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•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 22, 1999;

Tuesday

~~==~======-=~==~~~----------------~:
well aware of the help and comfol'!
"Mr. Sponagle came running up
,.
'
Beo.t of she canprovide asa newauxiliary theroadwakingus aswewe rein Meigs County · Humane Society · to begin:
me mbe r.
bed . My father asked Mr. Sponable
!
tlae Bend
Recently Shirley Hunnell Miller ~~a~~=~s ~~~; !~t~e.;.·~Y~;~~~~ euthanasia program with Ripley Animal Shelter:
If you ' re on the prowl for Easter
items, you might latch onto a good
de al at the gi ft . shop o f the
Women 's Auxi liary in the 1obby o f
Veterans Memorial Hosp ital.
The shop'has a· variety of Easte r
theme artic les and effe.ti ve this
Friday, March 26, ·the auxili ary will
stage a 30 perce nt off sale at the
shop effec ti ve through Good Frid ay . Ap ril 2.
.• The auxi liary nas voted agai nst
hold ing a ny more raffles in the
future but are wrapping up the ir
fin al two whic h include a fill ed
Easter bas ket and an afghan . Wi n·
ncrs wi ll bo dete rm ined on Apri l 2.
Also on Good Fr iday.heg inni ng at
9 a.m .. the a uxiliary wi ll be holding a bake sale in . the hospital
lob by. Fallhfu l member. Libby
Fisher, is creatin g a bunch of color·
fu l Easter candy ' fm the sale.
Meanwhile , the grou p has welco nlcd a new mcmbcr: Sa.ll y Ebe rsbach. into the org an izati on. Sall y
has spent a lot uf time ove r the pa st
fe w years in the c~ tc ndcd care uni t
o r the hospit al having had several
re latives as res ide nts there so she is

of the Flatwood s Road , Pomeroy, and he told my father his wife had
had asked for info rmation about a drowned. (Bai ley recall s that the
tragedy that occ urred on the Ohio Sponagles ' small daughter also
River near Pomeroy back in 1926.
drowned.) The B. &amp; 0 . excursio n
A former res ident, Clarence R . had turned into a tragedy.
Ba iley, Springfie ld, Ohio, picked
"When I was a boy in the 1920s
up on the request and directed a let- the Ohio Ri ver would freeze over
ter to Shirl ey telling her about the and tWO team s of horses would pull
traged y as well as some of his other a load of coal from Ohio to Wes t
experiences in Meigs County .
Virginia ·
"In 1936 on a Sunday night my
He writes .. in part :
''I have read Bob Hoe flieh abou t girl friend and I watched the Ohio
the cap sizing of the skiff in 1926. I River ice break up. I later married
was ll years old. I remember the my girl friend , Doll y Erl ewi nc.
ni ght as Bill Spo nagle was goin g to
"When the Pomeroy - Mason
meet his wife. He was a neighbor. bridge was buil t the re was no use
"T here was an exc ursion on the for the ferry boat and the last day it
·B. &amp; 0. Rai lroad in Wes t Virgi ni a ran, my gra ndfather took my
that weeke nd. T,he river was rough ,cousin (Robert J. M~ In tosh) and
and the ferry boat quit runn ing. me for a ride on the ferry. My
The train came in after dark some- gra ndfat her was a relative of
time between nine and eleven. A Valentin e B. Horton who dcvc lman offered to brin g eve ryone that oped coal and salt ind ustrie.s in
wanted to co me to Ohio. In those Pomeroy ." .
days, some of the ladies wore ankle
Bai ley was born and reared on'
leng th dresses. The r-iver was very Ebenezer Stree t in lower Monkey
rough when they too k off. The Run and graduated from Pomeroy
train le t · off the pa sse nge rs in Hjg h Sc hoo l in 1933 .
·Mason . W.Va. Tl1ere was no pl ace
And ' tis the season for jelly
for the passe ngers to stay. Everyone wanted to come home as quick beans. Somehow they don' t seem
as possible . About the middle of as tasty as th ey used to . Do keep
the ri ver, the skiff turned over.
. smi ling .

- ------Community
The Comm)J nit y Ca lendar IS
puhlished as a free sc rv i c~ to
no n-pro fit gro ups wis hi ng to
a nnounce mee tings and spec ia l·
eve nt s .. The ca lend a r is no t
des igned to promo te sa les or fu nd
rai se rs of a ny type. Items arc
printed as spa ce pcrmrt s and can no t be guara nteed to ru n a speci fic number of da ys.

Calendar·--~----

MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Free
Wi ll Bapt ist Church, rev iva l se rvices, Monday through March 27.
Jame s Arthur, spe aker.

T UESDAY
·RAC INE - RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park . New
members welco m e .
POM EROY - Me igs Loca l
Board of Educati o n reg ular mee tRAC IN E - So uthe rn Hi gh . in g Tuesday, 7 p .m . at the distr ic t
Sc hoo l Board of Educa tion, 7 ce ntral office on th e seco nd fl oor
p.m. Mo nday, a t t he hi gh sc hoo l. of the Pomeroy Muni c1pal Buildmg.

The Meigs County Humane Society, as of April I , 1999, is now
resuming a service about whi ch several of us (and, I include myself
among them) are ambivalent but
which apparently is greatly needed
in thi s county. The necessity for the
service te fl ects. I think, one of the
most serious problems in lhe county
- what to do about surplus cats.
Let me explain the service and
how it · works and then look at the
philosophical issues that arise.
Once a week - twice a week. if·
necessary - and beginning in April ,
we will be pay ing a person to transport relinqu ished cats and kittens to
the Ripley An imal Shelter in Jackson County, West Virgini a. People
surrendering ca ts/ki ttens will be
required to- sign a · rel.inqui shme.nt
form and give us a dona tion of a
mini mum of $5.00. The kittens must
be eight weeks of age or we will not
accept them.
·
You should know, however, that
th is donati on reall y amounts to a
euthanasia fee · bec a u ~e 95 percent of
the ani mals will be promptl y put to
sleep. Killens under e ight weeks do
not do well with the form of
euthanasia used at Ripley.
The Board of Directors of the
Meigs County Humane Soc iety has
agreed to resume this service (disco ntin ued for several months)
because we think it is more humane

than the -alternative means some they did not take lhe molher cat tct
people will employ to get rid of cats the vet after she h,ad that first litter?:
and kittens. There are people (many
Regardless, the problems of cat~
of • whom. profess to have great and ki ttens remains and transportin~
respect for life) who will drown kit- cats to Ripley is one - let us hope;
tens (m aybe kee p the mother, temporary - solution. But can 't WC(
although never give a lhought to . do better?
· !
preventing the next litter).
I ask those of you out ihere who)
You know this is true. Some peo- fee l as I do to help us. Convince&gt;
pie will p~tlje litter in a box , dri ve your re lati ves, friends, and neigh•
out to a county road and dump them, 'bors· to · take a&amp;vantage of o ur!
box and all (one member of our Spay/Neuter Program (rememberi
board enc&lt;luntered just such a box). we pay one-hal f the cost) to hav~t
Others, the cruelest of all, wm use their cats (of either sex) sterilized. I~
the kitte ns for target practice or as you have extra money, contact a vet
prac tice prey for hunting dogs.
and donate the cost of spay/neute~
Gi ven these scenarios, transport- operation for an indigent cat owner.•
ing the animals to be humanely Take responsibility for a box o(,
euth anized looks pretty good. How- dumped kittens - even if 'thal
ever. let's face it; this "service" is means they end up with us.
:
NOT the most productive use of our
In addition, I invite anyone willl
volunteers' time and it is not a ser- an idea of how to alleviate the. s ur~
·'vice we nam.,...ith much enthusiasm plus cat problem to contact me abou~
·when people 1lSk what the soc iety ideas you have f9r an alternati ve td
"does for animals." We are, after all , our service. Although we do not
a "humane'' society, and many of us . seem to have the means or s uppo~:~-.
are cat owners. We find it pain ful to we need to build, staff, and operate 3'
come into the Thrift Shoppe to be cat shelter, we can come up with
greeted with the purrs and meows o f other solut ions to cat overpopul~~
needy, loving, cats and kittens and tion. It could be that you~ idea __:
know that withi)'t 12 hours they will ingeni ous, untri ed. creati ve be dead .
works. We have funds set aside for
1
In addition , ~orne of us question just this purpose. Contact me with
the whole no(i on of our takin g your ideas.
:.
responsibility for other people's irreI can be reached at work at 593-&lt;
sponsibility. Are we assuaging them 4687
or
on
E-mail
at
of their well-deserved guilt because waitt @ohio.edu.
;

'Tomorrow: Ught Rain
High: 50s; Low: 30s ·

•
Meigs County's

Day Sale

~ BRIAN J. REED

developmen~ or because of the potential of starting
Council tabled discussion of combining the positions,
another economic development program in the village.
and took no action to hire Cheri Johnson in either posiA new use for $27,000 in old economic development
According to Custer, new economic development lion, although Councilman Bob Pooler encouraged lhe
funds was discussed· when Middleport Village Council funds would be available to the village if an economic village to advertise tHe position of park director before
met in regular session on Monday _evening.
·
development program were started.
hiring Johnson for the pos ition.
Pat Custer, village grant writer. has prompted discus·
Councilman Steve Houchins said that he would not
The position of park director is already on the village
sion among coun~l members about using the funds, left support the ·bike path project, because there arc more ordinances, but has not.been filled for several years.
over from a state-funded economic development office pressing needs in the village, such as street and other
Jean Craig encouraged the recreation committee to
in Middleport, to help finance a feasibility study for a infrastructure improvements. Custer noted that the use consider activities other than athletics for children, and
bike path between Middleport and Pomeroy.
of the economic development funds is strictly limited.
also·said that events in the park for adults might also be
The Village of Pomeroy has allocated its half of the
''Thestate will let you use these monies for develop- well-received. '
funds for lhe study, $7,000, which would fund env,iron- ment projects, but they're not going to let you put them .
Council also discussed mowing at the parks, and
mental studies and other .work required to apply for the ' in the general fund so that you can blow i~" Custer said. decided to solicit volunteers to assist with .park maintestate grant. The path would span from the Nyc Avenue
Council authorizc:Q ·a letter to the Department of nance.
Eblen and Johnson also discussed a $26,000 gra,nt for
area in Pomeroy to the marina in Middleport, but the Development to examine possible use of the funds, with
study must be 'completed in order to apply for the grant Councilman Roger Manley voting against such a letter. which the village has applied. The grant would be used
funds.
.
. .Wilh warm weather approaching, council discussed · to fund repairs to park restrooms, picnic shelters, basCuster said that she had spoken to some.one at the plans for the village parks and recreation program.
ketball courts, and playground equipment.
Ohio Department of Development; who had encouraged
Sam Fblen an\! Arnold Johnson of the recreation
Word of grant approval is not expected until April.
the village to request the release of the funds for other committee, proposed the consolidation of ,the positions
Police Chief Br~ce Swift and · Council President
economic development uses, because the fund was of pool manager and park director, and suggested that Sandy Jannarelli discussed the status of a new Neigh"dead."
Cheri Johnson, Arnold Johnson 's wife, be hired for both borhood Wat~h program in the village. Swift said that he
Custer said that the Department of Development has positions. She was pool manager last year.
would be meeting with Prosecuting Attorney John
indicated that using the money for such a study would be
According.to Arnold Johnson, the pool manager posi- Lentes to discuss the program, and said that a public
an appropriate use.
lion pays $2SO per week, and $50 extra would be paid meeting would be held soon for those interested in parCouncil members and Oerk Bryan Swann have for the park director position. The park director would .ticipating.
expressed concern about using tlte funds for the study, be responsible for overseeing park maintenance, and the
Those interested in volunteering for the new program
· ' -either because the project would not relate to economic reserv;~tion of picnic areas, ball fields and ·tennis courts: · were asked to call the Middleport Police Department.

BOSTON BUTT

TONY'S ITALIAN STYLE
.
'

•

Pork Roasts

c

COUNTRY STYLE
PORK RIBS 79C LB.

15.1-17.6

P1zzas
oz.
2/$

•

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CHICKEN

LA T

BROOKLYN (AP) - The Oeveland suburb which pioneered the
requirement to wear seat belts has banned the use of cellular phones by
· d(ivers unless they have two hands on the wheel.
The measure was approved by a ·5-2,city council vote Monday night.
' The Ohio Municipal League called it the first of its kind in the stale.
."Everyone's been talking about it, but nobody 's done anything about
Maybe we can stimulate interest nationwide," said Mayor John M.
' Coyne, who prides himself on making his city the first to require the use
, of seat belts.
Police Chief James f . Maloney said motorists wouldn 'I bJ: pulled over
fOf vaing a cell phone as a primary offense. But drivers weaving in traffic
.
would be cited, he said.
The ordinance makes it a minor misdemeanor punishable by a fine to
. use a cell phone While driving unless both hands are on the steering wheel.
Exceptions are allowed for calling emergency crews, using the phone
when the car is in the. "park" position or if a speakerphone device
is used .
.

4/$

' 7 oz.
Limit 4 please

CHERRY OR

Judge won't release suspect's mental records
CLEVELAND (AP) - A judge refused a request by prosecutors to
release the mental records of a suspect in last week's sidewalk shooting
death of 15-year-old girl who had spumed his advances.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard J. McMonagle
refused Monday to release the re\X)rds of Scott Strothers, 21, of Shaker
Heights, agreeing with the Cleveland Clinic that th~ records were governed by doctor-patient confidentiality.
James Malone, an attorney representing the research hospital, said the
clinic was not trying to obstruct the case, but had a legal obligation to its
patients.
.
Assistant Prosecutor Steve Dever said his office wanted the records in
case Strothers claims he was mentally ill at the time Penny Chang of Shaker Heights was killed on March 16.
Strothers has been held in the county jail on an aggravated murder
charge. The victim was shot while walking to Shaker Heights School and
·
police ssid Strothers had been infatuated with her.
Gerald S. Gold, who represents Strothers, would not comment on a
possible insanity plea. "We have no plans other than to appear at the
arraignment and enter a not guilty plea," he said.

Pfe ·Filling

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21

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FRESH HEAD

JACK FROST GRANULATED

Lettuce

S_ugar

c

$ ·59

5 LBS.

LIMIT 2 .

Tomato .Juice
.

c

10 LB. BAG

COLUMBUS (AP) - A report commissioned by the state calls on
.Ohio's politiealleaders to stop fighting a court 's school-funding ruling and
.l·worli with educators to find an acceptable solution.
Two newspapers reported on the study which was to be released today
to the State Board of Education.
·
Th~ report by Achieve Inc., an j ndependen~ nonprofit, bipartisan organization, says it would take extraordinary will by elected officials t6 break
through the school-finance impasse, but they should do it.
It says the focus needs to be returned to teaching and learning, The
Columbus Dispatch and The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
Former Gov, George Voinoi~ich commissioned the study last November. The report comes as the state prepares to appeal a Perry County judge's
finding that the state has failed to come up with an equitable plan to pay
for education.
A si x-member team re viewed
Ohio's newly enacted laws aimed at
. improving student performance and
school district fiscal management.
lt. found Ohio's academic standards don 't provide enough detail to
1 Section - 10 Pages
ensure that students learn what they

STOKELY

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. 46

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c

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Limit 2 please

UNITED VALLEY BELL

2% Milk
$ 89 ·

SUNBEAM

PEPSI &amp; MT. DEW

Big Bread

Products

79c

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Gallon

Limit 2 Please
24 pk cube

$

Good Afternoon

1.------------,
Today's

Sentinel

~~5~~~~~~~~~
~

99

•
'

'

Jean Craig, chairman of the Board of Publ ic Affairs
updated co uncil members ori the search for a new consuiting fi rm .to assist the village in seeking gran t and
loan fun ds for improveme nts to the village water and
sewer systems.
Craig said that Floyd Browne Associates, the vil!age's c urrent consullant, has proposed almost $75 ,000
in stud ies before any other work can be done .
Craig said that she had mel with representatives of
another firm, Leighty and Snider, In c., to discuss the vii!age's needs, and will be meeting with John Anderson
and John Musser o.f Pomeroy later this week, to seek
advice on funding sources.
.
Street Supetvisor Junior Madden inquired about pay
raises for village street workers, and counci l noted that
pay increases for village employees were incl uded in the
appropriations ordinance which wa5 approved last night.
Coundl also:
- . Approved the annual appropriations ordinance for
1999;
- Authorized the sale of four cars forfeited to the
police department, along with excess village equipment;
- Approved the payment of bill s, with Pooler voting
no.
Iannarelli presided over the meeting in the absence of
Mayor Dewey Horton. Also presen~ in addition to
lannarelli, Houchins, Pooler, Manley and Swann, was
Council member Rae Gwiazdowsld. ·

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Lotteries

•

OHIO
Pick 3: 7-9-6; Pick 4: 4-6-9-6
Buckeye 5: 5-6-11 -22-29
W.yA.
...J
.

PRICES EFFECTIVE MARCH 23, 24TH, 1999 unt-.,

Daily 3: 0-7-2; 1Jti19'4i' 0-8-1-2
0 1999 Ohiu V.lley Pt..1hllshing Cn,

..
'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnal N-• Staff
A request for funding assistance to repair the
London Pool in Syracuse was tabled by the
Meigs County Commissioners when they met in
regular session on Monday.
'
Bill Roush and Larry Lavender, members of
Syracuse Village Council , requested $8,000 in
funding from the county for the r epairs, which
would include new diving board equipment and
plumbing repairs.
In the past, the commissioners have provided
funding ~sistance to both Syracuse and Middleport for their pool operations, with the reasoning that the pools are used by residents
·
throughout the county.
. Commissipner , Jeffrey ·Thornton, who
presided at yesterday ;s meeting, said that he hail'
been fold that such use of county general fund
money was illegal, but said that the commissioners were pursuing the reestablishment of a
parks district; and that grant funds would be
.sought through that agency.
In other business, the commissioners authorized Michael Swisher, Director of the Meigs
County Department of Human Services, lo enter·
into an agreement with Sojourners, a private

firm wh ich provides inpatient services and foster-care placement for at-risk youths .
Swisher, Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes
and Juvenile Court Judge Robert Buck met with
the commissioners to discuss the .proposal,
which will cost the county S12,000.
The agency, based in McArthur, will assist
children's services caseworkers and the Juvenile Court in placing children in the facility in
cases where there is a risk of suicide, and in
placing others in foster homes in Meigs County
. when the need arises due to home ci rcum stances.
The center will be e~pecially useful, Lentes
said, in cases where suicide is a potential risk,
because of the required evaluations which must
·. take place.
·
The nearest facility avail~bl e in suicide-risk
cases is in St. Clairsville, according to Buck.
Tourism Director Karin Johnson introduced
the commissioners to Sarah Alexander, an artist
who will oversee the creation of a mural on the
City National Bank. building in Pomeroy.
The $30,000 project will be funded through
the Ohio Arts Council and the Ohio River Border Initiative. The mural will feature historical
representations from both Meigs Cpunty and

•

\

Without clear standards, teachers
have no shared mission on what to
, should.
teach, assessors have no clear idea
about what to test, and students get
mixed messages about what they're
supposed to learn, according to the
study.
"There's a lot of confusion about
academic standards," Ohio Superin. tendent of Public Instruction Susan
Tave Zelman told the Enquirer.
" We have to get really clear and
explicit about wh at we want school
districts to 'do," s he said . .
· The report was joinlly sponsored
by the Ohi o Department o f Education, the governor 's office and the
Ohi o Business Roundtable .

Mason County, W.Va.
Dorsey Johnson of Columbia Township met
with the commissioners about a reduced telephone toll rate between the 698 exch ange and
the 992 exchange.
Commissioner Mi ck Davenport said that . he
would contact the. Public Utilities Comm ission
of Ohio regarding the rate, and he and Thornton ·
also discussed the possibility of a toll -free telephone number for the courthouse, to serve residents in the Columbia Township area, as well as
the Tuppers Plains and Reedsville communities,
fo r whom a call to Pomeroy is a toll call.
The commissioners reviewed a letter from
Jean Trussell , Meigs County Grants Administrator, about a matching funds grant from the Ohio
Department of Development, Office of Housing
and Community Partnerships, whi ch would create a farmland preservati on pl an for the county.
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District will also assist in the program, designed to
preserve land for farm. use.
. An informational meeting about th e program
will be held on March 29 at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
County Annex , next to Veterans Mem orial Hos·
pita!.
·
Al so present was Clerk Gloria Kl oes.
MEDIA BUlZ -An effort to strengthen
regional support of U-S. Route 33 from
Athena to Darwin has l!agun, In antlclpa·
tlon of a Rally Day event set for April 9.
The Melga County Commlasloners Invited
members of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and others active In the campaign In support of the proiact to apeak
with a reporter from The Athans Nawa on
Monday afternoon, so thst local officials
can explain the Meigs County "aida" of the
Issue. Pictured speaking with reporter
Andrea Gibson and photographer Ed
rick are Bill Childs, who was active In the
original puah for the road In the mid·
1960's, Steve Story, a member of the
SEORC Highway . Users Committee and
the Chamber of Commerce Highway Commlttae, and Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe: Paul Reed of Farmers
Bank, Tourism Director Karin Johnson,
and County Commlasloners Janet
Howard, Jaffrey Thornton and Mlck Dav·
enport also participated In th,a interview.

van-

Study: More details needed
to help students learn

PLEASE

US NO.1

·

s use
of cellulars by motorists

"'

THANK

. HEAD

.

nd s

WHILE SUPPLIES

REAMETTE
Macaroni &amp;·cheeie Dinner ·

$ 99

Single Copy - 35 C e nts

Co.mmissioners consider pool funding request ·

,

LEG QUARTERS

'

S.ntiMI Nawa Staff

white-sided dolphios were stranded,,
said aquarium spokes woman Susan .
Knapp. Of _those, 20 pied, 24 were .
euthani zed .and three were tagged ,
and released back into the ocean . ,

Prices Good ·Tuesday, March. 23rd 8 Wednesday, March. 24th only

NO RAINCHECKS

•

Fate of economic development .fund discussed by Middleport Council :

'

.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number 223

a

Aquarium and volunteers from -the
Cape Cod Stranding Network kept
watch , but said there were no new
strandings Sunday.
From late Thursday evening to
sundown Saturday, a 'total of 47

District 13 all-star results, Page 4
No more maternal matchmaking, Page 6
Time Out for Tips, Page 6

Todliy: Chatnce of Rain
High: 50s; Low: 40s

Dolphin strandings
end in Massachusetts- as mysteriously as they began.
.

WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP) - A
flurry of dolphin strandings that
took the li ves of 44 of the sea mammal s has ended as mysteriously as it
began.
Experts from the New England

March23, 188e

Weather

outhern Board considers

all field advertising

The board also accepted Alan Crisp's resignaBy JIM FREEMAN
tion as reserve girls' softball coach and approved
Sentinel News Staff
The Southern Local Board of Education, meet- Jeremy Hill as a replacement coach. Ron Hill was
ing in regular s~ssion Monday night, heard a pro- hired as a tutor for a seve re behavior handicapped
posal on selling advertising space on·the football student for the remainder of the school year with
board member Dave Kucsma abstaining. .
field fence .
In other personnel matters the board approved
Head Football Coach Dave Barr said the
advertising would benefi t the school 's football a leave without pay for school nurse Joyce Thoren
and accepted April! and May 27 as niake-up days
program.
following
school closings on March 9 and 15.
The board took no action on the proposal , but
A
su1J1mer
school intervention program will be
wanted to see written guidelines concerning the
held
June
2
1
to July 19 for those ele mentary
size and content of the advertising. No beer, .
tobacco, or other inappropriate advertisements school students needing assistance with reading
or junior high students needing assistance with
would be allowed, it was noted .
In personnel matters, it was noted that Karen math or scie nce. Superinte nde nt James Lawrence
Hill has transferred into the kindergarten position said the classes will likely be held at the junior
vacated by the retirement of Suzanne Sayre effec- . high school in !l.acine.
In other business, the board:
li ve the 1999-2000 school yet~r.

-· Appro ved a tentative li st of seniors for
graduation that have met both the State Board of
Education and South ern Local Board of Ed ucati&lt;tn requirements for graduation.
. · - Tentatively approved a con tract with th e
Athens-Meigs Educational Service Ge nter for
psyc hology, speech therapy, and other services for
the 1999-2000 sc hool year.
- Approved a letter of endorsement of the
U.S. Route 33 project from Ath ens to Da rwin.
It was noted th at the Southern Local Academic Banquet wi ll be April 29, 6:30 p.m. at Southern
High Schoo l. Tickets wi ll be $7 and State Representalive John Carey Jr. will be the speaker.
Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill,
board President Bob Colli ns and boa rd members .
Ron Camm arata, Marty Morarity, Doug Littl e and
Kucsma.

