<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7667" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7667?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T11:59:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18078">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/35c9dddc7290fb56675266cdacdd202e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>181003106614804c661db0506ed320b7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24948">
                  <text>•,
•
:~

•

..

!

.

-on

.-

Ohio Boyl 881kltblll
Dlvl81on rv Sectlon•l Fln•l
Ill Alexander

•

~="'...,. ~·M,O:'\~~~:·,~

56
90

....... .......................... 26 25 25 14 .

:t t:

~:

Iouth
Shlf• ............ 0-0
Duty .................. 0-0
Moonoy........ ...... 2-8
Bameo .............. 0-0
Mlcl&lt;eyMialle ......... S-11
Don Bickle ...... :.......... 0-0

0..0
0
0-1
0-1
0
2-4
0-0
10
0-0
0-0 o-o
2....
1-2 17
0.()
0-0
0
lhone&amp;tophenson .... 2-3~ 0-0 0-0 •
. , Staton ............... 0,-0
0-1
0-0
0
-Young ............ l -2 ' 0-2
0-0
2
Aoltin Cool&lt;... ............. 2-4 0-1
0-2
4
~
J..;l li
)abo!•
111-40 "'"
2-8 50
...; Aulat1: 7 (Mooney, Stepnenson 2).
"' l:ld ahot1: 1. FOUl•: n/a. Rebounda: 27
4lllassey. Be&amp;s 9). SINio: 3. To1111 FGo: 24-56
J.A2D). 111-: 21.
.

.... - ................uz

'

•

Eoatom(l•21

~KeN. . ~ ~
~
Garrett !&lt;err ...............2-4
1-2
1-3
folatt Blaaoll................5-8

jloo Brown ............... 8-10

;!Dsh WIM.-. ................ 6·10
!;hris Lyons ...............o-0

Man Slmp90n ............2·5 ,

2-4
0-0
0-1
t-3
O· 1

3·5
1-3
1-2
o-o

o-o

1!11;
8
19
17
13
3
4

Chad Nelaon..............4-8
1-2
0-0
11
lrtc Smith ................ 3-10 0·1
3·3
9
lltow Weeks .............0-0 0-0 0-0 o
lradley Brannon ........o.o
o.o
o.o
o
Broderick ...........Q,Z
Q,2 . g_,g
Q
,....... .
30-55 8-15 12-11 10
• Aoolo4o: 14 (Will 5). Blocked oholo' 2.
~ 1'1/8. Aebounda: 35 (Bissell 6). Stelle:
~:i-islmpton 4). Total
36-7o c.st4).
nta.

Faa,

.:run-..:

DlviOioniV
Allen E. 55, lime Perry 37
Anington 67, Ada 41
Aversville 78, Stryk• 53
Bascom Hopowoll-l.oodon 78. Danbury 311
Bodford CIIOnal Si, Ashlabule Sts. J&amp;P 22
Berlin Hiland
Malvwn 21
Cen1ottl&lt;J'Ij60. Cols. Wellington 51
Convoy CresMew ... onoville 37
Dan'lille 88, Marion Ca1h. 13
Delphos St. John's 53, R . Jennings 42
EdgOflon 43, H~llop 34
Fon LOramie 58, ·Troy Chrisitian 44
Franklin-Monroe 47, Bethel 30
f;remonl St;-Joseph-fiA , New Aiegel44
Gibsonburg 81 , Van Buren 70
Greenwict'l S. Central 55, New London 49
Holgate 74, TOt Maumee Vallfl'l 53
Independence 83, Cuyahoga Hts. 40
Jackson Center 52, Russia 45
Kalkla 47. ~psic 48
Kidron Cent. Chr. 89, Mogadore 52
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 56, Cols. Acade~y

Tri-Village 71 , Mississiniwa 'AtHey 41

eo.

Ohio Girls 818kelblll
SMurday'• Reaulte
Tournament
Dtvtelon I
Amhem 47, Southview 40
Barberton 43, j3reen 26

~

eek53.~5

Breck vi He~62, ~onia 55
C · 40, !Jma Sr. 35
·
Centerville 47, Sidney 39
Cola. Brookhaven 71, Cols. Northland 50
Defiance 60, Bowling Green 22
Grove City 63, Olemangv 44
Hudson 07, Akron Garfield 41

Massillon J~Ckson 57, CM. GlenOak 4o
N. can. Hoover 49 , Wooster 40
Newark 55, Aeyooklsbtirg 33
Northmont 47, Miamisburg 35
Parma Hts. HOly Name 80, Brunswick 33
'Wiley Forge 152, Panna Normandy 39
Pickerington 44, Dublin COffman 26
Shaker Hts. 62, Garfield Hts. 58
.
Tiffin Columbian 48, Mansfield Madison 44
Tol. Cent cam. 95, Anthony Wayne 29
Tol. Nor1hview 58, Tot Start 53
Tal. Notre Dame 59, Dragon Clay ,.7
Trotwood-Madison 72, Day. PattEtl'son 37
WesUake 47, Elyria 43

TournarMnt

•
.. .
•~
.... ' .
'

Divlo4onl
Chillicothe 58, Mariana 39
...
Cin. Colerain 74, Cln. Anderson 68, OT
Cin. Hamilton 48, Cln. Mt. Healthy 27
Cln. Harrison 60, Cin. Sycamore 51
Cln. Weatem Hills 71, Cin. Moeller 49
• Cln. Wln1on Woods 62, Cirl. HUgheS 43
E. LJvorpool 48, Dover 45 .
• · Grove City 74, LewiS Center Olentangy 47
Hil.lard Davidson 37, Grovepon Madtson 27
l..akOia East 80, Cln. LaSalle 54
Matyavllle 55, MI. Vernon 38
New Philadelphia 6Ei, Zanesville 62, OT
Reynoldsburg 55. ClaMoway Weslland 48
Thomas Worthington 51, Gananna 32
Dlvlalon II
Athens63, S. Point 53

Cln. flturceii-Marian 75, Bethel-Tale 55
Ctermont Northeastern 64, Cin. Taft 30
Oay. Chr. 60, Day. Northridge 41
Hamilton Ross 51, Taylor 49
.• Fairfield Union 76, Warren 64
NOfWOOd S4, Western Brown 54
Portsi'I'IOI.Ittl 64, Rock Hill 49 :
Thornville Sheridan 60, Circlaville 47
npp City Tippecanoe 64, Greenorl 42

n.

Dlvlalon Ill

Huntington Ross, 46, Zane Trace 43
Germa.n10wn VBlkty View 70, Spring. NE 36
Wheefersburg 63, Nelsonville-York 43
wi•lamspon Westfall 72, Piketon 63

Elida 68, Uma Bath 62
Hebron Lakewood 66, Cols. East 55
.Jefferson Area 66, West Geauga 57
London 57, Pataskala Watkins Memorial47
River Valley 47, Whi1ehaii-Year1ing 46
Marvsvllle 47, Delaware Buckeye Valley 38
Napoleon.aa, Oak Harhor30
Philo 56, Dresden Tri-Valley 49
~oland Seminary 79, Hubbard 21
St. Marys Memorial 55, onawa -Glandorf 39
Teays Valley 11&lt;4. Cols. Briggs 13
Upper Sandusky 65, Kenton 43 '
River View 50, Zanesville Maysville 37
Willard 51, Norwalk 46

J23"'Jt:"'

"-«!;-

MIDWEST
Cincinnati 68, Louisville 59.

N-

FAA WEST
Gonzaga 70. San Francilco 84
IdahO 84. Cal Poly·SLO 78

By Tho ANoclolod Proeo
. EAST
.George Washington 81, Duquesne 42
LB Sa.lle 65, Fordham 55
L.alayette 81, B'!Cknell 60
Marist 73, canlslus 89
Massacllusalts 54, RhOde l~and 4e
Niagara 80, Siena 73
· St. Joseph's 79, St. Bonaventure 59
Sl. Joaeph'o, Maine 69, Malne-Farmlngton

49, Usbon David Anderson 4S

54
St. Pater's 88, Loyola, Md. 61

SOUTH
Clemson 75, Florida St. 58
East Carolina 67, Goorgo Muon 49
Florida 84, Alabamtl 60
Florida Southern 89, Florida TIICI188
.Funnan 70, Goorgla SOulhom 88
Georgia 75, YandMIIUi
GIOI)Iia Tee~ 80,-Matyland 49
LSU 70. Soulh C&amp;rollna 88

Mississippi 78, Arkansas 83
Mlaslaalppi St. 83, Kentucky ole
N.C.-WIImlng10n 65, WIHiam &amp; Mary 511
North Corolina 73, Duke 8&lt;4
Old Dominion 93, Rldlmond 87
South Florida 88, 82
Southern Mlso. 78, Tulane 72 .
Tennessee 76, Aubum 81
UAB 65, N.C. Charlolte 48

f

$33,980.

~f

FootBALL

21. (12) Mike Skinner. Chavrolet, 390,
NoUonol'f_.l taoeue
$37,210.
Cl.EVELAIIID BROWNs-Named Jon Foib22. (31) ~ny Irwin, Chovrolot, 389,
ns aaalsleot coach.
~
$38:910. . &gt;
INDtANAPOUS COLTs-Re-signed Qll
23. (24) IWcloael Wollrip, Chovrolel, 388,
Kelly Ho~omb. Signed 08 Guo OmOIOin.
•
$38,510.
,.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Agreed 10
24. (19) ~ Wallace, Chevrolet, 389,
Ierma wilh WR Troy Brown on a five-year con$37, 180.
·
· ·
Inlet Slanad TE Eric Bjomoon.
-, '
25. (9) BiU Eliott, Ford, 389, 135,960.
WASHINGTON ,REDSKIN6-Signed (;
26. (35) Jl!!omy Spencer, .Ford, 389, . Cory Raymer 1o a lwO-yetlf contract At:qul.,c(
$38,050.
;1,
tho No. 3 ove'l'll draft pick from the San F...,.
27.- (28) Kevlil 'lapage, Forti. 389.$35,350.
cisco 49erolor VO. 12th, 24th; 118th and 1411h
28. (26} Blioif'SadiOO', Ford, 389, 135,800.
OVerall plcka In the 2000 dnlfl.
. •;
2D. (22) Jerry Nadeeu, CloOYfOiet, 388,
HOCKEY
$34,450.
·
Nllllonol H~X.I.Aogue
30. (8) Joe Nemochell, · CheYrolo4, 388,
CALGARY FlAME
elgned F Cnris
$3:!,375.
.r
Clark and G Joan-Sebotstiefo Giguere to Salit!
31 . (13) Ky1e .!',t!IIY. Pontiac, 318, $31,750.
John of the AHL
;;
32. (18) Jalf
Ford, 387, $43,07!5.
"
' '
33. (28) Rick lolaot. Che.rollll, 387, $23,500.
'34. (21) · Staey Compton. Ford, 386,

• 20-hp, V-Twin,liquickoo/ed engine

·

$149 JltrMonlll* Save $1,300

$72 Per Month* Save$300
'JA60 Wallt-Behlnd Mower
• 6 hp • 2J.inch castaluminum deck

N

s

L

I

Naw$419

R

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive
740-446-2412.

740.593-3815

•

'

..........,W¥ ;

,Bidwell·, 011

AtloeM,OH
WakefieldGarage .
US# 50 West, P.O. Bod 639

' ..

.

l.arry.'a Cycle Cl 'l'noftor 'Salef

2706 Pike Street
304-4~7102

I.

.

, fi-lnQ=

'Offt~ tnd ftbtuary~. 2000. SUb\ect 10 19J&gt;rovod tred~ on Jolin llotrJ Cred~ Rl'loiYinil Plan,lor nonc:crnmeltlal use. 1011 down payment requioed. ~h bl~nct Is not paid lntulll!yh end o1 Slme /oo Clllr pro•natitnl~.lt!lrtWI Wll blllleiMd fronllle ortglnaldlle ot pulthall d 18.1111 APR lllioja
IJSidt ~ CA (19.2% APR); Al, Fl,I&lt;S, LA, ME, MA, MN, NE, NC, NO, PA, vr &amp; WV (18'11 APR); TX (14 'II APR, bUI rail lillY vary); will a $0.50 1!Jrmont11 minimum. Tws, frli0h1,1111op,lnd dlllierycould Inc- moro11t1y peyment. OllitrJIIOCIII-IIIId Ierma IIIIYIIII'IIIIIble lnchHIInQ inllllmtnl
llnanclng for&lt;ommerc~luse. AYJIIabla !rom participating deale,.. P""' and modelo mtyYiry

by_._

'

't

(.

•

·

·

\.

_.

•

·

-·

·

l

•

t

· .

'

~~b~~~~~~

·

Capitol ~uminum &amp; Glass of Belleview received ~pproval fot entrances, ..
windows, glass and glazing' at a ~ost of
$167,704.
.
Louis R. Polster Co.- of Columbus

ommended by Jim Swartzmiller, conSfFUction manager with the Quandel
Group, construction counsel Peck, Shaffer, and Williams, and the Ohio School
Facilities Commission.

·'

•

,

.
&lt;

,-: ·..

..

'lfo.

,,.
I

'

.._..,

~~·

'

....

H Cent~

P11111 lloi SOedhii'R, Pllp AS .

Deputies launch
· ·•evance in quest
or.new

•

'

.

.

BY JtM FREiMAN

,,
Mid-V&amp;Ihey ChristiB!l
MlcldJe.
port, ·received, a
donation from FeeneyBennett.Post 128 of the Atherican h.egion, Middleport, through the·Ohio Educational Support Group.
.Shown are. frpm left, Feeney-Bennett Post Past
Oomlnilnder Jc?e Andreoni, . Mld-VBIIey Chr1stj81'1
School Dlrec!PI' Brenda Barnhart, OESG .representative Ellis ~ and ~uss Mozingo, Fe!!ney-Bennett Po.st vice·commander. BELOW - The Atl)emi

'

School, Athens,
'I'J.,•JIJU &lt;lo1:18tioo from Feeney-Bennett
Post . 128 ·
· ArneriC8n Legion. Middleport,
through the Ohio Educatlonal- Support Group.
Shown ~. from left, Feeney-&amp;lnnett Post Past
Commander Joe Andreoni, school representative
Unda Lawlnsky, OESG !'EIP.f'lse~ Ellis Myins
and Russ Mozingo, Feenev;Benne_tt POst vice commander.
·

POMEROY - Meigs County sheriff's deputies filed a grievance through their union Monday morning in the hopes of getting new patrol cars. ·
Deputy . Kevin Dugan, presi. dent of tbe local Ohio Patrol- ·
men's Benevolent Association,
said the action ~ filed because
the Board of County Commissioners has been ·unresponsive to
t!eputies' req11ests for new vehi, cles.
Dugan said he met twice with
commissioners, two weeks apart,
and that commissioners then
scheduled' a meeting with Sheriff
James M. Soulsby .last Friday
morning.
He said that, commissioner$
did not show up for the meeting
and the sheriff waited in the
commissioners' office fpr approXimately 40 minutes:
·
Commissioner Mick Davenport declined comment Monday·

night on Dugan's statement, but
said the board was preparing ~
response.
.
The grievance W3$ filed against
Soulsby, who reportedly denied
the grievance, saying he has not
received his budget from the
commissioners.
. The grievance will .~ost likely
proceed to a mediator appointed
by the uoion, Dugan said.
Dugan emphasized that the
deputies' complaints are with the
commissioners and not the sher~
iff. However, he said the grievance had to go through the sher~
iff since he is in charge of that
department.
'
·
Instead of trying to resolve the
prohlem, the comrmssJoners
ignored it, he said.
Along with the latest action,
the deputies are now asking thilt
six, high-mileage cruisers be
replaced instead of the three cars
originally requested.

'

...... -

Crullln,,.. AJ .

.

-

Tobacco improvement:
grants now available . ·
FROM STAFF REPORIS

POMEROY - Both Meigs
and Gallia County tobacco producers a!'l' eligible to apply for the
more than $42,000 in grants now
av:lilable for use in improving
production, curing and harvest
managemept prat;tice during th}s ·
tobacco growing season.
In Ohio, the project is being ·.
admirustered by the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation (OFBF). The
money is being provided by the
Farm Income .Jmproveinent
Foundation (FIIF), and 22 southern' Ohio counti~ are eligible to
"

. .

,

I

discusSes truck,purchases.

~'IJ,

'

·t-

~·

.

.oli

;li

apply.
The grants may be used for
blue mold conq-ol, constructic:Jn .
of curing structures, purchases of
certain production equipment;
labor housing, irrigatiqn systems,
and purchasing or leasing tobacco
harveste.rs. The grants will be
awarded to qualifYing individual
farmers as funding allows.
Ohio growers who live in
tobacco-producing counties wjll
find applications for grant prcr.
grams available at county Fart;n

P11111- Gnlltl, Pllp Af

.

of

wWw.dHre.oom
•

/

ropy

Other contractors approved included:
KAL Electric of Glouster for electrical
work, $814,500; Brewer &amp; Co. Inc. of
Charleston, W.Va., for fire protection;
$145,000; Cabling Concepts Inc. of
Lakewood for technology, $50,731.
.
The total price of all bids combine,d
was $7,783 ,566 compared to a pre-bjd
-estimate of$7,603,000.
Swartzmiller said the project is currently 1.15 percent (or $91,476) over
budget, ,but anticipates to malce up th~

liJy BRIAN J. RaD ·
last )'ear,. and! ·altogether, it has five opera" ~nouffer fire and Safety Equipment, at a the sale pf the truck to be replaced and
S~NEL N£WS STAR'
ti~ truch'~d one which is riow being cost of $2,597 .30. " ·,
' · funds raised by the fire department. ·
MIDDU!POR,.T'- Action tp pure~ serv:lced. . '
I
.•
-The lite' alarm waS ~b· &amp;.ilaged in the . . Iannarelli reported on the .recerit meeting
a truck for .the s~et department prompted !=ouncilman· Bob Robinson .suggested · recent storms.. A seconi;J estimate, from . of the. village recreation committee, and
an extensive discussion about village vehi- that the ~ eqoipment committee meet jalnes AJahn Systems of New Haven, W.Va., · progress on Improvements at Genetal
des.and eqoipment at ·l'v!-oilday night's.reg-· this ~ek to:•c(&gt;mplete a 1etailed inv.:ntory :was ~59 . re~eived in tbe amount , of . Hartillger Park. ·
IJ)ar meeting MiddleportVillage C!)un~. , of village trUcks and eqmpment, and the $1,127.99.
.
.
_
The village received grant funds last year
·,cpuncil approved the putchase of 1989 condition of.eaeh item, so that council can
The cost ~o includes a number. of'fire ~m the Ohio Departtnent of Natural
GMC one-ton, four whee)-driv.: truck; more carefully consider the purchase of extingUishers and service of 'tho!ICl extin~ Resources/NatureWorks progl-am .for
with a salt spreader and ·snow blade, from another truck.
guishers. · ·
·
improvements to the basketball and .tennis
Jerry Bibbee Ford. ·
. Mayor Sandy lannarelli thanked village
Coiui.cil approved entering into a loan courts at the park, and lannarelli said that
The cost of $14,800 will be paid from · street W&lt;)rkers at).d members of the Middle- - agreement with Peoples Banking· &amp; lhlst the work should be ~ompleted early this
the s~et and refuse budget&gt;.
poft i'Jofunteer Fire Department for their Co. for a 15-year period in an aniount not swruner.
, Kenny M.odden, s[1:eet superintendent, work on clean-up needed as' the result of . to exceed $250,000.
'
Iannarelli encouraged council members
asked council to consider the pUithase ·of recent rain storms.
The lo'an will be serviced by proceeds and the conunittee to begin work in hiring
1
another ·truck as weD.
Madden said that a nu~ber of cl!lverts frorp a permanent levy approved .bY vOters a weD-qualified P~ and pool manager
He noed that some of the villagC trucks arid storm drains were ~d, and couti:- in t 998 for the purcl\ase of a new pumper who would be responsible for both facilihave been· pulled 'off the road because- of · cil discussed damage to the village hall roof truck for the VFD. The truck is now being ties, as council discussed late last summer,
safety concer~ or mec;banical problems, and drainage sys~ dpe to the heavy rains buil~, and is expected to be completed la!er , when the ·village .experienced problems
and that he has been driving his own truck of last week.
this year. ·
witl\ disorderly conduct at the pool area.
fo~ village use.
.
Council approved the purchase .of a new
Clerk Bryan Swann ~timated the cost at .That manager should be hired by late
The ~ putthased a ·new tiuck late lire alarm system for · ~ liall from _approXimately $200,000 after considering ,
PIIM~ llil ~-c'!.. Pllp AJ

h-: '
.;·

~m

'

Middleport.-·

e·

99-5944-H/B

received approval for food service equipment at a cost of$141,197.
For library and science casework, the
board rejected the lowest bid of
$414,000 submitted by Universal Custom Millwork of Anuterdam, N.Y., and
awarded the bid ·to the sel ond-lowest
bidder, Farnham Equipment CQ. ofwest-

SChOol·donations

.

sat Off

D

E

K

·t

of Waterford for masonry work was
accepted at a price of$1,440,850.
Receiving the nod for heating and
tooling/plumbing was Geiger :Jirothers
of Logan, which submitted a combined
bid of$1,999,300.
J.J. Morley Enterprises ·Inc. of Columbils received the roofing bid at a cost of

-uco.,... AS

PI••••

j

R

~ingl•·

FROM STAFF REPORTS

RACINE - Plans for the sev~
enth annual Flower Festival and
other events were discussed at the
Feb. 22 meeting of the Racine
Area Community Organization.
·' The Flower Festival will be
held Saturday, April 22, from 10
. a.m. to 6 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
A Flower Festival queen will be
selected from ~outhern .High
School senior contest · participants, with the crowning of the
, queen to b~ held at noon.
Allen Graham, festival chairman, repo~d scheduled ent~r­
tairiment Will include Tile Midoight Cloggers, folk singers Steve
and Beverly Pottmeyer, juggler. ve1;1triloquist · Mike Hemmelgan.
country-gospel band The Remedi_es, and th.e Carmel Bluegrass
Band.
Other events are being
planned and spaces ·are being
made aV2ilable for crafts and vendors, food booths and other activities with a S10 reservation fee.
Applications are available at
Home National Bank in Racine;
See Krista Smith for more icl'ormation or contact Lillian Weese at
949-2401.
Tbe group voted to increase
the number of $500 scholarships
given to SHS seniors from four.to
five. A total of $7,000 has been
given in scholarships and applications are available at the school.
The guidance co.unselor maY be
contacted for more information.
The application deadline for
the RACO .scholarships is April
15:
.
The spring yard sale will be
held in May at Star Mill Park,
with proceeds appli&lt;;d to scholarships. Donations are appreciate.d.
· The grol,lp also voted to sponsor the seventh -annual Frog

425 Lawn and Garden Tractor

Savings are so big at your John Deere dealer's store, there's ne\rer been
a better time to cut a deal. And with Same-As-Cash until June 2000*, you'll . J'.
enjoy the biggest cuts of the season lorlg before the grass begins to grow.
· So don't wait for it to green up. See your John Deere dealer today
.i
because the .offers end February 29, 2000.

HiSh

'

-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.n.

• 54-inch mower deck
•.Automatic llilnsmission

amount coming from local property
owners.
RACINE - Southern Local EleWesam Construction Co. of Pomeroy
mentary School moved ·another step will ·likely constrUct the new building
closer to becoming reality Monday-oight and· conduct renovations to Southern
as the Southern Local Board of EducaSchool after' the board accepted the .
tion approved contractOll for the bUild- company's bid ofS2,315,910.Wesam also
ing project.. ·
,
bUilt the new el~mentary school In
Plans call to construct a new K -8 ele• neighboring Eastern total School Dismentary school next to the high school trict.
,
in Racine, and to. add additional class~
The board also accepted· the. bid on
rooms and laboratori~s to . the high_ ' site utility work from D. V. Weber Conschool. Total cost of the project is struction Co. ofReedsville for $108,394.
$9,810,988, with $4,042,000 of that.
The bit! of Lang Masonry Conqaqors NEWS STAFF

Flower
Festival
Ianning.
. .
eg1nn·1ng

-

I OKs mntractorsfor·· building'

BY .ltM FREEMAN

SENTINEL

-

Middleport • Ponwroy, Ohio

em

--It

c-.

Iowa.71, Minnesota 69
Ohio Sl. 64. llllnolo 51
Purdue 88, P.,n St. 71

-

Voolurno· '•II . Nouulot·r 1111o

ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AI?)- Resulta Sunday of the NASCAR Winston Cup OuraLuboi1&lt;marl 400 a1 Nor1h carolina Speedway
qualifying po11111on, drive&lt;, car make, lepo
complo4ad, ....., out. any, anc1 money ""'"'
. 1. (3) !lobby L.abonto, Pon11ac, 383,
$131,385.
·.
.
2. (4) Dole Earnhardl, Chevrolet, 393,
$18.810.
3. (11) ward·l!urton,-. 383,$70,410.
4. (15) Tony Slawart, Pontiac, 383, 185,120.
5. (23) OOie Jarrett, FORI, 382. 184,080.
e. (2) Ricky Rudd, Font, 382. 147,010.
_
7. (27) Jeremy Mayfield, Ford, 382, 142,710.
By 1llo Aooocllll«t , _
&lt;
8. (33) Mark Martin. FOrd, 382, 152,285.
IA'EBAII
·9. (18) Stave Park,
3112.142,010.
·
'
AtoNtl- Looeue
• •.
I 0. (5) Jell Gordon, Chovrollll, 3i2,
TEXAS RANGERS to ..,
181,510.
RHP Jooquln - · RHP lllovid Eldor oncl;3!!
11. (I) RuslyW.IIace, FOrd, 381, 152,185.
Jaeon ~&gt;'·i
12. (20) John Andrettl, Pontiac, 3il,
Looaue
•• ·
$50.880.
MILWAUKEE . BREW~$-Agreod .. ·k,·
13. (36) Ken Schrador, Pontiac, 381,
tarms willoiNF LOu Coller, LHP Hortoclo ~lllili$32,480.
da and OF Lyko oo on•yoar coritraCiol.
14. (34) Johnny Banoon, Pontiac, 391,
IIAIKITIALL
., ,
$32,380.
.....,._, BMMtbltll Aleodltlon ~
15. (14) Stor)lng Manln, Chevrolol, 3111,
LOS AljGEL.ES CUPPEAS-Signad a·Jill
143,260. ,
Mclronla 1o a 10-doy contract arod f' Pale ChH·
18. (311) ·Ted Musgrave, Chovrollll, 390,
CUll 10 a ooacond 10-dey contract. Plecad f
$39,980.
'i
Brian Skinner on the injured ltsl.
17. (17) Torry Llobonle, Chevrolet, 390,,
MILWAUKEE BUC~ F DaMrr
$44,780.
Ham loom thelnj,.ad list. Plat:¢F J:R!-Ael(l I'J1
18. (38) C'1qd Utile, Ford, 390, 138,280. ·
· VO.Injurad llal.
1
19. (1) Cole Eamhard1 Jr, Chevrolot, 390,
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIE6-Ac:tivaiad F
$27,110.
.
Obima Elcozle from the injured list. l'lacad
20. (40) Wally Dallonbach Jr.. Ford, 390,
.Boyanl R-H on lho injured 1111.
_,

n

SOUTH
Ctemoon 88, N.C. Stato 83
f:lorlda 88, Auburn IS&amp;
Wake Fofos178, Georgia Tech 11&lt;4

-

Tlma r:1 riCII: 3 hOWl, 7 minul•, 32 s~
ondl.
~~ i
- · · - ......,, 127.875 mph . • ••
. Ma'llln ol vlclory. 1.051 IIOCOfldo.
• •
Caution llaga: 4 - - for 21 lapO; •
20·23 (caro13, 42. 17 • acoldonl·lum 4), ._ .
toe-tc»-(011- tum 3),• lapO- tta-tu
::111~
"'"'- franlatrotch), laps 181l-11l8 ,.... 27
wall· tum 1}.
..
;..,.
lMII changes: 22 among 1o d"""'"- ' IS'
LAp LAad-; Rut~y Wolloc:e, 1·35: '~iii\!''
Burton, *&amp;4; Bobby Hamilton, 85-87;~
Martin, 88; S1er11ng Mllrlln, 89-110; - e . i ~
83; Hamilton, 114-105; - · 108-110;
•
ton, 111-1ae: w. Burton. 131 ~ 1e1: Marlin, tear .
181; Stew POlk. 182·183; J.. - · 1M" ·
IIIII; Plltk, 1110-220; - · 221-228; Jolllki:
ton. m :,w. lklrlon, 2:10-241; 8obby l..llbo&lt;fiO :
(242-212; Dole Eamhardt, 283; - · ~ .
285; Park, 288; W. l!urton (287-2110; LAbol)le;'
281·393.
'
.
'
..... ·~
· Tap 1o Points: Cole Jwrlll, 340; I!GIII!i
L.abonlt, 335; want Burlon, 312; Mor1c - ·
307; Rusty Wollllce, 285; JeNrnv MayfloW,
278; Dole E8ITilardl.- 275; Rjct&lt;y lludd, . 273;
Tony Stewan, 272; Ken~. 282.
•~
..;

c...-

Melp County's

.

.,.

Dura-Lube 400 R18ulll

r

How Tltlo Wnlc'a Top 25 Forocl

Heath 64. Spana Highland 53
Huron 69, Castalia Margaretta 35
Kansas LBkOia 55, Western ReseNe 29
Uma Cent. Ca1h. 66, Wayne Trace 30
'Magnolia Sandy Volley 61, Claraway 57, OT
Fairbanks 62, Cols. School for Glr1s 58;
20T
Morral Ridgedale 48, New.Aibariy 42

T H I N G

February l9, 2000

.

43. t•1) Robert P: JL'*f, Ford, 222,1gnilloij!
$22.88Q.
•'

Sundey'a ecoree

By The A"ochled P~
EAST.
CanlaluO 75, Loyola, Md. till
Duquesne 70. Vlralnie TIICI150
Lafayette 7~. Bucfmell59
Maine 76, Boeton U. 54
Marlst 70, Siena e7
Niagara 73, St Po40J's 71
Syracuse 67, Geolgetown 52
Xavier 71, La Salle 80

Men's Collega Baaketblll

Archbold 63, Evergreen 58
Bluffton 68, Uberty Center 36
Burton Berkshire 52, Wickliffe 29
Carey 56, Elmwood 53
Coldwater 55, Defiance nnora 42
Cots. Ready 72, ~onalhan Alder 29
Elrria Catholic SS, Ashland Mapleton 41
Hawken 50, Kinsman Badger 33
·Genoa 33, Oregon S1ritch 24

Melt-· """'·

Colorado Stat&amp; oo.-9.

Suna,"e eoor..

Divlelon Ill
Akr. Manchester 72, Akr. SVSM 47

...

Tuesday

•

G1225 Lawn and Garden Tractor
• 15 hp • 42-inch convertible mower deck
• Automatic transmission

..

...

-.m.i":

31. (43) Ed · - · 184,123,1100. "'
37. (e)
313, 1131,200.....
38. (2&amp;) ~-.Ford, 381 , 123,~
38. (10) Donal Wollrlp, Ford, 378.123,1
40. (37) Bobby - · ~
'
131,025.
..J
41 . (42) Dave Morell, CheYrolo4, ""!"
$22,D75.
.
·"
42. (30) Jell F.._, - · 331, 122.825'_.,

15. LSU
beat Miltil:4pp'.
1 1 . 1 - (111-8} loot 10 1 1 - S t 72, Croig~ 11
No. 5 Mk:f1lvon S-11 -79, OT.
-.pnio 73, Solnl Louit 5I
17. 1owa-(24-4) -No. 14T- 1111Mk:hlgan 70, Nonf'l llt..rt 4e
77; boot No. 10 Oklalloma Stale 72-11 _
75, Mlchlyon St 71, OT
18. 1&lt;an11d!y (20-8) lool1o No. 1 TemN. Ia. 75, SW lolooouri St 87
7...7; boot M&lt;ansu 80-55.
Ponl1 St 51, Ohio Sl, 50
19. Maryland (21-7) Clemson 78-13;
Purdue 13, lowe 511
beet North Corolno 91·73.
VIrginia TIICII 88, 00)1011113
20_Olclaho. . (22-5) bea1 Toxao lOCh 83-15;
81. 8&lt;4, Bradley 88
boe1 83-!0.
21 . Purdue (21·7) b081 Michlgen 18·75;IOUTHWI!IT
.Pem S1ale 88-71 .
.
Nonh T - ro, Bcloe St 58
22. ~ (1t-l) loll to St. John'o 788&lt;4; boot Weo1 V.glnla 72-71 .
.-.- -=.=.::-;;;,..-;:fAll WEST
23_ Kenaas (21·7) beei~ NibrllkAI 83·51:
Col Poly-SLO 88, New Mexloo 51.53
boot.Baylor 80-70.
tong Beoch St 72, UC Irvine 88
24. V.ndefbih (17-1) lost IOM&lt;anaaa18-13;
. Pacific till, Col St.-Fullenon 53·
lost to Mlultlsippi 75-87.
UC santa Barba-e 81; Nevada 80
25. U1ah (20-1) beel UNLV Ill-52; lost 1o

$61 Per Molth* Save $250

0

~

~

:15. (32) -!Iodine, Font, 3115,

CIN:irnali 84,1.Dililvlll 86
Drlko
~-· St. 57
1
- 72.
72, lndilno 82

LX255 Lawn Tractor . .
• IS hp • 42-inch convertible mower deck
• Automatic transmission

N

..

Taft likes Clinton Internet stance, A2
No. 16 Longhorns whip Jayhawks, B 1
.

~§;
......

123.425.

-T

SOlAn Clrallna 114-w,
71-M.

Woman'• College Basketball

By Tho Auocllllod Prou
How the top 25 t&amp;ams in The A.ssocia1ed
F'ress' college basketball poll fared this week:
1. Stanford (24·1} beat Washington State
89-52: beal washington n -52.
2. Duke (22· 4} beat Wake Forest 96-78; lost
to StJohn's 83-82.
3,.,Cincinnati (26·2} beat Southern Mississippi 95-69: beat Louisvlle 68-59.
4. Arizona (24--4) beat Arizona Slate 89-82.
5. Michigan Stale (21·7) beel Pl!ln State1863; lost 10 No. 16 Indiana 81·79, OT.
6. Ohio State (20-5) boa1 Nonhwestorn 6949; beat lllnois 64·51.
7. Tamassee (22·5) beat No. 18 Kentucky
N-17; lost to Alabama 60,75.
8. Temple (22~) bee.t St. Bonaventure 75!58; beat Maoaachusetts 72-54.
9. Rorida (22-5) boat Georgia 90-68; boal
No. 11 Aubum 88-59.
.
.
10. Oklahoma Slale (22-4) boat Misooun 8472; lost to No. t71owa State 72-(11 .
·
11. Auburn (21-8) lost to AJabama 68-84; lost
to No. 9 Ao'rlda 88·59.
.
12. Tulsa (26-3) lOst to Fresno State 73·72;

VL CommOI:::ealth 71, AIT'IIrtcan U, .
111rp n, wuo F01t11 11

1111-n;- T - AIM 115-58.

Leetonia 54, Berlin Center Western
Reserve .a
'
Maria Stein Marlon Local 56, W.ynasfietdGoshen 21
. . Minster 53, St. Henry ~9
Montpelier 58, Hicksville 44
N. Lswlsburg Triad 44, Cin. Seven Hilts 36
N. Robinson 'Col. Crawford 37. Mansfield
Sl. Peter 26 .
New Bremen 69, Ft. Recovery 55
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 41 , Lucas
35
Old Fort·53, Plymou1)l50, OT
ottawa HUis 55, Hamler Patrick Henry 52
PandOra-Gilboa 53, Con1inental 36
Riverdale 53, Findlay Ubeny-Ben1on 45
s. Chanesron ~E 37, Cln. Coon1ry Day 34
Sebnng McKinley 67, MI;Doneld 64, 20T
Tri -Villaga 52, Ansonia 51
Triad 44, Cin. &amp;Nan Hills 36
Upper Scioto V&amp;lley eo, CoJY·Aawson 45
Wellsville 64, tuscarawas Cath. Cent. 52
Windham 53, Newbury 43
'll
Worthington Christian 45, C&amp;rdinglon Uncoln 33

Dlvlalon II
· Ashville Teays Valley 68, Cols. Briggs t3
Bellevue 57, Vermilion 44
BettviUe Clear Fork 51, Bucyrus 26
Beloit W. Branch 68, Niles McKinley 52
Be:dey 39, Cols. walnut Ridge 3P
Cols. Hartley
Madison Plains 30
Cols. Mifflin 63, Cols. Hamilton Twp. 32

Gir~d

-T-eJPelollli-55.
13. Sylw:ueo (23-3) Vlllonovo 11-13;
Goorgllowu 87·52.
14. r.... (2&lt;)-7) 1o11 10 No. 11 ~a. -

