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8v DAVE HARIQ

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
ROCK 'SPRINGS - Meigs rolled to
a double header sweep over Jackson Saturday afternoon at Meigs High School.
Meig; {4-1 over:~ U ,, 2-1 TVC) with the
sw~ep has won four in a row, !hey will
host Wellston Monday evening.
In the firsr game, Meigs pounded out
t 5 hits en ure to a 28-5 pounding of

r

aouc1y
Hlp: JOs; l.ow: 20s

crew
beats Jackson .twice in·doubleheader
..

Marauder

the lronladies. Meigs scory:d th"'e runs in
the first inning, added seven in the second, fi.v~ in the th ird, two in the fourth,
and If more in the seventh inning.
Brooke Williams led the Meigs hit
pmde with a double and three singles
with four RBis, Abby Harris went three
for three with rwo doubles and three
RBls, Tangy Laudermilt chipped in with
a tnple and a single, Shannon Price and

Stephanie Wigal each added a double and
a single, and Julie Kennedy and Br:~ndy
Tobin each added singles.
Laudermilt picked up the win to run
her record to 2-1, she gave. up nin~ hi!J,
walked three and· srruck out three.
Griffith and Snyder pitche,ll for Jack_.
son. The two combined to give up I 5
hits, walk 16 and strike out one. Lambert
led Jackson with a pair of doubles, D~on

addtcl a single. and a triple.

Ja---·-on diamond men notch two ·wins over Marauders in twin bill :.
BY DAVE HARRI$
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
ROCK SPRIN GS - The Jackson
Ironmen swept a double header from
Meigs Saturday afternpon at Meigs High
School. Jackson held off a Marauder
co meback in the first contest ro post a
l0-8 win .
In the secpmd game, Jackson scored
seve n runs in the first inning and went on
to dtofeat Meigs 12-6.
In rhe first· game, Meig; sported rhe
Jronmen a 1-0 j·~ad in the first inni11g.
But Meigs tied the game in rhc bottom
of the inning on a Kyl~ Smiddie, a stolen
base and a single off rhe bat on Tommy
R oush.
Jackson howt•ver put a big five spot on
the board· in the second inning, with the
big hit coming on a rhree run home run

I
off the bat of Rouse.
Meigs came back in rhe rhird inning,
singles by Jeff Brown, Roush and Jacob
Smith, coupled with a pair of walks the
Marauders scoted three runs and pulled
ro within 6-4.
But Jac kson added four more runs in
the fourth inning o n three walks. singles
by Hoover, Shens and a two run double
by Skaggs to take a 10-4 lead.'
Meigs starred ro chip away' at the Jackson lead ill rhe sixth il)ning. Kyle Smid- ·
die tripled over the center fiddcrs head
·
to start the inmng,
on~ out' later Jc· ff
Brown reached on a Jacksoll erro~ to
· Roush then walked and
sco re Smidd1e.
.
•
·
Jacob Smuh
had a rwo our• smgle
to score
Brown .
Meigs had rhcit first two batters
retired to start the seventh in11ing. But

.
Snudd1e walked and Nick Dettwiller
looped a single to left. Brown then
wal ked to load rhe bases. Roush follo\ved
with a two run single and Meigs had
pulled to within 10-8. Smith then hir one
to seco nd, ',b ut the ball took a bad hop,
which the second baseman had to go
b,?ck ro ger rhe ball . Wlulc laymg on the
grou nd, he flipp ed t&lt;i .th e shortstop for
the force at seco nd and end rhe game.
Hoover p1ckcd up th e win for Ja ckson,
scatterin g 1fil hits, walki ug edigJht kaud
srnkmg out 1vc. Hoover a1so 1e ac son
· of Sill
· g1 cs. R ous.c
ar thc p1arc .w1r· 11 a pa11
added his home nm, and Skaags had a
double.
1
'
·
Sophon)ore Josh Lynch was the lolmg
. h er, he gave up nme
. Iurs
. . , walked SIX
.
pnc
and struck out seven. Ro11sh and Smiddie
each had three hits for Meigs, with Smid-

.
.
.
· die getting his triple. Smitl) added rwo Jackson, Rouse and Green each smglefl.
singles, Matt Stewart, Dettwiller and Jackson closed ~mt rhe scormg m the fif!~
Brown ea~h added singles.
on a !'foover smgle and a Holdren do uIn the second game, Jackson took bk
advantage of sloppy lidding by rhe . · Bachtel was the winning pitcher, l).e
Marauders jumped to the early 7-0 lead. gave up seven hits, hit one, walked fo11r
Jackson had four smgl~s, a walk to go and struck out seven . Holdren had a p~ir
along With the four Me1gs errors.
.
of doubles for Jackson, Rouse and Green
Meigs cur the lead ro 7-3 i.n rhe bot- added two singles each.
rom of rhe firsr, Zach Bohn smgled, and
d ]j . . k d
'th
1 I
Dctti!ler walked. Brown then followed I Anfi Y av;'- p~c e u~~ 1e oss WI
1
1 11
with da two rund .bdo ubk Brown later ~fn~~ ~~~~~~i~~ :~p ~ ;,~~. hitet\~:oba~~~~~
score on a passe a11 ·
'lk fi
d .k
. 1 d'
1uce. Bo1111
M c1gs
· pu 11CC d town· h'm 7- 6 m
wa
1ve
an
stn
e
out
t
· t11c sec·
M.
h 1 , . h d bl , d e·
ond innin g, Bolin doubled with one our, . ~~1gs aBt r e P ardcdwdu .da obul e adn two
,
Det- Sln!l&gt;es,
S' k'1p D ods·on rcac11&lt;d on a· error.
I R rown
. S a. he ad Dou .c kan ha Sill·
h.
lk d
d Brown an d g e'h onme
Jo nson '
twiller
1 en ·wa e ; an
dd d 11111
. 1......ah~ .......erne
,
J aco b Snut. h cac h smg
. Ied .
eac a e a smg e.
But Jackson added four more in rhe
Meigs (2- 3 overall, 2-1 TV C) will h&lt;is,!
fourth inning. Holdren had a double for Wellston on Monday.
:

1

.

TODAY'S -SCOREBOARD

"

.

\

Denver ............... .............. 30 43 -~11
Houston ................... .... .. .. 28 45 .38o4

Voncouver ........................ 19 53 .254
Pacific DIYiolon

3(1

x-l.A. Lakers ...................62 12 .838
)(·Portland ................... .....54 19 .7.0

13\ .

lC-Seattte ...........................41

20~

Meigs .. ... ...................... 330
000
Bottorl..

:=

32 1,.562

Golden Sltllo .................... 11 57 .230
L.A. Cllppol1 .................... 14 59 .192
K&lt;:llnchod plai'Qff berth

lil
45

47'1,

Holdren (WPI and Skaggs
Da~s (LP) , S1anley (4) and Denwlller
~

Denver 112, Utah 92
Porttand 11S, MHwaukee 79

Sundey's scores
Detrott 113. New Jersey 92

co

PhoenllC 87, Minnesota 88

Jarnr:~~--.~~~.~~~~on ~~~e ~·8

1ncliana 104, Toronto 83
Sacramento 117, Philadelphia 95

t,leii!~d&lt;iimiii'(wPi arJt~a~~ 1)K = 28-15·2
Grllllth (LP), Snyrlo!r (4) and OIKOO

L.A. lakers 106, New Vorl&lt; 82
Miami 88, San Antonio 84
Chicago 83, CLEVELAND 74
DaMas100,Vancouver88
Portland 95, Soatile 82

- Meigs 15, Jackaon &amp;-game 2

M~waukea117,

Jackson ....................... 500 300 p : 8-8-2
Mol~s ...........................060 405 0=15·12·5

FT. WORTH, Tags (AP) -

Results Sunday

of the NASCAR Winston Cup Series OlrecTV
• 500 at Texag Motor Soeedway wllh slartlng positbn in parentheses, driver; type of car, laps com·
pleted, reason out (If any) and mona~ won:

· 1. (8) Dale Eamhaidl, Jr.. Chevrolet, 334,
$314,675.
2. (99) Jeft Burton, Ford, 334, $259,550.
3. (,18) Bobbr Labon!e, Pontiac, 334,
$186,500.
4. (2) Rusty Wallace. FOld, 334, $155,450.
5. (16) Ke~n Lepage; Fordl334, $128,800.
6. (12) Joramy ¥al'fle d, Ford, 334,
$108,650.
7. (3) Dale Earnhardt, Chevrolat. 334,
$108,750.
8. (5) Terl)l Labonte, Chevrolet, 334,
$118,350.
9. (20) Tony Slewan, PonUac. 334, $991225.
10. (28) R~ky Rudd, FOld, 334, $105,125.
.11 . (6) Marl&lt; Martin, Ford, 334, $93,525.
12. (31) Mike Skinner, Cl!evrolet, 334,
$87,325.
.
1.3. (91) Chad Unla, Ford, 334, $84,025.

Saiurday's ecoree
CLEVELAND 109, Boston 103
Houston 115, Atlanta 93
Charlone 90, Chicago 87

6·8·5

DirecTV 500 re•ults

7~

K·PhoaniK .........................4B 25

,658
)!·Sacramento ..................42 30 ' .583

Jac~~~~o~ 1~~ ~~gs ~~~m~·~0·2

14. (22) Ward Bur1on, Pontiac, 334,

19'1
21'1

Golden State113

$62,975.

$93,525.
33. (68) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 285, $68,550.
. 15. (26) Jimmy Spencer, Ford, 333,
34. (40) Slertlng M,artln, CHevrolel, 279,
$85,200.
engine failure, $53.425:
16. (4) Bobby Ramlllon, Ch&amp;\lrolet, 332,
35. (90) Ed Ben1er, Ford, 270, engine tall·
$73,200.
uro, $41,900. ·
,
17. (42) ~enny Irwin, Chevrolet, 332,
36. (9) Stacy Compton, Ford, 255, $40,850.
$18,500.
.
37: (33) Joe Nomechek, Chavrotet. 253.
18. (36) Ken Schrader. Pontiac, 332, · accident, $47:825.
"'
$68,800.
38. (21) Jeff Fuller, POntiac, 233, accklen1,
19. (1) Sieve Park, Chevrolet, 332, $15,600. $38,175. ·
20. (14) Alck Mast, Pontiac. 331,$68.200.
39. ~1) Elllon Sadler, Ford, 221.$46,725.
21 . (55) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet, 331,
40. 45) Adam Pelty, Chavrolet. 215, engine
$15,400.
'·
. failure, ,875.
22. (93) Dave Blaney, Pontiac,. 331,
41 . (41) Gal)l Bradberry, Chevrolet.. 185,
$60,700.
accldenl, $36.825.
23. 111\ Brett Bodine, Ford, 33C, $59.100.
42. (10) Johnny Benson, Pontiac, 143, accl24. 68 Darrell Wallrtp, Ford, 328,$61,100. dent, $38,515.
25. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet. 320,
43. (25) Jerl)l Nadeau, Chevrolel, 110, accl$76, tso.
.
.
dent, $46,525:
26. (17) ROI&gt;ert Proosloy, Ford, 318, ~nglne
failure, $58,400.
11me or race: 3 hours: 49 mii')Utea, 12 ~Zl. (32) Scoff Pruen, Ford, 318, $52,700.
o'nc!s.
.
28. (60) Dick Trickle, Chevrolet, 311,
Margin of vtctol)l: 5.920 secoods.
$61,900.
~Ve'l\ge speed: 131.152 mph,
29. (1) Michael Waltrip, Chevrolet, 300,
load cllangas: 29 among 17 drivers.
engine failure, ~ 300.
Caullon Hags: 121or 621aps. ·
•
30. \94) BMI 'eulon, Ford, 297., $59,450.
Lap laad&lt;!rs: Torry Labonte 1·3, Scott Pruo11
31 . 17) ¥~tt Kensalll, Ford, 288, accident, 4·16, Oale Eamnardt, Jr. 17-19, Bobbr Hamilton
$57,050.
·
20, Joe Nernechok 21-22, ¥1ko Skinner 23,
32. (43) John Andrenl, Pontiac, 287, Rusty ·Wallace 24-76, ~ Labonte n-B2,

Earnhardt, Jr. 83, Jel1 Burton 84, Kevin Lepagi
85, Jimmy Spencer 88·87, B.labonte 68·11l!;
Kenny Irwin 113, Earnhardt, Jr. 114· 14~
Michael Waltrip 141, Dale Jarren 148·151,'1t'
Wallace 152, Jarrett 153-155, R.Wallaca 1~
159, Jarretl160·170, Rlcl&lt;v Rudd 171·179, Jert,
my Mavfleld 180·197, J.I!&lt;Jrton 198-233, Eo'""
halllt, Jr. 234. Lepage 235·25f , B.labonlo 2g;
260, Eaml)alllt Jr. 261-215, Steve Park 2111;
281, Eamhar&lt;lt, Jr. 282-334.
.
Point lltlndlngs: Bobby Lat&gt;onte 1114, ¥ark
Martin 1030, Ward Burton ·1024. Dolo Earr)har(j\
959, RU&amp;ly Wal"co 940, Jeff Burton 934, RickY
Rudd 907, Dale.Jarren 895, Terry Labonte 818,
Jeremy Mayfield 846.
'

Baeeball

·

·.,

Amorlconi.Nguo
. ·
~NAHEIM ANGELS: Purchased lhe con·
· trecta ot INF Be~l Gil and LliP Keni .Merckar.
Aelaas,d RHP Tom Candloffl.
.BI'ILTIMORE ORIOLES: Reassigned OF
Warne Klrll)' and OF Derrick May to Aocllasler
ot lhe International Laague. Placed C Greg
Mjl.,. on lhe 15-day dlsablod.llsl. Pun:huecl
the conlrtiCt ol C WIHie Morales. Assigned RljP
Rlcll Nogrena outright to Rochester.

.No gain•• tonight

G'f:~ ~~~. ~~~u{:,'::'~ DIKon

Tuesday' a game•
New Jetflev at Waahlngton. 7 p.m.
Oettolt at toronto, 8 p.m.

''
American League slate
Todav'a openera
.
Chicago White So• (S~otka. l H 3) at Tegs
(Rogers 5·3), 3:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Colon 18-5) a1 Bolllm0111
(Mussina 18·7), 3:05p.m.
,
Kansas City (Suppan 10-12) at Toronto

·.

CLEVELAND VI. M"ml, 7:30 p.m.
Boston at Charlotte, 7:30 p;m,
Son Antonio at Ortanilo, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Milwaukee, 8 p.m:
Atlanta at Minnesota,,8 p.m.
Sacramento It Dallu. 8:30 p.m.
Denver at Seattle, 10 p.m.

ra

l.A. lakera al PhoaniK, 1P:30 R.m.
Utah at L.A. Cllpparo. 10:3(1 p.lll.
Houston a1 VBntouver, 10:30 p.m.

(Wells 17-,0), 4:05p.m·.

Tampa Bay (Trachsel . 0·0) at Minnesota

(Radke12·14) , 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Nomo 0·0) al Oakland (Appler 16·
14). 10:05 p.m.

New Vork Yankees (Hemandez 17· 9) at
Anaheim (Hill4·11 ), 10:35 p.m..

Kansas Citv at Toronto, 7:05p.m.
Boston at Seanle, 8:05 p.m.
ChicadO White Sox at rexas, 8:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 8:05p.m
Detroit at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
New Yort&lt; Yankees at Anaheim. 1():05 p.m.

.,

Wednesday's games
Chicago White Sox at Texas, 3:05p.m.
Detroit at OaklaOO, 3:35p.m.
Kansas City at Toronto. 7:05p.m.
CLEVELAND at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Tafll)a Bay at Minnesota , 8:05p.m.
Boston at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
New York Yankees at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.

'

'

e,

a
'

'

CAPITOL HILL GOLF .COURSE

NHL standings
• EASTERN CONFERENCE

Tuesday's games

•

Att1ntlc Dlvl11on

Jum
It I. I BI 1!11. liE
x-Naw Jersey .... ..44 27 8 5 101 247
•-Philadelphia ..... 41 25 12 3 97 222
Plnsllurgh ........... 34 36 6 6 82 231
·NY. Aangars ....... 29 3B 12 ·3 13 216
N.V. Islanders ...... 22 48 9 1 54 168
Northl18t Division
K-Toronto .............43 28 7 3 96 236
•.Onawa ............. 38 29 11 2 89 231
Buflalo ................ 33 35 10 3 19 203
Montreal. ............. 33 37 9 4 19 181
Boston ................. 23 36 19 6 71 200
Southeast Division

)(·Wasnington ......~2 25 11

2

liA

192

114
228
235
210
212
205
199
190
233

Named two of the TOP 35 new public courses in America for 1999 by Golf magazine.
'

.

r

;

THE SENATOR course named in the TOP 10 new public courses in the cou~try.

This newest honor is one of many earned by Alabama's ROBERT TRENT jONES GOLF TRAIL,

97 218 i86

named "one of 'the TOP 10 trips in the world" by Frequent Flyer magazine.

•·Fionda .........'....41 31 6 5 93 230 199
Carolina ..............35 34 10 0 80 209 2~9
Tampa Bay ........ .. 18 51 9 7 52 194 292
National League slate
AUanta ............. ... 14 51 1 4 39 162 299
.
Today's openers
, WESTERN CONFERENCE
Milwaukee (Woodard 11·8) at CINCINNATI
Central Dlvlelon. ,
(Harnisch 16·10), 1:05 p.m.
rum
W L I BI 1!11. Gf 11A
San Diego (Hilchcocl&lt;. 12·14) at New.Vork K•St Louis · 50 18 11 o 111 238 153
Me!SColorado(Astado17·
(Leiter 13-12), 1:10 p.m
.
oa·troil ..............
. .. •• 22 10 2 106 214 203
11)atAllanra(MaddulC · X·
._
19·9) 4·05
ChlcaJm ............... 3C 39 10 2 12 230 239
ChtCa J&gt;·~;b&lt; (Tapani 6·12) at St. louis , Nash lie ..... ii0ft28 ::. DI~IJon70 195 .229
(KilO
B·13f. 4:10 p., m.
.()of ad 0
31JW9 29 11 1 90 224r 196
Los A eles (Brown 18-9) et Montreal (Her· x
or
.... ,.....
)
'J
7-0
Edmonton
...........
30
32 18 a 54 213 20 1
4
5
9
man:~frandsCo~~-:andez8·12) at florida vancouvar ......... ..2.9 36 14 8 80217 229
Calgal)l ............... 31 38 9 5 78 200 239
, pm
(F ema ndez 1·82 , 1.
. ·
Pactftc Otvltlon
Houston ( •toids 16·14) at ~lflaburgh J&lt;Y·Dal"o ............. 43 21 8 8 !00203 172
(Schmkl113·11), :OS p.m.
K-loS Angelos .....37 30 11 4 89 236 220
PhoenlK............... 31 34 7 4 85 224 220
Tueaday•s gam11
San Jose ............. 32 36 10 7 81 214 206
Anahelm ..............32 34 12 2 78 204 216
Los Angeles at Montreal, 7:05 q.m.
Hllnched plai'Qft berth
•
San Franctsco at Florkla, 7:05p.m.
y-clinOhed dlvltion tnle
Colorado at ~tilmla, 7 :~0 p.m.
Overtime ton11 count 11 a k;ll and a reguPhlladelph" at An~ona, 10:05 p.m.
"tion rta.
· · Wedneadey'e 111me1
Slturdey's score•
Los Angeles 01 Montreal.-,:05 p.m.
Phlladoiphll .3, Pltltlburgh 2
Dotrctt o, 51. loulo O.tio
San Francisco at Florida, 7:05p.m.
HouSton at Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Rangers 2, Bollon 2·tle
Chicago 2, N.Y. Ialanders 2·118
Mllw-ukoo al CINCINNATI, 7:05p.m.
Loa AAgolee 2, Anaheim 1
San Diego al N.V.Molt!, 7:10p.m.
Colorado at Atlanta, 7:40p.m.
Toronto .c.,·WUhlnQton 3
Chicago Cuba at Sl. Loulo, 8:10p.m.
Buffalo 2; Montrtlll o •
Philadelphia at Allzona, 9:35p.m.
Tampa Bay 3, F)orldo 3~e
Colgal)l 3, Son Jotf 0
Edmonton 4, Phoenbr 3.0T

Come see for yourself.
.......

•
0

,.

,,

'

"

•

EASTERN CONFERENCE
r.D
All'""" ~·"t 1!!11. lll
K·Miaml ............................46 28 .639
K·New VOtl&lt; .....................45 28 .618 1 ~
Phlll&lt;lolphla ..................... 42 31 .575 4 ~
Ortando ....................:....... 37 36 .507

9\i

NewJersey ......................31 42 .425

15',.

BostQn.....................~ ....... .30 43 .&lt;411

Walhlng1on ...... :............ ... 28 47 .356

Control Dlvlolon '
•·lndlana ...........:............. 49 24 .871
Charlqtte ..........................41 31 .569
Toronto ................ ,........... .40 33 .548 ·
O.trolt.. ............................37 35 . 514
Mjlwaukee ........................35 38 .479

16'•

20'·~

7',

9

11'a
14

ct:EVELAND .................. 29 .. .391 20
Atltnta .............................. 26 46 .361 22'.
Chlcago............................ 15 58 .205 34
WEStERN CONFERENCE
MI-Dhriolon
111m
It L &amp; olil
•·Utah .............................. 49 23 .. 681
~e·Sa n Antonto .................. 47
~e·Mi n nesola ....
. .44

28 .844
29 .603
DaHas .............................. 32 41 .438

2',
5',
17',

'.

. Tonight's gam11
Toronto at Buffalo, 7 p.m.

Carolina at Pltltlburgh, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Ranoera a1 washington, 7:30p.m.
Now Jersey at Florlde, 7:30p.m.
Colgal)l at Dallas, 8:3C p.m.
San Joaa ot Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Lcs·Ange!H at P,hoenl)(, 9:30p.m.
NashvtHe at A"-"elm, 10:30 p.m.

.'

CAPITOL HILL
334 .285 . lll,4

. Tue1dly's llll!lel
Washington al Ottawa,'} p.m.
Pl\ltadolpllia at ~l"nto , 7:30p.m. •
Boston at Tampa Bey. 7:30 p m.

To get a current weather
repQrt, check the

.I
It

.....

•

' Melp County's ·
Volume

so. Number 211

Hometown Nel(Wspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 Cents

AEP won't speculate on Meig~ Mine fate
Nature qf (itiformal'
meeting at Mine No. 2
IWt revealed

Jeff Rennie ofAEP's Fuel Supply office
in Lancaster, who serves as a spokesman
for the mine operations, said Monday that
he could nor confirm rumors from last
week that a buyer for the operation will
be sought, or ~hat the min es will close if a
sale is not completed by year-end.
BY BRIAN J. REED
However, Rennie did confirm rhat
OVP NEWS STAFF
.
POINT ROCK- A spokesman for AEP, officials met with representatives of
AEP's Southern Ohio Coal Co. has the United Mine Workers Asoociation ar
tefused to comment on rumors thar the Meig; Mine No. 2 on Monday morning.
Rennie was unwilling to reveal the
Meig; Division mines are for sale, or that
nature
or the subject of the meeting, other
layoffi of workers at the Meigs Division
than to say thar th e meeting was an "inforare in1minent .

"AEP and Southeru Ohio

.
Coal Co. are exploring a
11uml1er of options wir/1 regard

.to the Meigs Dir&gt;ision."
.Jell Rennie, AEP

"SOCCO has nor changed the projected shutdown date, but the plans for 'the .
mining operation are under co ntinuous
review," Rennie said. J
"There is nothing new to report at ·this
time," he added.
In pasr weeks, speculation about an earlier closing of rhe m.ines and possible layoff of miners has grown. But late last year,
R ennie said the mines were still expected
to remain open until at least the end of
2001, a date which has been included in
reports to the Public Utilities Comn1ission of.Ohio.
'

mal " session held at the min e site.

"AEP and Southern Ohio Coal Co. are
exploring a number of oJ?tions with
regard to the Meigs Division," Rem1ie
said,.but was unwilling to be more specific about the fate of the Salem Township
operation.

Pomeroy Council approves bid for new well
BY BRIAN J. REID
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - A bid from
G.M. Baker for the drilling of a
new water well was approved
when Pomeroy Village Council
.met in regular sessionMonday
evenmg.
The Dayton company was rhe
lowest of five bidders on the project, with a bid of$33,333.
The new well, to be called
"No.5," will be located at the village wellfield in Syracuse, and will
produce water with a lower manganese content, according to
Mayor.John Blaettnar.
It is likely, Blaettnar said, that
one of the village's other three
weUs, that whic h presents the
highest manganese content, will t
be abandoned once Well No. 5 is
completed.
l'he cost will be pai&lt;f frotn vil~
· lage war.er funds, Clerk Kathy
Hysell said.
Afi:er meeting in executive session with Pomeroy Police Chief
Jeffi-ey Miller, council accepted
the resignation · of Patrolman
Jonathan Sanders, and ~pproved
the promotion of' Aoyd Hickman, a part-time officer, to·a fulltime position to replace Sanders.
Council also authorized Miller
to accept applications for a'partdme offic er.
Fire Chief Chris Sh~k reported to council that th,e fire department will disconnect the fire siren
on a temporary 30-day ba_sis.
, R esidents in some areas of
Pomeroy have complained that
the siren creates a noise problem
at emergency_times, and Shank
said that all volunteers are now
equipped wirh scanners which
notify them of emergencies:
If response time is not affected
by the disconne~tion, it will be
made permanent, Shank said. But
the noon sire11 will continue to
sound, be added.
Gouncihnen Victor.Young Ill
and David Ballard both expressed
concern that the siren will still
sound during times of village. wide ·emergencies, which Shank
said it could.

.
. DISCUSS PERSONNEL- Police Chief Jeffrey Miller met with Pomeroy Council on Monday night to. l!is·
cuss a ilufl!bet perSl&gt;onel 'matters. {Brian J. Reed photo)
~hank

·,

also .ad that the fir~ department workers are required requirement for water depart- ·
department's ~· brush truck to work more in winter, w.eather ment workers, who were once
will likely' gri ,into service next and that they; at rimes, risk their· charged wirh operating the water
.,veek.
. ,
. lives doing their jobs.
treatment plant.
Charlie Fitch~atrick; a street · Water department employees,
Blaettnar s.uggested that the
department employee, mel with he said, are paid considerably finance 'committee meet cO
council about .,.inequities ih more o11 an hourly basis than review the pay scales for the two
salaries between • Workers for ,the street department .workers. Coun- departments, and to return to
water departme · and the street cilman Bryan Shank said that he .·council with a recommendation.
depa.rtment.
,,
feels the difference in pay is the
Fitchparrick noted thar .street result of the former certificati,on ! · PIIIH see COUnciL ,... Al

Investigators say · ·. :. ·...
candle caused URG .blaze,
"

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,,

Commissioners
debate engineer's ·.
request on salaries
Bv BRI~N J.. A.EED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - Meigs County. Co mn1issioners discussed, but
decided to tai!:e no action, on a
request for additional funds for
salaries at the County Highway
Departm ent, durin g Monday's
regular meeting.
Last week, Engineer Robert
Eason asked conm1issioners to
transfer $95,0(}0 from the department's "bituminous materials"
account• to the "employees'
salaries" litle iterp.
, .The request \lias not accompanied by a explanation, bur"Eason
said by telephone Monday after,.noon rhar the request was a "routine transfer to cover needs" in
the line. item for employees
salaries.
'
The commissioners have discu ~sed the request for two weeks.
Last week, th e request was tabled,
and Monday, commissioners discussed it again, but took no
action ,
Connnissioner Jailet Howard
said, she had met with Prosecuting Anorney John Lenres regarding the request . Lentes had
explained rhat the commissioners
have no choi ce but to approve
the request,' because once the
co mmission ers approve appropriations, the · authority to · spend
mon ey in departmental budgets
tests with the officeholder - in
this case, with Eason .
C ommissioner J effiey Th'llrnron said he· "will nor" vote to
approve the transfer, because he
opposes using funds appropriated
for bit~minous ro ad materia ls
(asphalt) for salaries.
"I will vote 'no,' "if this comes
to· a vote," Thornton said. "If
rh ese funds are necessary to make
payroll, they should have been
requested when we made the

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports

AS
B3-4
· A4
A3
B1-2

Weather

A3

.

Lotteries

.... - - - ikil

\"')t.,~ • ~-~~-~-:- .0. ::. ~ -~-..Q.~+--- ~L ~~~

owo
Pick 3: 6-0-1
Pick 4: 2-8-4-8

Bucloe)oe Five: 1-7"19-ll-29

WYA.
Dally 3: 0-6-5 Dally 4: 6-1-6-5
C 2oo0 Ohio Valley Publi!hing Co.

••

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u/ will llote 'no,, if this
comes to a 1•ote. ~f these
funds are. necessary to make fll}'ro /1, the}' sllonld
ha1•e /Jce11 · req11ested wllen
we made the annual
appropriation.~

(in ]all liM]'). "

Jell"'t·

omton

annual appropr

atio~s

a1;~binton s'

,. 'Jflat ·he .suspect-

(in Janu-

ed the funds might be 'used to
increase . salari es for o utgoing
administrative employees, who
are· expe'cted to leave the department when Eason leaves at the
end of the year. Eason was defeat- ·
·ed in the Ma~ch primary by
Eugene Triplett.
"Raising (salaries) will .make
.their retirement higher," Thornton said , noting that a public
employee's retirement is based on
the employee's highest earnings
prior to retirement.
" It just seems wrong to me to
take materials from funds ·set
aside for paving material and to
put them into salaries,"Thornron
said.
Howard said that she felt that
the request was "premature," and
said that while commissioners
have been told by Lentes, their
legal counsel, thar rh e request
must be approved, the board wiU
take no immediate action to
approve it. .
Eason said that he would not
comment further on the 'request,
but said th at he had been told
Monday morning by the commissioners' office that 'the board
would not be meeting in regular
session, and ' therefo.re was not

PIHH- S.'-ry...... Al

Juvenile Court receives $2.000

•

y I

Rennie said at tht• time the future of
the mining operation will depend on the
quality and quantity of coal that the mines
produce. Bur he added rhat rumors about
;arly closing of the mines were likely the
result of the operation's recently hitting a
particularly difficult coal seam.
The Meigs Division currently employs
830 people, and includes Meigs Mines 2
and 31, the SOC CO Meig; Division Prep
Plant, which washes coal mined there for
use at AEP's Gen. James· M. Gavin Plant,
and the business offices ofrhe operation at
Point Rock.

'

FROM AP, STAFF REPORTS
the one room, offiebls said. Other
RIO GRANDE - An unat- ·partS of tb.e building had extentended candle caused a fire that sive smoke and waC~! damage.
forced mote than 70 students out
N1l official 'estiri'#lie has been
of their dormitory at the Univer- issued on fire daruage, a R.io
.. sity of Rio Grande, investigators prande press release saiq.The fire
said.
jWas brought under control shortA student, id!!ntified by school ly after the arrival,:of. the Rio
officials as a 22-year-old central Grande and Gallipolis volunteer
Ohio wom~n,lefi: a candle burn- fire departments: ·
ing in her second floor Boyd Hall
Contcictbrs were eltpe~ted. to
room and fell asleep. She awoke be on campus Monday to
and fo11nd her bedding on fire , appraise damage.
·
said Bill Teets, spokesman for 'th e
About 70 people living in rhe
stale fire marshal.
building were moyed to the uniCampus police said the student
versity's four other dorms. They
suffered minor injuries and was
were given linens and were perueated at a hospital and released.
mitted to r,eirieve some of their
No one else Was injured.
moving, -said
The fire, whiah 'started around belongin ~ before
. .
'
5 a.m. Sunday, severely damaged
Plllee see Blue, Pllp AS
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April 4, 2000

•

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"

scores
Caroline 1, P
lphloo 0
St. Loull4, Oftawa 1
ColollldO 3, DoMao 2.QT
Allanta 5, N.Y.Islanders 4
Vancouver 3, Chicago 2
New Jeruy 4, Tampa Boy 1
Dllroll 6, MontrHI5.0T

Sentinel

.
,.,.

Slm.,:Z''

NBA standings

''

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And THE LEGISLATOR named amorig the Top 25 "very worthy newcomers."

TU

,I

Spartans win NCAA title;..&amp;1

Details, A3

and .Laudermilt each had a double and a
single. Williams had a pair of singles.
Wigal and Julie S~un each added a smgle.
.
·
·
For Jackson, Griffith l&gt;nce again W2S
the loser with relief Melp from Snyder.
The two combined to give up 12 hits,
walk I 0 and strike out four. Lambert and
Hughes each.-added a pair of singles for
Jackson.
·
·

•
·•
In the second game Meigs spotted the
visiton a S-0 lead in the first inning, but
came back with a six run second, a four
run fourth md added five in the sixth to
coast to the win .
Amy Hysell, who picked up the win,
gave up eight: hits, walked five and struck
out three. Hysell, Bethany Boyles, Price,

Lawmaker doesn't .like loaded definition, A2

w~nesc~.y:

Monday, April 3, 2000

PoJMrOy, Middleport, Ohio

. . . . . The Deily 8tntlntl

·r

•

Ohio Attorney
General Betty
Montgomery's office
made a $2,000
cqntribution to the
"Natural Helpers•
program of Meigs
County Juvenile Court
on f&gt;'londay., Holly
Martin , field
representative for the·
attorney general, left,
presented the funds
to Triola Jack~on,
case manager for the
court. The funds will
be used to train
student leaders to
assist their
•
classmates at a
special camp this
summer, according to
Judge Robert Buck.
'
{Brian J. Reed photo)

�'

•.
1

Pege A 2 The Dally Sentinel

City gets tough with bus drivers
DAYTON (AP) -The city's school district is taking a, gettough approach with its bus drivers.
.
·
.
- The distri~t says it 'won't tolerate lapses by drivers, three of
whqm the district said left pupih on buses after routes were finished. The school board at its April 14 meeting plans to consider firing them.
A fourt h driv~r quit last month after the district said it would
recommend his firing for bypassing a railroad barricade and dri~ing his bus 'across tracks with children aboard, the school system reported.
Since the "hool year began", the district 's transp·o rtation
department has been .under fi~ from parents who had complained that buses 'ro utinely run late or fail to pick up children .
Clayton Luckie, a Dayton sc hool board member, said the seriousness of the incidents has to be considered~
"The most important thing is the safety of our children,''
Luckie said.
In o ne case, a driver parked his bus at the district bus garage
after his morning run Feb. 25. When he retu rned fo r his ~fte r­
~oon assi~;v ment mo re rh an four hours later, he· fo und an 8- yearold pupil asleep, the district said.
·

Student$ study First Lady
C ANTO N (AP) - A group of teachers and histor ians is making the life of former First Lady Lucy Webb H ayes compell ing
to children in the fo urth grade.
T h e National First Ladies' Library on Mo nday anno un ced a
curriculu m projec t fo r students in 12 nearby area fo urth -grade
classes. T h" boys and. girls will study the Ohio native who was
ma rried to the 19th U. S. president, Ruth erford B. H ayes.
In 1875, the R epublican Party chose H aye s as its presidential
ca ndidate. He won the 1876 ele ction only after th e creation of a
special co mmissio n to decide disputed electoral vo tes. Because of
the te nsion surrounding his election, Hayes secre tly too k the
~a rh of o fl) ce on Sunday, March 4, J 877 , in th e R ed Room of
the White House. He served o ne term.
- T he library has opened an exhibit of items relating to Webb
H ayes. She was born in C hillicothe and went on to become th e
first college graduate among the first ladi es.
" Edu cation was very important to her,'' said Mary Regula, the
ljbrary 's president. 'Fhe school project is something that would
have excited the first lady, she said.
The library is working to develop a rlational curri culum' fo r
kindergarten through 12th grade. Th at way, the histo ry of all th e
firs t ladies can be weaved into courses across the ~oun try, R egula said.
-

Ohio freshman found hanged
: DElAWARE (AP) - An autopsy was planned on th e body of
an Ohio Wesleyan University freshman found hanged in his· dorn;litory room.
University officials called the death of Mark Ma scari of Dublin
an apparent suicide, but fri ends and relatives of the 19-year-old
didn't believe it. They sa id they tho ught he died accidentally
while playing S·prank.
·
· A university lspokesman said a roommate found the body at
around 1 p.ljn . 011 Mond4'"
'
.
There was fl&amp;}~icide.n'o t4said D ave Cozzens, director of student life.
Delaware police are investigatin g th e death.
.
• Mascari was described as deeply ~ligiou s by university chap·
lain Jon Powers.
· Mascari spent his spring break March 11-19 working as a volunteer fo r .the Appalachian Service Project repairing the homes
of needy families in Chavies, Ky.

.

.

_NASA accused of computer misuse
C LEV_ELAND (AP) -

COlUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft hopes
:i retooled gun storage bill contains enough
• changes to satisfY its critics, but a member of
the House Criminal Justice Corrunittee said
Monday that he objects to the bill's definition
of what constitutes a "loaded weapon."
Sponsoring Rep. Ann Womer Benjamin, an
Aurora Republican and the committee's chairwoman, pl~.r:~ned to outline those changes at a
committee hearing on Tuesda~ She made the
changes after meeting with opponents of the
bill and with Taft.
T he bill adds penalties under child endangerment laws, instead of creating new. offenses.
Opponents had argued that the previous version of the bill singled out gun owners.
.
T he bill also has tougher penalti es than the
original bill . If a child gets access tO' an improperly stored firearm, it would be a first-degree
. misdemeanor, punishable by up to six months
in jail, up from a third-degree misdemeanor,
which has a maximum penalty of 60 days.
Should the child harm anyone after getting

.

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..,

: Prisoner charged in slaying dies
.

"Anything other than a- gun .wirh anything
in the chamber won 't 'c ut it;' Callender said.
"I'm trying to figure out if there's a way to do

a way to do that."

He said he appreciated Womer Benjamin's
work at trying to reach a compromise with all
the parties.
"Chair Womer Benjamin and Goverhor
Taft's office are working very, very hard t!l
accommodate some of my objections;· Callender said.
Womer Benjamin, who said the changes
were necessary because she did not have the
eight committee vOtes she needed to get the
bill before the full House, said she had not spoken with Callender about the wording of the
.definition. •
·
"He did not express that specifically to me

llopublicon Rop. Joml• Collonder

access, it would be a third-degree felony, punishable by lip to five years in prison, up from a
fifth-degree felony, which has ~ maximum
penalty of one year.
However, the change that concerned the
committee's vice chairman; Republican Rep.
Jamie Callender ofWillowick, was how the bill
defines a "loaded firearm:•
T he original \&gt;ill, introduced in December,
included ·among the definitions "an unloaded
firearm for which ammunition is ready at
hand." The new version replaces "ready at
hand" with "inunediat~ly accessible and in
close proximity." He said the bill must defi ne a
loaded gun as simply that: a gun with ammunition .in the firing chamb e~.

that."

as an ongoing concern ," said Womer Ben)amin,
who stressed the bill she sent Cal!f!nder was a
draft version. "We .are trying to address the situation where the gun is in the drawer and' the
ammunition is right next to it."

Animal rights group.
Prosecutors 'portray Sheppard
PETA. protests agatnst Ciap murder as domestic crime ,
COl U M BUS (AP ) - Six
T he Sa n Fra ncisco-based
C LEVELAND (AP) - With a
memb e rs of an animal ri ghts re tail er also met with PETA
case built o n a ne\y expert and old
group de m o nstrated for an re presentatives abou t eight
witnesses, prosecutors are about to
hour in fro nt of a down town wee ks ago, Leona rd said .
w in d, up .their effor t to prove
mall M o nday to pro te st w ha t
PETA was to ld , sh e sa id,
something they first tried to 'show
(hey said was the Gap In c.'s t hat Gap expec ts facto ri es
46 years ago: that Dr. Sam Shepusc of lea th e r imp o rted from that make p ro duc ts for the
pard beat his wife to death in a fit
Indi a and C hina.
co mpany t o fo ll ow appli cable
of rage.
But the comp any said Peo- laws and approp riate ind ustry
Cuyahoga County Prosecuto r
pl e for th e E th ical Trea tm e nt prac ti ces. "T h at in cl udes
William Mason and his assistants
of An imals had bee n to ld thdt hunune c treatment of aniare defending the state in a wronga new Gap policy, put in m als,'' she said.
.· ful imprisonment lawsuit brought ·
pla ce las t week , p ro hibi ts
" At th e tim e w e me,t with
by the doctor's son, Sa m R eese
app arel fa c to ri e! ·the co mp a- P ETA, we co nfir me d tha t
Sheppa rd, through his fa th er's
ny work s w i t~ from usin g less than _1 0 p e rce nt of
estate.
lea ther mad e from animals in skinn ed leathe r used (o r Gap
Prosecuioti could re5~ their case ·
Ind ia or C hin a in future pro du cts came fro m India or
as soon as T~esday.' Closing al:gn o rders.
E hina," Leo na rd sai d.
·
ments are exp~cted'hext week.
." This isn 't a huge policy
A ·PETA re p rese nt ative
.. Then an eight- person jnry will
change fo r n s... but we com':. 'M o nday night charatterized
cjecide whether 'it thinks Sheppard
mitt ed to ' them (PETA) that the Gap's p olicy statem ent as
we wo uld find alt er native va gu e. " Ba sicall y, we are ask- .
so urces ... ,"
said . · K e llie · ing the m for a little more · ·
Leonard, a G ap 'spokes- definition to th eir !tate - ·.
woman. "Wa s PETA aware of men't," sai d Kim Kri er, a '.'~
this new po li cy change? Yes, PETA spokeswo man.
·
they w~ re aware of it."
E arlie r in C olumbus, ·rh e
" Lep nard said th e new Gap . pro tes te rs, in'cluding one
policy. will., no't affect ga r- wea r in g a brow11' •cow suit ,
ments being stitched now. car ri ed signs and hande d out
but will impa ct G ap gar- liter ature in fro nt o f C ity
ments b ~ ginning late r thi s Ce'nter Mall, w hi~ ha s a
yeat. ,.
Gap s,tore.
··

DE AT H- NO T I CES

LOC AL BRI EFS

Doris Gmeser

Ardella Herdman

Fonns now avail,ble

RAC INE - Doris Whaley Grueser, 85, Racine , died Monday,
April .3, 2000 in Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, fol-.
lowmg an extended illness.
She was born on January 24, 1,915 in DarWin, daughter of. the late
Welby and Vena Howett Whaley, she wa~ a homemaker and member
of the Wildwood Garden Club. She was also a member of the Min .
ersville United Methodist Church.
Su;viving are two sons, Larry Grueser 9f Racin e, ~d B~b Gru-eser
ofVmcent; a daughter and son-in-l'aw, Marilyn and Pat Quinn of
McConnelsv ille; a sister and brother•in-l~w. Ann and Bill King of
Newark; four grandchildren, Kimberly an/l Mark Bernard of Boston,
Mass., Todd Grueser of Columbus, Pat Quinn of Philo, and Cindy
McG raw. of Pickerington; and five great-gran~c hi ldren and one
great-great-grandchild.
. In addition to her parents, she was also prec~ded in death by her
husband, Karl; am.l three sisters, Avis Koesel, Maxine Prentice and
Ruth Herdman.
.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Ap ril 6; 2000 in Ewing. Fu neral
Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Bob Robi nson officiating. Friends
m~y ca ll at the funeral home on Wednesday, April 5, 2000 from 6- 9
p.m. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Ardella V..,-die Hoschar Herdman, 04, Pomeroy,
died Saturday, April 1, 2000 at her residence.
'
She was born on Apri125, 1935 in Leon, W.Va., a daughter ofJohnnie Hoschar of Southside, WVa., and the late Inez Parsons Hoschar.
She was a homemaker.
Surviving in addition to her father are a daughter, Priscilla Riddle
of Pomeroy; six sons, Oley E . Herdman .Jr., of Columbus and
Pomeroy, David B. Herdman of Rutland, Ephriam Herdman of
Columbus, and Ronald Herdman, Kei th Herdman and Timothy
Herdman, all of Pomeroy; fotjr sisters, Naomi Pullins and Annabel
Rice, both of Point Pleasant, W.Va., Attie Lewis of Richmond, Ind.,
and Nellie Hudson of Southside; fou r brothers, Hary Hoschar and
Johnnie Hoschar, both of Pomeroy, Charles Hoschar of Richmond,
Ind., and Calvin Hoschar of Southside; and four grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren.
.
She was also preceded in death by a son, Donald Herdman; a
· daughter, Janet Herdman; and a sister, Renie Russell.
A graveside service will be held at 4:30 p.m . on Thursday at Creston Cemete ry in Leon, W.Va .. with the Rev. J im Morris officiating.
Burial will follow. There will be no calling hours. Arrangements are
by Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Poin t Pleasant, W.Va.

Students·invite
death row
inmate to speak

,
·
L.
&amp;\C . ·. 1ves

hop·. '·

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..

·wEDNE.SDAY. ·APRIL

. ·Elizabeth ~ Mcintosh

&lt;

o ·EATH NOTICE'S

MASON, W.Va. - Eliza\&gt;eth L. Mcintosh , 87, Mason, died Monday, April 3, 2000 in Rocksprin'gs R ehabilitatiQ!l Center, Pomeroy.
She was a retired registered nu rse. She was born on Aug. 30, 1912
in Masot'l, daughter of the late Robert C. and Grace M . Car twright
M cintosh.
'
,
.
Surviving are a sister-in-law, Betty Mcintosh of C heshire; and a

Jeanittie Edwardson
HIAWATHA, Kan. - Jeanittie ]. Edwardson; 51, Hiawatha, died
Sat urday, April I , 2000 in H orton C ommunity Hospital, Horto n ,
Kan., as the result of inj u ries received in an auto accident.
She was born July 13, 1949 in Athens, dau ghter of the late
Jilmer and Katherine B right Althouse. She wa~ a 1967 graduate of
Rutlan d High School, and had worked for seven years at CR Industries.
'
Surviving are her h usband, Alan E dwardson, a daughter, Sa ndy
Edwardson of Hi a~Vatha; fo ur sons, Gerald Uribe of Pomeroy, Jesse .
and Jamie Uribe of O rlando, Fla.·, and R obert Edwardson of
Hiawa tha; four sisters, Kathy Elliott of G uysville, Emmalo u Gillis of
~n eeds, Fla., Pea rl Altho use ofLake C ity, Fla., and R osemary Baker of
Coleman, Ala.; th ree brothers, Elmer Althouse of Lake C ity, Fla.,
C h arles Althouse of Pom e roy, and Marvin Althouse of Albany; and six
·
grandchildren.
Sh e was also preceded in dea th by a b~other, Ernie Lee Althou ~e , in _
1954.•
Se rvices will be IO·a. m. Wednesday in C hapel O aks Funeral Home,
Hiawatha. Pastor Vern Finley will officiate. Burial will follow in
Hiawatha Ce metery. The family will greet friends from 7 to 8:30
tonight.
·
·
· M emorial connibutions are suggested to the Jeanitti e Edwardson
Me morial Fund, which may be sent in care of the fnneral home, 519
N . First, Hiawatha, Kan. 66434.

niece.
She was also preceded in Cteath by her sisters, Hele n R uth Mcintosh and Ma9(.fis.. E Ward, a bro ther, R obert E. Mcintos h, a ste psister,
H elen Glo~l(ne r ;\md a stepbrother, C onrad Davis.
Servi ces will be I p. m. Wedn esday in Foglesong Funeral H ome,
Mason, wi th Pastor Da mon Rhodes officiating. Burial will fb e in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Frie nds may call at the funeral' h o me on
Wednesday from 1 1 a.m . until time of se rvices.
'

Evel~

v.·Moore 1(Vofford

POM~ROY- Homeowners&gt;2re reminded that applications will be ·
accepted nntil Jnne 5 for the Homestead Exemption .
Meigs County Auditor Nancy Parker CampSell said that the Homestead Exemption is a state-reimbursed program where valuation of
ptQperty is redcrced based on income.
I
The smaller the income, the greater the reduction in value and the_
amount of tax due. New applications require incon1e verification.
In ·order to qualify for the homestead exemption, those plan ning to
participate must be at least 65 years old during 2000, or be permanently and totally disabled, have a total income of not more than'
$23,300 for tax year 1999, and own and occupy the home as the principal place of residence as of January I, 2000, .explained Campbell.
There is a separate application for owners of manufactured homes,'
according to Campbell, who encouraged anyone w ho thinks they may·
q1.1alify to visit her office in the Meigs Cou nty Courthouse or call the
office at 992-2698 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.

