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                  <text>ByTh~Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Page 10 .

T~esday, March 3, 1998

Woman suffers from clinical depression - medicati9n needs to be prescribed
Ann
L d
an efS

:;;-.~.~ ~.S'~.~:::
Syn.Jinlc.

· Dear Aon Landers: I am an
intelligent, attractive, art1culate,
vivacious divorced woman, under
40. I have a great career and make
good money, which has made it posSible for me to own a nice home and
car, and wear designer clothes.
Everyone loves me because I'm outgoing anu extremely funny. I'm
invited out a lot.
So what's my problem ·&gt; I don't
enjoy li ving, and it would be OK
with me if I didn't wake up tomor-

row mormng.
When I was younger, I , uffcred
from depressiOn. When my son was
born, he gave me a reason IO li ve
and enJOY hfe. ~ut now that my son

lent to sec me once a week, .and
there was never a guarantee of mllmacy.
He said his sex drive would probably d1m1n1sh as he gets older. ThiS
IS grown, I can t ~cern to fmd a rca was very bad ne ws bccau..,, h1 s
son to live.
li bido barely functions whik mine is
I have had no success in rcla - 1n overdnvc --and he IS lour years
tionships. I ofte1• JOke th&gt;t I need lo younger than I am .
meet a well-educated man in a blue. I finaii.Y dec1ded to quit secmg
collar job, but the 1ru1h is, I don't h1m , but I m tcrnbly ,I qncly. M7 son
think I'll ever meet anyone.
IS away al coll ege. and I don I sec
I recently fell hard for a co-work- any poi nt in goin g on. I don't want
er. He was wonderful and seemed so to meet more men. hut the thought
happy to be with me. but after on ly a of bemg alone lorcvcr IS more than I
few weeks, it hccamc apparent that can bear: Please help me . -- Pomlwe had linle in common. I love less 1n Z 1 o~. Ill. .
.
being around people. he doesn't He
Dear Zwn: II ever I sensed elmdidn't care for any of the recreation- ical depression m a lener, yours is it.
al activities that I enjoy. He was con- Please ask your physician to pre-

sen be a mood elevator. (A psycholog1st con not prcscnbc medication.)
You could ~I so usc some counseling.
I recommend it. .
, Too ba~ you p•ckcd &gt; dud , but
p1case don t g1vc up. Keep alert to
other possibilities and open to new
relat10nsh1ps . You say you arc lone:y. Well. there arc a lot of lonely men
out there who would · appreciate a
woman like you. Fmd one.
Good luck. and h&gt;ppy hunting .
Dear Ann Landers: 1 don't cons1dcr myself a prejudiced person, hut
Ia 1~1 tcrnf1cd of AIDS . It 's not that 1
Sll '.n JUdgment. of people who have
H. I m Simply .tn ghtencd to death of
catch mg the disease.
I thmk there should be some sun
of law rcqUinng an annua l HIV

screening of everyone over 18 years sexual history is somewhat murky. If
of age. People who test positive you aren't sure of your partner's siashould be required by law 10 tell tus insist on see ing the results of a
everyone they have had sex wllh blo~d test Then , insist that your
&gt;bout their condition . I've heard and ' portncr usc condom s each and every
read countless stories ;1bout women

time.

"hose.hoyfricnds or husbands were
infected but didn't lc llthcm until il
was too late.
Is it wrong for 111 c to feel thi s
way ·&gt; How can 1 make sure 1 don't
gel infected '' __ Michelle in Riverside. Calif.
Dear Michelle: Decency and
tonsiderution for others cannot he
legis lated. fi is a matlcr of personal
integrity. You should not have 10
worry ahoul AIDS unless you ar&lt;
having unprotected sex with smne·
one who is promiscuous or whose

The re arc now condoms for
women . Since you arc so concerned.
about AIDS. it might give you additional peace of mind if you useJ that
prolcction, tno. P.S. : If you want
unequivocal aud total peace of mind,
consider abstinence
·
Send questions to Ann I,andcrs, Crcotors Syndicate. 5777 W. Ce ntury
Blvd .. Suite 7CXl. Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

Community Cal·endar
The Commun ity Calendar is puhlishcd as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
n01 designed 10 promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items arc
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
TUESDAY
1UPPERS PLAINS - United
Methodist Women meeting at Tuppers Plains Tuesday. 7 :~0 p.m. at St.
Paul United Methodist Church
POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department. free evening
immunit.ation clinir Tuesday. 5 In 7
p.m. Children to he ;tccompanicd hy
parent and 10 ta~c immunization
record.

Auxiliary. Tuesday. 7JO p.m. the
hall.. Refreshments.
CHESTER - Chester Council
323. Daughter of America, Tuesday,
7 p.m. at hall. Good of order commillcc wi ll serve vcgctahlc soup.
Take five gifts for games lo he
played following the meeting.
ROCK SPRINGS - Salishury
Township Trustees meet in~ . 6 p.m..
township hall.

FIVE &lt;:JEN~RATION F~MilY -· This fiye-generation family gathenid recently at the home of Euvetta
Bechtle tn Middleport. P1ctured left to nght, are Mrs. Bechtle, her son, John, his daughter, Mary Ann
Bechtle Frounhauer, and her daughter, lacey Nicole Davis, holding Taylor Madison Byers, the greatgreat-granddaughter of Euvetta Bechtle.

----Time Out For Tips---bread. and ready-to-cal cereals arc
now being fortified with calcium.
Check the labe l 10 determine the
amount that they offer.
Vuamin D enriched products ond
sun shine help our hod ics ahsnrh calcium. The absorption rate also
depends on the needs of the body.
the foods eaten. and the amount of
calcium present in the foods .
Absorpt ion tend s to dccrc&gt;sc with
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/ Community Development
Calcium is an important nutrient
for hea lthy hodies . It is a mineral
that helps make strong bones and
teeth . It is also used in muscle contract inn . hlood dolling. and mainte-

nance of ce ll membranes.
If

we

do not get enough calc ium

over the course of otlr lilctimc. we
may develop a disease known a:-.
osteoporn~i~ .

This illness is due to
lack of hone density. It primarily

affects older women in the fonn of a

"hump" hack and bnlllc hones . This
di sease is the main rca~on why
elderly women tend to hrcak hips
when they fall. The hone dcnsit) is
not enough to

~ithstanJ

'Can we

You may wonder about the usc of
calciu!Jl supplements. They can contrihutc some to your hody's nutrient
needs. but it is still bcucr tn get your
calcium from f9ods.
If we make a conscious effort 10
consume dairy products regularly
and cat a wide variety of foods, we
should get the amount of calci.um
that we need for healthy bodies now

read asking mcmbcJS to meet their
goal. She also reponed thai 1hc veterans Christmas birthday party was
a success.
Louella Pauerson reponed from
the Firing Line and noted that the
smuggling of drugs and illegal
aliens into this country are carefully
watched.
Margaret _Bowles. Americanism

3-5-13-25-34

BIRTH ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. Brian Hollman of
Cheshire announce the birth of
a son, Gabriel Ryan, on Valentine's Day at the Holzer Medicat
Center.
seven
Gabriel
weighed
pounds, seven ounces and was
21 inches long. He has two sis·
ters, Tiffany and Brittany, and a
b.rother, Christopher. Maternal
grandparents are Charles and
Carol Moody of Cheshire. P•ternal grandparents are Rick and
Debbie Hatfield of Pomeroy.
Great-grandparents
are
George and Marjorie Moody of
Cheshire, Connie Hollman of
Middleport, and the late Perry
Hollman, Mary Hatfield of Gallipolis and the late VIrgil Hatfield, and the late Arthur and
Mary Hughes and Jim Haggerty.

(!;;:lto save fur their rollege education today?"

· you afford not to?
:r-----------.,
IRA - .

11.-

.

: SAVINGS
I
I
I Percentage Yield. Rate may change

after the account is opened. $100 minimum
balance to open account. APY accurate as of
February. Can make contributi9ns at anytime
up to IRS imitattoos.

It is rc•·ommcndcd that people
between the ages of 19 and 50 get
I000 milligmms of calcium daily.
Individuals over the age of 50
require 1200 milligrams. Unfortu-

IRA CD

the young worm:n who t:onsumc

h~.:

1

I
I
I
I
I
I
........... II

w - · """

1
J

_________ .

·Annual Percentage Yield . $500 minimum
balance to open account. APY accurate as of
Febn.Ja.ry. Penalty for early withdrawal.

products. however. arc n' t

chairman. spoke of the manv homeless veterans on the streets and in
shelters. Many arc unahlc to adjust
once they get home. This is pulling a
strain on the Veterans Administration and local communities arc
asked do all they can to ·help the
homeless veterans.
Ella Dunsmore was hostess for
the meeting.

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

eaten. such as nonfat yog urt.
D~tiry

I

---------.,
7Month

200-300 mill1grams less than the
recommendations.
1
Most of the calc ium we take in !
con)cs from dairy foods Many times

skim milk . and lowfat cheeses.

I
I
I

---------~

natel y. many young women average

Cloudy with scattered
snow showers tonight
lows in mid 30s. Thursday:
chance of rain or snow
highs in mid 40s.
'

en tine
......

Vol. 48, NO. 224
©1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

~Sections, 16 Pages, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 4, 1998

p.m. when a pickup truck crossing the
bridge struck a steel 1-b.:am near the
Ohio side of the bridge. The !-beam
was bent and cracked by the impact.
Allen Johnson, 19, Mason, W.Va.,
came onto the bridge at an excessive
speed and lost control of 1988
Chevrolet S-10 which jumped partially onto the walkway and struck a
vertical beam, according 10 Pomeroy
Police Chief Jeff Miller.

Johnson was ticketed on charges
of operating after underage consumption, reckless operation, failure
to control, possession of marijuana
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
The. Pomeroy Volu.nteer Fir~
Department and Emer~~y Medical
Service squad and th'(j)ntml Dispatch squad responded to the scene.
Johnson and his passenger. Andrea
Ord, age unreported, Letart, W.Va.,

BRIDGE . DAM·
AGE • Shown here
is some of the
damage sustained
by the PomeroyMason Bridge during · a one-vehicle
crash
Tuesday
night. A vehicle driven by a Mason,
W.Va., man struck a
vertical member of
the span and damaged a hanQer
assembly for- "ll ·
floor beam connection. The bridge
will be closed until
repairs can be
made.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

18Month

IRA CO
"An~ual Perce.ntage Yield . $500 minlmum

made.
pe"onnel erected signs to detour trafOfficials with ODOT District I0 fic to the Ravenswood Bridge at
were called immediately and Don Great Bend or the Silver Memorial
Johnson , an engi neer and roodway Bridge at Konauga.
services admini.mmor. was disPedigo said the accident knocked
patched to the scene as well, accord- loose a "hanger" or lloor 'ection of
ing to ODOT spokeswomon Nancy the bridge.
Pedigo.
"There is no danger of the bridge
Johnson was ·on the scene until collap,ing. but heavy traffic such as
nearly dawn, making initial assess- semi trucks could cause the hanger to
ments of the damage. ODOT traffic
Continued on page 3

and Harris accepts a certlllcate,of recognition
from Frank Vaughan. Other legionnaires qualltylng for 50-year certificates ·were Elza
Gllmore, deceased, Carl Will and Robart Crow.

American Legion celebrates 79th birthday
State unemp/Qyment rate falls

Local jobless rate up in January
While the state's jobless rate for Januar_x fell slightly - from 4.4 percent to 4 percent, unl:mploymenl
rose throughout southeBslern Ohio, the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services said this week.
Among the state's 88 comties, the lowest rates
were in Franklin and Delaware counties, at 2. 7 percent. The highest was in Morgan County, 17.2 percent.
In Meigs County, the jobless rate increased by 2.7
percent - from 10.3 in December to 13 percent in
January. According to the OBES, 1,100 members of
the county's labor force of 8,600 were unemployed.
Gallia County 's rate increased from 8.8 percent to
I0.3 percent for the reporting period. OBES figures
show 1,500 of the county's 14,300-membcr labor force
as unemployed in January. .
Other regional January unemployment. rates
(December rates in parenthesis) were: Athens, 6 (5.1)
percent; Jackson, 9.9 (7.7) percent; Lawrence, 7.6
(6.6) percent; Scioto, 12.4 (II) percent; Vinton, 15 .9
(13) percent; and, Washington, 7 (6) percent.
Across the state, the number of jobless was down
from a year ago, when the rate was 4.9 percent.
Regionally, percentages of unemployed workers were
down from the· same reponing period in 1997.
The nation's jobless rate last month was 4.7 percent, unchanged from December.
The number of Ohioans working in January was
about 5.56 million, up 27,000 from the previous
month. The number of workers without jobs was
232,000, down from 255,000 in December.
·
Since January 1997, the number of Ohioans working has increased by 169,000, up from 5.39 million.
. The number unemployed has decre&amp;sed by 48,000,
· iiom 280,000.
Among cities with populations of more than
50,000, Youngstown had the highest jobless rate, 12.6
percent, while Kettering had the lowest at 1.9 percent.
The county and city rates are unadjusted, meaning
they do not take into account seasonal adjustments in
employment.

Regional January jobless rates

Waohlnglon

Jan. '07

D

Dec. ·o1

Scioto

Meigs

Lawrence

Jackaon

GoUla

Athena

dors, with churches and other orga· BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
nizations to sell food. Residents tak··Sentinel News Staff
· · Acommunity yard sale on the first ing part will be given yellow flags to
. w~ekend in May and a porch and mark their locations. A small partie'
·entrance beautification contest were ipation fee will .be charged to cover
·planned when the Middleport Com- advertising.
Also approved was a residential
munity Association met Tuesday at
porch and entrance way beautificaPeoples Bank conference room.
The yard sale was set for May I tion program. Residents are being
and 2 with details of participation to urged to plant flowers in porch boxbe worked out later. Myron Duffield, es, put up hanging plants, and do othpresi4enl, will meet with the er things to enhance their homes.
Pomeroy Merchants Association next Judging will take place in July and
week am! invite them to join in the prizes for first, second and third will
be awarded.
sale.
Mary Wise, town beautification
Tentative plans call for group
chairman,
asked Mayor Dewey Hor- ·
advertising. restriction to local resiContinued on page 3
dents which means no outside ven-

•

•

VInton

:May activities planned by MCA
balance to open account. APV accurate as or
February. Penally for early withdtawal.

were transported by ambulance to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
Johnson was treated and released .
Ord was transferred to Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis where she
wa1listed this morning in stable condition, according to a hospital spokeswoman.
Meanwhile, the Ohio Department
of Transportation said the bridge
will be closed until repairs can be

SO.YE~R MEMBERS • Recognized for SO
yaar memberships In the legion and iis AuxilIary were George Hatrlaand Mary Martin. Here,·
from the left, Joanne Vaughan, Auxiliary presIdent, gives a certificate and corsage to Martin

as well as for the rest of our li ves.

the acci-

Lewis - Manley Auxiliary, gives donation to Heart Association
A donation to the American Hean
Association was made when LewisManley Auxiliary Unit 263 met
recently at Dale's Restaurant. Gallipolis.
During the meeting conducted by
Lorenc Goggins, a get-well card was
signed for Florence Richards.
The news bulletin from Eighth
Districl President Belly Harris was

Cooking may destroy the calcium
in some foods . To min1mi1.c thiS

pos~ 1blc.

dcm .

the only sources of calcium. By eating a variety of foods, we can help
ensure that we consume the appropriate amounts. Whole grains, broc-&lt;:oli. spinach, mockerel. salmon, and
tofu arc good non-dairy suppliers of
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town- THURSDAY
calc
ium . Even I hough these foods do
POMEROY - AA. 7 p.m Sacred
ship Trustees. 6:30 p.m Tuesday at
not
hove
a lot of the mineral, when
Heart Catholic Church, Mulberry
tlk: town hall .
eaten
regularly
and plentifully, they
,Avenue . Pomeroy, Thursday.
t:ontnbutc sig nificant quantities.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Some foods such as orange juice.
SYRACUSE - Mcig&gt; County
.-1..•. Trustees. 7:30 Tuesday at the home
Rcpuhlican Commillec meeting
·
of clerk. Osic Foil rod.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Carlcwn
POMEROY - Pomeroy Eagles School. All Republicans welcome .
P.OMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees. Tuesday. 6 p.m. at the
towpship building on Rod. Springs
Road .

age in both men and women .

affect. cook foods in very linle water
and for the shortest period of time

Pick 3:
150
Pick 4:
7577
Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 4

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Motorists driving between
Pomeroy and Mason_ W.Va., this
morn ing were greeted by detour
signs after a one-vehicle crash last
ni ght damaged the 70-yeM-old
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, resulting in
the span hcmg closed until repairs are
made.
The wreck occurred around 9:45

· very lillie calcium feel that milk
product ' have too many calories, so
WEDNESDAY
ihcv
av,&gt;id them . This dccrc&gt;sed calPOMEROY - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164. F&amp;AM . Wednesday, ciuin intake can have dc\oa~tating
·results later. To prevent this. lower
7:30p.m. at the hall.
ca 1aric versions of dairy foods may
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, Wednesd&gt;y. 2 p.m.
home of Gay Pcrnn. Program. two
mysteries hy Mary Hi~gins Clark.
Sara Owen to review "A Stranger is
Watching" and JoAnn Wildman.
"Moonlight Becomes You ."

Miami wins, in
MAC tourney
finals tonight

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge closed after auto crash

Southern honor roll posted
The following stude nts were Syracuse Elementary
Second Grade - Bonnie Lou
named to the Southern Local School
District's ·honor roll for the second Allen, Morgan Brown. Christopher
Burkhamer, Lindsay Buaard and
nine weeks .
Sarah El DcbaJa. all As: Teddy
Southern High School
Ninth Grade - Macyn Ervin, Brown, Josh Caruthers. Ryan ChapJonathnn Evan&gt;. Chad Hubbard. man , Heather Cund iff. Stephanie
Shauna Manuel and Brenna Sisson, Cundiff, Jessica Durham. Chelsea
all A's; Sarah Ball. Nicole Benson, Freeman , Jordan Pickens, Eric
Brandy Codner. Clayton Enslen, Pierce. · Ashley Robie and Trenton
Jeremy Fisher. Brandon Hill , Josh Roseberry.
Third Grade - Nick Buck.
Larsen, Buster Penix. Fallon Roush,
Emily Stivers and Manhcw Warner. Chance Collins, Tyler Hark ness.
lOth Grade - Brandon Wolfe , Ashlec Teaford and Ade lle Rice. all
all A's; Jamie Baker. Eri n Bolin , A's; Angie Apperson . Chriswpher
Kimberly Freeman, Clinton Hatcher, Cogar, Olivia Dudding. Samantha·
Kim Ihlc. Laraine Lawson, Amber Gray. Amber Hill , Mallory Hill.
Maynard. Julie Nakao. Kyle Norris. Jessie McKnight. Adam Phillips.
Chris Proflin. Chris Randolph and Darcy Winebrenner and Michael
Yost.
Amanda Spaun.
Fourth Grade- Ryan Amberglith Grade - Christa Circle,
Suzanne Evans, Jesse Lillie and er, John Bentz and Jason Pierce, all
Kimberly Sayre. all A' s; Teresa A's; Robin Eblin . Shy la Jarre ll ,
Bush, Jennifer Carleton, Ashli Tiffany McDaniel, Myca Michael.
Davis, Joshua Ervin. Julia Hensler, Bethany Riflle, Derek Roush. A.J.
Jenny Howerton. Josie Jarrell . .Jere- Simpson and Chelsea Smith.
miah Johns11n, Kara King, Marisa
Fifth Grade - Ashton Brown.
Lopitzsch, Anne Mauhies, Sarah all A's; Tyler Roberts, Stacy Snyder
Roels, Jason Roush, Billie Jo Sell- and Christopher Warden.
ers, Jessica Theiss, Trish Warner and
Sixth Grade
Bethany
Amberger, all A's ; Timothy Cogar.
Rebecca Wolfe.
12th Grade - Cynthia Cald- Codi Davis, Sarah Hawley, Amber
well, Crystal Coleman, John Matson Mills and Katie Sayre.
and Evan Struble. all A's; Angela
Alley, E~ica Arnou, Michael Ash. Portland Elementary
Fifth Grade- Sara Cammarata.
Chad Clark, Ginnee Hendricks.
Stacy Hubbard, Ashley McKinney, Autumn Reed, Elizabeth Sandy.
Jackie Proffiu, Nikki Robinson, Jen- Bryan Smith and Ryan Smith. all
nifer Roush . Lisa Russell, Ranena A's; Jessica Gloyd. Brooke KISer.
Wheeler, Corey Williams, Jason Nicole Law·son, Craig Randolph and
Aaron Sellers.
Writesc l and Billy Young.
Sixth Grade- Andrea Tedford ,
Southern Junior High
all A's ; Stephanie Bradford, Chelsa
Seventh Grade - Crystal Cot- Dilchcr. David Gloeckner. Tabitha
trill . Mcriam El Dcbaja, Tara Pick- Jones, B.J. Marnhout, Amy Norman.
ens and Brandon Smith. all A's';" -Dcaaa Pullins and Michael Roush .
Justin Allen, Adam Ball, Rachel
Chapman. Megan Combs, Curtis Letart Falls Elementa'r)'
Due to the multi-age at Letart
Crouch. Jeri HilL Amy Lee. Alan
Moore. Jamie Norville, Tom Theiss Falls Elementary. there will be no
honor roll for the first and seco nd
and Stephanie Wilson.
Eighth Grade - Joe Cornell grade.
Third Grade Cameron
and Tyler Lillie, all A's: Mall Ash.
Ashley
DeMoss.
Sherri Cummins. Amhcr Duffy. Brinager.
Amanda Huddleston. Rachel Mar- Stephanie Hoskins, Miranda McK shall.
Nathan Martin.
Kim elvey. Wyan Musser. Bethany Vance
McDaniel. Aaron Ohlinger. Lori and Nathaniel Wolfe.
Fourth Grade - Dustin Brinag Sayre. Lindsay Smith and Amy M.
cr. Amber Holsinger. Heather Nicole
Wilson.
Jnnes and Kasic Sellers.

Ohio Lottery

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The 79th birthday of the American
Legion wa' celebrated by Drew Webster Post 39 at a dinner party held at
the Senior Citizens Center Tuesday
night.
Allending were more !han a hundred legionnaires and guests who
were welcomed by Oeorge Harris,
commander. Guests introduced
included Mickey Williams, Eighth
District Commander, and George
Kenneth Harris of Somerset, the district's second vice commander, and
their wives.
Williams spoke on membership
noting that the Eighth District stands
at96.18 percent of goal. He ur&amp;ed his
Drew Webster home post to gel out
and sign up the 18 veterans needed
for goal.
Named legionnaire of the year and
presented a trophy wa' Orval "Curly"
Wiles. Past post commanders were
recognized and certificates were pre sented to them along with several
others giving spec ial serv ice 10 the
post.
Four post members were recognized for 50-year memberships. They
were Carl Will who now resides in
Kentucky, George Harris, Robert
Crow, and Elza Gilmore. now
deceased.
On behalf of the Auxiliary, Joanne
Vaughan. president, gave a birthday
gift of $100 to the commander for
post activities. She also presented
Mary Manin with a 50-year mem bership certificate, displayed a certilicate of appreciation to Iva Powell.
unable to auend due to illnes.s, in
recognition of her longtime work in
poppy sales, and recognized Frank
Vaughan, Wayne E. Milhoan. Ken neth E. Harris, and Willis F. Bearh&gt;.

lEGIONNAIRE OF THE YEAR- Orval "Curly" Wiles, center, was
named legionnaire of the year at Drew Webster's birthday party
Tuesday night held at the Senior Citizens Center. He was presented a trophy by Chuck Kitchen, adjutant, left, and George Harris, commander.
all World Wor II veterans. for a tlag
program al the Port land Elementary
School.
Vaughan reviewed activities of the

Vaughan reported .
She also talked about c ommun~ty
service, noting donations · to God\
Net, a youth progrJm in Pomeroy and
unit over the past year ment ioning the Meigs County Coopera ti ve
specilica ll y its work for veterans. Parish's food pantry.
Donations were made 10 the Chilli The invocation Wa\ gi ven hy
cothe Veterans H1hpi1al. gi ft . , were Roland E. Wildman, Jr. of Trinity
purchased, wrapped and deli vered to Church, Harris led in the POW-MlA
veterans at Christmas time. and in allirrnation. and Jim Sou lsby sang the
February a party wa.s held for the sev- National Anthem. Jim Gilmore gave
en veterans at the Athens Hospital. the benediction.

Supreme Court further delays Berry execution
COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
auorney general says the legal baule
surrounding the case of Wilford
Berry Jr. is far from over.
·
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld a stay of execution order
for Berry, known as .. The Volunteer"
because he has waived his appeals,
less than two hours before the former
Cleveland man was scheduled to
receive a lethal injection for murderlog his boss.
Aui&gt;mey General Betty Mont- '
gomery appealed a federal judge's
stay order to the high court on Tuesday moming, hoping it would block
the order and allow Berry to be the

first death-row inmate to be executed in Ohio in 35 years.
"We knew this w&gt;s a long shot,
. but decided it was an important
stand to take." Deputy Auorney General Mark R. Weaver said Tuesday
night.
Weaver said his oflice wi ll continue to light for Berry's execution
and planned to meet today to discuss
asking the Ohio Supreme Court to set
a new .execution date. He said the
auomey general's office will also
speak to U.S. District Judge Algenon
Marbley in Columbus about Berry's
mental capacity to waive his appeals.
"We are confident that the feder-

al court will find he is competent just
as the Ohio Supreme Court found he
is competent." Weaver &lt;aid. " If he 's
competent he's able to waive hi'
appeals and be executed. That's been
state's position for 2 1/2 years."
Marbley ruled Friday that the
state Supreme Court did noi properly determine whether Berry w"'
mentally competent to volunteer 10
die.
·
The 'state appealed Marbley's
decision to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in Cincinnati, which
allowed the stay of execution to stand
until a competency hearing for Berry
on March 24.

Montgomery appealed that to the
U.S. Supreme Couri. which
announced its ruling in a .,imple statement Tuesday evening:
""The application to vacate the stay ·
of execution of se ntence of death
entered by the United States District
Cou rt on February 27. 1998. presented to Justice (John Paul) Stevens
and by him referred to the Court. is
denied ....
The Ohio public defender's office.
which has appealed Berry's death
sentence despite his objections, has
argued that Berry's life should be
spared. at least until . the federal
Continued on page 3

•
. ' -

�,

Cotnmentary

~ednesday, March 4, 1998

Page2
Wednesday, March 4, ~8

Pomeroy • Mtddleport, Ohto

--Local briefs----1

OHIO Weather

•

Thursday, March 5
.

'

The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6fulid 1n 1948
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·2156 • Fax 992 2157

Q~
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

T7'M Stolinel nlcomH ,.,.,. to lltQ Nltor from riiHI.,.. on • broed rwtf1e of toplg
Sh0111ottor• (300 wortlt or •o..) hovo tho 1&gt;011 chiJilco or l&gt;olng pul&gt;llllltttl. Tljpod 1111
ler• art prtftrred and 111 m.y H Jtllftd &amp;t:h lhDuld Include IIIQMtute 1ddf8st
•net tllytlme phone numUt Spt If¥ • date If thtre' 1 referena to 1 pre "ou• artie 1
0"' l•f!•r. Ifill ,, Letters to lht Editor. Tht Sentlntl 111 Court St Pomerco Ohio
45769 · or, FAX

to 614-9~-21&gt;7

Letters to tne ealtor
President has trouble with the truth
Dea I J
Th1 ' tlmm
r..: n 1 tant trar.; k r~.:c rd I r ron or tnu~
h &gt;Ut lllcrn II
he M1dcast N nc ol the xpcrts
ee mt l1 vc
thtl c chlcf R1h ad &gt;ll aqThc
Jc t' kn ow the 1It "' lut on I! th t t I on and would pur uc t w11h J It
tic cnc u1 a n c1I II 'c I u' wh l11d w nllU wnh th&lt;Sc pe pi c tt cr sc v
t.:f II yc~ rs
on found ut how they th r k a 1d rc tel to cc r t t n c rcumst 1nces
No" Sit ek Willie " pl ay m nto S tddam s (spell t bac kward s) plan lor he
M &lt;.l east h1 kee p n al ar c mhtary Ioree n standby With noth n to &lt;.1' ""d
no !nne Ira ne lor gc t1n&lt; out Rc11Cmhcr he sa1d June lor withdra w 11 from
Bosn11 No ' thc1c " no tclhn ho" I me we w II occ upy the place The
P1 e"dcnt ol thc Un11cd States urc has tr uhlc w th the truth but he sure has
a Ill &lt;I otherwiSe ntcll gent folks s 10\\Cd under t--! ay be they should take a
ion look 01 The Cl nton Chron clc s 1dco or hook And please do not
tln ow tl c g trh 1gc about h" domest c rcc01d tin s direction Thctc IS no bal
meed bud eel nor will there ever he Will the SIX trtllton dollat dcht hang111g
over us Repl ace the llOnlcs ratdcd h m the H1ghway Tru st Fund the
Soctal st Sccunty lt ust Fund and the p 1per covcnng the Ioms from vanous
s lUtc es a 1d we have an already msol &gt;&lt; n natton Sitek Willtc can make
some people thtnk n1ght IS day
And P 111 Am JUSt JOt ned a lonJ lt st of bankrupt corporot ons not to men
t1on countless small bus1ness ventures fallm g apart 1ndud ng some local
ones Indll duals gotng bankrupt arc at an all lime htgh These arc good
ttmcs? Not where I ltvc
And no" I pcrce1ve there ts an attempt to tack on the total of about n111e
more mtlls of tax to our property from d1ffcrcnt 111slltllltons and enlilies But
then that IS another entirely different subJect May some one bestdes Sitek
Wtllte be mhal111g 0
R E Weaver
Racone

More is never enough
Dear Editor
Oh10 lawmakers With G 1 V01novtch' mcc ssant den and want to ratsc
sales tax rates to 7 percent so that we arc told sc hools can have sufftclcnt
lundtng I remember when sales tax tn Oh o w ts ~ percent I remember
whe n Oht 1 d1dn I hnYe an 1ncomc tax We Oh1 oans were told then cspcctal
ly hy our 1llustn ous Gm G lltg tn that we had 1&lt; 11 1vc stole 1nco nc tax so
the sc hoo b e&lt; uiJ have suiiKicnt lund111g 11d that I asn 1 worked etthcr I
remember when \\ C d1d1 h 1vc a Godforsaken lottery 1 th s state hu t we
Ohtoans were told til u we had to It tve ~he lottery so th 11 the schools would
have suffi Cient lund no Well cucss what 1Thnt d1dn 1 w&lt;rk cllhc1
Now ll C0 11101 h a c hlc sscd wtth 1stile 1nco 11c tax 1 lot cry an 1lready
douhlcd s 1b tax tl c school s sttll don I I 1vc enough Ill&lt; nc y md a ntajotl
ty ol the student s th II " ' Ju te h om pubIc h1eh schoo ls 111 Ohu cant
ex pre s thcmscl cs tn ion h u d Tt x1ne people 11111c md throwto~ mo1c
m&lt;ncy at C\c) chtol In h sllte dJc snt wuk Rl) Charb c uld ce
th at lncre 1 nc t txcs IS mcrcl) the It" lc 1Ith II nc 1111pctcnt pnl11
to cover hc1 11np tl.:n&lt;.:c H n l.: lll cnt and li s&lt;.: 111 ) lt.:'P 11 \lhk
E1c h !!c nc

n l th ~.:s

\1

nl!c ntdp)lti Lllh Kk li.:ll us thc

llll' ts mm~.:

tlun c tnd 'PI lUI IVth nk the tl xptyc s \\Ill hcltctc 11 1 111 H &gt;Wet cr the
milk t:nw 1 v~..: 1ry and
ln P dry I he l:X &lt; hll nt 1.:
sl s t~.:ntl ) t.:
IJt n
rl! Vl: llUl:

de

1111\d \ Ol ~: &lt; \l: fnlll c llt

HH.J lll llk ln

U il l: l

llC Lh C In 11 I h~.:

