<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7951" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7951?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T05:18:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18364">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6a35498d1824e8c9aee80a0bf145cbe3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>32e497ccac42f389db92bc581a275488</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25802">
                  <text>\

.

Page 12 • The Dally ·Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

By _Bob Hoeflich

•

Friday

Study finds top-rated . cardi.ac hospitals
treat heart attacks bestwith few cheap pills

How soon we forget-particuhirly if we didn't have the experience-and sometimes we forget even if we did.
.
However, Pomeroy's.Bob.Thompson hasn 't forgotten that it is 62
. . years this month that Meigs Countians experienced the -rampage of
the 1937 Ohio River flood.
Bob dug out his newspaper clippings showing the vast expanse of
the flood in Pomeroy. Ten feet of water splashed across the gymnaSium floor at the former Pomeroy Junior High School and many res. idents gave thanks that at least the flood didn't get into the second
floors of their homes-in some cases it did. A new system of dams
has been built along the Old Ohio and it is believed that these will
keep. us from suffering floods in the magnitude of the 1937 whopper.
If you' re too young to have experienced the '37 flood col.or yourself lucky.
·
•

And again looking back.
The current new movies, "Saving Private Ryan" and "The Thin
Red Lme" both dealing with World War II have t "ought that war
ba.;k to the consciousness of the American public and apparently
have revived the idea of a tribute in the form of a memorial to the
veterans·o[ the war's battlefronts.
"
Many
Ame"ricam;
are
not
aware
that
there is no national mem ori•
al that pays proper homage and tribute to those men and women of
the 1940's whose dedic;ttion, sacnfices and contributi on~ saved the
wo rld by wi nning the conflict, the bigges t war of all time and the
most defining period of the 20th Century.
. The "story begins i.n the late 1980's when Ohio Co ngresswoman
Marcy Katpur .was attending a barbecue where the subject of war
memorials arose. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the National
Mall in Washington, D. C. had been recently dedicated and there
'- __were plans. to build a memorial nearby to h()nor Korean War veterans. Someone asked her where the World War II memorial was
located.
She found her answer unsatisfactory. There was no national
memorial to veterans of World War IL While there is a statue in
· Arlington depicting the flag being raised atop Mt. Suribachi on lwo
Jima, \t is dedicated solely to the Marine Corps.
So she launched legislation to correct the situation. On Veteran's
Day of 1996, a site was chosen on the National Mall in Washington .
Then a contest was. held to select t!Je design with over 400 entries
bein2 reviewed and finally one was selected.
.
As wtth most other war memorials, tlw moQument was to be paid
for mostly by private donations. A massive fundraising effort began
with Bob Dole as nation al chairma!l and with George Bush, Ronald
Reagan, Jtm')'ly Caner and Gerald Ford as honorary chairman.
. All of the money-$ 100 million-must be raised bi:fore ground'
can be broken with the target date to begin constructipn on Veteran's
• Day 2000. Jusi after one year the commission has raised $40 million
from corporations, veterans ·groups and millions of private donors.
The commission has staned a campaign to get each of the states to
donate one dollar for every resident who served in uniform during
the war.
·
Rep. Kevin Couglin learned about the sta(e campaign and has ·
introd uced legislation in Ohio proposing that the state give one dollar for each of the 893,000 World War II veterans from Ohio to the
building program.
Residents wishing to voice their support of Rep. Couglin's legislation can contact him by writing him in care of the Ohio House of
Representati ves, 77 South High St., Columbus, Ohio 43266-0603.
The memorial does deserve suppon. Frankly, I doubt if we will
ever again experience the patriotism and loyalty so ·f'ffectively
demonstrated across our nation during World War IL It occurred in
an ·era when we felt love tgr God and Country. There have been
some bad things happen since then but all in all it IS a Grand Old
Flag. Do keep smiling.
·

By LINDA A. JOHNSON
Associated Press Writer
Heart attack patients fare best in
top-rate(j__l,J.S. hospitals because of a
few cheap pills, aecording to
researchers who say all · clinics
should offer prompt treatment with
beta blocke rs and aspirin.
·
Several studies jtave shown the
benefits._of beta blockers, which
reduce the heart's work load, and
aspirin, which thins blood. Although
medical groups encourage use of the
drugs, many hospitals and doctors
still aren't routinely giving them to
patients.
" We could save a lot of patients'
li ves if ... that knowledge was fully
translated to the bedside, " said Dr.
Harlan Krumholz, director of the
Yale-New Haven Hospital Center
for Outcomes Research and Ev&lt;ijuation.
The Yale center study, reponed in
today's New England Journal of
Medicine, tracked the cases of
149,177 Medica~e patients hospitalized for heart attacks in 1994 or
1995.
T~e ce nter look, d at 60 hospitals
that made U.S. News &amp; World
Report 's list of the best places for
cardiac care from 1995-97. At those
hospitals, 15.6 percent of the
Medicare hean attack patients died
within 30 days, Yale medical student
Jersey Chen concluded.
Chen also studied the results at
766 hospitals that, like the top 60
hospitals, had equipment for hightech surgery to unclog or bypass
.clogged arteries. At those hospitals,
18.3 percent of the heart attack
patients died in the first month.
And in 3,846 hospitals without

that equipment, mostly rural o~ community hospitals, the rate was 18.6
percent.
Researchers said they were not
endorsing the magazine's A-list
because it weighs hospitals' reputations too heavily. They said their
study is about how hospitals · ~an
improve care·, not where heart at\jl(:k
patients should seek it. . · ;
"If you're having a heart attack,
you should go to the closest hospital" because prompt treatment is
crucial, Chen said.
The big difference 'among hospitals came not from high-te9h equipment, but the use of everyday drugs,
the researchers said.
At the top-ranked hospitals, J!6.2
percent of patients considered prime
candidates for the bloOd-thinning
abilities of aspirin were given the
. drug. The rate was 88.6 percent at
similarly equipped hospitals and
83.4 perceni at the others. ·
Use of beta blockers followed a
similar pattern. At the top-ranked
hospitals, 75 percent of patients eligible for beta blockers, which slow
the heart rate, got them. The rate was
61.8 percent in the next tier and 58.7
percent at the others. ·
"The hospitals that have less
(patient) volume, less technology,
they should be able to follow these
guidelines," said Dr. Valentin
Fuster, president of the American
Heart Association. "This is simple,
cheap."
However, Dr. Marc Klapholz, a
cardiologist at 'the University of
· Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-New Jersey Medical Sch0ol,
said the top hospitals may have
more specialists or have more rigid

ny."

.Other major phone companies
offer similar plans. Sprint Corp .. for
example, sells lon'g-djstance and
mobile-phone service for 10 cents a

•

.

NICHOLAS JAMES HARRIS
JORDYN ELIZABETH JOHNSON
DAUGHTER BORN - Mr. and
SON BORN - Gregg and Kim
Mrs. Dou!!las .Johnson (Vida Adams Harris of Wilmington
Weber) of . Charleston, W. Va. a nnounce the birth of their first
announce ·the birth of .their first child, a son, Nicholas James,
· child, Jordyn Elizabeth, Dec. 30 born on Nov. 30 at the Bethesda
the Women and Children's North Hospital In Cincinnati.
"!ospital in Charleston, .
The infant weighted eight
· The infant weighed seven pounds, four ounces and was 20
p.o unds, nine ounces.
·Inches long.
·
Grandparents are Kenny and
. Grandparents are Barbara
Francis Johns.on of Nitro, W. Va., a11d Dale Harris, MI. Sterling;
tllld Norman and Vera Weber of and Carol Adams of Syracuse
Tuppers Plains.
and the late James Adams •
•
•
Great-grandparents are Nell
of MI. Sterling; Earl and
NJ authorities fatally Mason
Doris Adams of Racine, . and
shoot loose tiger
John D. and Ruth Sights, Lexlngtoll, Ky.
JACKSON, N.J,. (AP} - Authori[ies were .trying to find out who
owned a 6oo- .to soo-pound tiger Dan . Quayle . resigns
that they had 10 shoot to death in a from family newspaper
cfensely wooueu area of western ..
New Jersey.
COmpany board .
; Police and state Division of Fish,
PHOENIX (A P) - Former Vice
Game and Wildlife officials . had President Dan Quayle has resigned
tried to tranquilize the animal with from the board of Central Newspadrug-filled darts, said Sut. Rick Fer- pers Inc., say•ng it would· b.e a con---- r.U:el'li. Wbcn_that·didn'l.work, they nict.nfinteresuo hold the post while -·
shot the animal Wednesday night.
runni.ng for president.
"It was just impossible to co ntain
CNI publishes The Arizona
it." Ferrarelli said.
Republic, The Indianapolis Star, The
Police received a call Wednesday Indianapoli s News and other newsafternoon from a resident who said . papers.
she saw what she thought iVas a tiger
Quayle, who li v.es in suburban
in her yard. l"he area is about 30 Paradise Valley, announced last
miles south of Trenton .
week that he is forming a committee
Whil e the 'carch was on, a radio tu begin campaigning for the GOP
station no1itied re side nts· to stay nomination.
·
inside and not let 1[1eiL childJen or
Quayle, grandson of CNI founder
animals ou t; ide. Pol ice cars also Eugene C. Pulliam, had heen on the
drove up and down some roads . Phoenix-based . company''s board
advising people to stay inside .
since 1993 . His resignation was
effective Jan . 22 .

at

SALE

lOK D!a.mond
Heart Ring

Beailtlfull/4 CT. TW
Diamond Heart Pendant
Reg. 1199"

00

SALE 599
)ts .!ll.wags... tfie

6est quafity ana 6est

- prices on tflamontfs antf:goftil ·
'EVEll(Y'1&gt;.!11.
- - . ')"! t .
10% tfown fw[tfs your fayaway

.!Jlcquisitions_
91 Mill St. Middleport
2nd &amp; Grape Gallipolis

992,&amp;250
446-2842

• In s1ore repair In
Gallipolis Store
• Financing ·
Available

• Visa, Discover, M/C
• Free Gift Wrap
• Free Parking

(

•

'

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

S;ngle Copy- 35 Cents

A joint publi.c hearing of the United States A-rmy unitS. · ·
..
'
.
barges. Each· fleet would contairi three mooring cells.
Corps of Engineers and the Ohio Environmental ProThe Meigs County Historical Society and the Buff- The middle fleet would extend 220 feet from and
t~ction Agency. will be held Feb. 18, 7 p.m. at Meigs ington Island Battlefield J?reservation Foundation are . 1,052 along the normal pool shoreline.
.
Local High School near Pomeroy ,to discuss an appli• seeking an appeal from a Sepl 3 decision by the Ohio
The loading dock, which would consist of a barge,
cation for a ~rol";'sed sand and gravel loading facility Divisi?n of Mines a~d Recl111ftalion granti~g Shelly would measure 30 by ISO feet and be secured by two
along the Ohto RIVer near Portland.
Matenals Inc. a perm1t to operlite a gravel mme on the moormg cells.
.
· The _purpose of the hearing is consider an applica- 486.4-acre site in Lebanon Township.
The conveyor system would extend from the shoretimi submitted by ·RiChards and Sons· Inc. to construct,
,Other groups are also concerned about the battle- . line to the loading dock.
.
The middle fleet would also hold 12 barges and
operate and maintain the proposed sand and gravel ·field.
loading facility.
•
The wl)rk requiring a Department of the Army per- contain a total of six mooring· cells.
.. The loading facility is crucial to a planned gravel mit would involve the placement of 12 steel sheet pi!The applicant also proposes to place riprap bank
mining operation near Portland that supporters of a ing cells measuring 24 feet in diameter along approx- protection along 510 feet of shoreline behind the barge
Civil War battlefield there say will annihilate large imate(y 1,980 feet of shoreJine.
loading dock. ·.
sections of the battlefield.
The facility would consist of three separate fleeting
The purpose of the project is to load sand and grav•
The July 19, 1863 1 Battle of Buffington Ishind is areas.
.
el proCiucts·mined at the si!e for shipment to concrete
¢9J1Sidered Ohio's only Civil War battle. .
The -upstream and downstream f'leets would each contractors .
.
·
During that battle, about 2,000 Confederate cal- extend 185 feet from and 462 f~et along the normal
All interested parties are invited to be present at the
varymen which General John Hunt Morgan were rout- pool shoreline.
·
hearing including officials of any local government or
cd by a Union force of about 8,000 soldiers and naval
Each fleet would hold nine barges for a.total of 18 any association whose intere~t may be affected by the

j

•

992-2156

s39oo

·- Page4

•

. a1
, .

Jessica Brannon •
scores 1,OOOth
career point tor EHS

:Hearing ~lated tordiscuss Portland minin_
g .operation

First Payment
Security Deposit

R.. 159"

.

'

Volume 49 , Number 186

Your
Choice ·
lOK Hugs &amp; Kisses
Diamond Ring

Sports

.

Meigs county girls sweep, Page 4
Is a lack of communication a.sign? Page 6
Beat ofthe Bend, Page 8
·

I

News Hotline
News Hotline
News ·Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

Valentines Day is just
around the corner,
And Love is in the Atr .
We are receiving beautiful heart
jewelry every day!

J•n1111ry 20, 10110

M,eigs County's

.

•

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: soa; Low:.20s'

policies regarding use of aspirin and tals with the care at hospitals not
beta blockers.
affiliated With medical schools. The
A related study in today's J6umal , study found tbat treatment at teachcompared the quality of care for ing hospitals was more expensive,
Medicare patients at teaching hospi- but the survival rate was higher..

minute, but doesn't put · it on one
bill.
.
AT&amp;T's Personal Network promotion is the company's latest
effort to buoy its long-distance
sales, which fell 3.6 percent last
quarter as c·ustomers ·continued to
defect to rival providers of cheaper
service.
To encourage customer loyalty,
the $29.99 plan requires customers .
to sign a one-year contract that
obligates them to pay for a year's
worth of service .

.
.9lcquisitions J'ine Jewefry

J

I

today: Cloudy
High: 40a; Low: 20s

AT&amp;T unveils one rate for longdistance and wireless calls
.:
By DAVID E. KALISH
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -·Two phone
services. One rate. One bill.
Beginning Sunday, AT&amp;T Corp.
will offer long-distance and wireless phone service on a single bill at
the same rate.
The Personal Network initiative,
which costs $29.99 a month and 10
cents a minute, could save heavyvolume callers money.
The payment system unveiled ·
Wednesday, the first of its kind from
a major telephone company, also
may prod AT&amp;T's rivals to reduce
the complexity of their bills.
With the new AT&amp;T plan, people
don't need to worry about whether
they 'are making a call using their
cellular or home phone, said Fred
Voit, an analyst with Yankee Group,
a Boston-based research firm .
" It's just a call," Voit said . "This
is going to be the future of telepho-

·.

Thuradey, January 28, 1999

Weather

Beat of the Bend ....

..

If the cost of home heating fuel bas created a hCat-related emergency for
low-income area residents; Emergency HEAP funds are s!ill available
through Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency. .
·
. HEAP provides help for'thjl area's neediest RSidents, who .may be on a
fixed income or among the working poor. HEAP helps senior citizens and
families With children avoid the choice of "heating or eating." '
"People who neCd'help should choose HEAP," said Letha Proffin, HEAP
coordinator for·Gallia·Meigs CAA. "Most of _the HEAP recipients are. our
neig!tbors who are living on a fixed income or working~for low wages. They
are ihe elderly or single-parent household, and our disabled, HEAP gives
them the extra help they need to make it through these cold Ohio winters."
Emergency HEAP provides assistailce to households that have had utilities disconnected, face the threat of disConnection, or have lO days or lesil
supply of bulk fuel. The program·allows a one.time payment of up to $175
per hel!ling season to restme or retain home .heliting services. .
.
Homeown~ or renters inay qualify if their total household inj:OIIIe is at
or beloW 150 percent of federal poverty aui&lt;,k;li~
,
. .
. ·
En)ctW;!JCY~-~J~e._eljgi~tf. ~ be fQr· l)ie Jitisl·~~ pr 12 ,
111011ths. Thc:iM not q~alifying on three months income ,.,e ask"" w 'pn!ient
_lheit full12 months' lnoome to see if,eliglbility can be met on that basis. The
deadline for Emergency HEAP is March 31. ·
The Regular HEAP program offers heating assistance once per heating
season to low-income households while defraying the high cost of home
ing. Regular HEAP pays a portion of eligible hoilseholds' winter heating bills.
'The amount of assistance is determined by total household income, the num,
ber of people in the household and the type of heating fuel used.
. ··
The income guidelines for both programs are the same. However, Regular .H£AP requires the previous 12 months income while the past three
months income is acceptable for Emergency HEAP. The 12-month period or
three-month period for the test is detennined from the date of applicatjon,
making it possible for some with decreased income during these periods to
qualify later in the program .
Examples of these type situations could occur from layoff, strike, retirement, disability or death of a SpOuse or household member. Documentation
verifying income must be provided when applying for Hl,lAP. A copy of the
applicant's m;ent electric bill is also required.
·
The following Jncome levels by household size can be used to determine
eligibility. These income guidelines represent the 150 percent calculation and
are reviewed annually.
,
· Allowable annual income for a.one-person household is'$12.075; t\vo persons, $16,275; three people, $20,475; four people, $24,675; live people,
$28,875; and six people, $33,075. Households with more than six members
should add an additional $4,200 to the yearly income.
·
Both Emergency HEAP and Regular HEAP applications can be completed at the Gallia CAA HEAP office, 859 Third Ave., Gallipolis, or the Meigs
CAA HEAP office at33105 Hiland Road, Pomeroy. ·
J
·
Applications will be taken from 9 li.m. until noon and 1 to 3:30p.m., Mon·
day through Thursday.
This year, ·CAA has implemented an appointment system to apply for
Emergency HEAP. Contact 992-6629 in Meigs County and 367-7341 in Gallia County to sch!ldule an appointment. The toll-fn:e' number for Regular
HEAP Inquiries is 1-800-282-0880. f'orthe hearing-impaired with a telecommunication device for the deaf (fDD), the number is 1-800-686-1557.
For more information, contact the Cheshire offi&lt;ie at 367-7341 or 9926629, the Gallia County office at 446-6849, and the Meigs COunty office at
992-2222.
.

Used car limited warranty from Ford, Included
In monthly payment, up to 80,000 miles.

8-year-old boy accused of threatening
classmate wHh knife in a bathroom

You ..can drive up to 15,000 miles .per year
(60,000 over 4 year lease period)

CANI'ON (AP) - Charges are expecled to be filed ioday against an 8-yearold boy IIIX'Itsed of·
a knife to,a classmate's neck, a detective said.
name wam't released, also faces an expulsion·hearaccording to Canton Sdtool Disbict
officials. He's ' - ' suspended since

Special low lease rate on Expeditions,
ElCplorera and Mountaineers

•

TURNPIKE HAS 10 USED
EXPEDITIONS, EXPLORERS AND
MOUNTAINEERS

proposed activity. ·
· .
They will be give,n the opportunity to express ~iews·
concerning the proposed activity.
All views expressed should be based on factual'
information related to the permit application.
Oral statements supporting or opposing the pro- · '
posed facility will be heard, however, for accuracy of
the record, all important facts and argumen_ts should
be submitted in writing.
Written statement may be presented at the meeting
or mailed to this office prior to the meeting date.
In an effort to conserve and eliminate duplication of . ·
facts presented, the Corps of Engineers encourages
groups .with common interests to consolidate their
comments for presentation by a representative;
spokesperson.
·
All statements, both oral and writlen, will be
recorded and will become a part of the official record
ofthe application.
·

o;~;~~if~~ exeicis.eprogram
izens 0
in the new fitness center.
Cyndi Suerkant, a fitne~ trainer with Well Works, a health program funded through
an Ohio University grant, is coming to the Pomeroy Center every Wednesday through
March to work with seniors who want to improve their fitness levels.
·
Suerkant's role will be to do an activity assessment, train the seniors on the equipment, much of which is computerized, and then set up an individualized training pro- · •
gram taking into consideration their physical co,ndition. There is no charge for taking. ·
part in the program or using the equipmen~
Th.e fitness center, open Monday through Friday from 8:30 to 2:30 p.m., is equipped
with two treadmills, two bicycles,. a cardiac rider fot rehabilitation work, and two rowing machines. There are also exercising weights and two large mats before floor-to-ceiling mirrors for warming up or floor exercises.
,
At left, Suerkant discusses the use of a. treadmill in building endurance as Norma
Custer gives it a try. Below, Ann Rupe, facing camera, and Rose 'Corliss, work out on'
the rowing ma~hines.
.

...

f,

Candidate -filing deadline for May primary set
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The deadline for filing as a candidate for office
in Middleport and Pomero¥ is February 18. Other
local races, including township trustee and clerk,
will riot be decided ' until November.
Voters in each of ihe two villages will elect' a
mayor and. two members of village cou~cil. In
Rutland, Racine and Syracuse, village officials
will be elected in the fall, _because they run on a
non-partisan basis, according to Barbara Smith,
clerk {or the Meigs County Board of Elections.
In· Middleport, Sam Eblen is the only candidate for mayor to file with the board, although
Jean Craig; who was recently appointed to the
Board of Public Affairs, has picke.d up a petition
and said Friday that she intends to file, also. Both
are ·Republicans.
·
·

Partisan candidates will appear in the May pri mary, and primary nominees will go on to the
November election.
No candidates have filed for the mayor's post
in Pomeroy, nor have any prospective candidates
picked up petitions, according to Smith.
The council seats occupied by·Beth Stivers and
Steve Houchins in Middleport, and Geri Walton
and Scott Dillon in Pomeroy-are B'iso up this year, .
and Smith said today ihat Wallo~ has picked up a
petition and a petition .was mailed to Houchins.
Three members of the Middleport Board of
P.ublic Affairs, which was recently reformed after
the position of Village Administrator was abo! ished, will be elected as well. ·
Oon Stive'l and Myron Duffield, both of
whom serve on the board now, have each picked
up their petitions for el~tion to the board.
I

In the county's outlying areas, candidates for
township trustee and clerk. and board of education members will run in the November election. .
In the Meigs Local School District; school
board seats now occupied by Roger Abbott, John
Hood and Randy Humphreys will be filled. In
Eastern Local, the positions of Rick Sanders,
John Rice and Mike Martin will be decided, and
·in Southern Local, the positions of David Kucsma
and Robert Collins will be elected.
Mayor and village council seats in Rutland,
Racine and Syracuse will also appear on the
November ballot.
. The official deadline for votor registration for
the May election is April 5, acc~rding io Rita .
Smith, Director of the Board of Elections, and
candidates filing for the May primary must file.
their petitions no later than 4 p.m. on February 18.
'

•

'

Lewinsky testimony tapes could .be ·public

lo
Q V b/
• f tOT
I.
fria
• JSenate
the agreement of the
S
ena,e
. nS ueprln
Republi~an and
By LARRY MARGASAK .
·
Detitocratic leaders.

