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                  <text>Monday

Don't pass'up benefits cit sma/1-capitallunds

·'

:.J CONGRATULATED- Lawrence Burdell, recently re elected to
. the Gellla Soil and Water Conservetlon District Board of Superlliaors, 'was congratulated by Ohio Supreme Court Justice Paul
J'falfer after swearing In Burdell during the Ohio Federation of Soil
;,nd Water Conservation Districts' recent 56th annual meeting In
;columbus.

•

~WCD s,u pervisor

By DIAN VUJOVICK
When investors think about
investing in dividend-paying stock
funds, they typically think large caps
are the only way to go. But small
companies pay dividends too.
If you didn 't know that of the
more than 8,200 public companies
with market caps below ~I bi-llion,
almost 20 percent have dividend
yields of 1.5 percent or more, you 're
not alone. This sector of small-oap
companies is ·Often ignored. And
what gets overlooked just might be
worth investigating.
"Mostpeoplethinkofsmallcompanics as growth companies only,"
says Chuck Royce, portfolio manager of the Royce Total Return Fund
and manager of The Royce Funds.
"But there is a whole other sector that
by and large gets ignored because
there IS no value attributed to the dividend on small caps in the marketplace. Therefore, whatever y1eld you
get from ~portfolio made up of div1dend-paymg small caps 1s sort of
thrown in for nothmg."

Small companies pay dividends
for any number of reasons~ Some
might have run out of steam from a
popularity standpoint and decide to
pay a d1v1dend to gather appeal. Othcrs have matured and their founders
decide to pay them; still others might
have a substantial cash position, and
instead of plowing the money bac~
tnto the company, use It to reward
their shareholders. Whate~er th~ reaS?n: If a small company· " paymg _a
dlvtdcnd, chances are Royce and his
crew of analysts Will be checking it
out.
Royce d~esn't necessanly buy
the old nsk/reward adage: the greater '
the •n sk, the . greater the reward.
In ~tead, he beheves that tfyou pay a
lot of attention to risk, handsome
rewards can follow. That's why he
prefers d1vidend-paying companies
and those that are debt-free and have
high returns on capital.
"We want to double our money in
three or four years, and we would just
as soon not lose very much in the
short tenn," he says

,,

. While small-company stocks were
kic~in the face earlier this year,
they c recovered handsomely...From
P.t-pril rough the first week of October, the Russell2000 (an index measuring small-cap companies) fell 38
percent, And from Oct. 8 through
Nov. 1'7, it gained 2.5 percent RoY,ce
figuret;,lhat we are in a new lijl-cytle
for small-cap companies which could
last two to three years.
"Anytime that you've had a 20
pe~ntdecline or more in small-cap
stocks ~ver the past 25 years, without exception, there has been at least
a 70 pt!rcent rebound in the following one to two years," he says.
. The'Total Return Fund's assets are
mveste.ct in roughly 75 different
stocks, · including Helmerich &amp;
Payne, Alliance Capital Management
and Sturm Ruger &amp; Co.
Hclmench &amp; Payne was chosen
becau~e · t is a conservatively managed otl company that sells very close
to bo~k yalue, has no debt, has very
large m~bstment and cash poSitions
on the balance sheet, and pays a small

•

sworn
to new term
..

~ .GALLIPOLIS - Lawrence Bur4ell of Bidwell, recently re-elected
ta)perv1sor of the Gall ia Soil and
'Water Conservation Distnct, was
~0111 into office by Oh10 Supreme
Ellluf\ Justice Paul Pfeifer during the
Qilh Annual Meeting of tht Ohio
r'ederation of Soil and Water Confarvation Distncts (OSWCD) held in
~lumbus Jan. 19-20.
: . Elected to a three-year term, Bur4~11 joins Jay Crisenbery, Robert
Massie, Jim Howard and Mike Hughin admimst~nng the qallia
S~CD's natural conservation prosrams.
.
• The Federation of Soil and Water
Conservation district was organized
th 1943 to furtherJthe naiural resource
conservation m1ssion of the stites 88
~ounty- based SWCDs As subdiv•~ions of state government, soil and
:'.Jllater conservation distn cts have
~al authority to assist landowners
~th a wide range of soil , water

woodland and wildlife conservation
objectives.
Another Important goal is to provide mfonnation and education programs on natural conservation and
management topics for county residents.
Adoption of proposed "ActiOn
Agenda for Ohio's Watersheds" will
be a major focus of soil and water
conservation distncts in 1999. The
proposal would involve local citizens
in water resource management, provide better water quality data, encourage well-developed watershed plans
and improve water quahty in Ohio's
streams, nvers and lakes. The
"Action Agenda" outlines a statelocal partnership involving the Oh10
Department of Natural Resource.Division of S01l and Water Conservation, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, Ohio State University
Extension and SWCDs.

~ . FINDLAY•(AP) - Cooper Tire &amp;
ee
.. the world's eighth largest tire,

imports from Asia and Latm Ameli - ·
ca.

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Free Pancakes &amp; Sausage To

SIS.H5

Middl eport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number xxx

'By TERENCE HUNT
strain but said, ".I think we've come through the stances, you never lost sight of your first obligation AP White Houaa Correspondent
worst."
•
to serve the people of our nation. For that, I am proWASHINGTON (AP) -It's not really over. Not for
For maily people, it will take a long time to over· foundly grateful."
l'!illary and Chelsea. Not for many others, either. There come the awful consequences of Ointon 's misbehavior.
Some of Clinton's aides blame not Clinton but lodeis a legacy of pain, anger, humiliation and embarrass·
One White House official who left described the pendent Counsel Kenneth Starr. believing he waged a
~tent that endures from the yearlong scandal that grew
legal bills as "brutal." Not just for senior staff, eithervendetta against the president.
•
out of President Clinton's affair with Monica
assistants, associates, friends outside
When the story broke a year ago, ClioLewinsky.
the White House were subpoenaed as
ton personally assured his Cabinet he
• Hillary Rodham Clinton and her daughter
well.
had not had a sexual relationship with
were devastated by the president's tletrayal, left
The official, speaking on condition of
Ms. Lewinsky. Secretary -of State
with sleepless nights and private agony. friends
anonymity, said there are mixed emoMadeleine Albright, Commerce Secresay. They try not to show their heartache pubtions among the staff.
tary William Daley, Health and Human
licly, but others, like former Sen. Elale
"There lltll those who are deeply dis· Services Secretary Donna Shalala and
Bumpers, describe a relationship that has been
tressed," the official said. "There are
Education Secretary Richard Riley
"about as decimated as a family can get."
those who are a little disillusioned and Hillary Qlnton were sent out before the -press to repeat
· For staff and friends, there are huge legal
hurt. There are also those who are the
Clinton's false denial.
Lawlnaky
bills to pay. Damaged repuljltions to be
steadfast supporters and arc deep believers in •
The pre!ident apologized to them' eight months later
repaired. Shattered trusts and confidences to be his agenda and what he is trying to do for the country. and admitted his d~eption. Shalala, Riley and Interior
soothed.
They see that with greatness can sometimes come Secretary Bruce Babbitt bluntly questioned or confronted Clinton.
Some of the president's top iiilcs were furious that weaknesses."
Ointon, in a message to his staff Friday, said, "The
Clinton adviser Paul Begala was described as taking
he lied to them, then expecte~ them to defend his 'deception, Some considered quitting but stayed. mostly out of past year has been especially difficult for you. I know it especially hard. But it was Begala who helped Clin·
fidelity to the president's agenda. Or loyl!lty to the first that my actions and the events they triggered have made ton draft his address to the nation after he testified
your work even harder. For that, I am profoundly sorry. before the grand jury. Former spokesman Mike McCurlady.
.' · The president recently acknowledged it had betn a ln all this, under the most extraordinary of circum- ry and aide George Stephanopoulos also have spoken

..

COLUMBUS (AP)- A minister who has been meet·
ing with Wilford Berry for several months says Berry,
who is scheduled to be executed Friday, has no fear of
dying. .
Berry "has always given me the impression of being
in his right mind. I believe he is," said the Rev. David
Otase of the Columbus Christian Center, who has seen
Berry each month since September.
. He said Berry has indicated he wants to die because
"there is no life in the cell."
Gov. Bob Taft's office has received nearly 3,000 letters and more than
700 phone calls requesting clemency for Berry, 36, who was convicted of
killing baker Charles Mitroff during a 1989 robbery. The most prominent
plea c1111e from Pope Jo~n l'aul II. · ,
.
Tiln_;L~fliR! hod• rllQt'i~ 71l;!ctters. and .49 ~plls last uek favoring
exea-tl'iion. Birry's execution, If it occurs, would be the first in Ohio since
1963.
One of the ~lis to Taft's office came from Eleanor and Ricliard Bowler
of Parfield Heights. Mrs. Bowler is Milroff's sister. The Bowlers called
Friday after they became upset with a Cleveland-area radio program.
"A woman was saying it was
unfair to execute him because he
was a proven schizophrenic,"
Bowler said. "I would just like. to
explain ... that not everybody is
bleeding for Wilford Berry."
Today's
Taft spokesman Scott Milburn
1 Sections • 10 Pllges
said Taft's chief legal counsel,
William Klatt, pro.bably will call
Calendar
10
the couple Tuesday. That is the
Classlfteds
7&amp;8
same day Taft is to meet with IS
Comiq
legislators who want him to spare
9
Berry's life.
Ec!ltoda!s
About 175 people prote5ted
Local
3
execution Saturday ouiSide the
Sports
4&amp;5
governor's mansion in suburban
Weather
Bexley. They carried signs, sang,
3
held candles and listened to speakLotteries
ers who pleaded for Berry's life to
be spared. Addi tiona! protests are
OHIO
planned this week.
Pltk 3: 9-6-9; Pkk 4: 8-9-3-9
Public defenders are appealing
Super Lotto: 7-26-33-34-42-45
the
execution. They say Berry,
Kicker: 8-3-6-1·9-8
known
as "'the Volunteer" because
W,YA.
he
wants
to be put to death, is not
Dllily 3: S-2-0; Dally 4: 9-9-9-3
mentally
competent to decide to
C 19W Ohio Valiey PllblishhiJ Co.
die.

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;For many caught in Lewinsky web, the pain lingers on -

91 fOlD fS(DIT Sf

,We Ara Now An
Authorized
Dalullb
8aad Dealer

Hometown Newspaper

harshly about Clinton "s beha\tior.
Associates say Clinton confidante Bruce Lindsey
probably wins top prize in legal bills, perhap5 as much
as $1 million. Former deputy chief of staff Evelyn
Lieberman, who was suspicious about Lewinsky's
interest in Clinton and forced her to leave the
White House, also has huge legal expenses.
Lind5ey said he hopes to get his bills paid by
the government, since he was a target in Starr's
·invesligation but was not indicted. "It is a
dubious honor to have been an actual targei of
Ken Starr, but having been a target and not
indicted, the only advantage is the possibility
of having to apply to the government to have
them reimburse my legal fees," Lindsey said,
He said White House officials were able to
negotiate cheaper attorney rates for !!Orne staff who
needed legal help.
Associates marvel at the extraordinary loyalty of
Harold Ickes. He was unceremoniously dropped from
his job as deputy chief of staff after the 1996 election.
But he was summoned back to help Clinton in the
Lewinsky mess. He returned even though he had his
own legal problems with Starr and Congress over cliO·
paign finances.

Fourth Annual Bend Area Town
and Country EXPO 1999 plans set
A concert by gospel singer/song writer Squire Par·
sons will be a feature of the Bend Area Town and Country E~PO 1999 to be held on Sept. 18 and 19 on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Planning for the fourth annual EXPO got underway
week when the cpmmittee met to elect officers and
appoint committees.
Elected were Dallas Weber, president; Hal Kneen,
vice pre!ident; Addalou Lewis, treasurer; and Karen H.
Werry, secretary. Named trustees were Dale Kautz,
Kenny Buckley. an,d Dan Smith.
Committee! appointed were Addalou Lewis, inside
space; Lewis and Karen Werry, garden clubs; Jim Watson, food vendors; Watson and Bill Spa~n. animal
mounts and wildlife inte~ests; Dan Smith, animal inter~unny ..Kqhl, ,q-11Ut, sMw;,. Webe{, pupl.icity; Hal
I'Xnteefl and FFA' cluO!i, ·tiorticulture; Hbbbaids Green·
house, pumpkin contest; Donna Jean Smith and Jo
Kautz, entertainment; Buckley and Weber, outside

space; Eugene Underwood. church services. and Kautz,
antique tractors. ,
Again this year monster truck rides will be offered
free of charge and a chain saw sculpturer will be there
to give demonstrations. and create a piece for auction
with proceeds going to the EXPO committee.
New and .antique car, truck and tractor displays, a
petting zoo, a flower show, and a quilt show will
included at the EXPO, along with numerous contests to
detennine the biggest and best in com stalks, ears of
corns. and pumpkins.
·
Several clubs will have displays, there will be live
entertainment both days, and a church service to kick
off the Sunday activities.
Meetings of the planning committee will take place
on the last Th~I'Sflay, of e~ch . flllnJ,h !T.d a~yone i.1)1~[­
e5ted in fielping with the event1Ts 'U~etl tp attend .. The
next meeting will be on Feb. 25 in the grange annex
building on the fairgrounds, 7:30

Sentinel

Athena County Falrgrounda
Weat Union St. Athen•, Ohio

.. '15.99

-Page 5

Good Afternoon

LOCATION
JUNIOR FAIR BUILDING

Co-op
BALER TWINE
' 9,000 ft.

Daytona500

•

Minister says Berry ready tQ die

PLA results
Producers Livestock Market
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Feb. I 0.
Feeder Cattle.
200-300# St. $84-$96, P.f. $74$82, 3(&gt;0-400# St. $82-$94. Hf. $69$81; 500-650# St. $71-$88 Hf: $67$78 650-800# St. $63-$76 Hf. $59$69.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $35-$40·
Medium/Average $30-$35;
'
Thin/Light $21-$29; Bulls $40$45
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $375-$545; Bred
Cows $325-$600; Baby Calves $15$60; Goats $25-$85.
Feeder cattle and brood cow sale
Wednesday, Feb. 24 at noon
For free on-fann VISits, please call
446-9696.

Remembering Washington and lincoln on

;r~.y:P.Sunny

'

'!iremakers ente~ into agreerrie~t
QUikcr, announced today it has
formed an alliance with Italy's Pirelli
jpA to market iires in North and
,S!Juth Amenca.
. The partnership should help both
•companies cut costs and expand into
new ma,kets .
,.. The deal will allow Pirelli, the
world 's stxth largest tire maker, to
.expand sales in the Upited Stares.
Cooper will be able to enter emerging markets overseas.
·
, ~ · "As our industry continues to con·
~olidate, strategic alliances are the
ultimate way to maintain indepen4;cnce and continue to be a competltwe factor in the market." Patnck
~ney, Cooper's chainnan and chief
executive, said in a statement
· It's the second maJor deal in the
\i[~ industry in I0 days. Tire makers
ll(e trying to protect -their profi\li, in
\!!"face of e.cess capacity and cheap

dividend. Alliance Capital, the mutual fund CO'JIPAllJir CaugiK-.._manage-.
mont's eye beca~ of its l:tividend'
structure that passes alon11 all of it~
current earnings to t~r'ShflteJtolders.
And Stunn Ruger, a 'f!un manufac:,
turer. is a coD)pany thil's-fllllen out,
of favor and has a strong dividendpaying history.,. _____ ......._
But even if you like inv~ng in
funds that are value-managed and·
provide a yield. like this otiC', smallcap investing ,still comes with its
risks. Along with knowing that smallcap companies are inherently riskier
than large-cap ones, yqu should also
understand that their performances
won't follow that of the larger market. For example, as of Nov. 25, the
total return on the Royce Total Return
fund was up 2.66 percent, according
to Lipper. While that outperformed
the_ average fund (down 6.85 percent)
10 tis peer group of small-company
growth funqs, it fell short of the 23
percent return on the ' average S&amp;P
500 funds.
So don 't forget- diversify.

ports
Jeff Gordon
wins the 1999

l"ebruary 15, 1800

'

APPLEGATE
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1t'Gato ................. .................. ,..................00
5 or moro (mix any llzo) ... CI.OO OFF PER QATI!
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BolO F - . ....................... Aa Low Aa ....00
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~~II: ?g.=rAgaliiiilJYMliii;k~~

IF YOU CAN'T COME IN YOU CAN CALL IN YOUR ORDER/

LINCOLN
-- .

·-

MERCURY

\.!

i

r-u•r-u''-"'" SPORT- Wood sculpturing will again this year be a feature of !he Bend Area Town
Country EXPO. A aculpture will be created and auctioned off with proceed• going Into

EXP02000.

LongBottom
woman killed in

Athens wreck
A Long Bottom woman was killed
early Sunday morning in a one-car
crash that also injured two people who
left the scene of the wreck, the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Dead is J~nnifer W. Sellers, 18, of
33280 DeWitts Run Road. lnvestiga- .
tors found her in the front passenger
seat around 7:30 a.m., approximalely
four hours after the wreck, the patrol
reported
.
Alyshia Whaley, 21, and Teddy R.
Carpenter, 21. both of The Plains,
walked away from .the SQe!lC of the
crash ~ithout immedialely going for
help, the patrol reported
Sellers was pronouiKllld detld at the
scene by Athens Couniy (:oroner Dr.
Scott Jenkinson.
Whaley transpot1ed to the emergency room at the O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens where she was
reported in . stable oondition Sunday
afternoon. Carpenter was not treated
and was questioned at the Athens Highway Patroi ·Post Sunday.
A resident of a nearby house called
authorities at 7:25 a.m. after a woman
stopped there to report the crash.
According to the patrol's account, the
accident happened between 3:30 and 4
a.m.
The car was heading east at a high
rate of speed on Johnson Road about
two miles northwest of Athens. The car
left the road, struck a tree and overturned before coming to rest in a creek.
The car was not submerged, the report
stated.
The driver has not been detennined
as of presstime this morning, acmrding
to the Athens Post of the State Highway
Patrol. Tile crash remains under investigation and no charges have been tiled.
Sellers was a 1998 . graduate of
Southern High School. Funeral
arrangements will be hat)dled by the
Cll'meens Funeral Home, Racine, and
will be pnnounced later.

•

I

�•

Commentary
f
I
I •

P~tp~

•

Th~ ·Daily Sentinel A clear and present rJanger.

By Nil Hentoll
"once the-suspect hangs up."
intended 1D increas~ electronic surveillance by I~
I
Deputy Allomcy General Eric
But that is not exactly w~al the new law saY.s. Department of Justtce.
.
. ·.
Holder
charges
that
in
my
colIt
states
that
the
roving
suspect
cali
be
wirelapped
111
any
cue,
Holder
emph~tzes, Wtrel4~
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
umn on roving wiretaps 1 was
so long as he is "reasonably proximate" to all the :•enabled the .FBI to prevent terror1s~ fr?m blo~740...11112·2150 • FIIX: IKI2-2157
mistakcn as to the dangers of a
phones he is using.
mg up the br~dges and tunnels leadmg 10to Ne'/i
:I .
new change in the law that, -as he
If the Department of Justice were serious about York City in 1.994."
. .
.
:
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
says, "allows federal officials to
not intercepting innocent conversations, it wo~ld
But.accordtng to the AdmtnJslratiVe Office •of
I
I
wiretap conversations of a given
support a roving wiretap amendment mandating the Un1ted States Cou~, fro'!' 1987to 1997 ~I)'
I
suspect
regardless
of
the
phone
thai it not start until the suspect was observed 9.13 percent of authorized wrretaps were .usedtp
I
ROBERT
L.
WINGETT
i.
Publisher
the suspect uses."
actually using ·any phone to which he or she. is investigate _cri~cs i~~olving arson, bomb10g "''d
· This new provision, Holder assures us, is "a "proximate." The amendment should also speaf- ~rearms vrolatrons. The. FB! understandabl~
•
DIANE
HILL
relatively minor adjustment to an existing statute ically require that the FBI hang up as soon as the hkes to ~seth~ spe~ter of terronsm as a reason:IP
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Controller
that serves to protect privacy rather than intrude target does .. instead of recording everything so expand 1ts wiretappmg po~ers.
·:
. Qenertlllol•118118r
upon il. ...
'
that the ·agents do not have to continually listen.
Mr. Holder says that ~e ts opposed to t_ho ~~\!oAt first he says that 1 suggested roving wireSignificantly, the Depanment of Justice ~as emmen~·s unreasonable t~trus1on o~ .an •~dJv!~n.Sentlnrl MwkOitta,.,_. to,. ~lt«trom ,..,.,.. an abi'Gadratlp of fop.
taps are a new idea. But in my column, 1 noted been 'asking the FCC to require phone compan1es ual's pnvacy. Yet the Cltnton admtmSt_r'!ltJon,·!P
A 1o1foro (3110 won1o Of' lo•J """ ,. boot of l»&gt;ng putJ/IMI-.1.
that "in 1986, a very limited multipoint wiretap to adjust their systems so that the FBI can contin- which he serves, had more ~ederal w•n:taps ·~
!}'pod-,.
PfONrrwl•nd ollmoy bo odllod. EliCh_, lncludo • oigtMiuno,
was petmitted if the target showed a clear intent ue to listen in on conference calls in'(olving the 1995 "?d .1~96 than all the wrretaps put tn plac:"
add; .,.J eM daytiiM phone numbw: Sp«::fy • del• ff U.W.'e • ,..,.,..,..:. to • p,.
wouo - · o r loftot. lloll to: uft.,. lo ""' .-~n... n.. Sentinel, 111 Court St,
to evade a conventional wiretap."
suspect .. even after he has hung up on that con- by the tnd•v•?ual states 10 t~ose y~ars. ,
,
PomMJ)j OIHo 4S1tf; or, FAX to 14/laflll2..2111.
A conventional wiretap .. requiring particular ference call. So much f?r Mr. Holder's.insistence , The new mcrease tn -~~vtng_ Wlre~ps· m add!descriptions of the place and person to be that innocent conversatJoils not be recorded.
tton to those ·placed for mtelhgence purposes:searched •• is supposed to prevent
the governmertt from using general
search warrants of the kind that
British troops so wantonly used
against Americans colonists.
However, electronic roving wiretaps now authorized for the FBI are
:::By JOHN McCARTHY
the equivalent in the eleclronic ·age
.. Auoclated PrH8 Writer
of giving government agents blanket ·
~ COLUMBUS (AP)- An idea floated by Sen. Louis Blessing had permission to follow lhe suspect
~ the Statehouse buzzing by the end of last week: Ohio lawmakers, who around and search every home and
•'
t haven't received a raise in seven years, are underpaid.
business he or she enters.
This is hardly "a relatively minor.
~
Former Gov. George Voinov ich promised to veto any raise the
adjustment" to the Fourth Amend·
: Legislature gave itself after an election- a "lame-duck" raise.
·- But with Voinovich gone and term Iimits kicking in at the end of ment.
Mr. Holder claims that · roving
this session, the time may ·be right to look at the issue, lawmakers said
wiretapS are needed because without
last week.
them a suspect can avoid surveilOhio lawmakers technically are pan-time legislators, and many lance by continually changing telehave other jobs. But does the basic pay of $42,426 measure up to the phones. But most of us could be sus•· workload?
pected of such diversionary taclics.
.. "That's less than what a county commissioner makes," said Rep. The average length of a federal wire:. Donald Mottley, a suburban Dayton Republican and c~airman of the tap in 1997 was 51 days. During that
House Ways and Means Committee. "The workload IS greater and time, many of us use one phone at
work, anolher at home, a phone at a
· we've got more out-of-pocket expenses."
friend's
house, a cell phone, and
•· ·Most lawmakers make more than the minimum: comfl!ittee chairs
make $5,000 to $7,000 extra, vice chairs and members of special pan- occasionally a pay phone. So, as I
;: els such as the Controlling Board get more, and leadership positions noted, roving wiretaps actually
thwart the purpose of the Fourth
pay from $44,385 for assistant minority whip to $66,133 for speaker
Amendment
requiiemenl of a partic1
' of the House and Senate president.
·
. Holder says that 1 have left "the misapprehen- - without probable cause of crime --by the secrtt
ulat description of the place to be searched in
However, aside from once-a-week mileage reimbursement, law- addition to "the persons or things to be seized."
sion that roving wiretaps are used frequently." He Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (hou!;l:d
. makers must pay their own expenses, from meals to lodging.
Mr. Holder. goes on to say that I am incorrect notes that "of all the federal electronic surveillance at the Departmcnl of Justice), shows that this is-~
· ' Blessing, R-Cincinnati, told The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer last in stating that the FBI can listen to the wandering requests reviewed in the Department of Justice last administration that, as Marc Rolenberg of the
., week that he favored raising lawmakers' pay to about $60,000. Sen. phones even if the owner of the phone and ·his or year, less than I percent involved roving wiretaps." Electronic Privacy Information Center says, "has
But the new law allowing the expansion of less regard for the privacy of American citizens"
Roy Ray, R-Akron, proposed a more modest raise to about $45,000 her family-- and not the target .-- are using it.. Not
~
so,
Holder
says.
The
official
eavesdroppers,
he
roving
wiretaps was not signed until Oct. 20 last than any since Richard Nixon.
with later increases tied to the Consumer Price Index.
N•t
Hentoll
I•
a
n•tton•ll!f
renowned
claims,
can
"listen
in
only
on
those
criminally
year,
and
could
not
have
been
implemented
until
·
Scott Pullins, executive director of the Ohio chapter of the Nationrelated conversations in which the suspect is a guidelines were promulgated. It may be inslruc- •uthorlty on the First Amendment and the re8t
. al Taxpayers Union, thinks there's a better way than a pay raise .
party." Th'at surveillance must end, he adds,· t_ive to see the 1999 figures, since the new law is ol the Bill ol Rlghte. '
"The way it used to be is that lobbyists would take folks out for
: dinner, pick up hotel rooms, etc.," Pullins said. "What I'm taking
· about is having the state reimburse their expenses, like they do in
·· other states."
:: Goy. Bob Taft won'l tip his hand on whether he'd sign a bill rais' ing. lawmakers' pay. Spokesman Scott Milburn said Taft will not By JOHN CUNNIFF
neapolis company he founded and
,, comment on pending legis'lation that he dido 't initiate.
AP Business Anal!fst
built into a $85 mnlion operalion
.. Mottley thinks lawmakers' salaries might be. keeping talented
Ma~:a~ w~0 ~~otnplhe-;;th~;~:;, tita~~'" ~~~~ ~~~~ he has !raveled
·
·
politicians away from Columbus.
II;
~
"I think it makes it hard to attract and retaip good folks, and when descending briefly fro".'. orbit to pro- more th~n 100 days a year, trips that
mote
h1s
·tatest
book,
Pushtng
the
usually
mvolve
a
speech.
"Once
a
,
.
"
.
•
•
'
.
:.
· you combine that· with term limits, you aren't going to be able to
Envelope,"
whtch
he
wants
the
week
for
10
years,"
he
says
matter·
attract and retain more good people."
world to know about. It will.
of-factly. And, he insists; every
·
J
·
In recent weeks, he had spoken to speech means many hours of prepau I
Harvard students, old customers, a ration. He took intensive language
•
::
meeting of college alumni clubs, co.urses to surprise audiences in
radio an\1 TV audiences ·and book Russia, China, Japan and the
•
buyers. He stood for 10 hours sign- Mideast.
yet. at age 63 he has the look of a ied how much sleep he really ne~I am a graduate student at Marshall University in Huntington, W.Va., ing books in Phoenix.
"Success is having a predeter- man who left the gym a few minutes ed. "Less than five hours huns,"l*:
·' compiling data for my thesis project.
After meeting with friends- the mined plan and doing it.." Leave before. He is always "up.'! Mysteri- · advises.
,, I am searching for anyone who participated in or has. knowledge of the ultimate networker, he has dozens of nothing to chance. And after the ously, he rarely seems hurried.
Why, how, does he do it? ~
, Civilian Pilot Training Program (CP1) or military aviation training under the them wherever he alights- perhaps · event, whatever it ·might be,
Being up means giving undivided queslion is posed a dozen time&amp; ;a
War Training Service (WfS) at Marshall College from 1939-1944.
a speech (at $35,000 per), and "debrief yourself; ask what could I attention to the person or t,hc matter day. ·
:•
.• Although the focus of my research concerns Marshall College, I have · maybe a talk show or two, he would have done better." Learn from every before you .. "Don't be boring," and
· While his bopks, all filled with
_; questions for pilots, trainees and instructors who participated in either pro- soon resume a dizzying cross-coun- experience.
preferably not even predictable. clear, practical advice and wisdB4!
gram at any institution during this period.
try tour.
Learning is constant. When he (And "don't write a dull letter or a from his own experience, allude;m
:
Please forward any information to:
• "Pushing the Envelope" (Balian- gives a speech "I gel to meet the top so-so Christmas card.")
the answers, they still leave a htic
Norman J. Elllngham tine, $25), is from the heart, and his people.'' He loves it; he says he
Everyone wonders how he main- of wonderment, .and even provoke
1554 Terrlle8 Drive
relentless efforts, along with · the ~farns from them. They pay him, but tains the pace. Books, speeches, · deeper questions.
·
':
HunUngton, WV 25701
business
wisdom,
~e
learns
free.
And
sometimes
he
golf,
tennis,
a
syndicated
column
For
now,
he
explains
simply:
book's
inherent
(304) 523-1138
elllngh 1@marshlll.edu are likely to push "Pushing" to the might even pick up an order for and volunteer work are major inter- "The thrill of entrepreneurship
top of the bestseller lists. Nolhing envelopes.
.
ests, but he;s a family man too, mar: never goes away. 1 don't have to &lt;Ia
less will suit.
"My feedback is ages 13 years to ried to Carol Ann for 38 years, father 10-hour book signings. I don't have
· Earlier books, "Swim -,With the 90 years," he says. Everyone. Exec- of three and grandfather of five. to pul in 20-hour days." But tile
Sharks" and " Beware the Naked utives, employees, scholars, celebri· Where does he get the time?
feedback to him is nourishment.
_ By The Associated Preas
.
Man
Who
Offers
You
His
Shirt,"
lies,
athletes,
kids.
"04r
lives
"You
can't
own
lime
bul
you
can
Off he goes, ready for what he
Today is Monday, Feb. 15, the 46th .day of 1999. There are 319 days left
'
topped
lists
everywhere.
"Dig
Your
change
because
of
the
people
we
spend
it,"
he
says.
He
spencls
effiviews
as his next adventure but
in the year.
'
Well
Before
You're
Thirsty"
was
a
meet
and
what
we
read.''
ciently,
with
a
purpose.
He
is.
a
selfwhich
you
might view as the next
Today's Highlight in History:
.
bestseller,
too.
In
all,
8
million
"You
learn
from
everyone,"
he
descri~d
aphorism
junkie;
he
doeschore
on,
a
grueling, even impossiOn Feb. 15, 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine mysteriously blew up in
books
in
35
languages
in
80
counsays,
"but
to
do
so
you
must
have
n't
just
spout
them,
he
lives
by
them
ble,
schedule.
" Havana Harbor, killing more than 260 crew members and bringing the Unityour antenna up." And then debrief . too. Even when he sleeps.
·He has a final message, one
tries.
ed States closer to war with Spain ..
"Pushing"
is
loaded
page
b)'
yourself
at
the
end
of
the
day,
when,
"I
don't
like
to
go
to
sleep,"
he
pleasant
to contemplate.
On this date:
says. ,"I'm afraid I'll miss some"Find something you Jove to do
page with insights gathered by ever and wherever that might be.
In 1564, Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei was born in Pisa.
Mackay
in
his
40-year
career
at
·
On
his
prqmotional
tour
he'll
put
thing.,;
He
speaks
earnestly.
Seeking
and
you'll never have to work a day
the city of St. Louis was established.
......,.. InIn 1764,
Mackay
Envelope
Corp.,
a
Minin
20-hour
days,
day
after
day.
And
to
extend
his
day,
he
seriously
studin
your
life," he proclaims.
·
1820, American suffragist Susan B. Anthony was born in Adams,
I