11dcilllld y su I 1ncd And n&lt; w l the 1 us 1II I cl plul1 ttnnciS the I 1d h 11
nstc1s ol h Sup1 c n c C u 1 h 1 ~.: 1 u tl hu ll ~.: ndu 1 the pi t.: ~..:nt n ct h ,d
&lt;I lund no sell I ilk tl It I lie ' " ICI 1 cd hem til Th lint IV sttll
he k 11
Mochael Shuler
Mtddleport

Someone who really cares
De

1k I c 1
0 1 I ch 0 I c 1r hll he I lint I) s do
I r All I
, ,, ll d
the pet pic I hcv ve nt h
Ul &lt;.!li te t 1) II cl h 1d h sec me runntng to the to 1d hut
I ~n ' h d t J
11 d ma c I th~.:u L u
vc m.:
lOll r u 11J c I kn v " hcle cc lt vc the trallic I h d hut
( 0 11 ks pel I Ul down tile h II t 11 Route 7 !S peed
I 11 "' ul d ha1c I 1ppc 1ed to 1 k1J 11 v uiJ
"a 1cd up tin

v 1uldn 1 h 1\ C 11 lppencd 13 ut the
1 tf 1) d&lt;I! th lt 11 t.: I I
t u y d Our t1 " ' pr lice ! no ou1 k1ds Irom thiS dog whtch h ts heen seen
0 r Jo ch 1scJ hn 1 up tl c r 1J 20 °5 yards and hIll tuned
1e h 1 k t&gt;tl c h Ju sc when th 1c r l11t l11n
Lu U
t t1 sunned hcctu sc I ' cry ktttd I carted gcntlc nttn and
th t h d st ppcd Our c " h 1d I r kc down tha t10rm1 e \\ C d1Jn t
\ v ! I tk c our d l.:: 1 tbc \ I r lc I!L: Illk:man ' wil e told her hu s
I n c md get hiS 1uck n tl the) lclt Ahout I0 mtnutcs Iller the
u1 1 I ckw llhh!Struek nd1 c l J dt urJtg ln h h tckoltl e trul k
I he 1' I 1J 1 bl mk t to 1 t cr hnn up " til \\ c took tl c d J to the te l and
thn k pt h n lor 24 hours
Th
tlem 111 a 1d I vd "" " n t hc ~r w 'Y to R1plc) W \1 til 11 day
hu the\ 1 k the 1 me to cc I the) cou ld help us And they d1d
Th n.; u no word n h \\
1 dl l V.:l' trc tc t h~.: sc '-"O pc pic We no\\
kn " tl , c rc 1 lc " pc &gt;P k n 11 s s&lt; c c v th II rc 1ll y care thou what ho p
1c 1.., l tl '
A 11111 1 lm ks 11d then
1 I tl c I' ' p&lt; &lt;pic nd y&lt; u knm who
\ u

f

u.J h

\ 1 dllSin

1\.:

Kom Fetty
Pomeroy

Today in history
fi

By The Assoctated Press
~ &gt;U a )

, Wcdnc day

I 111tl e)e

~1

"h

~

the 6 ~rd dav ol 1998 There arc '0' days

r

~ &gt;d IV II hh cht 111 H t r)
On M trch 4 1789 the Con 1 Iutt on ol thc Umtcd State. went 1nto cl fec t
1s the l1rst Feder tl C n 1c1
tt 1n New York City Lawmakers then
adwurncd lo1 the lack ol 1quo un
On tl " date
In IM I England s K1no Charl es II granted a charter to \Vtll am Pc 111 for
an arc 1oll1 nd tl 1 later hccamc Pcnn s) lvanl l
In 179 1 Vcm10n t bee t ne the 14th stttc

•

expenstve
41ld
h1ghl y confiden
ttal surveys of
representatrve
samples of
members on a
w de vanety of
subjects One of
them contmually
reassesse s why
Amen cans over
Moiler &amp;
the age of 50 JOtn Anderson
the AARP
Hav ng seen the results of these
senslltve surveys we can report that
the AARP s profesSional lobby sts
know that only 14 percent of the
group
s members
But an unprecedented four year
f 1 ldent1f1cd repre
scntatwn
o
t lent 111 Co ngress as
Invest gat on of the AARP l y our h
I
e
most
Important
reason to JO n
assoc mte Dale VanAtta re~ ea l s th 11
Does
thiS
mean
that the AARP s
the organllatlor s member d 11 1 lobbyiStS can run up to Capitol Hill
J"'" the group for rcprcsc ntat 011
and say that they know they rcpre
don 1 know wh 11 Its pos itiOns arc sent more th an 4 m II on sCn10rs
f
b
tndl eavc lndr, cs~ l c nth c)
(! 4
percent o mcm crsh1p )" Hard
beco me a\l arc 1l ns norc pu blic ly
stances
like he AARP B ad s
N
f
one o the AARP s sohcllattons
supp ort ol the 1 9~4 De 1 &lt;c111i c
II
actua ) spell out wh 11 post11ons
he tlth care rcl orn 111 s tnt! nan y thw lobby"" wdltake on the Hill
other rc \el1t10n s Ire c nta ned 1 n
u , ually the hcne~l OileprCSC nta
soon 11 h' pullli •hcd h k hy Van lion s 1&gt;uncd well below hotel auto
'
·'
rru I Bcttavcd In s de the and other diSCOUnts and other bene
Attl
AARP (Reancry)
1 etoup s solicttlllflll
Itt\ n llC
E llh ye r th e AARP takes

MODEL LI.IGE POSITION

For example a recent soUcttatton
letter rncluded th1s paragraph (4)
A votce on Washtngton When Con
gress debates ISsues like pensiOn
nghts the federal deficit or Soc1al
Secunty AARP represent s our
members tnterests
Huh 0 The last one sent out to
molltons of prospecttve members
was stgned by a man who know s a
whole lot better current Executt vc
Drrector Horace Deets Anyone
knows 11 s preposterous to suggest
even m a sohcttatton letter
that
AARP represents our members
tnterests as If everyone over 50
agrees on how they llantto be rep
resented
When you
r have a dt verse aud1
ence goong rom (age) 50 to over
100 you cannot assume one stz£ l1ts
all Deets h msc lf conceded to us
He sliould liSten 10 htmsell Deets IS
the same man who conceded at the
end of a c o n~ress wnal heanng on
the AARP that there were nany
members who d1dn t know "hot
poSition the oroamzatton had taken
on health c 1 c reform whtcl h d
been liS most hl&lt;•hl y pYhli lied
e
stance tn almost a decade
One hl~h lc cl AARP member
sh1p Jcvelopn cnt expert relate s
till
1 test
rna l1n g sc '
cr 11
yea s
hack sh wed
that one ( r
the
WOISI
lhlnl!s we 1.: 1n
do ~ 1ctually
spell out what
our posttlon
IS on Soctll
Sccunty
Medicare &lt;1
whatever
The numhcr
of pOSIIIVC
responses
then drop ol r
lhe cllf lfwc
mention rep
rcsenlat1on m
general
words

By Joseph Perkins
I rccctved an mvrte n my mat I
bag thiS week from G Gordon
L1ddy He s hostmg a fund ra1 ser at
hts home 111 Sco usdale for Sen John
McCam the An zona Republican
For ~1 2 5 I can attend the cocktail
reccpt1on tn the senator s honor For
$250 I can attend the VIP reccplton
wh ch wtll mcludc a photo wtth the
se nator and the G Man
Wh le I contemplate whether to
ll y lro n S tn D ego to Scottsdale to
1uh shoulders w th two ol my
I II mtc c&lt; nscrvatt vcs or to mere
ly dash 1ll 1 check to a1d McCan s
aim"' certatn 1c elect on the sen
att s '"WISh n" ton I tntcnt ne tl c
de th ul the ca11pa1en ilnanc c
rclotlll lor the y c~t
I th nk 11 " he yond doult
McC un ,,J earlier thts week try
111
t 1 mu ster supp 111 lm the Ill
I ted hIll c co sponsored "''h W"
c Ill s n Democrat Ru ss Femeold
th 11 the w 'Y we ltnancc u1 clcc
11 1s n thiS country h 1s cau cd the
pc pic we 1Cprcscn t I doult lUI
p
n llllcc lll) and the Inte g tty
I he 11 slltuli on we uc pmtlc cd
But I n n Jl o swc th 11 the en 1
1 w t n c ll Indeed IJ the puhl c
WL L
l: 0\.:C rn~.:d 1h Ut h W clcc
II &gt;s lrc l1n nee d
how t'&lt;JUid
McC 1111 cxpla1n a Janu try poll hy
tl t: 1\ :w Rcsc 1Tl: h Ccnl cr showm
II 1 the An'lcn c 10 puhl c r 111kcd
c 11 ' I 1 n ln1anc c 11th on a ltst &gt;I 14
11 a

u

'

0 I the people h lie become o
c "' ned 1hnut the llllc 0 111Y ol
l 1 vn 1 kc r~ who rqm..: scnt tl em m

Congress or the
mtcgnty ol Con
grcss as an mstt
tutton why d1d
most voters return
thetr meum bent
member to Con
grcss dur ng the
most recent clec
twn? Why did
they keep Rcpuh
l!cans 1n power 1n
both the House md

(whtch means that tf lawmakers
reduced the money 1n polttcs more
elect ons wtll be compettltve) But
the cv1dcncc Simply dtd not bear that
out
The Washtngton based Center lor
Votmg and Democracy thoroughly
analyzed the 1996 House electiOns
particularly l tJCUStl~ on races for
open scats (1n whtch money should
have 11 td the btggcst ttnpacl) The
Perktns
auth rs olthc study Bob R1ch1c and
Steven Htll lound that the st~nngest
Senate
predictor of 1d stilet s congrcsst m
McCam says that the obj ec t ol h1
11 chmcc was h&lt; w t v ted 10 that
ca npatgn rdorm measure w ts to year s ptcstdcn!l tl race
b sch the 10lc of nH ney n poli
In diStr cts where B II Cl1111 n m
lies
well Dentllltlls conSistently w n
Toward that htgh s&lt; und1n 0 co tl
In diStrtcts whc c Cl nton 1 n htdl y
the McCan Fcmg• ld hill w 1uiJ Rcpuhl1c tns c nSistcntly w m In
I 1vc h mned tile usc ol s &gt;called I ct nca ly one tlmtl &lt;I Rcpuhl c 1ns
s It m ncy (donal! ms that 0 o 11 a wh' won 1pcn scat n 19)( wc1c
polt llc 11 p trt y
ostcnSihl y lm out spent hy Den ocr 1ts Almost til
ptrl) hu1ldm g
r~thcr th 111 1 1 n m &lt;.1 stmts where ChntHl nu
c md1d lie) Ill lcderal races It '' " ' tc1ed les s than 'i() percen ol the
WI ul d h tvo t utla wcd so ca lled vote
cxpt css td voc ley (the IOQcpcn
Even 11 we h 1d di sll untcd these
dent cxpcndi!Uics hy e1oups un tlld
ilnd1n s ts 1 fluke even II we h td
lllcdwllhcllhcr tcmddatc lrpolll
hhndly tc ccptcd McC un s prcmt sc
1 I pu ty) w1thm tw&lt; m nths t I m tl 11m mcv dctc1m ncs p ltuc 11 ut
d~.: ~.: I m
c m~.:s ll sttll w ts &lt;.h san gcr u us t
McCam prom&lt; ted IllS hill 1 the hcl eve that McC 1111 Fcm. IJ h m
111 I hcs t hope I &gt;r me uunglul c t n on ' It mt ncy W&lt; uld 1cducc the r lc
pI on fm 1111..:1.: fcl0101
to 1Cp II thts
l ! ( l"ih tn C!Cl:l!Ons
ten hly mcqwtthl c unnccc stnl y
I 1 tl c lesson olthc p tst4u 1rtcr
cxpc nmc md at tunes corrupted century ol c unp ugn In mce rei&lt; nn
l:a nr l e n hn mu: system But ti.lk
IS lh ll whenever Con IL:SS cn&lt;Jcls l
111 1 hard look at McCam Fe1neold putl11vc rclorm 111 unmtcndcd c 111
11 w" dtfllcult to sec how 11 would sequence rc.ults And when II "
dl:l l\ cr he prom a cd t od...
s~ud md Jont: there 1s n 1 less
I nst of oil th e h II was based on money '" politics thm hcl rc
the lall acy th ll 111 ncy determine'
Indeed tn the earl y 1970s C 111
1h~,: JUtl:om c of 1 ~-: d c ral ~l c~.: ta o n s grcss pa ssed a &lt;.:ampill l.! n lrnam.:c

works much better
Another AARP offic1al m the
membcrshtp communrcat1ons
department says tt s become a run
nmg JOke at hts office Judgmg from
the h1gh volume of phone calls on
the subjeCt he sa1d many many
many people JOin who are unaware
of the pOStttons AARP takes The
suckers we call them
If anythll1g the AARP s cia"' to
represent tis members must neces
san!) d1m1n1Sh 1f 11 WIShes to expand
over the com ng decade In fact ''"
ltkely that elcn the gcneraltzcd
AARP reference to represcnta
twn n WlShtngton tn their sohcl\a
uons w 11 slo" ly start fad111g away
from thw hteratu 1e at least 10 any
onalltn""
tarocted
at the com 10 o.,
•·'
e
older
generatiOn of bahy
hoomer
01 cout c the AARP has been
sali,an tthc th oug htof&lt;~gmn .
up the cno mtus gcncratton 11
Amcnc ms wh&lt; hcg tn turntn~ 50 111
1996 But
lar th&lt; y 1c lmdmg the
hah) ho 1111cts o he t whole lot d I
lcrcnt l1nn th e Wolld War II gcnor
tton h 11 h" hccn 1ts membership
ha c On he Clll tal pomt of lobby
11 c en he p1 ospcct ol advocacy1
1 supc tu1n oil to most hahy
t n me s JcCordtng to the AARP
c wn I H.:u e- 1oups
A sum nary " contmnctl tn a key
cnnl1dent il stratcclc plannmg docu
11cn cl crrcd to as the SWOl
report hy AARP mstdcrs Complel
cd 11 Apnl I YY5 1ts tttle s SWOT
Analys s Strengths Weaknesse s
Opportun l!cs and Threats
On tim po nt tl c key concluSion
The hoomcrs and post boomers
were cmphaltc that AARP shoultl
prov1dc mlormat10n to them and to
leg!Sill ors hut not I/Xprcsumc lo
VM rept esent tl1em As one hm mer
put 11 111 1 loco "' oup Say tog you
represent us won t ever wm us
over
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are \lrlters for Umted Feature
Syndocate Inc

reform measure that was supp&lt; sed
to g1ve small donors more tnflucncc
Thts gave nsc to political actton
co mmttccs wlmh nctdcntally
McCam con stdcrs such a bane on
electoral poltltcs that )us pre rcv1scd
campa1gn I n mcc reform htll !nod
to lcgtslate them out ol cxtstcnce
S mt l trly a I uc IY70s campatgn
I nan&lt;.:c ref&lt; rm mcu:-;ure w ls mtcn I
cd l 1 cncourtgc tl\e p 11 lies to get
more nvolvcd 1n ur 1 s IO&lt; ts pol Ill
t: a) H.:( IVI IC S lak e town h llf lll Ct.:l
tnes and v tel dttvcs 1 hts muc!1
o 1llyh &lt; cd rei&lt; r 11 e IVc us the \C y
s )jt Ill ) ley th lt Mt:C un H w w lilts
llhn
S c'e I McC 1111 h tl succeeded
111 h nntn g s ltn t ncy 11 tlmtst c c~
111nl y " uld h IVc cndctl up some
whL:Tt: d st: And th m ~.; t t hvtOiJ
plllc "1111 lntlcpcndent tdvclllsltt
c ltnp 1 ns hy the very spccltl
lnlcl c I
roups til 11 McC 11n lnd
supp1 rtn
I ha s t: unp 11 1.! 11 I n HlCc
n.: l nn h II Jt: , pl st: ' o n ud
McC 1111 I etn old
tttncd
lm II the 1 lc &lt;I ndcpentlcnl
ex pend turc s "' p l1t1 c I c 1m
p 11 1s
hu ~ lat.: p11 v sum of tlu.:
htl l th t w uiJ h JVc uti wed mdc
pendent c tttp 1 n 1ds Itt 111 ustng 1
c md1d li es 11111 c " likeness (,()
d tys 1 ut lr n n d cuu n
01 ct ursc lithe se n I! r h td sup
ported u I 1 ref 1n he w Jultfn t
h tvc hcc1 hie t 1sk me and other
n n A11 t 1 n In \ t 1 umtnhulc 11 ht s
1c elect n II rt He wouldn 1 l1~ c
th II mJ nc thc1 w 1uld I
Jo«ph Pcrkons ts a columniSt
for the San D1e~o Umon Trobunc

Reno should investigate Starr's office for grand jury leaks :
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Servtce
WASHI NGTON - I don t know
S dncy 131umcnth tl
I c never t1lkcd to the While
House sp1n d oc to r whose c.:onvcrsa
tt ons wnh JOUrnal sts made htm a
loc u ol s pec ~al prosecutor Kenneth
Starr w de rangmg 1n vcst gauon
I1St wee k
But then I don I need an a&gt;SISI
Irom one ol &lt;he preSident s men to
hgurc out tha wh n st tncd out as a
probe 1nto Bil l Clinton s posSible
1111 olvemcnt tn a fatlcd Ark ansa.'
lm I de 1l now lo &gt;ks l1ke a bad 1n1
tatmn olthc Jerry Spnn gc1 show
Blu ncnthal was hauled before
Stan s grand JUry "' U nlled about
h s contacts wtth reporters aft er he
was l1nkcd to JOUrnali sts who were
look tng nto the hackon unds of th e
thtn sk1nned spcc 1al prose cutor and
me n bcrs ol h s leeal team
Ken
Starr s
prosecutors
demanded to know what I had told
re porters and whut report ers had told
me about Ken Starr s prosecutors
Blum entha l satd after lcavtng that
taxpayer fund ed nqut stll on
If
they th111k they ntnn1dated me they
have fatl ed

'

Starr had a dtf
lcrcnt explanation
lor hiS act1on He
sard Whtte House
wh o u;-.1d l fo
stafl crs
smear the rcputa
t1on s of htm and
hiS law) crs arc
gu11t y of ohstruc
tton of JUSt ce the
k1nd Of SC[I OUS
cnm1nal act that he Wtckham
has tncd repeatedly
- md 'o far un, uccc sfull y - to
ptn on Clinton
That s a great leg al trctch
Wh u ar~ we tal k! 1g th&lt;ut here
JUry tampcr111g or suh&lt;rntn g per
JUry) or course not What s at ISSUe
arc the efl orts - rea l and pcrcc1vcd
- of Clinton s supporters to call
tnto questi On the mottvcs of Starr
and hts troupe and to pa nt some of
them w1th the same sl my bru sh tlicy
have used on the pres dent
How docs any of thts amount to
an obstruct on of JUS!tce '
The not so secret grand JUry pro
cecd1 ngs that Starr IS conductm g can
hardly be tmpcded by the whtspcred
con1ersat1 ons of Clmton s attack
dogs That Star Chamber whtch has

become 1ncrcasmg petty 111 the usc
of tts subpoena power IS largely
tnsulated from all hut the spectal
prosecutor s questi onable sense ol
nght and wrong
If Starr really were scnous about
stnkmg a blow agamst pe&lt;pic who
have acted tllegall y m hts 1nvc t1ga
uon he sh 1uld subpoena those m h s
o lf1cc who had access to all the
grand JUry te st 11nony th at was leaked
to the mcdta He should put them
under oath as he d1J Blumenth al and
ask 1f they arc the sourc e of the llood
of nl&lt; rmauon that ll 1ws t ut lr m
those procccdmg s
Instead he has prorm scd 11 take
app1 opnatc actiOn tl thr 1u gh
some lesse r clfort he diSI'ovcrs that
anyone on hts staflts rcsponSihlc lor
tins vwlauon ol federal law
TilC key WOrd here IS If
Up to now Starr has hccn far
more aggrcsst vc tn harasstng those
who object to h1s mvcst1gat1VC tac
ltcs - a Ftrsl Amendment nght that
a orow1ng number of people arc
cxcrciStng - than m trytng to weed
out those who have vtolated the
secrecy of hiS grand JUry
Why ' Maybe because vtrtually
all the leaks have been harmful to

•

I

Clmton wh1ch " to say the preS! ,
dent has hccn s nc iretl more hy what
has lc tkcd lnm the grand JUry than
Starr has ocen ocsmtrchcd hy th ~
re ~.:c n1 While House l.:ountcratta~,;k
II the c tks c:1mc from sc mcon o
&lt;n Starr s st1ll that would he a clear
VI Iat n I law But wh 11 Blumcn
th 11 IS th&lt;uehl I! have d&lt; nc n miS
1nc que II ns h lUI the mtcgnty f
some I St 1rr ... und er! ngs ts n&lt; 1
Th 11 the spec1al proscc ut&lt; r has hcc~
m&lt; rt: 1gg t: 'l Ye an t ' mg 11lcr Blu
men h il th 111 ll osc who vwlatcd the
c ml1dcntllhty I Its gr111djury pn
cccdmg 1 tk cs has nvcsta e at10n I 10k
m11 c hkc 1Witch huntth 111 a scatch
I 1r the 11 uth
It ' tunc It r J met Reno to ac t
1 he 11 rncy general must do
what Ken Sttrr h" shown h1m scll
Ineap •hie I r dotng She must lllltt~I C
1 Jwaa ce Dcpnrtmcnt mvc~tJ~auon \
ol the rand 1ury leaks that he can t
- or w m t - stop
These leaks have turned Starr s
mvcst gat on mto a &lt;.: trcus a' 1 a nd ~
must he treated as the ser ous vt ola :
t1ons of law that they arc They arc
the real Onstructt un of JUS(ICC on thC :
case that Starr " trym g 10 1nakc :
agamstthe pt cstdcnt

1

.J

•

Hattie Mae Fischer

MICH

McCain-Feingold bill flawed from the beginning

1..: \l:

I d II

I i t.:

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The vast ma1onty of members of
the country s largest and most feared
lobb y ng group
the A mer can
Assoctatton of Ret~red Persons
hasn t gtven the orgam w uon ltccnsc
to lobby for them
For years the AARP has been
'ICllcd as Bt gfoot on Captt ol Htll
because lis 30 mrlhon plus ncn bcrs
make tl larger than any me nbershtp
orgamzatron '" the Un1tcd States
except the Catholic Church They
usc the numbers for pushll1g thw
ge nerally pro Democratic pro ax
tncrcase agenda o ' Capttol Hill

Injuries reported in one-car crash

AccuWeather®lorecastl or dayttme cond !tons and htgh lmmeomllo

·AARP must move away from its old tactics

Hattre Mae FIScher 90 Pomeroy dted on Monday March 2 1998 at Holz
er Medrcal Center m Galltpolts
She was born on May 20 1907 on Mason daughter of the late Thomas
Rtggs and Wmona Mcintosh Roggs She was a 1926 graduate of Wahama
Htgh School and attended the Mason Methodtst Church
Survtvmg are three daughters and a son m law Alice Jones of Chesapeake
Oh1o Dorothy Schwarz of Mason and Joyce and Robert M1lls ol Pomeroy
a Sister on law Norma Roggs of Mason and ntne grandchtldren 17 great
grandchtldren two great great granddau~:hters and three n1eces
BeSides her parents she was preceded m death by her husband Raymond
Ftscher Ill 1984 and by two brothers Walter and Rtley R1ggs
Servoces wtll be 2 p m Thursday 111 the Pomeroy Chapel of the Ftsher
Funeral Home The Rev Lamar 0 Bryant wtll otfictate Bunal wtll follow
tn the Beech Grove Cemetery m Pomeroy Fnends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday from 4 to 8 o m

!NO

•[Columbusj42'

•

I

James H. Tyree
WVA

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

Today's weather forecast
By the Associated Press
Southeaslern Ohoo
Tontght Mostly cloudy A chance
of light snow alter m1dmght Lows 30
to 35 Ltght and vartable wond
Chance of snow 40 percent
Thursday Cloudy wtth a chance
of ltght ra111 orsnow Htghs 111 !he mtd
40s Chance of prectpttatton 30 per
cent
Extended forecast
Thursday noght A chance of ram

Lows on the m d 30s
Fnday Ram hkely durong the
day Part1al cleanng at mght Htghs
tn the upper 40s
Saturday Partly cloudy Mom
ong lows m the mtd 30s Htghs tn the
lower 50s
Sunday Raon ltkely Morntng
lows on the mod J Os Htghs m the mod
50s

May activities _c_on_t'"_ue_d_fro_m_pa-ge_•_ _
ton about responstbtltty for keepmg
the streets and s1dewalks clean Hor
ton sa1d that the tenant or bu1ld ng
owner ts responstble tor the stde
walh and that the v1llage 1s on
charge of street cleanup
A dtscusstOn was held on the trees
wh1ch hoe the streets and tentattve
plans were made to plant tlowers
around them The posSibtlity of get
ttng planters for poles along the
sodewalk was also dtscussed along
wh~ plantmgs at the levee and on the
parks
As for long range plans WISe
talked about trees tn restdenttal areas
bemg cut down and not replaced and
consideration of replacmg trees 111
downtown Middleport We cannot
accompliSh anythong wnhout volun
teers sa1d Wtsc who encouraged
mvolvement from commun1ty peo
pie
Duffield reported that new pastel

!lags wtll go up on Apnl I and rema111
tn place unttl June I when the patn
ottc flags wtll go up
Membershtp m the Metgs Coun
ty Chamber of Commerce was
approved Duffield wtll represent the
organtzatton at the meetmgs
II was noted that the anttque and
craft mall of M1chael and Debbre
Gerlach wtll open thts month II was
reported that 14 parttctpants have
Signed up to go onto the mall Also
noted was the March 27 openmg ot
the Umverstty of R1o Grande on
Middleport Arrangements were
made to send welcome gtfts
Bob G1lmore volunteered to serve
as chmrrnan for the July 4 parade and
contacts w1ll be made about a pro
gram m D1les Park
Duffield reponed that the Jewel
City IS avatlable for excurstons m
May and June for $700 and noted that
a:novatton plans for the old depot are
sttll betnJl consrdered

Common Pleas Court news
lndtctments filed
The followong md1ctments were
filed recently tn the Me1gs County
Court of Common Pleas tollowong
acuon by the M •rgs County Grand
Jury
Kelly Thomas age unreported
Pamter Rtdge I oad Vmton was
ondtcted on one charge each of rape
~nd gross sexual tmposot1on The
charges stem from a Feb 9 onctdent
tnvolvmg a monor under the age of
13 accordtng to the ond1ctment

Franklin Tracy Hysell 34 658 E
Kmg St Lancaster was 111d1cted on
a felony charge of fa lure to appear
before the court Hysell allegedly
fa1led to appear for a Feb 19 tnal on
a charge of fa~lure to pay chtld sup
port
Ronald Lambert 33 New Ltma
Road Rutland was tndtcled on a
charge of gross sexual 1mpostt1on
stemm1ng from a Sept 26 1997 lOCI
dent

Joint operation yields 18-month sentence
A Manetta man arrested Feb II
lollowmg a drug hust to Mtddkport
was sentenced recently to I H months
111 pnson on ' charge ol trafltckmg'"
manJuana
Robert A Meyers 42 135
Malthews St pleaded gu1lty on Feb
24 to the traffick me charce wh1ch "
a fourth degree felony
He was arrested dunng a com
lirned operatum by the Me1gs Coun
tv Shenll s Department members of

the MaJOr Cnmes Task Force aeents
of the Ohto Bureau of Crrmtnal
Identification and InvestigatiOn tnd
the Me1gs County Prosecutors
Olltce
Olficers watched an apparent drug
transactoon take place between two
veh1cles m Middleport and later
pull ed Meyers over on General
Horttnger Parkway satd Shenff
James M Soul sby
Mart)uana and money were recov
erect from the car he sa1d

The Daily Sentmel

Stocks

(USPS liJ 96&lt;JI
Puhl shed eve y aflernoo n Monday h ough
fr d y II Cou S Pomc oy Oh o hy h

Oh oVa cy Puhl

~ ~~

ng Co mp ny Gannell Co

Po me O) Oh o 4 ~7 ('1 Ph 99

I ~f Seco n I

class pos1age pa d a Pomtroy Oh o
Mt'mber Thl' Auoc I'd P en ~nd h Oh
N wspape J\ssoc a n
POSTMASTER Sc: d dd ess co e ons o
The Da y Sen nrl
I lou S Po mc o y
Oh 10 -1 ~769

SURSCRIPTION RATl S
Bv Carrier or Molor Rou e
One Week
One
Mon h....... •••.•••.• : .•••.•••.•••••••.••••.•••••••

Ont Yl' a ............................................ ..
SINGLE COPY PRICE

~o s ubsc p on by rn a I pu m led n a reas
J..here home ca r e serv ~ t au table

Pub sheI reserves he r ght to ildJUS a es du
ng the subsc pt on pc od Subscr pi on raae
changes may be mplement ed by c h a n ~~: ng the
dura on

nr he subscr pi on

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ln•kle Melj:s Cou11t1
.,~ Weeks
$.13 H2
i$27
30
52 Weeks:.:·:::.:. , ::: .. ::. ·.: :. : :; S
I 15 !56
Rates Outskte Mtlgs Couniy

11 Weeks

$?9 2'i

26 Weeks

$56 M1

52 Weeks

SI09 72

The Datly Sentmel • Page 3

Am Ele Power ...................... ..
Akzo ................. ..... ............ .
AmrTech ............................... ..
Ashland 011
AT&amp;T
Bank One .................. .
Bob Evans
Borg Warner
Broughlon
Champion
Charm Shps .............. .
Coty Holding
Federal Mogul ...............,.. .....
Gannett ................................ ..
Goodyear
Kmart ................. .......... ..
Kroger ..... ........ ~ ......
Lands End
Limited
Oak Hill Flnl
OVB ...................
One Valley ............................... ..
Peoples .................................... .
Prem Flnl ................................. ..
Rockwell ..........................
RO/Shell ................................ ..
Sears
Shoney s
Star Bank .................... ,
Wendy s ..................................
Worthington

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10 30
a m quotes provided by Advest
ol Gallipolis

James H Tyree 75 Snowball Hrll Syracuse d1ed Tuesday March 3
1998 at hts home
Born Dec 4 1922 m Charlestot! W Va he was the son of the late Charles
and Ollte Vo~rs Tyree He was rettred !rom the Foote Mmeral Company at
New Haven W Va He wa.s a World War II Army veteran md served tn three
campa gns at Rhmeland Ardennes and Central Europe
He ts sumved by h1s w1fe Betty Bass Tyree to whom he was mamed
tn August 1949 tn Pomeroy two daughters and sons m law Kay and M1ke
Ryan of Syracuse and Mae and Gerry Hupp ol Racme tour grandchildren
SIX great grandchtldren a Sister Opal Tyree of Pomeroy a brother John
Tyree of Mtddleport several nteces and nephews
He was preceded mdeath by two ststers Ruby Hyan and Margaret Bar
rett and by four brothers Bob Tyree Charles Tyree Ray Tyree and Roy
Tyree
GraveSide servoces Will be Thursday 12 30 p m at the Gtlmore Ceme
tery Monersvtlle wtth the Rev Robert Coen officmtong Fnend s may call
Wednesday 7 9 p m and Thursday 9 am to noon at the Cremeens Funer
al Home Racme
A mthtary flag presentatton Will be conducted at the graveSite

Kimberly L. Stout
Ktmberly L Stout 41 Columbus former Pomeroy re&lt;~dent dted
Tuesday afternoon at Umversoty Hosp1tals m Columbus followmg an extend
ed illness
She was a daughter of the late Betty Hoetltch Hammer Columbus also
a former Metgs reSident and the late Clarence Hammer her adoptive father
She was also preceded 111 death by two brothers Dennts Ke1th and George
Mcintosh and a SISler Lou Ann Jones Columbus
SurviVIng are her husband Dennts two sons Steven Columbus and
Randy and a daughter Ntkl&lt;t both at home
Semces wtll be held m Columbus