EMS• unitS answer 6 calls
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergen cy Services answered
six calls for assistance on Monday.Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2: 18a.m., T he Maples, Evelyn Wofford,Veterans Memorial Hospital;
11:33 a.m ., Frecker Road, assisted by Pomeroy, lda Frecker, treated;
2:50 p.m., South Second Avenue,' Middleport, Dorothy Roush,
Holzer M edical Center.
MIDDLEPORT
•
,9:20a.m., O live r Street, Lucille Haggerty, elec trical fire.
RUTLAND
12:54 p.·m ., Beech Grove R oad, Frances Harmon,VMH.
SYRACUSE
1 p.m., State R oute 124,Eddena Ru sseli,VMH .

Cemetery dean.lip to begin
POMERO Y - Salisbury Township Trustees will begi n cemeter)'
cleanup o n Ap ril 17. Any flowers left o n g raves will be removed at that
time. .

Office to close

·POMEROY - Ev~lyn V. M o ore Wofford ,The ·Maples ofPp meroy,
died Monday, April 3, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
POMEROY - The Meigs County -Board of Elections office in
' Born in Faye tte C o unty, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late Pomeroy will be closed all day on Friday so that employees may attend
Jo hn and Bertha Elunbar Berry. She was a retired cook from Syracuse a district m eeting in N ewark.
Elementaty School.
Normal hours will resume on Monday.
Survivors include two sons ~nd a daughter- in-law, William and Pam
K. Moore b f the D exter area, and Carl E . Moore of Pomeroy; a·
daughter, C heryl Hysell of Poqteroy; several grand~hildren and greatgrandchildren; two sisters, Kitty R ac kley and Beatrice Page of Fayette
HOBSON - H obson Christian Fellowship Church will hold an
County, W.Va.; and a brother, Ja c:k Berry.
.
open-face roast beef dinner on Friday from 10 a.itt. uritil 4 p.m.
She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Viola Irene Cundiff;
The menu, in addition to the dinner with cole slaw for $4, will
husbands, Maurice Moore and R ay Wofford; sisters, Nellie.Robinson include hot dogs and apple pie. Advance orders may be placed iwth
and Elsie Neuman; and brothers, Harold, Howard, W illie and Jerry Patty White ~t 949-3017, Nora Nitz at 992- 1626, and Faith Hayman;·
Berry.
•
I
992-3893.
At her request,. there will be no services.
" GALLIPOLIS - Raymond Glen Hauldren, 54, Gallipolis, died
t-1onday, April 3,2000 at his residence, following an extended illn~ss.
'
Born July 22, 1945 in Mercerville, son of the late Kenneth and
Madge Patterson Hauldren, he was· a retired employee of United
REEDSVILLE - James Donald E)mon, 92, Reedsville, died MonSprinkler Fitters, where he was employed for 25 years.
(AP) Entertainment highlight$
; He was a member of United Sprinkler Fi,ttl'fS Association Local day, April 3, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
during che week. of April .2-8:
. fromPapAl
Arrangements wiD be announced by White " Funeral Home,
&amp;69, Moose Lodge 731 iri"PIIint Pleasant~ W.Va., and a U.S. Army vet- ·
·40 yean ago: "Ben-Hur" woa
eran.
Coolville.
1
1
Oscars, ini:luding best picture.
present to discuss the request.
· Surviving are his wif,..Vickie Scherer Hauldren, whom he married
· ln other action , the commis- William Wyler won an Oscar for
Nov. 30, 1974 in Parisburg, Tenn.; a son, James Hauldren of Gallipo•
.sioners approved the following best director and Charlton Heslifi; a daughter, Amy Hauldren of Gallipolis; a granddaughter; two
tainment will be sought for each appropriations adjustme nts for ton was named best actor.
hi-others, John (Ree) Hauldren of Gallipolis, and Mack (Jackay) Haulweek.
Burt Lancaster and Audrey '
county departments: $1,100 for
dCen ofWin chester, Tenn.; four sisters, Louise (James) Stitt of GallipoCouncil authorized the conthe prosecuting attorney; $150 Hepburn starred i n john Huston '~
li$1 Elaine Ballard· of Ashville, N.C. , Merle Herbert of Cincinnati, and
from Page AI
struction of a numbered locator
"The Unforgiven."
for the litter control office;
~ma (Jack} Howard of PalJO Coast, Fla.; and several nieces and
map to assist boat visitors.
J\bphews.
.. .
Council approved the ' first
The- map, four-by-eight-feet, $6,750 for the M ajor Crimes
"Market Day" for April 29. Last , will be mounted near the levee, Task Force, and $6,076.04,
:' H e was also preceded in 'death by a sister, Mary Ellen Reeder.
Present, in addition to Howan:J
:·: Se rvices will be t p.m . Thursday in McC oy-Moore Funeral Home month, Blaettnar suggested that and removed during the winter $16,332.46, and $9,454.75 for
debt
retirement.
' were Lentes anci,
and
Thornton;
We therholt Chapel,, Gallipolis, with the R ev. Lee Baird officiating. the village oversee the weekly · months. It will include a business
also
approved
Commissioners
·
1
'11
b
·
v·
C
M
·11
F
·
d
all
t
events
in
order
to
promote
downClerk Gloria Kloes.
Buna Wl e 10 tctory emetery, ercerVI e. n en S may C a
.
directory and map to assist visitors
.tli· e c h ape1 firom 6- 9 p.m. e d nesdaY·
town shopping and tourism.
of
bills
in
the
amount
of
payment
in finding restaurants,· scores, and
· M -1·
'd
·
·11
b
rf
d b A
·
L ·
Vendors, flower and vegetable
,. .
1 nary gravest e n tes Wt
e pe orme
y men can eglOn
other attraction' in the business $263,953 .29.
c
p
27
growers,
craftsmen
with
.
quality
'
L,a,ayette ost crafts and others are invite d to dt'strt'ct.

Di.nner planned

· James Eynon

FLASHBACK

- salary

r------------------:--------

-~4

~·

v . on CAN ER DAY\f·
'

•

Raymond Glen Hauldren

Pancake, Sausage,
,. , Caffee, lea '••

s· 2000

(OUnCI•I

w.

· • Noah Wyle posed as Steve Jobs
; : at a computer trade show. He.
: was invited. as a joke

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS%13·960)
Ohto Valley PabUsbl•l Co.
Published every anernoon, Mond•y throuah
Fricb y, Ill Cou rt SL, Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhc

,Ohio Valley Publishina Compa ny., Pomeroy,
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Saturday,
April 29
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Ashland Inc. -

where home carrier service is available.

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No subtcripllun by mail permilted In ·areas

ARGO-SLICED

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Akzo-43),

:ohio45769.

bring their wares to the parking
lot for the events, which will be
held throughout the summer.
Blaettnar suggested, and.council
approved, free parking for Market
Days, and he also said that enter-

MORE LOCAL NEWS .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Me111ber1 The Asaoc:iatcd Preu, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auocl&amp;lion.

'

..

'•
.....
'

Suppar

April I, • • 4-7 pm

&gt;

,

was innocent, finally laying to rest
the se nsational case tha.t helped
inspire "The Fugt'tive" TV series.
for the past month, "the state
has been trying to show that D r.
Sam's account of that day doesn 't
make sense - not by looking at
the physical evidence but by
applying co mmo n sense," said
James N eff, author of a forthcoming book on the Sheppard case
called "Chasing the Fugitive."
The prosecution's strategy is
similar to the one it nsed bac k
when the case began, Neff said.
M arilyn Sheppard's partially
nude body was fonnd sprawled on
her blood-soaked bed ea rly on
July 4, 195 4, at the couple's ho me
on lake Eric.
·

United Methodist Church

A contract employee at a NASA
a computer to
access pornography and un authorized chat rooms on the InterBY THE AssociAtED PREss ·
net.
Students from a second school in
• Patrick M . Montgomety, 45, or'Aurora, was charged with. vioOhio have invited death . row ·
~ting NASA administrative regulations regarding the use· of ·
inmate Mumia'Abu-Jamal to give.:~
&amp;&gt;mpute r equipment at the NASA Gl enn Researc h Center in
taped speech.
·
€leveland, 'according to Emily M . Swee ney, U.S. attorney for
Abu-Jamal, wh,o is in prison in
.lorchern Ohio.
.
Pennsylvania for killing a Philadel! The same charge all eges violation o f' a security procedure by . phia police officer, will deiive;r a '
siving his computer password to his son, a juvenile, who
taped speech M;ly 4 at Ken! State
&lt;C::cessed the NASA system from a c;pmpuler outside of NASA,
University,Jeffrey Ritter, co-chair of
:Sweeney said. '
·
the student-run May 4 Task Force,
said Monday.
·
: M o ntgc&gt;mery, reached Monday night by telephon e at his resi~en ce in suburban Aurora and asked whether he wished to comThe event, which marks . the
T-ent on the charge, said, "Not really. It's a pending thing."
30th anniversaty of the fatal shooi• According to Sweeney, MontgQmery worked fo r Science
ings of four students by Ohio
Applica tions International Corp. whe n he did contrac t work at
N ational Guardsmen trying to quell
·an anti-war protest, is not sponsored
SIASA between July 1998 and July 1999.
by the university.
:Robert W. Kern , an assistar1t U.S. attor ney assigned to the case,
"The forces hell~bent o n (Abuslid Monday night a plea agreement was filed in Montgomery's
¢ se. H e said the plea agreement's te rms could become public
Jamal's) execution want to do the
same thing as the forces who killed
'fhen Montgomery appears' in cou-r t possibly within two weeks.
the four Kent State students in 1970
:The ossible maximum se ntence for violating NASA equip· silence strong voices qf political
T e nt ecurity regulations is one year imprisonment and a
dissent;' said. Justin Hans of the
$1100, 0 fine.
'•
,'
Kent Student Anti-R acist Action
• Ker ; aid NASA keeps securi!)' logs regarding Intern et usage
group.
~at a regularly reviewed. He 'said evidence of the alleged misLast week, Antioch College in
.ise was brought
. . to the U. S. attorn ey's staff. ·
YeUow Sptings invited Abu-Jamal
to give the cottmtencemertt address
April 29 via audiotape.
~
.
....
'
. That announceqtent triggered a
: C HILLIC OTHE (AP) - An inmate d ied Monday wnile
flood of outraged letters, e-rh:!il
:!Waiting trial in a 1981l kill ing of a man who se bo dy wasn 't
~und for 10 years.
'
'
messages and faxes from law·
1
enforcement organizations and 'vic~ three months after h e was G'harged wi th aggr~vate~ murder,
tims' gn\\'1'!!· Many of · the letterC harles Crowder, 62, of West Portsmouth, died at Ohio State
Writers, including the slaiil offic~r·s
!J niversity Medical Ce ntet iq Colu+n.bus, said J,;e Andrews, a
widow, p,romise a large protest if
i tate pr isons spokesman.
:
,
A~u-Jamal is . allowed to !pve ,tl)~
: Andrews said C rowder, serving a 10-year sentence at R oss
commenceqtent,address.
,
l:orrec tional Institution 'fQr kidnapping ·a nd felonious assault,
But Kent officials are not conl&gt;ecame ill Sunday morning and was taken to a local hospit~l and
cerned abo ut a 'similar backlash, said
~hen later transfe rred to Ohio State. Scioto County Prosec uto r
university spokesman Ro~;~ Kirksey.
J-ynn Grimshaw said ii· appears Cr&lt;;&gt;wder su!fe retl a brain
"It's a stude nt-sponsore~ ta!fY;'
fneurysm.
,
he said."This looks mo~ like a Mi'
; Crowder was awaiting trial in'the slaying of Danny Traylor, 33,
ical spring thing."
o f Po rtsmouth. C rowder also was charged with kid napping and
But at Antioch, some graduating
~ggravated burglary in an unrelated abduction of a Jackso n
seniors say they're worried about
l::ounty couple in 1997.
·
. ..
•
the prospect of a demonstration.
: Authori ties accused C~owder artd two other people of trying
Teishan Latner, a graduating
to make them think Traylor committed suicide in 1 988 .by j umpsenior
and commencement .comjng off the Carl Perki ns Bridge over th e Ohio River. T he. Ke nmittee member, said he would · be
t uc ky Siate Po lice fon ndTraylor's car On the bridge.
: ··
disappointed
if prot~sts overshadow
: His skeletal re mains wete found _tWO years agq, on ·a r.ugged
the culmination of fou t yea of .
billside in Scioto C ou!fty after Crowder told the m whe~ to
~~
·\
hard work.

r~search facility was charged Monday with using

'

"Anything other tlian a gu ~ with ~
anything in the chamber won't CJit
it. I 'm trying toflguTe out if there's

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

f

OBI T UARY

·Lawmaker doesn't like ·1oadecl" definition

BUCK E Y E BRIEF S

•

..

•
· Tuesd~ 4, 20oo

.

.

•

1\.lesday, April 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Mlddieport, Ohio

.

'

AmTech/SBC -

44'/o .

32~.

AT&amp;T - 58
Bank One - 38,.
Bob Evans - 13lo
BorgWarner - 37'l.
Champion - 3~

Charming Shops - 5'),
City Holding - 12).
Federal Mogul - 15'1,
Flrstar - 24),
·

General Electric - 158'),
Hartay Davidson - 83

K mall - -9'·

Kroger -

18'/o

Lands End - 56 ~.
Ltd . - 43'1•
.
Oak Hill Financial - 13

· OVB - 29~ ·

One Valley - 36~
f'eoples - 16\

Premier - 7.,.

Rockwell -

41 1.

Rocky Boote - 5),
RD Shell :.... 58l.
Sears - 32l•
Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart - 61 '),
Wendy's - 20%
Worthington - 12Vio
DaDy Block reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes of ·.
the prevl.ous day's trans·
provided
by
· actions,
' Advesl of Gallipolis.

VALL ~ EATHER
· Chilly temps f~recast t~night
BY THE ASSOCI ATED PRESS

The rain will end and ski es
will clear across th e tri-courtty
tonight, with rather chilly tempe ratures settlin g in, the N atio nal
Weather Servi ce sa id. .
l ows tonight will be 25-30.
Ablmdant
sunshine
on
Wedn esday will help boost the
m e rcury into the mid- 40s to
mid-50s, forecasters said. ·
Warmer temperatu res arid a
chance of rain are in T hu rsday's
forecast. ,
Sun1et tonight will be at 8
p.m . a~d sunrise on Wednesday at
7:09 a. m.
Weather forecast:
. Tonight ... C io ud y. w it h
a

~

chance of snow showers. Lows
from the uppe r 20s to near 30.
'Northwest wind I 0 to I S mph.
C han ce of snow 30 percent.
Wedn esday... Becoming partly
sunny. Highs in the upp er 50s .
Wednesday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower and
mid 40s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Partly cloudy and
~arm er. Highs in the lower 70s:
Fri day.. .Partly clo ndy. Lows 45
to 50 and highs in the low ~ nd
:mid 70s.
Saturday... M ostly cloudy with
a chance of rain. J;.ows in the
upper 40s and highs fro m the
t~p per (lOs to lower 70s.

I

The sign is expected to cost
approximately SSOO.
..
At Ballard's recommendation,
council approved .a n:solution in
support of the Athens-to-Darwin
U.S. Ro 11te 33 project. Blaettnar
and Council President John Muss"
er will attend the 1RAC meeting
on Thursday, where a vote on
funding is expected, to testifY oit
be half of the village.

lOX OIFla Will OPBI
6:30 PI fGI MNING SHOWS
· 12:30 PM FOR lllliliUS

Blaze
from PapAl
school spokeswoman Kathleen
Gierhart.
"Rio Grande staff m et with
students on Sunday afternoon
and arranged temporary living
arrangements
on
campus,"
according to the press release.
"1\lso, Rio Grande e mployees
helped . students in getting · some
of their essential possessions out
of Boyd H all."

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ALL AGES . ALL Tlr\1ES S.\ 00

�'

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1

Pege A 2 The Dally Sentinel

City gets tough with bus drivers
DAYTON (AP) -The city's school district is taking a, gettough approach with its bus drivers.
.
·
.
- The distri~t says it 'won't tolerate lapses by drivers, three of
whqm the district said left pupih on buses after routes were finished. The school board at its April 14 meeting plans to consider firing them.
A fourt h driv~r quit last month after the district said it would
recommend his firing for bypassing a railroad barricade and dri~ing his bus 'across tracks with children aboard, the school system reported.
Since the "hool year began", the district 's transp·o rtation
department has been .under fi~ from parents who had complained that buses 'ro utinely run late or fail to pick up children .
Clayton Luckie, a Dayton sc hool board member, said the seriousness of the incidents has to be considered~
"The most important thing is the safety of our children,''
Luckie said.
In o ne case, a driver parked his bus at the district bus garage
after his morning run Feb. 25. When he retu rned fo r his ~fte r­
~oon assi~;v ment mo re rh an four hours later, he· fo und an 8- yearold pupil asleep, the district said.
·

Student$ study First Lady
C ANTO N (AP) - A group of teachers and histor ians is making the life of former First Lady Lucy Webb H ayes compell ing
to children in the fo urth grade.
T h e National First Ladies' Library on Mo nday anno un ced a
curriculu m projec t fo r students in 12 nearby area fo urth -grade
classes. T h" boys and. girls will study the Ohio native who was
ma rried to the 19th U. S. president, Ruth erford B. H ayes.
In 1875, the R epublican Party chose H aye s as its presidential
ca ndidate. He won the 1876 ele ction only after th e creation of a
special co mmissio n to decide disputed electoral vo tes. Because of
the te nsion surrounding his election, Hayes secre tly too k the
~a rh of o fl) ce on Sunday, March 4, J 877 , in th e R ed Room of
the White House. He served o ne term.
- T he library has opened an exhibit of items relating to Webb
H ayes. She was born in C hillicothe and went on to become th e
first college graduate among the first ladi es.
" Edu cation was very important to her,'' said Mary Regula, the
ljbrary 's president. 'Fhe school project is something that would
have excited the first lady, she said.
The library is working to develop a rlational curri culum' fo r
kindergarten through 12th grade. Th at way, the histo ry of all th e
firs t ladies can be weaved into courses across the ~oun try, R egula said.
-

Ohio freshman found hanged
: DElAWARE (AP) - An autopsy was planned on th e body of
an Ohio Wesleyan University freshman found hanged in his· dorn;litory room.
University officials called the death of Mark Ma scari of Dublin
an apparent suicide, but fri ends and relatives of the 19-year-old
didn't believe it. They sa id they tho ught he died accidentally
while playing S·prank.
·
· A university lspokesman said a roommate found the body at
around 1 p.ljn . 011 Mond4'"
'
.
There was fl&amp;}~icide.n'o t4said D ave Cozzens, director of student life.
Delaware police are investigatin g th e death.
.
• Mascari was described as deeply ~ligiou s by university chap·
lain Jon Powers.
· Mascari spent his spring break March 11-19 working as a volunteer fo r .the Appalachian Service Project repairing the homes
of needy families in Chavies, Ky.

.

.

_NASA accused of computer misuse
C LEV_ELAND (AP) -

COlUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft hopes
:i retooled gun storage bill contains enough
• changes to satisfY its critics, but a member of
the House Criminal Justice Corrunittee said
Monday that he objects to the bill's definition
of what constitutes a "loaded weapon."
Sponsoring Rep. Ann Womer Benjamin, an
Aurora Republican and the committee's chairwoman, pl~.r:~ned to outline those changes at a
committee hearing on Tuesda~ She made the
changes after meeting with opponents of the
bill and with Taft.
T he bill adds penalties under child endangerment laws, instead of creating new. offenses.
Opponents had argued that the previous version of the bill singled out gun owners.
.
T he bill also has tougher penalti es than the
original bill . If a child gets access tO' an improperly stored firearm, it would be a first-degree
. misdemeanor, punishable by up to six months
in jail, up from a third-degree misdemeanor,
which has a maximum penalty of 60 days.
Should the child harm anyone after getting

.

.

..,

: Prisoner charged in slaying dies
.

"Anything other than a- gun .wirh anything
in the chamber won 't 'c ut it;' Callender said.
"I'm trying to figure out if there's a way to do

a way to do that."

He said he appreciated Womer Benjamin's
work at trying to reach a compromise with all
the parties.
"Chair Womer Benjamin and Goverhor
Taft's office are working very, very hard t!l
accommodate some of my objections;· Callender said.
Womer Benjamin, who said the changes
were necessary because she did not have the
eight committee vOtes she needed to get the
bill before the full House, said she had not spoken with Callender about the wording of the
.definition. •
·
"He did not express that specifically to me

llopublicon Rop. Joml• Collonder

access, it would be a third-degree felony, punishable by lip to five years in prison, up from a
fifth-degree felony, which has ~ maximum
penalty of one year.
However, the change that concerned the
committee's vice chairman; Republican Rep.
Jamie Callender ofWillowick, was how the bill
defines a "loaded firearm:•
T he original \&gt;ill, introduced in December,
included ·among the definitions "an unloaded
firearm for which ammunition is ready at
hand." The new version replaces "ready at
hand" with "inunediat~ly accessible and in
close proximity." He said the bill must defi ne a
loaded gun as simply that: a gun with ammunition .in the firing chamb e~.

that."

as an ongoing concern ," said Womer Ben)amin,
who stressed the bill she sent Cal!f!nder was a
draft version. "We .are trying to address the situation where the gun is in the drawer and' the
ammunition is right next to it."

Animal rights group.
Prosecutors 'portray Sheppard
PETA. protests agatnst Ciap murder as domestic crime ,
COl U M BUS (AP ) - Six
T he Sa n Fra ncisco-based
C LEVELAND (AP) - With a
memb e rs of an animal ri ghts re tail er also met with PETA
case built o n a ne\y expert and old
group de m o nstrated for an re presentatives abou t eight
witnesses, prosecutors are about to
hour in fro nt of a down town wee ks ago, Leona rd said .
w in d, up .their effor t to prove
mall M o nday to pro te st w ha t
PETA was to ld , sh e sa id,
something they first tried to 'show
(hey said was the Gap In c.'s t hat Gap expec ts facto ri es
46 years ago: that Dr. Sam Shepusc of lea th e r imp o rted from that make p ro duc ts for the
pard beat his wife to death in a fit
Indi a and C hina.
co mpany t o fo ll ow appli cable
of rage.
But the comp any said Peo- laws and approp riate ind ustry
Cuyahoga County Prosecuto r
pl e for th e E th ical Trea tm e nt prac ti ces. "T h at in cl udes
William Mason and his assistants
of An imals had bee n to ld thdt hunune c treatment of aniare defending the state in a wronga new Gap policy, put in m als,'' she said.
.· ful imprisonment lawsuit brought ·
pla ce las t week , p ro hibi ts
" At th e tim e w e me,t with
by the doctor's son, Sa m R eese
app arel fa c to ri e! ·the co mp a- P ETA, we co nfir me d tha t
Sheppa rd, through his fa th er's
ny work s w i t~ from usin g less than _1 0 p e rce nt of
estate.
lea ther mad e from animals in skinn ed leathe r used (o r Gap
Prosecuioti could re5~ their case ·
Ind ia or C hin a in future pro du cts came fro m India or
as soon as T~esday.' Closing al:gn o rders.
E hina," Leo na rd sai d.
·
ments are exp~cted'hext week.
." This isn 't a huge policy
A ·PETA re p rese nt ative
.. Then an eight- person jnry will
change fo r n s... but we com':. 'M o nday night charatterized
cjecide whether 'it thinks Sheppard
mitt ed to ' them (PETA) that the Gap's p olicy statem ent as
we wo uld find alt er native va gu e. " Ba sicall y, we are ask- .
so urces ... ,"
said . · K e llie · ing the m for a little more · ·
Leonard, a G ap 'spokes- definition to th eir !tate - ·.
woman. "Wa s PETA aware of men't," sai d Kim Kri er, a '.'~
this new po li cy change? Yes, PETA spokeswo man.
·
they w~ re aware of it."
E arlie r in C olumbus, ·rh e
" Lep nard said th e new Gap . pro tes te rs, in'cluding one
policy. will., no't affect ga r- wea r in g a brow11' •cow suit ,
ments being stitched now. car ri ed signs and hande d out
but will impa ct G ap gar- liter ature in fro nt o f C ity
ments b ~ ginning late r thi s Ce'nter Mall, w hi~ ha s a
yeat. ,.
Gap s,tore.
··

DE AT H- NO T I CES

LOC AL BRI EFS

Doris Gmeser

Ardella Herdman

Fonns now avail,ble

RAC INE - Doris Whaley Grueser, 85, Racine , died Monday,
April .3, 2000 in Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, fol-.
lowmg an extended illness.
She was born on January 24, 1,915 in DarWin, daughter of. the late
Welby and Vena Howett Whaley, she wa~ a homemaker and member
of the Wildwood Garden Club. She was also a member of the Min .
ersville United Methodist Church.
Su;viving are two sons, Larry Grueser 9f Racin e, ~d B~b Gru-eser
ofVmcent; a daughter and son-in-l'aw, Marilyn and Pat Quinn of
McConnelsv ille; a sister and brother•in-l~w. Ann and Bill King of
Newark; four grandchildren, Kimberly an/l Mark Bernard of Boston,
Mass., Todd Grueser of Columbus, Pat Quinn of Philo, and Cindy
McG raw. of Pickerington; and five great-gran~c hi ldren and one
great-great-grandchild.
. In addition to her parents, she was also prec~ded in death by her
husband, Karl; am.l three sisters, Avis Koesel, Maxine Prentice and
Ruth Herdman.
.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, Ap ril 6; 2000 in Ewing. Fu neral
Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Bob Robi nson officiating. Friends
m~y ca ll at the funeral home on Wednesday, April 5, 2000 from 6- 9
p.m. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Ardella V..,-die Hoschar Herdman, 04, Pomeroy,
died Saturday, April 1, 2000 at her residence.
'
She was born on Apri125, 1935 in Leon, W.Va., a daughter ofJohnnie Hoschar of Southside, WVa., and the late Inez Parsons Hoschar.
She was a homemaker.
Surviving in addition to her father are a daughter, Priscilla Riddle
of Pomeroy; six sons, Oley E . Herdman .Jr., of Columbus and
Pomeroy, David B. Herdman of Rutland, Ephriam Herdman of
Columbus, and Ronald Herdman, Kei th Herdman and Timothy
Herdman, all of Pomeroy; fotjr sisters, Naomi Pullins and Annabel
Rice, both of Point Pleasant, W.Va., Attie Lewis of Richmond, Ind.,
and Nellie Hudson of Southside; fou r brothers, Hary Hoschar and
Johnnie Hoschar, both of Pomeroy, Charles Hoschar of Richmond,
Ind., and Calvin Hoschar of Southside; and four grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren.
.
She was also preceded in death by a son, Donald Herdman; a
· daughter, Janet Herdman; and a sister, Renie Russell.
A graveside service will be held at 4:30 p.m . on Thursday at Creston Cemete ry in Leon, W.Va .. with the Rev. J im Morris officiating.
Burial will follow. There will be no calling hours. Arrangements are
by Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Poin t Pleasant, W.Va.

Students·invite
death row
inmate to speak

,
·
L.
&amp;\C . ·. 1ves

hop·. '·

•

&amp;~

..

·wEDNE.SDAY. ·APRIL

. ·Elizabeth ~ Mcintosh

&lt;

o ·EATH NOTICE'S

MASON, W.Va. - Eliza\&gt;eth L. Mcintosh , 87, Mason, died Monday, April 3, 2000 in Rocksprin'gs R ehabilitatiQ!l Center, Pomeroy.
She was a retired registered nu rse. She was born on Aug. 30, 1912
in Masot'l, daughter of the late Robert C. and Grace M . Car twright
M cintosh.
'
,
.
Surviving are a sister-in-law, Betty Mcintosh of C heshire; and a

Jeanittie Edwardson
HIAWATHA, Kan. - Jeanittie ]. Edwardson; 51, Hiawatha, died
Sat urday, April I , 2000 in H orton C ommunity Hospital, Horto n ,
Kan., as the result of inj u ries received in an auto accident.
She was born July 13, 1949 in Athens, dau ghter of the late
Jilmer and Katherine B right Althouse. She wa~ a 1967 graduate of
Rutlan d High School, and had worked for seven years at CR Industries.
'
Surviving are her h usband, Alan E dwardson, a daughter, Sa ndy
Edwardson of Hi a~Vatha; fo ur sons, Gerald Uribe of Pomeroy, Jesse .
and Jamie Uribe of O rlando, Fla.·, and R obert Edwardson of
Hiawa tha; four sisters, Kathy Elliott of G uysville, Emmalo u Gillis of
~n eeds, Fla., Pea rl Altho use ofLake C ity, Fla., and R osemary Baker of
Coleman, Ala.; th ree brothers, Elmer Althouse of Lake C ity, Fla.,
C h arles Althouse of Pom e roy, and Marvin Althouse of Albany; and six
·
grandchildren.
Sh e was also preceded in dea th by a b~other, Ernie Lee Althou ~e , in _
1954.•
Se rvices will be IO·a. m. Wednesday in C hapel O aks Funeral Home,
Hiawatha. Pastor Vern Finley will officiate. Burial will follow in
Hiawatha Ce metery. The family will greet friends from 7 to 8:30
tonight.
·
·
· M emorial connibutions are suggested to the Jeanitti e Edwardson
Me morial Fund, which may be sent in care of the fnneral home, 519
N . First, Hiawatha, Kan. 66434.

niece.
She was also preceded in Cteath by her sisters, Hele n R uth Mcintosh and Ma9(.fis.. E Ward, a bro ther, R obert E. Mcintos h, a ste psister,
H elen Glo~l(ne r ;\md a stepbrother, C onrad Davis.
Servi ces will be I p. m. Wedn esday in Foglesong Funeral H ome,
Mason, wi th Pastor Da mon Rhodes officiating. Burial will fb e in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Frie nds may call at the funeral' h o me on
Wednesday from 1 1 a.m . until time of se rvices.
'

Evel~

v.·Moore 1(Vofford

POM~ROY- Homeowners&gt;2re reminded that applications will be ·
accepted nntil Jnne 5 for the Homestead Exemption .
Meigs County Auditor Nancy Parker CampSell said that the Homestead Exemption is a state-reimbursed program where valuation of
ptQperty is redcrced based on income.
I
The smaller the income, the greater the reduction in value and the_
amount of tax due. New applications require incon1e verification.
In ·order to qualify for the homestead exemption, those plan ning to
participate must be at least 65 years old during 2000, or be permanently and totally disabled, have a total income of not more than'
$23,300 for tax year 1999, and own and occupy the home as the principal place of residence as of January I, 2000, .explained Campbell.
There is a separate application for owners of manufactured homes,'
according to Campbell, who encouraged anyone w ho thinks they may·
q1.1alify to visit her office in the Meigs Cou nty Courthouse or call the
office at 992-2698 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.

EMS• unitS answer 6 calls
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergen cy Services answered
six calls for assistance on Monday.Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2: 18a.m., T he Maples, Evelyn Wofford,Veterans Memorial Hospital;
11:33 a.m ., Frecker Road, assisted by Pomeroy, lda Frecker, treated;
2:50 p.m., South Second Avenue,' Middleport, Dorothy Roush,
Holzer M edical Center.
MIDDLEPORT
•
,9:20a.m., O live r Street, Lucille Haggerty, elec trical fire.
RUTLAND
12:54 p.·m ., Beech Grove R oad, Frances Harmon,VMH.
SYRACUSE
1 p.m., State R oute 124,Eddena Ru sseli,VMH .

Cemetery dean.lip to begin
POMERO Y - Salisbury Township Trustees will begi n cemeter)'
cleanup o n Ap ril 17. Any flowers left o n g raves will be removed at that
time. .

Office to close

·POMEROY - Ev~lyn V. M o ore Wofford ,The ·Maples ofPp meroy,
died Monday, April 3, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
POMEROY - The Meigs County -Board of Elections office in
' Born in Faye tte C o unty, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late Pomeroy will be closed all day on Friday so that employees may attend
Jo hn and Bertha Elunbar Berry. She was a retired cook from Syracuse a district m eeting in N ewark.
Elementaty School.
Normal hours will resume on Monday.
Survivors include two sons ~nd a daughter- in-law, William and Pam
K. Moore b f the D exter area, and Carl E . Moore of Pomeroy; a·
daughter, C heryl Hysell of Poqteroy; several grand~hildren and greatgrandchildren; two sisters, Kitty R ac kley and Beatrice Page of Fayette
HOBSON - H obson Christian Fellowship Church will hold an
County, W.Va.; and a brother, Ja c:k Berry.
.
open-face roast beef dinner on Friday from 10 a.itt. uritil 4 p.m.
She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Viola Irene Cundiff;
The menu, in addition to the dinner with cole slaw for $4, will
husbands, Maurice Moore and R ay Wofford; sisters, Nellie.Robinson include hot dogs and apple pie. Advance orders may be placed iwth
and Elsie Neuman; and brothers, Harold, Howard, W illie and Jerry Patty White ~t 949-3017, Nora Nitz at 992- 1626, and Faith Hayman;·
Berry.
•
I
992-3893.
At her request,. there will be no services.
" GALLIPOLIS - Raymond Glen Hauldren, 54, Gallipolis, died
t-1onday, April 3,2000 at his residence, following an extended illn~ss.
'
Born July 22, 1945 in Mercerville, son of the late Kenneth and
Madge Patterson Hauldren, he was· a retired employee of United
REEDSVILLE - James Donald E)mon, 92, Reedsville, died MonSprinkler Fitters, where he was employed for 25 years.
(AP) Entertainment highlight$
; He was a member of United Sprinkler Fi,ttl'fS Association Local day, April 3, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
during che week. of April .2-8:
. fromPapAl
Arrangements wiD be announced by White " Funeral Home,
&amp;69, Moose Lodge 731 iri"PIIint Pleasant~ W.Va., and a U.S. Army vet- ·
·40 yean ago: "Ben-Hur" woa
eran.
Coolville.
1
1
Oscars, ini:luding best picture.
present to discuss the request.
· Surviving are his wif,..Vickie Scherer Hauldren, whom he married
· ln other action , the commis- William Wyler won an Oscar for
Nov. 30, 1974 in Parisburg, Tenn.; a son, James Hauldren of Gallipo•
.sioners approved the following best director and Charlton Heslifi; a daughter, Amy Hauldren of Gallipolis; a granddaughter; two
tainment will be sought for each appropriations adjustme nts for ton was named best actor.
hi-others, John (Ree) Hauldren of Gallipolis, and Mack (Jackay) Haulweek.
Burt Lancaster and Audrey '
county departments: $1,100 for
dCen ofWin chester, Tenn.; four sisters, Louise (James) Stitt of GallipoCouncil authorized the conthe prosecuting attorney; $150 Hepburn starred i n john Huston '~
li$1 Elaine Ballard· of Ashville, N.C. , Merle Herbert of Cincinnati, and
from Page AI
struction of a numbered locator
"The Unforgiven."
for the litter control office;
~ma (Jack} Howard of PalJO Coast, Fla.; and several nieces and
map to assist boat visitors.
J\bphews.
.. .
Council approved the ' first
The- map, four-by-eight-feet, $6,750 for the M ajor Crimes
"Market Day" for April 29. Last , will be mounted near the levee, Task Force, and $6,076.04,
:' H e was also preceded in 'death by a sister, Mary Ellen Reeder.
Present, in addition to Howan:J
:·: Se rvices will be t p.m . Thursday in McC oy-Moore Funeral Home month, Blaettnar suggested that and removed during the winter $16,332.46, and $9,454.75 for
debt
retirement.
' were Lentes anci,
and
Thornton;
We therholt Chapel,, Gallipolis, with the R ev. Lee Baird officiating. the village oversee the weekly · months. It will include a business
also
approved
Commissioners
·
1
'11
b
·
v·
C
M
·11
F
·
d
all
t
events
in
order
to
promote
downClerk Gloria Kloes.
Buna Wl e 10 tctory emetery, ercerVI e. n en S may C a
.
directory and map to assist visitors
.tli· e c h ape1 firom 6- 9 p.m. e d nesdaY·
town shopping and tourism.
of
bills
in
the
amount
of
payment
in finding restaurants,· scores, and
· M -1·
'd
·
·11
b
rf
d b A
·
L ·
Vendors, flower and vegetable
,. .
1 nary gravest e n tes Wt
e pe orme
y men can eglOn
other attraction' in the business $263,953 .29.
c
p
27
growers,
craftsmen
with
.
quality
'
L,a,ayette ost crafts and others are invite d to dt'strt'ct.

Di.nner planned

· James Eynon

FLASHBACK

- salary

r------------------:--------

-~4

~·

v . on CAN ER DAY\f·
'

•

Raymond Glen Hauldren

Pancake, Sausage,
,. , Caffee, lea '••

s· 2000

(OUnCI•I

w.

· • Noah Wyle posed as Steve Jobs
; : at a computer trade show. He.
: was invited. as a joke

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS%13·960)
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Published every anernoon, Mond•y throuah
Fricb y, Ill Cou rt SL, Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhc

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:ohio45769.

bring their wares to the parking
lot for the events, which will be
held throughout the summer.
Blaettnar suggested, and.council
approved, free parking for Market
Days, and he also said that enter-

MORE LOCAL NEWS .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Me111ber1 The Asaoc:iatcd Preu, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auocl&amp;lion.

'

..

'•
.....
'

Suppar

April I, • • 4-7 pm

&gt;

,

was innocent, finally laying to rest
the se nsational case tha.t helped
inspire "The Fugt'tive" TV series.
for the past month, "the state
has been trying to show that D r.
Sam's account of that day doesn 't
make sense - not by looking at
the physical evidence but by
applying co mmo n sense," said
James N eff, author of a forthcoming book on the Sheppard case
called "Chasing the Fugitive."
The prosecution's strategy is
similar to the one it nsed bac k
when the case began, Neff said.
M arilyn Sheppard's partially
nude body was fonnd sprawled on
her blood-soaked bed ea rly on
July 4, 195 4, at the couple's ho me
on lake Eric.
·

United Methodist Church

A contract employee at a NASA
a computer to
access pornography and un authorized chat rooms on the InterBY THE AssociAtED PREss ·
net.
Students from a second school in
• Patrick M . Montgomety, 45, or'Aurora, was charged with. vioOhio have invited death . row ·
~ting NASA administrative regulations regarding the use· of ·
inmate Mumia'Abu-Jamal to give.:~
&amp;&gt;mpute r equipment at the NASA Gl enn Researc h Center in
taped speech.
·
€leveland, 'according to Emily M . Swee ney, U.S. attorney for
Abu-Jamal, wh,o is in prison in
.lorchern Ohio.
.
Pennsylvania for killing a Philadel! The same charge all eges violation o f' a security procedure by . phia police officer, will deiive;r a '
siving his computer password to his son, a juvenile, who
taped speech M;ly 4 at Ken! State
&lt;C::cessed the NASA system from a c;pmpuler outside of NASA,
University,Jeffrey Ritter, co-chair of
:Sweeney said. '
·
the student-run May 4 Task Force,
said Monday.
·
: M o ntgc&gt;mery, reached Monday night by telephon e at his resi~en ce in suburban Aurora and asked whether he wished to comThe event, which marks . the
T-ent on the charge, said, "Not really. It's a pending thing."
30th anniversaty of the fatal shooi• According to Sweeney, MontgQmery worked fo r Science
ings of four students by Ohio
Applica tions International Corp. whe n he did contrac t work at
N ational Guardsmen trying to quell
·an anti-war protest, is not sponsored
SIASA between July 1998 and July 1999.
by the university.
:Robert W. Kern , an assistar1t U.S. attor ney assigned to the case,
"The forces hell~bent o n (Abuslid Monday night a plea agreement was filed in Montgomery's
¢ se. H e said the plea agreement's te rms could become public
Jamal's) execution want to do the
same thing as the forces who killed
'fhen Montgomery appears' in cou-r t possibly within two weeks.
the four Kent State students in 1970
:The ossible maximum se ntence for violating NASA equip· silence strong voices qf political
T e nt ecurity regulations is one year imprisonment and a
dissent;' said. Justin Hans of the
$1100, 0 fine.
'•
,'
Kent Student Anti-R acist Action
• Ker ; aid NASA keeps securi!)' logs regarding Intern et usage
group.
~at a regularly reviewed. He 'said evidence of the alleged misLast week, Antioch College in
.ise was brought
. . to the U. S. attorn ey's staff. ·
YeUow Sptings invited Abu-Jamal
to give the cottmtencemertt address
April 29 via audiotape.
~
.
....
'
. That announceqtent triggered a
: C HILLIC OTHE (AP) - An inmate d ied Monday wnile
flood of outraged letters, e-rh:!il
:!Waiting trial in a 1981l kill ing of a man who se bo dy wasn 't
~und for 10 years.
'
'
messages and faxes from law·
1
enforcement organizations and 'vic~ three months after h e was G'harged wi th aggr~vate~ murder,
tims' gn\\'1'!!· Many of · the letterC harles Crowder, 62, of West Portsmouth, died at Ohio State
Writers, including the slaiil offic~r·s
!J niversity Medical Ce ntet iq Colu+n.bus, said J,;e Andrews, a
widow, p,romise a large protest if
i tate pr isons spokesman.
:
,
A~u-Jamal is . allowed to !pve ,tl)~
: Andrews said C rowder, serving a 10-year sentence at R oss
commenceqtent,address.
,
l:orrec tional Institution 'fQr kidnapping ·a nd felonious assault,
But Kent officials are not conl&gt;ecame ill Sunday morning and was taken to a local hospit~l and
cerned abo ut a 'similar backlash, said
~hen later transfe rred to Ohio State. Scioto County Prosec uto r
university spokesman Ro~;~ Kirksey.
J-ynn Grimshaw said ii· appears Cr&lt;;&gt;wder su!fe retl a brain
"It's a stude nt-sponsore~ ta!fY;'
fneurysm.
,
he said."This looks mo~ like a Mi'
; Crowder was awaiting trial in'the slaying of Danny Traylor, 33,
ical spring thing."
o f Po rtsmouth. C rowder also was charged with kid napping and
But at Antioch, some graduating
~ggravated burglary in an unrelated abduction of a Jackso n
seniors say they're worried about
l::ounty couple in 1997.
·
. ..
•
the prospect of a demonstration.
: Authori ties accused C~owder artd two other people of trying
Teishan Latner, a graduating
to make them think Traylor committed suicide in 1 988 .by j umpsenior
and commencement .comjng off the Carl Perki ns Bridge over th e Ohio River. T he. Ke nmittee member, said he would · be
t uc ky Siate Po lice fon ndTraylor's car On the bridge.
: ··
disappointed
if prot~sts overshadow
: His skeletal re mains wete found _tWO years agq, on ·a r.ugged
the culmination of fou t yea of .
billside in Scioto C ou!fty after Crowder told the m whe~ to
~~
·\
hard work.

r~search facility was charged Monday with using

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"Anything other tlian a gu ~ with ~
anything in the chamber won't CJit
it. I 'm trying toflguTe out if there's

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

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OBI T UARY

·Lawmaker doesn't like ·1oadecl" definition

BUCK E Y E BRIEF S

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· Tuesd~ 4, 20oo

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1\.lesday, April 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Mlddieport, Ohio

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AmTech/SBC -

44'/o .

32~.

AT&amp;T - 58
Bank One - 38,.
Bob Evans - 13lo
BorgWarner - 37'l.
Champion - 3~

Charming Shops - 5'),
City Holding - 12).
Federal Mogul - 15'1,
Flrstar - 24),
·

General Electric - 158'),
Hartay Davidson - 83

K mall - -9'·

Kroger -

18'/o

Lands End - 56 ~.
Ltd . - 43'1•
.
Oak Hill Financial - 13

· OVB - 29~ ·

One Valley - 36~
f'eoples - 16\

Premier - 7.,.

Rockwell -

41 1.

Rocky Boote - 5),
RD Shell :.... 58l.
Sears - 32l•
Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart - 61 '),
Wendy's - 20%
Worthington - 12Vio
DaDy Block reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes of ·.
the prevl.ous day's trans·
provided
by
· actions,
' Advesl of Gallipolis.

VALL ~ EATHER
· Chilly temps f~recast t~night
BY THE ASSOCI ATED PRESS

The rain will end and ski es
will clear across th e tri-courtty
tonight, with rather chilly tempe ratures settlin g in, the N atio nal
Weather Servi ce sa id. .
l ows tonight will be 25-30.
Ablmdant
sunshine
on
Wedn esday will help boost the
m e rcury into the mid- 40s to
mid-50s, forecasters said. ·
Warmer temperatu res arid a
chance of rain are in T hu rsday's
forecast. ,
Sun1et tonight will be at 8
p.m . a~d sunrise on Wednesday at
7:09 a. m.
Weather forecast:
. Tonight ... C io ud y. w it h
a

~

chance of snow showers. Lows
from the uppe r 20s to near 30.
'Northwest wind I 0 to I S mph.
C han ce of snow 30 percent.
Wedn esday... Becoming partly
sunny. Highs in the upp er 50s .
Wednesday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower and
mid 40s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Partly cloudy and
~arm er. Highs in the lower 70s:
Fri day.. .Partly clo ndy. Lows 45
to 50 and highs in the low ~ nd
:mid 70s.
Saturday... M ostly cloudy with
a chance of rain. J;.ows in the
upper 40s and highs fro m the
t~p per (lOs to lower 70s.