'Est46lislid In 1948

I

'Monday, February 15, 1999

I

~- Pay .raise mulled

THE IMPEACHh1ENT PROCESS ...

..~ at Ohio Statehouse ·

J .

Weather
,Chance of rain forecast
.i n area by Tuesday night
By Tha Aaaoclatad Preu
aouds should be on the increase tonight as mild temperatures continue across Ohio. lows tonight are expected mainly in the 20s.
• Cloudy skies are forecast for Tuesday. Parts of western Ohio could
light rain late in the day. Highs are forecast in !he 40s and SOs \n .some
·
·
parts of the state.
·' The record-high temperature for this dale at the Columbus weather station was 70 in 1954, while the record low was four below zero in 1978.
Sunset today will be at 6:07p.m. and sunrise Tuesday will be at 7:23a.m.
·
Weather rorecast:
· Tonight... M()Stly clear. lows in the lower and mid 30s. South wind 5 to
10 mph.
·
TueSday ... lncreasing cloudiness. Highs in the mid 50s.
Tuesday night...Gioudy with a chance of rain. Lows 35 to 40.
E:ltended tcirecast:
Wednc:sd!IV....A chance of rain or snow showers during the day, partial
clearing and
Highs 40 to 45.
.
the day, but another chance of snow or rain at
in
mid 20s. Highs in the mid 40s,
·
cloudy ~ith a chance of snow showers. Morning lows
to40.
'

:Squads answer 13 calls
• · U)lits of the Meigs County Emer- HMC;
:gency Medical Service recorded 13
ll:Z&lt;\ p.m. Sunday, Bailey Run
:calls for assistance Saturday and Road, Pomeroy, Charles Napper,
:sunday. Units responding included: HMC.
I
CENTRAL DISPATCH
POMEROY
: ·: 6:42 a.m. Saturday, Township
12:46 p.m. Saturday, East Main
.Road 441, Tuppers Plains, Patsy Street, Denver Parsons, treated at
·Miller, O'Bleness Memorial Hospi- the scene;
ital;
2:01 p.m. Saturday, East Main
: ·, 9:56 a.m. Sat~rday, Overbrook · Street, Denver Parsons, VMH, Cen:[lfursing Center, Middlepon, Mil- tral Dispatch squad assisted.
•dred Arnold, Holzer Medical Center;
RUTLAND
i • 12:12 p.m. Saturday, Liberty
12:17 p.m. Salurday, Salem
:Lime, Pomeroy, Ruth .Carr, Veterans Street, Melissa Fife, VMH;
•Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy squad
4:01 p.m. Salurday, Hampton
•
d;
1I asstste
Hollow Road, Dorothy Headley,
. 9:29 p.m. Saturday, Salem Street, HMC, Central Dispatch squad
:Rutland, Melissa Fife, HMC, Rut- assisted;
-land squad assisted;
9:57 p.m. Saturday, Meigs Mine
: 5 a.m. Sunday, · Beech Street, 31, Danville Portal, Freddie Nease,
:Middleport, Troy Todd, VMH, Mid- · Pleasant Valley Hospital;
•dleport squad assisted;
2:08 p.m. Sunday, College
'- 7:45 p.m. Sunday, Race Street, Avenue, Adeline Snowden, dead on
:Middleport, Kimberly . McKenzie, arrival.

:Appeals court overturns conviction .
.; , TOLEDO (AP) - · An appeals
o6urt has overturned the conviction of
a man on charges that he broke into the
.home of a 74-year-old woman and
',r3ped and iOdomizCd her.
Robert L:e Roughlon, 39, was sentenced in May.1997 to 10 to 25 years

Harvey Mackay's"S in orbit
~Qf!.i-rJ
• h '
d. t
' d •;

.UCCeSS IS avzng a pre e errnzne :..
plan and doing it." Leave nothing to ..:j
.chance. And after the event whatever
mzght be, debnef YOUrSelf; ask What •;
cou l'-' have uone better. "L earn firom :':;
every expenence.
·:

,-Letter to .the editor

.

: "' In 1879, President Hayes signed a bill allowing female attorneys to argue
•: cases before lhe Supreme Couri.
~: In 1933, President-elect Franklin Roosevelt escaped an assassination
~· attempl in Miami that claimed the life of Chicago Mayor Anton J. Cermak.
~ W~r~d1 e:a~· t~e British colony Singapore surrendered to the Japanese during

1

-;",: In 1961 , 73 people, including an 18-member figure skating team from lhe
~ Untied States, were killed in the crash of a Sabena Airlines Boeing 707 in
-.: , Belgium.
"
..: In 1965, Canada's new maple-leaf flag was unfurled in ceremonies in
\o, Qttawa.
"~ In 1982, 84 men were killed when a huge oil-drilling rig, the Ocean
'· Ranger, sank off the cQast of Newfoundland during a fierce storm. .
·
In 1992, Benjamin L. Hooks announced plans to retire as executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Ten years ago: The Soviet Union announced lhatlhe last of its troops had
left Afghanistan, after more than nine years of military intervention.
Five years ago: 'Navy chief Adm. Frank Kelso II agreed to early retire·
ment because of criticism over the Tail hook sex abuse scandal. Viacom won
a hard-fought victory to acquire Paramounr Communications.
One year ago: Monica Lewinsky's atlorney, William Ginsburg, continued
his harsh criticism of Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr for alleged leaks
of information to lhe news media. Two Japanese ski jumpers, Kazuyoshi
Funaki and l'.jasahiko Harada; leapt to gold and bronze medals in the 120meter evefit at the Nagano Olympics.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Kevin McCarthy is 85. Country singer Hank
Locklin is 81. Former Illinois Rep. John Anderson is 77. Comedian Harvey
Korman is 72. Actress Claire Bloom is 68. Author Susan Brownmiller is 64.
·
Songwriter Brian Holland is 58.

Monica Lewinsky: The girl next door
By Sara Eckel
She's been compared to
· Greta Garbo and the Mona
Lisa. But the mystery surrounding Monica Lewin,sky came to a rather anticlimactic end after her
videotaped Senate testimo·
. ny was released recently.
And thank goodness .
Because without any access lo Lewinsky, the
press, the public and the Republican party could
only project their own cultural ideas onto her. And
the verdict was pretty clear from Day One: She
was either a wide-eyed child who had fallen prey
to a powerful man or a gum-snapping, valley ~
speaking bimbo. Or she could be nuts, a stalker - a theory the White House is alleged to have pro:.
mated. Whichever the perspective, one conclusion appeared unanimous: She was immature a11d ·
very, very stupid.
But the Monica we saw this month was perfectly composed, adult and, well,' ordinary. She
certainly wasn't the frail flower the Republicans
made her out to be when they told us in hushed,
fatherly tones that she was just a child. Indeed,

she often seemed more self-possessed than many members of Congress to grasp, for it completely
of the Republican house . managers. When Ed clashes with the myth that young women.are sti!l
Bryant awkwardly referred lo the " salacious raised with -- the one that says you can be
occasion,'/ Lewinsky quickly chastened him. "ruined" by a single indiscretion, that your entire
"Can you call it something else? ... I mean -- this sense of self-worth can be destroyed by th:e
is my relationship," she said.
ma.nipulations of a dishonest or insensitive man ..
Still, Republicans cling to the idea that she is a
But the truth is, women are jusl as resilient
damsel in distress. " Monica Lewinsky is an intel- men are, and our attitudes about sex arc just $
ligent, articulate young woman who until recent- complicated.
ly held untarnished hopes fpr tomorrow,'' said
We don'·t fit into the neat little-boxes-or yesteiRep. James E. Rogan of California.
year -- good girl, bad girl, slut, bimbo, prude• ~­
One could certainly make a sound argument and frankly, I doubt we ever did.
•·
that being the subject of Kennelh Starr's investiI'm ,not asking anyone to condone 'Monica
, gation and becoming an accidental celebrity and . Lewinsky's behavior. Having an affair with
nationwide joke will have a dclrimental effect on another woman's husband is a ·rotten thing to d&lt;).
Monica Lewinsky's futUre. But there is no evi- But it's ridiculous to define her as a victim on one
dence that the actual relati~nship she had with the hand or a deviant on ·the other. Rep. Rogan said
president did her any real harm. Yes, he was a cad · Lewinsky had "lhe image of a young woman vecy
and broke her heart. But Lewinsky seems shrewd much like a family member or a friend we might
enough to know that having an affair with the know."
'
most powerful man in the world .. who also hapThat statement might be truer than many
pens to be married -- is taking a risk, to say the Republicans would like to think.
least. If the affair had not been made public, it Copyrlghtt- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. :
seems enlirely likely that she would have walked
Send comment• to the uhor In c.ra of thl•
away from it unscathed.
.
newapeper or eend her •m•ll •t aar•e.u·
I think this is a difficult concept for many IIIJIOI.com.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Feb. 12 - Wilma
Smilh, Faye Wright, Donald
Sprague, Mrs. Terry Barr and son,
Madeline McClung.
Discharges Feb. 13 - Leah
Rutheford.
Discharges Feb. 14 - Betty
Clark, Wanda Poling, Rosa
McClaskey.
(Published .with permission)
IJennls Franz nlade his amateur debut
In a high-school production of The
Crucible. The role cost him his girtfriend, who auditiooed bu1 w"'n'l cast.

IIINAGIIIIA IOT1U (PQ13)
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tu...=:,.~:;..~.:..~ttl

:J

·.Today In History

VAMITV ILUU (R)
1:10 a t:JO DNLY

_.,

MA'fiNIU UTJIUN 1:10 i , ::10

IHI'I ALL THAT (PQ)
7:0011!10DM.Y
MA.l*IUIATIIUN 1:10.3:10

The Daily Sentinel
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atory, ..11 lh oeworvom ol (740) 99Z·
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News Department•
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•

t,
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k. .

in prison after a .Wood County Common Pleas jury found him guilty of
two counts or rape and one count each
of felonious sexual penetration and
aggravated burglary.
·
The 6th District Court of Appeals in
Toledo overturned the conviction Friday, saying county Prosecutor Alan
Mayberry violated discovery rules by
not sharing DNA evidence with
·l!.oughton 's auomey, Dan Gma, prior
to trial.
The evidence included glass slides
used.for analysis of human biological
rn,aterial, _including sem~p and blood.

Hospital news

Graduate research topic

~.:. Mass .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

- Mondlly, flet.ruwy 11, 19811

The Dally Sentinel •

3

I Death Notices I Announcements:
Dana'Red'Barton
Dana "Red" Barton, 72, Colut!J~ died Friday, Feb. 12, 1999 at his residence.
He was a retired member of the U.S. Air Force, and was a veteran of the Korean Conflict.
·
Surviving are his wife, Harue S. 'Yo" Barton; a Sister, Hazel Ancbor of
Phoenix, Ariz.; four brothers, Andrew G. Barton of Canoll, Frank Bruce Barton of
Canal Winchester, Adrian L Barton of Colum~ and Jack C. Barton of Columbus; and two nieces, three nephews and four great nieces.
.
Services will be3 p.m. Wednesday in the Evans Funell!l Home, 4171 East Uvingston Ave., Columbus, with William B. Walker officiating. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.

Anna Irene Kerwood -

Coin Club to meet
The OhKan Coin Club will hold its next meeting, Feb. 22, 7:30 p.m. It
the Riverbend Arts Council building in Middleport. The public is invitc&lt;J.
An auction will be held and refreshments will be served. Adult membership is $10 per year and for lhose under 16 it is $3.

Firefighters' association
The Meigs County Firefighters' Association will meet Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. at the Chester Firehouse.
.

Lenten breakfast planned

'

The annual Lenten breakfast will be held Wednesday at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, in the Bethany Building, Second Street. The public is invited to
auend.
'

Board to meet

Anna Irene Kerwood, 87, Gallipolis, died Saturday, Feb. 13, 1999 in the Arbors at
The E:tstern Local School District Board of Education will meet in regGallipolis.
ular sess1on Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Administration
Born Sept. 8, 1911 in Plymouth, W.\'.1, daughter of the late William &lt;lnd Della
office.
Pearl Oaigo Devault, she was a former employee of the old Bob Evans Steak House
and the Queen Bee Hael, and was homemaker.
she was a member of the First Otuteh or' the Nazarene, and a member p£ the
American legion Ladies Auxiliary.
She was also pleceded in death in 1985 by her husband, Ralph R. Kerwood, whom
she married November 5, 1927 in Plymouth; three sons, Tom Kerwood, Ralph Kerwood and \\bodrow Kerwood; and two brothers, \\bodrow Devault and James
Devault. ·.
Surviving are three daughters, OeUa (Freddie) Moore of Oteshire, Anna Belle
(Richard) McCartney of Vhverly, and Jerry Jordan of Gallipolis; a son, Owles Kerwood of Gallipolis; 11 grandchildren, 16 great-granddlildren and a great-great-grand'• Anna Irene Kerwood, 87, of Gallipolis, died Satchild; a brother, William Devault of Gallipolis; and a sister, Jerry Hager of Bidwell.
urday, February 13, 1999 in·t.heArbors at Gallipolis,
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the Waugh-Halley-v.ood Funeral Home, Gal- .
Born September 8, 1911 in Plymouth, West Virlipolis, with Pastors Alfred Holley and Gene Harmon officiating. Burial will be in ginia, daughter of the - late William Devault ·aqd
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from ~ p.m. Wednes- Della Pearl Craigo Devau It, she was a former
day.
employee of the old Bob Evans Steak House and the
American Legion Auxiliary services will he conducted in the funeral home at 7:30 Queen Bee Hotel, and was a homemaker.
p.m. Wednesday.
She was a member of the First Church of the
Nazare~e. and a member of the American Legion·
Ladies Auxiliary.
.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
Margie Jean Schuler, 78, formerly of Portland, died Friday, Feb. 12, 1999 death in 1985 by her husband, Ralph R. Kerwood,
in Ketcham's Nursing Home, Crooksville.
whom she married November 5, 1927 in. Plymouth,
Kerwood,
·
Born April 25, 19~ in Kyger, daughter of the late Earl .and Mary B. Brad- Wesl Vi,rginia; three sons, Tom Kerwood, Ralph Kerwood and .Woodrow
bury Rupe, she was a housewife, and attended the Methodist Church.
Kerwood; and two brothers, Woodrow Devault and James Devault.
Surviving are a son, Jaoob E. Schuler of Portland; a grandson; and a sisSurviving are three daughters, Della (Freddie) Moore of Cheshire, Anna
ter, Gertrude Sabin of Marysville.
Belle (Richard) McCartney of Waverly, and Jerry Jordan of Gallipolis; a son,
She was also preceded in death by her hqsband, .Paul M. Schuler; an infant Charles Kerwood of Gallipolis; 11 grandchildren, 16 great-gfandchildren
son, Larry Schuler; a brother, Wade B. Rupe; and·her stepfather, Dale Sisson. and a greal-great-grandchild; a brother, William Devault of Gallipolis; and a
Services will be 10 a;m, Tuesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, sister, Jerry Hager of Bidwell.
'
with Charles Mash officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday, February 18, 1999 in the Waugh-Hal Cheshire. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
ley-Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis, with Pastors·Alfred Holley and Gene
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Kyger Harmon officiating. Burial will follow in Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends
-Methodist Church.
·
may call at the funeral home on Wednesday, February 17, 1999 ·from 5-8
p.m.
American Legion Auxiliary services will be conducted in . the funeral
home
at .7:30 p.m. Wednesday, February 17, 1999.
Jen'nifer Sellers, 18, DeWitt's Run Road, Long Bottom, died Sunday, Feb.
The
grandsons will serve as pallbearers.
14, 1999 from injuries sustained in ~n auio accident nearAthens.
The
family
will .also receive friends at the family residence at 33 Smithers
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.
Avenue in Gallipolis on Tuesday, February 16, 1999 and Wednesday, February 17, 1999.

a

Anna Irene Kerwood

Margie Jean Schuler

Jennifer. Sellers

Adeline Harrison Snowden

Adeline Harrison Snowden, 79, Rutland, died Sunday, Feb. 14)999 at her
residence on College Avenue.
·
Born Nov. 27, 1919 in Meigs County, daughter of the late Ernest and Faye
Spires Harrison, she was a homemaker; and a teacher's aide for the Meigs Local
School District.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Alberta and John Montgomery of
-Athens; a son Bl)d daughter-in-law, Jeff and Carolyn Snowden of Rutland; two
grandchildren and two great-gradchildren; a sister-in-law, .Lola Harrison of
Rutland; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by a grandson, Travis Reeve; two brothers,
Morris and Floyd Harri5on; and three sisters, Frances Johnson, Elnora Stivers·
and Ada Harrison.
·
·
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Wednesda'y in theBirchfield Funeral Home,
Rutland, with Doug Shamblin officiating. Burial will be in the Miles Cemetery,
Rutland. friencls may call at the funeral home froin 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Margie Jean Schuler

Margie Jean Schuler, 78, formerly of Portland, died Friday, February 12,
1999 in Ketcham's Nursing Home, Crooksville.
A housewife, she was born April 25, 1920 in Kyger, daughter of the late
Earl Rupe and Mary B. Bradbury Rupe. She attended the Methodist Church.
She is survived by a son, Jacob E. Schuler of Ponland; a grand.son,
Thomas E. Schuler of Tuppers Plains; a sister, Gertrude Sabin of Marysville;
a special nephew, Gary W. Rupe of Roseville; and a special friend, Helen
Isenhower of Pomeroy.
.
·
'
She was preceded in death by her husband, Paul M. Schuler; an infant
son, Larry Schuler; father, Earl Rupe; mother, Mary Sisson; brother, Wade
· B. Rupe; and a stepfather, Dale Sisson.
·
Services will be held Tuesday, February 16, 1999 at 10 a.m. in the Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Charles Mash officiating. Burial will follow
in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call Monday, February 15, 1999 from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Charles J. _White, 71, Columbus, died Friday; Feb. 12, 1999 at his residence.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Kyger
He was born June 18, 1927 in Meigs County, son of the late Theodore and Methodist Church.
Jennie Braham White, he was a retired founder and business owner of the
White Dislributing Co., a U.S. Navy ·veteran, and a member of the Eastgate
Lodge 603, F &amp; AM.
Adeline Harrison Snowden, 79, of Rutland, died on Sunday, February 14,
He is survived by his wife, Sarah Lucille Genheimer White; a son and
daughter-in-law, Larry Clement and Awilda While of Columbus; a daughter 1999 at her residence on College Avenue.
She was born on November 27, 1919 in Meigs County, the daughter of
and son-in-Jaw, Yvonne Lee and David ~ancino of Canal Winchester; one
the
late Ernest Harrison and Faye Spires Harrison. She was a homemaker, )
granddaughter; five sisters and three brothers-in-law, Cora Bailey of Hudson,
and
a teacher's aide for the Meigs Local School District.
.
Fla., Clara Belle and Charles Landers of Pomeroy, Joann Fortner of Hudson,
Surviving
are
a
daughter
and
son-in-law,
Albena
and
John
Montgomery
Helen and Neil Dickson of aeveland, N.C., and Alice Jane and Elmer Payton
of Athens; a son and daughter-in-law, Jeff and Carolyn Snowden of Rutland;
of Deltona.
a sister-in-law; lola Harrison of Rutland; a special friend, Bill Deem of RutHe was also preceded in death by a brother, Raymond White.
r.femorial services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the .Schoedinger East land; two grandchildren, Melanie (Rick) Reeve of Albany, and Amber
(Adam) Snowden, both of Rutland; two great grandchildren, Michael and
Chapel,. 5360 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus.
·
Rebecca Reeve, both of Albany; and Several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a grandson, Travis
Reeve; two brothers, Morris and Floyd Harrison; and three sisters, Frances
Clara M. Will!ams, 88, Clifton, W.Va., died Saturday, Feb. 13, 1999 at her Johnson, Elnora Stivers and Ada Harrison.
·
residence.
Services will be held on Wednesday, February 17, 1999 at ll a.m. in the
Born Aug. 29, 1910 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., daughter of the iate John Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland, with Doug Shamblin officiating. BurThomas and Luella Love McDermitt, she was the owner and operator of ial will follow in the Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
Williams Grocery.
. , Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday, February 16, 1999
She was a member of the Bend Area Quilters Club, the Clifton United from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Methodisl Church and United Methodist Women, the Order of the Eastern
Star Chapter 157 in M~n. W.Va., the Order of the White Shrine of
The Concorde be'gan the first
The Woodstock Music Festival,
Jerusalem Lafayette Chapter 82, was a former member of the Mason Exten- near Bethel , N.Y. , drew 300,000 to ~c heduled supersonic commercial
sion Homemakers, and was a charter member of the West Virginia Farm 500,()()() people Aug. 15-17. 1969.
service in 1976.
Museum Mason County Bell in 1982.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Lloyd E. Williams, in
1976; a son, Thomas L. Williams; and by a sister and seven brothers.
Surviving are lwo daughters,' Anna (Denver D.) Blake and Phyllis M.
(Richard) Gilkey, both of Clifton; a daughter-in-law, Helen M. Williams of
•
Indian Head, Md.; five grandchildren, three great-grandchildren and two
step-great-grandchildren: and a brother, Lawrence McDermill of Nitro, W.Va .
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Clifton United Methodist
Churcli, with the Rev. Terry Alvarez officiating. Burial will bi: in the Suncrest
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, from 2·
4 and 7-9 p.m. T~esday.
\

Charles J. White

Adeline Harrtson Snowden

Clara M. Williams

MEIGS COUNtY·REAL ESTATE OWNERS
THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1998
COLLECTION OF THE ·REAL EST~TE ·TAXES,
ALSO FOR DELINQUENT TAXES.
CLOSING DATE IS MARCH 8, 1999
·TUlLER TAX. DEADLINE 1$ F.EBRUARY 10; 1999
NO EXTENSION WILL BE GRANTED ON TRAILER
TAXES.
HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

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'Pomeroy
'Lebanon
'Wilmington
•sardinia

'Greenfield

'Gallipolis
'DayJon
'Hillsboro
'Springfield
'Circleville

'Nelsonville
'Middletown
'Washington CH
•west Union

'

•

�•

'
Monday, February 15, 1999

llle Daily Sentin~! :~

Sports

·

Gordon edges .Earnhardt in home stretch, wins Daytona 500

Monday, February 15, 1999 · _,..

