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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

'

OSU upsets
Wisconsin
five 61-56 ·

Pick 3:
891
Pick 4:
8742
Super Lotto:
13-28-35-43-45-46
Kicker:
066670

Sports on Page 5

Cloudy tonight, low in
mid 40s, chance of showers. Friday, cloudy, showers, high in mid-60s.

en tine
Vol. 48, NO. 220
le1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

2 Sections. 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 26, 1998

Time ticking away for 'The Volunteer'
By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service

COLUMBUS- As time continues
to. tick away for death row inmate
Wilford Berry, the legal tussle over
his mental competency resumed in
U.S. District Coun Wednesday in
Columbus.
_
Oral arguments over the mental
competency of Berry. the schizophrenic killer dubbed "The Volunteer" for his desire to waive all further appeals of his death sentence.
·were heard yesterday morning in
front of Judge Algenon Marbley of
the U.S. District Court in downtown
Columbus. The arguments were
based on an appeal by the Berry family of a December Ohio Supreme
Court decision finding the Cleveland
killer mentally competent.
Placed on death row for his role in
the 1990 slaying of Charles Mitroff
Jr. 'Berry is set to die by lethal injec-

tion at 9 p.m. next Tuesday at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility
in Lucasville. He would be the tirst
person executed in Ohio in 35 years.
Judge Marbley saict he will make
his decision whether to grant n temporary stay of execution at2 p.m. Friday. Regardless of his decision. it will
be immediately appealed to the federal Sixth Cireuit Court of Appeals.
The last legal step for the Berry case
would be an appeal to the U.S.
Supreme Court. However. Berry
could also be spared the death penal ly at any point by Ohio Gov. George
Yllinov ich.
Granted by Marbley Wednesday
was a motion to have the legal record
expand~d in the Berry case. Now
included in the evidence for courts to
consider is t~stimony about the beatings, sexual abuse and suicide
allertipts of Berry ddring his child hood. Medical records verifying the

Bridal books abound with advice and ideas

.•

By The Associated Press
Once you've announced your
engagement, you're showered
with advice - some genuinely
helpful , some geared to sell you
something. Wedding guides at the
bookshop can help you sort it all
out:
- Many prospective brides
hold down full-time jobs while
trying to plan their weddings, so
author Leah Ingram reasoned that
they could use advice from all
quarters on all subjects but in one
book. The result is "The Portable
Wedding Consultant: Invaluable
Advice from the Industry's
Experts for Saving Your Time,
Money,
and
San1ty"
(Contemporary trooks , $14.95
paperback).
-"Crib Notes for The First
Year of Marriage" (Fairview
Press , $14.95 paperback), by
Evereu DeMorier, aims to help
newlyweds cope with the serious
and trivial issues in ·their new
union, from managing money io
dec iding who takes out the
garbage.
- New lyweds David and
Wendy Hubbert tackle the subject
from both sides in "The His &amp;
Hers Guide to Surviving Your
First Year of Marriage" (Delta
Trade Paperbacks, $ 10.95).
Alternati ng chapters, they take
aim at everything from who controls the TV dicker to choosi ng a
house.
Wedding expert Diane
Warner, author · of "The Best
Wedd ing Ever," "Diane Warner's
c 'omplete Book of Weddin g

Vows" and "Diane Warner's pens to him, not for him. A wedComplete Book of Wedding ding is a. culmination of a rigorous
Toasts," has a new title in the planning regimen in wliich he
series:
"biane
Warner's · may have about as much say as a
Complete Book of Wedding feed bag." The authors offer
Showers." All titles are from advice to · gel the groom safely
Career Press, $11.99 paperback. past the wedding day in "The
Her "How to Have a Big Wedding Groom 's Secret Handbook: How
on a Small Budget" (Beller Way Not to Screw Up the Biggest Day
Books, $12.99 paperback) is now of Her Life" (Fireside/Simon &amp;
in its third edition and can be Schuster, $9.95 paperback).
accompanied by a planner by the
same name (Writer 's Digest
- "Colin Cowie Weddings"
Books, $12.99 paperback).
(Little, Brown, $65 hardcover,
- "Alternative Weddings : An February), by Colin Cowie,
. EsseJlli~ Gujd~ for Enhancing details how to design your own
Yo~r Own Ceremony" (Taylor signature wedding . Cowie, who
Publishing, $12.95 paperback), by has planned weddings for celebriJane Ross-MacDo~ald, looks. at ties such as Paula Abdul, Sugar
the possibilities in light of today's R~y Leonard and others, tells how
multicultural relationships and for you can have a spectacular event
~uples who .want a personal, even if you want it to be smaller
rather than traditional, ceremony.
and less costl y.
- Suppose you'd like to slay
at the same honeymoon collage
- You want a wedding planthat John and Jackie Kennedy
ner you can carry around with
shared, or gel married at the ranch
your other datebook , business
where Brooke Shields and Andre
papers, and lunch in your briefAgassi recently were wed .
case? "The Pocket Weddin g
"Celebrity
Weddings
&amp;
Planner"
(from
Oona
Honeymoon Getaways" (Open Communications, P.O. Box 446,
Road Publishing, $16.95 paperNollingham. N.H . 03290-0446,
back), by Elizabeth Borsting, is a
$5.95 including shipping) has
guide for romantics interested in
m6ny of the features of the bigger
celebrity haunts in the U.S. ,
versions without the heft.
Canada and Mexico. The author
offers a capsule history of the
venues, a peek at the guest registers, and practical information for
booking.
- " For a groom, a wedding is
no party," write Anthony E.
Marsh and Jay Blumenfield. "A
wedding is something that hap-

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The forensic·stientist who gained
· fame when he exhumed the body of
outlaw Jesse James to identify it
through DNA is helping relatives of
Mcintosh who are trying to prove she
was murdered. The official ruling
w~s suicide.
The 26-year-old Mcintosh died of
a shotgun blast on April 4. 1989, a

$9

Special
rh Carat
'Diamond Solitaire .

. NEW LEXINGTON ( APl - The
state is 4uestiuning portions of a nt:arly $3.5 million hill attorneys submilt~d alter winning a landmark sc hoolfunding lawsuit nearly a year ago.
Stale attorneys said the bill is too
high even though a judge already has
reduced by S 1.5 million the original
bill submitted by Bricker &amp; Eckler.
the law firm representing a coalition
of sch!XliS that WOn its lawsuit against
1he slate.
Th~ Ohio Supreme Court ordered
1he state to pay l~gal fees lor the Ohio

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While none of the 175 men on Ohio's death row are there as a "'suit of a Gallia or Meigs County ca,.,, six of the 343 people executed in Ohio between 1885 and 1963 were sent ot death from Meigs
and Gallia County murder CIISeS. While the most r«ent loc:al case
was in 1928, an unusual case was a 1926 murder committed by three
Meigs County men of another man "who knew too much" about their
bootlegging operation. The trio died in quick succession in the electric chair on September 2, 1926.
may have been applied. ''I'm nut
even saying that the Supreme Court
of Ohio did use the wrong slandard.
but it is a concern to me. " said the
Cl inwn appointee to the federal
bench.
If Berry's exec uti on takes place.

Ohio will be the 30th stale in the state
to carry our an eKecution since the
Ohio Supreme Court reinstated the
death penalty in 1976 with new
guidelines. Ohio reinstated its death
penally in 1981.

few hours after she l~ft to go hunting
with her boy fri~ nd . Edward Pons. in
an isolated woods along Bi g Rock
Road.
Polls told authonties he heard but
didn' t see Mcintosh shoot herself m
the chest with a long-barrel shotgun.
The case was ruled a suicide and
closed.
Mcintosh's mother. Patsy Newsome . has long contended her daughter couldn ' t have reached the trigge r
and ha.s lobbied for an in vestigation
to prove it.
In January 1996. the famil y won
a wrongful death lawsuit againsl
Pous. who has ye t to be~ in paying on
the $1 million judgment against him .

Late last year. Jac kson Couniy SherifT Gregg Kiekr. who was not sht:rilf at the lime of Mcintosh's death.
agreed to try to arrange an exhumalion .
The autopsy that did not take place
in 1989 was s.:heduled Ill be performed today in Col mbus by Patrick
Fardal. deputy Fmn~lin Cnunty coroner.

Starrs. i.l professor al George
Washington Uni versity in Washing·
ton. will be present at the autopsy 10
collect sample s for independent
analys is .
Starrs is donating his time in the
Mcintosh case .
" You sec 'lltneone'lik e Mrs. New-

some who's heen struggling for year.;,
and it seems that she deserves some
support," Starrs said. " In addition,
the rase is very intriguing to me."
Although no one has been named
as a sus peel and no charges are imminent. the exhumation was videotaped for th e Ohio public defender 's
office .
" If something does come up. a
man's got a ri ghttoddend himself. "
Newsome 'aid. "!'u nderstand that ."
But Starrs said the autop,y may
prove eve n more difficult than
expected. Water thai got into the vault .
at Fairmount Ce metery also seeped
1010 the coffin . Starrs said that could
drastically affect the amount of tissue
available for examination.

Fight continues over school-funding fees

s~

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Jeanette, or Linda,
The Experienced Travel
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~ver

JACKSON (AP) - The family of
Malinda Mcintosh are hoping an
autopsy on her exhumed body wi II
yield clues to how she died nearly
nine years ago.
Celebrity exhumer James Starrs
looked on Tuesday as Mclntosli's
coffin ·was · j!ulled ·rmm· a watery

M A S T E R

Six from Meigs, Gallia
were among 343 people
excuted by state officials

Autopsy to be performed on body
of wonran who died nine years ago

Wednilday, February 25, 1998

Page 1\Nelve- Gallla, Mason, Meigs 1998 Bridal Edition

injuries, including blows to the head,
Furth~rmore. because those quesreceived by Berry at the hands of fel - tions were not addressed. the Ohio
low death-row inmates during an Supreme Court did not use the propuprising on September 7, 1997 ar~ er legal standard which says couns
also now included.
must determine whether or not a
In federal court Wednesday. argu- defendant 's mental condition may
ing on behalf of Berry's family was have affected their capacity to make
assistant stale public defender Larry a rat ional decision. argued Komp.
Komp, who said that two courtSimon Karas, deputy chief counappointep psychiatrists --upon which se l for the Ohio Allorney General 's
the Ohio Supreme Court based their Office. countered in coun that the
finding of Berry's mental competen - Ohio Supreme Court's decision was
cy -- did not a'k him the right ques- based on case law which incmporaltions .
ed this standard.
"They should have been askine
He said the public defenders were
him does he understand his leg:ii merely raising the possibility of menoptions and is he rationally choosing tal incompetency and that "clear and
those options." said Komp. Instead. ~.:onvincing·· evidence of mental
Komp said both doctors turned away incompetency is needed to overrule a
from those questions when Berry l01•er coun·s decision.
"started clamming up and saying he
During his persistent questioning
didn't Want to discuss it. .. which lies of both sides. Judge Marbley seemed
into his personality disorder."concerned that an improper legal test

' MURDER OR SUICIDE- Family members of Malindjl Mcintosh
watch on Tuesday as the vault containing her coffin is raised from
Its grave in Fairmount Cemetery in Jackson. The body was
exhumed for an autopsy. Mcintosh was originally believed to have
committed suicide on a hunting trip in 1989, but th~ Is now in
doubt (AP)

Pickens seeks GOP nod
in county commission 'race
Pany Goeglein Pickens of
Pomeroy is se~king the Republican
nomination to the offire of Meigs
Ctmn:y Ctlmrni ssinn~r.
A fourth-generation resident of
Meigs County. Pickens said she "&lt;'~ks
to ''expand her serv ict:s to th.: coun·
ty a~ commi ssioner."
She is a member'of the Route JJ
Comminee. Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce. Meigs County Repuhlican Central Comm inee. Beta Sigma
Phi sorority. president of the Meigs
County Republican Women. Eastern
Band Boosters and the Meigs County Extension Advisory Council.
Recent improvements like the
Meigs County branch of the University of Rio Grande. the arrival of the
Della Queen and the buildin g of the
new Eastern Local Elementary
School point to the strength and success or Meigs County. she said.
"Effectiv~ representation. dedication, and hard work wi II bring even
greater achievements to the countY:"
she said.
"The first step in ex panding Meigs
· County's assets is to elect a full -time
commissioner who dedicates themse lves to the needs of our residents
and act ns ambassadors of Meigs
County to other regions." she said.
Pickens said she would establish

Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of
School Funding when it ruled in
March that Ohio's sc hool-fundin g
sy~ te rn was unt.·onstitutional.
Perry Co unt y Common Plea'
Jud ~e Linton Lewis Jr. redu&lt;ed the
bill in November. 'aying the state did
not h:.lVe to pay Sf)me ex;pen'e'. ~u c h

wanb t o~ reimbursed for those fees.

Col umbus auorne y Keil h McNamara testilied lor the stale alter
rt:view ing the hill and 4Ue-.,tiont:d the
le ngth nf several con fer~nce ,,

expenses ' uhmitted for meal &lt;and the
number of hour&lt; a11orneys worked on
the c;t"tt! .

c:xpert witne., s fei:s .
Fm exa mple. McNamara said
State· ~lt torne y s questioned sever- allorney Nic holas Pinner reported
al other expen..;e, during a hearing ' pending 10 hours in trial on Nov. II .
Tue,sday before Lewis.
llJl).1 . when the:: l:OUrt was dosed for
The coalition already has p•ml Wtcran' Day. And he said an allnr$13 million of 'the total bill and ncy billed tho coalition for 14 houf\
i.IS

of work in a ..,ingk Ll ay. whik on
another day. eight penpk 'pent 94
hour~

working nn th~: •.:~t..,~: .
. Coa lit ion atlllrnc y Quintin F.

Lind~rnith ~aid

tht:n: were ..,umt:

mi ~·

take' on the hill. For example. Pittner
wa... not in court on Vetc::rans Day hut
wa.., in tht: o tTio: preparing hlr trral
the nexl day. he .'aid.
Coa lition

attorn~)

Quintin L inJ-

srnith 'C iid tnday S~44 . 1 KKl of I he hoi I.
i ~ in di,putc . He ' itid BriL· ~er &amp; Ed..lcr agreed to cut
put~d

~64 .000

nf the dj, _

amount earlier th" wed

Treasurer urges 'no' vote on May 5 .

COLUMBUS (AP) - Treasurer
K~nneth Blackwell is urging voters to
defeat a May 5 ballot issue that would
oncrease the sales tax by a penny per
dollar Ill fund school improvements
and provide property tax relief.
Blackwell. in a speech tu about 50
peoP.Ie at the (::apital Club. said
Wednesday lhal cuts in state agency
budgets. including money for Med icaid. plus privatizing school serv ices

~uch

as transportati (lfl wt1ukl ~ave the

stale ahout $X!M l mi ll ion a year.
Backers of the Legislature approved .. all!" tux incrt!a~e . . ay it
would raise abllut $1.1 billion a year
to be even ly split hetwecn educati on
and tax rdkf for homeowna.'i.
The ballnl i~sue i~ in re~pon ... e lO
la't year' Supreme Coull ruling thai
lhe current .;ystem i ~ uncon ~ti tUiion ­

among th~ ' l&lt;t te \ 611 puhlic ~L"hvol
t.Ji , trict' ami an o ver-re liance on
pmjx:rty I axe' 111 pay for &lt;ehonh .
Blackwdl . whn j, running for~cc·
retary of ' tat~ hut ' aid hi! wa' . , peaking WeJne, day a. . trea.,.urer. t.lt....e,n ·,
th1nk the t;tx increa'tt: j.., nt:ce.., ,ary.
··1L"nntmue to hel icve that we can
fund our "' Y "'I ~m of public education

.
with dollars I hat exi.,l already wolhin
our present rewn ue pool." Blac~ wdl
'aid after the 'peech.
He said he had received crit ici' m
fn r prnpo,ing Medicaid l:U l.., , whirh
he li"t diJ in Ju ly. But he aJJcJ 1ha1
it can he: done withou t cuttin1.! . , er.
vic~.!' for the poor. t-Ic 'aid manYJ)t.!n·
pie in the program ' houldn 't he.

al hecause of funding ine4uitie,

Report: CIA drafts
Iraq sabotage plan
NEW YORK - The-CIA has
drafted plans to toppl~ Saddam Hussein by enlisting Kurdish an,d Shiite
agents to sabotage key economic and
political targets in Iraq, The New
York Times reponed today.
The plan. which would be the fifth
covert attempt by the Central Intelligence Agency to get rid of the Iraqi .
president. must be approved by Pres·
PArrY G. PICKENS
ident Clinton. Many of the Clinton's
daily office hours which would be advisers are skeptical of the proposopen to the publ ic to ask questions al. according to the Times.
and voice concerns. She said she
would also be avai lable to attend
CIA Director George Tenet ha•
meetings of any group or organiza- told Clinton the plan is risky. the
tion requesting she speci ticall_y Times reported. and Na1ional Secuaddress thei r concerns and regularly rity Adviser Sandy Berger doubts the
auend meetings outside of the imme- agency's ability to undermine Husdiate area in order to make others sein.
aware of Meigs County's potential
The plan would try to weaken the
an~ also stay up to date on grant
Iraqi leader by damaging the counopponunities available to the county. try's economy, the Times said. It

wou ld target fm destruction utllny
plants and government bmadca.st stations. and increase poli tical pressure
through propaganda programs Iike a
.. Radio Free Iraq " broadcast to Baghdad.
"This is not a propaganda operation." an unidenti~ed ~~nior government official told the newspaper.
"This is a major campaign of sabll·
tag e.
If approved. the plan could co't
tens of million s of do ll ars and
become one or' the largest coven
operations since the end of the Cold
War.
Since the Persian Gu lf War in
199 1, the CIA has backed Kurdish
Jlissidenis in northern Iraq, Shiite
Muslim groups in the. south and Iraqi
exiles and defectors in London and
Jordan in an unsuccessful effort to
destabilize Hussein's government.

SLIP REPAIR - Work is underway on the repair of a slip on state
Route 7 near Apple tree Est~tes near Tuppers Plains. Here, workers with the Ohio Department of Transportation use a crane to
drive pilings in an effort to save lhe roadway. The slip is located near another slip that shut down the road in 1996.

�Thursday, February 26, 1998

•

Commentary
~ . The Daily Sentinel

Page2
Thursday, February 26, 1998

OHIO Weather
Friday, Feb. 27

President Clinton gives
Saddam one more chance

As an eth1c of expresstve mdlvlduahsm swept through Amencan culture tn the 1960s, !he neutral serv1ce
ethiC of JOurnalism began to be
eclipsed " ParaJOUfl\ahsm," marked
by skeptiCISm, advocacy and adversanalism, gamed a beachhead fnst
111 alternative muckrakmg organs of
the New Left, like Ramparts and 1hc
Berkeley Barb Later, the mam stream press followed SUit, as war
correspondents m V1etnam found 11
hard to reconc1\e optlllllSIIC offic1al
accounts of Amencan m1htary
progress wuh lhe apparent stalemate
they perce1ved on the ground Then
came Watergate Two young metro
reporters at the Washmgton Post had
a hunch that the Watergate break-10
led back to the While House When
thcrr report1ng was ultimately vmd1
catcd, the new adversanal style 10
mamstrcam JOurnalism was consecrated as a professiO nal •deal
The mdcpendent counsel evolved
as a d~rccl result ol Watcrgalc Th1s
pccuhar new mst1tUt10n of Amcn~.:an
govemmcnl was created by a Democrallc Congress m 1978 Appomlcd
by a spcc1al panel ol JUdges rather
than an auorney general accountable
to the preSident. the law's staled
ra11onalc was to prevent a recurrence
of Watergare's Saturday N1ght Massacre when R1chard N1xon ordered
the fmng of Special Prosec utor
Arch1bald
Cox The tact
1he
that
DemocratiC
WE'RE •
Congress that
WORKIN60N
wrote lhe law
MARCH
exemp1ed
MADNESS
Congress (at
NExt
t1me ,
that
securely
Dcmocrauc
for the foreseeable
fulurc ) from
mdependent
counsel
mvest1gat10ns
10d1catcs partially partiSan

mau ves
Remember the Reagan years?
Meese. NofZiger, Donovan, Deaver
and others acqu~red personal ~de­
pendent counsels the way Hollywood stars acqu~re personal tramers
L1beral hopes for the "s le~ze fac tor" as a polillcaliSsue fizzled 10 the
1984 and 1988 preSident~al electiOn s But 11 IS arguable that IranContra
Independent rOi l~Sel
Lawrence Walsh s elecuon•weekend
md1 ctment of Caspar Wemberger
stalled a late Bush rally m the closmg days of the 1992 elect1on
Sexual-harassment law ongmatcd as a necessary legal protecllon for
women agamst JOb rcpnsals for
rcsiSllng the se xual advances of
supenors m lhc workplace But by
1991. the concept had grown so
amorphous and Oex1hle Ihat 11 could
be used as a pohucal we apon m the
hum1ha11on and ncar-rcJCCilon of
Clarence Thomas as a Supreme
Court JUstice, even though none ol
1hc nommcc s ,,1\cgcd hchav101 11
1ruc .tppc.~rcd to ;nect ""Yof the
legal te,ls ol harassment In 1992
rhc Year of the Woman · Democrats lurthcr cxplmtcd sexual harassment s poll Ileal potential pamtmg
Congress as a hasuon of out-of
rouch males who JUSt d1dn 't gel 11
The tactoc worked Women volcrs
1urncd out m force, carrymg a num
bcr of qu1tc liberal women mto
olf1cc and boost•ng the ClintonGore t1ckc1
By now. parapohucs has IOSillu
uonahzed 11 self Its sclf-perpctuatmg mslllullons need fresh execuuve-hranch scandal and fresh sca lps
to JUsllfy lhcmsclves You could call
thiS mulllprongcd mvest1gauvc
apparatus a vast nghl-wmg consprracy Bur only With a sense of rrony
It " nm nghl -wmg. and dcsptlc ns
Ideol ogical ongms, II 1s no longer
lcfl -wmg It" now a pilotless drone
And 11 1s zcromg m on the Cllntons
Den Wattenberg is a writer for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.

IToledo I 52' I
INO

• IC9lumbusls9' I
' ' ' '

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Showers T storms Ram

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today 1s Thur,da\ Feh 26 1hc 571h day of 199K There arc 308 days left
IR the Vl.:;Jr
Today' Hogh ll ghl m H"""&gt;
On Fchruarv 2olh IYIY Cnngre" cstahll, hcd Grand Canyon National
Park 1n Anwna
On 1h1, dale
In IH\ 5 Napoleon Bnn.1p.onc &lt;&gt;L.oped lrom the Island of Elha to hcgm
hi !&gt; second ~.:onqut.!~l ol I r.IO(.;C
In IM4b Wild Wc,l lrontlcr-rnan turned showman William F Buffalo Bill Cody wa' horn m Scou Count) Iowa
In 1848 th&lt; Second French Rcpuhhc was procla1med
In 1870 New York (II) s flr,t pneumatic-powered subw,1y lmc wa.'
opened to the puhllc
'
In \929 PreSident Coolidge ' 'gncd a measure establishing Grand Tc10n
National Park
In 1940 1he US A1r Defe nse Command was created
In 1945 a m1d mgh1 curfew on n1gh1dubs. bars and olher places of entertammcnt was set logo 1nto effect acro&gt;S the nation
In 1951 . the 22nd Amendment 10 lhe Constllut1on. llm1110g a preSidenl to
two terms of offi ce. was ratified
In 1952 Pnmc M1m&lt;1cr Wm&lt;1on Church•ll announced that Bntam had
developed 1ts own arom1c bomb

From the very begmnmg of th~
Momca Lewmsky busmess, you
have been told that what n's all
ahout •s cn me· No Silly not sex
Perjury Subornation of perJury
Cnme
ThiS IS the line that mdcpendent
counsel Kenneth Starr fed to Attorney General Janet Reno when he
.,;ought perm•ssron JQ. expand the
focus of hiS land swmdle prohe It 's
ahout lymg under oath Madame
Auorncy General he sa1d The fact
that he would have to expose Clmton' s nbald conduct was comudental
ThiS 1s the line the mcd1a has
hecn feedmg you to excuse their
prunent mterest m the scandal Oral
sex" Semen sta m s'~ Heavens no.
that's not what 11 s about It s about
cnme
Well. pardon my 1mpertmenee,
but I say thai IS a lot of hogwash I
say th1s whole epiSode has been a
polntco-relrg10us crusade from the
start I say that Kennelh Starr 1s Carne Nation and Anthony Comstock
and Pat Robertson rolled mto one
Every follower of news knows
the politiCS of 11 by now Rtght wmg

Flumes

Ice

Snow

'\

'

'

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

V1a Assoctated Press GraptucsNet

Today's weather forecast
By The Assoclaled Press
Southeastern Ohio
Today Mostly sunny and warm
H1ghs m lhe m1d 60' L1ght easl
wmd Becom111g 5 10 I0 mph IhiS
afternoon
Ton1ght Mostly cloudy A chance
of showers from !ale evenmg on
Lows from lhe upper 40s to around
50 Southeast wmd 5 to 10 mph
Chance ot ram 40 percent
Fnday Mostly cloudy With a
chance of showers m the morn111g
Becommg partly cloudy m the afler-

noon H1ghs m the m1d 60s Chance
of rarn 40 percent

Extended forecast
• Fnd"y mght Partly cloudy Lows
I rom Ihe upper 30s to lhe lower 40s
Saturday Partl y cloudy Then
moslly cloudy w11h a chance ol ram
dunng 1he n1ght H1ghs m lhe upper
50s
Sunday Ram likely Lows 111 lhe
lcrwer 40s and h1ghs m the lower 50s
Monday .Mosrly cloudy with a
chance of showers Lows 111 the
upper 30s and h1ghs 111 1he m1d 40s

Meigs EMS logs 4 calls
Unns of the Mc1gs County Emergency Med1cal Servile recorded tour
calls for asSIStance Wednesday Umts
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2 26 p m . sl"te Route 681
Pomeroy, Elmer Bailey. lreated at the
scene
POMEROY
4 03 p m . Cave Streel, Robert

Armenlrout Velemns Memonal Hospital Central DISpalch sq"ad assiSted
II 06 p m , Marn Streel. Amber
Robm,on . VMH Cenlral DISpatch
squad ass !Sled
SYRACUSE
7 0 I p m . Lee Crrcle . M1ke
SwiSher. Holzer Med1cal Center
'

qucnces of a world recc&lt;s10n
Fortunalely, !here arc forces at
work !hat m1ght salvage the situatiOn One ts a senous effort by Treasury Secretary Robert Rubm
Deputy Secretary Latry Summers
and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan to lobhy Congress on the
Importance of IMF rcplenashmcnt
Another " an awakcmng hy lhc
busmess community, led hy lhe U S
Chamber of Commerce wh1ch
seems deterrnmcd In lighl lor the
IMF as ll d1d only letharglc"IIY lor
fast-track
An ad h()( cn.tlitwn for IM F
rcplemshment organ11cd hy the
chamhcr" sc heduled IIIIS,UC a letler this week ln mcmhl.!r' s 1 ~mcl1 by
executi ves from more thltn 100
maJor 'orporatwns 1mohed 10
mtemauonal lmdc
Busmcss has nol yet mounted a
gra.ssroot' lohhymg ellorl lor the
IMF the way lahor unums d1d
agmnst fast-track - homh.1rdong
memhcrs wuh ma1l and personal
VISits -- hut thas ume. labor " nol
energiZed against the IMF and mosl
conl!rcss10nal
Dcmouats
arc
c.pecled to support 11
Chamher of Commerce prcSidcnl
Thomas Donohue sa1d m an mtcr
v1cw lhat he thmks 1hc trail to IMF
passage " " a goat rope hu1 I thmk
we II gc1 It lor nne scll ·.,cr\lnf! rca
son It's good lor our nauonal ..lntcr
C't
Similarly. Rep Dav1d Dre1cr R
Cahf a lead1ng GOP mternaiUmal-

sa1d he thmks some IMF fundmr
w1ll pass because most members
Will "hate to have lhc respons1b1hty
of a maJor econom1c la•lurc m t~c
Pactlic R1m on therr hands "
lSI,

