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                  <text>Page D8 • JJIIftb; a!bau-JJndbul

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunday, March 8, 1998

Ohio Lottery

New study stirs up more
What's in a (botanical) name?
controversy over food ·safety
By Gannet News Service
WASHINGTON- The Environmental Working Group, which uses
sophisticated computer analysis of
masses of federal data - from cash
payments to farmers to chemicals in
water supplies- ha.s bedeviled agriCuliure and agribusines.s for almost
two decades. and has done it again.
EWG has analyzed material from
some RO.OOO government laboratory
tests and coupled it with statistics on
children's tood consumption to con-

elude that more than I million children daily are exposed to possibly
unsafe levels of foodbome
organophosphate chemicals_ EWG 's
analytical method is similar to one
used in 1993 by the National Academy of Sciences in studying pesticides
in children's diets.
The EWG study focused on the 13
organophosphate insecticides. which
are deriv~tives of nerve gases. The
estimated .safe daily dose for each of
the 13 compounds were those devel-

oped recently by the Environmental
Protection Agency.
Organophosphates are used on
corn. cotton. fruits and vegetables and
for household and garden use to co.n- .
trol insects. Because two-thirds of
insectici de compounds contain
organophosphates. any ban would
resuh in crop losses and increases in
food prices. some agricuhural economists believe.

U.S., Canada work hard to
improve access for U.S. wheat
WASHINGTON CAP)- Hoping
to smooth over a chronic trade dispute, top agriculture officials in the
United States and Canada are work-

ofticials said they are aiming tor an
announcement within 30 days.
The tirsJ meeting between Glickman and Vanclief also touched on
several other trade disputes. but both
stressed that 90 percent of the agri cultural trade between the two countries is friendly.
_
"The U.S. and Canada are each
other's largest trading partners, ..
Glickman said. "There are obviously some matters of disagreement. But
we have more to gai n than we have
to lose."

ing on a deal to improve access for

American wheat expons to Canada.
Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman and his Canadian counterpart,
Lyle Vanclief. told reponers after a
meeting Tuesday the two sides hoped
to put together a pilot progmm providing greater opponu.nities for U.S.
growers to sell to Canadian grain elevators.

The major complaint of U.S.
WASHINGTON -Canon isn·l
wheat producers is that Canada 'ells
wheat in the United States at below king in Kansas. but a combination of
rost. not that Canada blocks imports hand&lt;-off government farm laws and
of U.S . wheat. Still, Glickman indi- scie nti fic advances led to a tourfold
cated that improving access would increase in the colton harvesllasl year
make a big difference in perceptions. in a stale known best for wheat.
It's part of a nationwide trend in
··11 would help to quell the feeling
that perhaps were in an unfair trad- which many farmers are abandoning
ing scenario now," he said. "h.will traditional crops in favor of lucrative
allernatives.
defuse this issue to some degree."
Vanclief. however. said Canada
In Kansas and across the Great
would make no commitment to Plains, low prices have led farmers to
reduce wheat sales in the United plant the smallest acreage of winter
States. He described the trade as a wheat since 1973. Before the 1996
market-driven "ebb and tlow" based "Freedom to Farm" taw. those farmon the quality and quantity of wheat en. would have been forced to continue planting the same crop to pro- .
available in Canada.
. ALthough Canada wants to teet their federal subsidies. Now, the ·
improve U.S. access to its market, ·subsidies are being phased out.
Last year in Kansas. an unpreceVa'nclief added, "We want the assurdented
number of farmers turned lO
ances that the product c-oming in
meets our standards.··
canon. Across the nation. the conan ·
Deiails .of the program have not crop was the second-largest on record
yet been agreed upon. but the two at 19 million bales. And the huge

1997 soybean . harvest - a record
2.73 billion bushels- retlects a shift
by Corn Belt farmers into a crop that
is paying them a high $6.65 a bushel.
Other factors have led farmers to
alternative crops. Use of new ~lage
techniques that conserve soil moisture allow many to plant com. soybeans and other crops in places
where the weather was too dry
before. Improvements in plant
hybrids , including some that resist
herbicides, allow farming in areas
where previously weeds had consumed ttie soil nutrients and choked
out crops.
"We're seeing a significant
change in rotation pallerns," Polansky said. "Ovemll. it now comes
down to the economic realities." For
all that economic planning. however.
weather is still one variable tile
farmer can't control.
In 1997, near-ideal conditions
prevailed across most or'the nation
and produced big harvests. Corn
production was No.3 all-time at 9.37
bill-ion bushels. the Agricuhure
Depanment said in its final 1997 crop
report.
Last year's wheat crop. which
includt:s varieties harvested in both
spring and fall,topped out at2.53 billion bushels. an II percent increase
over 1996 levels. The rice harvest
was 4 percent above the year before.
Among major crops, only sorghum
showed a marked decline. dropping
19 percent from 1996 at653 million
bushels.

• POUND RIDGE, N.Y. (AP)- A
· woman casually dropped a botanical
· name while showing me her flower
garden. When I looked blank. her
eyes registered surprise, tinged. I
thought, with disdain.
Well. my ego grieved. No one
likes to look ignorant. but then I
soothed l'lyself wit!) these thoughts:
I'm mostly a vegetable grower
and hardly, if ever, use a botanical
name . Though I'm acquainled with·
"Licopersicon esculentum" fortomato and '' Brassica oleracea (italica)"
for broccoli. I don't go around asking people how their Licopersicons
are doing.
The situation is more demanding
in ornamental gandening, where the
scientific name may be crucial for
accurate identification. si nee the
same common name may refer to different plants.
In line with this, you'll notice that
seed catalogs generally don't use
botanical names for vegetables, but
do so for ornamentals.
Now. no one expects an ordinary
gardener to memorize lists of botanical names and be able lo ranle them
off or flaunt them in your face. But
it helps greatly to research a plant
when necessary and come up with the
right name.
Dale Palmgren. store manager at
the Pound Ridge Nursery in my village, says her work is made much
easier when a customer uses botanical names.
Illustrating the problems present-

ed by common names. she mentioned
"cohosh." This. in the Eastern United Slates. could be "Cimicifuga
racemosa" of the buttercup- family or
"Caulophyllum thalictroides" of the
barbeny family, two unrelated plants.
Which doe~ the customer want?
Or take "pinks." Do you want the
China Pink, "Dianthus chinensis" or
is thepink you are.looking for Sweet
William, "Dianth~s barbatus"?
· Naming plant~. goes back to the
origins of civilillliion because of their
imponance in human nutrition, medication and survival and hence the
need for accurate identification. It
took ages to arrive where we are
today - the lnteroational Code of

Hall of Farner
Nitschke\dies
at age 61

Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants,
first issued in 1958 and under constant revision since.
Underthis code, a name ·applies to
the same plant everywhere in the
world.
The authoritative "America's Garden Book" (Macmillan 1996) notes
that. under the code, " 'Rosa rugosa'
refers to the same species of rose and only that species - whether in
its native Japan or in Italy. South
Africa. Argent!na. the United States
or anywhere else."
"Common, or vernacular names.
by c~ntrasl, are often applied to
unlike plants and frequently vary
from place to place." the volume

Sports on Page 4

VOl. 48, NO. 221'
©1998, Ohio V~lley Publishing Company

State elections, issues
preoccupy Strickland
By PAUL BARTON
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - AI a time
when most people in Rep. Ted Strickland's position would be consumed
with their own re-election to Congress. Strickland takes time to talk
about state government elections in
Ohio.
He has !I special interest in those
races, he said- all of them.
He plans to make each of the candidates for statewide office take a
stand on whether they think at least
$14 million in corporate tax dollars
that Ohio will soon roap from the privatization pf the U.S. government's
uranium enrichment plant near Piketon should be returned to the are·a for
economic development and job ereation.
He plans to publicize their intentions and doesn 't care if it helps
Democrats or Republicans.
If state .government can help big
cities like Cleveland and Cincinnati
with their sports stadiums, that is the
least it. can do for the economically
struggling 6th Congressional District
in Southern Ohio. he said.
"This is a maner of faimes.~." said
Strickland. who has already written
Gov_George Voinovich and contacted state legislators about the maner.

For Strickland, a focus on !!Uch 6th Strickland has vowed to be there.
District-specific issues has been the
"He has been in and out of the
central theme of this, his second go- community often," said Margaret
around in Congress.
PI anton. mayor of Chillicothe.
The 56-year-old Democrat first
" He is a very hard worker and
captured the seat in 1992 but lost it cares deeply about people and has
to Republican Frank Cremeans in been extremely responsive."
· 1994, then won it back from ereListen hard and even some Ohio
means in 1996.
Republicans will acknowledge that
The political fickleness of the Strickland is hard worker. But 1hey
area's voters has made it one of the still think they can take the seat back
most closely watched congressional in November.
districts in the country.
That's if they can find a candidate
The incumbent has lillie time to to unite behind after a potentially
make himself a celebrity in Wash- divisive primary that will feature Creington- if he or she is _to retain the means and Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister.
seat.
"We believe the 6th District is a
"I don-'t have any time off. I work fundamentally conservative district
all the time," Strickland said.
and Ted Strickland is not in tune with
"We are on a mi ssion. The mis- most people in the district either on
sion is to make sure that our pan of social issues or economic issues,"
Ohio gets the best possible represen- said Gary Abernathy, spokesman for
tat ion and gets its fair share of the Ohio Republican Pany.
resources."
That sounds like the message
. Since being re-elected, Strickland Republicans used against Strickland
has kept up an intense tmvel sched- in beating him in 1994, wben they
ule across the 14 counties he repre- found much to quarrel' about in his
sents. sometimes stopping off in recond, including·pro-choice votes on
each one during as lillie as a three- abonion and suppon of President
day period.
Clinton's first-term tax increase and
Whether the issue is helping to health care proposals.
cope with plant downsizings. tinishMeanwhile. the most recent list of
ing highway projects or helping legislative highlights put out by
farmers protest railroad freight qJsts. Strickland's staff trumpets his suppon

Racine Village Cou nc il. meeting
in regular session last week. gave its
endorsement to a 5.3'1 mill. 23-year
combined bond/levy for construction
of a new K-8 el~mentary school
building for the Southern Local
School District. The issue would
also include renovations to the high
school in Racine.
Mayor Scull Hill presided al _the
meeting .

A re.solution authorizing Clerk
Karen Lyons to transter money in the
general fund to pay for repairs to the
police cruiser was approved. Council also approved the third reading
and adopted the ordinance authorizing provision of health insurance to
the clerk and 1o the street commissioner.
David Ncigler. tire chief. reponed
that the tire · department would be
applying for a I00 percent grant
through the fire marshal's nftice in an
amount from $7.000 to $10,000.
This would be for updating "tum-out"
gear. Council also authorized the purchase of three hand-held radios and
. two he Imets.
Neigler also reponed that the tire.
school will be held in May instead of
March.

a month
.,
until Apflll999.
.I

80 Minutes for $17.~5
210 Minutes for $24{95
340 Minutes for $39.95
380 Minutes for $49.95
520 Minutes for $89.95

Council approved the request of
Martin-Mariena to use the annex tor
a safety meeting on March 24.
Street Commissioner Glenn Rizer
wa.' authorized to make various purchases of needed items.
Hill appointed Douglas Johnson
Jr. to the Racine Board of Public
Affairs. Jophnson replaces 'Bobbie
Roy: who was .elected to a seal on
council. Council approved the
appointment.
Council also approved the
appointment of Doug Lillie a.s village
solicitor.

Mayor Hill reponed on the deregulation meeting that he recently
anended in Columbus.
His opinion is that we will riot be
seeing any reduction in our bills. He
also reponed that he is to meet with
represenl&lt;ltives of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources in regards
to the boat ramp project.
Council authorized a commiuee 'to
investigate the possibility of purchasing a used pickup tru'ck from the
Ohio Depanment ofTmnsponation at
the April 6 sale in Marieua. A pickup truck would help cut down on the
use of the backhoe especially with
grass/weed culling season approach-

Plus, activate now and get
a phone you can count on...
not a cheap giveaway.

mg.
Discussion was held concerning
cemetery mowing and the need for
stop sign at Pearl and Fifth street~ by
the doctors' oftices for people coming fro.m the library. It was decided
to paint a stop ·line and stop on the
pavement. as well as installing a stop
ahead sign.
The mayor's repon for February
showed $522.01 paid to the village
general fund.
Clerk Karen Lyons reponed the
Ohio Environmental Protection
. Agency has sent notification that the
waterdepanment is in compliance of
having a certified operator.
Bill Browning. Middleport. is
under contract with the board of pub·lie affairs for the service.
The clerk al.,o reported that state
audit repon has been returned. The
repon contained several items critical
of the mayor's court operation of the
former mayor. it was noted. The
report is available for public viewing.
Altending were council members
Roben Beegle. Henry Bentz. John
Dudding. Joe Evans. and Henry
Lyons. Bobbie Roy wa.• absent.
Council recessed until 7 p.m. on
Monday, March 16.

.
- '

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i.

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'MII·Mari606/J2A-27.59

DAMAGE PREVENTED- Racine firefighters
fishing at the Racine Locks and Dam Sunday
afternoon helped prevent greater damage et the'
scene of this trector fire In Letert Falls. Flrefi!Jhters Jack Lyons Jr., and Boyd Bailey were
~lshlng .for 111uger when the department was

•
•

•

-

-

-

•

;

-

-·

Fund-raising letter for Hollister
surprises primary foe Cremeans

Rep. Strickland
for the 1997 Tax Relief Act, including its various tax cuts, credits and
exemptions. including those designed
to make it ea~ier for parents to pay for
their children's college.
· "I have lots of Appalachian kids
who are first generation college students, .. he said.
".What I have tried to do is identify those issues that are of particular
imponance to constituents in my district." .

That's why he ha' used his second
term as a chance to be a maJor advocate for expansion of children ·s
health care coverage as well. he said.
Republicans think they spot a
trend.,
(Continued on Page 3)

Congressional candidate Frank Cremeans was both "surprised" ai1d
"disturbed" to receive a leuer from Ohio Gov. George Yninovoch la.,l week
urging him to suppon his main opponent in the Republican primary Lt. Gov. Nancy Holli&gt;ter.
Both Cremeans and Hollister are seeking their pany's nomination to
oppose incumbent U.S. Sixth District Rep. Ted Sirickland, D-L uca&lt;Ville.
Cremeans said that whik receipt of the fund -raising leiter was "amusing ... the fact that our governor has taken a side in lhis race. by helping
my opponent raise money, was so mew hat dislurbing ."
Voinovich states in his leite r. "I have told Nancy I will do everyth ing
I can to help her win thi s election ."
In a statement released by his campaign. Gallipolis Republican Cremeans says that while he "u nderstands" t_he governor havi ng a preference
on the race, he wonders, "how appropriate it is for Gov. Voinovich to make
his choice known in suc h an aggressive manner."
In his leiter. Voinovich asks recipients to make a "generous gift of$35,
$50, $100. $250 or even $1.000" to the Holister campaign.
In his reply. Cremeans responds di.-.;ctly to Voinovich: "I appreciate
knowing your preference in this campaign ... bull hope you' ll understand
if I don't send in a contribution too soon."
Cremeans' response urges the governor to closely consider his "direct
involvement" in primary races.
"His position as governor of our state is definitely a political one." Cremeans said. "but, in some ways a governor should be able to transcend
politics. as well."
Cremeans added that. if elected to Congress. he plans to work as close
as possible with Voinovich- if he should become a U.S. se nator. a seat
the governor is seeki ng in the November election.
"I believe such close relationships are imponant for our state's wellbeing:· he said. 'This fund-raising leiter does not change my altitude:·
The leuer is signed by Voinovich. but carrie·s a disclaimer stat ing that
it was paid for by lhe Hollister for Congress campaign; and. "Not paid
for as government expense."

4

BACK IN BUSINESS- The Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge resumed its business of carrying traf·
fie from Meigs County to Mason County, W.Va.,

Saturday afternoon. -A vehicle passed by the
reinforced vertical beam damaged in a traffic
accident last week.

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge·reopens
after emergency repairs completed
The Pomeroy -Mason Bridge is
back in business following weekend
repairs.
The reopening. ~ccording to the
Ohio Department of Transportation.
is much to the relief of local
motorists. whose I0-minute commules grew to at lea&gt;l an hour as they
traveled to either Raven,wood.
W.Ya .. or Kanauga to cross the Ohio
River.
The bridge reopened at approximately 4:30p.m. Saturday. according
to ODOT spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo. It had been closed since Tuesday
night after a pickup truck struck a

vertical beam. cau . . ing damage to the
slructure.

roadway ~ervices admini~lraiOr for
District 10, met with the contrattor

On Friduy morning. officials with
ODOT Districl 10. Mariella, signed
a $25,000 emergency repair contract
with Kramer &amp; Sons. the contractor
on the new bridge at Point Pleasant.
W.Va. The contractor began moving
heavy equipment to Pomeroy on Fri c.Jay afternoon. eslimating it ~ou ld
take two days to complete the repairs.
On Saturday morning. the con-

and approved the propmcd change.
The driver of 1he pickup true~.
Abn Johnson. 1~ . Mctsnn. W.Va . wets

traclor\ engint!er sugge•aed a chanj!e

W.Va .. Pomeroy and Middleport. and
is where U.S. 33 cro."c' the Ohio
Ri ver. The 'pan is ,latcd for replacemen! in 2002.

to the repair plan that would streamline the work and save considerable
time. Pedigo 'aid. Don John son.

ticketed on charges of oPerating after
underage consumption. rl!ckl ess
operat'ion. failure to control. poso.;es-

sion of mariJuana and po"e"ion of
drug parapherna lia.
The bridge. built in 192H. connects
the river commu ni tie.., of Mason.

Ohioans give conditional support
to women's right to get abortions

Surgeons, Inc.

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

bond iss.ue.wi-ns
Racine Cpuncil's backing

Glickman said the Agriculture
Department would continue its use of
credit guarantees to enable Asia's
"troubled economies to buy US farm
goods. Already. some $2,1 billion in
guarantees have been offered.
"I want to make it clear we will
continue to do so," Glickman said of
the guarantees.
Commenting on USDA's 1998
forecast. Keith Collins. the depanment's chief economist. said soybean
and corn production would both
e~ceed 1997's big crops but wheat
and colton would both fall.
The soybean cop was forecast at
2.8 billion bushels. with com at 9.8
billion bushels. Wheat was expected
to drop by 9 percent to 2.3 billion
bushels and colton production to
decrease by 7 percent.
In the livestock sector. high production of beef. pouhry and pork will
lead to lower prices tor consumers
and for farmers. Collins said. Overall supplies are expected to increase
by 4.5 percent. even as exports
decline.
"Livestock and poultry producers
will take a· pounding." Collins said.
"Consumers will be in hog heaven as
they lind one bargain after another in
the meat e&lt;tse of their supermarket.··
Overall farm cash receipts for
1998 were estimated at $I 'IX billoon.
compa red to a record $202 billion
two years ago. Collins said. Lower
feed costs and interest rates will help
offset that. lead in~ to net faron
income of aboui ssi billion.

~~

t Section, 1o Pages. 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 9, 1998

~Southern

Joint
Implant

.

An 80 percent chance of
snow tonight, lows near
20. Tuesday, additional
daytime accumulation.
Highs near 30.

en tine

USDA projects exports
down $2.5 billion due
to Asia, competition
By CURT ANDERSON
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON - Projeqed_
U.S. farm e~ports were lowered
today by $2.5 billion due mainly to
the Asian economic crisis.and strong
competition from other countries,
Agricuhure Secretary Dan Glickman
announced.
The new 1998 export estimate of
$56 billion would be 2 percent below
1997 levels and would be the lowest
since the $54.6 billion in 1'195.
accordi ng to the Agriculture Depanment .
Also' today. the Agriculture
Department predicted that beef. paultry and pork production would
exceed 1997 levels this year_ mean.' ing lower meat prices for consumers_ '
It also said soybean and corn production was inqeasc.
1 asp~ the annual agricul IU outl.. lk forum . Glickman said
the reduction again demonstrates the
need for the lmernational Monetary
Fund bailout and for the United
States to continue opening up markets as alternatives to Asia.
" There are lessons here: We
shouldn ·1 put all our eggs in one basket ... Gl i c~man said. "We have a
huge stake in the global economy.··
Since the USDA's December
export projection. estimates for corn
exports were 'reduced by 7 million
tons. or II percent below 19'17. Oth '
er sharp reduclions were in expons of
. meat . hides and skins. and fruit and
- vegetables.
The orig inal 1'198 farm e&lt;pon
forecast was $58.5 billion.
Aside from the IMF bailout.

Super Lotto:
6·13·1 9-34·35-40
Kicker:
0·8··7·5·6·8
Pick 3:
7·0·4
Pick 4:
0-5·3·1

sum~~~t~he~~:;~~-rc~~mr~
where a tractor Inside a g1rage

caught fire.

The two we~ able to open the building and

move the tractor outside, eavlng a packing
machine and other vehicles. Cause of the fire
wes undetermined. (Racine VFD photo)

CINCINNATI (AP) - While woman should be ab le to obtain an George Voinovich signed into law
most Ohioans support a woman·s abonion for any rea~on. while 52 per- last month _
right to have an abortion in some cir- cent opposed abonions on demand.
Seventy-seven percent ., upponed
Of those polled, 72 percent parental consent before a minor can
cumstances, they also support restrictions such as a waiting period and favored access to abonion if there is have an abortion ; 80 percentlhought
parental consent for minors, accord- a strong chance of serious defect in women should mee1 with a doctor 24
the baby. a number that ha., barely hours before an abortion: and 59 pering to an Ohio Poll.
The question of whether women wavered in 12 years.
cent thought insurance ' hould not
Support when the woman's health cover state employe~!'! wanting to
should be able to have abortions on
.
demand has divided Ohioans almost is in danger, which stood at 85 per- have an abonion.
equally over the dozen years the Ohio cent in the poll, has been equally · Support for abortion on demand
steady.
was slightly higher among menJhan
Poll has been studying the issue.
The poll also showed that Ohioans women and among Democrats than
In the latest survey. published
Sunday in The Cincinnati Enquirer. favored the restrictions that Gov. Republicans.
46 percent of those polled said a
~
\

�Commentary

Monday, March 9, 1998

Page2
Monday, March 9, 1998

OHIO Weather
Thesday, March 10

The Daily Sentinel
'Lstabftsfittf 1n 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992·2156 • Fax 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Th1 Sentmel welcomiS letttr• to the ~/tor from reader• on a broad nmge of topics
Short letters (300 words or iell) t11v1 the t»st cnance or being published Typed letters '"' prefe"HJ and all m.y M tdlted Each should Include 11 slgnatur• addrep,
artd daytlmt phone numbfr Sf'Kify a date If there s a refertnce to a previous artlc/1
or lerttr. Mall to lefttrs to the Editor. The Senrlntl, 111 Court Sl PoNroy Ohio
45769;

or, FAX to 614-992·2157

Court looks for ways to tone
·down annoying legal solicitations
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Assoc1ated Press Wnter
COLUMBUS - The Oh oo Supocmc Court IS lookong for w.ovs to l.tkc
-.,um..: of the tn ~ ult ou t ol the tnJUIIC S sullcn.:d hy acctdcn t v~~.: ltm s
SpCul tl:ully the &lt;.:ourt ts loolo ng !or a way to tone dov.n mall ;.. ohc.:lt Hwns
-.c nt nut by some personal InJUry law) CI S In some cases lcttc1s ha\C .tfii\Cd
hc l&lt;11e the func1al ol ,1 pcoson killed m a ca r crash
The puhloc " ollended hy lhos ktnd of conduct saod Chtcl lmlocc
I hom'' Moyer It g1vcs the prol essJOn a had 1magc
Moyer wa' on the losrn g mJc when the seven JUstu.: cs \Otct! c.lrllcJ th l~
V&lt;&lt;tr nn a ptoposa ll o bar l.twycrs 110111 asktng by mall to rcptescm 1 ICIII11S
'" l.n1111y members lor 10 days .tiler an Injury or death Irom .tn .tcctdent or
n.tlur.t l diS.l&lt;ter Lawyers .tlre.tdy .trc ptoh tb llcd lrom soloctllng husone"
1rom am dent vIell ms on person or by Ide phone
Mo)cr st1ll lhmks the coohng oi l pc nod ts .m appropnatc w.oy 10 deal
\\llh m crl y agg •css1vc layer~ and nolt::&lt;i that the mall han h~ts hct.:n .H.loptcd
111 Fl ond.t T.xas Arkansas and Nc1ada .ond upheld 111 the US Supreme
Coull
1 he Ohoo Stale Bar Assocoallon .tl so supported the han
1 heres been a \Cry str0ng Jeelon g tn the profesSIOn lh,l( dtcnls slmu ld
come 10 lawyers when they have lcg.tl problems .ond that sohcll.ltl&lt;ln ts .1 btl
diSI.tslclul satd Dennts Whalen assoctatl nn spokesman
In l.tel. RO percent of lawyers survcved m a bar .tssoctatoon poll conductd 111 laic January favored some sorl ol rcslrtctlon Whalen satd
But opponents of the propo&lt;al worrocd th.n some people nughl be pressured hy msurancc compamcs mto s1gnmg away thCJI nghts without ever
gcttiiH! .ldv1cc I rom a lawyer
Though some people m1gh1 find them dtslasteful the letters a1 least let
people kn &gt;W they arc cnmled to legal representation sa1d Justtcc E\clyn
S1ra11on
Stncl the court reJected the 30 day rule Stratton has been workmg wtth
lhc st.IIL .1nd l:Ounty bar assocmt10ns tn come up with an altcrnatt\C
One tdca hcmg consodcrcd os to ' tandardozc the lcners sent nut 10

Shenanigan boosts AARP's member ·r olls
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
Mcntbershtp on the nation 's
largest lobbyong organoza110n ·• the
Amcncan Assoctatlon of Retored
Persons has been "droppmg hke a
stone " lor several years now, one of
thcor top olltcoals confided to us
The AARP has been desperate to
keep lh" qu1c1 It has been so desperate 10 ocverse the trend that at one
poonl offtcoals secretly monkeyed
wllh a membershop fonnula 10 g1ve
the orga nozau on l11erally an
ovcrn 1g h1 boost of more than 2 m1l
It on members -- w thout recc11 •ng a
songlc new membership appltcatoon
To understand what a shock the
dedonong membership numbers whoch translates to declonong clout
on Capttol Holl ts 10 AARP longtimers consoder the boast thai cur
rent Executive 1Drrector Horace
Deets maJc 0\Cr brcakfa" a dcc,tde
ago
Then chtel of s1aff Deets was
httclmg an oncom in g c.ccut11 c
dn cc tm on tile OlgLmlzatlon
At:~.:urd111g to handwnttcn notes
Deets satd 1ha11he AARP was con it
Jcnlly ex pecting to have 41 moll ton
mcmhets by (the} 1990s
These d.ty s AARP tnstdcos

know, they ' II be
happy 1f ihey
call JUSI stay
even wtth a lntle
over 30 mtlhon
members by ihe
year 2000 The
s11 uat1on
has
become so dts
co nccrtmg mtcr
Moiler &amp;
nally that top
Anderson
off1eoa ls have
felt forced lo make a vortue out of Its
hand1cap
When Deets reports to the board
of dorcc1ors about the numbers. he IS
neolheo downcaSt nor apologcuc He
checro ly tells them e\crylhtn g ts
go1ng along sw ommmgly because
hts
strategy ' of
break -even
goowth or modest growth "
go1ng JUst as planned It s a btl ltkc
the CEO ol a maJOr corporation
lclhn g hts sin&lt; kholdcrs that the
comp.ony cxpencnccd onl y a 1/2
percent ptoltt -- JUst as planned
bcc41usc why make more money 1
In l.ou the truth IS unsettling
Th1s 1s an 01£!an11at10n that s m~.:c tis
lo undon g ,,;- 19S8 has avcr.lgcd
nearly I om Ilion new members each
ycm But not occcntly At the hegm
nong ol 1994 the AARP had more

Accu Weather• forecast for

.. .
t

VILIIIll\ .llld thct r f :J. IlliiiC~
1 h 11 ~... ould 1ncludc w.1rnmgs :.&amp;gmn!&lt;il stgnmg .my msuram:c watvcrs tt
thl'rc m..: .m~ llngcnng InJUries amhL'nllnds:rs to people tmohcd tn .\cu ·
tknt ' to !lie pnlh.. C rcpons ,md to t.1kc fHL:Iurcs olthc &lt;.l.tmagt: w h~.:nt:\Cr pm1
,1hlc Stt ,Ilion s.1 1tl
ln tilL lllL.Jntrmc Stratton llllc1' o n~.: oth~,;r ptccc ol ad\ 1u.: lm pcl1plc who
n.:Ll: l\ ~o: un\\ ,antcd lcg.d lcltt.:rs
II )OU Jon t like It you L.ln lo:oi' 11 1n th ~.:

In a do sed-door scssoon the
board agreed th.tt so nee the numhcrs
were droppmg so prcctpllously they
would reverse the trend hy multlplyong the numhcr ol households hy
I 6 P.trt ol the t.llton.tltz.ttton was
that some numhe1 s su g~c,.t cd th.lt 60
percen t ol .til households mcluded a

Ice

spouse

But th.tl s ,olmosl hc stdc the

By The Associated Press
Cold aor w1ll enter Oh1o tomght. and temperatures Will be 111 the songle
dtgtts across mosl of the slate by Wednesday morntng
·
The wmds that develop 1h1s afternoon Will ease lomghl. and snow Will
taper to Ourrtes Lows woll be m the upper teens and low 20s
Wmds woll dte down on Tuesday. bul Ourroes are possible HtjlhS Will be
on the mod-20s to low 30s, whtch os 10 to 20 degrees below nonnal.
The record htgh 1empera1ure for 1h1s date at the Columbus weather sta·
uon was 77 set m 1974 The record low was -6 m 1984
Sunset today w1ll be at6 32 p.m Sunnse Tuesday Wtll be at 6 51 am
Weather forecast:
Tomght An 80 percent chance of snow Accumulations of one to three
m~hes. Lows near 20 West wmd IS to 25 mph
Tuesday A 70 percent chance of snow Addot10nal dayt1me accumulaltons
of one to two mches Htghs near 30
Tuesday mght Loght snow ltkely Lows 111 the lowerleens
Extended forecast:
Wedne&lt;day Mostly cloudy woth scattered snow showers Htghs m the
upper20s
Thursday Partly cloudy With &lt;eattered snow showers Lows on the lower teens and h1ghs near 30
Fndny Mostly clear Lows 10 to 15 and htghs m the upper 30s

Specter urges caution before ·
move to impeachment begins
WASHINGTON (AP) - Speakong of the "trauma"tl would bnng to .
lhe nation, Republican Sen Arlen ,'
Specter sa1d Congress should not ,
start Impeachment proceedmgs
agamst Prestdent Clmton unless 11 has
clear-cut ev1dence of cnmonal wrong·
domg
Specter, R-Pa., also cnttctzed the
tdea of Senate MaJonty Lender Trent
Lou, that Congress take the less drasIIC course of censunng the prestdent
1f mdependent counsel Kenneth Starr
cannot prove Cltnton had sex wtth a
Whole House tntem and asked her to
he about 11 under oath
"I don't thonk a censure resolu11on
would be worth a tonker's dam,"
Specter sa1d on · Fox News Sunday ·
"I don't thmk tht· Congress IS m ihe
bus mess of censunng ihe'prestdent,"
a move that would have no legal ram·
tficauons
One opttOn for Starr. 1f he does not
find credoble evodence that Clinton
Obstructed JUStice or otherwose broke
the law, 1s to report hts findongs to the
House and let 11 decode whether to
begm Impeachment hearongs
If there 1s cred1ble ev1den•e.
Specter saod, "so be ot • But • I don t
thtnk there ought to be an Impeachment proceedmg brought unless there
IS an open-and-shu! case Amenca
cannot stand the trauma ot an
1mpeachmen1 mauer unless 11 IS cutand-dry ·
Rep Btll McCollum. R·Fia a
member of the Judoc1ary Commottee
responsible for ompeachment proceedongs, satd heanngs would be necessary tf tl's proved that Chnton hed

l 1i.l''&gt; h l&lt; lll

!Barry's World /

HEll!

