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pqe 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Beat of·the Bend ...

By Bob Hoeflich
-lt'sbeen four years since Pomeroy 's Carolyn .Korn underwent
her heart transplant operation at University Hospital in Colum·
bus.
Carolyn is the subject of a feature story in a public ation , "The
Home With Heart", the winter .edition . The publication is distnbuted by The Unverferth House near the hospital. As you
probably recall Carolyn and her husband, George, spent time at
the house during the days of the operation.
The house opened 10 years ago to families of patients at Ohio
State University Medical Center. The mission of the house is -to
provide a safe and comfortable home for both patients and their
families. The house now provides accommodations for some
200 familie s a year- families from Central Ohio, other states
and at times even from foreign countries.
To gel back to Carolyn, pictured with the article entitled, "A
Special Resident" , the story of her battle with a h•art condition
is outlined. Her problem went undiagnosed until she was 39.
Her transplant surgery took place on New Year's Day in 199~ .
The surgery went well but problems developed during her recovery period. Among the difficulties-and there were several others-were four incidents of rejection.
As you may recall Carolyn had -to stay rear the hospital so
., that she cou ld be given the proper care and AEP for whom
George worked transferred him to a plant near Columbus. They
now reside at Carroll
, A year after her·transplant, George , who had been voluntecr.mg all along, talked Carolyn into working as a volunteer at
Unverferth House. ,She is still doing that and is enthusiastic in
the he lp she is able to give patients and their families who are
going through ordeals similar to hers.
. A former director of the house was quoted in the story, saymg:
"We're lucky to have Carolyn at the Unverferth House. She
is always willing to do whatever needs done, but her ~realest gift
to the House is what she can sl!are with the guests She is able to
tell the transplant patients and their families what to expect,
whether good or bad. She's been through so much and has an
inner strength that seems to help others".
Carolyn stil l has reoccurring medical problems but through it
all has maintained a positive outlook and is always ready to
accept any new challenge life throws her way.
Carolyn reports that her new heart is in great working order,
but was in a slight rejection again recently. Some of her medicines were increased and the doctors will do another biopsy in
six months unless some major signs of rejection appear before
that.
And not only is Carolyn serving as a v0 1unteer at Unverferth
House these days but she is also a volunteer with LOOP, Lifeline
of Ohio Ptocurement, which promotes the giving ·of organs
across the state .
Isn't it fantastic that Carolyn and George too basically have a
new life as a result of the surgery. None of it could have been
easy but the couple has come through with flying colors-and
we' re proud of them aren 't we?
.
Their story is inspirational -and should be quite adequate to
encourage all of us to keep smiling.

'•

of

£

Real Catholics" on
, a com'munal · penance servtce "Forgiveness . .JtiBilee. Style" 011 'Wednesday;
and ''Mary: Do What Your Mother
~Says" on Thursday. •

1

---- 1
I

.

Thinking Day to be o_~rved
~ Big Bend Gift, Scouts will
'celebtate Thinking Day Saturday in
the cafeteria at Meigs High School,
6:30 to 8:30p.m.
Troops will have d~~~lays based
on the country they rt!present and
r
.~&lt;•
:

Tomorrow: Cloudy

,will be presenting a skit, song, or
game from that country.
Thinking day is an opportunity
for girl scouts to look beyond· their
own communities and remember
their sister girl .Couts and girl guides
around the world. Feb. 22. was chosen as Thinking Day-because it was
the birthday of both Lady Baden
Powell,, who played an important
part in founding the Girl Gutde/Gtrl
Scout Movement, and her husband,
Lord Baden Powell, who founded ·
the Boy Scouts.

High: 30s; Low: 201

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Youth League, Thursday, 6:45
p.m., Mi ddleport Council room.
Officers to be elected.

Association, 7:30 P-111· Thursday at
Grace
Episcopal
Church in
Pomeroy. Rev. Bill Holiac~ to speak.
Public invited.
' .,.,

TUPPERS PLAINS - VPW
Post 9053, dinner celebrating IOOth
anniversary, Thu~s'day, 6:30 p,m.
State Commander George Cox to
speak. Members, auxiliary members, spouses, and veterans interested in joining invited;

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

CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM special meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. Work will be in the
fellowcraft and entered apprenti ces
degrees . Refreshments.
POMEROY - AA meeting , 7
p.m . Thursday, Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT - Elaine Armstrong, dean of students at the University · of Rio Grande, will deliver
an educational presentation on the
civi l rights movement and racism in
America Thursday, 4:30-6 p.m. at
the URG Meigs Center in Middleport .
POMEROY -

,.

MIDDLEPORT - Lenten meditation services will be held at the
Hearth United Methodist Churc.h
Saturday evening) 7 p..m. Services
· will continue through Lent. .
,

•

By JIM FREEMAN
'S entinel New8 Staff
Supporters of the Buffington Island Bat·tlefie!1 fired salvo after salvo at the
·Army Corpi of Engineers and ·the Ohio
'J!nvironmental Protection Agency in a bid
to halt permits for construction of a b.arge
loading facility along the Ohio River in
forlland.
The agencies held a joint public hearing.
attended by about 200 people, at Meig$
High School Thursday njght to allow publie comment on a permit application · b)l
Richard &amp; Sons Company, a subsidiary -o f
the Shelly Company. The barge loading
facility is crucial to a gravel mine the company plans to construct ncar Portland on
land associated with the July 19, 1863, Civil
War battle of Buffington Island.
The battle involved about 2,000 Confederate calvarymcn led by General John Hunt
Morgllll which, were routed bv a Union
JoK:c of about 8,()00 soldiers and naval
units. It is considered Ohio's only full-scale
Civil War battle.
Attorneys for the Shelly Company

.

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'

RCJlllblican voters in Middleport and
will have two mayoral candidates to choose from when they go the polls May.
The filing deadline for partisan candidates was Thursday afternoon.
John W. Blaettnar and Kenny Klein have filed for mayor in Pomeroy, and
Sam Eblen and Jean Craig have filed in Middleport.
Incumbent village clerks Kathy Hysell of-Pomeroy and Bryan Swann of
Middleport have also filed their petitions.
·
· Ipthe race for Pomeroy Village Council,. incumbent Republicans Scott
Dillon and Geri Walton
appear on the Republican ballo~ and Victor C.
Young Ill will appear on the. Democratic ballot.
'
Middleport CouncilmWI Stephen Houchins, a Republican, will seek reelection, and Democrat Bob Robinson, a Det)locrat, will be on,~ Democralic balla.
Tluee men . hail~ filed l\ii,"''I!Qidi't~ JOf:~he MiddleP,Ort Board 9( ~ul!lic
Affairs. :riley ~ill b,e elected to tinexpirell terms ending Dec. 31, :!001. Don
Stiv~~ a Republicflll, and ~yron J.B. Duffield, a Democra~. were appointed to the tioartilast 'year, and Bernard D. Gilkey. another Republican, also
filed as a candidate for the board.
· Candidates for village offices in Racine, Rutland and SylliCUSC will not appear
on the ballot until November, because those village officials run on a non-partisan
basisJownship clerks and a township trustee are also to be elected in November.
Independent candidates may file their nominating petitions until 4 p.m.
on Ma 3, and write-ins until Se tember 13.

'Nelsonville
• Middletown
•washington CH

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Plus:

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Price II
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Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages
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Comics
Editorials
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Lotteries
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Pick 3: 8-9-6; Pick 4: 4-8-2-2
Buckeye 5: 6-14-19-30-31 ·

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Dally 3: 9-6-6; Dally 4: 8-6-7-8
C I 9W Ohio ~lkly Pub1i11hiUB Co.

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~I

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Eastern Local Board of Education will
a~cept nothing less than $400,000 for the abandoned Riverview School property ncar
Reedsville, and no less than $15,000 each for
two pieces of property in Che~ter.
The board set 111inimum bids on the sale of
the two abandoned elementary schools and
surrounding real est11te on Thursday.
Meeting in recessed session from Wednes·
day, ihe board met in executive session before
selling the minimum bids of $15,000 each on
two pieces of property in Chester, and
$400,000 for seven acres at the Riverview
property nea~ Reedsville.
. ,,
, ,, ,,

The properties will be.sold at public auction parcels of hind where the el'ementary building
on March 6.
.
sits, and another ' parcel across from State
At least one gravel mining company has Route 248 next to the United Methodist
expressed an interest in purchasing the Church .
Riverview property, Superintendent Deryl Well.
The Chester school building was ·constructsaid earlier this year, and Letart Sand &amp; Grav- ed in the 1920s as the high school for the Cenel owns property adjoining that land.
tral Rural School District, and the Riverview
Another company, a real estate developer in building, situated off Curtis Hollow Road near
Columbus, has inquired about purchasing the SR 248, was built in 1957.
·
property. The firm leases property to the state
The buildings were abandoned last spring
for alternative correctional institutions due to the consolidation of the district's three
"halfway houses."
elementary schools into a new building next to
Well said last week that the firm had looked Eastern High School.
.
at the property in January, but has not contactAt last night's meeting, the board also
ed him since.
•
authorized Well to retain a licensed auctioneer
, The Chester property consists of two to conduct the March auction.
:

·ee·rry·anovMt·to ·tlJC&amp;S'fifl1tfor·executioo; "ttefender1Ues.appeal~-

Sy ANDRI;W WELS_H •HUGGINS
mind t~~~d decides to resume appeals.
,
The last time appeals reached this point was
Aaaoclatad Praaa Wrltar . '
'' fhe pfotests were expected to grow, as death on March 3, 1998, when Berry .was less th~n
A lone demonstrator stood outside a south- .penalty opp&lt;inents planned vigils .outside the two hours from being executed: The U.S.
ern Ohio prison today, where convicted killer prison and at various .churches around the state. Supreme Court stopped it and the van moving
Berry was moved on Thursday night from Berry to Lucasville returned to Columbus.
Wilford Berry Jr•. was being· held on the day he
is to be executed.
·
the Corrections Medical Center
Public defenders have been working on
However, court aclion concernnear Columbus lo the Southern behalf of Berry's mother and sister.
O~io .Correctional Facility in
They say they have new evidence that Berry
ing what would be the state's first
Woman says boy told her execution in 36 years continued
Lucasville, about 75 miles south.
may ·have suffered brain injuries in a beating at
victim deserved to die
today, following decisions ThuisHe was being held in an isolated the Mansfield Correctional Institution in 1997;
NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP)
day from the governor and ' two
cell a . short distance from the which would make him incompetent to decide
- Wben 13-year-old Anthony Harcourts to let the lethal injection
death c~amber, with guards moni- to die.
ris was lold that his 5-year-old
proceed'.•
loring him. Berry had · access to a
They suffered three defeats on Thursday.
neighbor Devan Duniver was dead,
Public defenders asked.the U.S.
radio and reading materials. The
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
he said she deserved i~ according
Supreme Court to step in and were
warden described him as calm and Cincinnati and the Ohio Supreme Court refused
to testimony at his juvenile court
considering · other, unspecified
quiet.
to postpone the execution and order a new
he1niig.
·
options, said Jon Woodman, a pubFor .his last meal, Berry request- round of psychological tests to determine
The boy is accused of stabbing
lie defender who has represented
ed lasagna, garlic bread, chees_e- · Berry's ,mental fitness. Gov. Bob Taft declined ,
Devan to death last June 27.
Berry. Woodman would not discake and Pepsi. The meal will be to grant clemency.
·
Testimony in the eighth day
Wilford Berry . served at 3 p.m. .
"I find no compelling reason to grant
cuss.. the other options, which
the hearing, which is similar to an
could include going to Berry's original · trial
Berry's mother and sister planned 'to be at clemen·cy in this case, particularly · given the
adult murder trial, came from Tami
court in Cuyahoga County and asking the judge the execution, scheduled for 9 p.m. Three men heinous nature of the crime, the decision of the
Eckert, the mother of one of Harris' · to declare Berry insane.
who helped catch the killer, including a private jury; the thorough and detailed appeals. process
friends. She said she heard the
Woodman's office today filed an appeal with de.ective, would represent the victim 's family. upholding the conviction, Berry's admission of
boy's comments.
the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking to overturn a Media witnesses also will be on hand.
guilt and court rulings finding Mr. Berry ~omHer husband, William Eckert,
ruling by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
Berry, 36, would be lhe first Ohio prisoner petentto waive further appeals," Taft said in a
and New Philadelphi_a Police Capt.
that allowed Berry's execution to proceed.
executed since March 15, 1963. He was con- four-page statement.
Jeff Urban, the investigating officer
"At this point, we already have lodged doc- victed of murdering his boss, Cleveland baker
Six protesters were charged with criminal ·
on the case, also testified.
uments (of appeal) with the U.S. Supreme Charles Mitroff, during a 1989 .robbery from trespassing outside the governor's mansion in
• Court is in recess today. TestiCourt. Our first action this morning was to acti- Mitroff's shop.
·
·
subu rban Columbus Thursday afternoon. They
mony will resu~ Monday in Tusvale those documents," Woodman said.
Berry has b~en called "The Volunteer" wanted to deliver letters to Taft and were arrestcarawas County Juvenile Court ·
In addition, pape{work already is before a because -he said he would rather die than spend ed when they refused to leave, the State. High-..
before Judge Linda A. Kate.
federal judge in Columbus if Berry changes his · the rest of his life in prison.
way Patrol said.

on new Southern Elementary will proceed; completion date pushed back..

"No other problems have been discovered with the lawmakers, including Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston,
By JIM FREEMAN
million. The Southern Local project was originally part
1990
project budgets, and 1 do not expect any further and Se~ .. Michael Sh~emaker, '?-Bourneville, to assist
Santlnal News Staff
of the Department of Education's 1990 list of distri,cts
Design 'on the new Southern Elementary School will prioritized to receive funding. The Ohio School Facili- budget shortfalls resulting from the way the budgets 1n rece.1vmg the addnwnal fundmg.
' Carey co~mende_d the board ~nd Lawre~ce for the~r
proceed, but not on schedule,, aft~r the Ohio School ties Commission approved this project on Jan. 22, . .for the 1990 projects were constructed."
· The decision appears to vindicate the Southern pers1stence 10 pursumg the fundmg and sa1d slate offt Facilities Commission awarded the Southern Local 1998, and the Controlling Board approvedit on Feb. 9,
School District an additional $1,817,953 on Thursday. 1?98, The district passed its local levy in May of 1998. Local Board of Education, whjch has ·maintained pub- cials and the OSFC recogmzed that Southern faced an
, ..
The extra money was pledged by the commission
"During the pre-construction phase pf the prQject, licly since September 1998, that the project needed al~,ost unique fundin~ dilem':'a. ,
additional
funding
.
·
It
was
just
a
pos111ve
thmg,
Carey
sa1d.
There
after it agreed the district's project budget was insuffi- the. OSFC and the project's construction manager,
Superintendent James Lawrence said the additional , was a problem and we fixed it."
,.
.
cieht for compleiion of a new ~lementary· school and Quandel Group Inc., dis.c overed that the project budget
Shoemaker, on t_he other hand, was d1sappotnted
other planned construction.
.
.
'
was insufficient .to support the project scope as was funding sim(lly means the building project will proceed
that' it took almost s1x months to correct t(Je problem .
However, delays in receiving the additional funding originally agreed to by "the school district and the as originally proposed.
"We're not going -to mak'e changes or build a more
"The sad thing is the state told. them (the local
have pushed back the proposed completion date.
Department of Educatiqn, and that was subsequently
.
expensive
school,"
he
said.
"It
means
we
have
the
school
board) what to ask for," he sa1d.
The additional $1,817,953 will be addeH onto agreed to by the Ohio School Facilities Commission. '
money
to
pay
for
what
we've
already
designed
.
It
Shoef11aker
also wrote a letter to OSFC members
$3,951,035 provided by the state under a school fundThe project scope for Southern Local would coning plan began in 1990, including an addition of struct a new K-8, 650-student elementary school build- means we'll be able to put new furniture in there, reiterating his desir~ I? have _supennten~entsan.d architects' who have partiCipatedm the states butldmg pro$299,235 approved in July 1998 for construction in an- ing, and make renovations and additions to the existing instead of using old furniture."
Lawrence said the board attempted to cut down on · grams to share their experiences with the commission . _
agemenl services. The state money will be matched high school building.
''Unfortunately, that information session . has not
After intensive review by OSFC staff, we deter- the cost of the project, but found, like Fischer observed
locally by $4,042,000 fro111 a 23-ycar; 5 .39-mill bond
in
his
letter,
that
the
project
could
not
be
scaled
back
occurred
and the problems conttnue to mount. The lack
issue approved on May 5, 1998.• for a total of . mined that in order to address the facilities needs of the
enough
to
stay
within
the
existing
budget.
of
a
consistent
approach to address the unique situation
S9,810;988.
district in a manner consistent with the poliCies and
In
November
1998,
Lawrence
said,
"there
arc
not
a
for
each
school
district and a predictable common
Plans call for a two-story building adjacent South- practices of the OSFC, the project scope could not be
whole
lot
of
areas
to
cut.
We
haven't
pi,l'nned
on
an
senle
reaction
by
the
commission now threatens to halt
ern J-ligh School that will house a 650-student, K-8 ele- scaled back to stay within the existing budget. The
mentary school that will replace Letart Palls, Portland shortfall in the budget is approximately $450,000 for elaborate building, just a good building With simple, buildtng constructipn in its tracks. The level of frustra- .
lion has been further complicated by the fear of politi-~ '
and Syracuse elementaries, Southern Junior High the high school and approximately $1.4 million for the basic materials."
· The district had attempted to cut t osts .by making cal retribution or funding cuts for those who simply:
School and Southern Kindergarten.
new K-8 facility. I regret that we did not uncover the
the classrooms sm;lller- 763 square feet compared to want to do what is right for their students," Shoemaker
An additional project includes renovations and addi· budget miscalculation before now.
900
square feel; using old furnishing and by using wrote.
·
.
"I believe the weakness in the Southern Local protions to the high school.
Lawrence said he is looking forward to proceeding
Randall A. Fischer, executive director of the OSFC, ject budget ste~~ from the way in which t~e project lower-quality construction materials, Lawrence
·
with the liuilding design in hopes the project can be let
addressed commission members on the problem with budget was ongmally developed. ConstructiOn plans explained.
"We were going to push for a project, but it would out for bid as soon as possible.
.
the following letter:
for Southern Local and other 1990 list districts were
be
bare
bones,"
he
said.
"It's
pretty
much
safe
to
say
we
won't
be
in
this
"An issue has arisen ·regarding the budget for our developed without using the standardized design man"We
want
a
good
building
that
will
last
as
long
as
school
building
at
the
start
of
the
200)
school
year,"
he ·
.school facilities project in the Southern Local school ual that is currently in place and without consulting
Syracuse
and
Letart
Falls
(elementary
schools)
have
said.
"There's
just
no
way.
It's
too
bad
it
is
going
to .
district. The construction plan and budget for Southern · professional coostruction management firms. ThereLocal was originally established in 1990 at a total cO$t fore , I recommend providing an additional $1,817,953 lasted," he said. those buildings are now more than 70 delay our start, but getting the extra money_is worth it.'
•T he Southern board will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
of $'Z.3 million .. Additional inflationary adjustments in slate funding to the Southern Local project so that years old.
School
board
members
and
Lawrence
lobbied
state
Southern
High School.
were made that increased the total project cost to $7.7 the construction can be satisfactorily completed.

'

llll•lated Warlwear

uch oral .·

anll stv11 mav varv IIV Sllre.

W~rk

.... $7.81 "

20 to 30 years, he said.
netometer survey at the Blood)'
. Using trucks to transport the
Ground. The company will also
gravel from the site. instead of using
match up to $100,000 funding used
barges, would create highway safety
to mark t~e path of Morgan's Raid
concerns along with increased dust
through Ohio.
and noise pollution.
If human remains are discovAttomey Paul Rice, also rcpreefC9, the appropriate officials wiU
senling the Shelly Company, said the
be notified to document the finds,
COmp8!1y has been a part of the
he said.
greatest
co.nceni
Meigs County community for
The
approximately 30 years. The proper·
expressed by those opposed to the
ty at Portland has been owned by the
mining'there was forth~ unmarked
company for about 25 years.
graves of perhaps 57 Confederate
He said' the company has
and five or six Union soldiers killed
·
addressed historical concerns with a
there.
One of the more eloquent
memorandum of agreement with
state historical officials.
REPRESENTATIVE speakers was John B. Wells lll,
The agreement focuses on a 4(}. - Paul Rice, an attorney represent- lieutenant commander of the Kenacre area near the junction of lng the · Shelly Company, ampha- tucky DiVision of Sons of ConfedMcDade and Old Portland roads alzed .tapa the company Ia taking to erate Veterans, whose great-greatdubbed the "Bloody Ground." The mitigate damage to the Buffington grandfather died in the battle and
company proposes to protect that leland Battlafiald, which It plana to WI!$ buried somewhere on the batsite by covering it with three feet of · mine.
Uefield.
bank run and then donating it to the state after mining is
His testimony recalled Private Augustus "Pap" Castilla,
completed:
. The company also proposes to spend $25,00) for a magContlnu.e d on page 3

Eastern .Local Board sets prices for property

..

Lenten services

Price 01 Selected

- Margaret Plrk·
er, director of the Melga
County Plonellr and Hl1toriCIII Society, ·Wll one
of many apukel'l It ·I
U.S. Alrrr'l Corps of Engl·
llWI'I/Ohlo EPA hearing
oppOII d to gr1vel mining
It PorUII'id. Parker •Y•
the 11'18 IIIOCllttd wittl
the Bittle of Bufllngton
llllnd ehould be mlln·
talned aa farmland.

ill)pact surrounding construction !llld operalion of the barge loading facility, !llld a
memor!llldum of understanding between
the company and state historical officials.
The environmental impact of construct•ing steel mooring cells and installing riprap
shoreline protection would have only a
temporary effect on the river, said anomey .
Steve Hoy.
"This is not rocket science,'' he said.
The ripr8p, large rock placed along the
riverbank; would have a long-terril positive
effect on wildlife, providing spawning and
shelter areas for fish, he said.
The positive economic impact stemming from the project would far outweigh
any temporary environmental impac~ he
said.
J:le said · construction of the loading
facility would cost about $I .5 to $2 million
dollars providing 10 to 12 construction
jobs.
The facility would later employ approximately 30 workers with ~ $300,000 to
$400,00) annual payroll for approximately

·

$150 for 12 months
Web TV or Computers all at local call!
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The Orlu

addressed two concerns: the environmental

u.s.

·,: · ~··

*Pomeroy

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Debate over Civil War battlefield continues at public meeting

••

'

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vo lume 49, Number 202

MONDAY
POMEROY - Veterans Service
Commission, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
117 ·Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

· 111 Items an this page are limited to Items II StiCII.

•. Meigs County's
•

•

POMEROY
Alcoholics
Anonymous study group meeting, 8
p.m . Saturday, Sacred Heart Church,
Pomeroy.

-Page 5

.a 1

.

..

,,
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTE~ . :- Star
Grange 778, fun night ·and potluck
supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Grange hall .

Roger Clemens tladed
to Yankees tor David
Wells, two other players

•

Combined Immunodeficiency Syn- 'ioumal of Medicine, Dr. Rebecca cent, were still alive three months to
drome, but there was scant infonna- I;!uckley and colleagues. at the Duke I 6 1/2 years after transplantation.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr.
•l;Jniversity llledical CeP,ter showed
tion on the longer-term effects.
Babies with the disease can't pro- tliat children who receive&lt;! bone mar- Alain Fischer of the Necker Hospital
.duce T-cells that ward off infection, row transplants from rel~tives b&lt;1nefit- jn Paris .called the study's results
and can die from somethins as minor 'ed, even if the donor was not an iden- impressive. "Long-term follow-up,
which found the children in good genas a cold. The best-known victim was tjcal match.
David, the Houston "Bubble Boy" ' •· They examined 89 · infants who . eral health, validates these results.
received transplants between 1982 These outcomes are by far the best
who lived in a genn-proof enclosure.
In a study _in the New England _and 1998.Amongthem, 72,or81 per- that have been reported, " he wrote.

--'---Community Calendar-- ,,•
THORsoAv
sponsored tiy Meigs Ministerial

Sports

Meigs ·boys beat Federal Hocking, Page 4
Skin cancer risks, Page 8
Beat of the Bend, Page 12

Today: Cloudy
High: 408; Low: 20s

Bone marrow transplants effective. against weak immuhe systems
By The Associated Press
Bone marrow transplants from relatives can extend the lives of children·
with extremely weak immune sys-'
terns, a rare genetic disorder once
considered almost always fatal ,
researchers reponed today.
· Doctors have known since 1968
that bone marrow transplants could
help children with SCIDS, or Severe

Februuy 1•, 111011

Weather

. Topi~s
t~e mOI'!)ing m~~ita­
twns w1ll be Honest, Honestly Truth and Consequences" on Monday ; ' Hallowed Be Thy Name- The
Holiness Secret" on Tuesday; "It's
About Time - Tome and it Challenges" on Wednesday; and "Anger
and Resentment - I Try So Hard, I
Do So Much , I Work So Long, But
It 's Never Enough" on Thursday.
The evening reflections will be
"We Dare to Say... J-lj)w God Wants
to be Known" on Sunday; "Parents:
Everyone Has Two" on Monday;
"Coming to his Senses - Let's Get

Parish Mission planned at Sacred
Heart
'
A Parish Missi n has been
pl anned at Sacred 'eart Church in
Pomeroy from Sunday, Marc!) 7,
through Thursday, March II, as a
part of the jubilee celebration .
·The celebration this year ·marks
the I 50th year of the foundin g of the
pari sh, and the I OOth anniversary of
the church dedication .
There will be morning meditation s at 9 a.m. following Mass at
8:30 a.m ., and evening reflections
from 7 to 8:15p.m.
.

Friday

Thuteday, February 18, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

)
•

J'

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•

f

"·

•

•

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•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 19, 1999

Commentary
..
...

P811• 2

... .

Death Notices

Frldey, February 111, 1111111

.
.-.~--I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!I!I!!!!B!!!I!!II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!BaB.£..:......11!!!!!!B!!!!!!!II!!!I!!!!!!!!I!!I!!!B!!I----~-~
.........-----~-

The Daily Sentinel H~se,· Se~ate need own reconcilia~i~n

~------------------------~

..