Dre1er thinks Il lS hkely however
lhat Congress will vote only $1 5
b1llion m emergency lund,, not the
$14 5 bllhon Clmton " scckmg 10
expand the IMF , lcndmg power
Almosl ce rlamly Congre" will
mSi st that the IMF rcl orm Itse lf "t
a m1mmum hy makmg 1ts opcra11on'
more open .md hy hcmg more m~ls­
tcnt thal horrnwcr cnun tncs open
thw markers 10 U S ex ports
Some experts - lmm Henry
K1s..,10gcr to the Progrcssavc Polll:y
ln~lJtutc .., Edllh W1bon ~ arc urgmg
that lhe Cllnlnn .tdmmiStratum thmk
h1g "' 11 light' lor 1he IMF orgamzmg a 'new Bretton Woods" con fcrcn~.:c to retool world econom ic.: mslt
tutwns ltoundcd more lnan SO years
ago m a rad•cally d1tfcrcnt cnv~ron ­
mcnt
Thai s a good 1dea, hul 11 assumes
that lhe 105th Cong ress wnuld
respond as the 7Yth d1d -- hy dwdmg lhat the Unucd States should
lead lhc world Thrs year what Con gress wams 1he U S role 10 he IS m
doubl
(Morton Kondracke is executive tditor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Starr's ambush reeks of collusion
By Joseph Spear

•

'''''

ObituarY-

IMF vote is vital to U.S. world role

World

' PA' '

'

Iogue Kenneth Starr. son of a
appeals
JUdge
Dav•d , Sentelle,
Church of Chnst m101ster a former
B1ble ,a)esman, a man who stngs
who heads the
hymns aloud on hts murmng JOg
panel that chooses
mdependent coun.
How perfect for top deputy H1ckm"n
SCI&gt;, lunched w1th
Ewmg, a lcelotaling fundamentaliSI
nght wmg senators
They had begun lasl summer to pry
mto Clinton 's stoned sex life And
Jesse Helm s and
now God. known to work m mystc
Lauch Fa~rcloth of
North Carolina
nous way' had delivered unto them
after wh1ch moderSpear
a means of overthrowmg the mfldcl
ate
Republican
W1lham Jefferson Clinton All they
proseculor Rober! FISke wa.s dts- needed was an excuse to mvestlgate
miSsed and ngh1-wmg ex appellate some way of transformmg Clinton s
judge Srarr was appomted
alleged lax moral' 1nto a cnmc
It wa.s a poliucal ambush, pure
Through Momca's Judas lscanot ,
and Simple It may have been taCit Lmda -Tnpp, Slarr\ gang began
but Starr's llliSSIOn was clear Get workmg wnh the lawyers who repreB1ll Chnton
sent Paula Jones m her harassment
After three years and the expen- su1t agamst Clinton They set a perditure of more than S30 m1lhon Jury trap In his depoSition. Clmton
Starr and hts band of monomamacal would be under oath All they had to
prosecutors had failed to make a do was ask about Momca They d1d
case agamst the Cllntons They had Clinton dcmed a sexual ha1 son
put away some mmor characters and Presto, the pres1dent 's morality was
coerced the cooperatiOn of two self- cnmmallzed
confessed hars and Jailed a woman
How common ts n for prosecuwho refused 10 tell them what they tors to mvestlgate perjury charges m
wanted to hear, but they were about pend10g CIVIl actiOns? Former mdcto become fa1lures when, hallelujah. pendent counsel Lawrence Walsh,
a sex thmg fellmto their laps
wntmg m the New York Rcvtew, put
11
thts way "In 60 years of pract1ce.
How perfect for the p1ous 1deoI have never known thts to happen "

•

h " a snow JOb Starr and the

Moral Pohlcl need an ahb1 to mvcst•gatc Clinton's personal hfe The
mcdm need an ahb1 lo report 11 So
they feed us lhc en me ruse
What howling prclcnse What an
outrageous l1e
Where arc we go10g wuh this
pohtlco-rchgtous crus"dc" Where
will we he 10 Kenneth Starr's AmerICa wca the year '"Y· 2006? W1ll
ihc Moral Polllcl he roammg th~
streets, hke the Arab1an mutawa,
whacking women on the knees
becau&gt;c thcrr sk1rts arc too short 1
W•\1 the mspcclion of pre s1dcnuaf
hcdshccts for semen slams become
'tandard proscculonal procedure"
W•\1 the poltt1c1ans of tomorrow a~
lhc Balt1m&lt;nc Sun suggests, be
lnrced to Sig n sexual (jlscJo,urcforrn, sweanng to then punty?
The partisans and wowscrs arc~
humlhatmg a great nation , and the y
arc des1roy1ng a Oawed but fundamentally decem man
It " msanuy, and someon~ has 10:
step up and stop II
•
Joseph Spear is a syndicated:
writer for Newspaper Enterprin '
Association.

Obltuar, •• ara paid en'nouncementa arranged by local tunerat homea.
Oblluarlll .,. publlahed 11 r1quaetad to accommodate thooe dealrlng more
Information than J• provided In the accompanying Death Nqtlceo.

Barbara Ellen Log_an
Barbara Ellen Logan. 53, Pomeroy.
d1cd on Wednesday. February 25, 1998 al
Cabe ll Huntin gton Hosp1tal 1n Hunting
ton, WVa
She was born on September 8 1944 m
GallipoliS, the daughter of Howard and
Eleanor Jordan Logan ol Pomeroy She
was a second grade teacher al Middl eport
Elementary Sc hool and had hcc n a
reacher for 31 years For SIX years she
!aught m lhc Reynoldsburg Cny Schools
m Franklm County. before tcac hmg 27
years m Me1gs County
She was a 1962 gr"duatc of Pomct oy
H1gh School. and rcce1vcd her B A
Barbara E. Logan
degree from R1o Grande Coll ege She was a
mcmher of the Mc1gs Local Teachers Asso
elation Oh10 Education Assoc1al1on .md 1hc National Education Assoc 1a
uon . and was a former memher ol Bcl.oS1gm.1 Ph1 Sororny
Survtvmg. m ::uJd1tton to her p.m: nts ~1rc ,1 hrothcr and ststcr m law Ron
and K.1y Logan. Middleport 1wo nephews D.~r~n and Angle Log.m and
Kcvm Lngan. all ol Middleport lhrcc aunts Belly Zatkovic ol Bessemer
Pa . Nancy G1hson ol Z.mesvillc .1nd J.mc Rnhcrhon ol Col umhu' and .tn
uncle Robert Jordan ol Columhu'
She wa' preceded m &lt;Ieath h) hc1 g1.mdp.null'
Servile' Will he held ·" I r 111 on S.uuru.oy l'chru.~ry 2H \99K al ihc
Pomeroy Ch.1pcl ol f'l , hcr Funer.il Home wnh Re' P.aul Sunson oii llloltln g
Bun a I w11l foll ow m Rol:bp11ng.., Ccm~tc1y 1n Pomeroy
Fncnd' may L.lll .It the lunci .IIIH 11111: on F! ld.t} h llll1 2 to 4 md 7 10 l) r m
In . llcu ol tiowcr., mcmm1 .1l Ll)nl! lhutl on' 111.1v he m.u.k In M•d lllcpmt
EJcmenl.try School c/o Don 1lu H.1 nmng 619 l'c.ul St1cct M1ddlcpm t Oh1o
~'760

The Daily Sentinel

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Oh10 Valkv Put&gt;h!&gt;IUn}: Cnmr11nv/G •nnc~t Co
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elm Jl'l51agt J»td II Pt)m.;fll\ Ot\u1
MemMr llh: J\SS!'I( I lt~J

Pn \' tnd th ~

Otnu

Nr-.sp.1Jk' r A!&gt;s-.'lt: t uum
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Am Ele Power _. . .....
48 'h
Akzo ............ . ........ ........ 100
AmrTech .... .................... .41 '.1
Ashland Oil ......... . ......... 54).
AT&amp;T ................................ 61 ',
Bank One
,
... .. .. 56'!,
Bob Evans ....... .................. 20'1,
Borg-Warner .................... 59~
Broughton . .. . . . . . .. . 14'/,
Champion ...... : .................. 15 ~
Charm Shps ............... .........4"h
City Holding.. ........ .... . .... 44'!,
Federal Mogul ................. .49~.
Gannett .... ......................... 63'1.
Goodyear ...........................68 "1.
Kmart .................................... "'4
Kroger . . . . . ..... 41 ";.
Lands End ........................ 39"1.
Limited .................................29'1.
Oak Hill Flnl . ...... ... ...... . . 26:0
OVB ....................................... 36';,
One Valley ............................. 37'4
Peoples ........................... 4~.
Prem Flnl .............................. 24
Rockwell .............................. 58 ~.
Rb/Shell .......... ,................ 53"1.
Sears .................................... 54'1•
Shoney's .................................s~
Star Bank ................. ......... 51 1.
Worthlngton .......................... 17'1.

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10·30
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of Gallipolis.
.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Death Notices

Mildred

•

Parapolitics has institutionalized itself

lid/lor"""'-.., •
,.,..,..lo •,...... •lllcl•

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Com and lhelr daughler, Dol Com

.

AccuWeathet • lorecasllor dayume cond umns .111d h1gh lcmpcralurc'

t

By Ben Wattenberg and Daniel cous mmonty of
'UtUtJJiittf i111948
Wattenberg
ant1-war protesters
At the heart of Pres1dent Clln- grab the med1a
lon's current catalogue of poll11cal spo1l1ghl JUSt when
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
woes lies a stnk10g 1rony Whether 11 they are trymg to
614-992·2158 ·Fax 992·2157
IS a dehc10us 1rony or a b11ter 1rony,
deliver a message
of course, depend s on one's taste 10 of domestiC umty
pohtlcs
and resolve to a
Over the lasl 3(J years or so, a fore1gn foe
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Conservauves
rcpcrtmrc of new ;&gt;ohtlcal techmques was fashioned by lhe New m
government
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Left and honed m unconventional long ago learned to
Ben
Publisher
polll•cal warfare agamst more con- accept these thmgs
servauve opponenls who seemed to as the mev1table Wattenberg
po"c" a perpetual lease on the pnce of execut1ve power m a conWlutc House The tcchn1ques of the servative country w1th liberal medta,
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
new " parapollllcs" have mcluded cultural and legal elites But to the
General Manager
Controll1r
.•d vcrsanal JOurnalrsm, mdependent Chntons, themselves product s of the
~.:nun!'icls , ~cx ual · hara ssmc nt law
overlappmg eliles that forged these
new weapons, 11 must come as
l'llo ~~ ..-lottora tolho
btN&lt;t- ol loplt:&amp; .111d mcd1a -savvy poll 11cal protest
_ , lflllwnl (301h•om• or ••ul ,.., ,,. b o l l - ot r.lnfl pul&gt;ll-- r'IIIH '-11hesc p .~rapolillcal lechmques somelhmg of a shock to diScover
,.,. .,. ,.,_.., ond • 11mor,. •dlltd. IEa&lt;h llhould lnelude • . . . . - . tddre...
h.1ve hem used sen ally agmnst diS- that lhe weapons are not political
- '*'fll.... , _ numlloo s,...Ht • d... II lhtro'• •
or IIIlo• 11111 ,.. ullorero lholidllor, ...,. Sonllnol, 111 c'""' sr Pomono;•. 011/o p.u.uc conscrv.1t1vc targets of oppor- neutron bombs thai selectl\ely kill
.__45.;:;;,71:;'::.::••::.·:.;FAX;;;.;;'•;.:':.;';:;4.:,1m::·;:2~1~::;1.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. 1unlly ovc1 the l.,~t gcncrat1on Now, conservatives wh1le leavrng others
'l11klllgly 11 :\CCms as If many of the unharmed
most ~. h"r.u.: tc n stiL: tcchn1ques m the
Bdore the 1960s mamstream
lo!IIIIJ.ohJc p"rapolillcaJ repertOire Amencan JOurnaliSm was fa~rly
.u~.· lli:mg t:nnc.:cntratcd slmuhancstodgy m co ntent Back lhcn ,
"usly on B•ll Chnlnn He face., all at reporters tended to keep therr skep11
nn~...: .1 W1&lt;.lc-rangmg and long-runciSm about public figures and offi
By WALTER R MEARS
11111!:!
1mlcpcmlcnt
counsel
tn\ICStlgae~al accounts of public evcnls to
AP Special Correspondent
tum
.1
sex
ual
-harassment
lawsuit
themselves In pr101 lhe) mostly
\\ \SHINC JON - N~. '' llln~o.· Tll'llh' l l.' Mr D1plnrn.11
.1nd
.m
mv,t,I
VC
and
advcrsanal
took the publi c statements of newsSlhlllld S.tdd.llll Hu~''- Ill l ~o.'n~o.·~~.· 1111 tlu . . J~o..ll P1C., 1Jcnt Clinhm ....ttd thL·
P""
onsi,IUght
At
Oh10
State,
h1s
makers at lace value The pnvate
\\ llll \1 \\llllld Ulhkr~tl!ld tlh' l l s~ light {l\ ICI.II IIIC \\llh r.J id" ··~·1111 '1 IT . IlJI
huc1gn
pull~..:y
lieutenants
even
lives
of public f1gures were off-hm~.h~.·mh.li .l lhll' ll'h'~"'· II "'-'lf'lllh 'He.,
k.trncJ
whal
11
"
hkc
to
have
a
raults
S11 lll!.' r \\\\l \\L'IP'-'11' llhJ'II.'d llln umhnnt.UHln'\ II\ lour llHlllllh ( llnhll\
.h.!rL''-' J - ,t,lllL\\h 11 .. hplll.llh - In .1 UN sellkmcnt \.:tlllllllltllng h 14 to
njlul . . u.. p~Lt '"-'·IP~'th "'llt.:"'lllmtcrnallonalwspct: tt on tcanb
H~ ....ud 11 1.., rwt .1 m.utcl ol t1 U'illng S.1ddam the lraq1 prcsu.knl 'dill
made 1h~ s.une uc-.•1 m 1991 to ~et out olthc Persian Gull W,1r .md h,,, lll&gt;l
IT LOOKS UKE
honored n hul ol dcti nm ~ the &lt;~mmllmcnl and '"nfymg thai n w1ll he kept
WE'VE STALLED
And II II" fine clmwn 'aid Monday And If II s not Ihen the .tiler
TH~A\ UNTIL AFTER'
nat1vc will he a dear cour:sc ol a~.:t10n
THE OlVMfiCS ...
M1htary acnon umlatcrally 1f need be
And unt1l 1he Umtcd Stales IS salrsfied that Iraq IS keepmg ''' eommn
ment..Ciinton sa1d there wil l be no m•lltary stand down 10 the Pers1an Gull
zone where 33 ()()() Amencans arc deployed now, and more are bemg sent
In the fi ve weeks Since Saddam s regtme began blockmg UN mspectors
after restrlctmg !hem late 10 1997 and then backmg down. Clinton and h1s
fore1gn policy team had prefaced each wam 10g of 1mpendmg U S a1r stnkes
by saymg that they would prefer a dtplomatlc settlement to the cnsrs
They got one. brokercd by U N Secrelary-General Kofi Annan. back
from Baghdad to prescnl 1110 lhe Sccunty Counc1l1oday
To Clinton 11 IS satiSfactory as long as 11 sucks
He sa1d he wants all the deta1ls defined , but as a practical maner, any deal
10 reopen mspecnons could hardly have been refused with world and U S
op1mon d1v1ded on stnkmg Iraq
Wh1le Clinton had emphaSIZed diplomacy first, he d1d not mean bargamIOg or concessiOns It was to be diplomacy w1th the result set m advance Iraq• compliance w1th lhe terms Baghdad accepted seven years ago
That seems 10 be what Annan arranged. m an accord that also ts sa1d to By Morton Kondracke
well as a bevy of
renew the offer of easmg or lifting UN economic sanctions tf there IS full
As h1s Iraq policy md1ca1es. PresGOP nationalists
compliance wnh ellmmatmg weapons of mass destructiOn, w1th a proVISIOn Ident Clinton 1s commuted to U S
and hard-lme supto have UN -chosen diplomats accompany the Inspectors ro some suspect leadership m the world But what
ply-siders
Sites, a gesture to Iraq• scnslliVIlles
about Congress. whtch last year
The IMF also has
Clinton sa1d the sett lement. 1f Iraq ab1des by 11. w1ll enforce a proven sys- k1lled fast-track trade legiSiauon and
attracted opposition
tem agamst weapons of mass dcstrucnon - chem1cal, b•olog1cal and thiS year may block replenishment
from
mOuenual
nuclear
of the lnternauonal Monetary Fund?
1nternat1onal1sts
He sa~d mspectors are the most effectiVe tool we have" agamst !hose
Judg10g that the ASian economiC
who object to the
weapons the miSsiles 10 del1ver thclJ! and the capacny to rebUild them once cns1s IS far from over. Clmton has
austenty It 1mposes
found and dcs1royed
Kondracke on borrower coundec1dcd to spend h1s political ch1ts
More ha'c been clnmnatcd m seven years of mspccllons than by the a1r on lhe IMF wh1ch lend s money to
tnes, to the encourra1ds ol 1hc 1991 Gulf W.rr A1r smkcs 10 thiS cnm would have nsked an countncs 111 trouble and demands agement lis bmlouts g1ve lenders to
outnghl end to those mspcc t10ns And the admiiiiSiratwn already has toned reforms Fast-track " dead for thiS make more nsky loans, and to lis
down us cla1ms of whal an slrlke s would accomplish
year -- a VIctim of DemocratiC "ola-_ fa1lure 10 an11c1pate and correct
llomsm
underdeveloped countncs' linancral
Now wllh lhc IM F dcciSmn . n's weaknesses
There w1ll be moves to attach
the Republicans turn 10 'hm•
whether they remam the nation s cond 1110ns to IMF tundmg. the most
10ternat1onah s1 party - a' they were lethal of wh1ch w11l be a ban on US
through 1hc Cold War - or w1ll asmtancc to mternatwnal fam1ly
revert to pre-World War II ' usp1c1on plannmg programs that ment1on
abort1on as a woman s opt1on Clinof mlemat1onal mst1tut10ns
Early next month the Hou'c ton has vetoed b11ls contmmng soBankmg and Fmant.:lal Scrv1ces called Mcx1co Cuy language
Commntee w1ll mark up a h1ll h) before and prcsumahly w11l agam
'Fhc consequences of a U.S
Chairman J1m Leach. R-lowa. 10
reserve the lull $ 1S b1llioJl for the rcfu,al to rcplcmsh the IMF could
IMF that Clinton has requested and he dcvastatmg. tnggcnng a pamc m
to sludy ways 10 meet obJeCtion' to 'haky As1an cconomtcs, competitive
IMF pollc1cs posed by hoth conserv- ~.:uTTcncy devaluatiOns, trade wars.
polit1cal unrcsl and a wave of hankatives and !:bcrals
Replemshmenl face s mult1ple ruplcaes at feeling not on ly ASia but
penis. mcludmg opposrt1on from also RusSia, BraZil and Europe
The US economy, though cursuch GOP leaders as House MaJon
1y Leader D1ck Armey of Texas rently buoyed by 1ts own fundamenMaJonty Wh1p Tom DeLay ol tal healih lhe benefits of low mnatiOn a balanced budget. and an
Texas and Senate Bankmg Hous
mg and Urban Affa1rs Cha~rman mnux of Asmn money seekmg safeAlfonse D' Amato of New York. as ty could nol escape the consc-

Barry~s

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

With~e

M1ldred Ela1ne W1thee 76. Pomeroy, d1ed on Wednesday, Feb 25. 1Y98
at her resrdenl&gt;e She was born on July 16 1921 m the Bradlord Commu
mty of Me1gs Coumy. daughter of l~e Ime John W and Rnx~e Lee Myers
Eskew She was a member ot the Vererans Memona\ Hospual Aux11iary .tnd
was a homem"ker
SurviVI ng are her husband of 60 vear,, Charles M Wilhee. Pomeroy IWO
sons "nd daughrers- m-law. Charle' Eugene and Mary Wuhee ol R10 Grande
and Kenneth lames and C1ndy Wllhee, Junct1on C1ty. Kan . a daughter and
son-m-law Maxrne Ela•ne and Jerry Laverack. Groveport lhree "ster' ""d
a brother-In -law Margaret Andrews. Pomeroy. E•leen Hatlield, Middleport
and MaXIne .md Robert Marcmko. Tuppers Plams three broihers and,,_
1ers-1n-1.1w Edward Webster and M1lhe Eskew Dayton FranciS E'kew and
Margaret Eskew Pomeroy and Rosemllr) Eskew Beaver Creek. mne grandchildren 17 great grandchildren and severalmeces and nephew s
Be,des her parents she was preceded m death by her brothers Charles
W1lliam. Eugene and Dewayne Eskew. and rwo Slslers, Leona Web srer and
Gladys Frye
Serv1ces w•ll be held al I0 30 am on Saturday, Feb 28. 1998 at the
Pomeroy Chapel of Frsher Funeral Home Rev Jack Berry w1ll oflic•ale and
bunal w1ll follow 1n R1verv1ew Cemetery
Fnends may call at the fu neral home on Fnday from 6 to 9 p m
Memonal con1nbut1ons may be made to the W1thee Scholarship, Instructional Advancement, UniverSity of R10 Grande. R1o Grande, Oh10 45674

PRODUCE PROS -Jessica Sayre Is shown here show1ng John
Matson how to pot peppers She took first place m frUII and veg·
etable production wh1le Matson took frrst place m fru1t and vegetables 10 FFA District 10 competition

Racine-Southern FFA
places in district ·competition

Rac1ne-Southern FFA memher' rece avetl tounh pi .Ju:- 1n the d!~trli..:t :
John M"tson Mau W1i&gt;nn Jon Smu h .md .1 go ld r 1ttn g lor h~r trea!-.Urer.., f
.md Jmun y Alley recently parill lpat- book (lht&lt;.l \ lh ~ltr ... tl ltn~ lno vcr 25\
ed 10 lhe DIStnct 10 FFA S.1b .md yeM.., tor th L: tr~ hllfL'r., hnnk ) Jere-.!
Serv1ce Conte~ t Ag s~. 1~nu: Joh my Hill rc-~.:e t \-cLI .t h10nN 1L1tm:; lor
lnterv u~w dnd Productum At.n~o: ulturl!
hts \CU~I.If) s hoo~
lnlemew
AI 1he st.11 e bel M on H1l\
The foursome pl.tced lillh 10 s.,b Nathan H.une.., J.,..,nn Lunbe rt .md
TOLEDO (AP) - Dnvers ' hou ld each 10 have 1he1r l1cense' reinstated
.tnd ServJ~.:e Tha' co nt~..:t co n... J... tcd ol John M.\tson ,111..: pn., . , 1bk StJh: FFA
only have to pa) one lee. nol two. to 10 drunken-dn vmg casli!s
have their licenses remstated 10
Under a \993 slate law police ' e!lrng .m ObJect such .t"i tom.aloes or De_:!ree w1nne ' " fh..::" ho~\ c Pil''ed
drunken-dnvmg cases a JUdge has may suspend the licenses of ,u,pect- tlowers 10 a set ol JUdge' They .ol,o the li r'il ot two ph.lsc-.. nw. goe... to
ruled
ed drunken dn vers pnor to any court had to demonstrale how to h"ndle ah the top two pen.:ent ol m~.:mber... hlp 111
Juilge James Jensen of Lucas ac11on That adm1m,lra11ve ilcen'c unhappy customer and lmall) !hey the state ot Ot110 J~ "'lc.:.l S.1vrc ts one
County Common Pie," Court '"'d suspensiOn " 10 etlect for 90 day s lor took a te'l of 50 que,lmns relaied In ot the top two L.UH.ltd Ill!\ to l\)Ott! nd
dnvers have been paymg too much 10 a first oltense, alter wh1ch 1he dnver ,,t\es ""d 'erv.ce Alley .tlso pl .~eed lor S1.1r Dl,lm I St.llc She h." rank~d
have the1r licen,es re•nslated
can have lhe license re10s1a1ed for a lilth 10 the Ag SCience Job lnlerv.cw tir... ltn the da, tnll 111 reun Uhoob. ;mLI
Con lest while Jon Sm1th placed'"- .lt tht~ pomt 1' ~..un, t tk l cd to he 10 the
Jensen ISsued h" op1mon on Tues- $250 fee
day m a class-acuon law suu filed 111
Bul 10 many cases lhal occ urs enth an the Produ~.:taon Agnculture lop ::!0 Jndt vldu.tJ, an th~ ..,t a l ~
At the n.llmn.ll le~ d the ch o~ptcr
1995 b) Mark Po1ner ol Toledo and before a final d"pOSIIIOn Oi lhe Job lnterv1ew
In oth er Doslnct 10 compellllon was rated ,1, supenor Oa\ td Rou ~h
Steve Judy of Perrysburg aga1nst the drunken-dnv1ng case. wh1ch w11l
Oh1 o Bureau ol Motor Veh1cles
Include a l1cense •s uspenS1on 1\ the Dav1d Roush pl.tced l~rst 1n bnlh .md Jt.!ss1c 1 S.t\ re h,\\C p.ts:..cd lhl!l
D1verS1tied Crop .1nu Ag S"le' .md fir.,.L ol thrt!c ph .t'e" tow.m.l genmg
At ISsue was whelher. -p mers person IS COOVICted
Serv~ee k'"c" S.tyre placed liN 10 the1r AmertL.IIl FFA De-gree II they,
could be charged two fee s of $250
Frun ""d Vegetable while De.m H1ll P·'" .1 i l1hr~e ph.1'c' Ihey w1ll he 1he
pl .tced liN 10 Flnr.•uolture Andre,, se~.:otH.I .md thm.l st udents Irom Me1gs
Neutzling placed 'ec nnu m Special- Cou nt y tn t:\I.~T n:u~t\lt! tht s dWarq
ty An1m.tl ""d John M,uson pl.tced wh1lh ~oes tu the lOp two pc1~.:ent tn
first an the lhstra.: t 10 phu..:ement m lhe n.llmn S1eph.m1e S.oyre w"' the
Fnut .1nd Vegel"ble Jo,h Erv1n first to rclel\&gt;C th1 ' .twa1d tn Jl)l)6,
pl"c~d e1gbth 1n Bee! Produc11nn
The chapter w." lounded 1n IY~O ,
Neutzling reu!lvet.l a gold r.111ng
The chapter" prcse nll y wo rk1n ~
The concerns lac1n~ Oh10' Rural Ftre Department lnsur.mt:l! '"'~ue s
F~re Council and ,m;ll communlly will then be expla1ned preSided over and pl.tced second 111 lhe d~&lt;lnll '" on FFA week .Ill I\ lil t' and the annulrre serv1ces wall he .tddre"ed 10 a hy Joe Stewart ol !he Oh1o Volunleer lhe Reporters Bonk and Reporter' "1 b.mquet whll h wdl be held M.1rc~
workshop The IIJ9K Rural F~re Ser- Frre ln,urance Service&lt; Bre.1kout Wntmg Contest Counney Hame' 12 6 p m al Soulhern H1gh School
VICe' Spnn g Workshop w11l be held SessiOn II Will beg1n wllh a pre,enat lhe P~ekway -Ross County Joml tauon on Cia" A Foam by John
Vocauonar School m Ch1llicmhe on Wym"n The sewnd 1op1c w1ll be
granh and lundmg g1ven by Kurt
March 14
The workshop 1s mtended tor S1mon ollhe Ohm v,,lley RC&amp;D. Ed
members of rural I1re dep"rtment' McConoughey Ill lhe Ene B"''"
RC&amp;D. and Bob F1N ot the Buckeye
and elected ottic1als !rom count1e'
H1ll' RC&amp;D
townsh1ps. and 'mall commumt1es
The P1ckway Ro" voc.lllo nal
There wil l be a keynole presentation
aboul Pennsylv.m1.1's F1re Semce school " located .11 HIJ5 Crouse
Jn,lllule. and a legiSlative panel to Chapel Ro.od wh1ch con nec t' SR \59
d~&lt;cu" the tormauon ot an Oh10 F1re
and SR 23 approx1m.tlely 6 m1le&gt;
Serv1ce Caucus
north ol Chllllcolhe Adm""on "' 1he
Charrman John Peters w11l open dw r" $15 00 or reserv.11nms c.m he
up lhe event .md g1ve an updale on made before M"rch 6 for $ 18 00 dollhe si.IIU' of lhe Oh1o Rur"l F1re lars by check lo lhe Oh1o Rur.tl Fore
Coune~l Speakmg .tl lhe work,hop
Council PO Box 157 Reynoldsw1ll be Wal ham Hamollon pa't pre'- burg. OH 41068 Regrsrr.111on bcg1ns
idenl ol Penn,ylvanm' F1re Servace at~ am .md the workshop will co nlnslll ute
dude at 4 30 Lunch " 1ncluded m
Also mduded Will be 1wo 'Bre"k - the pnce ol admiSSion
uut SC'\S JOns" that WIJI &lt;.'OntrOnl V,\fFor additional mlorma11on re,,_
IOUS l ... su~ . . ot prommem:e to ttre ser~
dent&gt; may contact Nath.m Knk ol the
vtce:.. Rrt!akout Ses~1on I will first
Oh1o DIVISIOn of Forestry at 614
DIVERSIFIED CROPS ·· Dav1d Roush took first place 1n d1ver·
cover kg.11 1"ues dmussed by Lar
265-6711
silled crops 1n FFA District 10 competition, workmg m hay prory Bennet a Cmc mn.1 11 anorney
duclion, corn, tomatoes, peppers and cabbage He also received
ftrst place '" sales and serv1ce for his work at WaiMart and
Wendy's.