51

~~~~~~~:~~ ~arry 52

s.turday''e R"uHe

•

Ne:1C011181'5lown 30, Indian Vlley 38
Oni.no 58, A11ka Sonoca E. 33
Smithville 45, Creston Norwayna 34
. SUiiven Black A~ 48, B&lt;oold)n 42, OT
'Noodmolfl 58, Nor1hwood 34
'!bungl. Ursullno 88, E . Paloa1ine 28

Fort loramie 73, Troy Chrillian 33
GrMn 67, Pommouth Noire Dome 34
New Boston Glenwood 54, Mancheller 32
Frontier &amp;!5, 'Bellaire St John's !58
AoedSVtle Eastern 90, Soulh Galla se
Sidney Lahman 54, Houston 45
Spring. Cath. Cl!lt 68. Ansonia 48

fi fiL

0~

.-

•

IV
Beallsvl!la 72. Bridgepon 30
Beover Eas1orn 88, Waterford 53
Fairtawn &amp;1, OtGI'tt.ff Riverside 46

IIDOPS
•
•
•

.. -

•

~

-

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD ·

...•

. ..

•

iPage Be • The Dally Sentinel
•
•

. .••

..

.Tocllf•

Sentinel

. :Uaclha•-12 .... • :

------ ·
Celgder

A5 =·

.Q•,jfieda

BH

Editorjele

M

COmica .

. Qb!typriet

Bt-2. 6

Weatber

Lotteries
•'

oHio
Pick 3: 9-0-0; Pldr: 4:0-7-5-7

BI•IJ,e S: 6-18-19-25-JO

.

'BYA.

.n.nr 3: 4-9-4 n.ilr 4: 0-5-J-.6
•I

..

I.

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1\.leellay, february 21, 2000

:: Petry owners want fin• dropped
~uit.

· The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission recommended the fine
I.St year a{ter finding that a plant manager intimidated an employee ·
w~o testified in the 1997 trial of a suit by Kevin Doody, who claimed
he had been fired because he reported safety problems at the plant.
· NRC regulations prohibit plant operators from retaliating against
workers who raise safety issues or testifY about them in a fedecal or
•s~te proceeding.
· NRC will consider the company's request and respond within two
.~oilths, said spokeswoman Pam Alloway-Mueller.
·
John Wood, a vice president at FirstEnergy Corp., which runs the
~erry plant, told the NRC that the .manager who sp~ke to the wit·ness did not violate any regulations.

.New material in school funding case
· COLUMBUS (AP) -The attorney genecal's office will submit
lawmakers' passage of a $10.1 billion tobacco spending plan as part
Of the State's argument in the long-running school funding case, an
official said Monday.
.·
·: · ; The plan approved earlier this month guarantees $2.5 billion for
fiXing up schools through 2012 and promises another $2 billion by
2025.
Attorney General Betty Montgomery had asked the Ohio
Supreme "Court earlier _this month to allow it to file additional
information. The court granted that request Monday. . .
· · "Attorney Genecal Montgomery thought it was important to get
.the full body of evidence before the court reg4rding the' Legislature's efforts to comply with the court's on;ler," said Montgomery·
spokesman Bret Crow. ·
·
The court is expected to rule later this year on whether Ohio has
c6mplied with its order to change the way Ohio funds ·education. ·
· The court ruled in March 1997 that Ohio's school funding system was unconstitutional because it did not provide a "thorough
~11d efficient" e~ucation for every child.
·

. ·
CINCINNATI (AP) the earlier -~nes before saving and Industry representatives and an
sharing the latest one with the environmentalist offered conadministration.
flicting views Monday ~t a U.S.
Superintendent
M~chele Senate subconunittee hearing on
Hummel said she tried unsuccess- federal regulations governing the
fully to persuade Cadet to meet way older plants can be updated
with her to discuss the problem, and still meet clean air standards.
then asked Madeira police and
The U.S. Environmental Prothe telephone company for help
. in investigating the preserved
voice mail. Investigators determined that it was phoned in on
Saturday afternoon, Feb. 19, Mate
said.
But Cadet said he couldn't
continue to teach 'w hiie the
harassment went on.
"I told the administration I'm
getting these messages. They told
me, 'Why don't you lock the
door?' Basically, that meant they
didn't think it was serious;· Cadet

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Administrators of a suburban
Cincinnati school district say they
are investigating complaints by a
Haitian-born teacher that he was
the target of racial slurs .
Jean-Robert Cadet, a Madeir~
High School history and French
· teacher since 1996, said Monday
he . resigned last week after ·
administrators had not vigorously
investigated his complaints.
• Cadet, 45, said he thought several students were to blame for
· the racial slurs he found written
on his blackboard and left on his
voice mail during recent' months.
·Administrators, he · said, just
told him to .lock his classroom
when he was not in it.
But school principal Christopher Mate said the administration
in the I ,500-student district
investigated Cadet's initi~l complaint that someone had written a
day to be ~·lied {'nigger: ... .
slur on the blackboard but could- every
My integrity, my pride, is much
n't identifY the culprit.
·more important to me."
He said he didn't learn about
"Nobody should have to face
the . telephone harassment until chat," said Hummel, who recalled
Cadet resigned.
no similar harassment in her five
Cadet said he had received . years as superintendent of the
numerous voice-mail messages predominantly white school syscontaining racial slurs, but, eclsed terfi:

Wlmams &amp;lauciataa
lnsuranca

ERIE. Has Moved To ANew Location

We Are Now shari:rig Office
Space With Leo's Cruise
&amp; Travel At

sai~.l'mnotgoingtogotoschool

.

Ill Wea·t le•ond Sire·et Suite I ,·
PQmiiGJ,.DIIID
U.

.

·

·

Ill-.....

-.

'

EMS logs 7 calls

Grants
from

'

I

. •

~ .

&gt;

.~

,·
Soup supper pIanned .

·
·
' PAGEVILLE -The Scipio Township VolUnteer Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary will serve soup and chili Saturday at the fire station,
from r)oon to 4 p.m. Desserts will also be available.

Dinner planned

S149~~er Mollll* Save $1 ,300

:POMEROY -An Election Day luncheon will be held Tuesday at
Grace Episcopal Church, 326 E. Main St: Pomeroy. Homemade. soups,
sandwiches, and desserts will be served from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m Call-in
orders may be' placed at -992-3867 .'

4

Testing times announced
·POMEROY - Current testing times and locations for prospective
census takers to be continued through March 30 are as follows:
. • Mondays: Long Bottom Community Center, 9:30 a.m.; Coolville
Public Lib=y, 1:30 p.m.
: • Tuesdays: Athens Job Services, 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
· • Wednesdays: Pomeroy Library, 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
• Fridays: Racine Public Library,
.
· For more in(ormation, contact Cheryl Cox at ,1-888-325-7733, or
Jannine Petrel, 949-2786.

G1225 Lawn and Garden Tractor
• 15 hp • 42~'nch convertible motiJer deck
• Automatic tronsmission

$7·2Per ~onlh* Save S300
,.......;....,""'

· · JAfJO Walft.&amp;hlnd Moar
• 6 hp • 2l-inch cast·
aluminum deck

'

N

0

T

H

I

N G

R, u

s

L

\

I

K E'
'

Wakefield G81age
. US# 50 West, P.O. Box# 639
740:593-3815
•

. CARTHAGE -Spring revival services will be held at tile Carthage
Conununity Church, March 9-11, 7 p.m. each evening. The church is'
!c)cated six miles from Coolville.
·
·

*IOOFF

'

99·5944-H/8

Athena, 011

Spring revival plans set

Novi$419

Savings.are so big at your John Deere dealer's store, there's never been
.
.
'
a better time to cut a deal. And with Same-As-Cash until June 2000*, you'll
enjoy the biggest cuts of the season long before the !ll'a5S ·begins to grow.
· So don't wait for. it to. green up. See your John Deere dealer
. today
beCause the offers ~nd February 29, 2000.

•ldw•11'•ott' .

...

•'

f,

D E

E. R

•

·cruisers

that the county will have to pay
for the mediation - .which may
result in extra cars - .,.and any
resulting attorne)(s fees.
PapAl
· Commissioner Jeff Thornton
returned
to work Monday after a
· Dugan said the cars in question
have 125,000 to 175,000 miles on hospital s~y. and was unable to
them, and are costing the · county attend the Friday meeting. However, he said the deputi~' action
in maintenance.
"The sheriff has no control may ultimately hurt the people of
·over this;• Dug4n said. "He has to Meigs (;ounty
"It's not the commissioners'
ger the OK from the county com.. .
"
doUars;• he said:
''
nusstoners.
He
said
the
commiSsioners
and
"We .have to file it (the grievance) against the sheriff, but we'n: de'puties have to work to~~:ther
not holding him res~onsible,. he within the eXisting financial co'n strainu to resolve the problem.
added.
"I can't stress enough about the
• "This will be a higher cost to
the county;'
Dug4n said, adding . need to work together;' he ?id.
.

E•

frOm

www.deere.com·

· -- ·~

Carmicluiel's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

740-446-2412

A

'P8IIleNIIuq,WV
Larry's Cycle &amp; Tractor Sal~
2706 Pike Street ·
304-428-7102
•

..
,,
•

'OIIm end ftbruary 29, 2000. SUbjocl to approved a!d~ on John Deere Credit Rovolving Plan, forooncommerolat use. 10'11. down p.aymtr\1 requill&lt;l.lllht ba~nce is not paid In JuH by tilt end of Same As Cull promotional period,- will lie - . d from lhtorlginof dati ot pu-111UliAI'!Iunlal jQ\1
1111doiiiCA{19.2'1o APR); A~ FL, KS, LA, ME, Mrl. MN, NE, NC, NO, PA. VI &amp;'W'1 (18'11.APR); TX (14 'II.APR 1btl rate may vary); willl a 10.50per monlll minimum. Tans, freight, setup, and delivery could lncrusemootlllypoymort OlflliiPICill'"*llldt1niiS!111YIIemiflble, mctodlng -Niclr1Gnt
tlnlllcing fur comrnen:lll UN. Avalllbfo !min p.articlfllllng deale11. Prices llld
vary by deoler.
'
·

..-lillY

'

,,
'

•

Kathryn B.1(aj Rail

-

..,
,
.· BURLINGHAM - Bedford Township •rustees ~ill meet in regu··
lar session March"14, 7 p.m. at the town hall.

-·

DEATH
NOTICE
.
.

.,Voting equipment b?$t

POMEROY -A public test of the Meigs County Board of Elections' votir;tg equipment will be held ~ednesday, ) 1 a.m . .at the election office on Mulberry Avenue.

415 Lawn-and Garden Tractor
• 201Jp, V-7Win, /iquickoo/ed engine
• Uinch mower deck
• Automatic tronsmission

Anco Mining of Belmont, is
expeqed to complete its work
soon with the addition of threeto-four inches of soil near the
baseball field, and the construetion _of a temp.orary gr3llcl roadway.
Swartzmiller said the first con- .
tractors. should arrive on the
scene in about three to four
weeks. The project is expected to
be completed sometime around
late April or early May next year.
He said the construction
schedule and the impending start
of construction will be discu·ssed
at the next board meeting,
In per~o nn,el matters, -the board
approved the retiremen-t of longtime high school secretary Grace
Griffin.
The board also approved Mary
Bar~on and Leah Johnson as substitute . teachers, and Robin
Nance as a substitute cook, custodian and secretary/aide.
Graduation this year . will be
held Sunday, May 21 at 8 p.m. at
the high schooL
.
In other business, the board:
• Met with Rhonda D ailey,

MIDDLEPORT - Kathryn B. "Kay" Rail, 92, a Middleport business woman for nearly 40 years, died Wedn~sday, Feb. 23, 2000 at
··
Homewood Nursing Home in Williamsport, 'Md.
Born Aug. 6, 1907 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, she was the widow of
.Everett 0. Rail, with whom she owned the Ben Franklin store on
North Second. Street in Middleport from .1949 u·ntil their retirement
·
in 1988.
Mrs. Rail was a 1925 graduate of Washington High School and
attended Coe College, both in Cedar Rapids. She also attended the
American Conservatory of Music in Chicago. There she srudied the.. atre org4n, which she later played for the silent movies .
, While in Middleport, Mrs. Rail was elected to both the Middleport
and Meigs boards of education, Among other activities, she was also a
rnember of Business and Professional Women, a garden club and Heath
Methodist Church.
.
Residents of Mason, W.Va. , for many year1, the Ralls moved to
. Homewood Retirement Community in Williamsport in 1991. ·Mr.
Rail died in Maryland in 1992. .
She is survived by a son, Thomas Bowman Rail, a daughter-in-law,
Debi H. Tucker; and a grandson, all of Arlington,Va.
Interment was at Cedar Memorial Cemetery in Cedar Rapids. Contributions may be made in Mrs. Rail's memory to Alzheimer's Association, 919 Michig4n Ave. No. 1100, Chicago, lll. 60601.

.

"

•

,,,

Bureau coordinates the program
in the Buckeye State.
Its purpose is to improve and
expand agricultural productipn
and farm profita~iliry through .
various research: and educational
projects in the eight-state buriey
belt, which ind11des Ohio.
. .
Since its creation, the foun&lt;4- ·
tion has provided . more than Sf
million in grants to tobacco
farmers in the eight-state burley
belt.

A correction was made' in the
secretary's report. It was noted
that Date Wallace Hill of Karen'~
Greenhouses donated the poin~ .
Page AI
settias given to the judges of the
Jumping ·Contest at the July 4 holiday home decorating conte~.
celebration. Bob Fisher gave .an Appreciation of the donation ~
::
update on the Racine Riverbank expressed by RACO.
The· group also voted to pu~."
Project.
chase a.Santa Claus suit for use4t
"Christnm in the Park," .
:.
Thirteen members were jn
II'R'IIG VI,IL LYCll: [l,\•\
n
J
,
attendance, with one new me.,;446 4524
~
ber joining.
'
:"
FAI 2/25 • THUAS 3/2100
The
next
meeting
will
be
h~
CERTFKATES AVAIWU
lOX OFFIC£ WIU OPEN AT
March 28, 6:30 p.m. at_Star Mill
6r3D PMIOIIVIIIIIG SHOWS
Park. · ·
. ::
••
12:30 PM FOR MAnNEIS

'

,,

from

II &gt;lilt

I

1\ I ol

,,I

'II I'll

i

t

•

Gin

MORE LOCAL NEW~
MORE LOCAL FOLKSi .

•

=
·!
•

Subscribe today.
992-2156

..

. . .1

The Daily Sentinel •
(USPS 213-960)
Commu~itl

: . •

Newspaper Holdlnp,.Inc.: ,

P\Jb1lshed ever~ afternoon, Monday throuat. ·

Evans
&amp;om

and permitted by a majority of
council members to so speak
"No person shall be permitted ·
to address council more than two
PageA1
times per year on the same sub.
ject,''
March ·or early April, she said.
The rules place enforcement of
lannarelli said that the conunittee will consider expanding pro- the rules with the chairman, ·and
grams offered at the park to attract allow for ejection of those. who do
all ages, including water aerobics, not comply.
Councilman Roger Manley
swimming lessons . and tennis
inquired about the process used to
lessons.
·
.
· Council approved a number of dispose of excess equipment, and
amendments to the rules of coun- said that he was concerned that a
cil, relating to the way in which village truck was sold recently
the meetings are conducted and without council's approval.
''I have a prob)em with equipguidelines relating to public ·parment being sold when nobody
ticipation.
around
this table knows anything
· The new rules prohibit any
comments made in the g4llecy about it;' Manley said.
lannarelli said that village
during meetings, and requiring
those who-wish to discuss business department heads and · equipment
with .council to request placement committee members should meet
on the agenda no later than noon before any equipment is sold. ·
Councilman Stephen Houchon the Friday prior to the meetins asked about the starus of a light
ing.
"That person must fir~t make · at the municipal parking lot, and
written application for an oppor- lannan:lli reported that the new
runity to speak during the public vapor light has been ordered from
participation portion of the meet- . American Electric Power and will
'ing. The application shall dearly be installed soon. ·
Council member Kathy Scott
state who will appear by name and
address and the purpose of the reported a drainage problem on
Beech Stteet.
· appearance, .
·
it was noted that some of the
"Applicati6ns shall be permitolder
Christmas decorations were
ted ~ time permits and .at the discretion of the chair. If the chair unearthed when village employees
does not permit a non-member to cleaned out the old Park Street
participate, then that 'applicant School storage building. The decshall only ~e permitted to speak if orations could be repaired and
sponsored by a council member used.

..'

RACO

Friday, Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy, Obio, by thi'
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Seton(
class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
•
Membu: The Associated Press, and the Ohio,._
Ncwspapc:T As&amp;Oeiatian.
:
PO~MASTER: Send addrc11 corrcctioils 10""

7:10 &amp; 1:10 DAILY

MAnNEES BAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
·Ohio 45769

~

•
:
,
'
:

Pom~roy~

1
... ,

SUBSCRJ.PTJON RATES
By Carrier or Motor Ro•le

• •
' ''

.

One Wcek ..............................................$2.00
One Month ................ ............................ $8.70
1
OneYear............... ,............................ $104.00 ~ ~ ·,
1
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .....................................:.......... .JS Cents
Subscriben not desiring to pay the carrier may,
remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on I tbree, alx or 12 month bRsis. Credit will be•·
alven carrier each week.
'
No subscription by mail permitted in arua
where ho!Jie Clrrier service i'- available .
Publiaher reservc1 the riJht to adjust ntcs.
durlns the au'bscrlptlon period Subscnptlon •
rate chanae• may be Implemented by chan&amp;ina.
the rJuratiQn or the aublcrlpdon.

I'

j

'

..

MAIL SUISCRIPnONS
la11de Melp Co.atJ
13 Weeks ......, ....... ;.............................. $27.30
26 Wec:ks ............................................. $S3.82

52 Weets ..........,........,....................... $105.56
Rata OulaJdc Melp CouiJ
13 Wcc:ts............................................. $29.25
26 Wcc:b ............................................. $56.68
.52 Wceb ........................................... $109.72

'

Reader St'l v11 ·1 ,_.,
Our 1111ln coacern h1 111 ltorlells le be
ltc:Untl, ((you kaow of1n error I• a...,., . '"
ull •• newll'vom •• (740) m.uss. We
will chec:k Jo•r lnto.... atlo• altd
1
wrndlen lrwamnted.

••ke

Newt Oep.rtmeat1
'l1tt 111ln •umber 11 Ml·21". o.,.n.... ~
exttn1lons tre:
Genertl Manapr........................... Ed. lltl
~
Newa ................................................ Ext.lltJ ...
................................................. -or Ext. Uti ·•

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES S4.00

•

•

'

calls

..

Home-Auto-Gommerical-Annuit -Life

difference in future construction
cost savin&lt;!S. The biggest impact
°
on
the budget was the
b
k
HVAC/p 1um ing wor • which
was 34.55 percent (or $534 ,200)
higher than estimated.
The initial sitework contractor,

MIDDLEPORT - lthni.er "Ike" Neal, 86, Middleport, died unexpectedly Sunday. February 27, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
He was born on January 26, 1914 in Middleport, son of the late .
George Woodrnan Neal and Clara Mae Cash Neal.
He was a graduate of Middleport High School, was a police officer
for the Village of Middleport for over 19 years and worked for the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office. He was employed by the State of Ohio
as a timekeeper for 17 years.
He was a member of the Heath United Methodist Church, Middle.:
'
,,'
port
.
••
He is survived·by his wife, Mona Oiler Neal of Middleport; two sons
: POMEROY - Units of the. Meigs County Emergency Medical and daugbters-in-law, Kit R. and Carol Neal of Austin ,Texas~ and Kim
Service logged seven .
for assistance Monday. Units responding B. and Mary Ann Neal of Mason, West Virginia; a daughter and sonincluded:
in-law, Janet Lee and Jeffrey A. Russell of Mason, Wrst Virginia; six
CENTRAL I)ISPATCH
grandchildren·, Ryan Russell of Mason; West Virginia, Katie Lee· RusI
: 12:25 a.m., Headley Run, Tuppers Plains,Vivian Headley, Camden- sell of Mason, West Virginia,Jeff (Pam) Neal ofBeck!tiy, West Virginia,
Clark Memorial Hospital, Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
PageA1
Jason (Tone) Crandol of Bremerton, Washington, Kerry Goel) King oC
; 4:56 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Laura Gilbert, Arizona, and Justin Crandol of St. Petersburg, Florida; greatf'lager,Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy squad assisted; .
grandchildren, Hanna King of Gilbert, and Katlyn Garten of Beckley; Bureau and Ohio State University Extension offices. The applica; 2:53p.m., Maples Apartments, Pomeroy, Florence Tadlock, treated at and several nieces and nephews.
the scene; .
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by two broth- tion deadline is May 1, 2000.
The FIIF was created three
: 6:45 p.m., Little Forest Run Road, Reedsville, Donald Haning, St. ers, Charles W. Neal and Raymond Cash Neal.
Joseph's Hospital, Reedsville squad assisted;
.
Services will be held Thursday, March 2, 2000 at 1 p.m. at Fisher. years ago with financial support
· 9:51 p.m., Second Street, Syracuse,l)ave Donahue,VMH, Syracuse Funeral Home in Middleport, with the Rev. Clark .Baker officiating. . from major corporations and . is
managed by the Kentucky Farm .
squad assisted;
. .
.
Burial will be conducted at the convenience of the family.
Bureau,
while the Ohio Farm
: 11:18 p.in., State Route 681, Pomeroy, Charles Martin, Holzer
Friends may call Wednesday, March 1, 2000, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. .
Medical Center, Rudand squad assisted.
at the funecal home. ·
COLUMBIA VFD
2:58 p.m., Darst Roa&lt;l, brush fire, no injurieS reported·.

'lftiStees to meet •

$61 Per Month* Save $250

lthmer •1ke' Neal

MASON, W.Va. - R~um~ foe 15 scholarships of $500 each to be
awarded by Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason are being accepted from post lllembers and their famili~ with an April 21 deadline.
If all scholarships are not awarded to members and their families, qther
veterans ~nd their families will be considered. Those who apply must be
accepted at their respective coUege or university.
·
Resumes should state the applicant's relationsliip to veterans as well as
including the coUege being attended and the majo{ course of s!Udy.
• Send applications to Post 9926, P.O. BoX 586, MasonYJ.Va. 25260.

· RACINE - Racine American Legion Post 602 .will hold a steak
and noodle dinner Sunday starting at 11 a.m. $5. Dine-in or carry-out.

• IS hp • 42-inch conve_rtible mower deck
• Automatic transmission

OBITUARY

"''
·. . Applications being ·accepted

....

I

Tonight. .Increasing clouds. A
chance of showers late. Lows in
the mid and upper 40s. South
wt'nd 5 to 10 mph. Chance ofrat'n

Wildlife hearings scheduled

American l.elion dln~er

LX255 Lawn Tractor

Clouds will ·build over Ohio
on Wednesday and scattered
'bl
' howers are poSS! e.
But temperatures will continue
to be unseasonably warm with
hlghs 55-65, the National Weather Service said.

.

tection Agency .is •scheduled to
release revisions . of the New
Source Review regulations· later ·
dris year.
.
·
The NSR rules apply to
plants built before 1977. Those
plants have been exempted in .
the past fi:om having to install
up-to-date pollution · controls ·

PREss

30 percent.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers. Can.
d
. h highs 111
. h
tmue warm Wit
t e
It will be a little cooler on mid and upper t\Os. Chance of
Thursday with readings in the 40s rain 40 percent. .
.
and 50s, according to forecasters.
Wednesday mght ... ConSlderThe record-high temperature able cloudiness. Lows from th":__
, ATHENS - The Division ofWildlife of the Ohio Department of
for
this date~at-the~eolumbus--upp·er"30s to-rhelower 40s.
Naturu Resources has scheoUieafive open liouses To be held around
weather
station was 70 degrees in
Exte~tded forecast:
the state on March 5.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy.
' The intenr of the open house is to provide sportsmen, outdoor 1976 while the re.cord low was 0
in
1884.
Highs
in
the
lower
60s.
I
enthusiasts and the general public an opportunity to comment on proSunset tonight will be at 6:23
Friday.. ,Mosdy cloudy with a
posed hunting and fishing regulations for the 2000-2001 season.
p.m.
and
sunrise
Wednesday
at
chance
of showers. Lows near .40
Wildlife· District 4, which covers 19 southeastern Ohio counties
7:05
a.ni.
·
and
highs
from the upper 50s to
·including Meigs and Galha counties, will hold its open house at the
Weather forecast:
the lower 60s.
Athens Parks and Recreation Community Center, 733 E. State St.,
Athens, from no'?n-5 p.m. In the event of inclement weather,.the open
house will be held March 8 at 7 p.m. at the Athens Disttict Office.

Cincy-area teacher says Sen~ subcommitb!e ~olds
he was harassed at school heanng on EPA regul~ons

'NORTH PERRY (AP) -The owners of the Perry Nuclear Power
Plant are challenging a proposed $110,000 fine against them for
:lllegedly intimidating an employee who testified in a co-worker's law-

BY THE AsSOCIATED

from PageA1

Other Strvkel
Adverttlina..................................... Ell. l.llot
Cln:ullllon ...................................... EJt.IIIJ
CllulftedAdt
.................................
...._
__
_ _ EJt.Jlot

..

•

·.t

:
!-·

ga

possible Wednesday

1

CHARDON (AP) -A 19-year-old pleaded innocent to charges
tliat he, along with two other teens, robbed and ·killed a !}IS station
clerk.
· Wesley Peuson of Cleveland entered his pleas Monday in GeauCounty Common Pleas Court to two counts of aggravated murder with death penalty specificatiops and one count each of aggravated robbery, attempted aggravated murder and attempted ltidnappi_ng. He was being held without bond.
County Prosecutor David Joyce said he would pursue the death
penalty against Pearson.
· Prosecutors and police said Pearson and two friends walked into
die Clark ()il service station in Chester Township at closing Feb. 18
and killed Danielle Kovacic, 19, before raiding the cash register. A
- -17- year-old friend of Kovacic's was shot twice and wounded.
··Jill Holder, 17, and Marcus Moorer. 15, both of Chester Township, also have been charged in the ·crime. The county has filed
motions with Geaug4 County Juvenile Court to try the two as
adults.

SNOWVILLE - Four teens from Athens County teens and one
from Meigs County will likely face charges in the rheft of signs from
Meigs and Athens counties over the weekend.
. After receiving a call Saturday afternoon from a Snowville area resident who said he saw five boys steal a scliool bus sign, a Meigs County sheriff's deputy on patrol stopped a truck with two boys in front and
three in back, and road signs in the back.
The truck reportedly contained a stop sign, a road sign, a business
sign and an election campaign sign. A totaf five signs were stolen, four
from Meigs and one from Athens.
.
.

R~~n

-

"He said that this is an issue that they're
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio's Bob Taft taxes on purchases made via the Internet if the
going
to have to work out among the states;•
and the nation's other governors didn't end customers buy from Ohio-based ' companies
.
Clinton spokesman Joe Lockhart said.
any part of the ongoing debate over taKing or sellers with stores in Ohio.
"He (the president) told the governors that
Internet sales,, but Taft found comfort at the
That means no sales tax is collected on a
this is an issue that we're going to have to
White House, where President Clinton said large numb'e r of sales.
he's backing the states' efforts to resolve the
In Congress, considerable sentiment eXists work out together, and that we're going to
·
controversy themselves.
- led in part by Ohio Republicans John have to work on with some urgency."
"It may have to involve some simplification
"We're tallting about what fundamentally Kasic~ and John Boehner- in favor of a fedshould be a state issue area ;'Taft told reporters ecal law declaring the Internet to be a tax-free . of sales raxes;• Loc;khart said. That is the
who waited on the White House lawn Mon- zone in order to encourage the growing field approach favored by many governors and by
Sen. George Voiriovich, R-Ohio, one of the
day during a meeting between Clinton and of electronic commerc.e. ·
the governors,
Some governors have openly worried louder voices on Capitol Hill in favor of sales
Taft said he could support a short extension abo'!t that as a drain on future state revenues. tax collection on Internet purchases.
A commission headed by Republican Gov.
of the current moratorium on new taxes Taft has not declared whether he wants Ohio
while states devisF a cor{sistent approach to · to be able to collect sales taxes fi:om out-of- James Gilmore ofVirginia is _!!udying how to_ _
the problem.
state compames wllo slij.p, goodSiO Ohio cus- proceed on several Internet taxation ques~
"We need more time to figure out what tomers they connected with over the Inter- lions, including what to do when the current
moratorium expires in 2001. ·
we're going to do," he said. "It's very impor- net.
The commission is to release its recom-.
Clinton told the governors he believes fedtant,that the states work togethe-r."
mendations in April.
Ohio and other states .only collect sales era! law. should not preempt _their state laws.

Southem

vice president of nursing at Veterans Memorial Hospital, who discussed th e upcoming four-mill
emergency room levy. The board
took no action on the matter.
• Agreed to post the position
of prom director at a cost f&gt;t'
S427 .2L
• Agreed to continue the Ohio
Hunter Education Program a~
Southern Junior High School
held at no cost to the district.
• Approved having a track program at' the high school chis
spring using volunieer coaches.
• Ac cepted a mition student
for the remainder of the school
year~
_
.·
• Approved an early dismiss¥
on March 16 to allow staff to do
continuo us improve ment plan ~
nrng.
.
• Approved for the sixth gra~e
TAG students to take. a field trip
to Canada with Jody Howard,
TACJ coordinator, on June 6-8
with expenses paid by the students. · .
·
• Accepted ·a $4,000 Ohi?
Reads Volunteer Building Coordinator Grant (or Letart Falls a.nd
Syracuse elementary schools ~!Jd
approved the math t11t6ring program developed by the AthensMeigs Educational Service Center and financed by the· Department of Human Services .
Present were Superintendent
James Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill, Board President Bob
Collins and board members Rot'
Cammarata, Dave Kucsma, Doug
Little and Marry Morarity.

-

Teen denies killing derk

VALLEY WEATHER

LOCAL BRIEFS

Taft likes Clinton lntemet taxation stance

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

The Dally Sentinel • P • A J

~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1\.leellay, february 21, 2000

:: Petry owners want fin• dropped
~uit.

· The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission recommended the fine
I.St year a{ter finding that a plant manager intimidated an employee ·
w~o testified in the 1997 trial of a suit by Kevin Doody, who claimed
he had been fired because he reported safety problems at the plant.
· NRC regulations prohibit plant operators from retaliating against
workers who raise safety issues or testifY about them in a fedecal or
•s~te proceeding.
· NRC will consider the company's request and respond within two
.~oilths, said spokeswoman Pam Alloway-Mueller.
·
John Wood, a vice president at FirstEnergy Corp., which runs the
~erry plant, told the NRC that the .manager who sp~ke to the wit·ness did not violate any regulations.

.New material in school funding case
· COLUMBUS (AP) -The attorney genecal's office will submit
lawmakers' passage of a $10.1 billion tobacco spending plan as part
Of the State's argument in the long-running school funding case, an
official said Monday.
.·
·: · ; The plan approved earlier this month guarantees $2.5 billion for
fiXing up schools through 2012 and promises another $2 billion by
2025.
Attorney General Betty Montgomery had asked the Ohio
Supreme "Court earlier _this month to allow it to file additional
information. The court granted that request Monday. . .
· · "Attorney Genecal Montgomery thought it was important to get
.the full body of evidence before the court reg4rding the' Legislature's efforts to comply with the court's on;ler," said Montgomery·
spokesman Bret Crow. ·
·
The court is expected to rule later this year on whether Ohio has
c6mplied with its order to change the way Ohio funds ·education. ·
· The court ruled in March 1997 that Ohio's school funding system was unconstitutional because it did not provide a "thorough
~11d efficient" e~ucation for every child.
·

. ·
CINCINNATI (AP) the earlier -~nes before saving and Industry representatives and an
sharing the latest one with the environmentalist offered conadministration.
flicting views Monday ~t a U.S.
Superintendent
M~chele Senate subconunittee hearing on
Hummel said she tried unsuccess- federal regulations governing the
fully to persuade Cadet to meet way older plants can be updated
with her to discuss the problem, and still meet clean air standards.
then asked Madeira police and
The U.S. Environmental Prothe telephone company for help
. in investigating the preserved
voice mail. Investigators determined that it was phoned in on
Saturday afternoon, Feb. 19, Mate
said.
But Cadet said he couldn't
continue to teach 'w hiie the
harassment went on.
"I told the administration I'm
getting these messages. They told
me, 'Why don't you lock the
door?' Basically, that meant they
didn't think it was serious;· Cadet

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Administrators of a suburban
Cincinnati school district say they
are investigating complaints by a
Haitian-born teacher that he was
the target of racial slurs .
Jean-Robert Cadet, a Madeir~
High School history and French
· teacher since 1996, said Monday
he . resigned last week after ·
administrators had not vigorously
investigated his complaints.
• Cadet, 45, said he thought several students were to blame for
· the racial slurs he found written
on his blackboard and left on his
voice mail during recent' months.
·Administrators, he · said, just
told him to .lock his classroom
when he was not in it.
But school principal Christopher Mate said the administration
in the I ,500-student district
investigated Cadet's initi~l complaint that someone had written a
day to be ~·lied {'nigger: ... .
slur on the blackboard but could- every
My integrity, my pride, is much
n't identifY the culprit.
·more important to me."
He said he didn't learn about
"Nobody should have to face
the . telephone harassment until chat," said Hummel, who recalled
Cadet resigned.
no similar harassment in her five
Cadet said he had received . years as superintendent of the
numerous voice-mail messages predominantly white school syscontaining racial slurs, but, eclsed terfi:

Wlmams &amp;lauciataa
lnsuranca

ERIE. Has Moved To ANew Location

We Are Now shari:rig Office
Space With Leo's Cruise
&amp; Travel At

sai~.l'mnotgoingtogotoschool

.

Ill Wea·t le•ond Sire·et Suite I ,·
PQmiiGJ,.DIIID
U.

.

·

·

Ill-.....

-.

'

EMS logs 7 calls

Grants
from

'

I

. •

~ .

&gt;

.~

,·
Soup supper pIanned .

·
·
' PAGEVILLE -The Scipio Township VolUnteer Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary will serve soup and chili Saturday at the fire station,
from r)oon to 4 p.m. Desserts will also be available.

Dinner planned

S149~~er Mollll* Save $1 ,300

:POMEROY -An Election Day luncheon will be held Tuesday at
Grace Episcopal Church, 326 E. Main St: Pomeroy. Homemade. soups,
sandwiches, and desserts will be served from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m Call-in
orders may be' placed at -992-3867 .'

4

Testing times announced
·POMEROY - Current testing times and locations for prospective
census takers to be continued through March 30 are as follows:
. • Mondays: Long Bottom Community Center, 9:30 a.m.; Coolville
Public Lib=y, 1:30 p.m.
: • Tuesdays: Athens Job Services, 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
· • Wednesdays: Pomeroy Library, 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
• Fridays: Racine Public Library,
.
· For more in(ormation, contact Cheryl Cox at ,1-888-325-7733, or
Jannine Petrel, 949-2786.

G1225 Lawn and Garden Tractor
• 15 hp • 42~'nch convertible motiJer deck
• Automatic tronsmission

$7·2Per ~onlh* Save S300
,.......;....,""'

· · JAfJO Walft.&amp;hlnd Moar
• 6 hp • 2l-inch cast·
aluminum deck

'

N

0

T

H

I

N G

R, u

s

L

\

I

K E'
'

Wakefield G81age
. US# 50 West, P.O. Box# 639
740:593-3815
•

. CARTHAGE -Spring revival services will be held at tile Carthage
Conununity Church, March 9-11, 7 p.m. each evening. The church is'
!c)cated six miles from Coolville.
·
·

*IOOFF

'

99·5944-H/8

Athena, 011

Spring revival plans set

Novi$419

Savings.are so big at your John Deere dealer's store, there's never been
.
.
'
a better time to cut a deal. And with Same-As-Cash until June 2000*, you'll
enjoy the biggest cuts of the season long before the !ll'a5S ·begins to grow.
· So don't wait for. it to. green up. See your John Deere dealer
. today
beCause the offers ~nd February 29, 2000.

•ldw•11'•ott' .

...

•'

f,

D E

E. R

•

·cruisers

that the county will have to pay
for the mediation - .which may
result in extra cars - .,.and any
resulting attorne)(s fees.
PapAl
· Commissioner Jeff Thornton
returned
to work Monday after a
· Dugan said the cars in question
have 125,000 to 175,000 miles on hospital s~y. and was unable to
them, and are costing the · county attend the Friday meeting. However, he said the deputi~' action
in maintenance.
"The sheriff has no control may ultimately hurt the people of
·over this;• Dug4n said. "He has to Meigs (;ounty
"It's not the commissioners'
ger the OK from the county com.. .
"
doUars;• he said:
''
nusstoners.
He
said
the
commiSsioners
and
"We .have to file it (the grievance) against the sheriff, but we'n: de'puties have to work to~~:ther
not holding him res~onsible,. he within the eXisting financial co'n strainu to resolve the problem.
added.
"I can't stress enough about the
• "This will be a higher cost to
the county;'
Dug4n said, adding . need to work together;' he ?id.
.

E•

frOm

www.deere.com·

· -- ·~

Carmicluiel's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

740-446-2412

A

'P8IIleNIIuq,WV
Larry's Cycle &amp; Tractor Sal~
2706 Pike Street ·
304-428-7102
•

..
,,
•

'OIIm end ftbruary 29, 2000. SUbjocl to approved a!d~ on John Deere Credit Rovolving Plan, forooncommerolat use. 10'11. down p.aymtr\1 requill&lt;l.lllht ba~nce is not paid In JuH by tilt end of Same As Cull promotional period,- will lie - . d from lhtorlginof dati ot pu-111UliAI'!Iunlal jQ\1
1111doiiiCA{19.2'1o APR); A~ FL, KS, LA, ME, Mrl. MN, NE, NC, NO, PA. VI &amp;'W'1 (18'11.APR); TX (14 'II.APR 1btl rate may vary); willl a 10.50per monlll minimum. Tans, freight, setup, and delivery could lncrusemootlllypoymort OlflliiPICill'"*llldt1niiS!111YIIemiflble, mctodlng -Niclr1Gnt
tlnlllcing fur comrnen:lll UN. Avalllbfo !min p.articlfllllng deale11. Prices llld
vary by deoler.
'
·

..-lillY

'

,,
'

•

Kathryn B.1(aj Rail

-

..,
,
.· BURLINGHAM - Bedford Township •rustees ~ill meet in regu··
lar session March"14, 7 p.m. at the town hall.

-·

DEATH
NOTICE
.
.

.,Voting equipment b?$t

POMEROY -A public test of the Meigs County Board of Elections' votir;tg equipment will be held ~ednesday, ) 1 a.m . .at the election office on Mulberry Avenue.

415 Lawn-and Garden Tractor
• 201Jp, V-7Win, /iquickoo/ed engine
• Uinch mower deck
• Automatic tronsmission

Anco Mining of Belmont, is
expeqed to complete its work
soon with the addition of threeto-four inches of soil near the
baseball field, and the construetion _of a temp.orary gr3llcl roadway.
Swartzmiller said the first con- .
tractors. should arrive on the
scene in about three to four
weeks. The project is expected to
be completed sometime around
late April or early May next year.
He said the construction
schedule and the impending start
of construction will be discu·ssed
at the next board meeting,
In per~o nn,el matters, -the board
approved the retiremen-t of longtime high school secretary Grace
Griffin.
The board also approved Mary
Bar~on and Leah Johnson as substitute . teachers, and Robin
Nance as a substitute cook, custodian and secretary/aide.
Graduation this year . will be
held Sunday, May 21 at 8 p.m. at
the high schooL
.
In other business, the board:
• Met with Rhonda D ailey,

MIDDLEPORT - Kathryn B. "Kay" Rail, 92, a Middleport business woman for nearly 40 years, died Wedn~sday, Feb. 23, 2000 at
··
Homewood Nursing Home in Williamsport, 'Md.
Born Aug. 6, 1907 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, she was the widow of
.Everett 0. Rail, with whom she owned the Ben Franklin store on
North Second. Street in Middleport from .1949 u·ntil their retirement
·
in 1988.
Mrs. Rail was a 1925 graduate of Washington High School and
attended Coe College, both in Cedar Rapids. She also attended the
American Conservatory of Music in Chicago. There she srudied the.. atre org4n, which she later played for the silent movies .
, While in Middleport, Mrs. Rail was elected to both the Middleport
and Meigs boards of education, Among other activities, she was also a
rnember of Business and Professional Women, a garden club and Heath
Methodist Church.
.
Residents of Mason, W.Va. , for many year1, the Ralls moved to
. Homewood Retirement Community in Williamsport in 1991. ·Mr.
Rail died in Maryland in 1992. .
She is survived by a son, Thomas Bowman Rail, a daughter-in-law,
Debi H. Tucker; and a grandson, all of Arlington,Va.
Interment was at Cedar Memorial Cemetery in Cedar Rapids. Contributions may be made in Mrs. Rail's memory to Alzheimer's Association, 919 Michig4n Ave. No. 1100, Chicago, lll. 60601.

.

"

•

,,,

Bureau coordinates the program
in the Buckeye State.
Its purpose is to improve and
expand agricultural productipn
and farm profita~iliry through .
various research: and educational
projects in the eight-state buriey
belt, which ind11des Ohio.
. .
Since its creation, the foun&lt;4- ·
tion has provided . more than Sf
million in grants to tobacco
farmers in the eight-state burley
belt.

A correction was made' in the
secretary's report. It was noted
that Date Wallace Hill of Karen'~
Greenhouses donated the poin~ .
Page AI
settias given to the judges of the
Jumping ·Contest at the July 4 holiday home decorating conte~.
celebration. Bob Fisher gave .an Appreciation of the donation ~
::
update on the Racine Riverbank expressed by RACO.
The· group also voted to pu~."
Project.
chase a.Santa Claus suit for use4t
"Christnm in the Park," .
:.
Thirteen members were jn
II'R'IIG VI,IL LYCll: [l,\•\
n
J
,
attendance, with one new me.,;446 4524
~
ber joining.
'
:"
FAI 2/25 • THUAS 3/2100
The
next
meeting
will
be
h~
CERTFKATES AVAIWU
lOX OFFIC£ WIU OPEN AT
March 28, 6:30 p.m. at_Star Mill
6r3D PMIOIIVIIIIIG SHOWS
Park. · ·
. ::
••
12:30 PM FOR MAnNEIS

'

,,

from

II &gt;lilt

I

1\ I ol

,,I

'II I'll

i

t

•

Gin

MORE LOCAL NEW~
MORE LOCAL FOLKSi .

•

=
·!
•

Subscribe today.
992-2156

..

. . .1

The Daily Sentinel •
(USPS 213-960)
Commu~itl

: . •

Newspaper Holdlnp,.Inc.: ,

P\Jb1lshed ever~ afternoon, Monday throuat. ·

Evans
&amp;om

and permitted by a majority of
council members to so speak
"No person shall be permitted ·
to address council more than two
PageA1
times per year on the same sub.
ject,''
March ·or early April, she said.
The rules place enforcement of
lannarelli said that the conunittee will consider expanding pro- the rules with the chairman, ·and
grams offered at the park to attract allow for ejection of those. who do
all ages, including water aerobics, not comply.
Councilman Roger Manley
swimming lessons . and tennis
inquired about the process used to
lessons.
·
.
· Council approved a number of dispose of excess equipment, and
amendments to the rules of coun- said that he was concerned that a
cil, relating to the way in which village truck was sold recently
the meetings are conducted and without council's approval.
''I have a prob)em with equipguidelines relating to public ·parment being sold when nobody
ticipation.
around
this table knows anything
· The new rules prohibit any
comments made in the g4llecy about it;' Manley said.
lannarelli said that village
during meetings, and requiring
those who-wish to discuss business department heads and · equipment
with .council to request placement committee members should meet
on the agenda no later than noon before any equipment is sold. ·
Councilman Stephen Houchon the Friday prior to the meetins asked about the starus of a light
ing.
"That person must fir~t make · at the municipal parking lot, and
written application for an oppor- lannan:lli reported that the new
runity to speak during the public vapor light has been ordered from
participation portion of the meet- . American Electric Power and will
'ing. The application shall dearly be installed soon. ·
Council member Kathy Scott
state who will appear by name and
address and the purpose of the reported a drainage problem on
Beech Stteet.
· appearance, .
·
it was noted that some of the
"Applicati6ns shall be permitolder
Christmas decorations were
ted ~ time permits and .at the discretion of the chair. If the chair unearthed when village employees
does not permit a non-member to cleaned out the old Park Street
participate, then that 'applicant School storage building. The decshall only ~e permitted to speak if orations could be repaired and
sponsored by a council member used.

..'

RACO

Friday, Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy, Obio, by thi'
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Seton(
class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
•
Membu: The Associated Press, and the Ohio,._
Ncwspapc:T As&amp;Oeiatian.
:
PO~MASTER: Send addrc11 corrcctioils 10""

7:10 &amp; 1:10 DAILY

MAnNEES BAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
·Ohio 45769

~

•
:
,
'
:

Pom~roy~

1
... ,

SUBSCRJ.PTJON RATES
By Carrier or Motor Ro•le

• •
' ''

.

One Wcek ..............................................$2.00
One Month ................ ............................ $8.70
1
OneYear............... ,............................ $104.00 ~ ~ ·,
1
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .....................................:.......... .JS Cents
Subscriben not desiring to pay the carrier may,
remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on I tbree, alx or 12 month bRsis. Credit will be•·
alven carrier each week.
'
No subscription by mail permitted in arua
where ho!Jie Clrrier service i'- available .
Publiaher reservc1 the riJht to adjust ntcs.
durlns the au'bscrlptlon period Subscnptlon •
rate chanae• may be Implemented by chan&amp;ina.
the rJuratiQn or the aublcrlpdon.

I'

j

'

..

MAIL SUISCRIPnONS