ing the rest of the trial. A bipartisan agreement, like
the pact that governed the trilli until now, proved
elusive this time.
,
.
Associated Preu Writer
. nee those issues are resolved the Senate would
·The Senate voted 55-43 Thursday against a
_WASHINGTON (AP) _ ·A divided ~nate · tcVon any motions to allo~ the videota~s _to be motion by Daschle to go immediately to closing
~~~!~!~~~~~!
the Canton
Jan. 20 incident
~
Detective Capt. James W.
approved a blueprint for completing President shown or to call the three wttnesses to testify m the debate and votes on the two articles df impeachMyers said investig~~tors decided
Clinton's impeachment trial, with a provision that Senate chamber.
.
.
ment. Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., was the only~:
Thursday to file charges of delinquen- . could bring Monica· Lewinsky 10 the Senate floor, .. Dem?"rats ~ad oppo~ed hve wttn~es or depo- senator to cross party li nes, consistent with .hiS: ~
cy by reason of aggravated menacing
live or on -videotape.
Sitton Vl~eotapmg, , feanng the pubhc ~ouid s.ee maverick vote Wednesday against a Democratic· ';
sec~tlot~S. 1l Pages
and carrying a concealed weapon
-Majority Republicans made some concessions Ms. Le~msky talktng about sexual relattons with motion to end the-tri al now and in favor of a GO\'· ~
against the boy in Stark County Famito Democrats and the White House.in their propos- the prestdent, ~ven though House prosecutors. ~ave motion to depose the three witnesses.
. •:; •
ly Court.
al, bu,t primarily muscled their own idea5 through pledged to stay away from sex m the depostttons
. Party li nes held, however, for a 54-44 vote that :
the Senate on a 54:44 party-l ine vote Thursday.
~nd some GOP sen~tors hav~ e~pr~ed reserva: defeated Daschle's .alternative .to the Republi""":::
brought a
- The proposal calls-for-tbe-trial-to end-by Feb-. _ ttons.abouLMs. LewmskyJest1fymg hve
_ piJln. Thc:llerooc:rauc pro!Xl"al, tn part,~llhlll'e,.;_
nearly a3-incl i
12, unless more witnesses are called, with a vote on
But the Republican majority prevailed in Thurs- limited public ey,jdence of the depositions to writ-:~
friends.
perjury and obstruction of justice charges against day 's voting.
ten transcripts.
:
They were in a boys bathroom
Clinton.
"'This i.s 1999, we're about to go into the year
Cliitton's lawyers were displeased with the lar~ • ·
where. they found ·another · secondBefore that, ho~ever, Ms. Lewinsky, presiden- 2000," Rep~blican leader Trent Loti said. "To not est tum of events.
. _
· ', •
~· who often has '-t harassed by
tial friend Vemon Jordan, and White House aide have videotape available for sepators, ami maybe
.. lt"s clear .the spirit of bipartisanship evaporat-&lt;
other students, polial said
Sidney Blumenthal would give videotaped deposi- even beyond that, is not ... defensible."
ed ... 8J1d that this has ·become a • Republican::
Myers said the boy came up behind · tions, beginning Monday with the former White
Lotteries
In opposition, Democratic leader Tom Daschle impeachment trial," spokesman James Kennedy:
the viclit:trand put the knife to his . HollSe intern and going through Wednesday.
commented, " We're very concerned about live said. "'The plan that was adopted is vague and i(
neck. There are conflicting stories
The plan would allow witnesses to be ques-· witnesses. We don't want the spectacle of Monica has no certain end. It appears to contain trap doors
as to what happened next.
Pick 3: 9..Q-4; Pick 4: 8-8·3-8
tioned on the Senate floor following the deposi- Lewinsky or anyone' else having to bC brought in that could significantly extend this trial. "
and how the-victim avoided being · lions, if a majority agreed.
the form that is anticipated under this resolution .... • . Lott said the successful Republican plan grantBuckeye 5: 6-11-21-36·37
cut, he said.
·
The.trial resumes Feb. 4, at which point the Sen- We don 't .~eed salacious ~atFrial. "
ed a White House ~equest to delay the depositions
· Police said the knife was found · ate could consider any objections raised but not
Republicans
took
thetr
plan
to
the
Senateuntil next week, and gave Daschle veto power-over
Dally 3: 6-6-9; Dlllly 4: 0-1-8-9
in a toilet bowl and that the defenresolved
during
the
depositions.
Any
requests
for
tumed-impeachmel)t
court
only
after
two
days
of
calling
additional witnesses beyond the three
0 1999 Ohlo Wlr~ Publilhina Co.
da~t admitted it lJ!:longs to hi~ ..
additional witnesses or discovery would require swappi ng proposals with Democrats for conduct-- already approved .

Sentinel

..

.I
, o.l

!.

�•
•

•

Friday, January 29, 1999

(:otnmentary
j

•

•

111 Court St., Pomtroy, Ohio
740-11112·21118 • Fax: 082·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETI
publlaher
·•

DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~enaral

Manager

' -

7lM Sentinel

IWicomH ,.,.,..

ro lh• edHor l'rom ,...,.. on •

I:H'Nd ,..,. ot rap-

* · Sltolt ,.,.,.. (300 WOide or ,...) haw the bMI ch•nc. ot IMing publl•hM.
• ' ~ /olf....... " " ' - -. , ,.., , . odllod. Eoc/t ohould Inc/-. oll/fHIIUro,
lldd,..., •nd d•ylltM phon• nurnbw: Specify • d•t• If,,..,.. .• • ,.,.,.,.ce to • p,.. ..

~ lltfJde or.l.n.r. ,.II to: Utt.,. to th• «&lt;ltor. TM Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
: , -·~~ Ohio 4117fl/; or, FAX to 7-f0-llf2-ZI56.

GueSf ecJitoria/

.Co·nsum
' e·r _
myt h.s
--

--

-

Government's Y2K readiness is doubtful·

A major point of con';em is Medicare. The we found · 142 audits of critical systems that all
By JICk And-n
.and Jan Mollar
Health Care Financina' Administration (HCFA), lndictlte the same thins: The Pentagon's reporting
. In 1993, Mary Bandar
which oversees Medicare, has consislen_lly is shoddy and unreliable, and the majority of sy;·
became one of the few people
received the lowest marks for Y2K remediation. terns remain untested. Worse, compu)er jockeys
keenly aware of an impending
This agency dispatches pay~pents to· the elderly there arc grabbing the low·~ll!ging fruit firit computer crisis now referred
and disabled and their. health providers. Any _lapse correcting low-priority systems and.leaving critito as Y2K. Th~ Winona,
of service within the ag~ncy "-'ould disrupt treat· cal ones for later.
The Army's Global Positioning System, for
Minn., resilient was 104 years
ment for patients aild cash no+- for hospitals.
example,
has yet to be tested for Y2K. This is the
o)d at the time, boi1J in 1889.
But Gary Cluistoff, a Y2K specialist contract·
satellite
system
used to track international miliBut a federal computer sys·
ed by ihe age_ncy, "!'Y" s~h wo~
' ries are premat~re
tern, programmed as almost all computer systems and that Congress ts telymg on year-old sconng tary movement, which is· so precise that if man·
are to assume the first two digits -of a year are system that doesn 'I reflect th agency's recent aged to find downed Air Force Captain Scott
O'Grady after his plane crashed behind enemy
"19", read her birth date as 1989 and issued Ban· · preparations.
I
.
dar a notice to attend kindergarten.
"The way our system is structured is very ' lines in Bosnia in 1995.
Investigators also found problems with the
This wasn't the government's first . warning complex .. it involves many c:pntractors, many
that there would be problems with the six-digit different systems," Christoff tdld our associate- Pentagon's Chemical Agent Disposal Systtm,
dateline inscribed in billions of lines of computer Kathryn Wallace. " We doubled our original cost which is used to destroy chemical warfare agents.
code.
estimates, and since then.we doubled them again, A November audit discovered that the military
The programming industry recognized by the but we are convinced Medicare will be function· falsely reported that all its systems we~e ready for
Y2K. Every week that the plant is down will cost
mid-80s that the six-digit convention, adopted in ing Jan. 1, 2000."
•
the early years of computer programming when
Don Meyer, spok.Sman for Bennett's com)llif~ taxpayerS $2 million.
we· found much of the same when reviewing
space was at a premium, would cause most sys- tee, is still- cynical. ,
.
.
"I don 't · think anyone seriously believes Y2K readiness on a state level. While some states,
terns to go awry. But the federal government has
taken its sweet old time responding to the crisis HCFA could turn arouna the system so fast," he like North Dakota, arc ready Jor the millennium,
says,. "The senator is used to people lying· to him. the vast majority aren't even done assessing the
and is now paying the price for its indolence. .
Mostmonth~go
agencies waited
until r ------------------'------------'----::::==-;:==::::::=::::~
a few
to begin

IJ'
repairing compu r code for
f IIIO.•-•••
· As a consumer, you have certain rights under Ohio law. It's important you thousands of "mission criti·
know exactly 'what those rights are· so you can make good choices in the cal" systems. Computers. that
marketplace. Also, if you · aren't familiar with Ohio consumer laws, some generate Social Security and
jlllOple may try to take advantage_of your lack of knowledge or misinforma· Medicare payments, position
tipn. It's my job to give you the knowledge you need to protect yourself from · satellites in space, monitor air·
those crooks.
plane traffic, ,dispatch emerHere are the truths to the most.common consumer myths. My hope is that gency services, mot~ito: the
this knowledge can .help you make smooth and well-informed business parole of prisoners, and con·
transactions.
·
'trol ground-based missil'es
.. MYTH:. You have a three day right to cancel any purchase.
have all yet to be fixed,
.. FACT: The three-day right to cancel exists only for a limited number of according to Rep. Stephen
consumer transactions. For the most part, it ·applies to credit or cash trans- Hom, R·Calif., who is track·
actions of $25 or more initiated through face to face contact (like door to ing the government's Y2K
d_oor sales) away from the seller's regular place of business. The three day compliance.
rlght to cancel' provision does not cover vehicle purchases.
The president's response
· MYTH: A store has to give you a refund if you request one.
:has been to establish a high·
FACf: Stores can set their own refund policy, as long as the store clear- . profile·· but utterly toothless·
ly,posts it so you can see it before you buy anything. Options include offer- • commission to monitor
ing customers cash, credit slips, exchanges, or no adjustment lit all. Dam· progress. The commission 's
aged merchandise may be handled on a case by case basis.
job is to monitor governmentMYTH: If a company writes or calls sa~ing you have won a fabulous wide deadlines, but it has no
pri:ie, it's acceptable for the company to charge a service or handling fee in authority to force compliance.
order for you to receive that prize.
Nor does it have any means of
FACf: Ohio has a rule that prohibits a company from charging you any verifying ·the information it's
fee, including one for shipping, in order for you to claim a prize or gift. In given.
Ohio, free is free.
·
With $6.4 billipn already
·· MYill: A lemon law protects buyers from all big ticket items, including spent, and many key depart·
u5ed cars not under warranty.
ments like Defense, Energy
FACT: Ohio's lemon law appli.S to new car purchases and leases only. and Treasury · missing last
l.Jsed cars normally come with a very limited warranty or no warranty at all. month's deadlines to correct L------~~~~..!_~~~~_.:::~~~:!~!!!~~~~~~::_
_j
This means you are responsible for repairs if the vehicle breaks down.
all mission~critical syStems,
. .. MYill: When solicited by a charity, almost all of the money you con· time is running ouL Of course, all agencies report . (All the agencies) say they are going to make (the problem . Many states, like West Virginia, Alabatribute must go to the intended charitable purpose.
they will be completely ready by the end of the March 31, 1999 deadline); there is no way they rna and Ohio, don't even have a Y2K budget yet.
:· FACf: Charitable organizations are not obligated to spend a certain per· year. But both Horn's committee and _a Senate are all going to make it."
Rosy scenarios, we've learned over the years,
.centage on their stated cl)aritable purpose. Charities that hire professional panel chaired by Ro~rt Bennett, R-Utah, 111•
The official line from all _the agencies we are a comm9n Washington st_iple. Nobody likes •
fund raisers will have higher overhead costs to meet, so may spend less on worried that federal agencies aren't reporting spoke with is cheery, but reports issued by the being the bearer of bad news. A year from now,
the actual charity they are soliciting. Consumers should ask if the caller is a accurate numbers •• and that there's no way to Inspector General •• the watchdog of the govern· we fear these forecasters will have a lot of
paid solicitor _or a volunteer for tbe charity and what percentage of the dona- · double-check and make sure that agencies are ment ·- paint a far more sobering picture. .
explaining to qo.
tion will actually go to the charily.
.
telling the truth.
At the Departljlent of Defens~. for exa)llple, Copyrlght'1m, United Feature Syndlcllte, Inc.
• MYill: Giving out your credit card number for identification or other
·
·
·
·

Letha F. Whittington Cotterill, 69, Hurisonville, died on Wednesday,
January 28, 1999 in Doctor's Hospital, Columbus.
S_he was born on~ug. 29, 1929:in Buffalo, W.Va., daughter of the late
Orvtlle and Pearl Rledy Whittington. She attended Moui)t Union Baptist
Church, was a mernber of Harrisonvill'e Grange, was a retired school bus
driver for Meigs Local School District, and was a -member of God's Help·
ing Hands.
·
Surviving are her husband of 51 years, Raymond R. Cotterill; two
daughters and sons-in-law, .Barbara and Dan Cremeans of Pomeroy, and
Catherill'C and John Domigan of Woodbridge, Va.; four sons and two
daughters-in-law, Steven and Barb ·eetterill of Albany, Wayne and Brenda Cotterill of Pomeroy, Denver Cotterm and his fiance, Connie
Karschnik, of Pomeroy, and Lawrence Cotterill of Killen, Texas; 12
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; a brother and sister-in-law,
Ronald and Emma 'Whittington of Albany; and several nieces and
nephews.
·
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rut·
land, with the Rev. Joe N. Sayre officiating. Burial will be in theWhite
. Oak Cemetery, Harrisonville. Friends may call at the funeral home from
2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Satutday.

Saturday, Jan. 30
MICI1.

•
INO.
'

'

ol Cotumb.. la•M I

•

-

THE
END
IS
NEAR

,.
W. VA.

...Y2K.

Sunny, cool conditions
forecast for weekend ·
By The Aaaocllted Pl'lllla
Sunny but cool weather will continue across Ohio on Saturday. Highs
will be mostly in the 40s.
,
That will follow a cool night with lows mainly in the 20s, the National Weather Service said today.
.
Southern Ohio could see some rain Saturday night and Sunday.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
tion was 65 degrees in 1975 while the record low was 13 below zero in
1963. Sunset tonight will be at 5:47 p.m •.and sunrise S~turday at 7:42a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight:.. Clear. Lows in the .mid 205. Light and variable wind.
Saturday... Sunny. Jiighs in the upper 40s.
·
Saturday night ...Oear. LOws in the. mid 20s.
.
.Elltended rorecast:
Sunday...Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s.
Mortday...Mostly cloudy. A chance of light rain d11,1ing the night. lows
in the lower and mid 30s and highs in the mid and upper 40s.
Tuesday.;.Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain. LOws in the mid and
upper 30s and highs near SO.

______,. . :. ___

irA~

T:oday In Hist_o ry

'

Eu ro· Ian· d ' . h'om·e.o·f t h'e Eu ro
_

.:

By Ben Wattenberg
Consider "Euroland," home. of
the Euro, the highly publiciZ&lt;:d and
controversial new currency for II
member nations of the Euro-zone of
the European Union. Is it good for
Europe? Is it good for America? It's
good for both.
·
But Europhoria aside, the hot
new currency will not extract Europeans from the deep ditch they are
in, which has no parallel in all history, and from which there is no apparent ready exit.
I salute the Euro. I can live with it
even if it).ecomes "a competitor to
the dollar," and I could live with that
even if I understood what it means.
But I do know that Euroland sits in
Europe, one of the preeminent
blood-stained land masses of the
world, and now the site of one of the
great and hopeful stories of our time.
For centuries the ancestors of
today's. Eurolanders had art ugly
habit of regularly killing each other.
A common coin may well en&lt;ourage
further unity, diminishing any
chance of renewed violent behavior.
Ongoing peace is good for America,
period.
But a further case is mad_e ·· that
Euroland will become a major competitor to the United States. Why?
Principally because of wealth and
size.
Today Euroland has a. per capita
income of about $21 ,000 and a gross
national product (GNP) of $6.3 tril·

·

·

lion. That is not as high as
the American $30,000 or
$8. I trillion, but by any
global standard it is high.
But the reported size. of
· Euroland is, at root, highly
misleading. It is said that
the new bloc, with 292 millio.n people "is larger than
the United States" with 278
· million people.
The United Nations has just published the 1998 'edition of World
Population Prospects, one of the
great demographic reference works.
At my request, the U.N. Population·
Division did a special run for the
aggregate of the 11 nations of the
Eurb-zone.

The Total Fertility Rate (TFR) in
Euroland -- that is, the average number of children born per woman over
the course of her child-bearing years
•· is 1.38.
- That is incredibly low, lower by
far for a large group of countries
than anything the world has seen
since the advent of serious statistics.
Moreover, the rate has declined for
more than 30 years and has declined
in the 1990s.
The "magic number" in demography is 2.1, which is the "replacement 'rate." Why 2.1? If two parents
aren't replaced by two children,
plus. I of a child to account for children who don't survive to their own
reproductive years, then, absent
immigration, a population shrinks,

_. .

.·

and shrinks, •• in a geomet·
ric downward spiral.
The current TFR for
Euroland is 34 percent
below- the repracement rate.
This means population loss.
Within 10 years (20052010), Euroland wi II be losing numbers. .
The population projection
for Euroland in 2050, based
on constant rates, is 240 million, 18
percent less than now, and spinning.
further downwind. (In theory ··only
in theory .. such a progression does
not end up with zero population
growth but zero population!) •
By contrast the American TFR in
2000 is estimated at 1.93 children
pe_r woman ·· . ~low replacement,
bur not by much ·· and 40 percent
higher than Euroland. We take in
about a million net immigrants per
year.
That yields a population of 372
million' by 2050. So: American population moves from slightly less
than Euroland's today (·5 percent) to
· substantially more (+54 percent).
The key point is not that the
American market will be bigger thah
Euroland's. Even 240 million people
is substantial, particularly whim they
are wealthy.
But what will Europe's population look like in the decades to
come? Gray. In 1950 the average
. age in Europe was 31 years. Today.
it is 3'8. By 2050, it will be 49.

.

.

Today, 22 percent ofEurolanders are.
older than 60. In 2050, it will.be 38
percent. Tres gray.
Many decades ago, the premier
French demographer Alfred Sauvy
glumly and famously predicted that
Europe would become a continent of
"old people in old houses with old
ideas." He could have added, "with
few young people to pay their pen·
sions or take care of them." .
" There are two plausible solutions.
One is mass emigration from Africa,
both Saharan and sub-Saharan -·
. that is, young -blacks and Arabs tend·
ing to, and paying taxes for, old
Europeans. The other is a solid
increase in European fertility.
Unlike pluralist America, modern
European nations have not been
built on immigration. Even in Amer·
ica, attitudes toward foreigners are
often harsh .
In Europe, they are far harsher. It
would be sad to see turmoil return to
a continent seeking well-deserved
stabi lily.
Trying to increase fertility is a
modem dilemma, with no apparent
easy fix. But in Eurolan_d they had
better come up with something more ·
than the· Euro.
Copyrlght1111111 NEWSPAPER ENTER·
PRISE ASSN.

Ben Wattenberg, • unlor ftl·
low at tilt American EnterpriH
lnlltltute, Ia the author of "VIIIutl
Matter Moat" •nd Is tit• hold of the
WHkly public talevlalon program
"Think Tank. • ·

Letter to the ed ito [~_Th_a_ts_ay.:.._s_s_om_e_th..;_in_::;g_fo_r_th_e_la_w

By TIM Aaoc:lllttd Preae
Today is Friday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of 1999. There are 336 'days left in
the year.
This is written in response to the front page
Another safety concern is said to be that these believe this could be more of a "safety" issue than On J_an. 29, _1820, B[ itain 's King Geor~e Ill died insane at Windsor Cas- article with Shannon Webb in the Sunday Times· ·. tractor/trailors are unable . to stop· due to being the weight of the load.
tle,.endtng a retgn that saw both the Amencan and French revolutions.
. Sentinel.
overweight. I would like to see the statistics on
The simple solution. would be to raise the
On this date:
.
Officer Webb said it ail himself. The weight this. Most of the accidents involving injury/death weight limits and ihis would in turn reduce the
In 1843, the 25th president of the United States, William McKinley, was limits {or tractor/trailors was instituted in the with these trucks seem to be because of careless hours these drivers would have to be on the roads •
__llorn in Niles, Ohio.
- -"1930's". It was only set up due to-road damage drivers pulling out in front of them or stopping to supply the demands of all of us.
In 1845, Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven " was first published, in the caused by oversized loads.
. suddenly. You could not stop these trucks any cas:
I would rather take my chances with an ovei·
New York "Evening Mirror."
He also stated that the concern was for safety. ier if they were empty. Also, it was stated in this sized load than a driver who is asleep and doesn't
In 1850, Henry O~y }ntrodu~ed i? t_he Senate a_compromise bill on slav- So why don't 1 feel any .safer?
article that the roads were being damaged by even know I'm there, or a drunk driver.
ery that tncluded admttttng Call forma toto the Umon as a free state.
Officer Webb also stated that these these overweight loads. Don't truckers pay taxes
Note that the fines for a-drunk driver are much
In 1861, Kansas be_came the ,34th state ~f the U~ion .
.
tractor/trailors are capable of ha~ling much heav- for the use of these roads? And most of the roads less than the fines imposed on overweight trucks.
In _1~. theAmertc~n League, const~ttng of etght baseball _teams,, was ier loads than the Jaw allows. 1 believe that says that they travel are in much better shape than ·From all of the articles and commercials we see,
orgamzi:d m&lt;f'htladelphta.
sometl\ing for the Jaw.
where they don't travel.
who do you think causes the most deaths? Also,
In 1936, the first members_ofbaseball_'s Hall of Fame, includingTy Cobb
In response: 1 have seen an officer leave the
These fines are much too high to fit the crime why are convicted drunk drivers given working
and Babe Ruth, were named 10 Cooperstown, N.Y.
..
scene of an accident to stop a truck believed to be anyway, and if these truckers are unable to carry permits to drive and truckers lose their jo~?
In 1958, actors Paul Newman and Jo~nne Woodward were marrt~d.
overloaded Is this safety? 1 also saw this same loads in which they can make a dollar for their _ ~i~ is i_ust something to think abou_t while yo11
In 1~3, the first members of footballs Hall of Fame were named to Can· officer stop trucks at this accident and ask them families, why would they bother? So are the are sttttng •.n your warm home, having a nice hot
ton, Ohto.
for their weigh tickets.
police officers going to carry coal to the power .meal supplied by these truckers who are still out ·
In 1963, poet_Robert Frost died in Boston.
.
.
.
The harassment from these officers toward plants and 'food to the grocery store (or us? I think there working while their families wait for them
. In ~979, Prestdent_ Carter formally w_elcomed Chtn~se Vtce Pre~ter De~g truckers is "out of control". Their means of sup- not.
·
to come home.
Xt~pmg to the Whtte House, followtng the establishment of dtplomauc port to their families and to their communities is
Most of these drivers put in more hours in a
Deanna Proctor
relattons.
being taken away by this.
week than most of these officers work in two. I
Galllpolll

•

•

••

~----~--~~----~~--------~------------~ .~

Immunization clinic

•

Whittington Cotterill .

Letha F. Whittington Cotterill, 69-1/2, went to b~· with - the Lord, on
Wednesday, January 28, 1999 at Doctor's Hospital in Columbus.
She was born Letha F. Whittington to Orville and Pearl Reedy Whittington on August 29, 1929, in Buffalo, West Virginia.
.
·
She married Raymond R. Cotterill51·1/2 years ago on July 11, 1947. She
attended Mount Union Baptist Church, was a member of Harrisonville
Grange, was a retired school bus driver for Meigs Local School District, and
was a member of God's Helping Hands, helping the needy.
In addition to her husband, she is survived by six children: Barbara (Dan)
Cremeans of Pomeroy, Catherine (John) Oomigan of Woodbridge, Virginia,
Steven (Barb) Cotterill of Albany, Wayne (Brenda) Cotterill of Pomeroy,
Denver Cotterill and his fiance, Connie Karschnik, of Pomeroy, and
Lawrence Cotterill of Killen, Texas; a brother, Ronald (Emina) Whittington
of Albany; 12 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, January 31, 1999 in the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland, with the Rev. Joe N. Sayre officiating. Bur·
ial will 'follow in theWhite Oak Cemetery in Harrisonville. Friends rnay call
at the funeral home from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. on Saturday, January 30,
1999.
.

The Daily Sentinel Leak at oil refinery
causes fire
,
· (USPS 213·960)
Conununily Newsp1per Holdlqa, Inc. •,
• Published every afternoon, Mondly throu&amp;h
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio' \\Hey Publishing Company. SeCond clue
postage paid 111 Porrteroy, Ohio. _
Mnnber. The Associated Preas and !he Ohio

The Meigs Band Boosters will meet Monday, 7 !).m. in the band room
at Meigs High School.
'
:

Newspaper Association .

· Poltmuter: Send addres.s comdioM to· The
Daily Sentinel , Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

SUBSCRIPTIOI'I RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ............ ..... ...............Jl.OO
One Mont)I.,..... ......................... S8.70
One Year................................... S104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily.•....•••...••....•.•.. ••.••..••••.••••. 3S Cents
SUbKribcrs n01 desirin&amp; to pay the carrier m1y
remil in advance direct to The Daily Stnlinel on
a three, si:t or 12 month basis. Credit will be
g;ven canier each week.
No lllMcription by mail permitted in areu
where home carrier service is available.
Publisher reserves the right to .djust ratea dur· ·
inJ the subscription period. Subscription ra1e
changes may be imptemented by changing the
duration of lbe subscription .

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
lilskle Mtlp Ceunty
13 W&lt;i:ks............... ......, ..... J27.30
26 Wccb ..... ...................... .$53.82
S2 \Vccb .......................... .SI05.S6
Rales Out.tklt: Melp County
13 W..ks ..................... ...... .S29.2S
26 \Vccks............................SS6:'"
S2 \Vccb ..........................SI09.72

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Oar main concern in 111 stnrlts ls to be
1ccunt~. If you kllow of 111 error Ia ·•

story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
%155. We witt chc&lt;k your lolonnallol
aad mike 1 correction It wnn11ttd.

Newa apartments
The moJo nu ber I• !191-1155. Depart.
ment extrns

s are:

Gteenl Manoget .................. ..... E&gt;L 1101

New............ .... ...... .......... ............. .Ext 1101
or Eltt. 1106

Other Services
Advertlslng. .. .... ........ .............:.... .Ext 1104

(;J..,.tatton ................................. .Ext 110J
Oa11llled Ad&amp;.. ,...........,.............. E&gt;L 1100

The Middleport Community Association meeting scheduled for 8:30 •
a.m. Tuesday has been postponed until Feb. 9 at 8:30 a.m. in the confer· :
ence room at .Peoples Bank.
:

OES to meet

.:

Racine Chapter 134, Order of Eastern Star, will meet Monday at 7:30 :
p.m. at the hall . Refreshments will be served.
· :

Defense expert takes the stand at teen's trial~

Charles E. Price

Lucy Patterson Rexroat

lion between Harris. and Millers- ::
burg Police Chief Tom Vaughn on ':
Thursday.
"
•
Ofshe pointed out when he ~
thought Vaughn pushed the con- :
versation toward eliciting a con· '
fcssionofrom the youth regardless ~
of facts. '
·
'
He said people often confess IQ
crimes they didn't commit _becaust_
of police tactics.
"It was the assertion of tho~
threats and the offer of lenie~
that caused Anthony to shift from
denial to admitting that he had"
involvement," Ofshe said.
Harris admitted during his tall\·:
with Vaughn that he pushed Devan·
from behind, stabbed her once C1f'
twice in the neck and then weni '
back to his house and washed th~ ·
blood off.
But Harris' mother, Cindi Har1·
ris, .who entered the interview:
room after watchi-ng through. a
mirror, is recorded on the tap"e asking her son if he killed Devan. ··
His answer was " no."
· .r
Harris, who was 12 at the titnd '
of the girl's death , would f~ce ·
imprisonment until age 21 if he 's
convicted.
·
State law says he cannot b~ '
tried as ait adult because he is·
younger than 14.
•

Kasich names Slifka campaign manager~

EMS logs 6

c~lls

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance. Units responding
included:
·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
5:16 a.m., Yellowbu8h Road,
Racine, Edna Neigler, Holzer Medical
Center, Racine squad assisted; ·
4:18 p.m., Fruth Pharmacy, Middle·
port, Sandra Cwiertviewilcz, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Middleport squad
assisted.
·

POMEROY
6:58 p.m., Overorook Nursing Center, Middleport, Pansy Jones, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
8:45p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Jamie Lin·
scott, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.

New Hampshire advisor, a positipn
he held in Bob Dole's failed presir,
dential campaign in 1996.
":
"Few people have as much
experience in the trenches of N~w"
Hampshire primary politics -as
-Bruce Berke," Kasich said.
: ,,
"Bruce· and I both understaoii;
the importance of New Ha'mp·
shire's first-in-the-nation primary.::,
Kasich, chairman of the House'
Budget Committee, incorpo&lt;atetl.
"Kasich 2oo0" earlier this mont&amp;:,~
It will become his presidential cam~:
paign entity should he officially~
enter the race.
·
'1,
I

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Jose
Delgado, Middleport.
Thursday discharges- none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Jan. 28 - Earthel
Hall, ·James Stiles.
Birtb - Mr. and Mrs. Sherman
Gerlach, daughter, Letart, W.Va.
(Published with permission)

THURSDAY THRU FRIDAY
ADAM SANDLER
IN

WATER BOY"""

REEDSVIu.E

8:26 p.m., Mt. Olive Road, Charles
Price, VMH.

RUTLAND
6:48p.m., Ogdin Road, Everett Hut·
too, PVH; Central D(spatch squad
assisted.

SUPERBO-WL SPECIALS .
Large Deluxe Pizza
$12.99

super Bowl .xlx1n

·.

·Party _

Sunday - Jannary 31