1!)- MIKE HARRIS

'~~

Lady Eagles take sole possession of Hocking Division title

Eastern defeats Federal Hocking 42-39.··
The league's twq best teams
squared off in the unofficial title bout
for the Tri- Valley · Conference
Hocking Division champi-onship
Sat_urday afternoon, and the game
lived up to its expectations.
In a game that went to the wire
Eastern's Lady Eagles scored a dramatic 42-39 wi n over the Federal
Hocking Lancers to claim the league
title outright.
Eastern ( 17-2 overall &amp; 14-2 In
the Hocking Division) is ranked 13th
1n the stale, while Federal bows out
at 15-4 and 12-4.
Eastern's Becky Davis rose to the
occasion, and despite dislocating her
shoulder early in the game, came
back to spark the Eagles to the Will
with 14 points. Jesstca Brann on
added ten and Valerie Karr eight
Dav1s had eight points the f~rst
quarter on two three pointers and
another that was whistled as a two,
then a dramatic defensive pla y slid
1nto the wall and dislocated her
shoulder. After a break m the trainers
room , Davis came back to play the
second half.
,
The game went right to the wire
Eastern led the entire diStance, taking
GETS REBOUND - Meigs forward Daniel Hannan (5) gets the an initial 15' 5 lead and leading 15-8
rebound in front of River Valley postman Mike Westbrook In the first
half of Saturday night's rematc" at Meigs High School, where the
Marauders' 42-40 win gave the home teams the victory for the eighth
straight time In this series. (OVP photo by G. Spence~ Osborne)

after the first round. At the half
Eastern led 21- 16 and after three
rounds 30-26. Federal finally came
back in the last round on a long three
pointer by Shelly Bush, who tied the
game at 38-38 , then made .a free
throw as she was fouled on the play.
Juli Hayman drew her fourth foul on
the play and was substituted by
Danielle Spencer, who ended up
making two free throws the b1ggest
of her career.
Hayman's foul came with 58 seconds left when Federal took its only
lead. On the ensuing play, guard
Amber Baker found an unguarded
Spencer underneath. Baker fed a
great pass to Spencer who was fouled
an d went to the line for two huge free
throws, where in the clutch she hit
them both after coach Pierson ca lled
a lime out to ice her Spencer hit
nothing but net, 40-39 Eastern lead·
ing. Federal took the ball out and
never got a shot off until four seconds. Bush shot and missed.
Brannon got the rebound and was
fouled, where she hit two to ice the
game.
Coach Paul Brannon sa1d, "The
to this game was in the third
qu.~rt&lt;er against 'southern. We came

Two stra1ght baskets by Mollohan
pulled the Raiders to within 28-25
w1th 39 seconds left. But Beha connected on a three point play with I 0
seconds left and Me1gs held a 31-25
lead heading into the final pen od.
R1ver Valley in the fourth period
chipped away at the Metgs lead, and
pulled to within 33-32 when Fowble
hu one of two from the line with 3:57
remaining.
But Beha answered with a threepointer from the left corner to give
Meigs a 36-32 advantage. The two
teams continued to trade buckets
down the stretch ~Hh Meigs holding
anywh~re from a two to four point
lead .
Foy;ble, who scored nme points in
the fourth period, scored on a followup with 35 seconds led to cut the
Marauder lead to 41:40 The Raiders
sent Hannan to the line with 22 seconds left and the seniOr made one of
two to give Meigs a a 41-391ead.
The Marauders fou led Jame s with
eight seconds left, and the Marauders
called two consecullvc time outs, to
try and ice the talented senior.
James made the first shot to make
it a 41-40 contest, but missed the second with Hannan grabbing the
rebound. Daniel was fouled with
seven seconds left and hu one of two
to put Meigs up 42-40
R1 ver Valley went to James for the
last shot, and his jumper from about
10 fe et out along the right baseline
went off the side of the ~ron as lime
expired to g1ve the Marauders the
win.
The Marauders had , a balanced
scorin g auack, with nobody sconng
1n double figures. Hannan, Beha and
Rodriguez each scored nine pomts,
Humphreys added seven.
The Marauders were 14 of 32
from the noor mcluding four of 10
three pointers for 43%. Me1gs went
to the lin e 17 times and hit 10 for
59%. The Marauders pulled down 37
rebo und s led by Humphreys with 12.

'

in scoring with nine. Amber ...:
Vans icicle had 7.
- '
For Federal , Tracy Sidwell had
II, and Beth Withem hac'! nine.
. ...
Quarter wtab
,"
Eastern ..................... .. 15-6-9-12~42·.
Federal Hocking ........ 8-8-10-13~39 · ,·,
Easteni: Jessica Brannon 2-Q, -~
619= I0, Valerie Karr 4-0-0=8, Juli~ :1
Hayman 1-0-2/4=4, A~i Wolfe ()..! •
0/2=2 , Amber Baker 2-0-0/1=4,
Danielle Spencer 0-0-212=2, Becky ··_;
Davis 2-3-113= 14. Totals: 11-3· '· ·
11/21=42
Federal Hocking: Susie Bond 2'
(S« EAGLES on PageS)

.. '
, ·.

Boys

EASTERN
Boys

Girla

2!16- Vinton Co (H)
2/,18- Federal Hocking (A)

N. llhnoism Cent M1chigan

N~A standings

·'

Other NCAA Division I
men's scores

: EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

:rum

2/16- Southern (A)
2!19- Trimble (Al_
2/20- Waterford (H)

.W L en.

. . .. 5

I

.833

PhaJadelptuu .. . . ......... 4
Do~1on
.2

I
2

800
500

New York . . ...

. 2

2

·500

MIIMl .. . . ... . . .. .... 2
New Jersey . . . . . . .... I
"Wuh~ng1on .......... T " •••.•••• 1

3

400
250
.250

Orlluldo . .. .. ... .. .

3
3

Centr11l Division
. '
I
Atlama
.. .. .. .. . . .... 4 2
Jnduma . . .. . . . .. ... . 4 2
Deuoi1 . . . . .. . . , ..... :\ 2
CLEVELAND ...... . ......... 2 .l
Toronto
.. 1 3
I
4
Chatlotle . . . . . .
Chtc!ago ..................... I 4
Mtlwauk~

2/20- Sectional Tournaments at
Alexander vs South Gallia or
Symmes Valley 1 pm

-·-

-

'

2

2

2':
.l
)

7SD
667

667
.600

.400
.250
200
200

,,

I

I

2
.l
4',

,,

4',
·· '

Padfte DI"VIsion

Seat~ . ... . ... .. .. . .. .. ... 5

0 I 000
2 600
J 500

Phoe t:t. .. . .. . ......... 3
L.A •km ........... .. ..... 3
Portlind
.. . .. . , . 2
Sacramento. .. ....... ....... 2

2

500

2 .SOO

Golden State .......... ......... .1
LA Clippers ......... : ., ....0

~

.167

5

000

Saturday's scores
Plloentx 107, L.A. Cl1fpers 104-0T
Seaule lOS, penver 9

Sunday's scores
Siln AntoniO 89, Chtca1o 76
Orlando 85. Mtlwaut:ee 81
Phtladelphta 78, Adanta 70
Vancou,er 96, Dallns 92
lnduma 101. LA Lakers 99
Mmneso1 n 95 L.A. Clippers 73
Golden Sta le 10.5. Pordtmd I00-20T

Tonight's game5
Dctrcll at New York. I p.m.
New Jeuey Bt MtBml , 8 p m.
Soctamento nt Utah. 9 p m
Phoem x a1. Denver. 9 p m
Dallas at Portland. l 0 p m
Mtnnt~ota at Golden State. 10 30 p m

Thesday 's games
r

Mt lwnukee at Philndelphta, 7 p.m
Orlnndc ot CLEVELAND . 7 ~ p m
Detroit at New Jersey. 7:30pm.
Toronto at New Yotk. 7.30 p m
Mtami :u Indiana, 8 p m.
Atlanta at Chicago. 8:30pm
Phoenix ot H()uston , 8 ~0 p m
Utah at Seattle, 10 p rn
Boston at Sncrarnc:nlo. 10 JO p.m.
Vanco uver vs LA. Cltppers at Anahetm 10. ~0

pm.

Chnrlone at LA laken. 10 \0 p m

Big Ten men's standings
Iwn

.... ~ ..

Michigan St

OHIOST

.w
.. I I

9
Wisc(lMtn ..
9
Purdlle
6
Iowa
.7
Indiana ... . ..
6
Nonhwestern ..•
6
Minnesota .. .. ' ' 5
4
Michi~an
Penn , t
2
llhnots
... ' ' .2

Lady Marauders
whip Miller 83-21

Cont.

L f£1.

I .917
750
4 692
5 545
6 5.18
6 .soo
6 .soo
7 417
8 ~31
to .167
II ll4
.l

Overall

.w22

L &amp;

4 B46
19 6 760
21 5 BOB
IB 7 720
\6 7 696
\9 8 704
.6.16
14
14 8 6.16
10 I5 .400
10 12 455
10 IS 400

•

Saturday's scores
lndmna 69 , Nonhwestem 62-0T
Mi~ ht gan St 84, ~innesotn 82
OHIO ST 7J Iowa 69
Purdu e 6l Illtnots .56
Wt sc onstn 7J, Penn St. 6J

Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs opened up a 40-7 lead at
the half and coasted to an 83-21 win
over Miller in gi rl s' Tri -Valley
Conferen ce
basketba ll
act1on
Saturday.
The Marauders (1 6-2 overa ll &amp;
14- 1 in the Ohio Di v1sion) are currently tied for the top spot in the divi sion with Alexander. A Marauder
Win m thelf fu\al regular seasor contest at Well ston on Monday wi ll give
them a share of the champ1 onship.
Me1 gs held a 14-4 lead after one
period as Amber VInin g and Brooke
Williams scored six points each 1n
the penod . The second penod however was all Meigs as the Marauders
outscored th-e hust26-3to take the 33 Quarter 1l!tlll:i
point halfttme lead . Becky Smuh Meigs ..... . ..... ..... 14-26 -20 -23~83
paced Me1gs in the penod pouring in · Miller ....................... 4-3-9- 5~2 1
Ill points. .
.
Meigs: Amber Vining 7-1·2~ 19,
In the thlfd penod Me1gs held a Brooke Williams 5-0-4~14 , Tracy
20-9 advantag~ to ope n up a 60- 16 Coffey 2 -0- 2~6 . Becky Smith 6-0lead heading . '~to the_ fin al pcnod 4~ 16, Tncia DaVIS 3-0-7~ 13, Tony a
Vmmg and Tnc1a DaviS each scored M1ller 2 - 0-0~4 Shan non Price 1- 1seven points 1n the period
. . o~s . Tiffany' Halfhill 1 -0·2~4 .
Me1gs closed out the sconng 10 Mari ssa Whaley 1-0-0-2 totals:
the final penod. placing eight girls in 28-2-21=83
' ·
the sconng co lumn mid coasting to
Miller: Cenna Braglin 2-0- 1, 5,
the 62 point Win .
KriSten Plant 2-0·4~9. Felicia Pmgc
. Me1gs had f?~r g~rl s In double 0-0-2:2. Cassie Lackrone 1-0-0=2,
figures led by Vmmg wuh 19, Sm1th Heather Compston 2-0-0~4 Totals·
added 16. Brooke Williams added 14 7-0·7=21
·

L

M14wut

Thursday's game

Compliments of:

and Davis 13. Mei gs hit 29 of 61
from the nour including two of 10
three pointers for 47 %. Meigs went
to the !me 24 umcs and hll 21 for
88%.
Me1gs pulled down 27 rebound s
led by Davis with e1ght, the
Marauders only had e1ght turnovers,
had 20 ass.Ist led by Dav is with six
and 13 steals led by Vining with four.
Kristen Plant led Miller with
eight.
Reserve notes: In the reserve
game Me1gs posted a 39-16 win.
Amy Hysell led the way wuh 13,
Stephanie Wigal added nine The
Little Marauders own a 14-0 mark in
the TVC and are. 14-3 overall.

1\tesday's game
Putdut il l M'tchigan St

Wednesday's games
1\hnots'at Nonhwestern
Mtnnesora at Penn St
OHIO ST ar lnd1aM

'·

MAC men's standings
Conr.

.11: L &amp;

Iwn

.w
19

Overall

L &amp;

4 B26
.14 I 933
792
12 4 750 19
5 667 Jl B 652
10 l .667 ll B 652
O,HIO
... ... 9 l . .641 ll 7 6B2
Akron
MARS HALL . ' 10 6 625 ll 9 625
ijuffalo . . .. .. .. . 0 ll 000 4 22 154

M11m11
..
Kem ...
' Green
'
BQwlmg

.

'"

We5t Division

''

. 9 6
Toledn
Ball Sl.. ...
.. " . 9 6
Cent Mtch1gan ... " 6 9
l II
W Michi ga n ..
1 12
E Michtgan
N lllmois
... . I 1.1

.600 17
.600
400 9
)IJ

2011

071

)

l

Ball St 69. Cenl Mu.: hignn 6\
Bowling Gn:en 84, Buflnlo 61
Kent 92. Akron Rl
MARSiiALL 81 Toledo 12
Mtmm178, E. Michtgan 56
OHIO 74. W. Mtchtgan ~5

ToniKht's game

Akron' ut

N llhnots

Wednesday's gam&lt;s
Ball S1 at W Mk h1!an
Bowh ng Green 01 Akmn
MARSHALL at Buffalo
Miami at To ~do
OHIO atE M1chigan

'

6
8

''10 "14

Saturday's scores

''

River · Valley coach Carl Wolfe
declined comment after the contest.
Meigs (7 -11) will host Vinton
County on Tuesday.
River Valley who went into the
contest ranked 12th in the state in
Division 11 drops to 12-5 overall,
they will travel to Chesapeake
Tuesday.
.
Reserve notes: In a low scoring
reserve game Meigs posted a 28-20
win . J.P. Staats was the only
Marauder in double figures with 14.
Keith Stout led the Raiders with
eight.

vict~ries, ducked under leader Rusty
Wallace heading toward the first tum
and squeezed past the slow-moving
lapped car of Ricky Rudd , drawing a
gasp from the standing 'crowd of
185,000.
Wallace probably lost his chance
of winning tbe 500-mile race for the
first time when his team chose to
keep him on the traek while most of
the other leaders pitted for fresh tires
during the final caution period. That
yellow nag came out 27 laps from
the end after Bobby Hamilton

crashed. .
Kenny Irwin, last year's top rook, ie, finished third, . followed by
Earnhardt teammate Mike Skinner
and Michael Waltrip. Wallace wound
up eighth.
The race went 94 laps l&gt;efore the
first caution nag waved when a car
. stalled on the track.
After some close early racing, the
field stretched out and broke up into
drafting groups, with the front -runners pulling awa¥.
Wallace ,- who led L04 laps, took
the top spot for the first time on lap
58 and was able to stay at or near the
front until Gordon's late pass
Gordon led only 17 laps, but that
Quarter l01ilk
included
the final 11 He played it
River Valley ........... 8-12-5-15~40
safe
for
most
of the race, saving his
Meigs ............ , ......7- 12-11 - 11=42
daring
move
for when it counted
River Valley: Aaron Sullivan 1-0most.
0=2, Joey James 4-0- 1=9, Shawn
The 200-lap race was incredibly
Mercer 1-0- 1=3, M1ke We stbrook 3- compeutive, with nearly co nstant
0-2~8. Ryan Fowble 4-0-3=11, Mike
battles for posi tion . But with the
Mollohan 3-0- 1=7. Totals: 16-0- restrictor plates that slow the cars
8=40
.
keep them bunched, the
Meigs: Daniel Hannan 2- 1 -2~9, and
inevitable multi-car crash came on
J.T. Humphreys 2-0-3~7, Kyle
Smiddie 1-0-0=2, Steve Beha 1-2- lap 135 when two-time Daytona win1~9 . Dwayne Madison 1 -0- 0~2 , ncr Dale Jarrett spun 1n traffic.
Angelo Rodriguez 2- 1 -2~9, Grant Thirteen cars were involved, with no
Abbott 1-0-2=4. Totals: 10-4-10=42 injuries reported .

Gordon averaged 161.551 mph. ~
His margin of victory in the battle of ~
Chevrolets was 0.128 of a second. (:!,
Earnhardt Started founh and chal- ::0
lenged for the lead in the early-going. !;I
But, by the firs1 pit stops, he had fall- ~
en back with an ill-handling car. A :;.
slow pit stop cost him more ground ;::
and he found himself nearly a half -&lt;:
lap behind at the halfway point.
•
To make matters worse, he was • ;
losing engine power because of an ; :
electrical problem Fortunately, the . , !
Winston Cup cars have a backup :
electrical system and Earnhardt was '
able to switch over before falling too
far off the pace.
Once the cautions began flying ,
he was able to get close to the lead- ·
ers again and moved into second on
lap · 166, trailing ~allace . But
'i
Earnhardt never led
'

Eagles...

·.l

(Continued from Page 4)
4
0
0 - ~ ' Sh e 11 Y Bush 2-2-112=11 ,
Jenny Bush · 1- 1-3/5=8, Turella
Waderker 2-0-0=4, Abbte Linscott O0-2/2=2, Hannah Sayers 1-0-0=2 ,
Jaime Limcott 3-0-2/2=8. Totals:
11-3-8/11=311

·~

::,

:·:
.,
•. 1

:!

I

·

':~
•' '

Basketball

2/15- Wellston (A)
2/17- Sectional Tournaments at

949-2210 (RACINE)
992-6333 (SYRACUSE)

run at Gordon on the back straight·
away. But the seven-time series
champion just couldn't catch the
winner of NASCAR's premier event
and the Winston-Cup season-opener.
" I couldn't even get to his
bumper," Earnhardt said. "If I could
have, maybe I could have done
something with him. But he was
mong."
Gordon, who also won the
Daytona 500 in 1997, took the lead
with a daring move on lap 190.
The Kid, who now has 43 career

..
·'

·. .

Scoreboard

(See MARAUDERS on Page 5)

By DAVE HARRIS

Chant Abbott added seven and the line 14 times and hit eight for
Roilriguez and Hannan each added 57%.
SIX.
Rt ver Va11ey pu1led down 16
Meigs turned the ball over 18 rebounds led by Westbrook with six.
times, had one steal, four assists led The Raiders turned the ball over six
by Humphreys with two. Humphreys times and had one steal The Raiders
also had all of the Marauders ' four were ca1led for 19 personal fouls .
blo, ked shots . Meigs was called for
''I'm very proud of the kids effort
1~ personal fouls.
tonight," Marauder coach Chris Stout
• Fowble led all scorers with II said. "Everybody gave maximum
P&lt;$ints, James added nine, Westbrook effort, I told the kids that lack of coneight and Mollohan seven. The fidence was the only thmg keeping
Raiders hit 16 of 46 for a cool 35%, us from being a good basketball
thh missed all three 'of their three team. I think a win like this takes
point attempts. The Raiders went to care of that problem."

WESTERN CONFERENCE

BIG MONEY ON THE LINE - Racine Home National Bank will
give away $1,000 in cash Tuesday night's Shawnee State-Rio
Grande doubleheader at the Newt Oliver Arena. The women's game
tips off at 5:30 p.m. The men's game begins at 7:30 p.m. Tom Wolfe
of Racine Home National Bank (left) presents Redman head coach
Earl Thomas with the sponsorship check for Tuesday's game.

-the biggest in auto r~ing history
- as he got to the finish line about
two car-lengths ahead of Earnhardt.
The Intimidator did everything he
could to catch the leader on the last
trip ~round the 2 1/2-mile oval at
Daytona International Speedway.
"I had a mirror-full today;" the
27-year-old Gordon said. "It's a
dream come true for me to race Dale
Earnhardt all the way to the finish
line in the Daytona 500."
Earnhardt eased off the accelerator driving off turn two and took a

Marauders ... (Continued from P~ge 4)

2/17- Sectional Tournaments at
Alexander vs Miller_at 8 pm

Girla

Girla

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
.:...- Jeff Gordon has learned well from
the master, Dale Earnhardt.
The lessons helped him win his
second Daytona 500 in a thrilling,
lat~-race shootout with Earnhardt on
Sunday.
'' He taught me so much out
there," Gordon said. "He's probably
going to tell you I learned too much
from him."
The two-time, defending series
champion had a $2.1 million payday

.

2/16- Eastern (H)
2/20- Trimble (H)

MEIGS

Meigs boys outlast
River Valley 42-40
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs outscored River Valley 11 5 tn the th1rd period, and held off the
Raiders down the stretch to upset
Ri ver Valley 42-40 in basketball
action Saturday evening at Meigs
Hi gh School.
Me1gs had to survive a last second
shot by Raider standout Joey James.
H1s 10 footer from the nght baseline
came off the side of the iron as time
ex pired.
It was an exciting contest from
stan to finish, played before a large
crowd. The Raiders biggest lead
came at three points (twice in the
· first half) , and the Marauders biggest
was seven in the second half
R1ver Valley jumped out to an
early 4-3 lead behind to buckets by
James, sandwiched around a Steve
Beha three pointer. But Meigs came
back and took a 7-4 lead on four
straight points by Grant Abbott.
River Valley came back and took
an 8-7 lead at the end of the first penad on another James bucket wi th tw o
seconds left.
Daniel Hannan gave Me1gs the
lead ( I 0-8) to stan the second penod
on a long three pointer from the left
wing. But the Raiders stormed back
and took a 15- 12 lead on a pa1r of
Ryan Fowble free throws With 4:48
remaining.
Angelo Rodngucz t1ed the game
at 15 with a trifecta w1th 4 44 left.
, After a J.T Humphreys free throw,
another bucket by Rodnguez gave
Meigs an 18- 15 lead.
Three straight po1nts by M1ke
Westbrook, the las t commg on a free
throw with two seconds left 11ed the
game at 20-all at halftime.
Meigs came out in the th1rd penod and took a 24-20 lead on two
straight Hannan baskets. After a
Shawn Merce r free throw cut 11 to
24-2 1, Humphreys scored four
straight for Me1gs to g1ve them thelf
biggest lead of the mght at 28-2 1
w1th 1·30 left.

out . a~d outscored them 26-3 . . I
thought at that time this will go. a
long way for us and it d1d. We had a
couple bad games against Waterford
and South Gallia and th.at gave us
some momentum. "
Eastern hit 11-29 two-pointers, 35 three-pointers, and had 3~
rebounds (Brannon .10, Karr 10,
Angie 'Wolfe 6). Eastern had six
assists · (Juli Hayman 3, Brannon
two); 12 steals (Amber Baker 4, Karr
3); 20 turnovers, and 18 fouls .
No Federal statistics were available.
Reserve notes: Eastern lost the
reserve game 39-27. Eastern was led