Portland youth recognized for aviation pQster
Although many youngsters like airplanes, fe w take
their passion as far as 10-year-old Chance Collins of
Portland.
Collins, a fourth-grader at Syracuse Elementary
School, recently entered a 1999 International Av iation
Art Contest in which he drew a poster dealing with aviati on.
His poster was se)ll to the Ohi o Department qf Transportation 's Office of Aviation for state judging.
The son of Bob and Bev Collins, he created a colorful , freehand poster of a rural airport with a short
airstrip, an old hangar and a windsock.
Vintage ai rcraft are show n parked at the field while
in' the sky oth er planes are perfor ming aerobatics.

Last week, he was n,otified that he had won first
place· in category one in state-level competition.
iji~ poster has been forwarded to Washington, D.C.
to participate in the national competition.
Chan ce has flow n in vari ous types of ai rcraft over
the past three years alo ng with his father, Bob, who is
currently pursuing a pilot's lice nse. ·
He is also partici pating in th e Yo un g Eagles program
in which young people gel to take their fi rst airplane
rid e along with learning abou t aviation.
.
He remains acti ve in Oying th roughout the summer
mo nth s.
·
His sister, Merri , 8, also received a certificate of
achievement for _her entry in the-contest.

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~C~O~n1~n1~e~n~t~a~'~Y~~~~----------~---·~-~,-~,~~~·:~1~:
The Daily Sentinel Can GOP take Clinton's issues from.·hiln?)
.

Tuesday, March 23, 1999

Weathe-r ·

...

'E.Jta6(rsfid rn 1948

I·

' 1 •

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
746-9112-215&amp; • Fax: 9112-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

'

DIANE HILL
Controller

11M Sentinel we/com.• lett.,.. to U.. «&lt;ll« from,...,.,. on • bro.d ,..ng• of top-.
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TyptJd 1«1.,. .,. ,..r.rr.c~ 111td •II m•y bto «&lt;lt«i EMili •hould lnclud• • •lgrgtu,..,
-'d,...., •nd d•ytJm. phon• numb.r. Sp.clfy • d•t• If th•n • • ,.(.,.nc. to • , . .
tAou• •rllcl• or
to. utt.,. to th• «1/tor, Th• Sentinel, 111 Court St
Pomwoy, Ohio 457U, or, FAX to T40-H2·2167

,.tt.,. """"

I

!Guest column

!Substance abuse prevention
:efforts increase in Ohio
:By Lucama Flaming, director, Ohio Department
;ot Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services
The State of Prevention
Oh1o's comm1lment to keepmg young people off alcohol, drugs and
)qbacco has bten strengthened Governor Bob Taft has stressed " a child
;on drugs IS a ch1ld whose chances for success are d1m1mshed:'and somellmes
lost forever" F1rst Lady Hope Taft has ded1cated herself to carrying out the
miSSion of crealmg more quahty prevenllon programs throughout the slate
Th1s also f11s the m1ssJon of the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug
'Addiction Serv1ces
Nat1onal and state stud1es have proven prevent1on works a carefully
'planned preventiOn program saves lives and dollars L1ves are saved when
Yt&gt;ung people chose to l1ve drug and alcohol free The b1ggest k1ller of
teenagers 1s alcohol or drug related car crashes Other reasons for early death
or senous inJury acc•dental overdose, SUICide, physical abuse, rape, murder
and card1ac arrest caused by an mhalant Substance abuse hes at the core of
~ach of these lraged1es
' Prevention saves dollars as well For every $1 spent on prevention, $15
1s saved tn expenses from health care, cnme, school drop-outs, teen preg
nancy, welfare and JOb related acc1dents Schools, Cities, counties and the
state spend at least $8 bli han each year on the after-effects of drug and alco·
hof abuse Th•s staggenng amount of money could be gomg to new schools
Instead of secunty officers, new parks 1nstead of JUVem!e detentiOn centers,
~nd new local programs mstead of detox hosp1tals and treatment centers
What Can I Do?
, Every adult in Oh10 can make a difference to a ch1ld who 1s deciding 1f
fie or she needs drugs to be part of the "1n" crowd The fact IS ~at most
young people don 't do drugs or dnnk alcohol But from the v1ew~mt of a
1ll-year-old wants nothtng more than to be "cool," drugs and alcohol seem
to be the key to gettmg "m" To whom Will a 14·year-old, a 10-year-old or
a six year-old hsten? They w1ll hsten to the parent or Important adult 1n thm
lives
To a Six-year-old, talk about good and bad thtngs to eat or dnnk The 10year-old's message IS a httle more sophisticated, and the adolescent's mes·
§age has to reach an mtellectual level Use every opportumty to tell a young
~rson that usmg drugs or alcohol can rum h1s or her ltfe Describe the physJCIII danger that they put themselves m, the cnme and pumshment of usmg
fllegal substances and the poss1ble effects on thelf futures
- ' Although conversatiOn at breakfast IS vllally important, prevention IS
more than that Successful prevention 1s an ongomg commumty effort
tvery county m OhiO has access to a number of state and federally-funded
'prevention programs Head Start, preschools, elementary and m1ddle school
cbrncula, htgh school preventiOn groups, churches and commumty orgamZai!Ons all contnbute to keepmg young people healthy
The Pride World Dr\lg Conference
Next month, Apnl 8-10 Oh10 Department of Alcohol and Drug AddJCIJon
Serv1ces hosts the 1999 PRIDE World Drug Conference m Cmc1nnall
Thousands of adolescents, parents, volunteers and substance abuse professionals w1ll meet to look for solut1ons to the world's most threatening prob·
lems The Parents' Resource lnslltute for Drug Educatton (PRIDE) holds
•fh•s event each year Representaltves from 50 countnes have attended m the
Qast Th1s year PRIDE expects about 7,000 young people and adults to JOin
fdrces around drug and alcohol prevenllon
' General sess1ons feature well -known nat10nal speakers, mclud1ng Generill Barry R McCaffrey, dlfector of the Wh1te House Office of NatiOnal Drug
PJntrol Pohcy, and James E Burke, chalfman of the partnersh•p for a Drugflee Amenca From Oh1o, Congressman Rob Portman, pres1dent of the
(::oahllon for a Drug-Free Amenca From Oh1o, Congressman Rob Portman,
~res1dent of the Coaht10n for a Drug-Free Greater Cmcmnat1, w1ll speak and
Procter and Gambl e Chalfman John Pepper will open a pre-conference
~outh Mentonng workshop on April 7
: For over a year, Flfst Lady Hope Taft and I have co-cha1red a statew1de
tomm lttee to create an exc1ttng motJvat tonal event The PRJ DE Conference
115 open to any adults or youth groups that wan t to work for substance abuse
Orevent1on m theu home communltlCS
: A rat1o of one adult to every four adolescents 1s expected For more mfor1113lton, call Conference Coordtnator Tamara Sulltvan at (~ 13) ~83 - !433 or
~I Sit the web Site at www pndeusa org
: The Oh1o Department of Alcohol and Drug AddJct1on Servtces eXJsls to
~rov1de statew1de leadersh1p for alcohol and other drug prevenllon and treat·
ment servtces The role of the state can only support the most VItal role of
411 that of the parent and adult mentor who hve and work every day wllh
1.oung Oh1oans Don't JUSt talk talk about somethtng that could forever
change the If II ves
: Lucellle Fleming Is director ol the Ohio Department ol Alcohol and
lilrug Addiction Services This cabinet-level state department can be
"-•ched by calling (1114) 41111·3445 or visit the web alta at
l!(ww.atllte.oh.ustadl/odada htrn.

today In Hisrory
By The Aeaoclattd Presa

; Today is Tuesday, March 23, the 82nd day of 1999 There are 283 days
left m the year
: On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry made hts famous call for America's
independence from Bntam, te!hng the Vngm1a Provmc1al Convenhon,
".G1ve me hberty, or giVe me death 1"
In 1792, Joseph Haydn's Symphony No 94 m G MaJOr (the "Surpnse"
•¥mphony) was performed pubhcly for the first bme; m London.
In 1806, explorers Lewis and Oark, havmg reached the Pacific coast,
~gan thm return journey
• In 1919, Bemto Mussohm founded h1s Fasc1st pohbcal movement m
Milan, Italy.
In 1933, the German Re1chstag adopted the Enabhng Act, wh•ch effectJyely granted Adolf H1tler dJctatonallegJslabve powers
; In 1942, dunng World War II, the US government began evacuating
J~panese-Arnencans from West Coast homes to detentiOn centers.
, In 1956, Pakistan became an independent repubhc wnhm the Brillsh
Commonwealth
In 1965, Amenca's first two-person space flight blasted off from Cape
Kennedy with astronauts Virgil I Grissom and John W Young aboard.
. : In 1983, Presid~nt. Reagan first proposed development of technology to
1~tercept enemy missiles - a proposal that carne to be known as the Strate·
g!c Defense lmtiat1ve, as well as "Star Wars "
: In 1983, Dr. Barney Clark, recipient of a permanent artificial heart, died
a( the University of Utah Medical Center after 11 2 days w1th the devil:e.
; Ten years ago. Fawn Hall, fanner secretary to onet1me National Security
Ccuncil aide Oliver North, completed two days of testimony at North's Iran·
Contra tnal.

By Morton Kondr~eke
You have to hand 11 to congressional Republicans. They are trymg to wrest 1ssues from President Clinton the way he usually does from them
The question is· Can they pull1t off?
On educat1on, Soc1al Secunty and Medicare -·
all 1ssues on which Democrats maintain a tradit1onal poht1cal advantage-- the GOP has dec1ded
to fight Chnton by one-upping him.
Clinton is famous for makmg political hay by
stealmg GOP 1ssues •• welfare refonn, deficit
reduct1on, cnme and, th1s year, defense spending.
For fiscal 2000, though, the House and Senate
GOP budgets contam more money for education
than Chnton's and res~rve more of anhc1pated
surpluses for debt reduction, Med1care and Social
- Secunty
Moreover, 111 much the way Clmton convmced
Democrattc hberals to swallow hiS centrist programs, GOP conservatives have accepted the 1dea
that they won't be able to afford a 10 percent,
across-the-board tax cut th1s year
Repubhcans are not sacnficing their prmc1ples, however, to f1ght on DemocratiC turf Thelf
educahon proposals, for mstance, emphasize
greater local control of school pollcy as opposed
to Cllnton's, wh1ch set nahonal pnonhes "-··
On Med1care, Repubhcans are w1sely adoPIIng
the reform proposal of DemocratiC Sen John
Breaux (La) and addmg a prescnphon drug benefit for poor seniors -- a combination Clinton has reJected
On th1s one, Clmton is ra1sing the
b1ddmg by prom1smg a drug benef1t
for all sentors, s1dmg w1th the hber·
al wmg of h1s party - possibly in
thanks for ba1hng h•m out on
Impeachment, more hkely to
reserve Medicare as a 2000 cam·
pa1gn issue.
On Social Security, where C!in. ton has proposed reservmg $1 3 tnthan of the next 10 years' budget
surpluses for debt reduction, the
GOP plans to lock up $1.8 tnlhon
that can be used to extend the solvency of both Social Security and
Med1care.
Republicans aren't gtvmg up on
b1g tax culs They 're budgetmg now
for $800 bllllon over 10 years, startmg with JUSt $!0 billion to $15 b•lhon next year, but they hope that
they can go h1gher 1f estimates of
th1s year's budget surplus chmb ••
as everyone expects, g1ven the
strong economy -- above $113 billion
Wh1le all of lh1s constitutes a
canny departure from the Jdeolog• ·
cal ngtd1ty of the past few years,
there are questiOns about whether
the GOP can succeed w1th 1ssue

~·

theft as well as Ointon did.
One problem lies with communications On
educatiOn, for instance, there's a Jot to recom·
mend the GOP approach The question is: Can
Repubhcans sell their 1deas as better than Clin·
' ton's, or will it seem hke they are qu1bbhng•
To demonstrate the priority they now give
educatiOn, the GOP just pushed "Ed-Flex" legis·
lation through both chambers to release states and
local school boardS from mmute federal regula.'
lion.
But Democrats tned to amend the measure by
accelerating Clinton's program to hire 100,000
additional teachers around the country over seven
years The GOP defeated the amendmei\I.S In
doing so, can the GOP convmce people that it's
just as pro·educahon as Democrats•
•
A second b1g problem w1th the GOP Jssuestheft strategy lles w1th 1ts narrow majonues m
Congress
Cllnton IS threatenmg to veto Ed· Flex •f 11 con·
tams Senate amendments that allow states to use
previously appropnated class-size money for education of handicapped children.
Democratic Senators are preparmg a letter to
demonstrate that Republicans couldn't override
the veto. The 1mportance ofth1s IS that 11 could be
the model on 1ssues beyond Ed- Flex Chnton will
stymie G0P initiatives by usmg h1s veto Watch
for th1s on Med1care, too.

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Finally, even though Republicans are working •
hard to get their budget resolution passed on tim~ :
and pass appropriations bills promptly, they '
remain wedded to the idea that they have to reta1~
deficit-era spending CliPS in a hme of mounting ;
surpluses.
'
It satisfies them ideologically and lets then! •
retatn the mantle of fiscal responsibility. But i' :
prevents them from dev1smg policy strategies ,
early and carrying them through
:
' Budget caps require huge cuts in domestic pro, •
grams -- $5 b1llion this year either in education, ;
health or worker safety -- which are simply sense,;
less when the government IS runmng $100 billio~ •
surpluses.
·:
The budget caps certamly won't hold in the ;
end game of fundmg the government So Repubr •
licans should move now to adjust.them to reahs• :
tic levels

a weapon that he's used before· He'll p1ck an edu• :
cabon or health program that faces cuts and ;
threaten a veto if it 1sn 'I restorejl
:
In the end, Repubhcans can't beat Chnton by :
promising to outspend him, which means they :
have to make a very good case, very early, for
then own pnoribes It's tough
;
(Morton l&lt;ondracke Ia executive editor of
Roll Call, the newapaper of Capitol Hill.)
1
Copyrlght1m NEWS_PAPER ENT~RPRI~ ASSN. -: 1
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~laGE!it. TYf"E OM ,.HE
01:'~ Of WINNING

ment

A year's worth of 1nspecttons of
the Cap1tol grounds found plenty of
hazards Inspectors reported how
•Congression al workers nsked
blood-transmitted d1seases by d•gging through contammated trash
Without protective clothmg
•One butldmg contamed h1gh
concentrations of the bacteria that
cause Leg10nna~res' diSease
'Recalcitrant offtcJals had to be

ISSued federal CJtaltOns before they
moved flammable liquids stored
near exposed elcctncal w~res and tn
other dangerous places
The Office of Compliance
mspectors 1ssued a scathmg report
last November on the work of the
2,000-employee Cap1tol Architect's
Office, responsible for upkeep of the
Capllol, eight congressional office
bmldtngs, the L1brary of Congress,
the Supreme Court and the power
plant that supphes cooltng and heating to congressional butldmgs
"Overall ... protectiOns for
employee health and safety fall far
below those that preva1l m pnvate
compan1es and government agenc1es
that have good safety programs,"
that report concluded
The Arch11er.l's Off1ce says 11 1s
JUSt begtnnmg to change a culture of
neglect on Cap1tol Htll
"We were behmd" m brmgmg
Congress tnto compliance, sa1d
Lynne The1ss, the Architect's execu·
t1ve officer "We are mak1ng great
stndes to get ahead of the curve We
had a general change m our

weather

Edward R. Brown, 71, Rmggold, Ga., formerly of Vinton, died Sunday
March 21, 1999 m a Georg•a hosp1tal.
'
He was retired from the BTJ_Sprinklefitters Local 669. AU S Navy veteran of World War II, he was a hfellme member of the Arnencan Legion and
the VFW. He was a member of the J&lt;jseph Freeman Post of the Arnencan
Leg1on in Wilkesville
Surviving are h1s wafe, Y1ola Brown, a daughter, Linda Brown of Bnm·
mgham, Ala , and by an uncle, a niece and five nephews,
He was preceded 1n death by a son, Lynn Brown, and a grandson, Timmy
Brown
Graves1de serv1ces will be 3 p m. Wednesday m the Anderson Memorial
Gardens, Rmggold, With the Rev. R.V. Wells offic1allng Fnends may call at
the Walhs-Stewart Funeral Home, 443 Boynton Dnve, Ringgold , Ga. 30736,
from 2-9 p.m. today

Wednesday, Man:h 24

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134'148"

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I ...,,._ l3rl48· I •

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Roy Elwood McCullough

o l Columbuo l3fl•tst• I

1

W VA.

•

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Sunny PLQoudy

Showofa

Clauclj

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By The Ailaoclatad Praaa
• Rain is forecast for southern Ohio tomght, and skies will be cloudy else·
where. Overnight lows will be in the 40s in the south and m the 30s m the
test of the state.
On Wednesday, snow or rain showers are PoSSible fn extreme northeast
Ohio. Rain showers may linger m southeast and east-central Oh:o. It will
be partly cloudy m the rest of the slate.
•
Highs w1ll range from 45 in the north to the ~Os in the south.
. The record h1gh temperature for this date at the Columbus we;~ther slalton was 76 set 1n 1966. The record low was 9 set in 1885.
Sunset today will be at 6·46 p m Spnrlse Wednesday Will be at 6.29
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight . Ugfit rain likely. Lows in the lower 40s. L1ght and variable
wmds. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday.. Light ram hkely. H1ghs m the upper 50s Chance of ram 60
percent.
Wednesday night...A chance of hghl ram early, then partial cleanng.
Lows an the lipper 30s.
., •
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Dry during the day, A chance of hght snow or rain dunng the
night. Highs m the lower 50s.
Friday...Cold with a chance of hght ram or snow dunng the day, a
Ich1an•cc of light snow al mght. Morning lows in the mid 30s and h1ghs m
low and mid 40s.
•',
Saturday...Contmued chilly w1th a chance of snow or ram showers durthe day. Morning lows m the lower 30s. Highs near 50.

~.ObHuorlu

moNinfomudton lhln

approach to busmess "
Just last week, however, 1nspectors found 14 new health and safety
VIOlatiOnS at the power plant They
1ncluded excess1ve txposure to coal
dust, lack of a comprehens1ve respt·
ratory program, fa1l~re to clean and
d•smfect resp~rators and a lack of
workmg fire extmgu1shers
Patnc1a Dollar, the Architect 's
former recyclmg coordinator, had a
firsthand look at the hazards mside a
closet m one House offtce budding.
"Stx drums were 10 there," she
sa1d
,
"One of the drums was very
rusty and had popped and expanded.
We unscrewed a httle cock We
looked down and 11 was bubbling It
was a combmallon of leftover chem·
1cals from the furmture repair shop
And 11 was extremely flammable"
F~re al so 1s a senous fear for
workers Hazel Dews, a ntghtttme
custod1an 1n the Senate office bu1ld·
mgs, complamed, "We are m three
bmldmgs w1th one extt from 11 p m
to 7 a m "
The House mspector general

reported m December that the Capi-'
tol and f1ve other congressional
properties were flfefrapS ' that left '
VISitOrs, lawmakers and employees,
w1th an "unciue nsk of loss of hfe
and property "
.'
In January, Architect's employees;
rem_oved asbestos (ro,m a Cap1tol,
Pohce locker room- but never tohl
the officers what they were domg.:
Asbestos can cause cancer if 1ts dust
IS breathed
Ms. The1ss acknowledged thi
officers should have been notified,
callmg 11 ''a fatlure 1~ communt.
cate "
•
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Congress
htstorlcally
has
exempted 1tself from the federal.
safety and labor laws 111m poses an"it
wh1ch are enforced on corporate
Amenca by agencies such as the
US Occupational Safety an·d ,
Health AdmmJstratJOn But when
Republ1cans took over the House m ,
1995, they engmeered passage of
legJslatJon that comrnttted Congres~
to follow those statutes and created
the Office of Comphance to enforce
them

Statues rose 'like mushrooms after a rain~ ;

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
The statue of Bng Gen James
Associated Press Writer
Birdseye McPherson, who was killed at
WASHINGTON (AP) - P1erre
the Battle of Atlanta, was cast from ,
L'Enfant's pen, hke the sweep of a sword, slashed egos mounted on pedestals and completely Confederate cannon captured at that battle.
the cap1tal's gnd of streets w1th broad and sharply unapologetic about 1t."
The standing statue of Adm. David Farragut m
-angled-altenues.
-Aimosui~UIIlCIIts..w~~~cated.with- .fimagui--Squere was east from the branze pre
That left L'Enfant's 1799 map of the unbu11l pres1dents domg the speakin~ as anc1ent, hmpmg peller of h1s flagship, the Hartford. Farragut was :
city speckled with circles and squares, JUSt wa1t· veterans bared thw. w~ne-thatched heads, clinging to the Hartford's ngging at the Bartle of '
mg for monuments to fill them.
remembenng when then world was young and Mobile Bay when he shouted, "Damn the t0 rpe:. •
L'Enfant, mihtary engmeer turned c1ty plan- death could be a prolonged agony or as quick as a does I Full speed ahead'"
ner, knew that every great city remembered its tap on the shoulder
There is a statue to Gen George McClellan '
past. He made certain the new cap1lal of the Umt·
",The statues of the world are ~u1et h1ston- who won the Battle of Anhetem wh1le losing th~ '
ed States would have places for columns and ans, sa1d a speaker at the 1903 dedJcatJon of the confidence of his commander m chief Abraham
obelisks and memonals of all kinds
equestnan statue of. Gen William Tecumseh Lmcoln The statue to MaJ. Gen. George Gordon
But for decades after L'Enfant left the scene, Shennan, who led Umon troops from Atlanta on a Meade, the VICtor at Gettysburg, is hemmed in
his VIsion was marked by empty spaces on the marcb to the sea.
with nude symbolic figures
map presided over by the unfimshed stub of the
There are more equestn.an st~tues m WashmgThe most recent statuary group has ils focus on ,
Washington Monument, standing like a broken ton than many other Arnencan c1ty The very first rank-and-file soldiers and sailors, no1· flag off,;: ,
pencil between the White House and the Potomac was erected to the memory of Lt Gen Winfield cers.
: ,
River.
Scott and may have had more fun poked at it than
The Afncan -American Civil War Memorill1 ,
The CIVIl War and the urge to remember its all ~he rest The tall and portly Scott was shown honors the 178,000 black solltiers and 19,00\) ;
heroes and sacrifices filled in the circles and astnde a small mare When the Scott fam1ly black sailors who served in the war.
.
squares on L'Enfant's map. The hst mcludes slat· declared that generals nde stallions, not mares,
"To all those who take a moment to really look
ues of 10 Civil War generals, two C.vtl War admi- the sculptor reluctantly changed the gender of the at these monuments and to all who are open to the
rals and, at the Grant Memonal, two battle scenes bro.~ze horse.
,
flood of memories they unleash, each Civil War ,
so vivid one can almost feel the passage of canWhatever you do aft~r I am gone, don t. put statue is a silent historian still," Ms. J~~~:ob con- ,
non balls and hear the trumpet call troops mto me on a horse hke that, Gen. Ph1hp Shendan eludes in her book.
•
actiOn
told h•s.w•fe after seeing the~~~ statu~" Each is a testament to union m some sense of '
"After the war, Civil War monuments popped
Shendan probably wouldn t complam. Sculp- the .word: to d1sunion reunion umon and the '
up hke mushrooms after a ram," says Kathryn tor Gutzon ~rglum's Shendan statue is a jolt of Umon Each reminds u~ that the'Union was once ;
All among Jacob m "Testament ttf Umon Civil energy, ~howmg the mome_nt the c~valry general, violently fracfured and that some wounds left by :
War Monuments m Washmgton D.C ," published ndmg h1s spmted horse, Rienz1, skidded to a halt the cataclysm healed faster than others"
'
last year by the Johns Hopkms Umversity Press.
after a dash to Cedar Creek, Va, rallied Umon
·
,
"I have great respect for the honesty of the war troops and turned a rout mto a victory.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Lawrance L. Knutaon hll
memorials," sa1d Edwm Harlan Remsberg, who
Some of the statues are weighted w1th other reported on CongreM, the White HouH and
W•ahlngton'• hl1tory tor more than 30 y81rt.photographed them all for the book "They are kinds of symboli$m

Yesterday in history

Roy·

McCulloug

Roy Elwood McCullough, 85, R•chmond, Va , d1ed Saturday, March 20,
1999, m Houston, Texas.
He 1s sumved by a daughter and son·in·law, Ann McCullough and
Anthony Cooper of Texas, a daughter·m·law, Jud1th Coffman McCullough
of Richmond, Va., f1ve grandsons and three great-grandchildren
H~ was preceded 10 death by h1s w1fe, Charlotte Nye McCullough, and
by a son, S1las Alfred McCullough II
A memonal serv1ce for Mr. and Mrs McCullough will take place al
Grace Ep1scopal Church m Pomeroy, where they were marned 64 years ago
at a date and time to be announced.
'

Ray Junior Roush
Ray Jumor Roush, 50, Racme, d1ed Monday, March 22, 1999, at hiS resIdence.
A farmer, he was born Aug 19, 1948, in Chfton, W Va., son of Irene Elizabeth Vanan Roush of Racme and the late Arthur Franklin Roush .
He IS also sumved by Jus w1fe, Ehzabeth "Libby" Roush; two sons,
Harold Roush of Bennett, 1'1 C, and Kevin Roush of Racme, five grandchildren; five brothers, Roger J!.oush of Lancaster, Harold Roush of JlhnoJs,
Danny Roush of Point Pleasant, W Va., Ronnie Roush of Racme and Tom
Ro~sh of Hartford, W.Va ; two SISters, Clara Gerlach of Letart, W.Va., and
Jan1ce ReJtrn•re uf Hartford, W.Va., father-in-law, Norman Milhron of
Racme, several meces and nephews
Services ~ill be held Thursday, 1 p m at Ewmg Funeral Home 1n
Pomeroy. Bunal w1ll be m Letart Falls Cemetery Services w1ll be offtc1ated
by Rev. Bryce Utt
Friends may call Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Lola Ziegler
Lola z ;egler, 98, Cambridge, d1ed Sunday, March 21 , 1999, al Southeastern Oh1o Reg10nal Medical Center
She was born Oct 2, 1900, m Sumner, daughter of the late Eber and Els1e
Carsey M1ller. She was a reined school teacher and also a homemaker and
seamstress She was a member of the Modern Woodmen of Amenca, Gray
Lad1es Garden Club, Rebekah Lodge m Stewart and WSCS m Albany
She.'s surv1ved by a son and daughter-m-law, Bobby and Shuley Reed of
Cambndge; two daughters, Eva Mae Root of W1lmmgton and Grace Aletha
Coen of.Aibany; 10 grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren; f1ve great·greatgrandchlldren and one sister, Ruth Lemon of Belpre.
She was preceded m death by her husband, Lowell Ziegler, and by five
brothers and three SISters
SeCVJces Will be held Thursday, 2 p.m. at Hughes-Moqum Funeral Home
m Athens w1th the Rev Willard Love officiatmg Bunat w1ll follow m
Athens Memonat Gardens
Fnends may call Tuesday, 4-8 p.m at the Thorn-Black Funeral Home m
Cambndge at Thursday, 10-2 p m at the Hughes-Moqum Funeral Home.

