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..:~ra:·.,
: 40s;
. 211

Feds plan to track 22,000 children, A2
Meig~ rolls in s~ctional; Southern falls, B1

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DetailS, A3

Friday
February 18, 2000

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Hometown Newspaper
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Numb&lt;·r 179

single copy. 35 cenh

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.Clinton wants;
to use su Ius
for drug p an

~e-s-1-s
-Cammarata
wins county spelling bee

WASHINGTON (AP) - ·
After ignoring a similar pro~
President Clinton's proposal to · posallast year, Republicans have
prclviqe prescription drug cov- said they will put together a
erage for all Medicare recipients drug plan of their own in this
· is a better use for federid budget election year. Hut House Speaksurplu~ than Republican tax- er Dennis Hastert, R-IlL, has
cut plans, the White House bud- said the GOP will focus on aidget director says.
ing elderly people who lack
"We've pro- access to or cannot afford priposed some- vate prescription coverage. ·
thing that can
Republicans have ~aid Clin-· ·
be afforded in ton's proposal threatens a federal _
the context of takeover of the prescription
limited
drug industry. Among · the
resources,"
GOP's options are tax crediti
budget' chief and block grants to states.
Jack Lew told .
"The real choice is do you
reporters_ and want to have the governmen~
editors
of The take over prescription drugs, or
Clinton
Associated
.have a program that helpi
Press in an interview on Thurs- seniors get drugs they need
day.
· wi.t hout encouraging a govern;
"The real debate is, is there ment takeover of the prescrip;
room for a tax cut much larger tion drug ind1.1stry?" said 1-iasterl
than we proposed," he added.
spokesman John Feebery.
:
In the fiscal 21l01 budget he
Lew defended Clini:Qn's. pro; ·
introduced on Feb. 7, Clintqn . p\)Sal to cover even the ~althi!
proposed $351 · bi~ion in taf · est of Americans: He said that if
cuts over the coming decade. Clinton's plan wc:re tp be recon·
. Congressional Republicans have figured to make it , less-- casdY,
not offered their OWJ?- tax .l'ro.! "the vast majority of people
. posal, but have 5aid' Clin,ton's who wo.u ld nQt benefit ... are
was too small.
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not rich ~ople. They're not the
Cliriton" alS&lt;? P.~~~d a' 10~ BiU Ga~es." .
_ .. ·.
,
· billion progrilm that• · Ht; ' ·~ · ~"Havill
an
.
' optional ' pre~ ir'rc&lt;;fme c~!Otr'it '
: mp sctiption coverage fOr all llle income lev~! Is I o,nJy way
beneficiaries, regardc ~ save sq_~tantial amounts ·. of
less of income.
money."
&lt;

Bv .liM FJimwj
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

·A R G E

LARGE

1. Topping PIRA
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UPPERS PLAINS
- "Tuber~ulosis"
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was the· word that
clinched a third
consecutive· ·Meigs
County Sp'eUing Bee champi:onship for Sara Cammarata,
:daughter ofThoma~ and Suzanne
'Cammarata of Portland.
: Cammaraia is a seventh gradet :attending Meigs Middle School
-in Middleport. She won the two
.previous yean as a student at
l'ortland Elementary School.
Runner-up in the event was
Julia Johnson, daughter of Stoney
and Michelle Johnson of
Langsville, who is a sixth-grader
at Meigs Middle School.
· Both girl~ misspelled the words
. ~·appropriate,""parody" and "Cel- ,. '
sius" before Camn1arata properly .
's pelled "creepage" and - then
"tuberculosis" fqt the win.
. The spelling bee was held ·
Thursday night at Eastern Ele(nentary . School near Tuppers
~lains. Serving as judges were
Deryl Well, Ea~tern Local super·jntendent; Bill Buckley, Meigs _
local superintendeD!; -and, Jam~­
LaWt-ence, Southern&gt;' Lotal s'tipefintend.e nt.
Representing various schools
in the county-were:
Eastern
Elementary
Jonathan. Owen, Brian Castor,
Kimberly Castor and Kayla
Collins;
. Bradbury Elementary - HiUy
Fink, Phillip Sisson (alternate);
Harrisonville - 'Daniel Bookman, Carrie Phelps (alternate); .
Meigs Middle School .- Sixth
~=~~ CHI,Mf'li '·

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[)elo,.ay charge may apply.
Umit 1 piz2apercoupon.
Co&lt;4JOO e&gt;&lt;pres, 3/31100.

Umit 1 pizza per coupoo.
Co.pon e&gt;&lt;pres, 3/31/00.

Pl.... He Spell, Pac• AI

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Polls show McCain-can
give Gore some trqubJe

Sara C111:riml1rat:a, left,
· of ~~fMei&amp;s· Cou~ Spelling Bee, held at
Elementary,School Thursday
for. the third consecutiVe year. She is shown with Julia John-

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son.- r~nner:up. ~OJll,airls attend.Meigs

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School in 'Middleport.

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Suspect in;'pu.S!H fclces burgl•ry cllarge
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LARGE

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$15.98
DeM.y charge """&gt;' "1¥1

U&lt;m 2 pizzas P"' coopoo.
Co.pon e&gt;&lt;pres, 3/31/00.

FIIOM STAFF REPqRTS

.POMEROY- A 40-year-old Ironton mion,
arrested after a high-speed chase through Gallipolis and Gallia County, may face a charge of
· burglary in Meigs County.
rJ.
patrol, using stop sticks, was eventUally able to
Larry L. McClellan of 2219 . N. Fifth St. is · ring a ·priioner, when he passed a truck match- halt the ve~icle,-Soulsby Sai~.
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acc~d of burglarizing the Rock Springs resi- ing i!J .' pescription of the truck allegedly ·
The Me1~ County Sherdfs Ollie~ 1s ·mves!
d~nce ~f Itod Pullins ~e&lt;lnesday a~rnoo_n, , jnvolye~'.n the burglary.
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ti~tingot~errecentburglariesiosetiftheyare
sa!dJI1elrCount&gt;:Shen~Jan'lesM.Souls~,' ·,
1'1\e c~ lled .after Hol.man attempted to connected,Soulsbysaid. _ • , .1. ' • ,_··.
.l'ulhns_ father, BiU l'uJ!ms. called the ·shen!f's stop the h1cle, Soulsby s;ud. The chase p_ro- _ McClellan was expeeted to appear in Meigs
office ~nd reported seemg a •blu_e and wh1te ceeded
ugh Gallipolis, down Upper River , · County Court this m_orning for arf?igiunent_ on
_,Ch~vrolet truck .leave the res1dence and head' Road ..a_(-' , Eastern Avenue, at a high rate of a charge of_burglary, Soulsby said. Burglary is:a;
~uth !lO State Ro~te 7. .
,
_ • speed. _ .' . ,
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felony of the second degree punispable by _u p IP,
·, Meanwhile, Me1gs sheriff's Deputy Bryan ,._ -\:he ,, . ,:polis Police Depafln\e!nt. ,Gallla,- _ eight yean in pris.o n.
· C:.
· · ,
Ho~an ~ northbound on. SR 7 near..¥dJ;;.;""~ ~f the S~te High\Vay ~a~l and ~e · A large amount of J&gt;ulljns' property w:is
5!"1 rn Gallia County, ren.rnmg liom ~"'fer~:- Gallia .CJiutty Shenlf's Office pat11opated 10 recovered liom the truck, Soulsby said.
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lbday's

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LARGE
Specialty P•nu
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lotteries
1 OHIO -

1 Plc:k ): 7-1~ Pick 4: 1~4;-11-7

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llacb)le 5: Z-1 t-19-23-25.

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~~ Mdgs ,tligh students Share first-place science hom)rs
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Sentinel
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1 .Topping PIRAS .

Th;i'sher!lf's office is investigating .·_the chase. Gallipolis Police attempted to Oatten
other "-cent bflrolaries to set •if tL:... - the truck's tires through the use of stop sticks.
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The chase continued l'- · Gall" 0 I'1
t
NNected, So11lsb•v,
· routes 141 and 775 ..where
,.,m ..theIPhighway
s ou
a'!, CO ,...
" sal-d.
st!te

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WASHINGTON - (AP) - · indepen'dents than Republicans:•
John McCain's strength among
The_ Arizena senator trails
independents and older voters · Bush nationally in poUs .of likely ·
makes him a formidable oppo- GOP primary voters by 20 points
nent for Democratic fiont-run- · 19 30 points, but is closer to Bush
ner A) · Gore, · possibly tougher now than he was before winning
than GOP national front-runner the N~w Hampshire pr,irnary. In
George W. Bush,' a poU suggests.
the next three · primary states,
That .runs counter to the Bush · McCain is running dose to Bush
campaign's nequent claim ihat in South Carolina and Michigan,
their candidate Would make the · and is weD ahead in his home
strongest GOP can.didate in the state of Arizona.
_
general election.
Only a· fourth 9f voters are
McCain led Gore by 49 per- paying close attention to the
cent to 41 percent in the hypo- cam~gn anhis point, according
thetical matchup in the poD by to the''Pew poD .of971 registered
the Pew Research Center for the voters taken Feb. 9 through
People &amp; · the Press. Bush '· and · Monday. It had an error margin.
Gore were in a dead heat.
of plw · or · min'~ , 4 percentage
· "McCain i~ the new, exciting points, larger ~~ subgroups.
candidate," said Andrew Kohut,
. McCain's sttength in a hypo- ·
director of the Pew Research thetical m~h!lp With Gore· is.
Center. "The message of this poU ~ased largely on his appeal with
is that McCain is taking off 1pdependents .and Older wters;
nationally more so among acconJing to poDs.
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DUly 4: 3-6-3-6

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aim, fire! Are some 1(o~'l:!~~?,
types more accurate h:i
Kyle Smiddie _._. .. ,A
what is the best mal:eri3

WINNERS, PART 1- Kyie Smiddie, Tawny Jones and Beverly Burdette WINNERS, PART II- Derrick Bolin, Brooke Williams
display the awards they received tor their science fair e'l)tries.
PriCe Cllsplay their awarCI-WiMinl science fair projects.
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P9MERGY . - · Six Me!gs
High School ,students $11ared firstplace horlcirs in the ~ei~ High
School Scienct Fair '~ld Th\lrsday .at the higlr schoOft . · ·
_Of lhe 3) ''p~~;presented
bY the. college chel\btry and
bioldtp- 1J ~~~. ~1 received ·
supenor rat111p whiiC! · 17 and
eight received exceUen and good
ratings, respectively. ~;i_, Winners. were,listed\Yith
theit
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, Derrid:' · Bolin
angle ci( attack pi'Q·duc·~
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Brooke Williams

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P8ge A 2 • The o.lly Sentinel

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Finn foaiSIS on qll•·pl~
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CINCINNATI {AP) - Sending grip~ or compliments to a
company is getting faster and easier in the Internet era. For. a handful of companies, speeding consumer feedback to corporations also
is a potentially profitable business.
· Cincinnati-based PlanetFeedback Inc. is hoping to find that
niche with consumers by operating its Internet site - PlanetFee&lt;lback.com - which opened Thursday.
Tlie service could help consumers find out which compani~
respond to complaints and which on~ don't, said Pete Blackshaw,
founder and chief executive of PlanetFeedback Inc.
. "The light will shine through on the heroes, and the goats will
be exposed;' he said.
PlanetFeedback also will forward electronic messages to state
attorneys general and members .of Congress, among others.
.
Altho!Jgh companies will be the target of the ' complaints, the
b.usin~ can benefit.by getting immediate feedback from·the con~
sumer and .the chance to respond to them directly, said Blackshaw,
a former Procter &amp; Gamble Co. interactive marketing specialist.
. ,His company will not accept advertising on its Web site, but
expects to make money by selling the col)sumer information it' col·
·
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lects to corporations. .

18-year-olcl running for House
, MINSTER (AP) -An 18-year-old high school student running
for the Ohio House says he's not. sure why more young people
don't get involved in politics.
.
Derrick Sea:ver said he's nothing special among his peers whe)l it
comes knowing the issues and being able to run a political campaign.
.
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"I ~an list kids in my own grade ·that can do just as good a job,"
l)e said. Seaver, who turned 18 last week, is seeking the Democratic
nomination for the 85th District seat being vacated by Republican ·
Rep. James Jordan, '\Yho is rUnning for the Ohio Seriate: The west
central Ohio district coven Shelby and Champaign counties and
western Auglaize County.
· Although Seaver is unopposed . in the MaiCh 1 primary, he
a1ready is campaigning for the November election. He often speaks
tWO or three times a night to service organizations and other groups
and is making plans to knock on doors this summer.

.Judge weighs custody case ·
COLUMBUS (AP) -A federal iinrnigration judge will have the
final say on whether a custody decision in favor of a bOy fighting
$portation to Sri Lanka will affect the 11-year-old's case.
:. Senthan Mahendrarajah has a hearing Thursday before a U.S.
llrunigration and Naturalization Service judge in Cincinnati.
; On Wednesday. Magistrate Woody Hudson of Franklin County
Jpvenile Court granted custody of the boy to his uncle, physicist
Ambalavanar Thavendrarajah, and aunt, Dr. Vasanthy Thavendrarajah. ·
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: The custody order gives the boy a second avenue to fight deportation, said his attorney, E. Dennis Muchnick!.
: The federal iminigration judge will decide what impact, if any,
t~e custody decis.ion will have on the deportation proceedings, said
~ark Hansen, INS district director in Cleveland.
~ "Each case is separate and individual, and there's a lot of variables
tllat come into play:' tiansen said Thursday. "Generally 'it doesn,'t
hl.ve" an impact, but I can't speak specifically to this case."

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The vast majority of children enter kindergarten with the
proper building blocks for successful learning.
They know the alphabet. They can count to 10.
They can work and play well with others. And
they're healthy.
But the chances of being that well-prepared
for school diminish for children who are poor,
non-English speaking or living in with single or
poorly educated parents, say Education Department researchers in a first-ever report card on
the nation's ytiungest students.
In releasing the "America's Kindergartners"
study Thursday, the department said it planned
to continue !'racking for six years the national
sample of 22,000 children used for the initial
- repoq. The subjects enteredprivate and public
kindergartens in the fall of 1998. While department researchers said the longer term study
would shed light on how to help children who
are lagging, Education Secretary Richard Riley
said there are ways to start helping such young'
sten now.
"The better the start, the stronger the finish;'

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.WASHINGTON (AP) -The Internet attacks originally aimed
at e-conunerce sites are continuing this week and even· cropping up
abroad, so federal investigators are looking into whether copycats
are targeting less well-known Web sites.
Newly opened FBI computer-hacking investigations have
quadrupled since the first attack at Yahoo! on Feb. 7. Some attacks,
not noticed by the public and not identified by the FBI, h~ve con-tinued into this week, and no omd&lt;nows if they have ended, FBI
spokeswoman .Debbie Weie~man said Thursjlay. And attacks have
cropped up abroad, said one federal investigator, who requested
al).oriymity.
: As of Feb. 9, the FBI had opened four new investigations of these
so,.called 'distributed denial of service attacks. Npw the total is
"more than 17 new investigations, including more than -13 where
th~ victim suffered a disttibuted denial of service attack;'Weieqnan
said Thursday. Only eight of the more than 13 have been identified
publicly. ·
·
'Four investigations involve the placing of denial of service tools,
Ia\own as dael)lons, . on middleman computers that can later be
remotely ordered to attack a victim site, Weierman said. Hiding
these daemons on unwitting host compu\frs is a key step in mounting distributed denial of service attacks.
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"The possibility of copycats is oui there, as are other theories,
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with these piggyback incidents;' she said.

