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_____By The Bend

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JCn •

Dally Sentine~ ·
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t,(,••l''i ,

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Pige 12
. Thursday,
February 11, 1999
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Ann gives hope to woman who. has trouble:i.n.love _and m~rria·ga·
and most of my friends were married. When Bob proposed, it seemed
like the right thing to do.
Immediately after the weddlng,
we began to fi ght. Bob goes out
drinking every night, and I hate it. I
have suggested counseling, but he
won't go. We haven't made love for
six months.
Several weeks ago, I became
friendl y with a man at work. "Max"
paid a lot of attention to me and built
up my battered self-esteem. It didn 't
take long for me to stan seeing him
on the side.
Max is 40 and has never been
married. He say s he can make me·

Ann
Landers
IIW1. Lon Anrclcs Ti'?'IC5
Syn\1 1~ 1tt

and· Creaum

S)'ndiute.

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 30
year-old married woman who is having a full -blown affai r. I never
thought thi s would happen to me.
Before "Bob" and I were married
last year, we were compatible and
had similar inlerests. I was not in
love with him,' but we had been dating for six years. I was al most 30,

Beat of the Bend ....
By Bob Hoeflich

The Col'lmunity Calendar is
.Published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed
space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number· of days .

I neglected to tell you the time
on the open house to be held this
Sunday at the Rutland United
Methodist Church honoring the
90ih birt~day of Marcia penison.
Friends and family members are
cordially invited to drop by the
church between the hours of I2
noon and 3 p. m:

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
6:30p.m. at the Lutheran Church,
·Thursday. Members to wear red.
Hostesses, Jane Brown, Shirley
Beegle and Ann Rupe.

.

- - -

Bob a chance to dry up.,If Max. ~alLola then had 'the nerve to say
He then galloped off to the w~
ly cares about you; he wjlllyve\Y, · }. thla(:g9o&lt;J ~hina like mine is really About 10 miles from home, he saw ~
alone and be willing to let you li,IV~j~t_for show and I !hould not have cloud of dust approachmg and wat .
your marriage a chance '(o malte 1\~ using it. My great-grandmoth- ed.
.
":
You have a lot on your plate, lady ers creamer is, of course, irreplaceHis trusted friend, ·on horsebac~
and I hope you are equal to the chal- able, but I am going .to get another galloped up and said, "You gave ~·
Ienger that lie ahead,
•\
·
·~
1 china ha11dle crafted onto it. Should the wrong key."
· Dear Ann Landers: I recently I send Lola the'bill? - SLOW BURN · Is that Ann Landers column YO!
gave a dinner party. I prefer to serve IN PASADENA, CALlE
. clipped years ago yellow with age)
my guests myself and ' tried to be
DEA-R SLOW BURN: Stick For a copy of her most frequently,
emphatic about it, but one guest yourtoe in the water for testing. Tell requested poems and essays, send :J.
insisted on "helping" me.
: 1 Lola,,you' ve found a place that will self addressed, long, business si &gt;'t
' I know "Lola'; was only trying ro mend, the creamer and ask if she envelope and a 'check or rnonex
be useful, but sl)e·was getting in my wquld lii,e the bill . My guess is she order for $5 .25 ( thi~ include!
way I asked her· several times to will ,be happy to pay it. It will ease postage and handling) to:· Gems. c/o
please sit down and stay out of the ~~~r conscience and cool your anger. Ann Landers. P.O. Box . I 156f.
kitchen, but she followed me around
Gem of the Day (~ent in by an · Chicago, IlL 60611 - 0562. (In Caml•
and insisted on giving me a hand.
Ohio reader): An offic~r of ancient da. send $6.25 .)
• .,
To get her off my baek:;:I:;asked ·~~QIIle; . called away ,lo the wars, ·
To find out more about Ann La~
her to take a creamer into the dining locked his beautiful wife in armor ders and :read her past columns, visit
room and place it on the table. Well, and gave 'the key 10 his best friend the Creators Syndicate web page
she dropped it on the tile floor' slia~-' :lv'l\:ith the admonition, "If I don 't www.creators.com.
~
tering the handle and spilling the .return in six months, use this key. To
·'
cream all over the. place.
you, my dear friend, I entrust it:" ·

at

t

.;'_
. ------Coml11pnil~·-~9~1endar

muscles are back to normal.
Junior has not driven a car yet
because of di zziness but is getting out some when a driver is
available. He does appreciate the
patience of his piano tuning customers who are hanging in until
he gets back on schedule. A few
days ago, with the help of a good
friend, Max Boring of Racine,
Junior resumed his piano tuning
activities. Max does the driving
and the '.'go-fer-ing".
Rita and Junior are most
appreciative to everyone for all
the cards, letters, gifts, flowers,
calls and visits and are especially
grateful 10 the churches and individuals who have Junior on their .
prayer list.

I probably don't need to
remind you that Sunday is Valentine's Day and you'd better be
doing your thing.
The day will be quite special
for Maude Carney who will mark
her 106th birthday ann'iversary
on Sunday. Mrs. Carney is alen
and would love to receive cards.
She's at Overbrook Center, 333
Page St. , Middlepon.
On Saturday afternoon from 2
to 4 p.m., her nephew, Ralph.
Gibbs, Jr., and his wife, Dorothy
Childs Gibbs, will entertain with
an open house at the center honoring Mrs. Carney and you are
invited to drop by. Of course, ·
many of you know Dorothy and
Juni or- they 're
everywhere
doing a ·lot of good work.
Speaking of birthdays, Delmar Baurn, well known Chester
residen t, will mark his 90th on
February 18.
Delmar was ·in the building
and hardware business in Chester
for many years retiring about 25
years ago when .his son, Tim,
took over the business. . '
·several weeks ago Delmar
underwent surgery and is feeling
a bit down. Cards would certainly cheer him up a bit and they can
be sent to him at PO. Box 65,
Chester. Oh. and the zip code out
there is 45720.

happy and feel fulfiiled, and I know
· he is right. Max .has asked me to
leave Bob and marry him. I love
Max , but I hesitate to throw away
the long history I have with my husband. Also, I don 't want to admit to
my parents that my marriage is a
failure.
Another problem - Bob's mQjher
is ·very ill, and I'm afraid a divorce
would kill her. What should I do,
Ann? I feel tom and trapped . I am in
desperate need of advice. · AT
LOOSE I&gt;NDS IN PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR PENNSYLVANIA: Put
everything on hold until Bob's mother is well or, heaven forbid , no
longer with us. Tell Bob he must go
to Alcoholics Anonymous or the
marriage is over. Be fi rm about thi s
unless you are willing to be married
to a drunk who is.sure to get worse.
Stop seeing Max until you give

as

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Veterans
Administration Medical Center,
Chillicothe, health care enroll ment, Thursday, 10 a.m. to noon ,
I to 3 p.m. at the Veterans Service
Office, 117 Memorial. Drive,
Pomeroy. Proof of military ser·
vice required.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tupp,ers
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. Re fre shments.
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Board of MRDD, 5 p.m. Thursday
at the Carleton School.

All!Cric~

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1• Camp·i';S .I '• '
Woodmen of
7230, potluck dinner Saturday, 3
POMEROY
Return
p.m. at hall. Tak~ covered dish Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR,
and a Valentine to be sent to the regular
meeting,
Saturday,
sick or shut•in. G~es~s •a[e'i~~!'-~£fomerf&gt;y Library,· IO a.m. History
come .
Mont~ to be observed wnh Pat
Holter to present a history of
RACINE - Racine Post 602, Meigs County libraries. Winners
American Legion and Auxiliary.. ·~· Jifth grade history writing con.
valentine dinner, Saturday, II p.m . ~ s't and winner of Good Citizenat hall. Meat furnished , - those · s ip award to be recogJliZed.
attending to take cov·ered dish.
Hosting meeting, Pauline Atkins,

!

Sharon Jewell , Donna Jenkin~
and Clotine Blackwood.
·;

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TUESDAY
'
POMEROY - Meigs Coun~
Board of Elections, 9 a.m. Tuello
day, at the office.
: ·.
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¢,

RACINE - Racine Board
Public Affairs, ,Tuesday, 10:~
a.m. at the municipal building . ~

..:',

Friday
eat er
·Today: Snow showers
.High: 40a; Low: 108

Tomorrow: Blusterv.
fllgh: 20s; Low: 108

F•bruary 12, 1M

Marauders blast Vinton County, Page ·4
__ .Diabetes etiquette, Page 7
Rethinking Miranda decision, Page 16

•••
Meigs County's

\

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vo lume 49, Num ber 197

By LARRY MARGASAK
After another morning of closed-door deliberations, sen· ·
;Aseoclated Pr"' Writer
alors were to vote in public today on the impeachment arti· WASHINGTON (AP) - Thirteen months after the cles, possibly around noon. With four Republican senators
hame Monica Lewinsky .rattled the White HouSe, senators saying they would vote to acqui~ it was possible lhat the
are primed to acquit Bill Oinlon and end the second presi- articles would not even attract a simple majority in a chamaential impeachment trial in U.S. history. J'lut senators ber where the GOP holds a 55-45 edge.
appear far less willing to forgive Qinton for concealing an
Ointon, however, would not remain without troubles:
extramarital affair from the nation and his family.
, He could face indictmen~ while in office or after his term,
Today's.hisk)ric votes on two articles of impeachment by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, and must finish his
chuwng .Ointot:~ with 'peljury and · obstruction of justice remaining months in office facing a GOP-controlled Concorrtplete a .drama that has riveted official Washington, gress that w1111ted him evicted from the White House.
roiled' a midterm congressional election and worn out the
The votes cap a five-week trial that featured for the first
patience of the American public:
time videotaped testimony on the Senate floor and provided
_, And it has caused Ointon, .and the presidency; incalcula- the world its first good look at Ms, Lewinsky, the former
ble damage.
White House intern. A national TV audience was able to
· ·"The presid!:nt's ~If-indulgent actions were immoral, . watch as 13 House impeachment managers, all Republidisgraceful, reprehensible," said Sen. Bob Graham, 0-Aa. cans, argued that Ointon deserved to be thrown out of
"Histpry should - and, I suspec~ will - judge that office, while White House lawyers said he should not.
William Jefferson Ointon dishonored himse.lf and the highThroughout the impeachment proceedings, opinion polls
est office in our American democracy."
showed that most of the public gave Ointon low marks for
· .Republican Sen. Robert Bennett of Utah predicted that personal trust and morality. But they approved of the job he
Oinlon's concealment of his affair wit.h Ms. Lewinsky, was doing in a time of peace and a booming economy and
which grew out of the Paula Jones sexual harassment law- did not think the sex and cover-up scandal was serious
sui~ would forever tar him as "the most accomplished, pol- enough to warrant his removal from office.
.
ished liar we've ever had serving in the White House."
Still, a Republican-controlled House in December voted

• Jewelry
• rr'ravel !Agents
• Stationery
• &lt;'florist
· • 'Pfiotograpfiylllideo
• 'Tux fR_entals

Evidence
found no clear link to By JIM FREEMAN
I.
dant 1·n NeW Ph'lI ade1ph'1a tr1a
•1
. Sentinel
News Staff
d81en
Meigs County Republi~ans were urgllll to demon-

No c~ndidates have
yet filed for Pomeroy
mayor's seat

There is yet to be a candidate to be the
next mayor of Pomeroy.
According to the Meigs County Board
of Elections, nobody has even picked up a
NEW PHlLADELPHJA(AP)-Astate crime evidence examiner testified strate the compassion, commitment and character of
petition for the post, even though the fil·
she has had trouble finding a link to 13-year-old Anthony Harris in the stabAbraham Li~coln during the annual Republican Lining deadline for the May primary is Feb.
bing death of his 5-year-old neighbor, Devan Duniver.
coin Day Dinner held Thursday night al Meigs High .
18.
Brenda Gerardi, a scientist with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification
School.
·
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan and
and Investigation, is a prosecution witness.
,
·
Auditor of State Jim Petro, making his second visit
Middleport
Mayor Dewey Horton have
Her videotaped testimony Thursday detailed the items she was instructed to Meigs County since 1990, addressed approximateboth
said
that
they do not plan to seek re-·
to examine.
ly 200 ·Republicans at the dinner, held in honor of
election, leaving both offices open in the
She performed tests on Devan's clothing, socks and shoes to look for blood Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican president, who
fall.
or semen, All were negative. Devan was not sexually abused, iqvestigators led the Union during the Civil War and proposed the
Sam Eblen has filed as a Republican
con.cluded.
·
Emancipaiion Proclamation whi!!h outlawed slavery
for the mayor's off,i~ in Mid- .
candidate
., ,dTh~~~v~th~~ ~~~ be t~e ~.,u~er ~ea~n hadn.~o.;t:r.:a•ces
;.:;;~o.:,.f..;..;..;.;;,;;,,_;.l - in t~_IJ.qi~ed Stale~. . ..• __ .. _. · · _ . ;
dleport,
and
Jean Craig, another· Republi·
581 •
·'
.
.
.... l..mcofn Ciemonslra e ca measure of perslsttnce ,
can,
has
also
said that she plans to .file as
Devan's body was found June 27 in a wooded area behind her home.
during a series of ,unsuc~essful campaigns, Petr~
a
mayoral
candidate.
If convicted. Harris would be imprisoned until age 21. Because he is observed
,
Democrat Yvonne Scally has picked up
younger than 14, he eannot be tried as an ·adult under Ohio law. Tuscarawas
"Like no other.president in history, he stayed with
a petition for the mayor's race, bui had not
County Juvenile Court Judge Linda A Kate ls presiding ov.er the Harris case. his oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitufiled as ofThuriiday morning.
There is no jury in the Ohio juvenile court system.
,
tion of the United States," Petro said. "His lead.ership
1\vo council seats in both Middleport
A black p!'astic garbage bag found near Devan's body tested positive for
is what we celebrate today; his crusade against slavand
Pomeroy are up; and partisan candi·
'"··--of blood, but did not indicate any connection to Harris or Devan, Ger- ery."
dates
in Middleport and Pomeroy will
ardi said.
1\vice, Petro found President Clinton sorely lackappear on the May 4 ballot.
Harris' T-shirt and shorts, obtained · ing in comparison to Lincoln, particularly in the fields
Middleport Councilman S~eve Houchduring a ,July 2 search of ·his home, of "leadership, character anCJ commitment to service."
ins
and Pomeroy Council member Geri
r----------~--, were shown to have traces of blood.
He said he was "shocked and
Wallon
have filed 3s candidates for reShe sent those to be tested further for amazed" that a majority of Amerielection,
and Chip Werry has filed as a
DNA.
cans continue to support Clinton
candidate
for council in Pomeroy. Bob
A DNA expert who tested those despite the controversy surround2 Sections • 16 Pages
Robinson,
a Democrat, is circulating a
items, Glen Hall, les~ified earlier this ing ihe president's affair with a
petition as a candidate for council in Mi~­
week that he !'auld not exclude either young intern and subsequent
Calendar
7
dleporl.
Devan's' or Harris' DNA from the T· cover-up.
C!assifleds
13&amp;14 shirt.
· Middleport voters will elect three
Petro also discussed his duties.
members to the newly reformed Board of
Comics
15
Bones foUnd In chimney those
.,As auditor of state, Petro is the
Public Affairs. Myron Duffield, who was
Editorials
2
of middle-aged ~lack nian
chief inspector and supervisor of
appointed to the board, along with Craig
CLEVELAND (AP) . _ A public offices in the state of Ohio.
Local
3
and Don Stivers, has picked up a petition
human
skeleton found in the chim - Managing a staff of 900 and a budSports
4-6
·for the post, a5 has Bernard Gilkey.
ney of Mount Ararat Baptist Church get of nearly $65 million, he heads
In order to appear on the May- primary
Weather
3
Youth Center is that of a middle·
the largest state auditing agency in
ballot, candidates for village offices musl
aged black man, th e Cuyahoga
the United Stales, second in size
file petitions no later than 4 p.m. on the
Lotteries
County coroner said.
only to the U.S. General Account. 18th.
Or. Elizabeth Balraj said Thursday
ing Office.
OHIO
Township trustee and· clerk candidates
the remains were those of a 'man
As Ohio's 29th auditor of state,
will be elected in November, as will mayPick 3: 8-5-6; Pick 4: 0-9· 1·3
between 37 and 47. He was between 5 he is responsible for auditing the
ors and council members in the other vii- .
BuckeyeS: 11-17·22-23-24
feet 7 inches and 5 feet 10 inches tall.
financial records of Ohio's' 4,500
Iages in Meigs County : Rutland, Syracuse
W.}1A• .
Balraj's office was running tests to
units of local and state governand
Racine.
Dally 3: 9-0,2; Daily 4: 7-2-6·3
determine the identity of the body and
ment, including cities, villages,
RALLYING REPUBLICANS ..,.. Jim
auditor of state,
Those
candidates run on a non-partisan
0 1999 .0hio V.lle)' Puhlishins·Co.
the cause of death.
universities, libraries, counties and addressed Meigs County Republicans during Thuraday basis.
_j townships. The auditor 's office night's Lincoln Day Dinner held at Meigs High School.
•
extends financial and technical training services to
local governments and identifies incidents of fraud,
waste and abuse in publicly funded institutions.
Petro said his office "allows taxpayers to have trust
and confidence in their local governments."
. He also briefly described what he called "the good,
the bad and the ugly."
He described the "ugly" as those public servants
who steal from the taxpayers, which are eventually
caught and prosecuted. The "bad" are "somewhat
contemptuous of good business practices" and "allow
a lack of trust..". .
.
"The good are those Ghioans who have ah active
role i~.Jafe,&amp;'!ardin&amp;l'ublic ~·1 he said. "~ouih
~ir atten8_on td'de!aiJ-.!hey butld real.irust.•
' ~ctro is.:a,,tiltm~t bf the Associati~n of Government Accountants, The Government Finance Officers
·Association, the Association of Certified Fraud
Examiners, the Na~ional State Auditors Association,
and n·umerous other civic and professional organizalions.
He resides in Columbus with his wife Nancy, a
publish,er and graphic artist. Their daughter Cory is a
sophomore at Yale Unive~ity, and their son John is a
senior at Denison l:Jniversity.

Sentinel

t!:===========---------_...:._

Voinovich voting to convict Clinton Linda Tripp says she'd do it again
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
George Voinovich of Ohio said today
he planned io vote to convict President Clinton, a decision he called
more difficult than any pardon or
. commutation he handled as gover-·
nor.
. "The president cannot faithfully
execute the laws when he himself is
breakinfl them," the Republican senator told Ohio
reporters.
.
· Voinovii:h would not go into specific evidence that
convinced him.
" All 1 can say to you is that I believe that beyond a/
reasonable doubt in Article One there were at least two
instances where h~ committed perjury," and in the second impeachment article "several areas where he
obstructed justice."
Voinovich called the obstruction premeditated and
" undertaken over a long period of time, beginning when
h~ learned Monica Lewinsky was placed on the witness
list."
The first article of impeachment accused the president
of lying to .a federal grand jury on Aug. I 7, 1998, about
his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky.
The second charge said Clinton obstructed justi ~e by
trying to have Ms. Lewinsky sign a false affidavit in the
Paula Jones case; by a job search ~;onducted by prestdential friend Vernon Jordan; by the retrieval of presi~ential
gifts by Oval Office secretary Betty . Currie; and the
alleged "coaching" of Mrs. Currie by the president for
her grand jury appearance.
.
." You have to take this whole, all of these facts , and

• Jiair Salon

• 9ifts
• fR_eceptions
• Jiome 'furnisliings
• 'Bridal9owns
• anp more

·'Don't be left out. ..
Deadline is )VIonday, ']eb . 15

Call Dave Harris or Kathy
992·2155
,,

Single Copy - 35 Cents

virtually along party lines to send to the Senate for trial an
But .oemocrats and Republicans alike said the votes
itnpeachment case based almost entirely upon a voluminous were not there for conviction. Bennett, for one, has joined a
report by Starr.
·
Democratic-sponsored initiative to have the Senate pass a
The report detailed Linda Tripp's secret tape recordings; strong resolution of censure immediately after Chief Justice
furtive gropings and sex acts between the president and Ms. William Rehnquist gavels the trial to a close.
Lewinsky near the Oval Office; late night phone calls
But even supporters agree the resolution is ailing becalise
between the president and the intern; and, most damning for of stiff Republican opposition, and the pro-censure ~nators
Ointon, a stained dress.
.
·
may h~ve 10 settle for a statement ~nouncing the presiBased on Starr's findings, the House approved one arti· deill's conduct
cle of impeachment accusing the president of lying to a fedOn Thursday, Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe of
eral grand jury on Aug. 17, 1998, about his relatiotlship with Maine joined three GOP senators who previously
Ms. Lewinsky.
·
.
aimounced their decisions against removing the president.
The second charge said Ointon obstructed justice by try"After due consideration, l am persuaded that the presting to have Ms. Lewinsky sign a false affidavit in the Jones dent's wrongdoing can and should be effectively addressed
case; by a job ~h conducted by presidential friend Ver- by the criminal justice system," she said. "And I am further
non Jordan; by the retrieval of presidential gifts by Oval persuaded that future presidents and future generations can
Office secretary Betty Currie; and the alleged "coaching" of be effectively deterred from such wrongdoing by this
Mrs. Currie by the president for her grad jwy appearanCe:.
impeachment and that potential prosecution."
Senators said il was their constitutional duty 1o proceed
Republicans John Chafee of Rhode Island, Jru:nes Je~with a trial, even though from the beginning there were fords of Venoont and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvanta prevt·
doubts that the two-thirds vote required to convict Ointon . ously came out against conviction. .
.
·and remove him from office would materialize.
Senators began private dehberattons on Tuesday, and by
In three days of closed-door deliberations this week, sen- Thursday night they were holding news conferences and
alors den,ounced Ointon 's conduct "over and over again issuing written statements to &amp;Mounce their votes and
from both sides of the aisle," Bennett said.
explain their decisions.

Republicans celebrate Lincolnls
·
·•
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leadership at L1ncoln Day d1oner

Today's

'Place your business ad in our '99 !J3ridal 'Edition
tfiat will be inserted in
rr'fie 9allipolis 1Jaily rr'ribune, 'Point'Pleasant
'Register and in rr'fie 1Jaily Sentinel
On W~dnesday, &lt;'february 24

·

:s enators primed to acquit Clinton, but not to forgive

Good Afternoon

1999 'Bridal 'Edition

.

•

DOWn PAYMEnT ASSISTAnCE InTEREST SURVEY
.The Meigl County Grants 0/JU:e u'conducting a lUMley to determbae the need and
interest ma Homebuyer Down Payment Assiltance program. in Meigs County.
The Homebuyer A..utan~e program wouLl provide 5Q% down payment/closing
cost assiltance to Low/Moderate Income Howeholds in Meip County. Thu wouhl
enable the howeholds to purchase appr011ed homes in Meip County.
If y~~r howehof4 ·u;:ould be f'~re1ted in participating in thu pr~pam, I!leme caU
the Mergs County Grants·oftce a.l 992-7908~Monday through Fnooy~9:00 A.M.5:00 P.M.~Jean Tnus.eU.
, .
If a signifi~ant number of h: weholds are interested, the County may include this
program in the F¥'99 CHIP ·jppUcation now being prepared.
,, .
Meigs County Cominiuioneri

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synthesize them and understand that he orchestrated this
whole thing," Voinovich said.
He stressed that he considered Clinton guilty of high
crim es and misdemeanors because df what he did to
cover his tracks and not because of the extramarital relationship. .
,
The Senate planned to vote on the anicles of impeachment later today. Ohio's other senator, Republican Mike
De Wine, did not plan 10 make a statement until after the
vote, his office said.
All ind icati on~ we.re that there would not be a required
two-thirds majority to convict Clinton and remove him
from offi ce.
And it was possible thai the articles would not even
achieve a simple majority, because at least four Republican senators said they would join Democrats in votes to ·
acquit.
Since Voinovich just took office in January after serv·
·ing two terms as Ohio governor•. his decisions on
1mpeachmen1 were to- be hiS first maJor votes as a sen a·
tor. '
Voinovi ch voted wi th the majority to hold deliberations in secret. and to take depositions from witnesses but
not hear live teStimony. DeWine favored having the
whole Senate hear ~rom _witne_sses.
.
As governor, VOJnovtch satd he had had the ftnal say
on hundreds of requests for pardons and sentence commutat ions, but " in no case have I labored more" than
o~er the decision on how to vote in the impeachment
tnal.
~ in ovi c h ~a i d he would not support a ~ns u~e of the
• prestdent or stgn a letter of reproach be1ng c11culated
among senators.
.
· .
. " We have g~ ne through a long process that 's o ~thned
10 the Conslltutton," and that was suffic1ent, he sa1d.

deny th at she brought up Ms. Lewinsky's name.
By PETE YOST
"Are you asking me did I want this behavior exposed?
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Linda Tripp, whose tape Absolutely," said·Mrs. Tripp.
She said lying in Mrs. Jorres'lawsuit in order 10 protect
recordings triggered the Monica Lewinsky scandal, says
the
president was " not an option for me."
she considered it her "patriotic duty " lo expose a relati on"It
was worth it to.me to do what I considered to be my
ship in w~ich President Oinion "abused, used, discarded"
patriotic duty" and "yes, I would do it all again," Mrs.
the former White House intern.
People think the relationship was "consensual and that Tripp said.
Mrs. Tripp has emerged as one of.the most unpopular
I inserted myself somehow" bitt "it was not," Mrs. Tripp
·
figures
in the presidential scandal.
.
said in an interview aired today on NBC's "Today" show.
She
turned
over
the
tapes
to
prosecutor
Kenneth Starr
"The public has no clue ... absolutely no idea what
but
refuses
to
say
in
public
whether
she
made
them. She
Monica endured ... the histrionics, the hysteria, the throw ing of lamps, the damage to herself" and Clinton "emo· remains under investigation by Maryland authoriti~ who
tionally abused Monica, " Mrs. Tripp.asserted. "She threat· want to know whether she violated the stale's wiretapping
law.
ened suicide on more than one occasion."
Save for her grand jury appearances and the release of
Mrs. Tripp said she fe ll Ms. Lewinsky was passing
her
tape -recorded phone calls, Mrs. Tripp ~as seldom been
along "threats" from President Ointon that Mrs. Tripp
heard
from over the past year. During a statement on the
should lie in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit.
"There were threats," said Mrs. Tripp. " Did I take courthouse steps, she told Americans she had been misunthem seriously? Absolutely. ThreatS to my life. Threats to derstood and mi s~haracterized. " 1'!11 you,!' she declared
the lives of my childre.n. Monica made those threats and then.
A form er White House worker employed by the Penta·
passed them along to me,' I believed from the president. I
gon
but who has worked from home since the scandal
believed I was in jeopardy. Be a te4m player, or else." She
erupted,
MIS. Tripp insisted that she would wantso111eone
said the message she got was that if she didn't protect the
10 expose an improper relationship if it involved her
president by lying, "You will lose your job and worse."
Regarding alleged threats, White House spokesman daughter, just as s.he did for Ms. Lewinsky.
"I would thank them," Mrs. Tripp said. "If my daugh·
Jim Kennedy said " any such bizarre suggestion is Judi '
ter
found herself in a situation such as this where she was
crous."
Mrs. Tripp .denied the role Clinton supporters have . being abused, .used, discarded, I would hope someone
· attributed to her as a provocateur who actively tried to would come in and help her.
"I take exception to the fact that I brought this all
foment the scandal. She said she didn't start taking steps to
expose the relationship " until I was asked to commit a abou~" Mrs. Tripp declared, placing the blame squan:ly on
Oin10n.
crime" by lying in the Jones case.
"These were choices made by the president of the Unit·
l'ressed about her contacts with Mrs. Jones' lawyers,
ed
States,"
she said.
Mrs. Tripp said " they approached me" but she did not

�•
••

Friday, February 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

.

Commentary
,,

'£sta6{isftel In 1948

,_

..'

P'rlday,

FebrUII'Y 12, 181111

The Daily .Sentinel Democrats take and hold middl' ground

I '

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
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.

'

·· Guest edUorlal

.Legislative activity
at your fingertips

By JICk Andereon •nd Jen Moller
The not-unexpected news that House Minority
Leader Richard Gephardt, D·Mo., won't be running
for president might be seen as the final nail in the
coffin of the once-mighty Republican revolution. Gephardt wants to be Speaker of the House,
and as of this writing he's got a betler·than·e~en
shot at the job. Democrals need only to claim six
House seats in the 2000 elections to put Gephardt
third 1n line for the presidency. It's a scenario
nobody could have imagined when 73 Republican
freshmen stormed the House four years ago,
intent on remaking Washington.
In some ways, the revolution was a success The
budget is balanced and welfare has been reformed.
The upstarts didn't get their wish of ellminahng an
entire cabinet agency or two, but they changed the
political dynamic, at least for a time
A lot of good that does them now
While Republicans have focused on
deposing the president, Democrats have
used the past year to cement their hold on
the political middle ground. The final
blow came litst week, when President
Clinton proposed a budget that would
make any hawk happy. Though some
Democrats are opposed to the plan ..
which calls for $110 billion in defense
hikes over the next six years .. they
won't muster enough votes to threaten
passage. Flummoxed Republicans are
left arguing for an across-the-bOard tax
cut that doesn't stand a prayer of becom·
ing law.
Democrats have used the last year to
tell voters what they are for .. almost
everything, if you believe the State of the
Union address. Kids, mothers, families,
apple pie and plenty of bucks for educa·
lion are all on the Democratic plate. It
plays as well in Peoria as it does on Capi·
tol Hill. '
Gephard~ seeing the same polls as
Clinton, realized two things: That he was
bound to lose an expensive, divisive race
against AI Gore for the Democratic nomi·
nation in 2000, and that the president's
robust approval ratings are just what he
needs to bring a Democratic majority back to the
House
.
It's much too early to pred1ct anything in an
election that's still 21 months away But political
pros w1ll tell you that elections are often won in
the off-years.
This is the year when candidates get recruited
and veterans announce their retirement. It's also a
crucial year for raiSing money. The successful
challenger is one who already has some money in

By Rep. John Cerey
W1th I I .2 million people 1n the state of Ohio, it has always been a chal·
lenge for those of us in the state leg1slature to stay ih current contact with
our constituents. But, believe it or not the Ohio Gener·
al Assembly 1s mvvmg full steam into the 21st century
with the introduction of our new integrated web site.
That's right, by signing on, pointing and clicking, rele·
vanl and current legislative information can be attained
in an instant by anyone, anywhere.
For those of you who found calling or writing to
'•
request bill information cumbersome and time consum·
mg. these new advances will suit you just fine. For
those of you who are unsure of who your state repre·
sentative or senator is or need more information on leg·
1Siat1ve agenc1es, again this web site was made with
you in mind.
,
It is my purpose, as well as all of us in the 123rd General Assembly, to
make sure that the legislation we pass not only benefils you as Ohio Clllzens,
but that 11 is accessible That is why I am so excited about the new integral·
ed web site.
This new web Site includes the full text of bills, including line numbers
and stnke outs, a sect1on on "how to find your legislator" by using your zip
·· code, name or district number searches, links to other leg1slative rich sites;
and an integrated view of a bill and all of 1ts assQ~:iated information This
means that when you pull up the b1ll you can also link to the bill status, b1ll
hiStory, b1ll analysiS, fiscal notes and even video clips.
,
Many of the state agencies provide much of this needed information on
the web already. Unfortunately, this information is not in one concentrated
site making it difficult to access. It was our intention to create a site that
would incorporate the technological attempts of other agencies into a single
integrated stle so that all mformation could be accessed from one pl,ace.
" Consequently, there is now only one reference point to remember for infor·
8y JOHN CUN~IfF
mation on the state legislature, legis·
Tills new web site Includes
AP Business Analyst
!•tors and related agenctes, www.leg· the full text of bills, including
NEWYORK(AP)-Th .. persis·
1slature.state.oh.us
.
line numbers and strike outs· a tence
of economic good times has
It IS our hope that the new mte·
.
"
'
done more than lift stock prices,
grated web site not only allows for sec!IOn °~, how !0 find yo~r
lower the jobless rate and raiSe
,. easier access to public mformation, legislator by us~ng.your tiP
homeownership, to name just a few
:: but that there is quicker feedback as code, name. or dJStnct num~er
of
its materi al benefits
.. well. Oftentimes, constituents do not searches; lmks to other legJSlaIt has taught us a few economic
:: hear about or are not clear about cer- tive rich sites; and an integrallessons as well and made us ques:: tam tssues m the state legislatures ed view of a bill and all of its
lion
others, such as the notion !hal
:~ and are unable to respond before associated inforttUllion. This
you
can't have a mere 4 3 unem·
:: measures are passed. W1th legiSlators means that when you pull up
ployment rate and low inflation too.
:: and o~r staff, thiS IS less likely to be the bill you can also link to the
We,have both now, and maybe a pol·
,, a predtcament
.
bill status bill history bill
icy lesson to boot.
'•
The new web s1te IS also a great
. '
'
For decades now we have
:: way for people 10 learn about the a?alysJS~ fJScal notes and even
believed
that full employment was
.. Ohio state legislature, the vanous video clips.
reached
when
the JObless rate fell
" stale agenctes and how they all come to work together. The passage of a bill
below
6
percent
and down through
requires the efforts of hundreds of people. The elected officials are responthe
"5s."
Costs
would
rise and so
" Sible for a great part of that, but legislatiOn certainly could not be passed if
:: it were not for the efforts of people like those in the Legislative Service would prices.
There was a sensible-sounding
: Comm1ssion who draft the b1lls or those m the Legislative Budget Office
rationale
for th1s: Companies would
'• who determine the local fiscal Impact of legislation on communities These
be
forced
to hire less qualified work·
;: efforts are all represented on the new web sJ!e.
ers,
which
would raiSe output costs.
~
It IS w1th much excitement that we unveil our new integrated web site. We
• hope that the web site provides an easier and more convenient avenue for the And the availability of jobs would
; general public to mqu1re about legiSlative mformat1on. We want peo~e to put upward pressure on other wages.
Such a Situation as alarmmg, and
: know about who we are and the progress we are making for the state of
monetary
officials expressed their
• Oh1o So, next t1me you are at a computer, look us up This is only the first
concern
by
raiSing short-term inter·
: verston of the web Site. It will be 1m proved upon as t1me goes on.
est
rates.
Invariably,
1! worked, the
:_
John C•rey represent. the 114th District In the Ohio House of Repreeconomy
would
slow,
JObs would be
- aenmtlvea.
cut and the economy would be
saved.

the bank heading into a tough wiggling. Those who decide to stay will have! to
campaign
versus
an explain why they want to remain tn a club they
entrenched incumbent.
once derided.
"To the extent that
Finally, Republicans wi II find thef!lsel.ves
things look really good for a handicapped by the departure of Newt Gtngnch.
party, (that's when) people - " One ,of t~e c~allenges for ~epu?lic~ is, replacdecide to run, " says elections ing Gtngnch, says Cook While Gtngnch was
guru Charlie Coo~ of the something of •. liability politicaii_Y•. he.. was •an
National Journal " When enormous asset m terms of fund-rmsmg.
.
things look pessimistic, it can have a chilly effect
That doesn't mean the Democrats will gain
on recruitment."
back the financial advantage they once took for
And this is where the fallout from impeach· granted. The GOP will still raise more soft m1mey
ment may eventually be felt most deeply. By than will Democrals, which means more a~ at
pushing an unpopular prosecution of the presi· election t1me. But they must fi.nd someone to
dent, Republicans could inadvertently be scaring replace Gingrich, who could rmse hundreds: of
off their most talented potential candidates. Con· thousan~ of dollars for under-funded challengers
versely, Democrats are quietly confident that the simply by showing up in their districls.
,.
president's high poll ratings will help them recruit
There are signs that thtngs may be coming full·
pnme cand1dates who otherwise wouldn't leave circle In 1993-94, Republicans weakened din·

Victor C. Genhcimer of Pomeroy died Friday, Feb. 12, 1999 in the
Crestv1ew Manor Home, Lancaster.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

.