By TOM RAUM
and balances among the executive, the legislative September among people who odent1fy themAuoel8ted Preu Writer
and judicial branches of government.
selves as Democrats; a deere~ among those .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Both parties are
The constitutional rules of impeachment also identifying thcm~elves as Republicans;
...
pledging to work to repair the political damage impose more than the usual amount of stress on
"The Repubhcan .party als~ hasn t had a~y
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
..
done to Congress by the wrenching impeachment . the system. Instead of being equal legislative popular leade~ in quote some lime," Kohut saod.
140.902-2158 • F.x: IIQ2-2157
drama. Bul, with the two chambers all bul . charnbel'll, the House in the impeachment trial " I hate to say ot, but t~e Republican ~y needs a
snarling at each other ncar the end, some hard . became the prosecution; the Senate the judge and Bill Ointon- so_mcone who can bro~ge the gap
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
feelings are likely to linger.
jury. .
and appeal to the ondependcnt vot_ers.
.
.
"We would all be wise 'to cool the rhetoric,"
"The Constitution, in mtllY ways, came alive
But James Thurber of Arnerocan Umverstty
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Sen. Robert Byrd, D· W.Va., advised colleagues for me for the first time," said Sen. Jay Roeke- said the fact that only a handful .of House DemocPublisher
behind closed doors.
feller, D-W.Va. '
rats - and no Senate Democrats - voted f~r
."
But, as the 2000 elections get nearer, emotions
It used to be said by some political scientists impeachment glosses. over. the fact that there s
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
could intensify.
'
that there were essentially four parties: congres- still a lot ~f DemocratiC dovosoon, and resentment
General
Man~~ger
Controller
'
"There are a lot of wounds there that have to sional Democrats, presidential Ocmocrats, CQn- toward Chnton.
1M: healed," said Gerald Kerns, a pro- .
·
fessor
at
the
University
of
Dayton,
in
~-~
'
1M Sentinel wMomN ,.,.,. to liN edltOt from,....,. Oft • brNd , . , , of top.
Ohio. But he sees it as mostly a
b. Sltorl leftf,., (300 wot* or ,.,.) han tM bHr chMr» of being publlm.tl.
Republican problem, suggesting
J)tped ,.,.,. .,. PtWt.rrwl 1nd 111 may be Rned. E1olt -"oultllncJutl• • alptutW,
Democrats emerged from the
~ and daytltM phon• numlMr: Sp.clry • d1r. It fiNn'• • ,._,. •rc:• to •,...
rdoue atflcM or l•rtw. ,.11 to: utt.,.. fo 11M .clltor, Th• Sentinel, 111 C&lt;Jurt st.,
impeachment drama unusually uniPoiMroy, Ohio .CSTG; or, FAX to 7~Nio.21f'1.
~
fied.
"I think we're going to have a battle royale within the Republican party
between the moderates and the right
wing," Kerns said.
.
As the Senate trial came to an end,
House .managers - all 13 of them
Republicans- were virtually spitting
their contempt for the Senate, and
By len Shoales
senators had to be reprimanded for
"I'm a lot of things in life," the woman in the ad says. "I'm a mom. I'm · snickering.
.
.
a woman with dry skin. And I'm a pharmacist."
"We knew that everybody in the
; :
So, as we can see, even in the post-Monica Ally MeScal Zone of the wJn- country wanted us to go away," Rep.
• ·· ing days of the 20th century, feminism is very much alive. This commercial . Henry Hyde, R-111., said afterward.
woman has it all: motherhood, problem skin and access to appropriate drugs. "We could have had a better trial; we
What man can claim as much?
.
should have had a better trial."
Yes, ever since the Senate gave a Lovely Parting Gift to Chief Justice
The vitriol is strongest in the
William Rehnquist, I've been basking in the possibility that there might be House. In the Senate, the final days of
other things to pay atte'ntion to besides the moral lapses of Democ~ats, the closed-door arguments seemed to
; · helpful searchlights of Republicans and vice versa. Like: makeoversl Last have a quieting effect on members of
: .. week Linda Tripp tried to make herself over as Mom of the Year in a New both parties. " We spent these count·
York Times interview. She's lost forty pounds, and sports a flattering new less hours together," said Sen. John
hairstyle, and who knows? Maybe folks w.ill come to believe her when she McCain, R-Ariz.
says she hoped "some other mom would do for her daughter what I did for
·"The trouble with the House: They
' Monica."
had a flawed beginning," said Sen.
Yes, she's a lot of things in life. She's a Mom. She's a woman with a Carl Levin, D-Mich.
phone tap. And she's a weasel. The media could do for her what they did for
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said it more boldly:
"They're angry he put them through all this.
Paula Jones and Hillary Clinton-- note their nose jobs, hair styles and cloth· "Extreme partisanship and prosecutorial zealotry gressional Republicans and White House Republicans.
They
didn'tlike him to begin with and now they
ing choices with the same obsessive attention to detail that Sen. Byrd have strained this process in its critical early juncBut
such
distinctions
are
no
longer
so
appardon't
trust him," Thurber said.
devotes to Robert's Rules of Order.
tures.u
ent,
said
pollster
Andrew
Kohut.
Clinton
has
Sen.
Wayne Allard, R-Coio., cited some
Why don't congressmen get makeovers? Well, they're honorable men.
No matter how messy, some suggested the moved the entire Democratic Party more to the advantageous side effects of the draining debate.
They're not interested in improving their image. They have no imagination. ordeal demonstrated the wisdom of the Founding
"It gave us a chance to get a lot of legislative
The can comb their thinning strands over their bald pates, but would they Fathers in creating bodies that operate on such center, while Republicans not only have a serious
riftbut
"are
going
to
have
to try to bury the work done in the last five weeks - just because
ever buy a wig, a nice handbag, or earrings? Don't hold your breath. In other . different impulses.
bad taste they've left ... by cooperating more with we had to be here. We've been having committee
news, a high Italian court ruled that if a woman is wearing jeans, rape is
"The whole thing is over, and our institutions Clinton and the congressional Democrats."
meetings and hearings. We've gotten far more
impossible. The justices, in their wisdom, r.uled that " it is common know!· are intact," said Sen. Qaniel Patrick Moynihan,
The
liberal
wing
of
the
Democratic
party
has
work done up to this point than we had a year
edge ... that jeans cannot even be partly removed without the effective help D-N.Y
become
smaller
and
less
influential;
the
socialago."
of the person wearing the.m." Where did their "common knowledge" come
Moynihan contends that impeachment is
from? Did they have a blue jean orgy in their quarters? It just goes to show, potentially destabilizing to the American form of conservative wing of the Republican party, meanEDITOR'S NOTE - -Tom Raum covert
once again, that governing bodies in other lands are foolish, while ours are government because once set in motion "only the while, has grown larger and more outspoken.
n8tlonal
and International aHai're lor The AssoKohut said there's been an increase since the
. : .. wise and good
.
Congress is involved," without the usual checks impeachment process began in the House last ciated Press.
:. ·&gt;· Well, maybe not. Remember Dr. Fay Boozman, the ophthalmologist who
• ·.. ran for the U.S. Senate in Arkansas last year, and lost? He claimed that preg:: ::: nancy is impossible for rape victims because (according to the New York
.: .::Times) "the stress of the assault triggered a biochemical reaction in the vicsons. For one thing, more fulfilled thao while "sitting in
By George R. Ptagenz
.
:: ·. tim that made conception unlikely."
-I am living in the hope
wonder
whether
there
are
any
I
they are too busy the big stuffed chair in the living
::;·. He might have lost that election, but Mike Huckabee, Arkansas governor,
getting ready for room sewing seams and replacing that the old-fashioned
· : . recently appointed this marvel of the medical community director of lire mothers around today like Leonard
Stone's
.
mother.
Every
day
she
work themselves.
lost buttons. I recall the lost luxury nwther is coming back.
. : · state's Department of Health. Maybe he 'll commission a study on blue.jeans,
would
wrap
Leonard's
lunch
in
the
But I am living in of lingering over simmering pots
:·: and their effect on pregnancy rates. We can only hope.
There are signs. "Smart
sports
-section
of
the
previous
day's
the
hope thai the old- and child's play and mending. "
-: "· Feminists everywhere have their fingers crossed.
fashioned mother is
She and Leonard Stone's mother women do stay at home
: ·: Meanwhile, in South' Africa, carjacking has become such a problem that Cleveland Press so I could read it in
coming back. There would have gotten along well . I am and love it, "says the co·
·: ;- drivers are resorting to the use of flame throwers. The Baltimore Sun, which the school cafeteria at lunch time.
Like
a
lot
of
families,
we
could
are signs. "Smart not so sure about Katie's mother.
broke this story, claims that the device, now on the market, called the
founder of Women at
afford
only
one
paper
and
my
father
women
do
stay
at home and love it,"
Fifteen-year-old Katie was listen, . Blaster, is easier to usc than a gun. It's "operated by pushing a button beside
liked the Plain Dealer. I preferred says the co-founder of Women at ing as her mother and I were talking Hdme. "They are sur·
~ the foot pedals. It sends a man-high fireball from the car, engulfing the
hijacker without endangering the passengers or damaging the auto's paint." the Press, which had a better sports Home. "They are surprised to find about working mothers ·and how it prised to find out how
out how much they usc their educa- affects their children.
Don't scratch the paint! That's the fir st rule of carjack foiling. And the first section.
much they use their educa·
One
day
in
the
cafeteria
I
noticed
tion and creative abilities raising
"You don't mind that I'm not
: " client for the Blaster was Johannesburg's head of criminal intelligence, who
here when you get home from tion and creative abilities
:: ·called the flame thrower a "deterrent." Well, I guess. A ball of flame the size that Leonard's lunch was wrapped in children."
Women in foreign countries are school, do you?" Katie's mother, a raising children."
• of a man would certainly deter me . It 's certainly more of a deterrent than the Press sports section. I devoured
it
more
eagerly
than
my
peanut
buteven more devoted to their kith and bank executive, asked.
· jeans with rapists anyway. If we could put flame throwers in blue jeans, we
ter-and-marshmallow-whip
sandkin at home. The daughter of Anwar
" I guess it would be nice if you catcher's mitt?-" Maybe she didn't
might be on to something. How do I know? Because I'm a lot of things. I'm
wich.
I
asked
Leonard
whether
his
Sadat,
the
slain
Egyptian
leader,
were
home," said Katie.
' a Dad. I'm a man with dry skin. And I'm acynic. Yes, even in the post-Mon·
know, but she would help you look.
mother
would
mind
packing
his
once
told
a
group
of
American
busi·
"But
you have my phone number
ica bipart1san "let's get back to work" spirit of the waning days of the 20th
Most of all, she. was there -- for
lunch in the sports pages every day. nesswomen: "You ' can take a few at the office," said her mother. "You
century, cynicism is very much alive.
you, or in the case of Leonard
Well, she did it. It must have been. lessons from Moslem women. Go can always call me if you need me."
(Ian Shoales' new book, "Not Wet Yet, " Is available from 2.13.111 PubStone's mother, fot the kid next door
a
nuisance
for her. There was anoth· back to being good mothers. You get
" Oh, I don't need you," said who could count on her like his own
llcatlona, PO Box 11110, Los Angeles, CA D0078. The toll-free number Is
er kid ·- Billy-- in the family to pack so busy with your work that you for· Katie. " I just said it wo~ld be nice if mother.
1-800·902-1381.)
a lunch for, not to mention Mr. get your basic role. You are respon· you were here."
Copyrlght1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
But that was a long time ago,
Stone. It had to be a pain to hunt for sible for that child."
What those of us with old-fash - when we still used the Old Reliable
yesterday's sports section every
In Japan, when a child is sick, the ioned mothers probably remember
and before the New and Improved
morning on top of everything else.
mother shows up for class and takes most about them is that they were came along.
Do you know any mother today notes that she brings home for her always there when you came home
As we later learned, the Old Reli. By The Associated Press
who would go to all that bother for child to study.
from school .
able was better. Including mothers.
Today is Friday, Feb. 19, the 50th day of 1999. There are 315 days left in the neighbor boy? Most mothers, I
Sometimes all we said to them Copyrlghtl099 NEWSPAPER ENTERThe popular magazine writer
the year.
bet, wouldn't do it for their own ~h Viorst said , she never felt were things like, uMa, where's my PRISE ASSN.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 19, 1945, during World War II, some 30,000 Marines landed on
Iwo Jim a, where they began a month-long battle to seize control of the island
from Japanese forces.
On this date:
By Jack Anderson and Jan Moiler
were to pinpoint potontial witnesses, with whom
For two weeks, this operaIn 147j, the astronomer Copernicus was born in Torun, Poland.
You
can
add
two
more
names
to
the
long
list
of
the
lawyers
would
follow
up
and
collect
testimotive
recalls, Davis wasted no
In 1803, Congress voted to accept Ohio's borders and constitution. (Howwho
think
Ken
Starr
mi
ssed
the
boat
Americans
ny.
OJlportunity to remind voters
ever, Congress did not get around to formally. ratifying Ohio statehood until
with Monica Lewinsky.
"We really didn't do a whole lot of investigat- which on~ served his country
1953.)
Rick and Beverly Lambert of Texas are a pair ing on any one person," Rick Lambert told us. in wartime. In November,
In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was arrested in Alabama. He
of private investigators hired by lawyers for Paula "We would find out about a particular wor~~&lt;~n, Davis not only beat Lundgren,
was subsequently tned for treason and acquitted.
Jones in 1997 to dig up dirt about President Clin- interview corroborati ng witnesses and the woman he trounced him.
In 1846, the Texas state government was formally installed in Austin.
ton's sex life. Their job was to find other women herself, and make a determination whether or not
"Every body knows you
In I 878, Thomas Edison received a patent for his phonograph.
.
In 1881, Kansas became the fi rst state to prohibit al l alcoholic beverages. who were rumored to have had affairs with Clin· we felt th~ lawyer team should follow up with a didn 't pull Stars and Stripes duty in Saigon with·
•
•
In 1942, President Roosevelt s1gned an executive order giving the mili· ton to help Jones' lawyers prove a pattern of sex· subpoena or any further questioning. We didn't out pulling a lot of strings," the strategist says .
ual harassment.
have a lot of time to spend on any one person·. "
"But you run a non -veteran against him and (Vice
tary the authority to relocate and intern Japanese-Americans.
In the course of their research, the Lamberts
Over the course of the investigation, the Lam- President AI) Gore looks like John Wayne."
In 1942, about !50 Japanese warplanes attacked the Australian city of
came across a former White House· intern named " .berts interviewed 209 people. Lewinsky's name
It would be a gross oversimplification to sugDarwin.
Lewinsky
..
who
months
later
would
become
a
crossed
their
radar
screen
in
the
fall
of
1997
--and
gest that 'Lundgren lost the governor's race on
In 1959, an agreement was signed by Britain, Turkey and Greece granti·
household name as the scandal became front-page was turned over to Jones' lawyers at ;~bout the account of his missi ng WBr record, just as it would
ng Cyprus its independence.
In 1986, the U.S. Senate approved a treaty outlawing genocide, 37 years news. But the Lamberts didn't give Lewinsky a same time as Linda Tripp was making her infa- be silly to suggest that Gore's service in Vietnam
second look.
mous tape-recordings.
will tip the 2000 presidential race in his favor.
after the pact had first been submi tted for ratification.
"We blew (Lewinsky) off. We didn't even
The Lamberts don't seem sorry that they Nevertheless, the ·California race suggests an
In 1997, Deng Xiaoping, the last of China's major Communist revolu·
think she was important enough to talk to," Bev- missed the media circus that would have ensued issue that may become a problem for GOP presitionaries, died.
erly
Lambert told us. "We were looking for had they -- not Tripp and Lucianne Goldberg -- dential hopefuls.
Ten years ago: Iran's A atollah Khomeini rejected the apology of ''Satanwomen
who had benefited professionally as a first presented the story. Both Lamberts believe
Charlie Cook, the National Journal's noted
ic Verses" author Salman ushdie, exhort in Muslims to "send him to hell"
result
of
a relationship with the president; she did- that Arkansas is much more fertile ground than political analyst, disagrees. "You just had a draftfor committing blasphem
Five years ago: With sma erbs facing a NATO deadline to withdraw n't fit the profile . Of course, we had no idea about Washington-- and that it's Ken Starr who missed dodger (Clinton) open up relations with Vietnam.
People are not going to vote Democratic becau@
heavy weapons encircling ara' vo or face air strikes, President Ointon Vernon Jordan or her job · interviews in New the "real" story.
1
York."
Gore's
a veteran."
'UNDER
THE
DOME
-A
top
Republican
delivered an address from the
al Office reaffirming the ultimatum. Amer·
"It
sounds
terribl
e,
but
at
the
point
·
i~
our
strategist
-unaligned
with
any
potential
GOP
But Republican primary voters do pay attenican speedskater Bonnie Bl ·r won the fourth Olympic gold medal of her
investil:ation that we heard about Lewinsky, we presidential candidate -- worried openly recently tion Ill military service. And with few exceptions,
career as she won the 500- eter race in Lillehammer, Norway.
One year ago: U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan set out for Iraq on a had heard so many stories and tales of women, about the prospect of George W. Bush winning · most of the Republican candidates· had better
things to do than fight in Vietnam . The lone
last-chance peace mission, say.ing he was "reasonably optimistic" about that if we didn 't find something unusual in the his party's nod.
His worry comes from watching last fall's race exception is Sen. ·John McCain, R-Ariz., a genending the standoff over weapons inspections without the use of force. At story, we ignored it," Beverly Lambert continued.
• the Nagano Olympics, Austrian Hermann Maier won the men 's giant slalom "Lewinsky was of age, she was a white woman, fot governor of California, a contest that pitted uine war hero who spent five -and-a-half grueling
she moved on to a mid-level goverhment job, we Republican· D~n Lundgren against Democrat years as a prisoner-of-war in Hanoi. But McCain
while Hilde Gerg of Germany won the women's slalom .
just
tho.ught there wash 't a story here."
Gray Davis. Like many of his ge~eration, Lund- has problems of his own: His stands on campaignToday'•s Birthdays:· Movie director John Frankenheimer ("The ManchuriThe Lamberts were hired in October of 1997 gren did not fight in •Vietnam. But Davis -· who finance reform, tobacco and other high-profile
an Candidate") is 69. Singer Smokey Robinson is 59. Singer Bobby Rogers
(Smokey Robinson &amp; tbe M~racles) is 59. _Actress Carlin Gl~nn is 59. Singe~ and given six months to find women from Bill also once worked for the urtra-Iiberal " Governor issues will make it very difficult for him to raise
- Lou Christie is 56. Actor Mochael Nader os 54. Rock mu~1c1an Tony Iomm1 Clinton's past. Given a partial list that often Moonbeam," Jerry Brown --did serve his coun- the $20 million needed to mount a serious run.
included just first names and cities, the Lamberts try.
CCfyrlght •-· Unhed Footuro Syndteeto, tne.
(Black Sabbath) is 51. Actor Jeff Daniels is 44.
,,

Chance -of snow showers Harold H. Hawk
"
Harold H. Hawk, Tuppers Plains, died Friday, Feb. 19, 1999 at his resipersists through Saturday dence.

'EstafJlisMil ln. 1948

By The Associated Pr•••

Cold but generally dry conditions· are expected across Ohio tonight
and Saturday, the National Weather Service said.
~e snow and show showers predicted earlier for parts of Ohio will
remam to the south of the state, forecasters said.
Lows tonight will be 15-20 and highs on Saturday in the 30s.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather
station was 70 degrees in 1939 while the record low was 6 below zero in
1936. Sunset tonight wili be at 6:12p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:18
a.m.

Weather forecast:

.

··_,. Tripping -our way
into the millennium

The old reliable was better

including mothers

Today In History

P.l.s thought Lewinsky was insignificant

•

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

I

..

Tonight...Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s. North wind around 10
mph.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Highs in the
upper 30s. Chance of snow 30 percent.
. Saturday night ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Lows
10 the lower 20s.

Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Mildred L. .Meredith
Mildred Lucille ~eredlth, 79, Pomeroy, died Frid~y. Feb. 19, 1999 in the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care, Pomeroy.
Arrangements will be announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher
Funeral Home.

No sympathy near prison for
inmate facing execution

LUCASVILLE (AP) - Some
of the people who live near to the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility say Wilford Berry Jr.'s execution - scheduled for tonight Extended forecast:
should have happened long ago.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy and continued cold. Highs in the lower 30s.
"All I say is, do it," Bob Hawk,
Monday:.. Partly cloudy and continued cold. Lows in the teens and
highs in the mid 30s.
·
.
a VaHey Township trustee, said
Thursday. "It's long ov~rdue."
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the teens and highs in the lower 40s.
Hawk said he yearns for days
when a death sentence meant a
a • • noose around the neck or a fatal
"K
k h
do . h' fi h ,
high-volt age jolt.
Continued from page 1
entuc Y as a g m I IS g _I.
Even the Methodist minister at
a member of the 11th Kentucky Cav~e named seven known dead and .. the largest church in this Scioto
alry which served with Morgan.
bun~ at the battlefield: 1st U. R.O. County community about 80 miles
"Members of my family learned Marnner, 3rd Cpl. Edward 0 . McKen- south of Columbus said he knows
how to ride horses in Meigs County... zie, Pvt. C.H. Yaegle, Pvt. J.A. Beck- of nobody who would stand in the
they learned how to ride them very ham, Pvt. G.W. Hensley, Pvt. F.M. way of Berry 's death wish.
fast. Here in Meigs County they Brown.
The Rev. Harley Roston said he
learned how tb swim in the Ohio
Among the other speakers were doesn't even bother to preach
River. Here in Meigs · County they members of the Ohio Archaeological against
capital
punishment
·were taught marksmanship by tho cit- Council who claimed the archaeologi- _ because so many members of his
izens," he said.
cal survey commissioned by the com- congregation are prison guards, or
"Buffington Island is holy gmund pany was incomplete and said there is have relatives who work inside the
to me, to Kentuckians, as soldiers, no evidence that the Bloody Ground is maximum-security complex.
· · they learned to die here," he said.
the main area of significance in the
Their opinions are shaped by
· · . A letter from a, family friend who battlefield. In addition, the mitigation experience inside the ce1lblocks,
. ·was present at the battle recalled and preservation plan is ineffective, the minister said.
"Paps" death. A religious man, he was they said.
"You've got to understand how
·chased down and surrounded by
Tom McCullough, a member of the they fe_el," Roston said. . · . .
Union soldiers; he looked toward Advisory Council on Historic PreserRestdents have been 1n thos Sit·
Heaven as a Union officer shot him in vation, said the Corps of Engineers ualton before. After all, Berry
the head with a revolver, he recounted. must take into account the permits came close to death a year ag~ but
· He also recillied a visit to Ponland impact on historic propeny, but makes th.e U -~· Supreme Court d~coded
with his grandmother in 1952. '"This is the final decision on the activity. •
not to hft an order to stay hos ex~where her Pap died. This is where her
In
~involving
private
property,
cutoon
JUSt two ~\)urs before hos
Pap is buried."
.k
h'
.
th
.
t
fi
d
scheduled
execulton.
"F
-•
Id th' "
He said he does not want to stop l1 et tsone, eagencoes ryto tn a
11 s an
solution
that
serves
the
public
interest
or
us,
mg, grothe mining, but stressed ttiat the graves
while
respocting
the
rights
of
the
prop· must be found.
"Let's find the graves ... we dt;ln't erty owner.
'
&lt; "Responses involving private
have the right to desecrate a military
LORAIN
(AP)
-Abou\
2,300 galproperty are quite limited," he said.
cemetery,'' he said.
Ions of diesel fuel spilled when the lead
Another Kentucky resident, JimThe Corps of Engineers will accept engineofafreighttrainderailed,butno
. - ie Epling of the Kentucky Division written comments until 4:45 p.m. on one was injured in the accident.
o Sons of Confederate Veterans, said March 1 before making its decision .
The derailment happened about 5:15
9:38 a.m., Salem Street, Charles am. Thursday on lnlc)ts in Lorain, about
Eads, HMC;'
25 miles west of Cleveland, said Jlob
Units of the Meigs County
2:09 p.m., Collins Road, Ubkind, a spokesman for PhiladelphiaEmergency
Medical
Service Pomeroy, Howard Searles, HMC.
based Conrail.
recorded six calls for assistance
Preliminary reports indicated a lnlck
Thursday. Units responding includprob~m may have caused the deraile(!:
ment, Lorain Assistant Fire Chief Randy
Vdmuls Memorial
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Hupp said. The fuel leak occurred when
Thursday admissions - Susan ae2:50 a.m., Pomeroy Police ,
a piece of rail popped up and punctured
Department, Frank Houser, Holzer Iand, Chester; .laieph Bolin, Middleport.
the engine's fuel tank, authorities said.
Thur.;day discharges-Gatrude &amp;m.
Medical Center;
In addition to the lead engine, the
Hot= Medical Center
1:03 p.m., Reedsville, Forrest
front wheels of a second car - anothDi!cbargei Feb. 18 - Raymond
Kibble, Veterans Memorial Hospier engine - also came off the track.
Pauley,
MIS. .Billy Saylor and daughter,
tal·'
.
Hazardous materials .crews were
6:46 p.m., Fourth Avenue, Mid- \bnda King. Fred Hayes, Donna Smith, cleaning up the spill, which was conMarilyn ClrirxMaff.
dleport, Joe Bolin, VMH;
tained, Hupp said.
Bh1h - Mr..and Mrs. John Dabney,
8:33 p.m ., Lincoln Heights,
Conrail also had hired a contractor
!lJI1, Southside, w.vo~.
Pomeroy, Gerald Shuster, HMC.
to help with the cleanup.
(PubllsbeAI with pennksion)
The Coast Guard also was on the

°

cer John Gahm said. "They say
they ' re going to do it, and then
tltey don't."
But things seem different this
time, he said. Some townspeople
in the past placed bets that Berry
would not die.
There aren't as many takers this
time, he said.
'
Along the short stretch of U.S.
23 that bisects Lucasville's business district, the customers and
employees in the auto parts store,
the beauty salon, restaurant and
the mortuary said their only fear is
that some court somewhere will
stop the execution at the last
minute. .
Of more immediate local concern was news of a neighbor gored
and trampled to death by a bull on
a farm pasture. Som ~ of
Lucasville's 1,600 residents said .
they felt grief for the 83-year-crld
victim, but there was no similar
compassion for Berry and the 190
other men awaiting their destiny
in the Lucasville prison 's death
chamber.
"They should line up a bunch
more from death row behind
him," said So;:ott McNeal, working
behind the counter Thursday at the
Barbourok Auto Parts store.
"They waited far too long to do
it," McNeal said.
" Personally, I don 't know if
there 's anyone here who's against
it."

Senators aim to end
foreign steel dumping
By ttKI KAPSAMBEUS
Aaoolalld Praes WrtW
PITtSBURGH (AP) -The Qinton
adminNration has !kJne tittle to fend off
cheap foreign steel that has fkloded the
U.S. marlcet and threatened the steel
industry, three senators said.
"My patience is ninning out on this
thing." said US. Sen. Jay Rockefeller, DW.V..., at a special hearing Thursday about
the crisis. "It just kills me to see this indusby being eroded ... I will oot quit. And I'm
oot afraid of anything or anybody."
Union and sleel oompany representatives testified before Rockefeller and
Sens. Arlen Specter and Rick Santorum,
bolh Pennsylvania Repubiicarti, at the
hearinginPi~'s U.S. District Coull.
The senator.;, who belong to the Senate Steel Caucus, criticized Qinton for
reacting too slowly to foreign oountries'

steel &lt;kunping.
They wged support foo legislation cosponsored by Specter and Rockefeller
-that would limit the prnctice.
Rockefeller acknowledged that socalled "quota legislation" probably will
have a hard time passing Congress, especially because only 16 states are major
steel p!Oducers. But he warned similar
dumping oould oro.or in any industry and
said it was important to send a message to
foreign p!Oducers.

" I don't believe in protectionism," said
Rockefeller. "On this one, I draw the line,
because other ooururies are taking advantage of us."
Ironically, ·the three senators . sat
beneath a quaint portrait depicting Pinsburgh ru; a thriving steel town. There are
no longer any working Steel mills within
city limits, though 9JI11e have been made
into memorial&gt; to the industry thai built
the region.
On Friday, the ainton adminisllation
found that Japan and Brnzil sold steel in
U.S. markets at prices dramatically below
production costs or home-market prices.
That finding trigger.; a full investigation thai oould lead to tariffs of up to 71
percent by this summer.
· But to Specter, Qinton 's action was
"too little, and it's 1oo late."
"What we need IS relief,"Spectersaid
The finding "does not help the steelworker who has la;t his job."
Those who testified at the hearing
expressed dismay that Friday's finding
applied to ju.&lt;t two oountries and only one
product, hot-rolled steel.
Leading steel a:&gt;mf'Ulies and the United Steelworkeos of America on Thesday
filed import oomplaints accusing eight
oountries of dumping: Czech Republic,
France, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan,
Macedonia and South Korea.

Man guilty of killing teen
during gang fight ·

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man
has been convicted of killing a
high school stud ent during a
gang-related fight in September
near a crowded commercial area.
Ricardo Gray, 20, was convicted Thursday of murdering Jam es
D. Russell , I~ . and. of felonious
ass au It for shooting at a companion of the dead youth.
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Nancy R. McDo nnell '
sentenced Gray to 23 years to life
1n prison, with possi ble release
after 23 vears.
Assistant County prosecutors
Dominic DeiBalso and Kimbedy
Mahaney asked only that Gray'&gt;
·
'·
sentences for the two crimes not
scene because the spill happened be/ un together.
about one mile from Lake Erie, said /
McDonnell's se ntence was
Tom Kelly, emergency management three years short of the maxo·
director for Lorain

1ira.• n dera"IIS sp"llls d"lesel fuel

DelBalso and Mahan ey prese nt ed 14 witnesses in th e trial,
which began last week. They told
jurors that Gray used a 9 mm
handgu n to shoot Ru ssell before
riding away on the bike .
Defense lawy er Almeta A.
Johnson presented three witnesses. Gray did not ta·ke the stand.
Mahaney said Gray told Cleveland po lic e that he was not present at th e shooting because he
was being treated at a nearby hospital for a beating he claimed he
recei-ved dunn~ the QanQ fiQht.
The jury that convicted Gray
acqui tted hi m of the more serious
charges af aggravated murder in
the killing , and attempted aggravated murder in the shooti ng of
Ru ssell 's friend .
The panel de liberated about a
da and a half.