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· ;.' :NORniWOOD (AP) -The
-bulk of Ohio's n.W railroad over:p~ likely will be built in the
•notthern: half of the state, trans~rtation officials said.
- ·Gov. Bob Taft outlined plans
:Thursday for a proposed $200 million project to build new railroad
~verpasses throughout the state
.
piuing the next 10 years.
· .While none of the sites has been ·
determined, most probably will be
blult in n6rthern Ohio because the
~wn tracks are busiest there, said
· Gordon Proctor, director of the
Ohio Department of Transportatipn.
·
.: Building new crossings has
~come a top priority forTa!i since
J,::SX Corp. and Norfolk Southern
&lt;;;orp. acquired Conlllil's lines in
J!'ne. ·
· Following the takeover, train
~ffic \ripled in some areas, resultmg in .blocked c195Sings that frus.tiateq motorists and wo;ried safety
. officials.
: The state plans to spend existing
r)loney and an anticipated ipcrease
i!' its share of the federal g3s tax to
pay for part of the railroad project,
''Proctor said.
: He added that there shouldn't
lie a problem handling both the
.:;lilroad crossing upgrades and

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1998 FORD F150 .

1999 FORD F350
Crew Ceb. Dually,· 4Xo6, 7.3 L Oleael,
Lariat Pkg, lealher. LOAOEOI

1998 MERCURY SABLE
~uch . morel

199. FORD CROWN v•c
LX, ve, auto, air cond, AM/FM can, tlh
cru.... toac~Mt. local trade. Only 33,000 mun

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:Bush countered that McCain. was the candidate on the attack'
a~d said key Republicans have_conclqded Bush is the one who can
c~rry

the

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EMS lop 6 calls

POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
RACINE- Southern Local Schools will be holding parent/teacher Service recorded six calls for assistance Thursday. Units responding
conferences Wednesday, 4-7 p.m. Parents may call their child's school to included:
schedule a conference. They are encouraged to take advantage of the
.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
opportunitY to discuss their children's progress with teachei..
·
_ 11:39 a.m., Bas~!!. ~ad, Racine, Fay.e._Kir.khart...Eleasan.t..Valley~ Hospital;
· ·
- - , ~6:42p.m., Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport,John Kerns,Veterans Memorial Hospital;
· 10:24 p.m., Race Street, Middleport, Marcus Rei,VMH;
WILKESVILLE -A soup and sandwich supper will be held ·at the
11 p.m., Condor Street, Pomeroy, Penny Smith, PVH, Pomeroy
Wilkesville Community Center Friday, 4-7 p.m. Desserts and peverges
·
squad assisted.
wil also be served.
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MIDDLEPORT
4:28 p.m., volunteer fire department to Village Manor Ap,artments,
automobile fire, Donna Buffington owner.
RACINE
RACINE -The Racine Area Community Organization (RACO)
10:01 a.m., Greenwood Cemetery Road, Lizzy Wood, treated atthe
will meet Thesday at Star Mill Park, 6:30 p.m. Th.,.:: will be a potluck
scene.
dinner.

SUpper pl1nned

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Schools to be open on Jewish holidays, unlike before

The ACLU lawsuit alleged that
BLUE ASH (AP) - The ment.
closing
public schools on Jewish
Sycamore school · district has
"We were rescheduling school
ended its two-year experiment around those high absentee dates holidays violated the Constituwith closing schools on Jewish ... (which) average 15 percent:' tion by appearing to have been
holidays,' saying the absentee rate Armstrong said. "The normal done to benefit religion. The.
ACLU argued that public schools
wasn't significant el)ough to can- absentee rate is 4 percent."
eel classes.
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Armstrong said when he may close on religious holidays
"This is . a· public school sys- became superintendel\t in 1994, only if they .have a religiously
rem, so we are going to attempt . the district had a policy of not neutral reason for doing so.
The 6,200-student district
to ·run· our district with nopreli- giving tests or introducing new
future .highway construction plans. giops days off;' said School Board material on Jewisl) holidays serves the northern suburbs of
. There are 40-60 rail crossing5 in' President Don Hirsch.
because attendance was notably Blue Ash, Montgomery and
Symmes Township. The district 'Is
Ohio that definitely need an overThe American Civil Liberties lower.
.
pass or underpass, Proctor said.
Union, which had sued the subOfficials will begin the process urban Cincinnati district, praised
of choosing the projects this sum- the decision. But Superintendent
mer, but it usually takes at least two Bruce Armstrong said the
years to design and construct each AGLU's lawsuit wasn't the reason
crossing.
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the district chose to hold clas~
State officials selecting the sites on R_osh Hashanah and Yom Kipwill consider factors such as the pur.
the mid 40s. Chance of rain 40
BY THE ~ATID PRES$
crossing's proXimity to' fire and
percent.
.
A
winter
storm
featuring
a
mix
the school board, in voting 4- .
police stations and the volume .of
Saturday night...Becoming part1 Wednesday night to adopt a cal- of snow, ice, lieezing rain and
tr:iin and vehicle traffic.
ly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s.
heavy
rain
will
continue
moving
endar for the 2000-2001 academIn p:cent months, there have
·
Extended forecast:
ic year, decided to drop the through Ohio today, making roads
been several complaints that trains
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Highs in
experiment because the average slick.
have blocked ambUlances and fire
the
mid 40s. 1
A buildup of ice is possible near
15 peltent absenteeism rate on
trUcks from getting to emergenMonday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
Lake Erie, while heavy rain _and
th~JSe days wasn't !Ugh enough to
cies.
possibly
thunderstorms
are the mid 20s and highs in the mid
Officials with CSX and Norfollt justifY closing schools, Armstrong expected in southern Ohio. High 50s.
Southern say the companies sup- said.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
temperatures will range from the
Sycamore
schools
closed
on
port the project, but want to see
30s through the 40s, with the lower 30s and highs in the
the Jewish holidays this. academic overnight lows in the 20s and 30s. upper 50s.
the details befo~t committing.
year and last, under the experiThe weekend forecast calls for
cloudy skies with a
generally
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The six winners each received chance of snow flurries in north$50 · contributed by John R . ern Ohio. Highs are expected in
Lentes, Meigs County Prosecut- the 30s and lows in the 20s.
ing Attorney; H.D. Brown, DOS, · . The record high tempe~ture
flampqeA1
Pomeroy; PDK Con~trui:tion, on this date at the Columbus
Pomeroy; and E. John S~uss, weather station is 65 set in 1948.
ing ice?"
The record low is minus 7 set in
Shannon Price - "In what Gallipolis.
Judges were Bobby Hill,Jiolz- . 1936. Sunset today is at 6:11 p.m.
generation and age · level is
er
Meclical Center medical labo- and sunrise Saturday is at 7:20
extrasensory perception more
ratory technician; Ann Sisson, a.m.
prominent:'
. , Weather forecast:
Southern
Bigh School science
Tawny Jopes - "How do~
Thnight ... Occasional showers
radiation affect the germination teacher; George Hawley, Southern. Ohio Coal Co. area office with a chance of thunderstorms,
of beans?"
. Beverly Burdette - "Which supervisor; and Don Anderson, mainly until midnight. Periods of
dye dies first? Natural or synthet- Gavin Power Plant laboratory heavy rain possible. Lows in the
lower 40s. West wind 15 to 25
supervisor.
ic?"
mph and gusty.,Cha11ce of rain 90
peiCent.
don Pearson, Kristii'l Trader (alterSaturday...Mostly cloudy with a
·
nate);
chance of rain showers. }:lighs in.
Portland Elementary- Ryan
S!llailes;
Zachary Imboden {alter. from PapAl
nate); ·
·
grade; Julia Johnson, Brittney · Souti)er.n Junior High Jacks (alternate); seventh grade: Shawn Barnhart, Matthew Strong
7:1~ 11:10 DAILY
MATIN!!S
SATIIUN 1:10 I 3:10
Sara Camffiarata, josh J'!hnson Jr. (alternate);
Syracuse Elementary - . Lind(alternate); eighth grade, · Shane
sey Buzzard, Samantha Gray
~ewis,Justin Oiler (alternate);
(alternate).
Pomeroy · Elementary
Caminazata and Johnson are
Chelsea Hicks, · Molly Smith
now eligible to participate in the
(alternate);
All 3.
Rutland Elementary -: Jac_ob annual Tri-State Spelling Bee
&amp;
Barries, Randi Searles (alternate); which will be held next month at
Salc:m CenteF .ElemeJ!tary -: the • Huntington, W.Va., Civic
·
.
Ryan Barnett, Ryan Barrett Anlrta.
That
event
is
tentatively
set for
(alternate);
Salisbury Elementary- Bran- March 25.

prohibited from polling s.tudents'
religious affiliations, so no statis•
tics exist on the percentage of
various faiths in the district, officials said.
Hirsch, who voted with the
majority, said several religious
groups are strongly represented in
the district.
"If we give two holidays to
coincide with . one religion, we
should give two. to the others ...
to be fair;· he said.

VALLEY WEATHER

Heavy rain .possible tonight

Sdence

1996 MIRCURY v•LLAGIR
, V8, auto, air frOnt &amp; Nat, quad ._lng

AM/FM - · 1111. oruiM, All ,_..-

""•"'• Not

1.995 FORD MUSTANG
ve. 11uto. elr cond, AM/FM caM, tnt

cru~. PS. PB, PW, POL,

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mucti more

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.......................................... St09.n

LOCAL · ST-O CKS
AEP __;, 30'1•

Akzo-43'1.
AmTIOh/SBC- 38\
Aahl•nd Inc. - 31 ~
AT&amp;T·-49'•
Bob EVIInt - 14
.EIQrgWemer- 32'1.
Champion - 4"!.
Ch•rmlnQ Shopa ....,. ~
City Holding - .13,,
Fedenll MOQul- 14%.
I'Iretllr-20

{

Ph()n_;
740-992-2196

461 S . .Third
. . 'Ave.

www.jerryblbbee.com

Middleport ·

Gannett - 14'-

.'

General EIICtrtC -130~
Harley D•vldaon ...... ee'4

Kmert-"-

KI'Oger- 15"1.

'

Landi lncl- 28"1. . .

. Ltd. - 30'Y.

08ll Hill Fin•nQtel-14'1.
OVI--32'4
'

B3,Jk

~ Vliley .;_, 30'-

Peoplel -11~ .
Pnlmllr- a'!.
Rockwell - 47'/to

I

AD Jtlell- 58'!.
...... -rn"t.

Far1ners
Bank
&amp; Sovlngs Company ·
·

ShoRey'• _;_ 1'1.

Wandv'• -

17'4

Worthln~ ...... 14
· . ' .
O.lly etook repor\1 utt the ·
4 p.m. cloelng q®tet Qf the
prevloue d•v'• ti'I'1Uotlont,,
Pf'9VIdtd by Ad\clat or Gt!l-

llpolle. ·

All AG£S . All 111\lES S4.00

Locations of the
.Farmers Bank Savings ·
Will Be Closed
·Monday, February 21st.
In Observance Of Presidents Day
We will be open
Tuesday February 22nd
our regular hours;

'

Bank One- .~'!.

WA.SHINGTO!" (AP) - Close-up .photos of E!w, the first
. astero1d to be orb1tetl by a maprtiade satellite, show that it is· heavily ;crate':"d, sprinkled with boulders· ahd slightly ~llQW in color. .
·The unages Doin the Near Earth Asteroid'Rendemltis (NEAR)
spacecraft also suggest that Eros is a solid rodty body.tllat inay have
· once been part of a larger obje~t. such as 'a moon O( planet.
·."Eros ~ an. ancie~t; heavily cri!'ered surface:• Andrew Cheng,
, . chief project Scte?,bst i&gt;r the NEAR million, laid Thursday at a
news conference. There ue also tantalizing hintS that it has a layered structure, as if it WCfe! made up oflayen like in plywood.h
· Such stra~ ~eatures, siid Cheng, equid occur if the ast~roid
was melted while tt was pan of a planet, but'the 'scientist said it'was
·
·
·too early to draw any final eonclusio!W. .

POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Depanment will offer
an inununization clinic Tuesday, 9-11 a.m and 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs
Muiltipurpose Center, Memorial Drive, Poemroy. Each child is to be
accompanied by a parent/legal guardian, and the child's inununization
record is to.be presented.

-Spell

.

out the GOP agenaa.
• On the eve of a South Carolina ·primary that's too close to call,
b~th candidates were beginning to foc.us oh
mechanics of get- ·
t•ng voters to the polls on Saturday.
'
·
. • .
~ McCain was invoking the name of another GOP president in
c ~rting his tactics.
· · · , "'
.
.
·
(It's the &lt;Jld Reagan co~tion, wha1 we used to ~all Reagan
Democrats:' the Arizona senator said. "I 'think that's·· one of the
que~~ion marks in this election. How many Democrats will tum
out. .

Immunization dlnlc set

?tate will start ranking rail
~rossings for overpass work

·

· .

..ter Inn,

DEATH NOTICE

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Caaa, tilt, cruise, all power,

•HILTON HEAD, S.C. (AP) -John McCain sought to broaden
aud energize his ba!e in hopes of countering rival George W Bush's
niass1ve turnout effort, again bashing ~ Bush campaign so negative

~rqtisitt Cuisine

· '

.

; MASON, WVa. - Charles "Chuck" Kitchen, Masqn, died Friday,
"f$,b.'18. 2000 at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Fune1.11l Home.

., · 'ltelfnral-f :Jloun are
.s:oo .p.m.- s:oo .p.rrt. tfrl 6o Sat 'Dinner
zo:oo 1.111. - 3:oo p.m. S11ncl•y 'Brune&amp;

'

COOLVILLE -There will be a square dance Saturday night at the
Dutch Ridge Auction Barn. Champion fiddle player Doc Lemon will
be featured with Harold Taylor on the banjo.
Wilber Buskirk, who once played in the Ray Price Band, will join
the group. Deuie Kirkpatrick liom New Martinsville, WVa., will be
playing rhythm guitar and singing vocals. J.B. Wilson wil be the caller.
Music begins at 8 p.m.

Charles ·a.uck' Kltclaen

turns 18 one day in advance of the
March 7 primary.
Later in New Haven, Conn.,in'
a music club acioss from Yale University, Bradley was greeted by
throngs of cheering students and a
raging saxophone riff from tire·
band Mokijam.
·

The ·Diaias Room Bas Reopenea.