Ohio farmers press for more federal aid

WASHINGTON (AP) -Arnencan
fanners need a safety net, Oh1o FannRoy Elwood McCullough, 85, of Richmond, Va, passed away on Satur- ers Umon Pres1dent Charlie Nash sa1d
day, March 20, 1999, in a Houston, Texas, hosp1tal.
Monday as h1s organrzat1on prepared
Mr. McCullough was preceded m death by h1s w1fe, Charlotte Nyc for two days of lobbymg on Cap1tol
McCullough and h1s son, Silas Alfred McCullough II
Hill.
,
He is survived by h1s daughter, Ann McCullough Cooper and her husNash and five other Ohioans were
band, Anthony of Texas, daughter-m-law, Judith Coffman McCullough part of a nat10nal lobbymg effort
(w•dow of Silas) of Richmond, Va ; five grandsons, Roy Thomas Anderson mtended to convmce Congress to conand wife, Ana, Stephen Nye Anderson and w1fe, Sandra Robert Edward tinue dairy pnce supports and other
~ight, all of Texas, Silas Alfred McCullough Ill of Washlngton, D C , and subs1d1es.
Lee Andrew McCullough and wife, Amanda of Moseley, Va.; three greatHe sa1d farmers were encouraged
grandchildren, Thomas Lee Anderson, Stephame Ann Anderson and Sylas by the response steel workers got when
Franc1s Anderson, all of Texas.
!hey lobbied for help - JUSI last week
A memonal service for both Roy and Charlotte Will take place at Grace the House approved leg•slallon m
Episcopal Church m Pomeroy, where they were marned 64 years ago at a response to that mdustry 's problems
date and time to be announced.
'
w1lh fore1gn trade Nash sa1d he hoped

Meigs EMS logs 4 calls
Units of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Service recorded

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lll·HOJ
Commualty New1p1pcr Holdinp, Inc.

Pubhallcd every aftemoo11. Monday through
Fnday, 111 Cour1 St Pomeroy, Oluo, by the
Oh1o Valley Pubhshmg Company Seoond class

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four calls for assistance Monday.
Un1ts respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6· 12 a m , state Route 338, Letart
Falls, Ray Jumor Roush , dead on
arnval;
9.28 a m , Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, Debb1e Cund1ff, CamdenClark Memonal Hosp~lal ;
9:41_ a.m, Eden R1dge Road,
Reedsville, Louella Nutter, CCMH,
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Reader Services
Correction Polley
Oar mal• concern In 111 stories Is to bt
aa:1r*. If you know or 1n error In •
llory, coli lhe newsroom ol (740) 992·
1155. We will ch«k your lnform•llon
~•d m1ke 1 co...-e.:tJoa lfw•rnnttd.

Newa Departments
T~t

m1in numbtr Is 992-2153. Inp•rt·
Bitlt exteallons 1re:
Gt1cral Mlllp, ....................... .ExL II 0 I
Ntwl . ..
.• , . • . .
ExL 1102
or Ext. 1106

Other Servlcaa
Advcrtlllllt... .... ...
Chnlollol .. .
Claullled Ad&amp;

Exl 1104
.ExL 110J
.Ext 1100

Willi~

Stocks
Am Ele Power. ...... .............41 ~
Akzo ... .
........... 37~.
AmrTech. ..
........... 62'1•
Ashland 011 ........................ 42~.
AT&amp;T .................................... 76 ~
Bank One .. .. .. .. .......... 53~.
Bob Evans. . ...............20'1.
Borg-Warner .........................44\,
Broughton ........... ,...... ,............ 12
Champion ............................. 7).
Charm Shps......... . ............4).
City Holding....... . . . .......25),
Federal Mogul.. .... .. .. ..... ...42'1.
Gannett ...... ........ ..................64 ).
Kmart . . .. . . . ............. 16'' •
Kroger
..
. ... .. .65~.
Limited ............... ..
... 36).
Oak Hill Fin! .............. .............18
OVB .......................... , .......... 42),
One Valley........... . ........34~.
Peoples ................
.. ...... 23
Pram Flnl ... ........................14'~•
Rockwell ••.. ., .................. ...43~
R0/Shell ....................... ,..,,.... 52 '1,
Sears........... .... .. .. ..........43')•
Shoney's .................. , ...... 2).
First Star............. . . ........91').
Wendy's.............................. 28
Worthington ...................... 11 ~

- •-w_

ll'll-'~

t46

EP ll'tllf Jlf OCEAN ll'll-131 t45, 11:20
MY FAVORITE MAR11AN ti'GI 7:00
KnG I I
8:10

OCTOBBI SKY IPGI 7:15, 8:40
*P.'• ...... 'Pf44 Ci 7k - ·
ANAlYZE nus 1•1
1:20, &amp;:45
CRU8. l'flB'flD'II (RI 7:80, 9".46
FORCES II NATURE (PG-·~ 7:80, 8".46
CORRUPTOR
I~
9:00
Til OTIIII SISTBI II'G-131
t10
Bmm
~·

&amp; 31

BABY

(PGJ

7 00 &amp; 8:10 DAILY

OCTOBER SKY lPG)
7 10 &amp;9 20 CAlL\'

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 10 &amp; 3 20

The names of George Hawley, Joyce Quillen, Rev. Robert Robinson
and Lorena Turley were inadvertently omitted from the list of new board
members to be elected at Thursday's Annual Meetmg of the United Fund
for Me1gs County

Computer classes

•

Computer classes will begm th1s week at Eastern High School. The
courses are How to Nav1gate the Internet, Mondays, March 29 through
May 17, from 6·30 to 8 p.m , at no cost; How to bu1ld your homepage,'
Tuesdays, March 30 through May 4, 6:30 to 8 p m., at no cost; Office
97!Word, at no cos!, April 17 from 9 a.m. to noon; and Pnnt Art1st, a•
course about making card~, letterhead, etc., Mondays, Apnl 5 through,
•
Apnl 26, 6:30 to 8 p.m., w1th a $10 fee for supplies.
Each class has a capacity of 25, on a first -come basiS, Informahon and'
registratiOn are available by calling Nancy Larkins at 985-3329

EXPO meeting set
The Town and Country EXPO '99 March committee meehng will be
held Thursday, 7·30 p.m at he Rock Spnngs Fairgrounds. Anyone interested in helping with the Expo IS asked to attend.

Chapter to meet
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sig111a Phi Soronty will meet
Thursday 6.30 p.m at the Lutheran Church for a lasagna dmner.

Ballet classes offered
Technical ballet spring session will begm April 12. Classes are available for children, four and up, and w1ll be held at the R1verbend
·,
Counc111n Mtddteport. Class will focus on ballet techmques to enhance
poase, balance and flexibility Res1dents may call Susan Eason, 992-27~
or Juhe Howard, 992-1044 to reg1ster.

Inspection to be held

::

Harnsonv1lle Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, w1ll hold its annual mspecllon at thoMasomc Temple, Friday Dmner Will be e served at 6 30 p.m. and work
w1ll follow at 7 30 p.m All Master Masons are welcome
•

Soup supper to be held
Star Grange 778 w1ll hold a soup supper on Fnday, 4 to 7 p.m at the J
grange hall located on County Road 1 north of Salem Center. The public'
ts mv1ted to attend. Entertamment will follow at 7 p.m.
'

Chester VFD meeting

:·

The Chester Volunteer F~re Department Will meet Wednesday 6 p m."
for trammg with regular meetmg at 7 p.m. at the fire statiOn
'

Lawl!'aker, maple syrup industry
worr1ed about Asian beetles
.
CLEVELAND (AP)- The Ohio the Geauga County maple trees,"
maple syrup industry is keepmg a said slate Sen. Anthony Latell, Dwary eye on a Chmese mvader, the Girard " I started to look at the othl'r
As1an long-horned beetle.
1mpacts thai 11 would have - it
The mch-long beetles, shmy would have a major 1mpact on OUJ
black w1th bright white spots and district and throughout the state."
long curved, stnped antennas, have
About $5 million has been spent
w1ped out thousands of trees m Ami- in New York to eradicate the msects,
tyville, NY, New York C1ty and wh1ch bore mlo trees, d1srupting the
Ch1cago.
·
flow of sap and water. Kilhng the
They also have been found m tree IS the only way to stop toe
warehouses m 14 states, mcludmg msect 's spread.
Cahfornta, North Carolina, Florida,
The U.S Department of AgrJcuf·
Michigan and Washmgton stale. The lure m December 1mposed a requiremsecls have not been found m Ohio. ment that shipping wooden crateS
"It could devastate the maple commg from Chma be heated and
mdustry," said Les Ober, a syrup d•smfected to k11l the beetles
producer who taps about 1,200 treh
Such crates are beheved to hzye
with h1s father, Uoyd, in rural Geau· camed the msects here in the fi,jt
ga County about 25 mtles east of place.
,
Cleveland.
"It's a potenllally very devastaf" If you took all the maples out, It mg cntter," sa1d Dame! Balser, fofi'Sl
would be devastahng, espec1ally to health admimstralor with the OhiO
th1s county I think we need to take Division of Forestry.
,
every measure we can," Ober told
Based on esllmates from official&amp;
The Plam Dealer for a story pub- in Chtcago and New York, woo
hshed Monday
beheve the beetles had mfested thj:
Concern has a slaie lawmaker trees for seven to 10 years befQre
plannmg to mtroduce a b1ll that being detected, Balser saJd there IS
would form a study commlltee of chance the beetles could be m Ohio
state and federal agencies to stop the but haven't been detected.
bug's entry mto Oh1o.
Balser said the state IS trymg IQ
" They were cuttmg down maple educate foresters and farmers a~t
trees, and I •mmed•ately thought of the threat.

a

Education.key to calmness on Y2K issue
thru Thun. March 25th

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 00 &amp; 3'10

One Year,.. .... • • .. ••• •• • S104 00

that md1cated a willingness to help
struggling farmers, as well, but much
depended on whether the fanners had
the pohllcal muscle
"I don 'I know whether we have the
power to play hard ball" hkc the steel
mdustry, he S81d
For some commodities, the prices
farmers get for thc1r goods have
reached 40-year laws, w1th payments
below the cost of production becommg
commonplace.

' ~ 18kii,~ 6i~fl.llfoa ll!tN l'bm

(PG13)
700&amp;910DAILY

Announcements: -·

·Names omitted

Edward R. Brown

Clinto~ •

Few worker protections found -in Capitol~
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Now
committed to followmg the laws 11
1mposes on the rest of Amenca,
Congress IS fmdmg 11s own workplace so fraught w1th danger and
carelessness that 1nspeclors have
womed about a "potential catastrophe," records show.
D1ggmg mto the bowels of the
Cap11o! and other congressiOnal
bmld1ngs, new mspectors named by
lawmakers to protect employees'
safety diScovered Congress' main. tenance workers had the h1ghest
acc1dent rate 10 the ent~re govern-

Ohl~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

meath Notices

::

If they don't, the GOP will be handing

'tiE MA.'f t1A'4E ALREAl)Y WON
ASENA'Te 1NVE$1'16ATION WITH
At\ l:Hi!L.'I91~ ~~~~U~ FOR

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•, Mlllilleti Sbawir Owly 011

Pr~M,, S~~~~m~ay,.srlllllily &amp; Ho~J44Ys
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) The
state's utility compan1es should
usher m the next century without a
maJor cns1s, but convmc•ng the
pub he of that may take some domg,
two state offlctats fam1har with the
struggle say
Publicity and educahon are the
keys lo easmg the fear surrounding
the year 2000 - or "Y2K" - phenomenon, satd Don Mason, the
Pubhc Ullhttcs Comm•ss•on of
Oh10 member who IS that agency's

point man on "Y2K" matter;,
Mason moderated a d1scuss•on of
the Utllilles' state of readiness at
Oh1o State Umvers1ty on

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
' Savings.

Hospital news

Our stattst•cs show that mature
dnvars and home owners have
lewer and less costly losses
Veterans Memorial
than other ege groups So 1t's
Monday admiSSIOns - Franklin
only
laJr to charge you less for
Dtckens, Pomeroy
your
msurance. Insure your
Monday dtscharges - none
and car w~h us and save
home
Holzer Medical Center
' even more wtth our speelal
Discharges March 22 - Paul
multi-r10li1:v dtscounts
Gauze, W1lham Tracy
Birth - Mr and Mrs Paul Vetth,
daughter, Galhpohs.
(Published with permis~ion)

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Stock reports are the 1 0:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
ol Gallipolis.

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and f1 ee toll -hmJt,Jtl o n se •v •ces a1e
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;Spotts

The Daily

Sent~~\

After McC lure and Donahoe
made stx out of 10m reg ular competition , both tied after two extra
rounds. Both made three out of five
tn the third shootoff.
.
Then sudden death was declared.
After both mt ssed their nutial shot,
McCure made her second . Donahoe
missed.
Local talent in the 11 -competi(or
field tncluded Gallia Academy's
Amy Wil son (5- 10), So uthern's Ktm
Sayre (2- 10), Eastern's Bec ky Davis
and Meigs' Shan non Price (each 110).

In the slam dunk competition,
River Valley's Shaun Mercer
emerged as the best of the three final ists and walked away the winner.
The 6-foot- 1 Mercer, going up
agai nst Coal Grove's 6-foot-6 Brad
Miller and Alexander's six-foot
Kevin Kubachka, scored two "9s" on
hi s last two attempts. The othor fin alists didn't get any scores higher than
1
"&amp;s" on their attempts
Other loealtalent m the field of 12
were Galha Academy's Brian Sims
and Meigs' Dwayne Madison .
RIVer Valley 's Ryan Fowble sank
nine out of I 0 three- point atte mpts to
win the boys' three-pmn t competition .
Other local talent m the ft eld of 18
were Southern 's Mitchell Walker (710), Meigs' Steve Beha (6- 10) and
Sims (no score reported).

DRIVING TO THE LANE :- Eastern's Valerie Karr (left) puts a
--baseline move to the lane on Marietta's Tracy Binegar In the first
··hall of Monday night's District 13 all-star game on the University of
· Rio Grande campus. Karr, a member of the Division III-IV squad, had
.seven points in the 1-11 club's 14-point victory. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

Jewett get
MVP honors; Eagle
trio scores 19 points

semifinals Thursday night.
The coaches of the year in
Division II are Dresden Tri-Valley's
Rick Lewis and Troy Holtrey of
Springboro. Selected as the top
coaches in Division I were Shaker
Heights' Bob Wonson, Nick Aloi of
"East Liverpool, Grove City's Ray
Miller and Mike Kanney of state poll
champion Celina.
Shaker Heights (24- 1) and
Wonson will match wits and moves
with East Liverpool (23- 1) and Alai
on Friday in the state semifinals, followed by Cincinnati Moeller ( 19-6)
against Mansfield Senior (22-3).
Moeller's 6-5 Mike Monserez
joined Smith on the first-team allOhio list. Monserez, a Notre Dame
signee, averages 19.8 points and 6
assists a game. Also headed for the
state tournament is first-teamer Dan
Swogger of East Liverpool, a 5- 11
senior who averages just 9.3 points
but 9 assists a game.
Also on the Division I first team
are: Youngstown Rayen's Romuald
Augustin (6-7, Sr., 22 pomts per
game), Lima Senior's Andre Honan
(5-8, Sr., 25.5), Isaac Jefferson of
Columbus West (6-4, Sr.. 19.2),
Troy 's Brooks Hall (6-6, Sr., 22.9)

and Jonathan Burge of Clel'eland
South (6-2, Sr., 31.5).
Wonson lost one of the top players in the state, Jon Higgin s, to a
knee injuty last summer that cost
him all but three reg ul ar-season
games. But Shaker regrouped to go
19-1 during the season.
Aloi guided East Liverpo.ol to a
19-1 regular-season record Kanney
helped Celina win the poll championship with another 19-.1 mark and
Miller coached Grove Ctty to a 17-3
record and its first league titl e in 21
years.
In Dtvision II, Ho-:ell and Leanza
were joined on the first team by.
Whitehall-Yearling's Charles Warren
(6-1, Sr., 22. 0), Youn gstown
Liberty 's Ray Austin (6-7, Sr., 17.3),
Rick McFadden of St ruthers (6-7, Jr..
20.6), Onawa-Gl andorf 's Tyson
McGlaughlin (6-3, Jr., 23.6), Jerry
Barlow of McDermou Scioto
Northwest (6-6, Sr., 22 8), Perry 's
Mike Patrick (6-3, Jr., 23.8), Andy
Slaughter of Dresden Tri -Valley (5 11. S~. l§.O! and Hamilt on Badin's
Matt~rmann (6-5, Sr.. 17.5).
Lewis coached fifth-ranked Tri -

6· 2, Sr., 11.1: Undbcflh Cb:~tman. Akron Hoban. 6-

Valley. expected to be a .500 team, to
a 19-1 record with no staner taller
than 6-3. Holtrey led Springboro to
its second straight 20-0 regul ar season and a No.3 ranking in the poll.
(l

-*-

••

Here are the 199 &amp;-99 Assoc iated
Press Division II all-Ohio high
school bas ketba ll teams, based on the
recommendations of a state media
panel (wllh school, height, grade and
. scoring average):
Flnt tt am : Chns l.:..ennzn. Cle Bent=diCitnc . 6foot . Sent or 15.5. Cha rles Warren Whttehall ·
Ycarltng , b- 1, Sr , 22 0 Adam Howe:!I, Lcxtn gton, 62, Sr 20 2: Ray Austm, Ynu l.tho:rty. 6· 7, Sr 17 J

Tyson McGinughlm, Otmwa-G iandnrf 6~'\, Jr . 2] fl .
Rick McFadde n. Strul hl"n , 6· 7. J1 . 20 6. J ..rry
Harlow, McDumolt Sciotu No rlh"' c~l , 6·6. Sr ..
22.8; Mtke Patri ck, Pmy. 6 - ~ . Jr 2J 8. Andy
Slnu-ghtrr, Dresden Tn- Valley. ~-1 1. Sr , lliO. Matt
Broennarm. Hatmhon Dadm. 6-~. Sr .. 17.5
Sttond tum : Del:~ no ll10mas..Col Bccct1croh .
6-7, Sr.. 17.0, Ke ith W{lleskowskt, Keucnng Alter, 69, Sr , l g I . Seth Oohboa, Spri lll!boro, 6-7. Sr. 17 4,
Rnn Williamson, Col. Bnggs. 6-1. Sr , 24 0. Andy
Ht p~ h er. Akron Hoban. 6- 8. Sr , 20 I. Man Lu.::k1 . St
Cltm m lle. 6·2. Sr . 22 0. Jdf fralty, Ironto n Rock
Hill, 6· 2.. Sr., lZ.I! ; Ben Sw,1rt1wc ldcr. IJO\Cr. 6-'i .
Sr. 194 Jonathnn Oues, Eacon (,.'}_ Sr . 2l 'i
Third tum : Kyle c._.ms toc k Dclawa' eBuckcye Vall ey, 5- 10 Sr. 2~ 9 Mtke G.mscy
Olrns teU Fal ls 6-S. Soph . 19 B. JeiT Pcmc. Rocky

":'~;.··•:!'::~~i ~}SrI. Sr
, ,17I8I.I , Andrew
Mtc\wclStale},
Wood~.
Cle
Sandusky

~

20.0, Lucas Messer, Clyde, 6-6, Sr ,
JAMES, CUESHJRE RIVER
Sr., 16.1 ; Mt ke Moses, You . Ch:~ney,

(Continu~dfromPage4)

five-minute marks slashed what was a 19-point I-lllead to a 92-80 margm.
After Athens' Nathan White sank a turnaround in-the-lane jumper (4:,08},
, tbe III-IV cast kept chipping away at the lead until the layup and bonus foul
.shot by Ironton's Justin Collins (2:34) cut the 1-lllead to 97-90.
" But that w~ as close as the dark-uniformed III-IV stars got in th e home
stretch. A layup by Trimble's Brady Trace (:55) was the only answer the
small-school stars had in the last two minutes for the last of Albrecht's three
treys (1:40) and James' tap-in ( 1:1 &amp;).
Dillow, who led the 1-11 stars with 16 points, joined Miller in claiming
most valuable player honors.
• 1•

Division III-IV ..... ... 1...... ... ........ ... .......... .... ............. ...... ... ............... .41-51 =92
Division 1-11 ..... ... .............. .......... :.... .. .. ... ......... .............................56-45= I 0 I

Division 1-11 boys
Player ·
PojnJs
T.J. Dtllow-Rock Hill ......... .... .............. ............ ... ................. ......... 2-4-0/0= 16
Jeremy Albrecht-Marietta ........................................................ .3-3-0/0= 15

Daniel Hannan-Meigs ................................. ;...................... ~ ........ 4.:2-1/1=15

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
.
The first 4:50 of Monday ni ght's District 13 boys' all -star game at tile
University of Rio Grande's Newt Oliver Arena belonged to the Divison IUIV cast, whtch got four points from Coal Grove's Brad Miller and three fro!l'
Ironton St. Joe's Joe Dressel to lead I 1-9 with 15:26 left.
.
But with 15:10 left in the first half, Rock Hill's Jeff Fraley sank a pivotal
three-pointer that put the I-ll stars ahad 12-11.
That was the start of an 8-0 run that put the big-school luminaries ahead
for good and on their way to a 101 -92 victory.
. Startmg with a trey by Rock Hill 's TJ. Dillow at the 12:27 mark, the 1·11
stars went on a 10-0 run that permanently expanded their lead into doublefigure country.
.
Dillow's 13-point first half and a 10-point showing by Marietta's Jeremy
Albrecht helped the" big-school crew balloon their lead to a 23-point rift
before they had to sett le for a 15-pomtlead at intermission.
.
The second half belonged to Meigs frontman Daniel Hannan . Hannan
scored 10 of hiS 15 points in that stretch. ·
.
Helping to keep the big-school stars comfortably ahead in the second half
were six-potnl efforts from River Valley 's Joey James and logan's Josh
Lawrence.
The small-school stars battled back unti l a 7-0 run between the six- and

'
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
· . In the District 13 all-star girl s' basketball game at the University of Rio
''Grande 's Newt Oliver Arena, Manetta's Em my Yoho led all scorers on the
.night with 2&amp; points to pace the large-sc hool stars 10 a 66-52 victory.
. Eastern's Juli Hayman scored the game's first pomts with I&amp;. 24 left m the
'fir st half Her stick back jumper gave the DivisiOn III-IV cast the first· of ns
two leads in the contest.
' · The first of Yoho's fiv e three- poi nt baskets fou nd the mark 14 second s
later. The Divt~ ton 1-11 club was ahead 3-2.
After Symmes Valley front -liner Ttna Owens tied the game with a foul
shot at the 17.52 mark , baskets by South Pomt teammates Ray shea Taylor
and Alicia Morri so n put the 1-11 stars ahead 6-3.
In the 2 1/2·.minutcs that fo ll owed, two baskets by Trimble's Bobbi Lent
sandw iched a base line JUmper by Gallta Academy guard Amy Wilson
(1 2·36) to slash the big sc hool stars' lead to one. That s.et the stage for a lcadgrabbmg three-pointer by Alexander's Amy Jewett. Her behind-the- foul Circle lob put the lli -IV stars ahead 10-8 with 10:56 left in the first half.
In the next 2:42, Marielta center Tracy Binegar and Yoho combined for
three baskets to start a 9-0 run that put the 1-11 stars ahead 14- 10. They never
trailed agai n, though thctr lead was shrun k to three points on two occ asions
from then until halft tme.
Yoho finish ed the first half wn h 13 poi nts Eastern's Valcnc Karr led the
small-school stars wi th seve n f1rst-ha lf pomts
On fo ur oc!.:as10ns 111 thL: second htllr s rirst eight mtnutcs the lil -lY stars
cut their oppo nent 's lead to two pot nts Bu t alterle nt 's lay up '( 12·13) cut the
· 1-11 stars' lead to 33-31. the I-ll stai' went on another Y-0 tun - Yoho's trey

:AP counts M·a rauders' Hannan among· Division II all-Ohio cas~

lWf il!lllli

Hannan's 15-point
show makes him
prime factor in win

~Yoho,

(See AL,L·STARS on Page 5)

Ryan Caudill-Vinton Co............................. .................... :............... J-1-0/0=9
.Joey James-River Valley ............................................................... 4-0-1/2=9
Jeff Fraley-Rock Hill .. , ......... ............ .. .. ....... ................................. 1-2-0/0=&amp;
· ~osh Lawrence-Logan ........... ............... ................................... ........ 1-2-0/0=&amp;
' Vince Jenkins-Jackson ....................... .. ............ ...... .........................0- 1-4/6=7
Nate Nester-South Point ...... ... ................. .... .................... ...............2·1-0/0=7
' Nathan White-Athens ........ ................ ,... .. ............... ............... ... ....... 2- I-0/0=7
•Totals
22-17-6/9=101

..