5:30pm • until end of game at the
Family Life Center Middleport
Church of Christ
Food· Food • Food
"Flying Blimp"
Fun· Prizes
10' x 10' screen with stereo sound.bring a
friend and wear your favorite team clothing

' Jr. &amp; Sr. ,Hi =~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

Subs by the Foot
·

s4.50 per Foot ·
Hot or Cold

Chicken Wings
10 for $4.49
20 for $7.99
Hot or Mild
Ranch or Blue Cheese Dressing

Party Trays
$19.95 Mix and match 3 items:
Subs, Wings, Bread Sticks
or Pepperoni Rolls

Two Medium Pepperoni Pizzas
$11_j9-Additional toppings ·
$1.00 per topping per pizza

•,

'

~

Meeting rescheduled

NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP)
- A defense expert testified that
police coerced .a 13-year-old boy
"" into confessing that he stabbed his
S-year-old neighbor to death.
Mavis Mankin, 71, Carroll, Iowa, died Tuesday, Jan. 26, 1999, at Mary
. Richard Ofshe, a Scocial psyGreeley Medical Center, Ames, Iowa.
chologist and profes_sor at the UniShe was born J\,pri18, 1927 in Pierpont, S.D., daughter of the late John versity of California at Berkeley, ·
and Anna Osness Ness. On Aug. 23, 1947,. she was married to Fred testified Thursday at the trial of
Mankin in Pomeroy, who survives.
.
Anthony Harris in Tuscarawas
In_ addition to her,husband, she is survived by three sons and daugh- County Juvenile Court.
ters·tn·law, Larry and Sue Mankin of Salt Lake City, Robert and Hella
. Har~s has pleaded_ innocent to
Mankin of Greenwood, Ark., and Scott and Julie Mankin of Portland, ktlhng Devan Duntver, whose
Ore.; a son, Kevin Mapkin of Earlham, Iowa; a daughter and son-in-law, body was found about 100 yards
Anne and Steve McCrea of Ames; 10 grandchildren and one great-grand· from her home last June 28, a day
child; a brother and sister-in-law, Emil and Vernell Ness of Aberdeen, · after site disappeared..
S.p.; and a sister, Eunice Sjervin of Bristol, S.D.
The two youths lived in the
She was also preceded in death by four brothers.
same apartment complex in this
Services were held at 11 a.m. today, Friday, Jan. 29, 1999 in the Sharp city a1mut 70 miles south of CleveFuneral Home, Carroll, with the Pastor Mike Evans officiating. Burial · ·land.
was in the in Carroll Cemetery.
Defense attorneys want judge
Linda Kate to throw out $tatements
Harris made to police July 15 and
information
from a search -of the
I
boy's
home.
Charles E. Price, 73, Long Bottom, died Thursday, Jan. 28, 1999 in VetKate: who will also decide the
erans Memorial Hospital.
An-angements will b_e announced by the White Funer~l Home, Coolville. case, Will rule on those two points
before starting the trial..
More defense witnesses are
expected today.
Ofshe, who has testified at more
Lucy V. Patterson Rexroat, 80, Norwood, died Wedoesday, Jan. 27, 1999
than 125 trials and has repeatedly
in the East Galbreath Nursing home, Cincinnati.
criticized·
police int~rrogation
• She was born July 19, 1918 in Wilding, W.Va., and had workc;d as a fac·
methods,
went
through the Iran·
tory w~ rker for National Distillers, Cincinn&lt;~li.
script
of
an
88-minute
conversaShe is survived by a son, Philip L Rexroat of Riverside, Calif,; two
grandchildren; a sister, Ann Boso, and a brother, Delbert Patterson, both of
Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Philip R. Rexroat; and by
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
her parents. .
·
.
.
John Kasich on Thursday
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in the Vorhis Funeral Home, Norwood, · announced the hiring of two veterwith the Rev. Buster Hammons officiating. Burial will be in Arlington an GOP strategists to run his
Memorial Gardens, Mount Healthy. Friends may call an hour before services explora~ory presidential -campaign
at tbe funeral home.
teams m Iowa and New Hamp·
shire.
Karen Slifka, who has w&lt;irked
on several Iowa-state Senate camHarold E. Vanmeter, .83, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died on Friday, Jan- paigns, will serve as Kasich's Iowa
uary 29, 1999, at Pleasant Valley Hospital, following an extended illness. campaign director.
He was born on January 3, 1916 in West Columbia, W.Va., son of the
"There are few who know the
late Bill and Clara Mae Vanmeter.
state, the activists and ·tl)e politics
He was a coal miner for the Living Coal Co., and was a member of the of Iowa better than she does," said
Gospel Tabernacle Church in Point Pleasant.
Kasich, R·Ohio. "Karen understands
that the key to winning in
Surviving are his wife, Alma Tucker Osborne Vanmeier of Point Pleas·
Iowa
is
through grassroots organizant; three sons and daughters-in-law: Leland and Nellie Vanmeter; Larry
ing."
·
and Mary Vanmeter, .and Cecil "Lee" and Vicki Vanmeter, all of Letart,
Bruce Berke will be Kasich's top
W.Va.; a daughter, Vickie E. Fox, Vincent; a stepson, Dencil Osborne, and
his wife, Denies, of Henderson, W.Va.; a brother, Ray Vanmeter of Mason,
W.Va.; nine grandchildren, six great grandchildren and two step grand·
: children. ,
Funeral services will -be held at1:30 p.m. on Sunday, January 31, 1999
at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Rev. Herbert Buck and Rev.
Bert Flory officiating. .
'
'
·
Burial will follow in Graham Cemetery, Graham Station, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m . .

OREGON (AP) -A fire at an oil
burned about two hours
today before firefighters brought it
under control.
No one was injured.
· Flames shot into the air at the
British Petroleum plant in suburban
Toledo.
The· fire started at about 5 a.m. ·
when a substance used . to produce
asphalt leaked out of a holding tank,
company spokesman Dan Waterfield
said.
,
The fire did little damage to the
plant.
A message seeking further details
was left at the plant today.
refiner~

•:•

Meigs Band Boosters

Harold V~nmeter

Le~tl')a

·:'

The Meigs County Health Department will offer an immunization eli~- •
ic 1\tesday, 4-7 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Center in Pomeroy. Chil·
dren must be accompanied by a parent or guardian with a copy of tilt •
child's immunization recol'd. For more information call the helllth depart- l
ment at 992-6626.
•'

s Mankin

ElY Ohio Attorney G.t neral Betty D. Montgomery

siinilar purposes is OK as long as you don't authorize a charge on your
Credit cal'ds used .for identification purposes can turn out to be a
~y mistake. Con artists with access to your credit card number and expiration date may make unauthorized charges against your card; however,
using a credit card to place catalog ol'ders, make hotel reservations, or make
other types of purchases from familiar, established businesses is fine. In fact,
c~it card charge back procedures can even help protect you if you have tlif·
fiCulty receiving the product or service.
• MYill: You have a better chance of wi.nning a publisher sweepstakes
wlten you purchase magazines.
.
-FACf: It is illegal for sweepstakes promotions to require any type of purchase or payment. Entrants who do not purchase magazines must be given
the same chance of winning publisher sweepstakes as those who do make
purchases.
·
; MYill: People cannot take money directly from your bank accounts
without your written authorization.
: FAC1) Merely giving someone your checking account number may
rdult in their making withdrawals from your account. People can sometimes
issue a "demand draft" to your bank claiming you authorized the withdrawal, and the bank rna~ pay it even though it lacks your signature. You may not
know this has happened until you receive your next' statement.
·
: MYTH: Your credit report is private unless you authorize someone to
reYiew it. "
·
: FACT: Potential employers, landlords, insurers, and others may also look
at:your credit report and many actually do; however, recent changes to the
Fair Credit Reporting Act now require potential employers to disclose in
wri!ing that a consumer report may be obtained for employment purposes.
·Also, the consumer must authorize in writing the procurement of the report
by the employ~r. ,
MYill: Advertisements you see or hear il;\ radio, television, newspapers,
and magazines are accurate or they would n\'!1-be in the reputable media.
FACT: Neither the government nor the media checks the accuracy of ads
·before they run. Consumers should not believe everything they see or hear,
especially ads claiming huge price discounts or wholes.ale prices.
· Remember, knowing your rights is the best way to protect yourself from
consumer fraud when making business tran-sactions. For further information
or to file a consumer complaint, please write to Attorney General Betty D:
Montgomery, Consumer Protection Section, 30 E. Broad St., 25th Floor,
Columbus, Ohio 43215-3428; call the toll-free Consumer Protection Hotline, 1-800-282-0515; or fill out a consumer complaint form on our.web site,
at www.ag.state.oh.us.

Announcements: .

Letha Whittington Cotterill

•

T.su6ftsfiet! 111 1948

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Death Notices

.

•

The Daily Sentinel
•'

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pizza
740..t)9Z-61:li

.,,.

·'·
....

�"

Sportg

The Daily Sentinel

.'

Friday, January~. 1~

Brannon gets 1,OOOth career point; Easter+. takes flr~t place

E~gles

.

roll over· Wellston 62-29,

j

The Eastern Eagles rolled to yet Marietta are al so top choices.
another v1ctory by defeating the Brannon also has several top offers
Wellston Golden Rockets 62-29' to go to college in volleyball
Thursday night at Eastern High . Behind Brannon's 22 came Karr
School, where Eastern senior Jessica with 20 points, Julie Hayman 10,
Brannon ser a career scoring plateau Angi Wolfe 5, and Amber Baker
of I ,000 points.
'
four.
Brannon reached th~ coveted
R,achel Henneman had II for
mark in swring Eastern's 49th point Wellston.
m a 49 -18 th1rd quarter.
The game was a good game, until
The game was stopped to mark midway throughout the second perithe prestigious 'event in honoring the ad when Eastern opene~ up the 14-9
talented Eastern star. Brannon had first period score·to a 29-15 tally, the
JUst six pomts the first half, ~uttal - blasted Wellston in the third round
lied 10 in the third frame en route.to 20-5 for a 49-20 score.
a 22'-point night. She currently has a
Sophomore Amber Baker made.
16.5 point average.
some great passes to feed Brannon
. Another Eastern senior, Valerie and Karr inside, while Brannon also
Karr, can also break into the 1,000 dio a great job finding tl[e open teampoint club later this season, making mate. Senior Juli Hayman also had a
Eastern one of the few teams in Ohio great defensive game and another
with . two I ,000-point performers good floor game.
Brannon was a starter as a freshman,
EHS shot 26-67 overall w1th 26while Karr spent much of the fresh- 64' two-pointers, and 0-3 on threeman year on the championship pointers, while hitting 10-25 on the
reserve team.
(}
line with 39 rebounds led by Karr 15,
Currently, Brannon IS leanin g Brannon 10, Hayman 8, and Wolfe 8.
toward going to Muskingum Eastern had II assiSts (Brannon 3,
College . however, Shawnee, and Wolfe 3, Baker 3); 14 steals

THERE IT GOES!- Meigs front-liner Jennifer Shrlmplln (40) puts
up the shot as Federal Hocking's Jamie Linscott (45) arrives a little
too late to stop it during Thursday night's TVC ~ame at Meigs High
School, where the Marauders won 64-44. (Sentinel photo by Dave
Harris)

DIVISIOn .

Marauders notch
64-44 win· over
Federal Hocking ·
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
· 'Meigs outscored Federal Hocking
39-19 in the middle two penods, and
went on to defeat the Lady Lancers
64-44 in girls' Tri-Valley Conference
basketball act10n Thursday evening
~~ Meigs High School.
~ The win ra1sed the Marauders '
record to 10-2 overall and 8-1 in the
Ohio D1vision . Feder&gt;l Hockin g,
wh1ch was coming off a big 55-2 1
win over Belpre on Wednesday
. e~eni ng , fell to 8-3 in overall,and 6,
13 in the Hocking D1vision.
The Lan cers took ~ 2-0 lead to
start the contest on a bucket by Susie
Bond. But the Marauders took a 7-4
lead with 4 35 left in the half when
Jenn1fer Shnmplin scored her sev enth point.
But th~ Lady Lancers battled back
and took a I0-91ead With one mmute
left in the period dna basket by Jenm
Bush. Brooke Williams hit one of
~wo from the line for Me1gs to tie the
same at 10 wnh 26 second s left
' Stx seconds later, Amher Vmmg
came \lp with a steal and a lay- m. and
the first period ended With the
Marauders on top 12- I0.
A bucket by Bond at the 7· 10
mark of the second penod li ed the
game at 12-all. The Marauders then
ran off nine poin ts in a row to take a
23- 12 lead
Sophomore Shannon Pn ce nailed
a long three pomte1 with I 30 Jell m
the half to put the Marauders up 3315 Jenni Bush scored to cut the
Meigs lead to 33-17. But the
Marauders made It a 16 pomt game
at the half when Tiffany Halfhill
scored in the pamt w1th I 06 left giv ing Meigs a 33-17 advantage.
In the third peri od, the Marauders
b4ilt onto their lead outscoring the
Lancers 16-11.. Me1 gs took a 51 -29
lead at the end of the penod on a
Price bucket off a Vmmg feed w.•th
I0 seconds left and put the game all
but out ol reach ·
Lancer sophomore forward Jamie

Linscott was injured m .a collisiOn
goi ng for a loose ball late in the
game. She fell to the floor striking
her head . She was transported to
O'Bieness Memonal Hospllal by the
Pomemy Emergency
Medi cal
Serv1ces for treatment.
Shrimplin led a trio of Marauders
in double figures with 15 points,
Vinmg added 14 and Shannon Pnce
10. The Marauders hit 25 of 55 from
the floor for 45 %, including two of
four from three point range. The
Marauders went to the line 20 times
and hit 12 for 60%.
The Ma•auders pulled down 30
rebo unds led by Shrimplin led the
way· with eight, DaviS and Williams
both had $ix . Meigs turned the ball
over 23 times, has 12 assists led by
Wlll1ams With fnur and had II stea ls
led by W1lhams w1th three. '
Soph omore twms Shelly and
Jenni Bush combined to score 26
points for Federal Hocking . Jenni led
the way with 16, wh ile Shell y added
10. No other Federal Hockmg statistics were availab le.
Mei gs won the reserve game by, a
40-32 score . Stephanie Wigal led the
way with 16. Amy Hy sell added 10.
Tracy Sidwell led the Lancers With
SC'Ye n .

Mei gs will host Belpre Saturday
afternoon in a make-up contest Tipoff for the reserve game

IS

1 p m.

Ouarter !l!tm
Federal Hock ing ...... 10-7- 12-1 5=44,
Meigs
.. 12-23-16- 13=64
Federal Hocking: Sus1e Bond 30-0=6, Shelly Bush 2-0-6=10, Jenn1
Bush 5- 1-3=16, Calah G1ldcrs 0-00=0, Terell a Waderker 2-0-0=4,
Jamie Lmscou 4-0-0=8 . Totals: 16·
1-9=44
Meigs: Amber Vmm g 7-0-0=111,
Brooke Wilhams 3-0- 1=7, Jcnmfer
Shnmplin 5-0-5= 15, Becky Smith 10-1 =3, Tmia Da vis 1-0-5=7,
Shannon Pn ce 2-2-0= I 0, Tiffany
Halfhill 1-0-0=2, Tracy Coffey 3-00=b . Totals: 23-2-12=64
'

Cleveland Indians' Vizquel continue
discussing renegotiated contract

Southern was led by a 20 point
effort from -Kim Sayre, who had
another double -double with II
rebounds. Kim !hie sparked a second
half dnve with 18 points, 16 in the
second half. Sarah Brauer had a.
career high 14 points, while Laraine
Lawson had three and Tammy Fryar
two points. Heather Dailey did not
score , but led the team wnh 13
rebounds desp1te Sitting out much of
the second quarter with three fouls.
Amanda Ashworth dtd a good job off
the bench .
Vinton County was led by
Belinda Hayes \vith 13 points, Juli
Orlowski with ten,. Elizabeth Sowers
ten , Jod1 Jenkins seven, KrJSiy Hayes
six, and Melanie Jones four.

Kafeinikov
to face Enqvist
in .Australian
Open final
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)
- Wielding a nashier serve and
snappy returns, Yevgeny Kafelnikov
i~ hoping for a repeat of the last time
he reached a Grand Slam tournament
fmal.
.
That was in 1996 at the French
Open where Kafelnikov downed
Germany 's M1chael Stich -to capture
the IItle
Today 's b-3, 6-4, 7-5 v1ctory over
another German , Tommy Haas ,
sends Kafelnikov into the title match
of the year's first Grand Slam tOurnament where he will face Sweden's
Thomas EnqvJSt.
Enqvist reached his first Grand
Slam final with a 6-3, 7-5, 6- 1 victory over Ec uador 's Nicolas Lapentti
in a semifinal on Thursday. Along
the way, he has beaten U.S . Open
champion Patnck Rafter and runnerup Mark Philippoussis.
The I Oth-seeded Kafelnikov, the
only seed' to reach the men 's quarterfinals hefe, sa id.. he considered himself an underdog because of the form
Enqvist has shown m winning 14
consecutive matches this year.
Enqvi st also has won four of their six
meetings.
Still, Kafelnikov said , "Thomas
is known , I wouldn ~ l say for chok mg, but ... "
He cited Enqvist 's fourth-round
match against Philippoussis, when
the 21 st-ra n ~ed Swede was serving
for victory at 5-4 ·in the third set but
let Philippoussis back into the match,
finally winmng m five sets.
The fmal , he added , " is goi ng to
be a long one. I promise."

The bnn g it up," he told Th e P/ai11
CLEVELAND (AP) Cleveland Indians and shortstop Dealer.
01)1ar Vizquel are still talking about
his dem and for a renegotiated conTAX BOOKS ARE OPEN FOR THE 1999 TUlLER
tract, but there's no word on ~ny
TAXES, DEADLINE WILL BE FEBRUARY 10, 1999.
progress.
"I'm very optimtsllc that we 'll
AFTER THIS DATE A 'PENALTY WILL APPLY.
see Omar ready to play ball thi s season," John Hart, general manager of
the Indians, sa1d Thursday
All owners of house trallora having a status In
V1zquel said he 's underpa1d at $3
RESPONSIBILiTY
the State of Ohio and subject to the tax aa
million a year an d wants to renegoti - OF HOUSE TRAILER
provided above MUST register such trailer with
ate his contract. He said he might OWNERthe
County auditor on or pnor to t~e date tho
boycott the Feb 18 start of spting
tax
is
due and payable.
trainin g to press his co ntrac t
demands
The 31-year-old V1zq uel signed a TRANSFE~-- ~-opon the transferor ownership ofahouae
trailer tho certnlcato- as to such trailer shall
s•x-yenr, $18 mllhon contract after
expire,
and the original owner ahalllmmedlatety
the 1995 season. In Novembtr, the
remove such certlflcato from the traller.
lnHians sig ned Robtrto Alomar to a
four-year, $32' million contrac t
Every operator of a house trailer eourt or park
V1 zquel also sa id he m1 ght ask for ' OPERATOR OF A
of every owner or property used for such
HOUSE TRAILER
a trade , but Hart said he has no plans
purpose when there Is no oper~tor shall keep a
for such a move.
--o
COURTregister of all house trailers which make uae of
Hart would not say if the team has
the eourt, park, or property.
offered any concession to V1 zquel
and said the talks have been mformal.
Vizquel said he wasn' t mtercsted
in d1.scussmg the matter. " Don 't even

Tax Levy On House Trailers

'

HOWARD E. FUNK', MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

'

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(Brannon 5, Wolfe 4): and coJ1lmined · 0-1/2=5, Amber Baker 2-0-0=4, Angi
seven turnovers. ·
,
T,11ylor 0-0-1/3=1. Totals 26·0·
Easterp .had 14 fouls.
10/25=62
Wellston, who has Slf'l!ggled lateWeUston: Rachel Henneman 4-1 ly shot 20 percent from the field on 0/1=11, Candice Robinene 1-1-0=5 ,
13-65 shots overall and 3-16 'three- Dusty Cremeans 1-1-0=5, Rochelle
poi~ters
with
39
rebounds Tribby 2-0-0/2=4, Jesse King 2-0(Henneman 12, Crabtree 6). Wellston 0=4. Totals 10·2·013=29
had an 0-3 ·night at' \he line, 3 assist~.
four blocks, four steals, and 22 fouls.
All but two Eastern girls scored
in Bas tern's 47-24 win which was led
by Sarah. Clifford with II, and Juli
Bailey an Whitney Karr six each. 10
out of 13 Eastern players scored.
Wellston was led D. Frifby 8 a~d S.
GI!J'Y six. • .
.· ' '
' As a re It of MeigS,: 64-44 win
over ·. Fe&lt;)!ral Hocking, Eastern.
assumed first place m the Tri-Valley
Hocking Division,
Eastern goes to Southern Satutday
at noon.
Quarter l!!.!lliJ ·
Eastern .. .. .............. 14-15-20-13=62
Wellston ....................... 8•7-5-9=29
Eastern: JesSica Brannon 11 -00/2=22, Valerie Karr 8-0-4/9=20, Juli
JESSICA BRANNON
Hayman 3-0-4/8=10, Angi Wolfe 2,
'

:Fifth-ranked Cinci.n nati rallies to defeat ar.c hrival Xavier 87-77
ByJOEKAV
CINCINNATI (AP) - All week
long, Steve Logan wondered why
coach Bob Huggins and his
Cincinnati teammates were so
worked up during practjce.
As a freshman point guard, Logan
·knew httle' about this CincinnatiXavier rivalry coming up, a grudge
match that consumes the city each
win.te~. He learned fast and ended up
dectdmg the first one he played in.
. Logan's late three-pointer helped
;. the fifth-ranked Bearcats get beyond
' two years ·Of torment at the hands of
their crosstown rivals with an 87-77
• .-ictory Thursday night.
• When it was over, Logan knew
: .what all of the screaming was about.

Southern coach Alan Crisp said,
"This was another good te am effort
and a matter of one player p1ckmg us
up when another was down. The girls
played very unselfish and shot th.e
ball very well."
, A last second 28 foot bank shot
from K1m Sayre gave Southern a 13-,
I I lead at the endff the first quarter.
Sayre and Brauer made a great inside
outSide combination that saw Sayre
have II at the half and f3rauer eight.
Vinton County tied the score once
early in the second penod then 'fell to
a 29-21 def1cit at the half. In the third
pe,riod Southern's Sayre and Brauer
were shut down early. but junior ~tim
lhle picked up the slack with a barrage of short and long jumpers. lhle
had eight points in the third frame
and eig~t more in the fourth. Her
shooting twice stretched Southern's
lead to ten as Vinton County struggled to find momentum. The Vikings
are coached by former Meigs
Countian Doxie Walters, who starred
at Me1 gs H1 gh School.
Each 11me Southern made a run,

Walters countered with a time out
and · the Vikings cut back into the
SHS lead, until finally Southern's
foul shooting won out doing down
the stretch. Southern hit I0-12 free
throws in the last four minutes to ice
the game.
Southern was 21-52 overall, 3-9
on thFee-pomters, and 17-43 on twopointers with a 13-23 night at the
line. Southern had 32 . rebo unds
(Dailey 13, Sayre II); three steals:
10 assists (lhle 4. Sayre 4): nine
turnovers, and I0 fouls.
Vinton County was 21 -59 overall ,
5-17 on three-pointers and 16-42 on
two-pointers with a 3-10 night at the
line. VC had 37 rebounds (Hayes II ,
Jenkins 12): five steals, fo~r assists:
7turnov~rs . and 19 fouls.
Southern's freshman boys' team
(7-4) claimed a . dramatic 49-46
come-from-behind victory over
Vinton County in the preliminary
contest. Southern ' trailed by nine
points in the th,ird round, steadily .
came back to
the win. ,
Point
Nathan Martin led

~NCAA Division I

\

East

58

South
Belmonl 78. Tenncuee St. 15
DcPaul65. South Flond~:~5 8
Aa lnlernatl0n&lt;al17, New Or]eans ~S
Georgia St. 68. Jack.son v1Ue 54
~o rgtn Tech 66. Clemson 62
lou1stann Tech 82, Arkansn St 75
Maddie Tennessee 80, Tenn · Mnrun 78-0T
Morehea d 51 84. E !IIi nms 82
Murray St 78, Tennessee Tech 61
N Carolina S1 70. Wake Forest 59
Sa mford 70. Cent FlondD 58
South Alabama 71 , SW LOUISian&lt;a 6\
Steplltn F Austill 58, Ntcholl s St ~7
Stelsoo 83 , Campbell 67

l3400 V-6 Power

·
• Power Wlndowallocka
• AM/FM Cassette

119
•1 950*
I

• 3800 V-6 Power
• Power Windows
• Power Door Locka

Montana 4 Door Extended
-··
• Cruise ControVTIH
• 4 Wheel Anti·Lock Brakes
• Totally Loaded I

Brand New 1999
Buick LeSabre Custom
• AMIFM Cassette
· • Crulu Control
• Loaded!

Southwest

-~

Lnmar 85, SE Lou1stana 64
R1ce 84. Sou1hern Meth 79-0T
SW Texas 7~. Northwestern St. 72
Te~as -E I P~so 87,"8righam Young 72
Texas-San An1on1o IN. McNeese Sl 80
. W Kentucky 62 , Ark ·lildt Roc k 54

~

FarWest

•11,850*
~1,850*
• Air CondHionlng
•LS Package
• AMIFM Cassette

••

• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakes
• AlumlnumiWheela
• Nicely Equipped!

East
Alderson· Bro addll s 7J. W Va We sley11n 67
Buffnlo 63 . W M1chi,gan 58
Buffalo St 79 Hilbert l 4
Centennry 5/:J S1e~ens Tech 4/
f Conco rd ~7 . W V1rgima St 43
Dnmmt cnn NY 90 Fell cton 77
·• Emerson 56. Whee loc k 40
,. Fairmom S1. 66. Westliben y 65
•· F1ndla~ 'JO. Mercyh urst 55
Franklm &amp; Milrshall ~8 . Dt~' km so n 5 ~
George Wosh mgton 84. La Solie 58
Glen vtlle S1 7J W V•rgmtn Tech 6 1
Goucher 65 Genysbllrg 5J
Ml r Sl Elm~ 47
Massa,husc:ns 70. St D ona~ e n tu1 e 6J
Nyack 'i4 Bloo mfield ~2
Rhock l sl ~nd Coli 77, Salve Regtna ~.l
Spnngfield 68 W Co nnecticut 54
S1 J os~ ph ' ~ 66 l'ordham 37""
Wheaton. Mass 72. Bndgewater, Mass 66
Wheeling Jcstut 74. Sal e m -Tc1k~o 71-20T

South

• Air CondHionlng
• AMIFM Stereo ·
• ~· Wheel Anti·Lock Brakes

Brand New 1999 Chevy
5-Series LS Pickup

NCAA Division I
women's scores

•
• '
•
:
•
•

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Sunfire Coupe
• Dual Alrbaga·
• Rear Spoiler
• Wei! Equipped!

Far West
Do1se St 60, Lon g Beach St ~6
Bngham Young 84, TexaS-El Paso 4~
Ca hformo 74. Arizona St. 60
Colorado St 97 An Force J 2
Idaho 79, Pac1fic 74
Loyola Morymount66. San D•~! O 65
Mas1er"s 76, Pomt Loma 69
Montano Sl.-Bilhnas 78. Alaska-Fairtmnks 58
Nonh Tuu 66 New Mex1c0 St 62
P~tten 62, M1lls :50
Pepperdu~ 60. Sl. Mlll)' "s, Cal. 58
PonlandSt 64, Weber St 44
S U!ah 74. lnd -Pur. -lndpls 61
Snn D•ego St 89, San Jose St 51
SiiTIQn F"rase r 78 , Humbold1 St 60
St::anford 79. Arizona 64
UC lrvme 6::\, Cal Poly·SLO 55
UC Sama Barbara 102, Cal St .-Fullerton 60
UCLA 90, Washmgton 53
Uiah 61, New Mexko SO
Washington S1 6S. Southern Cal .58

Midwest

~

50*BrandNew1~

Southwest
Colorado 61 Oklnhon1n Sl. 58
Hardmg 75, Om s ll~n Brod)Crs 68
Henderson St. 8:5, Oumchha 78
McNeese St 75. Tex.u-San An1on1o 67
Nor1hwestern St 78, SW Te~a• 58
Oklah oma Bnpt.is• 71 , Ok!Moma Christian 66
S Nazarene 98, John Brown 76
SW Okla.homs 62, Oklahoma Scie nce ~4
S1ephen F Austin 58. Ntcholls St. 57
Sui RoJJ Sl 61 Mary Hardm-Bayl ~r 55
Te•lU Chnst•nn 80, Tulsa 68
Valpanuso 7J. Oakland. Ma ch 69
Way l&lt;tnd Bnpt1st 56 OkiDhomn City 54

Mount St Mary 's. Md 69, Oumnipiac 52
Robert Moms 76, St . Fraocis. NY 7~
St Bonaventure 68, La Salle 6\
St Peter's 82, Fa•rfield 75

Butler .54, Ill -Chicago 47
Ci ncinnati 87, Xav1er 77
Detro11 78, Wts·Mtlwauke&lt; 53
Illinois 61, M1chrgan 59
Loyola, Ill 75, Wnght St 68
Marque1te 65 , Tulane 59
Massachusetts 59, Dayton 57-0T
Mtaml, Ohio 8), Bowling Green 12
N Illan.ms 74. Buffalo 46
Ora l Roberls 76, Ch1cngo St 60
Saint lou1s 62, l ouisville .52
Valparano 72, 0 Dkland, Mt ch 69
W. Illinoi s 80. Misso uri-Kansas Cit~ 56
Wts ·Green Elay 71, Cleveland St 67

Alabama 71 . LSU 66
Ap~nt1ce 63, S Vtrgmta 5~
Auburn 71. MI SSi5Sipp162
Auburn·Montgomery :Ci2. Onfhn 50
Bel htrmine 90. lndiDnapolis 67
Bowtc St 65 St Paul s 49
~ Campbell 90, Flonda Atlanuc 70
Cen t Fl onda 70. Mercer 49
~· Clark Allama 92 Lane 46
~ Clemson 5~ . Maryland 4.5
• Hampton 79, Norfo lk St 55
• John son C Smah 71. Be nediCt 54
• Kentucky 80. Flonda 70
Larnbuth 89, Union , Ky. 74
. Libc:ny 58. East S1roudsburg 41
. Undsey W1bon 78, Campbells\'llle 69
• Longwood 70. V1 rg m1a Union 67
Loo1stana College 80, Belhaven 74
Loyola, NO 47, D1llard 40 '
~ lyon 7\, Tre\'ecca Naz.nre ne 5~
' Mtddle Tennessee 88, Tenn - M ~tlln 71
· Mile s 49. Pame .W
Milligan 82 Ahc,t Lloyd 67
~t utssippi College 62. Dallus 51
• MIUISStppt S1 81 , Arkansas 60
Mob1le 82. Willi11m Carey 81
' Morehead St. 76 1 E. IllinOIS 69
Mou nt St Mary's, Md 65 Md · Bnlumore
C&amp;u my 55
~ N Cnrolin11 S1 9l Georgln Tech 7~
• N Kemucky 71: Kentu cky Wu leytm ~7
r' .Newberry 70, Umestone 60
•• North Cnrohllil 117 Flortdn Sl 76
~ Queens , N.C. 68, Con,·erse ~4
: Roanoke 72. Gull (ord _,4
.. Shenandoah 60 Ferrunl 5J
;. Tennessee 95. Georgia 79
., Tennts§l'e Tech 76 Mnrrny S1 68
1 ,
.. J-uskegee 74. Moms Drown ~4
\
"...Un1.0n. Tenn..1.5•.Lee 6'-c~c:-~
' .Vnnderb•lt 7R, Sonth Caroltnn63
~ 'Virgima 81. Wake F01est ~0 .._
, Wash•n!ton &amp; 1..et 82. Ly nc~mu rt. ~4
~ )ca vter . NOS~ SpMt. Hall 48

85, M1dway 48

Wis -Green Bay 78. Loyola: Ill 55
Wts.- MIIwaukee 51, 111 -ChitiJO 48

Ce nt Connecttcut S1. 75, St Franca, Pa 61
GeOrge Washington 109, Duques ne .57
lonn 81. Rider 76
long lslnnd U 75, Monmouth . N J.. s9
Md.-Bahimore Coumy 62. Fairleigh Dickinson

.._" Anzonn 78, StMford 76
.,... Anzonll St. 69. Cahfornia 66
" , Boue St 61 long Deoch St ~ 1
• .. c;s Nonhridge 79, Idaho St. 15,
Cal Po1y-SLO 7l UC irv1ne 71
....., Colontdo St. 9~ . Air Force 76
~, ' Fresno St. 101, San Olego St. 80
.... ' Gonzagn 70, Santa Clara S2
,.. lnd -Pur -lrxipb 72, S Utah 66
New Memo St 75, NeYado6J
... • Pacific 60. Idaho 59
Pe nland 65. San Francisco 51
San Jose St 70. HawDil 55
UC S:u11a B3rbora 7J. Cal St ·Fullenon 54
UClA 69. Washmgton St 66
UNLV 96. Wyommg 7S
U1ah S1 91, North Te~as 6 1
Wosh•nJtdn 85. Sou1hem Cal 83
Weber St 92, Pmtlmxl St 82

1

Wtlbt:rforc~

. :men's scores

,..•
_,

.
·
820'

nated in an 88·68 win that stands as time and time again - the Bearcats
Cincinnati's third-worst defeat in had 20 offensive rebounds, setting up
Huggins ' 10 seasons.
24 points - while Xavi ~ r relied on
A prominent sign in the student · its guard duo of Gary Lumpkin (25
section said what was on the minds points) and Lenny Brown (21
of the 13,176 fans at the Bearcats ' points).
home coun- "Payback is a .. ."
"That 's what a great ballgame
But instead of letting the is ," said Cincinnati's Kenyon
Shoemaker Center rock m celebra- Martm, who blocked s1 x shots,
tion, Xavier ( 15-S) flooded it with a scored eight points and had eight'
sense of foreboding . The Musketeers · rebounds. "There was no one domi·
led for most of the first half and then nant team ou t there. Both teams
overcame an 11-po!nt deficit in the played hard and whatever happens,
second half to go up 47-44 with happen s."
14:131eft.
What happened ? After hilling
, lbe tension grew over the next II only two of 1ts first II three-pOint
minuk!s, .whtch featured five lles ·and attempts, Cincmnall h1t 1ts final two
seven more lead changes. Cincinnati -one by Logan, another by Melvin
turned to its front-line advantage Levett, who scored 23 points.

Oral Robens 86. Chicago St 52
SW M1ssour1 St 71, Crr:tghton 56
Southwestern , Kan 67, Mc Pherson 52
St. Josrph's , lnd 81 , Quincy 69
W. llhno1s 12, M1ssoun-Kansas Cny 68

Bas ketball

•

Southern with 17 points and six
assists, while Matt Ash had .11 points
and 1'1 rebounds. J P. Harmon had 10
points and 10 rebounds, Brice Hill
added five (four steals); and Dallas
Hill had six points and four assists.
Joe Cornell and Macy Rccs did not
score, but played error free ball with
Cornell gainmg 7 rebounds.
Vinton County (8-3) was led by
Dean Dunlap and Sean McManus .
with 14 each.
Southern hosts Eastern Saturday
at noon.
Quarter l2lllb
Vinton County ........ 11-1 0-15-14=50
Southem .... :............ l3-26-14-15=58
, '{into~ County: Krjsty Hay es 30-0=6, Elizabeth Sowers 3-1-1/2=10,
Melanie Jones 1-0-2/4=4, Jod1
Jenkins 2- 1-0/4=7, Belinda Hayes~ ­
l -0=I3, Juh Orlowski 2-2-0=10.
Totals: 16·5·3·10=50
Southern: · Kim Sayre 2-3718=20, Kim lhle 8-0-2/4=18, Sarah
Brauer 6-0-2/7=14, L.araine Lawson
1-0-0=2, Tammy Fryar 1-0-0.=2.
Totals: 18·3-13/13=58

"On Monday, the toughest week
of my life started," said Logan,' who
scored 17 points. "Coach Huggs and
(teammates) were yelling ·at me in
practice that we nec4ed thi6 game. ,
·:11 was more Intense than they
told me. I couldn't understand why
when we· came into the locker room
before the game, everyone was so
quiet. I didn't know how much this
game meant to Cincinnati - until
tonight. "
'
It was a game befitting its history.
Cincinnati (19-1) desperately
wanted to beat the team that had
come onto 1ts home court two years.
ago and robbed the Bearcats of their
No. I ranking with a 71 -69 upset.
Last year, Xav1ei 's guards domi-

Logan 's
three-pointer
put
Cincinnati ahead 76-72 with three
m1nute s left, and Levett's shot built
the lead to seven wiJh I:16 left.
Xavier got it down to a four-point
game, but the Bearcats hit their free
throws to pull away again.
It came down to Xavier's zone
defense leavmg Logan open when
the game was on the line.