~

· ; BIDWELL - Earl A. George, 96, of BidweU, died unexpectedly in
Holztr Medical Center on We4D~y. February 16, 2000.
.Born April 26, 1903 in Morgan Township, Gallia County, he was the
son of the late William J. George and Eliza~th Harmon George.
· He was a U.S. Postal Service employee ·who retired in 1970. He was
a member ofVinton F &amp; AM Lodge 131,Vinton Order of Eastern Star
375, Eno Grange 2080 and a member of Morgan Center Christian
Holiness ChuiCh.
_He married Georgia Mitchell on August 10, 1935 in Morgan Town•¥P· and she survives, along with a son and two daughters, Fred
(Avanell) George of Rutland, Sharon Qerry) Black of Rutland, and
Janie Qim Jr.) Crace of Racine; nine grandchildren .and 20 greatgpndchildren; and a brother, Billie (Mildred) George of Bidwell.
' : .In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by three sisters.
• .Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, _Februa_!'Y.19, 2000 in Morgan.Cm-.
- m ·Chrlsrttn H'61iness ChuiCh, with the Rev. Teddy Russell officiat"mg. Burial will be in Vinton Memorial Park.. Friends may call at
. McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, on Friday, February 18, 2000
·'from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
·
~. Masonic services will be conducted in the fune!'al home by Vinton
F.&amp; AM Lodge 131, at 8:45p.m. Friday, February 18, 2000.
·:. The body ;.villlie in state in the church one hour prio~ to services
·
·on Saturday, February 19,2000.
"' Pallbearers will be Clarence Hash, Benny Hash, Billie Hash, Donnie
·Shupe, Paul Cremeans and Nicholas George.

.

'

first vote," llradley told them. "I
remember my ,first vote. ,I voted
for Lyndon Johnson ·- . but I
never met Lyndon Johnsqn:'
Kate Davey, by contrast, was
,meeting Bill· Bradley and also
planning to vote for Bill Bradley.
!'So cool!:' exdaimed·Davey, who

'

' Air oond, AMJFM
.
Wagon, ve. auto.

McCain seeks to enerJize·base

~.

, .·. :~~ ·:(· · JERRY BIB• .I;.
.

~•• ,.~nee planned

..'"

FOR GREAT SERVICE ~EFORE .AND AFTER THE SAL.E

'

·

.

.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

Ealt A. GIOIII

"

Bradley 'draws energy from young supporters
.

NATIONAL BRIEFS
.
.
:wave of-lntemet attacks continues

it~ "low comedy."

OBITUARIES

Riley said, touting some popular Clinton failing tests, repeating grades or dropping out o~
administration policies and campaigns for school.
improving early childhood care and education.
"Despite the booming 0.~. econ~my, large
"More families can read to their children every numbers of children are growmg up '" preenday. And we can help parents, especially work- ious family circumstances;' said Zill, who added
ing mothers, spend more time with their infants that children's family backgrounds ·needs closet
through paid maternity leave:'
attention from policy makers and parents who
Though the start is strong for most of the have tended to blarne schools for the failure. ·
nation's little ones- neirly aD, 94 percent, can
"These difficulties cannot be attributed solecount to 10; two in three know their ABC's- ly tQ bad schools, because children are already
the news isn't as good for disadvantaged chil- behind when they. reach the· classroom doot:~
dren.
Zill said.
·
Disadvantaged children did worse than othThe pupils in Maura Backenstoe's class know
ers on academics and other numerous indica- their ABCs, can count to 10 and an; in good
tors of school re~diness - which include a health and well-behaved. But the 10-year veterchild's health and social skills. The kids-less lik-e-- an lei' ndc:tgllfte·n-teacher--frc&gt;m-·Belth.,&gt;da;:-Mcll:;----'
ly to count to 10 or recite the alphabet or be says she
must meet the challenge of preparhealthy were children in poveny, single-parent · ing them for lifelong learning.
homes and. non-English speaking families, and
"I give my kids a lot of ownership in whar
those whose parents didn't finish high school.
they are going to do;' said .Backenstoe, who did
Nicholas Zill, an education researcher who ' math exercises with footballs and other activi:
worked on the report, said half of the children ties during Super Bowl week. "You need to
being studied were in one of those four family ·grab their attention, so that they are motiv:ited
situations- ';Vhich usually put pupils at risk fur to learn:' ·

NEW YORK (AP) - The aqd area.residents, is to give health
theme song to· "Rocky" ·blaring insurance to more Americans,
from speaken welcomed Bill - reduce the number of children in
Bradlj,y to the suburban college poverry, license all handguns and
where he finished a four-state bus make sure teachers are well
tour by invitirlg students to trained.
. .
dream.
Mter stops in M:issachusetts,
·About' 35() people turned out Rhode Island, Cennecticut and
for the Thursday night town hall New York, Bradley headed to his
meeting with Bradiey at Manhat- home in Montclair, NJ., to spend
tanville College in Purchase, N.Y. one night in his own bed for the
"I ask you· tonight to think first ·time in three months.
·
about what 1$ your dream - for
Bradley, a former tl1te~-term
yourself, for }rour 'family, and for senator from New Jersey, appeared
your count'ry, in these ·times of to draw energy from young peoincredible
prosperity,"
said ple throughout the day.
Brad!~. who needs some victories
At the Old Saybrook Diner in
in March 7 primaries to give a Old Saybrook, Conn., he chatted
surge to his campaign against Vice with seven high school students
President AI Gore for the Demo- who will bF voting for the first
cratic nomination.
time this year.
His dream, he told the students ·
"You alw.iys remember your

The Deily Sentinel • P•p A 3

Pomeroy, Mlddltport, Ohio

frldly, februuy 4 ' 2000

Govemment planS to track 22,000 tots

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

I

Friday, Februery 18, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio·

't • • • t
Men..., F.D.f.O.

·

......,.,
'

112·2136
221 w. 2nd. st.

,.. rr ••• "o"na
1113313
887-3111

........

448-2286 (Bank)

114 Upper River Rd.

.,

....-~.:·;,. :l'I.M~·!lf.f!j~~-~

.
"

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�•

P8ge A 2 • The o.lly Sentinel

.

Finn foaiSIS on qll•·pl~
'

CINCINNATI {AP) - Sending grip~ or compliments to a
company is getting faster and easier in the Internet era. For. a handful of companies, speeding consumer feedback to corporations also
is a potentially profitable business.
· Cincinnati-based PlanetFeedback Inc. is hoping to find that
niche with consumers by operating its Internet site - PlanetFee&lt;lback.com - which opened Thursday.
Tlie service could help consumers find out which compani~
respond to complaints and which on~ don't, said Pete Blackshaw,
founder and chief executive of PlanetFeedback Inc.
. "The light will shine through on the heroes, and the goats will
be exposed;' he said.
PlanetFeedback also will forward electronic messages to state
attorneys general and members .of Congress, among others.
.
Altho!Jgh companies will be the target of the ' complaints, the
b.usin~ can benefit.by getting immediate feedback from·the con~
sumer and .the chance to respond to them directly, said Blackshaw,
a former Procter &amp; Gamble Co. interactive marketing specialist.
. ,His company will not accept advertising on its Web site, but
expects to make money by selling the col)sumer information it' col·
·
·
lects to corporations. .

18-year-olcl running for House
, MINSTER (AP) -An 18-year-old high school student running
for the Ohio House says he's not. sure why more young people
don't get involved in politics.
.
Derrick Sea:ver said he's nothing special among his peers whe)l it
comes knowing the issues and being able to run a political campaign.
.
.
"I ~an list kids in my own grade ·that can do just as good a job,"
l)e said. Seaver, who turned 18 last week, is seeking the Democratic
nomination for the 85th District seat being vacated by Republican ·
Rep. James Jordan, '\Yho is rUnning for the Ohio Seriate: The west
central Ohio district coven Shelby and Champaign counties and
western Auglaize County.
· Although Seaver is unopposed . in the MaiCh 1 primary, he
a1ready is campaigning for the November election. He often speaks
tWO or three times a night to service organizations and other groups
and is making plans to knock on doors this summer.

.Judge weighs custody case ·
COLUMBUS (AP) -A federal iinrnigration judge will have the
final say on whether a custody decision in favor of a bOy fighting
$portation to Sri Lanka will affect the 11-year-old's case.
:. Senthan Mahendrarajah has a hearing Thursday before a U.S.
llrunigration and Naturalization Service judge in Cincinnati.
; On Wednesday. Magistrate Woody Hudson of Franklin County
Jpvenile Court granted custody of the boy to his uncle, physicist
Ambalavanar Thavendrarajah, and aunt, Dr. Vasanthy Thavendrarajah. ·
..
·
: The custody order gives the boy a second avenue to fight deportation, said his attorney, E. Dennis Muchnick!.
: The federal iminigration judge will decide what impact, if any,
t~e custody decis.ion will have on the deportation proceedings, said
~ark Hansen, INS district director in Cleveland.
~ "Each case is separate and individual, and there's a lot of variables
tllat come into play:' tiansen said Thursday. "Generally 'it doesn,'t
hl.ve" an impact, but I can't speak specifically to this case."

'

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The vast majority of children enter kindergarten with the
proper building blocks for successful learning.
They know the alphabet. They can count to 10.
They can work and play well with others. And
they're healthy.
But the chances of being that well-prepared
for school diminish for children who are poor,
non-English speaking or living in with single or
poorly educated parents, say Education Department researchers in a first-ever report card on
the nation's ytiungest students.
In releasing the "America's Kindergartners"
study Thursday, the department said it planned
to continue !'racking for six years the national
sample of 22,000 children used for the initial
- repoq. The subjects enteredprivate and public
kindergartens in the fall of 1998. While department researchers said the longer term study
would shed light on how to help children who
are lagging, Education Secretary Richard Riley
said there are ways to start helping such young'
sten now.
"The better the start, the stronger the finish;'

'

'

.WASHINGTON (AP) -The Internet attacks originally aimed
at e-conunerce sites are continuing this week and even· cropping up
abroad, so federal investigators are looking into whether copycats
are targeting less well-known Web sites.
Newly opened FBI computer-hacking investigations have
quadrupled since the first attack at Yahoo! on Feb. 7. Some attacks,
not noticed by the public and not identified by the FBI, h~ve con-tinued into this week, and no omd&lt;nows if they have ended, FBI
spokeswoman .Debbie Weie~man said Thursjlay. And attacks have
cropped up abroad, said one federal investigator, who requested
al).oriymity.
: As of Feb. 9, the FBI had opened four new investigations of these
so,.called 'distributed denial of service attacks. Npw the total is
"more than 17 new investigations, including more than -13 where
th~ victim suffered a disttibuted denial of service attack;'Weieqnan
said Thursday. Only eight of the more than 13 have been identified
publicly. ·
·
'Four investigations involve the placing of denial of service tools,
Ia\own as dael)lons, . on middleman computers that can later be
remotely ordered to attack a victim site, Weierman said. Hiding
these daemons on unwitting host compu\frs is a key step in mounting distributed denial of service attacks.
.
.
.
"The possibility of copycats is oui there, as are other theories,
·
'
with these piggyback incidents;' she said.

\

··

, ·

....

r~
~ t"""•

1-H1·6'1·USO

.;_

U atleo NW. of

-

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· ;.' :NORniWOOD (AP) -The
-bulk of Ohio's n.W railroad over:p~ likely will be built in the
•notthern: half of the state, trans~rtation officials said.
- ·Gov. Bob Taft outlined plans
:Thursday for a proposed $200 million project to build new railroad
~verpasses throughout the state
.
piuing the next 10 years.
· .While none of the sites has been ·
determined, most probably will be
blult in n6rthern Ohio because the
~wn tracks are busiest there, said
· Gordon Proctor, director of the
Ohio Department of Transportatipn.
·
.: Building new crossings has
~come a top priority forTa!i since
J,::SX Corp. and Norfolk Southern
&lt;;;orp. acquired Conlllil's lines in
J!'ne. ·
· Following the takeover, train
~ffic \ripled in some areas, resultmg in .blocked c195Sings that frus.tiateq motorists and wo;ried safety
. officials.
: The state plans to spend existing
r)loney and an anticipated ipcrease
i!' its share of the federal g3s tax to
pay for part of the railroad project,
''Proctor said.
: He added that there shouldn't
lie a problem handling both the
.:;lilroad crossing upgrades and

t-aoe-u4.zuz

:!.!!.!!.!.!

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1998 FORD F150 .

1999 FORD F350
Crew Ceb. Dually,· 4Xo6, 7.3 L Oleael,
Lariat Pkg, lealher. LOAOEOI

1998 MERCURY SABLE
~uch . morel

199. FORD CROWN v•c
LX, ve, auto, air cond, AM/FM can, tlh
cru.... toac~Mt. local trade. Only 33,000 mun

.

:Bush countered that McCain. was the candidate on the attack'
a~d said key Republicans have_conclqded Bush is the one who can
c~rry

the

..

EMS lop 6 calls

POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
RACINE- Southern Local Schools will be holding parent/teacher Service recorded six calls for assistance Thursday. Units responding
conferences Wednesday, 4-7 p.m. Parents may call their child's school to included:
schedule a conference. They are encouraged to take advantage of the
.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
opportunitY to discuss their children's progress with teachei..
·
_ 11:39 a.m., Bas~!!. ~ad, Racine, Fay.e._Kir.khart...Eleasan.t..Valley~ Hospital;
· ·
- - , ~6:42p.m., Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport,John Kerns,Veterans Memorial Hospital;
· 10:24 p.m., Race Street, Middleport, Marcus Rei,VMH;
WILKESVILLE -A soup and sandwich supper will be held ·at the
11 p.m., Condor Street, Pomeroy, Penny Smith, PVH, Pomeroy
Wilkesville Community Center Friday, 4-7 p.m. Desserts and peverges
·
squad assisted.
wil also be served.
·
·
.
MIDDLEPORT
4:28 p.m., volunteer fire department to Village Manor Ap,artments,
automobile fire, Donna Buffington owner.
RACINE
RACINE -The Racine Area Community Organization (RACO)
10:01 a.m., Greenwood Cemetery Road, Lizzy Wood, treated atthe
will meet Thesday at Star Mill Park, 6:30 p.m. Th.,.:: will be a potluck
scene.
dinner.

SUpper pl1nned

. RACO to ILLeet

.