Double fees void in
drunken-driving cases

Rural fire services
workshop offered

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (APl - lndl an:~ ­
Ohm d~recl hog pnces at se lccied
huymg p01nt' Thursday a' prov1ded
hy 1he U S Depart men! ot Agnculture Markel New'
B"rro" s .md gilt- ste.•dy to weak.
~kmand .md n1o·;~m~nt light to muder.lle
US 1 -~ ~1 0 -~60 Jb, country
ptllnh 1~ tMl-11 m lew 33 50 pl.1n1s
11 00-1~ 50
us 2-1 210 260 111, n (M&gt;12 ()() 210 210 lbs 24 00-27 (M)
Sows , le.•dy lo I OO'i¥&gt;wer
U S I 1 100-400 Jb, 2 1 0021 ()() ~00 -5 00 lbs 2100 25 00.
S!Xl-6CK) lbs 2S 00 26 00. over 600
lbs n 00-28 00
Bu.rr' 15 IKl- 17 00 under 300
lbs 19 CKJ-21 00
E,t ,m.ued rece1pt' 1~ 000
Prices from Producers Lrvestock
AssociatiOn

Hog market trend lor Thursday
,really
Summary ot Tuesday 'auct1on' at
Gal II poliS .md M1 Vernon
Hogs ' 'e"dy 10 3 00 lower
Burcher hog' 28 75-40 SO
Caule 2 00 to 3 00 lower
Sl"ughter sleers cho1ce 5K 0064 00. 'elect 51 00 58 00
Slaughter he1lers chmce 57 50M IKJ 'elecl 50 00-57 50
Cow .. steady to h1gh~r all cow'
4K 00 .1nd &lt;!own
Bulls 'ready 10 h1gher all hul ls
56 00 .1nd down
Sheep &amp; lamhs I ItO lo 2 IXl
h1~htr &lt;h01ce wools 7-1 CtO-HO 00
chmce clips 77 00-83 00. Ieeder
lamb, YO (X) und down. "ged , heep
5H tKl and down

Couples issued marriage licenses
Tht! lollowtng marn.tge l!~.:en scs
were 1" ued reu.·ntly 111 the Me1g'
County Probate Coun ol Juugc
Robert Buck
Mllh .o ~l A T••blcr 29 o~nd An~d-•
Lee Br&lt;~n"".:orne. :!X h1tth of
Pomero) Jell rev W.oync Cunu1ll 12.
and Bre nd" Nad111e S11tes 40. holh ol

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Feb. 25 admissions:
Ha111e FIScher. Pon1eroy
Feb. 25 discharges:
None
Holzer Med1cal Center
Feb.25
Discharges:
Ethel Myers R"ymond Haskms,
Ann.t McK1nney
Birth
Mr and Mrs Ch¥d Smclw.
daughter. Pomeroy

•

If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of
Your Telephone Service, Then You Can
Call Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Free!!
DIAL

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
992·2588
VINTON
Gallla County Dltplay Yard
155 Main St.

J88.8603

992·7834
Holzer Clime ..
Jfere 'for 'Your Jfea(tfr., Jfere 'for 'Your Life tune

'

Pomeroy Ad.un l\·1r\ L llllc 22. '
Lmt.l'iter .md Shdn D.t,~ n Moore ;
20 Pc lmerov hrllll \ DtlcC.Ict.:k :!1. :
.tnd Kell v Rente Alk.m~ 14 bnth ol
Syr.ICU'e
j

Btc:tu~t \.\t n prntnt
Tbe 1\atumu jrdr ~ lmuratJce I nlt:rpnst
v.h1ch has some: of tht flnc ~t1n suranct
compamcs tn th r nauon "'c.: can offer a
v.tdc: rangr of lO\t:ra).(n for the: w1dtst
sptwum ol dmm ~, ran hdp JOU gtt
the msuranet }OU nnd Lall us for J frt"t:
quoH l&lt;x.la\ 1

Paula K. Dillon
ASSOCiate Agen1

J1m Rogers &amp; Assoc1ates
105 H~and Rd lUiie#\ Pomeroy, OH 45769
Olf1ce 740 992 231 B BBB 445-9426

~I NATIONWIDE
'lJ. ~!'!.~~~.~,!;
Nattonw106 Mutual Insurance Company
and aff1hated Compan1es
Home oH•ce One NaMnwtde Plaza ,
Columbus OH 432 t 5
Nat1onw1de' tS a reg1stered lederal serv~ce
mark ol Nauonw10e Mutual
I

�•

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Thursd~y. February 26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.
·
Page 4
" Thursday, February 26, 1998

ouiright ACC regular-season tllle on

Ihe l111e for Duke and a share al slake
for Nonh Carolina.
'
McLeod had 20 poum for 1he
Blue De vils agtll lht Georgil1 Te-lh
( 17- I I. 6 9), bul il was defclhC Ihal
made ihe dilfercn.;e .
The Yellow Jackels shnl 32 R,percenl (21 -of-M ). inclmling 1-fo't--1 5
fwm 1hree-p01 n1 r;mge . .u1d M.111
Harpring wa" held to i.l se:~son-low I~
pomt s on the n1ght h1.., un1form num ber was retued
"They're Ihe besl ddcn sii'C1e.1m

I've "en 111 a long llme."Techcoach
Bobby C1enu ns snid. "We worked
agninst six or "even defensive players

111

Dion Glover led 1he Yellow Jackels wilh 19 p(lints, while fellow
freshman Alvin Jones had 10 points
and 12 rebounds.
In other games mvolving rnnked
teams Wednesday. i1 was No. 7 Ken tucky 83. Auburn 5R; No. I I Purdue
87, Minnesota 83; No. 13 Mississippi 81, No. I2 Arkansas 65; Boston
College 72. No. 19 Wesl Virginia 69;
Si. Bonaventure 72. No. 20 Massachu,.ns 70; and No. 21 Michigan 77.
Penn State 6 I.
No. 7 Kentucky 83, Auburn 58
lefT Sheppard had a career-high 25
points. 15 from ihree-pomlrnnge. and
Scon Padgeu added 19 on ~-for-9
shooting as ihe viSiting Wildcals
t25-4, 13&gt;2) clinched lhe SoUiheaslem C~nference Eastern Di1•ision and
the league's b~SI overall record .
Doc Robinson had I5 pomls for
1he Tigers ( 15- I I. 7-8). who lost to
Kenlucky for the 12th sl raiglll lime
and played wilh jusl sc1cn schol;u·ship players due lo lasl week's indef111ile suspensions of Randy Hughes
and Derek Cai&lt;lwell lor violaling

practJce. and I thought we ran

our offense prell) good.
"Maybe I should h;11·e pul 10 guys
ou t there 111 practice," he smd. sh.tkmg)m head
Duke was up 44-25 a1 halflime
,IJid led h) a'- many as 29 po1n1s 1n Ihe
second half in wmning for Ihe I7th
!nne in 18 g'1mes
"We pl.1y logelher. we play hard
and we have depih, so we can slay
fresh." Duke coach M1ke Krzyzews' ' ~;ud "The thing I like is we're
111sll nCIII'C. For ihe mosl P"rt. that
defense has been re.1lly good all year
long "
H.~rpnng. second 1n lhc ACC m
both scon ng 122 3) and rebounding
!9 7). was guarded by al leas! five differenl Duke playe" in bemg held to
5-of-20 shoaling.
"You can't have everylhing you
w.1n1 111 l1fe." Harpring said of hi s
fu1al home ~a rne. "I would have
loved to go out w1th a \\•in ."

team rules.

No. 11 Purdue 87
Minnesota 83
The Boilermakers (23-6. I 1-4 Big
Ten ) snapped a 1wo-game los-i ng
slreak as Brnd Miller had 28 p01111s
and nme rebounds in his final home
game. Purdue moved inlo sole possesSion of llu rd place in 1he league.
guaranleeing it a firsl -round hye '"
the conference tournamenl
Eric Hnrns had ~2 poi nls for the
Golden Gophers ( 1 ~-14. 5-10). who
had a chance to lake wilh lead wilh
6. 7 seconds 10 go. but Sam Jacoh'&lt;ln
missed an off-balance 1hree-po1nlcr
No. 13 Mississippi 81
No. 12 Arkansas 65
Ansu Sesay lud 23 po inls and I I
rebounds as lhe Rebels (20-5. 11-4)
moved into a tie w1 th Ark:m ~:;a.,. for
first place in lhe Soulhe.ISiern Conference Weslern DiviSIOn wuh one
regular-sea"'" game lefl. Ole M"'
winners of ~ix

str~1 i gh t ,

extended 1ts

school-record home wmnmg st reak
10 19 games and earneu only lhe
founh 20-wln season 111 school hiS-

tory
Derek Hood had 16 points and I0
rebounds for lhe Razorbacks (22-6,
I I-4), who led by 10 poinls Iale in Ihe
firsl half Ole Miss used a 13-2 run
10 lake a 38-37 halflnne lead and lhen
scored eighl of1he firsl nine points in
1he second half
Boston College 72
No. 19 West Virginia 69
Duane Wood1vard scored 20
po1111s . Ihe Jastlwo on a JUmper wilh
22 seconds lefl. and lhc Eagles (1415. 6-12 B1g East) st1rvived three
1hree-poin1 misses by West Virginia
111 lhe f1nal 14 seconds.
Brem Solheim paced lhe visiling
Mounlaineers (22-6, I1-6) wilh 17
po1nts. Jarrcxl Wesl and Damian
Owens bolh mi ssed lhree-poinlers,
Ihe second going oul of bounds off
BoSion College wi1h 3.8 seconds left
Aftc1 a time'out. West Vi1ginia got the
hall 10 a wide-open Sol heim. whose
three-poml ane mpt bounced off lhe
nm '" the horn sounded.
St. Bonaventul't' 72
No. 20 Massachuselts 70 (2 OT)

Wellston, Wheelersburg boys notch Division Ill

Ball State· gets top
seed in tourney;
OU wins, Herd falls

burg meeung the Alexander Spartans
in a 4 p m. lip-oil
DIVISIOn Ill tournamenl play
resumes on Fnday w1th lwo evening
conlesls on 1he slale
Many fans are lookmg forward to
ihe 6 p.m. battle ihat feaiUres topseeded Chesapeake ( I9- I ) against the
slrong Oak Hill Oaks (15-6). The
nighlcap contesl al 8 p.m. has the
Belpre Golden Eagles pulling a 16-5
record on the line against the Nelsonvi lle-York BU&lt;:keyes coming in
w1th a 14-6 record.
Wellston 63, Federal Hocking 48
Guard Brodie Merrill's long 1nple
opened lhe scormg qut ckly. sellmg
lhe stage for a senes of three-poinl
guals Ihal Jeflthe huge crowd in the
Newl Oliver Arena siUnned .

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Correspondent
F1r:-.. twund

.trt um

111

the

DIV I:"' IOn

Ill boys· haskelba lllournamenl allhe
ol Rio Grande Wednesday

Un 1 vers~1y

n1ght saw

th~

Wells ion and

two lavoretl learn ....

Wheelersbur~ .

emerge

with Important '-'H.:tom:s .

In lhe lid-lil'ler. lhe Wellslnn Run"'"' Rockel s defeated Tn -Valley
Conference nval Federal-Hocking
63-48 fo llowed hy Wheelersburg 's
very Iough 62-56 win over Ironton .
Both wm n1ng teams advance into
1he semi-finals SaiUrday in a pair ol
af1emoon conle,ts. In whal could be
nne of lhe more outstandmg mulch ups of the tourney the Wellston
Rockels wi ll face Coal Grove in a I
p m. game. followed by Wheelers-

II was 3-0 Wellston before 1he efforls by lhe Lancers '" the second
Lancers ' Scott C~apman triggered a half the Rockels mnunued 10 build
~Iring of four consecutive long-range on a solid lead ot I 2- 13 pomls forthe
bombs by his team that saw them remainder of Ihe conles l.
In the learns' on ly regular season
recover from a 5-3 defic111o knollhe
score at 12-12 w1th 1:15 left in lhe meeling on Jan .6 1he Lancers losl a
tirst quarter.
6 I-53 deciSion al Wellston.
Even !hough Federal-Hocking
Ryan Bethel Jed W~llston in 1he
opening stanza wi!h four poinls while won lhe 1hree-po1n1 goal contesl 7-3.
the Lancers responded wilh three- Wellslon out-gunned lhem 46-20 on
pointers from Ed Beha, Chuck Vogl, 1wo poinl. goa ls.
and a pair by Chapman. It was a
Memll accounied for all nf hi s
layup by Vogl that lied the score at team's triples enroUie 10 a 17-poml
I4-14 when the horn sounded.
mghl whi le Chapman swiShed fo ur
Afler a 16-I6 tie early 111 the sec- treys lo go wilh I6 pomts for Ihe
ond quarter lhe Rockels look com- Lancer....
mand and put six 'players in the scoreWellslon lakes a I4-7 record mto
book enroute to a 33-24 halflime the semi-linal contes l aga1nst Coal
lead.
Grove on SaiUrday while FederaiDespile some greal indiv1dual Hockmg calls 11 a season at I I- 10.

Tim Winn hila lhree-pointer wilh
6.1 seconds remaining in lhe second
overtime as the Bonnies ( 16- I~. 6-9
f.tlantic 10) benl a Top 25 team at
home for the third lime llu s season
and r nded a 20-game losing streak to
the Minulemen. Caswe ll Cyrus had
25 point s and 13 rebounds for Si.
Bonaventme.
Tyrone Weeks had 21 poinls for
the Minutemen (20-8 .. 12-3). who tied
Ihe ga me a11he end of Ihe first overlime on a dunk by Lari Kelner wilh
less lhan a second to ph•y.
No.2 I Mici&gt;igan 77
Penn St. 61
LouiS Bullock had 25·points and
Robert Traylor added 16 poinls and
a career-high I7 rehounds as the
Wolverines (20-8, 10-5 Big Ten)
reached ihe 20-win mark for Ihe the
fiflh lime since 1990
Ca lvin Boolh had IR points for the
N111any Lions (14- 11. 7-8). who
!rai led hy 19 poi111s alllillftnne and by
as many as 27 '"I hey losll;&gt;r only lhc
second lime :11 home th1s "cason.

tourna~ent

: Is

rM

wins

SURROUNDED - Wisconsin's Mark Verahaw (left) and Maurice
linton (right) surround Ohio State's John Lumpkin In the first half
of Wednesday night's Big Ten match up In Madison, Wis., where the
Buckeyes' 61-56 victory was their first of the season In conference
play. (AP)

Federal-Hocking (48): Logan pomls. at 5M-52.
Bush 2-0-0-4; Scoll Chapman 2-4-0Leesburg. a 6-4 JUnmr. swiShed I0
16; Ed Beha l· I- I-6;Chuck Vogt 1- of 13 free ihrows. including seven of
-J-2-7. Pal Qumn 2- 1-2-9. Logan nine in crunch lime dunng the linal
Ban leu 0-0-1-1; Dusly Bond 2-0-1- lwn mmutes nl play.
The Tigers entered 1he contest
5. Totals: 10-7-7-48.
Wellston (63): Regm Evans 2-fl- w11h a 7- 12 record. havmg played
4-8; Brcxlie Merrill 3-3-2- 17: Mall only I9 regular season games insteatj
Burris 3-0-0-6; Man Sowers 2-0-0-4 ; of ihe usu&lt;~l 20. In 1he only meetmg
Hank H&lt;1~e r 2-0-0-4. Scnll Siurgi)J I· between the teams m rli!'guiM season
0-0-2; MZ&gt;rg&lt;~n Slevens 1 -0-0-2 ~ Kyle play Wheelersburg defeated lh¢'
Stew an 4-0-0-~ ; Ryan Belhel 5-0-2- T1gers 67-59 on Jan I7 nn Ihe Pir.tes'
hardwocxl.
12 Totals: 23-3-8-63
Ahough the Pira1es Jed by quarter
Wheelersliurg 62. Ironton 56
The Tigers and Pirales staged ll scores of I I- 10. 22-20. and 40-33. Ihe
real crowd-pleaser in lhe ni ghl-ca·p score was tied al 2. I4, 16. and 42.
game thai really was nol dec1ded un11l Ironton led on several occasions. the
the Pirates' ace. M1ke Let!.,.burg. con- last commg wilh 2:45 lett m the ·lhird
verted a pair of free thrqws w1th 53 quarter on Jason Cain's steal-layup
seconds Jefllo pul h1s leam up by si• for a 31-30 lead. The cal-quick l)Uard
(See TOURNEY on Page 6) .

Buckeyes win first Big Ten game

Ohio State downs
Wisconsin 61-5.6
MADISON , Wi s. (AP) - Ohio
·state coach Jim O' Brien crediled perSIStence for saving his last -place
Buckeyes from a Big Ten. shutout
season.
They won their first conference
~am&lt; of lhe campaign Wednesday,
extending WISconsm's Big Ten losing streak to 10 games with a 61-56

Scoreboard
Mmnt'~Jta :u Hnushm M 10 r m
Toronto .tl San Antomn K 10 r m

Basketball

PhocOI'-

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[),,\las .11 ML .\1111 7 \() p 111

1ill

MARSHALL. Bull St Wllllll'f v~ Tul\l..lu · l
wmncr, t-. 10 p m Ken! Akron w11mcr

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F.ast Oiv1sinn

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Other NCAA
Division I men's scores

ll: L 1!&lt;1. l!' LI!&lt;L

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Athletic lhMK'Lalinn·first ruumJ
V,, Clllmnunwt:.tlth M . l ,t\t Cm, IIIJ.L 62

NCAA Division I
women's scores

~0

1 1 1~

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Ohio H.S. girls' scores

( ~Jili n) .Iii)

Tnurnamenb

N lllmois 79 C'-·nt M1L111~.nt M
I cx.1s I C[h 117. N~llr.t,ka (J!

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Ohio H.• boys' scores

10
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Mason Bowling
Lanes results

M111n.1l Knl}!~· I~ S.llllll\1111. Sutll11l'lll ~·J
Mtl\111lc y &lt;ii7 Cllll\.uul Mo~pkY~urod 17
Sulllt') I dn11.111 -IIi C.. vm!!tun I~
Suulhlll~l•llll"lt.llh·r &lt;ii-4 N..·whul y ~:!

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Early Wednesday
Mixed Bowling League
(As Feb. 18)
:fum!
Record
Meigs County Golf Course 36-20
S&amp;S Sports Cards
36-20
Life On Mars
32-24
Tony's Carryou1
28-28
F.O.E. 2171
18-38
Thunder Alley Lanes
18-38

or

Hockey
NHL standings
F.ASTF:RN CONFF.RF.NCF.
Atl111111( Utvbiun

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4K 140

Teom high series: S&amp;S Spons
Cards ( 1892)
Team high game: S&amp;S Sports
Cards (652) ·

lf1 \

I I IOK IKtl

Men
High series; Roger Carpenler
(563). Loren Coleman (532)
High game: Carpcn1 c1 (214 );
Coleman ( I98)

$10.00 DOWN/$1 0.00 A MONTH
(with approved credit)
REPI.fiCEMErtT WlrtDOWS

Women
High series: Marga~el Eynon
(498 ). Pal Carson ( ~85)
High game: Eynon t200). Bell y
Smith ( 179)

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"Just about the lim~ you think it
can't gel any worse or more painful,
11 does." he said.
Jon Sanderson also scored I9
points for Ohio State's first victory
since healing Tennessee-Challanooga
Dec.l2.
The Buckeyes have averaged
about 60 percent in free throws in
conference play.
After making only one of th,eir
firsl seven. however, lhey sank 13 of
16 lme in the game includmg eight
s1rmght in the final minute.
" When you go 14-for-23, it doesn't look 1hat great." O'Brien said.
"but down the strelch when it really
counled , we made Ihem. " ·
Sanderson hila three-poonl basket
withjuSI under eightminu1es remaining 10 gi1•e the Buckeyes a 48-44
lead. It was Ohio State's last field
goal.
Wisconsin tied il 53-53 on a
lhree- pomt hasket by Sean Mason
With 57 seconds remaining.
Michael Redd . who finished wilh
I6 pomls. gave Ohio Slate :i'55-53
lead wilh two free throws. Mason
was fouled wilh 35.9 seconds left bul
made jusl one of two foul shots.
The Buckeyes 1hen pui Ihe ga me
away on 1wo free throws by Sanderson and four by Coleman.
Sean Daugheny. one of three
se niors playing !heir final home
game. Jed the Badgers wi1h 18 points
and I I rebounds. Mllson added 16
pnmts.
"I feel had . to say Ihe Je"'l," said
Daugherly. who became the 24th
WISconsin player 10 surpass I .000
c.treer poi Ills .
''I' m not going to m;.tke any
excuses for anybody I just hope people lake a deep look inSide themsell;es and dec1 de 1f these Jasl lwo
games mean anylhing or if lhey're
just going to quit now."

The . B.,dgers pl.1y '"'' io11.1lly
ranked Michigan Saturday.
" I'm sure we've got a major
regrouping job juSI 10 keep this crew
togel her." Bennell sa1d.
"I h:ll'e not fe lt that way before.
bul I felllhal way 1omgh1. There was
nolan efforllo come logether. which
is mosl disappointing 10 me ... bul nol
all ihm surpri sing considering lhe
k1nd of season we've had"

By The Associated Press
Ball State is the top seed in the
Mid-A merican Confhence wurnament afler all .
.
1\vo days after bemg t~psel by
last -place Central MIChigan and
falling mto second place 1n lhe MidAmerican Conference WeSI Division, Ball State clinched '111e No. I
seed wilh an 80-71 v~e tory over divi sion-leader Western Michigan
The win gave Ball S1a1e and
Western identica l records at 20-6
overall and 14-4 in league play. b"i
the Cardinals swept Ihe season series
against the Broncos and win lhe conference tie-breaker.
"I fell the team gave grem efforl
and it was a team win." Ball State
coach Ray McCallum said. " I am
proud of our team. They have worked
really hard 10 be champions."
Bon21 Wells. who became lhe
MAC's all-lime leading scorer Sal·
urday, led the Cardinals wilh 23
points, 12 rebounds and 10 assisls.
" I 1old Bon21e that I lhought he
made a s1gmticant conlribution to
Ball State and also to our conference." Western coach Bob Donewald
said.
Duane Clemens and Lamont
Roland sparked a 13-0 Ball Slate run
which gave the Cardinals a 59-5 I
lead with 8:35 remaining.
Clemens, who finished with II
points, started the run v.ilh a jumper
and later added a layup. Roland
scored SIX of hiS 13 p01n1s dunng Ihe
stretch.
Western got within three poims
with about 2:35 to play, bullhe Cardinals puJied away again on a threepointer by' Wells and a Roland layup.
"Overall, I though! Ball Stale
made better plays than we did."
Donewald sa id.
Rashod Johnson Jed the Broncos
with 20 poinls and Jermain Kimbrough scored I 5.
As the No. 2 seed. Western opens
the 1ournament at home Saturday
against seventh-seeded Miami of

Ohio (I 5- I I, 9-9), wh ich clinched a
tournamenl berth with a 61-52 wm
over Bqwling Green despile shooling
39 percent from 1he field.
"I don' t know how well we
played, bul we won," Miami coach
Charlie Coles said. "We pulled il oul
and we' II take 11. Our kids JUSt need
to rei a• more."
Wally Szczerbiak scored 24 points
and Damon Frierson added 22 as the
RedHawks kepi lhe Falcons (7- I I.
10- 16) oul of the MAC tournament
for 1he first 11me since 1he 1987-88
season.
" I didn'llhink lhailhere were too
many times when we had an open
look at the basket." Bowling Green
coach Dan Dakich said. "Thai's just
how it was 1on1gh1. We probably did
m1ss so me opportunilics. That's just
the way il is."
DeMar Moore. Jay Keys and
Tony Reid each scored II points for
Bowling Green ,'wh1ch dropped eight
of ils las! I0 games.
Wilh ihe win. Miam1 did Marshall
a b1g favor.
The Thundenng Herd (11-15. 71I) lost 10 Akron 65-62 Wednesday,
but backed in 10 lhe tournamenl w1th
the Falcons' Joss. Marshall. which
has lost three straighl, wms the
league lie-breaker over Bowling
Green.
That means Marshall. the No. 8
seed, will play Saturday at Ball
Stale
Akron (17-9. 13-5) trailed 58-57
with 4:3 I to play when Jammal Ball
hit a three-pointer. then scored ihe
Zips' last five points to clinch the
wm.
Ball finished wllh I5 points- all
mthe second half.
Derrick Wrighl and Travis Young
Jed Marshall wilh 12 poinls npiece.
George Phillips Jed all scorers
with 16 points and grabbed 10
rebounds for the Zips, who close the
regular season on a se'Ven-game winning s1reak and are the lournament's
No.3 seed.

.,
..
I ..

.
t:.~

~·· ,.-~

I
I

~

1:. •.

Akron opens 1he tournament Sm- wilhin one point. lhen hil another•
urday againsl No.6 seed Ken I, which from beyond lhe arch al Ihe horn to
lost at Ohio Wednesday nighl 76-61. lift Easlern (17-9. 13-5) 10 lhe win. ,
It was just the third league win thi s . The Rockets ( 15- I I, 10-8) will noll
season for lhe Bobcats, knocked oul have long to wait for a chance at;
of tournament contention long ago.
revenge. They're the lournament'SI
Sanjay Adell Jed Ohio (5-21, 3-15) fifth seed and play al Easlern again
·
with 17 points, including 14 in the Saturday.
first half.
Greg S1empin Jed the Rocket ~ ­
John Callaway led Kent (I 2- I6. 9- wilh 18. Casey Shaw added 15 points
9) with 17 point.s and Ed Norvell and I I rebounds. .
added 15.
Northern Illinois and Central·
Eastern Michigan is lhe tourna- Michigan, lhe other teams not headment's No.4 seed afler Wednesday's ed 10 the MAC lournament, closed
87-86 win over Toledo on Earl out their season Wednesday withp
Boyk ins' buzzer-bealmg three-point- Northern edging Central 63-61
er.
Northern (10-15, 6-12) got I 1il
Boykins, who finished with 30 points and 16 rebounds from T.J .O
poinls, hit a three-pointer wilh 54 Lux.
i
seconds lo play 10 bring the Eagles

!'

~

•
•

I'

' "'·~
'·

(

I'

'

MEETS
- New England Patriot and Meigs County native
Mike Bartrum signed autographs and visited with a large group of
fans Wednesday evening at Taz's Marathon In Five Points. Pictured\
with Bartrum Is Derak and Amanda Roush (on Bartrum's lap), the ·
children of Bill and Sheryl Roush of Syracuse.
.
'

DONATES PROCEEDS TO CAMP- Taz's Marathon at Five Points
held a give away to help raise money for the 1998 Mike Bartrum Foot·
ball Camp, In conjunction with Mike visiting the store to sign autographs on WO\dnesday. Bartrum (left) receives a check from Mike
"Taz" Roberts, the store owner. The money will go toward this year's
camp that will be held on June 19 at Meigs High School. Proceeds
from the camp and a golf tournament being held the next day will
go toward establishing a scholarship.