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

19

17

7.\9

6'2

)91
417
1.\6
221

Saturday's action
East
Bucknell .57 Colsnte 4.5
Cent Connecltcut St. 56 Mo1.1nt St Mary 's, Md
Cormeclicut ~3, Seton Hall 48
Cornell14, Harvard 64
Dmrtmouth 66, Columbia 61
Dc!aw!ll'e 80, Vennont 62
Drexel 77. Nonheastcm 68
East Carolina S9, AmenciUI U ~5 '
Fnirleigh Dtckinson 66, Qutnnip!ac 49
Georgetown 99. Southern. NO 7'
Hartford 65. Towson S6
Hofstra 58, Boston U. .5~
Holy Cross 73, Anny 59
lona 77, Manhattan 61
Miami 69, Prov1dence 65
Nta@ara 95, Fairfield 9'
Penn 71 . Yale 50
Pnnceton 67. Brown 4.5
Rhode Island ~9. Massachuseus 56
Robert MorriS 72, Monmouth, N J. 70
Rutgers 7~. Boston College 62
S1 John 's 82. Villanova 7.5
Virgtma Tech 79. Fordham 75·0T
Wagner 72. St Francts, Pa 62
South
Akorn St. 77, Alabama A&amp;.M 68
Appalach1an St 8~ , VMI 65
Auburn 102, Alabama 61
Coastal Caroltna HI , N C ·Ashe"11le 73
Coli of Char\euon 58, Chattanooga 53
Coppin St. 7~. Bethune-Cookman 67
Duke 102, Wake Forest71
E Tenne~~ St 82, David~o n 7~
Fin 1nternllltona188, SW Louisiana 6.5
Rondt~ 75. Gcorg1a 64
Flonda A&amp;M 91, M011an St. 67
Florid11 AtlantiC 56, Centenary S~
' GeorJe Mason 60. N C -Wilmmgton S~
G~orgia St 51 . Samford ~4
Hampton 64. N Caroltna A&amp;T 5]
Jackson St 65.' Gramblina St 63
Jacksonvllle 6~. Mereer 61
l ochunville St 68, Campbell 60
Kentut:ky 74, South Carolina 40
Ltbcny 72 H1gh Pmn! ~5
Loutsmno Tech 87, W Kentucky 71
Mars hall 81 Toledo 72
Maryland 81 North Car()hnn 64
Md ·Eastern Shore 71 Howard S4
M1ddle Tennessee 87, Austm Peay 81
Morehead St 91 E. Kentucky 69
Murray St 94, E llltncls 89-20T
NE l oui sia na 18, Northwestern St ~8
Old Dom1nion 70 W111iam &amp; Mary 48
Radford 72, Elon 71
Richmond 78 Vn Commonwealth 72
S Carohna St B . Norfolk St. 72
SE M1ssoun 60, Tenn -Morun 49
South Flonda 72. Southern MJSs ~7
Southern U 11 , Alnbama St 5'
Stetson 80. TTOy St. 76
Tennessee 6J Vandcrb1l1 62
Ten nessee St 68 , Tennessee Tech 61
The Cttadel 86. W Carohna 82
UNC-Grcensboru 8J Gcorgh1 Southt"rJ} '\6
Woffortl69 Funrntn,57
Q
Midwest
Cle\eland St 87 , Wnght St . 64
,DePau\81 , Memphts 1~
DetrOit 61 Butler 52
lndmnn St 67 Drake 48
Kansrts St. 77. Baylor 68
Marquett e 69, N C Charlone .59
Mtssoun 87. Cplorado '6
N Iowa 87, Wic hita St 82
Nebraska 59, Iowa St 57
Oakland, Mich 79 Ollcago St 6)
S lllmots 80, EvnnAvtlle 65 ,
SW Mmoun St 61. Bradley 48
w mnou 84, Jnd -Pur -lndpls. 79
Wis · Milwaukee 71, Ill -Chicago 57
Youngstown St 61. Valpanmo 60
Southwest
Arkansas 82, Mtsstsst ppt St 62
ArkansllS St. 74 Ark -Lillie Rock ~5
Houston 76, Tulane 72
Lamar 83. Texas-Arlington 62
McNttse S• 37, Sam Houston St 72
Min Valley St 84, Pmine View 6~
NJcholls St 104, Tex111·San Antonio 99-20T
Oklllhomml02. Tuas A&amp;M 75
Orl'll Robens 98. M1ssoun-Kansas Ctty 90
Rtce 59, UNLV 55
SW Texas 6,, SE loUISiana .51
Southem Meth. 75. Wyommg 72
Texas Christian 84. Colomdo St 79
Texa.'i Southern 84 Ark -Pme Bluff 68
Texas Tech 90. Kansas 84
Texas-EI Paso 70, San Jose St 64-0T
Tulsa 78, Aar Force 7~
Far West
Ariwna 78, LSU 71
Boac:' St 70. New Mell.tco St 48
Bngham Young 9J . San Die&amp;o St. 70
CS Northndge 8~ . Montano St 62
Cal Poly-SLO 87. Long Beach St. 79
Cal St.-Fullerton 104, UC lrvtne 97
Cahfomia 85 , UCLA 67
Gonuso69. SIU} Diego 62
ldnho 85, Nonh Texas 66
N Anton !'I 74, Montana :U
New Mextco 83. Fresno St 81
Oregon 94. Wnshmgton g I
Oreson St 83 Washmgtoo St 64
S. Utah 69. Denver 6-'
Smcramento St 66, E Washington 62
S:m Fr~ncisco ID, Loyola Mnrymount 71
Southem Cal 86, Sumfunl 82-0T
St Mary 's. Cal 68 Port\nnd 56
UC So mtt Barbara 60. Pn c1 fi1.: 38
UHlh 82 Hnwon 55
Utah St 66. Ne"ado 60

Sunday's action
East
Laltlyette' 85. Lehtgh 49
Lo)•ola Md 1110. St Pctet ·~ M
Mrune 91 New H amp~ ht rt 66
S1e1\tl 81 Rid~r 74
St Bonave nture 69. Du4uesnc 62 ,
St Francts, NY 94 Long l ~land U 81
Syrncuse 75 Jlinsbutgh 67
Wen V1rgum1 8'i Noire O:tnlt' NO
South
Clemson 7tl Flondn St 4"i
LouJ S\'tllc 78. Georgin Tech 'it!
Virgin in 81 N Carulma S1 19-0T

George Washington 69. Dayton 65
lllmois St. 79. Cre1ghton 77
Samt Louts 69. Cincmnat1 .57
Xav1er 62. Temple 60
Southwest
Texas 13. Okll\homa St 68
Far We!it
Santa Chra 66. Pepperdme :'i2

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Saturday's action

McDern1ott NW 64, Oak Hills 61
McDona ld 72, Mathews ~7
Metgs 42, Chcshtre Rt\er Vo:~lley 40
MentO! L11k.e Cat h 19, Padu a 78
Mercerbur&amp; Pa 7J. Akron St V-St M 65
M111m1 lrace 4S, Chtlilcolhe 44
Miam1 Val 49, Homtlton Twp . :n
Middletown 61 . Lakota W 56
Milfurd 47 Cin Sycamore 42
Millbury Llke: B. Kansas Lakota J 6
Mohawk H Manon Cadt 48
'Monrctvtlle 64. Mansfield Temple chr 59
N Central 84, Delta 49
New Albany 52. Johnstown 44
New Bremen 59, AllenE 4 ~
New KnoK\tlle 58. Ltncoln'flew 43
New Mtddletown Spnng 57 . Berhn Ce nter
Western Rersrve 45
Newark 51. Massillon lac bon ~I
Newcornentown .54, Tuscarawas Val S~
Northmonl71. Trotwood-Madison 67
Northndge 76. Amanda-Clearcrcek 60
Norwalk 66, Bucyrus 59
Ontano .5~ , Lextngton 52
Orange 70, Cardinal 39
Orrvtlle 72, Akron Covemry 41
Painesville Ri venide 6(; Chardon 47
Parkersbur@ IW Va) South 7.5. Vmcem Warre n

Cm Syca)norc 60. Ltma 45
Cm Taylor 65, Cm Cal"ary Chr. '7
Claymont40. New Phi lade lphia )3
Cle Cathohc 62 Elyna Cath. 61
Cle Height s 66, Valley Forge 5)
Cle St Au8u~tme 64. Cuyahoga Hts 47
Cle VA-SJ 64, Clc St. Joseph Acad. ~8
Clear Fo rk 66, Black RI'Yer 48
Co lonel Crawf()rd 79, Lu cas ~0
Col Academy 65, E Knox .59
Col DeSale! 51 . N Union 43
Col Re!'ld)' 6J Bloom-Qmoll ]J
Col Tree of L1fe 5], Wellington ~7
Copley 71, Medma H1ghland SO
Coshocton .54, Cambndge 41
CrnokSVJile 67. Philo 56
Danbury Lakesuk 50. Sandusky Perkins 44
Dan"tlle H Worlhtngton Chr. 42
Day. Pt~uerson .59, Spring. Nonh 40
Defiance 64, Wauseon 46
Delphos St John's 62, Ottoville 57
Della 48 To! Start 47
E Clevela.nd Shaw 44, Nonnandy 43
Eastlake N 91, Cle Kennedy JO
Elyrta Sr 47, Mentot J5
Evergree n 78, Tol. Emmanuel Bapt 61
Fairbanks 41 R!dll,emont 30
Fntrfield ,Unmn 57 McCiitin 52-0T
Fmn ·1ew 74, Bryan 4J
F1eld 67. Woodridge 55
Firestone 6), Akron Elms 3S
Fos10na 61 . Pon Chnton S3
Garawa) 57 R1dgewood 3 1
Gllrfield Hts 69, Parmn Sr U
Glrll!'d 41J. Howland 31
Grace Ha\en 40, Cm Norwood 20
Grandview 61, Hebron Lakewoo d J5
Greenevtew ~7 . M1 am1 Trace 38
Hamilton 64, Middle tow n 36
Hamilton Badin 51 Cm R()ger Bacon 44
Hawken School 63, Gilmour Acad 26
Ht cksvt lle 59. N Centrnl 4(i
Holgate 4\ , Stryker .\8
Holland Spnng . ~7 . To\. Bowshe r 25
Holy Name IS , Padua 32
Hopewell-Lou don 99 Fostona St Wendehn 40
Hudson 61. Cuyahoga Falls 25
Huron 56, Belle\'Ue 45
Jndtan Val 60, Tu!carawas Vnl )~
Jackson Center 6 1. Covmgton 14
John Glenn 53, W MuskiJ1 gum .5 1
Jonathan Alder 54. Madtson Plmns J6
Kahd&lt;J 45, Letps!c 40
Kansas Lakota 66. Otsego 46
Kent Romeveh 78. Akron Ellet SO
Ktdroa Chr 55 W S:~lern Not1hwc-stetn 50
Lancasltr 51 Day Meadow dal ~ '4
Ltmn Bath 73. St Henry S5
L1ma Ca th 67, Ken ton 48
Lmle M1:1mi 72, Lebanon 70
London 'i I. West Jefferson 4 ~
Lorain Cath b' Avon Ht gh 47
Lomm Soutl1V!e&gt;' 66 Clc John M1u shall 41
Lo...,e l\vtlle 40. Derl!n Ce mer Western R e~ n e

McDermott NW 62, Portsmouth W 46
Meadowbrook J9, Dover ~8
•'
Mechamcsburg 56. Waynesfield 4S
Medina 49, Brunswick 44-0T
Me1gs 83 , Hemlock M1ller 21
Midpark 70. N RKigevtlle 41
M!lan Edtson 58. F1relands 49
Miller City 61 Bluffton 5.5
·'
Mmerva .52. E Canton 41
Mmford 59. Portsmouth 48
Mogadore 69. Cre5twood 60
Monlpcher 55 To! Notre Dame 38
Morgan .59, New Lexmgton SS
N Olmsted ~0. Avon Lake 49-0T
N Royalton H . Berea 44
New Bremen 64, Spencervtlle 28
Newcomemown 48, Lakelmnd 38
Norton 65, Green 39 .
Norwood 51, Lovelatld 46
Oak Harbor 63, Tol. Wait'e 47
Oberlin .52, Elyrta Open Door \9
Olmsted Falls 6), Bay 5'
Ontano 35 Crestline 33
..
Oregon Stntch 52. Tot Maumee Val 39
ouawa Hill s 691 N. Baltimore 27
'
Pames vi\le Rtverslde 67, WJ!Iougby S. S~
Pt:IT) 73. Gene\'a 71
Petus v1l le: 46 Hilltop 41
Ptckenngtoi1 77. Gahanna 33
Plymouth S2. Se neca E 50
Poland 62, Stuthers 47
Ponsmouth Clay 57, Franklin Furnace Green 43 , 1,
Reedsvdle Eastern 42, Federal Hocking 39
Regma 63. Fremont Ross 32
" )
Riverside 47 lndtan Lake 38
Rootstown 47, Garretts"tlle Garfield 37
S Charleston SE 78 , Franklin-Monroe 25
Salem 48, Jefferson Area )g
Sandusky 61 , lo1am Adm Kmg 53
Sandy Val 77 Dalton 65
Shaker Hts. 48, Lakewood 38
Shaker His Independence 56, Chagnn Falls SO
Sheridan ~I, Tri -Valley 4S-20T
Solon 41, Notdonta ]9
Sparta H1ghland 60, Manon Elgi n 54
Spnng NW 60 Kent()n R1dge S6·0T
Spnna ShawDCC 75. sr.na. NE ~3
,
Spnng. Southeastern 7 , Frankhn Monroe 25
!
Strasburg 3~. Malvern~]
·'
Sycamore 60, L1ma St 4~
Tallmadge 57 Revere 46
Tiffin Calvtrt 57. N01wa.lk St Paul44
•'
Tiffin Columb1an 61 Ehda 52
Tol. Ctltholic 15 Coldwater 36
Tol Christnln 8~ Mohawk 55
Upper Sctolo Val 51 Vnnlue 50
Urbana 65, Tecumseh 4l
' "
Van Bun:n 69, Ltberty -Benton S3
W Branch 46. Ca nol hon J4
W Geauga 65 Co:~rdmal 35
W Hohf'IC': s 4 I Onville '\6
Wadsworth 58. Clo\·erleaf ~6
.. !·
Walsh Jesutf 66, Loutsvllle Aqumas 42
Woshmgtoo C H 69. Licking Val 61
Waterloo 51 Ra,e nna Southeast 44
Way~n Tt nt:t 60 Edon '5
Westlake ~7 . Roc ky R1ver .~9
Wtllard 5~ . Verm1hon W
Wtndham 7J, Streetsboro 51
World Harve-st 66, Newark Cath 58
You Boardman 67 Ynu Ursul1nt&gt;: ~0

Albany AleJtander 81 . Ironton IJ
Amherst-Steele 63, N. Rtdgeville 61
Anthony Wayne 80, Swamon J8
Ardtbold 60, linora 40
Ashtabula Sts John&amp;. Poui:SI. Bloomfield 44
Bedford 76. Maple Hts 66
Bellevue 12. Huron 53
Bet Sefer M1uachi 63, Onsttan Community 44
Beusville 74, N. Bahunore 67
Be~r.ley 6~, Col. Academy 38
Black River 61. New London ~S
Bloom Cartol149, Hebron Lakewood 38
' 49
BlufftoB 34. Ltber&amp;y Benton 25
Parkway 57 Spencerville '47
Bow1tn1 Orten 70. Bryan 49
Paulding 72, Ottawa.Glandorf63
Bnstol 60, Lutheran E. 58
Perry 7S, Grand Val 72
Buckeye Central 83, New Ricge181 -0T
Polnnd 57 , Girard 'B
Buckeye Val , 74, Gahon Northmor 49
Portsmouth 80, Greenup {Ky) Co 70
Cadiz 61, Bndgeport 43
Rtdgeda\e 69 Mount Gilead 63
Canton Cath 56, C\e East Tech 55
Rtdgewood 74. Tuscarawas Cath 52
Canton menOak 78, Cle Unco\n W 4.5
Rlverstde 61, Benjamm Logan ~0
CMton Herttage 82. Rtttman 67
Rocky Rtvet 74, Keys1one .54
Canton McKinley 68, Alliance 59
RussJa 64, S1dney Lehman Cath 62.QT
Carey 70, Cory- Raw son .56
S Central 101. Seneca E 90
Cedarville- 61. E Clinton 5~-0T
S Galba 50, Ponsmouth E 41
Celma 8:1, Sidney 56
Sandusky Perkms 77. Vernulton 66
Centerburg 80, Clear Fork 72
Chesapeake .52, S Potnt 4.5
Southmgton 79. Flllrpon Hardm~ 65
Spana Htghlnnd S8. Marion Elgin 4.\
Chtppcwa .54, Dalton 42
Sprm3 Cathohc 67, Spn1)8 Nonhwestern SS
Cm. Coleram 52 , Lakota E SO
St Henry 66. Van Wen 48
Cm Country Day 54. Bethel-Tate 3~
Cm H1lls Chr Acad 78, New Mmrru 75
Steubenvtlle Cath 65. Wmton (W Va)
Mt~donna 61
C1n Madetra 72. Deer Park 48
Stryker 66, Liberty Center 49
C!n Moeller 78, Cm Taft 26
Sylvllllia Northvtew S9. Oregon Clay 54
Cm N College H11l .59, Cln. Fmneyrown .54
Sylvama Sou1h v1 ~w 49 To\ WaJte 14
Cin Purcei\-Manan 73. Cm Northwest 54
Cle Benedtctine 56, Tol St Franm 52
Tecumseh 64. Urbana 55
Tel. Woodwnrd 66. Tal Maumee 65
Cle Col ltnwood 67. Eastlake N 54
Tnway 67, Medma Bu ckeye 46
Cle East 66. Lorain Southview ~7
Clc!. He1ghts 84, Loratn Adm King 42
Twin ValleyS. 60. Preble Shownee 52
Unt'Yersify School 67 Linsly (W Va ) Institute
Cle John MW'ihall 70. Bay 69-0T
Cle Sf lgnntJus 81. Wnhh Jesutf 51 ,
Upper Arhngton 60. Westcmlle S 5 ~
Cle VA-SJ 82 Mentot 58
Clyde 63. ~hlan Edt 5on 41
Upper Scioto Val ~6 Ada 49
Uuca 73, Granville 51
Coldwater 7~ . Fort Loram1e ~.5
Valle y View 76 Day Chnstian 69
Col Bri!!' 73 . Col Ttee of Life 69
C()nvoy CrestvJew Rl, Mtller Oty 69
Vanlue SZ. Leipstc ~0
Cuyahogo Val Chr Acad 62. Snlllhvtlle 46
Vers;ulles 68. Covtngton 51
W Holmes 56, Wayneda\e 47
Danbury 62, Ottawa H1ll s 50
W Salem North\\estern 64 Manslteld St
29
Day Jeffeuon 61. Day Patter,on 55
Mad1son 57, Chardon 37
Day Meadowdale 73. Lancaster 65
Peter J 51
Magmfit:a t 54. Tol Wh1tmer :li l
Defiance 71 Ftndlay ~ 8
Wayne Trace 78 Napoleon 6-'
Wellington 60. Delaware Chr 50
Mansfield Madt son 51) Mansfield Sr 50
Delaware 6\ , Hdliard Darby .56
Mansfield St Peter's 59 Mnnon C:Jth 26
Wheelersb1.1rg 73, Galhpohs 52
Dover 47 New Phll adelphtn 31
Mnrgareua 64. New R1egel 3.'i
Whiteford. Mlch 60, To! Chnstinn 51
Dubltn Coffman 64 Olerttangy 44
Marhr1g1on 46 Akton Coven!ry 44
Wtekhffe ~0 Kirtland 48
E Cleveland Shaw 15, Tol Scott 12
Mnson 7'i Kmgs Mdls Kmgs D
E Liverpool 8g Wells\llle 47
Wooster 69, Ashlond Sr ~I
Worl d Harve~t 69, Col Wh~tston e 64
May! Jeld .56 Euchd 4-5
Eaton 79. lippeca nOC' 71
Maym llc J5. Watsn"' R1ver Vtew H
Wonhmgton Chr 98, E Knox 50
Edon 44, Antwerp 25
Xenta Chr. t&gt;9 , Troy Chr. 52
Elida 52. Wapnkoneta 44
You Chaney 62, Austintown-Fit ch 49
Elmwood 82 Otsego 76
Z.mesville 58 Hilliard Drl\'tson ~4
Elyrta FITS! Bapt 75. Willo- Htl! 40
Zanemlle Rosecrans 88 Shektn~h Chr 54
Eudid 79, Lukewood 57
F111rborn 64, Greenan 42
Fort Jenmns,s 75. Delphos Jdte rson Sl
Fort Recovet) 69 An~oma 34
Frnnkhn Furnoce Green 91 . S Webster 85-0T
Saturday's action
Fredencktown 5\ Lucas 45
Akron E 42 Norwaync J l
Ftemont Chr 70 Liberty Chr 55
*Most Prices Are Lower Than Last Year
Akron St V-SI M 51, Akron Cent Hower 45
Fremont St Joseph 84. Man sfield On. SO
Amherst 56, F:urvtew SO
Gnllowny Westland 61. Mnnsfield Sr 41
*Cash Discounts On Some Items
Arcadia 52, Old Fort 40
Genoll 79, Northwood 40
Archbold
.50,
Napoleon
"~
Gtbsonburg 8.5, Eamvood 82
Barberton 71, Akron Kenmore 48
Goshen ~3, Lmle Miami 49
Bedford 68 Warrens'fll le 57
Gr~nvi!l~ 89 St Mary s 7]'
Dcllcfontrunc 57, Greenan 42
Hmmhon 58 Cm Pnnce ton 54
Berlin Ht land 96, Jewe11-Sc10 16
H£Jrdtng Northcrn 78 Riverdale S8
Bexley ~7 Granvtlle 4 ~
Harrison 69. Norwood 62
Botkm!i 72. New Kno,.vdlc 57
H1cksv11le 81, Pemsville 63
Athens County Fairgrounds
B~ cks\' tll c 55. Strnngn•1lle 51
Holland Sp fing 77, Tol Whumer 71
Bristol 6.5 . Lutheran E 46
West Union St. Athena, Ohio
Hopewe ll-Loudon 71 , Arcad ia 44
Buckeye Local 51. Beaver Loca l 44
Hudso n 50. Kent Roose"elt 47
Buckeye Val 54. Mount G1lead \J
Iro nton St Joseph 76. Pommouth Notre Uame
Campbell 67, You Chmtmn 41
49
Canal Winchester 61. Col S~h oul fot Gtrls J7
Ktdron Chr. 61, Lora1n Cath 44
Canton Cath 78. Akron Ruchtt:l 46
Lakeview 63 . N1les 61
Cantnn McKmlt:)' 54 Wanen Hardtng 51
Lebanon 79, Lemon Monore 46
Cant()n S .58 Alhance 44
L1m11 Cat h .59. Tot Cmhohc 12
Canton limken .57,Aklon N 42
Limn Perry 62, Lima Temple Chr 42
Lima Shawnee 67, Tol Bowsher 61
Carey 63 Hnrdm Nonhero '"
, Centerburg 49, Nonhndee 41
Li rna Sr 70. Fmrficld 50
Chardon ND·CL 64, Cht~n el 59
Co-op
logllll 69 Nelsonvtlle · York 50
Chtppcw a 47, Wnynedak '\ 4
Lord5town 47, ledgemont 41
BALER TWINE
Cl n Country Day 44. C!n Seve n H11ls 2J
Madtson Plains 4.5, Jonathan Aldc:t 41
Cm Fmacytown 6~. Ctn Ind.!an H1ll 41
Manetta .56. Parkersburg. W Va J8
9,000 ft.
lHIIIfmo F!IIICfl ~y
Cin Htlls Chr Acad 59, Cm Summn Country
Mari on Local 50, Arc:anum '4
HIGH TENSILE W1RE - 200,000 Pill
1-9
Day 20
Marion Pkasant 46. Cardmglon 42
Cin Landmlll'k Chr 46, Xt"nta Chr 26
Massdlon 55, Masstllon P1.-rry 41
10 or more 5
Ci n Mercy 47 Cin Oak H1lls 4'i
, MCC:Iatn M. Vinton Co. 60
Cin
St
Ursula
65
Ctn.
Purccii·Man!ln
.54
McCo mb 49, Fostona Sl Wendeltn 48
HEAVVT
STEEL

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

.
..
..

...

·'

..

...

HURRY TO LANDMARK'S
*SUPPLIER DIRECT SALE
LOCATION
JUNIOR FAIR BUILDING
TUESDAY, FEB. 16TH
10 AM TIL 7 PM

Free Pancakes &amp; Sausage To

•'

' -~·

•
~

.-·•'
..-...,
,. '
~- ·

'21.95
20.95

POSTS
Willi Ctlpo

,..,.,..

---

....., .....'13.49
• .... " .. 1 13.49
leomOoP•'* ....-'15.99

Tax
been
returned with Insufficient
Addresses. If you have not 'eceived
your Tax bill call The Meigs County
Treasurer Office at:
992•2004 A.S.A.P.
There will be no extension after
the March
line •

WeAre Now An
Authorized
Dakalb
Seed 0e111r

'

·~

.

~--,..

I0%0FF ,

APPLEGATE
TUBULAR GATES

.. '

BARB W1RE

12' Gate ................................\...................144.00

•19.99

5 Of l'TIOfe (mhc any alze) ... l2.00 OFf PEA GATE
4'~-8'·10 ·12'·14'· 16'· 18' a 20' avallabtl
Balo ..................... .... Low ....
Bunk
AoLowAo . ..OO

HIGH TENSIL!
FIELD FENCE

.'
'i .

1

F -......................

.-.oo

P~~ ~.=rAQiliiiH.MiiOCk ofJ:o..Gf
IF .YOU CAN'T COME IN YOU CAN CALL IN YOUROROERI

.. :
I ' •I

'd I

�. Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Po~nerc)y

Monday, February 15,1999

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

• Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7,

''

Early campaigning isn't just for the presidency. anymore . ':. ·
By DOUG WILLIS
'
·
Richter's campaign schedule. Still, Oller says he puts mat least 20 hours a
AIIOCII!ted Pntll Writer
'
week campaigning.
.
CAMERON PARK. Calif. - Stores in a nearby mall are still selling 1999
"I'm doing something vinually every evening. Most weekends I have sevcalendars, but Bernie Richter is well into his founh month of full-time cam- ·.eral things going on. And when I'm not doing that, I'm on the phone callpaigning for a seal in the 2001 Californta state Senate.
ing people," Oller said.
This sunny February day, he logs another 270 miles on his cream-colored
It's the same all across the state, from Assembly seats to presidential runs. ·
·
·
· Why is everyone campaigning so early? .
.
Ford Victoria in 10-1/2 hours on the c.ampaign trail.
He starts the day charging up supporters in a.meeting near the state Capi"The answer is the population is so diverse and so unfo&lt;;used on politics
~ tol in Sacramento. At noon, he's at the Rotary Club in the upscale suburb of that you have to do anything you can to raise you,r visibility, and you have
: Cameron Park, where .the homes are as big as motels.
to do it for as long as possible before an election," said Democratic cam:
Two hours later, he drops in on a columnist for the newspaper with the paign consultant .Jeff Raimundo.
' largest circulation in his district. At 3 p.m., there is another meeting with
Two recent changes in law - term limits and the early presidential pri~ po'tential supporters.
mary .- have only increased pressure to start campaigns earlier and earlier,
l Presidential hopefuls aren't the only candidates whose campaigns now said Republican consultant Richard Temple.
,
stretch over two or more years. Candidates for Congress, the slate Legis IaTerm Iimits lengthen campaigns, Temple says, because new candida~es
' lure and' even local offices are fanning out across California evecy day, rais- who are not well known need more time to build their political base, ratse
: ing money, hunting fqr endorsements and making speeches.
money and introduce themselves to voters, even if they already hold or have.
:
Richter 's likely opponent, Rico Oiler, was just elected in Novem!Jer to held some other elected office.
..
.
: his Second term in the state Assembly. That's a full-time job, so he·can't match
The shift of next year's primary from June to March - a move to give
:
·

!