'
\

'-'

Carl E. 'Gene' Mitch

I Toledo I11"!24:J

-

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Carl E. ' Gene' Mitch, 60, 501 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, died Thurs·
day, Feb. 11, 1999 at the Meigs County Golf Course.
Born Jan. 26, 1939 in Pomeroy, he was the son of the late Carl T. and Mil·
dred Campbell Mitch.
He is suiVJved by h1s wife, L1la Terrell M1tch of Pomeroy; a son, Mark E.
Mitch of Benton Harbor, Mich.; I daughter and soll-in,law, Shari and Joe
Garnes of Pomeroy; two grahdcl\lldren; a sister and brother-In-law, Lena
Mitch and George Nessel road of Pomeroy; a stster-in-law, Kathryn Spencer
of Anna Marie, Fla ; sister-m-law, Polly Legar; sister-in-law and brother-in·
law, Martha and Joe Stnible of Pomeroy; and several meces and nephews.
He was a long-time employee of Amen can Electric Power and worked as
a shift engineer at the Gavin Plant. Prior to transferring to th e Gavin plant,
he worked in plant operations at the Kyger Creek Power Plant.
He was an avid golfer and a longtime member of the Meigs County Golf
Club. He graduated from Pomeroy High School in 1956 and was co-capta1n
of the championship football team there in 1955. He also played basketball
and baseball for Pomeroy H1gh, and later was involved in Little League
coaching.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday tn the Ewing Funeral Home, w1th the Rev.
Roland Wildman officiating. Burial will be in the Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 3-5 and 7·9 p.m. Saturday.

Hilda EUa Yeauger

6 ~--~-~

,... ~ht snow accumulation
Sl.rwt; Pt. Cloucty

Clouely

snowtrs T-atorms

RaJn

Aun1ea

Ice

s expected by Saturday

the safety of a statehouse 'Or local office.
Republicans find further self-inflicted trouble
m the form of term limils. The blustery class of
'94, eager to undo busmess·as·usual, clung td'
term limits to show how different they were from
the Democratic fossils who had ruled the House
for four decades. Those revolutionaries are now
in their third term .. after which many of them
had once vowed to retire. Some members have
already said they'd honor that vow; others are

For various reasons, includjng
the collapse of foreign economies,
tmplementation of the old policy
was delayed. Surprise! Inflation did·
n't JUmp like a spnng, it fell like a
broken wire.
What rose were wages of the
poorest, which for several years had
been stagnant or actually falling.
And because they were, all sorls of
costly government programs and
subsid1e's were created to assist
them.
"
As made clear in a study by the
Economic Policy Institute, a m1ddle·
of-the-road think tank often favored
by Democrats, some of the sharpest
percentage increases in wages were
among those lowest on the wage
scale
What a turnaround
Between 1989 and 1996, said
Jared Bernstein and Lawrence
Mishelk, real hourly wages failed
even to keep pace with inflation,
falling at least 3 percent for the bot·
tom SO percent of th~ male work·
force.
But, since 1996, wages among
men m the bottom 10 percent of
incomes have risen 4.7 percent, and
those in the next h1gher percentile
by 6.4 percent. Accompanymg these
gams, female incomes also began

ton by attacking bloated budget proposals that
were light on cuts and heavy on big-government
spending programs. Last week, several Repu~li·
cans said privately that the party would be better
off forgetting about big tax culs in favor of fighting
Clinton's all·things·lo·all·people spending plan~.
The last time Republicans tried that lack; it
brought them control of the House. It remains to
be seen 1f the same ploy can work again.
•·
Copyrlght11188, Unlttd Ftlllure Syndicate, Inc. ,

rising.
The Fed learned
from the experience,
and for months has
resisted the temptation
to raise interest rates. In
effect, it has voted to
pursue or to test a new
policy of restraint. At
least for the time being.
Already, say the
report's authors, the
expenment has helped
to generate real, broad·
based wage growth,
" and has given workers
a much•needed foothold
to begin regaining two
decades of lost ground ."
Many conservatives
would agree With that,
but perhaps not with
another reason offered
for the Improvement. The EPI con·
eludes that mcreases 1n the min i·
mum wage level also made a contn·
bution to closmg the wage gap.
The minimum wage remains con·
troversial, with those leanmg toward
a more conservat1ve view contend·
ing that it closes the door to hiring at
the very lowest levels of the eco·
nomic ladder.
And there still remams a debate

The minimum wage
remains controversial,
with those leaning
toward a more conservative view contending
that it closes the door to
hiring at the very lowest
levels of the economic
ladder.
over why the new monetary policy
is working. It could be, as many
believe, that recent mcreases in prp·
ductivity, or output per manhour,
deserves most of the credit
'
Whether or not that IS so, every·
one shares in the good news, which
is that after years of wage stagnation, the current expansion provided
jobs and has begun raising wages of
the poorest workers and of women
too.

Some writers know when to end their lives

• By The Associated Press
· Today IS Friday, Feb. 12, the 43nd day of I 999. There are 322 days left •
: in the year
tine." The literary matchmaking was like an
By Ben Wattenberg
Today 's H1ghllght m H1story :
"exalted parlor game," sa1d series ed1 tor Atlas
For those of you who have
On Feb. 12, J809, Abraham Lmcoln, the 16th president of the Untied
With the nse of the new media .. home vtdeo,
been defeated lately by a bloated,
: Slates, was born m present-day Larue County, Ky.
cable and the Internet .. the publishmg biz has
On this date:
eleventy· hundred·page biogra·
many new competitors for the attention of its
In 1733, English colomsls led by James Oglethorpe founded Savannah, phy, remain calm. Help has
arrived.
readers. "IllS Simply utopian to think that you can
. Ga.
On
Super
Bowl
weekend,
I
carry
on business as usual in the face of th1s techIn 1870, women in the Utah Territory ga•ned the right to vote.
read both Larry McMurtry's
nological onslaught on our time," sa1d Atlas.
In 1892, Pres1dent Lincoln's b1rthday was declared a national holiday
lnev1tably, short b1ography cannot layer inci·
In 1907, more than 300 people died when the steamer Larchmont collid- "Crazy Horse" (141 pages) and
Edmund
White's "Marcel
dent upon detail on top of episode the way longer
: ed With a schooner off New England's Block Island.
b1ographies can. In a way, they cannot be as true
. In 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo· Proust" (156 pages) ·: and st1ll
saw time recaptured by John Elway The only to th e lives of their subjects as more comprehenpie was founded.
Sive biographies. But by locating and staymg true
· In 1915, the cornerstone for the Lmcoln Memonal was laid in Washing· thmg that was too long was the game.
Super Bowl companions Proust and Crazy to the characters of their subjects, they can make
, ton, DC.
, In 1924, George Gershwm's "Rhapsody m Blue" premiered in New Horse are the first :wo Penguin Lives, a new the1r lives more intelligible than can many far
. York.
series of streamlined biographies (T28 to 256 · longer works ballooning With incidental facls. In
In 1940, the rad1o play "The Adventures of Superman" debuted on the pages) of figures from world history and culture's good examples of the genre, like the first two Penexcl us1ve smgle·name club .. Mao, D1ckens, gums, dramatic coherence and clarity emerge
Mutual network w1th Bud Collyer as the Man of Steel.
In 1973, the first release of American prisoners of war from the Vietnam Dante, Darwin, Churchill and Leonardo, to name from the pressure to be conc1se.
McMurtry's Crazy Horse is a reclus1ve and
a few. Conce1ved by journallsl!b•ographer James
confl1ct took place.
mdependent
soul who avo1ded for most of his life
In 1993, m a crime that shocked Britons, two 10-year-old boys lured 2· Atlas, the short b1ograph1es are published JOmtly
year-old Jam~ Bulger from h1s mother at a shopping mall in L1verpool and by Vtk1ng/Pengum and investment banker Ken· "all parleys, councils, treaty sessions, and any
neth Lipper, sometime author and oneli me New meetings of an adm inistrative or political nature,
beat him to death
not merely w1th wh1tes but w1th his own people as
Ten years ago: The spec1al prosecutor m the Iran-Contra case and the ~us­ York deputy mayor.
More writerly than scholarly, the biographies well." His solitary nature helps explain both the
lice Department reached an agreement on protecting classified materials
match an array of up-market literary journalists, vacuum of verifiable facts abou t hiS life (fewe[
aimed at aii!Jwmg the tnal of Oliver North to proceed.
novelists,
belletristic cn lics and popular histori· than those available about Alexander the Great,
Five years ago: President Clinton signed an $8.6 billion relief package for
ans
(not
an
academic specialiSt in sight) with h1s· McMurtry reflects) and his emergence as an
victims of the Northridge earthquake m Southern California. The XVII Win·
torical figures about whom they feel passionately. implacable resister, as white pressure on the
ter Olympic Games opened m L11fehammer, Norway.
One. year ago: A federal JUdge threw out President Clinton's new line- The approach makes for some intriguing pa1rings. Plams Indians grew.
His. negligible contact with wh1tes, McMurtry
item veto authority. At Nagano, Norweg1an Bjorn Daehlie became the first McMurtry's "Crazy Horse" is the story of the
man to win six Winter OJympio gold medals; as he placed first in the 10· diehard Sioux resister to white settlement of the• speculates, may have meant that "he never made
kilometer classical cross-country race. An appeals panel reinstated Canadi- West .. by the writer whose most famous novel, the kind of hardheaded assessment of white charan snowboarder Ross Rebagliati's gold medal, a day after he was stripped of "Lonesome Dove," is famously ambivalent about acter and white intentions" that more accomoda·
the taming of the frontier. Next in the series, lion 1St Indian leaders like Red Cloud and Sitting
the honor for testing positive for marijuana.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director Franco Zefferelli Is 76. Baseball Hall· Garry Wills, one of the notable intellectual con· Bull made early on. Both his mystery and his
of-Fame sportscaster Joe Garagiola is 73. Sen. Arlen Specter, R·Pa., is 69. verts of our time, encounters one of the notable reluctance to abandon the fight were central
intellectual converts of all time in "Saint Au gus· ingredients in the emergence of his myth. And
Basketball Hall·of· Famer Sill Russell IS 65.

•

Victor C. Genheimer

• •• • •

A noble expe~iment, not by design

\Today In History

Locaf. brie·f s:

hi•A2

•

McMurtry's Crazy Horse is, finally, a necessary
myth· "The Crazy Horse legend grew m the main
from a broken people's need to remember and
believe in unbroken heroes."
Proust, too, lived reclusively in hiS artistically
mature, later years .. but not by choice. Solitude
was imposed on the extravagantly soc1al novelist
?Y debilitating asthma. "Forced to lie utterly stjll
m bed for hour on end med1tatmg on his life,
(Proust) was naturally disposed to turnmg the
people he knew and the adventures he liv~d
through into glowmg legends," wntes White. • 1
But if McMurtry's Crazy Horse is fated io
remain a symbol of the vanished civtlizatJOn of
the Plains Indians, White 's Proust has been
detached with the pa!lsage of time from the
expired world that he recreated in his master·
piece, " In Search of Lost Time."
"As his life recedes in time and the history. ~f
his period goes out of focus, he is read more as' a
fabulist than a chromcler, 115 a maker of mytbs
rather than the valedictorian of the Belle
Epoque," writes Whtte " We no longer measure
his accounts against a reality we know Insteail,
we read his fables of caste and lust, of familY
virtue and social vice, of the depredat1ons of jeal•
ousy and the consolations of art not as reports but
as fairy tales."
·
:
We still don't whether John Elway knows
when to end his career.
'
But at least we know that some writers know
when to end their Lives.
Copyrlghl11188 NEWSPAPER ENTERPIIIII! AIIN.
Ben Wittenberg 11 1 ~enlor fellow 1t the
Amerlcln Enterprlae Institute 1nd 11 the mOd·
er•tor of PBS's "Think Tlnk." Daniel wetten·
berg, who wrom thla w"k'l ,column, wrltel
regularly lor The Weekly Smndlrd 1nd le 1
contributing editor lor Gtorge..

•

By The Aaloclelad Press
·. A cold front swept across Ohio early today, sending temperatures plung·
ing, and dusting the state with snow.
Readings dropped from the 60s ahead of the front to the 30s behind it.
There will be another threat of snow tomght and accumulahons of about
one tnch are likely in the north. Lows will be 15-25.
It will be blustery and cold on Saturday w1th more snow poss1ble and
highs only m the 20s.
·
Weether forecast:
(fonight ... Becoing cloudy. A chance of snow slrowers from late evening
on. An inch or less of snow accumulation. Breezy. Low's in the upper teens.
Northwest wind 15 to 20 mph. Otance of snow 50 percent.
Saturday... Biustery and much colder. Cloudy with a chance of snow
~howers. Highs in the lower 20s. Chance of snow 40 percent.
Saturday night...Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper teens.
Extended forecast:
Su111day.. .lPan:l~ cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.

H1lda Ella Yeauger, 87, Racine, died Thursday, Feb I 1, 1999 in the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
She was born on May 13, 19llm Minersville, daughter of the late Homer
and Viola Virginia Davis Roush. She was a former clerk at Elberfeld's
Department Store, and attended the Forest Run Un1ted MethodiSt Church .
She was a member of the Chester Grange, the DAY, Garden Club and the
United Methodist Women.
Surv1vmg are two sons and daughters·th·law, Gene and Sanlea Yeauger
of Enon, and Don and Marie Yeauger of Canal Winchester; and three grand·
children and three great-grandchildren.
~he was also preceded in death by her husband, Foster Alfred Yeauger;
an mfant son; and brothers and sisters.
.
. Serv1ces will be 10 a.m. Saturday tn the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
With the Rev. Wesley Thatcher and Pastor Chad Emerick officiating. Bunal
will follow in the Gilmore Cemetery. Fnends may call at the funeral home
from 7·9 tonight.

1-

Tax notices returned to treasurer
Approximately 50 property tax statements mailed out by county Trea·
surer Howard Frank have been returned by the post office due to improp·
er addresses, according to Frank. ,
People who do not rece1ve a t~x statement s~"uld call the treasurer'~
office at 992-2004 to receive their statement, ~rank said. He advised
affected residents to contact their post office to obtam the proper address.

- Announce)m ents·: ~Meeting canceled
The Feb. 15 meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services has been canceled The
board's next meetmg will beheld on March 15 at 7 p.m. at the Board's
office, 35 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
'

Fellowship planned
The Lifeline Apostolic Church, Point Pleasant, W. Va. will observe
"Red and White (blood and soul) Sunday" Sunday. Services will begin
With Sunday School and will be followed by a dinner, then a church service at 1 p.m. There will be no evening service. .
•

Club to meet
The Mtddleport L1terary Club will meet at 2 p.m Wednesday, at the
home of Bernice Carpenter. Eileen Buck will rev(ew "The Three daughters of Madama Laing" by Pearl Buck.

Trustees to meet

.

Letart Township Trustees will meet Monday 6 p.m. at the office build·
ing.

Youth league to organize
The Middlepon Youth League will meet Thursday, 6:45 p.m. at the
Mtddleport Counc1l Room. Officers will be elected. Anyone mlerested is
invited to attend.

Lupus meeting set
The support group for people With lupus will be held Monday from
6:390 to 8 p.m. at Grosvenor Hall West, Room ll1, on the Oh10 Univer'
stty's Athens campus. There will be a general discussiGD and anyone with
lupus or has a family member or fnend wtth it, ts inv1ted to attend.

EMS units record 10 runs

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 10 calls
for assistance Thursday. Units respondmg included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:18 am., State Route 124, Dave Grindstaff, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Racme squad ass1sted,
5:45 p.m., Frecker Road, Pomeroy, Ida Roush, Veterans Memorial Hosptlal;
7:25 p.m., Lmcoln Heights, Pomeroy, Dale Hoffman, Holzer Medtcal
Center.
ObltUarleo ~ paid !lnnounoement. orrangecl by' local funertl homoo. Oblluorl••
•,
ore pub!Jihed aa roqiHI-Io occ:ommodatt thoH doalrlng more Information 1111111
POMEROY
1
Ia proVtd~Jn the li!:collll\lnylng DNth Nollcoo.
10·24 am , Will's H1ll Road, Carl "Gene" Mitch, VMH, Central Dispatch
squad ass1sted;
4:26 p.m., volunteer fire department and squad to U S. 33, car ftre, no
injunes reported.
Carl E. "Gene" Mitch, 60, of 501 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, passed away
.. ~
cloudy. Lows in.the lower 30s and h1ghs in the lower 50s.
RACINE
suddenly Thursday, February 11, 1999 at the f\oleigs County Golf Course.
6:47a.m., VFD and squad to SR 338, gas odor at Pearl Russell residence,
He was born in Pomeroy on January 26, 1939, the son of Carl :r. and Mil· no injuries reported;
.
dred Campbell M1tch, deceased.
8:03p.m., VFD to County Road 28, brush fire, no IDJUnes.
He IS survived by his wife, Lila :rerrell Mttch of Pomeroy, a son, Mark E.
RUTLAND
Mitch of Benton Harbor, Michigan; a daughter and son·tn·law, Shan and Joe
10:46
am.,
North
Second
Avenue,
MiddlePort, Kenneth Jordan, treated at
.~-By JAMES HANNAH
On several occastons, Rose Garnes of Pomeroy, and two gmndchtldren, Megan and Andy Garnes.
the
scene;
!' Aseodlted Preu.Wl'ller
rephrased questtons for Taylor.
He is also survived by his sister and brother-in-law, Lena (Mitch) and
8:55 p.m., New Lima Road, George Lowery, HMC, Central Dispatch
XENIA (AP)- Things didn't so
At,onepoint, Taylorpulledoutabox George Nesselroad of Pomeroy; a stster-m-law, Mrs. Kathryn Spencer of Anna
squal,l
assisted.
'
any smoother for James Taylor Sr. in his of photos to be submttted as evidence Mane, Florida; a sister-in-law, Mrs. Polly Legar; and sister-in-law and brother·
'
SYRACUSE
second day defending himself against only to be told most of them had already in-law, Martha and Joe Struble of Pomero~. along with several meces and
6:40a.m., College Road, Betty VanMeter, VMH.
murder charges.
been introduced by prosecutors.
nephews.
Taylor repeatedly received reminders
"We're not going to so into duplicaMr. M1tch was a longt1me employee of AEP, currently an assistant shtft
from the judge about how to question tive things," srud Rose. "You can only engineer at the Gavin plant in Cheshire. Prior to transferring to the Gavin plant,
witnesses Thursday and lost one sharp seesomanyptcturesoflhesamethtng." he worked in plant operations at the Kyger Creek Power Plant. He had a total
exchange with him.
Friction between the two flared when of 41 years and 11 months service at the time of his passing.
Taylor JS accused of attempting to Taylor insisted that a pohceman on the
Gene was an avid golfer and a longtime member of the Metgs County Golf
shoot his estranged wife dunng a Valen- stand tell htm the exact distance between a~
.
tine's Day dance last year at a Fraternal a pool cue and a bloody T-shin on the
He was a graduate of Pomeroy High School, class of 1956. He was a co·
Order of Eagles lodge in FaiJbom, then floor of the dance hall. Rose overruled captam OQ the 1955 PHS championsh•p football team, and also played on the
fatally shooting the couple who had the question.
PHS basketball and baseball teams.
taken his wtfe in.
"He's a professtonal, your honor,"
Gene also took an active pan JR helping to coach and promote L1ttle League
· On Thursday, he stubbed his toe time Taylor said.
baseball teams.
and again while trying to navigate the
" Mr Taylor, you are not arguing
Calling hours at the Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy will be Saturday, Feb·
l~w and court rules m CJ'OS&amp;&lt;lxarrunmg
with my rulings," Rose rephed.
ruary 13, 1999 from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m Funeral serv1ces will be held Sun·
the prosecution's witnesses.
The tension was broken a bit when day, February 14, !999 at 2 p m , w1th the Rev. Roland W1ldman officiating.
Greene County Common Pleas R~fr:~ Jltylor to use a laser point- Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy
Court Judge Thomas Rose had to er d
ts questioning.
Pallbearers w1ll be M1chael Struble, 'M1chael Nesselroad, Cecil M1dk1ff,
MESSAGE IN A BOffiE (PG13}
700lt30DAILY
remind Taylor to put his tnquiries mto
"Just don't point that at me," srud Charles Legar Jr , Michael Wayland, Carson M1dktff and Charles Legar Ill.
MATINEI!I SAT/IUN 1 10 l3 30
the form of questions, to avoid trymg to Rose, dmwmg laughs from courtroom
Honorary pallbearers will be Ray Ohver, Albert Banks, Don Mayet, Dave
use hearsay as evidence, to let the wit· observers
Swain, Jim Carpenter, Otarlie Saunders, Paul Chapman and Don Hunnel.
FROM
, ntss answer a quesllOn before posmg
Prosecutors allege that Taylor, 68, of
In add1t10n to floral tnbutes, the family requests donations be made tn his
· 11110ther, and to try to speed up.
Huber Heights, tried to shoot his memory to the Pomeroy Youth League, m care of Benme Wright, 32170
·
estranged wife, Pat Taylor, 63, at the Avenue Bndge, Pomeroy.
VARSITV BLU!S (R)
710lUOOAILY
dance, but instead killed Ronald Rihm,
MATINl!IIAT/IUN t 1063 XI ,
...HT
51, and his wife, Carolyn Rihm, 57, of
(USPS l13-960)
Riverside.
SHE'S ALL THAT (PO)
Community Newspaper Holdlnas, lne.
'
'
J
7 00 l UO DAILY

~ ~~~~~~~c~~~u~d~~JLo~w~s~i;n~th~e~m~id~2~0s~a;nd~h~lg~h;s~in~t~h;e~lo~w~e~rJ5~0stJ.

Carl E. 'Gene' Mitch

dant has more problems .
representing himself at trial

.

The Daily Sentinel
tl'try afternoon, Monday through
111 Court St , Pomeroy, Ohto, by the
Oh•o V.lley Pubhshmg Company Second class
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Hospital news

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Feb. 11 - Verttse
Bryant, Mrs. Craig Mason and son,
Mrs. Hayden Hammond and daugh·
ter, Robert Schaeffing, Marion Scar·
berry, Clem Leasure, Anus Hurt,
Mary Cribben
(Published with permission)

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Am Ele Power .......................41 '1.
Akzo ...................................... 41 ~.
AmrTech ...............................62'·
Ashland Oil ..........................46'1•
AT&amp;T .................................... B6')•
Bank Ohe ..............................507.\

Bob Evans .................... :....... 20'1.
Borg-Warner ........................... 45
Broughton ............................... 17
Champion ............................... &amp;~.
Charm Shps .......... ................ 3'~•
City Holding .......................... 27'1.
Federal Mogul ........ .............54"i.
Gannett ................................. 68i.
Kmart .................................... 16'·
Kroger ...................................60'1.
Lands End ........................... 30'~.
Limited .................................35'!.
Oak Hill Flnl ................. \:''""'18l
OVB ......................................... 42
One Valley ...............................31
Peoples ................................ 24%

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
ln-.ldt Mdp County
13 Weeks.... ... .... .... •.. .S27 30
26 Wtck.s .......................... .SS3 82
52 Weeks • •.............$105 ~
R•tm Outside Mt111 County
13 Weeks • .. "'""" r""' .$29 2S
26 Weels .• .. ............... $56 68

52 Weels . . . ................ .S\09.72

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our .. alii concern in all storKs Is to be
accurate. U you know qr an error in 1
story, &lt;1111 the newsroom at (740) 99Z·
11!5. We will check your lnfonnation
and make a correction lr warr•nted.

Prem Fln1 ............................... 15 ~

Rockwell ...........................44 ~..
RD/Shell ••••••• •.• ••••••....•...• ,...••• 44 y,.
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.

.

'

Dad returns to smoke-filled
house twice to rescue son

AKRON (AP) - It was a Harvey, 34, of nearby Green.
fourth birthday with a special gift: "Leaning in that w1ndow was
like sticking your head m an
life.
A boy was rescued by hi s oven."
Wea nng the hooded sweatshirt
father, who twice ran mto the1r
smoke-filled
burning
home of one of the constructiOn work·
ers to protect him, Robert J. Pete
Wednesday to fmd h1s son.
.
" They are very lucky to be dived through the w1ndow.
About 15 seconds later he
alive," fire investigator Dennis
Nelson said, poirttmg out furm· ' dived back outside, Harvey said.
After: gulpmg down a1r for a
ture blackened by smo ke that
f1lled the home of Robert J. Pete, few seco nds, Pete dived back
through the window and emerged
27, and his son , Robert D. Pete.
The boy remained in the burn in about 20 seconds, landing face
unit of Children's Hosptlal Med-. down on the ground .
"We turned htm over to see 1f
ical Center in Akron today, but hi s
condition had improved from sen· he was OK and hi s son was craous to fair, a hospital spokes- dled in hts arms, " Harvey said.
The boy was unconsciOus
woman said.
" He wasn 't brcath•ng and hi s
The father, who was cleared fo'
eyes
were rolled back mto h1 s
di scharge Thursday, dechned an
interview request relayed by th e head," sa1d constructi on worker
Rod Ford, 39, of Suff1eld.
hospital.
The former Lakemore pol1ce·
The fire began as fa th er and
son were takmg a nap Wednesday. man began givi ng the boy car·
The older Pete awoke and tried diopu1monary resusc•tatwn, and
to reach his son's bedroom but young Robert was breat hing on
couldn' 't because the smoke was his own when paramedics arnved,
sa1d f1re Lt . Marc Ftnney.
too dense.
The cause of the f1re is betng
He ran from the one-story
hom e, yelling for ne1ghbors to investigated.
call the ftre department.
Members of a constructiO n
crew budding a hom e down the
street heard him yelling and ran 10
FRIOAY THRU THURSDAY
the Pete house to help.
CIVIL ACTION ..
At that point, Pete had broken
JOHN TRAVOLTA
out the window of h1 s son 's bed·
ROBERT OUVALL
room .
ONE EVENING SHOW 7•30
BARGAIN NIGHT WED.
" The smok e just streamed out ,
and he was yelling for hiS son but
there was no answe r." sai d Tim

MATINI!!I SAT/8UN I 00l3 20

Don't Miss The Prom.
First Rent Your
Tuxedo From THE
FABRIC SHOP,
Then Be Fashionably
Late.
'

Tuxedos
From $3?95 and. up
PROM SPECIAL
$500

OFF REGULAR PRICE

THE FABRIC SHOP
110 WEST MAIN • 992·2284 • POMEROY, OH.

·

�,

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Ksrr gets 19 points in victory, scores 1,000th career point

'

....

·····-

.

.·
Page 4
Friday, February 12, ·1999

.

Eastern beats Southern 68-34, w_
i ns Hocking Division titl.e
By SCOTT WOLFE
title, the second in a row for Eas tern
Sentinel Correspondent
and the third in the past four years.
It was a night of celebration at
Additionally, Eastern center
Eastern High School Thursday night Valerie Karr reached the I ,000 point
where the Eastern Lady Eagles dev- milestone in the second quarter of
astated the Southern Tornadoes 68- the game, becoming the seco nd
34 to clai'm at least a share of the Tri: Eagle to achieve the feat on thi s
Valley Conference Hocking Division year's team. Earlier, Jessica flrannon

reached the mark. Currently, Ohio
State basketball hi storian Tom
Metiers is researching the .dual I ,000
point feats to see if it has ever been
accomp li shed before.
Karr has been a three-year starter
for the Eagles, seei ng limited action
and just 12 points her freshman year,
but scoring over 300 points each of
the last three seasons.
.
Eastern coach Paul llrannon said.
"No one work s any harder than
Valerie to get the points she does .
Often she's up against double and
triple teams. She's been a great high
scbool player and should be able to
continue a high level of success at
the coll ege level. " ·
Besides becoming the second
I ,000-point scorer on the leam, Karr
joins her sister Jess ica Karr in the
1.000 -point club. Je ssica, . a 1996
graduate, sc ored over 1.200 points in
a

~toried

'

career.

in cludin g

Southeastern Ohio "Player of th e
Year" honors.
As far as the game gOes, there
wasn't much of · :l contest. Eastern
flex ed its musc le early against the
injury ridden Tornadoes. who limped
to an 8-22 fir st period defi cit.

Southern ace Kim Sayre was nursing
strained ligaments in her shooting
hand, but still managed 13 points,
and Laraine Lawson was slowed by a
severe ankle sprai n.
Brannon and Karr powered the
Eastern attack early with six points
each in the first quarter, while Becky
Davis took ai m at a nice game with a
long three and five total first period
floi nts. Kim !hie led Southern in the
first round wilh four.
Southern, who swffered a frigid
shooting perfdrmance in the first
quarter, started to hit some in the second. Eastern went from a man-toman to a zone and a more comfortable SHS club kept pace (9-9) for a
31- 17 score al the half. Karr's sixth
point of the -frame , her 12th of the
ni ght proved 10 be the historic basket
as she ente red the half with 13
points.
Eastern turned up the wick in the
third fram e and took no prisoners,
outscoring Sou thern 26-3. Although
Jess ica Brannon led the charge with
eight poii11S, her unselfi sh play and
several of her five assists came in the
frame. Angi Wolfe had all nine of her
po1nts in the frame as the score ended

57-20.
Eastern rolled up the scoreboard
to 64-22 before calling off the dogs
around the fi ve minute mark of the
game. Eastern's seniors got one last
curtain call and a standing ovation
later as they exited their home noor
for the last time. '
Southern outscored the Eastern
bench 12-4 going down the stretch to
make the score more respectable as
Kim Sayre hit a couple three-pointers and Kim lhle added four points
for Southern ...
Karr led Eastern scorers with 19
points, Brannon had 14, Juli Hayman
seven, Angi Wolfe nin e, Amber
Baker 'five , Danielle Spencer four,
and Becky Davis ten.
Kim Sayre and Kim Ihle each had
13 for Southern. Sarah Brauer had
four, Laraine Lawson two, Heathe r
Dailey two. Tammy Fryar and
Amanda Ashworth had good hustling
games but did not score .
Senior Jessica Brannon. starting
as a freshman , has played on three
Tri -Valley Co nference champi ons hip
teams. With onl y seven players her
sophomore year, thi s year's seniors
slipped to · 7- 14 as sopho mores, but

regained their championship form
lasi year.
. ·
Eastern hit 31-57 overall with 3-6
at the line and 31 rebounds (Brannon
6, Karr 11, Hayman 5). Easlef(l had
14 assi sts (Brannon 5), 12 steals,
·four turnovers, and seven fouls . The
Eagles-are now 16-2 overall and 13th
ranked in the state.
Southern hit 11 -35 two-pointers
and 4-9 three-pointers with an Q-2
night at the line arid 16 rebounds
(Dailey 3). Southern had J.9
turnovers , 3 steals, and eight assi~ts
(Sayre 3).
There was no reserve. game.
Quarter .til!!ili
Southern .................... ... 8-9-3-14=34
Eastern .......... .... .. .... .22-9-20-11=68
Southern: Kim Sayre 2-3-0=13,
Kim lhle 5-1-0=13, Sarah Brauer 20-0/2=4, Heather Dailey I -0-0=2,
Laraine Lawson 1-0-0=2. Totals: 114-0/2=34
Eastern: Jessica Brannon 7-00=14, Valerie Karr 9-0-1/2=19, Juli
Hayman 2- 1-0=7 , Angi Wolfe 4·01/2=9, Amber Baker 2-0-111 =5,
Danielle Spencer 2-0-0=4, Becky
Da vis 2-2- 0= I 0. Totals: 28·3·
316=68
.

Friday, February 12, 1999

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

.