Meigs EMS logs 10 calls
Untts of the Me1gs County Emer
gency Medtcal Servtce recorded I0
calls for assistance Tuesday Untis
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8 40 a m Rocksprongs Rehabtlt
tat1on Center Pomeroy Floss1e Nel
son Veterans Memorral Hosp1tal
I 45 p m Maples Apartments
Pomeroy Ida Cowdery VMH
2 21 p m Church Street Syra
cuse Evelyn Stowe Holzer Medocal
Center
4 44 p m Oak Grove Road
Rac111e Emma Adams VMH Racme
squad asSISted
6 39 p m Metgs Mme 2 Paul
Johnson 0 Bleness Memorral Hos
p1tal
I 0 59 p m state Route 124

Reedsvolle Merion Robmson Cam
den Clark Memorral Hospttal
POMEROY
7 32 a m volunteer fire depart
ment to Welsh Town Htll chtmney
fire no tnjUrtes reported
9 42 p m VFD and squad •o
Pomeroy Mason Bndge motor veh1
cle acctdent Allen Johnson and
Andrea Ord VMH Central Dtspatch
squad asststed
REEDSVILLE
12 35 am Bellville Locks Mtke
Huddleston VMH
TUPPERS PLAINS
5 04 p m state Route 248 and
Success Road motor veh1cle acct
dent Carol Def1baugh and Gary Flo
ra refused treatment Ohve Township
VFD asstsled

Bidwell man in 'guarded
condition' after accident
A B1dwell man ts m Holzer Med
teal Center lollowmg a ""!lie veh1
cle acctdent early Wednesday mom
mg on S R 2 accord1ng to a Mason
County W Va Shenffs Department
spokesman
Jason L Mercer 19 w ts listed m
guarded condttron Wednesday
accordmg to a HMC spokesm tn
Mercer was transported to the lacd1
ty by Pomt Pleasant EM,S after the 4
a 111 wreck
The tdentttv of a passenger tn
Mercers 1986 Honda ts not known

but the person was taken to Cabell
Huntmgton Hosp1tal by Valley EMS
Accordtng to the shenffs
spokesman Mercer was traveling
north on S R 2 at Jerry s Run when
he ta led to mamtatn control and ran
olf the road Hts vehtcle rolled sev
eralumes before commg to rest m a
field
Mercer was Cited for DUI and lml
ure to nmntam control The acc1dent
"sttll under mvestogat10n

Pomeroy-Mason bridge...
Conlmued from page I
fall pff she satd
Ped1go smd she not had a chance
to talk to the bndge mspectors thrs
mom111g but she expects that ODOT
w1ll pursue an emergency contract so
that the repairs can be made qutckly
a matter of days Emergency con
tracts do not have to go through the
ODOT btddtng process
ThiS mommg Ron Strttz DIStnct
I0 bndge mspector and John Wack
eriey a structural mamtenance eng1
neer from ODOT s central office m
Columbus wrll further tnspect the
structure and make recommenda
!tons tor repatrs
Contractors known for domg thts
type of work can be contacted for
cost~sumates and an authoozauon to
proceed can be obtamed w1thm a
maner of days, Pedtgo satd Repa1rs
could be underway by next week
Exactly how long the bndge wtll
be closed has not been determmed
she sa1d Repa1rs could be underway
by next week Exactly how long the
brrdge w1ll be closed has not been
determmed however ODOT w1ll
work to reopen the structure as soon
as posstble
ODOT w1ll also try to reopen the
s1dewalk to pedestnan traffic even
though the roadway os closed she

added
Built 111 1928 the Pomeroy Mason
Brtdge " one ol lour remammg
Oh1o Rtver bndges owned by Ohto
Plans call to replace the agtng struc
ture m ?002 wolh prelimtnary work
already underway

ACCEPTS POSITION - Bar·
bara Ebersbach has recently
been employed as an adminls
tratlve asststant at Warner Heat
lng &amp; Cooling In Chester She Is
a 1981 graduate of Valley High
School In Lucasville and a 1997
graduate of Southeastern Busl
ness College In Gallipolis where
she received an associate
degree In accounting and a
diploma In data entry specialist
She resides In Middleport

Couples issued marriage licenses
Two couples were rssued mamage
licenses recently m the Metgs Coun
ty Probate Court of Judge Robert
Buck
Recetvrng ltcenses were Jesse

Ryan Maynard 19 and Danyel Lee
Smtth 19 both of Ractne Douglas
Edward Barnette 35 and Cathy Jane
Thorla 43 both of Rae me

A one car acctdent on State Route 24~ Tuesday left two people tnjured
the Gallia Me1gs Post of the State Htghway Patrol reported
Dnver Gary J Flora 18 SR I ?4 Reedsville and hts pru;senger Cor
ol J Defibaugh 20 also ol Reedsv lie both rei used treatment lollowmg
the 4 53 p m crash troopers sa1d
Flora was eastbound 111 Olive Township when he lost control of the
car he drove went olf the lett s de ot the road and struck a tree accord
mg tp the report
The car wa.' severely damaged and Flora was c1ted for fa1lure to con
trol

Patrol issues citation after accident
Maranda J Drake 22 63443 SR 124 Lono Bottom was c1ted for fa~ I
ure to control by the Gallta Me gs Post of the State H1 ghway Patrol fol
low1ng a one car acc1&lt;lent Tuesday on SR 248
Troopers satd Drake was westbound tn 01 ve Townsh1p at 6 10 p m
when s e lost control of the car went olf the r gill Side of the road and
struck a mbwment
The car aSilloderately damaged

Meigs announcements
Trustees to meet
The Ohve Townshtp Tru stees wtll
hold thetr regular meetmg on Thurs
day al 6 30 p m at the township
garage
Hunter Education Class
An Ohto Hunter Educatton Class
w11! be held March 16 17 and I~ t\
9 p m and March 21 9 a m to noon
at the Pomeroy Gun Club The course
ts mandatory tor all wantmg to pur
chase their first Ohto huntmg hcense
To preregoster call Jom Freeman at
The Datly Sentmel at 992 2155 ext
102 or at 949 3403 Class SIZe" I m
ned and those takmg the course must
attend all four sesstons
Chamber of Commerce luncheon
Doma Sm1th adult superv,or at
Galli a Jackson Vmton Jmnt Voca
t1onal School wtll speak at the
monthly Me1gs County Chamber ot
Commerce luncheon Tuesday noon
at Carleton School tn Syracuse
Square dance set
A square dance w1ll be held Sat
urday 8 p m at the Tuppers Platns
VFW hall Mustc wtll be by Smokey
Mountam Qnfters With J B Wilson
as the caller There w1ll be cake walks
and door pnzes
Sognup set
The HarriSonv lie youth league
wtll have stgnup tor baseball and
softball Fnday 6 to 8 p m at the Har
nsonvtlle Ftre Statton
Dance to be held
A round and square dance wuh
cloggmg and line dancmg Will be
held Fnday Mto II p m at the Long
Bottom Community Butldtng Out ol
the Blue Will be the band and Arthur
Conant the caller
Auxohary to meet
The Lad1es Aux11iary VFW Post
9053 Tuppers Pla111s regular metmg
Thursday 7 30 p m
St Patrock s Day dmner
Heath Unued MethodiSt Church
Middleport w1ll ha1e a St Patnck s
Day Spaghettt dtnner Sunday 5 to
6 30 p m There wtll be a lree wtll
offenng to benefit the youth fellow
shrp
Ch1h dmner planned
A chilo supper wil be served at S
p m after whtch there wil be a fel
lowshtp and srngtng unttl 8 p m at
the ReedsVIlle Umted MethodiSt
Church

Group to stng
The Perrys wtll be stngtng Thurs
day 7 p m atthe Ash Street Freewill
Bapttst Church Middleport Pastor
Leslie Hayman 1nv1tes the public
Communoty hand
The B1 0 Bend Community B tnd
under direct on ol ~m e) Dnt ge s
Me1g s H1gh S&lt;: hool band dtreclor
w II beg tn spnng rehearsals on Mon
day 7 p m m the MHS band ro&gt;m
Membership " open to all adult and
ha gh M.:hool musu.:zan s an Metes
Mason Gallia and Athens counties
Rehearsals w1ll be held ev ery Mon
day except the hrst Monday ol the
month 7 8 p m Laroe m&lt;truments
and percusSion eqUipment will be
avatlable at the school For more
mformat1on call Dmgess at 992
7141 or Jeanne Bowen at 992 7536
Better Breathers Club
The first meettng ot the Bend Areu
Better Breathers Club w1ll be held
March I 0 10 30 II 30 a m m the
conlerence room at the Metgs Coun
ty Semor Cittzens Center'" Pomeroy
Meetmgs wtll be held the second
Thursday every month Randy Mam
hout owner of Prescnptton Oxygen
w1ll be coordmator for the meettn 0 s
Supper planned
A soup and sandw1ch supper will
be held on March 14 from 4 to 7 p m
at the W1lkesvolle Community Cen
ter sponsored by the Wtlton C1V1c
Assoctatton
Servoces set
Agape L1le Center m Mason
W Va w1ll hold spec1al serv1ces w1th
the prophetrc team ol Rev Michael
Spnnglcr and Rev Erme Cad ILk on
March IS at IOlOam anJ6pm
Cantata announced
The Untty Smgers of Coolville
will present a sprtng cantata The
L1ght of the World at the Mt Her
mon Umted Brethren m Chnst
Church on Sunday at 7 30 p m The
church ts located on WICkham Road
m I e Texas commumty The public
IS InVIted
Lenten servtce
The Grace EpiScopal Church tn
Pomeroy will hos t the Me1gs Coun
ty Ecumentcal Lenten Worshtp ser
v1ce on Thursday 11 7 30 p m Rev
Ke1th Rader w II be the euest spe~k
l!r

Brble study
The Pomero) Untted MethodiSt
Church w1ll hold a Lenten B1ble
study and worsh1p sem ce on Sunday
11 6 JO p 111 Rev Dwayne Stutler wtll
be the spectal guest

Supreme Court.. ~ontonuedtrompage 1
courts deal wtth the tssue of hiS com
petency
Obv1ously we re delighted with
their (the Supreme Courts) dec1
Slon Public Defentler Dav1d Bod1k
er satd We ta1l to understand why
there" some kmd of urgency to ex e
cute Wtllord It seems to me that that

Hospital news
Veterans Memorral
Tuesday admiSSions - FlosSie
Nelson Pomeroy
Tuesday diScharges - none
Holzer Medocal Center
Doscharges March 3 - Julta
Kennedy Alvm Keefer Chnstopher
Lowrey John Hale Mrs Ste ven
Dav es and son Dorothy Roush
W1lbur Young Sharon Smith Anm
ta Stevenson Teresa Murph y
Lawrence Unroe
Borth - Mr and Mrs Johnny
Ltvely son Gallipolis
(Pubhshed woth permrssoon)

potential s there an) tune - 11 they
Jon t do I ton chi they can tlo 11 a
month from no w or two 11 &gt;nths from
now

Gov Geor0 e Vo1nov1ch could
grant clememy to Berry h~the ov
ernor hat! not deudctl whether to tl u
so M1ke D t'v\ ... on the gove rn or '
&gt;pokestn 111 s uti T 1es d ty
Weu ver ~a u.J the . . tatt: w 1" pn.:
pared to execute Berry 11 the h1 h
court hlxk cd the 1 y

We carry a full
hne of electnc
products, from
all gauges of
wtre to many
styles of
receptacles See
us for all of your
hardware needs

PICKENS
MASON,
W.VA.

�Wednesday, March 4, 1998

Sports

Th·e· Daily Sentinel

Butler, Valparaiso, South
Alabama win conference titles

MAC concludes men's semifinal round

By The Associated Press
Butler did it
So did Va lparai\0.
And South Ali1bama. too. but wi th
more intrigue.
for the 'econd straight wason. the
Butler Bulldogs ;md South Alabama
Jngu:rrs played their way into the
. NCAA tournamenl by winn ing conferem:e tournaments.
Valparui so, rne;~nwhil c. made il
three consec uli vc NCAA berths with
a 67-48 victory over Youngstown
State on Tuc.&lt;day night in the MidContinent Conference title game.
At Green Bay. Wis .. Mallhew
Gruvcs scored 18 points and Otis frnzier added 17 as But ler heal Wisconsin-Green Bay 70-51 to win the
Midwestern Coll eg inre Conference
ti tle .
"Our idea was JUst In If)' to be in
•. the face of lhe ' hooter Cl'ery time
· · they turned ," Bu1lercoach Barry Col;. lier said after hi s Bulldoe' (21-10!
:: : held the Phoenix to J~ per~cnt ' hoot-

in OT; Miami tops Kent 64-59
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
TOLEDO. Ohio (API - While
.eve ryone el. . ~ m~n· e l ed at EHrl
Boykin\ steal 10 lock up Eastern
Mi chi gan's dr;unatic 93~9~ overtime
victory over Bal l Slate, all Boykins
cou ld think nboul was what would
ha ve )J;rppcncd if he had faibl.
" If I hadn't made the play, conch

se mifinal Tuc ,d :l~ n1 ght at SeaG:1te
Centre.
Boy"in
. . &lt;11 :1\t' the l'nurth -,ecdi!J
•
Eagle' tl!J -'JI :r '1.1-'111 lead 11 ith 49
second' left in til l' ml'rtllliC \\ hen he
drm't' :Jl'fO " " the l;llle and ducked
unt.lcr a h1 gg L;r ddl.' ndcr tn llip in H
SLOOp \ Ito\

"Earl

rlaycr
into thi s
would ha\'e \:l id. ' You wen~ out of l ea~ue .1nd repre,en1 lhc conferpo\ i"tion , a\ u... ual."' Boykins \aid.
ence ... Ball \~:rt e cnarh R:r ) ~kCal­
Nol I hi s time. Boyk i11S scored J5 lum ":ud.
points and then stripped the hall from
With ~ 6 "t' t· nmJ.. k•fl in the overBall State\ L1mon1Roland with 10 lime. Rlll curd - 11h" had IX point s
st:concb left to put fnunh- o.;cednl Jor tllp·,er&lt;lcu B.tll S1a1c el -7) Ea,tem in it o., record follrlh "araight drm·'-' tht? right h;,•.\.'linl' to L' lll the
Mid-American Conference titk ga me lead to a rotnl.
Eii'IIL'rn· . , J;nm· , Ill-ad \\:1'1 foukd
tonight 'again'! M1&lt;11ni of Ohio.
Miami ( 17- 11 ). I he se1enth seed wi th ~ I o., ecnm!... IL·lt and mi . . ...L·d hnth
in the eight -team tourney. moved intn . . hnt' - :11r-h.dl111 t !lw \CCt Hltl
Forced tn gn 11 nhnut k:1~lll. MVP
the 11nal with a somewhat k ss than
artistic 64-59 \'ictory m ~: r ~ i x th ­ 13ouLi Well" \1 hn li•1d fouled ou t ea rscedcd Kent.
lier intiH: merltiiiL'. lbll St:1IL' got the
"It w;rsn 't 1-cry prclly. Bul every ba ll lo Roland otrl l'rnnt. He Clll
time Pir;PiSO go.::-. to th~ co1nva,, it '..., atTO\\ the middl r .md ,.,.,1.., o~hout to
oot ~~ m:Jsh!rpiec~ hut it \ "till :1 Pi ca'- pivot had when llllyl.in' 111ckcd oiT
so." ~ai d acting Mi:1 mi coac h R:ty lhe h~ l l w1th Ill ,ccond s kit .
Martin . lilling in ftll lu:ad rn&lt;~c h
" I knew I wa' J; llill~ to lean· my
Charlie Coles. Coles is stil l recn ver- man and tal1lhle ." Bo) kith "i aid.
ing from a hc:art attack sullc:red dur- " That \ j uslthc I) pc nl player I am ...
Boyl.111s d11hhlcd dclll nmtrn.lhen
ing the q u &lt;~rterfinal Sa1urday.
E&lt;~, l c rn wi ll be n prohihiti 1·c
ptrl lcd up and hr01 1 ~ ht the hall ntrt·
favorite in the fin:ll - il' the Eag l e~ . . ide . l'illally r :l ...... lll~ it ;\\\ :ty tt.l avoid
didn 't e•pcnd too much energy in the a 1rap ncar mi\h.:ourt. He to..,,cd up a
semifinaL
15-rdot jumper"' the hut rcr w h~n it
In head -to-head meetings thi ~ hL'G III1(' d c;.1 r Lhll State ''ouhln't get
year. Ea'tern won hy lour at home lhe hall hack.
ilOO lost by eight at Mianri .
13uykitl' aJ,o h.ul "t'\ L' ll tl""i' "' ;111d
"W hen we're clit·king on all
~even ' teal'\ .., hi lc hilli11g all ~ ix free
throw1 and 11 -of- ~1 shot1 from the
cylinders and healt hy. we're a pretty
goorJ le:rm." Miami's Wally Szner- field. including J-nf-Ythree-pointers.
Derrick Dial added J I points for
hia~ said.
E:·p~tcrn ccn:tinl y wa~ in the fJr, t
Eastern. which heal Ball State in all
three meet in.[!~ thi . . 1\eason.
.Ill lltJhltl lldmg

I\

H:\ n ne of lhL'

hc .., \\11 L' OJ1ll~

Well&gt;. the MAC\ MYP. hit a soft
15-footer from the right foul line
extended with l'ight second\ left to tle
il at 84 and 'end the game into over·
time. He wasn't around to see the fin·
i1h. however. fouling out with :1:42
kfl in the o1·ertirne
Wdl1 still fini,hcd with 24 points
- hilling nine of hi s last 10 shots
nfter mi.....,ing hi~ first ,e,·en - to go
wilh nine rebounds and nine assists.
"The last few weeks I !~ought
Earl IV :IS the MVP or thi s league ...
Eastern coach Milton Barnes said.
"That's not to wke ilnything away
rrom BonLi . hccau"ie Bonzi is a great
pl ayer too. Earll"" done so much for
. us, to put us in Ihi s position . Unfortunately. lhing"i dj(_ln't work out.
"Bul I thin k if we won the champion ship. th&lt;ll wi ll suitl1irn line."
Anthony Taylor scored 22 points
and SLczcrbiak chimed in wi th 18"'
M1ami earned its herth opposi le the
Eagles. The RedHawk s didn' t hit a
field goal Ol'er the last 5:51 - scoring their last II poinrs from the li11e.
Mi:rmi trsed nn 11 -0 nrrt late in the
(irst half to break the gilme open.
Kent kept pumping up three-pointers
(hilling just 8-of-26) but never got
closer than five points aga in . .
" If Taylor doesn' t get22. we win
the ballgame." said coach 'Gary
Watm of Kent ( 13-17).
Coles rcmn ins in a Kulamazoo,
Mich.. hospital. in serious llut stahle
condi tion. He is expected to remain
in the hnspi tal for at least another few
days. hul he st ill passed on some
advrce In hi s team when Szczerbiak
spoke to him earlier in the day.
" He said. 'Go get 'e m. And do
what I'd want you to do,'" Szczerhiak '&lt;lid.

At Moline. Ill .. Yalparai 'n (~1-9)
got 16 points from Bill Jenkins and
15 from Jamie Sykes in ih win over
Youngstown Swre C!0-9) to het·ome
just the eighth Di vision I sc hool to
win at least four straight con ference
tournaments. Kentucky holds the
record with seven in a row.
' 'l',,e enjoyed the ride ," Val paraiso COilCh Homer Drew said.
At Lafayelle. La .. Tohy Madison
hit a 12-foot j umper wilh -10 seconds
left as South Alabama (21 -6) heiJ off
Southwestern Louisiana t\~-59 in a
furious finish in the Sun Belt Conference lournament final. The Jaguars
withstood a 17-3 run that nulled Ihe
Ragin ' Caju ns even m 59-all wi1h
1·07 left .
··we m·ercame everylhjng we had
to." Madi"1n said. "We ju' t kept
plug~ ing nway. ph1g£il'£ :tway."
Also. No. H Prinreton. whirh
cl inched the Ivy League title ancl an
NCAA herth Frid:l) night. bea t Penn
7R-72 in overtime in their final reg - ~

'J)',

Ebewhcre. Eastern Michigan heat
Ball State 9VJ~ in overtime and
Miami . Ohio. beat Kent64-59 in the
semifinals of the Mid-A merican Conr~rence tournament: Howard beat
Bethune-Cookm :m 79-77 in overtime
in the fir.&lt;t round or the Mid-Eastern
Athletic Conference tourney : and
Tulsa beat Bri gham Young 59-56.
SMU topped Colorado S1a1e 76-7 1.
Sa n Diego· State beat Wyoming 6().
57 in overtime and UN LY defeated
Hawaii 64-59 in first -round game s at
the WAC tnurnament.
No.8 Princeton 78, Penn 72
At Philadelphia. Steve Goodrich
scored J.l point s as the Tige r&lt; (~6-',
I 4,0) warmed up for Ihe NCAAs
wi th :.1 cl o~e ca ll aguinst th e Quakers
117-12. 10-4).
" II wou ld have heen ni('e to win
the gnme in regulation . hllt we
hmen' t hc~n in thi' ~ ituati n n all
year:· Gahe Lewu lli s. who added 18
points. s1.1id. "Corm: !&lt;JUrney time,
we're going to meet these \ ituations

Basketball

lmi -Suulh lknd 10. Ohvl.'r'Nazarl'lll' ~ .l
M . orro~H Inti ll() 1\clhl'l ln.! IO:'i.

NBA standings

Tourni:lments
lli R 11 Lunrrn•ncr-finl round
Ct1 lt1f.1Jo 171 Ukbhtuna f-.6
K : nl , ,l ~ S1 7'. lb ylnrM ((IT)

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Alhmllc

u.w

Dlvi~ton

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New Yurl

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FIFTH-GRADE CHAMPION - Coolville won
the fifth-grade title In the Eastern Athletic Booster elementary basketball tournament. In front are
Jonathan Thompson, Cody Hornsby, Dana Vales,

Brandon Russell. In the middle row are Aaron
Rupe, Brett Moone, Jerred Willis and Nick
Springer. Behind them are coaches Robert Vales
and Randy Hornsby.

II
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Ohio H.S. boys' scores

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NCAA Division I
men's .~cores

Mifl·,\nlt'rican Cu nfrrt'O&lt;'f 'r m i final~
I Mn: lu!!.m •n. ll.cll S1 '' 2tlrt J
M1.um f•-' J... ~.· nr W

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Chumpiunship
But k r 70. Wcs ·Greo:n llay .~ 1

Sun thlt Cunrrrt'ncr
ChampiDnship
Sm11h l\l:ihanm62. ~W Lnui s•:.n:. ~ I)

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NCAA Division I
women's uores
ReiUIMr-IH!tlSiln action
.
Dllr!lliOu lh ?M. Hurvl'r~ 61
PnnL'CIIIn 7J . Prnn 67

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Co1Jv..cla67 Kr:111on 'i'i
Culumhu\ C.nl\t= 0.1. Ar.:hlx1ld 60 (OTt
lo: l-.111)

C~l.' ~ ltm Nurwa~no:

'ij Map lr:lon 42
l,)n) b rown Cluproc.•w:1M . R11trnan :'i7
K .m ~:-os Lt~ul a 'i&lt;J Mil'lhur) Lakt= .~

l. c ~rl y

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I99BSPHINC

Belpre, Best Defense, all-tournament team; Jeff
Welsch, Little Hocking, all-tournament team;
Madison. Stephens, Belpre, All tournament Team;
Not pictured were all-tournament players Jim
Clevinger, Tom Frazier, Scott Sanders, Mike Hale,
Andre Geiger and Andrew Frlendenstlen. ·

.

{in ll \' l 'o l } 44

,\tlantk

:w.W
N,.,.,

Bruins, Islanders, Flames,
Blues collect latest NHL wins

Supplement to:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
The Daily Sentinal

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WESTERN CONFERENCE
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Ct&lt;rUI.'r Q . Swnnlnn -+4

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l.llf,lrn Ck.Jr v•e~~o {l(), Ohcrlln 40
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~ar.lth•ilco: •; i-.·tl.u 11 •. rh 6-1. C.1 \dwcll "14

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25
ADVERTISING DEADLINE
MARCH 17, 1998

PUCE.YOUR AD AND
REACH 3 COUNTIES!

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SIXTH-GRADE SPECIAL AWARDS - Special
award winners In the Eastern Athletic Booster
elementary basketball tournament were (L·R In
front) Ben Gum, Little Hocking, Tournament MVP
and Most Points scored; All Tournament; Matt Lll·
ly, Belpre, Best Free Throws; i.loel Gandee, Belpre. all-tournament team . Behind are Ta2 Mayle,

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~'ullll.'fll Mclh. 7b, Colu1aJo St 7 1
Tul\ a "19. Un1harn Y u un~ .~ b
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l\1irt-t-:usltrn Athll'lic Confrrtncr-nrst round
H" "'- ·•rJ U 711. lklhune ·(tl(JI..nMn 77 tOT I

"2

{1.11.. ll .uho•r

Tournaments

#25, Ross Holter #32, Robert Cross ·#40, Cody Dill
1144, Ken Amsbary #11, Ashton Well 1130 and
James Will #21. Behind them are coaches Tim
Baum and Steve Dill.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

l' .u1hhnr or;.;;
M "~·" l ' &gt;t'' hdd 1 1~ Or.ll lf.!c' XI,
No~• ·'"'' 1 o~Hlc''' &lt;i 1J. ( 'u p k)' IX

~-::~,·
f'l' rl ll7~f ( ) !" l

CHESTER TAKES SECOND - The second·
place winner In the Eastern Athletic Booster elementary basketball tournament fifth grade divl·
sion was Chester. In front are (L·R) Derek Baum

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NHL standings

H.uhnhO / r.mlhn 41
I n•nl'h•n r,.l W11l.ud 'i6
lnou H.olh

67 . D:mfoury l .:1 k.- ~ iJ.: 61

Hockey

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Jeff Wettengel, Steve Hollis. Behind them are
Madison Stephens, Jeremy Freels, Rodney Johnson, Eric Hayton, Aaron Hampirian and Chadd
Sinnett. Coaches are Tom Gaspens and Stott
Kappel

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CLAIMS RUNNER-UP HONORS - Second
place winners In the sixth-grade division of the
Eastern Athletic Booster elementary basketball
tournament 1111as Belpre II. In front are (L-R) Taz
Mayle, Chad Bledsoe, Joel Gandee, Matt Lilly,

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Gum, Ryan Duty, Clayton Clatterbuck, Jeff Welsh
and Jesse Joseph. Behind are coaches Dave
Welsch, Bill Duty and Ray Blackburn.

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SIXTH-GRADE CHAMPION - Little Hocking
won the sixth-grade championship In the Eastern Athletic Booster elementary basketball tournament. In front are (L·R) Chris Emrick, Steven
Givens, Josh Blackburn, Justin Hamilton, A-aron

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Humphreys and Waylon McKinney. The Marauders will play Friday evening at Ohio University's
Convocation Center against New Lexington.
Tickets are available at Meigs High School until
3 p.m. Friday afternoon at $4 each. The Maraud·
era will get a percentage of each advance ticket
sold.

. '·

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Tol Norlhwood 66 . WauSI.'nn 6 .~
Y&lt;IU L1bcrt y 42 , !lmo\.:f1dd 2()

lkrwdr d rnc .K:m ~ .\ [nnl!cl 27

SECTIONAL CHAMPS - The Meigs Maraud·
ers defeated Gallla Academy 52-47 to win the
Division II sectional championship at South Webster. In front are (L-R) T.J. Davis, Brad Davenport
Collin Roush, Angelo Rodriguez, Sean O'Brle~
and Nell Giles. In the back row are Steve Beha
Zach Meadows, Grant Abbott, Daniel Hannan, J.i.

h'

Scoreboard
Mld,..r ~t

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

NCAA men's tournament field grows to 14 teams

Page4
Wednesday, Ma;ch 4, 1998

EMU defeats Ball State 93-92

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Home Improvement Center • Air Conditioning
• House Painters • Building Contractors
• Interior Decorators • Lumber • Flooring
• Carpeting • Hardware • Appliances
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The Daily Sentinel

Sr Luuu ,5. Cl11n 1gu l
1. T.u11p:1 BaJ I

C.rl ~n' y

Tonight 's ~ames

Call992·2155 Dave Ext 104 or Don Ext 105 ·

N Y R:mgt•rs ,n fJ unUa. 7 10 p Ill
(nlor:ujl) al ToiiOIII tl 7 10 I'm

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•

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••
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FIFTH GRADE SPECIAL AWARDS - Special
winners In the Eastern Athletic Booster elementary basketball tournament fifth grade were,
Front Row L-R, Eric Burnen, Rutland (all-tournament team); Ken Amsberry, Chester (all-tour·
nament team); Justin Coleman Rutland (all-tournament team); Jerrod Willis Coolville- Best Free
Throw; Derek Baum Chester- Best Defense; 2nd

..

Row· Zach.Bush, Rutland (all-tournament team);
Cody Dill Chester· Most Points Scored and alltournament team; Ross Holter Chester (all-tournament team); Cody Hornsby, Coolville (MVP and
all-tournament team); and Dana Vales Coolville
(all-toumament team). Not pictured are Adam Dillard, Josh Hayman, Danny Cooper and Brandon
Smith.

WASHINGTON IAPl - Ron
Wi lson\ Olympic co,rchirrg experience wilh the U.S. learn was haJ
enough . Now he\ trying to figure out
what's wrong wilh hi s suddenly sagging Washington Cap1tals.
''I'm not going In pl:.~y guy ... who
continue to throw 'now out there and
don ' t w;.ml to gel hi! or don ' t w;ulllO
be involved in the play." Wil,on 'a id
alter the C.1pitals losl ).() Tuesday
night to the Bn, ton Bruin .... " You
want to play &gt;0(1. you ~nn't hal'c a
. spot on thi ... t~am . 11 \ a' ,i mr lc a...
th&lt;ll ..
.Wi lson \.V;I'\ under,landothl y up . . el.
The Capitals have lost lil'e .&gt;traight.
including four ~inre he re-turnct l from
the Olympics. where hi s team finished a di-sappointing ~ixth. Counting
both the U.S. team and Ihe Capitals.
Wilson's teams have won just twice
in rhe ln' t 13 games.
After going ~5: 16-8 in their first
49, games. the Capitals are 1·7-J in
their last II . Since the Olympics. they
hnve five gon ls in four f!Umec; and
were shut out twice.
Jason Allison hnd two goals and
an assist. and backup goalie Roh Tal las made ~3 'nves to lead the Bn1in '.
The triumph allowed Bost on to
stretch its unheaten \lreak to four
games (3-0-1) and jump over the
Capitals and idle Montreal Canadiens
into fourth place in the NHL's Eastern ronlerence . The C:r pitclls

dropped tn ' ixth.
"That wo.1' lttl~cd ;J hnut ;rnd \' c
knC\\ the .., jtua1ion we: Wl'n: in ." Bru in.., defen,enwn lby ll"ourquL' ,,nd
" We wan lcLl to gl't it tlonl.' :md th:1t
Wi.l' our hit: illL'l'llti ,c.
W1th ~6
gillll C"i l dt.t~n:rythin~ j.., gotng to he
down tnlhc wire . lt \tllll ~0 111~ to he

ea . . y. hut a , t;Jrt liJ..c th i... 'l lii"L' hL'lfh ...
It w:h lho &lt;.;ccontl \ l rai~h t . , Jwtout
Jo..,, for 1he C:1[1it~1k \\ 110 \\L'rL' hrat en :1-0 Sunday hy Btr!Ldo arr d ~n ; d1 c
Dominik Ha..,cJ.. .
"I don't knm~ ,r 11 \\a . . thL'Ill m lh
or it comh ill&lt;ltlon of hoth ." ":1id

Bu.\ ton ·.., Ja,on Alli . , olt. who had
two to,d. . and an &gt;l..,, i..,t. " We l"n1 ,1ra 1 ~
IL'&lt; IIll" 'o m .:t t llll'"· M;1yh.: hc(i lli '~O:

thL'Y callll' Olll . . n . . tmng. they t hou ~ l11
il \~;h going to hL' c.a . . y."
The Cap1t.d ... ' ent IS . . lmh at T.tl fa.., Jurin g thl' OJk'IIJil g li :SO. l h l' n
had onl ) llllL' ... hoi i"o1 Ill ~ nl'\t r UJ(l.
Tttlla, , \\ hn won fo1 tht: fi1 ' 1 IIII IL"
... ilK~ DL·c. ~ 7 .... trl'lchl:'d thr.: Ca r it&gt;~l . . ·
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(Sec Mil . "" l':ri!c 6!

...

""'"~~..,.,..