,

A\'fO~NE'1CS
FEE~ fiJ~t&gt;
(WO'-I&lt;eP IN
WJ.4 IT f "'o~Kf.)

f,O.S.

--

•

9i--~
Cl 1998

NEA Inc

The new. Richard Nixon White House
war ronm

Nat Hentoff
11\\C:-illg.lltOn

HE

~II

the
While
Hom.:e ts su~.:­
ccedtng hrol lt.tnll)
'"
t:h,mgtng the
lm.:w.; o[ Kenneth
St.ttt s
1s nov. th ~:

lm;us

the t!t~.tl ol
th\.: w.u mom 1s to d~sc1t.:d1t r~npcdc
m.ty h.tvc seen The M.tltcsc F.tl .md ulttmatcly dcsiJOV Ius lll\ Csll~.t­
um too ollcn Consu.lcr Terry tum so that tile Comch:u:k KHJ c.;~an
h!c.llhc l1ccly on\:c nWIL
L~..:nzncr lor mst.mc..:c who wh1lc
Kenneth St.Irr s sc ll -~..:on tr ol h~l"'
"orkmg lot 1l1e prestdcm s men dur-.
hccn
put to the tc't - when lm
mg the Scn~uc hcann :;' on ~.:.u npm gn
m.,.t.tnu::
1cporh ol tht.• war wom"'
lm.JIKC w.\s .Jl~.:Uscd hy .1 Dcrnnu.Ireach
wc
tc on Mtch.tcl Dull) '
IIL ~cn.1tm Jo:oicph L1l:h1.:1111Jn ol
~K:ulunt
m
Tu11c mag.t11nc {M.m.: h
Ct)nnc~..:IH.: Ut tl l cng.•g•n g m
,m
2)
The
clandestine
w.or hcg,on 4u1
mtru~10n mtn tht.: "Y ~t e m
hy has
e1
ly
telephone
c.tlls
lt om out-olpl.umcd mvcsllg.ttmn ol St.:n Dlm
wwn
l.1wyus
who
Ul
gcd
rc purtcr"' to
Nockles (R Ok l.t) .ond ht s Wil e
01 l.llk P.oll.tJmo whllsc dossoct look .11 1h" old l cdco~ l c.tsc '" that
- ,,, desmhcJ h) Wtllt .un S.tlttc on sc.tlcd police 1cpo11 Nc" c.nnc the
mystery laxD g1 c.u pile" ol mky
the New Yoo k run"
mcludcs
black cltpp tngs dct.nltng the duhtdc.:.ilmg wllh Cl upt1ng h1mhn..,
ous ln Vl:sllgatl\c h.1h11s ol the men
v. ho nught h,1ve cmh.m.ts~ct.1 thr
who wot k lor Kl:nnc th St.lrr
president
Fon.tll) Starr dod lose hts cool In
But none ol the pr1.:su.lcnt ~ men USIIlg Iu s suhpocna rowel to haul m
or thcrr h1rclmg.., h.l\ c hU1gl.u11ct! .1 Stdney Bluo&gt;tcnth.tl
the Whole
psycht.tlrt&gt;l s oil tee to glcc lull y House s nustcr acator ol t.:onsp1ra
~.::x.pmt: the mnn laHs ol a Lflllc.; ol
c..:y thconcs St~lrr gave Blumenth.ll
!he prcstdcnl In thai 1espcc1 we .md th1.: rest ol the war room a lrcc
have ad\,lllt.:t.:d som~.::w h.tt lrom
Ul1\C pn\ll egl' cmer-urs encm1cs
IP•I" .mtl the U:oie ol prl\ ate eyes who

St&lt;HI ol LOUI:oit.: 1s fl!!ht

In the :oi.une c..:~l!\l: JustH.:C Arlhur
Goldhcrg m .1 LOilt.: urnng opmmn.
poonted out II mdovodu.tl cttlzcns

mcnt umvcrsc
1l11s '' .1 str.mg:c nwountleJstandrng nl the F1rst AmcndmL:ntt.:OUllllt!

the t.lllg lclll rc~ .md thvcrsums Wllh ·
cn:c.l .1w.1y .1lte1 the.;: sudden t.h st:ov
cry ol Rtch.ttd Noxon s tcm.nk.&gt;hlc
'ollct:tum nl t.1pc l~.:: ~.:or&lt;.lmg:oi Ken
ncth St.trr ts not ltkcly In enjoy such
a lhundcrd.tp nl luck It woll he h.ml
gomg lor some 11111c to &lt;.:omt.: \-\lth
the h.tnshccs I J,une s Ctr'! llc) tho
conjurers (Stdney Blumcnth.tl) md
the pl.atoons ol l.1w ycrs i..lccpc mn ~ 111
the lng

loom ,o foomer JUdge on the DC CircU it Court ol Appc.1ls who also
su \ ctJ ~1 s solu.:uor gcncr~tl
In Ger11 vs Roher! Welch
(1974) Jusltcc Lew os Powell spc.lkmg lm the Supreme Court cmph.tstzed th.u under !he Forsl Amendment there IS no such lhmg as a
l.tlsc 1dc.1 However perntctous an
opmuon nt.ty seem we depend lor us
t.:m rc~.: llon ntJt on the u1ns~.:tcm.:cs ol
Judge' and JUitcs hut on !he compclttton ol other 1Jc.os ·
And ol to u"c !here wa&gt; Justtcc
Wtlh.un Bocnn.m '" New York
rune' vs Su lhv.m (1964) · Erroneous statement IS 1ne vuahle m a
I rce dehale and It must he protected tl the freedoms ol c•prcssoon arc
to have the hrcalhong 'pace th.n they
need IO sUrVIVC

may be held lt.ohle lor sit ong W&lt;llds
whtch .t JUry lomh l.ol~c .md m.tlt l.:IOUsly mot1 v.atcd there t.:.m he httlc
dnuhtth.ll puhltc &lt;ich.tle ond .tdloc.t
t.:y wall he t.:cm,lr.lmt.:d
Blumcnth.tl shou ld 1!d .1 1,11 se
lrnm h1s hoss ltll h,\\m'g provoked
Kenneth St~tu to lnsl: t.:onlrol .md
lunh~r dtsll.tcl .tllenttnn loom Iu s
own JOh

Back tnlhc 111nc ol

W.ne~ g.nc

.til

Me tnwhtle the Woz.ord ol 0;
w.tlks .unong the people hut when
he IS h.tck .tl the Whole House he ts
prohx tcd lrom the d1sanlcL:trng sun
hght ol the press P.1y no ancntlon lo
the man hehtnd the cun.un - he IS
dmng the people's hustncss
Nat Hcntoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Boll of Rights.

By Dian Vujovich
Want lo on vcsl on no-lo.td lu nds
hut don l lhtnk you have enough
money 1o gel started 1 Here arc a lew
lunds you can get onto on the cheap
One of the advantages ol ownong
~utual funds IS that 11 "sually docsn 1 take an ann and a leg of your
hard earned cash to mvest m one
Whole we vc seen thef 1ndves1mcn1
m1n1mums on many un s go up
over !he )Cars Mormngslar found
10 stock funds thai have no loads
redemption tees or 12h I fees , wllh
ntlntmum mves1ment rcqutremcms
of $250 or less Lt&lt;teo by performancc over the last 12 months they
arc
-- MSB Fund Thos long-term
capot al appreeoauon fund has three
slars and falls onto Mommgslar's
large blend category Dunng the last
12 months endmg Jan 31, the fund's
total return was 25 55 percent Over
the last five years, Its average annu
al total return was 17 ~8 percent
Ftfty bucks IS allot lakes to become
a shareholder on thos fund

- Muhlenkamp Total return IS
the on vestm ent objccl ovc ol thos lourstar rated mtdcap value fund Its 12
month Iota I return was 24 4K percent , lt1c year average annual lotal
return 19 I0 percent lntttal mtnt
mum purchase ts $200
-- Amana Income Thts three star
lund, catcgonzed as a large value
lun d. mTvhesls hascddon lslanuc pdrtn1
copes
at means eco&lt;oons nee to
be approved by the Norlh Amencan
lslamoc Trust and on vcstm g on
1h1n gs hkc liquor. wme, casmo
pornography and gambling stocks IS
prohtbned Its 12-month total return
22 78 percent, fovc-ycar average
annual return 13 28 per.cnt lntttal
mmomum purchase $100
-- Stonebndgc Growth Th1s twostar large blend ,Browl h fu nd had a
total return of 18 66 percent overthe
last 12 months F1ve year average
annual return ~2 89 percenl lntttal
m1nomum onvcstmenl $250
- Leonelli Balanced It only
lakes S100 to get started on th1s fund,
calegonzed as a domes11c hybnd

Because the fund IS young, tl has no
star ratong or long-tenn performance
numbers Over the pasl 12 months,
ots total return was 17 86 percent
- Strong Tot.ll Rcturn Classified
as a large growth lund, 11 returned
16 52 percent over the past year, and
had a 16 46 percent average annual
total return lor the last live years It
c$a rroes a lwo-star mtmg and takes
250 to get on
--Strong Asset Allocation Three
stars go to lhts domes11c hyhnd fund
that over the last year returned 14 89
percent to Its shareholders Fovcyear average annual total return
II 77 percent lnotoal m1mmum
onvcstment $250
-- Amana Growth Thts fund
mvcsts 1ts assets on accordance woth
Islamic reltgoous pnnc1ples Over
the last 12 month s, th1s modcap
blend fund had a lotal return of
13 23 percent There IS no five-year
pcrfonnance number for thos twostar rated fund lnotoal monomum
onvestment IS $100
-- Annstrong Associates Thts

largNap growth fund holds a two:
star ratmg and had a tolal return of
10 35 percent over the last It
months F1vc-year average annual
return 12 57 percent Mmomum 1noJ
toalmv~stmont IS $250
'
Adams Equoty Over the last l l
months, lhos modcap value fund hal{
a lotal relurn ol 8 70 percent;
Although ot ha.• no star mltng o•
long-term pertonnancc numhers, 11~
mommum onveslment IS $0 So yo~
can Inerally mves t $1 or $2 10 th 1 ~
fund and he a shareholder
'
, All funds ment1oned have man~
agcment fees that range bel wee~
075 and 100 percent per year
•
When eval uatmg these funds ;
remember that over the last l:l
months the total return lor the S&amp;F'
500 ondcx wa' 26 90 percent Th~
average annual total return over the
last five years for thai mde• was
20 31 percent
Dian Vujovich is •he author of
"Straight Talk 1 .out Mutaai
Funds" and "Straight Talk ~bou(
lllvesting for Your Retirement,"

(USPS 213·9&amp;0)
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under oath or obstructed JUStice Bul,
he added, "Ken Smrr could JUSt as
eas1ly report to the Congress m a few
weeks that he does not have !he evo·
dence and that Will be the end of ot "
MoSI Republicans have tned to
stay out of ihe fight between the
Whue House and Slarr over the
melhods and extenl of lhe ondepen~nt counsel onvestogatoon
!lui differences came to the sur
face th1s weekend when Lott, RMtss • suggested that Slarr "show h1s
cards" and wrap up the mvesltgatton
He alro proposed !hat Congress eonsoder a r&lt;solutton to censure the
presodenl of ol lacks the ev1dence to
move on ompeachmem
Specter backed Lon s comments
on !he pace of Starr's mvesugat1on
" llhtnk a gentle nudge by Trent Lon
1s a good !hong "
But other Republtcans were openly cnt1cal House Speaker Newt Gmgnch on Saturday satd Starr should
cons1der the needs of JUSttce. not pubhe relations, on carryong out ht&lt;
duioes Sen Fred Thompson. RTenn, s31d that wh1le "we'd allltke
to see 11 over woth one way or aneth·
er we need to leave h1m alone and
let hom do hts JOb"
"I don't know what Senator Lou
has m mmd," former Education Sec·
retary and conservative leader
Wilham Bennen sa1d Sunday on
NBC's 'Meet the Press" "Ken Starr
ts down, he s betng kocked by every
Democrat from here 10 Caltforn1a and
Trent dectdes to throw somelhtng on
htm 100 Doesn't seem to me to make
much sense ,.

The Daily Sentinel

Today in history Stock funds boast low startup fees .
By The Associated Press
rml.oy " Milnd.oy Match 9 the 68th d.oy ol 1998 There arc 297 d.oys lclt
10 the ) car
l mlt) s Ht ghloght on HIStory
On Match 9 1862 dunng the Covtl War !he oroncluds Monotor and Vor
gonoa (lorntcrly Mcrnm.tc) cla.hed lor l11c hours lo a draw al Hampton
Roads V,t
On lht s dale
In 1796 Napoleon Bonaparte marncd Joseph me de Bcauharnaos
In 1916 Mcxocan raodcrs led hy Pancho Voila attacked Columbus N M .
l"llm ~ more than a dozen people
In "1911 Congress called 1111 0 specoal scsston hy President Roosevelt
began '" I00 day s of enacting New Deal lcgtslauon
In 1 94~ dunng World War II US B29 bombers launched mcend1ary
bomh anacks agaonst Japan causong Widespread devastanon
In 19~4 CBS ne\\sman Ed"ard R Murrow erotically rev1ewed Woscon ·
son Sen Joseph R McCarthy s ant o Communosm campaogn on · Sec It
Now
In 1975 work began on the Alaskan ool popeltne
In 1977 about a dozen armed Hanaft Musltms onvaded three buoldmgs m
Washmgton DC, ktlhng one person and takmg more than 130 hostages The
socge ended 1wo da) s later
In 1990, Dr Antoma Novello was sworn on as surgeon general, beeomon,g
the ftrst woman and !he first Htspamc to hold the JOb
In 1992 fonnerlsraelt Pnme Monoster Menachem Begm dtcd on Tel Avov
al age 78

Kathryn 'June' Hysell

Chance of snow remains
high for tonight, Tuesday

It ' a pcrccplton ol power th.tt
gets them on the door 111 the ltrst
plai.:C
one top c..:ongrcsswn.tl
Dcmocrattc stallcr s.1ys " II we get
!he perception that lhcor mcmhcrs
arc lcavtng on droves and they're
htdmg that wtth some .1ccountong
' shcnantgan hchevc me. ot w11i have
an clfccl up here '
Jack Anderson and Jan Moiler
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

pa s.' to hammer hom some more The
While House has ondccd spread
ml ormation among the press mtendcd to do slocatc Starr and Ins team
But It ts leg.tl to he guemlla mcdoa
warnors on hchall ol the prcsodcnt 's
survoval Blumenthal w,t, sktllcd al
that g.tmc hclm c he ever got to the
While House
Kenneth Starr 11yong 10 JUsttly
hos h.ovong brought Blumenlh.tl
hclorc the grand JUry s.oys thai the
F1r't Amendment s mtcrcst 1s an
llulh .ond thai locs .tnd dostorloons
1ta1c no pl.~&lt;:c m out Ftrst Amend

Sunny Pt ClOudy Cloudy

Mary Irene' Pete" Golmore, 78, Pomeroy, dted Sunday, March 8. 1998m
Holzer Med1cal Cenler
Arrangements w1ll be announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fosher
Funeral Home

VIa Associated Press GraphgNet

pn1111 They d h.uJ tl.n'l m.mhCI:oi lo1
yl:.ll \ .md llt:\Cl ~,;ho .... : to usc I 6
helm&lt; The clkLI m ,, smgle J.oy
w~1s to mr1c tsl: the numh'-=r ol
rcpmtcd mcmhers lwm lJ (ll;j nul-

protest~

t.JUC SIIOn

t

Mary Irene 'Pete' Gilmore

w11i h.11nper thctr .thtllly 10 mlluence
a Rcpuhltcan Cungoess lh.n \\,tnls to
rclorm programs hkc Sm:1.1l Sn unly .tnd Medoc.trc dcspotc the g1oup's

thai the new

••

WVA

To AARP lc.tdcrs the member

flO

I

1 99~

shtp loss Js .l scnous u1s 1s - .mJ

Noxon defense
taL: IIl: :oi
Thc1e "

PA

• IColumbus l2e• I

loon lo n 76 mtllton S&lt;l the y
rcceovcd .t p.tpcl hoosl ol 2 II mol
lum llll'rnhel s 111 .m IR :&lt;it.mt .mJ the
OC"- l1 -m lllum mcmhcr UlUOt was
4U1 etly Included tn the sl.md.trd l.tsl
pat .tgr.tph ctl .til AARP ptp s tcl ~.ts-

By Nat HentoH
Before Rtchard N1xon s I all I
w.ts told hy ,, reporter .11 ABC Telc' ISlOll New~ that m 1C scmd11 n,g .a
''"ry on the Internal Rc,cnue Scr
v1~..:c he hnd found my name on a
, m,ll ll tsl ol JOUrnaltsh who had p.ult cularly trrtlatcd the While Hou se
My wole .ond I h.td wondcocd why
the IRS l1.1d hccn so mtnulcly con
l:CIIletl W ith OUr (,IX ICtUrns
The cUII COt .lggrcsst\Ci y dclcnd
~.:d mode .n the Whue House Js
thctdotc l.umh.Jr- d.um" ol excc-

•

Hoy Dale Foster, 66, Pomt Pleasant. W Va. dted Saturday, March 7. 1998
at hts resodence.
Born Jan 26, 1932 m Swandale, Clay County, WVa, son of ihe late Roy
Earl and Sus1e Barnell Foster, he was rettred from Raven&lt; wood Alummum
Corp
AU S Anny Aor Force veteran on North Afnca, he was a member of the
Monturn Lodge 19, AF &amp; AM, Pomt Pleasant, the Amerocan Legoon Post of
New Haven, W Va • the Moose Lodge 731 of Pomt Pleasant, and Umted Steelworkers ot Ameroca Local 5668
Survtvmg are hts wofe. Helen Drozdnck Foster, a son, Roy Mochael (Lots)
Foster of Albnght W Va , a daughter, Kathy (Russ) Gaskms of Barboursville,
W Va , and five grandc;Jnldren
He was also preceded m death by a brother H1llery Wade Foster, and a
soster, Louose Gregoroch
Semces woll be 8 30 p m. Tuesday m the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home.
Pomt Pleasant, With the Rev Bob Graham officoatmg Graveside servtces Will
be I p m Wednesday m the SugarCreek Cemetery, Gassaway, W Va. where
Masomc serv1ces woll also be held Fnends may call at the funeral home from
6-9 p m Tuesday

INO

pruspcLt i\C ~ ll c nt s

Rogh1 no" lor onstance maol ,o ltcllatlnns have to be clearly marked on
red onk a&gt;ad1crt"tng But some lawyers have Ined lo sktrt that rule by pnnt
mg c&gt;c" lhmg on the envelope on red onk or by dtsguosong the maolmg as a
htll Str.Uion s.ttd
There .He ,t lot of lncks thai ; }muld nnl he there she added
Anothc1 .ncnuc lor change'' a ~.:rc.tu on ol ,, h1ll ol nghl:oi lor .tcudc nt

Hoy Dale Foster

MICH

more than 22 m•lhon dues-payong
members But the 33 molhon figure
ts frequ e ntl ~ used because the
AARP goves a free membership to
each applicant's spouse So, onsode
the AARP, when they talk about patd
memberships. they refer to tl as 22
moll ton · households "
For more than a decade AARP
qfflcoals have "'sumcd that there
was one hvmg :oipousc 111 every two
households So lhetr membcoshtp
ligures usmg tl formula accepted hy
advcruscrs m thctr publtcauons.
multiply !he number ol households
by I 5 to calculate the full membershop number -- at least until July

than 33 molhon members But by ihe
end of that year·· wh1ch featured the
orgamzat10n's support of the
Democrats' health care b1lls desptte
member objections -- they had lost a
m1lhon members
The trend has roughly contonued
each yaar fnstead of gaonong I mtl hon new members a year, they seem
to be losong that amount And 11 hasn't changed Wtlh the agmg of ihc
baby boomers tt 's gotten worse
The baby boom generauon started
turnong 50 on 1996, and 4 m1lhon d1d
so by the end of the year But on the
first SIX monlhs, when the AARP
had a new pool of lwo m1llton potential members, membershtp dropped
by 660,000 It was shapmg up 10 be
a worse year than the prevoous one
Outsoders, and most AARP
stalfers, arc unaware of the depth ol
the mcmbcrshtp drop hccausc the
organozatton hod 11 wtth a neat little
slctght of hand called the spouse
laclor on July 1995 our assoc1atc
Dale Van Atta has learned Van
Att.\ s new book on the AARP
Trust Betrayed lnsodc !he AARP
(Rcgnery). os to be released lhos
month
Though 11 's not wcll-kno\\n the
AARP has actually never had many

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IS66H

• 510972

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....... ........ 411'·
Akzo ... .............................. 1O'ft.
AmrTech ...............................44'1,
Ashland 011 ......................... 55~1o
AT&amp;T ..................................601.
Bank Ono ..............................sal.
Bob Evans ...........:................ 21
Borg-Warner .........................61 ),
Broughton ..... ,....,,,, .... ,, ......... 14~.
Champion .......................... 14~.
Charm Shps ........................... 4'ia
City Holdlng .......................... 44l,
Federal Mogul. .................
Gunnett .......... ,,,, .......... ,.,, .~. 64'7..
Goodyear .................. y .......... 69~.
Kmart .....................................1S'lo
Kroger .................................. 44'•
Landa End ............................. 40),
Limited .................................. 28~.
Oak Hill Flnl ............................27
OVB ....................................... 41),
One Valley ............................ 36,,
. Peoples ................................. 41'1.
Prem Flnl ............................... 23'1.
Rockwell ...............................59'1.
RD/Shell ...............,,.............. 53'7..
Seara .....................................55'1.
Shoney's ........................ ...... 4'/o
Star Bank .............................. 58'1.
Wendy's ..................................21
Worthlng1on ..........................17'!.

50,.

• •
. ---

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quot11 provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Kathryn 'June Hysell, 83, Grove Ctly doed Salurday, March 7, 1998 at
Mount Cannel Medtcal Cemer. Columbus
She was a member of the Grove Cuy Order of Eastern Star No 502
She IS survoved by her son and da11ghter-m-law. Dana "Bob· and Janet
Hysell of Grove C1ty. a Sister, Betty Jean Bogg~ of Pomeroy, and four grandchildren and live greal-grandchtldren
She was preceded on dealh by her husband of 60 years, Dana Hysell, on
1994
Fnends may call on Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p m at the SchoendmgerNoms Chapel. 3920 Broadway, Grove Coty, where servoces w1ll be held on
Tuesday at 10 30 am
The Rev George Hartman woll offictate, and bunal w1ll follow at the Sunset Cemetery

OSBA votes against
supporting sales tax
increase on ballot
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Oh10 School Boards Assocmnon has unnmmously vo1ed not 10 support State Issue 2. a ballot tssue that w11i ask Ohoo
voters to ratse the state sales tax lo help pay for school-fundmg relonns
The group's board of trustees passed a resoluuon on SaiUrday, sayong 11
believes the Leg1sla1ure's new school-fundong plan, whoch mcludes the proposal to Increase the sales ta• from 5 percenl to 6 percent, does not satisfy
an Ohoo Supreme Court order to reform the method of lundong schools
Ron Dover, OSBA presodenl and a member ot the Carlisle school board
m Warren County, sa1d "th1s proposal tail s way short of that '
"Stmply put, State Issue 2 IS not the solutoon." Dover saod "Thos IS ttnkenng With an unconstotutlonal fundong syslem "
The trustees' resolutiOn calls on Ohooans to ons1st that state lawmakers
enact a school-tundong plan that compltes w1th the Supreme Courl order and
w1th the Oh1o Consttlutoon
The tax oncrease would ratse $1 I boll ton per year. wh1ch would be evenly split between educauon and restdenttal propeny-tax rehef

Pro-hunting meeting slated
Rob Se•ton state servoces dtreclor ot the Wtldltfe LegiS!atove Fund of
Amenca, wolf address local sportsmen Tuesday at 6 30 p m at the Shade River Coonhunlers Club at !he Me1gs County Faorgrounds
The meeting IS betng held for !he purpose ol orgamzmg !he proposed
Me1gs Counly Conservation Coahuon cnnsiSttng ot Me1gs County huntong.
fishmg and gun clubs. 10 suppon Oh1oans tor Wtldltle Conservatoon. whoch
ts opposong the thre.1t ul a November ballot ossue to ban moummg dove huntong on Oh1o
Club representaloves and other 1n1erested sportsmen are welcome to attend

McDougal death leaves
Starr with a quandary
WASHINGTON (AP) - James
McDougal, the ompnsoned lormer
savongs and loan owner whose
account about the Clt nlons fueled the
Whnewaler mvestl gatlon has doed
leavmg prosecutor Kenneth S!arr the
task of fimshmg hts probe wnhou1
one of ~I S mosl unportant wunesses
Convtctedot 18 1elonoe&gt;on 1996.
McDougal turned on the Cltntons He
detailed for Starr the alle ged role ol
both the presodent and ltrst lady 1n
fraudulent loans and real t31ale trans
acttons 111 Arkansas that co&lt;t tax pay
ers mil loons of dollars wh~n McDou
gal's savmgs and loan fat led
McDougal. 57. suffered from a
vanety of aolments, onclud1ng heart
d1sease and blocked artenes He doed
Sunday aflemoon at John Peter Smnh
Hosp11al 111 Forth Worth, Te.as ol
card1ac arrest, accordong to the Justice Department He was serv1ng a
three-year pnron term tor consptra·
cy and fraud regardmg the ollegal
transactions 111 whoch he says the
Cl1ntons played a role
Despote the fact that one of the
most 1mportant w1tnes~es agamst
htm IS dead. !he prestdenl ossued a
stalement saymg he was ·saddened

-Meigs announcementsSignups planned
Syracuse Youth League baseball sognups woll be held on March 14 and
March 21, from 10 a m unttl noon al the elementary school
Trustees meeting
Chesler Townshtp Trustees woll meet on Monday at 7 p m al the home
of Dav1d Koblemz
Building Committee
An organizational meetmg for the Southern Local Buoldmg Issue Com·
m1ttee Will be held Tuesday at 6 30 p m at ihe htgh school on Racme All
wantong to partt copate 111 promotmg ihe buoldmg ossue are wdcome to attend
Club to meet
The Cathohc Women's Club woll meet Tuesday. woth Mass to precede at
the meeung al 7 p m

State elections, issues
(Continued from Page 1)
oncumbeney behond hom "
"There os no doubl Ted ts makong
Stockland doesn'l watt long when
a concerted etlort durmg thts term 10 answenng why he wants to keep a
move toward !he moddle " Aber- seat on Congress so badly
nathy smd
" It's hke a callong · he satd
But the GOP spokesman added
"I feel ltke - wtthout trytng 10
that voters shouldn'i trust htm
sound too rehg1ous or sptrnual 'If he ts allowed to gel a real gnp that we've only got so much time on
on the dtstnct, hos very ltberal sell Earth and I thmk thts JOb enables me
w1ll come forward," Abernathy saod
to accomplish thmgs that I lhmk are
Bul others thonk Stnckland has Important "
already done a lol to &lt;ohdtfy hos hold
-----~
on the dtstnct.
" I thmk he ts one of those guys
MO~IIil8
who ltkes to &lt;pend as much t1me as
he can on the dtstroct I thonk he ts a
ltitle more confidenl ot himself. 100,"
saod Alexander Pnsley. Oh10 Umverlhls schedule good r• 3/12
-.ty political sctenust
~l:fl
TIDrtl: I1'G ·~
"He's got another 1wo years of

----- •o

t:l,llit4!00~I
=

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

.r•• ., , .....