I

The sign is expected to cost
approximately SSOO.
..
At Ballard's recommendation,
council approved .a n:solution in
support of the Athens-to-Darwin
U.S. Ro 11te 33 project. Blaettnar
and Council President John Muss"
er will attend the 1RAC meeting
on Thursday, where a vote on
funding is expected, to testifY oit
be half of the village.

lOX OIFla Will OPBI
6:30 PI fGI MNING SHOWS
· 12:30 PM FOR lllliliUS

Blaze
from PapAl
school spokeswoman Kathleen
Gierhart.
"Rio Grande staff m et with
students on Sunday afternoon
and arranged temporary living
arrangements
on
campus,"
according to the press release.
"1\lso, Rio Grande e mployees
helped . students in getting · some
of their essential possessions out
of Boyd H all."

AMERICAN BEAUTY
READY TO RUMBLE &amp;
RULESOFENOAOEMENT

Rebate OR
You can save up to 50% on your utility bills,
be cool and comfy all summer and warm and
rozy next winter before you make one payment!
Or take an instant rebate on select models.
Ahot summer is forecast. Hurry, the schedule .
is filling and there will be no lower prices '
this year.

up

HotUne 1

David,.,..••,

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ALL AGES . ALL Tlr\1ES S.\ 00

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PageA4

. . .;r__~;te_o_ai-..Iy_Se_n_tin_e_I----~-·_ _0_piniOn

'Tu•day. April 4. 1000
I

The Da~ly Sentinel

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'Esta6Culid in 1948
•j

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

Oh'lo Valley
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager,

'

Publls~lng

NO. I · CAN'T

Larry Boyer

I

GI~~TOYOUR

Co.

years, and we have two adult sons and a
1.7-year-old. I am 16-years-older than
my hus!Jind, It never seemed to be a
problem, and I always thought we had a
good reJationship..I must have been blind
or too busy to notice that everything was
not picture Jferfect.
. About 18 months ago, I began to
notice some unusual phone numbers on
our biUs and on Jake's beeper. I then discovered receipts for car rentals, motel
suites and gifts that I had not received.
When I asked a few questions, Jake told
me it was personal stuff, and ordered me
not to open his maiL About eight months
ago, when some of his checks. came·
through our personal account but did
not list our home address, I confronted
Jake, He said the checks were for his
business.
Jake and two of our sons run the business. He insists that none of it belong; to

CAM.PA\GN

R. Shawn Lewis
Maml'glng Editor

Advertising Director

, .Dear Ann Landers: My husband,

'~ake:' and I have been together for 20

''

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

t..um 1o tlr~ n/itor ~ -ltOI'IIe. Th•y s•ONid IK ku tll1111 JOO words. A.U kn~rr tiJ't. 111b}ut
10 ffllli~tr fUUIIIUIII 1M rirn«&lt;arul iMIIId• tuldrns ud l«l•p"u"• ~tuMNr. NoMIUifll«ii ldhn wiJl
h p•WU.Itd. Utttn •lt.OMU IH y. gooJ ltUt•, tuUireninl iss• "· 1101 pustHfldi&amp;1.
oplltiofU •q,..uld Ill ,., colllmll ~~~l.olfl lltf' dlf COIISf:IUid oflltr Ohio Vslh) PJibiUitinr
CtJ. 'I Milorl4JINMN, 11nln• OIJttrwill 1101ed.

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OUR VIEW:

Black eye
Strikers~ alleged

L

by

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I

ry.

TODAY IN H'ISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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band and a 90 year-old mother. I hope
you will put my letter in your column so
she wiU get the recognition she so richly
deserves - better late than neyer. Thank
you. - GRATEFUL DAUGHTER IN
MISSISSIPPI
DEAR GRATEFUL DAUGHTER: Here it is. Have it laminated, and
give it to your wonderful mother for her
next birthday. She'll love it.
An alcohol problem? How can yo 11
help yourself or someone you love
"Alcoholism: How to Recogni ze II .
How to Deal With It, How to Conque1
It" will give you the answers. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size envelope
and ac check or money order for $3.75
(this includes postage and handling) to:
Alcohol, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, IlL 60611 -0562 .. (In
Canada, ·send $4.55.) To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web page at www.creato rs.com.

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Revival to be held

I

Is there a better way to pick our nominees?
Delaware Republicans have come up with a
"
and N ew H ampshire would be ·followed by il
compelling .alternative to the current front"pod" of small-population states, including
Wyoming, Vermont, Ala.•ka, the Dakotas, Monloaded presidential primary system. The question is: Will George W. Bush and AI Gore buy it?
tana, Rhode Island, Hawaii and Idaho.
Both parties are considering an overhaul of
That group would be followed in a tl!.cond
the much criticized current calendar. A plan for
pod by slightly bigger states, including Maine,
rotating regional primaries has gotten the most
Nebraska, West Virginia, Arkansas, Kansas, Misattenfion, bui DelaWolre's "inverted pyramid"
sissippi and Connecticut.
.
idea may be better.
There would be three more "pods" for proUnder that plan, .which some R epublicans
gressively bigger states leading up to a grand
favor and which has been discu ssed with
finale of Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, llliQo~,
Democrats, a group of small states would hold
NEA COLUMNIST
Florida, New York,Texas and California in May.
primaries in mid-February, followed by groups
Under this plan , nearly -holt:-of each party's
of progn,.Ssively bigger states in M arch and
convention delegates would be selected on a
would be followed by four multi-stare primaries Super Duper Tuesday in May instead of37 perr
April, followed by the biggest states in May.
As former Senator and ex-Republican in March, April, May and June.
.
cent in this year's March 7 Super Tuesday,
National Conunittee Chairman Bill Brock, ·
For 2004, states in the Northeast would go
When the plan
tried out on Democ1'31lj,
Tenn., points out, "There's a lot of dissatisfaction _first, followed by the South, Midwest and West. they objected that most states in the earliest pop
with the present system."
In 2008, the South would be first, etc.
had few minority voters. A variation includes
Brock, now chairman of the ·GOP conunis- . TJle plan earned i!lformal support from th.e , the .J?~trict of C~}umb!~· Another prol"?se;!l
sion studying alternatives, says the present sys- nation's governors and was endorsed by Demn:.::.·. four !nstead of five pods.
, ,
, .. :·
tern "truncates the nominating process, drives cratic National Committee General Chairman
Some Republicans proppse folding Iowa and
good people out of the race before their ideas Ed Rendell who calle!l for Congress to pass a" New Hampshire into pods, undoing the tra~­
are heard, and allows for nowhere near enough law to mak~ it happen.
ti9n that plac,es them at the beginning of the
discussion of issues:'
.
' However, neither party is near a final deci- nominating process. But since both. states have
There has been a steady rush by states toward . on, 311d it is dawning on people that the ,. popular Democratic governors, it's unlikely that
the front of rhe process, resulting in what ~~ primary automatically limits geograph- the Democratic Party wiU go along with such.a
amounts to a national primary on the first Tues- ic - and probably, ideological - diversity on change.
day in March, eight months before the general each of the primary dares:
- In fact, it's not clear what either Gore or
election.
An alternative suggested by former Democ- 'Texas Gov. Bush thinks of any change in the
The current system favors well-financed, ratic National Conunittee Executive Director primary process that worked for him. Bush's
well-known_ front-runners. They may get chal- Mark Siegel calls for rotating time-zone pri- campaign chief of staff, Joe Allbaugh, met with
lenged in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Caroli- ' marie!, witli states as diverse a,s Maine, Ne;.v Brock on Tuesday to discuss Brock's plan,
na an~ Michigan, but their money and institu- York, the Carolinas, and Florida all voting on 'r!Je
·Each nominee will ask: "lfl'm president and
tiona! support prevails quickly as the race then same day.
somebody challenges me, which system will
moves to states such ·as California, New York
But both the regional plan and the' ti~e- help me stomp him (or her) ?"
·
and Ohio.
pack big stares and small states 'roger~Bush, presumably, will be teinpted to keep an
Instead of the. 11ominations being decided in
when the Western primary takes . establishl)lent "fire wall" in South Carolina.
most of the candidates' time Gore, presumably, likes the five-week "de~d
June primaries or even at tl1e national conventions,leading to a short general election race in and
be focused on California, not ·zone" be~en New Hampshire and Super-·
the fall, the current system produces a lengthy, Otegon or Arizona.
· Tuesday that starved former Seq. Bill Bradley,
The beauty of the Delaware plan is that it D -NJ, of political oxygen.
expensive contest in which each side may have
to be savage in otder to break through the pub- allows for - really, demands - "ret:lil:' hand- · . It will take bipartisan agreem~ nt to change
lie's boredom. ·
shaking, town-meeting politics in places besides thing;. So don't bet on change, even if it's for the
As one alternative, the nation'r secretaries of Iowa and New Hampshire.
better.
.
Under the original plan designed by
(Morton Kondracke is exemtive editor if Roll
state proposed. rotating regional primaries. The
Iowa caucuses and New B!!Jllpshire primarY Delaware GOP Chairn1an Basil Battaglia, Iowa Call, the newspaper if Capitol Hill.)

ORTA conference held

0

First Census help~d identif~ national _tr~nds
WASHINGTON- ,In late 1790, an inquisitive government ~nt knocked on the. door of
Boston silversmith and patriot Paul Revere and
dutifuUy noted his name and the number of
people living under his roof.
Two hundred and ten years later, the ledgerbook recording data about Revere and his
Boston neighbors is at the National Archives,
.Pel)-and-ink eviden~e of the 6rst census and
the 20 national head counts th11t foUo\ved.
The Archives pulled the 1790 ledger from its
miles of shelves just as the 21st ce11Sus got under
.way with the dispatching of questionnaires to
about 120 .million households.
As the American Revolution began in 1775,
Revere gaUoped out from Boston to Lexington, Mass.·, rousing the ~ountryside and warning
that the British were marching. His midnight
missiol} would be ·'immortalized in Henry
Wadsworth LorigfeUow's "Paul Revere's Ride."
None of that is obvious from the 1790 census. Revere's name appears as head of a household that included three boys under age 1.6 ~nd
thiee white females,
"Other than that we know nothing else
about them, not even their narn~," said Connie
Potter, an Archives official. "But it is clear, from
the questions that were asked, that tllere were
no slaves in Paul Revere's household." .
In the 6rst census, just 650 people did the
couiltin.s, in i:he 13 states, the districts of M;!ine,

ritory.
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Responsibility for the count was lodAAd with
the U.S. marshal in each state and districtThose
doing the actual counting were hired as aSsistant
marshals.
·
·
: Each census worker took an oath to 'make "a
. juSt and perfect' enumeration and description of
persOns within ~he division assigned tO' him ."
The· count was essential. It not only estab-,
lished the total population but also served as the
basis• of -apportioning state delegations to the
new House of Representatives,
"Most people realized the ·iniportaQt nature
of what was being set in motion," said David
Hendricks, a Census historian, standing near the
case with the sheet o( ruled paper listing the
names.ofPaul R evere and other BostonianS.
Unlike the secrecy rules p~vailing today, the'
1790 census rules required that two copies of
the• final tallies be publicly displayed. Records
show that copies went on view in such places as
"in front of the Court House:· the Orange Tree
Inn, a local gristmill, or, in one case, "Mr. Henry
Eckhart's Tavern ,"
The third tally sheet was sent to President
Washington:
As in every census, some people w ere missed,
either because they· were hard to find or
because they wished to remai11 uncounted.
(/.Au!r.,lle L Krutson has reponed on tl1e Wl1it(
"But I think there. was a general acceptance · House, Congress dhd the history if Wlllhington for
in 1790 that while not everyone got counted, it more tha~ 3 0 years,) "
I

sex

PrOtect .· . .
rtant
.
~
·peopIe m your we. .

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

n
was good enough for whar they had to do,"
Hendricks said.
Acc9tding to tlte for,mula established by the
Constitution, slaves were counted as three-fifths
of a 'whole person for the purposes of appor~
tionment. Free blacks were counted as whoiC
people. So were indentured servants.
Th~re ' were just six questions a.• ked in 1790:
of which two were basic: the name of the head
of each family and the number of people in
each household.
'
,
·The census takers recotded the number of
free, wliite males I 6 years or older to determine
how many men might be potentially available .
for military service. They also counted the
number of free, white males younger thaq 161
the number of free, white females; all other free
and race and the number of slaves
people by
in the ho usehold.
When all the adding Was pver, the result ·did
not meet everyonC:s expectations.
'
Washington and other unhappy gnvernment
officials had hoped the count would show a
population of signi6cantly more than 4 million 1
It didn't.
When the census w:is over, the"population o~ ,
the United States at the end of 1790 was cerci- .......·". .
"~
6ed at exactly 3,929,214.
That included Paul Revere.
.
,

company require the renter to purchase insunn cc on
the rente&lt;\ item, even though the customer may
already have renter's insurance or home owner's insurance?
These are some questii&gt;ns you need to ask before
making your final decisiolf when buying a large tick~t
item. Generally, you will find that there is a sig.)ificant
difference in how much you would have to pay for an
item if you rent-to-own versus paying with cash. It can
,
be up to three times as much as the cash. pri ce.
If you plan to buy the TV on credit, also figure the
total cost as you would for the rent-to-own. Check the
annual p~ rce ntage rate, fin ance charges and. any other
charges that may be included in the credit contract.
Paying by credit may be less than rent-to-own, but still
more than if you paid with cash. It might be wise to
think twice about just how soon you need to have th,at
television. The immediate availability of the item might
not be worth the extra costs when purchasing through
rent-to own or credit plans.

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The . /
• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
•GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE

WASHINGTON YESTERDAY: ·

,, VerrJ!Ollt and Kentucky and the Southwest Ter-

Becky
Baer

Health Club contributts

'

BY LAwRINCE L. KNuTsoN

Fry.
The contest was won by Dorothy Jeffers and
Phyllis Skin~er. Suzie Ma~h will host the April
meeting at the.homein Cheshire, with Fry giving
the prografll, and Jeffers the contest. Refreshments
were served by the hostess to those name,! and a
guest, Melyla Mash,

PCC meets

was

.

.

Wya.nt reunion held

Morton
Kondracke

.

'

TIME OUT . FOR TIPS

You have decided to buy a new television. How
Should you 'buy the TV on
should you pay for iF?
credit? Should you go to a " rent to-own" store? Or
POMEROY ~ The Pome roy Church of Christ
should you wait until you save enough money each
wiD host a community-wide revival to be held
week or month and pay cash for the new se't?
April 7-9 with Hoyt Allen of the Kyowva (KenAccording to Susan Holladay, OSU Extension
tucky, Ohio and West Virginia) Evangelistic AssoAgent in Clinton County, de ~ide if the television is a
ciation of Ironton as the speaker. Allen is a former
"want" or a "need." Many people are attracted by the
.....
.pastor of the Pomeroy congregation.
"rent-to-own" ·stores because they can satisfY their
, Services will be held at 7 p.m. nightly aJ!d 9:30
wants immediately. If you are considering a major pur- .
a.m. on Sunday. There wiU be special music at
chase, weigh the pros and cons of your different
HARRISONVILLE - The Wyant family
each service and a staffed nursery wiD be providoptions before signing any contracts or ·putting any
for the children of Leroy and Goldie
reunion
money down. Here are some questions you need to
•ed.
Wyant was held S,unday at the Eastern Star hall in ,. ask the rent-to-own .salesperson before you make your
HarrisonviUe.
final decision about a purchase.
Attending were Kenneth and Lois Wyant, Jean
First, what is the total cost? Find out what your payCHESTER - Charlotte Grant and Marcia and Norman Wood, Janic e and Dal DeBord of
ment w be each month then multiply that by the
'Keller hosted a recent meeting of the Past Coun- Pomeroy; Juanita and Stanley Beal, Strong;ville;
number of payments you will have to make.
cilors Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of . Judy and Harold Gilliam, Zanesville; grandchilDoes the company guarantee the item you are plan'America, held at the hall .
dren and great grandchildren, Tim and Carla
ning to rent is new? Can you buy the item out right at
' · Jean Welsh opened the meeting with Psalm Wyant, Rutland; Ronnie Wood, Pomeroy; Vickey
a reduced price at some point during the contract? Is
'133, and the group gave the Lord's .Prayer and the and John Abdella, Elizabeth and Maria, Wellston;
there a penalty" for doing that? Do you have to make
all of the contracted payments to become the owner?
pledge to the flag in unison. Members named Terri and Mike Petra~, Taylor and Seth. CannonsEven though the company JllllY provide repairs at
favorite spring Oowers ,in response to roll calL burg;'l'a.; Chris and Misty Haning, Jimmy and
no charge, does it also provide a "loaner at flO extra
, , Officers' reports were gtven by Esther Snuth and Robyn Haning, James .a nd Joey, Jeff and Becky ·
charge, or will they allow you to stop payments during
Laura Mae N1ce.
,
Hanning, and Jennifer of Rudand. Lee Drake of
the repair period? Does the company require a large
Games :were conducted by Ruth Snuth and p0 meroy and Whitney Allan of Wellston were
'
'Esther Smith, and door prizes were awarded to
"balloon payment" when you are ready to make your
Margaret Amberger, lnzy Newell, Goldie freder-, guests.
final payment? ..Jf. rhe ren\er misses one or more pay' lck, ' boris Grueser, Ruth 'S mith, and a visitor,
ments, can they reinstate the rent-to-own contract
Richard White.
·
1
without losing the investment up to that point? Are
Refreshments were served to those named and
· there large penalties charged? Does the rent~to-own
POMEROY - ·Several retired teachers. repreBetty Young,' Opal Eichinger, Mary K. Holter,
Thelma White, Opal Hollon, and another visitor, senting Meigs .CountY attended the District VII
conference of the Ohio Retired Teachers Associa"
_ Sandy White.
tion where th~ emphasis was on volunteering
with children.
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The meeting carrying out the theme "CelePOMEROY - Donations were made to the brate the Century" was held at the Lewis Family
Disabled American Veterans, Carleton School for Restaurant in Jackson. Joe Endry, ORTA 'e15ecuthe special Olympics p1£gmm, and the American tive director, spoke on recent efforts to further ·
' Lung Association whetfthe Rock Spring; Better beneficial legislation on both the state and nation' Health Club met recently at the home of Barbara a! level for retirees.
Sessions atte
d during ~he day ' were "TeachFry.
Plans were also made for the group to serve the ing Consu
s to Shop Wisely" with emphasis on
American Red Cross bloodmobile on its April 19 changes i utility companies and services, present;Visit to the Meig; County Senior Citizens Center. · ed by ay Foeller from the Ohio Consumers
' · Officers' reports were· given, thank you notes Cou cil, and updates on health care by Lynne
.read from those recei~ing Christmas treats, and Hokanson, the director of Health Care Services at
Dorothy Jeffers was narhed to be in charge of con- the STRS.
tacts with .the sick in the conununity.
The Lord's Prayer ard pledge to the Oag
Attending from Meigs Cou nty were Jean
.
Alkire,
Eileen Buck, Jo Ann Corder, Nellie Parkopened the meeting, Devotions by Fry, presid ent,
"were readings on spring. A request for a leave of er, Gay Perrin ,Anna Rice, Grace Weber, and Maxabsence was read from Lenora Leifheit.
·
ine Whitehead.
Dorothy Jeffers gave the -program which
Many. Meigs County retired teachers are curin~luded reading; on massage by Nan.cy Morris, rently active in various vo!Uiiteer, projects, such as
salt upon the· bones by Suzie Mash,, symptoms of the Stars Reading program, the Seniors in Schools
a stroke by Phyllis Skinner, st'rong feet by Dorothy history program, and other tutoring and teacher
Jeffe.rs, and Cleaning out the medicine cabinet by_ . assista~ce ..p~grams.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW:

..

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me since I have not contributed toward
it. He did not buy me any presents last
Christmas, but I noticed receipts for giftS
he had bought at a lipgerie store. Last
night, he left, and didn't come back until
morning. Today, I found a receipt for a
post-office box he has rented so that his
mail will no lo nger 'c ome to the house,
Jake says he is ·going to change banks,
even though we've used the same one for
years. I am afraid h e is putting aU the
money into his name so he can leave me

SO·CIETY- NEWS

,

Today is Tuesday, April 4, the 95th .day of 2p00. Th~re are 271 cl;iy. ,
left in the year.
·
·
Today's Highlight in History: ..
On April 4, 1%8, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., 39, was
~hot to death in Memphis, Tenn.
On this date:
'
In 1818, Congress decided ,the'flag of t!Je United States would consist of Ured and white stripes and 20 stars, with a new star to be added
for every new state of the Union.
.
In 1841, President William H enry Harrison succumbed to-1'neumonia one month after his inauguration, the first U.S, chief executive
to die in office.
In 1850, the city of Los Angeles was incorporated.
In 1902, British financier Cecil Rhodes left $10 mlllion .dollars in
hi~ will to provid.; scholarships (or Americans at Oxfoq;l University.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces liberated, the Nazi death
camp Ohrdruf in Germany.
·
In 1945, U.S. troops on Okinawa encountered the 6rst signi6cant
~istance from Japanese forces.
,,
In 1949, 12, nations, including the United Stites, signed the North
Adantic Treaty, foundation of NATO.
.
In 1974, Hank.Aaron of the Atlanta Braves tied Babe Ruth's homerun record by hitting his 714th round-tripper in Cincinnati.
In 1979, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the deposed prime minister of Pakistan, was hanged after he was convicted of conspiring to murder a
political opponent. (His daughter, Benazir, became prime minister in
1988.)
'
.
'
.
'
In 1983; the space shurde Challenger roared into orbit on its 'maiden voyage.
Today's Birthdays: Composer Elmer Bernstein is 78. Actress EliZ&lt;~ ­
beth Wilson is 75. Author- poet Maya Angelou is 72 ..Sena.tor Richard
Lugar (R-Ind.) is 68. Recording executive Clive Davis is 68. Actor
Michael Parks is 62. Bandleader Hugh Masekela is 61, Author Kitty
Kelley is 58. Actor Walter Charles is 55. Actress Caroline Mcl,:villiams
is 55. Actor CraigT. N elson is 54.Acrress C hristine Lahti is 50. Country singer Steve Gatlin (Tbe Gatlin Brothers) is 49. Writer- producer
David E. Kelley. ("Ally McBeal''; "The Practice") is 44. Actor Ph'il
Morris is 41. Rock musician Craig AilanlS (The Cult) is 38.

ADV!CE

until the bill was paid. Shorily after that,
the doctor closed his practice and left
town. My mother had no idea where he
had gone, but she knew ~lie still owed a
balance of $60. Money was tight in those
days, and it was a struggle for her to get
by. I am · sure $60 seemed like a huge
sum. Mom used to tease me that I would
be ."repossessed" bec'ause she never fin ished paying for me.
The other day. Mom called and told
me I cou ld quit looking, over my shoulder, !Jecause she finally located the doctor, who is now retired. She sent him a
note of apology for the long delay in
payment, along with a check for $60.The
doctor was so impressed with her
integrity that he wrote ha a letter of
apprfciation.
Ann , my' mother is a truly remarkable
woman. She has -!t ied tQ instill morals
and values in her three children while
working at:i physically demanding factory job and taking care of a disabled hus-

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actions
hurting the entire region · .
ast week's shooting of a Coca-Cola d elivery truck alon~
Interstate 64 pamts a bad p1cture to th e nation. And that s
the last thing the region's struggling economy needs.
The tractor- trailers were shot while
Granted, it's nCJt they were on an entrance ramp to Interbeen proved Fri- ~ate 64 at Nitro about 5:45 a.m. Friday.
• day's shots were The shootings are the latest. damage to
company property since 38 Teamster
fired by union
members who work at Coca-Cola's
members liu t,,
Huntington warehouse walked off the
alas, the union
job March 14.
· .
.:... and the
·It's been an ugly strike. Windows have
broken anti rites slashed. Granted,
been
region - s•!lfer
it's not been proved Friday's shots were
from guilt
fired by union members but, alas, the
association.
union - and the region - suffer from
guilt by association.
Prospective companies often mistake such bad apples for the
whole bunch.
It doesn't matter that the truck could have been shot up anywhere; it wasn't. It was shot up in western West Virginia, so western W:est Virginia must be a dangerous place filled with rabblerousing unioris.And given western West Virginia's historical connection to southeast Ohio, southeast Ol:rio must a lousy place,
too - or so the flawed 'logic goes.
Don't take our word for it, folks. Economic development offi. dals in both states have been preaching this for years, and they've
got the statistics to prove their claims.·
.Each strike-related incident increases the chances corporate
eyes are apt ~o look elsewhere when it comes time to expand or
start new ventures. Who can blame them? What company wants
to move into a hostile labor environment?
We're not downing organized labor; umons have done wonders for the working man. We applaud - and support - the
e fforts of United Steelworkers Local 5171 to save their jobs at
American Alloys' New Haven plant.
These folks are doing it the right way. They're using their
brains rather than their bt:~wn to prove their point. This is the
modern labor movement at its best.
· • Actions such as those allegedly performed by the Teamsters,
~owever, represent old-school unions at their worst. The days of
pelting "scab" workers with rotten eggs and slashing their tires
are over. We wish they never existed.
We 'encourage the Teamsters to take a page from the Steelworkers' boo~: Put away your knives and. open your minds . .
:rhere's no place for such primitive behavior in the 21st centu-

Ann
Landers·

and take all of our savings. I am desperate and confused. I, need some of your
good advice.- BAD VIBES IN TEXAS
DEAR BAD VIBES: You need more
than my !'good advice," I hope you wiD
~ee a lawyet at once, and make certain
that you are protected, because it sounds
as if Jake has some plans for the future
that do not include you.
When you meet with the lawyer, be
sure ro bring all the evidence that you
have referred to in' your letter. And P.S,:: I
hope you cleart his clock. He's got it
coming.
Dear Ann Lander.s: I would like to
shan; a story about my mother, and I
hope you think it is wdrth printing in
your column. This tale is for all those
who believe the re is no honesty or
integrity left in the world.
When I was born 35 years ago, my
mother could not afford the obstetrician's bill, so she worked out an agreem~nt tq give the doctor $10 a month

rtJESDAY,April 4

I

. POMEROY - Business After
Hours, Meig; County Chamber of .
Commerce,Tuesday,6 to 7:30p.m.
flosted by Fu~ Peace Ranch. . ' '

tfJ·~ ooW have the~ of p~ting your family members'

1.L:a~

~ · ALFRED ·_ Orange Township

~

I

'Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of clerk, Osie Follrod.

puii1e!' with kiw-COII
'
I

IO.cx ZO.year ]eye! tenn life

'1l

cROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury
Tqwnship Truste.es, regular meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m., township
building.

inSurance hom Auto-Owners

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
~thletic Boosters, Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
at Eastern High School. Election
of ojlicers for 2000-2001. '

details ar.i a canpetitive prqn;al.

, . .fioN£soAY, Aprn ~ .

·

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ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
. MONDAY, APRIL 17, 2000
12:00NOON
IJYSERTlON. DATE:
WEDNESDAY~ APRIL 26, 2000
•

Call

Insurance Company. CaD us fur more

·D ave Harris or·Matt Haskins .
For More. Information
.
'
992- 5
~

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' RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, Free and. Accepted .
Masons. Refreshments.

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Jut,;..o.;,,, ~

1------------Ufe ·Home car•Suslness

7M'N!Ik!IJ,.,'¥•

POMEROY -. Pomeroy High
School class of 1955, planning session, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at Trinity
church basement. Plans for 45th
reunion parry afternoon of May 27
before PHS banquet and dance.

21.4 Ea•t Main
Pomeroy

992-6687

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-·--..11 -- --- •..

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PageA4

. . .;r__~;te_o_ai-..Iy_Se_n_tin_e_I----~-·_ _0_piniOn

'Tu•day. April 4. 1000
I

The Da~ly Sentinel

'

'Esta6Culid in 1948
•j

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

Oh'lo Valley
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager,

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Publls~lng

NO. I · CAN'T

Larry Boyer

I

GI~~TOYOUR

Co.

years, and we have two adult sons and a
1.7-year-old. I am 16-years-older than
my hus!Jind, It never seemed to be a
problem, and I always thought we had a
good reJationship..I must have been blind
or too busy to notice that everything was
not picture Jferfect.
. About 18 months ago, I began to
notice some unusual phone numbers on
our biUs and on Jake's beeper. I then discovered receipts for car rentals, motel
suites and gifts that I had not received.
When I asked a few questions, Jake told
me it was personal stuff, and ordered me
not to open his maiL About eight months
ago, when some of his checks. came·
through our personal account but did
not list our home address, I confronted
Jake, He said the checks were for his
business.
Jake and two of our sons run the business. He insists that none of it belong; to

CAM.PA\GN

R. Shawn Lewis
Maml'glng Editor

Advertising Director

, .Dear Ann Landers: My husband,

'~ake:' and I have been together for 20

''

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

t..um 1o tlr~ n/itor ~ -ltOI'IIe. Th•y s•ONid IK ku tll1111 JOO words. A.U kn~rr tiJ't. 111b}ut
10 ffllli~tr fUUIIIUIII 1M rirn«&lt;arul iMIIId• tuldrns ud l«l•p"u"• ~tuMNr. NoMIUifll«ii ldhn wiJl
h p•WU.Itd. Utttn •lt.OMU IH y. gooJ ltUt•, tuUireninl iss• "· 1101 pustHfldi&amp;1.
oplltiofU •q,..uld Ill ,., colllmll ~~~l.olfl lltf' dlf COIISf:IUid oflltr Ohio Vslh) PJibiUitinr
CtJ. 'I Milorl4JINMN, 11nln• OIJttrwill 1101ed.

n.

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OUR VIEW:

Black eye
Strikers~ alleged

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by

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ry.

TODAY IN H'ISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

band and a 90 year-old mother. I hope
you will put my letter in your column so
she wiU get the recognition she so richly
deserves - better late than neyer. Thank
you. - GRATEFUL DAUGHTER IN
MISSISSIPPI
DEAR GRATEFUL DAUGHTER: Here it is. Have it laminated, and
give it to your wonderful mother for her
next birthday. She'll love it.
An alcohol problem? How can yo 11
help yourself or someone you love
"Alcoholism: How to Recogni ze II .
How to Deal With It, How to Conque1
It" will give you the answers. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size envelope
and ac check or money order for $3.75
(this includes postage and handling) to:
Alcohol, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, IlL 60611 -0562 .. (In
Canada, ·send $4.55.) To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web page at www.creato rs.com.

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Revival to be held

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Is there a better way to pick our nominees?
Delaware Republicans have come up with a
"
and N ew H ampshire would be ·followed by il
compelling .alternative to the current front"pod" of small-population states, including
Wyoming, Vermont, Ala.•ka, the Dakotas, Monloaded presidential primary system. The question is: Will George W. Bush and AI Gore buy it?
tana, Rhode Island, Hawaii and Idaho.
Both parties are considering an overhaul of
That group would be followed in a tl!.cond
the much criticized current calendar. A plan for
pod by slightly bigger states, including Maine,
rotating regional primaries has gotten the most
Nebraska, West Virginia, Arkansas, Kansas, Misattenfion, bui DelaWolre's "inverted pyramid"
sissippi and Connecticut.
.
idea may be better.
There would be three more "pods" for proUnder that plan, .which some R epublicans
gressively bigger states leading up to a grand
favor and which has been discu ssed with
finale of Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, llliQo~,
Democrats, a group of small states would hold
NEA COLUMNIST
Florida, New York,Texas and California in May.
primaries in mid-February, followed by groups
Under this plan , nearly -holt:-of each party's
of progn,.Ssively bigger states in M arch and
convention delegates would be selected on a
would be followed by four multi-stare primaries Super Duper Tuesday in May instead of37 perr
April, followed by the biggest states in May.
As former Senator and ex-Republican in March, April, May and June.
.
cent in this year's March 7 Super Tuesday,
National Conunittee Chairman Bill Brock, ·
For 2004, states in the Northeast would go
When the plan
tried out on Democ1'31lj,
Tenn., points out, "There's a lot of dissatisfaction _first, followed by the South, Midwest and West. they objected that most states in the earliest pop
with the present system."
In 2008, the South would be first, etc.
had few minority voters. A variation includes
Brock, now chairman of the ·GOP conunis- . TJle plan earned i!lformal support from th.e , the .J?~trict of C~}umb!~· Another prol"?se;!l
sion studying alternatives, says the present sys- nation's governors and was endorsed by Demn:.::.·. four !nstead of five pods.
, ,
, .. :·
tern "truncates the nominating process, drives cratic National Committee General Chairman
Some Republicans proppse folding Iowa and
good people out of the race before their ideas Ed Rendell who calle!l for Congress to pass a" New Hampshire into pods, undoing the tra~­
are heard, and allows for nowhere near enough law to mak~ it happen.
ti9n that plac,es them at the beginning of the
discussion of issues:'
.
' However, neither party is near a final deci- nominating process. But since both. states have
There has been a steady rush by states toward . on, 311d it is dawning on people that the ,. popular Democratic governors, it's unlikely that
the front of rhe process, resulting in what ~~ primary automatically limits geograph- the Democratic Party wiU go along with such.a
amounts to a national primary on the first Tues- ic - and probably, ideological - diversity on change.
day in March, eight months before the general each of the primary dares:
- In fact, it's not clear what either Gore or
election.
An alternative suggested by former Democ- 'Texas Gov. Bush thinks of any change in the
The current system favors well-financed, ratic National Conunittee Executive Director primary process that worked for him. Bush's
well-known_ front-runners. They may get chal- Mark Siegel calls for rotating time-zone pri- campaign chief of staff, Joe Allbaugh, met with
lenged in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Caroli- ' marie!, witli states as diverse a,s Maine, Ne;.v Brock on Tuesday to discuss Brock's plan,
na an~ Michigan, but their money and institu- York, the Carolinas, and Florida all voting on 'r!Je
·Each nominee will ask: "lfl'm president and
tiona! support prevails quickly as the race then same day.
somebody challenges me, which system will
moves to states such ·as California, New York
But both the regional plan and the' ti~e- help me stomp him (or her) ?"
·
and Ohio.
pack big stares and small states 'roger~Bush, presumably, will be teinpted to keep an
Instead of the. 11ominations being decided in
when the Western primary takes . establishl)lent "fire wall" in South Carolina.
most of the candidates' time Gore, presumably, likes the five-week "de~d
June primaries or even at tl1e national conventions,leading to a short general election race in and
be focused on California, not ·zone" be~en New Hampshire and Super-·
the fall, the current system produces a lengthy, Otegon or Arizona.
· Tuesday that starved former Seq. Bill Bradley,
The beauty of the Delaware plan is that it D -NJ, of political oxygen.
expensive contest in which each side may have
to be savage in otder to break through the pub- allows for - really, demands - "ret:lil:' hand- · . It will take bipartisan agreem~ nt to change
lie's boredom. ·
shaking, town-meeting politics in places besides thing;. So don't bet on change, even if it's for the
As one alternative, the nation'r secretaries of Iowa and New Hampshire.
better.
.
Under the original plan designed by
(Morton Kondracke is exemtive editor if Roll
state proposed. rotating regional primaries. The
Iowa caucuses and New B!!Jllpshire primarY Delaware GOP Chairn1an Basil Battaglia, Iowa Call, the newspaper if Capitol Hill.)

ORTA conference held

0

First Census help~d identif~ national _tr~nds
WASHINGTON- ,In late 1790, an inquisitive government ~nt knocked on the. door of
Boston silversmith and patriot Paul Revere and
dutifuUy noted his name and the number of
people living under his roof.
Two hundred and ten years later, the ledgerbook recording data about Revere and his
Boston neighbors is at the National Archives,
.Pel)-and-ink eviden~e of the 6rst census and
the 20 national head counts th11t foUo\ved.
The Archives pulled the 1790 ledger from its
miles of shelves just as the 21st ce11Sus got under
.way with the dispatching of questionnaires to
about 120 .million households.
As the American Revolution began in 1775,
Revere gaUoped out from Boston to Lexington, Mass.·, rousing the ~ountryside and warning
that the British were marching. His midnight
missiol} would be ·'immortalized in Henry
Wadsworth LorigfeUow's "Paul Revere's Ride."
None of that is obvious from the 1790 census. Revere's name appears as head of a household that included three boys under age 1.6 ~nd
thiee white females,
"Other than that we know nothing else
about them, not even their narn~," said Connie
Potter, an Archives official. "But it is clear, from
the questions that were asked, that tllere were
no slaves in Paul Revere's household." .
In the 6rst census, just 650 people did the
couiltin.s, in i:he 13 states, the districts of M;!ine,

ritory.
.
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Responsibility for the count was lodAAd with
the U.S. marshal in each state and districtThose
doing the actual counting were hired as aSsistant
marshals.
·
·
: Each census worker took an oath to 'make "a
. juSt and perfect' enumeration and description of
persOns within ~he division assigned tO' him ."
The· count was essential. It not only estab-,
lished the total population but also served as the
basis• of -apportioning state delegations to the
new House of Representatives,
"Most people realized the ·iniportaQt nature
of what was being set in motion," said David
Hendricks, a Census historian, standing near the
case with the sheet o( ruled paper listing the
names.ofPaul R evere and other BostonianS.
Unlike the secrecy rules p~vailing today, the'
1790 census rules required that two copies of
the• final tallies be publicly displayed. Records
show that copies went on view in such places as
"in front of the Court House:· the Orange Tree
Inn, a local gristmill, or, in one case, "Mr. Henry
Eckhart's Tavern ,"
The third tally sheet was sent to President
Washington:
As in every census, some people w ere missed,
either because they· were hard to find or
because they wished to remai11 uncounted.
(/.Au!r.,lle L Krutson has reponed on tl1e Wl1it(
"But I think there. was a general acceptance · House, Congress dhd the history if Wlllhington for
in 1790 that while not everyone got counted, it more tha~ 3 0 years,) "
I

sex

PrOtect .· . .
rtant
.
~
·peopIe m your we. .

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

n
was good enough for whar they had to do,"
Hendricks said.
Acc9tding to tlte for,mula established by the
Constitution, slaves were counted as three-fifths
of a 'whole person for the purposes of appor~
tionment. Free blacks were counted as whoiC
people. So were indentured servants.
Th~re ' were just six questions a.• ked in 1790:
of which two were basic: the name of the head
of each family and the number of people in
each household.
'
,
·The census takers recotded the number of
free, wliite males I 6 years or older to determine
how many men might be potentially available .
for military service. They also counted the
number of free, white males younger thaq 161
the number of free, white females; all other free
and race and the number of slaves
people by
in the ho usehold.
When all the adding Was pver, the result ·did
not meet everyonC:s expectations.
'
Washington and other unhappy gnvernment
officials had hoped the count would show a
population of signi6cantly more than 4 million 1
It didn't.
When the census w:is over, the"population o~ ,
the United States at the end of 1790 was cerci- .......·". .
"~
6ed at exactly 3,929,214.
That included Paul Revere.
.
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company require the renter to purchase insunn cc on
the rente&lt;\ item, even though the customer may
already have renter's insurance or home owner's insurance?
These are some questii&gt;ns you need to ask before
making your final decisiolf when buying a large tick~t
item. Generally, you will find that there is a sig.)ificant
difference in how much you would have to pay for an
item if you rent-to-own versus paying with cash. It can
,
be up to three times as much as the cash. pri ce.
If you plan to buy the TV on credit, also figure the
total cost as you would for the rent-to-own. Check the
annual p~ rce ntage rate, fin ance charges and. any other
charges that may be included in the credit contract.
Paying by credit may be less than rent-to-own, but still
more than if you paid with cash. It might be wise to
think twice about just how soon you need to have th,at
television. The immediate availability of the item might
not be worth the extra costs when purchasing through
rent-to own or credit plans.

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The . /
• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
•GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE

WASHINGTON YESTERDAY: ·

,, VerrJ!Ollt and Kentucky and the Southwest Ter-

Becky
Baer

Health Club contributts

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BY LAwRINCE L. KNuTsoN

Fry.
The contest was won by Dorothy Jeffers and
Phyllis Skin~er. Suzie Ma~h will host the April
meeting at the.homein Cheshire, with Fry giving
the prografll, and Jeffers the contest. Refreshments
were served by the hostess to those name,! and a
guest, Melyla Mash,

PCC meets

was

.

.

Wya.nt reunion held

Morton
Kondracke

.

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TIME OUT . FOR TIPS

You have decided to buy a new television. How
Should you 'buy the TV on
should you pay for iF?
credit? Should you go to a " rent to-own" store? Or
POMEROY ~ The Pome roy Church of Christ
should you wait until you save enough money each
wiD host a community-wide revival to be held
week or month and pay cash for the new se't?
April 7-9 with Hoyt Allen of the Kyowva (KenAccording to Susan Holladay, OSU Extension
tucky, Ohio and West Virginia) Evangelistic AssoAgent in Clinton County, de ~ide if the television is a
ciation of Ironton as the speaker. Allen is a former
"want" or a "need." Many people are attracted by the
.....
.pastor of the Pomeroy congregation.
"rent-to-own" ·stores because they can satisfY their
, Services will be held at 7 p.m. nightly aJ!d 9:30
wants immediately. If you are considering a major pur- .
a.m. on Sunday. There wiU be special music at
chase, weigh the pros and cons of your different
HARRISONVILLE - The Wyant family
each service and a staffed nursery wiD be providoptions before signing any contracts or ·putting any
for the children of Leroy and Goldie
reunion
money down. Here are some questions you need to
•ed.
Wyant was held S,unday at the Eastern Star hall in ,. ask the rent-to-own .salesperson before you make your
HarrisonviUe.
final decision about a purchase.
Attending were Kenneth and Lois Wyant, Jean
First, what is the total cost? Find out what your payCHESTER - Charlotte Grant and Marcia and Norman Wood, Janic e and Dal DeBord of
ment w be each month then multiply that by the
'Keller hosted a recent meeting of the Past Coun- Pomeroy; Juanita and Stanley Beal, Strong;ville;
number of payments you will have to make.
cilors Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of . Judy and Harold Gilliam, Zanesville; grandchilDoes the company guarantee the item you are plan'America, held at the hall .
dren and great grandchildren, Tim and Carla
ning to rent is new? Can you buy the item out right at
' · Jean Welsh opened the meeting with Psalm Wyant, Rutland; Ronnie Wood, Pomeroy; Vickey
a reduced price at some point during the contract? Is
'133, and the group gave the Lord's .Prayer and the and John Abdella, Elizabeth and Maria, Wellston;
there a penalty" for doing that? Do you have to make
all of the contracted payments to become the owner?
pledge to the flag in unison. Members named Terri and Mike Petra~, Taylor and Seth. CannonsEven though the company JllllY provide repairs at
favorite spring Oowers ,in response to roll calL burg;'l'a.; Chris and Misty Haning, Jimmy and
no charge, does it also provide a "loaner at flO extra
, , Officers' reports were gtven by Esther Snuth and Robyn Haning, James .a nd Joey, Jeff and Becky ·
charge, or will they allow you to stop payments during
Laura Mae N1ce.
,
Hanning, and Jennifer of Rudand. Lee Drake of
the repair period? Does the company require a large
Games :were conducted by Ruth Snuth and p0 meroy and Whitney Allan of Wellston were
'
'Esther Smith, and door prizes were awarded to
"balloon payment" when you are ready to make your
Margaret Amberger, lnzy Newell, Goldie freder-, guests.
final payment? ..Jf. rhe ren\er misses one or more pay' lck, ' boris Grueser, Ruth 'S mith, and a visitor,
ments, can they reinstate the rent-to-own contract
Richard White.
·
1
without losing the investment up to that point? Are
Refreshments were served to those named and
· there large penalties charged? Does the rent~to-own
POMEROY - ·Several retired teachers. repreBetty Young,' Opal Eichinger, Mary K. Holter,
Thelma White, Opal Hollon, and another visitor, senting Meigs .CountY attended the District VII
conference of the Ohio Retired Teachers Associa"
_ Sandy White.
tion where th~ emphasis was on volunteering
with children.
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The meeting carrying out the theme "CelePOMEROY - Donations were made to the brate the Century" was held at the Lewis Family
Disabled American Veterans, Carleton School for Restaurant in Jackson. Joe Endry, ORTA 'e15ecuthe special Olympics p1£gmm, and the American tive director, spoke on recent efforts to further ·
' Lung Association whetfthe Rock Spring; Better beneficial legislation on both the state and nation' Health Club met recently at the home of Barbara a! level for retirees.
Sessions atte
d during ~he day ' were "TeachFry.
Plans were also made for the group to serve the ing Consu
s to Shop Wisely" with emphasis on
American Red Cross bloodmobile on its April 19 changes i utility companies and services, present;Visit to the Meig; County Senior Citizens Center. · ed by ay Foeller from the Ohio Consumers
' · Officers' reports were· given, thank you notes Cou cil, and updates on health care by Lynne
.read from those recei~ing Christmas treats, and Hokanson, the director of Health Care Services at
Dorothy Jeffers was narhed to be in charge of con- the STRS.
tacts with .the sick in the conununity.
The Lord's Prayer ard pledge to the Oag
Attending from Meigs Cou nty were Jean
.
Alkire,
Eileen Buck, Jo Ann Corder, Nellie Parkopened the meeting, Devotions by Fry, presid ent,
"were readings on spring. A request for a leave of er, Gay Perrin ,Anna Rice, Grace Weber, and Maxabsence was read from Lenora Leifheit.
·
ine Whitehead.
Dorothy Jeffers gave the -program which
Many. Meigs County retired teachers are curin~luded reading; on massage by Nan.cy Morris, rently active in various vo!Uiiteer, projects, such as
salt upon the· bones by Suzie Mash,, symptoms of the Stars Reading program, the Seniors in Schools
a stroke by Phyllis Skinner, st'rong feet by Dorothy history program, and other tutoring and teacher
Jeffe.rs, and Cleaning out the medicine cabinet by_ . assista~ce ..p~grams.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW:

..