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PUTS UP SHOT- Marshall's Derrick Wright (right) puts up a shot
over Akron center Bruce Welnkeln In the second half of Wadnes-·
day night's MAC game In Huntington, W.Va .• where the East Dlvl·'
slon champion Zips won 65-62. (AP)
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La1d off due to a business closing or cutback
Has a layoff not1ce or public not1ce
Unlikely to return to that type of work
Eligible for or rece1ved unemployment compensation

859 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-1018

' ·''"'''till All"''hl'

n\\IV.U4h

: Gallta-Metgs CAA has available JTPA dislocated worker retratntng funds. These funds can be used
:to ass1st w1th the cost of IUitton, fees, books, and other allowable cost for eligible/enrolled dislocated
, workers who ltve 1n Gallia or Me1gs Counties.
·
Dislocated workers fall1nto several types, the fo llowing are four common types.

·9010 North State Route 7
:Cheshire, OH 45620..0272
•740-367-7342
·740-992-6629

II

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Tuurnumenls

LAID OFF, UNEMPLOYED: TRAINING FUND$ AVAILABLE

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:- "When you go through a season
like this, it would be very easy to go
through the motions," O'Brien said,
"but to Iheir cred1t. they nave come
back every single day and they have
consistently given us !heir very best
elTon."
·
" It jusl feels like a piano's been
lifted ofT my back," Neshaun Coleman said, having helped Ihe victory
with 19 points including five threepoint goals.
Ohio State (8-20, I-14). with a
school-record I 7-game losing slreak
and the conference's worsl percenlage from the freelhrow lme. sank
nme of its I0 in Ihe final I: I5 10 fin ish off Wisconsm (I 1-17. 3- 1~) .
" Wilh critical turnovcf' and bad
shot se lection , we conlinue to selfdestruct when the game ism Ihe bal ance." Badgers coach Dick BenneH
said.

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Lnn}: 11l'.Ldl .11 Jlnril.llltl 1 r 1n COLUMBUS

w•:STERN CONFERENCE

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Portland at Indiana 7 p m
TtlHnlltl at Orlando. 7 .10 r m
CLEVELAND at Ot!tro11 H p m
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Saturday'~ ril'lit-ruund acliun
MAR S HALL(II · I ~laLOa iiSt (20-6) lpm

Wednesday's lirst-rnund score

Crnlral Division
(hl lol~ ll

Ch.1rlnlh.'
c u :vn.AN O

MAC luurnamc-nl pairln~~

rm

Friday's games

EASTERN CONFEREN CE

Inm

U!.lh. 1)

Daily Sentinel • Page 5

MAC ends regular-season play

Duke, Kentucky win; Ole Miss upsets 'Hogs; UMass, WVU fall
By The Associateo Pr11ss
Rushown McLecxl said il all.
"This was a n1ght when Geor£ia
Tet'h was JO our way." he said
Wednesday night af1er lop-ranked
Duke beal lhe Yellow Jackels 76-53
in Ihe game befi&gt;re 1he remalch wi1h
No. 3 Norlh Carol111a
The Blu e De vils 06-2. 14- I
Allani iCCoasl Conference) were also
ranked No I for Ihe prel'lous meel lllg - a 97 -73 v1c10ry for lhc lhensecnnd-r.mked Tar Heels On Saiurdav. 11 will No 3 al No. I, wllh Ihe

The

I

·

Pharmacy 1

Expires 3·14·98

I

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

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Set. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday tO;OO a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. M~ln Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'1119

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II
I

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

_T_hu_r_sd_a_y_,_Fe_b_ru_a_ry:;_..,26..;,,_1_99_a_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;.__ _ _ _.:,_~P..:o:.:.:m=.eroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 26, 1998

Division IV boys' tournament action to start Friday

· ·........;..~ ·

, · - -··.. T

.,

~

~

By The Bend

Eastern to take on Sy~me.s Valley in sectio'nal ·semifinals
By SCOTT WOLFE ,
Sentinel Correspondent
On Friday al Alexander Hi gh
School. the Eastern Eagles meet the
Symmes Valley Vikings (6-14) at
6: 15'" the forst round of the Division
IV sectional basketball tournament
Eastern looks 10 get ~orne good
games from its younger players and
lOp se nior Steve Durst in an across
the board match-up. that is fairly
even among, lhe top five starters.
Additiona ll y. both teams are similar
in learn speed and size.
Eastern coach Tony Deem said,
"We have 10 lake away their inSide
game defensively and offensively we
have In be pat ienl. Also. we simply
have to Slop their penerration . That's
their strong poi111. They'll take it right
at you and challenge you tn slop
them . If you slop the ball they are
good at hilling the open man off Ihe
basket cut."
If Eastern has one disadvantage. it
is the fact that Symmes Valley upset
Beaver-Eastern in the last regular
season game last Saturday. AddiSymmes
defeated
tionall y.

Pons mouth Clay in the second of two
meetings.
Although they haven't always put
a "W" on the scorecard. Eastern
played several upper di vision clubs
Iough in the last part of the season.
Friday. its anyone's game.
Symmes Valley play s a sol id fun damental game wi th no frill s. The
Vikings press very lillie and often lay
back in a zone defense . The Vikin£
philosophy is to get the oppos it ion in
a half court game '" they are not a
great transition team .
Although Symmes is lOne orient ed. they occasionall y play man . but
a man -10-man of the half court vari. cry. Symmes runs a c ut ·a nd · pas~
offe nse with up-picks and pl ent y of
back-door cuts. OC(';I'iona ll y. they
even run a vari;H ion of the old three

man weave.
Much of the ol'ftlhe heg in s with
penel;alion from the point with cut s
from the elbow In the ha&lt;e li nc . From
1.2-feel and under Symmes is an average shooting te;un. however. they
draw a lot of fou ls hy laking the ball
to the hole. Although average shoot-

crs. Ihe Vikes can sltll light
up the trey's hitting 2-6 three 's a
game. Inside. though. is bread and
buller of the offense as SV utilizes its
strong post men.
Josh Ct mpbelf. number 3l " a 64 senior post thai averages 14-20
shots a g;tme, and is able 10 draw
plen ty of fnuls on opposing defen ses. In two outings Campbel l hit 7-8
;111d · 1 4 - ~0 at the

l i ne against

Portsmouth Cl ay. Campbel l likes the
up aml under and can lake it 10 the
hole . Buddy Ma ss ie . a 6-0.
S'l l"guard wearing # I:! av e rage~
ahout I 0 ;1 ga me. one of four men

with double fogrues . SV. however,·
gets m o~ t of it s scoring from its start ·
ing five ~
Jeremy Holland . numher 3. a 6-1
juninr guard. averages ju&gt;t under 15 .
points a game. He is a good ball han dler and likes to penetrate and is
shurp off the dribble . Ju,lin Myers
#2.:1. is a 6-J inside post player. At
onl y a fre shman he adds great athletic
abi lity to the lineup. Josh Myers #40.
a siK-fOOI se nior forward benefit s on
the baseline cut and scores mostly

from the paint
Eastern has the advantage in the
transition game, and perhaps the
de fensive edge. while Symmes is a
very strong rebounding team.
Coach Deem said, "We'll play
man-lo-man if we have to, but basically we want lo control the tempo.
and lo do thai we need 10 get them in
a half court game. We'll probably run
a lot or zone to lake away the inside
game and slop the penetration. If they
hill he outside shot , lhen we'll adjust.
We may run a full court zone press
and el them make the mistakes."
Eastern has been led this season
by freshman Joe Brown, who owns
a 14.5 average with four rebounds per
game, and a 59-115=51.3 percent
from the line. Brown is a great post
player, can play the wing, and can
handle the basketball. He can slop
and pop off the dribble, plus is often
elu sive in taking the ball to the basket Brown, however, is "iffy" after
suffering a severe ankle sprain last
Saturday during practice. He has not
practiced this week.
Next in line is Steve Durst, who

with a season high against Southern,
bolstered his average to 11.6, with
five rebounds per game. and a 2941=70.7 average from the line. Durst
is capable ·of the three, has good
range and is an e•cellent rebounder.
Durst can take the ball to the hole, but
is a much beuer set shooter. His
"Strulling Eagle" rendition is the best
in the league and is an emotional
boost to the cl ub.
The team's leading rebounder is
Junior Corey Yonker with a six-carom average and 4.1 shooting clip.
Yonker has had some big gam._ in
the late season. and works well in the .
post.
After missing last season. Mall
Bissell has steadily improved and
developed as the Eastern point guard.
Only a sophomore. Bissell has played
like a senior in several games. He
leads the team in assists (3.2) and
steals. and is h'itting.25-32 allhe line
for 72 percent. Bissell has good
shooting range and can lake the bull
to the hole a&lt; well. He averages 6.85
per game.
A key rebounder from the post.

sophomore Eric Smith may have to
move to the wing if Brown is unable
to go. Smilh ha• a great shot and
often benefits from the follow-up
jumper. Smith has a 4 rebound average and a 5.5 point shooting clip.
Senior Jeremy Kehl averages 4.45
points per game, has good range and
is a steady defensive player. Kehl
also gels his rehoundsand is an intelligent Ooor lender. He too may be
limited Friday because of a hack
strain.
The fonal senior is John Driggs
who averages 3.95 points a game und
is capable out'side shooter. Joey
Weeks is noother se nior with good
heighth and rebounding skill. Sophomore Josh Will and a couple reserves
will most lik ely round oullhe lineup.
Eastern. 4-16, has heen shooting
38 percent fmm the noor and only 56
percent at the line ( 194-346 ). Eastern
has often scored enough to win, but
in some major losses the Eagles simply have given up 100 many points,
around 1.400 for the year.
All in all. Eastern has a good shot
at a win Friday. Only time will tell .

IiLl has lost it' last four gmnes. f think
it is· important thai we gel off lo a
good start. In our last meeting we
were able lo establi sh a tempo early
and thai led lo our success. We can't
give them (South Gallia) any false
conlidence."
Caldwel l added, "We must play
with intelli gence and run our offense
when we have no fast brea~ . We must
play like a poised club. Things will
be difficult at limes so we must keep
our composure ."
South Gallia is led by Jeremy
Davis. number 32 on th e sc·ore sheet.
Davi s is a right handed point guard
that initiates the Rebel offense . He
can dri ve and can pass. but is not a
high percentage shooter.
Jason Johnson is the Rebels leading scorer for the year and wns an
All-District selection. Johnson had 15
points against Southern the first time
around in Racine. Johnson i·s right
handed and has good range as a
shooter and is effecti ve in the paint.
The other main scorer is Rufus Stanley, who is capable of hilling the
three. especially from the nghl wing.
Stanley must be controlled by the
Southern defense as he can break
away for a quick jumper anywhere
inside the perimeter.
AI post is Ju stin Coo•. who is a
good. sleady tnside player thai jumps
well. Cook is a shot blocker defen sive ly and is a big threat on the
boards. Offensively. Cook has not
-shown much range. At the other post
is Kent Buller. Butler is.nol a great
scorer. but is steady and consistent.
Compared lo the rest of the st&lt;ming
lineup Butler fots the rnould of role
player.
Although he was ul several games
with a severe case of the llu. Mitchell

by Bob Hoeflicn

II may be a while before the Stale Fair Band, 5190 W. !51st
fall festival in Racine is unveiled St., Cleveland. Ohio 44142-1741 .
but the Racine Fall Festival Com- Band applications must be postmillee is very much into action .
marked by Friday, March 27.
The commi11ee will sponsor a
Now about the All-Ohio Stale
concen by the Lewis Family of Fair Youth Choir. About 200
Lincolnton, Ga .. on March 21 al singers from grades 10 through
the Southern Hi gh School. 12 will be selected 10 take part in
Racine. The family is considered this summer's choir on the basis
the first family '" blue grass of their ability and experience
gospel music and feature s "Lillie and upon the recommendation of
Roy". ·The Builders Quartet will their respective school's choral
be the opening .act for the fami - director.
ly's program which wi II ge l
Those se lected will lake pari
'l~derway al 7 p.m.
in four day s of pre-fair rehearsal
And tickets are now available and then launch into a perforfor the concert. The price i' $6 mance schedule that includes six
for adults and $3 for children to eight daily concens during the
from the ages of seven through slate fair. Traditionally, the choir
12. Children under six will be learns and polishes a repertoire of
admiued free of charge .
nearly 50 songs ranging from
So that you can really have a classical to contemporary · and
carefree evening out , food will be from folk songs to show tunes.
available at Southern High Singers will include sopranos.
School beginning al 5 ' P.ili':-. so altos, tenors and basses.
you can eat and then lake in the
Charles E. Snyder has served
program
at the choir director since 1992.
· Concert tickets can be secured
Students interested in taking
from the Quality Print Shop, the part in the youth choir can obtain
. Racine Home-National Bank. applications from their school
Larry Wolfe, Dale Hart and Dave choral director or can write to the
Zirkle.
All -Ohio State Fair Youth Choir,
in care of the Ohio EKpo Center,
And since we're into music , Special events Office, 717 E.
perhaps, some of you high school 17th Ave ., Columbus, Ohio
instrumental or vocally .talented 43211-2698 and again applicastudents would be interested in tions must be postmarked by Friparticipating in groups at the day, March 27.
Ohio Stale Fair this summer. ·
Both band and choir members
The All-Ohio State Fair Band are housed on-site in the Rhodes
has been a featured attraction al Center and are provided three
the state fair since 1925 and these meals each day. Members of
day s is comprised of 200 of both groups are responsible for
Ohio's finest high school musi- the cost of their music packet and
cians. The 21 day camp which unifonns.
.
goes
with
the
band
offers
a
valuThe
1998
Ohio
State
Fair
will
i.
able opponunity 10 perfonn more run Aug. 7 through Auq. 23.
· than 60 pieces of music of varied
styles and periods. Young inslruYep, our days have, indeed,
. mental students gel to work with been gray and a•bil depressing.
a superior staff of 14 music edu- However, when \ye look at what's
cators from across Ohio ..
been happeni~g in Florida and
Interested high school musi- Calofornia. it might be good to
cians may obtain an application count our blessings. And. of
from their respective band direc- course , it 's always a good time to
tor or may write 10 Omar P. keep smiling.
Blackman. Director, All -Ohio

Is On The Road Agalnl

--..

W L
P OP
Team
Chesapeake ........ t9 t135t 1174
Marietta .............. 16 4 130t 1057
Wheelersburg ...... 16 5 t 41 t 1296
RiverValley ......... 13 71 t34 1088
Logan ............... .. 13 71343t2 tt
Portsmouth .......... t 2 8 t3571248
Greenfield ........... 12 8 11071030
Meigs .. ................. 1 t 9 t283 t 309
Gallipolis .: .......... 11 911191075
ovcs .......~ ......... t3 t1 t4301367
Fairland ...·.............. 9 t 2 1284 t309
Pt PleasanL ........ 8 t 2 tt851203
x-Aihens ................ 8 t 3 t 1731 270
Warren Local ......... 8 13 10641237
South Gallia.. .. ... 7 t 3 t t78 t 38t
Eastern ................. .4 1611021472
x-Jackson .............. 3 18 12t3 t487
Soulhern ................ 2 1810171390
• x-Completed season.
Post-season tournaments
Feb. 24
Division II
AI South Webster HS
Fa ~rla nd 59 Jackson 44
Rock Hill 85 South Poinl 57
Feb.27
Northwest vs. Fairland, 615 p.m.
R1ver Valley vs . Vinton County , 8
p.m.
Feb. 28
Portsmouth vs. Rock H1ll 6: t 5 p.m.
Gallipolis vs. Meigs. 8 p.m.
At Chillicothe HS
Feb. 23
Sheridan 67. Waverly 65 (ol ) Feb.

..

~~
I

--

24
New Lexington 57 Athens 42
Warren Local, 53 Circleville 49.
Feb. 27
Miami Trace vs. Sherida, 6 p.m.
Gre enf ie ld vs . Logan Elm. 8:45
p.m.
Feb.28
Hillsboro vs. Ne w Lexingt on, 3
p.m.
Washtnglon CH vs . Warren Local, 7
p.m.
Division IV
At Alexander HS
Feb.27
Eastern vs. Symmes Valley. 6:15
Soulh Gallia vs. Southern. 8 p.m.
Feb.25
Division Ill
At University of Rio Grande
Feb.24
Belpre 72 South Webster 37
Oak Hill 71, Crooksville 48
Feb.25
Wheelersburg 62, Ironton , 56
Wellston 63 Federal Hocking 48
Feb.27
Chesapeake vs . Oak H1ll , 6 p.m.
Belpre vs. Nels-York 8:t 5 p m
Feb. 28
Coal Grove vs . Wellston. 1 p.m.
Alexander vs. Whee lersburg , 4 p.m
At Athens HS
Feb. 28
Log·a n vs. Chillicothe . 7 p.m.
Winner vs. Marietta on March 7. 7
p.m.

•

groups wi shing lo announce meeting

and special events. The calendar·is
not designed to promote sales or
fund rai sers of any type . Items arc
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed lo run a sped fie number of days.

• Saturday Only! Special Low-Rate
Bank Financing On New And Used
Vehicles! On The Spot Approval!

POMEROY - Town and Coun try Expo 1998 com millec meeting .
Thursday, 7 p.m. secretary 's oflice.
Meigs County Fairgrounds. All
interested persons invited .

• Register To Win A FREE Tank
Of Gas A Week For An Entire Year*!

'

• Listen To Win During A Live Broadcast
By Magic 101 ·The Rock Station!

I

•

Loans Slbjeclto
credit approval.

'

.Mason

New Haven

773-5514

882-2135

Loan Hotline
675-ASAP

RACINE - Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.
Mor.day. Mock initiation.
TULSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - United
Methodi st Women meeting at Tuppers Plains Tuesday. 7:30p.m. at St
Paul United Methodist Church.

POMEROY - Lenten Ecumenical Worship Service , Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. 7:30 p.m. Speaker. the
Rev. Fr. Waller Hein z. Services
sponsored by the Meigs County
Ministerial Assoc iation. Re v. Bob
Robinson. chairman.

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustee s, 6:30 p.m Tuesday at
the town hall .

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Baseball
s~nups Friday. 6-7:30 p.m. al the
li re station. Meeting lo foll ow.

WEDNESDAY
POM EROY - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164. F&amp;AM . Wednesday,
7:30p.m. at the hall .

NEW YORK (AP)- In real life.
Glona Stuart wouldn ' t dream of
throwing her jewelry overboard the
way she did with a 6Q,caral di amond

A Division Of City National Bank • Member FDIC
Point Pleasant
674-1000

RACINE Racine Village
Council. Monday. 7 p.m. at the
Racine Municipal building.

Gloria Stuart won't toss her jewelry overboard

I

j
"$800 value. No
pwchase necessary.

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup~rs
Plains VFW Post 9053. Thursday,
7:30 P·n;' ·

• Balloons! • Refreshments! • Prizes!

duwn wit h ~~ 7 - IJrewru after making 2 ~ Df 57 fi eld

TUPPERS PLAINS - Revival
at St. Paul Uni ted Mctlmdisl Church
beginning Friday. 7 p.m. with Evangelist Fred Adkins.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - Bill Hinds. former pastor of the Chester Church of
·God. will he the guest speaker all he
THURSDAY
Rutland Church of God Sunday. II
POMEROY
Alcoholics a.m. in the morning worship service.
Anonymous . Thursday. 7 p.m.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church .
MONDAY
CARPENTER
Columbia
MIDDLEPORT - Leaders, Big Township Board of Trustees. MonBend Girl Seoul Troops. 7 p.m. in day. 7:30p.m. at fire station.
the sixth grade room of Meigs Middle School.
POMEROY - Friends of the
Meigs County Library. Monday. 7
POMEROY - Alzhcimcrs Dis- p.m. at the Pomeroy Lihrary.
ease/Related Disorders. support
group. Thursday. I 'to 2JO p.m. at
SYRACUSE - Su11on Township
the Senior Center. Topic. "Heart to Trustees . Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
Heart." Public welcome.
Syracu&gt;c Munic:ipal Building.

Car Loans To GOI

..; it.;

goa l allempts. just J of ~ free throws.
and Jason Ca in \ Oaring I 0 or
team's 16 rebou nds .
Ironton (56): Jason Harmon 4-11-12: Jason Cain ~ -0-1-9: Sha ne
Colvin 1-3-0-8: Mike Hen ry 1-0-0-c:
Justin .Collins 3- 2-0-12: Josh Farrow
6-0-1- 13. Totals: 19-5-3-56.
Wheelersbur~
(62) : Jui ce
Schmidt2-3-0- IJ: Jason Schmidt 20-0-4: Jared Carver ll-1-1-4: Mike
Leesburg 2-2- 10-20: Nate Conn 1-10-5: Scoll Estep 2-0-2-6: Jarod Darnell 0-0-2 -2: Mike Yelley J-0-2-H.
Totals: 12-7-17-62
Quarter t2tll!l;
Ironton
10- 10- 13-23=56
Wheelersburg
11- 11 -18-22=62

The Community Calendar is publi shed as a free service 10 non -profi t

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY· 28
9:00 am to 12 noon

eicht of hi ..; team \ :!-t rr.!houiH.h .

. . lmnlon

I

.

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

Division Ill tourney... !Continued from Page 41
got four of hi s team's eightthelts of
lhe bal l.
The nuwd of some 1.800 fan s
came alive with J: IH i&lt;fl in the game
when Shane Colv in·, area code triple
squeezed the Pirate l&lt;aJ to47-46. but
just 19 seconds later Juice Schmidt
nailed a trey from parking- lot mnge.
sparking an 8-0 run that put WHS up
55-46 with I :39 showing on the
clock.
Leesburg look game scoring hon ors with 20 poi nts, and Schmidtlinished with 13 for the winne". Josh
Farrow's 13 led Ironton backed by 12
point efforts from Jason Harmon and
Justin Collins.
Statistics show Wheelersburg hitting 19of38 foeld gouls, 17of 25free
throws. two blocked shots. and 6-7
sophomore Mi ke Yelley ,grabbi ng

Community Calendar

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
1911 Eastem'Ave. ·Gallipolis

A

-Area cage standingsAll games

has been doing a decent job defen- quick hands on defense . Freshm:on
sively the past few games. Hoback ts Nick Bolin has really improved
also a good, solid rebounder. Benji throughout the year and was a part
Manuel has had a consistent season lime starter. Bolin atlcled some key
and has played big in several late sea- third quarter buckets in the win at
son games. Manuel is best when he Eastern and has had many double
is moving to the bucket and is ahle to digit rebounding games . For his
strengthen the Southern rebounding. lanky fmme . Bolin holds his own in
Off the bench is guard Adam lhe post.
Cumings. who proved to be the
Up from the reserve team 10 fill
Eagle killer in hi s last game. Cum- out the lineup are sophomore Kyle ·
ings can pop the three and is a good Norris and freshmen Garren Kiser,
driver. Only a sophomore. Cumin£S Jeremy Fisher and Chad Hubbard.
has taken some knocks. but has Jason Allen underwent ACL surgery
gained a ton of experience Ihis sea- last Thursday. His offense has been
son and finished strong. Another missed, but of late Southern has
sophomore is Russe ll Reiber. Reiber adjusted and has set its sights on ·
adds a lot of life 10 the SHS lineup. bringing home a win for their fallen
If someone could lap his energy,lhey comrade.
could light up New York City. AI
Game time is al 8 p.m. Friday
Eastern. Reiher played a more con- night al Alexander High School.
trolled game and was 'l big factor in Tickets will be on sale at Southern
the win. He is a good jumper and hus High Schoolthru Friday.

Peop s National

-

.., 9 ... I

740·992-6614 or 1·800·837-1094

pill

S11 9 1111· 5 p11

~-! ~

eat of the Bend ..

•

Walker is the leading Tornado scor- aging around ten points a game arter
er at around II points per game. A a slow offensive start.
junior. Walker is not know for hi s
Known affectionately as Millsie,
defensive skills, but is basically the the Southern workhorse has often
best pure shooter in the Racine line- tried to carry too much of the load al
up. He can pop the three with a hand certain points of the season. but has
in his face and can slop and pop balanced hi s act here lately in helpinside the three point line.
ing the Tornadoes improve. Mills is.
AI point guard is veteran Pete Sis- the cornerstone of the SHS inside
son. the lone Southern senior enter- defense and is a good shooter in the
ing his lasllournamenl in the purple- I0-12 fool range. Mills is also a not and-gold. If anyone want s thi s game, ed rebounder and good ball handler.
it 's Sisson as his days are numbered
Freshman Jonathan Evans has
and he'd like to go out a winner.
moved up the ladder quickly and into
Sisson hit several clutch shots in the SHS starting lineup. Evans gives
the Easte rn game and has started to Southern an added outside scoring
lake control of the SHS offense. For threat and smart ball handler on the
Southern . to win, Sisson must con- noor. Evans abo is a big body,
tinue his late season composure and steady defensive player and reboundgood passing. Sisson ha s range and cr.
speed thai omplimenl his position
Troy Hoback works one side of
The anchor of the SHS lineup is the Southern post. Hoback is a blue
pi vot mu~ Ierr~d Mills . who is aver·- collar worker with a good shot. who

•

DON·'A'E IO,ORS, INC• .

Pomeroy, Ohio

Southern to take on South Gallia in sectional semifinals
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
On Friday. the Southern Tornadoes boys' basketball team enters the
"second season" with a first round
Division IV sectional IOlirnamenl
game against the South Gall ia
Rebels.
Southern. 2- 18. has beeti on the
upswing the last five or six ball
games and won its last regular season
game against Eastern. South GaJ~ia
finished the season with four straight
losses. according lo the scouting
report .
South Gallia has shown botli a
man-to-man defense and variou s
zones throughout the season. Against
certain teams, the man-lo-man has
proven efleclive. while a 2-3 has
been the Rebel s primary zone of
choice. Going back to the old Hannan Trace Wildcat days with current
Rebel coach Mike Jenkins at the
helm. this variation oft he 2-3 utilizes
the top two men on the point picking
up the ball up high. At both sc hool s
Jenkins coached learns have had
success with this defense.
Offensively. South Gallia runs a
lot of motion offense with picks
opposite the ball. Like Southern.
South Gallia has boosted its offensive
skills to become very much improved
since the middle of the season when
the Tornadoes claimed their firsl win
over the Rebels (7- 13).
Against a zone. South Gallia likes_
10 gel in a high-low situation. When
you collapse lo keep the ball OUI of
the post Johnson and Stanley are
capable of pumping in the three
pointers. Southern coac h Howie
Caldwell feels that hi s le.tm is "turning the corner" towards a more successfu l ulure . Caldwell li sted these as
keys to the game: "Since South Ga l-

• •

in " Titanic."

r

"I don'tthink I would have done
thai, " Stuart said Wednesday as she
tried ·on · pieces of a $200 mi Ilion
Harry Winston collection that will be
avaihtble for celebrity loans during
the Academy Awards show.
She p:cked out about $2 million

worth of jewels. including a diamond and ruby neck lace, ring . earrings and bracelet set. The collection
on display included. a $20 million ,
$70-caral diamond and a $1.1 million pearl necklace.
Stuart is the front-runner to win
an Oscar for best supporting actress
for her role in !he best picture nominee "Titanic ," and at 87 she is the
oldest Oscar-nominated perfonner
ever.