la11de Melp Co.atJ
13 Weeks ......, ....... ;.............................. $27.30
26 Wec:ks ............................................. $S3.82

52 Weets ..........,........,....................... $105.56
Rata OulaJdc Melp CouiJ
13 Wcc:ts............................................. $29.25
26 Wcc:b ............................................. $56.68
.52 Wceb ........................................... $109.72

'

Reader St'l v11 ·1 ,_.,
Our 1111ln coacern h1 111 ltorlells le be
ltc:Untl, ((you kaow of1n error I• a...,., . '"
ull •• newll'vom •• (740) m.uss. We
will chec:k Jo•r lnto.... atlo• altd
1
wrndlen lrwamnted.

••ke

Newt Oep.rtmeat1
'l1tt 111ln •umber 11 Ml·21". o.,.n.... ~
exttn1lons tre:
Genertl Manapr........................... Ed. lltl
~
Newa ................................................ Ext.lltJ ...
................................................. -or Ext. Uti ·•

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES S4.00

•

•

'

calls

..

Home-Auto-Gommerical-Annuit -Life

difference in future construction
cost savin&lt;!S. The biggest impact
°
on
the budget was the
b
k
HVAC/p 1um ing wor • which
was 34.55 percent (or $534 ,200)
higher than estimated.
The initial sitework contractor,

MIDDLEPORT - lthni.er "Ike" Neal, 86, Middleport, died unexpectedly Sunday. February 27, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
He was born on January 26, 1914 in Middleport, son of the late .
George Woodrnan Neal and Clara Mae Cash Neal.
He was a graduate of Middleport High School, was a police officer
for the Village of Middleport for over 19 years and worked for the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office. He was employed by the State of Ohio
as a timekeeper for 17 years.
He was a member of the Heath United Methodist Church, Middle.:
'
,,'
port
.
••
He is survived·by his wife, Mona Oiler Neal of Middleport; two sons
: POMEROY - Units of the. Meigs County Emergency Medical and daugbters-in-law, Kit R. and Carol Neal of Austin ,Texas~ and Kim
Service logged seven .
for assistance Monday. Units responding B. and Mary Ann Neal of Mason, West Virginia; a daughter and sonincluded:
in-law, Janet Lee and Jeffrey A. Russell of Mason, Wrst Virginia; six
CENTRAL I)ISPATCH
grandchildren·, Ryan Russell of Mason; West Virginia, Katie Lee· RusI
: 12:25 a.m., Headley Run, Tuppers Plains,Vivian Headley, Camden- sell of Mason, West Virginia,Jeff (Pam) Neal ofBeck!tiy, West Virginia,
Clark Memorial Hospital, Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
PageA1
Jason (Tone) Crandol of Bremerton, Washington, Kerry Goel) King oC
; 4:56 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Laura Gilbert, Arizona, and Justin Crandol of St. Petersburg, Florida; greatf'lager,Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy squad assisted; .
grandchildren, Hanna King of Gilbert, and Katlyn Garten of Beckley; Bureau and Ohio State University Extension offices. The applica; 2:53p.m., Maples Apartments, Pomeroy, Florence Tadlock, treated at and several nieces and nephews.
the scene; .
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by two broth- tion deadline is May 1, 2000.
The FIIF was created three
: 6:45 p.m., Little Forest Run Road, Reedsville, Donald Haning, St. ers, Charles W. Neal and Raymond Cash Neal.
Joseph's Hospital, Reedsville squad assisted;
.
Services will be held Thursday, March 2, 2000 at 1 p.m. at Fisher. years ago with financial support
· 9:51 p.m., Second Street, Syracuse,l)ave Donahue,VMH, Syracuse Funeral Home in Middleport, with the Rev. Clark .Baker officiating. . from major corporations and . is
managed by the Kentucky Farm .
squad assisted;
. .
.
Burial will be conducted at the convenience of the family.
Bureau,
while the Ohio Farm
: 11:18 p.in., State Route 681, Pomeroy, Charles Martin, Holzer
Friends may call Wednesday, March 1, 2000, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. .
Medical Center, Rudand squad assisted.
at the funecal home. ·
COLUMBIA VFD
2:58 p.m., Darst Roa&lt;l, brush fire, no injurieS reported·.

'lftiStees to meet •

$61 Per Month* Save $250

lthmer •1ke' Neal

MASON, W.Va. - R~um~ foe 15 scholarships of $500 each to be
awarded by Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason are being accepted from post lllembers and their famili~ with an April 21 deadline.
If all scholarships are not awarded to members and their families, qther
veterans ~nd their families will be considered. Those who apply must be
accepted at their respective coUege or university.
·
Resumes should state the applicant's relationsliip to veterans as well as
including the coUege being attended and the majo{ course of s!Udy.
• Send applications to Post 9926, P.O. BoX 586, MasonYJ.Va. 25260.

· RACINE - Racine American Legion Post 602 .will hold a steak
and noodle dinner Sunday starting at 11 a.m. $5. Dine-in or carry-out.

• IS hp • 42-inch conve_rtible mower deck
• Automatic transmission

OBITUARY

"''
·. . Applications being ·accepted

....

I

Tonight. .Increasing clouds. A
chance of showers late. Lows in
the mid and upper 40s. South
wt'nd 5 to 10 mph. Chance ofrat'n

Wildlife hearings scheduled

American l.elion dln~er

LX255 Lawn Tractor

Clouds will ·build over Ohio
on Wednesday and scattered
'bl
' howers are poSS! e.
But temperatures will continue
to be unseasonably warm with
hlghs 55-65, the National Weather Service said.

.

tection Agency .is •scheduled to
release revisions . of the New
Source Review regulations· later ·
dris year.
.
·
The NSR rules apply to
plants built before 1977. Those
plants have been exempted in .
the past fi:om having to install
up-to-date pollution · controls ·

PREss

30 percent.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers. Can.
d
. h highs 111
. h
tmue warm Wit
t e
It will be a little cooler on mid and upper t\Os. Chance of
Thursday with readings in the 40s rain 40 percent. .
.
and 50s, according to forecasters.
Wednesday mght ... ConSlderThe record-high temperature able cloudiness. Lows from th":__
, ATHENS - The Division ofWildlife of the Ohio Department of
for
this date~at-the~eolumbus--upp·er"30s to-rhelower 40s.
Naturu Resources has scheoUieafive open liouses To be held around
weather
station was 70 degrees in
Exte~tded forecast:
the state on March 5.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy.
' The intenr of the open house is to provide sportsmen, outdoor 1976 while the re.cord low was 0
in
1884.
Highs
in
the
lower
60s.
I
enthusiasts and the general public an opportunity to comment on proSunset tonight will be at 6:23
Friday.. ,Mosdy cloudy with a
posed hunting and fishing regulations for the 2000-2001 season.
p.m.
and
sunrise
Wednesday
at
chance
of showers. Lows near .40
Wildlife· District 4, which covers 19 southeastern Ohio counties
7:05
a.ni.
·
and
highs
from the upper 50s to
·including Meigs and Galha counties, will hold its open house at the
Weather forecast:
the lower 60s.
Athens Parks and Recreation Community Center, 733 E. State St.,
Athens, from no'?n-5 p.m. In the event of inclement weather,.the open
house will be held March 8 at 7 p.m. at the Athens Disttict Office.

Cincy-area teacher says Sen~ subcommitb!e ~olds
he was harassed at school heanng on EPA regul~ons

'NORTH PERRY (AP) -The owners of the Perry Nuclear Power
Plant are challenging a proposed $110,000 fine against them for
:lllegedly intimidating an employee who testified in a co-worker's law-

BY THE AsSOCIATED

from PageA1

Other Strvkel
Adverttlina..................................... Ell. l.llot
Cln:ullllon ...................................... EJt.IIIJ
CllulftedAdt
.................................
...._
__
_ _ EJt.Jlot

..

•

·.t

:
!-·

ga

possible Wednesday

1

CHARDON (AP) -A 19-year-old pleaded innocent to charges
tliat he, along with two other teens, robbed and ·killed a !}IS station
clerk.
· Wesley Peuson of Cleveland entered his pleas Monday in GeauCounty Common Pleas Court to two counts of aggravated murder with death penalty specificatiops and one count each of aggravated robbery, attempted aggravated murder and attempted ltidnappi_ng. He was being held without bond.
County Prosecutor David Joyce said he would pursue the death
penalty against Pearson.
· Prosecutors and police said Pearson and two friends walked into
die Clark ()il service station in Chester Township at closing Feb. 18
and killed Danielle Kovacic, 19, before raiding the cash register. A
- -17- year-old friend of Kovacic's was shot twice and wounded.
··Jill Holder, 17, and Marcus Moorer. 15, both of Chester Township, also have been charged in the ·crime. The county has filed
motions with Geaug4 County Juvenile Court to try the two as
adults.

SNOWVILLE - Four teens from Athens County teens and one
from Meigs County will likely face charges in the rheft of signs from
Meigs and Athens counties over the weekend.
. After receiving a call Saturday afternoon from a Snowville area resident who said he saw five boys steal a scliool bus sign, a Meigs County sheriff's deputy on patrol stopped a truck with two boys in front and
three in back, and road signs in the back.
The truck reportedly contained a stop sign, a road sign, a business
sign and an election campaign sign. A totaf five signs were stolen, four
from Meigs and one from Athens.
.
.

R~~n

-

"He said that this is an issue that they're
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio's Bob Taft taxes on purchases made via the Internet if the
going
to have to work out among the states;•
and the nation's other governors didn't end customers buy from Ohio-based ' companies
.
Clinton spokesman Joe Lockhart said.
any part of the ongoing debate over taKing or sellers with stores in Ohio.
"He (the president) told the governors that
Internet sales,, but Taft found comfort at the
That means no sales tax is collected on a
this is an issue that we're going to have to
White House, where President Clinton said large numb'e r of sales.
he's backing the states' efforts to resolve the
In Congress, considerable sentiment eXists work out together, and that we're going to
·
controversy themselves.
- led in part by Ohio Republicans John have to work on with some urgency."
"It may have to involve some simplification
"We're tallting about what fundamentally Kasic~ and John Boehner- in favor of a fedshould be a state issue area ;'Taft told reporters ecal law declaring the Internet to be a tax-free . of sales raxes;• Loc;khart said. That is the
who waited on the White House lawn Mon- zone in order to encourage the growing field approach favored by many governors and by
Sen. George Voiriovich, R-Ohio, one of the
day during a meeting between Clinton and of electronic commerc.e. ·
the governors,
Some governors have openly worried louder voices on Capitol Hill in favor of sales
Taft said he could support a short extension abo'!t that as a drain on future state revenues. tax collection on Internet purchases.
A commission headed by Republican Gov.
of the current moratorium on new taxes Taft has not declared whether he wants Ohio
while states devisF a cor{sistent approach to · to be able to collect sales taxes fi:om out-of- James Gilmore ofVirginia is _!!udying how to_ _
the problem.
state compames wllo slij.p, goodSiO Ohio cus- proceed on several Internet taxation ques~
"We need more time to figure out what tomers they connected with over the Inter- lions, including what to do when the current
moratorium expires in 2001. ·
we're going to do," he said. "It's very impor- net.
The commission is to release its recom-.
Clinton told the governors he believes fedtant,that the states work togethe-r."
mendations in April.
Ohio and other states .only collect sales era! law. should not preempt _their state laws.

Southem

vice president of nursing at Veterans Memorial Hospital, who discussed th e upcoming four-mill
emergency room levy. The board
took no action on the matter.
• Agreed to post the position
of prom director at a cost f&gt;t'
S427 .2L
• Agreed to continue the Ohio
Hunter Education Program a~
Southern Junior High School
held at no cost to the district.
• Approved having a track program at' the high school chis
spring using volunieer coaches.
• Ac cepted a mition student
for the remainder of the school
year~
_
.·
• Approved an early dismiss¥
on March 16 to allow staff to do
continuo us improve ment plan ~
nrng.
.
• Approved for the sixth gra~e
TAG students to take. a field trip
to Canada with Jody Howard,
TACJ coordinator, on June 6-8
with expenses paid by the students. · .
·
• Accepted ·a $4,000 Ohi?
Reads Volunteer Building Coordinator Grant (or Letart Falls a.nd
Syracuse elementary schools ~!Jd
approved the math t11t6ring program developed by the AthensMeigs Educational Service Center and financed by the· Department of Human Services .
Present were Superintendent
James Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill, Board President Bob
Collins and board members Rot'
Cammarata, Dave Kucsma, Doug
Little and Marry Morarity.

-

Teen denies killing derk

VALLEY WEATHER

LOCAL BRIEFS

Taft likes Clinton lntemet taxation stance

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

The Dally Sentinel • P • A J

~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

�..

••

_Th_e_D_ai~Iy_S_en_ti_ne_I________________I~~~~~....

Charlene Hoeflich
. General Manager

R. Shawn Lewla
Mllnaglng Editor

.
h£ ~INN.r.rl ftSI':~ .,

WEB·51Tf JrMS
FOR YOU.

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

stahler@fuse.net

.•
'

'·•

,

"
'

Diane Hill
Controller

j

. "'

w'ko"''·

LMNn ID tJw NiMH an
'l'luJ sluud4 H ku tlutll JOO ttmnh. All tettns A~"e tulbjut
1o f!CiitMr f1fN! 11t1Uf bf llflled IUtd ilttludt tldtlnn t111d wlqltotu "'"""''· No 11nligrml Ulten wUI ·
lk JH'blUIIM. ~ u.o.d4
IIUit, tUI.dnuing iss•n, 11114 fH"JIMIJJJtin.
11f1 a,Utio• IJtlflfllfl llf lilt OO/NirnrbfiDII' II" II" COIISitiSIII o/thl Olfio Vdty Pi~islflltf -

btU.,..,

·.j·t

,,

.

Co. '1 ~ 6o.td, .,,.,.,. odtUJ~~iu 11ottd.

•· '

" .

OUR VIEW:

I

i

Taxing

"
,.,

,.

' 'f1

Like it or not, munidpal .
.income taxes have benefits
Preventing
taxation on
nonresidents'
earntngs
within a
municipality
is only a
formula for
disaster.

'

~'
'

I

I

I ,

'

state law."
).'

·

Fact is, those people who live .outside a city but use its services
can't have it both ways.
If they come to a city or village to work, they expect such services as clean water, trash pickup and police protection. And that
cost~ money. Rising costs of providing services makes an income
rax·almost an inevitability.
·
We all feel taxed to death. If we need relief, the pressure should
be on state and federal officials to give us cuts in the big ticket
taxes.
Preventing taxation on non- residents' earnmgs within a
municipality is only a formula for disaster.

TODAY IN HISTORY
. BY THE AssociATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 29, the 60th day of 2000. There are 306
days left in the year. This is Leap Day. ·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 29, 1940, ." Gone with the Wind" won eight Academy
Awards, including best picture of 1939.
On this date:
In 1504, Christopher Columbus, stranded in Jamaica during his
fourth voyage to the West, used a correctly predicted lunar eclipse
to frighten hostile natives into providing food for his crew. ·
In 1792; the composer Gioacchino Antonio Rossini was born in
Pesaro, Italy.
'
In 1796·, President Washington proclaimedJay'sTr.eaty'in effect; it
settled some outstanding differences with Great Britain.
In 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt appointed a seven-member commission to hasten completion of the Panama Canal.
In 1956, President Eisenhower announced ·he would seek a second term of office.
'
.
In 1960, the first Playboy Club, featuring waitresses c.lad in
"b1,mny" outfits, opened in Chicago. (Hugh Hefner closed the cor"
porate-owned clubs in 1986, calling them "passe.")
·
In 1968, the discovery of the first "pulsar," a star which emits regular radio waves, was announced by Dr: Jocelyn Bell Burnell at
•
· Cambri,dge, England. ·
In 1968, President Johnson's National Advisory Commission on
Civil Disorders (also known as the Kerner Commissiot;t) w.~rned
that racism was causing America to move "toward. two societies, one
black, one white - separate and une~ual."
·
.
In 1980, former Israeli foreign nunister Yigal Allon, who had
played an · important role in the Jewish state's fight .for independence, died at age 61.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Michele Morgan is, 80. Actor Arthur
franz is 80. Actor James Mitchell is 80. Actor Joss Ackland is 72.
Actor Alex Rocco is 64. Former space shuttle astronaut Jack Lousma is 64. Actor Dennis Farina is 56. Actress Phyllis Frelich is 56.
Actor }\.ntonio Sabato ]J.mior is 28 . .

'

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
not a financial b11rden . But our children
are grown now and out of the house, and
my husband and I have no life of our
own.' Mom comes over for meals every
day, and I find myself cooking a lot more
than I' expected to at this point in my life.
The worst part of it is, she .expects us to
take her everywhere we go ..
,The anger I feel tow:utt thts woman is
beginning to ea~ me alive, and I don't
know_what to do about it. Any advice ?
- WRETCHED IN ,TEXAS

DEAR TEXAS: The problem you are
writing about is now I 0 years old. Stuck
is stuck, and that is exacdy what you are.
You need to Jearn how to live with this.
Talk to your clergyman or a professional
·counselor about how you can come to
terms with the situatipn.After 10 years of
togetherness, I see no easy way out .
Dear Ann Landers: I would like to
express my opinion on the subject of
" c all wattmg.
. . " PIease te II your te.iWm
~ ~-that it is extremely rude to say to a caller,
"I have another call coming in op the
other line. Hang on for a nunute." Invariably, it is a lot longer than a minute. This
hap,Pens even when I have placed the call
lon g-distance. Would a business person
treat a customer. 't hat way? I think not.
I have decided to hang up on the next
person who docs that to me. What do
you do, Ann? - NEEDING GUIDANCE IN D.C.
DEAR D.C.: I'm willing to "wait a
minute ," in case the other call is an t!mer-

.-........

PRESENTED PIN -

Dwight M. Brown, right,
was presented a 65year membership pin at a
recent meeting of
Harrisonville La,dge
411, F.&amp;A.M. Making the
presE1ntation were two
50·year members,
Harold Rice, left, and
Frank Young. ·

''l'

j
•s

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

.
HENTOFF'S VIEW:
.

Slightly more than half agreed that separate
but equal was all right. "This indicates," Professor Klinker told me, "that many young
Americans are comfortable with the notion of

J

'

.

.,

••

"".•,1
••
''". '

Are we still one nation, or becoming two?
Hamilton College in upstate New York.
commissioned ·a survey last year - "The
Racial Attitudes ofYoungAmericans" - from
John Zogby. Since' he is the only national pollster to whom I pay serious ·attention, I ·find the
results illuminating and important, but also
distuJ;bing.
·
The questions were asked of 1,001 randomly selected 18- to 20-year-olds around the
coun.try. Among the somewhat more hea~
ing results was that 56 percent said that government should ensure fair treatment of blacks
in the workplace.
The majority also ~ccepted interracial dat- ·
ing and marriage. And 61 percent agreed that
"the government in Washington should see to
it that white and black children go to the same
schools.''
However, t~either the current president nor any prospective president - has indicated
that school i[\tegration is a priority. And more
public sch(lols are segregated now than when
the Suprem~ Court, in 1954, declared segregated public schools unconstitutional in
Brown vs.}loard of Education.
Professor Phillip Klinker of Hamilton College, who directed the survey, said that it is
"troubling that .only some 60 percent of these
young Americans felt strongly that the schools
must be integrated as a constitutional mandate , Thurgood Marshall, while on the
Supreme Court, used to say that 'people who
don't learn together are nqt going to know
.
.
how to live together."'
· ·What I found most disturbing were the
answers to the question that read: "It's okay if
the races are basically separate from one
another as long as everyone has equal oppor- .
tunities. That used to be called 'separate but

,

..I

,

.

-, .l

.....t

you live with? They really shove that down ""
your throat. I come from ·a predominantly!
white, Republican town in Northern Califo.:~
'
nia, and all of a sudden, I'm an. Asian girt;:
whether I like it or not. I really resented it." ···~
Not surprisingly, in a report on affirmative
action at the University of Michigan, the
widely ' respected Chronicle of Higher Education noted, "Most students' close friendships
·/.'
.
t~nd
to be with people of their own race;·
,) '
)
Teaching at Princeton University two year,)
'!:'~. ' !.,~~)
NEA COLUMNIST
ago, I was given similar responses by black and .. I
white students.
Malcolri1 X was a friend of mine, from the-:.
a segregated society."
time he was in the Nation of Islam to his
This is not entirely surpnsmg . when so assassination. In one of his last speeches, he ,;
many ele~~;Jentacy, middle and high schools said: "We don't judge a man because of the1" .
remain segregated, and when some champions, color of his skin. We don't judge you because: ! .
of black pride .d eterminedly emphasize sepa- you're white; we don 't judge you because.. ;
ratism.
·
you're black or b1;0wn. We judge you because p,
On college . campuses, )lleanwhile, well- of what you do and what you practice."
· . ,q '
Louis Armstrong also believed that. He
meaning but patronizing administrators have.narrowed the meaning of "diversity" and · often spoke of. how much he enjoyed, as ,a .,
"multicultutalism."When "diversity" results in young trumpet player in Chicago, jamming,. :
one group focusing primarily on its own spe- with the white cornetist, Bix Beiderbecke. Fqrf,,
cia! moral and cultural virtues, the outcome is black and white jazz players, improvising·
hardly a .COncern with the Value Of diversity in together, On the job Of later, became a normal,, 1
the larger society.
part of their lives.
.. h
This kind of separatism is encouraged by
We are considerably behind Malcolm .an~ ,,,
colleges th~t create separate orientation pro- ' Louis. In Newsweek, Ellis· Cose · wrote: "The, :
grams for blacks and other minority newcom- color line is fraying all around us. Disparitie~ ·''
ers so that they'll be "comfortable" on cam- . will remain. But with the rudest reminders of
pus.
racism washed away, it will be a lot easier to ...
Then administrators encourage them to live tell ourselves that we finally have overcome.'.'.,. l
in "theme" buildings apart from the rest of the
But there is still a long way to go before we .rr
residences, isolating them further. To learn see each other, as individuals, beyond the color: . ·
how this thought control works, see. Alan line. And Thurgood Marshall was right. That .
Kors' "Thought Control 101" in the March day will come sooner if our children learn
issue of Reason magazine.
together from kindergarten· on, and are not ,
Vinnie Tong, a student at the University of separated later by college adminis~rators with, 1,
California in Berkeley, told the New York limited vision. .
,"
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authoritY, " .
Tiines:"When you first get here, they give you
this talk about diversity- what kind of place on the First Amendment and· the rest of the Bill of
did you come from? What ki11d of people did ' Rights.)
.
·
. ' ...
'

Nat
~ ..... -.~~
' Hentoff

----------------------------------------------~----------------------~------------~• •· f·

'HARDBALL':

·Survey grades quality ifAmerican presidents
•

BY CHillS MATTltfWS
WASHINGTON -- Here's a great riddle
with which to trick ypur friends: "What five ··
presidents are not buried in the United
States?"
Before giving you the answer, I ask you to
· look at the new survey of historians. Conducted by C-Span (the network that shows
: Congress in action), the poll asked the profes.
sionals to rate our 41 presidents according to
their effectiveness.
The top of the list contained few surprises.
The four faces on ·Mt. Rushmore are chiseled
in our national, memory. The historians ranked
Abraham Lincoln in first .place, Franklin Roosevelt in second, George Washington in third,
Theodore Roosevelt in fourth.
:.
Thomas Jelferson' who finished seventh, is .
the only missipg face from Mount Rushmore.
The historians bumped him for FDR, who
was not yet inaugurated when the grand
· Soj!th Dakota sculpture was un.dertakeit. · '
Let's talk about a more recent quintet of
presidents: Gerald Ford, Jimrrly Carter,

. JVho are the five American presidents .not buried in the United
States? Gerald Ford, jimmy Carter,
. Ronald Reaga,n, George Bush and
most of all, Bill Clinton. He's not
-. even out the door yet.

., .. ,'·'
: ·'f'/

I
li

change it.
Clinton ranked· fifth in .e conomic management, fifth in pursuing equal justice, 11th in
public persuasion, 20th in crisis management, t
21st in international relations; 21st in admin-.
. i~trative skills, 22nd in vision and .agenda-set·tmg.
.
·
. The ranking the histOrians gave hiin in
Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Bill Clintol).
"moral authority" . must be especially troll• ·
Except for Reagan, who finished 11th on bling. Of the 41 presidents, he finished 41\!'1
the new list, all C!nked in the range of 20th dead last.
··
through 25th. Bush was 21st, Clinton 22nd,
How does that feel to the inan ~rking dli
Carter 23rd, Ford 24th, Nixon 25th.
his legacy in the 0~ Office, this presidcp.t
How does it feel to be one of those ~ys? who has hited a top-paid staffer, Sydney Bl~~oThey'ye just received their grade in history. If · menthal, to tend to that specific task?
·
they're like the rest of us they can only won·
Who are the five American presidents not
der what small achievement might have taken buried in the United States? Cerald For(
t,heiri' past a whole pack of their close com- Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush
petitors.
.
and , most of all, BiU .Clinton. He's not evei:J
This is especially true for the current pres· out th~ door yet. ·
ident who has enougl:l mo'nths left in office to
(Chris Matthews, chief of the Sim FranCisco
think about his tigh,d y calibrated ranking in Examiner~ Washington Bureau, is hosr of''Hardhistory but,probably not enouglr time ·left to ba/1" on CNBC a.nd MSNBC cable channels.) -

a

=

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT. DROP US ALINE.

gcncy, but if it's any longer than a
minute, I hang up. I figure any person
who takes another call while speaking tO
me can call me back on his or her own
dime. (Did I say "dime"? My age is
showing. It's 35 cents now!!)
Dear Ann Landen: I read. your column about the woman who didn't want
to take her husband's name when she
married. It made me think ~bout my situatlon .
,
!legally took my husbands name, and
. .
d .
. I had h
h1s stster an s1ster-1n- aw
·
ht e same
did
Th
first name I
. at meant t ere were
•t h ree pat B ourd eaus m
· t h e rtamJ·1y. .,.,
.1.0
'd
~ ·
h'
f:
·1
b
avol conmston, ts anu y mem ers,
inCluding the children, used our maiden
. names. More than once, 1 got a funny
look from a friend or business associate
wiJen ch~ kids greeted nw as·"Au'ntie Pat
Reed."

me with the name Pat 13ourdeau, hut my
maiden name stuck. Wh en my hmb.md
and I celebrated our 25th anniwrsary, we
renewed our vows. Ou r youn g nie ce
said, "lt's about time you go t married."
She thought we were never matt·ied in
the first place. We will soon celebrate our
37th anniversary, and I am •till - PAT
REED IN MICHIGAN
DEAR PAT: Consider · it .1 t:.mily
j ol&lt;e, and tefltgo at fha c
PI
·
dd' ~ Wh t'
,·gl t&gt;
annmg a we 1ng.
a s r 1 .
Wh a;t' s wrong ,. "TI
•
r _ l
G
. 1e nnn ,Ldm ers u1·de
.
r
.d , .
·
S 1
wr Bn es WI11 re1tcve your "'"'ety.. one
.
a self-addressed, long, busmC&gt;HI7C c llv&lt;~
lope and .a ~heck or mon ey order or
$3.75· (thts mcludes p.ostage and han dling) to : Brides, clo Ann Landers. 1~0.
Box 11562. Chicago, IU . 60(oi) -IJ5 (o2 (In
Canada, •end $4.55 .) To find " "' llHHL'

Well , his sister changed her last n~tne

abou[ Ann Lnndcrs and n::u l h~..-r

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Wedn esday, at Pagcville town -. Syrarusc ~J ssio n C lnar! l. rL·d
Russell of M,org.1u ( :e nte r w dl
hall.
POMEROY -- Meigs Local
be the spea ker. p,,lell' M1kc .
School
District, . planning
Catholic Thompso n i1w i tt~'\ r_lll' pul"" ll l
POMEROY
meeting,
for . cOntinuous Women's 'Club with a 7 p.m .
improvement plan for Ohio
SYRACUSE - Sy rac " " ' Vil Mass to prcce!le the meeting.
Department of Education,
lage
Council, Thursday. 7 p 111.
Joanne Tatterson and Sue Jean
Tuesday, 7 p.m . .high school
Raub to be hostesses .
•
cafeteria .
Saturday, March 4
Thursday, March 2
HARRISO NVILLE - H .nPORTLAND - · Lebanon
·risonville
Lodge 411 , T&amp;A i\'1.
SYRACUSE
A
weekend
· Township Trustees, Tuesday,· 7
revival will be held Thursday Saturday, 7:30 p.m. D egrcc
p.m. at the hall.
through Saturday, 7 ·
at the work. Refreshme11ts.
RACINE ·_ The Southern
Local School District Financial
Planning and Supervision
Commission will meet in regular session Tuesday, 10:30
a.m. at the high school in
Racine.

COMMUNITY CORNER
scholarships to be awarded this .
Here in Meigs County we
spring by the Veterans Memorial
, know and appreciate the vocal
. Hospital Auxiliary.
talents of B. J. Smith since she has
Fern Grimm, president, advisbeen singing in local variety .
es that the applications can be
·shows for many years.
Charlene picked up at the desk in the hosHowever at Ohio University,
lobby and need to be comit's' a different story, There are lots
.Hoeflich pital
pleted
and turned in by April' 3.
of: talented- vocalists around.
The dedicated members of
However, it was B. J. who was
COMMUNITY
the
Auxiliary work at various
invited to sing . the National
projects during .the •year to raise
Anthem before the OU and
Nancy
Cak
secretary,
money for the scholarships Penn State game at Bird Arena.
As
with
any
alumni
group
something they have done for
And she made her · family
they
need
all
the
help
they
can
many years.
proud. Her father, Greg, and
they
encourage
MHS
get
so
brother, Cody, drove over for the
***
grads
to
attend.
Also
for
those
Now
.
here
·s an unusual
opemng.
class
reunions
who
.
are
having
request.
.
.S. J. is a· freshman at OU
Chris Woodyard, author of the
majoring in aviation. She spends this year, there will be class mailthree afternoons a week in the ing lists available which can be Haunted Ohio se ries, recently
air ··as she works. toward getting picked up so contacts can be con tacted the local tourism
office for information. on public
her license as a part of the four- made about special class events.
***
places. like old houses or
year program.
Jean
Will
is
coming
along
just
.
cemeteries in Meigs County Incidentally, her mother Vicky
who worked for ,many years at fine from Monday's quadruple haunted by ghosts.
Woodyard .is collecting g~ost
I f\gels Furniture in Midclleport is by- pa'ss heart surgery at the
stories or tales of hauntings, past
now the flight coordinator at the Charleston Memorial Hospital.
She expects to be there for or present, from all Ohio CounOU Airport.
several more days and after that ties to put into her next book on
***
You know that spring is just will recuperate at her home in hau11ted places that the public
may visit.
around the
corner when Parkersburg.
Cards may be sent to Jean, a
She can be ·reached at 1-800announcements start coming. in
longtime resident of Pomeroy, at . 31-GHOST and is anxious to
about meetings to plan high
the. hospital, Room 388, 3200 hear from· folks here who have
school alumni reunions.
McCorkle Ave.
"real" ghost stories to tell. co·n - .
Midclleport High School's first
***
tribucors receive a free book. She
meeting has been set for ThursStudents graduating from high views the project as a way of
day at 7 p.m. at the home of
school this year and entering 'a preserving local history and
Yvonfle Scally, president. The .
medical related field like nurs~ folklore, as well as a unique marother officers are Macy Carolyn
ing, therapy, even pre-med, are keting opportunity for haunted
Wiley, vice president; Dixie
invited to apply for one of the houses. Know any? .
Pierce Arbuckle, treasurer; and
.

'

VUI3LIC
Ml]f3§

CUU~ff

\

/,

.,

•

Wednesday, March 1
MIDDLEPORT -: Middle$1000 eath to the three loeal hiRh schools to be used toward scholarships.
port Literary Club, 2 p.m .
$1000 eath to Syracuse aad Middleport to 11se In the
Wednesday, home of Ida Diehl. IIDIIIntenonce and support or the swimming pools.
$500 lo the Veteran1 or Meigs County,
Sara Owen to review "To Kill
a Mockingbird" by Harper
$500 to the Senior Citizens or Meigs County.
$5000 to be dlstrlbuted equolly amona
Le.e.
ceunty nre deportments. .
FISHER, JR. X
$1000 to Carl!on School
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m.

·Oak Sleigh
·Bedroom Suite
Headboard, Footboard,
Wood Rails, 5 Drawer
Chest, Triple Dresser
and Mirror

8

2,24

Vaughan•Bassett
Oak 5 Piece
Bedroom Suite
FuWQueen Spindle
headboard, foot board m
Gentleman's chest,
Gentleman's mirror
&amp; 5· Drawer chest

~()TIC~
lif)U§I:Iif)L()§

The M~lgs County Grants office Is now providing applications for
assistance In the repair and/or replacement of septic systems for
Very Low and Low Income Households In M~lg·s County. This
assistance .provides g~ant assistance to very low Income
households and 50% grant/~0% loan assistance to low Income
hQuseholds at 3% Interest for 5 years.
' ·
.
. New 'construction Installation Is not eligible . .The program will
~eplace . and/or repair exl~tlng falling s~stems only: Aeration
$.y stems are not .eligible through this EPA funding. Approved
leach systems are eligible.
,. ,
..
. . .
.
:Applications may be obtained at the Meigs Grants Office at 117
East Memorial Dr.lve, Pomeroy, Ohio (Jormer Infirmary i;)ulldlng)
.between the hours of (9:00 a;m. and s;oo p.m., Monday through
friday. For further lnfo.rmatlc~m" you rn,ay call Je~n Trussell at 740.
992~7908.

.

Vaugha•·Bassett
O•k 4 Piece_.
Bedroom Sui••

...,

Full/Queen Bookcase
Headboard, Triple
Dresser, Hutch mirror
• &amp; 5 Drawer chest ·

I
)

1111•

8

Quafity !FUrniture P[us
!Turniture, Caryet, ·.9l.ppfi4nc:.es

FluanclngAvatlable 421 23 State !Bj:. 7 • 'Tuppers Plains, Q!}{
90 Day Lay-Away {740} 667-7388 • 1-800-200-4005

Mon.·Thurs. 9·5
Fri. 9•6 ' Sat. 9·4

. •.

..

p.1 . . 1

columns, ,,isit th ~ Cr~~ :ttn, ., SyudH .ILt'
~wb page at www:r n.::tt un . ~ ~m1

when she married, and the sister-i n- Jaw
divorced and remarri~d, so that l~ft only

Tuesday, February 29

..:.-::. .

equal."'

1:

Dear Ann Landers: When my fatherin-law passed away 15 years ago, my
mother-in-law was left with a big house
in a deteriorating neighborhood. When
she let me know how unhappy she was, .
my husband and I suggested she m&lt;&gt;ve to
a smaller house in a better neighborhood. She was not receptive to the idea.
We lived in a lovely home on a large
lot. I told my mother-in-law if we had
the money, we would build an addition
lo our house so she could IWe'tnere . I
now know that I should never have
· opened my tnouth . As soon as I hung up
the phone, .she called my husband and
told him she wanted him to build a small
home . for her on our property, and, of
course, she would pay for it. He said,
"Wonderful, Mom." She has been .living
here for 10 years. ·
Don't get me. wrong, Ann . My mother-in-law is a wonderful person, and has
helped us a lot. She contributes .toward
our utility bills and the groceries , and is

Brown honored for 65 yeilrs

A

rumor has been Qtrcu.lating in Gallipolis claiming that if ,
it loses city status in the 2000 Census -. that is, if population drops below 5,000 - the municipal income tax
wiU be eliminated.
City and census officials are quick to ·
· point out that even if Gallipolis becomes
a village, the income tax and existing
ordinances will remain.
If that doesn't convince anyone, then
look to Rio Grande - it has a village
inco·m e tax. And so do a lot of conunu•
itities in southern Ohio, both large and
small.
That said, and recognizing most people don't like taxes, a recent initiative by
some township trustees in southwestern
Ohio to have city and village inc0111e
taxes exclude non-residents loses sight of
an important fact.
And that fact is, without revenue from
the inc.ome tax, many benefits both residt:nts of those communities and non~residents who work there enjoy wiU be affected
severely. Check the budgets of area municipalities with income
taXes ..The revenue pay1 for many thinb"· including safety, health
and capital improvements.
The most common complaint about the income tax is
inequity. The tax is imposed on people who work and draw.
wages within the city or village. Locally, most people affected by
the tax object because they are not residents. They have no say in
how the money is spent.
·
,
The trustees seeking to put the income tax ban on the ,b allot
in November as a constitutional amendment obviously believe in ·
this strongly, since 1he people they represent probably work in
Cihcinnati and must pay the tax,'yet live ·outside the .Queen City.
The language of their proposed ballot issue reads, "No Ohio
resident shall be subject to or required to pay any local government tax on his or her earnings or income, except by the city,
village or township in which he or she resides as provided by

.-

•

GOTANOT~ER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~

........,. Februll'! 21. 2000...,

WE'VE

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: "2·2157

...

PapA4

The Daily Sentinel
Established in 1948

..

'•

.

',.

�..

••

_Th_e_D_ai~Iy_S_en_ti_ne_I________________I~~~~~....

Charlene Hoeflich
. General Manager

R. Shawn Lewla
Mllnaglng Editor

.
h£ ~INN.r.rl ftSI':~ .,

WEB·51Tf JrMS
FOR YOU.

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

stahler@fuse.net

.•
'

'·•

,

"
'

Diane Hill
Controller

j

. "'

w'ko"''·

LMNn ID tJw NiMH an
'l'luJ sluud4 H ku tlutll JOO ttmnh. All tettns A~"e tulbjut
1o f!CiitMr f1fN! 11t1Uf bf llflled IUtd ilttludt tldtlnn t111d wlqltotu "'"""''· No 11nligrml Ulten wUI ·
lk JH'blUIIM. ~ u.o.d4
IIUit, tUI.dnuing iss•n, 11114 fH"JIMIJJJtin.
11f1 a,Utio• IJtlflfllfl llf lilt OO/NirnrbfiDII' II" II" COIISitiSIII o/thl Olfio Vdty Pi~islflltf -

btU.,..,

·.j·t

,,

.

Co. '1 ~ 6o.td, .,,.,.,. odtUJ~~iu 11ottd.

•· '

" .

OUR VIEW:

I

i

Taxing

"
,.,

,.

' 'f1

Like it or not, munidpal .
.income taxes have benefits
Preventing
taxation on
nonresidents'
earntngs
within a
municipality
is only a
formula for
disaster.

'

~'
'

I

I

I ,

'

state law."
).'

·

Fact is, those people who live .outside a city but use its services
can't have it both ways.
If they come to a city or village to work, they expect such services as clean water, trash pickup and police protection. And that
cost~ money. Rising costs of providing services makes an income
rax·almost an inevitability.
·
We all feel taxed to death. If we need relief, the pressure should
be on state and federal officials to give us cuts in the big ticket
taxes.
Preventing taxation on non- residents' earnmgs within a
municipality is only a formula for disaster.

TODAY IN HISTORY
. BY THE AssociATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 29, the 60th day of 2000. There are 306
days left in the year. This is Leap Day. ·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 29, 1940, ." Gone with the Wind" won eight Academy
Awards, including best picture of 1939.
On this date:
In 1504, Christopher Columbus, stranded in Jamaica during his
fourth voyage to the West, used a correctly predicted lunar eclipse
to frighten hostile natives into providing food for his crew. ·
In 1792; the composer Gioacchino Antonio Rossini was born in
Pesaro, Italy.
'
In 1796·, President Washington proclaimedJay'sTr.eaty'in effect; it
settled some outstanding differences with Great Britain.
In 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt appointed a seven-member commission to hasten completion of the Panama Canal.
In 1956, President Eisenhower announced ·he would seek a second term of office.
'
.
In 1960, the first Playboy Club, featuring waitresses c.lad in
"b1,mny" outfits, opened in Chicago. (Hugh Hefner closed the cor"
porate-owned clubs in 1986, calling them "passe.")
·
In 1968, the discovery of the first "pulsar," a star which emits regular radio waves, was announced by Dr: Jocelyn Bell Burnell at
•
· Cambri,dge, England. ·
In 1968, President Johnson's National Advisory Commission on
Civil Disorders (also known as the Kerner Commissiot;t) w.~rned
that racism was causing America to move "toward. two societies, one
black, one white - separate and une~ual."
·
.
In 1980, former Israeli foreign nunister Yigal Allon, who had
played an · important role in the Jewish state's fight .for independence, died at age 61.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Michele Morgan is, 80. Actor Arthur
franz is 80. Actor James Mitchell is 80. Actor Joss Ackland is 72.
Actor Alex Rocco is 64. Former space shuttle astronaut Jack Lousma is 64. Actor Dennis Farina is 56. Actress Phyllis Frelich is 56.
Actor }\.ntonio Sabato ]J.mior is 28 . .

'

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
not a financial b11rden . But our children
are grown now and out of the house, and
my husband and I have no life of our
own.' Mom comes over for meals every
day, and I find myself cooking a lot more
than I' expected to at this point in my life.
The worst part of it is, she .expects us to
take her everywhere we go ..
,The anger I feel tow:utt thts woman is
beginning to ea~ me alive, and I don't
know_what to do about it. Any advice ?
- WRETCHED IN ,TEXAS

DEAR TEXAS: The problem you are
writing about is now I 0 years old. Stuck
is stuck, and that is exacdy what you are.
You need to Jearn how to live with this.
Talk to your clergyman or a professional
·counselor about how you can come to
terms with the situatipn.After 10 years of
togetherness, I see no easy way out .
Dear Ann Landers: I would like to
express my opinion on the subject of
" c all wattmg.
. . " PIease te II your te.iWm
~ ~-that it is extremely rude to say to a caller,
"I have another call coming in op the
other line. Hang on for a nunute." Invariably, it is a lot longer than a minute. This
hap,Pens even when I have placed the call
lon g-distance. Would a business person
treat a customer. 't hat way? I think not.
I have decided to hang up on the next
person who docs that to me. What do
you do, Ann? - NEEDING GUIDANCE IN D.C.
DEAR D.C.: I'm willing to "wait a
minute ," in case the other call is an t!mer-

.-........

PRESENTED PIN -

Dwight M. Brown, right,
was presented a 65year membership pin at a
recent meeting of
Harrisonville La,dge
411, F.&amp;A.M. Making the
presE1ntation were two
50·year members,
Harold Rice, left, and
Frank Young. ·

''l'

j
•s

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

.
HENTOFF'S VIEW:
.

Slightly more than half agreed that separate
but equal was all right. "This indicates," Professor Klinker told me, "that many young
Americans are comfortable with the notion of

J

'

.

.,

••

"".•,1
••
''". '

Are we still one nation, or becoming two?
Hamilton College in upstate New York.
commissioned ·a survey last year - "The
Racial Attitudes ofYoungAmericans" - from
John Zogby. Since' he is the only national pollster to whom I pay serious ·attention, I ·find the
results illuminating and important, but also
distuJ;bing.
·
The questions were asked of 1,001 randomly selected 18- to 20-year-olds around the
coun.try. Among the somewhat more hea~
ing results was that 56 percent said that government should ensure fair treatment of blacks
in the workplace.
The majority also ~ccepted interracial dat- ·
ing and marriage. And 61 percent agreed that
"the government in Washington should see to
it that white and black children go to the same
schools.''
However, t~either the current president nor any prospective president - has indicated
that school i[\tegration is a priority. And more
public sch(lols are segregated now than when
the Suprem~ Court, in 1954, declared segregated public schools unconstitutional in
Brown vs.}loard of Education.
Professor Phillip Klinker of Hamilton College, who directed the survey, said that it is
"troubling that .only some 60 percent of these
young Americans felt strongly that the schools
must be integrated as a constitutional mandate , Thurgood Marshall, while on the
Supreme Court, used to say that 'people who
don't learn together are nqt going to know
.
.
how to live together."'
· ·What I found most disturbing were the
answers to the question that read: "It's okay if
the races are basically separate from one
another as long as everyone has equal oppor- .
tunities. That used to be called 'separate but

,

..I

,

.

-, .l

.....t

you live with? They really shove that down ""
your throat. I come from ·a predominantly!
white, Republican town in Northern Califo.:~
'
nia, and all of a sudden, I'm an. Asian girt;:
whether I like it or not. I really resented it." ···~
Not surprisingly, in a report on affirmative
action at the University of Michigan, the
widely ' respected Chronicle of Higher Education noted, "Most students' close friendships
·/.'
.
t~nd
to be with people of their own race;·
,) '
)
Teaching at Princeton University two year,)
'!:'~. ' !.,~~)
NEA COLUMNIST
ago, I was given similar responses by black and .. I
white students.
Malcolri1 X was a friend of mine, from the-:.
a segregated society."
time he was in the Nation of Islam to his
This is not entirely surpnsmg . when so assassination. In one of his last speeches, he ,;
many ele~~;Jentacy, middle and high schools said: "We don't judge a man because of the1" .
remain segregated, and when some champions, color of his skin. We don't judge you because: ! .
of black pride .d eterminedly emphasize sepa- you're white; we don 't judge you because.. ;
ratism.
·
you're black or b1;0wn. We judge you because p,
On college . campuses, )lleanwhile, well- of what you do and what you practice."
· . ,q '
Louis Armstrong also believed that. He
meaning but patronizing administrators have.narrowed the meaning of "diversity" and · often spoke of. how much he enjoyed, as ,a .,
"multicultutalism."When "diversity" results in young trumpet player in Chicago, jamming,. :
one group focusing primarily on its own spe- with the white cornetist, Bix Beiderbecke. Fqrf,,