_ Pope~s 25-point effort drives Redwomen past
By ANDREW CARTER
Tribune Steff Writer
· Fort)ler Gallia Academy Blue
Angel Mindy Pope scored 25 points
and snared 19 rebounds to lead the
University of Rio Grande past a
scrappy Ohio Valley College sq~ad
93-84
Thursday
night
in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
It \"as Rio Grande's third consec•

utive win and fifth out of its last six.
The Redwomen (21-5, AMC 9-3)
bolted to a 40-29 halftime advantage._
htltmg 43.6 percent from 'the field tn
the opening frame. Rio Grande made
a late run to grab the double digit
lead arter the Lady Scots went silent
on offense in the final seven minutes
of the half.
The second hal( featured a
v

treyfesl by the home club as Ohio
Valley drilled 8-of-13 shots from
outside the arc. The Lady Scots had
connected on only 1-of'IO threepoint chances in tl\e first half.
As has been the case this season;
however, Rio Grande dominated the
painted area , outscoring Ohio Valley
56-38 inside the key. The tough
inside . play allowed Rio Grande to

get to the charity stripe at will, especially in the second half, where they
drained 17-of-23 attempts. Overall,
Rio Grande was 22-for-30 at the
stripe. The Redwomen also converted 17 Lady Scot miscues into to 22
points.
·
Pope finished 8-of-16 from the
field and 9-for-12 at the foul line.
Eight of her 19 boards came on the

Top 25 men's
college basketball
By The Associated Press
Stanford has done almost everything right this season except shoot
·free throws. The sixth-ranked
.Cardinal took care of that in a bi g
way against No. 9 UCLA.
The Cardinal went 31-of-40 from
the fou l line ' in their 77-73 viclory
,over the Bruins on Thursday night ,
including a 22-of-24 effort in the second half. Not bad for a team that
ente(ed the game making just 67 percent from the line.
"They must have a greal free
throw shooting coach," UCLA coach
S'teve Lavin said jokingly. "1 think
I' m going to . ge t into a bidding war
and get him to our side."
Stanford (20-4 , 10-1 Pac-10),
which got its fifth straight 20-win
season, now has a 1wo-game lead
: over second-place Arizona in the
Pac-10 race in pursuit of its first
leag ue tille "since the conference
expanded to 10 teams in 1978-79.
,"We really hung in there and
played especially well in the second
half," Stanford
coach Mike

Montgomery said. " I thought we No. 25 New Mexico 82, San Jose Cavaliers 58-26. Willie Dersch and
used our heads much better in the State 46.
Chezlcy Walson each had 12 points
second half to take care of the ball ."
No, I Duke 100, Virginia 54
for Virginia ( 13- 12. 3-9).
The Blue · Dev ils (24- 1, 12-0 No. S Michigan St. 61, lllinois 44
Arthur Lee had 17 points for the
Cardinal, who rebounded from Atlantic Coast Conference) are off to
'Thomas Kelley had 10 points to
Saturday 's home loss to No. 2 the best start in school hi story thanks lead a balanced scoring attack as the
Connecticut. ·
to their 19th straight vic tory and their Sparl11ns (21-4, 10-1) tied a sc hool
UCLA ( 17-6, 8-4) gol within a seventh I 00-point game of the sea- ·record with their lOth straight Big
point three times in the final tw o son. William Avery, El lon Brand and Ten victory. Michigan State Jed 33minotes, the last time at 67-66 with Corey Maggelle each sc ored 15 14 al halftime by holding the visitors
1:08 left en two free throws by points for visiting Duke, which out - to 6-of-25 shooting. Cory Bradford,
Jerome M.oiso.
shot Virginia 58.7 percent to 27.4 the Big Ten 's leading fre shman scorBut Mark Madsen made two free percent and outrebounded the er. led Illinois (1 0-14. 2-10) with 13
throws with 41 seconds left, and Lee
added two more wi lh 19 seconds
remaining for a 71-66 lead. Baron
Davis hit a long three-pointer with
14 seconds left to pull UCLA within
two , but Stanford hit six straight free
throws - fo ur by Lee - after that.
Baron Davis had 23 points and
JaRon Rush added· 20 for the Bruins,
who had three starters foul out.
David Moseley added 13 points,
Tim Young had 12 and Madsen had ·
I I poirils and 12 rebounds for
Stanford.
In other games i~volving ranked .
teams Thursday night, it was No. I
Duke 100, Virginia 54; No. 5
POMEROY, OHIO
Michigan State 61 , Illinois 44; No.
Mon.·Frl. 9 am·8
Sat.
14 Utah 86, San Diego State 38; and

•

..'
.;
~

\;.,

''•

r;

,
WHO'S OPEN? - Southern forward Kim Sayre (23) seeks an
• .answer to that question as Eastern's Angle Wolfe (42) defends on
the play during Thursday night's Hocking Division contest at
· .Eastern High School, where the Eagles' 68·34 victory gave them
)heir second straight division title and their 13th consecutive viclo·
" ry.

:::Meigs iris cruise
~:to 94- 4 victory
~;over Vinton County
: By DAVE HARiiiiS
• Sentinel Correspondent
;
Meigs placed all 10 girls that
· -played in the sconng column and
rolled to a 94-44 win o.ver Vinton
, County in Tri- Valley Conference
• basketball action Thursday evening .
: : Meigs with the win raises it s
: record to 15-2 overall and 13-2 in the
· Ohio Division headin g into a
: Salurday make-up game with Miller.
.The Lady Vikings drop to 2-16 over··all and 2-13 in the TVC.
,. Mei gs played without the services
; of standout junior center Jennifer
• Shrimplin . She suffered a whiplash
; type injury in the win over Belpre
" last Saturday.
Meigs jumped to a 29-~ lead after
·one period . Amber Vining had the
hot hand for Mei gs pouring in 10
. · points in the per iod , Tracy Coffey
; added eight.
_JV!eigs behind Tricia Davis who
. scored six point s in the second per i, od increased their lead 10 51- 19 al the
• hal r.
":, The Viking s played· almost even
_..w11h Meigs in lhe th lfd- period as
• Meigs had a 16- 1I scoring ad van~ t age . Belinda Hayes poured 1n 'II
; po ints in the peri od for the Viking s,
• While Vining and Co ffey had six a
=-riece for Meig s.
.
Meigs closed out the contcst, wilh
J1 27- 12 scoring advantage in the
third period. Amy Hyse ll · led Meigs
•rn the llnal period with six points. as
; eight girl s scored points in the peri ; od .
,
·

Vining ied all scorers with 26
points, Coffey added 14, Tri cia
Dav is and .Shannon Price each
chipped in with 12. Other Marauder
scorers were Brooke William s with
·nine, Hyse ll wi th eight, Tanya Miller
and Tiffany Halfhill with four each,
Marissa Wha ley with three, and'
Becky Smith added two .
Meigs was 35 of 75 from the field
including two of eight three pointers
for 47% . Mei gs went to the' line 29
' times and hit 22 for 76%. The
Marauders had 53 rebo unds led by
Willi ams wilh 16, Davis added nin e.
Meigs turned the ball over 14 times,
had 18 ass1sts led by · Becky Smith
with seve n and 20 steals with Vining
leading the waywi lh six.
Meigs al so won lhe reserve game
42-31. S t ep h ~n i e Wi ga l led Meigs
with 13, Tiffany Qualls· added 10 and
Amy Hyse ll nin e .. Jones had II for
Vinton.
-- Quarter~

Meigs ............ .' ....... 29-22- 16-27=94
VInton County .......... S- II - 13:-J 2=44
Meigs: Amber Vining 11 -0-4=26,
Broo ke William s 2-0-5=9, Tracy
Coffey 6-0-2= 14, Becky S'mith 1-0D=2. Tricia Da vis 5-0-2= 12, Tonya
Mrller 2-0-0=4, Sha nnon Price 2-22=12, Tiffany Haltnill 1-0-2: 4, Am y
Hyse ll 2-0-4=8,. Mari ssa Whaley J.
0- 1=3. Totals: 31-2-22=94
Vinton County: K.· Hayes J·-02=4, Jones 0-1 -0=3. Sowers 2-0-0:4.
Jone&lt; 2-0-2=4. Jenk ins \-0-0=2, B.
Hayes 5- 1-5= I H. McCorkle 2-0-0=4.
Rnhson 1-0-0=2. Totals: 14·2-9=44

(See REDWOMEN on Page 6)

points on 4-for-17 shooting.
No. 14 Utah' 86, San Diego St. 38
The Utes Cl9 -4, 9-0 Western
Athletic Conference) won their 14th
straight game, their school-record
32nd straight at home and handed the
Aztecs the worst loss in school history. Jeremy Killion was 5-of-6 from
three -point range and had 20 points
for Utah , which led 38-19 · at halftime. Donte Wil son had I0 points for
San Diego State (2-20 , 0-10 ), which
has lost I0 Slraight games by an aver-

DON T 7E MO,.ORS, INC.

. , By DICK BRINSTER
re sI of the lineup was up for grabs
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) Thu~sday:
: - Dale Earnhardt doesn't ' need
Gordon was more the victim of
· much luck the way his car is running. circumstance than the power of
Still, he plans to add one more p1ece Labonte 's Pontiac in the first qualifyof equipment before defending hi s ing race. Labonte squeezed him to
Daytona 500 title. ·
the low side on the backstretch,
He'll go to the Daytona USA catching Gordon behind lapped lrafexhibit, which displays his winning fie for the winning pass.
Chevrolet from last year, and take his
"There was nothing I could do to
good-luck charm for Sunday's race. hold him off," ·Gordon said.
"We' ll pry that penny off that
Labonte, who blocked Gordon's .
dash," Earnhardt said after another attempt for a pass ·in the final lap,
victory at Daytona International conceded that traffic was the key lo
Speedway in the second of two qual- victory.
ifiers Thursday. '.'I've got that penny
"I have no idea if I could have
marked, and I'll know if it's the same passed him if he hadn 't got caught,"
one. I' ve got it insured for a mil- said Labonte, who will start third in
li on."
·
the 500.
!hat's jusl about what the sevenGordon can see Labonte 's
time Winston Cup champion would strength. and hopes hi s own will give
get if he becomes the fourth driver in him an advantage .
41 years 10 win the· world's premier
"Bobby's car might be a little
st()ck car race two years in a row.
faster down the straightaways, ·but I
Besides gluing the penny to his think our car is the best one through
dash board, Earnhardt will make one th~ corners," he said.
other key change.
Because he was in the second
"We're goi ng to put a . fresh. qualifier, Earnhardt had a chance to
eng ine in- it," said Earnhardt, who watch Gordon. He ' ll have a closer
won his lOth straight qualifying race vi ew of the two-time defending
at Daytona and will start fourth on Winston Cup champion on Sunday.
Sunday. " I think we've got a good
Gordon hopes to win his third
· shot at winning thi s race."
·strai ght series title, sliming with hi s
A new engi ne might be necessary second Daytona · 500 victory. But
because Jeff Gordon doesn't figure Earnhardt knows ihe front end of the
to stand pat.
·
field is loaded with fast cars and that
With crew chief Ray Evernham's he has more to worry about than just
knack for making the right adjust- , Gordon.
ments to their Chevy, Gordon figure s
"If you focus on one , you ' II lose
to be·tougher tha_n he was in the first site of· what you want to be," said
qualifier, when he finished ·second Earnhardt, .who has won at the track
behind Bobby Labonte.
a record 32 times.
"lthink .because the temperatures
In agreement is two-time Daytona
are going to get cooler. on Sunday, 500 champion Dale Jarrett, who
we 're going to work on gelling a lit- starts eighth Sunday. He says winlie more speed out if it," Gordon ning the race usually depends on
said. "We went with a good-han- being in the right plaec at the ri ght
dling race car today to see what kind time.
of speed we could get oul of it." ,
Everyone wants to find a drafting
, The temperature is expected to partner on the 2 112-mile track; but
drop about 15 degree.s into the mid- -Jarrett says agreements to ride in tan60s on Sunday, meaning the cars dem often are violated when drivers
should run faster. Evernham guessed have a chance to improve their rosiright last Saturday, when his setup in tions.
the time trials put Gordon on the pole
"There arc no deals out there," he
for the 500.
said. " If you believe in deals, you're
Rookie Tony Stewart locked up in trouble."
the No. 2 spot in the trial s, but the

Utley plans to go public next week
with progress on. his rehabilitation
DETROIT (AP) - The last time
Mike Utley took a step by hi'l'se lf in
public, he was an offensive guard for
the Dclroit Lions, moving to block
another player in a game at the
Silverdome on Nov. 17, 1991.
Utley lost his balance, sending hi s
6-foot-6, 3 I 5; pound body down on
hi s head and neck, crushing his sixth
and seve nth vertebrae. Seven years
later, Utley is prepared to walk next
week - to take at least one or lwo
steps unassisted for the first time
~incc the accident.

·

Ul!ey, 33 , is ex,pccled to take his
first public steps Monday in Phoenix ,
llankcd hy two friends - Lions line hacker R&lt;ib Frcdnckson and former
NFL center Bill Lewis - with a
handful of reporters as Witnesses .
"Doc tors . at Craig Hos pital in
Denver arc calling thi s remarkable hut
not miraculous ," Utley's spokes-

age of 22.4 points.
No. 25 New Mexico 82
San Jose St. 46
Senior center Kenny Thomas got
hi s eighth double-double of lhc season and the 33rd of hi ~ career with 19
point s and 13 rebounds for the Lobo&gt;
( 19-6, 6-4 Weste rn Athleti c
Conference). who had lo st fou r ul
six. Michae l Quin ney and Shaun
Murray each had 10 p01n t&gt; for the
visiting Spartans ( I I- II ; 4-5) , whu
trailed 38-21 at halft ime.

Overstoc e Overstocked, Overstoc ed
Our Loss is your Cain!

Earnhardt wants
new engine in bid
to win Daytona 500
HOCKING DI\IISION CHAMPIONS- From left to right are statisti· Karr, Angl Wolfe, Juli Hayman, Angl Taylor, Amber Baker ·and assls·
cian Leonard Koenig, head coach Paul Brannon, Amber VanSickle, tant coach Dave Weber.
Becky Davis, Juli Bailey, Jessica Brannon, Danielle Spencer, Valerie

from the field and 2-for-6 outside the
three-point line. Carson also nailed
7-of-8 free throws. She di shed out
four assists.
Mi sti Halley rounded out th e
Redwomen in double digits with II
points. She hit 4-of- 10 from the field
and 3-of-5 at the foul line .
Cindy Hopper added six points

Stanford dow·n s UCLA; Duke whips Virginia; MSU also wins

(740) 992·6614 • (800) 837·1094

9 am·4 pm; Sun. 1 pm•5 pm

@ ~

Temperatures expected to drop into 60s

~ :ter Jessica also scored her 1,OOOth career point at home against
• ;Southern in 1996. Karr is presented the game ball by Eastern High.
: -School principal Rick Edwards and head coach Paul Brannon.

OVC 93-84

offensive glass. Pope also had two
assists, two blocked shots and two
steals.
Karley Mohler knocked down 9of-14 shots from the field and finished with 19 points. She also had
eight rebounds, a blocked shot and a
steal.
Carrie Carson scored 19 points at
Ohio Valley. Carson was 5-for-12

-. · REACHES MILESTONE- Eastern senior Valerie Karr scored her

::-1,OOOth career point Thursday night against Southern. Her older sis-

'

woman, Allison Ward, was quoted as
saying in today's issues of the Detroit
Frfe Press.
Although Utley was told he probably would never walk agam , he never
quit trying.
He learned . to move in a wheel chair and with crutches. He learned to
drive a specially equipped car, to ski
and to skydive . He lifted weights to
keep his upper body strong. And he
vowed someday to walk.
Because .UI!ey ,has what is considered an "incomplete inJury," Ward
said, he has been able to regain some
J'celin_g in hiS extremities and 10 a CCr·
tain cxtcnl some use of his legs.
Much or the progress has occurred
in the pasl month , Ward sa id. Utley
has tested hi s abi lit y to walk wearing
shoes with 'leg braces. Ms. Ward said
he now _was ready to go puhlic with
· hi s improvement.

Darl&lt; Jade, VB, auto, air, cass, rear
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Now
Onl;ll

'11,71110

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PW, keyless entry
MSRP $23,461.00

2 Door, 5 speed, air, Black, spoiler,
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Now
Dill~

*11,931110

91 CHEVY MONTE CARLO Z:·U 98 CHEVY MONTECARLO LS

99 PONTIAC GUND PRIX GY

.

2 Dr, Black, sunroof, V6, CD, keyless
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Now

'18,77808 .

0..1;11

Jade Green, cass &amp; CD, auto, air, M,
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•ao,aos•

Now ·

Torch Red. VB. ·dual exhausl, PW, PL, V6, auto, air, CD, cruise, 1\tt, white MSRP
PS, CO, spoiler, auto, air
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=~

Gee

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1

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16,45lr0

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99 BUICK REGAL GS
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Now

8

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'17,47,..
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Silver, V6, auto, air, loaded
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.., Platinum Beige, V6, auto, air, CD &amp;
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•ao 818

00

98 PONTIAC SUNFI'-E GT
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VB. auto, air. tilt, stereo
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21,21,..

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VB, leather, Gold Firemlst, loaded

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Now
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1993 CHEVY· Crimson Pearl,
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LS trim, auto, air, Whrte, cass, 4.3 V6,
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'12,78,.

'20,89IJGI

~o.~~cass,bench

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VS, Leather, Auto, PS, PL,
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loaded MSRP
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'21,90000

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4x4, Ext cab, auto, air, Pewter, alum
I N••IP'Iheells, MSRP $30,192.00

99 GMC YUKON
4x4, 4 Dr, Black, VB, auto, air, lilt,
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4x4, 4 Dr, auto, air, Red, tilt, cruse ,

PW, PL. luggage rack MSRP $30,653

Ooolj~

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Auto. air, VB, PS, F'B, PL
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.....

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~

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0

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White, bench seat, 5 speed
MSRP$1 1,6B2.00 '

Now

~~On~l31~~

~~ (HMlAHm ~ WD ~Dr,~~. auto, ~~M~~er looO~, W~ m,,OO.:........... NOW~10,4~~
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~~ CHM moo ~(KU~Yi, bt ~~. 4J,I niles, out~ oir, h1t, auise.................................. m,BOO

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel
'•

Redwomen ...

:~ end three assists. Renee Turley had
·: 'five points, six rebounds and seven

• assisls.
Rio Grande shot 46.6 percent
. • -from the field for the evening and
: ·_outrebounded Ohio Valley 48-46 .
· Laurel Auch led Ohio \Ialley (10'": 12) with 20 points. She was 9-of- 14
• from the field. Auch grabbed six

b

d

Friday, February 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
(Continued from Page 5)
Mandy Morrison added 19 points points and six rebounds.
Rio Grande travels to Cleveland
and 15 rebounds. Morrison was 9-of14 from the field. She had two blocks Saturday for a meeting with Notre
Dame College of Ohio in AMC
and two steals.
action.
Tip-off is set for 3 p.m.
Tracey Hendricks and Amy Way
each tallied 15 points. Hendricks was Half tl!.llll:i
6-for-13 from the field. Way was 4- Rio Grande ....................... 40-53=93
of-8 on three-point attempts and 5- Ohio Valley College ......... 29-55=84
Rio Grande: 1/8-0/0-3/4=5,
of-14 overalL
Elizabeth Lewis chipped in nine Carson 3/6-216-7/8-19 Halley 4/9-

Blocked shots: 5 (Pope, Turley 2)
Steals: 8 (Turley 3)
·

0/1-3/5=.11,
Mohler . 8112-1/20/1 = 19, Pope 8/16-0/0-9/12=29,
Hopper 3/4-0/0-0/0=6, Daugherty
2/4-0/0-0/0=4, Kendall 0/l -0/00/0=0, Brown 213-0/1-0/0=4. Totals:
31/63-3/10-22/30=93
Total FG: 34-73 (.466)
Rebounds: 48 (Pope 19)
Assists: 18 (Turley 7~
Turnovers: 19

-·-

010=84
Total FG: 36-84 (.429)
Rebounds: 46 (Morrison 15)
Assists: 15 (Way 5)
Thmovers: 17
Blocked shots: 2 ·
Steals: 9 (Hendricks, Way 3)
Fouls: 24
Fouled out: Way, Lewis

Ohio VaUey: 8113-111-010=19,
Hendricks 419-214-111=15, Way 116418-112=15, Auch 7110-214-010=20,
Lewis 4112-010-112=9, Schultz 0100/1 -010=0, Busch ' 114-0/1-0/0=2,
Hall 0/1-0/l-0/0=0, Anderson 2/60/3:010=4. Totals: 27184-9/23-

South

.NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic DiYision

Iwn

Philadelphia ..
Orlando
: ,. Boston ..
New York
Miam1 ..
New Jersey
Washington ...

»:
... ..... 3

L &amp;1.

4
.2
.2
2

800
2 ·.500
2 .500
' .4QO
J .2.50
.~
.2.50

0
I

I
.I

Crntral DiVision
MIIW&lt;lukee ....
. .. - ~
0
Atlanta
.. ,.4
1
, , Detroit .. ...
J
2
Jnd!Un:l ...... .. ... .. .. .
. .. J- 2
' ·" CLEVELANQ;:'- .. ..
2 .'
Chicago ............. ...
I 3
Toronto ....
I
'\
Chari One .
I
4

J.(XX)

1':
I ':

2
2':'

2':

I.COO
.800

-·-

I

.600
,6()0

400
.2.50
.250
100

2
2',

i,

3

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Oivislon

w

Iwn

........ 4

Utah ....... ..
Hous10n ·.
''• .. Mtnnesota ..
San Antoni o ...
·.· Dilllils ......
V&lt;Jncouver.
Denver

~

.A

...... . ... J
2
I
I

..... 0

f&lt;l.

0 !COO
I 800
1 750
3 400
J .250
l .250
4

-'
I
l'~
.l

.000

;
4

Pacific Division
.. .4

Se:~nle .~

.............. 2

'' Porthmd
, ._ , LA l..akers
Phoenix
Sacramcnlo ... .
L.A . Clippers ..... ..
Golden StAte ..

.J
.. 2
.. .2
.0
.0

0 1.000
1 .667
2 .600
2 .500
2 .soo
J 000
4 000

Thursday 'S scores
Miami 102, Toronto B4
Atlanta 100. Charlotte 88
CLEVELAND 99, San Antonio 89
Orlando g7, Detroit 81
Minnesot:J 86, LA . Lakers 71
Hounon 105, D&lt;~llas 95
Milwaukee 95. New Jersey 75
New York. 73. Chicago 68
Utah 82, Phoeni~t 74
Indiana 101 , Vancouver 97

'..
.··,'• .

Tonight's games
San Antonio ·at Ph1ladelphm. 8 p m.
Dallas at Den,er. 9.p m.
Utah at Golden State. 10 ]0 p m.

Saturday's games
LA Cli ppers t~ t Phoem~t, 9 p m
Denver at Seattle, I0 p.m.

Sunday's games
San Antonio at Chicago, 2:30p.m
Mi lwaukee ac Orlando, 3 p.m.
Atlama at Philadelphia. 3 p m
Dallas :11 Vancouver,.'\ p.m.
Indiana at L.A Laten. 5:30p.m.
Penland at Golden State, 9 p.m.
Minnesota at L.A. Clippers. 9 p m

NCAA Division I
men's scores
East
Umsms ?6. Fatrfield 72
FE1irle1gh bicltinson 56. Monmouth . N 1. 39
Long Island U. 71.~!. Francts. Pa. 5 .~
Md .- Balllmore Cou'nty 60. Cenl. Connectkul St

49
Rutgers 71 , Pittsburgh 58
Sten:~ 92. Manhrman 75
St Frar~cis. NY. 95, Quinnipinc 74
Wagner 79. Robert Mqrris 6J

South
Belmont 106, Rust15
Dukr \00, Vi rg1nia 54
Georgia St 7' Jackson\'illc St. -W
Geors,ia Tech 111 . J-londa St. I08-lOT
Houston 73. South Florida 68
Liberty 7B. Elon 71
LOli iSmnn Tech 87. Ne~ Orlenns g2..QT
Lou1svtlle 79. N.C. Ch:~rlot1e 68
McNeese S!. 9J. NE Lomsiana 78
Memphi s 78 Ala.- B1rmingham 75
Middle Tennessee 78, Tenne ssee S1. 74
Murray St. 62, SE Missouri 52
Radford R8. Hi gh Point 70
Tenn .- Martm 87. E Illino is 31
Tennes see Tech 75. Au sun Peay 6.'\
Tulnne 68. Southern MiiS . 6 1
Wts ·Gree11 Bay 6 1. N C- Wilnun gton "i8

Midwest

Cle veland St n. Butler 52
DePaui76.,. Srunt Louts b7
lktrOJt 64. Wnght St 46
Loyola. Ill. 76. Wts.·MJ!waukee 68
M1 ch1 gan St. 61. lllm01s 44 ~
Oakland. Mi ch. 80. lnd.- Pur.-lndpls 77
Toledo IO.l Buffalo 51
W. Jllinms 59. Valparaiso 55
Wtchtta St. 7.1, Drake 66
Youngstown St 75. Chtcago St. 58

'

Southwest

Ark:~ n sns

51. 34. SW Louisiana 66
N1cholls S1. 64, SW Te'tas; 57
Ru:e S8. A1r Force 6&lt;1
Sam Hou ston 51. TJ. Lamar 60
South Alabnnm 75. Te)(:IS·P:uaAJl"lt'l'ican 69
S'ou!hern Meth. 72. Colorado St 68
Te~tas Christian •102, Wyoming BS
TeK:~s - 1\rlington 74, Stephen F Ausun 59
Tuas-EI Paso 7J. Fresno St 62
Te11.as- San Antonio 8J. SE Louisiana 59

•0
••
.,

Far Wtst

".,",

'•"•.

-•...

;" "'·~...

...
1:
".. '
..

Boise St. 67. North Texas 55
Brigham Young 8 I. Hnwru i 68
California 58, Southr=rn Cal 55 0
Gonz:~ga 97, St. Mary·s. Cal. 52
Idaho 82. New Mex1c0 St 78
Idaho St. 83 , E. Washingt on 57
Momana 74, CS Northndge 68
· N. t\rizona 82, M o n tan:~ St. 67
Nevada 89. Cal St -Fullerton 17
New Me~ti CO 82. Son Jose St 46
Oregon 77, Washingt on St. 64
Pacifi c 94. Ca l Poly-S LO 83
S Ut ilh 8.' . Ora l Robens 77
SAn Diel!o 66, Po n):~ nd ~7
Stanford 77. UCLA 7.1
UC Snnta Barb&lt;tr&lt;l 87. Long Beach St 77
Utah R6. Sau IJ•cgu S1 Jl.(
Utah St 76 UC lrv111c 46
Wash1ngto11 82 01ef!un S1 69

~

NCAA Division I
"••_, ' women's scores
ol
ol

•

I! l
~
t;

'·

l
~

·•

Cin. Prince10n 58, Ci n. Milford 53
Cin. Roger Bucon 70, Cin Purcell-Marian 38
Cin. Seton~\ Cin. Ursuline 52
Cin St. Bernard 49, Cin. N. College Htll41
Cin. Summit Country Day 55. New Miami JJ
Cin. Tnfl 55, Cin. A1ken 45
Cin. Winton Woods 45, Ctn. Woodward 42
Cm. Wyonung 48, ftnneytown 44
Circle,·ille 71. lcJgan Elm 45
Cle. Beaumont 7 1. Orange Chr. II
Cle. G1lmour 45, ~ichmond Ht s. 43
Clyde ~J . O:~k Harbor 23
Col. Academy 41t M:~ranmha Chr 46
Col. Bnggs 68. Ohio Deaf 17
Col lndepe11dence 59, Fra11klin Hts i1
CoL Walnllt Ridge 65, Col Centen ni al '0
Col. World Han est 52. Welling toll ~7
Columbia 61 Cuyahoga HIS. 4:1
Con\'JJ} Cre5l\·iew 50, Allen E 27
Cortl~;d Lnke~iew 57. You . Ltberty 5~
CovinN'16 I. Twtn ValleyS 4.\
Creston Norwaync 38. Rmman 26
Do1nbul'y Lokc sJdc 66. Ou:~wa Hill s SJ
Day. Carro ll 58. Da). Lemon-Monroe 26
Da,y Chr~mmnde-Ju l 1enne 5~ . Huber Hts W:~yne

East
Allentown 6-1. M1 ~ n cord w 40
llmnde1S 70. Wmn~~ll!l k ch SJ
Ce nt Connecl!cul St 76. Fmrk1~h Dtckln5on h9
ConcOI'd 6.\. Hlt1 et1eld S1 ~9
Eliznbethtown 6~. W Maryland -IY
G1mnon 7R. Wc ~ tmin.~tcr ,_Pa ""
Getty~burg .'i7 IJ1 ~ k i n su n 42
l&lt;euk.1 68. Alfred ~9
L1lx·ny 68. Easl Strou J &lt;;hur ~ .~6
Loyola. Md 6K .~itm,, 60
Mninl! · F:umm)!.tun .W. Suff•JII:. 42
.Mn~~ -flostoul(}. Rlltil'r ~1
MtJ ·. Jiahnnor!" County 5R. Sl Fr;mcl5, NY ~6
Nyoclt 7fl. Aluomliclcl olfl
Sulcm St CJI. Wo! ~ltict tl St 0-l
.Salcm-Te1kyo (J7 l"o11rnu·u11 S1 JIJ
S! llm m a~ i\qmu;• ~ 79 {icnrl!l.on (." nun 11(
St Vm ccnt 91 Po1nt l'~1rl 7~ '
~Wiir!lull! J rl· 7 1. lnmtanJlat .• '\l
rctkyu- l'mt flh. l·chclan ~1
W Ne.,., En_\! l:111d flll St Jm.:ph '~ ~9
Way!ll.'. M1 ~ h 71 o\krryhur'l (,()

Alabama 72, Auburn S7
Auburn-Mont!'Omery 72. North Alabtunn 42
Be!ha~en 68'. Xa~ie r, NQ 58
Belmont 69, Mo;nehead St 53
Bere01 82. Asbllry ~4 ·
Campbell 67. Mercer 64
Carnpbdls11ille 61 , Cumberland. Tenn. 55
Ce nt Fl orida 77. Flonda Atlanttc 57
Clemson 69. Georgia Tech 41
Delta St 82. Ark.·Monticello 64
Duke 86. Wake Fares! 48
Emory &amp; Henry 70. Washington &amp; L« 64
Fin. Internat ional 79, SW Louisiana 47
Frud-Hardeman 74 , Lee 66
Georgia St. 73, Troy St. 64
H1gh Point ~2. Radford 51
Kentucky 78. South Carolina 76
Lipscomb BQ Berry 67
Lo}'oht. NO 76, Southern, NO 71
McNeese St 58. l\: Loutsiana 5'
Middle Tennessee 81. Tentlessee Sr. 79
Miles .57. l.qlle 45
Mi~sis~ippi Colle se 64. Dallas 60
MisStS!ippi St. fl}, Mtssissippl 55
Moms 55. Benedict 54
'
Mount Oli~e 87. NeWport News 70
Murray S! 64. SE Missouri 6J
N.·Kerttucky 99. lnd.-Pur -Ft. Wayne 55
North Carolm:J 78. Maryland 63
RAndolph-Macon 87. Mary WashingtOn 58
Roonoke 74. E. Mennonite 52
Samford 65. Stetson 59
St. Aug1,1stine's 69. Eli rubcth City St "il
Tenn -Mttrtl!l 91 . E Jllino1~ 70
Tem.essee Tech 78. Austin Peay 51
TliSkegee 6 1. CJ ;rrk Atlanta 55
Union, Ky. 75. Nonh Greenville 71
Union. Tenn. 89. Blue Mountoin S I
W. Ket\tucl:.y 70. South Alaboma 55

'

Midwest
Benedictine. Kan . 77. Baker 47
Butler 87, 111.-Chkngo 43
01ndron St.' 68, Colorado Mines 50
Culver-S tockton 75.-Mid-Am Nazarene 59
Oelr0!!65 , Wi s.- Milwaukee 60
Doni! 73, D:~kota Wesley:~n 60
Evans~ille 60, N. Iowa 57
Hillsdale 72, Ash,and 63
L:~ke Superior St. 76, Northwood, Mich 61
Lewis 7.\, Kentucky Wesleyan 62
Luther 57, Colorado College 4;4
Mtchigan Tech 84, Grand Vall ey Sr 56
Mu:hi~an-Oearborn 60, Rochester 46
M1ssouri Western 78. Mi ssouri Southern 62
N. MichJg:Jn liS, Ferris St 5~
S. Indi ana 102. Quincy 47
SJU -Edw.:Jrds11i lle 7J. Missouri-St. Lou1s 5]
Sioux Fall s 70, Mount Marty 60
St Joseph's, Ind. 8.'i, lft(llanapoli s 77
Sterlm g 61 . Friends 48
Valpamiso 62. W lllinoi~ 5J
Walsh 70, Geneva 40
Wi s -Green Bay 60. Clevelan d St 49
' Wright St. 87, Loyola, 111 82
, Youn!!stown St. 59, 01icago St 58

J9
Day. ChnS'imt 67 Cin. ChristiarJ 27
Day Mimni Val 40, Middletown Cln. 13
Day. Oakwood 54 . Middletown Madison 27
Day. P:menon 58. Tray Ch1 J?
Defiance 65. Van Wrrt 41
IXGmff Riverside 51. J e tfer~on 50
Ddpl1os Jefferso n 54 , Spencerville _q ·
Delphos St John's 77 New Knoxv ille 42
Doylestown Chippewa -12. W. S:~le(D NW 32
E Canlon 60 Fairle ss 47
E. Clmton 5M. McClain 48
Eaton 60. Carlisle 51
Edgcrlon 55, Fair~iew .38
Fa1rtidd 54, Lak.o l:~ W 42
Faycucville 7S , Whiteoak 5J
Felicity 79. Willi:~msburg 26
Findlay 71. Oregon Clay 4g
Findlay Liberty Beman 55, Arcadia 34
Fort Frye 62. Purkersburg (W.Va.) Cath. 58
Fort Loramie 54, Ruma 46"
Franklin 60. Mi ddletown FenWick 41
Franklin Furnace Green 56. Portsmouth Notre
Dome 42
Fremont Ron 47 , Fostoria 37
GallipOlis 66, Poim (W_Ya ) Pleasant 26
Genoa 56, Elmwood 62
Germantown Valley View 58, Brookville 49
Gibsonburg 56. Mil lbury La ke-' I
Girard 5J, Howland 50
Glouster Trimble 47 , Hemlock Miller ~7
Grandview 48. Licking Val 3S
Gran~ille 66, New Altmny JS
Greenwi ch S. Central 48. Plymouth 40
Hamilton Badin 46. Cin McAuley 42
Hnmihon Rm~ 64, Norwood .16
Hnmler Henry 67. Liberty Center 60
Hannibal Rh,er 64. Barnesville 56
Hnnove rton Untie~ 38, Sa,linesville Southern 37.