Meigs EMS runs

Hospital news

H .c.ol:oNv ·-r·H-EATRE·I ~

1997 Mltaublshl 3000 GT
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Pqe4

Friday, February 19, 1999

Ro.c kets beat Nets in ·or; Cavs also win
Not only was it a tough call for
the Nets, it came j ust, three seconds
after official Scott Foster nullified a
basket by New Jersey center Jayson
Williams for offensi'e interference,
ruling that Kerry Kittles ' sho t was
still in the cylinder.
What made the two calls even
tougher was a non-call .by Foster in
the closing seconds of reg~lation
after Hakeem Olajuwon ilil a jumper
from the top Of the key to tie the
game at 85 ~ith 4.4 seconds left.
After a Nets timeout, Kendall Gill
inbo unded tbe ball . at halfcourt to
Kittles . Rockets rookie Michael
Dickerson gave Kittles a little shove
as he caught the ball , ·.knocking him
off balance and forcing a desperation

NBA roundup
By TOM CANAVAN
.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . (AP)
- When it comes to game-deciding
call s, even NBA offiC'ial s seem to
disagree.
, Case in point, the Houston
Rockets' 93 -92 overt ime vic tory
over the New Jersey Nets o n
Thursday night.
Scottie Pippen provided the margin of victory, hittin g one of two free
throws with 3.3 seconds to play after
official Marc Davis called Scott
Burrell for a tripping fo ul near midcourt.

pass to the top of the key to Keith
Van Hom.
·
His shot was partially bloclied by
Pippen, forcing the overtime.
. As soon as horn sounded, Nets
coach John Cali pari. jumped up and
down and questioned Foster for not
making a call.
Foster seemed to tell Calipari that
he .was n't goin g to make a call like
th at to decide a game .
However, Davis did just that t'i ve
m inutes later when Burre ll and
Pippen, C hicago Bulls teammates
last season, got tangled as OlaJUWOn
threw a pass.
.
Pippen , who had his best scc&gt;ri n1g
night with the Rockets with
points. said the young official

the correct call .
" I was definitely tripped," said
Pippen,5Io was 10-of-21 from the
field in e ipsing his previous high of
24this sea on . · ~ Bull was a little surprised I got the call because I didn't
get a lot of calls I thought I
deserved." .
Burrell said the call was ridiculous.
"To make a call like that with the
game tied, on a· backcut and I deny
him and he trips, you can't,'' Burrell
said.
After a New Jersey timeout, Keith
Van Hurn missed a three-pointer at .
,
·
the buzzer.
Neither Calipari nor Williams
(See NBA on Page 5)

IRA 18-MONTH TDOA FIXED RATE
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co Is autorrottcottv tere.I!Clble and teqlj'es o rrrmum depollt a $500.00. l'erdtV t~ eatv tMthaowOl

.. LAUNCHES SHOT- The Meigs Marauders ' Angelo Rodriguez
la~nches a shot in front of Federal Hocking's

df:ito(. 11o!e Ia aJbleCI to ChOr'QII,

ro· .

HIOVALLEY BANK

Meigs tops F,ederal
.Hocking 56-52
By DAVE HARRIS
Meigs a 55-52 lead with I:24 left.
Sentinel Correspondent
After a missed Lancer shot
Meigs opened up a big third peri - Humphreys closed out the scoring
od lead and then held off Federal with a free throw at the 16 second
Hocking to post a 56-52 win over the mark . The Lancers missed three
Limcers in a TVC make-up game straig ht shots in the closing seconds
Thursday evening.
and Steve Beha pulled down the
The MarQuders played without rebound with .four seconds left and
the servi ces of their outstand ing Meigs ran out the clock.
Abbott led three Maraude rs in
se nior Daniel Hannan who sat out
nursi ng a knee injury:
double figures with 18 , Rodriguez
Meigs with the win ends the regu- added 15 and Humphrey s II . Meigs
lar season with an 9-11 mark o verall hit 26 of 43 from the floor including
and 8-8 in the TVC. Federal Hocking three of eig ht three potnlers for 61%,
drops lp 3- 12 in the TVC and 3- 16 and otJIY one o f three free throws for
J3% .
overall.
. The game was kept close at the
Meigs pulled down 19 rebounds
foul line . The Lancers went to the led ' hy Ahbott and Humphreys with
line 231imes and hit 18,while Meigs SIX each. Humphreys had five . of the
qnjy shot three foul shots and hit one. Marauders II blocked shots and
~igs was called for 2 1 personal Abboll ·four. Meigs turned the ball
(Dilts and Federal Hock ing only 10, over 10 times , had 14 assists led by
f,;):e of those came in the final minute Humphreys with seven .
'play. Mei gs was never in the
Playing but not scoring for Meigs
~nus.
·
were A&lt;lam Bullington, ·Jason
"" The first period was played close Cundiff. J .P. Staats and Nick Wood .
~tb . five lead changes, Angelo Doing the same for Federal Hocking
tn}tlriguez gave Meigs a 15- 13 lead was Matt Green.
at..the end of the period with a three
Ed Beha had 18 to lead Federal
p(;tinter at the buzzer.
Hocking, Josh Martin 12. The
In the second penod Me1gs took a Lan cers hit 17 of 45 from the noor
filClr point lead on two difl'erenl ucca - for 38%, they missed all eight free
$ns. But the Lancers battled hack throws . They were 18 of 23 from the
411d tied the game at 21-all on D~sty hn e for 78 %.
~~d free thrmv.
The Lancers had 16 rebounds led
&gt; After J . T. Humphreys game by Beha with nine, and turned the
l'r'f&lt;;igs a 23 -21 lead , buckets hy Bond ball over I0 lJJncs.
·
ajjd Ben Dunfee put the Lancers on
The Lancers won the reserve
lQp 25-23 w1th 20 seco nd s left. game 50-35. Stacy Gi lchrist led the_
~driguez hit a lay-up With six sec- Win ners with 13. Atiam Bullinglon
dltds left and the two teams went into had 12 for Meigs , and Derrick .
t)'le lock er room tied at 25-all.
Jobnson II.
.:; Kyl e Smiddie nailed a three
Mei gs will tra ve l to South
pointer at the '6:23 mark to put Meigs Wehster o n Tuesday tn play South
¢iilop 33 -29to start Meigs on a 17- Pint in the secti onal tournaments .
5: run. A bucket by Dwayne Madison Quarter totals
whh 46 seconds left gave Meigs a Meigs ....................... 15- 10-22-9;o56
4?/•34 lead head in g into the final Federal Hocking .. .. .. 13- 12-9- 18=52
~riod . Grant Abbott· had the hot
Meigs: J.T. Humphreys 5-0- 1=I I,
Emtid for Meigs in the period with Steve Beha 1- 1-0=5 , Kyle Smiddie
e&lt;ght poi nts. .
0-1 -0=3. Jeren1iah Bentle y 1-0-0=2,
:;. The Marauders still had a 5 1-40 Dwayne Madison 1-0-0=2. Angelo
~don a Rodriguez bucket witb 5:2 1 Rodriguez 6- 1-0= 15 , Grant Abbott
left. But Federal Hocking went on a 9-0=0= 18. Totals: 23·3·1=56
16-0 run ·and· pulled to within 51-50 .
Federal
Hocking:
Scot t
\¥hen Scott Chapman hit two techni - Chapman 3-0-2=8. Ed Beha 5-0&lt;i.Houl shots with 2:51 le ft.
8= 18, Ben Dunfee 3-0-0=6, Matt
:• After a Abbott basket, two 'free Baker 1-0-0= 2, Josh Marlin 3-0(hrows by Ed Beha pullfOd the . 6=12 , Logan Bartlett 0-0- 1=1. Du sty,
t:'ancers to within 53 ' 52 . But Abbott Bond 2-0- 1=5. Totals: 17-0-18=52
connected on a short j umper 10 gi'e

In_. cornpour.ded

fNurturing

MEMBER FDIC

"HARDEN" HONEY MAPLE
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Friday, February 19, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TERMS

ADDITIONAL FACTS

All purchaSes must be paid by Cash, Check,
VISA, MastrCard and/or approved credit . Pur·
•Chases must be rem011ed Immediately; All

No layaways will_be accel!ted &amp;
no one will be admitted in the
store before 12 noon Sunday.

By The Ati80Ciated Preas

"I · tlijJ!Ic the potential for his Andres," Cox said.
Clemens, coming off consecutive
recovery is very good with successfultreatment," Dr. Lee Kelley said. Cy Youngs , will report to the
" There 's no widespread invol,e- Yankees on Saturday. He went 20-6
ment, so the outlook is very good. I last season, leading .the AL in ERA
think theni's a good possibility that (2 .65) and strikeo uts (271 ), and
he can look forward to playing in tying for the lead in wins.
2000."
,
" We''e got a ·group of warriors
Galarraga, 37, w ill undergo six here and we're getting a very big
owner
George
months of treau· ont , which will warrior,"
include chemotherapy followed by Steinbrenner said . " He's a monster.
radiatton . He is the fourth prominent He's just, 'Give me the ball ' - a real
baseball player since 1996 to be competitor. "
Clemens, who was also sought by
stricken With cancer, following Brett
Butler, Eric Davis and Darryl Texas, Cl.eveland and Houston, has
Strawberry.
·.
always been one of Steinbrenner's
" It's sad that he 's out for the sea- fav.orite players, and is the only fi veson, but it's a relief to know the can- time Cy Young winner in baseball
cer hasn't spread," manager Bobby history.
Cox said.
" I met my match in a guy who
Ryan Klesko is expected · to wants to win," Clemens s~id after
replace Galarraga, who hit .305 with speaking with The Boss. " This guy,
44 homers and 121 RBis last season. he •ettles for nothing less . I enjoy
Otis Nixon and Gerald Williams are that."
ex pected to share time in left field in
Toro nto had wanted several
place of Klesko.
young prospects from teams when it
" Our offense will be potent, but shopped Clemens in December, but
obviously not as pote nt without the Yankees were able to hold onto

How was that for a first day of
spring training'
· On the day workouts for the 1999
season officially began, two stories
that will have a profound effect on
the two best teams in the game
shook up baseball.
The New York Yankees completed their winter-long courtship of
Roger Clemens, acquiring the five'· time Cy Young Award winner from
Toronto for David Wells, Graeme
Lloyd and Homer Bush on Thursday.
"It's just another indication of
how the business of baseball is these
days," pitcher Mike Stanton sa~ d.
" We won 125 games, but you're still
always loo.king to make yourse lf better. What can you say? It's one of
those things that happens in basebaiL "
The Atlanta Braves were dealt a
seriou s
blow
when
iloc\ors
announced that first baseman Andres
Galarraga has a cancerous tumor in
his back and Will mi ~s the 1999 sea-

son.

Mr. Casby (Sk ip)
Meadows Ill calls all

employees together

to Inform them ·the
Public Notification
Sale ia all over at 10

PM this Sunday Ni~t.
This sate w111 become
history. 50-75% of all
remaining merchan-

dise ordered sacrlrlced this Sunday at

12 Noon.

MAJOR

STORE WILL OPEN
AT12 NOON
SUNDAY ONLY FOR
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LAMPS
SALE $9.95

11 f'IIQhl hili h~ II~ pU!II)VI CO"' rQI IGI I
people Tilt mlltlfess " mnar spm&gt;g a-1CI II

Not SSOO 95

S39.95
NOW 10 HOURS ONLY
(other lamps .. $ 100.00)
Lamps for $50.00

$150.00

•

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$675

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THIS IS A SALE
FOR THE PUBLIC ONLY
and will be held on the premises of

5 PIECE DINING SET ·
Round table, leaf and 4 chairs

All-wood m a rlch oak finish Not $599.95

Empire Furn11ure COI!!P&amp;IlY at 842 2nd
Avenue in Gallipolls?Ohio ·

By .RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
In addition to being the coach at
Ohio University, Larry Hunter is
also a basketball fan.
So he understands that there 's
nothing that compares with all the
speculation that surrounds a postseason tournament. As a maller of fact ,
he's not afraid to join the fray.
" Our people are aware of what
other people around the MAC are
doing and what we have to do to get
one of the top,.four seeds," he said.
"I'm sure everybody around . the
league is doing w hat we're doing they're looking at who' s playing
who and where and how that might
shake out in the standings."
Eight teams have already filled
the brackets for the league tournament, which kicks off next Saturday

on the home co urts of the four topseeded schools .
Just who those four top:seeded
teams are remains to be determined
- and there arc pockets of fans ,
players and coaches around the
Midwest caught up in the speculalion.
" This really creates a lo t of extra
excitement ," Hun.ter said. " Just
think of all of the fans of the MidAmerican Conference who are doing
exactly what you and I are. doing.
My AD was\ looking at what the
tournament pairings could be this
morning."
Within the elite group in the tournament there will be. plenty of
jostling and elbowing for position ,
not only Saturday but. also in
Wednesday's final regularly scheduled games.

If Miami of Ohio wins either of
its last two games or Kent loses one
of its linal two, the RedHa\\(ks will
be the top seed. Two Miami losses
and two Kent wins, and the Golden
Flashes could still steal the top seeding.
Here'swhat remains for the eight
tournament qualifiers.. along with
their record and current seeding: ·
Miami (19-5, 14-2): at
Bowling Green Saturday, hosts Kent
Wednesday.
- Kent' (19-5, 12-4): at Ohio
Saturday, at Miami Wednesday.
- Akron ( 17-7, 11 -5): hosts Ball
State Saturday, at Ohio Wednesday.
- Ohio (16-8, 11 -5): hosts Kent
Saturday, hosts Akron Wednesday.
- Marshall (16-9, 11-6): idle
Saturda)', hosts Bowling Green
Wednesday.

553 passes for 4,275 yards and 36
touchdown s as a senior with the
Wildcats.
Still, there are those who think
he's not worthy of being the No. I
selection in the NFL draft.
But on March II , Couch plans to
answer. the question s about his arm
. by showing it off for th'e Cleveland
Brow ns .
. :'I' m definitely going to try to
.persuade them I'm the guy to take,
but it's really going to depend on my
workout," he said Thursday.
· Couch was in town to be honored
as the ~leveland Touchdown Club's
1998 college player of · the year. It
was merely coincidence, but Couch
holding his award during an after-

CLEVELAND .(.1\l')
Tiin
Couch's critics say his ann is too
· weak to throw the 15-yard out pattern or the deep ball. He 's too slow,
they insist. And wait a minute, who
did the guy ever beat in college anyway' .
.
Couch has heard it all.
"Year in and year out this happens to all the top guys," the
Kentucky
quarterback
aid.
"Everybody
'finds
something
wrong."
It's hard to find many flaws in
Couch's game: 'After all, he set 26
12
school
passing
records,
Southeastern Conference and four
NCAA marks. He completed 400 of

NBA

noon news conference with a brown
and orange bantter complete with
· Browns helmet and the initials TC
was kind of funny.
" Hopefully, this is not my last trip
to Cleveland," he said.
Couch ts on . his way to
Indianapolis for this week 's NFL
sco uting combine. However, he
won't be displaying his talents for
teains to e'aluate and ~ill only
undergo a physicaL
•
Instead, he'll wait until next
month to prove to the Browns he
should be their quarterback of the .
future.
·
He has been plotting his strategy
for the Browns ' brass like he used to
,prepare for facing Alabama's

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FACTS OF MLE ,
The purpose of this sale is to stabilize
and mcrease a cash tla.N situalron. A

sluggiSh economy and wOfld events SlluatJon 1s tha reason . Thjs firm IS not going oot of btJsineN .

. PRICE
SACRIFICES
ORDERI;D

- Bowling Green (15-9, 10-6) :
hosts Miami Saturday, at Marshall
Wednesday.
- Toledo ( 18-6, I0-6): hosts
Ce ntral Michigan Saturday, at
Northern Illinois Wednesday.
Ball State ( 15-9, 9-7): at
Akron Saturday, hosts Buffalo
Wednesday.
The schedule doesn 't favor Kent,
which must hit the road twice to play '
topflight opponents. Toledo is the
only team that doesn't play a tournament qualifier. Ohio is the only team
that stays home.
" And we play Akron and Kent,
the people next to us in the standings," Hunter said. " If we win those
two, I think we 'll get the second
seed."
As hectic as the final days· of the
schedule are- and as muc;h tension

as they cause for coaches - Hunter
said he wouldn ' t have it any other
way.
' "I'm a big fan of conference to urnaments, " he said. " It gives teams
that might have been out of the regular-season race for sometime something to play for. It keeps the fans
involved in your season. And all ol
those things are positi yes. "
MAC FAX: No wonder Toledo's
66-63 upset of 25th-ranked Miami
Wednesday night went down to the
wire. Each team has played 24 ·
games this year and each has surrendered 1,482points, 61 .8 pergame . .. :
Central Michigan '~ Mike Manciel is
tied for lOth in the nation in freshman scoring (16.4) .... Official s at
SeaGate Centre 'in Toledo say ticket
sales are running ahead of the last
two years for the MAC tournament.

PINY

842 2nd. AVENUE
.
.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE: (7 40) 446-1405
OSALESASSOCIATES &amp; PROMOTIONS. INC .. t992

'

''I wouldn ' t have thought that ,' ' sal~
Jim Donnelly, ScaGate president a~
CEO . .. . It 's, in the drinking water :
lith-ranked Ohio State has 12 more
wms than it did a year ago. while
.,
nearby Ohio University ha s II more.
... If Buffal o drops its last t wo
games, it will mark the third time in
the last five years a MAC team hait:
gone winless in th e league. Bcfoi~· ·
that, it had been 42 years since a
team lost every MAC game. -....:
Miami's Wally Szczerbiak isn't i: ·
huge fan of MAC expa nsion. " Our
(the MAC 's) overall RPI is good;'.: ~
he said after the loss at Toledo~'·
" We' d probably be a lot better off\f
Northern Illinoi s and ~uffalo :
weren't in the league.T m not sure ,
why the y are."
•
-

.

(Continued from Page 4)

were interested in picking up a fmc .
" That's a tough one to swallow, "
Cahpari said .
"I'm not going to go back mto
what the calls are," Williams said .
" It should not have been· that cl ose.
We were up 13 and should have put
them away.".
·
Olajuwon had 2 1 points and a
se ason-high 15 rebounds for, the
Rocke ts, who were playing their
third game in as many ni ghts.
Dicke rson added 14 points and
Othclla Harringtoo had 12 for the
Rockets, who outrebounded the Nets
57-39.
Gill led the Nets with 24 points
before foulin g out with I :55 left in•
overtime. Two nights after sco ring a
career-high 35 points, Van Horn had
IS on 7-for-19 shooting. Kittles
added 17 points, and William s had
12 points and II rebounds .
The Rockets, who were leading
the league in fi eld goal and threepoint shooting, struggled in both
areas. They were 36-for-94 for 38
percent from the fi eld and 2-of-16

from three- point range .
In other NBA games, it was
Cleveland 98, New York 74 ;
Washin gton 95, Toronto 88; Utah 97,
Denver 86; and Indiana 99 ,
Philadelphia 95.
Cavaliers 98, Knicks 74
Shawn Kemp scored 20 po1nts
and Vitaly Potapenko had 17 points
and 12 rebounds as Cleveland, playing its first game since lcarninll
Zydrunas Ilgauskas would miss the
rest of the season, embarrassed New
York.
On Wednesday, tests revealed that
the 7-foot-3 Ilgau skas fractured a
small bone in his left foot.
Wes ley Person· added 14 points as
the Cavs won their fourth straight
ga me after. opening 0-3. Patrick
Ewing had 14 points for visiting
New York, whtch had its four-gam,e
winning streak stopped.
I Wizards 95, Raptors 88
At Toronto, Mitch Richmond
scored 31 points and Rod Stri ckland
had 23 poi nts and 14 ' assists in
Washington 's victory.

Washington's two wins thi s season have come agai nst the Raptors,
who have los t five straight after beating Boston in their season opener.
Kevin Willis led the .Raptors with 45
point s and 14 rebound,s.
· Jazz 97, Nuggets 86
Bryon Russell had 21 points and
Jell Hornacek added 19 as Utah
matched its best start in franchise
hi story by winning at Denver.
The Jazz, who have beaten
Denver nine slratght times . are 7 - I to
equal their fran chi se-best 1989-90
start. The Nuggets lost their fourth
straight game to fall to 1-8, the sec- .
a nd- worst mark in the league .
·
Nick Van Exel had 19 point s and
eight assists for Denver.
·Pacers 99, 76ers 95
Antonio Davis scored 16 points
and Re·g gie Miller added 15 as
Indiana beat visiting Philadelphia,
the Pacers' lOth straight victory owr
the 76ers and 15th in their last 16
meetings .
. .
Allen Iverson led the 76ers with
33 points, and Man Geiger had 22.

828 850

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122,9
• Vortec V-II Power.
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cassette

• AMIFM Powerload'Cass.
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Totally Loaded!

All New 1999 Chevy Silverado
Extended 'Cab. 4x4 Pickup
• Crulae Control
• Styled Wheels
• Nicely Equlppedl

qa,B5D*
• Air Conditioning ·
• AM/FM Cassette
• Sport Suspension

WEDNESDAY'S VICTORY SCENE - Southern's
Kim Sayre (right) stands
in the paint to cut off the
forward option of Miller's
.Heather Compston during
night's.
Wednesday
Division IV sectional tournament
game
at
Alexander High School,
where the Tornadoes' "3421 victory moved them
int.o Saturday's bracket
championship
game
against Oak Hill.

* -Buick
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• 3800 V-6 Power
• Power Seats .
• Dual Climate Controls

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PIRE FURNITU.RE

...

defense. Using four Wildcat wide and put on a good show for them," Kentucky, but he's sure he can air it
receivers, including Craig Yeast, a Couch ~a id . " I'll try and show them out far enough to play m the NFL. · ..
potential high-round draft pick him- .- exactly what they want to see. We 've , " !think if you can throw the ball .
self, Couch plans to tluow every- been going over our game plan li t&lt;eltce tely 55 yards on. a deep post:'
thing he's got at Browns coach Chris we're preparing for a game."
atid y
throw it on time, I think .
Palmer, football operations director
The knock on Couch is his arm that's as ar as you' ll have to throw
Dwight Clark.
strength. He rarely got a chance to it," he said . ~·Except o n Ha t! ·
" We're going to go out and try throw de:r down the field while at Mary's. "