cia! moral and cultural virtues, the outcome is black and white jazz players, improvising·
hardly a .COncern with the Value Of diversity in together, On the job Of later, became a normal,, 1
the larger society.
part of their lives.
.. h
This kind of separatism is encouraged by
We are considerably behind Malcolm .an~ ,,,
colleges th~t create separate orientation pro- ' Louis. In Newsweek, Ellis· Cose · wrote: "The, :
grams for blacks and other minority newcom- color line is fraying all around us. Disparitie~ ·''
ers so that they'll be "comfortable" on cam- . will remain. But with the rudest reminders of
pus.
racism washed away, it will be a lot easier to ...
Then administrators encourage them to live tell ourselves that we finally have overcome.'.'.,. l
in "theme" buildings apart from the rest of the
But there is still a long way to go before we .rr
residences, isolating them further. To learn see each other, as individuals, beyond the color: . ·
how this thought control works, see. Alan line. And Thurgood Marshall was right. That .
Kors' "Thought Control 101" in the March day will come sooner if our children learn
issue of Reason magazine.
together from kindergarten· on, and are not ,
Vinnie Tong, a student at the University of separated later by college adminis~rators with, 1,
California in Berkeley, told the New York limited vision. .
,"
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authoritY, " .
Tiines:"When you first get here, they give you
this talk about diversity- what kind of place on the First Amendment and· the rest of the Bill of
did you come from? What ki11d of people did ' Rights.)
.
·
. ' ...
'

Nat
~ ..... -.~~
' Hentoff

----------------------------------------------~----------------------~------------~• •· f·

'HARDBALL':

·Survey grades quality ifAmerican presidents
•

BY CHillS MATTltfWS
WASHINGTON -- Here's a great riddle
with which to trick ypur friends: "What five ··
presidents are not buried in the United
States?"
Before giving you the answer, I ask you to
· look at the new survey of historians. Conducted by C-Span (the network that shows
: Congress in action), the poll asked the profes.
sionals to rate our 41 presidents according to
their effectiveness.
The top of the list contained few surprises.
The four faces on ·Mt. Rushmore are chiseled
in our national, memory. The historians ranked
Abraham Lincoln in first .place, Franklin Roosevelt in second, George Washington in third,
Theodore Roosevelt in fourth.
:.
Thomas Jelferson' who finished seventh, is .
the only missipg face from Mount Rushmore.
The historians bumped him for FDR, who
was not yet inaugurated when the grand
· Soj!th Dakota sculpture was un.dertakeit. · '
Let's talk about a more recent quintet of
presidents: Gerald Ford, Jimrrly Carter,

. JVho are the five American presidents .not buried in the United
States? Gerald Ford, jimmy Carter,
. Ronald Reaga,n, George Bush and
most of all, Bill Clinton. He's not
-. even out the door yet.

., .. ,'·'
: ·'f'/

I
li

change it.
Clinton ranked· fifth in .e conomic management, fifth in pursuing equal justice, 11th in
public persuasion, 20th in crisis management, t
21st in international relations; 21st in admin-.
. i~trative skills, 22nd in vision and .agenda-set·tmg.
.
·
. The ranking the histOrians gave hiin in
Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Bill Clintol).
"moral authority" . must be especially troll• ·
Except for Reagan, who finished 11th on bling. Of the 41 presidents, he finished 41\!'1
the new list, all C!nked in the range of 20th dead last.
··
through 25th. Bush was 21st, Clinton 22nd,
How does that feel to the inan ~rking dli
Carter 23rd, Ford 24th, Nixon 25th.
his legacy in the 0~ Office, this presidcp.t
How does it feel to be one of those ~ys? who has hited a top-paid staffer, Sydney Bl~~oThey'ye just received their grade in history. If · menthal, to tend to that specific task?
·
they're like the rest of us they can only won·
Who are the five American presidents not
der what small achievement might have taken buried in the United States? Cerald For(
t,heiri' past a whole pack of their close com- Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush
petitors.
.
and , most of all, BiU .Clinton. He's not evei:J
This is especially true for the current pres· out th~ door yet. ·
ident who has enougl:l mo'nths left in office to
(Chris Matthews, chief of the Sim FranCisco
think about his tigh,d y calibrated ranking in Examiner~ Washington Bureau, is hosr of''Hardhistory but,probably not enouglr time ·left to ba/1" on CNBC a.nd MSNBC cable channels.) -

a

=

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT. DROP US ALINE.

gcncy, but if it's any longer than a
minute, I hang up. I figure any person
who takes another call while speaking tO
me can call me back on his or her own
dime. (Did I say "dime"? My age is
showing. It's 35 cents now!!)
Dear Ann Landen: I read. your column about the woman who didn't want
to take her husband's name when she
married. It made me think ~bout my situatlon .
,
!legally took my husbands name, and
. .
d .
. I had h
h1s stster an s1ster-1n- aw
·
ht e same
did
Th
first name I
. at meant t ere were
•t h ree pat B ourd eaus m
· t h e rtamJ·1y. .,.,
.1.0
'd
~ ·
h'
f:
·1
b
avol conmston, ts anu y mem ers,
inCluding the children, used our maiden
. names. More than once, 1 got a funny
look from a friend or business associate
wiJen ch~ kids greeted nw as·"Au'ntie Pat
Reed."

me with the name Pat 13ourdeau, hut my
maiden name stuck. Wh en my hmb.md
and I celebrated our 25th anniwrsary, we
renewed our vows. Ou r youn g nie ce
said, "lt's about time you go t married."
She thought we were never matt·ied in
the first place. We will soon celebrate our
37th anniversary, and I am •till - PAT
REED IN MICHIGAN
DEAR PAT: Consider · it .1 t:.mily
j ol&lt;e, and tefltgo at fha c
PI
·
dd' ~ Wh t'
,·gl t&gt;
annmg a we 1ng.
a s r 1 .
Wh a;t' s wrong ,. "TI
•
r _ l
G
. 1e nnn ,Ldm ers u1·de
.
r
.d , .
·
S 1
wr Bn es WI11 re1tcve your "'"'ety.. one
.
a self-addressed, long, busmC&gt;HI7C c llv&lt;~
lope and .a ~heck or mon ey order or
$3.75· (thts mcludes p.ostage and han dling) to : Brides, clo Ann Landers. 1~0.
Box 11562. Chicago, IU . 60(oi) -IJ5 (o2 (In
Canada, •end $4.55 .) To find " "' llHHL'

Well , his sister changed her last n~tne

abou[ Ann Lnndcrs and n::u l h~..-r

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Wedn esday, at Pagcville town -. Syrarusc ~J ssio n C lnar! l. rL·d
Russell of M,org.1u ( :e nte r w dl
hall.
POMEROY -- Meigs Local
be the spea ker. p,,lell' M1kc .
School
District, . planning
Catholic Thompso n i1w i tt~'\ r_lll' pul"" ll l
POMEROY
meeting,
for . cOntinuous Women's 'Club with a 7 p.m .
improvement plan for Ohio
SYRACUSE - Sy rac " " ' Vil Mass to prcce!le the meeting.
Department of Education,
lage
Council, Thursday. 7 p 111.
Joanne Tatterson and Sue Jean
Tuesday, 7 p.m . .high school
Raub to be hostesses .
•
cafeteria .
Saturday, March 4
Thursday, March 2
HARRISO NVILLE - H .nPORTLAND - · Lebanon
·risonville
Lodge 411 , T&amp;A i\'1.
SYRACUSE
A
weekend
· Township Trustees, Tuesday,· 7
revival will be held Thursday Saturday, 7:30 p.m. D egrcc
p.m. at the hall.
through Saturday, 7 ·
at the work. Refreshme11ts.
RACINE ·_ The Southern
Local School District Financial
Planning and Supervision
Commission will meet in regular session Tuesday, 10:30
a.m. at the high school in
Racine.

COMMUNITY CORNER
scholarships to be awarded this .
Here in Meigs County we
spring by the Veterans Memorial
, know and appreciate the vocal
. Hospital Auxiliary.
talents of B. J. Smith since she has
Fern Grimm, president, advisbeen singing in local variety .
es that the applications can be
·shows for many years.
Charlene picked up at the desk in the hosHowever at Ohio University,
lobby and need to be comit's' a different story, There are lots
.Hoeflich pital
pleted
and turned in by April' 3.
of: talented- vocalists around.
The dedicated members of
However, it was B. J. who was
COMMUNITY
the
Auxiliary work at various
invited to sing . the National
projects during .the •year to raise
Anthem before the OU and
Nancy
Cak
secretary,
money for the scholarships Penn State game at Bird Arena.
As
with
any
alumni
group
something they have done for
And she made her · family
they
need
all
the
help
they
can
many years.
proud. Her father, Greg, and
they
encourage
MHS
get
so
brother, Cody, drove over for the
***
grads
to
attend.
Also
for
those
Now
.
here
·s an unusual
opemng.
class
reunions
who
.
are
having
request.
.
.S. J. is a· freshman at OU
Chris Woodyard, author of the
majoring in aviation. She spends this year, there will be class mailthree afternoons a week in the ing lists available which can be Haunted Ohio se ries, recently
air ··as she works. toward getting picked up so contacts can be con tacted the local tourism
office for information. on public
her license as a part of the four- made about special class events.
***
places. like old houses or
year program.
Jean
Will
is
coming
along
just
.
cemeteries in Meigs County Incidentally, her mother Vicky
who worked for ,many years at fine from Monday's quadruple haunted by ghosts.
Woodyard .is collecting g~ost
I f\gels Furniture in Midclleport is by- pa'ss heart surgery at the
stories or tales of hauntings, past
now the flight coordinator at the Charleston Memorial Hospital.
She expects to be there for or present, from all Ohio CounOU Airport.
several more days and after that ties to put into her next book on
***
You know that spring is just will recuperate at her home in hau11ted places that the public
may visit.
around the
corner when Parkersburg.
Cards may be sent to Jean, a
She can be ·reached at 1-800announcements start coming. in
longtime resident of Pomeroy, at . 31-GHOST and is anxious to
about meetings to plan high
the. hospital, Room 388, 3200 hear from· folks here who have
school alumni reunions.
McCorkle Ave.
"real" ghost stories to tell. co·n - .
Midclleport High School's first
***
tribucors receive a free book. She
meeting has been set for ThursStudents graduating from high views the project as a way of
day at 7 p.m. at the home of
school this year and entering 'a preserving local history and
Yvonfle Scally, president. The .
medical related field like nurs~ folklore, as well as a unique marother officers are Macy Carolyn
ing, therapy, even pre-med, are keting opportunity for haunted
Wiley, vice president; Dixie
invited to apply for one of the houses. Know any? .
Pierce Arbuckle, treasurer; and
.

'

VUI3LIC
Ml]f3§

CUU~ff

\

/,

.,

•

Wednesday, March 1
MIDDLEPORT -: Middle$1000 eath to the three loeal hiRh schools to be used toward scholarships.
port Literary Club, 2 p.m .
$1000 eath to Syracuse aad Middleport to 11se In the
Wednesday, home of Ida Diehl. IIDIIIntenonce and support or the swimming pools.
$500 lo the Veteran1 or Meigs County,
Sara Owen to review "To Kill
a Mockingbird" by Harper
$500 to the Senior Citizens or Meigs County.
$5000 to be dlstrlbuted equolly amona
Le.e.
ceunty nre deportments. .
FISHER, JR. X
$1000 to Carl!on School
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m.

·Oak Sleigh
·Bedroom Suite
Headboard, Footboard,
Wood Rails, 5 Drawer
Chest, Triple Dresser
and Mirror

8

2,24

Vaughan•Bassett
Oak 5 Piece
Bedroom Suite
FuWQueen Spindle
headboard, foot board m
Gentleman's chest,
Gentleman's mirror
&amp; 5· Drawer chest

~()TIC~
lif)U§I:Iif)L()§

The M~lgs County Grants office Is now providing applications for
assistance In the repair and/or replacement of septic systems for
Very Low and Low Income Households In M~lg·s County. This
assistance .provides g~ant assistance to very low Income
households and 50% grant/~0% loan assistance to low Income
hQuseholds at 3% Interest for 5 years.
' ·
.
. New 'construction Installation Is not eligible . .The program will
~eplace . and/or repair exl~tlng falling s~stems only: Aeration
$.y stems are not .eligible through this EPA funding. Approved
leach systems are eligible.
,. ,
..
. . .
.
:Applications may be obtained at the Meigs Grants Office at 117
East Memorial Dr.lve, Pomeroy, Ohio (Jormer Infirmary i;)ulldlng)
.between the hours of (9:00 a;m. and s;oo p.m., Monday through
friday. For further lnfo.rmatlc~m" you rn,ay call Je~n Trussell at 740.
992~7908.

.

Vaugha•·Bassett
O•k 4 Piece_.
Bedroom Sui••

...,

Full/Queen Bookcase
Headboard, Triple
Dresser, Hutch mirror
• &amp; 5 Drawer chest ·

I
)

1111•

8

Quafity !FUrniture P[us
!Turniture, Caryet, ·.9l.ppfi4nc:.es

FluanclngAvatlable 421 23 State !Bj:. 7 • 'Tuppers Plains, Q!}{
90 Day Lay-Away {740} 667-7388 • 1-800-200-4005

Mon.·Thurs. 9·5
Fri. 9•6 ' Sat. 9·4

. •.

..

p.1 . . 1

columns, ,,isit th ~ Cr~~ :ttn, ., SyudH .ILt'
~wb page at www:r n.::tt un . ~ ~m1

when she married, and the sister-i n- Jaw
divorced and remarri~d, so that l~ft only

Tuesday, February 29

..:.-::. .

equal."'

1:

Dear Ann Landers: When my fatherin-law passed away 15 years ago, my
mother-in-law was left with a big house
in a deteriorating neighborhood. When
she let me know how unhappy she was, .
my husband and I suggested she m&lt;&gt;ve to
a smaller house in a better neighborhood. She was not receptive to the idea.
We lived in a lovely home on a large
lot. I told my mother-in-law if we had
the money, we would build an addition
lo our house so she could IWe'tnere . I
now know that I should never have
· opened my tnouth . As soon as I hung up
the phone, .she called my husband and
told him she wanted him to build a small
home . for her on our property, and, of
course, she would pay for it. He said,
"Wonderful, Mom." She has been .living
here for 10 years. ·
Don't get me. wrong, Ann . My mother-in-law is a wonderful person, and has
helped us a lot. She contributes .toward
our utility bills and the groceries , and is

Brown honored for 65 yeilrs

A

rumor has been Qtrcu.lating in Gallipolis claiming that if ,
it loses city status in the 2000 Census -. that is, if population drops below 5,000 - the municipal income tax
wiU be eliminated.
City and census officials are quick to ·
· point out that even if Gallipolis becomes
a village, the income tax and existing
ordinances will remain.
If that doesn't convince anyone, then
look to Rio Grande - it has a village
inco·m e tax. And so do a lot of conunu•
itities in southern Ohio, both large and
small.
That said, and recognizing most people don't like taxes, a recent initiative by
some township trustees in southwestern
Ohio to have city and village inc0111e
taxes exclude non-residents loses sight of
an important fact.
And that fact is, without revenue from
the inc.ome tax, many benefits both residt:nts of those communities and non~residents who work there enjoy wiU be affected
severely. Check the budgets of area municipalities with income
taXes ..The revenue pay1 for many thinb"· including safety, health
and capital improvements.
The most common complaint about the income tax is
inequity. The tax is imposed on people who work and draw.
wages within the city or village. Locally, most people affected by
the tax object because they are not residents. They have no say in
how the money is spent.
·
,
The trustees seeking to put the income tax ban on the ,b allot
in November as a constitutional amendment obviously believe in ·
this strongly, since 1he people they represent probably work in
Cihcinnati and must pay the tax,'yet live ·outside the .Queen City.
The language of their proposed ballot issue reads, "No Ohio
resident shall be subject to or required to pay any local government tax on his or her earnings or income, except by the city,
village or township in which he or she resides as provided by

.-

•

GOTANOT~ER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~

........,. Februll'! 21. 2000...,

WE'VE

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: "2·2157

...

PapA4

The Daily Sentinel
Established in 1948

..

'•

.

',.

�-

•

.

·-

• f&gt;

..

.

.

...

'

~

....
•

.

.. .

.

. . .. . .

....... ,

CLEVELAND (AP) -As voten go to the polls today in Virginia, Washington stlte and North Dakotl, George W Bush is struggling to reclaim control over the Republican presidential race from
John McCain.
The Arizona senator bas not only enjoyed a fund-raising surge
and narrowly leads the supposed front-runner in delegates for the
GOP nomination 96-93, but he also is finding success in controlling the sometimes biner dialogue between the two campaigns.
On Monday, Bush visited Washington, where he tried to play up
his education initiatives, including urging Internet millionaires to
put their money to a higher use.
"I'm going to caD upon them to use their brainpower and innovation to help reinvent education:· the Texas governor said during ·
_ _ ___. meeting with educators at Bellevue Communicy-College-:
A continent a~ay, McCain stole .the news coverage by lambasting
leaders of the religious right and criticiZing Bush for affiliating with
them.
The senator's criticism came one day after Bush delivered a belat. ed apology for not condemning the religious and racial policies at
Bob Jones University, a South Carolina Christian school he
addn:.sed on Feb. 2.
"Neither · party should be defined by pandering to the outer
.
reaches ofAmerican politics and the agents of intolerance; whether
I
they
be Louis Farrakhan or AI Sharpton on the left, or Pat Robert/
son or Jerry Falwell on the right;' McCain said during a speech in
· Virginia Beach, headquarters for Robertson's Christian Coalition.

j

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Lawmakers are planning to come up
with a definition of breakfast to settle a spat between restaurants
wanting space on interstate "food ahead" signs;
Restlurants that serve three meals a day get priority for place~
ment on the signs, but two owners of McDonald's restaurants in
Tennessee say they were bumped off by pizza restaurants closer to
the freeway exit.
·
The pizza restlurants were serving coffee and doughnuts to the
cleaning crews in order to qualify. for breakfast service, said Bo
Johnson, a lobbyist representing the McDonald's franchised in
Cleveland and Lebanon.
·
.
He wouldn't name the pizia restaurants, but called their actions "a
sha m .. an d attempts .. to game t he system...
Restlurants pay the state just over $600 a year to be listed on the
signs, which have room for six logos each.
'
Stlte Sen. Jercy Cooper and Rep. John White on Monday agreed
to sponsor legislation that defines breakfast as the first meal of the
day, commonly t1ken in the morning. It must include coffee, juice
and items from at least two of three categories: eggs, "breakfast
meat" and "breakfast bread."
Under the bill, breakfast meat would include bacon, sausage, ham·
and steak. :Breakfast bread would include toast, bagels, pastries and
cereal.
·

Celine Dion sues National Enquirer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Singer Celine Dian has sued the
National Enquirer for $20 million, aUeging.it said she was pregnant
with twins while knowing the story was false.
Claims in the suit, filed Monday in Superior Court, include false ,
light invasion of privacy, unfair busine!S practices and intentional,
infliction .of emotional distress.
Citing "a source who knows Celine," the Enquirer's Feb. 1 story
on the pop singer said she. was "ove~oyed her greatest dream has
come true:' Its cover sported a photo of Dion with the headline:
"Celine- I'm pregnant with twins!"
·
.
"The story is absolutely false," said Martin Singer, her lawyer. He
said no one had attempted to verify the story with Dian or her.
publicist before it appeared.
.
·
Singer said the report caused Dian "significant emotional distress"
because it was believed by the public as well as her friends and relatives.

New charges for "Sammy the Bulr
.PHOENIX (AP) ·_ Former Mafia hitman Salvatore "Sammy the
· Bull" Gravano, already accused of funning a lucrative designer drug
ring, has been 'charged with racketeering, conspiracy and money
laundering.
·
· Attorney General Janet Napolitlno on Mon~y filed a new com~
plaint, charging Gravano, his wife, son and daughter and 42 others
with a totll of 181 counts. They had all initially been arrested on a
single count of conspiracy t&lt;j&gt; disttibute a dangerous drug.
Four of the charges are felonies carrying maximum 12 112-year
prison sentences, if the suspect has no prior convictions. .
Grava'no is also charged with possession of dangerous dfugs for
sale, illegal enterprise and participating in a criminal syndicate. He
was being held on a $5 million 'cash bond after his arrest last week.
His attorney, Larry Hammond, would not comment.

Reports: Morris open to regulation
NEW YORK (AP) - A Philip Morris Cos. executive said the
nation's largest cigarette maker is willing to discuss some government regulation of the embattled tobacco industry.
,
S.enior vice president Steven Parrish said the company still opposes efforts by the Food and Drug Administration to classify and reg. ulate tobacco as a drug, an issue at the core of a pending U.S.
Supreme Court case.
. However, Parrish said he has met recently with U.S. lawmakers to
discuss the company's "willingness to open up 3 . dialogue and look ·
at· the right regulatory approach."
.
Parrish said the company would be willing to discuss regulating
cigarettes in sue~ areas as sales to young people, re.search on safer
products and the disclosure qf ingredients.
His comments appeared today in The WaD Street Jourrial, New
York Times and Washington Post. Detlils of the company's policy
·
·.
shift were expected to be announced Thursday.

Prosecutors win 1st Net gamlftl case
NEW YORK (AP) -A man who operated a sports betting business on the Internet has been convicted in what is believed to be
the first case of its kind to go to trial.
·
The jury in U.S. District Court in Manhattln concluded that Jay
C:ohen, 33, broke a federal law by ac~epting bets and wagers on
sports events· over the Internet .and telephone.
In a statement, U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White said the San Francisco man was the first to stlnd trial in the United Stites for running an Internet sports gambling site.
·
Cohen, president of World S~~rts Exchange in Antil!'la• was
. among 22 defendants charged in March 1998 with operating off- ·
ihore companies that took bets from Americans via the Internet or
roD-me telephone numbers. Federal ·law prohibits the use of the ·
ln~ernet for sports betting and makes it a crime to use interstlte
!elephone lines for gambling.
·
Ten defe~dants pleaded guilty.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congmsional
Republicans say their still emerging proposals
to cut tiXes this election yeat will likely differ
markedly from the proposals of GOP presidential contenders George W Bush and John
McCain.
Though no final decisions have been made,
GOP lawmakers are virrually certain to ptQpose cutting tiXes by more than the roughly
$500 billion over 10 years rbat McCain, a
Republican senator from Arizona, favors.
Eager co avoid any tax inc!'l'ases, they also are
likely to ignore McCain's caD to raise revenue
by closing some corporate ·loopholes. ' ·
Likewise, they are _like~Jlro~se a far
smaller rax cut than the $1.3 trillion, 10-year
reduction advocated by Bush, the Texas governor. And they are unlikely to propose trimming income tiX rates, as Bush would do.
Some like House Budget Committee
Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, worry that
Democrats will try to exploit any differences
~mong Republicans over tiX cuts. Kasich, a
Bush supporter, has argued . in internai 'GOP
meetings that the budget Congress writes this
year should leave room for a Bush-sized tiX
cut.

· "A Republi'"n Parry that doesn't stand for
cutting tlxes has no purpose:' he said recently.
Even so, most GOP leaders on Capitol Hill
say they want this year's budget fight wi.t h
President Clinton to focus on specific
Republican proposals like reducing tiXes for
education and healthcare costs.
"You have to give some consideration" to .
keeping the congressional tiX cut close to the
GOP presidential nominee, said Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss. ''I'm not
an advocate of that. We have our work co do
and schedule to live with."
.
~me SJlecific elements of the cong~QD­
al plan will resemble those of the presidential
hopefuls - such as proposals to reduce the
marriage penalty, the extra ~ many people
owe because they are JT\3rr1Cd, And once
Republicans have chosen th~r presidential
nominee, many will no doubt embrace his tiX
plan and lawmakers could make their own
proposal closer to his.
Still, the emerging contrast between GOP·
b.wmaken and the parry's presidential eandidat~ on ·cutting tiXes whoever it is could make it harder for them to have a uni-

..

~i

'!

.
·~"Zip,

., '

·~
House Majority L~a.et
DickArmey.R-Texas, when asked what e!f&lt;:,~ ,
the GOP presidential race was having on c~n~
gressional tiX-cuttirig plans.
.
· · ,- .~

zero:· said
.

,,z

"

to begin this Wee~...,
'

'

exempt from state regulations. ,;:;
If pressure . from Republi~p
presidenti~ hopefuls isn't enou~.
Americans are widely in favor~
new·measures against health,
tenance org:uuzanons.
....:;
A recent poll by the ~
Family fo11ndation artd Harvaiil
School of ·Public Health sh~
72. petcent of .voters favored ~
patiept protections. That supN$:
dropped to 53 petcent, howev~lf
protections drove up premiurns:t:
Democrats have aligned then-;.
selves with the House versiori.·'Of
the legislation, which drew bipae.
san support, and are heaping criticism on efforts to prevent bWSUi~.
''The House has passed stro~g•.
effective bipartisan legislation . ~
Senate has passed a weak bill th4t
only an insu~ance company caul~
love:• said S~n. Edward KennedY,

D-Mass.

'

President · Clinton wants a lf.dJ '
that WO)Ild alloW patients to SUe
health providers. ·
· ·

....

I

,.A.og'"fa·rmers to vote on ~ontinlltng

0ttler white meat' ad campaign · ·

WASHINGTON (AP) -The advertising cam- farm operations.
paign that promotes pork as "the other white meat"
"This is
about the dem~ratic proc~ ... and
could end if hog farmers vote in a government- the right Of hog farmers and other producers to vote
. sponsored referendum to stop paying the f~es that on whether the checkoff p~ are working for
finance it.
them:'.said Rhonda Perry, a Missouri hog producer
Agriculture Secretlry Dan. Glickman announced who opposes the pork program.
Tell them about DivoceCarc, a·~,
his decision Monday to caD the first . vote on the
But Glickman was criticized immediately by the
special weekly se111inir all ;
pork program.since it was created 14 years ago. He . National Pork Producers Council, which rec~ves
said he has the authority to.caD the referendum even money from the checkoff fees :
support group fof people who are
though his department did not validate sufficient
It questioned his authority'to ·order the referensepan~ttd or divorced.
·
signatures .o n petitions submitted by farmers who dum on his own. ·
Sponsored by the Middleport
oppose paying the fees, or "checkoffS." ·
The referendum hurts ·~bona fide pork producers
"As a matter of basic fairness, I believe that pro- who created a ptogt~~m that truly worh to benefit
Cllist, Fifth at Main Wedoesdoys
ducers deserve the opportunity co vote on this pork producers of aU types and sizes;• said John
7:00-8:15. Mirth 1-May 24
checkoff program;• Glickman said in a speech to the McNutt, president of the council and an Iowa ·
National Farmers Union in Salt Lake City, Ut~h. "It farmer. In cailing the referendum, McNutt said,
more informolion. ·
is, after
a mandatory assessment, ..akin to a tax, "The law was somehow bent in favor of political ·
· Child core provided. Regislmtion is.
·
that aU producers must pay even if they disagree interests."
llqtJired. You con · onylime.
with it." . '
The fee requires payment of 45 cents fo~ every
Opponents of the ·$48 million program, which $100 of a pig's value when it is sold. The money
. pays for research . as well as advertising, say it has goes .to the quasigovernmentil National Pork
done little to stimulate pork consumption and Board, which contracts promotional services
mostly benefits meal -proc.essors and large, corporate through the producers council.
.
.
. .. ,

au

Churth:

ri

Coll992-2914 frl

au,

.

.
Protect
.
.
.
.
·
rtant.
Y2K: ·The Sequ~l arrives
1.
~
with few glitches worldwide peop1e m your ~e. . ·.

\t

though officials · were unsure
mw have the ~dpioo:ctilogyour ~membets
. .
I
Leap Day brought scattered and whether Leap Day was to blame.
miqor cpmputer · glitches. around
In New Zealattd: merchants had
~ bllliness panner wilh low,co6t •
the world today in perhaps the trOuble verifYing banking transac- :
final echo of the Y2J{ problem that , .tions and government experts said ·
life
wasn't.
· ·
ai 1\tany as 4;000 'inoney transfer · 10. ir 20-year bel
At a nuclear plant in Japan, a . terminals inight liave been affected .
computer system . that monitors before the.problem was fixed.
insl,araoce liu!n Auto-Owners
employee work hours shut down . The Jakarta StOck Exchange was
but didn't affect operations .. The ·.closed today as a pre'"ution due to
itllltllliOC.C ~ Call us I.Jr I!IOl'e
Monju. plant, 220 miles west of .fear that the automatic trading sysTokyo, hasn't produced nuclear tern would encounter computer
details. aOO ~ a:mpetitiye pltlXSII.
.
energy since 1995.
. · prob!epu, while .the Singapore
: At Japan's. Meteorological subway system rejected some rid- ·
.
.
. .
.
· Agency, weather monitoring sta- ers' cards.
tions , repo~ double-digit riinfaU
The ptobiems were dismissed'!!
~·
even .thougb no rain fell ouwde, minor by Bruce MCConnell, who i
Lie !IOmO c. llullnoio
·'
while computers at six obsely.llo- heads a United Nations-World :
. 7At.~,.,.·IW4~ 1 , ,
ries failed to recognize Feb. 29.
Bank monitOring group forY2K . . ......_ _ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ __
. Elsewhere inJapan.~ismographs
"I would conclude !1!at1 as ·at more than 20 sites considered p)'tdic~d •.there will not be any sis.I
tOday March ~. artd the postal ser- rillicant disruptions, and the world
~14
E
..
t ••II!:~
vice had problems with receipt will barely n~ce Leap Day:• he ·.
.. P-'-1
printen for registeted 1i1ail and dis- said from,Washington late Mon&lt;!ay. ,
.'
99J4i687 .
play screens for interest rates. In
There were no early reports of
le911oa
addition, 1,200 automated teller proi;&gt;Jems· as Leap Day arrived in.
1
m2chines af pqst offices·shut dow11, qte United States.
.
.,.. L....;....;.__________~------~;..."!"'-~~

tmn

t.-O•nilll» -..., ••

_
_ ·- - .• -· ·- ..•
-~- . .,,1 ' ··-.·.
----_...u:.:.-.;_

• ·.,...

t .•..

.. ,./_

·-

•
'

Sparlry WQitsfor callfipm Hall, Page B2
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

•

Page 81

•

1Ue11My. Ftllru•rr 11, 2oQa

'fuFIDAy's .

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Blsketbal
DIYIIIOft lfDiitiiCfTOIII'IIall*lt 111 111e eonvo; Athen•
lllu., llm'Ch 2
McClain v. AleiCIII1der, 6:15
Portsmouth v. Falrllekl UniOn, 8:00
Fri., ...-ch 3

'Galla Academy v. Ftlllsboro, 6:15
Sheridan v. Athens, 8:00

Dlvl8lon Dl Dlltrlct Tou1'J181Mfit
lllllle Convo, Athena

a.t., March 4

Cheaapaake v. Valley, 3:00
Wastfall ·v. Wheelersburg, 4:45
Eastern Brown v. Oak Hill, 6:30
Belpre v. Huntington, 8:15

'

.

.,

"

.

Jar stitfuess could slow down Schilling tion. Erickson, who iJ1jured the ankle

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Darryl Strawberrx will miss this season. four or five more times befo!e his projectPhiladelphia's ~ltrt Schilling, Balti- ed mid-May return.
more's Scott Erickson and Boston's
"I'm not nervous;• general manager Ed
·Nomar Gareiaparra wo~t be ou&lt;tha~Wade-said. "It- may be a setoack, but it
long. Still, they're wondering when they'll doesn't put him back to square one or
be playing at full strength.
'
square 101 at this point."
Schilling, coming off arthroscopic .· Schilling had arthroscopic surgery Det.
surgery on his right shoulder, ,felt stiifuess 13 after missing most of the second half of
for the second straight day and skipped his last sc:ason with shoulder pain.
throwing programl .
In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the Orioles said
"I definitely feel, better than I did yes- Erickson will he held out of Friday's exhiterday;· the pitcher said in Clearwater, Fla. bition opener against the Cincinnati Reds
"We're going to ~ve _it one more .day and because of a sprained right ankle. .
get back to thrffiilng."
· .
It's the second setback this spring for' the
Phillies trainer' Jeff Cooper thinks simi- No.2 man in the Orioles' stlrting rota-

Sunday, has been sidelined since Tuesday
with stiffness behind his right elbow.
Although Erickson has said the stitfuess
is "no big deal," he will have the elbow
·
examined as a precaution,
"If there's .m;&gt;thing wrong, he should be
able to throw as soon as his ·ankle will
allow it," Orioles manager Mike Hargrove
said.
In Fort Myers, Fla., Garciaparra had tests
on his sprained ligament in his right knee
and will have an MRl exam, team physician Dr. William Morgan said. There did
not appear to be any swelling in the knee.
"h's like a discomfort more .than any-

1\1!1., March 7
Green v. Beaver Eastern, 6:15
Southern v. WMeoak, 8:00

tldlets on sale

EAST MEIGS - Tickets are
on sale now for Eastern's Division
IV district playoff game against
New Boston. The game is set for
next Monday, at 6:15 p.m. at the
Ohio University Convocation ·
Center.
Tickets are SS each. The high
School will receive $1 from the
Sale of tickets locaUy.
·

Tomado playoff
tlx naOable
RACINE· Tickets are o~ sale
now for Southern's Division IV
district playofF game against
Whiteoak. The game is set for.
n'ext Tuesd~y. at 8 p.. at the
· Ohio University Convocation
Center.
Tickets are $5 each. The high
school will receive $1 from the
sale of tickets locally. ·

Stanforcl still No.
1 in llien's poll
NEW YORK (AP) ·- Stlnford, which has won 12 straight
games, was a unanimous No. i in
The Associated Press Top 25
men's poll.
The Cardinal (24-1) received
aU 70 fitst-place votes artd 1,750
points from the. national . media
panel.
Cincinnati and Arizona each
moved up one spot, Duke
dropped from second to fourth, .
while Temple jull)ped from
eighth co fifth ..
Ohio State held sixth, followed
by Michigan State, Florida, Syracuse· and Iowa State, which
jumped fro'm 17th to No. I 0.
·
tennessee dropped four spots
to llth, followed by LSU, OklahoJD3 State, Indiana, 'J'ulsa, texa,s,
Maryland, St. John's, Auburn and
Purdue. The last five were Oklahoma, Kentucky, Kansas, Connecticut and fi!inois.
·
Vanderbilt and Utah dropped
. OUt.

uc; reautt ~lied
In S. Clf(illna

. COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) Cincinnati basketball recr.u it
jerome Harpet·Was arrested on an
assault charge Monday as he practiced at Keenan,High School:
Harper, J8,
c~mrnitted to
play for . the Bearcatll next year.
His . ~t cam.e on the same day
he was selected . to· play in the
McDonald's All-American game
next month in Boston.
· ·. Harper was scheduled for a
!)ond hearin~ 1\t&lt;!day morQing.
·. A,ccording to ·coach Zilch Norris aJ!d the police report, the
arrest i! the EeSUit of a Feb. 17
incident at the Columbia· home
of Harper's aunt, Carolyn Agustas,
46. Harper lives with his aunt.
Harper's right ~d was
injured, sidelining him for a game
on Feb. 18.

·JW

thing," said , Garciaparra, who felt a
"twinge" Friday.
In Tampa, Fla., the Yankees were gorie
after an inrrasquad_l@!le when 'ommissioner Bud Selig suspended Strawberry
for one-year because of a positive cocaine·
. test.
.
"We will abide by the decisioO:'Y~nkees
owner George Steinbrenner said. "I feel
badly for . Darryl. My hopes and prayers
are that he can ·do the things he needs to
do to get his life in order."
.
Across· the state in Port St. Lucie, 'Mike
Hampton pitched two hitless innings and

.......... Ach•• hp'a2

No. 16 Texas
tops.Kansas

Mon., March •
Eastern ·v. New BOelon, 6:15 ·
Leesburg Fairfield v. Trimble, 8:00

Eallespl~ ~

'

Boys:of Summer feeling the pains of spring

Dlvlelon IV Dllllrtcl Toui!Wnerrt
· It l1le COnvo, Athena

m.

1

··~-~.-.-....

•

The Daily Sentinel

••

'
.. _ ...... ~ .. - · ·- -

.

iied tiX message this faD. Since the p~=
tial nominee will get far more exposure dur•
ing the faD campaign than bwmakers wilt
congressional Republicans want to be in l1int
with the nominee as much as possible. - • .;
Another risk for Republicans is that duri~
this faD's general election, Democrats cpq)~
focus on the differences between GOP w;t
plans to raise questions about the wisdom
one proposal or the other.
·•
"Are they going to be in ·the position tl
saying they disagree with him?" said Dembciratic consultant Mark Mellman.
;
So far this year, Republicans ·have brokeQ
their tax__cuts...into separate bills,...ratha..tha~
bundl,ng them into a single package as they
did last year .w ith a $792 billion plan Clinto9
vetoed. So far, the House has approved a $1~i
billion, 10-year reduction of the marriagt
penalty, while the Senate is debating an S8 bi.l~
lion plan to expand tax-free savings acco::;t
for families' 'costs of public and private sch

. WASHINGTON (AP)
expanded liability;' said Neil in Texas "while Washington politi- ·
Lawmakers will have co balance Trautwein, director of employ- cians deadlocked." His main rival,
strong public support for enhanc- 'ment policy at the National Asso- Sen. John , McCain\ R-Ariz., also
ing patients' rights against opposi- dation of Manufacturers.
. supports federal legislation permitlion from politicaUy powerful busi- ·.1 The House and Senate both ting lawsuits.
ness groups :IS they craft a compro- passed bills that offer patient pro"We ge( ti.J.e Texa~ model
mise t,o give Americans more · tection!, but they differ on liability thrown up at us aU the. time;• said
leverage in dealing with HMOs.
and who would be covered
Sen. Tiin Hutc.hinson, R-Ark., a
With presidential .candidates of
The . House bill, supported by commi\tee member. "It puts added
both patties endorsing patients' Democr:its and many'Republicans, pmsure on Republii:ans."
,
rights to sue their health plans and allows bwsuits and covers 161 mil- ·
Republiqn leaders concede a
amplifying HMO protections, the lion Americans with private insur- compromise will have to include
pmsure is on for the House and ance. The Senate bill, crafted by -some provision for lawsuits, but the
Senate to work out differences on Republicans, doesn't aUow lawsuits question remains how far GOP
the touchy issue. ·
and covers 411 million Americans senators will ·go.
Insurers and corporations are whose health plans are ·exempt
HutchinsOn predicted any
vehemently against the idea, argu- from state regulations.
GOP-backed' ri~t-t(Hue proviA House-Senate conference sian would come with lots of
ing that giving Americans the right
to sue over denial of care will raise . committee is schedule to begin restrictions. '
·
premiums. They've conducted meeting Thum4y tO .halnmer out
One posSibility, similar to a
their own polls suggesting many· a compromise, which it hopes to Republican House bill rejected last .
faD, would:
·
workers would lose coverage reach by Match 31.
because companies, . fearing. law·Their task ~came .more com• . Allow ' lawsuits only after
suits, would slop offering health plicated when the party's presiden- patients go tluOugh appeal panels.
tia) front-runner, George W Bush,
• Cap the size of damage .awatds.
plans.
"We can't imagine a more anti- began running ads . boasting he
• Cover o~..;...~ ~~ million
. wOrker, anti::elnjir~er polky than . "delivered a patients'bill of righa" Ameri~ns wliQSC lieii'ffi plans are

lilY THE AsiociATED PRas

....

: ..... t

lUll lilly, Flbnlery21, --~ ·

'

I
_ _.. ___ ._.,.

•

•

t

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Debate over HMO refonn

Lawmakers plan to define breakfast

--

· ~~··

·CongresS' tax cuts differ from candidates ~•

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Bush strugles to regain message

. I

..

-

Page A 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

•'

'

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - The t.eams, was equally effective on
Texas · Lopghorns certainly defense, forcing Kansas into
aren't fading as quickly as their 1'\lissing 13 of its first 16 shots ·
Big 12· tide hopes.
and 11 turnovers in the first l4
The 16th-ranked Longhorns minutes.
used stifling defense to take a
"l have to congratulate
17-point halftime lead, then Texas," Kansas coach Roy
fought off a Kansas raUy in the Williams said. "They ran out
second half for a 68-54 victory early and with a lot of intensity
Monday night.
and got the easy buckers."
The Longhorns shot 54 perThey kept their slim conference tide hopes alive. But if cent in the ·first half, helped .by
Texas (21-7; 12-3) is .to repeat as six dunks on breakaway and
Big 12 champs, it will need to :illey-oop baskets, en route to· a
win Saturday at Kansas State 38-21 halftime lead. Gabe
and hope. for unlikely losses by Muoneke had 10 points iri the
conference leader Iowa Stlte to · half, six on dunks.
·
. Texas Tech arid Baylor, who are
"We wanted CO show our
·. a combined 6-22 in conference killer 'instinct and attlck," said
ftl
Muoneke, who finished with 16
!'lay
.
")chink we heed a lot of help. points. ·
But if we get that help in the
"I'd like to put that first half
•&gt;
be
more
in
a bottle and keep it for a
Iast two games, w e u
.
grateful -than anyone could · while,"Texas·coach Rick Barnes
know," said Ivan Wagner, who said.
Kansas finally showed signs of
scored a career,high 19 points
life in the second. The Jayhawks
in Texas' first win against Kansas scored the first two baskets after
since 1938.
halftime, and Texas missed its
The Longhorns are 2-7 first five shots.
against the Jayhawks. (21-8, 10Kansas closed co 42-30 on
5) overaU, and.l-3 since the Big five straight points · by. Eric
12 was formed:
'
Chenowith and finally made .i!
In the only other game 46 _36 ll ,58 left.
Barn&gt;s caUed a timeout, and
involving a ranked team, No. 24
Connecticut beat Rutgers 74- the Longhorns came back with
69 ·
a 3-pointer from Wagner and
Texas grabbeq a 14"2 lead on yet another bre:ika~y dunk by
3-pointers by Wagner and Muoneke to push the lead to ·
William Clay. Chris Owens 55-38.
"We stuck our head out of
then scored six straight points,
including a layup when he the hole, but couldn't get aU the
slapped the ball away at mid- way out;' Kansas forward Drew
court and spun around two Jay- Gooden said.
Kansas twice more cut the
hawks defenders near the basket
to bring the crowd of 13,561 to lead to 10, the last at 59-49 with
its
feet.
BIG XII FACE J011 - Chris Mlhm of Texas (4) dunks over Ashante Johnson of Kansas during the Long5-5 against ranked
PluiiiHTDp2!1, .... 12
Texas,
horns' 68-54 Wlft11 over the J~hawks Monday night in Austin. iAPI
·
·

·,,Heat ra.Uy .
.burns f'Jew
Yorke~ .
~

'

.

1'·

I

BY THE ASSOCI1'f.E.D•PRESS

'

·~··
! .

•Reels
Larkin
to retire in Cincy
'

_No punches w~ro &gt;thrown in .
this Miami-New~f\t ~e. ln .
411'\lftilr, t}je .
fact, after the fi
Heat t~ok aU the
~ outjof th~ .
K1Ucks.
.'
,·
Miami,' playing without Fentef
Monzo Mourning' for the .prst
.time this season, r3llied flom a
20-p~int first-half ~elicit Mollday rught to beat the Knicks' 8576 and remain in 6nt piRce in
the Atlantic Qivision.
After the Heat fell..qehirld .37~
17 at home, ' they came, b~
behind · Jamal· Masnburn,
Clarence Weatherspoo!l' ' and
smothering defense.tl:he Krucks
started .12-for-16, biit'shet just
30 percent the rest of the ).vay.
.
.
,
·~It was
onslail...h[":'jn the JUST SAY ~ - New Yorks Kurt Ttlom~s (40) blOC~ a shot by
· , ..
. d we
·•· ~ul·
. . Mllilnl's. Jainaal
MashbUrn
b egmmng,
an
co d have
.
.
.
, during Mondays pme. (AP)
·
.
.
1ost- aU ··kinds of ' '"""
neart,"H
, eat I;J. •
•
•
,_ •
•
•
•
•••
coach .~t Riley saidit' . .-... , .. .: h~~en't .h~ this ~ng about · as Mi~ increased.lts diV)Sional
' N~York score.d ~ pomts,in this ,team m a ~hile.•When we lead to, 1 1/2 games over New
: · the opening qu:qt~b add op!Y ~3. play that comnutted o~ defc;ns~, Y~~k.
.
..
.
; the·rest·ofthe ·wa}'J &gt;_ : :
.. ~ we can- re~y be good.
.They outplayed. us, ~atd
"Just an incredible . gatpe ,for
The Knicb and Heat, w~o . Knicks c~nter Patrick Ewtng,
us;• said Riley. whose· seam has have had memorable fi~ts m
·PIIIIIIHNIIA.PIIp82
·'truggled in · recent weeks. "I the playoffS, behaved on Monday

t . ,.

an

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
is to Kansas City, Carl Yas ~
Shortstop Barry Larkin wants trzemski is to . Boston, Tony
to stay in Cincinnati. The Reds Gwynn i.s to San Diego."
want him to end his career
Larkin accepted far less than
with his hometown team.
market valqe to stay with
Starting today, they'll get an Cincinnati in 1996, agreeing
idea []ow much it will cost to to a $16.5 ririllion, three-year
make that happen.
extension. When an option
· Larkin's agent, Eric Gold- year for 2000 automatically
schmidt, planned to visit ·the kicked in, the deal became
Reds' training complex , tod~y worth $21.2 million over four
and begin talks on a cOntfi1Ct years.
•
extension. Larkin's current
Larkin will make $5.3 million this season, third-highest ·
deal ~xpires after 2000.
Larkin, the team's captain, on the roster behind Griffey
turns 36 on April 28. He. (S7 million) and. Dante
played in a career-high 161 Bichette ($6.5 million).
"I'd love to stay here;• Larkin
games last s.e ason and hit ,293
with 12 homers, 7 5 runs bat- . said. "I want to be on a comted in and· 30 steals.
petitive team, and the commitHe has spent his entire ment is there." ·
Larkin said 'money isn'f his
care~ with Cincinnati. Larkin
attended Moeller High School . m:ain concern.
·and set home run records that
"I'd · be interested in seeing
would' later be broken by Ken how much money would be
available if I were a free agertt,
Griffey
"I've always felt that Barry but it's real!y about · b~ing
Larkin should finish his career comfortable," Larkin said. "l£it
as a Red," general manager Jim was about rhe money, I would
Bowden said. "He is to have been, .gone · a long time
Cincinnati what George Brett ago."

Jr.

..

.

�-

•

.

·-

• f&gt;

..

.

.

...

'

~

....
•

.

.. .

.

. . .. . .

....... ,

CLEVELAND (AP) -As voten go to the polls today in Virginia, Washington stlte and North Dakotl, George W Bush is struggling to reclaim control over the Republican presidential race from
John McCain.
The Arizona senator bas not only enjoyed a fund-raising surge
and narrowly leads the supposed front-runner in delegates for the