IDIIft IDMI
COII7RUCftll

California more clout in picking presidential nominees - has a? tmpact all
the way down to·local Senate and Assembly races, since the Legtslature als
advanced the date for all state and federal offices to avotd the cost of tw
pnmaries.
.,
.
Oc be
That mpves up the fihng date forthe March 7•. 2000..pnmary 10 to
An even earlier &lt;tate -:- June 30-.is when campatgn contnbullon statement1
are due. So fun~ ratstng must begm earher.
. ,
.
.1
"You're talkmg $30,000 to $50,000 to look credtble, Temple saJd- an&lt;l
that is just a start on the $100,000 to $500,000 or more requued to wm ~
California legislative or congresstonal race,
. .
ded d .t i ,
For voters, however, it seems as if the last campatgn JUSt en
an 1 s :
far too early to think about another one . .
·
. . d,
d h' :
Rotary forbids campaign speeches, so Rtchter 's speech IS e~~te 10 •s,
personal evolution from Democrat to Republtcan, a ref~rence to 1 ~ y;ars.~
the state Assembly, and a long~r descnptton of hts role ~n the repea 0 rae• .. :
preferences in state contracts, Jobs and c~llege admtsstons.
ood • .
Afterward, Richter says, "It was a temfic day. We made some g
con-,
tacts, good contacts."
·
· .
',
"What time are we starting tomorrow, George?" he asks campatgn matt;
ager George Osborn, before heading home to Chico.
•,

: By JOHN SEEWER
· : Asaoclated Press Writer
• Ken Richey sits by himself but not
: alone in his cell on Ohio's death row.
:
That's because thousands· of sup1 poners all over the world believe this ·
I
' man from Scotland has been wrong: ly sentenced to die for starting a fire
• that killed a 2·year-old girl.
:
While his case has generated lim: ited interest in Ohio, his name is a
: familiar one in Britain. Filmmakers
: have produced two documentaries
•. that question his guilt. British and
' Scottish citizens and politicians have
.
•, written thousands of letters, saymg
; he's wrongly imprisoned.
:
There are Internet sites to con: vince others of his innocence.
•.
The a,tlention being given to
Richey, though, is unusual. Th~re are
; 191 people on Ohio:s death row,

.
i

.
'

~ Airline

'

mostly at the Mansfield Correctional Institution. Only Wilford Berry, ~he
inmat~ who has volunteered to be .
executed, has received as much
notice. Berry's scheduled execution
Feb. 19 would be Ohio's first since
1963.
Just a few issues seem able to
energize people to rally behind
inmates waiting to be executed. They
include the youthfulness of the
inmate when the crime was commit.:

ted, mental instability onretardation,
religious commitment and nationality.
The movement behind the Kenneth Richey Campaign For Justice
began in his native land long after he
was convicted of burning an apartment in 1986 in Columbus Grove.
Richey had moved to the north~
west Ohio village to be near his fam-

\ AP Business Writer"
DALLAS - With a growing
: number of American Airlines pilots
; reporting for duty .. airline oflicials
; think they can resume regular service

i

: this week.

the pilots were immediately av·ailable
for flying.
More than half a million travelers
have been left at the gate by the
nation's se~ond - largesr airline sine~
Feb. 6. That's when a large number
of pilots started calling. in sick in a
dispute concerning how quickly
American should integrate the pilots
from recently purchased Reno Air

Insured

:
As of late Sunday, "well under
•. 1,000" of American's 9,400 pilots
:. were still listed as sick, compared to
\ the nearly 2,500 Thursday and Friday intO its own roster.
According to American, pilots
: who declared themselves unfit to fly,
· have been taking themselves Off of
: an American spokeswoman said.
:
"We' re just glad they are coming the sick list at a rapid rate since a fed: back and we hope by the end of the eral judge held the Allied Pilots
• week to be in business as usual Association and two top board mem( here," said Sonja Whiteman, adding bers in contempt of an order that
) that 100 percent service was possible pilots .return to work. He promised
-sizable fines against the union.
\ by Tuesday.
Despite the continued cancella; However, about 231 flights , or
tions,
most of the nation's airpor1s
:; about I0 percent, scheduled for today
; have been· canceled because not all of were calmer Sunday with many pas-

County court news

;
(Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines
The Bank ofNew Yor~ was grant• the grievances ol one party against ed judgment of $57,783.98 from
: another. It does not establish guilt William E. Kauff Sr. on Feb. 9.
Man sentenced
: or innocence.)\
The following lawsuits were filed
Seth, Cremeans, 20, Middleport,
: ·recently in the Meigs County Com- )Vas sentenced Tuesday to 18 months
: mon Pleas Court of Judge .Fred W. in prison after pleading guilty to a
~ !Crow Ill:
felony count of aggravated assault.
! A foreclose suit was filed Feb. I 0 He was originally charged with
i by Ft. Mortgage Companies, Dallas, assaulting two Middleport police
: Texas, against DanielL. Thompson, officers and a third person on July 19,
• Albany. The company asks forjudg- 1998:
I •·
: ment of $77,294.31 on a delinquent
Guilty plea· accepted .
; promissory note.
Michael A. Bolin, 44, Syracuse,
~
A foreclosure suit was filed Feb. pleaded guilty to a charge of attempt:. 9 by•Equicredit Corp. of Jacksonville, ed cultivation of marijuana, accord: Fla., versus Paul and Dora Clay, Mid- ing to a court document filed Thurs: dleport. The company asks for judg- . day. Sentencing will be held March
: ment of $47,892.80 on a delinquent 29.
II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
, promissory note.
:
A personal injury suit was filed
: Feb. 8 by Eric Dillard, Pomeroy,
, against Rebekka Mcinl~ re. Pomeroy.
: Dillard seeks damages in excess of
I $25,000 stemming from a Nov. 17,
: 1993 motor-vehi cle accident.
Suit dismissed
, . A suit fil ed by Bank One NA ve r- ,
• sus .Herbert Eugene Whal ey was di S·
; mi ssed on Feb. 5.
i
Judgment issued

More ThanA·
Tax Season Remedy.
ALifelong Plan.

~ Actions to end

:marriages filed
, The following actions to end mar ' riage were filed recently in the office
.~ of Meigs County Clerk of Couns Lar:· ry Spencer.
:: Di~solution asked - David K.
; Rar:ney, Shade, and Teres a Ramey,
; Amesville, Feb. 2.
: Dissolutions granted - · Larry
•,O'Neal Napper and Dtena Ann Dar(lene Napper, Feb. 4: Amy Brown and
iJeff Brown, Feb. 8; Gerald Pullins Jr.
:and Susan M. Pullins, Feb. .8; Betty
- ;caldwell-and Bruce Caldwell~ Feb. 8;
:Dawn Taylor and Mark Tay lor, Feb.

;10.

J.,•t it time you work wldt the 11111-timc, year 'round
tax and in•estment professional? After all, I ean ·

"otlca

tax return to in•estmenta

;...
III!!J

Free Estimates

;...

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Grea:t Bend

• -

Crt

And discover-the diff'li!itnce
till prepom
and. I IIX
......._

prof011i0111l.

Lol)gbottom, Ohio Will be

.HDVESI.
fiNANCIAL

!!I!!DY!QII

C/ranrlng 11N Way A-rica lniiUII

Karl Kebler III, CPA
(740) 992-7270
I

'

•

reolevect by the Tuppere
'Pioln..CMI!Ir
Wiler
Dlllrtct II the offtae loc.led
II ,llleet Bar 30 Roed,
RMdevllll, Ohio 45n2,
un1112100 o'clock p.m. Qoc.l
Umt), M1rc:h 2, 1M, lnd
lhln 'll llld otfletl publicly
opened end rllcl lloUd.
A copy Of the e(IIOifiDIIIone'

'"'7,
be oblllned from our·
me n otnce or by Clllllng

lnd •klnt 11110 IIIII copy:

Tuppeq Plelna-Chlller
Wiler Dlllrlcl
3Ne1 llr 30 ROid

i.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
11nrrtMt lramJ•nr

''

188,0hlo &amp; Woat VIrginia, 304·
773-5185 01'304-773-5447.

CLASSIFIED
AD SALE

. IIIYERSIIE AUCTION IARN
7~~

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
6·1 4·992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
211 .........

·

Taking Conalgnmenta For Grand

Opening Saturday, March etn At
7 P.M. Alao, Booking EataJe An·
llqut Or,., Solei AI Tile Bam.
. IARNOWNER
FIAYIIOND JOHNSON
5 Mllti-TIIt Dam
Wedemeyer's Auction Strvlce,
GallipoliS, Olllo 74().379.2720.

90

Wanted to Buy
Abaotutt Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·

ver And Gold Coins, Prootsela,

Antlqutl &amp; clean Used iurnlture.
will buy one piece or compll!tl
household, Osby Martin, 7-40-

R. L. HOLLON

I

•

8ulldo~er

Trucks, 1990 Modela Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, ·1900 East·
ern Awnue, Gallpo!IS.

DUMP TRUCK ·
. SERVICE,
,

&amp; Backhoe
Service•
.Houoe &amp; Trailer Siteo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syotem &amp;
Utilitiea

,,

'

Fairly new or more Tanning Beet

Agrlqultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel

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

Dirt • Sand .
985·4422 .
Chester, Ohio
1OI25IJI&amp;'IIn

Don't Need
A
..
,

Big One

mo. pel.

,

Call
a Little
' -

'

One

A25A76R
270 Lines of Resolution

Icon Menu System
3 Jacks

7'·

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470
In Memory

·'121~

SMITH'S
;coNSTRUCTION
~

• New Comtruction
,
• Remodefins
'
•Siding

11Commerdai
I
Skip

Year B Event Timer

Automat1c Head (leaner

r:

•:No Job -Too P&gt;ig or
-Too Smttll

:

"Cali Today''
FREE Estimates

~

. (740)992-5535
992·2753

or

H1u•s
SELF STORAGE
: 29670 Bashan Road
: Racine, Ohio 45n1
: . 74().949-2217

. lflhll 1ho!lld 1'11ppn to )'OIIf

•

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM

Readevllle, OH 45na
Phone 740-9115-3315

1 mo. pd.

EICHINGER
Sales

Fill 740-985-3320

(740) 949-8400
I..SB3R~ VanMeter Hill Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

~ar, Ulillty, Dump &amp;

Gooseneck trailers
-•Jilutfwmea '.Deafer of

YOUR Mi:SSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

9lalli..,S,:;..w:,
·J.t15, 199S

•New Hollies .

985-4473

JK.-~~... ...ft~,
, .;.......~...:!'

&lt;l1uat~&lt;L.J...tF«;

J .... "" u.l'i.:.. .. .
~W.m..an~

9,f...J..d. W e...U na.l. ....~L
3'1l.. tK&lt;nr ~·~ ~~~
. dut.f... ... ,

' 7122/lfn

~te),~

J~ru'j!Jl flo&lt;L eafi..t.

AT 6:30P.M.

Lie. If

9

~·.. ""41·
a(.tu" &amp;if. ~nd, t~i.

4~ru'
ond, "f""t

4 R...&gt;. ~~ J;...[,

:J~ tKint #""' e...U na.l.
•"1! s...t&amp;s.,
ffi.(~ sruoeb..t.

oo-svt

Beaellts., '
lend Be...- to
. The Dall7 Se,Atlael
P.O. Bo• '7S9-7'7
Po•ilro:Y1 Ohio

Lilllt thing&gt;
art Worth A lot

,.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Pereonala

Are You an Exciting Romantic? 1·

900·896·8960, Ext.5953, $2.99
Per Minute. Must Be 18Yra..
Sorv·U 619-645-6434
Beaulllul Glr1slll EMcltlnglll Pas·
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1-900·329.0051, Ext 7145, $3.99

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6500 Ext. 3593, 18+ $3.99 Per
Min. Sorv·U 619-645-8434. http://
www.theho1pagos2.com/nllp&lt;y·
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Never Bo Lonely; (900)4QH999,
extension 4979. $2 .99 par
minute; Must be 18+, Serve you.

30 Announcement•
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Be Entitled To Racetva Vo'ur Di'a-

botlc Supplies At No Cost To

You. For More Information, 1-BBS-

Now To You Thnft Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens

740-592·1842

Quality clothing and houae'hold
items. $1.00 bag aale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9;0().5:30.

40

tht Clnssi[itd Srclion .

Q.W,.

p414Ud.

(t,d, .... "'lf' "&lt;~IJ'

,

9in~

R.....t

·

3 Monlh Old Mala Black, Brown
long Hair Puppy, Intelligent, Lov-

Ing, will grow Mod·lgo. 74Q-245·

5104.

SE fWI CES

n\.u{. a.:t"'Uh

ffia.:Jw'J, If~ loi£ uud. .).t.u(....
'W.: e£ el'.&gt;l"&lt;oeft odl..,; ~
(t.&lt;i,f',.,.;., ol..,4f

*

(Over 15 Words-20¢ Per Word. Per Day)
NO REFUNDS!
Offer good with 90upon only.
Photo Copies Not Accepted

11 0

Help Wanted
l
HELP $
Eacpandlng c......, ·
Noeda10 FuleTime Ptople.
Permanent Position.

Avo11ge Earnings Ara:
S1 ,200 AIIONTH
CBI Monday fo&lt; DetailS At

Shepherd puppiea- 2 brown and
black, 2 grav and black, call 7o4o99~· 10B9-·

Lost and Found

Found: Small male dog_In vicini·
ty of -McDonald a Pt. ~leaaanl.

(304)6754612.

Lost Dog Sheppard /Aott Mix
Black W ·fTan Mar~lngs And
White Patch On Cheat, Wearing
Black Collar, Friendly, Anawere
To Blazer, Last Setn: Friendly
~ldge Area, Rawardl 7~0-2ee :

1125.

l.:ost- OVB Envelpoe Of Cuh In
The Wai-Mart VIcinity. LOll Friday, Fob. 5, t999. Reward Fo&lt; Re-

·'!
J

'POSITION AVAILABLE'

Ohio Valley Bank Is ~ow Accept·
ing Applications For A Loan Of·
fleer Poalt!on. Appllcanta Need To
Be Customer Service And Sales

Driven With Prior Landing Expert.

FEBRUARY

ence. Ohio Valley Bank Offers A
Generous Benefits Package In·
eluding -401 K, Retirement And
Career "dvancemant Opportunl·
Ilea As Well As Merit Bonus Opportunlllea. Experience And

OFFER
EXPIRES

Oualllled Applicants Shook!' Send

Reaume To: Ohio Valley Bank, cJ
H. Tackett, 420 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45831.

· o Patrick

EOE.
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spearo, ~75-1429.
ARROW CONCRETE
COIIPANY
.

CDL DRIVERS

Want To Have A New Beginning!
Relocate To Columbus, OhiQ.
Looking For Experienced COL
Drivers. Experienced Ready Mix
Drivers A Plus. Willing To Ra· .
locate In Columbus, Ohio -·A
Growing Community! Arrow Con·

cre10 company Olloro:

• Up To $12.35 Hour1y Wage
•Madcal
• Pension
• Vacation
• Holiday Pay
• Relocation Assistance

• Start·Up Houolng Assistance
• Spouse Employment

Parl&lt;ellllu'll, wv 28104-4336
..•

AVON PRODUCTS: Slarl

M

T

w

-

I 2 3
8 9 10
14 15 16 11
23 24
22

' 7

®-

1999
T

F

s

4 5 6
II 12 13
18 19 20
25 26 27

- - - - -

-

-

I
I

a.

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

Address ____________________

Phon'~------------------------------

...
'

Classification: ________.___

fo&lt; Funher Information, Cootact:
larry B. Elliott
P.O. Box 4336

...

s

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

A&amp;slatance

4 Adorable Klllens, Call Aflar

6:00PM. 740-441·1391 .

60

'!J.... R.w...~ ..a.t. a.t. f..t.
ffiu.L aum.&amp;.o o.WUL t~· W...' U

$1.50 A DAY FOR
15 Words

EMPLOYMENT

Giveaway

Basketball With Net &amp; Pole, 7404o08--2732.

1

'

Don't Worry About YOur Future

Let Our PsychiCs Put Your Mind

""lf.'., 41"'"'·

'!!.~ t..,.,Uut, • .,~

Time

7-7441

'YQWI.I ..,'..uL,".~.Qt'~ u.nd.

~...t~ ~R;.,..J &amp;:! ~;.,~~.
&lt;:ann~ ::fa.u.su. &amp; 9btal\da.

•

......,. ....

DAY

Lhnlted.

Appllancoo, Etc. By The Piece or
Atbeaa. Jmrie11e&amp;e · .The Loll 740-256,8989.

Baby Rabbits, Seven Weeks Old:
Two One Year Old Rabbits , Call
after 5:00PM. 740·44lHl~.

~au, ~1.4·

Rate

We Buy Everything: Furniture,

. , ·: '.-~ T . . . , ·- -· ;
Openlq, .

A

· Speeial

Wanted To Buy: Used Hardwood
Floomg, 740-245-5887.

For a Baq
Internal Medlolae
Praotloe In

677·6561 .

9 tKint4........,•"jj·
3'~. 4 ~~·· ....... ~d,

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
Pt!aln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
· Paying $80.oo
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progreealva top line.

JateWceat, - •
Rellable.NHded

u (619)645-6434.

R,OBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION
. •Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compara
FREE
ESTI.MATEES

ConditiOn. 74Q-446.9853.
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homes, Call 74D-448-0175, 304,
875-5965.

1'i'alnedo QUlok,

per min. Must be 18.yrs. Serv •

·. 9~mlu".'t':!' 4

'

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Any

eal

Umestone,

.737 bade here

$-Video Input
Universal Remote Control

Slug &amp;Sllot
Matches

or 28 bu lbs, call (304)675·
•5754.
24

eo.a,.tltlve

Driveway Stone
Light 1;lauling
up. to 8 ton.
992·5455 .

12!30"pm
Limit 680 sleeve

MTS /SA~

J

992-8576.
Clean Lata Modal Cars Or

TRUCKING

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Oub
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday

\

Two to Four Day

Rick Pearaon A~lon Comp•ny,
full time eucttoneer, complete
auction
service. licenaed

Anttquoa, top prlcea paid, River·

I

2 Video .Heads

Auto Service-

lne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ru11 Moore owner, 740-9922528 . .

1/2018191

O~~~~ng System

Houaehold- Commercial. Ohio Li·
...... 17893.740-989-2623.

'I

Avenue, Gallpol!a, 7-2842.

Out of Area
: 1-800-564-3227 '

kEzt" Voice Directed

·Classified Ads Section

Dltmonda, Antique Jrwelry, Gold
Ringo, Pro-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqu!alllona Jrwelry
- M.T.S. Coin Sho~. 151 Second

···1100

S

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlapaugh Auctioneering
Services, Little Hocking, Ohio.
ApprallllsFarm- Estate·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INc.·

No Embarra11m1nt ••.
You're Treated with Reapectl

zenith=====~~

The Tuppera Ptaln..Cheller
Weier Dlllrlcl reaervea the
tight to reject any and all
Bide or to lncreeee or
....,,... or omit eny Item
or Heme ancl/or ewerd to the
low"t and beet BIDDER.
E!Jch propoeat muet contain the full name of every
ptJraDn or company lntereetecl In the aame. The
Tuppere
Plelne-Ch..ter
Water Dletrlc:t reeervea the
right to WIIW any Information or lrragularttt.. In the
Bidding.
Harold Blackaton,
Preaklent
llollrd of Dlrac:tore
~d5,22

-Compl~te

WORRYING Ill

2/~/99

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
.
, liDS .
Sep~~qte ••elect Bide for
the P!Jintlnt of arltlnlll
of thl Treeiment P ant
locat,cl ei 311211 Sand HHI
Cem...ry
Road

!iilll .

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo ; ·Divorced

... :,
t

IJ)

··: CIEDI7

A25A0 2D

VRA2 1 1

80

52954 State Rt. 124

'
"'B.!~
~ftft~ftftftft'*liM~C
'
..

Public Notice

for the next century.

8unct1y &amp; Mondew edition·
1 :llllpnl Friday.

Phone 74().992·3987

~·
lf)Jepgir :· r.• Pickup &amp; Delivrry
•
'
. Available

311• .

Fonner-"Vetvet Hammer"

ft)

.

Middleport ,
&amp;VIcinity
All Yard &amp;olea lluat eo Paid In
Advanoa. ~lint: 1:OOpm lhe

cl•y Hfore tht ad 11 tO · run,

Racine, Ohio
Phone:' .740-843-5572

Owner: John Dean

. Pomeroy,

(61

Dave's Garage

ft

,FUI'IIUu,. RejiniohintJ :

8

Joe Wllaon

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.I

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
;..,
III!!J Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding !iilll
~
Commercial &amp; Residential
·
'l:7 yre. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

APPALACHIAN
WOODWORKS

High Drive Video
Trilingual Menus
Sleep Timer
FuU Function
Remote Control

-10:00 .... Sllllnlay.

1998 Martin Street

;..,

(740) 992-3131

of her persona," Schiller wrote in the
book, to be released later this week.
"A side capable of bringing harm to
her daughter."
When Haney told Mrs. Ramsey
that she had lied '10 him, Mrs. Ramsey replied, "Pal, you don't want to
go there. Don't start that," Schiller
wrote. "The tou.gher the questions ·
, became, the tougher Patsy became."
JonBenet's beaten and strangled
body was found Dec . 26, 1996 in the
basement 'of the Ramseys' Boulder
home. about seven hours after Mrs .
Ramsey called 911 and said she
found a ransom note demanding
$118,000.
Police have said the Ramseys
remain under suspicion in JonBenet's
death,' while the Ramscys have
. repeatedly ·maintained their innocence.
Attorney Hal Haddon, who represents JonBenet's· parents, declined
comment Sunday because he had not
had a chance to read the book.
Schiller theorized that JonBenet 's
killer was familiar with the house and
knew where the family kept the
blanket i.n which her body had been
wrapped.
-'
Schiller also revealed police evidence which was presented to District
Attorney Alex 1-lunter on June 1-2,
before the interview with Haney,
according to excerpts of the book
printed in the Rocky Mountain News
of Denver today.
· The police presentation helped
convince Hunter to take the case to a
gra~ jury, which is now hearing evidence. A spokeswoman for Hunter
declined comment.

Frldar.llondly ldllon

C . JD CONSTRUC710N ft

lwtdle everydting fiom thia year'a ·

between
.-- I

: Divorces asked - Christine A.
;Teaford, Pomeroy, from Brian W.
rT'eaford, Pomeroy, Feb. 8; Ronald
'Leslie Carr, Pomcry, from Brenda
Darlene Carr, Pomeroy, Feb. 4; Mini a
;:R Boggess. Pomeroy, from Gary L.
~ ogges•, Middleport , Feb. 4; Lisa
'Lynette Day, Pomeroy, from ,Patrick
iO. Day, Thorntonville, Feb. 3.
: Divorces granted - Kim Jarrell
and Dallas D. Jarrell , Feb. 4; Noah
)'\.lien Runyon and Bobbie Jo Runy·on, Feb. 8; Janet L. Lucas from Ricky
~ay Lucas, Feb. II .
·

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - JonBenet Ramsey's mother revealed
"the hard side of her persona" when
questioned by a. ~elective , leading
authorities to suspect she was capable of banning her daughter, author
Lawrence Schiller writes in a new
· book on the crime.
The book, " Perfect Murder Perfect Town," draws on nearly 600
interviews with key players in the
investigation to unveil never-before
reported details about the un~olved
slaying of the 6-year-old be.auty
queen.
After Detective Tom Haney inter-.
viewed Patsy Ramsey · June 23-25,
police reviewing a videotape believed
he had "gotten to the real Patsy,"
according to excerpts released by
Newsweek Sunday.
"She had exhibited the hard side

ld

ftftftftftftftftfiftft~

versity law professor and an expeit'
on the death penalty, said the reasof!
most prisoners who are sentenced to
die don 't.generate a great deal of SUI";
port is their background .
;
"Most arc poor black males who
aren' t able to garner the resources or
bodies io protest," she said: "It's Why
international c~ses gain more inle':'
est."
~
Richey is fair-haired and phot~
genic.
,
Ken Parsigian, Richey's lawyer,
doesn't expect the publicity to impa~l
his client's current appeal pending in
U.S. District Court in Cleveland.
" It's not going to make a difference to a federal judge," he said.
Richey's appeals have been exhausted at the siate level, and the case n&lt;iiN
is in federal court where his lawyefS
hope they can get a new trial.
•
But if the case comes down io
waiting for a clemency decision froln
the governor, Richey's supporten
hav9 the potential to stop his execu:
tion, Parsigian said.
issue are. scheduled to restart this
"If there's a public outcry, thai
afternoon.
may make a difference, " he said. · :
Nearly 6,000 flight s have been
And there's another way the sup;
canceled since the work action began, port is helping Richey's cause.
costing American between $67 mil"I think it gives a boost to Ken:
lion and $90 million, acc!lfding to ny. It matters to him and makes birr\
Chris Chiames, a spokesman for feel bener," Parsigian said. "It pro~
AMR Corp., parent company of vides some satisfaction to know thati
American Airlines.
1
others are hearing your case."

New-book"reveals ·'hard
side' to Ramsey's mom

ALL---dly-..

·IIPikltn-...
"'''!' •. 2:00p.m.
It to ...... !kanclor
--2:00p.m.

Free Estimates

740·742·341 I

' .
deni:e·. It cited the prosecutor's claim nobody was listening," she said
that Richey, who was wearing a cast
They· are now.
on his hand,' climbed a tool shed and
There have been offers to help pay
a balcony on the night of the fire his legal bills. And hundreds of Scotwhile carrying cans of gas and paint tish citizens have flooded news orgathinner.
nizations and ~overnment offices
BUt Ms. Torley still didn't buy with letters asking anyone who will
Richey's story.
listen to inve.stigate Richey's case.
"I didn't like him at first: I thought
Whether this death row campaign
he was arrogant," she safd from her will have any success is debatable.
home in Glasgow, Scotland. "A lot of
Victor Streib, dean of the law
people were skeptical because every- school at Ohio Northern University,
.one says they're innocent."
has been involved in high-profile casThere were plenty of reasons not es invoLving death row prisoners:
'to believe his story. He Wl\5 consid- Creating publicity for a case rarely
ered a troublemaker and a playboy. · results in it being overturned, he said.
He . was irresponsible and· twice
In fact, he .has found that ihe
anemp.ted s'!icide.
media attention is usually a problem
But later afterlearning more about because it's harder to focus on facts
the case, Ms. Torley got involved.
"when you've got minkams in your
"It became very apparent that face and people are screaming at
something was very wrong and you."
Deborah Denno, a Fordham Uni-

sengers prepared for delays.
U.S. District Judge Joe Kendall
At Miami International Airport, said he would decide Wednesday
heart-shaped decorations adorned how much to levy in fines. He
American 's baggage counter wall required the union to place ·$IO miland musicians strolled through the . lion with the court·and for union prestenninal serenading passengers. But ident Rich LaVoy and vice president
many travelers remained angry.
Brian Mayhew to remit a total of
"I think !lost two to 'three years $15,00()..
of age off my life," said Luis Delga"While we are disappointed and
do, a furniture exporter who faced disagree with Judge Kendall's order
delays in three cities over four days of contempt, we urge all pilots to
while trying to get home to Santo comply with ' the restraining order,"
Domingo. Dominican Republic. LaVoy said. " We're taking his order
"This is not my problem, it's Amer- seriously. I took his order seriously
ican Airlines. We don't have to be the Wednesday night. "
ones that suffer."
Negotiations on the Reno pilot

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

reports service back to normal .as sickout ends

i By KATIE FAIRBANK

.
·~ Meigs

ily and look for work.
"He was on death row six years
before anybody here in Scotland
knew about him," said Karen 'rorley,
coordinator of the campaign to free
Richey. " It's unusual because we
don't have the death penalty."
She first .learned about Richey,
·now 36, by watching a documentary
tliat explained how he angrily threatened to set fire (0 his girlfriend's
apartment. Witnesses told authorities
he had said he would " torch the
place.'.'
His girlfriend escaped the flames
but a child, Cynthia Collins, was
trapped in another apartment and
died.
The documentary questioned
whether authorities thoroughly investigated the fire and whether Richey's
lawyer failed to present all·of the evi-

MIJ

·New ~nlfruetlon &amp; Remo4ellng

!Ohio
death
row
inmate
wins.
support
from
far
and
·
a
way
-~
.
.