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me since I have not contributed toward
it. He did not buy me any presents last
Christmas, but I noticed receipts for giftS
he had bought at a lipgerie store. Last
night, he left, and didn't come back until
morning. Today, I found a receipt for a
post-office box he has rented so that his
mail will no lo nger 'c ome to the house,
Jake says he is ·going to change banks,
even though we've used the same one for
years. I am afraid h e is putting aU the
money into his name so he can leave me

SO·CIETY- NEWS

,

Today is Tuesday, April 4, the 95th .day of 2p00. Th~re are 271 cl;iy. ,
left in the year.
·
·
Today's Highlight in History: ..
On April 4, 1%8, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., 39, was
~hot to death in Memphis, Tenn.
On this date:
'
In 1818, Congress decided ,the'flag of t!Je United States would consist of Ured and white stripes and 20 stars, with a new star to be added
for every new state of the Union.
.
In 1841, President William H enry Harrison succumbed to-1'neumonia one month after his inauguration, the first U.S, chief executive
to die in office.
In 1850, the city of Los Angeles was incorporated.
In 1902, British financier Cecil Rhodes left $10 mlllion .dollars in
hi~ will to provid.; scholarships (or Americans at Oxfoq;l University.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces liberated, the Nazi death
camp Ohrdruf in Germany.
·
In 1945, U.S. troops on Okinawa encountered the 6rst signi6cant
~istance from Japanese forces.
,,
In 1949, 12, nations, including the United Stites, signed the North
Adantic Treaty, foundation of NATO.
.
In 1974, Hank.Aaron of the Atlanta Braves tied Babe Ruth's homerun record by hitting his 714th round-tripper in Cincinnati.
In 1979, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the deposed prime minister of Pakistan, was hanged after he was convicted of conspiring to murder a
political opponent. (His daughter, Benazir, became prime minister in
1988.)
'
.
'
.
'
In 1983; the space shurde Challenger roared into orbit on its 'maiden voyage.
Today's Birthdays: Composer Elmer Bernstein is 78. Actress EliZ&lt;~ ­
beth Wilson is 75. Author- poet Maya Angelou is 72 ..Sena.tor Richard
Lugar (R-Ind.) is 68. Recording executive Clive Davis is 68. Actor
Michael Parks is 62. Bandleader Hugh Masekela is 61, Author Kitty
Kelley is 58. Actor Walter Charles is 55. Actress Caroline Mcl,:villiams
is 55. Actor CraigT. N elson is 54.Acrress C hristine Lahti is 50. Country singer Steve Gatlin (Tbe Gatlin Brothers) is 49. Writer- producer
David E. Kelley. ("Ally McBeal''; "The Practice") is 44. Actor Ph'il
Morris is 41. Rock musician Craig AilanlS (The Cult) is 38.

ADV!CE

until the bill was paid. Shorily after that,
the doctor closed his practice and left
town. My mother had no idea where he
had gone, but she knew ~lie still owed a
balance of $60. Money was tight in those
days, and it was a struggle for her to get
by. I am · sure $60 seemed like a huge
sum. Mom used to tease me that I would
be ."repossessed" bec'ause she never fin ished paying for me.
The other day. Mom called and told
me I cou ld quit looking, over my shoulder, !Jecause she finally located the doctor, who is now retired. She sent him a
note of apology for the long delay in
payment, along with a check for $60.The
doctor was so impressed with her
integrity that he wrote ha a letter of
apprfciation.
Ann , my' mother is a truly remarkable
woman. She has -!t ied tQ instill morals
and values in her three children while
working at:i physically demanding factory job and taking care of a disabled hus-

'

actions
hurting the entire region · .
ast week's shooting of a Coca-Cola d elivery truck alon~
Interstate 64 pamts a bad p1cture to th e nation. And that s
the last thing the region's struggling economy needs.
The tractor- trailers were shot while
Granted, it's nCJt they were on an entrance ramp to Interbeen proved Fri- ~ate 64 at Nitro about 5:45 a.m. Friday.
• day's shots were The shootings are the latest. damage to
company property since 38 Teamster
fired by union
members who work at Coca-Cola's
members liu t,,
Huntington warehouse walked off the
alas, the union
job March 14.
· .
.:... and the
·It's been an ugly strike. Windows have
broken anti rites slashed. Granted,
been
region - s•!lfer
it's not been proved Friday's shots were
from guilt
fired by union members but, alas, the
association.
union - and the region - suffer from
guilt by association.
Prospective companies often mistake such bad apples for the
whole bunch.
It doesn't matter that the truck could have been shot up anywhere; it wasn't. It was shot up in western West Virginia, so western W:est Virginia must be a dangerous place filled with rabblerousing unioris.And given western West Virginia's historical connection to southeast Ohio, southeast Ol:rio must a lousy place,
too - or so the flawed 'logic goes.
Don't take our word for it, folks. Economic development offi. dals in both states have been preaching this for years, and they've
got the statistics to prove their claims.·
.Each strike-related incident increases the chances corporate
eyes are apt ~o look elsewhere when it comes time to expand or
start new ventures. Who can blame them? What company wants
to move into a hostile labor environment?
We're not downing organized labor; umons have done wonders for the working man. We applaud - and support - the
e fforts of United Steelworkers Local 5171 to save their jobs at
American Alloys' New Haven plant.
These folks are doing it the right way. They're using their
brains rather than their bt:~wn to prove their point. This is the
modern labor movement at its best.
· • Actions such as those allegedly performed by the Teamsters,
~owever, represent old-school unions at their worst. The days of
pelting "scab" workers with rotten eggs and slashing their tires
are over. We wish they never existed.
We 'encourage the Teamsters to take a page from the Steelworkers' boo~: Put away your knives and. open your minds . .
:rhere's no place for such primitive behavior in the 21st centu-

Ann
Landers·

and take all of our savings. I am desperate and confused. I, need some of your
good advice.- BAD VIBES IN TEXAS
DEAR BAD VIBES: You need more
than my !'good advice," I hope you wiD
~ee a lawyet at once, and make certain
that you are protected, because it sounds
as if Jake has some plans for the future
that do not include you.
When you meet with the lawyer, be
sure ro bring all the evidence that you
have referred to in' your letter. And P.S,:: I
hope you cleart his clock. He's got it
coming.
Dear Ann Lander.s: I would like to
shan; a story about my mother, and I
hope you think it is wdrth printing in
your column. This tale is for all those
who believe the re is no honesty or
integrity left in the world.
When I was born 35 years ago, my
mother could not afford the obstetrician's bill, so she worked out an agreem~nt tq give the doctor $10 a month

rtJESDAY,April 4

I

. POMEROY - Business After
Hours, Meig; County Chamber of .
Commerce,Tuesday,6 to 7:30p.m.
flosted by Fu~ Peace Ranch. . ' '

tfJ·~ ooW have the~ of p~ting your family members'

1.L:a~

~ · ALFRED ·_ Orange Township

~

I

'Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of clerk, Osie Follrod.

puii1e!' with kiw-COII
'
I

IO.cx ZO.year ]eye! tenn life

'1l

cROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury
Tqwnship Truste.es, regular meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m., township
building.

inSurance hom Auto-Owners

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
~thletic Boosters, Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
at Eastern High School. Election
of ojlicers for 2000-2001. '

details ar.i a canpetitive prqn;al.

, . .fioN£soAY, Aprn ~ .

·

'

'

'

I

'

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
. MONDAY, APRIL 17, 2000
12:00NOON
IJYSERTlON. DATE:
WEDNESDAY~ APRIL 26, 2000
•

Call

Insurance Company. CaD us fur more

·D ave Harris or·Matt Haskins .
For More. Information
.
'
992- 5
~

.

'

' RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, Free and. Accepted .
Masons. Refreshments.

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''

Jut,;..o.;,,, ~

1------------Ufe ·Home car•Suslness

7M'N!Ik!IJ,.,'¥•

POMEROY -. Pomeroy High
School class of 1955, planning session, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at Trinity
church basement. Plans for 45th
reunion parry afternoon of May 27
before PHS banquet and dance.

21.4 Ea•t Main
Pomeroy

992-6687

·•' ····--·n

-~~-------------

-·--..11 -- --- •..

I

�•

Peo- A 6 • The Dally Sentinel •

~ Tuuday, AprU 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, OHio

Inside:

We Are Proud To Salute The
Following Outstanding Young Men
For Earning Eagle Scout Honors
Jn·. The MGM District
.

•

•

SHS basketball honorees, Page B2

-The Daily-Sentinel

'

.

-

Seth Fallon, Troop 259

Joshua Gulley, Troop 201

Parents: Todd and Darlene Fallon
. Point Pleasant High School
Project: Build four dog houses for Mason
County Humane Society

Parents: Carole Gulley
Gallia Academy High School
Project: Cleaned three trails at Bob ·Evans
Farm and made signs for each trail

Matthew Caldwell, Troop 235
Parents: Ken and Sue .Caldwell
Eastern High School
Project: Reclaimed peninsula at Fo1ked Run State
Park, added picntc tables and a boat landing

Page 81.
'IUesday. April 4. 2000

Baseball
Tornadoes
lose twice
in twinbill ·

TuFsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Softball Eagles·
flog N-Y 17·1
EAST MEIGS- The Eastern
Lady Eagles evened their record
up at 1-1 with a·17-1 win over
league foe Nelsonville, then
trailed Vinton County 18-17 in a
suspended game Friday.
In the Nelsonville"York game
Juli Bailey got the win with seven
strikeouts and did not walk a batter ilt'hurling a three hitter. Powell suffered the loss.
Kristen Chevalier had a single,
Elaine Putman a double, Janet
Calaway had two singles, Carrie
Wiggins two singles, Alison Rose
a single, juli Bailey a single, and
Tiffany Spencer three singles.
Against Vinton
County
Chevalier and Tammy Bissell singled, and Ridenour and Calaway
each tripled. Eastern walked
twelve times, while Eastern pitching gave up six walks and made
ten errors. The gan:ie will be
completed at a later date.

Joseph McCall, Troop 299
Parents: Greg and Debra McCall
.,
Mtigs High School
Project: Constructed an archway into the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly chapel area

ALBANY - The Southern
Tornadoes dropped both ends of
a Saturday afternoon doubleheader at Alexander High SchooL
The non ~league battles were to
host Alexander, 12-1 and north·
ern Ohio foe Buckeye Valley. 7-4.
five runs in the first inning
was all Buckey Valley needt;d in
posting a 7-4 win. A Harriott
home run, a solo shot, four walks,
two errors and a Hall single
pushed across four runs in rhe
first inning.
Btlfkey Valley added a single
run in the second innlng and in
the four ining on Harriott's sec-

.....

Rain poStpones
Eastem, SOuthem.

Parents: Catherine and Barry Harnm.
J. Wilson Braley
Point Pleasant High School
Project: Cleaned off over 800 unmarked·
graves in Mound Hill Cemetery's
. inaccessible
field.

•

Kevin Keaton, Troop 235

Parents: Bob IDld Pat Keaicin
Eastern High School
ProjeCt: Built a foot bridge for Honey
Suckle Trail at Forked Run State Park

Jereme Osborne, Troop 235

Shawn White, Troop 249 .

Parents: Gale and Debbie Osborne
Eastern High School/Meigs Vocational School
Project: Repair work to Keno Church of Christ
that included washing and painting the church
and repairing and painting the church signs

POMEROY - All Monday
. night games at Eastern and
Southern were canceled because
of inclement weather. Southern
was slated to make up their games
with Waterford tonight .

. Matthew Keaton, Troop 235

Parents: Danny and Adell White
Meigs High School
Project: Built ospray nesis

Parents: Bob and Pat Keaton
Eastern High School
Project: Organized a clothing drive to aid.
cooperative parish

UM's Hamilton signs

contrad Qtension
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP)
- Miami coach Leonard Hamilton, who led the Hurricanes to
the rou.nd of 16 in the NCAA
.. to~rnantbnt, signed a. rtew .s even-·
year contract that ended specuiation he might co,ach elsewhere.
Hamilton · signed a five-year
contract extension in August
1998 that w~s to last through
2003. That year, he led the school
to its first NCAA tournament
appearance since 1960.
l'n I 0 seasons a~ Miami, Hamilton turned around a program that·
once went 0-18 in the Big East.

Ry~lll. Well; Troop 299

Andrew James Darling, Troop

Parents: Jerry and Susan Well
Meigs High School
Proj_ect: Bui~ and installed wooden duck
boxes m the backwaters of Gavin Power Plant

. Shawn Workman, Troop 249

Parents: Terra Lea Darling
Project: Built dog houses for Mason
, ' County Humane Society.

NBA fines Chlds,
Bryant ~r fighting

Parents: Cathy Workman and Bol&gt; Workman
Meigs HiSit School
Project: Built benches for the high sch«??I

NEW YORK (AP) -· Chris
Childs of the Knicks was suspended for two games and fined
$15,000, and Kobe Bryant of the
Lakers was suspended one game
and fined SS,OOO by the NBA for
fighting in Sunday's _game.

Photo
Not

Leitefs stray pitch
hits Gwynn in elbow

Available
Michael Williamson, Troop 249

- Robert Carter, Troop 249

Parents: Darla and Richard Williamson
Meigs High School
· Project: Cleared off Sacred Heart Cemetery

Parents: Dot Carter
Currently Serving In The US Navy ·
Project: Built and placed bird ho118es
·
at Gavhi Plant

I

Stan' Hull ties dad
for nlirth place

Fa1~el'S Bank

-&amp; Sav1ngs Company .
211 Weat Seclond Streit 42120 State Route 7 ,

~~.~

_ ...
7401992 21 .w

Member F.D.I.C~

45788
9

NEW YORK (AP) - Tony
G"'-ynti was hit by a pitch on his
right elbow by New York's AI
Leiter on opening day and· might
have a b-roken bone.
Preliminary Xcrays after San
Diego's 2-1 loss to the Mets were
inconclusive. Further tests will be
taken Wednesday after the
swelling subsides.
Gwynn, 18th on the career list
with 3,067 hits, could return
Wednesday if he did not break a
bone. The right fielder would
miss at, least two weeks if there
was a break.
Gwynn, 39, an eight-time NL
batti ng champion, has a .339
career average in 17 seasons with
the Padres.

·

164lJPper ·~lver Road

P.Q. SbiC 338 ,Gallipolis, OH 45831
TupperaPialnl, OH 45783 740/446-2265
•
74WI87-3181
BANK
'

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DALLAS (AP) - Stars right
wing Brett Hull scored his 610th
goal, tying his father, Bo,bby, for
ninth place on the NHLs career
list.
Hull blasted a poe-timer past .
Calgary goalie Fred Brathwaite at
7:29 of the second period on a
power play to give Dallas a 2-0
lead. Hlj)l has 24 goals this season.
Wayne Gretzky is the leader
with 894.

the NCAA men's championship game !'Aoriday night in Indianapolis.

WE DID Ill - Michigan State coach Tom lzzo hugs Al~American
point guardI Mateen Cleaves after the Spartans'
win' over Rorida In
.

i

.

(AP)

.

•

Spartans Win N

men's title

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) .- With every trophy. .
,
basket, every glare, every pump of his fist,
The championship came '2 1 years after
Mate en Cleaves carnied Michigan State.
Magic Johnson led the Spartans to their first
So, when it came time to carry away the national title.And Magic was on hand to see
championship trophy, Cleaves wasn't about this one, too. ·
to give it up - even with a crutch under
The victory over ·Florida certainly wasn't
a one-man show.
each arm.
"He · pas the heart of a lion," said his
Morris Peterson finished with 21 points
-coach, Tom lzzo.
and A.J. Granger had 19. Cleave. was 7-fotCleaves scored 18 P'?i~t:S in the NCAA 11. from the field -including 3-of-4 from
c~~~Pi\lt?"hip againsi Oeli\'lit.li\.~(qre tu~- . OMtsi41' che t,hree-point arc -::.~ve_n th~gh
bhng to •· the courC.VJit}i a .·@rotesquely he didn't take.' a shot after his mjur)i. ·
sprained• ankle. Mter ·a 'quick ·tape job, he
Many tho11ght Cleaves would be playing.
returned io play 11 more minutes in his col- in ~he NI'IA-this year,. following Michigan
lege finale, the Spartans' leader right to the State's loss to Duke in the final four last
end - even though he was· barely able to season.
make it up and down the 'court.
Instead, he returned for his senior season,
"It was a lot of pain;' Cleaves said. "I had delaylng the inevitable millions for the
chance tQ ·win a championship for his
to suck it up and' play on it,"
Later, he. had the perfect painkiller.
school.
Tears w~re rolling doom~ cheeks as he
Even when he' missed ·the first 13 games
hobbled on crutches and his Michigan State . with a b~lwt right foot, he never secondteanunates cut down the nets .after their 89• guessed his decision to come ~ack to the
76. vi~tocy MoQ.day night.
· '
Spartans.
They put one of the nets around his
~leaves was impressive in the first half,
ne.;k. and Cleaves then helped carry off the hreakiiJg Florida's press with his passing arid

ballhandling as Michigan·State (32-7) built a
43-32\ead.
The margin had been cut to SQ-44 when
he rolled his right ankle on a drive to the
basket with 16:18 to play.
· A lot of teams might have folded after
losing their leader. Not the Spartans, with a
team full of seniors and juniors. ,
Mike ·Chappell, taking Cleaves' spot on
the floor, imm~diately hit a three-pointer,
prompting lzzo ,to take such a vigorous
P.iffich at tne afr that 'he nearly lost his jack·
et. Michigan State was up 58-50 by the time
the point guard returned 4:29 later.
Florida coach Billy Donovan said his
team's sryle was a gamble against Michigan
State, which won all six games in the tournament by at least II pointi in becoming
the fi.rst Big Ten team to win the championship since Michigan in 1989.
"We watched a lor of tape. I did not see
one team press them all year long," he said.
Udonis Haslem had a season-high 27 points
for the fifth-seeded Gators (29-9), while
Brent Wright added 13 points and 10
rebounds.

..

ond home run of the day.
Southern scored single runs in
the fourth and fifth innings, then
came back with tWo runs in teh
seventh only to fall short.
Adam Cumings continued to
sizzle at the plate With another 34 night. His 9-13 for the season so
far. Cumings had two doubl~
and a single.Jamie Baker had two
singles, Josh Davis a dou~le and
Ryan Hill a single .
Hall was 3-4 for Buckey Valley,
wtih Durbin and Herriott placing
two hits and Kuhn a single.
Jamie Baker suffered the loS6
with five errors, four walks, two
strikeouts, with seven runs on

nine hits. Heath posted the win
with a seven hitter, six strikeouts,
three walks and four runs. Southern made five errors and BV two.
In the nightcap the entire
·Southern staff got a try on the
mound, but gave up twelve runs
'in four innings 'lf work to an
undeated Alexander team. Southern had hoped to avenge a 13-12
loss in Racine jus{ last week, but
·the bout never materialized.
Southern went up 1-0 on a
leadoff walk to Norris and a
Baker double. Three errors and
three hits gave Alexander a 6-1
lead and Southern
never scored'
.
agatn.
So11thern had but three hits;
singles to Warner and Randolp
and a double to Baker.
Alexander
hitters
were

....... -

Southenl, Pap 82

Southern honors winter athletes at awards barlquet
Roberta Forester and ~randi Codner. Other squad mem•
SENTINEL CORRESPO~DENT
bers are Jennifer Norman, 'Emily Stivers, Tootsie
RACINE - Students, athletes, ~oaches, family and Lawrence, Stephanie Wilson and mascot Allie Rees. Codfriends gathefed together at Southern High S~hool to ner was assisted by Brandi Anderson.
honor the m&amp;nber:s of the various winter sports teams · 'Next, Dave Barr honored members of the firJt-ever
Sunclay afternbon. All in attendance were treated to a Tornado wrestling team and praised the squad for great
delicious potluck dinner with ham and chicken provided progress throughout ihe season. Adam Cumings and Josh
Davis were honored as senior . members of the team,
by the athletic boosters dub.
·
Southern l:figh School principal Gordon Fisher gave while Davis earned the Most Ourstanding wrestling
the welcoming address followed by the invocation by award and Best Record of13-10.
Other tea~ members a~e Ryan N. Hill, Chris Yeauger,
Racine United Methodist youth minister Tom Gill .
Lee Codner then recogfuzed members of the cheer- Robert Forester, Brice Hill, Derek Michael and Brandon
leading squad and recognized senior cheerleaders Stacy Pierce.The team's assistant coach was Brian Har!,ness.
Next, reserve girls' basketball coach Tammy Chapman
Lyons and Laraine Lawson. The Coach's Award went to

BY SCOTT WOLFE

made presentations to her team.The team lost its first five
then won the in a row to finish with a 12-8 record.Tealll
members included Amanda Ashworth, Rachael Chapman,Jeri Hill , Brandi Lane, Amy Leeoand Tara Pickens.
Next, Alan Crisp honored members of his girls' varsity vasketball team. Special award winners were Kari
Cummins, Best Field Goal Percentage; Kim lhle, Best
Free Throw Percentage and Best Offensive Player;
Heath,cr Dailey, Most Rebounds; and Stacy Lyons, Best
Defensive Player. Earning senior awards were Lyons, !hie,
Dailey and Sarah Brauor.
Other team members were Tammy Fryar, Brigette
Barnes, Rachael Chapman, Amy Lee and Tara Pickens.
Pluse see Banquet. Pap.82

' '•

Indians

Rain forces
tie in Reds' (
opener

•

to 4·1

win over Orioles

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
ovation. The rain.
The two outs. Th-. rain. The
tear in his father's eye.
The rain.
When he reflects on his
homecoming; Ken Griffey Jr.
wiU come back to those things.
Mayb,e by then, he'll have dried
o11!. ~ , ,
Junior's hometown debut
Clnclrmatl third baseman Aaron Boone (lett) lay? '
t11rned into a baseball footnote leather on:....Ml\wau~e·s
Kevin Barker for the second-Inning out ,i ,
Monday - the first opening Monday's season opener In Cincinnati. (AP)
.
_1
game in 35 years to end in a tie.
' .
Griffey went 0-for-2 as the
Cincinnati's open-air stadium
Gindnhati Reds and Milwaukee · good ho~ instead.
After playing most of his 11 and got dren ch~d.
B~rs slogged to a 3-3 tie after
years
with Seattle in a domed
,
' five mnings before the game wa.• '
"As a kid growing up ·in
called because of unrelenting stadium that was shelter from the
Pacific
·
Northwest
rains,
Junior
Cincinnati,
you dream of"just
ram.
Griffey had to settle -for a few ma4e his. first appearance in . playifiS Qn this field," h.e said.

.

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•

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BALTIMORE (AP) - The before being elevated to manager
pregame hoopla centered around after Hargrove was fired in OctoMike Hargrove, whose first game · ber. Manuel downplayed the vic~
as I,Ilanager of the Orioles ·came tory, saying he did little more
than fill out the lineup card.
against his former team.
, '"I happened to be just sitting
The day belong.,.J to Charlie
there
participating by wat~;hing;·
Manuel and Kenny Lofton, who
showed that the Cleveland Indi- he said. "It's not like I did a whole
ans are much the same team that lot."
That doesn't mean he didn't
five sttaighi AL Central titles
. enjoy it. After all, Manuel spent
under Hargrove..
. Lofton .provided the -Indians 38 years in baseball and ~d
with /an unexpected lift that in the minors for nine years.
. ipfi:on wasn't expected to play
enabled Manpel to thoroughly
e~oy ·his first. game as a 'major in the Indians' .first 70 games,
league manager.-Lofton homered muth Ieos the opener, after tear·
and drove in two run~ as the Indi- htg .a rotator cuff in the playoffi
ans won 4-l lJ1!tonday, spoiling last season. He surprised doctors
Hargrove's · much-anticipated b)r returnillg near the !'Dd of
spring training; and looked in
debut~ the Orioles.P'
Manuel spent the previous six midseason folill ~t the .Ori·
years as the Indians' hitting~ coach oles.

won

I'

�•

Peo- A 6 • The Dally Sentinel •

~ Tuuday, AprU 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, OHio

Inside:

We Are Proud To Salute The
Following Outstanding Young Men
For Earning Eagle Scout Honors
Jn·. The MGM District
.

•

•

SHS basketball honorees, Page B2

-The Daily-Sentinel

'

.

-

Seth Fallon, Troop 259

Joshua Gulley, Troop 201

Parents: Todd and Darlene Fallon
. Point Pleasant High School
Project: Build four dog houses for Mason
County Humane Society

Parents: Carole Gulley
Gallia Academy High School
Project: Cleaned three trails at Bob ·Evans
Farm and made signs for each trail

Matthew Caldwell, Troop 235
Parents: Ken and Sue .Caldwell
Eastern High School
Project: Reclaimed peninsula at Fo1ked Run State
Park, added picntc tables and a boat landing

Page 81.
'IUesday. April 4. 2000

Baseball
Tornadoes
lose twice
in twinbill ·

TuFsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Softball Eagles·
flog N-Y 17·1
EAST MEIGS- The Eastern
Lady Eagles evened their record
up at 1-1 with a·17-1 win over
league foe Nelsonville, then
trailed Vinton County 18-17 in a
suspended game Friday.
In the Nelsonville"York game
Juli Bailey got the win with seven
strikeouts and did not walk a batter ilt'hurling a three hitter. Powell suffered the loss.
Kristen Chevalier had a single,
Elaine Putman a double, Janet
Calaway had two singles, Carrie
Wiggins two singles, Alison Rose
a single, juli Bailey a single, and
Tiffany Spencer three singles.
Against Vinton
County
Chevalier and Tammy Bissell singled, and Ridenour and Calaway
each tripled. Eastern walked
twelve times, while Eastern pitching gave up six walks and made
ten errors. The gan:ie will be
completed at a later date.

Joseph McCall, Troop 299
Parents: Greg and Debra McCall
.,
Mtigs High School
Project: Constructed an archway into the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly chapel area

ALBANY - The Southern
Tornadoes dropped both ends of
a Saturday afternoon doubleheader at Alexander High SchooL
The non ~league battles were to
host Alexander, 12-1 and north·
ern Ohio foe Buckeye Valley. 7-4.
five runs in the first inning
was all Buckey Valley needt;d in
posting a 7-4 win. A Harriott
home run, a solo shot, four walks,
two errors and a Hall single
pushed across four runs in rhe
first inning.
Btlfkey Valley added a single
run in the second innlng and in
the four ining on Harriott's sec-

.....

Rain poStpones
Eastem, SOuthem.

Parents: Catherine and Barry Harnm.
J. Wilson Braley
Point Pleasant High School
Project: Cleaned off over 800 unmarked·
graves in Mound Hill Cemetery's
. inaccessible
field.

•

Kevin Keaton, Troop 235

Parents: Bob IDld Pat Keaicin
Eastern High School
ProjeCt: Built a foot bridge for Honey
Suckle Trail at Forked Run State Park

Jereme Osborne, Troop 235

Shawn White, Troop 249 .

Parents: Gale and Debbie Osborne
Eastern High School/Meigs Vocational School
Project: Repair work to Keno Church of Christ
that included washing and painting the church
and repairing and painting the church signs

POMEROY - All Monday
. night games at Eastern and
Southern were canceled because
of inclement weather. Southern
was slated to make up their games
with Waterford tonight .

. Matthew Keaton, Troop 235

Parents: Danny and Adell White
Meigs High School
Project: Built ospray nesis

Parents: Bob and Pat Keaton
Eastern High School
Project: Organized a clothing drive to aid.
cooperative parish

UM's Hamilton signs

contrad Qtension
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP)
- Miami coach Leonard Hamilton, who led the Hurricanes to
the rou.nd of 16 in the NCAA
.. to~rnantbnt, signed a. rtew .s even-·
year contract that ended specuiation he might co,ach elsewhere.
Hamilton · signed a five-year
contract extension in August
1998 that w~s to last through
2003. That year, he led the school
to its first NCAA tournament
appearance since 1960.
l'n I 0 seasons a~ Miami, Hamilton turned around a program that·
once went 0-18 in the Big East.

Ry~lll. Well; Troop 299

Andrew James Darling, Troop

Parents: Jerry and Susan Well
Meigs High School
Proj_ect: Bui~ and installed wooden duck
boxes m the backwaters of Gavin Power Plant

. Shawn Workman, Troop 249

Parents: Terra Lea Darling
Project: Built dog houses for Mason
, ' County Humane Society.

NBA fines Chlds,
Bryant ~r fighting

Parents: Cathy Workman and Bol&gt; Workman
Meigs HiSit School
Project: Built benches for the high sch«??I

NEW YORK (AP) -· Chris
Childs of the Knicks was suspended for two games and fined
$15,000, and Kobe Bryant of the
Lakers was suspended one game
and fined SS,OOO by the NBA for
fighting in Sunday's _game.

Photo
Not

Leitefs stray pitch
hits Gwynn in elbow

Available
Michael Williamson, Troop 249

- Robert Carter, Troop 249

Parents: Darla and Richard Williamson
Meigs High School
· Project: Cleared off Sacred Heart Cemetery

Parents: Dot Carter
Currently Serving In The US Navy ·
Project: Built and placed bird ho118es
·
at Gavhi Plant

I

Stan' Hull ties dad
for nlirth place

Fa1~el'S Bank

-&amp; Sav1ngs Company .
211 Weat Seclond Streit 42120 State Route 7 ,

~~.~

_ ...
7401992 21 .w

Member F.D.I.C~

45788
9

NEW YORK (AP) - Tony
G"'-ynti was hit by a pitch on his
right elbow by New York's AI
Leiter on opening day and· might
have a b-roken bone.
Preliminary Xcrays after San
Diego's 2-1 loss to the Mets were
inconclusive. Further tests will be
taken Wednesday after the
swelling subsides.
Gwynn, 18th on the career list
with 3,067 hits, could return
Wednesday if he did not break a
bone. The right fielder would
miss at, least two weeks if there
was a break.
Gwynn, 39, an eight-time NL
batti ng champion, has a .339
career average in 17 seasons with
the Padres.

·

164lJPper ·~lver Road

P.Q. SbiC 338 ,Gallipolis, OH 45831
TupperaPialnl, OH 45783 740/446-2265
•
74WI87-3181
BANK
'

I '

DALLAS (AP) - Stars right
wing Brett Hull scored his 610th
goal, tying his father, Bo,bby, for
ninth place on the NHLs career
list.
Hull blasted a poe-timer past .
Calgary goalie Fred Brathwaite at
7:29 of the second period on a
power play to give Dallas a 2-0
lead. Hlj)l has 24 goals this season.
Wayne Gretzky is the leader
with 894.

the NCAA men's championship game !'Aoriday night in Indianapolis.

WE DID Ill - Michigan State coach Tom lzzo hugs Al~American
point guardI Mateen Cleaves after the Spartans'
win' over Rorida In
.

i

.

(AP)

.

•

Spartans Win N

men's title

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) .- With every trophy. .
,
basket, every glare, every pump of his fist,
The championship came '2 1 years after
Mate en Cleaves carnied Michigan State.
Magic Johnson led the Spartans to their first
So, when it came time to carry away the national title.And Magic was on hand to see
championship trophy, Cleaves wasn't about this one, too. ·
to give it up - even with a crutch under
The victory over ·Florida certainly wasn't
a one-man show.
each arm.
"He · pas the heart of a lion," said his
Morris Peterson finished with 21 points
-coach, Tom lzzo.
and A.J. Granger had 19. Cleave. was 7-fotCleaves scored 18 P'?i~t:S in the NCAA 11. from the field -including 3-of-4 from
c~~~Pi\lt?"hip againsi Oeli\'lit.li\.~(qre tu~- . OMtsi41' che t,hree-point arc -::.~ve_n th~gh
bhng to •· the courC.VJit}i a .·@rotesquely he didn't take.' a shot after his mjur)i. ·
sprained• ankle. Mter ·a 'quick ·tape job, he
Many tho11ght Cleaves would be playing.
returned io play 11 more minutes in his col- in ~he NI'IA-this year,. following Michigan
lege finale, the Spartans' leader right to the State's loss to Duke in the final four last
end - even though he was· barely able to season.
make it up and down the 'court.
Instead, he returned for his senior season,
"It was a lot of pain;' Cleaves said. "I had delaylng the inevitable millions for the
chance tQ ·win a championship for his
to suck it up and' play on it,"
Later, he. had the perfect painkiller.
school.
Tears w~re rolling doom~ cheeks as he
Even when he' missed ·the first 13 games
hobbled on crutches and his Michigan State . with a b~lwt right foot, he never secondteanunates cut down the nets .after their 89• guessed his decision to come ~ack to the
76. vi~tocy MoQ.day night.
· '
Spartans.
They put one of the nets around his
~leaves was impressive in the first half,
ne.;k. and Cleaves then helped carry off the hreakiiJg Florida's press with his passing arid

ballhandling as Michigan·State (32-7) built a
43-32\ead.
The margin had been cut to SQ-44 when
he rolled his right ankle on a drive to the
basket with 16:18 to play.
· A lot of teams might have folded after
losing their leader. Not the Spartans, with a
team full of seniors and juniors. ,
Mike ·Chappell, taking Cleaves' spot on
the floor, imm~diately hit a three-pointer,
prompting lzzo ,to take such a vigorous
P.iffich at tne afr that 'he nearly lost his jack·
et. Michigan State was up 58-50 by the time
the point guard returned 4:29 later.
Florida coach Billy Donovan said his
team's sryle was a gamble against Michigan
State, which won all six games in the tournament by at least II pointi in becoming
the fi.rst Big Ten team to win the championship since Michigan in 1989.
"We watched a lor of tape. I did not see
one team press them all year long," he said.
Udonis Haslem had a season-high 27 points
for the fifth-seeded Gators (29-9), while
Brent Wright added 13 points and 10
rebounds.

..

ond home run of the day.
Southern scored single runs in
the fourth and fifth innings, then
came back with tWo runs in teh
seventh only to fall short.
Adam Cumings continued to
sizzle at the plate With another 34 night. His 9-13 for the season so
far. Cumings had two doubl~
and a single.Jamie Baker had two
singles, Josh Davis a dou~le and
Ryan Hill a single .
Hall was 3-4 for Buckey Valley,
wtih Durbin and Herriott placing
two hits and Kuhn a single.
Jamie Baker suffered the loS6
with five errors, four walks, two
strikeouts, with seven runs on

nine hits. Heath posted the win
with a seven hitter, six strikeouts,
three walks and four runs. Southern made five errors and BV two.
In the nightcap the entire
·Southern staff got a try on the
mound, but gave up twelve runs
'in four innings 'lf work to an
undeated Alexander team. Southern had hoped to avenge a 13-12
loss in Racine jus{ last week, but
·the bout never materialized.
Southern went up 1-0 on a
leadoff walk to Norris and a
Baker double. Three errors and
three hits gave Alexander a 6-1
lead and Southern
never scored'
.
agatn.
So11thern had but three hits;
singles to Warner and Randolp
and a double to Baker.
Alexander
hitters
were

....... -

Southenl, Pap 82

Southern honors winter athletes at awards barlquet
Roberta Forester and ~randi Codner. Other squad mem•
SENTINEL CORRESPO~DENT
bers are Jennifer Norman, 'Emily Stivers, Tootsie
RACINE - Students, athletes, ~oaches, family and Lawrence, Stephanie Wilson and mascot Allie Rees. Codfriends gathefed together at Southern High S~hool to ner was assisted by Brandi Anderson.
honor the m&amp;nber:s of the various winter sports teams · 'Next, Dave Barr honored members of the firJt-ever
Sunclay afternbon. All in attendance were treated to a Tornado wrestling team and praised the squad for great
delicious potluck dinner with ham and chicken provided progress throughout ihe season. Adam Cumings and Josh
Davis were honored as senior . members of the team,
by the athletic boosters dub.
·
Southern l:figh School principal Gordon Fisher gave while Davis earned the Most Ourstanding wrestling
the welcoming address followed by the invocation by award and Best Record of13-10.
Other tea~ members a~e Ryan N. Hill, Chris Yeauger,
Racine United Methodist youth minister Tom Gill .
Lee Codner then recogfuzed members of the cheer- Robert Forester, Brice Hill, Derek Michael and Brandon
leading squad and recognized senior cheerleaders Stacy Pierce.The team's assistant coach was Brian Har!,ness.
Next, reserve girls' basketball coach Tammy Chapman
Lyons and Laraine Lawson. The Coach's Award went to

BY SCOTT WOLFE

made presentations to her team.The team lost its first five
then won the in a row to finish with a 12-8 record.Tealll
members included Amanda Ashworth, Rachael Chapman,Jeri Hill , Brandi Lane, Amy Leeoand Tara Pickens.
Next, Alan Crisp honored members of his girls' varsity vasketball team. Special award winners were Kari
Cummins, Best Field Goal Percentage; Kim lhle, Best
Free Throw Percentage and Best Offensive Player;
Heath,cr Dailey, Most Rebounds; and Stacy Lyons, Best
Defensive Player. Earning senior awards were Lyons, !hie,
Dailey and Sarah Brauor.
Other team members were Tammy Fryar, Brigette
Barnes, Rachael Chapman, Amy Lee and Tara Pickens.
Pluse see Banquet. Pap.82

' '•

Indians

Rain forces
tie in Reds' (
opener

•

to 4·1

win over Orioles

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
ovation. The rain.
The two outs. Th-. rain. The
tear in his father's eye.
The rain.
When he reflects on his
homecoming; Ken Griffey Jr.
wiU come back to those things.
Mayb,e by then, he'll have dried
o11!. ~ , ,
Junior's hometown debut
Clnclrmatl third baseman Aaron Boone (lett) lay? '
t11rned into a baseball footnote leather on:....Ml\wau~e·s
Kevin Barker for the second-Inning out ,i ,
Monday - the first opening Monday's season opener In Cincinnati. (AP)
.
_1
game in 35 years to end in a tie.
' .
Griffey went 0-for-2 as the
Cincinnati's open-air stadium
Gindnhati Reds and Milwaukee · good ho~ instead.
After playing most of his 11 and got dren ch~d.
B~rs slogged to a 3-3 tie after
years
with Seattle in a domed
,
' five mnings before the game wa.• '
"As a kid growing up ·in
called because of unrelenting stadium that was shelter from the
Pacific
·
Northwest
rains,
Junior
Cincinnati,
you dream of"just
ram.
Griffey had to settle -for a few ma4e his. first appearance in . playifiS Qn this field," h.e said.

.

\
•

'

..

BALTIMORE (AP) - The before being elevated to manager
pregame hoopla centered around after Hargrove was fired in OctoMike Hargrove, whose first game · ber. Manuel downplayed the vic~
as I,Ilanager of the Orioles ·came tory, saying he did little more
than fill out the lineup card.
against his former team.
, '"I happened to be just sitting
The day belong.,.J to Charlie
there
participating by wat~;hing;·
Manuel and Kenny Lofton, who
showed that the Cleveland Indi- he said. "It's not like I did a whole
ans are much the same team that lot."
That doesn't mean he didn't
five sttaighi AL Central titles
. enjoy it. After all, Manuel spent
under Hargrove..
. Lofton .provided the -Indians 38 years in baseball and ~d
with /an unexpected lift that in the minors for nine years.
. ipfi:on wasn't expected to play
enabled Manpel to thoroughly
e~oy ·his first. game as a 'major in the Indians' .first 70 games,
league manager.-Lofton homered muth Ieos the opener, after tear·
and drove in two run~ as the Indi- htg .a rotator cuff in the playoffi
ans won 4-l lJ1!tonday, spoiling last season. He surprised doctors
Hargrove's · much-anticipated b)r returnillg near the !'Dd of
spring training; and looked in
debut~ the Orioles.P'
Manuel spent the previous six midseason folill ~t the .Ori·
years as the Indians' hitting~ coach oles.

won

I'

�..

l

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r

c,

-

Tuesday, April 4, 2!!QL

-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, April 4, 2000 . :

I ..,
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

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Ohi6 Valley

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp;VIcinity
83() F1rst Avenue April 6th, 7th

NB Toddler, JuniOrs. Toys, Mise

AIJ. Yard Salea Muat

Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE , 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
It to l\ln. Sunday
edldon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
• 9:30a.m. Saturday.
AprJI 8th 9 Till 5, 3 1/2 Miles Out
01 ·fHo Granda On 325, South
Lots 01 Cheap Goodresl Rain
Cancels
lnsj de Wednesday. Thursday,
Fr ldpy, 9-6, 32 Mad1s.on , Behind
PIZII:a Hut Kids Clothes, Mise _

IDeludea: 2free sbow tickets
Jlj.SUIIIW.Ilufuclllllll$26 dhmer certificate
COIIpon hook

Movrng Sale Rain Or Sh1nel Apnl
7 (nd 8, New King slza mattrrass,
Clo the s. Computer, some Furni,
turfil, Household Items, Old Tools,
Car Parts Tires 2500 Wheaton
Ad r-Qff At 554; 3 miles Easl of R0ute:160

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BASKETBAlL HONOREES - Special award Dailey and Stacy Lyons.
winners, we(e (L·R) Ka't1 Cummms, Kim lhle, Heather

.

Banquet

..

fromPipB.I

..

J{jm lhle was named first team
All- TVC and AII-Dmnct 13,
wh1le Kaue Cu nmuns earned fir st
team All-TVC and second team
AII- D!Stnct 13 Jeremy ~lll was
the vamty assmant coach
Coach Scott Wolfe then honored members of his freshman
basketball team . Tea~ nl~nibers
were Jus em Allen, Ike Apperson, ,
Just•n Connolly, Tony Crouch,Jordon H1ll, Curns Ne1gler, Tommy
The1ss and Derek Warden.
The second place TVC reserve
squad, finishmg 15-5, wa$ honored
by coach Jonatha!l Rees . Team
members were MIChael Ball, Matt
N elgler, Mate Sham, Matt Ash, Joe

Cornell, J P Harmon, Dally Hill,
Nathan Marnn, Macy Rees,Justm
Connolly and Jordon H1ll.
Coach Jay R ees then honored
members of the 13-9 D1V1S1on IV
sectlonal champion boys' vamty
basketball team. It was the first
tune Southern has )'ad a winnmg
team smce 1995. In a liSt of more
than I ,200 scho o ls , RaCineSouthern moved mto seventh
place all- tunc for vi ctori es 11}
Ohw. That record will be hsted m
the State Tournament program for
the 2000-2001 season
Spec1al award wmners Wt!re,
C had Hubbard, Best DefenSive
Award; Jeremy Fisher, Most
Rebounds, Garret Kiser, Best Free
Throw Percen,tage, Chns Ran.dolph, M ost Improved; Kyle Norm , Unsung Hero Award and Best

Defenuye Player: and Russell
Re1ber, The Jonathan Rees II 0
Percent Award As of yester9ay the
110 percent hu stlmg award will
now be named m honor of Russell Rc1ber and 15 now offic1ally
the Ru ssell Re1ber 110 Percent
Award
Randolph was named to fir st
team All-TVC and fir&gt;t tea m All DJStrlct 13, whil e Re1ber was
na1ned to d~nd team Associated
Press by the sporcswm ers.
The All- Tn- Valley Conference
Ali- Acade1m c team was then honored by Mr FISher Those earmng
honors were Em1iy Snvers, J{jm
Ihie, Kyle Norm, C hris Ran- I
dolph , Jonathan Evans and C had 1
Hubbard
The Rev Tom G1ll eben gave i
the bened1Ct1on

Th~rsday , Friday, Corner Of
Neighborhood Road &amp; 141 , Lots
to,11SCI

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Muet Be Paid In
~qvan'Ce. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
d'IV before the ad It to run,
!{...,day I Monday edition·
I&lt;~Fridsy.

Btfsement sale Friday, 9·4, Ru·
tl8nd Church of God

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Pomeroy, Ohio
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Relations Department, 90 Jack·
son Pike; Gallipolis. Ohio 45631,
1582, Fax To ( 40·448·5532, Or
Call 740·448·5 189 Equal Oppor·
tunlty Employer
.. GOY 'T POSTAL JOB$:: 1Up
To $18 35 Hour, Hiring For 2000,
Free 'Call For Application IExaml
n,ation Information Federal Hire •
Full Benefits. 1·800·598·4504 E1·
tension 1521 {8 A.M. · 6 PM
CST.)
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts,
Toys, Jewelry Wood , Sewln!J,
Typing Great Pay! CALl 1·800·
795·0380 Ext 0201 (24 HNi)
AtTENTION WORK FROM
HOME Earn $500 · $1 ,500 PT I
Mo., $2 ,000 · $4.500 + PT /Mo.
www.atayhometllz .com , 1·800940.7424

l

AT'TN: POMEROY · Pos1a1 POll·
lions, clerks! carriers/ sorters. No
experlente, required Benefits For
exam, sa'llry &amp; tasting Information
call 1-(830)·838·9243 ex1 7151
Bem-flllm 7 dsys
Attn. Work From Home Earn Up'
To $2 000 /Pan·Time $10,000
Full· Time Full Training Provided,
Call For A Free Booklet 1-8 89849-2258.
AVON I All Arta&amp;l To Buy or Sell. '
Sh&lt;ley Spears, 304-675-1429
I
Bates Brothers Amusement Co 11
Interested to travel, please call
740·266·29M. Must be at least
18 years cld
BQ okkaepar Wanted Part·Time
for Fctrm Office near Point Pleas·
ant. Flexible Hours. Mall Resume
to P.O Box 32045, Hillsboro, VA,
20134
Dents- Hygen lst. Send resume
to Earnest l Trent DOS , PO
BoK 380, Mason, !IN 25260

'

'

REPORTER
we grow again ...
area's number one
. If you have a n0$e
1neo~..s, good news judgn1enq
computer

experience
and Photo Shop
experience
like to talk with
have

Jl(JHets

$800 WEEKLYI Make Money
Helping People Recei ve Govl!lrn·
ment Ael vnds Free Oe tlals 1·
BQ0-725·2411 Ext. 5877.
Helping People Re ceive Govern,
fTltnt Flaf~J_nds. Free Oelailsl (2.t
t!tr. Re corded Message) 1·800·
125-2417 EKI 5046 .

· LUMBER

ipo

OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDEDI Loso 5·200+ Lbs Sale,
Natural, Doctor Recommended.
l ~c~Jme Opportuntty Available 1·
1KJQ-705·2:l48
~~'·'A Metabolis m Breakthrough, I
· : • '.L-ost 40 lbs. In 2 Weeks Guar.
• • (iall Nowi1 ·888-B21-1958

(11 ·$33 HOURI Governme.nt
Jobs! Hiring Now! Paid Training .
Pull Benaflls Call 7 Days 1·800·
~5·2417 Ext 4090

.
~

.

Driven 2 Week Paid COL Train ,
lng. No Experience Netded. Earn
Up To $32,000 Nr Fljl1 Bena111s.
Call Today
1·877·2 30·8002
PA M
fransport
23pam com

Excellent Opportunity
II you want 10 make money are
willing to work hard and like to
help others, we may have a job
lor you. Local Re si dent Excel·
lent Income possibil ities and
home office train ing lor persons
selectl!ld Must have pleasing
personality and be willing to
meet the public No experience
necessary. For more lnformatlort,
call Clay Roney at (304 )-67!,
6019 , or mal l resume to· 2413
Jackson A.venue, Point Pleas ·
ant, WV 25550 E.O E Woodmen
of The World life Insurance Soclel)'
hcELLENT WEIGHT LOSS1
Powerful High Protein, low Carbo·
l'lydrate Secrets Revea led. Help
Wanted Immediately www tlps4 ·
werghtlossoom 1·800-339-9169

Publisher
Ohio Valley
• Co.
Publishmg

Only Ouallhad Applicants Need
App ly To Hol ze r Clinic, Human
Relatlons Oapartment; 90 Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631·
1562. Fax To 740·446,5!532. Or
Call 740·446,5189 Equal Oppor·
tunlty Elf1)1oyer

Resource [)eyelooDlflnt Manager

446·9340
FULLER BRUSH CO Is Looking
For Pooplo Who Would Like To
Start Their Own Business Work,
lng From Home NO INVEST·
MENT Needed. Limited Time
Only Call 800,882,7270 email ful·
terettOaol oom
FUN INTHESUN .
Travel In The USA In A Aock-N·
Ro ll Atmosphere If You Are
Atleast 18, Free To Travel And
Can Leave Immediately Call Eric
At 888 ·720 ·2 127 9·5 Est. April
3rd Thru 71h, EOE
Help wanted on dairy farm , milking
oosllion, 740· 949·2578 or 740·
949-2823
JANITOR WANTED: Early Shift
Approximately 23 Hours /Week
Some EKperlenee Preferred Will
Train. Must Have Aallable Trans·
portatlon To Job Site, 1-118~411·

etSI.
MEDICAL BILLING Great Earn·
mg Potential! Full Training ICom·
puler Roq'd 888·680 ·6893 Ex1

4401
Millennium Teluervlcel
IS pltased 10 8MOUr\C8 the
Grand opening of Itt new Well·
ston calling center.
We era now sttting up
intlf'VIew appointments for
outbOUnd telellrvlet po1110n1
No eltperience necessary
Etrn.ul) to $15/hr
w~h quanerty salary reviews
Managemem opportunities available. 401 KIMedlcaVOentaVPald
vacations available 3 shifts dally
Fltllbll setledullng Start your
new career with uti
Call 1-800·929--5753
for an appointment
We look forwar&lt;ll,o meeting you!