IT'S GETTING AWAYI -That was probably the thought foremost'
on
the minds ol Tennessee's Chamique Holdsclaw and Duke's Peppi
Division III· IV boys
(40) during Monday night's NCAA East Regional final in
Browne
·Player
'·
Points
Greensboro,
N.C., where the Blue Devils claimed a 69-63 win over
Justin Collins-Ironton ........ .... ........... ........ ................... ......... ... 1-4-0/0= 14
the
defending
three-time national ,champlns. (AP)
Brad Miller-€oal Orove ............................ ..... .. ..... ........... .. ............ 7-0-0/0= 14
.Kyle Stewart-Wellston ... ,.. ...... ................. ......... :.. ............. ............ 3-2-2/2= 14
Joe Dressel- Ironton St. Joe ......... ..... .............. ................ ............ 4-0-214=10
Nate Hutchmson-Aiexander. ........ ............. .. ............ .... .. ................. 1-2-0/0=8
Greg Johnson-Fairland .... ............
.. .......... ............ .... ........... 1-2-0/0=8
Eri~ Ferris-Fairland ................... .. ..ii ................ ........................... .... 2-0-2/3=6
·chris Lane-Chesapeake ......... .. ... .... ............ ........ .... ... ........... ......0-2-0/0=6
Brady Trace-Trimble .. ..................... ....... ......... .. :........................ .. 1-1-0/0-5
Shawn Schultz-Nelsonville-York ............. ...... ........................... ..... 1-0-2/3=4
Ni ck Roberts-Coal Grove ........ .. ...........
............
0-1-010=3
Totals
21-14-8/12=92

4, Sr.. 14.0.
Pllytrs or lhe yur: Adam Howdl. U:ungton:
Chris ltaJU.a Cit. lkne,ll ctu~
CoarhH of the year: Rick Lewis Dresden Tri ·
Walley. Troy H o h~ y. Spri11gboro
SpKial mrntion
J .D. Fou st , Norwood , Bren Potter, Ci n.
Woodward: Jason Smith. Col Cemennial; Adam
Davtnpon. Cambridge; James Wam. Bellaire; Ste,·e
Phipps. Steubenville, Marc Von Kaene l. Dovrr: Sean
Powe ll. Ltma Shawnee : Mtke Marshall. Lima
Shawnee: BrandOn Gray. Wastungton CU: Rya n
Calidt ll. McAnhur Vinton County . 'Wmce Jenlo.:m1,
Jackson; John C&lt;m~so . Rocky River, PnnQ Ogbogu,
Hum ing Val Univ School. T~mon Htlher. Chagri n
Falls Kenston. Joh n Lmlt., Pauna Padw1l. Ken Vanyo.
Ashtabu la Hart&gt;ur. Brian Conklin , Hubbard, Kevin
Culp. C11nfield, P:~u l Lenban, Woooter Tnway.
I.J onorable mtmlion
Ryan Ogletree , Ci n McNi cholas. Chip James.
Spn ngboro: Brad Copito, Cln. McNtcholas: Joslm
Ju lian, lipp Ci ty Ttppc:caooe: Jason Petenun
Urbana: Trent Ingrum. Monow Little Mtah\1 ,
Crmg Jackson . Col EM t, Pre! ton Dean, Col
Miffltn: Ketwan Ratliff, Whitehall-Yearhng: Mau

Set bert. CGI Wau erson. Kory Sharp. lkdcy;
:
TJ Omr. Coshocton. Pat Rush, Philo; R)llft
H.snnon, Zanrl\'llk: W Muskmzom: Etic Uu'o'lllf.
Zanesvll~

W Mu sktng~m . Jetst Rupe, ZaoetvftJe

Maysv ilk : Eric Sheck. Dre!idrn Tri~Valley . Jdin

Robinwn. UdKJII Bea~c r loe~ l :
~
Ka&amp;: Dillon, Bu cyrus. Andy Roesch, Oalioa,
Jvron Htmon, Eltda, COfey Wibon, Uma Bath,
Om s Ryga.lski , Oak Harbor.
·
,. '
DA~IEL HANNAN, POMEROY MEIGSi
Shaun Evons. Hillsboro: L.and.ry Rot. Grttntiekl
McClam. Nu:k Spears, WCH Mtarru T111l!e: Etk
Bod a&amp;er, Wnerly; Hubby Rlrhards. Vln~~~~t
Warrf'n Locu.l ;
•,
Jason Kat ser. Ck Benedi ctme : Jermaine
Croiiby. Cle Benedict ine, Manzie W1Uumu, Olm~
Full~. Sean Radtgan, Olrmted Falls , Jon Nail,
Jefferson Area: Pau l Noble, Chag.nn Fal11 Kenstoe;
Brice McClain , Orange ;
• .J
Roy Gecr. Ca nton South : Tom Sanor. Beloit'W.
Branch: Ed Hunl. Rave nna Southeast: Pal 0 Br~ .
Cuya Ft~lh Walsh Jcsun , Mtkt Bajornas. Canion
Cem Ca th , Mike fourooux, Lmusville: Andrae
Batt ste, Cantoo Sou 1h. Dave Mayle, Manftl:l.
Crestwood
... ,

Regional finals ...

..

(Contin ued from Page 4) :
'

th ere, it 's very exc iting for our team.
But we 're not sat isfied . There are
other thm gs we want to accompli sh " ·
Tennessee lost in the NCAA tournament for the first ttmc since the
1995 champi onship game. On ly one
year ago, the Lady Vols went 39-0
and were proclatmcd hy many as the
best Women's team ever. But that
same magtc was n' t there th1s season,
even though all the key players were
back.
" You can want somethmg tn ltlc
so much to the point where you just
can ' t relax and go get H." said a
teary -eyed Pat Summitt. Tenne ssee's
coac h. "We struggled at time s to go
gel 11 . There is no doubt thts team

MIDEAST-AI Cincinnati
Georgia 89, Iowa St. 71
Georgia advanced behind th~
shooti ng of Kell y Mill er, who went
6-for-8 on three-pointers in scoring
33 points Mill er had four threes an~
I &amp;·pa ints as Georgta built a 37-22
halftime lead, and Iowa State (2 5-&amp;)
never got back tn it.
Des iree FranciS led Iowa State
wtth 19 potn ts. Outside shootin g specia liS t Stacy Frese scored 17, but was
2-of- 10 on tht ec-po mt shots.
MIDWEST-At Normal, Ill.
Purdue 75, Rutgers 62
t:
Purdue got Rutgers (29-6) in foul
11 oublc and capitali zed by makin g 3()
of 46 free throws. Rutge rs was called
for 32 fou ls and was only 7-for-15 at
wanted it. "
the line
Duke got tl mstcad and became "
The Boilermakers also got a big
the ftr st program to advance its lift from 6-foot-4 sophom ore
men ·s and women's teams to the Camill e Cooper, who scored -a
Final Four smceGemgia tn 1983.
catec r-hi gh 20 points. She scor•d
EAST-At Greensboro, N.C.
fiv e as Purdue started the second half
Duke 69, Tennessee 63
wtth a 7-0 run to gel back Ill it after
Duke needed a supreme effort and trailin g 34-26
an off night by Hold sclaw if tt was to
Rutgers led by as many as 10 in
beat Tennessee , and the Blue Devils the first half - onl y the third game
got both .
that Purdue has trailed by· double
Holdsclaw, the natmnal player of dt git s.
the year last season, mi ssed her first
WEST-At Los Angeles
,
I 0 shots and ne ver got untracked.
louisiana Tech 88, UCLA 62 :
Her stellar career ended when she
Amanda Wilso n had 23 points
fouled out with 25 seconds left and and 12 rebounds and Loutsiana Tech
fell sobbing into Summitt's arms.
rattled UCLA with relentless defen Georgia Schwettzer matched her sive pressure.'
career hi gh with 22 points to lead
Down bv 10 early, Louisiana Tech
Duke.
ended the first half wnh a 17-4 run ro
Down by 13 in the first half, go up 35-32, then broke it open in th~
Tennessee cut the lead to 46-45 wtth second half.
Monica Maxwell finished with 22
6:52 left. Nicole Erickson hit a 12foot shot and made a running banker points and 13 rebounds for Tech,
50 seconds later for a 55-50 lead, and which forced 24 turnovers. Maylana
the Blue Devils held on.
Martin 's 16 points led UCLA (26-8 ).

-

., .

~

'

Scoreboard
Notice ofNames of Current
, .
or Former Residents of Meigs County
Appearing to be owners of Unclaimed Funds

Midwest
Purdue 75, Rutgers 62

Basketball

•

\Vtst

NBA standings

and layups hy Binegar and Yoho prece ded a pot nt- blank-I&lt;.Hl £C JUmper rrom

DWAYNE'S WORLD - The Meigs Marauders' Dwayne Madison
goes up for the dunk and draws more than a few raves during the
Denn ey was rcsponsihlc for giv1ng tht.:: 1-11 stars the ir fir st two doublc- slam dunk competition held between the District 13 all-stllti: games
dt gll leads . Th at and Yoho's last ucy 12 54 ) hel ped the ht g-"hool stars kee p Monday night at Newt Oliver Arena. River Valley's Shaun Mercer was
their lead m douhlc-dt git tc nnory for all hut 28 scLonds of the ga'me's last the contest winner. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
three minut es. Jewe tt 's scvc n-potnt scl:onJ hil lI and Haynwn s SIX· flOlllt sec·
om.l half were prmcipal lactm s Ill keepin g 1hc I-ll slaP&gt;' lead from grow ing NCAA women's regional finals end
larger
Yoho and Jcw ~ tt rece1v~.:d most v,1luab lc pla yc-1 honor s ju1 thei r ollc nsivc
contributions to their tea ms of the cvcnm g
.. Notes: According to Ea ste rn coac h Pau l Brann on. Eag l e~ Jcss1ca
Brannon, Hayman and Karr wo re bo)Towed rn.acticc )Crscy s from lhc Rio
Grande Rcdwomcn hecausc they brought thcrr home um form s rn stcad ol
l11e1 r ruad uniforms .
Half totals
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
was an upset, which is probably the
Dt VISIOM 111-IV ....... .............. ......... .. .......... .. .. ............. ... .... 19-31=52 AP Sports Writer
mentality we had (o h~ve to win the
Di vtson I-ll
.... 23-43=66
A women 's Ftnal Four without game."
Tennessee?
Georgta earned tls ftfth Ftnal Four
Division 1-11 girls
Believe it.
trip. and third in five years , with an
Player
Points
Tennessee's quest for a fourth &amp;9- 71 victory over Iowa State in
Emmy Yoho- Mari etta
. 5-5-314=28 consecutive national champi onship Cincmnati .
Tracy Binegar-Marietta ........ ........ ...... .... ............................... 5-0-0/2= 10 - and ftfth slratght Final Four trip
The only two No. I seeds that surliltcta Momson-South Pot nt .
1- 1-3/4=8 - ended in Gree nsboro, N.C. , on vived the first rounds of the tournaMarie Denney- River Valley .... ...................................................... 1-1-0/0=5 Monday night wnh a 69-63 loss to ment, Purdue (32- 1) and Louisiana
Kelly Sheppard-] ackson. .
... .. .. ...
1- 1-0/0=5 Duke 111 the Eas t Regional final s.
Tech (30-2), will meet in the other
Rayshea Tay lor-South Point ...... .. ............ .. ..... ,........................... 1-0-3/6=5
Duke el tminated the top-seede.d national semifinal.
Amy Wilson-Gallipolis ...................................... :........................... J-1 -0/0=5 Lady Vols with a so lid olt enstve
Top-ran ked · Purdue ran its winTotals
15-9-9/16=66 game and outstanding defen se on mng streak to 30 with a 7 ~-62 victothree-time all-American Chamique ry over Rutgers in the Mtdwe st at
Division III -IV girls
Holdsclaw, who was 2-of- 1&amp; from Normal , Ill. Loutsiana Tec h, which
Player
f!!iDll the ft eld while scoring etght points. lost to Tennessee in last year 's
Amy Jewe tt-Alexander
................... 0-3- 112= I 0
So tt 's third -seeded Duke (2-6) national champiunsh1p game, made
Juli Hayman·Eastern .................................................................... 2-0-4/4=8 gomg to the Fmal Four for the first the Ftnal, Four for the I Oth time by
Bobbie Lent -Trimble.. .
.. ..... 3-0-2/2=8 time instead of Tennessee for the beattng UCLA 88-62 in the We st
Valerie Karr·Eastern .................................................................... 3·0-1/3=7 12th. The Blue Devils wtll· pl ay Regional at Los Angeles.
Jessica Urannon-Eastern ...................................................... ........ 2,0-0/0=4 Midc;tst champion Georgta (27-6)'tn
Purdue is going for }US! the secAmanda Dalton-Nelsonvi ll e-York ...............
.. ........... 2- 0-0/0=4 the nattonal se mtfinals tn San Jose, ond tim e, having made its first tnp in
Angela Jewell -Alexander
.. 2- 0-0/0=4 Calif , nex t Frida y.
1994.
Mand y Leach· Well ston ................. . . ..... .......
.. ......... ... ........ 2- 0-0/0=4
Just don' t try tellin g them that
" It's very sali sfying, hut we' re
Tma Owens-Sym mcs Valley...... .. .. .................
.. .. 1-0-1/2=3 they
there with an upset
not fini shed," said Purdue all Totals
17-3-9/13=52
'' When you expec t to win, I guess American Stephante Whtte -McCart y,
you don't fee l hk c tt 's an upset when who led the Boilermakers wtth 22
you do," Duke coac h Gail points. " It 's .a great fee lin g to get
Ooe ... tcnkOis sa td . " ... I don' t
(See FINAlS on Page 5)
hcl tcvcany of our pl ayers feel li ke It
Early Wednesday Mixed
Can·ynut (6 11)
League (as of March 17)
If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Men ·
Thl!!!!
Record
Datry Queen Brazt c r ............ 59-37
High series: Chut k Burton
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Tony's Carryout..
..... 58-38 (530) : Loren Co leman (4901
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Anderso n's Furniture ........... 57 - 3~
High game: Co leman I 192):
Maso n Lanes Rat Pack.. ..... .48-48 Burton ( 190)
Toll Freel
Meigs Co. Go lf Co'urse .... 46-50
DIAL
Metgs Ind ustries .............·...... 20- 76
Women
I; .
High series: Pat Carson (5 16):
Team hi gh series: Datry Queen M,trgarcl f.ynon (50R)
arat icr ( 1769)
Hi~:h
g;~ mc :
Eynon 1206):
Team high game : To ny's C:trson I I X6i
Holzer Clinic ... Keepin!f the P_romise!
River Valley's Man e Denney ( 10 201- that permanentl y put the small -sc hool

stars o ut of.two-possess10n

GOING TO THE HOOP ~ With Coal Grove's Brad Miner (upper
left) on his shoulder, Meigs Marauders' Daniel Halman .makes his
move to the hoop shortly after having Fairland's Greg Johnson (55)
in his wake during Monday night's District 13 all-star game on the
University of Rio Grande campus. Hannan, who received Division II
all-state honors today (see Page 5 for that story), turned In a 15point effort helped the big-school stars win 101-92 (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh,io

. District 13 all-stars ...

Division 1-11 boys win 101-92

.Division /-/1 girls win 66-52

;ruesday, March 23, 1999

.iy RUSTY MILLER
COlUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Euclid's Emmanuel Smith is the top
player from the big schools and
texington's Adam Howell and
:eleveland , Benedictine 's Chris
:L.eanza headline Division II of the
t999 Associated Press all-Ohio
.teams announced today.
• ; Smith, a 6-foot-3 senior, averaged
•28.4 points, 8.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists
:~d 4.5 steals a game this year while
;shooting 60 perce,nt fro"!- inside the
·;Ire and 40 percent on three-pointers.
:- He was selected as the player of
·the year in Division I based on the
(ecommendations of a state media
panel.
' Howell, a 6-2 senior headed 1 for
Ohio University, hit for 20.2 points,
6 rebounds and 2 assists a game. He
shared the Division II player of the
year award with Leanza, a 6-0 senior
who averages 15.5 points a game
Leanza will be on· display tht s
weekend at the 77th boys state high
school championships at Value City
·
Arena.
Leanza leads Benedictine (20-6)
against Philo, with Kettering Alter
(19-6)
meeting
Columbus
Beechcroft (20-4) in the Division II

Meigs County gets
-six cagers involved
in shooting contests
contest.

•

'

•

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
After three live-shot shootoffs
and a sudden-death fourth shootoff,
Fatrland's Amber McClure outlasted
Sy mmes Valley's Renae Donahoe to
win the girls' three-pot nt. shooting

.

r~mgc

Duke gets 69-63
win over Tennessee

got

Mason Bowling Lanes results

992-7834

The accounts listed were received in the previous year and are
valued at $so or more. Information concerning the amount of the
funds and how to claim them may be obtained by any person possessing a proprietary interest in the unclaimed funds. Prescribed
forms will be furnished by addressing an inquiry to the Ohio De:
partment of Commerce at the address below. Name and address
must be given exactly as listed in the advertisement.
Ohio Department of Commerce
Division of Unclaimed Funds
77 South High Street, 20th Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43266-0545
NOTICE: Names and addresses of unclaimed accounts advertised in prior years are on file with your County Treasurer, as well as
unadvertised accounts of less than $50. The Division will also search
for accounts in names not appearing on those lists. Send a list of
complete names, . 11long with the Ohio counties in which they may
have lived. We will provide claim forms for possible matches.
We also are on the internet. Our web site address is:
www.com.stllte.oh,us
City of Cool&gt;lllr: Deeter, Ernest J, Laurel St; Hysell, M, 31940 Hysell Run
Rt 2 Box 36A; Emrick, Boyd E, PO Box Rd; Keebaugh, ~rio, 39S61 Keebaul!h
Jackson, Gary E, 26930 Rock Run Follrod; Story, Morie, 29436 Rocksprlnp
Rd; Weny, Jefrey S, l09 Ple1511tt Rdg;
Rd;

n;

City of Horrloonvllle: Kingsbury · City of Portland: Hiney, Senn A,
Unknown; Ski, S11111uel, 6939 N Maemm;
Homes Sales .t Srv, I 10()-E Main St; .
SkiMer, Andrew C, 6939 N Mocmrn;
City of Lana~&gt;llle: Marcum, Michael
City of Ra&lt;loo: Campbell, Jon W, P
J, 32373 Hampton Hollow Rd;
0 Box 877; Hayman, J,.llllan M, Tyree
City of Lone Bottom: Webb, F W, Blvd; Simpson, Greta M, Tyree Blvd;
PO Box 36:
City of Reedsville: Bal:er, R L, 40165
City of Middleport: Bareswllt, Roy Silver Ridgi Rd; Barnett, S R, 49523 SR
O, 952 3rd St; Ban:swit~ Yvonne, 952 S · 681; Johnson, Sandy, Silver Rldae Rd;
3rd St; Beaver, Henry R, 457 Beech St;
City of Rutland: Chapman, Craig,
Miller, Eddie, PO Box I 5, Painter, Victor
33322
lack Rd;
R. ·11472 Noble· Summitt; Tho,mas,
Wendy, 612 Grlnt St;
City of Syraeuoe: Moore, L Dennlt,
f:lty of Mloero&gt;tllr: Kesterson, B F, PO Box 520;

c 60-1;

City Unknown: Echard, Thomas,
City o{ Pomeroy: Brlckles, Clyde, 29160 E Belpre Pike Rd; Lee, J W.
STATEOFOIUO,DEPARlMENTOFCOMMERCE
Bob Taft
Governor

l a uist ana Tech 88. UC LA 62

The Final Four

EASTERN CONFERENCE

AI San Jose Artnll, San'Jose, Calif,

A.thtnlic Dh·lslon

ll' L

lllm

Miam1
Orlilndo ... ,, ..
Ph•lndclpht a ...
New York

' 18
... 18
... 1~
.15

6
8
ll
12
to 15
R 15
. 5 20

Wn~h t ng l o n

Ros1on
New Jer,scy

Centntll}h-iskm
lnd1nna
18
7
M1lwaukt:e .... .... . ....... 15 10
Atl nnla
.. 15 I l
l)t;troll
14 11
11 1\
Clevela nd
Toronto ..

11
. .. 9
.. 8

Charlotte ,..
Cht cago .

-·-

11
14
17

Friday's stmifinals
Du ke t28·6J vs Gcorgm (27 ·6) 7 or 9:JO p.m
Purdttc {12- IJ vs . l..out smna l ech {J0-2). 1 or

1'&lt;1.

750
.691
~ 60

.556
.((\()

14R

200
720
.600
~77

538

m

458
39 1

no

,.,.I
,.

9 lO p m

9'
I \' .

i

l

Utah
19
· Housloo
17
Sun Antum o .
. 16
Minnesom ...
.14
Dallas . .... ... .. ...
.... 9
Denve r ................ , ............ 7
Vanrou ver ..................... 5

L

1'&lt;1.