You lost everything you had worked
for liftecn years ago, even us
You proceeded to fight for custody
..of Pam and I - and won
You sheltered us from the cruel
world as best you could
You helped two broken-down lillie
girls grow up 10 be strong women
You showed us that through faith
nolhing is impossible
You proved that together we can do ·
anything
You helped us sustain · our love for .
God even though you could ha ··e .
· easily rebuked Him
You possessed a confidence in our -ability 10 see the positive and to do what was right
To those who say, "Oh what sweet
girls he has", I can truly say that
God knew what He was doing when
he put us in your care
When you didn ' t have enough
money to buy the things you wanted;
When you spent your weekends on
the road - picking us up and return- ing us.for visits;
When you slept on a mauress on the .
Ooor because we had only one bed;
When you saw bigger families
because we fell we were happier
than all of them combined;
When you had 10 s;~Crifice for our
benefit because we were your whole
life;
When you spent your evening at the
laundromat doing our laundry ;
When you had to be the chaperone at
an ali-girl slumber party;
When you spent your weekends
helping build a stage for my drama
class just because I asked.
·
We have laughed and cried together.
You have held your forst' grandchild
and given your last daughter away in
marriage. Through all the changes
we have experienced and for those
yet to come we depend on you to be
there. You are our rock!
By Michelle Starcher
Mason

1996Convertible,
NEW CHEVROLET
CAMARO
Red, Black Top, Z 28
Sticker ..................... $27,797
Discount... ........ :... $2,473.93
Invoice ............... $25,323.07

Oana~JIIotors

Pro,...m C:ar

1996 CADILlAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

8

11,180

OanaiJIIotors
PropamC:ar

1996 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

1998 CHEVROLET
1TON DOOLFf CREW CAB

Sticker .......... .$25,259
Discount.. .... $231~ .55
lnvoice ..... $22,947 i 5
Dealer Mark Up ... $~0 /
Rebate ........... .. $1
Dealer Cash ...... ...500

Sticker ........... $31 ,560
Discount.. .... $3998. 72
lnvoice ..... $27,561.28
Dealer Mark Up .. . $10

/

Yotar

Yotar .

prle•

rttl

~27,871 28
1998 GMC.C1 SOO
PICK-UP

AWD VAN
Sticker .... .. ..... $29,259
Discount.. .... $3028.77
Invoice ..... $26,230.23
Rebate ............. $1 000
Dealer Cash .. .... .$500
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

Sticker ........... $18,312
Discount. ..... $1698.34
Invoice ..... $16,613.66
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

Yota'

8

1111

prle•

8

24,740

Sometimes we need special
things this world cannot hold
the Holy Word the Bible
Has God's story told .

day comes into being.
God's wonders we are seeing
His love to us endowed.
That's· why we have his peace on
earth
and all his mercy mild .

1997 CHEVROLET
VENTURE VAN

.......

Every day is wonh living
When you live your life for God.
He can chastise you with His staff
and rod.

Ev~ry

Add't Dealer
Discount.. ........ .......... 2,183.36
Dealer Mark Up .......... ....$1 0

oo'o

Stock •GM1601

Every Day is Worth Living

We sometimes pray for things
that our Father knows we
do not need.
He told his disciples
His Holy Word do feed .
Hi s sheep arc kepi close
to our loving Savior's side.
He wants all of us in His Word
to abide.

Getl

23

/ a tf' '~-~

OanalJIIotors
Propam C::..r

1998 CADILlAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

1996 CHEVY CORSICA

Sticker ....... :... $39,145
Discount.. .... $2974.42
Invoice ..... $36,170.58
Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate ...... ...... $2000

8

7110
189

_....._..._

1

PER MONTH
"NO MONEY DOWN

P.,mem baH upon 1 .75" APR

ll&amp;lbfiC! tiD cndft epptCMiL to ,
T1UI ,... noll lnCtuclld

~
1998 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

Sticker ...... ..... $20,000
Discount.. .... $1694.62
lnvoice ..... $18,305.38
Rebate .... ..... ...... $750
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

Y•"'
prle•
8

y0 .ar

prle•

34,180U

17,88938

8

By Barbara james
Pomeroy

1998 CHEVY
K2500 PICK-UP

I Belong to jesus
My heart belongs to Jesus .. .
W~ose anns are opened wide.
Hope and trust in Him
You' ll reach the other side.
My heart belongs to Jesu' ..
In our heavenly home abo·. o:
My heart belongs to Jesus ...
And he has all the care and love.
My mouth belongs to Jesus to
praise his Holy Name.
We know of His miracles ...
He healed the blind and lame.

o.n.ratlrlotors

PropamCar

1998 CADILlAC SEDAN
DEVILLE
Loaded , leather
8000 miles

only,

29,980

8

4X4, 3/4 Ton
Sticker .... :.$25,054.95
Discount. ... .. $3095.17
lnvoice ..... $21 ,959.78
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

yuur
pric•

21,98978

8

1998 PONTIAC
SUN FIRE GT
Sticker .... ....... $17,570
Discounl.. .... $1231 .52
Invoice ..... $16,338.48
Rebate ............... . 750
Dealer Mark Up ... $1 0

f•"'
pric•

19,89858

8

My eyes belong to Jesus .. .
His wonders to behold.
Read the Holy Bible
Where +lis Holy Word is -told.
My hands belong to Jesus to
praise His name on high .
And he ' ll stay right by you ...
till morning light draws (h.
M.y life belongs to Jesus ...
on earth and heaven above.
And He will always bless you
the abundance of His love .

1997 CHEVY S-10PICK-UP

1998 CHEVROLET METRO

.Sticker ... ...... .... .. .......... $11 ,582
Discount ............ ... ....... $563.92
Invoice .................. . $11 ,018.18
Dealer Mark Up ................. $10 .
Rebate .. ........... ......... ... .. $1500
Dealer Cash ......... .... ........ $500

Sticker ......................... .$12,815
Discount.. ..................... $949.94
Invoice ..... .. ...... ........ $11 ,865.06
Rebate .... ............ .........$750.00
Dealer Mark Up ................... $1 0 .

yotlf
pr~e•

By Barbara Ja!Jies
Pomeroy

All

Bankruptcy does not mean that you
can never again finance a new
vehicle. Call me for details on how
you can drive a nice car now.
Ask for Mr. Barcus.

�..
I

'

.

'

I

Thursday, February ~6,

1'age

8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February

court motion asking that the sales
gomg on the day .of the alleged !heft
be accounted for. Both the batteries
and donuts were marked down -enough to lower the bill to $97.37
and the charge to a misdemeanor."
This is Ann talking. That
woman was very lucky to have had
such a clever lawyer and a lenient
judge, but doughn uts and cigarettes?
Someone should tell her she would
be a Jot better off without both.
Dear Ann Landers: After ra•sing
four fmc children, I thought I knew
all the answers. but I was wrong .
All the members of my family -parent s, s1stcrs, aunt s -- arc buried
near one another at a cemetery not
far from my home. Tw1ce a year. I
vis II the cemetery to make sure the ·

weeds are pulled and the stones are
upright. I am now a weary 76, wtth
two artificial hips, and find it difficult to keep &lt;Iaing this.
My sons live out of state, so I
called my two lovely, successful
daughters and asked for their assistance. They told me in no uqcertain
terms that they wanted nothmg to do
with taking care of our "old folks •
graves."
Where have I gone wrong? If no
one takes care of the graves, tlley
will deteriorate. What should I do 0 I
was totally unprepared for such a
response . Please advise.
Roseville, Mich
Dear Roseville: Pl ease don 't
take your daughters · lack of interest
personally. Some of those relatives

Custom Homes

were probably strangers to the pery combination. The solution ? .
younger generatton, and they may Use liquid detergent instead of soap ',
not share your concern about the I tried it and discovered that my feet •
upkeep of the graves. Most cemeter- actually adhere to the wet porcelain :
ies have perpetual care services that in my tub instead of slipping. As an :
will maintain grave sites. Check added bonus, tt's great for the skin. :
with the cemetery management I'm 88 and don't look a day over 75. •
office about the cost, and ask your -- Forever Young in Almond. N.Y. ~
lovely. successful daughters (and
Dear N.Y.: Thanks for try m-g to
out-of-state sons) to contribute to pre,ent some injuries in Landers '
the expense. They may find this Land. I'm not sure how it works, but .
more palatable than the physical I know many readers will pay atten-.:
effort.
tion to your warning and the ;,,ter-_
Dear Ann Landers: I read a cst ing beauty up.
while back that the most dangerous
room in the house IS the bathroom .
Send questiOns to Ann Landers.-:
That's where the majority of seriou s Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Cc ntu- :
accidents happen . The reason is the ry Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles. •
porcelain and tiled noors. when cou- Ca lif. 90045
'-V ·pled with soap. make for a very slip-

The Grammy Awards filled with surprise winners - and ~
~dd on stage happenings - but fans get to see legends:

Shawn Colvin, left, shares a moment with Bette Midler and
Kelsey Grammer.
By DAVID BAU DER
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK lAP) ~ 1\ singecrashing rapper . .1 pamtcd my , lcry
dancer. a PJ-ycar-old soul smgcr
who callcJ Boh Dylan " Bil l.. and a
serie s of surpn sc wwncrs - thd

MTV take over the Gram my Awards
and not tel l anybody'' ·
ll1c unexpected hrcathcd some
li te mto the formerly stodgy muSic
award's show Wednesday ni ght.
;•lmost upstagi ng hig wmners Dylan.
!'.ou l .. mgcr R Kelly and vc tcr~m l olk

art1st Shawn Colvin .
Colvin was walking to the Radio
City Music Hall stage to accept the
f~rst of her two awards for "Sunny
Came Home " when the microphone
was hijacked by a red-shined ODB
of the rap group Wu-Tang Clan.
. Apparently upset at losing the
best rap album Grammy to Puff
Daddy, he complained that he spen t
a lot of money for new clothes
because he thought he was going to
win . " Puffy is good, but Wu-Tang IS
the best," he said.
" I'm confused now... Colvin said
when the microphone was recovered. ODB was later escorted from
the building
Later. when Dylan was performing his song "Love Sick ," a shirtless
· man with the words "Soy Bomb "
pamted on his torso - who knows
why? - jumped on stage to gyrate
next to him .
Dylan 's response? Quizzically
raised eyebrows.
Perhaps nustercd a few minutes
later, the young singer Usher called
Dylan "B1II " when read mg names
of the best album nominees.
"Everybody has a bad day," he
sa1d sheepishl y afterward .
Dylan won that best album award
for his critically praised "Ti me Out
of Mmd " disc. He also won a Grammy for best contemporary folk
album and best roc k performance,
for "Cold Irons Bound ... To cap hiS
famil y's good n• ght. son Jakob won'
two Grammys for -- one Headlight."
the song he wrote for hiS band. the
Wallfl owers.
Bob Dy lan seemed moved hy the
llcs1 alhum award. sayi ng that he felt
the sp1rit of the l ~te Buddy Holly
watchmg over hun as he made lhc
record .
" In the words. you know. of the
immortal Robert Johnson. 't he 'iu ff
we got wi ll hust your hrains out. ...

said Dylan. who recovered from a
potentially fat al heart infec tion last
year to play for the pope and receive
Kennedy Center honors
R. Kelly 's insp irational ballad, "!
Believe I Can Fly," brought him
three Grammys: best male rhythm
and blues perfonnance, best rhythm
and blues song and best song spe,c lfically for a motion picture. He perfanned the song backed by a gospel
choir.
"'I Believe I Can Fly ' is the type
of song that God wrote," he sa id
backstage. "I didn't have anything
to do with it."
Colvm won song and record of
the year for "Sunny Came Home."
Together with best album and best
new artiSt (Paula Cole), they're considered two of the four most prestigious Grammys.
. Music legend Bob Dylan
Country and bluegrass artist Alison Krauss won three awards. Puff shared the stage with a shirtDaddy, Lilith Fair founder Sarah less man, sporting a painted
Mclachlan, celli st Yo-Yo Ma. soul torso - all without missing a
·
newcomer Erykah Badu and the late musicalbeat.
Stre1sand
also
backed
out of an
newsman Charles Kurah were also
e~pectcd
perfonnance
with
the llu.
multiple winners in the 40th annual
The
show
also
boasted
some
eyeshow that aired on CBS.
brow-arching
results.
Veterans
Van
First-time winners included forMorrison
and
John
Hooke
r
won
for
mer Creedence Clearwater Revival
best
pop
collabomtion,
besting
1
wo
front man John Fogerty and the-late
John Denver, who won for best chil - Streisand ducts and Grammy
dren's recording. "He really wanted favorites like B~hyfacc. Tony Benone... said h1s 23-ycar-old son nett and Cclinc D1on
British rockers Jam1roquai 's
Zachary.
The least surprising win: Elton "Virtual Insanity " won hest pop
John 's best male pop vocal perlor- perfonnance hy a duo or group wnh
mance award foi "Candle in the voca ls. heating venerable rockers
Wmd 1997," h1 s eulogy 19 Pnncc" the Rolling Stones. Flee twood Mac
Diana that became the hcst-sclling and teen faves Hanson.
All the surpri,~.:s . sam:t1 oncd or
Single of all time.
Singer Arctha Franklin deserved otherwise. unprc sscJ one singe r
a most versatile Grammy Award . A hackstagc .
"I didn 't hclicvc lhc Grammys
half-hour after smgmg her stgnaturc
could he "' vo l;~tilc ... , ,,id Shawn
~o n g. " Respect." :-;he returned lo
Paula Cole reacts to her win
smg the aria "Ncssun Dorma " from Stockman ot the soul group Boyz II
.
at
the
Grammy Awards.
Puccmi 's "Turandot"to fill in li1r an Men. "I didn 't thmk the Grammys
ailin g Luc1ano Pavarottl. Bmhra woulc..l he so &amp;.:rat.y ..

ROCK
INSTRUMENTAL
PERFORMANCE:
" Block
Roc kin' Beats" Chem1cal Brothers.
ROCK SONG: " One Head light" Jakob Dylan.
ROCK ALBUM: "Blue Moon
Swamp" John Fogerty.
ALTERNATIVE MUSIC: "OK
Computer" Rad1ohead.
FEMALE RHYTHM AND
BLUES VOCAL
PERFORMANCE: "On and On.. Erykah
Badu.
MALE RHYTHM and BLUES
VOCAL PERFORMANCE: " I
Believe I Can Fly " R. Kelly.
RHYTHM AND BLUES PERFORMANCE BY A DUO OR
GROUP WITH VOCAL: "No
D1ggny" Bl ackstreet.
RHYTHM
AND
BLUES
SONG : " I Sche ve I Can Fly" R.
Kcll)
!\LUES
RHYTHM
and
ALBUM: " Baduizm .. Erykah
Badu.
PERFORRAP
SOLO
MANCE: " Men m Black .. Will
Smi th .
RAP PERFORMANCE BY A
DUO OR GROUP· 'Til Be MISsin g You" Puff Daddy and Faith
Evans Featuring 112.
RAP ALBUM: "No Way Out"
Puff Daddy and The Famtl y.
FEMALE COUNTRY VOCAL
PERFORMANCE : ·' How Do I
L1vc" Tnsha Yearwood.
MALE COUNTRY VOCAL
PERFORMANCE: "Pretty Little
Adnono .. Ymcc G1ll.
COUNTRY PERFORMANCE
BY A DUO OR GROUP WITH
VOCAL : " Look1n g m the Eyes of
Love " Alison Krau ss and Union Station.
COUNT RY· COLLABORATION WITH VOCALS: "In
Another's Eyes" Trisha Yearwood
and Garth Brooks.
COUNTRY INSTRUMENTAL

PERFORMANCE : "Li11lc Llza
Jane'' Alison Krauss and Union Station .

COUNTRY SONG: " Buttcrny
Kisses" Bob Carlisle, Jeff Carson.
Raybon Bros.
COUNTRY
ALBUM:
" Unchamed" Johnny Cash.
BLUEGRASS ALBUM: "So
Long So \'.'rang" Alison Krauss and
Union Stat1on.
NEW AGE ALBUM : "Oracle "
Michael Hedges.
CONTEMPORARY
JAZZ
PERFORMANCE: "Into the Sun"
Randy Brecker.
JAZZ VOCAL PERFORMANCE: " Dear Ella" Dec Dee
Bridgewater.
JAZZ
INSTRUMENTAL
SOLO: "Stardust" Doc Ch~atham
and Nicholas Payton.
JAZZ INSTRUMENTAL PERFORMANCE: " Beyond the Mi ssoun Sky " Charlie Haden and Pat
Metheny.
LARGE JAZZ ENSEMBLE
PERFORMANCE: "Joe Henderson B1g Band" Joe Henderson Big
Band.
LATIN JAZZ
PERFORMANCE: " Habana" Roy Hargrove 's Crisol.
- ·ROCK GOSPEb ALBUM :
"Welcome to the Freak Show: de
Talk Live in Concert" de Talk.
POP/CONTEMPORARY
GOSPEL
ALBUM :
"Much
Afra1d " Jars of Clay.
SOUTHERN
GOSPEL,
COUNTRY GOSPEL OR BLUEGRASS GOSPEL ALBUM:
" Amazing Grace 2: A Country
Sal ute to Gospe l" Various Artists.
TRADITIONAL
SOUL
GOSPEL ALBUM: " I Couldn 't
Hear Nobody Pray" Fairfield Four.
CONTEMPORARY
SOUL
GOSPEL ALBUM: " Brothers"
Take 6.
GOSPEL ALBUM BY A

CHOIR OR CHORUS: "God's
Property From Kirk Franklin's Nu
Nat1on " God's Property.
LATIN
POP
PERFOR·
MANCE:
" Romances" Luis
Miguel.
LATIN
ROCK/ALTERNA·
TIVE PERFORMANCE: " Fabulosos Calavera" Los Fabulosos
Cad1llacs.
TROPICAL LATIN PERFOR·
MANCE: "Buena Vi sta Social
Club" Ry Coodcr.
MEXICAN·
AMERICANffEJANO MUSIC
PERFORMANCE: " En Tus
Manos" La Mafia
TRADITIONAL
BLUES
ALBUM: "Don't Look Back" John
Lee Hooker.
CONTEMPORARY BLUES
ALBUM : "Se nor Blues" Taj
Mahal.
TRADITIONAL
FOLK
ALBUM: " L'Amour ou Ia Fohc''
BeauSoleil .
CONTEMPORARY FOLK
ALBUM: "Time Out of Mind " Bob
Dylan.
REGGAE ALBUM: "Fallen "
Bahylon" Ziggy Marley and the
l'ylclody Makers.
WORLD MUSIC ALBUM :
"Nascimento" M1lton Na.,c1mento.
POLKA ALBUM: "Living on
Polka T1mc' ' Jimmy Sturr.
MUSICAL ALBUM FOR
CHILDREN: "All Aboard!'; John
Denver.
SPOKEN WORD ALBUM
FOR CHILDREN: " Wmnic-ThePooh" Charles Kuralt.
SPOKEN WORD ALBUM:
"Charles Kuralt 's Spnng'' Charles
Kurah.
SPOKEN COMEDY ALBUM:
" Rol l With the New" Chris Rock.
MUSICAL SHOW ALBUM:
"Ch1cago, The Musical. ·•
INSTRUMENTAL COMPOSITION: " Aung San Suu Ky1 " Wa~ ne

Shorter.
INSTRUMENTAL COMPOSITION WRITTEN FOR A
MOTION PICTURE OR FOR
TELEVISION: " The . English
Pat1ent" Gabnel Yarcd ,
SONG WRITTEN SPECIFICALLY FOR A MOTION PIC·
TURE OR FOR TELEVISION:
" I Believe I Can Fly ·· from "Space
Jan\," R. Kelly.
INSTRUMENTAL
ARRANGEMENT: "Straight, No
Chase r" Bill Holman.
INSTRUMENTAL
ARRANGEMENT
WITH
ACCOMPANYING
VOCAL:
"Cotton Tail " Slide Hampton.
RECORDING
PACKAGE:
"Ti tanic ~ Music As Heard on the
Fateful Voya~e " Hugh Brown. AI Q
and Jeff Sm1th.
RECORDING PACKAGE BOXED: · Reg Scream and Shout'
The B1g 0 1' Box Of '60s Sou l"
Hugh Brow n. DaVId Gorman and
Rachel Gutck
ALBUM NOTES: "A nthology
Of American Folk Music ll997 Editum Expanded) ...
HISTORICAL
ALBUM:
" Antholo~y ol American Folk
Music (I'J97 Edition Expanded)."
ENGINEE RED
ALBUM,
NONCLASSICAL: " Hourglass"
Frank Fili pelli.
PRODUCER OF THE YEAR,
NONCLASSICAL: Bahyfacc .
REMIXER OF THE YEAR:
Frankie Knuckles. .
ENGINEERED
ALBUM,
CLASSICAL: "Copland: The
Music of Amenca (Fanfare for the
. Common Man : Rodeo, Etc.)"
Michael Bishop and Jack Renner.
PRODUCER OF THE YEAR,
CLASSICAL: Steven Epstein .
CLASSICAL ALBUM: "Premieres - Cello Concertos (WorkS
Of Daniclpour, Kirchner, Rouse)''
Steven Epstem. producer, Philadel-

RUTLAND
AMERICAN
LEGION
B'EECH GROVE
ROAD
·GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

PICket.

•There will be a bidders
cpnlerence on March 9,
18)18/1 :30 p.m. RFP
p•ckagee will be given out
at · thlt ttme. All RFP
package• will be due March
t9, 1998/12:00 (Noon) .
Loctted at:
Service Delivery Area #24
Ironton-Lawrence County
CAO
305 North Filth Street
Ironton. OH 456J8
(614) 532-3534
(2) 24, 25, 26, 27 (3) 1, 2, 6 tc

..,

Joe Wilson
(614) 992·4277

30 Announcements

General Solicitation
Statement
The Private Industry
Council (PIC) end the
Govemlng Board ol Service
Elitlvery Ar11 Number 24
(SOA 124), which tncludts
fJ\thene, Gallla, Hocking,
~wrence, Mtlge, Perry,end
VInton) Counttea, are
t411cltlng propoula lor
••rvlc11 to be provided to
youth (1ltle 11-B and Title IIC), edulta (Title 11-A) and
i!letocatad workera (Title Ill
El;IWAA) under the Job
Tretnlng Partnerahlp Act.
Thtll ttrvlcaa will be lor
P(OIIram Y•r 1998 (July 1,
1998 to June 30, 1999) on a
county baala. Each RFP
muat Identify a County. II a
prospective urvlce
pfpvlder wlahea to bid on
'!'Ort than one (1) County, a
atparatt RFP mutt be
atibmltted lor each County
ljlenttlylng the County.
llroorama operated during
Program Year 1998, which
meet
contracted
performance atandardo,
may be extended lor an
additional year ol operation.
The application proceae
raqutrea that aubmttted
proposals:
(1) Contain detailed,
ICJ;urate and complete
p)'Ogremmatlc and budget
h\lormatton.. .
.. . . .
r (2) Follow the prescribed
14rmat ldentiHed In the RFP

...
I•

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

H'S CONSTRUCTION
Don't let winter
give you the blues.

"Build Your Dream"

Public Notice

phia Orchestra.
ORCHESTRAL
PERFOR--•
MANCE: "Berli oz: _Symphomc
Fantastiquc " Tnst ia, Pierre Boulcz,
conductor. The Cleveland Orchestra ;
Chorus. The Cleveland Orchestra.
OPERA RECORDING: "Wag-"
ncr: Die Meistersinger Von Nurn- •
berg" Sir Georg Solti , conductor. '
CHORAL PERFORMANCE·
"Adams: Harmonium/Rac hmalli -•
noff: The Bells" Robert Shaw.
INSTRUMENTAL
SOLOIST(S) PERFORMANCE ·
WITH ORCHESTRA: "Premieres·
~ Ce ll o Concertos (Works of
Daniclpour, Kirchner, Rouse)" YoYo Ma. cell o.
INSTRUMENTAL SOLOIST
PERFORMANCE WITHOUT
ORCHESTRA: "Bach. Suites F&lt;" '
Solo Cello Nos. I - 6" Janos Stalt er, ce ll o.
CHAMBER MUSIC PEII '
FORMANCE: " Beethove n: The ·
Stnng Quartets" Emerson Stnn g ·
Quartet
SMALL ENSEMBLE PER· FORMANCE: " Hindemnh: Kam- ·
mcrm usik No. I With Finale 1921. ·
Opus 24 No. I" Claudio Ahhado. ·
conductor. mcmhers of the Berliner ·
Ph1l.
CLASSICAL VOCAL PER ~\I
FORM/\NCE: "An Italian Song&lt;
hook " CcCil1a Bartoli .
CLASSICAL CONTEMPt&gt;&lt;)
RARY
COMPOSITION'•
.. Adams: El Dorado .. John Adams.
MUSIC VIDEO, SHORT
FORM: "Got 'Till It 's Gone" Janet
Jackson . Mark Roman ek. v1dco 1
di rector. ·
· ·
MUSIC
VIDEO,
LONG :
FORM: " Jagged Lillie Pill, Live"'
Alanis Mori"cttc. Steve Purcell.
v1deo d~rcctors.
·~ ·

Remodeling

M&amp;J

Factory Choke Only

------Grammy winners listed-----By The Associated Press
Gramm y w 1nn cr~ ann oum:ct.l
Wednesday n1ght.
RECORD OF THE YEAR:
.. Sunny Came Home" Shawn
Colvin.
ALBUM OF THE YEAR:
"T1me Out of Mmd " Bob Dylan.
SONG OF THE YEAR:
"S unn y Came Home" Shawn
Colvin and John Leventhal
NEW ARTIST: Paula Cole.
FEMALE POP VOCAL PERFORMANCE: "Build1ng a Mystery " Sarah Mclachlan .
MALE POP VOCAL PERFORMANCE: "Candle •n the
Wind 1997" Elton John .
POP PERFORMANCE BY A
DUO OR GROUP • WITH
VOCAL: "Virtual Insanity ..
Jamuoqua1.
POP
COLLABORATION
WITH VOCALS: "Don't Look
Back" John Lee Hooker wnh Van
Mornson.
POP INSTRUMENTAL PERFORMANCE: "Last Dance" Sarah
Mcl achlan.
DANCE
RECORDING:
"Carry On" Donna Summer and
G1on~io Morodcr
POP ALBUM: " Hour~l a,s"
James Taylor.
TRADITIONAL POP: "Tony
Bennell on Holiday " Tony Bcnnc11 .
FEMALE ROCK PERFORMANCE: '·Cnm•nal" F10na Apple .
MALE ROCK PERFOR·
MANCE: "Cold Irons Bound " Boh
Dylan .
ROCK PERFORMANCE BY
A DUO OR GROUP WITH
VOCAL: --o ne Headlight " ~he
WaJJn owcr&gt;.
HARD ROCK PERFOR·
MANCE: ··The End Is the Beginning Is the End" The Smashing
Pum pkms
METAL PERFORMANCE:
" Aenema" Tool.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

9

The Daily Sentinel • Page

26; 1998

Leave it to a fast talking - and quick thinking lawyer
demeanor because some of the items
were on sale.
Ann
"A clerk at the Vennont District
Court
for Rutland County said the
Landers
1 ~7 L&lt;&gt;~ An ~c~' T1mc1
state has reduced the charges against
Sy~d1 c ~IC ~nd Crc:oho ll.
the 32-year-old woman The charge
Syndt&gt;;alc
was red uced from felony retail theft ,
wh1ch can be punished by up to 10
bear Ann Landers: My hu sband years in prison, to misdemeanor
and I have rcaG your column m the retail theft, puni shable by at most six
~oston Globe for many years. I am
months. 'WcJ.?sin g a clipping that made us
''C II y poll ee smd the woman
l~t~ · It" a perfect example of Yan- stole about $100 worth of items
ke!&gt; consenat.sm. Thanks for years from a supermarket, includin g
df good readmg -- Reba 1n Mass
doughnuts. batteries. cigarettes and
Dear Reba: I laughed. too. Here v1dcotapes. If the Items· reta1l prices
It IS:
arc added up. they come to $10 1.49,
"An eye for bargams has pa1d off JUSt over the $100 threshold for the
for a shopliftin g suspect who wanted felony charge
her felony charge red uced to a nm" But the public defender filed a

1998

Start today with a new home, new
addition or just a little remodeling.

Call Toda,f Free .Estimates!
992·5535 or 992·2753

CELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

""' WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF
113 W. 2ND ST.

614-992-5479

SAYRE

McFEE ROOFING

TRUCKING

&amp;PAINTING
Speclellzlng In:
New Roole; Roof Repalro,
Gultero, Interior &amp;
Exterior Painting,
Drywell Repelr.
Low11t ratea during the
winter montha ot
Jen.-Feb.-Mer.

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeltone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

POMEROY, OH.

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

Quality Work Guaronteed

614-992-7643

Fr.. Eat. • Fully lneured
Hi14-992-9057
Middleport, Oh.

