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Monday
January 3, 2000

Syracuse Elementary.principal retires, Page 2
Our View: Unity key 'to region's.ftdure, Page 4
-Eastern's Caldwell nets 200th' win, Page 5

.High: 8Da; Low: 150a
~:lhowera
High: 508; Low: 20e

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at

en tne

Meigs County's

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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 145

.

Y2K&amp;MEIGS

.·County ring~
if) .new year .·
with few issues

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Y2K's ·bark.
much ·bigger
than its bite
·.

By JIM FREEMAN
Benti.,...Neft·S..ff
·
: POMEROY - Meigs &lt;;ounty kicked in the new
millennium with nary a. sign of. the dreaded Y2K
bug.
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· When the clock rolled. over from 11 :59 p.m. to 12 ,·
a.m. on New Year's Eve, ~eigs County Emergency
·
ServiceS Director Robert
~
Byer and ·Sheriff James
"t
M~ Soulsby were on
hand, but expected little
trouble.
tuiff.
' •p
"There wasn't a thing .
r
... not
a glitch at all,"
:~ }•USt Wtnt . Byer said late Saturday .
morning.
The sheriff's offiee had
extra deputies on patrOl
i
during the changeover;
according to Meigs.
~
County Sheriff James M..
Soulsby.
·
t
Earlier, Sou!sby antic.
ipated thl\t any problems
. . 0
··
· would likc;l)( be caused
by humans, not compute"' - · a prediction that
rang true.
"We didn't ·have any
' Mllgl ShlrltJ.J--.
··· M. Soullby on locll .' Y2K problems," said
· . NewYw'a Eves-tMUee Soulsby, ., adding · that
there were plenty of
·human-related problems
after midnight, including several domestic viol~nce
calls, a.nd one stabbing complaint. ,
•l
"We .~ad ell ki~ .o f &gt;~tuff, .~pie just went "
' banallu, ~'he said. "1 1mglad we had ex!fa people out
on tile hiab,way11." .
·
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·
Meigs CounJy's residents olfscrved thci beginning
oft~ ntw ceatury in a variety of wa~s.
·
. Some churchel held special' New Year's Eve.ser- ' ·
vices, while other ·places provided a more f~tive
atmoeplle}e to rina in the ·new ' century. Others
undoubtedI)' remained at·home, preferring to watch
· the event on TV or even sleep through the
chanpover.
The Court Grill in Pomeroy held a New Year~s · PARTY PREPARATIONS - While .eome people were preparing for the y•r 2000 by
Eve party 11nd was closed through_out the day Friday ~ng up on coned food 8lld other auppllea, others were getting realty.for Hrlou_s
- with wi~;~dows covered~ in bfack .plastic - $0 the partying. Here, Craig Darst and.Shai"oti Knight prepared decorations for a New Year's
owners could decorate for the event. ·
· . · . : Eve party held at the Court 'Grill In Pomeroy.
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. al-l
. . "UT.e' had
ds oif

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Smgle Copy. 35 Cents

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pe-l VoburtHrs
in Fiesta Bowl

eonle

: bananas.
.J'm
glad we
· had
;
extra
peopl e ou

·n the
:, highways." ·

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri- nen. "There will continue to be
cans , returning to work today are . reports of small glitches in one place
logging onto Office computers for or another."
the first time since the Year 2000
Banki.ng and securities industry
roilover amid signs that . overseas offiCials. expected no major '"probbusinesses were operating mostly lems. Phone companies anticipated
glitch-free.
~·
heavy call volume and data traffic,
· Hopes thai phones, financial sys- . but officials said they were fully pre·
terns aild power would c.ontinue to pared.
·
run smO?thly .were bolstered after
"Everything has been completel¥
electroni~ trading at two Chicago tested,·~ said
Dave .Johnson;
exchanges wen.t off wilhout a hitch spokesman for AT&amp;T.
· late Sunday and oversees markets
Schools reopening this week
reported no·major Y2K glitches.
could experience · problems. More
But small mom-and-pop shops · than one-third of all public and sec·
· that didn't take precautions against ondary school districts were unpreY2K bugs and stayed closed over .pared for Y2K problems that could
'' ·the holiday weekend might ·experi- affect heating, food service and
ence problems ·- p&lt;issibly with teacher payrolls, according to a gov·
credit card swipe devices that have emment report released in October.
not been upgraded, federal officials
" It should not surprise' anyone to
cautioned.
.,
.find that during the week there will
' "Their jpdgment has been we're be some reports ... of a, particular
going to wait an4 see what breaks school that has a particular prob·
and we'll fix it," President Clinton lem," said Koskinen.
top Y2K adviser, John Koskinen, · P,rilputers guiding everything
said Sunday. "The fix will be easy. from air traffic control systems to
The question is whether there's a automatic teller machines sailed
long line of other people who need through the rollover to 2000 with
the fix."
few major problems. The glitches
The Small Busine~ Administra· that did occur, including seven
tion planned to monitor businesses nuclear power plants that -reported
· fJ:lr,Y+~ ll!P~lems· tQday .tbroll&amp;~ J9 111i!!Of c;o!rlpliter problems1 were
regional and·'70 ~stnct offices.
. qu1ckly ~rrected and did not affect
. ~hile many cdre services such as service. ..
automatic · teller machines, tele·
But the rOllover was ilot prolilem·
PhOnes and computer networks ran free. ~ customer returning a movie
· smoothly over the weekend, the real to a rental shop in .suburban Albany, ·
test came wheri businesses reopened N.Y., was presented "(ith a $91,250
today.
.
late fee aft~r compu~rs showed the
Koskinen said he expected minor . .tape was 100 years late. Employees
glitches as the wor~ week began in . at a video rent~ · Store in Flori~ jj8ed
earnest, taxing systems that have pen and paper becAuse computers
been upgraded to avoid Y2K prob· failed. · .. ,
.
terns but have not been testeCI with
An estimated $100 billion. was
live traffic.
spent on Y2K preparedness. When
"Systems will be tested with roil- no major problems .surfaced, some
lions of transactions," said Koski: questioned whether it was ·necessary.

~iltennium Messages: Clergy, congregations
focus
on
faith,
love
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CtNaNIIATI (AP) :..._The new ~illen·
nium· didn1f1' dominate services at various
Protestant and Roman Catholic chufctjes in
Ohio and · northCtn Kentucky on the fint
Sunday of tile year 2000, but it did ierve as
a basis .for the timelesS mcuaaes of faith
and love. .
,"1 sl{ligled with wh,at llhoul~ say in
the fil'it SCI'mon of the new year and the
new century'and talked with othet pastors,"
the Rev. Larry ~is, pastor of Pint Baptist
Churc)LiJi Cold Spring, Ky;,, told about 550
people .ga~hc"" In the 207-year-old church
near .CinCinnati. "I could have focused on
looking back at the "'t century and on the
fact lhl! God. has gotten us this far, but it's
not my nature to.Jookb,_:kward:"
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Davis told the congregation to l()()k for· prayer and music.
ward but to ai!IO focus on entering into
"In a world of constant change, your
·everything God has for them ·now.
regard for us never changes," said the Rev.
· "Be all you can ~ 8s children of God, D. Keith M~r. a retired assistant pastor,
· and don't just live on the edges of the full- who led about 200 people in the final
. ness he has for us," 5aid Davis.
· prayer at an early morning service. "We
He.urged everyone to work to drive out look forward ib confidence, just as you
·tlic old prejudices a~d the old biases, but have been with us in the pas,t, you will be
eaytloned them not to conecnfrate so m~h With us on all those unknown roads ·we
on \he future that they fall to take advantage !"':"must travel."
•
.
• of ,the blessings they can haye in the pre·
The' final· hymn, ·"Through the Darkness
sent.
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,
,
.
of the Ages," was the winner of a contest
At Covenant Presbyterian Church. in the for a new hyrnn for the millennium spon·
Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington, the sored by St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
sermon Was more ·a look back at Christmas The hymn ends with the verse "Jesus you
than a look forward to the unfolding new have ·kept your promise- faithful through
century, but .the millennium was noted in two t~ousand yeirs." .
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TrUssell announces.
bid.fOF sheriff's star
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19.99: YEAR IN REVIEW

.·U.S.·33
debate
waged
ear.ly,
often
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Today's

·sentinel
1~-lOPiia
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~alendar

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~IIIIIIID~I
~omlcs

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Etll&amp;gdlll

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Q!llllllries

· ~

· ~Ill

~ilorts

Weather

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I. ottcric.\·
omo
Pkk 3: 6-4-9;·Pick 4: 0-4-4-1

Lottf:.10-24-28-35-36-43
Kicker: S~-9-8-1
W,YA! I'

Dally J: 2·9-J; Dally o4: I·3·8·1

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(Edttor•a note: The following promise Salisbury Township assis18 tbt flrat In a·three-part aeries tance .in repairing a bridge on Zus·
· foOidng ~k at the news of. ·pan Hollow Road.
1111.)
Jan. 14- Local schools use up
JANUARY
snow days .
· Jan. 1 ...l... Meigs County's first
·Jan. 17 - ~tern Local Boar~ ·
baby of the year, Mackenzie Cama- .of Education plans auction to Sllll
.,han, is bam at 2;37 ·a.m. She is the Chester and Riverview elementary
· daughter of James and Sandra Car· schools.
nahan, Racine.i.· · ,
Jan. I 8 - Pometoy Council dis·
· Jan. 2 - J ne first major winter cusses cable television rate increase.
stonn Qf the se11011 itri~es. creating
Jan. 19 - Speaker at Pomeroy
hazardo'us tdriving conditions.
Library predicts Y2K computer
· Jan. 4 - .County commissioners, problem will ~;auss.worldwlde crisis.
budget commilai01r begin work on
Syracuse
Village •. Council
'99 budget,
.
; approves purchase of a new fire
Jan. 6 ;_ Qxrlmissioners com· truck.
plete work on $3.3 million budget.
Jan. 22- Sam Eblen announces
. Jan. 10- The price of mailiris a he is a Republican candidate in the
first-class letter' rises to 33 cents. · Middleport mayor's race.
Fe&lt;lcral, .state, local officials prpJan. 25 - OD0T meets with
pict . ne~ millennium will see local government officials c&lt;mcern· .
advanceS in area hlpway .projects, ing intersections for 'the planned
notably the RaveiiiWood Conne~r Ravenswood Connector.
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-and Athens-to·Parwln Highway.
Commissioners approve an
WMPO AM and, FM reported agreement whic~ will result in ·
·subject of pe11ding sale. ·
525,000 in additional funding for
Jan. 1I -· County·commissioners tourism promotion in Meigs County
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One of the largest religious gatherings of come to a designated church."
the year occurr,ed Sunday afternoon as
Many of those attendi,ng some of the
about I ,000 people came to the .Cathedral Sunday services said they are optimistic
'Of St. John the Evangelist in downtown aboul the new cen.tury.
Cleveland to celebrate a Year of Jubilee.
"I think it's exciting," said Rosie
Churches from throughout the eight- · Hodges, 20, of Crescent Springs, Ky. "I
county Diocese ,of Cleveland were invited · would just hope that the new century is one
to mak.e a pilgrimage to the cathedral, .of increased faith and that-people look more
where Bishop Anthony M. Pilla and two to ch11rches for guidance."
auxiliary bishops greeted visitors as part of
Marilou McCarthy, 47, of California,
the Jubilee Year 2000 celebration in . the Ky.; said she is entering the new millenni·
Roman Catholic church.
.
urn just as she left·the last one. taking on~
. . .
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" What we've asked people to do. is trace; day at a time. · ·
their own faith journey to that of Jesus · "I think if we do that, and if we love one
Christ, " 5aid diocese spokesman Robert another and hold on to our faith through the
Tayek. " Since they can't get to Bethlehem years to conie, everything will be fine, " she
in Jerusalem, they've asked t~e faithful to said.
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Good
Afternoon!

I

• LONG BOTI'OM ~ itllph E. '·System 1 S~isor, corppleted Ohi~
Trussell · his filed ·bia petition as , a . LEADS termmal Operation ~ usage
~publican cahdidate for die oftice of • ptesaibecl by. Ohio. . ,
Meip County Sheriff in die Mild! 7 , ' He is a member of the Shade River
.!iimary election.
.
M11011ic Lod&amp;c; 453, and a founding
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He II • life- member of Bashan \bl!lntcet Fire
lonJ i'elident ·Of Department.
· • .
M~:;ct II~
, Trussell retired fn&gt;rD Kaiser Alu-'
in
'Jbwn- nllnuin in I982 after 27 years of serlhip with his ~icC. He was a member of tlte United
wife, Jeln. He Is . Steelw~ UrdO!! for 17 ye~. He
a Olelfcr High wll C!OII)miuioncd as a deputy sheriff ·
Scbool pllduate. in 1985 and was epin commissioned
He hu . com- in 1989. He wu promo.ted lo the rank
pkted the Cona·. If! 1ieulelllnt and served the Meip
~ive
. CoUnty Sherift'a Department until his
Tl'u8eefl
Supervision
retlrem.a In November. l"fe is a union
· '
Development . member of the Ohio Patrolman's
Proiparn; t!Je G.E. Supervisory Trai~ BenevolemAIIocjation.
,
ina Course; 358 hOurs of Ohio Basic ·
"I feel my is ,..s o~ce as a
· 1.-w Enforoement Training; 40 hours poHce officer 1ft Meigs'Thunty Md
Ohio Pollee O(ficcrs! Criminal Code my experi~ Ia. auperviaiOI) has
'rraining·Pqram; 56 houri in iapcllf-· Jiven me ·the knowledge and compe..ed training In laws of arrest, lawful tence to aerve the people of Meigs
methoda of sean:h and lelzlire, County u sheriff a11d to uphold the
1
ijrtanna and physical evidenoe; and law wbjle providil),l justiee for all,"
as Law Enfonlement Automated Dala · · 'l'ruMell said.
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between the Meigs County Clamber
of Commerce and the Department of
Human Services.
·
Jan. 26 - S.tevc Story is elected
president of the Meip County _
Chamber of Commerce. 0ther offi·
cers are Judy Williams, vice presi·
dent; Brenda Jon~. seCretary, and
Mike Klocs, treasurer.
County commissioners reinstate
a controvers.ial utilit)"pcrmit proceU· ··
for utiliti.es crossing county rightsof·'fay.
Jan, 27 - The Eastern Local
Board of Education discusses the
sale of the vacant Ches,er and
Riverview element.ary schools,. ,
. Meigs Local Board of Education
considers possibility of a November
ballot issue for construction of new
school facilities.
FEBRUARY
.
Feb. 1 - Billing begins for new ·
customers of the Tupper!! Plains
Regional Sewer District.

PI•M ... Revtew,:Page.3

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Monday, January 3, 2000

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The Daily
. Sent~l
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·ByTh~BeD.d
.
Ann starts neW ye(r off with a plea for smokers to stop killing themselve~
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Dear Rud·

en: I apologize
for starting the
new year will a
column that is
totally without a
laugh, but I
.would
rather
save your life
.l):lan amuse you.
•
Here is a letter that could give
:You a ldnger life, ¥-d a much better
one.
-i . Dear Ann.Laftden: I was once a
s !Doker. Today, I am a laryngec·
lomee . In plainer words, a neck·
:Oreather.' "Disgusted in Cleveland"
1Eliked, "What gives Ann Landers tlie
right to tell smokers they stink?" He
'Complained aboUt being made to
~make outside in freezing weather,

because the building where he
works does not allow smokers.
May he if "Disgusted" had to look
at~ hole in his throat every morning,
h.e might ehange his attitude.
Keep ye1ling at the smokers out ·
there, and if _you need an assistant'
"cheerleader," I will: hop a flight to
Chtcago and stand nght besade you.
·.. DWIGHT FROM DANVILLE,
CALIF.
.
·
DEAR DWIGHT: Thanks for
the offer, but please; don't come to
Chicago. The weather is much better
in California: Here is qne more,
which I promise will be the last on
this subject for a long time:
Dear Ann Landers: I smoked·
fo.r 46 years . . and told myself I
enjoyed _i t. Meanwhile , my sin use~
were blocked. I hated the lo usy taste

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· Monda~, Januery 3~ 2000

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in my. mouth, my breath stank, I thought it was insulting, because it
ruined clothes and furniture, and did suggested that the avera1e viewer
without things I really needed to . didn 't know when to laugh.
support my tobacco addiction. On
Ann, ·the reason laugh tracks are
Thanksgiving 1998,-· I gave myself used is because it has been scientifi·
the best gift ever. I quit smoking. I cally proven that when other people.
can breathe' through my nose aaain, laugh. you are much more likely to
my-· mouth no )onger t~tes· liKe a enjoy the scene or_ the joke than
sewer, my harr and ptllowcases when you are laughmg by yourself.
smell fresh, and I'm alive again . •, Things seem a lot funnier when you
L.S.
.
.
are awa!e that others ar~ enjoying
DEAR L.S.: .As one of th~. th'em, t~o.
,
world's most veheme'nt tobacco
I am nor in the television indusfoes, I applaud your comrneJits, and try, but I have learned about this
am delighted to share lhe_m with my . phen_omenon in my psychology
read~rs .
·
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class, and 'l'ant you to know il is JN!t
Dear Ann Landers: . I am some dumb idea, as you suggested,
responding to the letter from but a well-thought-out concept to
"Lawrence in Burbank, Calif. ,''-who help viewers enjoy programming
commented on the use of laugh more.
tracks in television programs. He
PSYCH STUDENT IN

GEORGETOWN, TEXAS
DEAR STUDENT: You get an
"A" for your observation. Oo to the
head of the_class. I personally do not
care for laugh t,rach, because I
resent being urged to laugh at something I do not consider funny.
However; hiug~r is inde~d con·
tagtous, and much"-ftrore enJoyable
when shared with others.
Walter Lippmann said, "Laughter connects .us, and helps us appreciate one another. It is a universal
language that needs no ifiterpreter:"
I can tell you fro!Jl personal expe·
rience, when I was in · the Soviet
Union in 1959, Vietnam in 1969 and
in the People's Re(lublic of China in
1974, humor · )Was the common
thread lhat connected me with 'peopie . worldwide, I have al~
•

believed that laughter is good, not
only as a social lubri~;ant, but fOJ
physical health. A fine physician
once told me, "He who laughs .'~
lasts." I believe it. .
..
· When planning a wedding; wlio
pays for what? Who stands \\'here?
"The Ann Landers Guide fot Brides~'
has all the answers. Send a se!faddressed, long, business-size enve·
lope and a check or money ·ofderfpr .·
$3,75 (this includes pos.tage· and
handling) to. Brides, c/o Anp Lan·
ders, P.O. Box J I S62, Chicago •. Jll.
(irl611 - 11562. (In Ca~irda;, sel).\t
. $4:55)
: · ·
·r
· To find out more about At~n Lan·
ders and read her past columns, visit
· ihe Creators Syndicale we~ page ~t
· www.creators.com.
~
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' Longtime Southern elementary 'Hurn~ne ·soci~ty: Life wi~h a house·,rabbi~
·pr., nc ,. paI .R0 be rt 8 eegIe r'et I' res
W~ltt

By Alden
don't attempt to add a second. rabbit live a lot longer. Rabbits., can bi:
Meigs County Humane Society · unless both are neutered, regardless neutered between three ·and •a half
of the sex. But take two; they're and six months old.
There at · ihe window, on hi s small.
.
Rabbits- groom themselves con,
favorite perch, is -Oscar, waiting for
When you bring your rabbit stanlly as .cats do and therefore .pro.·
you, longing for your arrival. You home for the first tiltle, introduce her duce the rabbit version ,of fur balls.
open the door to be greeted by or him to the house slowly through However. they don ' t vomil. Jnstead,
your house rabbit and his . best c~t &amp;us_~ of a cage. Fasten a litter box they-are troubled by excessive swahfriend!
·
·
· ,1'fll'he corner"of the cage, far from lowing , which c~n cause blockages.
This scenario could come ·true . . the food souri:e. ·
· .
In order to prevent intestinal blockAdmit it; yo~ have been fantasizing
As soon as the rab~it is trained, . ages. owners ,must brush 1qe rabbit,
abou1 adding to your family. More · then you can introduce her or him to so that tess hair is ·swalloWed, ar1tl
and more people are living your fan- the .rest of the house .
provide plenty of exercise each ·
tasy. There is even -a House Rabbit
As with cats and dogs, use only week. You can give rabbits a'handfwl
Society. located in Athens , whose positive reinfo'r~ement. .I t is poini- of fresh hay and fresh-vegetables; ai;
mission it is to educate the general less to smack a rabbit y0 u find trying well as the occasional petroleum
public about domesticated rabbits to f'hew on an electrical cord. The laxative for digestive problems.
.
who live in your house apd share rabbit is only being a rabbit; chewRabbits can get their version
your life.
ing is what life is all abr"t. You will colds, and vets .can treat. the coldS '
.Rabbi)s are intelligent, social ani- have to conceal the cord so the rab- ·with special antibiotics. But NEVER
rnals who -need affection and are bit cannot reach it. You will also give ir rabbit an an.Libiotic prescribed
ideal companion animals: The. saei- ' have tq encase any cords that can be for a human being. But presumab~
ety, in an effort t'!,get .lhe word out .seen in vinyl (ubiirjl.
·
you will have thought ahead ana
about these lovable creatures, pro-. .' Everyone wanis to know about already have visited your bunny vet
vides· volunteers to help with issues house training. Most rabbits will use (certainly-for the spayinglDelltering)
including bunny-proofing tile house, a lit.ter box; however, u_nneutered befol'l' the first cold·. ·
•
house training, lifting and handling males and unspayed females might
· For: answers to all yotlr bunny
rabbits, spaying and neuiering, and "mark territory," so, as with cats atfd questions (such as supplies, what Is
locating rabbit vets.
dogs, sterilization will solve that "chewable," housing, .etc.), consult
House rabbits can get ·along with problem.•
the House 'Rabqit Soeiety ··P,O. B&lt;!X
cats and well-behaved dogs. And of • Once. sterilized, house rabbitS are ~767; ' Athens, OH 45701; . or call
course they would love another less likely to chew, exhibit terrilorial (740) · 797· 7616; or e-mail: rondir
companion of their own species. But . aggression, and of course they will na@ ohiou.edu.

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, . SYRACUSE - Children return·
·ing to Syracuse Elementary School
:today after Christmas break will no
. doubt notice the absence of long·
time principal Robert Beegle.
~ Beegle, whose teaching career
,-spanned 41-and-a-half years, retired
·. e.ffective Friday.
·
· Since the school itself is slated
'.for replacement with the construe·
lion of a new district-wide elemen·
J ary school, Be~gle will ndt be
Jeplaced with another principal:
.fnstead, the Southern Local Board of
Education appointed third-grade
·teacher Patti Struble aS head teacher
:at the school. .
:. · As a result, Beegle was the
school's final principal ... a distinc}ion the school shares with Racine
-Elementary School. Beegle was
, : Princip~l · of that school when it
.closed in 1995.
. ·
A 1956 graduated Of Racine Higl.1
:School, Beegle was hired April 14,
· 1958 by Charles Hayman, then"
:executive ·head of Southern Local
·schools.
· He ~ught at Portland Elementary
·:for four years then transferred to
:Racine Elementary in · 1962. ·For a
:couple of years he served as a trav·
· eling reading teacher before becom) ng Southern's first ceflified elemen·tary school principal at Racine in
1970. After Racine Elementary
:closed in 1995.• he went to Syracuse
;Elementary where he was both prin-'
cipal and sixth-grade teacher.
.
Beegle, who had a reputation for
·being stern, said the biggest change
.over the years is the children's lack
::Of discipline.
"Everybody wants di sci pline.
'llOW, but they . want it for the other
he said.
.;'child,"
• parents must sign a
At syracuse,
1orm at the beginning .of the school
~y-ear before their children can be
:paddled. "About the only ones who
;sign that .their children can be
'Spanked are the ones whose children
:cton't need spanked,'; he said.

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Working after
retirement: What you should know ~
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BY ED PETEIRSON
$1 for every $3. Benefici'!"ies 70 ·
and over are iiot affected by the
Social Security.Mmager, A!hens
·
RETIRING PRINCIPAL - Robert Beegle, principal of Syracuse
If you plan to work ~fter retire!· ·earnings Iimit.
Elementary School, -retired effective .Friday. He was recognize.d ear- ment, and an increasing number ·of
lier for lila 40-plus years Of teaching.
··
people do, you will apout Social How other income affects your
Security. These include how much social security_benefits
Another slatewide trend Beegle PTO .. Joining Beegle for the surprise you can make before -your benefits
In general, only earnings from
are affected-and how other retire· work done after you start receiving
finds disturbing is the way instruc- ·ceremony was his wtfCJl~ne .
·.
tion is geared to the current stale
benefits affect your benefits. Most
Sam Hawley from the .Sporn ,ment income affects your benefits.
profic"iency tests.
other . types of retirement income
Plant reviewed reviewed Beegle's
"Now they're wanting you to ·career. Cookie Salser' and Leanna How .much you SJ"n ·e arn while will not affect your benefits. These
include payments from private
teach now for ihc proficiency test," Beegle, members of 'Beegle's first retired ·
There are limits on how much· insurance, pensions from private
he said, "teac hing material that is class at Portland Elementary School.
tested rather than teaching kids what were also on hand to ·talk about the you can earn without affecting your employers and annuity payments
they need to know."
Social Security retirement benefits. ·and income from investments such
early years of his career.
"They're teac hing the te st riow,
' Sixth -grad~ Sludents Caitlin (The rules for Social. Sec~rity dis- ' as interest and capital gains., This
but not leaching knowledge," he Nease , John Bentz and Nicole ability and Supplemental Security rule is designed to ·encourage people
said. : 'That's everybody in the McDaniel , members of Beegle's last Income benefits are different) 'Ben· to build up income for ~irement
state ." '
class at SyracUse, gave p~:esentations eficiaries under age 65 can eam up and financial security using Social
In 1958, teachers didn 't instruct of love 'a nd respect for their teacher to $10,080 in 2000 (up from $9,600 Security as a bll5e.
'kids on the use of computers.
and friend . Also, a presentation of in 1999) without affecting their ben"We-didn ' t know what a comput- cards, from Deborah Harris' fourth- efits. Earnings over that wiU reduce O!her income that col!ld possibly
er was," he said.
.
grade Jlas s, was rnade by Ashley benefits $1 for every $2· in excess affect your benefits are:
"li's bittersweet," Beegle said on Robie. Next, Syracuse teachers Jan eaf11ings. Beneficiaries 65-69 may
•:,."-'~""-"--------~~~=-·
* A pension based on work not
his retiring. "I had re~ll ly a good Norris and Patti Struble shared some earn $17,000 (up from $15,500 in covered by Social Security will
class this year. I hated t(l leave them; of their teaching' experiences with 1999) before benefits are affected. ·reduce your Socia~ Security retireCUSPS ZIJ.!IH)
ihey 're a good bunch of students."
Earnings over that reduce benefits ment payment under lhe windfall
Beegle.
c_ _...,., ""-,..u....., ....
"1
,have
regrets
I
won't
get
to
Jerry
Houser
from
the
.
Sporn
~
1 • rwtJihed every eftemoon, Mondly tbn:Mia\
teach in the new school, and walk l'lant 'presented ·Beegle with · a
111 Court St., PL'"' ~r.oy, Ohio. by 1M
do'l'nthe
halls in the new building," plaque for his support to the '"Part·
: OWo \tllley MIWdn&amp; f ·· t11pany. Sec:aM eta.
he
added.
p~lcllt Pomtrot. Ohio.
.
ners in 'Education" program. Wrap-Beegle was honored Dec. 16 by ping up the ce~emony was Cathy MONDAY
Thursday, Sacred Heart Catholic
M-==·~·
The
"-loted
Pnta
the
OliiO
NIWifllplr Allocildon.
the
staff
and
students
of
Syracuse
Syracuse
PTO
president,
ll'ith
Crow;
. ,_.,....n Send Mklreu CDITeC.'tlons to The ,
POMEROY
Meigs High Church, Mull\erry Ave., Pomeroy.
S.iOinel, JII Court 51., P-r', Olilo
Elementary, former students, the the presentation of a pocket watch.
School Band . ·Boosters nieeting
45
American Electric Power Philip . Beegle was also given a plaque Monday, 7 p.m. in the high schoql FRIDAY
.
. SUBSCRIPJION RATES
.
1 Sporn Plant the· school 's Partner by the So~thern Local- Board of band. room. All parents urged to
IIJConhr..-M-. POMEROY Friday's Fun
One \\leelt ................................ .$2.00
in Education - and the · Syracuse Education for. l!i·s y'ears of service.
Food
and
fellofship
project at
attend.
One Month .............,.................. $8.70
God' s Neighborhood · Escape for
One ye:liicu·cop;y·PiJa"'t04.oo
. ATHENS - Rouie 33 Athens-to- · Teens .. Nutritional foods free, nonDally. ............. ,•• _ •• ,......,,.. _;,,,,3.5 Cems
Darwin
Citizens Advisory Commit· violent games, computer programs,
Sublaibel'l noll ~rinJ'IO pay tile carrier, !Illy
. ·fttnltio iidviiiCII diltCI to Tbdlllily 5cMinel011
.
tee regular biweekly working s~- cards, pool available. Located Main
1 1-._ liJI or tz -h boolo. Credll wll be
Retired teachers hear about plant Chester Restoration Committee.
. sian Monday at the Ohio University Street, Pomeroy. Center o~ns at 6
&amp;ivM&lt;IIrill_..._
.
,
care
p.m. and closes at 10:30 p.jn. on fri- ·
. fW .......ion br mill penniUed In 11a1
In~ in Athens to review alignment
wlltN ._,. !C'ff'W Ill'\' lee la enllabte.
day
and Saturday. nights. · · · .
·.
POMERe&gt;Y -The Meigs Coun- Christmall party held • .
alternalives for the Athens to Dar·
• ......... - t h o ri1Jot to odJut dur·
ty Retired Teachers were given
· The Bradford Church of Christ win project.
-..loo porlod. Soblcrlpllon ....
information on the care of Christmas adult and you11g adult Chris1mas
.
.. ... I
lplloo.
•.
plants by Hal ·Kncen , extension party was held r'ece~tly ;ti lhe GoldRACINE - Racine
regular
·
agent,
at
a
recent
luncheon
meeting
meeTing Monday with rrioi:k inilia· .
MAILSUIICIUPJION
en Corral in;Gallipolis. ;··
t.......... c:_,.
tion.
· '
held at Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
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t3
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SZ7.30
· Officers elected fQr the · coming Lydia ConneD membe.l'll exoiluing,
'l
• """'·······-···...............$53.112
year
were Maxine Whitehead, presi-, prnaments
, RACINE .:....: Racine · Village
' ,
S2 \VIIIti,,.._, ............·..... JtQS.!d
dent; Jean Alkire; first vice presi:
An ornament exchange was a fea- Council will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at ·
. de'~t ; Gay Perrin , second vice presi- ture of the annual Christmas party of the municipal building.
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:
denh
and
Anna
Ri~e.
secretary;
and
•: · 52 \\ltltlo,,,,_,,,,,,.,..,,.....S109.72
Lydia. Coun~il of . -the Bradford
Carol Ohlinger, treasurer.
·
.
Church of Christ held recenUy at the
Perrin and Pau line Horton are 'to Golden Corral in Gallipolis.
Reader Services
• select books 10 be placed in. the
.Cotiteotlon Pollcv
county · Iiliraries in memory of Wreaths topic of S9nshine Clrele
' Ortr
II? ...rtO. PI to be , deceas.e d me1i1bers, Virginia Carson.
RACINE.:.... A program on a livICICEEnlt. If,_.~-. et • ernr .. • Martha Chapman . Rose Ann Jenkin s ing advent wreath MSing,_ herbs was
_ , , CliP .... - - .. (1411) ,z,.
dF • K
d
presented by Janet Theilis when the
JISJ. we ,.. ·dllck ' " ' ..,.,....,.. an ane ~nne y.
.
. ... .U.•ait• t?l alr,..m 1 ret
·
John ·Milhoan. ORTA Eastern ,The Sonshinc Circle ol' DorGa• WEDNESDAY
.
,
.
.
vice pres ident, spoke briefly o n pro- Bethany Church met recenily ill the
· MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
/ " - - DeD!Irtmenta
posed legislation affecting retired church. ' '
_ Port Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednes·
Th • • .......... tt2-21!5. llopl~ teachers . Next meeting will be held
Lois Sterrett,presided ~~ t~ busi- tlay, ltonie of Jeanette Thomas, Pat
Mlltn.k'+iar..-.r · •
'
in Man.:h.
ness mec1ing and Me lissa Smtth and Roher to re~iew "Strawberries in
'G ncni .........- ........~.......Exl. Ull
Kathryn Hart gave th,e secretary and · the Sea: by Elisabeth Ogilvie. Annu·
.....~ ......:...._ .., _ , _ ,__J!al. 11112
treasurer's reports.
al business meeting with election of
. or Elrl. Ut6 DofA members enjoy ~inner
CHESTER - The annual Christ.
The next meeting will be held . officers ..
mas dinner party of Chester Council . Jan . 13 at the church with Blondena
Afte........................... _ ..:;...bL 1114 : 323, Daughters of Ameripa, was Rainer and Mattie Teaford doing the THURSDAY
Clic P t!II ..........- ... - ••,.;;.........EI:t. 1113 held recently- at the hall. .
program and Ann .Boso and Peggy
POMEROY
Alcoholics
a
?'t f Ma..__...._,;;_......Eif. UGO
The- diorer was 'served by "the Hill ~erving refreshments.
·
AnQnymous open meetirtg, 7 1 p.m.
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.The Daily Sentinel

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eliminalion provision.

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Society Scrapbook
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·=_, . . .,. . . . by., ...
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oas

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MilEr_.,.. ..

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Other lervlcia . .·

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• A benefit receiv!.l fro'rri anotllet
public pension system based on yoirr ·
owh work not c'overed ·by Soda.!
Security may affect your benefit as 'a
s!JOuse receiving a Social Security
benefit on the earnings recordof a
worker, under the rules -of the government pensio~ offset:
"
J

Also note that, if you have high
income, federal income tax may tiC .
due on up to 85 percent Of y&lt;ill'r
Social Security 5enefits.'·
"
.
Knowing these facts can help 'yo'U
plan your retirement in a w~y tHIII
·assures you ma.imum pleasure from
your~arniilgs and benefits. For mote
infotll)afiQn. call · 'Social ' Security:S
toll-free number, 1-800-772-121'3
and ask for the leaflet, How Wot\
Affects Your Benefits ·.
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---Community .Calendar---

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yaaidaor ''.

CaD. • I-1

Review
from Paga1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

~ Eutern ' Local School District

may continue its capital improve!:l'ent program by constructing a
new bus gar-age/storage buildins at
i~ cent~! campus.
•
Feb. 2 Pomeroy Village
&lt;Auncil OKs Police Department
moving into , village auditorium.
Council al110 approves revising a
residency ordinance for fire depart·
·mtnt leaders stating eit~er the chief
or the assisttnt chief must live
~ithin the village. .
. Feb. 7 - The shocking early ·
morning discovery of a pair of sev- ·
ered feet in a Pomeroy alley shocks
·
residents.
' Feb. 8 -- The communities ·
$hock upor the finding of the sev·
ered feet turns to relief - 'and
: laughter ·- as the grizzly find turns
out to be a pair of skinned bear feet.
· Feb. 11 - Auditor of 'State .Jim
Petro addresses Meigs County
Republi:ans at tbe annual Lincoln
Day, Dir ner.
Feb. ~ 5 - Pomeroy Police Capt.
Jim Stacy is suspended' for 10 days
and &amp;mated after a poliCI', di~­
patcher says he pasted a picture of
her head onto a photo of a naked
woman .
Feb. 18 Southern Local
School Distric? receives an addi·
tional $1,817,953 from the Ohio
School Facilities Commission
which agreed the district's project
budget was insuffici~nt for completion of a -new elementary school
and other planned construction.
. About 20()' attend a joint U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers/Ohio
Environmental Protection A:gency
. public hearing concerning perinil
fo~ construction of a barge loading ·
facility al Portland. Most speaking
oppose the permit which they say
will adversely affect the Buffington
Tsland Battlefield there.
Sara Cammarata, a sixth-grader
at Portland Elementary School,
wi~s Meigs County Spelling Bee
·for second consecutive year. .
·feb . 21 -Eastern Local schools
report a high absence rate due to an
outbreak afinfhienza.
· Feb.22-Adisputebetwee~ ·lhe ·
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District board and angry residents
moves into court with a motion ask·
ing Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III to
review the operation of th.e qistrict.
" Due to funding delays, Sou?h~rn
·Local Building Project cannot· be
completed by August, 2000, school
board learns.
Feb. 28- Meigs County Coun· .
cil on Aging director Susan Oliver
announces plans to testify before
1.1 .S. Senate sub-committee on

a

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Swearing-in ceremonies
•

March 8 - Fight over U.S. 33
heals up as Bill Childs, Middleport,
•
an original advocate of the U.S. 33
project, anno~nces ' he will crusade
for the, highway once again .
Throughout the following w~eks,
other groups announce their sup·
port for the project.
March-9 - Meigs 'Local School
Board agrees to repaint athletic
POMEROY - William R. "Bill" Hayes, 72, of Lone Oak, Kentucky, for·
facilities in the district.
merly
of Meigs County, died Friday, December 31, 1999 at his re~idence .
March 10 - Leonard Jewell, a
Born September 1, 1927 in Pomeroy, he was_
member of Drew Webster Post 39
the son of the late Carson S. Hayes and Hazel
of the American Legion, is named
Shuttleworth Hayes.
Meigs County I:egionnaire of the
Year.. ·
·
He was a retired terminal manager for the Cook
Coal
Company in Metropolis, Illinois. He was a
March .14 - Chester's Delmar
member of the Lone Oak First , B~ptist Church, the
Bau~, a veteran of World War II,
Pomeroy-Racine Lodge No. 164, Free ahd Accept·
receaves medals for his 'Service in
lhe war.
ed Masons of Ohio, the Bosworth Council No. 80,
March 1S - Pomeroy Council
Ohio Valley Commandery No. 24, was a recipient
relaxes residency requirements foJ
of the Y\]rk Cross of Honor, was a 32nd Degree
fire department officers, allowing
Master Mason, and he served in the U, S. Navy
during World War II.
Chris Shank to become chief of the
Surviving ·are his wife, Dorolhy "Dot" Hayes;
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart.ment;
\WO .daughters, Debby Lynn Wolfe of Zanesville
The Leading Creek Conservancy and Brenda Jea~ Davis of Syra~use; a stepdaughter, Trudy Gregory of Pad:
bistrict board asks county commis- ucah, Kentuck~, lhree sons, Wtlham R. Hayes of Marshall County, Kensioners . for $24,000 in legal fees tucky; and Davtd L. Hayes and S.teve M. Hayes, both of Russellvill e, Ken·
.used in the prose&lt;;ution of former lucky; ~ stepson, the Rev. Jim Arnold of Wes,t Memphis, Arkansas; 11
grandchildren, four stepgrandchtldren a.nd three great-grandchildren; two SWORN IN- Two village mayors and a clerk took their oaths
LCCD director Jack C.risp.
office Thursday before Probate and Juvenile Court Judge
March · 18 - 1Wo Point Pleas- srsters, II a May Bowers of Pataskala, and Helen Grace Rusche I of Syracuse;
.Ro.,ert
Buck. Above, Jay Dewhurst, left, assumed the mayor's
ant, W.Va., men are charged in a an~ two brothers, Carson Hayes of Pearland, Texas, and Robert Hayes Of
office
In
Rutland on Sunday, .due to the resignation of Jo ArCo
. .
series of 1998 burglaries most! y Edrson, Georgia.
EadiS.
Below,
Middleport .Mayor Sandy lannarelll and Clerk/Tref·
Iu addition to his parents, he was. preceded in death by his first wife, 'Betty
occurring iri the western portion of
surer
Bry~n
Swann
take their oaths. lannarelll was appointed to
Jean Hayes.
.
·
the county.
Ser\lices will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, January 5, 2000, in the chapel al'the the mayors office earlier thla year, and was elected as a write-In
March 19 - 'George Collins of
candidate In November's general election.
•
Tuppers Plains is named aciing Le.tart Falls &lt;;:emetery. The Rev. Robert Stewart will officiate. Burial will
· deputy director of ODOT District follow. Friends may call at the chapel on Wednesday, one hour prior to the
service.
·
·
to.
. .
.
Arrangements
are
by
the
Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.
March 2i - County commissioners announce plans for an ~pril
9 rally .promoting U.,5. 33 projects.
March 25 -Joan W. Lawrence,
new director ·of the Ohio Department of Aging, tours the Meigs
County SeniQr Citizens Center.
March 29 - County commis·

:r

William R. 'Bil_
l' Hayes

..