""' ' '" '""'

Hospital news

Sunday admosstons - none
Sunday dtscharges - Thomas
Anderson
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges March 6 - Elma
Caldwell, Tammy Watkms, Clyde
Hammons, Patrtc1a Johnson, Ktm·
berly Gtlbert, Esta Whtle, Tamm•
Adamson
Birth- Mr and Mrs Scotl R1ce,
daughter, Hamden
" Dtscharges March 7- Rebecca
Perry, Brooke Holley, Mary Dav1s
John Lamb, Donna Young, Helen •
Thacker. Brenda Long, BesSie Man- ·
mon
Discharges March 8 - Lew1s
Westfall. Mary Porter, Etta Puzer.
Mrs. Scott R1ce and daughter, Con·
me Moms •
(Published with pennission)

LEGAL NOTICE
The publ1c Utol•t•es Comm1Ss1~~
of Ohto has set for publtc
hearing Case No 97-10t-EL·
EFC, to rev1ew lhe fuel
procurement practices and
pOliCies ,of Oh10 Power
Company, the operatoon of 1ts
Electnc Fuel Component and
related matters Th1s heanng IS
scheduled to begm at the
Commission off1ces at 10 00
am on March tO, 1998
All mterested parttes w•ll be
g1ven an opportunoty to be heard.
Further mformat1on may bl!
obtamed by contactmg the
Comm•ss1on at 180 East Broad
Street Columbus Ohto 43215·
3793

'

.,

t

7

,.

..M:-llllll ll'G-t~ l:li6,4ii,7.
BPIIIIE II'G·I~

TJI.uwBIS IPGI
IIIBfll •~

~nil

l:si

.

MOUSE- tPGI

OARIICIIY IRI
..-ARJil llll

Squads log 18 weekend calls
Umts ol the Me1gs Cnunly Emer- Moiler. PVH.
8 04 p m Sunday. Mulberry
gency Medocal Servoce re&lt;orded 18
calls for asststance S.tturday and Avenue, Pomeroy. Geraldme Marton,
VMH.
Sunday Unots respond1n~ oncludcd
II 19 p m Sunday. stale Route
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I 16 a m Salurday. Mulberry 338 Racme Larry Powell VMH
CHESTERVFD
Avenue, Pomeroy. Sally Wairon
9 04 p m Saiurday. Flalwoods
Holzer Medtcal Center.
10 15 am Saturday. Zuspan Road brush fl re
MIDDLEPORT
Road, Moddleport Conme Scholder4 08 p m Sunday. Soufh Second
er HMC . Mtddleport squad assosied
2 39 p m Sa!Urday Rockspnngs Avenue Fred Stewart PVH Ce ntral
Rehabohtatlon Cemer. Pomeroy. Dan - Dospatch squ,od assosted.
II 41 p m Sunday. Broadway
ny Saylor. O'Bieness Memonal HosAvenue.
Charles Young. VMH
pital.
RACINE
6 21 pIll Salurday. Powell Sireet
4
06
p
m
Sunday. volunteer lire
Mtddleport. Alva Reed. HMC. Mtdand
squad lo Sate Route
department
dleport squad assosted,
338,
Letart
Falls
lractor tore John
8.57 am Sunday, R1vemde
Htll
owner
Apartments, Moddleport. Luc1lle
REEDSVILLE
Hendnx. Pleasant Valley Hospotal
Saturday
SR 124 Marvtn
3
p
m
I 29 pm Sunday. ~oln
Reed.
Maneua
Memonal
Hospital,
Heoghts. Pomeroy. Mtldred Slili:&lt;ter,
Ill
L
I
a
m
Saturday.
School
VMH Pomeroy squad "'""led
House
Road,
Moldred
Hauber.
VMH
6 42 p m Sunday Overbrook
RUTLAND
Nursong Cen ter. Middleport, Leroy
9 35 am Sunday. VFD and squad
to Leadmg Creek Road. electncal
lore no InJUnes reported
8 15 p m Sunday Dunbar Road.
Wtlham Moore, VMH
Veterans Memorial
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday admtssoons - none
7
32
p m Sunday. Stiver Rtdge
~aturday dt,..;harges Ha) man
Road.
l1m
Watson. HMC
Barntlz. Dons Grueser -

by. McDouga l' s_;Jeal h
" I have gOOd memones of the
years we "orked together on
Arkansas. and I extend my condolences to h ~&gt; tamoly. Clonton saod
McDougal s dealh lakes away
from prosecutors an element thai has
been sorely lackmg m theor mvesugatmn '-'" mstder to cnmmal m.:tiVI·
1y who was eager to testofy agam&lt;t
the Cltnlons
' Losong a key wolness to death
never helps and clearly Ken Starr was
treattng McDougal as a valuable
w1tness," saod Unoversoty ol Mocht·
gan law profe&lt;Sor Samuel Gross
Cltnton loyahsts were quock to
potnt out McDougal s credtbtltly
prohlems
"Jtm McDougal was a gentleman
who was very ltkable personally ·
satd Bobby McDanoel,ihe lawyer for
McDougal 's ex-wote, Susan He
was also a man who had had sogn1f1cant emotoonal problems on the past
but who was vehement on hos con
tempt for tndependenl counsel be lore
hts conv1chon "
Prosecutors no~ are ltkely 10 turn
up the heal even more agaonst Susan
McDougal

IIJIII Il'G-t~

4:56,7Si
1:ll,4:ll, ni
1:211,4:211.721

1:26,4:25, 715

lalllllllf1Till ll'G-lll 1:16,4:15,7:16

• • AIITIITI lPG Ill l:li, 4:ri, 7:Gii
U.S. MAIISIIAW il'G-'~ I :GO, 4:1111,7:110

Jt;.,r=~r.!4;0a
MOTIEI!I .. O

740·753·3400
..........
____
------

Just north of Athens on St At 33

"Mama Don't Get Dressed Up For Nothin"

So, Bring Her To The

,......._
i.

TICKETS:
Steak

,.·-.--·~
"
........
B.Y.O.B.

j.

$20

Dinner • D1nce

Single

$35

Couple

Dance ONLY

$10 per

person

(Will Not Be Admlned UntU
800 pm)

Sponsored by the
MEIGS COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

9th ANNUAL DINNER/DANCE

Saturday, March 14, 1998
Royal Oak Resort
6:30 • Midnight
Entertainment by'

Mike Morrison a The Swing Shift Band
Tickets on aale NOW at the
Melga County Chamber of Commerce Olftce
238 W. Main Strwt. Call 740-992·5005.

�r-

•

Monday, March 9, 1998

Sports
Selection committee
puts more emphasis
on schedule strength
By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY Mo lAP) Woul&lt;.l he NCAA lournamenlleams
ll\tcn up there s ''" tmportanl mes
sage 111 lhts ye&lt;~r s 64 IC un field
Note Flonda State md Western
Mtcluga n Sit dy closely the three Y"' three - teams lrom the M1d
"estern Cnlleg1 tie Conference
Every one of them 111Sicad of
mopp1ng up on C1eampuffs m every
posSible non LOnference game
sc heduled Iough well respected
opponents
They be 11 a kw too whiCh" abo
m mdator) But IhiS 1998 tourn a
mem more than any other under
scort's wh 11 the selection co mmittee
has been s tymg ahoutlhe 1mportance
of strength of sc hedulmg
Thts "somethmg the comnultec
01er the years hIS really stressed
chmnnan C M Newlon sa1d Su nday
II s those games ~&lt;h e re you ha1e
control over who you are ~mng to
pity
Wh1lc Buller got the Mllhlestern
Colleg1ate Conference s automat iC
h1d at ltrge berths were extended to
Dctrml (24 5) wh1ch IS makmg lis
first appearance smce 1979 tnd 1111
IIOIS Chtcago maktn 0 ti s NCAA
dtbul
ThiS ts JUSt fant1s11 c second
yea r llhnOJs Ch tcago he 1d co tch
J1mmy Collins satd II s been two or
three mgh.ts smce I ve had my sleep
The best p.trt of thiS " to see these
young guys celebrate The best part
lor me 1s seemg therr "ork bemg
rewarded
Flofld 1 Stare ( 17 10) got '"
uesplle lo'lng seven of liS last I0
0 ames I lfgely because the Scmmoles
beat a No J seed Anzona
The mess tge has been sent for a
number nf ye.lfs nnw Newlon sud
Hopefully we II see more te 1ms
play1ng (tough schedules) But ag un
11 s not JUS! enough to schedule those
teams You &lt;~I so have to "10 some of
rhem Thai s what IllinoiS Ch1cago
and Detroll dtd That s wh.u Western
MICh gan d1d
Newton also admllted he can t
remember a year when the lour No
I seeds \\ere so obvwus As every
one h td b en predtcllng smce Clmsl
mas Kansas Duke North Carolina
wd dtfend1ng champton Amon 1
"ere made rop reams 111 rhw 16-team
reg10nals
North
Carolina
rn
BIIIGurhndge s first season re plac mg the
ret~red De 111 Sm11h extended us
own record wllh us 24th m nsecull\ e
appe trance Anzona Ited Georgei0\1 n
fnr the second longest streak wtlh tis
14th consecullve se lec11nn
By wummg '' ' rubber game "llh
top ranked Duke m Sundays ACC
ch tmptonshtp North Carohn.1 won
th~ nght 10 be top seed m the East
and more tmpon mtly play the
reg1onal semifinals and hn 1ls 10

fnendly Greensboro N C 1f they
wm thelf first two games
Duke seekmg 11s fifth Fmal Four
appearance of rhe 1990s "as put at
the top of the South reg1on Anzona
wuh the top e1ght playe" back from
last year s champtonshtp lc un " No
I m the West
Kansas w.1s placed m the Mtdwest
and drew whal shapes up as pos&lt;~bly
the brggesl mrsm ttch Since the fi eld
was expanded to 64 te tms 111 1985
The Jayhawks (34 3) who are on
a 13 game wmnmg streak and have
two probable NBA lollery ptcks 10
Raef LaFrentz and P 1ul P1erce open
111 Oklahoma City on Fnday agamsl
16th seeded Prau 1e Vtew The South
western Athlettc Conference cham
p10ns are 13 16 the only sub 500 111
the tournament and have an RPI rat
1ng of 263 the lowest m tournament
hiStory
But 11 least they mrghl take some
heat off the If football ream wh1ch has
lost 77 games 111 a row
I m gm ng to tell my players thai
we re gomg to wm the basketball
game coach Elwood Plummer satd
Sunday
Kansas " Kansas but
Prame Vtew ts Pralfte Vte\\ We ve
"on our last five games to get here
Prame V1ew notwrth standrng
Newton offers lhts year s tournament
as evtdence of the robust growth of
college basketball
The state of college b.tsketball
nght now lthmk IS as healthy as 11 s
e'er been m terms of the number of
quality teams ana teams that are not
from the tradtltonallop conferences
Newton sa1d llhmk that bode&lt; well
for colege basketball
He noted thar the No 6 seeds are
Xavter Arkansas UCLA and Clem
son
In most years that would be a
hsr of teams you d expect to see m
the F1nal Four or the regronal
finals
Ftve conferences are sendmg five
teams etch to the tournament
All mile Coast Conference Atlantrc
I0 B1g East Btg Ten and South
eastern Conference Three are send
mg four each Btg 12 Pac 10 and
Western Athletrc Conference The
Mrdwestern Collegrate Conference
and Conference USA each had three
Besides Prarne Vte\\ and lllmoiS
Ch1cago Northern An zona and Rad
ford are also makmg lhelf tournament
.debuts Mtaml 1s m for the firsttrme
smce 1960 and San Franctsco IS back
for the firs111me smce resDrrectmg 1ts
DIIIStOn I program m 1985
Temple (21 8) surpn sed coach
John Chaney by gorng 22 8 md wm
nmg the regultr season AtlantiC 10
East lllle for the school s mnlh
st~atghl NCAA berth
To tell you the 11111h I dtdn I
lhmk we had the elemenls I dtdn I
thmk we had the players Ch mey
sa1d

Vols, Old Dominion,
Texas Tech, Stanford
women get top berths
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER

In an mterest mg first round pa1r
mg Tennessee w1ll meet the only oth
AP Sports Writer
er team that went unbeaten IhiS sea
Ten nessee Old Dommton Stan
son 16th seeded Ltberty of the Btg
ford and Texas Tech rece11 ed the No
I seeds Sunda} 10 the NCAA South
Texas Tech mlhe Mtd\\est has ,m
women s basketball tournament
bracket "htch held surpnses for even belter route than Tennessee
Con neciiCUI md several other because the Lady Ratders rhe 1991
nat ton tl champions wou ldn I h 11e to
&gt;chools
Connccl ~eut got only a No 2 seed
leave home to earn a Fm 11 Four
mthe E 1st Regronal after Ihe Husk res berth Therr fir~ttwo games would be
ha&lt;.l been expected to be a No I al home and the M1dwes1 Reg1on tl"
despue the loss of star Nykesha on !herr court '" Lubbock
Tech opens agamst Grambling
Sales to a ruptured Achtlles tendon
Stanford 111 the West wouldn I
lare tn the season
UConn won the four games II have to lea1e tis s111e etlher because
played w11hou1 Sties mcludmg the the West Reg10nal "JUS! across the
B1g Easr tourn 1men1 champwnshrp B 1y m Oakl1nd and the Cardmal
game But the selectiOn commlllee would ~et therr first two games at
apparently took rhe IIIJUry 11110 con
home The Cardmal (21 5) meet hy
S1dera1 on 111 seedmg the lhlfd ranked League champ1on H 1r1 trd m the first
Husktes I I I 2) who h 11 e lost only to round
Tennessee md Rutgers by! dtdn I
Old Domnuon " the only No I
h 1\e the schedule strength of the top seed that wou ld have to make a
seeds
lengthy tnp The East Reg10nal " m
North C trolln 1 Alahama and Dayton Ohto The Lady Monarchs
Duke JOllied Connecucut as the No
face St FranciS m thelf first game
The lop four seeds m each regton
2 seeds
Tennes'fe 03 0) a dommatmg are the host schools for subreg1onals
team dll season long wtlh all Amer
of four teams each Those games wrll
1can Chamtque Holdsclaw and a tal
be played Fnday and Sunday or Sat
enled lreshman class was the top urday and Monday
seed m the M1deas1 Reg1onal
All of the regronal games are
Thnr means the Lady Vols would March 21 and 23
not ha1 e to leave the stale lo earn a
The nallonal semtfinals m Kansas
berth m the Fmal Four '" Kansas Ctty wtll pll the M1deas1 agamsllhe
Oty Thetr first 1\\0 NCAA games West and the East agamst rhe Mtd
would be at home and the reg1on 11 "est
Another surpnse mlhe bracketmg
sem1finals and fin tis wtll be played
was Lo01srana Tech ranked m the top
m Nash1 rile
four all season gettmg only a No 3
Coach Pal Summut s team ts try
mg to become Ihe hrsllo wm to wm seed Although the Lady Techsters
three consecu111e NCAA ttlles Sum are 26 3 lhelf power rankmg suffers
null has gutded the Lady Vols to five from playmg m the Sun Bell Con
ference
nat1onal ch unpronshrps 111 all

The Daily Sent4!4tl
Monday, March 9, 1998

Firat round
March 13

Reglonala

Stmlflnala

Semifinals

Pr ViiiWA&amp;M
1161 (13 161 - !!l ~ Is 122 8)
19) Murray St (29-31

Firat round
March 12

Marchl4

EAST

MIDWEST

(1) Kansas (34 3)

Second round

Reglonala

--

IS) TCU (27 5)
----.
(12) Fla. Sl (17 13)
14)Miao (22-ll)
(13) VllporalaO (21

r

---c
(3) S1anfonj (26-41

(24 5)
17) Sl John 1 (22 9)
ol Chill

GrHhaboro
NC
March 19 &amp;21

National
Champlonahlp
Sen Antonio
Taua
March 30

Western Alhltllc Confrrenet thamplomh•p
UNLV ~6 New MeXI[ll ~I

NBA standmgs

Sunday's tournaments
Atl•ntlt Cout Confertnteo&lt;hlmpionshlp
N{lr1h Cnrohnn 8l Duke 68

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Kansas12 OklahorTIIl

(24-5) -'

&gt;-- - (26-7)
(15) Delaware 120-91 - - - - '

Brg Wtsl Conferm~t-c:h11mpion.~hlp
Utah Sr 78 Poc 1fi ~.: b1

WEST

718
701
621
600
"i2"i ...

492
441
Zl7

Mldwt~t

1- - - - St Patlnllurg
Fla
March 20 &amp; 22

UCLA (22 Bl

(11) ~I (Fia) (18 9l

-----(31 MlchiQIU1 (24 81

ll! I. fd.

San Anlomo
Mm M::W a
Hous10n

41

Uioh~~:·: • · · · · · · · · · · l4l

Anaheim
Celli
March 19 &amp; 21

20
:\2 29
16
:\0 :\0

612
"i2"i
729

Vnm:oo~ve7'' • •• ··············i' ; 4~

21:\
081
2'i0

IJ 48

Dallas
Denver

1

[_

"i~

~7

~

18

Far West
An zona 84 UCLA H
Ort,!!On 82 Cah furrn a 66
Slanford 97 Oregon Sr 74
Wash1ng1on 8 1 WashlnJ!Ion Sr 6l

Ill.

Amuk• East Confertnce-chtl.. pionshlp
Marne S I Vermcn1 80

11
:\9 1!

81111 Confrrtnct-champloruhlp
Texns Te~h 71 Kans lS n

2Sh

"

1

6h
II
20 h

Rig West Conference champlon.•hlp
UC S mla Bnrb \1' 186 Bo1sc S1 69

12 1

ECAC Olv Ill Mdro NY NJ K"A'IInrnda
Momdau S 01 Vassnr 'i4
Moum Sr Mmy N Y 79 Sta en Island ~6

12

(15) s c 5t (22 7)

Saturday's scores

Sunday's scores

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Second round
March 15 cr 18

--,,

1161 St. Fr101 Pa

Semlllnala
March27

Reglonala
March 21 &amp;23

EAST

15) Momph~ (22 7)
~~aiOWnst

1121

Second round
March IS or 16

S!anlord (21

----

-

__ __ _
- - - -·

l- ------'

National
Champlonahlp
KllnuaCHy
Mo
March 29

(18 9)
(111 s Moln (21 71
(~Vl~lnla

(31 Arizona (21 ..

-

.....

Haw!OI (24-31
JArl&lt;ansa (18 101
rKansas
- '-'21
" 8)
- - •Tulane 12!-81
Iowa (!I 10)

(8)

,-

Tech (25 41
-(11 Toxaa
------

(18) G~~ 23 6)

(81 S W MIII&lt;I&lt;Jri St 12• 51
(9) N Dame (20 91

D1viskNII
Deaver~ reck

45 Cm Mt Nltre Dame 26
C n Pnnceton ~0 Troy 41
Cle East T rch 62 Clr He ghts 4~
Day Ch~mmadt Juhennr 'i~ Cm Sy nmore

NATIONAL
CHAMPION

-, ~- ~·

5)

(21 5)

(
J
r-·- - --1

(51
(1~

Orlando 01 New Y vrk 7 10 p m
M1nmi 111CbJcago 1:1 p m
Washmgton at Milwaukee 8 :\0 p m
Oallu 11 Hous1on R :\0 p m
New Jersey ar S 111 AntoniO 8 :\0 p m
Phocm1 nr Denver 9 r m
Toronl\l al Sea tile I 0 p m

(13)

Top 25 men's college poll

(7)

N~AA

_

)&lt;)

49

Fran~.:•~

161

IJandert&gt;rH (20-81

(on

NCAA Dh II South Krgkmalstmlnnals
Ark Monti tllo 77 Aond~ Southern 7S
Arkansas Tel.:h 7~ West Flond ~\

Wt Pat~.:

s F Austn (25 31

OIYWon IV
Bolt. ns 54 Cm H1lls Chr 41
Chand 14 Sourhmg on '\8
Color~~:] Crawford 6'i S Ccnnul 42
Fon Loramie '\4 Sprmg Cu1hohc 26
Hu1Jtwcll l:..oudt n 60 Arc:a~hu ~2
K 1llda62 L1beny Benmn &lt;119

Manon 62 B(lw e S1 ~2

Liberty Center 40 Edgenon :\1
Lormn Ctllh ~4 8 Canton 49

Manon Pleasan1 68 Cenlerburg 49
M1 nster ~S Manon Locul H
Morrnl R1dgedale ~8 Danvtlle 41
S Charleston SE 71 Fmnk1n Monrot" l"i
Sebnng M Kml~y 51 McDonald 45
z.,nesvdle Rosecrnns 76 Shadys de ~6

Ohio H.S. girls'
regional pairings

t 69 Coil f'" I NJ ~7

NCAA l&gt;1v Ill
Norlhtllsl Rt'JI,Ional S«und round
8 \C'S 71 S kll ~ ~ 07
J lu s H 1k fiK "-h hlcut\!rg +I
s M IIIII,: 71J y. ( llkd !.:U! ( 2
Smmt n bH Alv~rn r&gt;

(1~

(4)

Here are the sr:ue r~g1o na l sem1final and final
1~ r ngs for tht 2'\nd Ohio 8 rls state bUJketball
our " mem

Dmslon I
At Wllmlnaton
Cm Pnncelon (22 I) vs Gahanna Uncoln (20...
4) Tuero y 6J~pm
New f'tll adelphm (IS 9) vs P1ckenng1on (22
2) Tue«tay 8 p m
Fm1l Fnday 7'l0pm

NC \A Drv Ill Soulh Ct'ntnl sr&lt;und round
Wts o~hk sl 6'i W s E:tu Cl urc 41J
Auslll C I &amp;-' R nd 11 h M ~ I 'i'
Bndl!.:w cr V 1 90 Chmh.lj her N1!Wfl\ll1 K7
W slunj:IOII M M M II k t &lt;4

161

AI D•,Yton

NCAA Orv Ill Wt!!l ReglonQI """'' 00 ruund
De Pat w 70 Baldw11 W llllt: 64
M

UIIUIItll n

(

Day Chnm1 nade Juhcnne (2 1 2) vs Beaver
n:.:k (22 I) Tuciday 6 I 'i p m
Masu 1 (21 0) u Tru wool.l Mad1son (2 1 1)
Tuesd IY 8 p n
Fmal Snlurday II a m
AI Willard
rrlfin Columbian (20-4) VI Rody River Mag
llfi[&lt;!l (16-8) Tuesda~ 6 I~ p m
Parm:t. Holy Name (2 1 2) vs T ol Central
C:llh he (2l I ) TUt"sd y 81 m
F1nal Fnday 7 10 p m
AI C•ntun
Cle En~r Tech (21 0) vs Erutlnkt N ( 19 "i)
Tuesday 6 I~ p m
Woo~ler (2l 0 ) vs Wadsworlh (2 1 2) Toes
dly
1
Fm~l Fr1day 7 J0 Jl m

f v n~li

Sl Bcncl.l d 7~ UC S n 1J1c}t 47

-

St

Til Mils

M

11 li~

Ce lt 1tw1 'iO

~-

12) Alabama (22 9)
Gr-lbofo
(15) UNC
(21 8)

NorlhtaSI Confrrconcr-cbamplunship
Sl tr mus 11 1-t Wl1!ncr~J
Sooner A.thldt[ Confcorrnc1 stmtnn:als
1 rl"lC J1 Olll 11 Cirs1 11 (J
W yl niB JI ~ IKO PI Ill f.()

S N

NCAA Dms10n I
men's scores

llaetd

Hall of Fame linebacker Nitschke dies at 61
MILWAUKEE (A P) Ray
Nnschke the bald headed lou~h as
naris hnebacker on Vmce Lombardt s
IItie learns of the 1960s wrll be
remembered for hr s off the field
kmdness as much as h1s dommatmg
play fnends say
The Hall of Famer dted of a hean
allack Sunday wh1le on a dnve Wtlh
ht s daughter and granddaughter m
Aonda where he had a wrnter home
!{e was 61

St R

NCAA Olv II
South Central Re&amp;looal d.amplon~hlp
Empona S1 9S Ab l~ne Ch nm an 64

(10L~k:h1Qan~

By JIM CARLSON

~0

NCAAOiv II

'
------j~I~;L_I13)

-i

Oh· II Northeast Rt&amp;lonal champlon~hlp

Ben Icy

NCAA Dno Ill All11nh[ Re11lunwl !icoond ruund
Elnurt ~') B ngha 1 01 Sl 11
NYU 70 Will ~ n Sn h q
R wan )'\ M U"Y Wu !1 j!l n 00

(11!_MIIITII (1&amp;-9)_
{3) Loutoan• TOCh (26-31
I - ---(14) Holy
(21 9)Crou
____ __,
171UCLA(111-8)

Nor1h Oakoln 96 N Colorado (i8

Tennessee (33-0) 111
1 Ublny (28-0) __ (~

Iowa St. (24 7)

L-

(OT)

51 (18 111(15)

· - - - - Oregon (17 91

(:10-91
(131Wull (189)

NCAA 01" II North Ccntnl st:mlnnal.s
Nebmska Kearnc)' 81 Nor hcrn S1 S 0 78

The top H lea. 1 1n The! Assoc1a ed Press
men s baske b II pt II wtth fin I pl11cc votes 1n
po1n:n1he~c~ rt~,;onb l~rt ugh Mn cl 8 lolol poml5
ba sed on 2~ potms lur first plaLoe vo e dnough
one pomt ror a 2~ 1h pi [C vme und prev1ous rank
mg

(11l)

161

Onislon Ill
Amanda Cleurc.:r«k 41 Ut1ca H
Bellrure :W Fon Frye 40
Bluffton 76 Lmm Cath &lt;II~
Chugr n Falls 61 Akron St V St M 42
Cm Wyommg 45 Mmml E l4
Clc VA SJ lli7 Warren Champ1on 42
Ooylcu&lt;Jwn Ch ppcwa 7~ Loudonv1lh: 7l
Lorwn Cle111vrew ~8 Oberlm 46
Margareua 4'i Kansas Lakota 28
Manon Elgm ~2 Granville ]4
N Bend Taylor 66 Eastern Brown 41
P~tn[k Henry 5R Coldwater Sl
S Ran&amp;-e lli6 You Mooney S1
Versn lies 48 Georgetown 30

South All•ntlt ReRional championship

(141

w ~ (25-ll)

Wollanll9 Oyde 12

Easl Regional-championship

NC.4 4. Olv II
Great Lakes Rt!&amp;IUIWI championship
N Mtchtgun 74 M chrgun Tc:ch ~8

9pm

Tuesday's games

(4)

DIYIIion II
Avon Lake 44 Olms ed Falls :n
Col HiU1Icy ~ B 8 W~~olnur47
Garfield H11 Tnmty 78 Nordoma 49
Mentor Luke Cath 63 Perry 62 (2 01)
Olentnngy 41 Col OeSales l9
Om1lle l1 Akron Spnna 28
Poland ~7 Canfield 1I
Wauseon 51 Sr Mary s 44

Shtppensburg 91 Blwmsbu rg li2

R~gors (20-~--~

'----~

(4) ~~

NCAI\ Dl• II

NCAA [)., It We,. Reglorull thnmpinn~hlp
UC Dav1s M0 Scall lc P 1 11'" ~2

l ~_!enn

MIDEAST

u ~ lono!Utlh

Eastlake N &lt;112 Eu10ht.lli
Holy N 111'\C 48 Dnmsw 1~k 46
M 1gmlical 17 We ~tl nkc '\6
Mason 6~ C111 Mother of Mercy 49
New Ptulndelph a 49 Loatr.n 40
l1ffin Columbian 49 LJma Sr 4~
Tol Cathohc 66 Sylvama Northv1ew 54
frolwood MtKhson 29 Cm Onk H1lls 27
Wadsworrh 71 Stow 41
Woosrer 68 Maulllon Washmgton 18

Drake 7:\ SW Mr s~un Sl W

l A Cl!pJltrs 111 Phoen x 9 p m
Golclt:n S 1~ I Sacrnmenlo 10 10 p m

Duke (21 7)

MIDWEST

(24 7)

H

49

Mtssourt Valley Conftrtnc:t-c:hampionshlp

Orlando ur Ptuladtlphl 1 1 lOp m

19)

(8)

I
c
--- - 1louiSVIIIe (111·11)
'- - - ·

1

RAY NITSCHKE

Saturday':s tournaments

Midwestern Collt~;lalt
Conftrtnce-champlonshlp
Wrs Green Day bl Butler ~4

Tonrght s games

- -:_va Tech 121 9) 1111
Florida (21 8)l ................131
:
UIMl

l_

(15) Fotrfiold 12&lt;1 91

(61 Clorn00f1

(161

- - ---

_
(2) u Conn (31 2)

(51 Drll&lt;e (25-&lt;)
(12) Colo St (23 5)

- Harvard (22-&lt;)
1

Wile _E1 91

I

-----

(1)

He was one of the great players
not only 10 Packer htstory but m NFL
htstory Packers spokesman Lee
Remnrel sard
In a recent poll, he was voted the
fourth best player rn the team s h1s
tory behrnd recctvcr Don Hutson
current quarterback Breit Favre and
Ban Starr the quarterback on Lorn
bardt s teams
Ntlschke a th1nd round draft ptck
of Green Bay out of llhnms played
for the Packers from 1958 72 when
the team won five NFL trUes rnclud
rng the first two Super Bowls He was
a member of the NFLs 75th annrversary all-lrme team
N1tschke and the Bears Dtck
Bullcus sel the standard for the punrshrng mrddlc hncbacker of the '60s
and '70s
' He was a thunderous tackler
Remmel Silld ' He drdn t know the
meanrng of taking 11 easy on the football field He drd that every play of
h1s career '
The persona had a lasung effect on
the Packers, who ended a long
· drought by wmntng conference
champtonshtps the last two seasons
and the Super Bowl tn January 1997
'II s gorng to be a b1g loss for us
satd Packe!s offenmc lineman Adam
Timmerman "He was a great compelltor on the field and even 1f

you ve mel htm ~mce hts playmg
days he strll was a lersty compel!
tor
Nttschke made hts home m Green
Bay after hts re11rement He was often
at Packers pracuces and traveled to

S"un Hell Conrerrnrt rhampiunsh111
ltUISIIlll d H

Saturday s tournaments

Cooking • Heating Water
• Unvented Heater Construction

$2830 +tax

2·1 00 lb. Cylinders of Propane Gas
Installed, including regulator and
10 feet of tubing

$7999 +tax

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS
RUTLAND, OHIO
742·2511
1·800·837·8217

.~

••
''
••••
,•,
!