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6 • The Daily Sentinel .

Wednesday, March 4, 1998

Wednesday, March 4, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Sonics·top Miami 97-91 in OT; Jazz, Knicks,. Pacers ·also win , \
By The

Asso~lated Press

On a night when most of his shots
didn't fall, Gary Payton just stepped
back even fun her.
With a cool hoist from almost30
feet, Payton ended a shooting slump
and the Miami Heat 's 10-game wi nning streak.
· Payton's deep three -pointer in
overtime helped the Seattle SuperSonics beat the league's hones\ team
with a 97 -91 ovenime victory over
the Heat on Tuesday night.
"I just hoisted it up there and it
went in," said Pay,ton, who was on ly
3-for-13 with 12 points. but hit the
b'iggest shot of the game.
" It was a pa inful loss. an excruciating loss," Miami coach P,at Riley
said .

"Thi ~ g~1me ca m ~

down to two

teams flail ing away :r11he end . Sooner or later somebody was goi ng to
make one or two

for a baseline jumper. Hersey
Hawkins finished off the Heat with a
hook shot to make it 95-89 with 21.2
seconds left as Seattle won its fifth
straight.
" I trusted the team when we were
down," Seattle coach ,George Karl
said. "I knew we could come b:1ck.
You ' re going to have to win close
games, because they are a part of the
playoffs."
The Sonics rallied from an 83 -78
deficit in the final five minutes of
regulation as Miami missed its last 10
shots ·in the founh .
Hawkins and Schremp!' each h;1d

18 points for Seattle. Alonzo Mourning and Vashon Lenard each scored
20 for Miami.
·
In other NBA games, it was Utah
108. Toronto 93: New York 94, New
Jersey 91; Indiana Ill ; Vancouver
I03: Dall as II 0, Minnesota 99:
Chicago 118. Denver 90: Houston
107. LA Cli ppers 97; and Portland
98, Phoeni x 93.
Jazz 108, Raptors 93
At Toronto, Shandon Anderson
scored a career-high 26 points and
Bryon Ru«ell added 21 to lead a 55point barrage hy Utah's reserves.
The Jazz won their third straight

and lOth in II games, dominuting
inside, penetrating ar will and outrebounding the Raptors 43-32.
Karl Malone scored 18 of hi s 22
points in tbe second haiL and added
nine rebounds. John Stockton had
seven points and II assists to go with
seven points.
Chauncey Billups led Toronto
with 26 points.
Knicks 94, Nets 91
Larry Johnson scored 23 points,
Charles Oakley grabbed a seasonhigh 16 rebounds and host New York
shot 20-for-22 from !he foul line for
a gritty victory over ri val New Jersey.

Enter To Win

EASTMAN'S

s hot ~ . "

Payton hit a 27-rooter as the shot
clock wound down to make it 91-89
with 2:39 to play.
A minute later. Payton drove the
lane ;mel passed to Detkf Schrempf

Birthday
· Sale •••

NHL games ...
(Conlinued from Page 5)
r~at it came ag:lin "&gt;t an und~rmanned
~e.fense . Boston was mi..;sing Don
Sweeney, who broke hi s left shoulder
blade on Sunday. Grunt Ledyard,
.'acquired Tuesday from Vancouver.
has yet to repon to the Bruins.
"It's not just the defenseman's job
to hold down an opponent," said Bruins forward Dimitri Khri stich , who
assisted on all th ree goals. " lt's'also
the centers and rorwards holding up
their end. It 's all about te:1mwork."
That 's something the Capitals
were !:&gt;eking. And it was enough to
infuriate Wilson.
"Yo u have to be a responsible
leammnte. and we don't hHve enough
people doing that," he said.
, The Bruins patiently waited until
Allison ignited the oll'l'nsc with a pair
of second-period goals.
At 9:05, Allison broke a scoreless
tie . by backhanding a feed from
Sergei Samsonov past Capitals goalie
Olie Kolzig. He got his team-high
24th goal on a power play wilh 2:05
remaining in the period .
Samsonov added a goal 6:42 into
the third .
" It seems we have everything on
this line," Allison said. "We have
speed, we have strength . we have
size. We ha1e sense and feel. ... And
we've bonded well in a short pe!iod
of lime."
Elsewhere in the NHL Tuesday
night. it was the New York Islanders
\Philadelphia I: Ca lgary 2, Tampa
Bay I: and St. Louis 5. Chicago 3.
Islanders 3, Flyers l
Tommy Salo stopped 34 shot s as
New York stopped a three-game los-ing streak by defeating Philadelphia.

· Allan ·Houston added 20 points,
reaching that plnte:1u for the 14th
rime in 17 ga mes. as the Knicks
improved to 9-2 si nce the All -Star
break and moved 2 112 games ahead
of the Nets for second place in the
Atlantic Division.
New Jersey, losing for the sixth
time in eight games. los!A II -SI:lr cen•
ter Jayson Williams to a pulled
abdominal muscle. He was scheduled
to be examined today.
Pacers Ill, Grizzlies 103
Rik Smits scored 26 points to lead
Indiana to victory at Vancouver.
The Pacers won their third straight

FOOD LAND

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po~

Nascars FoodCity 500 in
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Bristol, Tenn. On March 29

Address - - - - - - - -

I

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals·
.Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

Gallia, Meigs,
Athens, Jackson,
Mason and Jackson
County, WV

(

City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
State---- Zip _ _ __

Un1ted Valley Bell

~

t

Orange Juice

tying In his own defense during his court·mar·
tlal at Fort Belvoir, Va. McKinney firmly denied
all 19 counts against him. (AP)

What a Time
NEW YORK (AP&gt; - With all the
luxes and toasts, it was hard to tell
who DIDN'T show up at Time magazine's 75th binhday bash.
Small wonder - it 's a shon list.
In a star-studded gala any organizer would be proud of.rhe rich mingled with the powerful at Radio City
Music Hall on Tuesday nigh! some 1.200 gliterati and literati. ~ci­
entists and politicians and actors and
writers from Mel Brooks to Mikhail ·
Gorbachev.
President Clinton was there. So
were Monica Lewinsky's lawyer and
former Clinton adviser Dick Morris.
Some of the Kennedys were there.
too. and so were Joe DiMaggio and
Jack Kevorkian, Jerry Falwell and
Louis Farrakhan. Raquel Welch and
Elie Wiesel - even Bill Gates made
it after a day of testimony on Capitol
Hill about his Microsoft Corp.
There was no sign of the pope, bur
no one seemed to mind.
"Tonight, Time magazine has paid

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DENIES ALLEGATIONS • Army Sgt. Maj.
Gene McKinney, right, accompanied by his wife
Wllhemla, walks to his car Tuesday after testl·

Buckeye)

ch·ICken Breast F.lI ets

··

.!

Gallon Jug ·

Proud to serve

The Islanders got goals from
Sergei Nemchinov, Zigmund Palffy
. a
and Robert Reichel as they extended ~(i@ihl
their home unbeaten streak to five
, .r..
'
games over the FlyerS (4-0-1).
·
··.;\
G:~rth Snow stopped 21 shots for
·
··
Philadelphi a: ·Snow was chosen to
stan after Ron Hextall lost for the
fifth time in six games in Monday
night's 4-3 loss in New Jers~y.
Flames 2, Lightning I
Tommy Albelin. who last scored
on Nov. 20 :1gai ns1 Florida, recorded
his second gml of the season to lift
Calgary over visiting Tampa B;.y.
Albelin broke" 1-1 tie at 12:3 1 of
1 lb. roll
the second period. with Lightning
right wing Stephane Richer oil lor
interference and a misconduct.
'
Bob Evans Gravy 20 oz. $t .99
Tampa Bay's Darcy Tucker tied
the gnme 1-1 early in the second. Calgary's Cory Stillman scored hi s 19th
goal of the season and IOOth NHL
career poin t at II :39 of tile lirst on a
setup from Then Fleury.
Blues 5, Black hawks 3
AI St. Louis. Pa1·ol Demi tra hall a
goal and two 01ssisls ;1s the Blues rontinued their recent orre-nsiv~ Sllf~..: .
The Blues have hcen making
,• .
things ~omforta h l e ro r Jamie
McLennan, the replacement in goal ·
14.5-18 oz box
for the injured Grant Fuhr. St. Loui s
h:J.s scored I fi goals in his 1h ree starts
since Fuhr went down ror a month
with a knee injury in the lir.sl game
following the Olympic break and has
a nine-game unbeaten streak !7-0-21.
St. Loui s. which got three powe rplay goal s. has won live nf six overall. Demitr:l has two gn:~ l s and six
24 Packs
assist' in hi s la't rour g~rncs .

I

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•We accept credit cards

FORT BELVOIR, Va. (AP) Point by point,lhe Army's former top
enlisted man denied claims by live
women who say he pressured them
for sex, implying some cooked up the
stories out of revenge .
Sgt. Maj. Gene McKinney. in a
calm, clear voice . repeatedly asserted his innocence during four hours on
the stand at his court-manial Tuesday.
He was to testify again today about
a sixth woman whose claims account
for nine of the 19 sexual misconduct
charges against him . 1
In a trial with no physical evidence, McKinney's testimony has
seemingly boiled things down for
jurors lo tl)is: Do you believe me or
them?
McKinney, 47, t~e former
sergeant major of the Army, is on trial on charges of groping or crudely
pressuring six women for sex since
1994. He could get 55 112 years in
prison if convicted.
McKinney, who is black, has said
he is a victim of race bias. His
lawyers have argued that hi s
accusers. all of whom are white, are
lying.
Asked if he had committed any
crime related to charges against him,
McKinney replied in a strong, clear
voice: "No sir, I committed none of
those offenses."
The most sensational charge he
faces is forcing a subordinate into sex
when she was nearly eight months
pregnant. McKinney testitied that he
never had sex with the woman and
merely took a special interest in her

l

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

Name ___________________

Drawing to be held on March 24.

Under oath, McKinney denfes
wrongdoing in.Army sex case

despite allowing their highest
total in seven games. They were coming off back-ro-back wins in which
they held Portland and Denver to an
NBA record-low 122 points.
Mavericks 110
Timberwolves 99
Cedric Ceballos scored 22 points
as Dallas won its second road game
in four ni ghts.
Shawn Bradley. replaced in the
starti ng lineup by rookie Chri s
Antsey. responded with 16 points and
live blocks _ three in the kJT1h
quarter.

A Pair (2) of Tickets to

88

tribute to the time it not only
Mary Tyler Moore paid tribute to
observed, but helped 10 create - the the late Lucille Ball, who graced
100 stunning years thatyour founder Time's cover in 1952. "II wasn't TV
Henry Luce so unforgettably called that made Lucille Ball, it was Lucille
the American Century," Clinton said. Ball who made TV." Ms. Moore said. ·
There was a series of toasts by the
Actress Lauren Bacall. in a slinky
famous to the famou s.
black evening gown. struck a statActor Kevin Costner, who shared uesque pose for Eunice Kennedy
a table with Gorbachev and Sophia Shriver, and United Nations SecreLoren. roasted DiMaggio. who was tary General Kofi Annan and John F.
sitting nearby.
Kennedy Jr. struck up a lively con"Joe DiMaggio wasn' tjust a ball
player. he was, he is. a man tor all
. seasons," Costner said after a dinner
of lamb and truffles.
Actor Tom Cruise toasted
Muhammad Ali as a man who
"promised ro handcuff lightning and
jail thunder ... who elevated exaggeration to new heights. He was our
Cyrano. We had many -kings of hislory but only one AIL "
Ali wasn' t the only boxer in the
house - Evander Holyfield was
riiere, roo.

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GENEVA, Ill. (A!'l - An admitted child molester whose altomey
called him "the safeM·sex offender in
the United Stales" because he had
himself surgically castrated was sentenced to 26 years in prison.
Jeffrey Morse. 30, who coul~
have been sentenced to nearly I00
years for molesting two young girl s,
had himself camared in hopes of getting a lighter se ntence. But Judge
Donald Hudson on Tuesday sentenced him to a much harsher penalty than the six years his attorney had
asked for.
Hudson noted that Morse wailed
·'until the gates of the penitentiary
were closing in on him " before he

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had the procedure performed. The
judge also said he wanted to keep the
threat of a long sentence as a deterrent to other child molesters.
"I choose not to lose the threat of
a longer sentence and irs deterrence
because the defendant wants lo use
hi s body parts as a bargaining chip,"
Hudson said.
Prosecutor Kathy Dia"l"nd
Karnyannis asked for a sentence of 25
to 60 years and called Morse's castration a ploy to evoke sympathy and
get a lighter sentence.
.
" He had control over these victims," she said. "Do nor let him gel
control over this court, too."

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Castrated sex offender
gets 26 years in prison

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SEN. JOHN GLENN

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ranked third last year in magatine :ttl
revenue with $533.2 million. The
weekly circulatiun is more !hart &lt;t
million . mostly by subscript1on . 1 ·
Time's managing editor. Waller
Isaacson, said the magazi ne hH ~
ch~nged since Luce 's days. when '"tf
was " a very opinionated journal.''''
" Now we hope to be based ·.;~
great reporting and good stotyc
telling." he said.

Tcrlit about value! These usage
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Creme ·Pie Fest

Golden Crisp

Asst. Varieties

is going to hun us at all ."
Prin ~e t on. winning ih 19th
straight after a loss to North Caroli na. set a school record with 26 wins
- topping the 25 -win mark by the
1966-6 7. team .
The NCAA's 64-team · fie ld now
stands officially ar 14: Arizona (Pac10); Butler (Midwestern Collegiate);
College of Charleston (Trans America Athletic): Davidson (Southern):
Fairleigh Dickinson (Nonheast): Illinois State (Missouri Valley). lona
(Metro Atlantic): Murray State (Ohio
Valley): Princeton (Ivy) : Radford
(Big South): Richmond (Colonial
Athletic Assoc iation): San Francisco
(-West Coast): South Alabama (Sun
Belt): and Valparaiso (Mid-Conti ,rlent).

Time was launched in 1923 by
two Yale students, Luce and Briton
Hadden. as "a brief. readable chronicle of significant events."
Over the years, the price of the
New York-based weekly went from
15 cents to $2.95 as it grew into one
of the magazine industry's leaders in
circulation and advenising revenue.
II now claims more than 31 million readers in 210 countries, and

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anniversary ~ :

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Mike Sells

versalion.
Anne Bancro ft chatted about
Israel and Iraq as comedian Brooks
commented on food . Falwell said he
was looking forward to seeing the
" Phantom of the Opera" show on
Broadway tonight
Though Lewinsky' s lawyer,
William Ginsburg. wa~ there. the former White House intern featured on
a recent Time cover was not invited.

' ~.

because he talked her out of having mg.
an abonion.
Leaning forw'ard in the w itn~ss
McKinney said he rescinded a job .chair. McKinney recalled telling M;.
offer to Sgt. Christine Roy when he Hoster: "I'm just going to tell yo~
l~amed she was pregnant and !hut she
I'm tired of you not meeting the stanwas bitterly disappointed. He felt the dards. I'm tired of the complaints I' ve
job entailed too much rravel and been hearing.... It' s time for you'
stress for a young mother who was seek employment elsewhere ." .' :
expecting again, he said.
Ms. Hoster ha' testified that Me!&lt;'-.
Ms. Roy. who testified she did not inney showed up in her room unanplan or welcome her pregnancy. nounced and propositioned her. S~.e.
offered to abort the child to take the said that when she rebuffed him, ~~
job, McKinney testifi ed.
picked her up and said, " I could t :V'~
"I felt there was a child in the you nght here."
·' "
world because of me," he said.
McKinney also offered a possible
' for anot her accuser,,
I'IJ
McKinney said he never spoke to revenge mot1ve
or saw Ms. Roy on Oct. 30. 19'16. the Navy Petty Offi cer Johnna Vinson;
night she claims he forced himse lf on who said McKinney propos irio n~d
her at hi s Army quarters.
her durin g a conference in Denver in'
He also 'denied altering a docu- 1996.
' 11
ment that defense attorneys hope will
McKinney said Ms . Vinson actuestablish an alibi for that night. McK- · ally came on to him. When he la1e(
inney signed in for an oil change at mentioned that he could tell l\is
a do-it-you rse lf auto repair shop. but Navy counterpart about her behav i!lr,1
prosecutors have suggested he later "She disp layed a little bit of coli-'
altered the sign-in sheet.
cern ," he said.
_.
McKinney's first accuser. Sgt.
After the women made their ac¢.11Maj . Brenda Hoster, testilied last sations last summer. McKinney was
month that he assaulted her in a quickly suspended from hi s appoinlHawaiian hotel room in Apnl 19%. ed job as sergeant major of the Arft:ly
Me Kinney said he actually had gone . and later was removed from !lie
to the room to lire her as his spokes- post.
woman and speechwriter.
The sergeant major of the Army Is
McKinney said long · frustration responsible for advising the Artn1
with Hoster' s job performance came chief of staff on matters relating to
to a head when she began berating 400,000 enlisted personnel.
co-workers during a stall meeting. He
The · case against Me KinneY,;
said he walked out of the meeting. which staT1ed with sex ual misconducf
then asked to speak privately with accusations by Hosler 13 months ago,
Ms. Hosler in her room, a few doors has been a source of great embat·-.
down from whore his wife was slay- rassment for the Army.
'

magazine celebrates 75th

Lb.

Bob Evans
Far~ Sausage

The Daily Sentinel• Page ;~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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1:1.

�By The Bend
-..

The Daily Sentinel
PageS
Wednesday, March 4, 1998

l

Live in lover gets cold s:,oulder from family for being 'other woman'
Ann
Landers
I '~'J7 L•» An~·dc~

T•m''

\, ,.J ,, .Hr .roJ ( r,·,u .or'

,,nJ .. ~ l•'

Hear Ann Landers: I have hccn
tor a couple of years
rH m . W'e hcg-tn our rel at ionship
\\ hil L' '''l' wl.!n: hoth married to ot her

\ L'( IIl ~ · · sl1h ..

f'l..'l lpk . M~
1 ,,

.\ OI II L'

di \i l fl'C

has been final

tunc. hut hi s wil l not be

I IILIIIIL' J ft1r "L'\l'l't! l months. Our

\\ ;!.., born la.' t May (hi s fnst
~· h dJ l . anJ I ha\l' a ;-.on of my ow n.
Hl 1h ·~ p ,!IL' Ilh haYc kn own abou t
u.., l1H c~ ~ ~..· ar . .tnd the pro hkm ~ ~t hat
d:tCJ ~ hiLT

they think of me as a home wrecker.
The truth is, Bub's marriage was
over years before 1 met him . His
fo lks. however, cannot accept !he
fac t that Bob has a 11 . w life -- as if
by ignorin g 11. 11 wi ll go away. They
wil l not vis it us a~··~ have !'occ n uur
1nf~ull daughter o n! ~ -'nee when Bob
took the baby o'er t•J their place.
I have ne ve r met Bnb's fa rllll y.
He. says !hey don't want to meet me
bc(ausc uf their L· lu:-.c relationship
w1t h hi s ex -wife . I don't cxpe...:t thcm
10 cu t her oul of their live s. bull feel
hurt that they want nothing to do
wuh me . They in vite Bob 's cx -wll"r
to all the famil y gathering:-., whiL· h
m c~m s I am left at home alone . Bo h
ncv\! r

make ~

goes .
Their hope is th;lt one day down the
1 want Bob's famil y to ack now l- road. Boh wtll dump you and gel
edge and accept me . How do 1 go hack wit h hi s wife.
about making . thi s happen '' Please
Please keep th is column . and let
adv ise me . -- Ri ghtfully Hurti11 ~ in me k:oow in a couple of years if my
Virg oma Beach, Va.
prognostications were on targ~ l.
Dear Virginia Beach: As an Mc;mwhtle. forget ahout Boh's parunbiased ou&lt;sider, 1 think I have a em and concentrat e on making
pretty good idea of how thi s loo ' ' '" yol' r rebtionship with him and your
Bob ·s fplk s. You started to sec their child a healthy, happy one .
. . on. who was a marri.cd man when
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
you met him . You then had a baby response to your 73-ycar-old corre"it h Bob. whi ch they may have con- spo ndent who says life can be a lot
~ t lkred an aucmpl at cn tr;lrmcnL . better wi thout u tn&lt;tn . She said, " He
B()h "s paren t ~ arc very fond uf hi s snores and hogs the covers ... The
fcmncr wife and will continue to woma n needs to ~n ow she docs not
1n clude her at all family affaor; and have to put up woth th is forever.
treat her a~ :J mcml&gt;cr of th!.! fa mil y. There is an alternative: separate bed -

any apolog1cs . He ju:-.1

They havC no wish to include you

rooms .

My wife and 1 made that deci sion
live years ago. and it was one of the
smartest move s we eve r made. After
umpteen ycarg with a woman who
turns over by levitating .; inches
above the bed and plopr1ng down
like a cannon hall , twitd ..s :1er feet
all night long and snoo ·:. like a
moose, I mrivcd to anotho.:r room.
There arc onl y 40 inches scparaling my bedroom door from hers. ~ nd
that is not a long trip when I get the
"call of the wild." The hcncriiS nf
this arrangement arc cnonnous. It is
true that absence doc s ondccd make
the_heart grow fonder and _the fan tastes somcttmcs more cxutmg.
If mar.ncd cou(')lcs can ,get over
the ·'you ·don ' t love me anymore ··

syndrome, and they have a spare
bedroom , they should take my
adv ice and use it. Married couples
get along much better aflcr an undi sturbed night of rest. .. No Longer
Sleepless in Augusta. Ga .
Dear Augusta: You don't say'
how old you arc o ;· how many years
you· V\.'! been m&lt;lrricd. Bot h maLe a

bi g dt.ffcrcncc. The only cl ue is your
reference to "umptCl' ll years ." Also .
:.111 t.:x tra bedroom is not always
avai lahlc . Each co uple mu s1 work
out :-. kcpmg an&lt;Jn_gcrncnt!i in a wuy

Wednesday, March 4, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

M.oving to settle 80 years of history, Russia decides to bury last czar
By ANNA DOLGOV
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW (APl - Overridm2
last-minute hesitations by the Ortho:
dox Church, the government decided Friday to bury Russia's last czar
and put to rest a painful chapter of
history.
Cabi net voted to bury the remains
of Nicholas II and hi s family in the
uars' crypt in St. Petersburg on July
17 - 80 years to the day after they
were cxc.:utcd by a Bol shevik firing
squad.
The fate of Russia's last royal
family has troubled the country
since their bones were exhumed in
july 1991 from woods ncar the Ural
Mountain s ci ty of Yckatcrinburg -

raosmg the sensitive question of
whether Russians need to repent for
thei r past.
First Deputy Prime Minister
Boris Nemtsov said Yelisin gave the
Cabinet full authority over the burial
plans, and Friday's decision was
final. "There will be no other decision except this one," Nemtsov.oaid. ·
Nic holas was executed in Ycka•erinburg. 900 miles cast of
Moscow, on Jul y 17, 19 18. along
·, ith hi s wife. five children an~ four
scrvJ.nts.
To prevent the remains from
becoming religious or political
relics, the Bolsheviks did their best
to destroy the bodies , burning !hem
with fire and acod, blasting them

that ' u" ' hnih husband and wife.

MIDDLEPORT - Moddlcp"n
L&gt;terar) Cl ub . Wednesday. 2 r m
home of G~y Perrin Pro~ram. twn
m y~ tnics by Mary Hi gg111~ ClarK
Sar:1 Owe n to review " A St ranger ~ ~
Watching" and JoAnn Wildman .
"MtJonli ght B et'om..:: ~ You ."

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
mav lwvc a rccurn:ncc of \Van~
Qucsllon : My I) -year-old son thai appeared to have previously
ha ~ hcen ha v1ng trouble with
cleared up.
" 'art -. He.: h;~ s them o n hi s hand.
I recommend that warts he
parti cularl y around the nail of hi s trcmed when :
index finger, and he also has one
% They arc cosme ticall y
on the bottom of his foot. We've objectionable or painful.
lricd ~evcral non -pre sc ription
% The risk of spread ing the
products without getting rid of the infection to other parts of the
warts. Should we sec a dermatol- body or to ot her individuals is
high. or
o~ i s t '!
Answe r: Seeing a dermatolo% In very rare instances. the
gist for a skin problem seems sen- wan interferes with breathing or
sible . Your famil y doctor may speech.
alsn be ahle to help. too. In fact.
All wart treatment is designed
desp ite the previous failures. yo u to destroy the infected skin. since
may still be ab le to take care of there is currently no treatment
the wart infection you rself wi th that can kill on ly the offending
non-prcsniption remedies.
\'trUS.
, i'he non-prescription wart
First. I'll explain a liu le bit
ahout w~trts anJ then give you ~~ remedies work quite slowl y. but
hasic primer on wart treatment. . •cy have a ve ry low ri sk of proAll wao:s re sult from mfcction c. ·• ing a scar. The most frequent
w1th the hu ma n papillo,na virus. r('asoti for unsatisfactory results
S( ICn ti sts ha\'C id::ntificd over with these products IS failing to
I00 different suh-1ypes of this follow the label in structions. The
v 1 r u ~ . They all share the characproduct s must be used daily,
tcn :-.ttc Df Jn\'admg normal skin or along with daily soakm~ of the
muL· ou ~ · m c mhranc~ ~lnd t·ausing
skm followed by pee ling or scrap:1hnnrmal growth - \\hat yflu and I ing off the dead laye" of wart
c;11l :1 wan · Jt th e ~i t c of the heforc rcaprlication or the prod1n c u r~ ion . Wart s ~rl! o h ~..: n l"lassiuct. I'd sugge st that you help your
ficJ by their locot ion rather than- _son try thi s approach for two
h) the ~peci l'iL· type of virus that monihs before you make a doccau..;c-. th L' l c ~ i o n \\1arts around tor' s appointment.
the fin!.!crnai l'i. li~ c your ~n n ha ~.
Doctors usc a variety of methar1..' c :-~flcd periun gual. Thosl' on od~ to destroy the wart-infcl'lcd
thC hotlOill Of \IJ C feci .trl' plillll.ll" skill. Cuttmg. hurning. frco mg.
\\",ll'h .
~c raring an.d the usc of ~ trnn g
Warh arc quit e Ul llllnon
ac1Js arc ~ quite t.:ommon . Each
Ahout )0 pnccnt ol the popul.t- method has about equal result s.
tion reporh h : l\ ' lll~ \~art-. Jl :-.ome Orca~iona ll y with largt· warts. or
time 111 their 11\ c:-.. hut I 'iu-.pcc t tho~c rcststant to prevtou s treat that thL· Lit e lll.l~ iiC\u ,lll ) he hlgh - ment s. the ant i-t.:am:cr dru~~
L' I' In mo-.t -.1\ ua ll nn-. tilL' hody':-.
bleomycin or 5-FU arc used.
l kf"cth l' -. ~ -. tt' lll rei." O_g fli! C-. tilL'
Unfortunately. even wilh these
\\a rt ' 11u:-. ,1-. ;ul 1n\ .tJ~..·r .md (' limmore powe rful agent-.. ~cvc ral
mate .., ll . Thh OLt,:ur , 1n t " l )· \htrd~ treaunen ts arc often requ ired . and
i l l tho-.c 1 n k~..·h:J 1-tut 11 P f i L' Il · the wart~ may ~ti l l l'ome h~u.:k .
t. lk l'-. up to 1~\ •l ~·.: .n -.
l nJI \' HJu ~il ~ \\H h. -. urrrL·~~cJ
"Family Medicine'" is a weekly
lllllllliii L' -.~:-.\C I!l -.. pariiL' U!'arJ y
column. To submit questions,
ti·.- 1-.L' v..llh t i i ~ Ml tr ; 1n .-.p lant ~ nr write to John C. Wolf. D.O ..
Wi th HI \'. m ; 1 ~ h.i\L' .111 L·~ pcu all y
Ohio Univcrsit)· College of
diiiiL"tilt I Hil L' \\ 11h \\:Jth . They
Osteopathir
Medicine,
tll ;l\ ,lllli ii L 11\..' 1,\ rnk' L tllln 'i ant.l
Grosvenor Hall, Athens. Ohio
L11l tn -. liP\\ llll j1HI\!...'Illl..:nt aft er a 45701.
rca-.Pnahll· [lL' It ud i ll tnnc. or they

THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA. 7 p.rn Sacred
Hearl Cat hoi ic Church. Mulberry
1\\cnuc. Pome roy. Thursday.
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Republi ca n Commiltce meeting
Thursday. 7:30 p.m. at Car leton
Schoo l. All Republican s welcome
REEDSVILLE -

Olive Town -

~ hip Trustees

reg ular mec tmg Thur~ ­
day at 6 :30 p.m . at the to wol, htp
ga rage .

POMEROY - Pomc ooy Ylluih
League hascha ll sig nups Thur -.day
at Pomeroy Elc menlary School.
S:30-DO p.m.

quc-.tloll'. t(l Ann Landers. Crcat~~rs S)lld&gt;c&lt;&gt;l c. ) 777 W. Ce ntury
Hlvd .. s ;,, c 71111. L"s An gob. Calif.

The Meigs County Health
Department nursmg staff and 1he
staff of the Ohi o Unive rsity (0U)
College of Osteopathic Mcdic one
(COM I have completed their collaboration for a two-part profe ssional
ed ucat ion oncr ing at the Mctg ~
Count y Public Library.
Thc ~c wo rb hops arc ·underwritten and planned by the Director of
the Consortium for Health Education in Appalachian Ohto . Margo
Marat.on. RN. BSN . MS Ed. under
the auspices of the OU . Area Health
Ed ucati on Center (AHEC). The
Nursing Dire ctor of the Meigs
County Health Department. Norma
Torres. RN . BSN. MSEd . has assisl ·
ed wi th local coordination.
The cost per workshop wi ll he
$10.00 and a continental breakfast
and 3.2 Ohio Nurses Association
Credit will be awarded for tl1is nom-

port.

TUPPERS PLAI NS - Lad iC&lt;
Auxo liary VfW. Po .s1 905 .1. Tuppers
Plains. 7:.10 Thursdav .
FRIOAY
HARR!S Of\' VJLLE

MIDDLEPORT - The Pm;•s tn
si ng. 7 p.m. Thursday. A...;h Street
Freew ill Baptist Church. Middle-

Har -

ri ~on\

lllc youth k agul' . ..; tg nup. Fn day. 6 to K p.m. llarn -.tmv illc fin..:
St atiun

Alexei, and a daughter, either Maria argued th at all Russians need to he
"Not everybody believes th at
or Anastasia - keeping alive ques- convinced of the bone s' au thenticity these arc the true remai ns of the
tions over the bones and their identi- before a final hurial takes place.
cwr's family. " he told repone"
ties.
The govemmenrs in vestigation after the Cabinet meeting.
Those who disposed of the .ha s been criticized by Russia n
The exiled branch of the church
corpses have said they burned two monarchists and exiles who arc sus- has already canonized the family.
of them , then scattered the ashes in picious of Soviet and post-Soviet
In el'lect. the church 's stand
nearby woods.
offic ials.
means that althoug h wil l take pan on
At the last minute, the Russ ian
Yuvcnaly said the clumh lacks the funeral cercmon ic:-. . thc v wil l
Orthodox Church on Thursday with- scicnti,.lc expertise and docs nut take consider the burial tempman
held endorsement of the commis- issue. with the commission's find Many ortici:..ll s. IIH-' 1Ul 1 · n~ the
sion's decision to proceed with a ings . Hut he critici1cd whm he called church . have urged rap td 1nt c rrncnt
s•ate funeral. saying the remains exec· ivc secrecy surroundin g the of the hont:'-~. ~ay in l! it \~uul L I)L' :-.:K should be onl y tcmporan ly buried onveqigalion .
nlcg tuus to keep them an) i o n~~.:r 111
until all doubts a(&gt;out their authenIn addition. the Ort~.odox Church the police morgue 111 Yckatcnnhur~ .
ticity arc erased.
is c~msidering whether to canonize
During the Cabinet 's protracted Nicholas and his famoly . rai sing condebate Friday, Metropolitan Yuve- cerns over the "danger of worsh ipnaly, the church representatove. ing false remains." Yuvenaly sa id .

inal fcc. Part 1 w1 ll take place on
March 16 frum 8.30 a.m. to 12 noon
and will oncludc such speakers as
Cat herine Estep Whited . MSN .
OCN. Oncolog y (Ca nce r Study 1
program coordi nator at Ca mden
Clark Memorial Hospit"ls' Commumty Co mpn: hcmivc Cam:cr Cen ter
and Lc Ann Matvi'y. coordinator of
the Southeastern Ohio Breast and
Cervical Cancer Project (BCCP).
The BCCP program funds have
hccn used to pay rnr scn.:c nin ~ and
diagnostic mammography. hrcast
ultrasounds and ccrvo""l cancer
s\.?'rccnings for income cli g'ib lc
wome n rcsidt: nt s of Meigs County .
who arc rcfcrrcU hy the Mei gs
Cou nty Health Department. It l1:"
been responsible for the detection .
diaenosis :md treatment of hrcast
and' cervical in many of the ladies
who have had the free se rvices.