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of

· Ada Beatrice Morris
··.
.

siqners consi4er moving county

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ti!le office to the county government annex (formerly the Meigs
County Home).
.
March 30 - Athens County
Commissioners approve resolutions
endorsing four-lane and two-lane
U.S. 33 projects. Approval by the

· LONG ~OTl'OM -A!Ia Beatric~ Morris, .87, of Bashan .Road, Long
BoUom, dred Jan .. 1, 2000 at the 'Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
.
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Pomeroy.
·
Bo"-July 25 , 1912 in Atianla, Ga. , she was the daughter of Carley and
Sara~_lums Cash. She was a retired restaurant cook.
Surviving are a son. and daughter-in-law, Clyde I. and Jean Morris of
Long Bottom; and a grandson, a granddaughter, 10 great-grandchildren and ·
commission is considered neces- 16 great-grandchildren .
sary for the At~ens-lo-Darwin pro·
She was al~ preceded in death by her husband, Marlin JacksOn Morris ;'
ject to move 'forward. ·
and by two brothers and two sisters.
Services will be 1 _r.m. Wednesday in the Ewing Funeral Home,
.APRIL
Pomeroy.
Bunal wrll be tn the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may .call at
April 4 - Area landowners
the
funeral
horne from 6-8 p.m . Tuesday,
warned to brace ' for onslaught of
' 17-year Cicadas.
•
April 7 - Meigs Economic
Pevelopment Director Perry Varna·
doe. predicts },000 new . jobs by
2002. •
POMEROY Mayor Frank $72; Duane Wolfe, Reedsville,
AprilS- Cleveland Plain Deal- Vaughan processed 19 cases last speed, $72; Suzanne Sprouse,
er visits county schools in response week in Pomeroy Mayor's Court.'
Racine, speed, $66; Tory · Swartz~
to a challenge by Congressman Ted
Middleport, failure to appear, $63;
Strickland to view, first-hand, con·
Fined were: Michelle King, David Danko, Marion , speed, $71; '
ditions at poor, rural schools.
· Shade, FAA suspension, $75 and . Kelly D. Miller, New Haven, W.Va:,
April 9 - West Virginia offi • costs; Rebecca Sexton, Vinton; FRA · speed, $69; Carol Supple, Gallipolis
cials, includi'lg Governor Cecil suspension~ $75 and-costs, fictitious .Ferry, W.Va., speed, $71.
Underwood, submit written resolu· tags, $63; Michael Jackson,
tions supporting Meigs County Pomeroy, public intoxication, $113
.~ging.
highway projects which they feel and costs; Lora Roach , Mason ,
will also assist in economic devel· W.Va., no child restraints, $40 and
MARCH
opment efforts for Jackson County, costs; Nada Koezinsky, assured
. March I - Meigs County com· W.Va.
clear distance. costs only;· Carol
missioners urge support for U.S. 33
A "Rally for the Roads" in Supple, Gallipolis Ferry, expired
project from Athens to Darwin.
. Pomeroy attracts several hundred registration, costs only; Randy
Pleasant Valley Hospital opens supporters of the Athens-to-Darwin Stone, Mason, W.V~., expired regisnew Middlepart clinic at site of for- highway project.
tration, $63 and. costs, no child
mer Western Auto store. ·
April 13 - Middleport Village restraints, $100 and costs; Denise
March 2 - Middleport Commu- Council approves waterline ex ten· Keys, Portland, speed, . $61 and
.nity Association endorses U.S. 33 sion in Hobson area.
costs; Thomas Stobart, Stockport,
.project.
April 14 -Meigs Local Board assured clear distance, costs only;·
March 3 - Parents of truant of Education considers possible l&gt;aul D. Flowers, Racine, red light
·children answer in court for unex· construction bond ballot issue of violation , $33' and costs; Aja
cused School' absences. Six-month less tllan three mills for November McGlothin, Pomeroy, wrongful
sentences are suspended pending election.
entrustment, $150 and costs; con·
completion of. the school year with
.April 17 - Sarah Roels and tributing to the delinquency of a
no more unexcused absences.
Jason Allen named Southern High minor, $213; Anna M. C.hapman,
March 4 Meigs County · School 1999 Prom Queen and Pomeroy, FRA suspension, $1'50
1ecfds its first traffic fatality of the King.
and costs .
yea when Jerry Matney, 47, of · · April 19 - Chris Shank named
Beaver is killed in a car/tractor· new Pomeroy Fire Chief.
·
Forfeiting bonds were: Keithen
trailer ,collision.
April 25 - In the wake of the M. Branch, St. Mary's, W.Va., speed,
Eastem Local Littleton, Colo., school shooting, $68; Ernest Calaway: ·Coolville,
. March 6 ~chool Board sells Chester Ele- area superin'tendents focus on
speed, $71, window tint; $83; Virmentary School to Tom Karr, teachers' need to know students.
ginia Clendenin, RaCine, window
Pomeroy, for $30,000. A neighborApril 27 - Area lawmen raid tint, $83; Roger Stone; Point Pleas·
ing site goes to the Chester United property, houses belonging to Rut· ant, W.Va., speed, $7~; Mark GrossMerhodist Church for $15,000. No land's Fred Pri.ddy of Rutland, seiz- nickle, · Reedsville, speed, $67;
bids were received for ·Riverview ing drugs, IJ!Oney and property Georgann Dobbs, Texas City, Tex.,
Elementary School which had a including numerous automobiles.
slop sign, $83; Angela ' Roach,
$400,000 minimum bid price.
April 29 - Plans announced for Pomero, expired r¢gistration, $83;
The Eastern High School girls June 18 Log Jam Festival at Port· Mary Powell, Pomeroy, speed, $70;
basketball team defeats South Web· land featuring coun?ry stars David Gerald Mohler, Middleport, speed,
ster, 50·38/.to capture district lOUr- Lee Murphy, Kenny Chesney and $70; Jill Lipscomb, Pomeroy, speed,
~ament crown.
·
Toby Keith . .
$65; Trina Davis, Syracuse, speed,.

Mayor processes_19 cases

Arthur Treachers
34099 St. Rt 7

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· Pomeroy, Ohio

992~5829 .

Fish Sandwich Combo

.~2.99

M·F

Quality Furnitur Plu
Year -End ·Millennium

Clearance Sale

Ql' Mah Winter expected .to return·.ruesday
•

By The Atsoc:lated Preas·

Colde~ air will sweep into the state a'nd earl)' morning

¥other mjld.day was f&amp;recast for today across Ohio .but
a steady rainfall was expected to keep temperatures from
reaching recotd levels for a second straight day.
Then, winter weather is expected to return liS quickly ,as
'it left, with snow likely on Tuesday. ·
'Onseasonably warm temperatures on Sunday snapped
· ~rds Jhroughou? Ohio - at least one Of them more
·
than a century old.
1he record readings included 63 degre~ at the CantonAkron Airport, topping the old mark of 58 set i-n 1897;
C!O in Mansfield, eclipsing the 54 set in 1997; 61 in
Youngstown, besting the' S2 also set in I997, and '6 4 in
Columbus, erasing the record 61 set in 1916.
·
The stime "southwesterly winds that brought _the warm
temperatures also carried in lots of moisture that prq·
duced showers- some of them heavy - Sunday night
llitd today.
!!q,uthwest Ohio received the most rain Sunday night, the
l!latioqal Weather Service 51lid, with Cincinnati measur- .
i~g more than .75 of an inch. Dayton, Columbus and
&amp;n~ville all reported around .25 of an inc'h. .
_
temperatures overnight were very mil~ with CiQcinnati
t~~ ~armc8l spot at 57 degrees and Defiance the coolest
wrth 36 degrees.
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An approaching low pressure J'YStem will bnng a sharp
Glwtge in·Ohio's weather on Tuesday, forecasters said.

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temperatures in the 50s will drop into the 30s during the
day, as the lingering rain turns IQ snow. •
Snow or snow showers will continue Tuesday night as
·temperatures fall into the 20s • .
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus w.eather station was 64 degrees in 1897 while the
record low was 20 below zero in 1879. Sunset. tonight
will be at 5:19 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:54 a.m.
'Weather fo.,.,ast:
.
Tonight ...Showers developing by· midnight. Lows in the
upper 50s. South. wind lO ,to 20 mph. Chance ofrain 90
percent.
Tuesday... Showers likely. Turning cooler with early
mor.ning highs in · the upper 50s, then temperatures
falling into the mid 40s. Cl}an~ of rai'n 70-percent.
'Tuesday ~ight ... Mostly cloudy with a chance -o f rain
showers, then a chance of snow showers. Lows in the
'upper 20s.
El&lt;tended forecast:
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.
Thurs!lay:.. Par:Piy cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s and
·
highs near 50.
. Friday.:.Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows in
the mid-30s and higlis in the upper 40s.

42123 St. Rt. 7
. ·
·
Tuppers Plains, OH
Hours: M.on • Thurs 9:00.am • 5:00 pm, Frl9:00 am • 6 pm, Sat 9:00 am • 4 pm

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Quality
Furniture
Plus
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:Phone: 740-667-7.388 ·1-800-200-4005

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Monday, January 3, 2000

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The Daily
. Sent~l
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·ByTh~BeD.d
.
Ann starts neW ye(r off with a plea for smokers to stop killing themselve~
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Dear Rud·

en: I apologize
for starting the
new year will a
column that is
totally without a
laugh, but I
.would
rather
save your life
.l):lan amuse you.
•
Here is a letter that could give
:You a ldnger life, ¥-d a much better
one.
-i . Dear Ann.Laftden: I was once a
s !Doker. Today, I am a laryngec·
lomee . In plainer words, a neck·
:Oreather.' "Disgusted in Cleveland"
1Eliked, "What gives Ann Landers tlie
right to tell smokers they stink?" He
'Complained aboUt being made to
~make outside in freezing weather,

because the building where he
works does not allow smokers.
May he if "Disgusted" had to look
at~ hole in his throat every morning,
h.e might ehange his attitude.
Keep ye1ling at the smokers out ·
there, and if _you need an assistant'
"cheerleader," I will: hop a flight to
Chtcago and stand nght besade you.
·.. DWIGHT FROM DANVILLE,
CALIF.
.
·
DEAR DWIGHT: Thanks for
the offer, but please; don't come to
Chicago. The weather is much better
in California: Here is qne more,
which I promise will be the last on
this subject for a long time:
Dear Ann Landers: I smoked·
fo.r 46 years . . and told myself I
enjoyed _i t. Meanwhile , my sin use~
were blocked. I hated the lo usy taste

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· Monda~, Januery 3~ 2000

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in my. mouth, my breath stank, I thought it was insulting, because it
ruined clothes and furniture, and did suggested that the avera1e viewer
without things I really needed to . didn 't know when to laugh.
support my tobacco addiction. On
Ann, ·the reason laugh tracks are
Thanksgiving 1998,-· I gave myself used is because it has been scientifi·
the best gift ever. I quit smoking. I cally proven that when other people.
can breathe' through my nose aaain, laugh. you are much more likely to
my-· mouth no )onger t~tes· liKe a enjoy the scene or_ the joke than
sewer, my harr and ptllowcases when you are laughmg by yourself.
smell fresh, and I'm alive again . •, Things seem a lot funnier when you
L.S.
.
.
are awa!e that others ar~ enjoying
DEAR L.S.: .As one of th~. th'em, t~o.
,
world's most veheme'nt tobacco
I am nor in the television indusfoes, I applaud your comrneJits, and try, but I have learned about this
am delighted to share lhe_m with my . phen_omenon in my psychology
read~rs .
·
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class, and 'l'ant you to know il is JN!t
Dear Ann Landers: . I am some dumb idea, as you suggested,
responding to the letter from but a well-thought-out concept to
"Lawrence in Burbank, Calif. ,''-who help viewers enjoy programming
commented on the use of laugh more.
tracks in television programs. He
PSYCH STUDENT IN

GEORGETOWN, TEXAS
DEAR STUDENT: You get an
"A" for your observation. Oo to the
head of the_class. I personally do not
care for laugh t,rach, because I
resent being urged to laugh at something I do not consider funny.
However; hiug~r is inde~d con·
tagtous, and much"-ftrore enJoyable
when shared with others.
Walter Lippmann said, "Laughter connects .us, and helps us appreciate one another. It is a universal
language that needs no ifiterpreter:"
I can tell you fro!Jl personal expe·
rience, when I was in · the Soviet
Union in 1959, Vietnam in 1969 and
in the People's Re(lublic of China in
1974, humor · )Was the common
thread lhat connected me with 'peopie . worldwide, I have al~
•

believed that laughter is good, not
only as a social lubri~;ant, but fOJ
physical health. A fine physician
once told me, "He who laughs .'~
lasts." I believe it. .
..
· When planning a wedding; wlio
pays for what? Who stands \\'here?
"The Ann Landers Guide fot Brides~'
has all the answers. Send a se!faddressed, long, business-size enve·
lope and a check or money ·ofderfpr .·
$3,75 (this includes pos.tage· and
handling) to. Brides, c/o Anp Lan·
ders, P.O. Box J I S62, Chicago •. Jll.
(irl611 - 11562. (In Ca~irda;, sel).\t
. $4:55)
: · ·
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· To find out more about At~n Lan·
ders and read her past columns, visit
· ihe Creators Syndicale we~ page ~t
· www.creators.com.
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' Longtime Southern elementary 'Hurn~ne ·soci~ty: Life wi~h a house·,rabbi~
·pr., nc ,. paI .R0 be rt 8 eegIe r'et I' res
W~ltt

By Alden
don't attempt to add a second. rabbit live a lot longer. Rabbits., can bi:
Meigs County Humane Society · unless both are neutered, regardless neutered between three ·and •a half
of the sex. But take two; they're and six months old.
There at · ihe window, on hi s small.
.
Rabbits- groom themselves con,
favorite perch, is -Oscar, waiting for
When you bring your rabbit stanlly as .cats do and therefore .pro.·
you, longing for your arrival. You home for the first tiltle, introduce her duce the rabbit version ,of fur balls.
open the door to be greeted by or him to the house slowly through However. they don ' t vomil. Jnstead,
your house rabbit and his . best c~t &amp;us_~ of a cage. Fasten a litter box they-are troubled by excessive swahfriend!
·
·
· ,1'fll'he corner"of the cage, far from lowing , which c~n cause blockages.
This scenario could come ·true . . the food souri:e. ·
· .
In order to prevent intestinal blockAdmit it; yo~ have been fantasizing
As soon as the rab~it is trained, . ages. owners ,must brush 1qe rabbit,
abou1 adding to your family. More · then you can introduce her or him to so that tess hair is ·swalloWed, ar1tl
and more people are living your fan- the .rest of the house .
provide plenty of exercise each ·
tasy. There is even -a House Rabbit
As with cats and dogs, use only week. You can give rabbits a'handfwl
Society. located in Athens , whose positive reinfo'r~ement. .I t is poini- of fresh hay and fresh-vegetables; ai;
mission it is to educate the general less to smack a rabbit y0 u find trying well as the occasional petroleum
public about domesticated rabbits to f'hew on an electrical cord. The laxative for digestive problems.
.
who live in your house apd share rabbit is only being a rabbit; chewRabbits can get their version
your life.
ing is what life is all abr"t. You will colds, and vets .can treat. the coldS '
.Rabbi)s are intelligent, social ani- have to conceal the cord so the rab- ·with special antibiotics. But NEVER
rnals who -need affection and are bit cannot reach it. You will also give ir rabbit an an.Libiotic prescribed
ideal companion animals: The. saei- ' have tq encase any cords that can be for a human being. But presumab~
ety, in an effort t'!,get .lhe word out .seen in vinyl (ubiirjl.
·
you will have thought ahead ana
about these lovable creatures, pro-. .' Everyone wanis to know about already have visited your bunny vet
vides· volunteers to help with issues house training. Most rabbits will use (certainly-for the spayinglDelltering)
including bunny-proofing tile house, a lit.ter box; however, u_nneutered befol'l' the first cold·. ·
•
house training, lifting and handling males and unspayed females might
· For: answers to all yotlr bunny
rabbits, spaying and neuiering, and "mark territory," so, as with cats atfd questions (such as supplies, what Is
locating rabbit vets.
dogs, sterilization will solve that "chewable," housing, .etc.), consult
House rabbits can get ·along with problem.•
the House 'Rabqit Soeiety ··P,O. B&lt;!X
cats and well-behaved dogs. And of • Once. sterilized, house rabbitS are ~767; ' Athens, OH 45701; . or call
course they would love another less likely to chew, exhibit terrilorial (740) · 797· 7616; or e-mail: rondir
companion of their own species. But . aggression, and of course they will na@ ohiou.edu.

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, . SYRACUSE - Children return·
·ing to Syracuse Elementary School
:today after Christmas break will no
. doubt notice the absence of long·
time principal Robert Beegle.
~ Beegle, whose teaching career
,-spanned 41-and-a-half years, retired
·. e.ffective Friday.
·
· Since the school itself is slated
'.for replacement with the construe·
lion of a new district-wide elemen·
J ary school, Be~gle will ndt be
Jeplaced with another principal:
.fnstead, the Southern Local Board of
Education appointed third-grade
·teacher Patti Struble aS head teacher
:at the school. .
:. · As a result, Beegle was the
school's final principal ... a distinc}ion the school shares with Racine
-Elementary School. Beegle was
, : Princip~l · of that school when it
.closed in 1995.
. ·
A 1956 graduated Of Racine Higl.1
:School, Beegle was hired April 14,
· 1958 by Charles Hayman, then"
:executive ·head of Southern Local
·schools.
· He ~ught at Portland Elementary
·:for four years then transferred to
:Racine Elementary in · 1962. ·For a
:couple of years he served as a trav·
· eling reading teacher before becom) ng Southern's first ceflified elemen·tary school principal at Racine in
1970. After Racine Elementary
:closed in 1995.• he went to Syracuse
;Elementary where he was both prin-'
cipal and sixth-grade teacher.
.
Beegle, who had a reputation for
·being stern, said the biggest change
.over the years is the children's lack
::Of discipline.
"Everybody wants di sci pline.
'llOW, but they . want it for the other
he said.
.;'child,"
• parents must sign a
At syracuse,
1orm at the beginning .of the school
~y-ear before their children can be
:paddled. "About the only ones who
;sign that .their children can be
'Spanked are the ones whose children
:cton't need spanked,'; he said.

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Working after
retirement: What you should know ~
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BY ED PETEIRSON
$1 for every $3. Benefici'!"ies 70 ·
and over are iiot affected by the
Social Security.Mmager, A!hens
·
RETIRING PRINCIPAL - Robert Beegle, principal of Syracuse
If you plan to work ~fter retire!· ·earnings Iimit.
Elementary School, -retired effective .Friday. He was recognize.d ear- ment, and an increasing number ·of
lier for lila 40-plus years Of teaching.
··
people do, you will apout Social How other income affects your
Security. These include how much social security_benefits
Another slatewide trend Beegle PTO .. Joining Beegle for the surprise you can make before -your benefits
In general, only earnings from
are affected-and how other retire· work done after you start receiving
finds disturbing is the way instruc- ·ceremony was his wtfCJl~ne .
·.
tion is geared to the current stale
benefits affect your benefits. Most
Sam Hawley from the .Sporn ,ment income affects your benefits.
profic"iency tests.
other . types of retirement income
Plant reviewed reviewed Beegle's
"Now they're wanting you to ·career. Cookie Salser' and Leanna How .much you SJ"n ·e arn while will not affect your benefits. These
include payments from private
teach now for ihc proficiency test," Beegle, members of 'Beegle's first retired ·
There are limits on how much· insurance, pensions from private
he said, "teac hing material that is class at Portland Elementary School.
tested rather than teaching kids what were also on hand to ·talk about the you can earn without affecting your employers and annuity payments
they need to know."
Social Security retirement benefits. ·and income from investments such
early years of his career.
"They're teac hing the te st riow,
' Sixth -grad~ Sludents Caitlin (The rules for Social. Sec~rity dis- ' as interest and capital gains., This
but not leaching knowledge," he Nease , John Bentz and Nicole ability and Supplemental Security rule is designed to ·encourage people
said. : 'That's everybody in the McDaniel , members of Beegle's last Income benefits are different) 'Ben· to build up income for ~irement
state ." '
class at SyracUse, gave p~:esentations eficiaries under age 65 can eam up and financial security using Social
In 1958, teachers didn 't instruct of love 'a nd respect for their teacher to $10,080 in 2000 (up from $9,600 Security as a bll5e.
'kids on the use of computers.
and friend . Also, a presentation of in 1999) without affecting their ben"We-didn ' t know what a comput- cards, from Deborah Harris' fourth- efits. Earnings over that wiU reduce O!her income that col!ld possibly
er was," he said.
.
grade Jlas s, was rnade by Ashley benefits $1 for every $2· in excess affect your benefits are:
"li's bittersweet," Beegle said on Robie. Next, Syracuse teachers Jan eaf11ings. Beneficiaries 65-69 may
•:,."-'~""-"--------~~~=-·
* A pension based on work not
his retiring. "I had re~ll ly a good Norris and Patti Struble shared some earn $17,000 (up from $15,500 in covered by Social Security will
class this year. I hated t(l leave them; of their teaching' experiences with 1999) before benefits are affected. ·reduce your Socia~ Security retireCUSPS ZIJ.!IH)
ihey 're a good bunch of students."
Earnings over that reduce benefits ment payment under lhe windfall
Beegle.
c_ _...,., ""-,..u....., ....
"1
,have
regrets
I
won't
get
to
Jerry
Houser
from
the
.
Sporn
~
1 • rwtJihed every eftemoon, Mondly tbn:Mia\
teach in the new school, and walk l'lant 'presented ·Beegle with · a
111 Court St., PL'"' ~r.oy, Ohio. by 1M
do'l'nthe
halls in the new building," plaque for his support to the '"Part·
: OWo \tllley MIWdn&amp; f ·· t11pany. Sec:aM eta.
he
added.
p~lcllt Pomtrot. Ohio.
.
ners in 'Education" program. Wrap-Beegle was honored Dec. 16 by ping up the ce~emony was Cathy MONDAY
Thursday, Sacred Heart Catholic
M-==·~·
The
"-loted
Pnta
the
OliiO
NIWifllplr Allocildon.
the
staff
and
students
of
Syracuse
Syracuse
PTO
president,
ll'ith
Crow;
. ,_.,....n Send Mklreu CDITeC.'tlons to The ,
POMEROY
Meigs High Church, Mull\erry Ave., Pomeroy.
S.iOinel, JII Court 51., P-r', Olilo
Elementary, former students, the the presentation of a pocket watch.
School Band . ·Boosters nieeting
45
American Electric Power Philip . Beegle was also given a plaque Monday, 7 p.m. in the high schoql FRIDAY
.
. SUBSCRIPJION RATES
.
1 Sporn Plant the· school 's Partner by the So~thern Local- Board of band. room. All parents urged to
IIJConhr..-M-. POMEROY Friday's Fun
One \\leelt ................................ .$2.00
in Education - and the · Syracuse Education for. l!i·s y'ears of service.
Food
and
fellofship
project at
attend.
One Month .............,.................. $8.70
God' s Neighborhood · Escape for
One ye:liicu·cop;y·PiJa"'t04.oo
. ATHENS - Rouie 33 Athens-to- · Teens .. Nutritional foods free, nonDally. ............. ,•• _ •• ,......,,.. _;,,,,3.5 Cems
Darwin
Citizens Advisory Commit· violent games, computer programs,
Sublaibel'l noll ~rinJ'IO pay tile carrier, !Illy
. ·fttnltio iidviiiCII diltCI to Tbdlllily 5cMinel011
.
tee regular biweekly working s~- cards, pool available. Located Main
1 1-._ liJI or tz -h boolo. Credll wll be
Retired teachers hear about plant Chester Restoration Committee.
. sian Monday at the Ohio University Street, Pomeroy. Center o~ns at 6
&amp;ivM&lt;IIrill_..._
.
,
care
p.m. and closes at 10:30 p.jn. on fri- ·
. fW .......ion br mill penniUed In 11a1
In~ in Athens to review alignment
wlltN ._,. !C'ff'W Ill'\' lee la enllabte.
day
and Saturday. nights. · · · .
·.
POMERe&gt;Y -The Meigs Coun- Christmall party held • .
alternalives for the Athens to Dar·
• ......... - t h o ri1Jot to odJut dur·
ty Retired Teachers were given
· The Bradford Church of Christ win project.
-..loo porlod. Soblcrlpllon ....
information on the care of Christmas adult and you11g adult Chris1mas
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plants by Hal ·Kncen , extension party was held r'ece~tly ;ti lhe GoldRACINE - Racine
regular
·
agent,
at
a
recent
luncheon
meeting
meeTing Monday with rrioi:k inilia· .
MAILSUIICIUPJION
en Corral in;Gallipolis. ;··
t.......... c:_,.
tion.
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held at Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
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SZ7.30
· Officers elected fQr the · coming Lydia ConneD membe.l'll exoiluing,
'l
• """'·······-···...............$53.112
year
were Maxine Whitehead, presi-, prnaments
, RACINE .:....: Racine · Village
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S2 \VIIIti,,.._, ............·..... JtQS.!d
dent; Jean Alkire; first vice presi:
An ornament exchange was a fea- Council will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at ·
. de'~t ; Gay Perrin , second vice presi- ture of the annual Christmas party of the municipal building.
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denh
and
Anna
Ri~e.
secretary;
and
•: · 52 \\ltltlo,,,,_,,,,,,.,..,,.....S109.72
Lydia. Coun~il of . -the Bradford
Carol Ohlinger, treasurer.
·
.
Church of Christ held recenUy at the
Perrin and Pau line Horton are 'to Golden Corral in Gallipolis.
Reader Services
• select books 10 be placed in. the
.Cotiteotlon Pollcv
county · Iiliraries in memory of Wreaths topic of S9nshine Clrele
' Ortr
II? ...rtO. PI to be , deceas.e d me1i1bers, Virginia Carson.
RACINE.:.... A program on a livICICEEnlt. If,_.~-. et • ernr .. • Martha Chapman . Rose Ann Jenkin s ing advent wreath MSing,_ herbs was
_ , , CliP .... - - .. (1411) ,z,.
dF • K
d
presented by Janet Theilis when the
JISJ. we ,.. ·dllck ' " ' ..,.,....,.. an ane ~nne y.
.
. ... .U.•ait• t?l alr,..m 1 ret
·
John ·Milhoan. ORTA Eastern ,The Sonshinc Circle ol' DorGa• WEDNESDAY
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vice pres ident, spoke briefly o n pro- Bethany Church met recenily ill the
· MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
/ " - - DeD!Irtmenta
posed legislation affecting retired church. ' '
_ Port Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednes·
Th • • .......... tt2-21!5. llopl~ teachers . Next meeting will be held
Lois Sterrett,presided ~~ t~ busi- tlay, ltonie of Jeanette Thomas, Pat
Mlltn.k'+iar..-.r · •
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in Man.:h.
ness mec1ing and Me lissa Smtth and Roher to re~iew "Strawberries in
'G ncni .........- ........~.......Exl. Ull
Kathryn Hart gave th,e secretary and · the Sea: by Elisabeth Ogilvie. Annu·
.....~ ......:...._ .., _ , _ ,__J!al. 11112
treasurer's reports.
al business meeting with election of
. or Elrl. Ut6 DofA members enjoy ~inner
CHESTER - The annual Christ.
The next meeting will be held . officers ..
mas dinner party of Chester Council . Jan . 13 at the church with Blondena
Afte........................... _ ..:;...bL 1114 : 323, Daughters of Ameripa, was Rainer and Mattie Teaford doing the THURSDAY
Clic P t!II ..........- ... - ••,.;;.........EI:t. 1113 held recently- at the hall. .
program and Ann .Boso and Peggy
POMEROY
Alcoholics
a
?'t f Ma..__...._,;;_......Eif. UGO
The- diorer was 'served by "the Hill ~erving refreshments.
·
AnQnymous open meetirtg, 7 1 p.m.
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Society Scrapbook
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·=_, . . .,. . . . by., ...
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Other lervlcia . .·

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• A benefit receiv!.l fro'rri anotllet
public pension system based on yoirr ·
owh work not c'overed ·by Soda.!
Security may affect your benefit as 'a
s!JOuse receiving a Social Security
benefit on the earnings recordof a
worker, under the rules -of the government pensio~ offset:
"
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Also note that, if you have high
income, federal income tax may tiC .
due on up to 85 percent Of y&lt;ill'r
Social Security 5enefits.'·
"
.
Knowing these facts can help 'yo'U
plan your retirement in a w~y tHIII
·assures you ma.imum pleasure from
your~arniilgs and benefits. For mote
infotll)afiQn. call · 'Social ' Security:S
toll-free number, 1-800-772-121'3
and ask for the leaflet, How Wot\
Affects Your Benefits ·.
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---Community .Calendar---

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yaaidaor ''.

CaD. • I-1

Review
from Paga1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

~ Eutern ' Local School District

may continue its capital improve!:l'ent program by constructing a
new bus gar-age/storage buildins at
i~ cent~! campus.
•
Feb. 2 Pomeroy Village
&lt;Auncil OKs Police Department
moving into , village auditorium.
Council al110 approves revising a
residency ordinance for fire depart·
·mtnt leaders stating eit~er the chief
or the assisttnt chief must live
~ithin the village. .
. Feb. 7 - The shocking early ·
morning discovery of a pair of sev- ·
ered feet in a Pomeroy alley shocks
·
residents.
' Feb. 8 -- The communities ·
$hock upor the finding of the sev·
ered feet turns to relief - 'and
: laughter ·- as the grizzly find turns
out to be a pair of skinned bear feet.
· Feb. 11 - Auditor of 'State .Jim
Petro addresses Meigs County
Republi:ans at tbe annual Lincoln
Day, Dir ner.
Feb. ~ 5 - Pomeroy Police Capt.
Jim Stacy is suspended' for 10 days
and &amp;mated after a poliCI', di~­
patcher says he pasted a picture of
her head onto a photo of a naked
woman .
Feb. 18 Southern Local
School Distric? receives an addi·
tional $1,817,953 from the Ohio
School Facilities Commission
which agreed the district's project
budget was insuffici~nt for completion of a -new elementary school
and other planned construction.
. About 20()' attend a joint U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers/Ohio
Environmental Protection A:gency
. public hearing concerning perinil
fo~ construction of a barge loading ·
facility al Portland. Most speaking
oppose the permit which they say
will adversely affect the Buffington
Tsland Battlefield there.
Sara Cammarata, a sixth-grader
at Portland Elementary School,
wi~s Meigs County Spelling Bee
·for second consecutive year. .
·feb . 21 -Eastern Local schools
report a high absence rate due to an
outbreak afinfhienza.
· Feb.22-Adisputebetwee~ ·lhe ·
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District board and angry residents
moves into court with a motion ask·
ing Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III to
review the operation of th.e qistrict.
" Due to funding delays, Sou?h~rn
·Local Building Project cannot· be
completed by August, 2000, school
board learns.
Feb. 28- Meigs County Coun· .
cil on Aging director Susan Oliver
announces plans to testify before
1.1 .S. Senate sub-committee on

a

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Swearing-in ceremonies
•

March 8 - Fight over U.S. 33
heals up as Bill Childs, Middleport,
•
an original advocate of the U.S. 33
project, anno~nces ' he will crusade
for the, highway once again .
Throughout the following w~eks,
other groups announce their sup·
port for the project.
March-9 - Meigs 'Local School
Board agrees to repaint athletic
POMEROY - William R. "Bill" Hayes, 72, of Lone Oak, Kentucky, for·
facilities in the district.
merly
of Meigs County, died Friday, December 31, 1999 at his re~idence .
March 10 - Leonard Jewell, a
Born September 1, 1927 in Pomeroy, he was_
member of Drew Webster Post 39
the son of the late Carson S. Hayes and Hazel
of the American Legion, is named
Shuttleworth Hayes.
Meigs County I:egionnaire of the
Year.. ·
·
He was a retired terminal manager for the Cook
Coal
Company in Metropolis, Illinois. He was a
March .14 - Chester's Delmar
member of the Lone Oak First , B~ptist Church, the
Bau~, a veteran of World War II,
Pomeroy-Racine Lodge No. 164, Free ahd Accept·
receaves medals for his 'Service in
lhe war.
ed Masons of Ohio, the Bosworth Council No. 80,
March 1S - Pomeroy Council
Ohio Valley Commandery No. 24, was a recipient
relaxes residency requirements foJ
of the Y\]rk Cross of Honor, was a 32nd Degree
fire department officers, allowing
Master Mason, and he served in the U, S. Navy
during World War II.
Chris Shank to become chief of the
Surviving ·are his wife, Dorolhy "Dot" Hayes;
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart.ment;
\WO .daughters, Debby Lynn Wolfe of Zanesville
The Leading Creek Conservancy and Brenda Jea~ Davis of Syra~use; a stepdaughter, Trudy Gregory of Pad:
bistrict board asks county commis- ucah, Kentuck~, lhree sons, Wtlham R. Hayes of Marshall County, Kensioners . for $24,000 in legal fees tucky; and Davtd L. Hayes and S.teve M. Hayes, both of Russellvill e, Ken·
.used in the prose&lt;;ution of former lucky; ~ stepson, the Rev. Jim Arnold of Wes,t Memphis, Arkansas; 11
grandchildren, four stepgrandchtldren a.nd three great-grandchildren; two SWORN IN- Two village mayors and a clerk took their oaths
LCCD director Jack C.risp.
office Thursday before Probate and Juvenile Court Judge
March · 18 - 1Wo Point Pleas- srsters, II a May Bowers of Pataskala, and Helen Grace Rusche I of Syracuse;
.Ro.,ert
Buck. Above, Jay Dewhurst, left, assumed the mayor's
ant, W.Va., men are charged in a an~ two brothers, Carson Hayes of Pearland, Texas, and Robert Hayes Of
office
In
Rutland on Sunday, .due to the resignation of Jo ArCo
. .
series of 1998 burglaries most! y Edrson, Georgia.
EadiS.
Below,
Middleport .Mayor Sandy lannarelll and Clerk/Tref·
Iu addition to his parents, he was. preceded in death by his first wife, 'Betty
occurring iri the western portion of
surer
Bry~n
Swann
take their oaths. lannarelll was appointed to
Jean Hayes.
.
·
the county.
Ser\lices will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, January 5, 2000, in the chapel al'the the mayors office earlier thla year, and was elected as a write-In
March 19 - 'George Collins of
candidate In November's general election.
•
Tuppers Plains is named aciing Le.tart Falls &lt;;:emetery. The Rev. Robert Stewart will officiate. Burial will
· deputy director of ODOT District follow. Friends may call at the chapel on Wednesday, one hour prior to the
service.
·
·
to.
. .
.
Arrangements
are
by
the
Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.
March 2i - County commissioners announce plans for an ~pril
9 rally .promoting U.,5. 33 projects.
March 25 -Joan W. Lawrence,
new director ·of the Ohio Department of Aging, tours the Meigs
County SeniQr Citizens Center.
March 29 - County commis·

:r

William R. 'Bil_
l' Hayes

..

.

of

· Ada Beatrice Morris
··.
.

siqners consi4er moving county

.

ti!le office to the county government annex (formerly the Meigs
County Home).
.
March 30 - Athens County
Commissioners approve resolutions
endorsing four-lane and two-lane
U.S. 33 projects. Approval by the

· LONG ~OTl'OM -A!Ia Beatric~ Morris, .87, of Bashan .Road, Long
BoUom, dred Jan .. 1, 2000 at the 'Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
.
'
Pomeroy.
·
Bo"-July 25 , 1912 in Atianla, Ga. , she was the daughter of Carley and
Sara~_lums Cash. She was a retired restaurant cook.
Surviving are a son. and daughter-in-law, Clyde I. and Jean Morris of
Long Bottom; and a grandson, a granddaughter, 10 great-grandchildren and ·
commission is considered neces- 16 great-grandchildren .
sary for the At~ens-lo-Darwin pro·
She was al~ preceded in death by her husband, Marlin JacksOn Morris ;'
ject to move 'forward. ·
and by two brothers and two sisters.
Services will be 1 _r.m. Wednesday in the Ewing Funeral Home,
.APRIL
Pomeroy.
Bunal wrll be tn the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may .call at
April 4 - Area landowners
the
funeral
horne from 6-8 p.m . Tuesday,
warned to brace ' for onslaught of
' 17-year Cicadas.
•
April 7 - Meigs Economic
Pevelopment Director Perry Varna·
doe. predicts },000 new . jobs by
2002. •
POMEROY Mayor Frank $72; Duane Wolfe, Reedsville,
AprilS- Cleveland Plain Deal- Vaughan processed 19 cases last speed, $72; Suzanne Sprouse,
er visits county schools in response week in Pomeroy Mayor's Court.'
Racine, speed, $66; Tory · Swartz~
to a challenge by Congressman Ted
Middleport, failure to appear, $63;
Strickland to view, first-hand, con·
Fined were: Michelle King, David Danko, Marion , speed, $71; '
ditions at poor, rural schools.
· Shade, FAA suspension, $75 and . Kelly D. Miller, New Haven, W.Va:,
April 9 - West Virginia offi • costs; Rebecca Sexton, Vinton; FRA · speed, $69; Carol Supple, Gallipolis
cials, includi'lg Governor Cecil suspension~ $75 and-costs, fictitious .Ferry, W.Va., speed, $71.
Underwood, submit written resolu· tags, $63; Michael Jackson,
tions supporting Meigs County Pomeroy, public intoxication, $113
.~ging.
highway projects which they feel and costs; Lora Roach , Mason ,
will also assist in economic devel· W.Va., no child restraints, $40 and
MARCH
opment efforts for Jackson County, costs; Nada Koezinsky, assured
. March I - Meigs County com· W.Va.
clear distance. costs only;· Carol
missioners urge support for U.S. 33
A "Rally for the Roads" in Supple, Gallipolis Ferry, expired
project from Athens to Darwin.
. Pomeroy attracts several hundred registration, costs only; Randy
Pleasant Valley Hospital opens supporters of the Athens-to-Darwin Stone, Mason, W.V~., expired regisnew Middlepart clinic at site of for- highway project.
tration, $63 and. costs, no child
mer Western Auto store. ·
April 13 - Middleport Village restraints, $100 and costs; Denise
March 2 - Middleport Commu- Council approves waterline ex ten· Keys, Portland, speed, . $61 and
.nity Association endorses U.S. 33 sion in Hobson area.
costs; Thomas Stobart, Stockport,
.project.
April 14 -Meigs Local Board assured clear distance, costs only;·
March 3 - Parents of truant of Education considers possible l&gt;aul D. Flowers, Racine, red light
·children answer in court for unex· construction bond ballot issue of violation , $33' and costs; Aja
cused School' absences. Six-month less tllan three mills for November McGlothin, Pomeroy, wrongful
sentences are suspended pending election.
entrustment, $150 and costs; con·
completion of. the school year with
.April 17 - Sarah Roels and tributing to the delinquency of a
no more unexcused absences.
Jason Allen named Southern High minor, $213; Anna M. C.hapman,
March 4 Meigs County · School 1999 Prom Queen and Pomeroy, FRA suspension, $1'50
1ecfds its first traffic fatality of the King.
and costs .
yea when Jerry Matney, 47, of · · April 19 - Chris Shank named
Beaver is killed in a car/tractor· new Pomeroy Fire Chief.
·
Forfeiting bonds were: Keithen
trailer ,collision.
April 25 - In the wake of the M. Branch, St. Mary's, W.Va., speed,
Eastem Local Littleton, Colo., school shooting, $68; Ernest Calaway: ·Coolville,
. March 6 ~chool Board sells Chester Ele- area superin'tendents focus on
speed, $71, window tint; $83; Virmentary School to Tom Karr, teachers' need to know students.
ginia Clendenin, RaCine, window
Pomeroy, for $30,000. A neighborApril 27 - Area lawmen raid tint, $83; Roger Stone; Point Pleas·
ing site goes to the Chester United property, houses belonging to Rut· ant, W.Va., speed, $7~; Mark GrossMerhodist Church for $15,000. No land's Fred Pri.ddy of Rutland, seiz- nickle, · Reedsville, speed, $67;
bids were received for ·Riverview ing drugs, IJ!Oney and property Georgann Dobbs, Texas City, Tex.,
Elementary School which had a including numerous automobiles.
slop sign, $83; Angela ' Roach,
$400,000 minimum bid price.
April 29 - Plans announced for Pomero, expired r¢gistration, $83;
The Eastern High School girls June 18 Log Jam Festival at Port· Mary Powell, Pomeroy, speed, $70;
basketball team defeats South Web· land featuring coun?ry stars David Gerald Mohler, Middleport, speed,
ster, 50·38/.to capture district lOUr- Lee Murphy, Kenny Chesney and $70; Jill Lipscomb, Pomeroy, speed,
~ament crown.
·
Toby Keith . .
$65; Trina Davis, Syracuse, speed,.

Mayor processes_19 cases

Arthur Treachers
34099 St. Rt 7

''

· Pomeroy, Ohio

992~5829 .

Fish Sandwich Combo

.~2.99

M·F

Quality Furnitur Plu
Year -End ·Millennium

Clearance Sale

Ql' Mah Winter expected .to return·.ruesday
•

By The Atsoc:lated Preas·

Colde~ air will sweep into the state a'nd earl)' morning

¥other mjld.day was f&amp;recast for today across Ohio .but
a steady rainfall was expected to keep temperatures from
reaching recotd levels for a second straight day.
Then, winter weather is expected to return liS quickly ,as
'it left, with snow likely on Tuesday. ·
'Onseasonably warm temperatures on Sunday snapped
· ~rds Jhroughou? Ohio - at least one Of them more
·
than a century old.
1he record readings included 63 degre~ at the CantonAkron Airport, topping the old mark of 58 set i-n 1897;
C!O in Mansfield, eclipsing the 54 set in 1997; 61 in
Youngstown, besting the' S2 also set in I997, and '6 4 in
Columbus, erasing the record 61 set in 1916.
·
The stime "southwesterly winds that brought _the warm
temperatures also carried in lots of moisture that prq·
duced showers- some of them heavy - Sunday night
llitd today.
!!q,uthwest Ohio received the most rain Sunday night, the
l!latioqal Weather Service 51lid, with Cincinnati measur- .
i~g more than .75 of an inch. Dayton, Columbus and
&amp;n~ville all reported around .25 of an inc'h. .
_
temperatures overnight were very mil~ with CiQcinnati
t~~ ~armc8l spot at 57 degrees and Defiance the coolest
wrth 36 degrees.
· ·
•
An approaching low pressure J'YStem will bnng a sharp
Glwtge in·Ohio's weather on Tuesday, forecasters said.