I

Schools to be open on Jewish holidays, unlike before

The ACLU lawsuit alleged that
BLUE ASH (AP) - The ment.
closing
public schools on Jewish
Sycamore school · district has
"We were rescheduling school
ended its two-year experiment around those high absentee dates holidays violated the Constituwith closing schools on Jewish ... (which) average 15 percent:' tion by appearing to have been
holidays,' saying the absentee rate Armstrong said. "The normal done to benefit religion. The.
ACLU argued that public schools
wasn't significant el)ough to can- absentee rate is 4 percent."
eel classes.
'
Armstrong said when he may close on religious holidays
"This is . a· public school sys- became superintendel\t in 1994, only if they .have a religiously
rem, so we are going to attempt . the district had a policy of not neutral reason for doing so.
The 6,200-student district
to ·run· our district with nopreli- giving tests or introducing new
future .highway construction plans. giops days off;' said School Board material on Jewisl) holidays serves the northern suburbs of
. There are 40-60 rail crossing5 in' President Don Hirsch.
because attendance was notably Blue Ash, Montgomery and
Symmes Township. The district 'Is
Ohio that definitely need an overThe American Civil Liberties lower.
.
pass or underpass, Proctor said.
Union, which had sued the subOfficials will begin the process urban Cincinnati district, praised
of choosing the projects this sum- the decision. But Superintendent
mer, but it usually takes at least two Bruce Armstrong said the
years to design and construct each AGLU's lawsuit wasn't the reason
crossing.
.
.
the district chose to hold clas~
State officials selecting the sites on R_osh Hashanah and Yom Kipwill consider factors such as the pur.
the mid 40s. Chance of rain 40
BY THE ~ATID PRES$
crossing's proXimity to' fire and
percent.
.
A
winter
storm
featuring
a
mix
the school board, in voting 4- .
police stations and the volume .of
Saturday night...Becoming part1 Wednesday night to adopt a cal- of snow, ice, lieezing rain and
tr:iin and vehicle traffic.
ly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s.
heavy
rain
will
continue
moving
endar for the 2000-2001 academIn p:cent months, there have
·
Extended forecast:
ic year, decided to drop the through Ohio today, making roads
been several complaints that trains
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Highs in
experiment because the average slick.
have blocked ambUlances and fire
the
mid 40s. 1
A buildup of ice is possible near
15 peltent absenteeism rate on
trUcks from getting to emergenMonday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
Lake Erie, while heavy rain _and
th~JSe days wasn't !Ugh enough to
cies.
possibly
thunderstorms
are the mid 20s and highs in the mid
Officials with CSX and Norfollt justifY closing schools, Armstrong expected in southern Ohio. High 50s.
Southern say the companies sup- said.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
temperatures will range from the
Sycamore
schools
closed
on
port the project, but want to see
30s through the 40s, with the lower 30s and highs in the
the Jewish holidays this. academic overnight lows in the 20s and 30s. upper 50s.
the details befo~t committing.
year and last, under the experiThe weekend forecast calls for
cloudy skies with a
generally
.'
The six winners each received chance of snow flurries in north$50 · contributed by John R . ern Ohio. Highs are expected in
Lentes, Meigs County Prosecut- the 30s and lows in the 20s.
ing Attorney; H.D. Brown, DOS, · . The record high tempe~ture
flampqeA1
Pomeroy; PDK Con~trui:tion, on this date at the Columbus
Pomeroy; and E. John S~uss, weather station is 65 set in 1948.
ing ice?"
The record low is minus 7 set in
Shannon Price - "In what Gallipolis.
Judges were Bobby Hill,Jiolz- . 1936. Sunset today is at 6:11 p.m.
generation and age · level is
er
Meclical Center medical labo- and sunrise Saturday is at 7:20
extrasensory perception more
ratory technician; Ann Sisson, a.m.
prominent:'
. , Weather forecast:
Southern
Bigh School science
Tawny Jopes - "How do~
Thnight ... Occasional showers
radiation affect the germination teacher; George Hawley, Southern. Ohio Coal Co. area office with a chance of thunderstorms,
of beans?"
. Beverly Burdette - "Which supervisor; and Don Anderson, mainly until midnight. Periods of
dye dies first? Natural or synthet- Gavin Power Plant laboratory heavy rain possible. Lows in the
lower 40s. West wind 15 to 25
supervisor.
ic?"
mph and gusty.,Cha11ce of rain 90
peiCent.
don Pearson, Kristii'l Trader (alterSaturday...Mostly cloudy with a
·
nate);
chance of rain showers. }:lighs in.
Portland Elementary- Ryan
S!llailes;
Zachary Imboden {alter. from PapAl
nate); ·
·
grade; Julia Johnson, Brittney · Souti)er.n Junior High Jacks (alternate); seventh grade: Shawn Barnhart, Matthew Strong
7:1~ 11:10 DAILY
MATIN!!S
SATIIUN 1:10 I 3:10
Sara Camffiarata, josh J'!hnson Jr. (alternate);
Syracuse Elementary - . Lind(alternate); eighth grade, · Shane
sey Buzzard, Samantha Gray
~ewis,Justin Oiler (alternate);
(alternate).
Pomeroy · Elementary
Caminazata and Johnson are
Chelsea Hicks, · Molly Smith
now eligible to participate in the
(alternate);
All 3.
Rutland Elementary -: Jac_ob annual Tri-State Spelling Bee
&amp;
Barries, Randi Searles (alternate); which will be held next month at
Salc:m CenteF .ElemeJ!tary -: the • Huntington, W.Va., Civic
·
.
Ryan Barnett, Ryan Barrett Anlrta.
That
event
is
tentatively
set for
(alternate);
Salisbury Elementary- Bran- March 25.

prohibited from polling s.tudents'
religious affiliations, so no statis•
tics exist on the percentage of
various faiths in the district, officials said.
Hirsch, who voted with the
majority, said several religious
groups are strongly represented in
the district.
"If we give two holidays to
coincide with . one religion, we
should give two. to the others ...
to be fair;· he said.

VALLEY WEATHER

Heavy rain .possible tonight

Sdence

1996 MIRCURY v•LLAGIR
, V8, auto, air frOnt &amp; Nat, quad ._lng

AM/FM - · 1111. oruiM, All ,_..-

""•"'• Not

1.995 FORD MUSTANG
ve. 11uto. elr cond, AM/FM caM, tnt

cru~. PS. PB, PW, POL,

.

mucti more

'

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.....

' "

'

"

."

'

'

'

llllob .......................................... SU11.56

Ratoo-MoiiOOIUI7

Quelifttcl BU)rwa

\\llob..................................,........$29.25
\\llob ..... .....................................$$6.68
.......................................... St09.n

LOCAL · ST-O CKS
AEP __;, 30'1•

Akzo-43'1.
AmTIOh/SBC- 38\
Aahl•nd Inc. - 31 ~
AT&amp;T·-49'•
Bob EVIInt - 14
.EIQrgWemer- 32'1.
Champion - 4"!.
Ch•rmlnQ Shopa ....,. ~
City Holding - .13,,
Fedenll MOQul- 14%.
I'Iretllr-20

{

Ph()n_;
740-992-2196

461 S . .Third
. . 'Ave.

www.jerryblbbee.com

Middleport ·

Gannett - 14'-

.'

General EIICtrtC -130~
Harley D•vldaon ...... ee'4

Kmert-"-

KI'Oger- 15"1.

'

Landi lncl- 28"1. . .

. Ltd. - 30'Y.

08ll Hill Fin•nQtel-14'1.
OVI--32'4
'

B3,Jk

~ Vliley .;_, 30'-

Peoplel -11~ .
Pnlmllr- a'!.
Rockwell - 47'/to

I

AD Jtlell- 58'!.
...... -rn"t.

Far1ners
Bank
&amp; Sovlngs Company ·
·

ShoRey'• _;_ 1'1.

Wandv'• -

17'4

Worthln~ ...... 14
· . ' .
O.lly etook repor\1 utt the ·
4 p.m. cloelng q®tet Qf the
prevloue d•v'• ti'I'1Uotlont,,
Pf'9VIdtd by Ad\clat or Gt!l-

llpolle. ·

All AG£S . All 111\lES S4.00

Locations of the
.Farmers Bank Savings ·
Will Be Closed
·Monday, February 21st.
In Observance Of Presidents Day
We will be open
Tuesday February 22nd
our regular hours;

'

Bank One- .~'!.

WA.SHINGTO!" (AP) - Close-up .photos of E!w, the first
. astero1d to be orb1tetl by a maprtiade satellite, show that it is· heavily ;crate':"d, sprinkled with boulders· ahd slightly ~llQW in color. .
·The unages Doin the Near Earth Asteroid'Rendemltis (NEAR)
spacecraft also suggest that Eros is a solid rodty body.tllat inay have
· once been part of a larger obje~t. such as 'a moon O( planet.
·."Eros ~ an. ancie~t; heavily cri!'ered surface:• Andrew Cheng,
, . chief project Scte?,bst i&gt;r the NEAR million, laid Thursday at a
news conference. There ue also tantalizing hintS that it has a layered structure, as if it WCfe! made up oflayen like in plywood.h
· Such stra~ ~eatures, siid Cheng, equid occur if the ast~roid
was melted while tt was pan of a planet, but'the 'scientist said it'was
·
·
·too early to draw any final eonclusio!W. .

POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Depanment will offer
an inununization clinic Tuesday, 9-11 a.m and 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs
Muiltipurpose Center, Memorial Drive, Poemroy. Each child is to be
accompanied by a parent/legal guardian, and the child's inununization
record is to.be presented.

-Spell

.

out the GOP agenaa.
• On the eve of a South Carolina ·primary that's too close to call,
b~th candidates were beginning to foc.us oh
mechanics of get- ·
t•ng voters to the polls on Saturday.
'
·
. • .
~ McCain was invoking the name of another GOP president in
c ~rting his tactics.
· · · , "'
.
.
·
(It's the &lt;Jld Reagan co~tion, wha1 we used to ~all Reagan
Democrats:' the Arizona senator said. "I 'think that's·· one of the
que~~ion marks in this election. How many Democrats will tum
out. .

Immunization dlnlc set

?tate will start ranking rail
~rossings for overpass work

·

· .

..ter Inn,

DEATH NOTICE

..

..

Caaa, tilt, cruise, all power,

•HILTON HEAD, S.C. (AP) -John McCain sought to broaden
aud energize his ba!e in hopes of countering rival George W Bush's
niass1ve turnout effort, again bashing ~ Bush campaign so negative

~rqtisitt Cuisine

· '

.

; MASON, WVa. - Charles "Chuck" Kitchen, Masqn, died Friday,
"f$,b.'18. 2000 at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Fune1.11l Home.

., · 'ltelfnral-f :Jloun are
.s:oo .p.m.- s:oo .p.rrt. tfrl 6o Sat 'Dinner
zo:oo 1.111. - 3:oo p.m. S11ncl•y 'Brune&amp;

'

COOLVILLE -There will be a square dance Saturday night at the
Dutch Ridge Auction Barn. Champion fiddle player Doc Lemon will
be featured with Harold Taylor on the banjo.
Wilber Buskirk, who once played in the Ray Price Band, will join
the group. Deuie Kirkpatrick liom New Martinsville, WVa., will be
playing rhythm guitar and singing vocals. J.B. Wilson wil be the caller.
Music begins at 8 p.m.

Charles ·a.uck' Kltclaen

turns 18 one day in advance of the
March 7 primary.
Later in New Haven, Conn.,in'
a music club acioss from Yale University, Bradley was greeted by
throngs of cheering students and a
raging saxophone riff from tire·
band Mokijam.
·

The ·Diaias Room Bas Reopenea.

~

· ; BIDWELL - Earl A. George, 96, of BidweU, died unexpectedly in
Holztr Medical Center on We4D~y. February 16, 2000.
.Born April 26, 1903 in Morgan Township, Gallia County, he was the
son of the late William J. George and Eliza~th Harmon George.
· He was a U.S. Postal Service employee ·who retired in 1970. He was
a member ofVinton F &amp; AM Lodge 131,Vinton Order of Eastern Star
375, Eno Grange 2080 and a member of Morgan Center Christian
Holiness ChuiCh.
_He married Georgia Mitchell on August 10, 1935 in Morgan Town•¥P· and she survives, along with a son and two daughters, Fred
(Avanell) George of Rutland, Sharon Qerry) Black of Rutland, and
Janie Qim Jr.) Crace of Racine; nine grandchildren .and 20 greatgpndchildren; and a brother, Billie (Mildred) George of Bidwell.
' : .In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by three sisters.
• .Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, _Februa_!'Y.19, 2000 in Morgan.Cm-.
- m ·Chrlsrttn H'61iness ChuiCh, with the Rev. Teddy Russell officiat"mg. Burial will be in Vinton Memorial Park.. Friends may call at
. McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, on Friday, February 18, 2000
·'from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
·
~. Masonic services will be conducted in the fune!'al home by Vinton
F.&amp; AM Lodge 131, at 8:45p.m. Friday, February 18, 2000.
·:. The body ;.villlie in state in the church one hour prio~ to services
·
·on Saturday, February 19,2000.
"' Pallbearers will be Clarence Hash, Benny Hash, Billie Hash, Donnie
·Shupe, Paul Cremeans and Nicholas George.

.

'

first vote," llradley told them. "I
remember my ,first vote. ,I voted
for Lyndon Johnson ·- . but I
never met Lyndon Johnsqn:'
Kate Davey, by contrast, was
,meeting Bill· Bradley and also
planning to vote for Bill Bradley.
!'So cool!:' exdaimed·Davey, who

'

' Air oond, AMJFM
.
Wagon, ve. auto.

McCain seeks to enerJize·base

~.

, .·. :~~ ·:(· · JERRY BIB• .I;.
.

~•• ,.~nee planned

..'"

FOR GREAT SERVICE ~EFORE .AND AFTER THE SAL.E

'

·

.

.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

Ealt A. GIOIII

"

Bradley 'draws energy from young supporters
.

NATIONAL BRIEFS
.
.
:wave of-lntemet attacks continues

it~ "low comedy."

OBITUARIES

Riley said, touting some popular Clinton failing tests, repeating grades or dropping out o~
administration policies and campaigns for school.
improving early childhood care and education.
"Despite the booming 0.~. econ~my, large
"More families can read to their children every numbers of children are growmg up '" preenday. And we can help parents, especially work- ious family circumstances;' said Zill, who added
ing mothers, spend more time with their infants that children's family backgrounds ·needs closet
through paid maternity leave:'
attention from policy makers and parents who
Though the start is strong for most of the have tended to blarne schools for the failure. ·
nation's little ones- neirly aD, 94 percent, can
"These difficulties cannot be attributed solecount to 10; two in three know their ABC's- ly tQ bad schools, because children are already
the news isn't as good for disadvantaged chil- behind when they. reach the· classroom doot:~
dren.
Zill said.
·
Disadvantaged children did worse than othThe pupils in Maura Backenstoe's class know
ers on academics and other numerous indica- their ABCs, can count to 10 and an; in good
tors of school re~diness - which include a health and well-behaved. But the 10-year veterchild's health and social skills. The kids-less lik-e-- an lei' ndc:tgllfte·n-teacher--frc&gt;m-·Belth.,&gt;da;:-Mcll:;----'
ly to count to 10 or recite the alphabet or be says she
must meet the challenge of preparhealthy were children in poveny, single-parent · ing them for lifelong learning.
homes and. non-English speaking families, and
"I give my kids a lot of ownership in whar
those whose parents didn't finish high school.
they are going to do;' said .Backenstoe, who did
Nicholas Zill, an education researcher who ' math exercises with footballs and other activi:
worked on the report, said half of the children ties during Super Bowl week. "You need to
being studied were in one of those four family ·grab their attention, so that they are motiv:ited
situations- ';Vhich usually put pupils at risk fur to learn:' ·

NEW YORK (AP) - The aqd area.residents, is to give health
theme song to· "Rocky" ·blaring insurance to more Americans,
from speaken welcomed Bill - reduce the number of children in
Bradlj,y to the suburban college poverry, license all handguns and
where he finished a four-state bus make sure teachers are well
tour by invitirlg students to trained.
. .
dream.
Mter stops in M:issachusetts,
·About' 35() people turned out Rhode Island, Cennecticut and
for the Thursday night town hall New York, Bradley headed to his
meeting with Bradiey at Manhat- home in Montclair, NJ., to spend
tanville College in Purchase, N.Y. one night in his own bed for the
"I ask you· tonight to think first ·time in three months.
·
about what 1$ your dream - for
Bradley, a former tl1te~-term
yourself, for }rour 'family, and for senator from New Jersey, appeared
your count'ry, in these ·times of to draw energy from young peoincredible
prosperity,"
said ple throughout the day.
Brad!~. who needs some victories
At the Old Saybrook Diner in
in March 7 primaries to give a Old Saybrook, Conn., he chatted
surge to his campaign against Vice with seven high school students
President AI Gore for the Demo- who will bF voting for the first
cratic nomination.
time this year.
His dream, he told the students ·
"You alw.iys remember your

The Deily Sentinel • P•p A 3

Pomeroy, Mlddltport, Ohio

frldly, februuy 4 ' 2000

Govemment planS to track 22,000 tots

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

I

Friday, Februery 18, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio·

't • • • t
Men..., F.D.f.O.