Custom Homes

~our

own business, work tlt11lble
hOura. beneftls available; Enjoy
limited earnings; Call toll-free: 1·

888-561-2388.

Bates Amuaementlnc, ... seeklnO
Help To Travel For 1999 Sealon.
Ride Operators, Food Helper•
Ortvers Wanted. Call 71140·288:

3120.
Caohl011· lull and pan time, htrlng
lor all ahllts. Ftal growing, lr~ndiY

almoaphere. Send reaum11 cfo

Tha Dally SenUnal, ~.0. Box 729·
75, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.

1---~---

2,. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

3 . ----~------~-

5-------~-----

7. ___________

9 _ _ _ _ _ __

6, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
10·---~---------

11~------ 1 2 . - - - - - - - 13, _____________

14,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
For Additional Worde Please Attach
A Separate Place Of Paper.

15.

Mail or bring this coupon with payment to:

Coder/Analyst: Jackson General

Rlp!a~. WV, hu •"
opening for a full·tlme COderiAn-

Hoapllat,

aiytl. CertlflcaiiOn as an A.A.T.•
Coding -Specialist or equt~alent
exparlence with CPT and ICD·9
Coding required. Tumor Reglatry
knowledge or experience rt·

THE DAILY SENTINEL

tor, Jack1on General HospUat

.

111 COURT ST., POMEROY, OHIO 45769

qulrod. Raply to Paraonntt Dlrec·

.O. Box 720, Ripley, WV 25271 :
turn! Call 740-388·6464 Or 740· P
EOE.
388·9510 .

MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE

.

L-------~-~--------------------~ ~

�'

•
....onday,
February 15, 1999

Pomeroy•

Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzl•
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 Grow """-

7 11IW

13 Pnnec:t
Bartender apply In person at
Jt~C~t between 10 &amp; 2,

no

coltlpioaM

CULULAIIONE, A Provon
L - tn The Cellular Industry
II ;&amp;tfklng An lftllalladon Ttcllnlclln, Whose Primary Function

Will Bo The tnotellation Progra""
Rllng And Servicing Of Celtular

FIELD SURVEY HELPER, ongl
nearing firm requires laborer lo
anlat survey crew with cleaning
line for local project Chalnsaw
cutting Involved. $10 per hour

call e14-467 1650 (Meigs Counly
IUMI)'-'1)

Please Apply In Peroon A1 CEL·

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is cur·
rentty accepting applications/
resum11 for a Stalf CRNA Must
be a registered nurse In the State
of West Virginia Graduate of an
Accredited School of Anesthe
sla Certification or 'eligible for
certifications by the American
Association of Nurse Anesthe
tlsts Competitive wages and ex
cellent benefits Please apply or
send resumes' to Pleasant Val
lay Hospital C/O Personnel
2520 Valley Drive PI Pleasant

LULARONE, 1502 Eastern Ave
GallipOlis OH

WV 25550 or lox to {3041875
8975 AAIEOE

Applications Witt Be Accepted

Resumes are being accepted for
a part· tlme janitorial job at the
Court House and County-owned
annexes The position will begin
at S8ooo per year for approx
lmately 20 hours per week Some
basic knowledge of healing and
cooling systems and plumbing
arv preferred Anyone Interested
can turn In resumes at the Com
missioners office Court House
100 East Second Street Po mer

Telephone EQUipmonL
The SUCCIIIIUI CaMtdates Will
Possess Excellent Interpersonal

Sldlll, Bo StK·MoU.attd Customer Oriented And Have Installs
lion~

We Offer A Competitive Salary
And Benefits Otalgnad To Re
ward Outstanding Achievement

Through F&lt;lbruary 15, 1999 CELLULARONE 10 A EOE M/F/0/F
Computer Users Needed, Work

OWn Hro $20K $75K fYr 1 800
348 7188 ext 1173 www amp
inc can

Cosmetologlot Notdtd Full &amp; Part
Time Paid Vacallon Hourly Vs
Commission Free CEU Houra

740'ol48-7287
Direct Sales/Audit Technician
CllbteVIslon Communications Is
currently accepting applications
for Cable tv direct sales/audit
lechnlclana Job responslbllltle&amp;
Include but are not limited 10 ca
bit television sales and service
Installation CATV sales and
techoicar experience or eQulval·
enl training In electronics Is
helpful The SUCCISSiul can
dldate should be self motivated
~et team oriented There will be
travel Involved Applicants must
possess a valid drivers license
This description is nol all inclu
slve A competitive wage and
benefits package Ia provided
The auccessful candidate will be
requltad to pass a pre employment company drug screening
lest and a poat· employment
background check Interested
par1Jes should apply In writing to
CablaVIslon Communlcallons
Attanuon Craig Van~ 1410 Jef
farson Blvd Box t06 Point

Pleaoant WV 25550 EOE·DrugfratWorl&lt;place
EKperlencad Backhoe/Dozer Operator Musl be a licensed con·
tractor for the State of WV Call

D&amp;W HOmes at 1-800-878-4429
Help Wanttd • Experienced Roofers
Must Have Hand Tools
Valid Drivers Ucensa Reliable
Transportation And Relerences
Applications Are Available At
Christian s Construction 1403

eastern Ave Gallipolis OH From

8-5 740-446-4514
FrontlerVIalon Operating Partn·
era LP. A Fast Growing National
Multi-System Cable Operator
Has An Immediate Full Time
Opening For An lnslatlar Technl
c1an In The Gallipolis /Ironton
Oh1o Systems We Are Seeking
Individuals That Are Career

M oded And Highly Motivated
The Successful Candidate Must
Have A High School Diploma Or
Equivalent With A Good Driving
Record Cable Installation EJCperlence Helpful But Not Necessary
In Return For Your Expertise
FrontlerVislon Offers An Excel·
lent BeneUts Package And Competitive Wages Send Resume By
February 19 1999 To Frontier
Vls1on AttentiOn Human Re·
sources At PO Box 627, Chtlll

420 Mobile Homa
for Rent
INoncEt
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommenda lhat you do bual·
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated

the offering

Avollablo VEND/NO Rte- Mull
StU By 2121 10 20 Locations
S2K ·$1 OK $4 000 +IMO Income
100% Finance W /Good Credit
Toll Free&gt;1-88H38-9508

Professional
Services

230

Llvlngalon'a Bailment W•terProoflng, all basement repairs
done free estimates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job experl
ence :JOt 195 3887

RNG Profesolon,al Paint Servlc
ea Residential Commercial In
terior/Exterlor Custom Wood·
work Furnishings Professional

Service Slnco 1919 (740)387
503e
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /S$17
No F&lt;le Urt/NS We Wlnl
1-888-582 3345

oy, Ohio 45769

Athena-Meigs ESC 507 Richland
Avenue Suite 108 Alhens OH

45701 bY February 24 1999

Substitutes Needed For Child·
ren's VIllage Must be at least 18
years old with a high school dl·
ploma or GEO Must have an In
tereSI In and a desire to wor11: with
lntanta and toddlers Previous
eKperlence w1th preschool child·
ren preferred Reply to Rlwr Val-

ley CDS P 0 Box 5441 Hunt
lngton WV 25703 by Feb 19
EOE
The Southern Local School Dis
tr!ct has the position of reserve
girl's softball coach available for
the 1999 season All applicants
must possess or acquire a
sports medicine cenlllcate and a
CPA Card Phone 740 949 2669
for lurther Information Please
send inquiries to James Lawrence Superintendent Southern
Local SchOols PO Box 176
Racine Ohio 45771 SLSO Ia end

Equal Opportunlly Employer
Wanted-

a managing casmetolo

gist Lindt o Seauly Shop PO Box
111 Ch.,ter, Oh 45720 send a
reaume references experience

a

necessary

the F-rat Fair HoullrtQ Act
o1 1llel wt11cflmat&lt;• K lltgal
to tdvtrtl1e •any ,..,.,._,
lmltallon or dlocrlmlnotlon
baSed on race color. rallglon
sex familial 118tus or naHonll

origin, or any Intention to

make arrv auch ,.,.,.nee,

Mrnttollon or chcltminltion •

wf1k:lllllln- of the
taw. o... ""' hertby
Informed thellil-ngs
ldvef1:1Md In lhll newspaper
. . avdablt Man equal
CJPIIQI1unlly baalo

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale

By owner 725 Page Street Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to apprecla1i will sell -house With
out lots tor $89 000 740-992

2704 740-1)92 5696

Wanted Mobile Crane Operator

With Class A COL s Position Lo
cated In Nelsonville Ohio Mini
mum Of Two Years EKperience

Neconory Call t-800·339 8518
Mon·Ffi800AM 500PM

In Town living • 442 First Ave
Large 2 Story Formal LA Formal

DR 4 BR 2 112 Baths. Well
Equipped Kitchen, Lg Basement
In Ground Pool WJHeater, Lg
Family Room, Off Street Parking
Serious Persons Only 740 592

5236 (Atllens) After 5 OOPM
Crop Insurance Burley To
matoes Corn Ken Bass In
surance 1 800-291-6319

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres VIllage Middleport
secluded and private appoint

Help Wanted EKperlenced Car
penters Must Hsve Own Tools
Pi(:k Up Truck Valid Drivers ll
cense And References Appllca
tlon Are Available. At Christians
Construcllon, 1403 Eastern Ave

My Home Can A M 740 388
9479

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

dleport Ohio 45780

tiiiiEDtATE OPENING
Well Established Pesl Control
Company Looking For A Serious
Self Motivated Technician Must
Be Able To Pass The Ohio De
partment Of Agriculture D1v1sion
Of PesUclde Licensing Test Must
Mave A Valid Ohio Drivers Ll
censa Excellent Benefits Offered
Come Into Office Between The

Hours01830AM And400PM
To Fil l Out Application Boggs
Pest Control Inc 11 Boggs

Road OBI&lt; Hill OH 45658

o

Need 5 Ladles To Sell Avon 740

Eldorado Adult Home Long Or
Short Term Care Private Room
S1 400 Semi Private Room

Part·Time Teachers Aide For
Children s VIllage Must be able
to work from 11 30s m ·5 30p rn
M·F Does include fringe bene
fila Muat be at leaat18 years
old Willi a
SChool diploma or
GEO Mu have an Interest ln
a a de rt to work with infants
Cl to lara Previous experl
IM..,.otih preschoOl j:lhlldren pre
rerred Reply to River Valley

CDS P0 Box ~44 1 Huntington
wv 25703 by Feb t9 eoE

1997 Chevy Cavalier, 2 Doors, AI
C Tllt, Cro,llst 5 Speed, CO Play
''· Power Mirrors, Power Sunroof,
G""'n 38,000 Mlleo $9,500 740- •
992 7102.

937-379-4015
As Little As $500 Down 1 608
928-3426

Furniture repair refinish and res
torallon also custom orders Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop Larry

PhUI/ps 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your your logs to a mill JUSt

Frontage 740-367.0138

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View
Gallla County
$32 000 More Acreage Available

a.

Hunt·
ing, Public Wate r City Schools!
Teens Run Ad, 10 Acres

$10000
Melge Co

Danville Briar Ridge

+ GoH Ads • 7 Acres With Pond
Or 5 Acres With Stream $12,000
Or On SR 325 Nice Wooded 17

call 304·675-1957
Handyman&amp; Special Elec ca r·
pentry other repairs &amp; remodel
lng Free E&amp;tlmate (304) 674

0126
Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl

capped 74Cl-441 1536
Interior Painting Plumbing &amp; Re
modeling Any And All Odd Jobs

9648 740 367 7010
RESUMES UNLIMITED Offers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get Your Prepared 740 388

3800
Roach Cuslom Butchering West

Takmg Applicatio ns On 3 Bed
room Repo Pre Approval In 10
MII'M..IIesl 800-383-6882

New 14wlde 3br/2 balh, $500
$185 per mo Free air 1 800-691

8777
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
1ncludes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer skirUng
deluKe steps and setup Only
$200 7-4 per month with $1150

dOwn Cali 1 800 837 3238
New 4BR, 16wlde, $500 down/
$219 pef mo Free Air 1 800

691 6777
Oakwood Homes Barboursville

wv Tired 01 No? we Say Yesl
304-738-3409

Columbia (304)882 3133

Down Payment

Will do au occasion cards 1nv1ta
Uons etc can do newsletters
boarders &amp; etc 740-992·1489

No Problem I 1125·2128/99 1-800·

Klndl740-388 8010
would like To Be A Singer In A
Rock &amp; Roll Band Please COntact

251-5070
Rent Buster new 1999 14K70 2or
3 bedrooms only $990 00 down
S195 00 per mon free delivery

and let up cell 1 800 946 5678

John, 740-448-2454

New bank repos only two leU
never lived In call 1·800 948

Would Lllle To Do Houseclean·

5678

lng, 740-245-9258

FINANCIAL

210

Buslnes.t
Opportunity
Y2K TliiEBOMBI

Factory goof Ill Save thousands

call 1 800 948 61!78
used single wide around S1 00
per mon 1·8Q0.9&lt;t8 5678
Limited offer 1999 double wide, 3

br 2 ba $1 799 dOwn $275 00
pe, mon

delivered aM set up

Learn How To protect Yoursalr

call 1 1100-948 5678

While Crtatlng FA$T lncomol

Two bedroom $3000 740 992

Free Report 1 800 410 2612
x3131

73e7

For Rant 740 388-1100

&amp; Trailer

~EAUTIFUL

APARTMENTS AT
SUDGE'r PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to f358 Walk to shop

a.

movies Call t•0--448·2588

Equal Housing Opportunity

Furnished Upstair&amp; 2 Room&amp; &amp;
Bath, Clean References, &amp; De·

y,:

modate 2Bx50 Home Or Larger,
140.388-8058
t ,.

posh Required Utllll/es Paid l40446-1519

Electrtc Scoolera, WhMichalrt

Now And U..d. Slllrw~y Eleva·
tort, Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts, Bowman a Homecare 740446-7283.
For Sale Rail Buggy Needo en
glnt Repair $400 00 Call 74P
..1-1)109
Four Prom Gowns Sizes 8 Thru

12 740-2!18-8803
Girls 20 Inch Bicycle Pink And
Purple Very Nlca, $25, 74D-245·
5138

COUNTRY LOTS
In Gallla Count)' OK State Route
233 Naar Gallla 7 Acres Mead
ows Fenc:ad In Area WIShed
Ready For Animals. Only
$1450000 20AcreHuntlng
'llacts W/Access Rd To Wayne

port From $249-1373 Cell 740992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor-

2359

tunities

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New l ReWitt In SIOd&lt;
Call Ron Evtna 1-6Q0.537-9528.

National Forest Mostly Woodad On~ $23 000 00 Land COn
tract Available Free Maps An

thony Land Co, Ltd 1-800-2138365

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime location In
downtown Gallipolla No PetsJ
$300 oo month plus utilities Rat·
erencas &amp; Deposit Required

Cali (740) 446·3302 for appointment
Now Taking Applications- 3!5
Weal ~ Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments lnclu~es Water

RECREATION LAND
South Of GaHipolls Naar Crown
City 35 Acre Recreational Ttacts
Of Land Clo86 To Crown C/ly
dille Ar"" Own Your Own Hunting

w"

~ ... Only $28,000 00 Land
~Available 1-800-213-

8365

380

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted 2 -3 Acres Secluded
Land Wllh Access Must Be
Bulldabla Or M H Accessible

740-448-2317
Wanllng To Buy 15 To 20 Acres
Prefer Something With Buildings
&amp; Barn, &amp; Some Usable Acres,
On land Contracl 740 367-()280
We Bu~ Land 30 · 500 Acres,

We Pay Cash 1 800 213-8365
Anthony Land Co

RENTAL S

410 Houses for Rent
House ~ Ciose To Rio
Granda College $280fMo Water

1 Bedroom

441 -,917
lot Fenced ln yard $425 mo

(304)882·3199
2BR Economical References

Depostt No Pets (3041675·5182

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

Required 1 888-640.0521
Clean 2 bedroom house In Po
meroy $3SO per month plus de
posit no pets land contract pos
Sible after a year 740-698-7244
For Rant 3 BR House In New Ha
van Call (304)675 1651 altar

(304)895 3568
Modular Home in Mason WV
38A/2 Bath heal pump garden
tub In master bath S~n Room
refr ldgerator/slove furnished

Foam 5/

f6ths, 54x90, 1xl4x27, 740·446I

,..

Klngalze Waterbed she drawers
Lighted/Mirrored Headboard

1175 (304)675-7119

•

Long While PromCresa, Slzt 4

New, $150 00 Shor1 Burgundy
Drtss Size 5, Ntw, $22 00 740448-0568

LOSE WEICIHTI
,
Call RIIB 1·888·oilf·3758 Horbal·
lfa /ndependenl Dlalrt&gt;utof
'

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

MIJCed aeatoned firewood, cut,

One bedroom apartment In Mid
I

One BR Furnished Apt In PI
Pleasant Very cleanfnice No
pets (304)675·1388
Renters Dream Come Ttuel Gall

304·736·7295
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms 2

Floors CA 1 112 Bath, Fully Car·
paled Pallo, No Pata, lease PIUI
Security Deposit Required 740

448-3481 740-448-0101
"TWin Rivera Tower now accepting
applications for 1br HUO aubaldlzed apt for elderly and handl-

cawed EDH 304-675-8679
Upstairs efficiency with private
entrance completel~ furnished,
quiet surroundings thrae miles
from the Ravenswood Ritchie

Bridge In Ohio Partect first apart·

ment for a single person or new
couple If you are looking II s a
muSI see It's $390 a month, utili
ties are Included A $300 deposit
Is required For more information,
or an appointment call 740 843

5343 and ~ave a message
Why Rent , you can own your
own home for as low as $499
down low monthly payments
owner financing available 304·

-

755·7191 Oak wood Mobile

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

740-365-4367
Trailer lor for rent In Middleport
near grocery stores schools
churches and park utilities avail
able new trailer only, no pets

740-992 2319

MERCHANDI SE

5PM
Mouse lor Rent In Polnl Pleasant
In Good Location No pets

111x18x28, 8•5x25,

Sewage Trash $295/Mo 740
448 0008

$300 00 304-1175-1550

Household
Goods

510

apl/t tnd dtflvtrtd $30 lotd 740742-2283
"' Moonraker Four, 75 H entrance
cable, 75 ft of Coax, heavy
switch box ham ro1or, approx
lmately 30 H ot tower you take It
down, $800 nogotlablt, ball&lt;olball
bankboard, still in the box. never

used S50 740-992-7997

Prlrneatar S49 Installation, with
value special Free bonus gift

aoo-263-2840
Prom And Evening Gowns, Sizes
Three Boughl New From
Brittany a In 1998 One Whitt
Chiffon Dreu Bought In Novem·
bar For Pageant One Lavender

.. e

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned 5260 $300, aewer
wa1er and trash Included 740992

2187

2 Bedroom Mobile Home You
Pay Ullllllas &amp; Deposit In Porter

Area $265/Mo 614-388-9182
2 Bllrdroo ms 2 Bath Trailer In
Green Terrace $350/Mo , In·
etudes Lot Rent Water, Sewer
And Trash $250 Oeposil And
References Required No Pets
Excellent Condition 740 · 44 t .

1913.

er Check lhtse prices against
your popular Bell Balere, NH,
Vermeer, JD Heaston Keefers
Service Center, St Rt 87, Pt
Plooeant &amp; Jllptey Rd (304)8953674

t2 Mos , I 75% 24 Mo, 35% 36
Mol 4 5% -48 Mol 5 5% -60
Mo Used lioy Equipment AI Low
As 3 ~~ C"armlchatl'o Form &amp;
Lawn. Mtdwoy 8ttw- Qalllpollo
And Rio Grande On Jackson

Pike 74Q-448-24 12 Or t ·900594-1111
New Holitlnd 352 Grinder Mi ..r,
4·Ut ateerablt plow, round,
aquare bales of hay, 740·992-

73l2.,.,..ngl
Witch

Trencher

$2,!l00 oo eon 740-894-7842

'
630

Livestock

1 year otd Roan filly, welt broke,
exceller')t dlspoiiiiOn, great faml
ly ~lotte $800 (304)875-711 9

$1 75 A Bole Also Have Riding
Horooo For Sale Coli After 5 PM
740-388-8358

Waterllno Sp ..lal
200 PSI
$21 9~ Per 100, 1• 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Braes Com·
pression Fittlnglln Sloclc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackoon Ohio, 1-800-537-9528
Womena Size 6 Boots 8 Inch
High Oil eteclrlc Heater 2~ Old
Time 8 Track Tapes, Part Sewing
Machine 740-448 9304

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brick aewer pipea, wind·
owa lintels, etc Claude Winters

Rio Grande OH Call 740·245

5121

560

Pets for Sale

AKC Golden Retriever 23
Months Old For Stud Service

Call304-773-5011 Or 304·773
persAval-

plea Alao. Mate Slomtoe Cat
Good Breeder Or Pet 7•0·367nos
AKC

740-992 9989
2008 Camden ~111nue
l_'arkoraburg WV 28101
304-465-1293

Hay For Sale Square Bates

$1 75 A Salt
740-387.0583

740·~45-~872

01

Round Bales Of Mixed Hay

1983 Dodge Truck With Tool
Boxes, $1 900 oo 740·448·1e37,
Or740-448-3437
1987 KW W900 425 Cat 48 1\•
ars Heavy Specs 74Q-258-6808

•

Square Or Round Bales Delane

Jackson Farm~ 740-446-1 104

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos for Sale
87 Dodge Charger, good condl·
lion, greet work car, $890 OBO,
740-992-8929

THE BORN LOSER
...