'

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.,

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temperatures in the 50s will drop into the 30s during the
day, as the lingering rain turns IQ snow. •
Snow or snow showers will continue Tuesday night as
·temperatures fall into the 20s • .
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus w.eather station was 64 degrees in 1897 while the
record low was 20 below zero in 1879. Sunset. tonight
will be at 5:19 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:54 a.m.
'Weather fo.,.,ast:
.
Tonight ...Showers developing by· midnight. Lows in the
upper 50s. South. wind lO ,to 20 mph. Chance ofrain 90
percent.
Tuesday... Showers likely. Turning cooler with early
mor.ning highs in · the upper 50s, then temperatures
falling into the mid 40s. Cl}an~ of rai'n 70-percent.
'Tuesday ~ight ... Mostly cloudy with a chance -o f rain
showers, then a chance of snow showers. Lows in the
'upper 20s.
El&lt;tended forecast:
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.
Thurs!lay:.. Par:Piy cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s and
·
highs near 50.
. Friday.:.Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows in
the mid-30s and higlis in the upper 40s.

42123 St. Rt. 7
. ·
·
Tuppers Plains, OH
Hours: M.on • Thurs 9:00.am • 5:00 pm, Frl9:00 am • 6 pm, Sat 9:00 am • 4 pm

il

•

•

.

•

Quality
Furniture
Plus
· ·
:Phone: 740-667-7.388 ·1-800-200-4005

•

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:Commentary

•

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PegeA4

lllanllay,

.-nuery 3,,2000

•

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Page 5

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Monctay, Janull')' 3, 2000

J

The Daily Sentinel

., "'

~

WEL(/)Itti TO

'Esta6fi.shd in 1948

[

THE DON'T ASK

rxtfT TELL STATE

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

Diane Hill

f Prep Basketball ·

n.,

I :..

l ,·
•:

•

.

Happy New Year, folks. With a major Y2K hurdle crossed, we look
now to the future of the Ohio Valley.
··
_
it is a promising future, if the region strives to reacha

feww;0~~;ieve

1999

..___---,...---------~--.,-----__.___--~
, ·
'

.

'

· .

i1:t its he{ght in the early 1990s, the Christian Coalition
· comprised 30 percent of the Republican electorate . ,
·and had the muscle to significantly influence elections:
in some
ZO stateS. If these voters have left politics,
._
where did they go?
·

:United, we run
forward;
divided, we
crawl.

.

Hardball:

chair of the Republican Pro-Choice Coalition.
"They don't nece~arily listen to us, but they do
talk to us." · .

'

Pat Robertson, who founded the O.ristian

Coalitio~. has made_his peace with Bush. Robeft-

son 's "21 .Victory Project" promises io raise $21
million to elect Bush and other Republicans ne~t
year. Some disgruntled conservatives grumble
that Robertson is "more interested in the 0-o;p
than G-0-D."
·
Robertson fits the cat~gory or an activist who
has moved into the mainstream, at least for now.
"Social movements are unstable," says Green.
"They either fade away or get institutionalized.
We don't have the demise of the Christian Right;
we have a shift."
,
.·
. The next president could fill as many as four
Supreme Court vacanc.ies given the advan~d
ages and health of the current justices. R\lC \&gt;s,
Wade is in ,the balance, along with innumerable
cases seeking to blur the separation of Church and
State.
And only Bradley may be reading the public
mood correctly, which seems to be saying expressions of faith are bettet left to the pulpit.

Ohio perspective:

Clayton Moore was s~elf-defense still a
complex
legal
matter
·
that masked man

your ptt.l, u kemo sabc." ·

On this date in hiatory ...

,

· "Get dark soon, kemo sabe," we
hear Tonto declare as the sun sets
behind the rocky hill. "Me start
fire."

• .

By The Auoclated Presi
"Him strange man, kemo sabe,"
Today is Monday, Jan. 3, the third day of 2000. There are 363 days left in we hear our shrewd sel&gt;ut surmise
the year. ·
·
. later over coffee.
Today's Highlight in History;
A friend of mine from lhe Carter
On Jan. 3, 1959, President Eisenhower signed a proclamation admitting White House, those other "days of
Alaska to the Union as the 49th stale.
· yesiCryear," ·on~ told inc the wonOn this date:
·
derf~l story of lidw, !bese trail bud·
· In 1521, Martin Luther )NBS excommunicated from the Romllll Cat~olic dies; Clayton Moore ~Jaf SilverChdrch.
.
,
. heels, got together. It's· the.secret of.
' In 1777, Gen. George Washington's army routed the British in the B~tle how Moore got to spend the rest of
·f p ·
NJ
his life in that-skin-tight, two-piece
o· 1rmceton,
,
.
Lo ne Ranger costume, comp1ete
868 h
n 1 , t e Meiji Restoration re-established the authority of Japan's with black mask, gloves and matchemperor !llld heralded th~ fall of the military rulers known as "shoguns." . ing neck scarf.
In 1892, J.R.R. Tolkem, autho,r of the "l,.ord of the Rings" trilogy, was
The !.one Ranger began on radio
born in Bloemfontein, South Africa.
·
·
'" in 1941 and continued there thro~gh
; In 1938, the March of Dimes campaign to fight polio wa5 organized.
1954. It came on at 7:30 p.m'. 1
In 1947, congressional proce.edings were televised for the first time as .~ro~~r t~c ~because ,my par:
viewers in Washington, Philadelphia and New .York witnessed ~orne of the ents' rule was that my brothers and, .
opening ·ceremonies ~f the 80th Congress.
'
·
had to be in our pajamas .and under
' In 1961, the United States severed diplomatic relations with Cuba.
the cl'vcrs before we could turn it
In 196?, Jack Ruby, the man whq shot accused presidential asSasSin Lee on.
·
·
Har~ey Oswald, died in "a Dallas hospitaL'
In 1949, they began looking for
In 1980: conservationist Joy Adamson, author of" Born Free," was killed an actor to play The Lone ·Ranger on
by a servant in northern .KenY,atelevision. They wanted someone
In 1993, President Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed a his- with a deep voice like the guy who
toric nuclearmissile-reduction treaty in Moscow.
~---'- _ play_
(d him o_n radio.
Today's Birthdays; Comedian Victor Borge is 91. Former U.S. ambasThe way I heard the story, Clay_sador Vernon Walters is 83. Sportscaster Hank Stram is 77. Record produc- ton Moore was.reminded of how difer ~ir George Martin i5 74. Actor Robert Loggia is 70. Actor Dabney Qlle- . ficult it would be playing the· rol~.
.man is 68. Journalist-author Betty Rollin is 64. Jfockey Hill! of Farner After all, be would be wearing a
Bobby Hull is·61, Singer-songwriter-producer Van Dyke Parks is S7: Musi- muk all the iin\c. With 'his eyes and
chin Stephen Stills is 55. Actress Victoria Principal is 50.
much or his race covered, he would

I've always liked this
story. It's not about
sweating the .little
details of life.Jt's
about getting the one
·. big detail right.
.. ~-·

be unable to show any emotions or
facial expressions whatever.
"So h9w can· you play The LOne
Ranger?" came the climactic ques. tion or the interview, Then came the
deep, sonorous,· authoritative voice
none of us, boomer or not, will never
forget.
•
,
"I AM the Lone Ranger."
Clayton Moore, determined to
win the .part, had been practicing
singing scales, listening arid checking himself again and again asainst
the recilrded voice of Brace Beemer,
the actor who played the masked
man on radio.
·
And that's how he got it!
I've,always liked thi~. story. It's
not about sweating the little details
of life. It's about getting the one big
detail right,
Moore . loved being the l:.one
Ranger. After 169 episodes, he con•tinued being The Lone Ranger at
shopping mall ,shows and on TV
-commercials, including some for the
Texas Rangers baseball team, right
up. until his death ori Tuesday, Dec.
28, at 85.
.-.,...

Eastern
falls to
Beaver
Eastern

~'

Southern at Federal Hocking
Eastern at Trimble

1

• Better'- and more.- roads. A modern, convenient highway sys- •
By JACK ANDERSON .
.tern is the lifeline for the region's economy.
and
DOUGLAS COHN
·
·
· The four-laning of U.S. 35 from
WASHINGTON - As .a. young. man, Bill
Point Pleasant to Charleston is crucial. Bradley·was active in the Fellowship of Christian
Building an access road to downtown Athletes, proclaiming his faith and proselytizing
Gallipolis to alleviate · the Eastern to others. Something must have happened alongAvenue traffic snarl is a necessity. See- the way, because tbe Bradley of today refuses to
11'~
ing the U.S. 33 connector become a discuss his religious beliefs. He says they are
"private," and he intends to keep them that way.
reality in Meigs County is vital.
Bradley may be more in tunc with public atti• Renewed and enhanced economic
tudes
about religion than his rivals, AI Gore and a threat, and it is widely assumed that the Repubdevelopment efforts. The Ohio Valley
George
Bush, who sometimes sound like they arc licans cannot reclaim the White House if they are
~ has of the qualities prospective industries want. We've got water access,
run,
n
ing
for Chief Cleric. American voters for the · seen as its captive. "George Bush has walked.
rail access, affordabl~ flat land, a strong work ethic and a willil}g work
force. Add better roads to that mix, and you've got a gOQd recipe for most part want to believe politicians are people of about as far away from .the religious right as anyfaith, but don't want them to impose their faith on . body could without snapping the cord from the
success.
others.
.
·
conservative base," says John Green. a political
We need to 'do a better job of marketing .these strengths to the busi;
Exhibit A is the Christian Coalition, which is a science professor at the UniverSity of Akron.·
ness world. Perhaps it's time to organize a strong regional economic shell of its former self, down from an estimated 2
Green likens the religiouS&gt;-right movement
development authority; an agency with the sole purpose of selling the million adherents at its peak to some 100,000
today to that or a long-distance runner who hits
Ohio Valley.
.
today. Its chief strategis~ Ralph Reed, left for the waiL Will he muster every last -bit of energy
: · Our chambers of commerce do a fine job retaining existing busi- greener pastures; ihe group lost its IRS tax- and finish? Or will he collapse?
hesses and promoting their own counties, but they don't have the man- exempt status;. and in 1998, it mustered· fewer
Nollody knows the answer, which is why B.ush
votes in. Congress·for school prayer than it did 15 js hedging his bets, appealing to the religious
power to concentrate fully on recruiting industry. .
.
· 'Other regions reap ihe rewards from having EDAs; we can, too. The. years ago.
right with his public declaration of Christ as the
At
its
height
in
the.early
1990s,
the
O.ristian
political philosopher who guides him, yei steering
Regional -Economic Development Association formed, in 1994, but
·1,10w defunct, attempted to align develop'meni efforts for Gallia, Meigs · Coalition comprised 30 percent of the Republican his policy pronouncements closer to the ideologiand Mason counties..An Ohio Valley economic development authority electorate and had the muscle to significantly cal middle. "This is .a movement getting its sec·
.. · would report to the chambers as well as the region'~ ele.cted county influence elections in some 12 to 20 states. If ond wind, maybe its 'third wind," guesses Green. .
these voters have left politics, where did they go?
A sign of the religious right's,continuing clout
commissiqns.
• ,
.
. .Some have gotten disillusioned with the polit- is ·its insistence on a pro-life running mate for
. So how do we achjeve these two goals? The answer lies in the ulti- ical system and dropped out. Others have become whoever wins the GOP nomination. Both Bush
mate goal ...
enthralled with pol_itics and moved into the main- . and challenger John McCain have reached out to
· ' • Unity: The government of Mason County alone has a tough time stream, muting their more ideologically driven moderates but have limited maneuvering room.
~:etting Charleston to listen to it. But if Gallia and Meigs join forces
viewS.
"Pro-choice Republicans are invited in, and that's
with Mason, the odds improve greatly.
·
Many people regard the Christian CQalition as an important change,'' says Susan Cullman, co•
Columbus may hear Gallia 's lone voice, but if Meigs and Mason ·
join the chorus, the capital is more inclined to listen. Ditto for Meigs

'

tMeigs·., at BelpreThuredlly

"" ·

,,

I

.

(Chrla Matthewa, chief of
the San Franclaco Examlner'a
Wltahlngton Burou, Ia holt of
"Hardball" - on CNBC and
MSNBC cable channala. The
18QII edition of "Hardball" haa
been recantly publlahed by
Touchato"' .~ka.)
'~&gt; ..,

By JAMES HANNAH .
defense applies," he said.
AuoclatiCI Prell Writer
Levinson said it is always the
DAYTON - An intruder defendant's burden to prove self\.
breakli into a home where children defense.
'are sleeping. A thief hot-wires a car
There are several . criteria,
in a driveway and tries to steal it. A · including:
suspect wrestles with a policeman
• Pe&lt;iple claiming self-defense
over a gun.
cannot have been the aggressors. ·
Each would raise the question of
• They ·must have had a goOd
what constitutes legal self-defense reason to believe they were in
or the use of deadly force. And . imminent danger ·and could escape
becau~ of several recent cases, only by using force.
'• ·
authorities have been poring over
• The amount of force has 10 ~
Ohio Jaw books on the complicated appropriate to the level of danger.'
jssue.
"If I have a real and. honest
Polh;e are still investigating the belief I am in imminent danger of .
Dec. 9 shooting death of Anthony being slugged on the jaw that may
Henson, 30, who the owner of an sting but not serioQsly injure me, I
auto service center in subu&amp;an cannot usc gunfire as my means or
Trotwood said broke into his prop- · escape from that danger," Levinsoil
erty.
said. "That's disproportionate.~· ~
Th,e owner, who lives ·on the
· The perception of the'defendiUJJ·
property, told pollee he .was awak- can be vital to whether a self•
ened by sqmeone lrying to start a defense case is successful, said
car on his lot, which is.surrounded -Joh·n Rion, former president anll
by a 'padl~ked fence.
chairman of the Ohio Association
He said he saw Henson in a car, of Criminal Qcfense Lawyers, who
approached him and, while. holding has represented hundreds of defen· a sho.tg~n on him, k!ld him to get dants in self-defense cases.
out. The owner then called police.
For example, he said, it'could be
When officers arrived, they found self-defense if the defendant
Henson on the grou~d with a gun- believes the aggressor is polling
. shot wound to the side. No charges out a gun 'Nhen it actually · is a
have been filed.
.handkerchief.
On Sep\. 12, Dayton policeman
"We've been successful iii
· Roger Kielbasa shot and killed a many or those cases because of the
suspect during what·poliee say was perception of-daft&amp;er..-".jJO.yjd,.......:.
a struggle Jor the officer's gun.
A defendant's case also can bt
Todd 'Brunson, whQ was wanted in helped ·if the aggrcsaot . was on"
co~nection with the theft in August drugs, Rion said.
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of $2,000 from ' a . van, was shot
"A jury is more frighiCncd on
several times. A grand jury deter· person on drugs," he·said.
,
mined the shooting was justified.
Under the rlght circurnstahccs,'
James Levinson, chief attorney th~ law supports the right to repel
for the Montiomery County prosc- an invasion of the home by usinl'
cutor's.office, would not comment force, Levinson said. •
on any specific cases.
"We're entitled to the' sanctitY•
"It's complicated and very fact- · of ·our home and property by an~
sensitive. E!v.cn the slighiCst varia- lalje, however nothing iS mo~.
tion in the facts can have a very big ~ed in the law than the bumlii ·
·
.~
implication on whether seJf! life," he·said. o

hartnim
catches
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TD··pass. in Pats'
season fi'nale
FOXBORO, Mass. - Former
Meigs M11.r.auder standout and
Marshall All-American tight end
Mike Bartrum scored his second
career touchdown ln an NFL regular season Sunday afternoon during the New England Patriots 20-3
•
win over the
Baltimore
Ravens Sunday
at Foxboro Stadium.
Bartrum's
touchdown ·
pass,., a one,
yard toss from
quarterback
Drew Bledsoe,
Bartrum
came witli 5:04
left in the first
half and put ~he Patriots ahead to
slay in the contest. .
.• Ironically, his first 'touchdown
came also on a one-yard pass from
Bledsoe. against Baltimore. That
·One came back in 1996 in a 46-38
~win at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore'.
:· Bartrum has also · caught two
:touchdown passes in preseason
action, one while wearing the uni. form of the Green Bay Packers, a
17-yard pass from former Heisman
Trophy winner Ty Demeter in
1996. In 1997, he caught a two·
yard scoring pass from former
Patriot signal caller Scott Zola,k in
a preseason game with the
Phil4dclphia Eagles.
.Bartrum completed his fourth .
season with the Patriots on Sunday, and seventh overall in the
. NFL. He is 'tl!eir long snapper for
all extra points, field goals and
punts.
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For his career, including presea~Dn games, Bartrum has caught
6,ve passes for 38 yards and four
touchdowns.
,, Bartrum is a 1988 graduate of
Meigs High · School, earning all
..UIC honors in three sports. After
an All-American career at Mar~hall, he began his NFL career at
Kansas City in 1993.
.. Bartrurn is. married to the Jornier Jennifer Taylor, also a former ·
~arauder siandout athlete. They
have a son, Cody, who is 17
months old, and are expecting their
second
child in June.
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By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correapondent
BEAVER - putscoring Eastern-Meigs 20-10 in the third
quarter, the B!laver Eastern
Eagles walked away from a 2520 halftime lead to claim a huge
65-49 win in the Beaver Eastern
Holiday Tournament Thursday
afternoon.
Cindy Leach 'led Beaver Eastern (5-4)with 22 poi11ts and Bran 7
di Southworth added 19. Ni(&gt;ki
Tackett · chipped in with · lS
. points.
.
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Juli Bailey topped all Eastern·
Meigs s¢orers with 14 points:
Danielle Spencer ·added 13 and
Amber B11,ker II.
Thursday's game was a
rematch of last yeat's Regional
Semi-final that Beavcr,Easterf!
wqn over Eastern-Meigs tO
advance to the Regional Finals:
Both clubs arc ~cbuildina thi~
200th VICTORY- Eaatern COIICh Howll caJ~II . (Ieft) recorded .tint. co"'muillcatlona director lor~ Goyamor of 'Welt VIrginia, . year.
hla 200th victory aa a varalty coach Thursday night In a 75-45 win· pr..ented Caldwell a ' clock on behalf of the .team and athletic
Beaver Eastern took a 10-7
over Federal Hocking at Eastern High School. Arter the game, Tom . booatera. Caldwell potted 16.4 wlria. as Southern mentor before lead in the rlrst round. and edged
Hunter, former Ohio Valley Publishing columnist and now aaala- developing successful teams at Ea.stern. (Sentinel photo)
toward 25-20 advantage at the
half. The Pike Countians picked
.
I
up the offensive temp() in the
third round and buried .the Meigs
club 20-10 to take a commanding
45-30 lead in to the final round.
Despite a good offensive quarter
in the finale, the Meigs Counelub had its fate 'sealed early by the intense tians still fell 65-49. •
by SCOTT WOLFE
•
·
Sentinel Correspondent
Eastern coach Howie Caldwell Eagles.
Eastern (2-7) hit 20.S2 two's
In
the
second
round,
after
a
24-9
tally,
EasiCrD'
EAST MEIGS- Behind a potent 20-5 bomand
was 20-.56 overall . from the
now joins 'the 200 Club thanks If! went on a 12-0 run for a 36-9 tally. The score
barding of the Federal Hocking Lancers in the
field
with a 9-14 night at the line
stood 41-22 at the half. The newly formed East- with 29 rebounds Jed by Becky
first quarter, the Eastern Eagles rode the wave of . the win over Fed Hock.
em Dance team performed a nice show at the .Davis with nine. EHS had · U
momentum to a one sided 75-45 triumph over
. .
Eastern was relentless in its pressure, gaining ~[
the Lancers Thursday night at Eastern High
turnovers, 9 assists, two steals,
half
court
traps
and
picking
up
several
full
court
Eastern r0lled on to a 59:33 third period tally · and eight fouls .
School.
,
..
The win marked the 200th ·victory·.for ve(eran · steals that resulted in numerous Jay-ups.
and a 75-45 finale.
Eastern's Juli Bailey was
Eric Smith got the ball rolling early as "The . Eastern 'ilit 25-pf-50 two-point shots, 1-of-4
coach Haw.ie Caldwell, who has been a varsity
among
five players selected to
Animal" powered in a post jumper from the · three-point attempts, and was 24-for-30 at the
mentor since the 1985-8!1 season.
the
all-tournament
team, joinlf!g
Eastern's key to succe~~s was a lightning quick paint. After a five-second call, Joe Brown hit a line. The Eagles collected 31 rebounds (Will 7, Leach and Soul~ worth 1 from
fast-break and upbeat defensive tempo, sprin- follow-up jumper, then Eastern forced another Brown 5, Smith 6). Eastern had 11 steals, 15 Beaver Eastern, Rayona TurleY,
kled with a balanced scoring attack. Joe Brown turnover that saw Matt Simpson get fouled on a turnovers, eight assists (Bissell 3, Brown 3) -and of Paint Valley and C. J, Blessing
led the way with an 18 point effort, while Eric break-away lay-up. Simpson hit both for a 6-0 18 fouls.
·
ofWahama.
Federal Hocking hit '13-of-35 two's, 5-of-20
Smith posted his fine~~t game with 14. Matt tally.
Paint
Valley
·
posted
a
57-39
At the 7:03 mark, Federal finally reached its three's, was 4-for-15 at the line with 19.rebounds
Simpson added eleven, Matt Bissell had .10 and
own
end of the court as Dan Whit Iatch drew a (Du.nfee 5). The Lancers had four steals, 16 win in the consolation game of
a foul-plagued Josh Will added eight.
the tournament.
Ben Dunfee led Federal Hocking with 12. foul on a ~ade field goal, but missed. Arter a turnovers, nine assists and 20 fouls.
Beaver Eastern advanced , to .
In reserve action, Federal Hocking and Coach the title game after Wahama was
Logan Barllett tallied seven and Brian Poston Brown score, Whitlatch connected on one char·
ity toss, but Eas!cm went on a 10-0 run that Roger Bissell claimed a SS-46 overtime win
and Matt Quinn scored six each. •
unable to- take ,part in a game
A combination of upbeat offensive and a trap- pushed the score to 18-3. Brown scored four in over the Eagle~~; who held a lead going down the against the E!agles on any of ·the
stretch. Federal outse!Jred Eastern 11-2 in the
ping, pressing defense staggered. the LancerS the drive as did junior Chad Nelson.
Federal finally hit a bucket, compliments of extension period. Shaun Simpson led with 24. three different times it was
early. The _Lancer offense stru!!!lled to get the
scheduled. Monday's snow post.'
ball down the floor early and showed signs ·of Ben Dunfee at the 1:10 mark, for an 18-5 tally,' points and Matt Dillinger added ten. Chris Lyons poned the original date. · .
·
ineptness in the absence of point guard Amos then Garrett Kan made a field goal to close the led Eastern with 11, Joey Marcinko added 10 and
Meanwhile,
Eastern-Meigs
C:Otterill, who was out with a debilitating leg · scoring at 20-5.
Corey Young added eight.
defeated Paint Valley 61-4 7 in a
By this point in the game; a struggling Lancer
Eastern plays Meigs Tuesday.
injury.
first round game last Monday.

a

Eagle~

giVe ca·ldwell20pth wi·n

., · ATHENS ~ · The Division of
Wildlife od the Ohio Department
of Natural Resou~ces has scheduled five open houses to be held .
uound · the state Marc.h 5. The
intent of the open houses is to
provide . sportsmen, outdoor
• ·CIIthusiasts and the general public an opportunity to comment
on the division's proposed hunt• ing and fishing regulatiops for
the 2000-2001 season.
• Officers from Wildlife Dis·
trict Four, which . covers 19
southeastern Ohio counties
~itcluding Meigs and Gallia, will
be greeting the pubNc and
· accepting cOmments at the
Athens Parks .and Recreation
c;;.omqHinitY, Center•. 733 East
Stale Street in Athens. Biolo'
~,isis ·and offiCers will be available to.the public from noon to S

MERCERVILLE - South Gallia tasted victory for the first time
MIAMI (AP) - Tom , Brady
this season after posting a 60-50
threw for 369 yards, and Michigan
victory over Southern last Thuhibeat Alabama - by inches in the
day night in Mercerville.
Orange Bowl.
South Ga'lfia jumped out to an
Brady threw four touchdown
eight point lead by the end of the
passes, including three to . David '
first period and led 32-)6 at the
Terrell, and the Wolverines won
intermission, then survived a solid
35-34 in overtime Saturday night.
second half performance by the·
Aft~r
MichigaJ!'S . Shawn
Lady Tornadoes to earn the win.
Thompson caught a 2S·yard touch·
Stacy White led: South Galli a.
down pass on the first play of over- . ROLLIN.G THUNDER - Alabarna'a Shaun Alaxander (37) buratl with 15 points. Holly Haner fin.time; Alabama si:ored on Andrew through Mlchl9111'a line during Saturday's Orange Bowl. (AP)
. ished wi!h 12 points.
Zow's 21 -yard pass to Antonio
Rachel Waugh contributed nine
Carter. .Out Ryan Pflugner 1s extra· year, rushed for 161 yards and . win season. The fifth-ranked Crim- points, three assists, two steals
point kick was inches wid~ to the three touchdowns in his final game son ·Tide (10·3) lost in their and one rebound. Ashley Cardwell
right:
for Alabama. His scores came 'on NCAA-record 59th bowl appear- added eiilht points for the Lady
The Wolverines won despite runs of five, six and 50 ya;ds, and ance.
Rebels.
losing a fumble at the Alabama one teammate Freddie Milons scored
!&gt;outhern's Katie Cummins led
.The Wolverines erased deficits
in the fourth.quarler ·and having a · on a 62-yard punt return ..
all
scorers ·with 22 points. Cumof 14-0 and 28-14 thanks to Terrell ,
36-yard l'ield goal attempt blocked_
mins
scored 20 points in the secTlie eighth-ranked Wolverines who tied Orange Bowl and. Michito force overtime.
(10-2) managed just one first down gan bowl records with three touch- ond half, including· 16 in the
Shaun Alexander, the South· in the opening 28 minutes but oom· down receptions. They covered 27, fourth period. She 'had 10 twpeastern ' Conference player of the plet~d their third consecutive 10- S7 and 20 yards from Brady.
point field goals.
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.'. In case or poor weather on
~arch 5, the open house will be
lfeld. Marc~ 8 at 7 p:m. at the
~thens dis,trict office.

South Gallia tops
· sout~ern- girls · ·

Michigan
edges·
Alabama

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Division of Wildlife
· !J.l ates open house for
March s·

P..in.

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Has' th e re I"IQIOUS ng'ht. IOSt.some SU ppo rt.
. ers ?·=
1

. ter's 2-yarq touchdown run with 12 :01 to go:
· "Once we started running, we found out fhat maybe
we can keep running it," Nebraska coach Frank Sollch
said. "That's what we ended up doing. That worked
very well."
.
The Huskers ran the ball their last 23 plays, gaining
·
·
1S6 yards.
When Tennessee (9-3) cut the lead to 31-21_·on a
trick 44-y~rd pass play from wide receiver Cedric
Wilson to Donte' .Stallworth with 7:25 to play, it
looked ·like a comeback was possible .
But the Huskers, whose only loss w.u by four
pBints at Texas, never gave up the ball again and the
Vols could do nothing as time; an out.
.

.Girls
Thla w•k's acheclule
Todly
, Eastern at South Gallla
: Ohio Volley Christian at Southern

slahlerOiuse.nel

Washington Merry-Go-Round:

42-17 victory in the Oran~;e Bowl.
"I'd say we got another good lesson tonight," Vols
coach Phillip Fulmer said.
•
•
This time, after Tennessee cut the lead to 17-14 following a fumble by the Huskers on t·he first play of
the second half, the stage seemed set for a come-frombehind' vicl&lt;»'y. Then, .Nebraska's offense took over.·
The Cornhuskers (1·2-1) went 196 yards in nine
plays, with Crouch throwing to wide-open tight ~nd
Aaron Goiiday for a 13'-yard touchdown and it was
24-14 with 4:44 left in the third quarter.
Crouch never threw another pa.Jis .
A perfect punt pinned the Huskers at their own 1
tqc nilxt time they got the ball, and they went 99 yards ~
in 10 plays to t~ke a 31-14 lead on Correll Buckhal '

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Numbers speak volumes in the hiills of state and federal govern, ment. The more people you put behind a request, the better chance that
request has of being honored.
,
.
·
Never mind Mason is in a different state. It's still a part of us. Our
mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters may live tllere and work here - .
or vice versa.
: We are one people divided by a river. And 'there are b'ridges over
that. United; we run forward; divided, we crawl.
: If Gallia County lands an automotive assembly plant, Mason and
Meigs also benefit. If Meigs scores a steel plant;Gallia and Mason res- By CHRIS MATTHEWS
'de
'II
k h
If M
1
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WASHINGTON - I once fig1 nts WI wor I ere, too.
ason· ures a computet company head· ured out how to speak "TOnto, .. the
quarters, Gallia and Meigs get a boost.
language used by the Lone Ranger's
, • Sure, the region can reach the first goals without unity, but it may . .trusty Indian companion.
not happen within 10, 20 or even 30 years- maybe not even in our · Of all the languages I've ever
lifetimes. With unity, however, these goals- are quite attainable with a tried, it's the easiest. Just drop all
~ew years.
· · articles, definite or indefiniiC. Forget
• Roads and industry aside, unjty makes all facets of life much better. those "a's" and ."the's." ,Next, drop
; ·Let's put whatever differences there may be behind us, folks. The all,use o_f the verb t~ be; am, is, are,
book of the 21st century is filled with blank pages; it's just waiting for etc. Sw1tch, th~ obJeCtive pronoun
us write the chapters of progress.
for the subJective and always call

11181day

Meigs
: Southern at Alexander
•
,
Friday
1 Federal Hocking at Southern
'l Belpre at ME!Igs
Trimble at Eastern ·
·

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.. With Y?K past, Ohio Valley
needs to focus on vital issues

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Boys
This wMk'aacheclule ·

j
I Eastern at

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Co~

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - At its best, the optio~ is_
unstoppable, and Nebraska was at-its best in tiie second half ·of the Fiesta Bowl.
In touchdown drives of 96 and 99 yards, followed
by a marathon, 7-minute, 25 -second 'march to end the
game, the third-ranked Cornhuskers used a deadly
combination of speed and strength Sunday night ·to
beat No. 6 Tennessee 31-21 .'
" We had to be the most· physical team," Eric
Crouch said. "I think it showed."
Crouch was ihe g'ame's MVP. The shifty, lightningquick sophomore at .the controls of Nebraska's offense
never was corralled by the Volunteers for long.
It was all too famlliar to Tennessee. Two years ago,
Nebraska wore down the Vols in the second half for a

'

Lllll.,.lo liN .Jilol.,. w.&amp;:-0.-..
slttJMU k I4U ,,_,. JOO ftltN'ft, AU,.,_..,. sll/d«t '
lo #IIMlttJIIIfli IIUUI h• :fiJif.flll affli inciNII• .,u,.. 11M1.1,..,# , . . . ,, N11 11ulp• W.n MM
h , . ..... Wlilts s/lofM t. ill~ IUtf', IIMtwsift61:aMn, 11t11 ,.,Sillfalilln.
TA. .,._. •...,.....uJ Ia ,., coiMM• . . . , . . tiN eOIUIIUMJ oflit• OIIJG V.U.,. ,...,.,,.,

~ur view:

•

Huskers humble ·vols in Fiesta

MONDAY'S

-:~r.,. ----

Control~

C•. ~ fiiiiiiii'W ....,., 1111lm otii,.,U• 11111«1.

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~ffiGHLIGHfS
f.;
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Charles W. Govey
Publlahll'
-Charlene Hoeftlch
General Mllnager

Inside: NFL wraps up regular season- Page1o
Inside: .Top 25 hoop roundup- ... 1o

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t~,--~---------~~~~--------------~~~--~~~~--~------------------------------

VERMONT

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OhiQ
740-1192-215e • FIX: 1192·2157~~

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Ednor

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Tammy Fryar scored 10 points
for the Lady Tornadoes. She had
four two' PQint field goals and hit
2-of-4 free throws.
. Kim lhle and Stacy Lyons had .
five points apiece. Heather Dailey
scored three points.
Amy Lee · and Brigette Barnes
added two points each. Sarah
Brauer had one point for Southern.
The Lady Tornadoes finished
14-of-32 ftom ,the free throw line.
Southern outstored South Gallia
31-28 in the second half.
··
Southern's next outing is t~i's.
·evening at home a&amp;ainst Ohio Valley Christiap. .
.
JV Thmadoa wla
Southern dcfealed South Gallia
in the junior .varsity contest; 3731. Amy Lee led Southern with 16
points. Tosha Pelfrey had II
points for South Gallia. Jeanie
Fellure led South Gallia with five
·rebounds.
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:Commentary

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PegeA4

lllanllay,

.-nuery 3,,2000

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Page 5

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Monctay, Janull')' 3, 2000

J

The Daily Sentinel

., "'

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WEL(/)Itti TO

'Esta6fi.shd in 1948

[

THE DON'T ASK

rxtfT TELL STATE

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

Diane Hill

f Prep Basketball ·

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Happy New Year, folks. With a major Y2K hurdle crossed, we look
now to the future of the Ohio Valley.
··
_
it is a promising future, if the region strives to reacha

feww;0~~;ieve

1999

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i1:t its he{ght in the early 1990s, the Christian Coalition
· comprised 30 percent of the Republican electorate . ,
·and had the muscle to significantly influence elections:
in some
ZO stateS. If these voters have left politics,
._
where did they go?
·

:United, we run
forward;
divided, we
crawl.

.

Hardball:

chair of the Republican Pro-Choice Coalition.
"They don't nece~arily listen to us, but they do
talk to us." · .

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Pat Robertson, who founded the O.ristian

Coalitio~. has made_his peace with Bush. Robeft-

son 's "21 .Victory Project" promises io raise $21
million to elect Bush and other Republicans ne~t
year. Some disgruntled conservatives grumble
that Robertson is "more interested in the 0-o;p
than G-0-D."
·
Robertson fits the cat~gory or an activist who
has moved into the mainstream, at least for now.
"Social movements are unstable," says Green.
"They either fade away or get institutionalized.
We don't have the demise of the Christian Right;
we have a shift."
,
.·
. The next president could fill as many as four
Supreme Court vacanc.ies given the advan~d
ages and health of the current justices. R\lC \&gt;s,
Wade is in ,the balance, along with innumerable
cases seeking to blur the separation of Church and
State.
And only Bradley may be reading the public
mood correctly, which seems to be saying expressions of faith are bettet left to the pulpit.

Ohio perspective:

Clayton Moore was s~elf-defense still a
complex
legal
matter
·
that masked man

your ptt.l, u kemo sabc." ·

On this date in hiatory ...

,

· "Get dark soon, kemo sabe," we
hear Tonto declare as the sun sets
behind the rocky hill. "Me start
fire."

• .

By The Auoclated Presi
"Him strange man, kemo sabe,"
Today is Monday, Jan. 3, the third day of 2000. There are 363 days left in we hear our shrewd sel&gt;ut surmise
the year. ·
·
. later over coffee.
Today's Highlight in History;
A friend of mine from lhe Carter
On Jan. 3, 1959, President Eisenhower signed a proclamation admitting White House, those other "days of
Alaska to the Union as the 49th stale.
· yesiCryear," ·on~ told inc the wonOn this date:
·
derf~l story of lidw, !bese trail bud·
· In 1521, Martin Luther )NBS excommunicated from the Romllll Cat~olic dies; Clayton Moore ~Jaf SilverChdrch.
.
,
. heels, got together. It's· the.secret of.
' In 1777, Gen. George Washington's army routed the British in the B~tle how Moore got to spend the rest of
·f p ·
NJ
his life in that-skin-tight, two-piece
o· 1rmceton,
,
.
Lo ne Ranger costume, comp1ete
868 h
n 1 , t e Meiji Restoration re-established the authority of Japan's with black mask, gloves and matchemperor !llld heralded th~ fall of the military rulers known as "shoguns." . ing neck scarf.
In 1892, J.R.R. Tolkem, autho,r of the "l,.ord of the Rings" trilogy, was
The !.one Ranger began on radio
born in Bloemfontein, South Africa.
·
·
'" in 1941 and continued there thro~gh
; In 1938, the March of Dimes campaign to fight polio wa5 organized.
1954. It came on at 7:30 p.m'. 1
In 1947, congressional proce.edings were televised for the first time as .~ro~~r t~c ~because ,my par:
viewers in Washington, Philadelphia and New .York witnessed ~orne of the ents' rule was that my brothers and, .
opening ·ceremonies ~f the 80th Congress.
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had to be in our pajamas .and under
' In 1961, the United States severed diplomatic relations with Cuba.
the cl'vcrs before we could turn it
In 196?, Jack Ruby, the man whq shot accused presidential asSasSin Lee on.
·
·
Har~ey Oswald, died in "a Dallas hospitaL'
In 1949, they began looking for
In 1980: conservationist Joy Adamson, author of" Born Free," was killed an actor to play The Lone ·Ranger on
by a servant in northern .KenY,atelevision. They wanted someone
In 1993, President Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed a his- with a deep voice like the guy who
toric nuclearmissile-reduction treaty in Moscow.
~---'- _ play_
(d him o_n radio.
Today's Birthdays; Comedian Victor Borge is 91. Former U.S. ambasThe way I heard the story, Clay_sador Vernon Walters is 83. Sportscaster Hank Stram is 77. Record produc- ton Moore was.reminded of how difer ~ir George Martin i5 74. Actor Robert Loggia is 70. Actor Dabney Qlle- . ficult it would be playing the· rol~.
.man is 68. Journalist-author Betty Rollin is 64. Jfockey Hill! of Farner After all, be would be wearing a
Bobby Hull is·61, Singer-songwriter-producer Van Dyke Parks is S7: Musi- muk all the iin\c. With 'his eyes and
chin Stephen Stills is 55. Actress Victoria Principal is 50.
much or his race covered, he would

I've always liked this
story. It's not about
sweating the .little
details of life.Jt's
about getting the one
·. big detail right.
.. ~-·

be unable to show any emotions or
facial expressions whatever.
"So h9w can· you play The LOne
Ranger?" came the climactic ques. tion or the interview, Then came the
deep, sonorous,· authoritative voice
none of us, boomer or not, will never
forget.
•
,
"I AM the Lone Ranger."
Clayton Moore, determined to
win the .part, had been practicing
singing scales, listening arid checking himself again and again asainst
the recilrded voice of Brace Beemer,
the actor who played the masked
man on radio.
·
And that's how he got it!
I've,always liked thi~. story. It's
not about sweating the little details
of life. It's about getting the one big
detail right,
Moore . loved being the l:.one
Ranger. After 169 episodes, he con•tinued being The Lone Ranger at
shopping mall ,shows and on TV
-commercials, including some for the
Texas Rangers baseball team, right
up. until his death ori Tuesday, Dec.
28, at 85.
.-.,...