Publishing Co.

NEW &amp; EXCITING Aeataurftn t &amp;
Bar In area seeks walters or waitresses who have the 'abl hty to
provide upscale service All sh1fts
are needed Bring resume to 239
Ma in Street, Jackto n. OH bet·
ween 8 OOam &amp; 4.00pm .

825 2nd Av_lf/i"" ,

Part· Time Help Wanted To Work
On Paper Route, 740-742·2852

POSTAL JOBS To S18.35 /HR.
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPEAI·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO. CALL 1·800·813·3S85,
EXT 04210 8 AM. ·9 PM, 7
CAYS Ids Inc

Ohio Valley

Gallipolis, OhiO 45631

Nurse Aide Tr aining ProgramRocksprings RahabllltaHon Center
w1lf be offering training classes In
the monlh ol April. Appli ca tions
~:tre now being accepted at 36759
Rocksprings Road. Pomeroy. OH
415769 Class size Is limited
Three reference papers are re~ulred with application App ly In
person between 1cam and 3pm
M-F Students that successfully
complete the TCE class will be
eligible lor employment Absolute·
ly NO PHONE CALLS EOE

Med1cai Transcr lpttontst - Ae ·
qu lrements:
Comprehens ive
Knowledge Of Medical Terminolo·
gy, Microsoft Word, And Ability
To Type 135 ·140 Unes Per Hour

Need T LadleS To Sill Avon, 740·
446·3358
•

A~entlon Publisher

Now Hiring HHA, CNA, LPN's, lm·
mediate Openings, Fe!Kib le
Hours, Compalllllve Compan&amp;a·
tlon , Cell 740-446-3808 , Health
Management Nurs ing Sei'Yices I
Ultimate Health care, EOE.

Postal Jobs $48,323 00 Vr Now
Hir ing ·NO Experience ·Pa id
Train ing ·Great Benefits, Call 7
Cays 81)().,j29·3860 EKI J·385

us ave
knowledge o1
acce~untlng, Office
. Procedures, and
Computer Literate.
Apply In Person·
FRENCH CITY
HOMES, INC.
269 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Nlgnt · shirt, carin !J for efderly,
hours 7pm ·to 9am. catl 740·992·
5023.

Wock From Home
On 'rllu• Compu1or
Internet Marketing Opportunity

=~~~om
Work from home $~$1500 PT,
$2aao.s8aoa
1-800· 727·

n.

A25 2nd Ave. -'" ll~~~or~wo~rk~lro~m~a~nyw~he~re!:.co~m:_
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
X· Ray Technic ian needod,.lor

FULL·TIME POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
Competitive Salary And
EKceptional Fringe
Benefit Package

GOV'T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hour, Full Banaltts No Ex·
ptrlence Required Free Appll ca·
lion And Information 1· 888-7269083 Extension 1701 (7 AM. ·7
PM CST)

SIGO WEEKLYII Mako Monay

Stlate.:Roiite 248 Che1ter, OH

'•

Clinical Manag•r: Resp onsible
For Da lly Minagement And OP·
erallons Of UCC, Orthopedics,
Ophlhalmology, And PM&amp;R .

WEEKLY I Mailing 400
B'ro chu resl SI!Jisfactlon Guar,
ahtaedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro ·
vlded l Rush Stli ·Addrenld
9tamJJad Envelope! GICO, OEPT
5', Box 1438 , ANTIOCH, TN
3701 1-1438. sum lmmedla18~

"~-

•Estes Rockets and Accessories•Trains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
.•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas
•Lifeline

PhyS~Ian

Mui11·Speclahl)'
Group Located In
J•cklon Is Seeking:

· ~t;ooo

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN·
MENT fROM HOME PART·
nME NO EXPERIENCE AE ·
OUIAED 1-1!()().757-0753

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 IHR
INC BENEFITS. OAME WAR·
DENS,
SECURITY,
MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED . FOR APP, AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1-800·813·
3!8!, EXT t4211 8 A.M ·9 P.M
1 DA'rS 101, Inc

109

Help Wanted

•pwn

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
'
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per g•.,$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Stllrburat •
ProgiQtlve top line.
Lie. ' QOo5Ci

Wanted to Buy

....,,..., __ .,_Obta in LITo Trav·
11 To Surrounding
. To
ln~ulr• , Pleaae Submit Retume
To PO Boo 188, Rio G - . OH
48874 By Apr114EOE .

EARN $2! ,000 TO $!0,000 N R
Medical lnsura.nce BUUng Ass ls·
tance Needed Immed iately! Use
Your Home Computer For Greal
Potential Annual Income Call
Nowl Call 1·800·291·CS83 DePt 0

Publishing Co.

100+

70

URGENTLY NEEDED· plo1m1
dOrlorS,
S35 10 145 1or 2"or 3
I Call Sera·TIC, 740·

www,

60: Lost and Found

1..aoo-332·2411

UP T0'120.000 ·$45 ,000 II Por
YfJar Earning Potential. Dr's Need
People To Process &lt;Claim&amp;. You
Can Work From Home We Train.
MUST Own Cof'll)UIIr IMO&lt;IIm. 1·
888·332·501! E~ . t71XUlaiy •

-sALES &amp;

30 Announcements
' GOT A CAMPGROUND Mom•
berahip Or Tlmesl'lare?· We'll
Taka Ill Amer ica a Moat Suecenlul Campg round And Timeshare Rflaale Clearinghouse Call
sort Sales lr'lltrnatlonal 1·8003·5967, 24 Hours www rea Ortaates.com

11o Htlp Wanted

.110

Driver With COl's , Needed For
loca l Garbage Company, Part·
Time Pou lblt Full-Tim!J.. Gallla,
Jackson County Area, .7•0·38896il8

MARKETING

SAVE UP To 80o/. On Moat Dental Services No Age Limit, No
Additional Cost For Mfldlclne &amp;
VIsion 1·800.844·9539 Ext 0273

llw.IW.CSimbrldgecredlt.org

110 Help Wanted

Why walt? Start meeting Ohio
singles tonight Call toll tree 1800,766-2623,eltenslon 6176

r·

'A FREE DIRECT/TV
SATELLITE SYSTEM!
• Frw Vacation fot 21
• Free Mototoll Paglrl
• $600.00 in fl'llmerchandlll!

Help W•nted

Personals

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Ha11e Fun Meetlng"EIIglble Sin·
g1es lrrYour Area. Call For More
Information. 1·800·ROMANCE
EK1.~735
'

'

110

The Sahtallon Army Seeks Quall11ed CMstlan Candidates For The
PositiOn Of Resou rce Oevetop·
mant Manager For The South,
easl Portion or "Ohio Minimum
ReqUirements 5 Years Professional Fund Raising Ellperlenoa,
Highly Oavei&lt;Hutd Verbai OAnd
Written Communication Skills ,
Highly Oevelopad Interpersonal
SkillS Must Be Willing To 00 Um·
ltad Trilvelmg Send Resume And
lellar 01 Interest To
Human Resources Director
The $atva.1ion Army

.
PO Box 596

-

Cincinnati, OhiO 45201
EOE

Salesperson Needed Retail Fur·
nllure lmmed1a1e Opening, Part·
Time Apply Topes Furniture Co
151 second AventJe., GaltiJJOUs.
Security Gfards, must be able to
work any s~1ft lnduding most weekends . Must have cl ean police
record, god work h1s1ory, reliable
transportation, valid driver's II·
canse, home phone and must
have black steel toe safety
sh oes Pay starts at $6 00 per
hour, 32·40 hours per week Call
740·669·2874 Monday· Friday,
8am-4pm lor appointmenl
S1NGERSI GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY, ond EASY LISTEN·
IJ NGI Cali 1.:0800-469 -8184 For
Appointment To Come To NashYUle And AuditiOn Fo r Major
Re cord' Produ cers And C ~mce rt
Promotl'es Internet www wcin ac
Suballtute Nun•· Mus t pos·
seas currant licensure by the
Ohio State Board ol Nursing, valid
driver's license and exPerience in
mdtJstrlal nurs ing anellor MROO
programs preferred
Subltltute Adult Service Aldl·
Must possess a tllgh school dl·
ploma or equ ivalent and a valid
driver's license Ellperlence with
Individuals Wl1h MADO prele"ed
AppllcaUona may be obtained
from and submitted to Athens
County Soard ol MRDO, Attn:
Personnel. 8D1
Union SUet!,
Ath1ns , OH 45701 . Dtadllnl.
Ap&lt;ll14, 2000 or unli 1111ed. EOE

w.

TAKE BACK YOUR LIFEI Bo
Your Own Bossi Earn An Extra
$500 ·$1.500 PT Or $2 ,000 •
$1,500 FT Per Mon1h 100·338·
0427,
www.globllf.MIIhcarp.com
TruCk drivers - COLI non COL,
needed for local flower deliveries
In 24' bo1 lrucka , call 7~0·247 ·

2684

busy Point Pleasant Phys ici ans
Office unrasound preferred but ,
nol necessa ry; Aectptlonltl/
Medical Aallstan•, 1mmedlala
Opening . Sand resume clo P:O
Box 657 , Barboursville , Wll
2!504

111 ·133 HOURI Government
Jobst Hiring Now! Paid Tra ining
Full Benefits Call 7 Days 1-800·
725,2417 EKI 4020

. 446·9340

S2 .00D Wllkty From Home Pro·
catslng VIsa /MasterCard P11fn·
phlelll We Pay Yoli $1 Per Pam~Jtlllll Homeworl&lt;lrt Nle&lt;IICI lmme&lt;tlalllyl All Materials Supplied!
Payctlecks Mailed Friday&amp;!" Call
1-800.!72-6495
$3.000 WEEKLVI Milling 400
8rochurl8 AT HOME ! Guar·
anttld . FREE Sup~JIIII. Start lmITlldltttl~. 1,800-..a9·9477 Exl 88
(24 HIS)
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommtnda tt\at ·you do buai·
ntu with ptqptt you know, and
NOT to aend mQnay through thl
m1ll until you t'lava lnvtatlgated
lho o11tnng
CREATING MILLIONAIRESIII
Global Internet Exploalon First
VIrtual Network Company In Hla·
tory! W• Are Breaking Networking
FlecordJ Ov1r 100 Count rl11
Worldwldo TOLL FREE Pre·
Recorded Meaaage, 1·877·677·
4048,
DATA ENTRY ON YOUR PC • Le·
gal Judgment NOIICII PT /FT
www.aviathome.com Or SAse ~To
AVI , PMB t06, 7231 Boulder
Ave , Highland, CA 9234H232
DOT COM FEVER • $MIL·
LIONS$ Awesome Internet E,
Commerce Opportun ity Ground
Floo1 Wllh Rapidly Grow l~g Com·
pany Turn -Key System Witt\
Matching Bonuaea. HUGE IN·
COME POTENTIAL 800·242·
0383 EKI 3022
EARN $90 ,000 YEARLY Repair·
lng, NOT Replacing , long Cracks
In Windshields . Free Video 1·
800·828-8523 US /Canada
www.glasamechanlx com

FR1TO LAV /PEPSI IHE.RSHEY
"GOY'T POSTAL JOBS"' Up SNACK AND SODA VENDING
To $18.2.t Hour, Hiring For 2000, ROUTE $$ ALL CASH BUSI·
Free Call For App lication !Exam!· NESS$$ BUILD A BUSINESS
nation Information Federal Hire • THAT IS ALL YOURS. SMALL
Full Benelils 1·800·598·4504 Ex· INVESTMENT
/EXCELLENT
tan11lon 1522 (8 AM -8 PM
PROFITS 1·800·731·7233 EXT
CST)
.1403

140

Business
Training

Qalttpollo ca- Coi111J0
(Car,.rs Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-448·4387,
1·800·214-Q452,
Reg t90.05-1274B

1'50

Schpola
lnalructlon

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE OE·
GfiEE QUICKLY, Bachelors ,
Masters, Doctorate, By Carre·
spondence Based Upon Prior Education And Short Study Course
For FFIEE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1·800.98+8a16,

180 Wanted To Do
Bennetts lawn Care Service
Cornmercra!SAHlclonllar.
We 00 mowing, weed cutting,
nne clearing &amp; brush removal, .
landscape &amp;custom built fences Call lor free estimate
(7 40)388·04821(740)7(19.()538 .
Dependable Man will mow and
tri m your lawn Free estlmatea
(304)875-2 105
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your togs to the mill just call
304-875·1957.
Excellent care tor peraon In m~
home non ,smoker and Mobile,
$800. per monlh (304)882-31180
lnlldorfExtertor I'IIOUng. mcpblll
hQmt rpolt. bfma. pytbylldlng•

end tin rpoft ,

E~~:perlenced· Free

Estimates, FtefQJencas 304 .. 68·
1802.
lawnmowlng , Reasonable Rates,
Senior CIIJzen Discounts, Free
0uo1e Call Ooke's 740.388o8789.
Need An ElectriCian Or Carpenl·
er? Beat High Prices, All Work
GauranleUI Free Esllmalttl
740.448-2947
•
Odd Jobs and Lawn Mowing .
Cleen ·up and paint (~04)875·
1823
Porte r's Construct1on Roofing ,
Palnllng, Decks. All Complete R...
modeling (References Available)
Ftiil~ lnavrad, Call Secretary After
8 P.M 74Q.441.Q653,
Roofing , plumbing, exterior paintIng, odd )obs. Call740·992·050t,
ask lof Tarry.
Wanted To Do: Mounts Tree
Servtca, Bu ckel Truclc Service .
Top Trim Removal, Stump Grind·
lng , Fully Insured Free Esll·
mates Bidwell, Ohio 1·800·838·
958S. Or 740.388-9648.
Will dig water llhes, clean ditch·
es, d!g graves. Have own equip,
men11 (304)675-3824
~Will haul trash away, $40 a pick·
up losd (304)875-8188.

Will Mow Lawna In th• Point
Pleasant Area Call Matl Oliver,
(304)89!·3884

FINANCIAL

210

Bu•Jnell
Opportunity

"The Homemaker Opportunity
Guida" Ia your ticket to flnancltl
frtldOfl"l ll For more Information,
send S!S .OO plu s 1 SASE to.
MDC , 30581 Briar Rldg• Rd .,
Lang.,;lle, OH 45741 .

SU UNL1M1TED INCOME I Havo

Immediate
Opening for
Full Time
Salesperson
Excellent
Potential· Apply In
Peraon·
FRENCH CITY
HOMES, INC.
269 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Buslne"
Opportunity

210

Vour own Internet Busln&amp;ul Independent
Mali
Owner.
www ocaansurt km 011
StOO Per Hour. Homeworker&amp;
Needad l Large Advarllsmg Firm
Pays 54 For Every Voice· Mal!
Rerrleved Make $400 -$500 Eve·
ryday In Your Sj:)are Time. Llmlled
Space 1·888-831·8464 (24 Hro)

FUNORAISING IS BOOMINGI
Up To SO'% Commission New
Fundralslng Product ~ WIIh Top
Fast Food Chains. Serious
Agents Wanted. www.scratch,
card com Oi 1·888·875-124!
MEDICAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hr.
Medical Billing Software Company
Seeka People To Process Madl,
cal Claims From Home. Training
Provided Must Own Computer 1·
800.434-5518 Ext 887
MEDICAL BILLING, Unllml1ed 1,..
come Potential. No E~~:perlence
Necessary Free Information &amp;
CD·AOM Investment $4 ,995 $8 ,995 Financing Available Is·
land Automated Med ical Sarvlc,
ea, Inc 800- 322- 1139, E1t. 050
Void 1n KY. IN, CT

Mobl11Homn
for Sale
Three bedroom, totally r~
lntldl and out, tqllef and kit, new
lurnace. new APC~~Iancet, f'IIW car,
~J&amp;t , 123,500. cal! 740-992.,.51.t

All'"'-

- l n g 1n
thla r'18'1:4PIII*' lllubt~Ct to
lhe F - Felr Housing Act

Ql11168 whlcl1 mokso nHlogal

to Odvellltt 'any preference.
11mha11on or dllc~mlnallon
baaed "" riOO, color, llllglon.
IlK flmttlalatatua or natiOnal
origin, or ony tmtr~IOn 10
mal!o any •uch preference,
llmftaUon or diSCflminatlon."
Thla newspaper will not
kr&gt;OWingly ocoopt
ltdvertiHmtntt lor rtllestate
which lo In vlo1allon ollhe
law Our readorl are horoi&gt;Y
ln!ormodlh~RIII dwelllngl
advertised In tNs ntWipaper
,_,. available on 1n equal
Opporll.l'llty bull.

1~.$3001Mo , 740-446·3292

Start YotJr Busin ess Today ..
Prime Stlopplng Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate
Sprtng Valley Plaza. Call 740.446·
0101
Tired Of wasting Money On
Work AI Home Programs Thai
Don 't Work? Need Tha Truth?
Coll978·887·7925 24 Hour&gt;

220 Money to Loan
SS Auto Loans, Personal loans,
Debt Consolidation, Mortgagll
And Aaflnanclng. Credit ProblemS
OK Consumers Financial 1·800·
241·5125 EKI 1134 Void OH, KS

SS Auto Loans. Persq-nal Loans,
Debt ConsolldaUon':"'Mortgagea
And Refinancing Credit Problems
OK Consumers Financial 1·800·
24N125 Ext. 1134 VOid OH, KS

SSS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining, Payments
On Pro11erty Sold! Mortgagu1
Annuit ies! Setllementa1 Immediate auolesll! "Nobody Beats
Our Prlctts • National Contract
Buyers ~00 · 490 - 073&gt;4 E1t 101
www natlonalcontractbuyers rom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Families Unloading Mil·
Ilona Of Dollars, To Help Minimize
Ttlelr Tues Write Immediately:
Wlnd1ells, &amp;47·A.SECOND AVE.,
1350. NEW YORK, NEW VORK
10017
CRED1T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAC CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
LAWSUITS,
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING. 90 ·180 CAYS 1·
800-422·1598.
CREDIT AEPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Eraat BaCI CrtCIIt Legal ly
Freelnlo. 1-B00'7BS-41108
FREE OEBT CONSOLIDATION
Appllcatio rt W /Strvlce Reduce
Poymenll To 85% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Call 1-800·
328·8!10 Ext. 29
NEED CASH? Tty Debt Consoli·
da11on Up To $200,000 Bad
Crtdlt, No Credit OK Credl1
Cards , Mortg1g11. Monarch Fl·
nanclal QrotJp. 1·800·491·1758

Elcl.l201

230

Profeulonal
Servlcee

TUNNEO OOWN ON
IOCIAL SECUAITY 19811
No Foe Unltto Wo Wlnl
1-&amp;ea-582-3345

310 HotTle• for Sele
3003 Brook Or. In PT. Pltuant 3,
4 br 180Q aq lt.lall 1 floor, at·
lached garag1, new roof new
heat pump, new hot tub,$8!5 ,000
eall 304·674·1 022(Gay o)or304 ·
e7 !5·e479 {evenlnge&amp; weekends)

Required Call
tlori And For Other
lions lndependenc• Mor1011oe
Sarvlcas 1·800:&amp;45-0036
$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CREC·
IT NEEOE01 GOV'T ~ORE ·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·
PAOVALI 1·800•380·4820 EXT
8509
AAAA LIOU10ATIONI1 Repos·
sessad /Mull Sellll 4 New, Af·
fo rdable Pre,Fab Home Packag·
as Easy Assembly SACRI·
FICEIIl.-&amp;45-1200.
Brick Ranch , 4 Bdrms , l,IA , F: R ,
Bath , Basement , 2 Fireplaces,
Gat Furnace. CIA. 3 Acres. 740·
441-0953.
For sale by owner· 3 bedroom, 2
bath home on 2 acr11 wfth river
fronla~. for appointment call 740.
949·2745
FOAECLOSEC HOMES. Low Or 0
Oownl Govn't And Bank Aepo s
Being Sold Nowl Financing Avail·
abte Call Now! 1·80Q-355,0D24 ,
EK1. 8040.

~~~~;~~~~=:·I
Near North Point 3BR, 2 full
bath. ctnlral air, bailment Call
(304)875·8048 or (304)675-3212,
aft8r5PM
Ntce two bedroom, one ace with
337' of Oblo River frontage Recently remodeled &amp; new shingles,
caii:J04.17:J.5031
Relocating, selling below appral·
sal Convenient, quiet area In
Racine Beat the nellt Interest
hike and realtor CCl&amp;l8. Very good
condition, threa bedr&lt;1om, one
bath, appllance&amp;, exlras, garage,
etc . Serious Inquiries, please .
Yard sate coming aoon . Leave
message at 740·949·3228 fo r

Info
REPOSSESSED. 2 On lyll Musl
Sell, 10Q% Steel Framing For 2
Pr&amp;-Fab Homes, One Is 1560 Sq
Ft Extremely Eas~ To Asaemble,
Brand Nsw. Never Erected . In
Original Packing Crates. Sacrifice
Prices, 1·800·580-9919

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1.tx70 Mobile Home Completely
Remodeled Inside And Beautiful
Bank Appraised At S1 0.000 Or
Make Offer, 74Q-44&amp;-488G
1983 14x70 Skyline. new Berber
carpet, security system, excellent
condlllon, $10,000 OBO, call 740992·5686

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

2, 3 bedroOm ho u11, ga rage,
build ing , tru lt tr111. 2 acres .
country llvlniJ, bu1 mlnvtea from
town, $39 ,500 OBO, 740·367 ·
n8s

AUT • MCI • SPRINT 1c
PHONE CARD Routt Maket
$1 ,000 ·$5.000 !Wk • ALL CABHI
Easy! Local Silea, FREE infO! 3 Bedroom on Sandhill Rd 1
This Is Nol A Job • $5,000 At·
Acre, 2 Car Garage $47 ,000
qulrsd 1·800·991-9888 Ext 11!!'
(304)875·3988
(24 Hrs)
Green ·To nahlp 3 Bedrooms
AT&amp;T PAYPHONE RTE
Wl1h Gorog Oulbulldlng, 1 112
EZ Loca11on&amp;
Acr11 M/L ow UIII!Ues, Many
E1cel ~ lncome Local Rle
Exbasl 740 8-0744
800·264-8878

37 112 Acres, 3 Bedrooma, Bl1h.
Living Room Kitchen /Dining
Area , Laund ry Room , Garage,
Ctllar, Barn. 74Qo25e-e7ee

340 Builne" and
Building a
Rental property for sale, two commercial buildings, both l..ud,
good monthly Income, calf 7.t0·
742·3304 or Cleltnd Rtalty, 7.t0·
992·22159
•

Anontlon Otveloporo
33 Acres, Approximately 10 Acre
Lake, Mobile Home Ideal For
Housing, Campground, Etlttt .
$99 50Q Ala o 5 Acre Lota
$32,000, 740.388-BS78
BEAUTIFUL POND
On 8 Acres, Rolling MaedOw With
Tr49a All Around Pond Pert1ct
Home S111 W1th Countr Water ..
Land ConHact Available. 1-BOD·
21\)-8365
BRUNER L.ANO
741H4MU2
Gtllle Co.· Rro Grandt, Mobley
Rd , Oil SR 325, Romola Homo
Sites On Dead End Roedl 8 Acr·
as With Pond $26,500 Ca1~ Or
13 Acres $30,000 Chel~lre, Jot·
sie Creek Rd., 8 Acres S12,00Q, :
15 Acres $19 ,000 Or 2• Acres .
WI! Large Barna $3-t,OOO Eureka,
Marabtl Rd., 11 Acres $20,000
Or 31 Acres With Barn $37,000, :
City Schools Friendly Ridge, 15
Acres $11 ,000 Cash Price
Scioto Co .: Nic e 40 Acres On :
Paved Road With County Water
$25,000 Cashl
Melgl Co.: Flutland, Whltll HIQ.-:
Rd , Nice 9 Acres $12,000 Or 11
Acres $14,000 . Water Danville,
SA 325, N~e 5 Acres $16,000 Or,
Brirar Aldga Rd - 7 Aerts ·
$11,500 Cash

~thlcal , Environmentally Con· ·
cerned Hunter Looking To LeaH ;
Hun11ng Rlghls Or Buy Land, 30Q •

+Acres,
304·744-1379
THE
WOODS
New SuDdiYIIIOn , •
Blacktopped County Fload, Grun :
Township, City Schools, Wood.d" 1
4 ·5 Ac1e Lo1S In The $30's, 740-'
245-9033.
,•

410 Houses for Rent
t -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo, 4% Down
For LIStings &amp; Pa~ment Details,
800-319-3323 EKI 1709

2 bedroom home in Pomeroy,
$300 per month plus deposit,.
740.992.0175.
For sale or rent · 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy, $350 month'
J!lus depos1t. will sell on contract
with good re1erencu, no pets 1
74Q.69H244
'
3 Bedroom House, Stare Route
598, 5 Minutes From Gallipolis
References /Deposit. $3501Mo ....
74().446.3292.

3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath. Poner Area.
S425/Mo.,' 1 Year lease. Refer.'
anca s' And Deposit, 7.tQ·U8.,
2801

3 Bedrooms, 8 Miles From Galli·
polls, New Carpet, Good Location,
$35P!Mo, Deposit, No Pets, 74().
388-99CS
For sale or rani· lhree bedroom '"'
Chester, newiv remodeled, up·
dates , e 14·50 1·8339 arte (
9 OOpm.
Nice 1 or 2 bedroom houses In
Midd leport &amp; Pomeroy, t~ulpped
kitchen. deposit &amp; references r•
qvlred. 74():§2.8951
Small 2 Bedroom Ideal Location.
Eastern Avenue. Large Lol S3001
Mo., call740-367·7609
STOP R'!NTINGIII OWN FOR
LESSI Low Or No Money Down ••
EZ Credit Approval. Call Now 1·
80().772·7470 Ext 8813.

1988, 14x70 Trallerfwlth lot. Ex,
cellent condition. Has fenced In
yard and 8•10 building $21 ,500

Two bedroom house in Middle·
poll, $300 monl~. $300 tiOpooll,
ct1174Q.892·5039.

11rm.t304)87!-8887.

1991 Manaion m&lt;1blle home ,
1.txeo, two btdroom, one bath ,
central air, 10111 t lectrlc, ready to
IIIOYO , 111,500, 740-9411-901 e.
1&amp;t time~uytf1 Uttle or no Credit
Ok only ot Ookwood' Homes Galli·
poliO 74().445·30113 •
•
32x80 Factory Repo. Ntver lived
In, $4~ ,950 1·8Q0.891·6777
N1w 14' Wil:la, 3 BR
$18,900 HHlfl.e91-8777

16x80 Factory New Sptclal Pur·
ChaM, $23.000. H!00.1191-Bm.

Abandoned HOII'II Nnds Owner,
Pty Small Tr1n1f1r F11 Move
In, 7-30113.
Only $233/Mo • Won1 Las11 Hurry,

7-30i3
Huge 18x80 lhrte bedroom/ two
bath, includn d•llv~ry, setup ,
skirting. attpa, blocks Onlv
$272. 17 per monttl wllh snoo
Cal 1·80Q.I37·32311.

-n

New 14 wldt mobllt homes stlrt·
lng at $203.23 with onlr, 1925
down Lol spac11 avtllab e also
Con740·385-ll621 .
OotJblew1de R1po • Easy 1'8rma
Froo Delivery S Sei·Up 740-4483093

420 Mobile HomM
for Rent
Betr11n Athena 1nd Pomtroy, 2
I 3 btdroom motllll hom11,
$26().$300, 740-992·2187,

2 Bedoooma, $2!10 Dopooit, 12501
Mo , We Pay Wlllr, Traah, SP·
ogo, No Pill, 740.388-11328
Fo• rem· 3 bedroom mobllo - ·

no polS, 74().992·5858.

Only

~ow Coublo Wldt, 3 BR, 2 Bl1h
Only 2 1111. sauoo 1·8oo: ea1·
8777.

Nice Cl11n 3 Bedroom Mobile
Homo In Counlry, 74Q.:ISHS74

440

Apartmenta
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom s p a - 1u~
nlsl'led andJunfurnlahecl, ltcurlly
dtposit required , no pet•. 740·
992·2218
1 Bedroom ~pt . at Rio Grande,
Privati Orlveway Total' eltetrtc.
$225 00 Month, (740 ~-1 9edroom Furnlshtd Apartment. •
Utllillea Paid, 94 Locust Street,
Gallipolis, Upslaht, $290/Mo , ,
S1000oposU, 7-1340.
1 Bedroom, Near Holzer, AJC ,
Economical Gas Heat, WIDHookup, Quiet location, 127al r:
Mo, + Ut!MIS, 7..,......2957.
2 Bedroom Apt for re nl In Newt
Haven area All appllanctl in·
eluded · $275 per month.
(31)0)882·3 131 , HUll .....-..

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Call Now For FREE Mapa An({Finenclng Info !
•

1988 Royal Cova DlltJxe , tWo
bsdrooms, two baths, CA, new
carpet, many IKtras Presently on
rented lot. Must ael! Land con·
tract- 50% down, $13 ,200 ca ll
740-992·1386

Brand New 3 Bedfooml, 2 Baths

310 Hom11 for Sele

330 Farm• tor Sala

RENTA L:,

a

REAL ESTATE

Pvt Your Tu Refund To Work,
U99 Down , Only At Oakwood
Homu In Barbaunvllle , 30.t ·
73&amp;-3409

350 Lola,&amp; Acreage

Na8d A Loan? Try Dabt ConsOli:
dallon $5,000 • $200,000. Bad
Crtd1t OK. FH. 1·800·770-01»2,
Ext215.
Ofllce Space 20~~:40 Next To Hal,
1ells Carpet Outl9t, State Route

Sank A11po $499 + Move-In FrH
Delivery &amp; Se1·Up, 74Q.44W093

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r

c,

-

Tuesday, April 4, 2!!QL

-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, April 4, 2000 . :

I ..,
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

' INSTANT 16,000.00
CREDit UNITt
' NO CREDIT CHECKS!
'NO SECURITY
DEPOSITS!
' NO JOB OR INCOUE

.

VERIFICATION

cotrl- you..,,_,.,

IC&lt;OIIrrrr«tllml, oNn)QiboccmOO

All

FREE!
8

Giveaway

1 Mall!! , 5 Females, Black Puppies , Fatl'ler Registered Slack
lab, Mother Re~istered Golden
Aetl'lever, t40-441-0243

CASH LOANS!

• Bad Credit OK
• Easy Qualifying
• Fast Service
• Low Payments

wmners

(FuU time and pan time
position) If you enjoy
meeting and talking •with
people and have the ability
to be crea11ve and think
outside the ljox, wt would
like to talk with you. Mus1
have dependable trans·
ponation. Position offers,
salary, mccntlves, 40\K
plan, insurance plan,
vacatioru allll pleasalu
working environment. For
Interview
corulderarlon
send resume and cover
letter to·

40

4 Rotwel ll er /Garman Sheppard
Puppies . 4 weeks old (304)578·
241:8.

• ConfldenUal

Publisher
Ohi6 Valley

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp;VIcinity
83() F1rst Avenue April 6th, 7th

NB Toddler, JuniOrs. Toys, Mise

AIJ. Yard Salea Muat

Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE , 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
It to l\ln. Sunday
edldon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
• 9:30a.m. Saturday.
AprJI 8th 9 Till 5, 3 1/2 Miles Out
01 ·fHo Granda On 325, South
Lots 01 Cheap Goodresl Rain
Cancels
lnsj de Wednesday. Thursday,
Fr ldpy, 9-6, 32 Mad1s.on , Behind
PIZII:a Hut Kids Clothes, Mise _

IDeludea: 2free sbow tickets
Jlj.SUIIIW.Ilufuclllllll$26 dhmer certificate
COIIpon hook

Movrng Sale Rain Or Sh1nel Apnl
7 (nd 8, New King slza mattrrass,
Clo the s. Computer, some Furni,
turfil, Household Items, Old Tools,
Car Parts Tires 2500 Wheaton
Ad r-Qff At 554; 3 miles Easl of R0ute:160

Toll Free

l-877-521·2080

~IRLS'

BASKETBAlL HONOREES - Special award Dailey and Stacy Lyons.
winners, we(e (L·R) Ka't1 Cummms, Kim lhle, Heather

.

Banquet

..

fromPipB.I

..

J{jm lhle was named first team
All- TVC and AII-Dmnct 13,
wh1le Kaue Cu nmuns earned fir st
team All-TVC and second team
AII- D!Stnct 13 Jeremy ~lll was
the vamty assmant coach
Coach Scott Wolfe then honored members of his freshman
basketball team . Tea~ nl~nibers
were Jus em Allen, Ike Apperson, ,
Just•n Connolly, Tony Crouch,Jordon H1ll, Curns Ne1gler, Tommy
The1ss and Derek Warden.
The second place TVC reserve
squad, finishmg 15-5, wa$ honored
by coach Jonatha!l Rees . Team
members were MIChael Ball, Matt
N elgler, Mate Sham, Matt Ash, Joe

Cornell, J P Harmon, Dally Hill,
Nathan Marnn, Macy Rees,Justm
Connolly and Jordon H1ll.
Coach Jay R ees then honored
members of the 13-9 D1V1S1on IV
sectlonal champion boys' vamty
basketball team. It was the first
tune Southern has )'ad a winnmg
team smce 1995. In a liSt of more
than I ,200 scho o ls , RaCineSouthern moved mto seventh
place all- tunc for vi ctori es 11}
Ohw. That record will be hsted m
the State Tournament program for
the 2000-2001 season
Spec1al award wmners Wt!re,
C had Hubbard, Best DefenSive
Award; Jeremy Fisher, Most
Rebounds, Garret Kiser, Best Free
Throw Percen,tage, Chns Ran.dolph, M ost Improved; Kyle Norm , Unsung Hero Award and Best

Defenuye Player: and Russell
Re1ber, The Jonathan Rees II 0
Percent Award As of yester9ay the
110 percent hu stlmg award will
now be named m honor of Russell Rc1ber and 15 now offic1ally
the Ru ssell Re1ber 110 Percent
Award
Randolph was named to fir st
team All-TVC and fir&gt;t tea m All DJStrlct 13, whil e Re1ber was
na1ned to d~nd team Associated
Press by the sporcswm ers.
The All- Tn- Valley Conference
Ali- Acade1m c team was then honored by Mr FISher Those earmng
honors were Em1iy Snvers, J{jm
Ihie, Kyle Norm, C hris Ran- I
dolph , Jonathan Evans and C had 1
Hubbard
The Rev Tom G1ll eben gave i
the bened1Ct1on

Th~rsday , Friday, Corner Of
Neighborhood Road &amp; 141 , Lots
to,11SCI

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Muet Be Paid In
~qvan'Ce. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
d'IV before the ad It to run,
!{...,day I Monday edition·
I&lt;~Fridsy.

Btfsement sale Friday, 9·4, Ru·
tl8nd Church of God

"We're Back"
219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts~ All Makes

ROBERI
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, Roofing,
New Adtlillona',
Pole Building! , Etc.

Free Estimates

740-992 -1709

•Bathblg •Ears
• Nails • Jt-.lea Batha
All Breeds

992·1550

the Appliance

Also,Show Quahty

Man

tomacloas

double co Gngsby
Southern p!tchmg of Norm,
Warn ~r, Davis and Brice Hill 1;ave
up seven h1ts, four walks, 12 runs
' ,'
Lutsgarten 2-4, Jewell 2-3, Slngles and the defense made five rrrors
to Broo ks a n\~ N ewson1e and a A. Ross fanned two SHS batters,

fnNnPilp81

Pomeraniun K&amp; Pet

e-rror

fD·
"
SunutHome

lndependenl Dea~er
Gold Scat steel
Rp!ldlpft, IQG

Colllh'Uetlon

740·742-8015

ftUndl, IU!f4Jhbora,

•

ntkU'-• CIUUtfGA

•

Don'1get
prim!
ShotiJIIe ckml(ltd secilon

llrothera cui.Ci a«atera
and aU who IU!Iped
118 tn ao IIICIIlJIIIICIII'·

The Doctora,
NW'Ie&amp;, AlcU and
StqJJ' at ~ended
Care, Hofpfee and
Bob Orlmfor hfa
plfft• and Mule.
The BradbUill
Church. Tom
RunJIOn, Paa,or, &amp; ·
'-Darell Gild Cclrol

LINDA'S
PAINTING.

•WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

"Take the pain out
ofpaimingLet me do it for you"

Su«,, &amp; ~Itt

Interior

1·800·311·3391

FREE ESTIMATES

6p.m. ·
Leave Message
Ahar 6 pm· 614·985-4180 '

Free Estimate•

Before

'

Ctntraetert Wtlotlllt
Albany, Ohio

Brewer, The

11187 Chevrolet Silverado
Pickup, Auto, PS, PB, PL. fll!l,
97.728 Mil.., $2,500 Firm

Call Maontnt Routh 882·5840

Farmer•• BclniC.
l"ffhM Jl'uneral

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc.

Home and all the

Rutland, Ohio

Prot~«'•• food.
/IOUHirf, carcfa and
lupport JIOU luwe
jjiHn 118. AfaJI God

Truck seats, car.seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. ·
Man· Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

BleqYoualljor
JIOUr lclndn8t• II
our Pr'GI/ft'•
.lrnat VonlniiiCIQm

(740) 742-8888

• P'4JIIflll

..

1·888·521 -G91t

,,

• n
,•

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...

New cOnstruction &amp;
Remodtlirig • Kitchen
Cabinets· Vinyl Siding·

QutJUly concrele natwork
and all metal hutlclmgs
25 yean expertence
Free E11tima1es
Oenn1s I;tryant, Owner
3914fST Rl 68-1&gt;
Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769 '
toll free 817-353-7822

Thefamtly qf
Fred4 Vanlnlf"!QIIll
will never JoJJJ« trw
loiNI and c:GI'tlqj qf

I

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
. 740.992·1671

Billy Goble Aucttoneer. Pomeroy,
Ohio 740.992·7502.
Ri ck Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, cQrop lete
a'ucuon ser vice
Licensed
166,0hlo &amp; West Vlr~11n1a, 304·
713-5785 Or 304· 773-5447
Wademeya f's AtJctlon Service,
&lt;lalhpolls, Oh1o 740·379-2720

90

Ygur Cgncrete
Connection

Southern (1-3) lS slated for a
make-_up game with Waterford
tom ght.

Auction
and Flea Marllet

~111 Moodlspaugh Auc11oneerlng ,
buy/se ll estates, consignment
auction- Tl'lursdays, 6pm, Middle,
P,or t Ohio &amp; WV License, 740·
~-9707 740-989-2623.

walked two and gave up one run 1 L_J.K~e~n!,2~~L.-J
o n three bits Alex made one I

Card of Thanka

,,,.,,by ,.,h

80

Roofs • Decks • Garages

Fm Estimates •
' 740.742-3411
Bryan Reeves
www.sunsethome.com
.

•

' HILL'S

SELF STORAGE

'
'

29870 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'.
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM

..

1/::11100 1 mo. ad.

NEED A DOZER?

Atisolute Top Dollar. 1\11 U s Sll·
'lef And Gold Coins, Proofsets .
!llamondS. An tique Jewelry, Gold
Rings. Pra,1 930 US Currency,
Sterling, Etc Acquisitions Jewelry
· 1M T.S Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GalllpOII&amp;, 740-446·2842

JDSSOG·
50 per hr.
Cal11or minimums
and
Free Estimates
Powda welcome
•
G. DAVIS

EMPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

110

740-992·29,45

825 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohlo 45631

A Computer?• Put It To
Workl $3SO ·S5 00 Per week .
www.ez-pc net1 ,888·321·7083

DTC /Ltrbo,.tory Man•a•r: Re·
sponslble For Dally Management
And Operations Of Diagnostic
Test ing Center And Laboratory
An cillary Services lnc:tudt MRI
CT, Nuclear Medlclne, us, Mammography. X-Ray And Flv of·
oscopy, Phlebotomy And Lab
These Managemen t Position s
Require Clmical Or Technical LIcens ure In A Heaithcare Fie ld
With Prior Management E11perl•
enee Preferred. Compelitlve Salary And Exceptional Fringe Ben·
e111 Pat:kag&lt;l
OnlY Oualll~ed Applicants Need
Apply To Holzer Clinic; Human
Relations Department, 90 Jack·
son Pike; Gallipolis. Ohio 45631,
1582, Fax To ( 40·448·5532, Or
Call 740·448·5 189 Equal Oppor·
tunlty Employer
.. GOY 'T POSTAL JOB$:: 1Up
To $18 35 Hour, Hiring For 2000,
Free 'Call For Application IExaml
n,ation Information Federal Hire •
Full Benefits. 1·800·598·4504 E1·
tension 1521 {8 A.M. · 6 PM
CST.)
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts,
Toys, Jewelry Wood , Sewln!J,
Typing Great Pay! CALl 1·800·
795·0380 Ext 0201 (24 HNi)
AtTENTION WORK FROM
HOME Earn $500 · $1 ,500 PT I
Mo., $2 ,000 · $4.500 + PT /Mo.
www.atayhometllz .com , 1·800940.7424

l

AT'TN: POMEROY · Pos1a1 POll·
lions, clerks! carriers/ sorters. No
experlente, required Benefits For
exam, sa'llry &amp; tasting Information
call 1-(830)·838·9243 ex1 7151
Bem-flllm 7 dsys
Attn. Work From Home Earn Up'
To $2 000 /Pan·Time $10,000
Full· Time Full Training Provided,
Call For A Free Booklet 1-8 89849-2258.
AVON I All Arta&amp;l To Buy or Sell. '
Sh&lt;ley Spears, 304-675-1429
I
Bates Brothers Amusement Co 11
Interested to travel, please call
740·266·29M. Must be at least
18 years cld
BQ okkaepar Wanted Part·Time
for Fctrm Office near Point Pleas·
ant. Flexible Hours. Mall Resume
to P.O Box 32045, Hillsboro, VA,
20134
Dents- Hygen lst. Send resume
to Earnest l Trent DOS , PO
BoK 380, Mason, !IN 25260

'

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REPORTER
we grow again ...
area's number one
. If you have a n0$e
1neo~..s, good news judgn1enq
computer

experience
and Photo Shop
experience
like to talk with
have

Jl(JHets

$800 WEEKLYI Make Money
Helping People Recei ve Govl!lrn·
ment Ael vnds Free Oe tlals 1·
BQ0-725·2411 Ext. 5877.
Helping People Re ceive Govern,
fTltnt Flaf~J_nds. Free Oelailsl (2.t
t!tr. Re corded Message) 1·800·
125-2417 EKI 5046 .

· LUMBER

ipo

OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDEDI Loso 5·200+ Lbs Sale,
Natural, Doctor Recommended.
l ~c~Jme Opportuntty Available 1·
1KJQ-705·2:l48
~~'·'A Metabolis m Breakthrough, I
· : • '.L-ost 40 lbs. In 2 Weeks Guar.
• • (iall Nowi1 ·888-B21-1958

(11 ·$33 HOURI Governme.nt
Jobs! Hiring Now! Paid Training .
Pull Benaflls Call 7 Days 1·800·
~5·2417 Ext 4090

.
~

.

Driven 2 Week Paid COL Train ,
lng. No Experience Netded. Earn
Up To $32,000 Nr Fljl1 Bena111s.
Call Today
1·877·2 30·8002
PA M
fransport
23pam com

Excellent Opportunity
II you want 10 make money are
willing to work hard and like to
help others, we may have a job
lor you. Local Re si dent Excel·
lent Income possibil ities and
home office train ing lor persons
selectl!ld Must have pleasing
personality and be willing to
meet the public No experience
necessary. For more lnformatlort,
call Clay Roney at (304 )-67!,
6019 , or mal l resume to· 2413
Jackson A.venue, Point Pleas ·
ant, WV 25550 E.O E Woodmen
of The World life Insurance Soclel)'
hcELLENT WEIGHT LOSS1
Powerful High Protein, low Carbo·
l'lydrate Secrets Revea led. Help
Wanted Immediately www tlps4 ·
werghtlossoom 1·800-339-9169

Publisher
Ohio Valley
• Co.
Publishmg

Only Ouallhad Applicants Need
App ly To Hol ze r Clinic, Human
Relatlons Oapartment; 90 Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631·
1562. Fax To 740·446,5!532. Or
Call 740·446,5189 Equal Oppor·
tunlty Elf1)1oyer

Resource [)eyelooDlflnt Manager

446·9340
FULLER BRUSH CO Is Looking
For Pooplo Who Would Like To
Start Their Own Business Work,
lng From Home NO INVEST·
MENT Needed. Limited Time
Only Call 800,882,7270 email ful·
terettOaol oom
FUN INTHESUN .
Travel In The USA In A Aock-N·
Ro ll Atmosphere If You Are
Atleast 18, Free To Travel And
Can Leave Immediately Call Eric
At 888 ·720 ·2 127 9·5 Est. April
3rd Thru 71h, EOE
Help wanted on dairy farm , milking
oosllion, 740· 949·2578 or 740·
949-2823
JANITOR WANTED: Early Shift
Approximately 23 Hours /Week
Some EKperlenee Preferred Will
Train. Must Have Aallable Trans·
portatlon To Job Site, 1-118~411·

etSI.
MEDICAL BILLING Great Earn·
mg Potential! Full Training ICom·
puler Roq'd 888·680 ·6893 Ex1

4401
Millennium Teluervlcel
IS pltased 10 8MOUr\C8 the
Grand opening of Itt new Well·
ston calling center.
We era now sttting up
intlf'VIew appointments for
outbOUnd telellrvlet po1110n1
No eltperience necessary
Etrn.ul) to $15/hr
w~h quanerty salary reviews
Managemem opportunities available. 401 KIMedlcaVOentaVPald
vacations available 3 shifts dally
Fltllbll setledullng Start your
new career with uti
Call 1-800·929--5753
for an appointment
We look forwar&lt;ll,o meeting you!

Publishing Co.

NEW &amp; EXCITING Aeataurftn t &amp;
Bar In area seeks walters or waitresses who have the 'abl hty to
provide upscale service All sh1fts
are needed Bring resume to 239
Ma in Street, Jackto n. OH bet·
ween 8 OOam &amp; 4.00pm .

825 2nd Av_lf/i"" ,

Part· Time Help Wanted To Work
On Paper Route, 740-742·2852

POSTAL JOBS To S18.35 /HR.
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPEAI·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO. CALL 1·800·813·3S85,
EXT 04210 8 AM. ·9 PM, 7
CAYS Ids Inc

Ohio Valley

Gallipolis, OhiO 45631

Nurse Aide Tr aining ProgramRocksprings RahabllltaHon Center
w1lf be offering training classes In
the monlh ol April. Appli ca tions
~:tre now being accepted at 36759
Rocksprings Road. Pomeroy. OH
415769 Class size Is limited
Three reference papers are re~ulred with application App ly In
person between 1cam and 3pm
M-F Students that successfully
complete the TCE class will be
eligible lor employment Absolute·
ly NO PHONE CALLS EOE

Med1cai Transcr lpttontst - Ae ·
qu lrements:
Comprehens ive
Knowledge Of Medical Terminolo·
gy, Microsoft Word, And Ability
To Type 135 ·140 Unes Per Hour

Need T LadleS To Sill Avon, 740·
446·3358
•

A~entlon Publisher

Now Hiring HHA, CNA, LPN's, lm·
mediate Openings, Fe!Kib le
Hours, Compalllllve Compan&amp;a·
tlon , Cell 740-446-3808 , Health
Management Nurs ing Sei'Yices I
Ultimate Health care, EOE.

Postal Jobs $48,323 00 Vr Now
Hir ing ·NO Experience ·Pa id
Train ing ·Great Benefits, Call 7
Cays 81)().,j29·3860 EKI J·385

us ave
knowledge o1
acce~untlng, Office
. Procedures, and
Computer Literate.
Apply In Person·
FRENCH CITY
HOMES, INC.
269 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Nlgnt · shirt, carin !J for efderly,
hours 7pm ·to 9am. catl 740·992·
5023.

Wock From Home
On 'rllu• Compu1or
Internet Marketing Opportunity

=~~~om
Work from home $~$1500 PT,
$2aao.s8aoa
1-800· 727·

n.

A25 2nd Ave. -'" ll~~~or~wo~rk~lro~m~a~nyw~he~re!:.co~m:_
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
X· Ray Technic ian needod,.lor

FULL·TIME POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
Competitive Salary And
EKceptional Fringe
Benefit Package

GOV'T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hour, Full Banaltts No Ex·
ptrlence Required Free Appll ca·
lion And Information 1· 888-7269083 Extension 1701 (7 AM. ·7
PM CST)

SIGO WEEKLYII Mako Monay

Stlate.:Roiite 248 Che1ter, OH

'•

Clinical Manag•r: Resp onsible
For Da lly Minagement And OP·
erallons Of UCC, Orthopedics,
Ophlhalmology, And PM&amp;R .

WEEKLY I Mailing 400
B'ro chu resl SI!Jisfactlon Guar,
ahtaedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro ·
vlded l Rush Stli ·Addrenld
9tamJJad Envelope! GICO, OEPT
5', Box 1438 , ANTIOCH, TN
3701 1-1438. sum lmmedla18~

"~-

•Estes Rockets and Accessories•Trains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
.•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas
•Lifeline

PhyS~Ian

Mui11·Speclahl)'
Group Located In
J•cklon Is Seeking:

· ~t;ooo

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN·
MENT fROM HOME PART·
nME NO EXPERIENCE AE ·
OUIAED 1-1!()().757-0753

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 IHR
INC BENEFITS. OAME WAR·
DENS,
SECURITY,
MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED . FOR APP, AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1-800·813·
3!8!, EXT t4211 8 A.M ·9 P.M
1 DA'rS 101, Inc

109

Help Wanted

•pwn

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
'
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per g•.,$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Stllrburat •
ProgiQtlve top line.
Lie. ' QOo5Ci

Wanted to Buy

....,,..., __ .,_Obta in LITo Trav·
11 To Surrounding
. To
ln~ulr• , Pleaae Submit Retume
To PO Boo 188, Rio G - . OH
48874 By Apr114EOE .

EARN $2! ,000 TO $!0,000 N R
Medical lnsura.nce BUUng Ass ls·
tance Needed Immed iately! Use
Your Home Computer For Greal
Potential Annual Income Call
Nowl Call 1·800·291·CS83 DePt 0

Publishing Co.

100+

70

URGENTLY NEEDED· plo1m1
dOrlorS,
S35 10 145 1or 2"or 3
I Call Sera·TIC, 740·

www,

60: Lost and Found

1..aoo-332·2411

UP T0'120.000 ·$45 ,000 II Por
YfJar Earning Potential. Dr's Need
People To Process &lt;Claim&amp;. You
Can Work From Home We Train.
MUST Own Cof'll)UIIr IMO&lt;IIm. 1·
888·332·501! E~ . t71XUlaiy •

-sALES &amp;

30 Announcements
' GOT A CAMPGROUND Mom•
berahip Or Tlmesl'lare?· We'll
Taka Ill Amer ica a Moat Suecenlul Campg round And Timeshare Rflaale Clearinghouse Call
sort Sales lr'lltrnatlonal 1·8003·5967, 24 Hours www rea Ortaates.com

11o Htlp Wanted

.110

Driver With COl's , Needed For
loca l Garbage Company, Part·
Time Pou lblt Full-Tim!J.. Gallla,
Jackson County Area, .7•0·38896il8

MARKETING

SAVE UP To 80o/. On Moat Dental Services No Age Limit, No
Additional Cost For Mfldlclne &amp;
VIsion 1·800.844·9539 Ext 0273

llw.IW.CSimbrldgecredlt.org

110 Help Wanted

Why walt? Start meeting Ohio
singles tonight Call toll tree 1800,766-2623,eltenslon 6176

r·

'A FREE DIRECT/TV
SATELLITE SYSTEM!
• Frw Vacation fot 21
• Free Mototoll Paglrl
• $600.00 in fl'llmerchandlll!

Help W•nted

Personals

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Ha11e Fun Meetlng"EIIglble Sin·
g1es lrrYour Area. Call For More
Information. 1·800·ROMANCE
EK1.~735
'

'

110

The Sahtallon Army Seeks Quall11ed CMstlan Candidates For The
PositiOn Of Resou rce Oevetop·
mant Manager For The South,
easl Portion or "Ohio Minimum
ReqUirements 5 Years Professional Fund Raising Ellperlenoa,
Highly Oavei&lt;Hutd Verbai OAnd
Written Communication Skills ,
Highly Oevelopad Interpersonal
SkillS Must Be Willing To 00 Um·
ltad Trilvelmg Send Resume And
lellar 01 Interest To
Human Resources Director
The $atva.1ion Army

.
PO Box 596

-

Cincinnati, OhiO 45201
EOE

Salesperson Needed Retail Fur·
nllure lmmed1a1e Opening, Part·
Time Apply Topes Furniture Co
151 second AventJe., GaltiJJOUs.
Security Gfards, must be able to
work any s~1ft lnduding most weekends . Must have cl ean police
record, god work h1s1ory, reliable
transportation, valid driver's II·
canse, home phone and must
have black steel toe safety
sh oes Pay starts at $6 00 per
hour, 32·40 hours per week Call
740·669·2874 Monday· Friday,
8am-4pm lor appointmenl
S1NGERSI GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY, ond EASY LISTEN·
IJ NGI Cali 1.:0800-469 -8184 For
Appointment To Come To NashYUle And AuditiOn Fo r Major
Re cord' Produ cers And C ~mce rt
Promotl'es Internet www wcin ac
Suballtute Nun•· Mus t pos·
seas currant licensure by the
Ohio State Board ol Nursing, valid
driver's license and exPerience in
mdtJstrlal nurs ing anellor MROO
programs preferred
Subltltute Adult Service Aldl·
Must possess a tllgh school dl·
ploma or equ ivalent and a valid
driver's license Ellperlence with
Individuals Wl1h MADO prele"ed
AppllcaUona may be obtained
from and submitted to Athens
County Soard ol MRDO, Attn:
Personnel. 8D1
Union SUet!,
Ath1ns , OH 45701 . Dtadllnl.
Ap&lt;ll14, 2000 or unli 1111ed. EOE

w.

TAKE BACK YOUR LIFEI Bo
Your Own Bossi Earn An Extra
$500 ·$1.500 PT Or $2 ,000 •
$1,500 FT Per Mon1h 100·338·
0427,
www.globllf.MIIhcarp.com
TruCk drivers - COLI non COL,
needed for local flower deliveries
In 24' bo1 lrucka , call 7~0·247 ·

2684

busy Point Pleasant Phys ici ans
Office unrasound preferred but ,
nol necessa ry; Aectptlonltl/
Medical Aallstan•, 1mmedlala
Opening . Sand resume clo P:O
Box 657 , Barboursville , Wll
2!504

111 ·133 HOURI Government
Jobst Hiring Now! Paid Tra ining
Full Benefits Call 7 Days 1-800·
725,2417 EKI 4020

. 446·9340

S2 .00D Wllkty From Home Pro·
catslng VIsa /MasterCard P11fn·
phlelll We Pay Yoli $1 Per Pam~Jtlllll Homeworl&lt;lrt Nle&lt;IICI lmme&lt;tlalllyl All Materials Supplied!
Payctlecks Mailed Friday&amp;!" Call
1-800.!72-6495
$3.000 WEEKLVI Milling 400
8rochurl8 AT HOME ! Guar·
anttld . FREE Sup~JIIII. Start lmITlldltttl~. 1,800-..a9·9477 Exl 88
(24 HIS)
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommtnda tt\at ·you do buai·
ntu with ptqptt you know, and
NOT to aend mQnay through thl
m1ll until you t'lava lnvtatlgated
lho o11tnng
CREATING MILLIONAIRESIII
Global Internet Exploalon First
VIrtual Network Company In Hla·
tory! W• Are Breaking Networking
FlecordJ Ov1r 100 Count rl11
Worldwldo TOLL FREE Pre·
Recorded Meaaage, 1·877·677·
4048,
DATA ENTRY ON YOUR PC • Le·
gal Judgment NOIICII PT /FT
www.aviathome.com Or SAse ~To
AVI , PMB t06, 7231 Boulder
Ave , Highland, CA 9234H232
DOT COM FEVER • $MIL·
LIONS$ Awesome Internet E,
Commerce Opportun ity Ground
Floo1 Wllh Rapidly Grow l~g Com·
pany Turn -Key System Witt\
Matching Bonuaea. HUGE IN·
COME POTENTIAL 800·242·
0383 EKI 3022
EARN $90 ,000 YEARLY Repair·
lng, NOT Replacing , long Cracks
In Windshields . Free Video 1·
800·828-8523 US /Canada
www.glasamechanlx com

FR1TO LAV /PEPSI IHE.RSHEY
"GOY'T POSTAL JOBS"' Up SNACK AND SODA VENDING
To $18.2.t Hour, Hiring For 2000, ROUTE $$ ALL CASH BUSI·
Free Call For App lication !Exam!· NESS$$ BUILD A BUSINESS
nation Information Federal Hire • THAT IS ALL YOURS. SMALL
Full Benelils 1·800·598·4504 Ex· INVESTMENT
/EXCELLENT
tan11lon 1522 (8 AM -8 PM
PROFITS 1·800·731·7233 EXT
CST)
.1403

140

Business
Training

Qalttpollo ca- Coi111J0
(Car,.rs Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-448·4387,
1·800·214-Q452,
Reg t90.05-1274B

1'50

Schpola
lnalructlon

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE OE·
GfiEE QUICKLY, Bachelors ,
Masters, Doctorate, By Carre·
spondence Based Upon Prior Education And Short Study Course
For FFIEE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1·800.98+8a16,

180 Wanted To Do
Bennetts lawn Care Service
Cornmercra!SAHlclonllar.
We 00 mowing, weed cutting,
nne clearing &amp; brush removal, .
landscape &amp;custom built fences Call lor free estimate
(7 40)388·04821(740)7(19.()538 .
Dependable Man will mow and
tri m your lawn Free estlmatea
(304)875-2 105
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your togs to the mill just call
304-875·1957.
Excellent care tor peraon In m~
home non ,smoker and Mobile,
$800. per monlh (304)882-31180
lnlldorfExtertor I'IIOUng. mcpblll
hQmt rpolt. bfma. pytbylldlng•

end tin rpoft ,

E~~:perlenced· Free

Estimates, FtefQJencas 304 .. 68·
1802.
lawnmowlng , Reasonable Rates,
Senior CIIJzen Discounts, Free
0uo1e Call Ooke's 740.388o8789.
Need An ElectriCian Or Carpenl·
er? Beat High Prices, All Work
GauranleUI Free Esllmalttl
740.448-2947
•
Odd Jobs and Lawn Mowing .
Cleen ·up and paint (~04)875·
1823
Porte r's Construct1on Roofing ,
Palnllng, Decks. All Complete R...
modeling (References Available)
Ftiil~ lnavrad, Call Secretary After
8 P.M 74Q.441.Q653,
Roofing , plumbing, exterior paintIng, odd )obs. Call740·992·050t,
ask lof Tarry.
Wanted To Do: Mounts Tree
Servtca, Bu ckel Truclc Service .
Top Trim Removal, Stump Grind·
lng , Fully Insured Free Esll·
mates Bidwell, Ohio 1·800·838·
958S. Or 740.388-9648.
Will dig water llhes, clean ditch·
es, d!g graves. Have own equip,
men11 (304)675-3824
~Will haul trash away, $40 a pick·
up losd (304)875-8188.

Will Mow Lawna In th• Point
Pleasant Area Call Matl Oliver,
(304)89!·3884

FINANCIAL

210

Bu•Jnell
Opportunity

"The Homemaker Opportunity
Guida" Ia your ticket to flnancltl
frtldOfl"l ll For more Information,
send S!S .OO plu s 1 SASE to.
MDC , 30581 Briar Rldg• Rd .,
Lang.,;lle, OH 45741 .

SU UNL1M1TED INCOME I Havo

Immediate
Opening for
Full Time
Salesperson
Excellent
Potential· Apply In
Peraon·
FRENCH CITY
HOMES, INC.
269 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Buslne"
Opportunity

210

Vour own Internet Busln&amp;ul Independent
Mali
Owner.
www ocaansurt km 011
StOO Per Hour. Homeworker&amp;
Needad l Large Advarllsmg Firm
Pays 54 For Every Voice· Mal!
Rerrleved Make $400 -$500 Eve·
ryday In Your Sj:)are Time. Llmlled
Space 1·888-831·8464 (24 Hro)

FUNORAISING IS BOOMINGI
Up To SO'% Commission New
Fundralslng Product ~ WIIh Top
Fast Food Chains. Serious
Agents Wanted. www.scratch,
card com Oi 1·888·875-124!
MEDICAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hr.
Medical Billing Software Company
Seeka People To Process Madl,
cal Claims From Home. Training
Provided Must Own Computer 1·
800.434-5518 Ext 887
MEDICAL BILLING, Unllml1ed 1,..
come Potential. No E~~:perlence
Necessary Free Information &amp;
CD·AOM Investment $4 ,995 $8 ,995 Financing Available Is·
land Automated Med ical Sarvlc,
ea, Inc 800- 322- 1139, E1t. 050
Void 1n KY. IN, CT

Mobl11Homn
for Sale
Three bedroom, totally r~
lntldl and out, tqllef and kit, new
lurnace. new APC~~Iancet, f'IIW car,
~J&amp;t , 123,500. cal! 740-992.,.51.t

All'"'-

- l n g 1n
thla r'18'1:4PIII*' lllubt~Ct to
lhe F - Felr Housing Act

Ql11168 whlcl1 mokso nHlogal

to Odvellltt 'any preference.
11mha11on or dllc~mlnallon
baaed "" riOO, color, llllglon.
IlK flmttlalatatua or natiOnal
origin, or ony tmtr~IOn 10
mal!o any •uch preference,
llmftaUon or diSCflminatlon."
Thla newspaper will not
kr&gt;OWingly ocoopt
ltdvertiHmtntt lor rtllestate
which lo In vlo1allon ollhe
law Our readorl are horoi&gt;Y
ln!ormodlh~RIII dwelllngl
advertised In tNs ntWipaper
,_,. available on 1n equal
Opporll.l'llty bull.

1~.$3001Mo , 740-446·3292

Start YotJr Busin ess Today ..
Prime Stlopplng Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate
Sprtng Valley Plaza. Call 740.446·
0101
Tired Of wasting Money On
Work AI Home Programs Thai
Don 't Work? Need Tha Truth?
Coll978·887·7925 24 Hour&gt;

220 Money to Loan
SS Auto Loans, Personal loans,
Debt Consolidation, Mortgagll
And Aaflnanclng. Credit ProblemS
OK Consumers Financial 1·800·
241·5125 EKI 1134 Void OH, KS

SS Auto Loans. Persq-nal Loans,
Debt ConsolldaUon':"'Mortgagea
And Refinancing Credit Problems
OK Consumers Financial 1·800·
24N125 Ext. 1134 VOid OH, KS

SSS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining, Payments
On Pro11erty Sold! Mortgagu1
Annuit ies! Setllementa1 Immediate auolesll! "Nobody Beats
Our Prlctts • National Contract
Buyers ~00 · 490 - 073&gt;4 E1t 101
www natlonalcontractbuyers rom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Families Unloading Mil·
Ilona Of Dollars, To Help Minimize
Ttlelr Tues Write Immediately:
Wlnd1ells, &amp;47·A.SECOND AVE.,
1350. NEW YORK, NEW VORK
10017
CRED1T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAC CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
LAWSUITS,
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING. 90 ·180 CAYS 1·
800-422·1598.
CREDIT AEPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Eraat BaCI CrtCIIt Legal ly
Freelnlo. 1-B00'7BS-41108
FREE OEBT CONSOLIDATION
Appllcatio rt W /Strvlce Reduce
Poymenll To 85% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Call 1-800·
328·8!10 Ext. 29
NEED CASH? Tty Debt Consoli·
da11on Up To $200,000 Bad
Crtdlt, No Credit OK Credl1
Cards , Mortg1g11. Monarch Fl·
nanclal QrotJp. 1·800·491·1758

Elcl.l201

230

Profeulonal
Servlcee

TUNNEO OOWN ON
IOCIAL SECUAITY 19811
No Foe Unltto Wo Wlnl
1-&amp;ea-582-3345

310 HotTle• for Sele
3003 Brook Or. In PT. Pltuant 3,
4 br 180Q aq lt.lall 1 floor, at·
lached garag1, new roof new
heat pump, new hot tub,$8!5 ,000
eall 304·674·1 022(Gay o)or304 ·
e7 !5·e479 {evenlnge&amp; weekends)

Required Call
tlori And For Other
lions lndependenc• Mor1011oe
Sarvlcas 1·800:&amp;45-0036
$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CREC·
IT NEEOE01 GOV'T ~ORE ·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·
PAOVALI 1·800•380·4820 EXT
8509
AAAA LIOU10ATIONI1 Repos·
sessad /Mull Sellll 4 New, Af·
fo rdable Pre,Fab Home Packag·
as Easy Assembly SACRI·
FICEIIl.-&amp;45-1200.
Brick Ranch , 4 Bdrms , l,IA , F: R ,
Bath , Basement , 2 Fireplaces,
Gat Furnace. CIA. 3 Acres. 740·
441-0953.
For sale by owner· 3 bedroom, 2
bath home on 2 acr11 wfth river
fronla~. for appointment call 740.
949·2745
FOAECLOSEC HOMES. Low Or 0
Oownl Govn't And Bank Aepo s
Being Sold Nowl Financing Avail·
abte Call Now! 1·80Q-355,0D24 ,
EK1. 8040.