·

......,.,
'

112·2136
221 w. 2nd. st.

,.. rr ••• "o"na
1113313
887-3111

........

448-2286 (Bank)

114 Upper River Rd.

.,

....-~.:·;,. :l'I.M~·!lf.f!j~~-~

.
"

.

�•

Ion

The Daily Sentinel

Vou

The Daily Sentinel

se~, SotJ, i,..'S

. .

PageA4.

(

\

a f'~~1''S Jog

••

: Dear Ann Landers: I am glad' you

or she's not playing with a full deck. Who
DEAR MISSOURI MOM: Many er.lf you cross them low, you're a procrastiati'crsed your posil;ion about telling people
was it who said, "None are so blind as . overweight women who wear glasses have nator. (I'm a procrastinator, and my handJ.ben their spouses are cheating. You used
tho.e who do not wish to seen?
dates. Your beautiful, intelligent, compas- writing bears this out.) If you leave circular
t1: say MYOB, because you were conDear Ann Landers: My 22-year-old sionate, well-read daughter with the terrif- letters, like D, G and 0, open at the top,
~ced the cheated-:on spouse already
daughter is beautiful, intelligent, compas- ic sense o( humor has a different kind of you're honest -again true.
luleW and didn't want to be forced to do
sionate, well-read and has a terrific sense of problem. She's not aggressive enough, and .
Do' you believe in gr.;phology Ann? splnething about it. Well, I'm writing to
humor. She is also a bit overweight and probably doesn't know how to talk to JUST ASKIN IN BRENTWOOD,
teDyou, you were dead wrong. If even one
wears glasses. She has never had a date, men. The savvy female is aware that men CALIF.
per.;on had told me what was going on, I
much less a relationship with a man. She like to talk about themselves. She needs to
DEAR ASKIN': Not reaUy, but l don't
ADVICE
wpuld not be looking like a complete fool.
has overweight girlfriends who have had ask questions that will give men the wam to rain on anybody's parade. If people
· 1 Now·that everything is out in the open
dates, so she is convinced there must be opportUnity to do so.
want to believe in it, I see no harm.
-l--ah~d;;rw;·,,o~_families have been torn a('al1, it is whe.n they know a husband or a wife is something seriously-wrong-with her:-She
My ~dVice to women who fail to con- reeling pressured to have sexrAow
· how inany "friends" are.willing to bClng cheated on. They should teDthe vic- is desperately unhappy, and I don't know nect with 'men is this: Don't try to impress
informed are you? W rite for Ann ' Landers'
me about my husband's infidelity Had tim.That's what real friendship is all about. how to help her,
a
man.
Ask
him
questions
that
will
give
booklet "Sex and the Teenager." Send a
'lmC&gt;wn earlier, it would have -saV.d me - A VICTIM OF SILENCE
I have no idea why men do not flock to him the opportUnity to impress you. Be a self-addressed, long, business-si2r envelope
DEAR VICTIM: Sorry, I don't agree.
hou;s of self-doubt, · wondering
and a check or money order fot $3.75 (this
T~e
reason I reversed my position was her. I think she is the most wonderfi&gt;l per- good listener. It works. Trust me.
wh,ere I had failed.
son
iar
the
world.
I
have
told
her
that
my
Dear
Artn
Landers:
1
am
taking
a
asked myself your fa mous qu estion, because ofAIDS. An extramarital affair can mother did not marry ulltil she was 30, but course on "Graphology and What Your includes postage and handling) to:Teens c/o
Ann Landers, P. O. Box 11561, C hicago, !U.
'~lould I be better off with him, or with- now be a matter of life and death. I still
that
doesn't
make
her
feel
any
better.
Can
Handwriting
Tells
About
You."
My
texthim," and have decided I am better off belieye the female antenna is extremely you 'think of something 1 could say or do books say if your 'handwriting sl;mts to the 6061 1..0562. (In Canada; send $4.55) To
find out more about Ann· Landers and read
'filthoul hin1. Meanwhile, please teD your sensitive. The woman who claims she did- that would help? - CON CERNED left, you aic generous. (True in my case.) If
her past columns, Visit the Creators Syndi¢aclers again that people should speak up n't have a ~lue is either in a state of deni al, 'MO M IN MISSOURI
you cross your T's high up, y9u're a dream- . cate web page at W\V\V.creators.c;om.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Get•ll llllllllgef

Ann
Landers

Oltlne Hill
Controller

OUR VIEW:

Gimme
shelter
M
' ,

onday's discussion by Meigs commissioners regarding
one of the countys public housing complexes brings
to light an important issue: the continued need for
safe and affordable housing - not only for those deemed lowand moderate-income families - but for aU residents.
Facilities constructed using federal doUars (mostly built in the
·
1970s ~nd. 1980s using HUD · and
~
FmHA funding sources) were a boon to
poorer families in need of dean and safe
homes.

enctmrage
,m 1s, both
o.JJ.cia
p11blic and
•
pru~ate' to
support pro•
•
h t 'II
JCCtS t a Wt
build and
tnaintain
. affordable .

However; they have become, in many
instances, little more than cash cows for
companies ii-I the very specialized busi~
ness of buying apartment complexes,
spending as little as possible on repair
and maintenance, .and then reseUing
them when the cpst of making absolute- ly necessary repairs cuts too deeply into
the profit margin.
Residents in public housingcomplexes regularly complain of broken cabiOUStttg
netry, plumbing problems, and serious
infestations of roaches and other unsanitary pests. While sopte problems, .a dmit'
·
tedly, are the direct result of poor
hygiene and Jow living standards on the
)
tenant's behalf, others are the direct
. result of poor .management by those receiving federal tax doUars
.fOr low-income rents.
·
·
·
·
HOIII'e\'er, those on the lowest rungs of the local economic
ladder are not the only ones faced with a shortage of decent and
affordable shelter. ·
. In our conutluJ'li.ty, entry-level professional couples, young
singles and older retirees on aU economic levels often find the
sean:h lOr affOrdable, safe and attractive rental properties to caU
home ~ling.
·
·· ·
.
. , We c;ncourage officials, both public and private, to support
i'Jojett:l that wiU build and maintain affordable housing throughout the Ohio Valley.
·
··, Housing is a major consideration in terms of economic devel- .
it is a major factor in the health and happiness of our
,hildml; and it should be seen as a priority in every communi-

•

throughout
. ·tJee Ohio
Valley.

....
··~
::~

RUSHER'S VIEW:
.,

'

Several years ago WiUiam Kristol, son of
the magisterial Irving and the redoubtable
· Gertrude Himmelfarb, persuaded Rupert
Murdoch to bankroll a new weekly conservative publication of which young William
would be the editor and publishe.r.
Thus was born the Weekly Standard, which
has been published in Washington ever since.
Its circulation is nothing to brag about, being
roughly a quarter of that of National Review,
the longtime fortnightly standard-bearer of
the conservative movement. But the Weekly
Standard is must reading for political junkies
inside the Beltway, and it has served as 'a splendid platform for Kristol, who has become one
of the premier Washington spokesmen of the
conservative movement, in wide demand on
television talk shows:
It was, therefore, no small thing when Kristol, in the course of an op ~ed piece published
in the Washington ·Post' early this month 1 .
delivered jlj~f o( th.e following thund.erous
conclusion: 'I::eadeilef(. rudderless and assueless, the conservative movement, which
accomplished great things over the past quar.
·
·
ter-century, is finished." ·
· The precipitating event was John McCain's
victory over Geqrge Bush in the New Hampshire primary. Kristol noted that "The three
movement conservatives left in the Republican race" (meaning Bauer, Keyes and Forbes)
"received a grand total of about 20 percent of
the votes;' and conclud~d that· this pathetic
showing represented the current strength of
the movement. Precisely why the passionately
reiterated conservatism of both of the frontrunners, McCain and George W. Bush, didn't
count in the assessment, Krista! didn't explain.
They 'may not be "movement conservatives;'
but both men are solid conservatives by any
reasonable test. •

William A.

Rusher

•'

Tracing the evolution ofthe Rev. Billy Graham
I

TODAY IN HISTORY

I

(1

tnn&lt;m

:r

,•

,,.

Birthday
'

.&lt;,

.:,
. ·,.
•••
..••••'
..,
' ' ll

.·-••

drove fast cars.
.•
A cousin of Billy's remembers that t~
future evangelist was "rowdy and misch~~
vous" as a boy. On one occasion, Billy felt ~
sting of his father's belt for chewing tobaccOj
out by the barn on' the family farm in Charlotte, N.C,
When he would borrow his father's car, this;
cousin says, he would drive ·it is as fast as i{; .
wouJd go. turn curves on two w hee 1san drace : ·
other boys on the country roads.
· •·.
Pr:obably no one who 'knew him in those'
days would have predicted that Graha~•
. would become one of the best-known · and'
' admired figures of 20th- century · American
life, a close friend of several presidents and,leader of one of the greatest evangelical awak•~
enings of the century.
. ·
· ~:
Then, when he was 16, Graham had a con~ ·
version experience. The popular . Southern:
evangelist Mordecai Ham held a (ol!r-weeJr
revival in Charlotte in 1934, and Billy·attend~
. ed. ·
..
'
'
, After the nightly sermon, Ham would urge;
his audience members to come forward att~.
confess ,their sins: "This might be your last:
chance," he would say - something Grahanj ' .
re~inded his ow~ a~dience of when he~
became an evan~hst.
·
.
, .
. Bolly Frank, ~ath ~me urgmg f"?m one·of
the workers at ~~e revaval, wa,l~e~.to the fronr·
of the tent and ~cepted Chr~st.
,
It Was .a ~e~~mgfu1 expenence for Gra•;·
ham, but ot didn t shake has desore tu become ,
a basebaU playe.r. ~t would be a few. years .~t~
before Graha~s hfe reached a tu~mng poant, :
when he feU m love f?.r th'e first. lime.
,

With the arrival of the new millennium,
Billy Graham's reputation . as the world's pre···
eminent evangelist. now ·span.s two ·centuries,
.''
His battle with Parkinson's disease lias slowed ·
him down a bit, but, at 81, he refuses to· set a
date for his retirement.
:
Renowned as Graham is, many of his folIowen are unfamiliar with the beginnings of
his life and ministry. In a four-part series, start- · ·
•·
ing today, George R . Plagenz introdu~es us to
BiDyGraharn:The Early Yean. ·
NEACOLUMNIST
His boyhood he.ro was not Billy Sunday.
the most renowned evangelist of the 1'920s
,
and 30s ..BiDy Graham's idol was Babe Ruth, ·
Born Nov. 8, 1918, three days before the
who once shook Graham:s han'd and told the
lanky youngster he ·had the build to become a Wor)d War I armistice, William Franklin· Gra· good first baseman.
·
ham Jr. was the oldest of four children. The
· Later, when the high lcbool principal told family belonged to the Associated Reform
Graham he would make a goocl orator, the Presbyterian Church, but his parents were not
boy replied, "Thanks, but I'd rather make a particularly religious.
..
good first baseman." · ·
Then, in 1933, soon after Billy:J, fat~er ,lost
There are various .versions ofrhow good .a all his savings, in the bank crash, hi. was hit in
player Graham was. One of his biographers the head by a flying piece of wood from a
said, "Billy's keenness for baseball was not ~echani~al saw; the doctors saici he would
. match~d b): h~ skill. He ~ 111ade his high die.
,. · '
'
'school team." Some
said he was a terMrs. Graham summoned the mem~rs of
rific playe(, whijF others said he was go0d1in her Bible c~ to P!l~Y for her hu~i'~d's recovthe field but lousy at the plate. The stoqes .ery.. When . he d1d recover, Bt,lly s pa~nts
agree, however, tbat , baseball interfered with .' decaded they should· find mor:e t~m~ for B1ble
Graham's studi~. At '·one point, there was study and prayer. ~ut, whale , ~Illy Frank
so~ doubt ,Whedlet he would sbduate from ~t~nd~ chua'c~ dutofull~ a11d olleyed .'111 the
high school.
'
·
·
mJunc.!Jo~ agamsr.s".'okmg and sweann~, he
H'is mother wanted a "nice Christian col- was more mterested an baseball and havmg a
'lege' ' for Billy Frank; as he was called, and she good tirpe than .he '!V3S in religion,
picked Bob Jones ' College. Billy, however,
.H~ Yias a ladaes.' man.- taU, a go~ d~ss\vasn't happy With the school's.rigid discipli'!.~ ~r, wath blo~d, wavy ~~Jr. H~ ~re loud taes,
and 1eli after &lt;!De semester, when he u.ns- ~1ked the g~rls (~metames . he wo.uld have
(George R. Plage~z. ~ a col11mmst for Nnvspd-,
ferred to Aorid:l Bible Institu~. .I
, back-to-back dates. on the same mght) and PF' E11terprue AssOCI4ti011.)
·

G
R
eorge •
Pla
· genz , ,

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people

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T his type of situation produces what we
doc tors call the "fight-or-flil(ht" reacti on
'that involves an increased heart rate,
increased.breathin g, dilated pupils, sweaty
palms and nervousness.
, Your question su'ggests to me that you
are experiencing emotional stress in social
settings everi though your judgment tells
you that you should not be. We doctors
call this a "social phobia;" and these occur
. in various degrees of severity.
A surprisingly large number of individuals experience a social phobia about a
' specific activit)'. Speaking in public or
performing on stage are common exampies. Despite a mild phobia, most people
manage to perform their assigned task,
although they may fail to come off l&lt;?ok· ittg and sounding·as smooth as a politician
does. (That ·may not be a bad . thing,
depending upon your view of politicians!) An individual with a more intense
. .phobia may feel overwhelmed by the
mere possibility of someday' having to
speak in public. T his person may begin to

Question: Is there any type of medicine that I can take that will make me feel
relaxed and not shy, kind of like what a
'little bit of alcohol caq do?
Answer: Infants. go through a. normal
phase of development when they are
afraid of others.They cling to mom when
there are strangers present, but they soon
learn that most situatio!lS are not dangerous and can be ll)anaged more effectively
without such anxiety.
As adults; all of us experience some situations causing stress during interactions
with oihers. This is a totally natural and
desirable response. When that wide-eyed
aggressi';e looking individual comes
toward you, you want to be ready to flee
or fight ·-if the~e are no other options.