Adantlc 10 Con(t!fntt--champlonshlp
XAYIC:r 17 Georgt Wruhmg o 6l

Blc East Confermtt~h•mpionshlp
"
Connecm:ut 69 Syrocuie:..,..

,
l

BiJ Sky Conftnnctothamptoruhlp
N Am.ona 11 Montana Sl :\0

•

'

"'
:

Bla Ten Conltrence: stnllfln~ls

M1ch gan R~ Mtnneaola 69
Purdue 68 llhn01s 47

Division I
On Prnt~rm71 C11 H1msm61
C.n W nton WooJs "iQ C1n Oak ~Ills .U.
Cl~ Collin wood n ChI tk n "i l
Cl~ Gkn~tllc 6l Warr~n ~an.hng "i~
Clc St l 11n~11u~ 8S N Rny hnn 4 I
o~y C lund While 7 ~ Hutk=r ~t s W 1ync 60
E L vcrpool M Znnc:IYIIh: 'i7
Holy Nilmefll Piv"llii"'O
Hudson 64 Akmn Garfield ~0
Logon ~g Mnnd II ~~ (0 n
Lorwn AUm. Kmg 62 Wes!lnkc 19
M us1llt n W •slung 01 60 N C 111ton H lOVer

16

Dlvlsion II

Conrmnco USA-duomplonololp
N c Cbarlooel7
Alllldl&lt; eo..rcr&lt;n&lt;e-dlllllplonlhlp
: S Carohna S1 66 Copp~n Sl 61
Cinclwh

•
..

Southland eonr.............~rp
N•cbofll St 84 TeJu•s· ArUnaton 8.1

Soutflwr•em A.U.Idk
ConftnrxMhlmplonshlp

P1111ne V1ew ~9 Tew Southern ~7

Med n 71 Slrongsv•l le b2
Srow M2 AtkrtH Spnng 41
Vandall Bulltr H. Ctnll"rVII\t 42
Akron St V St M 71 Crestwood &lt;ill
Bellbrook M K•nJI Mills Kmas 61
Cm McN1cbolas 87 New Rrchmond 46
Cm Roger Bacon 81 Cln Turptn ~1
Col Bngs 69 Col OeSaln 62 (011
Col M fflin 62 Buckeye Val 42
Conland Lak~vtew 66. Ashtabula Edgewood

.folld-l!llltm 71
..

~ham pwnshlp

Saturday s tournaments

Bli West ConferenceoRmlftn•l•
Pat:1ftc 67 Ncvd 62
Utah S1 6.'1 Cnl St Fullerton ~6

S.thtoutem ConftmKt&lt;-semfftnals
Kenrucky 99 ArktuuD.S 74
South Carohnn 87 MIUIU1pp177

kyM

Ohto H S. boys' scores

8•&amp;12 Cunre,..nce stmlnn"afs
Kunsa&amp; ~I N~bratl:! ~~
Oklahoma68 T.:xus ~s

~

I u

WcJtun Alhltl t Conftrentt
New Mcx1 6J R '" ~ K

Atlantic Cthlst Conrrnnct semlnrwl5
Duke 66 Clemson 64
North Cnrohn 181 M U')'land 7:\ (OTl

,•

wK

Tnms Amtmu
Alhlrllt Confrrt'nre chLlmplunsh•p
Fl I t r
n IKfl G r~1 S 'ill

Amenn EaJt Confertnte c:Mn~plonshlp
IXInware 66 lk s on U ~fl

••
:~

s,

Soulhwutrrn 1\lhlc:tlc Cunft"nmT thump!
UJl"IJip
Gr mbhn~ St I'll J ~h n S! ~4

F•r Wtst
Anzona 91 UCLA S7
Cahform 7~ Orego n 71
Sou rh~.:rn C I 117 Anz.on 1St 71
St oft rd ~'i Oret:on St 71
W1sfnng1on 70 Wilsh ngton S1 ~~

road games
He parlayed hrs celebnty status
and fnendly nature mto a career as
speaker crurse host chanty fund
rarser and ptlchman

NEED PROPANE FOR

100 lb. Cylinder

Sou rhlund Conftrence dJ:amplumhtp
Sl 1 ~n I Au 11 t{.l NE L.1
'il

Saturdays
regular seaSiln acuon

61

Frurvu~w 44 Med na H1ghlnrld lR
Field 70 Twmsburg 6K
Ham~ lion B001n 71 Day Dunbar'\'\
NorM168 Canton Cnth 66 (011
Rock)' R1ver 6S Revere ID
Strulllc:rs S~ Polnnd ~1
Tnway 11 Fmrlcu 64
W Geouga S9 Chardon N[).CL :\:\
You Rayen 44 W Branch 29

~I

Oh1o H S. g1rls' scores

Mid Eulnn Athletic: Canftrtnct-thltt~plonship
HownnJ 18 Hampcon 70

L.; A Lakers 96 Detrotl 8.9
San An1on10 82 Port !:and 78
Vancquvc!r I I'\ Tnu n1o 106
Ctucngo 102 New York 89
lA Chp[)Cr&amp; 100 Dcnver89

~--

(7)_GIICl(g •117 101

(10) G Wash (19-9)

5)

--~ u Mua t1~0l_

SiiilaClii&amp; "'-

1,.1 (23 7l

lndumll )()4 Boston 100
Charlo11e 109 New Jerser, 100
Washmglon 100 Ph1htde ph!a91
Senltle 99 Mmnesorn 911 (OT)

Firat round
March 13 or 14
r

1-- - - l

r-1

I•INC ~-121-ll)
(13) Milne (21 8)

A!lanln 101 ClEVElAND 96

WEST

_j---,

122 n
_
161 Now MexiCO (26-8)
(9) ~;.,..... (22 9111 - --

C n W tl row bO Cm Modlt:r

ECAC Southern Rralon second round
K ngs Po ~6 Penn Sl Behrend ~l
P111 Bradrord 71 GroveC.ty 4l
Will ams 99 Rhodt Island Coli 89 (0T)

M1am1 94 Dallas 8~
Uah 110 Mllw:lllkte92
Hous1on lOll Phoen1x 89

-

DlvlSiun I
C n A ken 70 On LaSalle 17

Hlg Sky ConfrrtntM"hlllmplonshlp
Monlann SR N Amon 14R

(2) Kontuci&lt;y (29-&lt;)

(1) Old ClornniOfl (27 2)

Sunday s tournaments

Saturdav's t('lurnaments

l
12

(14)

Fln1t round
March 13 or 14

J K.:ksoll Ccnle 61 Fore Lor JJll e SlJ
K dron Cen rnl Chr 711 Luther n E 61
Lowellville l4 lords own 10
M oeral R dgc M E C 1n1on 44

Saturday s regular season actton

I

David&gt;on (:10-9) 17) Mass (21 1O)
(~ Sl lou
_!~2 1 10)·······--···--.---

B oomfie d 8~ M gadnrt 69
0 1s o169 8 1dger 40
Cedam llc 7I Ansom1 "i1
Day Jdferson iS Newton 41
fntkJ'Mt 1dcn c 6~ Lor un C II ~1

~ NCAA DIVISIOn I
:: women's scores

Division

IwD

Dlvbilon IV

Soulhtastern Confumtto&lt;hamplonshlp
Kc:muc:ky R6 Sou•h Carohnil 'i6

"
"'
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Now MOXICO 123 7)

~8

811 Ttn Cooftrtnte championship
M .. h1gan 76 Purdue 67

NATIONAL
CHAMPION

SOUTH

16)

Barnesv11Je S~ Shenandoah ~4
Brooklyn 61 Cuyahogu Val Ch 60
Cannl Wmcllester 65 Mad1son Pl1 ns 62
Che1.1peak~ ~S ~·hnford 4l
Cle V-A SJ SS Cle Carhol (' 49
Coal G ove 'i4 Z. Ol" Tr ~~~:e 'i l
rol Rtndy 67 Manon R1vcr Vnl 61
El)raCah 49 Well ngon ]7
Gilrawny 6 1 lnd an V.-1 4"i
Granv l le 7~ Bloom CarroiJ7'\ (QT)
Pur1smoo h W 1 1 Nelsonvtllt: Yo k 60
Spnna Hi ghland 69 Manon Elg n 64 (OTJ
Tuslaw 71 Norwaync lO
Wheekrsburg 56 Adena 4'i
W•ckhtrc 52 Hilwken 'lS

Big 1l Conftrence:-championship

{2) ~rdue

(4)

because the Pyranud was bemg used
for htgh school champ10nsh1p games
Fnday and Sarurd ty
The StmgRays were 6 3 on the
second day of playmg b tck to back
games dunng the regular season
Long Beach coac h Maura
McHugh called pl1y1ng on con&lt;ecu
live days a b1g ch tllenge
At least 11 s for both teams
McHugh satd They played a lot of
mmutes for thelf starters and so d1d
\\e II s gomg to be a challenge for
both teams

OtVisiOn Ill

Basketball

-----,

(10) D-.

home-court ad\ anlage w11h a betler
regular season record the senes
opened rn Long Beach because the
Quest s home court was bemg used
for a conventiOn
The Columbus players voted
agamsl playmg at Ohto Slate s St
John Arena prefenng mstead to end
the senes wllh three possrble game•
at Ballelle Hall "here the Quest was
21 I dunng the regular season an&lt;l
won tis only playoff game
The finals openmg two games are
bemg played on consecuttve da) s

The StmgRays overc 1mc 1 31 27
halfllme delicll and s 1w Amile 1
Lloyd s three pomler to t1e the game
mtss as lrme explfed Suncla)
Long Beach lost four rcgu l tr sc 1
son games by an a1 erage of 19
to the Quesr
They are a tough re 1m and
played hard
Me Hu eh s 11d of
Columbus But we rc pia) Ill " much
betler now We have 1 101 more con
fidence We thought Hey rhcy '"
nor mvtctble
Yolanda Gnlf11h and Cl 1n« 1

P'""''

Da11s Wnghlstl each scored 16
pomls tnd Be1erly W1llttms had II
ol her 15 rn rhe second half for Long
Be,tch 111 Iron! ol an mnounced
crowd ol 4 005
Tonya Edw uds had 17 Vale11e
Still h td 15 and Ka11e Sm11h had 10
for the Quest
Colum bus pulled 10 58 56 on
Smuh s layup With 4 39 left only 10
be out scored 7 2
S11ll 'r htee po1111 b tskel "tth 12 7
sc&lt;.:onds remammg cut the deficit

Scoreboard

St Louie,
Mo
March 20 &amp;22

161 Clom1100 (18 13)
(11) W Mlch (:10-7)

(14)

th1s before m the regular season h's
not gorng to be a different expen
ence
Columbus had an II 2 record on
the second day of playmg back to
back games dunng the regular sea
son when the team led the league
wnh a 36 8 mark The Quest also
won a semtfinal pia) off game at Sat!
Jose after playmg the day before
Conn1c1s wrth arenas m both
Long Beach and Columbus have
resulted rn the finals unusual sched
ule Although Columbus earned the

---

8)" - - -

The Dally Sentinel e Page 5

StingRays beat Quest 65-62 in opener of ABL title series
LONG BEACH Cahf (AP) Columbus Quest coach Bnan Agler
rs nor fazed by havrng only 25 hours
to make adJustments after losmg the
openmg ~arne of the Amencan Bas
ketball League finals
The Long Beach StmgRays won
65-62 Sunday wtlh Game 2 lonrghl
m Long Beach The best of five
senes mo\es to Columbus on
Wednesday
II s not easy but at the same lrme
we rem a senes ltke thrs and have to
.do that Agler satd ' We ve done

MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP

Second round
March 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Drvision II
AI Morral Rkl~;td•le
W 1u seon (2l 0) YS Willard (1 9 ~) Tuesdny
6 1Ci flm
lew~ Ce nt~r Olen 1ng y (16 7) n Orrville
(18 'i) Tuesdny Rpm
f nal Fnday 7:'\0 p m
At Vandalia
Ham110n B ld1n (2 1 1) vs Co l Hnrlley (II
Jl) Tunllay 0 I~ p m
Urbnnn (20-1) vs On St Ursula ( 16-7) Tues
I day 8pm
Final Fnday 1 10 p m
At Zarwnillt
VINCENT WARREN (22 l) Yl Dresden Tn
Valley (20..1) Tue1day 6 1:\ m
Dover (17 6) vs NEW EXINGTON (17 7)
Tuesday 8 p m
Fmal fTtday 7 :lO p m
At M111lllon
Polalld SenunllJY t22 I) vs Garfield Hts Tnn
ty 122 2) Toesdoy 6 I~ p m
Avon Lake (211) vs Menlor Lake Calh (19
~~ Tuesday 8 p m
Fmal Fnday 7 10 p m

I
I

r

Div1slon JU
AI Vondollo
N BendTaylor(Z21)YJMonoaEign {l6 8)
Wednesday 61~pm
v~'"'ll" (2l I) v1 Cm Wyommg 120 1)
Wednesduy 8 p m
Final Sa1urday 130 p m
AI LoncutH
PEEBLFS (22 I) v1 Amando-Oeoorcreek 122
2
) ~1\'EEtJl'R~~~~a' (ll 2, v1 Beiliu"' 121 21
Wedncaday 8 pm.
Fonal SaiuniAy I 30 p m
AI Uucy""
Pamck Henry (22 I) v1 Ca!lal~a Morgoreua
{19 4) Wednesday 6 ~~ p m.
Lora~• Cloomew (20,4) v1 Blurflon (19 4)
Wednaday
8 pm
Final Smurday 130pm
AI AIUo""'
N U= s Ron.. (10 l) v1 Ouo&amp;nn Foll1(240) Wednesday 6 I { p m
Cle•e Villa Anaela S1 Jo~eph (18 6),.
Doyk.,own Choppewa (20-1) Wednc1doy 8p m
Final S01un!ay 110 p m

I

Divlston IV

i\t Vandahlll
v~

Furt l oram e (19 5

AI Plc:kermglon
Mowr" &lt;town Wh leoak ( 11 I0) vs Sean1m N
Adams (IOThur~ y6 I ~Jlfl
Morral R dgl!' I {.l '&gt;) s Mar on Pic s 1
(2'\ I) Thursday 8 p m
F nal Saturday 7 10 p n

d y 6

I~

Mn

1

1

t~ r

(2l I )

B k

CORRECTED NOTICE OF
SALE
By virtue of an Order o(
Sole luued out of the
Common Pleaa Court of
Malga County, Ohio, In the
:aea of Cheater Proffitt, ot
al , Plalntllla, vo Peer!
Proffitt, at al , Defendants
upon a Judgment therein
rendered baing Caae No
94-0V-223 In llld Court I
will offer lor aala at the front
door of the Courthouee In
Pomeroy, Melga County
Ohio, on tho 17th day of
April, 1998, at 10 00 a m
the following Ianda and
tenement• A complete
lagal deecrlptlon of the roll
eatato Ia 11 lottowa
PARCEL NO 1 Tho
following pramleea eltuate
In the Townehlp of Lebanon,
County of Melga and State
or Ohio, and In the Ohio
Compeny'e Purchaee and
bounded and daecrlbod aa
lollowa Baing a part or 100
aero or 5th Dlvlolon Lot No
188 and Sections 14 and 15,
Townahlp 2 and Range 11
particularly bounded aa
lollowe Beginning at tho
Southeaat comer of Lot No
188, thence North of a atone
et tho Northwoet corner,
thence Woat 27 poles and 6
llnka to a poet thence
South to a etako on the
bank of tho Ohio, thence
with the meandare and up
the aame South-eaatwardly
to lha pleQa of beginning,
making at right angle 1he
eame width and front at the
eouth end aa at the North
and which Ia 27 polee 6
IInke, containing 76 and
148!160tha of an acre, mora
or leaa And baing the aamt
property conveyed by laaac
Parr and Ruth Parr, hla wile,
to Robart F Johnson by
deed dated April 20 1853
and recorded In Book 16 at
Page 324 of the Deed
Recorda ol Meigs County,
Ohio
Except a river bank which
waa sold to Pfaff and Smith
Bulldera Supply Company
See D11d Record Vol 161,
Paga12
Reference Deads Vol 4
Page 133' (0 R) Vol 314 p
433, Vol 298 p 475, Vol
290, p 211, Vol 288 p 803
Meigs County Deed
Recorda
Baing a part or Auditor a
Parco! No 07..()()678
Value
Appraised
$61 500 00
Parcel No 2 One
Hundred Acree of land lying
In the Township of Lebanon,
County of Meigs and State
of Ohio attuetad In
Township TWo and Range
11 of tho Ohio Company s
Purchase, which Includes
the entire 70 Acre Lot No
189 and thirty acraa off lha
We at a~d lower aide of 100
acre Lot No 188 platted and
bounded aa tollowa
Beginning at a atone or
atake on the bank of tho
River at George Cummings
upper corner thence North
with aald Cummlnga Una to
a atake at the Northweat
corner or aald 70 acre tot,
thonca Eaat of the
Northeaat corner of the 70
acre lot, thence East on the
North line of 100 Acre Lol
No 188 to Isaac Parr a
Northwest corner, thence
South with Parr'a line to the
River, thence qown the
River to tho place of
beginning, containing 100
acroa more or laaa, within
tho Ohio Company a
Purchua and lor a
particular description of the
premlaaa reference Ia had
Ia the Ohio booka And
being the 11ma property
conveyed by Edward Rouah
and Julia A Roush, hla
wile lo Robert P Johnaon
by deed dated February
24th, 1883, and recorded In
Book 24 at Page 600 of the
dead Recorda of Melga
County, Ohio
Reference Deeds Vol 4
p 133 (0 R), Vol 314, p 441
Vol 314,p 433,Vol 298,p
475 Vol 290, p 217, Vat
288, p 803, Meigs County
Deed Recorda
Baing a part of Auditor 1
Parcel No 07-®678 and all
of Parcel No 07..()()679
Appralud
Value
$95,000 00
Parcel No 3 011 and gas
rights conveyed by Mayme
and Leroy Homes to John
Prollllt Reference Dead,
Vol 141, Page 477 Dead
Recorda, Malgl County,
Ohio, 81 followa altuated In
Ithe County 0f MI 1ga, State
of Ohio and In the Townahlp
of Lebanon and bounded

I

K~l

(2 1 1) 11

Fm:~l

SJiurJay 7 10 1

Public Notice
and deecrlbed aa follows,
to-w)t Being In Section
Number Twenty-live (25)
Town Numbar Three (3) and
Range Number Elevan (11)
of the Ohio Company a
Purchase and being lhe
North one hall (1/2) of the
Southwest quarter of
Section Number twenty·llve
(25) containing Eighty (80)
acrea more or loaa and the
right to use eo much or the
aurlaco aa Ia neceuary lor
operating and removing the
aame
Reference Deed a Vol
314, p 441, Vol 314, p 433,
Vol 303 p 799, Vol 303, p
798, Vol 298, p 475 Vol
290 p 217 Vol 288 p 803,
Melga County Deed
Recorda
Ap p ra load
Value
$2 600 oo
Parcel No 4 The
following real aatata
oltualtd In the County of
Meigs In the State of Ohio
end tn the Township or
Lebanon bounded and
deacrlbed aa followa All
that portion off the
following described land
lying Northw11t side of
State Routoa 124 and 338
which are the aama Known
and designated aa Filth
Dlvlalon or 100 acra Lot No
194 In Soctlone No 20 21
and 22 In Town 2, Range 11
of tha Ohio Company a
Purchase which was
originally drawn In the
dlvlalon of land of the Ohio
company a Purchaaa to one
of the ahares In the name of
Alaxendar Hamilton, and lor
further deacrlptlon as
lollowa Beginning at a
atake or post In the East
line off said 100 Acre Lot eo
leal south or the
Intersection of State Routes
124 and 338 and running
with said Eall line In the
Northerly direction to the
Northeast corner of said
Lot thenca In a Waatarly
direction acrose said 100
Acre Lot No 194 to the
Northwest corner of said
lot thence In a southerly
direction wllh the Weal Una
of aald 1oo Acre Lot no
194 which Ia the una
between eeld lot and land
now owned by Lloyd Harris
to a poalln said una 20 rods
South of State Route 124
thence across aald Lot to
tho place of beginning
containing 65 acras more
or lose
11 Ia agreed and
understood by former
Grantora and Grantees that
the Grantees shall have all
minerals and the rights 10
operate
tho
same
underlying 15 acroo, mora
or loss, across tho South
end of tho above described
promisee tt Is further
understood by and between
both parties to thla Dead
that a former Gran1or has
reserved unto himself hie
halra and aaalgns all the
minerals underlying tho
balance of the above
described land wllh the
right to teat and operata the
same
11 Ia furthar agree and
understood by lha Grantors
and Granteaa that a Iormor
Grantor hla heirs and
aaslgna shall have a right
of woy 12 feet wide from tho
State Road 338 North along
the Ellt nne to the south
end olthla property
Excepting therefrom 45
acroa more or len
conveyed to Lloyd Harris
and susie Harrla by Arthur
Rouah and Sadie Roush by
deed datad September 2
1t48 recorded In Deed
Book 160 Page 486 of
Melga county Dead
Recorda 11 Is Intended
however, to Include and
convey herein the tree uaa
of tho aprlng that waa.
reaarved In tho dead to
Lloyd and Suale Harris
aloreaald
Baing tho part ot the
eame real aatata conveyed
to Sadie M Roueh and
Arthur E Rouah by d11d
recorded In DHd Book 180,
Page 84 of the Melga county
Dead Recorda
The laat previous
flhe property
conveyance
Ia recorded oIn Dead Book
175, Page 463, Deed
Recorda of Melga County,
Ohio
This deed Ia Intended to
convey 17 acres, more or
leas, or all on tha Northweat
aide of State Routoa 124
and 338 now or formerly
owned by tha aald Harry
swan
Except 1 acre aold to

I~

r

T

&lt;&amp;) \S

ua ~~.:o n

Hopewell loudon

I S 1unl ) 7 10 1 I
At Mass11lon
S brng M K nky (2 1) v Bt!Jiml (I ncl
( 16 K) lllu sJ y fl I~ 1 '
Z 1es vllk Ro s ~ r s (11 7) vs Lllrl l
C lh ] [(204) Thumlay Kt ••
F nal Saturda) 7 :\0 p n

Lb

Public Notice
Robert and Elizabeth Faye
Proffitt aa described In Vol
178, Page 449 Dead
Racorde, Meigs County
Ohio

YS

I

S Cl ric u So I

\tHida
N Rob ~on Colonel Cr&lt;~wro n.l 19

da (21 0)

(11 I ) 1 1 u ~l.l y K t

(24 0) Thu sday 8 p n

trry c~ nl t!T ( I~ 10) Thursd ) Ci

Public Notice

~

Reference Deeds Vol4 p
133 (0 R) Vol 314 P 441
Vol 314 p 433 Vol 299 p
475 Vol 290 p 217 Vol
288, P 803
Being Auditor a Parcel
No 07..()()68()
Appralted Value $11,300 oo
Parcel No 5A The
following real utate
situated In the County of
Melga, State of Ohio and In
Lebanon
Townehlp
bounded and daacrlbod 11
lollowe, to·wlt
One
Hundred Acre Lot No One
Hundred and Eighty three
(183), Sectlona Nos 13, 14,
and 15 In Town No TWo (2)
In Range No 11 Ohio
Company a Purchaaea,
except three-fourths or an
acre (3/4tha) on the Eaat
aida of said lot deeded to
the M E Church Also,
except the Pioneer
Graveyard In the South Eaat
corner of said lot deeded to
the Truatoea of Lebanon
Township In Meigs County
Ohio, and lurlher except
TWo rods or land uaad as a
private burying ground
situated on the Eaat side of
aald Lot and directly In front
of tha M E Church abova
referred to
Excepting 1/4 aero mora
fully described In Volume
168, Page 262 Meigs
County Deed Recorda
Aleo, the coal underlying
the above described
promlaos Is hereby
reaerved and excepted, also
the exclualvo right In
perpetuity Ia reeervad and
excepted to uae so much of
tho au rlace abova
daacrlbad aa may be
necessary to open and
operate and equip a mining
property with buildings
railroad awltchea necaasary
to mining property with
buildings railroad switches
neceaaary to carry away
said coat from aald
promises also lor drainage
and depoe It of reluae and
the right to haul through
and over said premlaas coal
and from adjacent
properties and the grantors
to be relieved from any
aurlaco damage by reason
of mining for coal under
said premises
Any surface lond required
lor use as above by said
grantors or any peraon or
persona now or In the
future owning aald coal and
other right excepted and
raserved or either or both
sa alated aforesaid to be
paid for at the rete of
$300 00 per aero
Reference Deeda Vol
314 p 441 Vol 314 p 433
Vol 393, p 799 Vol 303 P
789 Vol 298 P 475 Vol
290 p 217 Vol 288 p 803
Vol 149, p 584 Meigs
County Deed Records
Baing Auditors Parcel
No 07-00677
Appraised Voluo $74 000 00
Parcel No 58 Also the
!ollclwlng promisee situated
In lhe county of Meigs and
State of Ohio and In tha
township of Lebanon and
bounded and daacrlbed as
follows A triangular place
of land Included In tho
dooryard of tha dwelling
house or Emallna L
Blcknet Beginning on the
Eaat line of Lot No 184
whera the renee of the lront
yard croesoa 1ha line and
running parallel to the
public road alghty two feet,
thence at right angles with
aald line running Eatt of N
Seventy-eight IHI along the
aide of the dooryard lanes
and side of waah house to
the Intersection of the Eaat
tine of Lot No 184
aloreaald thence South on
said East Una to the place of
beginning and with all ollha
appurtenances lencee
galea well, aummar house,
shrubbery fruit 1reeo wash
houaa ate In ond on eald
lot of land aa sloroaald, aald
No 184, being known •• Lot
184 In Town 2 Range 11
Ohio Company a Purchaeo
In Meigs County, Ohio
Also the coal undartylnft•
the above deacrlbad
pramlan Ia horeby
raaerved and excepted also
the exclusive right In
perpetuity Is reserved and
•