6
9

760
654

New Jersey
Pnt sburgh ..
Philadelphia
NY Ran g~n
NY lilarn.lers

oo~l o n

Jessie T. Baker
Chief

I&lt;'

84 '201 \69
82 2 10 182

Kl 20R

')

172

~I

6tl 196 199

9 49 162 209
,,_'

S9 20.1 146
Sl 217 199
71 180 152
1 ] 181 159
66 t64 179

Q'

C&lt;

t:

,
"

)-

'

1'"

lt

II

~

• '

~

'

'

Southe11st Division

H 183 178
Aarida ..................... 26 26 17 69 t76 163
Wa5hmgton '· ............. 29 ~5 6 64 179 184
Tampn Rny
17 47 5 w 151 249

Carolina .............. 30 27 14

-·-

.4 17
407

WESTERN CONFERENCE

083

Monday's scores

lWn

Detroit ...
St Lou ts ...
Nashvil le ....
~kago .

Central Dl'l!lon
~ L I
...... J4 10 6
3029 II
.... 2419 7
" .2 1 w 10

1'1&gt;. !LE !iA

Northwest Division
ColoraUu
.......... .35 26 9
Calgary .............. 2732 11
, Edmomon ............ 263.\11
Van couver........ .. ... . 20 39 11

Tonight's games
Charlotte nt Orlando, 7 ,\0 p m
Boston nt Clevdund, 7:JOp.m.
·Mtaml at Utah 8 p m
lkn\'er 111 San A.ntomo. IDO p.m
Toronto at ctuc~go . R :m p m
Gulden Stal e .11 Port lund. 10 p m

Paciric
x- Dnll lu
Phocm11.
Anaheim
San Jose
Los Angeles ,..... , . . . ..
x-cl inched playoff bc11h

...

Wednesday's games

74
71
II
52

208 t82
202 185
t66 m
164 219

79 197
6.5187
6 \ 194
51 167

178
196
\9J
.116

Division
4' 14 12 9R 200 l]H
.1 4 24 12 80 175 167
:\ I 28 II 7l 184 172
26 28 16 68 157 161
.27 J 8 5 .59 16.\ Ii6

Monday 's scores

Mtnnesma a1 Boston 1 r m
Cht cago m Charl ene , 1.JO p m.
DetrOt! ill New Jer5ey, 7"\0 p.m.
lnduma til A!lantn. 7·10 p m
l-l ouuon nt IJ a ll ~s 1:1 ,\0 Jllll
Mlam1 il l Mi lwaukee. R JO p m
Wnshmgton .;u Seatt ll' HIp m
Phil oddpht a at Vancouver, 10 p m
Nt w York Ill Sru::ram..:nlo. to 10 rIll
Phoe ntx m L 1\ L1kcrs 10 .\D pm
,.._ Golden S t~IC m LA Clipper) \0 10 p m

San Jose I. Montreal 1-ttc
Tnmpa Bay 6 NY Rangm
Phtladelphlil J Toronto I
St Louts 'i. C.1m hna 2

Cnlgary 2 Edmon!Oii

\

1-IJC

Tonight's games
rm

Bufl nlt• ut New Jcuey 7 JO

C)uugu 111 Pitt~b u r!! h 7 \0 p m
0 :~ 11 :1§ at Phnt: IIIK. 9 pm

NCAA women 's tournament

\\'ednesday's games
N.Y lslnnders at Carolina. 7 p m.
Nashville at TanJI):l 1Jo1y 7 O:'i p m
San Jose at To ront o. 7 .\ 0 p m
Boston ill Onaw a 7:\0 p m
NY R n n~cr~ 111 rlowli1 7 ~0 pm
Uuff.1ln ll t L&gt;ctrntl 1 .\0 11 111
VaurOtl\'er :JI c .,\nradu, 9 p 111
Mon1rc.1 l at IA.lmnntun 9 p m

l-:1~1
rcl lllt'nl'C

8
12
17
10

2s n 10

Montreal

.800
.679
..542
.500

lndtana 90. Washmgton 86
New Jersey 106. Torom o 87
Atlant a 80. New York 71
Houston I I0, Sacramento l00
LA laken 96, DaiiM 9l
Mtlwaukee I 1.5, l:ktrott 86
Phoenix 89, Vancouver 84
Seo11le 92, Ph tlndc: lphi11 76

Duke 61)

'

'

ll' L I 1'1&gt;. !LE !iA

...... J8 22
..... J522
12 22
29 u
20 42

Northeast Division
. 40 20 9
.. ' 38 27 .5
. J22J I J
~ I 27 11

Onawa .
Toronto ..
Huflalo.

Monday"s regional finals

Gary C. Suhodolnlk
Director

r

'f

Allanllt Dh·isiun

lWn

to

9 640
12 5.\8
18 J.B
18 .280
21 .192

Pulnc DlviMon
Pun land ....... .................. .20 5
LA Lakers
. .......... 19 9
Seanle ...
. ......... . IJ II
Phoent" .. ..
,.......... 1.1 I]
Ga ldenStntc
.... 10 , 14
&amp;ac r.~mento
l l 16
LA Chppers..
. 2 22

'.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

6'·
8

Mid" tst Division

ll'

&lt;

NHL standings

WESTERN CONFERENCE
lWn

"

Hockey

,.1

~

•

Sundwy, l\larfh 28·rinul
Semdinal winners. 9 p 111

6.\

1\lidrust
Gt:('r].\1:1 HlJ. lm1 n St.111:: 71

l.

I

'

I

�__- &lt;._By The Be~!}

Th~ Daily _ Sentinel~
..

top prtc11' liald, Rlvor·
Pomofo:r. Ohio,

Pagel ·~

...·-- ·- ..

owner, 74~·.9.92·

TuesdJIIy, March 23, 1998 :

·-~

~ r
~ --~~~~~----------~--------~
r------------~~~~~~~~~~,
' •.

;Bullda:ur·&amp; Baelrhoe'
·~
Service• ·
House &amp; Trailer,Sites

l{emember
"Done right the first time"
"Priced right aU the. time"

" (740) 992·3131

Dave's Garage

WICKS

Limestone,

Former-"Velvet Hammer )'
52954·State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Gravel; Sand,

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

.·: HAUtiNG

l,..

!•I I ' '

···

f Top

Soli, Fill Olrt
740·992-3470:: .
.

•

•

t

00-

: Some people may think that
UIBking yeast bread is a lost art. It
shouldn't be because baking
homemade breads can be . fun,
healthy and tasty.
What is the secret to making
fresh-baked bread without a
breadmaker? Read on to discover
the different types of mixing
methods and reasons .for certain
ingredients and procedures when
inaking bread.
There are several basic methQds of mixing yeast breads. Follow the method that is indicated in
your recipe. The one most often
used is the traditional or straightdough method. It involves dissolvmg the yeast in warm water (105
degrees Fahrenheit). The rest of
il\e ingredients are added, then the
dough is kneaded and allowed to
fise.
The cool-rise method is very
' s·imilar, except that there will
probably be more yeast and salt
added to the dough before it is
mixed. After kneading , the dough
Is allowed to rest a· few minutes,
!hen then refriger~ted 2-24 hours
before shaping. The dough actually rises a little in the refrigerator.
- The sponge-dough method
combines the yeast with some of
ihe liquid, flour and sugar. The
'!Iough is set in a warm place to
form a sponge before the remaining ingredients are added and
kneaded.
The batter or "no-knead"
·method does not require kneading.
B,ecause of this, less flour is used,
and the product results in a coars- .
.~r uixture.
- In the rapid-mix method, the
yeast is combined with the dry

'

'

~~

Author sues makers of 'Shakespeare in Love~
By ANTHONY BREZNICAN
Associated Press Writer
·
LOS ANGELES (AP)- A bestselling author has sued the makers.
of the Oscar-winning film "S ha~espeare in Love," claiming they stole
the talc of a lovelorn bard from her
1989 novel "The Quality of
Mercy."
·
Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard

won the best original screenplay
Oscar for the movie Sunday night.
Novelist Faye Kellerman sued them
in federal court on March 16, le ss
than a week before the Acade my
Awards.
.
" It's interesting that it won the
award, but as I sa id in the complaint
it should have been for best adapted
screenplay," Barry Novak, Ms.

Kelletman's attorney, said Monday.:
Named in the lawsuit are Normad
and Stoppard ; Miramax Film Co~
Inc., Uni versal City Studios Inc. and
script publisher Hypcrion Press lncl
In both the no~el and the movi ~
a young Willi am Shakespeare
romances a woman who also mas:
querades as a man in one of hi~
plays.

BULLSEYE
Lane Double Reclining Sofa

RACINE - RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park. New
members welcome .
RUTLAND - Special village
council meeti ng, 7:30 p.m., to
di sc uss nood mitigation grant.
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education regul ar meet ing Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the district
central office on the second no or
of the Pomeroy Municipal Build ing.

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053, 7:30
p.m.

----- ~--- ~

Roofing ~ Rer,lrs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Di'yWall &amp;
• Plumbing
Free Estimates

debtor of financial obligation• and arrange a fair
diotrihution of aooeto. Debtor• in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for bio or ber personal
use. Tbis may include a ear, a bouse, clothef, and
household goods,
·

Joseph Jacks

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

.

· Pleasant Valley Hospital

Quafity !furniture P{us
r------;!F_umitun, Carptt, !A.ppfianas

-

.

----- ..__ _________
,

Financing Available
90 Day Lay-Away

421.23 Statt !J(J.

7 •

tz'uppers '.PfJuns, O!Jl

{740) 667-7388 • 1-800-200-fOOS

Mon-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. N • Sat M

"

J/12 1 mo.

can relieve a

Custom Homes

Remodeling

MIJ
"

"Bullll Your Dream"
Joe Wilson
(740 992-4277

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·
•

Linda's Painting
'lake the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you .

. ,INTERIOR
Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

LANDSCAPE
DElliII
Computer Graphlca
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commerclat'
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohio
740-985-4422

HILL'S

SELF STORACE
29670 Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2271
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, Ohio

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

40

•

Lori·Casto
Love,
·C haden,
&amp;Me!

• Lawa Cue • D••lp
PluBag
• Malcblag ·

.• Publlc..NoUce
':
LEGAL NOTICE
;spring
Ctaanup
of
~llobury Twp. Cern
. etery
;Jill begin 4-5-118. Anyone
"ho wonta to aave floware
decaratlona are aaked I&lt;&gt;

L!21,Pt£~r

t

everyone for flowers and
food during·our
time of sorrow,
&amp; your li.ind
expressions of
sympatfiy.
Connie (jray

.............

Goll Carts For Sale
Hl85 E-Z Go Electric
With Battery Chargers

(304} 773-5354
.00

3TC

Anyone not able to attend bui
wanting to contribute can send a
donation to Joan Wolfe, AHA
Treasurer ; PO Box 296; Racine,
Ohio 45771.

., The Mei gs ;V? unty American
Heart Association has finalized
plans for Heart t &gt;ance '99 to be
hCid on Saturday, April I 0 from 8
t¢ II p.m. at Royal Oak Park.
• Music will• be provided by
George Hall ( a well-known local New Ohio Valley Bank Scholarniu sician whose music appeals to ship for Meigs County 4-H
aJI ages.
Jame s L. Dailey, chairman and
• "We are trul y excited about
t,iois new event for the American CEO of Ohio Valley Bank , has
announced 1hat beginning this
~earl Association ," commen ted
Qr. Man sfie ld , Meigs Cou nty year, Meigs County 4-H mcmbqs
.ijHA President. "It will provide wi ll be eligible for the Ohio Val an e ntertai nin g evening to the ley Bank 4-H Scholarship Prol)itblic fo~ both dancers and non- gram.
The scholarships were created
~n ce rs . We urge everyone to
attend for a delightful evening to reward outstanding high school
· -;Vhilc we join in supporting the seniors for their accomplishments
in 4 -H .
~merican Heart Association 's
~hen the program began in
~ght agai nst heart disease, our
I
986,
four sc holarships were·
,i..,mber one cause of death in
awarded each year.
~eig s County."
.
However, as the bank grew. so
~ Tickets are pri ced at $ I 5 sin gle
$25 co uple with soft drinks have the number of scholarships .
.,d snac ks provided. Legal bcv- Now, each year, eight new gradu ~{ages arc permitted on a carry -in ating high sc h'o ol se ni ors arc
se le cted to re ce ive a .scho larship
~a s 1s ·.
Tickets
will be sold at the door. but for . valued at $2,000 over four years .
These eight sc holarships wtll
~10rc infor:tnation residents c.:o nd&gt;c t Denver and Nt&gt;ra Rice at be awarded to graduatin g 4-H
e&lt;&gt;2-3759 or John Redovian .a t members in Ja ckson. Gall ia. Pike

.

t

{I'

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
' FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7/22/lln

SERVICE
AgrlcuHural Uma,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand
985-4422
Cheater, Ohio

(3) 9, 16, 23

.

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

ROBERT ;BISSlll
CONSTRUCTION

DUMP TRUCK

remove them prior to that
dote.
.
·
Sollabury Twp. Truotooo
will not be reaponolblt for
flowers or docarallana loll
on cometary Iota.

992-5455

· PaUo ConstracUoa

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

n

Light Hauling up
to 8 ton

74N87-GI83

·lat...lngW.UI . .clc

and Meigs Coun ties in Ohio and
Mason County in West Virginia .
Meigs County wi ll receive at
least one scholarship. A toral of
72 OVB 4-H Sc ho lars have
shared in over $1 1'9 .000 in fund ing since the inception of the program.
The winners are determined by
select committees of 4- H advisors
and volunteers. 4-H experiences
make up 50% of th e score .
. The o ther half of the total

YOUNG'S
&lt;ARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Add ttl one l A• modeling

•NewQoragea
• Eleclrtcal &amp; Plumbing ·
• Roofing
• lntarlcir a Exterior
• PalnUng .
• Alao Concrete Work
• Pada dtoCka &amp; guttering
V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 992~215
Pomeroy, Ohio
Carpenters Building America

Haning's Home
Improvements
Wood-Vinyl-Metal
Siding, Soffit, Paint,
Metal, Lamination, Pole
Buildings, Decks, Etc.

Free Estimate~ ''-~

~

Carpenter

tfj

B. Haning IJI'
1740) 698·1713

score is derived from experiences

i'n other groups and act ivities and
academic accompl ishments. The
final decision will also consider
financial need.
Winners and paSt recipient s
arc honored at a luncheon in May
and during the county fair.
Recipients must maintain a
cumu lative GPA of 2.75 by the
end of the fir st year; a 3·. 0 a the .
end of the seco nd year and for. ~II
succeeding years.
For more informati on and ·
applications for the sc holar sh ip ,
contacts can be made with Chip
Ha ggerty. County Exten sion
Agent .. 4-H. at OSU Extension.
Meigs County at 740-992-6696 .
The dcatllinc for applications is
April 5.

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00-50 """""'

740·742·2138
3/11/99TFN

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

C!J.ASSIIREOSI

Help Wanted · .''~

, S$ EARN EXTRA CASH S$ [I •
Independent Contractor5 Naedtd
To Del iver The New Chambl61i
Publ ishing Telephone Dlr•ct orU
l!'l Th&amp; Ohi o Valley Area . Must ~
At Least 18 Years Or' Age , A
Hive Use 01 An Insured Vehlot8.
Oellvety Starts March 23, 19~
Ceii ·Now To Reserve A Route 111"
You'r Area . Market Olslrlbuti on
$pecia.Ust&amp;.lnc.
.
.. i,

FREE

~·

I

www.t11ohotpages2.comlnslpsychtc1251l29llltm

1 will no longer be raaponslble lor
any debts other than my own , 3·
18·99, William E. Tijlple.
Prlncus VIdeo Has New Sh ipment Of Adult Movies &amp; Movies
Far Sale, 740-~1-5167.

30 · Announcements ·
740-592·1642

9:()0.5:30.

COMMEIOAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614-992-7643
(No Sunda Cal.ls)

40\(k) . Point Pleasant Nursing &amp;
Re~abtt~atlon Genter. lit@~ .Route

NSAI Songwriter C'Q~_riliY:(l'r)Jpet,
Looking For Band To Pu t Mus ic
To lyrics For Demo Tape , 740 367-7755.
_ -. _~ -i •• •

e

40

Giveaway ·

C,IIA:IIi!

Agency Witt Tretn For The PCA

Positions. Must Have High
Black CoCkerSPanlel, Female , School D lplom.a, GED Or Some
Prelerably to oountry . home . - Experience Caring For The Ek:terHousebroken . (304 )675-7528.
1~. You May Pick Up An Appllca·
tlon Or Send A Resume To : (N8
Female Brlttney Spaniel Qog . 1 Phone Calls Please)
; "'
, !2yr, to g~ nome In country or
11
on term. (304)773-61 1 t.
Family Home Heatlh PIUs, Inc. ~
750FirstAvenue
\(,
::~1~~;-wee~ old pupp(~,~ ·- ?~OGaii~Js, Ohio 4563~

·

Free, S Black Puppies, 1/2 Cho·

'AVON I All Areas I Shtriel

cola to Lab. (304)675·5636.

Speats, Jtl4-£75- t 429.

Maple Tablil And Cha ir s,

740·

' ·

Babysitter Needed For Shift

A1~d

446·3388.

Some EIIBnlngs. 74Q-44t '9842. ;' "

Older Refflg8r.ato r &amp; l 'P 'slave,
fr om mobile home. Small Dog
House. (304)57~31 37.

carpenter needed,
on experience, call 740·992•24~&amp;
lor Interview.

Puppies. Retrle'.fer /Shepherd
Mhc~. 740.388-o-413.

Cook, Waltstall, Bartender. Mdil:
be 18 or otd,r. Apply : LaCantlni
Mexican Restau ra,nt. Galllpol~'i

~~Q~s b~~UA

======---. """~'· wva.(304)675-7115:
60 l,o!lun,d Fou,nd .

:

.

Found: Sma ll .Mate Black 6
Whi te Dog . Call daily till 3PM
(304)675·2723, to tnqutrelldentity.

DISPLAY HOMES
L
NEEDEb ·' ' ·" • . ·
For VInyl Stdtng And Reptadi'

Lost Male B~xer Fawn With Black
Mask In The SA 588 Area Wearlng Black ·Collar, Family Pat, Re-

ment Windows.
Financing
No Applicat ion Refused Pmta. A&amp;
Low As $89/Mo. Before And Aftbt
Pictures Plus Advertising Rights ,iJ

1-oo•;.

Relaase Are Required

ward! 740·44 1·1626.
Loat, Bla ck Wallet , Ald l Store/
G allip olis , In shopping· carts
March/20th. Important card/heart
med .
(304)675-1 144/6741 174,1eave message/n umber.
Reward/No questions.
Lost. Reward . "Mpthars Ri ng•
pos&amp;lbly near Trinity t,JM Church
Parking Area, dur-Ing Lamon
Luncheon. (304)~76-3~37.
lost: Beagle Mala With Brown
Collar, In Ke rr /Bid well Area ,

1-800· 5~

,5695 24 fHr.

-

.

Easy Work I Excellent Pay I ,114.
semb le Produ cts At Home. Cafl
Toll Free 1-800 -467-5566 E~i
12170.
·
,, ,,
,
Equipment operator needed, wittas based on experience, caii74Q992-2478 tor Interview.
•• 1
Experienc ed HVAC Technician ·&amp;
Insta ller G oo d Pay &amp; Benafl~.
740-446-,637.
··

Please Call t ·600·926·0207.

Fast Growing Home Health AQ~n;
cy ~ow Ac ceptmg Appli Cati ons

Lost: Big Light /Oark Brown Dog
Looks Like Hound .Dog, AnswerS
To Pep , Last Seen In Glanville
Area , 304-895-~.

For Part-Time AN's And CHH.A:'V.
Apply Medl Home Heallh 4 ,f.~
SacoM Avenue, Gallipolis. 74~446-1779.
'

lost : Income Tax Refund Che ck
In Spring Valley Are~. If Found
Call14o-38S-9081.
-1.
,

FREE

Lost white German shepherd/
Hu sky mix. female ; blue eye,
brown eve. Flatwoods- Rocksprings vicinity, 74D-992-70n.

to

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Call740·446·3808
Ot
140·686·9031
EOE

All Yard Sal.. Mull Be Plld In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the acl 11 to run,
Sundav &amp; Monday edition·

80

F~dO)'.

A~ctlon

and Flea Market
Auction , third of April, old Amerl·
can Legion, Middleport, Oh.
Bill Moodispaugh Auctioneering .
Complete Auctioneering Serv ia·
es . Consignment auction - Mill
Street, Middleport, Thursdays.
Ohio License 17693. 740 ."969·

2ti23.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time ~~crloneer COIUPiete
auctldn ..~~~rv l.c~ .• ,.l..¢ensJd
t66 ,0t1io &amp; we•t VJrgln4a, 304-

n:l-5785 Or 304·173·5441.
RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Ever.y Saturday Nlgnt 7 P.M ..

Crown City, 740·25H989

'•

Wedemlyer's Auctior'l Service ,

Gaiii&gt;Oii~Ofl!O 7t1Q-379-l17~· ; ·

90

-·

Opportunities For lmmedlaie
•
Employmenl May Be Avai~,-­

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

t 'Otlpm

Free Home Health Aide Tra ining
Classes Wil l Be Conducted M
Health Managmenl NUrsing ServIces, Inc .. If You Are Aespons ltle.
A Sell Starter. And w ant To E(l.t.er In to The Health Care FIElld
This Is A Tremendous Opporlunlty. lnlerested Individuals Showip
Call Today To Reserve Your Spot
In The Class.

Fulltlme position for a warehOu·
seman for local Woodworking
Di stributor. Computer and lorknlt
experler:~ce required . Candida')t!l
shOuld be service oriented and
have a neat appearance. Applic;
ants should apply in· person 'o~
FaK/Mail resume to: WarehouM~
man, OVIS, P.O. Bo ~e 9-.. M iJJ~
wood, WV 25262 or faK 304-27'j~
3879.
·~
Furniture Wa re house And Deir'very. Immediate Opening. Full-n"*
Applv : Lifestyle Furr;a ltu re , Th ird
And Olive, Gallipolis, No Pjlonp
CaHs.
General Office /Sales . Etpertenced Preferred . Ful l- Time . IITI·
mediate Opening . Apply: Ulestylt
Furniture, 856 Third Aven ue, Gih
lipolis, 10-2. No Phone Calls.
. ·.., ,
Hi lp Wanted- lawn Craw Supetr--t
visor. Meigs Industries .has im mediate opening l or seasonal
(Aprii :October) mower and crew
supefvlsor. Day shilt hours. Must
have minor equipment repa ir
knowledge. Applicants shbul!:t apply In person at 131 o Car,_,ton
·street. Syracuse. No phone calls

,

please.

t

• .. .

INSTRUCTORBITEACHEl!S

u.s. . su.·

I'

Week Summer Youth Tralning
~rog ra ,m..

To

AUQUOtl. To

1

. Reattlng. Pre .
I And AILI8i · :
. VIsit Our •

Wanted to Buy

Absoii'I.J top Qoll.ar:~"-11
ver And Gol&lt;t-Cotns , ProofsE11s.
DiamoMs. Anti(lue Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre -1930 U.S. Currency,
Oterling , Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 151 Second
AY&amp;nue, Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.

•
'
;

1
~eedad In Gallipolis Fdt An 8 1

'
'
At 1·800-397·6490·-1
local Truck Driving Pos llloli, ;
Hauling Milk , Class A License 1
With Tanker· Endorsement. 1
Atleast 1 Year Experience Orlv- f
ing T111ctor Troller, 740·245-9557. ~ ~

(C....--:---:-----:---7

'

)

•

RN'.S;:'

Home Health Agency NoW Hlr'i~f
For Full &amp; Pan Time Pos lttorm

Vase Only.

• :No Job •Too 'Big or
'1oo Small
"Call Today"
FREE Estimates
(7401992·5535 or

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New GaraQI'S
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

Adm ission / Acllv ltl8s Directo r.
Full-Time Comprehensive Bene fits Package Which -Includes

;;-Su~n~r~la~o~M~o~in~ocri~~~:J~~n
PCA'S l SECRETARIES • :-~~· :1
f.1ease Aemove .. Grave

• Siding

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

nue, Hunllnglon, WV.

'AHENrtON

DEAPLINE:J:OO p.m,
the dly ·before tM ad ,
Is to run . Sunday
edition· 2:00p.m.
Frldav. Monday editiOn
.: 10:00 a.m. saturday.