" We didn ' t pay attentwn and g1ve
him credit, he hit the three. That was
a big shot, " Xavier coach Skip
Prosser said.
It was no cons11la11on for Xavier
that 1t had played the No. 5 team m
the nati on to a draw on tis home
court for 35 minutes. The
Musketeers had fixed their early sea-

son problems and climbed back to
the verge of the Top 25 by winning
theJT last I0 games.

Del Negro signs
with Milwaukee Buck$
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Vinny
Del Negro agreed in pnnciple to :a·
contract with the Milwaukee Bucts
after six seasons With the San
Antomo Spurs.
Del Neg ro, a shooting guard,
averaged 9.5 points and 3.4 assists in
54 games last season. In hJS eightyear NBA career, Del Negro h ~
averaged 10.4 points and 3.4 assist~.

Scoreboard

Southern defeats Vinton County·58-50
The Southern Tornadoes put
together a 16-point fourth quarter to
defeat the Vinton County Lady
V1kings 58-50 Thursday ni ght at
Southern High School. Southern is
now 4-11 overall and 3-8 in the TriVallcy
Conference
Hocking

I

_:Friday, January 28, 1188

Page ·4

'

Lady

•

0 hio H.S. girls' scores
Akron E 49, Akron N Jl
Akron Ellet 68. Akron Kenmoll! 40
Akro n Firtstooe ~B . Akron Cent -Hewer 4S
Ab on Garfield 50, Ak.roo Buchlel 45
Akron Manchester 68. Tuscarawas Val. ~4
Abander 81 , Hem loc k Mtller 32
Allen E 60, Spencerville ~7
Amnndm·Ck:nrcreek 70, Teays Val. 52
Anna 5], Hou s1on 42
Ansoma 56. M1 ssiss1nawa Vnl . 39
Anthony Wayne 51 , Bowling Gr«n 4l
Arcadia 48, Cary-Rawso n 26
Arcanum 54, FrnnkltD-Monroe 40
Arlington 60, MComb 52
Ashl•nd Creslview 54, New london 36
Ashtabult:J Sis. John&amp;. Paul 32. Mentor Chr. 20
Athen5 81, Pom1 (W Vo.) Pleasant 42
• Barnesville 67, Caldwell 52
Denve r Eastern 6l Glenwood '9
Beaver Local 44, Buckeye locn l 37
Bell aire 58. Steubenvt lle 5J
•·
Bellaue St John79, Toromo 5~
Bellevue ~6, Norwalk 19
Belpre H Tnmble 4~
BenJamin Lo ~ a n 66, Stndey L.ehm&lt;an 'i7
Berhn H1iltnd 69 Dover S I
Berne Unon :'iO New Albnny ~5
Bethel 56. Bradford JJ
Bu ley 78. L1cking Val 54
Rloom Carroll :5.1, Logrm Elm W
Bluff1on 92 CotwQy Cren vtew 44
Botkms 70. Russin 58
Bropkfield 49 Hu bb11rd 47
Brobklyn 36. Luther~n W :I I
Brookvil le 68. Duue \5
Buckeye TraJ I 51, John (W Ya) Marsha ll 48
Cad11 62 Cono non Val 60
Cil nton lim ken ~ I . Akro n Elm s 41
Cardington 6J Buckeye Val ~0
Cnrey 64. New Re igel ~ '
Carltsk 41 . Norlh ndge J4
Cemerb urg 71. Johnstown 42
Chesapeake 53 Fairland 45
Cm Amelia ~l, On Tu rpin 49·0]
Cm Coleman 55. FairfL~Id 29
Cm Glen Es1e 6~ Cm Anderson 4\
Cm Hamso n S6. Cm Mounl HeDithy 2'i
Cm HillS Chr Acnd 63, Cm Cou ntry D::~y ..J8
O n Hushes 7-l Ctn Woodward 24
Cm lndmn H11l 64. Cm MDnemont .\6
Cm Lnndnlnrk "' ~ · Cm fol Co llege Hill J4
Cm M e 11: ~ 51 Ctn Seto n 44
Cm Mount 'Neue Dame 84. Cm Purce ll M•man

2l

Cm Oak Hills 52 Cm Western H1lh 21
Cm Prmce ton SS L1ma Sr n
Clll Roger Bacon~~ Can McNicholas 41
Ctn Summit Counny Day 45. Cin Locklund 2~
C1n Tol}-lor 58 Cl n Reading 40
Cm Unulme 49, Cm. McAuley 41
Cm Wnlnut H11ls 46, Cm Taf1 ~8
Ctn Wtthrow 79 Ct n Atken rt
Cm Wyomin g 66. Cin Deer Park J6
Cie LMrel49 Cle Andrews 3'
Coldwater 63_. Fon Reco'(ery 57
Colonel Crawford 65 Galion 44
Columbus Grove 61, Poud hng \l
Crestli ne 66, Riverdale 35
Cuyah o!n Ht ~ ~2 . Clc Gilmour 43
Danv1lle .54, E. Knoll 47
Da~ Carro11 49. Da~ StebbinS 1.\
Day. Cham tnade ·Juh enne 4"8 , Day Colonel
Whne 29
.
IJay Chnstmn BO, DtL Y. J ~ ffeno n 20

Defiance: 49, Wapakoneta 30
TMiaw 7H E Canron 56
Phtladelph1a
. 25 10 11 61 142 91
D~klwarc Chr. 4l Ubeny Chr 24
Twm ValleyS 59, National Tr:ul 46
New Jersey .
• 27 14 5 59 135 111
Delphos Jefferson 53. Upper Sc•oto Val 14
Urbana 56. Bell efonlame \8
Pittsbu rgh
21 IS 7 ' "9 l 31 11 8
Delphos St. John 1 57, New Bremen 52
Valley V1ew 69. M1ddle1own Mndtson \ 4
N Y Ran ~ers
18 22 1 43 lB .J2R
Dtltn 55 , Swanton 47
,
Van Buren 64. Leipsu:: 4J
N Y lsl,mders ...
l:'i 29 1 :u 110 111
E Clinl on 6' Cedarvtlle :18
-...· .;.,.Yersmlles H Spnng Cath olic :\ I
E Liverpool 51. R1chmohd Edi1on 42
Villngt' Ac::ld 42 Tornh Acad 16
Norfht&gt;ast Division
Ea~1wood 75 Millbury Lake ~8
V1 n~em Warren 63 , Logan 37 1
Toronto
..... 27 11 1 ~1 I ~2 119
Edgerlon 53, Anlwerp 40
W Holmes 62, loudonville 55
Ounwo
25 15
56 134 105
· El yna F1m Ba.p1 ~9. Elyr1a Open Door 28
W ktferson 49 Col School lor G1rh \8
Bu lf&lt;~ lo
21 14 8 54 112 91
F.:nrbank! ~ W Libert y Salem 2"i
W Salem Nonhl"estc=rn ~2. Norwaync= 26
Boston
~ ' 2018 1 47 117 10.'
Fa1rfield Unt on 51, Can11l Wmches1er J 1
Molllreal
Warren Hn rdm ~ 57. You Mooney .\8
' . 18 22 8 44 109 12.'
Fa1n&lt;1ew S ~. 11nora 40
Watertord 48 Nelson ville-York 44
Fehwy 62, Georgetown 5::\
Wa\·erly 76. Mmford 46
Sout heast Dh-ision
Findlay 66. Tol Whitmer W
Carolina
Wayne 67. Frurtnont 4:'i
22 18 1 ll 124 11 7
Fort Frye 70. Monroe-Cemral 28
Waynesv1lk 70 Grttn.e v•ew 47
rt oru\1
18 16 12
iiY
Fredenck1own 4J Mansfield S1 Peter s W
Wei non (W Va) Madonna 68, lhidgepoo S~
. Washmg10n
16 24 4 36 10 1 11 7
Fremont Ro ss 51 . Sat;~dusky J'i
l l ll
Tampa Bor
26 95 il8
WeSiern Brown 55 Belhe~Tate 50
Gall Jpoh s ~7. Jackson- ~4
Westlnll 58 Adena S I
Garnw::ay ~0. Strasburg 12
Wheele1 sb urg 51 Portsmoo W J8
WESTERN CONFERENCE
G1bsonburg 56. Otsego 35
Whneonk 79 Western Lnthn 1 ' \
Ctntral Oiv1sion
Grandview 4:t Madison Plmns 29
Wood more 5\, Nonhwood 27
\\' .. ·-· ·-· ........... - ........ L TPts GF GA
Gretnon 47. Sprmg Northeastern 40
Detroit
. 24 20 3 l l 139 121
Greenup (Ky) Cou nty 47 .Fmnklm Fu rnace
St Lour s ...
18 17 9 4l 118 11 0
Green 45
Nash, ille
17 26
JB 109 149
Hamilton 54 Lakota E U
14 25 8 ~6 107 147
Chtcago
Ham1hon Badm 46, Cm St Ursula 44
Henth 6~. Li cking His. 44
Northllnt Dhi~lon
Hicksville 6 1 Wa yne Trace ~ I
Colorado
..... 24 19 4 l2 i24 11 8
H1llsboro 81 Clermont Nonbeustern 16
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Edmont on
liD O 7 4::\ !29 120
H1 lllop 51 Stryker 40
Allanite Division ·
Vm1couve1 ,
15 25 6 ~ 11 7 1.\9
Holland Spr1n g. 44, Rouford 4:1
15 27 5 'l 11 8 14~
Jtwn'
.11: I. I fiL !if liA {'algury ....... ,
Indian Creek 57, Uni on Loca l 54
lndum Lake 41 , Ridgemo"\:4-1
Jackson Center 57, Fen loramie 4.~
Kansns Lllkotn SI . Genoa ~6
Kenton Ridge 90 Tecu mseh 52
Kings Mills Kmgs 64 Loveland 60
Lake R1dge 49, Hud5 on Western Reserve Acad

'

-·- '

Hockey

Grand Opening
Loan Special
POMEROY FOODLAND

-.SuperBank -

7.99%
992-2357 700W.l\fain Street
'•

6\
56
43
42

I \0

Thursday's s&lt;.:ores

Tonight's games
Lo; Angclt.'S at Wasl11ngtou. 7 I'm
Dal las 01 Tampa Bay, 7 O:'i p m
Phoem • at N Y l s la n d ~ r s 7 10 p m

Saturday's games
Nashvtlle a1 New Jersey. 1 p m
Bos1on nt P1 11sburgh. I ::\0 p rn
Carolina m Momreal 2 p m
Washmg.ton at Toront o. 7 p m
N Y Islanders nt OUawa 7 ~ Til
Los Angeles a1 Buffalo, 7 JO p m.
T:-ampa Bay at Phaladelphm 7 \0 p m
Dall,ts at Flonda, 7 :10 p m

TODAY.
~
!-

•t

116 9l
118 118
I 0-l i09
\6 lOR ll4

New Jersey 2 13o~ao n 0
Nash\1 llc 4 Buffalo 2
Carolma J. N Y Rangers 2-0T
Ph !l.tdelphw -1 Phoen1x 2
Piu sburJ!II 6 To10mo 0
Ch1cago 6 Calgar~ 6-ue
Colorado 0 Anaheim 2
St lo w ~ 4 Vanco u\er 2

Come to
Taylor Motor's and Test Drive
the most popular sport utility
v~hi~s and place your order

.

1

24 12 8
. 17 21 9
15 19 12
1626 4

Lakeland 42. Jewett -Scio 24
lakev1ew 58, Newton Fans 3 I
Lakewood 48, Utica ~8
Leban on 61 , Goshen 43
Lextngton ~4 . Ontano 29
L1beny B.emoo 79, Vonlt~e 29
liberty Center 62, Evergreen 49
ltbeny Umon 58, Granville~~
Lima Oath 6.5, Vsn Wert n
L1ma Shawnee 56, Elido. 44
Lincolnvtew 76. Ada 38
U ~ bon 53, Leetoma 4S
Unle Miami 75. Wilmington ~2
Lucasville Val 61 , McDennott NW 49
Mansfield Madison 44, Marion Harding 25
Mansfield Sr 60, Ashland 42
Manella 70. Chesh1re R1ver Val. 49
Man on Elgm 44, Gt~llon Northmor 32
Mart on Pl easant 73, Mario'n Rt\•er Vnl 5-I
Mason 96, Norwood 24
Massillon Jackson 45, Canton McKinley 44
M(llhews62, Jackson· Milton 48
Medtna Buckeye 55, Clear Fork 42
Me•gs 64, Federnl Hocking 44
Millml E 12 , Graham 2S
Middle1own Chr. 49, Xenia Ctu-. 21
Mtddletown Fenw1ck S7, Edgewood ~
Milford 69, l&amp;kota W JO
Miller City 61 Continemal 43
Mmster 64, New Knon1lle 51
Mohawk 82, Fostona St Wendehn 56
Montpelier 58 Bryan 26
N Adams 59, Rtpley 43
N Camon Hoo\'er 64 . Um omown L1ke 42
N Unton 62, Mount Gilead J7
New Ptull:\dclphia 4S, Claymmll ~5
Norwalk St Paul5.5. Co lllhs Western Reserve 48
O:ak Hlll64 S WebMer 41
Oakwood 47, Bellbrook 40
OhKl Val Chr 56. Tenys Val Chr ~:'i
Old Fort SO. Bettsville 16
Ouawa H11l s 40. Cnrdmal S1rnch J7
On:twa·G I:andorf 66, Kenton 2~
Ollfonl Talo.wanda 49, Cm. Lemon-Momoe 37,'
PDndora-G1lboa 74. Hard m Nort hern )4
Patnck Henry ~9 Archbold 57
Peebles 70. Fayenev1 lle 31
Perry sburg 41, Slyvanta Northv1ew :II
Pem sv!lle 49 Fayelle I \
Prckenngton 59. Gahanna 14
Piketon 54 Unioto J4
Portsmouth 51 Ironton 45
Portsmouth Cl ay 52, Symme s Val. 48
Ponsmollth E 65. Portsmouth NO(rc Dnmc 4R
Rllclfll: Southern 58 V10ton Co 50
Rudsvtlle EaSiern 62. Wellston 19
Re gtnl\ 86 Orange Chr 9
Ru:hmond Dale SE 42 , Pamt Val .~ 8
Ridgedale 55. Sparta High land 46
Rtd gewood 54 Tuscarawas Ca th 47
RivefSide 6 1 Wnynesfield-Oos ebn 43
Rod: Htll 57. S Pmnl44
S Chad eston Soulheruilern 85. Blan&lt;.'heste1 19
S Range 47. Berlin Ce mer Western Reserve :12
Sandu~ky Perkin5 54 Pori Cli nton 34
Sandy Val 6 1, Fanless 4~
Shtldys•dc 'iS Btshop (W Vn } Donahue 49
Shaker Hts Independence 51 , Columb ta 41
Shenandoah 76. Beallsvalle ~6
Spnng Locnl 57, M1nern.l Ridge 40
Sprmg Northwestern 69, Sprmg Shilwnee 57
Sprmgboro 49 Franklin 41
Sl Clo.usvtlle 59, Steuberwtllt Cath 42
S1 Henry 40. Marion Local .~6 - 0T
St Marys 61 , Celina 'i6
Sylvan111 Southview 4.5, Ma11rnee 4J
Talnwandn 49, U:mnn-Monroe 37
1iflin Calve r1 57, Fremon1 St. Joseph 51
~lppecafioe 55. Milton-Un1on S~-OT
lol Chnst1an 76 Tel Emman uel Bapl 4l
Tn -Coum y N. 55. NewtQn J4
Tn·Vrllage 62, Cov1ng1on 5'\
Tnad 6.\, Mechanicsburg 42
Tnwny 65, Blnck Rt ver :W

Midwest

Blackburn 67. Pnnc1pa 26
: ~tier 78. Cle\·eland St. 65
troh 74. Wr1ght St ~2
. •ddnso n S1 81. Mtn n -Crookston ~7
Drake 7J Wiclm~ Sr :'i8 •
f~ITI ! St M Notlhwood. M1 ~ h ~7
Grand V:illey S1 . 98 Sat.tnBW Vnllry Sl ,78
fnd1 nnn St 48 S ll hno1s ..J.4
J.qwn St 79 Nebrrlllkn 58
Lamar 6 1, SE Lou man.• 56
a.-tnt Murray 91 Weslnli!ISier. Mo 89-0T
~ 11r y 80, Mayvtlle St 6H
McKendree 77. Hnrrh -Swwe 52
N. lown 7!! Brndlcy 61
N, Mt ch1gan 70. Lake Supenor St 1'11
tlhlo Valley 59. Ohi o Oo mi m ~·n n 5.\
Ohio Weslyn 72 John CDITOII ~5

28 9

~-~

,_
'·

'

NHL standings

., "'

Pacinc Dh\slon
Dallas
Phoem•
Anaheim .
San JO!ie
Los Angc l ~s

�:

•

.....,
.'

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

..

'

Friday, January 29, 1999

•

·.

By Th~ ,J;Jend

•

...

.

lt;._.,t

Se~e~

The Daily

Page 1 :.

.
'Friday, January 29, 1ggg;;

.

\

•
Worship . 10a,m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCes. 7 p'.m.

Apostolic

..

VanZindt and Ward Rd.

Pastor: James Miner
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Evening • 7:30 p.m.

Assembly of God
Uberty Alaernbly or God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
· Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

.
.·•
••

PllStor: Us Hayman
Sun~y Service ~ 7:00p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

'

''
..•

..
•

Flnt Baptist Chorch
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

'•

Radne Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Warship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- ?.:00 p.m.

J

••
•

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church or Christ
Corner "Of St. Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Slwmblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School- 9:30 a"".m.
Worship . 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servica · 7:00p.m.

•

Slinr Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School· 10a.m.
Worship • l la.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Se{Vices- 6:30p.m.

Laaii'Uie Chriltlaa Church
Suaday School - 9:30 a.nt.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia: 7:30 p.m.•

Ml Union Baptlot
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schoo1~9: 45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

..
~

Hemlock Grove Church
Poster: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a~ m .
WorshiP · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Betblebem Bapelst Church
Great Bend, Roule 124, Racine, OH
Pa.. tor : Gene Morris
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 6:00 p.m.

~

••'
y

&gt;

•

Old Beollll Frte Will Baptill Church
28601 Sl. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30
Hlllaldo BapCIJt Charcb
St. Rt. 143 just off RL 7
Pastor: R~v. lames R. ACree, ~1\
SUnHiy School- to·a.m. " .• ...~
Worsb1p • lla.rn .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·i p.m.

..

•

Victory Baptlsllodependaot
S25 N. 2nd Sl. Middleport
~astor: Jam~s E. Keesee
Worship · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

.• .•
•. .
•
••
•

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne5day Servicts • 7 p.m.
Forat Run &amp;.ptl1t
Pastor: Arius Hurt'
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

,

••
"
•

i

,.
~

..

ML Morlrlh Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Ull
Sunday School - 9:45 l .m.
Evebing • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services"- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30 a:m ~
Worship ·11 a.m.,·6:30 p.m.

S.ered Heart Catholic Church
1~1 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-.5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
· ~.at. Con. 4:45-S : IS~. m . ; ~ass-3 :30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass- 9:30.a.m.
Dailey Mus - 8:30 a.m.

Pomeroy Churcll or Christ
212 W. Main St.
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School- 9:.30 a.m.
Worshfp- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m .

: Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
,.. . 33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.

Middleport Church or !be N.._e
Putor: Oreaory A Cundiff
Sunday S&lt;bool • 9:30a.m .
Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SOrvioes- 7 p.m.

Joppro
.
Putor: Bob Randolph
· Worship· 9:30 a·'!!·
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

- l l l e F.U......Ip .
Cburck oltbe NUII!'ftlt
Pastor: Teresa .Waldeck
~unday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Loot Bottom
. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wolllhlp -10:30 a.m.
Reednllle
Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Sdlool·10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month· 7:30p.m. &amp;eN ice

Syracute Church ortbe N......,.
Pas1or, Robert J. Coen
'WDGS Radio-10:30 a.m. daily 9 a.ni. Sunday
WJOS..TV 27-3:JOp.m. Sunday
4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday_Kids for Chrlst-1 p.m.

Tuppen l!lalat SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nuareu
PllStor: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,Jr.
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Ceatral Clatter

Atbury (Syra&lt;oue)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School · 9:43a .m.
Worship -1 1 a.m~
Wednesday Services · 7:3Q p.m.

www . f~gnet . net/-deane.ry

Chtttel' Cbun:h or lhe Nuarate
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Woflihip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Ente'1'rioe
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Holiness
Comm•nlty Church
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Streel, Rutland
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship-10:30 a.m.
Sunday &amp; Wednesday Service-? p.m.

R•Uaad Chun:b of the Naart~~~

Pastor: Rev. Sa~ucl W. Buye

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wo r~hip • 11 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 i .m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servit"Cs • 7 p.m.

Forest Rua
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m. ·
Thuroday Services-6:30p.m.

Danville Hollaea.Charcll .
31057 Stale Roule 325, L.anpvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young
.
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. II. 7 p.in.
Wedncaday prayer service- 7 p..m. ·

.

Nazarene

. Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wors~ip - 9 a'.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· '7 p.m .

Grace EpiiiCOprol Church
326 1!. Main Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Kaaharin f05ter
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Oetgy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schoolll:OO a.m.

~Ciourdl

CUftoa Tllberude Choin:h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday S&lt;bool- 10 a.m. ·
Worship • 7 p.m • .
Wednesday SOrvlce- 7 p.m.

Porllaad Flnt Charcb or tile N Pastor: Mark Mataon
Sunday S&lt;hool-10:30 a.m.
Momina Wonhip ·11:15 1.m.
Sutlday Service-· 6 P:·mWednesday Services • 7 p.m.

11ue1

co-•.,

OlfRt. 124

&gt;

Mlddlepori Peotecollll
Thin! Ave.
Pallor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- JO a.m.
· Evening • 6 p.m.
WC:dnesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Pre s byterian
Syncuae Flnt Uolled l'rnb7.lerlln
Pastor: Rev. Kriuna Robinson
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Cllurdl
lbrri~Hvlle

Putoo: Edaelllart

.,

-· $¥~1- 9:3Q.o.m. ••
~tp -1~ a.m.• 7:30p.m.

''

Yfttbyterlan CbiU'Cb
, WonlUp·9t.m • ....,·.,
§unday School- 9:45 a.m.

. Dy-llla Com•aal.ttCbiii'CII.
• - .- • . Su!lday S&lt;bool • ?':W a,m., .
. Woilhla - 10:30 o.m., ? .p.m.

·

..

Pentecostal

S7111C1Ue Mlulon
1411 BridJeman Sl., Syracuoe
Rev, Mike Thompson, Pastor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
EvenlnJ • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Mono .Chopol Cbur&lt;b
Sunday scbool-10 a.m.
Worship • llo.m .
~edneaday SOrvico , 7 p.m.

MARLEE
HOFFMAN &gt;., '
•
. TURNS.AVE· Marlee Jill Holtman was honored with a dinner
to celebrate her 5th blrth!IIY ori
J.an. 12 at the home of her par·
enta David and Kathie Holtman
of Middleport. A Barbie theme
was carried out.
. Attending were her sisters
Uin &amp;l)d Gracie; Grandparents
·Fred and ~Jaullne Hoffman and
Nick and Ruth Wright; Taml,
·Jon, Trevor, and Jordan Buck;
Mike and VIcki Hoffman; Bev
and · Nathan Rothgeb; Kim Duncan; Brenton Barnette; and
Nikki Roe.
Sending birthday wlahe!l and
gifts but unable to attend were
Mark, Brenda&gt; and Markle .
Wright; Todd Rothgeb; Mike,
Cindy, Mike, and Jimmy Smith;
Randy · Wright; Manning Roe; .
and David Duncan •

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Syracuse

992-3785

- 992·3987Davia-Quickel Agancy Inc. ,
Full tine of

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Master Service Technician
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

Bill

. 949-2804

Support your
. local
churches
Place an ad in this space
•

•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

214E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME

FUNERAL HOME
" We Accep• Prene1u~ Triuufen "

Dignity and Service Always

Established 1913

112·1200

992-2121

Dlrwctor

Reg•nBrown
174LayneStreet

985-3308

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVJCES

NEW HAVEN
Lundy Brown

St. Rt. 248, Cheater, Oh.

590 EM! Main Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-5444
Jametr R. Aetf/8, J1':7Dire&lt;:IOI

1~

Mulberry Ave.

Searching fOr a
local church?

\If

Foltb GGopel Cborch
. l.oni Bottom
SWlday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip • 10:4S a.m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wedacaday 7:JO p.m.
ML Olive CommiUIIIy Church
Putor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Bvenina -7 p.m. ·
Wedneday SOrvico · 7 p.m.
Ualled Fallh Olarch
Rt. 7 an Pomeroy By-Pass

Pulor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sundiy S&lt;bool· 9:30 Lm.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
FuU Golpel u p 33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

Check the Seniinel
every Friday/

Pomeroy

Putor: Roy Hunter

.

POMEROY - Friends of the
Library. Monday, 7 p.m. at lhe

manners? ~.

•

•

SYRACUSE - Sulton Town ship
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m .· ao
Syracuse village hall .

Dragon Internet
Full Unlimited Access
as-low as $12.50 per Mo.,

TUESDAY
P.OMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at
the lownship garage on Rocksprings
Il.oad.

$150 for 12 months
~Subtract line 6 from line 5 ~ Enter the smaller of

Web TV or ComputerS all at local call!
UNLIMITED Personal Access, Personal E-Mail AcCount
&amp; 10 meg of Personal Web Space! Regular rate is $16.95 per mo .

line 2 or line 7 ~ Subtract line 3 from line 8
~ Add the amounts from line

12 of all Forms 4684

Guaranteed No Busy Signals!
1-888-657-0977

.~ Enter 10% pf your adjusted gross income ~ Subtract line

*Pomeroy

{Form 1940), line 19

Hymn sing, 7 p.m. Sunday, Ash ·
Street freewill •Jiaplisl Church, Middleport, featutih~ Marvin and Deana
Clark family ofBeverly.

*Lebanon

*Wilmington
•sardinia
*Greenfield

Prevent Hair Loss.
618 East Mc:iin St

POMERQY. The Meigs Cooperative Parish fifth Sunday hymn ·
sing will. be ~ld· at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church Sunday, 7
p.m.

•Gallipolis
*Dayoon
"Hillsboro
•springfield
•Circleville

Eden United Br&lt;tbreo la Cbrill
2 1/2 miles north of ReedaviJie .
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Sunday Wor1h1p • 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30 P:m.
~ednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m.

"Nelsonville
*Middletown
•washington CH
•wesl Union
*Jamestown

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992·6674
9·6 M·F
9~5 Sat.

)

Frozen Food Manager
GENE SPURLOCK.

Fnedoa&gt; Golpel Mbaloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Putor: Re,, Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
While'• Clrapei.Wesleyon
CoolviOe Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 1.m.
Wedncsdty Sctvice . 7 p.m.

is retiring from
Vaughans
Supermarket after
12 -years of dedicated
service to Vaughans
Supermarket Family
&amp; its ·custo:lners~
Gene will be- in the
store Saturd~y ulttil
4 pm for
our
loyal
. .
.
M
,
customers to~~t~p in
with their ·best wis·h es(
.for his retirement.
,-

Time to clean house?

992-5432
Buy, Sell or Trade

~rancis FLORIST

in-the

Mei{p Cou111y\ Old.•! Fltt,•u•

CL.ASSIFIEDS!

~

'.

'

..

(,

l;l' . .

Clean out your basement
or attic with the help of the
CLASSIFIED SECTION/

· Sentinel

.

.

Ill! flit Mill r

• q,

740·992-2644
740-992-6298
l..fol V• S.rul four TINnt~l"' lf&amp;cll Special

c.,..

Advertise your
business each week .
In this space
and support local
· . churches

.

'

.

,

'

.

/

.

.

.

.

.'

.

'Best W{Sfies ene

'I•

'·
'

•

gap" between me and mine. Perhaps.:
the work I do has kepi me young_:
Whatever 1t is, it's greallo know ihal'
ihey look · 1o me for guidance- '
because they know I will not be :
judgmenlal. Maybe that's 1he key. .
Feeling pressured . to have sex' .
How well-informed are you7 Write :
for Aon Landers' booklet "Sex and .
the Teenager." Se nd a self-:;
addressed, long, buSt ness stze e n vc ~.
lope and a check or money order (or:
$3 . 75 (ohis includes postage a~a:
handlmg) lo: Teens, c/o Ann LaR- .
ders .. P.O. Box 11 562, Chicago, IU .:
6061 1-0562 . (In Canada. send :
$4.55 .)
.
.
To lind out more aboul Ann Lan::
ders and read her past columns, v i s i~ :
the Crea10rs Syndicaoe web page a( ·
www.creaoors.com.
·

·'

cutetoa laterdenomlaatiou•l Church
Kinpbury Road
.
Pastor: C:lyde Hendenon
.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
.
Worship SOrvioe 10:30 a.m.
NO S~nday or Wednesd1y Night Servic:es

rt, Oh

'

up on her peopll: skills if she wanls started long ago. I know because I
to make it in !his com'petilive world. have lhe same siluation with .my
Bowie, Md.: I disagree with your granddaughler. ·I spoke to "Mary's"
advice to :'Perplexed Grandi])Other," mother'· about this, and she said;
who couldn't make conversa1ion "Don't feel bad. That's the way it is
wilh her granddaughter. Could it be with all young people today." Is she
1hao 1he young woman. felt her right? P.S. I never baked cookies,
grandmother was bombarding her buo I did send checks several of
non-slop wilh intrusive and irritating them and I paid fot her educalion.
quesoions? I know how sh; feels. A
DEAR ST. CATHARINES : No
dear fnend of mtne says I m a clam she is not right The generation gap
while I consider a conversation with is nol as difficult lo bridge today as
her 10 be a cross-examination . Add io once was. Many "grannies" are
to lhe mox her tendency to pass on now very much with it. The problem
bits and pieces of our conversations. with some granny-teenager con neeand you get the picoure.
tions is thao ·1he 'closeness was not
St. Catharines, Ontario: I was established at an early age. Too bad,
interested in the letter aboul- lhe but io is never too lale tQ start, and
grandmother'who was crioical of h~r it 's up to Granny oo niake ohe move .
granddaughler because she couldn ' l
I'm a grandmoth~r. too, and like
gel a conversalion going
a you, I send checks bini don ' t bake
three hour car ride . That
cooki es. There is no "genera1iqn

17 from line 16, Also enter result on Schedule A

ML Hermoa Ualled Breth,..
Ia Chrlat Chiii'CII.
Teus ~munity off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Silver Ridge
PutQr: Robert Badx:r
Suoday School - 9 a.m •
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p~m .

Middle

,

RACINE Racine Village
Council, , Monday, 7 p.in. al lhe
municipal building.

SUNDAY

Un1ted Brethren

South Bethel New Tatlaeat

172 North Second Ave.

1"

MONDAY
CARPENTER
Columbia
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m. Monday al the fire slalion.

. PORlLAND '- Lebanon Town- ship Trustees; Columbia Township ,
Monday, 7:30 P\M- at lhe township
building.

Seveolk·DI)' Arlvntlst
MulbeiT)' Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawlnsky
- Sa1urday Services:
· Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
WQrship • 3 p.ril.

. Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenina 7:30 p.m.
TuCiday It Thursday • 7:30 p.m.

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992·7075

•

,,

Seventh-Day Adventist

Family Restaurant
RIDENOUR . Crow's
Kentucky Fried Chicken"
SUPPLY •featuring
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

2&amp;4 South Second /We.•Middleport. OH 45760
740-992-5141
llnJce R. FISher • Olreetor

'

CHESTER - ·· Rev. Julius &gt;,Wittenberg, two night revival at the
Harvesl Outreach Church, Chester.
Saturday and Sunday. Pastors Mary
and Harold Cook ;inviles the public.

'

Mill Work
Cabinet Making

1 ~·1

J, ~
', o..&gt;Jr•

'

I

RACINE PLANING MILL

)&gt;

\'

'.
"

SATURDAY

.,

Peotecottal .....mbly
St. Rt 124, Racine
Pastor: WiiJJam Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Frollll Valley Taberuacle Cburcb
Bailey Run lload
Pator: Rev. Emmet1 Raw,son
SWlday Evenlna 7 p.m.
Thursday S...VIce • 7 p.m.

I

POMEROY - tJod's ~ET program for teens at !he Center, Main
Street, Pomeroy. Nutritional food s
. free·, non-violent.~' video games,
cards, pool, 6 to 10:30 p.m. every
Friday and Saturd~y ni.ghl. ·

Full Goapel Chllrcb ortbe Uvlrlt Savior
Rl.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Aat. Pastors: Jim Manis
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

EaddmeHouoeorPnyer
(II Burllnpam church off Route 33)
Putor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship • 10 a.m.
Wednesday service -6:30p.m. ·

'

,

New Ufe VIctory Ceatet
3773 Georges Cr&lt;ek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
. Sunday Services • 10 a.m. A 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday . 7 p.m.lt,Youlh 7 p.,.;

Middleport Commually O.urch
S75 Pearl St., Middleport
Putor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollO Lm.
Evenin&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SCrvlce • 7:30 p.m. ·

Torch Church
Cc. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor1hip- 10:30 a.m.

Alfred

Episcopal

•

OrandSU&lt;d
Sundoy·School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 1J a.m.
., l\'¢nesday sorv"'~,&gt;!J!.m• .

Melu Coope!'ldvel'orllh
.
florlbeut Cl-r

Trially Cburcb
Second &amp;: Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Rutland r ... Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
• Eveni ng- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m .

' '

Faldl Fall GGopel Cbun:ll
Lona Bottom
Putor: Steve Reed
Surtday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship • 9:-30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.
Pridt.y .• fellowship serviee 7 p.m .

llontoollollhi.Commuolty Chorcb
Pallor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wcd!lllsday - 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
· Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a..m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Serv~ • 10 a.m.·

ML Olive uallld M - t
01112A behind Wilkeavllle
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School• 9:30a.m.
WonMp • 10:30 a.m.; 7 p.m.
Thursday Servla:s • 7 p.m.

.,. · ·

Congregational

Church of Christ

••

Church of God

United Methodist

Charcb el J - Cllrlll~ ·
Apoolollc Flltb .
1/4 mile )lift Fort Meip on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter ·
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednaday-7:00 p.m. •
Friday-7:00 p.m.

.

Coolville Uolled M-ilt Pariah
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cool•llle Churcj&gt;
Moin It Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 Lm.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Gnbam United Melltodllt
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st&amp;: 2nd Sun).
7:30p.m. (3nl &amp; 4th Suo)
Wednesday Serviee -7:30p.m.

Hortfonl Church orCkrlsllo
Chrlitlao Unloa
Hartford, w.va.
Pas1or:Jim Hughes
. Sunday S&lt;hool · 11 a.m.
worship • 9:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvlcea - 7:30 p.m.

B~ptist

Catholic
...

'

Church or God or Prophecy
0 .1. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servicts • 7 p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening-6:00p.m.

I

Rldae
Pastor: Brian Hukneu
Sunday School·'10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Syracute Flnt Church or God
Apple and SOcond Sts .
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wedne~ay Services· 6:30p.m.

ML Morillh Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Paslor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4!i a.m.

•

Oul' S..-lour Lutberaa Cbun::b
Walnut 'and 'Henry Sts.• Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
·

Rutland .Church or God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Wor5hip • 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

FaUil!l Baptist Chun:b
Rail road St., Mason

Antiquity

EutLetart
· Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
- Wednesday • 7 p.m.

St. P1uiiAJtbenu Claurcb
Corner SyCamore&amp;.Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
·
Worship - 11 a.m.

RmlawUie Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union

SL Joba Lutbenur Church
Pine Grove
· Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship : 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

.
-CllrlalluJ!ellowtlllpCbrch

New Ume Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Marpret J. Robinsoi\
SOrvlces: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m .

Moml_q Sior
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School • J1 Lm.
Worship : 10 a.m.

Lutheran

.

no Bolinon' Fellowaklp Mbdtll)'

C•rmei-Suttoa
Carmel &amp; Baahan RdJ.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewarne Studer
Sunday SChoo - 9:30 a.m•
Worship- 10:4S a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

The Ch•rcb of JeaWJ ·
Chritl or Latter-Day Sal oil
Sl. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday S&lt;hool10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05·12:00 noon
. Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
HomemaJjng meeting, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Hkkory Hilla Chur&lt;b or Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 6:30 P·J!I·
Wedacsdly Services • 7 p.m.

Betbuy

Pastor: Dewayne Studer
Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

R&lt;oraaolucl Church of Jnus CluiJt
of LaUer. Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Petor: Jerry Singer
Sunday Sthool· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

~unday School· 9 : ~ a·.m.

I

.

Rcloldq ure Cbordl
500 N. 2n&lt;1 Ave., Middleport
Putor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship-10:30 am ·
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday aorvice, 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p:m.
Youth Fellowlhip S~nday, 7:00p.m.
Wednetday aerv1CC, 7:00p.m.

SnowvUie
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship~ 9 a.m.

Latter-Day Sa1 nts

RUtlaad Church of Christ

•

S.lem Center
Paslor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:1!j: a.m .
Worship- 10:1S a.m.

Laur&lt;l Cliff Frte Methodist Church
Pastor:.David DeWin . ·
Sunday SChool • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Bndbury Cburch or Chrill
Putor: .Tom Runyon
Sunday S&lt;hool • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Flnt Soutbem Bapllst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
PastOr: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

'

Worship ·10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Service· 7:30p.m.

Fallll CloOpol

SdvenvUie Wonlel Foltb
Putor: David Dailey
Sunday Scllool 9:30 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.

•·

Ann
Landers

Putor: Rev. Bil&lt;:l&lt;wood

Clorlatlu Fellowalolp Cerlter
Salem St., Rudand
Putor: R.oben 1!. Muaer
Sunday School-10 a.m•
Worlhlp - ll:l,·a.m., 7 p.m.
W ednetday SOrvico - 7 p.m.

Rutlud
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Thu~y

Worship Service· 9 a.m . .,
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School-10:1~ a.m.
Youth- S:30 pin Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Pomeroy First Baptlot
East Main St.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.' .
Worsh i p ~ 1'0:30 a.m.

ROckS~

Hy.ell Run Holl•w Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m .

Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
wo,.hlp !0:30a.m. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SOrvloe • 7_:30 p.m.

923 s.Thlrd St, Middleport
l'ulor-l!mle Wonp:nl
Sunday IIUYict, ia Lm.
Wodnesday aervlco, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ketth Rader
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
· Worship. JO a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

Wesleyaa Bll&gt;lel{ollnea Charch
7S Pearl St., Middlepo•.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox.
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\lic:e - 7:30p.m.

Tuppera Plain Cburdr of Christ
lnstrUJnental
Pastor: Terry Stewart

Rutllnd Flnt Baptist: Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m.

.

112 ntile off Rl. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scf\lict - 1:30 p.m.

Putora lobo It Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon
773-5017
S.rvloe dme: Sunday 10:3Q a.m.
.'
Wednesday7p!"

,

•

I have a brother who is also bril- brilliant people are incapable of
lianl with a Ph.D.· in apljlied malhe- forging close relalionships is flawed.
matics. As a child, he sol~edcompli - Nonnal ·people can have lhis probcated malhematical problems i.n his !em, too. Keep reading for more:
sleep,. but he had·. zero' com.!llunicaFrom. Lebanon, N.J.: Yollr
1997, L.nJ AnJele$ Times
Syftdh.:u tr;: und Crc:wl1or~
tion
skills
and·
was•·
,considered
advice
to "Perplexed Grandmother,"
4
~ynlfica~e ..
·
."stuck-up." As a grovin man , .he is who could bl!fely gel a word out of
still incapable of small.talk, and his her brillianl granddaughter on a
, Dear Ann Landers: I' m friting communication . skills
haven 't three hour car 1rip, missed the mark.
_about your response to "Perplexed improve~. The "genius,:: is currently My over educaled ex-husband was
Gtandmother," who said she drove on his ihird wife and has very little the same way. He has a Ph.D. m
for hours with her "brilliant'' grand: 10 do with his siblings or parents. engineering from an Ivy League
d~ughler and . there was zero comPeople seldom· measq~~ up to his school and':'as a pennanent fixture
niunicalion. Not a word was spoken . . expectations, so he wntes them off.
on lhe Deans LISt. W~ would dnve
I have a differenl l)jeory on why \ for hours, and all I would get was a
brilliant pe6ple often ·· have trouble . grunt in response to any question or
establishing and mainlaining rela- comment. Often. to get his al lention,
lionships. Maybe their heads are so I would say; "Planet Earth calling
crowded ·with infonr\ation; there is Johnny. Come in for a landing ." Tell
no room to think
family and Grandma not 10 be offended. Her
friends.
D.C.
"brilliant" _granddaughter may be
she
to bru sh

CIJyary Bible Chul'!il
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

"Fuii-Gotpel Olurdl"

Po......y
Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School ... 9:15 a.m. ·
Worship · 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study Tuesday· 10 o.m.

Plae Gron Bible Holineu Churc::b

Zloa Clourch orCkrbt
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Putor: Roger Watson
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servloes - 7 p.m:

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middler)ort

'

Sunday worship -7 p.m. ·

,

, _ Feltawablp c.- r.r auut
Paslor: Rev. Franklin Diekens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Appro ure c.i.ter.

Purl C..pel .
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
WorshiP • 10 a.m.

Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Bnrwallow Ridie Church or Cbriot
Putor:Terry Stewart
Sunpay School -9:30a.m.
Worsh1p- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SOrvlces • 6:30 P·'!'·

Hope lllrptlst Church (Soulhem)
Pastor: Jim Ditty
510 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m. '
Worship- 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

.•

HontJto.a.-MlalaCrloo
47439 Reibel Rd. O.ester
,._,Rev. Mary aod Harold Cook
Suodoy SOrvloea: 10 a.m. It 6 p.m.
Wodnesday SOrvlces • 7 p.m.

MiroenYIIe
Pa""" Cbod Ernrick
Sunday School ~ 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

ROH ofSbaron Holiness Cburdl
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewe~ King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.

Keno Church orCbrbt
Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sundoy School - 10:30 a.m.
Paslor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3nl Sunday

Baptist
•

Worship· 11 a.m., 7:3Q p.lJI,
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

's·lack of GOmmunip~tton a sign of brillia·nce or just lack of

Falnlew B1111e Clollrdt
Letart, W.Va. Rll
Putor. John Hart. •
Suadly Scl1ool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp • 7:00 p.m.
,
Wednesday Blblo Study-7:00p.m,

Other Cllurct1es

Pastor: Vemapye ullivan
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m.

Puler: R~v. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 Lm.

Mlrldleport Clourch or Cbrlto
5th aRd Main
··
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1S, 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
_ Wedt:tesdaY Services ~ 7, p,m.

Cloudt or J - ClorUt Apottollc

H- (Middhr,.r&gt; .

Cllvary Pllpim Choptl
Harrisonville Road

-------

�...
Friday, January 2~!.. 1. 999 ·

.
'
Page 8 e The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

a

•

Dear Aunt Maude.
corner of our living room . Well ,
Great to hear from you, as the other day I attempted to open
usual.
its door to ra1se the weights so that
I loved the poem· you enclosed it would be good for another week
in your letter dealing with hospital or so. And what happened? The
gowns. It's funny and I really gremlins broke the key in the door
needed some amusement'" my life lock and as a result the door is
at this point in time. You're always locked shut. ,
so upbeat.
No problem you say' That :s
To steal a couple of your what I thought. I called ,in a lockexpressions, let's just say that I've . sm ith who conducted an examinareally been down in the dumps and tion and found that there 's nothing
feeling as low as a blue nosed he can do about it at the present
.mule. I believe those expressions time. Howeve r, he's working on
sum up what today they call the location of a key wh1ch might
"depression".
do the trick
It's encouraging that the re arc
I'm now bidmg my time but in
remedies for 11 now. You. no longer the back of my Mind there lin gers
have to take the bull by the horns bus and pieces of an 'o ld, old song
and work through it. No siree. dealing With a grandfather clock.
'There are even p1lls to help with As I recall, the clock stopped,
the problem. I'm thankful that never to run agmn , and the old man
·there is medication to help people died, according to the story told in
who do have depresSion problems. the song. Needless to say, J'll (eel
However, if it can be avo1ded, I relief when the clock is running
don' t need one more pill in my life. once more.
_ My friend, Oddie, sulfers wnh
Then there was that message
depression from time to time. He · from General Motors. The compatells me that he hasn't gone for the ny is discommumg the production
pills yet ,'either but depends on of the Oldsmobile ' 88-known as
someone called "Jack Daniels". "Dad 's car". And so ends another
Jack must really be special After era. Is th1s a bad omen for me? I
Oddie gets together with Jack, he is drive an '88 and the Olds has
really jovial-at ·least for a little always been my very favorite vehiwhile. His speech is a bit slurry, cle. I'm not sure when I will need
but Jack apparently helps with the to replace it, but does General
'depression. More and more, I'm Motors know something that I
thinking maybe I should give Jack don 't? Perhaps, you have been
~try .
.,
smart in keeping the buggy and
Perhaps, I'm paymg too close Old Dobbin over the years. If the
;utention to the problems that seem pendulum ever swings far enough,
to be accompanying the approach- maybe we 'll all be back to the
ing millennium I don 't know why horse and buggy.
Sometimes
I even give it a second thought. It when I'm driving along I feel that
is almost a year away and most ol 1t m1ght just he a good idea.
the time I feel like 11m being optiI hate to lay all of thi s on you,
mistic in looking ahead to even Aun t Maude, but Aunt Rhod1e
next Tuesday. Of course, I will always said you had broad shouladmit that I'm concerned that there ders so, perhaps, you won't mmd.
may not be enough champagne to I'll close for now. By the way, do
go around with which to celebmte you think it might Ge a good idea to
the arrival of 2000.
send me some of tho&gt;e herbs that
Maybe I'm wrong but I seem to you' ve been takmg for ·years?
have gotten little messages that They ' ve cenainly done wonders
concern me over the·past week.
for you along with the products
I'm sure you remember the from the still. Do keep smiling.
grafl!lfather's clock that sits m the

Family Practice, Lab, and X-Ray
Have Extended Hours Past 6:00 PM

Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday
'

To schedule an appointment or for
more details, call

992·0060.
•

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomerpy, Ohio 45769
(7 40) 992-0060

The- Dally Sentinel • Page
9
.

Friday, January 29, 1999 -

Racine United Methodist Women meet for pledge service

Beat of the Bend ...

By Bob J~oeflich

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

"" R~s po ndin g to God 's Word"
was the theme of the pledge service
presented by Karen Walker at the
January meeting of the Racine
United Methodist Women.
Walker took scripture from
· Daniel 6 and focused on the fact
that Daniel kept faith with the laws
of God he was taJJght as a youth.
God rewarded hi s fai thfulness, she
noted, that by· vindicating him
when enem1es conspired to bring
him down, Daniel pled ged hi s lile
to God and remained faithfuL
-" Pledge· cards were . distributed
and member&lt; were asked to reflect
prayerlully on their pleqge for the
1999 year. The !Jtany was read by
Walker wi th members respond mg.
They hymn "My Faith Looks
Up to Thee" was sung, Members
brOllght 1helr pledge cards to a
worsh1p table and pl aced them in a
basket. A continuation of the service wnh Walker and members
reading closed the service.
Lee Lee, president, opened the
meting b) readtng an arti cle "Safe
and Secure." After the UMW purpose was repeated, "New · Beg innings: was g•ven by .Alice Wolfe.
Walker gave the secre tary's
repon and !hank yciu notes were
read from the Mei gs County
Department of Human Services
and Lee.
A lette1 was read from the West
Ohi o Co nference UMW commending the unn as bein g one of
the nine units in Athen s District
whose payment on the1r pledge to
mis sions exceeded the amount
pledged.
.
The 1999 prayer chain list was
passed out to members. Etta Mac
Hill gave the treasurer 's report in
the absence of Clara Mae Sargent.
She listed all the recent monetary
donati ons.
The hat and millen fund was
taken but there was no report of the
project due to the absence of
Melissa Harkness.
Wolfe read letters from the Red
Bird Mission and tw o mi sswnanes
from Zimbabue and the Phil1 ppines. Members had sent card s to
them using the prayer calendar for
Information.
Lee reported she IS working on
material for all members to parti cipate in a UMW Sunday morni ng
serv1ce in the n e~r future. A paper
with questions and answers concerning membership in UMW was
read and she closed with a humoi·ous poem, "The Value of One
Member."
Flowers will be delivered to the
sic k and shut ins before Easter.
Working at the church on Monday
mornin gs will be gin Feb. I at 9:30
a.m . Women are to take a sac k
lunch
Wolfe reponed that 149 getwe ll cards were sen t 111 1998 An
article was also read by atheiSt
Madalyn 0 ' Hair. Members will
work at the bloodmobile June 16.

Jesse Ventura proposes
eliminating public radio
and television funding

·Come On Over to Bolts•••
For Uni4ue

·Vaa.ntlne's Da~ Giffs
CatS Meow Village

• New 'Releases ·
• John Glenn's•a¢~~S~h~uttl~e

• Lizzie High Dolls
• Crafts • Seasonal Flags
• Beanie Babies
• Russ Valentine Bears
OPEN· lO
Monday thru Saturday
Rt 7 (across from K-mart)
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone (740) 446-l7ll

was held at the church. There were
games, songs and gift exchanges
with ·prayer partners being revealed

and new ones drawn.,
' Chris Hill served refreshments
and get well cards were signed. Next

~UN SHOOT

IDIIft
COIIftUC'riON

:Radne Gun Club
(lease Hollow Rd.
: Every Sunday

New Conatruetlon' &amp;Remodeling

: 12":30'pm

Minor Repalra • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

Umit 680 sleeve
:.737 back f.ore

Insured

· Free Estimates

740-742·3411

Custom Homes

can relieve a

Remodeling

M&amp;J

debtor of financial obligationo and anange a fa ir
diotribution of a11ets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for hio or her personal .
uae. This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goodo.

ANNOUNCEMENT S
. 005

"Build Your Drea~"

F&lt;&gt;r Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

WmwmS~~~~~LWm

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(7 40) 592-5025 Atliens, Ohio

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CALL AMERICA'S ft PSY·
CHICS 1·900-74Q-6500 Ext
3596,

Joe Wilson

www.thet'&lt;llpages2.oomlnslpsy-

Public Notice
Public Notice
Continued from Poge a
PERSONS AND PROPERTY
PROGRAM I·BECURITY OF Pollee Law Enforcement
PERSONS AND
240 Supplloi/Mottrlato

4,150

1

1994 Ea1H Slliiltll DL Wap
Sloe[ N1111btr8Tt34tA

• Autlnwlc • ~ •,Loe:ild!
•

~4,950

7,150

1

t996 a!I!¥Y 5-Seriel Pk:ttf

Emptoyara• Share, Current
Uablllty....................9,272.35
Toial Pollee Dlaobllltf any
Panaton F nd A
loll
u
ppropr on
272 35
i!N'iiOwi.i"iiNi'"f=ii"Ng' '
C-•ry
Totel Cemetery Endowment
-............................. 28,548.59
Other End-nt Fund
PWpetual Coro
Tote! Ptrpatuol Care

Total
Pollee
Lae
Enforcement ........... 7,367.83
SAFETV l'UND
PROGRAM I-SECURITY OF
PERSONS AND PROPERTY
Pollee Law Enforcement
240 SUpptlti/Mottrlale
................................. 9,452.05
Total
·Pollee
Low
Enlorcemant ........... 9,452.05
MOTflR VEHICLE LICENSE
TAX rUND

•At·AUrtun~•l.td

FEDERAL GRANT FUND
COPSFASTGRANT
Federal Grant
210 Poraonal Servlcea
211 Solarlei/WI{IIa
................................. 4,500.00
212 Banente ............ 1,087.48
Tote! Federal Grant 5,597.48 ·
Other Federal Grant FEMA

.·

and

other

axpendlturoa of tho aatd
VIllage of Pomeroy during
the ftocal year · ending
December 31, 1999, tho
following auma ba and they
are hereby oat aalde and
appropriated ao followo, vtz:
Section 2. That there be
appropriated form the
Ganer~l Fund:
PROGRAM I • SECURITY
PROPERTY
Pollet Law Enforcement
OF PERSONS
AND •
210
Peroonal Servlcea
211 Silorln/Wagll·
...........................$201 ,000.00
212 Beneflta ........ $64,000.00
240 Suppllaa/Matorlala

Public Notice
Total
Mayor ·and
Administrative Offlc...
Leglalatlve
Actlvhlaa
(Council)
210 Personal Servtceo
211 Satarlaa/Wagea
................................. 5,450.00
212 Beneftta ............... 550.00
Total Legislative Actlvltlaa
................................. 6,000.00
Clerk, Tree•urer
•

210 Peroonal Sarvlceo
211 Salaries/Wages
............................... 17,000.00
212 Beneflta· ........... 2,900.00
Total Clerk, Treaourer
............................... 19,900.00
Landa end Butldtngo
250 Capital Outlay .. 6,900.00
Total Lando and Butldlnga
................................. 6,900.00
Boarda and Commlo~tona
County Audltor'o and
Troaaurer'a Fee....... 2,200.00
Auditor of State"o Feeo
................................. S,500.00
Solicitor
230 Contractual Services
................ ................. 4,500.00

Total Solicitor ..... ;... 4,500.00
Other General Government
230. Contractual Servlon
................................. 4,000.00
........................ 80,000.00250
Total Othar General
Capltel Outlay
Government ............ 4,000.00
................................. 7,000.00 Total Program VII·Goneral
Total
Pollee
Law Government ........ 151,150.oo·
Enforcemont ..... $332,000.00 Other u... of Fund•
Street Ughtlng
•
271 Tranofero ...... 120,000.00
240 Suppllei/Materlata
Total other Uoea of Funds
............................... 30,000.00 ............................. 120,000.00
Total Strnt Lighting ·
Sectton 3. That there be
............................... 30,000.00 appropriated from tho
Total Program I • Security of GENERAL
FUND lor
Peraono and Proplrty
contlngenctea
lor purpooao
........................... $382,000.00 not otherwloe provided for,
PROGRAM V •
BASIC to be elcpandad In
UTILITY SERVICES
accor.d ance with the
Electric Utility
provisions of Section
240 Supplloo/Matellate
5705.40, R.C., the oum of
................................. 4,400.00 GRAND TOTAL GENERAL
Toto! Ettotrlc Utility
FUND APPROPRIATIONS
................................. 4,400.00 ............................. 640,350.00
Gaa Utility
Section 4. That there ba
240 Supplloo/Materlal
opproprlottd from tho
................................. 2,800.00 following
SPECIA·L
Total Goa Utlllty ...... 2,800.00 REVENUE FUNDS.
Total Program V • Baalc PJ!OGRAM
v tUtility Servlceo ....... 7,200.00 TRANSPORTATION
PROGRAM VII • GENERAL Street Malntance ond Repair
GOVERNMENT
21 0 Peraonal Servlcu
Mayor and Admtnlatratlvo 211 Salarlei/Wageo
Offlceo
............................ 100,000.00
21 0 Peroonal Services
. 212 Beneflto .......... 30,000.00
211 Salariii/Wagaa
240 Supplloo/Materlol
............................... 23,000.00 ............................... 42,025.26
212 Beneflta ............s,ooo.oo Toto!' Str..t Maintenance
220 Travel Tranoportatlon
and Repalr ...........172,025.28
.................................... 150.00 Street Cleaning, Snow ond
240 Supplltt/Materlalo
teo Removal
............................... 85,000.00 240
Supplloi/Mattllalo
Tax Refunda ............ 5,000.00 .................................
3,500.00

Public Notice

Now Is the rime (or g-r-r-r-ea~
Totet Street Cleaning, Snow
buys In rhe classf(IMs
and Ice Removal .....3,500.00
Total
for
Street
Conotructlon Maintenance
Public Notice
and Repair Fund
............................. 175,525.26
Stile Highway and .......................... 1,000,000.00
Improvement Fund
Section 7. That lhtra be
Street Malntananca and appropriated from the · Repair
following ENTERPRISE . ·
240 Supptlet/Motertole
FUNDS.
................................. S,052.83 Wlltar Fund
Total Street Maintenance Offlco
and Ropalr...............8,052.83 210 Peraonel Servlcaa
Total lor State Highway 211, Satartai/Wagu
.............................. 120,000.00
lmprovement'Fund
................................. 8.052.83 212 Boneflta .......... 40,000.00
CEMETERY FUND
230 Contractuot Sorvtceo
PROGRAM II·Publlc Health ............................... 1O,ooo.oo·
Sorvlcae
240 Suppllea/Materlala
Cometary
............................. 174,980.30
210 Personal Servlcea
Tptal Offlce ..........344,980.30
211 Salarloi/Wagoa
Pumping
................................. 7,700.00 240 Suppllel/materlalo
212 Beneflta ......t, ... 1,300.00 .;............................. 16,000.00
240 Suppllao/Maltrllll
Total Pumplng ...... 16,000.00
................................. 4,959.37 Melero
Total Cemetery ..... 13,959.37 240 Supplleo/Matorlal
Total Comotery Fund
· ................................. 5,000.00
............................... 13,1159.37 Totel Matera ............ 5,000.oo
PARKS AND RECREATION Automotive Equipment
FUND
250 Copltal Outlay .. 8,825.00
PROGRAM Ill-LEISURE
To I I I
Automotive
ACTIVITIES
Equlpment. ..............8,825.00
Recreation Program
Other Water F&lt;~nd
240 Suppiiii/Matartate
'260 Debt Service .. 26,000.00
................................. 3,229.26 Total other Water Fund
Total Recreation Progrom
............................... 26,000.00
................................. 3,229.26 Total lor • Water Fund
Total for Parke and . Approprlotlon
Recreetlon Fund .....3,229.26 ............................. 400,805.30
Section 5. Tho! there b,j Sanitary Sawor Fund
approprtateo from the Of1tco
following DEBT SERVICE 240 Supplloa/Materlala
FUNDS.
.. ........................... 100,272.18
GENERAL OBLIGATION
Total Offlce .......... 100,272.18
BOND FUND
.
Other Sanitary Sewer Fund
BUILDING
280 Debt Sarvlco .. 25,000.00 Prtnclpal.................. 4,000.00 Total Other Sanitary Sewer
lntereot ....:............... 2,4S1 .82 Fund ..................... 25,000.00
Totel Program ......... 6,481 .62 Totol for Sanltory Sawer
TRUCK
Fund Appropriation
Prlnclpal ................ 12,000.00 ..............................125,272.18
lntoreat.....,.............. 1,202.28 UTIUTY DEPOSITS FUND
Total Program .......13,202.28 PROGRAM Y.,13AStC
TOTAL FOR GENERAL
UTIUTY SERVICES
OBUGATION BOND FUND Dapoolta Refunded
APPROPRIATION
............................... 28,103.54
......,........................ 19,183.90 Total for Utllltlu ·Dopoolta
Section 6. That thea be Fund Appropriation
appropriated from · tht ............................... 26,103.54
following
CAPITAL GRAND TOTAL
PROJECTS FUNDS:
ENTERPRISE FUNDS
CONSTRUCTION FUND
APPROPRIATION
Sewer Una Exten•lon
............................. 552,1S1 .52
othor Conotructlon
Section 11. That there be
.......................... 1,000,000.00 appropriated from the
TRUST AND AGENCY
Totellor Conatructlon
.......................... 1,000,000.00

FUNDS.

GRAND TOTAL CAPITAL
PROJECTS FUND
APPROPRIATION

POLICE DISABII,JTY AND.
PENSION FUND
'Continued on Poga I

v' -

Street Conotructlon and
Raconotructlon
240 Supptlti/Motorlalo
18,287.65
Total Street &lt;:onotructlon
and Rleonllructlon

.......................... 2,898,581.25 ' 18,287.85

Public Notice
ORDINANCE 657
~n Ordinance to make
appropriations for Current
Expenooo and other
Expendllurea of the VIllage
. of Pomeroy, Stole of Ohio,
during .the !local year
ending December 31, 1999.
Section
1. " BE IT
RESOLVED by the Council;
of tha VIllage of Pomeroy,
State of Ohio, that to
provide for the current
expenaea

....................... ~......... 7,317.83

Approprtotton ....... 45,883.75
GRAND TOTAL TRUST AND
AGENCY
F U N DS
APPROPRIATION.55,118.10
TOTAL
ALL
APPROPRIATIONS ·

11111 TQI'OII TIICGIIII41hlclul
stx:Uanbor llP376.\ .,

Stock rtmber R8743A
• Autlrnltie • - • Loadld!

PROPERTY

roili"ic;-;··e;;Ci·o;;n;,~'V~~~ ;~~s~~R~:noN

.
·;Nd:';'~:;.-;::"";:-:"'~·~...:·:·~&amp;·~·:;~~=:!=~
r~;:~;,;;~~·~r·~-~rogoi.~TMio~-~·~. ~'"~"";Good;,.Jon.o.y~~-;::,_.~=Jonuory~;··~·

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Pity
the folks in Lake Wobegon - the
governor wants to eliminate state a1d
for public radio and television.
Gov. Jesse Ventura, whose colorful res ume includes a stmt as a radio
talk show host, proposed cutting aid
to Minnesota Public Radio, · which
produces Garrison Ke1llor 's " A
Praine Home Companion."
State funding for MPR would be
eliminated m three years; for televi- ·
sion, it would be within four years.
Ventura, who released his first
budget Thursday, said public radio
·has plenty of producers and "stale of
, the art 'equipment " while the Twin
Ci t1 es com mercial stati ons he
worked for ..:.. KFAN-AM and '
KSTP-AM somet imes used
eqUipment he.ld together by tape.

1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~.:::·::::::::::::~~:

The mother-daughter banquet was
set for May 8.
The Christmas party and dinner

Public Notice
Clark of Council
JohnMuanr
Preeldanl of Cou~ll
CERTIFICATE
Boctlon 5705.39, R.C.-"No
approprlstlon meaauro lhlll
become tlfactlve until the
county ludltor !Ilea with the
appropriating authorlty...a
certllloato that the totol
approprlotlona from each
fund, tektn together with all
othor
outatandlng
appropriation, do not
oxcoed ouch official
uttmata or amended
official totlmote. When the
appropriation dooa not
oxcaed auoh official
ootlmota, the county auditor
thall give auch eerttllcote
forthwith upon reclovlng
from appropriating authority
a certified copy of the
appropri~Uon mauure ....•
The Stole of Ohio Molgo
County, u.
I Kothy Hyaall, Clerk of the
VIllage of Pomeroy In oold
County, and In whoaa
ouatody the Fllao, Journals,
ondo Recorda are roqulrld
by the Lawo of the State of
Ohio to bt kopt, do hereby
certify that the foregoing
An n u al
Appropriation
Ordinance Ia taken and
copied from the orglnal
Ordinance now on file with
uld VIllage, that the
foregoing Ordinance hao
been comporod by me with
the oald orgtnel and that the
aame Ia a true and correct
copy thereof.
Wltneaa my algneture, thlo
4th day of January 1999.
Kath Hyoall
Clerk of the Village of
Pomeroy Meglo County;
Ohio
(1) 29

LANDSCAPE
DEBlOIS
Computer Graphics
- oeslg"s
All Landecaplng &amp;
. Lawn Service~
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
7 40-985·4422
. ...,_

HOWARD .
EXCAVATING CO.
11

WA•Bm"•

992-9200

BINGO

RACINE PIZZA

EXPRESS .
SUPER BOWL SPECIAL
18" 4 Item Pizza
Hot Wings &amp; 6 pack
Pepsi or MI. Dew

of

$19.99
949-4900
Surprise Open House Birthday
Party for RALPH McCUNE
Sat.. Jan 30 , 2.00 pm - 6:00 pm
at new home: 800 High Street
Middleport
Questions
Sharon Warner,
Learn to
CLOG DANCE
Rutland Civic Center
·Every Tuesday Beginning
February 2, 1999
6:00-pm- Beginner class
7 :00 pm- Intermediate
Fee: $2.00 donation
Ask aboui fami ly rates
Instructor: Paulette Harrison
For Information :
. Phone:· 7 4 -992-624

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$1000.00
$50.00 OR MORE

17•01 992·3131

1 Male Puppy, Part Col lie, 9
Months Old, To Good Home, 740·
441 -0192.
1/2 Go lden Retriever Puppies, ~
112 Weeks Old , Mother : Full ·

Blooded Golden Aetrieyer, Father:
Unknown, 74D-44&amp;-2 181.
6mo. old Half Rotwelller/Hall Do·
be rman Female Pup; Excellent

Tompermen1. (740)446-1091 .
Ad orable Male Husky/Pointer

MIK Pup. 3 Monlhs Qld; (304)7735972.
.
Free Puppies to good hom9.

(740) 367-QS24

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

Giveaway: 5 German Sheppar(t/
Collie Mhled Puppies: {304)675-

WICKS

6508 .
Happy Healthy Puppies, To GoOd
Homes , 11 Weeks Old , Pap&amp;r
Tra ined Outdoor Lovers! 749-

HAULING

245-5t04.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

Puppies to

Dave's Garage

R. L. HOLLON

aftor 7pm, 74Q-643-54BO
Registered Persian Cals , To A

GOOd Home, 740·256-6107.
Aottweller mlk puppies to glve·away, one ma le, two remales, 740l

992-5747

60

-Complete Auto Seroice-

256-1595.

Agrlc;£
' ural Lime,
Limes ne ' Gravel ·

: • D • Sand
;

9 5-4422
Chester, Ohio

~~C~fMCCCCCft:JC

""f.'
JD CONSTRUCTION
11.'!1

~
11.'!1

'~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
fil!!l Garages , Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding

"======'
012=:......,;::":; ~
r
~

Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
L1censed &amp; Insured

Phone 74o-992-3987

f;j
,·,

~

~ -

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIA'- and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

· appliances, batterieS,

In Memory
In Memory 0f
WCY CHESSER
who passed away
January 30; 1987
Pur your anns around her
Lord, Give her love, and
tender care, and save a
place beside her, until I can
be there.
Loved and missed
Your sister Mary

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

many metals &amp;
motor blocks
740-992-4025 S anHI

CARPENTER SERVICE

(Owner-21 yrs)

Don't Need A

(740) 992·6215
"

Big One

Help Wanted

MEDICAL
ASSISTANT
NEEDED

Aunl Shauna &amp; family

-- - 1
.., I

Lost: small black and brown Bee- · ~ 1
gle &amp; small Dachshund mix, vlcln- 1\ I
lty of Flatwood s Rd. , 740-992· " :

t'

5039.

1

~~ ~

Yard Sale

:• ,•
1

Galilpolls
&amp; VIcinity
~,
-~ALL;;-;-cV:;:o::rdo;So;:t;:a,:-;M;;u::at;-- ~

! 1•!

~E1;;~?~E:~~~:!.

-

tilt clay before the eel
11 to run. Sunday
edlHon- 2:00 p.m.
Frldll)'. Mohdll)' edition
---:.;
to:;.::OO==•·:;.:
m:..:
. So:;.:t:;.:•;.:"to:::r::..·_

.

~
"
.~
' 1
~ 1

I

.'
~

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepor:tJ

t

~I

-;;;-;;~;:;&amp;::V-;;Ic:::ln:-;lty;':-;;:~ ~

All Yard S1lea Mu1t Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day betore the ad Ia to run,
Sundar &amp; Monday edition1 :OOprn Frldll)'.

!,

: il
~ .
..,.

:
..

!I

: !
· •'

Auction
and Flea Market

•

;:

.

.,

Aucti on February 5th , 6 PM. 241
Th ird A11enue , Gallipoli s. Large
Load 0 1 Name Brand Tools &amp;
~ I
Household Goods, 740-256-1270 .
.

'''
~ -

Bil l Moodlspaugh Au ctioneer ing

:. '

..

V.C. Young 111

1

Narmie, PaPa ,
Amol Sherry &amp; family,

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SU,PLY

-

~~:1
'"'

110

Ira Loving Memory of
Jeremy Lee Atkiru
Ja11-:- 30, 1978 May 20, 1996
! Happy Birll1day
Miued ·&amp;
by aU ofw.
Mom, Mu1y, Anlhany,
Kelli &amp; Family,

211211121tfn

·

St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
Servi ces . Little Hocking . Ohio. 4
•Room Additions
Appra isalsFarmEstate· .. .
7 40-985-3813
Household· Comm erc1ai Oh1o LI·Remodeling &amp; Siding
cense 1117693. 740-989-2623.
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
•Garages &amp; Dec~~
Rick Pearson AuCilon Company,
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks •Eiectncal &amp; Plumbing
full Ume au ctioneer, comp lete ...
aucHon
service
Licens ed ~ 1
Septic .&amp; Cistern Tanks
•Interior &amp; Exterior
,;ss,Ohlo &amp; Wast Virginia , 304- 't 1
Painti ng .,
ll~ew,er Pipe : 3 " thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; RegullatclrSI 773-5785 Or 304-773-5447
'It i
~~~~~~~~~~~
j
•Roofing &amp;Gutters
Open:
We demeyer's Au cti on Service, •· ..Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720.
•Concrete Work
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday
90 Wanted to Buy
(Free Estimates)