614-742·2138

ANNOUNCEMENTS

(No Sunday Calls)
21121112/11n '

Public Notice
Flnancttl Report ol
Township
For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31, t 997
Scipio Township,
County of Matge
Summary ol Cash Balancee,
Rocelpte and E?cpendlturee
Govemmentat Funds
Revenue Recalpte
Taxee ...................$22,255.00
lntargovemmantal
Rectlpta ...............90, t62.00
lntereat..................... 2913.00
All Other
Revenue ...............75,253.00
Total Receipts .... t90,598.00
Expenditure Dlaburaementa
Dlaburaementa
General
Government ........ 28,561.00
Publtc Safety ........ 1t ,429.00
Public Worko ...... 117,661 .00
Heatth .......................2665.00
ConaervatiOn- ·
Recreatlon ........... 10,759.00
Miscellaneous ........ 5,172.00
Cspltal Outlay ........ 9,353.00
Note Principal
Payment .................1,668.00
Interest and Fiscal
Charges .................... 176.00
Total
Dlaburaements. 187,444.00
Total Receipts Overt(Undar)
Dlab ......................... 3, t 54.00
Other Financing Sources
(Uses)
Other Sources
Recelpts................. 5,419.00
Other Uses/
Disbursements ... (2,132.00)
Total Other Financing
Sources (Usos) ...... 3,287.00
Fund Cash Balance,
January 1... ...........87,763.39
Fund Cash Balance,
December :u ....... 93,656.46

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE
STARTING

FRI., FEB. 20
BAHR
CLOTHIERS

''Your One Stop
£omputer Shop~~

Limestone,

ATTENTION LOVERSIII CALL
NOW III 1·900-285-9287 . E•(
8079 , $2 99 Per Mtn Must Be

·,a

Yrs Serv-U 619-&amp;45-8434 .

Start daltng tontghtt Have tun,

play 011to s dattng game. 1·800ROMANCE e~tenston 7484 ,

30 Announcements '
Herbal Hea ling for Women,
March 7th, 10·4. Ed ucational or:i-

Give us a cat/ for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

Gravel, Sand,

Personals

portunl!v Foc us o n wellness rssues relatmg to women 's health -

care lunch and supplies includ·

IPOMEFIOY.OH

135

ed Worksno p near Albany Maps
sent upon regtstralton Fee $45

Contact Herbal Sage Farms. 740·-

STAR BOUND
ENTERTAINMENT "OJ"
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB

440

Apartments
for Rent

WATERS EDGE

OF SYRACUSE
Seniors Disabled &amp; Handicapped now available 4
apartments. 2 witti RA. 2 Basic rent 291 Hud
Certified Accepted. Ref. stove. air conditioning
providecJ in apartments. All electric. Management
pays water, trash &amp; sewer. Contact Manager
Office.
Hours: Mon thru Thurs 1 :30 pm to 5:30 pm
Fri 1 :30 to 3:30

740-992-6419
Public Notice
Cash on hand ..... 109,463.36
Total Traaaury
Balance.............. t 09.463.36
Leu Outstanding
Checka ....,............ 43,658.46
Total Balance ....... 93,658.46
I certify the following report

Public Notice
to ba correct and true, to
the beat of my knowledge:
Connie K. Chapman, Clark
36385 SR t43
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740.742-3128
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(2) 26 1 tc

time ban from the securi ties indust ry
The NYSE also susJl&lt;!nded the defendants 1rad10g pri vileges.
The crackdown is pan of a height ened effort by federal prosecutors, the
SEC and the exchange to strengthen
inves tor confidence m the f•mness of
U.S. stock markets.
" I want to ensure the anve ~tmg
public thatlhe heat 1s on ... FBI agent
Timot hy Dorch sa1d
Floor dealers arc paid a commi s··don to ronducl trades for brokerage
clients and their customers They are
restricted by law and NYSE rules
from making trades for themselves or
lor any account m wh1ch they have a
financial imerest because they cou ld
take advantage of their market
knowledge to benefit from trades that
are made split seconds before tnformauon is processed or mode w1de ly
public.
For eumple. lloor dealers cou ld
see big market-moving trades in the
Y.orks and jump m just before the
order is executed and take advantage
of a price climb. They also could
exploit changes in certain stock prices

before they are widely pos)ed.
Aut horities sa~d the defendants
used disguised accounts (or the illegal tr.msactions and doctored tradi ng
records to hide their tracks.
Prosecutors say Killeen and Boc k
ope ned accounts that they shared
with the dealers and falsely' identified
them as Oakford trading accounts.
The dealers conducted ill egal trade,
for the accounts from the tloor of the
exchange. shanng profits or losses
with K1ll een and Bock .
The dealers would iOIIiate trades
for the accounts and falsify the
rece 1pts to g1ve the appearance th ey
were e~ecut 1n g orders for Oakford.
Illegal trades miti ated by the dealers
were coord inated to match blank
order ticket s from Oakford that
already were stamped with a time.
authonlleS said.
. Bock and Kill een. who also face
tax fraud chargl.!s stefnming from

another investigation. could face up
to 95 years in priso n and millions of
dollars in lines. The lloor dealers
couTd face Similar fines an&lt;t25 years
in prisO n.

about 13.7 million people had asthma in 1994. the most recent year for
which data is available. In 1980, that
figure was 6.8 mi II ion.
Today. an estimated 15 milli on
people suffer from asthma. a chronic lung inflammation that makes it
hard for patients to breathe .
"The numbers were not une~­
pected. but they are disappointing,"
said Dr. Christopher Fanta, an asth·
rna specialist at Brigham &amp;l Women's
Hospital in Boston. " We knew about
this problem from previous reports.

B~t despite that awareness. despite
the effort s, the stati stics suggest the
burden of asthma continues to grow.:·
The data also showed that blacks
were more than twice as likely to die
from an asthma attack than whites. In
1994. 38.5 people out of every million black Americans died from asthma. compared with 15 .1 of every million whites.
Asthma attacks are often triggered
by allergens such as dust. mold, and
cockroaches

742 -S AGE he r bsage@eureka ~
net corn

LOHG·s

LIMESTONE

Women ·s

8 ton Delivered
$120

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
•.Room Additions

Mileage Limit

Over 20 years experience.

Call Randy

Free Estimates

Classes, 62 State Street . Ga lhp~
Its, 740·388-9129
'

40 ·

Giveaway

7wk old puppte s. to good home

304 -675 1907

Four month old puppy , la ther
AKC black La b. mother half

Free pupptes. lab /Golden Ae ·
!never m1x ra1seo 1Moors . make
good pets . lo good home on ly

304-882-3636

KINGS'

-

Large Retr1gerator /Freezer. 740 -

iu ~ JANICE S. HAYNES, BA, MT
;r,n"•
MASSAGE THERAPIST

256-1291

~a

Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
Additions, Roofing,
Siding,
Pole Barns,
Oecks, Painting

o.•
"' "
vu

Refngerator to g1ve away 30 4·

675-1365

~ l
.... &lt;

lnl(grqti\IC mquau tu·Mjgyq tbqr A'I bctn(;d fo r
•l'hrrmu.: paUl •muscJL slruin.flsprain.t •.urr.s.t

;:.... •

•miKraiMs

.c~

-='
&lt;11 ~

Call Us For~ Free Estimate

614-742-3324
614-742-3D76

Lab.

houseb roken . needs attenliOn.
740-992-3240

CCIII 614-843-54Z6,_,m, ...

992-5050

Oetense -Aerobi cs:

Starls 3/2 nd . Mor ntng &amp; EvenlnQ

COrtSTROCTIOrt

Special Thru
•
March ·

614·742·3090

CDC: Asthma rate ·.doubles
since 1980; blacks hit hardest
BOSTON (AP) ~The number of
Americans with asthma has more
than doubled since 1980, federal
researchers say. and blacks are more
than twice as likely than whites to die
from the disorder.
New figures from the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention were
released Wednesday as public health
officials met in Boston to discuss
ways to control asthma among
minorities hit hardest.
The data compiled by Dr. Slephen
Redd at the CDC in Atlanta show that

WICKS
HAULING
614-992-3470

NYSE .floor dealers charged -with
illegally trading ror themselves
NEW YORK (AP) - Seeking to
boost public confidence in fair stock
trading, authorities charged I0 people with · a scheme at the nation's
large st stock exchange that allegedly netted $1 1 million.
Oakford Corp. brokerage owners
William Killeen and Thomas Bock
and eight llOOf dealers are accused of
a five-year conspiracy to illegally
book personal trades at the New York
Stock Exchange .
They were charged Wednesday
with violating a law designed to prevent a form of insider trading by dealer,; who have access to fro nt -~ ine
mformation by bei ng on the lloor of
the exchange.
It is the first time federal prosecutors and the SEC have pressed
charges against anyone for making
such personal trades. Authori ties said
they don 't think the case was isolated.
In addition to criminal charges, the
SEC also tiled a civil ca.'e against the
defendants and their companies seekmg to recover any illicit profits. payment of undisclosed fines and a life-

COMPUTER
PERFORMANCE
UPGRADES

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

AeaeNe for Encumbrancet,

December 31 ........ 93,656.46
Summary of Indebtedness
Total
Outstanding
January 1, 1997 ..... $3688.00
Retired .....................1844.00
Outstanding
Dec. 31,1997 .......... 1844.00
Fund Cash
balanc, ................ 93,658.46
Depository
Batanc,.............. 109,463.36

005
(Lime StoneLow Ratas)

~

540 WfST UNION STREET

f

twauer. 740.256·9121

60

Lost and Found

ATHENS, OHIO ..5701
PHONE (740) 59A-2227.FAX (740) S9•·662A

2 female Fo..:hounds. 1 has collar
w1th Co rby Cleek 's name on 11.

•AMTA MtmMr •uctll.ftd by Ohw Stutt MtdlcuiBtJtJrd

Found Black &amp; Wh11e Female
Pup. lavender Co tor 11 00 Block
Of Second Avenue. 740·44 1·

•

V

•cJmmic jtJtigut
•urthrrti.f
*sport! irt)ury/prrvtntilm

To Good Home Rottwe1ler &amp; Border Cothc Puppy Mixed. 7 Months
Old. l:ooks More Like The Aot-

Accepting Workers Compens11/on Patients 21 1311 mo.

740·843·5393 or 740-843-5346

9819

CHESHIRE

FOOD MfiRT
4 A"'·12 PM Mon.-Sat.;
Sun. 6 AM-Midnight
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich, .
Hot&amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
rntroduclng Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Toppings
Catlin Ordera Accepted
740-367.7838

SNOW

REMOVAL
Driveways,
Parking Lots, etc.
Call Anytime
Home

614·992-3141
Cell Phone

591-1897

SUSIE
Home for the
.Eldera,
At

260 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·7147

.

/B

P
Contractors Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
Construction
•Masonry Construction
•General etc.
Commercial and Resident ial
24 Hr. Bobcat-Service

Available

Free Estimates
No Job Too Small

Brian Mornson
(740)985-3948

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
·Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C . YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

bhawst Work
Wa do Custom Bending
Converler Back S84.9S
Most Cars
Used nres 12.00 to 1S.OO
Servl&lt;e Joh 5_16.95 4 ql. od
General Repair Work
Sugar Run Ashland
190 Mulberry
Pomeroy
Phone 992.g949

-

HOWARD
Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

IOBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

(614) 992-3838

985·4473

EXCAVATING CO.

12/11.'1fn

7/22/tfn

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10/25196/tfn

FOUND N1ce brown tacket. left '"
o ii1 Ce Of Health 8 Human Re so urces Catl 304 675-0080 to
cta1m
Lost· mate S1ber1an Husky t:llue
eyes. Wlhle 1black blue collar Big ley R1dge area 740-985 -4385 ,

740-992·5335
Lost Small Brown &amp; WMe Corgi
Dog, Looks L1ke f ox. Wt1h No
Ta 1l Answers Name Danny. Vi·
Cl r1 11Y Morgan Cen te r Aoao &amp;
Fr ank Road. 740·368- 9476
LOS! Teacher ·s Pel Brown Fe male Weiner Dog . Blue Col l ar 1
Tag . Butavtlle / AddiSOn P1ke Area,
740-367-0667

Male Black Ctjt W1th While Mark·
1ngs Rodney Area 740 -446 -

8662

70

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ill Yard Sa les Must
Be Pa1d In Advance
DEADLINE : 2:00pm.
the day before lhe ad
IS 10 run. Sunday
edition ·2:00p.m .
Fnday Monday edllro n
- 10·00 a.m. Saturday.
Aoi.Jie 141 3 112 M11es. 27m -2na ,
ChriOrens / A dull C!olhes. Woo d
Youlh Bed. lamps Home tnter1or
D shes M1sc 74 0 446 t379

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
All Vard Sales Must Be Pa id In
Ad &gt;Jance Dell dline .1 :00pm the
day tlel o r e the ad Is to run ,

Sunda y &amp; Mond ay edl tlon-

1 :OOpm Fndoy.
Yara s ate

2 7 th

&amp; 28th

es . baby cl othe s.. b oy 's clo th es.
men ·s &amp; women s c lothes . baby
1ten\S, more

Auction
and Flea Market

Ric:~e::~rson

Auctron Company,
fu ll trme auctr oneer. cornple te
ai.Jctron
se1v1ce
L 1censed
r6 6,0hto &amp; West Vtrg1n1a 304 -

Pat Arnold

WILL HAUL-

Dlatrlbutor

JUST CALli.

Vitamins, Herbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss
Products

Feb

'

8 onehollow Ad sl&lt;~nds. apphanc

80
Pat's Herb Corner
Located at Dan'•
290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, OH

Yard Sale

992·2646
Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.
(JIIaJonabll JlataJ).

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All u S SH·
ver A nd Gold Co•ns. Proo lse ts ,
O~amonds . Antrque Jewelry. Gold
R mgs Pre -1930 US Currency
Sterling . Etc ACQU1SII10ns Jewelry
· M T S C om Sl1op. 151 Second
Ave nue. Galli!XJiis 740-446-2842

Ant iQIJSS. lop pqces pa1d, R rver-

lne Antrques . Pomeroy, OhiO,
R uss Moore owne r. 740-992·

2526
Ant iques- no 1tem too large m too
small Also estates . appra1sa1s .
rel1n1shrng custom orders. 740-

992·6576

---------

�'

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 26, 1998

I

·:
&lt;

Tttursday, February 26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11

I

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean

Late

Mode

Cars

110
Or

Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Smtih Butck Ponuac 1goo East
ern Avenue Gallipolis

J &amp; 0 Auto Pans

Buy ng

wrecked or sa lvaged veh etas

304 773 5033
TIMBER We pay cash for racts
of limber If nterested n se ll ng
your t mbe please et our pro
lass on a fore my stall manage
your timber lor ncome w ldl le
and a pa ce to enJOY the ou1
doors Super o Hardw oo ds of
Oh o lu mber Co PO Box 606

Weltston Oh o 45692 (7 40)38 4
5677
Wanted To Byy.
Extra large Steel Pet Crate

Ca11(304)6151051
Leave Message
Wanted To Buy Used Mob te
Homes 740 44 6 0175 304 675

5965
We Buy Au 0 S In Any Cond hOD

Call 740 388 9062 Or 740 446
PART

310

Help Wanted

In Search Of Motivated Fr endly
Car ng Team Player Part Time
LPN Pos t10ns Open For All Shifts
At Seen c H lis Nurs ng And Ae

hab ltalton Center Contact Olrec
tor 01 Sta ll Dave opment Pam
Caldwell To Lea rn More About

Employment Opporlun I es 311
Buckr age Road

B ewell

Help Wanted

AVON ! All Area s I Sh rley
Spears 304 675 1429
Avon $8 S 18 /Hr No Ooo To
Door Ou ck Cash Fun &amp; Rela11

ong I BOO 7:16 0168
Avon $8 $20 /Hr No Door To
Door Qu ck Casll 1 800 296
0139 tndlsls/rep
Babys tier Needed For Two Ch•ld
ren On Weekdays Flex be Sh f1s

74(}256 1070
CNAS
Etderca e ot WV s now accept
ng appl cahons for part 1me and/
or full ttme CNA S e11penenced n
long term health care l censed 1n
WV Apply m pe son between
9am 5pm at 107 Mtll ar Drve Rip

toy WV EOE
i.Jeaters &amp; Ctstnbutors wanted
Great money mak ng opportuntty
car home health body care pro
ducts avat lable For demo &amp;
sate top quattty tn waterle ss
technology lr om Ell Cal l Scott

Sm th

45614
Dependable And Fle ~ 1ble Cart
fled Nurse A1d Needed For In
Home Care Call Adnanne Or ,&amp;.n
gtO

I 800 48 I 6334

Onvers Needed For 300 To 800
M1/e Rad ius Must Have Class B
l cense And Good MVA Expeu
ence Also Re(iwed Weekly Pay
&amp; Health tns Avatlable For More
InformatiOn Ca I 800-437 8764
Easy Wo kl Excellent Pay As
semble Produ cts At Home Call
Toll Free 1 600 467 5566 Ex!

12170

379-2816
Fum lure repa r rei nlsh and res
torat on also custom orders Ohio
Va ley Rein shlng Shop larry

Phil ps 740 992 6576

1974 Rockwood 12x65 trailer

2br

f balh

Making Money With a Typewriter or Computer!
Several Umque Ways For lnlor
mahan Wnte To
T na Sanders PO Box 1253
Amherst Oh o 44001

OHIO RESIDENTS ONLY
You Can Make A D fference In A
Chi ld s l fe Earn Dollars Wh te
Work ng AI Home And Be Treat
ed Aespectlul y How? By Becom
tng A Foste Parent Cal Ed Nee
co &amp; Assoc 1 888 577-6085
Plumbe rs And P pel tier s l U
1577 W II Be 0 str but ng Appren
ltce Appt ca t ons Begtnmng Fe
bruary 16 Through Feb uar~ 27
Applica tions Can Be P•cked Up
At 1236 Gatha Stree Portsmouth
Oh 0 From 7 30 A M Un II 4 00

PM $35 00 Appl catoon Fee EEO
AN SUPERVISORS &amp; AN'S
Eldercare of WV s now accept
ng appl cal ons lor part 1 me RN
Superv sors and LPNS exper~
anced n tong e m health care
licensed n WV App y betwee n
9am Spm a1 107 MIter Or 'le

A1pfey WV EOE
So me one To Work On Wee
ke nds Saturday Morn ng To
Monday Morn ng To Take Care
Of Elderly Laoy Send Name Ad
dress &amp; Refere nces To PO Box
128 Vmton OH 45686
Star t An EKc I ng Care er As A
Dr ver W th l llle Caesars Earn

304 675 1957
Local res dent IS no longer caring
for elderly m her home I m a11all
able tn your home lor elderly
care Pat Doss 304 675 6t83
Profess anal Tree Service Slump
Rem oval Free Estimates• In
surance Bdwell OhiO 614 388

9648 614 :167 7010
W1l care for elderly '" your
home days only Mon Fri Ex
per ence &amp; references 304 576
4144

1991 Rtvervtew by Redman
2bed oom 2/bath vmyt stdlng
shlng e roof 2x6 msulatlon oak
cabtnets porch Included wash
er/dryer optional eKcellent con

dillon $15 ooo Call 304 675
6768 after 2 30pm
t 992 Oakwood Mobtlt Home

WOO 2BR 2 Baths Hoot Pump
GE appliances excel Cond Rt

1400)
The Frick Gallagher Manufac w
mg Company In We Is ton Oh o Is
Seeking A H ghly Qual fled Equtp
ment Ma ntenance Mechan ical /
Electrical For Its 2nd Shtlt Opera
tlon Init ia ll y The Temporary
Workmg Hours Wtll Be t2 Noon
To 8 30 PM Afterwards The Job
Duties Wil l Become A Full Time
Permanent 2nd Shill Poslhons
Wtth Some 0 T Avail able Start
1ng Pay Scale Is S12 31 Per H o~Jr
Plus A Full line Of Benems Alter
The Probationary PeriOd Must Be
Able To Pass A Wrl!l~m Test
And A Pre Employment Phystcal
And Drug Test AI Qual had Can
dldates Please Send Resume To
, p 0 BoK 227 Well ston OhiO
45692 We Are An Equal Oppor

tunlly EmplOyer

2

Leon W va $13 500 OBO 740
256-6980 After 5 pm
1993 Sunshtne BAKWD 14x72

an electric

3br 2 bath cent ral
a lr calling fans all app/lances
par1lall~ furntshed vmyl sktrting

loundallon block $12 500 304
675 3508
W I Do Houseclean ing Also
Wash Wmdows Phone 740 446

6055

1994 Century 14x70 J Bedrooms
t Bath CA 0 E Appliances Ex
celtent CondtUonl $16 900 740

ptekup load 304 675-5035

1994 lndtes Brandywine 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Many Extras

FINANCIAL

Must Seel Asktng $11 000 740
441-Qt55 740-446-2706

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 unt I you have nvesttgated
the offer ng

BUTCHER SHOP

SLAUGHTER

HOUSE 0 d Establishment Bus•
ness Centrally Lo cated In The
Bidwell Porter Area Excellent
Chance To Own Your Own Bus
ness Blackburn Realty 740 446

0006

230

Professional
Services

L•v ng sto n s base ment water
proof ng all basement repairs
done free es timates I !etime
gua ran tee 1Oyrs on job expert
ence 304-675 2145

1tta 3br 2 bllhl lots of extras
set on 101 Call lor more Info 304

755 7191

Isl Ttme Buyers E 2 F nanelng
2 or 3 Bedroom around $200 per
month Free delivery &amp; set up

Call credtlltne 1 80Q 948 5678

3 Bedroom 2 bath 1998 model
home Includes Free aet up &amp;
delivery Skirting elr color TV

FREE Del very &amp; Sol up $24 999
Low Down Payment E Z Monthly
Payments 1 888 928 3426
New double wide repo $999
down Free delivery and setup

304 7:16 7295
New Repos Never lived In Only
~ Ltlt Free Dehvery &amp; Set up
Call Finance line For Free Ap

provat 1 80D-948 5678

2bdrm apt&amp; total electric ap
pt ances fur-nished laundry room
lacu Ues close to school In town
App icat ons availab e al VIllage
Green Apts •49 or caJI 740 992

3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive

fro111 $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Hou$1ng Opportunllj

NEW SHIPMENT
14x70 s 3BA/2BA
Free Doliv8ry &amp; Set-up
W/AC $19 750
I 80().251 5070
New Stnglewlde 3BA FREE Do
livery &amp; set up $16 999 J 888
928 3426
One t987 12 K69 Ofllce Trailer
With Electric Forced Atr Heat
And Central AJC Unit Best Offer
Please Call 740 256 6327 From

8 00 AM To 4 30 PM

Monday

lllru Friday

PRE OWNED HOMES
Excellent Condltton Owner Ft
nanclng Ava !able Call 304 722

7148
Qultt Country Sontng w1th llrtau
lilul mobile home forced to sell
Financing available 304 755

5566

Erf1c~ency Apartment Share Bath
607 Second Avenue Galllpol s
$t60/Mo Ullltlles Included 740

4141 0573

992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun1ties
In New Haven 1br furnished apt
mcludes washer &amp; dryer depostt

&amp; relerences 304 882 2566

Ntce clean efflency apartment
references &amp; deposit no pets

t·b70 s

3

Br /2 Ba Free Deltv

ery &amp; Set Up W /AC $19 750 1
80().251 5070

330

Farms for Sale

3 Bedrooms Bath Kitchen OR

LA Den Full Size Basement CA
4 1/2 Acres Tobacco Base Bu
lavllePke 740-4464192

350

Lots

304 675 5162
NIce one bedroom &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments In Pomeroy utlhtles
Now Taking Apptlcaltons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo 740 446

NEW SHIPMENT

0006

(ATIENTION DEVELOPERS
SMALL BUSINESS
COUNTRY ESTATE)

• SPECIAL OW S •
Spacoous 3 BR /2 Ba Complete
Delivery &amp; Set Up Approx $200
Per Month 1 800 251 5070

M ddleport $23 000 OBO 740
992 2290
l ots on Midway Or ve

ven 304 062 2904

360

Ha

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted 4 Or 5 Acres In The R1o
Grande Or Green School D1s1nct

Call Afler 5 PM 74(}245 5946
RENTALS

410

Houses for Rent

4 Room House in Harlford Dou
blew de lor sale or rent 11 Ohto
on St At t43 Senous tnqwres

One Bedroom Near Holzer
Range Refrtgerator Furntshed W/
D Hook Up $279 Plus Ut !Illes De
pas !/Lease Required (740 )446Three room furnished apartment
Next to Bossard Library $350 per
month Deposit requ1red no pets
Contact Debbte or Judy at Bos

Only AI
3(14.755-5685
01scount Mobtle Home Pa Is &amp;
Accessori es Water Heaters V1
nyl Sktrl ng Kits $299 95 An
cho rs Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps
Roof Coatings Doors Wtndows
Plum btng &amp; Electncal Supplies
Blo ck ng Wood &amp; Wedges And
Mo el Call Bennet ! s Mobtje

Home

Supp~

AI t 74(}445-94f6:'

Large House At t23 Fourth Ave
nue Galllpolts $300/Mo Plus
Deposll 740 446 0924
Mt Vernon Ave Ntce 3br central
a11 appliances basement pat o
references requued 304 882

2405 or 304 882 2447
NIC8 2 Bedroom 1 112 Ball'l Home
Near Rio Grande $325/Mo +

Depos t 74(}446 2801

ENTERTAINER
3bed rooms
2baths starting at $219/roo

SUNRISE

31 0

Homes for Sale

Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath Large
L v ngroo m large Kitchen 1
Acre Galhpol s c ty Schools
$62 000 537 Plymale Road 740
446 4323
3 Bedroom Rancher w/heat pump
&amp; Situated on prwa te 66 acre set
1 ng m l eon Allordably prtcect at
ON LY $59 900 Call Gary Garr
son lor Infor mation or pnvale
VIeWing 304 566 9032 or 304

757 7545
3br home 1 acre lot located m
Gall pol s Ferry across from 84
lumber Pn ce reduced nt ce
304..S75 5010 after Spm
40 Acres 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
LR Large Rec Room Din ing
K tchen 2 Barns 1 With Horse
Stalls Lttrge workshop 4 Car
Garage 1 Log Cab n 1 Hunting
Cabi n 15 Mins From Gallipolis
25 M ns From Huntington 740
2~6 1484 II No Answer leave

Message
BUY HOMES FROM $4 000 I 5
Bdrm Local GoVt &amp; Bank Repo s

Calt 1 80D-522 2730 X 1709
House and property approx 4a
cres Idea l starter home Beech

St Pomeroy OH 304 882 2077
NEW CONSTRUCIIDN . Beau
!tlul Two Story Colonial 414 Third
Avenue Galllpohs 3 Bedrooms 2

t/2 Baths LA &amp; FA Formal Dmlng
Room Oa~ Trim F replace M~h
More

Home Eligible For Tax

Abalemenl $1 79 500 304 273
2940

Loaded wtlh GE ap
pllances start ng at $299/mo
FAMILY
4bedrooms 2 large
bat hs slartmg $359/mo l m11ed
lime ofler onty at Oakwood Bar

boursvtle WV 304 7:16

~

FIRST TIME BUYERS
EZFnancng
Can fo pre approval

1 888 7J6 3332
Mandymtn Spec:lel Cas h Onl~
2&amp;3 Bed rooms St 501) I Upl
On~

3 Left 304 755 5561

large selectiOn of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Startmg..at $2995
0Utck del very Call 740 385

Rapid Tax Aelunc/
Use as down payment

Call the credttllne
WESTWOOD HOME SHOW
304-73H888
LIMITED OFFER
WHY WAIT?
DON'T WAITt
Wt I Pay For Your Rapid TaK Re
lund Use A~ Down Payment Call

The Credit Line WESTWOOD
HOME SHOW :304 736-3888
Make 3 Payments &amp; Move In A
New 14x70 3bedroom Call 1

800-928-11777
FIRST TIME BUYERS

Pomeroy 4 bedroom HUO with
sto11e &amp; relngerator relerences
no pets call 740 992 6686 altar

5 30pm
Small clean quiet carpeted no

pets $275/mo $250 depos 1
304 773-9192
Two bedroom house clean re
frigerator no stove no ns de
pets deposit reqwred 740 992

3090
Two bed oom basement garage
central alr located n park dnve 1n

PI Pleasant Caiii740)441-Qt28

420

Mobile Homes
forRent

450

Fumlahed
Rooms

C rcle Motel lowest Rates In

Lei E&amp;M Help You Get The VP
per Hand On Cutting The Coohng
And We Wtll Have 11 Done In
Reasonable Time Call E&amp;M At
740 441 1236 For Your Early Btrd
Servtce Needs EPA Certtlted

WARM UP H gh Elltclency Natu
rat And LP Gas Furnaces Life
time Warranty On Heat Exchang
er If You Don t Call Us We Both
lose!" Free Estimates! Add On

Mob le home site avatlabte bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

740 385 4367

Household
Goods

Jackson Oh1o I 800 537 9528
Waterhne Spec at

3/ 4 200 PSl

$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per I 00 All Brass Com
presston Ftttngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohto 1 800 537 9528
Wood For Sale $35 A Load Will
Building
Supplies

5121

560

Pets for Sale

AKC Reg Black Labs born 12/
WANTED AKC Rog Chocolate
Lab puppy 304 675 6046

740 446-Q231
AKC Doberman Female 6
Months Housetra ned Moslly
Obed1ence Tra ned Red /Ru st

$150 Neg 740 256 6904
Airedale Terr er Pupptes AKC
Registered Males $200 Ea ch
AKC Registered Engl1sh bulldog s
starting at $500 V1sa Master
Card &amp; Dtscover accepted 740
AKC Reg stared Yorkshtre Terner
Pupp es Vet Checked Wormed
1sf Shots Ta Is Cu t Dew Claws
Now Open Sundays 1 4 Man Sat
t1 6
Ftsh Tank &amp; Pat Shop
2413 Jackson Ave Pomt Pleas

7795

ant 304 675 2063
APPLIANCES

Washers dryer s refr ige rators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vme Street Call 740 446 7398

1 80().499 3499

Border Colhes 8 Weeks Non
Aegtstered $150 Call Betwee n

t4dl 0 Trailer 2 Bedrooms W&amp;O

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob te homes
$260 S300 sewer water and

5pm

2 Bedroom Tra il er Wa ter &amp;
Trash Palcj No Pets Butavllle

Road 740 388-1100
2 Bedrooms t Mile From GalltpOUs Water &amp; Trash Included No
Inside Pets Re fe rences Re

qulred $250/Mo S100 De post
740-448-076 t
3 Bedroom Trailer Mercerville

2 Sets 01 Used Forks $125
Each (740)379-2655
Amaz1ng Metabolism Break
Th augh lose 10 to 200 lbs Call
For free consultallon and Free

Samples 1740)441 - 1982
Beauty Shop Equipment 304
675 4873 days or 304 675- 6168
evonW1gs
Brand Newl Great Gtfll CO/video

Mob le Home For Rent 740 446

stoq1ge unit Black and cherry
Never out of boK $125 Holds up
to 940 discs al so holds tapas

1279

Ca ll 740 992 6636 after 6 pm

Area 740-256-6574

E Z Financing Call For Pre Ap

Two 2 bedroom trailers on New

Lima Ad call 740 742 2803 efter
6pm

1- ' - - - - - - - - - 1Wo bedroom 11111ter In MiddlepOrt
740-992 5039

MUSICal
Instruments

Os &amp; tapes not Included
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks

300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises Jackson OH

I 800 537 9528

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

er 2t80 cc Straker Motor Motor
Needs Rebuilt $2000 740 446

1137

I

304 895 3338

610

Farm Equipment

Cl~!re

0% Interest on John
Hay
Equipment and 5200 5aoo 5400
5500 Tractors Offer Good thur
February 27 wtlh John Deere
Credit Approval/ Carmichael s
Farm &amp; Lawn inc Gallipo lis
0~10

(740) 446 2412 1 800 594

II II
John Deere lawn Tra ctors Spe
ctal Fmancing Avai la ble With
John Deere Credit Approval As

Low As 7 9 ~, Up To $250 Re
bates Thru Feb 28th Car
mtchaet s Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 'TliO

448-2412 1-800-594-111 f
New Holland Grinder Ford lOft

Transport DISc Both In Good
ConctltloM Corn For Sale 3o\

273-4215

THAT BUG IS SCAIRT
HE MIGHT KETCH
SOMETHIN II

rr

667 3369 or 740 667 3267

Good Condlllon $4 300 740 446
7289

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
1\

. . Otf WOw!