includes table 5 side chairs-1 arm chair and Uot•led ·Chl,na

This Sale Shall Not Exceed 10 PM Sunday and
Shall Be Held Only At:

~~~:;;;;~S
_ Right-hander Ben
sidelined nearly two years be&lt;: au"i!::-:
of shoulder problems, agreed
minor league contract with
~
Bay.
• ••_"
The Devil Rays also learned oui';O: :':
fielder Quinton McCracken has :a:&gt;
sprained right knee that wi ll siqcli!!lt: .
hi m 4-6 weeks.
• ,..
· ::!::~
.::;:,;

action ....

B PIECE CHERRY
DINING ROOM

RECLINER

will get $5 million this year instead
of the team's $3.2 million offer.
Cleveland shortstop Omar
Vizquel abandoned the idea of staying away from spring training to
prod the Indians to improve his $2 1
million, seven-year contract .
" It 's safe to say that I'll be there
on time," said Vizquel, who is
expected· to report Monday.
-Randy Johnson .said he's much
more at ease in his tirst spring training witlr Arizona than he was the last
two years with Seattle.
In 1997, he was coming off back
surgery and was dealing with all the
doubts about whether he wo uld
return to his old intimidating form .
Last year, he was in a .sour mood
after the Mariners' decided against
extendi ng his contract.
" I think this is probably go in g to
be o ne of my better spring trai nings," Johnson said after hi s first·
workout with the Diamondbacks
· " Last year, I had to deal with a lot of
contract s t~ff and I'm really glad it's
over and behind me."
.

Couch knocks his critics as p-u tting forth well-worn · complaints~'_

I
back and amp1y padded w1th attached
comfort Has no sag springs and

some of the players the Blue Jays
coveted most: outfielder Ricky
Ledee and pitcher Ramiro MendoLa.
Well s, a quirky left-hander
known as " Boomer," was the toast
of New York after pitching a perfect
game aga inst the Minnesota Twins
onl\jay 17. Hewas one of the team's
most effective pitchers with an 18-4
record and a 3.49 ERA.·
Ll oyd, a 31 -year-old left-hander
from Australia, was 3-0 with a 1.67
ERA in 50 relief appearances last
year.
Bush, a 26-year-old who plays
primarily at second base, hit .380 in
71 at-bats for the Yankees, but was
cons·idered expendable because New
York has Chuck Knoblauch.
In other baseball news:
- Mariano Rivera made it 2-0
for Yankees players in sa l'ary arbitration when he was awarded $4.25
million rather than the team 's $3
million offer.
Owners are 6-2 in arbitration thi s
year, losing only to Rivera and to
Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter, who

t:tunter seeks to guide Ohio to top four seeds in MAC tou·r ney ~~

I
RECLINING SOFA AND
LOVE SEAT

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5'.

·~

11ems Sold "As Ia" and where is, All Sales f1·

nal, _&amp; No Refunds.

..•

Yankees .a cq1uire Clemens for Wells, Lloyd, ~ Bush

By TOM WITHERS ("")

cit

-

&lt;.

Brand Ne.w 1999 Pontiac
Sunfire Sun &amp; Sound

•nit Steering
• Rear Window Defrost•
•loatledl

Brand New 1999 Chevy
XTREME S-5eries Pickup
• XTREME Appearance Pkg.
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�'

•

.Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

-.

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Friday, February 19, 1999'

Frlday, ,Februery 19, 1819

The Dally Sentinel • Page 'f

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Urbana downs Rio 83-70; Redwomejn drop two- in a row

By ANDREW CARTER
Tribune Staff Writer
After falling behind by 21 points
at the half, the University of Rio
Grande just ran out of time in its
comeback bid agamst Urbana
~n~versity ~ Thursday.
The
,_ e women ell 83-70 to the Lady
·l&gt;lue Knights at the Grimes Center in
Urbana. It was Rio Grande's second
consecutive loss and may leave the
18th ranked Red women out of the
lop slot in the AMC postseason tournament.
Rio Grande (22-7, AMC 10-5)
jumped out to a 9-4 lead two minutes
into the contest, but then fell VICtim
to a 25-0 run by Urbana, ranked lith
in this week's NAJA DIVIsion U poll.
The Red women shot JUSt 28.6 percent from the field m the first half,

whiCh saw Rio Grande go without a
point for nearly seven minutes.
Urbana (22-5 , AMC 12-3) shot 60
percent from the field m the first
half.
The Redwomen mounted a comeback in the second frame , outscoring
the Lady Blue Knights 39-3 1 m the
period. Rto Grande p1eced togetber a
16-7 run over tbe . fit'st seven and a
half minutes of the second half to
pull to wnhin 12 points at 59-47. The
Redwomen cut the defictt to 70-67
when Came Carson drained a threepomter with 4:30 left m the contest.
But, that was as close as the
Red women would get for the
remainder of the game.
Karley Mohler and Mindy Pope
both fouled out m the closi ng minutes and any hopes of a Redwomen

victory went to the bench wtth them.
Renee Turley led all scorers with
22 points. She was 8-of-18 from the
field and 5-for-6 at {he foul line.
Turley had seven rebounds, two
steals and a blocked shot.
· Carson fimshed w1th 17 points.
She was 6-for- 12 from the field and
hn4-of-4 free throws..
Mohler had 10 poihts and a teamhigh nine rebounds. Cindy Hopper
had six pomts and seven rebounds
Shannon Brown ch1ppcd in SIX
pomts and three boards. Pope had
JUSt five pomts, but hauled m seven
rebounds.
R10 Grande shot just 35.8 percent
from the f1eld overall. The
Red women connected on just 2-of-8
three-pomt attempts
""Ntktta Thompson paced Urbana

offensively
with
19 points.
Thompson was 6-of-12 from the
field and 7-for-11 at the line. Sbe
grabbed nine rebounds .
Molly Mahaffey had 17 points
and five rebounds. Mahaffey hit 2of-5 three-point' attempts and finishcd.6-of-9 from the field overall.
Ktya Starr scored I 2 points,
grabbed five rebounds and dished
out fo ur assists . Missy Mitchell
added II points on a 3-of-7 \:luting
from beyond the arc. Mitchell had
four assists and three rebounds.
Ja1mc Myher chipped in nine points
and recorded a game-high seven
assists
Urbana cooled off from the field
in the second half and shot 44.8 percen t overall. However, the Lady Blue
Kmghts knocked down stx trifectas

Rio Grande looks to break out of
its two-game losmg funk against
Tiffintomorrow.Gametimeissetfor
2 p.m at the Newt Oliver Arena.

U1llf l!!tlb
Rio qrande ..........., ........... 31-39=70
Urbkna ................. ............. 52-31=83
Rio Grande: Turl&lt;&gt;y 7/17-1115/6=22, Carson 5/7-1/5-4/4=17,
Halley !/7-0/0-0/0=2, Mo~ler 4/90/0-213= 10, Pope 2/9-0/0-11:1=5,
Hopper 117-011-416=5, Daugherty
0/0-0/0-2/4=2, Kendall 0/0-0/00/0=0, Brown 213-0/1-212=6. Totals:
22159-2/8-20/27=70.
Total FG: 24-67 (.358)
Rebounds: 43 (Mohler 9)
Assists: 9 (Halley 4)
JUrnovers: 21

,.'•.

'
Blocked shot.: I
'
Steals: 12 (Halley 5)
Fouls': 25
.
Fouled out: Mohler, Pope
-•Urbana:
Mitchell
114-317.
0/0= II. . My her 215-0/3-5/7=9,
Mahaffey 4/4-215-3/4=17, Starr 21'11/3-5/6=12, Thompson 6112-0/0·
711 1=1 9,
Pfau
2/3-0/0-0/0=4,
Cramer 0/0-0/0-212=2, Higgins 1120/0-3/4=5, Gregorek 213-0/0-0/0=4.
Totals: 20/40-6/18·25/34=83.

,'

Aposto ltc
Cli.... ofJ-Qrlolll

Vuthndt aDd Wotd d.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Of
the two Salt Lake City Olympic offi cials put on leave dunng the mvesttgallon of the bnbery scandal , one
,will keep hi s job and the other wtll
remain on leave pending further
evaluation.
Mitt Romney, the new prestdent
of the Salt Lake Organizing
Committee, decided late Thursday
that Kelly Flint. seqmr v1ce prestdent
of markeung and legal atfatrs, will
retam his JOb.
Licensmg dtrector Rod Hamson
will remam o n patd leave pe'ndmg
further evaluation in the next 30
days, spokesman Carolme Shaw
S3Jd

Flint and Hamson declined to
comment.
An mdependent ethics pan'el last
week blamed Tom Welch. former
head of the btd committee, and
Davld Johnson, semor vice president, for spendmg more than$! mil lion in cash, free vacations, living
stipends, gifts and free medtcal care
on International Olympic Committee
members and the1r famtlies pnor to
the 1995 IOC vote that awarded Salt
Lake the 2002 Winter Games.
Flint and Hamson have been on
paid leave $ince Jan . 8, when SLOC
President Frank Jokhk and Johnson
resigned. Joklik remains on the
SLOC board &lt;'lf trustees.
Flint and Hamsdn were not

respo nsible for the excesses, but
Flint sig ned so me checks and
Hamson prepared vouchers for
checks that allowed relallves of IOC
members to attend Amencan univcrsities or stmply to live in the~Umtcd
States, the ethics panel reported
The compensat ton committee on
Wednesday unanimously recommended that Flint re turn to the
. SLOC, but the tina! deciSion was left
to Romney.
When he accepted the job last
week, Romney said he would raise
the ethical bar and req utre all
employees and trustees to sign a
code of ethics. Aod he ask.eo trustees
who "cast a shadow on the games,
even where no wrong may have been

done, " to restgn .
Flint was the secon d signator on a
number of checks to IOC member
relat1 vcs, but he told the ethics panel
he thought the checks were authon zed undet a scholarship program.
He also told the eth1cs panel that
he had no way of knowing that the
names on the checks belonged to relat ives ol IOC members.
Among the IOC relatives who
benctitcd from checks Flint signed
was Sibo Sihandzc, the son of David
Sibandze of Swaziland, who
resigned from the IOC amid the
scandal last month.
Ultimately, Sibo S1bandze got
more than $111,000 frotn the bid.
comnitttee

While Flint attended meetmgs of
the bid board and its executive committee and wrote the minutes, -he was
not involved m the day-to-day operallons and played no significant role
m entertaining IOC members. the
eth1cs panel report said.
The report described Hamson as a
fresh college graduate who was
give n the title of fmance director, but
who had no leadership role.
Ham son socialized with IOC
members and stmply did what he
was told by Welch and Johnson, the
report said. That included filling out
vouchers for checks showmg documentation that did not exist.
"In thts regard he was not unlike
other bid committee employees who

Suaday School - 10:30 o.m,
l!vonlna- 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
Uberty .411 ~of God
P.O. Box 467,
'n1 Lane
Muon, W.Va.

Hope Batlllol Cbwdl (SoulbOI'II)
Pulor: Jim Diny
570 Grant Sl., Middtepo•
Sunday 10hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service - 7 p.m.

Sam Houston St 92, Te1tas-San Antonto 90

Mary Hardm-Baylor 92, W•5ey 56
N1cholls St 63, Lamar 53

Far West
o:\fizona 89, Oregon St 12
801se St 60r Nevada 48
Denver 981 Texas-Pan Ameri can 88
E Washmgton 78, CS Northndge 77
Fresno St 80, Bngham Young 71
Long Beach St 66, UC Irvme 63

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allant1c Oivi!ion

Itam

.lrLf&lt;l.

Orlando

6

750

2

M1ama
5
New York
4
Phaladdphla
.4
Boston ,
3
Washmgton
2
New Jersey ....................... . 2

l

625

~

~71

I ·~

57 1

I'J

500
13:\

,.,

l
~

4
5

286

Central Dinsion
5 I
5 2
5 3
4
J
3
5

Mtlw a ulu~e

Atlanta

Indiana
.
ClEVELAND
Detron .

Toronto ................ .
ChDrlotte
Chtc:ag o

I

-·-

I

I

2
3

833

•,,

714

,.I,

625
57 1
375

167

5
6
6

I

1 4~

141

n

L f&lt;l.

1
I 875
6 2 750
. 5 2 714
. 44500
3 4 429
I 7 125

Houston
Minnesota
San Antomo
Vancouver

Dallas
Denver ........... .

I

1

4

..••,

Ponl;~nd

LA Lakets

I

)1~
l
3'~

Phoemll.
Sacramento
Golden State
l,A Clt ppcrs

6

I

8~7

4

2

667

I'

I'

4

\

'

'i

17'i

0

6

000

6'1

I'

2

,.
1'

Thursday's scores
lndt .ma 9'-1 J'h1lndel ph1a 95
9'i Tomnto 88
CLEVELAND 98. New York 74
H u u~wn 9l New Jeney92. OT
Utah 97 Denver 86
Wa~hmgton

•
Tonight's games

New York a.t Philadelphia 7 p m
Chicago at Washmgton 7 p m
Milwaukee at Toronto 7 p m
Orlando at Atlanta, 7 ID p m

Loyola, Md 72, Can1s1us 58
Masnc:husens 59, St Bontwenture 39
MjlSsachusens Coli 7-4, Fttchbura St ~0
New England Coli. 85, Anno Mana 72
New Hnmpshtre 72. Towson 63
Rtder 82 Mnnhaunn 56
Salem St 99 Bndgewater, Mass 58
Salem-Te1kyo 64, Owlnton, WVa 51
Solve Regma 82, Curry 66
S1ena 83 Fmrfield 65
Southampton 79 Dowhng 71
St John Ftsher 87, Keuka 45
St Peter 's 72, N1agara 42
Tetkyo-Post 67, Caldwell 59
VirJihlil Tech 70.' 1-a Salle 57
W V1rgtma St 74. Bluefield St 61
W~ntwol1h Tech 87, Roger Wllhnms 42
West Lt~ rty 90 l1av1s &amp; Elkms 74

South

Arkan5a.s 77 Alabama 71
Belhaven 58 D1llard 45
BeiT) 90. Blue Mount;un 55
Bnd~ewa l e r. V~t 71, Randolph -Macon 56
Campbellsv tl!e 77, Umon, Ky 50
Charleston Sou1hem 79. East Stroudsburg b7
Clemson 66, Wake Forest 38
Duke 7'i N CarolinaS! 67
Fa¥,ettevtlle St 87 Vt rgm1a St 74
FIJllida Southern 69, Barry 5Q
Flond.1 St 6Q Maryland 63
Flondn Tech 1S St Leo 64
Furman 68 Chattanooga 59
Georgetown, Ky 79, Cumberland, Ky 66
Georgm 91, Ronda 66
Gmlford 8J Roanoke 80

Vancouver .at M1nne~o !a K p m
Detm11 al PhOI"nu;, 8 p m
BO!iton at Poftlnnd 10 p m

Charlotte al Sacnunento I0 .\0 p m
Dallas nt Golden Stme, 10 30 p m
Snn Antomo at L A l.akers. I O.JOp m

Saturday'5 games
Houston at Mmnu. J .10 p m
Seattle at Utah. 3 JO p m
Atlanta at PhtladelphtE!o, 7 p m
New Jer~y at CLEVE(..AND, 7 ~0 p m
lndtana at Mt lwaukee 8 JO p m
Golden Stale 111 Portland, I 0 p m
Dallas at l A Clippers, 10 10 p m,

Hampton 73 Md ·Eastern Shore 65
lndtana·Soulheo51 55, Bresc:ta 39
Kmg Tenn 72, Clmch Valley, 59
lee 67 Martm Methodtst 61
ltberty 74, N C · Ashev)lle 53
Lipscomb 66. Lyon 61
Louastana Tech 92. SW Louts1ana S I
M1ddle Tennessee: 91 . Morehead St b6
Mtutmppt St 78, Alallama A&amp;M 44
Murrar St 61 , Tt'!nneuee St 52
N C Ce ntra14 3, St PE!oUI 1s 29
New Orlt'!an' 70, South Alabama &amp;I
Norlhwestern St 64 Ttx,;u .Arhng!on 60
Rollms 89 Tampa 86

Sunday's games
Boston at Washtngton I p m
ChiCDfO Dt New York I p m
Detrmt at San Anlorn o, I Jl m
Vancouver at Toronto. 1 p m
Houston at Orlando, l \0 p m
Sacramento at Mmnesma. J ~ p m
New Jl'!rst: y ar lndtana. 6 p m
LA Lakers at Scaule. 6 p m

NCAA Division I
men's scores

S lnchana 8', Kentucky Wesleyan 69
SE LoutStana 52, McNeese St 49

East
Canu1us 80, Loyola, Md 76
Cent Connecucut Sl 60 Robt'!n Mom s 62
Delaware 117 Mame 74
lena 96 Fatrfield 67
Long Island U 60 Md -Batttmore County 59
Man st 8~. Manhanan 61
New Hampshire 74 Towson 70
Qummptac 7S Wagner 72
R1der 89. N1agaro 66
St FranCIS NY R~ Mount St Marys, Md 70
Sc Joseph '§ 59, Drexel 50

r

Samford Sj:tMerter 52
Spnng Hall67. Wt ll lam Carey 62
Tt'!rln ·Mart1n 74, Austin Peay 'i8
Tennessee 89, Vanderblll S1
Tennessee Tech 86 E Kentucky 69
Transylvama 98, M1dway ~4
Umon. Tcnn 64. Freed-Hardeman 60
Virgama 86, Georgia Tech 71
w Kentucky 74 An lnternMtoOElol 68
West Alabama 72 Tuskegee 69
Wm ~ton- Sal e m lOS, Columbta Unt011 28

Midwest
Ashland BJ

M1 ch 74
Be1hany, Kan 88 Onawa. Kan 58

South
Ausun Peay 77. Tenn -Mamn 6'

W~yne ,

Central S1. Ohto 85, P1ke\'llle 61
DePauw 99, Rose-Hulmart42
Dctrott 69 Loyola. Ill ~6
Dordt 77 Dakota St fiR•
Evangel 87 Raker 62
Ferns St 76 Northwood, Mu.:h 57
Fnends 47 Kan sas Wesleyan 44
Gn:md Valley S1 89. Sngmaw Valley S1 8..
Hillsdale 61 Gannon 56
Ill Cht c:ago 65 Cleveland St 51
Lake SupcriOI' St 66 N M1chtgnn 6~

Belmon1 85, Fisk 66

Cam'pbell 80. Georgia St 7 ~
Cent Flonda 6~ . Jacksonville 60
DePaul 6S Soothern Mt s5 64
Jacksorivtllt: St 64 Centenary ~~~
Lou15VIIIt'! SO Tulane 75

McNeese St 99 SE lotus1ana 68
Mrmphts 92 Satnt l.ou•s 89
Mcrcc:r 90. Troy S1 89
Morehead S1 75 M1dd\e Tennes~ee 74
Murray St 61 Tennessee St 51
New Orleans 74. W. KetUUl:ky ~~~
South Flor1da 75 Ala BtrnlmJ!hmll S~
Stet~on 87 Flondn AtlantiC b I
Tennt!lste Tech tiY E Kentud:y 7M
Ttxas-Arhngton 71 Nortllw!!stern St 60

67. lnd - l~ur . ff Way~ ~2
Mary 78 Minn ·C((K)hlon -*8
Mmryv11lt: Mo 7'\ Web51er 6Q
M1d-Am Nazau~llt: 66 M1ssoun Valley 44
MISSOI.1n · Kansll5 City 76 Oakland Mtch 71

leWIS

M1ssoun -St Louis 91. lndtanapolu 60
N Kemucky 65 . Qutncy 5~
Oakland Chy Ill. S1 Mary's of 1he Wood, 64
Ohao St 85. M1ch1glln St 46
SW Mmoun St 76 S llh no1s "i6
S1oux Falls 84. Hu ron 61!
Southwestern, Kan 7\ Tabor 58
Spnng Arbor 82 Madonria Sl
S! J o1e ph ' ~ lnd 86 W11 -Parks1de 6l
Urbana 8l RIO GRANDE 70
v.. tpt~ra!SO 78 Chu:ago St 66

Midwest
Butler 78 Wn -M1Iwaukee 6l
Cent M1chtgan 66. N llhn01s 62
Indiana S1 74. W1chnn St 68
Michigan St 7\, Mt cha gan 58
Oakland M1 c:h 90. Musourt K01tuas C11y 78
Vnlpnrnlso 90 Chicngo St 48
W1s ·Gtttn Boy 58 Wrtght St -10

•

W Texas A&amp;M 67. Tarleton St 57
Wofford 93 Texas-l'an Amencan 60

FarWesl
Bngham Young I00, Fremo Sr 49
Ca hfom1a 83 Washington St 68
Idaho St 59, Weber St ~8
Monmna 76, Sacra memo St 5:\
Montana St -Northern 83. Rocky Mountam 6'i
N Anzona 71, Portland St 56
Nonh Texas 87 UC Santa Barbara 71

NCAA Division I
women's scores

Immaculata 6 7, Neumann 63
lona S7, Mansi 49
lebanon Valley 77, Widener 55

6

Ill

625
625
'i7 1

Southern U 61 , Prame View 58

Step!len F Austm 84, SW Texll!'j ~n
Te~ ~u A&amp;M·Kingsv111r 1 I, Angelo St 52
Texas Chnsctan 64, UNLV 63

7~

Alderson-Broaddus 74, Shepherd 65
Allanuc Umon 79, Becker ~9
Coast Guard.§ti, W. New Engl11nd 46,
Delaware 71. Mrune 66
Gkn\'ille s\ 6t Concord .58 .,
Holy Fanuly 86, Dorm.mcan. N Y 72

!ill

S

'5 ·'\J..

SE Oklahoma 63. Cent Oklahoma 51
Sam Houston St 70 Tens-San Anromo 58
Southo'n Metb 82 l\1r Force 44

l' l'!p~ rdJ~

Southwest

Southwest

Arknnsns St 69. Sooth Alnbamn 67
Lam• 64, Nt~holls S1 62 OT
Oral Robcru 72, You St 68
SW TelW 82. Stephen .F Aunrn 66

Ab1lene Chnsunn 80. Te.11as A&amp;.M Commerce .54
Arkansll!l Tech 79 HeOOerson St ~5
Hardin Stmmons 61 Sui Ross St ~6

•'

77, Gonzaga 64

Porlland 73. Loyola Marymount 49
S Utah 6~, W llhn01d8
Utah 76, San Jose St 23
Washmgton 74, Stanford 62

East

Padfic: Divh;ion

&amp;at de

S Nazarene 65. Oklahoma Ctty 54

Utah St 68, Idaho 67

Washmgton St 79, Cahforma

M1dwtsl DivUion

Iuw

S Arkan~s 6.S, Chnsuan Broth ers 61

Momana 78, Sacramento St SO
Ne"" Mextco St 79, Cal Poly-SlO 69
North Texas 87. UC Santa Barbara 71
Oregon 76, An:r:ona St 15
Pac1fic 75 Cal St -Fulle r.ton 59
Portland St 77, N Anzorm 76, OT
S. Utah 89, W llhnots 79
San Du:go 80, Santa Claro 58
San FranCISCO 75, St Marys. Cal 72
Sou thern Melh 86, Air Force 8 1
Stanford 89 Wash1ngron 57
Utah 71 San Jose St 49

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Utah ,

Oklahoma Baptlil 70, Lubbock Cbnsuan 66
Oral Roberts 76, You St 70

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Be rim Hiland 87, CaniO;n lt~mage 78
Centerville 47, Xenia4J
Cle Heritage 64, Willo-Hill Chr 59
Cle Uncoln-West 70, Cleveland Hts Bet Sefer
M1uach166
Faith Chr 88, Mentor Chr 85, OJ
Liberty OmstJan 70, VIllage Acodemy SO
Oak Harbor 60 St Mary Central Cathol tc 46
Pomeroy Metgs S6, Federal Hocktng 52
' Streetd)oro 43, Pemnsula Woodndse J7
Tyler Consolidaled , W Va , 65, RJm Valley S9
Wellsvtlle 62, Cadtz 57
Wood Co Chnsuan W Va.. 88. Mu sktngum Co
Chr 51
Xema Chnsunn 7~ . Ohto Deaf 47

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Tournaments
Divl!lon I
Cm Ursuhne 55 Oxford T:Jiuwanda 29
Lo8an 66 Atht:11s 45
Mam:lla 60, Oulhc:othe 54
M1lford 55. Fatrfield 45
Ohlslon II
Bellbrook 50. Wilmington 40
Cm McNicholas 78, Hethd -Tatl! ~I
Ctrclt:vtlle. tQ Wa5hmttQn Cou n House 66
Dmer 54 Wmtersvtlle lndnm Cred: 4.\
Hillsboro 61 Greenfield McClain 44
Keuenng Alter 44 , Kmgs M1ll s Kmgs ~8
Lnbon Beaver 51, Unchsv11le Clnymont 44
McConnellsvtlle M org~n 76 New Concord John
Glenn 62
McDermott Northwest 69. South Potnt S6
Morrow L11tle M1am1 76, Trenton Edgewood 4S
Mt Orab Wc=stern Drown 64 Norwood 42
Plltlo 58, Maysv1lle 37
Portsmouth 57. Ironton Rock H1ll 55
Spn n!!bOr0'75 , loveland Hurst61
Thornvalle Shendan JB, New lextngton 29
Vtnc:ent Warren S5, Ctrclevtlle Loga r~ Elm 25
Division Ill
ArcantJm 48. S1dney ld!man 45
!]elmont Umon 65 Caldwell41
Gnaddenhutten lndum Vall 49, Old Wash
Buckeye Tratl 46
JameSiown Greenv1ew 63, Lees Creek East
Clmton 51
Spnng Norlhwest'ern 65, Camden Preble
Shawnee ]7
SugaJcreek Gttraway J8. Newcomemown 30
~rsa1lles 65 Dayton Northndge B
W lafayene Radgewood 62 Ma8nol1a Sandy
Vall 55
Division I\'
Beaver Eastern 49, Waterford 18
Cm landmark O.r 49, Ctn Chrlsuan 43
Danv11le 6~. Newark Cathohc J6
Frankfort Adena 55 Franklin Furnace Green 45
Mnrton Cathohc 69 Oh to Deaf 21
Middletown Fenwick 46 Cm Summll Country
Day

~2

. Porlsmouth Clay 49, Leesburg Fanfidd 45
South Webster68, Rtch mondElole Southerunern 52

Regular-season play
Ada 57. L1ma Temple Chr 30
Arcacha 47 Elmwood 46
Archbold 7 1 lklra 60
Arltngron fi~ Rt vt'! rdale \7

- . ...

-

..

.

'

Carey 64. Bettsvt!lc 8
Chnmpton 45 . LaBrae 42
Cle Addams ] I,Cle Hayes 16
Cle Addams 15, Cle Ans ~J
Cle Glen \Id le 44, WaJrensVJile Hts 42
Cle Glt:1Jvdle 44, Warrensville Hn 42
Cle lmcoln-West :55, Elynn FBCS ~7
Clyde 85, Port Chnton 4J
Collins Western Reserve 45, Mopleton )5
Copley S~. Akron Manchester 46
Cuy:~hoga Valley Chr 59, Hudson WRA '5
Danbllry Lakestde 71, Oak Harbor 45
Defia11ce 47, Celtn'a 46
Dcfiaoce Tinora 45, Ht ck$\•t lle 34
Edgenon 69, Wayne Trace 45
Ftndlay 6LTol Whnmer 54
Ftndlay ltbcrty Denton .a9, Ottawn H11ls 12
Fremonl RO$.Sr51,.Sanduakb' 17
rremont St Joseph 48, New Riegel ~9
Ft Recovery 51, Van Wen 42
· Gales Mtlls Gilmour 47, R1chmond Hts 39
Genoa 6S, Northwood lS
Hathuway Brown 53, Elyna Open Door 49
Hentage D;JriJ.d..an 62,'Strashura.),4
Holgate Ss. Defiance Fturv1ew 36
Hopewell Loudon 78, Tiffin Calven 41
Huron 81 , Norwalk 38"
Jellerson 44, Bndger 41
Ka l1dt1 57 Onawa.Giandorf 50
Kenton S6 Dola Hardin Nonhern 43
Larx:asrer Fa1rfield Umon 44 Bloom-Carroll ~2
l.ee1oma % Southern \4
Ltbeny Chmuan 27 Village Academy 20
L1ma Shawnet 55. Waynesfield 3 1
Lor,ull Adm1 rnl Ktng 6 1. Ch= Kenr~ed y 47
LoroLih Southview 49 A5hland 41
Lowc:ltvalle 18 Mmeml R1dge l3
Mamficld MadHon 40 Bell\llle Clear Fork ~5
M ;mn Stem Mmtoll50 Delphos S! John s 4~
Marysville 86, Dubhn Sc..:totu 52
Mass1 llon 80 Mansfidd 54
McComb 57. Vanlue 45
McDonnld 64, New Middletown Spnngti eld 56
Medm tLBuckeye 57, Revere .16
Monlpeller 69, I..J berty Center 46
N L1m.1 South Range 60 Jackson-Mtllon 41
New Bremen 75 St Henry l'i4
New Londo n 54 Plyp10uth 4(,
Norw;~ l lo: St Paul C.4 Ashland Crestvn:w 51
Ohan V.LIIey Chnsllan 69 , Hanmm W Vu .7
Old r--ort 58. Fo~ t ona St Wendehn 44
Oregon Clay 61 , Fmtona 59
Oregon Stmch 46 Maumee Vall Coll nlry Doy

In other Olymptc developments·
- A top official on Atlanta's bid
and organi zi ng committees admitted
that he and others ignored the $200
gift limn set by the IOC , The
Wwh111gton Post reported today.
Charlie Battle said that as Atlanta
pushed to secure the 1996 Summer
Games, his panel showered IOC
members with $475 sets of golf
clubs, free travel for family members
and even a bulldog for a Cuban delegate.

Caroltna . ...
Flonda .. .
Washmgton

So•theast Division
.25 22 10 60 t49 146 ._

Worship Service • 9 a.m.
, Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Youth· S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Sludy Wednesday 7 pm

Bndblll')' CblU'&lt;b ol Cbrlal
Pastor: Tom Runyoo
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonblp • 10:30 a.m.
Ruducl Cburcb or Cbrld
Sunday School- 9:30 a m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Ftnl Baptlot Cbwrch
Pastor: Mark Monow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:1S a.m.
Worslilp • 10:15 a.m., V:OO p.m.
, Wednesday Senlice--7:00 p.m.

Brodfont Cbun:h 01 Cbrtst
CornerofSt Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd.
Minister. Dous Shamblin
You.th Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00 1.m~, 10:30 a.m , 7:00 p m.

20 21 15
22 28 S
II 39 S

-·-

Tampa Bay

~5 13.5 146
49 138 146
21 Ill 20S

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Iuw

Detron

St Louts
Nashvtlle
Ch1cago
Colorado
Edmonton
Calgary . ...

Northwest Division
" .. 29 21 l 63 149 134
2226 8 52 154 147
19 28 8· 4Ci f37 161
18 ] I 7

43 141 177

Padlk Dlvl!lon
Dallas.... ...... ........
Phoemx
Anahetm
San Jose
lo5 Angeles .

16
29 IS 10 68
.. . 23 24 9 55
.. 20 23 I .~ S3
.2 1 31 4 46
34 10 8

153 105
142 II~
147 140

129 129
IU 151

-- Thursday's.. -Stores--·---· ..

Wastitngton 2, Carohna 2-tte
Ottowa 2. Boston 0

Tonight's pmes
Phoemx at Tampa Bay, 7 p m
San Jose at Buffnlo. 7:30pm
Ptnsburgh at NY. Rangers, 7'·30 p m
Ni:!w Jersey at lktron 7 30 p m
Colorado t\1 Nashville, 8 p m
Chicago at Dallas, 8 30 p m
Anahetm at Calgary 9 p m
Carolina ot Tampa Bay. S p m
Montreal at Toronlo, 7 p m
San Jose at Washmgton, 7 p m .
Phtladelplua at Ottowa 7 '0 p m
N Y lslanden a1 New Jersey, 7 30 p m
Phocmx at Flonda, 7 :\0 p m
Nash\'llle at St Louts, 8 p m.
Los Angeles at Cal gory. 9 p m
Anaheim !It Vancouver. IO'p m

7
7
7
7

Hemloc:k Gron Cb•rch
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Wol'$hip . 9:30a.m., 7 p m.

Sunday's games

Hllolde Baptiol Cburc:b
St. Rl. 143 juSI off Rt. 7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Worahlp · lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednuday Services -7 p.m.

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Worsbtp • 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bible Siudy Tueoday - 10 a.m.

·W esleyullllte Hollo. . Cbvdi
75 !'&lt;art Sl., Middlepo•.
Pastor: Re\'. Doua Cox
Sunday Wor1lllp - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service .7:30p.m.

Pastor: Ke11t1 Rader
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

S.lem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce

Worshtp • 10:15 a.m.

SaowvUte
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Wot~hap • 9 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 a.m.

Raci~,

Tile Cbun:b ol J•ua

Dible Study Wed. 7·00 p.m.

Worship • 10 o.m.

SL Joba Lutbono Cbun:lo
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

l!utLewt'
Pastor: Brian Harknw
Sunda)' School-10 a.m.

S7ncuoe Flnl Churdl ol Gocl
Apple and Second Sts
· Paslor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday Scllool and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6·30 p.m.
Wednesday Servir;cs - 6:30p.m.

ML Mortall Baptiol
Fourth &amp;: Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr

Chun:llol Goclol Prophocy
OJ While Rd off St. Rt. 160
Pa5lor: PJ. Chapman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- U am.
Wednesday Services • 7 p m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10·45 a.m.
Anllqally Baplld
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worahtp - 10 4!i a.m.
Sunday Evenina- 6:00 p.m.

Congregational
Trtnhy Cbun:b
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor. Re\1 Roland Wtldman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Rudancl Free WIU B,pttd
Salem St '
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evemug- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Episcopal

Catholtc
Sacred Heart Catbcille Cburc:b
161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Re•. Waller E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4:45-S:IS~.m::
5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45 9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mus- 9:30a.m.
Dalley Mus - 8:30 a.m.

;-t"'·

Church of Christ
PomeroJ Churdt oiCbrtot
..; 212 W. Main Sl.
Minl1ter: Danny Blaa
•
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship-10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 1 p.m.

Gnce Eplotopol Cbun:b
326 E Main St., Pomeroy ·
Re11, James Bernacki, Rev. Kathann Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schoolll :OO a.m.
www.froanct.net/-.dcanery

Holiness

Pomeroy Weotolcle Cbun:h oiCbrlot
33226 Children's Home Rd
Sunday School • 11 a.m.

.
Joppo
Pa!lor: Bob Randolph
Worship- 9.30 am.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Lona Bottom
Sunday School· 9·30 a.m.

Wo11hip · 10:30 a.m.
Reeclovnte
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - l0:30 a.m.
UMVF Sunday 6:30p.m
First Sunday of Month- 7.30 p.m. service

Tuppen Pllln1 St. P1ul
Pa5tor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday wor~hip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer scl"'ice -7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worshtp - 9 a m.

Filii Gospel LlplhoUIO
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday S&lt;:hool · 10 a.m.

· Seveolh·Day AciTenllll
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Saturday Serv1ces:
Sabbath School - 2 p m.
Worship- 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Chrtll Chun:b
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor Robert Sanders

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worsh1p - 10 30 a.m. , 7·30 p m
Wednesday Services -7.30 p m.

Edea Uailtd Brethren In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of ReedsYtlle
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev Robert Markley
Sunday School - 11 am
Sunday Worship· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youlh Serv1ce ·7:30pm

E11enmg 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday- 7 30 p.m.

Soulh Bttbtl New Testament
Silver R1dgc
~
Pastor. Robert Barber
Sunday School 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 o.m, 7 p m
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m
C1rleton Interdenominational Ctlurc:h
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School - 9:30 B.R).;
Worshtp Servace 10 30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Se:mces

or

Frtedom Gospel Mission

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor Re\' Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9 JO a.m
Worship· 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worshtp- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SeNices • 7 p m

Pastor: Chad Emnck
.Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 am.
Thursday Servtccs ·6:30p.m

Seventh-Day Adventist

Uolted Faith Chun:h
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor Re\1. Robert E Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 1 p m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Rud111d Church the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev Samuel W. Basye

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip R1denour
Sunday School · 9 30 a m
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servu:e - 7 p.m

Portlaad Flrtl Church of lht Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Matsou
Sunday School-10:30 am.
Morning Worshtp - II: l!i am
Sunday Serv1ce • 6 p.m
Wednesd ay Servtces • 7 p.m.

•

.

ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

66 178 166

26 19 10 62 148 118
B27 8
22 24 9

.'

•

Pastor: Lawrence Dust\
Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Evemng • 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Scrv1ce. 7 p m

Cltater Church of tilt Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School-9:30a.m . ..&gt;
Worshtp - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeNices • 7 p m

Ente'1'rtse
Paator: Keith Rader

Foral Run

Mlcldtepon ~yleriaa
Suhtlay School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m .

Pomeroy Churdt oflbt Narareae
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm.Jr
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 am. and 6 p m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m

Central Cluster
Asbucy (Syncuae)
Pastor; Chad Emrick
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Worshtp • 11 a.m
Wedne5day Servtces ·7:30p.m.

Du.,llle Holl•eu Chun:b

Dyn,JIIe CommuJty Chun:b
Sunday Sehooi · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10·30 am., 7 p.m.

ML Olive Community Church

SylliCUie Church of the Nuare1e
Pastor', Robert J. Coen
WBGS Radio-J0:30 a.m. daily 9 a.m. Sunday
WJOS-lV 27-3:30 p.m. Sunday
4-4.30 Saturday
Sunday School· 9.30 am.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant

54 137 1~1
5~ 116 J29

'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken·

992-5432 -

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618 Eaat Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
740-992-6674

9-6 M-F
9-5 Sat
Ducover, Yua/Mo•ter Ch1ar·llJI&lt;

Am•"*""

•

Wor1li1p · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worshtp- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday 7:30pm.

ReeclnUie Ftllowohlp
CbW'Ch of the Nuarme
Pastor: Tereu Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30 a m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

•.
••

••

Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Mlddtepyrt Cburdt ollbe Nazarene
Pastor: Oreaory A. Cundiff
Sunday School- 9:30 a m.
Worahip -10:30 a.m., 6.30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.. ...
.
. ·'.·
.....·.••.

HarrlsonvUJe Presbyterian Churtb
Worahip • ·9 a m
Sunday School. 9:45a.m.

Mone Chapel Cburth
Sunday school-10 a.m

Nazarene

Chester
Paator: Sharon Hausman
Worship • 9 a m.
Sund11y School- 10 a.m.
Thursday SeNice&amp; - 7 p.m.

Syncuse Flnt Unlttd Piesbyterlata
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worshap • 11 a.m:

Pastor: Edsel Hart v
Sunday School -"9.30 a.m.

Tordt Cburdt
Co. Rd. 63
Suaday School· 9:30a.m.
W011hip · 10:30 a.m.

Moloa CoopenUn Pariah
Nortbeut Cluster
Allred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6:30 ~.m.

Presbyterian

Huet Commually Cburdl
OffRt124

Hoc:ldqport Ch-b
Orand Sireel
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday SeNicel - 8 p.m

ML otlve Vatted Mdbodlol
Off 124 behind Wllkuvltte
Paator: Rev. Ralph Spires ~
Sunday School· 9·30 a.m.
Wo11hlp . 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services - 1 p.m.

.....

Middleport Penteco~tal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
"
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
•
Evemng • 6 p.m
•.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Syn11:uae Mlulon
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. M1ke Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School • 10 a m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Bethel Clwn:h
Town1hip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

'Gnbam Ualled Melbocllll
9.30 a.m. (lsi &amp; 2rld Sun),
,
7:30p.m. (3rcl &amp;; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Ser~icc- 7:30p.m.

natwoods
Pastor· Ke1th Rader
Sunday Sdlool • 10 a m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Main &amp;; Fil'lh SL

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship~

Community c•urcb
Pislor: Rev Amos T1lljt
Matn Street, Rutland"'
Sunday School-9·30 a.m.
Sunday WofShtp-10:30 am.
Sunday &amp; Wednesday Service-? p m.

31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young

Coolfllle Cburch

Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

Pea-.! Aslc:mbty
St Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Evemng - 7 p.m
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Fallb Valley Taheraade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Re\1. Emmett Rawson
, Sunday E\lenina 7 p.m.
Thursday Sel'\'ice- 7 p.m.

Coet¥1te Untied M..-ocltd Portob
Pastor: Helen Kline

.•••..
. .•.
..•.
.

Penlecostal

Mlddlepon CommiMIIty Cbun:b
575 Pearl St., Middleport
P11stor: Slim Andenon.
Sunday School10 a.m.
Evening • 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7.30 p.m.

Racine

'

•

Enddme House or Pnyer

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

Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Pastor: Jesse Moms

Asst Pastors. Jim Morris
Services; Saturday 7 30 p.m.

(at Burlingham clturch off Route 33)
Pastor: .Raben Vance
Sunday WOrship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday service- 6·30 p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Our SaTiour Lulberaa Cbun:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell

FuU Gospel c•un:h ollbe Uvbla Sa¥1or
Rt.338. Antiquity

Sunday • 9:30 a m and 7 p.m
Wednesday • 7 Jim.

MoraiDIStar
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler

Lutheran

New Ufe VIctor)' Center
3173 Georces Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services .. 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.&amp;. Youth 7 p.m.

Harriloavllle Commualty Church
Pastor: Theron Durham

Sunday School· 11 a.m.

Chrtsttan Union
llartl&lt;&gt;nt Cburdt oiCbrisl bl
Cbrtollaa Uotoa
Hartford, W.Va.
Paslor:Jtm Hughes
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7!30 p.m.

Ohio

Pastor: Dewarne Stutler
s..day Schoo - 9:30 a.m.
Wor111ip · 10:4S a.m.

Chrill ol Laller·Doy Salata
Sl. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday ·Schoot10:20·11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament SeNice 9-10:15 a.m.
Home111alina meeting, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Clifton Tllbernocle Cbun:b
Chfton, W.Va
Sunday School - 10 ll.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce- 7 p.m

The Betteven' Felowllbtp Mlolstl')'
New Ume Rd , Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Sel'\'iccs: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Cannel-5ultoa
Carmel &amp;; Bashan Rd•

Wednesday SeNices ·7:30p.m

Cburda ol Jaua Cbrtat,
Apodolk Fottll
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Uma Rd.
Putor Wilham Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-1':00 p m

ratlll Flllt Gntpet Ctwn:h
long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p m

Betbaay
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

~- Clntrch ol JOIUI Cbrld
ol Liller Day Salnto
Portland-Racme Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer

Pastor· Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 am
Wednesda)' Servtces - 7 p.m.

Hobooa Chrtatlaa Fetlowablp CbiiJ'da
Sunday sc:rvice, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday servi12, 7:00p.m

J unday ~hool· 9:15am.

Latter-Day Saints

Jlojotclaa Ule Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Cbrldlaa Fellowablp Collier
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'tCC: • 1 p m.

Rutland
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
Worship· 10;30 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

SeNice ·7:00p.m.

Stiwenvll\e Word otFIIIh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 1.m
Evemng - 7 p.m.

Follb Cbopet
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday strvice, 10 a.m.
Wednesday servtce, 7 p.m.

RO&lt;kS~p

United Methodist

RaUand Church ol Gocl
Past.;&gt;r: Ron Healh
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Foretl Run B1plllt
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 am.

16R 141
171 142
ISO 157
DS 172

Sunday School-9:15a.m.

Wednc~y

773·5017

Service dme: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 t.m.
Wor111ip · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

CoiYIIry Bible Cbordl
Pomeroy Pike, Co Rd
Putor: Re11. Blackwood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship 10 30 a.m., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Service -7:30 p.m

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

.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Connie Fiares

lAurel Cliff Free Methodllt Church
Pastor: David DeWitl

Fakb Fellowoblp c....icte ror Cbrlol
Pas10r· Rev. Franklin O:lekena
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Appe Ule C.ter
"Full-Gospel Oiurdt"

Peoo1 Cllape1
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m

P1IN Grove Bible Holtaeoo CbiiJ'da
1/2 mile off Rl 325
Pastor: Re\'. O'Dell Manley

St. Paui Lulberaa Cbun:b
Corner Sycamore &amp;. Second St , Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz

Mt Morta• Cbun:h oiGocl
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Putor: Brice Utt
Suaday School - 9:4S a.m
Eycnmg • 6 p.m
Wednesday Servtces • 7 p.m.

Fahh Bopdol Chan:h
Rallrpad Sl., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a m.
Worshtp • 11 a.m., ~p.m.
Wednesday Servic:es : 7 p.m.

~

PISIOr: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 a m.
Wonhip - 10 am.

HyHII Ruo HoUo011 Cburch
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worsb1p ·10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday SeNicc • 7:30 p.m. ,.

Pastor: John Han

Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Sludy · 7:00p.m.

lllrml O u - Mlolatrleo
47439 Reibel Rd., Otester
PulOB: Rev. Mary ond Horuld Cook
s..day Setvlc:es: 10 a.m."' 6 p.m.
WednesdJ.y Services • 7 p.m.

Mtlllm'Uie

Rooe or Sllaroat l:lol'- CltiiJ'da
Leldin&amp; Creek Rd., RuUand
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday ocliool- 9:30 o.m.
Sunday worsh1p -7 p m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m

Falr&gt;tew Billie Cliwdl
Lewt, W.VL Rl, I

Other Churches

Wonlllp • 10:30 am.

w-:;::r.-

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

Cl1urd1 of God

Vlclocy Baptld lndepeaclant
52S N. 2nd Sl. Middleport
Pastor. James E Keesee
Worship - 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -1.p.m.

175 111

Puwr: Vemapye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m

I

Old Betllol Fret WUI Baodol Cban:b
28601 Sl Rl. 7, Miclctleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thursday SeN ices - 7.30

Northust Dtvlslon
·" 16 8 70 160 117
31 20 4

Cluiadaa Cbun:b
Sunday School • 9:30 l'lm.
Wo1Shlp · 10.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Setv1ce 7:30p.m.

Belhtohem Baptlll Church
Great Bcmd, Route 124, Racme, OH
Pastor : Gene Morri1
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday W.onbte- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study • 6:00 p.m.

Detrou ar Buffalo ~ p m
Bosto11 ut Clucago. ' pIll
Colorado 3t D&lt;~llos . ~ p m
N Y Islanders at Carohna, :S p.m
Pmsburgh at Phlladelphta, 8 p m
N.Y Rangers Elol Edmonton, 8,p.m

All:mttc D1vlsion
71
69
67
49
41

~..aa.,.nte

Putor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schooi-9:4S a.m.
Eventng - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 6:30p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
IJ

Sundoy School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 am., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -1 p m

Mt Union Baptltt

'·

.lr L I fll. !if

Hickory HDII Cburdt oiCbrld
Evanpliat Mike Moore

Silver Ran~
Putor: Bill Little
Sunday School- 1ba.m.
Worship • 11a.m., 6:30 p.m,
Wcdnelday Services- 6:30 p m.

Saturday's games

Vancouver ..

...-

Rodtto Flnl Baptlot
Pallor: Rick Rule
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor1hip -10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

NHL standings

Buffalo
Montreal
Boston

Tvppen Plaia Cbuidl oiCbrisl
Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewart

Flnt S..thera BaP.fiJI
41872 Pomeroy Ptke
Pastor: B la~ar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsblp - t0:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Mon1 rcal ~. Phlladelphta f
Aonda 0. St Louts 0-1ie
Los Angele5 3, Edmo.nton 2

Hockey

Ottawa .
Toronto

Wednesday Service! - 1 p.m.

Pomero1 Flnl Baplld
East Main SL
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am.

Rocky ~tver 69 Cuyahoga H1s 40
Spencerville 52, Perry 45
St M.1rys Memoria l 77, Lama Cent Cath 67
Stryker 56, Edon 49
Sylvant:l Nonhvtew 6J. Bowhng Green 46
Upper Sandusky 61 . Wynford 40
Yon Buren 73. Cot)' Rnwson 48
Van Wert Lmcoln vtew 44, Delphos Jeff 39
Yaenna Mtlthews Sl Western Reserve 48
Warren Harding 61, You Rnyen 36
W&lt;1useon 58, Patuck Henry ~.l
, Wtlloughby SoUih 78, Chardor. 15
Wooster 63. Mass11Jon Jackson 2~
You BoElordman 65, You Moon.!y bl
Younglown Ur5uhne 66 Austmtown F1tch Sl