The March 16 a•cnda include s a
re\ iew of the cpJdc~Jiology and ri sk
fa ctor~ fo r hrcast Gmccr. update~ nf
sc rccnin:.! and Jl'h:c t1on of hrea:-.1
~.:a n ce r. ~the l:lt l:~ l manunot!raph}
1\'l'&lt;HnnKnded guideline~. p&gt;iyt.: IH l~ll ­
l' lal a~rc c t s o f hrcast ~.:a n ~.:c r. -.un·,,·.

1n g hrl'ast ~.: an~.:c r and 1\.'fcrral guKkllno' lor BCCP. The re will he l&gt;lllC
fm ; l lJUC~ttnn ~llld an.-...vcr penoJ.
Th..: May -l pn:sc nt..:r ~ nK iu Je Dr.
Edw~mJ Got fn cd. DO . a pmfc~:-.ur ill
surge rv at the OU/COM. Tillllllllc S
Jonc~. RN . 13SN . OCN '" hu h a ..:cr tlftcd oncology nur..;c ' at the
Charksl&lt;l!l Area ~·1 cdica l Cc l~h.:r 111
Charh.'ston. Wcq Virgin1:1 :1nd Lc
Ann Mat vcy .
Thcs\! pro~ram s arc . ; u'pportcd in
part by an cducalional grant from
the Ohi o Department of Heulth .
Bureau of Health Prnmotinn and
Ri sk Reducti on. Breast and Cervical

C:mccr ProJect ami the C\: nh.:- r.., for
Di~l' a :;c Cun t ro l anJ Pr'-'\..: lltlo n.
Another actircly 1 11 \'oh~d ct~ lbho ­
rativc group which kill lh -.uppon 1:-ACCESS (Agc ncic-.

111

C\dbhora -

tion fo1 Can~.:er EdUL"JIHlll .~nJ Sup port Sc rvi . .:c-.) .
Nur-.c-, who arc intLTL' ' IL'J 111 par·
llcip.lling 111 lllL'"e li)L".il \\ P r~-.hnp:-.
~ hould co l1t :ICI till' Me1 ~' CtiUilty
Hc.t lth Dcpart111cnt fnr a rc_:; 1-. t1·1tt1on
hrochun:. Dcadlln1..' ftH fl..:):! l, tratl on
Ices to be t\'CL' ivcd at the OU/1\ HEC
D lli l' l.' ~ i:-. Mard1 12 for t!JL' March 16
program and i\pnl .10 lor the Ma; 4
pmgram . Parti( ipanh ma ~ d1o1 1~1.:' 111
~1 1tcnd onl y one. or hoth worbhup~ .
For more information. rc,idcn"t:, 111ay
call th\! Me1gs County Hea lth
Dcpartm enl at 992-0626 .

SAVE
q~ct

SAVE;

40(/

'1

manufacturers'

Bring in as many
coupons as you like.

They have

up to &amp; including 55C

Triple V"lue
at Kroger!
To lnSun: avallabllily ol produc:l. only one
coupon per !tan wl belllpled,'

Voight. A verse titled Tomorrow was
read by Helen Trout.
TOPS hc st loser was Catherine ·
Little . KOPS best loser wa.s Mary
Martin . Middleport.
Janet Thomas. leader an nounced
that Area Recognition Day (ARD!
wtll he held on Saturday, April 18 at
Lancaster High School. Lancaster.
A TOPS program ti tled Super
Sf'niors was 11rc sc 111l'd hy Janet
Thomas on February ~3 . Gcn Gih·
son . Gallipo lis and Ellen Darby.
Bidwell won ~ifts ns winners of the
Super Seniors quit .
Pledge of Allegiance. Never Quit
· Pledge antl TOPS Pledge was led by
Emogene Johnson. Pt. Pl easant . WV
KOPS Plcd~t was led hy Virginia
Voight. A reading' tilled, Trust and
Smile was r~ad hy Helen Trout.
TOPS b~ st losers of the week
were Anne Mttchcll and Ellen
Darby.
TOPS Fchruary hcst loser was
Anne Mitchell with Helen Trout as
KOPS February hest loser. Wmncrs
of the Brand New Year conlest were
Mar) Marton . Helen Trout iond VirginiJ Voigh t. Each rccetvcd J TOPS
charm.
People of al l a~es. from preteens
on up . arc welcome to TOPS. where
the y sha re the common goa l of'sensible weight loss and .maintenance .
Anyone wis hing more information
on TOPS may co ntact Janet Thomas
al 367.0274 .

Upcoming events . including
plans for the fifth ·,1nual RACO
Fl ower Festival. were discussed
when the Racme .\rca. Community
Association met Tu ~ · ,tay.
The festival will be held Saturday, April 25, IOa .m. to 6 r .m. at
Star Mill Park with a parade kicking
off.the event at 10 a.m.
A !lower festival queen will be
se lected from Southern High School
~c ninr contest participan ts. wi th the
crowning of the queen to be held at
noon .
Sched ul ed entertainment wi ll
include the Midnight Cloggcrs.
Faith Harmon y Boys. Back Porch
Swinr Band . Puppeteer. Mike Hem mdsarn and Last Chan ce Band.
Other c\·cnts arc hcing planned . it
was noted.
For ~cncra l infmmatinn. contJct
Md ani~ Weese at tJ4Y- ~401. Parade
chamnan Maril yn Powell m;oy he
wnt;octcd at tJ4&lt;Jc 1676.
The group will he prc.:scnting fom
$500 sclwlarsl1ips to Southern High
School seniors.
The spring y;orJ sale wi ll b,· held
May 14- 1) at St;or.Mill Park wi th all
pwn·cds applietltn the !"Cholar..; hips.
Donations arc appreciated and reopic wishing to donate ~hould co nt:lL·t

Dale and Kathryn Hart at 949-2656:
David and Ann Zirkle at 949-203 1
or Frank and Delores Cleland at
949-2071. Pick-up service is available. it was toportcd.
In other business, the group voted
to serve re fres hments m a local auction on March 7 and will donate proceeds from one of RACO's fcsllva ls
to the Cross Mill/Racine Museum
Fu nd .
It was announced hy the Racine
Fa ll Festival Committee that the
Lcwos Family Singers with Lillie
Roy and the Builders Quartet wi ll
appear at Southern Loca l High
School in Racine on March 21. 7
p.m. with the co ncl!ss ion· sUUid
open in!! at 5 p.m.
Twt~ nl..'w memhcrs joined tiJc
!:!roup wi th 12 memhcrs ami one
~ues t attcndin!.! the meeting . op~ncd
hy President Kathryn Hart . Nancy
Carnahan gave· the scnctary's r!.!p,nrt
10 the ahscn...:c of SI..'L'rl'tary Lillian
\Vcc~c. Ann Zirkle gaw the treasurer's report with hoth r\rnn ~ h.cing
apprr"·cd.
Ton)a Hunter gave the prayer
he fore .the meal with DaYid .Zorklc
leadi ng in the PkJ!!c ,,f Allcgi~uKc .
The nex t n• ecting will be held
Marcil 24 at Star Mill P:n·• ·

Updated monarchy will give
women equal rights to the throne
By AUDREY WOODS
Associated Press
LONDON (APl - The girl who
would be qu ~c n may now have as
good a chance as the boy who would
he l-ine .
Wilh the arproval of Queen Elitabcth II. the House of Lords "greed
frithlv it was time to bring equal
roght; to the British monarchy and
cnJ 1.000 y~ars or male.: prcfcn:ncc
by "l!ivinl'c a monan.: h's lirst -horn
Jau!.!htcr tl}e sa me claim to the
thr
as any li rst-Onrn so n.
' t1ll' prop&lt;hed change would ltkc1 fl~t\'t: no impat.:t tlO the SUl.'CC~SJOn
r: !!Cnc-ratil)fl ~: The 4UCcn"s h.:ir.
f&gt; ~ in ~e Chark~ . ha ~ no dJ~r si~ t er
; m ~ hi ' heir. PrinL·e William. has no
..;isters ;It ;1ll.
But or. Willialll ·, lirst ch tltl i&gt; a
~ 11 '1. sf\c \\'tluld he hl'ir. C\1!11 ir
\voll iam had a son laler. By tradition.
•1 ~on ha~ l1r:-.t nght:-. C\ en if he IS
preceded by a daughter.
The 40 unl'lected lords. not usually the.: van~u~ard of L·hangc. grt.:l'll'd
nc~'' S 11f the ·mndcrnit.i.ttion plan with
apprm ;1! ~mU pr;.lisl! for women.
"Our rule i~ parllcubrly d~roga­
lt\ry to woml.'n a!~ wd l a:-. hcing quite
out of Jate . When \\o't.: l.'Ompar..:: our!'&lt;oeh·c, with our wives and mothe r~ .
we ICel hum ility... said Lord Simon.
El it..,hcth .succeeded her father to
the throne hcL':tU&gt;e she had no brothers and was the elder of two girls.
AlthouQh the effects of the
chan~e mi~ht not he felt for many
ye:ors. the d~cis ion to :oltcr the success ion is a major symbol of the
!!nvcrnmcn!'s ;.md 1hc quccn ·s d~tcr­
~nination to update the monarchy. .
" Her Majesty had no objection to

:1c

ALL FLAVORS

Blgll
5oft Drinks

..

·· .~ Kroger 2%
\

Lowlat Milk
Gallon

save An Extra •:sooo
WITH THE IROGER IS
COUPON
BC1WRA
of

®

CHEER LEADING CHAMPION- First-place winners in the Eastern Athletic Booster elementary basketball tournament cheerlead·
ing divison was Tuppers Plains. Team members are (L-R in front) ·
Shannon Whitlach, Katie Hoxsie, Sara Wiggins and Brittany Roush.
Behind them are Ashley Welch, Dusty Murphy and Heather Hutchtnson. Not pictured was Amanda Barringer. In backAs advisor Jennie
Conklin Haning.

ROAC discusses upcoming events

Snacks topic for TOPS meeting
Lmcl Th,Hnas picscni L'd a TOPS
!Toke Oil Pnund s Scn siol v) program
ill led The Sn:1d /\iUcf- I' IJCn TOPS
#O H 1.1K\ Clidnrc llh't on fehru ar v ~ at Chl'-. lllrc United Mcthodi~t
Cllurd1
" Sn : ~&lt;.: ~ ... ~· : lll he an 1111portant clclll L'Ilt 111 .t gntld cat1n . program.
-.. Ill! J .~ n c l TIHnna ~. &lt;1 ··cprcscniJtivc
of TOPS 'TI,c l-c· y " to rlan for
them ...
Pk· d ~ 1..' n1 All e ~1an \ e. N~vc r Quit
PiL•cV' L' "and TOPS Plcd~ c were kd
l1v [;ll hclllll' Ltttlc . Ch:·., hirc . \~ll h
K:111 ..: \1 Potc. S vracu ~c .. k•:1ding the
1\0PS IKc·c p ti ff Pond s Se nsiblv)
Pklh:c ;\. \ C I ~~..· tilled Joy \\ ;bread
h\ H.ckn Th l Ul. Chc\ lurc .
. TOPS hL'"' ln~e 1 of 1hc week was
Ann e Mit chell . B1dwcll Helen
Tn1ut \\a -. KOPS he ~ t lo ~ a.
Ka\1 1..' Moui"L' prl'scntcd a program
tilled The· Htddcn F:n 111 Ynur Diet
wh en l ll L' mhcr ~ met on t"chruary If.
Plcd !.!C of A l lc~1Jil l'C . Nc \'Cr Quit
Pled ~c and TOPS Plcd~e were led
. hv Katlw Me Dan tel. L~n~ Bottom
~llh K:u; c Mnnt'l' bd tn g tltc KOPS
PkU !.!e. Hl.' len Tr&lt; l UI rc;.ld a verse
titleJ To A h1 cnd TOPS best loser
" " Judy" Rainey. Gallipolis wtth
Vin:m1a Vn1_t ht Pt . Plca s ~m l. V./V n:-.
KOPS hcs t lmc r.
Syh '" Neece. Pomeroy led the
Pledge of Allcg1ant.:c. never Quit
Pl cJ gc and T OPS Pl edge 11 hen
mcmhcr., nH.: t on Febru ary 16.
KOPS Pl edge wa.s led by Virgonia

with grenades and dumping what
remained in a swampy, unmarked pit
outside )he city.
The bones were exhumed the day
after Yeltsin was inaugurated as
Russia's first elected president in
July 1991 and their burial would
complete the symbolic reckoning he
set in motion .
In the years since, tl ; nine recovered ske letons ha1· ~ undergone
extensive scientifi c tt:sting in Russia. the United Stalt'. and Britain,
and based on the find .ngs . a government commission concluded last
month the hones bei ·.Jng io the royal
family.
Two skeletons were never found
- those of Nicholas' son and heir.

Breast cancer update planned at Meigs Library

s~nd

Community Cal.endar ·
WEDNESDAY
flO MEROY - Pomeroy-Racine
l.llllgc IM. F&amp;AM Wedncsd:ll .
7 ..111 p.m. at the hall .

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

the government's view that. in determining the line of succcssoon of the
throne. daughters and son.s should he
treated in the same way. .. Lord
Williams of Mostyn. a junior Jnoni.stcr in the Home Ofllce . told the
lords .
Primo!!cnilure. or success ion
through the male line . is as old as
En~land's 1.000-yca r-old momrchy.
It e-nsured that men ruled in the days
when kin~~ were warriors and
power was held th ro ugh force of
anns.
But the half-do!Cn v.umen who
hnve sat on thl' thmnc i .• _luJc two of
hi ·;tory's most remarl l.lc sovereigns . Eli1.ahcth 1 took lvr turn at the
throne on 155 H after her brother and
elder sister had ruled and dtcd.
Queen Vi~.:tona . who \\llS an only
child. succeeded Ill IX37 when ber
uncle died without &gt;urviving legiti mate L·hiklr..: n.
Wtlltams made the announcement dunng a dchatc on a bill on the
same subject. introduced by Lord
Archer. who IS better known &lt;Is the
novd ist lclfrey Archer.
Th e publtc pressure for
chan~c in the past few years ha; led
to the queen paying taxes. opening
Buckingham Palace to paying visitors. and giving up the royal yacht.
Princess Diana "s death in August
seemed lo rcinfun.:c the momentum
for moderni7~lli o n in the monarchy.
Homeward-bound city workers
had a mixed reaction .
" It's about time.'' said 26-yearold law yer Olivia Wormald . " It's
amazmg they haven ' t done it
before .

WE ARE LOOKING FOR APPLICANTS
SEEKING FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT!
ALL SHIFTS OPEN FOR 24 HOUR OPERATION.

JOBS AND TRAINING AVAILABLE
THE FO~LOWINGAREAS•
FRONT END
SERVICE
•CASHIER
• CUSTOMER.SERVICE
•
• LAY-A-WAV.
• CUSTOMER SERVICE MGRS.
• PEOPLE GREETER
• SKATER
MAINTENANCE
• JANITOR (DAY OR NIGHT)
• CART PUSHERS
RECEIVING
• STOCKERS (DAY OR NIGHT)
OFFICE
• INVOICE ASSOCIATES
• CASH ASSOCIATES
• UPC ASSOCIATES
• CLAIMS ASSOCIATES
• PERSONNEL MANAGER

SALES ASSOCIATES &amp;
DEPARTMENT MGRS
• MENS WEAR
• BOYS WEAR
• GIRLS. WEAR
• LADIES WEAR
• INFANTS WEAR
• FABRICS
• DOMESTICS
• SHOES
• JEWELRY
•TOYS
• SPORTING GOODS
• AUTOMOTIVE
• COSMETICS
• GARDEN CENTER
• STATIONERY
• FOODS
• HARDWARfJPAINTS
• HOUSEWARES
• ELECTRONICS
•PHARMACY
• LOSS PREVENTION
• FIITING ROOM ASSOCIATE

FOOD AREA
ASSOCIATES
• ASST. BAKERY MANAGER
• BAKERY SALES ASSOCIATE
• BAKER
• GROCERY RECEIVING
• ASST. MEAT MANAGER
• MEAT CUITER
• MEAT WRAPPER
• SEAFOOD ASSOCIATE
• ASST. DELI MANAGER
• DELl ASSOCIATE
• ASST. PRODUCE MANAGER
• PRODUCE ASSOCIATE
• DEMO COORDINATOR
• DEMONSTRATOR
TIRE &amp; LUBE EXPRESS
_:..MANAGER TRAINEES
• SERVICE MANAGER
• TIRE/LUBE TECHNICIANS
• ALIGNMENT TECHNICIANS
• INVOICE ASSOCIATE
• SALES ASSOCIATE

ALL ASSOCIATES RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING
EXCELLENT BENEFITS
• EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS
• HOLIDAY PAY
• ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES
• STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
•GOOD WAGES
• 10'7c DISCOUNT ON PURCHASES
• FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING
• PROFIT SHARING
WHEN POSSIBLE
(REQUIRES 20 HOURS
• 401K PLAN
PER WEEK AVERAGE)
WE ALSO OFFER THE FOLLOWING ADDITIONAL
BENEFITS FOR ALL FULL-TIME ASSOCIATES
• GROUP HEALTH PLAN
• PAID VACATIONS
• GROUP LIFE INSURANCE
• SICK LEAVE
• SHORT TERM DISABILITY INSURANCE
• DENTAL INSU RANCE
• LONG TERM DISABILITY INSUR.ANCE
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR AN EXCITING AND REWARDING CAREER OPPORTUNITY - AND YOU·
HAVE AN INTEREST IN ANY OF THE AREAS LISTED ABOVE • WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

APPLICATIONS WILL BE TAKEN BY WAL-MART MANAGEMENT
"PLEASE ADVISE US IF ASSISTANCE IN THE APPLICATION OR HIRING PROCESS
IS NEEDED TO ACCOMMODATE A DISABILITY."
APPUCATIONS BEING TAKEN AT THE WAL-MART HIRING CENTER, 208 UPPER RIVER ROAD,
LOCATED OFF AIRPORT ROAD BEHIND BIG A. AUTO.
HIRING CENTER WILL BE CLOSED
TUES., MARCH JRD, 8 AM-5 PM FRI., MARCH 6TH, 8 AM-5 PM
MONDAY, MARCH 2ND, 1998.
WED., MARCH 4TH, 8 AM-5 PM SAT., MARCH 7TH, 8 AM-NOON
APPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED: THURS., MARCH 5TH, 8 AM-8 PM

..\ • ~- ·./EQtJAL OPI'ORTUNITY EMPLOYER-EMPLOYER PAID AD

'~------~-------------------------------~----~

�Page.10 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 4, 199S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedf:'esday, March 4, 1998

[

)

'

'.

7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Forget the panCakes, this buckwheat fills your pillow

The better

By PATII SINGER

$5 Off your Purchases of $35°0 or more with Coupon
Now Thr~ Saturday, March 7
~,1~'I

I
,..\\l' better prices

By DAVID BRIGGS
AP Religion Writer
When a t:lcric visi ts a parishioner
in the hospital, the spiritual outcome
is nearl y always favorable .
i In a study at a Midwestern hos·pi i tal. patients gave pastoral visitors
: high marks for comforting them and
~ helpin g them rco.llit.c Gm.l care!'&gt; for
1 them . Out of 21 areas 11f pastoral
'l.'.arc survcvcd. patients did not f111J
: auy fault s ~i th chun.:h vi.siwrs.
1
There was on ly one prohlcm
: Relative ly few pat ients told anyone

~

your purchases of $35 or more
Now Thru Saturday only. .
Limit one coupon per shopping family.
Good Now thru Saturday, March 7, 1998 only.

Look for Dolla·r Da

i at their

ecial!i ·T hi!i Week

..........~~~.;P:r~lc~e:·~~~~~~::~~~

Del Monte
Golden
Bananas

(Excluding Homemade Flavors)

L -·. 1-,LI ...../

12 Pack
Coca-Cola
Limit 2

FOR

4

I'

I'

12 oz. Cans

Fresh

\

Edy's Grand
Ice Cream

FOR

local church or sy nugoguc
in the hospital.

i that th ey were

In a random sample of 500
32h cou ld identify "
~ religious l'an::g i,·cr. or that numhcr.
~ ju s t Jl).t nHKk the pnstoral worke r

i patients. on ly

..

Half Gallon

2

N.Y., crliropractor. "From my point pillows have come back under the
Rochester Democrat and of view, what people most need is store's 30-day·retum policy.
Chronicle
proper neck support."
The soft, triangular buckwheat
I used to dream I was eating a
All therapeutic pillows promise hulls have two major selling points:
marshmallow. the old sayi ng goes, 10 support the nalural curve in your They promote bener air circulalion
and when I woke up half my pillow neck, which will prcvem you from 1o keep your head coot' and the_y
was gone.
waking up with a crick.
don'l flanen under rhe weigh! of
Now I dream I'm caring a slack
But most are long on tcs!imon ials your head.
Some bu.:kwheat pillow s arc
of buck,wheat pancakes. Must be the and sho rt on evidence. And with
power of suggestion.
retail prices ranging from $20 io advertised as hypoallergenic. But
· I've been sleeping on a pillow · more than $60, claims may not be because the main ingredient is a
filled with buckwheat huJI, These the onl y thing that 's inflated.
plan!. the pillows mtght trigger
tiny husks, each no big·
allergies , says
ger than a baby 's finger- Sleeping shouldn't be a pain in the neck Dr. Tom Adler,
nail, arc what's left over
But d roppmg
· off on lhe wrcmg pill ow could lead to morning an
· t
aII crg1s
after the seed is milled aches and pains.
with Westside
into " kasha ,·• a high " You wam enough of the pillow under your head to keep your neck Allergy Care
fiber food with fewer aligned, so there's no ti ltin g of your head ," says Dr. Stephen James, spine in
Gree~e,
ca lories and t'n orc pro- surgeon m the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery at the Universi ty of N.Y. And dust
tcm than nuts.
Rochester (N.Y.) School of Medic ine an d Dentistry. " Your head should mues sllll wtll
The shell apparently still be in line with your body."
feed off the
also has health benefits
A b.tg 11 uffy ptllow
·
d
can force your head up . A skinny. worn-o ut pillow ea d s k.111 you
Stuffing thousands into may tilt it too far down.
slough onto
10
a pillow is supposed
"That 's when you wake up wi th a stiff neck ," says James.
the pillowcase.
support your neck and
Like Goldilocks. you need to find one that's just right.
But
provide a com fortab le
" You need to luok at the shape of the pillow so it will contour to the that 's of lillie
night's sleep.
small of you r neck ... says Leigh Yi ~neri . seni or physical therapist at concern
to
Nothing is neccssari · Genesee Hospital in Rochester. l'l.Y.
devotee s like
ly wrong wi th your
The thi ckness of that con tour wil l differ. dcrcnding on whether you Robin Youn g,
foam or feather pillow. sleep on your side or your back.
who bought a
But more and n1orc reo11· you ·re a , ·d. e sleeper and yo u 11avc curoad shoulders, you may need soua
" kawa
pic arc toss in g those a thick pillow. Slight')'leop le can usc a thinner pillow. To determine the before
they
co mmon pillows as ide thickness you need. stand with one shoulder against a wall and check the were chic .
" It literfor buckwheat, and space between the wa ll and your ncc k..-fhat 's the space the pillow needs
all y cradles
other therapeuti c pi l- to fill.
lows des igned to proBack sleepe rs may ge t the additi onal support they need by placing a my head In
mot e wclln css alon~ neck roll at the hasc of their sk ull .
comfort ... says
with sweet dreams . "
S tomac11 s1cepers s110u ld ro II over. say c111· ropractors. In that position. the H"nrt'
' "Ita.
'
you have to twist your neck to hreathe and you have no support.
N.Y. . resident ,
Consider:
- Foam egg-c rate
Pi llows. regardless of th eir type . will lose their support. so they should who
won 't
sleep on anypillows that look like be replaced every few years.
they came out of a grothing else. "I
ee ry store.
L---:-:----:::---:-:---:---=:-:-- - , - - - - - - _ J wake up restFor centunes, the Japanese fr llcd cd. My back and neck don't hurl."
- Wavy pillows that rese mble
giant Ruffles potato chips.
pillows with huck wheat husks.
I wanted to sec why these fans
- Pillows for the cervical spine rather than throw the shells out. were so loyal.
that have thi ck edges that support We're just catching on. thanks to a
It seems they ' re also tenacious.
yout neck and wtlh a sunken middle growing interest in Eastern thera- Sleeping on a buckwheat pillow is
for your head .
pies - and the marketin g power of an acquired skill.
- Water pillows thai can he infomcrctals.
I tried the Sobakawa pillow,
fillcd1or drained to eo nforn1 more
Last year, after Sobakawa pil- which cost $20. The first night, I fell
, closely to the shape of your he ad.
lows were heavi ly advertised. so me right to sleep. But I woke up in the
"- Magnet pillows that suppos- local stores had trouble keeping middle of the night feeling like my
cd ly draw away pain.
them in stock for Christmas.
head was lyin g on a pile of hricks.
. Compared to those fillings, buckBedding industry trade groups
TI1e next night I couldn ' t fall
;wheat doesn't seem so far out . But don't track the sale of pillows, and asleep, but the third day I did get a
•liguring out which pillow to try makers declined to release sales fig - nice afternoon nap on it.
could keep yo u up nights.
ure s, so it 's tough to say how many
Patricia Doris, a spokeswoman
" Just b&lt;:cause somelhing sounds have been sold .
for Bucky Products In c.. which
But officials at Bed, Bath ~nd · makes buckwheat pillows, says she
' gimmick) doesn't mean it is," says
Dr.· lngchmg Eihl, a Roc hester, B ~y&lt;md in Pills ford , N.Y. , say no knew the feeling . The pillow I was

,
:
.
:
·

fliLU#l

. /
L.-

lbs.
Sanderson Farms

Jumbo Pack
lit Chicken
Breasts

:~ware
they we re hospitali zed,
according to the study published in
the rece nt issue of The Journal of
Pastoral Care.
Many min iste rs and pri ests have
stori_cs to tell aho ut the church mem ber wlw doesn' t in form them ahout
an upcoming (ipcration and later
complain s that they didn't visit.
·'What is kind Df surprising is the
ex tent nr thai. II is nnt an infrequent
phcnqrncnon. ·· said swd y authm
Larry Va ndeCrc\: k. ;1ssiSjant dir\:ctor
of the Department of Pastoral Care
at The Ohin State Uni ve rsity McJ it.:al Ce nter.
Chun.: hcs place a hig h nriorit y on
caring for those suffering. In the
G(lspcl of Mallhcw·. ksus says those
who would not visi t the siL" k ··wi ll

go away into eternal puni shment."
However. clergy have come in
for some criticism' recently for not
be in~ supportive enough to critically
ill indi viduals.
According to a 1997 poll conducted hy The George H. Gallup
lntcrnatinn ~li.lnstitutc. nearly nine in
I0 people get comfort in the belief
that they wi ll he in tl1c loving presL'IlL'l: of God or a higher rower after
death.
Yet. harcl y mon; than one-third
of the rL'sponJcn~s said the clergy
co uld he comforting to them in
many w;.~y.s when they were dyin g.
"The sun·cy is a wake-up call for
the cl ergy ... sa1d Gcnrgc H. Gallup
Jr. "Not man y sec the clergy providing hroad spiritual support in thei r

Sobakawa pillows, filled with buckwheat, were hot sellers at Christmas. They offer neck support and
a comfortab le_night's sleep.
using may ha ve been too derise, or I
may not have shaped it right.
She sent me the company 's
Bucky pillow, which she assured me
would be more com fortable.
The _first night, I fell right to

wake up, I toss it aside in fa vor of
iny quieter cervical pillow. I can't
say I have beuer dreams on a huckwheat pillow, but they certainl y &lt;trc
more nutritious.

When I awoke in the middle of
the night , I felt like I was lying in a
beanbag - more comfortable than a

wall of bricks. But gelling back to
sleep proved fitful.
·
Plumping up buckwheat pill ow
is not like nuffing up feathers . You
ha,vc to knead the hulls 'into place .
And the crunching noise of the hulls
sounds like you 're scuffing through
a pile of dead leaves.
I start out each night with the
Bucky. I drift off right away. but if I

own dying days."
In their study. YandeCreck and
Stephanie Gihso n of The Ohio Stale
University Schoo l of Medicine
inlen&gt;tcwcd a random sample or 500
patients at the Ohio State Medical
Ce nter l'rom June 10 Au2ust 1996.
What they l&lt;1und to h'C a "significant imped iment " to loc al clergy
meetin g the spi ritual need s of
patients was not the qua lit y or pa storal care. hut tile fact that less than
40 perce nt not ifictl ~orm.:onc fr om a
local church that the y were in the
hnspila l
or the 196 pat ie nts ,who did let
their relig ious can..:g ivcrs know they
we re in thl' .hospital. 57 perce nt
reponed hcmg visitct..l ~ ince their
ildmi ssion an ii\'Cragc oi" :1.5 d;Jys

earlier. An additional 22 percent said
they expected a vtsil.
When clergy or lay visi tors dtd
come, the patients reported high levels of satisfaction. Nearly all the
pati ents said the pastoral worker's
prayers were a comfort to tl.1em. 'and
they also were extremely satisfi ed
with their clergy's ability to he lp
them realize God cared for them and
to usc their faith to cope with their
feelings .
After talking with the pari sh vist ·
tors, the patients said they felt heuer
about their problems.
Researchers said there arL' a num hcr ol: reasons paticnb don"t tdl
their pastors when they enter a ho . . pital. rang ing fn.llll a desire ttl keep it
a scnet to the lack of a strung ..:on-

ncction to a loca l congrc,!-!at ion .
Those pati ents who tended to
inform their rcli gitlU.. L·a re~ive r s
we re regula( ~: hun.: h gol:r' ilnJ tho."c
h os pit ~1li zcd for carh:cr.
In an cr~1 of man;l g~ J care . '"'hen
people hoth enter i.l nd ka y..: th e ho~ ­
pital in sicke r conlii iiOil .., ~1 nd the
rroccss i ~ ~u mc tim c ... (l llll pa red to
" a holly ~ hop ." th e value nl pe r..,n n·
al pastoral care is r art icul &lt;trly IH ,:! h.
says VanUcCrcd . whn al-.,, 1.-. lh L·
ed itor of :1 ~cp~rrat c puhll c.lli \l ll . till'
Journal oi' Health Care Ch"J'I"""')'.
Sn it i ~ rru strallllt! (() dL'ft! Y. hl"
s ay~. when a L·hurch llll'lllhL' I quu.: tl y
~.:" h eckS in anJ out of" th L· ~~ ~~' lliL II.
and "" then nl( P~ll"l'flto l h.'f L" l ri1 L" IIL'~
them rm not vi~ itlll ~ .
ll ~c dn~y
:-.hould he .1hlc.: tu re&lt;1d lllllld'

~~p .

I

a

For informati on on the Buck\\heat pillow, call I (800) 692 -X259 .