OT

Heath 94, Millersport 29
Hill sboro 56, New Richmond 38
Holgote 76. Hlck~~t lle 74-0T
Hopewell -Loudon 111 , Beltsville 9
South.wesl
Hubbard 48, Badger 40
Angelo St. 7?. E. New Mex1co 62
Hudson Western Reserve A.cad 45. Cle. Sl.
Arkan~as 86. LSU 61
Augustine 31
E Texas Baptist 101, U. of the Ozarks 69
Jackson Center 46, Houston 21
H :~ rd1ng 82. Cent. Oklahoma 69
Jamestown Greeneview 57, Cedarvtl le 34
Howard Payne !W. Schreiner 73
Kidron Chr 9J , Med1na First Bapl. 10
Lam:~r' 50. Sam Houston St. %
L1Grange Key~tone 63. A.~on 44
LeTourneau 58. Texas-Dallas 56
Lakewood 61. London 46
Lyon 6!1, Martin Methodist 47
~bnnon 61. Kings 37
Nicholls St. 66. SWTexas 49 "
· ~tenia 74, Columbiana 59
Leipsic 73, Vanlue 20
Oklahoma City 66, John Brown J6
Texat"Arlington 76, Stephen F. Austin 61
Lewistown lndtan Lake 47. Upper Scioto Val. 45
Teua- S:~n Antonio 60, SE Louisiana 52
Lima Bath 7 1, Kenton 34
W. Te~tu A&amp;M 80, Abilene Chrlslian 74
UnsJy, W.Va. 17, Monroe Centtal :\5
Lisl;'o n 59. E Palestine 43
~
Lisbon Beaver S8. lnd1an Creek 5 1
FarW~st_.
·
logan 77, Athem 62
Cent. Washmgton 65. Alaska- Fairbanks 59
Lu cllsville Val. 5.\ , Portsmouth W .16
Co lorado St 89. Te11.:1s Christmn b6
Malvern 48, Jeweu-Sciu 43
E. Washington 64, lilaho St 49
Munchester 47, Lut ham Western 34
Mon tona SI · Btllings 74, Humbo ldt St 70
Mansfield St. Peter 's 5 1, Mansf1eld' Chr JO
New Me~tico 58. San Jose Sl. 49
, Man~ field Temple Chr. 41 . Wayside chr 21
'Oregon 6S. Wastungton St. ~ 4
MApleton 55, Norwfl.lk St Paul ~~
Rice 83. A1r Force J~
.
Mana Stein Marion 6 1. Fori Rt!c overy ~7
S. Utah 60, Oral Roberts 42
Manetta 64. Jackson 47
- Tex lls-EI P:~ so 7 1. Fresno St 6'
Manon Elgm 52. Buckeye V&lt;JI. ~9
Mar10n Harding .'i3. Mansfield Sr 51
Otlio H.S. girls' scores
Marton rJeasant 7J. Mount G1leud :J0
Massillon 67. Akron Hoba11 •0
Akron Bo ~htel 5B. Akr;on Ellet .n
Massillon Jackson 46. Can ton GlcnOak .~7
Akron 1\bnchester 70, Sandy Val. 4~
Massillon Perry SO. Unio.ntown Lake 42
Akron Spring. 64. Greensburg Green 2J
Massillon Tusl:~w 61. Tus.::~rawa s Val. J I
'Albany Ale~a nder 75, Nelson ville· York 26
Masssillon 67, Akron Hoban 4.\
Am:mda-Cie&lt;~ rnee l56 . Carm i Winchester ~'i
Medina Buckeye 59, Loudon~ille \8
At1sonin 7-1 Newton 44
Mentor Chr JS. WJIIo-Hill Chr. 20
A11twerp 67. Wny ne Trace 52
Mi lan Edison 67. Sandusky Perkin s 38
Arcanum 5J. National Traol J1
Mllford Center Fairbanks 64 Wa}nesfieldArli ngton 64. L1ma Temple Chr 4~
Goshen 46
A~hlnnd CreSI\'JCW 5-J. Monroevdlc .16
Mllton~U nion 47. Lehman Cath 44
Ashville lCays Val. 50, Humtlton Twp -46
Mmster 46 , St Hen(} 42
Aycrsvdlc 54. Ttnora 42
M!.lg.tdore 85 Cuyahoga Val Cht '7
Baitlbndgc Pllinl Vnl . 41. Adena .18
Montj:telier 71 Ew:rgree n .SCJ
lltlltlmore LtllcJt\ UntorJ ~6 . F1 sher Cath. -t4
Man ni Ridgedale 65 , Gali on Northmor .SO
Bata,·ta 39. BethCJ-Tate .~6 '
·
Morrow Lillie Miami 56 Loveland ~5
lleadtwood 25. Lut heran W 2.\
Mt Ornh Westem Drown 4~. Clermont NE ~7
Beall sville 43 , Tyler {W.Va ) Coti5oll dllled W
New Bremen 77. l'arkwny 'i~
nenvcr Eastl!rn 57. Symmes Val J7
New MadJton fn · Vlllagc 50 In-County N 41
• lle:wercrct•k 72. Fairmont 29
New Ph\1. Tuscarawas Cath .~8 Str"asburg 25
llellai re Sl. John 80, Ai shop (\1./ Va.) Donahue .5.\
New Riegel 62. N. 8 tlltm10rc JO
Bell broo k .57. Day Nonhridge .~:'i
Newlon Foil s 56. LoBren 44
Bellefomame 82, Kenton Ridge·62
Northri dge SJ. Johnstown J6
Belmont Uni On 56. Milrtins Feri"} 41
Ottawa-G landorf 65, Elida 54
Bel pre 52. Wellst on 47
.
I
Pandora-Gilboa 49. K:~lid:~ 44
Berlin Hi land 62. Lakelan!..l 24
Pau lding 58, Lima Perry 38
Bethel 66, Franklin-Monrre 57
Peebles S9. N Adams 52
Bex ley 58, Utica 29
Pemberville El\slwood J7. North'&gt;l.o ed 22
Bloomdale Elmwood 62. Genoa 56
Bluffton 70, Ado1 30
Bowling Green ]8, Muumee J4
Bucyrus 58. Norwalk 49
C:Jrdlt~gto n 66. Marion Ri11erVal 57
Cnrey 70. Seneca E 49
Cmstown Muuni E 47 , Spnng Cathol ic 42·0T
Cas tali a Mar~v uctta 64. Huron 42
Cchna 55 , Lmta Sha wnee 47
for information leading to
Cemerburg 53 WCK"thington Chr 40
Cin. Amelia 5? , Cin Westem Hi11s 2J
a"ell &amp; conviction of
Cin Colernin 71. Ham1hon 52
Cin Cour1try Day 52. C'm L1ndmark .Chr 30
person(•) removing
Cin Dect Park )7. Cin Mariemont .12
political
in
Cin Glen Este 50, Cin. Turpin 40
Cin. Ham son 64. Walnut Hi lls 22
Village of MiM.leport
Cin. Hil ls Chr. Ac&lt;1d 80, Cin Se~er1 l-lills 24
Cin Hughes 64. Cin Withrow 61
Co,&amp;lact Sam Eblen
Cin Ind ian Hill 58, Cin. Taylor 54-0T
Cin . Madeira J.'i. C1n Readir1g 3~0T
992-4103.
or Middleport
Cin Mercy 56, Cm St Ur:sula 40
Cin Mt Notre Dame ti.'i. Cin M cN ich o l n~ 5~
Police Dept.
Ci n North we~! 51 . C1n Mount Healthy 40
Ci n Oak H 1ll~ 71. Cm. An(lenon ~9

--=. . . ----~=
Ann
'

$50 REWARD

&lt;~~.•

~-

49
Pomeroy Meigs 94, Vi neon Co. 44
Portsmouth 49, Olesa~ake 36
Portsmouth Clay 52, Pommouth E. 49
Preble Shawnee 52, bixie 44
·
Rawson Cory, Rawson 56, Hilfdin Nortkem 45
Reeds.,iiJe Eastern 68, Racine Soulhem 34
R1chmond Edison 60, Sttubenville Cath. 4.l
Ridgeway Ridgemonl 50, Marion Cath. 33
Rod Hil' 69. G~nwood 44
S. Omrleston SE 5 I, Waynes.,Jlk 49-0T
S ElK lid Rtgm;:a 96, Hathaway Brown J 4
S. Webster 58. Wheelersburg 48
Sardinia Eastern Brown 48. W Umon J.~
Shadys1de 7B. Conotton Val 76-0T
Shoker Hts Independence J7, Brookl}'n 24
Shaker Hts Laurc173 , Lake Ridge 49
She lby 54, Bel1e.,ue 40
Smuh~ille 41 , Waynedale 24
Spann Highland 49, N. Union 47
Spring. Northeanern 46, Tecumseh 43
Spring Shaw nee= 62, Gre-=noo 54
Spring Southenstem 51. Waynes.,ille 49-0T
Sprin gboro 5R, Miamisburg 51
St. Maryt Memorial 60. Wapakoneta 42
Steubenville 55, Buckeye Local .' 5
Stewart Federal Hock.ing 58. Waterford .'5
Stryker S4. N Ce ntra l 5 1
Su~or Gro\·e Berne Umon 52. U ck.ing Hts 47
Sugarcreek. Garaway 47. Newcomerstown 29
Swamon 4J, Bryan .U
Tiffin Calven . ~2. Fostoria St. Wendel in J9
Tipp City 68, Benjamin Logan 67
Tel. Chnstian 52, Cardinal Stri1ch 46
Tol. Whitmer SO, Sandud;.y 43
Trenton Edgewoocj 72, Day Stebbins 43
UhrichtviUe Claymont 5~. Coshoccon 50
Umon City Miuissinawn Val . 54. Bradford 27
Urbana 71, Spnng. Northwestern 66
V:m Buren 65, McComb JB
Van Wert Llncolnview 54, Columbu.~ Grove .19
Versailles 42, Graham 21
Vincent Warren 78, Cheshire River Val. 34
W. Umty Hilltop66, Fayette 30
Wnrren Chmmp1on 45. Brookfield 43
Wauseon 62. Delta 51
Waverly 79. Oak l;lill H
Wh!lehouse Wayne 57. Syl~an111 North~tew 54
Willard 71, Galion 47
· Williamspon Weslfall51, W. Jefferson SO
Wilmington 49. Goshen 42
Wooster Triway 72, W. Holmes 63
Xenia Chr. 43, Jefferson J4
You. Rayep64, You . Chaney 45
You . Wilson 46, E. Li\·erpool 33
Zanesville 45, Bellaire 43

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

»:

....

Ann-gets blasted

••

Peninsula Woodridge 49, Garfttld 41
Perrysburg 58, AkroR SprinJ. 42
Pettis.,ille 52, Edon 35
Plam Cily Jonolhan Alder 63, Washingttm C.H.

l'wD

'•

By The Bend

J.' ··

Scoreboard
Basketball

•

~

Philadelphia .................... 2812
New Jersey ...... ................ 29 I?
Pittsburgh ........................ 28 15
N.Y: Rang en .. ................ .20 24
N.Y. Islanden .................. 16 32

I llL Jl£ !iA

12

68 166 109

6

64 150 I JO

7 63 160 134
7 47 137 140
!! 37 12~ 164

Onawa .............................. 28 16 8 64 150 114
Toronto ............................ 30
Buffalo ............................ 2S
Boston ............................. 22
Momreal ...................... 20

19
18
21
27

3
9"
9
8

Southeast Divls'on
... ..·... 24 20 9
Carolina ......
Florida .................. 20 19 13
Wuhington ................:... 21 26 4
Tampa Bay ...................... II 37 4

-·-

63 1'70
59141
S3 132
48 124

ISS
Il l
120
147

»:

57 IJS IJ-4
S3 IJ2 138
46 129 133

Tonight's games

Saturday's games

4 .58 159 J)g ·
51 1.19 136
41 119 167
J6 114 169

Paclnc Dl"islon
Dallas.... ...................... 30 10 8
Phoeni~ ..... ,
.... 28 13 10
Anaheim ...
21 22 9
San Jose ...
.... 19 22 12
los A.ngeles .
.. .20 29 4

6g 141
99
66 JJ6 10~
5 1 1~5 129
.'iO 12J 11J
44 t26 143

Crca10n

Dear Ann Landers :Your criti·
cism of people who test their blood
·and inject insulin in public raised
quite a stir among the readers of
Diabetes Interview, an independent
monthly publication about diabetes.
Although some readers agreed with
you, most considered your answer
off-base.
I would like to tell you why diabetic care has improved dramatically in the past two decades. In the
old-days, w e took one or two injections of long-acting insulin once or
twice a day.

Washinglon at New Jersey. 7:30p.m.
Nashville m N. V. blanders. 7:.m p.m.
Carolina a1 N.Y. Rangers . 7:.~ 0 p.m.
Detroit at Chicago. 8:30p.m.
Bos1on at Calgary. 9 p.m
Dallas at Anahc:tm . 10:30 P m

26 106 191

62 14!' 126
.48 142 IJ6
44 133 15 8
41 137 164

~rd

Syndic;~t¢

Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 3

Northwest Division
COlorado .., ................... .. 29 20 4
Edmonton ........ .............. 20 24 8
Calgary .......
.. ....... 18 28 g
Vancouver................... 1729 7

AnJetes Times

DetrOit 4, Edmon10n 2

L I llL Jl£ !iA
9
5
8

Syotlicue

San Jose S, St. Louis I

Ceninl Division
Detroit ..
.. .. 27 2l
St Louis .
......... 21 21
Nashvi11e .
. 18 29
Chicago .................. 14 31

1997 , Ul!

Buffalo 5. Montreal 2
Aorida J, Onawa I
Pittsburgh 15, Vancouver S-OT

. WESTERN CONFERENCE

l'wD

Landers ·

Thursday's scores

Nonhtut Dlviskm

Phoeni:c. at Colorado, -~ p.m
San Jose at Tampa Bay. 4 p.rp
Chicago at Toronw, 6·30 p.m
Flonda at Montreul. ? p.m
.N.Y. hhmders ut BuiTalo. 7:30p.m
Washington nt Ouawa. 7 : ~0 p m.
C11rol ina at New Jersey. 7:JO p.m
Edmonton nt St l...ou1s. 8 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Nash\ille. 8 p.m.
Dalla~ at Los Angeles. 9·.'0 p.m.
Boston ot Vancouver, 10 p m.

The Daily Sentinel
·

This low-maintenance routine
was convenient, but it did ~ot control the diabetes sufficienV¥ to prevent complications such as blindness arid kidney and heart disease.
These days, diabetes is treated
aggressively. We have portable
blood-te sti ng equipment and rapid
acting insulins.
We often take four or more injections a day - before each meal and
at bedtime. Since these insulins
work as soori as they are injected,
the best time to take the injection is
when the J1late is in front of us.
Insul in inj ~t iotls do not have to
attract auention.
There is no need to pull up one's
shirt and expose skin. We can inject
right through clothing, and often,
nobody at the table notices. Blood
testing is more obvious, but it is an
essential part of our basic health

care.
For those _who must do eight or
I 0 tests a day, even the best ~ath­
rooms are not sanitary enough.
Hiding the {acts of our health
care suggests that we are doing
something shameful. We need
insulin to survive. Banishi ng us to
the bathroom undermines efforts to
accept our diabetes in a positive,
healthy way.
I hope this gives you a basic
idea of the concerns and cares of
over 8 million Americans who take
·insulin . SCOTT KING, PUBLISHER AND EDITOR IN CHIEF.
DIABETES INTERVIEW, SAN
FRANCISCO
DEAR SCOTT KING: Thank
you for a letter that will educate
millions of readers, me included.
I'm pleased that you wrote. Keep
readi'ng for more:

From Dublin, Ireland: My
won't be grossed out.
daughter is 6 years old and diabetic .
Provo, Utah: I tcy to be discreet
No way will I give her an injection
when administering insulin in pubin a dirty bathroom or make her .
lic . No one is offended by a heart
feel that taking her medication is
patient who takes a pill at a meal or
something to be .ashamed of.
a person with asthma using an
Please tell your readers about
inhaler Why should diabetes be any
the v•onderful, courageous children ·, different~
with diabetes who face daily injecPiggott, Ark.: Are you out of
tions, blood tests, restricted diets
your mind ~ Fast-acting insulin must
be taken immediately before eating .
and the discrimination of adults
who don't understand.
Nowadays, a diabetic can inject
Baltimore: Diabetics must test
insul in in the stomach, right
through the clothing .
· themselves and take insulin at
mealtime If seeing a drop of blood
Orange, N.J.: My 16-year old
son has diabetes , and he agrees
makes people sick , well, too bad. .
They shouldn 't look.
with you , Ann. He feels that diaMoreno Valley, Calif.: I would
betes ts part of his personal I ife and
never teach my two diabetic chil should remain private . He does not
dren that "good table manners"
wish to have strangers see him test
means to hide or be embarrassed
his blood or inject IUs insulin. Your
about their condition. People should comments were right on.
_be educated about diabetes so they
York, Pa.: I am a diabetic. Many

Sunday's games

•

Page 7
Friday, February 12, 1999

by diabetics over public testing of -blood sugar

of us talk about being treated "like
anyone else and then , we go ahe~d
and make sure everyone within _.
viewing distance knows we have a
condition that requires attention!: I
prefer some privacy, thank you. :•
Is life passing you by~ Want to
improve your .social skills? Write
for Ann Landers' new booklet. How
to Make Friends and Stop Being
Lonely."
Send 'a self addressed, long,
business size envelope and a check
or money order for $4.25 (this
includes ·postage and handling) to
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, PO. Box
11 562': Chicago, III. 60611-0562.
( In Canada, send $5 .15)
To find out mqre about Ann Lan ders and read and her past column s
· visit the Creators Syndicate web
page at www creators.com.

Community Calendar·-----

Detroit :11 N.Y. Rangers, J p.m
Phil~e l phi o ill Culorado. 1 p m
Anaheim at Phoenb.. Bp.m

PUBLIC NOTICE

•

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be gul\11111teed to run a specific number of days.

r

'·•.

I

II\ compliance with Section
5705.27 of the Ohio Revised Code, the
Meigs County Budget Commission will
meet to review the 1999-2000 budgets
of the Eastern Local, Meigs Local &amp;
Southern Local School Districts. The
Commission will meet at 10:00 A.M. in
the Auditor's Office in the Meigs
County Court House on February 24,
1999.
Nancy Parker Campbell
Budget Commission Secretary
d-

,·.'

•; . '
•,

FRIDAY
POMEROY Informational
session on Children with Medical
Handicaps by Meigs County Health
Department, Friday, noon to 2 p.rn .

'\ .

I

''

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•'
'

LONG BOTTOM - Hymn sing,
Faith Full Gospel Church, 7 p.m.
Friday. Singers/evangelists David
and Debbie Dailey.
POMEROY Women' s AA
meeting, 7 p.m. Friday, 160-8 Nye
Avenue, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM
Modern
Woodmen of America Camp· 7230,
potluck dinner Saturday, 3 p.m. at
hall. Take covered di•h and a Valentine to be sent to the sic,f or shut-in.
Guests are welcome.

RACINE - Racine Post 602,
American Legion and Auxiliary,
valentine dinner, Saturday, 6 p.m. at
hall . Meal furni shed, those attending
to take covered dish .
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, regular meeting, Saturday, Pomeroy Library, 10
a.m. History Month to be observed
with Pat Holter to present a history
of Meigs .County lil:&gt;raries. Winners
in fifth grade history writing contest
and winner of Good Citizenship
award to be recognized. Hosting

. meeting, Paulin e Atkins, Sharon
Jewe ll, Donna Jenkins, and C!otine
Blackwood.
TUESDAY .
Meigs County
POMEROY
Board of Elections, 9 a.m. Tuesday,
at the office.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.
at the municipal building.
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m. at the
fire station.

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,.,

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l't'aude Car!ley

...

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'

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It's the DeaJer Beh.ind 'The DeaJ
That Malres The BEAL Dillereneel

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I,

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.;

Bi'and New 1999 Chevy

Silverado Ext. Cab 4x4 Pickup
• Vortec v. 8 Power

•Automatic
• A'r Conditioning

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Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE Sedah

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• Air Conditioning
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tl3
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BrandNew1999Chevy
S.Serles
LS Ext. Cab Pickup

• Air Conditioning

• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock BrakeS

•LS Package
• AMIFM Clllltte

• Aluminum Wlleela
• Nicely Equipped!

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VB, Aut!l, power Moonrool, Leather, All Power Equip.

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1998·FORD CONTOUR GL

Cartier Edition, VB, Auto, Climate Control, All Power

4 cyl, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM Cass, All Power Equip

Only828,•o

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· Only 811,900

•
••

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE - Thomas Theiss, supervisor for
the Meigs Soil and Water Corservation District, was recognized for
20 years of service during the recent Ohio Federation of Soli and
Water . Conservation District's 56th _annual meeting held in Colum·
bus. Theiss received monogrammed stemware from OFSWCir
President Robert Carroll, left. Organized in 1943, the agency role Is
to further the natural resouree conservation mission of the state's
: . 88 county-based SWCDs. The goal is to assist landown.rs with a
wide range of soil, water, woodland and wildlife conservation objectives, to · provide information and education programs on natural ·
resource ·conservation and management topics for county rasl': ·dents.
•
'"

•
'•.

)

.

"I

''

'·

1998 FORD EXPEDITION XLT
5.4L, VB, Auto, AC, Tilt, Cruise, All Power Equip.

Only 827,900

CULTURE - Shawna Manley and Devan Dugan
from tht Big Btnd Cloggare vlelttd ACCESS GlngerbreaciiHtad...,
Start to ehare local cuhure with prtechooltra there demonatt'lltlng
Appalachian clogging and river dancing. Htre, Becky Foattr and
Manley, from right, dance with Hattie Jarrell and Michael Beaver
whllt other youngsters look on.

'

Phone
7 40-992-2196

4x4, SE Pkg. 4.0L, Auto, AC, Tlll,·Crulse, Cass, All Power

Only 215,000 MUaa

Stop In and See

HOURS
SALES 9-6 Mon-Sat
Parts &amp; Service
8-5 Mon-Frl
8-12 Saturday

1,96 MAZDA 14000 EXTENDED CAB

•

• Jerry Bibbee • Bob Ross
•John Bennet •Bob Stanley
• Shelia Stidham

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

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: Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel
NOTHING RUNS
UKEAOEER~

Friday, February 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

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Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

eea Pl'*rest Drive

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

friday, February 12, 1999

ladle

j.,
.

.

Gallipolis

Aao!s ITom Gala Aulo Sales on old lta. 35 West

108 North Second Ave. • Mlc!dleport, OH

(740) 446·2412

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

992-2825

740 992-2196

.~

'

Hills

(itgo

Marlin,
Labonte
hopeful
for 500
I

See us for Your StihJPower Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

Fast, Friendly
Service ·

j
INDY RACING £BASU£
1998 atandlnga
Top 10

949-3099

Points

.c&lt;JiJ(.);~IIIIi9~JH1!Ci:iif:rifGH
2. Scott Goodyear

40

4. Jeff Ward

35

. r;:J;: ~i,,@: ~~I)V~BA\J~XD6S~?Ji
•

,

:;~;:;j~~:: n•QrBPJi.ii:::;::::D::~urm:~rt
6. Mark Dismore

28

lE:ttE$tftfJqtiR~:~;EHlLE~f.f@#fffi·i

By DICK 8RINSTER
AP Sports Writer

SIIHJ:.
www.atdduaa.c.om

.

Toda~ To~ow,And
Always-Fo~kver Yours
-Happy Valentine\!

.

l' ,
Day.

Love,

'

B.~rt

'l'

· '; TRACK LENGTH: 2.5 miles
' RACE LENGTH: 200 laps, 500 miles ' .
: DEFENDING CHAMP: Dale Earnhardt :
, ·. RACE RECORD: Buddy Baker,
' ': 177.602 mph·, set Feb. 17, 1980
QUAUFYINO RECORD: Bill Elliott.
210.364 mph, ·set Fob.~. 1987

Indeed. Marlin collected
$300,460 in 1995. Tbe winner
Sunday will get at least $1.1
million from a record purse of
$8 million.

'',

... ··:·

·:···'

Kyle&amp; DiUon
Happy Valentines Day
to my two
Sweethearts!
1 Love You

In Loving,Memory,
, Happy Valentine's D!ly
Pat,
I Love You &amp; You Will
Always Be In My Heart.
Love,
Earl

Happy
Valentine:, Day
Jacob Hatfield .
You're Mommy:,
Little Sweetheart!

.lf)sie Doerfer,
You havegrow11 up so fast.
· But yo~ will always ,be my
•hooting star:
My baby, ,,.
My forever Vale 'I tin~ ·

lf/IJ/Ij'~~i~':l
Paints

1998 at\ondlnga
Top. 10

BtU,
You fu!fiU aU my fantasies
and make my d~eam•
come true.

I'U always lnve you.
Happy Valentine~ Day!
Peb

""

stage." .
Marlin expects to do less
exploring ihan Labonte because
he appears so satisfied with the
way his car is running. His first
priority is to find a drafting
·partner- the key to staying
near the front
on the high·
banked trioval. ' ·

"You

THIC GRICAT AMICRICAN RACIC
,.IC8RUARY 14TH, fllllll

but at times the brevity urthe
qualifiers ·prevents teams from .
learning as much as they woia!d
hope.
"If we can run 50 laps, it'll
give us a good Idea of how we
stack up for the 500," he said.
"These races really set the

can't win it by
yours.Jllft said
M~rlin, who
prevailed
after starting
12th in one of
the qualifiers a year ago. "Hut I
think we're going to be in good
shape."
Marlin and l,obonte are in
the power-pocked first qualifier
led by reigning Winston Cup
· champion Jeff Gordon, who has
the poie Sunday. Astride.

..

Gordon, a three-time DIS win·
ner, Is Ken Schnider, II threetime Daytona 500 pole-sitter.
( Labonte starts fourth, outside Mark Martin, who broke
an 0-for-72 Daytona drought
with a victory last Sunday in
the no·n-points Bud Shootout.
Marlin starts seventh.
&gt;
The second qualifier bas
rookie Tony Stewart on the
point.
He starts second Sunday in
his Winston Cup debut.
Mike Skinner, who won the
pole as a rookie in 1997, starts
alongside Stewart today• .
Defending Daytona 500 champion Dale Earnhardt starts
fifth, four spots ahead of twotime champion Dale Jarrett.
The qualifiers fill positions J
through 30.
The final 13 starters will
make the field Sunday on quail·
fying speeds or provision a is.

Dear "Middie Ping"
. Roses are red,
Violets are blue
Life is so much sweeter,
With a sister like you.
"Beak"
'

We Love You
Ben Wilson
From Your Parents
Craig and Sheri

ICH LIEBE DICH
BUD

ATTENTION
See

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.C hannel
%8 '

Call 992-2155

lor

Dave Ext. 104
. Kathy Ext..105
For more information

details
COf'tl"tUNICAT, IONS

For infor Call675·3398 or 1·800.766.0553

Mary, Chelsea
&amp; . Vicki, ·
You three make every
day Valentine~ Day!
Love, ·.,

Kitty Cat,
Our lives chaf!ff~dforever
both know
its~ for the beuer. ·
Together lnve will grow thi..
we know.

Jim

Bob: · 1.
Your love is iny
·direct line to '
happiness.
Betty

John,
Happy Valentine~ Day to
the Worlds Greatest
Husband and father. Your
family loves you .
Le'Anna
Ruckel &amp; Lil' John

David,
I Love You With
All My Heart!
'Love,

Deb

A'ITENTION

ADVERTISERS!!

Rosie Doerfer,
You are my do:en: Pink
Roses every day. The
su"1;1shine in my life. My
sweet little candy kiss,
Love,
MaMa

Jason, Bobby &amp; Kyle
Happy
Valentines Day!
Love,
Mom

Doug,
I LoveYou!
Happy Valentines
Day

Austin,
We love you very mttch..
Happy
Valentine:, Day!
Love,
Mommy &amp; Daddy

Thank you for giving me
your heart &amp; your
worlil. In return I will
give you my love forever.
Tina G. &amp; Kids

Cup

1 . Mlkl Hokklnan

of two 125-miie qualifying races
today on the 2 1/l:Qlil~. Daytona
International Speedway oval.
Labonte says the qualifying
races often result in surprises
because some teams use them to ·
experiment. His is among them,

Happy Birthday!
Debbie King
Best Wishes ~ Love
Always,
Aunt Shirley

S.E. T.
God must have sent me an
angel the night that we met. If
you're not an angel what else
could you be, the way you have
.touched my heart,
. wi'th one kiss
you made me believe in angels ..
Love,
D.G.T.

,~~"fl/:.':1

Grand Nstlonsl

18t8 atandlnga
Top 10

Love,

MaMa

AP

La~Jnnte

secure advantageous starting
positions for Sunday In the first

Dave,

Ill'

more."

113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Office: 992-5479

Happy Valentine lr Day
MaMaw &amp; PaPaw
Anderson,
We Love You,
Braden, Trenton, Kyle
arul Ryan

~~f:ij~$~fv.~-0~f.
JJ[;g·~~Ji\tX;h
l
10. Buddy Lazier
20

. DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Not long aeo, Sterling
Marlin was hoping to make history by winning the Daytona
500 three yean in a row.
Terry Labonte would settle
for just once.
And then he'd want more,
insists Marlin, who won the
crown jewel of stock car·racing
in 1994-95.
"I want It even more than I
did then," Marlin sa)d ou the
eve of a qualifying race that
wUI determine when: he starts
Sunday. "It sure pays a lot

- three times a sec·
oud·place llo,isber in lO previous tries- wouldn't mind
counting the money. But for
him, The Great Americ~n Race
Is not about finances.
"I want to win very badly,"
the two-time Winston Cup
champion said. "Anybody
would want to have this on
their resume."
Marlin bas it on the top line
of his, and feels like he's ready
to take another shot at it in his
second year with Team Sabco.
"We're much better.than we
wen: last year," be said. "Since
I won, I've been in some can
that wen: good enough to finish
in the top 10, but not good
enough to win.
"This year,
tbe guys really
went to work on
tbe motor.
We've got more
power: or
course, I keep
beating on them
saying I need
more."
Labonte also feel~ good
about his car.
"It's running real good right
now," he said. "But we've got
to get better."
--'' Both drivers will try to

-·

SR 124_
Racine, Ohio

.

•

· Daddy,
Roses are red;
Violets are blue
I thank God everyday, That
me and Mommy have yo"'!
Madi..on Grace Maynard

To Zach and Trey our
Frmny Little Valentines
We Love .You Both.
Happy Valentines Day
Nanny&amp; Papa

Bill,

Happy
Valentine:, Day!
/Love You
Cindy

Snuggle Bug,
Thanks for the.
wonderful life you give
me each and. everyday.
Happy Valentines Day,
I Love you.
E.T.

Superman,
To my good looking
muscle bound, tough·
man, biker. I've been on
Fire for You Forever!
Love,
TwirnJ

I want to wish my husband
Everett &amp; Children
Michael, Pamela, Debbie,
Marlin, Shayne, &amp; Samuel
a "Happy Valentines Day"
Charlntte

Ryan, Lacey, Samantha,
Amanda &amp; Shawn,
You are my five
V!llentin.eli!
I Love You

To My Daughter, Brooke,
I Love You and
1 am very proud of you
Sweetheart.
With All My Love ,
Mommy

ADVERTISERS!!

Mike (Mr. Happy),
Happy Valentines

Craiggy more than
anything in the world: ·
Love,
Michelle

To Chuck,
I
To the one I love very
much, and always will.
fl.appy Valentine's Day .
/Jove Always,
'Treasa

Dear Daddy,
Thanks for being my Best
Bud! I Love You
Soooo Much!!
Love,
Karlie Anne

-

....,.,

Happy Valentine~ Day
I Love Yori Very Much.
Las Vegas ...
here we come!!
AU My Love,
Theresa

David Doerfer Jr.,
To are new littll! Brother.
We love you very much.
We will lnve you till the
end of time.
Your Sisters,

Josie &amp; Rosie
Doerfer

Norrnan,
You are my sweeiheart,
You are rny life,
t"m oh., so proud,
To be your wife.
Love,
Allegro

""'-""""

Mike,

BooBoo,
Even after
everything I still
love you.
Always,
Bad Girl

To My GronddaUBiller MO.ty,
Ro1e1 are Red,

Violets are blue,
I mi.ued la.1tj year,
Bur I sti.U love you!
Happy Valentin~:. Day!