Eastern
falls to
Beaver
Eastern

~'

Southern at Federal Hocking
Eastern at Trimble

1

• Better'- and more.- roads. A modern, convenient highway sys- •
By JACK ANDERSON .
.tern is the lifeline for the region's economy.
and
DOUGLAS COHN
·
·
· The four-laning of U.S. 35 from
WASHINGTON - As .a. young. man, Bill
Point Pleasant to Charleston is crucial. Bradley·was active in the Fellowship of Christian
Building an access road to downtown Athletes, proclaiming his faith and proselytizing
Gallipolis to alleviate · the Eastern to others. Something must have happened alongAvenue traffic snarl is a necessity. See- the way, because tbe Bradley of today refuses to
11'~
ing the U.S. 33 connector become a discuss his religious beliefs. He says they are
"private," and he intends to keep them that way.
reality in Meigs County is vital.
Bradley may be more in tunc with public atti• Renewed and enhanced economic
tudes
about religion than his rivals, AI Gore and a threat, and it is widely assumed that the Repubdevelopment efforts. The Ohio Valley
George
Bush, who sometimes sound like they arc licans cannot reclaim the White House if they are
~ has of the qualities prospective industries want. We've got water access,
run,
n
ing
for Chief Cleric. American voters for the · seen as its captive. "George Bush has walked.
rail access, affordabl~ flat land, a strong work ethic and a willil}g work
force. Add better roads to that mix, and you've got a gOQd recipe for most part want to believe politicians are people of about as far away from .the religious right as anyfaith, but don't want them to impose their faith on . body could without snapping the cord from the
success.
others.
.
·
conservative base," says John Green. a political
We need to 'do a better job of marketing .these strengths to the busi;
Exhibit A is the Christian Coalition, which is a science professor at the UniverSity of Akron.·
ness world. Perhaps it's time to organize a strong regional economic shell of its former self, down from an estimated 2
Green likens the religiouS&gt;-right movement
development authority; an agency with the sole purpose of selling the million adherents at its peak to some 100,000
today to that or a long-distance runner who hits
Ohio Valley.
.
today. Its chief strategis~ Ralph Reed, left for the waiL Will he muster every last -bit of energy
: · Our chambers of commerce do a fine job retaining existing busi- greener pastures; ihe group lost its IRS tax- and finish? Or will he collapse?
hesses and promoting their own counties, but they don't have the man- exempt status;. and in 1998, it mustered· fewer
Nollody knows the answer, which is why B.ush
votes in. Congress·for school prayer than it did 15 js hedging his bets, appealing to the religious
power to concentrate fully on recruiting industry. .
.
· 'Other regions reap ihe rewards from having EDAs; we can, too. The. years ago.
right with his public declaration of Christ as the
At
its
height
in
the.early
1990s,
the
O.ristian
political philosopher who guides him, yei steering
Regional -Economic Development Association formed, in 1994, but
·1,10w defunct, attempted to align develop'meni efforts for Gallia, Meigs · Coalition comprised 30 percent of the Republican his policy pronouncements closer to the ideologiand Mason counties..An Ohio Valley economic development authority electorate and had the muscle to significantly cal middle. "This is .a movement getting its sec·
.. · would report to the chambers as well as the region'~ ele.cted county influence elections in some 12 to 20 states. If ond wind, maybe its 'third wind," guesses Green. .
these voters have left politics, where did they go?
A sign of the religious right's,continuing clout
commissiqns.
• ,
.
. .Some have gotten disillusioned with the polit- is ·its insistence on a pro-life running mate for
. So how do we achjeve these two goals? The answer lies in the ulti- ical system and dropped out. Others have become whoever wins the GOP nomination. Both Bush
mate goal ...
enthralled with pol_itics and moved into the main- . and challenger John McCain have reached out to
· ' • Unity: The government of Mason County alone has a tough time stream, muting their more ideologically driven moderates but have limited maneuvering room.
~:etting Charleston to listen to it. But if Gallia and Meigs join forces
viewS.
"Pro-choice Republicans are invited in, and that's
with Mason, the odds improve greatly.
·
Many people regard the Christian CQalition as an important change,'' says Susan Cullman, co•
Columbus may hear Gallia 's lone voice, but if Meigs and Mason ·
join the chorus, the capital is more inclined to listen. Ditto for Meigs

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tMeigs·., at BelpreThuredlly

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(Chrla Matthewa, chief of
the San Franclaco Examlner'a
Wltahlngton Burou, Ia holt of
"Hardball" - on CNBC and
MSNBC cable channala. The
18QII edition of "Hardball" haa
been recantly publlahed by
Touchato"' .~ka.)
'~&gt; ..,

By JAMES HANNAH .
defense applies," he said.
AuoclatiCI Prell Writer
Levinson said it is always the
DAYTON - An intruder defendant's burden to prove self\.
breakli into a home where children defense.
'are sleeping. A thief hot-wires a car
There are several . criteria,
in a driveway and tries to steal it. A · including:
suspect wrestles with a policeman
• Pe&lt;iple claiming self-defense
over a gun.
cannot have been the aggressors. ·
Each would raise the question of
• They ·must have had a goOd
what constitutes legal self-defense reason to believe they were in
or the use of deadly force. And . imminent danger ·and could escape
becau~ of several recent cases, only by using force.
'• ·
authorities have been poring over
• The amount of force has 10 ~
Ohio Jaw books on the complicated appropriate to the level of danger.'
jssue.
"If I have a real and. honest
Polh;e are still investigating the belief I am in imminent danger of .
Dec. 9 shooting death of Anthony being slugged on the jaw that may
Henson, 30, who the owner of an sting but not serioQsly injure me, I
auto service center in subu&amp;an cannot usc gunfire as my means or
Trotwood said broke into his prop- · escape from that danger," Levinsoil
erty.
said. "That's disproportionate.~· ~
Th,e owner, who lives ·on the
· The perception of the'defendiUJJ·
property, told pollee he .was awak- can be vital to whether a self•
ened by sqmeone lrying to start a defense case is successful, said
car on his lot, which is.surrounded -Joh·n Rion, former president anll
by a 'padl~ked fence.
chairman of the Ohio Association
He said he saw Henson in a car, of Criminal Qcfense Lawyers, who
approached him and, while. holding has represented hundreds of defen· a sho.tg~n on him, k!ld him to get dants in self-defense cases.
out. The owner then called police.
For example, he said, it'could be
When officers arrived, they found self-defense if the defendant
Henson on the grou~d with a gun- believes the aggressor is polling
. shot wound to the side. No charges out a gun 'Nhen it actually · is a
have been filed.
.handkerchief.
On Sep\. 12, Dayton policeman
"We've been successful iii
· Roger Kielbasa shot and killed a many or those cases because of the
suspect during what·poliee say was perception of-daft&amp;er..-".jJO.yjd,.......:.
a struggle Jor the officer's gun.
A defendant's case also can bt
Todd 'Brunson, whQ was wanted in helped ·if the aggrcsaot . was on"
co~nection with the theft in August drugs, Rion said.
·
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of $2,000 from ' a . van, was shot
"A jury is more frighiCncd on
several times. A grand jury deter· person on drugs," he·said.
,
mined the shooting was justified.
Under the rlght circurnstahccs,'
James Levinson, chief attorney th~ law supports the right to repel
for the Montiomery County prosc- an invasion of the home by usinl'
cutor's.office, would not comment force, Levinson said. •
on any specific cases.
"We're entitled to the' sanctitY•
"It's complicated and very fact- · of ·our home and property by an~
sensitive. E!v.cn the slighiCst varia- lalje, however nothing iS mo~.
tion in the facts can have a very big ~ed in the law than the bumlii ·
·
.~
implication on whether seJf! life," he·said. o

hartnim
catches
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TD··pass. in Pats'
season fi'nale
FOXBORO, Mass. - Former
Meigs M11.r.auder standout and
Marshall All-American tight end
Mike Bartrum scored his second
career touchdown ln an NFL regular season Sunday afternoon during the New England Patriots 20-3
•
win over the
Baltimore
Ravens Sunday
at Foxboro Stadium.
Bartrum's
touchdown ·
pass,., a one,
yard toss from
quarterback
Drew Bledsoe,
Bartrum
came witli 5:04
left in the first
half and put ~he Patriots ahead to
slay in the contest. .
.• Ironically, his first 'touchdown
came also on a one-yard pass from
Bledsoe. against Baltimore. That
·One came back in 1996 in a 46-38
~win at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore'.
:· Bartrum has also · caught two
:touchdown passes in preseason
action, one while wearing the uni. form of the Green Bay Packers, a
17-yard pass from former Heisman
Trophy winner Ty Demeter in
1996. In 1997, he caught a two·
yard scoring pass from former
Patriot signal caller Scott Zola,k in
a preseason game with the
Phil4dclphia Eagles.
.Bartrum completed his fourth .
season with the Patriots on Sunday, and seventh overall in the
. NFL. He is 'tl!eir long snapper for
all extra points, field goals and
punts.
·
.
For his career, including presea~Dn games, Bartrum has caught
6,ve passes for 38 yards and four
touchdowns.
,, Bartrum is a 1988 graduate of
Meigs High · School, earning all
..UIC honors in three sports. After
an All-American career at Mar~hall, he began his NFL career at
Kansas City in 1993.
.. Bartrurn is. married to the Jornier Jennifer Taylor, also a former ·
~arauder siandout athlete. They
have a son, Cody, who is 17
months old, and are expecting their
second
child in June.
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By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correapondent
BEAVER - putscoring Eastern-Meigs 20-10 in the third
quarter, the B!laver Eastern
Eagles walked away from a 2520 halftime lead to claim a huge
65-49 win in the Beaver Eastern
Holiday Tournament Thursday
afternoon.
Cindy Leach 'led Beaver Eastern (5-4)with 22 poi11ts and Bran 7
di Southworth added 19. Ni(&gt;ki
Tackett · chipped in with · lS
. points.
.
..
Juli Bailey topped all Eastern·
Meigs s¢orers with 14 points:
Danielle Spencer ·added 13 and
Amber B11,ker II.
Thursday's game was a
rematch of last yeat's Regional
Semi-final that Beavcr,Easterf!
wqn over Eastern-Meigs tO
advance to the Regional Finals:
Both clubs arc ~cbuildina thi~
200th VICTORY- Eaatern COIICh Howll caJ~II . (Ieft) recorded .tint. co"'muillcatlona director lor~ Goyamor of 'Welt VIrginia, . year.
hla 200th victory aa a varalty coach Thursday night In a 75-45 win· pr..ented Caldwell a ' clock on behalf of the .team and athletic
Beaver Eastern took a 10-7
over Federal Hocking at Eastern High School. Arter the game, Tom . booatera. Caldwell potted 16.4 wlria. as Southern mentor before lead in the rlrst round. and edged
Hunter, former Ohio Valley Publishing columnist and now aaala- developing successful teams at Ea.stern. (Sentinel photo)
toward 25-20 advantage at the
half. The Pike Countians picked
.
I
up the offensive temp() in the
third round and buried .the Meigs
club 20-10 to take a commanding
45-30 lead in to the final round.
Despite a good offensive quarter
in the finale, the Meigs Counelub had its fate 'sealed early by the intense tians still fell 65-49. •
by SCOTT WOLFE
•
·
Sentinel Correspondent
Eastern coach Howie Caldwell Eagles.
Eastern (2-7) hit 20.S2 two's
In
the
second
round,
after
a
24-9
tally,
EasiCrD'
EAST MEIGS- Behind a potent 20-5 bomand
was 20-.56 overall . from the
now joins 'the 200 Club thanks If! went on a 12-0 run for a 36-9 tally. The score
barding of the Federal Hocking Lancers in the
field
with a 9-14 night at the line
stood 41-22 at the half. The newly formed East- with 29 rebounds Jed by Becky
first quarter, the Eastern Eagles rode the wave of . the win over Fed Hock.
em Dance team performed a nice show at the .Davis with nine. EHS had · U
momentum to a one sided 75-45 triumph over
. .
Eastern was relentless in its pressure, gaining ~[
the Lancers Thursday night at Eastern High
turnovers, 9 assists, two steals,
half
court
traps
and
picking
up
several
full
court
Eastern r0lled on to a 59:33 third period tally · and eight fouls .
School.
,
..
The win marked the 200th ·victory·.for ve(eran · steals that resulted in numerous Jay-ups.
and a 75-45 finale.
Eastern's Juli Bailey was
Eric Smith got the ball rolling early as "The . Eastern 'ilit 25-pf-50 two-point shots, 1-of-4
coach Haw.ie Caldwell, who has been a varsity
among
five players selected to
Animal" powered in a post jumper from the · three-point attempts, and was 24-for-30 at the
mentor since the 1985-8!1 season.
the
all-tournament
team, joinlf!g
Eastern's key to succe~~s was a lightning quick paint. After a five-second call, Joe Brown hit a line. The Eagles collected 31 rebounds (Will 7, Leach and Soul~ worth 1 from
fast-break and upbeat defensive tempo, sprin- follow-up jumper, then Eastern forced another Brown 5, Smith 6). Eastern had 11 steals, 15 Beaver Eastern, Rayona TurleY,
kled with a balanced scoring attack. Joe Brown turnover that saw Matt Simpson get fouled on a turnovers, eight assists (Bissell 3, Brown 3) -and of Paint Valley and C. J, Blessing
led the way with an 18 point effort, while Eric break-away lay-up. Simpson hit both for a 6-0 18 fouls.
·
ofWahama.
Federal Hocking hit '13-of-35 two's, 5-of-20
Smith posted his fine~~t game with 14. Matt tally.
Paint
Valley
·
posted
a
57-39
At the 7:03 mark, Federal finally reached its three's, was 4-for-15 at the line with 19.rebounds
Simpson added eleven, Matt Bissell had .10 and
own
end of the court as Dan Whit Iatch drew a (Du.nfee 5). The Lancers had four steals, 16 win in the consolation game of
a foul-plagued Josh Will added eight.
the tournament.
Ben Dunfee led Federal Hocking with 12. foul on a ~ade field goal, but missed. Arter a turnovers, nine assists and 20 fouls.
Beaver Eastern advanced , to .
In reserve action, Federal Hocking and Coach the title game after Wahama was
Logan Barllett tallied seven and Brian Poston Brown score, Whitlatch connected on one char·
ity toss, but Eas!cm went on a 10-0 run that Roger Bissell claimed a SS-46 overtime win
and Matt Quinn scored six each. •
unable to- take ,part in a game
A combination of upbeat offensive and a trap- pushed the score to 18-3. Brown scored four in over the Eagle~~; who held a lead going down the against the E!agles on any of ·the
stretch. Federal outse!Jred Eastern 11-2 in the
ping, pressing defense staggered. the LancerS the drive as did junior Chad Nelson.
Federal finally hit a bucket, compliments of extension period. Shaun Simpson led with 24. three different times it was
early. The _Lancer offense stru!!!lled to get the
scheduled. Monday's snow post.'
ball down the floor early and showed signs ·of Ben Dunfee at the 1:10 mark, for an 18-5 tally,' points and Matt Dillinger added ten. Chris Lyons poned the original date. · .
·
ineptness in the absence of point guard Amos then Garrett Kan made a field goal to close the led Eastern with 11, Joey Marcinko added 10 and
Meanwhile,
Eastern-Meigs
C:Otterill, who was out with a debilitating leg · scoring at 20-5.
Corey Young added eight.
defeated Paint Valley 61-4 7 in a
By this point in the game; a struggling Lancer
Eastern plays Meigs Tuesday.
injury.
first round game last Monday.

a

Eagle~

giVe ca·ldwell20pth wi·n

., · ATHENS ~ · The Division of
Wildlife od the Ohio Department
of Natural Resou~ces has scheduled five open houses to be held .
uound · the state Marc.h 5. The
intent of the open houses is to
provide . sportsmen, outdoor
• ·CIIthusiasts and the general public an opportunity to comment
on the division's proposed hunt• ing and fishing regulatiops for
the 2000-2001 season.
• Officers from Wildlife Dis·
trict Four, which . covers 19
southeastern Ohio counties
~itcluding Meigs and Gallia, will
be greeting the pubNc and
· accepting cOmments at the
Athens Parks .and Recreation
c;;.omqHinitY, Center•. 733 East
Stale Street in Athens. Biolo'
~,isis ·and offiCers will be available to.the public from noon to S

MERCERVILLE - South Gallia tasted victory for the first time
MIAMI (AP) - Tom , Brady
this season after posting a 60-50
threw for 369 yards, and Michigan
victory over Southern last Thuhibeat Alabama - by inches in the
day night in Mercerville.
Orange Bowl.
South Ga'lfia jumped out to an
Brady threw four touchdown
eight point lead by the end of the
passes, including three to . David '
first period and led 32-)6 at the
Terrell, and the Wolverines won
intermission, then survived a solid
35-34 in overtime Saturday night.
second half performance by the·
Aft~r
MichigaJ!'S . Shawn
Lady Tornadoes to earn the win.
Thompson caught a 2S·yard touch·
Stacy White led: South Galli a.
down pass on the first play of over- . ROLLIN.G THUNDER - Alabarna'a Shaun Alaxander (37) buratl with 15 points. Holly Haner fin.time; Alabama si:ored on Andrew through Mlchl9111'a line during Saturday's Orange Bowl. (AP)
. ished wi!h 12 points.
Zow's 21 -yard pass to Antonio
Rachel Waugh contributed nine
Carter. .Out Ryan Pflugner 1s extra· year, rushed for 161 yards and . win season. The fifth-ranked Crim- points, three assists, two steals
point kick was inches wid~ to the three touchdowns in his final game son ·Tide (10·3) lost in their and one rebound. Ashley Cardwell
right:
for Alabama. His scores came 'on NCAA-record 59th bowl appear- added eiilht points for the Lady
The Wolverines won despite runs of five, six and 50 ya;ds, and ance.
Rebels.
losing a fumble at the Alabama one teammate Freddie Milons scored
!&gt;outhern's Katie Cummins led
.The Wolverines erased deficits
in the fourth.quarler ·and having a · on a 62-yard punt return ..
all
scorers ·with 22 points. Cumof 14-0 and 28-14 thanks to Terrell ,
36-yard l'ield goal attempt blocked_
mins
scored 20 points in the secTlie eighth-ranked Wolverines who tied Orange Bowl and. Michito force overtime.
(10-2) managed just one first down gan bowl records with three touch- ond half, including· 16 in the
Shaun Alexander, the South· in the opening 28 minutes but oom· down receptions. They covered 27, fourth period. She 'had 10 twpeastern ' Conference player of the plet~d their third consecutive 10- S7 and 20 yards from Brady.
point field goals.
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.'. In case or poor weather on
~arch 5, the open house will be
lfeld. Marc~ 8 at 7 p:m. at the
~thens dis,trict office.

South Gallia tops
· sout~ern- girls · ·

Michigan
edges·
Alabama

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Division of Wildlife
· !J.l ates open house for
March s·

P..in.

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Has' th e re I"IQIOUS ng'ht. IOSt.some SU ppo rt.
. ers ?·=
1

. ter's 2-yarq touchdown run with 12 :01 to go:
· "Once we started running, we found out fhat maybe
we can keep running it," Nebraska coach Frank Sollch
said. "That's what we ended up doing. That worked
very well."
.
The Huskers ran the ball their last 23 plays, gaining
·
·
1S6 yards.
When Tennessee (9-3) cut the lead to 31-21_·on a
trick 44-y~rd pass play from wide receiver Cedric
Wilson to Donte' .Stallworth with 7:25 to play, it
looked ·like a comeback was possible .
But the Huskers, whose only loss w.u by four
pBints at Texas, never gave up the ball again and the
Vols could do nothing as time; an out.
.

.Girls
Thla w•k's acheclule
Todly
, Eastern at South Gallla
: Ohio Volley Christian at Southern

slahlerOiuse.nel

Washington Merry-Go-Round:

42-17 victory in the Oran~;e Bowl.
"I'd say we got another good lesson tonight," Vols
coach Phillip Fulmer said.
•
•
This time, after Tennessee cut the lead to 17-14 following a fumble by the Huskers on t·he first play of
the second half, the stage seemed set for a come-frombehind' vicl&lt;»'y. Then, .Nebraska's offense took over.·
The Cornhuskers (1·2-1) went 196 yards in nine
plays, with Crouch throwing to wide-open tight ~nd
Aaron Goiiday for a 13'-yard touchdown and it was
24-14 with 4:44 left in the third quarter.
Crouch never threw another pa.Jis .
A perfect punt pinned the Huskers at their own 1
tqc nilxt time they got the ball, and they went 99 yards ~
in 10 plays to t~ke a 31-14 lead on Correll Buckhal '

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Numbers speak volumes in the hiills of state and federal govern, ment. The more people you put behind a request, the better chance that
request has of being honored.
,
.
·
Never mind Mason is in a different state. It's still a part of us. Our
mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters may live tllere and work here - .
or vice versa.
: We are one people divided by a river. And 'there are b'ridges over
that. United; we run forward; divided, we crawl.
: If Gallia County lands an automotive assembly plant, Mason and
Meigs also benefit. If Meigs scores a steel plant;Gallia and Mason res- By CHRIS MATTHEWS
'de
'II
k h
If M
1
·
WASHINGTON - I once fig1 nts WI wor I ere, too.
ason· ures a computet company head· ured out how to speak "TOnto, .. the
quarters, Gallia and Meigs get a boost.
language used by the Lone Ranger's
, • Sure, the region can reach the first goals without unity, but it may . .trusty Indian companion.
not happen within 10, 20 or even 30 years- maybe not even in our · Of all the languages I've ever
lifetimes. With unity, however, these goals- are quite attainable with a tried, it's the easiest. Just drop all
~ew years.
· · articles, definite or indefiniiC. Forget
• Roads and industry aside, unjty makes all facets of life much better. those "a's" and ."the's." ,Next, drop
; ·Let's put whatever differences there may be behind us, folks. The all,use o_f the verb t~ be; am, is, are,
book of the 21st century is filled with blank pages; it's just waiting for etc. Sw1tch, th~ obJeCtive pronoun
us write the chapters of progress.
for the subJective and always call

11181day

Meigs
: Southern at Alexander
•
,
Friday
1 Federal Hocking at Southern
'l Belpre at ME!Igs
Trimble at Eastern ·
·

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.. With Y?K past, Ohio Valley
needs to focus on vital issues

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Boys
This wMk'aacheclule ·

j
I Eastern at

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Co~

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - At its best, the optio~ is_
unstoppable, and Nebraska was at-its best in tiie second half ·of the Fiesta Bowl.
In touchdown drives of 96 and 99 yards, followed
by a marathon, 7-minute, 25 -second 'march to end the
game, the third-ranked Cornhuskers used a deadly
combination of speed and strength Sunday night ·to
beat No. 6 Tennessee 31-21 .'
" We had to be the most· physical team," Eric
Crouch said. "I think it showed."
Crouch was ihe g'ame's MVP. The shifty, lightningquick sophomore at .the controls of Nebraska's offense
never was corralled by the Volunteers for long.
It was all too famlliar to Tennessee. Two years ago,
Nebraska wore down the Vols in the second half for a

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Lllll.,.lo liN .Jilol.,. w.&amp;:-0.-..
slttJMU k I4U ,,_,. JOO ftltN'ft, AU,.,_..,. sll/d«t '
lo #IIMlttJIIIfli IIUUI h• :fiJif.flll affli inciNII• .,u,.. 11M1.1,..,# , . . . ,, N11 11ulp• W.n MM
h , . ..... Wlilts s/lofM t. ill~ IUtf', IIMtwsift61:aMn, 11t11 ,.,Sillfalilln.
TA. .,._. •...,.....uJ Ia ,., coiMM• . . . , . . tiN eOIUIIUMJ oflit• OIIJG V.U.,. ,...,.,,.,

~ur view:

•

Huskers humble ·vols in Fiesta

MONDAY'S

-:~r.,. ----

Control~

C•. ~ fiiiiiiii'W ....,., 1111lm otii,.,U• 11111«1.

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~ffiGHLIGHfS
f.;
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Charles W. Govey
Publlahll'
-Charlene Hoeftlch
General Mllnager

Inside: NFL wraps up regular season- Page1o
Inside: .Top 25 hoop roundup- ... 1o

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t~,--~---------~~~~--------------~~~--~~~~--~------------------------------

VERMONT

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OhiQ
740-1192-215e • FIX: 1192·2157~~

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Ednor

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Tammy Fryar scored 10 points
for the Lady Tornadoes. She had
four two' PQint field goals and hit
2-of-4 free throws.
. Kim lhle and Stacy Lyons had .
five points apiece. Heather Dailey
scored three points.
Amy Lee · and Brigette Barnes
added two points each. Sarah
Brauer had one point for Southern.
The Lady Tornadoes finished
14-of-32 ftom ,the free throw line.
Southern outstored South Gallia
31-28 in the second half.
··
Southern's next outing is t~i's.
·evening at home a&amp;ainst Ohio Valley Christiap. .
.
JV Thmadoa wla
Southern dcfealed South Gallia
in the junior .varsity contest; 3731. Amy Lee led Southern with 16
points. Tosha Pelfrey had II
points for South Gallia. Jeanie
Fellure led South Gallia with five
·rebounds.
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A6 • The Dally Sentinel

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Middleport, Ohio

~~y. January 3, 2000

20100'

Monday, .January

Pomeroy, Mlddlfport, Ohio

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Evening Meals
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THURSDAY

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.

.

&amp; Gravy

Green Beans
Roll

..

&amp; Onions

Orange Juice

Red Gelatin • Brownie

.

Green Beans

Scalloped Chicken

Brocco~

Mashed Potatoes

.

.

13
.'

Roast Beef with

Buttered Carrots

potatoes, carrots)

Bread

Bread

Braad

Biscuit

Peach Slices

Pu!l)le Plums

Pineapple

Beefand Noodles

Hamburger

Cauliflower

Broccoli

on ~un

BBQ Chicken Fillet

Soup

Sandwich Plate·

Mandarin Oranges

Applesauce

Br8ad

Garlic Braad

Apricots

in Orange Gelatin .

Peachy Creamy

Tropical Mixed Fruit

Cooked

25

·Swiss Steak

Chicken Cacciatore

Mashed Potatoes

Mashed Potatoes

Spinach

Gravy

Peas

28
Salmon Patty
Lyonnaise

&amp; Carrots

Ham

Potal~s

Cole Slaw

a d Crab Cr'eek, 4 Month Old
lte Bo•er Pup. Caii(:I04)675·
2 tS/1304)675·1543.

BuHered Cam

Mixed Vetgetables

Biscuit

Bread

Bread

Braad

Peaches

Banana

.Orange Juice

Blushing Pears

Pineapple

F'und large Black Male La·

Rocky Road Pudding

bflldor Broke Hj&amp; Chain, No Tags,
0}1 State Route 2t8, 740·446-'

~

•

Cake

"

"

The Home Energy
name.
'Program (HEAP) is a federally A household applying for HEAP:_:
funded program administered by must report total household.income : \
the
Ohio
Department
of for the past 12 months for all per- ·Development,
"Office
of sons 18 years of age and older.
Community Services (OCS). It is Both homeowners and renters are
designed to help eligible low- eligible for assistance from HEAP. · '
income Ohioans meet the high Applications will be accepted until
costs of home heating. HEAP pays March 31, 2000.
·
a one-time payment for most Applications may be picked UJJ" at
PUCO regulated utility customers . the Multipurpose Senior Center:
reflecting their usage for the cur- Home visits to assist any disabled
rent winter heating season. or homebound person can be Vouchers are issued to non-regulat- arranged. If you have questions or
ed utility customers, master- need assistance call Darla Hawley
metered and other applicants who at 992-2161.
do not have a utility . bill in their

Lima Beans and Com

Potatoes

Roll
Pistache Pudding

.

I

January Activities
Monday and Wednesday from 3:00
p.m. - 3:45 p.m. through March.
This class consists of stretching and
bending exercises for • flexibility
and mild aerobics (walking and
arm movements) for cardiovascular
strengthening. T)lere is no registration required for the class and the
$1.00 per person charge will be collected on the day you attend class.
New members are welcome to
attend.
'Evening Dlnnen
Are you looking for a night
away from cooking? Come join us
every Tuesday and Thursday for
dinner. .Serving starts at 4:45 p.m.
and continues until 5:30 p.m. The
suggested donation for the meal is

_...)&lt;0)().

1111 Chi Classes
Tai Chi classes will continue
every Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Center through February. Tai Chi
teaches balance and relaxation
techniques. Ramona Compton is
the instructor and there is no charge
for the classes. The class will last
one hour. Note: No class will be
held on January 13 &amp; February 3.
Birthday Party
Will you celebrate a. birthday
in January or February? If so,
s:ome join us for the monthly birth·
day parties to be held Bn January 27
and February 24. Happy Birthday!
llelfnnlng Art auses
Carol Tannehill ·will be the
instructor for Beginning Art
Classes to be held on January 10,
If, &amp; 24...These classes will begin
at I :00 p.m. There is . a $3.00
charge per class. For more infor·
mation, you may contact Patty
Pickens at 992-2161.
Eye Care Month .
Dr. James Schmoll will be the
speaker on Janull)' 20 concerning

A ClaiiS In making raibaske,ts was held recently·at the Meigs Senior
Center. Shown are (left) June Ashley, teacher and Dorothy
Anthony, student. June bas helped with the Yesteryear Program
since II began fifteen yean ago and teaches fifth graden how to
make a ragbasllet.
·
"Eye Diseases &amp; Glaucoma" Dr.
Schmoll will speak at 11:00 a.m.
Card &lt;;:lub
Do you like to play Euchre,
Bridge, Rook, etc.? Bring a friend
and let's get started. If you are
interested in having a fun time
playing cards, come to the Center
on January 20 and February 20 at
1:00 p.m. We'll play whatever you
want to!
Interested In lnvestmeilts?
Elizebeth
A.
Schaad,
Investment Representative, wiiJ
speak on January II at 10:45 a.m.
concerning "Ten Investment and
Financial Risks." A question and
answer oeriod will follow.
Recipe Club
Do you have lots and lots of
recipes you could share? If you
like to cook and enjoy •eating, mark
you calendar for January 11 at 2:00
p.m. Bring a recipe or two to trade
with others. Come taste and see
what is new to cook.
Forclng·Bulbs
Put on a happy face and let's,
get ready for spring. Hal Knecn,
OSU Extension Office, will show
-

~

-

- -

~&amp;Oifp '

you how to force bulbs. He will be
here on January 13 at II :00 a.m.
and at 4:15 p.m. (at the Evening
Dinner) to demonstrate the how
to's on th!s subject.
. '
Computers &amp; the Internet
"Opening New wm&lt;fows on
the World" will be shown on video
at the Center on January 27 at
,10:15 a.m. This instructional video
was developed · specifically for
seniors. Join us·forthe video if you
would like to: •
•Take the mystery out of computers
and the Internet.
•Translate technical jargon into
every day terms.
•See examples of how the Internet
can be used to explore areas of personal interest and communicate
with friends and family via e-mail.
Running Time: 45 minutes.
Blood Pressure Clinics
Cross'polnte'..January 13 ' &amp;
February 10 from 1:30 p.m. • 2;00
p.m. , .
Harrisonville Senior Center--No
meeting in January or February.
Center--January 19 &amp; February 17
from 9:30 a.m. • It :00 a.m.

WE HONOR

. 'Q'J~eler.t

..'

HEAP~~--'. ;.

Emergency

The HEAP Emergency Assistance
guidelines and emergency. require:. ;,~
Program was created to provide
ments must·be met. The total gross
financial assistance to low income
household income must be at or • :
households that are threatened with
below 150% of the federally estab- . •
disconnection of their heating · lished poverty guidelines.
, ·;
source, have already had service
Individuals interested in applying •
disconnected, or have less than a
for Emergency HEAP must go to .
ten day supply of bulk fuel.
the Gallia·Meigs Community :·
Emergency HEAP allows a oneAction Agency.
;~
time ~ayment per heating season of
Home visits can GC arranged to - .
•up to $175.00 to restore or continue
assist the disabled or homebound ~:;
home heating service. To be eligi-. unable to j!et into the intake site.
·•
ble for the
both income

6~.

.

·992-3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

light golde~ .Retriever,

7411-992-68t0

70o

•

Yard Sale

.==::::::=::1=
lli Vord Soleo Mutt
Be Pold In Advonco.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
tile cloy befonl ""' ad
' • 11 to n1n. Sundly
l!dltlon- 2:00 p.m .
. , Frlcloy. Mondoy odltlon .
·tO:OOo.m. Sotunloy.
Pomeroy,
Middleport

2.44 Acres, Homesite, Green
Township, Gallla County, · Flet,

&amp; VIcinity

,,

•

r--.=;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~

d..,_, before the

1d~

ls"to''run,

S!lndoy &amp; Monday edttlont :OOpm Frlctoy. ,

80

Auction
". and Flea Market

BIII .Moodlspaugh Auctioneering·
complele aut:Jion service. Buy
and sell estates. Ohio License
176~.
t338, 740-989·2623.

wv

Wetfemeyer's Auction Service ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-2720.

90

Wantad to ~uy

Ab"''lute Top Oollar All U S Sll·
v11 And Gold Co1ns, Proofsets,

Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
I
Pre. t930 U.S Currency,
St¥itng,, Etc. Aoqui!ltlons Jewelry
1 Shop. 151 Second
AW•,uo.l:laltlpolls,, 740.446-2842.

' Minded Individuals
Its
Tra1n1ng Program In The Gallipolis Ferry
(0414) Area. Manager Trainees
Earn Betwe.n $23,000 ·$28,000
Par Year E!a~allts tnctudo Health
And Denial Plans~ Disability And
Life lnsura~ce, As wen As 401 K
And Profit Sharing ,Plans. 84 Lum·
bar Promotes From 1Within With
C'-Managors· Earntn,i t $30,000 •
$40,000 And Manager Earning
$40,000 ·$80,000 II You Enjoy A
blnation 01 Working With
ople, Hands ·On Work, And
los, You May ~ulllly. No
owtodgo Of Building Materials
...ry College Proferrod, Bill
t Necessary. Training WUI Be

o

=
to

SEE: CHAD sUMMERS
WED JAN 5 THR JAN I
2 P.M. -II P.M.

4~APPLY AT:

I'ATIIIIT Ltnl

WMIIL DMAIIIS

OliYOIII

Seroing The Community W'uh Care For 15 Yean

SALES, RENTAL$
&amp; REPAIRS
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIRS
BATH SAFETY EQUIPMENT
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
HOSPrrAL BEDS
!JFTCHAIRS
STAll! ~DI!S ,
•OSTOMY
'
• DIAPI!RI A CHUXB

0,

ROUTEJ BOX 84A
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV

'

EMAIL ADORESS:
J0BS084LUM,BER.CDM

~

•'~ ~ AN EQUAL OPPOIITUN1TY
~
ADVERTISING
~ SALES REPRESENTATIVE

.'I Hr

I

lk we~~'e•iabl- ~.Co­

.

~Ff'IV'NG TRt·COOifr;t AREA

Con)mtlllcalloh '•
~
1il .. ha'iJ good
iiUifs
•

"' ;

Lrll('!(,l IllY Sr'IV I(P

.

'

I

'

1

'

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l

I ,.

~uat h8'¥'e good dnvlng record
•• ·~ own Transpol'taliQn
uti liM abiiJty to be a TEAM
.~

player

.,

''Sind RoliJIIif lo:

. 1480 Jackson Pike
. Gallipolis, DH

" ust Minutes

..

m Holzer" "

Gollj&gt;cjlls Doily Tribune,

~!: ~-Rep

h 1'1'
1-l:OO- I I .1 -:.':.'0h

~

Toll

-Uii

825 Third
Gaitlpolla, OH 4563t

Wt Pay CA&amp;II·

WILDLIFE JOBS To $2t 60 /HR.
INC BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS,
SECURITY,
MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
El&lt;P NEEDED. FOR APP AND
EXAM INFQ. CALL t·B00·8t3·
3585. EXT. 142tt . 8 AM. ·9 PM.
7 OAYS Ids, Inc.

140

Buslnna
Training

8001213-8385

150

Schooll

Instruction

All real estate advertising In
thlo newspaper" StJb(ect1o
the Federal Fair HOIJSing Ar1.
of t !168 which makes It Mlegal
to advanlae ' any preterenco,
limitation or discrimination
based on race. color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention 10 ·

RENTALS

1 or 2 Bedroom: Near Wai-Mart
References, Deposit Required.
Utilities Paid. No Petsl (740)·245·

5693
10 Rooms. 5 Bedoroma, 2 Bath
HOUII, Rio Grande, $500/MO., +

This - r wilt not
knowingly accePI
advertisements tor rest estate
which Is In violation of the .
taw Our readers ani hereby
Informed thai aU dWellings
actvM~ied In thle newspaper
ara available on an equal
rtun"" boala

U~l11ea.

' EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors,
Maste:ra, Doctorate, .By Corre·
oi&gt;Ondonce Belod Upon Prior Ed·
Uc:atlon And Short Study Caurn.
For FREE Information Booktell~~!!"o~ppo~~"~'~!!"·~~
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t·lf00.964-83t6.

OHIO OPERATING
-ENGINEERS LOCAL 11
APPRENTICESHIP Ill
CONSTRUCTION .
Men and Women, ages 18 and
owr, learn to QPerale and repa1r
earth movlng.machlnes
and cranes.
Appllcallon datoa:
January t7, t8, t9, and
January 27, 28, 29, 2000
From 9;()() A.M To 3:00 P.M.

REAL ESTATE

180

W1ntedTo

Appllcallon Foe:'
$tO 00 non·rofu,.,_
·Contact: Ohio Oparatilig
l!rigtneors Tralolng Center
Phone: (888)·385·2587
EO.E.

Handyman Service, 740·256·
6t20.
Jlma Drywall &amp; Construction.
· New Construction &amp; Aemodelf
Drywall, Siding, Roofs, Addl·
tiona, Pai~Ung , otc . (304)6744623 or (304)674.0155.
Local teacher will do afler schOol
tutoring and ovanlng baby !ltllng,
call after 4pm, 740-992·9807.

,I

FINANCIAL

':':':-'--=---::--:-::--21 o

Point Pleasant EMS Ia currently
seeking applicants for the poal·
tlons of EMT &amp; Paramedics. FuiV
part·llme positions available. Ap·
pllcatlons may be completed at
2308 Joltorson Avenue. Pt,

BuslneBB
Opportunity

1

P1tasa!'l,

~l'o,;;&amp;:;:ta:;:_lJo7-:b,-$~4:!8~.32i3~.00:::-;Y-;:r.::::N::ow:: I
~fling ·No Experience ·Paid
Training -Groat llonoflta, Oat! 7
oaya 800·429-3860 Ext J:365
POSTAL JOBS To $t8.35 ii!R.
tNC. BENEFITS. NO EXPERt·
ENCE . FOR APP. AND ' EXAM
INFO CALL t-600·8t3·3586,
EXT 142t0. 8 -A M, · 9 r: ~ · · 7
DAYS fda. inc,
•
.._.
POSTAL JO~S Up To $t7.2t/Hr.
Guaranteed Hlfe. For Applk:atlon
And E- lolormatlon Call 8 A.M.
• 9 P.M. M·E 1.....8..·HZ7 El!,l,
2+t007.

$100 Per Hoyr. Homeworker&amp;
Needed! Larga Advartlamg Firm
Pays $4 For every Voice-Mall
RetriO\Iod. Make $400 ·$500 Eve·
ryday tn Your Spare Ttme. 'Ltrultl!d

Space.,t·Bif!-7411-0007 (2&gt;1 Hll).
INOncll
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommendt that
dO bUllnelS with people
NOT to aond
Qlail until you
~~-

1

310

740-367-7475.

2 Bedroom House Reference/
Deposit. No Pets. $325 a month.
(304)675-2749.

Homes for Sale

Near Rio Granda. 2 BA 1 1/2
Batha, Full Baaament./ New Septic
System, Excetlem Condlllon. Briel&lt;
&amp; Vl~yt Bt-ll'ovol. Haa Barn &amp;
Stvtrat Outbuildings. County
Water, Great Buy, $87,200, Call
' ·
:g;5, Appointment. t·800·.• t3·

3 Bedi"oomt, 2 Bath HouH, Ga·
rage &amp; Baument. Hud Approved!
7t Texas Rd. Call: (740)·448·

0008.

·

Houle And Trailer, 2 •Bedrobma
EaCh. Ro~oncos and Depoalt Requlrad. Water And Trash Paid.

7-40'388-ttOO.

:.::..:=::=;_:-:=--

FORECLOSED HOMES. Low Or 0 (
Down! Govn't And Bank Repo'a
House For flnt , $350.oo per
Baing Said Now! Financing Avail· month, 3 rotrencos required. 740.
able. Call Nowl t -800·355·0024, 446-tt.:!.
•

Ext 8040
HOMES FROM $tvt.30 /Mo. t •
3 BR Repos /Foreclosures. Fee.
4% Down. For Llatlnga/ Payment
Do18Ns t -800-7t9-300t xtttls.
Nice Home, Plenty of Room , 3
Bedroom, Brick. Reduced Price.

(304~73-9485.

Owner Says

sau. Bring 011a11 For

Mobile

2 Bun~ Beds With Mattresaaa &amp;
Shoots, Like New. t2 Foot Boat
With Troller. Trolling Motor, Bat·
tery. Flah Finder. 740-388-t 722

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, 1\Jr·
nllhed and unfurnished, security
depoalt required, no peta, 740·

Bulk Foods, Spices, Candles,
Cheese, Butter, Trail Bologna,
715 Bulk Foods. 5184 S.A. 775,
Patr1ot.

1 Bedroom, Near Arbors Nursing
Homo, Economical Utilities, Culet
LocaUon. $279/Mo., + Utilitios, No
Pets, 74o-446-2957.

2 ' bedroom apartment (down·
stairs), S250 per fl'lonth plus utiM·
ties &amp; depoalt, Third Street,
Racine. 7"·247·4292
"'t\1

•

•

X'

.,.

448-0390.

· ..

•

•

'

, I

•

' 'r

\.

,

t994 cavalier, 2 door, 4 cyl., 5 :
speed, C 0 . Player, A/C. $3000 1
080 (304)675-6693.
•

8 LS·1 Engine.

I

a·

Six panel poor • 24" x 79 314"
. $15. Call 7.40-446·4548. 740·446·
7375.

720

740

..

Motorcycles

Two bedroom apartment In Ml~-1
dteport. all utllltios paid, $325 per
month plu4·StDO deposit, 740·

810
Home
-:-::-l_m-:,..p-.ro_v:-:e'::"ma-:::-:n~t-:-B:-:-:-::

836-4052.

~-7800.

'

vutage ·Groen Apartmonto· 2
bedrooma, total oloctrlc, appllorxi·
•• turn..htd,' taunHry, 100m loclll·
Ui1 and to achoot, applications
available at ofllco, 740·982·37tt
TOO 1-688·233·8694. Equal

6

STEEL BUILDI!iGS • 5 ONLYI 2)
25X30, 30X40, 2) 45X90 . Mu&amp;t
Movel Selling for Balance Owedl
t·800-2tt·9594 X.t5,

Tal!galo. Fits 1898 And Newer
Ford F·Serlto Pidlups. Came Oil
Of A 19119 F-350 SuperDuty. Ex·
cenent Conduton1 $150, Call 7.t0·
4546.'740-448-7375. ·

ue

Two t5' MTX Subs: F.our t2'
MTX Sub wooftre; Two 1 2"
PIOneer Sibs Excolent CondMion,
$450 For Tho Set: Must Sell All
Together: 15' 400 Watt Each,
740-448-3909.