"Fully Insured"
Winter

BINGO

(No Sunday Calls)

Ave. 740·256-6176.

80

614-992-7643

.

Foun d : On Tue sday, Doll Near
GallipOlis Post Office On Second

~ 70

~
o':::rE;:~~~==n
~
c~c~~cc~ti~ti~&amp;

Pick up discarded

lost and Found

Found: 1 Tri Colored Older Be'agle, Blandon Mercervill e Ad . 740-

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE.

740-992:
"

Red male Oober~n. needs roq(n
to run , ca ll betw&amp;en 10am-2pm or

Near the 3~8 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

TRUCKING

glveaw~;~y ,

l t72.

., " Fonner-"Velvet Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Top Soli, Fill Olrt
614-992-3470

PER GAME

every Saturday
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
~tarbunt $2,350
Door Prize $200
145 people or
more will play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
regular g~me .

; DIABETIC PATIENTS : Yo u May
Be Entitled To Receive Your Orabell e Supplies At No Cost To
More Information , 1·888·
Jm-6561

U1ili1ie•

EXPRESS

30 Announcements

30 Announcements

Buiuo2er &amp; Backhoe
Service•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sy11em &amp;

AT. 7 PIZZA

s12.99
16" Deluxe s12.99

S.M. 28 Yrs. old , Looking for S.F.
18-36. II interested call (3Q.4.)8B2·
3764

Public Notice

GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL
REVENUE
FUND
APPROPRIATION
............................. 431,179.73
And the Vllloge ·Clerk Ia
hereby outhorlzad. to drow
warrant• on the VI 11 ago
Trtaourer lor payment•
from ony· of tho forgoing
111
opproprlatlona upo"
230 Contractual Sorvlcea
raclevlng proper cenlftcatu
and
voucher• thereol,
·· ··"'··········................. 1,000.00
approved by the board or
240 .Suppllei/Matarlata
.... ~ ......................... 73,480.00 olflcara outhorlzad by low
to opprovo the ume, or on
STATE GRANT FUND
ordinance or rttoluttqn of
OVERTIME GRANT
council to mako tho
State Groot
expendlturea; provided that
21 o Peraonal Sarvlc11
no warrenta oholl be drawn
21 { Salortoo/Wagao
................................ 8,083.62 or paid lor aalarlta or
Totel State Grant .... 8,083.6.2 wages except to peraona
OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE employed by authoruty of
and In accordance with law
FUNDS
or ordinance. Provided
FIRE
further
that
the
'Fire Special Fund
approprlotlono · for
210 Peraonal Sorvlcea
contlngenclll can only be
211 Salarlei/Wagoa
................................. 5,500.00 expended upon appeol of (2) 5
212 Banente ............... 150.00 two·thlrdo volt of Council 2TC
lor llama of expen~e
240 Suppllei/Materlalo
Public ~ottce
................................ S1 ,279. 74 conolotutlng a legal
tho
obligation
agalnat
County Audhor FHa
PUBUC NOTICE'
................................. 2,800.00 village, and for purpoa.. Tho Mtlgo County Board of
Total Fire Fund ..... S9,529.74 other than thoaa covered Mentel Retardation and
by
ot.htr
apeclflc Dovttopmontal Dtaobllltlao
UTIUTY
approprlatlono heroin mode. Ia
Utility Special Fund
occeptlng Haled blda lor
12.
Thill' the following vehicle: 11N16
SECTION
240 Supplloi/Motarlola
............................... t 6,834.55 reoolullon lhlll take effect Ford Van-Convarolon, E·
County Auditor feeo .. 700.00 at ttie aarllut porlod 350
Automatic
Totel Utility Fund .. 17,634.55 ilttowed by law.
Tranomloolon,
naeda
LAW ENFORCEMENT FUND Palled January 4, 1999
engine work. Ao 11 condl·
PROGRAM ~SECURITY OF Att..t: Kothy Hyooll
lion. Tho Board reoervaa
the right to rajoct any and
all blda or to ull to the
hlghoat bidder. S..led blda
to be aent to: Melgo County
Board
of
Mental
Retardation
and
Dovtlopmentel Dlaobllltlea,
P.O. Box 307, 1310 Carlolon
Street, Syracuoe, Ohlo
45779 and mark "Vehlcta
Bid" on outoltlo of the env•
lopa. Q!
To lnapect the vehicle call
(740) 992-1881 during work·
lng hourolor arrange.mento.
Bid muot be rocotvod by 12
noon February 28, 1999.
Bldo will be opened ot 12
noon February 2&amp;, 1999 ot
the main offtce of the Metga
County Board of Mental
Relardatlon
and
Dovelopmental Dleabllltlea
at the above addreatSuper Bowl
(1) 29
(2) 5, 12, 19
Special
4TC

18" 4 Item

chicl250291 htm $3'.99 fMin . 18+
Serv-U Bt 9·645-8434

for an eatablished
Internal Medicine
Practice iu Atheru
Prior billing
expeneuce
de•irable but no't ,
required.

Send resume
C/0 The Dally
Sentinel .
P.O. Box 729-77
Pomeroy, OH
45769

Call a Little ·
One
Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
· up to 8 ton.

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

29670 Ba~an Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
7 40· 949-2217

1ne Antiques , Pomeroy, Oh iO,

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

will buy one piece or complete

Hours
7:00AM - 8 PM

992-5455

RUTLAND, OH.
AMEIUCAN
LEGION
.BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Absolute Top Dollar . AU U.S. Sil - ..
ver And Gold Coins . Proofsats,
Diamonds Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 US. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions Jewe lry ·
- M T.S Coin Shop, 1.51 Second.
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.

1 /~!99

1 mo. pel ,

Antique s, top prices patd, R iver·~

Russ Moore owner, 740-992 ·

2526 .

.

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture.
household, O&amp;by Ma rti n, 740-

992-6576.

.

Clean Late Mode l Cars Or ,
Trucks. 1~90 Models Or Newer,
Sm ith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern A'"1!nue, GallipoliS
We Buy Everything: Furniture .. ~

Appliances , Etc. By The Piece Or

The L011740-256-6989.

l'urnilure Refinuhing
&amp; Repair
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Available

992·1100
Out

of Area

1-800-564-3.227
1/20199 t mo. pd

..

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

-:--:-:---:-:~:::-:-:-~ .

11 0

Help Wanted

AVON I "II Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-67~1~29 .

Comp uter User&amp; Needed , Wora:
Own Hrs $20K -$75K !Yr. 1-800·
348-7186 Exl. 1173.
lnc.tom

www.amp- ,

-..
•

�Friday, January 29, 1999

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

·.
•

·'

; frldi!V• January 29, 1999

The Dally Sentinel • Page·t1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

DIDOI:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER
'

.~ ·, t d r \l, I ·..,
t. ll\rf-::-,J,)LK

r /• · l

)t.ccopllng Appllcallons Full·
Tlmo/Part·Tlmo Employment; Apo
ply I n - At KJptlng Shoo&amp;.
Applications are being accepted
for Home Health Aldll Appllt·

crop Insurance, Burley ·Tomatoes, -Corn, Kan Bass Insurance. 1·800-291-6319

ant1 ahould hava a high school

diploma or G.E.D.. reliable Irons·
ponallon. telephone In the home
flexible. Experience In providing
direct care or worklnQ with otder

adults a plus. Will train State
tested nursing assistants en·
couraged to apply Application&amp;
are available at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Senior, Mulberry

Helghto, Pomeroy, OH. An EOE
Employer.
Are You Looking For A Warm
And Friendly Work Environment?
Would You Like To Work In A
Place Where Your Efforts Are

Recognized And Appreciated? If

You Are A Dedicated, Friendly,
Outgoing Individual Then Scenic
Hilla Nu11lng Center Is The Place
ForYoult

By owner, 725 Page Stroot, Mid·
dieport, house &amp; 3 loto, mual ...

llalllpolll Caroor Colllgo
(Careers CloM To Homo ) Cal
Todayl 74().4.46.4367, 1-800214-0452, Reg 190-05-12748.

and willing 10 work 'lfll&amp;kanda &amp;
hollc:tays Must be motivated and

to app,tteiata, will seD house wtfh..

out lola for $89,000, 740·992·
2704, 740-992·S896.
For Sale or Rent: 4 BR, 2 Bath,

170 Miscellaneous
'

Good Location; (304)875-78M or
(304)441.o450.

Uka Surprises?

For your surprise gift send $3 00

Houae And 5 Acres On Teena

Mason,wv 25260, and treat
yourselfl

Owner Financing Available. Call

Run Rd., •'FIKtr Uppof $2UOO •

to . Collecllbles , P.O Box 105.

After 8:00 P.M Or Leave Mea·
oago, 740-598-5707
Restored VIctorian home alluated
on 12 acres. Village Middleport,
secluded and private. appoint·

180 Wanted To Do
Auto Detailing; Buff10g, Paint and

Electric maintenance ser..,lce
Wiring , breaker boxta, light fhl.·

I~==::..:~~~~:--;-:-;­

Furniture refinishing &amp; re~alr,

Furniture repair, refinish and res·
toratlon, also custom orders Ohio •
Valley Aellnlshln~ Shop, larry
Phillips 740-992 -65 6
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your your logs to a miH just

AVON PRODUCTS Start your

i:all304-6 75- 1957

own business, work flexible
hours, beneflrs available, Enjoy
limited earnings, Call toll-free 1·

Handyman-Quality Work, ladders. tools. uuck, skill; Also.
quality, shingled, bluebird nest

888-581-2868

boxes, $15 each; (304)875-6925.

Clean Office and Commercial
'Bulldlng In Eleanor/Buffalo Area.
Part time - 20 to 3S hrs week. dltferent shift times Permanent
part·tlme job - rnale or female,
(304)788-7290, leave message
wtth be&amp;t Ume to call bact.

Handymans Special: Elec., carpantry, other repalra &amp; remodellng, Free Estimate: (304)874·
0126.

WHAT WE OFFER:

IIWoWII

Wort:lng Conditions, Flexible
Hours, Solid 39 Year Old
Company, No Layoffs,

$1,400 Par Month To Sian.
WHAT CAN YOU OFFER?
CALL MONDAY ONLY
I A.M.·5 P.M.
740-44f.4SU
An Equs/ Opportunity Eflll/D)'Or
SOuthside Farms (304)875-1993.
Housekeeping/Laundry Super·

visor needed for 1OO·bod akilled
nursing and renab facility. Posl·
t1on If lull-time and 8ltcellent benefits Candidate must be willing to
work with staff, scheduling, prob·
lam solving, ea:cellent communicator, knowledgeable ol Regulator
COmpliance as well aa related required documentation. Interested
candidates should submit resume
to . Rocksprings Rehabilitation

Center, 36759 Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Attn: Lisa
J Yehl Administrator
legal secretary, pare time I full
ume. computer friendly, short hand preferred but not required,
send resume c/o the Point
Pleasant Register box C. W 22·
200 main St PI Pleasan t WV

$999 Down on any 98 model

Doublawlde In stock. Free Dellv·
ery. CaU Hl00-891-87'17
1973 Hillcrest two bedroom

$11,500,080; (304)6?5-2819.

Will Take Cai-a of the Elderly In

1988 141170 Manorwood, 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths, Elec, AC, Good

Their Homo.l304)6?5-6154

Condition, $10,500, can 740.245-

5332

FINANCIAL

•

1988 Skyline, 14x70, three bed·
room, two bath one owner, air
conditioning and skirting, very
good ~ondltlon, must be moved,

Business
Opportunity

$13,000, 740-992·8227.

fNOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

1992 Norris , 16Ft X ?OFT, Vinyl

recommends that you do buslness with people you know, and
NOT to send money thro!Jgh the
mall until you have Investigated

lha otferlng

Needed Experienced Tree Climb·
ers And Bucket Operator For
Work Clearing Power lmes In
The Mercervllle Area, For Infor-

mation Cal~740-258-1578

STANLEY HOME PRODUCTS
I FULLER BRUSH 740·423·
3331 Or 740·898·5392, Partloa,

RN Superv-Isor To MP~nage Certified Passport Provider Agency,
Call Medi-Home Health Private

caro, 740-441 ·1 875
Salesperson wanted fQr immediate opening at Don Tate Motors, 308 East Main Street, Po·
meroy, Oh10 Apply In person

Fund Raisers, Products, Employment
•

From, 1-800·251·5070

Professional
Sarvlces

Ooublewlde Aepo, Call For View-

Ing. 800-383-8862
Double Wlde New $999- Down

"Promotional Sales Products•
wwwvernoncornpanyoom•

$3995 Quick detlvery. Call 740·
365-9621.
"
Taking Applications, On 3 Bed·

room Repo Pre·Approval In 10
Minutes! 800-383-8882

Llvlngaton'a Basement WaterProofing, all basement repairs
done , free es ti mates, lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job experi-

EOE
Security Guorcll
Mu11 be able to work any shift Including most weekends Must
have clean pollee record, good
work history, reliable transporta tion, va lid driver's license, home
phone and must have black ateel

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1·888-582·3345

er, Good Public Relations &amp; Com-

munlcatton SkHts Needed 'TYPing,
&amp; Computer Skills Required. 28
Hra !Weekly, Send Reaume To

CLA 483, c/o Gallipolis Dally Trfb.
una, 825 Tl!lrd Avenut, GaiHpolil,
OH 45831

Situations
Wanted

Opening February elderly lady:
non-smoker. mobiJe/rea&amp;onllble;

otnd reply · CW28 c/o Polnl
Plellant Register, 200 Main St ,
Pt PI ,WV

3 Rooms, Nicely Furnished Apt,
Carpet Throughout, Central Headl
And A/C, All Utllltloa Furnliho

We Buy Land, 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1-800·2t3·8386,
AnthOny Lend co
RENTAL S

740 - 448 ~

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drl\le

lrom $219 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movloa. Call 740·448·2588.
Equat Housing Opportunity,
Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, Aaferencea, &amp; De·

poalt Required, UUIIIIes Paid, 74044e·1519
.'

3 SR, 2 Bath, detached 2 car ga·
rage, Glenwood, $350 month +

apartments at Village Manor and
Rlveralde Apartments In Middle·

port From $249·$373. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltles.
Ground floor aptartment, 2 bed·
room with W/0 hook-upno pets.

(304)675·5t62
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

deposit; (304)743-8584

'740-448-0390.

312 Wotzgal St Pomeroy 3 Bdrm
House, $350 oo Month, Deposit
Required 1·888-841).()52 t ,

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
aparlment Prime location ln
downiQwn Gallipolis. No Petal

3BR houae In Point Pleasant:

$300.00 month plus utilities Ref·

Church pews lor sale, 12 twelve

fool, 4 tan fool: $200 each, 740949-2217.

Elaclrlc Scoototi, Wheelchal(o,

Tractors In Stock. Financing As
Low As 6 5% Fixed Rate On
Qualifying Tractors With John
Deere Credit Appro\lal Car·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Midway

New And U11d, Stairway Eleva·
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter

Granda On Jackson Pike 740-

Complete Satellite System Boa:,

Dish, Cable, and Romola. EXcell.
condnlon. (740) 388-9080

For Sola. 2yr old; t2HP MTD RidIng Lawn Mower; 381n. Cut; $400;
(304)874-0050.

630

Grubb't Plano· tuning &amp; repairs.

SUncSay cans Please

Hoallh Rider, Nordic Track, Color

Boaullful Leopard Appaloosa
mare with twin phlllleo, 4 1/2
months old, soil ooparattly or togetbar: yaertlng bay 0911; tOOO lb.
baits o1 hey, 740-898-2785

TV Monitor $25; P.V.A.E.Y. Gul·

tar Amp $50 Caot tron Tub, or
060174().446.9709
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repawed, New &amp;I =~~ ~;~~"·[
7
Cal Ron Evans, 1·

Clean , Rod on Rod; I13,00Q
1304)812·3358
1994 S·tO 4 3 LHtr V-8, Excellent

Condition, 7oiiJ.446.98&amp;1

,Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, includes Water

Sewage, Trash, $295/Mo., 740·
44f!.OOOI.

posH required, ?40-742·2681.

420 Mobile Homee
. for Rent
14X80, 2 Bedrooms, AJC, W &amp; D,
Stove &amp; Relrig , Small Porch, Re·
frencos, No Pats.740-258·1044.
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $280·$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·

992-2157.
2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms, Stove, Relrlg·
erator, Water &amp; Trash Paid, $275
And $350/Mo. In Country, Reference &amp; Oepos1t Required. 740-

388-9688.
2 Bdrms, Furnished, On Rocooon
Creek, Near Cora No Pets. Deposl1, Reference 740 ·379-2929
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You
Pay Ulllltles, &amp; Deposit, In Porter
Area $285/Mo, 614-388-9162

2 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Trailer In
And Trash , 1250 Doposll Ahd

t

,One bedroom apartment for rent
quiet ,dep. &amp; ref required

Macintosh
Ink JetCCo~
or
Printer, Computer.
Modem, Mouse,
0.
Rom Wlthlnttrnll Hookup. Hardly
Used $60000.740 ·379-260t.
Mixed seasoned firewood, CUI
and .apllt, .delivered':" $30 loact.
1
7-t0-742.2283

$300.00, 304-675-1550.
One Bedroom Apt Lafayette Malt
Ooposlt
Roq'd. All Utilities Paid Call740·
:;.448;,:. :-2:.;47::.:7:;..--::--:c-:-:;-':;
$350 00 Por Month

Rantara Dream Come True! Call. .
304 736 7 ~5

1OPt

tlon, Runs And Oump1 Gooq,

$2,500.00. Call740.446-4514 B•
fore 5 oo PM Or 740-448·3248
After 6 00 PM

•

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs · · :
1985 Nl&amp;san Klngcab 4x4 $2,800,
74Q.446.1420After5~M
'
1967 S·10 4x4, 4 Cytlnd~r. J
Speed, Good Condtllon, I2,Aoq,
740-387.0186.
•!
1988 Eaglo Wagon 4 WD, Runs
Good, Needs Rear End, $400,

•

•

co~:~

•

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

k fl ld
~Y Action· Revell· 8 roo 8 1 •
Winning ' Clrcla and Racing
. Champions Cole Earnhart, Jeff ~Square Or Round Bales Delano
Gordon, plus Dale Jr and othera. ' Jackson Forms, 740.448-1104

740-388·1100.
3 b8droom mobile home for rant,

no poto, 740-992-5158.

For Sale or Rent· 2BR, Trailer,

HUD App"""", (304)173-5878.

Security Deposit Required, 740-

B37·8217,aSIC:IorOave

448-348!

Rod Stewart tickets for sal.. 1st,

TWin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications tor 1br HUD substd!zed apt for elderly and handl·

2nd, 3rd &amp; 4th rowa, $120 &amp; up:
Martina McBride &amp; OlaiJPnd R~.
2nd &amp; 3rd rows; call ,.0-949·

capped EOH 304-875-8679.

3315 after 7pm.

Upstairs efficiency with private
entrance, cor;'lpletely furnished,
quiet surroundings, three miles
from the Ravenswood Ritchie

Stock Car-Dirt LM Stock Car,
1993 Rocket Chassis, Track
Champion In 1997, some ea:tras,
W/0 engine and tran,mlsslon,

Bridge In Ohio. Pertect first apart·

$3,400; stoat block T&amp;H 438

ment for a single person or new
couple If you are looking, It's a

Chevy, w/Brodlx heads all $8,500,
engine only $6,000, call 7..W·949·

must see H's $390 a month, utili·

2045

lies are Included A $300 depoa1t

Ia required For more information,
or an appointment, call 740·843-

prossloriEVANS
Fittings inENTERPRISES
Stock
owner none ng ava au e
• RON
~~9f Oak wood M~bllo Jackson, Ohio, l·B00-537.9528

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home alta available betwten Athens and Pomeroy, caU

740-385-4387
MERCHANDISE

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wli'\d·
owa, lintel&amp;, etc Claude Winters,

Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245·
5121.
"

560

Household
Goods

Appliances .
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers. Ranges. Relrlgrators, 90 Day Guarante~l
French Clly Maytag, 740-446·

7795

Building
Supplies

550 .

Pets for Sale

AKC Boston terriers, $300, 740-

AKC mala Pomeranian puppy,

Umlted oHer 1999 double wide, 3

Two bedroom in country, water
and trash Included, references
and deposit requ ired, call 740-

New and Used J;utnltute Store

per mon., delivered and set up

949-2833.

Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Day
Bods, Bunk Bodo, Soda, Computer Oesl&lt; , Entertainment Center,

T~o

Dresaers, Couchaa, Olnette.a .

992·5264

430 Farms for Rent
85 - I n oaes, 3 bedrooma,
2 bathS1 central Bk'. fireplace 30ft
x 40ft • garage. bam with 4 atalts,
electriC and frost free water 10

Stove and Refrigerator Furnlallldl
(740) 446-2583

1g71 Super Boatto, All Now:
P.arta, Fenders, Running Boarda,
Chrome 8umpers, 1800; 740-448·

9552.

1975 Oodge Matador: 8 cylinder
258; 71,000 actual miles; 4 now
if&amp;ua-trad tires: good condition;

4887
1986 Nluan pickup, 4 new tires,
runs perfect, gas saver, motor

AKC Register ~ Pomeranian e
monrt'IS old. 3 females , two with

Cal. Like New In Bo•t $400, 740·
379-260t .

530

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Streat, on AI 124,
Pomeroy Houra· M T W 10 00

Moore owner

2 Model :::l!o Ditch Witch Trenchers $3,500 Each, One 20 Ft
Gooseneck Trailer. $2 801}, 1
Volkswagen Dune Buggy, Seoo
Firm . 1 Female Eskimo Spitz,
Spade, S50: Cheat Freezer 1150,

740

pleo, Championship Bloodline, Ex·
740-245-5823.

'97 Kawasaki Prairie 400, 4x4,

•4-

tomallc, good condition, $3100,
740·992·5578.
-

tOOOCC, Big tank, black, lola 4f
chrome, SIS Super E Carb Mu11
see to appreciate: $8,000

(304)802·22t6

97 Honda 4 Trac 300, 5 hours on
It, factory extended warranty, aok-

lng $3,500, 74o-742·1503 or 740.
592-4530.
• .

760

Auto Parts &amp; ,
Accessories

slide-out, e11ce11en1 condition,

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

810

Home
Improvements

UncondiHonaL lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es·
labishod 1975 Call 24 Hro (740)

446·0870, 1-800·287·0576. Rog·
era Waterproofing

1994 Plymouth Acclaim 4 Doors,

C&amp;C General · Home Maintenance - Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doora, windows, baths,

mobile homo ropalr and mora. For

tree estimate call Chat, 741)-992·

8323.
Professional 20yr$ 8a:perlence
with all masontry, brick, bloctc
stone. Also room additions, ga·
rage&amp;. etc. Free estimates 304·

a

n:~-9sso

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Reslder:~tlal or commercial wlrlng,

new sarvtce or repairs Master Ll·
censad electrician

Ridenour

Eleclrlcal, WV000308 , 304·675·
1?68

•

I

LEARNED SOMETHING

VEIN IMPORTANT...

Eva'a g.ardep.
Double curve
Paator, •·II·
Ten yooro
lie concerned
Conalructlon
beam (2 wda.)
25 Type or
aquad
26 The same
28 Facility
.
29 1\'pe of paola
30 Sbter Halden
31 Irritated
37 Flammable
malarial
38 Commit a
faux pet '
41 log dwelling
42 Dancing
Queen group
43 Damoge
\.
eeverely
44 Breakfaat
food a
45 Large amount
47 River In holy
48 Storkllke bl"'
49 -on(act
IIIIa a
grendparent)
50 Tropical frul152 Slghl orgen ~
54 Playwright
Betti
·J

CELEBf}ITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
c.lebrlty Cipher cryptograms are createcllrom QUOIIIIOI'\S by tamous people puland present
Eeeh letter If\ the cipher I lands tor another TOO.ys ciiHI N equs/s S

P XXR N

EVIX

'0 M

OTGL

XRVLVPU

N W FE

0 X ,

' IT G

E.)l I X

w

XVLFXG

FWN
TG

YWDX

H X X P

w

YXRRVPU
AXLXG
T'LTTEX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I don'l know 1f you could call my mus1c cowboy
mus1c. I don'l sing aboul horses ' - Merle Haggard
•

TIAI DAILY

S©\l~~-l&amp;t-trs·
CLAY I. POUAN

PUULII
------

WOlD

GAM I

Uho~ ~y

leHers of
0 Rearrange
four scnomblod words

the

b1o

.,

!Jr.:::::-i

I
II II1

low to form four simple words

CORDOT

2

I

PHEDT
•

T0 0 U0

I I I

I 1

1

I I

,;,'
· ~;

A fnend won't go for coun·
sel1ng She says a Psych1atnst
1s someone who doesn't have
...-.,.
-P--I,..-::T,.-O--c~'l
to
worry as long as • -- - • - • 5
5

NEVER BE
ANDREW WVETH ..
I'LL

I

' 17

6

18
.-

e

Complete 1he chuckle quored

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM.t.ETS ANSWERS

\

You'll bUild a b1g ~ egg when
¥00 S&lt;M with the classlfieds

Galaxy· Utter· Hum1d • Sorely- EYESIGHT

"If you find a four leaf clover," the old man to ld the
young boy, " you're very lucky to have such keen
EYESIGHT "

I FRIDAY

ASTRO·GRAPB

IIASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

n95

19.500, 740-

LOT ATT14E

I THINK

SERVICES

A/C, 4 door,• 95,000 milts
3.800 00 080 (740) 388.()4 t 3

MI-.~

A

12
19
21
22
23
24

by fdl1ng 1n the mis!ung words
L._J,.....JL-...1.-..L..-1--l you develop from step No 3 below

Low Mileage. All Electric Windows. Deluxe Interior, Nol'\·
Smokers. An11lous To Sell Phone
74().4.46.2602

Appliance Parts And Service: AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed ,
French City Maytag , 740· '46·

Mfrrors, Power Sunroof,

LEA~NED

$16,000 OBO, 304·773-5484

1992 Honda Atcord, LX, 2 Door
Coupe, 5 Speed, A/C, Cruise,
$3,995 080, 740.388-9878. .

er,

I

1979 Wilderness 5th Wheal wiV&gt;

Soil Contelned Also 1985 Cl\aYy
Suburban, Fully Equipped, V·8,

Children, $150, 080, 740·448· Gr..n, 38,000
3447.
992·7102

· PEANUTS

.

1988 Crown VIctoria LX , well

miles. 5 speed , 2 ctoorl, hat¢h·

'

.

For Sale 1985 Airstream Tra\1.1
Tr~ller, 31 Fl, Purchased New,
Very Good Condition, Garage
Kept, Used Very Little, Twin Be&lt;fl
Center Bath And Sola Bed Futly

1993 Chevy cOrsica. Auto, \/-6,

•

You are trying to do something
difficult. If you succeed, how do you
react?
If you spot the correct line in
today's deal, I eKpect you will smile
to yourself, happy to have found the
perfect play.
Well, with the gauntlet on the
ground getting dustier by the
moment, wtll you ptck up the chal·
lenge? How would you play in three
no-trump? West leads the heart s":
five, jack .. .
You startwilh eight top tncks: two
spades, one heart (from trick one),
two diamonds and lhree clubs. (If you
would have ducked at tnck one, go
directly to jail, do not pass Go ... )
Only one more tnck must be fo'!nd.
Spades might be 3-3, but playing on
that sutt has two stnkes against it.
First, a 3-3 break happens only about
one· thtrd ofthc time. Second, even if
they do divtde evenly, East mtght wm
their spade trtck and push a heart
through your queen wtth unpleasant
consequences. (You know W.est has
the ace from tnck ,one )
It is clearly preferable to play on
clubs. Low to dummy's mne works
with this layout, but would be suici·
dal tf East could wtn (perhaps from
two or three) and return a heart, West
having four left You must struggle to
keep East off the lead,
'Qle nght play is to cross to dummy wilh a diamond or spade, then to
call for the club three. If East follows
low, msen your eight .. contract safe.
!fEast puis m the 10 or Jack, win wilh
the king and return a club lo dummy's
ace .. contract sound. But here, when
East discards, you wtn wtth the ktng
and return a club toward dummy's
ace-mne -· contract secure.