MaMa Haye

Advertise·on this page

Call 992-2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

Toots,
I don't need riches,
I don't need golil,
AU I "need" ia you,
To have and to holil.
Buffy

Brenda,
f still think of you
every day.
Deniro

Tracy,
1 Love you with all my
heart. You'll always
be my Valentine!
Love Always,
Rob

We Love You
Alyssa Deemer
Love Always,
Mommy &amp; Daddy

�,

•

&lt;

•'

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Page

10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Nf;W YORK (AP) -It's been nearly two
years since . Julie Andrews had throat
surgery, and there's still no sound of music
coming from her lips.
Andrews, who in December .dismissed
reports that her singing career is over, now
concedes she's been unable to sing since
·she underwent surgery to remove non-cancerous throat nodules.
The 63-year-old Andrews. Broadway's
"Fair Lady" whose voice swept across the
hills in "The Sound of Music," .said she is
considering filing a lawsuit over the operaAndrews
tion .
She said she will keep trying to si ng,
though doct&lt;ll's don't give her much hope it will happen. She said she
tries to be o'ptimistic but thinks she is in denial about her problem.
"To not sing with an orchestra, to not be ab le to commun icate
through my voice which I've done all my life and not to be able to
phras.e lyrics and give people that kind of joy, I think I would be total ly devastated," she told Barbara Walters in a "20/20" interview to air
toni ght.
NEW YORK (AP) - John McEnroe must have decided art isn't
hi s game.
The former tenni s champion has decided to close his gallery tn
New, York 's . trendy SoHo n.e ighborhood, said his father, John P.
McEnroe.
"He had his eyes OJ1Cned a little bit by th~ whole experience," the
senior McEnroe said Thursday of hi s so n's st int with the downtown
gallery, whi ch sold contemporary art.
.
" He had such an interest in art and a love for art ... and I think he
found , in fact, it's a cutthroat business,'' said the father, who served as
la;vyer for the loh~ McEnro~ Gallery. " I don 't think he 'd be closing
it if he was making money hand over fi st. "
The youn ger McEnroe, who · won seven Grand Slam titles and
recently was elected to the tenni s Hall of Fame, was in Uruguay for a
tennis to urnamen t~ his father said.

•

CAM BRIDGE, Mass , (AP)- Goldie Hawn JOyfu:ly revisited her
psychedelic go-go dance from her "Laugh-In" days as she accepted
Harvard's Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year award.
Flanked by male Harvard students dressed in drag, Hawn was driven Thursday through Harvard Square in a BMW convertible en route
to the awards ceremony and traditional roast. _
There, the Academy Award-winning actress earned the coveted
brass pudding pot after fielding questions about her movies from
tuxedo-clad Harvard students.
And Hawn, 53, easily slipped into the go-go dance that made the
bubbly blonde famous in the ' late 1960s on " Rowan &amp; Martin's
Laugh-In."
· ·
"Don't ever lose this joy for life and thi s humorthat lives inside of
you," Hawn told the crowd. "That smile sometimes lies dormant, but
it never goes away."
!fawn won an Oscar for best supporting actress in 1969's "Cactus
Flower." The Hasty Pudding awards are given to ·performers who
have made a " lasting and impressive contribution" to entertainment.
' MIAMI (AP) _:_ The FBI is in ves tigating a possible death threat
against Gloria Estefan, the singer's company told a television station.
"Gloria doesn't feel she's in any danger. She's pullmg her confidence in the proper authorities and Jelling them do their job," the
Cuban-born singer's Estefan Enterprises Inc., told WSVN-TV for a
story Thursday.'
·
Phone call~ to Estefan Enterprises were not returned Thursday.
" We cannot comment on an ongoing investigation, " said FBI
Agent Mike Fabregas in Miami .

~

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••
~

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·-"
·~

t

'\•

·~

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~

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...

Birthday observed
Victoria Dawn Zeigler cele brated her fifth birthday on Feb . I
with a party at Wendy 's in
Pomeroy. She is the daught er of
Mr. and Mrs . William Zeigler of
Pomeroy.

First aid course offered
A first aid training program
will 'be offered to Meigs Co unty
Girls Scout leaders on Feb . 27.
Those planning to take the co urse
arc to regi·ster with Shirley Cogar
by Saturday. For more information leaders may co ntact Brenda
Neutzl in g. 992-6697.
'Church
Bradford
women 's meeting

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' Pomeroy

12, 1999

The March of Dimes has awarded
a $10,000 grant to the Meigs C&lt;)unty Health Department for use in
establishing a prenatal smoking cessation prbgram.
Called "Smoke Free, Baby and
Me", the local agency has received
60' percent ot the total grant to initiate the program, and will receive the
other balance once the program is in
operation and has been evaluated
and determined to be effective.
Sherry Wilcox, R.N., a H&lt;)llth
Department nurse, is heading UP' the
program which is open for volunteer
participation from pregnant clientele ,
of the WIC (Women, In fants and
Children) program as well as those
in the prenatal clinics of the Health
Department.
·
· · The program, according to
Wilcox, is incentive based and provides for the mother to be given
things for the baby if she quits
smoking. The program hinges on
urine samples which show whether
the mother has been smoking.
The goal, said Wilcox, is to g. '
pregnant women to think about thei.
MEIGS DELEGATION - Seven members of the Meigs County Junior Fair Bpard attended the 75th own as well as the baby's health.
Ohio Fair Managers Association Conference held In Columbus.
Smoking cessation, especially
Tuesday was designated "Junior Fair Day" for the conference held at the Hyatt Regency Conventl.o n during pregnancy, will help reach
Center. A series of meeting was held for the. junior fair board members and that evening they were hon· the goal of the March of Dimes camored at a dinner.
paign of reducing jnfant deaths to ·
An emphasis of the conference meetings for the Meigs delegation was on garnering new Ideas for seven per 1,000 live births, reduce
the 1999 M.elgs County Junior Fair.
.
Accompanying the youth to Columbus were Kathy Reed and Ruth Spaun, chaperones, and JoAnn low birth weight to five percent of
all births, and ensure prenatal care is
Calaway,.junior fair c.oordinator.
·
·
Pictured are front, from left Joseph McCall, vice president; and Andrea Neutzllng, front; Melissa Hot- . begun within the first trimester of
man, secretary; Julie Spaun, president; Jessica Grindstaff; Jenny Starcher, treasurer; Sarah Houser, pregnancy.
and JoAnn Calaway, coordinator.
·
..· ,....--~----~· - - - - - - - - : : - - - - : -.....

hosts

The Bradford Church of Christ
ho sted a recent meetin g of the
Women 's Fellowship of the
Meigs Couiuy Churches of
Christ ,.
Linda Bates, president , con ducted the meeting whi ch opened
with Lynn Runyon givin g devo ti ons, "New things for the New
Yea r", a political poem, and
scripture from II Corinthians.
Mari e Snyder reported o n the
mi ssionary support given by the .
group and the fin ancial balance .
Sealed bids we re accepted for
a Ten Comma ndm ent Quil&gt; made
by member with Paula Pickens
makin g the purch ase. Kathryn
John son conducted a co nte st on
Bible trivia. and Ann Lambert
. report on how Valentine's Day
ori ginated and the meaning of it..
She· also read "A Valentine from
Heaven.
Mission program planned for Middleport church
Refres hm ent s were provided
by
the host church. Next meet ing
Hoyt W. Allen, Jr., executive ly men and boys supper meetings,
will
be at the Dexter Church of
director of the KYOWVA Ev.ange- publi she s a newslener, gives assishstic Association will be prese nt ~ tance with surveys, handles an Chri st on Feb. 25.
ing a mission program at the Mid- open mini strY. listin g to serve
dleport Church of Chris t, Fifth Christian workers seeki ng to reloand Main Street, on Sunday. Feb. cate, ·offers pulpit ministry train21 at 7 p.m . during the eveni ng ing sc holarships, and handles a Henry.s announce birth of son
Nic ole and Keith Henry of
recycli ng program of Christian
servi ce .
5790
University Heights , Athens ,
A former pastor of the Pomeroy materia ls to congregati ons in
Church of Christ, Allen and hi s. need.
wife, Shara re side in Ironton. He
has been been a part of the Eva nge listic Associatio n sin.ce 1984 .
The KYOWVA ministr y is one
of providing aids to churches. It
~ has enrolled over a thou sand peo1; .pie in Bible correspond e nce
co urses, work s with church bui ld :, ing groups of volunteers call ed
~ Kingdom Bui ldcrs, hold s qua rter-

!-

Friday, February

'Nelsonville
'Gallipolis
'Middletown
'Dayton
. 'Washington CH
'Hillsboro
*West Union
'Springfield
• Jamestown
'Circleville

Daily Sentinel

announce the birth of a so n, Keith
Jerem iah, on Jan . 27 at 0 ' Bl eness
Mem ori al Hospital in Athens.

Worsh ip~

Apostoltc

"'

Mlddlepolt Churdl

Evening. 7:30p.m.

SWl~Y

,,.

,. ' '

Wonlilp · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday s.ihool - 10'30 o.m.
Putor.Jetfrey Wallace
lSI and 3nl Sunday
BoarwaUow Rlqe C..rdl orCbrtll

Mason, W.Va.
. Pastor: Neil Tcanant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. Jnd 7 p.m.

•'

B a plt s l
Hope Jlapdst Churdl (Soathero)

...

Froe Will Baptist Churc:h
Ash Streei, Middleport

,,

.'- ' .

· Radud First Baptist Cburcll
' Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship - t0:4l a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Bapllst
East Main St.

..

'

Bible StudyWedneSday 7pm

,.

~

Bntdbury Cburdl ofCbrist
Pastor: :rom Runyon
Sunday S.hool -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Flnt Souiltem Baetlli
41872 Pomeroy P1ke

, I!'

Pastor: E. Lemar O'Bryant
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:4!5 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

'
Rullliltd C..rdlof Chrlit
Sunday S.hoot • 9:30 a.m.

Wo1'5hip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Flnt Bapllll Cburcll

Bradford Chun:h of Christ

Pastor: Mark Morrow·

....

/'Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp;: Bradbtlry Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School • 9:.30 a.m.
Wor!hlp . 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 P·ITI·

61h and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School -9: ll o.m.
Worship -10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WedneSjlay Service-7:00p.m.
'
Radoe Flrotllopllll

,

HlclrM)' Hlllt Chun:h or Christ

Paslor: Rick RLile

Sunday School -9:30 a.m..
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Evanaelist Mike Moore

Sunday S.hoot · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.
Luprille Chrlllllilt Cbun:b
Sunday S.hool -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:3,0p.m.
.WedneSday Service 7:30p.m.
'
Hemlock Grvve Churth

'

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Mt. Ualoo BaP,Iat
Pastor : Joe N
.Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
. Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

PastOr: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m., 7 p,.m.

• Reedsville Churc:h of Christ

Belhlehem Baptilt Church
GlOat Bend, Routel24, Racine, OH
Pastor ': Gene Morris
. ·Sunday Scllool -9:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship - lQ,30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
WedneSday Bible Study · 6:00 p.m.

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

•
Christian Union
Hartford Church or Cbrill In
Christlaa Unloa

Old lletbel Fne WID Bapdsl Chun:b

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon

..

Sunda)' School- 10 a.m.
' Ev1=nin(l; • 7:30p.m.
· Thunday Services · 7:30

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - II.a.m.

Worship -9:30 a.m., 7&gt;30 p.m.·

Hllltlde ~lsi Chan:b
St. Rt 143 JUS! off Rt. 7

Wednesday Service&amp;· 7:30 p.m.

Pastor: Rev...J~J¥11 R.: Acree, Sr.
Sunda~ School ·10 a.m.
Worsh1p. 11a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Ch u rch of God
M~ Moriah Church or God

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Ult
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Vl&lt;toty Bapllltlndependant
!2.5 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - lOo.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Rudand Church or God

Fallh Bapiltt Chun:h

Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship- "tO a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Railroad St., Mason

Sundal S.hoot- tO a.m.

Worship ,. 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Syracuse Flnt Chun:b of Gnd
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
, Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6:30p.m.

Forest Run Baptl•t
PastQr : AriuS Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a,m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Chun:k of God of Prophec:y

ML Moriali Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Won~hip- 10:45 a.m. ·

, Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a. m. .
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

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

Congregational
Trinity Church

Rudand Free Wilt Bapdst

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worshi p 10:2S

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Episcopa l
Gnce Eploc:opol Churth

"These display homes must go"

.•'

So Lloyd and David are cutting prices on everything
Single &amp; Double Wide 98's and 99's

C a thol ic
Socnrl Heort Calholl&lt; Chorch
161 Mulberry Avc:t.Pomeroy, 992·S898

Pastor: Rev. wllter E. Heinz
Sal. Con. 4:45-5:lSp.m.; !'Ius-3:30p.m. .
Sun. Con. -8:4.5-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30a.m.

Example
Clayton Volunteer 16 x 80 New 1998

Danville Holiness Churdt

3IOS7 State Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday school • 9:3~ a.m.
Sunday worship · 10:3Q a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
\yednCsday prayer service · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wntslde Chun:h of Chri1t
· 33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday Sctlool - 11 a. m.

VOLUNTEER 18 X 80

' '
'--

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II' 1 I'

,,. o II'

Work
Cabinet Making
Mill

WAS $28,995

s
24
__,__.,.-a~. . . ....._~· · '

SAVE$4,000

t.IA1116.)C {11110 50. FT ,)

..

ILLE

992-3785

Syracuse

Roc:k Spriap

Pastor: Kenh Rader

Sunday School- 9:lS a.m.

Worship· 10 a.m.
Youth FellowshJp, Sunday. 6 p.m.

RQaldna Ure Cbun:h
lOll N, 2nd Ave., Middlepon

Wednesday Service · 7:()9 p.m.

Soowvtlle

Fatth Full Gospel Churtb

.~

Rutland

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worihip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Sunday School · lO a. m.
Worship . 9 a.m.

Latter -D a y Saint s
Roorpolzed Charch of JetUJ Chrllt
or Latter Day Sal•ts
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
The Churth of JesUS
Christ of Latter-D.ay Saints

Si. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Sunday School10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 :05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
'Homemaktng meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

L u t h e ra n
SL Jobo Lutbe~Chun:b

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - JO a.m.
' Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.
Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds,
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewaync Stuller
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m.

HorriOODtllle Commuahy Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday -9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.
Momla11St1r
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worshi p- 11 a.m.
SL PaullMtheran Churtb
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. FriLz
Sunday School · 9:45a.m-. ·
Worship - 11 a.m.

United Methodist
Gnbom tJaited MelhudiJI
Worship· 9:30 a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
· 7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
ML Olive United Method"'
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. RalPh Spires
Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

M~lp Cooperatln Parish
Northeast Clu!lter
All'red
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- ll ,a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chesler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wors hip· 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

.

Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worship· 10 a.m .
Wednesday service· 6:30p.m.

Middleport Commuoky Cbun:h
515 Pearl St., Middleport

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
W~dnesday ' strvice- 7:30p.ni. ·

Racine

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Faith VaUey Tabernacle &lt;:;burch
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Hele n Kline
Coolville c•un::b
Main &amp;. Fifth St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
. Wo~:ship • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7·p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse

Rev , Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

· Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
. Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Off Rt. 124

Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .

. Grand Street
Sunday SchoOl • 10 a.m.
Worship ·11 a.m.
Wedn~ay Services· 8 p.m.

Dyesville Community Cbuttb
Sunday School - ~:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63

Morse Chapel Church

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
\ • Worship • I 0:30 a.m.

Sunday sc hool ·10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a. m,
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Faith Gospel Church

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Long Bottom
Suoday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:4.S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

C

•

Joppa
·Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship · 9:30a.m.

ReedJ¥11le Fellowship

Sunday Schooi- 10:30 a.m.
Long Bouom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.

Reedsvltle

Worship· 9:30a. m.
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.

UMYF Sunday 6'30 p.m.

First Sunday of Month ·7:30 p.m. service "

Tuppers Plains St. Paul .
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.
·Central Clu.ster
Albury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School- 9:45a. m.
Worship - lla.m.
Wednesday Services · 7;30 p.m.
1

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship - 9 a.m;

Church ottlle Nuareue

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wed nesday Services -7 p.m.

Syracuse Churth or the Nazarene
Pastor, Robe rt J. Cocn
WBGS Radio-10:30 a.m. dail y 9 a.m, Sunday

WJOS-TV 27-3,30p.m. Sunday
4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School ·9:30a. m.

Worship - 10:30 a. m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\lices · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Chri st- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Chuida orthe Nazarene
Pastor: ReY. Lloyd D. GrimmJr,

Sunday School -9,30 a. m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Chn1er Chun:h

or the Nazarene

Pastor: Rev. Herbert Orate
Sunday School · 9.30 am.
Worship- l1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Rutland 'churth or tbe Nazarene
P11stor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

· Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~ · 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship -' 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30 p.m.

264 SOuth Second Ave.•Middteport, OH 45760

740-992-5141
sruca R. Fisl:&gt;er- Director

Main-·

Porreroy. oH 45769
740-992-5444

Portland Fint C hurch of the Nuareae
Pastor: Mark Matson
Sunday School -10:30 a.m.
Morning Worship· 11: 15 a.m.
Sunday "Service· 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

RIDENOUR
s·upp•,y

Ctlllon Tabernacle Cbun:h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wedm:sday Service- 7 p.m.

New Ute VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH

Pas tor: Bill Staten
Sunday Service!; . ~ 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 1 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Church of lht Uvlng Savior
·

Rt .338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Satuiday 7:30p.m.

Pe nt ec o s ta l
Peatecoslal Asotmbly

St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pruitor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Middleport .Pentecostal

Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wedn~ay Services · 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Pnsbytertan
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship. ll a.m.

Hazel Community Churth

HockiDIIPOrt Churc~

' Middleport Chun:' of tbe Nazareae
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worshtp- 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p,m.

Friday-7:00 p.m.

Endtlme House of Prayer
(at Burlingl\am Church off Route 33)

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m."
Worship . 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7_P,.m.

Sunday School-10:00 a.m.

590 Easi

The Belleven' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pll!ltor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Easl Letart

Pine Oro
Rev. Donald . Fritz
Worship • 9:00 a.m.

Churdt of JOIUJ Cbrlll,
ApotiDIIc Fallh

Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesda1 - 7 p.m.
Friday . fellowshap service 7 p.m.

·

'

Me. Olive Com111unlty Churth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m. ·
Wcdneday Service - 7 p.m . ..

Uattrd Filth Church

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Full Gospel U&amp;hthoooe
33045 Hllan~ Road, Pomeroy
PaStor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 UIJ.·
Evening 7:30p.m.

Harrisonville Pre.sbyt~ri1n Churth
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday Scbool- 9:45 a. in~

Middleport Prosbylerlaa
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Advenltst
~,-eath·Day Adwentb:t
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services :
Sabbath School· 2 p.m.
Worsh ip- 3 p.m .

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethren

In Chris! Church

Texas Community"off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 1/2 miles north of ReedsYille
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev . Robert Markley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
Wcdnt:sdEty Youth Ser11ice • 7:30p.m.

Tuesday &amp; Thursday-7:30p.m.
South Bethel New Testament

Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School · 9 a.m .
' Worship - 10 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Carlet9n Inlerdenomlnatlo,al Church
Kingsbury Road
.
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services
Freedom Gospel Mission
Oald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pasto r: Rev. Roger Will ford
Sunday School· 9:30a.m .
Worship· 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Wesleyaa
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour ·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant

Time to clean house?

'Featuring Kentucky Fried Ch
. icken'

Clean out your basement
or attic with the ~elp of the

L.
228 w_ Main St., Pomeroy
St. .Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
992·5432
85 3308
CLASSIFIED SECTION!

-=

Meilf• Cou ..ty&gt; Olded Florist

tine of

..

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'

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Blvd.
Belpre, OH
Phone: 74o-423-7521

ERNIE SHULER Owner

Pomeroy

Fallh Qtapel

923 S. Third St., Middlcpon
Pastor Ernie Weneerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
We~ncsday service, 7 p".m.

StbenvDie Word ofFaltb
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.

!' 1t_~~~992~~~~39~8~7~~c.-i-~~IR~5fi~~----leh~;J•m~as~R
~.~~J~c~·D~iroct~~~--~~nst9~R-~IUD+~Ei~3UY:se~;r~aae-ll--~~~~~~---,
Agency Inc.
RACI
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE Buy, Sell or Trade
:Francis FLORIST
! INSURANCE
Full
MOWER CLINIC
INSURANCE
PHARMACY
in the
!1 - . .
Briggs &amp; Stratton
SERVICES ~
we Fil Doctors'
Sentinel
lliUIII::!:~~~~-A
Master Service Technician
~ E. Main ~·
Prescriptions
!'W'

See .U oyd Bonar
or Divid Rigg;:s

212 E. Main Street

.

Pastor: David DeW in

Sunday S.hool -9:30 '·I"·
. Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS ;pfislyer ;pj'uneral ~ontt c'lJnc.

RACINE PLANING MILL

Bible Study TueSday- 10 a.m.

Wedne~y7pm

1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Uma Rd:
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday ~7:00 p.m.

Holiness

Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a,m,. 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServJces · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Conni e Fiares
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

Calvary Bible Churcll
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
. Wednesday Service •.7:30 p.m.

Hobooa Chrilllaa Fettowoblp Cbw-dt

Laurel Clllf Fr&lt;e Melbodlol Church

Community Chun:h ·
Pastor: Re'l. Amos Tillis
Mairi Street, Rutland
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship-10:30 a. m.
S.unday &amp; Wednesday Service-? p.m.

Church of Chrt s t
PO..eroy ChurdlofCbrist
212 W. Main St.

773-5017

Sendee time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens .
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a. m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7:30p.m.

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bcrn&amp;cki , Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
·
Sunday School11:00 a.m.
www.frognet.nel/-deanery

I

Pastors John &amp;. Patty Wade
603 SeCond Ave. Mason

Fallb Fellowship Cnuade for C'risl

Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

H7oeH Rua Hollatll Church ·

.

Appo Ufe c..~er
'Full-Gospel Church"

Pearl Cltapel

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Pastor: John Hart
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

.Chriillan Fellowship Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Raben E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11:15 _..m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m,

v

~

'

Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship· 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160

Antlqully Bapllsl

"..

Ernie Shuler says

Sliver Rua Jlilptlst
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday Scllool-lOa.m,
Worship ·lla.m., 6:30p.m.
Wtdncsday Services· 6:30 p.m.

Wnleyon Bible HolloHI Church
75 Pearl St, Mtddlepon.

·

Worship Service • 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 a.m.
Sunday Scilool · 10:1Sa.rti.
. Yout~4 5:30pm ~unday

Sunday Scllool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

, , '!

'

Tuppan Plaia Cburdl or Christ
ln1trumental
,·
Pastor: Terry Stewar1

Sunday S.hool -9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesda y Service · 7:30p.m.

Zloa Clturth of Cllrlal
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd..(R1.143)
Pastor: Roger ,Watson
Sunday S.hool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne!day Services - 7p.m.

Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service · 1:00 p.m.
Sunday School - to a.m.
· · Wednelday Servicc-7:00 p.m.

'·

\

Pastor:Terry Stewart ~
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m. ·
Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Jim Ditty
S70 Grant St., Mlddlepon
Sunday school ·9:30a.m. ·
Worship · 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday ,Service· 7 p.m.
'

Plae Grove Bible Hollaesa &lt;.burth
112 mite off Rl. 323
Pastor: Rev..O'Dcll Mantey

47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pastor. Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Rote of Sharon Holto.U CbUrcb
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey l(jng ·
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
. Sundaf worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer metting- 7 p.m.

KnoCburdlof~

Hantlt Outnor:b Mlalslrleo

MloemUie

J

Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Asse m b ly of God
LilNrty "-blJ of God
P.O. Box 467, DuddlfiJ Lane

Worship • 10:30 a.m.

a.m., 7:30 p.in.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

School - 9:30a.m.

Other Ch u rc h es

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.

W~rsilip ~ 11

Wonlllp- 8: ll, 10:30 o.m., 7p.m.

,..

Pastor: Vemaaaye Sullivan

Sunday School 9:30a.m.

Sth lind Main
Pastor. AI Hartion
Youth MiDister: Bill Frazier

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

r,.,,.

orcbrill

Falnltw Bible Cllurdt
Lewt, W.Va. Rt. l

Heolb (Middleport)

c.t.lll'l' Pllartm Chapel
· Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

ll.ll.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Strvict.~ • 7 p:m.

Chon:llorJ-cw~ tulle
VanZandt and Wont d.
hsiar: lames Miller

•

Need a Cure
for that
Winter Cold?

11

...

Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

M celing held
Acknowledgements for co ntri butions were read at th e rece nt
meting of the Bertha M. Sayre
Mi ss ionary Society held Tuesday
at the hom e of Margie Grimm.
Read were notes from God's
Net, a youth activity of the Meigs
Coope'rat ive .Parish program , the
Meigs Count y Council on Aging ,
and th e Murrow Indi ana Children 's Home fot a child ·supported there. Also were were thank
you notes from from Mr. and Mrs.
McKnight and Mabel Brace .
., '
Barba ra Gheen gave devotions
IAICI IHRII DAYS Of 000
.entitled "Time Our for Love" and
AND CALL US IN THI MORNING~
Mildred Hart had the prayer.
Mart ha Lou Beegle had the
love gift program noting th at gifts
are give n to show loge for others.
The three-day golf and hotel package on
She sa id th at .we reflect God 's
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf TraiL
measure of love through th e Holy
Sptrit and we prai se God for all
Packages beginning at SJ.59°are prescribed.
hi s blessi ngs -to us through love
gifts. She dedi cated the offering .
The program in cluded readings
ALABAMA'S
"Arc You a Wilted Leaf of Lettu ce?" which dealt with different
ways t o show a Christian spi rit.
Lillian Hayman read "God' s Timing Doesn.' t Always Fit My Cal. endar." Get-well cards were se nt
to the sick and shutins of the
com munity.
Refreshments we re served to
1-800-949-4444
Barbara Gheen, Lilian Hayman,
Martha Lou Beegle, Linda
• Throe 18./oolo rounds, two nights hotel, Sunday through Thursday.
Grimm, Mildred Hart, Geraldine
Per person . Based on double ~cuponcy. Corts nat Included.
Cleland , Florence Adams, Naomi
L--------------------:-------Stobart , and Marjorie Grimm.

The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

~ ..

1220 Washlhgton

~~.
·
""' •
::

C~£N(''~ ··

.

KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

21

CLASSIFIE'DSI

740-992-6298

l'• l---;~~~~~~~~~--t---~~~~~~~~~--~99~2~-5~1~3~0~Pio~m~e~roiy~~~~~~~9~9~2~·=2=9~5=5~:t:=:-·~P=o~m:e~r:o~ylr--~~~~~jf~~~~·--~u:•~u~.~~Mi,~;··~'~™ifs~~h·~,~~-~h~s~~~~~~~Y:N~

I

Bill Quickel 992~77

l:

i,·

l
i

l

upport your
·local
churches

Place an

in this space

NEW HAVEN

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Dignity and SeiVice Always
ruNERALHoME
"We Accepl P.reneed Trorufm"

Establt'shed 1913

112•1200

992-2121

Lund B '
rown

Olflct~r

R
s
17?:Vn.'
:::t

Searching for .a
?
local church.
Check the Sentinel
every Friday!

FIRE
SALES

&amp; SAFETY

&amp; SERVICE

992 ' 7075

172 North Second Ave.
.
Oh

Advertise your
business each Week
In this space
and support local

.i ~~~~~==~==~~~~~~~~~~~~
ad

l

1.

•

12, 1~

March of Dim~s
awards grant to
Meigs County

ROANOKE, Va. (AP) - Production plans for Sandra Bullock's
'-----, new movie "28 Days" sounded 1i ke a
two-month nuiS ance to the National
·Park Service .
The park service refused to allow
· film ing of the $30 million romantic
comedy along the scenic Blue Ridge
Parkway because the movie company
wants to build a two-s tory facade at the
Peaks of Otter Lodge.
Columbia TriStar Pictures w~nts
to film between March 15 and May 22,
but parkway Superintendent Gary Everhardt
said Thursday he was concerned
Bullock
because "visitors would be looking at the
backside of the facade."
Chief Ranger Gordon Wi ssi nger wrote the mov ie company on
Tuesday that the park service mi ssion ai Peaks of Otter "is to provide
a serene, peaceful, relaxing visitor experience wtthin a pastoral landscape." The filming would be unacceptable, he wrote.
Wiss.inger said the Park Service would reconsider if the movie
company cam~ up with a plan that did not significantly alter the lo!lge.

R

• Friday, February

I .

I '

106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

�•

Page 12 • The· Dally Sentinel

atendne's·Day
Valentine's Day is special because it
celebrates the love we feel for one another
and the liM! that God has for us. God is love,
and it would be such a blessing if everyone
could say lhat they love not only God, but
everybody in the world. God our Father,
created each of us, anti we are all brothers
and sisters through Him. Although we may ·
not always approve of each other's actions or
deeds, like God, we should hate sin but love
the sinner. Tile Bible teUs us that we
all have sinned .and have come short ol the
glory of God, but that God's love is
everlasting. If we could repeat to ourselves
every day, a silent prayer like, "God loves me,
I love God, I love everybody", perhaps God
would help us to become more loving
towards each other.

.;

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

friday, February 12, 1999

Friday, February 12, 1999

DtAIITtC PATIENTS: Vou May
Be Entitled To Receive Your Ola·
ballc Suppllea At No Coat To

BOMB ·

•
'

MD.
•
According to Nancy Pitre,
RNC, BSN, clinical director for
home care and hospice, Miller's
specialized trai ning means each
pati ent has the benefit of the most·
up-to-date treatments and products
avail ab le fo r thei r particular skin
care need.
Appal achi an Community Vi siting Nurse Assoc iati on, Hospice
and Health Servi ces, Inc . is a full servi ce home he alth care agency.

Workshop on financial aid for college bound offered

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

5,950

1998 Martin Street •
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

· Joe Wilson

(61

992·4277

::erCC\l~Cl~ftftft~ftC ·::::::::====~~

.

NANCY J. MILLER

~

Dave's Garage

JD CONS,.RUC,.ION C

Fonnej...."Velvef Hamm.er"
52954 State R t. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

lin.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
lin.
~ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding IIi!!
Commercial &amp; Residential
lin..
" 'n yrs. ixp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured IIi!!

@

ft

Phone 740·992-3987

~

Free Eetlmates

~~n..

.

•.CREDI'

~ISSELL

No Credit • Slow Credit • Binkruptcy

•

No Embarraument ...
You'ri Treated with Respect!
Call Now lor 11!111!!'! 4nl,rnv.. t 11**
1

Will Clean out baaement, garage,
attica , free lor &amp;alvaga. (304)87'S·
1402.
P.upples: 3 Months, 2 Maie&amp;,
long Hair, 1 Tan, 1 Brown, 112
Boxor 1 Small Short Haired 1\tllow
Female Wl1h Blue Eyes. 740·245·
5!04.

Found: Small male ~og In ~t~icinl·
ty of McDonald&amp; Pt. Pleasant.
t304)675412.
.

BUILDERS, INC.

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

lost Dog Sheppard !Flott Mix
Black W !Tan· Markings And
White Patch On Chest, Wearing
Black Collar. Friendly, Answers
To Blazer, Last Seen: Friendly
Ridge Area, Reward! 740·256·
1125.
Lpst~ OVB Envelpoe Of Cash In
The Wai-Marl VIcinity. Lost Friday, Feb. 5,1999. Reward For Ae·
lurnl Call 740·388·6464 Or 740·
368-9510.
.

Lost: 3 Year Old Dalmatian, Rod·
ney \ll clnlly 740•446- 405 1• 7 40·
44$-161 t.
Lost: Smell male dog with long
brownish·O!lnge hair. Has no heir
on hlnQ legs or hips due to aller·
gles . Needs his medication . If
lound Immediately call t304)675·
6351 or (304)675·5872, ask for
Ch,ryl .

70

Two to Four Day

CLASSIFIED
AD SALE

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity ·
&amp;J. Yon! Solei Muot

Be Ptltd tn Advance.
PEAPLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the !lay bofon tho Od
Ia to tun. Sundliy
odtuon - 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday odtuon
• 10:00 a.m, Sotunlay.

'

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

'

C.,'M HauDw
BuUJo,er &amp;.Backhoe

II=

SeMJice•

. House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Septic System &amp;;
Utilities

,
'I

~
L~
- .:.;.17..;.40;,:.1..;.99:.:;2:..;·3;,;,13;,;1;....!

::

APPALACHIAN
WODDWORKS
':;

..

RejinUhintf
&amp; .Repair
Pickup &amp; Delivery
· Available

Furniture

181·1100
..

Out of Area

1-800-564-3227
1120199 1 mo. !Jd.

Card of Thanks

We would like to .
expre•• our deep
appreciation &amp;
. thank. to the
Reecl.ville Squad 90
and Tup:rer• Plaim
Squa 86 and
Clarence.Atherton,
White• Funeral
Home, e•peciolly
Mike &amp;Ruth
Pulmnn, Rev.
Norman Buller, Sue
Folrod, Do"!! Circle
and all our family &amp;
frien.d• for their
support·, }lowers,
food &amp; Prayer.
without that we
would nol have been
able to bear the
pauing of our
beloved Husband &amp;
Father.

The Charles E.
Price Family

TURNPIKE
FORD,
Mid Ohio VaUev'sl

·R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING

'

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
, Dirt • Sand
985-4422 .
Cbester, Ohio

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGIOH ·
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

10125(96/lln

Don't Need A

Big One
Call a Little
One

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
up to 8 ton •

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
:HAULING

992·5455

GUN SHOOT
· Racine Gun Club
Nease HoUow Rd.
· Every Sunday

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

61.4·992·3470

12:30-pm

~OBERT

BISSELl .
CONSTRUCTION .

Limll 680 sleeve
.737 bark bore

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

30 Announcements

BINGO
every Saturday
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst $2,450
Door Prize $400
145 people or
more wm pl(Jy
, $1 000 cover all.
Average $90 per
regular garrw . .