PA((Al&gt;16M

StflfT!

t991 Chev S 10 P U In Very

Mtxed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

Shape! 80 000 Actual Mites

$3 000 F rm 740 446 2163 Alter
5PM
1969 Butck GS 13 000 740 6827512

245-56n
1995 Ford F 150 XL ale 4x4
5spd 74 000 m los $15 000
304-675 1754
1996 Chevy Silverado z 71 4x4
38 000 m11es &amp;19 500 304 675
2677

Vans

t985 Mercury lynx new ttres AT
many new part s 82 400 mtle;~

looks good $1 200 304 675
3162
1986 Mercury Lynx 2 Doors 5
Speed Rear Spo ler Clean Ins de
And Out Runs Real Good $900

740 379 2645
1986 NtSsan Pu sar $1 000 OBO

1989 Bronco II Edd e Bauer Edi
lion loaded 4WD 5 speed ex
ceUent condthon $4400 740 992

2762
1989 Ford Aero Van Good Co n

dillon 740 245 5676

1996 Jeep Cherokee 740 379

9047

1992 Della 86 Loaded $6 500
740 682-7512

1994 Lin co ln Mark VIII Fully
Equ pped Se nous lnqune s Only
Asktng $19 000 740 245-5903

1995 Pontiac Grand Am 4 Doors
Loaded Itali c Blue Excellent

Condit ion 58 000 M1los $9 900
740 388 8041
1995 Mercury Sable blue 4 door

6RAMPA

~E

HAD
HIS OLD CAR BACK
WISHES

740

Honda

Shadow

1t 00

ISN T
THERE
A
STAC.E

CALLED

WHEN THE MILEAGE MADE
A 616 CHAN6E IT WAS FUN
TO WATCH ALL THE NUMBERS
ON THE ODOMETER ROLL UP

3NT

Auto Parts

&amp;

BUDGET PRICE TRANSIIIS
SIONS Used /Aebu It All Types

f.lE SA'(S THAT WAS
HIS FAVORITE PROGRAM

MoiJl'i ~ou1VE c~w. ~ ­
L~Nil~o ON ~tiNS
M(X).IOOG ~NP 1 /..Ill:
H"RE 10 1A~E 'iOV
OIIC~ 10 1./ARS

~0!&lt;\HINIE._ Nt~

10 &lt;SO 11-!10 1\IEIR
C~vES 10 SE

Bl/..~ Off FCR tP.AlY
VIN'S 60 60
IN
10 SECONDS
OOV~TING

'I

~ 1

MONE

Access 011er 10 000 Transm s
s10ns &amp; Clutches 740 245 56n
New gas tanks 1 ton truck
wheel s &amp; radiators D &amp; Fl Auto
Ripley WV 304 372 3933 or t

800 273 9329
SERVICES
Home
Improvements

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~E~v~e~ry thtn~
ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

UncondtUonal lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es

tabltshed 1975 Call (740) 446
0870 Or I 800 287 0576 Rogers
Waterproofing

C&amp;C General Home Main
lenence Painting vinyl siding
carpentry doors windows baths
mobile home repair and more For
free esllmate call Chet 740 992

the year ahead

6323

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Aestdentlal or commercial wiring
new service or repa irs Mastef ll
cansed electricia n A dtnour

Eleclllca l WV000306 304 675
1786

you do to&lt;.lay v.tll he
observed d"'dy h y you r peers Your
nuxk ol lx:havmr wtll 1nV1Ie applau se

tn stead ol c.:ntu;t\rn

BASEMENT
WATEAPR90FING

840

'

sweet-- \

1.

27 Uses an ax
28 Author Wiesel'
29 Nawts
31 Most
hackneyed j!

Pass
All pass

~:~~l=py ~

The mam story as las1 years
World Champtonshtps began m
Tuntsm was the Withdrawal c1tong
secunly reasons of lhe lsraelt
women s team Italy breached the
gap but as the Latm lad les recetved
such short nottce they started uncer
tamly Here ts a deal from lhetr
round three match agamst Gennany
the defendmg champtons
In one room the Gennan South
Wahraud Vogt opened wtth a weak
no trump North ratsed 10 three no
trump Understandably West led I he
heart three After wmntng w1th dum
my s ntne declarer drove out the d1a
mond ace And a moment later she
led a spade 10 her kmg for tnck nme
AI thts table the b1ddm g was
much more co mpeltllve
and
stranger North s 1wodoubles were for
takeout but wouldn I be the chotces
of many players m North Amenca
Sull South was m three no lrump
West Dantela von Arn1m led 1he
spade Jack whtch East
btne
Auken carefully overtook w11h the

s.•

4ueen South had to duck 10 k1ll
East s spades Now 1hough Auken
swllched to lhe hean e•;ht SIX Jack
live West reiUrned a spade East wm
n111g w11h lhe ace and leadmg her sec
o nd heart Thts set up West s sui!
whtle she sllll had the dmmo nd ace
as an entry
That beaut1ful de ten se resulted m
three down Germany won lhiS
malch bul surpnsmgly Jailed to
qu.1ilfy lor the quanertinals llaly
lhough dtd quality 111 e1gh1h place
lwo potnts ahead of Germany

There's no
way around it,

!THURSDAY

~~~1?1.\t;tJ

Those sec ret unbt11ons you vc
been nurtunn.; w1tl be &gt;chtev •ble m

1996 Z 24 Black Loaded ~II
Power Sunrool 5 Speed $13500
Call After 530 PM 740441
0235

SURE YOU LL
DO SOME
SACKSLI Dl NG

ROBOTMAN

French City Mayleg 740 446
7795

1996 GMC Sonoma 20 000 Miles
43 v 6 740-388-0013

ALTHOUGH

11'1 PI:ETT \'"

REVENGE '

10 l\~101 QIT 1,\I;IJ

Accessories

810

Poor grade
I get Ill
Protection
Invisible
Country
Gambling
game
24 Important
times
25 How

40 Kate Nil ligan ;
mov1e
41 Rat 42 Sharp
projecllon
43 Gravel ridges '
44 Anglo Saxon
serf

46 Beaver sk1n
47 Roll-call
answer

48 Great - (dog)
50 - Commando
ments
52 Use the
microwave
53 St crosser

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity CIPher cryptograms are created from Quotallons Dy rarnous people pas and p asent
Each letter Ill the ~IJ)her stands lor another Tl1d.tys dtMI X 8QlJ8s K

N

PZRH

B LR

RGPZNXLSDXW

P NT

GLBQ.FGR

P NT

I Z B R 0

ZFONHBGH

VFR

IN J J

ZBO

N U
NR

RPH
GZB

PZSH
PNT
CNHAAH
VLFJHY
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Chaos 1s a frtend ol mtne" - Bob Dylan deltntng
hts mustcal style tn the mtd SIXItes

T~:~:~:~y S©\\4{\lw\-~t.~~~~

WORD
GAM I

EdUod by CLAY t POllAN

0

Rearrange

lette r s of the
lour scrambled words be
low to form four stmple words

AniONE

EYEF B

I I I' I

r
I
.

--.r:-B_U.,.,_T:..,.:O...,;;,D-1
5
6

N:,'

1 1 I I .

L.-'---1--'--l..--J

N

At the end of the year I have
not1ced that some employees
work the1r fingers
the

,-I-,-le-iI0

Como e oe rne cnuc kle qvo ed

@

PRtNr NUMBERE D
LETTERS IN SQUARES

€)

UNSCRAMBLE FOR I
ANSWER
•

SCRAM LETS
Garage

ANSWERS

Whoop Lisle

Cns1s PROGRESS

I

$6000 740-742 3302

760

13
18
20
21
22
23

Motorcycles

98 Banshee lour wheeler take
over payments call 740 992
6544 weekends
1996

9 Door openers
11 Cut
12 Ointment
Ingredient

S1nce you c an 1 warm your feet on a m 1crowave 1do
believe that there are senou s drawbacks lo PROGRESS

1995 Neon • Doors While Auto
Air Cassette T lt. 73 500 Miles

Ae~ase $12 000 CaD After 5 PM
(Serious lnqulrtas Onlyl) 740
448-4015

Db I
Obi

e

Classified Ads

Appl ance Parts And Service All
Name Brands 0'1er 25 Years Ex
parlance Al b Work Guaranteed

1995 Saturn SC2 Automattc Air
Cruse AM/FM Cassette Trunk

3 Capri e g
4 'itedding page
word
5 Mao - tung
6 A Brady girl
7 Strangelv
8 Nile queen lor
short

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by I I ng n he m ss ng words
.__._......_._.....__ _.___. you develop !rom step No 3 below

loaded 49 ooo miles Call 304
675 1449

$4 750 00 OBO 740 256-63.0
740 256-6467

I Speedy
2 See

1998 2500 Ext Cab 4x4 SL Peck

1995 Ca maro Converttble Z28
B lack/Black Leathe r lnten or
Very low Ml es loaded! ltke New

(740) 388-1122

I

2 ..
Pass

PEANUTS

5 400 M11es 740 379-9381

95 S 10 4x4 4 3L LS 83 000
m las excellent condition $9 200
304 882 3132 740 992 7228

8258

DOWN

UVR S ES
~-r-~--,.17:--r-1

1997 Ford Ranger XLT 4 WO

740-446 2532

1991 GEO Strom G S I Exc
cond
auto a r ps pb 614 388

pronoun

34 One who lttts
35 Stu~ld person
36 CIA&amp;
predecessor
37 One on Munich

54 Fish .. allng
seabtrd
55 Bar
56 Check
57 Olive green
ltycatcher

East

1995 GMC Slera SLE 4K4 3!ilt V

1989 Dodge 0mn1 New Pa nt Job

Cond lon 63 000 Miles 740 367
0394

Nor1h

$7000 304 882 3139

ExcAIIent Cond 1! on 5 Speed

1991 Ford Taur us Very Good

w

IT A MINUTE I
1F In tN DENIAL
THAT MEANS I M
ALREAPY PA!»T
ANGER - I
__.~,

&lt;(j

1993 Dodge Caravan SE Sports
Wagon 4 capta tn chatr s 5port
wheels luggage rack axe co nd

350 V 8 Auto 8 Bed Heavy Duty

PM

0

D

FOR DA W LABREOLIE
BtG DEAL'
1 NEVE!'.
REALLY
L IK ED
HER AN'(

fW)~\C. tN:l/1{)

AAD DIC:tLY&lt;n:iot~
01\ AAD "lllto\r-.. 1

1989 GMC Salarl Full Custom
Van $3 950 740-448 4222

$2 500 304 862 3682

1990
Cadillac
Fleetwood
Brougham 5 7 engtne 4dr good
co nd tton $5 000 304 675- t 139

'l't.U..OW f.IUtl\&amp;l.b
50t&gt;\Ut&lt;\ 1-\C~I\

WA'{

2532

$1 800 OBO 740 446 7252 After
5PM

'!'EUDW flU~5,

50 ANGI E DL!M ?ED ME

1987 Ford Escort GT good con

t988 Toyota MR 2 t tops ale

~\rof~lt-1 WJt!l)

BIG NATE

8 8 Bed Automati c Power
Wtndows &amp; Door Locks 740 446

1987 T Type Buick Regal TTops
AC PW PL CD Player 740 446
6869

Lt.T'~ 'X£ Tl\lNo\1~ ~llmt,

~~\X'\~

D

304 773-6111

d lion $1200 74(}499 2665

Wl-\f&gt;..\~ FOIZ. Dlt--lt-\Efl: GL.(&gt;.,t&gt;Y~ 7

...

&amp; 4-WOs

ooo

9357

~

lent Condlllon Must Sell I 740
441-Q9!!6 After 4 PM

1969 Nova SS 396 375 Less
Moto1 &amp; T!ans $3 000 (740
682 7512

1978 Monza Dragcar 377 Ghde
513 Dana 6 50s liS $6 500
Turnkey Ask For Randy 740 245

~

1997 Dodge 4x4 Diesel t Ton

1969 Mu stang 6 Cylmder Auto
EKcel ent tnt $5 000 304 675
3960

1977 Chevy Cor11ette 350 Auto
52
M1tes T Tops Whtle !Tan
Interior Best Offer 740..446 t02t

.

THE BORN LOSER

Dually Compaltely Loaded Excel

730

shrub

14 Mal1ce
15 Hook - 16 Nauttcal rope
17 90210 s Z1erlng
19 Fln1sh last In a
race
20 Pleas•ng sound
23 Pretend
26 Pie- - mode
27 Tee 30 Van Gogh tor
one
32 Neuter

By Phillip Alder
Bndge has fought hard and fa1r
ly successfully to keep poltt1c s oul
of the game Players never care
whtch race o r creed the1r opponents
are but governments have someltmes
taken a less ltberal ltne

tors 2 85 Gal Gas Tanks Pump

Trade In 740 2561424

t 868 Plymouth V 8 Excellent

..,.,.,.,.,~~~ ~

Politics again

End Hood and Fenders TIt Ra
dtalors Auto Transmission and 5
Speed 2 Comple te 3TO 2V Mo

Hay for sale excellent horse hay
Never been wet $ t 50 per ba le
Contact Harley or John Rtce 740

West

I

Answer to Prevloul Puzzle

Opemng lead • J

Hyde Brakes Complete Front

1986 Dodge Dakota Clear
$2 650 00 Or Best Oflor Or

Autos for Sale

• 8 32
.. 9 3 2

Desert stops
Participant
Actor Grey
Heve lunch
Third dog?
Items ownad
Flowering

1

dem 141181 Rear and Front A~tles
Brakes Rear and Front Axles

Orchard Grass 74(}245-9212

dtt1on $4995 74(}992 6824

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

2NT

1982 Ford F700 Dump Excellent
1981 GMC Pick Up Good Condl
tton New 1997 Ullltly Tra•ler Tan

Speed 4 Cylinder 1986 C .. ivy
Astro Van V 6 Auto $1 800
Each 740.446-4328

+

Pass

I'M GLAD MY MAN
SNUFFY DIDN'T KETCH
TH' BUG !!

1978 FOrd F 150 4x4 35 t auto
run s good g oo d sttcker $725

Patr1ot

580

Cres s Greens AI eady Cut $10
You Cut $5 Chartes McKean
Farm 740.446 9442

South

BARNEY

1985 Toyota P ck Up ~ WD 4

710

39
40
t Fencing move 42
6 College athlete 45
10 Subject to a
46
tax
49
12 Used a soup
51

Vulnerable North South
Dealer: South

Trucks for Sale

Ear Of Co rn $2 75 A Bushel An
drew Troyer 469 A chards Road

TRANSPORTATION

ACROSS

• QJ 4

~~~~~~~--- - 1~
, . ~40~~~45~9~41~9--------~

t992 Geo Storm amlfm stereo
al 5 speed new ttres mmt con

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

A 10
• 10 8 6 5

Duneouggy ClOsed In With Heat

and Gauge 20• wheels and Tires
Rough and Straight Tread Drive
Shafts
and
Mise
Parts

Good Mixed Timothy Orchard
Grass Hay Second Cutttng 01

+

• K 9 6
•AQ6
• J 9 7 4

BARN EO Round batls mtxed
hay never wet 304 882 20n

74(}245 9560

6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Ru ss

200 amp dis co nne ct bo11. out
Side w/rain hub Cal K &amp; K Mo
btle Homes 304 675 3000 8am

trash tncluded 740-992 2167

Seal Pomt Stamese Ava labia For
Stud Servce 740..367-7123

530

540

Reg Mint Horse 9mos old
A M H A Pinto 304-675 3992

tton 740 446-3903 Alter 5 30

Oval on Acousttc Elect r c Gullar I
Case Peavey Etc Wtth Case

Moore owner

(740)592 2322 or (740)698 3531

95 600 M1les Very Good Cond1

570

Buy or sell Rive r ne Anttques
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hour s M T W 10 00
am to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to

Athena Llvettoek
February 281ft I pm Bread/Cow/
and C81ve Sale/ All Consigments
WelCome Hauling Avatlable Cat
lie accepted after 4pm Fnday

Ch huahua pupptes 6wks old

Marl n 22 w th scope and sUng
Ruger 10/22 w th two chps $200
for bOth 741)-992 4133

Antiques

Livestock

IDlHlS

South

720

630

East
•AQt073
• 8 7

• J 4
•KJ432

VIckie 74(}446-2897

620

Wanted Ford And Massey Fer
guson Tractors Older Models
8N 9N Jubilee 600 800 $enes
Tht!l Type Tractors &amp; lmple
ments t 937 886.2822

HEY LISIDJ

Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles No Turn Downs Call

614-694 7842
Wanted to Buy

..•

EEK&amp;MEEK

Trucks ..~~... s Etc

Upton Used Cars Rt 62 3 Miles
South or Leon WV Financing
Ava~able 304 458 1069

1990 Pont•ac Grand Prtll lE Au
tomallc AC Stereo Cassette

0013
Sporting
Goods

Used 25 ... 4xP Case Trencher
With Backhoe Attachment And
Case Maxi Sneaker Cable Plow

6 00 9, 00 PM

Female Full B ooded Beagle PIJP
pes Shots &amp; Wormed 740 388

520

Siders EquiPI!"'nl 304 675-7421

Upright Ron Evans Enterprises

Appliances
Recondtlloned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relrl
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctly MayJag 740 446

USED

C edll Prob ems? We Can Help

Hydraulic oil lowest price In
town Vent free gas heat•rS pro
pane &amp; natural gas on sale now

02 26 98

1 800-522 2730 X3901

N On AI 2 304 675 3960 Leave
Message

740 367 7705

GOOD

son P1ke 740 446 8906 740
445-7787

1980 1990CarsFor$1()1111
Seized And Sold
Locally ThtS Month

Year In The Heatmg &amp; Cooling
Busl nesst 740 446 6306 I 800

742 2654 or740 992 5177

510

0607

Square Bales $2 00 Each t Mile

74(}388~92

MERCHANDISE

Bad Credit No Credit Bankrupl
cy? We Can Help! Bank Finane
lng On Used Vehicles 740 441

Massey Ferg uso n Adjustable
Olsc NH56 Hayrakas N H Hay
Bind Hay Tedders 2 Row Culll
vator Potato Plows Caront FiniSh
Mowers New &amp; Used P.arts For
Ford And Massey Ferguson
Kessel s Tractor And Equ pmenl
1 Mile Past Holzer Hospital Jack

----------------------------{•
server

Spoiler

1993 S tO Pick Up 5 Speed 2 86

A Groom Shop Pet Groom ng
Featurtng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

Space for Rent

Ground Eflects

$1 500 080 740 25-1233

Cyl nder low Miles E~tcellent
Condtlton Asktng $7 500 740

740 441 5698 74D-441 5167

460

Blades 12 And 14 Inch Plows

89 Shadow 4 door 1\Jtl&gt;o Cruise
T ilt

Ph 740 446 1104 740-441 0450

25/97 shots &amp; wormed

Sleepmg room s with cooking
Also tra er space on river All
hook ups Ca ll after 2 00 p m

Ford 3000 Diesel Massey Fergu
son 135 PS Masse~ Ferguson
35 Diesel 8ti1 Ford 641 Ford
800 Ford Cub Cultivators Side
Dresser Bush Hogs Grader

Heat Pumps Only Sl1ghty H~her
Call UsToday f 998 Is Our 28th

Town Newly Remodeled HBO
Ctnemu Showtime &amp; Dtsney
Weekly Rates Or Monthly Rates
Construction Workers Welcome

Open Kt1 &amp; LA State Route 218
$300/Mo 74().256- 1044

provef t -888 738-3332

Doublewlde Aepo Free Delivery
And Sol Up 304 736 7295

er II s Time To Gel Your AIC
Un ts And Heat Pumps Cleaned
Cleaning Your Un Is Will Help
Sa 1e You Money On Your Cool
mg Blls

$125ea 304 895 3815

9621
LIMITED OFFER
WHY WAIT
DON'T WAIT
W II Pay For Vour

304 773-5341

Block bnck sewer p pes wmd
ows trntels etc Claude w nters
Rto Grande OH Call 740 245

DREAM HOME SERIES
REAL ESTATE

Buy Sell Trade
Used &amp; Antiques
Furntture

550

740 446 4543

Oakwood Homea
of Nitro WV

Mason WV

Deliver 740 388 8010

Onlyl 304 882 2904
Ava !able March 1st 3 Bed
ooms Bath LW Garage 1 :l2
Graham Road Rodney IJ Village
$425/Mo Depostt &amp; References

A i S Furniture

sard L1D111ry at (740) 446-7323

&amp; CLG 1 80().872 5967
Cuatom made tlomes where
the customer seta the
price • '(We own the bank

call 74(}992 5295

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gal on

304 773 5651 Mason wv

304 736-3409
AttentiOn Mobile Home Owners
Areas Largest Inventory 01 Inter
therm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps
A r Condit oners Furnaces &amp;
Parts Huge Buytng Power Means
The Lowest Installed Pr ce Easy
Over The Phone Bank Fmancmg
Call Bennetts MoDtle Home HTG

mNew

Prom gowns lor sale sizes 8 12
short and long from $20 to $80

1366

1519

120 leal long 80 feet long on oth
er s de 75 reel wtde level lot m

lowest pMce 888 265 2123

291 0098

1 10 acres for sale 740 742

2803

PRIMESTAR winter blowout
spectal All nventory must got!
170 free channels free monthly
guide tree bonus g rt Guaranleed

One bedroom apartment In Pt
Plea sant furn shed very ntce
and clean no pets 304 675

2957

&amp; Acreage

ending soonlt 80().26J.2G40

B lis Now $40 oo Servtctno Cost

paid no pets 740-992 5658

NEW BANK REPO S ONLY 3
LEFTt.to(I.!UI:J.6862

Prlmeatlr $99 wtth rebate Free
HBO with first month free Offer

port From $249 $373 Call 740

ltnanclng on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Peymenta 11 low 11
SIBO cen now 304 755 5885

•

Mag c Chef Electrtc Range Euro
pean Burner Almond E~ecellent
Cond~lon $100 740-446 9708

SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL
Sprtng Is A ghl Around The Corn

Modern 1 a,edroom Apartment

736 7295

Call Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528

Sofa $200 lazy Boy rechner
like new $400 304-675 7173

740 446 0390

Spectal tmanctng available 304

JET

Gracious I vmg t and 2 bedroom
apartments et VIllage Manor and
Atverslde Apartments in Middle

Single Plrent Progrem Special

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

Dr 740-448 4525

ences 740 446 4335 (6 00 9 00
PM)

5 New t997 t 4 Wldes Unbeliev
able Prtce Must Sell Before Jan
31st To Close Out Physt cal
Year Call Cred1t Lme t 800 948

bile home $5 000 74(}446 4782

Grubbs P a no tuntng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Cal the

Furnished Apartment Near ll
brary Employed Person To Share
Apartment With Teacher Refer

74(}388 0678

Barboursvtlle W V.a.
Dream Home Series

Th s newspaper w II not
know ng y accept
adven sements for real esta e
wh ch s n v alatiOn olthe
taw Our readers are hereby
nlormed that all dwell ngs
advert sed n th s newspaper
a e ava able on an equal
opportun ty bas s

very nice 1n Chfton $225 per mo

plus$100dllf)OsU 304 773-9181

day 304 755-5885

6x32 Office Tra1ler or use as an
add on of 2 rooms to present mo-

Call304 675-1695

New Double Wide 3BA 2 Bath

Upstalfs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur
n shed Clean No Pets Reference
&amp; Depos I Requ red 740 446

5678

G rls baby clothes (0 24months )
name brands wedding dress
size 22/24 (In bnde magaz ne)

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

Only whtle supplies last Call to-

• VCR Included AI lor $2111/mo

740-2561922

S35

2 Bedroom furnished garage apt

63 95 Aces Approx 8 Acre
lake Galha County Counry Water
And Electric $2 600 Per Acre

OAKWOOD HOMES

All real es tate advert•slf1g tn
th s newspaper s subtect to
the Federal Fa •r H'ous ng Act
ot 1968 which makes !JIIegat
to advert se any p elerence
hm tat on or d•scr m nat on
based on race color rehg on
se• lam I al status or na t anal
o •g n or any ntenhon to
make any such preference
I m•tat on or d scr m nat1on