[Massag.e therapists - helping cure some of life's ailments
By KIRSTEN HAUKEBO
The Courier-Journal
Marion· Radway started gc uing
Jegular mas~ag.cs four years ago in
~Opes or ruhhing awny minor aches.
Now. at age X2. the Loui sville.
J&lt;.y .. womun cred its her tw icc ~m onthly massages wi th helping her
stay healthy. She even thinks they
w nt rihuted to her rapid rec&lt;tvcry
from a hrokcn leg last fall.
" I real ly be li eve in it. It keeps
your circubtion go mg.·· Rat.! way
says
Mas:-.age - once regarded as a
pamrcrii1g luxury - has rc~H.:he d
out to an cve r~ w idenmg.audicm:c as·
!lit udic' ha ve sho.wn that il c:m case
stress and hcaJachcs. help asthmatit:~ hrcathe . ksscn the ra in of art hriti .... hoo-.t ~1 thlcti c pcrfonn;.mcl' and
C\'l: n help prcm~Jture hahil's gmv. .
: It \ now the third most comnwn
eorm of ahcrnati vc treatment in the
~ni tcd States , after rela.\ a tion tec h·
rliqu c~ and chiropractic.:. accon.Jing
1(' Consurn~r Reports on Hea lth .
· While not many hea lth plans pay
1:,r rn a~:-.a!..!c. it"s not hard to finJ
~hy si cians.. who arc ad\'lx:a tes.
• Dr. Forrest Kuhn. a Lllul svil lc
~~LT~ist. visib a massagt.: therapist
tWic~ &lt;t week to ward olfstress-relatcU mi ~~ ra in e~. a nil . has heen •ahie fl)
c~l th~ amoun t of medication he
t3kcs for hcado.ll"hcs.
. He recommends massage to
rnany r:~ tic n ts who have headaches
or muscle- related hack pain.
: Athletes have long used massage
I&lt;) help them recover from a hard
workout.
: Louisville ' hike cluhs frequen tly
hti'ng along thcrapi:-;ts hl soothe
muscles during long rides. and many

local health clubs offer massage .
Some cnmranies . like Events
Etc. in Louisv ille, eve n schedule
regular hackruhs as an employee
be nefit.
" It relieves stress and it 's kind or
like an in -house party every other
month that you look forward to, ..
s~1ys Eri c Stocss. executi ve vice
rresidc nt in charge of producti(m
M~1ssages arc growing as g i ft ~:
Just he sure th e recipient really
wou ld apprcnatc a massage: most
gift Ct.! rtificatcs arc non-refundable.
How do you find a good massage
lhcrap1S!' 1 It takes a hit of research.
Twenty -five states and the District
of Co lumbi il lic·:nse massage thcrarists. hut KclliUcky and India na
aren't among •:Iern . Th:lt means you
have to do a li :k more work to find
snmconc quahf1cd
If your doc tor rrest.:ri!'les ma~ ­
sage. ask for referrals. Many health
rllan~ t.lon't cover massage .
Human a and Ant h ~rn Blue Cross
ant.l Blue Shie ld mr~y cover it if 11\
pan of a prescribed course of physical therapy for ccrtnin ~.:onditions
lik e musc le spasms.
An them is Consider ing covering
massage therapy nnd other ahcrn ati vl' treatmen ts. said Dr. Thomas
James . medica l director for the
Lousvillc area .
Among hcailh and managed-care
plans that do cove r massage therapy.
according to the American Massage
Therapy Association, arc Oxford
Health Plans Inc .. Prudential Insurance Co. of America and Alternat ive
Health Insurance Services .
Ideally. the massage therapist
shou ld be nntionall y.cenificd. which
mc:ms passing an exam covering

anatomy and physiology. ma ssage
theory and techniques and busine ss
practices.
They also must adhere to the
code of ethics establi shed by the
Nattonal Certification B(lard for
Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork.
To find a certi fied ma ssage therapist ncar you. call the hoard at I
iHOO) 296-0664 or visit its Web site
at www. nchtmh.c&lt;Jm and click on
"practitioners in yo ur are3 ...
Bre nt Will iams. exec utive director of the Louisville School of Ma s·
sage, reco mmend s sc hedulip g a
face-to-face interview with a
prospective massage therapist - it 's
usually free.
You can sec if you arc comfort .
ahle 1\'ith the person and the envi ronment and ask questions ahout
education and training.
If you have spec ific health pmb·
lcms like mi gn1incs or arthritis. he
recommends you look for so meone
wll h at least 500 hours of educati on
.:.... tile amount recommended hy the
AMTA.
Mem bersh ip in the AMTA. the
country's largest massage therapy
as~ociation. also is a good si ~ n .
Mcmbe" must be gradu ate s of'
accredi ted programs and be natt on'
all y ce rtified.
Your lirst appointment usually
hegins with questi ons ahout your
physical condition. medical history
and any aches or pains.
The theraptsl also should ask
what you hope to gain from a massage and which pans of your body
you wi ll al low them to touch. You
set the mles here.
A good therapi st will respect your

limits, be noq-judgmemal and will stimu late appet ite, and honsl slrok es, kneading and friction on
neith er Oattcr nor criticize your growth .
superficial layers of musdcs, co mphysique.
Kelly says massage lowers heart hined With aL"tivc and ras sivc lllOVl!·
For • body massage, expect to rate and blood pressure , and increas- mc111 of joints .
undress in private and to usc a sheet. . es ci rculation to the areas bemg
- Shiatsu and acu prc»urc . Systowe l or gown for draping. It's up to massaged. which may dec rease pain. tems or finger-pressure hascd on
you if you want to remove your
II also is comforting and medita- Asi(,l n hciicf, ahn ut chJnncJ, of
underwear.
ivc, and can produce a tranqu ilit.ing energy in the hod y.
. CCI.
You 'll lie on a c u ~h ioncd table.
- · Tr i g!!cr~ro intth crapy (o r ncu. and the th erap ist wil l un mvcr onl y
IS tmssage helps speed
romuseu lar therapy J. sy~ tc ms of
the part of the body being massaged. recovery from a tough workout by worki ng with tender spots 111 musMany therapists usc oil or lotion to stretching mu sc les and increasi ng cles. wh ich may radiate pJin 111 other
help their hand s move smoothl y blood fl ow.
areas . Techniqu es arc s1m ilar to
across the body.
· Some people should avoid mas- th ose used 1n shiatsu or acu pressu re,
If you wan t to remain clothed. sage, Kelly says. They include those hut 1.1rc hascd on western atiatomy
wear someth mg you' rc com fon ahlc who ha ve arterioscle ros is, or hard- and physiology.
in that will al low th e therapist to en ing of the arteries; severe varicose
Reflexo logy. M&lt;ls-. ag ing
:o uch and move the areas of your ve ins: any acute innartmation of' the pot nl s 111 th e hamb and Jcc t is
body you want massaged .
skin . soft tissue or jo1nh; hern iated th o!Jg: ht to cnn c.srunt.l to all area~ of
On-site massages ~~ your office discs; and heart or :·rng prohlems.
the bod y
or a shopping mall arc done whil e
Sport" ma..,,:li!C . Ma ..... al.!c
you're · fu lly clothed. "' ual ly while
There arc rnurc than I 00 nmncs thcr&lt;lfl Y focu~ 1 n~ on m~sdc-. u'cd i n
you sit in a .&gt; pccial ly desig ned for massage techniques anU philoso- a rarlicular ~r!l ll
port able chair.
phies . according to Brent Wi ll iams .
The AMTA recommends not eat- cxccu1i ve director of the Lnurw illc
ing just before a massage and sug - Schoo l of Mas,agc. Among the mo~t
gests drinking extra w~tc r altcrward popul ar fonn~ :
· Swedish ma ... ~agc. Long
for best results.
Also , the association suggests
discuss in g :lOy ~onccrns with the
~~
therapist. from the room temperature
to the amou nt of pressure being
applied to ·your body.
1998
One massage can he relaxin g, hut
ALL NEW
for more lasting effects. must people
SUPER GALACTIC
benefit from more regular massages.
SPACE ODYSSEY
says Debbie Ke lly, assoc iate profesEXTRAGANZA
so r or physical thcrary in the University of Kentucky Co llege of
Alli ed Health Professions .
Circus Stars
Easi ng musc le pain might require
From All
one to three visits a week for a few
Over
the World
weeks. she says.
Studies have shown rrcmaturc
POMEROY, OHIO
in rants need dai ly massagc.s to rc lax,

Famous Cole Indoor Circus
".:::

SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 1998
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL GYM
PERFORMANCES: 2:00 &amp; 4:30P.M .
: POMEROY /MIDDLEPORT LION$ CLUB

..
\

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11 ·

•

,,••
'J

�Page 12 • The Da1ly Sentinel

Wednesday. March 4, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh1o

Wednesday, March 4, 1998

The Daily Senttnel • Page 13

Billion-dollar debate rages over sales tax on the Internet
By CARL WEISER
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- Here s and
die
You re sotung at a computer 10
Delaware lookmg to buy some soft
ware You call up the Web page lor a
soltware company headquartered 10
Seattle You buy the software on lone
The company s computer os m a Itt
tie of11ce m San Jose It sends the
software d1rectly to your computer
v1a other computers m Dallas and
Buffalo
What "the sales tax ? Where did
the sale take place 0 Who collects 11 '
Conundrums hke that are wh 11 "
dnvmg a b1lhon-dollar debate over
sales taxes on the Internet
In February 11 dovoded the nauon s
governors and Congress PreSident
Clinton entered the debate Thursday
endomng a sox year moratonum on
1mposong any new taxe s on the Inter
net and declanng There should be
no spec1al breaks For the Internet but
we can t allow unfaor taxaloon to
we1gh 11 down and stunt the devel
opment of the most prom1song new
economoc opportunity on decades
The problem of sales taxes over
the Internet goes to the nature of the
Interne! Itself It os no place There s
no there there
It s not JUs I a metaphySical puzzle
States depend on sales taxes for
abou1 one thord of theor reve nue
That was 1bou1 $140 billion 10 1996
accord10g to the Tax Foundation s
Stephen Gold

What s a1 stake IS the lax base
saod Jock Croom cdotor ut a bookcalled Toxat1on of Cyberspace
and a tax expert at accountmg goant
Delome &amp; Touche
On the other sode compamcs
doong buSiness over the Internet wor
ry that stales will rush to 1mpuse new
taxes They like Ch ntan are backong
1 bill on Congre ss that would block
new taxes though 11 would allow
states lo ompose the same k1nds of
taxes now imposed on other buSJ
nesses
There are some unu~ue que~t1ons
that have tn be thought through saod
John C He ol v n11n ogmg d11ector of
the Delollle '&lt; Touche C~nter for
MultJ&gt;tatc Taxatoon at the UnJVersoty
of Wl'cons on Molwaukee
Among the ISsues
• What can states tax 0 Under a
1992 Supreme Court deCISIOn on cal
alog sales states can only force
compan1es to co llec t sales tax 1f tho&gt;e
compan1es have a phySical pres
ence m the1r states
But whai coun ts as a physo cal
presenc e' A server' A Web page ' On
the Web 11 s not always clear where
a busmess " or where Its customers
are or eve n lithe) are on the Un11ed
States
Where " the s tic ltkmg place '
I thmk that " the question 10 elec
tronu.: commerce

Heal) sad

• How wil l slates make up the rev
enue' In the same way that mayors
worned about lost sales tax when
stores moved from Mam Street to

Kmart's turnaround
beginning to pay off
By MELISSA PREDDY
The Detroit News
TROY M1ch - Kmart Corp s
long awa1ted turnaround 1:; under
way but don I look tor the evo
dence yet '" the stock pnce and
earnmgs figures Rather Kmart
Chamnpn Floyd Hall sa1d on 10
onlervoew look on the store
shelves where merchandiSe "
bem~ lone tuned Hem by 1tem lo
lure customers back
Unhke Sears Roebuck &amp; Co
w~u:h wd~ revJtal1zed 1n a rela
tovely short time w11h a clever mar
ketmg campa1gn and a few qUick
sponolfs Kmart laces a more ardu
ous and longer term task It s lo.ed
1ts manaue ment and 1mprnved li s
mventory and now must rebuild us
1mage store by store and shopper
by shopper
So far the emphasiS on refur
biShed stores nation ol brands and
lower prH.:es on thousands of 1tem"'
"pay1ng oft w1th (()O sumers
I stopped shopp10g at Kmart
lor I0 ye '"
s ud Mauree n
Vauchan ol Bormmgham who
stopi}ed m a returbiShed B1g Kmart
m Troy I happened to come 111
here to p1ck up a songle 1tem and
couldn 1 believe the chan •e Now
I shop here all the time The pnces
an:: as .!OOd as Sam s Club ~ m
Iact I lei my membership ex pire
I buy all my canned goods Jere and
on the way today I thought lo
rnysdlil s too bad they don t have
mt:lh

Experts worned that the new
B1g Kmart formal w1th 1ts expand
cd consumahl es are 1 call ed Ihe
P 101ry would erode Kmart s prul
1h b) -.;clime- too rn my low mare1n
gotltb like p 1per towels aod c 1nned
lood But th 11 s nut sn Hall s od
Sales Jncreases al B1g K are oi l
acr '" the hoard he sa1d We do
-..el l mort! t.:n no.;um tble" 1fi the nux
bee ou sc ol the expanSion ol the
Panory but we also gel a lilt 1n
ladles md men s ahd all the other
JJVI'• IUil \

We track th 11 very closely and
\\t; look ti l t:m:h LOO\l:fSIOil Ill ew.:h
market Jnd how our prol11s track
out ot thai he said And BI J K s
cu111nb uted handsu m&lt;lv h&gt; th e
prolusollhc company We II h ovc
mother 515 stores umvertt:d th1 :-.
ye 11 1nd th It "gumg to pos111on us
vc1y \cry dkdl'rt:ly In the rn tr
'dplace
He admlls Ihe word about BIL K
' ' " t out to evcryone ye t -

only

Jix&gt;ul 50 percent ol shoppers 1n B1~
K m 11kets unders11nd the dol fer
em:e To l1x that Km trt ts n:m: w
'"e 1 d1red ma1l and TV advt:rtrs
tnt! L tmp 11 n m som~ market'
11 s monq well spent the com
pany sa1d because Bog K s.oles are
runm ng 10 percent to 15 percent
hi gher than traditiOn II stores
You re not embarrassed any
more to say you shopped at
Kmart
sa~ d shopper Sh11le y
0 Bnen ol Troy When I came
here the fo rst tome I was over
whelmed And I never thought I
would be redecomung my house al
Kmart They ve come a long long
way
And they sltll have a long way

•

IQ 0 o Hall admots Kmarl s stock
pnce hovers arounu I~ ond 11&gt;
share oltlte dJScount market while
rowon g "still on ly about a thord
0
lh 11 of rov il W ol Mart When asked
w h~.:re Kmu1 1 ~ 111 1h turnaround

he 0 ave 11 16 out of 10
Or m 1ybc 1 o I/1 he ' ud
We Ill ode a hU 0 C 1111011111 Of
proeress 111 Y7 The 'lalcs ~i.l lll'oi tor
the ye or arc go1ng to run 111 the 5
perLe nl r 111 .c wh1 ch " about on
plan And "e led very 0 ood obout
the .., li es moment urn 11

~o me

ot the

key IIC IS l1ke M 111ha Stew ul tnd
Sesame Street whiCh did excep
tJOnall y well last )e 11
We rc movmg. 1n st 1~es and
thos " a snapshot he sa1d Our
shareholders understand th 11 We
kn ov. our shK:k pm.:t.: 1sn 1 r ~:: 11ly
tlcklmg lltw l tncy bullhey see the
enunmty o f tr) 1n .., to turn around

th JScompany and don 1cxpec 111 to
happen overn1ght
Kman
announce lis 1997
earnon 0 s Wcdn"J ty Hill decl1ned
to t.:on mc.;nl on the yc 1r s profits
except to s oy Ihal Kmarl - wh1ch
hade 11ned onl y 63 million 111 the
l1 rst three qu1rter-• of tlw ye ar m uld c ll ch up w1t h 1996 ' 21 1
mollion prut11
h " lc '"hie - 11 you look al
the mox We have been predomo
n 1ntl y lou rlh quarter proltl dn
vcn he.: '~u J Th ll was true m
1997 as well

"'II

Th1 ' ve 1r "" ott to :.m au,pi&lt;.:IOUs
"tan H dl \ i.illi wllh 'itorcs um
vcned to the nt: w B1c K I mnat
~..:ontmuJ n

to ' hov.

J

&gt;Ublc JL!II

\ dt'\ e 110 . ., mi po, I!IVt: shopper
rc 'lpt n -..~.:: to llt:\\ spr n... fa'l hlon s
bclll ... tuppn l to Ill Kmtrh ttu s

n onlh
tnHI '

trenJ...,

Unl1~ c

I lt.:111pl

11, 1 yc" s IJS s
IU t:t.: ho I l'i hlOil

Kn1 Jrt

The lJ'p llcl problem we h1d
til ltdtt: ' 1 !.. nd nl hdunJ u'
H oi l s 11 0 ~ c li re Jd) ~nt w Irom
tht.: h.: tl..lt 111 So \\ hdt.: we 1\ "' t
hu ... t: Ill ounl ol c- r wml n llJlJ7 we
' ltrttn Jl)) X 1A II h ntu.: :.Jtll ~
We mtc:nJ I &gt;ct: l t:Yt.: T) Ihtn w~.: lo•a
bIlk 111d then pul 1 I llie t n lop ol
If\.:

II

lh Ill

1

200 InVentory
ltll:: ... or L: IIIII .., t~U Kmart mt:r
Lh tnt ' ft.: 111 II ) /Ill " \ tit: /ttl :.tnd
llll c lllllll e lh t: lllt:rdltndt "'l: ll li X
down lo lhc I lSI I 0 hl hulh
We hJ H: !-. lll'h t tnlttll y mort:
an tl ysh l ook tn c 11 .., ll r.:.., tn lonn t
mort:

at1on
• Woll new taxes retard the Inter
net s growth? Estomates of Internet
purchases vary wildly but vortually
everyone agrees 11 woll grow exp lo
s1vely A Yankelovoch Monotor study
found Amencans bought $2 6 boll1on
worth of goods over the Internet 111
1997 about one percent ol all retail
sales That " expected lo grow 10
$327 bolloon worth ot sales hy 2002
accord1ng to Cambnd"e based For
rester Research
What the slates are co nce rned
about IS that 1! thiS th111g continues to
gro" the way 11 s expected to grow
f1ve years !rom now ot could be the
pnmary means of purchasong goods
Healy saod
Compames b1ggest fear&lt; are not
a sales tax 1lself but a patchwork of
sates taxes a hodgepodge ollaws or even seveml states claumng they
have the power to tax the same Imer
net sale
The Vermont Teddy Bear Co 111
Shelburne VI thos year expects to do
about $1 mil loon worth of s lies over
ot s Internet SJte (www vtbear com)
Now 11 collects sales tax only il a bear
os shipped to someone 10 Vermont or
Ma111e because ot has a phySJc tl pres
ence 111 those states (Headquarters 111
Vermont a store 111 M une )
But 1f New York where many
bears are sent clmmcd lh 11 home
pages called up'" New York consto
tute a phys1cal prese nce - and thus
requore the company to pay sa les tax
- that could become a real ISsue

smd Tom George dorector of fmance
for the compan y
I expect there wou ld be some
mmor drop 10 sales he sa1d
Some members of Congress have
proposc:d a moratonu m on t:e.rtatn
Internet taxes but contrary to much
ot whal has been wnllen ahout lhe
Interne! Tax Freedom Act 11 would
n t stop !, \ales or lo&lt;.: tltttes Iro m
tmpos1ng sa les taxes It on ly reqlures

that those sa les taxes be the same as
the other sales taxes 1m posed on local
merchanl s
The computer mdustry " worned
that s1nce 30 000 tow ns utoes and
states have the power to 1m pose sales
taxes they II hIVe to conte nd w1th all
those gove rnments lryong 10 clllm a
p1ece ol the sale s tax pot
It s thiS whole fear of a lack of
consiStency or a l1ck ot certao my
saod Bruce Reod dorcuor ot slate and
local ta xes tor M1crosolt and a chaor
ot a group study1ng Internet taxes
You don t know where: y( ur ~.:us
lamer 1&gt; necessanly located Maybe
you re sendtng son ethtnc?, to tn e
maol address Al l you h tve os a cred
11 card number
What 11 P1ttshurgh h" a spec oal
sales tax for buo ld 1ng 1sladoum? How
would companoes .ven know 1f lheor
customer " 111 P111 sburgh &gt;Over the
Internet maybe 11 looked Joke the
customer wa~ c tlhn g m I rom lrom
Saskatchewan Dav1c smd
Not surpnsong ly the sl He gover
nors want the states to set the sales
lax rate rheor po l1 cy tpproved at

theor wmter meetmg calls on each
state to se t a s10gle statewide sales
tax
Some people have suggested mak
mg the Internet a tax free zone at
least wh1le 11 matures States with
thnvm~ Intemettndustnes were more
wary ot any sales taxes Vorgm1a Gov
Jom G1lmore whose stale os home to
Amenca Online saod states should be
nurtunng the Internet not thwartmJ
11 w11h a state by state patchwork of
burdensome lax polic1es
Other governors said II wasn I r llr
to let people buy tax free sweaters
over the Internet wh1le forcmg stores
to collect that sales tax
ThiS " not about revenues ThiS
"about equoty sa1&lt;\ Utah Gov M1ke
LeavJtl There are lots and lots of
people who work 1n Mam Street buSJ
nesses who need to be treated faorly
But Web merchants say regular
buSinesses shouldn t be so worned
At Amazon com a Seattle based
busoness th II se lls books only over
the Web - 11 h " no stores - buSJ
ness grew tenfold lrom 1996 to
1997 But bookstores shouldn t wor
ry sa1d spokeswoman Kay Dan
gaard
Amazon s owner md preSident
Jell Bezos still buys halt hJS books
al regular old lash10ned bookstores
she sa1d Stores woll always have cer
1a1n advantages over the Internet she
sa1d
You love to open the books Ieel
Ihe bJnd 1ngs creek she saod And
you ca n have a mce laue

Alternative healing's popularity concerns doctors
By JILLYN McCULi..OUGH
Salem Statesman Joumal
Most of the lime you don t even
led them D,~rrell Robertson says as
ac upunctunst Kathy Wes t mserts thm
needles mlo hiS head hands and leet
II s strange he sud lilting hiS
head to take a look all these p1ns
Not long ago the thought of pay
mg someone to suck needles 1n you
had about as much appeal as throw
mg out bottles of asponn and sleep
mg pills
But people such " Robertson are
10creason ,;ly try1ng acupuncture
herbs and other form s of alternative
med1cme The 49 year old Salem
Ore teacher recent!) tro ed acupunc
lure tor pun relief from degeneratove
arthntiS
U S reSidents spent $ 1 13 bolhon
on herbs '" 1993 doublmg the
amount they spenl JUSI e1eh1 yea rs
e 11iler occord1ng 10 the Amerocan
Medocal Assocoat1on
In a recen1 study lh 11 looked at the
patients of tour Portland Ore tam
ily phySJcoans half sa1d they hod used
a &lt;.: htropr tctor acupunctunst mas
s 1ge therapiSt naturopath or herbal
remedoes But nearly hal l of those
people hadn t told their pnmar) care
doctor
Not surpnsmgly that has doctors
concerned
They worry thai most people don t
have the sc1ent111c background to sep
aratc le!! lltmat e medu.:tne !rom
yu ockery BeSides posSJbly w JSiong
money en! H.: ' worry people trt&gt; nsk
ong lhw health
I thmk most doctors are re luclam
to u se alternative med1&lt;.:ml.! bee mse
they re lr uned 1n Ihe sCie ntific
method and a lot of ohese Iher 1peu
IK mud thlies ~re conSidered lo he
folklore 1nd not sc1encc

s ntl Dr

Isadore Rosenfeld
He s the author of th e besl seliln,;
book Dr Rose nl eld s Guode lo
Alternative MedJc1ne What Works
What Doesn t - And What s Roght
tor You
1$1195
Fawcett
Columb1ne 1996)
Because most doc tors have n t
been lrmned on alternative med1cme
they diSmiSs II out ot hand Rosenl eld
saod
What s happemng now because
of paloenl pressure IS the so ca lled
cstabltshment
Js almos t be1ng
obligated to look 1nto some ol these
thmgs Rosenfeld sa1d
He became Interested 111 altern 1
ttve med1cmc on a vtstl to Chtna tn
1978 when he saw a p otJen l under
go open heart surgery wh1le awake
and beong treated with acupuncture
Even Congress " Jnlerested '"
alternative med1cme In 19'1 1 11 ere
aled the Otloce of Altern otlve Med1
Cine as part of the Nalwnallnstllut«
ol Health to study the etlecuveness of
vanous forms ol alternauve med1
cme

The office s recent find1ng that
acupuncture can help rd1eve nausea
vom1tmg and pam1n some cases was
seen as a VICtory for alternative med
ocone Bul crotlcs contend that the
olfice s mere eX IStence lends ere
dence to some of the more hJ l arre
lorms of alternative med1c1ne
Others say that the people runnmg
the s1ud1es are advocates who don t
have the sc1eniJ!ic backgrou nd need
cd tor ev 1iu Jtoon
Its l1ke havmg the lox watch the
ch1cken wop Rose nleld s ud
He supports the oi !Ke wh1 ch he
saod "underfunded but s ud the stud
1es should be more su entJiic
Rosenfel d olso sa1d herbs shou ld
be regulated by the hx&gt;d and Drug

Admamstr~ttHlll

Advettt ~t: m ent s

lor

many herbs allude to he tlth bend ts
but don t have to go throu"h the s tme
s~..:teniJh c tn tis as pharm tll:U lH.:als
You c 10 t have 11 boll w 1ys he
satd
Herbal proponent s s oy th ,ll
~cause ht..-:rb~ tre n Hurltl pro&lt;.lm:h
that can t he p otenled there s no
10cent1 ve tor the bog druh camp 101es
10 run expe: nstve ~ucn lth c tnals
More practica ll y they don I w 1nt to
undergo the lenethy FDA approval
process

In 1994 Congress passed a l1w
ehmtnatmg the requtrement th ll lom
pames prove th 11 their herbs md
d1etary supplements were s 1lc bet ore
m trkeung
Thai laws p ISsage "credlled lor
the explod10g In terest Ill herb d rcme
dtes and al tern 1ttv~ mcdtcmc
But other fa ctors tr~ tl work too
Desplle the phenomenal tdvances 10
Weste rn med1ctnc tht :-. ~..:e ntury some
diSeases h 1ve del Je-d tre ilment Alter
native med ic me has ollered people
hope and oteel mg ot control In addt
!ton pracllttoncr~ of ullernattve med
1c10e otlen spend more lime wllh
patient&gt; provJdong 1 hum Ill d1men
ston that s ollen ltckm ~ 111 Western
rnedtctne
Ste\cll S 1ndherg Lewos 1 Port
lmd Ore n Jturopatlm doctor can
spend 90 m10utes w1th a new pIll enI
ask10~ about doet lli gcsll\ e f11n c1mn
dre tm 'l tears md musl:lt: ;.K hes
Sa ndhere Lewts tlso 111 a ~'i ls t an t
proles .. or H the N ttton tl Col Ie ee o f
N uurop 11Im MediCine 1n Portlijnd
says naturop uh, work Wllh wh 11 they
ca ll the body s onnale he 1i1n 0 cap 1c
1ty whiCh they c ill the vllallorce
Naturnp 1ths try to remuve my blllcks
to 11s normallunclion so the body can
heal il se ll

Treatments can mdude changes 10
Joel supplements to 1mprove the
bod) s ability to obsorb nutntoon and
expel waste spm ol m onlpUIIUuns ,ond
ene mas wh11.:h are used to eltmanutc
tox ms
Many tre 11ments remam
comroversoal
Naturopaths don 1 do maJor
surgery md S mdher0 Lewos says he
discourages pal tents from cormng to
hom 1! they h Jve ,on cmer0 ency like
1 he orl tttad or acute appendocotiS
West the Kupunctunst saod she
always advoses patients to go 10 tt n
M D I 11s1 for 1dJa 0 n'""
I ve ry much believe on mformed
deCISion m 1k1ng ' he sa1d
Robertson the le,ocher hopes that
tcupundure c 1n lesst::n has relmnce
on p 1111 pills for hJS bock
I take pam pills all day lo11g and
I m reall y gettong lored ol 11 sa1d
Robertson who" concerned that the
medJcat1on could eventually dam 1ge
hos orga ns
Robert son has only been tryong
ocupuncture for a few weeks md "
unsure tt Will provu.lt! any lasung ben
elol He saJd he usually leds better tor
two or tour hours altt:r lreatment
I sure don t underst,IOd how lhJS
works but 11 s oys II works ,md I sure
hope 11 works tor me he sud
Doctors say 11 s Important lh ot
they know il thw p uoenls ore t okm 0
any herbs or eng tgmJ m an alterna
11ve Iher 1py that could ontcrfere with
med1cat1on they re 1ak10g
Your dtx:lor also m.oy know the
reput thons ot v tnous altern tl!ve
health care prov1ders md recn111
mend a .ood one In addotmn state
lic en" n,; boards tor naturopalhs 1nd
Jcupu nctunsts c,m tell you ol a par
tlcular pracuuoner has rece1ved a lot
of complamts

!to n bdort: th tn v. t.: t:ve r hJ\t! m

tht: pu~ l IIH..l Wt: are ... lud ) til e our
bu ... me' ' more 1nJ lh m ktng more
strateg tl lll v tn t.: tch department
lh 111 we h IV&lt; 111 the past he s 11d
We wont I &gt; I nd what the cus
tomer w tnls md fltve Ito them
H til s od he expec ts to complete
hts h \e ye tr uHllract wtth Kmart
wh1ch exp1rcs 1n ?()()()
I st ill ha\C 1 lot of thmgs I
would like to do he s 11d I stil l
feel cha llenged by the company
and very enthu 'l asllc about the
change' that arc takmd place I d
l1ke to see all those thmgs com
pleted and then I II lei somebody
else come up With a list of h1s or
her own

Get the latest in sports news from the

Daily Sentinel

CUISSUFUIEDSi
CHESHIRE
FOOD HART

JANICE S. HAYNES, BA, MT
MASSAGE THERAPIST

4 AM-12 PM Mon -Sat,
Sun 6 AM Midnight
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot &amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwrch
Introducing Pizza
12 ' $7 49 Deluxe
All Toppings
Call In Orders Accepted
740·367-7838

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

lntcgrqtryc mququ tccfuuuw tflqt urc hdnful for,
•~.:hmn1c patn •muscl~ strmnrlsprams

•stnJf

•m•Kralnt.r

•urrhrrtu

•chmnic jultRu.t

New Homes • VInyl Sldmg New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roof1ng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Gallipolis Ohio 45631

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances

•sp&lt;~rtr m;urylprr~tnlwn

540 WEST UNION STREET
ATHENS, OHIO .5701
PHONE (740) 59H227 FAX (7.0) 59•·6624

005

1619)645 8434

(No Sunday Calls)

mo

Personals

Would You L• ke To Kno w The
Ansv.e1 To The Ouest ons In Your
l fe?? I! So
Call N o w~
1900)288 886 3 E" 634 2 $3 99
Per M n Mu st Be 18 Ser v U

614-992-7643

'AMTA. Mtmb&lt;r •Uctr&amp;.ltd by Ohw St~lt Mtd~eul Bourd
Accepting Worbrs Comp•n•atlon Pat ent1 211311

ANNOUNCEMENTS

2112/02/tln

40

Gtveaway

6 Week 0 d K I! en s &amp; Mother
Cal 740 245 5233

SAYRE

TRUCKING
t.taullng, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Ltmestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Tratler &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates

Joe N Sayre
614·742-2138

SNOW

P/8 Conlradors Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
Construction
•Masonry Construction
•General etc

REMOVAL
Drtveways,
Parkmg Lots, etc
Call Anyttme
Home
614-992-3141
Cell Phone
591-1897

Public Sale and Auction

WILL RAULJUST CALL.