MERCHANDISE
Hiluaehold
Goods
Appliances
Aeconditlbned
Washers; Dryers, Ranges,, Refrl·
gr1lora, 90 ' Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740·446·

77115.

wantod to ~UJI· Natfvtty ut, mult
be c;ompltte life 1lze eet, 740·
992·2328.

Buy or 1111 . Rlvtrlno' Anttquts,
1124 Eat Main 01) SR t2ol E Pomeroy, 140·992·2521, 740;192·
t5311. R... Mo\&gt;ll', OW[IIf.'http://

SERVICES

~':""--:-:---"":"--

~.

··

"'"'

"•
Appliance Parts And Service. AU · ~
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex· :
perlence All Work Guaranteed, .
French City May1ag, 740 -446· 1
7795. '
·•

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence- Painting . vinyl llldlng,
carpentry, doors, windows , baths,
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740·992·

1

,

2
'

6323.
llvlngatoi'J'I Basement Water
Proofing , all basement repalr1
done, hae estimates, ,lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job axperl·
ence (304)895-3887.

'i
..:
, r4

,
·

Electrical and
Retrlgeratlon

'

.

~~~~~~~~~~ ·!

for Sale: Rocondlltonad •. wa&amp;h·

.

Sotweent&gt;tOP.M.

840

'

er•.
dryere andl r1trlgaf4IOrl.
Thompso~s Appliance. 3407

ll3o . ·AntlqUH

t982 Harley Davidson Sporlster

1100 . $6,000 080, 740-258 6008 •

Buying DTV systems with access

cordi. Jwi 740-948-2~.

Reoldentlal or commtrclol wiring, · '.]
new servk:e or repaira. Maater LJ. •
cenaed electrician. Flid•nour · ''"'
Eleetrlcal, WVOOD308, 304·675· ~~ •,
t788.
•:.~

rr---------+-------;,....-11'
SHOP.'HIE · · :;;
'·

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CLASSIFIEDSI

ltl-your~.cort\ltl\oi&lt;1no

•

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740~ ;

t997, 350 Yamaha Banahee.
Llko
New
$3,000. OBO.
(304)882·2266.

t-IIHte.otaa.

2 lldrmo, Off State Routo teO At
[ ... QIMII . Caii74Q.4.48.~.

1966 Trans-Am 350, Automatic, '
Good Condition, $2,200,

Snow Plow to Fit Cub Ca~t Rl·
dtgn Lawn Mover. Llka .new. used
Spring Valley Groan One Bad- . Once! (740)·367-7560 (740)·367·
7671 •
room Apartments, Apptlancea
Furnllholl, ~ 740'446-t599.
SOCIAL SECURITY biSABILITV
TWin Towers now accepllng ap· · Ctalm Denied? We Spaclallzt In
Al/poals And Htertngo. FREE
•plication&amp; tor t BR. HUD subald·
CONSULTATION. Benefit Team
lzed apt tor elderly and handl·
Servlcu, Inc . Toii· Frte : 1·888·
capped. EOH. (304)67s-6679.
•

rangeo
!ikaggo
?8 '
Vloa Strett,
Ca~ Appttancta,
7~0..~4e·73t8,

,2

1985 Alta Romeo Spidec, convert·'
ible, 5 speed, excellent condition.,
$8900, 740-992·2529 or 132 But·,
tomut, Pomeroy.

· , 1998
Pontiac Trans-Am - 350 V· '
---- - - ·
----

·o·

QOOD USED APPLIANCES
waahara. dr~ara. r•frlatrators,

-"omes,

CARS $tOO, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda'&amp; Toyota 's,
Chevy&amp; . Jeeps, And Spoil Utili·
ties. Call Nowl 800·772·7470 ,
EXT. 7832
·

1997 Camara, loaded with extras,
45.000 miles, 74Q-.869.Q904.

Firewood for sale, S25 truckload,
740·949;0605

=

Jackson Avonue, (304)675-7388.

Mo'bile Home•
for Rent

'

COMPUTERS • Low Or SO Down.
Low Monthly Pay menta.. V2K
Compliant. Almost Everyone Ap·
oved "1-800 617 3478 E t 330

·

$ NO DOWN! NO CREDIT NEED·
EDI GOV'T FORECLOSURES!
GUARANTEED APPROVAL! t .
800-360-4620 El&lt;T 8509

1995 Camero, .V-6 automatic,
custom show car, custom wheels
and dash, black, 71 ,167 mlle1, '
minor front damage, funs and
drlvos, asking $5400, 740-992· ,
t501t days or 740·949·2644 ,
evenings end weekends.

Complete DISH Network aatelllte
system, brand new, $149 Installed
Jreo, 740·992·tt82 or 304· 773·
53Q5 after epm.

pr

Autos for Sale

Automat!~ Trans· (
mlsalon. Factory Chrome Wheels,.
r-Tops , Fully Loaded , 500 Walt
For Sale a Pedestal Table wltb 4 Monsoon Stereo System With 10
.BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Chairs. Super good Condlton. Speakers. t2 Disc CD Changer tn
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
,_,(7.;.40;:)~4.::46::4:;:53:;7_;E:;vea=-.Only=;;:;--:''- Trunk. Casaolte Player' In Dash .
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
Dark Blue Malalllc Paint Dark
from $279 to 1358. Walk to shop
Grubi:S's Plano· tunln!J repairs . Gray Leather Interior, Will Take
&amp; movies . Call 740· 446-2568
Problems? Neacl TUned? Ca,il the PayyoH Or Reasonable OHer. Cali
Equal Housing Opportun~.
::Pia:;no.::.,:D:;:r.::740-446:=.;.::-4::5::25:::--:::::--l 740-446-4548 Or 740-44!1-7375.
Chrlaty'a Family Living, apart·
"'ANITROL HEATtNQ AND
maroon tjr. car, runs great.
82
4
manto, home &amp; trailer rentals,
COOLING EQUIPMENT
$500
4Q.99l!-92t9
7
700·992·45t4, apartmanls ov,llINSTALLED
'
·
)lbl~, ~&amp;unturnlohod.
'If You Don't Call Ua We Both C~RS $tOO ·S5oo: Pollee tm·
Loss. • Free
Close To Rio Grande Campus. t
·~- Eallmartst
t.IJ098 740·446· pounds: HOnda's
u Toyota's,
c
Bedroom. •tt Utilities Included, . 6 308, t·~ 29
.
Jeeps, And Sport tltltles. ALL.
--'---~::-----1
NOWII
t·80tl-772·7470, EXT.
$290/Mo ~ ~Oeposll Required, 1·
JET
B336
888·840-o52t •
AERATION MOTORS
-'--'------'--:-::--::
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabull1 In Stock CARS FROM $29/MO. Buy Po·
Countr~slda Apartmanla , Nice 2
Gall Ron Evans, 1·800-537·9528,
Ilea Impounds /Repos Fee. For
BedrOoms, 1 Bath, CIA, WID
$365/Mo, House S.lze 2 Bed·
/Payment Detell Calt t · •
- ---:-=--::::::-::-::-::::-:--::::flistlnga
rooms, 2·Baths, $435/Mo., 1-888· WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT lf00.3t9·3323l&lt;2t56.
840-0521 .
• NO CASH?? MMX Tochnolpgy
Trucks for'Sale
•
We Finance With
Oownt Pa&amp;l
Fumlshod 2 Rooms &amp; Beth Show·
Credit Problems OKII Even If 199Q Model, Ford Ranger. 4
er, Downstairs, Clean, No Pels,
Turned Down Beforell Reestablish Wheel Drive, Automatic TransOeposU &amp; References Required;
Your Cradlut 1·800-659-0359
mtssion.
Good
Condition . ' •
740-446-t5t9.
(304)675-3354.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Gracious ltving. 1 and 2 bedroom
t997 Ford Ranger XLT, V-8, auto. ·
apartments at vmage Manor and
Huge Jnventory, Discount Prices, blue, amlfm cassette. bedllner,,
Riverside Apanmants In MiddleQn VInyl S~irtlng, Doors, Wind· aluminum wheels, air, left front
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
owa; Anchors, Wat!U Heaters, wheel damage, .t2,2M mllu, ask· •
1192-li084 Equal Houslrig Oppor·
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Fur- lng $4750, 740· 992-t506 dayo, .,
tunltlts.
naces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts 740-949·2644 evenings &amp; wee· ,1
Mob11e Home Sup,:~ty, 740·446· kands.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
9416,
740·44&amp;-0390.
GMC, t969, Sierra Fuii·Pkg.; 2
New Mlllentum Dietl Eat All Day Wheel Drive, 1/2Ton, 14,700.:
Mbdern t BR Aft Utllltloa Paid
And Melt Away, Cell Tracy AI t982, 300 FD Morcedeo, Auto ..
Except Electrlo. Gallipolis Ferry
740-44t·t982,
Fuii·Pkg. Turbo, 5 Cyl,. Newly r
Area . $250 month + Deposit.
Rebuilt Engine, $3.000 (304)675·
(304)675-t37t/675-3230.
Prlmaatar/ DlrocTV. "Christmes 2897.
Giveaway•. Ltmlttd ouppty 600·
Nice 1 &amp; 2,bedroom apartmenla,
263-2640.
730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
A/C, aqulpped kitchens, tn Po·
meroy &amp; Middleport. Call 740·
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
982-695t, dopoalt and relortn0011
raQUirad.
Tappen HI Elllclency 90% Gas
Furnace&amp;, 011 Furnaces, 12 Seer
t Bedroom, Vory Clean. S215,por
Heat
Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
month . Call evenings or leave
Systams Free 8 Year Parts &amp; La·
mesaage: (304)675-4975
bor warranty Bennena Healing 1
COI&gt;IIng, t •B00-872·5987.
Nice 2BR ~partment with gora{jlt.
Mason. 1300 + utilities &amp; securt·
Ron's Gun Shop, 74o-742·84t2.
1y deposit. (304)875-t9tt.

Apartment lor rant in Pomeroy, no
pets, 740-992·5858.

510

420

sees.

992·2218 .

Pilot Program. Renters Needed, ·
304-736-7295.
Three bedroom all electric ranch
home with attached garage,
lanced Dock y4rd, large tot, at
Meadow Land Eatatea, Pt Pleai·
ant, $600 month plua references
and dopoolt, 304-824-2410., d

Homea

tat MONTH FREEl! NEW Inter·
for Sale
net Servlcal GUARANTEED Lo·
cal Or TOLL·FREE Acceull
$1!J .95 Per Month Unlimited t888 'Redmon Danvlllt• 14x70
I,Jaage Aepr.sentatlvea WANT· ' AIIO H11 Expondo, Very NICI,
tOll High Payoutl With High DE· Ntw Halt P~mp. 114,000, 740·
MMDStl CALL t-589-60t4
38H33S,
:
~

eronces/Oopoolt
Required.
7 7783
(:!04)6 5·
440 Apartments
for Rent

Houllng Opportunity

7~!!548.

320

HUa Approved $295 month Ref·

SSBAD CREDIT? Got ~aah
Loano To $5,000 . Debt Conooll·
dation To $200,000. Credit Cords,
Mortgages, Refinancing And
Auto Loans Available . Meridian
Credit Corp. 1-800-47t-5tt9 E•t.
1180
•
"WATERLESS COOKWARE" .
Home Demonstrarlon KIM High·
181 Quality .• American Made.·
NOT Korean Normally, 11,500,
5a1Nng,
t-eoo-421-7267.

Newly Remodeled, · 2BR, Untur·
nlshed, Houao lor Rent New Ha·
van area. Deposit/Reference Requlred (304)875-3469, allar 5PM

This Beautiful 4 Bedrooms, 2 112
eath Home Sitting On The Ohio
Rlvor. Huge Country Kitchen,
P•achtree Wlndow1, .New R•'
,
•
ducid Priea. $208,000' Eveq, Dot•' TWo bedroom hflll.. In Portlllnd,
lo·74Q.88M32S.
, l ... wooa heat, S30P par month Qluo

STOP RENTINGIII OWN For
LESS! NO MONEY DOW('II Crtcllt .
Noadodl Guaranteed Approvatt,
CA~L NOW! t·aoct-~ Ell1.
81!f.
·,

Merchandise

446-01108.

"f, no pots, 740-1192·5858.

740-446-1794.

, COUNTII't' HOME

for Rent

Five room house for rent wiga· 'Now Teklng Appllcatlooa: 35
rage. You pay utlllUes. Oepoalt &amp; ' West 2 Bedroom ~ Townhouse
retorenco required 304-875-2535.
Apartments, lnctudea Water
2 or 3 bedroom house In Pamer· Sewage, T~lh, $3t5/Mo , 740·

3 BedroOms, 2 Baths, Hardwood
Floors, Some Carpel, Fully
Equipped Kitchen, Large Vard,
Depostt &amp; References, $!500/Mo.,

Do

Georges Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your toga to the mill juat call
304-ll75-t957

.

Anthony Land Company. LTO.
WtiW couOIM\Ima rom

limitation or diSalmlnrllloo •

NEW MILLENNIUM DIETl Success Guaranteed. High Protein f
Low Carbo. Eat All O.ay .. Melt
Away! 970.870.2628.

foJLANDI
Even tt ns L~tod
20 ·500 Acres
Coli Ryan

·.

make Slt'f IUch preference,

wv

,.
EMPLOVERM/FDY , ,
~ F~EE ~VIRCNM~

Real Estate
Wanted

Part-time receptionist, must be
peraonable, have telephone
lkiiiB, able to deal with the publk:
handle general oHice duties,
· Pomeroy area. Send resume to.
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 729·88,
Pomeroy. Oh 46789.

Person to assist with mUiclng &amp;
general farm work on local dairy
~espond wlbrlef resume + 3 references to: ML09, Point P_lel~~~~!
Register. 200 Matn Street,
Pieala'",
25550.

f.!
~1:HECK OUT OUR WEB&amp;rrE
, ' WWW.84LUMBER.COII

HOME OXYGEN

360

ARE '!OU CONNECTEO?
INTERNET USERS WANTEOI
S300·$tlOO/WMk .
' Hl88-220-20t3
www. tnternet·SUCCfil.net

It 84 LUMBER CDMPANY
~

HOusakeeper!Companlon for
disabled untor In Ripley. Light·
Housework/cooking . Muat have
driver's license, car provided.
Prater live-ln. C~ll Sher·
ee,(304)875.Q867

Moms Wanted: America 's 11
Home Business Moma Work At
Home, Free Casutte, 1-888·6t3·
527!. .

•

"

Home Health Care
Ohio Inc.. now hiring
Nursing and Register Nurses, caa
t·740·867-60t0 Monday thru Frl·
day, 8-4

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Excel·
lent S $ S I Processing Claims
From Homo. Full Training Provld·
ed Computer Required· Call
Medi·Pros Toll Free. 1·888·313·
6049 Eld. 3t25.
•

~;~)!.',!'~-~:,company Is Looking

HOME OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

NO-TAL

Scenic, Close To GaHipoUs. Some
Restrlcttona. 740.245-5776.
20A1:RES
Off SR 7 South 01 GoHipolls. SA .
..
2t8 &amp; Neighborhood Road ~roa.
Ro~h &amp; Wooded, Road Cut ln.
NEE S TLO, Slnglewldaa AllOwed
$2,300 Down
MEIGS COUNTY
Up To t? Acre Tracts F,or Rt·
creation Or Realde"tlal. Off SA
t24, 20 Minute• From Rio
Grande. $9.500 +. $950 Down,
Lend Contract Available AN THONY LANO CO .. LTD 1-800·
2t3-8365 For FREE Maps

All Yard Saloo Muot Be Pold tn
AdY!Inoo. Deodllne: 1:OOpm tile

. '
MA~~RTfiAINEE
•
:'
:
"· •
' '

Six Acres, more or less, w/new
28x48 Barn, w/2 water tap&amp;, Mas·
sey Ferguson 150 Diesel w/End·
Loader. Power Steering &amp; Iota of,
1
nt N
B h Hog
extra equ P~ · ew rua
'
Plow,, Disks, G(ader Blade
1994 300 4·Wheel Orlve w/Snow
Plow. t977 t4x70 w/lot at Pty·
G It'
F
male Lane, a polis erry on
Mlllatono Rd , Apple Grove Call
In Mornings, (304)576·3033
350 Lot. &amp; Acreage

· Galllpol s
&amp; VIcinity

~LUMBER

212 EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH.

Y~ung,

TRANSPORTATION

r-~~~~;=~~~=t::=;;:::;:;=~~====1
420 Mobile Homes ·
540 Miscellaneous
710

0181.
Nice 2BR MoblleHome, Mason,

Bel ween Galllpolta &amp; Jackson,
Near Thurman, Beautiful Rolling
M•adows: With Lots Of ROad
FrontagJ. 6 Acres With 1 Acre
Pond. Awesome Building SUe Be·
hind Pond. Prices Start At
$12,500 Land Contracts Avail·
able Free Maps. ANTHONY
LAND CO., LTO t·800-2t3-8365. .

green collar. Flalwoods-Pomeroy
Plt&lt;e and s Points area. any Info.

-the

Sl!'OI&amp; ' Wide Clearance $9.99
Faxed Raft Save Thousands,
Farm. for Sale

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

"H you'N gonna buy • 'flattpece, buy onel
Don't liMp drawl!'llatl
mirrors."

2 Bedrooms, In Kanauga, Beau~
ful River VIew, No Pets, 74o-44t·

no 10 ACRES

(740) 367-7017 Very 5anllll1enl81t

Help Wanted

Pictured left to right an: Harold Hysell, RSVP Volunteer; Clay
Crow and EIU•b Roush. Clay 1nd Elijah are firemen with the
Pomeroy Fire Department who bel~d RSVP volunteer Harold
Jlysell Install smoke detecton and carbon monoxide detec'ton I• the .
homes of older adults In Meigs County. HArold and other RSVP volunteers Installed detectors In 42 homes with funds from Walmart,
Tbe Emeflllency Planning Agency and the Meigs County Cou11eU on
Aging, Inc. .

12·13

Repoa, Single &amp; OoubleWide. 1·
868-928-9898.

330

Wel:tdlng Band on safnEi Chain •

HEAP·---....,..
Assistance

2601

2 Bedroom TraMer In small troller
Park; Deposit and Roloranco Re·
qulrodl Phone (740)-4-46-tt04
2 Bedrooms I300JMp , Electric
No Pots, Deposit, 740-387.()6tt. .

=-~~~L~=::30ak;

LQstl 6 Keys wrth Bulterlty and

BBQ Chicken Fillet

Green Beans

The Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m. until
4:30 p.m. Regularly schecluled
activities held throughout the week
include sewing, quilting pool,
bingo, cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost is
$1.00 per session attended. The
Knitting
Circle .meets on
Wednesday from 10:00 a.m. until
noon.
All older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and pick what you
want from the a Ia carte menu or
you can eat the regular meal.
January 25--10:45 a.m. Lisa
Koch,
Licensed
Clinical
Audiologist, will present a program
on "1-jearing Aids &amp; Dizziness."
February 10--11:00 a.m.
Darren
Hayes,
Exercise
PhysiOlogist, will speak about cardiac rehab.
Pace Class (Persons With
Arthritis Can Exercise) is scheduled for January 4, 11, 18, .&amp; 25 at
I :00 p.m. TI.I.i~ class can be done in
a chair ari~f includes range of
motion, strengthening, balance and
coordina!ion.
Social Security
A representative from the
Athens Social Securily Office is at
the Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center to assist persons with"Social
Secunty problems and to provide
information. The dates are January
12 &amp; 26 and February 9 &amp; 23, from
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Support Groups
•
The Arthritis Support Group
meets on the third Friday of each
month from 10:00 a.m. until II :30
a.m. The January meeting will be a
planning session for activities and
speakers for February - Decem.ber
2000. The Arthritis Support Group
is made possible through funds
from the Ohio Department of
Health and Ohio Oniversi!Y.
The Caring and Sharing
Support Group ~ill continue to
meet the fourth Thursday of each
inonth at, the Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center. The
topic at the January 27 meeting will
be "Eye Care" in celebration of
National Eye Awareness Month.
At the February 24 meeting we
will have a "Heart to Heart" discussion since February is Heart Month.
Bring your questions for' discussion:
The speaker 1 will be
announced. ·
The Support Group is open to
all caregivers or to anyone who
wants to learn more about disease
processes and/or caregiving. For
more information, contact Lenora
Leifheit, RNC at 992-2161.
Onr 55 Exerdle ClaiiS
The ongoing exercise class for
persons age 55 and over is held on

Sweet Potatoes

at betWeen Redmond Ridge

l

Braad

27
Scallo~

Peach Crisp

award""

Beef Stew

Pineapple Upside

Creamed Potatoes

Roll

LQaf

Musical
Instruments

New Gibson Night Hawk electric
Guitar w1th Case. Cost S t ,1 99
' new; will •ell $650.00 (740)·379·

Now t8 Wide, 4BR/2BA, tow
down payment, only $245 par
mo Free Air, Free 13.1drt. 1·800·
69t.-6777.
•

28 .

.

25

New 14 Wide, law down paymont, $175 per 100. 'Free Air, Free
Skirt, H!OIHI9t.Sl'77

"

27

Down Cake

Meat Loaf

Home for the Holidays on a Mce
Lot.AitUtt~iea 1·(304)-796-7295

· Tossed Salad

Pudding

Roll

Apple Dumpling/Ice Cream

Meat Sauce

·'
Cabbage

570

OoubloWide, 3BR/2BA, oniYJ
$287 per mo w/Low down payment. Fr.. Air t·800-69t.em.

0

Pets for Sale

Young Registered Cream Colored
Female Persian, Declawod. 'St25 .
Bundy Trumpet 1250 OBO 740·
446-7573.

Double Wide Sal-Up tn Tho
Country. No Payments For 90
Days Only 0 OOkwood -Gallipo·
118, 740-446-3093,

\

Tomato Juice

Creamed Peas

Cole Slaw

Spaghetti With

Scalloped Potatoes

560

92 Clayton 1BxBO; 3 BedrooMs,
Hut Pump, Good CGndltlon.
$t6,000 .00 OBO (740)·256·t8 t 8
(740)-258-t252

&amp; Oranges

Bread

.24

&amp;

•
)

Green Beans

20
Mashed Po.tatoes

Bananas

Framing Lufrbor, ~.e. 2-8, 2· t0, 2·
12. Treated Po sts, Trueaa 28 Fl
Shingles, 20o/oOff, 74o-44t..0279.

rooms. 1 large Bath wiU\. Garden
Tub, Stove &amp; Retrlg, Central Air,
E•cel. Condlllon, lt5.500 .00
(740)-44t-o91111

(Ham, cabbage,

Bread

Oven Fried Chicken

&amp; Gravy

&amp; Gra

Block, briclc , sewer plpea, * ind·
owa , lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5t21. .

1986 Overland 14x701t. 2·Bed·

Cookie

&amp; Gra

Roll

18

1974·12x6o au alectrtc. washer,
dryer, retrlgerator, oven, curtains,
couch and chair, two window air
conditioners, In Portland, read}: lo
move, $3500, 740·843-53tO days
or 740-843-5t471M!nlngs

New England Dinner

Brussel Sprouts

Pumpkin Pie

'

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter·
net Users Wantedl $350 •$800 f
Wetlc · 1·888·858·9338 www.eblz·
dream net

14

Baked Steak

with Cheese

$2 ,000 .00 off Stloctod Single
Wide Hom11. Super Low Pay·
me.ntal Oak Wood Homes , Bar·
boursville, Wv 1·(304)·736·7295
or t -(304)·736-2395

Graham Crackers .

13

Broccoli with Cheese

Biscuit

Orange

Harvard Beets

;

Baked Porkette

over Noodles

Mixed Vegetables

Tropical Mixed Fruit

,A ltOO.OOO +/Yr BualntUI
CASHI cASH! CASHI This ts Not
A Jot&gt;. $5.000 Roq. Wort&lt; 5 Hro I
Wk . Free tnfo t-800·991·9888
Eld. It 55 (24 Hll).
•

t - - - - - - - : 1 : i 7r--------:1::8:1------~1:::19r--------:2:::01--------:::2~1 ~

Meat Balls in Gravy

.

Bread Pudding

12

Macaroni and Cheese

Buttered Com

Bread

Braad ·

11
Craamed Tomatoes

Mashed Potatoes

Hungarian Pork Chop

Mashed Pqtatoes

Fruit Cocktail in

•

11

.

Tossed Salad

Biscuit

,Mashed Potatoes

..

.

Rice Pilaf

Buttered Peas

Fruit Cocktail

.

Che_ll}' Topping

Noildlea

Crackers

Braad

Texas Sheet Cake

Cheesecake with

Lemon Lush

Liver

Meat BaHs on ·.

Potato Casserole

.

HERMAN• by Jim UIJIII'r

7

Ham and Scalloped

•

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

Garlic Bread
I

Beef Soup

Pimento Cheese

JANUARY MENUS

6
Sala~

Vegetable

I

Scrambled Eggs

••

-

Tossed

5

Hash Brown Potatoes

10

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes

Sausage f.'atty

SENIOR CENTER

The Senior Nutrilion Program
ed to provide a nutritional meal at a
evening meal will be served on • reasonable cost. Dollars generated
Tuesday and Thursday with serving
will be used to support the e.isting•
from 4:45 to 5:30 p.m. A suggestlunch and home delivered meal
ed donation for the evening meal is
program.
$4.00. The evening meal is intend-

....

..

MEIGS

KIT 'N' CARLVLE e by Larry Wrlelrt

-.

\'

�•
I

•
Page

A6 • The Dally Sentinel

•

-

Middleport, Ohio

~~y. January 3, 2000

20100'

Monday, .January

Pomeroy, Mlddlfport, Ohio

\
.• - - -· - !... ... --- --

Evening Meals
. '

TUESDAY

.

THURSDAY

.

.
4
.

.

&amp; Gravy

Green Beans
Roll

..

&amp; Onions

Orange Juice

Red Gelatin • Brownie

.

Green Beans

Scalloped Chicken

Brocco~

Mashed Potatoes

.

.

13
.'

Roast Beef with

Buttered Carrots

potatoes, carrots)

Bread

Bread

Braad

Biscuit

Peach Slices

Pu!l)le Plums

Pineapple

Beefand Noodles

Hamburger

Cauliflower

Broccoli

on ~un

BBQ Chicken Fillet

Soup

Sandwich Plate·

Mandarin Oranges

Applesauce

Br8ad

Garlic Braad

Apricots

in Orange Gelatin .

Peachy Creamy

Tropical Mixed Fruit

Cooked

25

·Swiss Steak

Chicken Cacciatore

Mashed Potatoes

Mashed Potatoes

Spinach

Gravy

Peas

28
Salmon Patty
Lyonnaise

&amp; Carrots

Ham

Potal~s

Cole Slaw

a d Crab Cr'eek, 4 Month Old
lte Bo•er Pup. Caii(:I04)675·
2 tS/1304)675·1543.

BuHered Cam

Mixed Vetgetables

Biscuit

Bread

Bread

Braad

Peaches

Banana

.Orange Juice

Blushing Pears

Pineapple

F'und large Black Male La·

Rocky Road Pudding

bflldor Broke Hj&amp; Chain, No Tags,
0}1 State Route 2t8, 740·446-'

~

•

Cake

"

"

The Home Energy
name.
'Program (HEAP) is a federally A household applying for HEAP:_:
funded program administered by must report total household.income : \
the
Ohio
Department
of for the past 12 months for all per- ·Development,
"Office
of sons 18 years of age and older.
Community Services (OCS). It is Both homeowners and renters are
designed to help eligible low- eligible for assistance from HEAP. · '
income Ohioans meet the high Applications will be accepted until
costs of home heating. HEAP pays March 31, 2000.
·
a one-time payment for most Applications may be picked UJJ" at
PUCO regulated utility customers . the Multipurpose Senior Center:
reflecting their usage for the cur- Home visits to assist any disabled
rent winter heating season. or homebound person can be Vouchers are issued to non-regulat- arranged. If you have questions or
ed utility customers, master- need assistance call Darla Hawley
metered and other applicants who at 992-2161.
do not have a utility . bill in their

Lima Beans and Com

Potatoes

Roll
Pistache Pudding

.

I

January Activities
Monday and Wednesday from 3:00
p.m. - 3:45 p.m. through March.
This class consists of stretching and
bending exercises for • flexibility
and mild aerobics (walking and
arm movements) for cardiovascular
strengthening. T)lere is no registration required for the class and the
$1.00 per person charge will be collected on the day you attend class.
New members are welcome to
attend.
'Evening Dlnnen
Are you looking for a night
away from cooking? Come join us
every Tuesday and Thursday for
dinner. .Serving starts at 4:45 p.m.
and continues until 5:30 p.m. The
suggested donation for the meal is

_...)&lt;0)().

1111 Chi Classes
Tai Chi classes will continue
every Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Center through February. Tai Chi
teaches balance and relaxation
techniques. Ramona Compton is
the instructor and there is no charge
for the classes. The class will last
one hour. Note: No class will be
held on January 13 &amp; February 3.
Birthday Party
Will you celebrate a. birthday
in January or February? If so,
s:ome join us for the monthly birth·
day parties to be held Bn January 27
and February 24. Happy Birthday!
llelfnnlng Art auses
Carol Tannehill ·will be the
instructor for Beginning Art
Classes to be held on January 10,
If, &amp; 24...These classes will begin
at I :00 p.m. There is . a $3.00
charge per class. For more infor·
mation, you may contact Patty
Pickens at 992-2161.
Eye Care Month .
Dr. James Schmoll will be the
speaker on Janull)' 20 concerning

A ClaiiS In making raibaske,ts was held recently·at the Meigs Senior
Center. Shown are (left) June Ashley, teacher and Dorothy
Anthony, student. June bas helped with the Yesteryear Program
since II began fifteen yean ago and teaches fifth graden how to
make a ragbasllet.
·
"Eye Diseases &amp; Glaucoma" Dr.
Schmoll will speak at 11:00 a.m.
Card &lt;;:lub
Do you like to play Euchre,
Bridge, Rook, etc.? Bring a friend
and let's get started. If you are
interested in having a fun time
playing cards, come to the Center
on January 20 and February 20 at
1:00 p.m. We'll play whatever you
want to!
Interested In lnvestmeilts?
Elizebeth
A.
Schaad,
Investment Representative, wiiJ
speak on January II at 10:45 a.m.
concerning "Ten Investment and
Financial Risks." A question and
answer oeriod will follow.
Recipe Club
Do you have lots and lots of
recipes you could share? If you
like to cook and enjoy •eating, mark
you calendar for January 11 at 2:00
p.m. Bring a recipe or two to trade
with others. Come taste and see
what is new to cook.
Forclng·Bulbs
Put on a happy face and let's,
get ready for spring. Hal Knecn,
OSU Extension Office, will show
-

~

-

- -

~&amp;Oifp '

you how to force bulbs. He will be
here on January 13 at II :00 a.m.
and at 4:15 p.m. (at the Evening
Dinner) to demonstrate the how
to's on th!s subject.
. '
Computers &amp; the Internet
"Opening New wm&lt;fows on
the World" will be shown on video
at the Center on January 27 at
,10:15 a.m. This instructional video
was developed · specifically for
seniors. Join us·forthe video if you
would like to: •
•Take the mystery out of computers
and the Internet.
•Translate technical jargon into
every day terms.
•See examples of how the Internet
can be used to explore areas of personal interest and communicate
with friends and family via e-mail.
Running Time: 45 minutes.
Blood Pressure Clinics
Cross'polnte'..January 13 ' &amp;
February 10 from 1:30 p.m. • 2;00
p.m. , .
Harrisonville Senior Center--No
meeting in January or February.
Center--January 19 &amp; February 17
from 9:30 a.m. • It :00 a.m.

WE HONOR

. 'Q'J~eler.t

..'

HEAP~~--'. ;.

Emergency

The HEAP Emergency Assistance
guidelines and emergency. require:. ;,~
Program was created to provide
ments must·be met. The total gross
financial assistance to low income
household income must be at or • :
households that are threatened with
below 150% of the federally estab- . •
disconnection of their heating · lished poverty guidelines.
, ·;
source, have already had service
Individuals interested in applying •
disconnected, or have less than a
for Emergency HEAP must go to .
ten day supply of bulk fuel.
the Gallia·Meigs Community :·
Emergency HEAP allows a oneAction Agency.
;~
time ~ayment per heating season of
Home visits can GC arranged to - .
•up to $175.00 to restore or continue
assist the disabled or homebound ~:;
home heating service. To be eligi-. unable to j!et into the intake site.
·•
ble for the
both income

6~.

.

·992-3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

light golde~ .Retriever,

7411-992-68t0

70o

•

Yard Sale

.==::::::=::1=
lli Vord Soleo Mutt
Be Pold In Advonco.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
tile cloy befonl ""' ad
' • 11 to n1n. Sundly
l!dltlon- 2:00 p.m .
. , Frlcloy. Mondoy odltlon .
·tO:OOo.m. Sotunloy.
Pomeroy,
Middleport

2.44 Acres, Homesite, Green
Township, Gallla County, · Flet,

&amp; VIcinity

,,

•

r--.=;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~

d..,_, before the

1d~

ls"to''run,

S!lndoy &amp; Monday edttlont :OOpm Frlctoy. ,

80

Auction
". and Flea Market

BIII .Moodlspaugh Auctioneering·
complele aut:Jion service. Buy
and sell estates. Ohio License
176~.
t338, 740-989·2623.

wv

Wetfemeyer's Auction Service ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-2720.

90

Wantad to ~uy

Ab"''lute Top Oollar All U S Sll·
v11 And Gold Co1ns, Proofsets,

Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
I
Pre. t930 U.S Currency,
St¥itng,, Etc. Aoqui!ltlons Jewelry
1 Shop. 151 Second
AW•,uo.l:laltlpolls,, 740.446-2842.

' Minded Individuals
Its
Tra1n1ng Program In The Gallipolis Ferry
(0414) Area. Manager Trainees
Earn Betwe.n $23,000 ·$28,000
Par Year E!a~allts tnctudo Health
And Denial Plans~ Disability And
Life lnsura~ce, As wen As 401 K
And Profit Sharing ,Plans. 84 Lum·
bar Promotes From 1Within With
C'-Managors· Earntn,i t $30,000 •
$40,000 And Manager Earning
$40,000 ·$80,000 II You Enjoy A
blnation 01 Working With
ople, Hands ·On Work, And
los, You May ~ulllly. No
owtodgo Of Building Materials
...ry College Proferrod, Bill
t Necessary. Training WUI Be

o

=
to

SEE: CHAD sUMMERS
WED JAN 5 THR JAN I
2 P.M. -II P.M.

4~APPLY AT:

I'ATIIIIT Ltnl

WMIIL DMAIIIS

OliYOIII

Seroing The Community W'uh Care For 15 Yean

SALES, RENTAL$
&amp; REPAIRS
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIRS
BATH SAFETY EQUIPMENT
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
HOSPrrAL BEDS
!JFTCHAIRS
STAll! ~DI!S ,
•OSTOMY
'
• DIAPI!RI A CHUXB

0,

ROUTEJ BOX 84A
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV

'

EMAIL ADORESS:
J0BS084LUM,BER.CDM

~

•'~ ~ AN EQUAL OPPOIITUN1TY
~
ADVERTISING
~ SALES REPRESENTATIVE

.'I Hr

I

lk we~~'e•iabl- ~.Co­

.

~Ff'IV'NG TRt·COOifr;t AREA

Con)mtlllcalloh '•
~
1il .. ha'iJ good
iiUifs
•

"' ;

Lrll('!(,l IllY Sr'IV I(P

.

'

I

'

1

'

•

l

I ,.

~uat h8'¥'e good dnvlng record
•• ·~ own Transpol'taliQn
uti liM abiiJty to be a TEAM
.~

player

.,

''Sind RoliJIIif lo:

. 1480 Jackson Pike
. Gallipolis, DH

" ust Minutes

..

m Holzer" "

Gollj&gt;cjlls Doily Tribune,

~!: ~-Rep

h 1'1'
1-l:OO- I I .1 -:.':.'0h

~

Toll

-Uii

825 Third
Gaitlpolla, OH 4563t

Wt Pay CA&amp;II·

WILDLIFE JOBS To $2t 60 /HR.
INC BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS,
SECURITY,
MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
El&lt;P NEEDED. FOR APP AND
EXAM INFQ. CALL t·B00·8t3·
3585. EXT. 142tt . 8 AM. ·9 PM.
7 OAYS Ids, Inc.

140

Buslnna
Training

8001213-8385

150

Schooll

Instruction

All real estate advertising In
thlo newspaper" StJb(ect1o
the Federal Fair HOIJSing Ar1.
of t !168 which makes It Mlegal
to advanlae ' any preterenco,
limitation or discrimination
based on race. color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention 10 ·

RENTALS

1 or 2 Bedroom: Near Wai-Mart
References, Deposit Required.
Utilities Paid. No Petsl (740)·245·

5693
10 Rooms. 5 Bedoroma, 2 Bath
HOUII, Rio Grande, $500/MO., +

This - r wilt not
knowingly accePI
advertisements tor rest estate
which Is In violation of the .
taw Our readers ani hereby
Informed thai aU dWellings
actvM~ied In thle newspaper
ara available on an equal
rtun"" boala

U~l11ea.

' EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors,
Maste:ra, Doctorate, .By Corre·
oi&gt;Ondonce Belod Upon Prior Ed·
Uc:atlon And Short Study Caurn.
For FREE Information Booktell~~!!"o~ppo~~"~'~!!"·~~
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t·lf00.964-83t6.

OHIO OPERATING
-ENGINEERS LOCAL 11
APPRENTICESHIP Ill
CONSTRUCTION .
Men and Women, ages 18 and
owr, learn to QPerale and repa1r
earth movlng.machlnes
and cranes.
Appllcallon datoa:
January t7, t8, t9, and
January 27, 28, 29, 2000
From 9;()() A.M To 3:00 P.M.

REAL ESTATE

180

W1ntedTo

Appllcallon Foe:'
$tO 00 non·rofu,.,_
·Contact: Ohio Oparatilig
l!rigtneors Tralolng Center
Phone: (888)·385·2587
EO.E.

Handyman Service, 740·256·
6t20.
Jlma Drywall &amp; Construction.
· New Construction &amp; Aemodelf
Drywall, Siding, Roofs, Addl·
tiona, Pai~Ung , otc . (304)6744623 or (304)674.0155.
Local teacher will do afler schOol
tutoring and ovanlng baby !ltllng,
call after 4pm, 740-992·9807.

,I

FINANCIAL

':':':-'--=---::--:-::--21 o

Point Pleasant EMS Ia currently
seeking applicants for the poal·
tlons of EMT &amp; Paramedics. FuiV
part·llme positions available. Ap·
pllcatlons may be completed at
2308 Joltorson Avenue. Pt,

BuslneBB
Opportunity

1

P1tasa!'l,

~l'o,;;&amp;:;:ta:;:_lJo7-:b,-$~4:!8~.32i3~.00:::-;Y-;:r.::::N::ow:: I
~fling ·No Experience ·Paid
Training -Groat llonoflta, Oat! 7
oaya 800·429-3860 Ext J:365
POSTAL JOBS To $t8.35 ii!R.
tNC. BENEFITS. NO EXPERt·
ENCE . FOR APP. AND ' EXAM
INFO CALL t-600·8t3·3586,
EXT 142t0. 8 -A M, · 9 r: ~ · · 7
DAYS fda. inc,
•
.._.
POSTAL JO~S Up To $t7.2t/Hr.
Guaranteed Hlfe. For Applk:atlon
And E- lolormatlon Call 8 A.M.
• 9 P.M. M·E 1.....8..·HZ7 El!,l,
2+t007.

$100 Per Hoyr. Homeworker&amp;
Needed! Larga Advartlamg Firm
Pays $4 For every Voice-Mall
RetriO\Iod. Make $400 ·$500 Eve·
ryday tn Your Spare Ttme. 'Ltrultl!d

Space.,t·Bif!-7411-0007 (2&gt;1 Hll).
INOncll
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommendt that
dO bUllnelS with people
NOT to aond
Qlail until you
~~-

1

310

740-367-7475.

2 Bedroom House Reference/
Deposit. No Pets. $325 a month.
(304)675-2749.

Homes for Sale

Near Rio Granda. 2 BA 1 1/2
Batha, Full Baaament./ New Septic
System, Excetlem Condlllon. Briel&lt;
&amp; Vl~yt Bt-ll'ovol. Haa Barn &amp;
Stvtrat Outbuildings. County
Water, Great Buy, $87,200, Call
' ·
:g;5, Appointment. t·800·.• t3·

3 Bedi"oomt, 2 Bath HouH, Ga·
rage &amp; Baument. Hud Approved!
7t Texas Rd. Call: (740)·448·

0008.

·

Houle And Trailer, 2 •Bedrobma
EaCh. Ro~oncos and Depoalt Requlrad. Water And Trash Paid.

7-40'388-ttOO.

:.::..:=::=;_:-:=--

FORECLOSED HOMES. Low Or 0 (
Down! Govn't And Bank Repo'a
House For flnt , $350.oo per
Baing Said Now! Financing Avail· month, 3 rotrencos required. 740.
able. Call Nowl t -800·355·0024, 446-tt.:!.
•

Ext 8040
HOMES FROM $tvt.30 /Mo. t •
3 BR Repos /Foreclosures. Fee.
4% Down. For Llatlnga/ Payment
Do18Ns t -800-7t9-300t xtttls.
Nice Home, Plenty of Room , 3
Bedroom, Brick. Reduced Price.

(304~73-9485.

Owner Says

sau. Bring 011a11 For

Mobile

2 Bun~ Beds With Mattresaaa &amp;
Shoots, Like New. t2 Foot Boat
With Troller. Trolling Motor, Bat·
tery. Flah Finder. 740-388-t 722

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, 1\Jr·
nllhed and unfurnished, security
depoalt required, no peta, 740·

Bulk Foods, Spices, Candles,
Cheese, Butter, Trail Bologna,
715 Bulk Foods. 5184 S.A. 775,
Patr1ot.

1 Bedroom, Near Arbors Nursing
Homo, Economical Utilities, Culet
LocaUon. $279/Mo., + Utilitios, No
Pets, 74o-446-2957.

2 ' bedroom apartment (down·
stairs), S250 per fl'lonth plus utiM·
ties &amp; depoalt, Third Street,
Racine. 7"·247·4292
"'t\1

•

•

X'

.,.

448-0390.

· ..

•

•

'

, I

•

' 'r

\.

,

t994 cavalier, 2 door, 4 cyl., 5 :
speed, C 0 . Player, A/C. $3000 1
080 (304)675-6693.
•

8 LS·1 Engine.

I

a·

Six panel poor • 24" x 79 314"
. $15. Call 7.40-446·4548. 740·446·
7375.

720

740

..

Motorcycles

Two bedroom apartment In Ml~-1
dteport. all utllltios paid, $325 per
month plu4·StDO deposit, 740·

810
Home
-:-::-l_m-:,..p-.ro_v:-:e'::"ma-:::-:n~t-:-B:-:-:-::

836-4052.

~-7800.

'

vutage ·Groen Apartmonto· 2
bedrooma, total oloctrlc, appllorxi·
•• turn..htd,' taunHry, 100m loclll·
Ui1 and to achoot, applications
available at ofllco, 740·982·37tt
TOO 1-688·233·8694. Equal

6

STEEL BUILDI!iGS • 5 ONLYI 2)
25X30, 30X40, 2) 45X90 . Mu&amp;t
Movel Selling for Balance Owedl
t·800-2tt·9594 X.t5,

Tal!galo. Fits 1898 And Newer
Ford F·Serlto Pidlups. Came Oil
Of A 19119 F-350 SuperDuty. Ex·
cenent Conduton1 $150, Call 7.t0·
4546.'740-448-7375. ·

ue

Two t5' MTX Subs: F.our t2'
MTX Sub wooftre; Two 1 2"
PIOneer Sibs Excolent CondMion,
$450 For Tho Set: Must Sell All
Together: 15' 400 Watt Each,
740-448-3909.

MERCHANDISE
Hiluaehold
Goods
Appliances
Aeconditlbned
Washers; Dryers, Ranges,, Refrl·
gr1lora, 90 ' Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740·446·

77115.

wantod to ~UJI· Natfvtty ut, mult
be c;ompltte life 1lze eet, 740·
992·2328.

Buy or 1111 . Rlvtrlno' Anttquts,
1124 Eat Main 01) SR t2ol E Pomeroy, 140·992·2521, 740;192·
t5311. R... Mo\&gt;ll', OW[IIf.'http://

SERVICES

~':""--:-:---"":"--

~.

··

"'"'

"•
Appliance Parts And Service. AU · ~
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex· :
perlence All Work Guaranteed, .
French City May1ag, 740 -446· 1
7795. '
·•

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence- Painting . vinyl llldlng,
carpentry, doors, windows , baths,
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740·992·

1

,

2
'

6323.
llvlngatoi'J'I Basement Water
Proofing , all basement repalr1
done, hae estimates, ,lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job axperl·
ence (304)895-3887.

'i
..:
, r4

,
·

Electrical and
Retrlgeratlon

'

.