29 1\
l l 18
10 16
21 27
17 J.l

Pastor: Roaer Watson

Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Worsllip • 10:30 Lm., 7:00 p.m.

R"*tld Flnlllapdlt Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.

.

Orwe ll Gr.md Valley 53, W1ckhffc 50
Pmma Nom1andy 44, Maple 1-lts W
Penysburg 49. Mallmee 19
f'cmsvLlle 44 H11l1op 1)
P10ncer N Central 'i\ Fayelle .B

Pluladelphaa
New Jcrs~y
P11tsburgh
N Y R.mgcn
N Y lsl andet!

Ztoa Churtb of Cbrlol
l'omeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (R1.143)

Wednesday Serviceo• -7:00p.m.

Atwater Waterloo S1, Newron Falls 37
Beachwood 85, Cleveland Hts Mtzracht 10
Bexll'!y81, Uuca46
·
Blufftoo 68, Allen East 37
Boardman 65, You Mooney 61444
Hurton IJerk~hm: 55. Ktnland 40
Campbell Memorial68, lordscown 25
Camon Cemral Cath S8, Wooster Tnway47
Camon Hentage Chnsuan 45. Orange Chnsttan

Itam

Wednesday Serviocs - 6:30 p.m.

H- (MicldkGoot)

Calncy Pllpl• Cttopel
HarrioonvUte Road
i JStor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday ~oot 9:30 a.m.
II a.m. 7:30p.m.
Wed
y Setvice -7:30p.m. ·

Jlj'ta~er

·

Setvleoa

"-&gt;&gt;a FlginciiMII 'llltltl_, Cooi&gt;GI T- PU T•l Till 0... foriO -IMII~

'

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TAYLOR MOTORS

Bill Quickel 992.:s&amp;77

Support your
local
churches

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ST. ROUTE 13 AT 33 &amp; 550 ATHENS
~. 594-3528·
800.772·8893

~

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A LITTLE DRIVE WILL SAVE YOU BIG MONEY/

~==•
Financial

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Established 1913

992-2121
106 Mulberry Ave.

Bruce A Fisher · DWllc:lor
590 East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769

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740-992: 5444
James A.
, Jr •

!{rancis FLORIST

Advertise your
PHARMACY~ business each week
In this space
We Fill Doctors'
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and support local

INSURANCE
SERVICES

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"We Accept Preneed

lramfer~"

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174 Utynt Street

MeiiJ&amp;

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Olcle&amp;t FlorUr
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740-992-2644
740-992-6298

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FIRE &amp; SAFETY
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992-7075

Check the Sentinel

112·1200
Lundy Brown
DINCtor

Jlf uneral ~ome ,3lu£;1

264 South Second Ave •Middleport, OH '-'~sol

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

•

"

.,

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Flft Witt BaptiJI Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Les Haymau
Sunday Service· 7:00p.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;:e·7.00 P·~·

Scoreboard
Basketball

Beorwdow Rldp Cbun:h ol Clllllt
Pastor·Terry Stcwirt
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Bapttst

were aware of educational grants )o
IOC relatives and had suspicions
about direct payments," the report

Cblln:li .. Cllrtlt
Wonhlp - 9:30a.m. •
Su.nday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor·Jeffrey Wallaee
lst and 3rd SWlday
)(eM

Pucor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Setviceo-10:00 a.m.llld 7 p.m.

Total FG: 26-58 (.448)
Rebounds: 37 (Thompson 9)
Assists: 19 (Myher 7) •
Turnovers: 20
Blocked shots: 3 (Pfau 2)
Steals: 10 (Myher, Mahaffey 3)
Fouls: 22

sa1d

Mlddlepol1 Clillrdi of Clllllt
Stband Main
l'ulor: At l!.utson
Youlh Mlnlslet: But Fll!i01
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- S.lS, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednuday Setvlces- 7 p.m.

tolle

Pulor. James Miller

SLOC president retains one executive, puts another on paid leave
By KRISTEN MOULTON

Worsllip · IOa.m., 6 p.111.
Wedncldly ServKCS• "7 p.m.

I

17~

North Second Ave.

Oh

'

evety Friday!

�...

..

,

Friday, February

_._
By
The
Bend
·- · ··., ". .
.....

Friday, .February

19, 1999- :

Moles can turn into melanoma and kill - get medical attention and save your life
became ill . The doctor th ought he posed to go first.
Your len er is an extreme ly
had ~n infection and prescribed an
antib iotic. He then did an X-ray important' one. Thank yo u on
and found a large grow th .in his behalf of all the people whose
lives,you have saved today. Read lungs.
The growth had metastasized ers, please pay attention· to what
and sent cancer cell s to all the thi s parent has written .
Dear · Ann Landers : The
lymph nod es in the. trachea. Diagnosis • inoperable. He died _three progress of women in the workin g
months later He was 48 years old. world is creating a new category
Please Ann , tell your readers if . of grammar.
We no ·longer use •the mal e
they ever find a melanoma any- ·
wh ere on their body to have an X- form of words to describe everyray fol low -up for at least three one , and using one word for men
years . If just one person c~ n be and another fo r women can
saved by thi s information , f will become tedious.
be th ankful. • L.T. , SANTA I
Waiters and waitresses are
CLA RITA , CALIF
now genetic . They arc call ed
DEAR SANTA CLARITA : I ''servers" or "wait perso ns." The
am so sorry abo ut your son. To term "chairma~ " has gone through
lose an adult child is an e~tremely a metamorphosis from "c hair percruel blow. According to the laws son" to simply "c hair" There is
of nature, the parents are sup- su rely more to come.

months for at least three years.
My so n, 44, had a small brown
spot on his back that he ' d had all
hi s life. It bore no resemblance to
pictures I had see n of cancerous
moles. I wasn ' t even sure it was a .
mo le. It was just a brown spot like
a freck le, no larger than a mat ch
head .
He occas ionally asked hi s wife
to look and see if the spots on hi s
back were any larger, and after 24
years of married life, she fcn ally
sa id , "You ought to see a doctor."
He did, and it was indeed
melanoma. A surgeon took a 6inch slic e uu! of hi s back. No
other cancer ce ll s were fo und .
The doctor did not impress on
my son the importance of hav ing
X-ray s per iodicall y as a safeg uard
agai nst any new ce ll growth .
Four years late r tny so n

Ann
Landers
11}1)'1 , l...I.IS AnJ!ela Times
Synd1Uic and CtUk\rS
Syndinu:.

•
:
·
:
·

Dear Ann Landers: Over the
past few months, you have printed
severa l .letters from readers who
had fo und small moles on their
bodies.
.
Doctors
di scovered that the moles were
. cancerous and had to be removed.
: Geni ng medica l auention saved
: their lives.
·
I want to tell th ose lucky fo lk s
: ·that lhey may still be at ri sk. Hav-

: in g a melanoma removed is not
· always e nough to save yo ur life.
·
T he danger is not following up
wi th X-rays of the lun gs every six

-------Community Calendat------·- The Community Calendar is
· publi shed as a free serv ice to nonprofit groups wishing to announce SATURDAY
mee tings and special eve nts. The
SALE M CENTER Star
·Grange
778,
fun
ni
ght
.and
potluck
· calendar is not designed to pro. mole sales or fund raisers of any supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. at the
·
type . h ems are primed as space Grange hall.
permits and cann ot be guaranteed
PbMEROY
Alcoholics
to run a speci fi c number of days.
Anonymous study group meeting ,
8 p.m. Saturday, Sacred Heart
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Women 's AA Church, Pomeroy.
meeting, 7 p.m. 1608 Nye Ave ..
MIDDLEPORT - Lent en medPomeroy.
itation se rvi ces will be held at the

Hearth United Methodist Church
Saturday evening, 7 p.m. Services
will continue throug h Lent.

POMEROY, OHIO

.

(740) 992·6614 • (800) 837·1094

Mon.-Fri. 9 a111•8 pm; Sat. 9 am•4 pm; Sun. I pm-5 pm

.

,@ ~.
IOkiii'T'inie BUICK• · ~

.c:::C:7
DfEVRDLET.

1999 CHEVY MALIBU

1999 CHm METRO

· LS, CD &amp; Cass. auto. air, V6, Black,

.3 Dr, 5 spd, ·Bir, cass, wildfire red
MSRP $10,983

sunroof

Now
OniJI

Now
Onl31

MSRP s2o,355

1999 CHEVY ClVALIER
2 Dr, auto, air, cass, rear defog,
bucke~ . bright red
Now MSRP $14,691

OniJI

1999 CHEVY LUMINA

1999 OLDS 88

1999 OLDS INTRIGUE GX

V6, auto, air, cass, power trunk,
custom cloth

VB, auto, air, loaded, Arctic White
MSRP $24,605

Loaded, Crimson
SMART LEASE PAYMENT

Now

Now

MSRP $19,337

0n131

'20 12100

0n131

Do not aok if
I mi.,·him,
there u ouch a
vacant place, ·
I cannot forget
hu foot•tepo,
nor hu dear and
loving face.

•aaa•

36 MONTHS AT

,.

1999 BUICK CENTUiiRYYh19ii
. 9~9'iPtGOiiiNTniAiicfi·iiifiiiEt~19ji9;,9PiPO~N~TI~Acf·iu;m;AMii"

VB, auto, air, loaded, Platinum Gray
MSRP $19,B70

Auto, air, cass, CD, spoiler, tiU, cruise 2 Dr, Silver, spoiler, CD &amp; cass, loaded
MSRP $15,B20
MSRP $1B,B10

: ;·•J8,82P

Now
Onl31

"" smiling way
and pleaaant face
are a pleaoure ·
to recaU;
he had a kindly
word for each,
and died beloved
by aU.
Some day I hope to
meet him,
aome day I know
not when,
to clasp hu hand in
the better land,
never to part again.

'13,09200

1999 PONTIAC TUNS 1M
• VB, auto, air, CD, Black
MSRP $2B, 705

1999 CADILLAC DEVILLE CONCOURS
VB, auto, air, leather, Whtte Diamond
MSRP $45,445

'27,38100

'39,82100
1999 PONTIAC
1998
CAMARO 1·28 GRANDAM

1998 CHEVY
BLAZER

Public Notice

Public Notice ·

(1) 29

Insured

W1111ted to Buy .
Absolute T9P Dollar: All u.s. Sil-

Free Estimates

Antlques, ·top prices paid, RiverIne Antiques, Pom~roy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740-992·

1999 CHEVY 1999 GMC
S·10 PICKUP SONOMA
414
V6, 5 spd, air, 4x4, cass,
wheels, fire red
Ml)RP $1B.33B .

4x4, auto. V6, cass &amp; CO, LS
, PW, PL, keyless entry, Lt.
Pewter. MSRP $25,422
NOW ONLY

Now orar

4X4, Ext Cab, auto, air, PW,
PL, tilt, cruise, SLE, VB ..
MSRP $30,192
HOW OHI.Y
•

4x4, 4 Dr. auto, air, VB.
Onyx Black, loaded.
MSRP $3B,720
NOW OHI.r

'27,98SOO

1999 CHEVY
.SILVERADO
LS Pkg, VB, 5 spd, air, CD,
keyless entry, tilt, cruise
· MSRP $25,121

-

12,9871111
1999 GMC
YUKON

v:.'f5Vfo'R a.
WE'R'RY
august 29, 1916.
'February 20, 1992
So suddenly you were
taken from us seven
years ago .
It only seems like
yesterday tliat you
answered tfie call of
9od.
I use to wonder wfiy,
but 9od fias answered
tfiat question tfirougfi
prayer. Witfi 9ods •
fielp, tfie fiealing process
is gradually taking
place, but your
memories will always
· witfi me and tfie rest of
your family and friends .
You are witfi us eacli ,
day.
·
One day l will see you
again as I prepare
myselffor tliat day: ·
:Mom, llioptl am as
well prepared as you
were on tfiat rtliurstlay.
Sadly mi'J&gt;sed-1
Witli love,

NOW ONLY

8

1999 GMC ALL
NEW SIERRA

1999 GMC .1999 CHEVY
BLAZER .
SUBURBAN
4X4, auto, air, SLE, all
·power, Summlt"Whlle
MSRP $39,382

4x4, LT. 4 dr, auto, air, cass
&amp; CO, Loaded, Cherry Red,
MRSP $30,653

NOW OHI.Y

HOWOHI.Y '

II DJI!, llllj,lllllr -,Ia * IIIII11M .... Wlllll, Ill..._
l cyl, IMo, If, lit,lllli!e, ldy ll,l))) ni, WI! IJI,!!L..........JOW lm:l
OIIJA !IIi,111o, IIi, ill,IIIU, ·
H!Milfl (.IYAIIH ~. l ~. aulo, ai, Iii!, mi!e, WI! 19!00 ..
&amp;OIISW,l ~.I 19,li,1.¥/~ Wll ~!00

II ~ J!N.\11, l ~ U11, II, I, 1111, 0 IG!l, WAII!l,!00.......... Na!ll!!,lOO
!l OlDI 081111 ~~ ~~lmtl, 11111111 b, WI! liO,!OO.................ItiW li,!OO
lllAlUIIl (~, I !pi, li, Ill, IJl/fM !ll!l, WI! lll!!..........................JOW li,!OO
ll OIM.OIOO 00 (.IIIDIIP, VI, ILio, If, f'f&lt; sflflo, ~ lllli!e ....:.. 0 lll.~
II aDIILitl!\lU! Ill, Yl,~ 1W, Ii, m,W.Iil,l-. ~ klhll Ill,!!I ll9,!00
U l!DMIIlii!Uf ~. leilwllt,1M! Will!!,!00 ................JOW 121,100
&amp;t II, 0,1))) II, mrto, Iii', lit, 1111i!e..............!II,Kil
OIMW!Ofll, !~, i1,aulo, Wlifl*e!l, WI! lii,IO.L........ JOWII!,~
~or, l'lOini,llltslO,MIII,IIO

•

2526.

992·8576.

52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Phone r40-992-3987
4n.

FrH Estimates

lli!l

Owner: John Dean

~~ft8~~c~ri~ti~

:- CREDIT PROBLEMS??
No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Fieepectl
Call Now for Instant
·

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Any
~lon.

THE
NTRY
CANDLE SHOP

WICKS
HAULING

lht rtghl to bid at thla .....
and to withdraw the above
collattral prior ' to aala;
Further, The Farmara Bank
and Savings companr
reaarvft lha right to rtltcl
any or •11 bids submitted•
Further, the aboVe collateral
will be aold In lha condition
It 11 In, with no exprua or
. Public Notice
Implied warranties giVen.
For lurthar Information,
~BUC NOTICE
contact Tim at 985-4288.
NOTICE II htraby given . (2) 17,1B, 19
lhot on Saturday; February I-..:3:,:,T;::;C_ ___,_ _ __
20, 18tll; at 10:00 a.m., 1
Lit/It things
public uta will be held II
211 Weal Second Streat,
art Worth Alol
Ohio,
The
Pomeroy,
'"
Farmer'a .Bank and Savlnga
lht Classifitd Stclion' ·
parking lot, to aall for caah
the lonowtng collateral:
1893
FORD RANGER

Bulldooer &amp;: Backhoe
Se,..ke•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
. Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sy1tem &amp;:
Utilitie•

every Saturday
night
6:30p.m;
Anu!rican Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Stqrbur8t $2500
J)oor Prize $500
145 people or
more wUl play
$1000 cover all.
Average $90 per

MON &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$700.0.0
$50.00 OR MORI
PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone· Gravel
Dirt' Sand

985-4422 .
Chester, Ohio
10

APPALACHIAN
WOODWORKS

Big One
Call a Little
One ·

FurrJilure Refou.hing
&amp; Repair
. Pickup &amp; Delivery
Available

Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
•
up to 8 ton.

Out of Area

l-800-564-3227

992~5455

1/20199 1 mo. pd.

Help Wanted

edleal Aubtaat,
Trained, Quick,
1Dtelll8ent, aad
ReUable. Neecled

1Of2!W6/tffl

Don't Need A

881·1100

BINGO

I

DUMPTRI.,ICK
. SERVICE.

(7401 992·3831

1FTCR1407PI'Be8148

110

L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

lateraal Medicine
l"ractlcela
Athena. llllmedlate

.· New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FuUTbne

FREE ESTIMATES

OpenJnc,
Competitive
Salar)'and

614-992-7643

Fora Busy

.,

(No Sunday Calls)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt.

614-992-3470
RUTLAND, OH.
.AMERICAN
LEGIOlt
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

CONSTRUCTION
·• New Con11ruclion .
• Remodeling

•Siding

"Call Today" ·
FREE Estimates

Appliances, Etc. By Tho Piece Or

The Lot! 740-2l!IHI989.

~
......

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVI CES

11 0

Help Wanted
'POsmON AVAILABLE'

Jtenellta.
Send Re811111e to
The DaUy Sentinel
'
P.O. Boll 7:&amp;9-'7'7
Pomero)', Ohio

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Llmlt 680 sleeve.
.737 back !.ore

Don't Worry About Your Future
let Our Psychics Put Your Mind

YOUR MESSAGE
. CAN BE SEEN· HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
. Thursdays
AT 6.30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying
·per game
, $300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Slarburst
Progressive top lln9.
Lie. 11 oo-501110
. oltlr
11
n

J{appy rjtfi
13irtfiday

sao.oo

to our little comedienne
•

.C.ove

'Dad, !Amber, !Aric:a;l

!Aja, !Aus~n; 'Vtl&gt;tinecq

HILl'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'

to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM -6 PM
2/4{99 1

mo. pel.

L. Luckeydoo, Not re -

Fr~nces

·Lawn Cue- leslp

Arbors At Gallipolis, 170 Pine·

Never Be Lonely: (900)•07-8999,

crest Or., Gallipo lis, Ohio 45631.
Part-Time Laundry Position 24 To
30 Hours Per Week . Mostly
Evening Shllt. Apply _ln Person
And Ask For" The laundry Super·

my own.

extension

4979.

miiiiJte: Must be

12199

t8+. Serve )'Oll.

per

30 Announcements..
50% off All Ready Low Price
Clothing at all you're Locale Mini
.

~art Stores. Located: Pt. Pleas-

ant, Wv., Gallipolis Plus Proctorville.

DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Be Entitled To Receive Your Dia-

betic Supplies At No Cost To

"rou. For More Information, 1·888-

an-6561 ..

- ............. - Planting
- Malchlag

740-992-!!808 for a - start.

TNT Amish.
New To'ltlu Thrlh Shoppe
·9 West Stimson, Athens

740-592·t842 .

Quality clothing and household
Items. $1.00 btig sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

40

Giveaway

25 Inch Magnavox Console, Col·
or Just StartingTo Go Out. Call

--lelalalag w.u a Irick
Pallo Conatr•cUon

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

'

D•lfll• cerllftld
Laadaupe lpaclllllal,
018-ltl
L. Roush (740) 949-1701

·New Roofa,

· Sak• Mana6er . .
Ph; 740-992·21116 481 S. Third Ave.
follddleport, OH 457150
·• www.jjerryblbllee.c:om

..,
'I

Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting,
Plumbing

-

Free Estimates

.Buy fr.orn the.Classifleds!

Joseph J11cks

740·992·2061

-

.•

Rate
Limited

Time
•

own business, work flexible
hours, benefits available; Enjoy
limited earnings; Call toll-free: I·

688·581·2866.

Ride Operators, Food Helpers,
Drivers Wanted. Call 740-2863t20.
'
cashiers- full and part time, hiring
lor aH shifts. Fasc growing, lrlondly

atmosphere. Send resumes cfo

Lost and Found

742-0202.

Lost : two BaKers, male and female, th~ee years old, $500 re ~
ward , CootvitlefTP ylclnlly, 740-

667-3889.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlcl11lty
ALL Yenl Slloo Mull
DEAQllNE: 2:00p.m.
thO day befOJW tho lid
Ia to run. Sundly

ldltton • 2:00 p.m.
Frtdey. Monday ldlllon
·10:00 e.m. Sltunley.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All V1rd S1l18 Mult Be Plld In
Adv1nce. Deltdllne: 1:OOpm Uti
d1y before the 1d Ia to run,

Sundoy a Mondoy odlllon·
1:OOpm friday.
80

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auct ion Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
service. · Llcanaed

166,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 30(·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5(.47.
RIVERSIDE AUCnoN BARN
7.().258-etlet

FEBRUARY

EOE.

Time Paid Vacation, Hourly Vs .
Commission Free CEU Hours,

7ol0-446-7267.

Direct Sates/Audit Techn ician :
Cablevls lon Communicallons Is
currently accepting applications
lor Cable lv direct sales/audit
techn ici ans. Job responsibilities
include but are. not limiled to: ca·
ble television sales.. and service
Installation . CATV sales and
technical experience or equivalent training In electronics Is
helpfuL The successful candidate should be sell·motlvated
yet team oriented. There will be
travel Involved. Applicants must
possess a valid drivers license.
This description Is not all Inclusive. A competitive wage and
benefits package is provided .
The successful candidate will be
rftqulred to pass a pre-empl oy·
ment company drug screening
test and a post-employment
ba ckground check . Interested
parties should apply In writing to:
CabieVIston Communications.
Attention Craig Vencei , 1410 Jefferson Blvd .• Box 106, Point

Pleaaanc, wv 25550; EOE·Drug·

free Workplace.
Excellent opportunity to Jol.n the
lOng 1erm health care field. SeekIng part-lime LPN's rotating
shifts. Intermediate care facility.
Wnt VIrginia license .required .
Point Pleasant Nursing &amp; Ret)abl litatlon Center, State Route
62N , Route 1,. Boll: 326 , Poin t
Pleasant, WV 25550. {A Genesis

Eldercaro Canter)EOE.

Experienced Backhoe/Dozer Operator. Must be a licensed co n·
lractor for' the State ol WV. Call

D&amp;W Homes at 1-B00-678-44;19.

Experienced Small Engine Me·
chanlc . Will Be Working With
Lawn &amp; Grounds Equipment
SerVIce, Set Up And Dellwery.
Send Resuma To CLA 466 cfo

s
.

OFFER
EXPIRES

tor, Jackson General .Hospital,
P.O. Box 720, Rlp~y, WV 25271 .

Gallipolis Dally Tribuna.' 825 -Third
Avenue. GallipOKs, OH 45631 .
Opening Saturday. Marcil 6th At
7 P.M. Also. Booking Estalo An·
GaldonCorrol
tlque Or Farm Sates At Tile Bam.
Hiring for .Full/Part time Positions.
BARN OWNER
Opportunity to Advance! Apply In
RAYMOND JOHNSON
.Pers on Monday -Thursday. 307
5 Miles Below The Dam •
Upper River Rd. GallipoNs.
Taking Consignments For Grand

_.,
·"
"'-·
••

..•

..

Coding Specialist or equivalent

Users Needed, Work
Three Shocks ol Fodder. Computer
Own Hrs. $20K -$75K !Yr. 1-800·
(304)675·1365.
348·7186 Ext. 1173 . www.ampWill Give Away Two Malo Mixed lnc.com
Breed Dogs, 74!l-448-43t4.
Cosmetologtsl Needed Full &amp; Part

60

.'
.-.

Hospital. Ripley, wv. has an

'-:(304-:'-16_75_·t_27_516_74_·30_7_5_,_ _ qulred. Reply to Personnel Dlroc·

. old. (304)675-2496.

~ .:

.

Bates Amusement Inc ... Seeking ·
Help To Travel For 1999 Season.

experience with CPT and ICD-9
Good outside small miKGd breed Coding required . Tumor Registry
dog . Good with children, ,knowledge or experience reMother cat, oft-while, 2 yrs. old. 2
Tom cats·, ~hiteltlger color, 1 yr.

·--

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

.

Five black L8b Puppies, wHntd,

.-.

s1.50 A DAY FOR
15 Words

ridge Rd., Bldwotl, 011.~4561. :
AVON PRODUCTS: Start your

opening for a fuiHlr:ne Coder/An alyst. Certlficauon as an A.A .T.,

(304)675-6148, aftor 6PM.

A
DAY

. ~pet!ial

M

T

w

T

.

s

F

2 3 4 5
7' 8 9 10. 11 12
14 15 16 17 18 19
21 22 23 24 25 26
. . . . .

®

1

.

.

..·~·
..
. . ''
.....
..•.

1999

.

.

6

27

.

I

•

'

.

~.

13
20

...

"

.

•'

.•

.

.

"•
r-------~-----------~----------, .

r

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

I
I

1

·1·:

I

I;
I ~.•

I
1 Name
I
!Address
I
I Phone
I
I
I
1

1

I~

r
I:

1:
Classification:

I
I 1
I
I 3.
I

,,

I·
~
1,:

2.

1·:

r·

I~

I·
I:
I·

II .5.

6.

r:

B.

•••l~
t::

I 9

10.

I.

II 11

12.

ll

I 7

I

'

I

1 13.
I

I 1.5.

I

t';

Mail or bring this coupon with payment to:

!

THE DAILY· SENTINEL
.

1~

For Additional Words Please AHach t··
A Separate Pleca Of Paper.
1::

1
I
I
I

I~

14.

111 COURT ST., POMEROY, OHIO 45769
MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE

I:
~I:;

F
1:

.

1:
1:

·L------------~-----------------~!

·:.'-

2/1 e,.w 1 mo.

1

-~

••
.•

tions for L.P.N.'S If Interested
please appty In person to: Scitnlc
Hills Nursing Center. 311 Buck-

Coder/Ana lyst: Jackson General

148365 VanMeter Hill Road
.
Racine, Ohio 45771

7122/lln

...•"~

Department and a Specialized
unit designed especially tor peo-

3 Puppies; 2 female, 1 male; Lab

(740)949-840o

985-4473

Are you Good-Natured, Friendly,
Outgoing , and Sincere? Would
you like to Work In an Atmosphere where your Co-Work·
era are Positive, and Upbeat and
the Job Ia rewarding? Scenic Hills
Nursing Center offers such opportunities In Addition to excellent
skilled and Intermediate care, we
have a comprehensive Rehab

The Dally Seminal. P.O. Box 729·
75, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

EICJQNGER
Trailer Sales

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

·~

visor.

Altaf6:00PM. 7~11.

8e Peld In Advlnct~ .

ROBERT BISSELL :
CONSYRUCTION

. .. '

Had to leave school wtthout a di- ple with Alzheimer's Disease. We
ploma? · Call 740·992·8247 or are currently accepting applica-

Lost or slolen· Doberman Plncher
pup, Leading Creek Ad., call 740·

ff&lt;painmner Traikrs•

Career Advancement Opl)ortuniUes As WeU AI Merit Bonus Op·
portunltlea. Experience And ·

sponsible for any Debt other than

Computer Graphics
Deslg'1s
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
;Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheste·r, Ohio
740-985·4422

Car, Utility, Dump &amp;
Gooseneck trailers
•JJtutlionzei 'Deaftr of

In-

At Ease Call Nowl 1·900-740·
6500 Ext. 3S93. t 8+ $3,99 Per OUalllled Applicants Should Send
Min. SIIII·U 8t9·845·8434. h!tp:ll RosuiT)O To: Oh~ Valley Bank, c/
o. Patrick H. Tackett, 420 Third
www.ch0hotpages2.comln&amp;lpsy·
Avenue, ·Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
chlct2ro29l.htm
EOE.

Found: Golden Retriever Type
Puppy, Approx. 6 Months Old, VI-

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

Drlvon With Pnor Lending Experience. Ohio Valley Bsnk Oilers A
cluding 40 t K, Rollromont And

Mixed. (304)576-4052.

12~30"pm

Ohio Valley Bank Is Now Acc8pt·
lng Applications For A loan 01·
Fleer PoaiUon. Applicants Need To
Be Customer Stl'\llce And Sales
Generous Benefits Package

Personal•

17401 992-5535 or

GUN SHOOT
Radne Gun Club

CLASSIFIED
AD SALE

We Buy E11erythlng: Furniture,

Is as En&lt;~ ns . . ·
· ~

9:(1().5:30.

Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday·
2/121t2/tfn

.

Floorilg, 740-245-58!!7.

Half pound Easter Eggs, Peanut·
butter, Chitrrynut, mole. WIU wei·
come spiclal orders . $2 .·$2.75.

•J'Io Job 'Too 'Big or
· 'Too Small

BISSELL .BUILDERS, INC.
-

Two to Four Day

Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile

Homeo, Call Utl-•48-0175, 304·
875-5965.

Usin,tllcr C/nHi(Jrol ·

Sal. 10·4 .
•Refilla
• Candlemaking
Supplieo
•Partie• &amp;:
Fundrai-ero

Ill me StoneLow Rates)

iR~

74().446.9853.

Wanted To Buy : Used Hardwood

740-992-4559

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
''mestmae "'"'w .

Classified Ads Section

ern Avenue, GallipoliS.

-Complete Auto Service-

10·6

WORRYING!!!

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Sulek Pontiac, 1900 East-

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

Open: Tuesday-Friday

No Credit• Slow Credit ·· Bankruptcy
· Repo ; ·olvorced

.

Antiques &amp; cte.iln used furniture,
will buy one ·piece or complete
household, Osby Martin, 740·

Fo~r-"Velvet Hammer"

. New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garage.s , Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Realdentlal
27 yrs. exp. ·
Licensed &amp; Insured

· Public Notice

r--------------------------~

· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipol~ . 74().4.48.2842.

Good Homel14!l-446-6832.

19,900

NOW ONI.Y

ver "'"d Gbld
Coins.
Pro ofaets,
Diamonds,
AnUque
Jewelry,
Gold
Rings, Pre~1 930 U.S. Currenc~.
Sterling, EIC. Acquisitions Jewelry

"Bufld Your Dream"

cinity: Clay Chapa! &amp; State Route
21 B. If. Not Claimed Will Need A

1111

Auto, air, cass, Green
MSRP $14,655

Weaameyer'l Auc:tlon Service,

Glill&gt;ollo. Ohio 740-379·2720.

·Dave's

PUBUC NOTICE
Tha Scipio Townahlp annu·
al financial report lor the
fiscal · year
ending
December 31, 1998 Ia com·
pitted and open lor public
lnapectlcm at 38385·SR 143,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
(2) 19 1TC

30 Announcement•

Auction
and Flea Merbt
8111 Moodlopaugh Auctlontltl"ff
8orvlco1, Llltlo Hocking , Ohio.
, Apprlllllt· Farm - E11111~
HouMilold- Comniorct.~t. Ohio Ll·
...... · -· 740--2e23.

740·742·3411

ilfn..
11!!1

9

90

NOW orar

8

Remodeling

Mil.

Minor Repairs • Cabll"'etS • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
·

1998 POLARIS MAGNUM
4X4 C42A8WA068273
Thr Farmer• Bank •nd
Company,
Sltlilnga
Pomeroy, Ohio, 11aarvaa

(2) 5, 12, 19
4TC

Wife, Nancy

4X4, Loaded, auto, air, 4 dr

Cuetom Home

FREE Diabetic Screening
Wednesday, February'}:( 1999
8:30A.M. -11:00A.M.
Screening Test,
Nutfltion and Medication Educational Information
Call (740) 992-3632 to Pre-register

all bide or to Hll to lhl
PUBUCNOTICE
The Melge County Board ol highest bidder. S•led blda
Mental Retardation and to be untto: Meigs County
of
Mantel
Developmental Dlubllltlea Board
and
Ia accepting -led blda lor Retardation
Developmantal
Dlnblllllaa,
the following vehicle: 1886
Ford Van-Converalon, E· P.O. Box 307, 1310 Carleton
350
' Automatic Street, Syrecuaa, Ohio
Tranamlaalon,
needs 45779 and mark "Vehicle ·
engine work. As Ia condl· l!ld" on outolda ollhe enva·
lion. The Board reaervea · lope.
tht right to reject any and To Inspect the-vehlclit call
(740) 992-8881 during work·
lng houralor arrangementl.
Bid muat be received by 12
In Memory
noon February 28, 1989.
Blda will be opened at 12
In Loving Memory
noon February 26, 18tll at
the main olllce ollha Melga
of my hwband .
County Board •ol Mantel
BUl Pettit
Retardation
and
who pa.,ed away
Developmental Dlubllltlel
altha above addrau.
Feb. 19th 1996.

BS, INC.

.

Rt. 124 Minersville, OH

.

Public Notice

. ·-

The Dally Sentinel • Page

80

Tn plocc on ud Coli 992-2156

New Conttruotlon &amp; Remodeling

"Shis"? Gimme a break. The Eng·
!i sh language has served .us well
for quite some time, and I am not
about to mess with_ it by attempt·
ing to invent new wqrds .,
.
What .c an you give the person
who has everything1 Ann Lan.ders' book let. "Gems." is ideal for
a ni ghtstand or ·coffee tabl e.
"Gems" is a col,ection of Ann
Landers' most requested poem:S
and essays.
.
Send a self addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a
check or money order for $5 .25
(thi s includes postage and handling) to : Gems, clio Ann Lar(ders, P.O. Box fl562 , Chicago,
Ill . 60611-0562 . (In Canada, se nd
$6.25 .)
·
To find out mare about An)l
Landers~ · read her past
co lu'!)!ll': vise( the Creators. Syndi ca te . · web
page
.at.
www.creators .com .

--------------------------~
MONDAY
Amherst College in Niassachu- 'department of physical· education in
POMEROY - Veteran s Ser· sells established the first college -1859.
·vice Commission, Mond ay, 7:30
p.m. 117· Memori a l Driv e , ,-~~~---------------------,
Pomeroy.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - Baseball signup, .
RACINE - SoUthern Juni or
I to 3 p.m. Sunday, Rutland fire· Hi gh School Boos ter meting , 6
house.
p.m. Monday, Junior High build·
in g.
CHESTER - Northeast Cluster hymn sinll. Chester United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m . Sunday. TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion Auxiliary, Tuesday, 2 p.m. concerning
membership.

O"erstocked, O"erstock.ed, O"erstocked
Our Loss is your Gain!

DO 7A7E.

Every pronoun is no longer "he
and she " or "him and her': We
need a more convenient designaLion; perhaps "sf he" or maybe ,
"shhe." · Of course, it would be
pronounced like the word "she"
and could aggravate excessively
chauvini'sti c males.
Perhaps a compromi se, like
"s him;' would do the trick . I heard
that one in an old black-and-white
movie.
The pronouns "his" and "her".
could become "shis," which
so unds slightly more masc uline
than feminine.
Perhaps so me grammarian or
lexi cog raph er will promote an
acceptable usage to help us writers out. The Ann Landers column
co uld serve as our rescue vehicle.
How about it? -- J.M. IN CORNWALL , PA. .
DEAR CORNWALL: Thanks
a lot, but no tbanks. "Shim" ~

--

SUIIft
COIIftUCftOI

Pagel

/

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

The Daily Sentinel
.

19, 1999

�•

Friday, February 19, 1999

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 19, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel: Pas.e ~

ALLEYOOP

i,~

BRIDGE

MV

PHILLIP

ALDER

11 'T1IMitlcel

ACROSS
1 Condiea, I 0

S3~af

1~ ~-::::J:J..

mua.r:paec.

AVl:&gt;N I All Areas I Shirley

Spoors 304-675-1•29
IMMEDIATE OPENING
Well Established Pest Control
CQmpany Looking For A Serious
Self Motivated Technician Must

Do Vou Th nk About lncreas ng
Your Income? Oevelopmg Your
Own Bus1ness1 Call Income Spe
c ahsts Now 740 446 06471
H1ghyly Moti~Jated Self Starters
On~

Oop1 22

Be Able To Pal&amp; The Ohio De

Pllrtment Of Agriculture Division
01 Pesijclde Licensing Test Must
Hsve A Valid Ohio Or ver s Ll
cense EICcenent Benefits Offered
Come Into Ortlce Between The

Hours 01830 AM And 400 PM
To Fill Out Application Boggs

Y2K TIMEBOMBI
Learn How To Protect Yourself
While Creating FAST Income!
Free Rep ort 1 800 410 2612
x3131

local Truck Driver Needed To
Haul Milk For An Interview Or
More lnta~mation 740.245-9557

Have You Been Disappointed By
Your MLM Company? Not E:c:pan
enced Prospe ty For Vou1 Hard
Work? Fmally An MLM Company
That Delivers! No Hoops To
Jump Through Up llne Puts Reps
Below You! Call Income Spec1ai1SI
Now 740.446 0647 Dept 38

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS! Earn
$500 S• 500 PIT Or FIT Per

230

Past Control Inc 11 o Boggs
Road Dok H• OH 45656

Month Training Provided Ultima
lesuccess com Or 800 228 3661
Need 5 Ladles To Sell Avon 740

446-33511

Professional
Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

OUTDOOR (:AREERS
•Pilei On The .Job Training
•Competitive Pay &amp; Benefits
•Ripld Advancement

P---------.11
1 888 582 3345

Opportunities
Enjoy R~rous Outdoor Worl&lt;
Have A Good Dnv ng Record
And Be Flexible To Travel To

can For Information Toii-Ftee
YJalt Our Webalte At

www 01moae com
Reputable Commerc1a1 Roofing
Company In Southeast Tennes
see Is Expanding We Need Mo
t1vated Hardworking And Drug
Free Personna Ali Posit ons
Available Will Train Will Re
locate Key Personnel Who Are
Willing To Grow With The Com
pany Send Resumes To ~LA
465 clo Gallipolis Daly Tnbune
825 Th1rd Avenue Galllpohs OH

45631

Salesperson Needed Furnt10re
Store Full Time lmmed1ate
Opening Apply lllestyle Furn
lure 856 Th rd Avenue Galllpol s
1 To 2 No Phone cans Please!

Facuty EOE

Survey ng Company Seekmg Sur
vey Party Chief Prior Expenence
Preferred Competitive Salary &amp;
Benefits Send Resume To Exline
Surveying t0356 State Route
139 Jackson OH 45640
Taking Applicat ions For Fuel
Drivers Wlln Class B And Haz
met Ucense Paid T me Off BeneIlls And Pay Based On Experl
ence Burllle Oil Co Jet Rte 35
And 1 Galllpol•s
Wanted Mob te Crane Opera tor
W th Class A COL s Pos1tion Lo
cated In Nelsonv Ue Ohio M•nl
mum 01 Two Years EKperlence
Necessary Call1 800 339 6518
Man Fr1800AM SOOP:M

Crop Insurance Burley To
matoes Corn Ken Bass tn
SI¥81'1Ce 1 800-291 6319

170 Miscellaneous
For Sale 53000 BTU Electnc
Furna ce used 11ery httle $250

(304j576 2686

180

Wanted To Do

Cakes lor all Occas1ons Buth
days Wedd1ngs Eel lor more m
lormat1on call (740) 441 1681
as~ lor Delores
Eldorado Adu lt Home Long Or
Short Term Care P 1vate Room
S1 400 Sem i Pnvate Room
S1 100 Syracuse Otllo 740 992

4410

Electric maintenance serv1ce
Wiring breaker boxes 11ght fl:c:
tu re heating systems and Re

modeUng 304 674.0126
Furn lure repa1r restoration &amp; re
finishing custom bu It reproduc
lions Liz &amp; Bennett Roush 740
992 1100 Appa lachian Wo od
works

Taking Appllcat ens On 3 Bed
room Repo Pre Appro11al In tO
Minutest 800-383 6862
New 14w•de 3br/2 bath $500
$t 85 per mo Free a1r I BOO 691
6111
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
mcludes 6 mooths FREE lot re nt
Includes washer &amp; dryer s~lrtlng
detu11e steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month with $1 1SO

dOWfl Call 1 \l(!0-837 3238
New 4BA 16wlde $500 down/
$219 permo Free Air 1 800
691 6777

Oakwood Homes Barboursville
wv Tned 01 No? we Say Vest

004 7313 3400

Galllpohs OH The Above Will Be
Sold To Highest Bidder "As IsWhere Is Without Expressed Or
Implied wa rra nty And May Be
Seen By Cal 1ng Marion Wilson At
740 446 4060 OVB Rese rves
The R1ght To Accept Or Reject
Any And All Bids And Withdraw
Property From Sale Prior To Sale
Terms Of Sale CASH OR CER

This newspaper will not
knowing y accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In vlotatJon ol the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised 1n th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
oppor1unlty basis

No Problem I 1/25 2128199 t 800

TIFIED CHECK

310 Homes for Sale
1/2 acre lot 2 3 bedrooms elec
trlc furnace wlcentral air single
car garage deck $34 900 140

949 3037

3 4 Bedrooms Full Dry Base
ment Fireplace F-o rced Air/Gas
Furnace AJC Fenced Corner Lot
36 Windsor Cour1 304 675-7285
3 Bedrooms 2 Full Baths Laun
dry Aoom LA .Kitchen Attached
Garage Apartment 1 3 Acres 2
Trailer l ots $65 000 Serious In
qulrles 740 300-0136
4 Bedroom Home In Cheshire 2
Car Garage Work ShOp 1 112
Acre land Orchard Bath &amp; t 12

740 3137 7401

5 bedroom home porch/deck
c ose 10 schOol store &amp; post of
f1ce $70 000 oeo must set~ 74o865 2962 alter 3 30pm Monday
thru Friday any1ime weekends
Bn ck Ranch 3BR/2 baths 2 car
garage/Add lienal 2 car garage
Acre lot
Sandhill Road Pt

Pleasan1 (740)441 0618

By owner 725 Page Street M d
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate will sell house with
out to1s for $89 000 740 992
2704 740 992 5696
House lot five rooms bath laun
dry n Middleport close to
schools town 740 992 5503
In Town Living 442 Firs! Ave
Large 2 Story Formal LA Formal
DR 4 BA 2 1/2 Baths We I
Equ1pped Kitchen Lg Basement
In G oUnd Po ol W/Heater Lg
Fam ly Room 011 Street Park ng
Serious Persons Only 740 592

5136 (Athens) Al1er 5 OOPM

Restored Victorian home s tuated
on t2 acres V1llage Middleport
seclu ded and pnvate appo nt
mant call 740-992 5696
Three bedroom modular home on
t 00x1 00 lot two car garag e
many e11tras m Mason 740 949
9004

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

251-5070
Rent Buster new 1999 14x70 2or
3 bedrooms only $995 00 down
St95 00 per mon tree delivery
and set up cal! 1 800-948 5678
New bank repos only two left
never lived In can 1 800 948
Factory goof 111 Save tho usands

cal11 800.948-5678
Used single wide around $100
pflr mon t 800 948 5678

l mlted offer t999 doubte wide 3
br 2 ba $1 799 down $275 00
per mon delivered and set up
call t 800 948 5678
We Fmance land &amp; Home With

As L11tle As $500 Down 1 606

928 3426

Aelocat~ng?

Take Over Pay

ments 304 736 7295

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Beautiful 2 Acres Centenary Ad
Deed Restricted Surrounded by
Beautfu Homes 740-446 2927
2 38 Acres A t Road Frontage
Fairly Flat Bldwe I Area 740 245-

2222
22 s Acres Road Frontage
Ciea ad On Netghborhood Road

$35 000 74().446.0785

5 Acres Bla ckto p Fr on tage &amp;
Lake VIew
Galla Co unty
$32 000 More Acreage Available

74().388 8678

F ve acres SR 681 Reedsville
t2](60 mob le home w1th two bed
room addition 28x32 nsulated
garage n•ce location possible
land contract 740 378 6437
For Sa e 1/2 acre lo1 West Col

umb a AI 62 $3700 (304)674
0101
Glenwood Rt 2 Apple Gro11e
Near Ashton Rd 17 ml es from
Milton E~elt 1 acre land 3 BR 2
Bath 89 Branclywlne Mobile
Home C ty water low down pay
ment $35 000 F1nandng avail
able with good bad or no cred 1

(304)562 5840

•

Hurncane corner of Hurricane
Ck and Cow Ck Mob1le Home
2 BA and 1 acre land $29 500
Fmanctng availab e w th good
bad or no credJI (304 )562 5840
Land

7 8 acres

(304)675 3159

wl!n

well

Rive front Lot for sale Gallipolis
Ferry area (304)675 2067 Leave
message

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted 2 3 Acres Secluded
Land With Access Must Be
Bu ldable Or M H Accessi ble
740-446 2317
Handyman&amp; Spec1al Elec car
pantry other re pa1rs &amp; remodel
ng Free Estimate (304)674
Ot26
Have 2 Openmgs For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Hand1
capped 740 44t t536
lnte~IOJ Painting Plumbing &amp; Re
moq,wng Any And A 1 Odd Jobs
740-245-5151

Professional Tree Serv1ce Stump
Removal Free Est mates• tn
surance Bidwell Oh o 740 388

S999 down on
large sel&lt;&gt;Cii&lt;&gt;n ol double w1des
tree del1vary &amp; setup owner II
nanc1ng available 304 755 5885
$500 Down on any 14x70 n
stock lim led number free deh11

Wanting To Buy 15 To 20 Acres
Preler Something W th Bu ldlngs
&amp; Barn &amp; Some Usable Acres
On Land Contrac1 740 367 0280
We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
Anthony Land Co

ery Call I 800691 6777

$999 Down on any 98 modal
Doublew1de In stock Free Dehv

ery Call 1 8Q0-691 6777

RENTALS
410 Houses lor Rent

9646 uo 3137 7010

AI Makes Models &amp; S zes Aller
Noon 740 742 0510

1 Bedroom House Furnished
Galt polis Good Location Refer
encas /Oepos1t No Pets 740

Taking orders tor fi ll dlrl good top
so11 dirt ava table 2/t8/99 $100
per load anywhere n Me•gs Co
call740 949-1022 ask ror J m

12x60 For est Park CA 2 Bed
rooms Underp nnjng Block Awn
ng Very Very Clean! $5 800
Firm 740..245-9239

1 Bedroom House Close To R1o
Grande College $280/Mo Water
Sewage Gamage Pa1d 740 441

•SAVE ON BA~K REPOS•

t4lC70 mob le tx:&gt;me for sale three
bedroom two bath total etectr c
Would Like To Be A Singer In A
Rock &amp; Roll Band Please Contact

John 740 446-2454

210

1005
2BR Econom1cal

Releren ces

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned $260 $300 sewer
water and tra&amp;h Included 740
992 2167

Ralrenoe 740-446 1104

2 Bedrooms 2 Bath Trarler In
Green Terrace $350/Mo In
etudes Lot Rant Water Sewer
And Trash $250 Oepoan And
References Required No Pels
EKcellent Cond t1on 740 44 1

1913

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths CIA Stove
Refrigerator Water Trash Paid

No Pels $350/Mo $350 Deposit
740 386 9686
2 Bedrooms Deposit And Re
frence Required 740 367-&lt;)632

2 BR Trailer private location
near school good condnion air
porcnes nice Hartford $275

(304)882 2389

2BA Trailer located on Broad
Run Road New Haven $270 mo
+ ul!lltres &amp; depos11 (304)773

5681

3 BR Trailer In Country Good to
calion central heating and cool

lng (304)895-3566
Three BR trailer on Pleasant
Ridge Road $300 deposit $300
per month (304)576-2241

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
n shed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pets 740

992 2218
1 Bedroom Ground Floor Eco
nomlcal Gas Heat Near Holzer
Wf D Hook Up Quiet Location
$279/Mo Pus Utilities 740 448

2957

2 Bedroom Apanmenr Adjacent
To University Of R o Grande
Campus 740-24~5858

2 Bedroom Apartment 1 1/2
Baths Great Local10n! 15 Court
Street Gallipolis Kitchen With
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo
Plus Utlhtes Deposit Referenc
es No Pets 741).4&lt;46-9580
2bdrm apts total electric ap
phan ces turn shed laundry room
lac lites close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992
37t t EOH
Apartments Cottage &amp; Trailer
ForRent 740388-1100

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 WeS1wooa Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath Clean References &amp; De
posit Requ red Utilities Pad 740

446 1519
Gracious il111ng t and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llage Manor and
R1vers de Apartments In Middle

pon From $249 $373 Call 740
992 !5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun Illes
Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime location In
downtown Galhpol s No Pets!
$300 00 month plus ut lilies Ref
erences &amp; Depos1t Required
Call (740) 446 3302 lor appoint

mont

BrookSide Apts Are now Ac
cepling Appl1cat ons For All Elec
trlc One Bedroo m Apanments
Washer /Dryer Hook Up Water
Trash /S ewage P_s~ld $279/Mo

740 446 9611

Now Taking App l cations- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Wate r
Sewage Tras h $295/Mo 740

446 0008

One bedroom apartment lor rent
quiet dep &amp; ref required

$300 00 304-675 1550

One bedroom furnished apart
ment In Middleport also one bed
room furnished house In upper
Gallipolis 741).992 9191
Renters Dream Come True! Call

304 73137295

Small furnished Cottage Close
To Downtown Gall pol s Refer
ences And Depos t 740 446

1158

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacio us 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car
peted Pat1o No Pets Lease Plus
Security Depos1t Requ red 740

446 3481 740 446-0101

Twin RIVers Tower now accepting
appl cations lor 1br HUO subsld
lzed apl lor elderly and haMI

cappe&lt;l EOH 304-675 6679

Upsta rs Apartment Furnished