Public Notice
excepted to uee ao much of
the aurrace above
deacrlbed aa m,y be
necauary to open and
oparate and equip a mining
property with bulldlnga
railroad awltchaa necoaeery
to carry away eald coal from
aald premlaaa also lor
drainage and depoatt of
reluea and the right to haul
through and over aatd
premlaea coal and from
adjacent propartloa and the
grantore to be relieved from
any aurlaca damage by
roaaon of mining lor coat
under said promleee
Any eurlace land required
lor uaa 11 above by 11ld
grantors or any pereon or
persona now or In tha
future owning aald coal and
othar right excepted and
roaarvad or either or both
as alated aloreeald to be
paid lor at the rate of
$300 00 par acre
Reference Deede Vol
314 p 441 Vol 314, p 433,
Vol 393, p 799, Vol 303, p
789 Vol 298, p 475, Vol
290, p 217, Vol 288, p 803,
Vol 149 p 584, Matga
County Deed Recorda
Baing Auditors Parcel
No 07-00681
Appraised Value $50 00
Parcel No 6 the
following
deacrlbad
premlaea altuatad In tho
Township of Lebanon,
County or Malga and State
of Ohio,
Being 100 Aero Lot No
182 In Township No 2
Range No 11 of the Ohio
Company•
Purchue,
containing 100 acres mora
or leas axceptlng about
6 26 acres on the North aide
thereof, which wu
conveyed by C M Brown
and Lucinda Brown hla
wife, to Jampa H Hugh11,
by dead recorded In Volume
69 Page 77 Melga County
Dead Records
Furthermore excepting
unto Clair C Boao hla hetra
and assigns forever all thai
part ol aald 100 acre lot
which Ilea South of the
Sta1e Route No 338, and
described as follows
Tho following real eatata
being In 100 acre Lot No
182 Lebanon Townahlp
Meigs County
Ohio
described as lollowa
Beginning In tho cantor of
State Roula No 338, on the
Eaat Uno of 100 Acre Lol
No 182 1hanca South 995
leal to the Ohio River
thence Southeast along the
Ohio River 1o the East lint
or said 100 Acre Lot No
t 82 thence North I 057 8
feet lo tho center of State
Routt No 339 thence 60
degroea North 20 wa~l
847 22 feat along the center
of said State Route No 338
to tho place of beginning
containing 13 2 acrea more
or less subject 10 all legal
highways
and also
excepting all the land south
of the above described 13 2
acres, which may be
Included In 100 A,cro Lot No
182
The foregoing baing part
of the real estate which waa
conveyed to Clair C Boao
by deed recorded In Deed
Book 167 Page 698 of the
Malge County Deed
Racordt
Ftalerenca Deeds Vol
314 p 441 Vol 314, p 433
Vol 290 p 217 Vol 288 p
801 Vol 222, p 59 Melga
County Deed Recorda
Subject to Flowage
Easements tq the United
Sta101 of America recorded
In Vol 225 paga 721 and
Vol 225 page 713 Melga
County Deed Recor&lt;b end
to all other leaau ,
eaooments and rlghte of
way of record
Being Auditors Parcel
No 07..()()676
Appraised
Value
$6300000
Rasl Eatate Appraised at
Parcel No I $61,500 00,
Parcel No 2 -$95,000 00,
Parcel No 3 $2 600 00
Parcel No 4 $11 300 00,
Parcel No SA $74 000 00,
Parcel No 58 $50 oo
Parcel No 6 $63,000 00
Tho real estata cannot be
aotd lor teas than two-thlrda
the tppraload value
Terms of Sale Caah on
delivery or dead
James lot Soulaby
Sheriff ol Meigs County,
Ohio
(3) 9, 16, 23 30 (4) 6, 13, 6
lc

�By The Bend

The Daily SentiJ.!~J

Ann
Landers
lW7,

l.o~ An~c ln

Sy nd1~~•c

;ami

T1mu

Crc~hlr,

Synohutc

Dear Ann Landers: I would like
to respond to the letter from Rita
Sauc•er, whose son d1ed as a result
of fraternlly hazmg. I am a 19-yearold coll ege sophomore and very
acti ve 1n my fraternity , Delta
UpSilon, al the Umvers•ty of
LoUisville I am proud to say my
chapter has managed to ehm1nate all
form s of haz1ne Unfortunately, we
arc a n11nonty 'Ha"ng IS still gmng
on tn a great many fraternities

Beat of the Bend ..
by Bob Hoeflicn

··suJ VI val ol the llltcst"' IS
appl• cahlc m a sense , at least.
In thiS day and age sprccd With
computers you should he exammmg all of your recctpls for purchases Somcumcs th1ngs aren't
as they're supposed 10 be. I
undcNand these days certain
Items arc on sale but when your
total IS f12urcd at the regiSter, the
sale pnc~ docs not kick 1n and
you ' re paymg the pre-sale price.
Takes an eagle eye, hut you can
dort.
Pauline Wolfe of Mc1gs Coun'ty had an mtcrestmg experience
recently She and Mary Ball had
spent several days m New
Orleans and Pauhnc went to the
hotel regtstratton desk to check
out. Ord1nanly, Pauhnc says, she
JUSt pays the tab and moves on.
However, on thts occasion, she
decided 10 check the bdl.
On the statement was a $26
charge for valet parkrng. Pauline
was floored and ment1onec •o the
de sk clerk thai the att~ndant
would have had a difficult time
parkmg her car SJnce rt was at the
31rport in Columbus during her
enure stay m New Orleans.
Of course , the charge was
removed from the brll but had
Pauline followed her usual paltern she would have paid the
$26- and for nothmg
I dun '1 know about you but
some days $26 can seem hkcqutlc a hll ol money

m sure
from ft1cnds Hrs
mer Blondena Hudson

If you have an old vehicle
around that you want to get nd of
and arc affluent enough that you
don 't want to go through the hassle of selling it, the National Ktdncy Foundauon of Oh1o would
apprccratc your donating the
vehtcle to the Kidney Cars Program
If you 're mtcrcsted call 1-800488-CARS and the foundation
Will arrange for a free prckup of
the vchtcle and wi II provtdc a
rece1p1 for tax purposes Your tax
adv1sor will be able to tell you
what the year-end tax deduction
will be in your case.
Funds raised through the program suppon patient services,
public health education, research,
community servtees and professional educatmn.

Once upon a umc there was an
actress named Jean Anhur-and I
am not real sure on the spelling of
the name after the passage of
time.
On the SJ!vcr screen she spoke
wtth a deep, husky votcc which
was her trademark.
Lately, I've encountered quite
a few ladies who arc spcakmg m
deep, husky voJccs thanks to the
colds, sore throats and stnus con'dlllons that seem "' prevalent
nght now.
_
When they have apologtzcd
Unlc&gt;s my hearmg IS worse lor the sound of the voices, I.
that I thought- and I hope not- thmking I'm passmg on a complithe name of Ronald Herdman of ment. comment.
"That's okay. You sound JUSt
Pomc1 oy wa~ drawn 'Saturday for
hun to appear on the Cash Explo- hkc Jean Arthur" .
After my eommcnls, I have
~to~ show us i.l contestant twn
weeks from last Saturday. Thai gnucn these suangc looks.
They're sure I've lnst 11 In Iact.
w1ll he Saturday. M.uch 2~ Congratulaunns to Rr'n and I nne ol them sard she thought I
know many of you Will he root· s:11d "Gene Autry-It finally dawns on me . These
mg Ron on and hop1ng that he
people arc youthful-that's 50
come' lmmc With h1g hucks
and under and they ' ve never
Meigs rc,.dent, Harold Ratner. heard of Jean Arthur
has scnous heailh prohlcms and
So no more comments hkc
IS conlmcd to Camden-Clark that from me. I' II just tell them
Hospllal m Parkcrshurg, W. Va . they &gt;!lund line and to keep smrl-_
HIS room numher " 13 1-A and mg .

Community Calendar
The Commumly Calendar "published as a free scrvtcc 10 non-profit
groups wt shing 10 announce meeting
and spec1al events The calendar IS
not dcstgned 10 promote sales or
lund ratscrs of any type . Items arc
pnntcd as space pcrm1ts and cannot
be guaranteed to run a spec• fie number of days
MONDAY
POMEII ')Y - Regular meeung
B1g Bend r'"'" Ant1que Club Monday, 7 :10 r m at the Grange annex
at the Roc k Spnngs Fatr Grounds
POMEROY - R1ght to L1fc
mcetmg Monday, 7 30 m the
Pomewy L1hrary
POMEROY
Mctgs
Cuunty/Ohto BJCentenmal Committee 4 45 p m. Monday
RACIN!' - The Amcncan Red
Cross Bloodmohllc w11l vtsll Southern Hr gh I0 a in to 2 p m . Commumty IS ln VItCd IOdonate blood
POMEROY - B1g Bend Community Band spnng rehearsals Monday. 7 p.m. m the MHS band room .
Mcmhersh1p1s open to all adult and
h1gh school mustcJans m Meigs,
Mason, Gall1a and Athens counues
For mfonnation call dJTector Toney
Dingess at 992-7141 or Jeanne
Bowen at 992-7536.
RACINE -

Southern Local

Rcorgan17.at1on Committee mcctmg
Monday. 6.30 p.m. at the htgh
schoolrn Racine.
CHESTE~

- Chester Townshtp
Trustees. Monday, 7 p.m , home of
Dav1d Koblcnlz .
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Rae me Board of
Pubhc Affairs w1ll meet Tuesday at
10:30 am . at the Municipal Bu•ldmg

DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees, 7 p m. Tuesday. town hall
POMEROY Free Meigs
County Health Department •mmumzaiJon clime Tuesday, 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs Muh•purposc Center at 112 E. Mcmonal
Dnve ~ring shot record. Call 9926626 for more mfonnatron
RACINE Free children 's
immunization chnic Tuesday, I 0
a.m.-noon at the Racine Volunteer
Fire Department The Hepatitis B
vaccme w1IL be available free to all
children born after Nov. 22. 199 I
and to eligible II, 11 and 13 year
olds. Bring shot records. For more
infonnation, call 1-800-844-2654
SYRACUSE - Syracuse PT0
·meeung Tuesday,I p m. al Syracuse
Elementary School First graders
will perfonn "Three Little Ptgs".

ply refuse to do it Others will follow your lead, and dangerous hazing
practlces wtll disappear. -A.D.,
Loursvtlle, Ky.
Dear A.D.: What a sane and sensible young man you are. How good
it would be·tf others followed your
example. Keep reading for mo•r on
this subject:
Dear Ann: There are about
I0,000 fratermty chapters on American campuses today. During my college days, I was a member of Della
Chi At ·21, I was an ens1gn U.S.
Naval Reserve on actrve duty By
25 , I was the commandmg officer of
a Navy supply shtp, responsible for
220 crew members and up to 200
passengers. My ship received a
"well done" from Fleet Adm Kmg

for rescuing a merchant ship from
Dear Ann Landers. I see you are
the Arctic ice pack.
back on the subJect-of.fratemrty hazDelta Chi helped me grow up and mg. I say, "Good for you." Not
assume responsibility at an early nearly enough has been satd about
age. Sadly, when a few fratet'mty • thts senseless, barbaric praeucc.
members do foolish things, 11 gets in
I am sull unable to get out of my
the papers. The many good things mind the face of that handsome
accomplished are not newswonhy.
young man "ilo was pledged to a
The English used to say thetr fraternity at MIT last fall and died (I
leaders grew up "on the playing should say "was killed " ) during the
fields of Eton." I believe a great hazing process
many young Amencan men have
What more has to happen before
grown ·up in their fraternities. I am all hazing, everywhere, stops?
one of ·them. - Fred R Brooks, Please print my letter with a twoSanta Momca, Cahf
word response, "I agree" or "I disDear Fred Brooks: My "well agree " - Northwestern U rn
done" tsn 't in the same league as the Evanston, Ill
one you received from Adm. King,
Dear Northwestern: I agree
but here it IS anyway. Thank you for
Dear Ann Landers· I am wriung
writmg.
this from the Cook County Jail. wall-

ing to go to the state priso~ for 16
months. My cnmc' Dnvmg my
ne•ghbor's car wtthout his pennts-:
s1on. What do you thmk of a govern·
ment that treats respectable citizens
thts way' - No Name, Please, Just
III1001S
Dear No Name: When you drive
a vehicle wtthout the owner's permissiOn, 11 is commonly known as
grand theft auto. In Illinois, thts is a
Class One felony. After you have
served your t1mc. I hope yo~ w11l
never agam ''borrow" a car.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Bhd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif, 90045

Enter the Be Kind to Animals Ki'd Contest
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Soci·
ety
Now.
know there are young
people here 10 the Meigs County
who love and work to protect animals . Has a ch1ld you know shown
~xtraordinary kindness to ammals?
Drd the kindness(es) take place
between May 1997, and April I,
1998'/ If so, the Amencan Humane
Association wants to reward her or
h1m- or them.
To nommate a ch•ld, aged stx
through 13 (or a group of ch1ldrcn),
provide the infonnatton below and
auach a descnption, in-200 words or
less, of what thrs child did and why
he/she should be selected as the
1998 National Be Kind to Animals
Krd.
Parents or guardians (or persons
wtth written pcnnission of parents
or guardians), over age 18 arc free to

submit photos, vtdeos, or other supporting documentation along With
the short narration. But please do
thts by the deadline, Apnl I, 1998.
The 1997 BKA contest wrnner
was 13 year-old Rondta~ Slian10
Leemmg, a collector of strays since
she was three years old Shan10's
mother 's narration, "No Ch1ckens 10
Bed,"' won her daughter the title.
There were t~ree finalists that year,
including II year-old David Hamcll
from New Jersey, who, whtle volunteenng at his local shelter, raised
$175 for the shelter through a fund
ra1s10g proJect at hts school.
The Nat•onal Be Kmd to Animals
Kid W10ner receives the IItle of official Be Kmd to Ammals Week
Spokes-Kid, setting an example for
kids and adults across the .country
and all expenses-paid tnp to Hollywood (in April or May) wuh a chapcrone for three days and three
nights. Among other adventures, the
winner will vtsit a movte or lelevi-

ston set with an Amcncan Humane
Association representative to sec
firsthand how anrmal actors arc protected.
A1rfare ts courtesy of Amcncan
Airlmes, and two $20. S1Xly-m10utc.
prcpatd BKAW caJ110g cards let the
winner call home for free'
The winner also recctvcs a trophy pnzc presented du11ng the tnp
to Callforma, a year's supply of
Fnsk1cs brand pet food for a companion animal or favonte shelter;
$500 worth of cat furniture/products
from the Clawtuff Corporation; a
Nintcndo GamcBoy lrom the
Clawtuff Corporation; the CD ROM
game, "I Can Be An Am mal Doctor"
(a new Al-IA-recommended game
explonng the animal kingdom With
a vctennarian), from Cloud 9 lnleracuvc; and a copy of the new book,
"Chtckcn Soup for the Pet Lover 's
Soul."
The five NatiOnal Be Kmd to
Ammals Kid Finalists don'ttravclto

Callform.l. hut they will receive
mcd1a attention ns natmnal fiilahsts
m this contest. sctllng ;m' cKamplc
lor k1ds across the ..:nunlr y
They wdl also reccrve a years

supply nl Fnsk1es pel loot!: $300
worth ol cal rurnllurc/plllducts: and
the AHA -recommended CD ROM
game, "Mortimer and the Riddle of
the Mcdalhon" .(an adventure gmnti
w11h sav10g an 1mals as the goal);
and a wpy or the new hook , "Chic~ :
en Soup lor the Pel Lover's Soul."
Send malenals to BKA Ktd Contest. Amcncan Humane As:-;oclal lon:
63 Inverness D11vc B., Englcwood1
Colo. 80112-5117: fax : 303-7925333 or E-mml BKAK(fllamcrhu;
manc .org
The form should he set llp to
mclude the Person Nominatmg
Child(rcn), Addr~ss. Day and
Evening Phone, the Namcs(s) of the
Nomtncc(s) and Thctr Addresses
and Phone Numbers .
Good luck'

Gardeners learn about the language of flowers
Clarice Kra••tter gave a paper on
"Language of Flowers" at a recent
meetmg ()f t~c Chester Garden Club
held at the h ·me of Betty Dean.
She noted that flower~ were used
for family crests in the Victorian era.
They expressed feelings and messages -- roses for love; da1sics for
mnocencc; dandelions for fa1thful;
lilies for punty, magnolias for d•gmty. mJ&lt;tlctoc for "kiss me." orchids
for beauuful lady, palms for triumph,• pans1cs for remembrance:
sunflowers for haughtiness, violets
for modesty, tvy for ftdelity, t.mnias
for thmkmg of you , crocus for good
cheer: marigolds for grief: white
flowers for innocence red for love,
yellow tor infidelity; and blue for

true: dark colors for melancholy.
pink for prcf~rcnce, and red for
comfort mg.
Single flowers mean simplidt}
variegated llowers mean "beautiful
eyes" and green means hope.
She said that whether Oowers arc
given as a gtft or kepi in the home, 11
1s possible to let the beauty of flowers speak lor you suggesting that
members study the meaning of flowers and let them make a personal
statement
She abo suggested allaching a
card wrth meanings "" a dtffcrcnl
touch when sendmg llowcrs. Fresh,
dried or srlk. the mcamngs arc the
same. she smd.
The thc,mc for the program was ·

"Love ts in the Air." For roll call
members answered wtth the name of
a Oowcr and told what it means to
them, w11h everything from orchids ,
gardcmas, roses, camclJas, 'panstcs
and mums were ment1oned.
A: mnshmc card was signed for
Earl Kn1ght.
A workshop on copper !lowers
was held w1th Pal Holter assJ&lt;Img
The hmt of the month related to
pruning summer flowering hulhs .
Spnng llowcnng "shrubs should he
pruned after they bloom , it was
noted. nnd members were encouraged to enJOY thm seed catalogs
wh1ch arc arrrvmg in the mail da1ly.
It was announced that Mc1gs
County Garden Clubs will host for

the spnng regional mccung m April
and a planning mectmg was held
thiS week.
'
For the rcgi&lt;•.al meeting Pat
Holter ts to do the afternoon program on "Rhapsody of Spnng."
Belly Dean announced that she
will be take a master gardening
course lrom Oh10 State Umversny
Exl~nSion Scrv1ce.
Providing llnwcrs for churches in
January and Fchruary were from
former mcmher, Jean Frederick.
Door p1 ilcs were won hy Holter
and Eleanor Kmght.
The next meeting Will he hosted
hy Krnuttcr. w11h the program 10 he
on "Greens ."

Racine UMW meets to hear about prayer and self- denial
"Prayer and Sclf-I:Icmal ·Expandmg Miss10n -- Helpmg Others to Cross over Jordan" was the
program topic for the February
meeting of the Racme United
Methodist Church.
Manlyn Bogard, leader, after her
opening prayer, sard 11 JS a time
when we can reflect our reason for
bemg and to celebrate the women
who, 10 selfish love, dcd1cated thetr
hvcs in Chnstian scrv1cc as rmssmn anes and deaconesses.
Twelve stones had prevrously
been placed on a makeshift altar
whtch were to serve as a reminder
that you "crossed over Jordan ."
Th1s year, "Prayer and SclfDcmal" offerings go lor the renovation and rcpaiT of schools, commum-

'
Alrred Church observed
Ash
Wednesday
Ash Wednesday serv1ces on Fell.
25 were led at Alfred Umted
Mcthodrst Church by Rev Sharon
Hausman. All churches of the charge
and others from Metgs County were
represented.
Scrv1ccs were opened by the congregation smgmg, "Lead Me to Calvary," and prayer by Rev. Hausman.
The Alfred Choir gave the program,
"I Wonder Why''" with songs and
readings showing the events 9f the
first Holy Week through the words
_of JlCople : Peter's dem~L fear and
sorrow: a woman's JOirung m the cry,
"Crucify H•m•:· so she could be a
part of the crowd: a soldier's excuse
for torturing Jesus, telling of his
hard life in a foreign land; the anger
of the Jews, and Pilate's desire to
keep order.
Rev. Hausman spoke of Lent, the
40-day scsston of spiTitual revival .
The congregation then came forward, and she placed ashes on thcrr
foreheads She read from Isa1ah.
After the congregation sapg, "I Need
Thee," she closed w11h prayer.
ALFRED PERSONALS
Mary Jo and David Barringer arc
announcing the binh of a grandson,
Douglas Michael Trout, son of Doug
and Susan Trout of Cold Springs,
Ky., on Feb 13. Mrs. Barringer

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

ty centers and nHss1on rcstdcnccs
The closmg prayer taken from
previously distributed cards was
read 10 umson by members. The
cards arc to he used dunng the year.
Lee Lee preSided al the busmcss
meeting, wh1ch opened wrth everyone rcpeatmg the Lord's Prayer and
the UMW Purpose.
Clara Mac Sargent gave the treasurer's report. Correspondence was
read and the hal and m111cn fund was
collected
The mother-daughter hanqucl
was diScussed and several committee chalfmcn were appomtcd Also ,
some 1111ponant plans were decided .
The banquet wrll be held at the
church on May 9.
It was dectded by the group not to

spent a week w1th her daughter and
grandson .
Eleanor Boyles of Belpre ts now
home after bemg hospttalJZcd for a
hcan attack
Martha, Joe and Will Poole
ancnded a btnhday party for Samuel
Michael at Dcxtc'. Mr. Michael was
80 on March 3. Other Mtchacl famtly members attcndmg were Gary,
Sharon, Manhew and ' Louise
M1chael of Chester; Lenora, Roger
and Michael Le1fheit, Rock Spnngs.
Rclallves of Samuel's wtfe, Nellie
Hatfield MIChael , also attended .

reserve a tahlc at the Rae me Flower
Lee reported on the West Ohl!\
Show, smcc 11 IS the weekend ol Ihe Cnnlcrcncc ''MJssJon Today" meet ·
UMW Spnng Retreat. and several mg that she allendcd recently 111
mcmhcrs will he unending.
Columllus.
An mvilation was read from the
A mcmor1al scrv1cc was lm
UMW of the Athens FiJSt Unrtcd Margery Roush was &lt;.:t&gt;ndu&lt;.:ted hy
Mcthodtst Church to JOm them lor Allee Wolle. Marg•c West ;u1d Lee.
the1r annual Ecumenical Lenten
Refreshments were scrvctl hy
Martha Duddmg .
Breakfast Tuesday.
It was reported that 16 bally blanAttendmg were Etta Mac Hill;
kets have heen made by the women Clara Mac Sargent, Marg1c West. ·
who work at the church every Mt&gt;n - Manlyn Bogard, Ruth Fmnk, Tara.
Norman. Chns Htll. Allee Wolle,
day mornmg .
Smcc rccrullmcnt ol new mcm · C1ndy Wmehrcnner. Judy Papc ,
bcrs 1s one of the twn mam issues m Martha Duddmg and Lee Lee
'1998, 35 1dcas for recruning new
The next mccung will he held
mcmhcrs were read from a new March 23 at the church
book called "210 Ideas for RecJUIImg New Members." More 1deas w1ll
be read at each n1cctmg.

MEIGS COUN!Y
ROMINE SOCim
tBRI" SBOPPE
'
Middleport, Ohio

NOW OPEN ON FUESDAY

THREE FOR THE PRICE OF ONE SALE
Tuesday Only, March 10, 1998

005

Peraonala

Looking

For

Female (Non·

Smoker) Companion For Dad, 64
Years Old, Rellrod, MUilary, Good

Monday, March 9, 1998:

Fraternity ·pledges have a right not to be hazed -.they can refuse
around the country.
The only way to stop hazing
tragedies is for the pledges to refuse
to take part in any actiVIty they conSider hazn.dous. They should say
Oat out , "What you are askmg me to
do ts foolish and dangerous, and I
am not g •ing to ~o 11."
If that answer is not acceptable
to the fraternity members, the
pledge's response should be, "Sorry,
I'm going to have to find another
fratcrntty"
Being a member of a fraternity
can be a very rewardmg expcnence.
II can forge a bond that Will last a
hfeumc The rnitiation process
should be rauonal and safe If you
are told to run naked in freezmg
wcJthcr or
s1m-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Lookl'9t Must Like To Have Fun

And Travel! Please No One Un·
Tho Age Of 45, Call 1•0-•~

dOl

35&lt;1~

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PHONE (7A0) 59A·2227 FAX (7A0) 59A·662A

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~
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Accepting Worb,.. com,_n,.tlon Pat11nt• 211ll1 mo.

bhausiWorlt
We do Custom Btadittg
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Moll Cars
Used nres 12.00 to 15.00
S.nite Job $16.95 4 qt. oil
General Repa1r Work
Sugar Run Ashland
190 Mulberry
Pomeroy
Phone 992-9949

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Start dattng tonlghtl Have flKI, •
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20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner. Ronn•e Jones

McFEE ROOFING &amp;
PAINtiNG

famil1es of
THERESA E. BECKER
and
BETTIE
J.
GLADWELL wish to
thank all of those who
helped make our loss
much . easier. The
beautiful cards, flowers ,
food an'd many phone
calls are greatly
appreciated A special
thanks to the staff of
Rockspnngs Rehab,
Veterans Memorial
Hospttal , and Fischer
Funeral Home and the
Rc1 . James Keesee. May
God Bless You and Keep
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The Becker &amp; Gladwell
Families

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~talntlfl,

Freedom Road Foundation,
Inc, et al ..
Defendants .
Case No. 97 CIV 116
In pursuance of an Order
of Sate In tho above lilted
action, t will offore lor sale
at public auction, Friday,
April 17, 1998 at noon at the
door of the County
Counhousa, Second Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, the
ublic
Notice
following
described
reat
P
estate:
Situate In the VIllage of
NOTICE OF SECOND
Pomeroy, County of Malga,
PUBLIC HEARING
Slate of Ohio, to wH:
The Meigs County
Being a part of tho weal
Commissioners Intend to end of Lot number one
apply to the U.S.O.A. Rural hundred elghty·nlne (189) In
Housing Service, tor said village.
tundlng under the RHS
Beginning at the
Housing Preservation northeast corner of the
Program. Mel go County George Addison tot on the
may ba eligible lor tundlng south side of Butternut
In the amount of $75,000, Stroot. Thence south 64
provldod the county meets degrees east 177 1/2 feet to
~pptlcabte requirements, On a stake on the aouth side ot
feb. 23, 1998, the County Butternut Street. Thence
conducted Its tlrat public south 21 degrees west to
hearing to Inform citizens tho nonh side of the road
about the Rural Housing running trom said Butternut
S e r v 1c •
H0 u sl n 9 Street over the hill to
Jlroservatton Program, what R 11 d Th
1 1
a~tlvltlee are eligible, and
u an · ence wooer Y
1m P 0 r tan t by and along the north side
01 h 8 r
of said AuUand Road to the
ooqulroments.
easterly corner of said lot
A second public hearing heretofore sold by Thomas
wilt bo held on March 16, Irwin to Charles J. Whitaker.
l99B at 1:00 P.M. at tho Thence along llld
M• I g s
C 0 u n 1Y Whitaker's north tine to the
Commissioners Office, corner of said Addison'' tot
'-"•lgs County Courthouse, Thence northeast along the
Pomeroy, ·Ohio to give llne of said Addison's tot to
citizens an opportunity to the place of beginning.
review and comment on tho
Excepting therefrom throe
county's proposed Housing small pieces thereof, as
Preservation proposed follows: one piece
program.
heretofore convey.od by
Citizens are encouraged Josiah Huntley and wile to
to attend lhla meeting on Joseph Starks by deed
March 16, 1998 to express dated December 19, 1864;
their views and commente one place being that part of
on the proposed project said lot convoyed by Josiah
apptlcatloo . _ Written H 1
d If
Phttll
comments will be accepted
unt ey an w 0 10
P
Miller by deed dated
unlit 10:00 P.M., March 16, September' 28, 1864, and
1998 and may be mailed to one place of said lot
the
Meigs
County hJTeloloro conveyed by
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio Madatlno A. Saunders and
45769.
Alonzo D. Saunders to F.F.
11 a participant will need
d d
auxiliary aids (Interpreter, Gilmore by deed ate
January 8, 1880.
1
Qr'alled or taped mater 1as,
Atao another parcel as
ilselstlvo listening device, follows : number 2: Also the
4ther) due to a disability,
pleaee contact Gloria Kloos, following real oatate
Clerk, prior to March 16, situated ln tha VIllage ot
(998, at (740) 992·2894 In Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
&amp;rdor to ensure that your and State of Ohio, and
rt• 8 d 8
wIll
be baing Lot number two
llCCommodated.
hundred throe (203) In said
•
Janet Howard-Tsekett VIllage of Pomeroy, said lot
: President Meigs county lacing on Butternut Street
•
Commtaatonors of satd VIllage wllh a
1'1
frontage of sixty loot
1
"'-.l_9__t_c_______ according to tho records of
1 tho Auditor's office of said
;:
~·_.:P.:u:.:b~ll:.::c;.:N,:.o::.;t;;,;ic;,:ec...._ 1 county.
~EGALNOTICE SHERIFF'S
Parcel Identification
numbers: 16-003B2.000 end
'.sALE·OF REAL ESTATE

,

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone· Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

110

POMEROY, OH.