742-1701

Apply In Person. 2300 Third Ave·

~ -. Polnl Pleasant. W!/..26:650.
A Genesis Eldercare&gt;r oe·n ter.
EOE .
•· ''" ~--,·

Quality clothing and household
Items . $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Sa turday

• Remodeliri!J

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
· Painting
· Interior &amp; Exterior
15Yrs. Experience

ACF Industries : Crane Operalor.
Industrial E~eperlence Required
(Cab operated ove~ht~ad crane) .

62

New To You Thrift Shoppa
9 West SUmson, Athens

• New Construction

Marty's
Power
Washing

._

, 8 or older
304·675·
We d . thru
Showbar. Pt.

6500 Ext . 3593, 18• $3 .99 Per
Min . Serv·U· 8t9·645·8434. httpil

ALL Yard Saln Muat
Be Paid In AdVance. ·

992·2753

TO~h

CALL 1· 888-808-8900

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
'

Hauling

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Ressonspje Rates
Joe tf.' Sayre

•

I

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

. . . . . . . . . .Cil •

e ifami o

fi'ldr

Racine Gun Club
Nease Hol_low ••·
Eviry Sunday
12:30 pm
\
Limit 680 siHvt I
.737 back bore

Equipment Parts·
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

40 742-8888

Card of Thanks

'•

675-5865.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

All Makes Tractor &amp;

3151!1011 mo. ad.

,Lordy.
Look Who•s

Wanted To Buy : Ua~!i~d
Homts, Call 740-448-0175,

110

a

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Auction

FG&lt;You, 740-256-e989.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Don't Need A Big
One Call Little
One
DRIVEWAY STONE

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

740·992·2068

......

HARRISONVILLE Har risonville Senior Citi z"ns Club,
10:30 a. m..to 12:30 P. .m .. meeting
.
and lun cheon. Becky Bae( to gtve
program on Welln ess.

Health line

Phone (740) 593-6671

$59995

---------------

(304) 675-2828

''

accompa nie d by parent/legal
guardi an; to present shot. record.
WEDNESDAY ·
LONG BOTTOM John
Elswick to speak at Mt. Olive
Church , Long Bottom , Wed ne sday, 7 p.m.

POMEROY
Immunization
Clinic, Tuesday, 9 to II a. m. 'and
I to 3 p.m. , Meigs Multipurpose
Center, Pomeroy. C hildrer to be

StGrtfn8 11t

East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

BIIKRUPI'CY

.

The judge wasn't available to talk and a spo keswoman refu sed comment on her contract situation.
Lyttle said Sheindlin is under contract and hadn ' t expressed to him any desi re to renegotiate. He sllid he
didn ' t expect her to boycott work.
" I'm sure she 'd like to make more money," he said. "I'd like to make more money. If the show continues to do well, I'm sure we all will ."

----Community Calendar-'-------

·: RUTLAND- Rutland Village
Cou,nc il, regular sess ion , Tues. d ~y. 7:30 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center, to discus FEMA
hazard mitigation grant.
.
'

'

•ralde

• .No Embarraument ... ·
You're Treated with Respeotl ..
I
for lnallant

GUN SHOOT

lack.'-1:toof ng.·

..

•"

tUESDAY

.

Tan-talking "Judge Judy " Sheindlin has single-handedly led a revival of the court show genre and
surged to the top of the daytime ratings by dispensing no-nonsense justice.
"Judge Judy" passed Oprah Winfrey, Jerry Springer and Rosie O'Donnell in the ratings during TV's.
February "sweeps" period. Her Nielsen Media Research numbers are up 60 percent over last year while
her three biggest rivals are down.
"People respond to her in the same way they responded to Jesse Ventura," said Larry Lyttle, president of Big Ticket Television, which produces the show. "There's a certain attitude and directness and · ·
succinctness that people relate to."
.
Like other court shows, combatants air their grievances before Sheindlin and she makes a ruling.
"Judge Judy" seeks cases where the people involved have a prior relationship in order to fire up more
passion , Lyttle said.
'
·
Sheindlin - who wrote.a book titled 'tDon't Pee on My Leg and Tell Me It's Raining" - doesn't
take kindly to being bamboozled or sassed.
"She's a very strong personality. and people like that," said Marc Berman, a television analyst for Seltel. "People, watch her to see how she rules a courtroom." .
'
.·
Court 'shows were big in the 1980s, when Judge Wapner 's " People's Court " was the mge. But in the
cyclical world of syndicated television, they soon burned out. None were left on the air by the end of
1994.
Lyttle decided to take a chance on reviving the genre when he met with Sheindlin, a former Family
Court judge in New York, and the show premiered in fall 1996. He wondered how the country would
respond to such a clearly New York personality.
"We didn 't know if people would be captivated by it or turned off by it," he said.
"Judge Judy" slowly caught on and she soon had rivals. Former New York City Mayor Edward Koch
now presides over a revived "People's Court." Former boxing referee Mills Lane and Judge Joe Brown
Slarted shows this season.
·
I
None are sensations like "Judge Judy," but all are doing well enough to stick around, Berman said.
· Next fall brings two new ones, including a revival qf "Divorce Court." ,
..I
The courtroom shows are thriving as talk sl]ows fade, largely due to oversaturation. Ratings for
''
"Oprah" in February were down . I 8 percent over 1998, "The Rosie O'Donnell Show" was off 16 percent and Springer dropped by 10 percent , Bennan said. Roseanne 's sho.,4ls struggling for its life.
, Sheindlin, meanwhile, .reportedly wants to sweeten her co ntract with ah ownership stake and may not
tape any more shows until she 's satisfied. the New York Daily News reported, quoting sources it did not

BY BECKY ·BAER
Mel~ County Extenlion Agent
Family and Conaumer Sclencell Community Develop~
ment

. The Community Calendar IS
~ublished as a free service to
non-profit groups wis~ing to
announce. meetings and special
events . The ca lendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cann\)t be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

.

Call 985·383•

j

' ' l'lah1 To Sell

WORRYIIG!!J -

3/15 1 mo.

. -Complete Auto Service-

&amp; Conltfuctlon
By DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) ~Head to the bench. Oprah and Rosie. The new queen of daytime television takes

A.GSI!IMCB~

I

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy .. Repo • Divorced

Stop In And See
An Old Friend ·
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

(Uine Stone:
LowRatea)

"

SHADE RIVER

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Now Custom
Grind Feed

Need ·a ,lrlend Ia tbe buslaeu
Call me at (7 40) 7 42-~84:.!

Land Clearing II&lt;
Grading
Septic Sy1tem &amp;
Utilitieo

'.

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

Don•s
Heating &amp; Cooling

•

�•

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Tuesday, March 23r 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Esday, March 23, 1999
,

•

'

"•
The Daily Sentinel • Page 9:1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

EYOOP

:!

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
42 Dole out
411 F1do • doc
47 Eatty lklton

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 LAcking vigor
7 SolllrohMiowo 5 1 - - n
13 Hanul'aala~
(lnvertad)
14 Lube lob
&amp;3 Loan ahark
...... (ly
More
15 Gets an
upenelvo
education
56 Group of
t 6 Slor•ahoped
words
17 WithoUt
57 Peaceful
purpoae
56 Small hole
18 McKollan of
" Godo and
DOWN

ss

540

440
3 BR 2BA, 2 Cor Garage 1 .lore
A Mu&amp;t See Letart. {304)882
3518

333 Third Avenue Gallipolis 2
References Required CaH After S
~M 740-44 Hl432
UNBEATABLE BUY - Brand
New 1999 14x70 3 Bedrooms 1
Ba1h Home Vinyl Skiing, Shingle

Roor Thermopane Windows And
Upgrade Car~t Includes Dellv·
ory Sot Up Skirting Stops And
Tie Downs On~ 2 LeH At $21 900
1 Btl0-6861783

By owner 72' Page Strut Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
10 appreciate will sell house without lots lor $89 000 740·992
2704 740-992 5896
For sale by owner In Pomeroy 3
bedroom 2 bath big front porch
close to school nice yard excel

BRUNER LAND
740-44J.I412
0111.. Co.• Hunters 88 + Wood
ed Acres On Williams Hollow
$40 000 Cash Price Just OH SA
21 B Friendly Ridge Rd 15 Acres
$14 500 Public Wolor City
Schoolsl Teens Run Rd 10 Acr·
ea $10 000 $1 000 Down + S132
AMonlh

Uelge Co oanvllle Briar Ridge
Ad
7 Acres Wllh Pond Or 5
Acres With Stream $12 000 Or
On SA 325 Nice Wooded 17
Acres $18 000 Public Water Rutland Whites Hill Rd 1t Acres
$14 000 Or 9 Acres $12 000
Pce;lc Water
Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Flanclng Info Take 10%
011 List Price On Cosh 9uysl

360

lent condition must see to appre
elate asking $33 ooo call 740
10 Yr Certlf1ed Nursing Ass1stant
has opening for two elderly pea
pie In her horn&amp; 1 740.742 2119
Medical Processor FT JPT No
Exp Nee Will Train PC Req Earn
40K Call 800-663-7440

Ace Tree Service CoiTfpl&amp;te tree
care 20yrs eKp &amp; msured free
estimates 614 441 1191 or 1
800 508 8887

Motl'lers &amp; Others Earn $499
Part Time $4 000 + Full Time
From Home FREE Cassena 740
532 2579

Carpentry From Frame To Finish
Decks Porches Add1tlons Re
models Call Joe 740-441 1316

NOW HIRING
S170 00 PEAWEEKIPT
(QUAAAANTEEO SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone Operator Work For
LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

Check This Out Save SSS lntertor
/E)( fenor Painting Root Palnttng
Pressure &amp; Hand Wash House
Mobile Homes Ne_p~ Work Guar
anteedl 20 Yeal"f"'Experlence &amp;
Relerences Free Estimates Call
Now To Get On The List For This
Year 1999 304 675-1327

• Day And Evemng
Shifts Available
• Full And Part Time Opening
• No Experl8flC8 Needed
We Train
• Homemakers Work While
Children Are In SChOQI
• Co»ege Students Welcome
~ In ~r&gt;&lt;&gt;n AI
111 P1ne Street
Galhpols oA
Tues Marcn2J. 25th
Wed March 1Oth
Thurs March 11 ttl
12 PM Til 6 PM Only
Ask For Mr Wiseman
Nursing Management Position Holzer Senior Care Center Is
Currently Accepting Applications
For An AN Preferably BSN W1th
Previous Long Term Care /Direc
tor Of Nursing Experience The
Successful Candidate Will Pos
sass Experience In Leadership
Quality Improvement /Ass ura nce
Excellent Communication And
Follow Up Skills As Well As Fo
cus On Resident Outcomes And
Teamwork Interested IndiVIduals
Should Forward Their Resume To
Andrea Cline Williams Admlnls
trator Holzer Senior Care 380
Cotanlal Drive Bidwell OH EOE
PoSition F1eld RepresentatiVe
Woodmen Of The World Life In
suranee Soe1ety
If you want to make money are
w111mg to work hard and like to
help others we may have a job
for you lgca l Resident Excel
le nt ncome possibilitieS and
home ott ce tralnmg tor persons
selected Must have pleasing
pe rsonality and be wll\lng to
meet the public No eKperience
necessary For more Information
cell Clay Roney at 304 675 6019
or ma1l resume to 2413 Jackson
Avenue Point Pleasant WI/
25550 EOE

Electr c Maintenance Service
Wring Breaker Boxes Light Fix
ture Heating Systems and Ae
modeling (304)674 0126
Furniture repair restoration &amp; re
fmish1ng cus tom bUilt reproduc
tlons Liz &amp; Bennen Roush 740
992 1100 Appalachian Wood
WCN'kS

Geotges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the mill just call
304 675 1957
Have 3 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Elderly Or Hand!
capped 740.441 1536
Having Trouble W1th Your Camp
tuer? Need Some Home PC Sup
port? Well We Can Help I Call
THE HOME HELP DESK We Oil
er Phone Support And In House
Support! Just Call Us At 740
441 9868
HOUSE CLEANING
Honest Mature Female To Clean
In Gallipolis Point Pleasant Area
Will Work Around Your Schedule
Reasonable Rates 740 446 4502
Jeannie
House Cleaning Jobs Honest
Reliable Have references In the
Mason/New
Haven
Area
j304)895-3996

GallipoliS Developmental Cente r
An ICF /MR Is Recrultmg For A
Part T1me Permanent Dietllian
Current l censure And Annual
Renewal As Issued By Ohio
Board Of 0 etedcs ReqUired
Also Recruit ng Providers For
Professiona l Services To Resl
dents For The Penod 7/11!999
6/30/2001 The Areas Of Profes
slona l Part T1me !Inte rmittent
Servtees Are
Chapta n (Catholic Faith) Psych!
atrlst G~nera l Act1v1ty Therapist
1 (Life Guard) Language Deve l
opment Spec1al1st (Speech And
Audiology) Pharmacist Physle1an
Specialist (On Call)
lnterestM
Person
/Parlles
Shou d Subm1t An Apph ca hon I
Letter Of Intent Together W1th
Appropnate L1cense Cert1f1catJon
Or Other Credential Information
And Salary Requirements Or Fee
Schedule To

Reputable Commerc1al Boo ting
Company In Southeast Tennes
see Is EKpanding we Need Mo
llvated Hardworking And Dru g
Free Personnel All Po sitions
Available Will Train W111 Re
locate Key Fte rson nel Who Are
Wl11ing To Grow With The Com
pany Send Resumes To CLA
465 c/o Galllpotl5 Da tty Tribune
825 Third Avenue Gallipolis OH
45831
RESUMES UNLIMITED Otters
Per.sonalized Resumes AF'ld
Much Morel Interv iew Materia ls
To Get You Prepared 740 388
3800

Scenic Hills Nursing Cen1er 31t
Bllet!ric:lge Ad Bidwell OH Is Now
Accepting Appl ications For
Friendly Outgomg And Oepend
• able LPN 8 (Part Time Days &amp;
Eveninga) Please Apply In Per
son At The Front Desk Between
830AM -430PM
STATE TESTEO NURSING AS·
SISTANTS NEED£0 Appllca
lions are being accepted for
those individuals who are Inter
eated In becoming a State Tested
Nursing Asslalant for our laclllty
Please apply m(CNrson to Rock
springs Rehabilitati on Center
36759 Rocksprings Road Pamer
oy Ohro 45769 phi 740 992
6606 Need ded ica ted caring
hard work•ng people to JOin our
tea EOE

'

Spring Valley 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom 2 1/2 Baths
LIVIng Room D1ning Room Eat In
Kitchen Lg Family Room 740
245-9337
Largest Home On The Market Come See Our Mammoth 32x80
Home With Up To 5 Bedrooms
And 3 Bathrooms This Home Is
Unbelievable Starting At $475
Per Month Call Now AI 1 800
6a6 1783

for Sale
'"'

Used 12x60 Good Condition
$3 900 Delivered &amp; Set Up 1
800-251 5070
1964 Windsor 14x55 3 Be&lt;t
rooms Appliances And Dinette
Must Be Moved $2 000 304
895-3608 304 895 3025
1973 Hlflcrest two bedroom mo
bile home 740-992 5039
1976/ 14)(60 Hollypark Trailer
Total Electric 2BR Price Re
ducedl For more information call
(304)n3 5543 aller 4~
1978 Schultz 14x60 2 Bedrooms
Very Good Condition! Air Condll
lion1ng Underpinning E)(!rasl
740.367 0583 740 245 5872
1980 Bayview 3 Bedrooms ~ ~12
Baths Fireplace On 3110 Acre 3
Outbuildings Located Graham
Sc"ool Road $16 000 74o-441
08sa

Will mow lawns trim any odd
job&amp; hauling 740 992 4286

1990 14x70 tra1ter two bedroom
one bath refrigerator stove and
central air included must move
$10 000 740-667 6a30

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ness w1th peop le you know and
NOT to send money Ulrough the
mall until you haYe investigated
the offering
VENDING Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours ~ Good $ Pric e To
Set! Free Brochure 800 820
4353

230

Professional
Services

Economy Heating And Cooling
Factory 10 Years Parts &amp; Labor
740 245 9009
TURN EO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
I 688 582 3345

1992 Norris 16Ft X 70FT Vinyl
With Shingles 2 Bdrms 2 Baths
All Electric Appliances Porches
Carport 740.256-6336

2 004 acres 2 bedroom large llv
lng room newly remOdeled new
carpet big dining room new car
pet eqUipped k1tchen full bath
basement must sell soon gettmg
drvorce 740 742 2008(Robln)
Kmeon Drive 3 Bedrooms Living
Room Kitchen Bath laundry
Carport Wllh Ullllry Fenced Yard
740-446-2801

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths $300/Mo
304 736-7295
Comlortable 4-5 BR 2BA In Bend
Area available April 1 wlth dec
orating allowance (304)675·

2464
For Rent With Option To Buy 4
Bedrooms Stove &amp; Refrigerator
Dishwasher Furnished Fireplace
JLarge Deck Fenced In Yard To
tal Electri c $525/Mo Deposit
304-675 7673
House In Gallipolis 3 Bedrooms
CA $375/Mo + Ulllllles 740
446 1295
ter no pets deposit and refer
ence required call740 742 2661
New Haven 2BR home garage
River Frontage D~;~poslt Refer
ences Lease Call (304)934
7462
Clean Efficient 2BR Referenc
ea DepoSit No Pels (304)675
5162
Aemodled House In Gallipolis
Mature Couple Preferred Call
Leave Message 74().446-3845
Three bedroom home In Middle
port corner lot lanced In yard
$375 plus depoot 740 992 3194
Three bedroom house two car
garage no pets $300 deposit
$350 month reterences 740 8435236, 740 985-4218

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash Included 740·
992 2167
2 Bedrooms In Potter Area Deposit &amp; References ReqUITed No
~IS $285/Mo 740-38HI62
6 Miles Out 218 2 Bedrooms
$225/Mo Plus Oepos/1 And Ref
oronces 740 256·6251 740 4468172
Mobile home for rent In Racine
no pets 740-992 5858
Nice 2 Bedroom Trailer Refer
ences &amp; Oepos1t Required No
Pets 740-446 1104

440

3 Acres W th bauble Wide In
V1nton No Flooding Will Sell On
land Contrac t With Down Pay
mont $29 000 740 258-6793
1972 Academy 12x65 3 Bed
rooms 1 Bathroom Front Bed
room Home Ready To Move Into
Includes Free Delivery And New
Vinyl Skirting $3 995 Call 1 800.
500 3957
Ooublewlde On Lot
6a62

800 383

Good selection of used homea
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starling at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740
385-9621
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE 101 rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer skirting
deluxe atepa and setup Only
$200 74 per month wl!h S1150
down Call1 800 837 3238
1979 Mansion 14x70 New Carpet
Good Shape And Ready To Go
Delivery Included 3 Bedroom
Front Kitchen $1 100 Down And
S154 Per Month Call 1 800 500
3957
14x70 Owner Financmg Avail
able Must Soli 800-383-6862

-

Why Finance Long Term? 7
Years Only New 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Under $3001Mo 1 800
251 5070

330 Farma for Ssle
31 0 Homes for Sille

2BR House Rent or Sale 4th
St Now Haven WV (304)882
3121 mornings (304 )882 3274
Untll1tPM

1996 14XBO Mobile Home 3BR
2BA Large Covered Porch Lot
95X105 A 1 Con dition Somer
VIlle Realty (304)675 30301675
3431

Bank Repo Mobile Homes Single
W1de &amp; Sectional&amp; Flnanc1ng Lit
Ue As $500 Down 74o-742 0510

REAL ESTATE

==::._-------i

450

Furnished
Roome

MERCHANDlSE

Route 7 Crown City 2 Bedroom
Trailer $22.5/Mo + Deposit Wa
ter Paid 740 256-M\9 Ahor 6

Buy A Home Rent A Lot 1st
Years Rent Paid t 800 251 5070
For Details

ThtS l'lllmpaper w111 not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh1ch s 1n v ola!IOn of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advert sed m th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baSIS

.-o

Mobile home site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
740.385-&lt;4367

1993 18 Fl x80 Fl Nice 3 Bod
rooms 2 Baths New Carpet
Front &amp; Back Porch Excellent
Cond11ion Must Be Movedl 740
441 1269

....

All real estate advert1slng 1n
tnls newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fa1r Hous ng Act
of 1968 wh ich makes 1tlllegal
to advertise any preference
limitatiOn or diSCrlmtnatlon
based on race color religiOn
sex fam llal status or nat1onal
or gm or any 1ntent on to
make any such preference
hm1tatron or d•scrlmmat1on ~

s

Room For Rent In 2 Bedroom
House In Patrtot 740 ;l79-2928
AHor6 PM

House In Rutland out of high wa

1989 14X70 2BR IBA Claylon
Excellent Condition (304)675
5108 or (304)576 2101

Human Resources Department
2500 Oh1o Avenue
Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone No 740..•4&amp;1642
Fax No 74D-446 1341
TOO 740 446 2958
The Stale Of Ohio Is An
Equal OpportuniTy Employer
.A.nd Provider Of Services

Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres Village Middleport
secluded and private appoint
ment call740 992 5696

Will Do Spring Housecleaning
Windows /Carpet Etc Gall After 4
PM 304 882 2046

21 o

Furnished Upslalrs 2 R omt
Bath Clean References &amp; De
posit Roqulrad Utiltleo Pa 740:446::..1::5.:;19:.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Me.nor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle·
port From 249 $ 373 Call 7
992 50&amp;4 Equal Housing Oppor
tunltlas

Mob1le Home Lot Available In Rio
Granda Cal740-446-3617

Reduced Price 333 Third Ave
nue Gallipolis 740-441-0432

83 Acre Farm Mason County 3
Bedroom House Basement Cen
tra l Air IHeat 2 Large Barns
Outbuildings
Good Gountry
Kitchen Good Hunting Area Call
After 5 PM 304 576 2345

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
5 Acres Black top Frontage &amp;
Lat\e View
Gallla • Counry
$32 000 More Aeteage Available
740 386 8676

Trailer For Rent 740 446-~279

Apartments
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pets 740
992 2218
1 Bedroom Apartment In Mason
Stow &amp; Refrigerator Utilities Fur
nlshed AJC Laundry Room Ceil
ing Fan Garbage Disposal Ve ry
Nicol No Pots 304 773 5352
304 882 2827
1 Bedroom Ground Floor Eco
nomical Gas Heat Near Holzsr
WID Hook Up Quiet Location
$279/Mo Plus Utilities 740 446
2957
2 Bedroom Apartment At Gslllpo
Us Ferry WV 304 675-2548
2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To UnivetsUy Of Ala Grande
Campus 740 24!!-5856
2bdrm apts total electric ap
pllances furnished laundry room
facilitieS close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 149 or can 740 992
3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Weatwood Drive
from 1279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housing ()ppor1unlly
Christy a Family llvtng apart
ments trailer&amp; and home rentals
740 992 4514 April 1st 2 bed
roo m fireplace fu ll basement
home $500 +deposit April 1st 2
bedroom all utlllllesfcable paid
$515 +deposll Hud honorad
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

740-446 0390
Modern ~ BR all utilities paid
e11.cept electric $250+depo&amp;il
Gallipolis Ferry Area (304)675
1371/675-3230
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Ap artments lncludn Water
Sswage Trash $315/Mo 740
446-0008
Tara Townhouse Apartmenta
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car
peted PaTio No Pats Lease Plus
Security Deposit Requ ired 740
446-3481 740 446-0101
Two bedroom apartment In Po
meroy no pets 740.992 5858

•
l

DIRECT TV Installed With 3
Months Free P~ammlng At An
Unbelievable Prlcel ~ 877 223
2688

&amp; DISHNETWORK 16 Mini Dish

Modular home on 100xt00 latin
Mason WV Three bedroom two
baths family rooml kitchen com
bo living room/ dining room combo appliances Included fireplace
and ce ntra l air rwo car garage
porctles and fence 740 949-9004
after6pm

Will Do Babysitting In My Home
Gallipolis Ferry Area Any Shift
304 675-4637

FINANCIAL

Christy 1 Family Living aport
ments home &amp; tra II er ran I1 I1
74t&gt;-992 4514 apartments avail
able furnlst'led &amp; unfumla
J

460 Space for Rent

1983 14X52 Mansion Total Gas
2BA New Retrlg &amp; Carpet Extra
Nice Gall1polls Ferry Will be
ready to pull $7800 (304)675
n92

Protess onal Positions

Me:chandlae

992 n25

320 Mobile Homes

Furniture repair refinish and res
toration also custom orders Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop Larry
Ph lips 740-992 6576