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•

tremble and experience sweaty palms at to-benefit ratio is much better for rhc pre. the very moment that the prospect of scriptio n product~. Even some non-pregiving a talk crosses his or her mind.
scription herbal preparations can be helpYou probably, have a mild social pbobia
1ince a "little bit" of alcohol is a sufficient- . ful. In additi on, counseling to learn to deal
ly strong' sedative to reduce your anxiety with the stressful situation in a more effcc"
level. Many people use alcohol for .this live way is also generally benefi cial.
. purpose. That is why it is often served at
I sug!'est that you talk to yo ur family
parties!There are some reasons why it isn't
doctor,· a psyc hologist or a psyc hiatrist
a perfect drug f&lt;?r dealing with you r social
phobia, however. The amount of .alcohol · about ,your social phobia. This will help
necessary to reduce anxiety is also enough . you clarify the nature of the pro ble.m an d
to cause impairment in judgment. Since make sure that it is riot just the 11101t
alcohol is readily available, and often in . notic eable symptom of a more signifi car; t
very pleasingly fl avored drinks, it is easy to
disorder. He or she can also help you learn
consume enough to impair judgment to
the point that you do some truly dumb to effectively interact in social situations
things. Driving drunk or "hitting on" the without the risks of impaired judgment.
boss' spouse are just two examples.
· "Family Medicine" is a wee kly column.
There are several pres~ ription medicmes To submit que'stions, write to John C.
that are effective at reducing social phoWolf, D.O., Ohio University College. of
bias, although none of them cure the
~
underlying condition . Each of them has Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor H~D ,'
some potential for causing undesirable Athens, Ohio 45701. Past .columns are
· effects, just like akohol does , but the risk- available online at www.fhradio.otg/fm.

SOCIETY . NEWS
Youltg named to dean's list
POMEROY - . Amy Patricia Young was placed on the Dean's List
at Ohio Unii!ersity for the fa)! quarter. Students on the Dean's List
achie~ a grade point average of3 .3 or better on a scale of at least 4.0,
and have achieved at least 16 quarter hour.; for credit.
She is a Psychology major, rhe daughter of Alan and Debbie Duvall
ofVincent and Eq and Malea Young of Michigan. She is the granddaughter ofJohn•aiid Roberta JetTer.; of Racine and the late Dick and
Patty Young of Pomeroy.

Sorority enjoys valentine workshop
POMEROY - .A valentine program and workshop was featured at
the recent meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sc'ircirity, held .at St, l'aul Lutheran chur:ch, Pomeroy.
Carol Jean Adams talked about St. Valentine, read a poem, "Old
Friends are the Best" and· then direqed the group in making valentines. . ·
.1
A get-weD card was sigoed for Reva Vaughan and a sympathy card
for Dorothy Sayre. ·
.The Ohio Convention was announced for May 19-21 to be held at
the King's Island Relort.The Gold and Silver award. ceremony for the
local group was announced for March 23 at the home ofJane'Brnwn .
Attending were Jane Walton, Clarice Krautter, Joan Corder, Velma
Rue, Carol Adams, Jane Brown, Vera Crow, Norma Custer, Carolyn
Grueser, Martha McPhaii,Jean Po\veD, Rose Sisson, Margaret Stewart,
·
·
and Eleanor Thomas.

.,:

(FIRST OF FOUR PARTS)

Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 18, 1861,Jeffenon Davis wos sworn in as pfe'ident of the
C:O,.federate States of America in Mon14!omery. Ala.
. On this date:
.
.
&lt; •
'
·· In 1516, Mary Tudor, the Queen of England popularly known as
"Bloody Mary," was born in Greenwich Palace. . ·· ..
In 1546, Martin Luther, leader.of the Protestant Reformation in
_9ermany, died.
•
/
In 1564, the artist Michelangelo.died in Rome.
· In 1885, MarkTwain's"Adventures ofHuddeberry Finn" was published in the United States.
. .
, In I ~30, the ninth planet of our solar ~tern, Pluto,~ discovered.
''' In 1960, the Eighth Winter Olympic Games were formaUy ope11ed
in Squaw VaDey, Calif. by Vice P~dent Nixon.
.
ln. 1970, the detendanll known as the Chicago Seven were found
J!lnocent of conspiring to incite ri~ at the 1':161! Democratic·Nationil Conven!K&gt;n.
·
In 1972, the CalifOrnia Sup~me Court Sli'Uck down the $tate's
~penalty.
.
.
.
.
.
0. .• :111 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, sitting atop a Boeing 747,
~Went. on its ,trjaiden "fliJ!tt~' a~ the Mojave Desert.
· . .
·
ln · 1988, An~y ,M. Kennedy was swo!'" mas the 104thjustlce of
~ I).S: Supreme Court.
.
·
·•
.
· Tqday's Birthdays: Songwriter-musician 'Pee Wee King is 86. Actor
Jac!c l&gt;llance is 79. Former Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown
II 78. ACIQr George Kennedy is 75. Senate Armed Services C 0 nunitlee ChairiiWl.John w.irner is,73.AuthorToni MOI'rison is 69: Movie
Mctor Milos Forman .I!' Man bn the: Moon") is 68. Singer Yo.ko Ono
il 67. Singer Irma Thomas is 59. Singer Herman Santiago_(Frankie ·
and the Teenagers) is 59. Singer Dennis De Young (Styx) is 53.
·~ Si~ Cusack is S2. l'nxlucer::director-writer John Hughes is
50. Atlrell CybiD Sliepherd is SO. Singer Juice Newton is 48. Singer
~~is 48. Rock muSician Robbie Bachman is 47. A~ ·
Jahnhola is 46. Game shOw host Vanna White is 43.
·'

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. PLAGENZ'S VIEW:

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left in the year.

NEW' ARRIVAL.
Mr. and Mrs.
J~mes Pauley of Mason announce
~ birth of their ·first child, a son, Isalah' James. Born at Holzer Medical
64i~ter on Januaiy 5, 2000, Isaiah
weighed se\oen pounds. five 0\.l'lCes, ·
and was 19 1/2 inches long. Maternal grandparents .are Garfield and
E~lana Pauley of Portland, Ohio.
·Great-grandparents are bayton and
.
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~ Raynes. Pam Keams and
t,ieadie Long. The mother Is the former Leslie BroOke Keams.

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'N

BY THE AaociA1ID PRm
· • TOday is Friday, Feb. 18, the 491:11 daY of 2000. There are 317 days

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tol's dreams w iUoffer the world moralleadef- ~
ship, backed up by whatever firepower it tak~
As a "champion of democracy and decenc~
it will act wherever these ideals are chaJ ~;
lenged, Kristol's vision Of America, in . fact, j
·beats a .remarkable resemblance to DeGaulle'J l
vision of France - a mighty nation, redolen! l
of grandeur. Conservative reservations about :
intervening in foreign disputes where no vital :
American interest is at stake will be dismissed :
as old-fashioned if not downright cowardly. ;
NEA COLUMNIST
Can a new ideology - . a new political j
movement - be cobbled together out of!
these rather amorphous materials?
·'
In any caSe, the sight of William Krista!
Do even Kristol 's principal colleagues anhe,
proclaiming the death of the conservative Weekly Standard agree with him on the sub-~
movement certainly looked, at first blush, like ject? It is at least suggestive that Kristol's obit-.
a classic case of a man sawing off the tree uary for the cons~rvative movement appeared,
branch on which he sits.
not as a lead editorial in his · magazine, but
But it i~ only reasonable to assume that over his personal by· lin.e on the op-ed page 'of
Kristol has some rational goal. in mind. And a the Washington Post.
study · of soni_e of the· themes that have
It is said that one ofVoltaire 's disciples once.
emerged in the Weekly Stanc:lard under his asked him, "I'd like to found . a new religion . .
editorship suggests what it may be. 'Kristol How should I go about it?" To which t~• ·
seems to be trying to fashion a new ideology, master replied, "It's very simple. Just get your; ·
which he hopes will ultimately. replace con- self crucified and then rise from the dead." '
sew•tism altogether.
.
Starting a new ideological movement may
Domestically, the new entrant looks rather not be quite that hard. But I think Bill Krisiof
more fondly on go~rnment than con~r­ will find that it takes a lot more effort than he
vatism is accustomed to doing. "Big govern- has yet invested in his project.
.
merit" may stiU be a no-no, but Kristol rejec~
Usually it requires the analytical contribu"the notion that the highest end of govern- tions of a generation or more of political ·
meni· is· to leave us alone." On the contrary, philosophers, working from various points on
"limited" government may still be actjyist a~d the periphery of a major p9litical problem , ;
"energetic," in the service of a "positive gov- in the case of conservatism, the Leviath!~
erning philosophy." It isn't altogether clear. state.
: . :.
what this muscular government will do, but
And when t~e job is done, it won't ~
-· unlike Gingrich, Armey and DeLay - it undone by a New Hampshire primary.. ..~:"
will assuredly . not merely "cut, devolve and
(William A . Rusher is a Distingr1uhed FelloutJ,
dismantle."
the C/aremotd lnstilllte for tl1t Str1dy of Stat~~ ·
Abroad, the .American government ofKris- mans/tip and Political Philosophy.)
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Reader should see
doctor about anxiety,
not self-medicate

)' ~

NH. primary won't undo US. conservatism

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·. FAMILY MEDICINE

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wment.

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Birth

Offidals should pursue scife,
iffordable housing in Valley

h

Ann maintains health position regarding cheating spouses

:••••.
,.,.

740 112·2151 • Fu: W2·2157

Cherletlt Hoeftlcll

The Daily Sentinel
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TURNS TWO Nathan
Bl;iin Redman, son of Ray and .
Mandy Redman, recendy cele.
b~~ted his second birthday· at the
home ot hls parents. A Big
'l{uckll.nloader theme was carrl~ d out with cake, ice cream and
~ ks served to guests . .
, Attending in addition to his
p&gt;rents were his sister, Macken~pc , Ron and Nancy . Russell;
RAy and Joyce R edman, Alice ·
Russell, Russell and Bernie
!}.push, Eulah R edman , Dorothy
L0ng, Lori Hatfield, Jamie Bailey,
Brenda, Claudette and Larissa
H~ggy, Sharon , Jerod, Jessica,
J ~ nna and Joshua Hupp, Ed and
Ta\an Roush, Cindy, Joey and
1 imothy Sands, Donna Arn old,
~~ron, Amy and Bryton Grate,
Z~c k Warth, Joyce, C hristy, Misti,
Trenton and Tyler 'Brewer, T im,
.J{J iSti and ]arret Durst, Debbie
ap,&lt;;!Jodi R oush and Jason !Orvin.
Those sending gifts were Lew
aljd Vicky Nazarewyci, Wally and
Allison H atfield, Bob . RpsseU ,
O? ug Sands, Brad and . Steve
Jlaggy, Ed , Jeremy and Jarni e
1-lupp, Mi!ce Brewer, Adam Taylor, Wes and Ryan Roush, and
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Ion

The Daily Sentinel

Vou

The Daily Sentinel

se~, SotJ, i,..'S

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PageA4.

(

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a f'~~1''S Jog

••

: Dear Ann Landers: I am glad' you

or she's not playing with a full deck. Who
DEAR MISSOURI MOM: Many er.lf you cross them low, you're a procrastiati'crsed your posil;ion about telling people
was it who said, "None are so blind as . overweight women who wear glasses have nator. (I'm a procrastinator, and my handJ.ben their spouses are cheating. You used
tho.e who do not wish to seen?
dates. Your beautiful, intelligent, compas- writing bears this out.) If you leave circular
t1: say MYOB, because you were conDear Ann Landers: My 22-year-old sionate, well-read daughter with the terrif- letters, like D, G and 0, open at the top,
~ced the cheated-:on spouse already
daughter is beautiful, intelligent, compas- ic sense o( humor has a different kind of you're honest -again true.
luleW and didn't want to be forced to do
sionate, well-read and has a terrific sense of problem. She's not aggressive enough, and .
Do' you believe in gr.;phology Ann? splnething about it. Well, I'm writing to
humor. She is also a bit overweight and probably doesn't know how to talk to JUST ASKIN IN BRENTWOOD,
teDyou, you were dead wrong. If even one
wears glasses. She has never had a date, men. The savvy female is aware that men CALIF.
per.;on had told me what was going on, I
much less a relationship with a man. She like to talk about themselves. She needs to
DEAR ASKIN': Not reaUy, but l don't
ADVICE
wpuld not be looking like a complete fool.
has overweight girlfriends who have had ask questions that will give men the wam to rain on anybody's parade. If people
· 1 Now·that everything is out in the open
dates, so she is convinced there must be opportUnity to do so.
want to believe in it, I see no harm.
-l--ah~d;;rw;·,,o~_families have been torn a('al1, it is whe.n they know a husband or a wife is something seriously-wrong-with her:-She
My ~dVice to women who fail to con- reeling pressured to have sexrAow
· how inany "friends" are.willing to bClng cheated on. They should teDthe vic- is desperately unhappy, and I don't know nect with 'men is this: Don't try to impress
informed are you? W rite for Ann ' Landers'
me about my husband's infidelity Had tim.That's what real friendship is all about. how to help her,
a
man.
Ask
him
questions
that
will
give
booklet "Sex and the Teenager." Send a
'lmC&gt;wn earlier, it would have -saV.d me - A VICTIM OF SILENCE
I have no idea why men do not flock to him the opportUnity to impress you. Be a self-addressed, long, business-si2r envelope
DEAR VICTIM: Sorry, I don't agree.
hou;s of self-doubt, · wondering
and a check or money order fot $3.75 (this
T~e
reason I reversed my position was her. I think she is the most wonderfi&gt;l per- good listener. It works. Trust me.
wh,ere I had failed.
son
iar
the
world.
I
have
told
her
that
my
Dear
Artn
Landers:
1
am
taking
a
asked myself your fa mous qu estion, because ofAIDS. An extramarital affair can mother did not marry ulltil she was 30, but course on "Graphology and What Your includes postage and handling) to:Teens c/o
Ann Landers, P. O. Box 11561, C hicago, !U.
'~lould I be better off with him, or with- now be a matter of life and death. I still
that
doesn't
make
her
feel
any
better.
Can
Handwriting
Tells
About
You."
My
texthim," and have decided I am better off belieye the female antenna is extremely you 'think of something 1 could say or do books say if your 'handwriting sl;mts to the 6061 1..0562. (In Canada; send $4.55) To
find out more about Ann· Landers and read
'filthoul hin1. Meanwhile, please teD your sensitive. The woman who claims she did- that would help? - CON CERNED left, you aic generous. (True in my case.) If
her past columns, Visit the Creators Syndi¢aclers again that people should speak up n't have a ~lue is either in a state of deni al, 'MO M IN MISSOURI
you cross your T's high up, y9u're a dream- . cate web page at W\V\V.creators.c;om.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Get•ll llllllllgef

Ann
Landers

Oltlne Hill
Controller

OUR VIEW:

Gimme
shelter
M
' ,

onday's discussion by Meigs commissioners regarding
one of the countys public housing complexes brings
to light an important issue: the continued need for
safe and affordable housing - not only for those deemed lowand moderate-income families - but for aU residents.
Facilities constructed using federal doUars (mostly built in the
·
1970s ~nd. 1980s using HUD · and
~
FmHA funding sources) were a boon to
poorer families in need of dean and safe
homes.

enctmrage
,m 1s, both
o.JJ.cia
p11blic and
•
pru~ate' to
support pro•
•
h t 'II
JCCtS t a Wt
build and
tnaintain
. affordable .