~~~~~~~~~~ ·!

for Sale: Rocondlltonad •. wa&amp;h·

.

Sotweent&gt;tOP.M.

840

'

er•.
dryere andl r1trlgaf4IOrl.
Thompso~s Appliance. 3407

ll3o . ·AntlqUH

t982 Harley Davidson Sporlster

1100 . $6,000 080, 740-258 6008 •

Buying DTV systems with access

cordi. Jwi 740-948-2~.

Reoldentlal or commtrclol wiring, · '.]
new servk:e or repaira. Maater LJ. •
cenaed electrician. Flid•nour · ''"'
Eleetrlcal, WVOOD308, 304·675· ~~ •,
t788.
•:.~

rr---------+-------;,....-11'
SHOP.'HIE · · :;;
'·

., I

CLASSIFIEDSI

ltl-your~.cort\ltl\oi&lt;1no

•

I·

740~ ;

t997, 350 Yamaha Banahee.
Llko
New
$3,000. OBO.
(304)882·2266.

t-IIHte.otaa.

2 lldrmo, Off State Routo teO At
[ ... QIMII . Caii74Q.4.48.~.

1966 Trans-Am 350, Automatic, '
Good Condition, $2,200,

Snow Plow to Fit Cub Ca~t Rl·
dtgn Lawn Mover. Llka .new. used
Spring Valley Groan One Bad- . Once! (740)·367-7560 (740)·367·
7671 •
room Apartments, Apptlancea
Furnllholl, ~ 740'446-t599.
SOCIAL SECURITY biSABILITV
TWin Towers now accepllng ap· · Ctalm Denied? We Spaclallzt In
Al/poals And Htertngo. FREE
•plication&amp; tor t BR. HUD subald·
CONSULTATION. Benefit Team
lzed apt tor elderly and handl·
Servlcu, Inc . Toii· Frte : 1·888·
capped. EOH. (304)67s-6679.
•

rangeo
!ikaggo
?8 '
Vloa Strett,
Ca~ Appttancta,
7~0..~4e·73t8,

,2

1985 Alta Romeo Spidec, convert·'
ible, 5 speed, excellent condition.,
$8900, 740-992·2529 or 132 But·,
tomut, Pomeroy.

· , 1998
Pontiac Trans-Am - 350 V· '
---- - - ·
----

·o·

QOOD USED APPLIANCES
waahara. dr~ara. r•frlatrators,

-"omes,

CARS $tOO, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda'&amp; Toyota 's,
Chevy&amp; . Jeeps, And Spoil Utili·
ties. Call Nowl 800·772·7470 ,
EXT. 7832
·

1997 Camara, loaded with extras,
45.000 miles, 74Q-.869.Q904.

Firewood for sale, S25 truckload,
740·949;0605

=

Jackson Avonue, (304)675-7388.

Mo'bile Home•
for Rent

'

COMPUTERS • Low Or SO Down.
Low Monthly Pay menta.. V2K
Compliant. Almost Everyone Ap·
oved "1-800 617 3478 E t 330

·

$ NO DOWN! NO CREDIT NEED·
EDI GOV'T FORECLOSURES!
GUARANTEED APPROVAL! t .
800-360-4620 El&lt;T 8509

1995 Camero, .V-6 automatic,
custom show car, custom wheels
and dash, black, 71 ,167 mlle1, '
minor front damage, funs and
drlvos, asking $5400, 740-992· ,
t501t days or 740·949·2644 ,
evenings end weekends.

Complete DISH Network aatelllte
system, brand new, $149 Installed
Jreo, 740·992·tt82 or 304· 773·
53Q5 after epm.

pr

Autos for Sale

Automat!~ Trans· (
mlsalon. Factory Chrome Wheels,.
r-Tops , Fully Loaded , 500 Walt
For Sale a Pedestal Table wltb 4 Monsoon Stereo System With 10
.BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Chairs. Super good Condlton. Speakers. t2 Disc CD Changer tn
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
,_,(7.;.40;:)~4.::46::4:;:53:;7_;E:;vea=-.Only=;;:;--:''- Trunk. Casaolte Player' In Dash .
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
Dark Blue Malalllc Paint Dark
from $279 to 1358. Walk to shop
Grubi:S's Plano· tunln!J repairs . Gray Leather Interior, Will Take
&amp; movies . Call 740· 446-2568
Problems? Neacl TUned? Ca,il the PayyoH Or Reasonable OHer. Cali
Equal Housing Opportun~.
::Pia:;no.::.,:D:;:r.::740-446:=.;.::-4::5::25:::--:::::--l 740-446-4548 Or 740-44!1-7375.
Chrlaty'a Family Living, apart·
"'ANITROL HEATtNQ AND
maroon tjr. car, runs great.
82
4
manto, home &amp; trailer rentals,
COOLING EQUIPMENT
$500
4Q.99l!-92t9
7
700·992·45t4, apartmanls ov,llINSTALLED
'
·
)lbl~, ~&amp;unturnlohod.
'If You Don't Call Ua We Both C~RS $tOO ·S5oo: Pollee tm·
Loss. • Free
Close To Rio Grande Campus. t
·~- Eallmartst
t.IJ098 740·446· pounds: HOnda's
u Toyota's,
c
Bedroom. •tt Utilities Included, . 6 308, t·~ 29
.
Jeeps, And Sport tltltles. ALL.
--'---~::-----1
NOWII
t·80tl-772·7470, EXT.
$290/Mo ~ ~Oeposll Required, 1·
JET
B336
888·840-o52t •
AERATION MOTORS
-'--'------'--:-::--::
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabull1 In Stock CARS FROM $29/MO. Buy Po·
Countr~slda Apartmanla , Nice 2
Gall Ron Evans, 1·800-537·9528,
Ilea Impounds /Repos Fee. For
BedrOoms, 1 Bath, CIA, WID
$365/Mo, House S.lze 2 Bed·
/Payment Detell Calt t · •
- ---:-=--::::::-::-::-::::-:--::::flistlnga
rooms, 2·Baths, $435/Mo., 1-888· WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT lf00.3t9·3323l&lt;2t56.
840-0521 .
• NO CASH?? MMX Tochnolpgy
Trucks for'Sale
•
We Finance With
Oownt Pa&amp;l
Fumlshod 2 Rooms &amp; Beth Show·
Credit Problems OKII Even If 199Q Model, Ford Ranger. 4
er, Downstairs, Clean, No Pels,
Turned Down Beforell Reestablish Wheel Drive, Automatic TransOeposU &amp; References Required;
Your Cradlut 1·800-659-0359
mtssion.
Good
Condition . ' •
740-446-t5t9.
(304)675-3354.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Gracious ltving. 1 and 2 bedroom
t997 Ford Ranger XLT, V-8, auto. ·
apartments at vmage Manor and
Huge Jnventory, Discount Prices, blue, amlfm cassette. bedllner,,
Riverside Apanmants In MiddleQn VInyl S~irtlng, Doors, Wind· aluminum wheels, air, left front
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
owa; Anchors, Wat!U Heaters, wheel damage, .t2,2M mllu, ask· •
1192-li084 Equal Houslrig Oppor·
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Fur- lng $4750, 740· 992-t506 dayo, .,
tunltlts.
naces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts 740-949·2644 evenings &amp; wee· ,1
Mob11e Home Sup,:~ty, 740·446· kands.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
9416,
740·44&amp;-0390.
GMC, t969, Sierra Fuii·Pkg.; 2
New Mlllentum Dietl Eat All Day Wheel Drive, 1/2Ton, 14,700.:
Mbdern t BR Aft Utllltloa Paid
And Melt Away, Cell Tracy AI t982, 300 FD Morcedeo, Auto ..
Except Electrlo. Gallipolis Ferry
740-44t·t982,
Fuii·Pkg. Turbo, 5 Cyl,. Newly r
Area . $250 month + Deposit.
Rebuilt Engine, $3.000 (304)675·
(304)675-t37t/675-3230.
Prlmaatar/ DlrocTV. "Christmes 2897.
Giveaway•. Ltmlttd ouppty 600·
Nice 1 &amp; 2,bedroom apartmenla,
263-2640.
730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
A/C, aqulpped kitchens, tn Po·
meroy &amp; Middleport. Call 740·
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
982-695t, dopoalt and relortn0011
raQUirad.
Tappen HI Elllclency 90% Gas
Furnace&amp;, 011 Furnaces, 12 Seer
t Bedroom, Vory Clean. S215,por
Heat
Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
month . Call evenings or leave
Systams Free 8 Year Parts &amp; La·
mesaage: (304)675-4975
bor warranty Bennena Healing 1
COI&gt;IIng, t •B00-872·5987.
Nice 2BR ~partment with gora{jlt.
Mason. 1300 + utilities &amp; securt·
Ron's Gun Shop, 74o-742·84t2.
1y deposit. (304)875-t9tt.

Apartment lor rant in Pomeroy, no
pets, 740-992·5858.

510

420

sees.

992·2218 .

Pilot Program. Renters Needed, ·
304-736-7295.
Three bedroom all electric ranch
home with attached garage,
lanced Dock y4rd, large tot, at
Meadow Land Eatatea, Pt Pleai·
ant, $600 month plua references
and dopoolt, 304-824-2410., d

Homea

tat MONTH FREEl! NEW Inter·
for Sale
net Servlcal GUARANTEED Lo·
cal Or TOLL·FREE Acceull
$1!J .95 Per Month Unlimited t888 'Redmon Danvlllt• 14x70
I,Jaage Aepr.sentatlvea WANT· ' AIIO H11 Expondo, Very NICI,
tOll High Payoutl With High DE· Ntw Halt P~mp. 114,000, 740·
MMDStl CALL t-589-60t4
38H33S,
:
~

eronces/Oopoolt
Required.
7 7783
(:!04)6 5·
440 Apartments
for Rent

Houllng Opportunity

7~!!548.

320

HUa Approved $295 month Ref·

SSBAD CREDIT? Got ~aah
Loano To $5,000 . Debt Conooll·
dation To $200,000. Credit Cords,
Mortgages, Refinancing And
Auto Loans Available . Meridian
Credit Corp. 1-800-47t-5tt9 E•t.
1180
•
"WATERLESS COOKWARE" .
Home Demonstrarlon KIM High·
181 Quality .• American Made.·
NOT Korean Normally, 11,500,
5a1Nng,
t-eoo-421-7267.

Newly Remodeled, · 2BR, Untur·
nlshed, Houao lor Rent New Ha·
van area. Deposit/Reference Requlred (304)875-3469, allar 5PM

This Beautiful 4 Bedrooms, 2 112
eath Home Sitting On The Ohio
Rlvor. Huge Country Kitchen,
P•achtree Wlndow1, .New R•'
,
•
ducid Priea. $208,000' Eveq, Dot•' TWo bedroom hflll.. In Portlllnd,
lo·74Q.88M32S.
, l ... wooa heat, S30P par month Qluo

STOP RENTINGIII OWN For
LESS! NO MONEY DOW('II Crtcllt .
Noadodl Guaranteed Approvatt,
CA~L NOW! t·aoct-~ Ell1.
81!f.
·,

Merchandise

446-01108.

"f, no pots, 740-1192·5858.

740-446-1794.

, COUNTII't' HOME

for Rent

Five room house for rent wiga· 'Now Teklng Appllcatlooa: 35
rage. You pay utlllUes. Oepoalt &amp; ' West 2 Bedroom ~ Townhouse
retorenco required 304-875-2535.
Apartments, lnctudea Water
2 or 3 bedroom house In Pamer· Sewage, T~lh, $3t5/Mo , 740·

3 BedroOms, 2 Baths, Hardwood
Floors, Some Carpel, Fully
Equipped Kitchen, Large Vard,
Depostt &amp; References, $!500/Mo.,

Do

Georges Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your toga to the mill juat call
304-ll75-t957

.

Anthony Land Company. LTO.
WtiW couOIM\Ima rom

limitation or diSalmlnrllloo •

NEW MILLENNIUM DIETl Success Guaranteed. High Protein f
Low Carbo. Eat All O.ay .. Melt
Away! 970.870.2628.

foJLANDI
Even tt ns L~tod
20 ·500 Acres
Coli Ryan

·.

make Slt'f IUch preference,

wv

,.
EMPLOVERM/FDY , ,
~ F~EE ~VIRCNM~

Real Estate
Wanted

Part-time receptionist, must be
peraonable, have telephone
lkiiiB, able to deal with the publk:
handle general oHice duties,
· Pomeroy area. Send resume to.
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 729·88,
Pomeroy. Oh 46789.

Person to assist with mUiclng &amp;
general farm work on local dairy
~espond wlbrlef resume + 3 references to: ML09, Point P_lel~~~~!
Register. 200 Matn Street,
Pieala'",
25550.

f.!
~1:HECK OUT OUR WEB&amp;rrE
, ' WWW.84LUMBER.COII

HOME OXYGEN

360

ARE '!OU CONNECTEO?
INTERNET USERS WANTEOI
S300·$tlOO/WMk .
' Hl88-220-20t3
www. tnternet·SUCCfil.net

It 84 LUMBER CDMPANY
~

HOusakeeper!Companlon for
disabled untor In Ripley. Light·
Housework/cooking . Muat have
driver's license, car provided.
Prater live-ln. C~ll Sher·
ee,(304)875.Q867

Moms Wanted: America 's 11
Home Business Moma Work At
Home, Free Casutte, 1-888·6t3·
527!. .

•

"

Home Health Care
Ohio Inc.. now hiring
Nursing and Register Nurses, caa
t·740·867-60t0 Monday thru Frl·
day, 8-4

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Excel·
lent S $ S I Processing Claims
From Homo. Full Training Provld·
ed Computer Required· Call
Medi·Pros Toll Free. 1·888·313·
6049 Eld. 3t25.
•

~;~)!.',!'~-~:,company Is Looking

HOME OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

NO-TAL

Scenic, Close To GaHipoUs. Some
Restrlcttona. 740.245-5776.
20A1:RES
Off SR 7 South 01 GoHipolls. SA .
..
2t8 &amp; Neighborhood Road ~roa.
Ro~h &amp; Wooded, Road Cut ln.
NEE S TLO, Slnglewldaa AllOwed
$2,300 Down
MEIGS COUNTY
Up To t? Acre Tracts F,or Rt·
creation Or Realde"tlal. Off SA
t24, 20 Minute• From Rio
Grande. $9.500 +. $950 Down,
Lend Contract Available AN THONY LANO CO .. LTD 1-800·
2t3-8365 For FREE Maps

All Yard Saloo Muot Be Pold tn
AdY!Inoo. Deodllne: 1:OOpm tile

. '
MA~~RTfiAINEE
•
:'
:
"· •
' '

Six Acres, more or less, w/new
28x48 Barn, w/2 water tap&amp;, Mas·
sey Ferguson 150 Diesel w/End·
Loader. Power Steering &amp; Iota of,
1
nt N
B h Hog
extra equ P~ · ew rua
'
Plow,, Disks, G(ader Blade
1994 300 4·Wheel Orlve w/Snow
Plow. t977 t4x70 w/lot at Pty·
G It'
F
male Lane, a polis erry on
Mlllatono Rd , Apple Grove Call
In Mornings, (304)576·3033
350 Lot. &amp; Acreage

· Galllpol s
&amp; VIcinity

~LUMBER

212 EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OH.

Y~ung,

TRANSPORTATION

r-~~~~;=~~~=t::=;;:::;:;=~~====1
420 Mobile Homes ·
540 Miscellaneous
710

0181.
Nice 2BR MoblleHome, Mason,

Bel ween Galllpolta &amp; Jackson,
Near Thurman, Beautiful Rolling
M•adows: With Lots Of ROad
FrontagJ. 6 Acres With 1 Acre
Pond. Awesome Building SUe Be·
hind Pond. Prices Start At
$12,500 Land Contracts Avail·
able Free Maps. ANTHONY
LAND CO., LTO t·800-2t3-8365. .

green collar. Flalwoods-Pomeroy
Plt&lt;e and s Points area. any Info.

-the

Sl!'OI&amp; ' Wide Clearance $9.99
Faxed Raft Save Thousands,
Farm. for Sale

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

"H you'N gonna buy • 'flattpece, buy onel
Don't liMp drawl!'llatl
mirrors."

2 Bedrooms, In Kanauga, Beau~
ful River VIew, No Pets, 74o-44t·

no 10 ACRES

(740) 367-7017 Very 5anllll1enl81t

Help Wanted

Pictured left to right an: Harold Hysell, RSVP Volunteer; Clay
Crow and EIU•b Roush. Clay 1nd Elijah are firemen with the
Pomeroy Fire Department who bel~d RSVP volunteer Harold
Jlysell Install smoke detecton and carbon monoxide detec'ton I• the .
homes of older adults In Meigs County. HArold and other RSVP volunteers Installed detectors In 42 homes with funds from Walmart,
Tbe Emeflllency Planning Agency and the Meigs County Cou11eU on
Aging, Inc. .

12·13

Repoa, Single &amp; OoubleWide. 1·
868-928-9898.

330

Wel:tdlng Band on safnEi Chain •

HEAP·---....,..
Assistance

2601

2 Bedroom TraMer In small troller
Park; Deposit and Roloranco Re·
qulrodl Phone (740)-4-46-tt04
2 Bedrooms I300JMp , Electric
No Pots, Deposit, 740-387.()6tt. .

=-~~~L~=::30ak;

LQstl 6 Keys wrth Bulterlty and

BBQ Chicken Fillet

Green Beans

The Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m. until
4:30 p.m. Regularly schecluled
activities held throughout the week
include sewing, quilting pool,
bingo, cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost is
$1.00 per session attended. The
Knitting
Circle .meets on
Wednesday from 10:00 a.m. until
noon.
All older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and pick what you
want from the a Ia carte menu or
you can eat the regular meal.
January 25--10:45 a.m. Lisa
Koch,
Licensed
Clinical
Audiologist, will present a program
on "1-jearing Aids &amp; Dizziness."
February 10--11:00 a.m.
Darren
Hayes,
Exercise
PhysiOlogist, will speak about cardiac rehab.
Pace Class (Persons With
Arthritis Can Exercise) is scheduled for January 4, 11, 18, .&amp; 25 at
I :00 p.m. TI.I.i~ class can be done in
a chair ari~f includes range of
motion, strengthening, balance and
coordina!ion.
Social Security
A representative from the
Athens Social Securily Office is at
the Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center to assist persons with"Social
Secunty problems and to provide
information. The dates are January
12 &amp; 26 and February 9 &amp; 23, from
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Support Groups
•
The Arthritis Support Group
meets on the third Friday of each
month from 10:00 a.m. until II :30
a.m. The January meeting will be a
planning session for activities and
speakers for February - Decem.ber
2000. The Arthritis Support Group
is made possible through funds
from the Ohio Department of
Health and Ohio Oniversi!Y.
The Caring and Sharing
Support Group ~ill continue to
meet the fourth Thursday of each
inonth at, the Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center. The
topic at the January 27 meeting will
be "Eye Care" in celebration of
National Eye Awareness Month.
At the February 24 meeting we
will have a "Heart to Heart" discussion since February is Heart Month.
Bring your questions for' discussion:
The speaker 1 will be
announced. ·
The Support Group is open to
all caregivers or to anyone who
wants to learn more about disease
processes and/or caregiving. For
more information, contact Lenora
Leifheit, RNC at 992-2161.
Onr 55 Exerdle ClaiiS
The ongoing exercise class for
persons age 55 and over is held on

Sweet Potatoes

at betWeen Redmond Ridge

l

Braad

27
Scallo~

Peach Crisp

award""

Beef Stew

Pineapple Upside

Creamed Potatoes

Roll

LQaf

Musical
Instruments

New Gibson Night Hawk electric
Guitar w1th Case. Cost S t ,1 99
' new; will •ell $650.00 (740)·379·

Now t8 Wide, 4BR/2BA, tow
down payment, only $245 par
mo Free Air, Free 13.1drt. 1·800·
69t.-6777.
•

28 .

.

25

New 14 Wide, law down paymont, $175 per 100. 'Free Air, Free
Skirt, H!OIHI9t.Sl'77

"

27

Down Cake

Meat Loaf

Home for the Holidays on a Mce
Lot.AitUtt~iea 1·(304)-796-7295

· Tossed Salad

Pudding

Roll

Apple Dumpling/Ice Cream

Meat Sauce

·'
Cabbage

570

OoubloWide, 3BR/2BA, oniYJ
$287 per mo w/Low down payment. Fr.. Air t·800-69t.em.

0

Pets for Sale

Young Registered Cream Colored
Female Persian, Declawod. 'St25 .
Bundy Trumpet 1250 OBO 740·
446-7573.

Double Wide Sal-Up tn Tho
Country. No Payments For 90
Days Only 0 OOkwood -Gallipo·
118, 740-446-3093,

\

Tomato Juice

Creamed Peas

Cole Slaw

Spaghetti With

Scalloped Potatoes

560

92 Clayton 1BxBO; 3 BedrooMs,
Hut Pump, Good CGndltlon.
$t6,000 .00 OBO (740)·256·t8 t 8
(740)-258-t252

&amp; Oranges

Bread

.24

&amp;

•
)

Green Beans

20
Mashed Po.tatoes

Bananas

Framing Lufrbor, ~.e. 2-8, 2· t0, 2·
12. Treated Po sts, Trueaa 28 Fl
Shingles, 20o/oOff, 74o-44t..0279.

rooms. 1 large Bath wiU\. Garden
Tub, Stove &amp; Retrlg, Central Air,
E•cel. Condlllon, lt5.500 .00
(740)-44t-o91111

(Ham, cabbage,

Bread

Oven Fried Chicken

&amp; Gravy

&amp; Gra

Block, briclc , sewer plpea, * ind·
owa , lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5t21. .

1986 Overland 14x701t. 2·Bed·

Cookie

&amp; Gra

Roll

18

1974·12x6o au alectrtc. washer,
dryer, retrlgerator, oven, curtains,
couch and chair, two window air
conditioners, In Portland, read}: lo
move, $3500, 740·843-53tO days
or 740-843-5t471M!nlngs

New England Dinner

Brussel Sprouts

Pumpkin Pie

'

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter·
net Users Wantedl $350 •$800 f
Wetlc · 1·888·858·9338 www.eblz·
dream net

14

Baked Steak

with Cheese

$2 ,000 .00 off Stloctod Single
Wide Hom11. Super Low Pay·
me.ntal Oak Wood Homes , Bar·
boursville, Wv 1·(304)·736·7295
or t -(304)·736-2395

Graham Crackers .

13

Broccoli with Cheese

Biscuit

Orange

Harvard Beets

;

Baked Porkette

over Noodles

Mixed Vegetables

Tropical Mixed Fruit

,A ltOO.OOO +/Yr BualntUI
CASHI cASH! CASHI This ts Not
A Jot&gt;. $5.000 Roq. Wort&lt; 5 Hro I
Wk . Free tnfo t-800·991·9888
Eld. It 55 (24 Hll).
•

t - - - - - - - : 1 : i 7r--------:1::8:1------~1:::19r--------:2:::01--------:::2~1 ~

Meat Balls in Gravy

.

Bread Pudding

12

Macaroni and Cheese

Buttered Com

Bread

Braad ·

11
Craamed Tomatoes

Mashed Potatoes

Hungarian Pork Chop

Mashed Pqtatoes

Fruit Cocktail in

•

11

.

Tossed Salad

Biscuit

,Mashed Potatoes

..

.

Rice Pilaf

Buttered Peas

Fruit Cocktail

.

Che_ll}' Topping

Noildlea

Crackers

Braad

Texas Sheet Cake

Cheesecake with

Lemon Lush

Liver

Meat BaHs on ·.

Potato Casserole

.

HERMAN• by Jim UIJIII'r

7

Ham and Scalloped

•

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

Garlic Bread
I

Beef Soup

Pimento Cheese

JANUARY MENUS

6
Sala~

Vegetable

I

Scrambled Eggs

••

-

Tossed

5

Hash Brown Potatoes

10

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes

Sausage f.'atty

SENIOR CENTER

The Senior Nutrilion Program
ed to provide a nutritional meal at a
evening meal will be served on • reasonable cost. Dollars generated
Tuesday and Thursday with serving
will be used to support the e.isting•
from 4:45 to 5:30 p.m. A suggestlunch and home delivered meal
ed donation for the evening meal is
program.
$4.00. The evening meal is intend-

....

..

MEIGS

KIT 'N' CARLVLE e by Larry Wrlelrt

-.

\'

�:
•

•

,--!

Pllge M • The 1?-lly Sentinel

lllondey, Januery 3, 2000.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PHJIJ,IP
ALDER

Hill'S
JELF ITORAtE
2H70 BuhM Road
RICinet Ohio
45771
740-MD-2217
SI~N S.l x 10'
to 10.' X 30'
HOU111 •.

7:00 All,t • 8:00 PM

1

446~2342

~

~

,. .

8unutBOIU~ .·
'
New .(o~struction'&amp; Remoileling - Kitchen Cabinets

2

'J 9 7 4 3
• A I f ·3

762

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

AT 8:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00 ·
par game
$300.00 Cove,i'all
$51!0.00 Startlunll
Progre111ve top line.

. Quality Driveways,

'•

t

1
con rWvl adebtar al
alair dislrlbutlon of
as101s IIIIIGI1I uediton. Aponan pilg ttvough baMrvptty may rttail Clllaln
property, k1101111~111 ' oxtmpr property, lor his or htr porsonal 1111. This may
include a car, a houst, dolt!t!, and hall!lhald goads..You shGukl dirtcl ony
qllilllom r190r"v ltankruplty lo an attorney btlote proctdlt.

Dry

Self-Storage
33'795 HUand Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

·
,

'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

BARNEY .

For information re·gardlng , ,
Bankruptcy contact: ·
William Safranek, Attorney

· St. Rt. 7

•Room lddltlona 6 Remadallnt .
•NtwGIIIgtt

•ROOfing 6 Gutltra
•VInyl Siding I Painting
•Patio &amp; Porch Daclca

'

AKE ~ WISH AN' PULL
TH' WISHBONE !!

ONLY ONE??
•I

•

LEGAL NOTICE ·
On Saturday, Janu•ry 15,
2000 ot 10:00 a.m. the ttoma
National Bank witt offer tor
11111 11 public IIUCtlon on lha
Bank parking lot the
fallowing vahlctea:
1988 Chevy Blazer
Vln t1G8EK18H8GF1220i1
1992 Ponthoc Bamievllte
Vln ttG2HX53L8N130204S
1992 Chevy Cevallar
Vln 11GtJC1448N7118862
1884 Chavy Gao
Vln 12C1MR2485R872017t
t971 GMC Truck ·
Yin ITCS248E740483
· t991 Pontiac Grand Prtx
Vln 11G2W(l4X7MF:I88402
1987 Ford aronco It
Vln 11 FMCU14T7HUC17850 ·
· 11198 Chevy- '· ,
Vln 11G1LV15MIIl"i'2e5i21
The Ierma of the 1111e ara
caah.
..
Tha Home National Bank
r"arvaa tha right to rateet
any or all blda or to remove
any untt from the .aate. at
any time.
,
Arrangamanta ma.y be
made to lnapact any of the
abova named vehlclaa prior
to the alta by calling 740·
1149-2210.
.
George
Lawrence,
Collactlon Officer
(113, 7, 10, 14 4TC
Public Notice
. c NOTICE
PU au
Southern Ohio Coal
Company, P.O. Box 48Q,
Athena, Ohio 45701 haa
aubmltted a renewal
application lor coal mine
parmll D.Q483 to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Raaourc.., Dlvlelon of
Mlnaa end Raclamlitlon. The
parmlteraaa are locatllll In
VInton County, Wllkaevllta
Townahtp, SIICIIona 3, 15, 21 .
and 22, Townahlp e N,
Range HIW and 17 W
Fractlona 24, 30 end 38.
Townahlp 8N, Range 18W;
Malga County, Salem
Townahlp, Sacllona 25, 28,
30 Mil 32. Townahlp 7N lnd
eN, Range 15W; .on the
property of Southern Ohio
Coal Company; with
underground worktnga In
·: - VInton County, Wllkaavltla
:rownahtp, SIICIIone 1, 2, 2E,
3, 4, 8, 8, 10, 15 .and 1.&amp;;
Fraetlona 24, 30, and 38;
Townahlp IN, Range 18W
end 18 W; Malga County,
Salam Townahlp, Sactlone
13, te, 25, a, 30, 31, 32, 33·
10d 31; FraCtion• 7, 1;1, 11
end 25; T-nehlp .aN.
Renga 15W, Ollila County,
Huntington
Townahlp,
Sactlon 1, Townehlp 8N,
Ringe · 15W,, Th~ permit
contalne 371.43 acraa and
·11 'locatad on the. Mulga and
Wllkaavllla 7 112 Minute,
U.S.O.S Quldrlngla ll1p1,
approxlmltaty 2.5 mtlea
weal of Wll~•vllla, Qhlo.
The 9PHcenl hal obtltnllll
a road pen111t to mine within
tOO leal of tha right-of-way
of Salem Townehlp r0116
333, alfactlft November 8,
1JI7; Wllll.vllla Townahlp
road 4, alfactiVa Dacamber

..

12, ;973; and Stata Route
t24, atfactlva February 28,
1174, which wilt remain If
etfact until coat intnlng and
reclamation oparatluna are
completed under the coat
!'lining permli t . .uad
P.urauant to thla paimlt. The
r•newal .application will
allow Solitharn Ohio Coal .
Company to continue the
mining operation a an D·
0483 for up to five yaara
pall the expiration date of
Aprtl7, 2000.
The application Ia on fila
at-the otflcaa of the Malga
County Recorder, . Malga
County Court Houae,
Second Street, Pomeroy, .
Ohio 45769, VInton County
lleconler, Vll)ton ·C~ntY.
Coun. Houaa,' Maln Str111t:
McArthur, Ohio 451111, and
tha
County R~rdar,
Court HC!UH,
G.alltpolla,
4tit31 for public
viewing. Written .comment•
or requalla far an ln,formel
conference may be Mnt to
the Dlvlalon of Min•• and
Reclamation, 1855 Fountain
&amp;quart Court, Building H-3,
Cotu,mbua, Ohio 43224
wtthlnthlrtydoyaqfthalaat
data ol publication of thla
notice.
(113, 10, 17,24 4 tc
Public Notice

Tarma of Belli: 1K Day of
ula, balance due II! 30

~:.'ia 11. Soutby
Shariff of Malga County
111 3,10,17 3TC
Public Notice

sou~:! Ng~E
Company,

Garages
Complete '
· Remodeling
Stop

........ A
1 111

I

I

"Mon.-

?~~~~~' ~:::::~::;:;:;;::::::~:

31 , P.O.
Boxhaa
45701,
. Ohio
an "Application
to
Coallllnlng hrm!t" to
, .:,..,
· ;:.c;;a;;rd;:o;;f;;Tha;;nk;;•~
Mlntng 1nd Racta.m etton rPermit Number R-03114-2~,
We would like to t1wJk
to tha Ohio Department of
all.,_ d-.-.-ts,
Natunt Raaourcaa, Dlvlllon
un: - . - ........
ol Mlnea al!d Reclamation.
Wllkemlle Amcri ,
"Til• :revtalon to •the coat
. c:an

:'~tfta;.~~
,....u-• 1111 conclul:tlld

tn Mtlga County, Sa tam
Townahlp 1 ~ona t2•.Tha
underground mining ~rNa
baing raviHd anao.,......
20 tcree and Ia IOCitllll 0(1
the Rut11nd 7 1/2 minute
U.S. G.S. quadrangle map,
1.8 mllaa aouthwaat ol
Hanaavllle, Ohio. The
application propoaaa to
revlaa the mining plan to
allow full coal mining by
tongwatt methode and iixlm·l
and ptttar mining (Iongweii
development). Tht ara1 to
bt mined h11 pravloutly
bean approved · for mining
by room and pillar lllllhoda
and 11 baing raviHd tor full
coal extraction mtntng. '.
The appllcauon Ia on file
at the ,office of Matga
Collhty recorder, Malge
County c;ourt Hou11,
Second Straat, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788 for public
viewing. Written c:Ommenta
and/or raquall . fo~ an
Informal conlentne11 may be
aant tp the Dlvtaton .ol
MinH and Raclamatton,
1855 Fountain Square
Court, Building H·3,
Columbua, Ohio,. 45224·
1387, ·wtthtn 30 daya of the
taat data ol pubiiCIIUon of
thla notice.
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(1) 3, 10, .,7, 24 4 tc ';

In The Court of Commiiii ·
Plaaa Malga County, Ohio
l!nlled Companleli Landing
Corporation
Plaintiff
va
Martin L. Woodard, ET AL
o.tendanta
tn Pureuanca ol en order of
lila to rna dlractllll from
llld court In the aliove entl·
u,cl aetton, t will axpoH to
Hie at Jlllbllc ·aptlon altha
front . atapa
of
the
CoUithouH on Februery 11,,
2000 at 10:00 A.ll. of Hid
day, . the
fottowtng '
daacrlbllll real - :
·
!lftullllll In the State ol
Ohio, c-ty of llllga and
In the Townehlp of Rutland: ·
lllltng tn Sactlon No. 2 and
dlaetlbllll u fall-:
~
Ad
lleglnillng 11 a point tO.
rode Eaat o1 ~ No&amp;a11t
corner of land formerly
balontllng to Ellah1 Hlgtay,
now -ned by Htrlm
SI-r, at the center of en
road, which Ia now
thence Waat
171
l'llntar of lha
Hylllll Run Road; thence
NOrth 22 112' Waat 107.8
IIIII 1tong ,the center of
road; 111anca Eut ftll
to lha canter of Hid otd
roed; !hence South 111" Elat
to the llllca ot beginning,
oantalnlng 1.33 acraa; more
or lila.
.
Auclltor'a P1rca1 Number:
11-ot-.ooo.
Raflrtnca DHd: Volume
112, Paga 238, llalge
Cou~ DHd Racorda.
Tumln111t8
Property Addrtal: 32332
HyHU Run Rd.
•
1LOile your, Aunt Robin
P~y, OH 457t1

Legk)n, banvine
Hollness
Church,
Minnie Thomton;

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Fri. 9:bo to .4:
• •·

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'haasonaa.'"'
.R. at·as ·. ·
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• . COMMIIICIAI. .... RISIDEtmAL
FRt:E ESTIMATES

740·992·7643

' , COOlville, OH 45723'

: 7411t£J-e•a

(No Sunday Calls)

· Sewing Machine &amp;
Vaecuum Cleaner ·
..
'Repairs

.

te€uEVt:l~

H

Fl

.&amp;CONSTRUcnON .
New Roofs. Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free .Estimates

,... ,""'

740-T42o0419
.

,.JK,,_

P F .L

BPR

IJWCO .BLETR . ' -

YCLCTBCD

R N L LA

J 0

VWBJC " THS8R

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A big Iron needle .st"chlng lhe country together." ·
- Jesaamyn WI!St, on Baltimore &amp; Ohio Railroad.
· ·

1'\f:W YEn. 00
TilE Roo:nlo1l.. 1

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UAL~II'UL.I!!

• TOP
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' "J\n41t\Q

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Pones·

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Ohio

.

·a Footings • Flatwork
· · •. Wall, ,• :Perno
E
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL .
T. FREE ESTIMATEELFULL.Y INSURED
E Brian Morrlaon . . (740) 985-394$

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N
R
Y

WICK'S "fiQUnG
. · and

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Now is the lime for·g·r·r·r-ffll

buys In the classified• .

~1 ~5 ... 00 :

·IMONDAY.
••

When my 'bos.s gets .upset he chews gum. It has
proven to me that cheWing gum proves you can have.
motion.without PROGRESS.
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JANUARY 31 -~~
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Stop In And See
Steve Riffle'.
· Sa~es Representative
. • La.rry Schey

...,

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750 East State' Street Phone (740f593-6671 .
IAt~1ens, Ohio 45701 ·
"A

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.·,Cellular· ·
·~eff .. Warner Ins·.
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992;.5479
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loday. II has mar• ~r than you think.
.lhose days where lhe things lhel appear
.PISCES. (f.,b. 211'Mitch 20) Terms of 10 be lhe most difficult lo do cpuld lOrn
. endearmenl and knowing how much you out to be lhe easiesl ones for you to per·
· . really care· will elevate the spirHs of one · torm. Don 'l dodge any jobs thrown al
· yo~ love al this lime. Don'l hesltQte to you.
.
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,shareyourleellngs.
.
·
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V'RGO
(A\19·
23· Sapt. 221 .There is
•
u•day, Jan. 4• 2000
ARIES (March 21·Aprlt 191 Because the much 10 be gained loday by sfudylhg lhe
In lhe year ahead , somelhjng you've . ways and .means could be available experiences ot others In order lo search
·always wanled but lhoughl was beyond today l.o acquire somethln,g you've lor ways lo beller yoUr own life: What you
ybur reach could be' in lhe oiling. This always wanted. locus your lull allenlion learn could be ·appllc~ ble to your own
1
c(ijlld come about in rather transcen- on anaining your desire1
affairs.
•
,
·denial manner,
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TAURUS (April ~~·Miy 201 II you lind . LIBRA (Sept. 23•0ct. 23) From enler·
CiP.!UCORH (~. 22-Jen. 18)' Be~- yourse)t hlghar pitched than usualloday, . prlses initialed by &lt;?lhers. rattier lhan from
· 1a~ ypu ·lrury '\'ani an~~ respQfla. to . rathenhan _c o..,. on.!VIIh sneer assertive· your own hard work; is where you're like·
· any llirlalions you shbwer on · anol~er' lnest. mas~ your •nctinallonS with s11111es , ly to be lh~ mosl slJCI:!Isslul tciday. See
· t~y. ~Ui8 your aclione ""' fikety Ia and thank-you&amp;. ' ·
•
·whal peop,le have going for Ihem and
be Ioken .very seriously. Trying lo patch GEMINI (lily 2hluna 2~) Do nol dis· jump Oil board ..,
up a broken romance? The Aslro·Grapli ' cuss your ambitious inlenlions today with SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) llon'l 'proM. Ichmaker can help you ,undersland persons who are ndl dlreclly involved in .lecl your o\roin thinking it you discover
w~al to do' tq makelhe relalions~p """".. your b~slrfess. beca_uS'e lhe less.peopki your niate's judgment Is l! bil kaenerlllan
Maw S2.751o Matchmaker, c/o lhtS news· lhvolved, 11)8 less muddling will e•isl.
· yours today. Instead, be open:mlndad
. p ~per , P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill , ,C1&lt;NCER (Jun! 21·J'!IY 221 Don'l !el and .g ratafullorhisorherlnput.
·
Slolion , New York, NV 10156.
. scll·doubl&amp; pcrmeale your aHairs loday, SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 211 Try to
AQUARIUS (JID. 20,Feb. 191 Visu~lize ?"cause: in aclualily, cOOdilioils are s':"it: ulilize. your talenls lo beaulity your sur·
a ~silive pulcome and s&amp;nething aboul 1ng to look "'9r11.encourag•ng ''?' ach1ev· round1ngs today, because chances are
.which you've been concerned ·wtd mosl lng 50111111hing yqu fleem iR)portanl. •
. your it1\agination and den artistic louc:het
lik~ ly ba ·reeotved 1o your sallsfaclion . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) This. is !me ~~ could be benor thanjlSual allhis lime,

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SCUM UTS . ANSWIRS .