'(CN\, 1\ CNJ:'£~ :)Wt;;tl.tt&gt;IG I~
1-\a. WM!&gt;IUNE I

91 Lincoln Towne Car, runs per

CD player, eXcellent condition,

$7',400 7 4 0 - -

730 Vars &amp; 4-WOI

,

1984 Chovy S·10 •Biozer 4Wil,
2 8 engine, engine runs b\rt
needs vibrk body looks good
$800, 740-742 1049

I'IAYBE If I

1988 Chevy Astra 94 000 Mil I I
&amp; Whitt, Very Nlct,
$3 800, For Mo&lt;t Information Coli
304-773·5011, Dr L•••• Mas

-

1989 Chrysler 5th Avenue New
Yorker 318 Motor Top condition

$3 500 (304)675-8132

1989 Flreblrd Loaded Excellent
Condition $4 500 oo 740-24~5797
GoOd Shape

Lab Pups AKC 8 Weeki, Cho· 1991 Cadillac Sevilla 4 door ae·
cotate &amp; Black, 1s1 Shots &amp; dan loaded with acceuorlea,
Wormed, Call Alter 5 00 PM great gas mileage, car phone,
(740) 446-2480
304-tl75 2722
Shar Pel puppleo, Iota ol wrlnklel, 1991 Caval/or $2,9~0. 1989
$200 &amp; up, 740-949-2128
Ca\'lltlar $2 395, fIn Ford F 250
1 Owner S2 495 Cook Mo·
Shar Pel puppies, loll ol wrlnkleo, 4x4
tors, 740-&lt;146-0100
$200 &amp; up 740-94/1-2)26

1989 Tan eth Avenue , 92 000
Mile&amp;, Good Condition , Runs
Good $2,300 740-446-7413

1993 Ford Taurua OL Loa ded

72 000 mlleo $5 500 (304)578·

2048

I
I

PRETEND

I DON T SEE Hlt1,
l'IE LL SIT BACK

DOWN

I

YEAH' ILL

.lU!&gt;T ACT CLUELES!&gt; 1

1988 Blazer 4WD 6 cyllndtr au
IOmetfc AC, PS PB, greet shape
$3700 740·992·7478 or 740-949-

I I..L PLAY DUI1B'

I

THATLL

:c: AHE 1'1' -::

BE A

STRETCH

FOR

I

YOU

MAY
CUT
IN.,

::-t..&lt;~.c.,

2045

2 Goddeoa of

dlecord
3 Voatagea
4 Po...,ul
oxploolve
(crawling)
5 TV'a .._Haw''
Mollo and
Mignon/
8 Whirlpools
7 To tile point
Rope fiber
Wlndowolll alta 8 Wld41 ahoe alze
Voldo
9 Work unit
10 Hurried
Embrace
Mother ul Mile 11 Counting-out
Firat word In
word
volcano

---

32 Rodeo rope
33 --touro

10 6 52

34

A 9 T 3

8 5
K Q 10 9 8
K QJ
A83

35

38
37

31
41
44

South

West Nonb

East

2•

Paso

All pasa

4•

Your nght-hand opponent has JUSt
opened the b1ddmg You have a hand
that feels as tf tt ts worth some actton,
but what? The normal chmces are an
overcall (perhaps a weak JUmp over
call), a one-no trump overcall, and a
1akeout dojtbl~ In borderlme cases
how do you dec1de whtch to ptck?
Let's spend a couple of weeks
answenng that question
Ftrst, though allow me to clanfy
the dtfferences between overcalling
and doubhng For an overcall at the
one-level you are supposed to have
at least a five- card su11 (though a very
strong four-bagger hke A - K Q 10 ts
sometimes acceptable, espectally m
spades) And your pomt count w1ll
usually be m the I 0 16 range The
weaker your hand, the stronger your
sun should be For a two level overcall, you wtll normally have 12-16
pmnts and a stx card sun, though a
strong ftve may quahfy 1f you have
nothmg beller to do as m thts deal
Note rhe upper hmtl m strength
W1th more, you start With a takeout
double as we w1illearn on Saturday
Agamsl four hearts, West leads the
spade mne, East playmg three rounds
of the sutl (perhaps cashmg the d1a
mond ace before the thtrd round)
As East opened one spade, West
must have started Wtlh only two
spades Therefore you, South must
be careful not to send a boy to do a
man's JOb Ruff the thtrd spade wtth
the heart kmg (or queen) Then cash
the heart queen (or kmg) because
West ts much more hkely than East
to have all three mtssmg trumps
Here, you ptck up the hearljack wtth
a finesse and crutse home

moallr

19 Unclose (.,-)
21 Exceaalve
affection
22 Clears tho
bleckboard

I-lOW CAN SOMEONE

built, New lire S1 800 {304)675 '
7tl9

Budgel Priced Tranamtaalons.
an,d Englne!ll, All Types Access
To Over 1o 000 Trahsmlulons

You'H buNd o b•r ~~ tgg when
tw sooe with the doulfieds

740-245-8877
'
::N-ew-ga_s_te_n_k_s_&amp;_body
__
pa_r_ts_D---i&amp;(
37 ~

's

CJST

KPA

s

VG

mobile home repair and more For
e111ma1a call Chat 740 992·
Profllllonal 20yra experience
wllh all maeonery, brick, block &amp;
atone 41ao room additions, ga
rages, etc Free estimates 304

773-9550

840 Electrh;al and
Refrlgeretlon
Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repairs Master Ll·
cenaed electrician
~ltelrlcal,

178fl

Rldenou1

WV000308, 304 175

TFYJZ

LZUUJZ

A FZ

y N

AKFGNKG,

Thesday, February 16, 1999
Thts could be a ptvotal year for
you 1n more ways than one If you' n:

•presently unauached, this sltuauon
mtght be slated for a change If your
ltfe IS dull, adventurous tnterludes
-may be tn the making
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Success can be a foregone concluston
today 1f your obJeCttves are clearly
"defined at the get-go It could well be

that financtal or matenal constdera·
ltons mtghl be the eas1es1 to ottatn
Trymg to patch up a broken
~o mance? The Aslro Graph Match
maker can help you understand what
• ,to do to make the relottonshtp work
matl $2 75 to Matchmaker, clo thts
newspaper, PO Box 1758, Murray
H1ll Stauon, New York, NY 10156
PISCES (Feb 20-Morch 20) What
you

learn today may not come out of

books, but from personal expen
- ences, wh1ch you'll be able to use lat

' er for a number of advantageous pur-

pus..
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprtl 19)
Should you have to deal wnh some
one who has a reputouon of, hetng

shrewd and tough tn buStncss today,
follow your tnsttncts, because they'll
be ngln on target
,
TAURUS (Apnl 20-Moy 20) If

your compamons are movers and
shakers, you're ltkely fo be one as
well However, thts could also be true
1f they're deadbeats Your enthuStasm
may be determtned today by the compony you keep
GEMINI (May 2 I -June 20)
You 're m a good ochtevcment cycle
today and your thrust could be more
accelerated than usual The chances
of you renltztng your ambiltous
objecuves are excellent at thts 11me
CANCER (June 21-luly 22) Treat
what occurs phtlosophtcally and
you'll be more than up for copmg
wtth the full spectrum of today 's
events, enher good or bad lliumph
and fatlure are both Impostors
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Make
flnanctal developments your maJor
prtonty today, because your chances
at thtS ttme are better than usual for
concludtng tht~~gs lo your sausfoc-

KG

s

JDGVKG'N

let us fimsh the wort&lt; we

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "With malico toward none

are In, to bind up the nations wounds " - Abraham Lincoln

'::~:t;~' S@\\.(llA-~£~s·
::::
- - - - - - 141to4
CU.Y I , POlLAN_,;_;,__ _ __
~r

0 four

Aearronge

letters of the

ocromblod wordo balctw to form four wordt

I

I

F-u x N I L

I I 1 I'
3

m

L YDE I

1I I I
6

.1:"'_,,

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTHS

I'

by t1ll1ng

IJon

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) It s

that

comes ) r

1 \\

I

-t

FEBRUARY15I

ay Fortu-

ucellent

1Hea1llivf11ICC)

mficancc to them

•

huckle quoted
.t m1ssrng words

SCRAM-UTS ANSWERS
Dende- Index- Leech- Magnet - EXCEEDING
I think everyone IS foolish at least five mmutes a day
I also th1nk wtsdom conststs 1n not EXCEEDING that
t1me

nately, you're more than ready to do
wha11t takes
SAOITfAIUUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Even tf tt lakes a second or fhu"CI
clfort on your port to bnng about a
desnable result to finish an amb111ous
proJO&lt;t. Your chances for success are
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
One of your greatest gtfts today wtll
be your ability to elfecttvcly convtnce
others that wha11s of 1mmed1a1e concom to you coold also be of cquals1g

the
tn i

you de&gt;o~elop from step No 3 below

tmperattvetoday that you be the one
who supphes fhe mtttat1ve whtle
your counterpart provtdes the bockup 1n any Important partnershtp
You're the one who has the most dnve
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Your
most subslanttalgams today ore hke- I
ly to cot!te from your matenal offaus
Although condtt1ons u\ general look
good, greater benefits than usual are
found m thiS realm
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) Bold
strokes may be reqUired today m
order to bring to fnntmn somethmg

good

•

WKAFZE

'

'

'

PGGKAYXZV

u.

EZUZOSF

UJZWYNF

ASTRO·GRAPH

•
'

Secret"
52 Paycho

VYSWKGY

SERV ICES

General Home Maintenance Painting, vinyl siding
carpentry, doors, wlndowl baths

+&gt;

by Luis Cempos

Hitch Needs/ D&amp;L Family R~
Center. 7~800
,~

'Home
lmprovemants

,

48 MNaure out

c.brily Cipher cryptograrrw aN CtN.Itd from quotationl ~ farriOUI ptqM put and PNMnl
EIOh litter in lhe cipher atanda lor~ TOCIIY, C1w R ~ J

Hornet Starlight &amp; Campllght

C&amp;C

•

53 Yoar(Sp.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Travel Tra11e11 &amp; Tent Trailers,'
Sales &amp; Service We Also CarrY,
Truck Acceesoriea &amp; All Vou q

French City Maytag, 740·448
n95

42 '"Yea,-1"
43 Kelt ut the

component

Condition Garage Kept Uaeq
Very Li1tte 740-446-2502

Appliance Pans And Service All
Name Branda Over 25 Years Ex·
perlenoe All Work Guaranteed,

11-1

47 VP'o ouperlor
49 Arrange
50 "-Got•

1985 Airstream Travel Trailer 31
Fl Purchased New, Very Goqd

448 0870 1 800-287 0576 Rog·

•

come?

goddeoa

I MONDAY

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

era Waterprooflf1Q

babyto

45 Egyptian

8

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceesorlee

Uncondltlonallifellme guarantee
local references furnished Es
tabllohtd 1975 Gal 24 Hro (7&lt;10)

' '1

com lee

-

KNOW ..

J

Texaa

41 Between maxi ,
and mini

~.-.&amp;. ...,.-L.-.L.-..1.--L
. ....J

I WOIJLDIII1T

NOT GET EVEN
ON~ VALENTINE'?

,,
c
.;
'"

40 Walllcllor t~ .

t-:7;-r:I~:-'Eri. .;F-r.:I~. . . ;R;. .I. :o:. . -1- 1 0 ~ompl•••

1985 Yamaha XT-600 excellent.
condition, onfoff road Engine re

•

vacation aile -

30HebreW
month
31 Sh_.,._
37 Either u1 two
NT. books
38 Capital u1

Student "Mom says I have
to stay 1n school unttl 1m e1ghI
. .
- . .
teen I' Teacher Don t feel bad
r~------'--"'-t I have to stay until I m - -

Motorcycles

BASEMENT
WATERP!IOOFINCl

•'
lnotrumont, of'
aaon
••
24 Cord
combination
25 River to the l~;
Coaplan
26 BoRba//
complement
27 Full houM,
og
29 Popular
.:

5

rise, Power lock/windows, EK·

810

23 Porcuaalon

12 Arl Deco

team

1997 C!'lev Blazer Truck, LS,

pm weekdays or an~tlme weekends
B~rgundy

'"I

94 Ranger Splash, black, 4 Iller
V 8 apou wheels, tomeau cover,

87 Pontiac Flreblrd, good shape,
$1500 '89 Plymouth Sundance 5
Speed, St200, 74Q-992 5532

feel, 70 ooo mlleo loaded /ooko
good call 740 992 2358 alter 5

o""- ....

1997 Chev Blazer LS 42K Milos,
PS, PB, Air, CD Player Towing
P.I&lt;O $21,!l00, 740-448-93M

790

$1 75, 740·992-2823

-

•

•

1985 GMC JIIMl)' excelent Condillon Loto Of Extras/ 740-446·

Round bales $Hi, aquara bales

·- -r

By Phillip Alder

•

'

R ~uto, Ripley, WV 304
3933 or 1 8oo-273-9329

540 Miscellaneous
Merchendlae

1602

??

ENTE/ltf!/6
MINNESOTA

Front End Wrecked, All Elae Ex·

~M

1 Former
Yugoelav

Overcall or double

'II CALLS

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1881 Chevy 112 Ton Full Size PI
U 305 Auto Fair Shape, $750,
1985 Chavy 112 Ton Ful SiZit P/U
colltnt Condition, 305 Auto
$1,000, 1982 GMC 314 Ton P/U
Body Good Condition, Doa1 Not
Run $500; CaH 740·446-4514 Be·
fore 5 Or 740·448·3248 After 5

21 Moat profound
25 Knock trom o

DOWN

Openfng lead • 9

1979 Ford F1 50 4op , flcyl , So~
ld • Runo good $850 {304)8953746

Stored InSide $18 Per Bale 740
245-!550e

Four full btoOded Dalmatian
plea, 2 males 2 femelea,
lOCh 740-992·3147 otter 2pm

Wanted Stud Service For Fe

HOW COME I NEVER
GOT ENNY

l

760

Puppies &amp; Kmeno
Full line ot pall supplies

malo AKC Toy Poodle 740 441

I HEARD YOU MISSED l WAS
TH' BARN DANCE
THAI
LAST NIGHT
SHERIFf'

&lt;
1974 Chevy 1 Ton 12 Fl Bod&lt;
With Cottle RaCks N&amp;eda A tKtlo~
Work $1,50000 7-'l992
1975 Chavy Truck B50, Auto Tlh,!
Chrome Whee/a, Good Body•
~$7;,;50;,;.:.;,080:.:..;:..7:..40-44~,;,1;_1;,;083,:;:,;:;_ __,
.:
1978 Chtvy 4x4 Pick-Up 740387 5055.

•

I•

1997 Hondo Aspencade 3200
miles While New condition
{740) 258-6126 Leave Mtlllgol '

cell740-949 1022 as/dor Jim
•k"lot 740-742-2539.

BARNEY

I

740

am 10600 pm Sunday 100to
8 00 p m 740-992 2528 Ruos
Moore owner

74Q-387·7884

1972 Chevy Plck· up truck run•. •

2D~oaton

Vulnerable Both
Dealer· East

nuda 1 little work (:104)773·,

per load anywhera In Meigs Co

Antiques

ory Gardena Subject To Offer

720 Trucks for Sale

tended Warranty. S6,000 miles
$18 000 (304)882 3897 after
6PM

order&amp; llr fll dirt, good 1op
ooll dirt available 2118/99, $100

Wanted· 12" cast Iron lid for

•

Saddle light oiled $375 Red

Ta~ng

B ~ SOuUioldt Aquortum

1 Crypt &amp; Pllta $2 000 oo Mom

oy 740-992 3)11

Push Button 4WD, 4Door, Cu·

$15000 740-258-1114

Washers dryers, ralrlgeralors
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78

•WARM YPt•

Many nice used cars lrucks:
Blazers Explorers Come and
deal Mark'e -Auto Sfles Pamer· .

Regletered 22 Month Old Paint
Fn~. Slue Eyes, 740-388-9130

Bull

•

•

'
Soutb
•
•
•
•

1984 Chevy 4,.. ao 11. lots of new
parte, 14Q-9ol9-2685

Range With Stainless Steel Top
And Black Glasa Door, Asking

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Furnace Heat Pumpa, &amp; Air Conditioning Free Esllmatesl If You
Con t Call U1 We Both Loael
740-WI-6306 1 /I00-29Hl098

9411-2885

t99e Che•y S 10, Loaded, 74Q448-03215 Alfof4 30 PM

Ditch

J 9 4

1997 Saturn SC1 loaded 7•0· ,

pacts In Stock New John Deere
MoCoa And Round Balers 0% -

Ustd

.

1

7289

Square Bales Of Mla:ed .Hay

$150 oo For Wo1hor $125 00
For Dryer Or $225.00 For Match
lng Sat Whirlpool Bullt-/n,Eiectrlc

der, Autom

New 5010, 8010 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7 75% FIMed
Ralt John Deere Cradll Financing
AvaMablo Now 4000 Serieo Com-

Sears Kenmore Large Capacn~
Washer And Dryer Asking

Registered
miniature
Dachshund long haired pupplll
two pair of breeding Cockatells

Buy or sell Rlverlnl' Antiques
t 12-4 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T w 1o 00

50%, less moving parts 4X-4

$150000fltos 74().388-9725

For Sale Reposaeaaed Rainsoh
Water Treatment S~stem 112
Price like New! Comes With

530

yr warranly on Bars &amp; Bearings,

Gentle

Newly remodeled all electric
walerftrash paid $340 + deposit
Glenwood area (304)578 2929

14•62 2BR all electric water!
trash paid $300 .. depo&amp;l1 Jar
rys Run Road area (304)576
2929

wrap, no btttl ootid bar type 3

$1 ,000

AKC Miniature Dachshund Pup·

VIne Street Can 740·448-73'98
1-888-6 18·01 28

M l W Round Baler Dealer lor

Good Herd
(304)895-3319

French Clly Moylag 740·446
n95

44Hl720

$2 000. (304)458-16n

Llmosln Polled Bull

S400 mo (304)773 5721 Defore
5PM (304)882 3139 ahor 5PM

1 Bedroom Porter Area $3751
Mo Includes All UUIIIIes 740

Gr•vety Tractor reconditioned
Kohler engine, -4 attachments,

Plus Four Mora, All Priced

!584 1 For More loformatlon, Pa

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

87, PI Ptoaunl &amp; Rlplty Rd
(304)8115-3874

Chllfon Panto And Halttr Top

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers flanges Refrl·
graters 90 Day Guarantee!

Worronly 1 888-448-3278

ICeetera Servjct Center, St At

7001 $9,900
4X5 10001
$12,000. excolienl Stteago Bal·

Heavy Duty Boxeo- 18x3x4 1

740-448-0390

Ford New Holland F&lt;lbruory llac
tor Sale 3930 4WD, 45 PTO
H P, 192 Turbo Symcho axe
Trona F and 1'1 Shutllo, Large
pump, 2 remolll, 4 outlet&amp;, 2 yr
lull warranty, $20,900. 48:iO 56
PTO H P S'omt Spec 122 908
Our 45 and 55 HP Trectoro weigh
13001 morJ than JD 5210 and
5310 3012 2WD, $13,500, 3010
4WD, 42 PTO H P 1 remote
18500

thla area Fixed chamber, auto

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

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

Ftrguoon-30 llactor, ~aw Tire' 3
Point Hitch Exctlltnl Condition
$2 800 lnltrnatlonel 140 'ltactor,
Now cultivators f3,500 (304)
875-3824

Grubb o Plano tuning &amp; repalro
Problems? Need Tunod? Celt llle
pteno Dr 740-'Co!B-4525

Call Now For Free Maps + Owner Financing Info Take 10% Off
List Price On Cash Purchases!

740-258-1530

365-962!

Apartments Cottage

Acres Nice Fields $1 o 500 Rutland, Whites Hill Rd Just Off
New Lima 11 Acres St-4000 Or 9

Doublewlde Aepo Citll For V1ew·
selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Ou1ck delivery Call 740·

EI8Cirlc Furnace 77 000 BTU CA
Unit •a,ooo BTU 111 Accom-

3711 EDH

Acras S18 ooo Public Water
Carpenter Very Remote 11 +

3 Bedrooms Chillicothe Road
Gallipolis $400/Mo $300 Depos
It Days 740 256-6456 Evenings

~ Good

2bdrm apia • total electric, ap
puances turl\l8hed1 laundry room
faciiiUes close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts f49 or caN 7-40 992-

Christy s Family Living apart·
ments &amp; home rentals 740·992·
4514, apartments available now
furnished &amp; unfurnished

Building 304-875 1275
lng 1100-383-6882

448·2412 Or 1·80Q.!594-1 11 1

5 Acre Lot On Kerr Road Will
Sell All Or Half LOIS Of Road

2 SA House In Naw Haven 1 112

1996 Schullz 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Central Air 2 Decks 8a:10

a

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

nancing available 304-755-5885

wO&lt;I&lt;a

Valley Bank Approval. Car·
michael's Farm
Lawn, Your Local John Deere Dealer Midway
Between Gallipolis And Rio
Grande On ;Jackson Pike 740·

Relocating? Take Over Payments 304 738-7295

modeling 304 674 0126

$500 Down on any 14x70 In
stock limited number free dellv
ery can 1 800-691 6n7

Low As a 99% Fixed Rote On
Oua/lfytng Tractors With Ohio

We Finance Land &amp; Home With

2 Sdrms 15 Miles South On Ro
uta 7 Call After 8 oo Pm 740

W ill Do Odd Jobs Most Any

wv 25550

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tractors In Srock Financing As

Amaz ing only $999 down on
large selection of double wldes
rree delivery &amp; selup owner rt

Professional Trae Service Stump
RerTioval Free Estlmale!ll In
surance Bidwell Ohio 740 388

Pt Pleaoant

/Io487 740-2158-8340

Electric maintenance aervlce
Wiring breaker boKes, light 1111
lure healing systems and Re

448 3358

Part time emplOyee needed In ln..
aurance olflce Must have com·
puler/pho ne skills Please sand
reaumar c/o PI Pleasant Reg
ialer C W 1B :200 Main Street,

llllctor, 740-288-6522

In Gallla Co ) Must Be Moved! 1

10 8 6 5 2

J 73

1996 Geo Metro, 2 Door 4 Cylln- '

1020 John Deere Tracior 300 &amp;

WID

rooms, 2 Baths. Central Air

5li s.l lire IO
55 Mad41 a plctu111

' 21 Martinique

•AKQJ3

• 96

I

4000 018111 BN 885 lnttrl'\8tlonal

Sewage Garbage Paid 740 441
1005

Furnltur• repj1lr restoration &amp; re
finishing custom built reproduc
tiona liz &amp; Bennen Roush 74Q..
992 1100 Appalachian Wood

7118

1993 Sunshine 14x70 2 Bod-

Nitro Wv 304-755-5685

One Full Trme Registered Nurse
Poslllon Availab le In Oak Hill
~"'..ommunlty Medical Center's Behavioral Health Unit Ohio Licensure Required Candidate Will
Utlltllze Nursing Process While
Providing Care Direct !Guide Patlenr !Family Teaching And Func·
lion Within Scope 01 Departmen·
tal bpectatlona If lnlerested
PleBSB Send Resume To Oak Hill
Community Medical Center At ·
tentlon Brenda McKenzie 350
Charlotte Avenue Oak Hill OH

EOE

Only $199 down large selection
of :2 3 4 bedrooms tree dellverv&amp;
setup owner llnanclng avBIIable
only at Oak wood Mobile homes

engine, excelient condition In ,

lido and out $1 1,500 (!104)875· •

Included $16 ooo Firm (Located

......

54=rammer

Hem

East

1988 Dodge lntropkl, loeded 35 ;

A/C Casune 1
53 000 Miles $4 200 00 74Q-2!58-

$1 100 Syracuse Ohio 74Q-992·
4410

740-245-5151

45658

tiWoWtl

FABr.1 SUPPL IE S

610 Farm Equipment

949 3037

74Q-3e77401

• 10 T 4 2
•A6542
• 4
• K Q T

8194

2 Hoopitol Bods $100 00 For
Both 740-258-8038

41 01 mldlclne
51 c:tNtller9nt

ruler'o otond-ln
u1
17 CIAI0111n1nner 57 C/rc~o ut rope
18G..........nd

good condition Asking $9 000
(304)882 2141

tric furnace w/central air, single
car garage deck $34,900 740

Acre Land Orchard Bath &amp; t/2

18 lmm1tu111
11" DlrwcTV Sottlllte Sytttmt·
$89.00 purchaH price wllh up to
$200 worth or t... programming
Umlttd !line olfof can 1 8oo-n&amp;-

central air, new refrigerator, very

112 acre lot 2 3 bedrooms alec·

4 Bedroom Home In Cheshire 2
Cor Garage Work Shop I 112

3 bedroom mobile home for rent,
no pets, 740-992·5858

eomt giua

&amp; L IV[ STOCK

Acres $12 000 PubtiCWater

l11lo nowo-r will nol
koowtng/y aocapt
tdvertlstmenl$ for reeteotato

Run Road Ntw Haven 1270 mo
+utilities &amp; dapo111 {304)773
5881

.'

1983 Shultz 14X84 28R now

S14 500 Great Homesite
All real estate ad'o'ertlllng In
t h i l - Is aubltd to

2BR Trailer, located on Broad

mo·

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom

bile home 740-992 5038

Secretary to the Treasurer for
Athens Meigs Educational Serv
Ice Center Associate degree In
accounting or related work ex
perlence preferred Individual
must possess basic typing skills
and be able to provide own trans
portatlon Individual must also be
proficient In use of computers and
office equipment Submit latter of
Interest, resume w1th 3 references
to Carole Gilkey Treasurer

EOE

person 1
Must be
and able to cope
slress
Must be abJe to deal well with the
public Must be able to see things
thai need to be done Good tele
phone etiquette grammar and
math skills required EKperlence
m telephone orders and ra.tall
sales helpful Send resume and
cover tener to P: 0 Box 108 Mid

•SAVE ON BANK REPOS•
Ail Makes Modelo l Slzeo, After
Noon 740-742-0e10

BRUNER LAND
74D-4"1·1492
Clolllo Co Just Olf SR 218,
Friendly Ridge Ad 15 Acres

Babysitting Clark Chapel Road
Bidwell, Ages 6 Weeks ·4 Years

GaNipol/s OH From 8 5 740-446
4514

ery Cal1-800-891-6m

74Q-388-8878

mont cal 74Q-992 5696

3-46 2288 For An Application

Doublewlde In stock Free Oellv·

Salesperson Needed Furntlure
Store Fuii-T1me Immediate
Open)ng Apply Lifestyle Fuml
lure 856 Third Avenue Gallipolis
101h 2 No PhOne Calls Please!

180 Wanted To Do

cothe Ohio 45601 Or Call t 800

$999 Down on any 98 model

14 M0111 blu1111

15 Ukl

the IIQIII motto

• ....,p

•

j

''

�•

••

••
•'

,.

Tu~sday

·- ~ · ,~. TLe ·nail-y·Seniinel
·'

_
_
&lt;
.
;By
The
Bend
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.1

···•"" ·. •..

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February 10, 11118

Today: P. Cloudy
High: !lOa; Low: 401

Page1(J

Moriday, F•bruary

15, 1999:

Tomorrow: Rain
High~ cos; Low: 30•

\Miss A~erica speaks out on struggle with be-ing · ~ juvenile, dia~~tic ..:
inching toward death .
As my body began to fail , an
emergency .room doctor diagnosed
Landers
me with juvenile, or insulin 19in. L" A.nJcles .Ti111t"!i
dependent, diabetes.
Syndi~•te alld C reaLdrs
Syndb!C . .
! ·was shocked and knew nothing
about this condition. I now know it
affects 16 mi Ilion people in the
: Dear Ann Landers: I was a
United States, and inore than 5 mil-.
~ormal college sophomore five
lion don't know they have it. Diayears ago when things began hapbetes claims the life of one Ameripening to my body that I didn't
.
understand. I was thirsty. all the can every three minutes.
There is no cure for this dis time and noticed a dramatic loss of
ease, but through education and
weight. I . experienced bouts of
research, we can change _ these
blurred and double vision, and my
hair 'began to fall out. l was frightening statistics.
Last September I won the title
fatigued to the point where I didn't
of Miss America 1999. .From
.want to get out of bed in the morn·
tragedy to triumph. I learned I
ing. ·
could achieve my goals and dreams
· I rationalized all those symptoms despite a chron:o and debilitating
and decided nothing was wrong illness ..
with me. Little did I. know I was
My mission as Miss America is

Ann

Pet Allergies - Sometimes a
happy ending for everyone
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane So.:lety
In an earlier column, I noted that one of the reasons cited by people surrendering dogs and cats to shelters is allergies to cats and
dogs. My private (not so private, now, I suppose) belief is that most
people are not really allergic at all, at least not in some life-threatening way.
In my experience, most often adults' "allergic reactions" are highly exaggerated. First of all, I question the whole process of determining allergies. It seems to be that if you go about injecting twen·
ty items·(dust, cat dander, etc.) under someone's skin, she or he will
react to something!
,.
Then, there 's the whole psychological drama involved in saying
"I can't live"with cats, or dogs or hamsters, or whatever. "Often peo·
pie are punishing their mates, simply can't endure "competing" with
an a~imal for someone else's affections, or are simply so controlling,
so human-species oriented, that they can't share their space with a
creature that does not talk with them - in a conventional way, that
is.
Typical of these is an acquaintance who is extremely egotistical
aitd incapable of any sp.ontaneous display of empathy (unless she
· herself experienced the particuhir malady or problem), and allegedly allergic to cats. It wasn't until the eat's presence in a friend 's
hoose was remarked upon (she had been in the house for five hours,
blissfullyunaware of the malevole_nt feline lurking in the next room)
that she suddenly began scratching her arms, coughing, and making
.
a spectacle of herself. And so...
I know this sounds:ter'ribly biased. I admit up front that I am high."
ly suspicious of humans who don' t care for nonhumans. Those
tedious people who complain that dogs drool and that cats scratch
the furniture are dreadful ·to be trapped with in a broken elevator.
They usually dote. on their grandchildren, which is fine, until they
insist on regaling you with stories of them. I don't break out in hives
or start sneezing, but a profound melancho.ly settles over me, or I
become immediately sleepy. There are all kinds of allergies, after all.
For those out there whose immune systems are severely compromised, for those who are managing serious il)nesses, it would perhaps be better not to look for a pet. If you already have taken on the
commitment of an animal in your life , by all means contact ,a physician to see if you can get relief from your symptoms.
For those healthy people who already have animals and f:nd their
bodies reacting to the dander of a cat or dog, there is hope . Yqu could
limit the animal's run of the house. The bedroom, for e•ample, could
be off-limits. Frequent bathing of pets and frequent vacuuming will
make a difference, as, of course, will the kind of animal (short or
long-haired).· '
·
In addition, there is a new product on the market, a 16-ounce bot"tle of relief called Sneeze No More. Available in -specific formulas
for dogs and cats, it. neutralizes the area where the pel sleeps and
spends most of her/his time. I haven't tried it Remember, I'm only
allergic to some people. Let me know if it works.
For information, log onto the internet and look_ at
www.sneez.enomore.com.
.