985-4473

EICHINGER
Trailer Sales
(740)949-8400
48365 VanMeter Hill Road ·
Racine, Ohio 45771
Car, Utility, Dump &amp;

Gooseneck trailers
'JI!utliorit:.ei '/Jeakr of

All Yord Sat11 Muot Be Paid tn
Advance. Deldllrie: 1:DOpm the
dly before the ad 11 to run,
Su.ndey &amp; Monday edition·
1:00pm Friday.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Binga On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Ponieroy, OH
Paying $8o.oo '
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progresalve·top line.

80

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
741).2511-1N9
Taking Consignments For Grand
Opening Saturday, March 6th At
7 P.M. Also, Booking Estate An~
tlque Or Farm Sales At The Barn.
BARN OWNER
RAYMOND JOHNSON
5 Miles Below The Dam

SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio. 45771
740-949-221'7

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' 30'

Wedemeyer's Auct ion Service,
GallWis. Ohio 740-379-2720.

x

90

Hours

7:00AM-8 PM

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Antiques, top prices paid , River·
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740-992·
2526.
.

Computer Graphics
Deslgfls
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
;Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

Antiques &amp; clean used furn iture,

will buy one piece or complete
household , Ostly Marlin, 740 ·
992·6576.
Clean Late Madel Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Avsnue, Gallipoll!il.

710•985·4422

Fairly new or more Tanning Bed .
24 or 28 bulbs . coli (304)675·
57.54 .

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION .

Wanted To BUy Junk Autos Any
Condition. 74():.446.9853.

4n11Min

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Any
Condition. 74D-446-9853 .
•

•New Con.rruction

"Call Today"

Wanted To Buy: Used Hardwood
Fk&gt;orlng. 740-245-5887.
We Buy Everything: Furniture,
Appliances, Etc. By The Piece Or
The Loll 740-256-6989.

at

locate in
Ravenswood,
across from
McDonald 's.
Plenty of parking
space. First time
ever in this area.
Lots of new ·
items.
·Food will be
served .
AuctioneerAllen Mills

'

www.tompeden.com
YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HE;RE
FOR ATOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

475 South Chutth Street• Ripley, WV 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844
Monday -Saturday 9am -8pm •.Sunday 1pm • 7pm
.

7:00j.m.

•

Personals

Are You an Exclflng Romantic? 1·
900·896· 896 0. Exl.5 953. $2 .99
Per Minute. Must Be 18Yrs. · .
Sorv·U 619-645·6434
Beautiful Glrlslll E~e cllt ng !ll Pas·
slonate lll Talk to 'Elm live!!! Call:
1·900·328-0051 . Ext 7t4 5. $3.99
per min. Must be 18 yrs. Serv ·
u (6t9) 645-8434.

Don't Worry · About Yo ur Future
Let Our Psychics Put Yo ur Mind
At Ease Ca ll Nowt 1-900- 740·
6500 ExI. 3593. 18+ $3.99 Per
Min . Serv -U 6 1"9·645-8434. http://

www.theholpages2.com/ns/psy·
chlc1250291.htm
Gentleman See king Companion·
ship From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Friend shi p. Send Re·
plies To : 553 Seco nd Avenue ,
Ap anmtn t 1403, Gall ipol is. OH
45631 .
Never Be Lonely: (900) 407·8999.
e~~:ten slo n
4979 . $2.99 per
minute: Must be 18+. Serve you,

.,
\

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

FEBRUARY

OFFER
EXPIRES

s

M

-

I

T

2'
7 8 9
14 15 16
21 22 23

®
- -

w T

3 4
10 II

1999
F

5
12
17 18 19
24 25 26

s
6
13

20
27

- - - - - - - - -

r------------------------------,1
Print one word in each space below. Each initial or
group of figures counts as a word. Count name 1
address or phone number, if used. You'll get better 1
results if you describe fully, give price. The Sentinel (
reserves the right to classify, edit or reject any ad .
I
l

Name-------'-"--------- ~

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____

l
t

•

Phone~------------------'

t'
.------------------.,:
Classification:________
t

HelpWanted

1·- - - - - . , . . - - - -

2. _ _ _ _ __ ____ lf

$
HELP.
S
Expanding, Company
Needs 10 Full·Time Poople.
Permanent Position.
Average Earnings Are:
$1,200 A MONTH
Call Monday For Details At: ·

3.- - - - - - 5---------

6._ _ _ __ _ __

110

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

(Over 15 Words-20¢ Per Word, Per Day)
NO REFUNDS!
Offer good with coupon only.
Photo Copies Not Accepted
•

t

'

FREE Estimates
(740) 992·5535 or

992·2753

$1.50 A DAY .FOR
15 '{'lords

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. 511·
ver And Goll'l Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jeweiiy, Gold
Rings, Pre·1930 U.S. Currency,
St'"'rllng, Etc, Acqulsltlons Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.

2/4199 1 mo. pd.

•:NoJob 'Too rp,ig or
'Too Smalt

Limited
Time

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service:
Licensed
1166,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304n:l-5765 Or 304· 7?3-5447.

HILl'S ·

• Remodl!lillg
•Sidi"g

Rate

~s!,e~~~-3~7:_~=~~~fhio ,LI·

11tbmn

. !/(oaarunner 'Trailers"

Sat. f'eb 13th,

Auction
and Flea Market

A
DAY

Special

Bill MoOdispaugh Auctioneering
Services, Little Hocki ng, Ohio.
Appraisals·
Farm·
Estate·

Lie. # oo-so: , __ _

. 7/22/1111

Leading
Automotive
Retailer, hos
immediate
openings in the
following areas:

'

Classified Ads Section

Loat and Found

60

·New Homes • Vinyl Siding New ·
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

· WO.RRYdiNGI rr·

Baby Rabbits, SoWn WHk&amp; Old;
Two One Year Old Rabbits, Call
alier 5:00 PM. 740-«8.0566.

992·1089.

-Complete Auto Seroice-

1/2~~

Giveaway

Shepherd puppitS· 2 brown and
black, 2 gray and black, call 740.

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

IIi!!
ft~~~~~ftftfili!!rli!!r~
Owner: John Dean

BEECH GROVE
. ROAD

·. VIStfOUR WEBSITE AT:

740-592·11Mli

Quality clothing and household
Items. $1.00 bag sale avery
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:1»5:30.

"Bufld Your Dream"

740·742·341,

MON. WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST
STAR BURST

1

9 wast Stlmllon. Alhons

40

Free Estimates

~
-.

BINGO

Now To'ttiuThrlfl ~

M&amp;J

COIS,.RUC7101 -'

1----------

9,950

You. For Moro lnlofmation. Hl88877-t.

Custom Homes

New Conttruetlon &amp;Remodeling

For more in form ati on on the may call ihe Washington State Com. A workshop on getting financial
aid for college will be held at the ·. workshop or a personal.appointment mun.ity Co ll ege's Educational Talent
Washington State Community Col- to discuss financial aid, residents Search program at 740-3 74-87 16.
lege at Marietta on Wedn esday. Feb.
24, at 7 p.m. in the college commu _nity room.
Public Notice ·
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
The Educati onal Talent Search
noon February 26, 1999. ·accept an objection to 111
' Dtetrlct
r •ogram at the co ll ege will prov ide
LEGAL NOTICE
It hu bean determined
Tho Annuel Flnenclat Bide will be ·opened at 12 ,approval of the rateaea of
ansWers
to
many
finan
cial
aid
ques... Thou shalt lave the Lord thy ~od with all thy heart,
Report of the ·Malga Soli noon February 26, 19911 a1 Iunde and eccoptanca of that such a Requeet lor
ti ons at the free work shop.
·
and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind
and Water Conatrvatlon tho main office of the Melga the certification only If It 11 R..ale of Fundi will not
College bound students and their Dletrlct lor 1998 hoe been County Board of Mental on ana of tho two following conetltute an action elgnlll. Thou, shalt love thy neighbor as thyself
and beaee: (a) the certification cantly affecting the quality
parents wi II be provided information ·completed. The report Ia Retardation
KJV Matthew 22:39
Developmontol
Dleabllltloa
waa not, In fact, 1xecut1d of the humen environment
available
lor
lnopacUon
at
about sources of fin anci al aid and
at
the
abOve
addrall.
by tht County of Melga ond eccordlngly the Melge
the
office
located
at
33101
the application process. The work(1~ 29
chill executiVe officer or County Commlealonore
Hiland
Road,
Pomeroy,
shop will provide options to help in Ohio.
(2~ 5, 12, 19
other officer of tha County have' decided not to prepere
completing and submitting financial (2~ 12, tTC
4TC
of Malga approved by the an Envlronmentet Impact
State al Ohio; or (b~ that tha Statamant
under .the
aid applicati ons. Refreshments will
review Netlonel
Environmental
environmental
Public
Notice
Public
.Notice
be
served
and
babys
itting
will
be
Online glitch mqkes intimate messages public
record lor the project lndl· Polley Act of 1996, · aa
avail able during the workshop for
cotu omleelon or a amond.ct.
. PUBUC NOTICE
.
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
--" You will have the greates t fam ilies with smaller children.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) required
daclalon,
finding,
-Environmental
Revtow
Sealed
bldi
witt
be
REQUEST
RELEASE
OF
The lovers, flin s and playboys se nd - time you' ve had in 15 years," a man
o( atep applicable to the
Record(o) (ERR) lor eacl) of
For those unable to attend the racleved until 1:00 P.M.
FUNDS (NOI!RROF)
Ing e,mail Valentines and other assured his friend - unl ess the workshop, pe rsonal ass istance February 26, 19911 at tho TO ALL
INTERESTED PER· project tn the environmen- the Project(a) ltated ebOve
,
have been conducted , by
note s on Hallmark Cards' online site other man in her life persuad ed her appointments are available through Mayor• Office, 237 Race SONS, AGENCIES, AND/OR tal review procaea.
Written abjecttone muet tho
Melge
Cou.nty
no doubt intended their musings to . to stay home with him and their chil- , the Educational Talent Search offi ce. SlrHI, Middleport, Ohio lor GROUPS:
be
prepered
and
eubmlttad
Commlutonero.
The
the
following
equipment.
On or about, but not
be perused only by that spec ial dren instead.
One
1980 before, March 2, 1999 the In accordance with the ERR(a) docume.nta the env~
someone.
Plarca/lnllrnatlonol 1000 Melge
County required procedure (24 CFR ronmental revlawa of .the
Part 58), and mutt· be pro)ect(a) and more fully
Unwittingl.y, they had a potential
GPM lira engine. A detailed Commlaaloners,
will
llottng of equipment which requait tho State of Ohio to eddrelled to: State of Ohto; seta forth the rauone why
audience of millions.
The capital gains form is now three times longer.
will be provided with tho ralaua Federal lunda under Environmental
Officer; such atatamant Ia not
A programming error at hall- ,
apparatua Ia delivered to Section 104(g) or.Tilt a I of Community Development required. The ERR(I) are on
Check
your
calculator
batteries.
mark.com allowed anyone with a
and pieced In oarvlca by tho ·the
Housing
and Dlvlelon; P,O. Box 1001; file and avaltabla lor the
computer and some curios ity to
Middleport
Fire Community Development Columbus, Ohio 43286· publics examination end
The average American spends 4 hours and 19 minutes
Dapertment The uttmatad Act of 1974, ae amended; 0101 .
copying, upon requ11t,
search the Web site for pri vate love
delivery
of
the
replacement
Objactlone
to
the
Ralea"'
between the hours of 9:00
Section
288
or
Title
II
of
the
notes - and , in many cases, the
figuring out the capital gains form .
apparatue Ia 12 month a.
of Funda on billa other
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday .
Cranaton
Gonzales
senders' name, home and e-mail
Tho VIllage of Middleport, National
Affordable thin thoao etatoa above will thru Friday (expect hjll~
Investing is risky enough.· So why lake chances on how much
addresses and·place of employment.
Ohio raaervaa the right to Houalng Act (NAHA), aa be coneldered by the State daya) 11 the office of the
re(act any or all bide amended; and/or Title IV of of Ohto. No objactton Metga
County
A Hallmark official said the probta~ you'll pay? At H&amp;R Block, we ' re familiar with.the 824 tax
recleved and to waive any the Stewart B. McKinney recleved alter March 22, Commlaalonara,
Cc(urt
lem involved only greetings sent a
Informality In the building,
1999,
(which
ta
15
day•
House,
1
oo
Eaet
Secand
Homolaae
Aaetalllnca
Act,
law
changes.
We'll
help
get
you
every
penny
you
ha:ve
coming.
year or more ago.
(2) 12, 17, 2TC
u amended; to be ueed lor alter It le · antlclpetad that Street, Pomeroy, OJ!lo
According to the Star, some of'
the projact(a) deacrlbed tho State will receive 45769
618 East Main St.
roquoet lor the reteaae
the messages were obviously not
No further envlronmenllll
above.
Public Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
The . f.ilalga
County lunda), vfln ' be considered· review of euch proJect; 11
meant for mass consumption.
proposed to be ~onduc!i'd,
Coinmlulonera Ia certify· by the State of Ohio.
740·992-6674
Among them:
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho addrell of the chief prior to tha raquelt tor
lng
to
the
Stall
of
Ohio,
that
The Meigs County Board of
!HI M-F
9-5 Sat
- "Gary &amp; I have been having
executiVe officer Ia:
relaaee of FederallundaJ
Mental Retardation and Melga County and Janet Janet Howard, Proeldent
secret cyber sex via computer."
The
Melge
Couhty
Ducover, Vua/Ma•ler Charge
Howard,
Ia
hie/her
official
Developmental Dl18bllltl11
Melga
County
Commlulonare
plan
•to
capacity
ae
Pr01ldant,
American
Ia accepting 18al.ct bide lor
Commlttlo.
n
ere
pro(eel(•)
undertake
the
Malga
County
tho following vehicle: 1988
Meigs County Courthouse
d.eecrlbed with the Federal
Ford Van~Converalon, E- Commissioners, consent to
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lunda cited abOVe. Any per'
accept
the
)urledlctlon
of
350
Automatic
aona,
agiencl•a, anCI/or
Federal
court1
II
an·
action
Tranemlaalon,
needs
groupe, who hava any comengine work. As Ia condl· Ia brought to enforce
NOTICE TO PUBUC OF NO manta regarding the e~vllion. The Board reaervea responalbllltlta In relation
StGNtFICANT IMPACT ON
ronmant or who dl11gree
the rtght to ra(oct any and to environmental reviews,
THE
ENVIRONMENT
with thl1 finding of No
dectalon·moklng
and
all blda or to sell to the
(FONSI)
Slgnlllcant Impact declafon,
action;
and
that
·thasa
htgheat bidder. S.11led blds
are Invited to aubmlt written
to j)o aent to: Metga County rllponslbllltles have been Melga County
Commlaalonare
comment• lor conald~raBoard
of
Mental aatlafled.
lion to the Meigs County
Tho legal effect of the cer- · Melga County Courthou10
Retardation
· and
Pomeroy,
Ohto
45769
C
o m m I a • I o n o r·e ,
Ia
that
upon
Ita
tlllcatlon
Developmental DlaabltiUas,
Courthouaa, Pomeroy, O)lto
P.O. Box.307, 1310 Carleton approval, the Melga County (740) 992·2895
Stroot, Syracuall', Ohio Commlaalonere may use TO ALL INTERESTED PER· 45769 by 4:30 p.m . •on
45779 and merk "Vehicle the Federal Iunde, and tho SONS, AGENCIES, AND March 1, 19H, which II at
leal! 15 day• alter the pubBid" on outalde of tha enve- State of Ohio will have aat- GROUPS:
The
Metga
County llcatlon of thla comblntd
lallad Ita reaponalbttltlaa
lope,
' National Commlsolonara , propo1111 notice.
To lnapect the vehicle call under
Environmental
Polley
Act of to requeet the State.of Ohio (2) t 2 1TC
(740) 992-6881 during workto roloaae Federal Iunde
Ing houro for arrangements. 1996, as amended.
The State of Ohio wilt under Section 104(g) of
Bid must be received by 12
u,;,~ tlrr Cln Holonl·
ntlo I of Housing and
ls ns En s11 tH .
Community Development
Happy Ad
30 Announcements
Act of 1974, •• amended;
Section 288 of TIUe II of the
Gonzales
Cranaton
National
Affordable
1997 Dodge ln11811ld
1995 Chrysler Concord
Houelng Act (NAHA), aa
Stock Num601 8Tt6tbA
Slocli N11nbor 8Ttll96A
amended; and/or Tltla IV of
•V.f •AI Power • Fllf I.Dadod!
· l - - . Tdllltj l.oldo&lt;l!
the Stewart B. McKtnn'ay
&amp;
Homeloaa Aulatance Act,
u amended; to ba ueed lor
the following pro(oct(a):
Gilkey Ridge Road
11 0 Help Wanted
Waterline EKtonalq~­
Townahlp Road 235
467
CDBG FV 1998 Formula
AMERICAN
Allocation Funds
NURSING CARE
Bedford Townahtp-MEtGS
is
looking for a H HA i
County, Ohio
$600.00
Waterline Extanelon
Meigs Co. Certification ·
Project
Sne Jti/1/oofs tn~ pndy
will betprovided for
$50.00 OR MORE
Single year project
rww tfiat 5he'5 thirty .
exp
erienced individuEstimated total cost of the
~
PER GAME
Project
als.
Send resume to:
Happy Birthday
$36,069
.
330 E. North St.
$34,0Q0-CDBG FV 1998
Aunt Cheezie
Suite 10
Formula Allocation Fuhda
· 'i()e.fOtJe
.
Waverly,
Ohio 45690
. $2,069-Tuppere
or call: .
Platna/Cheater Water
I -800-897-5444
110 Help Wanted

1

The Daily Sentinel• Page 13

30 Announcements

Enterostomal therapist Nancy Miller joins
Appalachian Community home health staff
·An enterostomal therapist (ET) ·Cialized care .for colostomy and
has been added to the Appalachian urostomy patients and others who
Communit y Vi siting Nurse Assoc i- need ass istance with any of anumarion staff w~i c h serves clients in ber of skin or wound care needs.
Miller i s a graduate of Grant
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Morgan,
Perry, Vinton and Washington Hos pital School of Nurs ing in
Counties.
•
Col umbus, and she holds a BSN
The addition·fills a need which from Ohi o Un iversit y. Mill er
has gone unmet in the area for sev- received ET training at The Cleve~
eral years, said the age ncy's edu- land Clinic.
cation coordinator.
She pre viously worked at
The therapist, Nancy J. Miller, Waverly Home Health and also for
RN, CETN. BSN, is provid ing spe- Lancaster syrgeon Steven Cox,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

7~0...46-7"1

7. _ _ _ _ _...:..__ _ 8. _ _ _ __ _ __

lt
f
(.

rl

AVON I All Area s I Sh irley
Spears, 304-675-1429.

9. _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 10.____ _ _______

AVON PRODUC TS: Start yo ur
own bu si ne ss, work fl exi ble
hOurs,. benefits available: Enjoy
limited e{lrnings; Call toll-free : 1·

1 11 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 12 . - - -- - - - - ·~
' 13._ _ _ _ _ __
14.
t

688 · 56t ·26~

Help Wanted • Experienced Roofers · Must Have Hand Too ls,
Va lid Drivers License , Reliable
Transportation And References.
App lication s A,r$ Available At
Christ ian ' s Constru cti on, 1403
Eastern Aw., Gallipolis, OH Fro m
8-5. 740-446-4514.
FIELD SURVEY HELPER, engl·
neering llrm re quires tSborer to
assist survey crew with cleani ng
line for loc al project. Cha lnsaw
cu tting Involved. $ 10 per hour;
call 614·467·1650 (Meigs County
surv&amp;)l work).

'

f
1:

For Additional Words Please Attach
A Separate Pteco 01 Paper.

15.

Mail or bring this coupon with payment to: ·

l

..

[

THE DAILY SENTINEL

~

111 COURT ST., POMEROY, OHIO 45769

l;

MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE

I_

.:

L------------------------------j·
'

,,
I

•

�Page14 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, February 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: Frld8y, February 12, 1999

• Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

: ALLEY
BRIDGE

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

'PHILLIP
ALDER
PJ.OntlerVIslon Operating Partn-

~ LP A Fast Growing National

Matti System Cable Operator
His An Immediate Fuii·Time
()paning For An Installer Technl·
4lan In The Gallipolis /Ironton,
ehto Systems We Are Seeking

ln'al\llduals That Are Career
1114/ldod And Highly Motlvotad
l'\e Successlul Candidate Must
!lave A High School Diploma Or