~~~~;~~~~=:·I
Near North Point 3BR, 2 full
bath. ctnlral air, bailment Call
(304)875·8048 or (304)675-3212,
aft8r5PM
Ntce two bedroom, one ace with
337' of Oblo River frontage Recently remodeled &amp; new shingles,
caii:J04.17:J.5031
Relocating, selling below appral·
sal Convenient, quiet area In
Racine Beat the nellt Interest
hike and realtor CCl&amp;l8. Very good
condition, threa bedr&lt;1om, one
bath, appllance&amp;, exlras, garage,
etc . Serious Inquiries, please .
Yard sate coming aoon . Leave
message at 740·949·3228 fo r

Info
REPOSSESSED. 2 On lyll Musl
Sell, 10Q% Steel Framing For 2
Pr&amp;-Fab Homes, One Is 1560 Sq
Ft Extremely Eas~ To Asaemble,
Brand Nsw. Never Erected . In
Original Packing Crates. Sacrifice
Prices, 1·800·580-9919

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1.tx70 Mobile Home Completely
Remodeled Inside And Beautiful
Bank Appraised At S1 0.000 Or
Make Offer, 74Q-44&amp;-488G
1983 14x70 Skyline. new Berber
carpet, security system, excellent
condlllon, $10,000 OBO, call 740992·5686

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

2, 3 bedroOm ho u11, ga rage,
build ing , tru lt tr111. 2 acres .
country llvlniJ, bu1 mlnvtea from
town, $39 ,500 OBO, 740·367 ·
n8s

AUT • MCI • SPRINT 1c
PHONE CARD Routt Maket
$1 ,000 ·$5.000 !Wk • ALL CABHI
Easy! Local Silea, FREE infO! 3 Bedroom on Sandhill Rd 1
This Is Nol A Job • $5,000 At·
Acre, 2 Car Garage $47 ,000
qulrsd 1·800·991-9888 Ext 11!!'
(304)875·3988
(24 Hrs)
Green ·To nahlp 3 Bedrooms
AT&amp;T PAYPHONE RTE
Wl1h Gorog Oulbulldlng, 1 112
EZ Loca11on&amp;
Acr11 M/L ow UIII!Ues, Many
E1cel ~ lncome Local Rle
Exbasl 740 8-0744
800·264-8878

37 112 Acres, 3 Bedrooma, Bl1h.
Living Room Kitchen /Dining
Area , Laund ry Room , Garage,
Ctllar, Barn. 74Qo25e-e7ee

340 Builne" and
Building a
Rental property for sale, two commercial buildings, both l..ud,
good monthly Income, calf 7.t0·
742·3304 or Cleltnd Rtalty, 7.t0·
992·22159
•

Anontlon Otveloporo
33 Acres, Approximately 10 Acre
Lake, Mobile Home Ideal For
Housing, Campground, Etlttt .
$99 50Q Ala o 5 Acre Lota
$32,000, 740.388-BS78
BEAUTIFUL POND
On 8 Acres, Rolling MaedOw With
Tr49a All Around Pond Pert1ct
Home S111 W1th Countr Water ..
Land ConHact Available. 1-BOD·
21\)-8365
BRUNER L.ANO
741H4MU2
Gtllle Co.· Rro Grandt, Mobley
Rd , Oil SR 325, Romola Homo
Sites On Dead End Roedl 8 Acr·
as With Pond $26,500 Ca1~ Or
13 Acres $30,000 Chel~lre, Jot·
sie Creek Rd., 8 Acres S12,00Q, :
15 Acres $19 ,000 Or 2• Acres .
WI! Large Barna $3-t,OOO Eureka,
Marabtl Rd., 11 Acres $20,000
Or 31 Acres With Barn $37,000, :
City Schools Friendly Ridge, 15
Acres $11 ,000 Cash Price
Scioto Co .: Nic e 40 Acres On :
Paved Road With County Water
$25,000 Cashl
Melgl Co.: Flutland, Whltll HIQ.-:
Rd , Nice 9 Acres $12,000 Or 11
Acres $14,000 . Water Danville,
SA 325, N~e 5 Acres $16,000 Or,
Brirar Aldga Rd - 7 Aerts ·
$11,500 Cash

~thlcal , Environmentally Con· ·
cerned Hunter Looking To LeaH ;
Hun11ng Rlghls Or Buy Land, 30Q •

+Acres,
304·744-1379
THE
WOODS
New SuDdiYIIIOn , •
Blacktopped County Fload, Grun :
Township, City Schools, Wood.d" 1
4 ·5 Ac1e Lo1S In The $30's, 740-'
245-9033.
,•

410 Houses for Rent
t -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo, 4% Down
For LIStings &amp; Pa~ment Details,
800-319-3323 EKI 1709

2 bedroom home in Pomeroy,
$300 per month plus deposit,.
740.992.0175.
For sale or rent · 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy, $350 month'
J!lus depos1t. will sell on contract
with good re1erencu, no pets 1
74Q.69H244
'
3 Bedroom House, Stare Route
598, 5 Minutes From Gallipolis
References /Deposit. $3501Mo ....
74().446.3292.

3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath. Poner Area.
S425/Mo.,' 1 Year lease. Refer.'
anca s' And Deposit, 7.tQ·U8.,
2801

3 Bedrooms, 8 Miles From Galli·
polls, New Carpet, Good Location,
$35P!Mo, Deposit, No Pets, 74().
388-99CS
For sale or rani· lhree bedroom '"'
Chester, newiv remodeled, up·
dates , e 14·50 1·8339 arte (
9 OOpm.
Nice 1 or 2 bedroom houses In
Midd leport &amp; Pomeroy, t~ulpped
kitchen. deposit &amp; references r•
qvlred. 74():§2.8951
Small 2 Bedroom Ideal Location.
Eastern Avenue. Large Lol S3001
Mo., call740-367·7609
STOP R'!NTINGIII OWN FOR
LESSI Low Or No Money Down ••
EZ Credit Approval. Call Now 1·
80().772·7470 Ext 8813.

1988, 14x70 Trallerfwlth lot. Ex,
cellent condition. Has fenced In
yard and 8•10 building $21 ,500

Two bedroom house in Middle·
poll, $300 monl~. $300 tiOpooll,
ct1174Q.892·5039.

11rm.t304)87!-8887.

1991 Manaion m&lt;1blle home ,
1.txeo, two btdroom, one bath ,
central air, 10111 t lectrlc, ready to
IIIOYO , 111,500, 740-9411-901 e.
1&amp;t time~uytf1 Uttle or no Credit
Ok only ot Ookwood' Homes Galli·
poliO 74().445·30113 •
•
32x80 Factory Repo. Ntver lived
In, $4~ ,950 1·8Q0.891·6777
N1w 14' Wil:la, 3 BR
$18,900 HHlfl.e91-8777

16x80 Factory New Sptclal Pur·
ChaM, $23.000. H!00.1191-Bm.

Abandoned HOII'II Nnds Owner,
Pty Small Tr1n1f1r F11 Move
In, 7-30113.
Only $233/Mo • Won1 Las11 Hurry,

7-30i3
Huge 18x80 lhrte bedroom/ two
bath, includn d•llv~ry, setup ,
skirting. attpa, blocks Onlv
$272. 17 per monttl wllh snoo
Cal 1·80Q.I37·32311.

-n

New 14 wldt mobllt homes stlrt·
lng at $203.23 with onlr, 1925
down Lol spac11 avtllab e also
Con740·385-ll621 .
OotJblew1de R1po • Easy 1'8rma
Froo Delivery S Sei·Up 740-4483093

420 Mobile HomM
for Rent
Betr11n Athena 1nd Pomtroy, 2
I 3 btdroom motllll hom11,
$26().$300, 740-992·2187,

2 Bedoooma, $2!10 Dopooit, 12501
Mo , We Pay Wlllr, Traah, SP·
ogo, No Pill, 740.388-11328
Fo• rem· 3 bedroom mobllo - ·

no polS, 74().992·5858.

Only

~ow Coublo Wldt, 3 BR, 2 Bl1h
Only 2 1111. sauoo 1·8oo: ea1·
8777.

Nice Cl11n 3 Bedroom Mobile
Homo In Counlry, 74Q.:ISHS74

440

Apartmenta
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom s p a - 1u~
nlsl'led andJunfurnlahecl, ltcurlly
dtposit required , no pet•. 740·
992·2218
1 Bedroom ~pt . at Rio Grande,
Privati Orlveway Total' eltetrtc.
$225 00 Month, (740 ~-1 9edroom Furnlshtd Apartment. •
Utllillea Paid, 94 Locust Street,
Gallipolis, Upslaht, $290/Mo , ,
S1000oposU, 7-1340.
1 Bedroom, Near Holzer, AJC ,
Economical Gas Heat, WIDHookup, Quiet location, 127al r:
Mo, + Ut!MIS, 7..,......2957.
2 Bedroom Apt for re nl In Newt
Haven area All appllanctl in·
eluded · $275 per month.
(31)0)882·3 131 , HUll .....-..

I

.
'

'

'

..

j

Call Now For FREE Mapa An({Finenclng Info !
•

1988 Royal Cova DlltJxe , tWo
bsdrooms, two baths, CA, new
carpet, many IKtras Presently on
rented lot. Must ael! Land con·
tract- 50% down, $13 ,200 ca ll
740-992·1386

Brand New 3 Bedfooml, 2 Baths

310 Hom11 for Sele

330 Farm• tor Sala

RENTA L:,

a

REAL ESTATE

Pvt Your Tu Refund To Work,
U99 Down , Only At Oakwood
Homu In Barbaunvllle , 30.t ·
73&amp;-3409

350 Lola,&amp; Acreage

Na8d A Loan? Try Dabt ConsOli:
dallon $5,000 • $200,000. Bad
Crtd1t OK. FH. 1·800·770-01»2,
Ext215.
Ofllce Space 20~~:40 Next To Hal,
1ells Carpet Outl9t, State Route

Sank A11po $499 + Move-In FrH
Delivery &amp; Se1·Up, 74Q.44W093

'

;
'
'
:

�..--------.
Plge 84 • nt. Dally Sentinel

7-

~eo

Firtl 4vonue, (Golllpollol 1

Bedroom "Partm•nt , $26DIMo.,
Plut Damage OIPQIII, 740•441 •

Apartment For Aent $371!/Mo., All
UtiiiUtl Paid, Walking Qlatance
To College, Very Nice. Available

4/1100, 7~2~100 .
Apartment oti" Spring Avenue,

...,rnoroy, $271/mo., StOO depo'"·
no pelt, warer, gas &amp; trash fur·

' " -· 74Q.U1-3083.
IE4UTIFUL 4P4RTMENJ8 4T
BUDGET PJ!ICES 4T JACK·
SON ESTATES. 52 Weatwood
D'rlvt korn $289 to $370. Walk to
shop &amp; movies . Call 740·44fS·
2!68. Equal ~ng Opponu~ty.
Sttch Str..t, Ml&lt;ldltport. two
btdroom fumtshtd •panment, dtposll and riferencts, no ptls,

740-992.018!.
Christy' s Family Living , apart·
menta . home &amp; tralltr rentals~
740·992·451o4, apartments avail·
lble, furnished &amp; unfurnished.
Freahly Painted Upstairs Apart·
ment. Crown City, $350/Mo., Sa·

curlty Dtpool1, 7~258-t249 .

i

WANT A COMPUTER?? ·BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Ftnanco W1tl1 ·o· OOWn. Paot
Cro&lt;l" P.-mo. No l!rot&gt;ltm. Coli
TOll Frot 1 ·8n·~2.
tary . .Mowing , Setting Markers,
Trimming; El(J)trienctd Prelen'td,
But WilrTraln Right Ptraon. Sari· .
OVI ln;quritl . Call 740·4-48·9228

For Into.

port. From $273-$338. Call 740·
992·5C64. Equal Housing Oppor.

Complete DISH Network ~ateltitt
system, brant~ new, S99 , 740·

892·1t82 or 304-773-530! alter

epm.

Ethen Allen Maple Hutch &amp; Drop·
Laaf Table w/chaira, $300 . 304·

87!-t449.

Mod•rn 1 Bedroom Apartment,
7~11-0390 .

New Ha'llen· one bedroom lur·
nlshed apartment, deposit and
references. no pets, 740·992·

JET.
AEAATION MOTOAS
• R&amp;palre.d, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, HI00·537·9528.

Lilt Chair, 1 Year, Quad Cane,
Walli:er, Shower Chair, 1978 Ford
LTC II , 740·446·3342 No Answer
Leave Message.

WANT A COMPUTEA? But No

il.•7~446-38a7.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

North 4th Avenue, Middleport· 2
room afflcilnc:v apartment, dapos·
It and references, no pels, 740·

992'0t6!.
New Taking Appl'lcat ions- 5
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage, Trash , $325/Mo., 740·

446-0008.

Huge Inventory. Discount PrJces,
·on VInyl Skirting, Doors, Wind ~
ows, Anchors, Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
· naces &amp; Heat ..Pumps. Bennetts
Mobll.e Home Supply, 740·446·
9416 www.cnb.con'Vbannen

NEW BAANO NAME COMPUT·

Taking Applications : 1 Bedroom
Ctose To Wai·Marl Deposit, Rei·
erences, No Pets, 7A().24S..5893.
Twin Towers now accepllng ap·
.plication&amp; lor 1 BR. HUD subllctlzed apt. tor elderly and l'lan&lt;ll·
capped. EOH. (304)67!-6679.

Two bedroom Townhouse apart·
menl In Syracuse, $325 per
month, ·Water, sewer &amp; rrash In·
eluded, $250 deposll, 7&lt;10·667·

3018.

ERS • Almost Everyone Ap·
proved Wllh $0 Down! Low
Monthly Payments! 1·800·611·

3476 Ext. 330.
Nice Used Furniture and AP·

pllances. (7401·446·4039 (740)·
446·t004 Anytime.
NO MONEY DDWNIII Compaq
HP IBM Desktops /laptoJ;Js, E·
Comerce Websltis. Start Your
Homeeuslness Today! Almost
E'lleryone Approved! Low Monthly
Payments. Free Color Printer 1·

888·419·2345

(ToiiFree)

VIllage Green Apartments· 2 , www.ejump-start.com
bedrooms, 10111 electric, apptlancOPI Micro Bond Jell System
'8s furnished, laundry room tacl!iUsed Twice $250, 080, 740·441 ·
tlts and close to school, appllca·
· rtons available at office, 740-992· . 0988.

37t1 TOO 1·666·233-6894. Equal
Houtlng Opponunlty

RESIDENTI4L HOME OWNERS

~00

aquare teet office building,
$3,0/mo., .mobile home ·spac11,
$120/m,o.. - 2 bedroom mobile
home, $300/mo., Rlverpark, 'Po·

rnoroy, 74(1.949-2093.
_Mobile Home Park lot Available.
1115/Mo., Addison Pike, Wise·

man Aoalty, 740-446·3644,

For LeaH

For Lease Approx. 15 Ac, Caula.
Pasture. For leasa 450+ Lb. To·
bacc::o Baae. 1970 Monarch Trail·
er With Appliances For Salt,

7-918! Evanlnga.

MERCHANDISE

· Cooling,

.1·600·872-5987

www.orvb.comblnneft

Ron's Gun Shop· Is havtng a sale
on all guns In atoctc, cart 740·7428412.

Sawmill $3,795. Saw Logs lnlo
Boards. Planks, Beams. Large
Capacity. Bell ·Sawmill Value Anywhere. FREE Information. 1·8QO..

578·t363 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS 252 Sonwitl Drive, Buffalo.
NY14~5 .

Claim Denied? We Specialize In
Appears And Hearings. FREE

CONSULTI.oTION . Benelll Team ..

Servlcea, Inc. Toii~Free : 1·888·
836-4052.

Household

. Good•
· Reconditioned

Waehore, Dryers, Ranges, Aolrl•
gratort. 90 Day Guarantee!

French City Maytag. 740·448·
1715.

For Sa.I•;.,.Aecondltloned' wash·
era. dryers and refrigerators.
Thompions Appliance. 3407
Jool&lt;lon A_,., (304)875-73811. ,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wethers, ctrvera, rafrtgeratora,

rangte. Skaggs Appliances, 78
VIne Strtt1, Call 740-446· 7388,
Hl8&amp;-816-0128.
Mollollan Carpet 202 Clark Chi!&gt;
tl Road. Porttr Ohio. 740·446·
7 - "Ortvo A Ull/e S..,.-Aioll"
New Ahd Used FUrniture Store
lttow Holkll'f Inn, Kanoiuga. Stop

""" Savt. 740 446 4782.

530

Stell Bull&lt;llnga, NeW, Mual Sel't.
4Qx60 x12 Was $17,500 Now

510,971;
50&gt;100x18 Woe
$3t,500 Now. $19.990: 70xli!Oxt6
Wu $!9,980 Wao. $39,990:
80x200x16 WI&amp; $94,500 Now
$!1.1190. HIOD-406-!126.
STEEL BUILDINGS: Warehollsa
Spring Cleaning !Factory Direct
25x30. 30x40. 5011140. Must Sell

Nowtt 1 80G-4G·1130 X12.
Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI

B~y

oi' stU. Riverine Antlqutt,
112-4 Eott M11n on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74!f.992·252G or 740·992·
153i. RuM Moore. owner.

TION? What Is www.mr19.blg ·
amart.com? Ask Us. 800 ~9&lt;17 ·

•

W4NT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO C4SH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o• Down! .Past
Credit Problems OKII Evan If

Tumid Down Boforoll Aaellabllah
'!bur Cro&lt;IK1.11 ~59-0359 .

550

~

$$BAD CREDIT? Gol Cuh
Loana To U.ooo. Debt ConsOli·
· dalton To $200,000. Credit Caras.
Mortgagls, Rettnanctng Aild
Auto Loans Available. Meridian
Credit Corp. 1·800·471· 5119 E11t.
1180\

(3) 4LL STE,EL BUILDINGS.
24&lt;24 Woo $7.200 Sill S3.700:
30x!2 Was $12,380 Sell $8.8SO:
52&gt;110 Woo $42 ,500 Sell
S1UOO. Torn t-801).388-!314.

whh ~ Interior. aaktng $.4S.OO,
7~m- 1110e

dl\'1 or

Bloyk, brlc~ . sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Alo Grer.~de, OH Call 740· 245·

5t21 .

.

Palladian Picture Window 8' . 4~x8'
OWwE Argon &amp; GridS COli

~
.

St,

'

560

Business Services io plote

610 Farm Equipment
For Salt : Tobacco Sllckt . 740·

Corn cno. 7~2*8011 .

Misc. JaCk Hammer, Misc. Hand
·Tools : 1986 JtiP Wagoneer
$2,000 : 48' O.ozer Orum Roller

1\ludly, Aprll4~
2000
- . . :'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

[Ill

ud Coii91J/

.

BRIDOI! -

Jl!

?I

S&lt;IPt&lt;·

1ef0 Rid l!o&lt;&gt;'olo411o SSEI

Char~ld TUII&gt;o Futl-l'iitclldiVet

U Llltr, 7$K. AMIFM SIOrto,
Compact Disc/Premium Sound.

PHILLIP

Ill PIEPIUIIOI

brakll , Regularly Sarvlcad &amp;

Mtlntalnod . (740)·44&amp;·09!7 or
1995 Sulek Lttabrt Custom 4
ooora, Loaded , aluminum
Whitis, AIC, Tilt , Cruiu, Pwr,
Locka, Pwr Wlfrdows, Pwr Seals,

$8,200 .00: (2,006 Under Book
Vatue)l 740-682-7512

.....
2

7

-a

~dna Smlktl

OH 45760

740 -992'-1818
Compl.t• Acc:owml"'

ct To.c S.f"~'
C.R. K1nJ • C.O. Goter •
25 Yeore Ex lence

•

C)

'ALDER

•

...'

You tha:w Like a GirL

Lease In, Good Prlca Paid Up.
Front , Call Jodrey J . Farm 937·
373·484o4 Can Call Collect After

9;00 P.M.

Or Ma.O Oller,

7~

•,

Peta tor Sale

AKC Registered Grtal Pyrenees

1997 Chevy Ventura LS, 40,000

Miles, 740-24!-!443.
t997 Dodge Intrepid, 3:5 V·6,
58,833 mile~ maroon With gray In-

Want To Lease Tobacco Quota
In Ohio .. soc: A Pound , 606·473·

terior, cruise, recovered theft.

1t85.

days or 740·9&lt;19·28U
and wllkends.

Wanted· RCA or Hughes Direct
TV system, will pay top dollar, .
Wollla 740·949·3315 leave mea·
.sage.
We Are Buying Tobacco Base &amp;
Least, 937·69!1-0897. (Be~ore

tl ;00 A.M. &amp; Alter 6 P.M.)

630

uklng $7400, 740·992·1506
e~enlngs

2 Charolals IJulls, approxlmatety 2
yrs. Old, $1000 ta., 1 llmousln
bull, very thick will bred animal.
papers avallaDie, $1600, 7o40·

1997 Aed F150 with toot chest.
R - call (3041713-6000.

and Yo~o~'LL never find

...__t_h_e plat'e. i r---.--

JACkS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·
'

Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

740-742-950,1
"Toll Free

For Pirta, 1998 Chev Corsica .

$700 Arm. (304)89!-3828. ,

Farms, Jaci&lt;IOn, 74!f.286-539!.

Special Spring Feeder Calf Sale,

3t9-332~

6pm.

1982 GMC 112 Ton PICk·UP 2
we. Auto, Tilt, PL, 6.2L Oleaet,

Club Lambs, 4 Wethers, 1 Ewe,
Local Cnamp ton Bloodline, Very

Dual Tanka, ClaSs 3 Hitch Runs
Great, Good Work Truck! $1,200

High Quality, 740-24!-0485.

090, 740-379-2757.

fair Pigs For Sale, Hamp And
Some Blue Butt Call 740-44h

0968, Or 740-4411-4382.

1991 Ford F·150 .XLT 2 WO, ~u·
tomet~. 70,000 Miles, very GOOd
COnc!Kionl $6,500, 740-446-3988.

Good Stock Pure Angus Bull,

1994 Chevy 2500, 4X4, manual,

7~

block, $10,800 OBO, 740· 949·
170t&amp;11Mmtt-.

Hampshire Fair Plga For Sate,

1994 Ford F·350. 4x4, 88,000
mites: new tlcta &amp; whMII &amp; mora,

25,000 mites., 'llery sharp, tun far·
lngs, $11,100, 7&lt;10-9&lt;19·2045 or

740-149·2203.

Ear corn. $250 bushel. 740·742·

1997 Ford Ranger XLT. 2 wheel

1903.

drive, step aide, excellent condl·
tlon. 4 eyl .. auto, ale, amlfm co.
50,000 mllea, c:ustom wheels, fi·
blrglaaa btd cover, $8,999, 304·

Round Balea 800 ·10001 S1!
Each, 740•387·0512, 740·441·
5502.
''
Round Bales Ot Hay, $15 Each,

74!f.446'-t0!12.
Straw: Bright Wire Tla Straw Year
'Round. Delivery &amp; Volume Dll·
count ~vallablt. Herllage Farm .

(304)87!-5724.

650 Sead &amp; Fertilizer

•Eitclrtcal&amp; Plumbing
·RDOIIng &amp; Gutltre
•Vinyl Siding I PalnHng
•Patio &amp; Porch Decke
Frtt EltfmatH

Now Open For

na-5305 alttr &amp;pm.

Spring Season

V.C: YOUNG. Ill

Ve~table

Plants,
Bedding Pleats,
HanliJng-Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Petted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rbododelidronil,

1997 Mark 111 . Dodge Aam.
(304)773-51&amp;&amp;.

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

22 yre. Local

$8,69!. 1995 Blazer 4 Door Lood·
eel !0,000 miles $8,295. t991 S·

1998 Marada 1B' 135 HP Mer·
cruiser 110, Showroom New, Ex·
tras.t Consider Trade Harley Da·
vldson Or Land 01 Equal Value.

Mull 11111111 199" Ranger Baas
boat, 150 horsepower. Johnson
'11·8 outboard; excellent condition,

First Orders wilt Guarantee Btst&amp;
Earliest Plants.
Dewhurst

Farmo.(304)89!-37401885-3789.

730 Vena &amp; 4-WDa

TRANSPORTATION

71 o Autoa lor Sale
CARS $100, S!OO &amp; UP. POUCE '
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,
Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport Ulltl·
tlu. Call Nowl 800·772·7470;

EXT. 7832.

256-6002

Types, Acca11 To Over tO,OOO
Transmissions, eve Joints, 740·

t885 Dopge Aamcnarger. 380 V·
8, 4 Speed, Runs Good, , Needs
Work On 4WO. Serious lnqurrlaa

Only. 11,200.00 OBO. Call Bot·
wean 3:30Pm And 8:00Pm. 740-

245-5677.

CJ7 Jeep Hardtop, With Steel
Doors, Aslclng 5800, 080, Evan·
lnga: 740·2&lt;15-9544, Oays: 7&lt;10·

44t-3213.

992-t506 days or 740·949·2644
evenings.

t969 F250 4x4, 7.3 diesel, 5
speed, mull ..0. $6450: call 740992·3394 or •741l-742·3020 evtn·
lngo.

790

1984 Cl'levy Caprice Ctaulc
Very Nice l'nslde &amp; Out Low

Mileo, $2,100, 7ol0 446 4680.
1985 Otda Cutlaas One Owner,

1986 Camaro, New Transfmsslon,
+ New 350 HP Engine T· Tops,
Body In GOOd Condftlon, •3,500,
Prlco ~ . 7~~45-!443.
19~7

Cnrysltr New Yorker 2.2

Turbo, PS lAC, 740·266·8273,
740-256-12ol0.
1988 C_
nrysler Flflh Avenue, PS.

PB. crulll, good _ , cor, $1200.
'740-593-7390. '
1990 Geo Storm, Wrecked, En·
glne &amp; Transmission Good. New
Ports, Tltoa, 740-258-1687.

ARE llbtrgi111 to-. tKC.IIeni
ccnciiiiOn, 740-G48-2411. .

AC' a Heaters. LOaded. E11callent

oondiUon. (304)67!-!137. ·

Large I' Truck Slldt·ln C8mper,
Has Oven Range Top, Aalrigara·
tor, &amp; Portable Water, Fair Condl·
tlon, $375, Ca(l Between 5·8

Evonlngo, 740-38S-8743.

lime PhOne: 740-U1 - 1t36.

·

1993 Ford F' 2!0 Extended Cab,
4.. , 7.3 Utre ~ . 97,000 Miles,
740·381Hl875.
1994 Ford F-150 XLI, V· 8, au•
tomatlc, · 4WO, 8' bed, air, t tectrk::
windows. btctllner, fltlttgtasa top-''
per, 86,000 mites, e11cefltnt condi·

lion, 111

.soo: 7~892·5085.

1998 .J Hp Wrar{gler 4xo4, o4 Cylln·
der. 5 Speed, White With Stack
Solt Top, 24.000 Miles. Under
Wam&gt;Oty, 7~44&amp;-44t8 .