614·992-5479

LOHG'S
COttSTROCTIOtt

Special Thru
March
8 ton Delivered

Over 20 years .experience.
Free Estimates

Mileage Limit
Call Randy

Call 614-843·54Z6,_,m.

992-5050

$120

Help Wanted

KINGS'
Home Improvements

STNA's
Veterans Memorial Hospital SNF Unit
is looking for caring, dedicated
individuals to provide care to our
residents. STNS's preferred, but will
consider training the right applicant.
Part-time positions with flexible
scheduling available.
Apply in person at Veteran11 Memorial
Hospital, Human Resources Office.
Public Notice
16-02320.000
Deed Reference; Volume
6, Page 43 Meigs County
Official Recorda
Aleo known as 124
Butternut Street, Pomeroy,
Ohlo45769
Said premises are
appraised at $25,000.00 and
cannot be sold lor tell than
two-thlrda.ol that amount
All Sheriff's Sales operate
under tho doctrine ot
Caveat Emptor. Proapocllv"
purGhaaers are urg~d to
check for IIana In the office
of tho Molga County
Recorder. The Molga
County Sheriff makes no
guarantee as to atatue of
title prior to sate.
Torma of Sila: 10% down
at lime of acceptance of bid,
with balance ln lull within
30 days.
Jamee M. Soutsby Meigs
County Shariff
(3) 9, 16, 23,3 tc
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
CASE NO, 97-CV-D83
THE STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY
MID-STATE TRUST, IV
PLAINTIFF,

vs.

KELLY B. CtlAPMAN, ET AL
DEFENDANTS
In pursuance of an Order
of Sate In tho above entitled
action, t witt oHor for sate at
public auction lnatdo the
door of tho Courthouse In
Molga County, Ohio on tho
1Oth day of April, 1998 at
11:00 a.m., tho following
deserlbed real estate:
Situate In tho Township of
Rutland, Meigs County,
Ohlo: BEGINNING at o point
ln the centerline ol Route
124, said point Ia whore the
centerline of Corn Hollow
Road lnloraocts with Route
124; thance with tho

Public Notice
centerline of Route 124, S.
so• 02' 33" e. 153.97teet to
a point at the center of a
bridge; thence N. 37' 11' 32"
E. 24.91 feet to tho true
point of beginning, aatd
point to also, In tho
_Northerly right of way line
of Route 124; thence
leaving said right of way
nne and along a severance
line through the property of
Douglas Chapman D.B. 309,
Pg. 395 (Four Calle) and
following the contarlne of a
small creak lor (Two Callo),
N. 2' 25' 13" E. 94.171eat, N.
35' 20' 37" E. 60.51 feet to a
point; thence leaving said
creek, s. 54' 08' 43" E.
313.52 foot passing on Iron
pin at 20.00 feet to an Iron
pin, S. 41' 28' 39" W. 164.01
foot to an, lron pin In tho
Northerly right of way Uno
of Route 124; thence along
aald right of way lint, N. 48'
31' 21" W. 248.21 feet to t~e
point of BEGINNING and
containing 1.00 Acrea.
FOR· LAST SOURCE OF
TITLE SEE D.B. 324, Pg. 557
of tho Molgl County, Ohio
Records of Deeds. Parcel
No. 11.oo025.001
Pro~orty Address: Route
11, Box 28, AutlaAd, Ohio
45769.
Said promlau are located
at Route 11, Box 28,
Rutland, Ohlo 45769. Said
premises wert appraised at
$44,000.00 end cannot be
sold lor loss than two-thirds
of that amount, to wit:
$29,333.33.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
Cash at Sheriff's Sale.
Balance on Delivery of
Deed.
James M. Soulaby, Sheriff
Melpo County, Ohio
David H. MCCown, Attorney
311 Park Avenue
Ironton, Ohio 45638
(614) 532-8744
(3) 2, 9, 16; 3TC

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Wri~ht

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances

Call Us For A Free Esr1mat~

614·742-3090
614-7 42·3324

614-74~~~2!~Lm&lt;LIII1

~f.t~~~~f.t~~~~r;
~ JD CONSTRUCtiON ~

0
0

llolli L'"'· lh'llltlddill!.!

Free Estimates

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

.

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

Call Toda,! Free Estimates!
992·5535 or 992·2753
2/10/1 mo. pd.

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
(Lime Stone·
Low Rates,

SUSIE

WICKS
HAULING

Home for the
.Eiderl'

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

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

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

WILL DOLJUST CALL.
992·2646
Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.
(Reasonatle Rates).

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.

•Bobcat Servlc,e
•Concrete
Construction
•Masonry Construction
•General etc.
Commercial and Aealdentlal
24 Hr. Bobcat Service
Available
Fret Estimates
No Job Too Small

Cell Phone

Brlan Morrison

FMdoy. Mondoy odltlon
-t II: DO t.m. Sttunlly.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sa lea Must Ba Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ed 11 to run,
Sundey &amp; Mondey edition·

1;00pm

80

Frktoy.

Auction
and Flea Market

Atck Pearson Auct•on Company,
full t1me auctionee r. complete
aucllon
serv1ce
Licensed
t66 ,0h1o &amp; West Vlrgtma, 304·

773-5185 Or 304-773-5441

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sd·
ver And Gold Coms. P1oolsets,
D1amonds AntiQue Jewelry Gold
Rmgs, Pre 1930 U S Currency,
Sterling , Etc Acquisitions Jewelry
• M T S Coin Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Ga!l1po~s. 740.446·2642.

AnttQues . top pnces paid . Rtver•ne Antiques, Pomeroy, Oh10,
Russ Moore owner. 740 ·992·
2~

Antiques· no ttem too large or too
small Also estates appraisals ,
reflnl&amp;hmq, custom orders , 740-

992-6516

Buying Hardwood T1mber On
Shares. 40/60 Or 50150 % De·

penalng on auallly 740-256·
6172

late Model Cars Or
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Smith Butck Pontiac, 1900 East·

J &amp; D .6.uto Parts

Buying

wrscked or salvaged vehtcles

304-773-5033
Wanlld To Buv;
· Enra Large Sleel Pet Crate.
Gall 13041615-1051
leave Message

We BU¥ Auto's In Any Cond•tlon,

Call 140-388-9062. 0• 740-•46PART
'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 0
AVON

Help Wanted
t

All Areas

SpoaJS. 304-675-1429

I

Sh irley

Avon $8 $20 IHr, No Door ·To .
Door. Easy Cash, Fun . 1·800·
361 -0466 tnd/slslrep

Avon · $6 ·$20 /Hr No Door To
Door Easy Cash' 1·800 ·296·
0139 ndlsl~rep
Bates Bros .6.musemenl Co
Must be 18 years or older Free

to travel Call74o-266·2950. M·F,
800-4 JO

Carpenters Helper lor local con· .
tractor Send resume wl relerenc- .
es to

Box CW-26 c/o Potnt'

Pleasant Reg1ster 200 Matn St
Pt Pleasant
25550

wv

COUNTER SALES /TRUCK
DRIVER POSITION FOR W.VA.
ELECTRIC SUP~LY CO. In Gal-

(614) 992-3838

Be Constdered Send Resume To
Personnel Director . P 0

Dealer s &amp; D1stnbutors Wanted

Great money makmg opportuntty
car. hOme, neatth, oooy care pro· 1
du c ts ava •lable For demo &amp;
sa le , top qualt ly tn wate rl ess
te chnology tram ETI Call Scott
Smith 0 304·882-3972 Retatl Ot·
reel I ·600·820·6893 Pint
163062
Depe ndable And Ft extble Cef!t·
!ted Nur se Atd Needed For tr.
Home Care Call Adnanne Or .6.n·

gte 1·800·481 ·6334
Dmter Wanted, Good Pay &amp; Ben·
ef•t s COL W1th Hazard Matenal
Cer t•1tca110n ReQ utred Aoply In
Person At Burhle Oil Company,
683 Suue Route 7. Ga lli pol is,

Monday Thru Fr1day 7 To S
Drrvers

HOME Mosr
WEEKENDS!
coL-A&amp; ' v1 orA Aeq
- Ga ll Ken 800-395-IG45
EW01'9S (7 JO -10 30) &amp;
Weel&lt;en&lt;Js B00-89H792
Earn 4K Per Week Call I BOOExr 97' 1 Fo&lt;Aecooo-

636-677 3

•rg

12/18/lfn Moosohoart's
INFANT AND TOODLE
_,.:(7,;,;,40;.:..;.;.;.
) 985".;..
3948
__...._____....;.;:.;,;;:..;;;;;,
Baby A CARE
V1llego

..

005

Personals
BEAUTIFUL GlRLSI
HIOQ-407-7781 Ext 1399 $2.99 1

1

·'

DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
llle cloy bolero llle od
t1 to run. Sunday
edition - 2·00 p.m.

Box
6668 , Huntington. WV 2577 36668 EOE M/FN/0

ANNOUNCEMENTS

•

ALL Y1rd Slkea Mutt
Be hid In Advance.

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

61 4·992·3141
t't

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

lipolis, Must Have Eleclrlcal (Not
Etectront c) Sale s E~perlen c e Or
Ele ctrica l Voc ai!Onal Degree To

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septlc System &amp;
Utili I
t es
Estimates

Driveways,
Parking Lots, etc.
Call Anytime
Home

Yard Sale

614-992-3470

New Hours:
Tues-Fn 10-6 Sat 10-4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Acromalhcrapy Candles
&amp; Essen11at Oils
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Stuff R•bb1ts
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bnng your odds &amp; ends
and we will f&lt;lllhem .
Rl 124 Minersville, OH
740-992-4559

P/8 Contractors Inc.

REMOVAL

70

ern Avenue, Ganlpotts

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

FOODMAIU

Oua11 Creek Name Is Dudlee 740·
2~5 - 9550 (Has Medtcal Problems)

E\TI· ({I'({ lSI .S
Pomeroy

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION

4 AM-12 PM Mon.-Sat.;
Sun. 6 AM·Midnlght
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot &amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Introducing Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Toppings
Call In Orders Accepted
740.367.7838

Lost Black Scott•sh Terner Near

Clean

992-7943 992-5404
992-6810

CHESHIRE

Wh•te Tamer. 74Q-446·7565

limn: Cln:n.;

Owner: John Dean

591-1897

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

Dntn \.\. ILu:kh 11t'.
Sqllil s_, ..,I rill,,
l tilit il''· l&lt;unlill l.!. \l'\\

Phone 740-992-3987

SNOW

· ' ·auLLEnJ4 BOIRD' .
...~
*7" .cOIU1 11in::JI.I~~. . •••ii'4..JI .
*901 C~l,lntn '1'"'•11 :$Ulild{IIY·

( ;l'lll'rill ( .l lll ' II"Hl'lillll

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Bu1ldtngs, Rooftng, Stdrng
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp;Insured

factory Choke Only

.Menage Across .
_ Dally _Selltla'-~· ' ·

33151 Hoppy Hollow Rood
Middleport, Ohio 45769
Additions, Roofing,
Siding,
Pole Barns,
Decks, Painting

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Don't let winter
give you the blues.

Four'ld Dog On St At 218 Small.

LIMESTONE

FREE
ESTIMATEES
7/22/1fn

Lost and Found

614-742-2138

3127/TfH

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

985-4473

60

Joe N. Sayr~

•New Homes
•Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

10125196/tfn

Middleport, Oh.
Public Notice
Ohio Revised Coda Section
1329.26
State of Ohio, Meigs Count1
Bank One Athena, N.A.

...

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sltel
Reasonable Rates

360° Communications

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

POMEROY,OH
Card of Thanks

SAYRE
TRUCKING

~~-~~st Be 18 + S'erv-U 619 -

Seeks lnd tvtduals To Resrde On
Our Campu s To Nurt ure And
Care For Our Infant s And Toudlers Esp Welcome Expenen ced
Day Care Staff See Youth Development ProJesslonals
Nail Tech Needed For Bu sy Sa-

lon 740-441 -1880 Or 740-256-

6366

'

�~onday, March 9, 1998

The Daily Sentinel .• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

TH~Y~A

BE HUNii UP rH

TH!IR ntUMBS.
TH' Gli!ZP&amp;'

PHILLIP

ALDER

540
-Experlence,d Shirl Preuer For
Cardinal Drycleaners Please Ap·

ply Weo March 11th Al19 Ohio
Atver Plaza Galllpol~ Belween 8
10
Have An Avon Party In Your
HOme And Get A Free G11tt Call

Allsha Roja s At 740 245 9635
An A\'on Independent Sales

Represanla1N8
ladUIIrtoiDIII~-

SIIollonoger
Immediate Opening For lntegrat
ed Supply Slle Manager /Branch
Manager For Gallipolis Area

Managomem 01 Industrial Supply

/Tool Room At Customer's loca~
tion To Include Customer Serv
lea And Inventory Management
Bachelor's Degree Or Equivalent
Management E•perience Ae
qUired Cuslomer Service Pur
chasing Or Sates Exper~ance In

MROP Suppllaa A Plus Marl Re
&amp;uma 1'o Dixie Industrial Supply
Director 01 Human Reaources

PO Box 127, Shelby NC 28151
Or fax To 704 482 4208 Equal
Qpponunny EmplOyer
Need a home? Prefer a male
llve·ln with elderly gentleman

room &amp; board small salary refer
"""""please 30ol~5-3942
Needed Immediately\ Service
Technician Must Be ~PA Cert1
fled Appty In Person Comlorl A~r
Systems Inc 407 Third Avenue

GatNpolls O!llo
Part· Time Retail Jewelry Sales

Experience Helpful But Not Re
qulred Appllcallons 4ccepted 10
A M 1 PM AcquiSitions Fme
Jewelry 151 Second Avenue

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommen ds that you do bus!
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money th rough the
ma11 until you have Investigated

lhe offe~ng
ATTENTION

Poem &amp; Song

Write rs Wh o W1sh To Be No
tlced 1 BOO 600 0343 Office Ext

1295
Earn $104 To $160 In 1 Day lnv
1te Your Friends Over To Your
Home For A Professional Glam
our Portratt Party Call 1 800-426

8363
Earn A Free Cell Phone Free
Phone Tlmelllll And Free Web
TVI !tl!! No Credtt Check No Act\
vaiiOn Fee No Monthly Bil l Ask
Me How??1' ? Call Minnie 740

441 9802 Hot Line I BOO 404

25550

01 EMS 18 Locust Street Galli
polls OH 45631
Seeking employees to work In
the Po.nt Pleasant area as Direct
Care Staff lor Individuals with de
velopmental dtsabllllles Duties
mctuda teacnlng dally l!vtng

skill activities whi le working In
the client s home assisting ell
ent with co mmunity Integration
and providing respite to families
Must have a cer and a valid drlv
er s license Varied hours, train

tng provided Must be available
lor lralnong In Huntington begin
nong March 16 1998 To apply

Money to Loan
• DIRECT LENDERS '
$2 500 $50 000

No Aav Fee 1.aoo-~7860

230

Ll v•ngslon s base meht water
prooltng all baseme nr repairs
done hee esti mates llfellme
gua rantee 10yrs on job expert
ence 304 675 2t 45

21 Have HS Doploma Experrence
Working With Youth College De
gre e Preferred Comprehenstve
Tramlng Provided Sa la ry
$1 250/ Month • Free Aoom And

Board (Over $750 Value) Bene
Ills Including Free Med1ca1 In
surance Pension P an And
403B Recrulttng 888/775 2680
WWW:fT'IOOseintl org

180

Wanted To Do

Excellent child and 1nfant care In

my home $40 week ItO aach
addtlional child references
Chester area 740-985 3734
Furntlure repair reftntsh and res
!oration also custom orders Ohio