Real Eatata
Wanted

Ml-llaneoua

510

Hou&amp;Bhold
Goode

Amana Speed Queen Washer &amp;
Dryer Extra Large Capacity
Stainless Steel Tub 11 Cy
clea $375 (304,_75-3156
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrl
grators 90 Oay Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 448
n95
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vine Street Call 740 448 7398
1 888 818.0128
New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanagua Stop
And see
740-446-4782

us

Used Carpet (8 Rooms) Kilchen
Table With 6 Chairs Encvclope
dla World Book With Child Crall
Bedroom Suite 740.446-1304
Washer $95 Dryer $95 Refrlg
erator $95 30" Electric Range
$95 Phllco Freezer $75 Ken
more Washer like New $225 1
Year Warranty Wh irlpool Wash
er &amp; Dryer Set $150 Each
Skaggs Appliances 76 VIne
Siroet Gallipolis 740-446--7398

520

Sporting
Goode

Mathews Signature Red Target
Bow 60 lb 29" 30• Draw Excel
lent Condition $400 740 379

2601

530

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Po~eroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Marchand lee
$1 bag sale Thura Mar 25 &amp;
Friday Mar 26 Humane Society
Thrill Shop. Middleport
I Year Old Daybed With Trundle
Upgraded Manressea $300 740.
256-1426
(304)862

~2

Pc Of Brass $75 For All
Bowls /Vases Etc 304 882 2436
1e• DlrecTV Satellite Syatems
$69 00 purchase price with three
month free prog ramming limited
lime ot1w call I 800 n9-81 94
1985 JD 5408 Sk1dder excellent
condition with chains 1974 Mack
300 16 spd wllh rear mount G
model Prentice Knuckle Boom
call740-992 7421 anor 5pm
1997 Kawasaki Jet Ski 1100 cc 3
Seater Aluminum Trailer Lilt
Jackel EAcellent Shape I $5 500
740.992 3537

2.. Double Door Commercial Cool
ers Coldrln $450 Master Built
$1 250 304 675 7269 9 30 AM
9PM
3 Ton Miller Air Conditioner $300
Williamson Fuel Oil Furnace
$300 Dlnelle Se1 S7S Go Cart
55 HP Roll Cage Big Tires Front
&amp; Rear New S1 200 1 Year Old
Asking $800 740-446-3545
4 OOO ,PSI Pressure Washer Hot
/Cold Unit Honda Engine 740
386 6903
5 hp go car1 very good condltlon
$700 74o-742 2897
e Piece Solid Wood Olnette Set
Country Pine With Walnut Finish
Excellent Cond1tlon $5.00 740
446-8657
A Troybllt Rototdter 8 HP 304
675-2131
Above Ground Pool
Cresses 740..446-0871

Executive dtak and credenza
$450 fokllng machiM $75 cher·
ry drop leaf tabla wilh claw feet
and 4 Chairs pluS extra leaf $350:
electric typewriter with • extra
fonts with memory module and
stand $75 740-742 2485
Firewood $351 toad delivered
740-742·2283
For Sale Puah lawnmower
Starll Easily Runs Good $60 00
(304)675-7961
For Sale Set of Squaretwo Gaff
Clubs $125 (304)675-6986
Grubb 1 Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problema? Need Tun~d? Call the
plano Or 740-446 4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 BQ0..537 9528
Kenmore Washer And Dryer 18"
Bicycle Sigler Wall Type Gas
Heater 3 Joint Of G B Tower
740-3677441
New &amp; Used Furnaces Gaa
Electric, All Conditioning New As
Low As $200 553 Jackson Pike
9 5 740 446 6308 1 600·291
0098
Nice New &amp; Uaed Furniture And
Appliances 740 446 1004 740
446-4039 Anytime

pag 1s suppLy

4 Prom

AMAZING
METABOLISM
Breakthroughlll Lose 10 200
Quick
Faat
Pounds Easy
Dramatic Results 100% Natural
DoctOf Recommended Free S.m·
plea Call 740-« I 1982
Automatic Washer Beds Chest
Drawers Computer Desk Couch
Co lor TV Dinette Set Portable
Dryer Youth Bed 740.446 9742
8 115 Wheel Horse L.awn Tractor
36 " Cut Rear Discharge With
Snow Blade &amp; Chains $500 Firm
74Q-4411081
Baby Bed Hlon cnalr Car Seat
Stroller And Walker 304 875
4548
Brand new bicycle parts all size&amp;
&amp; accessories electric atove
1990 Toyota Corolla pee deck
preacher curl bench 740 992
6141
Dining room suite lighted glus
front china cabinet table with ex
Ira leaf &amp; 8 Chalfs maple twin bed
with mattress 2 computers
several typewriters (one elecUic)
call740-992 3128 to see them

~

We Are Professional Installation
And Service Supply We Sell
Wholesale To The Public We
Stock Janltrof Heating And Cool
lng Equipment Duct Work Fleg
latera And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Arrange For Lawrence En
tarprlses To Install For Vou If
'Vbu Don t Galt Us We Both Loael
553 Jackson Pike, 740.446 8308
800-291-C098
Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pt"esslon Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohkl 1-800 537 9528
XXXX X videos
Thousands
weekly! Sell videos from home
EnJov low ovemead and nigh prot
It We have top too sellers Plus
1000 s VItal Sources and Secrets
Revealed Will put you Into lasl
lane now Into $5 00 lnlo free with
video S19 95 Add $3 00 per
tape/shipping 9uy 3 get one ~eel
Toll Free 1 668 808 2312 (24
hours)21+

550

Antlquu

12 pc bras&amp; $75 00
2436

Package Starling AI $19 85 1
888-800-334&amp;

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121
Pole Building Specials
24 X42 x9 4" two 10 x8 overhead
doors 1 3 entry 1" Insulation In
root aeamlus gutter painted
steel s1des and root erected
price $6999
30x48 x9 one 14 x9 sliding door
on gable end of building 1 3 en
try seamless gutters painted
steel sldas and root erected
price $n19
40x64x10 two 12x10 sliding
doors one on each end of build
lng 1·3 entry painted steel sides
and roof. seamless guttar erect
ed price $13 647
Preclslon Post Frame Bdlrs Inc
740 742 4011 or 1 800· 396

3026
PQLE BUILQINOS
Horse Barns Garages Any Style
Any Size Free Estimates 740
384 4587

560

Pets for Sale

Full blooded pH bull pupplee male
and lornale. no paper~ ptronta on
premlall $175 11ch 740·591·
0881
Siberian Husky Pups. Rare Col
ors Most Btua Eyed $100 00
$200 00 Depending On Reglatra·
lion !outomollva Paint $20 00
Gallon 740-446-8627
FARM SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVE S TOCK

610 Farm Equipment
15 20 Uaad Tractors In Stock
8 99% Financing Uaed Hay
Equipment Financing AI low As
3 9'% Used Planters 5% New
John Deere Tractor Financing
7 99% carmichael' Farm &amp; Lawn
Your Local John Deer e Deater
Gallipolis Ohio 740 446 2412 Or
1 8000-594-1111
4 000 Ford Tr~ctor 6 Fl Finish
Mower $5 500 """'" King 18 HP
Tractor Plow Mower !Blade
$2 000 740-386 9654
500 Gallon Field Sprayer 38 Ft
Boomo 740-446-3848
553 Cat Roller $40 000 Cat 215
$32 000 1982 GMC Diesel
Flatbed Truck $5,200 1990
LT9000 Ford Dump Truck With
67 000 Actual Miles New Tires
Vibrallng Plata Temp Fits Cat
416 Mise Steel Beama 740
643-2916 After 4 PM 740 643
2644 A«er 8 PM
Closeout Sale Everything must
go Discounts up to 50% only 2
weeks left to save on all hard
ware saws trimmers tools
mowers tractor parts &amp; oil
Siders Equipment Company
Henclerlon wv {304)675 7421
Massey Ferguson 185 Diesel
Tractor Massey Ferguson 135
Deiset John Deere 1 I 20 Diesel
John Oeere 1010 Gas For'd 3000
Diesel 74Q-266-6522

620 Wanted to Buy
Wanted to buy A Troy Buill Ro
tatlller 8 Horse Power (304)675·
2131

630

Livestock

Gentle 4 Year Old Black Mare
$850 Also Pony Saddle Bridle &amp;
Blanket $25 Odds &amp; Ends An
tlques 740..367-7780
Goats Nubian SOonen Toggen·
burg Lamanc ha Doe/Babies
Milkers Newborn&amp; Wethers
2yr old Nubaan Buck All very
nlce/pamporad
Eggs
$ 75
{304)675 19&lt;6
llmousin Bull Call Alter 5 PM
740 245-5273
Saturday March 27th 1 PM Will
Be Selling 15 Cowa With Calves
By Side All Consignments Wei
come Cattle Will Be Accepted
After 4 P:M Fr~day Athens Live
stock Sa tes 740 592-2322 740
698 3531
Wanted Nubian Ooes 740 446
5504

640

Hay &amp; Grain

900 lb Round Bale Hay For Sale
$15 Each Can Haul $17 Each
740 386 6645
Good Grass Hay $1 75 Bale 740
446 1104
Large Round Sales Of Mixed Hay
$20 00 Each Call Aller 6 00 PM
740 245 9047
Square Bales Of Good Green
Mlxetl Hay $2 00 Each Rou nd
Bales $18 Each 740-446 2412
TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
1966 Pontiac Grand Prix Good
Shape 740256-1t02AskForJr
1980·1890CARS FROM$6011
Pollee Impounds, And Tax
Repo s For Listings Call 1 800
319 3323 Ekl: 4420

3 Male Chinese Pug&amp; $100 De
posit Be Ready 1St Week 01 April
740-388-0583

1983 cnevy 4 x 4 $2 aoo oo
Evenings 740 379 2467

AKC Chocolate Male LJb 3
Months 740 446 2460 After 5
PM

1984 Chevy Chevette Runs $350
740 388 9708

AKC Great Pyrenees Puppies B
Weeka Old Shots &amp; Wormed
$400 740-245-9498

1987 Mercury Gran Marquis
$500 1986 Chrysler 5th Avenue
$500 Ford Temp (Wrecked)
$300 740 388 0840

AKC Lab pupplea proven gun
dogs references 3 genera11ons
here shots wormed vet checked
black &amp; yellow S150 to $200
740 992·3619 after 5pm
AKC Male Choc lab Housebro
ken $300 (304)675-6048
B ~ Soull1olde Aquorlum
2006 Camden Avenue
Parkersburg WV 2610t
304-485 1293
Puppies &amp; Kittens
Full line of pets supplies
Birds Iguanas Tarantulas mice
Fish Tank &amp; Pot Shop 2413
Jackson Ava Point Pleasant
304-675 2063

1984 Camero (304)675-4910

1890 Pontiac Grand Am Au 1
toma11c Runs Bul NHdl Work
$300 74()-446.71X!9
••
1997 Honda Accord LX 4 Doo"•
Black With Gold Package p/W:11
A/C CaasoHo. Hao 56 000 Mllee
304 862 2843 Daytlrna 304 862.
2283 E&gt;enlngs

tAKQ4 2

• A 7

• 10 7 5
• J 10 8 6
.. Q J 9 7
South
• K Q 10 3
• K J 4 2
• 73
4542

720 Truck&amp; tor Sale

Vulnerable Both
North

1.

THAT DIET
DOCTOR'S
GOT ME

1988
Ford
RangerJXLT
130 OOOmlles, CD player, New
Tires Alum Rims Tie Rods
Runs Good $1200 (304)675,
5838
'

1991 Ford Tempo 86 000 miles 4
door PW &amp; POL air amlfm cas
sette as~lng $2300 740 742
1334

ff(AN~ ANI&gt;
~,N~ST

~-

TAX fl.tTWNS

•

P,~PA~~l&gt;

diet
29 Aware of
30 Preclpllltllon "
31 Blacklllorn
fruit
37 Stern
38 Regard
41 SUrgleol

5

compress
42 Soggy 80118
43 Fencing

colne
47 Restore to
health
48 Pertaining to

an age
49- mojaaly

It ts
much

50 Allowance lor

waste
52 Lion'• home
54 Timid

But would

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ttONeST MIST A~tS

n

by Luis Campos

worth more votes than o lhers'
Celeb~

At the bndge table though, 11 IS

C pher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people past and present
Each letter In llle cipt\er elanditor another Todays Clue B equals F

easy 10 see how some players' counl·

A SPeCIAL.TY

mg wetghs m ore

3-23
T.HE BORN LOSER

..------.

results than others'

heavtly on lhe

If you count a lot

you w1ll be a wmner tf you don't
you won t Take thts deal, wh1ch

occurred durmg a tournament m
Santa Fe , New Mex1co How wo uld

ZWMRWZP

MY

F L

HDFYWPP

CDAWP

BDTFDLY

D F P

MJJLHP

VLIZYMJDPN

LOOLZF1YDFK

D F P

FL

GDPFLZK

~WM~ZP

J~

DF'

l eads a spade to East's ace, and a
spade comes back
North s three club reb 1d could
backfire but tit s hard to do less w1th

VLGY

GWZPWK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I loved the game I loved the competrt1on
had any fun A)) hard work, all the time • - Carl Yastrzernski

suc h a strong hand
01d you play ahem! at Utckthrce?

But I never

....
WOII

If so you m1ght go down West will
duck lhe ftrst heat! wm the second
and shovel you mto the dummy wuh

Motorcycles

a

d1amond The opponent s \"tll.get
one spade one h eall one dtamond

vz

12!5 Excellent CondiJ
lion $1200 Call Aller 5PM'
(304)675 6651

BIG NATE

and two c lubs (Yes after the heart
THERE ARE PLEtiTY OF
THIN(:,l) YOU CAN DO

1995 XLH 1200 Harley OavldSOfl
Low Miles Candy Apple Red Ex,
collent Condition $f 200 OBO
304 675-3824

WITH YOUR FRIENDS.
THAT COST NOTHIN&lt;lt'
GooD OL FASHIONED
FUN 15
I

FREE

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sals

HEY, YEM,
1

queen wms you can cash dummy s

I THINK
OF THAT 7

second heart endplay tng West but

PAD
WHY DIDN T

m1nor-su1t tops before playtng the

1994 17 Ft Aluminum Tracke~
Pro Deep 1/ Boat nailer 1995 00
HP Mercury Tracker Power Tilt
Outboard Trollmg Motor $6 000
740 446-4929