740

Motorcyclea

staln.ed atanda. Pd. ,$150 each;
Crattsman 5 horsepower mutcherl
bagger/ chipper/ thrtddar: all
tttmJ new and never been used·
owner wan.ll quick aate, call 74()..

Over 75 Tanka ol Frashwater
Fish, locaii~&gt;Ralaed Parakee111
Supplies . Flah Taflk/Pet Shop,.
2413 Jackson Avanue,/Pt.
Pleasant. (30.. )875,2083. Sun. ,.

1D92 Ponllac e'onntYIIII SE, rnt· . Top End &amp; Tire&amp;, very Strong ,
taltlc blue, all power, ....ry lharp $1 ,100 Or Beat Offer, 740·o441·
eer, 79,000 milts, 740·742·&amp;200 1063.

992-8810 Mnlngt.

4PM, Mon·Sat 11AM-6PM.

---------

1 o· Craftsman Carpentet.Serlia
-Radial Arm Saw, New, $600: to•

Slack lab Mix ·Pups, 4 Blacks, &lt;1

1892 Oldo 98 Regency 81 K
Mllet, $4,!100, 7~2!6-6232 .

Of

7.0:992·3041 .

1992 Pontiac Grand Prix, Y·8,
Auto,
100+MIIts. $4,500.

Sf

810

1892 Chevy ~•4 Excellent Condl·
lion, $10,500, 740.387·0219, 740367-7272.
1992 Chavy Van, $5,79!: Day·

t969 Honda CA125 Dlrtl&gt;lkO Now

1989 Vamahl Banshee, FMF
graphlct kit, twist throtlle. runs
great, many extras, $1800. 740· ·

~4558 .
Golden, Road)' 4/8100, Bl~ Pupa,. "(304~)!;..7.;,6-.;,238;_.;,3._ _ _ __
er.ntman Tlltllt saw. N&lt;tt"Y New. , Worme&lt;l, $25, 740·245-5797, AI· ' 1893 Grey, DOdge Splm 4 Cylln· 1997 Honda Foreman, o4Wb, ex·
$3150: B 1/4 C...ltsm.- ~aCIIal Arm ror 5 P.M.
der,
Air, Automat~. $1,900 OBO, cell•nt condition, BOO mllea,
Saw. SI!OO: Saara Treadmill. ~ew
$3800, 740-m-5085.
German
snepher-d
Pupplts,
7«&gt;-256-1233.
Coot $800, Will Take $400: Floor
Model T.V. $35: Bluebird B'Oxea BlOOdline, Sa&lt;urlty Stock. Black &amp; - - - - - - - - - - 750 Boats &amp; .Motora
Sable. very.Nica, 175. 740-448· 1993 Maz&lt;la Mlata Convtrtlbte,
flO, 7-4801 .
8627.
23,900 original miles, accesso·
lor Sale
rita. ctr covtr. boot cover a.
37 People Nettdetl To Lose Up
Germafi'S!Iorl
Haired
Polntera.
7
wlndl)retker,
red
with
black
top,
18 Ft. Ba11 Boat trailer 50 HP
To 30 Pounds In The Ntx1 30
YfHks, ~G-446-.4043 After garaged In winler. $8000, 740· Motor 2 FiJb Flndl,. New Troll·
Oayt, Free Samphta, 7o40·4o4 1··
5 P.M.
' \...
1192l4t41.
lng Motor, 76~ 1072.
1112.
:.:.::..;,....,...._~--,....

Campara&amp;
Motor Homes

11M Holldly Rambler. 28it. wllh

1983 Chevy Malibu, 'e•ceuent ' 1990 Ford F·250, 300. 5 speld,
Condition , 305, Automatic, 4 new brakes, new ahoctca, new

Doors, IC. $2,200, 7ol0-448-&lt;l!t4.

•

387.(1229

1987 Ford lull size corweraion
van, 302 automatic, lvo.ry Coast
Conversion {Houlton, Texas),
gray \l'lk)w Interior, ~ront and rear
air, all extras, $3000 080 1 740·

fli:fiTIN&amp; I'&amp;IJT
1-\Y f\1\1~ (.0~ I

~

.

'

.

~

1\FTU:. N.J..., YOU KNOW WAA\
Tf\C:Y St-.'1'-Tf\E Tl\11111110:::.
TI\E. 1\1\1 R. ...

RONNIE DWYER ! .
WHAT'S SO GRE..o.T
,t&gt;.B()UT HI 1'1! WHY NOT
ME.? ALL I'~E EVER
ASKED FOR IS A

CHANCE !.. Mlr NO!"

BISSELL I UILDfRS
INC.
New H9mes • Vinyl
Siding • New Gbrages

• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions •
Stop In And See . ·

FREE ESTIMATES

Steve Riffle

740·992-7599

Sales Representative

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I WAS AFRAID I Ml61lT

HAVE AL~EAD'r' GOTTEN ON

IT, ROC!&amp; TO SCilOOL, STAI{EP
Ti-IERE ALl DAV. RODE BACK,
60T OFF ANO WAS STANDIN6
HERE FOR6ET11H610 60 l«llo\E .•

· Larry Schey

NowRentlnJ

High &amp; Dry
S.tlf·Storage

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Weol
Pass
Pass

251btuNCI
·28AdoNd
32Wel11n-

4 NewZ..lond

rellglouo belief

33Eored34 Dec. 25th figure
35 Macltronl, e .g.
38 Rutolan co-op
37 Aided aeon
39l.et ga
41 Rower'oneed
.... Sphere
45 Not1tt hOmtl

perrot
5 Mad. epeclall11

e ·~-·

7 Hlnd11 rellgloiHI
. INcher ,

8 -de mer
t Popeyo'o

friend OlivetO Potpourri

t1 Former
Chlneoa

monetary unit

48 Golno points

Phone (740) 593-6671'

23

2t Rodlotor
22 Tlko a

24Tum

formal
wedding

oppoaito
t9 Advanced dog.

ceremony

breath

25 Parks of clvH
rights fame 26 Construction

beam (2 wds.)
27 --up

(rep,.,ssed)

29 Great
30 Art deco

Illustrator
31 Group ol two

Opening lead: • 5

Sentinel

"A Better

SklpSiht

t2 Je~yll'o

Norlh:ftl
2•
ass
3 NT
All pass

To get a current weather
report, check the

33795 Hiland Rd.
· fomeroy, Ohio

37- Lingua
· . (airline)
3B Newborns.
40 Doesn't get a .

medal

4t
42

G~kpeak .

High cards
43 A friend on ·
" Frhmd1"
45 River In
France
48 Southweotern

Indiana
47 Eum
48 "Norma-" .
50 Prlnter'o

m...um .

52 Proopeclor•o
lind

53 Guordlan
oplrR

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are crealed ~rom quotations by·famous people, past and
present. Each fener In the cipher s18nds tor another.

~

Tod&lt;Jy's clue: Y equals v

'K

WZAGJGPGKL

P KL

GD

YNHUZDN

UN

MZHOD

J T KL

G L

KLBZLN

K

MTZ

S K L

EN M N H
N AD N.'

WNJNH
ON
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'II there were a Mount Aushmore lor the NFL: 1he
profile ol Tom Landry would have to be there ."- Paul Tagliabue
WOlD
GAMi

1MA1 DAILT
PUULII

0

Rearrange lenen of the
four scrambled words be-low ro form four slrnple words.

R U l F R y·

I I' I I I

I

SAEET

I~ I I 1• I
'
'

B 0 J A T ~ Quote from famou s aclor :
I-rs-....
"When you have instant success,
. 1.
~ you can't help won~.ering if it could
'---'--...._........_ ............,. end · · . · as - . · .

I

6....,,-..,,-..,,.--i,

I

CH!STE

I

~.,.
., ,,..........,.....,,.--.r,-...,,e,.,..-1. 0

Complele lne chuckle quoled

.
•
•
.
• . .
.
by fdflng in the missing words
L-....,1.-..L-L......I.........J........J. you develop from step No. 3 below.

@

-·••

PRINT NUMBERED

lEITERS IN SQUARES

,,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Dan en · Limbo- Nylon • System· LOSE MONEY
" If you warit to know _what someone is really like," a
man told his friend, "walch them when they LOSE •
MONEY"

APRIL 41.

·1TUESDAY

740-992·5212
1f2tll00 1 mo. pd;

r

clean~re repalre~

740-742·0419:'I

BASEMENT
Uncondillohal lifetime guarantee.
Local references ~urniShed . Es·

tabllallld 1975. Cal 24 Hrs. (7ol0)
448·0870, t·SOD-267-0576, Aog·
llf1l WBII!rprocillng. .. ·
Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
pertence All Work Guaranteed .
French Clly Maytag, 740·448·

7795.
C&amp;C Generaf ' Home Main·
tenence· Patntlng, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors. windows, baths,
moDIIe hOme repair and more. For
traa estimate call Chet. 740·892·

.

Jlms Orywett &amp; Construction.
New Conttrucuon &amp;. Aemddell
Drywall, Sieling. Roofa, Addl·

tlono, Painting, elc. (304)e74·
4623 or (304)674-0155.
Livingston'• Ba'~tment Wa1er
Proofing, •all basement repairs
dona·, rrtt tsllmatea, lifetime
liJ.Uaranlte. 12'yrt on job, lxperi·

........

..i

DIPDYIAI

j .e~

AD MakM Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parl!l

J

640 . Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,

·new service or repilf'l, Metier U·
canaed IJtclrlclan. Rid•nour

wli0oo30e, 304·675·
.

1

II'

Factory Au~rized
c--IH Pllltlt
Dea1en.

.Jeff

,•..,....

101111 St. Rt. 7 SoUth
Coo/vi/It, OH .f/S713

Ins.

992~5479 ""

look~ like it bra good one for lhe

t
l l

yearahcod, sodOn'tchanged~rec·
tion needlessly along~ way. The
result~ won't be what !hey could

:

have been otherwi5e.

: ..

''

..
......

'·

e~~; JONES'

We Service AU Make•

TREE SERVICE
·TOP
• ~erno" 8.'
.•

.20Yrs.

'

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

:~

Th.: linle kid cou ld come out of
you today wanting more toys
th:.ul you can afford. It might be
Wi!ie 10 steer clear of StOres that

•••

fte Appllace .

Wedne:;day, April .t 2000
The course you're presently on

:

~

once. (304)895-3817.

.

t'I/E. DE:CIOCDTO .)TOP

' I&gt;

&amp;vacuum

Horne
lmprovarnenta

Eltctrlcat,
17M.·

Gl.~(.)Y~,

I

• Roofing

·-

2tSieeper

Sewing machine

HVICES

WATEIIPROORNQ

6323.

.

... . •· .

; ,..THE' BORN LOSER ....

..

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAL

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorlea

10 Durango A/C 98,000 miles
Chevy Molar, neade over·
$2,495. 1893 Grand Am, t993 , 3SO
hauled. $27!. (304)675-4514, at- ·
CavaUer, 1992 Cavalier, 1991 Lu·
tar 6PM, or laave measage.
mlna Euro. Cook Motors (740)·
446.0103
Budget Priced Transmissions All

Tobacoo Plants
Now taking orcters for this Spring.

''

Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
{740) 992·3470

canopy, $6000, 740-742-2420-

• t 8 6
• A 52

_Brit;lge isn 't a game for cowards. And please don't reply with
these words· of Lewis Carroll:
'Tm very brave generally, only
today I happen to have a
headache."
Especially in competitive auctions, you should be aggressive
when you know of .. or might
have -· a fit with panner. Yet,
another word from that Carrollpiece is releva!lt to this deal. How
would you plan the play in three
no-trump? West leads a spade to
your king.
One no-trump is the secondbesl opening bid in bridge
because it defines your hand so
accurately and doesn't give panner a headache. (Yes, five clubs is
easy here. but you should opt for
three no-trump whenever that is
playable.)
You have eighllop tricks: two
spades, two hearts and four diamonds. The huril is on for number
nine. This is guaranteed in clubs
exceptlhal you don't have time-to
play on that suit. The opponents
will es1ablish and run 1heir spades
before you can gel (hal ninth trick
cashed .
Instead, you should - no(ice
those useful heart spo(s. A( trick
two. lead the heart nine (to
encourage a covet) and, assuming
West plays low, do likewise from
the dummy. (You could finesse
the jack instead, but this way you
will get an exira trick when West
has both the 10 and queen of
heans.)
If East has to 'win wilh the
queen, you are home. Yet if East
wins with the I 0 and returns a
spade, next play a hean !o dummy's jack. Approximately threequaners of the time, you will get
three hean tricks and be borne,
The best opening bid is seven
no-trump.

. Hauling • Umeslone •
Gravel• Sand-• Topsod •

1992 24' pontoon boat, 48 horse·
power, Evlnrude motor, aluminum -

act*•

t TV
L.orotbl2 Anclorlt
Perll1n'1
Mlghbor
3 CHyln Utah

Low-assets

. EXCAVATI"G

750 Boata &amp; MQtora.
lor Sale

760

I FOUND IT, TATER It

HfiOLI"G and

Lilac Trees; Assort~.
Shrubs
·
Open Dally 9-5
Sun 12-S

DOWN

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Fa.x 304-675-2457i

C.

.,WICK'S

call 740-385-2434.

1998 S·10 Auto AJC 18,000 Miles

D.UCK
MUNTIN'
ll

1:..~

•Driveways •Tennis Courts '•
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
'
•Roods • Streets
'
WV Contractors Lie. #003506
'..

992·6215

$t0,500, 7~24!-9391 .

White. 19,000 Actual Mllea. Must
S.te to Appreciate. Garage Kept.

HOWDY, SNUFFY·· .
WHAR'S LOWEEZY?

'

..

Eul
•Jt82
• 10 5 2

.South
•AK
• p4
t A Q J 10
• Q 10 7 6 •

2.

'

Cell PhDne 674-3311

K3

South
!NT

MYERS
PAVINBl
·
Henderson, WV
:·
;&amp;78-2487 or 441-1428i
.
.

•New 0111g11

$15,000 llrm, 740-992·5532.

1897 block Clltvy S·10 Sltpoldt
EJttended Cab, 3 door. loaded,

..••. BARNEY

Y:

(740)_985;3948
3121 ...

•Room lddhlona &amp;Rtmodellng

Syrecuae

Saturday, April 6, 2000 At 1:oo

E

1-877-2'02-3262

on

57 Drleot

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

E FREE ES11MATES........FULLY INSURED I'll
T
BralnMorrison/Raclne,Ohio
R

-

992-5776

X2t56.

·-

~ . RESIDENTIAI.J/1)////COMMERC{A~ ~

.

YOUNG'S
CARPEIIIEI SERVICE

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

Mos. 0 19.9% For Listings 1--800.

720 Trucka for S.la
P.M. All Consglnments Welcome,
Hauling Available. Cattle Accept·
1979 Ford F150, 302 Engine.
ad At o4 P.M. Friday, Athens Live·
stock Sale, 7o40· 592· 2322, Or · Auto. , New Paint, 2WD, Short
Wheel Base. Has new Eng . Ap·
740-698-3531 .
pro1. 1,000 mile American Rae·
ButchariniJ hags tor sale, 2501· lng Rima. (3(14)882·2C42.
300t\ call 740·949 · 2017 after

. parts

2I2IIIUO 1 mo. pet.

HDNDA'a StOO, $500 &amp; UP. PO•
LICE IMPOUND. Hondl'l Toyo·

CARS FROM U8/IIO. lm·
pounds IRepoa. Fee. $0 Down /24

Hay &amp; Grain

•

Frtt Delivery

2000 Foro Escort. $t o.ooo OBO.
(3041675-!479.

"'~--

R&amp;l Ouoll'v
P/B CONTRACTORS. INC~
hplcaoement ~ c *CONCRETE *BACKHOE
SERVICES M,;
Avht wv ,.,., , 0
.
All replacement N *MASONRY *BOBCAT SERVICES ~j

FrH Elllmetea

EXT. 6336.

640

I

Q 10 8 5 3
Q 7 s3
74
I

992-2635 882-3666

factory cttrol114 whetlt. silver,
minor right tron1 damage, $13,500,

Puppies Fo&lt; Sale, 74!f.245-9498.

-

.092-2772
For All Your. Home
lm rovemenl Needa

er.

2 Three Year Old Fillies, Great
Broke, Call 740·387· 05t2, 740·
""'1·5502.

Cow &amp; Heller Ca~. Basi Offer,
441·1182.

Middleport , New Haven'

V·8, 17,000 miles , auto, CID ploy·

1998 Ponltlc Flreblrd Trans Am.

ta's, CheVys, Jeepe, And Spon
UIIHtles. Call Now! 80()..772·7470;

ANGUS 4ND CHIANGUS Bulls,

RADIO SHACK DEALER

• Catting • Gutters
• Sldlllfl • Drywall
• Pelnllllfl • Plumbing

742-t903.

Priced ReaaonabiV. Slate Aun

ELECftGIICS

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boa! Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
BloWn Insulation

New Roota • Repalra

740-1192•1508.

L.lvestock

Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout. Garage room

days or 741).94g..2844 fW!!nlngs.

• J 98

-AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp;
BLACKBEAR PAGING

Replacement Windows,

sa tmpouata•

zo Bullfl$hl

• AKH
I K ·s S 2

An•...., to Prevloua Puzzle

55 Wlpeoout

time bolng)
181lmbort'"

• 7.

~

54y;ofteed

tobacco

11 United
17 Pro -' (for the

,

Jll IIIUUTIGI I
COISTIUaiGI
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

t Conoumu

15 Cor\col.,.

Nutrena Western Pride
.
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 llt.ltCig
S rin Seeds 8 Fertilizer

17401 992·1111

51 Ctystalllne

ACROSS

7 Sllkor&gt;

$6.75/50 lit. ltag

Utilitie•

NEA Crol8word Puzzle '

t3 Dldn1 1KII1
t4 Ampueh

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food ·

HoUte &amp; Trailer Shea
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sytlemo &amp;

317 N. 2fldAve.

•

··shade R1ver
Age Service ..

Bulldo04r &amp; Baclrlw•
Service•

1f/flrr cttlu

Middleport,

'

lOWAID
.EXCAVAniG CO.
u

CellUlar Phone W/Booater Kit, Air
,Conditioning , Tilt. Crulu , Dual

Alrbago, ABS 4 Whtol Anli·Lock

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5
'

OOP

740-~9·

(7o10~44&amp;0652

John Otere B With Cultivator••JO
3·t8 Plow: t800 Buahtl Wire

·'

2844-*"".,., -..~.,

10 Ouaner type bubble gurrt cand)' mac11lntl, teal
with oak

urvn.

Tuesday, _,\pnl 4, 2000

Sunroof, 6 way Power Leather
$tats. Power Locks &amp; Windows,

IIVFSTOCK

V-8, $t ,400, 740-4'114794.

Building
Supplln

MerchandiH

.

FARr,1 SU PPUE S

$21.95 Per 100: t• 200 PSI .
$37 .00 Ptr 100: All Braaa COm· 1959 Triumph 'TR3 Roa&lt;lst.,,
ready lodrlvt, cal 74&lt;HN9--2088.
preselon Flttlngo In Stock
RON EYANI ENTERPRISES
1967 ·Plymouth Sports Fury
Jackaorl, Olllo, HIOIHI37·11112S.
84,000 mllt~s . 318 Enblnt.; New:
VIAGAAIIII Order By Phonel 1· Interior, ttras, txhau•t.'Ttlnred
800·211·1737 ·oopt. F QUES · windows, $3,500.00 OBO (7401·

42.19.

AntiqUe.

540 Mlacellaneou•

(304)675-1011 Of (304)8&amp;2-2180.

HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Furnaces. Oil FUrnaces, 12 Seer Two year old Leghorn ehlctcens.
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning 50e each; aiao Oekalb brown
Systems Free e Year Parts &amp; La· · chickens, 7~e tach; ·Gary
bor Warranty BenneHs Heating &amp; M~llaal, 740-98!-3956 ..

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY

Appliances:

Puppl.t l for Salt: AKC lour.

740-37&amp;-280!.

Tappa~

460 Spaca tor Rent

51 0

18113 So1um SU!, • door, • o;ytin·
dot, . _ . . .. 18,428 ""'"· ltll

fOUCCD QUOT4: Wan1 To

Cash? No Credit OKI Slow Credit
. OKI 0 Down; laptops ._vallabla.
Reestablish Your Cradilt Call
Nice Ont Bdrm Unfurnished
Nowlll1 ·8n-755-0005.
Apattmenr. Range &amp; Refrlg. pro·
vided . Water $c Garbage Paid .
METAL BUILDINGS. Does Your
·Deposit Required. Call 740·446Deadlarship Nol Work ~or You? .
4345 After 6:00Pm
We Have Competitive Prices &amp;
Nice One Bedroom FUrnished Or NO Oediershlp Faesl Call For A
Unfurnished, Utilities Paid,' Down- Free 9rochure . El Dorado Build·
lng Systems 1·800.27S.4300.
stairs, $300/Mo., No Pets, Depos·

490

Mystic Pom•· any brttd dog
grooming IYillablt. Alao 1how
QUality Inc! pot lot'
..... 7 - 1 6.

~uel Tank
1995 Monte Clrto. All Opllon.s.
Wlth Pump 1750: 14 Ft. Semi V
Grubb's Plano· lUning &amp; ripalrs . Boat $350: 300 Pd. Sana Blaster Aed. 78.000 millis. Excellent
Pro blems? Need Tuned? Call the $t ,300: Cat 215 SICk HOI, condlllon, Inside and out. Brick·
· yard Spoiler. 18,000 . Calltlefore
pjano Dr. 740-446-452!
$21 ,000; R40 Ollch ' Witch 600 3PM (304)~73-6805 ; aller 8PM
Hot Springs l'lot IUb , 4 person, Hrs. $8,500; 45 Ft. Parts Trailer (3041885·3728.
good ,SOndltlon, will ha'lle neV( top, $1,8QO; 85Ft. Extended Tralltr
has new heater and new tl'lefrno-- $-l,OOO; Plate Tramp Firs 418' Hot t 995 Pontiac Grand Am, green
stat, soma chemicals Included. $4,00_9; 2,000 Gallon Futl Tank with blacj.; lnterlor, 159,432 miles,
cedar wtth btue IQp, call 740·992· · Wl1h ~mp $1,300: 2,000 Water left front IIJ&amp;ptnsion damage.
Tank 600,000 Concrete Vat asking 12.650, 740·992· t508
5053 after Spm.
S300; Mtsc . Steel Beams ; 011 dayo, 74!f.949-2&amp;44 tvO.
Racks $1,200; CaJ 215 Buckets
JANITADL HEATING ANO
Misc. Concrete Blankets , 140· 1998 Chevrolet Camaro, V·8.
COOLING EQUIPMENT
1!43-291e, 740·1!43-~ .
blue with gray Interior, 54,000
INSTALLED
mites, lront damage, runs and
• II You Don't Calf Us Wt Borh
drives, $6300, 740· 992-t!OS
Lose. • Free E&amp;rlmaresl 740·446· ~20 . Wanted to Buy

0165.

·I

'

····-..

$3.400; 550 Gallon

tunltles.

I

710 Autoa for S.le

245-5t2t .

6308, 1·800-29Hi098.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 b8droom
apartments at Village Manor anc:l
Riverside Apar.tments In Middle·

I

VIAGRAIIII OllDER BY PHDNEIII
St1y AI' Hornol ll t·I00·2t 1-1737
Oop!. F

560 Peta tor S.le

Cortllktl NH&lt;IId Frr For Ceme·

0052, 70-888 1531 .

-- .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

540 MIKellaMOUa
Met chllndiM
'I ltdroom With Lorge Living
Room, Furnllhed Kitchen, Water
I Trllh Included. Upatalrs 458
Secot'MI Av.nut, OtlllpOIII, $2101
Mo.. + Socurily Dopooll,
2!111 .

- ---.

ofTcr merchandise that lntri&amp;ue

.•• !

..••
:;"

A if •.

,

•••

you. Aries, trtat you'rselr to a

biitltday girt. Send for your A"ro- I
Graph predietlons ror the year (
ahead by 'lnailing S2,and SASE 10,

Astro--Oraph, e/o thts new1paper.
1758, Murray Hill SIS·
lion, New Yor1t. NY 10156. Be
IU!e to ltalt'your Zodhw: olp:
TAURUS 1Aprii20.May 20) It
IIU1'111ke you at all not to
the

P.O. Box

•••Y

.

••
•

• ••

cour~e of your objective!, yet
today these ~tellar qunlitie~ mi&amp;hl
not' be funclioning_ very well, ilnd
~u could quit the ioll fur too eur·

GEMINI (Mny 21 -June 20)

What sounds good u1 first hearing
might not stand up to the test
today. Subdue inclination!l to act
upon pie-in·the·sky. wishful
thinking:.

Don 'I rush in today where the bill
collectors are likely to tread. lr
you fall prey 10 a large ticket item
chat you can't afford, it could lie
you up for a long period of time.

CANCfR ll,une 21 -July 221

SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dec.

Trying to i!tt aWay wllh' tuking
~hoilcms 'in hope.~ of getting
thinss · done in u hurry won't

2 I ) 01hcrs mny be more c6n·
cemcd ubout h()w you perform in

work uxluy. What you can look
forward lu r~lfiJiiiiB. is that old
bron1idt&gt;, "Hwoh~ makes wu,;tc."
LEO lluly 23-Aug. 22) tr you
anew yqu~elr to be swt~yed or
pressured on something you ' re
unsure of. the pur'veyor of this

they are aboutttlemse iYes:. Don't

advice could cau~ you 10 make
an unwise' decision. Be your own

person .
VIRGO !Au1. 23-Sepr. 22)
Should you encounter someone at
. work today who doe•n :tsrasp Ihe·
idea~ orconcepls you're trying to
Convey, II muy ~ th~ way you're
p~e,.ntlns them, not !he pol"on•
that'• at rnult.
.
. LIBRA (Sept : 23-0ct 23)
Make !lUre the pedple with wham
you set Involved ,..;ally today
ante up their fair ""''" or tile cost
of lhe ~~ivity. Yt;JU c:ouklpt JC~Ic:
with tho Sit(;
ScORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 221

u

~pecific

situation today than

worry abou1 !hem: WOrT)' uboul
you~t:lf.

CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan.

•

·.

I«)) ,There's a gond cHimce todal(
that something good you· w ha4
in your ~rnsp might slip away•
bccau .~c.: you're lreuting this
Oflponunity di!Tercllll)'. You could
lose out financi 11lly.
•

AQUARIUS tlan . 211-Fcb 1'9J

Don'l gel tan:less when \' losin~
dcaltoduy you'\'c worked hard ull
to achieve. If you do. you cuuld
Jet ~onk:one otT the hook' who

need:o to ~trihute .
P!SCE
~ · lO-Mu'l'h 201

NormuHy. w - n you're usked to
k~ep u stcret. you're pretty j.ood
~bout it. Tnday. however. you
couldJalk 10 f~ly •bout ihinJ&gt;
-!hal you miahl'I01 "'""'thin&amp; oul
of the bof.

I

'
',.. '
'· ... ~...... ~ ..~......:.~........,... .._

..

.........q

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

�..--------.
Plge 84 • nt. Dally Sentinel

7-

~eo

Firtl 4vonue, (Golllpollol 1

Bedroom "Partm•nt , $26DIMo.,
Plut Damage OIPQIII, 740•441 •

Apartment For Aent $371!/Mo., All
UtiiiUtl Paid, Walking Qlatance
To College, Very Nice. Available

4/1100, 7~2~100 .
Apartment oti" Spring Avenue,

...,rnoroy, $271/mo., StOO depo'"·
no pelt, warer, gas &amp; trash fur·

' " -· 74Q.U1-3083.
IE4UTIFUL 4P4RTMENJ8 4T
BUDGET PJ!ICES 4T JACK·
SON ESTATES. 52 Weatwood
D'rlvt korn $289 to $370. Walk to
shop &amp; movies . Call 740·44fS·
2!68. Equal ~ng Opponu~ty.
Sttch Str..t, Ml&lt;ldltport. two
btdroom fumtshtd •panment, dtposll and riferencts, no ptls,

740-992.018!.
Christy' s Family Living , apart·
menta . home &amp; tralltr rentals~
740·992·451o4, apartments avail·
lble, furnished &amp; unfurnished.
Freahly Painted Upstairs Apart·
ment. Crown City, $350/Mo., Sa·

curlty Dtpool1, 7~258-t249 .

i

WANT A COMPUTER?? ·BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Ftnanco W1tl1 ·o· OOWn. Paot
Cro&lt;l" P.-mo. No l!rot&gt;ltm. Coli
TOll Frot 1 ·8n·~2.
tary . .Mowing , Setting Markers,
Trimming; El(J)trienctd Prelen'td,
But WilrTraln Right Ptraon. Sari· .
OVI ln;quritl . Call 740·4-48·9228

For Into.

port. From $273-$338. Call 740·
992·5C64. Equal Housing Oppor.

Complete DISH Network ~ateltitt
system, brant~ new, S99 , 740·

892·1t82 or 304-773-530! alter

epm.

Ethen Allen Maple Hutch &amp; Drop·
Laaf Table w/chaira, $300 . 304·

87!-t449.

Mod•rn 1 Bedroom Apartment,
7~11-0390 .

New Ha'llen· one bedroom lur·
nlshed apartment, deposit and
references. no pets, 740·992·

JET.
AEAATION MOTOAS
• R&amp;palre.d, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, HI00·537·9528.

Lilt Chair, 1 Year, Quad Cane,
Walli:er, Shower Chair, 1978 Ford
LTC II , 740·446·3342 No Answer
Leave Message.

WANT A COMPUTEA? But No

il.•7~446-38a7.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

North 4th Avenue, Middleport· 2
room afflcilnc:v apartment, dapos·
It and references, no pels, 740·

992'0t6!.
New Taking Appl'lcat ions- 5
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage, Trash , $325/Mo., 740·

446-0008.

Huge Inventory. Discount PrJces,
·on VInyl Skirting, Doors, Wind ~
ows, Anchors, Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
· naces &amp; Heat ..Pumps. Bennetts
Mobll.e Home Supply, 740·446·
9416 www.cnb.con'Vbannen

NEW BAANO NAME COMPUT·

Taking Applications : 1 Bedroom
Ctose To Wai·Marl Deposit, Rei·
erences, No Pets, 7A().24S..5893.
Twin Towers now accepllng ap·
.plication&amp; lor 1 BR. HUD subllctlzed apt. tor elderly and l'lan&lt;ll·
capped. EOH. (304)67!-6679.

Two bedroom Townhouse apart·
menl In Syracuse, $325 per
month, ·Water, sewer &amp; rrash In·
eluded, $250 deposll, 7&lt;10·667·

3018.

ERS • Almost Everyone Ap·
proved Wllh $0 Down! Low
Monthly Payments! 1·800·611·

3476 Ext. 330.
Nice Used Furniture and AP·

pllances. (7401·446·4039 (740)·
446·t004 Anytime.
NO MONEY DDWNIII Compaq
HP IBM Desktops /laptoJ;Js, E·
Comerce Websltis. Start Your
Homeeuslness Today! Almost
E'lleryone Approved! Low Monthly
Payments. Free Color Printer 1·

888·419·2345

(ToiiFree)

VIllage Green Apartments· 2 , www.ejump-start.com
bedrooms, 10111 electric, apptlancOPI Micro Bond Jell System
'8s furnished, laundry room tacl!iUsed Twice $250, 080, 740·441 ·
tlts and close to school, appllca·
· rtons available at office, 740-992· . 0988.

37t1 TOO 1·666·233-6894. Equal
Houtlng Opponunlty

RESIDENTI4L HOME OWNERS

~00

aquare teet office building,
$3,0/mo., .mobile home ·spac11,
$120/m,o.. - 2 bedroom mobile
home, $300/mo., Rlverpark, 'Po·

rnoroy, 74(1.949-2093.
_Mobile Home Park lot Available.
1115/Mo., Addison Pike, Wise·

man Aoalty, 740-446·3644,

For LeaH

For Lease Approx. 15 Ac, Caula.
Pasture. For leasa 450+ Lb. To·
bacc::o Baae. 1970 Monarch Trail·
er With Appliances For Salt,

7-918! Evanlnga.

MERCHANDISE

· Cooling,

.1·600·872-5987

www.orvb.comblnneft

Ron's Gun Shop· Is havtng a sale
on all guns In atoctc, cart 740·7428412.

Sawmill $3,795. Saw Logs lnlo
Boards. Planks, Beams. Large
Capacity. Bell ·Sawmill Value Anywhere. FREE Information. 1·8QO..

578·t363 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS 252 Sonwitl Drive, Buffalo.
NY14~5 .

Claim Denied? We Specialize In
Appears And Hearings. FREE

CONSULTI.oTION . Benelll Team ..

Servlcea, Inc. Toii~Free : 1·888·
836-4052.

Household

. Good•
· Reconditioned

Waehore, Dryers, Ranges, Aolrl•
gratort. 90 Day Guarantee!

French City Maytag. 740·448·
1715.

For Sa.I•;.,.Aecondltloned' wash·
era. dryers and refrigerators.
Thompions Appliance. 3407
Jool&lt;lon A_,., (304)875-73811. ,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wethers, ctrvera, rafrtgeratora,

rangte. Skaggs Appliances, 78
VIne Strtt1, Call 740-446· 7388,
Hl8&amp;-816-0128.
Mollollan Carpet 202 Clark Chi!&gt;
tl Road. Porttr Ohio. 740·446·
7 - "Ortvo A Ull/e S..,.-Aioll"
New Ahd Used FUrniture Store
lttow Holkll'f Inn, Kanoiuga. Stop

""" Savt. 740 446 4782.

530

Stell Bull&lt;llnga, NeW, Mual Sel't.
4Qx60 x12 Was $17,500 Now

510,971;
50&gt;100x18 Woe
$3t,500 Now. $19.990: 70xli!Oxt6
Wu $!9,980 Wao. $39,990:
80x200x16 WI&amp; $94,500 Now
$!1.1190. HIOD-406-!126.
STEEL BUILDINGS: Warehollsa
Spring Cleaning !Factory Direct
25x30. 30x40. 5011140. Must Sell

Nowtt 1 80G-4G·1130 X12.
Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI

B~y

oi' stU. Riverine Antlqutt,
112-4 Eott M11n on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74!f.992·252G or 740·992·
153i. RuM Moore. owner.

TION? What Is www.mr19.blg ·
amart.com? Ask Us. 800 ~9&lt;17 ·

•

W4NT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO C4SH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o• Down! .Past
Credit Problems OKII Evan If

Tumid Down Boforoll Aaellabllah
'!bur Cro&lt;IK1.11 ~59-0359 .

550

~

$$BAD CREDIT? Gol Cuh
Loana To U.ooo. Debt ConsOli·
· dalton To $200,000. Credit Caras.
Mortgagls, Rettnanctng Aild
Auto Loans Available. Meridian
Credit Corp. 1·800·471· 5119 E11t.
1180\

(3) 4LL STE,EL BUILDINGS.
24&lt;24 Woo $7.200 Sill S3.700:
30x!2 Was $12,380 Sell $8.8SO:
52&gt;110 Woo $42 ,500 Sell
S1UOO. Torn t-801).388-!314.

whh ~ Interior. aaktng $.4S.OO,
7~m- 1110e

dl\'1 or

Bloyk, brlc~ . sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Alo Grer.~de, OH Call 740· 245·

5t21 .

.

Palladian Picture Window 8' . 4~x8'
OWwE Argon &amp; GridS COli

~
.

St,

'

560

Business Services io plote

610 Farm Equipment
For Salt : Tobacco Sllckt . 740·

Corn cno. 7~2*8011 .

Misc. JaCk Hammer, Misc. Hand
·Tools : 1986 JtiP Wagoneer
$2,000 : 48' O.ozer Orum Roller

1\ludly, Aprll4~
2000
- . . :'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

[Ill

ud Coii91J/

.

BRIDOI! -

Jl!

?I

S&lt;IPt&lt;·

1ef0 Rid l!o&lt;&gt;'olo411o SSEI

Char~ld TUII&gt;o Futl-l'iitclldiVet

U Llltr, 7$K. AMIFM SIOrto,
Compact Disc/Premium Sound.

PHILLIP

Ill PIEPIUIIOI

brakll , Regularly Sarvlcad &amp;

Mtlntalnod . (740)·44&amp;·09!7 or
1995 Sulek Lttabrt Custom 4
ooora, Loaded , aluminum
Whitis, AIC, Tilt , Cruiu, Pwr,
Locka, Pwr Wlfrdows, Pwr Seals,

$8,200 .00: (2,006 Under Book
Vatue)l 740-682-7512

.....
2

7

-a

~dna Smlktl

OH 45760

740 -992'-1818
Compl.t• Acc:owml"'

ct To.c S.f"~'
C.R. K1nJ • C.O. Goter •
25 Yeore Ex lence

•

C)

'ALDER

•

...'

You tha:w Like a GirL

Lease In, Good Prlca Paid Up.
Front , Call Jodrey J . Farm 937·
373·484o4 Can Call Collect After

9;00 P.M.

Or Ma.O Oller,

7~

•,

Peta tor Sale

AKC Registered Grtal Pyrenees

1997 Chevy Ventura LS, 40,000

Miles, 740-24!-!443.
t997 Dodge Intrepid, 3:5 V·6,
58,833 mile~ maroon With gray In-

Want To Lease Tobacco Quota
In Ohio .. soc: A Pound , 606·473·

terior, cruise, recovered theft.

1t85.

days or 740·9&lt;19·28U
and wllkends.

Wanted· RCA or Hughes Direct
TV system, will pay top dollar, .
Wollla 740·949·3315 leave mea·
.sage.
We Are Buying Tobacco Base &amp;
Least, 937·69!1-0897. (Be~ore

tl ;00 A.M. &amp; Alter 6 P.M.)

630

uklng $7400, 740·992·1506
e~enlngs

2 Charolals IJulls, approxlmatety 2
yrs. Old, $1000 ta., 1 llmousln
bull, very thick will bred animal.
papers avallaDie, $1600, 7o40·

1997 Aed F150 with toot chest.
R - call (3041713-6000.

and Yo~o~'LL never find

...__t_h_e plat'e. i r---.--

JACkS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·
'

Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

740-742-950,1
"Toll Free

For Pirta, 1998 Chev Corsica .

$700 Arm. (304)89!-3828. ,

Farms, Jaci&lt;IOn, 74!f.286-539!.

Special Spring Feeder Calf Sale,

3t9-332~

6pm.

1982 GMC 112 Ton PICk·UP 2
we. Auto, Tilt, PL, 6.2L Oleaet,

Club Lambs, 4 Wethers, 1 Ewe,
Local Cnamp ton Bloodline, Very

Dual Tanka, ClaSs 3 Hitch Runs
Great, Good Work Truck! $1,200

High Quality, 740-24!-0485.

090, 740-379-2757.

fair Pigs For Sale, Hamp And
Some Blue Butt Call 740-44h

0968, Or 740-4411-4382.

1991 Ford F·150 .XLT 2 WO, ~u·
tomet~. 70,000 Miles, very GOOd
COnc!Kionl $6,500, 740-446-3988.

Good Stock Pure Angus Bull,

1994 Chevy 2500, 4X4, manual,

7~

block, $10,800 OBO, 740· 949·
170t&amp;11Mmtt-.

Hampshire Fair Plga For Sate,

1994 Ford F·350. 4x4, 88,000
mites: new tlcta &amp; whMII &amp; mora,

25,000 mites., 'llery sharp, tun far·
lngs, $11,100, 7&lt;10-9&lt;19·2045 or

740-149·2203.

Ear corn. $250 bushel. 740·742·

1997 Ford Ranger XLT. 2 wheel

1903.

drive, step aide, excellent condl·
tlon. 4 eyl .. auto, ale, amlfm co.
50,000 mllea, c:ustom wheels, fi·
blrglaaa btd cover, $8,999, 304·

Round Balea 800 ·10001 S1!
Each, 740•387·0512, 740·441·
5502.
''
Round Bales Ot Hay, $15 Each,

74!f.446'-t0!12.
Straw: Bright Wire Tla Straw Year
'Round. Delivery &amp; Volume Dll·
count ~vallablt. Herllage Farm .

(304)87!-5724.

650 Sead &amp; Fertilizer

•Eitclrtcal&amp; Plumbing
·RDOIIng &amp; Gutltre
•Vinyl Siding I PalnHng
•Patio &amp; Porch Decke
Frtt EltfmatH

Now Open For

na-5305 alttr &amp;pm.

Spring Season

V.C: YOUNG. Ill

Ve~table

Plants,
Bedding Pleats,
HanliJng-Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Petted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rbododelidronil,

1997 Mark 111 . Dodge Aam.
(304)773-51&amp;&amp;.

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

22 yre. Local

$8,69!. 1995 Blazer 4 Door Lood·
eel !0,000 miles $8,295. t991 S·

1998 Marada 1B' 135 HP Mer·
cruiser 110, Showroom New, Ex·
tras.t Consider Trade Harley Da·
vldson Or Land 01 Equal Value.

Mull 11111111 199" Ranger Baas
boat, 150 horsepower. Johnson
'11·8 outboard; excellent condition,

First Orders wilt Guarantee Btst&amp;
Earliest Plants.
Dewhurst

Farmo.(304)89!-37401885-3789.

730 Vena &amp; 4-WDa

TRANSPORTATION

71 o Autoa lor Sale
CARS $100, S!OO &amp; UP. POUCE '
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,
Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport Ulltl·
tlu. Call Nowl 800·772·7470;

EXT. 7832.

256-6002

Types, Acca11 To Over tO,OOO
Transmissions, eve Joints, 740·

t885 Dopge Aamcnarger. 380 V·
8, 4 Speed, Runs Good, , Needs
Work On 4WO. Serious lnqurrlaa

Only. 11,200.00 OBO. Call Bot·
wean 3:30Pm And 8:00Pm. 740-

245-5677.

CJ7 Jeep Hardtop, With Steel
Doors, Aslclng 5800, 080, Evan·
lnga: 740·2&lt;15-9544, Oays: 7&lt;10·

44t-3213.

992-t506 days or 740·949·2644
evenings.

t969 F250 4x4, 7.3 diesel, 5
speed, mull ..0. $6450: call 740992·3394 or •741l-742·3020 evtn·
lngo.

790

1984 Cl'levy Caprice Ctaulc
Very Nice l'nslde &amp; Out Low

Mileo, $2,100, 7ol0 446 4680.
1985 Otda Cutlaas One Owner,

1986 Camaro, New Transfmsslon,
+ New 350 HP Engine T· Tops,
Body In GOOd Condftlon, •3,500,
Prlco ~ . 7~~45-!443.
19~7

Cnrysltr New Yorker 2.2

Turbo, PS lAC, 740·266·8273,
740-256-12ol0.
1988 C_
nrysler Flflh Avenue, PS.

PB. crulll, good _ , cor, $1200.
'740-593-7390. '
1990 Geo Storm, Wrecked, En·
glne &amp; Transmission Good. New
Ports, Tltoa, 740-258-1687.

ARE llbtrgi111 to-. tKC.IIeni
ccnciiiiOn, 740-G48-2411. .

AC' a Heaters. LOaded. E11callent

oondiUon. (304)67!-!137. ·

Large I' Truck Slldt·ln C8mper,
Has Oven Range Top, Aalrigara·
tor, &amp; Portable Water, Fair Condl·
tlon, $375, Ca(l Between 5·8

Evonlngo, 740-38S-8743.

lime PhOne: 740-U1 - 1t36.

·

1993 Ford F' 2!0 Extended Cab,
4.. , 7.3 Utre ~ . 97,000 Miles,
740·381Hl875.
1994 Ford F-150 XLI, V· 8, au•
tomatlc, · 4WO, 8' bed, air, t tectrk::
windows. btctllner, fltlttgtasa top-''
per, 86,000 mites, e11cefltnt condi·

lion, 111

.soo: 7~892·5085.

1998 .J Hp Wrar{gler 4xo4, o4 Cylln·
der. 5 Speed, White With Stack
Solt Top, 24.000 Miles. Under
Wam&gt;Oty, 7~44&amp;-44t8 .

740

Motorcyclea

staln.ed atanda. Pd. ,$150 each;
Crattsman 5 horsepower mutcherl
bagger/ chipper/ thrtddar: all
tttmJ new and never been used·
owner wan.ll quick aate, call 74()..

Over 75 Tanka ol Frashwater
Fish, locaii~&gt;Ralaed Parakee111
Supplies . Flah Taflk/Pet Shop,.
2413 Jackson Avanue,/Pt.
Pleasant. (30.. )875,2083. Sun. ,.

1D92 Ponllac e'onntYIIII SE, rnt· . Top End &amp; Tire&amp;, very Strong ,
taltlc blue, all power, ....ry lharp $1 ,100 Or Beat Offer, 740·o441·
eer, 79,000 milts, 740·742·&amp;200 1063.

992-8810 Mnlngt.

4PM, Mon·Sat 11AM-6PM.

---------

1 o· Craftsman Carpentet.Serlia
-Radial Arm Saw, New, $600: to•

Slack lab Mix ·Pups, 4 Blacks, &lt;1

1892 Oldo 98 Regency 81 K
Mllet, $4,!100, 7~2!6-6232 .

Of

7.0:992·3041 .

1992 Pontiac Grand Prix, Y·8,
Auto,
100+MIIts. $4,500.

Sf

810

1892 Chevy ~•4 Excellent Condl·
lion, $10,500, 740.387·0219, 740367-7272.
1992 Chavy Van, $5,79!: Day·

t969 Honda CA125 Dlrtl&gt;lkO Now

1989 Vamahl Banshee, FMF
graphlct kit, twist throtlle. runs
great, many extras, $1800. 740· ·

~4558 .
Golden, Road)' 4/8100, Bl~ Pupa,. "(304~)!;..7.;,6-.;,238;_.;,3._ _ _ __
er.ntman Tlltllt saw. N&lt;tt"Y New. , Worme&lt;l, $25, 740·245-5797, AI· ' 1893 Grey, DOdge Splm 4 Cylln· 1997 Honda Foreman, o4Wb, ex·
$3150: B 1/4 C...ltsm.- ~aCIIal Arm ror 5 P.M.
der,
Air, Automat~. $1,900 OBO, cell•nt condition, BOO mllea,
Saw. SI!OO: Saara Treadmill. ~ew
$3800, 740-m-5085.
German
snepher-d
Pupplts,
7«&gt;-256-1233.
Coot $800, Will Take $400: Floor
Model T.V. $35: Bluebird B'Oxea BlOOdline, Sa&lt;urlty Stock. Black &amp; - - - - - - - - - - 750 Boats &amp; .Motora
Sable. very.Nica, 175. 740-448· 1993 Maz&lt;la Mlata Convtrtlbte,
flO, 7-4801 .
8627.
23,900 original miles, accesso·
lor Sale
rita. ctr covtr. boot cover a.
37 People Nettdetl To Lose Up
Germafi'S!Iorl
Haired
Polntera.
7
wlndl)retker,
red
with
black
top,
18 Ft. Ba11 Boat trailer 50 HP
To 30 Pounds In The Ntx1 30
YfHks, ~G-446-.4043 After garaged In winler. $8000, 740· Motor 2 FiJb Flndl,. New Troll·
Oayt, Free Samphta, 7o40·4o4 1··
5 P.M.
' \...
1192l4t41.
lng Motor, 76~ 1072.
1112.
:.:.::..;,....,...._~--,....