GOP nomination 96-93, but he also is finding success in controlling the sometimes biner dialogue between the two campaigns.
On Monday, Bush visited Washington, where he tried to play up
his education initiatives, including urging Internet millionaires to
put their money to a higher use.
"I'm going to caD upon them to use their brainpower and innovation to help reinvent education:· the Texas governor said during ·
_ _ ___. meeting with educators at Bellevue Communicy-College-:
A continent a~ay, McCain stole .the news coverage by lambasting
leaders of the religious right and criticiZing Bush for affiliating with
them.
The senator's criticism came one day after Bush delivered a belat. ed apology for not condemning the religious and racial policies at
Bob Jones University, a South Carolina Christian school he
addn:.sed on Feb. 2.
"Neither · party should be defined by pandering to the outer
.
reaches ofAmerican politics and the agents of intolerance; whether
I
they
be Louis Farrakhan or AI Sharpton on the left, or Pat Robert/
son or Jerry Falwell on the right;' McCain said during a speech in
· Virginia Beach, headquarters for Robertson's Christian Coalition.

j

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Lawmakers are planning to come up
with a definition of breakfast to settle a spat between restaurants
wanting space on interstate "food ahead" signs;
Restlurants that serve three meals a day get priority for place~
ment on the signs, but two owners of McDonald's restaurants in
Tennessee say they were bumped off by pizza restaurants closer to
the freeway exit.
·
The pizza restlurants were serving coffee and doughnuts to the
cleaning crews in order to qualify. for breakfast service, said Bo
Johnson, a lobbyist representing the McDonald's franchised in
Cleveland and Lebanon.
·
.
He wouldn't name the pizia restaurants, but called their actions "a
sha m .. an d attempts .. to game t he system...
Restlurants pay the state just over $600 a year to be listed on the
signs, which have room for six logos each.
'
Stlte Sen. Jercy Cooper and Rep. John White on Monday agreed
to sponsor legislation that defines breakfast as the first meal of the
day, commonly t1ken in the morning. It must include coffee, juice
and items from at least two of three categories: eggs, "breakfast
meat" and "breakfast bread."
Under the bill, breakfast meat would include bacon, sausage, ham·
and steak. :Breakfast bread would include toast, bagels, pastries and
cereal.
·

Celine Dion sues National Enquirer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Singer Celine Dian has sued the
National Enquirer for $20 million, aUeging.it said she was pregnant
with twins while knowing the story was false.
Claims in the suit, filed Monday in Superior Court, include false ,
light invasion of privacy, unfair busine!S practices and intentional,
infliction .of emotional distress.
Citing "a source who knows Celine," the Enquirer's Feb. 1 story
on the pop singer said she. was "ove~oyed her greatest dream has
come true:' Its cover sported a photo of Dion with the headline:
"Celine- I'm pregnant with twins!"
·
.
"The story is absolutely false," said Martin Singer, her lawyer. He
said no one had attempted to verify the story with Dian or her.
publicist before it appeared.
.
·
Singer said the report caused Dian "significant emotional distress"
because it was believed by the public as well as her friends and relatives.

New charges for "Sammy the Bulr
.PHOENIX (AP) ·_ Former Mafia hitman Salvatore "Sammy the
· Bull" Gravano, already accused of funning a lucrative designer drug
ring, has been 'charged with racketeering, conspiracy and money
laundering.
·
· Attorney General Janet Napolitlno on Mon~y filed a new com~
plaint, charging Gravano, his wife, son and daughter and 42 others
with a totll of 181 counts. They had all initially been arrested on a
single count of conspiracy t&lt;j&gt; disttibute a dangerous drug.
Four of the charges are felonies carrying maximum 12 112-year
prison sentences, if the suspect has no prior convictions. .
Grava'no is also charged with possession of dangerous dfugs for
sale, illegal enterprise and participating in a criminal syndicate. He
was being held on a $5 million 'cash bond after his arrest last week.
His attorney, Larry Hammond, would not comment.

Reports: Morris open to regulation
NEW YORK (AP) - A Philip Morris Cos. executive said the
nation's largest cigarette maker is willing to discuss some government regulation of the embattled tobacco industry.
,
S.enior vice president Steven Parrish said the company still opposes efforts by the Food and Drug Administration to classify and reg. ulate tobacco as a drug, an issue at the core of a pending U.S.
Supreme Court case.
. However, Parrish said he has met recently with U.S. lawmakers to
discuss the company's "willingness to open up 3 . dialogue and look ·
at· the right regulatory approach."
.
Parrish said the company would be willing to discuss regulating
cigarettes in sue~ areas as sales to young people, re.search on safer
products and the disclosure qf ingredients.
His comments appeared today in The WaD Street Jourrial, New
York Times and Washington Post. Detlils of the company's policy
·
·.
shift were expected to be announced Thursday.

Prosecutors win 1st Net gamlftl case
NEW YORK (AP) -A man who operated a sports betting business on the Internet has been convicted in what is believed to be
the first case of its kind to go to trial.
·
The jury in U.S. District Court in Manhattln concluded that Jay
C:ohen, 33, broke a federal law by ac~epting bets and wagers on
sports events· over the Internet .and telephone.
In a statement, U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White said the San Francisco man was the first to stlnd trial in the United Stites for running an Internet sports gambling site.
·
Cohen, president of World S~~rts Exchange in Antil!'la• was
. among 22 defendants charged in March 1998 with operating off- ·
ihore companies that took bets from Americans via the Internet or
roD-me telephone numbers. Federal ·law prohibits the use of the ·
ln~ernet for sports betting and makes it a crime to use interstlte
!elephone lines for gambling.
·
Ten defe~dants pleaded guilty.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congmsional
Republicans say their still emerging proposals
to cut tiXes this election yeat will likely differ
markedly from the proposals of GOP presidential contenders George W Bush and John
McCain.
Though no final decisions have been made,
GOP lawmakers are virrually certain to ptQpose cutting tiXes by more than the roughly
$500 billion over 10 years rbat McCain, a
Republican senator from Arizona, favors.
Eager co avoid any tax inc!'l'ases, they also are
likely to ignore McCain's caD to raise revenue
by closing some corporate ·loopholes. ' ·
Likewise, they are _like~Jlro~se a far
smaller rax cut than the $1.3 trillion, 10-year
reduction advocated by Bush, the Texas governor. And they are unlikely to propose trimming income tiX rates, as Bush would do.
Some like House Budget Committee
Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, worry that
Democrats will try to exploit any differences
~mong Republicans over tiX cuts. Kasich, a
Bush supporter, has argued . in internai 'GOP
meetings that the budget Congress writes this
year should leave room for a Bush-sized tiX
cut.

· "A Republi'"n Parry that doesn't stand for
cutting tlxes has no purpose:' he said recently.
Even so, most GOP leaders on Capitol Hill
say they want this year's budget fight wi.t h
President Clinton to focus on specific
Republican proposals like reducing tiXes for
education and healthcare costs.
"You have to give some consideration" to .
keeping the congressional tiX cut close to the
GOP presidential nominee, said Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss. ''I'm not
an advocate of that. We have our work co do
and schedule to live with."
.
~me SJlecific elements of the cong~QD­
al plan will resemble those of the presidential
hopefuls - such as proposals to reduce the
marriage penalty, the extra ~ many people
owe because they are JT\3rr1Cd, And once
Republicans have chosen th~r presidential
nominee, many will no doubt embrace his tiX
plan and lawmakers could make their own
proposal closer to his.
Still, the emerging contrast between GOP·
b.wmaken and the parry's presidential eandidat~ on ·cutting tiXes whoever it is could make it harder for them to have a uni-

..

~i

'!

.
·~"Zip,

., '

·~
House Majority L~a.et
DickArmey.R-Texas, when asked what e!f&lt;:,~ ,
the GOP presidential race was having on c~n~
gressional tiX-cuttirig plans.
.
· · ,- .~

zero:· said
.

,,z

"

to begin this Wee~...,
'

'

exempt from state regulations. ,;:;
If pressure . from Republi~p
presidenti~ hopefuls isn't enou~.
Americans are widely in favor~
new·measures against health,
tenance org:uuzanons.
....:;
A recent poll by the ~
Family fo11ndation artd Harvaiil
School of ·Public Health sh~
72. petcent of .voters favored ~
patiept protections. That supN$:
dropped to 53 petcent, howev~lf
protections drove up premiurns:t:
Democrats have aligned then-;.
selves with the House versiori.·'Of
the legislation, which drew bipae.
san support, and are heaping criticism on efforts to prevent bWSUi~.
''The House has passed stro~g•.
effective bipartisan legislation . ~
Senate has passed a weak bill th4t
only an insu~ance company caul~
love:• said S~n. Edward KennedY,

D-Mass.

'

President · Clinton wants a lf.dJ '
that WO)Ild alloW patients to SUe
health providers. ·
· ·

....

I

,.A.og'"fa·rmers to vote on ~ontinlltng

0ttler white meat' ad campaign · ·

WASHINGTON (AP) -The advertising cam- farm operations.
paign that promotes pork as "the other white meat"
"This is
about the dem~ratic proc~ ... and
could end if hog farmers vote in a government- the right Of hog farmers and other producers to vote
. sponsored referendum to stop paying the f~es that on whether the checkoff p~ are working for
finance it.
them:'.said Rhonda Perry, a Missouri hog producer
Agriculture Secretlry Dan. Glickman announced who opposes the pork program.
Tell them about DivoceCarc, a·~,
his decision Monday to caD the first . vote on the
But Glickman was criticized immediately by the
special weekly se111inir all ;
pork program.since it was created 14 years ago. He . National Pork Producers Council, which rec~ves
said he has the authority to.caD the referendum even money from the checkoff fees :
support group fof people who are
though his department did not validate sufficient
It questioned his authority'to ·order the referensepan~ttd or divorced.
·
signatures .o n petitions submitted by farmers who dum on his own. ·
Sponsored by the Middleport
oppose paying the fees, or "checkoffS." ·
The referendum hurts ·~bona fide pork producers
"As a matter of basic fairness, I believe that pro- who created a ptogt~~m that truly worh to benefit
Cllist, Fifth at Main Wedoesdoys
ducers deserve the opportunity co vote on this pork producers of aU types and sizes;• said John
7:00-8:15. Mirth 1-May 24
checkoff program;• Glickman said in a speech to the McNutt, president of the council and an Iowa ·
National Farmers Union in Salt Lake City, Ut~h. "It farmer. In cailing the referendum, McNutt said,
more informolion. ·
is, after
a mandatory assessment, ..akin to a tax, "The law was somehow bent in favor of political ·
· Child core provided. Regislmtion is.
·
that aU producers must pay even if they disagree interests."
llqtJired. You con · onylime.
with it." . '
The fee requires payment of 45 cents fo~ every
Opponents of the ·$48 million program, which $100 of a pig's value when it is sold. The money
. pays for research . as well as advertising, say it has goes .to the quasigovernmentil National Pork
done little to stimulate pork consumption and Board, which contracts promotional services
mostly benefits meal -proc.essors and large, corporate through the producers council.
.
.
. .. ,

au

Churth:

ri

Coll992-2914 frl

au,

.

.
Protect
.
.
.
.
·
rtant.
Y2K: ·The Sequ~l arrives
1.
~
with few glitches worldwide peop1e m your ~e. . ·.

\t

though officials · were unsure
mw have the ~dpioo:ctilogyour ~membets
. .
I
Leap Day brought scattered and whether Leap Day was to blame.
miqor cpmputer · glitches. around
In New Zealattd: merchants had
~ bllliness panner wilh low,co6t •
the world today in perhaps the trOuble verifYing banking transac- :
final echo of the Y2J{ problem that , .tions and government experts said ·
life
wasn't.
· ·
ai 1\tany as 4;000 'inoney transfer · 10. ir 20-year bel
At a nuclear plant in Japan, a . terminals inight liave been affected .
computer system . that monitors before the.problem was fixed.
insl,araoce liu!n Auto-Owners
employee work hours shut down . The Jakarta StOck Exchange was
but didn't affect operations .. The ·.closed today as a pre'"ution due to
itllltllliOC.C ~ Call us I.Jr I!IOl'e
Monju. plant, 220 miles west of .fear that the automatic trading sysTokyo, hasn't produced nuclear tern would encounter computer
details. aOO ~ a:mpetitiye pltlXSII.
.
energy since 1995.
. · prob!epu, while .the Singapore
: At Japan's. Meteorological subway system rejected some rid- ·
.
.
. .
.
· Agency, weather monitoring sta- ers' cards.
tions , repo~ double-digit riinfaU
The ptobiems were dismissed'!!
~·
even .thougb no rain fell ouwde, minor by Bruce MCConnell, who i
Lie !IOmO c. llullnoio
·'
while computers at six obsely.llo- heads a United Nations-World :
. 7At.~,.,.·IW4~ 1 , ,
ries failed to recognize Feb. 29.
Bank monitOring group forY2K . . ......_ _ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ __
. Elsewhere inJapan.~ismographs
"I would conclude !1!at1 as ·at more than 20 sites considered p)'tdic~d •.there will not be any sis.I
tOday March ~. artd the postal ser- rillicant disruptions, and the world
~14
E
..
t ••II!:~
vice had problems with receipt will barely n~ce Leap Day:• he ·.
.. P-'-1
printen for registeted 1i1ail and dis- said from,Washington late Mon&lt;!ay. ,
.'
99J4i687 .
play screens for interest rates. In
There were no early reports of
le911oa
addition, 1,200 automated teller proi;&gt;Jems· as Leap Day arrived in.
1
m2chines af pqst offices·shut dow11, qte United States.
.
.,.. L....;....;.__________~------~;..."!"'-~~

tmn

t.-O•nilll» -..., ••

_
_ ·- - .• -· ·- ..•
-~- . .,,1 ' ··-.·.
----_...u:.:.-.;_

• ·.,...

t .•..

.. ,./_

·-

•
'

Sparlry WQitsfor callfipm Hall, Page B2
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

•

Page 81

•

1Ue11My. Ftllru•rr 11, 2oQa

'fuFIDAy's .

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Blsketbal
DIYIIIOft lfDiitiiCfTOIII'IIall*lt 111 111e eonvo; Athen•
lllu., llm'Ch 2
McClain v. AleiCIII1der, 6:15
Portsmouth v. Falrllekl UniOn, 8:00
Fri., ...-ch 3

'Galla Academy v. Ftlllsboro, 6:15
Sheridan v. Athens, 8:00

Dlvl8lon Dl Dlltrlct Tou1'J181Mfit
lllllle Convo, Athena

a.t., March 4

Cheaapaake v. Valley, 3:00
Wastfall ·v. Wheelersburg, 4:45
Eastern Brown v. Oak Hill, 6:30
Belpre v. Huntington, 8:15

'

.

.,

"

.

Jar stitfuess could slow down Schilling tion. Erickson, who iJ1jured the ankle

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Darryl Strawberrx will miss this season. four or five more times befo!e his projectPhiladelphia's ~ltrt Schilling, Balti- ed mid-May return.
more's Scott Erickson and Boston's
"I'm not nervous;• general manager Ed
·Nomar Gareiaparra wo~t be ou&lt;tha~Wade-said. "It- may be a setoack, but it
long. Still, they're wondering when they'll doesn't put him back to square one or
be playing at full strength.
'
square 101 at this point."
Schilling, coming off arthroscopic .· Schilling had arthroscopic surgery Det.
surgery on his right shoulder, ,felt stiifuess 13 after missing most of the second half of
for the second straight day and skipped his last sc:ason with shoulder pain.
throwing programl .
In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the Orioles said
"I definitely feel, better than I did yes- Erickson will he held out of Friday's exhiterday;· the pitcher said in Clearwater, Fla. bition opener against the Cincinnati Reds
"We're going to ~ve _it one more .day and because of a sprained right ankle. .
get back to thrffiilng."
· .
It's the second setback this spring for' the
Phillies trainer' Jeff Cooper thinks simi- No.2 man in the Orioles' stlrting rota-

Sunday, has been sidelined since Tuesday
with stiffness behind his right elbow.
Although Erickson has said the stitfuess
is "no big deal," he will have the elbow
·
examined as a precaution,
"If there's .m;&gt;thing wrong, he should be
able to throw as soon as his ·ankle will
allow it," Orioles manager Mike Hargrove
said.
In Fort Myers, Fla., Garciaparra had tests
on his sprained ligament in his right knee
and will have an MRl exam, team physician Dr. William Morgan said. There did
not appear to be any swelling in the knee.
"h's like a discomfort more .than any-

1\1!1., March 7
Green v. Beaver Eastern, 6:15
Southern v. WMeoak, 8:00

tldlets on sale

EAST MEIGS - Tickets are
on sale now for Eastern's Division
IV district playoff game against
New Boston. The game is set for
next Monday, at 6:15 p.m. at the
Ohio University Convocation ·
Center.
Tickets are SS each. The high
School will receive $1 from the
Sale of tickets locaUy.
·

Tomado playoff
tlx naOable
RACINE· Tickets are o~ sale
now for Southern's Division IV
district playofF game against
Whiteoak. The game is set for.
n'ext Tuesd~y. at 8 p.. at the
· Ohio University Convocation
Center.
Tickets are $5 each. The high
school will receive $1 from the
sale of tickets locally. ·

Stanforcl still No.
1 in llien's poll
NEW YORK (AP) ·- Stlnford, which has won 12 straight
games, was a unanimous No. i in
The Associated Press Top 25
men's poll.
The Cardinal (24-1) received
aU 70 fitst-place votes artd 1,750
points from the. national . media
panel.
Cincinnati and Arizona each
moved up one spot, Duke
dropped from second to fourth, .
while Temple jull)ped from
eighth co fifth ..
Ohio State held sixth, followed
by Michigan State, Florida, Syracuse· and Iowa State, which
jumped fro'm 17th to No. I 0.
·
tennessee dropped four spots
to llth, followed by LSU, OklahoJD3 State, Indiana, 'J'ulsa, texa,s,
Maryland, St. John's, Auburn and
Purdue. The last five were Oklahoma, Kentucky, Kansas, Connecticut and fi!inois.
·
Vanderbilt and Utah dropped
. OUt.

uc; reautt ~lied
In S. Clf(illna

. COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) Cincinnati basketball recr.u it
jerome Harpet·Was arrested on an
assault charge Monday as he practiced at Keenan,High School:
Harper, J8,
c~mrnitted to
play for . the Bearcatll next year.
His . ~t cam.e on the same day
he was selected . to· play in the
McDonald's All-American game
next month in Boston.
· ·. Harper was scheduled for a
!)ond hearin~ 1\t&lt;!day morQing.
·. A,ccording to ·coach Zilch Norris aJ!d the police report, the
arrest i! the EeSUit of a Feb. 17
incident at the Columbia· home
of Harper's aunt, Carolyn Agustas,
46. Harper lives with his aunt.
Harper's right ~d was
injured, sidelining him for a game
on Feb. 18.

·JW

thing," said , Garciaparra, who felt a
"twinge" Friday.
In Tampa, Fla., the Yankees were gorie
after an inrrasquad_l@!le when 'ommissioner Bud Selig suspended Strawberry
for one-year because of a positive cocaine·
. test.
.
"We will abide by the decisioO:'Y~nkees
owner George Steinbrenner said. "I feel
badly for . Darryl. My hopes and prayers
are that he can ·do the things he needs to
do to get his life in order."
.
Across· the state in Port St. Lucie, 'Mike
Hampton pitched two hitless innings and

.......... Ach•• hp'a2

No. 16 Texas
tops.Kansas

Mon., March •
Eastern ·v. New BOelon, 6:15 ·
Leesburg Fairfield v. Trimble, 8:00

Eallespl~ ~

'

Boys:of Summer feeling the pains of spring

Dlvlelon IV Dllllrtcl Toui!Wnerrt
· It l1le COnvo, Athena

m.

1

··~-~.-.-....

•

The Daily Sentinel

••

'
.. _ ...... ~ .. - · ·- -

.

iied tiX message this faD. Since the p~=
tial nominee will get far more exposure dur•
ing the faD campaign than bwmakers wilt
congressional Republicans want to be in l1int
with the nominee as much as possible. - • .;
Another risk for Republicans is that duri~
this faD's general election, Democrats cpq)~
focus on the differences between GOP w;t
plans to raise questions about the wisdom
one proposal or the other.
·•
"Are they going to be in ·the position tl
saying they disagree with him?" said Dembciratic consultant Mark Mellman.
;
So far this year, Republicans ·have brokeQ
their tax__cuts...into separate bills,...ratha..tha~
bundl,ng them into a single package as they
did last year .w ith a $792 billion plan Clinto9
vetoed. So far, the House has approved a $1~i
billion, 10-year reduction of the marriagt
penalty, while the Senate is debating an S8 bi.l~
lion plan to expand tax-free savings acco::;t
for families' 'costs of public and private sch

. WASHINGTON (AP)
expanded liability;' said Neil in Texas "while Washington politi- ·
Lawmakers will have co balance Trautwein, director of employ- cians deadlocked." His main rival,
strong public support for enhanc- 'ment policy at the National Asso- Sen. John , McCain\ R-Ariz., also
ing patients' rights against opposi- dation of Manufacturers.
. supports federal legislation permitlion from politicaUy powerful busi- ·.1 The House and Senate both ting lawsuits.
ness groups :IS they craft a compro- passed bills that offer patient pro"We ge( ti.J.e Texa~ model
mise t,o give Americans more · tection!, but they differ on liability thrown up at us aU the. time;• said
leverage in dealing with HMOs.
and who would be covered
Sen. Tiin Hutc.hinson, R-Ark., a
With presidential .candidates of
The . House bill, supported by commi\tee member. "It puts added
both patties endorsing patients' Democr:its and many'Republicans, pmsure on Republii:ans."
,
rights to sue their health plans and allows bwsuits and covers 161 mil- ·
Republiqn leaders concede a
amplifying HMO protections, the lion Americans with private insur- compromise will have to include
pmsure is on for the House and ance. The Senate bill, crafted by -some provision for lawsuits, but the
Senate to work out differences on Republicans, doesn't aUow lawsuits question remains how far GOP
the touchy issue. ·
and covers 411 million Americans senators will ·go.
Insurers and corporations are whose health plans are ·exempt
HutchinsOn predicted any
vehemently against the idea, argu- from state regulations.
GOP-backed' ri~t-t(Hue proviA House-Senate conference sian would come with lots of
ing that giving Americans the right
to sue over denial of care will raise . committee is schedule to begin restrictions. '
·
premiums. They've conducted meeting Thum4y tO .halnmer out
One posSibility, similar to a
their own polls suggesting many· a compromise, which it hopes to Republican House bill rejected last .
faD, would:
·
workers would lose coverage reach by Match 31.
because companies, . fearing. law·Their task ~came .more com• . Allow ' lawsuits only after
suits, would slop offering health plicated when the party's presiden- patients go tluOugh appeal panels.
tia) front-runner, George W Bush,
• Cap the size of damage .awatds.
plans.
"We can't imagine a more anti- began running ads . boasting he
• Cover o~..;...~ ~~ million
. wOrker, anti::elnjir~er polky than . "delivered a patients'bill of righa" Ameri~ns wliQSC lieii'ffi plans are

lilY THE AsiociATED PRas

....

: ..... t

lUll lilly, Flbnlery21, --~ ·

'

I
_ _.. ___ ._.,.

•

•

t

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Debate over HMO refonn

Lawmakers plan to define breakfast

--

· ~~··

·CongresS' tax cuts differ from candidates ~•

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Bush strugles to regain message

. I

..

-

Page A 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

•'

'

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - The t.eams, was equally effective on
Texas · Lopghorns certainly defense, forcing Kansas into
aren't fading as quickly as their 1'\lissing 13 of its first 16 shots ·
Big 12· tide hopes.
and 11 turnovers in the first l4
The 16th-ranked Longhorns minutes.
used stifling defense to take a
"l have to congratulate
17-point halftime lead, then Texas," Kansas coach Roy
fought off a Kansas raUy in the Williams said. "They ran out
second half for a 68-54 victory early and with a lot of intensity
Monday night.
and got the easy buckers."
The Longhorns shot 54 perThey kept their slim conference tide hopes alive. But if cent in the ·first half, helped .by
Texas (21-7; 12-3) is .to repeat as six dunks on breakaway and
Big 12 champs, it will need to :illey-oop baskets, en route to· a
win Saturday at Kansas State 38-21 halftime lead. Gabe
and hope. for unlikely losses by Muoneke had 10 points iri the
conference leader Iowa Stlte to · half, six on dunks.
·
. Texas Tech arid Baylor, who are
"We wanted CO show our
·. a combined 6-22 in conference killer 'instinct and attlck," said
ftl
Muoneke, who finished with 16
!'lay
.
")chink we heed a lot of help. points. ·
But if we get that help in the
"I'd like to put that first half
•&gt;
be
more
in
a bottle and keep it for a
Iast two games, w e u
.
grateful -than anyone could · while,"Texas·coach Rick Barnes
know," said Ivan Wagner, who said.
Kansas finally showed signs of
scored a career,high 19 points
life in the second. The Jayhawks
in Texas' first win against Kansas scored the first two baskets after
since 1938.
halftime, and Texas missed its
The Longhorns are 2-7 first five shots.
against the Jayhawks. (21-8, 10Kansas closed co 42-30 on
5) overaU, and.l-3 since the Big five straight points · by. Eric
12 was formed:
'
Chenowith and finally made .i!
In the only other game 46 _36 ll ,58 left.
Barn&gt;s caUed a timeout, and
involving a ranked team, No. 24
Connecticut beat Rutgers 74- the Longhorns came back with
69 ·
a 3-pointer from Wagner and
Texas grabbeq a 14"2 lead on yet another bre:ika~y dunk by
3-pointers by Wagner and Muoneke to push the lead to ·
William Clay. Chris Owens 55-38.
"We stuck our head out of
then scored six straight points,
including a layup when he the hole, but couldn't get aU the
slapped the ball away at mid- way out;' Kansas forward Drew
court and spun around two Jay- Gooden said.
Kansas twice more cut the
hawks defenders near the basket
to bring the crowd of 13,561 to lead to 10, the last at 59-49 with
its
feet.
BIG XII FACE J011 - Chris Mlhm of Texas (4) dunks over Ashante Johnson of Kansas during the Long5-5 against ranked
PluiiiHTDp2!1, .... 12
Texas,
horns' 68-54 Wlft11 over the J~hawks Monday night in Austin. iAPI
·
·

·,,Heat ra.Uy .
.burns f'Jew
Yorke~ .
~

'

.

1'·

I

BY THE ASSOCI1'f.E.D•PRESS

'

·~··
! .

•Reels
Larkin
to retire in Cincy
'

_No punches w~ro &gt;thrown in .
this Miami-New~f\t ~e. ln .
411'\lftilr, t}je .
fact, after the fi
Heat t~ok aU the
~ outjof th~ .
K1Ucks.
.'
,·
Miami,' playing without Fentef
Monzo Mourning' for the .prst
.time this season, r3llied flom a
20-p~int first-half ~elicit Mollday rught to beat the Knicks' 8576 and remain in 6nt piRce in
the Atlantic Qivision.
After the Heat fell..qehirld .37~
17 at home, ' they came, b~
behind · Jamal· Masnburn,
Clarence Weatherspoo!l' ' and
smothering defense.tl:he Krucks
started .12-for-16, biit'shet just
30 percent the rest of the ).vay.
.
.
,
·~It was
onslail...h[":'jn the JUST SAY ~ - New Yorks Kurt Ttlom~s (40) blOC~ a shot by
· , ..
. d we
·•· ~ul·
. . Mllilnl's. Jainaal
MashbUrn
b egmmng,
an
co d have
.
.
.
, during Mondays pme. (AP)
·
.
.
1ost- aU ··kinds of ' '"""
neart,"H
, eat I;J. •
•
•
,_ •
•
•
•
•••
coach .~t Riley saidit' . .-... , .. .: h~~en't .h~ this ~ng about · as Mi~ increased.lts diV)Sional
' N~York score.d ~ pomts,in this ,team m a ~hile.•When we lead to, 1 1/2 games over New
: · the opening qu:qt~b add op!Y ~3. play that comnutted o~ defc;ns~, Y~~k.
.
..
.
; the·rest·ofthe ·wa}'J &gt;_ : :
.. ~ we can- re~y be good.
.They outplayed. us, ~atd
"Just an incredible . gatpe ,for
The Knicb and Heat, w~o . Knicks c~nter Patrick Ewtng,
us;• said Riley. whose· seam has have had memorable fi~ts m
·PIIIIIIHNIIA.PIIp82
·'truggled in · recent weeks. "I the playoffS, behaved on Monday

t . ,.

an

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
is to Kansas City, Carl Yas ~
Shortstop Barry Larkin wants trzemski is to . Boston, Tony
to stay in Cincinnati. The Reds Gwynn i.s to San Diego."
want him to end his career
Larkin accepted far less than
with his hometown team.
market valqe to stay with
Starting today, they'll get an Cincinnati in 1996, agreeing
idea []ow much it will cost to to a $16.5 ririllion, three-year
make that happen.
extension. When an option
· Larkin's agent, Eric Gold- year for 2000 automatically
schmidt, planned to visit ·the kicked in, the deal became
Reds' training complex , tod~y worth $21.2 million over four
and begin talks on a cOntfi1Ct years.
•
extension. Larkin's current
Larkin will make $5.3 million this season, third-highest ·
deal ~xpires after 2000.
Larkin, the team's captain, on the roster behind Griffey
turns 36 on April 28. He. (S7 million) and. Dante
played in a career-high 161 Bichette ($6.5 million).
"I'd love to stay here;• Larkin
games last s.e ason and hit ,293
with 12 homers, 7 5 runs bat- . said. "I want to be on a comted in and· 30 steals.
petitive team, and the commitHe has spent his entire ment is there." ·
Larkin said 'money isn'f his
care~ with Cincinnati. Larkin
attended Moeller High School . m:ain concern.
·and set home run records that
"I'd · be interested in seeing
would' later be broken by Ken how much money would be
available if I were a free agertt,
Griffey
"I've always felt that Barry but it's real!y about · b~ing
Larkin should finish his career comfortable," Larkin said. "l£it
as a Red," general manager Jim was about rhe money, I would
Bowden said. "He is to have been, .gone · a long time
Cincinnati what George Brett ago."

Jr.

..

.

�:hg. 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddlepofl, Ohio

'

BASEBALL HALL OF FAME

•

2000 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

Sparky, Mazeroski among those
awaiting vote by veterans committee

I

I

~'

-TAMPA, Fla (AP) - Sparky Anderson won two
World Senes Wtth the C10cmna11 Reds and another one wtth the DetrmtTtgers
Today, the only manager to w10 rmgs 10 both
leagues seemed sure to add another mle Hall of
Farner
Third on baseball's career w10 hst the popular
manager was expected to get the call from the Veterans Comnuttee at 2 p m EST, tellmg htm he d
been elected
But who would JOm him' Could 1t be Bill Maze- roslci Mel Harder or Gil Hodges'
If ptcked Anderson would get mSlde the doors of
t)je Hall for the first 11me He twtce VlStted Cooperstown when his teams played there but never toured
the shnne
Ted Wtlliams, Stan MuSial and the rest of the 14man Vets panel can choose one person m each of
four categenes - former maJor leaguers a combtnatlon of managers umptres execuuves and Negro
L'eaguers, 19th century players and personnel and
Negro Leaguers
"I feel like tliere s a chance a better chance than
last year" Mazeroski sa1d pnor to spnng trammg
'It's JUSt a feeling
' Turkey Stearnes, an outfielder who played nearly
two decades, looked like the top candtdate among
the Negn- Leaguers Outfielder Junmy Ryan and
second baseman Btd McPhee led the 19th century
list
It takes 75 percent for electton same as wtth the

NBA

ANNOUNCE1';1ENTS

Baseball W nters Assoctanon of Amenca Tony Perez
and Carlton FISk were elected 10 January
The Vets panel usually has 15 members Buck
O'Ne!l however ts not able to attend th1s years
meeung because of a rnmor health problem that
prevents him from traveling
If Anderson ts ptcked 1t wtll make for a Red letter day m Cooperstown on July 23 Perez, a former
Cmc10na11 first baseman and Reds broadcaster
Marty Brennaman are bemg mducted that afternoon
11i=
er~e~w
~a· s tallftne Vets were gomg to ptck former
manager Dtek Wtlltams over Anderson as the 16th
manager m the Hall But Williams pleaded no contest after bemg arrested on an mdecent exposure
charge mJanuary and that seems to have derailed his
chances for now
Anderson who turned 66 last week lS m his first
year of ehgtb\lity Wtth a record of 2 194-1 834, he
tratls only Con me Mack (3, 731) and John McGraw
(2, 784) for hfettme vtctones
Anderson managed Cmcmnatt from 1970-78
wmmng two World Senes ntles wtth the Btg Red
Machine He gutded Detrott from 1979-95 and won
another Senes rmg Along the way he won two
other pennants and a patr of d!VIs10n championships
He lS the only manager ever to top two franchises m career wms That could present a problem 1f
he s elected -he's sttll not sure whteh cap he d put
on his Hall plaque

Ewmg who scored oruy etght pmnts m 39 nunJazz 106, Nets 101
utes desptte Mourmng's absence 'We won the first
Karl Malone barely mmed his fourth career
quarter they won the rest of the game
tnple double with 35 pomts 12 rebounds and mne
Mashburn scored 24 pomts for Mtanu and asSISts as U tab beat VlSltmg New Jersey
Weatherspoon had 14 po10ts and 12 rebounds m a
Jeff Hornacek scored 27 pomts shootmg 10 of-11
reserve role
from the field and Bryon Russell added 14 as the
Mourrung nussed the game because of a sore left Jazz won for the stxth nme m seven games
ankle he lnJUred Saturday at Washington H e wont
Step!\on Marbury gomg agamst John Stockton m
oven travel to San Antomo for tomght s game wtth a match up of two of the NBA's be!ll: pomt guards
the Spurs
led the Nets wtth 34 pomts, while Kerry Kittles
'It was defimtely nerve-wracking s;ud Mourn- scored 22
tpg, who stood on the stdelines through much of
Hornacek sealed the vtctory on a patr of free
the second half But I m happy nght now
throws wtth 11 seconds left after the Nets closed to
Heat guard Voshon Lenard also nussed the game 103-101 on a 3-pomter by Marbury wllh 16 secwtth a lower abdonunal stram
onds rematmng
Larry Johnson scored 20 pomts for the Kmcks
Rockets 96, Clippers 77
who made thetr first four 3-pomt attempts and took
Cumno Mobley scored 21 pomts as Houston s
a. 29-12 lead after JUSt seven nunutes
reserves scored 63 pomts on the way to snappmg a
"You can't let them break your wtll 'Weather- five-game losmg streak wtth a wm at Los Angeles
spoon sa1d
Matt Bullard added 14 pomts for the Rockets
SuperSonics 84, Hornets 81
who were wtthout Hakeem OlaJUWon as they
Gary Payton scored 32 pomts and Seattle held ended a seven-game road skid
struggling Charlotte to 32 percent shootmg m the
The R:ockets career leadmg scorer flew back to
second half
Houston for tests to deternune the cause of qts
Payton had 21 pomts m the second half go10g 5
fattgue whJCh plagued him dunng the prcvtous
for-8 from 3-po10t range to send the Hornets to three games and linuted him to only 13 nun\lt~s on
thetr third consecuuve loss and thetr fifth m seven Sunday agamst the Lakers
games
,
The Rockets also held Los Angeles to 26 8 perPayton added mne rebounds etght asmts and two cent shootmg breaking the Rockets prevwus best
steals for the Somes who began a five-game road defenSive effort set Feb 5, 19&amp;9 when they held the
tnp by holding Charlotte to JUSt three field goals m Cmcmnau Royals to 28 7 percent
the final five-plus mmutes
Warnors 80, Hawks 75
.Eddie Jones led the Hornets wtth 23 pomts
Donyell Marshall had 23 pomts and 21 rebounds
Mavericks 108, Celt&amp;cs 100
as Golden State defeated Atlanta
Dtrk Now1tzki scored 26 pmnts, mdudmg a patr
Larry Hughes added 23 pomts and 10 rebounds as
o€ key 3-pomters m the fourth quarter and Enck the Warnors won thetr thtrd stratght at home It was
Strickland added 19 as Dallas won at Boston
JUSt the fifth ume thiS season Golden State won
The Mavencks tmproved to 4-4 smce the arnval when tmhng after three quarters
of Denms Rodman, who was on h!S best behav10r
lsa~ah Rider scored 24 pomts to lead the Hawks
aS he scored four pomts and grabbed 16 rebounds
D1kembe Mutombo added 13 pomts and 22
Dallas took tts first lead Since e2rly 10 the first rebounds the mnth ume thts sea~on he's grabbed 20
quarter when Rodman grabbed an offenSive or more rebounds Jlm Jackson had 21 po10ts

Aches

Greene dtdn t report to camp unttl Sunday
because he was tendmg to a fanuly SituatiOn and felt
lightheaded and nauseated when stretch10g He was
Page
taken by ambulance to a hospttal gtven two liters of
flu1d and released
struck out two as the New York Mets played the1r
The Cubs expected him to take part m a hght
first mtrasquad game of the spnng
work Monday but he arnved With chtlls and a low"My arm felt good; Hampton sa1d My location grade fever
was pretty bad but I dtdn t expect It to be nght on
'He's SJck, manager Don Baylor satd "I came m
this early'
here early this mormng and he was already here He
Country smger Garth Brooks, playmg left field
had a heavy coat on because he had the chills He
went 0-for-4 With a walk and two stnkeouts He had dehydratiOn yesterday He told me this was hiS
also lined mto a double play
first ttme m Arizona, and I know I've had some of
"It wasn't a great day but It was better than any the worst allergy attacks here"
day I ve had I d1dn t feel like I was drowmng,
In Dunedm Fla Toronto catcher Darren FletchBrooks satd
er had arthroscopiC surgery on hts nght knee and
In Mesa Anz Chtcago Cubs backup thtrd base- wtll be Sldehned 10-15 days
marl Willie Greene nussed his second stratght day of
fletcher will start rehab T\lesday ndmg a b1cycle
workouts
at the team's spnng trammg complex

from

WtLl BE HERE FRIDAY, MARCH 17TH

11

ToplS
faomPapBI
Wtth 3 09 left, but hit JUSt three field goals dur10g
the final seven nunutes and couldn t make a final
push
The Jay hawks fimshed w1th 17 turnovers and shot
JUst 31 percent wtth no 3-pomters Kirk Hmr1cq
was the only Jayhawks player 10 double figures w1th
11 pomts
Wagner made up for four turnovers With five
a~mts and hit seven free throws m the final 3 31 to
help Texas preserve 1ts lead
Chns Mlhm, consJdered the best pure center m
coUege bas)tetball, had a relattvely qu1et game w1th
mne pomts m what nught be his last game m the
Erwm Center

Mthm was 4-r;&gt;f-8 from the floor and gr;1bbed 12
rebounds as the ct;awd chanted, ' One more year 1
Mihm has not satd 1f he will turn pro after the season
I m not even gomg to talk about that nght now'
Mthm satd That was great No matter what happens wtth my qeclS!On It was mce
No. 24 Connecticut 74, Rutgers 69
Khalid EI-Anun h1t four free t)lrows and made a
game-clinching steal m the final 26 seconds as Connecucut won at Rutgers
Albert Mounng added 16 pomts and Jake Voskuhl
had 15 pomts and 13 rebounds as Connecticut (208 9-6 B1g East) clinched 1ts seventh stratght 20-wm

season
Dahntay Jones had 25 pomts to lead Rutgers (1513, 6-9),mcludmg a long 3-pomter With 15 seconds
rematmng to cut the Huskies' lead to 70-69

005

Supplement to:

Personals

Gfntleman Seeking Companalon
ship From N1ce Female For Talks
Walks &amp; Friendship Send Rt
pitas To 553 Second A\ltnua
Apartment 1403 Galljpolls OH

The Dally Sentinel

4!631

Gallipolis Dally Tribune

Why wait? Start meeting Ohio
s{nglea tonight Call toll lree 1
8Q)..766--2623 extension &amp;176

Point Pleasant Reglst4!r

30 Announcements
NI!WT5'Wiilnrlft Slioppe
9 West Stimson Arnens
740-592 1842
Quality clothing and household
ltfms $1 00 bag sale every
Tflursday Monday thru Saturday

Don't miss out on thla •••

9:00-S 30

0111ce ol Or Edwald L Howald 11
CLOSED
(Roflromenl)

40

Giveaway

Free Klnena to goOd home litter
Trained Can be teen anytime

Call Dave Harris or Matt Haskins at 992-2156

30213rd St MaS&lt;ln

Free roosters

'

wv

Cue Management Polltion - An
Outpatient Aleohol And Other
Drug Counseling Agency Local
td In Gallla And Jackson Coun
tlea Is Seeking A Case Manaoer

To Work With Adults And Adol
tscents PrOVIding Screenings
Evaluations Intakes Referrals
General Case Management Serv
Ices And Etc Must Have Know!

edge In The Field Of Chemical
Dependency Bachelors Degree
And /Or E~~:perience CCOC A
Plus Sand Resume By March 1o

2000 To FACTS 45 Olive SkHI
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 I Or FAX
740-446 8014 EOE M/F~
Cer11fled Nurae Alde1 Rotating
&amp;I"'IJts Intermediate care center
West VIrginia certification re
qulrad Point Pleaunt Ctnter
State Route 62 Route 1 Box
326 Poinl Pleasant WV 25550

EOE
Someone to do light house
cleaning In PI Pleasant area one
day a week Must ~ave own
transportation &amp; ret 5ai'KIIener or
application clo Point Pleasant
Register EB29 200 Main Street
Pt Pleasant wv 25550

lntamet Markeii/'IQ
$25 $75nlr
www any-1-can aarn com
1-888 816-1682

740-992 0703

P~s father Rottweller mother
7~247

7606

P-uppies
coma &amp;

If this is what your caddie looks like•••

•
•

..

Ml~~:ed Bread

See

the

Can
mother

lfl41675..057

Found gray &amp; white kl11en brown
flea collar followed ch ldren home

•

lrom Hysell Run 740 992'6895
Fpund Puppy Malo Btack Lab

•

. •

•

•

Mix State Street Vicinity 740

*-4479
Lost black &amp; while Japanese
Chin 6 months old blue collar
BJIIey!Hysell Run area 740 992

61191
Lest male Mt Cur pup brown &amp;
wtllte Smith Rd Pomeroy reward

klil s pel 740-992 n21

Lost Black &amp; Brown Medium Siz
ad Dog Near Crown City So
wards Ridge Area Blue Collar

740 256 9153
lost Keys Has Lener H• Key
cbaln Also Has Kroger s Card

"

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

•

AU. Yanl8altl Mull
Be Pold In Advance
OfAQLM 2 00 p m
the day bafonl the ld
II to run Sunday
edition 2 00 p m
F~day Mondoy ldldon
- 10 00 e m S.turdoy

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

you need to tiit The Trail.
WINTER. What a mtserable ume for golf Unless you head for the sunny

All Yard Solei Mua1 Bo Ptld In
A~vence Deadline 1 OOpm the

South and the red hot Robert Trent Jones GolfTraal Last year, over 5,000
golfers from Mmnesota took advantage of the beauuful courses. the mce
weather and the low rates to expenence what the
New York Ttmes called "some of the best pubhc
golf on Earth • And wh1le we can't guarantee
the weather, we can prom1se you great golf
Call fo( mformauon about our 3 day/2-mght golf
and hotel packages as low as $162

day before the 1d 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition

1:OOpm Friday
Btg yard sale 1st 3rd 43410
Dutchtown Ad Racine clothes
toys swing set baby clothea

,...,
80

Auction

and Flea Market
BUI Moodispaugh Auctioneering
buy/sell estates consignment
auction every Thursday 6pm
Middleport Ohio &amp; WV License

740-989 2623

1·800·949·4444 or

Billy Goble Auct oneer Pomeroy

Ohk&gt; 740-992 7502

www.rtjgolf.com

Professional Auction Service
Farm Eslate Inventory Reduc
tlon Fundraising Steven Balz AI

Public Notice

STATE OF OHIO OFFICE
OF THE AUDITOR
JIM PETRO, AUDITOR
OF STATE
CASH BASIS SUMMARY
FINANCIAL REPORT FOR
THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 1111111
POMEROY VILLAGE
MEIGS COUNTY
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYPES, EXPENDABLE
TRUST
FUNDS,
PROpRIETARY
FUNDS,
NON-EXPEND
TRUST
FUNDS, AGENCY FUNOII,
TOTAL MEMORANDUM
ONLY
RECEIPTS, REVENUE
OPERAnNG
RECEIPTS
REVENUES

SuppllH end lleteltllle.

21111,210 00

21111,210 00

C.pl1el OUIIIly •••••.,....... " ...,, ....

8,81177,
42,332 38

32,52081,

Debt ServJ...,..................,,......

21,122 15, 21,822.111
TOTAL DISBURSEMENT&amp; •

1,1113,788 01, 2,858.113,
387.781 84, 0 00, 0 00,
1,1184,432.&amp;8
Totll Receipt• over!(under)
Dl8bu,..menlll

(12:.1,388 83), 3,083 23,
7A,11111, 0.00, 0 00,
(411,2254'1
OTIIER
FINANCING
BOURCES/(USEB), NON·
OPERATING

5,844 27, TOTAL

44853238
lntergovernmentel Reyenue

458,8118 511,

Tl'IIWI Tl8neporllliton o 00
Contr8CIIIIll S..VIan 000

REVENUE~O[KPENSE~

Local Tua,........~ .. ~·,·:·

442,188.09,

Public Notice

275 811,

~.11744&amp;
Special Aue~~m~nle

00

Ch1rge1 for BerviCII

•

MEMORANDUM

ONLY
Locll TIXee ....,..............O00
11118rt10Vtrnmenllll

llevenuu 8111,040.34,
1111,04034

PI'OOMdalrom Bille Of Debt

452,285 117, 0.00
•
Sele oiBondll
01 Notea..... ::::::::::::::..o~:oo~
•
Flnea, Uc•n••• &amp; Permlte, Bille
107,385.74, 10~-- 74
112,000 00, 112,000 00
Mlacell1neou1, 33,121 01, Other Prooeecla.. • .......0.00
9,814.78, 43,243 .,.
Mlecell1neoua ............ 0.00
TOTAL RECEIPTS: ·•:·::~·~·:"~ 111111 of Fixed " - - ..0.00
1,071,388 18, 5,120 18, Oilier
481,1100 7S, 0 00, 0 00, ~noperallng 11ft
1,5311,207 01

c;urrent:

Seourlt)' of Per1on1 &amp;

Ploperty 414,727.114,
2,841.21!, 41_~1375'.24
f'ubllc ltMrm Bervlcee
8,424 72, 8,424 72
IAIIUI8 nme Actlvltlft
1,817.58, 1,1a7 58
Community Envlron-

000
llulc Utility SeMen
11,1111.11, 5,1111 51
Trlneportetlon 521,818 42,
521!118.42
GMMI81~mMd......,. ....

~.,....,;::,::::::::::::::::::.0.00

Tranafer~n

120,000 00, 120,000 00
Alttlnct•tn ................. 0.00
1'r'antftil.()u. ...

•••• • • •

=~120,000~.00
DebtBelllloa
~.177.83),

(33.177.83)

Other (U . . e) Nonop.
EXJM1ndlturea, 1211,027 11,

328,1111,.11211.312 11

TOTAL

OTHER

FIN.

SOURCI!BI(UIU) .. .. ....

112,000 00, 0 00, (411,1M 110),
(3al 00), 0 00, 38,11011.10
Ex- Recelpta lllld Oilier
flnencl _n e
Source•
o-J(Unclel) (40....131.

208 73,

3,CM13.23 30,1145.11, (321.00),
000

. . _ . Service..~."~,. ........

Expend Dlab
Other
Uaae/Net
(40,3111 83),

208,502 82,
201,711.55

1110,011 03, 1110,0111.CI3

Caeh

a

3,0113.23, 30,141.11, (328.00)1

B111nce

December 31 14&amp;,011 23,
7,405 58, 128,827 13,
45,288 75, 0 00, 327,320 81
R11erve lor ENCUMBER
.OECEMBEIJ 31 11,74&amp; 117,

0 00, 22,210 4&amp;, 0 00, 0 00,
38,181,45
Summary of lndebtedne11,
OUTSTANDING JAN 1, 1111111,
NEW ISSUES, RETIRED,
OUTSTANDING DECEMBER

31, 1111111
lllol1gage Flftenue

00 Bond•
00 Nota 21111,000 00,
20.000.00, 185,000 00

0.00
0.00

R-nue Antlclpetton Nota

138,413 28, 112,00000
21,772 51, 222,840 77
OWDA 1.011111
• .. 0 00
lndullrlll

28,814 75,
4&amp;1100.72

DISBURSEMENTS,
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS,
OPEFIAnNG EXPENSES

Fund

o.v. Boncle...o.oo

Oilier Bonde I NOIH 0.00
TOTAL 341,41328,
112,000 00, 45,772 51,
407,84077
TNieury a.lllnce ....

•-

•

l~nte
Cull In~

t~an Crook

Public Notice

0 00, (8,715.1111)
Fund Cull Balllnce...., 1
111,4111 01, 4,342 35,
11,eat 52, 45,5113 n, ooo,
334,038. .

.281,443 01
71,2113.30
..378

oo

166 Ohio &amp; Wool VIrginia 304
n3 5765 Or 304 na-5447
Wedemeyer 1 Auction Service

c-No

Gallipolis Ohio 740-379 2720

30800
Dookllt 0 P~g~200
NOnCE
RIIVIIICICode,

Aboolute Top Dollar All US Sll

leo 2717 01 (A)

Sterling Etc Acqutaltlont Jewelry

M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
A\ollnu&amp; Gaji&gt;OI~ 740-446 2942

C2)211TC

Acres W1th Barn S37 000 Gallla

367 5043
Motner or 2 will babysH 'ln home
Sandhill Rd Fenced In yard
Wanted To Co Mount&amp; Tree