Carpeted Cable/UIIIItles Paid
References and Deposit $400
month (304)675-16t6

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home site avellable bet
ween Athans and Pomeroy call

Small wood&amp;&lt;! lot Letart/New tea
ven area for small camper for
family camping With/without utU
Illes W1ll clea n II needed
Wan ted 2 Bedroom House In
Country 3 Adults &amp; Baby Due In
July. Reasonable Rent Gallla

3t2 Wetzgat St Pomeroy 3 Bdrm

1996 Schultz 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Central Air 2 Decks 8x10
Building 304 675-t275

Modular Home In Mason WV
3BAf2 Bath heat pump garden
tub In master bath Sun Room
refridgerator/s1olt'e lurn shed

Doublewlde Repo Call For View
log B00-383-6882

$400 mo (304)773 5721 belore
5PM (304)882 3139 after 5PM

(004)882 2141

House $350 oo Month Deposit
Aequlred 1 888 840-0521

Washers dryara refrigerators
ra ngea Skaggs Appliances 76

VIne Street Call 740 4•6 7398
1 888 818-0128

Matching sola &amp; tovaseat w1lh
and tables &amp; colfee table also
separate sofa &amp; end ta~es very
good cond1tion 740 992 70t4 at
ter Spm
New And Used Furniture Store

Below Holklay Inn Kenagua Stop
And See Us 740-446-4782
530

Antiques

Ant ique Bed Room Set Head/
Foot Board Dresser with mirror
Plus Chlfforobe E11cellent Condl

tlon (740)-446 3745

(304)675 1327

For Lease

Newly Remodeled Bu ldlng For
Lease 3 200 Sq Feet Great Lo
cation 1 Mile West Holzer Hospi
tal Jacttson Pike Gatu~ls Oh o

740 446 nat.

Rio Grande OH Call740 245

5t2l

560

Pets lor Sale

At&lt;C Boxer Pups Taila Docked
Dew Claws Removed 1st Shots 2
Males 1 Female $200 A Piece

74().441-Q185

AKC 9hamplon bloodline Mini
Schnauzers all shots and paper
worlc lnduded 4 mates 3 tema~s
ready !o go m1d March 740 ~92
6700 leave message It no an

swer

AKC female tlOx.ar $200 pur
ebred tamale bulldog $500 or
trade ror AKC male Maltese 740

77~

5011 Or 304 773

5841 For More Information Pa
pers Available

8627
e ~ Squ1holdo Aquortum

740.992-9989

Parkersburg WV 26101
304 485-1293
PJ.Jppies &amp; Kittens
FuU hne of pets supplies

ory Gardens Subject To Offer

740 31377884

gain call304 752 2970
AMAZINO
METABOLISM

Breakthro4ghlll Lose 10 200
Pounds Easy Quick
Fasl
Dramatic Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free SamBeanie Babies Princess Erin
Peace Goochy Prickles Luke
Mooch Fortune Slippery Scorch
Tiny Mac several others $10

$15 740 898-6805

College Student has Baseball

Cards lor Salol (740) 446 2927

Domatlc relrlgerator for sale
52x22 electric propane or 12

voi174Q.742 3805after6pm

Dressing table babybed stroller
car seat walker &amp; swing

(304)675-4548

Electric Furnace 77 000 BTU CA

Full Blooded Dalmatian Puppies

lor sa1e $50 00 eachl Call (740)
3138 8922
Golden Retriever AKC Shots
Wormed Female $250 00 Male

28x~O

740-388-6056

(304)675-3968

For Sale Treadmill
(304)675-6986

$200

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740-446-4525
Heavy Duty Boxes 16x3x41
t6x18x26 8x5x25
Foam J/
t 6ths 54x80 1x14x27 740 446-

2359

Je Matadl Prom Dress Style
13312 Size 3/4 Orch id retail

a1(304)615 6690 1o adop1 mel

740 448 2105
742 2263

(304)675-1431

One 11 Month Old Tennesee
Walker 1 Year Old 1!2 Morgan t1
2 Quarter Horse $900 For Both
Bar BootM Singles JOoubles For
Sale t 986 250 4 Wheeler $700
Apartment For Rent $250fMo
Second Avenue 74Q-367-Q219
Prlmeater $49 installation with
value special Free bonus gilt

800-283 2540

Regulation size Mansfield slate
pool table tealher drop pockets

$800 74().843-5565

590

Wanted and need Scamp Lawn
Boy lawnmower call 740 985
3967 COiled
Waterline Special

314 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100 I 200 PSI

$37 oo Per t 00 All Brass Com
press1on Fl!11ngs In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 80().537 9528
White Wh irlpool Refrigerator
$100 00 White Kenmore Wash
er $85 00 Almond Kenmore
washer&amp; Dryer $200 00: Otner
Dryers S75 00 Each Call After
5 OOPM Set BefOrf: Noon 740

446-9066

Womens Sin 6 Boots 6 Inch
High Oil Eleclrlc Healer 2~ Old
T1me 8 TracK Tapes Part Sewing
Machine 740-446-9304

Verdmon 52 Cu1 $2 000 20 HP
Cub 48' Cut II 200 18 HP 740
446-7824

..

w~

Orchard grass $1 50 per square
Round bates of hay for sate 740..
698 8211
Round bales 850 lbs good mixed

hay 740-698-2386

Square eates Of Good Green

Mixed Hoy S2 00 Each 740 446
2412

Square Or Round Bales Delano
Jackson Farms 740-44&amp;-1 104

Tobacco Plan1 Trays (304)671
2443 after 4PM

Two 12 Ft Semi V s Motors &amp;
Oars (304)675-1070

610 Farm Equipment
1020 John Deere Tractor 300 &amp;
4000 Diesel BN 88~ International
Tractor 740 286 6522

1975 Plymouth Ou11er 6 Cylinder
740-3137.0187

1984 Mon1a Carlo 55 119 000
sage 740-992 9339
1984 Pontiac Fiero Automatic
New tires and brakes $t 400

1 800.594 1111

1986 Olds Della 88 V 6 Autom
AIC T1lt Cruise Perfect Inter or
Good Tires Auns &amp; Drives Good
$1 50000 7ot0..4411083

1988 Plymouth Reliant 4 door
newer motor lots of new parts

Asking $700 OBO (304)874
0007

1988 Z 24 Cavalier black au
tomatlc a r real sharp good m les
lor model Marks Pomeroy 740

992 3011
1989 Ford Tempo Good Shape

1990 Chevy C'6.valler Auto 4
Doors 80 000 Miles Excellent
Cond1tion $1 650 740-446 9552
1990 Thunderbird LX loaded
64 000 miles all power mu$t see
pay off must sell 740-992 2221
1991 Cad llac Seville 4 door se
dan loaded w1th accessories
great gas mileage car phone

:l04 675 2722

t991 Pont1ac Grand Prix 3 t
cyl 4 door air power wlndowsf
doors E)(cellent shape $3 600

(304)882 31356

Ford New Holland February Trac

lull wa rr~nly $20 900 4630 55
PTO H P Sama Spec $22 90B
Our 45 and 55 HP Tractors we1gh
13001 more than JD 5210 and

1992 Geo Pnsm

Autom

Air

$1 650 Good Condl11on 740.446
4782
1992 Grand AM 4 door 4 cyl
Loaded Teal 84 000 miles ex
cellent
cond lion
$4 200

(304)675 7946

5310 3012 2WD $13 500 3010

1993 Ford Taurus GL Loaded

4WD 42 PTO H P

72 000 miles $5 soo (304)576

16500

1 remote

Keefers Service Center St At
87 Pt Pleasant &amp; Ripley Ad
Gravely Tractor r.econdilioned
Kohler engine 4 attachments

2046

t994 Chrysler Concord Loaded
Red Metallic 60 000 Miles

$7 200 OBO 740 256 6340 740
256 6467
t 996 Gao Metro 2 Door 4 CyUn
der Autom
MC Cassette

53 000 Moles $4 200 00 740 256
6467 740 256-6340

M &amp; W Ro und Baler Deater tor
thiS area Fixed chamber auto
wrap no belts $OIId bar type 3
warrant)' on Bars &amp; Bearings
less moving parts 4X4

C n Cruise 5 SPeed CD Play

er
these pr cas against
your popular Belt Balers NH
Vermeer JO Hesston Keelers
Service Center St Rt 87 Pt

Pleasan1 &amp; Ripley Rd (304)895
3874

Tra ctors In Stock
Rate John Deere Credit I
Available New 4000 Series Com
pacts In Stock New John Deere
MoCos And Round Balers Oo/,
12 Mas 175%24 Mo 35%36
Mos 4 5~. 48 Mos 5 5% 60
Mo Used Hay Equipment As Low
As 3 9% Carmichaels Farm &amp;
tawn M1dway Between Gallipolis
And Rio Grande On Jackso n

Pike 740 4•6 2412 Or 1 800
5941111
We Have A Few 1998 Model
John Deere Lawn Tractors Left
Rebates Up To $300 Thru March
1 Free Delivery Compare Our
Prices We Also Now Have ~II
The 1999 Models In Slack Now
Your Dealer For Dixie Chopper
Commercial And Resklentfal Zero
Turn Mowers Buah Hog Tillers
Finish Mo~ers Cutters And
loaders Carmichaels Farm &amp;
Lawn Inc Local John Deere
Dealer Midway Between Galtipo
lis And Rio Grande On Jackson
P1ke 7404462412 Or 1800
59-l t1 11

$2 000 (304)675 3718

BARNEY

•

WANT SOME

1998 Dodge 4X4 Autom AJC
318 Bedllner Hitch Aluminum
Wheels 42 750 Miles Sharp!

$6 100 00 74().379-2748

meroy 740-992 3011

1994 Chevy Silverado V 9
Loaded Immaculate Condition

Garage Kept 27 000 Miles
$1450000 74().2561968

t 995 GMC Jimmy Excellent Con
dillon Lots Of Extras! 740 448

7289
1997 Chev Blazer LS 42K M1lea.
PS PB Air CD Player Towing

2 B engine engine runs blll
needs work body looks goo~

$600 740 742 1049

1985 Ford 4X4 Ranger 2 34 cyl~
5 speed One owner gOOd condk

tlon $1 800 (304)458 1997 aftw
6PM

atr
tomallc AC PS PB great shape
$3700 740 992 7476 or 740 9492045

r

1-Jf\'( 00 '11\£'( ~Y,
IT':J 1-- DI~Y JOO,

1994 Ford Ranger $TX 4x4 4 0
V 6 AC Tll1 Cruise 011 Road
Package 18 500 740.446--6869

eJJT~

!!: f\10 TO 00 IT z

1995 Plymouth Grande Voyager
SE Loaded Power windows/
seats Digital overhead console/
Railey Package 57
miles
Excellent condition
Asking

l9 750;(304)675-3738

1997 Chev Blazer Truck LS
Push Button 4WD 40oor Cu
rise Power lock/windows Ex·
tended Warranty 58 000 miles

78 GMC 1 ton dual wheel 4x4
350 engine standard with 4 ton
winch excellent shape runs

BIG NATE
'I'OU RE f!..LWfWS LO&lt;&gt;-

tN(, YOUR FOCU::O
OUT iHERE I YOUR

great $3 900 740 992'6849

1'\INO WA.NDERS. I
YOU RE TOO EAS.I LY

Two 1979 Jeep Cherokees $500
for both 1979 Dodge Power wag
on 4WO truck $500 740 742

DIS.TRACTED' YOU

2050
Want a nice Ford Explorer? We
have several In stock Lets deal
Marks Autos 740..992 3011

740

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10 000 Trans.m isslons

AC AMIFMCassens High Mile
age $9 999 740 256 1094

93 Che11y Suburban 1500 4x4
Showroom Condition Completely
loaded Low Mileage one Owher
Rare vehicle Hard to find Call
t 17:24 If no answer
message!
Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Pubhc Auction A 1988
Mercury Cougar 1695019 &amp; A
1988 Pon tiac Flrebrld •234197

On 316199 AI I 0 00 A M A1 The

OVB Annex t43 Third Avenue
GallipoliS OH The AbOve Will Be
Sold To Highest Bidder ·As ts
Where Is" Without Expressed Or
tmptled w.,rrenty And May Be
Seen B~ Calling Keith Johnson At
740 441 1038 OVB Reserves

The Rlgh1 To Accep1 Or Reject

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

t

Coupd~

Fool Jl"rt
Alco.,a.g
Thr..dod noll
Raptllo with a
1111111
8 Mapobbr
9 .._lnlngto
11111 dlwn
10 Part ole
church
11 Faohlon
• deolgnor

Chrtotlan
12 Contents ol 1
45 Down
19 Mo after Jan
21 Actor Ted 22 - of London

A

By PhiiUp Alder
Amencans
and mosl others
hale losmg For example baseball
manager Leo Durocher observed
Show me a good loser m profes
stonal spor1s and I II show you an
tdiOt Show me a good sportsman and
I' ll show you a player I m lookmg to
trade In bndge we need to be care
ful wnh losers
You p1ck up a 5 3 3 2 hand wtth
a five card maJor a double10n m the
sml opened on your nght and some
13 16 h1gh card poonts Whal would
you do"
The answer IS overcall m your
major (You should constder passmg
only wnh 13 and a bad sutl) Wtih a
hand th1s slrong you ought to bod If
your sutt ts weak too bad you must
btte the fast movmg melal proJec11le
So m thiS deal Wesl overcalled
one spade Howevet the other stde
brushed the mlerference astde cruts
mg mlo four beans West cashed hts
three doamond tncks before swtlchong
lo the spade kmg Where dtd Soulh
go from 1here 0
Allhough Easl has only one Jack
and ts vulnerable agarnsl nonvulner
able opponents I know so me players
who would support spades wolh thai
hand And wtth thts layout four
spades doubled ts only one down a
good sacnftce Does lhts make them
clever or lucky"
Declarer was faced w1th a spade
loser whtch had to be doscarded
soraewhere And 1here was only one
candtd~le After wrnmng w1th lhe
spade ace and drawmg trumps Somh
cashed lhe club ace and played a club
10 dummy s Jack takmg the fmesse
and keep1ng hts fmgers crossed'
When the Jack won lhe lnck declar
er cashed 1he club kmg and Jetltsoned
hts spade loser

23 Fumbler o

24 Slnget Jerry
25 Jacket type
26 Cincinnati
ball club
28 Acreage
29 South r\lrlcor(
Outch
•
30 Jazz alnger
James
31 He loved
Lucy
37 Nawapaper
magnate

Murdoch
38 Entertainer -

Sumac

41 Makaa
unclear

42'--Mad
Mad Mad Mad
World"
43 Nuroery bed
44 Long limes
45 Desert olght
47 Roman route
48 Pinball
mlo1111p
49 Captain
Hooks

aaalatant

50 Unit of length
52 Enclooure
54 Fifth zodiac
algn

1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cellbrity ~ cryptogram~ are CfMI«&lt; hom quotat1001 by tamou people pas1 anc1 pre&amp;ent
EliCh liftli In lhe cipher ltandllor another Toddy's dull B tJqUII/s J

' V L ' M

RVL

IKZZKCPM

LMRVLH
RYL

DLZZNI

TN N Z,

XLRM

IY N,
BOPTM

IV L S
KSRN

MTZCMYLE

ALLSCS
IF S S
IF S S
ND
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "lis Jusr like a cheap Japanese horror movte " Manager Shep Gordon aeeesslng Allee Coopers show

L E

TIIAT DAILY

$@~4illA-L&amp;t-!fS•

WOlD

GAM I
PUULII
- - - - - - IIIItH ~y C\AY I. POUr\N - - - - - Rearrange lortera of lhe
• lout
oeramblocl wardJ .,..
low 10 form lour -do

I

REMEGE
I

NA C RH

.

,...--H-R_O_C_D_.,I ..~'
.~
~
I
Is
I. .I . .

_T_H_I_z_'l

were as s' m pre to
arouse enthusiasm as 1t 1s sus
p1c1on the commtttee chatr
man Sighed 1mag1ne what one
might ......
1n

Hl1ch

~t&amp;dsl

D&amp;L Family RV

Center 740.446-0800

SERVICES
81D

Home
• Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional llletlm~ guarantee
Local references furnished Es

10bi1Shed 1975 Cal1 24 Hrs (740)
448 0870 1 600 287 0576 Rog
era Waterproofing
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
parlance All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 740 446

7795

C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence Painting vln~t siding
carpentry doors windows baths
mobile home repair and more For
tree estimate call Chet 7 40 992

8323
Llvlngalon • B11ement Wettr
Prootlng, all basement repairs
done lree estimates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job experj

773-9550

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repairs Master u
censed electrician Ridenour
Eleclrlcal wvoooJ06 304 675

1786

build o b•g nest egg when
with rhe clonl(~s

ASTRO·GRAPH
Some 1nterestmg transfonnat1ons
m1ght transpire m your personal rela

one who JS Jealous of you attempt to
demean you tn the eyes of others

ltonshtps '" rhe year ahead There s
a good posstblhty tha1 you could
become a focal potnl tn the same
groups where you prevtously held the
role of a mere cog tn ihe wheel
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Because you could have some self·
doubiS today you need to lry 10 mtn
gle wtth those who say you "can do
11 mstead ofbemg wtlh people who
say you "can't • Avotd negattve
1hmkers Trymg 10 pa1Ch up a broken
romance' The Aslro Graph Match
maker can help you unde~Siand what
lo do lo make lhe rela1tonshtp work
Mad $2 75 10 Malchmaker c/o thts
newspaper, ~0 Box 17~8 Murray
Htll Stalton, New York NY 10156
ARIES (March 21 Aprtl 19)

Thts person s success wtll be depen

Don t thmk that you can make some

pomts and tmpress o1hers by betng a
good 11me Charlie wtth your
resources today

LIBRA (Sep1 23 Oc1 23)
Alrhough you mtghl be qune gtfied
rodoy tn handhng your ambtttous

Keep your cool today should some

Saturday, February 20 1999

That san exerctse m

futoltty Use your funds on loved
ones
TAURUS (Aprtl 20 May 20)

dent upon the

way you react

GEMINI (May 21 June 20) You
could have a tendency 10 allow
depressmn 10 creep mto your mtnd

abou1 thtnss you lack 1oday Focus on
whn1 you wanllo do wtrh whol you
already have
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Because yoo re not hkely 10 be very
odron tn managmg thmgs of a tangt

ble nature

such as your finances

spend your day on tnlangtble mterests
where you can be effective
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Be care
ful today of lwo oppostng fon:es are
al odds where your career or work "
concerned, because It s posstble lhe
proponeniS of your cause may nol be
as equally strong as your opponents
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sep1 22) If
certam persons

you've requested

atms, there's a strong chance rhat you

could pu1 your foot m your moulh
espe&lt;:1ally tn soctal setungs
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Don I allow any hard feel1ngs from
the past tnOuence your behavtor or
dectstons today Your coun1erpan
could do somerhing out of spne to
balance rhinss oul
SAOI'ITARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) It'~ not hke you bul you mtghl
have problems bemg a self slarter
1oday Be recepuve 10 rhose who 1ry
IO prod you tniO OCijOn A httle push
' could be helpful
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19) If
you come ofT as merely a 1aker
tnsteail of a gtver today It could 1ar
ntsh your tmage Be certatn you II be
ready to rectproca1e before maktng a
requesl 10 another
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Don 1 beeome f01n1 !Jearted today

favors from have rejected you m lhe
pas1 don 11um 10 1hem aaatn loday
lnslead go 10 rhose Y.OU know you can
counl on lo be kind to you

- when n comes ume 10 Implement

your plans What you wont to ach&lt;eve
1s feastble and should work ou1 ltke
you envts10ned 1f you trv

•

•

'r

exclamation

6
I II I Q Complete the chuckle quoted
•
•
•
by f1llmg
the m1u ng words
1
1.....1-..I..-.L...-1-..1.--1 you develop from step No 3 below

1FRIDAY

Hornet Starlight &amp; Campllght
Travel Trailers &amp; Tent Trailers
Sales &amp; Service We Also Carry
Truck Accessories &amp; Ail Your

Sale Volkeswagon Baby Blue
1972 $3 ooo or best offer

Mvstong GT En
$2 000 OBO

Pass

.

Condition Call (740) 441 174211

Professional 20yrs Q)lperlence
with atll masonery briCk block &amp;
stone Also room additions ga
rages e1c Free estimates 30.f

Sharp t 994 Z 24 Cavalier black
automatic atr real good car
Merk s Auto Sales Pomeroy
1

Pass

~ SOY!!

93 Dutchman Classic 35ft Travel
Trailer Front Bedroom 3 Rear
Bunks Full Bath K1tchen living
Room AJC Furn Awnings Loaded lots of Extras lmmaculal~

"""" 304-815-3887

004)675-3159

4•

A Auto Apley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 213-9329

Any And AU BidS And Withdraw
Properry From Sate Prior To Sa"

Terms 01 Sale CASH OR CER·
TIFfED CHECK

Joalp aroz
-ovla

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

6

1998 Chevy Cav~ller 5 Speed

1
2
3
4
5
6
7

Eaal
Pass
Pass

Go Jlop ba,c k
6allopbac.k
Gallop back
Gallop back

Gallop

74Q.245-56n

Green 38 000 Miles $9 500 740
992 7102

North
2•

·~-N-E~

PEANUTS
Leapmq onto h1s Gallop
horse, he qalloped Gallop
across the pra1rie. Gallop

1997 Chevy Cavalier 2 Doors AI

er Power Mirrors Power Sunroof

Weal
I.

Motorcycles

350X three wheeler good
condition $700 740-247 2961

DOWN

Middling a 5-3-32 and major

1998 Jeep Cherokee 92 000
miles real pretty white good
truck runs excellent Mark a Po

$18 ooo (304)882 3897 after
6PM

Soulb
I•

Openmg lead

PEANUT BRITTLE,
UNCLE SNI:JFFY ?

not answer leave Message!

John Deere track loader with ca
nopy $14 500 with bucke1 &amp;
larks 740.949 1019

$9 900 4X5 10001
., &lt;&lt;.uu•u. Excellenl Slleage Sal

speed AM/FM Cass AC/PB
Rally Wheels New rear shocks
bumper WV sticker asking

17 Cu!'M
18 Blla11111ncler
20 Stove Urkol, lor
one
21 Live
23 --barrel
27 Tordy
32 Mode af cereal
33 HerongLIII
34 Wolkl W-Ily
35 lrloh poet
311 Copobla of
leollng
311-l.emo
40 Ramoveo
feeling from
42 Klndoftea
46 Portner
47 --bltay

lliThrudwlndlng
machine
57 Out
58 Cloullled

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South

3488
1987 s 10 Pickup • cyiJ4

ooo

1990 Buock Regal GS 83 000
M1es $4 300 740 441 1316

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Ttactors In Stoc~ Financing As
Low As 8 99% Fixed Rate On
Qualify ng Tractors Carmichaels
Farm &amp; Lawn Your Local John
Deere Dealer Midway Between
Gallipolis And Rio Grande On
Jackson Pike 740 446 2412 Or

• A 6

1987 s 1o Good Condittonl Some
Extras! After 4 PM HO 446-

1988 Blazer 4WD 6 cylinder

$4 500 oo GMC Fla1bed Diesel

Tank $800 (740) 843-2918

ars Heavy Specs 741).256-6806

1984 Chevy S 10 Blazer 4WD

$100 OBO (304)675 7398

Truck $5 200 45 Ft Parts Trailer
$1900 2 000 Lb Headache Bell
Vbratlng Plate Jor a 4t6 Hoe 200
Brackets 011erhangs 215 Hoe
$33 000 MSC Steel Beams Trent
Box $3200 00 2 000 Gal Water

1986 Ford Ranger 2 9 Standard
Needs Clutch Work Runs Good!
$800 Negotiable 740-367.()167

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Auto~ for Sale

5~3

Cat Sheep Foot Roller
$34 000 Top Con Transient

•

P1&lt;g $21 500 740 446 9364

1987 Chevy Celebrity Call Aller
12 Noon 740-446 2081

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1986 Ford Rangor (DIESEL) nd
rust runs good aeponaable 90K,
SJOOO oBo, 740-992 1011

TRANSPORTATION

For Sale
or Trade

New 5010 6010 7010

Three Pink &amp; Gray Furby s For
sa e 740.367 7t04

Wallace 16 Milo Road Pliny

740 742 4510
M&amp;J Auto
Open 7 days a week

$2 ooo (304)458 18n

Nordic Track Manuel 4000
Treadm1l $250 Aluminum sheri
bed truck topper black $65

Hay For Sale Contact Harold

7851

(304)895 3874

M xed seasoned firewood cut
spl1 and Qellvered $30 load 74D-

Or

~872

Adorable AKC Registered golden
retrievers puppies males &amp; fa
males $200 each call 740 ~92

H P 192 Turbo Symcno 8x8
Trans F and R Shuttle Large
pump 2 remotes 4 outlets 2 yr

Mahogany Antique Buflel $225

$1 75 A Bale 740 245
740 3137./J583

1985 Honda 5 passenger Mini
Van AJC runs great body In ex
cettent candl!lon 4 good tires
amlfm cassette $995 080

JET
AERATION MOTORS

lie Independent DIStributor

&amp; Grain

OBO (304j576-2989

1or Sate 3930 4WD 45 PTO

LOSE WEKlHTI
Call Rl1a 1 888 449 3758 Herbal

S1 75 A Bale Also Have Riding
Horses For Sale Call Aftor 5 PM
740 381H1358

Sher Pel puppi~l lots of wrlnldes

$200&amp; up 74().949-2126

Weal
&amp; K Q 10 9 6
• J 87 3
• 85
tAKQ
• 9 6 43
• Q 7 4
• 10 9 8 5 2
South
• A 4
•AKQ763
• 7 52

1987 KW W900 425 Ca1 46 Re·

miles good condition new tires
S2 400 call anytime leave mes

6495 Worn only 2 hrs to a lor
mal dinner

Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

740-256-6510

have been declawed and
spayed I love to be petted and
people laugh at my funny ears!
Please call my Mother Rebecca

$238 Yours lor $150 (304)675

Call Ron Evans 1 8()().537 9528

Butcher Hogs For Sale Ready To
Go Will Haul To Butcher Shop

Automatic Minor Front End Dam
age Runs Good S1 000 Firm

Electric Scooters Wheelchairs
New And Used Stairway Eleva
tors Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts Bowman s Homecare 740

For Sale Restaurant Booths
seats 16 18 people S200 also 2
church pews $tO 00 each

Handled Dally FeeH'rlmmed Big
Col1 S1 100 740-286-0777
Black &amp; red Umousln bull&amp; &amp;heW
e1ll 740-992 8040

Hay

• 5 2

• J 10 9 4 2
• J 10 8
• K J 3
East

tires new exhaust $t 350 Call

My Name Is LOUISA MAY ALL
CAT I am a Scottish Fold pussy
cal and need a great home the
Hlmllayans at my house tease

Home &lt;Or Larger

For sale refrigerator &amp; electric
stove new bicycle parts &amp; ser11
Ice 74()-992 6141

(304)675-880!

71 0

Unit 48 000 BTU Will Accom
modate

A Q H A Aegls'tered Yearling

02 1~119

Norlb

New 'Parts f'{ew Paint Clean

74().386 9725

$200 00 (740) 379 2524 or
(740) 379 2961

me abou1 by earsll I stay lnslae 1

Man~

4 Year Old Mare 1/2 Quarter
Horse Gentle And Good Rider

bale 740-992 2070

2006 Camden Avenue

Don 1 Call Us We Bo1h Lose I
740-446-6306 1 800 291 0098
1 Crypt &amp; Pla1e $2 000 00 Mem

1982 Chevy J Ton Duly

Sharp Truck $4 200 00 740 379
2723
1983 Ch111y S 10 4 sp new

Hay For Sale Square Bales

•wARMUp!"
Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; Air Con
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FEBRUARY19I

�,

•

pqe 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 19, 1899 '

~

History of Meigs library system review at DAR meeting

Beat of the Bend ....

A review of the development of .
libraries in Meigs County was given
by longtime library board member,
Patricia Holter, at a recent meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters .of the American Revolution.
.
Holter took the members from
the early 1850s when each township
had its own library, to the present
district syslel!l of providing library
service.
'
·
Holter not ~d ·that. copies of min- ·
utes from two meetings of the
Pomeroy Library Board written in
1850's were found someti·me ago.
The first libraries usually were
located in the home ·of a township
trustee.
She ndted that her fam ily in
Salem Center had the library in their
·home before the Civil War and a
note in her family history records
the fact that the llbrary in her family
home received a copy of "Uncle
Tom's Cabin" . .
Local hi storia.ns have said the
library system of Meigs County
began at a 1895'meeting with donated books making up the collection.
M,eigs County District Library
Tru.stees are now appointed for
seven year terms by the county commissioners and judges.
Holter said the first recorded
location of a library in Pomeroy was
on the second flbor of village hall
which stood beside the United
Methodist Church.
The second was a small structure
immediately behind th~ Grace Epis- ·
copal Church, she said, while the
third location was the Carnegie
Library on Se'cond Street, built in
1914, and used until 1988. A
Carnegie Library was also built in
Middleport resulting from efforts in

r
By Bob Hoeflich
Ben inay be gone b~t hi s tomatoes linger on.
I write of the late Ben Quisenberry, Syracuse, who operated a small business in the former Syracuse Post Office for
· many years. In that building he processed tomato seeds and
printed his own seed packets· and seed lists on an ancient printing press in addition to carry ing out other business activities.
Seed Savers Exchange in Decm:ah, Iowa is permanentl y
maintaining Ben 's legacy of tomatoes. In the 1999 Exc~ange
catalog there is a photograph of Ben, born Aug. 24, 1887, as
well as a story about his tomato seed business. The catalog also
lists H) varieties of Ben's tomatoes ~nd offers packets of seeds
for each.
The catalog states that Ben probably; was the oldest active
seedsman in the United States until he entered a care facility at
the age of %. Ben packaged and sold seeds for over 30 vari eties of tomatoes. In 1980 he was hospitalized for most of the
summer and. lost all but nine of qis 32 tomato varieties An article on the loss of his seeds )Was published in Seed Savers 1981
Yearbook and members were able to .send in seeds ·for every
one of Ben's tomatoes. This put him back in full business once
again.
The outgoing and personable Ben, whom many of you will
remember, is quoted in the catalog saying:
"Once a fellow from a television station asked me how I
accounted for keeping active 95 years. I said to keep happy and
to keep content, do something that's worthwhile. If )'OU have a
hobby and you can make your hobby your business, you' re all
the better off. Do something good- ! do marvel at myself
sometimes, the way I keep going. Indeed, I do. I marvel at
myself. I'm surprised sometimes how I can keep going from 7
until dark. About dark , I'm like the chickens. I hunt for my
roost".
Thahks to Mary Wise of Middleport for passing along a
copy of the catalog. No question about it, Ben was a standout.

..

If you were born on Feb. 29- that's in ·a leap year- you

technically only have a birthday every four years. That can be
an advantage and a disadvantage. Technically you're short on
birthdays so you can pretend to be much younger than you are.
On the other hand, it could make for a bit of a birthday present
shortage.
Betty Kern is one of those Feb. 29 people. Although she
will be 75 this year, she's only had 18 birthdays with the 19th
coming in the year 2000. Friends usually help Betty celehrate
her birthday on Feb. 28, however, and communications will
reach her at412210, SR 33, Shade, Ohio 45776. Of course, you
can always give her a quick ring to wish her a happy birthday
at 992-7764.
·

19Q8 of interested Middleport citizens, led by Miss Emma Rowley, a
teacher, who recommended to the
school board a slate of citizens to
serve as a library board. This building was completed in 1918 and is
still in use.
Holter pointed out that before
1966 the Pomeroy and Middleport
Carnegie Libraries were called
School District Libraries. In the
1930s, an intangible tax law was
passed allotting a certain percent to ·
support libraries and was administered through the County Budget
Commission. Holter ·said that when
she joined the Library Board in
1968, the libraries were receiving
on ly 55% of the intangible tax
money. In 1980, she said, the
Library jJ'rustees become a County
Distric:IAiublic Library and asked for
100%. of the intangible tax. In 1986
the intangible tax was repealed.
The State of Ohio now has
income tax and a formula was structured to usc a percentage &lt;;&gt;r'that. It
was set up to endow the poorer
libraries to:bring them up to the standards of the larger metropolitan area
libraries . For example, Holter said,
in 1986 Meigs County's share of the
intangible !•x was $65,800; last ·
year's budget · was well over
$500,000.
.
In 1989, the Pomeroy Library
moved to its fourth location on West
Main Street. A feasibility study was
done on the Carnegie Library building on Second Street. This study
confirmed the decision that it was
not feasible to use this facility to ,
meet the new standards set for
library services.
.
The Meigs County District
Library System has completed its
third Branch Library with the Main

Library located in Pomeroy, branches in Racine, Middleport, and Eastern Local Schools. With these newly
completed branches, the system is
capable of serving the entire county .
of Meigs, Holter said.
In 1%8, she continUed, ten counti~s went together to solicit Federal
funding and to work together to create better library services. This orga- ·
nization, known as the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries (OVAL) provided
inner library loans, workshops for
li]lrary directors, clerks and library
trustees. This source also provided
books when it to.ok advantage of a
federal program in 1972 and became
the only state funded area library
system.
OVAL also provided bookmobile
and books by mail ·service with each.

library paying a share of expenses.•
The Bookmobile and the Books bi
Mail services are being discontin~
ued. Books By Mail through OVAL·
funding has come to a close. Both
services proved too expensive tO:
continue.

;

Down Middleport way, Robert and Nancy Manley will be
observing their 30th wedding anniversary on Feb. 22. Cards
will reach them at 741- S. 4th St,, Middleport. Robert and
Nancy say that after 30 years they're still smiling.

••

It's the Deale,.- Behind T.lJe Deal
That Makes T.lJe BEAL DiCCerenee!

.,

Aoto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass, Tilt, Cruise, Spoiler, Etc.
Up to $2400 Rebates Available '

1999

nso 414

5.4 L, Auto, A/C, Tilt, Cruise, Caaa., Off Road Pkg~,
All Power, Loaded

--•
1997 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

7hut in the Lord with all your heart.

1997 FORD WINDSTAR GL

'.
Cartier Edition, All Power Equip. Padded Roof, Etc·.

3.8 L, Auto, Air Cond., AMJFM Call, Tilt, Crulae, Quad Bucket Seats

.Only 828,1• ·

Only 811,190

Never rely on what you thin~ you Mow.
Remember the Lorrl in everything you .do,
and He will show you the right way.

Society Scrapbook
Free diabetic screening to be Cleland, president. Cleland opened
held
the meeting with reading of the
Veterans Memorial Medical 67th Psalm. The Lord's Prayer and
(:linic will host a second free dia- the pledge to the flag were given in
betic scroen ing clinic on .Wednes- unison. Each membt rs was given a
day.
small red valentine heart on which
In addition· to sc reenin gs, med - they wrqte a word beginni ng with
icati ori reviews will be offered "V". When members answered roll
along with nutritional educati on. call. they gave the word they had
The clinic will be ·held fro~~ written on the valentine .·
a.m. to II a.m. Participating will ~
Mary Jo Barringer. sec retary,
be Dr. K, Rahman .. Patricia Smith, .was reported ill . Laura Mac Nice
~NC - FNP, a family nurse practi - gave the .treasurer 's report. Memttoncr; Rebecca Gr ueser, COM. bers . were asked to w,ear green for
_nutritional services, and Brad · the March 10 meting . Cleland read
.Coll1ns, R.Ph., pharmaci st
"Really No Cause for An.xiety" ;
: Twenty cli ents wi ll be accepted Goldie Frederick, "Here Comes th e
:and preregistration is required. To Judge : and "Golden Rules for Livregister, residents m ~y call 992, ing."
3632 or 992-2104, EKt. 254 . ··
Refreshmen ts were served by
the hostesses and games were con. dueled by Esther Smith and Ruth
DorA meets
Smith . Door pri zes were won by
i\ valentine theme was carried ln zy Newell and Helen Wolfe.
out at the rece nt meeting of Past visitor. Others attendi ng were MarCouncilors Club, Chester Council cia Keller, Opal Hollon, Betty
323, Daughters of America. held at Young. Delores Wolfe . Goldie
the home of Elizabeth Hayes.
Frederick, Margaret Amberger,
Jean Welsh was co-hostess for Charlotte Grant. and Mary K.
the · meetinjl conducted by Erma Holter.

l

V-8, Auto, Air Cond., AM!FM Caas, lilt, Cruise, All Power

·Only 813,900

.

1992 DODGE D350

Phone
7 40-99'2 - 2196

'

~

..••••••
'.

••

u:
Ohio Department or Health had advised against closing
schools as a means of controlling the virus.
Nearly 209 students missed school on Wednesday
due to illness in the district, as did several fticulty and
support staff members. Those fi~ures are an the decline
in Eastern Local, but absentee rates are still higher than
average.
Meanwhile, the State of Ohio has been placed under
an Influenza Warning due to a marked increase in fl.u

Vol. 34, No. 2

·•
"The symptoms tlrat we . cases during the third those children and elderly people who surrer from other:;
are seeing are mort hard week of February.
chronic illnesses or compromised immune systems~:
cold symptoms tlran flu
T.C. Ervin, a nurse according to the National Flu Surveillance Network,::
L-t
with the Meigs Coun- . which monitors flu cases across the country.
·•
symptoms ... and aU t na
••
WI can teU patients Is to
. ty Health Depart- .. It is estimated that at least 20,000 people die eacli
drink pie•"' o~fluids and ment, said Friday that year from the tlu virus, although an estimated 30 mjllion l

the Meigs County
Health Department
had contacted the
Schoolnura• state health depart·
_
. T.C. E.!'VIn ment about the situalion at Eastern, and had also been ·told that closing
schools was not an effective method ·for controlling the
illness. '
.
"The symptoms that we are seeing are more hard cold
symptoms than flu symptoms," Ervin said, "and all that
we can tell patients is to drink plenty of fluids and get
. plenty of rest until the symptoms pass."
Influenza is.:a potentially fatal illness, especially for
'"J :1.

get ple11ty of rest until the
symptoms fHJSS."

people contracted the flu in 1994.
. •·
That same year, nearly 70 million work d~tys ·were.;
lost.
.
Thefluisspreildbysimplecasualcontactandismost::
contagious in its early stages, before infected individuals.:
·are aware that they are carrying the virus. The illneu ~
a short one to four-day incubation period, and is· mtllli ·
fested with symptoms including fever, cough, he~;;
muscle ache·and weakness.
· ·~
Antibiotics have no impact on the virus, but are ;
sometimes prescribed due to improper diagnoaia,.•
according to the NFSN. Antiviral medications, which:;
can slow the flu, are available.
;~

z

....,

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

·Krog8r will acquire
Big Bear store building
GALLIPOLIS - The Kroger
Co. will buy the !'lig .Bear store in
&lt;Jallipolis' Ohio River Plaza, Kroger
· .o.ffi~ials announced Friday.
·. Kroger will take Jl9SSCssion of
t6e 44,000-squate foot Big Bear
f$cility by March 20 due to an agree·ment between the superml\rket relail
chain and Penn Traffic Co., the
o)wner or Big Bear, according to a
Kroger news release.
· The Big Bear will then be closed
. for approximatelty eight weeks
while a remodeling occurs . The
store is expected to reopen in midMay . and replace the existing
2J,OOO-square foot Kroger outlet at.
the Silver Bridge Plaza. Kroger will
attempt to sublease that building to
another retailer.
: The new Kroger store will be
staffed by existing, Kroge~: .empiOJI«- ·
ecs7 from the Silver l:iridge Plaza
location. Additionally, Kroger will
be acceJlllng applications for . posilions at the store. Former Big Bear
employees' applications will be weicorned, the releilse noted.
"The acquisition of this larger
facility will allow Kroger to offer customers in Gallipolis and surrounding
areas an enhanced shopping experience, with a significantly greater
assortment and variety or products
and services, including a Kroger phar·
macy," a Kroger spokesman said.
· the move comes two weeks after
Syracuse, N. Y.-based Penn Traffic ·
announced it was filing for bankruptcy and restructuring.
penn Traffic has lost more than
$220 million since .1994 despite
atlempts to resolve its fiscal insecurity.
As part of the restructuring, Penn
Traffic reached an agreement with a
committee of .Jf its major creditors,
who will forgive $1.14 billion in
debt and loan the company another .
$100 million, according to Gary D.
Hirsch, Penn Traffic 's chairman.

911 sales tax up
Citationsi~ued
for renewal this fall forsaleofhquor :;

. By KEVIN KELLY
TlmH-S.nUnel Sll!f
, GALLIPOLIS- The one·
quarter percent sales tax funding
the operation of the Galli a County 911 emergency communications system is up ror renewal
this fall .
911 Director Steve Wilson
said · the agency's resources are
being evaluated, but said going
back to tile voters in the Nov. 2
election is likely since the
amount of money the increase is
expected to generate in 2000
won't cover all of the next budget
year's needs.
The increase was approved .in
.19!14 fur a five· )'tar period to get
· 911 established in Galli~~o. After'
data .was collected, engineerftlg '
and technical issues were
resolved and a 911 center wa5
built, the system began operating
on Dec. 4, 1997.
Since then, 911 has grown to·
where it handles dispatching for
the Galli a, County Sheriff's
Dep~rtment, local volunteer firefighting units and the EMS. A
tentative date of March 10 has
been set for the service to begin '
dispatching for Gallipolis City
Police, Wilson explained.
Currently, the only agencies
not serviced through 911 are the
Gallia-Meigs Post or the Stale
Highway Patrol, and security for
Gallipolis Developmental Center
and . the University of Rio
the calls go to 9111irst, where dispatchers
Grande/Rio Grande Community College, process and relay the messages to ofliwhich have maintained their own commu- cers.
nications setups, he added.
The establishment of 911 may have
911 serves, as Wilson put it, as a "one- been a long time in coming, Wilson
· .stop" telephone number-to apcess help in explained, but it .was due to the technical
an emergency.
. and informational dematids thai had to be
Non-emergency calls can slill ~e made met before the system could start.
at the sheriff's and police numl5ers, but
".Overall, the system is doing what it

..••

to underage.buyers_.

•

GALLIPOLIS - A sting operation by the Gallia.:
County Sheriff's Department against local businesses •
suspected of selling alcohol to underage subjects has '
resulted in several citations, and deputies hope the actiori •
will . send a messa11e that • Speel•l de.....l••
"we won't tolerate at."
.
,.,....
A similar operation is under Ohio's legs#
planned,before hig~ school drinking age of 21 1
proms 1n the spnng, so
"we can take care of one were sent to elg_~t
problem before it starts," carryoutsln the
sheriffs Investigator Mike county snd In Ga/Smtth added.
Smith said special llpolls on Feb. 13.
. deputies who are under Out of the eight
Ohio's legal drinking age · ·
'
.
of 21 were sent to eight seven allegedly Mid ;
carryouts in the county ana ·liquor to the Under•
in 'Gallipolis ~n Feb. 13. 11ge buyers.
Qut or the e1ght, seven
·
allegedly sold liquor to the underage buyers, he added·.
Citations were issued last week to the employees who ·
are. alleged to have made the sales at t~e Dock Inn Tavern, the Pony Keg and Marchi's Carryout in Gallipolis,
and to four carryouts in the county-' Max's, Country ,
Inn, Big Wheel·and Charlie"s, according to Smith. The employees will be summoned to Gallipolis .
Municipal Court to answer the charges, he explained,
while the businesses or permit ·holders may face fines
from the Ohio Board of Liquor Control.
· .
The sheriff's department will submit a report on the .•
alleged violations to the state agency, and attion taken .
will be based in part on past reported violations, Smith
said.
.
All or the cited employees and businesses were noli-·
·
lied of the citations by Friday, Smith said.
"We are anticipating other operations like this one,.,
because we're trying to tighten down on this problem::
before prom time," said ~mith, who added that the sale·•
of liquor to youths has been a contributing. factor
a&lt;JCidents, lights and other problems deputies have dealr.:
with on prom night.
"As we get closer to the proms, we want to ensure.:·
local businesses won't sell to juveniles," Chief Deputy
Dennis Salisbury said. "If they obey the law we don't
have a problem, but otherwise, we don't want it and wC::
1

was designed to do," he said. "We don't
get a lot of prank calls, and we've been
into the schools with information ror the
kids on using 911 ."
Wilson and 911 staff have also had an
informational. boOth at the Gall ia County
Junior Fair, visited Neighborhood Watch
groups and followed other avenues in
Continued on page A2.

to::

won'ttolerate it."

Good Morning

Calendars
ClassiOeds
Comics
Editorials
Along the River
Obituaries
Sborts

C4&amp;6

03·7 ·
I nserl
A4

C1
A5

B1·6

- El1lne Armldlvng, acUng d ..n ol 81Udenta Ill

!lie Unlveralty ot RIO G111nde pr•
aentld part ol her collection ol
1'11CIIIt 11*1101'8blllll ahawn h - 1t
the URG Melgl C.nter In .Middlepart. She
on civil rlghtl Ill
the CAttW Thuflldly lfllrnoon.

epa•

GALLIPOLIS- In recognition of alllc.k Hist9ry month, a .
program is planned for Friday, Feb. 26:' al!d Saturday, Feb: 27; '
ho.sted by Paint Creek Baptist Church, 833 Third Ave., Gallipolis. The program will lriill!ight portions of the many C!ln·
tributions persons or African-dt!Scent have made .to Ainerica.
Friday's program will st;lrt at 7 p.m. at the John Gee Historical Museum and will feature musicid selections from Ordinary c
People and area churches. Light refreshments will .he served.
· Satll,rday morning's program will start at 10. This portion of
the program will highlight local history and interesting facts.

Americans. ·' Their struggle for meaningful
elri'ploymont and fair wages will be seen lhrough
the life stories of yesterday's heroes.
A noon meal will be served and the afternoon
session will begin at I, with presentations made
to several area residents.
The8e awards are presented to those who have
demonstrated, through their life, a will to work
Lawton
toward greater America, for all Americans.
The hono~cs are Courtney Hutchinson, Martha Cosby,.

The keynote speaker for the afternoon will be Dr. Robert L. '
Lawson. Lawson, a former teacher a.t Gallia Academy High~:
School and track star at .the Un1vemty of Rio ·Grande, wiltt
return to the area to deliver an inspiring message on achievin~:
greatness.
'
.•
.One of his books, "Oh Yes We Can: Black Achievement in::
America,:· will be on sale at. this event:
··
Growmg u.p s~ven mtl~s
from the UmverStty at R1o
::
Grande, Lawson went on to
~~~~iii~