·

1988 CheVy Cavalier Lots Of New
PariSI $950, 740·445·3407, 740·
448.0519

304-875-2722.

pia~

Budget Priced Tranamlaslons
and Engines , All Types, Acceaa
To 0\ler 10,000 Transmissions,

""""'""' condition, $650
M&amp;J A..o, 740-742·4llt0

1991 Cadillac Str.~llla 4 door sedan . loaded with accessories,
great gas mileage, car phone,

'

ART MUSEUM ..

790

1987 Chevy Celebrity $1,200,
GOOd CondHion, 740-258-t 102

-

1982 Harley Oavldson Sportat'er,

1985 Dodo• Caravan, 7 pas·

•senger, new Urea, 5 speed, body

CFA Malo Sealpolnt Paralan 4 back , CD player, new Urn,
Months, Had Shots, Very Friend· $8,500, 740.742·3t72.
ly, Must SOIII 740-245·9238
t997 Cl\aYy Cevsller. 2 Doors, A1
Full Blooa1d Male Poklngeu 5 C, l!::;.;;ulao, 5 Speed, CD Play·

740-379·235t, E-r(go.

r---

Dl~ioolTL€.D 7

'94 Four Tra• 300 Honda, $2500;
'92 12 horse Wizard riding mower.
$450, 740-992·3480.
1

octuol n;~ea, $3500

Crulao, TNt, AM/FM 81 ,950 Mllea,
AKC Sholtio puppies, fwo blue New Tires, Sbarpl $3,900, 740·
merle femal11, one aabte and 379-2748
while female, $350 each, 740·
t915 Ford Escon GT, 38,000
896-t085

Month&amp;, All ShOll, Good With

l~ GIZU~IU::D!

""'

1

Motorcycles

740-247-3901 eftor 5pm

callent Temperment &amp; Ol1posl·
tloo, First Shoto &amp; Wormed, $350,

ThE EMI'LO'&lt;££~ 1-.rz£

TI\OIQ.lP-ffi£ ..

£1J~'(OO£

call Ron 740-742·2050.

Now ges tenks &amp; body pariS D 4
R Auto, Rlploy, WV 304·~12,
3933 or t ·80fl.273-9329
• • ••

992·9989

Weatherby Mark 5 $porter .30-06

~1-JOI.X..D '(OJ :i!\'{ 11\~T ~'1' OF~ ~t-10, ~It&lt;:., ['D Sf'\'(

Two 1979 Jeep Cherokees, one
runs , ..one tor parta, $700 080.

1995 Gao Meoo, aulomatic, 49,00

520

AKC Registered Rott Waller Pup-

I'D UK£'(~ F€€:0~~
'll\f. 11100011-1 'ffit.cxr••l...l.o.

~

loaded w1111 TVNCR; Black color,
510,500/Nogotlabla Call C C
s~ at (304)875· t837,(304)875·
69t4, or Mrs Shah at (304)675·
5534
)

740-245·56n.

AKC Registered Mini Dachshund
pupplaa, long and short hair,
breeding pair ot Cockatella, 740·

Sporting
Goods

~

miles, Aulometlc·AC·V6, Ne)o

has 50,000 ml..s. $875

74().448-4782

540 Mlticellaneous
Merchandise

1 Bedroom Apartment for Rent

740-949·3420

actual miles, ea:cellent condition ,
garage kept, mu1t see to appreciate, white with blue cloth top,
leather aeat, S7000 OBO, call

440

992-2218

sunroof, POl..,

1992 Mercury Cougar, 45,600

am to 800 pm , Sundoy 100 to
6 00 p m 740·992·2528, Russ

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp;, furnished and unfurnl1hed, security
deposit requ ired , no pets, 740-

cassette, air,

black feceal (740)3888842

mles from Gallipolis, $650 mooth
plus 1 month oecurlty (810) 5881252

Apartment•
for Rent

1085

Washert, ttryera, refrigerators ,

S150 deposit, $300 month, no
peta. water and trash paid, 740·

am'fm

1989 Chrysler Lebalon Sporta
Coupe: Whltelw Slue Interior: Aulomatlc/PW/PB/PS, CD Player,
$1,600; 080, (304)675-4452.

ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76 AKC Miniature Pinscher; famela,
Vlno Stroot, Call 740·446·7398,. Black and Ten; 7mo old $250
(304)578-244&lt;1.
1-888-81 iK)t28.

Two bedroom trailer, very clean,

'93 Pontiac Grand PriK, automatic,

AKC Collie puppies, sable and
white, certified normal eyes, $300

utilities, $300 deposit, 740·949·
22t?.

bedroom mobile home In

710 Autos for Sale

maintained, $1500, 740·742·2750

cream sable: 1800, 7•9·898-

OOOD USED APPLIANCES

TRAN SPORTATION

992·3480
tach, ?A0-81J6.1085.

•

'THE BORN LOSER

tires, leather Interior; Complete'y

runs good; $1,250 (304)875·

Used Kitchen Cabinets &amp; Coun.
ter 'cabinets, $800, 740-448-

510

Middleport, no peto, 740·992·
5039.

245-5193.

Floors, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Fully Car· ,be seen at Jlutlend Bottle Gao or
petod, Pallo, No Pats, Lease Plus by calling 740-142·2511 or t·80fl.

One bedroom, furnished, on SR
143, trash and water paid, refer·
encea and deposit, 740· 992·

8862

' Straw And Hay For Sale, Square
Bales, Altizer Farm Supply, 740·

Eaat
Pua
All paaa

By Phillip Alder

1998 Ch8Yy Blazer LS, Burgund}l,
Loaded, 29,000 Mlloo , 740.258·
1011.

Naacar COlleCtibles

Large aeklctlon Starling l:.lne-ups,
we have all good players and proltctlve cowrs lor displaying, MeGwlre· Grllfey· Marino- E. Smlttl.
Shak· K. Bryant and others. Can

The perfect

•

Cond~

1993 Asuo Extended Van, Tllt,
cruise, Air, Reese Hitch. Exc

$4.80/ hundred,
aacka, Long Bot·

..

??

Rubber, 2 Sp Rear End, Runo
Clood $5,000 00 1989 GMC 1 1!

v-e,

9 Naked
10 Darnl
11 Mother of
Apollo

'

For Sale. 1973 GMC 1 t/2 Ton

Bod, 2 Sp Roar End, Fair

North
11
3NT

..

o•
Verdi-•

Opening lead: • 8

Dump Truck· 12Ft Aluminum
Bed, 427 Rebuilt Motor, Goo~

740-441.()1 09.

['t~~;;~~8Qi!;~~

NOWII I CAN TAKE ME
A GOOD VACATlON It

1995 GMC Jlml1l1 4 WD, • Doorf,
Excellent Condition, LoiS Of E~·
trasi74Q.446.7289.
.&lt;

2 Ton Dump Truck,

Weot
Pas1
Pau

JNT
2t

1995 Chevy S·10 PU, V·8, 5
Speed, AJC, 30,000 Miles, $7,40!)
Phone. 740·245·5180, 740·24!19504.

1994 Chevy Astra 4x4, E11ce1lel'lt
condition, like new, 59,000

slble after a year, 740-898-7244

HOW LONG WILL HE
BE GONE
FLOAT
FISH IN'

'

Lift Chair, Like New. 740·446·

1
Used single wide, around $100.

wva . 740·441 ·0128, For An Ap· Green/ City School Dtstr1Ct Beau·
tlful Home Site 740448·3545
polntmom.
COUNTRY LOTS
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 1 25 Acres,
In Gonia County otf State Route
Nicely Landscaped. Surrounded
233 NaBt Galla 7 Acres, MeadBy WOOCis, 740.258-1814
ows, l'ooo!dln ArN WIShed
Ready For Animals. Only
333 Third Avenue. Gallipolis, 2
$14,500 00. 20 Acre Hunting
Story House, 740.441--o432, 814Tracts W/Acoess Ad To Woyne
556·3485
Nallonal Forest Mostly Wood·
3 SA, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, Brtdt ell, Only $23,000 00 Land ConRench; Additional 2 car garage ,
tract Available Free Mapa 1\nAcre Lot , Sandhill Road PI
lhOny Land co ' Lid 1-800-213P-.aoant, 1740)441.Q818
8355

.:.;.:..:.:.,:,:__-:---:---:For Sale; 5 Registered Limousine
Hollora, 3 Reglltarad LlmouOino
Bulls. Call Altar 8:00 PM 740·
448-3727

Kitchen cabinets lor aale, 740·

FactOfy goof Ill Save thousands,

In

Color1ul~uckskln Stallion, 74G448-3B59

Both While, $260 00 For Sol ?40441·1288.

Traller for rent In Racine, 2 bedrooms, porch, carport , e~~:cellent
condition, $300 per month plus

17 Acres

Baby Calves, 740-368·8524 No

Problems? Need Tuned? Call lha
plano Dr. 740448-4525

Kelvnator Washer, G E. Dryer,

Livestock

South

(304)6~5-

miles, Very Good Co'ndltlon,

1 llpencllng piM 42 ~
7~
,
rn·u,..
13 Tau a bowth "'
grp.
14 . - 47
15 In dla 11 51 Played a braaa
Mint (2 . . .) ,
1natrun..1
1S Aa or,_
53 Cod'a retouve
12 . . .,
55 l'l'opailllh
17 Female hoga 56 s.t on fire
1S Allan hotld4ty 57 Solution
20 Harrow'• rival 58 Cowhandtt'
21 Old e pre-e~me
looptt
leak
23 Type of HrVant
DOWN
or engineer
1 Favorltlam
2:1 Cold algna
32 Tolerate '
2 Do- othera
33 Capital of
3 ArablltHREgypt
rlgg.ad -aal
34Run..,
4 Roamaldly
5 Old oge
35 Moving
6 Sead covering
lboUI
7 Once -, twice
31 Rallgloua
ohy (wory)
recluM
8 Numero39 Thaw

Dealer: South

7809.

•

'•

40 11ot cern a or

ACIIIOSS

Vulnerable: Both

Runs Good; ' 160 Thou Milas;

3568.

tar &amp; Trash Paid, 1250/Mo , $250
Deposit, No Pets, May Consider
Land Contract, 740-388-9325

Nlo• Features! l ocated At 109
Pleasant Street , Pt Pleasant, Approximately

448-2412 Or 1·600·594-1111

Lifts, Bowman's Homecora, 740·
448-7283

• K 4 3

1989 Chav. S·10;4X4; Air, Auto.;

1993 Ford, F15D, XLT Pkg, 4K4;

•QJ9875

•KQ2
• K 4
IKQ852

Wheels Jansen CD Sound Sytem Amp W/12" Woofers . Ca'l
74().4.46.7375

5 Speed: 305 Engine; 47,000

g.

...
• J

South

1987 S·10 Plck·Up, New P245
80Rt 4 Tires. Chrome Mat

North 3rd Middleport, 2 br. unfur.
apt dep. &amp; ref. 304-882·2566
,

New bank repos, only two left,
never 11\lad In call 1· 800·948-

273-0297 aHor 5pm or 304·372·
Siding, Now Roof, &amp; Meny Otfter 7308 ao1t for '""" Murpl'rf, ·

Between Galllpolla And Rio

l987 F 250 'Diosel 4 x 4 Super
Duty XLT Lariat, 143,000 Miles,
Btack. $6,500 00. ?40-258-1519.

Clean 2 bedroom hOuse In Pomeroy, $350 per month plus de·
posit, no pats, land contract ~oa·

and set up call 1·800-948-5878

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
112 acre lot 1o Syracuae, Call 304-

We Have From 25 To 30 Uud

• 9 7
• A 10 7 6 3
• 10
IJJ0764

(004)882·3333.

7·2·2387.

Small 2 Bedloom Mobile Home, In
Porter, Close To Schools, Hoapl·
tal &amp; Stores, Newly Painted, Wa·

monto, 304-138-7295

Keroscene Heater Wlcs &amp; Repairs, Stders Equipment Compa·
ny, 304-875-7421.'

2

Eaat
1 Q J 10 8

Weat

1988 Ford Truck, F·UO, 4W~
$2,800 080, (304)882o277t OJ

Good Tires; After 1PM,

a3

I A·9 3

Ccnd. $5,500, 740-448-0278

53000, for Doublewlde, used very
little, $250.1304)578-2668.

Relocating? Take Over Pay -

$oi,OOO 060, (304)675-3824

f'l4lpleo &amp;Kltt8no
Full line of pettt supplies

• A

1983 GMC ii'ruck w/~2 t DUfi\P
Bed; 8.9 dltlol; 5 ..,. :2apood
Sing-. Axlt; (304)878-8 ,
·~

Call 1740) 446-3302 for appoint·
ment

' Rapid Refundlll Will Pay Tho Cost

We Fmance land &amp; Home With

Farmall • 140 n&amp;Cior with cultl\18tora, has just been restored ,

• A es 2
• 85

Carport, $400 moolh, Roferoncos;
(304)675-5929 after 7PM

For Sale: Electric Furnace, BTU

call Hlll0-948-5878.

Rio Granda On Jackaon Pike

•

0

arences &amp; Deposit Required.

wv Tired 01 No? We Say Vaal
304-736·3409

-

McCaa And Round Baiera 0% •

Par-.u, wv 28101
31J4-4M.t293
'

5 Court St , Small One Bedrm.,

Gracious tlvlng t and 2 bedroom

1005

740·4•8·2412 Or t·800·594·
tt t1 ,

so·-- ,..nue

448·2602.

Retrence &amp; Deposit

Rato John Deere crodk Financing

Availa~ Naw 4000 Seriea Com·
pactt In Stock New J,~&gt;M D11ra

, , -·
...,
"
u,
•·ua"um
B'20q8
Camden

Except Electric. ,t4o Peta 740·

Kitchin Wllh Stove &amp; Refrlgora·
tor No Pets. $225.00 Momh Plus

Now 5010, 8010, ?010 S1rlo1
Tractora In Stock . 7.75% Fllltd

12 Mo 1, 1?S% ·24 Moo. 3 5% •
3t1 Moo, 4.S% -48 Moo , 5.5% -80
Mos. Carmichael'• Farm &amp; Lawn,
Midway Between Gallipolis And

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,

As Little AI $500 Oown 1·808·
928-3o428

2 Bedrooms, Full Basement. CIA
Garage, Fenced Backyard, Vinyl

Applications available at· Village
Graon Apto. 149 or cell740-892·
3711 EOHi

S' brush hog, $350, '8t Chevrolet
pickup, heavy duty, PS, PS, $850,
74Q-985.4ll40.

AMAZING
METAIOliSM
Broakthroughlll Loll 10·200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fut
ora mane Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor, Rtoommonded Free SOrnpltlaCaH740-44H982

Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Braaa Com-

br., 2 ba $1 ,799 down , $275.00

REAL ESTATE

fecllltlea, close to school In town.

Mld,.ay Botwoon Galllpollo And
Rio Grande On Old 35 (Jackaon
Pike) 740·448·2412 Or t-800·
5114-1111 ,

kondo, retailed now for $8,1 00,
sell for So1,995, cai?40-~S.

Why Rent , you can own your
own home for as low as $499
down low monttlly payments,
1
11 •1 304
11

per mon. 1-&amp;ll0-948-5878.

1

?4().4.46.! 637• 740-446-3437.
2bdrm. apts., totelllectrlc, ap·
pllancao furnished, laundry room

Equipment Now Thru Jan. 30
Car{ftlctta:el'• Farm l Lawn, Inc

199-4 Pace Shadow enclosed
trailer, deluxe model 700Q GVW
with winch, u1ed only on Wll•

2 Bedrooms, Water And Trash
Paid. No Pets. On Bulavllle Pike.

call t-80().948-5878
1111a newapaper wil1 not

2 Bedrooms, $425/Mo 1100 De·

poalt, All Utilities Pald No Pets,

Equlpmenl

011. flnonclnf On Now . John
Door1 Hoy equ~pmonm Financing
Aa Low Aa 3 9% On Ulld Hly

$69 oo purehaoo priCe with up to
$200 worth ol tree programming.
Llmlled time offer, i:8111·80fl.7798194.

024 t, Alter 5 ~M

5678.

limitation or diCIImlnai!On.•

a

Stove
Refrigerator $495/Mo.,
Plus Utilities, Deposit, Referenc·
ea, No Pets, 740-446-9580.

610 Farm

Dl1'8cTV S.tallhl. a,•tam•·

5343 and 1oave a message

Rent Buater. new 1999 14x70 2or
3 bedrooms , only $995 00 down
,$195 00 per man , free delivery

limitation or dlscrimlnaUon

2 Bedroom Apartmonf, 1 1/2
Baths, Groat locatlonl 15 Court
Straat, Gallipolis, Kitchen With

u•

1913.

clude A Big Screen TV. With
Each Purchase! 1/25-2128/99, 1800-251-5070

baoed on race, colo&lt;, rollgloil,
sex lamlllalstatus or nattona1
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch p!ehiteiiCI,

I·~~~7~40-~~~~~·:-:-:::

"WARM UPt•
Furnace, Heal Pumpe, &amp; Alf condltlonlng Free Eatlmetosl II You
Don't Call Ut, Wo Both Loaet
740 ua 8308, 1-800-29h00fle
1 Crypt &amp; Pieto, 12,000 oil. Mems bJ to; Olf
ory Gordonl, u ec o tr
740-38?·18&amp;1.

6m

Of Your Rapid Refund And In-

to advenlsa ·any pmoronco,

On Land contract. 740-367'0280. ·

References Required, No Pets,
Excellent Condition, 740-441·

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,

All real estate advanlslng In •
this newspaper IS subject to
the Fedaral Fair Housirlg Act
ol1968 which makes It Ul8gal

Wanting To Buy. 1!i To 20 Acrea,
Prefer Something With Buildings
&amp; Barn, &amp; Some Usable Acres,

I

To University Of Rio Grande

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Now 18K80 $500-Down $245-per

$200 74 per month with $1150
down. Call t·B00-837-3231.

32·40 hours per week Call 740·

Wanted Asslatant Office Manag-

Real Estate
Wanted

360

1 Bedroom, $250/Mo., You Pay
Ullltloa, On Second Avenue,
Oo::w:;n::.:tow:;;;;n,:.:7..:40-.:..:38::.:7..:.Q2:=t97.-:--::-": l
:.
t Bedroom, Economical Gu
Hoa~ WID Hook·U!I, Near Clnoma
$279/Mo., Plus Utlltlla, Deposit &amp;
LNN ~rod,74Q.446.2957.
2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjocent

9580.

Green Terrace, $350/Mo., Includes Lot Rent, Water, Sewer

Includes 8 months FREE lot ren1
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only

too ssloty shoes $5 75 per hour,

889·2874 Monday Friday, Bam·
4pm for appointment

PM or uave Message, 740·
596-5707

Now 14K70 $500·Down $t99·por
mo Free air, skirt. 1-600·89t ·
67n
mo. Free air, skirt. 1 -800-691 ·

enca 30HII6-3887.

knowingly licC8pl
arlvlrtlalmantJfQrraalIa In vfolallon of tiNI
law OUr readero are heioby
Informed that aH dwlf1IIIQI
-load In lhll - - .,. IVIIIablo on aniQUII
_.unity belli

Stanlng At $8,000 Call After 8:00

House In Rutland, out of llood
area, no pats, references and de·

1

8404

Pet Groom1ng As&amp;lstant Most
Work Evenings And Saturdays
Aasumees Only We II Call You
To Schedule Appointments Send
Reaume To· CLA 8 011 452 , c/o
The Gallipolis Trtbune, 825 Third
Ave . Gallipolis, Ohio, 45831

~~7e"~oi~nQ~c~~ge::·~=~ Ad~

1994 Norris Clayton 14)(70, 2:
Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, 2 Decks,

6 1J20k Interest Rate To Qualified
Buyers, lowest Rate In Th, In·
duslryl Largest Se1Bctlon In The
Tri-State . Over 50 To Choose

Nurelng a11l1tenta needed to
provide In-home services lor the
elderly/ disabled, can 1·888·242Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Street. Middleport, tlas part time
positions for LPN's &amp; STNA' s
available for all shills and weekends Anyone interested please
stop by and fill out an application.

11

""' Locallon (304)895-3588

1996 14K72 2 Bedrooms, 2 Bat~a.
740-24!1·9834.

sls·Eidercare Facility, Equal Op-

74().446.3358

coled On Teens Run Rd, 112,500

Carpon, . 740-258-8336

24hr Licensed Home
seek-~~~~~5~~~~~~
11

Need 3 Ladles, To Sell Avonl

OfLandCioMToCrownCityWII·
dille Area Own ll&gt;ur OWn Hunang
Paracllso Only $29,000.00 La nd
Controcts Avaiable t·80Q.213o
8365.

House In PI Pleasant, WV, Ex·
cellent Condition and In Excel-

Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedroom&amp;. Starting at

portunity Employer

South Of GallpoPs, Near Crown
City, 35 Aore Recraatlonalltacts

W•th Shingles, 2 Bdrms , 2 Baths,
AU Electric Appliances, Porches,

CA, 8X10 Molat Building,
$16,000 00 740·258·8851 . 1! No
Answer, L.eavo Meoaage,

FIRE YOUR BOSS
100+ Opportunities to Stoy Homo
&amp;meka $$$ In 19991 Free A..
port Call t-800-41Q-26t2
X 3001, (24 hours)

leis, Rutland

RECREATION LANO

sewage, Gaibage, Paid, 740-o441·

Bath; All electric/kitchen appliances, eurtalnsJbUnda, new
wallpaper ..,Many
updates,

$1 !iO Each, Straight Dresses

llot

1 Bedroom House, Close To Rio
Grande College, $300/Mo , Water

$3.50 Each, 740.448·3635

28184, (304)273·9385, A Gene·

::;;.g!i,op..~~% olf

pllances, curtains/blinds. new
wallpaper.
Many
updates;

1983, t 4x70 Mansion, 3BR/2

Straight Skins, Slaoko And Jeans,

Daniels Plano Service- tuning
and repair, e11pen service since
1965, 740-742·2951, Lane Dan.

Call now for free mapltOWnar fl.

410 Houses for Rent

$11,500,060, (304)875-2619

Will Do Ironing In My Home,

lng caring and compassionate
leader
care, 1s poslnurses intorlong
lull term
and pan-time
tiona Pay begins at SB per hr
with an e11cellent benefits package If you want to join a quality
driven team, call or write us at
Ravenswood Center, 200 s
Ritchie Ave , Ravenswood WV

Teens Run Rd, 10 ocroa $10,000.

1983, 14x70 Mansion, 3BR/2
Bath, All tloclrl~/kitchon ap·

$237·por mo Free dollvocy &amp; set·
up. t-eoo-&amp;91-&amp;m.

LPN's- Ravenswood Center, a

120

m~

bl" homo, 740-992·5039,

9648, 740-367·70t0

230

Friendly Ridge Ad , 15 acres
114,500 Great Homesite &amp; Hunt·
lng, Public Water, City Schools!

Amazing only $999. down on
large selection of double wkies,
free delivery &amp; setup owner fl·

D1ck Roberts, ?40· 446·7812
(Voice /Fax) 'Seo Us At

25550

•

Only $199. down large selection
of 2·3-4 bedrooms tree delivery&amp;
s8tup owner financing available,
only at Oak wood Mobile homes
Nitro Wv 304-755-5885

ery Call1·800-89t-87n

Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estlmaleal Insurance, Sidwell, Ohio. 740-388·

210

ltO.SOO Rutland, Wblleo Hill Rd.,
just off New Lima, 11 acres
114,500 or 9 acres $12,000, pub·
llc wa!er
Oalllo Co , Ju1t off SA 218,

Trailer Hoole Up On 5 Acres LO·

$500 Down on any 141170 In
stock, limited number, tree dell\1·

Ha\1• 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Hamil·
capped, 740-441·1536

Farm Help nieded, must have
experience with horses; call

\llfY remote 11 + acres

nanclng avallab" 304-755-5885.

Shirts Ahd Blouses $1 00 Eaeh,

Rapid Advancement, Pleasant

er,

320 I'Jioblle Homas
for Sale

1 Part-Time STNA For The 10
P.M. -6 A M SNtt
Please Apply In Person To The
Front Desk. Scenic Hills Nursing
Center, 311 Buckrldge Road, Bidwei, OH 45614.

Duo To Company EKpanslon,
WeAre
NOW HIRINGIII

llolgo Co.: Oonvlllo, Briar Rldgo
lth I
A
+Golf Rda. 7 cru w n co
pond $12.000. 8 acrao $13,000 or
on SR 325, n1oo wooded t7 acrao
$18,000 city water Near Carpent·

&amp; Rail Road Stroot. Mason, Wv.
$22,000 00 (304)882-3604

lure. heating aystema, and Re·

Shift.

6290

?~78

Two bedroom house on
80ftx162ft lot. Corner of Pomeroy

pickup &amp; delivery available, ?40·
992-1100, out ol area 1-800:5843227, Appalachian WoodWo&lt;l&lt;&amp;.

Detective • Private Investigator
Trainees Good Wages, 614·523·

Gallla County,

$32,000 Mora Acroago Avalllblo,

mont, can 740-992-5696

BodyWorl&lt;: (304)874-0002.

modeling. 304-674·0126

At Scenic Hilla Nursing Cerlter,
we Are Looking For A Part· Time
STNA s For Tho 2 p M ·1 o p M

Lake Vlow,

Partially Finished Basement ,
Car Garage, Serious lnqulrle&amp;
Onlyll7~3385

Business
Training

140,

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;

!•

s

·'ALLEYOOP

Saturday, Jon. 30, 1999
Don' t be dismayed in the year
ahead tf you should have to shoulder
more responsibilities than you' ve
been actuslomed to handling. Bigger
·jobs wtll yield bigger rewards.
- AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J.Feb. 19)
One rarely mfluences the perfor·
mance of another through cnttcism.
In order to be effective, your com·
ments musl be constructive and positive, Trymg to patch up a broken
romance? The Astro·Graph Match·
maker con help you understand what
to do to make the relalionshtp work.
Mail S2.7S lo Matchmaker, c/o this
newspoj&gt;er, P.O. Bo• 17S8, Murray
Hill Station, New York, NY 101 S6.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Don't blame the vicissitudes of life tf
you lack the money to splu11e on
something you really want today.
Chances are you haven ' t managed
your money too wisely lately.
ARIES (March 21 · April 19) Be
careful where you point the finger of
blame today if you're subJ&lt;7Ied to
some restrictions The fault mtght not

'I

'·

be that of another, but a product of

your own miscalculations
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20) If
you are too self-serving today, your
acttons oren 'I likely to bnng much
Satisfaction. However, this malady
can be cured simply by considenng
the needs
others.
GEMINI (May 21·lune 20)
Resentment on your behalf could
come from allowmg friends lo pres·

or

sure you into spend1ng more than you
should today. Be yow own person
Say "no" and really mean it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Because you could have a tendency
to do things the hard way today, it
could be ra1her uncertain IBS to
whether or not you'll achieve the
objecuves you've established.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) If you
think beforehand that you're gotng lo
fail, you'll find a way to prove your·
self right. Guard againstlendenctes to
prejudge the outcome of events in a
negative fash1on.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Thts ts
not a good time to borrow from a

fnend o; be indebted tn any way. T'J'
not to let yourself get inlo a situatton
today that puis you under obligatton
to others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
defenses mtghl be down today, allow·
ing persons you're mvolved wilh to
have a strong influence over your
affairs. Unfonunalely, their atml
might be detrimental to yours.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't examine challenges under a
magnifying glass today, because it
could cause you to have a poor aUt·
tude on jobs or obligalion!tthat pop '
up unexpectedly.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec ••
21) Should you run into one of your
less favorite people a1 a social sctuii'g
today, don't let the event lose it's
sparkle by revisiting old gnevances.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·1an: 19)
Be the one to qu1ckly offer the ohvc
branch today should a disagreement
between you and your mate tum
rather senous Someone must set the
example w)th a wtllingness 10 coop·
erate.

•

•

'JANUARY 29 I

�•
•

.

•;

•

..

'

I

•••
:_Page.12 • The Dally Sentinel

..

'

.

•

Frkllly, J1nuery 29, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs .Cc;&gt;unty ~ouncil · on. Aglng, Inc.
Multipurpose Senior Center. 1st Floor
. (740) 992·2161 FAX (740)·992-7886
112tEast.. Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 7~2, Pomer.oy, Ohio 45769
E-Mail Address:
et.com
·. Thank you. for
gs Senior Center Levy
THANKS TO
Jlllllor. and Rlla White
Joe McCloud
SUPPORT YOUR
1998
ViviBD May &amp; The
Rev. Bob aDd JoAnn ~hln­
SENIOR CENTER
CONTRIBUTORS.
Chriot Academy BeD d...u

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS AT
THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER

. I

SERVICES &amp;
PROGRAMS FOR
SENIORS

Alzbeimer'5 DilleaSe/Related Disorders (family.
eareglver training and support groups)
Community Support Program (Identifying
Pf'?blems and obtaining assistance)

John Lenteo, Pr-uiJD&amp; A~ey
to..peooman Ted Strieldaad
'INMUry
Kerry W. Johnoon, Dept. of
David J. Booley, U.S. Dept. o J•Uce
Bub Neece
Ron Eatman
Ron Hawldna

Center Dining (nutritious meals)

Chore Setviee (eleaniatt!-laundry)

Educational Programs

Homemaker/Health Servieeo

Evening Meals

Home Delivered Meab

TerryBro~

Dr. Nick Rl'blnaon
Dr. William Smith
Dr. Rodaey SfOUt .

Home Maintenance (minor home repain)

Fitness Center

Health Clinics

Penonal Care

..

Dr, Jameo S.bmoll
Allee Jacobo, .ACCESS Heoadllitarl
Julie WandJid8, Health Reeo•ery
Hal Kneen, ·M eip CoUDty Exte · n Ofllee
Jemdfer Sbeiou, Attoraey At Law
Tonya Sbaw, MASLP, Director R bprlap
Rehabilitation
DenioeAmold
Heather Sabrie, Ohio Conaumen CoUDcd
JoAnn Wddman
Gay Perrin
Lia npton, o. T., H'!lser Rehab
Karen Gibaon, ReereaUonal Tbera~t, Kober Rehab
Sarah McGrew, OU Collep of Oateopathie Medicine

Reopite Care (-iohmee for familiee
who are oaring for 1m elderly family
member In tlieir home)

•

lnfonnation and Referral
Protective/Legal Assistance
Recreatlonai/Soclal Activities

'

CHURCH DONATIONS

..