Ser~lce Bucket Truck Ser\llce
Top Trim Removal Stump Grind
lng Fullv tnaured Free Esll

malos Bidwell Ohio 1 800 838
9568 Or 740-:388 9648
Wanted To Do Paint Well Char
actertl Cartoon$ Landscapes
Eel For Nurnrles Chlldrens
Bedrooms Ect 740
3437

••e

Ask For Jno~

FINANCIAL

Help Wanted

AAEYOU AEAD'I'
FOA AN UOIIIMERCE
BUSINESS?
121471 MR. PT 1FT
1IIIIOM33VEXT 1211

www.WGIII0u101You,. ,
Hooiltcom

recOmmends that you do busi
nus with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until vou ha\le investfgated
Are you connected? Internet us
era wanted! $500 to $1000 a

0110d candldeloo ahould apply to
Aocksprtng_a Aehabllltallon Can

lor 367S8 Rockiprlngo Rood Pomeroy Ohio 45789 ann Carol
G.-tng AN DIIOCtor of Nu111ng
Equal Opporluntly ErnpioyM'

(1} 1 Ooublewlde $249 Per
Month Low Down Payment 1

800 691 6777
(2) 14 Wide $167 Par Month
Low Down Paymeot 1 BOO 691

Down Paymenl

Millennium TeiHervktl

230

Prolesslonal
Servlcee

outbound !OieserviCO poollons
No axperienca necessary
Starling wage II $8/hr
wllh quarterly salary revtews
Management opportunllles avan
able 401K/l.4edlcali1lo!UVI'old
vacatk&gt;na avalloblo 3 Shifts dally
Flo•lblo scheduling Start your

No Fee Unless We Wlnl

Interview appointments tor

1-1188 5112 3345

All real estate adVertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act

of 1968 wnlch makes It !legal

to advertise •any prefererx:e
limitation or discrimination
based on race cotor religion
saM tamHJal status or national
or~ln or any Intention to
make any such preference
Hm~atlon or d scrimlnat1on •

Need 7 ladles To Sell Avon 740.
446 3358
Need Someone To Mow Gran

on Weakly Baals &amp; Trim Hadgos
As Nalded Will Taka Bids Unlit
March 1S 2000 Send Bids To
PO Bo• 527 OH 45643.

This newspaper will not

kno.,.ngly accept

Now accepting applications at

Now Ta~lng Applications From

Dominos Pizza Galllpolle &amp; Po
meroy Only 74Q.446..4040

Part Time Registered MLT Or

CLA Apply In Potson Medical
Plaza 936 State Roulo 160 Galli
polls
Seamstress Wanted Straight
Seams Heavy VInyl 740 388

9310
Servtce Technician Wanted Ap

ply AI Big Boys Walar Toys
ChaahiAI Ohio 45620
URGENTLY NEEDED fqr plasma
donors earned $35 to $45 tor 2

a hours weekly

Call Sera Tee.

1

advertisements for rual estate
which s In ~lolatlon of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In lhis npwspaper
are avallabfa on an equal

Eldorado Adull Home 740 992
5039

Have En)ov Dealing With Tho
Public Send Resume To P 0 Box
1109 Gallipolis Ohio 4!631

Wood Gallla County Commls

otoner

Paid For By Col!oa P. Wood
3952 State RoUIO 141
Gallipolis. OH 45831

opportunity basts

REAL ESTATE

310 Homea for Sale
2 3 bedroom house 2 acres ga
rage trun trees country living
minutes lrom town Bradbury
$39 5QO 740 367 n85

3 Bedroom Brick Home Double
Garage Large Lot Finished
Basement Mctlntenance Freel

740 446 8329
Green Township 3 Bedrooms
With Garage Outbuilding 1 1/2
Acres MIL low Utilities Many
Extrasl740-446-0744

Letart WV Near Vernon Church
(304)882 3204

140

Buslnen
Training

stat Newly refinished Hardwood

Floors $78 000 (740)588-9082
3BR Homo For Solo or Renl Gal
tlpolls Feny Araa (304)875-1105

Georgal Portable Sawmill don t
liaul your logl to 1ha mill juat call

304-67S.1 957
Handyman maintenance service

carpentry. pelnlln(l aiding rnollng
dry wall and tloc:lrk:ol 740 849
1035

$12 000
(304)576 2101/or
(304)67S.5108
1981 Flemming t4x70 central
air new carpet 2 full baths

or

Mansion mobile home
t4M60 two bedroom one bath
central air total electric ready to
move $11500 740949-9016
1991

e

Acres

$5

ooo

o

1

Acres

$10 000 5+ Acres For $8 SOO
Call Fot Free Maps ANTHONY
LAND CO LTD 1 800 213 8365

www countrytyme com

Or Just Relaxing In Your Own
Camper &amp; C&amp;mpslte Overlooking
Blue La~e To VIew 740 446

9539
FLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc
torvlllo Ohio GRANb OPENING

2 Lot Models Must Go Extra
Nice Loaded Your Choice $998
Down Hurry Won I Last Oakwood

Golf polls 740.446 3093
1 Lei! $299/Mo

Pump/Central Air Double Car
Garage Lynn Drive New Haven

304 736 7295

Shown by appl only (304)882
2049

Room Ear In Kitchen Sunroom
Work Shop On Acre Lol White
Vlnnel Fence New U Siding And

NswRoof Caii74044H659
An Older Houae In Crown City
Would Make 4 G4xld Rental Price

Bnl (304)675 2608
House for salt two storv 2 3
bedrooms one bath Middleport
asking $29 000 No down pay
ment Financing available to

qualified Call1 800 368 8194
Love!~

tan acres In a country set
ling four bedrooms two and hatr

baths lormal llvlflll room and famIly ('OOM two flrtplaceS two apart
ments lour car garage and two
storage bull dlnoa please call

740-992 2292

"'

Middleport corner ot H gh Street
&amp; Powell Street 2 bedroom home
with dining room llv'ing room and
kitchen J.Jewer carpel and kitchen
cabinets makta the kitchen with

brlghl Also a

large lot Cute as can be Ae

ducod to $33 000 Plooae call
Dottle Turner Realty Dottte S
Turner Broktr at 7&lt;10-992 2886
N~

3 Or 4 Bldroom Ranch Wllh

Full Basement Heat Pump On
1 78 Acres In Country On State
Route 775 Paat o 0 Mcintyre

Park Call
~M

7~0

441 1159 AllOr S

Includes Lot

Mobllo home wllh full langth acldl

Real Estate
Wanted

360

Wt Pay l:A&amp;II

ForLAND!
Even If Ill Llstsd
20 500Acres
Call !lyon

IIIJ0.319-J323 Ext 1709
152 Fourth Avenue Gallipolis 3

Bedrooms WID Hook Up $375/
Mo Deposit Required 1 888
84().0521
152 Fourth A~enue Qalllpolls 3
Bedrooms WID Hook Up $3751
Mo Deposit Required 1 888

840-0521
For sale or rent 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy $350 month
plus deposit will sell on contract
with good references no pets

74o-8911-7244
FOR LEASE OR BALE 5 Year
Old 2 000 Sq Ft 3 Bedrooms 2
Bolhs Energy Efficient Homo
Near Cllffalda Golf Club $685/MO
74Q.448.2957

Put You Tax Refund To Work
$499 Down Only At Oakwood
Homes In Barboursville 304

736-3409

330 Farma for Sale
I ACAES &amp; POND
Wllh BeautifUl Bulll;li 10 Slle Be
~lnd

Pond 9elwon Golllpollo &amp;
Jackson 2 Mile&amp; 011 SR 35 land
Contract Available FrH Maps 1·

740--1

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 112 Acre morelltas with
House Trailer &amp; Barn Millstone

square feel office building
$3!50/mo mobile home spaces
$120/mo 2 bedroom mobile
home $300/mo Rl\lerpark Po
ml«&gt;'t 740.949-2093
Advertise your busrnes s n this
visible loeatlon on well tra~sted
highway Will put up and rna ntaln
your algn Call 740 992 6396 or

740 992 2272

Household
Goode

Appliances
Recondll oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relrl
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446

7795

GOOD USED

APPLIANCES

Washer&amp; dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

Vine Stroot Call 740 446 7398
1 8811-818.0128
New And Used Furniture Store
Balow Holiday Inn Kanauga
Good Used Beds Oresse s
Couches Dinettes Etc Big Sa~
lngs On New Furniture 740 446

4782
R&amp;D s Used Furmlure Great Se
taction Priced To Sell! Cams
And Browss • Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike We Buy Furnl
lure 740-367.0280

Antiques

530

7 Piece Antique BeCiroom Suite 2
Antique Oak Parlor Table 3 New
er Oriental Rugs Two SxB One
3x5 All For $1 000 F~rm 740
379 2923 Leaw Message

Pilot Program Rentere Needed

304 7J6.7295

meroy 740 992 2526 or 40 992

Pilot Program Renters Needed

lor Rent
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes

$260-$300 740-992 2167
2 Bedroom Trailer Beaullful Rlvtr
View In t&lt;anauga No Pets 740
441.()181
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath In Country

HUD Approved 740 367-0544
2 Bedrooms Y@d 5 Miles South
218 $275/Mo Includes Water

Trash $150 Dopoalt 740 256
6767
MOBILE HOME IN GALLIPOUS
$275/Mo

Ideal For Senior Per

sons N.. Phone 740-44f!.9S39

440

Apartments
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartmanll fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pats 740
992 2218

1 Bedroom Near Arbor's Nursing
Econom~al Ulililiea Quiet
Location $279/Mo + Utlltlas No

1539 Russ Moore ow

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise
2 While Dryers Kenmore &amp; Hot
point $65 Eactl 2 Wh te Wash
era $75 Each Both Whirlpool Call

After 5 30 PM 740.446-9066
Baby bed stroller car seat
awtng high cha r walker play
pen 304 675-2801
•

To Rio GJanda Campus 740 245

5858
BEAUTIFUL APAATMENTB AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 WeSiwood
OrNe lrom $289 to $370 Walk to
shop &amp; movltl Call 7-40 446

2568 Equal Housing Opportunity
Beech Street Middleport 2 bed
room furnt&amp;hed apartment, utllltlta
paid deposit &amp; referenctB no

pels 74D-992.0185
Christy s Family Living apart

menta home &amp; trailer rentals
740 992 4514 apartmenla avail
able furnished &amp; unturniahed

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downstairs Clean No Pets Ref
trances &amp; Oepoall Required
740-446-1519
Gracloua living 1 and 2 bedroom

IS ICrtl wooded grtll hunting
off At 33 1olld tarm hou11 with

barnlshedl water restf"V()tr QUI
ott wtll pol1d Moloo County t40-

992 5700 1150, OOll.

Nice 2 bedroom &amp; 1 bedroom
apartments for rent please call

oflsr8pm740-eat-f

Ono badiOCH11 apor1mlnl &amp; 2 bad-

610 Farm Equipment

m los a&amp;klng 15 000 740 992
1506

1996 Subaru Legacy Sedan All
Wheal Drive 3 4~2 Miles Load
od $13900 74D-379-2218
1998 Dodge Sport Neon 23 000
M las 4 Ooora Spoiler 5 Speed
$6 000 OBO 740-256-1233
1998 Pontiac Flreblrd Trans Am
17 000 miles auto CID pll)'
er factory chrome wheels allwtr
minor nght front damage $14 000

v8

7•D-992

151)8

1998 Pontiac Trans Am 350 V~
LS 1 Corvette Engine AutomatiC
Transmission Factory Chrome
Wheels T Tops Fully Loaded
500 wt Monsoon Stereo Sy1tem
WJth 1o Sp~takers And 12 Disc
CD Change In Trunk CasMftt In

Dash Desp Navy Metallic l'lllh
Dark Grey Leather tnterlo r Any
Reasonable Ofler Considered
741)..446 4548 Or 74Q.-446-.7375
1999 Camaro/Z 28 Auto JV8 T
Tops !loaded Bleck w!Orey
Leather Inter or Excellent Condl
lion
Garage Kept
Under

3 OOOmlles (304)675-1751

0% Financing Now Avallbate On

Dayld Mln~o

John Oaare Balers And Mower
Conditioners Carmichaels Farm
&amp; Lawn t 800 5941111 Or 740
446 2412 Gallipolis Ohio Don t
Miss Our John Deere Day Febru
ary12 1100AM

Galla lwto Sales

1 Row Cultl~ator Tractor Many
Miscellaneous TV
Stereo
Stove Ratrigeralor Other 'Things!

7.0 379 2522
2 Unclelmod Steel Bulldlngal

2147 Jacl&lt;son Plkt
Phone 740.446-0724
For Sale Or Trade 1973 Fltet
wood Caddy Good Condition,
Runs Excellent Engine 501
Transm ission Good 740 387

0436
TO BE SOLD AS 18 1992 Fotd
Eacort 76 000 Miles Needs
Transmission Can Be Sean From

Factory Cancellations! Brand
New Still Eratedl Urgent Must
Sell Quonset Arch Style One Is
40x60 Selling For Balance Only!

Gall polls Dally Tribuna Sealed
B1ds Will Be Accepted Through

1 600 825-5059 Elllon

Va ley Publishing Aeser~es The

Farm Tractor Ferguson 50 Ser
Good Shape
$4 500
es

(304)67S. 1S45
Tobacco Sticks 740

Older John Deere Model A Tractor With Some Equipment &amp; Ap
proximately 20 Round Bales Ot

Hey You Haul 740.245-5801

Livestock

630

7 Vear Old Non Registered Stud
Qualer Horse Broke To Aida

$700 740 367 7755

2 To 4 PM March 2 2000 AI Tho
5 00 PM March 9 2000 Ohio
Right To Rajocl Arrt And All Bids
Ter ms Cash AI Time Of Site All
B1ds Should Be Submitted In

Wrlllng To Ohio Valley Publishing
Co Attn Publisher 825 Third.
Avenue Gall po is Ohio 4563 t

720 Trucks for Sale
1986 Ford Ranger XL 4•4 29 V
6 Motor 5 Speed Overdrive
Transmlss on 7 Ft Bed Very

Good Condition Asking $3 800
740 256-1348
1968 Jeep Comanche Pick Up
Excellent Condition Call alter

4 30PM (304)675-3476
Special Spring Feeder Cart 5ale
Saturday March 4 2000 At 1 00
PM All Consglnments Welcome
Hauling A'll'allabla Cattle Accept
ed At 4 P;M Friday Athens Ltve
stock Sale 740 592 2322 Or

740.696 3531
Boyd Beef Cattle Performance
Tested Bull Sale so Angus And
1o Poll ad Herelords Monday

March 6 At 6 30 PM At Tho New
OK Livestock Au ctio n On The
A.A. Hwy In Maya~ltte KV For
Mora Informatio n Call Charlie
Boyd 606 76!3-6688
Butcher Hogs 740 256-6510

1990 Mllsublshl Mighty Max

Husbands Truck Wlfs Says
ToGol$3000 740-38f!.0579

1991 Ford F 150 XLT 2 WD 8
Bed 6 Cylinder Automatic AIC

PS RB PW AM/FM CD 70 000
Mleo $7 200 740 4411-3988
1992 Ford F 250 Dlooel 4 WD
Runs Good In Great Shape! 1989
Jeep Wagoneer 4 WD 740 448

9357
1994 1500 Sorlos CheVy Pick
Up 108K M los Aulo Air Ntw
BF Goodrich Tires &amp; Alum Can
te r line Rims

Firewood For Sate $40 A Face

Coni CaD 740 389-9648

•

I

For Slle Or Trade 400 Cummons
3208 Cat 1983 Full Size Truck

Bed Ford 740-256-l;365
For Sale

Buck SIO\Ie Fan &amp;

Thor $250 Call (304)682 3247
Gateway Computer less Than 1
Year Old Prlnler Included 740
441.()996 Ca11After4PM
Orubb a Plano tun ng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446 4525
Hot Springs hOt tub " person
good condition some chemicals
Included calt 740 992 5053 after
5pm

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EOUIPMENT
INSTALLED

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Round bales of hay 740 742
2302
Straw Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
Round Oell~ery &amp; Volume Dis
count Available Heritage Farm

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco Plants
Now taking Olders lor this Spr ng
F rst Orders will Guarantee Best&amp;
Earliest
Plants
Dewhurst

Forms,(304)89S.37401895-3789

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autoa for Sele

1995 White Ford E•plorar XLT 4
Wheel Drive 40oor New Tires

48 OOOMIIes

Moon Roof/CO

Loaded $15 500 Firm Flnanclno-

Avallablo (304)675 1802
1997 black

Chev~

S 10 S!Opslde

E~~:tended

Cab 3 door loaded
25 000 miles very sharp full far
1ngs $12 ooo 740 949 2045 or

740 949 22G3
1997 Dodge Dakota Sport In Ex
cetlent Condit on 5 Speed 4 Cy
IInder AM/FM Cassetta A!C

33 000 M los Appro• $9 !00
080 740 367 0474 Call Alter 5

P.M

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1988 Chevy S t O 4X4 V 8 Very

112 Pontiac Bonneville four door
excellent cond tlon sharp $4650

Good Condition C&amp;ll after 4 OOPm

740.949 2045 8\/Bnlngs
1980 90 Honda&amp; From $29/Mo
lmpoundal 0 Down 24 Months 0

1986 Dodge Ram 4~~:4 Automatic
CD Player 49 000 Miles S5 500
740-446 8050

19 9% LISIIngs 800.319 3323 Ext
3901

1986 Fora Truck 4 Wheel Drl~e
Runa Good And 4 Wheel Drl\le

Works Good Asking S2 000 304
n3 5339

as·

1981 Monte Carlo V 6 Molor
Runs Good Good Frame $800 00
74().446.9653

992 2679

1987 Chrvster LeBaron 2 Doors

•tt You Don t Call Us We Both
Lose Free Esllmatest 740 446
6308 1 81J0.291-o098

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropalrld ~lew &amp; Robulllln Stock
Cal Ron Evano 1 ~537 9528
Metal lathe 7 awing o~er bad
between centers auto feed
11 D von 4 jaw chuck $400 740

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge Inventory Discount Price&amp;

On VInyl Sktrllng Doors Wind
owa Anchors Water Heaters
Plumbing &amp; Etectrlcal Parta Fur
naces &amp; Heal Pumps Bennetts

Mobllo Homo Supply 740 448
9416
Muzzleloader Shotgun 12 Ga
Vent Alb Choke Tubes lnllna

740-441 1982
RESIDENnAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI Elflclencv 90% Gas
Furnaces Oil Furnacea t2 Seer
Heat Pumj) &amp; Air Conditioning
Syaterns Free S Year Parts &amp; La
bor Wananty Bannetl6 Healing I

room llouso In Mlddlopon 7-40

Cooling 1.8Q0.872 S987

111129191

Ron I Gun Shop 740-742 8412

II

wfBia~k

9252

Automatic Wllh Air PW POL
Great Gas Mileage

Looks &amp;

Runs Oood $I 895 740 4468991

1989 Ford Escon 2 Doors 5
Speed 1150000 740-256-6129
1990 Nlssan Ma~~:lma Accepting
Sealed Bids Thru March 8th

Plaaso Phone 740 367-5055
Between 7 30&amp; 4 PM
1991 Caprice Statlonwagon GOOd
Condition 3 HP Outboard Motor

740.379 2228
1992 Mercury Topaz 4 door au

tomallc 88 000 m los $1650 74o-

7•a 2357

1993 Buick Park Avenue 4 door
\llry fi ne condition 8\lery opt1on
like new tires 3800 V 6 clolh In
terlor $8500 1992 Ford Ranger
pickup XLT: perfect cond tlon ps
pb am/fm cassette cruise con

trol S apeod ale a Florida !ruck
$5995 740-992-6719

740 J88 9032

1993 GMC Work Van New
Trans ladder Rack 350 c Wtll
Taken Care of Non Smoker

$3100 080 (304)773-505-4

1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x• 8 Cyiln

der 5 Speed Loaded 88 000
Mllea Sl1 ooo OBO 740 448
1900
1997 Ford Ranger Extended Cab

v6

AT Now Tlroa Low Mllaago
740-258-1925
1998

Van

Ford

Wlnd•tar

$14 000 (304)675-110!

740

Motorcyclea

1993 Suzuki 12~ RM 2 Stroke
S1 200 OBO 740 245 5018 Or
352 4605Loave Mossago
199&amp; Yamaha Warrior Four
Wheeler hctllent Condition

$2 800 441510!

750' Boats &amp; Motol"'

for Sale
12' John Boat Swlve1 $1111 Tl'oll-

lng Motor Oara SS2S 740 448
3!63

'
;I

Red

1994 Chevy SIN.erado Step Side~
loaded E~~:cellent Condition New
T res $8 000 Firm 740 245-

•

'

H~s

Regis tered Angus Heifers &amp;
Bulla Registered Polled Slmmen
tal Bull Red &amp; Back L mousin Bull
740.256-6510

New Mlllenlum Dial! Ea1 All Oay
And Men Away Call Tracy At

740-448--Q390

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1995 Chevrolet Custom Camar6
custom show car custom
wheels &amp; daah black 7, 000

v6

992 1182 or 304 773 5305 alter
6pm

port From $273 $338 Call 740
992 S064 Equal Housing Oppor

&amp;
LakOYiew $32 000 Mort Aeroago
Avollabfo 7-40 368-1878

Good Condition $600 740 446
46 9
•

kopl S12 000 firm call 74CI-H2
7508 l ea~e message or cal arter
Spm

740.742 2421

2 4" Acres Winding Cro1Jroad1
Subdhtlalon Very Nice Area
corwentent LocatiOf1 Gattlpolla
AcldiHI $23 000 740-2&lt;15 S778
Blackto~ Frontage

Baldwin Acrlsonlc Spinet Plano

pearlized cream color tan ctoth
top excellent condit ion garage

Complete DISH Network satellite
system brand new $99 740

With Loading Accessories $265
740-388 8934 LIIIMI Ma68age

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

Musical
Instruments

570

r•cJ

Taunty Covor $6 900 (304)675
2029 $6 900

apartments at Village Mahar and
Riverside Apartment&amp; In Middle
tunlties

74D-446 2055 leave mossago

Four bu Is black Angus Umoustn

Pet&amp; 74Q.448.2957

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent

look~ng for tamale longhair
Dachshund to breed Please cau

For Sale
245-5121

Rd (304)S76 3033

5 Aoraa

12 10 99$300 740 256 1421

MERCHANDISE

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
t124EastManonSR 14E Po-

Home

All Credit R~ks 740.44f!.J583

Over 75 Tanks of Freshwater
F sh Locally Raised Parakeets/
Supplies Fish Tank/Pet Shop
2413
Jackson
Avenue /Pt

For Sale Reconditioned wash
era dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson A\lenue (304)675-7388

Older Model Trallor 28edrooml
1Bath good shape Camp Con
la y llrat lrailor on left Lta"¥~e

Land Home Packagas All Areas

Village Green Apartments 2
bedrooms IOtal eleclric appllanc
es turnished laundry room facll
ties and close to school appllca
tiona available at oll1ce 740 992

RENTALS

www coynlrytviT!ft com

(304)736-555-4

74().446-3093

AKC Registered Weimaraner 2
Females Shots &amp; Wormed Born

Berber Sale In Stock Items Mol
lohan Carpet 202 Clark Chapel
Road Porter OhiO 74().446-7444

Ings 740 992 2517

Galllpol~

Pete for Sale

560

capped EOH (304)675-6679

100121 :J.83B5
Anthony land Company LTD

1 Bedroom Apartment Furnished
Utilities Paid On VIand Street
PI Pleasant $275 per month

Loaded Slnglewidea Must Go!
S&amp;\lt Thousands! No Lot Renl
For 6 Mos Onty 0 Oakwood

Twin Towers now aq:epl!ng ap
plication&amp; for 1 BR HUD subs d
!zed apt ror elderly and haMI

510

lion three bedroom two bath
26 x65 on one acre located 1 11
3 mila out 143 oH Rl 7 call even-

Message $1300 (304)67S.1935

Block brick sewer p1pes win~
ows llnlel&amp; etc Ctaude Winters
Rio Granda OH Gall 740 245
5121

qulrod 740-446-3481

Rl~erv l ew lot suitable for house
or trailer never tloodedl $14 000
located In Syracuse OH 740

420 Mobile Homaa

FISHING, BOATING, HUNTING

1994 ead llae Otllgr'llr Edition - 89 k miles all leather all optionl

7055

Balhs Asking $21 000 OBO 740
367-0474 After 5 PM

Roqu&lt;ed 304 736-7295

550

no
Building Suppllea

eoo

304-7J6.7295

Country Living 3 Or 4 Bedrooms
Pay Closing Costs &amp; Move In
74Q.446 3093

peted Adull Pool &amp; Babv Pool
Pallo Start $3501Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Security Oaposlt Re

1&amp;92 Dodge Spirit PS PB AC
Good Gas Mittag• wan Mltt'l

1993 Old I 98 4 door ltalher
loaded great car SS900
992 701.

Tara TownhOuse Apartments
Vary Spacious 2 Bedroom&amp; 2

Floors CA 1 112 Salh Fully Car

1985 cnevv Futt Size 414 Cooll
Motor&amp; 740-446.0103

Wedding Dress Size 6 fo.uoy
Sheath Style Long Tra n Very El~nt $325
446-6833

23 ACRES 121 000
Olf SR 7 South 01 Gallipolis No
Restnctk&gt;nsl NEEDS TLC $2 300
Down On Land Contract
MEIGS COUNTY
CHEAPER THAN DliiT

1994 Single Wide 2 Bedrooms 2

3BR/2BA 2 Femlly Roome Heat

lola of windows very

180 Wanted To Do

1986 Mobile Homa 2B~ 14x70
Ready to move In on rented lot

For Data Is 1 888-585.0167

room Digital Thermo

rool gulterlng 1 car garage
2912 .A:nnlston Orl\le Pt Pleas

Will Babysit In my homo $20 per
child per ahl11 Will do shift worll

$9 000 (304)e75 7349

carpe~fam

Racine Ohio

Shuatlons
Wanted

1988 Fleming 2BA Trailer
14x60 Set up on Rented Lot

Largest New Inventory In South
ern Ohio Specials On Homes
And Financing In Progress Call

For Sale By OWner 3BR 2BA
large family room &amp; office new

120

(304)675-n92 No land Contract

3BR Brick Ranch located on the
corner or Birch/Elm In Meadow
brook Al;ldltlon PI Pleasant w/
Fireplace 2 FamllyRoom 1Bath
Full Basement Large Corner
Lots CentraiAir Fenced Back
yard New Hot Water Tank New

calla please Harts Kountry
Kitchen 3rd &amp; Peart Street

SSOO $4 000 pUft/mo 1 600 720.
IXI2!l www az opporl\lftl1y com

1987 Oakwood Mobile Home
14x70 :2BA/:2BA on rented prl
\late lot
Gsllipolls
Ferry

~-~~~~~~~O~netB:ed:

1991 Lumina Euro 2 Docn 1183

Grend Am 2 Door1 11182 cOVIlllr
RIS 2 Doorl. Four S 10 Plclt-IJPI

30"675-8017

Jack Russell terr ier pups tails
dOCked shots wormed 740 698

1 3 Bedrooms foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo "o/• Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details

rooms :2 BathS Make OHer Until

(304)67S 1366

710 Auloslor Sale

tstnod $1 995 DBO 740 2586647

Wedding dress alze li never worn

460 Space for Rent

$10 000 080 740-992 5886

March 6th 1•0 446 3968 Until
5 00 740-446-4477 After 6

One Bedrooql lurnlshed Apart
ment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
and Nice No pets Phone

314 200 PSI
$21 95 Ptr tOO 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 All Brass Com..
pr&gt;SIIon fittingS In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO.M7-9528
Waterline Speclsl

Continues Into Wayne National
Forftt 011 SA 140 &amp; SR 233

41 0 Houses fDr Rent

1995 14•70 Mobile Homo 3 Bod-

446-oooa

Me1chllndlae

3711 TDD 1 868 233 8694 Equal
Housing Oppor!L&gt;O!y

rooms I 1/2 baths new Berber
carpet
excellent conditiOn

Ooublewida On Lot $250 Deposit

$17000 740 211H663

nred of making your boss rich?

mobile home two
bedroom two bath ll~e new sit
ling on 2 114 acres ready 10
mo\le Into $26 000 firm also 3
piece living room suite vary good
condition $100 740-992-()6()2

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townl'tOusa
Apartments
Include'S Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740

540 Mlecellsneous

Pleasant (304)675 2063 Sun 1
4PM Mon Sot 11 AM 6PM

AEQUCED PRICES
20 ACRES $18 000
All Wooded Wllh Road That

992 5700

14~t70

Decks
(304)675 3955
(304)67S.3249

W• are now accepting appllca
!lone Apply In peroon No phone

WORK FROM HOME Are you

Air 1 800

t17ToVIow 741).448.9539

1983 14•70 Skyline 2 3 bed

Home Freo Cassette 1 688 613
!5275

Part Tl"'e Secretary Needed For

Free

LOT spB!NQ VALLEY
O,ne Large lot Approx 101 x171
City Water Sewer Natural Gas
Electric All Are Avellfl,bte Lot

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths AC 740
448-2516 Aft~r6PM

Moms Wanted Americas 11
Home Bualneas Moms Work At

A Fast Paced Gallipolis Bust
ness Applicant Needs To Be Fa
millar With Baste Office Pro
cedures Telephone Communk;a
lions And Computers Must

ts$13000

rooms 1 Bath 1988 14x70 Schult

tor an appointment

cation or call 740.992 6472 EOE

Melga Co Rutland Whiles Hill
Rd NlcetAcret$120000r11
Acres $14 000 Water Danville
SR 325 Nice 5 Acrtl $18 000
Waler Or Briar Ridge Rd 7 Acr

1982 1 4x70 Mansion 2 Bed

We look lorwart! to mooting youl

OVerbrook Center has part lime
posUions available for AN ' &amp;
LPN s all shifts for mora lnforma
uon please stop &amp; 1111 out an appll

sn1

Academy
Ridge 15 Acr
..
$11 500Friendly
CoSh Price

.,Ound Pool 740-:388 0301

Call1 800 929 57S3

25550 EOE

691

$19 OliO Or 24 Acres Wllh Large
Barn&amp; $34 000 Eureka Marabel
Rd ' 11 Acres $20 000 Or 31

1976 Mobile Home 3 Bdrms t
bath Nice Lot 18Ft X 38Ft In

new career with ual

Office Manager 68 bed lnterme
dlate care nursing facility High
school diploma or GEO required
Accounts Aacel\lable Med1care
and Medicaid b lllnglcollecllons
payroll and btnef1ts adminlstra
lion a~~:perlance preferred Send
resume to Point Pleasant Center/
Genesis Eldercare C/0 PO
Box 575 Point Pleasant WV

(3) 16d0 $254 Per Month Low

1976

TUANEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Dancero Wantod Top U 740
892 8387 Wed Sat (304)675

Excellent team atmo1phtrt ex
ceptlonal co workers benatn1
aM good Survey History Inter

(3) "' LOOK '
5 Bedroom&amp; 2 Baths o\18r 2 000
sq ft lor ten than $450 mo
FRE.IIvery &amp; Sot 1 80D-946
5678

Galllpolo

$30 000 Or 8 With Pond $28 5QO

BuysI

{1) .... AMAZING... •
Drywall 4BA 32xao- 011er 2346
sq ft Payments tow as $406 per

week 888 869 8372www Slay

home net

Gellle Co R10 Grande Scenic
Ower Oeadend Road 13 Acres

Now For FREE Maps And Fl
nanclng Info 10% OFF Cash

8110-948 5678

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

740-441 1412

Many Nice Lots To Choose From

lor Sele

Apartments
for Rent

440

BRUNER LAND

Fot Homo S•tes And Hunting Ca"

320 Mobile Homes

Spring Valley Plaza Call 740-446
0101

All Aoaesl To Buy or Sell
Shllley Speall 304-675-1429

Exporlonctd RN/MDS Nurse for
1oo bod okllltd nurotno lac lilly

740 446-6659

6777

~VON!

-

On At 160 Large 11 Room&amp; With
Basement Gas Heat AIC One
Garage Work Shop One
Land House Between Bula
Pike And Count~ Garages

(2) First Time Buyers Easy Fl
nanclng 2 end 3 Bedroom Ar
ound $200 Per Month Call 1

Business
Opportunity

210

nwr view $29 800

I

mo 1 80Q-948 5678

We are now setting up

~

On 2 lOts In Syracuaa 10 rooms

(»1)895 3W -

Largo Utility Room 1 Car Galllgo

1688-1100-8065
WWW IO"'QQ'PYY!!j.. Pi'

"-nntlh wtgglne
43410 DuiOitlown Aoed
....... Ohlo41771
Ol)ft 1TC

13950000 740-446-f069

Loria Helping Hand Cleaning
Service Will Do FlOOd Clean Up
Free Eatlmates Low Rates 740

Appreciated In The March 7th
Primary Vote Republican Cerlos

$350 $800Niook

TOW!IIhlp, Mlllp County
complete and IVIIIIble
IIIII Clerk'e Oflloe

Cash Cheshire Jtlsla Creek
Rd 6 Acres $12 ooo 15 Acres

Family Room Sltllng Room Olnlng

An E-Commorco Bu-s?

LEGAL NOTICE
The Yllr 1Hll Annu
P1111nollll lleport lor 8UI1I

lng New Carpet Atlalched Ga
rage Ptenry 01 Storage Space
Nice Neighborhood Le1a Than 2
Milas From Holzer Ready For Immediate
Postilion
Price

WANTED Your Support Will Be

Ato '1\)u Loofllng For

iOiiuty u..;·;o;iOWi,:; ~ 1_-.,;,P:.u=:b;:;Uc;.,N;,;,otl;;;:;.::o;,;,•_

Very Roaaonable (304)882 J880

cath for other books old pam
phlata dlarlts letters We also

Users Needed! $25 75 IHr PT I

12121 lTC

For Sale By OWner .c Bedrooms
3 Bathrooms New Roof And Slct

4 Bedrooms 2 Baths 5 Minutes
To Holzer HospUal Tp Gallipolis

FT 888 491 9224 www work out
of yOa-ohomo.com

Pomeroy, Ohio 457ell

Excellent care for person In my
home non smoker and Mobile

740-592-6651

Are You COnnected? Internet

hie linn comptatecl tit
report le IVIIIIIbl• •t It
IWDC Offloe loo1ted 1
33101 Hll1nd R011

Porches 740-:388 8931

Start Your Buslniiss Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rete

Ia pleased to announce tho
Gtand opening of 11s new Wei~
ston taUif\Q center

350 Lots It Acreage

Bll.riel In Spring Valley Ar11 3
Bedrooms 2 Balhl ~mlly Room
2 Car Garage 740-44e-8to7

Carpentry From Frame To Finish
Remodeling Add tiona Decks

copy of The Gamblers Mirror

110

Public Notice

W.W ConMM1110n Dlltlto

"-"'lt. Ohio 48711

nuo

310 Homes for Sele

01

FMPl mMENT
SERVICES

'

TOTAL BALANCE

Kathy
Hyllll,
Clerl(fi'Naurw
320 E••t Main Str•at•

Manager Rllall Jewelry Store
Retail Sales And Computer Ex
perlenca Necessary Benefits
Available Apply Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry 151 Second Ave

180 Wanted To Do

Will orter $100 for good 1844

buy old oil paintings 740 593
89f5MR1ng

CourlhouM

LEGAL NOncE
The 1nn11'1l lln1noh
report of Melge Boll 1n

"' lie - * 1 lllld 11U1 to IIIII
belt Of my lmolllllilge
•

To CLA 495 c/o Gatwpolla Dally
Tribune 82S Third Avenue Galli
polls OH 451331

ver And Gold Coins Proofsets

Qlamonds Antique Jewelry Got~
Rings Pro 1930 U S Currency

Denla L.; Bunce
The Stat1 Of Ohio, lllllgt •

Courity.
12)21 lTC

Wanted to Buy

90

Notice le' hel'lby given
that Joy Ann lmbocl1111, CaM
No 301100 of 28HII Appll
Grove, Dorcae ROid,
R1clne, OH 45771, lull
applied to the Commo~
Ple11 Court, Prolllte
Dlvlalon of Melg1 County
Ohio, lor 1n order to chlngl
her neme to Joy Anr
Speun
Slid IIPPIICIIIIon will bt
lillrd In Hid Court, at 1 31
p m on the 21th day o
111rch, 2000 11 1111111
County Prob1te Court
M~lal CIKJnty

740-24S.S747

Rick Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
aucllon
service
Licensed

PROBATE COUFIT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In the Matt1r of the NIIM
Chlnge ol Joy Ann
Imboden to Joy Ann Speun

TDtal Tlueury lllllnol
........
.331,102 31
Oulltlndlng c:hecb....
....,,.,....
(11,781 81)

327,32081
............ Dill!
0.00
AeiHIIII v.lulllon
0 00
Ploparty Till LAvlea.
lneldll 10 Mill
1 70
Outlldll1 0 Mill
8 110
llunlclpellnooma Till 1%
e.t!IMI!Id Popullllon 22.81
.......1Cenepa i&gt;!IPUIIIIOI'I

Maintenance POSition Full Time
Must Have Soma Electric•!
Plumbing Alr Conditioning Heat
lng Experience Send R11ume &amp;
Qualifications With References

On Keychaln 740-44HI401

70

Public Notice

Help Wanted

110

Australian Husky -5 week&amp; old

rebound and kicked tt out to MIChael Fmley who
sank a 3-pomter for a 90-87 advantage Cednc
Ceballos three po10t play capped a 35-9 spurt that
made It 93-87
Antome Walker led Boston wtth 23 pomts

from Page 11

I

:rue.day, February 21, 2000 :
'

\

•

�:hg. 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddlepofl, Ohio

'

BASEBALL HALL OF FAME

•

2000 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

Sparky, Mazeroski among those
awaiting vote by veterans committee

I

I

~'

-TAMPA, Fla (AP) - Sparky Anderson won two
World Senes Wtth the C10cmna11 Reds and another one wtth the DetrmtTtgers
Today, the only manager to w10 rmgs 10 both
leagues seemed sure to add another mle Hall of
Farner
Third on baseball's career w10 hst the popular
manager was expected to get the call from the Veterans Comnuttee at 2 p m EST, tellmg htm he d
been elected
But who would JOm him' Could 1t be Bill Maze- roslci Mel Harder or Gil Hodges'
If ptcked Anderson would get mSlde the doors of
t)je Hall for the first 11me He twtce VlStted Cooperstown when his teams played there but never toured
the shnne
Ted Wtlliams, Stan MuSial and the rest of the 14man Vets panel can choose one person m each of
four categenes - former maJor leaguers a combtnatlon of managers umptres execuuves and Negro
L'eaguers, 19th century players and personnel and
Negro Leaguers
"I feel like tliere s a chance a better chance than
last year" Mazeroski sa1d pnor to spnng trammg
'It's JUSt a feeling
' Turkey Stearnes, an outfielder who played nearly
two decades, looked like the top candtdate among
the Negn- Leaguers Outfielder Junmy Ryan and
second baseman Btd McPhee led the 19th century
list
It takes 75 percent for electton same as wtth the

NBA

ANNOUNCE1';1ENTS

Baseball W nters Assoctanon of Amenca Tony Perez
and Carlton FISk were elected 10 January
The Vets panel usually has 15 members Buck
O'Ne!l however ts not able to attend th1s years
meeung because of a rnmor health problem that
prevents him from traveling
If Anderson ts ptcked 1t wtll make for a Red letter day m Cooperstown on July 23 Perez, a former
Cmc10na11 first baseman and Reds broadcaster
Marty Brennaman are bemg mducted that afternoon
11i=
er~e~w
~a· s tallftne Vets were gomg to ptck former
manager Dtek Wtlltams over Anderson as the 16th
manager m the Hall But Williams pleaded no contest after bemg arrested on an mdecent exposure
charge mJanuary and that seems to have derailed his
chances for now
Anderson who turned 66 last week lS m his first
year of ehgtb\lity Wtth a record of 2 194-1 834, he
tratls only Con me Mack (3, 731) and John McGraw
(2, 784) for hfettme vtctones
Anderson managed Cmcmnatt from 1970-78
wmmng two World Senes ntles wtth the Btg Red
Machine He gutded Detrott from 1979-95 and won
another Senes rmg Along the way he won two
other pennants and a patr of d!VIs10n championships
He lS the only manager ever to top two franchises m career wms That could present a problem 1f
he s elected -he's sttll not sure whteh cap he d put
on his Hall plaque

Ewmg who scored oruy etght pmnts m 39 nunJazz 106, Nets 101
utes desptte Mourmng's absence 'We won the first
Karl Malone barely mmed his fourth career
quarter they won the rest of the game
tnple double with 35 pomts 12 rebounds and mne
Mashburn scored 24 pomts for Mtanu and asSISts as U tab beat VlSltmg New Jersey
Weatherspoon had 14 po10ts and 12 rebounds m a
Jeff Hornacek scored 27 pomts shootmg 10 of-11
reserve role
from the field and Bryon Russell added 14 as the
Mourrung nussed the game because of a sore left Jazz won for the stxth nme m seven games
ankle he lnJUred Saturday at Washington H e wont
Step!\on Marbury gomg agamst John Stockton m
oven travel to San Antomo for tomght s game wtth a match up of two of the NBA's be!ll: pomt guards
the Spurs
led the Nets wtth 34 pomts, while Kerry Kittles
'It was defimtely nerve-wracking s;ud Mourn- scored 22
tpg, who stood on the stdelines through much of
Hornacek sealed the vtctory on a patr of free
the second half But I m happy nght now
throws wtth 11 seconds left after the Nets closed to
Heat guard Voshon Lenard also nussed the game 103-101 on a 3-pomter by Marbury wllh 16 secwtth a lower abdonunal stram
onds rematmng
Larry Johnson scored 20 pomts for the Kmcks
Rockets 96, Clippers 77
who made thetr first four 3-pomt attempts and took
Cumno Mobley scored 21 pomts as Houston s
a. 29-12 lead after JUSt seven nunutes
reserves scored 63 pomts on the way to snappmg a
"You can't let them break your wtll 'Weather- five-game losmg streak wtth a wm at Los Angeles
spoon sa1d
Matt Bullard added 14 pomts for the Rockets
SuperSonics 84, Hornets 81
who were wtthout Hakeem OlaJUWon as they
Gary Payton scored 32 pomts and Seattle held ended a seven-game road skid
struggling Charlotte to 32 percent shootmg m the
The R:ockets career leadmg scorer flew back to
second half
Houston for tests to deternune the cause of qts
Payton had 21 pomts m the second half go10g 5
fattgue whJCh plagued him dunng the prcvtous
for-8 from 3-po10t range to send the Hornets to three games and linuted him to only 13 nun\lt~s on
thetr third consecuuve loss and thetr fifth m seven Sunday agamst the Lakers
games
,
The Rockets also held Los Angeles to 26 8 perPayton added mne rebounds etght asmts and two cent shootmg breaking the Rockets prevwus best
steals for the Somes who began a five-game road defenSive effort set Feb 5, 19&amp;9 when they held the
tnp by holding Charlotte to JUSt three field goals m Cmcmnau Royals to 28 7 percent
the final five-plus mmutes
Warnors 80, Hawks 75
.Eddie Jones led the Hornets wtth 23 pomts
Donyell Marshall had 23 pomts and 21 rebounds
Mavericks 108, Celt&amp;cs 100
as Golden State defeated Atlanta
Dtrk Now1tzki scored 26 pmnts, mdudmg a patr
Larry Hughes added 23 pomts and 10 rebounds as
o€ key 3-pomters m the fourth quarter and Enck the Warnors won thetr thtrd stratght at home It was
Strickland added 19 as Dallas won at Boston
JUSt the fifth ume thiS season Golden State won
The Mavencks tmproved to 4-4 smce the arnval when tmhng after three quarters
of Denms Rodman, who was on h!S best behav10r
lsa~ah Rider scored 24 pomts to lead the Hawks
aS he scored four pomts and grabbed 16 rebounds
D1kembe Mutombo added 13 pomts and 22
Dallas took tts first lead Since e2rly 10 the first rebounds the mnth ume thts sea~on he's grabbed 20
quarter when Rodman grabbed an offenSive or more rebounds Jlm Jackson had 21 po10ts

Aches

Greene dtdn t report to camp unttl Sunday
because he was tendmg to a fanuly SituatiOn and felt
lightheaded and nauseated when stretch10g He was
Page
taken by ambulance to a hospttal gtven two liters of
flu1d and released
struck out two as the New York Mets played the1r
The Cubs expected him to take part m a hght
first mtrasquad game of the spnng
work Monday but he arnved With chtlls and a low"My arm felt good; Hampton sa1d My location grade fever
was pretty bad but I dtdn t expect It to be nght on
'He's SJck, manager Don Baylor satd "I came m
this early'
here early this mormng and he was already here He
Country smger Garth Brooks, playmg left field
had a heavy coat on because he had the chills He
went 0-for-4 With a walk and two stnkeouts He had dehydratiOn yesterday He told me this was hiS
also lined mto a double play
first ttme m Arizona, and I know I've had some of
"It wasn't a great day but It was better than any the worst allergy attacks here"
day I ve had I d1dn t feel like I was drowmng,
In Dunedm Fla Toronto catcher Darren FletchBrooks satd
er had arthroscopiC surgery on hts nght knee and
In Mesa Anz Chtcago Cubs backup thtrd base- wtll be Sldehned 10-15 days
marl Willie Greene nussed his second stratght day of
fletcher will start rehab T\lesday ndmg a b1cycle
workouts
at the team's spnng trammg complex

from

WtLl BE HERE FRIDAY, MARCH 17TH

11

ToplS
faomPapBI
Wtth 3 09 left, but hit JUSt three field goals dur10g
the final seven nunutes and couldn t make a final
push
The Jay hawks fimshed w1th 17 turnovers and shot
JUst 31 percent wtth no 3-pomters Kirk Hmr1cq
was the only Jayhawks player 10 double figures w1th
11 pomts
Wagner made up for four turnovers With five
a~mts and hit seven free throws m the final 3 31 to
help Texas preserve 1ts lead
Chns Mlhm, consJdered the best pure center m
coUege bas)tetball, had a relattvely qu1et game w1th
mne pomts m what nught be his last game m the
Erwm Center

Mthm was 4-r;&gt;f-8 from the floor and gr;1bbed 12
rebounds as the ct;awd chanted, ' One more year 1
Mihm has not satd 1f he will turn pro after the season
I m not even gomg to talk about that nght now'
Mthm satd That was great No matter what happens wtth my qeclS!On It was mce
No. 24 Connecticut 74, Rutgers 69
Khalid EI-Anun h1t four free t)lrows and made a
game-clinching steal m the final 26 seconds as Connecucut won at Rutgers
Albert Mounng added 16 pomts and Jake Voskuhl
had 15 pomts and 13 rebounds as Connecticut (208 9-6 B1g East) clinched 1ts seventh stratght 20-wm

season
Dahntay Jones had 25 pomts to lead Rutgers (1513, 6-9),mcludmg a long 3-pomter With 15 seconds
rematmng to cut the Huskies' lead to 70-69

005

Supplement to:

Personals

Gfntleman Seeking Companalon
ship From N1ce Female For Talks
Walks &amp; Friendship Send Rt
pitas To 553 Second A\ltnua
Apartment 1403 Galljpolls OH

The Dally Sentinel

4!631

Gallipolis Dally Tribune

Why wait? Start meeting Ohio
s{nglea tonight Call toll lree 1
8Q)..766--2623 extension &amp;176

Point Pleasant Reglst4!r

30 Announcements
NI!WT5'Wiilnrlft Slioppe
9 West Stimson Arnens
740-592 1842
Quality clothing and household
ltfms $1 00 bag sale every
Tflursday Monday thru Saturday

Don't miss out on thla •••

9:00-S 30

0111ce ol Or Edwald L Howald 11
CLOSED
(Roflromenl)

40

Giveaway

Free Klnena to goOd home litter
Trained Can be teen anytime

Call Dave Harris or Matt Haskins at 992-2156

30213rd St MaS&lt;ln

Free roosters

'

wv

Cue Management Polltion - An
Outpatient Aleohol And Other
Drug Counseling Agency Local
td In Gallla And Jackson Coun
tlea Is Seeking A Case Manaoer

To Work With Adults And Adol
tscents PrOVIding Screenings
Evaluations Intakes Referrals
General Case Management Serv
Ices And Etc Must Have Know!

edge In The Field Of Chemical
Dependency Bachelors Degree
And /Or E~~:perience CCOC A
Plus Sand Resume By March 1o

2000 To FACTS 45 Olive SkHI
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 I Or FAX
740-446 8014 EOE M/F~
Cer11fled Nurae Alde1 Rotating
&amp;I"'IJts Intermediate care center
West VIrginia certification re
qulrad Point Pleaunt Ctnter
State Route 62 Route 1 Box
326 Poinl Pleasant WV 25550

EOE
Someone to do light house
cleaning In PI Pleasant area one
day a week Must ~ave own
transportation &amp; ret 5ai'KIIener or
application clo Point Pleasant
Register EB29 200 Main Street
Pt Pleasant wv 25550

lntamet Markeii/'IQ
$25 $75nlr
www any-1-can aarn com
1-888 816-1682

740-992 0703

P~s father Rottweller mother
7~247

7606

P-uppies
coma &amp;

If this is what your caddie looks like•••

•
•

..

Ml~~:ed Bread

See

the

Can
mother

lfl41675..057

Found gray &amp; white kl11en brown
flea collar followed ch ldren home

•

lrom Hysell Run 740 992'6895
Fpund Puppy Malo Btack Lab

•

. •

•

•

Mix State Street Vicinity 740

*-4479
Lost black &amp; while Japanese
Chin 6 months old blue collar
BJIIey!Hysell Run area 740 992

61191
Lest male Mt Cur pup brown &amp;
wtllte Smith Rd Pomeroy reward

klil s pel 740-992 n21

Lost Black &amp; Brown Medium Siz
ad Dog Near Crown City So
wards Ridge Area Blue Collar

740 256 9153
lost Keys Has Lener H• Key
cbaln Also Has Kroger s Card

"

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

•

AU. Yanl8altl Mull
Be Pold In Advance
OfAQLM 2 00 p m
the day bafonl the ld
II to run Sunday
edition 2 00 p m
F~day Mondoy ldldon
- 10 00 e m S.turdoy

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

you need to tiit The Trail.
WINTER. What a mtserable ume for golf Unless you head for the sunny

All Yard Solei Mua1 Bo Ptld In
A~vence Deadline 1 OOpm the

South and the red hot Robert Trent Jones GolfTraal Last year, over 5,000
golfers from Mmnesota took advantage of the beauuful courses. the mce
weather and the low rates to expenence what the
New York Ttmes called "some of the best pubhc
golf on Earth • And wh1le we can't guarantee
the weather, we can prom1se you great golf
Call fo( mformauon about our 3 day/2-mght golf
and hotel packages as low as $162

day before the 1d 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition

1:OOpm Friday
Btg yard sale 1st 3rd 43410
Dutchtown Ad Racine clothes
toys swing set baby clothea

,...,
80

Auction

and Flea Market
BUI Moodispaugh Auctioneering
buy/sell estates consignment
auction every Thursday 6pm
Middleport Ohio &amp; WV License

740-989 2623

1·800·949·4444 or

Billy Goble Auct oneer Pomeroy

Ohk&gt; 740-992 7502

www.rtjgolf.com

Professional Auction Service
Farm Eslate Inventory Reduc
tlon Fundraising Steven Balz AI

Public Notice

STATE OF OHIO OFFICE
OF THE AUDITOR
JIM PETRO, AUDITOR
OF STATE
CASH BASIS SUMMARY
FINANCIAL REPORT FOR
THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 1111111
POMEROY VILLAGE
MEIGS COUNTY
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYPES, EXPENDABLE
TRUST
FUNDS,
PROpRIETARY
FUNDS,
NON-EXPEND
TRUST
FUNDS, AGENCY FUNOII,
TOTAL MEMORANDUM
ONLY
RECEIPTS, REVENUE
OPERAnNG
RECEIPTS
REVENUES

SuppllH end lleteltllle.

21111,210 00

21111,210 00

C.pl1el OUIIIly •••••.,....... " ...,, ....

8,81177,
42,332 38

32,52081,

Debt ServJ...,..................,,......

21,122 15, 21,822.111
TOTAL DISBURSEMENT&amp; •

1,1113,788 01, 2,858.113,
387.781 84, 0 00, 0 00,
1,1184,432.&amp;8
Totll Receipt• over!(under)
Dl8bu,..menlll

(12:.1,388 83), 3,083 23,
7A,11111, 0.00, 0 00,
(411,2254'1
OTIIER
FINANCING
BOURCES/(USEB), NON·
OPERATING

5,844 27, TOTAL

44853238
lntergovernmentel Reyenue

458,8118 511,

Tl'IIWI Tl8neporllliton o 00
Contr8CIIIIll S..VIan 000

REVENUE~O[KPENSE~

Local Tua,........~ .. ~·,·:·

442,188.09,

Public Notice

275 811,

~.11744&amp;
Special Aue~~m~nle

00

Ch1rge1 for BerviCII

•

MEMORANDUM

ONLY
Locll TIXee ....,..............O00
11118rt10Vtrnmenllll

llevenuu 8111,040.34,
1111,04034

PI'OOMdalrom Bille Of Debt

452,285 117, 0.00
•
Sele oiBondll
01 Notea..... ::::::::::::::..o~:oo~
•
Flnea, Uc•n••• &amp; Permlte, Bille
107,385.74, 10~-- 74
112,000 00, 112,000 00
Mlacell1neou1, 33,121 01, Other Prooeecla.. • .......0.00
9,814.78, 43,243 .,.
Mlecell1neoua ............ 0.00
TOTAL RECEIPTS: ·•:·::~·~·:"~ 111111 of Fixed " - - ..0.00
1,071,388 18, 5,120 18, Oilier
481,1100 7S, 0 00, 0 00, ~noperallng 11ft
1,5311,207 01

c;urrent:

Seourlt)' of Per1on1 &amp;

Ploperty 414,727.114,
2,841.21!, 41_~1375'.24
f'ubllc ltMrm Bervlcee
8,424 72, 8,424 72
IAIIUI8 nme Actlvltlft
1,817.58, 1,1a7 58
Community Envlron-

000
llulc Utility SeMen
11,1111.11, 5,1111 51
Trlneportetlon 521,818 42,
521!118.42
GMMI81~mMd......,. ....

~.,....,;::,::::::::::::::::::.0.00

Tranafer~n

120,000 00, 120,000 00
Alttlnct•tn ................. 0.00
1'r'antftil.()u. ...

•••• • • •

=~120,000~.00
DebtBelllloa
~.177.83),

(33.177.83)

Other (U . . e) Nonop.
EXJM1ndlturea, 1211,027 11,

328,1111,.11211.312 11

TOTAL

OTHER

FIN.

SOURCI!BI(UIU) .. .. ....

112,000 00, 0 00, (411,1M 110),
(3al 00), 0 00, 38,11011.10
Ex- Recelpta lllld Oilier
flnencl _n e
Source•
o-J(Unclel) (40....131.

208 73,

3,CM13.23 30,1145.11, (321.00),
000

. . _ . Service..~."~,. ........

Expend Dlab
Other
Uaae/Net
(40,3111 83),

208,502 82,
201,711.55

1110,011 03, 1110,0111.CI3

Caeh

a

3,0113.23, 30,141.11, (328.00)1

B111nce

December 31 14&amp;,011 23,
7,405 58, 128,827 13,
45,288 75, 0 00, 327,320 81
R11erve lor ENCUMBER
.OECEMBEIJ 31 11,74&amp; 117,

0 00, 22,210 4&amp;, 0 00, 0 00,
38,181,45
Summary of lndebtedne11,
OUTSTANDING JAN 1, 1111111,
NEW ISSUES, RETIRED,
OUTSTANDING DECEMBER

31, 1111111
lllol1gage Flftenue

00 Bond•
00 Nota 21111,000 00,
20.000.00, 185,000 00

0.00
0.00

R-nue Antlclpetton Nota

138,413 28, 112,00000
21,772 51, 222,840 77
OWDA 1.011111
• .. 0 00
lndullrlll

28,814 75,
4&amp;1100.72

DISBURSEMENTS,
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS,
OPEFIAnNG EXPENSES

Fund

o.v. Boncle...o.oo

Oilier Bonde I NOIH 0.00
TOTAL 341,41328,
112,000 00, 45,772 51,
407,84077
TNieury a.lllnce ....

•-

•

l~nte
Cull In~

t~an Crook

Public Notice

0 00, (8,715.1111)
Fund Cull Balllnce...., 1
111,4111 01, 4,342 35,
11,eat 52, 45,5113 n, ooo,