1
,
By JIM Ff'IEEMAN
destined to repeat it. You can't .know where
Briefly addressing Affirmative Action pronme•Sentlnel Slltf.
.
, you are goin'g unless you know where y0 u•ve grams, she stated, "It's a shame you have to
MIDDLEI'ORT- Some people may lind been," she said.
·
·
have laws to protect you."
Elai~e ~strong's collection of racist memoThe urge to collect the me~orabilia began
"The key for anyone is. education/' she
rab1ha htghly offe":stve. . .
)&lt;'hen she came across an antique can of "Nig- said. "When (Abraham) Lmcoln freed the
But the collectton, whtch tncludes slave llerhair" tobacco made around 1910. The lind slaves... we went from betng slaves to betng
shackles, a slave's bill of sale and everyday sparked &amp;II urge in her to possess the item.
free slaves.
items presen.ting blac.k people in a stereo!ypi- _ _ "I was so shocked. I was offended by it, but - "You can co ntrol anyone if you keep them
cal manner, are defi~ttely tho~ght l.'rovoking. 1 wanted it, • she said.
from being ed ucated," she.sat d.
.
These show bow black people have been
Some of Armstrong's 11ems are defimtely
Armstrong, who ts black, ts acttng dean or
students at the .Universit~ of Rio. Gran~ and· perceived; in advertisements, posleards and thought-provoking including the set of slave
presented the ttems dunng a dtscusston on other things, all that were displayed in stores shackles which she dtsplayed.
racism held at the UR.G Meigs center in Mid· where the public was.
•
"If they could talk, what would they say? I
dl~port Thursday afternoon "! part or Black
Black people were always shown on Jl{Od- collect lhem to let my children know this is
Htstory ~onth . . ~er col~ect1on ~nsists of . ucts having to do with color, black boOt polish real."
. ,
racism memorabtha, particularly ttems from for instance, or on things having to do with
Other items included a ch1ld s-&amp;otton sack
the post-Civil War era to the 1950's, the Jim serving, she explained. "Nothing ever in lead- ·&amp;lid a slave receipt which she says "shows it
Crow era when segrc11ation and state-spon· ership.'
was true that we were bought and sold."
sored racism was rampant, especially in the
"The images are always the same, on .that
Racism still exists, she explained. "It is still
Deep South.
bottle of syrup, on that pancake mix box," she a challenge for a lot of people to be able to
She admits that the items are offensive.
said. One target games, sheet musi~. the obtain housing or find a job," she added. In
"The things up here are ·offensive. They're images are similar; stereotypical portrayals addition, there is plenty of access to racist
groups and information on the Internet.
offensive to me, bilj I collect them ," she said. with black skin, big lips, stupid and lazy,
So why c~o&lt;;s she collect the objects? ·
•1n many history boOks we've just been left
She once recalled observi ng, from a safe
"People that do not kno~ their history are out," she remarked. '
distance, a KKK rally held near the Galli: and