Retired and Senior Volunteer Program
Support Assistance (for example, mung out
Insurance/medical fonns and answering
benefit questions)

Tax Assistance
T raosportalion and Escort
Welloess and Health Prevention Programs ·

Radne United Methodist Women
Mt. Moriah Church of God
Bertha M. Sayft Missionary Sodety
United Methodist Church Men's Prayer Breakfast
Catholi&lt; Women's Club-Sacred Heart Church
Roc:ksprlnp United Methodist Church
Racine Baptist Sunday School Classl4
Thppers Plains Church o; Christ
. East Letart United Methodist Women
Pomeroy United Mettioolst Chufl:h
Roc:ksprinas United Methodist Women

and the Arthritio Pl'081'am

Connie Kanchnlk, R.N.
Holzer WellDeH Prop-am
· Bonnie McFarland, BSN, RNC
Dr. Rlcbanl Boone

Keller

Shirley Appleby
Alberta KoeHler
Delbert Panorson

Lydia DeLong
Ruby Casteel
•

Gerald&amp;. Clara Pullins

Hanietle Thompson

MildJCd Riley
Kathryn &amp;Earl Knight
C. Richard Crow
Daisy Deem

Elmer Tufts

Palma Goodwin
Jennie Bowles
Clarence Fife

Elwood Phillips
Wanda Findling
Ed &amp; Dorothy Boyer

Ida Clark

Mabel Tracy
Eva Dessauer
James&amp;. Shirley Pauley
Gladys Walker
Alexander May
Rachel Cundiff
Evelyn Wofford
Lizzie Wood
.
Robert &amp; Mary.Dempsey
Dora Calaway
Kenneth Rhodes
Florence Adams

Joan Null

Hekn Black

Howard &amp;Phyllis English

Imogene Knapp
Mary Neutzling
Shirley Altier
Don &amp; Lois Bell
Marguerite Bishop
Tom &amp; Mary Bowen
Emma Broderick
Charles &amp; Daisy Blakeslee
Homer &amp; Alpha Bailey

Mildred Caldwell

Raymond &amp;. Farie Cole
Velma Winland

Belva Willard

Cora Birch
Mary Kunzelma'n
Lucille Yeauger

Earl Denny
Joseph &amp; Mildred Wolfe
June&amp;. Arcbic lee

Arlee Abbott

Shirley Frazier

Mary Smith
Dorothy Roberts
· Ralph &amp;Dorothy Badgley
Francis Shaeffer

Amanda Hawk ·
Vemop &amp; Betty Evans

Karl Kloe•
Lloyd Priddy

Alice Plantz
Jack Adams
Charles lambert

Boll &amp; Donna Smith

Howard Newland ·

Mildred MeadoWs
O.Orgo Sellers
Farie Kennedy
Raymond Adams

KatoJamll
H. &amp; F. Eber&gt;bach
Ruby Burnside
·
Joe A Lela Cremeans

T. &amp; M. McClung
Eloise Adams
Edilon Baker

Sybil Barr
Wayne Deal
Ellie Blaettnar
l..or&lt;tta Beegle
Margaret Cauthorn
Howard &amp;M..Vono Caldwell
Ida Cowdery
Jewell Welch
Mqdalene Russell ·
Mabel Pauley
Austin Phillips

Nina Dixson

Lillian Demoskey
V10Ja Rumfield
Lorena Davidson
Theresa Becker

Polly Eichinger
Mr. &amp;Mrs. Raymond Jewell
Madalyn &amp;Joseph Fanner

Edward Baer .
Olga Daniels

Mary Grueser
.
John &amp; Martha Greenaway
Erwin &amp;: Margaret Gloeckner

Pearl Gilkey
Freda Hood

Elmer Bailey
, Josephine Smith
JanoToaford
Janet 1beiss
Greua Thomas ·

Mabel Waddell

Wilda Wiseman

Naomi Hoschar

Robert &amp; Etta Mao Hill
Ted &amp;Kothol Hatfield

Icy Miller
H.&amp;E. Will
Grace Allen
Sadie Thuener
June Freed

Stella Atkins
H. Jeffers

Irene Roush
~nneth Newland
Pricey Tackett

Mildrod Castle
Addie Petrel

Doris Oruescr
William Pickens
Mabel Ooeglein

Dorothy Whaley

MarVin Fife
Emma Adams
Doris Adam!l
Robert Burdette

Ashley Bi&gt;hop
Dana Bunch

Carl &amp; Hazel Barnhill
Geraldine Cross

Manley Christy

Elizabeth Cannan

Raymond Conorill

Sherwood &amp;:. Beulah Collier

Rubal Caldwell

• Florence Circle
Ruben &amp; Thelma Collins ·
Constance Craig
Freda Carpenter
Robe rt &amp; Muine Durst
Dorothy Downie

Elizabeth Duffy

Curtis Jenkinson
Barbara James
lewis Kennedy
Pauline ·Kennedy
Jeanette Lawrence
Betty LoWe
Rita l.ewis •
Joan May
Cecilia Mitch
Cecil Morris
Lena Martin
Orsie Marie Norris
Thomas&amp;. Aorence Oellerich
Susan &amp; Raymond Oliver
Wayne &amp; Patricia Payne
Mary Rinehart
Harold Roush · l"
June Ann Rhode&amp;
Mr &amp;. Mrs. Richard Seyler
Mariette Sinclair
Mildred Spencer
George &amp; Margaret Search
Duane Stanley
Yvonne Sellers

Bonnie Conde
Lucille a ay
Willie Davis
Minnie Dixon
Rose Deem.
Mary Easterday
Edna Epperson ·
Lilah Frccker

Opal Frye
Ray Foster

Ruby Frick
John &amp;: Violet Fisher
Charles Goeglein
Walter Green
Bobbi Hobstencr
Vii'Jil &amp; Mary Hamm
Nadine Hudson
Annie Hanis
Virginia Heilman

Goldie G ilmore

Tho Easterday Family

Mildred lhle

Robert Jones
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Marvin Krider

Gonald M. Knox

George&amp;. June Kalaua
Maxine Linle
Naomi London
Virginia McClelland

JO&gt;&lt;ph Morgan

Don ~ Betty Maurer
Eileen Manin
Mary Marcinko
, Nellie Parker
Irene Parker
Ralph ..t Maxine Sbain

J""'phine Ritchie
Nellie Roark
James Rees

Thqmas &amp;Shirley Roberts
Edna &amp;·TJCII Schoonlo!&gt;

Pauline Davis

l.oona Smith

Viola Teegarden
Eleanor Thomas
Ora Watkins
Donald Weaver
Dora Wining ·
Faye Wildennuth

Dorothy Woodard

Betty Wills
Carol Wriston
Swingin• Seniors
Dorthea Fisher

Alta Dill

.,

.
I

Sarah Hull
. Holen Hood

French Cily Foot Oinic
Holzer Rehab Unit
KrOger Pharmacy
O'Bleness Hospital
OSU Extension OffiCe
Racine Dental Oinic
Schmoll Oplomelrics
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Face,myer Lumber
Kroger
Quality Print Shop
R.D. Wilson &amp; &amp;ons
G &amp; MFuel j
Farmers Bank1
.
Norris North'~\&gt; Dodge, Inc.
. ~rogan Wan/er Insurance
Delivery Concepls, Inc. ·
Office Service &amp; Supply
Wendy's
Acquisitions
Holzer Wellness· Bonnie McFarland
Toud~rokers lnlemalional
Po)Yell's Super Vatu
Subway
,Pomeroy Flower Shop

AEP· GaYUI Power'J!Iant
'
Olive Orange Memorial Posl N9053
Mike's Plul)lbing
.
Buckeye Hills Ho&amp;ing Valley ·
. .. .Regional DevelOJIPient District
'll
' iverbend Arts Ctlij!cil
Anwar Eye Center
·Area Agency on Aging, PSA ~
~Care f
cry Services, Inc.
lnhcaring
Meip Victim Assistance Program
OU-COM Arthritis Program
0verbrook Centqf
Rocksprinss Re~b Center
Serenity House ;
Woodland Centt4s
. Peoples Bank •
. Meiss County
Dan Smith

Mildred Hudson
Wanda Keller

Lester Keaton

Manley Christy

Meadie Long

Joan Corder
Rachel Downie
Norman &amp; Allegra Will

Mary Lyon

D~k &amp;

Marge Bedell- Slronssville, OH ·
P~lip &amp; Vesna Prenti!IS· Slronssville, OH
Bej;ky Pollack· Slronssville, OH
Mildred Delau- Stronssville, OH
Vh!Mart· Strongsville, OH
UPS
Strongsville Senior Cenler
Willoughby Senior Cen1er &amp; Cily of Willoughby

APPRECIATION TOt

Wanda Lowe
Raymond Landers
Oyde'&amp;Adt Morris
Kathoryn Metzger

James &amp;Dorothy Stout
Ola Hysell
Mary Cowdery
Mary T. Byor

.

Ltna Manin
Elmer Brandt

'

Robert &amp; Libby Fisllor
Harry StOO.rt
Mary Stobart
Wilma &amp;Dwain Casto

Alice Struble
Dorothy Reibel

Pauline Rideriour
John Rces
Nina RobinsOn
George Skinner

Virginia Heilman

Joan Wright
Mary K. Roush
Nina DillSOn

Barbara Shuler
Ferndora Story

'Josephine Ritchie
Ruben &amp;: Thelma Collins

Josephine Stiles

June Soulsby
Martha &amp; Richard E. Chambers

Mr. &amp; Mrs.Arthur Slusher
Opal TyJCo

Mike Martin
Robert &amp; Martha Beegle
Li llian Weese
Pat Smith

"

Thelma Ree!te

Doris Thomas

I..oLec

Hazel Webb

Tina Lee St. Mttrie
Yvonne Sellers

Norman &amp; Allegra Will

Hazel V, Wright

I

Bctha M. SayJC
Missionary Society of Racine
Brenda Stewart
Frances Googlein
Genevieve Burdette
Donna William10n
· KcQ.Braun

Carol Lunsford
Carl &amp;Purlono Leo
Uetwiler

Dorothy Morris

...

Nellie Parker

Kathryn l.ambon
.CharlosKisor
Emma Adamo
Melva &amp; Jay Tncy ·
Eu Mae Chriatian '

Sarah Hull

Pat Thomas ·.
Jane Aanslead
Alice Wolfe ·
Helen·Baer
Linda King
Becky Baer.
Maxine Griffith
June Ashley
Nancy Parker Campbell
and Staff
.Kenneth Wiggins
Judge Robert Buck and Staff

.

Margaret Bailey

J~nne

Carol Ohlinger
Judy Bunger
Paula Woods
Joan Co'rder
Raymond Smilh
Sharon Smilh
Scott Powell
Howard Frank and staff
Imogene Hamilton and staff
Margaret &amp; Leland Parker
Mike Hemmelgarn
Jocelyn Bailey

SPE'CIAL THANKS
.

Bonnie Condo
Gwlnnle White

Meip County Commiuioners &amp; Loati/State
Elected Omdalt
John Lentes &amp; Starr
The Daily Seotlael
Melp County Trusteet/Cierks ·
WMPORadlo
Melp TB Ollke

..' '
'

Mary Rinehart

....

'
'

(Jflio V,tllr·y l'uhlis llinq I .o

-

1

t

nme•Sen11nel Stiff

• G,\I,LIPOLIS- A 7-mitl bond issue in .the Gallipolis City Schools, up for a vote in a special election Tues·
day, has been the focus of feverish activity in the last
few weeks from both proponents seeking improved educational opportunities, an(! opponents looking for a more
ill-inclusive plan for schooling.
,·
·
, !!upporters of the bond issue, led by the Concerned .
Area·ResideniS for Education (CARE), have touted the
need for its pes.sage due to overcrowded conditions at

[)eWine to monitor
~ewinsky deposition

,,.

--

-

tbe curren! Gallia Acaclf.r!ty Hip Scllool . .
If approvecl. the llonil issue will pay for the COIIItruc·
tion·of a new GAHS at Centenary, the convcrsiQII of the
present high school bujlding into a middle .school, and
other improvements th~oughout the city schools.
\Vith historically loW interest rates at hand, CARE
has stressed that conditions are ripe financially for the
~istricl to get the new · ~coildary facility built on land
·purchi\Bed by Jhe distri~ in 1997 at the lowest possible
cost to taxpayers.
~
.
,
The CARE
has alia noted that'&amp;
hjgh
. new
. '

.

•

AEP,dismantllng
huge·coal . .
mining machine"

'·

\

..

'

etttntt
11111:1ry

'.

school allows for
enhanced . learning
capability through
technological
improvements that
GAHS can't offer
under present circumstances. ·
Beyond the edu·
cational benefits,
others backing the
issue have promoted
..the need for a new
school to assist in the
county's economic
development efforts.
R. V. "Buddy" Grahlllll; senior vice president and
chief executive officer of the Gallia l:bunty Oiarilber of
Commerce, said improved school facilitiea and curricu-

, '

Vol. 33, No ~d

:H. 1qqq

B..ig·. uskie's .demise:

WASHINGTON {AP) - Sen.
·Mike DeWirle will be holed up with
:stacks of paperwork this weekend,
ll:!~rc~ad~y to referee the videoC:
tapecj deposition of
COLUMBUS _ The
Monica LcwiMky. ·
owner of a. Jiant mining
~ The. Ohio 'Republican was named J:n:.. .roachjnc that's about to,be
d.ay to monitor . the .. i!ism'aniled . iiJ ··IIOuiiJ,~\iJ4li~;,i;l$i
Ol!io hopes to save at lolllK·
Lewinsky deposition
part of it for a display
for Senate Republisymbolizing coal's importan~ to the region.
cans. . Sen. Patrick
The ·machine known as
Leahy of Vermont .
will serve as De Wine's Democratic
Big Muskie has ·been idl.e
1
o;ounterpart.
sin.:C 1991, a victim ·of . .... """"
" As one of the referees, DeWine
more effiCient minina
will serve as an arbiter with ,limited
methods, new
'

81

•

'

.

.

Detalla on
pageA2

~

c;idlipolis • Mrddh•porl · Pomeroy· Pt. Plc&lt;ls&lt;ml · I

·Proponents, op·pon'ents·de~ate
firianci·al imp~ct. of.bon~· issue
.-y KEVIN KELLY

.

HI: 408
Low: 30t

~·

'

";(:

tum carry weight
with businesses and
industries ponderina
I! move into the
county;
A better school
system also playa a
role in retaining jobs
and larae employers'
already hl!rc, ,Ora~.

"When
~~~~~~~!~~~
ham
noted.Rockwell.••
Warners,
~
the ·Bora~

and G,v.ln planla
bring people in to
'their facilitiea, edu·
cation is lhe first thing they look at." Graham noted. ·_
"I can't over-emph'!Size enouaJt how important it is.
ConUnued an ,... A2

Parents of truant .· ·
students finding
the,mselves in court
By JIM

FREE~

nm•• Sentinel 8tllf

; '.

.

..

f - ·· '

" ·~ .
.

•

......... '•

POMEROY - . In an effort to make sure Meigs
County's children go to sehool, parentS,of truant studeniS
arc more frequently finqing themselves in court along
with their children.
·
This · school year
alone, the parents of
·
•
• · tha
approximately 25 youngIS
·t
,. sters. (r~prese11ting . ~II , kitfS
three county school dt~- ·-.
;
.. . ,
trlcts) have bee11 cited
(J..
into Meiss County Court •
ho
t·
on charges of contribut· In SC
0 , a
ing ".' the delinqu~ncy of that
a mtnor, a,ccordmg to
.
~eigs County Prosec:ut· ·
~~tto~n.e y_Jphn._. ~- .

l'Our basic
premiSe
can't learn''
unless they are.
nd

parents are
responsible for
theiY"flff(dr,ell?''. ·-...:..

powe~-~~~~~~;f.~;~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~

" Jf..

two lawyers
Th
"Our-basic premise is· Mllp County p _ , . .
,erilatiiies and the two lawyers f!lr · Amcri~an
1ihat kids, can't Jearn .
.John Fl. LlntM.
·the White House, De Wine and
Corp. an!! iiS Cenlral Ohio
!unless they arc in .5chool,
.
Leahy will .have the authority to.rule
Coal Co. subsidiary. plan
and that parents are responsible for their children," said
on the objection; provided they both
to begin dismantling the
Len~s. "So many of the problems in our community .are
related to a lack of education. We need ihe kids ioi'C in
agree.
· m!lchine next week. The
DcsP.ite the restrictions under
work is expected to IllS!
school."·
·
·
whlcb 'he'll be working, DeWine
h
h
•
·
f
Previously,
Lcntes
explained~
parents
were
cited
Into
1 rough 1 e spnng 0
intended to walk into lhe deposilion
court
!1114
()fdCred
to
post
a
S
100
bond
which
they
got
'
•
2.000.
IS prepared as any other lawyer in
Big Muskie became a
back if the'·C:hild c:Qntinued·to attend school. For some,
the room. Spol\esman Charles Boedinosaur when surface
the $100 wu·apparently a small price to pay.
sci said Dc:Wine intended to spend
mining operations ended
Now, a parent whose. child is chronically truant is
the weekend goin1 over Lewinsky's
at the Muskingum Mine
cited for contributing to the delinquency of a child, a
grand jury testimony and related
near Cumberland, about
misdemeanor of the first degree pUnishable by up to six
months in jail. Parents can avoid the jail time if their
evidence. ·
70 miles east of Cohim"Hc's gol a lot of reading to do,"
·bus. ·
children attend school.
··
,
Alth~ugh
ihe
$100
bond
frequently
failed
tO
work,.
Boesel said.
·
·
Officials of Tile Wilds, ·
De Wine did not volunteer for the
the jail time has proved a successful deterrent, Lcntes
'assignment, but he has been aclive
·an· IU)imal preserve IIIH1ul
said. So far, the court has not had lo implcmel)t jalltime,
jn assisting Majority Leader Trent
two miles frpm Big
although Lcntes said he is ready to carry out the 60-dayLoll, R·Miss,, in the behind·thc·
Muskle, had hoped to turn
sentencc
if necessary.
·
. ci .
h
.I
t~e machine into an altrac- I I Bit Mulkle
.
Ieite IInCe 111111' I vic- Power Corp. and Ita
"We
have
to
carry
through
on what we say,~ he sal d.
., ,
Jmpcac mtnt Ina preparat1on that would t~h. ~ urn of more efficient mlni!IQ methocle, new elM· lldllry plln to begin
1
Last
year,
the
prosecutor's
office
summoned approxi"··~
DeWi,ne and Leah.Y will oversee a
pie about the mmmg ronmental regUIIIIOne lnd Nducld clemancl tor next week.
mately
150
parents
into
court
for
an
infonnatiopal meetI .
industry and land reclama·
.
.
.
· iCSSion ieheduled to begin at 9 a.m.
tion.
- The Wi(ds cloesn'l have the money for . machine.
ing.
·
"There hu been some discussion
each day and end after eight
"Jt is the last·ofthe big machines and a such a rescue, but isn't giving up.
. Mannina Kloes, a truant officer who·serves all three
·!lOurs,;with ex!lfllination,time equalpretty significant. part of the history .of · , "We've got a proposal pullogether we about saving the bucket and keeping it in
districts, last year approached the prosecutor's office for
ly div1dC!i between House prosecu·
coi.l in Ohio," said Robert Reece, execu• hope they (AEP) will be interested in," The Wilds," she said. "That way we could
assistance. The meeting was a result of Kloes'' request,
Lentes sttid.
·
.ton and White House lawyers.
tive director of The Wilds.
. Reece sttid. He declined to provide details. keep something as a reminder of what part
"One child had missed 84 days .of school," he
He said officials from the preserve,
AllP spokeswoman Vikki Michalski it played in mining in the area."
· The depositions will be video:
One tooth of the 220-cubic yard bucket
taped, but lhe Senale has yet to ' .AEP .and historical agencies have been said 11riday that she was unaware of any
remarked.
measures
about 3 feet long. The buclcet . Focusing truancy efforts on children has not worked,
decide whether the lapes ;will be
talking for sever~! years. about possible recent proposal, but the company is conreleased to the public or whether the
ways to sav.e the machine.
. · sidering trying to sav.e part Qf the could move 325 tons of dirt in a single bite.
Lentes sttid. Otildren cannot be sent to a juvenile detenwitltesses will also teStify live in the
•
Cont!nuld on page A2
·Senate chamber. , ·
.
DeWine will only handle the
_Lewinsky deposition; other senators
:will oversee depositions by other
,witnesses on Tuesday and Wednes- BY BRIAN J. REED
began in September, 1997, has been they will not connect to the system process for assistance for low to Exc;avatina, the .aencral contractor
~ .day. The trial is to resume Thursday. Tl-~nel 8tatr
·shadowed
by controversy. A citi~s' until their demands for connection modcrate·income residents made it on the system.
.
Funding for the $3.1 million proTUPPERS PLAINS - The meter group has protested the costs affiliat· assistance are met, and a' leader of impossible for customers to be coned
with
conneCting
to
the
system,
that
committee,
Randy
Kidder,
was
nected
to
the
system
by
the
!anuary
ject
came . from several sources,
will
start
running
for
customers
in
(;ood flllmniuy
which
include
the
costs
of
·
a
bandon·
appointed
to
serve
as
a.
member
of
25
deadline.
·
•,
includin1
the Issue II program, as
the Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
ing
eXisting
septic
tanks
and
con·
the
sewer
district
bo
by
Common
Residents
wilhin
the
district
are
well
IS
the
Ohio Water Development
District bn Monday. That's when the
I
Todli~ I
Court J_udge
W. Crow Ill required to connect to the system, Authority, Ohio Public Works Com·
billing cycle for the first month of necting residences to the closest · P
15
Ions' - 1
sewer main. Customers are responsi- last 1. .
and county officials have sttid that mission and the CDBO program.
the system's operation will begin.
ble
for
payina
those
costs,
although
The
board
member
said
Thursday
.
properties which are not connected Customers will be required to pay
Construction
on
the
sewer
system
C2&amp;S
C1lendars
the
Meigs
County
Commissioners
that
an
estimated
50
of
200
tolal
cusby
the deadline could be con- for the retirement of debt for the sys·
is
now
complele,
and
it
is
fully
operIN-I
~IIIHIII~s
have
earmarked
Communily
Devel·
tamers
have
now
ainnectcll
to
the
demned.
Tuppers Plains has been the tern, either in a lur.np sum or u a part
ational. According to a member of
I Dint
J;;l!lll!il
the district board, the lagoon, located opmcnt Block Grant funds to assist system, ·and an extension has been subject of a building ban since 1973 of their water bill each m0111b.
Ellll!ldlll· .
M
Bills .will be payable at the
on
State.Route 681, is now ready to the lowest-iflcome residents in con· granted allowing customers until because of the sewer issue.
AtoH lbc River · ~1
necting
to
the
system.
May
31
to
complete
the
connection
The
system
was
originally
to
Pomeroy
and Tuppcta Plains, offices
accept
waste
and
an
office
facility
Oblllllria!
M
Approximately
100
members
of
process.
Snowy·
weather
and
delays
have
been
comphited
in
July,
b~t
an
ofFan:ners
·Bank and SavinpCo., or
should
be
completed
next
month.
IU::§
~tlorta
the
cilizens'
group
have
said
that
in
completing
the
application
extension
was
granted
to
Ftelds
by
mad.
•
The system's construction, which
c i'!W 0111o v.11ey Mtlllll•a eo,

::t. ·

• FLOOD DONATIONS

TREE OF LIGHTS·

Mildred Jacobs '

Patricia Shain
Elizabeth Smith

Anderson's Fumtture
Broughlon Foods Company
McCollough &amp; Riffle Drug
Snouffer Fire &amp; Safety
Pepsi
Francis Fio~st
Adoph's Dairy Valley
McOu:e's Restaurant
Mitch Meadows
Meiss Fann Market
Rite Aid
Dairy Queen
Locker 219Pamida
Valley Lumber &amp; Supply

Hobart Sales
· Brown Food ~/\&lt;icc
Holzer Home
ofVMH

Dortha Handley.

Rosanna Manley
Ruby Manis
Louise Smith
Marilyn PoWell

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

Oan's

Emmaline Hendrix

'Eslber Salser

1

'.

Ohio River Bear Company
Appalachian Community Visiling Nwses Association
Columbia Energy Group Service.Corporalion
Feeney Bennett Post 11128 • American Legion
Q·J·MBoard of Alcohol, Drug Add.iction
&amp; Mental Heallh Services
GWRRA Chapter C-2
Employees of Ohio Power· Gavin Plant

Elizabeth Gilkey

'Bernice: Swartz
Evelyn Stowe

Steve Story

Jolin, Mary &amp;Trudi Wright
Charles D. &amp;Robin R. Wright
Mr. &amp;Mtl. Carl R. Wright
Robert &amp;Nonna Wilson

Dorothy Chaney
Gayann Clay
Larry &amp; Lola aark

Grace Eich

Geraldine Oeland

Clarence &amp; Mae Wamsley

Hilda Harris

Earl Wines
C&amp;rl Weese

Doog Circle
Betty Carsoy
Raben Cushnor

Victor &amp;Alice Wolfe

Edna Evans

Goldie Basham

Ad~s--------------------

.Drew·Websler ORGANIZATIONS
AND
BUSINESSES
Poslll39
•
.
.
· .
·
- .
Bonnie WamSley

Elizabeth Davis'Alta Dill
Mr. &amp;Mrs. John Crary

.

Nmne ----------------~~----­

Pho~

,..
tmes

I

•

'

,.

•••••••••••••••••••••••

Edith Stout, R.N. II: Diabetic Education
Marje L""'l, Reptered Dieticlaa
Flint Adldna, Rober Clinic Sleep Dloonler Lab
Coordinator
Columbwo Abbelmer'o Care Vnlt

·Bank ·
- ·
·
F
armers
·
Lane Bryant
Racine Grange 112606
Career ManagemenUntemational
Meigs County Employee Retirees, Inc.
USDA Rural Development
Meigs County 4.H Advbory Committee
ACCESS Head Slart
Area Agency on Aging, PSA 7
Behavioral Health Unil· VMH

.

You may slop ' In at ll)e Senior Ceoter or
mall your membership to: Meigs County
Maltlpurpose Senior Center, P.O. Box 722,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. If possible, please
Include il stamped, self-addressed -envelope.
Tbaak you for your support.

·

.,.,...p.,.

Inside today

.

The cost of membenblp for 1999, is $3.00
per IndividuaL What ii your $3.00 used for?
The dollars ~ raised lhrougb the Met1•
Mulllpurpose Senior Center Membership
campaign will be used to pay for tbe coal of·
printing ud mailing the newsletter six tllaes
per year and as local match dollars for in. home services.

THANK YOU FROM THE CARING &amp;
SHARING SUPPORT GROUP TO:

.DONATIONS
M~ia

\

· Mony Wnod· lleip Co1111ty Sberllr'f Depa.
Dr. Henry Croci.
\
·
Cathy Bo,.en, Rober Clialc
Reeky Baer, Meip County Exte.lon OtBee

In-Home Aueument

Health AssesSment

,

ends,
the game
begins

coupons

FMtuNd on Pt~~Je C1

Your paid membership to the Meiss County
Council on AgiDI, lac. Is a measun of
support for the ,Multipurpose Senior Center
and for the many services It provides. Each
paid member,s hlp received verfnes to
npoaal, stt~ and nalloaal funding aaencl~
thai the Seolor Center Is providing ne.eded
PJ"'OI''IIIII to older adults.

PRESEN\fERS

IN THE HOME.

cel(lbrstlon
for Sacred
Heart Church

BUYA
1999 MEMBERSIDP

Tony Ding- &amp; 'l1ae Bi8 .~ c-mwlity Bpd
Swin@in' S..nion
· · · · •·
.~
SCREE~INGS, ~PEAKERS &amp;:

Money-saving

Melp County Estenaion Omee
Paulette Harrison
Cittda Starcher

r.nd

United
for Meip County
Melp County Hetllh Department
Melp Couaty EMS
. Melp Couaty Depart•nt of Human Services
One Weeks
Meip Conaty Hlstork:al Society '-..
Robert F1sher
'\

m

Meter-starts running for ·customers in Tuppers Plains ~ewer district

~

.

'

'

.

....

allia County resi.dent wins WWI honor from France
Former
G
J1V
ODIE O'DONNELL
T-~ CQrrupondent

., · GALLIPOLIS - A fanner Rio Grande
"reilident wu recently honared·when he was
"presented' with the highest honor the country
·of France can bestow on a non-nailonal.
J.nea Lawrence Clark, 99, received the
:official' insiania of the )..egioo of Merit from
•Apne Croux, deputy consul general of
):ranee., at a special ceremony on )an. 11 at
'the Hillview Rciirement Center in
Portlmouth, where Clark now resides.
Oark is one of America's most highly
decorated heros of World War I, e1111ed as i
:i!1-y~-old private in the U.S. Marine
during seven major engagemeniS on the battlefields of Frtutee in 1917· 18.

eoq,s

·~

If was during the bailie in the forest of after the U.S. entered the war agttinst Ger·
Belleau Wood that Oark; chosen because he many. He completed his hoollraining at Par·
. wastouah and daring, made his way through ris lslai\d, S.C. before being shipped over·
the Gennan lines with an u:gent mes1111ge to seas as a member of the 47th company, Sth
the rear command.post.
regiment.
.
.
. "Help, we have been cut off and we're
The "Fighting Fifth" battled its way inlo
sini'ounded by Germans."
. I
the history hooks from the lrenches and bat·
M he made his dash for help, an aftillery tlegrounds of Toulon, Verdun, AlsnC, Otam·
shell exploded nearby and Oark's shOulder pagne-Mif!IC; O!atcau-Thierry, and finally
was nearly severed by shrapnel.
the battle that IUmed the llde agttinst the
. Bleeding and in severe pain he delivered German• at Bola de Belleau.
the message that eventually br~ught Ameri~ark ~ved a Jetter from Franco.is
can reinforcements to his trapped buddies, BuJOII de I' Eatang, the French 1111bassador m
and saved the entire 5th Marine regiment Washington, in December, 1998 informina
from bei~aslauptcred.
him of his selection to receive this rtre
1'. native of Adams County, aark quit award.
school to enlist in the Marines just 11 days . · The letter to Oark stated, "this dislinction

~

in France's highest nation·

"' Gennan armies that had threatened to con·
quer Europe." This b~t of w~land where
on you by lhe ~rench
thousands of Am e n~ans dted or ~ere.
Government IS a stgn of
wo~nd~d was later destgn~ted as a nauona(
the hiah esteem my coun·
shone m ho~or ?f th~ M~nes :
.
try has for y~u, who perAfter dehven.ng _hts hfe-savmg message;
sonally contributed to the
Oark was hospttaltzed from June 9, 1918
decisive suRPOfl that the
until Dec. 12, 191~.
United Stales gave to
Before retumtng home. from France,
French soldiers in the
Oark was honor.ed by General John J.
defenae of our country
J
"Black Jack" Pershing, commander of the,
durina World War I. It is
lmM
• American Ex~tion~ ~~ in Fran~~
therefore a personal pl~ure for me to offer · who award.ed htm the Distinguished Semoc.
you my warmest and smcerest congratula· Cross, the' Na~y Cross. the Purple Heart, an~
tions .•"
, .
.•
lhe Victory M~al . ·,
• Military htstonans ~!are that ':klleau ·
Later, Henn Petain, marshal of France
Wood wu "where the .tide tumed agatnsl the
Continued on Pllll" 142

at award. It is conferred

&lt;

~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="422">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9849">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25804">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25803">
              <text>January 29, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1634">
      <name>cotterill</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2949">
      <name>mankin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5754">
      <name>ness</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="228">
      <name>patterson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5753">
      <name>rexroat</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="451">
      <name>vanmeter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="301">
      <name>whittington</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