334,038. .

.281,443 01
71,2113.30
..378

oo

166 Ohio &amp; Wool VIrginia 304
n3 5765 Or 304 na-5447
Wedemeyer 1 Auction Service

c-No

Gallipolis Ohio 740-379 2720

30800
Dookllt 0 P~g~200
NOnCE
RIIVIIICICode,

Aboolute Top Dollar All US Sll

leo 2717 01 (A)

Sterling Etc Acqutaltlont Jewelry

M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
A\ollnu&amp; Gaji&gt;OI~ 740-446 2942

C2)211TC

Acres W1th Barn S37 000 Gallla

367 5043
Motner or 2 will babysH 'ln home
Sandhill Rd Fenced In yard
Wanted To Co Mount&amp; Tree
Ser~lce Bucket Truck Ser\llce
Top Trim Removal Stump Grind
lng Fullv tnaured Free Esll

malos Bidwell Ohio 1 800 838
9568 Or 740-:388 9648
Wanted To Do Paint Well Char
actertl Cartoon$ Landscapes
Eel For Nurnrles Chlldrens
Bedrooms Ect 740
3437

••e

Ask For Jno~

FINANCIAL

Help Wanted

AAEYOU AEAD'I'
FOA AN UOIIIMERCE
BUSINESS?
121471 MR. PT 1FT
1IIIIOM33VEXT 1211

www.WGIII0u101You,. ,
Hooiltcom

recOmmends that you do busi
nus with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until vou ha\le investfgated
Are you connected? Internet us
era wanted! $500 to $1000 a

0110d candldeloo ahould apply to
Aocksprtng_a Aehabllltallon Can

lor 367S8 Rockiprlngo Rood Pomeroy Ohio 45789 ann Carol
G.-tng AN DIIOCtor of Nu111ng
Equal Opporluntly ErnpioyM'

(1} 1 Ooublewlde $249 Per
Month Low Down Payment 1

800 691 6777
(2) 14 Wide $167 Par Month
Low Down Paymeot 1 BOO 691

Down Paymenl

Millennium TeiHervktl

230

Prolesslonal
Servlcee

outbound !OieserviCO poollons
No axperienca necessary
Starling wage II $8/hr
wllh quarterly salary revtews
Management opportunllles avan
able 401K/l.4edlcali1lo!UVI'old
vacatk&gt;na avalloblo 3 Shifts dally
Flo•lblo scheduling Start your

No Fee Unless We Wlnl

Interview appointments tor

1-1188 5112 3345

All real estate adVertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act

of 1968 wnlch makes It !legal

to advertise •any prefererx:e
limitation or discrimination
based on race cotor religion
saM tamHJal status or national
or~ln or any Intention to
make any such preference
Hm~atlon or d scrimlnat1on •

Need 7 ladles To Sell Avon 740.
446 3358
Need Someone To Mow Gran

on Weakly Baals &amp; Trim Hadgos
As Nalded Will Taka Bids Unlit
March 1S 2000 Send Bids To
PO Bo• 527 OH 45643.

This newspaper will not

kno.,.ngly accept

Now accepting applications at

Now Ta~lng Applications From

Dominos Pizza Galllpolle &amp; Po
meroy Only 74Q.446..4040

Part Time Registered MLT Or

CLA Apply In Potson Medical
Plaza 936 State Roulo 160 Galli
polls
Seamstress Wanted Straight
Seams Heavy VInyl 740 388

9310
Servtce Technician Wanted Ap

ply AI Big Boys Walar Toys
ChaahiAI Ohio 45620
URGENTLY NEEDED fqr plasma
donors earned $35 to $45 tor 2

a hours weekly

Call Sera Tee.

1

advertisements for rual estate
which s In ~lolatlon of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In lhis npwspaper
are avallabfa on an equal

Eldorado Adull Home 740 992
5039

Have En)ov Dealing With Tho
Public Send Resume To P 0 Box
1109 Gallipolis Ohio 4!631

Wood Gallla County Commls

otoner

Paid For By Col!oa P. Wood
3952 State RoUIO 141
Gallipolis. OH 45831

opportunity basts

REAL ESTATE

310 Homea for Sale
2 3 bedroom house 2 acres ga
rage trun trees country living
minutes lrom town Bradbury
$39 5QO 740 367 n85

3 Bedroom Brick Home Double
Garage Large Lot Finished
Basement Mctlntenance Freel

740 446 8329
Green Township 3 Bedrooms
With Garage Outbuilding 1 1/2
Acres MIL low Utilities Many
Extrasl740-446-0744

Letart WV Near Vernon Church
(304)882 3204

140

Buslnen
Training

stat Newly refinished Hardwood

Floors $78 000 (740)588-9082
3BR Homo For Solo or Renl Gal
tlpolls Feny Araa (304)875-1105

Georgal Portable Sawmill don t
liaul your logl to 1ha mill juat call

304-67S.1 957
Handyman maintenance service

carpentry. pelnlln(l aiding rnollng
dry wall and tloc:lrk:ol 740 849
1035

$12 000
(304)576 2101/or
(304)67S.5108
1981 Flemming t4x70 central
air new carpet 2 full baths

or

Mansion mobile home
t4M60 two bedroom one bath
central air total electric ready to
move $11500 740949-9016
1991

e

Acres

$5

ooo

o

1

Acres

$10 000 5+ Acres For $8 SOO
Call Fot Free Maps ANTHONY
LAND CO LTD 1 800 213 8365

www countrytyme com

Or Just Relaxing In Your Own
Camper &amp; C&amp;mpslte Overlooking
Blue La~e To VIew 740 446

9539
FLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc
torvlllo Ohio GRANb OPENING

2 Lot Models Must Go Extra
Nice Loaded Your Choice $998
Down Hurry Won I Last Oakwood

Golf polls 740.446 3093
1 Lei! $299/Mo

Pump/Central Air Double Car
Garage Lynn Drive New Haven

304 736 7295

Shown by appl only (304)882
2049

Room Ear In Kitchen Sunroom
Work Shop On Acre Lol White
Vlnnel Fence New U Siding And

NswRoof Caii74044H659
An Older Houae In Crown City
Would Make 4 G4xld Rental Price

Bnl (304)675 2608
House for salt two storv 2 3
bedrooms one bath Middleport
asking $29 000 No down pay
ment Financing available to

qualified Call1 800 368 8194
Love!~

tan acres In a country set
ling four bedrooms two and hatr

baths lormal llvlflll room and famIly ('OOM two flrtplaceS two apart
ments lour car garage and two
storage bull dlnoa please call

740-992 2292

"'

Middleport corner ot H gh Street
&amp; Powell Street 2 bedroom home
with dining room llv'ing room and
kitchen J.Jewer carpel and kitchen
cabinets makta the kitchen with

brlghl Also a

large lot Cute as can be Ae

ducod to $33 000 Plooae call
Dottle Turner Realty Dottte S
Turner Broktr at 7&lt;10-992 2886
N~

3 Or 4 Bldroom Ranch Wllh

Full Basement Heat Pump On
1 78 Acres In Country On State
Route 775 Paat o 0 Mcintyre

Park Call
~M

7~0

441 1159 AllOr S

Includes Lot

Mobllo home wllh full langth acldl

Real Estate
Wanted

360

Wt Pay l:A&amp;II

ForLAND!
Even If Ill Llstsd
20 500Acres
Call !lyon

IIIJ0.319-J323 Ext 1709
152 Fourth Avenue Gallipolis 3

Bedrooms WID Hook Up $375/
Mo Deposit Required 1 888
84().0521
152 Fourth A~enue Qalllpolls 3
Bedrooms WID Hook Up $3751
Mo Deposit Required 1 888

840-0521
For sale or rent 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy $350 month
plus deposit will sell on contract
with good references no pets

74o-8911-7244
FOR LEASE OR BALE 5 Year
Old 2 000 Sq Ft 3 Bedrooms 2
Bolhs Energy Efficient Homo
Near Cllffalda Golf Club $685/MO
74Q.448.2957

Put You Tax Refund To Work
$499 Down Only At Oakwood
Homes In Barboursville 304

736-3409

330 Farma for Sale
I ACAES &amp; POND
Wllh BeautifUl Bulll;li 10 Slle Be
~lnd

Pond 9elwon Golllpollo &amp;
Jackson 2 Mile&amp; 011 SR 35 land
Contract Available FrH Maps 1·

740--1

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 112 Acre morelltas with
House Trailer &amp; Barn Millstone

square feel office building
$3!50/mo mobile home spaces
$120/mo 2 bedroom mobile
home $300/mo Rl\lerpark Po
ml«&gt;'t 740.949-2093
Advertise your busrnes s n this
visible loeatlon on well tra~sted
highway Will put up and rna ntaln
your algn Call 740 992 6396 or

740 992 2272

Household
Goode

Appliances
Recondll oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relrl
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446

7795

GOOD USED

APPLIANCES

Washer&amp; dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

Vine Stroot Call 740 446 7398
1 8811-818.0128
New And Used Furniture Store
Balow Holiday Inn Kanauga
Good Used Beds Oresse s
Couches Dinettes Etc Big Sa~
lngs On New Furniture 740 446

4782
R&amp;D s Used Furmlure Great Se
taction Priced To Sell! Cams
And Browss • Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike We Buy Furnl
lure 740-367.0280

Antiques

530

7 Piece Antique BeCiroom Suite 2
Antique Oak Parlor Table 3 New
er Oriental Rugs Two SxB One
3x5 All For $1 000 F~rm 740
379 2923 Leaw Message

Pilot Program Rentere Needed

304 7J6.7295

meroy 740 992 2526 or 40 992

Pilot Program Renters Needed

lor Rent
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes

$260-$300 740-992 2167
2 Bedroom Trailer Beaullful Rlvtr
View In t&lt;anauga No Pets 740
441.()181
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath In Country

HUD Approved 740 367-0544
2 Bedrooms Y@d 5 Miles South
218 $275/Mo Includes Water

Trash $150 Dopoalt 740 256
6767
MOBILE HOME IN GALLIPOUS
$275/Mo

Ideal For Senior Per

sons N.. Phone 740-44f!.9S39

440

Apartments
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartmanll fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pats 740
992 2218

1 Bedroom Near Arbor's Nursing
Econom~al Ulililiea Quiet
Location $279/Mo + Utlltlas No

1539 Russ Moore ow

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise
2 While Dryers Kenmore &amp; Hot
point $65 Eactl 2 Wh te Wash
era $75 Each Both Whirlpool Call

After 5 30 PM 740.446-9066
Baby bed stroller car seat
awtng high cha r walker play
pen 304 675-2801
•

To Rio GJanda Campus 740 245

5858
BEAUTIFUL APAATMENTB AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 WeSiwood
OrNe lrom $289 to $370 Walk to
shop &amp; movltl Call 7-40 446

2568 Equal Housing Opportunity
Beech Street Middleport 2 bed
room furnt&amp;hed apartment, utllltlta
paid deposit &amp; referenctB no

pels 74D-992.0185
Christy s Family Living apart

menta home &amp; trailer rentals
740 992 4514 apartmenla avail
able furnished &amp; unturniahed

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downstairs Clean No Pets Ref
trances &amp; Oepoall Required
740-446-1519
Gracloua living 1 and 2 bedroom

IS ICrtl wooded grtll hunting
off At 33 1olld tarm hou11 with

barnlshedl water restf"V()tr QUI
ott wtll pol1d Moloo County t40-

992 5700 1150, OOll.

Nice 2 bedroom &amp; 1 bedroom
apartments for rent please call

oflsr8pm740-eat-f

Ono badiOCH11 apor1mlnl &amp; 2 bad-

610 Farm Equipment

m los a&amp;klng 15 000 740 992
1506

1996 Subaru Legacy Sedan All
Wheal Drive 3 4~2 Miles Load
od $13900 74D-379-2218
1998 Dodge Sport Neon 23 000
M las 4 Ooora Spoiler 5 Speed
$6 000 OBO 740-256-1233
1998 Pontiac Flreblrd Trans Am
17 000 miles auto CID pll)'
er factory chrome wheels allwtr
minor nght front damage $14 000

v8

7•D-992

151)8

1998 Pontiac Trans Am 350 V~
LS 1 Corvette Engine AutomatiC
Transmission Factory Chrome
Wheels T Tops Fully Loaded
500 wt Monsoon Stereo Sy1tem
WJth 1o Sp~takers And 12 Disc
CD Change In Trunk CasMftt In

Dash Desp Navy Metallic l'lllh
Dark Grey Leather tnterlo r Any
Reasonable Ofler Considered
741)..446 4548 Or 74Q.-446-.7375
1999 Camaro/Z 28 Auto JV8 T
Tops !loaded Bleck w!Orey
Leather Inter or Excellent Condl
lion
Garage Kept
Under

3 OOOmlles (304)675-1751

0% Financing Now Avallbate On

Dayld Mln~o

John Oaare Balers And Mower
Conditioners Carmichaels Farm
&amp; Lawn t 800 5941111 Or 740
446 2412 Gallipolis Ohio Don t
Miss Our John Deere Day Febru
ary12 1100AM

Galla lwto Sales

1 Row Cultl~ator Tractor Many
Miscellaneous TV
Stereo
Stove Ratrigeralor Other 'Things!

7.0 379 2522
2 Unclelmod Steel Bulldlngal

2147 Jacl&lt;son Plkt
Phone 740.446-0724
For Sale Or Trade 1973 Fltet
wood Caddy Good Condition,
Runs Excellent Engine 501
Transm ission Good 740 387

0436
TO BE SOLD AS 18 1992 Fotd
Eacort 76 000 Miles Needs
Transmission Can Be Sean From

Factory Cancellations! Brand
New Still Eratedl Urgent Must
Sell Quonset Arch Style One Is
40x60 Selling For Balance Only!

Gall polls Dally Tribuna Sealed
B1ds Will Be Accepted Through

1 600 825-5059 Elllon

Va ley Publishing Aeser~es The

Farm Tractor Ferguson 50 Ser
Good Shape
$4 500
es

(304)67S. 1S45
Tobacco Sticks 740

Older John Deere Model A Tractor With Some Equipment &amp; Ap
proximately 20 Round Bales Ot

Hey You Haul 740.245-5801

Livestock

630

7 Vear Old Non Registered Stud
Qualer Horse Broke To Aida

$700 740 367 7755

2 To 4 PM March 2 2000 AI Tho
5 00 PM March 9 2000 Ohio
Right To Rajocl Arrt And All Bids
Ter ms Cash AI Time Of Site All
B1ds Should Be Submitted In

Wrlllng To Ohio Valley Publishing
Co Attn Publisher 825 Third.
Avenue Gall po is Ohio 4563 t

720 Trucks for Sale
1986 Ford Ranger XL 4•4 29 V
6 Motor 5 Speed Overdrive
Transmlss on 7 Ft Bed Very

Good Condition Asking $3 800
740 256-1348
1968 Jeep Comanche Pick Up
Excellent Condition Call alter

4 30PM (304)675-3476
Special Spring Feeder Cart 5ale
Saturday March 4 2000 At 1 00
PM All Consglnments Welcome
Hauling A'll'allabla Cattle Accept
ed At 4 P;M Friday Athens Ltve
stock Sale 740 592 2322 Or

740.696 3531
Boyd Beef Cattle Performance
Tested Bull Sale so Angus And
1o Poll ad Herelords Monday

March 6 At 6 30 PM At Tho New
OK Livestock Au ctio n On The
A.A. Hwy In Maya~ltte KV For
Mora Informatio n Call Charlie
Boyd 606 76!3-6688
Butcher Hogs 740 256-6510

1990 Mllsublshl Mighty Max

Husbands Truck Wlfs Says
ToGol$3000 740-38f!.0579

1991 Ford F 150 XLT 2 WD 8
Bed 6 Cylinder Automatic AIC

PS RB PW AM/FM CD 70 000
Mleo $7 200 740 4411-3988
1992 Ford F 250 Dlooel 4 WD
Runs Good In Great Shape! 1989
Jeep Wagoneer 4 WD 740 448

9357
1994 1500 Sorlos CheVy Pick
Up 108K M los Aulo Air Ntw
BF Goodrich Tires &amp; Alum Can
te r line Rims

Firewood For Sate $40 A Face

Coni CaD 740 389-9648

•

I

For Slle Or Trade 400 Cummons
3208 Cat 1983 Full Size Truck

Bed Ford 740-256-l;365
For Sale

Buck SIO\Ie Fan &amp;

Thor $250 Call (304)682 3247
Gateway Computer less Than 1
Year Old Prlnler Included 740
441.()996 Ca11After4PM
Orubb a Plano tun ng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446 4525
Hot Springs hOt tub " person
good condition some chemicals
Included calt 740 992 5053 after
5pm

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EOUIPMENT
INSTALLED

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Round bales of hay 740 742
2302
Straw Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
Round Oell~ery &amp; Volume Dis
count Available Heritage Farm

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco Plants
Now taking Olders lor this Spr ng
F rst Orders will Guarantee Best&amp;
Earliest
Plants
Dewhurst

Forms,(304)89S.37401895-3789

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autoa for Sele

1995 White Ford E•plorar XLT 4
Wheel Drive 40oor New Tires

48 OOOMIIes

Moon Roof/CO

Loaded $15 500 Firm Flnanclno-

Avallablo (304)675 1802
1997 black

Chev~

S 10 S!Opslde

E~~:tended

Cab 3 door loaded
25 000 miles very sharp full far
1ngs $12 ooo 740 949 2045 or

740 949 22G3
1997 Dodge Dakota Sport In Ex
cetlent Condit on 5 Speed 4 Cy
IInder AM/FM Cassetta A!C

33 000 M los Appro• $9 !00
080 740 367 0474 Call Alter 5

P.M

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1988 Chevy S t O 4X4 V 8 Very

112 Pontiac Bonneville four door
excellent cond tlon sharp $4650

Good Condition C&amp;ll after 4 OOPm

740.949 2045 8\/Bnlngs
1980 90 Honda&amp; From $29/Mo
lmpoundal 0 Down 24 Months 0

1986 Dodge Ram 4~~:4 Automatic
CD Player 49 000 Miles S5 500
740-446 8050

19 9% LISIIngs 800.319 3323 Ext
3901

1986 Fora Truck 4 Wheel Drl~e
Runa Good And 4 Wheel Drl\le

Works Good Asking S2 000 304
n3 5339

as·

1981 Monte Carlo V 6 Molor
Runs Good Good Frame $800 00
74().446.9653

992 2679

1987 Chrvster LeBaron 2 Doors

•tt You Don t Call Us We Both
Lose Free Esllmatest 740 446
6308 1 81J0.291-o098

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropalrld ~lew &amp; Robulllln Stock
Cal Ron Evano 1 ~537 9528
Metal lathe 7 awing o~er bad
between centers auto feed
11 D von 4 jaw chuck $400 740

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge Inventory Discount Price&amp;

On VInyl Sktrllng Doors Wind
owa Anchors Water Heaters
Plumbing &amp; Etectrlcal Parta Fur
naces &amp; Heal Pumps Bennetts

Mobllo Homo Supply 740 448
9416
Muzzleloader Shotgun 12 Ga
Vent Alb Choke Tubes lnllna

740-441 1982
RESIDENnAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI Elflclencv 90% Gas
Furnaces Oil Furnacea t2 Seer
Heat Pumj) &amp; Air Conditioning
Syaterns Free S Year Parts &amp; La
bor Wananty Bannetl6 Healing I

room llouso In Mlddlopon 7-40

Cooling 1.8Q0.872 S987

111129191

Ron I Gun Shop 740-742 8412

II

wfBia~k

9252

Automatic Wllh Air PW POL
Great Gas Mileage

Looks &amp;

Runs Oood $I 895 740 4468991

1989 Ford Escon 2 Doors 5
Speed 1150000 740-256-6129
1990 Nlssan Ma~~:lma Accepting
Sealed Bids Thru March 8th

Plaaso Phone 740 367-5055
Between 7 30&amp; 4 PM
1991 Caprice Statlonwagon GOOd
Condition 3 HP Outboard Motor

740.379 2228
1992 Mercury Topaz 4 door au

tomallc 88 000 m los $1650 74o-

7•a 2357

1993 Buick Park Avenue 4 door
\llry fi ne condition 8\lery opt1on
like new tires 3800 V 6 clolh In
terlor $8500 1992 Ford Ranger
pickup XLT: perfect cond tlon ps
pb am/fm cassette cruise con

trol S apeod ale a Florida !ruck
$5995 740-992-6719

740 J88 9032

1993 GMC Work Van New
Trans ladder Rack 350 c Wtll
Taken Care of Non Smoker

$3100 080 (304)773-505-4

1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x• 8 Cyiln

der 5 Speed Loaded 88 000
Mllea Sl1 ooo OBO 740 448
1900
1997 Ford Ranger Extended Cab

v6

AT Now Tlroa Low Mllaago
740-258-1925
1998

Van

Ford

Wlnd•tar

$14 000 (304)675-110!

740

Motorcyclea

1993 Suzuki 12~ RM 2 Stroke
S1 200 OBO 740 245 5018 Or
352 4605Loave Mossago
199&amp; Yamaha Warrior Four
Wheeler hctllent Condition

$2 800 441510!

750' Boats &amp; Motol"'

for Sale
12' John Boat Swlve1 $1111 Tl'oll-

lng Motor Oara SS2S 740 448
3!63

'
;I

Red

1994 Chevy SIN.erado Step Side~
loaded E~~:cellent Condition New
T res $8 000 Firm 740 245-

•

'

H~s

Regis tered Angus Heifers &amp;
Bulla Registered Polled Slmmen
tal Bull Red &amp; Back L mousin Bull
740.256-6510

New Mlllenlum Dial! Ea1 All Oay
And Men Away Call Tracy At

740-448--Q390

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1995 Chevrolet Custom Camar6
custom show car custom
wheels &amp; daah black 7, 000

v6

992 1182 or 304 773 5305 alter
6pm

port From $273 $338 Call 740
992 S064 Equal Housing Oppor

&amp;
LakOYiew $32 000 Mort Aeroago
Avollabfo 7-40 368-1878

Good Condition $600 740 446
46 9
•

kopl S12 000 firm call 74CI-H2
7508 l ea~e message or cal arter
Spm

740.742 2421

2 4" Acres Winding Cro1Jroad1
Subdhtlalon Very Nice Area
corwentent LocatiOf1 Gattlpolla
AcldiHI $23 000 740-2&lt;15 S778
Blackto~ Frontage

Baldwin Acrlsonlc Spinet Plano

pearlized cream color tan ctoth
top excellent condit ion garage

Complete DISH Network satellite
system brand new $99 740

With Loading Accessories $265
740-388 8934 LIIIMI Ma68age

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

Musical
Instruments

570

r•cJ

Taunty Covor $6 900 (304)675
2029 $6 900

apartments at Village Mahar and
Riverside Apartment&amp; In Middle
tunlties

74D-446 2055 leave mossago

Four bu Is black Angus Umoustn

Pet&amp; 74Q.448.2957

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent

look~ng for tamale longhair
Dachshund to breed Please cau

For Sale
245-5121

Rd (304)S76 3033

5 Aoraa

12 10 99$300 740 256 1421

MERCHANDISE

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
t124EastManonSR 14E Po-

Home

All Credit R~ks 740.44f!.J583

Over 75 Tanks of Freshwater
F sh Locally Raised Parakeets/
Supplies Fish Tank/Pet Shop
2413
Jackson
Avenue /Pt

For Sale Reconditioned wash
era dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson A\lenue (304)675-7388

Older Model Trallor 28edrooml
1Bath good shape Camp Con
la y llrat lrailor on left Lta"¥~e

Land Home Packagas All Areas

Village Green Apartments 2
bedrooms IOtal eleclric appllanc
es turnished laundry room facll
ties and close to school appllca
tiona available at oll1ce 740 992

RENTALS

www coynlrytviT!ft com

(304)736-555-4

74().446-3093

AKC Registered Weimaraner 2
Females Shots &amp; Wormed Born

Berber Sale In Stock Items Mol
lohan Carpet 202 Clark Chapel
Road Porter OhiO 74().446-7444

Ings 740 992 2517

Galllpol~

Pete for Sale

560

capped EOH (304)675-6679

100121 :J.83B5
Anthony land Company LTD

1 Bedroom Apartment Furnished
Utilities Paid On VIand Street
PI Pleasant $275 per month

Loaded Slnglewidea Must Go!
S&amp;\lt Thousands! No Lot Renl
For 6 Mos Onty 0 Oakwood

Twin Towers now aq:epl!ng ap
plication&amp; for 1 BR HUD subs d
!zed apt ror elderly and haMI

510

lion three bedroom two bath
26 x65 on one acre located 1 11
3 mila out 143 oH Rl 7 call even-

Message $1300 (304)67S.1935

Block brick sewer p1pes win~
ows llnlel&amp; etc Ctaude Winters
Rio Granda OH Gall 740 245
5121

qulrod 740-446-3481

Rl~erv l ew lot suitable for house
or trailer never tloodedl $14 000
located In Syracuse OH 740

420 Mobile Homaa

FISHING, BOATING, HUNTING

1994 ead llae Otllgr'llr Edition - 89 k miles all leather all optionl

7055

Balhs Asking $21 000 OBO 740
367-0474 After 5 PM

Roqu&lt;ed 304 736-7295

550

no
Building Suppllea

eoo

304-7J6.7295

Country Living 3 Or 4 Bedrooms
Pay Closing Costs &amp; Move In
74Q.446 3093

peted Adull Pool &amp; Babv Pool
Pallo Start $3501Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Security Oaposlt Re

1&amp;92 Dodge Spirit PS PB AC
Good Gas Mittag• wan Mltt'l

1993 Old I 98 4 door ltalher
loaded great car SS900
992 701.

Tara TownhOuse Apartments
Vary Spacious 2 Bedroom&amp; 2

Floors CA 1 112 Salh Fully Car

1985 cnevv Futt Size 414 Cooll
Motor&amp; 740-446.0103

Wedding Dress Size 6 fo.uoy
Sheath Style Long Tra n Very El~nt $325
446-6833

23 ACRES 121 000
Olf SR 7 South 01 Gallipolis No
Restnctk&gt;nsl NEEDS TLC $2 300
Down On Land Contract
MEIGS COUNTY
CHEAPER THAN DliiT

1994 Single Wide 2 Bedrooms 2

3BR/2BA 2 Femlly Roome Heat

lola of windows very

180 Wanted To Do

1986 Mobile Homa 2B~ 14x70
Ready to move In on rented lot

For Data Is 1 888-585.0167

room Digital Thermo

rool gulterlng 1 car garage
2912 .A:nnlston Orl\le Pt Pleas

Will Babysit In my homo $20 per
child per ahl11 Will do shift worll

$9 000 (304)e75 7349

carpe~fam

Racine Ohio

Shuatlons
Wanted

1988 Fleming 2BA Trailer
14x60 Set up on Rented Lot

Largest New Inventory In South
ern Ohio Specials On Homes
And Financing In Progress Call

For Sale By OWner 3BR 2BA
large family room &amp; office new

120

(304)675-n92 No land Contract

3BR Brick Ranch located on the
corner or Birch/Elm In Meadow
brook Al;ldltlon PI Pleasant w/
Fireplace 2 FamllyRoom 1Bath
Full Basement Large Corner
Lots CentraiAir Fenced Back
yard New Hot Water Tank New

calla please Harts Kountry
Kitchen 3rd &amp; Peart Street

SSOO $4 000 pUft/mo 1 600 720.
IXI2!l www az opporl\lftl1y com

1987 Oakwood Mobile Home
14x70 :2BA/:2BA on rented prl
\late lot
Gsllipolls
Ferry

~-~~~~~~~O~netB:ed:

1991 Lumina Euro 2 Docn 1183

Grend Am 2 Door1 11182 cOVIlllr
RIS 2 Doorl. Four S 10 Plclt-IJPI

30"675-8017

Jack Russell terr ier pups tails
dOCked shots wormed 740 698

1 3 Bedrooms foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo "o/• Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details

rooms :2 BathS Make OHer Until

(304)67S 1366

710 Auloslor Sale

tstnod $1 995 DBO 740 2586647

Wedding dress alze li never worn

460 Space for Rent

$10 000 080 740-992 5886

March 6th 1•0 446 3968 Until
5 00 740-446-4477 After 6

One Bedrooql lurnlshed Apart
ment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
and Nice No pets Phone

314 200 PSI
$21 95 Ptr tOO 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 All Brass Com..
pr&gt;SIIon fittingS In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO.M7-9528
Waterline Speclsl

Continues Into Wayne National
Forftt 011 SA 140 &amp; SR 233

41 0 Houses fDr Rent

1995 14•70 Mobile Homo 3 Bod-

446-oooa

Me1chllndlae

3711 TDD 1 868 233 8694 Equal
Housing Oppor!L&gt;O!y

rooms I 1/2 baths new Berber
carpet
excellent conditiOn

Ooublewida On Lot $250 Deposit

$17000 740 211H663

nred of making your boss rich?

mobile home two
bedroom two bath ll~e new sit
ling on 2 114 acres ready 10
mo\le Into $26 000 firm also 3
piece living room suite vary good
condition $100 740-992-()6()2

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townl'tOusa
Apartments
Include'S Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740

540 Mlecellsneous

Pleasant (304)675 2063 Sun 1
4PM Mon Sot 11 AM 6PM

AEQUCED PRICES
20 ACRES $18 000
All Wooded Wllh Road That

992 5700

14~t70

Decks
(304)675 3955
(304)67S.3249

W• are now accepting appllca
!lone Apply In peroon No phone

WORK FROM HOME Are you

Air 1 800

t17ToVIow 741).448.9539

1983 14•70 Skyline 2 3 bed

Home Freo Cassette 1 688 613
!5275

Part Tl"'e Secretary Needed For

Free

LOT spB!NQ VALLEY
O,ne Large lot Approx 101 x171
City Water Sewer Natural Gas
Electric All Are Avellfl,bte Lot

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths AC 740
448-2516 Aft~r6PM

Moms Wanted Americas 11
Home Bualneas Moms Work At

A Fast Paced Gallipolis Bust
ness Applicant Needs To Be Fa
millar With Baste Office Pro
cedures Telephone Communk;a
lions And Computers Must

ts$13000

rooms 1 Bath 1988 14x70 Schult

tor an appointment

cation or call 740.992 6472 EOE

Melga Co Rutland Whiles Hill
Rd NlcetAcret$120000r11
Acres $14 000 Water Danville
SR 325 Nice 5 Acrtl $18 000
Waler Or Briar Ridge Rd 7 Acr

1982 1 4x70 Mansion 2 Bed

We look lorwart! to mooting youl

OVerbrook Center has part lime
posUions available for AN ' &amp;
LPN s all shifts for mora lnforma
uon please stop &amp; 1111 out an appll

sn1

Academy
Ridge 15 Acr
..
$11 500Friendly
CoSh Price

.,Ound Pool 740-:388 0301

Call1 800 929 57S3

25550 EOE

691

$19 OliO Or 24 Acres Wllh Large
Barn&amp; $34 000 Eureka Marabel
Rd ' 11 Acres $20 000 Or 31

1976 Mobile Home 3 Bdrms t
bath Nice Lot 18Ft X 38Ft In

new career with ual

Office Manager 68 bed lnterme
dlate care nursing facility High
school diploma or GEO required
Accounts Aacel\lable Med1care
and Medicaid b lllnglcollecllons
payroll and btnef1ts adminlstra
lion a~~:perlance preferred Send
resume to Point Pleasant Center/
Genesis Eldercare C/0 PO
Box 575 Point Pleasant WV

(3) 16d0 $254 Per Month Low

1976

TUANEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Dancero Wantod Top U 740
892 8387 Wed Sat (304)675

Excellent team atmo1phtrt ex
ceptlonal co workers benatn1
aM good Survey History Inter

(3) "' LOOK '
5 Bedroom&amp; 2 Baths o\18r 2 000
sq ft lor ten than $450 mo
FRE.IIvery &amp; Sot 1 80D-946
5678

Galllpolo

$30 000 Or 8 With Pond $28 5QO

BuysI

{1) .... AMAZING... •
Drywall 4BA 32xao- 011er 2346
sq ft Payments tow as $406 per

week 888 869 8372www Slay

home net

Gellle Co R10 Grande Scenic
Ower Oeadend Road 13 Acres

Now For FREE Maps And Fl
nanclng Info 10% OFF Cash

8110-948 5678

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

740-441 1412

Many Nice Lots To Choose From

lor Sele

Apartments
for Rent

440

BRUNER LAND

Fot Homo S•tes And Hunting Ca"

320 Mobile Homes

Spring Valley Plaza Call 740-446
0101

All Aoaesl To Buy or Sell
Shllley Speall 304-675-1429

Exporlonctd RN/MDS Nurse for
1oo bod okllltd nurotno lac lilly

740 446-6659

6777

~VON!

-

On At 160 Large 11 Room&amp; With
Basement Gas Heat AIC One
Garage Work Shop One
Land House Between Bula
Pike And Count~ Garages

(2) First Time Buyers Easy Fl
nanclng 2 end 3 Bedroom Ar
ound $200 Per Month Call 1

Business
Opportunity

210

nwr view $29 800

I

mo 1 80Q-948 5678

We are now setting up

~

On 2 lOts In Syracuaa 10 rooms

(»1)895 3W -

Largo Utility Room 1 Car Galllgo

1688-1100-8065
WWW IO"'QQ'PYY!!j.. Pi'

"-nntlh wtgglne
43410 DuiOitlown Aoed
....... Ohlo41771
Ol)ft 1TC

13950000 740-446-f069

Loria Helping Hand Cleaning
Service Will Do FlOOd Clean Up
Free Eatlmates Low Rates 740

Appreciated In The March 7th
Primary Vote Republican Cerlos

$350 $800Niook

TOW!IIhlp, Mlllp County
complete and IVIIIIble
IIIII Clerk'e Oflloe

Cash Cheshire Jtlsla Creek
Rd 6 Acres $12 ooo 15 Acres

Family Room Sltllng Room Olnlng

An E-Commorco Bu-s?

LEGAL NOTICE
The Yllr 1Hll Annu
P1111nollll lleport lor 8UI1I

lng New Carpet Atlalched Ga
rage Ptenry 01 Storage Space
Nice Neighborhood Le1a Than 2
Milas From Holzer Ready For Immediate
Postilion
Price

WANTED Your Support Will Be

Ato '1\)u Loofllng For

iOiiuty u..;·;o;iOWi,:; ~ 1_-.,;,P:.u=:b;:;Uc;.,N;,;,otl;;;:;.::o;,;,•_

Very Roaaonable (304)882 J880

cath for other books old pam
phlata dlarlts letters We also

Users Needed! $25 75 IHr PT I

12121 lTC

For Sale By OWner .c Bedrooms
3 Bathrooms New Roof And Slct

4 Bedrooms 2 Baths 5 Minutes
To Holzer HospUal Tp Gallipolis

FT 888 491 9224 www work out
of yOa-ohomo.com

Pomeroy, Ohio 457ell

Excellent care for person In my
home non smoker and Mobile

740-592-6651

Are You COnnected? Internet

hie linn comptatecl tit
report le IVIIIIIbl• •t It
IWDC Offloe loo1ted 1
33101 Hll1nd R011

Porches 740-:388 8931

Start Your Buslniiss Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rete

Ia pleased to announce tho
Gtand opening of 11s new Wei~
ston taUif\Q center

350 Lots It Acreage

Bll.riel In Spring Valley Ar11 3
Bedrooms 2 Balhl ~mlly Room
2 Car Garage 740-44e-8to7

Carpentry From Frame To Finish
Remodeling Add tiona Decks

copy of The Gamblers Mirror

110

Public Notice

W.W ConMM1110n Dlltlto

"-"'lt. Ohio 48711

nuo

310 Homes for Sele

01

FMPl mMENT
SERVICES

'

TOTAL BALANCE

Kathy
Hyllll,
Clerl(fi'Naurw
320 E••t Main Str•at•

Manager Rllall Jewelry Store
Retail Sales And Computer Ex
perlenca Necessary Benefits
Available Apply Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry 151 Second Ave

180 Wanted To Do

Will orter $100 for good 1844

buy old oil paintings 740 593
89f5MR1ng

CourlhouM

LEGAL NOncE
The 1nn11'1l lln1noh
report of Melge Boll 1n

"' lie - * 1 lllld 11U1 to IIIII
belt Of my lmolllllilge
•

To CLA 495 c/o Gatwpolla Dally
Tribune 82S Third Avenue Galli
polls OH 451331

ver And Gold Coins Proofsets

Qlamonds Antique Jewelry Got~
Rings Pro 1930 U S Currency

Denla L.; Bunce
The Stat1 Of Ohio, lllllgt •

Courity.
12)21 lTC

Wanted to Buy

90

Notice le' hel'lby given
that Joy Ann lmbocl1111, CaM
No 301100 of 28HII Appll
Grove, Dorcae ROid,
R1clne, OH 45771, lull
applied to the Commo~
Ple11 Court, Prolllte
Dlvlalon of Melg1 County
Ohio, lor 1n order to chlngl
her neme to Joy Anr
Speun
Slid IIPPIICIIIIon will bt
lillrd In Hid Court, at 1 31
p m on the 21th day o
111rch, 2000 11 1111111
County Prob1te Court
M~lal CIKJnty

740-24S.S747

Rick Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
aucllon
service
Licensed

PROBATE COUFIT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In the Matt1r of the NIIM
Chlnge ol Joy Ann
Imboden to Joy Ann Speun

TDtal Tlueury lllllnol
........
.331,102 31
Oulltlndlng c:hecb....
....,,.,....
(11,781 81)

327,32081
............ Dill!
0.00
AeiHIIII v.lulllon
0 00
Ploparty Till LAvlea.
lneldll 10 Mill
1 70
Outlldll1 0 Mill
8 110
llunlclpellnooma Till 1%
e.t!IMI!Id Popullllon 22.81
.......1Cenepa i&gt;!IPUIIIIOI'I

Maintenance POSition Full Time
Must Have Soma Electric•!
Plumbing Alr Conditioning Heat
lng Experience Send R11ume &amp;
Qualifications With References

On Keychaln 740-44HI401

70

Public Notice

Help Wanted

110

Australian Husky -5 week&amp; old

rebound and kicked tt out to MIChael Fmley who
sank a 3-pomter for a 90-87 advantage Cednc
Ceballos three po10t play capped a 35-9 spurt that
made It 93-87
Antome Walker led Boston wtth 23 pomts

from Page 11

I

:rue.day, February 21, 2000 :
'

\

•

�•

•

1\Hieday, Febr\Niry 2SI, 2000

Pomeroy, llkldleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLE¥00P

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

... ...,.

Advertise your
message

~~-=-=-:;;P::u.,~IIC~c:;;:N~otiil~ce~=-1~ Public r.-otlce
L1p1 NOttce

I

Attn: Cont-ra
Sollobury Townohlp will be
taking aeolad bide on
Hazard Mltlgollon Grant
Project wor1c to bo dona In
Sollobury Townahlp. Work
wHI ccnolot of llavotlon of
.homao obovo flood 111(11.
Blda will be oponad at
ragulor Townohlp maotlng
held ol Sollobury Townohlp .
holl .In Rockoprlngo on
Morch 7th II 8:30 pm. For
ocopa of work call (740)

\

.

I
I

j

PSI
CONSTRUCTION

tiM following: 1982 Dodge
Ram 350 Maxi Van. ·The
vehicle hoo a high root wl1h
wolk· ln copoolty, with
ooaUng for thlrtoan. SHiod
blda will bo accoptod until
Monday, Morch 13, 2000.
Tho Malga County Council
On Aging, Inc. raoarvol the
right to eccept or reliCt any
and all bldo. For mora
lnformotlon contact Ron
Harrla ot (7401 982-2111.
(2) 'ZT, D
(3) 2 3TC

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

•

.

'

INC.

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
The Molgo County Board
of HNith will offer fer oala
by ooalad bid two (21
autornobltoa.
·.
1980 Ford Crown VIctoria,
ton
In color aerlol
IZFACP72BXLX153138. .
1981 Ford Crown VlctOrll,
Gray In color aarlol
IZFACP72G8MX1011094.
Automobllao ore In
running condition, and will
be oold to the hlghaot
bidder with a minimum bid
of $500.00 per auto ..
Automoblloa will bo aold 11
Ia with no warrantleo
_ _ . t o r lmpllod.

New Homes • Vinyl.

Garages
• Replace(lllmt Windows
• Room Additions ·
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
Siding • New

CLASSIFIEDSI

SHOP AT HOME

740.992-7599

992·6215

....,,..,......

· luht Body Peart/
All replacement
parts

. Fra hllvtry
740-742-9501
'Toll Free

Ohio

C&amp;C

General

Home

DIGITAL
CONSIGNMENT
&amp;ALES. Do You Have Somo1hlng
You Want To Stll? Have You
Been On Tt'adto More Than Once
Of Twice wHh No Sale? Have You

Been llaied In The Local News-

papt~r And Bulletin Boards?

I.
l

Let
U1 AdvertiH Your Product Wortd
Widl On The lrHernet Auclions.
You Keep Your Merchandise Until II Still. Sell Your Marchandirse
To Colleclors And Get More
· Money For lt!'Adveruae To MIIHo.na O,f. Internet User&amp;. Today!!
Cd 30U7s-.493.
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction.

· New Construction &amp; 'Remodel/

l
I

Drywall , Siding, Roofs, Addl·
Uons. Palnllng, etc . 130.)674·
4823 or (304)674-0155.
livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, tree estimates, lllelime
g·uarantee. 12yrs on job experl•""'· (304)695·3887.

SuperiOr Home Maintenance And
Plumbing Wt Do All Repairs On
Homtl And Trailers, Fast Strv•
k:e17oo-44Hl113. .
.

840 Electrical and

· Refrigeration

An.ntlon: Hea11ng And CoolIng Shop Olfert Cl&lt;ea1 Ra111 And
E - Sorvlco. Lot Our Expen.
enct Technician Give You A
Free Eatlmate Today And Btat
TN Spring Rush. Call Advanced

Comfort Sytlema

740-ue.

~~

0818.
AMklentllll or commercial wtrJng,

-

-

..,...

or roPalro. Mjlo1or L&gt;

cen•td tltctrlclan. Ridenour
E1ectrlcol , WV000308. 304·615·

•I

t.'t ... AiitO.
C.ll Alittle 0....
• Drlrewly 'Stette
• Lltt4aattpl Moterlttl

• Ttp S.il &amp;MmrMI c..,..t
• 8oll01t Serrlee
•Lisltt lt••ll•t .
Ult . . eton

t) t) )

c '"1 . I ' '---&gt;
--

SiaftNfBom•

Construetfon
New Construction &amp;
- Remodeling· Kitchen __
. Cabinets· Vinyl Siding·
ltoors - Decks · Garages

Free Estimates

367-0317

740· 742-3411
' I

Rreves .

,•

I

.
i'

l

'

~~

'

I ;

'

r---~----------------~
CREDrr PROBLEMS???

BtiRKFS

~Ser..lc:e

No Credit • Slow CredH • Bttnkruptcy

Repo • Dlvorded

Scrubbed &amp;

WORRYIIG!t!·
ll!'mberreeement...

cleaned ·
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 -Any
Normal Size Room.

No

You're Treated wHh R...,.ctl
Cell Now for lnetant Approvelll..

llllrolovoaclob1orof&amp;o.nclola'lladl.. ..t,._o!wlr~af1.
0110111
utoillvn. A,.....""'"""""......,...,
......... p!Oplltj, for lois" hor ......... This..., lodll1lo ........... . .
. ........ housohold """'You lloould oilroi1 ony .............. .......,.., 11
"'a11ontoy W.O. r•1 h ;
.

inly--""""" --..

For lnforma11on ragardlng
Bonlcruptoy oonti1ot

William Safranek, Attorney
5112·5025 Athenl

CARPET SERVICE

Clean &amp; Scot~h
Guard $40 - Any
Normal Size Room.

740·742-2706
74Q-446-1141

*A.I!I:a UotiH'VIDP. . .I
I

•..tEtM3..,, 1&lt;4tlfhl.-.fllllo•!

r:•11fk'*'..,.,. mrUIIlttllllt

•OIKnnW Ma01t W Nrtkll wwt·

CAlL NOW 1·800-250-4098

BUT HIS HUMIDITY
IS WAY UP tl

.·

SELF STORAOE.
29870 Baahan
. Road .

;•

..

. Plllft

AD Ill+' • Trador 11
Eqajpment P1111B
Fadory Autltorilecl

c-.IH P1111B
Dea1en.

,•.., .•.

.

1/ltJO ... Rl. 7 Soulll
'; CotJMI/I, OH 467U

Dotod: Jonuory 4, 2000
John N. IItie, Chalrt11811
Rill D. Smith, . , . _
(2) 8, 111, 22, D 4TC

ij

••

~~1-pct:

f't.'l

l

,.

,.~

-~

•' i
II

•

r---::-:::~~-..., :,. ~

. HOWAlD .
EICIVITIIII CO. \
''n ...,..
, wrr r , 1~:_,
BuliJOHr &amp; Baeklloe .
Semoeo
.
Houllll &amp; Trailer Siteo

Land Clearing &amp;
-, Grading
Septle Syatenu &amp;

UtiUtle•
17401 tt2-SIII

.

DIPIYIAI

v

Pasa

3NT

Pass

ITUESDAY

.'

CASH LOANSI
• Bad Credit OK
• Euy Qualifying
• Fut.$ervlce
• Low Payment~
• Cot o'kllilltlal
l..aoG-332-2411

3•

Novitmber
6 Unsealed
7 Repeat

native

Now'a.attna
·.
.

H.lah &amp; Dry:

.Self~Storaif
33795 Hiland Rd.:
Pomell'oy, Ohio

740·992·5212
1 , . 1 .... pol

••

·e· ·

your , life easier. They'll come
throoqh for you.
·.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

..
Crhar

Friends or usociates could p,lay a
prominent role in your affain
1odoy. 8111 you won't mind • bit;
in ftct. you'll we!come che
involvement.
.
GEMINI (May 21·1unc 20)

~

. I

•

Wednetday, Mord\1, 200().
The y- alteod wUI be 11ood

'

Competiliv~ sihlltions shouJd not

be dodsod 1odoy because1he flies
are. fovorins yoo by slontirts the

· limo1oplacepateremplwilon
, yoor ponona1 ambiu..., Seven!

: desileo

)'011

oddo siiJht)Y .In your favor. Con·
centrale on winninJ, not on rhe

fee1. 1110Rsly ....,. ·

, could be odvon«&lt;&lt; alicteafully.
. • PISCES (Fcib, 20-Mordl 20) If
YOU ~·t look oot for your own
· intorelll, why should you e!IJIOC1
• otben 1o do so for yoo?_Do not t,.
llaid belt or indltr....l 1o tbe
opolnt wheN you won'l _,.

opposition.

CANCEl\ (lane 21-July 22)

· You might, be a tritle too introspKtive cOncemina yOUr. plam
-orid datination ,todoy, but onc:c
Y'!U ploD ..... ~·~ Cleltl
"'ondi dtlllceo .... ,...:U,dlolk

l,_..tr. Pllces.- ,_...,'"
... 1llrthdly ..~~. Seaol for y-

iI

~riph pnillcllono

· "lip' I MCIIIflll city,

.

Bo• 1758, Mur·

'

1ray Hill Slolloe, New York, NY

ltot56. a.· ...,.

y..,

1o .....
Zodiac'lip.
' - ' '
. AAD!S tMOr&lt;tt 21·APB 191
Don't JUifer in ailenoo 10doy if
)'OU •mqulra ...... klad of ...... .
,_,Mob ycq noodo know 1o

I1

l

. _....,.yoakoow-..

, . '

•

, U!O (July 23-Aua. 22) Whll

for tbe,

,.. .oheod by moilhit $2 .....
SASE 1o ~ do ddtt
MWIJ'IPO~ P.O.

1

LIBRA (Sepl. '23..o.:t. 23)
Someone ·who likeo you and
knows your ambitions miah1 be
ins1rumentol in',dolnJ aomethins
that wiD pV11 yoar-•··,
lt'1 a penon you· may have mel
R!Ct!ntly.

SCORPIO

(Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
younelf from·
involvements tl,at are tedious or
OiSI~sociate

commer&lt;ial W!IAY. if •i all possi· ·
ble. It's to your bt.nefit to associ' · ote with outters thot could ,..;.
· !llize your Outlook.
SA.GnTARIUS (Nov. 23-J&gt;eo.
, 21) Cotch up on all those little
thincs aroun4 the house you've
been promisinJ younetryoo'd do
for lht! family. On~ · you, ·get

movins. you'll enjoy 1he order

brinas into y~ life .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jon. ·

19) What you oee and hear 1odoy

-hi """'
- they
.....
hond. 1ho VIROO (AUJ. 23-$epl, 22)
8ecouoe yoo'llllb 1ho..., ~
Jlme to moke everyone wl .

con 111 used to ,your penonal
advlftlip in a prominent wty, so
try to be u keen an oblerver and
11 aood a l i - u yoo c.- be:
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20'Feb, 191
Several linonclal ·opportuni1ieo
moy b e . - y&lt;M1odoy lhll wiD
be wqrdly of

;o.·nt. • ..., ...,.lilr .,.._.

developitorft. lie w•l'hl Mtd
.... tbe tDoot of dtol wltlolt io.
wlllllri your .......
' •

you'D do baLtodol' io help 0111on ""'out 1h0ii oil\in ... lhow '
dtom how 1hey can pi betler '

·· Wllom you deal feel ~hey ore 11p0clol ...s 4aorvo your ..........

your••..............

'

b·
.•.

• •

8 Achy9 lemony drink
10 P(lid no ttces
11 Okla. tirne
13 S1er·ShHped

~

,_

'• .

piJJyer
22 Cannon part

23 Opening (ol a
pipe, e.g)
24 Wears Bway
25 Scarcest
27 Pekoe, e :g.
32 Actor

~=

Sentinel

!8

-•

,74~992.L2068
-

Eoal

To get a current weather
report, check the

'

Joseph Jacks
,

Norllt

l---7/---:.~--:--.....__...,....,

I

.

'

7122/TFN

___s BlrthstonO-Ior

.;J..:.!.l..!.!.;"-'.:....=:.J

· defense
19 Harmed
20 New York

Tidiest
Author
Truman '60s dropout
Small lace
mat
45 " I can not tell

34
35
·
39
43

•
..

47 Soccer star
48 UK
broadcasters

49 A Gershwin
50 Youth

52 - ·de·sac
53 Compass pt.
54 Series of
gam es

..

.'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

. by Luis Campos

ramous people, past and
present. Each tsner in the cipher stands lor anolher.
Todlly's clue: R equals .r

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by

~TO

0

Sizes 5' x 10'
· to10'x30'
Hours
1:00AM ·8 PM

..... eettmet•

Current

33 Sldawoyo

Lga. con~lner
Go .awiHiyNavolobbr.
Bangkok

BY PlnLLIP ALDER

45771
740-949-2217

• Siding • Drywall

FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

1
2
3
4

The extra card

Racine, Ohio

• Painting • Plllmblng.

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

..

DOWN

18 Hard-h a11ded

Most employers enjoy today, ·
Feb ..29, because employee_s who .
are paid by the month have to do
an extra day's work for no extra
pay. Perhaps this isn't a good simile, but in tO&lt;jay's deal the declar·
er held a superfluous card, with·
. ·out which he would have crui~d
home. What was that card? ·
Wf'W..fiGU#ll -OUT
After West led a trumjl, how
T)tf TttAFfiG PttOIUM I
should South have planned the
'Ae$Att ···Al-L
play in four spades?
• ttOAI&gt;$
North's three hearts was a
~ UAP
transfer bid, .showing five-plus
'spades. Three no-trump offered a
c;hoice of games. Although three
ltOMf.
no-trump is an easy make, South
was right to prefer four spades
because he knew of an eight-card
fit and was worried about the
blocked spade suit in no-trump.
· ~
~
When you are in a suit contract,
'IOU W"-..T
mt&gt; WOU~'\' '100 ~OW, Tl\~ it usually
pays to check losers.
'([.~~
E'l-1~ t:+-,'( WOULD ~t ---:Here,' though; it is easier to count
FORI\10
&amp;. "~ t&gt;l\'{!
winners. There are five spades,
&lt;DMC ...
one. heart, one diamond and two
clubs. For the I Oth trick, you
could either try the diamond
finesse or play for clubs to be 3·
3. (South went for·the former, but
failed when the finesse lost.!!m;l
. -·· .... . . West returned.his lasl&gt;trump.)
LL..L..t....:..:::._ _ _ _ _ ___.
However, there is a third line '
/,
that is much ·better. Immediately
play
the ace aiid queen of dia·
"
THI\'T'~ &amp;ECAUSE HE
HMoii''T r..:O.)'ED Mit!
monds. West wins with the king
W,O,Rf
C.IVE 1'\E ROO!'\, S0'1'S ,
and
returns a trump, but you lead
1\1-ID ;t'LL SHOW HIM
NMtF
a club to dummy's ace and niffthe ·
WHI\T NI\TE WRIO:.HT
NARF
IS 1\\.1.. ABOUT!
last diamond in· your hand.
CHOMf'f
Any time'you can tak.e a ruff in
OI&lt;&gt;IIPF
the short-trump hand, il is probably the right line. The diamond
queen is .a red-card herring!
· Without the .diallKind queen,.
South wo11ld probably have made
the contract. Yet on the day when
it is acceptable for a woman to
propose rilarriage· to a man, he
1
u .....,TEAM.TI\1515 OUR
LET'S 51-lOW 'EM W~AT
was tempted, like Ulysses, by the
JUST WAIT TIL
6M\E .LETS llEAA """''!:A KIND OF 5PIRIT WE ~AVE ..
· ·Sirens.
NE&gt;&lt;.T YEAR!

CAATTER OUT THERE...

~

• NewHo'"".
• Garagaa
•Complete

oludent

58 Smell hole

Gulager

JACKS ROOFING . ,,
&amp; CONSTRU(JIOft 7.:•

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTRUUIOII .

51 Frogmento
55 Cook (mutl
alowly
56 lllalrtal
57 Milltory

Opening lead: • 2

New RCICQ • RePIIr-. . ·11
• Coating,• Gutter-. . ...l\

Expanoao.
Said Tox baing:• A
renowal of o tax of 1 mill ot
a rota not axclodlng1 mille
for ooch one dollor of
voluotlon, which •mounto to
tan canto ($0.10) for eoch
ono . hundred dollaro of
VIIUIIIort, tor five (5) yqra.
The Polio for oold
Eloctlon Will bo opan ot 8:30
o'clock A.M. end remain
open until 7:30 o'.cloek P.1!1..
ofNid day.
By order of the Botrd of
Elactlona, of Mllgt COUnty,

Ohio

Pass
Pass
Pass

L...-~Wil!L!..II!!i.l!!!
. . ·-L
~

·QuN-14,_111_1

Z

41 Bural
41 Lodging tor
lroopa

otovodoro'o)Ob

,

740-742·2706
.
740-446-1141 .

BURKE'S

autfhc

45 Frorn --, -

38 Doe

¥A65:i
t A Q
6 K 7! 2

·FINE·· HIS ·
TEMPER'TURE
IS WAY

SIIICE 1964 ·

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL L.MITATION
Ravleed Code, s.cttone
3501 .00(0), 5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE lo hereby glvon
that In purouonco of 1
Reoolulloit of the Villoga
Council ol tho Vllloga ol
Middleport, Ohio, pallod on
tho 15th day of December,
19981hara Will bo !IUbmlttod
to a vote of the people ol
told oubdlvlolon at a
Prlmory ElacUon to bo held
In 11M Vllloga of Middleport,
Ohio, at tho roguler plocoa
ol voting theraln, on the 7th
dey ol March, . 2000, tho
quaotlon of levying 1 tax, In
txctaa ol tho ton mill
llmlllllon, for the bonallt of
Middleport, VIllage for the

at

• A KQ

•1c\tn

Public Notice

purpo1a

a4

K 10 7 6 3
• J 9 2
J 9
• Q 10 8 4
South~

Wool

RESIDENTIAL· INDUSTRIALCOMMERCIAL
IIUI1 OIIAIIIIOIIIH

$1,000.00 .. '
For•IIIIIMtl tiMt JCI• MU-. rtUW..·

J•::~~~:j~~

t

I

..emo"•'
• s\\l~fno
•"
Gt\~""
:.
:?0 Yrs. Exp. •lns. Owner: Ronnie Jones

*NO CREDIT
•NO SECURITY
DEPOSITSI
*f 0096 GUARANTEED
APPROVALl
*CREDIT LIMIT OF

•u~n~

• K J

14 DalaWirt
Indian
15Moatwilherod
18 Author
Flaming
'
17 Thrta,ln Milan
18 Actreu
Fronclt
21 Strlpod crlner
23 Comparative
ouffll
28 Blind eo-21 "Dang!"
· 21 Gun grp.
30 Noraepoem
- 31 VOter . _

An1wer to Prewlout Puzzle

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

• ToP

Main·

8323.·

~

EllI
• 8 54
¥ Q 10 I

• 7 2

•

QAI.UP'OUl!, OHIO 41831• CNEIHIRE, OHIO

·c REDIT
CARDS!

Doted:N._lhle,
John
Rho D. Smith, Dlractor
(2) 8, 15, 22, 29 4TC

tenence· Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doora, wtndows, baths,
mobile home repair and mora. For
,,... estimate call Chel, 740-992-

I 'M/JOT
1'-lVITEO

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Admlnlotrotor
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Malga County, H. .lth
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
Dapartmont
Revlood Coda, Sactlono
·(2) 25, 28, 29 3TC
3501.00(0), 5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE lo horaby given
Public Notice
that In pureuanc• of o
RHDiuUon of the Board of
LEGAL NOTICE
Townohlp Truataaa ol the
The Malga County Townohlp of Sutto·n, Ohio,
Council on Aging, Inc., P.O. paoaod on lho 8th day ol
Box 722, 112laot Mamorlol ~mbor, 1899 thoro will .
Drive, Po,_.,y, Ohio 45789 be oubmlttod to e voto of
will accept oa~lod bldo for tho people
of oald
...-..---~----i oubdlvlolon at a Prlmory
Election to bo held In the
Townohlp of Sutton, Ohio,
760 Auto Parte &amp;
at the regular . ploc11 of
voting therein, on the 7th
Accea•orlel
day ol Morch, 2000, the
Budget Priced Transmissions All quootlon of levying o lox, In
Types, Access To Over 10,000 excelo of the tan mill
Transmissions, CVC Joints, 740- limitation, lor the bonellt of
245·5677.
.