. Script- Ord~r , Frame.- Grisly· PROGRESS

anp.ouneing my redrement.

,...../04,.

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Charlie Brown, Snoopy,
Linus, Lucy... bow can
I ever fo'l!"'t them.... . ·

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Sarld"Topsoii"Fill Dlri"Mulch
· Bulldozer ServiCes

.'

. . UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS 10
V GET ANSWER
·

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.EXCfiVfiTinG

IZI ·

maintain the scbedul&lt;! demanded by

PRINI NUMBERED 'LEITERS IN
"IHESE SQUARES

I have ~n gr.wful over the yean
for the loyalty of oar editor~ ud the
wonderfial "'''fOI'I and love opreued
to me by.fant of the comic strip. ·

a daily comic strip, t:hel'efore I am

12/22198 1 mo pd

'l)uck seats, car seafs, headliners,
truck !llrps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
F.o~r "'heeler .sea~, motorcycle seats, ·
' boat covers, carpets, etc.
..
Mon-f.:rl ,a:ao • s:oo
•
pver 40 yta experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888·521..()916

•

Dear Friends, ·
I have been fortuaare to draw Cbulie
Brown and hb friends for almost SO yean.
. It hu been the fulfillment of my
childhood ambition.
.
Unfortunarely, I om no longer able to

• Concrele • Backhoe Services
• Masonry • Bobcat Services M ·

Hauling~~one'*Gtavet
. Rutland,

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I. J;»/B CONTRACTORS, INC.
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A&amp;D'l•to UphOlstery· .-••, Inc.

'

OHIO 45831 • CHESHIRE, OHIO 45820

1/\XWO 1 mo. pd.
'

"LL THESE
t'\ I LLENNIUMS
ARE !.TIIRTIN&amp;
T1:) !.EEM ALIKE

--~ to

740-992-2068
''

C§p

JOlES'

Joseph .,facks

grew up Mitt too
futf .

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EBZBPELRR · 'HR

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~iNt.Tt 1'16 TilL

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~JA~C~KS~R~OO~FI..
NG....""' R

We malft house calls

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DWLHPCLRR

I.HAHIBPG

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CM,PUT ~!iOCK.I\-1 ·
rr,TI\Q!{NI\PPLE.!

P F L

B E E B C·J 8 R

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•Roofing

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bed*
f/01141

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. GOOD MO~INC.,
CKI EF, N--IP KN'!'Y

Call Now

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. 1000.81. Rt. 7 South·

PRDBir~·l,

' BC
OJW

'

by Luis Campos

Hauling .
Gooc;l Clean Cars
Limestone &amp; Gravel ·

'Case,IH Parts
Dealers. .

lllit IIIMJrt ,_., .

•

Celebrity Cipher cryptogram. are crett.:l from quotatlonl 'by famous ptiO()Ie, pa1t a'nd pr...rn"
Each hitler In tht dptter tll.ndl for another. Todly's Clutl: y ~~· u

TR.UCl(l'NG .~ CAR SALES

., PlRft

we •ll•r•'

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

• ..

RUTLAND

DEPDYSI&amp;

cloNII... acl
lo!M
' latdilutl
lon 1f0N wft:lt

, I

YOlJitSf&amp;..f
·AT wO~IC. ·

No Embarrassment...
You're Treited with Rtillp8Ctl

Hours:
· Mon&amp;Tue9to3
. Cloaed WedneadaJ&lt;•
Thura &amp; Fri9 to 3 .
Salurdlavs 10 to 2

WeWIIIDHI
Columbia Christian
Joe N•.Sayre :.
740·742·3311
Chapel, teftsa Sayle,
'740•742•2138
·
1·888·816·9609
Frank Shultz, A III}'QBe
3/11/99TFN
else who helped In any,
BISSELL BUILDER$,
way during' the loss of
.
INC • ...
my mobile home due to
New Homes • Vinyl
On:. Yout are very ·
. All Makes Tractor &amp;
•• *L ppreda•*-'
Siding • New Garages
muua !I
~oa~.
Prlsdlla Me~ A · , . Equipment P.arts , .· •Replacement WinQQWS
•Room Additions
Fact01:y A~thorized
.
I!
Smallwood

If/far the .·

Pau '
All pus

YOU'l&gt; tf ',UMPY, TOO, If
. / . .YOU wOICf UP
·
· ANI&gt; FOUNO

r'!=;:=====~
·s'

8•·

2•

WDIRYIIGtlt

Check Ua Out

Land Clearing &amp; ·
. Gradipg
Septic Sy•teiiU &amp;:
Vtilitie•
1740) 992·3131

985-"1473 ·

Pasa

No Credit • Slow .Credit • Bankruptcy.
Repo • Dlv,ordacl

503 Mill·Street
' Middleport, Ohio :

Houae -&amp; .Trailer Sites

ESTIMATES ·

3•

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·CRill,.

· Semcea

&amp; Cqmpare

Nortb. Eut

Pass

· By Phillip Alder

.

sat. 9:00 to 12:00

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. !lep""•
BulldoHr &amp;: BaciJ.oe

FREE
Coat
. No.

wQ'a

I

WHI

More of the best

8~ Gravell~ lead!

v.c.voUN'o in

JJ

K J 7

I Polltlcll ti'OIIP

8 Yalta

5"&amp;aaama

Opening lead: • A

100' • 1000' Rolk 1• &amp;3/4" 200#Water Une ·
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Storage Tanks

HOWARD .·
EICIYAIING
CO.. ·
.

New HomN

:::-

33 01 tiny lpiCII
H llotMI'ol

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Appral- at 810,000.00

tlbllll"ngullt
1 Lgt. oantal- .
2ROIIIID3
,&amp;=boat
7
at

.

Culverts: 4• - 48" in stock

22 yro. Loedl
Public

30 .....

7 40..985·3813

. •Eitclrtcll 6 Plumblnt

Potnanly,OIIIo

Public Notice

DOWN

21Above=)
31 Qultk

r-o011...,

II II ~DIM men
profound

t::aator lnd

South

·.1e

Tupper$ Plains, bH

·

11

group
21 Cincinnati

Vulnerable:. Both
Dealer: $9~th

·•G&amp;W Plastics a11d Supply

992·6215

Notice

•

H AbOUnded '
M 1Wie o1 clauH

"FarnanctO"

·-..,.,...

1-!-1~:;.

11 Fllllllo

·• K J 5

·'

High ·~

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Eut
• K 10 4 ·
• Q 10 8 2
• Q 10 9'
• 8. 3

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740..742-8015
B77-353-72221toH free)

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. tllllbar tNI
21 llyllllrta••
za Atty.'a cltg.

' 8eutli
.
•AQ97' 653

YOUI

Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonary/Wood ·
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates·

11 Hilwellan

• 6 52
• A Q 10 9 '.

www.sunsethome.com

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
. Thursd11ya

&lt;41 Co I p aawt
101111 ondtt . ·~~~
41 .......
..

17.......

• J a
• A ·K 6 5

Bryari l(eeves

' Free Esllmates
740·742-3411

Uc. II D0-50 nn....,

992-2156

··-

40"A" - .._.."' '
.41 llid. 11111!1·
1nlllpl
42 lit II I I 0ay
14 llllntlfOnd ol
1*11Cijlanl
11 fllall He*! fllr1 44 'xplul"' 1n11a. 1+-1~
11 IIIDtputala . 41 . . . . .
cllahOneally

.yinyl Siding- Roofs - Decks - Garages '· · :

NowRentJnc

Aat-tolnl

1OM lltd ·
•
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1UifonMI
awl aal
13 Lc dgtnt tor

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Pllge M • The 1?-lly Sentinel

lllondey, Januery 3, 2000.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PHJIJ,IP
ALDER

Hill'S
JELF ITORAtE
2H70 BuhM Road
RICinet Ohio
45771
740-MD-2217
SI~N S.l x 10'
to 10.' X 30'
HOU111 •.

7:00 All,t • 8:00 PM

1

446~2342

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8unutBOIU~ .·
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New .(o~struction'&amp; Remoileling - Kitchen Cabinets

2

'J 9 7 4 3
• A I f ·3

762

CONCRETE
CONNEOION

AT 8:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00 ·
par game
$300.00 Cove,i'all
$51!0.00 Startlunll
Progre111ve top line.

. Quality Driveways,

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1
con rWvl adebtar al
alair dislrlbutlon of
as101s IIIIIGI1I uediton. Aponan pilg ttvough baMrvptty may rttail Clllaln
property, k1101111~111 ' oxtmpr property, lor his or htr porsonal 1111. This may
include a car, a houst, dolt!t!, and hall!lhald goads..You shGukl dirtcl ony
qllilllom r190r"v ltankruplty lo an attorney btlote proctdlt.

Dry

Self-Storage
33'795 HUand Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

·
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YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

BARNEY .

For information re·gardlng , ,
Bankruptcy contact: ·
William Safranek, Attorney

· St. Rt. 7

•Room lddltlona 6 Remadallnt .
•NtwGIIIgtt

•ROOfing 6 Gutltra
•VInyl Siding I Painting
•Patio &amp; Porch Daclca

'

AKE ~ WISH AN' PULL
TH' WISHBONE !!

ONLY ONE??
•I

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LEGAL NOTICE ·
On Saturday, Janu•ry 15,
2000 ot 10:00 a.m. the ttoma
National Bank witt offer tor
11111 11 public IIUCtlon on lha
Bank parking lot the
fallowing vahlctea:
1988 Chevy Blazer
Vln t1G8EK18H8GF1220i1
1992 Ponthoc Bamievllte
Vln ttG2HX53L8N130204S
1992 Chevy Cevallar
Vln 11GtJC1448N7118862
1884 Chavy Gao
Vln 12C1MR2485R872017t
t971 GMC Truck ·
Yin ITCS248E740483
· t991 Pontiac Grand Prtx
Vln 11G2W(l4X7MF:I88402
1987 Ford aronco It
Vln 11 FMCU14T7HUC17850 ·
· 11198 Chevy- '· ,
Vln 11G1LV15MIIl"i'2e5i21
The Ierma of the 1111e ara
caah.
..
Tha Home National Bank
r"arvaa tha right to rateet
any or all blda or to remove
any untt from the .aate. at
any time.
,
Arrangamanta ma.y be
made to lnapact any of the
abova named vehlclaa prior
to the alta by calling 740·
1149-2210.
.
George
Lawrence,
Collactlon Officer
(113, 7, 10, 14 4TC
Public Notice
. c NOTICE
PU au
Southern Ohio Coal
Company, P.O. Box 48Q,
Athena, Ohio 45701 haa
aubmltted a renewal
application lor coal mine
parmll D.Q483 to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Raaourc.., Dlvlelon of
Mlnaa end Raclamlitlon. The
parmlteraaa are locatllll In
VInton County, Wllkaevllta
Townahtp, SIICIIona 3, 15, 21 .
and 22, Townahlp e N,
Range HIW and 17 W
Fractlona 24, 30 end 38.
Townahlp 8N, Range 18W;
Malga County, Salem
Townahlp, Sacllona 25, 28,
30 Mil 32. Townahlp 7N lnd
eN, Range 15W; .on the
property of Southern Ohio
Coal Company; with
underground worktnga In
·: - VInton County, Wllkaavltla
:rownahtp, SIICIIone 1, 2, 2E,
3, 4, 8, 8, 10, 15 .and 1.&amp;;
Fraetlona 24, 30, and 38;
Townahlp IN, Range 18W
end 18 W; Malga County,
Salam Townahlp, Sactlone
13, te, 25, a, 30, 31, 32, 33·
10d 31; FraCtion• 7, 1;1, 11
end 25; T-nehlp .aN.
Renga 15W, Ollila County,
Huntington
Townahlp,
Sactlon 1, Townehlp 8N,
Ringe · 15W,, Th~ permit
contalne 371.43 acraa and
·11 'locatad on the. Mulga and
Wllkaavllla 7 112 Minute,
U.S.O.S Quldrlngla ll1p1,
approxlmltaty 2.5 mtlea
weal of Wll~•vllla, Qhlo.
The 9PHcenl hal obtltnllll
a road pen111t to mine within
tOO leal of tha right-of-way
of Salem Townehlp r0116
333, alfactlft November 8,
1JI7; Wllll.vllla Townahlp
road 4, alfactiVa Dacamber

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12, ;973; and Stata Route
t24, atfactlva February 28,
1174, which wilt remain If
etfact until coat intnlng and
reclamation oparatluna are
completed under the coat
!'lining permli t . .uad
P.urauant to thla paimlt. The
r•newal .application will
allow Solitharn Ohio Coal .
Company to continue the
mining operation a an D·
0483 for up to five yaara
pall the expiration date of
Aprtl7, 2000.
The application Ia on fila
at-the otflcaa of the Malga
County Recorder, . Malga
County Court Houae,
Second Street, Pomeroy, .
Ohio 45769, VInton County
lleconler, Vll)ton ·C~ntY.
Coun. Houaa,' Maln Str111t:
McArthur, Ohio 451111, and
tha
County R~rdar,
Court HC!UH,
G.alltpolla,
4tit31 for public
viewing. Written .comment•
or requalla far an ln,formel
conference may be Mnt to
the Dlvlalon of Min•• and
Reclamation, 1855 Fountain
&amp;quart Court, Building H-3,
Cotu,mbua, Ohio 43224
wtthlnthlrtydoyaqfthalaat
data ol publication of thla
notice.
(113, 10, 17,24 4 tc
Public Notice

Tarma of Belli: 1K Day of
ula, balance due II! 30

~:.'ia 11. Soutby
Shariff of Malga County
111 3,10,17 3TC
Public Notice

sou~:! Ng~E
Company,

Garages
Complete '
· Remodeling
Stop

........ A
1 111

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"Mon.-

?~~~~~' ~:::::~::;:;:;;::::::~:

31 , P.O.
Boxhaa
45701,
. Ohio
an "Application
to
Coallllnlng hrm!t" to
, .:,..,
· ;:.c;;a;;rd;:o;;f;;Tha;;nk;;•~
Mlntng 1nd Racta.m etton rPermit Number R-03114-2~,
We would like to t1wJk
to tha Ohio Department of
all.,_ d-.-.-ts,
Natunt Raaourcaa, Dlvlllon
un: - . - ........
ol Mlnea al!d Reclamation.
Wllkemlle Amcri ,
"Til• :revtalon to •the coat
. c:an

:'~tfta;.~~
,....u-• 1111 conclul:tlld

tn Mtlga County, Sa tam
Townahlp 1 ~ona t2•.Tha
underground mining ~rNa
baing raviHd anao.,......
20 tcree and Ia IOCitllll 0(1
the Rut11nd 7 1/2 minute
U.S. G.S. quadrangle map,
1.8 mllaa aouthwaat ol
Hanaavllle, Ohio. The
application propoaaa to
revlaa the mining plan to
allow full coal mining by
tongwatt methode and iixlm·l
and ptttar mining (Iongweii
development). Tht ara1 to
bt mined h11 pravloutly
bean approved · for mining
by room and pillar lllllhoda
and 11 baing raviHd tor full
coal extraction mtntng. '.
The appllcauon Ia on file
at the ,office of Matga
Collhty recorder, Malge
County c;ourt Hou11,
Second Straat, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788 for public
viewing. Written c:Ommenta
and/or raquall . fo~ an
Informal conlentne11 may be
aant tp the Dlvtaton .ol
MinH and Raclamatton,
1855 Fountain Square
Court, Building H·3,
Columbua, Ohio,. 45224·
1387, ·wtthtn 30 daya of the
taat data ol pubiiCIIUon of
thla notice.
•
·
(1) 3, 10, .,7, 24 4 tc ';

In The Court of Commiiii ·
Plaaa Malga County, Ohio
l!nlled Companleli Landing
Corporation
Plaintiff
va
Martin L. Woodard, ET AL
o.tendanta
tn Pureuanca ol en order of
lila to rna dlractllll from
llld court In the aliove entl·
u,cl aetton, t will axpoH to
Hie at Jlllbllc ·aptlon altha
front . atapa
of
the
CoUithouH on Februery 11,,
2000 at 10:00 A.ll. of Hid
day, . the
fottowtng '
daacrlbllll real - :
·
!lftullllll In the State ol
Ohio, c-ty of llllga and
In the Townehlp of Rutland: ·
lllltng tn Sactlon No. 2 and
dlaetlbllll u fall-:
~
Ad
lleglnillng 11 a point tO.
rode Eaat o1 ~ No&amp;a11t
corner of land formerly
balontllng to Ellah1 Hlgtay,
now -ned by Htrlm
SI-r, at the center of en
road, which Ia now
thence Waat
171
l'llntar of lha
Hylllll Run Road; thence
NOrth 22 112' Waat 107.8
IIIII 1tong ,the center of
road; 111anca Eut ftll
to lha canter of Hid otd
roed; !hence South 111" Elat
to the llllca ot beginning,
oantalnlng 1.33 acraa; more
or lila.
.
Auclltor'a P1rca1 Number:
11-ot-.ooo.
Raflrtnca DHd: Volume
112, Paga 238, llalge
Cou~ DHd Racorda.
Tumln111t8
Property Addrtal: 32332
HyHU Run Rd.
•
1LOile your, Aunt Robin
P~y, OH 457t1

Legk)n, banvine
Hollness
Church,
Minnie Thomton;

'I

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Fri. 9:bo to .4:
• •·

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• . COMMIIICIAI. .... RISIDEtmAL
FRt:E ESTIMATES

740·992·7643

' , COOlville, OH 45723'

: 7411t£J-e•a

(No Sunday Calls)

· Sewing Machine &amp;
Vaecuum Cleaner ·
..
'Repairs

.

te€uEVt:l~

H

Fl

.&amp;CONSTRUcnON .
New Roofs. Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free .Estimates

,... ,""'

740-T42o0419
.

,.JK,,_

P F .L

BPR

IJWCO .BLETR . ' -

YCLCTBCD

R N L LA

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VWBJC " THS8R

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A big Iron needle .st"chlng lhe country together." ·
- Jesaamyn WI!St, on Baltimore &amp; Ohio Railroad.
· ·

1'\f:W YEn. 00
TilE Roo:nlo1l.. 1

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UAL~II'UL.I!!

• TOP
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' "J\n41t\Q

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Pones·

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Ohio

.

·a Footings • Flatwork
· · •. Wall, ,• :Perno
E
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL .
T. FREE ESTIMATEELFULL.Y INSURED
E Brian Morrlaon . . (740) 985-394$

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WICK'S "fiQUnG
. · and

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.·
Now is the lime for·g·r·r·r-ffll

buys In the classified• .

~1 ~5 ... 00 :

·IMONDAY.
••

When my 'bos.s gets .upset he chews gum. It has
proven to me that cheWing gum proves you can have.
motion.without PROGRESS.
•

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JANUARY 31 -~~
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Stop In And See
Steve Riffle'.
· Sa~es Representative
. • La.rry Schey

...,

,,

~--~---------·~·--~-----·

750 East State' Street Phone (740f593-6671 .
IAt~1ens, Ohio 45701 ·
"A

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.·,Cellular· ·
·~eff .. Warner Ins·.
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992;.5479
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loday. II has mar• ~r than you think.
.lhose days where lhe things lhel appear
.PISCES. (f.,b. 211'Mitch 20) Terms of 10 be lhe most difficult lo do cpuld lOrn
. endearmenl and knowing how much you out to be lhe easiesl ones for you to per·
· . really care· will elevate the spirHs of one · torm. Don 'l dodge any jobs thrown al
· yo~ love al this lime. Don'l hesltQte to you.
.
' '
,shareyourleellngs.
.
·
.
V'RGO
(A\19·
23· Sapt. 221 .There is
•
u•day, Jan. 4• 2000
ARIES (March 21·Aprlt 191 Because the much 10 be gained loday by sfudylhg lhe
In lhe year ahead , somelhjng you've . ways and .means could be available experiences ot others In order lo search
·always wanled but lhoughl was beyond today l.o acquire somethln,g you've lor ways lo beller yoUr own life: What you
ybur reach could be' in lhe oiling. This always wanted. locus your lull allenlion learn could be ·appllc~ ble to your own
1
c(ijlld come about in rather transcen- on anaining your desire1
affairs.
•
,
·denial manner,
•
•
TAURUS (April ~~·Miy 201 II you lind . LIBRA (Sept. 23•0ct. 23) From enler·
CiP.!UCORH (~. 22-Jen. 18)' Be~- yourse)t hlghar pitched than usualloday, . prlses initialed by &lt;?lhers. rattier lhan from
· 1a~ ypu ·lrury '\'ani an~~ respQfla. to . rathenhan _c o..,. on.!VIIh sneer assertive· your own hard work; is where you're like·
· any llirlalions you shbwer on · anol~er' lnest. mas~ your •nctinallonS with s11111es , ly to be lh~ mosl slJCI:!Isslul tciday. See
· t~y. ~Ui8 your aclione ""' fikety Ia and thank-you&amp;. ' ·
•
·whal peop,le have going for Ihem and
be Ioken .very seriously. Trying lo patch GEMINI (lily 2hluna 2~) Do nol dis· jump Oil board ..,
up a broken romance? The Aslro·Grapli ' cuss your ambitious inlenlions today with SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) llon'l 'proM. Ichmaker can help you ,undersland persons who are ndl dlreclly involved in .lecl your o\roin thinking it you discover
w~al to do' tq makelhe relalions~p """".. your b~slrfess. beca_uS'e lhe less.peopki your niate's judgment Is l! bil kaenerlllan
Maw S2.751o Matchmaker, c/o lhtS news· lhvolved, 11)8 less muddling will e•isl.
· yours today. Instead, be open:mlndad
. p ~per , P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill , ,C1&lt;NCER (Jun! 21·J'!IY 221 Don'l !el and .g ratafullorhisorherlnput.
·
Slolion , New York, NV 10156.
. scll·doubl&amp; pcrmeale your aHairs loday, SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 211 Try to
AQUARIUS (JID. 20,Feb. 191 Visu~lize ?"cause: in aclualily, cOOdilioils are s':"it: ulilize. your talenls lo beaulity your sur·
a ~silive pulcome and s&amp;nething aboul 1ng to look "'9r11.encourag•ng ''?' ach1ev· round1ngs today, because chances are
.which you've been concerned ·wtd mosl lng 50111111hing yqu fleem iR)portanl. •
. your it1\agination and den artistic louc:het
lik~ ly ba ·reeotved 1o your sallsfaclion . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) This. is !me ~~ could be benor thanjlSual allhis lime,

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SCUM UTS . ANSWIRS .

. Script- Ord~r , Frame.- Grisly· PROGRESS

anp.ouneing my redrement.

,...../04,.

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Charlie Brown, Snoopy,
Linus, Lucy... bow can
I ever fo'l!"'t them.... . ·

I

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Sarld"Topsoii"Fill Dlri"Mulch
· Bulldozer ServiCes

.'

. . UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS 10
V GET ANSWER
·

I

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.EXCfiVfiTinG

IZI ·

maintain the scbedul&lt;! demanded by

PRINI NUMBERED 'LEITERS IN
"IHESE SQUARES

I have ~n gr.wful over the yean
for the loyalty of oar editor~ ud the
wonderfial "'''fOI'I and love opreued
to me by.fant of the comic strip. ·

a daily comic strip, t:hel'efore I am

12/22198 1 mo pd

'l)uck seats, car seafs, headliners,
truck !llrps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
F.o~r "'heeler .sea~, motorcycle seats, ·
' boat covers, carpets, etc.
..
Mon-f.:rl ,a:ao • s:oo
•
pver 40 yta experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888·521..()916

•

Dear Friends, ·
I have been fortuaare to draw Cbulie
Brown and hb friends for almost SO yean.
. It hu been the fulfillment of my
childhood ambition.
.
Unfortunarely, I om no longer able to

• Concrele • Backhoe Services
• Masonry • Bobcat Services M ·

Hauling~~one'*Gtavet
. Rutland,

..".'

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I. J;»/B CONTRACTORS, INC.
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A&amp;D'l•to UphOlstery· .-••, Inc.

'

OHIO 45831 • CHESHIRE, OHIO 45820

1/\XWO 1 mo. pd.
'

"LL THESE
t'\ I LLENNIUMS
ARE !.TIIRTIN&amp;
T1:) !.EEM ALIKE

--~ to

740-992-2068
''

C§p

JOlES'

Joseph .,facks

grew up Mitt too
futf .

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EBZBPELRR · 'HR

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~iNt.Tt 1'16 TilL

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We malft house calls

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DWLHPCLRR

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CM,PUT ~!iOCK.I\-1 ·
rr,TI\Q!{NI\PPLE.!

P F L

B E E B C·J 8 R

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•Roofing

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bed*
f/01141

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. GOOD MO~INC.,
CKI EF, N--IP KN'!'Y

Call Now

••

I

. 1000.81. Rt. 7 South·

PRDBir~·l,

' BC
OJW

'

by Luis Campos

Hauling .
Gooc;l Clean Cars
Limestone &amp; Gravel ·

'Case,IH Parts
Dealers. .

lllit IIIMJrt ,_., .

•

Celebrity Cipher cryptogram. are crett.:l from quotatlonl 'by famous ptiO()Ie, pa1t a'nd pr...rn"
Each hitler In tht dptter tll.ndl for another. Todly's Clutl: y ~~· u

TR.UCl(l'NG .~ CAR SALES

., PlRft

we •ll•r•'

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

• ..

RUTLAND

DEPDYSI&amp;

cloNII... acl
lo!M
' latdilutl
lon 1f0N wft:lt

, I

YOlJitSf&amp;..f
·AT wO~IC. ·

No Embarrassment...
You're Treited with Rtillp8Ctl

Hours:
· Mon&amp;Tue9to3
. Cloaed WedneadaJ&lt;•
Thura &amp; Fri9 to 3 .
Salurdlavs 10 to 2

WeWIIIDHI
Columbia Christian
Joe N•.Sayre :.
740·742·3311
Chapel, teftsa Sayle,
'740•742•2138
·
1·888·816·9609
Frank Shultz, A III}'QBe
3/11/99TFN
else who helped In any,
BISSELL BUILDER$,
way during' the loss of
.
INC • ...
my mobile home due to
New Homes • Vinyl
On:. Yout are very ·
. All Makes Tractor &amp;
•• *L ppreda•*-'
Siding • New Garages
muua !I
~oa~.
Prlsdlla Me~ A · , . Equipment P.arts , .· •Replacement WinQQWS
•Room Additions
Fact01:y A~thorized
.
I!
Smallwood

If/far the .·

Pau '
All pus

YOU'l&gt; tf ',UMPY, TOO, If
. / . .YOU wOICf UP
·
· ANI&gt; FOUNO

r'!=;:=====~
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Check Ua Out

Land Clearing &amp; ·
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Septic Sy•teiiU &amp;:
Vtilitie•
1740) 992·3131

985-"1473 ·

Pasa

No Credit • Slow .Credit • Bankruptcy.
Repo • Dlv,ordacl

503 Mill·Street
' Middleport, Ohio :

Houae -&amp; .Trailer Sites

ESTIMATES ·

3•

'

·CRill,.

· Semcea

&amp; Cqmpare

Nortb. Eut

Pass

· By Phillip Alder

.

sat. 9:00 to 12:00

,.

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. !lep""•
BulldoHr &amp;: BaciJ.oe

FREE
Coat
. No.

wQ'a

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WHI

More of the best

8~ Gravell~ lead!

v.c.voUN'o in

JJ

K J 7

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8 Yalta

5"&amp;aaama

Opening lead: • A

100' • 1000' Rolk 1• &amp;3/4" 200#Water Une ·
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Storage Tanks

HOWARD .·
EICIYAIING
CO.. ·
.

New HomN

:::-

33 01 tiny lpiCII
H llotMI'ol

I

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Appral- at 810,000.00

tlbllll"ngullt
1 Lgt. oantal- .
2ROIIIID3
,&amp;=boat
7
at

.

Culverts: 4• - 48" in stock

22 yro. Loedl
Public

30 .....

7 40..985·3813

. •Eitclrtcll 6 Plumblnt

Potnanly,OIIIo

Public Notice

DOWN

21Above=)
31 Qultk

r-o011...,

II II ~DIM men
profound

t::aator lnd

South

·.1e

Tupper$ Plains, bH

·

11

group
21 Cincinnati

Vulnerable:. Both
Dealer: $9~th

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992·6215

Notice

•

H AbOUnded '
M 1Wie o1 clauH

"FarnanctO"

·-..,.,...

1-!-1~:;.

11 Fllllllo

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• K 10 4 ·
• Q 10 8 2
• Q 10 9'
• 8. 3

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B77-353-72221toH free)

'

. tllllbar tNI
21 llyllllrta••
za Atty.'a cltg.

' 8eutli
.
•AQ97' 653

YOUI

Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonary/Wood ·
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates·

11 Hilwellan

• 6 52
• A Q 10 9 '.

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Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
. Thursd11ya

&lt;41 Co I p aawt
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740·742-3411

Uc. II D0-50 nn....,

992-2156

··-

40"A" - .._.."' '
.41 llid. 11111!1·
1nlllpl
42 lit II I I 0ay
14 llllntlfOnd ol
1*11Cijlanl
11 fllall He*! fllr1 44 'xplul"' 1n11a. 1+-1~
11 IIIDtputala . 41 . . . . .
cllahOneally

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1OM lltd ·
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1UifonMI
awl aal
13 Lc dgtnt tor

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Fi8ge A10 • The o.Hy S•lllnet

Tuesday

Pomeroy, Middleport,.Ohio

.Packers, Panthers fall
shon
of
pJayo~s;
.
C
pwboys
get
berth:
.
with the Giants, Carolina needed to earned the last spot in tbe AFC.
win by 18 IliON points than .Green Seattle won the · AFC West in a
Bay, and with the coaches getting tiebreaker with Kansas City after
updates on the sideline, the points winning both of their meetings.
came in bunches as the teams kept
That set up next weekend's first
throwing the ball to the end.
round of playoffs, with Buffalo at
Carolina boat defenseless New Tennessee and Detroit at Washington
Orleans 4.5-13, end Green Bay on Slllwday, and Dallas at Minnesola
poured it on Arizona. too, winning and Miami a1 Sealtle on Sunday. St.
49-24 to finisb with an It-point · Louis and Tampa Bay in the NFC
advantag~ in
the differential and Indianapolis and Jacksonville in
tiebreaker. But when Dallas won a the AFC have byes.
·
few hours later and won the tiebreakIn other games Sunday, it was
er on better conference record, lhe New England ' 20, Baltimore 3;
point differential became moot.
Jacksonville 24, Cincinnati 7;
."We had our chances and didn't MinnesOUI 24, Detroit 17; Buffalo
makct the most of them," said Brett 31, Indianapolis
Favre, who passed the 4,000-yard 6; Tampa Bay 20,
passing milestone for the season for Chicag,o
6;
the third time. "I think everyone philad~lphia 38,
should be aware·of that.!'
St. Louis 31; San
~'I'm disapPbinted that we didn't Diego 12, Denver
get the help we needed today from 6; and Tennessee 47, Pittsburgh 36.
thi\Giants," said Packers coach Ray
Jets 19, Seahawks 9
RhOdes, who was reportedly fired
Seattle's coaches and players
after tbe game. "It's ·tough to have gathered around a television set in a
your season end 'the way it has, trainer 's room to root for Oakland
watching Dallas win a game on tele- _after the Seahawks lost, antl they
vision. But we have no one to blame looked like winners when Kansas
but ourselves- we got in this situa- . City lost to the Raiders .
tion.by not taking advantage of some
Curtis Martin gained 158 of his
.opportunities we had earlier this sea- 203 total"yards on the ground and
son."
scored the only touchdown of the
In the AFC, wins by Kansas City' game. He also set the Jets'· single(9-7) and Seattle (9-7) would have season rushing record.
eliminated Miami (9-7), but neither
Raiders 41, Chiefs 38·0T .
the Seahawks nor the Chiefs could
Fonner Kansas City quarterback
do it. Seaule lost 19-9 to the New Rich Gannon brought the Raiders (8York Jets and the Chiefs blew &gt;1 17-0 8) b~c.k from a 17:0 deficit to kn.ock
lead before losing 41-18 in overtime the Chiefs out of the playoff. Gannon
to Oakland.
was 2.5-for-47 for l24 yards and
Miami loSt 21-10 to NFC East three touchdowns as the Raiders won
champion Washington (10-6), but ·in K;msas City forthe first time in II

By The AUoc!MH p,...

· Green Bay and Carolina needed to
win, and win big, to have a chance to
get into the NI.'L pllyoffs. They did
just that, but still didn't reach the
postseason.
Kansas City and Seattle needed to
win by any score, and neilher was
able to pull it off Sunday, giving a
playoff spot to Miami, another team
that lost on the final weekend of the
regular season.
Dallas and the New York Giants
n«ded to win, .too, and since they
were playing each other, it would
have been fitting in this wacky season if they had tied. But the
Cowboys held on in the final quarter
to claim the last o,f the 12 postseason
spots Sunday.
Dallas · and Detroit are the fourth
•and fifth·8-8 teams to reach the playoffs, and while none of the previous
three has won a game, the Cowboys
see no reason why they can't change
that trend Sunday at Mmnesota.
"I thought today was the first sign
of .a team actually tryi~g to come
together," sa.id the Cowboys ' Emmitt
Smith, who ran for 122 yards in the
26- 18 victory over the Giants. "I
1hink we have sometljing to build on
and be confident about."
. Only Dallas controlied tts own
playoff fate in the NFC, and .because
the 'Cowboys and Giants played a
lat e-atternoo~ game, Green Bay and
Carolina haJ to proceed as if Dallas
would lose.
So they engaged in a shootout
remmtscent of what colleges try to
do when they want to impress poll~lers. Under a possible tiebreaker

offensive 'linemen (Tony Boselli and
Kun Wlli'ner joined Daa .Marino
loe Nedney kicked 1 3~,:ter to Leon Sein:y lea~ lhe pme wiih as the only. quarterbacks wilh 40
win the game ill overtiMt
kick· injuria.
·«Nehdoll&lt;ll passes in a season and
ins a 38-yarder to tie it with 45 ioeJilamy Smith hid 14 catches to Marshall Paulk broke Barry Sanders'
·Onds left.
malcll Marvin Harrison's NFL bish toaal yardage record, but St. Lo11is
Cowboys z.i, Glula II
this _.on. Smith and Keenan (13-3) turned the ball o- seven
Jason Tucker turned a short catch McCardell combined for 273 yards times to open the door for
into a 90-yard toucb!~own, Raghib receivina. ·
Philldelphia (.5-11 ).
Ismail caught a 4-yarcj touchdown
nt.. 47, Steelen 36
.
Donovan McNabb.threw the deci-:
pass and Eddie Mumy kicked fow · Tennessee, ~hose: 13-3 record 1s sive · five-yard touchdown pass 10·
fi~ld goals for the Co~boys, who fin- the~ f~ a Wild-card team, scored · Chad Lewis with IO:'SS left, endiqg
ished 7·1 at home and 1-7 on the 17 pomts an barely. a mmute of the the Rams' seven-game winning '
road.
second quarter. The TIUins defense streak
Packers 49, Cardlnalll&lt;t
generated 16 points and set up aneth·
·
•
Dorsey Levens ran for four touch· er score against Pittsbutsh (6-10).·
Patriots 20• Raveu 3
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downs and rookie Basil Mitchell ·
• . .
31, Colts 6
.
Troy Bro~ had three long kick
returned a kickoff
Rob Johnson, Doug Flutic's back- returns to lead New England (8-8).
88 ~ards · for a up for IS ·games, was 24-of-32 for
The Patriots' won just two of their
score
against 287 yards and lhrew two touchdown last eight games after. starting tile
Arizona (6·10), passes for Buffalo (11·5). 1
season 6-2. The Ravens also fmishoo
which got 396
The Bill~ had a season-high 419 8-8 with wins in four of their last five
yards
passing offensive yards as the Colts (13-3) games. •
"
from Jake Plummer. But he also had had their 11-game winning streak
Redsldas 21, DolpJdns 10
three interceptions. '
snapped.
'·
The l'osses by Seattle and Kansas
Panthers 45, Saiats 13
Buccaneers 20, Bears 6 ·
City put Miami in the playoffs, endCarolina (8-8) won six of nine to
Mike Alstott ran for a touchdown ing any suspense over whether this
finish its first seaso~ under coach and Jacquez Green caught 10 passes would be Dan Marino's last game as
George Seifert, but the Pan!hers still ' for 113 yards as Tampa Bay (II -~) a player and-or Jimmy Johnson's last
came up short qf qualifying for a won. its first NFC Central title since game as coac h.
•
wild-card spot. .
1981.
•
.
Carolina, trying to overtake Green
Vlkinas 14, Lions 17
For Washington, the ·game
Bay in point-differential, threw on
Randy Moss caught five passes became meaningless when Tampa
nearly every play i9 the fourth quar- for 151 yards and a touChdown for Bay's victory 1lver Chica~o was
ter, an4 New Orleans'(3-13) did. the Minnesota (10-6), which knocked flashed on the scoreboard seconds
same, well aware of the Panthers' Detroit into the sixth seeding posi- ·before the coin toss. The Buccaneers
. desperate need to wi n big.
tion.
·
. .
.got the NFC bye.
Jaguars ·24, Bengals 7
Lions quarterback Charlie Batch
Chargers lZ, Broncos 6
Jacksonville wrapped up the top reinjured his broken right thumb and
The Broncos ended their first seaseed in the AFC as Jay Fiedler, filling was replaced by Gus Frerotte just son since ·1982 without loh~· .Eiway
in for Mark Brunell, was 28-of-39 before halftitpe. His status for the at6-l 0, I"" i".IJM·Atl(: West. Rooki~ ·
for 317 ~~rds and a touchdo~n:
wil~·carcJ playoff roun~ nex! weelj: is .tfwiall!ll1il!(:l(! 'fe.,maine Fazande ran
But
w1th
Brunell
already
InJUred,
uncertam.
·
·&gt;
. ftfor _lgj yards. and a touchdown fo~
1
the Jaguars · (14·2) saw Pro Bowl , ' EJilles 38, Jtllnu 31
• ·' the Chargers (8-8),

By The .Associated Preu .
·ar~und," UNLV coach Bil! Bay)lo~
. Cmcmnau has. had some 1mpr~s- . satd. .
.
~· .
SJve numbers thiS, season, st!'rtlng, -· &lt;Anct--tt started rl$hl away as
woth a rankmg that s been as higb as Ke.nyon MDI'!'" ;;cor~ the first seven
No. I and no lower than No.4.
pomts of Cmcmnatt s 11-0 run to
The Bearcats (12-1) topped the open the game. UNLV tried to run
100-point ~ark for the first ttme in ·a ~ith the Bearcats and the 1~ c~:
106-66 VIctory over UNLV on · ttnued to grow~ they scored tns1de
Sunday. And there were plenty of and from the penmeter.
other numbers for the~ to ~row ?ver. · .Center Kenyon Martin had 21
Thtrd-ranked Cmcmnatt dommat- pomts, s1x .rebounds and s1x blocks m
ed the boards 51 -33, had I~ bl~ed on!y 20 mm~te~ and M1cj(eal had 16
shots, forced 23 turnovers, mcludmg pomts and moe rebounds. Freshman
seven on steals, and w~nt 8-~or-10 DerMarr Johnson hod . ~hings :under
from three-pomt range m .taking a control from the outside w1th 22
23-point halftime lead.
points.
.
.
"We're really playing as a team,"
"They played us zone for about
forward Pete. Mickeal said. "When 30 m!nutes l~t year," c~ach Bob
guys are making the elltra pass and Huggms
satd,
refernng
to
penetrating and rejiounding too, we Cincinnati's. 13-pPint victory at the
can't be 'stopped." • · .
Las Vegas Shootout. ."1 thought they
At least hot by the Ru~nm ' Rebels would play more zone· th1s year. I
(8-3).
, think this is th~ hardest we've played
, . .
"Our guys-tril'(l to go up ~ng . ·for4!l"'!aute •. "
and JUSt got manhandled, pushed •·'t'revOr , ' fell UNLV--wtth )8

......... :............... l
Holley Brod&lt;ri&lt;k. ....... ......... 0
S.. Muafteld ... . ..... .0
Janet Calloway .................... 0:
~w

Ba s k etball

Local scoring summartes

Tota11

so

Lyon s
• Heather Om ley .
SiaL}

l'lwl:

60

ll1ige u ~ B.~rne~

2-3

2

Amy l.ce
Sarah Btauer .
Totals
..