Va lley Refinishing Sh op Larry
Phlltops 740-992 6576

~~~~~------'
Georges Portable Sawmill don t

All real eslale advertlstng In
thts newspaper ts subJect to
the Federal Fair Houstng Act
ot t968 whiCh makes 11 Illegal
to advertise ·anv preference
hm ttatton or dlscrtmtnatton
based on race color rehg100
sex fam1hal statlJS or natiOnal
ong1n or any 1ntentton to
make any such preference
limitation or dlscnmipatiOn •
This newspaper Will not

New Slnglewlde 3BR FREE De
livery &amp; SOI·UP $16 999 1 888
928-3426
PRE.OWNED HOMES

$62 000 537 Plymale Road 740
446 4323
2 s rory hollse smlng on 60x150

tot 3br 1 bath tocatad on Ctnton
3 Bedrooms 1 1/2 Balhs Tn L~
el Spring Valley Area 740 446

8251 AMer 5 PM

3ll4-675 5010 after 5pm
All Bnck 3 Bedrooms Full Bas
ment Carpal! 1 3 Acre&amp; Close
To Rtver Valley School 740 446

1387

$180 Call now 3ll4 755-5885

BUY HOMES FROM ~ 000 1 5
Bdrm Local Gov't &amp; Bank Rapo s
Call1 800-522 2730 X 1709
In Mrddlaport two story large lRI
OR three bedroom one &amp; 112
bath laundry room attached car
port mce fenced yard with lots of
flowers good nelghbofhood close
to schools ca ll 740 992 3787 or

740 992 5438
NEW CONSTRUCTION

g flxod ReiH
$198/Mo Poymento
$17,995 on 3BR
fM O&amp;flwry &amp; Set-up
Only AI Oakwood Homos
Nitro wv 3fi4.7SS.5185

Beau

tlful Two Slory Colonial 414 Third
Avenue Galllpolts 3 Bedrooms 2
1/2 Baths lR &amp; FR Formal Dining
Aoom Oa\1: Trlm Ftreplace Mu ch
More Home Eligible For Tu

New 3br $999/down $189/ mo
Free Set up &amp; Delivery Only 3
Leltl Only at Oakwood Homes Nl
frO WV 304 755-5885

Well kept vinyl sided two sto ry
home with matchtng two car ga
rage large fenced cor ner lo t In
very nice neighborhood In Mid
dlepon home has newer root naw
windows and many other updales
too numerous to list Ca ll 740
992 6737 for an appointment

320

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

10~~:50 mobtle home 1973 model

740 742 2803
12x60 2 Bedroom wllh expando
on rented lot In Park Lane CA
Porch
Oulbulld 1ng
Carport

Caii304-67S.4878

equipment or rent for something
else owner will help qualified people good location call 304·882

2955

Will Care for Elderly Or Handl
capped Person In My Home Ref
lreno&amp;f, 741).4.41 1536

1971 Monticello 12x60 excellent
condition range , refrigerator
washer dryer air gas furnace
carpet two bedroom bath new

Will do house cleaning m Ma
aon New Haven PI Pleasant

vinyl underpinning $5500 740
985-3929 or 740-985 3641

Pomeroy &amp; Middleport areas
Contact Connie 304-773-5156

1980 14x70 mobile home $5000
1211:28 mobile home addition ,

Lots

&amp; Acreage

(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
SUALL BUSINESS,
COUNTRY ESTATE)
63 95 Acres Approx 8 Acre
lake Galha County County Water
And Electnc $2 600 Per Acre

740-388 8678
4 Acres Recently Land scaped
Rural Water Tap Read y For
Home Located Hannan Trace

Road 011 51 At 790 For $10 000
740-256 1789
70 acres pnme hunttng land se
d Uded and pnvate road frontage

bulldong soles $42 000 form 740
843-5453
BRUNER LAND
740-441-1492
G1lll1 Co

Galhpolls Neighbor

hood Ad 1o Acre Lots Ot Laval
$19 000 Or 22 Acres With Pond
NOW $24 000 frrendly Ridge 8 5
Acres $7 500 Or 6 5 Acres
$8 000 County Water
Melge Co

Da nv11te N1ce 17
Acres $18 000 S2 000 Down +
$238/Mo 5 Or 9 Acre Lot In
Same Area Ctty Water

Call For Free Maps • Owner F1

nanctng Into Taka 10% Otf Llstad
P~s On Cash Purchasasl
Real Estate
Wantecr

Wante&lt;l 4 Or 5 Acres In Tho Rio
Grande Or Green School Otstrlct
Call A~er 5 PM 740-245-5946
RENTALS
Houses for Rent

APPLIANCES

ranges Skaggs Appliance&amp; 78
Vine Street Call 740 446·7398
1·6Q0-499.3499
Polty'o- a Ulod Fumlturo
We now ha1111 Arrrrt Surplus!II
21 01 Jelleraon Ave
Open 9 30 • ~ 00 Mon·Sal
304 675-SOFA (78321
Used Furniture Store 130 Bula

2 Bedrooms Very Clean Stove
Refrigerator Water Trash 'Pa1d
$250/Mo Plus Deposit Near

v11le Pike Good Quality Merchan
dtse M T W Hrs 1fJ-4

520

Sporting

Goods

3 Bedroom Trat ler Mercerv1lle
Area 740-2§6574

Wlleon'o Army Surptuo

rooms Stove Refrigerator Water

Best pnces anywhere full line of
Advantage Camo In time for
turkey season Great select~n of
new and used boots lots of new
and used camo sizes 2 months

Trash Paid Very Nice $350/Mo
Housa 740-388-9686

740-742 2801

Size 8 prom dress $tOo' 740
992 7572
Corona PWP 4200 Word

Processor W1lh Monitor It Has A

Hard Drive And A Disc Drtva 11
Comas With Spell Right Corona
Cole Ill For Spreadsheets Lotus
And Word Perfect It Has Been
Used

Less Than

to Times

Bought New $350 Sell For $250
OBO Also for Sate Smith Coro·
noa Eleectrlc Typewriter $140
Call 740 245 9635 II No Answer
Pleaee Leave A Message
Sportscards lor sale very nice
selection of Insert cards and
rookies All at least 112 of retail
prices, some even 75% off Call
now lor best se!acuon 740 949·

rat And lP Gas Furnaces life.
ttme Warranty On Heat Exchang·

Two bedroom tralklr In Middleport
740 992 5039

more Come and check us out
We are open 8 30am 8 OOpm

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished sacunty
depos 1t reqUtred no pets 740

Buy or se ll Riverine Antiques
1124 E Ma1n Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

992 2218

am to6oopm Sunday tOO to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

1 bedroom apartment lor rent In

P1 Peasant 614-446-2200

Moore owner

2 Bedroom apt In New Haven

540

M lscellaneous
Merchandise

4x8 Sleet Single Axle Trailer With
A loH $450 740-446 4782
Amaztng

Metabolism

Break

Through Loee 10 lo 200 lbs , Call

2bdrm apts total electric ap
pllances furnished laundry room
facilities close to school m town
Applications avatlable at Vtllage
Green Apts 1149 or call 740 992

samples (740)441 - 1982

3711 EOH

Bean1e Babies current and retired Pnces from $8 00 No super
rare Beanies lor sale, 740 949
3096 No cells aHer 9 00 pm

456 1/2 Second Avenue Gathpo
lis 2 Bedrooms AC Appltances

Beautiful Midnight Blue Sequin
Prom Dress Size 10 Mike Benet

$425/Mo $225 Deposit Utrllloes
Paid 740-446-2129

Pa d $450 Never worn Best 011
er 740 245-5595

BEAUTIFUL 'APARTMENTS 4T
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Brand Newt Great Glftl CO/VIdec
storage unit Black and cherry
Never out of boll. $125 Holds up
to 94 0 discs also holds tapas

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Hou~ng Opportunity

Ca ll 740 982 6836 alter 6 pm
cos &amp;tapes nottncludad
Cabbage Patch Doll Collection
from 1982·To Data 304 875
1063

Furnoshed Efficiency Apartment

Comtc books for sale Ent1re ool

lectlon muat got $125 OBO 740
949-3098

446-2602

Computer Compact Disc 2000
Pen11num Pro Fax Modem 740 ~

apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Mtddle

port from $249 $373 Call 740

446-9218

992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun!Ues.

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
1Evans

In New Haven 1br furnished apt
Includes washer &amp; dryer deposn

ECONOMY
Heating And Cooling
Up Grade Your
Presant Sysl&amp;rl)
1 800 649·2323
740-245--

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

740-448-0390
Nice c lea n efflency apartment
re•erences &amp; deposit no pets

304-675 5162

Go Cart Dingo 5 Horse Power
Englne Knobby Tlres,.-Roll Bar

Ni ce one bedroom &amp; 2 bedroo m
apartments in Pomeroy utlhttes

740 446-3200 _ _ __
_;__.....:.=.:.:...
I,;$550

paid no pets 740-992 5858

Green Lazy Boy Recliner $400

Floret Love Seat $300 3ll4·675
7173

Nice One BR Unfurnished Apart
ment Range &amp; Relng Provided
Water &amp; Garbage Paid Oepostt
Req uired 740 4"e: 4345 Alter 6

Grubbs P1ano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
ptano Or 740 446 -4525

PM
Now Taking Applications- 35
We st 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenls $295/Mo 740 446-

0006

Enterprises Jackson OH

1 800-537 9528

&amp; references 304 882 2566

Hand Sewn FuU Size Quilts Log
Cabi n Shoofly And Crosstltch
1 Pansy

$200

One 2 bedroom aparlment $260
per month plus utl!Uies &amp; depos1t

1 Bedroom Near Holzer Range 1
AERATION MOTORS
Refrigerator Furnished W/D J Repaired New &amp; Rebulh In Stock.
Hook Up $279 Plus Utilities De
Call Ron Evans t 800-537 9528
posttllease Requ ired (740)4462957
- - - - - - - - - - · .I •Kareoke machine 30' elac trlc
Pomeroy two bedroom carpeted
cable trash utilities paid $4851
mo $485 deposit one year
lea se Middleport two bedroom
hardwood floors stove $2S0Jmo
$250 deposll six month and one

range electri c dryer Fi she r 4
head VCA Kenmore slde by side
refrige rator w /water &amp; Ice dis
penser GE 27' TV wooden gun
cabinet 304-67 5- 7163

year lease offere&amp; 740-992-4514

Lady Kenmore electric dryer

Upstairs 2 Room s &amp; Bath Fur

wns on 110 exce llent condlllon

nlshed Clean No Pats Reference

&amp; Deposit Requ ired 740 446

1519

450

Furnished

can see work $50 74Q..667 3830
Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer Stack
able While New Maytag Relrlg·
orator 14'9 Cub Foot Off White
New 24· Pontoon Boal like New,

Circle Motel lowut Rates In

40 Horse Mac Motor With Boat
Trailer 740 441 1538 740·U1·
0000

ll ~:---------­

460

Space for Rent

Mobile homo 1111 available bat
ween Athena and Pomeroy call

740-385-4387
Mt Vernon Ave NICe 3br central
air appliances basement patio
references required 304 ·882·

appllcallono to rent trollers &amp; efll·

2405 or 304-682 2447

HUD ~all3ll4 773-5944

Roush Rental Is now accepting
ency apartments Will accept

•Q

MICRC.'50fi

• 7 6 5 2

• Q8 3

bales

Call

before

pm

Q

Soulb
a A74
• A
t

Pass

1997 Ranger Fla l r~da Loaded.
Must Saiii740-448-IBOO
'

nura wheels dark green left front •

Round bales, $10 each square

bales $1 50 Ford '01 mower,
$300 call 740·742·2331 6 9pm
on~

Straw lor Sale 304-675-5086

Vans

YOU CAN TELL ME !!
I'M YORE GOOOEST

l JEST HEARD SOME
REAL GOOD

95 Gao Tracker 4x4 salt top :

loaded need payoff 740·985· ,
3734
-,9_7_8_F_o-rd-2-50_$,_2_5_0_0_19-7~
ll:

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

MOZA,T'f V~,y ~001&gt;, llJT YOU
(,Ati'T ltAT fl.OISINI fOil
SANI&gt;IOX

asking $3950 see or .

F Hysell 740-992-4283

TRAN S PO RTATlON

0

1977 Cadillac Limousine very
good condition runs good good
tires and exhaust $1800 740·
992 5529

1985 Ford 150 4X4 Supercab
loaded $2 300 cra«sman roll ar·
ound tool box 740-742 1906

en Day Jesus Fnday April 3rd
7 30 at North Part&lt;ersburg Baptist
Church call 740 949 3098 for d..

1984 Nlssan 300

zx 5spd

ttops

1991 Chevy lumina APV van sli
cylinder automatic high mlla1

tal~

773-5205

runs good $2800 1967 Forci

Used Baauly Shop Equipment 5
Dryers 4 Hydraulic Chairs, 1
Shampoo Chaor 2 Stations With

1985 Mercury Grand Marqu1s
Automatic 302 V Remanufac·

Aerostar Cargo van 4 cylinder S
speed 90 000 miles runs good
vary dependable lots of rust

Mirrors &amp; Sinks Attached 1 Ster·

lllzer Asking $2,000 740 2866600
Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 t • 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Attlngs l:l Stock
RO!I EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio 1 800-537 9628
White Kenmore Wa sher $90
White Gibson Dryer $75 Almond
Hol pomt Dryer $75 740 · 446

9088

550

Building
Supplies

41 Sheats Steel Siding /Rooting
3600 Sq Ft I 8 Gage $2 500 Ra
bar 3/4'x7' 1500 $1 000 Or $1 00
A Stick 45 90 lbs Bags 01 Por
!land Cement $200 Or $6 00 A
Bag 741).448 7877
Block brick, sewer plpls wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters

Rio Grande OH Call 740·245
5121

560

e

Fro.!Dm

1987 Monte carlo Super Sport
305 Auto TTops St 600 740
367 0138

1996 F· t50 4x4 XLT Package
302
Diamond Plate Tool
Box
Very GOOd CondHion

~WJI&lt;£ 1

1989 Buick laSabre loaded lots
of new parts good condl'lon,

740

$1900 cell 740 949 2203 or 740
949 2045

1981 Sportster XL 1000 Runs

1989 Ford Tempo CD player, two
door 5 speed II 0,000 plus
m1les strong car pamt OK need
to sell $1000 740 949 3098 No
calls arter 9 00 pm
1990 Sunblrd LE Cofl\lertlble Au
tomat1c Air New Top ixtra

Clean 79 000 Miles $3 500 740379-2641i
1991 Hondo Civic Wagon good
shape well kept $2 1oo phone
740-992-8619
1994 Hyundal Elentra Runs Good

1994 Mercury Cougar XR7 Elac·

trlc Bed 8 Cyt PS PB PW
head Cam Wishbone Suspen
slon Air Bags Excellent Condl

'
A Groom Shop Pat Grooming

lion Adult Driven Well Taken
Cere Of 44 000 Miles Take Over

featuring Hydro Bath

Payments 614-446-7527 Aner 5

Sheets 373 Georges Creek

741).446-0231

Don

Ad

AKC DOberman Male 10 Months
Housebroken Must Selll 740
379-2126
AKC Labrador Retriever puppies
shots wormed vel checked two
males leh one female 11 weeks
daughter of N1tro Express Pitt

740-992 3679 attar 5pm
Jack Russell terriers tamales
etght weeks old wormed first
shots ta•ls docked $200 each

740-698-7055
Mating Pair Cockatetls And Cage

$100 Baby $25 740-446-3200
Reg Black Lab 10wks old fe
male house brolce $150 304 ·

675-7281
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

275 Massey Fergustl n Tractor
Good Shape Farm Equipment &amp;

Wagon 740-3~2697

450 Casu Dozer Tower Angle &amp;

Tilt Blade 614 4ctual Hours
$17 000 740-245-5439
8 Ft Finish Mower l:.lke New 3

Hnch $1 000 740-379-2820
Hydr aulic 011 lowest price In
town Vent free gas heatefl pro·
pane 5. natural gas on saJe now

Sicfefs EqUipment ~75-7421

John Deere 317 17 HP Hydro
With 48' Mower Deck Wheol
Horse Lawn &amp; Garden Hydro,

Cub Cadet 1860 18 HP Hydro 50
Inch Mower Deck Troy Built Ao·

11lUIIer LbNew 740-448-9227

1995 C26 Cornaro T· Tops Load
ad, Excellent Condrtlon 74Q.441·
0996
1995 Eag le Talon Like New

SI 0 900 740 388-8909
1995 Toyola Avalon leather

Sur&lt;ool Loadeo E•calklnt Condl
lion 46K Mile&amp; $22 500 740·
441 1880 740-256-6366

Navy /Multi Plaid Sola Bed, 2
Years Old $375 740-379-9481

4·H Feedar Plga 30 To 40 Pda
741).379-2126
•

!&gt;#'(

THIN
MINTS

-·1

1989 Bass Tracker 1811 fiber
glass flah/skl boat w/150hp
JOhnson trolling motor

11M PRACTICING Ml{ QUESTION
MARKS QUESTION MARKS
ARE IMPORTANT IN CASE
'(OU ~-lAVE TO SA'(

.

???????
.. ' ...

exc

oond $5 800 304-675-1176
1990 16' Celebrity opan bow 3 "·

2B Paclltc
Island
30 Scratchleat
3o4 Vodka and
lome drink
35 Feel regret
36 Poetic ttrne
36 Prayer book
39 Sedative
40 Rlgatonl or
spaghetti
42 - ·
depressive
44 More crafty
49 Chemical
sulllx
50 Force (Lat )
52 Fuss
53 Alllrmadve

asking $7000 740-742·3042

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ceitbrit)l CIPher CI'W!ograms are crealltd tram qi.IOtahont by lamous people pas! and presen1
Ead't letter tn the CIPher Stands for anoltler rDdBy s clue R eqcmls 0

'Z M F

KALRPMAFWR

CFEWWJ

HEBZTC

PTtFZMALO

'CFHCAOFCEZTc ·
YWEJALO

AL

YFCCJ,

BMABEOT

K E P

KAWWAEI

T L
AL

RFBFIGFC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I have a woman s body and a chold s emotoons • Ehzabeth Taylor
"Stars don t cry " - Mae West

~:~~:~~~' S©\\.~lA -It tti'S®GAM I

WORD

Edrl•d by CLAY R POlLAN-- - - - - -

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

tho
be

low ro form fou r strnple words

I
I

I

OAWOME

I I I 1'I
REDYR I
2

f--,..,-A
5 _Nr-L--r.Y

-~~~ :~',

l

1 I It I :·

I

M0 N F I R

.

.

.

.

.

II you steal from one wnle r
tt s plag tilnsm but tt s resea rch

I''

_

.

.

.

.

.

you steal •••
Complere lhe chvckle qvoled

C)

b y ltll.ng m the m•ss•ng words

L-1-...L-L-1-...L--l you develop fro m step No 3 below

There's no ·
way around it, ·
Classified Ads

Ire Mercrulser engine upgraded •
stereo boat and trailer In new
condition less than 65 hours •

vote

~--r,--,:;,,;--r,-..,,,,.,6,--1

PEANUTS

PRINT NUMBERED
LEITERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Legacy - Usurp- Clump - Tedtum . SUCCEED
Always pay your debts and pay compliments and you
are sure to SUCCEED

I 995 17\t Pro Craft Bass Boat
12 24 501b thrust trolling motor
90hp force engine look s 11\l:e

new S10 000 304-882 3652

Kawasaki STS Jet ski sflll under

MARCH gf
fW~tD~ 1€. ~ L~&lt;f
III&lt;~VI'NT fl~S , BUT IT
W6 ~ lii\61C 1&lt;1~

$5000 740 949-2203 or 740 949
2045 will co nsider trade for a
good pOOIOOn boat

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

rJr ~~Oil:SQI.IE. ~It,;( fW

•

Access O&gt;Jer 10 000 Transmts

Junior dragster Jegs dlgllron au
tometer Sa lisbury clutch T/F

New ga s tanks 1 ton 1ruck,
wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; A Auto

•

Ripley WV 304 372 3933 or 1'
800-273 9329
SERVICE S

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer for
Sa le A 1995 Marada Boat &amp;

810

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
U&lt;tcondlllonal lllelllhe guarantee
references furnished Es-

tablished 1975 Call (740) 44(&gt;.-.
0870 Or 1 800-287 0576 Roge fi Waterprooflng
Tuesday Murch I 0, I 998
Appllanca Part&amp; And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex.
pertence All Work Guaranteed

French City Maytag, 740 448'

rJ9!i

'

ClC General Home Main•
t.e.lrl
ne,.n cerv·. Painting, vinyl siding,
01 doora windows bstlui
"'
repair and more fo&lt;
call Chat 74Q.992·

1978 Chevy C 30 food Delivery
Truck, Propane Heated, $3,000
080, 74CJ.4.4e·106a
1980 ford f·150 Plck·UP V·B
Auto Trona Clean 740·256·
1540

HAVE

C.OOKIE5,

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

stons &amp; Clutches 740-245 5677

4x4 ATV Serial t4781e l508·
18811047 And A 1984 Toyota
.Camry VIN tjl2sv18e0e0208303
Public Auction Will Be Held At
The OVB Annex, 143 Third Ave ,
Gallipolis OH On 3/21/96 AI
10 00 A M The Above Will Be
SOld To Highet! Bidder 'As Ia •
Where IS' Without Expreosed Or
Implied Warranty And May Be
SNn By Calling Keith Johnaon AI
7 40· 441·1 038 OVB Roaorves
The Right To A'Cipl Or Reject
Any And All Bto;, And Withdraw
Properly From Sate Prior To Sale
Torma 01 Sale CASH OR CEfl.
TIFIEO CHECit

DONT

(Rear) $2 400 OBO 740·88Z·
3079

Vk:kle 74Q.448-2697

Tenn Trailer Sertal JefjOOB 2
8e595 A 1996 Honda Fourtrax

un

WE

Brand New Turf Tamer Tlrn

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMiflo.'
SIONS, Used /Rebuilt All Types

wing tra ck champion, complete
mtnus engine S3000 OBO 740
992 2879

Monday. March 9, 1998
By Phillip Alder
It ts no good havtng a wmner stl·
ling m say the dummy tf you can·
not get over there. thatts, tfyou don' t
have a dummy entry Yet someumes.
although tl appears tmposstble to
reach the dummy you can wmkle a
way over there •• as m thts deal
After East opens four spades,
usually showmg a good etght·card
sutl wtth offenstve, not delenstve,
values. South has a problem However, assummg there are II spades
between hts hand and East's, he
knows etther the dummy wtll be shon
or West won't have one to lead So,
' " clubs ts a reasonable gamble It's
all North's tau It A decent partner
would have a trump or two'
The spade·two opemng lead con·
tirms that West has only one spade
and East etght (Wtth lwo spades,
West wou ld lead hts htgher card If
West has three spades East doesn t
have a tour·spade opentng ) But how
can you avotd two spade losers" How
can you get tnto the dummy 10 cas h
those red· sutt km gs'
There IS one h~pe Alter wtnnmg
trtck one, cash the .tee, kmg and
queen ol clubs Then take your two
reQ·SUtl aces Ftn.tlly, ex u Wtlh lhe
club three Wnh luck, Wesl wtll have
to wm the tnck and lead to dummy \

t99S Yamaha Blaster 4 Wheal~
Bought New In 1997 E C 200 cc

750

measure
26 Sea eagle

Pass

Thts £real play was luund by Nan·
cy Dommock ol Hobe Sound Ra Yet
West mtssed her chance lo be the
herome II she h.tJ unblocked the
ltve stX anJ &lt;even ol clubs under the
ace kmg ,tnd queen, she could have
play~d I he two unuer ueclart!r's three,
leavmg Soulh to lose two spade tnck s
at the end

5&amp;111741).256 1663

Credl1 Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles No Turn Downs Call

1\~~-z

Mutt

1 800-~22 2730 X 3901

I

flem.Spm.

lent Condition Low Hrs

4 Speed Trona For Truck 1984
Chevy 1 Ton Truck $150 740·
448-7877

Medal Sto re Shelving Ideal For

2 Raglstered Llroousln Bulls 740256-8350

1./00!&gt;CHUCK

1998 Honda 4 Tra• 2 WD Excel·

three matching Kawasak• s
vests and trailer all go with it

Business Or Workshop Will De·
liver 740-256--60511
Livestock

~M

power bought new July of 97iJ•

Trucks 411:4 s Etc

HI THERE
OH YES
LADY'
TWO BO~ES
\o/OULD
Of THIN
YOU LIKE
MINT.S. .
TO BUY
PlEASE '
f,oME JUNIOR llr~"'T:J

$3500 740-448 8015 Balora 4:00

$7,200 OBO 740 :ISH340 740256-6467

1980 1990Cors fo&lt; $100111
Salzad And Sold
LocaPy Thl$ Mon1h

1\ ~~ WI&gt;Q

NATE

Condllton,

Doors Auto Air 31 000 Miles

1'--------.,-.--.

1630

E11.cellent

4•

kmgs

1994 Honda 300 4•4 ATV With

warranty three seater 83 horse

tng On Used VehiCles 740 4410607

Tf\~1

Motorcycles

1996 Plymouth Naon Green 4

Bad Credit No Credtt Bankrupt·
cy? We Can Help\ Bank Finane·

'"~·r YOO 11\E. ~ Wt-10 "'

~~

Graatt LookS Grealt EKtre
Chroma Low Milas On Over •
Haul Needs Trans Work S3 800
form Ea~ MuiiW1s 741).388-8071
Extras

lfo\I'LYINC:&gt; r OCNT OOW "''
1-11\~\ t'fo\ \NJ(JNU N!OJ\ Wf'ffl
11 c.r:P£':1 m

I'"~ 'IOJ

~'rOC TOO

1993 Ford Aero Start XL Plus

Leather Interior Double Over·

es:..:2:..:3326~~=~=~--- '
L

f/II&gt;..XK.. fU:c.riPI:JC.!

Cruise Tilt AC PW POL 55 008
Mllea 740-367 0512

jl'leeks old

$75oa Call 3fl4.882 3264 or 3ll4·

~p ~'(~\E/o\ l~t-­

dge Caravan Automatic 2 5L 4

er s full blooded/no papers 9
have had shots

~\'k)W, Bl&lt;:lJ\Ul, ~ 1\0t&lt;\E 11-\fA\EK "'

Cyl Excellent Condition $3 200
740-446 721 ~

ago 740-446--6688

3 Female Australian Blue Heal

THE BORN LOSER

lured Engine Has Approximately \
work van $600 304· 773·
45 000 Miles Full Power Aluml
~~~:5p~m~_ _ _ __:_
num Wheels $1 200 1990 Dod· -

looks Great ExceHent Gas Mile

Pets for Sale

AtTIVITie5.

1989 GMC Safari full Cusll&gt;m
Van, $3,950 740-446-4222

low profile tires w/chrome
wheels 2 seater S1,000 304

East

The dilemma
of communication

ford 250 $3 500 740 446-0159 ;
Evenings

Autos lor Sale

9 Circuo animal
10 More like a
basketball
player
t 1 Earhest born
12 Shuts nolally
19 Gist
22 Yielded
24 Liquor

SHALL WE?

&amp; 4-WDI

1962 cnevy c 20 lull size C U&amp;~
tom van V·8 400 engine 30k
great lor towing &amp; traveling lots of ,

71 0

7 Artists
8 LP opeed

home (2 wds)

Opemng lead a 2

LET'S KEEP IT THAT WAY--

FRIEND ll

60li•51P II

damage, askrng $6 500 740 949 '
2844- or 740-949-2311

730

6 Have dinner at

Vulnerable North· South
Dealer East

Pass

Mfxad grau hay lor sale 740

Anawer to Previous Puzzle

A K Q J 10 9 8 3

6a

1998 Ford Explorer Sport. 2 door
V 6 auto 2WD 820 miles aluml·

Mixed Hay Delano Jackson Farm
Ph 740·448-11 04' 740-441 ·0450

a

37 auainna note
40- Plpej'
1 Czech capital 41 Skirt odge
7 Tolka Idly
43 Tears
13 Conotallalion 45 Concert sight
14 Dtamey
46 Once __
15 Dilemma
while
16 Mro Marcos
47 Part of RSVP
:~ ~odomen bronze 48 COlli part
!Ill
51 Deny
20 Astronaut a
54 Lend! 1 aport
ferry
55 Conceive
21 Small eongblrd 56 Certify
23 Ceohew or
57 Fuei·carrylng
pecan
ehlp
24 Strap on a
•
DOWN
latcon a lag
25 Large knife
27 Encompaalod
1 Tropical lrult
29 Prefix lor cycle 2 Measuring
31 Floor covering
aticko
32 Exploaive lnlta 3 Gotten up
33 Droop
4 Musician a
3o4 Athena'
Job
country
5 'fucki

A

$9500 614 446-2847

(740)448-4824 or (740)446-091 0
985-3902

• J 10 5
• 4

North

Sharp! $6,000 740 448·4254 AI·
tar 5 PM

614-6!14-7842

Mobile home frame ready to go
rdeal for klw boy car haiMr or big
bale hauler $500 Call K &amp; K
Mobile Homos 30 4 675 3000

a KQJ 109853

•Jt0964

w..t

$500 740-387-0688

Case Maxi Sneaker Cable Plow

1

IIJTE:RkTIVE
Ut\JIT FI&lt;I:)V1

Soulb

1990 Chevy Van HI Top Coover

Sleeping rooms wllh cooking
hook ups Call altar 2 oo p m
304 773-5651, Mason wv

Good mixed hay $2 square

East

• 2

ooo

slon Full Power TV , Stereos

With Backhoe Attaohment And

740-4ll1 5698 740-441 5167
Also trailer space on river All

&amp; Grain

•

Wosl

Cassette Automatic, Air PS PB
Bedhner Cover 35
Miles

1983 Pontloc 2000 PS PB, AC, 4

Used 25+ 4xP Case Trencher

Construcuon Workers Welcome

~

1990 Dodge Dakota V-6 3 9 Liter
Excellent Condlllonl 740·2455595

Cylinder, 2 Doors, Solid Body,

$300 740 446

JET

rrSA

1989 S 10 Ch&amp;&gt;Y $2 800 OBO
740-388 8084

Jackson Ohkl H00-537 9528

Health Rider like Now $200 740
388 0213

Third St Radne 740-247-4292

1981 Chevy 5 W B 30~ Auto
$1 BOO 1966 S·IO LWB New 25
Auto 0 0 New Seat $2,800 740,
448 1an

Upnght, Ron Evans Enterprises,

4680

I

Hay

Tlckels for sale Blaech and Sev

Antiques

•K87332
tK97642

er 'If You Don I Call Us We Both

to 4X backpacking and camping
1tems kid s clot he s U S made
Smith &amp; Wesson knives and lots

530

640

OHJ9 98

• 6

Lose1• Free Estimates! Add On

Streat, $250 month $100 deposit
741H167·3083

Apartments
for Rent

North

$1250 740-992 5529

WARM UP, High Efficiency Natu

Heat Pumps Only Sllghty Higher
Call Us Today 1998 Is Our 28th
Year In The Heating &amp; Cooling
Business! 740·446·6306 1 800·
29Hl098

everyday Cell us at 740·992
7093 or 1 800-348 8176

Chevy 112 ton pickup runs

1990 Ford Ranger short bed
4cyl 5spd aluminum wheeta,
Rabbits for Salo $5 00 Each runs good 1750 304-895-3237 or
Mora Than One $4 00 7 40 258 3ll4 895 3080
1098
1996 Ford Ranger XLT AM/FM
Registered Black Angus bull

Furniture

304- n:l-S:Ji t

~mlth

gus And 10 Polled Herefords
Thursday March 12th AI 6 00

3098 No cells anar 9 00 pm

Avallble April 1st 1993 2 Bed

Town Newly Remodaled HBO
Cinema ~~: Showlime 5. Disney
Weekly Rates Or Monthly Rates

$1500 4 x24 round pool $500
740-367-()617
1968 Oakwood Mobile Home
14K70 Wlftl Heat Pump G E A•
fngerator &amp; Stove Dishwasher
($12 000) Ux24 Addition
(~ 500) OBO + Extroal 741).2566980 304 89!1-37 42

GOOD USEO

2 Bedroom no pets reference re-

Buy Sell, Trod&amp;
Usad &amp; Antlquas

Aecondlllonad

7795

quired on Sandhill Road 304
875-3834

Rooms

41 0

R &amp; S Fumltu1'0
Maaon,WV

2 Bedroom trailer references &amp;
deposit 304 675 1076 Leave
message

I Gracious living I and 2 bedroom

~estau rant for lea ~e or rent

1967 Belmont 2br 1 bath gas
fu rnace &amp; refrigerator Asking

1971 t2x65 Concord Mobile
Home Very Good Condition Oak
Tnm $5000080740-441 1107

Business and
Buildings

360

446 4039 740 446 1004 freez

Washe rs dryers refrigerators

Central Heat &amp; Alr Condlllonmg
Carpet Throughout Pnvale Park
lng All Utihtles Furnished Except
Electric Private &amp; Qu lel 740

NEW BANK REPO S, ONLY 3
LEFT, 1-IIOQ.383.M82

Abatemenl Sl79 500 304 273
2940

74()-446.2003

Boyd Beef Cattle Performance

ers Refrigerators Side By Skies
Televf&amp;io ns Washer Dryers
Beds Stoves
Washers Dryers Ranges Relrt
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446

Joh nson s Mobile Home Park

qwr9d 614 446-11 04

741).448 8217

Black Angus Bull For Sale 740
388-8823

PM At The New OK Livestock
Auction On The AA Hwy In
Maysville KY 8Q6. 783-6888

Appliances

14~~:60 Mobile Home Located AI

ESTATES 52 We stwood- Drive

TAX SPECIAL

350

Mobile Homaa
for Rent

2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Trailer
Park References &amp; Deposit Re

Cooler 6 Ft Horizon tal With
Doors On Top Goo d Condition
Antique Pump Organ With Stool

Queen Size Watarbed Complete
Works Good 740 379-2720 AF·
TERIPII

Appliances /Used Furniture 740·

traSh tndude&lt;l 741).992 2167

Pool Table 8 Ft State ro p With
Naw Fen Balls Sticks Excelllnt
Condition Cover &amp; light Coke

SPECIAL SPRING
FEEDER CALF SALE
AttlenoU..tod&lt; Sileo
Saturday March 14th 1 ~M All
Conslgmenta Welcome Haulong
Available Callie Aoceplad After
4 ~M friday 740-592·2322 Or
~40-698-3531

Tested Bull Sale Selling 50 4n·

For free consultation and Free

Single Parent Program Special
financing on 2 3 5. 4 bedroom
homes Payments 11 low 11

340

pets depoall required 740 992
3090

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260 $300 sewe r, water and

740-992 3244

Prlmeater· $99 with rebate Free

Household
Goods

Two bedroom house clean re
trlgeralor no stove no Inside

420

New gas Frigidaire range, bought
6197 self cleaning moving $300.

HBO with first month free Offer
ending sooniiB00-263-2640

evanlngs 741H196 6002

Required 741).388 8321

7148

~990own

L1vlngroom Large Kitchen 1
Acre Galhpohs C1ty Schools

$212 plus depos1t call

2 Bedrooms New!~ Decorated
First AYanue No Pels Rent
$360/Mo Deposit &amp; References

~

Home•for Sale

I

area 304 773 9171 leave mas
sage

SPRING SPECIALS
REAL ESTATE

Professional Tree Service Stump
Removal Free fstlmalesl In
aurance Bidwell Ohio 614 388

Years Experience Excellent Ref
eronces Call Mer 2 30 PM 740441-0359

New Doubla Wide 3BR 2 Bath
FREE Delivery &amp; Set up $24 999
low Down Pay111ent E Z Monthly
Payments 1 688-928 3426

Excellent Condition Owner Fl
nanclng Available Call 304 722

lnforme&lt;lthal an dWellings
advenlsed In 1hts newspaper
are available on an equal
oppOOunlty basts

room

440

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 lehl
Still under warranly owner II
nanctng available
304 755
7191

304 675 1076
MERCHANDISE

TWo bedroom trailer on Condo r

800-837 3238

Trailer space for rent no pets

Pomeroy 109 Peacock one bed

Plus Deposit Also 3 Bedroom

knowingly acqopt

$2 000 740 446 2947

Would Like To Care For Children
In My Home On Weekdays
Clea n Loving Atmosphere , 10

800-383-6862

advertisements to,. real estate
which Is 1n v1olallon of the
law Our readers are hereby

Building Industry Call Chud&lt; 245
~104 No Job Too Small!