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

d1amonds

tmmed1ately

swttches 10 a c lub (besl)

~~~&lt;~~

w1th dummy 's ktng

I

an~

'

0

"'

East

forcmg

a hand enlry to yam second spade
tnck You end wtlh two spades, one

"-!:!L..J...:,;Jl Ui:i....-'-....;.a:.Zb,......,;ill

heart four dtamonds and lwo clubs

PEANUTS

1 LIKE SITTING

'

AND YOU SMELL
~l l'o.t: ER.A5ER5

(9

•

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

•

SCftAM.LETS ANSWERS

'

Don I R" stunR by hiRIJ pr~cos I

.

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

1

Home
Improvements

ASTRO-GRAPH
Wednesday, March 24. I 999
In the year ahead, somethtng env
neered by a competent fnend mtght
tum out to be qutte proptltous for you
.as well You could be brough1 mlo the

workmg arrangement because of
your know how and expenence
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) Its
fine to be generous today, but nolle

the pmnt of where you gtve more
than your famtly can afford It s one
' thtng for you to make a per1ional sac
nfice, but don 1 ask 11 of others Aries,
lreal yourself to a borthday gtft Send
the requtred refund fonn and for your
Astro-Oraph predtcllons for the year
ahead by ma11tng $2 and selfaddressed slarnped envelope toAstroOraph c/o thiS newspaper PO Box
17S8 Murray Htll Stal1on New
York, NY 10156 Be sure lo stale

your Zodtac stgn
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20) Your
JUdgment w1ll be quue keen today,
especially when you take the ume to
study whatever tt ts you re mvolv~d
tn today but be sure you actm accOr·
dance wuh the knowledge
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) While

''

w1&lt;hful thonk1ng won I fulfill your
malenal asptrahons today boldness
ami nssentveness wtl1 It won't hurt
10 he dec pi) mouvated enher'
CANCER (June 2 1 lui}' 22)
Everyone 1n your party mclud1ng
yourself w1ll find cozy controllable
groups more mvltmg and enJoyable
than bemg w1th large groups of peo
pie rodny L1m1t your mvol\'ements
LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug 22) Even
though th1s should be a profitable
ttme for you, unreasonable aspna
lions could mvne d1sappomtmcnt
tcxlay so be reahsuc tn your expec
tatiORS
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Espe

emily \\hen 1t comes to matters
\\ here }nu are better infonned than
your as~octates, do nollet others do
your thmkong for you Trust your
knowledge and gut feehng 718
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) II won I
be luck lhat bnngs about the poten
ual for personal gam today Com
pensallon wtll only be hkely when
you make a worthy contnbullon
toward those ends
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22) Even

I

though you re hkely to chalk up
many accomphshments today, you
could do better tf you are more tndus
tnous and les1 vocal KC'ep your mmd
on the tasks al hand
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Although you won't have any
problems recogn1ztng your opponu
mites and what they could mean for
you today, you may fall short on tak·
tng mruumum advantage of them
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Be ready and wtlhng 10 make some
conccss1ons or compromtses on
somethmg that as 1mportant to your
cause, and you should be able to am1
cably work out an agreement wtth
another today
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Advancement and/or an mcrease m
earnmgs where your work or career
ts concerned ts a poss1bthty today If
you properly handle somethtng pro
plllous that develops for you
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) What
makes you so popular v. 1th your pee"
today w11l be your humor and charm
Thts cou ld prove to be the case esre
ctally wtlh members of the oppo511e
gender

Invoke - Fudge • Brawl • Frozen • FOREVER
average man who does not know what to do w1th
hie wants another one Which Will last FOREVER

The

Shop the clossif;.d soclloo

Campera &amp;
Motor Homes

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
•
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local re1erences furnished Es
tabllshed 1975 Call 24 Hro (740)
446 0670 I 800 287 0576 Roters Waterproofing
'

"

overtake the

LINUSV'

One 01 The Areas largest Sa
lecUons Of Late Model Auto
Parts late Model Motors Trana
missions Body &amp; Suspension
Parts Best Prices In The Regk&gt;n
On .Alter Market Sheet Metal
Fender&amp; Hoods Doors Wind
shields Radiators A C Conden
sors Ovar 100 Cars In Last 30
Days For Parts Over 25 Late
Model Repai rab le&amp; Powerllne.
Auto Systems 740 532 0139 0,.
U S Toll Free 800·482 6260 KittS:
Hill Ohio.

KOMRES
2

You w m

heart quee n wtth your kmg

BEHIN~OU,

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10 000 Transmissions
740.245-5877

I I I 1I I

would you')
Much beuer 1s to play four rounds
of

14 aluminum V bottom ca moJ
nauged till trailer new 5 hp motor.
new 36 16 thrust trolling motor,
new Interstate Marine battery 3
swtvel seats S1400 OBO 74~742 2897
•

Resident ial or commetclal wlnng
new service or repair&amp; Master U
cenaed electrician fHdanour
Electrical WV000306 304 675
1786

Ruaalan ruler
45 Word on lrlah

some of lhe eleciOrale ' s optmons

9278

Electrical and
Refrigeration

44 Former

countmg

a

'

sword

Paul's

lnge have really approved makmg

'•

•

Juan
""
28 Jack Sprat 1 "

votes mslead of we1ghmg them

teal parttes lhan olhers

1993 Chevy Astra Van, Loadec:l
With Extras! 98 000 Mlloa Look(
&amp; Runs Greell $4 900 740 446•

llvingslon s Basement Wat er
Proofing ell basemen1 repairs
done free estimates llletlme
guarantee 12yrs on job expert
once (304)695 3887

24 Small
JapaneM

beller tdea of the pohc1es of lhe pohl·

1991 Ford Explorer 4x4 V.S Ne~
Engine Standard 740 446-3942

L.AREDO CON$!
Complete Home Remodeling Sid
ing Windows Roofing Room Ad
dlt lons Fully Insured Free Est
740 384 4567

net

12 Morays

25 Bird bMka
26 Cublat painter

you try 10 make three n o trump? West

C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence Painting vinyl siding
carpentry door&amp; windows baths
mobile home repair an9 more For
tree est1mate call Chet 740 992
6323

-

arrow

Pass

Pass

true that some people have

1990 Full Slze Dodge Cargo Van,
Needs A Little Body Work &amp;
~ln1 It 300 OBO 740-251l-1233 '

840

Pus

dtsadvanlage of merely

2045

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
parlance All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 740 446
7795

loMrtoDDE
Bird, at tlmea
22 '601 IICIIVIIt
"
23 Basketbell

21

government, and tt has the obv1ous

68 000

1991 Bonneville excellent
tlon PB AC 3 a engine $3 700
74Q-94g..2()45

18 Two-lime

' Democracy ts o nly an expenment m

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1985 F 150 4x4 300 6 Cylinder~
New Tires $2 BOO 740.386-9708 •

SERVICES

In gymnaotlca
6 - Dinsmore •
7 African nation
8 Morrlad
woman s IIIIa

abbr
8 Wegero
10- lVII
11 Straight -

tn London, wasn't afratd to vo1ce

1978 Ford Van 351 Automatic •
Wttn AJC $500 00 740-446 8981 :

1989 Ford Escort $500 OBO
(304)675-7930

Toulouse

5 Parloct score

op1mons oulstde those theologtcal
For example,
he
commenled

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

810

Pass

3•

By Phillip Alder
W R lnge, once dean of Sl

199 Chevy S 10 Standard Shortt
Bed assette No AJC 31 so~
Miles $6 600 304 895 3608 or.
304-895-3025
'

1993 Jayco Bunk House 22 Ft
$7 000 OBO 304 n:l-5648

times

4 To be In

Keep counting
those tricks

ON

1992 GMC Sonoma Extend8c(
Cab V 6 NC Loodod $3 795 00 ,
1986 Nlsa n Pickup $1 495 00 •
1991 avaller $2 395 00 Coo&lt;
Moto 740-~103
,

790

3

Ricky a landlord
Loyal, In olden

East

North

Opemng lead

1992 Chsvy Full Size SllveradQ
Stepslde Pickup 5 Spd 44000
miles Like New garage Kept '
$9000 (304)67~3753
1

760

2 Lucy and

container

, It
Pass
Pass

3NT

2928

~990

West

South

1968 Chevy Truck Excellent
Body All Original WJih Original
Manuals Runs Good! 740 379-'

740

1 He II

21

Dealer

1970 Chev)l Truck Short Whee(
Base New Paint, New Wheels/
Tires Nice straight truck $3 200
0801(304)675 3824

1988 Blazer 4WD 6 cylinder au·
tomat1c AC PS PB great shape\
$3700 740 992 7478 or 740 949

20 Without
Indigent
23 Door hanger
27 Shlp'a craw
32 Lollapaloozaa
33 Kind of camp
or colony
34 Path around
the IUn
35 Terrace
360wn
39--earand
out the other
40 Singer Della ~

East

1996 Pontiac Sunllra SE A/C TIH
CD Player With Equaltzer 6
Speaker Sound System, 2 2 En,
gino 4 Cylllidor 740-245-5890

1992 Dodge Dakota Diesel Er:
glne 5 Speed New Tires 2 De~
Side Tool Boxes Trailer Hltch 1
Front Stainless Brush Guard
$4 500 304 675-2014
I

Monttera"

4 A K 6 3

1998 Cavalier LS 4 Doors Au-'
tom NO Roar Defrost AMI FM
&amp; Cauena 22,500 Milas Aqu•
Blue With Rally Wheels Prtce Ia
$950000 080740-256-1011

1989 Chevy Corsk:a Will Make A
Good Work Car $700 304 773
5284

1989 Toyota Camry
Miles 740-448 4589

• 6 4

• Q9

h1s

l

MARCH 231

•

�•·

''"'

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~ .. ,.

t'

•

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•

...

L

..••

••

Wednesday

Tuesday, March 23, 1999
,..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Senior citizen policies and programs reviewed by c·ouncil ~
Comm unity ' policies ~ and programs which affect older Americans
were reviewed at the recent first
quarterly meeting of Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development District!AAA's Advisory
Council on Aging held in Marietta.
Members of the Council from
·Meigs County attending the meeting
were Jo Ann Wildman of Pom~roy,
Helen Swartz of Coolville, and John
C. Ricer of Reedsville.
The Council in addition to
reviewing all community policies

and programs which affect older
Americans, assists the Area Agency
staff in assessing the needs of older
adults and identifying resources
available to meet these needs, and .
recommends to the Executive Committee of Buckeye Hills progr"!ftS .
which should be awarded funding,
as well as funding levels. · ·
Joetta Lane, Area Agency Planner, discussed the new competitive
bid process the Agency will use to
obtain Titl e lii services in 1999,
which will lead to three · and half

1999. '

Cathy •Stevens.. Are~ Agency
Ombudsw. ·announce\! .a letter
"!riling campaign to address the
understaffing in nursing homes. She
would. like U.S. Senator .Charles
drassley's Special Committee on
Aging to address the issue in legislation.
· · •
Molly Varner, the Area Agency
Director, spoke about the status of

'

'

rization and stattJegislalion impact~
ing older adults. She discussed the
need for Ibm: new committees t'lt
study. and make ;recp1Jimendation!;
on future ·senior make·!IP. and need~ .
by-laws, and the celebration of the
Area Agency on Aging 's and;
Regional Advisory Council o!i
Aging's 25th anniversary, The
Council decided the committee:t
were needed and Mr. Jame$_
Neuhart, Council president formed;
them based on member interest. •'-

.

., "

•

•

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'

:: SYRACUSE -- Cheryl Adair quets with coordinating flowers and
:'l&gt;ape and Robert Tyrone Reiber were wore full length lavender sheath
~resses with pearl accessories. Flower
~1narried during a candlelight ceremogirl was Terri Reiber, cousin of the
~ny at .the Racine United Methodist
•Church on Nov. 28 with the Rev. groom .
•
;·)!Irian ]:iarkness officiating.
The groom wore a back tuxedo
' The bride is the daughter of James with a rose boutonniere as the
and Judy Pape, Syracuse, and the groomsmen who were Jay McKelvey,
groom's parents are Randall Reiber, best man; Michae l McKelvey, Vin~:e
:·\Ucirie, and Robyn Porter, also of Reiber., cousin of the groom, Jeff
Campbell, and Russell Reiber, broth'Racine.
er
of the groom. Seth Bond, nephew
The bride, escorted by her father,
:was attired in an off-the-shoulder · of the bride was the ringbearer.
Jennifer Walker registered guests,
: ~own of white satin with an overlay
of white tulle with satin trim. Seed Gary Walker c09rdinated the recordpearls enhanced the neckline and ed classical niusic, Karen Walker
&lt;;lropped waistline. The bride wore a assisted the wedding party, and
pearl headpiece belonging ·to the pianist, Mary Shule,, played the
groom's sister, Rachel Perdew, as well bridal march.
A reception was held at the Royal
as pearl jewelry. Her hand-tied bouOak
Resort with a lavender and pur:quet consisted of lave nder, purple
.. larkspur, red roses, white asiatic lilies, , pie color theme being .carried out in
·. white carnations, and caspia.
,
the table coverings and fresh flower
Attendants were her sister, Ktisten accents. All of the floral an angements
: Pape Bond, matron of honor;. Robyn and additional decorations were by
· Stout, maid of honor; Christi Lisle, Kristen Pape Bond, sister of the bride,
:Andrea Theiss, and Junie Maynard.
The new couple resides in New
London,
Conn.
-They
carried
traditional
round
bou,.
-

James M. Riffle

Tory D. Swaru

Pvt. Tory D. Swaru recently
Army National Guard Pvt.
'James M. Riffle has graduated graduated from the United,
from- One Station Unit Training States Msrine Corps basic train·
(OSUT) at Fort McClellan, Annis- · lng, located In Parris Island,
ton, Ala. The course of lnstruc-· S.C., where he succeufully
tion Included ·basic military completed' 12 weeks of training
· training and · advance individual designed to challenge new
Marine recruits both physically
training (AIT).
and
mentally.
During AIT, the soldier
·
He
also qualified as a sharpreceived military police specialshooter
on the rifle range. He Is
ist training and learned to pro'set
to
receive
his combat trlanvide combat area support by
ing
at
Camp
Lejeune, N.C.,
-conducting baHief.ield circulawhere
he
will
also
recahie .traintic:in control, area security, pris- ing to be a construction
engioner of war operations, civilian
Internee operations, and law neer.
and order operations.
·
He Is a 1998 graduate of
He is the son of James D. Rif- Meigs High School, end 'Is the
fie, Portland, and Victoria Cun- · son of . Cathy and Steve
diff, Pomeroy. He is a 1998 grad- Radsvlck, and Jerry and Nancy
·s wartz, all of Middleport.
uate of Southern High Schoo_!.

'

Sentinel

a1
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper
Single Copy- 35 Cents

By ROBERT BURNS

troops would be at risk, the
equipment in anticipation expensive plane ever built, can drop satellite-guided
.
lir campaign is necessary
of NATO
airstrikes. bombs on a round-trip sortie from the only B-2 base, at
. · WASHINGI'ON (AP) - · American and allied warships for Europe's long-term staYugoslav officials, citing an Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo .
~U~d bombers stood ready today to deliver a "swift and bility. Congress lined up
"imminent threat of war,"
NATO has a force of 350 to 400 aircraft eannarked for
severe" blow.to Yugoslavia, starting with a U.S.-Ied bar- behind him, dropping a
declared a state of emer- airstrikes in Yugoslavia. Just under 200 are American,
of sea- and air-launched cruise missiles that would move to cut the financial
gency, mobilized . troops Bacon said.
target Yugoslav air defenses and open the way to a larger· · rug from under U.S. miliand put the anny on a high
As NATO strikes appeared all but inevitable, Russian
scale bombing campaign.
tary action.
state of alert.
Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov negistered his opposi:
· . The ¥sion on when to start the attacks lay with U.S.
"I want to level with
"We have plans for a lion by canceling a White House visit even as he flew to
Army Gen. Wesley Oark, NATO's lop commander. you," Ointon said in a
swift and sevene air cam- Washington on Tuesday.
NATO SeciCtary-General Javier Solana gave Oark the $peeeh Tuesday. "This is
paign,"
Bacon
told
In an effort to patch up differences with Moscow,
formal go-ahead Tuesday evening.
.
like any other military
reporters. "This will be Albright spoke by telephone .for more than half an hour
' "No alternative is open but to take military action," action. Thene are risks in
painful to the Serbs."
with her Russian counterpart, Foreign Minister Igor
Solana said solemnly at .NATO headquarters in Brussels, IL"
tha
Falrford alrbase, 1~ 0 .miles west of Lon· Albright; appearing Toes- Ivanov, according to Albright's spokesman, James P.
Belgium. Sol811a announced his move just hours after lastHe said American diplo- don Wedneada~ morning. Its dastlnatlcm was not day night ori CNN's "Larry Rubin. Albright told Ivanov she hoped the United States.
ditch talks in Belgrade between President Slobodan Milo- malic efforts had reached a dlaclosed. NA: 0 authorized the bombing of King Live" program, said, and Russia could find a way "to deal with the situation and
'sevic and U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke.ended in dead end and Serb troops Koaovo Tueaclay.
·
·
· ~"The purpose of this is to continue to work in other ways," Rubin said.
failure.
wene terrorizing and murdering civilians jn Kosovo, a deter Slobodan Milosevic from continuing on his rampage
Albright also conferred twice by telephone with.
IntervieWed today on ABC's "Good Moming Ameri- province of Serbia, the dominant Yugoslav ~tpublic. "We 81)d going in and torching, having his soldiers and his spe- Solana, the NAm ~ief; and talked separately with the:
ca," Solana said: "Up to now we have not heard of any have to take a stand now," Qinton said. "If we don't do it cia! police torch the villages. It is designed to deter that and foreign ministers of France, Britain and Germany.
change in the behavior of President Milosevic.... We are · now, we will have to do it later."
also to damage his capability to do that"
.
One major diplomatic casualty of the decision to bomb:
aoing to continue with the decision taken yesterday."
An opening volley of cruise missiles would be fired
The commander who would direct the air campaign, on undoubtedly will be the 1993 STAKI' II treaty, w.hich.
Secretary of Stalll Madeleine _Ait;righl and Defense' from four U.S. Navy ships and two submarines in the orders from Oark in Brussels, is Navy Adm. James 0 . would sharply neduce arsenals of U.S. and Russian longSecretary William Cohen wene summo.ned to the White Adriatic; along with one British sub, plus Air Force B-52 Ellis Jr., commander in chief of Allied Forces .Southern range nuclear weapons. Spurgeon Keeny, president of the
House before 7:30a.m. today, about two hours after eight: bombers flying from a base in England. Also likely to be Europe. From his headquarters in Naples, Italy, he also is private Arms Control Association, said Primakov's can- .
U.S. S:S2 bombers were seen flying out of a British air · among the first in action: Air Force F-117 stealth fighter- commander of U.S. Naval Forces Europe.
celed visit "bndes ill for what appeared to be favorable·
base.
· bombers based in Italy.
Bacon said NATO has the option of using the Air prospects for Russian ratification of the STAKI' II treaty.
Presideni Qinton prepared the nation for an imminent
At the Pentagon, spokesman Kenneth Bacon said Tues- Force's B-2 stealth bomber, which has never seen combat and for longer-term U.S.-Russian relations. ~ · The Russian:
allack on Serb targets, saying that although .American day thai the Yugoslav Army was dispersing its air defense The radar-evading plane, at $2 bil,fion apiece the most parliament has not ratified the document.

AP Mlltt.ry Wr118r

rage

SON BORN • Ronal!! Bachtel
and Shelly Wolfe announce. the
l:!lrth of their secon.~ child~ 8
son, Tyler Andrew on Jan. 12.
' The Infant weighed seven
pounds and 14 ounces and was
21 Inches long. Tyler has a slate, r, Kay 1a.
., ,
' Maternsl gran-rants 1~!1 '
Brenda Hickel of Point Pleasant,
ind John and .Pam Wolfe of
. Pomeroy._Maternal great'grand-·
mother Is Gloria Michael, Syracuse.
·Paternal grandparents ani
flonnle end Diane Bachtel, Long
Bottom, and a great-grendmothar, May Mayle, Pomeroy.

To gel a current weather
report, .check the
'

Xavier falls to
Clemson In the
NIT semi-finals
-Page4

U.S., allied planes, ships ready for attacks on _
Serbs:

Academically outstanding fresh-'
men and sophomores who are intet:.:
ested in science, engineering, matlfematics, and computer infonnatio!'
r
science are enco uraged to apply fot .
Summer Institute ' 99 at the Ohio
Supercomputer Ce nter (OSC) i~
Columbus. ,
•
OSC is looking for students whp
are interested in investigating ho.y
advances in high performance com,
puling and networking may chang!(
the way we work, play, shop an~
learn in the next century.
··!
The . program "Computing and
L- - - - - - ---,-'l'-'---J . Networking for the new Millennl;.
•
.. urn" will- be held July 12-23 at OSC
TYLER BACHTEL
located on Kinn ear Road in Colum~

:;__
- --PAPE-REIBER--

Sports

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 224

'

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Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reiber

'

Tomorrow: Cloudy .
High: 508; Low: 201

Summer Institute '99
taking applications :·
for this year's session

"

Cavaliers blow out Celtics 113-86, Page 5
Freeloading son,· Page 7
Local science fairs, Pages 7,8

Today; Ch•nce of R•ln
High: ISOs; Low: 30s

the Older Americans Act reauth~

year COnlfl'I!IS. Bid packets will be
a'\'ailabl~ ~arch 31 and a bidder
conferenoO' will be held April 6,

March 24, 111111

busStudents will get hands-on exp.E.
rience using OSC's high perfo~
mance computers and networking;
systems. They also will explore sci·entl!ic investigati on through colla&amp;;
orative team projects and intensiv~
classes
. during the two week resi-•
de~!tal progra~ .. . .
:
Thts year s mstttute focuses on
how teamwork and technology coni
verge to advance science, engineer.
ing and the arts," said Charhe Ben~
der, Center .director. "Through lee•
tures and · ieam projects, studentS
will learn how computing and net;
working impact our society."
~
Applicants should be willing tP
work on a team. Computer programming experience is very beneficiaL Applications are availabl~
online at 222.osc.edu/SL To get an
application by mail, students may
contact Victoria Sauber at 614/2923768 . .
·
Summer Institute '99 is co-spotf·
•soredby &lt;he Ohio State University.

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, Resolution asks for more money for libraries

participated in testimony on the.. State Library 's budget
Tuesday. Anderson had also asked that all the trustees of
member libraries contact their legislators regardin_g By KATHERINE RIZZO
funding.
Assoclsted Prase Writer
··
For
the
last
nine
months,
the
Board
has
worked
with
·
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Ohio
XENIA (AP) - A jury has recom_mended the death penalty for a man
the Librarians' Advisory Committee (LAC) to develop a Sen. Oeorge Voinovich says it
who begged to be executed after being convicted of murdering a couple at
new plan for OVAL operations. At its meeting, the was ~is longtime interest in
a Valentine's Day dance last year.
.
.
•
Board tentatively approved a budget and member match
Yugoslav history and not his Sw
James Taylor Sr. chose not to be in the cOurtroom when the jury
payment
formula.
,
·
bian
heritage that led to his oppo~
announced its decision Tuesday after deliber,ating for about thnee hours.
Board members also tackled the issue of how to gov- . sition of airstrikes on the region.
. On Monday, '(aylor begged jurors to ignore any pleas to spare his life,
em
the re-vamped organization'. HB 674 went into effect
. " It gives me a little different
saying he had nothing to look fo~ to.
on
March
9
and
it
allows
OVAL
to
serve
all
libraries
in
_
perspective
than somebndy th"at
Taylor.later said he was ht~PPY ·r jury granted his request for the death
the region. The' Board discussed a ~iriety of scenarios to doesn 'I know the history of the
meet these new expectations. This-discussion will.eon- region," he said Tuesday, shortly
•
they did it out of the;gOOcliiess oHheir
said.
ti"ue
at a joint planning meeting to be held with LAC on .before· casting .a vote against
.,:lenora Rihm, 'IS, Ronald Rfhin's mother, said she will rejoice if she·
'
April
15.
.
authorization of air strikes in
lives ,to see the.e~ecution. Taylor, 68, of Huber Heights, was conviCted of
·.
The
Board
approved
a
request
to
the
State
Library
to
Yugoslavia.
killing Ronald'Rihm, 51, and Rihm's wife, Carolyn; 57.
Voinovich recalled that ·the.
,
Continued
on
page
3
"1 can loo.k ,al him and say, 'Now, how do you feel?"' she said. "He's
first
college term paper he wrote·
the devil personified. Anyone that would just take a gun and murder two
at
Ohio
University " was on how
people would have to be the devil."
the
United
States sold out
Taylor, who has a lOth-grade education and no legal training, repreBy JIM FREEMAN_
The program will begin in June and extend into July. Yugoslavia at Yalta."
sented himself during the trial. However, he chose.to be represented by
Sentlnal Newa Staff
Sessions -will be held in the mornings at Meigs High
" I have a large library of what
'attorneys during the penalty hearing.
-,
A summer program for students needing help passing School near Pomeroy and parents will have to transport went
on over there,, he said. " [
Gneene O&gt;unty Common Pleas Judge Thomas Ros~~ ·must decide whether competency tests, and football stadium nenovalions were their own children. ·
have
some
feeling for the polili :
to accept the jury's recommendation. He could sentence Taylor to life in
among the topics discussed by the Meigs Local Board of
While it is not mandatory for parents to make their cal environment."
prison without parole or life with eligibility for parole in 2S or 30 years . Education which met in regular se$Sion Tuesday night in children attend the summer school, those children who
Voinovich emphasized that his -'
Sentencing is scheduled for April 6.
Pomeroy. ,
·
do not pass the fourth grade reading proficiency test will
view
did not reflect support of
Prosecutors said Taylor was angry that his wife, Patricia, 6J, left him and
The board approved the summer program which is not be permitted to go to fifth grade, Buckley explained.
Yugoslav President Slobodan
began living with the Rihms.
·
designed to assist students needing additional help with
-In personnel matters, the board hired the following
Milosevic,
whom the senator
They said he went to the dance in Fairborn last year to kill Mrs. Taylor.
proficiency tests.
·
individuals for the contract terms and positions listed:
described
as
a war criminal and'
She was not -shot, but the Rihms were killed and another man was woundUnder Ohio Senate Bill 55, districts must make avail- Rusty Bookman, principal, three years; Don Hanning,
"
a
bad
person."
.
ed.
able intervention for students who fail competency or principal, five years; Cindy Johnston, principal, _two
But
he
said
he
was
concerned
:
Taylor said he went to the dance to commit suic,id~nt of his wife,
proficiency tests.
_
years; . Marilyn Meier, director of food services, three about the potential cest, · ·'
but the plan backfired when Ronald Rihm grabbed his atm and the $Un dis- .
"Most schools are opting for a summer school," said years.
dollars and lives.
~~'
.
'
Superintendent Bill Buckley.
Continued on page 3
.
" You ' re getting into someThe jury on Monday also heard testimony from Taylor;s daughter·in-law,
thing
that could turn into another
Rebecca Taylor, who asked jurors not to necominend the' death penalty.
.Vietnam," the freshman Republi ~
A four-page brochune detailing refuse service policie:; village, although they are not oontractually obligated to can said . " Who knows how this
thing could escalate?
·
has been mailed to water and nefuse customers in.Middle- provide alley service.
·.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A teen-ager has been charged with arson
"ThiS
is
a
mistake."
.
The brochure outlines several points about weekly ooland authorities are investigating whether he was connected to about 40 port.
Voinovich also expressed a
1!-umpke
of
Wellston,
which
provides
nefuse
pick-up
lection,
including collection times _and guidelines for what
others on'the city's near-east side.
.
co
ncern
that if military action
servi&lt;le to all residential customers in Middleport, has the firm will pick up.
Allen T. St]1ith Jr., 16, was charged Tuesday with one count of arson in
against
Yugoslavia
fails the si tua·
mailed the brochure to detail Jioints of policy, in light of
Customers-should have all items for collection at their
a Dec. 26 fire that ca..Sed $35,000 in damage to a vacant' house, fire capt
tion
could
become
similar to the
recent customer complaints that trash was not being curbside by 6 a.m. on Monday. The firm will also pick up
Tom Huston said.
one
in
Iraq.
pickedup when it should~. or that the finn was not pick- -large and miscellaneous items, such as mattresses, sofas
The fire spread next door to his own house, caU$ing an additional
"Think about Iraq and Sadjng trash up on private lanes, a service which has been pro- and chairs, on the regularly scheduled pick-up day, if cus$1,000 in damage, Hu~'ton said. No on~ was injured.
dam Hussein;'' he said.
vided in the village if the property owner grants the firm tomers call the finn in advance.
Investigators believe , the other arsons reported since October were
. "We have bombed them every
permission to do so.
Aocording to the Middleport Water Departmen~ comcaused by more than one suspect, but no other arrests have been made,
day, he's still popular and
other
Representatives of the finn have met twice with Mid- plaints about refuse service should be made to Rumpke,
Fire Department spokeswoman Barb Slaven said.
we've
gotten · absolutely
Smith accidentally set the fire when he was smoking inside the vacant dleport Village Council in an attempt to resolve .customer directly, at tbe finn's toll free number, l (800) RUMPKE3.
nowhere."
complaints, and, at one point, the village has threatened to ·
Business owners in Middleport are permitted t.o conhouse, said his father, Allen T. Smith Sr.
The opinion of many Serbs
"I'm quite sure he didn'tdo the other fires," the father said. "He was discontinue its contract with the firm due to service com- tract with their choice of refuse service provider, according · amund the world, Voinovi ch said,
plaints from customers.
to the Middleport Water Departmen~ and the brochure,
home playing Nintendo 64."
is that t_hey want Milosovic out of
Rumpke
pledged
to
work
with
the
village
to
resolve
the
which was in mailboxes on Tuesday, applies only to resilnvestiaators believe it was not an accident becaU$e several places in
power but "they believe this.
issues, and~ to continue service in some alleys in the dential customers in Middleport. .
the house were set on fire.
action is going to solidify his support so that it will be 10 times
harder to get him out of there."
police officers have been ·sen· Local agencies are sponsoring National Nutrition ·available by co~tacting the health department at 992Voinovich spoke after being
tenced in an investigation of under- Month activities during March, and the Meigs County 6626.
briefed by the Clinton adminis· .•
Commissioners signed a proclamation declaring the
NUTRITION MONTH
The Meigs County tration but before NATO Secre !~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ Youngstown
world gambling
activities
in
the
area.
.
observance earlier this month.
Commlseloners have daclared March as Nationtary-Oe nernl Javier Solana
· Former Campbell police Sgts.
The Ohio State University Extension Service and 11 Nutrition Month In Meigs County. Pictured ordered
ai rstri kes
against
Andrew Rau'lan, 49, and Gerard
the Meigs County Health Department will join forces with Commissioner&amp; Jeff Thornton, Janet
Yugoslavia.
Keish, 46, got ·sentences of 10 to share information about good nutrition during the Howard and Mlck Davenport are Sharon Smith,
Today's
Later, Voinovich voted against
months
each Tuesday from U.S. month's activities.
2 Seellons - 12 Pages
Becky Ball and Unda King, who work In the a resolution auth orizing ai r
District Judge ,Kathlec;n M. O'Malstrikes.
OSU Extension has three staff members who work county'a nutrition programs• .
ley:
.
.
7
Calendar
with the public on nutrition issues,
Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio,
Five months must' be served in
and provide nutrition education provoted for the resolution, which
ClapiDeds
9&amp;10
halfway house and fiv.e months
grains in group settings and on a onepassed on a vote of 58 to 41.
Comics
11
home detention. Campbell is locat- to-one basis, and the health depart-'
"At this point, I think America
Editorials
2
ed between Youngstown and New
ment also has qualified staff memshould stand united and support
Bedford, Pa.
3
bers who provide infant feeding
our troops/' DeWine said in a
The
two
men
pleaded
guilty
to
classes, · nutrition education to WIC
statement.'
4-6
SPorts
obstructing local law enforcement participants, and counseling to
';'This is a' risky operation and
3
Wealber
by allowing illegal gambling run by
improve the health status of clients
the threat to American troops is
rnob boss Lenine "Lenny" Strollo.
and to prevent health problems.
real."
.
Lotteries
Strollo, 68, testified against three
The department also has informa·
The brief measure stated· that
co-defendants who were convicted
lion available for those interested in
" the president of the United
OHIO
M~rch 12 of arranging the murder
breast feeding .
Sta~es is authorized to conduct
. Pick 31 1-7-5 ; Pick 4: 6-S-6·2
of a gang leader and the shooting
Information
about
nutrilion
edumilitary
air operations in cooperBuckeyeS: 4-17-19-36-37
a prosecutor. l-Ie agreed to testify in
cation
classes
and
workshops
is
ation
with
our NATO allies
w.yA.
return for a sentence of as little as
available by contacting the extension
against
the
Federal
Republic of
Dally 3: 0-1-4; Dally 4: 3-9-4-3 ·
12 years, while the three co-defe~­
office at 992-6696, and facts about
Yug~slavia (Serbia and Montene0 11199 Ollio V.ttiy l'llbliahl"tl Co.
dants got Iife terms.
the Fun, Food and Fitness program is
gro).·"

Jury recommends death

• '·'-&gt;,

pe~~tlhink

.I
!

dance slaylngs

hearta,~•--~te

A resolution asking the State Legislature to increase
funding for regional library systems was passed by the
Board of Trustees of the .Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL) at its meeting held last week in Wellston. ,
The Governor's budget that was released on March
lS failed to include sufficient funds· for.system operalions and OVAL faces a $520,000 funding reduction,
according to OVAL director Eric S, Anderson.
OVAL and the other systems had received Library
Services and Technology Act (LSTA) funds, but due to
changes in Federal guidelines are no longer eligible for
this program for ongoing services, he nepPrted.
The State Library is requesling $1.122 million for all
of the systems and. OVAL would receive $386,000 of
that.sum .if the. request is grantee!, said Anderson. The·
request is ..;tually l_ess than the systems received in fed·
eral funding last year, he noted.
. Andersqn dr,fted letters to all area legislators and

Senator of Serbian·
heritage calls
bombing a mistake

Meigs Local approves summer proficiency program

•' '

- '/

I

....

Teen-ager charged with arson

'

. '

'

MEDICAL
ELIGIBILI
PROG

-

M

Recognizing National_Nutrition Month

!

...

(

officers sentenced in mob probe

New brochure outlines refuse _policies

CAll'TODAY FOR
·MORE INFORMATION
'

'

(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608•

MEIGS COUNTY
,DEPARTMENT .OF
HU N SERVICES

Sentinel

.,

'

•.

'

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