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Former GAH§_.J~~cb~r will keynote Black History .Month ob$ervanc~

.D'i;p·~;v~f;~~i;t.;;~;;biii';~ecans ·Jim c;;~:-;;a

4x4 Dual Rear Wheel, 5.9 L, Auto, AMIFM Stereo, steel Flat Bad
WorlrTruck

461 S. Third
,, Ave.
Middleport

Details on
pageA2

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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant · February 21, 1999

I

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1996 DODGE 1500 LARAMIE SLT

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Today's tltmn-.Sadbul
. . 14 Sections· 144 Pages

Good News Biblo l'nm!lllo 3:5,6

Teena

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tmts

By BRIAN J. REED
·
·
Tim••!!entlneiStatl
POMEROY- Meigs County has been hit by an outbreak oflnfluenza, forcing one school district to consider closing. and keeping many out 9f the workplace.
The Eastern Local SchOOl District discussed closing
schools earlier this week because of high absentee rates
~I Eastem High School and Eastem Elementary School,
but Molly Jewett, ~lementary principal, said that the
TOURING FACILITIES - A tour of library facilities 'followed the
recant meeting of Retum Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAI'I. Checklnf!
out the computer and calilloglng room of.the Meigs facility are from
the left, seated Donna Jenkins, and •lilndlng, Mary Powell, Sharol)
Jewell, Pauline Atkins, :•nd Patricia Holter, who reviewed library
development In Melga COunty, and Chrlt~topher and Mary VanRaeth•

Low:

•

•

-61
•
ts sch 00;l WOTA,f.,
l nnuenza
ou tb rea k . d ISrup

JERRY BIBBEE

·1999 FORD ESCORT Zl2
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FOR GREAT SERVICE .B EFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

Every day should he exciting and chaHenging
to us, &amp;~~d it is important thai we are ftexible
and learn to adapt to our changing daily
routine. One of "Murphy's Laws," is that
nothing ever happens as planned &amp;!ld this is
continuously proven to us on a regular basis.
Many limes during the day, we·may he
interrupted hy unforeseen events that may
cause us to cb&amp;~~ge our plans. The important
thing is how we react to changing.
situations. Sometimes serious emergencies
that arise can cause us to put everything
into proper pe111pective. For example,
adapting to everyday minor changes C&amp;!l not
compare to the chaHenges associated with a •
serious health problem. Love and faith in
God, C&amp;!l help us function effectively in our
daily lives. As Psalm 91 tells us, we can say,
"You are my God, You are my defender and.
protect~r; in you I trust."

-

HI: 308

MM,yethewu
calm • The IIJCec:utlon: p,g. M

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Jr. '-Yon Ills Nck
Frldly with MediN
pwnplng • deadly
drug ltlbdu,.lnto
hla outatletched

FNiurwclon P• C1

Holter concluded her presentiP
lion with an overall view of services
and holdings of the main library iti
Pomeror and the branches. ·
·
Regent Pauline Atkins conducteq
the meeting during which time she;
and Abbie Stratton awarded th~
DAR Good Citizenship and AmeriJ
can Hfstory Essay Contest awards. ·
A brunch was• served, The nex(
meeting will be the Charter Day lun-(
cheon at Grace Episcopal Church,
March 20. Reservations should be
made with Mrs. Abbie Stratton.

I '

And thanks to Verna Sayre of Racine for a clipping from a
publica!ion eKplaining in detail the meaning of yin yang. Personally, even though I'm now better informed !look upon yin
yang as a substit'ute expression for "bummer".
Do keep smiling.

Wilford ...., Beny

Don't call
them
trailers.

•

'

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j

Jac~on coun-

ty hne ..
"Betng that
close . to that
. ,
. ,
.,
much hate was. a scary thtng, s~e satd.
..
Not all ractsm and segregatton was con-••
fined to the Deep Soulh, it was pointed.
Pearl . Scott of-~iddleport recalled her
efforts .'" mt~grattng pubh7 elementary
schools tn Galhpohs. Whtle chtldren went to .
W~hington Elementary School while . bl.ack :
chtldren went to another, run down butldtng~
she explained.
.
. Armstrong recalled. her husband saying that
m the 1950s bla~k ch~ldre~ were n~t all~ed :
to go to the pubhc swtmmtng pooltn Galhi'O" ··
lis except on Wednesdays, because that was
lhe day they changed the water. "
Armstrong al~o recal~ed a school field t~p :
to Camden Park tn Huntmgton, W.Va. The tnp .
was temporarily held up while the park m&amp;!l·,
agement dis~ussed .what to with the four or •
five black chtldren tn the class.
:
"flley were eventually allowed in with
Continued on page A2
:

the :
••

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