Will haul junk or lrash away $351
plci&lt;l.ll load ~75-5035

New Ooublewlde Repo 4 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Easy Terms 1

month with $1075 down Call 1

12x65 Trailer 3br 1 bath $5 500

9648 614 367 7010

New 14x70 3bedroom Call 1
800-928 67n

4514 ask lor Chns

Pomeroy 4 bed room HUD with
stove &amp; relngerator references
no pets call 740 992 6B86 after
530pm

N G H S 740-388 9686

months FREE tot rent.
Includes aklrllng deluKe stops
and setup Only $187 08 per

Looking For Handyma n Jobs In
30 Years Experience In

Localed Johnson s Mobile Home
Park Eastern Avenue With EK·

Includes~

$12 500 (740)245-0452 After 5 30
pm

able

755-5885

New 1998 14x70 three beclroom

haul your togs to the mill ju&amp;l cell
304-675-1957
Gallla County Reasonable &amp; Roll

LIMITED OFFER
1998 Doublewrde 3br 2 baths
S1 699/down $259/mo Only at

Set up $17,999 1 888-928 3426

3br home 1 acre lot loca ted m
GallipOliS Ferry across from 84
Lumber Price redu ce d mce

In Our Campus Homes (Located
40 Miles W 01 Chtcago) To Pro
vide Guidance And Suppo rt For
Our Children Newborn Through
H1gh SchOol Aga Must Be Over

Mo Only Oakwood Homes Bar

New 16 Wtde·Free Delivery &amp;

Truck driver needed local haul
ing 27% of gross stan tmme

dlvlduals Or Couples To Reside

Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
Moret Call Bennett s Mobile
Home Supply All 740-446 9416

Make 3 Payments &amp; Move In A

304 773 5129

Tha• Every Child Deserves A
Healthy Happy Nurturmg Envl
ronment In Which To Grow? Re
crullers From Mooseheart Child
City And School Will Be In Your
Area Mar 9 12 Pre Screen1ng
For Caring Energetic Patient In

Roof Coatings Doors Window&amp;
Plumbtng &amp; Ele ctrical Supplies

panda 740-446-2003

Professional
Services

days from 7pm until midnight Ap·
pllc&amp;tlons and aet up lime with
one hour of music In person Is nr
qulrad Call lor Interview 740-992
4514 3pm-9pm

YOUTH DEVELOPMENT PRO·
FESSIONALS Do Yo u Believe

nyl Skirting Kots $299 95 An
chars Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps

Oakwood Homes Nitro WV 304

ConsoiQatlons Cash Loans
Bad Credit No Problem

Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Balh Large

Ripley WV 304 372 8633 Mon
~ Barn-5pm Sat 8am-t2pm

Discount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessones Water Heaters V1

9621

Stylist Naede&lt;l No Clientele NBC·
essary Contact Carol King finest
Stylng Salon 74().446.8922

Install motors general mechamc
work run e~~:haust pipe bender

&amp;CLG 1 800-872 5967

6782

310

WANT,I:D Mechanrc to pull and

Parts Huge Buying Power Means
The Lowest Installed Price Easy
Over The Phone Bank Financing
Call Bennetts Mobile Home HTG

large selection of used home&amp; 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting et $2995
Quick delivery Call 740 385

wv 2571 0 304-525-8014

dlateiy caH 740-7•2 3410

Areas Largest Inventory 01 Inter
therm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps
Air Conditioners Furnaces &amp;

VENDING Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours Btg S Priced Right To
Sell Free Bro ch ure BOO 820

contact Personnel Dept Autism
Services Center The Prichard
Bldg 605 9th Street Huntington

Tomacelli s Entartalnmen• Club
Middleport OH looking for house
band Must play up-to·date varia
ty music, be-available lor Salur

Atlantlon Moblkl Home Owners

boursvll" WV 304 738-3409

""'"ue

Seeking 2 Pari Time Paramedics
2 Par t Time Advanced EMT s 2
Pari Time BaSic EMT s Apphc
ants Should Submtt There Appll
cation Or Re sume To Gallla
County CourrhOuse Department

304 736 7295

PM Est 423 362 44 50 Co de
46531 Bev 740-446.0386

Send Resume To CLA 430 c/o
Gallipolis Dally Trobune 825 Thrrd
Galljlolls OH 45631

RN or LPN lor prtvate duty hOme
care Send •esume to bOle CW -4
c/o Point Pleasant Regtste r 200
Main St Pt Pleasant wv

t4x80 Glamour Balh $179/Mo

Sle 3 Bedroom S995 Down St99/

220

Street front commercial space
204 North Second Avenue Mid
dleport large with balhroom and
ollt ce area $300/mo $300 de
posit one yea r lease 740 992

Nice clean 2br references &amp; de
posit, no pals 304-675-5182

I bu1275ldong pr ce reduced 3ll4·875·

914 8 Conference Call Dally 10

GalipoUs No pt&gt;one calls
Persons W1th Positive Attitudes
And Excellent Work Ethtc Abll1ty
To Learn Or Enhance Sales And
Service Techniques ComptJter
Skills Desired Must Be Able To
Work With Client s I On 1 And
Complete Multi Tasks Wtlh Oetatl

1996 Schult 3bedrooms r 2baths
vinyl s ding shingled roof barn

Mlacallaneoua
Merchandise

ACROSS

or repairs Mastvr
Alctenour

·~•need electrician

tectrtcat, WV000306 304 575·
1786

I

PISCES (Feb 20·M.trch 20) A
t'nend who IS usually r,tther stlent and
latd· back mtght be tn a talkattve
mood today Be a good listener. what
he or she has 10 say cou ld be va lu·
able Trymg to patch up a broken
romance I The Astro·Graph Match·
maker can help you understand what
te do to make the relattonshtp work
Matl $2 15 to Matchmaker, clo thts
newspaper, PO Box 1758, Murray
Hrll Statton. New York. NY 10156.
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprtl 19) In
competitive career tnvolvements
today, tt tsn·t who you kno_w but what

you know !hat wtll count Preparalton
ensures vtc tory
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20!
Fnend.\ wtll lind you a deltghtlul per·
son wtth whom to co mmuntcate
today They wtll see lhat you have
smcere mterest tn thetr ltves
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
Somethtng that may appear tnstgntf·
tcanl to others could be or enormous
tmportance to you Your mottvatton
lor wunung tl wtll be stronger than
thetrs
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) Let
your compamons have the same free·
dum or chotce today th ai you expect
from them. and your relauonshtps
wt ll be very convtv tal
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Today,
you mtght have to allocate some of
your ttme and resources to another s
proJeCI tnstead or focusmg on your
own The demands won't be exces·
stve

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) Spend
your free ttme today wtth compan·
tons who know how to enJOY hfe
They wtll tnfluence your evaluauon

ol hies tangibles and mtangtbles
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) You
tmght no t be able to linaltu all the
lill ie odds and ends you wnulu ltke lo
to&lt;lay but they can be reduceu sub·
stanllally tf you make l he .;!tort
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) h
best not to watt unttl the las t mmute
to make soctal arrangements today
People wtth whom you'll want to get
together mtght make early plans
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dec
2 I) Be a co mpanson shopper 1oday,
even though you m1ght not come
across any super bargatns What
money you do save. however, wtll
add up lobe tmpresStVe
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Phystcal mvolvemenls could be a btl
taxmg today, so don't press your.;elf
beyond your natural endurance Con·
centrale mstead· on mental work.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20·Feb 19)
Your mstmcts for spottmg financtal
opportumttcs could be keener than
usual today You could start to butld
a construcuve foundauon for yourself

,.

•

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, IVJarch 9, 199~ _

Pomeroy •_Middleport, Ohio ·

0 hio Lottery

Ia

:

~"

1
,,
1

I

~

"'

-

I

Jazz defeats·
Rockets by 7point margin

• : -

Sports on Page 4

l':..':.[

- -

-

MARCH MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Mushroom Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Corn
Bread
Blushing Pears

10
Oven Baked Chicken
Augrati'n Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Peaches with
Orange Sauce

l:l .

'I

THE SENIOR CENTER IS
CELE.BRATING • 25 YEARS OF
SERVICE TO THE OLDER ·
ADULTS OF MEIGS COUN1Y.
Tile Melj:o Couaty Cooadt on Acl•c. Inc. Board orTnu1.., and Senior "
c...... swr to rite ,.. to ottend oar l!lth Allnlverury CelebrotJon to bo
betd oa Tllul'ldoy,Apr!l Z, 19911.
Tile dot• octlritlet wiD bot!• ot Jl:tO o.IL wtlh remorb hiD Jllllllll
B......... ll~Mfor, mJo 1Jtp01t8eolof Aalllll Ted StJtdducl, JJ.S.
~~opreRatotlft; ooctJoJLo

c...,, m1o-.. ora.p......tou-.

Nooq

A oooa t1111c:lleoo will bo temd wtth .. ~er~a~ .....t ood IHIIIlltd.. Ia tile
......-. Aa _ . . , .W wtJI bo ..,.....~q~u~q ot4:45,...

11
!jam Loaf

Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
Bread
Applesauce

COME AND HELP US CELEBRATE ON
APRIL 2, 1998. WE LOOK FORWARD TO
SEEING ALL OF YOU.

the Senior Center received their
first "new" van through the Ohio
Department of Transportation
(ODol). The Agency has successfully replaced vans as necessary
throughout the years through
ODoTwith the Senior Center being
responsible for 20 percent of the

Evening Meals
The Senior Center Nutrition Program evening meals will be served
on Tuesdays and Thursday with serving from 4:45 to 5:30p.m. A suggested donation for the evening meal is $4.00.
The evening meal is intended to provide a nutritional meal at a reasonable cost. Dollars generated will be used to support the ex isting
lunch and home delivered meal programs.
Hal Kneen, Meigs ·Extension and Natural Resources Ag~nt , will be
present March 26 from 4 to 5 to discuss gardening and conduct a plant
exchange.

TUESDAY
March 10
Ham Loaf
Sweet Potatof's
Green Beans
Biscuit - Beverage
Hot Apple s auce

II

March 17
Navy Beans &amp; Ham
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Cole Slaw
Cornbread - Beverag
Rocky Road Pudding

23
Turkey Weiner
Mashed Potatoes
Sauerkraut
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

24
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes
Green Beans
Bread
Pear Halves

25
Vegetable Beef Soup
Pimento Cheese
Sandwich
Peachy Creamy
Pudding
Cookie

26
Meatloaf
Parslied Boiled
Potatoes
Spinach
Bread
Applesauce

27
Oven Baked Chicken
Ma s hed Potatoes
with Gravy
Harvard Beets
Bread
Banana

JU

31
Scalloped Chicken
Broccoli /Cheese
Sweet Potatoes
Bread
Apricots

HEAP

March 26
Oven Baked Chi c ken
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Harvard Beets
Roll - Beverage
Banana Refrigerator

I

Dnrlrlln

M.arch 31
Roast Bepf
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Co l e Slaw
Roll - Beverage
Pineapple Up~id e

April 2
Saliflbury Steak
Scalloped Potatoes
Lima Bea ns &amp; Corn
Roll - Beverage
Fruit Pie

nn;.~ ('~tc;,

Multipurpose Senior Center. Home
visits to assist any disabled or
homebound person can be
arranged.
If you have questions or need
assistance, call Darla Hawley at
992-2161.

Meigs Senior Center March Activities
The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games, and
pool.

Weekly actlviltes are Line
Dancing classes, with Paulette
Harrison, instructor, on Mondays
from 1:00 to 2:00, Knitting Circle
on Wednesdays. from 10 to 12,
chair setting exercises·on Tuesdays

cost.
The Senior Center vans travel
to each area of the county at least
one time each week. Older adults
are able to attend activities and it
noon meal at the Senior Center.
The vehicles also provide needed
transportation to area grocery
stores, banks, medical facilities ,
drugstores and the locqtions where
personal business needs to be con·
dueled.

I

The Medical Escort program
transports seniors to area medical
facil ities in Meigs, Athens, Gallia,
Mason, Washington and Wood
counties. In 1997, Senior Center
varis traveled 82,855 miles including 305 Medical Escon trips for
108 Older Adults.
If you would like to use the
Senior Citizens transportation
and/or Medical Escon services, ca.ll
Wanda Vining at 992-2161.

Art Conant, nn driver, opens the van door for senior citizens who
are leaving the Senior Center to go grocery shopping and home. ·

March 19
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Peas
Roll - Beverage
Fruity Bread Puddin

Mar c h 24
Vegetable Beef Soup
Hot Dog with Sauce
Peachy Creamy
Pudding
Texas Sheet Cake

19

20
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Peas
Bread
Peach Slices

THURSDAY
March 12
Chicken and Noodles
Broccoli/Carrots
and Cauliflower
Roll - Beverage
Apple Cherry Crisp

13
Chicken and Noodles
Broccoli/Carrots
and C:auliflowe r
Bread
Apple Cherry Crisp

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bread
Pineapple

Transportation is an-important service
Transportation for older adults
has been an important service provided through the Meigs County
Council on Aging for the past 25
years. Transportation th(lJUgh the
Senior Citizens Center began in
1973 when the County Council
purchased 2 used vans. In 1978,

'

12
Chili Con Carne
Cole Slaw
Crackers
Fruit Cocktail
in Red Gelatin
Brownie

If you haven't sent in your
application for the regular HEAP
Program, there is still time.
Applications will be accepted
through March 31, 1998, and are
available
at
the
Meigs

and Thursdays at 11:15.
The winter session of the
"Over 55 Exercise Class" will be
held on Mondays and Wednesdays
at 3:30 through Jlcpril 1. The
stretching and bending movements
and mild walking exercise class is
50~ for each session attended.
A representative from the
Athens Social Security Office will
be at the Center on Wednesday,
·March II and 25 from 10 to 11 a.m.
The PACE (Persons with
Anhritis Can Exercise) class will
b~ held for six weeks on Tuesdays
beginning March 10 from 10:30 to
11 :30 with Jeri Faulkner, leader.
Wednesday, March 11 - the
Stroke Survivors Suppon Group
will meet at 1:00, with Lia Tipton,
OT, Holzer Rehabilitation, coordinator.
Thursday, March 12 • a new
group Bend Area Better Breathers
Club will hold their initial meeting ·
from 10:30 to II :30, the public is
invited.
Tuesday, March 17 - St.
Patricks Day, Nutrition Bingo will
be played at II :30 in celebration of
National Nutrition Month.
Wednesday, March 18 - the
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
be held from 9:30 to 11 :00, blood
sugar tests will be available also for
$1.00.
Thursday, March 19 - Becky
Baer, Meigs Extension Family and
CQnsumer Science/Community
Development, will present a
Nutrition Education Program at
1:00.
Friday, March 20- the Anhritis
Support Group will meet from
10:00 to 11:30, Sarah McGrew,
R.N., Coordinator, will lead the discussion.

Thursday, March 26 - the
monthly birthday party will be
held. Hal Kneen, Meigs Extension
a'nd Natural Resources Agent, will
speak at 11 :00 with the annual plant
exchange held . Evcry!Jne is invited
to bring in bulbs and perennial
plants to exchange for some different flowers for your garden. · Hal
will be at the Center from 4 to 5
p.m. before the evening dinner to
conduct a plant exchange and talk
about gardening concerns.
Thursday, March 26 - the
Alzheimer 's Support Group will
meet at I :00. Guest speaker will be
. Connie Karschnik, RN, TB Clinic
Coordinator, who will be discussing the drug resistant tuberculosis.
Becky Baer, Meigs County
Extension Office, will present a
Spring Workshop which will
include making Easter breads, decorating ideas and a craft project.
Dates for the . workshop are:
Tuesday, March 31 from 7:00 p.m.
- 8:30 p. m. and Friday, April 3
from I :00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. at the
Center. Cost is $5.00. Please reg.ister bv calling 992-2161 or 9926696.
A dance will be held on Friday.
March 13 and Friday, March 27
· from 8:00 p.m. - II :00 p.m. at the
Center. "Out of the Blue" will provide the music for square, round
and line dancing .and clogging. Art
Conant will be the caller.
Admission is $5.00 per couple and
$3.00 single. The public is invited
to attend.
The Senior Center will celebrate it 's 25th ariniversa.ry on
Thursday, April 2. Special activities will be held this day and ·
throughout April.

SENIOR CITIZENS D
Every Wednesday Storewide Savings

15o/o off
M~ry Folmer, Escor1 Driver, assists a senior citizen into the
mini-van for a medical appointment.

WE HONOR.

~&amp;~

fli1

'Q'J~:fielers
J'212 EAST MAIN ST.

· ·

POMEROY, OH.

992-3785

Income Tax assistance will be
availab le for sen ior citizens at the
Multipurpose Senior Center on
Wednesday and Friday only,
through April 15th. The tax service
is designed to help taxpayers (age
60 and over) with their income ta'x
preparation. Darla Hawley will be
avai lable to answer your questions
or assist in filling out your tax
forms . The program is specifically
geared to older taxpayers with low
or moderate income.
Persons using the tax service
shm~ld bring copies of their last
years federal and state tax returns,
tax forms for the current year and
other relevant materials showing
income for the year.·
Call Darla Hawley at 9922161 to make an appointment.

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"Serving S&lt;!_ulhern Ohio f~r over 20 years"

Ltft Chatrs
Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools

Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding Pumps

Everything
for the
Patient
at

Home

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;
Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery .
First Aid Supplies
Dressings

JHE MEDICAL SHOPPE
1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

" ust Minutes om Holzer"
. I

Tull Fro·•·
1-1:00- 1 1.) - ~~(1(,

.,

en tine

'·

•
Vol. 48, NO. 228
Cl1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

1 Section, 10 Pages. 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 1o, 1998

Commissioners award bids to
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners awarded two bids for new construction to Home Creek Enterprises of Pomeroy when .they mel in regular session on Monday.
.
The projects. which will pmvide a new roof for the Rutland EMS depanment at the Rutland Civic Center, and a new addition for the Meigs County
Highway Depanment, will be funded through CQmmunity Development
Block Grant fun d&lt;.
Home Creek Enterprises was the second-lowest bidder on the Highway
·:Depanment project, but the lowest bidder, Smith Construction of Cheshire,
:withdrew its bid for .the work.
The commissioners discussed the possibility of rejecting all bids and re·
: &lt;tdvenising the project, because several of the contractors included the addi. tional cost of paying prevailing wage, which is not required on a project under
$50.000.
However, Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes advised the board that reject-

ing the bids was not a legal option, because the bids were submitted appro- highway projects. using Appalachian Regional Commission funds as leverpriately. However, the county is in a position to negotiate with the lowest age for state dollars.
and bes.t bidder, Home Creek Enterprises, to arrange additional work for the
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton said yesterday that he hopes the plan is
base bid amount, since prevailing wage is not requirell.
not "political propaganda," citing the need for an equitable distribution of
Home Creek's bid was submitted in the amount of $44.823 ·for the high- highway dollars to the southern part of the slate.
way depanment project, and $45,876 for the Rutland EMS project.
The commis.ioners also·
Sealed bids were opened for aggregate materials from the Jaymar Co. of
• Approved the appropriation of 1997 FEMA canyover funds in the amount .
Cheshire and Shelly Materials of Racine. Asphalt bids were received from of $165,234.52 within the budget of the highway depanment;
Middlepon Terminal of Gallipolis and Asphalt Materials of Marietta; and
• Authorized the advenisement for bids for a new computer system for
asphalt concrete bids from United Asphalt and Shelly Materials. both of the auditor and treasurer;
Thornville. Those bids were tabled and referred ro County Engineer Raben
• Set a public viewing of Pearsol Cemetery Road in Salem Town&gt;hip for
Eason.
April 6 at 10:30 a.m.. and a public hearing at I p.m.. to consider the dedi Requests for a road name change and closing. respectively. from trustees cation of the road;
in Orange and Rutland townships were also referred to Eason. Rutland trustees
• Appro.ved the payment of bills in the amount of $136,769.19, with 215
are requesting the closing of a portion of Cremeans Road, and Orange trustees . entries.
are requesting the change in name of Steams .Road to Dorst Road.
Present were Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton.' Janet Howard and Fred
The commissioners went on record to endorse the state's new plan to fund Hoffman, Clerk Gloria' Klees and Prosecuting Attorn&lt;y John Lentes.

Two-hour parking violation
rule gets nod in Middleport
-By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
l\liddlepon Village Council gave
final approval to a parking ordinance
allowing police to issue a $5 ticket to
people who park more than two
hburs in cenain downtown locations.
The ordinance does not address
the problem of business owners parking in front of their businesses,
. according to Mayor Dewey "Mack"
· Hpnon. who·has criticized merchants
for taking up parking spaces he feels
should be used by their customers.
Councilman Steve Houchins said
the village has no right to keep people from parking in front of their own
stores, as long as they comply with
the two-hour parking limit.
The ordinance will take effect in
30 days. and Village Administrator
Bill Browning said the proper signs
will be installed as soon a.~ they come
in.
Council also met with representatives of Rumpke tra.~h hauling. the
company contracted by the village to
· handle waste hauling.
Council members said residents
have complained about the workers
roughing up the residents' tra.'h cans.
However. the waste haulers
rep&lt;l!'led a few problems of their own.·
including people who set out trash

after the .truck goes by - necessitating funher trips -or people wanting the workers to take their trash out
of garages or from fenced-in yards,
which they ·are not supposed to do.
"What if something comes up
missing?" one man commented.
Rumpke sends a truck back
through the village Tuesday to pick
up trash from people who did not set
out their garbage in time for Monday
morning's pick up.
·
Council members reminded village residents they should set out
their tra.~h by the curb late Sunday
night because the garbage men come
thro~gh very early Monday morning.
Honon commented on several
meetings he has attended concerning
U.S. 33 construction projects and the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
- He cited a recent announcement
by- ihe Ohio Depanment of Transponation that a replacemeni for the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will be built
near the existing span.
"We need to attend these hearings," h~ said, commenting that public input at a bridge hearing last year
indicated the majority of people in
the Pomeroy-Middleport-Ma.wn area
want the new bridge to be built near
the existing bridge.
Clerk-treasurer Bryan Swann

commented that the price of cable
television has increa.o;ed over the la•t
few years far faster than general
goods and services and proposed
council investigate the feasibility of
establishing its own cable se..Vicepossibly joining in with neighboring
communities.
Swann issued t~e following financial repon for February: general
fund, $8,561.75; street, $33,994.73;
mini golf course, $1,146.41 ; law
enforcement. no balance; fire equipment, $7,060.72; fire truck,
$1,694.72; Cops Fa.,t, $715.35; economic development. $7.825.72: pub. tic transportation, (·$20,270.76); law
block grant, $4,145.13; refuse.
$51,878.99; disaster relief grant,
$187; water debt service, $97,095.31;
sewer debt service, $73,286.07; water
tank, no balance; water sy~tem.
$80,116.89;
sewer
system.
$56,860.33; recreation, $1,626.02;
cemetery, ( -$1,5 10.11 ); meter
deposits, $35,789.23; cemetery
endowment, $81,062.77.
Council also met in executive session to discu&gt;S personnel matters.
Also present were council President Beth Stivers and council members Rae · Gwiazdowsky. Sandi
lannarelli, Bob Pooler and Roger
Manley.

Clinton making profitable Ohio stop
CINCINNATI (AP) - President
Clinton's latest visit to Ohio will be
brief but profitable for Democmts. his
host for a big-ticket reception said.
Attorney Stan Chesley predicted
tonight's event would be the most
successful pOlitical fund-raiser ever
held in the Cincinnati area.
Chesley expects to raise close to
$1 million ti'om about 100 Democrats
invited to his suburban Amberley Village home to have dinner with the
president.
"Cincinnati is seen as a conservj!tive community. but there was a
great outpouring of suppon for this
event," Chesley said. "We closed out
tJie guest list and passed capacity...
: Chesley. who made his reputation
as the lead lawyer in a series of highprofile class-action lawsuits. was
~ost ftJr a series of fund-raisers that

raised well over $1 million for the
Democmtic National Committee two
years ago.
"I've never seen this kind of
excitement for a visit by the president,".Chesley said. "Not just among
the people I invited. Everybody I talk
to. People like him."
Th~ guest list was not made pub·
lie, but a number of statewide and
congressional candidates from Ohio
and Kentucky were known to have
been invited.
"It will be a good ch~nce for them
10 schmooze:· said Hamilton County Democratic Party Chairman Tim
Burke. who planned to attend with
Ohio Democratic Pany Chairman
David Leland.
Ohio Republican Pany Chairman
Bob Bennett issued a statement Monday criticizing the visit and chal·

lenging Democratic candidates to
"steer clear of President Clinton so
they can avoid the taint of scandal
associated with this president's fundraising tactics. "
The guest list of candidates
included Cincinnati Mayor Roxanne
Quails, who is running for Congress
in the 1st District; Lee Fisher, panyendorsed candidate for Ohio governor; U.S. Senate candidate Mary
Boyle; Rep. Ted Strickland. D-Ohio.
who faces a tough 6th District reelection campaign; and Boone County Judge-executive Ken Lucas. a
candidate for Congress in Kentucky's
4th District.
Strickland declined the invitation
to attend the dinner because he plans
to stay Wa,hington and panicipate in
House votes scheduled for tonight.
said his press secretary, Jess Goode.

-Visiting with students-

fi

Eric Martin, an exercise physiologist at Pleasant Valley Hospital, discussed his field of expertise with students in the nursing program at Meigs High School recently. ~artln works closely with members of PVH's Medical Explorers, an organization for students Interested In health
. care professions, which Includes 30 students from MHS.

Equity group wants judge to hold
state to funding solution deadline
COLUMBUS (AP) .- A group
that claims lawmakers have taken too
long and come up short in an effort
to revamp Ohio's public school funding methods says a judge should hold
the state to a coun-ordered deadline.
"It looks .to me like the state has
created a crisis and now is askinQ the
coun to bail it out ... said Wiliiam
Phillis. executive director of the Ohio
Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of
School Funding.
The group a.sked Perry County
Common Pleas Judge Linton Lewis
Jr. to reject an extension last week.
arguing that the state's aim was simply to delay the process and avoid the
March 24 deadline imposed by the
Ohio Supreme Court.
The state warned Monday that
some schools may not be able to stay
open past March 24 if Lewi&gt; refuses
to extend the deadline . The state

wants the date pushed back to July I.
an idea Phillis' group is opposed to.
"If !he state understood the old
laws would die Man:h 24. which is
what the court said, then the state
should have had a plan in place." he
said.
State So licitor State Solicitor Jeffrey Sulton said m the motion filed
Monday thai holding the dead Iine
could ultimately &gt;hut down some
schools.
"The expiration of the March 24
deadline arguably means that the slate
has no current mechanism lor the distribution of funds." Suuon said.
"Many school dislri.:ls will not be
able to complete the academic year if
stale funding is interrupted ...
Lewis declared· Ohio's system of
paying for schools unconstitutional in
1994. Last year, the slate Supreme

Cpun upheld the decision. set the
deadline and pul Lewis in charge of
oversel!ing the s l:..~te 's remedy.

The court gave lawmakers one
yt!~tr

to come up with a

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IIIII 11:11:

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· Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s (SOC- progr•m." said Ebetino. "All of our
Co) Meigs No. 31 mine proved efforts are focused on bringing
recently that it is the best' of the best. employees home safely every day.
The mine won American Electric And. since Fuel Supply operations
Power (AEP) Fuel Supply's presti - traditionally rank among the best pergious 1997 Homecoming award .
formers in the nation in terms of safeCharles A. Ebetino Jr., senior vice ty within their respective industries.
president-fuel supply, presented the the Homecoming award signifies a
award recently at Fuel Supply's annu- truly outstanding accomplishment."
al safety meeting in Lancaster. HomeAEP's underground coal mines
coming is a bronze sculpture depict- were recognized as safest in the
ing· an employee returning home nation during the five-year period
safely to his family.
1992-96, according to a repon
Fuel Supply ,presents the award . released last year by the federal
each year to its mining or tranS· Mine Safety and Health Administra•
pOrtation operation that exhibits tion.
exceptional performance in safety, in
SOCCo employs 473 at its Meigs
combination with an overall safety No. 31 mine, including 383 who are
and health program that promotes represented by . the United Mine ·
continuous improvement and Workers of America Total employ·
employee involvement.
· ment at SOCCo's Meigs Division is
"Our Homecoming award is a 826, which includes the Meigs No. 2
symbol of what we are trying to · mine and a general office staff. Last
accomplish in our safety and health year, the division mined more than

•

'

6.4 million clean tons of coal for use
at 'AEP's Gavin generating plant,
Cheshire.
·-:In light of the MSHA repon.
employees at Meigs No. 31 demonstrated during 1997 that the best got
better.
Mine employees experienced their
fewest lost-time accidents ever (7)
while achieving their best ·accident
incident rate-1 .26, some 85 percent
below the industry average of 8.59.
Overall. mine employees saw reductions in: lost-time accidents {36 percent), accident incidence rate (40 percent), lost workdays (42 percent).
severity rate (43 percent) and total
accidents (7 percent).
The employees' safety performance took place within the context
of two longwall moves and a mine
record production year-more than 3.5
million clean tons.
(Continued on Page 3)

,-

~ys h:m

increase the stale sales tax from 5 per-

cent to 6 percent. The tax increase
would raise $1.1 bi llion a vear. which
would be evenly split beiween euucation and residential propt:ny tax
relief.
Lawmakers sent the i"ue 10 the
ballot after adopting edu cati on
reforms.

-'
•"

-

...;.;._-'-~-:_:---...;...____.._....:;.:.;.:~..:::;

HOMECOMING AWARD WINNERS- SOCCo
end AEP Fue! Supply employees . gathered
around the AEP Homecoming Award. They are,
first row, from left, Luke Lucas, AEP vice pres·
ldent-rnlnlng operations, Ed Shriver, president
of UMWA Local 1857, Steve Addington, Carl
Curry, Mike Lively, Jim Latham, Lance Sogan,

~

that

relies less on property taxes and deals
with g'aps in per-pupi l spe nding in
different distri.:ts.
Lewis said he would rule on the
extens ion request this week .
The &gt;tate asked for the delay to
give vo ters !he chance to decide in
the May 5 primary whether to

Meigs Mine 31 recognized by AEP
Fuei ·Supply for safety vigilance

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS :

..

Tax
Assistance

Cloudy tonight with flur·
rles, snow showers. Lows
in the teens. Wednesday,
cloudy with snow showers. Highs in the mid 20s.

I

FRIDAY

18
Navy Beans &amp; Ham
Cole Slaw
Cornbread
Rocky Road Pudding
Apple

'
Wo.,. ,. pl.....t ud proud tlootwo Uft the opporttudty to IIIJ' tloot ...
brt omed the Older Adolt PopulotJoa ol Metp CoaaiJ lbr Z5 ,_.. OUr
otacere opprodllloo lo ateoded to tile d-o, orpabatJo111, •&amp;Hdo•
ood buolau- ..........pported ...... ....-or.""""''

THURSDAY

17
Meat Balls in
Gravy over
Noodles
Tossed Salad
Mandarian Oranges
in Orange Gelatin

Liver and Onions
Mashed Potatoes
Peas &amp; Carrots
Bread
Creamy Fruit Salad

HoDioter, U. eo- oiOWo, lao• beeo Jarited to olleod.

WEDNESDAY

Oven Baked Fish
Oven Roast
Potatoes
Carrots
Bread
Tro~~~H Mixed

16

Pick 3:
4-1-0
Pick 4:
6-8-6-5
Buckeye 5:
1-4-9-19-33

SOCCo vice president and general manager,
Chuck Ebetino, AEP senior vice president-fuel
supply, Tim Martin and Vern Gabriel; second
row, · Cecil Dillon, Bob K'att, Terry Lewis,
Randy Hatten, Danny Silvers, Rod Butcher, Red
Blair, Bruce Hann, Tony Bumbico and Rob
Marklns.

•

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