7398 After 2 PM 74D-367 7686

FirewOOd For Sale Delivered

and aotup Only $187 08 per
month with $1075 down Calli
80().837 3238

379 2821 740-379-2481

Will haul junk or trash away $351

Up To $8 00 Hr IT ps Comm &amp;
Hrly Rata ) Fie• Hrsl Appl y AI
The Gall pots l oca t on (740-4 41

kitChen

304 675 7604 Call after I OOpm

FREE INFO 1 888 430 7576
Ext 3208 (24 Hrs I

Clallltled Adal
Send SASE to Joe Glowsk1 PO
Box 1253 Amherst Oh 44001

ltv1ng

2 Bedroom Apartment 76 VIne
Streel Gallipolis Ohio 740 446

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

p~no

Call 304 675 4678

·~· 304 736-7295

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unfurnished security
depOsit required no pets 740

540

2 Bedroom apt In New Haven
stove &amp; relrlg $285/mo water &amp;
trash included 304 773 9171
leave mes63.ge

~00

MUST SELL 14K80 3 Bedrooms
2 Baths Owner Fmanc ng Avatl

Apartments
for Rent

992 2218

includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes skirting deluKe steps

$2 500 Needs some work done

Georges Portable Sawmtll don I
haul your logs to the m•ll JUSt call

FIRE YOUR BOSS

MekJng Lot• of Money With

$5

12d55 Tratler 3br 1 bath

400 Opportun 1es To Make
B•g $$ From Home

Have An Avon Parly In Your
Home And Get A Free G ft Call
Altsha AOIBS AI 740 24 5 9635
An Avon Independent Sa es
Representatrve

2baths owner financing avaU

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom

OW&amp;•
Spacous 3BA/2BA
Complete Dollvory &amp; Set up

210

Oedtcated To Ollenng The Best
In Care Seen c Hdls Nurs ng And
Rehabtl tat on Ce nter Is H rtng
STNA s (Stale Te ste d Nurs ng
Assrstantsj All Shilts Avatlable
Contact Stall Development D~rec
tor Pam Caldwell For Data Is 311
Buckndge Road B dwell OH

MUST SELL 14x80 3bedrooms

pm

304 882 3972 Rota I D
1 aoo a2o 6893
P nl

163062

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Un que Opponun 1y In Alzhe1m
ers Care Unt In Search OILPN
ApproK $200 per month
Part T me To Ca re For Special
1 800 251 5070
Popula 1 ons W1th Very Spectal
Needs Prove n Program Contact
12x60 Kirkland trailer total alec
Pam Cald well At Scenic Hll s
trlc on 35 acres tully stocked
Nu s ng &amp; Aet1ab ltatlon Center • pond good hunting 740 742
311 BuckrdgeRd Bdwell OH
2086 evenmgs 740 742 7405
days
WANTED Full hme person for
custom e se rv ce representative
1976 Governor 12X60 tolal alec
pos on n local nsurance agen
!ric 2br 1 bath $6 000 304 882
cy P 01 1ns urance expenence
3829
and state lteenstng a plus but wdl
Iran and liCense a qual fled per
t2x60 2 Bedroom w th eKpando
son Please send resume to Tt1e
on rented lot In Park Lane CA
Daly Sentnel PO Box 729 57
Outbulldmg
Carport
Porch
Pomeroy OhiO 45769
$12 500 (740)245 0452 After 5 30

@

rec t

320

New 16 Wide Free Delivery &amp;
Set Ull $17 999 I 888 928-3426

·s~EC IAL

Clean Ho use S I W l h Edlerly
Babys tt ng Ask For Cathy 740

110

able :304 736-7295

OH

Wanted To Do

440

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Middleport Gravel Hill 4 bed
1oom I 1/2 baths la•oe family
room &amp; living room formal dining
room 2570 sq 1 113 acre lot
740 9'92 2704 arter 5pm

45614

180
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

320

Homes for Sale

I

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) You
are 1n a favorable cycle to r Julttllmenl
ot expeclallons Couple th1~ lrend
With opumtsm and you II lx: assured
a good outcome w1th thm;s that look
bad now Get aJumpon hfe by under
standmg the tnlluences that wtll gov
ern you m the year ahead Send for
your Astro Graph pred1 ci 10n s by
mathng $2 to Astro Graph c/o th1 s
newspaper PO Box 1758 Murray
Htll Stat1on New York NY 10156
Be sure to state your zodtac s1gn
ARIES (March 2 1 Apnl 19)

TA URUS IA prtl 20M ty ' 0)
Even thoueh your concepts tlll_,! hl
umtatn e- r un s ol Wl,(.]om your ~ts \O

ua1es lack lx: c trdul how you pre
sem lhem loday so lh 11 you don t
Jdlale thw e~os
GEMINI !May 21 Jun&lt; 20) Stnve
10 he ad 1ptable lod ,ty reg.trdtnh a
development you can nol chanec per
sonall) II your adjustments are prag
malic everyone w tlllook ltke vtcto"
CANCE R (June 2 1 July 22l In
ord er to matntall1 harmon y tn 1mpor
I ant rela110nsh1ps lx: tolerJnt and to r
gtvmg today Others Will excuse 1n
you what you excuse 111 them
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) You could
be pleasantly surpnsed when you
recetve more m return today than you
gave to another Betng constderate
generales rewards
VIRGO ( Aug 23-Sept 22) You
are extremely chansmauc today and
wherever you go your pre sence wtll
be felt even lhough you won 1 be

seekw,;

altl!ntlon

Ll BRA (Sept 21 Oct 21) It th ere

'' ~om.:thtng ntlt: you ve been want
tn.! to do lor l l.oved one make an
cltort to do tttoday The ttm1ng "1de
.tl tnd tts 1mpac t w 1ll be eltecltve
SCORPIO lOci 2 4 NOv 22 )
Today w1ll lx: more enJ oyable d you
.tre mobtle tnslead ot l e1harg1c Move
around and try to make as man y

mt!anm,;tul short e"'curstOns as pos
s1ble
SAGITTARIUS ( Nov 23 Dec
2 1) Your matenal prospe~ts look very
good 1oday You mtght find a lot more
on your plate th 111 o thers w1ll that s
because you deserve 11
CAPRICORN iDee 22 Jan 19) If
condtttons warrant II assert yourself
as a leader today Encourage others to
do what you know they ca n do while
you take care of 1hmgs they can 'I
handle
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19) D o
not keep your feehngs bollled up
today Fnends Will apprectate you
more tf you express yourself Be
open and honest regardmg your emo
(lOllS

FEBRUARY 26 I

�·Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Y Thursday, February 26, 1998

Ohio· Lottery

Meigs girls
.eliminated
byWCH

Pick 3:

722

V6, A/C, case, New
velnlclle trade In

Auto, A/C, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass.

ONL
9500 MILES
DAR WINNERS -- Winners of the DAR contest are pictured here with their parents, contest chairmen and teachers. Left to right they
are Patricia Holler, Emma Ashley, DAR representatives; Rachel Ashley, Don Deyber, Ryon Wachter, Angie Rigsby, teacher, Judy Marshall,
Rachel Marshall, Jennifer Harris, Robert Harris, Jr., Trennia Harris, Robert Harris, Jr., and Pauline Atkins, regent.

DAR contest winners .presented awards
Awards were prc'icntcd to Win - Harrb . sixth gro.u.kr at Ri vcn'IC\'-'
ners of the American History Essay Elementary : Ryan Wacht er ol EastContest and the Good Ciuzcn Con - em Elementary : Rachel Mari e Mortest at a recent mceun g of the Return shal l. Sowhern Jumor High: Au!-:tin ·
Jonathan Meigs Chapter Daughters Tyler Lillie . Southern Juni or Htgh
of the American Revoluuon .
SchooL
Students
read
Awards for the Ameri can Hi story their winning essay on 'T orts m ·
Essay Contest were prese nted by Ameri can History" al the meeting .
Patricia Holter. chamnan. 10 Morgan Judging was completed by th ree
Ni cho le Weber. fifth grader at judges.
Rtvcrvicw Elementary. Jennifer
The DAR Good Ci tizen Program

and Scholarship Conte st Award was
presented to Radtcl Ashle y. a senior
at Meigs High School. by the contest
chatnnan . Emma Ashley The program i ~ ope n to all sc n1 or class stu dents and is intended 10 encourage
and re ward the qualities of good cit izenship. The senior class of each
school makes th e final selec tion of
the st uden t to be the school's DAR
Good Citizen . The Scholarship por-

liOn of the COniCS( IS admin iStered by
a faculty member. Each contest
entry IS evaluated by independent
non-DAR judges:
. Pauline Atkins, regent , congralulalcd contest wmncrs and all those
contesl parti cipants who entered the
competition . Atkins noted that
essays thi s year were outstanding
with good participation from the
sc hools .

Girl Scouts busy with activities -

1995
CHEVROLET
'S·10
PACKAGE,

A/C,

SUPER
NICE TRUCK

ONLY
49,000 MILES
1994 FORD
CROWN
VICTORIA
LX ~ACKAGE, leatner,
A/C, alum. wneels, power
equipment.

LOCAL
TRADE I

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1994 FORD
F·150 XLT

Auto, A/C, V6, PW, PL,
cruise, tilt, leather

4 wheel . drive, A/C,
cruise, tilt, AM/FM case,
48,000 miles.

LOCAL
TRADE IN!

LEASE

1995 GMC 2500 SUPER CAB 414
COCKlES ARRIVE - 1,299 cases of Girl Scout cookies arrived in
Pomeroy early Tuesday afternoon for distribution to Girl Scout
troo~s throughout the county. According to Unit Administrator
Shin~y Cogar, the most popular cookies were Thin Mints at 266
cases followed closely by .Samoas at 258 cases. Above, Mary Freeman, representing Syracuse Brownies, Cogar, and Cheri Johnson,
representing Middleport Juniors, examine stacks of the cookies.

AUTO, A/C, VB, POWER WINDOWS,·LOCKS,
CRUISE;, TILT, AM/FM CASS

PARADE OF NATIONS - Girl Scouts participating in Thinking
Day which was held Saturday afternoon at Eastern High School participated in a parade of nations in which scouts portrayed Girl
Guides from other countries. Here, Ashley Miceli and Brooke Parker, from left, members of Junior Troop 1039, Tuppers Plains, carry
the U.S. and Ohio flags. Their troop represented Australia In Thinking Day activities.

Literary Club members
hear review of 'Sanctuary'

WAITING THEIR TURN - Members of Daisy Troop 1339,
Reedsville, represented South Africa during Thinking Day activities
Saturday. They are shown here waiting their turn to present a program consisting of an African song of welcome. Thinking Day is a
time for Girl Scouts and Girl Guides to remember their affiliation
with millions of other girls around the world .

Indoor camp meeting planned
An indoor c~unp mee tin g spon sored by the Mcrgs Area Holines'
Associau on wtll hcg m Monday and
continue thruu ~ h March 8 at the
Laurel Cli ff Free Methodist Church
ncar Pomeroy.
Services will he held al · 7 p.m.
each ni ght except Sunday when the
servtce wi ll bcg tn at f) p.m.
R. G. Humble will be the evangeli st and there will he special music
by Jim and Cathy Stsson and fam il y.
Prcsc rvicc musrc will he provided
by the churches of the assoc iation.
There will be a nursery for ages hinh
10 three and junior church for chil d,..,n . age four 10 sixth grade .
At the servt ces there will be a
yout h section so lhal tee ns can sit
togct llcr and on Saturday mghtthcrc
will he a yu uth ni ght with all teens
being in vited for food. fun and fel -

"Sa nclu,uy" hy Nora Rohcrts was
reviewed hy Eilee n Buck &lt;~ I a rcu·n1
meeting ol the Middleport Literary
Club held at the home of Ida Dtchl
in Pomeroy.
Rohcn ~. well known lor her novl'b ol romance and my,tcry. ha ~
hcc n \VIdcly rccog ni1.etl in her f1cld
"-'1Jh :.1 lmost eve ry awmd g1vcn lnr
t: .'(l'C IIcnLC in romance writmg .
reported Mr&lt; . Bud . Her hooks can
almost alwap he found on the heslsc \1..:-r ll ~ t s and she is rarely out of the
puhlt c eye. she added .
-&gt;Buck mlroduced Hie main charac ter. Jo Ellen Hath away. as she
return s to he1 ~: hi!Uhood horne on
one of the Sea Island' off the Georgia Coast. The house i:-. now hcin,g
run a~ an mn hy her lami ly. hut she
h:is hcc n cSiran~cd fro111 hoth home
and fanul y for man y yc,rrs .
··sanctuary" is th e name of the
beautiful e'late. hut it had not provtdcd a haven for her al.lcr the my' tcnous d1 sappcar.1n cc of her mother

lowsl11p fo lluwmg till' s~.:n· icc
Add1tinnal lllforrnati t) tl on the
camp mcct1n g lll ~IY tx· ohta1ncd fro m
the Re v. Greg Cundiff. 'N:&gt;-7Y56 or
Re v. Dal'l(l DeWitt. 992 -4152.
The Mci~ :-. An: a H11 lmc..,s A..,su~..:i ­
:.Hion 1s made up of ci~ ht L" hurch -Hyse ll Run Holme». Laurel Free
Methodist and Nanrenc Chu rches
at Syracuse. Chester. Pon tand . Mrd dlcport . Rutland and Pomcrov.
The a ~soc iat! O il was or~a~iLcd 111
By MICHAEL SCHOPP
1962 and churches lake turns hostRoci1Cstcr Democrat and Chront ing monthly sc rv1cc s w ith ~~ di!Tcrcn t
cle
pa, tor preac hin g each month These
Blue . nmure's-scrcne. gentle giant
servtcc' arc hcl rl the fourth Tuesday
.
or
colors,
has a lightcr·sidc. So light.
from Se rtcmhcr through May.
in
fact.
that
ca ndy makers keep lakexcl udrng December and MarciL
ing
it
10
the
sweets.
Act ivities mcludc month skating
First there wen; the mar~hnwl ­
at the Skate-a-way to m nlcmpor:rr)·
low
&gt;of breakfast cereal 's Boo- Berry
C hri ~ ti a n mu ~ 1 c with devot ions
and
Lucky Charms. Then came
through the fall and win ter.
braver l'enturcs ltkc blue M&amp;Msand Jcl l-0 .
Now. brae&lt; yoursel f for a swee p
Blue
Pee ps.
of
Applicati ons for 10 scholarships of $500 each to he awarded by the StewPeeps
are squ ishy. marshm allow
art John son VFW Post 9926 in Mason arc bein g accepted from post memsugar
animals
that me most often •
bers and thctr fam tli es th rough Aprrl 15.
seen
hangi
ng
out
in Easter baskets
A Post 9926 spokesman s,at d if all sc holarshtps arc not awarded to memYe
ll
ow
is
the
most
popular color.
bers and their families, then other veterans and their famil ies will be confo
ll
owed
by
lave
nder.
pink and
sidered. Those who app ly must be accepted at a college or uni Yers lly.
while
.
Resumes should slate the applicant's rcl att onship to a ve teran as we ll giv- ·
Until bl ue blew in .
ing the coll ege where accepted and the major course of st udy.
·· we se le cted blue in keeping
They arc to he se nt to VFW Post 9926, P.O. Box 586, Mason. W Va 25260.

years be fore . As Buck related the
e1·cms that began to take place after
Jo Ellen's return . it became plain that
it was not to be a sanctuary for her
now.

Buck
maintained
suspense
thrnughout as she introduced lhc
ot he r characters and delved into the
"ck mind of the man who threa tened the It fc of Jo Ellen. As she concluded. Buck revealed the answer&gt;
'" the deadly sec ret s that "Sanctuary " held .
Nora Roherts. as usual. included
th e clement of romance as well as
myste ry. so the heroine seemed to he
able to look forward 10 a much happier life
Prc st dcnt
Martha
Hoover
pres ided and read · a lcllcr about
S"IARS . a readrn g program involvin g vul unlccr&gt; 111 school s that mrght ·
be of mtcrcst to mcmhcrs.
Thirteen members responded to
roll call with co mment s on the book
and the author.

Marshmallow candy goes blue with
barely a peep

Scholarship applications being accepted

.

''

wi th the current consumer trend
toward that color," says Greg Bar·
ran. vtce pre sident of markct mg for
Ju st Born Inc .. the Peeps makers.
Blue's dip into confcctionary culture is the latest in a series of bold
new terri lory expl ored by the primary color. The March issue of Self
maga zine has an article on how blue
is the "i n" co l or·~n clothing. especiall y fo r spring dresses.
The Pantone Color Institute ,
whtch track s' and markels co lor
trends and standards , says that 35
percent of Americans claim that blue
ts their favorite color far and
away the leader - and that blue is
the "official color for lhc end of the
millen ium ."
And to think , there wasn 't even a
memo. Not eve n a Peep .

1994 FORD
EXPLORER XLT

1993
CHEVROLET
CORSICA
Auto, A/C, AM/FM cass,
new car trade In_

LOCA
TRADE I
1992 FORD
E·150
uto, A/C, power wind·
ws, power locks, cruise,
lit, AM/FM caas

CONVERSION
VAN

1991 GEO
TRACKER
4x4

54995

1995CHEVROLET 1500 SUPER CAB
AUTO, A/C, VB, TILT, CRUISE, AM/FM CASS,
19,000 MILES

1990 FORD
PROBE
uto, A/C,
M/FMCD

tilt,

1988 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

cruise,

ve,

uto,
qulpment

power

NEW GRAND
MARQ.UIS TRADE

.,

... .F!'
,.
: rl~
: ...
~
~
1::::::: • • • • ..• • : •
'
O•

1:::::::

:• ,. ,

•

•

•

•

I

I

"

•

'

Cloudy

8028
Buckeye 5:

7 -9-19-25·30

1995 FORD
PROBE SE

' .u .

Pick4:

Sports on Page 4

1997 FORD
RANGER XLT

,'!'&gt;P ;o&lt;·~
. ~
._,.;"··'.,.~·-&lt; .,_· ,r~·.=:o;:-ir
~..
..:"&gt;'
~
~- -'l' t:&gt;(,; •.

Cloudy tonight, low In
low 40s, chance of showers . Saturday , cloudy ,.
showers, high near 60.

en tine
Vol. 48, NO. 221
,g1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannon Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 27, 1998

New bridge will be built near old span: ODOT
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New:; Staff
The replacement bridge for the aging Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will likely be co nstructed near the exisling span. lhe Ohio Department of Transportation announced this morning.
II would appear that the existing Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will continue
to carry traftic between the Pomeroy -Midd leport and Mason, W. Vu. areas
while a new bridge is buill in a location either just upstream or downslream
from the exisling slructure, according to a press release from ODOT District I0 headquarters.
A public meeting lo discuss the preferred route for a new Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge will be held sometime this spring. according 10 ODOToffictals. The
department has eannarked $25 million for construction of a new bridge in

2002.
ODOJ's consultant. Sverdrup Inc. of Columbus has been studying lwo
feas ;ble corridors for the new structure. The first corridor straddles I he exist-

ing bridge while the second is located in the Kerr Run area where U.S . 33
meets the Ohio Rtver.
'To this point. lhere is overwhelming public input for the existin£ location," said ODOT District 10 Depu1y Director John Dowler.
With the community support for lhe existing site iri mind. Sverdrup analyzed the structural capacity of ttle existing bridge piers and abutmems to
determine if they could be used to hold the new bridge. However. in u report
lasl month. Sverdrup recommended lhe existing piers not be used. ·
Although adequate for the exisling structure. they would be inadequate
by modem requirements for load caparily. JUSt as the existing bridge is inadequale by modem standards, ODOT said.
As the studies come out. the area near the existing span has come oul as
lhe desirable bridge location for several reasons. according to Tom Hedrick.
ODOT District I0 planning and programming administrator.
That site would have less environmental impact and cost less than building a bridge at Kerr's Run, he explained. To use Kerr's Run site correctly.

the brid2c approach would have to be tied into the Rock Spring' interchange.
k~td ~
.
There ha' been ~ome loc:.t l speculati on abo utt)' ing in the e:&lt;i~ tin g bridgt!
si te with ..,tate Rout e 7 via a ..,hort highway acrth.., the hill . . tn R1 1ut~ 7
"Th,rl wa., a consideration in the 'oils.'· Hedrirk explained. He -aiJ th e
iJca might ha\'e some merit. hut is not being ron,1Jered to the co... t mvnh·cU .
AI one time . ODOT thought a ferry could be hired to carry lr,rffi c whtlc
a new bridge wa s buill on the old pier- and abutments. With reu,ing the old
pi!!r' now ou t of the qu~ ... rion. the exi..;ting o.;tructure would hl' lefl ... tanding
while th e new hrtJ~e h buill .
Meanwhik. th~ ~u nsultant ha." been completin~ tidd work. Inc luding sub~ urface invest1 g~uion:-.. '-llong the! alignme.nts immediatl!ly up... trcam ~nJ downstream of the ex i, ting bridge. The consu ltant has also been dra lting com - .
ponents of the required envtr 0nmenlal document.
Once buill . the new bridge will become the respon"btlity of Wesl Virginia.

Parkersburg schools report case

Test results awaited in
Legionnaires•.case
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
'
Local health oflicials conlinue to
awatl the results of laboratory tests
perfonned on standing water at Middleport Ekmenlary School.
Jon Jacobs of the Meigs County
Health Department said the test
results are expected 10 arrive somelime Friday afternoon. Originally.
those results were lo have been provtded early this week. :md then were
10 have arrived ye&lt;lerday.
The tests were ordered on waler
found on the building's leaking roof.
in collection containers in the building and other sites where -standing
wmer collem.
Barbara Logan, 53. a second gmde
school teacher in the building. died
from complications of Legionnaires'
D1scase on Wednesday, causing concern among parenl~ that lhe slanding
water at the building might be a harbor for lhe bacleria which causes the
infection .
Meanwhile. a teacher's aide in
Parkersburg. W.Va. has been diag nosed with the infection. and a public meetin g was held there last night
to answer questions from lhe public
about the s~fely of the students at
Bknnerhassen Junior High School.
Health oflici:lis there are giving
the same re~pon~e to pilrt:nb' concerns that those here have given: the
likelihood of infection due to roof
leak s is "remote."
"Mariella A.M." reporled this
morning that parents with t:hiltlren in
the Parkersburg school arc concerned

that moldy ceiling tile may have harbored the bacteria which infected the
teacher lhere. a theory lhal health·
officials in Wood County have dismissed as "highly unlikely."
While the bacleria is known 10
develop in stagnant potable waler.
health officials say that the water
which harbors it is usually heated
water like lhal found m heating and
ventilation systems. Jacobs and
Meigs Local Superintendent Bill
Buckley have both noted that no other cases of lhe illness have developed
amdng 1eachers or studenls. Ths
incubation period for the disea!;!;_ is a
maximum of len days. and usually
live days. according to Jacobs.
Logan had been ill for approximately three weeks.before her death.
According 10 a nurse practitioner
with Mid-Ohio Valley Health Departmerli." quoted in "Marien a A.M.. "
males are almostlhree times ~s like­
ly to be infected with the illness as
females. and those over 50 are most
likely to be infecled.
Children are not oflen infected
with the bacteria because they generally have strong immune systems.
according to a St. Joseph's Hospital
physician quoted in "Mariclla A.M."
Symploms. according to Pal
Mays. are lack of appetite. nausea.
muscle aches. head&lt;lche. kver and
chills. abdominal pain :rnd diarrhea.
L~gionnaire, · Disease is cons1dered a
respiratory illness because the bacleria i"i in~c: ~ tct.l into the lung'~. COIU"iing
pneumonia-type symptoms.

Voinovich, district judge
consider killer's future
COLUMBUS (API - The fate of
convicted killer Wilford Berry Jr.
rests in the hands or two men : a federal judge and Gov. George
Vo1novich.
U.S. Dtslrict Judge Algcnon L
Marbley said he will rule today on
whether Berry. who is .,chedukd to
die by injection at 9 p.m. Tue,Jay. is
competent to watw appeals that
would delay his death .
In the meantime. Voinovich. who
has the power to Slop Berry\ execution at any time. is reviewing the
c;.~se . He spent several hour!\ on
Wednesday reviewi ng Berry's hi story with hi s chief legal adviser.

spokesman Mike Dawson said.
··onl'e he's l'tunpleted his review.
h~'ll make a d~l'ision regarding
dem~ncy.'' Dawson s~1id .
Vomov1rh had rt.&gt;ad ~,;orne of the
hundred' of ktlers - incl uding one
on behalf of Pope John Paul II asktng thai Berry he spared. but
Dawson said the guv~rnor will base
his tlc-ci,inn on thC" tact' of the L'a.,.e .
Berry. J5. who w,ts convicted of
killin~ hi, bo&gt;S. baker Charb J
Mitrotf Jr.. in Cleveland in 19X9.
would be 1he fiN prisoner e ~ecuted ·
in Ohio si nce 1963. The 'late reinslated Ihe dealh penalty in 19X I.
Continued on page 3

Youth still missing
The search is still on for 14-yearold Samantha Wilcoxen who wa, last
seen Jan. 16 in the Pomeroy area.
The girl apparently ran away from
a J'oSier home in the Portland area the
morning of Jan . 16. according to
Sheriff James M. Snulsby. She i.s
approximately five -fool. four- inches
t:lil and has blue eyes and blonde hair.
Soulsby said this morning lhat his
depan mem has checked on ·a number
of le:rds but have not come up with
any new infonnalion on the whereabouts of the teenager. There have
been rio responses to information
placed with the Nalional Crime Informal ion Center.
"We're slill investigating, checking things out," he said. "We've
checked several places in several
stales: there is nothing new."
Anyone wilh informalion concerning her whereabouts is advised 10

call the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department at 992-.1.17 1.

SAMANTHA WILCOXEN

OUTSTANDING - Lacy Marie Banks took one of the three outstanding awards at the Mel!!s High School science fair. Her exhibit dealt with different types of music and how they affect heart
rate at various times of the day.

TOP AWARD- Kristina Kennedy captured one of the three lop
awards in the Meigs High School Science Fair judging Thursday afternoon. Her exhibit compared the effects of commercial
antibacterial soap on bacteria.

Meigs science fair winners announced
Eight students received .superiors
on their science exhibits at the annual Meigs High School science fair
judged Thursday afternoon.
Receiving special award-t for nutstanding exhibits were Lacy Marie
Banks whos~ exhibil was on "How
does Hip-Hop Affect your Tick
Tock?". Rebekah Smith whu used
"Do Violent Movies Affect y&lt;'ur
Blood Pressure and Pul se". and
Kristina Kennedy. who used "Comparing rhe Elfec1s of Commercial
Antibacterial Soap on Bacteria" as
her theme.
Others with superior award.&gt;were
Matt Justice. "Plants and Pyramid
Power -Is There Truth 10 the Mylh ":
T J King. "Frostbite. Which Gloves
Protests the Best": Francn Romuno.
"The Emotional Power of Music ":
Bridget Vaughan. "Synthetic Based
vs. Petroleum Based Oil ": and
Hyung-Do Kim. "Is Drinking Wale(
Offered in Me1gs Cnunly Heallhi'"
There were 1Y proji!Ct!\ entered in
the science fair. Besides the eight
Continued on page 3

Activists
demand total
smoking ban
HEBRON. Ky. !API - The
largest airport in one: of tht! large'!
wbacco-growing slatt! s i' under
attack. for allowing smoking,
Anli-smoking activists on Thursday demanded a ban on smoking at
Greater Cincinnati-N\)rthern Kentucky lnternalional Airpon.
Spokesman Ted Bushelman said
1he airport has installed exhaust fans
and doors to limit the spread of
smoke from smoking areas. He said
the airport cannot ban smoking in
bars at the airpon because those businesses lease lhe space for lheir use.
Bushelman said Kentucky law
says any government building has to
allow smoki ng area.,. The airport's
management believes 1ha1 its build·
ings are government properly,
Bushelman said.
Ahron Leichtman. execulive
director of (:itizens 'for a Tobacco·
Free Society, said he thinks Kentucky
law applies oni:Y 10. state buildings.
not to the airport.

SUPERIORS - In addition to the three students taking "outstanding" for their exhibits in
the Meigs High School science fair, five others

''-'---&lt;/!;-·
..,,

:~

" ........

.

-l::'?~

Working the 'swing shift can be fun ... e.pecially
for second graders. Thursday's spring-like weather provided youngsters at Syracuse Elementary
!M:hool with the opportunity to play outside. Here,

students in Mr... Sayre's second grade class ('\torgan Brown, Lindsey Buzzard, Trenton Ros~berry
and Ryan C hapman - from front-to-rear) Sei! who
can swing the highest.

..

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