Community
. The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to·
non-profit. groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
~ vents . The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type . Items are
printed ·as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of day s.
MONDAY
LETART ~ Letart , Township
Trustees , Monday, 6 p.m., at the
office bu_ilding.

Calenda~"-r-

· POMEROY - Immunization
clinic, Meigs County Health
Clinic, Tuesday, 4 to 7 p.m. Each
child must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian and present
an immunization record .

.

'

BY, ED PETERSON
Social
Security Manager,
Athens
Most people know that when they
work they pay into Social Security.
But not everyone understands exact. ly how lhat qualifies him or her to
receive Social Security benefits. To
be eligibl~ to receive Social Security
benefits you earn credits through
your work - up to four credits each
year. For each $740 in reported
wages or self-employment income
you earn in 1999, you will earn one
credit. When· you've earned $2,960
you have earned your ·four credits
for 1999.
Everyone (e•cept people born
before 1929) needs to earn 40 credits (I 0 years) to be eligible for retirement benefits.
·
,
for
disability
However, eligibility
.

.

Several local studen ts attending Marietta Co ll ege were named to
'the Dean 's List for the fall semester. St uden ts mu st earn a GPA of 3.0
,o r higher to be eligible for the li st.
·
, S tudents on the li st, and thei r majors·, are : Jacob Morrow, sports
·medi cine; Dorothy Leifhei t, 'sports medici ne: Michelle Bisse ll , pre:law and Jamie Drake, sports med ici ne an d pre-med.

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The Me1gs County spelhng bee
will be held on Thursday, 7 ·p.m. at
Southern 1-ligh SchooL
Competing for county champion
and runner-up will be the winners in
the county's elementary schools,
fourth .through eighth grades. The
county winners will represent Meigs
County in the Tri-Stae Spelling Be
to be held in Huntington, W. Va.
sometime in March.
Winners and runners-up. in their ,
respective schools were as follows:
Eastern Elementary: Darren
Scarbough and Sara Pore, sixth
grade; Tia Pratt, seventh grade; and
ljeather Smith, eighth grade, winners; with Jonathen Owen, seventh
grade, and LeaAnn Marcinko,
eighth grade, runnetscup.
Bradbury: Alex Sisson, fourth
grade, winner; Melia Whan, fifth
grade, runner-up.
Harrisonville: William Taylor, ·
fifth grader, winner; Ashley Browning, fourth grade, runner, up.
Meigs Middle School: Cassie
Le e, winner, with Courtney
Williams. runner-up runnerup, sixth
grade: Megan Dodson, winner, with
Wesley Fields, runner-up. seventh
grade; Wesley Call, winner, with
Kelly John ston , runner-up, eighth
grade.
Pomeroy: Cody Hysell , fifth
grade, winner; Casey Richardson ,
fourth grade, runner-up.
Rutland: Sarah Jenkins , fifth
grade, winner; Miranda Beha; fifth
grade, runner-up.
·
Salem Center: Julia Johnson ,
fifth grade, winner; Ryan · Barnett,

of the Best

By BRIAN J. ·R~D
10 make decisions affecting a community in which neither
.Sentinel Nawe Stllff
.
. .
.
lives, and.boilrd 111ember Randy Kidder, who helped orgaMembers of the Tuppers Plains communi~)' called for nize the citizens' group befot;e his :appaintment to the
.
. ihc resignation of 1\.vo members of .the Tuppers Plains board, said he felt the same way.
Regional St;wer District bol!rd when the board !Jiel MonCole said he would not step down, and Keebaugh,
day.
··
,
·
.
. when asked, said thai he wanted 10 see the project com• Approxi10ately 35 residents attendi:d last night's meet· pleted before his service ended.
iog at the Tuppers Plains school building. and voiced con"I'm just trying to finish what I sl:;irled," Keebaugh
~ms about a number of issues surroynding l(le distri'c t's · said..
'
Ac:oording to Lavelle, the proVi~~ allowing current
operation.
, '
: _The qualifications of Marvin Keebaugh and Homer boaid members to continue selving IIJltil the project's
9Jle to serve on the board have been called into question~· completion was made f111' th~ sake-of continuity, because
by a citizens ·group in the community, due to the fact !hall' several board members-:- Keeb8Jigh Cole and Sue Mai·
the 1\.vo men do.notlive within the district.
son - have served on··tlle board since its inception in
: Athens attorney Frank Lavelle, who represents the 1990, and Joe Boyles has seryed.for several years, as well.
board, said that an order from Common Pleas Judge Fred
BoyleS said that the project .~ "all but completed," with
W. Crow lil allows the current board members to serve the exception of oosmetic imprc:wements and work on the .
until the J!!Oject is completed, and until election .of .new system's irrigation system.
··
bQard members fakes place'this fall. · ·
_,
· Olstorriers have received.tlleir firsi bill for service, and
: Keebaugh was appointed ,10 the board on the basi's of those bills ate now due and pay~Ie. Although only SO out
ffis ownemhip of a restaurant in Tuppers Plains, and Cole of 200'eustomers are connected;·everyone in·the district is
because of his residency in the district Keebaugh has responsible for paying,the $35 monthly bill. ,
since sold his business, and Cole has moved from the dis·
According to Boyles; biUs must be paid by all residentS
ttict.
in the district becaUSI: a debt retll'einent schedule has been
Tuppers Plains resident O!arles ~ber said that it put itito place and the Rural Development Administration
"bothem•: him' that Keebaugh
and Cole are in the position requires
· with the scheduJ4&lt;.
.

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C&amp;g Cfurnlfure
20001 State Route #7
Cheshire, Ohio 45620

Mif{ie's !l{estaurimt
39329. Bradbury Rd~,
Middleport, Ohio

.(740) 992-7713
]on &amp;Carolyn Jacobs

Down HorJUJ Cokin

Owners

at ita Beat!

Telephone

HOURS: 7 DAYS A WEEK
. 6am-8 pm
J

614-992-7508

Although a program through the county's CDmmunity
'·
Development Block Grant program is now assisting low
and moderate income residents in connecting to the sys·
tern, many residents in the district contend that \hey were
misled - that at least one member of the TPRSD board
and men hired 10 execute easements from residents told
property owners th~t they would not be. responsible for .
the cost of connecting to the system.
The board has said, and repeated la5tnight, that fund·
ing for individual connections was sought, but was not
found.
Many residents in the group haVe said that they will
not pay their bills until connection cost · issues are
resolved, or at the very least, until their homes are connected 10 the system.
Boylc;s said that refusal to pay bills would only result .
. in an increased cost to the customer, and said that unpaid concerns about billing procedure• In the TuP:
bills would be charged to property tax collections.
pera Plalna Regional s-er District, whlhi
Board membCr Kidder said that he was one of those membera of the TPRSD board and the commu~
who would not pay his bill.
- nlty look on. From left are district a,cFatary
"You'll receive my payment when Marvin Keebaugh Elolae~ Boaton, and board member• Homer
and Homer Cole pay their bill," Kidder said.
Cole, Sue Malson, Marvin Knbaugh, Jolf
Loretta Murphy, who serves as a leader and . ~oylaaldn~nd ~ahndhy Klddebor.ard ath han
. • ,
spokesman for the citizens' group, also responded to an mto wo~ g wtt I e sewer .
• r er I
protestmg
article in the Feb. 14 Sunday Times-Sentinel, in wliich · conn~•on costs and board procedures.
•
Lavelle said-that the group should channel their energies
Continued on page 3 .

(Jtl.f,urling Old Glory

COLUlMB:US (AP)- The slate public defender's office plans to file
more appeal later this week in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
, .,.,...... if all other legal efforts fail 10 stop the planned execution of Wil, ... .
ford Berry.
.
. .
.
Berry, 36, was convicted in that court eight years ago for the Dec. I,
1989, slaying of his former boss, Cleveland baker Charles J. Mitroff Jr.
The public defender's appeal would be based on a 1986 U.S. Supreme
Court ruling tliat stopped Florida from executing Alvin Bernard fiord ,
was convicted of murdering a police officer in 1974. After the conviction, he was examined and found 10 be insane.
· The court said it would violate the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution, which forbids cniel and unusual punishment, to e_xecute a person
o,yho didn:t undcg~tand why he was being pitt to death.
·
d
• Berry hlis not ; ~en found insane'or Incompetent, but rlll!ing rh•·l,..alo·1·.,.,
at the last minute could force postponement of Berry's execution by
lethal injection, which is to take place at 9 p.m. Friday at the Southern
O~io Correctional Facility near LuclllJville.
• He would be the first person executed in Ohio in nearly 36 years.
"If this· is filed at the last minute, it could create an obstacle to Friday's execution," Deputy Attorney
General Mark· Weaver said. "On
'
the merits, this wouldn't have 10, be
, . . . - - - - - - - - - - - . a very long hearing. There's no eviTOday'S
dence that Wilford Berry's insane.
Proving insanity is very difficult.
1 Sections • 10 Pages
"We've prepared responses for
every possibility," Weaver added.
Cal,e ndar
6
In the meantime, lxlth sides are
Classllleds
7&amp;8
awaiting a decision that
come as soon as today from .a
Comics
three-judge panel of the 6th U.S.
Editorials
2
Circuit Court of Appeals in CincinLos;al
3
nati.
Sports
4&amp;5
The panel is considering an
_..._W,_,y.,t.,_h.,.e4-r_ _ _ _-"J_ _ _, !fppeal by the public defender's
1
office based on assertions that
Berry should undergo more psychiLotteries
- Forty new American llaga donated by
atric testing. because he suffered . NEW
Post
128,
American
Legion, to the Middleport Community Association
OHIO
brain damage during a Sept. 6,
flew over Middleport for the flrat time Prealdent's Day. The flags line both
1997, riot on death row at the
Pk:kJ: 3-6·1; Pick 4: 8-9-9-0
aides of North Second and Mill In downtown Middleport, and Hartinger
Mansfield Correctional Institution.
Buckeye 5: l-8-1 5-1 7-23
Parkway In the lower part of the village. New permanent br11ckets ware
Berry was nicknamed "The
W.VA.
Installed
nine feat from the ground on utility and Qther poles so that the
Volunteer" because he refused to
Dally 3: 4-1-7; .D•Ily 4: 7·3·6·3
flags
would
be dlaplayed at a uniform height. Putting up flaga Monday
participate in appeals to delay his
C 1999 Ohio VIlle)' Publishins, Co.
were
Legion
Commende.r Rusa Mozingo on the ladder, Bill Swish•, left,
execution.
and Richard Ruaaell of the Community Association.
....

'

Crouch, etghth grade, runner-up.
- Both the champion and the runner-up will advance to the Tri-State
Spelling Bee to be held in Huntington, W. Va. sometime in March . .·

, '1'

.,.,

We carry all of the latest ·
designs &amp; arrangements. ,
Call today for total
friendly service

992-2644

......

D&amp;M Pizza &amp; Subs
Syracuse, OH

992·7287

Home of all your favoritePizza, Subs, Salads,
Hamburgers, Tacos, Lasagna
&amp; Spaghetti dinners, and
much more.
Open 7 Days.a Week
Stop in Check us out or
~e deliver
-

Miller Homes
1220 Waslinglon Ave. Belpre, Ohio 45114

740-423·7521

' '

See l,Joyd Bonar, Da-.;ld Riggs
J;rnest Shuler, owner
M-F 8-7'
Sat 9-4
Closed Sunday
Redman&gt;
Clayton
Homes

FLA~S

Pomeroy, Ohio

an eve11ln
meal

4:45. 5:30
Every lbesday &amp;
Thursday '
MEIGS SENIOR CEN'l'ERI
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy
Suggested donation
· $4.00
meat. ·

Leo's Cruise &amp;'!ravel

-··

Sentin.el

!Jrancis !J{orist ·

]otn us

.
J

BIRTH ANNOUNCED • Timo·
thy Wesley Wickersham and
Kayle Dawn Lonas announce
the birth of their sO,, Shaun Vln·
cent Wickersham, bom on Dec.
16 at the Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds, 14 ounces and was 22
inches long.
Grandparents are Brenda
H11rper of Minersville; Sharon
Wickersham of Letart; Mike
' Lomas of Mansfield, and Jeff
Wickersham of Pomeroy.

Single Copy · 35 Cents

ublic
nder's
ice planS$ ·
alln Cuyahoga County,··

Secrets Around town!

202 W. 8KQild SIIMt .
Pomeroy, Ohio 4mt _.

SHAUN WICKERSHAM

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Good Afternoon

614·992·4233
.. 800·795•1110

-

Newspaper

Tuppers Plains residents call· for two board members' resignation:

&lt;:

•

Hom~own

'

Volume 49 , Number 199

is somewhat differe.nt. If you fitr'for ~months or '!'ore'. .'·
. ate age 60 or older. If a widow or
become disabled - befo~e re~hing , · · ~ddt~ion~l information . a~out widower is disabled at ;~ge 50-59,
age 24, you need 6 cred1ts dunng the Soo1al Secunty benefits and cre!hts the Soctat· Secur:ty benefits would
3-year period before your disabilit~ ·is ,avail~~Ie by calling our toll: free ' ·not be affected by marriage. · -'
begins; betWeen ages 24 and)O, you ilUJilber' {:800772-121'3-and at this
If you are drawing a widow(er)'s
need credits for half of the period Internet address, www.ssa.gov.
• benefit and your new spouse is
between age 21 and the, time ·you
. \•
drawing Social Security, you m~y
become disabled; at age 31 or older,
want to apply for a benefit oil his/her
you need 40 credits. Also, you must A message for older ~wlyweds . record if it would be larger than the
have earned 20 credits in the 10
The question of marriage and widow(er)'s benefit. However, you
years before the disability began.
Social Security cropf up occasional- cannot draw both.
You'll probably earn many more ~- ly from older couples who wonder if
If you change your name after
tban 40 credits during your working getting married would affect their · remarryin_g be sure to change your
years. This is ·good .t?ecause Social Social Security benefits. The name with Soci.al Security .
Security averages your high . 35 .answer, in~eneral, is no.
. Otherwise your earnings may not
years of earnings to determine your
If a person receives Social Secu- ·.· be properly recorqed and you . may
retirement benefit amount.
rity benefits on his or her own work not receive all ' \fte Social Security
The credits you earn during your record, m~r;riage generally would credit due you for your work.
working lifetime also count toward have no effect on the benefits. LikeYou can call Social Security's toll
your eligibility for Medic!lfe when wise, marriage does not affect'lhe free number ,800-772-121 ~-and
you reach age 65 , or' at an earlier age 'benefits of a person receiving ' report a.name cliange.
if you're e~titled to disability bene-, widow or \!!idower's benefits if they

'I·~,.•~.
.
.
~·
'
)·...-f'j•
.
'
fourth .grade, r11nner.. :·_ !,: • Yt ~ . grade, runn~~up.
;"· .•
·· ..
Salisbury Elementary·• Ashton .. Syracus{:• Caitlin Nease ,' (ifth ·
Bush: fifth ,grade, _,winiicJ'}' Jelin"ifer\, grade, wimi~; Stacy Shyder, sixth '
Smith, fourth' grader, runner-up·. .
gtade, .
'
,
Portland: Sara Cammarata, sixth
grade, winner; , Nicki Tucker, _sixth
"' ·; :
. ·, '-'

,,

Meigs County's

'

,

Authorized

STIHC
Sales and Service

RIDENOUR

SUPPLY -

st. Rt. 248
Chesttr _ 985-.3308

Sacred Heart School wall removed

RIDEN OURS

GAS
·SERVICE
. St. Rt. 248 Chester

'. 985•3307

Cfhe .Dally Sentinel
Reminds !10" to support ,our local businesses!!! ·
'lo Promote !Jour Business
9n crhe Small811Siness OirectOIJ· · .-· _
eau Dave Hartis or . WIIUAmS011 at 992·2155

Melgsglrta
win share of
lVCtitle
-Page4:

at-

.

.

. Rodman ·mystery·continues, Page 5
_Wi9ower finds trouble after remarrying, Page 6
· .. · Beat of the Bend, Pag_
e 10

•

.' offered to pay ~otild' have been
inappropriate.'
.
No ·need to stop seeing thes¢
new neighbors if you enjoy their
company but be aware that thel~
dinner invitations don 't mean they
are treating. Bring cash or a credi)
,
card.
When planning a wedding, wlrG
pays for what!? Who stands where?
"The Ann Landers Guide fot
Brides" hasall the answers
. . Send. ·a
self addressed, long, busmess s1~e
envelope and a check or money
order for $3.75 (this includes
postage an,d handfing tp: Bride~ .
c/o )l.nn Landers, P.O. Box I 1562',
' ChiCago, III . 60611-0562. (l~
C~n~da, ~encj $455.)
To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past column~.
visit the Creators Syndicate we\&gt;
page a! www.cteators .com.
'lt

County spelling bee S'e tfor J;uesday at .Southern

RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m . at
the fire station :

Students named to Marietta dean's list

theni at their country cl_ub. We · $10Q, -went to her home and handaccept~d graciously ,Since w~ ~ ed it to ~er I wasn't sure if it was
not members df a club, 'we planned too much or too little: but she said.
to reciprocate by invitllig thern· to · "fllis will cover it."
an elegant restaurant at a later date.
Ann, we have never received an
The morning after our country 'in vjtation to dinner arfd then been
club dinner, my neighbor came to!'d the morning after that we were
over and said, "I must ask you for expected to pay our portion . Also ,
the money for dinner last ,night. My we are not happy about paying half
husband needs to pay his bill at the of a bill we never sav/. We have no
club by the end of the week."
idea what the actual amount was .
We like these people and don't
I was so taken aback, I didn't
know what to say Finally, I blurted want to stop seeing them, but I am
out, "How much was the bill?" She bothered by this . Should we have
said, "I'm not sure, but it must be asked to see tho bill? Were· we
about $200. I'll check with my.hus- wrong not to have offered money
band."
when the waiter brought the check?
I was extremely -sul'(lris~d and . Please enlighten us. - ~LUELESS
asked. her to . please call .ro=-.t!Jat . Ot&gt;l JJ;JE WEST COAST
.
evening and let me k~9w w~ap~e • DE'AR CLUELESS: · When
owed them.
, .
invil~;for dinner to a private club,'
A week went by, and I didn ' t one rithtly assumes that the host.
hear a word , so I wrote a check for itit.en~}l;to foot the bill-. -To have

You need ~~credits" f:or So~lal S,ecurity benefit~

RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs , Tuesday, 10:30
a.m. at the municipal building .

ATHENS - Support group for
POMEROY - Eagle Auxiliary
.those with lupu s, Monctay, 6:30 to meeting , Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
;8 p.m . Grosvenor Hall We st,- the hall.
:Room Ill , Ohio University's
Athen s ·campus .
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
"TUESDAY
Literary Club, .2 p.m. Wedne sday,
home of Bernice Carpenter.
.
POM EROY - Free skin te st- Eil ee n Bu ck to re view "The
, :ing clinic , Pomeroy Fire Station , Three Daughters of Mada ma
:Tu-esday,..A :30_Lo 6:30 p.m. co n- Lain g'' by Pearl Buck .
;ducted _hy Co nn ie Karsc hnik.
RN .. tuberculo sis nurse. All indi "
:viduals in f ood servi ce required THURSDAY
;to obtain yearly ski n tests.
MIDDLEPORT - The Mi ddleporr Youth League, Thursday,
POM EROY - Meigs County 6:45 p.m., Middleport Coun c il
· :Board of Elecfions, 9 a,m, Tucs- room . Offi cers to be ele cted.
0
'day, at the offi ce.

I

to educate ttie public about diabetes by promoting early detection ·
and prevention of complications,
while extending a message of hope
to those who are suffering. I hope
you will help by printing my letter.
-- NICOLE JOHNSON, MISS
AMERICA 1999
DEAR MISS · AMERICA:
You've performed an enormous
service by writing 'to me. thank
you for alert' g millions of readers
to the, s ptoms of diabetes.
Becaus ou wrote, a great many
peopl -who are experiencing the
symptoms you described are going
to seek medical help·-a nd live
longer and healthier lives. How
wonderful that you are using your
celebrity to help.humanity.
·
Dear Ann Landers: My husband and I received an invitation
from our neighbors to dine witli

Sports

•

IMP'R011ED - t..st
'wall ·at the rear of the Catholic
· Sacred Heart School In Pomeroy- waa
down. A new one will be erected,.but
will be sst btlck toward the hill about folir feat to extend the width of the parking
·area. The aecond lot on thalevel above will be retained. The Sacred Heart School,
built In 18e8, waa torn.down In 11170. The achool cloaed In 11158 because ofdaclln·
-lng enrOllment. In Ita early ¥eaira, about 200 children attended the school, where
they were lnatructtld by tour Slateraoaf Charity from the Cincinnati Province of the
Catholic Church.

F::':~~~

Nude photo incident
prompts officer's
unpaid suspension
By JIM FREEMAN
SenUnal Nawa Staff
.
Pomeroy Village Council, meeting in regular session Monday
I n;.,ht agreed to suspend one of its poJice officers without pay.·
Pnt;ce dispatcher Lois Shane has accused police Capt. Jim ,
Stacy of transposing an image of her bead onto a nude body. He
then allegedly showed the composite image to at least. one
male officer in the police department, she said.
Shane and he_r husband, Tim, raised their concerns with council during open session, demanding that council take action on the
matter.
·
She said she now has to ask herself if the people who saw the
picture see her as she really is, or as she appears in the picture,
which she described as "graphic," showing a nude woman with
her· legs open. ··
. .. - -Shane has been employed as a full-time dispatcher for about a
year after spending several years as a part-time dispatcher.
Afterwards, council met in ex~cutive session to discuss the
matter ll!ld met with other police officers before deciding to suspend Stacy without pay.
Council President John Musser said the incident allegedly
occurred around the middle of January and was brought to coun-·
cil's attention during its Feb. 1 meeting. He said Stacy was placed
on paid administrative leave the' next day, pending an investiga·
tion into the accusation.
"That's what we've been doing." he said.
He said council' is taking the matter very seriously and commented that council members, the mayor and the polic~ chief have
1decli11ed examining the picture out ofrespect for Mrs. Shane.
"Out of respect 10 Mrs. Shane, I don't feel that it is necessary
for us to look at the picture at this time," he said.
"She has every right to feel offended 811d has council's sympathy," he said. "I felt we took appropljate action."
Stacy, a veteran officer with about" nine .years in the depart~
merit, was present anc! represenied by his attorney, Charles
Knighl
.
Knight commented this morning that he and his client will wait
until they receive .a written order of the suspension before deciding on a further course of action.
"It sounded like a great deal of it was simply horseplay among
the police officers;" Knight said. "Apparently other incidents have
occurred, leading (Stacy) to believe it was not out of line."
"I believe all of the members of the police force were surprised
that it caused that reaction," he added.
tllhfser said council is working with its legal counsel, Olris
Tenoglia, on the matter.

Kasich campaigns one-on-one in
preparation for New Hampshire primary
didn ' I have to have a daddt
By GENE JOHNSON
· Kasich had planned to
to do what he does."
Associated Preas Writer
file papers with the Federal
Kasich was scheduled te
MILFORD, N.H. (AP) - After a -Election Commission Mon·
stay,
in New Hampshire
sendoff by 1,300 people in his hometown, day to make his presidential
tOday, then head to Florid•
Republican Rep. John Kasich started try· exploratory committee offi- ·
on Wednesday and Iowa on
ing to . pick up votes one by one in the cial, but.the FEC was closed
·
Thursday and Friday.
because it was President's
state with the nation's first primary.
~t
his
Monday
fund-raiset
Kasich greeted about 70 people on the Day.
in Columbus, Kasich ..urge~
So the papers will be
town common Monday in this southern
that new ·retirement saving&amp;
New Hampshire community hours after a filed today.
options be introduced.
'
·fund -raising breakfast and an airport rally
Kasich, who has a repu"Mom
and
Dad
are
going
in Columbus, Ohio.
tation as a zealous budget·
to get their Social Security.
Kasich got his hair trimmed at Joe's cutter, is trying to become
You know who"I'm worried
Barber Shop and was invited by several the first person to go direct·
abput? I' m worried about
voters to their homes for dinner.
ly from the House to the
Kasich said he plans to spend a lot of~ presidency since James_Garfield , another • the Baby Boomers and their children," h~
said. ,
time in New Hampshire figuring out Ohio Republican, did so in 181!0.
"Let the baby boomers have a piece of
whether voters like him , Ir they don't,
Kasich said he wants to g:ve people
their
own tax dollars that they currently
" I 'll go back to Ohio and play football," - more power-in choosing where their chil send·
to the government to be able to
he said.
'
·
dren go to school and spending their
in the American economy."
invest
- "I'm no millionaire's son," Kasich money.
.
Tom Mahoney, 50, a life-long Democsaid. "This campaign.'s not just about me.
He also said he would cut · taxes 10
It's about everybody . who thinks they percent and eliminate the federal com- ·rat from Columbus, look a few hours off
from the service station he owns to see
don't have to C(lmc from a big family in merce and energy departments.
order to make it."
New Hampshire voters seemed to like Kasich off at the airport.
" I vole with my heart," said Mahoney,
Kasich, 46, is the chairman of the his·message.
who
attended the rally with his wife and
House Budget Committee.
"I told him ·he could come to my
He acknowledged that his toughest hous~ and talk to my neighbors,': said two teen-age children. ,
"He's going to have to beat some big•
task will be raising the $18.S million he Linda Kaiser, 55, of Amherst.
"I tl)ink he's right when he says we dollar names, but he 's for the people. Ani!
says he needs to make a serious bid f.or
the GOP nomination. Most candidates have a lot of almosttrust-fu!ld babies run- if he can get that across, he ' II be all
say it takes at least $20 million.
ning. It's rdreshing to see someone who right. "

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