However; they have become, in many
instances, little more than cash cows for
companies ii-I the very specialized busi~
ness of buying apartment complexes,
spending as little as possible on repair
and maintenance, .and then reseUing
them when the cpst of making absolute- ly necessary repairs cuts too deeply into
the profit margin.
Residents in public housingcomplexes regularly complain of broken cabiOUStttg
netry, plumbing problems, and serious
infestations of roaches and other unsanitary pests. While sopte problems, .a dmit'
·
tedly, are the direct result of poor
hygiene and Jow living standards on the
)
tenant's behalf, others are the direct
. result of poor .management by those receiving federal tax doUars
.fOr low-income rents.
·
·
·
·
HOIII'e\'er, those on the lowest rungs of the local economic
ladder are not the only ones faced with a shortage of decent and
affordable shelter. ·
. In our conutluJ'li.ty, entry-level professional couples, young
singles and older retirees on aU economic levels often find the
sean:h lOr affOrdable, safe and attractive rental properties to caU
home ~ling.
·
·· ·
.
. , We c;ncourage officials, both public and private, to support
i'Jojett:l that wiU build and maintain affordable housing throughout the Ohio Valley.
·
··, Housing is a major consideration in terms of economic devel- .
it is a major factor in the health and happiness of our
,hildml; and it should be seen as a priority in every communi-

•

throughout
. ·tJee Ohio
Valley.

....
··~
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RUSHER'S VIEW:
.,

'

Several years ago WiUiam Kristol, son of
the magisterial Irving and the redoubtable
· Gertrude Himmelfarb, persuaded Rupert
Murdoch to bankroll a new weekly conservative publication of which young William
would be the editor and publishe.r.
Thus was born the Weekly Standard, which
has been published in Washington ever since.
Its circulation is nothing to brag about, being
roughly a quarter of that of National Review,
the longtime fortnightly standard-bearer of
the conservative movement. But the Weekly
Standard is must reading for political junkies
inside the Beltway, and it has served as 'a splendid platform for Kristol, who has become one
of the premier Washington spokesmen of the
conservative movement, in wide demand on
television talk shows:
It was, therefore, no small thing when Kristol, in the course of an op ~ed piece published
in the Washington ·Post' early this month 1 .
delivered jlj~f o( th.e following thund.erous
conclusion: 'I::eadeilef(. rudderless and assueless, the conservative movement, which
accomplished great things over the past quar.
·
·
ter-century, is finished." ·
· The precipitating event was John McCain's
victory over Geqrge Bush in the New Hampshire primary. Kristol noted that "The three
movement conservatives left in the Republican race" (meaning Bauer, Keyes and Forbes)
"received a grand total of about 20 percent of
the votes;' and conclud~d that· this pathetic
showing represented the current strength of
the movement. Precisely why the passionately
reiterated conservatism of both of the frontrunners, McCain and George W. Bush, didn't
count in the assessment, Krista! didn't explain.
They 'may not be "movement conservatives;'
but both men are solid conservatives by any
reasonable test. •

William A.

Rusher

•'

Tracing the evolution ofthe Rev. Billy Graham
I

TODAY IN HISTORY

I

(1

tnn&lt;m

:r

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Birthday
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.&lt;,

.:,
. ·,.
•••
..••••'
..,
' ' ll

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drove fast cars.
.•
A cousin of Billy's remembers that t~
future evangelist was "rowdy and misch~~
vous" as a boy. On one occasion, Billy felt ~
sting of his father's belt for chewing tobaccOj
out by the barn on' the family farm in Charlotte, N.C,
When he would borrow his father's car, this;
cousin says, he would drive ·it is as fast as i{; .
wouJd go. turn curves on two w hee 1san drace : ·
other boys on the country roads.
· •·.
Pr:obably no one who 'knew him in those'
days would have predicted that Graha~•
. would become one of the best-known · and'
' admired figures of 20th- century · American
life, a close friend of several presidents and,leader of one of the greatest evangelical awak•~
enings of the century.
. ·
· ~:
Then, when he was 16, Graham had a con~ ·
version experience. The popular . Southern:
evangelist Mordecai Ham held a (ol!r-weeJr
revival in Charlotte in 1934, and Billy·attend~
. ed. ·
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, After the nightly sermon, Ham would urge;
his audience members to come forward att~.
confess ,their sins: "This might be your last:
chance," he would say - something Grahanj ' .
re~inded his ow~ a~dience of when he~
became an evan~hst.
·
.
, .
. Bolly Frank, ~ath ~me urgmg f"?m one·of
the workers at ~~e revaval, wa,l~e~.to the fronr·
of the tent and ~cepted Chr~st.
,
It Was .a ~e~~mgfu1 expenence for Gra•;·
ham, but ot didn t shake has desore tu become ,
a basebaU playe.r. ~t would be a few. years .~t~
before Graha~s hfe reached a tu~mng poant, :
when he feU m love f?.r th'e first. lime.
,

With the arrival of the new millennium,
Billy Graham's reputation . as the world's pre···
eminent evangelist. now ·span.s two ·centuries,
.''
His battle with Parkinson's disease lias slowed ·
him down a bit, but, at 81, he refuses to· set a
date for his retirement.
:
Renowned as Graham is, many of his folIowen are unfamiliar with the beginnings of
his life and ministry. In a four-part series, start- · ·
•·
ing today, George R . Plagenz introdu~es us to
BiDyGraharn:The Early Yean. ·
NEACOLUMNIST
His boyhood he.ro was not Billy Sunday.
the most renowned evangelist of the 1'920s
,
and 30s ..BiDy Graham's idol was Babe Ruth, ·
Born Nov. 8, 1918, three days before the
who once shook Graham:s han'd and told the
lanky youngster he ·had the build to become a Wor)d War I armistice, William Franklin· Gra· good first baseman.
·
ham Jr. was the oldest of four children. The
· Later, when the high lcbool principal told family belonged to the Associated Reform
Graham he would make a goocl orator, the Presbyterian Church, but his parents were not
boy replied, "Thanks, but I'd rather make a particularly religious.
..
good first baseman." · ·
Then, in 1933, soon after Billy:J, fat~er ,lost
There are various .versions ofrhow good .a all his savings, in the bank crash, hi. was hit in
player Graham was. One of his biographers the head by a flying piece of wood from a
said, "Billy's keenness for baseball was not ~echani~al saw; the doctors saici he would
. match~d b): h~ skill. He ~ 111ade his high die.
,. · '
'
'school team." Some
said he was a terMrs. Graham summoned the mem~rs of
rific playe(, whijF others said he was go0d1in her Bible c~ to P!l~Y for her hu~i'~d's recovthe field but lousy at the plate. The stoqes .ery.. When . he d1d recover, Bt,lly s pa~nts
agree, however, tbat , baseball interfered with .' decaded they should· find mor:e t~m~ for B1ble
Graham's studi~. At '·one point, there was study and prayer. ~ut, whale , ~Illy Frank
so~ doubt ,Whedlet he would sbduate from ~t~nd~ chua'c~ dutofull~ a11d olleyed .'111 the
high school.
'
·
·
mJunc.!Jo~ agamsr.s".'okmg and sweann~, he
H'is mother wanted a "nice Christian col- was more mterested an baseball and havmg a
'lege' ' for Billy Frank; as he was called, and she good tirpe than .he '!V3S in religion,
picked Bob Jones ' College. Billy, however,
.H~ Yias a ladaes.' man.- taU, a go~ d~ss\vasn't happy With the school's.rigid discipli'!.~ ~r, wath blo~d, wavy ~~Jr. H~ ~re loud taes,
and 1eli after &lt;!De semester, when he u.ns- ~1ked the g~rls (~metames . he wo.uld have
(George R. Plage~z. ~ a col11mmst for Nnvspd-,
ferred to Aorid:l Bible Institu~. .I
, back-to-back dates. on the same mght) and PF' E11terprue AssOCI4ti011.)
·

G
R
eorge •
Pla
· genz , ,

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people

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T his type of situation produces what we
doc tors call the "fight-or-flil(ht" reacti on
'that involves an increased heart rate,
increased.breathin g, dilated pupils, sweaty
palms and nervousness.
, Your question su'ggests to me that you
are experiencing emotional stress in social
settings everi though your judgment tells
you that you should not be. We doctors
call this a "social phobia;" and these occur
. in various degrees of severity.
A surprisingly large number of individuals experience a social phobia about a
' specific activit)'. Speaking in public or
performing on stage are common exampies. Despite a mild phobia, most people
manage to perform their assigned task,
although they may fail to come off l&lt;?ok· ittg and sounding·as smooth as a politician
does. (That ·may not be a bad . thing,
depending upon your view of politicians!) An individual with a more intense
. .phobia may feel overwhelmed by the
mere possibility of someday' having to
speak in public. T his person may begin to

Question: Is there any type of medicine that I can take that will make me feel
relaxed and not shy, kind of like what a
'little bit of alcohol caq do?
Answer: Infants. go through a. normal
phase of development when they are
afraid of others.They cling to mom when
there are strangers present, but they soon
learn that most situatio!lS are not dangerous and can be ll)anaged more effectively
without such anxiety.
As adults; all of us experience some situations causing stress during interactions
with oihers. This is a totally natural and
desirable response. When that wide-eyed
aggressi';e looking individual comes
toward you, you want to be ready to flee
or fight ·-if the~e are no other options.

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•

tremble and experience sweaty palms at to-benefit ratio is much better for rhc pre. the very moment that the prospect of scriptio n product~. Even some non-pregiving a talk crosses his or her mind.
scription herbal preparations can be helpYou probably, have a mild social pbobia
1ince a "little bit" of alcohol is a sufficient- . ful. In additi on, counseling to learn to deal
ly strong' sedative to reduce your anxiety with the stressful situation in a more effcc"
level. Many people use alcohol for .this live way is also generally benefi cial.
. purpose. That is why it is often served at
I sug!'est that you talk to yo ur family
parties!There are some reasons why it isn't
doctor,· a psyc hologist or a psyc hiatrist
a perfect drug f&lt;?r dealing with you r social
phobia, however. The amount of .alcohol · about ,your social phobia. This will help
necessary to reduce anxiety is also enough . you clarify the nature of the pro ble.m an d
to cause impairment in judgment. Since make sure that it is riot just the 11101t
alcohol is readily available, and often in . notic eable symptom of a more signifi car; t
very pleasingly fl avored drinks, it is easy to
disorder. He or she can also help you learn
consume enough to impair judgment to
the point that you do some truly dumb to effectively interact in social situations
things. Driving drunk or "hitting on" the without the risks of impaired judgment.
boss' spouse are just two examples.
· "Family Medicine" is a wee kly column.
There are several pres~ ription medicmes To submit que'stions, write to John C.
that are effective at reducing social phoWolf, D.O., Ohio University College. of
bias, although none of them cure the
~
underlying condition . Each of them has Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor H~D ,'
some potential for causing undesirable Athens, Ohio 45701. Past .columns are
· effects, just like akohol does , but the risk- available online at www.fhradio.otg/fm.

SOCIETY . NEWS
Youltg named to dean's list
POMEROY - . Amy Patricia Young was placed on the Dean's List
at Ohio Unii!ersity for the fa)! quarter. Students on the Dean's List
achie~ a grade point average of3 .3 or better on a scale of at least 4.0,
and have achieved at least 16 quarter hour.; for credit.
She is a Psychology major, rhe daughter of Alan and Debbie Duvall
ofVincent and Eq and Malea Young of Michigan. She is the granddaughter ofJohn•aiid Roberta JetTer.; of Racine and the late Dick and
Patty Young of Pomeroy.

Sorority enjoys valentine workshop
POMEROY - .A valentine program and workshop was featured at
the recent meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sc'ircirity, held .at St, l'aul Lutheran chur:ch, Pomeroy.
Carol Jean Adams talked about St. Valentine, read a poem, "Old
Friends are the Best" and· then direqed the group in making valentines. . ·
.1
A get-weD card was sigoed for Reva Vaughan and a sympathy card
for Dorothy Sayre. ·
.The Ohio Convention was announced for May 19-21 to be held at
the King's Island Relort.The Gold and Silver award. ceremony for the
local group was announced for March 23 at the home ofJane'Brnwn .
Attending were Jane Walton, Clarice Krautter, Joan Corder, Velma
Rue, Carol Adams, Jane Brown, Vera Crow, Norma Custer, Carolyn
Grueser, Martha McPhaii,Jean Po\veD, Rose Sisson, Margaret Stewart,
·
·
and Eleanor Thomas.

.,:

(FIRST OF FOUR PARTS)

Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 18, 1861,Jeffenon Davis wos sworn in as pfe'ident of the
C:O,.federate States of America in Mon14!omery. Ala.
. On this date:
.
.
&lt; •
'
·· In 1516, Mary Tudor, the Queen of England popularly known as
"Bloody Mary," was born in Greenwich Palace. . ·· ..
In 1546, Martin Luther, leader.of the Protestant Reformation in
_9ermany, died.
•
/
In 1564, the artist Michelangelo.died in Rome.
· In 1885, MarkTwain's"Adventures ofHuddeberry Finn" was published in the United States.
. .
, In I ~30, the ninth planet of our solar ~tern, Pluto,~ discovered.
''' In 1960, the Eighth Winter Olympic Games were formaUy ope11ed
in Squaw VaDey, Calif. by Vice P~dent Nixon.
.
ln. 1970, the detendanll known as the Chicago Seven were found
J!lnocent of conspiring to incite ri~ at the 1':161! Democratic·Nationil Conven!K&gt;n.
·
In 1972, the CalifOrnia Sup~me Court Sli'Uck down the $tate's
~penalty.
.
.
.
.
.
0. .• :111 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, sitting atop a Boeing 747,
~Went. on its ,trjaiden "fliJ!tt~' a~ the Mojave Desert.
· . .
·
ln · 1988, An~y ,M. Kennedy was swo!'" mas the 104thjustlce of
~ I).S: Supreme Court.
.
·
·•
.
· Tqday's Birthdays: Songwriter-musician 'Pee Wee King is 86. Actor
Jac!c l&gt;llance is 79. Former Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown
II 78. ACIQr George Kennedy is 75. Senate Armed Services C 0 nunitlee ChairiiWl.John w.irner is,73.AuthorToni MOI'rison is 69: Movie
Mctor Milos Forman .I!' Man bn the: Moon") is 68. Singer Yo.ko Ono
il 67. Singer Irma Thomas is 59. Singer Herman Santiago_(Frankie ·
and the Teenagers) is 59. Singer Dennis De Young (Styx) is 53.
·~ Si~ Cusack is S2. l'nxlucer::director-writer John Hughes is
50. Atlrell CybiD Sliepherd is SO. Singer Juice Newton is 48. Singer
~~is 48. Rock muSician Robbie Bachman is 47. A~ ·
Jahnhola is 46. Game shOw host Vanna White is 43.
·'

\

. ,II

. PLAGENZ'S VIEW:

'

left in the year.