Crop Insurance Burley ·TO·
matoes, Corn Ken Bass In
surance, 1-800-291-6319

180 Wanted To Do

~~~~~~·~ ~~~~"8o~~.H:2~·c~,~-

Babysitting Clark Chapel Road
Bidwell Ages 6 Weeks 4 Years
My Home Call A M 740 388
9479

cothe Ohio 45601 Or Call 1 800·
346·2288 For An Application

EOE

Eldorado Adult Home Long Or
Short Term Care Private Room
$1 400 Semi Private Room
$1100 Syracuse Ohio 740.992·

Help Wanted - EMper~nced Carpenters Must Have Own Tools

Pick Up Truck Valid Drivers Ll·
cense "nd References Application Are Available At Christians
Cqnstructlon 1403 Eastern Ave
Gantpolls OH From a 5 740-4464514

t

IMMEDIATE OPENIIG

W811 Established Pest Control
Company Looking For A Serious
Self Motivated Technician Must
Be Able To Pass The Ohio De·
plirtmenl Of Agriculture Division
Of Pesticide licensing Test Must
Have A Valid, Ohio Drivers ll·
cense Excellent Benefits Offered
Come Into Office Between The
Hours Of 8 :lOAM And 4 00 ~M
To Fill Out Application Boggs
Pest Control Inc 110 Boggs
Road Oak Hill OH 45656

lPN s

Ravenswood Center a
leader In IOFlQ term care Is seek
lng caring and compassionate
nurses for lull and part time post
lions Pay begins at $8 per hr
with an excellent benefits pack

age If you want to join a quality
driven team call or write us at
Ravenswood Center 200
Ritchie Ave Ravenswood wv

s

26164 (304)273 9385 A Genesis Eldercare Facility Equal Op·
IIONUOity EmplOyer
Medical Assistant needed for
busy Phys1clans Office located
In the Pt Pleasant WV area Applicant must be familiar with pro~
cedures such as Phlebotomy,
Inj ections EKG s ~md patient
care Knowledge In medical tar~
mlnology a plus Applicant must
also have a 2 yr degree Expert
ence preferred but not required
Send resume c/o Poln~ Pleasant
Register CW23 200 Main Street

Point Pleasant WV 25550

~OO~M

130

,nee Helpful But Not Necessary
lfl" Return !=or Your Expertln,
~rontlerVislon Oilers .An E~tcel­
lent Benefits Pack&amp;Qiil And Com·
pelltlve Wages Send Reaume By
February 19 1999 To Frontier

dleport Ohk&gt; 45760

Wanted Mobile Crane Operator
With Class A COL s Position Lo

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew Gallla County,
$32 000 Mora Acreage Available,
740-388-6678

Mon·Fri800AM

Cable Installation Expert·

Immediate open ing for the right
person in busy environment
Must be friendly outgoing, honest
and able to cope with stress
Must be able to deal well with the
pu~lc Must be able to see things
that need to be done Good tele·
phone etiquette grammar and
math skills required Experience
in telephone orders an4 retail
sales helpful Sand resume and
cover le«er to P 0 Box 108 Mid

5 Acre Lot On Kerr Road, Will
Sell All Or Hall, Lots 01 Road
Frontage 740-36HI138

cated In Nelsonville Ohio Mini
mum Of Two Years Experience
Necessary Ca111 800 339-6518

lqui\lalent With A Good Driving
~tteord

Cosmato!Qglst Needed Full a Pan
Time Paid vacallon Hourly va
Commission Free CEU Hours
740-446 7267

4410
Electric maintenance service
Wiring breaker boxes hght tlx·
lure, heating systems and Re

modeling 304-674·0126

A

Excellent care elderly person In
my home non smoker mobile
reasonable
lady preferred

(304}882 3880
Furniture repair restoration &amp; re
finishing custom built reproductions Liz &amp; Benne« Roush 740·
992·1100 Appalachian Wood·
works
Furniture repair refinish and res·
toratlon also custom orders Ohio

LULARONE, 1502 Eastern Ave
OH

Galllpol~

Applications Will Be Accepted

Through February 15 1999 CEL·
LULARONE Is A EOE M/F/0/F
Company
Computer

User~t

Needed Work

Own Hrs $20K $75K Nr 1 800
348 7186 EKt 11T3 WWW amp
Inc com

Multi Office Worker part time
general orflce experience com
puterl keyboard knowlectge pur chasing correspondence billing
payables receivables cash han
dllng deposits flexible hours
bondable Pick up applications at
Middleport Utility OHice 237 Race
Street Middleport OH Appllca
Ilona accepted until 5pm Febru

ary 22 EEO Employer
Need S Lad1es To Sell Avon 7 40

446 3358
Part time employee needed A-1 n
surance ofllce Must have com
puter/phone skills Please send
resume cfo PI Pleasant Reg·
Isler C W 19 200 Main Street

PI Pleasant WV 25550
Pleasant Val ley Hospital Is cur
renlly accept1ng appllcatlonsf
resumes lor a Staff CRNA Must
be a raglsterad nurse In the Slate
or West VIrginia Graduate ol an
Accred ited School of Anesthe
sia Certification or eligible for
certifications by the Amertcan
Auoclatlon of Nurse Anesthe
lists Competitive wages and ex
cellent benetlls Please apply or
send resumes to Pleasant Val
ley Hospital CfO Personnel
2!520 Valley Drive Pt Pleasant

lis Ferry Ar"" (304)875-2067
Leave message
Sale 7 acres with 100 ft well,
flats &amp; hills, Gallipolis Ferrv,

Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In

Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl
capped, 740-44, , 536
interior Painting Plumbing &amp;

Ae·

modeling Any And All Odd JobS,
740-245-5151
Older Christian Couple Will Do
Housecleaning 304-675-8738
Professional Tree Service Stump
Removal Free Esllmatesl In
surance Bidwell Ohio 740 388-

9648 740 367 7010
RESUMES UNLIMITED Offers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel lntery1ew Matenals
To Get Your Prepared 740 388·

c~r garell!' deck $34,900, 740
949·3037

3 Bedroom Ranch In Green
Twshp Excellent COndition 740
446 4676

ery Call 1 BQ0-691 8777
$999 Down on any 98 model
Ooublew1de In stock Free Dellv·

ary Call 1-600-691-6777
*SAVE ON BANK REPOS•
All Makes Models &amp; Sizes, After
Noon 74Cl-742.0610
1973 H1llcrest two bedroom mo
bile hOme 74o;:992 5039

3800
Roach Custom Butchering West

State Route 218 In City School
District Daytime 740·446-3278

Will do all occasion cards 1nv1ta·
l ions etc can do newsletters
bOarders &amp; etc 740-992-1489

Will Do Odd Jobs Most Any
Klndl 740.368-8010

210

central alrr new refrigerator

very

good condition Asking $9 ooo
(304)882 2141

1988 Skyline 14x70 three bed·
room two bath one owner air
cond itioning and skirting very
good condition must be moved

$13 000 74Cl-992 8227

Business
Opportunity

1993 Sunshine 14x70 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Central Air W/D
Included $18 000 Firm (Located
In Gallla Co I Must Be Movedl 1
937 379-4015

recommends that you do bust
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until vov have ln11est1gated
the offering
The West VIrginia Division of
Natural Resources Parks and
Recreation Section will accept
proposals from qualified pros
pectlve vendors for the operation
of a horse drawn carnage ride
conceSsion located on Blenner
hassett Island Historical State
Park Copies ol the proposal may
be obtained by contacttng SuperIntendent Donna Smith Blennerhassett Island H1storlcal State
Park
137 Jul 1ana Street
Parkersburg WV 26101 533t
Proposals will be accepted

through F!lbruary 28, 1999
Y2K TIMEBDMBI
Learn How To Protect Yourself

While Creating FAST lncomel
Free Report 1 800 410 2612
&lt;3131

Profe18lonal
Services

Living• ton 1 Basement WaterProofing, all basement repa 1rs
do ne free est 1mates lllet1me
guarantee 12yrs on rob expert

once 304-8K-:i887
ANG Professional Paint Servlc
as Residential Commercial In
terlor/Exterlor Custom Woodwork Furnishing'S Professional
Serv ice Since 1979 (740}367~

5036
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
, 888 582 3345

,

1963 Shultz 14X64 2BR new

FINANCIAL

I NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

230

Evenings 740-446-3099

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes fc&gt;r Sale
3 Bedrooms 2 Full Baths Laun
drv Room LR Kitchen Attached
Garage Apartment 1 3 Acres 2
Trailer Lots $65 000 Serious In

1996 Schultz 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Central Air 2 Decks 8x10

Bwldlng 304-675-1275

mont In Mlddlaport, also one belk

Real Estate
Wanted

Galllpolle, 740-992-9191

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
appllcat1ons for.,1br HUO subsld
lzed apt tor elderly and handl·

RENTALS

capped EOH 304-675-61179

B~dga

2 Bedroom House 3 Miles Down
River $350/Mo Phone 740 446
1615 Or 740 446-1243
References

lng 800 383-6862
Good selection of used homes
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

$3995 Qul'k delivery Ca ll 740·
385 9621
Tak1ng Applications On 3 Bed~
room Repo Pre Approval In 10
Minutes!BD0-383-6862
New 14wld&amp; 3br/2 bath $500
S 185 per mo Free air 1 800-691·

67n
..New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 8 months FREE lot rant
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Onl~

$200 74 per month with $1150
down Call 1 800-837 3238
New 48R 16wlde $500 down/
$a19 per mo, Free Air 1 800·

691-6777
Oakwood Homei, Barboursville

WV Tired 01 No? We Say Yes I
304 736 3409

Clean 2 bedroom house In Po·
meroy $350 per month plus de·
pqsll no pets land contract pos
slble after a year, 740-698-7244
For Rent 3 BA House In New HB
van Call (304)675 1651 alter
5PM
House for Rent In Point Pleasant
In Good Locat1on No pets

(304}895-356e
House In Rutland, out of flood
area no pets references and de

posit required, 74().742·2661
Modular Home In Mason WV
3BR/2 Bath heat pump garden
tub In master bath Sun Room
refridgerator/stove furnished

$400 mo (304)773 5721 before
SPM (304}882 3139 after 5PM

No Problem I 1125-2128199 1 BOO

25 1-5070
Rent Buster new 1999 14J.70 2or
3 bedrooms only $995 00 down
,$195 00 per mon free delivery
and set up call t 800-948-5679
New bank repos only two left
never lived In call 1 800 948

5878
Factory goof 111 Save thousands

caii1600-946587S
Used single wide around $100

per mon 1 800 94S 5678
L1mlted offer 1999 double wide

a.

$275 00

per mon delivered and sat up
Call , 800-948-5678

2bdrm apts total electri c ap
pUances furnished laundry room
facilitieS close to school In town
Applicatio ns available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992 ~

3711 ~OH

10 To 2 No Phone C&amp;ls Plea sol

740 367 7401

Relo cating? Take Over Pay

menta 304·736 7295

lrom $279 to $358 Walk to &amp;hop
a movies Call 740 446 256$
Equal Housing Opportunity

The Southern Local School Dis
trlct haa the position of reserve
glrrs softball coach available for
the 1999 season All applicants
muat poaseas or acquire a
sports medicine certificate and e

By owner 725 Page Street, Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lot&amp; must see
to apprec1ate will sell house with
lots lor $89 000 740 992

Racine Ohk&gt; 45nt slso Is and
Equal Opportunity Empk&gt;yer
Wanted

a

managing cosmetolo

gill Linda a Beauty Shop, PO Bo&lt;
11 1, Ch11ter Oh 45720 aend a
rnume &amp; references e:~~perlence
necttsaery

S70 000

-llvi;;g

In Town
44 2 Firs t Ave
large 2 Story Formal LR Formal

DR 4 BR 2· 112 Baths We ll
Equipped Kitchen Lg Basement
In Ground Pool W/Heater Lg

Family Room, Off Street Parking
Serious Persons Only 740 592
5238 (Athens) Aner 5 OOPM

OWl Fenced In Area WIShed
Ready For Animals Only
$14 500 00 20 Acre Hunting
Tracts WIAccess Rlj:J To Wayne
National Forast Mostly Wooc:l
ad Only $23 000 00 Land Con
tract Available Free Maps An

lhony Land Co Ltd 1 800.21 38365

'
'

510

Household
Goods

Appliances

Reconditioned

Washers Dryers Ranges Refrl
graters 90 Day t!luaranteel

French City Maytag 740 446
7795
GOOD USED

APPLIANCES

Washers, dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Anliques

1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T w 10 oo
am to600pm Sundaytooto
8 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; Air Con

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath Clean References &amp; De posit Required Utilities Paid 740-

446 1519
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
A1verslde Apartments In Middle

port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5084 Equal Housing Oppor

For Sale 112 acre lot West Col

tunltles

um bla At 62 $3700 (304)674·
0101

Modern 1 Bedro om Apartment

740 446 0390

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; rapalra

3652

1991 Nlaean Pick-up, 5 speed,
4Cyl , ... MIFM Stereo, $2500 No
rust, (304)87!1-7809 after 1PM

630

Hove Moved Must Soli Cemotary
Plot Reduced Price $250 740·

1 year old Roan filly well broke,
excellent disposition great fami-

448-4344

ly horse $800 (304)87!1-7119

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrad, Naw &amp; ROWM In Stock
Call Ron Evans, t-800-e37-9529

Reglaterad 22 Month Old Paint
F~ Blue Eyee, 740-366-11130

Llvestotk

Saddle light oiled $375 Rod
Llmoaln Polled Bull, Gentle

Klngslzo Watorbod tlx dr1wera
Lighted/Mirrored

Headboard

$175 (304)675-7119
Long Whitt PromDress, Size •

Waterline Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100, All Brass Com·
prtoolon Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacklon, Ohio, , ·800-537·9!26
Wlll~pool

Relrlgerator, Lowry Or·
gan Glftlt 44. e Shelf Oak Eta·
gore, Call Harok! Davll 74().44ll·
0418

Building
Suppllea

Good Herd
(304)885-3319

Bull,

$1,000

Block brick sewer pipes wind·
ow&amp; Untels etc Claude Winters

Rio Grandt, OH Call 740·245·
~121

580

Pets for sate ""

AKC Golden Retriever
:23
Month&amp; Old, For Stud Service

Call 304 773·5011 Or 304·773-

S841 For More Information, Pa~
pars AvaNable

Drives
Monitor, Keyboard
Mouse Upgradable Also Com

merclal HP Printer (304)576
2331
5 Furbles $70 Each VHS Cam·
corder All Attachments $300 Or

Trode 740-445-G645
MIMed seasoned firewood cut

split and delivered $30 load 740742 2263
Prlme111r $49 Installation wltfl
value spe cial Free bonus gift

PRIMESTAR 76 Channel&amp; For
Only $22 99 A Month Please Call
Pat At 1 877 223 2688 For More
DeteHo
Sears Kenmore Large Capacity
Washer And Dryer Asking
$150 00 For Washer $1:25 00

For Dryer Or $225 00 For MatchIng Sot Whirlpool Built-In Electric
Range With Stainless Steel Top

And Black Gla68 Door, Asking
$15000 740256-.1114
Taking orders for fill din good top
soli dirt available 2118199 Stoo
pe r toad anywhere In Meigs Co

ca•740 949 1022 ask for Jim

AMAZING

METABOLISM

Breakthrough!! I lose 10·200
Pounds Easy
Quick
Fast
Drsmatlc Retulla 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Frft Sa~

For Sola MIXED HAY! $1 25 Per
Bale 740-286-2959
$1 75 A Bait
740-387-o583

Square Balas
740·245-~872

Or

98 Ford Ranger XLT Supercab,
excellent condlllon,

u-

paynwnta, 740·843-5180

Round bales $15 square bales

$600 740-742 1049

Jackson Farms, 740'446-1 104

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
67 Dodge Charger good condl
lion great work car $800 OBO
740-992-6929

1984 Chevy S 10 Blazer 4WD.

AKC
Registered
miniature
Dachshund long haired puppies,
two pair of breeding Cockatella,

1985 Ford F-150,
441·1015 Evonlnga

~

74().992·9989
AKC Reglatorod Mlnlatura
Schnauzer Puppy, D 0 B 1211198
740-446-46, 5

1988 Blazer 4WO, 6 cylinder au·
tomatlc PC PS, PB great shape
$3700 740 992·7478 or No-&amp;49
2045

B v. SOulhlkle Aquo~um
2006 camden Avanue
Parlcel1burg WV 26101
:J04..185-1293
Puppies &amp; Kltttr11
Full line of peJs ouppNoa

1997 S·tO

Red~

ker&lt;ls

Bedllner, 21 500 Miles $15,900
Warranly, 740-379 2766

1989 Chrysler !Sih Avenue New

Yorker, 318 Motor Top condition

$3,500 (30!1)875-6132
1989 Flreblrd Loaded Excellent

Condition $4 500 oo 740 245
~797

1989 Tan Slh Avenue 9:2 000
Miles, Good Condition Runs
Good$2300, 740.446-7413

;:c;.:.::.:::::.:..:.:.:..:.:...:..:...:..:.:.::.:..:.__ l
1990 Ford Taurus Loaded E•

740

1985 Yamaha XT-600 excellent
condition onfolf road Engine re4

built New !Irs St 800 (304)675·
7119
1997 Honda Aspencade 3200
miles While New cond ition

(740) 256-6126 Leave Messegal

WOULD YOU LIKE TO

760

60'( A 1-!AND·DRAWN
VALENTINE?

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Lab Pups AKC 8 Weeks, Cho·
1st Shots &amp;
Wormed, Call After 5 00 PM
(740) 448-2ol60

1991 Cadillac Sevilla 4 door sedan loaded with accessories
great gas mileage car phone

R Auto Ripley, wv 304 372·
3933 or 1 800-273-9329

740-~41-

For Sale
or Trade

590

For Sale GE Waohor, $100
(304)675-69116

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610 Farm Equipment
We Have From 2!5 To 30 Uaed
Tractors In Stock Financing As

790

1992 Geo Prism, Autom Air
S2 000 oo Gbod Condition 740
4460-4782

1997 Wilderness 5th Wheel with
slide out excellent condition

1994 Chrysler Concord, Loaded
Rod' Metallic 80,000 Mllea,
$7,200 OBO, 74Hee-e34o, 740
256-64e'7

810

Cruise Tilt AMIFM 62 000 Milos
New Tires Sharpl $3 800 740
379 2746

Between Qalllpolls And Rio
Grande On Jackson Pike, 740
446241201180015941111

1995 Gao Metro automatic runs

Ferguson-3D Tractor New Tlrea 3
Point Hitch Excellent Condlllon
$2 BOO International 140 Tractor

$1150080

Now cultlvotors $3 500 (304)
87~3824

Ford New Holland February Trac

tor Sole 3930 4WD 45 PTO
H P, 192 Turbo Symcho 8x8
Trans F and R Shuttle Largo
pump

1988 Ford Taurus 4 door au
tomattc, new Urea, runs perfect
$750

2 temotea. 4 outlets 2 yr

lull warranty $20,900 4830 ~~
PTO ~ P Same Spec S22 908
our 45 and ~5 HP llactore weigh
1300t more than JD 5210 and

5310 :1012 2WD $13 500 3010
4WO 4:2 PTO H P 1 remote
16500
Kaefers Ser11lce Center St Rt

87 PI Pleasant &amp; Ripley Rd
(304)695-3874
John Doers 4020 378 v 8 Cum
mini 120 HP S7 500, 740·387
n51

1996 Oodgo Intrepid, loaded 3 e
engine excellent cond i tion In·

aida and out Stt 500
7119

(304)87~-

1998 Goo Metro 2 Door 4 Cylln
der Autom , AIC Cauene
53,000 Miles $4 200 oo 740 256
6467 740 256"8340
1997 Chevy- Caval~r 2 Doors AI
C tilt Crul&amp;t 5 Speed, CD Play
er, Power Mlrro111, Power Sunroof
GIHn 38,000 Milt&amp;, $9 500, 740992·7102

ON IT

POTATO ..

Pass

Pass

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex~
parlance All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 740· 4-41S·
7795

C&amp;C Genoral Homo Main·
tenence· Painting vinyl aiding,
carpentry doors, wlr&lt;lowa, bathl
-lie "'""' rapalr and more Fo&lt;
lreo eotlmate call Chtt 740 992
6323
Professional 20yrs exp1rlence
with all maaonery brick , block
stone Also room addltlcna, ga4
rages , etc Free estimates 3044

a

n:l-9550

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring
sen~lce or repair• Master Lloo
cenaed electrician Ridenour

new

Eloctrlcel WV000308, 304·875·
1798

6 Command

4 TV'I-

perha.R!'
2 Aevo'f 12 wde.)

7 Slave
8 Map abbr

5 Uan'ehome

Paeplee

9
10
t1
12
19

22

African fly ..;

24 Filth word of "'
"Auld Lang "&gt;

Syne"

'

Saturday, Feb 13, 1999

The more you associate wllh per:
sons who m resourceful and pro·
greSSI ve the better the year ahead
wtll progress for you Deahng wtth
nonproducllve types w1JI only prqve
to be a drag for you
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
You could doscover today thai by
hold1 ng a grudge against someone
who d1d something you resent and
who you're forced to be mvolved

wuh wall cause you more pam

than

II does htm or her Trymg to patch up
a broken romaace? The Astro-Omph
Matchmaker can help you understand
what to do to make the relattOnshtp
work Mat I $2 75 to Matchmaker c/o
thtS newspaper P 0 Box 1758, Mur
ray H1H Statton, New York. NY
10156
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Rev1ew how much t1me and money

you ve been spend1ng pn nonessen
1tal thtngs and acttvttoes You ' ll
qutckly tdenttfy lhe culpnts today and
be able to weed them out •
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 19) If
you appre&lt;:~ate the fact that obJecuvcs

you set for yourself mtght not be too
easy to come by today, you won't be
so mchned to qurt should the gomg
get tough
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)

Bemg cautmus abeut thmgs IS under~
standahle , hut betng totally ncgat1ve
ts self defeating Should you reson to
the latter you moght possess too
mony doubts to do anythtng worth·
whtle todny
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Just
because you think you have some
thtng more 1mponant Jo do today,
don ' t

renege on an obhgat1on }'ou

promISed to take care of or y.ou II
look very bad tn the eyes of others
CAN(::ER (June 21 July 22) Pes·

slmiSIIC associates could have a very
bad affect on your outlook today and
cause you to see mud mstead of stars
Avotd these types tf pQSStble
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) You could
easily 1um tnstgmficant tasks mto
gtganuc undcnaktngs today tf your
methods are sltpshod Plan what
you re gomg to do before you swtng
your hnmmer
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Make

'

pos1t1ve

proJections today anstead of

negattve ones or you could spend all
your ume worrying about thtngs
that'll probably never happen
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Unless
you're spoohng for a fight today
don't try lo pm the blame on your
male for everythong thai goes awry tn
your household Treat ltfe philO
sophtcally
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) If
you attempt to embelltsh what you re
sellong or promottng today your
decepuon wtll qu1ckly be dtscovcred
and you may never be tntstod agatn
Instead, use the soft, factual
approach
SAOITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Don't saddle yourselfloday with
somethtng that could later cause

buyer s remorse Be certam that any
purchase of consequence IS exactly
what you wont
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)

Disputes or any dasagreements
among famoly members today should
• be settled a&lt;expedttoously and speed
tly as posSible If not fe(ces m1ght
tak.e a great deal of ttme to mend

~

26 Legal wronil:c
28 Favoritism ,
30 Artificial

rubber

11

34 Actr,..o
c
Jacqueline • '
35 Gifted
••

apealcer
36 Lump

38 -Croell
31 Dlrt1
40 Theyre

'•
·"

..• ''
,~

ragrodul
,
42 Himalayan . :
ro
region
44 Put Into
action
49 Gl'o tddreea
50 Actor Oanl&lt;ll!

52

c.....

~"

-klut?

•

53Dreubor~

,r•

''

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r'
'VA M L

MNVJHX

O'JPAKG

PGII

IC

J HG

A R,

YARACl

MN

VG

MLG

I U

VNIRXC.'

RJMANA'C

RNRG

V N HE

MLG

SA R X

JSHJLJO

PAAKNPA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Ufe IS like a B·movle You don t want to leave In t~
middle of tl but you don't want to sea n again • - Ted Turner
; ~

lAM I
'::~::~' S@~~lA-~"E~s·
Nito&lt;l lof CLAY I. POUAN _,;__ _ __

WOlD

0·
- lett.rlword1
of
ta.r-ocrombl!ld
low 10 lonn lour word1

'r '

•

the
be-

.,

DIRDEE
'

l7 I--.~"'~,'_

.-,-C-E_L_H_E
6

I 1•
•

•

I th1nk everyone IS fooltsh
at least five mmutes a day I

I

•

,....~~-----_,also thtnk Wisdom consists m

I

'

•

"'

G E MA N T
not • • - • - • • • - that t1me
~-T,-'T,'l:"§_,l.:..:...,lr::g_;_rl--l 8 Complete •the chuckle quoted

'"·--'·--'·'--""·--'·--""·--'·

-

8

I FRIDAY

ASTRO·ORAPH

tebllshed 1975 CaP 24 Hro (740)
446 0870 1 eoo 287 o~78 Aog·
or&amp; Waterproofing

~~
"0
"'
Greek leland, ;
Paouble
Dismal
,•
Sulllebrlc -;,
By birth
Feared
H

3 Buddlet

1 Cooka chicken,

Keeping an
eye open

You'll build 0 big nest err when
you SO&gt;'t wtth the cknslfleds

Home
Improvements

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es

DOWN

by flll1ng 1n
you develop
from

5

PRINT NUMB~~EO ,,

LETTERS

1· 1 I' I' I'

•

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
.

the m1SS1ng words
step No 3 below

I I

I I I

I I

I' I
I I

SC:RAM-I.ITS ANSWIRS

SERVICES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINQ

51 "La_..
(Puccini opera)
54 Unlock egeln
55 Smoother
56 Paced
57 Oentleet

East
Pass
Pass

•

.

like new newllroo $2995
1990 Hyundal Sonata !5 speed
fully loaded, 129K miles, 4 door,
Pioneer CO plaver runs greet

2•

GLVE IT TO SOMEONE
ON''BAKED POTATO DA'&lt;"

Very Little 740-446·2602

Hitch Needsl D&amp;L Family R';'
Center 740 446-0800

Qualifying Tractora With Ohio
Valley Bank Approval Car
michael&amp; Farm &amp; Lawn. 'fbur Local John Deere Dealer Midway

A HEART

LOOKS MORE
LIKE A BAKED

1985 Airstream Travel Trailer 31
Ft Purchased New Very Good
Condition Garage Kept Used

1 994
Cadillac
Fleetwood
Brougham 24 000 Actual Miles 3
Year CadaiUc Certified Warranty,
Loaded, Like New 740 448·4254
Arter 5 PM

4 Doors

SEE'? IT !-lAS

$18 000 OBO 304-773-5464

Hornet Starlight &amp; Camplight
Travel Trailers &amp; Tent Trailer•
Sales &amp; Service We Also Carry
Truck Accessories &amp; All Your

19~ Ptymouth Acclaim

•

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1993 Cavalier $3 295, 1989
Cavalier $2 395, 1977 Ford F 250
4x4 1 Owner $2 49e, Cook Mo
tore 740-446-o103

Low Aa 8 99% Fixed Rate On

North

New gas tanks &amp; body parts D &amp;

304-67!1-2722

$7 200 00 Autom Good Shape
740-446 8172 Or 74().256-6251

West

2t

Budget Priced Transmiss ions
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10 000 Transmissions

74Cl-245 5677

Wanted Stud Service For Fe-

BIG NATE

Motorcycles

cellent Condition Inside &amp; Outl
$2,800 740-448-8015

male AKC Toy Poodle
1602

{)P-.'( I

Fiberglass Bedcover

Four lull blooded Dalmatian pupplea 2 males 2 females seo
each 740-992 3147alllt 2pm

1992 Pontiac Flreblrd T Top
67 000 Milos Autom $4 900 00
1990
Pontiac
Grand
Am

NON I

Speed Air CD

Player

-

l.£/\1/1~&amp;

WO 740·

pm weekdaya or anytime wee
1988 Chevy Aatro 94,000 Miles
Burgundy &amp; While Very NIC8!
$3,800, For More Information Call
304·773·!5011 Or Leave Mea

1'\'(

$3 500 (304)675·2314

$18 000 (304)882 3697 alter
6PM

lect, 70,000 mllee loaded looks
good, call 740·992 2358 alter 5

Oi&lt;Jo..'i,U\lEF I
1-\1\IJE 1\ ~l(£

1985 Chevrolet Conversion Van
Raised roof Excellent Shape

91 Lincoln Towne Car runs per

AKC Registered Boxer pupplea,
lawn color DOS 12122198, lOIII
bobbed dew claws ramoved, 304875-4158

,..

r

needs work body looks good.

Godd Breeder Or Pat, 740·367no5

87 Pontiac Fireblrd good shape

THE BORN LOSER
• Wf\l(l{ t-I~ThTE~

2 8 engine engine runs but

Bales Delano

I

•

l 1-\f&gt;...l/t: 1\ CD/111-\\I~T

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Round BaliS Of Mixed Hay
Stored Inside $18 Per Bale 740
245 5506

Square Or Round

..

740·992·3787 or 740-992·3860

Toyota Tacoma 4x4 Extended
Cab automatic air black, excellent condit ion, take over lease

Soutb
I•
3NT

Bndge expens lend to dlvtde toto
two camps The first plays With
blinders on, concentralmg on findmg
the best techmcal ltne The second
uses "1able presence." These players
are like My Favonle Mantan, wtth
anlennae always up, tuned tn for any
liule clue the opponents are Willing
lo transmit (It IS illegal to take any
nottce of partner ' s rhylhm or
demeanor)
Dorothy Truscott ts pantcularly
good at nottng her opponents' tempo
She g1ves thts deal tn the fmal chap·
ter of her book "B1d Bener, Play Bet
ter" (Devyn Press)
North dtd well to pass out 1hree
no trump, four heans would have had
no chance
West staned wtth two 1op dta·
moods, East d1scardmg a club Now
West SWitched to the hean Jack
Truscott won with the ace and
returned a hean to dummy's kmg,
hopmg for a favorable break However, when Wesl threw a diamond,
she contmued unemngly with a spade
Ia her ace and a low spade from hand,
bnngmg down the kmg Now South
had none tnc'ks four spades, 1wo
heans and three clubs Why dtd
Truscott play the spades tn that
abnormal way'
The first due came when West
cashed h1s second top dtamond Thts
marked htm with a s1de entry, whtch
had to be the spade king Without that
card, he would have swttched at lnck
two, hoptng partner could gam the
lead to poke a dtamond tbrough
South's quee~
The second mdtcatton also came
at tnck two Eas1 was reluctant Ia part
wtth a club Wtth five clubs he
wouldn't have been warned And 1f
he had four clubs, he must have
begun with four spades Hence West
had kmg-doubleton

V·6, aport w~eela, tomeau cover,

8,000 mies buy at $12,950 or

~~~man

By Phillip Alder

1998 Chevy S·IO, Loadad 740·
448--o32~ Alter 4 30 ~ M

S1500, '89 Plymouth Sundance 5
speed, $1200, 740-992·5532

1994 Terramlle Good Condition,
Call Huntington, 304·7:J6-.9131 Or

After 6 ~ M 304-525-5359

goll-2822

Hay FQr Sale

I'M NON.IY II
THAT'S WHY

1995 GMC Jimmy Excellent Con·
dltlon, Lots Oi Extrasl 740·448·
7289

AKC Miniature Dachshund P~p:­
piea Also Male Siamese Cat,

Valentino puppies adorable AKC
Registered golden retrievers,
males $200, lemalu $225 cell
740-992 7851

18" DlrecTV S.tellho Syotemo
$69 00 purchaae p~ce with up to
$200 worth ollree programming
Limited time offer call 1 600-779
8194

a. Grain

WHY DON'T
THr PARS~~
SAY IT?

1994 Gao Tracker 4 Wheel Ot1ve,
47,000 Mllee Good Shape Only
$4,900 oo t987 Chevy Blazer, 5
Splld, $2,500 00 740 446 8t72
Or 740-256-6251

1997 Chev Blazer Truck LS
Push Button 4WD 40oor Cu·
rise Power lock/windows Ex4
tended Warranty 56 000 miles

1 Crypt &amp; Plato $2 000 00 1.4em·
740-367-7864

Hay

21 Fat around
~neyl1
23 ,..,.a mattar
24 Sllri411'1 quest
25 Attantlon·
getting eound
'DComprloe
2t Thouunde of
YNII
31 Neceulty lor
lila

118tlet1c (abbr.,

Operung lead· • A

$7 400 740-643-5264

$1 75, 740-992-2623

colate A Black

pies Col 740-441 1982

,,

1987 KW W900 425 Cot 46 Ro
ars Hoevi Spada 740-256-61106

dltlonlng Free Eotlmatell If You
Don t Call ua We Both Lose I
740-445 6306. , 800-291-()098

800-263·2640

Christy: 1 Family ~ivlng apartmenta &amp; home rentals, 740 9924!514 apar1men1s available now
furnished &amp; unfurnlslled ._.

Tickets to N'SYNC Concert In
Char1eston lor March 7 (304)8824

MERCHANDISE

386SX Computer 5 114' 3 112'

Plus Utilities Deposit Referenc
es No Pets 740-446-9580

620 Wanted to "uy

550

2 Bedroom Apartment 1 112

ESTATES 52 Westw ood Drive

tor further Information Please
send lnqulrlea to James La·
wrence Superintendent Southern
Local Schools P 0 Box 176

74().992 2319

campus, 740 245-5858

926 3426

CPR card PhO~e 740 949-2669

Trailer lot for rent In Middleport,
near grocery stores, ~ schools,
churches and park utilities avail·
able new trailer only, no pet&amp;,

2 Hospital Bads, $100 oo For
Boltl 740-25H038

4 Bedroom Home In Cheshi re 2
Car Garage Work Sh op 1 t/ 2
Acre Land Orchard Bath &amp; 112

COUNTRY LOTS
In Gallia County Off State Roule
233 Near Gallla 7 Acres Mead

740 385-4367

ory Gardens Subject To Offer

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Mobile home site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

"WABMUPI"

Street Gallipolis Kitchen With
Stove &amp; Relrlgerator $495/Mo

Girls 20 Inch Bicycle Pink And
Purple Very Nice $28, 740.245·
5136
Problem11 Need 11Jn1&lt;11 Call the
piano Dr 740-446-4525

BARNEY

1983 Dodge Truck With Tool
BOKII, $1,800 00 740·448•1837,
Or 740-448-3437
1985 Chevrolet 314 ton pick up
truck lor sale, 67 ooo mllea, ask·
lng $2500. 740-992·2042.

7191 Oak wood Mobile

5881

Baths Great Location! 15 Court

~M

aume lease at $223 a month also
12 month remaining on tease call

540 Mlscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Bedroom Apartmenl "djacent
To University Of Rio Grande

Ulld DitCh Witch Trencher
$2 500 00 C811740-69H642

Body Good Condition Does Not 1

Run $500 Call 740 448-4514 Ba
lore 5 Or 740 446 3248 After e

For sale, BOOt round bales 740

2BA Trailer located on Broad
Run Road New Haven $270 mo
+ utilities &amp; deposit (304)773·

WID Hook Up Quiet Location
$279/Mo Plus UtllltO!s 740 446
2957

l'302evenlngo

18 WIM COUIIMiar
17 =~an

43 Bicycle port
45 U.N. member
45 Ba-ll

Vulnerable· North-South
Dealer: South

305 Auto

bedllner

Moore owner

1 Bedroom Gro!Jnd Floor Eco
nomlcal Gas Heat Near Holzer"

aquaro balal of hay, 740·992·

• Q 9 6 2
•AB

$1 000 1962 GMC 3/4 Ton PIU

100 Squlro Balta Of Hay. 740·
446 434.

1913

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur~
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit reqUired no pets 740·

Ntw Holland 352 Grinder Mixer,
4·18 ateerable plow, round,

•As

1981 Chevy t/2 Ton Full Size PI
u 30~ Auto Fair Shape, $750!
1985 Chevy 112 Ton Full Size PIIJ
Front End Wrecked All Etae Ex·
cellent Condition.

• 10 9 7 5
• Q 9 7 4

AKJ875
• 4
• J 10? 4
9 6 5 2
South
•AQJ42

1979 Ford Ft 50, 4sp , 8cyt So~
ld • Runs good, $8~0 (304)895·
3746

LOSE WEIOHTI
COli Rita 1 888-449 3758 Holt&gt;al·
lfllndlportdent Distributor

Washer &amp; Dryer Shoppe White
Whirlpool Refrigerator $100
White Kenmore Washer $90, AI·
mond G E Washer $85, Almond
G E Dryer $75 White Kenmore
Dryer $75, Almond Maytag Dryer
$75 Call After 5 PM 740·446·
9066

Apartments
for Rent

Pike 740 448·2412 Dr 1·600·
1594-1111

K3

1978 Chevy 4x4 Pick Up, 740·
367·5055

640

441.0720

440

And Rio Grande On Jackson

:::,
Kennecly'a IIIII

41 Lay

20 Merah

East

J

Favorite Year"
15 Cuba or
Bermuda

18 Flnleh

•KQ3

Chevy 1 Ton 12Ft Bo~
With canle Racks Nelda A Llnle
WOrk St 50000 740-416-1992

448-0ilell

1 Bedroom Porter Area $3751
Mo Includes All Utilities 740·

3 bedroom mobil!~' home for rent,
no pets 740 992·!1856

Four Prom Gowns Sizes 8 Thru
12 740-~

MoCos And Round Bol,ro 0% •
12 Mol 1 75% 24 Mo 3 5% 36
Mol , 4 5% ·48 Moo 5 5% ·80
Mo Used Hay Equipment AI Low
As 3 9% Clrmlchatl'a Farm &amp;
~wn, Midway Between Gabfpoile

• 10 3

197~

Why Rent , you can own your
own home for as low aa $499
down low monthly payments
owner financing available 304·

Balow Holiday Inn Kanagua
And See Us 740-446-4782

2 Bedrooms, :2 Bath Trailer In
Green Tenace $350/Mo In·
eludes Lot Rent, Wafer Sewer
And Trash $250 Deposit And
Relerences Required, No Pets
Excellent Condition, 740·441

For Sail Rail Buggy, Nolds En
glne Repair $400 00 Call 740
441.0109

pacta In Stock Ntw John Deere

• 8 6
• K It) 8 6 5 2

1972 Chevy Plck·up truck, runs,
nooda a little work (30~)773·
9187

5343 and leave a message

New And Used Furniture Store

2 Bedroom Mobile Home You
Pay Utilities &amp; Deposit In Porter
Area $265/Mo 614-386-9162

sprayer and four old Fronch style
windows cell 740-992·2451 bet·
_,5-9pm

New 5010, 8010, 7010 Serloo
Tractor• In Stock 7 75% Filled
Rato John Deere Crtdl1 Financing
Avolloble New 4000 Sarita Com·

20M

CD player, excellent condition,

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

992·2187

Excellent condition Lazy Boy
sleeper sofa large microwave
Kenmore dishwasher, range
hood counter top, double stain·
leas ateei sink with faucet and

Pitasant &amp; Ripley Rd (31li)895·
387.

factory flatbed $500, 740 742·

740-381H1358

VIne Street Call 740-446·7398
1 888 818.0128

conditioned $260·$300 sewer,
water and trash included 740

Llfte Bowman's Homecare, 740
448-n83

er Check these prices against
your popular Belt Balers, NH,
Vermeer, JD, Heaston Keeler•
Service Center St Rt 87 Pt

73 Chevy pickup 30e motor

Now $150 00 Short Burgundy
Droll, Size 5, New, $22 00 740·

460 Space for Rent

Required 1 668 640-0521

Electric Scootera Wheelchairs
New And Uaed Stairway Eleva
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter

1001 19,900
4X5 1OOOt
$12,000 E&lt;collent Slleogo Bel·

=

:

Mo.. like Uriah 37 carol
of "M
40 To !tough, In
14
Y
TaulauM

good, automatic tranamlnton,

94 Ranger Spluh, black, 4 Iller

Homes

312 Wetzgal St Pomeroy 3 Bdrm
House $350 00 Month Deposit

Electric Fumaco 77,000 BTU CA
Unit 48 000 BTU Will Accom·
modale 28x50 Home Or Larger,
740-388-8056

M &amp;. W Round Baler Dealer for
thl1 area Flllld chamber, auto
wrap no belts, solid bar type 3
yr warranty on Bars li Bearings
50% leas mo111ng parfa 4X4

32 Thtw, In Turin

1 Actor Marton
7 Comee with
13

Squara Balla 01 Mixed Hay
$1 75 A Bale Also Have Riding
HorMo Fo&lt; Sale Call Alter 5 ~M

7~5

Gallipolis $400/Mo , $300 Oepos
k Days 740 256 6456 E110nlngs
74().256 15:10

992 2218

Down Payment

br 2 ba $1 799 down

3 Bedrooms Chillicothe Road,

Quality Stone $300 OBO 740·
24!5-T]g7

In Ohio Parfact llrat apart

ment for a single person or new
couple If you are looking, 111 a
must see It a $390 a month utili·
ties are lncludeil A $300 deposit
Is required For more Information
or an appointment call 740·843-

441 1917

We Finance Land &amp; Home With
As Little As $500 Down 1 606·

Four Bedrooms two baths tamlty
room large utility By owner
school bus route (304)895 3658

Upstairs efficiency with private
entrance completely furnished
quiet surroundings three miles
from the Aave..nawood Ritchie

1005

For Rent 740 366- 1100

740 992 5696

Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Cor·
potld Patio No Pate Loose Plus
Security Deposit Required 7~0446-{!481 740-44&amp;0101

We P~y Cash I 800 213 9365
Anthony Land Co

Apartmen ts Cottage &amp; Trailer

qulrO!s 740 368.0136

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres

2BR Economical

True! Cali

304 736-7295

On Land Contract 740.387-0260

7367

Salesperson Needed Furntlure
Store Full Time
Immediate
Opening Apptv lifestyle Furn l
ture 858 Third Avenue Gallipol is

pets (304}875·1388
Renters Dream Come

Two bedroom $3000 740 992

WV 2~5eo or fax to (304 )675
6975 AA'EOE

One BR Furnished Apt In PI
Pleasant very clean/nice No

Wanting To Buy 1~ To 20 Acres,
Prefer Something With Buildings
&amp; Barn, &amp; Some Usable Acres,

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air

Doublew1de Repo Call For VIew

1~50

dleport $270 per month all utili
ties paid $100 daposlt 740 992
7606

Deposit No Pets (304)675 5162
$500 Down on any 14x70 in
stock limited number free dallv

740·

One bectroom apartment In Mid-

410 Houses for Rent

Amazing only $999 down on
large selection of double wldas
free delivery &amp; setup owner II
nanclng available 304·755 5885

$29~/Mo

room furnished house In upper

Restored V•ctorlan home situated
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport
secludett and private, appoint
ment, call740.992 5696

Nitro Wv 304·755 5885

Water

446-0008

74().446-2317

1980 Kingsley 14 Ft x70 Ft With
314 Acre lot Located 2 Miles On

Colurrl&gt;le 1304)882 3133

Sewage. Traeh l

Wanted :2 ·3 Acres, Secluded
Land With Access Must Be
Buildable Or M H Accessible

trlc furnace w/central air, single

Includes

360

2 Bdrms 15 Miles South On Ro·
ute 7 Call Alter 6 00 Pm 740

lng, Free Estimate (304)674·
0126

Apartments,

One bedroorri furnished apart~

Only $199 down large select1on
of 2~3·4 bedrooms free delivery&amp;
setup owner financing ava1lable
only at Oak wood Mob1le homes

Handymans Special Elec , car
pentry other repair&amp; &amp; remodel·

Now Taking Applications- 3!5

(304)87!1-31 e9 Leave message

IIWoWII

Telephone Equipment

We Otter A Competitive Salary
And Benefits Designed To Re
ward Outstanding Achievement
Please Apply In Person At CEL~

Riverfront lot 1 acre + ~ Gallipo-

310 Homes for Sale

Diamond Marquis Solitaire New
Nfter Worn 11!5 C1rat High

S300 00, 304-675

Georges Portable Sawmill. don 1
haul your your logs to a mill just
cal\304 675-1957

Ia Seeking An lnltlllltlon Tech·

The Successful Candidates Wlll
Possess Excellent Interpersonal
Skills Be Self Motivated Custom
er Oriented And Have lnstalla
lion Experience

8365

Th1s newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which is m violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity bas1s

$300 oo month pluo utllltleo Ref·
erences &amp; Oeposit Required
Call (740) 448 3302 lor appoint·

One bedroom apartment tor rent
quiet ,diP &amp; ref required

1 Bedroom House Close To Rio
Grande College S280!Mo Water
Sewage Garbage Paid 740 441

Leader In The Cellular Industry

mlng And Servicing Of Cellular

Only $29 000 00 Land

Contracts Aval- 1 800-213

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Proven

nlclln, Whose Primary Function

Parad~

Boanle Babies lor eolo Door
prize II HIIO thl Angel Bear
(304)87!1-7223;

Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse

Own 'lbur Own HunUng

dNfe Area

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime location In
downtown Gallipolis No Petal

men!