0-0

1

.u .

l

()..0

2-3

IS
12

Rachel W~ugh

OoO

1·2

9

~Totals

~

.'

o-o

()...()

0.0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0-0

2-7

ll:O:

0.0
0..0
();.()
~

N, 14-35

lUa

Mslsas: \4 (White 4). FIMillt2S. FIMIIW Gill:

Eastern 75, Federal Hocldn145
4!1
Eastern ........................20 21 18 th 7~

•

I
0
0
0
0

2

['I
1-2

2·5
().()
0-2

0..0 ,

6

0-2
0 - 0-4

5

O~Karr

. ... " ... .Z:ul.
. 0 ,

.............. .... J

,Matt Ri utll., .... . .. ... 2
Joe Brown .............. ........7
Joey Marcmt.G . . .. . . 0
Josh Will ..... ................. 2
·Chm Lyons .. . . .
0
Man Stmpson ... . ..... ..... 0
Chad Nelson . .. .. , 3
Eric Smi 1b .................... 1
~

Tolals ·

·

l$1.

0

1

l

0

..0

0-1
6-6

0

4-5
0.0

18
0
8

2-2
8·8
0.0

2

II

~

li

0
. I

o:
Q

4~

10

6

I 24.J41 . 75

Fouh: 18 Roboo'!'lo: 31 (Wi117). - : ll.;tbW ·
FGs: 15·4.~ U63). "''wnnmn: 1$.
,

Be~yer Eutem '65, Euler'! 4'i

Ells1em ... · .1... .... . ... • 1 1.\ 10 19..
Ben\•tr Ens1em ...........:...... 10 I.S. 10 20 •

lletdtvlle Eutem (2·7)
Z:ul. ;J,tt. ~l
Amber Van Sicklrc .. . .. ,... .0
0
Whitney KaTT •. , ....... .0
0
0.0
.l-4
Danlclh: Spencer ............. .5 • 0
Juli Hatley . . . ..... .... ... $
0
4-5

'&amp;a:

4()

65

_

• Becky Davit . .. ..................4
Amber Baker .......... ....... S

' .

0

~

0

l·.l

-·-

Sa Antonio ..................... , .21
Ul.lh ........., ., ................. 18
Denm ................................ 15
M111nuo1a . . ............... 13
HoultOn .... ........................... to

~~
0
t .l
14

a

11

Akron 73. W. Michigan 62

I Ban St. 75, N Illinois 67

10 .677
10

64J

13

536

14

.m
lOO

~2

·--

l .A l.oken .... ..... .. ....... 25

fonland... ... .................... 22

S~eranaento ................. ..,...... 11

Phoenix ....

L....

.... •

207 .

..'

5 .83}
7 .759

' jO · .630
. ... , .18
1 • 621

Seattk .......................... ...... II 12 .600
L.A. Cll(l(ltn .. .. ........... 9 20 ljO'
OollknSiate :......................... 6 23 207

CiDCinn.u 106,llNLV 66 '
Evansville 84, Wichiia St 55

•....

14

1Cent61, Miami, Ohio 57-0T-Mwqueuc 6S, Xavier 63
M1cbts;an 87, Colorado St 80
·N.Iowa 17, Crciahtob 75
.
Notre Dame
Loyola Marymount S1
Oakland, Mich 60, Nonliweste.m 41 ·
S. Dhno1s 62, SE M1uoun S I
SW Misrour:l St 71, Saim Louis 62
Tokdo 80, Cent Michi&amp;M 57

2'1

_..woot
SMU 68, New Mextco St. !i9
Tcus 90, Hou~o• 80

lill

...

I~

7,,

~

6

lO'h
ll 'h

. 6'/t
6~1

.

7

ta'h

F1rWt11

Sunday's KOre

Tllllipt's giune1

'NCAA Division I
women's s~ores · ·

CLEVELAND a Botton. 7 p.m.
Go~n State at Wuhinpon, 1 p m.
Milwaukee • Pblladllphla, 7 p.m.
Detroit nl Orlalido; 7·l0 p m.
Portland at Od~:11o. 8:30p.m.
Denvei at Utah, 9 p.m

Ioiii.

~

_,

.

S..tti"Mtll

S.:rllfllftllo a CLEVELAND. 7 .~ p m.
AIIJJICI at Milwaukee, 8 p m'

~

'

Rockhllnc 76. lncllnlMI Wor'd 7-4
trinity. Tex¥ 79. Hendrb, 62

.

.

, U
F•rWett
Nco,y Mex.ico 65. Oral Robem 48

·. ·~

·~

'

COllege bowl action

.'
'·.

..

1.

,,

'i

· •
' •

t

•~~

.

'

. . . . ..com

~

84 • J 97

3

3

,
48 115

7 0 ~7 · 94'
7 I l4 88
~ · '3 2:8 tOO '
4 3 23 82

.

UMtt! Bowl

. O.lborlt Bowl
O.O.po 18. Punltte 25. OT ,

,.

,
CGIUII-..1
- · l ), liU16 ' .

'

.. .

.,

,·t

ll--1

Mianolll. Oocqlo Todl I)
.
(!III'UIIftl

Mldllpo- 37. Floridll4

•

~

.

101
101
128
138

5
6

17

2
2

35

101 114 1·
111

JO t06

·

' '

--

5 I 40 91 109 ·
9 S 40 100 108 .
7 ' 3 lot 9.S 112

..

~Diwltbt

"

.'

.

.a....

A.Ianla Mlulfalo,. 7,p.m.
Monaaiii,W-....1 p.m.
Bollon M N.Y blandm. 7 :~ P.m.
Oriawa II CII'Oiinill1l30 p m.
·
l'ttoenill at Detroit. 7:30 p.m.
Los A.•aetesat: Sr! l.oui1. 8 p.m

.

.'
)

.

t

~~

'

..,
.

to now ere?'

,

' I

'' &amp;

' tpur·lsne ·
on W. Vs. sld,, only twolane route on Ohio side
.

~

'

•

•

PIHH Ill

.

~

· By MATT McCARTNEY

.

SpecJal.\0 The Dally Sentinel

'

'

· · RAVEN$WOOD, W.Va. -The ribbon dedicat·
big,the Wiltllm S..'Ritchie Jr. B!ldge was cut Oct. 31,
1981 bY. thon•Gov. Jay Rocke(eller. , .
·
Tr~ftkfloyt~ shortly ,tter aeroesthe bridge just
outside of Ravww~. The b~dge thit broke the
lonpst stretch along the Ohio !liver without a bridge
-some 60 miles - took four years tp complete but
had been in.the wo.rks for much longer.
Vl
The first, talk pf having a bridge between"'bhio
and West Virginia ncar or at Ravenswood began in
1928. It was not until the 1960s; however, the dream
would receive.any kinll.,of substantialJ!rodding for- ·
ward.
.
·•
'
·
·
Paul• Moore became mayor of Ravenswood in ·
July 1965: In lg66,· he ,formed a commitlee to do
somo-.in-&lt;tepth studying into the possibility of turning the dream into ateility.
. ·•
The committee first met May S, 1966. Howard
Brownlee of Kaiser Aluminum chai!'l'~ the oommit·
_tee until his retirement in 1978. Davi4 Karr sei:Ved as
the ~mmittee's seerelat)'. l Othe~ oommittee members included Paul Bel!, Fostcr 'Seaman, Bob Park,
"Sub'r Hartley, Bill Caldwell, Carmef'Robi!ISOII, Joe
Huh and Michael McCann. A poyp of interQted
'Ohioans later joined the eominitlet. iJ'he Ohio group

r

RAcO.revieWs·1999.
.

~

.;.

ac~.ompiJ~h~nts
·~

1

,

...

~~,

.

'

.,

Good··
.
,
Aftern,oon.
., .

I '·

...
'·

'

~ RACINE - The Racine Arel:.. Jnr~bns:
'·
(;ommunity Organlza!ion fCC:CD~~~t' -.. $200'f0i'limestone for the Stlf
reviewed its activities and ~- ' Mill Park r&amp;rking Lot and Road. plishments for I 999. •.
• ·• ••:way; . ~ i 't
. . ,
; During the year, the' aroup mille _ . ' $350 fOr Ooor .mats for the
·(honetary disbli~oments :&gt; totalina · ~uthern Hip.' School refinished
$.5,9.50, includinp&lt;:holtnhips lind IYII1 ~; ~,
Cf•p'ftec!s
'H
donation5. The group prcaented·fOur . • S:ZOO'•fbt July 4 Celebration
· SSOO ~holarshiPI; to So~.them Hip ,~ eateriiiinmen~ .
· ·
. $chool senlon ahd SpOOsOnid tlie ' ~ $200 for. the Fall Festival staae
annual RAOO Flow~r .F~stlvtiJ, . cntcnainm..U: ·
·
·
'• $3QQ tOWard the i_.lation.of
,q11een ·contest and parade 'with tloat
Mzcs totalinJ $100. · '
the jloor In tho Oou MIIVR&amp;Cine
Watber
'
3.
· RACO also sponsored the an~ual Musoum.buildina:
. .
.,
'•·
Froa Jumping Conlcll at the Jl!ly 4
.·! W ' toward ·tho irillallation of
celebration with pri~ tolllln&amp; $300 '.wi~~ '111d plan( 'tor the witer
'· '
. wbeel for. tbe C~ Mill!Racl~~C
·. in two qe Jlllupa. ·
·. · 1\vo drop-off collections of Museum buildina; 'I , r '
Wll2
...
eanried food ancJ moneiary ,&amp;ifli
~ $1,000 for the RaciRCI' River
Pick
3:
9·9.0;
Pick
4J
4-9;24
were aiven .. to tho Melp :Plll!lty Bank Project Fund;
·
'I
, llooelw)'e 5: 16-1'7·19-34-37 ,
United Meih_odiat Goopettlive . • $20010' th~ Racine PirePepll't·
'' .
. .
~
' Plirish Food .Panlry. In addliion; the ment Auxiliary; '
lY.YA
.
pup sponsored tbe ~ual Holiday
. • $100 to the Melp ~ve
Dilli 3: 2·5·7; Dally 41 2·8-8-2
Home ,~rltina Contilt. with•&lt; hris.li Food Pantry; ·
.·
'
. prlaea '9ta!ing $100 and poinsettl• · • $100 for fruit and can4y 1re111
r fottliej~pa. .
""''f.
t1
:.
'
•
ol"-awovanfrFdl'b'.fu
. The 1f11~P also ~ tbe fol.~·
,P\1111,~ RACO, ~ ~ "'a;..,.-;__...;...,;;..._..•_ _.

,• :JI

~unn.er studies showed an average of
pie ~rossed .the ¥.~n bridge each· day.
,crossing the Parkersburg Toll Bridge. Hi!lt&lt;&gt;rical
accounts of the bridge's planning note the project
would ha,ve carried a price tag of $6 million had it
been built in 1966. The actual C\)St of the project in ·
1981 was more than $18 million. · ·
Many ideas were forrnulated 'about what type of
• structure should be oonstructed. Most favored a toll
bridge. Experts said the bridge would lose money for
the first five;years in operation,,.woufd break even
after.IO Yc:!'l!• and pay.for ltself,at the 20-year mark.
After all the studies were conducted and years of
lalking, the idea's importance dwindled away. It was
only after Gov. Arch Moore took an interest in· fulfilling the dream did the prQject begin ·to look like a
possibility.
Moore, and his Slate Road Commissioner was led by Racine Mayor Ernest Wingett .
In 1966 the first studies were done on the bridge. Ravenswood resident William S. Ritchie Jr. Industry was one oLthe leading forces behind the favored the idea' of a free bridge at Ravenswood,
road sludy. Kaiser Aluminum carried a great deal of rather than ·a toll'bridge.
So, on May 20, 1976, the official announcement
power and weight at the time, especially in West Virwas
made by Moore and Ohio Gov. James Rhodes'
ginia. Th·e studies focused on th~ some 3,450.
tha!
they had reached an agreement to build three
employees at the Ravenswood Plant. They found
that only 54 percent of the plant's employees actual- bridges across lhc Ohio River. One bridge would be
ly lived in Jackson County. A small group Jived in at Ravenswood, one 1!1 Moundsville, and one at
Mason, but it was discdvered almost 25 percent of Wheeling...The three bridges carried a combined
the ,plant's employees lived across th.e river in Ohio. price lag of more than $66 million.
Ttlose worl&lt;:els, in order to get to work, had to take " The actual work .on the structure began less than
the ferry across the river at ,Ravenswood (when it a·full year later. The project was slated in four phas·
¥(IS operational), or drive to Mason or to ParKers· es of construction. Phase one inv!Jived the construe·
. lion of.the ·river piers. The cOntract was awarded to
burg to cross the river.
.
.
The· Mason bridge was about 30 miles south, W. P. Dickerson of Youngstown. That phase began
while the brid..Ke at Parkersburg was just as far to the
north. That equated to as many as 120 out-of-the·
Please arldga, Page 3

PcNyt.o!f, ~- (;; .

l .ollcrin

, ·, ~ ~t'spma
New Ieney • Onlwa.2 p.m.
Buffalo 11 Toron10, 7 ~30 p.m,
,
St., Louis Dl N.Y. R_.lft1. 71l0 p m.
Los Anaelts 11 D,.ttao.I·JO p m.
Edmontoa II Co&amp;otldo. 9 p nt
'

-

l~~~i~ II somethina we noed to do,; Musser siid.

'

47 1~1 108
46 119 102
· 44 93 ·01
42 116 107
41 96 94
a 10M and a rcaulllion
'

4 3
.. 0
~
I
6 2
4 I

Nuhvllle J. Sonltlle 2 · ' · Florida 7, 1impo Boy 5
C.Oiina4, AilantAl r;..
• New Jeney :Z, Bo!Moa 2-tie
Buffalo 8, TorOruo I
St. Louis I. Washiaata. l·tie
Edmomon '· 'Phorftil 4

I

'

,, - ,. '
. POMEROY - P!lllleroy. Villago !):&gt;unci/ kicked
off a new ceqtury Monday night with a new mtyor a!
the·he.lm, anCI promptly ibolished a .long~ng .tra- •
aition. ~
' '
•.
.... ., ..... i
:·. At ·th~ prompting gf newly-sea.ed MaYor Joli~, W.· •
Blaeltnlf, council iii'J'I'OYed; hirini· a maptratc to pre'" !iide. elver Cllies thlt would ordiDarily be · ~eai'CI in

'

Dtrilion
.. ........ 18 16 '4 1 41 106 102

. 'lloalda1'•

'

hntlnel N.We Staff

.

I Bl ~ Ill 1i4
4 I 5.\. 1&lt;10 ~ ·
5 0 49' 113 80

CaiJII')' 4, Vtncouver 2 ·
. PitllbutJ;h 4. Detroit 3 '
' N.Y RDnaen 2, M~ 2-ht
• San Jose 4, Chi(!LlJO I
~

Colorado 62. - . . eon.,. 28

•..

91'

Philldelphla4, N.Y. IIIinden I

BoWl

Saturclay'l ..,..a

.

38 97 106

I

Sun...,'• KOres

.

Frlilay•l scoree

Sou~ Mluialppl 3, Colorado State
.~· ·
·
lntll~deeeao.l
~ ~ \ ~lt.lisllppi 17.
lhoma lS.
~

'

1\Jon~~na 8t.·BIIIInp ThU"'-'.wnt-dulmpknblp

.

. Tllllipl'l reolaMUIOn dootr
~ flo!&gt;&lt;!"" "Atl.,.., 9 p.m.
.
. . .

.'

"

89
99

Saturday's SCOftl

S..llowl

"

Sa1urday 's tournaments

I '

• ·.

Colotlldo.

Oreton'24, M•~ 20

·

90

WESTERNCONFERENCE

son1 ........ .............. 20 19
PhOellill :... ' ...... ... ,.21 13
Dallat .. ,................. 19 l5
WAnaetes ..., ,,: 17 I~
Anttltolta ............... 18 17 ·
Overtime Josset couht u
tic.
·

.

hJ\'WiJii ......

S1anfOJd 8l ta\orado 48

••1 ........

'

.'

New ~exl(o 54 .~. N, ArjiOM 40 •,
Pacific 69, UNLV ~
~
• Ptpperdii'IIL: ~5. Tulu. .SI . •
•POrtland 6S P(ldland St ol7
San Pieao 71. UC ln'ine 64-o'r
San FrantiscO 66. OreJoa 60

-

Carolina ............... l5 16
Wuh· tOO
13 16
Tam
10 21
Atl1~a ~-~ ::,. .. :: ...:. 8 2!

,

. '.
'

iiy JIM FREEMAN ,.

.

.,

anymore.

Cmcnl Dtrilion ,

~

!"'Y.I!.....

.52 116
45 100
.18 97

Southall Dlvhlon
Aorlda .....• '\ ...... 21 1.'\

CIIIJIY ................... I7 17
EdlaoDion ............ 13 17
Va.couver '···· ..... .12 .18

N Colonodo 67. Nonh Dokooa 66

OklahOA'tll City 81 . TeXI\l Luthrrnn. ~7

5• A.-nlo It MiMIIOtal 8 p.m.
, .SiJoult 11 HOiuton. B·~ p,m
C!hatlonc 11 ""-ix. 9 p.m.
Dallu 11 De:liver. 9 p.1ft. •
~ ~ · l.altm II L.A. CliP!"", 10:30 p.m.

1

Y'&lt;Uot:ltod

7

.5

5

Momre111 ,.......
... 12 21
•

341

.

"

'

Ill

22

I 51 121 89
2 49 112 9.3 ,
5 42 12.' 107
J .\4 9.~ 1l»
0 2.1 74 II~

,
Northeast Dlvlslon
, T0t011to ... . .. . 23 12 4 2
Onawa ................ 19 12 6 I
HulTalo .
.. -~ 16 17 5 I
Bonon .. ,..... ....... JJ 16 10· 2

Dl~

· 1~llndlli1 divitton hUe

l!o,se

Bcthune·Cook11,1R1n 61 . Md -Ea.Jiem Shore ~9
S Nuarene 79. Xnrier. NO 62

.

I

w...,.

272

L I Bl f'll. Ill 1iA

II 6
12 5
17 . J

t.St Looit ........ " ·· ..... ,13 l o 813 ~26 242 , lba. ·
lY L
Can&gt;Hu .......:. .................... :a L :O .lOO· 421 381
Doaoit., ...........25 10
At-.....,........................411. 0 .267 251 3~1 . St. Loub ..:.............22 , II
S..FfWIIC0 .,..., .......... :.. :411 0.267 flM · 4)9
NUhYille .....: .... .14 20
New QdJooDO......................J ll o .t88 260 434 · au..,., .................. 11 22

Idaho 70. Ore6on St 66
.
Mon.,tllfla 66.
St. 64
Mon1ana St1 71. Air Force ..~ ~ ·

Eul
Pittsburs;h 62, puqtJeSne 57
l

-••~

0 .625 441.~· 377
0 500 3S2 'Z76
0 .438 299. 358
0 375 245 .\82
0 J I3 272 ,357

, • ...,
aa..:
11 • O , •• ~o 235
l • oampl - T ... ........ ., ..... ,,
'
.,
)'~Mi~....... ..,. · . JO 6 0 62j 399 J35
~:8':;:1 ·::· .. :::.. · ::: .. ·:·: · : ::: : -~ ~;~ ~i

Cal St ·Fullerton 86. S., Joa St: 77 f
Ao. lnterllllllonlll2. Wuhineton 6;8

SjttUtday's acllon

'·

--

.

Nardi Texu 59. 5o¥1h Allbmll50
Rockhurst69, Tt~-.• LUtheran Sl
' South .Fiorida 73. KOU..oo'6l 11 •

lY L I f'll. lf 1!t1.

»:

Philadelphia .... ... 22
NcwJersey.
. 21
Pitttburgh ............. 17
N.'Y Rangers ... ,. 12
N.Y. Islanders ....... 9

Ctnt'rtl Dlwlllon

'.

.

Allantle DMst,n

1lul

.

lutern DlvllkiR

ll-WashinJion ...... ....... ,;... 10 6
¢·Dallu ~•. 1-...... 1 • .., • • • 8 8
N.Y. OiODij ............... .........7 9
Arizona. . . ..... ... ... . ..6 10
Phlladetphla .................. 5 II

'

Baylar 64 , l...ouislana-~)'ttfle S6

...

'

.. . ' 'l'o!ndaf'• aamu
P""'ond II\ Toromo. 1 p.m.
Ne,.Jerpey ltlljtdl- 7 p.m.
Bosto)l'at New York. 7. ~ p.m.
VaftcouV« vs. Miami, 7·.30 p.m

,

.

,

OHIO 73, ~ent. MiCbiaan 61
S Dakota St. 110, Momlnp~ 54
SW MtnnefO(a 64, ~a. Sc.P. !17
Winona Sr. 80~ W1yne,. Neb. 63

Montana 78, Rocky Mountain .53
New Mellico 78, WuhinJWn 52
Portland St 76, Thxu A&amp;M-Corpus Christi 64
San Di_eso St. 74. Hiah Point 63

Mtami Ill,, Orlando IO..l..OT

~· ~

· noil

,

No!R Dome 75.-M'!'I.tlene 60

CS Nonhrid&amp;• 94, Cal Poly-SLO 86
California 9S, O.vidaon B7
1

u~

-·-

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Cllicqo ... ~;·· ·; ·· ..............610 0 .J15

Iowa 82. Indiana 68
Iowa St 62. Te~~:u Tech 37
Kalamazoo 67, C~hqe 53
Kanns 81, Arizona St 65
,
Kent82, Bowli•g Greta 61 · •
Michigan 77, MiDne~ota 33
MtchiJan St 62, Ohio St 50
Minn!-Morris 70. Minn...Croobloa 61
N. Dakota St. 86, Nebruk.a-OnWttl7l
· N.C. Chul ... 60.. Solnt LouiJ 58 1
Northern St , S D. 110, Moolfleltd Sl 51

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Oakland ....... ......................8 I 0 .500 3911 329
Denver . .,,..: .... ,.............6 IQ 1l .37' 314 .\18

g

E. Illinols 72 •.Wis.-Publdl 67
E Miehism66, MARSHAU. j7
Illinois 82. GeO!JII 6S
Illinois St. 59, S. lltinois •1 .

!Qwo St. 84, Muus St. 53

217 437

Weshm Dlvldon
x-Stanle ................. 9 7 .0 .56] 3\8 298
KIWU Ctty ........., ......... 9 7 0 .!i6J 390 322
San Diego .. . .
. ......8 8 0 .500 269 316

1

Drake 78, N Iowa 69

,

. 12~

,.

NUL standings .

Puuburah .................610 0 .J7S 317 320

..

Mayor ,wo-n't
hear·cases ··'

I

(11-0), 8

Hockey

o 500 m m

CLEVELAND .. .............. 2 14 0

'

Te~h

p m (ABC) •

CINCINNATI ......: ..... .... 4 12 0 .250 283 460

DePaul 83. 111.-Chlc.,. ill, lOt'

BowHng.GI&lt;t:n 8~. MARSHALL64

I

20
o.tlu ... ............:... .. . ..... .9 21
............................. .... 6 2J

6

Auists: 8 (Btssell. BroWn 3). Blotktd' lltott; 0.

'

..

18 • .379

BohltMr&lt; ..... ............... :... 8 8

Mklwtll 1
Akron 83. Nttgara 79
· ·
Augustana,S.D. 76, South Dakota 59
Ball St n, Miami, Ohio 6.5
Cretghton 71, Bradley 6S
Dayton 84, Loyola, Jll 74 .

Mldw~

,

17 .414

lY L .'fa.

•s

0
0
0

.511

MldwootDtrittlon

0

IT &amp;

o.o ·

.

llut.

7

J.:l l)

4-17

13 ..567
14

Supr Bowl, New Orlea{'d

Florida State (11-0) vs Virs1nip.

.4

POMEROY

.. Blaettnar said,cquncil f)to~ld .illso consider raising
fines, m.l!ing them similar to olber c:Onjtilunitiu and
counues.
... ·
· .' In otber.business, council shot dbwft a reques.t by
.Biaettnar to keep the downtown park,ing meters
bagged for an additio!lfl three monihs.
: "The only reason to have parking meters in
P(lmeroy is to keep traffic movina.". said Blaettnar,
· ,o,yho proPosed thai the meie!l be hooded uritil M~rch
30, pendi~g the outcome of a Ma~&lt;:h · 1S downtown
survey.
'
/
. Parking meters have lang been a subject of debate
in tho downtown area. However, the topic .pin l'OIC•
to the surf!ICC following the announcemedt·that a rtcw
Wal-Mart store would be constructed ig ncighll?!!nJ
Mason, W.va. . .
,
. ,. ,
Supporters of the parking meters AY_' they ~~~ ·
traffic 111ovina in the downtownllrca by discilurtllna
lent-term parking, while meter Qpponents S!IY. meters ,
encourage people to shop clsew~re, who~ parking i.s
free.
· ·,
· ~- · · ·
. ·.Councilman Dave Ballard diilgreed with Slaettnar 's suggestion.
· ·. · '
· ·· '~--l
"I don't think it'll· work. I don't think it's a &amp;ood
Idea,• he said.
·

1\itsday

CeMt:ll DlvWon
ll-JacklonYtlje .......... ,.... 14 2 0 .875 396 211
y-lennenee ..
.
13 ·3 0 813 l92 324

Catllwba 70. Uvingstone 47
Clemson 75. N C -As~vtl!.e 56
Francis Marion 92, S C -Aiken 74 '
Georgta Collegt: 82, Al'lll!llrong Atlantic: 78
Georgta Southern 68. Wofford 6~ ,
Jame s Mndtson 89, Rider 75 • .~
louts\'tlle 65, Ctncinnau S6
i •
Mempht5 65, UAB 64
• Miami 64. Temple 44
Mlsstsstppt 72, Tenneuee Tecb ~
New Hnvcn 74, St Uo 58
North Honda 90, Clayton Sr. 55
South Caro1ina 62, GeorJe Mason 48
.Vanderb1lt 73. W. Kenl\l~;ky 57
Vn1in.ia Tech 66, Radford 42 ;
•

229

-PageS

•

·

This week's slate

y-Miami .. .. . .... . .... 9 1 0 S6) .126 JJ6
NY. Jets ....................... 8 8 0 .500 ~08 309
New Englan4 ,. ... ! _. ... 8 8 0 .!100 299 .284

S.Uih

Tennecsee 72, Radford 46
UTEP 88, Aa. lnternational 81
VilJinia89, Dartmouth ~

,Qtli(ito ...,,........................... 2 25 .074

6

4
4
12
0

Eut
Drexel 76 Northeastern 67
Ft~irlr,igtJ D1ckinson 72. Buffalo .S7
Fordham 71 Provtdence 67
Georgetown 6.\, James Madtson 48
Hofma 7-1, Bos1on U 46
MohM: 72. Delaware 68
Manhaunn 69, Army 49
St. Bomwenture 84, Ntagnra 71
Towson 73, New Hampshire 66
Vcrmom78, Hlln'nrd 71
South
A11bum 100, Stony Brook 4S
D11ke 96, W1lham &amp; Mary .5~
Georgia Tech 7!1, Lafayette 64
Lou•stann-Lnfayelte 71 , S1ena 54
Muyland 100. Coas1al Carolion 48
Mercer 82, N G.-Asheville 73
MississiP:pi 89, Birmingham·Southem 48
North ~llrOllna 86, Howard 53

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I

U.

'5 I

'

.

&amp;

I}()

7•11

.W L I•r.to. lf .fA

.. . JJ . 3 0 813 423 'jjJ

y-Buff,.to ........ ..... ..... ,.. II 5 0 .688 32Q

Liberty 69, WeSt Vira:inm 57
Loyola. Md 69, fona 51
Maine 74. Towson 62
M ertyh ur.~t 105. Columb111 l)mon 29
N()rtheastem 61, Hofstra 47
Penn 91 Bucknell 73
Penn St 114. Nonhwestern 49
Providence 7-1. Prmceton 59
Richmond 7?l Albany. N Y. 6l
Rutgen 66, Ma.uachusctts :U
S1. Bonaventure 8J. Sieno. 69
St Mtch~l s 79, Mass -Lowell 70
St Pewr's 60. Manhanan .19

· Sunday's action

CenttOIDlrilaclau ...:........... ,............ ..:.. 20 9. .690
Chorlode.. .. . ... . . ..18 II 621

CLEVELAND ........ ............ ,ll

· Aulsts: 9 lloektil: sllot•: 0 Fouls: 20
Rtb.und1: 19 (Dunfee 5) Steals: 4. Total FG1: 18S!i (327) 1\trnowtn: 16

-Jbshltt:hl

'

Ftdel'lll Hacklna

Z:ul. l:i&amp;

4

u

9 .690
New York . ,.,...,., - . . . .. 18 12 600
)'lttlodttlphla ...................... 17 15 531
Orlaado . . . .
. . ... 1.5 I5 500
Bo11on ....................... ... 12 16 429
New Jersey .. .:. , .. ..... 12 18 400
.Wutiin~ton .... .................... 10 20 .333

~J.. ..ta .................... ~...· II

.

Bnan Poston .. . . . 1
Dan Whttlatch........ , ....... !
Steve Rachatds . . . ... .2
Ben Dunfee .. ........_. ... ...6
Buddy Dunfee ... .. . . 0
Mau Quinn : .. ................. 0
LogaR . ........ , 2
Ryan Grimm ....................0
S~ty Gilchrist ..... , ....... .l
Toaall
· . 13

u

Q

.

ll-lodtan.apohs . .

Drexel 60. Bostl'ln U 59

Utnh 7~ S Utnh 56

· lY L r.t.

Mtlwau.kft .............. ........ 17
Detroit·........\.. , .......... 15

Federal Hocking . ... .,.. !i 17 IL 12•

elml:

0
0

ruin
•1

•

Hometo~ Newspap~r

FIHUBowl

Nebras,ka Jl, Tennes~ 21

Eattern DlviMn

r

6l Rose-Hulman .S3

S101day's·score

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Falcons SOII1' post
hopkss 49ers

·a t

Blaettnar- who had held mayor's coun
term- said he wauld not hold court
"or the t,t,onday 'after that. •
.
_
At
J'~!CQ~nmendalion, i!f COpncil Presidenr John
Musser, council agreed to hire Pomeroy,al!o~ Scott
· ~ell 'for SSOO per month on a month-by-month

' Michigan J5i Alabama 34, OT,

NFL staDcUDp

Y2K,

••

.can,,'* .
InSurance
for. Needless
-tosay,l do
. not want to
·: hold mo.yor's
\ CoNrt;'' ·

The Green Bay Packers fired first,
year coach Ray Rhodes and his
entire staff after the team failed to
m~e the playoffs for the first timC:
in seven years, The AssoCiated'·
Press learned.
l'lSPN first reported the firingil;
.confirmed to the AP !ry.~ · soUrce
close· to .the 'teattl \ vho spoke on
condition of anonymity. The
source said the -' Packers . will
announce the firings at a ptess·
conference later today.'

OnnpBowl

Euc

Far Wut

Toronco .......................... 17 12 ,586

Haner 5) Steals: II (H Haner 3)Thtal FCr. 23-:40
(57 S%). Tumovel"': 19

·

0
0

We~ d!Jne preparing for

you

ltuiohwl

Appalacluan SL 83, Navy 74
Buffalo 77. CaniSIUS 68
Connecutut 90,~ Louistana Teth 6)
Danmouth 63. Hartford 62
Delawpre 7S, New Hampshire 56

Southwttt

Mian&gt; ..... .................... 20

H Haner. Rebound!~: 3:2 (Jphnson 9, H."Haner 6, T

·

0

S N11.2nre01: 85. Frtends 52
Tnmty Texas 76. Hendri x 62

o.o

0
0
19
2
0
7

Allantlc Division

·a ·
60'
.

·

0

0
0
0
I
0

&amp;wa~

EASTERN CONFERENCE

8
6
4
4
l
0

0..5

0

n

.

GlreEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -

Wbco!Uin 17, Stanford 9

Sunday's actiOn

Mid"t~t

J-4
0-0
0-0
J.4
0-Z
0,0

'

Sports

•

Page 4'
How to take care ofT·s!lirts, Pages
.
Eastern girls topple South ~allia, Page 6

mayor's .court. · · · .. n 1 ·\
;:
•
• .t
; Blaettnar, who psked that tbe.village llOIISider liir:
jog a magistrate, said h_p would not hold mliyor's~rt
· in the wake of recent lawsuili allcslna !bat mayon are
billed in favor o{ officers wridna dcke!l, an~ lillY bo
pe,..Onally liable for darnagea resulting ·from civU· '
actions.
~·
. , t :
·
"That is a liability you
"That is 'a can't buy insur~ for,"
Blaettnar said. "Needless to.
·.liabiUty
"ny,' I do not ' w~l to hold·
b
miyor ·~"Court.,;
' ·• ·
UJ
Bl.ettnar· iaid he wanted•
council 'to .hire ·a magistrate, .
but" added that he wanted
·council• 10 make the deei-.
sion. ·
.
.
· "I will itot appoint a m~~a·
istrate," he said. "
I
Mayor's oourt is erie1ralh
held on
. seCC)nd ,
fourth
of

Packers.flra
Rhodes· . staff

Montnna St·Billlngs 70, Meu, Colo. !i9
Tlllrd ptOmdron St 79, Rocky Mountain 61

· South
Betfluoe·Coolman 64, Md -Eastern Shore 52
DePauw 56. Cemre 48

IT flL

3

with seven bl~cks for the Longhorn~
(8-3), who used a 14-4 run to take a
71-61 lead w1th 7:19 to play.
Freshman forward GeorgO: Williams
had 23
and. 12 rebounds for.
the
(6-7).

.

, Saturday's adion

NBA standings

f'll.

Holly Hatler .... ... ... S-9
Ashley Ctlfdwell ..... 4-5
Sarah Wngh!
2·3
Angle Johnson . .. ... 2·3
Tanya Haner .
2-4
S1ephame Evantch
1-2
Cand1 te Mooney .. .. ... 0.1
Tracy Cheney .
~ . Q:.2

e

AuhU: nla Blkktd shots: p/u. Fouls: nla
Rebo•nds: nla Steals: nla Total FGs: nla
Tll.-.oven: rria

-•-

South Gallia Rebtls {1·1)
J:lmr
~ ~
IT
S!ocy Wh1te , ,
\.1
().0' ' 9-18

~· ~

Nikki Tlcken ..... ............... .1
Totals
.13

Assists: n/tl Blocked shob: nln Fouls: n/o
R~buunds: n/u Steals: nfa Total FGs; nip..
Thmo\'trs: n/n

4-5

9-t.c

Ell!ttm C5-4i)

Cindy Leach . .. .. . .S
1\manda Waher .......... ... , .0
Kelly Roberts . .
.
0
Braridt Southworth.... .... .8
Tabby King . . .. . ..
I
JCsUcaOsbome,...........0
Bobbt Cratg
. . . 2
Shannlt Hacker ........ .. ....0
Ashley Fox ... J, ... . • • • 0

.50

14-ll

B~wtr

.

['I flL
2-3
22
2-4
10
\-6
!I
l-10
5
1-4
.\

K:111 Cummins
Tanunr Fryar
Ktm lhle
...... ....... :..... .

Q

~

10 .

Auburn made II three-pointers, high 21 ppints and 10 rebounds for
shot 52 ~rcent from the fiel~. had a th~ T.ar Heels (9-4), who opened the
48-31 rebound advantage, forced 19 sccqnd half with a 25-3 run in ending
turnovers and hell! the Seawolves (2- a two' game losing streak.
13) to 27 percent shooung.
Reggie Morris ·scored 17 points
No.9DIIke96
for·thevisitingBison(0'9).
William &amp; Mary SS
No. 14 Maeyllllld 100
Freshman Carlos Boozer scored a
Coastal Carolina 48
season-high 28
Juan Dixon had 18 poiniS and 10
points and senior rebounds for the Terrapins ( 11·2),
.c~ris Carra well . who cruised to lheir 72nd straight
added 20 lis the non-conference home victory.
Blue Devils (9-2)
Brandon Newby had 13 points for
won their 42nd the Chanticleers (2-9), wbo missec;l
straight . home their first nine shots and had six
game
and tumov~rs in falling behind 16-0.
improved their record in Cameron No. 111 Tern=iee 72, Radford 46
Indoor Stadium to 600-135.
· Marcus Haislip and Jon, Higgins
Scotty Scott had 15 points for the 1\ad II W~nts . each 'as the Volunteers
Tribe (5-5), who have lost 15 straight C.U·'r) "!WJO 10 playe;:.. scQ~e ' in ~
ti'Ves to Duke, the last eight by· at . home rout. Rian Evereu 'scored 15
least 23 pomts.
•r. poiniJ·for the Highlanders (4-6).
No. 13 North Carolina 86
i
~o.18 ~ 90, Wouitoa 80
Qpward53 . _
, ...,Duis. Mihm had 2,0 points, H ·
Brendan 'Haywood had a 'season· relliltJiidi&gt;Ud tidll his schoOl record
.

NCAA DivisigQ I
meJl'S SCOres

0

0.0

•

6 10 ll 19 ..
1012 623·

J:lmr

0

Our Vuw:

'Dis

3

0.0

Aulsts: ,9. Blocked shots: 0 Fouls: 8
ltlbeunda: 29 (Davis 9). Sleals: 2. 'lbtal FGs1 2().
56 ( ~57) 1\lmoven: 13

South Gallia 60, Southern SO
Southern ,
Sooth Gall to

1-2

points .but' n~ Runnin ' Rebel had ·as ·
,tough a gam.e a~ · ~enter Kaspars
Kambala, their leadmg scorer and
reboundcr.
Kambala, who averages 20.6
points and 9.4 rebounds, rarely got
the ball and finished with '10 points
and three rebounds m 23 mmutes.
In other games
involving ·ranked
teams Sunday, 11
was: _No.
4
Aubu,m . · I 00,
Stony Brook 45;
No. 9 Duke 96,
William &amp; Mary
~5; No. 13 North Carolina 86,
Howard University 53; "!o. 14
Maryland 100, Coastal Carolina 48;
No. 16 Tennessee 72, Radford 46;
and No. I 8 Texas 90, Houston 80.
No.4 Auburn 1110, Stony Brook 45
· Chris Porter scored 15 points to
!cad t!!e .Tigers (12·1) in their 23rd,
consccubve home victory.

J•nuary 4, 2000

tries.

No.3 ,Cincinn~tJ whips UNLV;·-Auburn, North·-c ·a rolina also win ·

.!ltwm IOiib

•

.

'

.IV~

,.

1999: YEAR IN REVIEW

.Prid.dy gets 8 years o~ pot charge ·
(l;dltor'• note: '!'he following
. 11 the - ~ond In I lhi'H part
Hrle• looking bllck It the newa
of1• •)

MAY .
May 3 - ~iddleport plans for a
neighborbojld watch program.
.,Becky Johnson and Dwight Icenhower were cro.wned Meigs prom
king and queen.
.
May '4 - Pomeroy reconsiders
re-Cstablishing a police auxiliary .
May 7 - National Day of Pray
lllll)cts several ·hilndred people to
tho observan~=t held in front of lhe
Meigs County Gourthouse.
May 9 - Tentative plans made
earlier to give a facelift io ll)e Meigs
County courthouse are postponed
until' 2000 due to a lack of inoney.
· May 10 - Gospel ainaer Squire
Parsons presents con~=trt at the
amphit~eater down by the .riycr.
May 11 - 1\venty-one I!CteS is
·secured ·aJona the Ohio .River in
1\acine for develojlmenl of ;a boat
ramp by the Ohio Pivislon of
Wildli~.

1:

. May 12 - Rutland Council :
decides to develop a new park in
Rutlaml in celebration 'of the com·
muniiy's.bicentennial.
May 13 '--Judge Fred W. Crow
Ill denies a motion filed by residents .
of Tuppeis Plains asking that the
board members of Regional Sewer
Disliiet be removed and the activities of the bOard be reviewed.
May 14 ..:.. ShopKo Stores,~'lnc.
buys the Pamida Holdings Corp.
which operates a. store on. Laurel
Cliff in Meigs County.
May 16 - Inventory of items
alleged! y owned by Fred Priddy is
seized during an ongoing Meigs
Couniy drug case.
May 17 - New firehouse at
Racine is dedicated during ribbbncutting ceremony.
.
•.
. May l8 ' - Fred Priddy pleads
guilty to ,felony ·marijuana P\)Ssession. Btidget Vaughan and Tricia
Davis are announced as top scholar.;
at Meigs Hi~h· ~hool.
May 19 - Jesse Clayton Little
and Kara Ruth King are named vale-

dictorian and salutatorian respec•
lively of Southern Class of 1999.
May 20 Stephanie Evans is
named valedicforian and John Prof1
fitt, ·salutatorian of Eastern · High
School.
•
May 23 -The Coalition Against
Superfluous Highways (CASH) file~
sui\ to stop U.S. 33 project approval,
May 24 -,. Fred Priddy of Rur;
land is sentc.nced to eight years i~
jail and fined $15,000 on a felony
charge of possession of marijuana. .
May 25 ......,.Fundiqg is secured tO
help Meigs County artisans form a
guild and market their works around
the nation.
'
.
May 26 :... Markers along the '
route of Morgan's Raid. across
Meigs County
. .. during the Civil , War:
are dedicated.
May 28 - Racine's Erica Arnott
'Is crowned 1999 Miss Ohio River in
pageant ceremonies held at Marietta
College.

PI•• 111 RIYI4Iw, Page. 3

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