Campara&amp;
Motor Homes

11M Holldly Rambler. 28it. wllh

1983 Chevy Malibu, 'e•ceuent ' 1990 Ford F·250, 300. 5 speld,
Condition , 305, Automatic, 4 new brakes, new ahoctca, new

Doors, IC. $2,200, 7ol0-448-&lt;l!t4.

•

387.(1229

1987 Ford lull size corweraion
van, 302 automatic, lvo.ry Coast
Conversion {Houlton, Texas),
gray \l'lk)w Interior, ~ront and rear
air, all extras, $3000 080 1 740·

fli:fiTIN&amp; I'&amp;IJT
1-\Y f\1\1~ (.0~ I

~

.

'

.

~

1\FTU:. N.J..., YOU KNOW WAA\
Tf\C:Y St-.'1'-Tf\E Tl\11111110:::.
TI\E. 1\1\1 R. ...

RONNIE DWYER ! .
WHAT'S SO GRE..o.T
,t&gt;.B()UT HI 1'1! WHY NOT
ME.? ALL I'~E EVER
ASKED FOR IS A

CHANCE !.. Mlr NO!"

BISSELL I UILDfRS
INC.
New H9mes • Vinyl
Siding • New Gbrages

• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions •
Stop In And See . ·

FREE ESTIMATES

Steve Riffle

740·992-7599

Sales Representative

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I WAS AFRAID I Ml61lT

HAVE AL~EAD'r' GOTTEN ON

IT, ROC!&amp; TO SCilOOL, STAI{EP
Ti-IERE ALl DAV. RODE BACK,
60T OFF ANO WAS STANDIN6
HERE FOR6ET11H610 60 l«llo\E .•

· Larry Schey

NowRentlnJ

High &amp; Dry
S.tlf·Storage

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Weol
Pass
Pass

251btuNCI
·28AdoNd
32Wel11n-

4 NewZ..lond

rellglouo belief

33Eored34 Dec. 25th figure
35 Macltronl, e .g.
38 Rutolan co-op
37 Aided aeon
39l.et ga
41 Rower'oneed
.... Sphere
45 Not1tt hOmtl

perrot
5 Mad. epeclall11

e ·~-·

7 Hlnd11 rellgloiHI
. INcher ,

8 -de mer
t Popeyo'o

friend OlivetO Potpourri

t1 Former
Chlneoa

monetary unit

48 Golno points

Phone (740) 593-6671'

23

2t Rodlotor
22 Tlko a

24Tum

formal
wedding

oppoaito
t9 Advanced dog.

ceremony

breath

25 Parks of clvH
rights fame 26 Construction

beam (2 wds.)
27 --up

(rep,.,ssed)

29 Great
30 Art deco

Illustrator
31 Group ol two

Opening lead: • 5

Sentinel

"A Better

SklpSiht

t2 Je~yll'o

Norlh:ftl
2•
ass
3 NT
All pass

To get a current weather
report, check the

33795 Hiland Rd.
· fomeroy, Ohio

37- Lingua
· . (airline)
3B Newborns.
40 Doesn't get a .

medal

4t
42

G~kpeak .

High cards
43 A friend on ·
" Frhmd1"
45 River In
France
48 Southweotern

Indiana
47 Eum
48 "Norma-" .
50 Prlnter'o

m...um .

52 Proopeclor•o
lind

53 Guordlan
oplrR

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are crealed ~rom quotations by·famous people, past and
present. Each fener In the cipher s18nds tor another.

~

Tod&lt;Jy's clue: Y equals v

'K

WZAGJGPGKL

P KL

GD

YNHUZDN

UN

MZHOD

J T KL

G L

KLBZLN

K

MTZ

S K L

EN M N H
N AD N.'

WNJNH
ON
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'II there were a Mount Aushmore lor the NFL: 1he
profile ol Tom Landry would have to be there ."- Paul Tagliabue
WOlD
GAMi

1MA1 DAILT
PUULII

0

Rearrange lenen of the
four scrambled words be-low ro form four slrnple words.

R U l F R y·

I I' I I I

I

SAEET

I~ I I 1• I
'
'

B 0 J A T ~ Quote from famou s aclor :
I-rs-....
"When you have instant success,
. 1.
~ you can't help won~.ering if it could
'---'--...._........_ ............,. end · · . · as - . · .

I

6....,,-..,,-..,,.--i,

I

CH!STE

I

~.,.
., ,,..........,.....,,.--.r,-...,,e,.,..-1. 0

Complele lne chuckle quoled

.
•
•
.
• . .
.
by fdflng in the missing words
L-....,1.-..L-L......I.........J........J. you develop from step No. 3 below.

@

-·••

PRINT NUMBERED

lEITERS IN SQUARES

,,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Dan en · Limbo- Nylon • System· LOSE MONEY
" If you warit to know _what someone is really like," a
man told his friend, "walch them when they LOSE •
MONEY"

APRIL 41.

·1TUESDAY

740-992·5212
1f2tll00 1 mo. pd;

r

clean~re repalre~

740-742·0419:'I

BASEMENT
Uncondillohal lifetime guarantee.
Local references ~urniShed . Es·

tabllallld 1975. Cal 24 Hrs. (7ol0)
448·0870, t·SOD-267-0576, Aog·
llf1l WBII!rprocillng. .. ·
Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
pertence All Work Guaranteed .
French Clly Maytag, 740·448·

7795.
C&amp;C Generaf ' Home Main·
tenence· Patntlng, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors. windows, baths,
moDIIe hOme repair and more. For
traa estimate call Chet. 740·892·

.

Jlms Orywett &amp; Construction.
New Conttrucuon &amp;. Aemddell
Drywall, Sieling. Roofa, Addl·

tlono, Painting, elc. (304)e74·
4623 or (304)674-0155.
Livingston'• Ba'~tment Wa1er
Proofing, •all basement repairs
dona·, rrtt tsllmatea, lifetime
liJ.Uaranlte. 12'yrt on job, lxperi·

........

..i

DIPDYIAI

j .e~

AD MakM Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parl!l

J

640 . Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,

·new service or repilf'l, Metier U·
canaed IJtclrlclan. Rid•nour

wli0oo30e, 304·675·
.

1

II'

Factory Au~rized
c--IH Pllltlt
Dea1en.

.Jeff

,•..,....

101111 St. Rt. 7 SoUth
Coo/vi/It, OH .f/S713

Ins.

992~5479 ""

look~ like it bra good one for lhe

t
l l

yearahcod, sodOn'tchanged~rec·
tion needlessly along~ way. The
result~ won't be what !hey could

:

have been otherwi5e.

: ..

''

..
......

'·

e~~; JONES'

We Service AU Make•

TREE SERVICE
·TOP
• ~erno" 8.'
.•

.20Yrs.

'

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

:~

Th.: linle kid cou ld come out of
you today wanting more toys
th:.ul you can afford. It might be
Wi!ie 10 steer clear of StOres that

•••

fte Appllace .

Wedne:;day, April .t 2000
The course you're presently on

:

~

once. (304)895-3817.

.

t'I/E. DE:CIOCDTO .)TOP

' I&gt;

&amp;vacuum

Horne
lmprovarnenta

Eltctrlcat,
17M.·

Gl.~(.)Y~,

I

• Roofing

·-

2tSieeper

Sewing machine

HVICES

WATEIIPROORNQ

6323.

.

... . •· .

; ,..THE' BORN LOSER ....

..

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAL

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorlea

10 Durango A/C 98,000 miles
Chevy Molar, neade over·
$2,495. 1893 Grand Am, t993 , 3SO
hauled. $27!. (304)675-4514, at- ·
CavaUer, 1992 Cavalier, 1991 Lu·
tar 6PM, or laave measage.
mlna Euro. Cook Motors (740)·
446.0103
Budget Priced Transmissions All

Tobacoo Plants
Now taking orcters for this Spring.

''

Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
{740) 992·3470

canopy, $6000, 740-742-2420-

• t 8 6
• A 52

_Brit;lge isn 't a game for cowards. And please don't reply with
these words· of Lewis Carroll:
'Tm very brave generally, only
today I happen to have a
headache."
Especially in competitive auctions, you should be aggressive
when you know of .. or might
have -· a fit with panner. Yet,
another word from that Carrollpiece is releva!lt to this deal. How
would you plan the play in three
no-trump? West leads a spade to
your king.
One no-trump is the secondbesl opening bid in bridge
because it defines your hand so
accurately and doesn't give panner a headache. (Yes, five clubs is
easy here. but you should opt for
three no-trump whenever that is
playable.)
You have eighllop tricks: two
spades, two hearts and four diamonds. The huril is on for number
nine. This is guaranteed in clubs
exceptlhal you don't have time-to
play on that suit. The opponents
will es1ablish and run 1heir spades
before you can gel (hal ninth trick
cashed .
Instead, you should - no(ice
those useful heart spo(s. A( trick
two. lead the heart nine (to
encourage a covet) and, assuming
West plays low, do likewise from
the dummy. (You could finesse
the jack instead, but this way you
will get an exira trick when West
has both the 10 and queen of
heans.)
If East has to 'win wilh the
queen, you are home. Yet if East
wins with the I 0 and returns a
spade, next play a hean !o dummy's jack. Approximately threequaners of the time, you will get
three hean tricks and be borne,
The best opening bid is seven
no-trump.

. Hauling • Umeslone •
Gravel• Sand-• Topsod •

1992 24' pontoon boat, 48 horse·
power, Evlnrude motor, aluminum -

act*•

t TV
L.orotbl2 Anclorlt
Perll1n'1
Mlghbor
3 CHyln Utah

Low-assets

. EXCAVATI"G

750 Boata &amp; MQtora.
lor Sale

760

I FOUND IT, TATER It

HfiOLI"G and

Lilac Trees; Assort~.
Shrubs
·
Open Dally 9-5
Sun 12-S

DOWN

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Fa.x 304-675-2457i

C.

.,WICK'S

call 740-385-2434.

1998 S·10 Auto AJC 18,000 Miles

D.UCK
MUNTIN'
ll

1:..~

•Driveways •Tennis Courts '•
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
'
•Roods • Streets
'
WV Contractors Lie. #003506
'..

992·6215

$t0,500, 7~24!-9391 .

White. 19,000 Actual Mllea. Must
S.te to Appreciate. Garage Kept.

HOWDY, SNUFFY·· .
WHAR'S LOWEEZY?

'

..

Eul
•Jt82
• 10 5 2

.South
•AK
• p4
t A Q J 10
• Q 10 7 6 •

2.

'

Cell PhDne 674-3311

K3

South
!NT

MYERS
PAVINBl
·
Henderson, WV
:·
;&amp;78-2487 or 441-1428i
.
.

•New 0111g11

$15,000 llrm, 740-992·5532.

1897 block Clltvy S·10 Sltpoldt
EJttended Cab, 3 door. loaded,

..••. BARNEY

Y:

(740)_985;3948
3121 ...

•Room lddhlona &amp;Rtmodellng

Syrecuae

Saturday, April 6, 2000 At 1:oo

E

1-877-2'02-3262

on

57 Drleot

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

E FREE ES11MATES........FULLY INSURED I'll
T
BralnMorrison/Raclne,Ohio
R

-

992-5776

X2t56.

·-

~ . RESIDENTIAI.J/1)////COMMERC{A~ ~

.

YOUNG'S
CARPEIIIEI SERVICE

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

Mos. 0 19.9% For Listings 1--800.

720 Trucka for S.la
P.M. All Consglnments Welcome,
Hauling Available. Cattle Accept·
1979 Ford F150, 302 Engine.
ad At o4 P.M. Friday, Athens Live·
stock Sale, 7o40· 592· 2322, Or · Auto. , New Paint, 2WD, Short
Wheel Base. Has new Eng . Ap·
740-698-3531 .
pro1. 1,000 mile American Rae·
ButchariniJ hags tor sale, 2501· lng Rima. (3(14)882·2C42.
300t\ call 740·949 · 2017 after

. parts

2I2IIIUO 1 mo. pet.

HDNDA'a StOO, $500 &amp; UP. PO•
LICE IMPOUND. Hondl'l Toyo·

CARS FROM U8/IIO. lm·
pounds IRepoa. Fee. $0 Down /24

Hay &amp; Grain

•

Frtt Delivery

2000 Foro Escort. $t o.ooo OBO.
(3041675-!479.

"'~--

R&amp;l Ouoll'v
P/B CONTRACTORS. INC~
hplcaoement ~ c *CONCRETE *BACKHOE
SERVICES M,;
Avht wv ,.,., , 0
.
All replacement N *MASONRY *BOBCAT SERVICES ~j

FrH Elllmetea

EXT. 6336.

640

I

Q 10 8 5 3
Q 7 s3
74
I

992-2635 882-3666

factory cttrol114 whetlt. silver,
minor right tron1 damage, $13,500,

Puppies Fo&lt; Sale, 74!f.245-9498.

-

.092-2772
For All Your. Home
lm rovemenl Needa

er.

2 Three Year Old Fillies, Great
Broke, Call 740·387· 05t2, 740·
""'1·5502.

Cow &amp; Heller Ca~. Basi Offer,
441·1182.

Middleport , New Haven'

V·8, 17,000 miles , auto, CID ploy·

1998 Ponltlc Flreblrd Trans Am.

ta's, CheVys, Jeepe, And Spon
UIIHtles. Call Now! 80()..772·7470;

ANGUS 4ND CHIANGUS Bulls,

RADIO SHACK DEALER

• Catting • Gutters
• Sldlllfl • Drywall
• Pelnllllfl • Plumbing

742-t903.

Priced ReaaonabiV. Slate Aun

ELECftGIICS

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boa! Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
BloWn Insulation

New Roota • Repalra

740-1192•1508.

L.lvestock

Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout. Garage room

days or 741).94g..2844 fW!!nlngs.

• J 98

-AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp;
BLACKBEAR PAGING

Replacement Windows,

sa tmpouata•

zo Bullfl$hl

• AKH
I K ·s S 2

An•...., to Prevloua Puzzle

55 Wlpeoout

time bolng)
181lmbort'"

• 7.

~

54y;ofteed

tobacco

11 United
17 Pro -' (for the

,

Jll IIIUUTIGI I
COISTIUaiGI
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

t Conoumu

15 Cor\col.,.

Nutrena Western Pride
.
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 llt.ltCig
S rin Seeds 8 Fertilizer

17401 992·1111

51 Ctystalllne

ACROSS

7 Sllkor&gt;

$6.75/50 lit. ltag

Utilitie•

NEA Crol8word Puzzle '

t3 Dldn1 1KII1
t4 Ampueh

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food ·

HoUte &amp; Trailer Shea
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sytlemo &amp;

317 N. 2fldAve.

•

··shade R1ver
Age Service ..

Bulldo04r &amp; Baclrlw•
Service•

1f/flrr cttlu

Middleport,

'

lOWAID
.EXCAVAniG CO.
u

CellUlar Phone W/Booater Kit, Air
,Conditioning , Tilt. Crulu , Dual

Alrbago, ABS 4 Whtol Anli·Lock

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5
'

OOP

740-~9·

(7o10~44&amp;0652

John Otere B With Cultivator••JO
3·t8 Plow: t800 Buahtl Wire

·'

2844-*"".,., -..~.,

10 Ouaner type bubble gurrt cand)' mac11lntl, teal
with oak

urvn.

Tuesday, _,\pnl 4, 2000

Sunroof, 6 way Power Leather
$tats. Power Locks &amp; Windows,

IIVFSTOCK

V-8, $t ,400, 740-4'114794.

Building
Supplln

MerchandiH

.

FARr,1 SU PPUE S

$21.95 Per 100: t• 200 PSI .
$37 .00 Ptr 100: All Braaa COm· 1959 Triumph 'TR3 Roa&lt;lst.,,
ready lodrlvt, cal 74&lt;HN9--2088.
preselon Flttlngo In Stock
RON EYANI ENTERPRISES
1967 ·Plymouth Sports Fury
Jackaorl, Olllo, HIOIHI37·11112S.
84,000 mllt~s . 318 Enblnt.; New:
VIAGAAIIII Order By Phonel 1· Interior, ttras, txhau•t.'Ttlnred
800·211·1737 ·oopt. F QUES · windows, $3,500.00 OBO (7401·

42.19.

AntiqUe.

540 Mlacellaneou•

(304)675-1011 Of (304)8&amp;2-2180.

HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Furnaces. Oil FUrnaces, 12 Seer Two year old Leghorn ehlctcens.
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning 50e each; aiao Oekalb brown
Systems Free e Year Parts &amp; La· · chickens, 7~e tach; ·Gary
bor Warranty BenneHs Heating &amp; M~llaal, 740-98!-3956 ..

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY

Appliances:

Puppl.t l for Salt: AKC lour.

740-37&amp;-280!.

Tappa~

460 Spaca tor Rent

51 0

18113 So1um SU!, • door, • o;ytin·
dot, . _ . . .. 18,428 ""'"· ltll

fOUCCD QUOT4: Wan1 To

Cash? No Credit OKI Slow Credit
. OKI 0 Down; laptops ._vallabla.
Reestablish Your Cradilt Call
Nice Ont Bdrm Unfurnished
Nowlll1 ·8n-755-0005.
Apattmenr. Range &amp; Refrlg. pro·
vided . Water $c Garbage Paid .
METAL BUILDINGS. Does Your
·Deposit Required. Call 740·446Deadlarship Nol Work ~or You? .
4345 After 6:00Pm
We Have Competitive Prices &amp;
Nice One Bedroom FUrnished Or NO Oediershlp Faesl Call For A
Unfurnished, Utilities Paid,' Down- Free 9rochure . El Dorado Build·
lng Systems 1·800.27S.4300.
stairs, $300/Mo., No Pets, Depos·

490

Mystic Pom•· any brttd dog
grooming IYillablt. Alao 1how
QUality Inc! pot lot'
..... 7 - 1 6.

~uel Tank
1995 Monte Clrto. All Opllon.s.
Wlth Pump 1750: 14 Ft. Semi V
Grubb's Plano· lUning &amp; ripalrs . Boat $350: 300 Pd. Sana Blaster Aed. 78.000 millis. Excellent
Pro blems? Need Tuned? Call the $t ,300: Cat 215 SICk HOI, condlllon, Inside and out. Brick·
· yard Spoiler. 18,000 . Calltlefore
pjano Dr. 740-446-452!
$21 ,000; R40 Ollch ' Witch 600 3PM (304)~73-6805 ; aller 8PM
Hot Springs l'lot IUb , 4 person, Hrs. $8,500; 45 Ft. Parts Trailer (3041885·3728.
good ,SOndltlon, will ha'lle neV( top, $1,8QO; 85Ft. Extended Tralltr
has new heater and new tl'lefrno-- $-l,OOO; Plate Tramp Firs 418' Hot t 995 Pontiac Grand Am, green
stat, soma chemicals Included. $4,00_9; 2,000 Gallon Futl Tank with blacj.; lnterlor, 159,432 miles,
cedar wtth btue IQp, call 740·992· · Wl1h ~mp $1,300: 2,000 Water left front IIJ&amp;ptnsion damage.
Tank 600,000 Concrete Vat asking 12.650, 740·992· t508
5053 after Spm.
S300; Mtsc . Steel Beams ; 011 dayo, 74!f.949-2&amp;44 tvO.
Racks $1,200; CaJ 215 Buckets
JANITADL HEATING ANO
Misc. Concrete Blankets , 140· 1998 Chevrolet Camaro, V·8.
COOLING EQUIPMENT
1!43-291e, 740·1!43-~ .
blue with gray Interior, 54,000
INSTALLED
mites, lront damage, runs and
• II You Don't Calf Us Wt Borh
drives, $6300, 740· 992-t!OS
Lose. • Free E&amp;rlmaresl 740·446· ~20 . Wanted to Buy

0165.

·I

'

····-..

$3.400; 550 Gallon

tunltles.

I

710 Autoa for S.le

245-5t2t .

6308, 1·800-29Hi098.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 b8droom
apartments at Village Manor anc:l
Riverside Apar.tments In Middle·

I

VIAGRAIIII OllDER BY PHDNEIII
St1y AI' Hornol ll t·I00·2t 1-1737
Oop!. F

560 Peta tor S.le

Cortllktl NH&lt;IId Frr For Ceme·

0052, 70-888 1531 .

-- .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

540 MIKellaMOUa
Met chllndiM
'I ltdroom With Lorge Living
Room, Furnllhed Kitchen, Water
I Trllh Included. Upatalrs 458
Secot'MI Av.nut, OtlllpOIII, $2101
Mo.. + Socurily Dopooll,
2!111 .

- ---.

ofTcr merchandise that lntri&amp;ue

.•• !

..••
:;"

A if •.

,

•••

you. Aries, trtat you'rselr to a

biitltday girt. Send for your A"ro- I
Graph predietlons ror the year (
ahead by 'lnailing S2,and SASE 10,

Astro--Oraph, e/o thts new1paper.
1758, Murray Hill SIS·
lion, New Yor1t. NY 10156. Be
IU!e to ltalt'your Zodhw: olp:
TAURUS 1Aprii20.May 20) It
IIU1'111ke you at all not to
the

P.O. Box

•••Y

.

••
•

• ••

cour~e of your objective!, yet
today these ~tellar qunlitie~ mi&amp;hl
not' be funclioning_ very well, ilnd
~u could quit the ioll fur too eur·

GEMINI (Mny 21 -June 20)

What sounds good u1 first hearing
might not stand up to the test
today. Subdue inclination!l to act
upon pie-in·the·sky. wishful
thinking:.

Don 'I rush in today where the bill
collectors are likely to tread. lr
you fall prey 10 a large ticket item
chat you can't afford, it could lie
you up for a long period of time.

CANCfR ll,une 21 -July 221

SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dec.

Trying to i!tt aWay wllh' tuking
~hoilcms 'in hope.~ of getting
thinss · done in u hurry won't

2 I ) 01hcrs mny be more c6n·
cemcd ubout h()w you perform in

work uxluy. What you can look
forward lu r~lfiJiiiiB. is that old
bron1idt&gt;, "Hwoh~ makes wu,;tc."
LEO lluly 23-Aug. 22) tr you
anew yqu~elr to be swt~yed or
pressured on something you ' re
unsure of. the pur'veyor of this

they are aboutttlemse iYes:. Don't

advice could cau~ you 10 make
an unwise' decision. Be your own

person .
VIRGO !Au1. 23-Sepr. 22)
Should you encounter someone at
. work today who doe•n :tsrasp Ihe·
idea~ orconcepls you're trying to
Convey, II muy ~ th~ way you're
p~e,.ntlns them, not !he pol"on•
that'• at rnult.
.
. LIBRA (Sept : 23-0ct 23)
Make !lUre the pedple with wham
you set Involved ,..;ally today
ante up their fair ""''" or tile cost
of lhe ~~ivity. Yt;JU c:ouklpt JC~Ic:
with tho Sit(;
ScORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 221

u

~pecific

situation today than

worry abou1 !hem: WOrT)' uboul
you~t:lf.

CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan.

•

·.

I«)) ,There's a gond cHimce todal(
that something good you· w ha4
in your ~rnsp might slip away•
bccau .~c.: you're lreuting this
Oflponunity di!Tercllll)'. You could
lose out financi 11lly.
•

AQUARIUS tlan . 211-Fcb 1'9J

Don'l gel tan:less when \' losin~
dcaltoduy you'\'c worked hard ull
to achieve. If you do. you cuuld
Jet ~onk:one otT the hook' who

need:o to ~trihute .
P!SCE
~ · lO-Mu'l'h 201

NormuHy. w - n you're usked to
k~ep u stcret. you're pretty j.ood
~bout it. Tnday. however. you
couldJalk 10 f~ly •bout ihinJ&gt;
-!hal you miahl'I01 "'""'thin&amp; oul
of the bof.

I

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'· ... ~...... ~ ..~......:.~........,... .._

..

.........q

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

�Pomeroy, Middleport, .Ohio

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·1n ·M

sCou

Helll"and Sctliiped

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APRIL MENUS
10

11
Oven Baked Chicken
AugratinP-

~ushroom Stoak
Malhed POWOel &amp; Gra
Butter..t Com
lltud
Blushing Pears

I

· Do you have questions about

Plant exchange
The Master Gardeners, through
the OSU Extension Office, will
hold their annual plant exchange at
ll :00 a.m. on Thursday, April 13.
Bring your perennials to swap for
some that you don't have.
The plant exchange will also be
held at the Evening Dinner (April
13) at 4:30 p.m.

consumer fraud, evictions, utility
shut-offs or estate planning? These
are just a few of the topics to be
discussed by Kerry Robinson,
Attorney at Law, on April 18 at

Meigs County.
.
To qualify for free legal serv1ces,
. the only requirement is you must be
at least 60 years of age. The
procedure for requesting free. legal
services
consists of completmg an
10:45 a.m.
Mt. Robinson is a Title III application (you can get one from
Attorney with Southeastern Ohio Darla Hawley at the Center) and
Legal Services in Marietta. He mailing it to the Marietta office.
handles legal matters on behalf of Mr. Robinson will contact you
senior citizens in 10 counties in directly.
Southeastern Ohio, including

May 5 from 9:00 a. m.-4:00 p.m.

done more efficiently. Call. Patty
Pickens at 992-2161 for more info
on the yard sale.

only. All donations will be used to

Evening Meals
The Senior Nutrition Evening
·Meal will be served on Tuesday
and Thursday wit h serving from
4:45 to 5:30 p.m. A suggested
donation is $4.00 The evening

'

.

mea l is intended to provide a
nutritional meal at a reasonable
cost. Dollars generated will be used
to suppon the existing lunch and
home delivered meal program.

'

TUESDAY

A Golden Buckeye Card Sign up
Site will be held from 10:30 a.m.·
2:30p.m. on April 11 at the Center.
Sally Bryan, from the Ohio
Department of Aging, will be here
to sign up persons for the card. You
must be an Ohio resident (60 years
of age of older) or totally and
permanently disabled to qualify.
There will be drawings for prizes
and bingo.

Creamed Baked Chicken
Twice Baked Potato
Tossed Salad
ROll
Strawberries on
Angelfood Cake

Turkey and Dressing Roll
Cole Slaw
Sweet Potatoes
Roll
Apple Dumpling
:· andJce Cream

Plne~Miie

Tuallday

·investment
representative
Elizabeth Schaad, Investment
Representative with Edward Jones,
feels that investor education is a
key ingredient to any successful
investment plan. In order to make
wise financial decisions, it is
important for investors to have a
basic knowledge 'o( the different
ill\lestments available and the risk
associated with them.

· To addre11 your h!nltmenl
qputlons, Ms. Shaad. will be
nallable at the Meigs· Senior

Ceoter on the second J'uesday or

BuiiBred canota
lltud
Tropical Mixed FruM

4:45-5:30 Evening Dinner
11
9:30 Trip Save-a-LotiWai·Marl
t0:00-11 :00 lnveltment Rep.
10:30-2:00 Salty Bergen
Ohio Department of Aging
4:45 • 5:30 Evenl!)llDinner
18
10:45 KelT)' Robin1011
Legal Servic:ea

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17
1:00 Line Dance'

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FamilY, Fun Feat • Senior Citizen Folding. Brochure, to be . •
distributed aa a promotion for Family Fun Festival which will •
bJ_held on Aprlla~zooo at eastern Elementary School.
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Thursday

•

5
10:00-12:00 Knitting Clrdtl .

FrRiay
•

7

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10:45 Cancer Awareness
...,

12
10:00-11:00 Soc. Sec. Rap.
10:00-12:00 Knllting Cirdtl
1:00 Stroke Suppor1 Group

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.10:00-11 :30 Althntil Support
Group
8:00 PM-11 :00 PM Square

' 11
10:00-12:00 Knitting Circle

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10:00 - 11 :00 Soc.Sec. Rap.
1o·oo-12
Knitting Circle

27

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Banquet raises over $14,000 for Scoutirig

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For morelnfonnatlon on or to sign up for any of the above activities call us at 740-992-2161 ·
The Center would be having an inside Yard Seta on May 5, 2000 lrilm 8:00 em to 4:00pm.
If you have anything you would like to donate pie- contect Patty. Pickens at 740-882·2161 .

BOWMAN ' S

Inc.
OH

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

992·3785

HOME·;(JXYGE~ &amp;·MEDICAL EQUIPMEN'l1

,Toclay's

Everything
for the
Patl•ent
at
Home

Sentinel
IIMI'IT.U.

NTIINT LWTI

.

.

I

"'·--• Minutes

Patty Pickens at 992-2161.

For 15 Year•

· Calendar
Classified•
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Editorialt
Qbituerjes

ELECTAIC'WHEEL(:HAtRS

lATH IAf'ITY EQUPIIENT
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
HOSPITAL BIOI
UFTCHA!fll
ITAIIIIIUDII

HOME OXYGEN

OiTOMY .

;l

•.

DIAPIRIA CHUICI

:

1 Hr

f Jill llj!'rl&lt;

V r,l

'"I

.
,

I

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AS
84~6

BS

M

AJ

Sports -

Bt-4. 8

Weather

' A3

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3: 8-6-t\
,
· Pick 4: 3-1-2-7
Buclooye,Fiw:2-l}.f5-J.l..35

:W:YA,
DoilY 3: t.-7-0 DaUy 4: 9-8-0-3

'

1480 Jackson Pike
' _Gallipolis, OH

each moatb rrom 10:00 a.m.·
II :80 a.m. bealanlng April 11.
To schedule an appointfllent, call

1 htth.ilS - 11 .,....

OIIYOIII

RENTALS
REPAIRS

THE M DICAL· SHOPI'E·
.

WMIU OHAIIII

Seroing Tlae Community W'tth

loll I ,., .,·
1-::oo 1 1-, .!.~w.

C 2000 Ohiet Valley Publi1hing Co.

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Bank and Bob Evans Farms Inc.
Pruett, whose tenure with 'the Thundering
Herd since 1996 has netted the team conference and division championships, three bowl
appearances and 1999's 13-0 season, equated
. scoutihg with success sm the gridiron.
As a. coach, Pruett said He can detect the
players who ·are or have been in scouting
· thfl,ugh their life skills, commitment and
goals, qualities learned through the CSA and
B.SA ,.
·
,
'
· .• . '~ase ... SaiUtlng. Pap A3

..-/

Taft's budget also spends $103
COLUMBUS (AP) - Buildings used by educators, whether mlllicin on state parks, $90 milpublic school teachers or uni- lion on prison maintenanCe ,and
versity professors, would get $27 million on stadium and
more than half of Gov. Bob Taft's arena projects.
About $1.5 bill ioi1 of the
proposed constru ction budget.
More testimony was expect- construction money would
ed Wednesday on Taft's $1.8 bil- come from money . borrowed
lion ca pital budget lor fi scal through the sale of bonds..The
rest, about $295 .million , would
years 200 1 and 2002.
_
The plan, proposed Tuesday, come from other sources
spends $603 million on primary including the 'state's general revand secondary school construc- enue fund and ·interest earnings.
tion and $530 million on col- · Combined with money set
aside from Ohio's $10. 1 billion
leges and universities.
Tom Johnson, director of the settlement with major tobacco
Office of Budget and ·Manage- companies, about $1.1 billion
ment, call ed the spending on dollars will be ·available . for
school construction unprece- school construction · over th e
dented. The $603 miU ion is 20 next two years, Johnson said.
percent higher than the last
two-year funding cycle:
Pluse see $chools. Page A3

Tafrs g¥,n·bill
prf.JpDsal
-~et~~s:
·
t
o
.
Legislatu~
to
resume
battle
I
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. . . ·. . . .
.
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Yti

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft's '
"House Bill 526 is gun'control . ... 11 stmply mnnot j 11 st!fy it
his 14-year-old son was killed in .1991 by .a
as reasonable. Please do not vote fo·r tltis legislation.
15-year-old ne1ghbor who had access to hts
proposal to ~;equire adults to store firearms in
·
O ZO OOO
I. ' . ,
father's gun.
.
a way that children, GI'JnOt get ' to them,
. on The""'y
••• along
ver · ,
gun orvners ar~ watc nng yo11.
D etec t.1ve Gregory Ki ng, a 20 -year veterreturned to the Le gislature
'
with the same argumel\.ts abqut .gun CQntrol
t
, Jlelf Garvu,
' an 1\f the force , said the shooting was tragic
that have followed tile ·bill since December.
Ohlqonw for Co~ Corry
, '·.
for both f.11nilies.
Rep. Ann Womet ~jamin, R-Aurora, six n~onths in jail if a child geti ace~ to 311 safetY program.
,
"It was just as hard for them as for my
introduced a reworked version :Of her biU, improperly stored firearm .
The changes, however, were not enough family. H e had put it (the gun) where he
whiGh has stalled in the t!&gt;mmittee while she
Should the child harm anyone after get- \O satisfy the opponents who offered much thought only he cb\'lld get it," King said.
Womer Benjamin said she hadn't decided
and Taft have lobbied memben fur. enough · ting access, it:would be a third- degree felony,, the same testimony as they did ~en the bill
punishable by up to fife yean in ' prison, up was introduced in December. They said the when to hold anol:her hearing on the bill.
votes to get the bill befqre the full House.
Womer Iienjamin, wJio introduced the fro
fifth d
~-•
h' h h
only way to keep children safe around The committee meets again on April 11 . She
pill at Taft's request, ealld:tithe new version, a
m a.
- egree •oony, w IC as a max. coinproihise meant to e.tl' th,e complaints of imum 1;1enalty of one year.
firearms is to educate them, not lock up their ~~id she W&lt;&gt;uld co ntinue to look for the
'
~
p
na1
·
~
d'·'t:s
h
·
t
are
ts or parents' guns
eight votes she needs to move it out of ~he
anti-gun control groups. while penalizing
e ttes .or a "' w o are no P n
.
·
·
·
h
1
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"H
Bill
526
·
trol
You
committee with a recommendation for pas- '
irrespcnsible parents and other adults.
gu antians would b e. somew at ess, · smce
9use
'
1s gun con . ...
· . "We all agreed that we want to address 'they cannot be prosecuted under child simply cannot justifY it as reasonable," Jeff sage.
- 1aws.
· ·u~-~
-'"'·~~· o·foh,·oan·. fcor Concealed Carrv
Two opponents, however, indicated they
careless, reckless behavior;' sh~ said.
en dangenng
. ,.' a
The new bill puts the penalties for pa~~ents
The biU also would provide S100,000 for gun-owners' rights group, told the commit- hadn't changed their minds. ·
under child-endangering laws, instead of in a pilot project to set up firearms safety train- tee . "Plea,se do ·not vote for this legislation.
"I have very serious doubt that changing
a new statllte, to · appease opponents w ho ing "rograms in up to 12 school districts. Over 20,000 gun owuers are watching you." the words of the Ohio Revised Code · is
complained it ·singled out gun owners. Par- _T.he program would be modcled after the
Testifying for 'the bill's passage, however, going to change the behavior of people," said
ents who violate the law co.uld receive up to National Rifle Association's "Eddie Eagle" v.&gt;as a Cleveland police detective who said Rep. Ron Hood, R~Canfield .
1

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Please see Bill, Page A3

.•..

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

"Serving Southern Ohio for o'Ver 23 years"
Lift Chairs
• 1
Mastectomy Supplies
Wheelchairs
Cervical Pillows
Hospital Beds
Tractor Equipment
Shower Stools
Tens Units &amp;
Grab Bars
Supplies
Commode Chairs
Back Supports
,
Knee, Ankle Braces
.
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chux
'·
Nursing $upp)ies
Osto111y Supplies
Support Hosiery
Diabetic Supplies
First Aid Supplies
Feeding Pumps
Dressings

·'

OVP NEWS EDITOR

~

Donations are accepted and appreclatfm

KEviN K!u.Y

morr people to contribute. You have to dig
deep for this cause, because there ·is no better
GALLIPOLIS - For Bob Pruete; one can cause."
never give enough to the Cubs and Boy Scout
Pruett's sentiments about scouting, and
those ~dded by local and regional scputing
O{ganizations !?f the tri-county area.
- Pledging more to scouting was ~he message offici~/ were successful in raising pledges ~f
the Marshall University - football coach $14,4~9 from the banquet for the districts
brought to local supporters at Tueiday's annu- opera®ns. ·
.
. ,
a] fund-raising banquet for the Milson-GalliaTh district has set a goal of $20;000 for
Meigs District, !ri-State Council of the Boy· this ye ; b~t Fri~nds ofScout~~g Chairman K.
Scouts of Amenca.
.
,
Ryan Snuth satd. the rematnder would be
. "Whatever you th9Ught ab!&gt;UJ giving ~ no.t . , J"~~ up· with additi&lt;jnal pleflges.
.
1
enough," Pruett sai4;~·you need f 6q~IO; ' The ~ ~quet W:is sponsored by Oh~o Valley

....."

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4:45~· 5:30 Eventna Dinner
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resources that we have in the
in1roduced capital bill will b e
used to leverage oth'er state and
fed eral dollars," he added. "With
the job losses we are facing in
our region we mus t develop
new industry. I b elieve the state
dollars I have fough t to include
,in the budget will help u s
accomplish-this goal."
In addition to focusing on
industrial parks, Carey said he
·introduced $25,000 each for
Gallia and Meigs for rural water
development.
"Even though the amount of
morley is not great, hopefully it
will be used to match other fed -

State unveils more
money for school~

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1:00 Ciitng &amp; sharing Support
Grqup ·Ketti Templeton dealing
Wit\ grlel and related issues

WE HONOR

GALLIPOLIS - The capital
improvements bill introduced ·
by Gov. Bob Taft · includes
$200,000 apiece for industrial
parks in Galli a and Meigs counties, St~te Rep. John A. Carey
said.
House Bill 640 will be considered by the House of Representatives by the beginning of
May and then move on to . the
Senate for further debate; ,the
· Wellston Republican s,ajd.
Carey said he believes "the ·
economi c success of o ur region
depends on having viable industrial sites.
" I am. hopeful that the

~

Blrthd•y ,..,., .
10:45 Klin Ch8flln
Lftil1thol,!te Foundatlon for
.

*Items h11ve a minimal cost or require reglstnltlon

FROM STAFF REPORTS

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28
8:00 PM-11 :00 PM Square
Dance

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Hame..t.r

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Blindneu

212 EAST MAIN ST.

Ca ital bill includes
Ga lia, Meigs projects

~

" Evanlno Dinner
4:45 • 5:30

4:45. 5:30 Evenl1111_Dinner

far right , manager of Vaughan's Supermarket, delivered a
complimentary
lunch to work·
ers recently
unemployed by
t he American
Alloy.s closing.
The workers
ar_!! attending
retraining
classes at a
Mason church.
(Brian J. Reed
photo)

(Kevin Kelly
photo)

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Cer)t.r CtoMCI .

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LUNCH BREAK
- Richard Hill.

will hopefully get th ese individu als moving in th.e right direction."
Local grocers have co ntributed
food items to the former employees . Since retraining has begun,
the wives of a number of the
workers attending the class have
taken on the task of preparing the
.midday meal for the men.
Vaughan's Deli donated Tuesday's lunch in h.onor of the workers and to show its appreciation
_for the workers' patronage of the
Middleport store throughout the
years .
The classes are held Monday
through Friday, from 8 a.m. until
2:30p.m.

speaker.

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21

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ill..

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Dane~!

4:45- 5:30 . Evenina Dinner
20
e.-Dinner ..
9:30 • 11:00 Blood Prenuno Clinic
' Parade · _ . your
10:45 ENIIr
belt·Euter outfit and
•
bonnet.
11 :15 RoKi.FamllySingera

27

Fish and Shrimp "
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Cole Slaw
Bisci.lit
Carrot Cake

14

' Plant ~enga

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4:45 • 5:30 Evening Dinner
25
11 :00 &amp; 4:15Hai Kneon
Spring Flowers • Bring Soli
In for PH level testing

•"

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4:45 • 5:30 Evenlna Dinner
13
11:00 Mea~ Gerdeo,....
Plant t;Xchange
4:30 MaaterGinlenelw

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24
1:00 Line Dance•

on getting back into the workforce.
Many of the workers are now
faced with the realization that
their yearly income has been
drastically reduced. Taylor said
that it is hard to comprehend the ·
immediate loss of one's income
and the changes in lifestyle that
laid off employees- must make.
"All unemployed workers
must go through an adjustment
period;' Taylor said, "and th.ese
types of classes help ease the frustration and confusi'on that is
attributed with the loss of one's
job."
"This IS a step- by -step
process," said Taylor. "One that

. Pledging more
• support for the
; Cubs and Boy
Scouts of
America was
the message
Marshall
University
football coach
Bob Pruett,
·right, gave to
scouting
. supporters
Tuesday at the
annual MGM
District,
·Tri-State Council
\ . fund-raising
banquet. The
event-was
successful. In
ral~ng $14,459
toward the
$:20,QOO goal ,
set by the
district ·for
2000. Pruett
was the
fund-raiser's
featured

•

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20

The company announced that
it was filing a Ch.apter 11 reotga·
nization in the U.S. Bankrupxcy
Court for the Southern District
of West Virginia. The action was
taken because of the low price of
the ferro"alloy produ ct that' it
manufactttres and-sells, and by the
r~moval of an import tariff that
lowers the cost of similar materials supplied. by foreign countries
sucli as Venezuela, Russia, Brazil
and China.
Wes Taylor, a representative of
the Human Resources Development Foundation, said West Virginia cohtacted him to present a
class that would train all unemployed American Alloys workers

M9RE FOR
. SCOUTING-

Wednesday

4
10:45 oonnette Dugan
Stress ManagerT111nt

3
1:00 Line Dance'

10
1:00 Line Dance•

TuESDAY, APRIL 11 • Rita and Junior White will play at 5:30
THURSDAY, APRIL 13 ·The Master Gardeners will hold the
annual plant exchange beginning at 4:30
TUESDAY, APRIL 18 ·Dana Johnson wlllalng at 5:30
TUESDAY, APRIL 25 • Hai·Kneen will talk about planting spring
flowers· at 4:~5

New service

Salmon Patty
Lyonnaise Potatoes

••

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.

Meet Bolla in ~vy
. Noodlel
Tillllld Salad
Mandarin Oranges in
Orange Gelatin
Cake

a.-

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28 •

27

j

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Texas Sheet Cake

Sweet and Sour Chicken
on Rice
Seven Layer Salad
Pineapple Cherry Pie

F...ah Apple
Rocky Road Pudding

The annual Easter Dinner will be
served at noon on Thursday, April
20. Wear your Easter Bonnet &amp;
outfit and enter the "Parade of
Hats" at 10:45 a.m. There will also
be a program at 11:00 a.m.

\

25

~oil

Comb!Nd

BBQ Chk:lcen F'lllel
Sctiloped " - "
Broccoli

'

Ham Loaf
Scalloped Potatoes
Peas and Carrots
Roll
Peach Crisp

Barbecue Spare Ribs
Red Skin Potatoes
Buttered Cabbage
Roll
Gingerbread
'

28 .

MASON, W.Va.- Job retraining classes· are b~ing given at the
Faith Baptist Church in Mason
for all · American Alloys Inc.
el)lployees laid off when the plant
closed its doors Jan. 26.
. These classes began March 20
and will last four weeks.
·
Approximately 125 employees
were affected by the plant's clos·ing, many of them from Meigs
,and Mason counties.
· The closing of the Mason
.County facility was due, in part,
'to a declining steel industry
·recenily been hurt by imports
coming in under domestic prices.

------------------------------~----------~----------''..
MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL ON AGING, INC. 4V4/:

13

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28
Navy Beano and Ham
Cole Slaw

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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CENTER
CLOSED

April is Cance&lt; " - • • Month end Nletlonll Humor Month·

6

11

BIICU~

Baked Ham Sileo
1\ugrdn Potatoes
Mixed Vegetable
Eaoter Egg
Bread
Creamy Fruit Salad
Cool&lt;le

April 2000 ACTIVITIES CALENDAR ·

4

'

Johnny'Marzalti
Cole.Slaw
.IIIMd
Bonane
Vanillli Pudding

BY TONY M. WCH

21 .

20

Easter dinner

Monday

Hungarian Pork Chop
Rice Pilaf
Glazed Carrots
Waldorf Salad
•
Roll
'
Earthquake Cake

11

Did you know that Spring starts
March 20? To get you ready for
spring planting, Hal Kneen will be
here on April 25 at 11 :00 a.m. to do
soi l samples. He will check the
acidity of your soil at no charge.
Bring a small sample in a baggie
and see what your soil is lacking.
Hal will also discuss planting
spring flowers . Bring your
questions, a friend and stay for
lunch. He will also present the
sari\e program at 4:15 p.m. at the
Evening Meal.

THURSDAY

'

erican Alloys employees in·retraining class

Spring is here!

Inside yard sale May 5th at the Cent~r Golden Buckeye
Clean out your closets or garage upgrade our computer network at
for this one! The Center will accept the Center. This upgrade will allow
card s'ignup
items.for the yard sale to be held on necessary computer work to be
Rlease, drop off items on May 3

Blscu~

Applnauce

l!lllwnle
r1

Hot Appleuuce

Bread ~
Peach Slices

14

Beef and NoodiM
BrtiCXlOii/Carroll
and CaulBread
Apple Cherry Crtap

eor...-..

li1 R.cl Gelatin

Sausege Patty
HaahBrownPTomato Julco

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gra
Buttered Peas

Bananas and ONoQel

Ham loll

18

April 5, 2000

Hometown Newspaper

G.-Bread

s-Potatoe•

o..lc~he!Tiot

Pe-wllh
Orange Sauce

24

Southeastern Ohio legal services

,I

Chil'&lt;:on Camo
COle SIIIW

a-·

7
TU!I&lt;oy and o-lnQ Roll ,
MllhedP-

13

12

BrusMI Sprouta

17

Ruth Moore, Tammy Sigman, Senior Companion Coordinator, Sandy Edwards, Josephine
Smith, Baaale Reynolds-Rica, Tracy Cundiff, VIvian Hurlow, Arlette Vanover, nna St. Marla,
Maxine Little and Rosalie Story. .
Presenters: Angle'Edwards and Donna Hatfield

jltNd

Apple sapo and Raillna

•

•

with Moll
Tillllld Salld
Genic Bread
Tropical Mixed Frul
Cool&lt;le

f'all!pCw
Q!l!!l SIIIW
lklllndl'eM

Wednesday

•

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MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

Chicken Cacclatora
Mashed Potatoes'
Splnacl\
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Strawberry Hash

Doctor says records contradict Sheppard, A2
Reds lose to Brew~rs, B1

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High: 60s; Low: 40S
"etails, A3

Senior .Citizens

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tueaday,Ap~l4,2000

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