Sutton Townohlp for the
Molor From '85 Pontiac Ftrebird purpole of Maintaining and
2.8 Litre Fuel Injected, Recently Operating Camaterloa.
Robulll Call 740·441·0335. 740Sold Tax baing:• A
448-3232.
replacement of a tax ol 1/2
mill II a rata net exceeding
SERVICES
0.5 mlllo for each one dollar
of valuotlon, which amounta
to five canta ($0.051 for aach
810
Home
one hundred dolliua of
valuoUon. for five (5) yeora.
Improvements
Tho Pella for oald
BASEMENT
Eloctlon lflll be opan II 1:30
WATERPROOFING
o'clock A.M. and remain
Uncondltlonalllrellme guarantee.
local references furn ished. Es- open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
tablilhld 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (740) OfNiddoy.
448-0870, 1-800·287-0576. Rog- By order ol the
ero Wa10rp&lt;00fing.
Elactlono, of Melga Cp!JIIIb\.J
Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
parlance All Work Guaranteed,
French Cily Maylag. 740-4467795.

Pomeroy, Ohio

22 yn. Local

-

-

I

FfH Eltftnllll

V.C. YOUNG Ill

. R&amp;l Ouolltv

ilda muat be m•r:ked

I

~~---::::::::=::=::::-! Weal

JONES'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEIYICI
•Room addltlono &amp; Romodellng
.. •NewGaragtt
•Eiaclrlcoll Plumbing
•Roofing&amp; Outten
•VInyl Siding • Painting
•PaUo l flon:h Dac:kt

6 A 6 5

Discount

992-5479 .

FREE ESTIMATES
. (NO SUNDAY CAL.L.S)

1980 Ford ond 1981 Ford.
Bldo Will bo occaptod until
Morch 8; 2000 at 4:00 pm. ·
Bldo may bo oubmlttad to
the Molgo County Hoolth
Deportment, attanUon Corol
UtUa, Adm. Aaot.
Bide Will bo opanod otlha
. rogulor. 1111lon of t~e
Boord of Hoalth moatlng
Morch 8, 2000. .
Jon D. Jocobo RS

• 8 54

DOWN
BISSELL BUILDERS

DHt-OO

• J 10 9 6 3

Se11lor Citizen

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

2/17!00 1 mo pd.

(21 11,14,15,25,28,28, 2QOO 8

.

No
• 7 2

~lLLEL ·.

7,40-992-1709

992TC

menl (2 wdo.)

(740) 742-8888
750 East Stat~ Street Phone (740) 593··66711
Athens, Ohio 45701
888
~---1_-___
~_2_1_-09
__1_6__~L_--~·~·~~~~~~~ ~

$8.00 column .Inch Weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

•J

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; Vinyl tops ,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

37' Caouot ohlrt
38 Apiece
1 Poklalln't
40 Wau atrlng1
Bonulr41 Nalharlonda
' ' 7 Jocob'a tether
city
12 Church olflclal 42 Ptontlouoa
131ndlaog....
44 SUperlative

ACROSS

• K .

ZXGTKIVAKCR

VGMIKSWX
M G C.

KTTGXHB.
W UK I ,
CGG

NAC

NWYHAIW

NWYHAIW
CGG

HMS

OGGS

·~

I W D

K I

•

K I

X H M S
KTZGXCHMC , ' HRM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I hate tO lose more than I love 10 win. I hate to see
the happiness In their.laces when they beat me." - Jimmy Connprs

WORD·
OAMI

TIIAT DAILY
PUZZLII

Q R~~arrart~

leiters

of the

,

four acrambl•d words be·
,lew 1o farm lour ~mplt warda.

. •... ,l--rA:..;Dr--=,ErG-iA;..:M,_-1

II 1· r· l
H E l WI

I' I· I r
~'

E N P 0 R
" Life," the psychology profes·1 ,~ I . ~ sor lectured, "is a process of get1. . _ .
ling used to the things you started
. - - - - - - - - ' - l o u t to· · • • • •

CLABHE

I"

..t-==~~~:~=~:r:=~~·~~:l=~
•

o ~ii:~:~~: ~~h~h:h~~:~;~g q~~:d~

you devetop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
. THESE SQUARES
.

I

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Thrush· Crumb - Unarm· Sturdy· HANDS BUS Y
Boss to lazy employee: "Don't you know that even a
clock passes time by keeping it's HANDS BUSY?"

·-

FEBRUARY 29 I· .
!'

�•

•

1\Hieday, Febr\Niry 2SI, 2000

Pomeroy, llkldleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLE¥00P

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

... ...,.

Advertise your
message

~~-=-=-:;;P::u.,~IIC~c:;;:N~otiil~ce~=-1~ Public r.-otlce
L1p1 NOttce

I

Attn: Cont-ra
Sollobury Townohlp will be
taking aeolad bide on
Hazard Mltlgollon Grant
Project wor1c to bo dona In
Sollobury Townahlp. Work
wHI ccnolot of llavotlon of
.homao obovo flood 111(11.
Blda will be oponad at
ragulor Townohlp maotlng
held ol Sollobury Townohlp .
holl .In Rockoprlngo on
Morch 7th II 8:30 pm. For
ocopa of work call (740)

\

.

I
I

j

PSI
CONSTRUCTION

tiM following: 1982 Dodge
Ram 350 Maxi Van. ·The
vehicle hoo a high root wl1h
wolk· ln copoolty, with
ooaUng for thlrtoan. SHiod
blda will bo accoptod until
Monday, Morch 13, 2000.
Tho Malga County Council
On Aging, Inc. raoarvol the
right to eccept or reliCt any
and all bldo. For mora
lnformotlon contact Ron
Harrla ot (7401 982-2111.
(2) 'ZT, D
(3) 2 3TC

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

•

.

'

INC.

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
The Molgo County Board
of HNith will offer fer oala
by ooalad bid two (21
autornobltoa.
·.
1980 Ford Crown VIctoria,
ton
In color aerlol
IZFACP72BXLX153138. .
1981 Ford Crown VlctOrll,
Gray In color aarlol
IZFACP72G8MX1011094.
Automobllao ore In
running condition, and will
be oold to the hlghaot
bidder with a minimum bid
of $500.00 per auto ..
Automoblloa will bo aold 11
Ia with no warrantleo
_ _ . t o r lmpllod.

New Homes • Vinyl.

Garages
• Replace(lllmt Windows
• Room Additions ·
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
Siding • New

CLASSIFIEDSI

SHOP AT HOME

740.992-7599

992·6215

....,,..,......

· luht Body Peart/
All replacement
parts

. Fra hllvtry
740-742-9501
'Toll Free

Ohio

C&amp;C

General

Home

DIGITAL
CONSIGNMENT
&amp;ALES. Do You Have Somo1hlng
You Want To Stll? Have You
Been On Tt'adto More Than Once
Of Twice wHh No Sale? Have You

Been llaied In The Local News-

papt~r And Bulletin Boards?

I.
l

Let
U1 AdvertiH Your Product Wortd
Widl On The lrHernet Auclions.
You Keep Your Merchandise Until II Still. Sell Your Marchandirse
To Colleclors And Get More
· Money For lt!'Adveruae To MIIHo.na O,f. Internet User&amp;. Today!!
Cd 30U7s-.493.
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction.

· New Construction &amp; 'Remodel/

l
I

Drywall , Siding, Roofs, Addl·
Uons. Palnllng, etc . 130.)674·
4823 or (304)674-0155.
livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, tree estimates, lllelime
g·uarantee. 12yrs on job experl•""'· (304)695·3887.

SuperiOr Home Maintenance And
Plumbing Wt Do All Repairs On
Homtl And Trailers, Fast Strv•
k:e17oo-44Hl113. .
.

840 Electrical and

· Refrigeration

An.ntlon: Hea11ng And CoolIng Shop Olfert Cl&lt;ea1 Ra111 And
E - Sorvlco. Lot Our Expen.
enct Technician Give You A
Free Eatlmate Today And Btat
TN Spring Rush. Call Advanced

Comfort Sytlema

740-ue.

~~

0818.
AMklentllll or commercial wtrJng,

-

-

..,...

or roPalro. Mjlo1or L&gt;

cen•td tltctrlclan. Ridenour
E1ectrlcol , WV000308. 304·615·

•I

t.'t ... AiitO.
C.ll Alittle 0....
• Drlrewly 'Stette
• Lltt4aattpl Moterlttl

• Ttp S.il &amp;MmrMI c..,..t
• 8oll01t Serrlee
•Lisltt lt••ll•t .
Ult . . eton

t) t) )

c '"1 . I ' '---&gt;
--

SiaftNfBom•

Construetfon
New Construction &amp;
- Remodeling· Kitchen __
. Cabinets· Vinyl Siding·
ltoors - Decks · Garages

Free Estimates

367-0317

740· 742-3411
' I

Rreves .

,•

I

.
i'

l

'

~~

'

I ;

'

r---~----------------~
CREDrr PROBLEMS???

BtiRKFS

~Ser..lc:e

No Credit • Slow CredH • Bttnkruptcy

Repo • Dlvorded

Scrubbed &amp;

WORRYIIG!t!·
ll!'mberreeement...

cleaned ·
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 -Any
Normal Size Room.

No

You're Treated wHh R...,.ctl
Cell Now for lnetant Approvelll..

llllrolovoaclob1orof&amp;o.nclola'lladl.. ..t,._o!wlr~af1.
0110111
utoillvn. A,.....""'"""""......,...,
......... p!Oplltj, for lois" hor ......... This..., lodll1lo ........... . .
. ........ housohold """'You lloould oilroi1 ony .............. .......,.., 11
"'a11ontoy W.O. r•1 h ;
.

inly--""""" --..

For lnforma11on ragardlng
Bonlcruptoy oonti1ot

William Safranek, Attorney
5112·5025 Athenl

CARPET SERVICE

Clean &amp; Scot~h
Guard $40 - Any
Normal Size Room.

740·742-2706
74Q-446-1141

*A.I!I:a UotiH'VIDP. . .I
I

•..tEtM3..,, 1&lt;4tlfhl.-.fllllo•!

r:•11fk'*'..,.,. mrUIIlttllllt

•OIKnnW Ma01t W Nrtkll wwt·

CAlL NOW 1·800-250-4098

BUT HIS HUMIDITY
IS WAY UP tl

.·

SELF STORAOE.
29870 Baahan
. Road .

;•

..

. Plllft

AD Ill+' • Trador 11
Eqajpment P1111B
Fadory Autltorilecl

c-.IH P1111B
Dea1en.

,•.., .•.

.

1/ltJO ... Rl. 7 Soulll
'; CotJMI/I, OH 467U

Dotod: Jonuory 4, 2000
John N. IItie, Chalrt11811
Rill D. Smith, . , . _
(2) 8, 111, 22, D 4TC

ij

••

~~1-pct:

f't.'l

l

,.

,.~

-~

•' i
II

•

r---::-:::~~-..., :,. ~

. HOWAlD .
EICIVITIIII CO. \
''n ...,..
, wrr r , 1~:_,
BuliJOHr &amp; Baeklloe .
Semoeo
.
Houllll &amp; Trailer Siteo

Land Clearing &amp;
-, Grading
Septle Syatenu &amp;

UtiUtle•
17401 tt2-SIII

.

DIPIYIAI

v

Pasa

3NT

Pass

ITUESDAY

.'

CASH LOANSI
• Bad Credit OK
• Euy Qualifying
• Fut.$ervlce
• Low Payment~
• Cot o'kllilltlal
l..aoG-332-2411

3•

Novitmber
6 Unsealed
7 Repeat

native

Now'a.attna
·.
.

H.lah &amp; Dry:

.Self~Storaif
33795 Hiland Rd.:
Pomell'oy, Ohio

740·992·5212
1 , . 1 .... pol

••

·e· ·

your , life easier. They'll come
throoqh for you.
·.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

..
Crhar

Friends or usociates could p,lay a
prominent role in your affain
1odoy. 8111 you won't mind • bit;
in ftct. you'll we!come che
involvement.
.
GEMINI (May 21·1unc 20)

~

. I

•

Wednetday, Mord\1, 200().
The y- alteod wUI be 11ood

'

Competiliv~ sihlltions shouJd not

be dodsod 1odoy because1he flies
are. fovorins yoo by slontirts the

· limo1oplacepateremplwilon
, yoor ponona1 ambiu..., Seven!

: desileo

)'011

oddo siiJht)Y .In your favor. Con·
centrale on winninJ, not on rhe

fee1. 1110Rsly ....,. ·

, could be odvon«&lt;&lt; alicteafully.
. • PISCES (Fcib, 20-Mordl 20) If
YOU ~·t look oot for your own
· intorelll, why should you e!IJIOC1
• otben 1o do so for yoo?_Do not t,.
llaid belt or indltr....l 1o tbe
opolnt wheN you won'l _,.

opposition.

CANCEl\ (lane 21-July 22)

· You might, be a tritle too introspKtive cOncemina yOUr. plam
-orid datination ,todoy, but onc:c
Y'!U ploD ..... ~·~ Cleltl
"'ondi dtlllceo .... ,...:U,dlolk

l,_..tr. Pllces.- ,_...,'"
... 1llrthdly ..~~. Seaol for y-

iI

~riph pnillcllono

· "lip' I MCIIIflll city,

.

Bo• 1758, Mur·

'

1ray Hill Slolloe, New York, NY

ltot56. a.· ...,.

y..,

1o .....
Zodiac'lip.
' - ' '
. AAD!S tMOr&lt;tt 21·APB 191
Don't JUifer in ailenoo 10doy if
)'OU •mqulra ...... klad of ...... .
,_,Mob ycq noodo know 1o

I1

l

. _....,.yoakoow-..

, . '

•

, U!O (July 23-Aua. 22) Whll

for tbe,

,.. .oheod by moilhit $2 .....
SASE 1o ~ do ddtt
MWIJ'IPO~ P.O.

1

LIBRA (Sepl. '23..o.:t. 23)
Someone ·who likeo you and
knows your ambitions miah1 be
ins1rumentol in',dolnJ aomethins
that wiD pV11 yoar-•··,
lt'1 a penon you· may have mel
R!Ct!ntly.

SCORPIO

(Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
younelf from·
involvements tl,at are tedious or
OiSI~sociate

commer&lt;ial W!IAY. if •i all possi· ·
ble. It's to your bt.nefit to associ' · ote with outters thot could ,..;.
· !llize your Outlook.
SA.GnTARIUS (Nov. 23-J&gt;eo.
, 21) Cotch up on all those little
thincs aroun4 the house you've
been promisinJ younetryoo'd do
for lht! family. On~ · you, ·get

movins. you'll enjoy 1he order

brinas into y~ life .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jon. ·

19) What you oee and hear 1odoy

-hi """'
- they
.....
hond. 1ho VIROO (AUJ. 23-$epl, 22)
8ecouoe yoo'llllb 1ho..., ~
Jlme to moke everyone wl .

con 111 used to ,your penonal
advlftlip in a prominent wty, so
try to be u keen an oblerver and
11 aood a l i - u yoo c.- be:
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20'Feb, 191
Several linonclal ·opportuni1ieo
moy b e . - y&lt;M1odoy lhll wiD
be wqrdly of

;o.·nt. • ..., ...,.lilr .,.._.

developitorft. lie w•l'hl Mtd
.... tbe tDoot of dtol wltlolt io.
wlllllri your .......
' •

you'D do baLtodol' io help 0111on ""'out 1h0ii oil\in ... lhow '
dtom how 1hey can pi betler '

·· Wllom you deal feel ~hey ore 11p0clol ...s 4aorvo your ..........

your••..............

'

b·
.•.

• •

8 Achy9 lemony drink
10 P(lid no ttces
11 Okla. tirne
13 S1er·ShHped

~

,_

'• .

piJJyer
22 Cannon part

23 Opening (ol a
pipe, e.g)
24 Wears Bway
25 Scarcest
27 Pekoe, e :g.
32 Actor

~=

Sentinel

!8

-•

,74~992.L2068
-

Eoal

To get a current weather
report, check the

'

Joseph Jacks
,

Norllt

l---7/---:.~--:--.....__...,....,

I

.

'

7122/TFN

___s BlrthstonO-Ior

.;J..:.!.l..!.!.;"-'.:....=:.J

· defense
19 Harmed
20 New York

Tidiest
Author
Truman '60s dropout
Small lace
mat
45 " I can not tell

34
35
·
39
43

•
..

47 Soccer star
48 UK
broadcasters

49 A Gershwin
50 Youth

52 - ·de·sac
53 Compass pt.
54 Series of
gam es

..

.'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

. by Luis Campos

ramous people, past and
present. Each tsner in the cipher stands lor anolher.
Todlly's clue: R equals .r

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by

~TO

0

Sizes 5' x 10'
· to10'x30'
Hours
1:00AM ·8 PM

..... eettmet•

Current

33 Sldawoyo

Lga. con~lner
Go .awiHiyNavolobbr.
Bangkok

BY PlnLLIP ALDER

45771
740-949-2217

• Siding • Drywall

FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

1
2
3
4

The extra card

Racine, Ohio

• Painting • Plllmblng.

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

..

DOWN

18 Hard-h a11ded

Most employers enjoy today, ·
Feb ..29, because employee_s who .
are paid by the month have to do
an extra day's work for no extra
pay. Perhaps this isn't a good simile, but in tO&lt;jay's deal the declar·
er held a superfluous card, with·
. ·out which he would have crui~d
home. What was that card? ·
Wf'W..fiGU#ll -OUT
After West led a trumjl, how
T)tf TttAFfiG PttOIUM I
should South have planned the
'Ae$Att ···Al-L
play in four spades?
• ttOAI&gt;$
North's three hearts was a
~ UAP
transfer bid, .showing five-plus
'spades. Three no-trump offered a
c;hoice of games. Although three
ltOMf.
no-trump is an easy make, South
was right to prefer four spades
because he knew of an eight-card
fit and was worried about the
blocked spade suit in no-trump.
· ~
~
When you are in a suit contract,
'IOU W"-..T
mt&gt; WOU~'\' '100 ~OW, Tl\~ it usually
pays to check losers.
'([.~~
E'l-1~ t:+-,'( WOULD ~t ---:Here,' though; it is easier to count
FORI\10
&amp;. "~ t&gt;l\'{!
winners. There are five spades,
&lt;DMC ...
one. heart, one diamond and two
clubs. For the I Oth trick, you
could either try the diamond
finesse or play for clubs to be 3·
3. (South went for·the former, but
failed when the finesse lost.!!m;l
. -·· .... . . West returned.his lasl&gt;trump.)
LL..L..t....:..:::._ _ _ _ _ ___.
However, there is a third line '
/,
that is much ·better. Immediately
play
the ace aiid queen of dia·
"
THI\'T'~ &amp;ECAUSE HE
HMoii''T r..:O.)'ED Mit!
monds. West wins with the king
W,O,Rf
C.IVE 1'\E ROO!'\, S0'1'S ,
and
returns a trump, but you lead
1\1-ID ;t'LL SHOW HIM
NMtF
a club to dummy's ace and niffthe ·
WHI\T NI\TE WRIO:.HT
NARF
IS 1\\.1.. ABOUT!
last diamond in· your hand.
CHOMf'f
Any time'you can tak.e a ruff in
OI&lt;&gt;IIPF
the short-trump hand, il is probably the right line. The diamond
queen is .a red-card herring!
· Without the .diallKind queen,.
South wo11ld probably have made
the contract. Yet on the day when
it is acceptable for a woman to
propose rilarriage· to a man, he
1
u .....,TEAM.TI\1515 OUR
LET'S 51-lOW 'EM W~AT
was tempted, like Ulysses, by the
JUST WAIT TIL
6M\E .LETS llEAA """''!:A KIND OF 5PIRIT WE ~AVE ..
· ·Sirens.
NE&gt;&lt;.T YEAR!

CAATTER OUT THERE...

~

• NewHo'"".
• Garagaa
•Complete

oludent

58 Smell hole

Gulager

JACKS ROOFING . ,,
&amp; CONSTRU(JIOft 7.:•

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTRUUIOII .

51 Frogmento
55 Cook (mutl
alowly
56 lllalrtal
57 Milltory

Opening lead: • 2

New RCICQ • RePIIr-. . ·11
• Coating,• Gutter-. . ...l\

Expanoao.
Said Tox baing:• A
renowal of o tax of 1 mill ot
a rota not axclodlng1 mille
for ooch one dollor of
voluotlon, which •mounto to
tan canto ($0.10) for eoch
ono . hundred dollaro of
VIIUIIIort, tor five (5) yqra.
The Polio for oold
Eloctlon Will bo opan ot 8:30
o'clock A.M. end remain
open until 7:30 o'.cloek P.1!1..
ofNid day.
By order of the Botrd of
Elactlona, of Mllgt COUnty,

Ohio

Pass
Pass
Pass

L...-~Wil!L!..II!!i.l!!!
. . ·-L
~

·QuN-14,_111_1

Z

41 Bural
41 Lodging tor
lroopa

otovodoro'o)Ob

,

740-742·2706
.
740-446-1141 .

BURKE'S

autfhc

45 Frorn --, -

38 Doe

¥A65:i
t A Q
6 K 7! 2

·FINE·· HIS ·
TEMPER'TURE
IS WAY

SIIICE 1964 ·

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL L.MITATION
Ravleed Code, s.cttone
3501 .00(0), 5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE lo hereby glvon
that In purouonco of 1
Reoolulloit of the Villoga
Council ol tho Vllloga ol
Middleport, Ohio, pallod on
tho 15th day of December,
19981hara Will bo !IUbmlttod
to a vote of the people ol
told oubdlvlolon at a
Prlmory ElacUon to bo held
In 11M Vllloga of Middleport,
Ohio, at tho roguler plocoa
ol voting theraln, on the 7th
dey ol March, . 2000, tho
quaotlon of levying 1 tax, In
txctaa ol tho ton mill
llmlllllon, for the bonallt of
Middleport, VIllage for the

at

• A KQ

•1c\tn

Public Notice

purpo1a

a4

K 10 7 6 3
• J 9 2
J 9
• Q 10 8 4
South~

Wool

RESIDENTIAL· INDUSTRIALCOMMERCIAL
IIUI1 OIIAIIIIOIIIH

$1,000.00 .. '
For•IIIIIMtl tiMt JCI• MU-. rtUW..·

J•::~~~:j~~

t

I

..emo"•'
• s\\l~fno
•"
Gt\~""
:.
:?0 Yrs. Exp. •lns. Owner: Ronnie Jones

*NO CREDIT
•NO SECURITY
DEPOSITSI
*f 0096 GUARANTEED
APPROVALl
*CREDIT LIMIT OF

•u~n~

• K J

14 DalaWirt
Indian
15Moatwilherod
18 Author
Flaming
'
17 Thrta,ln Milan
18 Actreu
Fronclt
21 Strlpod crlner
23 Comparative
ouffll
28 Blind eo-21 "Dang!"
· 21 Gun grp.
30 Noraepoem
- 31 VOter . _

An1wer to Prewlout Puzzle

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

• ToP

Main·

8323.·

~

EllI
• 8 54
¥ Q 10 I

• 7 2

•

QAI.UP'OUl!, OHIO 41831• CNEIHIRE, OHIO

·c REDIT
CARDS!

Doted:N._lhle,
John
Rho D. Smith, Dlractor
(2) 8, 15, 22, 29 4TC

tenence· Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doora, wtndows, baths,
mobile home repair and mora. For
,,... estimate call Chel, 740-992-

I 'M/JOT
1'-lVITEO

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Admlnlotrotor
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Malga County, H. .lth
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
Dapartmont
Revlood Coda, Sactlono
·(2) 25, 28, 29 3TC
3501.00(0), 5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE lo horaby given
Public Notice
that In pureuanc• of o
RHDiuUon of the Board of
LEGAL NOTICE
Townohlp Truataaa ol the
The Malga County Townohlp of Sutto·n, Ohio,
Council on Aging, Inc., P.O. paoaod on lho 8th day ol
Box 722, 112laot Mamorlol ~mbor, 1899 thoro will .
Drive, Po,_.,y, Ohio 45789 be oubmlttod to e voto of
will accept oa~lod bldo for tho people
of oald
...-..---~----i oubdlvlolon at a Prlmory
Election to bo held In the
Townohlp of Sutton, Ohio,
760 Auto Parte &amp;
at the regular . ploc11 of
voting therein, on the 7th
Accea•orlel
day ol Morch, 2000, the
Budget Priced Transmissions All quootlon of levying o lox, In
Types, Access To Over 10,000 excelo of the tan mill
Transmissions, CVC Joints, 740- limitation, lor the bonellt of
245·5677.
.
Sutton Townohlp for the
Molor From '85 Pontiac Ftrebird purpole of Maintaining and
2.8 Litre Fuel Injected, Recently Operating Camaterloa.
Robulll Call 740·441·0335. 740Sold Tax baing:• A
448-3232.
replacement of a tax ol 1/2
mill II a rata net exceeding
SERVICES
0.5 mlllo for each one dollar
of valuotlon, which amounta
to five canta ($0.051 for aach
810
Home
one hundred dolliua of
valuoUon. for five (5) yeora.
Improvements
Tho Pella for oald
BASEMENT
Eloctlon lflll be opan II 1:30
WATERPROOFING
o'clock A.M. and remain
Uncondltlonalllrellme guarantee.
local references furn ished. Es- open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
tablilhld 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (740) OfNiddoy.
448-0870, 1-800·287-0576. Rog- By order ol the
ero Wa10rp&lt;00fing.
Elactlono, of Melga Cp!JIIIb\.J
Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
parlance All Work Guaranteed,
French Cily Maylag. 740-4467795.

Pomeroy, Ohio

22 yn. Local

-

-

I

FfH Eltftnllll

V.C. YOUNG Ill

. R&amp;l Ouolltv

ilda muat be m•r:ked

I

~~---::::::::=::=::::-! Weal

JONES'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEIYICI
•Room addltlono &amp; Romodellng
.. •NewGaragtt
•Eiaclrlcoll Plumbing
•Roofing&amp; Outten
•VInyl Siding • Painting
•PaUo l flon:h Dac:kt

6 A 6 5

Discount

992-5479 .

FREE ESTIMATES
. (NO SUNDAY CAL.L.S)

1980 Ford ond 1981 Ford.
Bldo Will bo occaptod until
Morch 8; 2000 at 4:00 pm. ·
Bldo may bo oubmlttad to
the Molgo County Hoolth
Deportment, attanUon Corol
UtUa, Adm. Aaot.
Bide Will bo opanod otlha
. rogulor. 1111lon of t~e
Boord of Hoalth moatlng
Morch 8, 2000. .
Jon D. Jocobo RS

• 8 54

DOWN
BISSELL BUILDERS

DHt-OO

• J 10 9 6 3

Se11lor Citizen

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

2/17!00 1 mo pd.

(21 11,14,15,25,28,28, 2QOO 8

.

No
• 7 2

~lLLEL ·.

7,40-992-1709

992TC

menl (2 wdo.)

(740) 742-8888
750 East Stat~ Street Phone (740) 593··66711
Athens, Ohio 45701
888
~---1_-___
~_2_1_-09
__1_6__~L_--~·~·~~~~~~~ ~

$8.00 column .Inch Weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

•J

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; Vinyl tops ,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

37' Caouot ohlrt
38 Apiece
1 Poklalln't
40 Wau atrlng1
Bonulr41 Nalharlonda
' ' 7 Jocob'a tether
city
12 Church olflclal 42 Ptontlouoa
131ndlaog....
44 SUperlative

ACROSS

• K .

ZXGTKIVAKCR

VGMIKSWX
M G C.

KTTGXHB.
W UK I ,
CGG

NAC

NWYHAIW

NWYHAIW
CGG

HMS

OGGS

·~

I W D

K I

•

K I

X H M S
KTZGXCHMC , ' HRM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I hate tO lose more than I love 10 win. I hate to see
the happiness In their.laces when they beat me." - Jimmy Connprs

WORD·
OAMI

TIIAT DAILY
PUZZLII

Q R~~arrart~

leiters

of the

,

four acrambl•d words be·
,lew 1o farm lour ~mplt warda.

. •... ,l--rA:..;Dr--=,ErG-iA;..:M,_-1

II 1· r· l
H E l WI

I' I· I r
~'

E N P 0 R
" Life," the psychology profes·1 ,~ I . ~ sor lectured, "is a process of get1. . _ .
ling used to the things you started
. - - - - - - - - ' - l o u t to· · • • • •

CLABHE

I"

..t-==~~~:~=~:r:=~~·~~:l=~
•

o ~ii:~:~~: ~~h~h:h~~:~;~g q~~:d~

you devetop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
. THESE SQUARES
.

I

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Thrush· Crumb - Unarm· Sturdy· HANDS BUS Y
Boss to lazy employee: "Don't you know that even a
clock passes time by keeping it's HANDS BUSY?"

·-

FEBRUARY 29 I· .
!'

�•
•
•

Kathie lee ·leaving 'Live' show, A7
Sparky finally. makes Hall of Fame, B 1

1hur~Mv:a~

Manuel undergoes emergency colon surgery
BY TOM WITHERS
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - Cleveland
Indians manager Charlie Manuel had emergency colon surgery and is expected to be
hospitalized for at least a week.
Manuel, who replaced Mike Hargrove as
the Indians manager in November, had eight
inches ~moved from his colon on Monday
night, the Indians said today. Doctors found his
colon had ruptured.
After experiencing cramping and stomach
discomfort the past few days, Manuel,'who has
had two heart attacks and open heart surgery,
went to Winter Haven Hospital on Monday
____and had surggy _after_b.t:ing_diagnosed with
diverticulitis.
The· new manager wiD remain in the hospital for another seven to 10 days, team vice

Ohio. H.S. glrlf!' scores

president Bob DiBiasio said, and coach Jim
Riggleman was expected to run the . dub
when it opens exhibition play on Thursday.
Rigglem•n was the Chicago Cubs manager
the past five •••sons.
Indians general m•nager John H&gt;rt scheduled • news conferei)Ce this morning to discuss Manuel's condition.
Manuel had been complaining of stomach
problems since Saturday, and felt so b2dly on
Mond•y th&gt;t he skipped his daily media intervtew sessiOn.
As he walked aroun!f the Indians clubhouse
it was obvious M•nuel wasn 't his usual funlaYing -Self. NormaUy, he would mingle with
the players •like he did for six seuons as the
team's hitting coach .
The 56-year- old Manuel has . had nlajor

Dlatrlct tournaments
' DMolonlll
Sardinia E. Brown 45, Belpre 28
WBshlngton C.H. 57. Minlord 41

Regular-eeaaon acilon
. . Ent

n

Loot

,..watk

1. Slanlold (70) ..................... 24·1 1,750 ·
2. CINCINNATI ...................... 26·2 1,658
3. AI1Zona ..... ......................... 24-4 1 ,597
~ . Cuko ......................... .........22-l 1,488
5. T~e ............ ,................. 22-4 1,403
6. OHIO ST. ............ ..... :........ 20·5 1,394
7. Michigan SI... ......... ..... ,..... Zt-7 1,271
8. Flollde ............................. :.zz.s 1,289
8. S!'IIICUae ........................... 23·3 1,065
10. fowo 51 .............. .............. 24-1 1,045 .
11. Tenneue9 ......... ,............. 22·5 1,031
12. LSU ................................. 2.1-I 839
13. Oklahoma 61... ................ 22·4 900
14.1ndlllna ............. ........... .... 19-6 753
15. Tulsa ............ ...................28·3 716
16. Texaa ............................... ZD-7 .599
17. Ma1Yiand .................. ....... 2H 610
18. Sl. John's ........ .... ............ 2D-ll 603
· 19. Aubum............................. 21-6 542
20. Pulduo ............................ 21-7 499
21. Oklahoma ....................... 22·5 446
22. Kenluclry ............ :......... ... 2D-ll 445
23. Kanaes ............................ 21-7 244
24. COnnectiCut .... ............... ... 19-8

..

'

tm

N. Iowa 81 , Wichita St. 68
SW Missouri St. 62, S. Illinois 59

B

11
21
20
18
23
22

25. 1Rinola ......................... ..... 18·8
74
Othen rocolvlng volft: Miami (Fla.) 43,
Ullh 38, Oregon 26, Ulah St 17, Vandolblft 18,
CAYTON 11, Louisville 11, SMU 10, Fresno St.
8, Pappeldlno 5, Navy 4, Salon Hall4, Vi~ginla
.3, BOWLING GREEN 2, Gonzaga 2, KENT 2,
Nollh Carolina 2, Penn 2, Alabama I, BuHi11 1.

Southwnt

Allt·Pine BI~W 106, MVSU 102-&lt;lT
TCU 68,. SMU 83
Ta)(aa 68, Kansas 54
, Tawas·Pan American 55, Washington St. 52

.

NCAA Division I
women's scores
Regular.aeaaon actio!)
Elot
AICany, N.Y. 56, Na11)' 50
. Holy Famll~ 56, Comlnlcan, N.Y. o15
St Joseph&amp;, Maine 62, Husson 58-QT
.

NBA standings .
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allonllc Dlvlalon

.

!II! .L e;L

llll,

.818
.545
.446

5&gt;

Mlaml. ...........:.................. 36
Now YIHI&lt; ......................... 34
Phlladelpl11a ..................... 30
Ollando .. .......................... 25
Boston .... .......................... 23
Now JoiHy ...................... 22
washington ........ .............. 16

Cenvar 55, IY. Kentucl&lt;y 52
Wyoming 88, Ulah 61

South

Alabama Si. 81 , Jackaon St 6ol
Ari&lt;.·Uitle Roek 86, Centenary 50
ChnsUan BIDihers 81 , KeniUclcy St. 81

3~.
1D' •
11'•

.1104

Buftllo ........... - ...26 29 9 2 63160
MO(III'IjiL ............ 25 30 7 3 60140
8oilon ...............:.19 2617 4 58:158
~
.
{S11qu~al Dlvllllon
Floric11 .... ~ ....·.!4:". l34 25 4 5 77 190
WllllllniJOn .........32 21 10 1 75 1118

.81~

.564

101,
10~
13~~

29

.2118

34·

.207

20
21
26
31
33
34
40

CenlroiCivtllon
lndlana ............................. 38 17
Charlotte ...................... ....30 25
TOIOnlo .. ......... :................. 29 25
Detroit .............................. 28 27
Ml1waukH .................... .... 28 29
AUanta ............................... 22 32
CLEVELAND ...................22 33
Chicago ........................ .... 12 42

Fayeltevllle Sl. 78, Shaw 49

Freect--Hardeman 83, Lipscomb 1•

.843 .

.~11

~~

,

.393
.296

13
14
20

.891
.545

8

.537

B'l.

Detrol1... ..............38 20
Naotwlllo .............22 34
~ ............'..22 33

WESTERN CONFERENCE
· M l - Dlvlolon

6

6
7

Waohlnglon 3, N.Y. lslandltrl 2

il6

Oftlwa 11 Boslon, 1 p.m.
";, ; .
. Toronto al Adanta, 7:30 p.m.
· -.
Philadelphia al St. Louis, Bp.m.
,. - '
New Jerwy at Naltwllle, 8 p.m.
T• ~
E - a t Colol8do, 9 p.m.
,.:;
Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. • ''·
Anahalm o1 San JoH,.ID:!lO p.m.
., _

189
187
192
'183

. P.P,M_~R£J IH~Ff&gt;IJ~ORTrl OH :

t.t"EI&amp;R s£f,u'ORz:8o
lfrgli ~lll~Bt.

78 1112 140
86187 179

*liP
·1411TALIAN ·
BEAD CHAIN.

102 E. Main

882·1702

AIMCIIIJ f1011111 c•11101111•
-IOUIOH r.IOY

IIARTWEU
HOUSE

FROM STAFF REPORTS

111'1.111
All Flags &amp; Stands
through Sat. March 4

;..•t

111'1.111
Camille Beckman
Lotions through Sat.
March4
Po-.eroy

-992-7696
I

1/4

I

Needs

•..,•ar

ANDE

·111 W..2nd St.

'PM•&amp;

Pomeroy, Ohio

East Main

992-4233

992-3671

1-800~795-1110

tJ, .

,

.,;-t.~s-;

~1- :Aut'See
• Carla ~Megan

• Aim~e • $t•cy

SUPPLY
St. Rt. 248 Cheater

'

985-3308

~,Inc.

I

I

Offered Monthly

1H

'Det.a~

Three
Charlie
•Saturday, March 4th:
Cowboy ~pi~ w/':!Jpeci,al

Gue1t

Great FoOd • lee Cold Drinks .
•laqlorts bBrews

•111 w. 2nd St. To

Pomeroy, Phio .

.

3rd:

Lunch Specials
•

Pqeroy • Ohio

74o-M2·65M

'

.,

106 N. 2nd lve.
Middleport, OH
45760

'

··~

•

.'

'

• Gore wants to be •more
presidential in debate, AI

.

. '.

portable recycling buildings located at State
Route 7 and Hiland Rojd near Pomeroy.
Roy Miller is an original member of the
Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention Board.
Canfield noted that the ·division is cele- ·
beating its 20th anniversary culininatlng
with an event in Cleveland called "StiU
Rockin' ,StiU Rollin' and Still Recycling" 'in
keeping with the Rock 'n' RoD H:Ul of
Fame in Cleveland. '

,........ ·~ Pllp A3

Gov. George W. Bush and Sen. • Primary wins mean more .
John McCain turned their money fur McCain, .AI
..
Republican hostilities toward the
main event - Super Tuesday after the Texas governor won a ·
three-state parlay to recapture the
• In Virginia, with aU of the
lead in the struggle for the GOP precincts reporting, Bush lud
presidential nomination. They 350,185 votes, or 53 percent, an4
traded accusations of divisive, . McCain had 290,779, or 44 per7 ·
low-road campaigning, and post- cent. Alan Keyes had 20,294
ed rival victory forecasts for the ·votes, or 3 percent.
· ·'
dimac.tic tests ahead.
Virginia's was an open-tO:-all
Vic~ . President
AI Gore primary, but Republicans cast
rebuffed Bill Bradley's last-chance two-thirds of the vote and raUied
bid for headway in his faltering overwhelmingly to Bush, as they
challeQge· before Democratic have in earli~r .contests, an exit .
contests in 15 states next Tuesday poD showed.
• In North Dakota, with 100
'that could decide who wins that
nomination. ·Gore won over- percent of districts , reporting,
whelmingly in Washington state's Bush had 6,865 vOtes, or 76 perprimory, gaining no d' legates but cent,. and McCain half. •·1; 717
denying· his riVal •any basis ·on voces, or 19 per.cent. Keyes had
which to claim a boost in the 481 votes, or 5 percent.
'
next round.
• In Washington state, with 89
"This is reaDy a sweet, sweet percent · of preciocts reponing;
victory," Gore said in a confer- Bush had 196,620 votes, or .,ss
enc~ c.U to his Washingtbn sup- percent, and McCain had
porters. "We climbed another 129,194 votes, or 38 percen~.'
mountain tonight."
Keyes had 8,110 votes, or 2 perBush outdistanced McCain in · cent.
Virginia's Republican primary
The column that counts is. deland captured the North Dakota egate stren8th. and Bush regained
caucuses by a landslide. 'He won the lead McCain held briefly,
the Republican primary in Wash- Bush won :Ul 56 delegates in Vir~
Ington .state, where McCain ginia, and 14 in North Dakota,
gained his only success by leading where McCain got four and .
separate balloting among voters Keyes one. He .led for seven of
. the
affili.ated with neither political
. party.

.............. ,..,.,.,..

.

EPA,poUution deal could affect
Sentinel , 32-other coal~fired facilities
· Today's

·(740) 992·2635
Fax (740) 992·2459

&gt;

IV

'

._.,

·'

:Z SadlaM- 11 Pqu

,_ '".:1\i· '

A6

Calendjr

BHi

· Clanifi!!ds
Comics

BZ

~,
r.o~tortau

A4
A3

·-·-

....

Obituaries
!iporg
Wt•ther

a

I

more than six members, add $4,2.30 for recent electric bill is required. Having this with Emergency . HEAP and Regular
ea&lt;:h individual member. ·
' documentation in order will get you HEAP applications at the Meigs County
The program aUows a one•time pay- thiougb the application process much CAA One Stop Office, 33091 Hiland
Road, J:'omemy.
ment of up to $175·per heating sea,son to quicker, it was noted.
restore or maintain home heating ser- ·
Home units can be arranged ·to assist
The agency has implemented the
VICes.
the elderly, disabled or homebound appointme~t system to apply for EmerWh~n applying for Emergency HEAP · unable .to get into orie ·o'f CAA 's intake gency HEAP. To schedule an appointor Regular HEAP, documentation verify~ sites.
·ment or get additional information in
Applications are also available for· the Meigs County, residents should caD 992~
ing the househ~ld's gross income is a pro"
·
gram requirement and must be provided. Regular HEAP program, which is addi- 2222; in GaUia County 446-6849.
This proof of income must be for the tiona! heating assistance of a non-emerThe HEAP hot line number is toll free i
13 weeks ~r 12-month period preceding ' gency nature. The income guidelines are 1-800-282-0880. Hearing iinpaired
the request for assistance. Also, Sotial the same for both 'programs. 'the deadline applicants with a telecommunication(
Security numbers of each ho~ehold · for both progranu is March 31, 2000.
devic,e for the deaf (TDD) c.U taU free: I~
member "and a copy of the applicants
.. CAA staff is available to assist people 800-686-1557.
'

:J'.

CULLODEN, W.Va. (AP) "This plant will provide . a
. A development official says a much-needed taX base that will
1;000-megawatt natural ·gas- improve facilities 'i n olir school
fueled power plant planned fot district;• said Gerald
CabeU Comity will 'give the 'local ;. president of the Hunti•
s'hool system a needed boost by Development Council.
· eX)landing the county's tax base.
will also · benefit from .
Panda Energy lnte•national · p&gt;rtnership which ·
Inc. announced TUesday that it in · toucH with on·-tlle-J•
~ build plant .i~ Culloden. to pology:,: •
provide electricity ro customers ·' ConstrU~n .is
ill 'West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio begio . thC" spring of
and Indiana. . '
the
of
st&gt;rt-.
~he plant will create 500 jobs · ;in~.in
.. ·
said . .
durmg cOO$truCnon an'd 46 .fuUThe prom1se of det:ePJ•uon ·
titt)e Jobs once it.qecomes opera- in the. electric utility, in~try .is
tiona!, said Gary Hulkowich, the ·catalyst for this in~~ent;• ·
senior vice president' fot mer- !laid John R. Snider, ~utive
~hant p,lant development at director of the West Vl~inia
Pimda.
Development Office.
-~ ·
•

"

,_,

texas finn tO ·build:
Power·plant in C8bell

Ingels Furniture
&amp;

Classes·

992•4233

Feliciano encouraged local resi-

· POMEROY Applications for connection, have already had services disEmergency HEAP for the 1999-2000 ~onnected; or have less than a ten day
heating season ~ be accepted through supply of bulk.fuet
March 31, it waS announced by GalliaTo be eligible for assistance, both the
Meigs Community Action Agency.
· income . guidelines and tqe emergency
"The escalating cost .o f home heating requirements must be met. Household ·
fuel, coupled with Februory~&lt; chilling · income is \\dined as the gross income of
winds continue to create a profound all hous·ehbld members, except wages or
hardship on the working poor, as weD as salaries eamed by dependent minors
households on fixed income throughout under 18 years of age. ·
our &gt;rea," said an agency spokesman. .
Allowable income for a one-person
The Emergency HEAP program is ' ·household is $12,360; two persons,
d,irected at crisis situations and can pro- $16,590; three persons, $20,820; four per\1de linancial assistance to low-inco!Ue sons, $20,050; five .persons,. $29,280: six
households that .are threatef!ed with di1- persons, .'$33;51 0. fVr households with

'.

219 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
992-56;!7

~lftee

• Bush stumps in Buckeye
S'ate. AI

'- Emel'gency.heating bill assistance available through March 3'1

Ea~np

iiCICe

ftdt

. . . .

".

Diamond
t 'l
.

Basketball
and Softball
Shoes •

•

. •,

ural

.

Drive Rlg~t

Over 20 Styles WeAre Here For
All Your Travel·
On Sale

Prevention's District 1, an&lt;! Michael Canfield, chief of the Ohio Department of· Natural Resources' Division of Recycling and Litter Control.

POMEROY - The Meigs County
dents to participate .in area
Recycling and Litter Prevention Office got
cleanup projects including the
the opportunity Tuesdoy morning to show
annual OJiio .River Sweep in June.
off some of its latest projects.
. • The office hosted a visit by Michael Can. field, c\llef of the Ohio Department of NatMeigs Recycling Djrector Kenny WigResources' Division o(Recycling and gins, accompanied by Roy and Mal,.lrita .
Litter Control, and ' Nexida Feliciano, coer- · Miller of Pomeroy, and County Comrnisdinator of the Ilivision of Recycling and sioners JeffThomton and Mick Davenport,
· Litter Prevention's Distriet 1, which incor- • showed Canfield and Feliciano some of the
.
'
porates Meigs County.
'local office's endea~ors, including two

MGI

Sprine
Carpet Sat.

to Nexida Feliciano, coordinator of the Division of Recycling Blld ·Utter

,

Historic Downtown
Pomeroy ·

'88·

RECYCUNG VISIT - Meigs Recycling Director Kenny Wiggins uses
the new recycling buildings near Pomeroy Tuesday. From left, Wiggins,
and Maurita and Roy Miller of Pomeroy show off a.recycli~ building

State recydiRg?Chief ·viSits Meigs

4te

~~&amp;ffldu

~ 5-.t;~flu .b4t

,

Performance•
4:3~ P.M.
ljiponsored y:
POMEROY /MIDDLEPORT LIONS

6ol 180 180
42 142 208

2 72 175 151

.

~. · at«t·

Gore wins popular
vote in Wash. state

TickeD CaD

WEAVING STITCHES JUST ARRIVED
GIFT SHOP

E-D1ail:

...

" '
•

. Tonlght'a game•

Middleport· Pomeroy Metchants~~~

tJe,..S~
1·740·992·1135

•·

MORE ANDLUS!
MORBTRRDI.SI
MORE EXCITEMENT!
nCKET ~CE ADULT or CHilD~
.
16.00 ON ADVANCE
,
h.oo ON IHOWDAT

With Your

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769

•

Buffllo 6, Aollda ~

'

·e . ill4114

," i

Ottawa 1, Plttlburgh 1

ea .Info S ring
.,

~-.

.

Monday's ac:orw

~.

Nol'lhult D1v111on
i
Toronto .................33 22 7 3 78 18e 16S'
011awa ................30 22 10

1

..

!•

w·19L "nn
1!11. llf 116
7 6 86198 150
1
6
3
1

Bush scores
resounding
win in Va.

-··rJJIOUI

Atlantic DMaloiit
17 11
29 8
29 9
39 7

---E:AMPA-IG-N 2000-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NHL standings

rum

.

~~ C•·nt'

•

138 •
1 1 12 181 1~. •
7 3 70 201 ..,.

1

March 1; 2000

son~:lo· Cupy

Ohio

·-·-.."·
--·.
'

n 154

lat&amp;on tla.

128
1 83 215 188
5 55 181 187
2 53 180 11@

Dlvlolon
15 8 71 160
1P 1 67 173
7 : 5 &amp;1182
11 8. 59' 181

Detroit at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Callao al Phiodelphla, 7 p.m.
cr;cago al Toronto, 7 p.m.
Seattle al Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Phoon!• ol CLEVELANC, .7:30p.m.
Mlamlal Son Antonio, 8 p.m.
Cllarlono al ~. 8 p.m.
L.A. Lako1111 POitlarod, 10::!10 p.m.
Vancoulltt' at sacramento, 10:30

NewJeiHy ......... 37
Philadelphia ........ 33
Pltlabu~gh ............26
N.Y. Rang81&amp;... .... 26
N.Y. Islande18 ...... 1T

Pom~;&gt;roy,

Middleport •

Volume 50, Number 187

San Joae ............. 26 30 e 7 67 116 165 ~
Anahelm .............. 26 ZT 10 1 63 170 178'
Overtime IOSsea count Ilia a 1011 and a rept:t:,,

156
151

:t.m
~L~1!11. AI!
Sllouis .... :........4o 18 . 8 o 88 192

. EASTERN CONFERENCE

.1109 . 10
.491
II
.407 15'1.
.400
18
.222 25~

P.clllc Dlvlllan
6 3

DIIIU .................. 34 23
Phoerix ............... 32 23
L,psAngeltt ........ 30 25

,·WESTERN CoNFERENCE .

.804
.818

I &amp;I
1411
178

Cerollnl ... ... ,....... 26 28 9 0 61158 172
Tampa Bly......~i~t. 15 39 1 e 43 157 229
Atlanta ............ :;... 12 43 8 4 34 t34 221

Tonlghl'l gam•

111m

FarWnt

1

I

Wednesday

Mllp COUnty'l

....•

Dallas 108, Boeton 100
Soaltle 84, Charlotte 81
Miami 85, New y01'1( 78
Utah 106, New Jerwy 101
Golden Slale 80, Atlanta 75
Houslon 96, L.A.' C~ n

Ball St 94, Cent Michigan 61
Bol\11ng Green 84, OHIO 70
Buffalo 72, Akron 55
E. Michigan 67, N. Illinois 65
Miami 78, MAR.SHALL 68

Indiana St. 56, Bradley 54

.636
.582
.455
.438

Monday'a ac:orea

llld-Amerloan eonter.nee-flrlt round

Creighton 102. Evansville 69
lllinols St 90, .Drake 88-QT

1
3
4
2

6
5
9
13
17
7
15
10
18
12
14
19

_

20
23
30
. 31

35 .386 14~.
Vancouver ........................ 18 37 .327 . 17'~

Tournaments

S. Carolina St. 98, Morgan St. 84
. Southam U. 76, Prairie View 75

Ill.
-;-,.

l!! L M
20 .&amp;13

San Antonio ............... .... 36
Utah .........•....... :.. ......... ....35
Minnesota ........... ..... ........32
Denver .............................25
Oallas ....... ........... .............24
Housoon ...........................22

PICHicDivlolon
L.A. Lakel1 .. :.......... ......... ~5 11
Portland ..............,............ 45 11
Phoeni• ................ ............ 34 21
Seattle ... .... ....................... 35 22
Sacramento ......................31 24
Golden ~........................ 18 40
l ,A. Clippers .................... 12 48

Houoton Bapllsl74, Touo Coil: 40
Langllon -54, OldahOma Science 48
MVSU 73, Allt.·Pino Bluff 70 '

Alabama A&amp;M 76, GIBmbllng St 6.9
Alabama St. 76, Jackson St. 72
Alcom St. 82, Texas Southam 65
James Madlson 67, N;C,·WIImlngton 65

:rum

,t

Saulhwoot

South

The top 25 teams in The AssoclaleQ. Press'
men's college basketball poll, wilh first-place
votes In parentheses,· records through Feb. 27 ,
total poWtt&amp; based on 25 points lor a llrst·place
vote through one point for a 25ttl·place vote anCI
previous ranking:

_,

Bethany, Kan. 90, Starting 77
Mlssour1 Western 58, Pittsburg $1. 51

Connecticut 74, Rutgers 69

AP Top 25 men's poll

111m

..

Details, A3

•

·-

Neobefry65, TuSCIIIum 58
Rollins 69, Florida Soulhem 6ol
SouthemU. 54, PralrleV!ew43
Tarf1)11 79. Bany 76-0T
TougaloO 89, XaVIer, NO S8
Trevecca Nazarene 88, Martin Melhodist 65
Virginia St. 68, Sl. Augustine's 80

NCAA Division I
men's scores

•

cti!VELAND (AP) - Central Michipns David Webber is the men~ ,
playa of the week and BaU Sate's Laurie Kitu and Bowting Green'o ·
frmcioc Miller share the women's weekly award in the Mid-American ,..
health scares. He has suffered two heart attada
COilference.
•
2nd in July 1998 had open heart surgery.
W~bber, a 6-foot-2 sophomore guard fiom Formington Hills, Mich.. ..
Manuel, who has never managed at the
icored a Rose Arena record 51 points in the Chippewaf91-80 loss at BaU •
major-le&gt;gue level, p;wed an executive physiState ill the only game in which be played lasr week.A sprained right wrist ·
cal before he was hired on Nov. t.
kept him out of the Toledo contest. Webben 51 points are the sixth highest siag1e game toea! in MAC history. He made 16-ol'-24 field goals, 7-of"People ask me about the stress of the job;'
9 three-point attempts and 12-of-15 free throws. The 51 points broke the
he 12id recendy. " Believe me, I've never felt the
arena ~ord of 49 set by Larry Bird of Indiana State.
stress. Some of the best games I've ever seen
W~ber is the brother of the S.cramento Kings' Chris Webber.
•,'
were in the 1997 postseuon when we went to
Kiru, a fitsbman from Marion, Ind., averaged 22.5 points in two games. · •
the World Series. Those were nail-biting
She hiL57 percent ofher three-point atteinpo (13 of2.3) and matched her '
games. I enjoyed every minute of them."
career ..gh of28 poinl$ in an overtime win against Central Michigan, hit- ;. :
ring eiglit three-pointers against the Chippewas.
.
.:
Hart said there should be no break in the
team's wor)&lt;out routine with Manuel out.
Milh:'ll' a sophomore fiom Kalida, bad· 17 points in an 84-71 win at :
"Char~e and his staff establislred -~ prOgram. - Akron, tll&lt;n bad 22 poilits, including 16 in the S&lt;Cond half and the game- •
for spring training and we'll continue under . winninl; tiee throws with 4.'&lt; seconds remaining, to give BG a come-fiom-&lt; :
rhe supervision of our coaching staff," Hart ._~ehind ~n over Butralo. For the wee~. she hit all 12 of her lite throws. • ,
"
said.

'

•

. Wl. . .w Kllla.- tllkt MAC llonon

TODAY'S "SCOREBOARD

•

H....: ~;\ow: 101

'

.

Bl-4,8

Lotteries
OfUO

"'*

Pick 3: 5-7-9; Pick 4: 6-0-7"9
)Z 5: l6-21-2b-J2-36
•
r

W:VA.

Dailr 3: .6-0-&lt;&gt; Dailr 4: 1-7-8-8 .
Q lOOO Ohio

Voll'!' Pulilnhina Co.

WASHINGTON:' (,\P) - The Environmental one of the ewe.plants from coal to natural gas and
Protection Agency reached a $1 billion agreement install new pollution devices to curtail emissions a~
Tuesday with a Florida utility to cut tens of thou- the other plant. The cost of these changes, when
sands of tons of pollution annuaUy from t:Wo power fuUy implemented by 2010, would be "approxi.:
, plants.
·
mately $1 billion," Browner said.
·
The settlement could lead to similar agreements
. The result will be a ~eduction .of r,o~ ~
to resolve a goverrunent lawsuit. seeking pollution · 120,000 tons of smcig-causmg and ac1d-or.un-&lt;ausms
reductions at 32' aging coal-fired plants in 10 states, · chemical releases annuaUy by the end of the decade;
including Ohio.
she said.
·
'
The utility, Tampa Electric Co., also agreed to pay
"The (poUution) reductions we're .talking ·a bou(
a $~.5 million civil penalty for pa5t pollution and are huge," said Browner. She said nitrogen dioxide;
Will invest S10 million in environmFntal rnitig&gt;tion · a prec\\rsor of smog, will be cut by 91 percent at the: ·
anti ~hort-tetm . pollutiOn control measures, said two plants,' with significant reductions in micro-:
EPA Administrator Carol Browner.
scopic soot and virtual elimination of releases of sul-;
":rhere luve be..; violationS of public health fur dioxide.
·
,
over a significant period of time;· Browner sold in
John Rami!, president ofTampa Electric, called i~
justifying the civil penalties.The utility admitted no "a good settlement for everybody involved" and;
violations.
PluH ... IM. .... AS
'As p&gt;rt of the setdement, the utilitY will switch

·•

i

'Ill'

'

..

;----~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="436">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9872">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24950">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24949">
              <text>February 29, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="736">
      <name>neal</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5645">
      <name>rall</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