LARGE ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 7,
10:00 AM.
Located at the Auction Center on Rt 33 In
Mason, WV Will be selling two partial estates ol
Bess Knight &amp; Olive Fales plus Items out ol
storage and much more
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
Beau11fu l 5 pc BR su1te must seell Oak dresser claw
feel walnut genllemans chest wardrobes dressers
walnut pump organ 5 leg oak table cab1net chests
Duncan phyfe table &amp; more
GLASSWARE &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Old fenlon p1nk &amp; green depressoon Johnson Br
England china Sellers camster Amber &amp; clear oil
lamps stemware wall pockets cookware hnnens old
Tupperware lamps old p1c1ures &amp; frames
mirrors old Chnstmes decorallon new McCulloch gas
blower quoit racks new small gas gnll large lol ol
lumber Redwood Walnut Oak &amp; mosc 9 sheets of
new 1/2 plywood &amp; much more
MODERN FURNITURE
3 pc BR sulle 2 pc LA SUIIe sofa chests maple
hutch new oak Ice cream table &amp; 4 heart back chairS
2 Zenith console color TV RCA color console TV new
5 drawer chests new oak bar stools new kmg s1ze set
of bedding bunk beds Farberware convecllon/broll
oven Fng1da11e 30 eleclnc range Sears cold spol
upnghl freezer Maytag washer &amp; dryer a1r cond1!1oner
plus much more

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Res/ 773·5785 or
Auction Center 773-5447

• Easler Baskets

• Handmade Stuff Rabbus
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bnng your odds &amp; ends
and we woll foil them
Rt 124 Mmersvolle OH
740 992 4559

Free Esllmates
No Job Too Small

Brion Morrison
(740) 985·3948

R. L. HOLLON

SUSIE

TRUCKING

Home for the
ElderI,
At
. 260 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·7147

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

(614) 992·3838

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday March 7
1998 at 10 00 a m a public
sale will be held at 211 West
Second Street, Pomeroy
Ohlo, The Farmer a Bonk
and Savings Company
parking lot to sell for cash
tha following collateral
1990
CHEVROLET
CORSICA
1G1LT54G2LE133643
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company
Pomeroy Ohio reaerveo the

614-992-5479

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
3!27(TFN

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985·4473

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

Don~

let winter
give you the blues.
Call Toda,r Free Estimatesl
992·5535 or 992·2753
Custom Homes

$120
Mileage Lim1t
Call Randy

HOME INTERIOR SHOW
Fn March 6 7 PM
Spon sored by R L D S
CR 35 behmd Towns~ 1p garage
Proceeds go toward church
Ouest ons call 843 5524

Remodelmg

M&amp;J

230

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vtctntty
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Ad~ance Deadline 1 OOpm thP
day before the ad ls to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
1 OOpm Frldey

Mov ng sale March 7th 140 L n
coin Ht I clothe s baskets fu r
n sh ng tewelry sports cards p c
lures bedd ng curta ns dtshes
games books ste eo

Auctton
and Flea Market

Atck Pea son Aucl on Co mpany
lull 1 me au ct oneer co mplete
aucl on
ser ... ce
L ce nsed
166 Oh o &amp; We s V g n a 304
773 5785 Or 304 773 5447

90

Wanted to Buy

Abso ute Top Dollar All U S S 1
ve And Gol d Co ns Pr oo lsel s
0 amond s Anhq ue Jewelry Gold
A ng s Pre t 930 US Cu ency
Ste I ng Etc Acqu s 1 ons Jewelry
M T S Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Galt pols 740 446 284 2

~
"Build Your Dream"
199B Martin Street
flomeroy, Ohio 45769

Rummage Sale Gra ce Unl tea
Methodtst Chllrch 2nd &amp; Cedar
Gall pohs Oh o Ma1ch 61h 8 30

80

2/10/1 mo pd

Spec1al Thru
March
8 ton Delivered

B! Pald In Ad~ance
QEAQL!NE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday
edition 2 00 p m
Friday Monday edition
10 00 am Saturday

...

Chester, Ohio

992-5050

Public Notice
right to bid at thla sale and
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to tala
Furthar Tho Farmers Bank
and Savings Company
reserves the right to relact
any or all bids submitted
Further
the above
collateral will be sold In the
condition II Ia In with no
express or Implied
warranties given
For further Information
contact Tim at 985-4289
(3)4 56 3TC

"-•

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

LIMESTONE

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992•21

A\.1. Yard Sales Mull

360° Communications

7/22/tln

f7" column Inch weekdays
'9"·column inch Sunday

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlctntty

Agncultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422

12/18/lln

BOARD

Lost chocolat e .. ::~ o Rover
Bee ct1 Grove Ad 11 c n ty ca ll
740 742 2675

CELLULAR PHONES

10f2519611fn

Terms Cash or check
Public Nollce

20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner Ron111e Jones

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Lost and Found

Los! Bla ck Sco tt sh Ter er Near
Qua I CreeK Name Is Dud lee 740
245 9550 (Has Med cat Prob
\ems)

Av1l11blt

Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill D1rt,
Sand No Minimum
(ReaJonalrle JlalesJ.

New Hours
Tues Fn 10 6 Sal 10 4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromalherapy Candles
&amp; Essentoal Otis

60

Commerclaltnd Realdentlal
24 Hr Bobcat Service

992-2646

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

Pupp es pa t Coc ker Span el
pa t Bo de Colt e bla ck wh te
7wks old 304 675 6039

Joe W1lson
(614) 992 4277

Ant ques top PIICP.S pa d A VP.I
ne An que s Pome oy Oh o
Ru ss Moo 1e owner 74 0 9 92
2526

71 mo

LOHG'S
COHSTRUaiOH

KINGS'
Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport Ohio 45769
Additions Rooting,
Siding,
Pole Barns,
Decks, Painting

• Vmyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Addit1ons

J &amp; D Auto Pa rts Buy ng
wre cked o r salvaged veh cles
304 773 5033

TIMBER We pay cash 101 1 acts
of I mber II n1e1 es ted n se ll ng
your moer please tet our p o
les s ona\ fores try stall ma nage
your mber for ncome w ldl le
and a pla ce to entOY the out
doo r s Sup er or Hardw oods ol
Oh o t umb er Co PO BoK 606
Well s on Oh o 45692 (7 40)3811

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Free Est1mates

Call Us For A Free Esl&gt;mate

614 742-3090
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614·742·3076

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5677

'Alarm letters' needlessly jolting beneficiaries

n~.: w

do thtn ...
t: OI 11.: \ tn lr tlil lton II ' ty/e, lul!t:r
cuh tnd 1.: t'v L tn.: lthn L'

In

suburban malls governors now are
womed as stores move from malls to
the Internet
How asked pres1dent Clmton
can we further (the Internet s)
growth and foster 1ts magnoticent
freedom "othout allowmg 11 to be
used as a tax haven that drams funds
our states and Cities need to educate
our ch1ldren and make our streets
safe?
Gov Thomas Carper D Del the
\ICe chamnan of the Natlonal Gov
emors Assocmt1on called Internet
sales taxes the sleeper ISsue of the
governors wmler meeting here 111
February
Whole Delaware and Four other
states have no sales taxes the rev
enue bases ol 45 states could be
undermined he sa1d
States like Delaware woth no sales
tax are worned that other states
mo ght sompl y sh1fl to tax systems
more hke Delaware s They may
lower theor sales taxes and rely more
on corporate and bank franchl'e tax
es for example
Thev may come fish1ng 111 our
ponds he sa1d
• How can states ev en know 1f
someone 11 se llmg from theor state'
It s ompossoble to tell from Web
SJies where a company m1ght be
located unless 11 put s Its address on
II
You d lose the paper tra1l saod
Bruce F Dav1e an economiSt with
the U S Trea, ury Department and a
doreclor of the NatiOnal Tax Assoc1

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett News Semce
WASHINGTON Med1care
be neiK ianes Will not lose theor gov
ernment hea lth care coverage 1! they
p oy th e11 doctors lor serviCes
MeLi tc tre does not routant:ly t.:OH~ r
lawm 1kcrs 111d top tederal ofiKoab
w,tnl rcttrec!s to know
A n JIJonwode dorecl mail cam
pa1 gn by the United Se nmrs Associ
ttt o n a consnvattve fund ra 1s1ng
organo zauon has needl e"!) lnghl
en~.:ll ret trecs wtth maccurate state
rnenls thai MediCare could cui them
ott under l:t:rlatn cond ttaons sa1d
Nancy An n Mm DeParle admmos
tmtor of the Healt h Care Fm oncmg
Adm tnt :..tratton
Nothmg cou ld be further from the
truth she sa1d
Under ots Part B 10surance pro
_£ram Medicare pays a predeter
mmed amount lor a defined schedul e
ot phySJcoan and other outpauem ser
v1ces BenefJcJanes arc tree to pay
out of the ~r own pocket tor any ser
v1ces not covered by Medicare
De Parle sa1d
The Un1ted Sen1ors Assocoat1on
cla1 ms a prOVISion 10 Ihe Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 woll end thi s
arrangeme nt and cause health care
rat10nmg For the elderly
The group s pubhcuy campatgn
has detonated like a bomb on Cap1
tol Hoi I Democrats and Republicans
have been getlmg leuers calls e mail
and faxe s from consiJiuen ts who are
womed that Congress d1d some
thlllg bad
To calm conslltue n l~ lawmakers
held a heanng to set the record
slra1ghl
It IS most unfortunate that ~1s

organi zatiOn has made statement s
that were mJSieadon g sa1d Sen
Wolliam Roth Jr R Del who ltst
week chaired a Sen 1lc Fon mce Com
mtttee hcanng on the '''ur.:: It w ts
a :-; enous lnl \takc to u~t.: tho -;e kmds
ol "latements tn tho ~e lctkr..,
But Kenl Masterson Brown coun
sc i lor United Se mors Assouai iUII
loudl y defended the m ulin 0 s and
repeatedly asserted""'"" ore 1ndeed
m Uanger ol bemg locked out of
oblumng basic health and life saVJng
se rv t ~..:e~;

Your statement IS hl 0 hl y mJS
leadmg sa1d Se n Richard Bl)an
D Nev who questiO ned Brown
about mconststenctes between
Medllare s actual pohc1es md hos
orgamzatton s asserlton:-.
Fogged 111 by the Un ted Sen1ors
Assoc1at1on campa1gn " a much
broader debate lawmakers want 10
have over whether Amencans 65
years and older should be Iree to con
tmct pnvately With physiCians for se o
voces already covered under the
MediCare program
Untol passage of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 such arrange
ments were Illegal
ne nght of semors to pay out of
pocket (for their health care)" essen
t1al to our natoon s concept of liber
ty Sen Jon Kyl R Anz sa1d We
can t get to a poont where we sa) to
flCOple the only health care you ca n
rece1ve IS a government program and
you cannot go ou1s1de thai program
regard less of you r needs or your ab1 l
1ty to pay
Kyl os the author ot pendlllg leg
1S lauon that would allow MediCare
benelocoancs to contract pnvately
w1th phy Sicians The Balanced Bud

et Act approved such arr lll 0 emen ls
but st1pulo1ed doctors en 1e11 ng 11110 1
pn v ti e co ntr H.:t w1 th t M~.:dl t: are
bene!llJIIY 11e proh1h1t ed from
rece iVIng Med1c 1re payment ' lor
t"o years
ThiS two ye or proh bli Jon IS unl111
to seniOrs and doctors Ky l sa1d
fhe two yea r exclusoon rule
leaves doctors wtt h 1 m.llculou~
chmce Kyl s ud
Treaung JUst one Medll ne bene
licmry on a pnvah: contru.. t basts
would Ioree doctors to doop oil
Med1care pauents for two years 1
deciSIOn few phy'lctan s woll make
because so many of them depend
heav1ly on Medocarc rei mbursements
Oppom:nts areueli Kyl ~mea sure
cou ld weaken MediCare il dnclors
were tllowed tn cho J\ t wh 1ch
patients to bill dorcctl y ond wh1ch to
treat under the !;OVC rnrn~.: nt ' pre
estab liShed fee sc hedule

0

Pnvate contractmg w1ll allow
doctors to cherry pock and treat those
Ihey believe c 111 pay more Sen
R1chard Durbm D Ill s ud We re
1n danger ol creatmg a two tiered
hcallh care system
To many non re ttree~ and semors
alike 11 may seem conlu smg lh It law
makers want to liter the nationwide
health m~ uram:e syslcm lh:st 0 ned to
protect the elderly !rom h1gh med1c 1)
costs 1n a w oy that WtJUid expose
them to paymg I 00 percent of th~11
doctor bill s
But there are goou reasons Kyl
argued
The JSsue was hroughl lo the An
zon 1 sen uor s attentton hy l pa1r ol
consllluent' who sou;ht treatment
lrom a parttc.:ular tlol:tor hut were:
turnt:d away bet.:aU-;1! he w 1s not
accepting addll ltlna l Medicare
pattents

•

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

NURSING SUPERVISOR
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital has an Immediate fulltime, rotating shift p6sition available We offer a very
competitive salary range as well as excellent education
and other health related benefits Supervisory
experience preferred. 3 to 5 years of hospital nursing
experience required Applications can be picked up In
the Human Resources Department, O'Bieness
Memorial
55 Hospital Dr , Athens, Ohio 45701.

Philip Morris chief 'ashamed'
by youth market documents
ST PAUL Monn (AP) - The
chatrman of the naloon s JarJesl
tob,occo company .1dmJt1ed he w ''
shocked and ashamed at docum~nts
mdoc 1tmg teens were an omportan l
tar,;e1ol the 'ndustry
Geolfrey B1ble chaorman and
ch1cl exec utive ol Phil ip Moms Cos
Inc sa1d he was embarr ISSCd II Ihe
contents ol the formerly secret mem
os and reports shown to h1m Tuesday
We should not be markelong
Cigarettes to young people B1ble
saod
But be mamtaoned the documents
did not rellect the Ph1llp Morns I
know and smd he never heard any
~.::mployee suggesc m trketmg L: l g 1
rettes to monors sonce he JOmed Ihe
company 1n 1968

Boble was to ret urn for a third day
of testimony today
The state and Blue Cross and Blue
Sh1eld of M1nnr&gt;ola ire sumJ the
tobacco 1ndustry ttl recover the $1 77
boll10n th,y soy they ve spent treat
tng smok tng reined illnesses
Mochael CoreSI the plunulls lead
llturney brought up sevcllll llternal
Ph1l1p MorriS documents relatmg 10
youn ~ ' mokers CireSJ ontrouut ed
most of the papers earl 1er on Ihe tr1
al
Bohle sa1d he hadn t seen most ot
them bdore
CireSI showed B1ble ,, 1975 memo
1bout slower ~rowth oft~ Marlboro
brand The memo from researcher
Myron Johnston and circulated
among stmor t:x.ecultVI!s satd one

re tson w ts •dower growth tn the
number ol 15 10 I'I year olds
John ston s ud he had data showmg
M trlboro s m trk~t pe ne tr&lt;.~tton was
part Jcu l orly h1 ~h among 15 to 17
ye 11 olds He went on to say th~ teen
years were 1111portan1 because they
\\ere the ye 11s 10 wh1ch most people
started to smoke made 1he11 onlltal
brand ~dt:cttOn s and were most ~u s
cept oble to peer pressure
I am ashamed I om em barr IS'ed
abou1 11 ) es B1ble s ud
C11eso pomted OUI th It when Btble
gave a depo~ 1t10n for the ca"e he was
osked whether Ph11ip M liTIS ever
gathered data on the underage seg
ment ul the market and replied I
would be hornloed Jf they tloJ

'

(Lime StoneLow Ratesl

WICKS

HAULING
Limestone,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Ffll D1rt
614-992-3470

McFEE ROOFING &amp;
PAINTING
Specializing In
New Roofs, Root Repalre,
Guttero Interior &amp;
Exterior Painting
Drywall Repair
Lowest rates during the
winter months ot
Jan Feb Mar
Quality Work Guaranteed

Free Eat • Fully Insured
1-614-992-9057
Mlddteoort, Oh

1l•··

..n..JM:o..~~An&gt;.~Ano.lfr.o.~~IIAI!f?:o
1
1.11

"fiT•i" ~·II

from East Texas to central Pennsyl
vanta and south lo Flonda Ram tall
on IhiS re~1011 has been pknulul s01 l
cond itions are very wet and 1mnor
lloodmg has already been occum ng
Richards Said the only oth er area
w1th above average flood nsk
mcludes much of New England and
parts of New York an area w1th a
snowpack well above average
On the other hand for the upper
M1dwest devastated by floodmg last
year there os good news sa1d Com
merce Secre tary Woll1am Daley Et
Nmo brought a relauvely mtld wm
ter there woth a snow pack below last
year s The M""'"PP' Valley also
oppears unlikely to be thre,\lened by
lloods thiS )ear

Happy Ad

Happy
Birthday To
Our Favorite
Human I
Love,

Elsa
Lady and
Tiger

ILl' Jll

fill

Ill I

f; JD CONSTRUCTION

II

Used Ptano 304 675 6925 Leave
Message

Jjf:o.

I

tt

Wanted To Buy

EJ(Ira l argf! Steel Pet C ate

New Homes &amp; Remod eling
fll Garages Pole Butldmgs Roof~ng S1d1ng
P:..
Commercial &amp; Restdenttal
1 " 27 yrs exp
Licensed &amp; Insu red

lr.o.

Cal1 (304)6 15t05 1

Leave Messaqe

Phone 740-992-3987

~

..r,..

Free Esttmates

~

1"

Owner John Dean

I"

~~~~e:-~~~N:o..N:o..M:..N:o..
fll lu l fhe . ~t I" Jll t" IIIU TiJ i•- Tj1•_t_ lf" f"

We Buy Autos In Any Cond 10n
Call 74 0 388 9062 0 740 44 6
PART

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted
ley

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbmg
•Rooting
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
VC YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy Ohio

California, Florida, New England face flood threat
ALEXANDRIA Va (AP) - Just depe nds on whether the runlall
what Flonda and C olilornm n&lt;cded to spreads out and c m run ott or" con
hear The already so okeu ' tates top centrated on a short tome he
the list for potent1al spr10g tloodmJ expla1ned
R1chards and meleorologost Ed
New England " ,dso at nsk led
0
Lentc
doscussed the spnng flood
eral forecasters saod Tuesday bul
lorecast at a bnetmg beneath a gray
there s good news for the MISSJsSip
p1 Valley and the M1dwest where ramy sky on Alexandna s flood
devaslaUng floodmg st ruck on recent prone waterfront
Much of Calofomm has above
years
flood nsk R1chards sa1d
normal
Not surpnsmgly El Ntno IS the
Although tlood111g has currently
culpnt 1n the threats to the West Coast
subSided cond1 toons contmue to be
and Southeast
W1th the El Nmo phenomenon npe For further flood problems
S01l tn Cahforma 1s saturated
likely to contmue for at least anoth
er month contmued wet weather IS many streams are near flood level
expected m those areas Nauonal reserv01rs are h1gh and the snowpack
Weather Serv1ce hydrologost Fmnk " bount1ful he added
Another area of concern stretches
.., Rtchards sa1d The flood threat

I JII ' th-1 l f j ll

II
•

Exhaust Work
We do Cuslom Bending
Converter Back 584 95
Most Cars
Used nres 12 00 ID 1s.oo
Service JobS 16 95 4 qt. oil
General Repa r Work
Sugar Run Ashland
190 Mulbe rry
Pomeroy
Phone 992-9949

COMPUTER
PERFORMANCE
UPGRADES

.. Your One Stop
Computer Shop'"
Give us a call for system repa1rs,
sales, upgrades or consultmg
POMEROY, OH

740-992-1135
2/11/98 1 mo

Bates 8 os Amuseme nt Co
Must be 18 yeas o otde F .ee
to 1 avet Ca t 740 266 2950 M F

800430
CNAS

Etderc a e ot WV s now accept
ng appt cations tor par 1me and
or tull t1me CNA S exper enced n
tong term hea l h care censed n
WV App y n pe so n between
9am Spm at 107 M lle D ve Rp
ley WV EOE
Deale s &amp; D sl buto fi Wanterl
G eat money mal&lt; ng opportun ty
car home heath body ca e pro
duc ts ava tatlle For dem o &amp;
sa le top quatuv n water ess
technolo gy from ETI Ca I Scolt
Sm th @ 304 882 3972 Ae a 1 0
re ct 1 600 620 6893
Pr n,

163062
Ded cat ed To 0 fer ng The Bes t
In Care Seen c HIts Nurs ng And
Rehabtl tat on Center Is H r ng
STNA s (S tate Tested Nurs ng
Ass slants) All Sh Its Ava table
Co ntact Staff Development D ec
tor Pam Catdwe1\ For Oeta s 311
Buckr oge Road B dwell OH
45614

�Wednesday, March 4, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 15

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 Crudely built
dwelling
7 Fullneaa
13 Nonmetallic
element
14 Crystalline

15~~.
Dr ver Wanted Good Pay &amp; Ben
et Is COL W th Hazard Mater at

'Cerl heat on ReQu re d Apply In
Pe son At Burlle 0 I Company
683 Sate Roue 7 Gall po s
Monday Thru Fr day 7 To 5
~ r vers Neeoed For 300 To 800

Mile Rad us Must Have Class B
l cense And Gooo MVA Exper
ence Also Requ ed Wee~ty Pay
&amp; Health Ins Ava table For Mo e
l nformat on Call 800 437 8764

ng
Employmen t Opportun ty Fo Ex
per anced Recept on s Adm n s
I at ve Ass slant Mu st Have At
least One Yea s Expe en ce
W lh W ndow s 95 And Olt ce 95
Or H gher M c osofl Word Excel
Access And Power Pont W I Be
G1ven H1ghest Cons de a on
Othe Spreadsheet Appt ca ons
Or Wordprocess ng P og ams
Helpful Mu st Be Ab le To work
Jndependently Wh te Camp et ng
Mull pte Ta sks At One T me
Customer Se v ce Kn ow eoge
Telephone SkIts And Me ssage
Tak ng tmpe at ve App can ts
W Be G ven Compu e Te:; A::.
Pa I 01 l nte v ew Plea se Apply
IN PERSON At Seen c H s
Nu s ng And Rehab ta on Cen
ter 31 I Buc~r dge Ad B dwell
OH Front Desk Po 1ol o Of Pas
P OJects We co me And En cou
aged

The Fr ck Gallaghe Manufactur
ng Company In Wellston Oh o Is
Seek g A H gn y Quailed Equ p
men l Ma ntenance Meehan ca I
Elect cal For Its 2nd Sh I Opera
uon In tally The Tempo a y
Wok ng Hours WI Be 12 Noon
To 8 30 PM Aile wads The Job
Ou es W Bec omB A FLJI T me
Permanen 2nd Sh t Pos 1 ons
W th Some 0 T Ava ab e Sa t
ng Pay Scae 15 $12 31 Pe Hour
Pus A Fu 1 l ne Ot Bene ts Allar
The Probat ona y Pe od Mus B~
Abe To Pass A W ten Test
And A Pre Employment Phy 5 ca
And Drug Test A I Qua I ed Can
d dates Pease Send Resu me To
PO Box 227 We ston Oh o
45692 We A e An EQual Opoor
tun ty Emp oye

In Sea ch Of MOtiVa ted Fr endfy
Ca ng Team P aye Pa T me
LPN Pos t1ons Open For All Sh f1 s
At Seen c H II Nurs ng And Re
habItat on Center Contact 0 ec
to r 0 1 Sta ll De11e1opmen t Pam
Cadwe ll To l ea n More About
Em ployment Oppo tun 1 es 311
Buckr dge RoM B dwell OH
45614

Na I Tech Needed For Busy Sa
ton 740 441 1880 Or 740 256

63&lt;36
Neeo a nome? P eler a mate
I ve n w l h elder y qentleman
oom &amp; boa d smal sata y efer
ences please 304 895 3942

D Slrlcl

740-446 1536
NEW CONSTRUCTION

Beau

t l ut Two Sto y Coon at 414 Th rd
A11enue Gall pol s 3 Bedrooms 2
12 Ba hs lR &amp; FR Format Din ng
Room Oa~ T 1m F replace Much
More Home Eligib le For Tax
Aba ement $179 500 304 273

2940
Three beelroom liOuse wltl'l tw o
car garage attached add Ilona I
three ca garage three acres of
lana 74Q-643 5350

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
K rkland Ira le r total alec
tr c on 35. ac res fully stoc~ed
pond good hunt ng 740 742
2086 even ngs 740 742 7405
days
2 Bedroom wtlh expando
on rented 101 In Park Lane CA
Porch
Outb u ld ng Carport

I 12 500 (7401245 04S2 Ale1 5 30
pm

FINANCIAL
210
OH 0

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE!
VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

recommends that you do bus
ness w 11'1 peop e you know and
NOT to send money throug h the
ma I unt you have nvest gated
the ol er ng

967 Belmont 2br 1 bat h gas
furnace &amp; elr ge rator Ask ng

$2 000 740 446 2947

ATTE NTION Poem &amp; Song
W te s Who w sh To Be No
1ced 1 BOO 600 0343 011 ce EKI

1973 Cameron 12x65 2br t room
add II on $4 500 304 882 3612
1980 14x70 mob1le home $5000

t2x28 mob1te home addll on
1295
S1500 .tl x24 round pool $500
BUTCH ER SHOP SLAUGHTER 740 367 0617

HOUSE Old Establlsllmen t 8us1
ness Cent rally Located In The
B dwe ll Po rt e Area El(ce len
Cha nce To Own Yow Own Bus
ness B ackburn Rea ty 740 4-16

1986 2 Bed10om DuKe Clean 2
Porches On Rente d Lot S1DO/

Mo

0

G

2B14

I censed n WV Apply Oetween
9am 5pm a I 07 M I er 0 ve _,

Consotidabons Cash Loans
Bad Cred No P Obtem

No Adv Fee 1 800-580-78511
230

Professional
Serv1ces

L v ngston s oasement wa ter
p oo l ng all basement repa rs
done free est ma tes 1 let me
gua ran ee I Oyrs on JOb expen
ence 304 675 2145

~~~--------·

Apley WV EOE

essary $5 15i hou
THORNTON GREENHOUSES

740 247 4334 Want ng d ve s
that can drrve hght duty 24 t long
tucks
Tomacet s Ente Ia nmen C ub
M dd eport OH look ng to hOuse
band Mus pay up to date va e
ty mus c be ava abe to Satu
days from 7pm unt m on ght Ap
p cat ons and ser up 1 me w th
one hOur of mus c n pe son s re
QUife&lt;1 Ca lo nte v ew 740 992
45 4 3pm 9pm

3 Bedroom 2 bath 1996 model
home ncl udes Free set up &amp;
delivery Skirting ai r c olor TV
&amp; VCR Included All for $219/mo
Only wh le suppl es last Call to

Ttl s newspape w I nO!
knoWing y accepl
ad ert sements to ea est a e
whiCh s n v o1a1 on ot Hie
aw Ou eaders a e I ereby
nlor ed t at a dwe ngs
adven sed n ttl s newspape
a e ava abe on an equa
opoof1un ty bass

REAL ESTATE

Attention Mob le Home Owners
A.r~Jas largest lnvento y at lnte
therm &amp; Co leman Hea Pumps
A r Co nd !lone s F urn aces &amp;
Pa Is Huge Buy ng Power Means
The Lowest Installed Pr ce Easy
Over The Pnone Bank F nanc ng
Call Bannett s Mob le Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1BOO 872 5967

0 scount Mob le Home P&lt;~ ts &amp;
Accesso es Water Heat e s v
ny Sk rt ng K !s $299 95 An
chOrs Wood &amp; F be glass Steps
Roo I Coat ngs Doo s W ndows
Plumb ng &amp; E eel ca Supp e s
BIOC~Ing WOOd &amp; Wedge s And
Mo e Call Bennet! s Mob 1e
Home Supply AI 1 740 446 9416
Ste 3 Bedroom $995 Down s 199/
Mo Only Oakwood Homes Ba
bOu sv I.e WV 304 736 3409

Grubbs P1ano tun ng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Ca 1 he
p1ano Or 740-446 4525

4 Ac es Recenlly Landscaped
Aural Wa ter Tap Ready For
Home located Hannan Trace
Road 011 St At 790 F01 $10 000

740 256-17B9

AREYOU LOOKING
FOR LAND
5 AM 6 Acre lots Open Rot ng
Meadows 6 Acres Meadow &amp;
Pond Patr o Off SA 233 Paved
Road $ t 4 900 + D scou nt s Fo r
Cash l and Contracts Ava able
Call Fo Oeta Is 1 800 213 8365

1 Bedroom Near Holzer Range
Relr gerator Furnis hed W/ 0
Hook Up $279 Plus Utlllt es De
posit/l ease AeQu 1ed (740)4 46
Pomeroy two bedroom carpeted
cable trash ulllt es pad $4851
mo $4 85 de posit one year
lease Middleport two bedroom
hardwood floors stove $250 mo
$250 deposit s1x month and one
yea 1&amp;ase offered 740-992 451 4
Up sta r s 2 Rooms &amp; Ba th Fur
mslled Clea n No Pets Reference
&amp; Oepos 1 R eq u~red 740 446

450
Real Estate
Wanted

Waned 4 Or 5 Acres lri The A o
Grande Or Green School D sir c

Ca IAher 5 PM 740 245 5946
WE BUV LAND

Furnished
Rooms

C rcle Mo tel Lowes t Ra es In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
Cmemax Showll me &amp; Disney
Weekly Rates Or Mon hly Rates
Constru ctiO n Workers Welcome

740 441 5698 74Q-441 5167

In Sou hem Oh1o 20 300 ... Ac
es W th Road Fro ntage Wootls
A Plus Call M ke Anthony Land
Co LTD Your Country l ot Spe

~'.!!l'!'i!.