RECREATION LAND
South Of Gallipolis Near Crown
City, 3.1 Aae RecreaUonalllacts
01 Land Ck&gt;se To Crown City Wll

Valley Refinishing Shop Larry
PhilliPS 740-992-11576

Would Like To Do Houseclean

Will Be The lnstallaHon Program

this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it Illegal
to adllertise •any preference
limitation or discrimination
based on race color, rel,glon
se)( fam111a1 status or national
ong1n or any Intention to
make an~ such preference
11m11at10n or discrimination •

112 acre lot 2 3 bedrooms alec

lng 740 245 9258
CELLULARONE,

I

All real estate advertising In

540 Mlecellaneoua
Merchandise

ACRoSS

Gntty • Fnsk -lnsh

·Candor- FISHING

Most sports prov1de phys1cal actiVIty, but to 1mprove
your 1magmatton you must go FISHING

' I

•

�Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

·Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 12, 1999

Death
with
dignity

·suprem,e ·Court may gi.ve ·new thought to Miranda decision.
By RICHARD CARELLI 1
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Legal experts doubt the Supreme Court ever will let
.state and local police ignore its 1966 Miranoa decision on criminal suspects'
rights. But they say. a new federal appea,ls court ruling could ca~se the jus·tices to restudy the landmark ruling.
•
"If this goes \o the Supreme Court, the justices will have to decide whether
they want to toss out more than 30 years of jurisprudence that stemmed from
Miranda," said Stephen Saltzburg, a George Washington University law professor. "I don 't tliink.they' ll go for that."
University of Michigan law professor Yale Kamisar said, " It would be
an interesting battle, but I think Miranda would win out. "
, . Millions of Americans have seen movie and TV police officers read suspects their rights. " You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say
may !&gt;e used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney.
. If you cannot afford one. an attorney will be appointed for you."
Police nationwide have been giving such warnings before questioning
criminal suspects in cus1ody ever si nce the Supreme Court_said they had to
in a decision called Miranda vs. Arizona. Failure to do so often means a confession or incriminating remark made to police is inadmissible as evidence
in court.
'
In the 1966 ruling, the Supreme Court threw out an Arizona court's conviction ofErnesto Mi randa on charges of kidnapping and rape. Miranda, who
was identified in a police lineup, confessed and signed a written statement

without beil)g told he had a rig,ht to a lawyer.
.
:
. The_decision was steeped in the constitutional protection ag3inst selfmcnmmatlon, but the court never explicitly said the Constitution ·requires
such warnmgs to guard against police coercion.
.'
Ruhng in a Virgi nia bank robbery case this week, a three-judge panel of
the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said a long-ignored 1968 federal law
trumped the Miranda decision and freed federal law cnforcell)ent officers from
havi ng to give the familiar warnings in e'very case.
.
.
That ruling is now binding law i~ the 4th Circuit's five states- Virginia,
Maryland, North.Carolina, South Carolina and West Virginia.
.
Congress said such evidence could be used at trial aS long as federal judges
are sure the statements were made vo luntarily. The federal law says comph ance with Miranda is just one factor·to ~c considered.
Seven presidential administrationst Rcpublican and Democratic alike, have
refused to enforce the 1968 law, ho ever, out of concern for its constitutionality.
.•
.
· " We ... have determined the Supreme Court has concluded that (Miranda) is constitutionally based since ... it has applied it to the states as well,"
Attorney General Janet Reno said Thursday. " It would be up to the Supreme
Court to make the determination that it was not constituti onally based. "
The nation's highest court is far more conservative than it was 33 years
ago. Several of its members -most notably ,Chi ef Justice William H. Rehnqutst - repeatedly have played down the Mir~nda decision's constitutional dimensions even as the court rebuffed numerous attempts to overturn it.

....,ere's no groundswell to get rid of Miranda," Kamisar said. ·"Most
poli like 1t because it makes life simple. If it's nqt broken, why fix it?'' ·
.
Virginia case likely will be refcnred to the full 4th Circuit coun, and
'tl\en, the Supreme Court. "This is not a case the Supreme Court would
duckj ,.f the three-judge panel's reasoning is upheld by the entire appeals
court, 'predicted Northwestern University law professor Ronald Allen.
What if the Supreme Court agrees that the I~8 federal law is valid?
"You'll see numerous state legislatures adopting state analogues," Allen said,
leaving police forces free to. re-examine their policies on questioning criminal S~§peCtS.
. But&lt;perhaps not all states wou.ld see a need for change. " We're a Miranda stat~ and ~e'll stay that way," said Mike O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, chairman of the Kansas House Judiciary Committee. " In fact, we 're going thl!
opposite direction. We now apply Miranda to juvenile cases."
•

F..euqc~onP~~ge~t

..,

.

~

tags, $20 plus costs; attempted possession,

i

•

jail suspended to three days served, financial responsibility action (no
two years probation; disonderly while insurance) suspension, $150 plus
intoxicated, $25 plus costs; Marion costs, I0 days jail suspended to three
Snider, Racine, DUI, $850 phis costs, days, orie ,year probation ; seat belt,
six months jail suspended to 22 days $25 plus costs; Henry L. Jackso n,
jail, one year OL suspension, two Angelton, Texas, bUI, $850 plus
years probation; driving under sus- costs, 30 days jail ·s uspended to 10
pe nsion, $200 plus costs, one year clays, one-year OL suspension, one
OL suspension: two years probation, year probation, 90-day vehicle immosix months jail suspended to 22 days bilization;' speed, $23 plus costs; no
concurrent; expired plates, costs only; .. OL, $200 ·plus costs, 30 days jail susMichelle Wilson; Shade, posses- pended to I 0 days concurrent; seat'
sion, costs, two years probation, 30 belt, $25 .plus costs; failure to dri ve
days jail suspended to two days; Lar- within rparked lanes, costs only ; fal ry E. Sparks, Marietta, driving under sification, $100 plus costs, one year
r
.
.

six months jail sus-

pended to four days, one year probation; drug paraphernalia, $75 pJu·s
COS LS;

Nancy G. Phalen, New Have n,
W.Va., passing bad checks, $25 plus
costs, restitution; Ronn ie Pickens,
Pomeroy, menacing. costs, two years
probation , 60 days jail suspended to
four days; resis ting arrest, costs, 60
days jail s uspended to four days concurre,nt, two years probation; disorderly conduct, $50 plus costs; Sara L.
Day, Pomeroy, assault, costs, 60 days

probation, 30 days jail suspended to
10 days jail concurrent;
Joshua S. Hartsough, Marysv ille;
DUI, $850 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 90-day OL
suspension, one year probation; drl;
ving under FRA suspension, $200
plus costs, one year ptobati on, 30
days jail suspended to seven days;
wrong way on a one-way street, cost ~
onl y; Ri chard D. Blessing,
Reedsville, resisting arrest, costs,
one year probation, 30 days jail sus'
pended to six days.

FURNITURE
ElliMINATION
SAlE ORDERED

...1

f,'

II.PUTIPIIUI
SOME $815,1.0.80 OF
FURNITURE AND RELATED
FURNITURE ACCESSORIES FOR
A PERIOD OF 10 HOURS ONLY.

12 O'CLO&lt;!i&lt; NOON TIL 10 P.M. SUNDAY NIGHT
~

...

NATIONAl NAME BRANDS
TO BE SACRIFICED.

.

.

0f.
12 O'CLOCK NOON SUNDAY

TIL
10 PM SUNDAY NIGHT .

Corolla, England/Corsair, Imperial, Spring
Air, Lancer, Bean Station, Action lane,
Caldwell, American, Washington, Harden,
Frisco, Woodcrest,Adams-Pierce, Gro, Traditions and Many More.

PURCHASES MUST BE ~~MOVED WITHOUT EXCEPTION WITHIN 24 HOU~S

"HERE'S THE NEWS"

Mr. Casb'j (Skip]
Meadows Ill owner of
record shortly after a
meeting with all inter-

OWNER OF RECORD CERTIFIES FURTHER MARK DOWNS
During a meeting of all Interested parties, Mr. Casby (Skip) Meadows
Ill gives orders from tho top to go aljead and further marl&lt; down prices
of 50-75% of au remaining mereh"'fdl•e of this watt known 86 year
old Ohio Furniture Store. This Sunday, February 14, 1999. Beginning
at12 noon and ending 1110 PM this S..nday Night, some $875,000.00
wonh of Inventory will be placed direct to the Pubttc Mert&lt;et.end nothIng islo be hold back. All purchases ·must be '""'"'!'XI from the premises within 24 hours of purchase, wrthout exception. At! name brands
witt be Included, over 2,000 pieces In 'att . 1he reason for lhis public
salols to reduce Inventory an.d lnc;reasa cash flow. This sale Is to the
Public Only and this store Is not going out of business.

ested par1ies maklnQ
decision to go ahead

and further reduce
prices of inventory assets of The Erriplre

Furniture Company in
Galtipotls, Ohk&gt;, 50-

75% of all crated and

unCreated merchln·

disols to be Included.
Over 2,000 pieces in
alt .
This Is a sate to lha Public end shall be hold on the premises of Empire Fumlrure company, Gallipolis, Ohio.
.
BUNKBED
Aut1tic bunked. Headboard arld Footboerd
intludtld Mlh BuHd Ofl Uidder and Guard
Ali!. Bu~l To Teke PL!r1ishment.
WHILE THEY LAST

W1th Great Prin t Cover. No\ S399 .95

LAST

· "HARDEN " HONEY MAPLE
BEDROOM SUITE
C0fnP911 "''"' O....W, MlffOI , t -0!-Cf\HI, ~
~ 01- N.gt'ol Sit~ and 1 Ptnt! HHdbolr-1 Filii
0&lt; Queen WI wtn -'CliVI~ Bedlt~~me.

WHII..f

l'HEY~T

LAMPS

Clre sstr. mirror, Chett, fully
Queen held &amp; todlboard , nlgnt ltand.

SALE $1.11
Values · S 29.95 &amp; $39 .95
NOW 10 HOURS ONLV

l nnerspri11g Mattreas Set, Innerspring

Mattress &amp; MAtching F=oundatlon, Ourltttd

WHILE THEV

10 HOURS

5 PIECE BEDROOM S~

$157

2 PIECE UV!NQ ROOM SUITE

Include

Not$1299

10 Hours Sunday

3 PIECE UVlNQ ROOM

fabric, inc ludes Sofa &amp;
Not $_
1,499 .00

loveseat

reversible &amp;eat cushion• over no
steel springs. Not $1 ,499.95

$598

10 Hours Sunday

UPRIGHT ODD
Bedroom Chnt
Cottee Table &amp; 2 Lamp
$159.95
10 HOURS ONLY

abtaa. Not
.

$69

FULL SIZE
MATTRESS SETS
Mlldium Fll"m Coil Sui'PM Mamess &amp;
Matching Founda\10n in Prmt Cover

Qu,tfad tor style. Not S2o49 95
WHILE THEY LAST

$98

Tt11s 1s unbehevat)le, But

~ou

$698

5 Shelves . Cherf)l Finish
Not $299

U..IRCM!DMIUWf:
paid by Cash, Ctlecll, VISA., Ma sterCard and/or approved credit.
No 1peoal ordert. no layaways, no advance iikti, no free daliver+el, no refunds, no elchangu, all ••let 'As tiM and Final , 10
1oot1 ttltm over, what you see s what you get end all purchaHI
must De removed wilt! in 24 I'IOtJrs of purChase, w1lhout tlCeplion.

storage, glass dOof, 6 shelves lor compo..
nent system. Not $699.95
10 Houro Sunday

GLIDER ROCKERS

WHILE THEY J.AST

10 Hours Sunday

woven fabric. cranberry color. Not $449.95

$179

incluaes table 5 Bide cl'\elrs-1 arm chair
lighted China cabinet. NOI ,52999.95

10 HOURS SUNDAY
. QUEEN SIZE {SLEEPER)
HIDE-AWAY BED

$329

by Towne Square, oovered In a care rree

Solid wood spindle design.
Not $69.95
'

·rutttd back ona ,ram'"'

SOI.t 011 Oll~ome • NO • nogt"lt. "" long.t top puiiOul
C'D'II&lt;~ lor I... (~(~oft 11\d IIHj)IIWC ~ Tht,_l·
lift$ ,. ""*·pntlg IMd I Hc~~ _,. l'!IPI&lt;-.1 Not

55Hi!l

CHERRY
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
SO" wide x19 i/2 deep Jt52" tall, VCR tape

8 PIECE CHERRY.
DINING ROOM

WHILE THEY LAST

LIGHTED CURIO
CABINET'

10 HOURS SUNDAY

Round taDte, ttaf aM 4 cl'lairs
All-wood In a rich oa,k finish. Not $599 .95

TWIN HEADBOARDS

can buy a
L\ght Oak F1nu;h 4 Drawer Upright Ctle$1
at an almost 91\fl!l awa~ pnce.

All Furniture and Accessories purehaaed during this !ale must be

STORE LOCKED UNTIL
12 NOON SUNDAY

5 PIEt;:E OINING SET

Beautiful traditional style. docorator

WHILE THEY LAST

OaM Fin\$1"1 With Stra•gh1 l , s: Includes

$698

.

auacned p111ow
springs and hardwood frama.
.to HOUFIS NOW

EMPI.RE RNITURE
COMPANY
842 2nd AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

10 Hours Sunday

''

$1562

Snow delays search
·for baby's temaln.s .
NELSONVILLE (AP) -"· 'IJte
search, fill' the remains of a baby
thought 10. be du111ped at an Athens
County landfill was ·suspended Friday because of snow.
Investigators believe the . infant
girl was born to a 17-year-old Vin. cent Warren HisJ! School senior in
October, then dumped with the
trash.
The mother, now 18, told detec·
tives that she cut the baby's umbili·
cal cord willi scissors, then placed
packagina tape.ovtr .the newborn's
mouth befo.re placing it in white
trash b!lgs and disposing of it,
acconding to an affidavit for a search
warrant.
The Vincent Warren' High School
principal i:ontacted authorities-Moit.day ·~ ~-~~ rulftOIS o( the birth .•
The 8Jrl ·8dmtllld ~ht hid bad the

"

Honey Maple Finish
Ample work :!lurtace with 3 drawers down
ona 11de lor stOJage.

HOURS:

10 HQURS SUNDAY
PHONE : (740) 446-1405

Vol. 34, No. 1
• •• j

ieldratly
'

'Second battle'
of Buffington
Island reaches
frenzied pace

l

'

change will bring, Superintendent Robert Lanning said.;
''There will be attention given to adjusting some· of.
our (,us routes, which will result in some· additionAl'•
expense because we may have to hire some additional ,
bus driv.ers," he explained.
·
~,
. "As we look at it, we want to give the board some dlt• •
ferent scenarios to allow for the additional 18 minutes )o ~
the school d~y. "
; •,
Lanning said there are ways .1Jle district can prove'IQ
North Central how the time can be bOught, but he no~
that "no matter what is done, there will be additional
expenSe."
.
....
The board's resolution will be presented to Norili ·
central's leadership in March, when accreditation ;J!
awarded to schools that qualify.
_
Officials pointed out that tninsportation has been the
only drawback to the instruciional level at RVHS, ~
that the scilool's current Sc:hedule is above the sta'!:,:
daily requirement of 5-1/2 hours of instruction.
.-:;;

Petition drive calls'@
for creation of EMS§
..
satellite stations·;~-~~~~
·"'"'

~

By KEVIN KE\-LY

~~:r~5~i~~S~Irlrr~~is;m~~o~re:neces~
in respond~
~
'
~,S&lt;&gt;Yiards.i~.

~~ al&amp;ef&lt;a&gt;~wllo · exam~
her ,tolcli .._~ U ~ abC

. tiaa 'given l!irih; ~rdtol to ~lift.
records. ·
''
·
The !lien, who iniiially, deni~
ever being pregllilnt, told detellliv~
thf!l She placed the baby in the trash,
but at ·other times she had told people that she buried the infant in the
backyard, according to court .
records .
Authorities on Wednesday used
dogs to search the baCk yard of the
home outside Marietta where the
teen lived when investigators
believe the baby was born.11Jey did
not find any remains.
,
Investigators also searched the
landfill at the Alhens•Hocking
•Reclamation Center near Nelsonville on Wednesday, Thursday
and briefly Friday, but had to suspend the operation because of snow
Friday.

Calendan

!;;I!!!!!IRedl
C!!ml~:~

El!lt!!diiS
Al!!l!l the River
Qbltuariell
~l!!!rts

C2f!6

DH

llllu:l .

~-

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A~

DH

o 1999 Obio v.tley Pllblislltoa Co.

:;:

TimeaoSentlnet St•ff
·
.
·.
; ••*
. GALLIPOLIS - A petition drive calling for ·~
establishment of satellite Emergency Medical ~rvili(
stations at strategic points in Gallia County has ~
launched in the hope that response time to emergenci~
can be significantly reduced.
.
:.~
EMS staff who organized the drive report the idea hJiii:
received a positive response in areas where the petitio!('
have been circulated, with over ,200 signatures origi!l&amp;~
ing from the northern section of the county ahd ~~
reported from the southern end: .
. , : :r.:.
The drive proposes that astat1on staffed by two E~~~
personnel artd an ambulance be pl@l;ed 1n each of thre~
areas- Vinton, 'Rio Grande, Mercerville or Crown City.
- allow1ng the EMS to respond more quickly with
. equipment aboard an ambulance to situations whe1e
minuies count.

POMEROY - Action
in the Second Battle of
Buffington Island is reac;hing a frenzied pace,
marked by a Friday rally
on the Statehouse lawn in
Columbus and ' coniinuins
Ibis Thii(Sday with a local
·publill hearins. ·, ·
The orisinal July 19,
1863, Bailie of Buffington
Island at Portland involved
about · 2,000 Confederate
calvarymen led by Gen.
John Hunt Morsan, which
:«G{C tou,ted · by a
fon:e oll&amp;ut

petitions.
.
..- ·,.
'. • :
it saves one Iife1it'd be worth it,'~ adde,d Sol!lards,
who noted that 175 signatures had been collected in the
Vinton area as of Friday.
·
EMS staff and the service's current eight squads have
been based on Jackson Pike since Gallia created a counry-funded EMS 20 years ago. Satellite stations, backers.
of the concept have said, could better serve the popu~a­
tion, particularly in areas where the number of runs have
been heaviest. .
·
.A breakdown of 1998 responses by the EMS sho~a;
the majority of calls - 577 - were in SpringfioUI
Township, while Huntington, Raccoon and Guyan town;
ships each had over IOO. .
:·
While acknowledging the. cost connected to housilj
ambulances and staff in different communities, support-:
ers believe the additional service could pay for itself~
time through more demand. Additionally, stationin'g
squads in the county may decreas~ costs forrepairs , .¥
well as wear and tear on the vehicles.
'
:·
"!think it'd be better for the ambulance, because if it's
based in a certain area, the staff would have m~
knowledge of the roads and the 'best approach to reach~
ing the call,'' said Sowards, a member of'Vinton Village
Council who's worked with the Galli a EMS for the 1~1
two years.
•.
County Commissioner Casby "Skip" Meadows III
said that while the idea merits consideration, it would
need support and coordination between the coun!Y,
township trustees and village_councils to become a real~ .
~
One aspect of the proposal calls for the townships Rr
villages to locate or provide housing for EMS staff and
an ambulance, with the county maintaining the building.
"They lhink it will cut the cost through increased runs·
and more revenue," Meadows explained. "It's a plan tha.t
looks good on paper, but it would require cooperatio~
from a lot of different entities."

, yem later, an
bent on
, . th,e battlefie!d
.are
.. ~BJnst th~ own- enacto~
'==~~=:1~
ers of the sttc who seek to tori lll8nd alli~l~~rO!!I~I., llt_.lllte ,S
.\'i.•!( "-;;,•., ' ·: - . ·;· '.~ .. : /
mine the area for its gravel.
ooncrele contractors. :,
The neJtt. battle for public .opinion will
be held Thursday, Feb. 18 at 7 p.m. at
~~~~~~~~~~~
a Department of
~~:e.-invited tO be
A
involve the plac:(. ,:
·at~· ·
including officials
Meigs High School, at a joint p,ublic hearsteel sheet piling cells measur- ' . any local sovcmll!"nl or any associaing of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ment .
ing
24
feet
in diameter along approxl- .lion whose interest may be iffellled by the
and the Ohio Environmental Protection
1,980
feet of shoreline comprised , proposed llll1ivity.'
mately
Agency.
,
. , They will be given the opportunity ·to
The hearing is being held 10 consider of three separate fleeting areas. . .
The applicant also proposes to place expresa. views concerning .the proposed
the application submitted by Richards &amp;
Sons Inc., a subJidiary of Shelly Materials riprap bank. protec~on along 510 feet of . -activity and all statements, both oral and
of Thornville, to construct, operate and shoreline behind the barge loading dock. written; will be recorded and will become
maintain a sand and gravel loading facili - The purpose of the project is to load sand · a part of the official recond of the appliesty crucial to the planned gravel mining and gravel Products mined allhe sit_e for lion. '

~-t~.· s~E~C~ON~Ii~~[.ti~; r~~:t!lvlt

Sewer board .responds to .c:iti.~ens• group
By BRIAN J . .REED
An extension was granted by the district, allowing residents to
Tlme•Sentln•I Shiff
hook up before the end of May, and a program allowing low an~
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Dis- moderate inconie households - and some higher-income housett:ict's board has responded to allegatjons made about the system's holds - to connect at no cost has been underway for several
management, encpuraging cooperation on the part of a citizens' weeks under the direction of the Meigs County Commissioners.
The citizens' group, which meets monthly under the .leadership
group organized to protest board aclion.
The first bills for the new systen\ were mailed earlier this month, of 'Loretta Murphy and Ra!ldy Kidder, \"hO now serves on the
and customers must now begin paying for sewer.iei'Y.io;C ·~· debi " ~RSD 11oard• has encb)lra~ 'tcsit!cn~to refuse lit join the,sysretirement, regardless of whether they have connecte(l ;te .the sys•,• , tell! untit'llOp.'li:ction ~~ arC(.p.id. ·'
• :.:. ~ .... ,.
,
tern.
The board'll news release says that the c_onnecuon rate ts getIn a news release issued under the letterhead of the board's attor-' tins close to 40 percent." There are approximately 200 customers
ney, Frank Lavelle, the board saY.S that the construction· phase of , in the district.
.
.
.
the project is "just aliout done,'' with the eltceptioh of the inspec·
Several members of the group have sa1d that board members and
lion process and other minor engineerins details.
Continued on fMll' A2

Etched with love:
Chester couple recalls ~ unique Valentine
· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlm1s-Sentlnel Shift
CHESTER - Fifty-eight years ago, Henry Bahr of near
Chester claimed Eile~n Pigott of Long Bottom as his val~ntine
when he chtseled
their initials inside a
heart on a large
sandstone rock on
Bahr family

STUDENT DESK

12 O'CLOCK NOON SUNOAY TtL
10 PM SU NDAY NIGHT
MON., TUE ., WED : 9 AM TIL 6 PM
THUR ., FRI .. SAT.: CLOSED

'

'1'

But as the school prepared for
renewal this year, North Central
cited RVHS' schedule fot not meetitlg the organization's requirement
for the length of the school day.
Although the association initially
accepted the. district's explanation
thatU!e schedule is affected by transportation and the distance . students
Board of Education during a .special meeting Thursday. .
travel to gci' to. RVHS when it first
The board's action arms educators who will attend the
awarded accredtfation to the school,
North Central Association of Colleges and School• Ndhh Central s.aid the 11urrent schedule would weigh
ann11al meeting in Chicago with the commitment needed against renewal this y~r. ·
.
1o maintain RVHS' acc:reditation status.
The problem was ~tlined to the board i.n December.
RVHS has hid M;Creditation throusJ! North Central The boand was informed that a commitnient to adjusting
since the 1996-97 school year, and must sec:k renewal the schedule woutd be s~tisfactory to North Central as
each ·year. Accreditation serves as a demonstration that long as action is taken to correct the situation.
· the school is meeting and maintaining the association's
The administration is now lookins at ways of resolvnationally-recognized ll:lldemill standards. ·
·
ins
tnlnsportation issues and balance.potential costs the
.
'

II,.W,~l

14 Sections • 124 Pages

(olher lamps ...$100 .00)
Lamps for SSO.OO
$150.00 Lamps for $75.00

' ··J_.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 14, 1999

ly KEVIN i&lt;E.U.v
·
Tlms•Senttnel 8tllff
,
CHESHJRE - Expanding the instructional day. at
River Valley High School by 18 minutes will help the
school keep its accreditation, but Ga:Ilia County Local
Schools adminiatrato.-s said facm surrounding cost and
transportation are I!&gt; be studied before the adjustment
goes into effeet. .
.
A resolution .cllli'ng for the lengthened school ·day
was unanimously approved by the Gallia County Local

Today'aC-....JiadbJ:d

ALL CRATED &amp; UNCRATEO MERCHANDISE ORDERED SOLD DIRECT TO PUBLIC AT MAJOR PRICE REDUCTIONS.

QUEEN SIZE

.•

'·'

Good Morning

"THE NEWS IS OUT AND THE PRESSURE IS ON"

•P... II1•

instructional day for RVHS .·

'

THE STORE DOORS HAVE BEEN LOCKED
SINCE THIS PAST WEDNESDAY EVENING AND
WILL NOT BE UNLOCKED TIL SUNDAY AT 12
O'CLOCK NOON.

Recorder posts land transfers
The following land transfers were recorded recently in the office of Meigs
County Recorder Emmogene Hamilton :
·
Deed, Paul E. Kl ein to Raymond L. and Megan Andrews, Pomeroy parccl;
•
Right of way, Larry W. and Joy ce L. Hollon to Ohio Power Co., Chester·
Right of way, Christopher W. and·Megan E: Baer to OPC, S"tton ;
'
Deed, Glen R. and Melissa Bissell to Randall and Darla Hawley, Chester;
. Deed, W1lham Dav1d Krawsczyn. David Krawsczyn, Jennifer Krawsczyn
to John and Brenda Russell, Chester;
.
Deed, Paul D. and Patricia Lou Cuc'kier White to Harold 'red and Randi
Gan oe Cuckler Gillette. Bedford ;
Deed, Oli ve Satterfield to Jack Satterfield Jr. and Eleanor S. Blae ttnar
~iddleport;
·
.
'
: Deed. William and Doris Buchanan to Bill E. Buchanan, Orange;
, Deed , John and Sonja Buckner to David and Shirley Bumgardner, ·
~omcroy;
·
.
:' Deed, Harold and Virginia f Evans to Troy Eugene Boggs and Christopher M. Stye r, Lebanon;
: · Right of way. David McDonald to Leading Creek Conservancy District,
S11iem;
'. · Right of way, David L. Keller to LCCD, RutJ.and;
Right of way, EvanS. and Billie J. Hennington to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way. Rodney K. Davis to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Bradford and Hazel Lewis to LCCD, Rutland;
R1ght of way, Stephe n and Rh onda R1fe to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Charles W and Bernice VanMeter to LCCD, Rutland·
Right of way, ·Richard Macomber to LCCD, Salem·
'
Right of way, Jan et Barney to LCCD, Salem;
'
·
Right of way, Don V. and Bonni e G. Burke to LCCD. Salem;
Right of way, Letha Miller Edgen to LCCD, Rutland;
Righi of way, Roge r Adrian and Paul R Walker to LCCD, Salem ;
R1ght of way. Robert Ri gney to LCCD, Salem;
Ri ghi of w~y. William Kovatch .to LCCD. Salem:
Right of way, Joseph E. Beres to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Samson· Darsr to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Marcelain. Upholz to LCCD, Rutland;
·Right of way, Robe rt E. Davis to LCCD, Salem;
.
Right of way, Kathleen M. and Bernard L. While to LC.CD Rutland
Right of way, Randy and Kimberly M. Bennett to LCCD Salem· '
Right of way, Steven C. and Kathy A. Kelley Ray to LCCD, Sal;m .
R1 ght of way, William E. and Chri stine G. Rife to LCCD, Salem; '
R1ght of way, R1chard A. Peyton to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Mamie D. Harmon to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, 'Loretta Campbell to LCCD, Salem;
Ri ght of way, Dex ter Church of Chri st to LCCD , Salem;
Ri ght of way, Tina Williams to LCCD. Salem;
Ri ght of way. Robert and Tersa K. Birchfield to LCCD. Rutland·
Ri ght of way, Juani1a Harmon to LCCD, Rutland;
'
R1ght of way, John D. and Li llie J. Mullins to LCCD, Columbia;
R1ght of way, Kevi n Oiler and Lois J. Eblin to LCCD,-Rutland;-Right of way, James E. Chase to LCCD, Columbia; ·
. Deed, Ruby Casteel to John· Casteel, Bedford;
Easement . James F. Sr. and Ruth E. Dehner to Steven A. Mill hone, Olive,
.I03 acre;
: Deed, Leah H. Heady, Le-ah H. Spurlock to Gretchen S. Heady, Olive;
De~d, Patrick D. and Patricia A. Johnson to Ted L. and Crystal D. Dexter, Middleport;
.
; Deed, Carol A. Smith to Sandy Gangwer, Syracuse;
; Deed, Dennis and Carla S. Saelens t() Michael Shawn and Tina Dawn Bak'
·
er, Middleport;
: Deed, Alice Acming Vorpe to Ann Keller, Michael Robert and Thomas
lldward Vorpj!, Lehanon par(Oels;
·
,
Deed, Marguerite E. Eskew to Theodore. T. Reed lll, Pomeroy parcel;
. , Deed , Rebecca Wood to John F. and Many A. Husted, Scipio tracts;
Deed, Everett P. and Sharon K. Smith to Randall L and Angela F. Arnold,
Rutland parcel ;
Deed, Thomas F. Perone to Thomas F. Perone and Authorine Lausch '
Salem parcels;.
;
'
Deed. Facemycr Forcs1 Products to Debra La Shayc Wamsley, Letart.

cos t~,

f

Tod•y'• •r.rtlng 1/Mup

•

Boa,rd .commits to adjusting

''

.

.

of lldvWalty • B~

'

.

Cases concluded in recent Meigs County C.o urt session
The fo ll owi ng Cl!Ses were settled Buckeye Lake, DUI, $850 plus costs,
recentl y in the Meigs County Coun 90-day OL suspension, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, one year
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Nancy J. Arnold', proba~i on, jail and $550 suspended
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; upon completion of residential treatMichael Fraley, Albany, failure to ment program; seat belt, $25 plus
control. $30 plus eosts; Amber K. costs; reckless operation, $30 plus
Bird, Racine, speed, $30 plus costs; costs;
Charles R Kinnan , Pomeroy; fi ctiThomas Roush, New Haven,
tious registration, $20 plus costs; W.Va., DUI, $850 plus costs, 30 days
Rebecca J. Little, Gallipolis, speed, jail suspended to three days, $250
$30 plus costs; Gregory J. Vance, forfeiture , 90-day OL suspension, one
Syracuse, speed, $30 plus costs; year probation; failure to control,
Amber K. Bird, Racine , speed, $30 $100 plus costs; marked lanes, $25
plus costs; Eric L. Stover Jr. , Racine, plus costs; Julie M. Zielinski, Racine,
overload, $ 123 plus costs; Eric T. passing bad checks, $25 plus costs,
Toops, Middleport, seat belt, $25 plus restitution; Mary Smith, Racine,
costs; Tara R Gheen, Pomeroy, passing bad checks, $25 'plus costs,
speed, $30 plus costs; Linda J. Har- restitution; Rhonda J. DePue, Portrison, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus land. passing bad checks, $25 plus
costs; Jeremy S. Cline, Reedsville, costs, restitution; Karla Witherspoon,
reckless operation, $100 plus costs; Athens, passi ng bad checks, $25
e&lt;pired reg istration, $25 plus costs; plus costs, restitution; Michael Bums,
Trena S. Swetnam, Columbus, Middleport, seat belt, $15 plus costs;
driving unde r the influence, $850
Kev in R. Klein, Pomeroy, driving
plus costs, 10 day s jail suspended to under suspension, $150 plus costs,
three days, 90-day operator's license five days jail and $75 suspended if
suspension, one year probation, jai l valid OL prese nted Within 90 days,
and $550 suspended upon completion one yea~ probation; Steven R. Hysell,
of re sidenti al treatment program; Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
fail~re to control, $30 plus costs; Richard J. Gilmore, Pomeroy, DUI,
Chnstopher A. Wyatt. Pomeroy, DUI, · $850 plus costs, 60 days jail sus$850 plus costs, 60 days Jail sus- pended to 10 days, one year OL suspended to I0 days. one year OL sus- . pension, 90-day vehicle immobilizapenswn, one year probat10n; dn vmg tion, one year probation; driving
under,s~ spensJOn, $ 150.plus costs, 60 under suspension, $250 plus costs, 60
days Jail suspended to 10 days con- days jail s uspended to 10 days, one
~urre nt, one year probatwn; fa1lure to year probation; seat belt, $25 plus
control, costs only ; unsafe veh1cle, costs; Kyle Armstrong. Gahanna,
tosts onl y; Gregory A. Mornson, expired OL, $100 plus costs; expired

Grace ln'the hlce

Detail• on
pageA2

tmes

Ohio Valley Publishing Co .

'Get the latest in sports news from the1·

Daily Sentinel

L..ow:'Teen•

•

••

·•

.HI: 30a

couple married in 1943. They
had 10 children .
and as ·the years
went by and the
=J::t:~:~ responsibilities
increased,
the
n..r Cheet•r elalmed E
Long Bottom 11 his VIII..,Une
he memory of that
chl.eted their lnltl ... lnslele 1 h..rt on etching in stone
• 1111• esndel- rock II Y•~ ago. faded. In fact,
they had not seen it for 41&gt;' years.
.
But they were reminded of the engraving last fall when
their children asked them to write down events which had
made an impact on their lives.
•
.
.
' .
Just before Christmas, Henry dectded 1t was lime to sec tf

the etching had endured as well as their marriage. After all, it was
in 194I \hat the young farm boy of 16 in love with a girl not yet
16took a hammer.and chisel to the sandstone.
.
Bahr ,'f"as joined by his son-h)-law, Tim Bartee, in the search
for the ~rving. They quickly found the huge rocks, and .began
cleaning off the soil and debris which had accumulated over
the years. It was time-consuming and they were about to.
gi ~e up when Bahr spotted the point of the heart.
' The visit to the land which once was a part of the .Bahr
family fann in seiii'Ch of the sandstone etching turned into a
trip~own memory larie in more ways than one for Henry.
Last week, while revisiting the site with his wife, he
talked about his ancestor, Abraham Bahr, who purchased
the fanm with money he received for his service iri the Civil
War. Abraham had come to America from Genmany. · • .
Henry recalled beins reared on the farm, the fite whtch
destroyed ihe orisinal house and barn, and the eventual sale of
' Road property. .
the Ba~r
· As for the heart and initials, well-preserved in the sandstone
after nearly six decades, Bahr commented that while it was ·
his way of 'staking" out Eileen for himself in 1941, today the
etching symboliZes how right he was in his selection.
For Mr. and Mrs. Bahr, valentines with ve~s pledgins
·MEMORY ETCHED IN STONE- Henry 8nci.EIIHn Behr m•rrled In 1843. They h8d 10 chll;
d~n
•nd 11 the y..~ went by •nd th• ruponalbllltlee lncrnnd, the m•mory of thet llle!P.
uridyins, love can't compare to that etchlns in stone created so
Ing
In
stone flded. In flct, they had nat - n It for 40 ye•~'
many years aso.

-~·

.,

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•'

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