Mob le home stt e ava lable bet
wee n Ath ens and Pomeroy ca ll

740 385 4367

2 Bed roo m Ho.use In Gall lpo Is

WI D Hook Up CIA No Smokers
Or Pets Re ferences &amp; Oeposn

740 256 9190 Belween 6-9 PM

CanRon Evans 1B00-537 9S2B

Me dal Store Shelvin g Idea l For
Bus ness Or Workshop W1U De
liver 74 1)-2~56

Prlm111ar $99 w l h reoa te Free
HBO wi th I rst month free Ofle
ending soon!! 800 263 2640

Roush Rental Is no w acce pting
appl cat ons to rent tral ers &amp; eff1
ency apartm en ts W II acce pt

HUD Call 304 773 5944

Rec line r Ch a r l A Cha End
Table Lamp s En ertalnment Ce n
ter Inva lid Polly Cha r wa ker

740-446-QB97

Sm til Corona PWP 4200 Word
Processo W lh Mom1or It Has A
Hard Onve And A DI SC 0 ive It
Comes With Spell Rtgh l Co ona
Cole Ill For Spreadsheets l otus
And Word Perl ecl It Has Been
Used l ess Than 10 T mas

Bough! New$350 Sell For $250

OBO Also !=or Sale Sm th Coro
noa Eleec tn c Typ ewr l er $ 140
Cal 740 245 9635 If No Answer
Pease l eave A Message

309B No ca ISaller 9 00 pm
SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL

Spr ng Is A ght A ound The Co n
e II s Time To Get Your AI C
Unrts And Heat Pumps Cleaned
Cl ean ng Vou r Un Is W1 ll Help
Save You Money On Your Cool

ng Blls

0111ce area $300imo $300 de

pos 1 one year tease 740 992
4514 ask tor Chris

Serv~ce Needs EPA Certified

3 Oed room hOuse n M dd lepo rt
$350 a month plus depos t 740

MERCHANDISE

992 3194

510

Household
Goods

Appl ances /Used Furn lure 740
446 4039 740 446 1004 Freez
e s Relr ge rators 5 de By S des
Tetav so ns w ashe r Dryer s
Beds Stoves

Ml Vernon Ave N ce 3br central
a app l ances basement pat o
references requ ed 304 882

2405 01304 882 2447

N ce clean 2br rete ences &amp; de
past no pets 304 675 5162
Pomeroy 4 Ded oom HUD w th
stove &amp; elr ge rator relerences
no pe ts ca ll 740 992 6886 after
5 JOpm

GOOD USED APPLIANC ES

Tw o bedroom house c ean re
I ge aror no stove no ns de
pes depos I reqtJ red 740 992

3090

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob le homes
$..::60 S300 se we water
nd
1 ash ncluded 740 992 2 67
2 Bedroom no pe ls relerence re
qu red on Sandh I Road 304

6

3834

Used Fu n l ure Store 130 Bula
v He P ke Good Qua ty Merchan
dseM T WH rs10 4

520

Sporting
Goods

WIIIOA I Arrrrt SurpllJS
Best pnces anywhere lull I ne of
Ad van tage Camo n t me lor
turkey season Great setect1on ot
new and used boots lots of new
and used camo s zes 2 months
to 4X backpacking aM cam ping
tems k 1d s clo thes uS made
Sm th &amp; Wesso n kn ves and ots
fllO e Come and c he c ~ us out
We are open 8 30am 8 OO pm
everyday Ca ll us at 740 992
7093 a 1 aoo 346 a 176

530

Two bedroom tra 1er on Condor
St eel $250 month $100 depos
740 667 3083

WARM UP H1gh Elf c1ency Nat u
rat And lP Gas Furn aces L le
I me Warranty On Heat Exchang
e II YotJ Don I Call Us We Botl1
Lose Free Es t mate s Ad d on
Heat Pumps Only Stghty H1gher
Ca ll Us Tod ay 1998 Is Our 26th
Yea I n Th e Hea lin g &amp; Coo li ng
8USI!'leSS 740 446 6306 I 800
291009B

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Up r gh t Ron Eva ns Enterpr ses
Jackson Oh o 1 800-537 9528
T ekes lor sale Bleach and Sev
en Day Jesus Fnd ay Ap nl 3rd
7 30 at No lh Parkersburg Bapt s
Chu rch cal 740 949 3098 lor de
ta IS

Antiques

Buy o sell Aver ne Ant ques
tt24 E Ma n St eet on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 DO
am to600p m Sunday 10010
6 00 p m 7 40 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

540 Mis cellaneous
Merchandise

Ware I ne Spec al 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PS I
$37 00 Pe r 100 AU Brass Com
press on F1tt ngs In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

Jackson Oho 1 800-537 9528
Woolj For Sale $35 A Load W1ll
Delver 740 389 8010
Yellow gold &amp; d amond d nner
r ng appratsed for $5 000 best
offer 304 675 6925 Leave mes

sage

550

AKC Reg Boxer pupp es 6wks
old
mae 1 female shots
wo med ta Is docked 8 declaws
emoved vet checked Askmg
$250ea 304 773 5919

580

New Double W de 3BR 2 Bath
FREE Delve y &amp; Se up $24 999
Low OoV!In Payment E z Monthly

2bdrm ap s to tal elect c op
pi ances fu n shed aundry 1oom
lac t es clo se to school n town
App cat ons ava table at v tage
G een Apts lt49 o ca 1 140 99 2
3711 EOH

40 Ac es 3 Bed ooms 2 Batns
LA La ge Re c Room 0 n ng
K tcnen 2 Ba ns 1 W th Horse
S ails La ge Wor~s hop 4 Ca
Garage 1 Log cao n 1 Hunt ng
Cab n 15 M ns From Gall pots
25 M ns From Hunt ngton 740
256 14 84 If No Answer Leave
Message

New S nglew de 38R FREE De
I very &amp; set up S 6 999 1 888
926 3426
PRE OWNEC HOMES
Excellent Cond 1 on Owner F
nanc ng Ava table Call 304 722
7148

1-::--- - - - - -- -

BUY HOMES FROM $4 000 t 5
Barm local GoV't &amp; Bank Repo s

Quiet Country Setting wth oeau
tlu mob le home forced to sel
F nanc ng ava fable 304 755
5566

GOV T FORECLOSED Homes
From Penn es On $1 Del nquenl
Tax Repo s REO s You r Area

Single P1ren 1 Progra m Spec a
I nanc ng on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Paymen ts 11 low u
$180 Call now 304 755 5885

Call 1 BOO 522 2730 X 1709

To I Free I I) BOO 21B 9000 Ex I
H2814 For Cur ent LIStings
NEWBANK REPOS ONLY 3
LEFT 1-801).383-6862

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
I BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wes twood On11e
from $279 o $358 Walk to shop
&amp; moves Ca I 740 446 2568
Equal Housing Opportun ty
Gracmus I v ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V 1fage Manor and
R ve s de Apartments n M ddfe
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppor
tun lies
In New Haven 1br lu n shed apt
ncludes washer &amp; dryer depos 1
&amp; e e1ellCes 3:&gt;4 882 2566
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

740 4~6.0390

----------------~·

740 669-3765

Hay &amp; Grain

640

FrUitS &amp;
Vegelables

Cess Greens Already Cu t $10
You Cut $5 Charles McKean

Farm 740 446 9442

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment

BA RN EO Roun d ba1 s m xed
hay never wet 304 882 2077

Round bales $10 each sq uar e
ba es $1 50 Fo rd 501 mo wer
$300 call 740 742 2331 6 9pm
on~

Aound hay bales 1200 lbs $12
New leader I me ferld ze r spread
er on ra le PTO 740 698 8254
Squa e Bales $2 00 Each 1 Mile

N On R1 2 304 675 3960 leave
Message

..

650 Seed &amp; Fert1hzer

TRANSPORTATION
71 P Autos for Sale
1969 Mustang 6 Cy l nder Auto
Exce l ent In! $5 000 304 675

Com c books lor sale Ent1 e cot
leeton must gol $125 080 740

Concre te &amp; Plasuc Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gal ons Ron
Evans En terprrses Jackson OH

~a y tag Was~e r

&amp; Dryer Slack
1 While New Mayrag Relrlg
era tor 14 9 Cub Foo t Olf While
New 24 Pontoon Boat U~e New
40 Horse Mec Motor Wit h Boat

Tra1er 7404411536 740441
0000

• 9 7 6 4

tAQI0 53

... Q 9

... J B 6 5

1984 Bwck ReQa l needs engi ne
work $200 Call 304 675 2006
afte 4 OOpm
1985 Mercu ry Grand Mar qu1s
Au tomatic 302 V 8 Remanutac
l ured Engine Has App ox mately
45 000 M les Full Power Al um1
num Whee ls $1 200 1990 Ood
dge Caravan Au oma hc 2 Sl 4
Cyt Excellent Conditi on $3 200

740 446-7215

1987 Chrysl er F1lth Avenue ex:
cellent cond liOn S1200 call 740

992 2756

1987 Pon t1 ac F era 5 Speed .2
Doo rs 14 800 M les 740 446

9749

1987 T Type Bu ck Regal T Tops
AC PW Pl CO Player 740 446

6669

1989 Buick laSabre IOClded lo ts
o f new parts good cond1t on

$1900 call 7 40 949 ;!203 or 740
949 2045

1989 Ford Tempo CO player two
door 5 speed 1 10 000 pl us
m les strong car pamt OK need
to sell S1000 740 949 3099 No
ca Is after 9 00 pm
1969 Pont ac Sunb1 rd 4d r au o
NAPA reman u ac ture d en g1 ne
st II unde warranty $2 500 304

BB2 3710
1990 Po ntiac Grand Pr x l E Au
tama r c AC Stereo Casse ll e
95 600 M tes Ve y Good Co nd1
1 on 740 44 6 3903 Ate 5 30

PM

1992 Dodge Dakota lE 8 cyl n
der long bed toppe r 33 279 ac
tua1 m le!i exce ll ent cundl1 on

Vulnerable North South
Dealer West

t K J
"'K 4

740 949 2666

Soutb

1993 Ford Ranger 6cyl 5s pd
31 450 m les a toppe r exce l
en t cond1t on one ow ner

$6 500 304 676-5827
1993 S 10 Pck Up 5 Speed 266
Cyl nder l ow Mtl es Excel e n!
Cond I on Ask ng $7 500 740

245-5672
1993 S 10 v 6 5spd oed dam

age d good h es ps pb $1 250

BARNEY

5spd 74 000 mles $15000
304 675 1754
1996 Ford Range r XLT AM/F M
Cassette AutomatiC A PS PB
Bedllner Cove 35 000 M1 les
$9 500 614 446-2647

U.S. POST OffiGf

95 Geo Tracker tfx 4 so ft op
loaded need payo l 740 98 5

E~n11a

Runs Good

9552

m
0 • 3

!i

-; 5 ,~

• i

COMPUT~~IZfl&gt;

1983 Chevy SWB 4x4 Slaps de
1986 Full S1ze Bronco 4x 4 Au
omat c 740 446 6869

Q.

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0 3 ..
•

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5f£.f-

st~VI~f!

1982 Chevy C 20 l ull srze cus
tom \la n v 8 400 engtne 30k
great lor tow ng &amp; travelng lllls of
new pa rts ask ng $3950 see or
call Gary F Hysell 740 992 4283

•

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.

NOw! fUL.L.Y-

3734

(II

m o o
~ 3 ;

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THE BORN LOSER
P""

19B9 F150 4WD 302 5 speed

KOOi I!IAA'i 65 YENt. OLD~ CJ..N

a r toolbox Amer can rae ng r ms
$4000 304 773 5039

~\IU. ~'i \llf.Y ~~Vf:

"'I

N.J.. Tl'Liit

r~0\-.1 fo\AA'( 75 '(~-Ql.C6 c.AA ""
) \ILL ~y ffiE'{'~ bS 'm~7

ON~ \ff.Tf'. 7

198 9 GMC Sara n Fu ll Custom

Van $3 950 7 40 446 4222

1990 Chevy Van H Top Co nver
slo n Full Powe r T v Stere o s
$ 1'1 a1p $6 000 740 446 425 4 AI
ter 5 P:M
199 1 Chevy Lumma APV van sx
cy li nder automa 1c h1gh millis
runs good $28 00 1987 Fo rd
Ae ostar Cargo van 4 cylinder 5
speed 90 000 m les runs good
very depen d ab le l ots o f rust
good work van $600 304 773
5305 alter Spm
1992 Chevy Blazer 4x4 V 6 4 3
a r cond lion ng new I res $7500
740 992 6583 or 740 696-7019

BIG NATE

* ..
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r:i

-~

IVL

bu-t vou

1996 F 150 4 x4 Xl T Package
302 Aut o o amond Pl al e Too l
Box &amp; Ralls Very Goad Cond 1on

740 245 9544

4

3L LS B3 000

.

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PEANUTS

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Ho ll ~o~ ood

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996 Jeep Cherokee 740 379

9047
95 S I0 4x4

~IT o fr
t1ENTVI1

I V~ ~

I 1'-1"

kne \oJ
1993 Dodge Ca ravan SE Sports
Wagon 4 capta n c ha s spo 1
wheels luggage rack exc cond
$7 000 304 882 3139

*

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304 882 3132 740 992 722B
740

East
3.

Pass

Pass

1995 Pon t ac Grand Am 4 Ooo s
Loaded ll al c Blue Excellen t
Cond on 59 000 M es $9 900
740 388 8041
1995 Toyota Ava l on Lea her
Sun ool Loaded Excellent Cond
t1on 46K M tes $22 500 740

441 18BO 740 256 6366

By Phillip Alder
Bndge " a game of ln cks there
are 13 ul lhem m each deal But
lnck has anolher mean1ng a
decellful dev1ce or decep11on Well
somellmes one can have a lncky tnck
as m lhiS deal
How would you try 10 hoodwmk
the opponenls mlo pc:rm1Umg tour
hearts 10 make alter West leads lhe
spade I01
AI Ihe other table Z1a Mahmood
(North) and M1chae l Rosenberg had
reached three no lrump desp11e the
10 card hean hi (East opened one
dmmond South made an mtermed1
ale JUmp overcall ol two hearts
West responded 1wo spades Norlh
cue b1d lhree spades showm g a
spade slopper and as km g tor a d1a
mond gu.1rd Soulh b1d lhree no
trump and Nonh passed Bnlhant 1)
In thiS auc11on West s opc:mng
supposedly showed a SIK card su11
and 5 9 h1 gh card pomls but al
favorable vulnemb1hty some lalltude
IS permllled When East raiSed 10
three spades Soulh env1S1o nmg a
smglelon spade oppo&lt;~le overcalled
four hearts
When lh e dumm y appeared
declarer could foresee the defense
spade to the ace spade to the kmJ
spade ruff dmmond ace How could
he tn&lt;k East lnlo domg the wrong
lhmg ' Wnh almosl no pause tor
thought South called tor dummy s
spade hve ThiS lett East w11h the
1mpresswn lhal Soulh h td ' larled
wnh k1 ng doubl eton ol spades So
after wmnmJ w11h Ihe spade ace Easl
conlmued Wllh the ace and anolher
dwmond South won drew trumps
and cla1med losm.; lwo spades and
one dmmond
Who was lhiS lnckster &gt; Cezar)
Balle k1 Irom Poland Now lhou •h
maybe Easl am.l Wesl are pl1y;';,g
sane we lk t wos

1994 Honda 300 4x4 ATV With
Extras
E•ce/lent Cond lion
$3 500 740 446 8015 Before 4 00

PM

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

New Holland Gnnder Fo d tOll
Transport D1sc Both In Good
Cond lion Corn For Sale 304

2734215

Super A Farman cultivators and
s de dresser 740 247-4793

SIONS Used Rebu It All Type s
Ac ce ss Ove 10 000 T ansm1s
SIOilS &amp; CllJ!Ches 740 245 5677

Used 6510 D tch W tch Trencher
with Back hoe Attac hm ent and

1420 Ditch Wllch Walk Behind

Trencher 1 614-694 7842

BOO

Warrant es on most cars

SERVICES
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond I onal hlellme gua,antee
Loca efe en ces lu n shed Es

laOIShe~ 1975 Call 1740) 446
OB70 Or 1 BOO 2B7 OS76 Ragen
Wa erprool ng

Appliance Parts And Se1v1ce ,6.1
Name Brands Ove 25 Years Ex
per ence All Wor.k Gua ranteed
French C ty t.Aaytag 740 446

n95
C&amp;C General Home Ma1n
tenence Pa nllng v nyl s drng
carpentry doors wmdows ba ths
mob le home repa r and more For
free est mate call Chat 740 992

6323

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
720 Trucks for Sale
1976 Chevy C 30 Food Delivery
Truck Propane Heated $3 000

080 74()-446 1065

30 - - lhe

ground ll~r

31 Lions hom!'•

Omlls a
syllable In
speaking
38 Owing
41 l&gt;lant disease
42 Chooses
43 Nasty
44 Marathon
45 Actress
Chase
47 Unique
person
48 Intertwine

49 Mother of
Castor and'
Pollux
50 Habrew

.l

month
52 Waplll
54 Actress
Merkel

CELEBRITY CIPHER
•

by Luis Campos

Ce ttbnly Cll)he t:ryp oy 11n sa 11 c ea ed om quo1auons by lamous peop e pasT and p esenl
Eactl le e.- n hecphe stands or anotle Tooayscue 0 equasG

PCK

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PCK

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(WJPCMT)

HWZSFB
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PR EVIOU S SOLUTION "The med1a II sounds lik e a convenll on ol
sp1ntualls1s " - Tom Sloppard

'~~~;~;~' S©\\JillA-~£2/tS®
ldllld by CLAY I POLLAN

WOlD
UMI

O Reorronoe

letters of the
four JC rombled word5 be
low lo form four s mple words

I

OWPANE

I I I 1I
I KROBO I
2

t

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-.-M.15. :o,. I. .:. .v..-N.I . .E: 1~~ ~:,'
6

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example b1gamy proves that
two ntes ca n
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HUTGAN
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PR INT NUMBERE D
lfTT fR S

Complele 1ho chuck le

quoled

by I II ng n the m n ng words
you develop from step No 3 below

I'

I I I I Ia I I I I I I
SCRAM LETS ANSWERS
Cancel Hover Ripen Jailer VIOLIN

IWEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN

Pa ts For Sale Any Parts You
Want 740 388 9062 740 446

810

12 6 Closed Thursday&amp;
ard Sundays

De -

11 Soulhweatern
Indians

MARCH 41

273 9329

Cred 1 Prob ems? We Can He p
Eas y Bank F nanc mg For used
Veh ctes No Turn Downs Call
v ck e 740 446-2897

Open

12 Simple
19 Heabh re1drt
21 Items ownfd
22 Terminated
23 Culture
medium
24 Office note
25 Freahwater
porpolae
26 lalher
28 Wild disorder
29 Capitol of
Norway

college
10 Actor Robert

New gas tanks t ton tr uck
wheels &amp; rad ala s 0 &amp; A Aul a
R pley WV 304 372 3933 or 1

7;!28

actual m1tes $2800 1991 Geo
Sto rm automatic $1850 19B8
Foro ESP sunroof 5 speed two
seate r $995 1985 Butck LaSa
bre automat c electriC w ndows
$600

9 North Carolina

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessones
BUDGET PRICE TRAN SMI S

Se zed And Sold
Locally Th s Month
Trucks 4x4 s Elc
1 BOO S22 2730 X 3901

Used 25+ 4xP Case Trenche r
W1th Backhoe Attachment And
Case Max1 Sneaker Cable Plow

614-694-7642

Kawasak STS Jet sk st ll under
warranty three seater 83 horse
power bought new Ju y ol 97
th ee rna ch ng Kawasaki Ski
ves ts and 1 a ler all go w th
$5000 740 949 2203 or 740 949
2045 w II cons de I ade for a
goocJ pontoon boat

1996 Z 24 Black loaded All
Power Sunroof 5 Speed $13 500
Ca I AI e 5 30 PM 740 44 1

Jumor dragster Jegs dig 1ron au
tome t@r Salisbur y cl utch T F
W ng track champ on comp e e
mmus eng ne $3000 080 740

3 Eden dweller
4 Pleaaant
5 Powartul
exploalve
(abbr)
6 Alllrmatlona
7 Type of apple
8 Gama of cards

My parents made me play the p1ano becau se 1t s
harder to lose than a VIOLIN

760

0607
1980 1990 Ca1s For 11001

l.. Usea a chair
f2 ·laraell dance

rr-1'J'"""''I,.....,.,.""""P'"---

I
There's no
way around it,
Classified Ads

Motorcycles

1996 P ymotJth Neon Gr een 4
Doo s Aulo A r 31 000 M les
$7 200 080 740 256--6340 740

Bad Cred t No C ad t Bankrupt
cy? We Can Hefp l Bank Fmanc
ng On Used Veh ctes 740 44

DOWN

The trick of
the trick

II

1995 Ford F 150 XL ale 4x4

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

North
P ass

t 8 Sl1th sense
(abbr)
20 Organ of smell
21 Meat Iaiiy
23 Faulty
27 Barometer type
32 Clat~nleatlon
of plants
33 River In France
34 Ammonia
compound
35 Wlae
lawgiver
36 Cooked (a
turkey)

37

SCRAPS FER
HIM, TOO

West
28
Pass

money

Anawer lo Prevloua Puule

Opemng lead • 10

SHE'S GOT SOME

ELVINEY WANTS YOU AN'
OL' BULLET TO COME
OUT TO TH 1 GOSSIP'
FENCE!!

304 675 7386 or 304 674 0007

m les exce llent cond 1on $9 200
f990 two door Lincoln Mark VII
one prev1ous owner 57 000 m tes
all power well rna ntamed n ex
cellent cond on 740 992 2529

7

• 8 7 6

$500 740 367 0688

$2BOO 1994 Geo Melro 3B 000

1 BOO 649 2323
74().245 9009

• J 2

•AK8763

1983 Pontiac 2000 PS PB AC 4
Cyl nd er 2 Coo s So l d Bod y

M&amp;J Aut o new mventory 1994
Geo Met o 31 000 atua m es

949 3096

Present System

• 9

"'A 4

1990 Foro Range sho t be d
4cy l 5s pd aluminum whee ls
uns good $750 304 895 3237 or

3960

1994 Hyundal

East

South

1997 Range r Fla1rs 1de Loaded
Must SeK 740 446 1800

992 2679

1600-537 9528
ECONOMY
Heahng And Cool ng
Up Grade VOUI

"' A 10 3 2

West
eKI09J 2

304 895 3080

0235

740 698 7055

2 Bedrooms Newly Oeco raled
F rst Avenue No Pe ts Rent
$360 Mo Deposll &amp; Rete ences
Aequ red 740 388 8321

Seve n yea r sta ndar d bred geld
lng sound gentle brOke to ca rt
and to r ide gentl e S 000 call

256 6467

Russell tame rs fe males
e ghl weeks old. wo rmed first
sho s ta Is docked $200 each

New 998 14x70 three bed oom
nctudes 6 months FREE tot rent
Inc tudes s ~ rt ng de uxe steps
and se tLJp On y S t 87 08 pe
man h w th $1075 down Call 1

Goats 740 256 1615

• 8 2

EEK&amp; MEEK

pamphlets

16 Having less
17 Identical

0996
A Groom ShOp Pe t Groom ng
Featur ng Hydro Bath Do n
Sheets 373 Geo ges Creek Ad
74Q-446 OZ31

Jac~

2 Bed oom apt 1n New Haven
ae a 30 477391711eavemes
sage

t985 Toyota Pick Up 2 WO 4
Speed 4 Cy l nder 1986 Chevy
As tra Van V 6 Auto $1 800
Each 740 446 4328

98

• Q 10 5 4

740 256

1540

03 04

1995 C26 Ca mara T Tops Load
ed Excellent Cond11 on 740 441

5pm

BOO 3B3 6B62

Clean

$2 650 00 Or Bes t Ollar Trade
740 256 1424

1994 Plymo uth Sundance Auto
AI 4 Doo rs $3 800 740 446

Pets for Sale

Auto Trans

19B! Dodge Dako a Clean

Loo~s Great Excel ent Gas M te

560

19BO Ford F 150 Pick Up VB

sage Co 304 BB2 3194

age 740 446-6686

New Douo 1ew de Rep o 4 Bed
rooms 2 Ba l hs Easy Terms 1

1 BB8 92B 3426

Building
Supplies

200""amp Cl sconnect o o~ out
s de w ra n hub Ca K &amp; K Mo
b e Home s 304 675 3000 Sam

La ge se ect on of used homes 2
or 3 bed ooms Start ng at $2995
Ou ck delve y Ca 740 385

Paymen~

FOI \bur Early 8 rd

Vme Sl reel 'Call 740 446 739B
1 800 499 3499

304 675 SOFA (76321

Sma I two bedroom basemen!
nea Rae ne No pets $300/month
plus uti1 es &amp; depos t 740 949
2587 even ngs

123~

Washers drye rs relrlge alor s
ra nges S~aggs Appt ances 76

Polly s New &amp; Used Furniture
We now have Army Surplus! II
2101 Jellerson Ave
Open 9 30 5 00 Man Sat

Fat Hogs Whole or hal S 89 per
pound on d ess we1ght WV Sau

M xed Hay Dela no Jackson Fa m
Ph740 446 1104 740-441 0450

304 773-5341

740 441

Livestock

630

Buy Sel Trade
Used &amp; Antrques
Furn ture

Mason WV

2 Bedroom House l ocated Near
Ho zer Hospital Completely Un
lurnlshed 304 675 4833

St reet lront co mmere a space
204 North Second Avenue M d
die port large w th ba throom and

meniS 1 937 866 2B;!2

R &amp; S Furniture

l ei E&amp;M Help You Get The Up
per Hand On Cutting The Cooling
Bills Now $40 00 Serv cmg Cos!
And We Will Have II Done In
Reaso nable T me Call E&amp;M At

2 Bedroom house n New Haven
$250/mo + $100 depos I + utll
bes 616 885 2347 Ask lor Barb

Wa nt ed Ford And Massey Fe r
guson Tractors Older Model s
8N 9N Jub lee 600 600 Se 1es
Th s Type Trac tors &amp; fmple

Good Mixed T1mottw Orc hard
Gr as.s Hay Second Cull ng Of
O"chard Grass 740 245 9212

Spor tsca rds for sal e ve ry nice
selactlon of mse t ca rd s and
rook es All at le as t 112 ol retail
P ces so me even 75% olf Call
now lor best sele ct on 740 949

1 600 213 B365

Houses for Rent

Aepa red New &amp; Aebu 11 In Sloctl

2957

1519

360

JET
AERATIONMOTORS

New gas Fr g daue rqnge bought
6197 self clean ng mov ng $300
7 4().992 3244

Make 3 Paym ents &amp; Move In A
New 4r70 3bed oom Ca 1
800 928 6777

YOU TH DEVE LOPMENT PRO

www moosemtl org

Mddleporl $23 000 OBO 740
992 ;!290

Handym an Speci al Cash Only
2&amp;3 Bedrooms $1 SOO &amp; Upl
On y 3 Lei! 30&lt;1 755 5561

BOO B37 3238

4038 Aecru1 1ng 888 775 26BO

PM

9£21

Un que Opportun ty In A zhe m
ar s Care un 1 tn Search 01 LPN
Pa 1 T me To Ca e Fo Spec al
Populat ons W h Ve ry Spec al
Needs Proven P og am Contac t
Pam Ca dwet A See n c H lis
Nus ng &amp; RehaO tat on Cente
31 I BucK idge Ad B dw~l OH

FESSION A LS Do You Be e\le
That Eve y Ch ld Deserves A
Healll'ly Happy Nu tur ng En v
ronment In Wh1ch To Grow? Re
c u ters From Moosehear Ch ld
Cny And Schoof W n Be In You
Area Ma 9 12 Pre Screen ng
For Car ng Energet c Patent In
d v1dua1s Or Couples To Res Oe
In Our Ca mpu s Homes (l ocated
40 M les W Of Ch cago) To Pro
v1de Gurdance And Suppor t For
Our Ch1ldren Newborn Through
H gh School Age Must Be Over
2 Have HS Dploma E~per ence
Working W th Vouth College De
gree Prelerred Comp ehens ve
Tratmng Prov ded Salary
S1 250/ Montll .. Free Room And
8oa rd (Over S750 Value) Bene
!Its Including Free Med cal In
suranCe Pension Plan And

N ce One BR Unlurn shed Apa rt
ment Range &amp; Relr g Provided
Wa e &amp; Garbage Paid Depos n
Aequ red 740 446 4345 Alt er 6

day 304 155 5BB5

304 755-5885

Sty1 st Needed No C entele Nee
essa y Contact Ca ot K ng F nest
Styl ng Sa on 740 446 8922
740 247 4334 Want ng lull ume &amp;
part 1me workers equ res g een
hOuse work expe ence not nee

304 773 5129

Custom made homes where
the customer sets the
pJice &amp; we own the bank
Only At
Oakwood Homes
o f Nitro WV

Someone To Wo k On Wee
kend s Sa tu oay Mo n ng To
Monday Mo n ng To Take Ca e
0 1 Elderly lady Send Name Ad
d ess &amp; Refe ences To P 0 Sox
128 V nton OH 45686

THORNTON GREENHOU SES

2 Story house s t ng on 60x t 50
lot 3br 1 Da til toea eel n Gillon

apa tments n Pome roy utlhtles
pa d rlO pets 740.992 5858

120 feet tong 80 feet long on oth
e s de 75 teet wide level Jot rn

In coun try two bedroo m house
total elec tr c w1th good me ya rd
on Oh o Aver b~ Rae na Wa er
sewer trash all mcuded n rent
$35 0 per month $1 50 depos1 t
Ava !ab le about March l Oth Can
see any! me call740 949 1012
1998 3br 2 baths lots of ext as
sel on tot Call lor more nlo 304
7557191

304 675 5162

740 38B B678

0008

220 Money to Loan
DIRECTLENDERS
~2:500 S50 000

Eldercare of WV s now accept
ng appl cal ons o pat 1me AN
Superv1s0 s and LPNS exper
enced n long te m heath ca e

63 95 Acres Approx B Acre
lal(e Gall a County County Water
And Elec ric $2 600 Per Acre

$10 500 740 2S6 1664

FREE
CASH
GAANTSI

N ce c e an elflency apart ment
refere nces &amp; depos t no pe ts

N ce one bedroom &amp; 2 bed roo m

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
(ATIENTION DEVELOPERS
SMALL BUSINESS
COUNTRY ESTATEI

4~0
197t Mon ti ce llo 12x 60 nob le
home I ke new range relngerator
was he and dryer a r th ree year
old gas fu rnace ca rpet 2 bed
room 1 lull oath t res axles new
-v nyl unde rp nn ng $5500 740

9B5 3929 or 740 9B5 3641

1600 21B 9000 EXI

25550
RN SUPERVISORS &amp; AN S

2955

2~t60

Col ege Schota sh ps
Bus ness Med cal B lis
Neve Repay
CaiToHFee

AN o LPN for p vate duty home
care Send resume to box CW 4
co Pon t Peasant Reg star 200
Man S
Pt Pleasant WV

Res aurant for ease or rent
equ pmen t or rent for someth ng
else owner w111 he p qua flet.l peo
pte good local on cau 304 882

2~60

INFANT ANDTOODLEACARE
l l ooseheart s Baoy V1t age
Seeks lnd v dua s To Res de On
Our Campus To Nu lure And
Ca e Fo Our lnfan s And Tad
dlers Esp Welcome Exper enced
Day Ca e Stall See Youth Deve
"'ment Pro ess ana s

located On Ne gnoornood Road
3 Bed ooms Bath LA FA W FP
Eat In K !chen HP /CA Deck
App ox 6/10 Acre G een School

Well kept v nyl s ded lwo story
home w lh matc h ng two car ga
a9e a ge fenced corner Jot n
very n ce neighbo rhood n Mid
dleport home has newer roof new
w ndows and many other updates
too nume ous to llst Call 740
992 6737 lor an appo ntment

Excll l n g New Opportunit y
net~d salespeople mmed a e y
par tme o lu me Call 740 992
5387 anytJme 1ea11e mes~e
Have An Avon Pa ty In You r
Home And Get A Free G I Call
AI sha ROJaS AI 740 245 9635
An Avon Independent Sa es
Represen at ve

House aM property app ox 4a
eras Idea l starter home Beech
St Pomeroy OH 304 882 2077

North
• Q J 5

39 Typea or
lack1t1
40 '!'willed
42 Biblical king
46 Comparative
ending
47 Neighbor of
Ark
51 Rang like a
bell
53 - lor (went
after)
55 Fishing gear
56 New York lake
57 Sly onea
58 Cream of -

Aasldenllal or comme rcial wiring
new serv ce or repairs Master u
censed e1ectnc1an Rid8nc,ur

Eleclncal WV000306 304 875
1786

ASTRO·GRAPH

you m conl1 dence 1oduy 0 1hers can 1
kee p sec rels e11her
TAURUS iApnl 20 May '01
BERNICE
Suck 10 your b ud~e ll oday pertammg
BEDE OSOL to lunds earmarked lor so me lhm~
essenual and spc:u hc It spc:nl they II
bt: hard 10 replace
GEMINI (May 21 June 201 Your
1mace " a lad trag1 le al th1s t1me so
be more aware lhan usual ol your
Thursday Mar.h 5 1998
bt:hav1or m public It IS Important 10
PI SCES (Feb 10 March 10) slnve tor ta\ orablc 1mpress1ons
CANCER (J une 21 Jul y 22) If
Membt:rs of your household m eh1
fi nd you ex tremely dltll cull to mter there s a particul ar group you feel
prel today because you II lell lhem ha.&lt;n t accepled you yet don t waste
any more ume trymg 10 hi '" Be~ m
one lhmg whtle expc:cu ng some
thmg else Know where to look tor nmg today ..:ek a fn endher response
LEO (J uly 23 Aug 22) A socml
romance and you II hnd II The
Aslro Graph Malchmaker mstantly acquamlance m1gh1 lry to 1mpose
reveals wh1ch s1gns are romanticall y upon your good nature loday He or
she IS the type: who does n 1have any
pc:rfecl for you Ma1l $2 75 to Mulch
maker c/o th iS newspaper P0 Box qualms about mampulat mg others
VIRGO (Aug Z3 Sepl 221 Today
1758 Murmy Hill S1at1o n New
you
m1ght be more rece ptive than
York NY 10 156
ARIES (March 21 Aphl 19) Even usual to the counsel of olhers Avo1d
separatmg the adv1ce from the g1ver
though you may fi nd a perfecl aud1
and
you II undersland the meamn~
ence don 1 repeal whal was lold to

rener
LIBR A (Sepl 23 Oc1 231 Th ~&gt;
miJ hl nol bt: lhe nght day for you 10
do 1 comphca1ed and unf Hm1har
as&lt;tg nme nl You could gel your
thumb m lhe way of the hammer
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221 Be
carefu l tod ty you re not overly gen
erous wllhout thmkmg and lend
somethmg that ISO I yours lo anolh
er before consullmg the owner first
SAG IITARI US (Nov 23 Dec
21) Today make certam your mate
has a vo1ce m all deciSions affecun g
the fam1ly It he or she 1s demed
mput 11 may open a hngenng sore
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Seveml tasks you do not rehsh domg
could slare you 1n the face today You
m1ght g1ve lhe lesser ones a try wh1le
the major ones may not even be
anempted
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 191 Do
not y1etd to 1emp1a11 Ms to take hnan
cwl nsk.&lt; loday Leave your check
book at home 1f you re headed tor the
lonery coumer
I

•

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