NEW' ARRIVAL.
Mr. and Mrs.
J~mes Pauley of Mason announce
~ birth of their ·first child, a son, Isalah' James. Born at Holzer Medical
64i~ter on Januaiy 5, 2000, Isaiah
weighed se\oen pounds. five 0\.l'lCes, ·
and was 19 1/2 inches long. Maternal grandparents .are Garfield and
E~lana Pauley of Portland, Ohio.
·Great-grandparents are bayton and
.
'
.
'
~ Raynes. Pam Keams and
t,ieadie Long. The mother Is the former Leslie BroOke Keams.

·I' '
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'N

BY THE AaociA1ID PRm
· • TOday is Friday, Feb. 18, the 491:11 daY of 2000. There are 317 days

~..,

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tol's dreams w iUoffer the world moralleadef- ~
ship, backed up by whatever firepower it tak~
As a "champion of democracy and decenc~
it will act wherever these ideals are chaJ ~;
lenged, Kristol's vision Of America, in . fact, j
·beats a .remarkable resemblance to DeGaulle'J l
vision of France - a mighty nation, redolen! l
of grandeur. Conservative reservations about :
intervening in foreign disputes where no vital :
American interest is at stake will be dismissed :
as old-fashioned if not downright cowardly. ;
NEA COLUMNIST
Can a new ideology - . a new political j
movement - be cobbled together out of!
these rather amorphous materials?
·'
In any caSe, the sight of William Krista!
Do even Kristol 's principal colleagues anhe,
proclaiming the death of the conservative Weekly Standard agree with him on the sub-~
movement certainly looked, at first blush, like ject? It is at least suggestive that Kristol's obit-.
a classic case of a man sawing off the tree uary for the cons~rvative movement appeared,
branch on which he sits.
not as a lead editorial in his · magazine, but
But it i~ only reasonable to assume that over his personal by· lin.e on the op-ed page 'of
Kristol has some rational goal. in mind. And a the Washington Post.
study · of soni_e of the· themes that have
It is said that one ofVoltaire 's disciples once.
emerged in the Weekly Stanc:lard under his asked him, "I'd like to found . a new religion . .
editorship suggests what it may be. 'Kristol How should I go about it?" To which t~• ·
seems to be trying to fashion a new ideology, master replied, "It's very simple. Just get your; ·
which he hopes will ultimately. replace con- self crucified and then rise from the dead." '
sew•tism altogether.
.
Starting a new ideological movement may
Domestically, the new entrant looks rather not be quite that hard. But I think Bill Krisiof
more fondly on go~rnment than con~r­ will find that it takes a lot more effort than he
vatism is accustomed to doing. "Big govern- has yet invested in his project.
.
merit" may stiU be a no-no, but Kristol rejec~
Usually it requires the analytical contribu"the notion that the highest end of govern- tions of a generation or more of political ·
meni· is· to leave us alone." On the contrary, philosophers, working from various points on
"limited" government may still be actjyist a~d the periphery of a major p9litical problem , ;
"energetic," in the service of a "positive gov- in the case of conservatism, the Leviath!~
erning philosophy." It isn't altogether clear. state.
: . :.
what this muscular government will do, but
And when t~e job is done, it won't ~
-· unlike Gingrich, Armey and DeLay - it undone by a New Hampshire primary.. ..~:"
will assuredly . not merely "cut, devolve and
(William A . Rusher is a Distingr1uhed FelloutJ,
dismantle."
the C/aremotd lnstilllte for tl1t Str1dy of Stat~~ ·
Abroad, the .American government ofKris- mans/tip and Political Philosophy.)
::~
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ty.

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Reader should see
doctor about anxiety,
not self-medicate

)' ~

NH. primary won't undo US. conservatism

.

·. FAMILY MEDICINE

..

wment.

r•

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Birth

Offidals should pursue scife,
iffordable housing in Valley

h

Ann maintains health position regarding cheating spouses

:••••.
,.,.

740 112·2151 • Fu: W2·2157

Cherletlt Hoeftlcll

The Daily Sentinel
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TURNS TWO Nathan
Bl;iin Redman, son of Ray and .
Mandy Redman, recendy cele.
b~~ted his second birthday· at the
home ot hls parents. A Big
'l{uckll.nloader theme was carrl~ d out with cake, ice cream and
~ ks served to guests . .
, Attending in addition to his
p&gt;rents were his sister, Macken~pc , Ron and Nancy . Russell;
RAy and Joyce R edman, Alice ·
Russell, Russell and Bernie
!}.push, Eulah R edman , Dorothy
L0ng, Lori Hatfield, Jamie Bailey,
Brenda, Claudette and Larissa
H~ggy, Sharon , Jerod, Jessica,
J ~ nna and Joshua Hupp, Ed and
Ta\an Roush, Cindy, Joey and
1 imothy Sands, Donna Arn old,
~~ron, Amy and Bryton Grate,
Z~c k Warth, Joyce, C hristy, Misti,
Trenton and Tyler 'Brewer, T im,
.J{J iSti and ]arret Durst, Debbie
ap,&lt;;!Jodi R oush and Jason !Orvin.
Those sending gifts were Lew
aljd Vicky Nazarewyci, Wally and
Allison H atfield, Bob . RpsseU ,
O? ug Sands, Brad and . Steve
Jlaggy, Ed , Jeremy and Jarni e
1-lupp, Mi!ce Brewer, Adam Taylor, Wes and Ryan Roush, and
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Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Frkl8y, February 11, 2000

Inside:

URG baseball ptwiew, Page B2
.No. 1 UC wins again, Page B6
Scoreboard, Page B6
Po...,..y W~e Chordt orCbrbt
33226 Chililren's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II o.m.
Worship - IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Apostolic
Churtb or Jesus Chrisl AllcKlolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: Jumes Miller
Sund1y School- IO:lO a.m.
EYcning - 7:30 p.m.

Sib and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minis1cr: Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services .~ p.m.

Mnranatha Baptist Church
13urlingham · 742·7606 '
Pas!Or: John Swanson
Sunday School* 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
Eve ning Service ·6:00p.m.
\Vednc'id:Jy Service - 7:30p.m.

Zion Chun:h or Cbtiol

PIDe Gron IUble Hollaeu Churclt
112 mi le off Rl. 325
- ~Wor: Rev-:-D"'Ikl~Manlcy ........,.... Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor:ship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sef\!ice · 7:30p.m.

..
-

Rullud

Salem c..wr
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:1!5 a.m.

P~tor:

~

Racine First Baptisl
· P;1stor: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor.~ hip · 10:40 11.m .. 7:()() p.m.
Wcdriesliay Services· 7:00 p .m.

Lan~svllle Chrtstion

Silver Run Baptist
P.:tStor: Steven K; tittle
Sullday School · lOa.m.
Wor~hip- J I a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedrresdoy Services~ 7:00p.m.
Mt. Union. Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School ~9:45 a.m.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m,

Putor: Philip Sturm
Sundliy School: 9:30a.m.
. Won~hip Service; 10:30 a.m.
· ·Dible Study, Wednesday, ~:30 p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist ChuNii
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pll.Stor : Daniel Mc1.~a
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship· )1]:30 a.n1.
Wedne~ay Bible Study • 6J00 p.m.

Old Beohel Fr.. Will Boptlst Church
· "

"'

. Pastor: Rev. Janles R. Acree, Sr.
Sunda~ School·lO a.m.
Worshtp • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne5day Services ·7 p.m.

\ 'lctory Baptist lndependant
523 N. 2nd So. Middlcpo"
Pa9t0r: James E. Keesee
Worship· lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servkes- 7 p.m.

· Off 124 behind

II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • '7 p.m.
Worship ~

Forest ~un Baptist

Church of God

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mai n S1., Middleport
Pas1or: Rev. Gil bcrl Craig, Jr.
Su!J{lfly Sc hool ·9:30 a.m.
WOrship · !0:45a.m.
Anliquil)' Baptist
Stmllay School· 9:30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:45 o.m.
Stlllday Eveni ng· 6:00p.m.
f{ulhmd f'rl!e Will Baptist
Salem St.
!'astor: Rev. Pa!]l Taylor
Su111.l:ty School · 10 u.rn.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wc-Uncsd;•y Services· 7 p.m.

Northeast O~ter
Alfred
Paslor: Shuron Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - ·11 a.m.o6:30 p.m.
.

,

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship· 9 a.m.
.Sunday SchQOI • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m'Y 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

SyraCWIC Flm Church ol GOO
Apple and Second St&amp;.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Raf!dolph
. Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Catholic

Sac:red lltan CatholiC' Church
ll1l Mu lberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-ssqg
I'&lt;~Slllr: Re v. Wulter E. Heinz
Sa1. O:&gt;n: 4:45-5: l5~.m.; ~ass~ 5:30 p.'m,
Sun. Con. · 8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m.
Dailey Milss - 8:30 a.m.
•.

LOngBollotD
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Church oiGod of Prophecy

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

O.J. Wh ite Rd. off St'. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunduy School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Reedsville

'Worship· 9:30a.m.

.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
. UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
·
First Sunday of·Month-7:30p.m. service

Congregat io nal

Tappen Plains Sl. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beatlie

Trinity Cbun:b
. Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Sunday sch~ aed wonlllp 10:25

Sunday SchOOl- 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

EplSCOp:ll
Groce Epl..,pal Church
· 326 E. Main St, Pomeroy
Rev. JameS Bemac:ki, .Rcv. Karharln Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Euc:harisl and
Sund~y

·

Cealral CluSter
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship. II a.m.
Wc:dne5day Services-7:30p.m.

Schoolll :00 a.m.

www.fro&amp;net.net/-deanery

Pastor: Kc1th Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.

Flallroods
Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship . ll a.m.

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Olliotl T.....,_ Cborch
.
Clifton, .w.va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Scrv~ • 1 p.m.

, .

N&lt;tZ iHCfl C

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Middleport Cburdt ot lbe N Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship~ '10:30 a.m., 6:30 ·p.m.

Wednesday Servicel • 7 p.m.

Pu1or. Allen Mldcap......
ReedavUie Fellowlhlp
Churth orthe Nazan1e
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor&lt;hip - 10:45 a.m .. 1 p.m.
Wed~csday Services • 7 p ~m.

God'• Te•ple of Pralle

Pomteoy Churdl ollbe Naanao
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Orimm.Jr:
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesd~y SeiVices • 7 p.m.

Chesler Churdl Of the NIDnae
Pas10r: Rev. Herben OI'IIC
Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea- 1 p.m.
Rulland Church of liM Nuareae
Pastor: Rev. 'Samuel W. Buye

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
. Wednelday Sc:rvice1 • 7 p.m.

P0111ud Flnl Clourdl of die N o -

Pasaor: Mart Mataon

Sunday School-10:30 a.m.
Momiq Wonhlp ·li:IS a.m.
Sunday S.rvioe .' 6 p.m.
Wedne!ldaJ Services- 7 p.m.,

-,..
~

·Putor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evenina ~ 1 p.m.
Wedncday strvioe - 7 p.m.

ol'l

•
'

•

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":~

Hermon Ualled Bntllrell
Ia Cllrbt C~urch
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sand~rs

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

..

..&lt;',

. ...... GoopeiJJablbo•
33045 Hllond Road, Pomeroy
·

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenlna 7:30p.m.
Tu-y ATbo-y • 7:30p.m.

•

'

·.=

. Wbl4'i ~ Wealeflll
,

PasoorcRev, Phillip Ridenour
Sunday SChool - 9:30a.m.

Wo(Shlp • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday S.rvico ·1 p.m.

Worship ~ 9 a.m.

ATTEND THE ..CHURCH OF VO.UR .CH.OIC.
E·
_
.

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·-

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......

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-- -~-..:...

.Crow'• Family Reataurant
'FIIflrilg Kentuclcy Fried Chlclctn"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

"We accept P......, 7fcnufitr•"

·112•1200
Regan&amp;uw,l
174

,,

ll

I

•

FIRE &amp; .8 ,\FETV
~l.la &amp; SERVICE
112-7071

,..lp, ,... 82 .

PI••• -

DIVIalon II Sactlonlll
1 Thurldly'a ...utta .
· atRioOranda
1

~~ ~~::l'~&gt;"'!l'}tPI"""'

'lf

BY DICK BRINSTER

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP)Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis,
speaking publicly for the first
.time since charged with murder
Jan. 31, said he was innocent and
expressed sympathy for the victims' families.
· He rel'frned to Maryland from
Adanta; where he wa5 charged
with killing two men after a
Super Bowl party and released
Tuesday on $1 million bond. ·
The bond requires Lewis to
stay in Maryland unless he is traveling to Georgia for court
appearances or meeting with
lawyers.
'

.

Searching for
·local church?
Check the Sentinel

every Friclay/

,

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to tum pi'Q
'

:MINNEAPOLIS (All)
Minnesota coach Dan• Monson
said he bact not spoken with sus.p ended ., center Joel l'rzybilla,
I(Vhose parents said he plans to .
turn pro rather than return to the
Golden Gop hen' basketball team.
. ,Monson said the 1-foot l'r~y~
billa hadn't attended Classes since ·
suspended indefinitely Tuesday·
for what the first-year coach
o;haracterized as lack of commit~
mlmt to academics.
.
. .
,.

RIO GRANDE ·:.,. The Rio
Grande Redmen bask~iball team
is not only leading the American
Mideast Conference and the
NAIA in three-point shooting.
but the entire men's college basketbaD world,
As of Feb. 15, Rio Grande was
shooting .464 (234-of-504) from
three-poinl land. Lipscomb University of Nashville, Tenn., trails
the Redmen in NAIA Division I
. by 27 percentage points (.437)_
. Eckerd College, an NCAA
Division II school, out of St.
Petersburg, Fla., is the closest in
. percentage to Rio Grande's mark.
Eckerd was shooting at a .447 dip
as of Feb. 14.
Colorado State is the NCAA
Division I leader at .427, and
Emerson · College, of Boston,
Mass., is the NCAA Division Ill
leader at .429. The University. of
Maine-Fort Kent ·is the NAIA
Division II leader in three-point
·percentage at .435.
One of the main reasons for
Rio Grande's success is the con-:
sistency of senior guard/forward"
Jeremy May. May, a former Ohio
State walk-on, is third in N AlA
Division I in three-point percentage (.502) through 23 games. He
. ha5 canned 70·of. 134 attempts.
Junior guard .Scott Davis occupies the I Oth spot in the nation in
three-point percentage (.476).
Davis has made 70-of-147 shots
from deep.
Another reason is 'eruor center·
. Desroy Grant.
"So many people .have come'.
with the game plan tq take him'
(Grant) away,'' · Coach Earl
Thomas said. "Desi's just done a
great job kicking the .ball out to
our shooters."
Grant himself. is. making noise ·
on the. national leveL The 6-7
· Kingston, Jamaica, native is sixth
in field-goal percentage ~t the
NAIA Division I level.
Thomas said the inside-out
game has bc;en the key.·
"The best three in the world is
one that comes from the inside-.
out.': Thomas .. said. "When we'•ve
got (Scott) Davis and Oeremy)
May and (Nathan) Copas ond
Chris Beard and Joey. James and
some of those guys spotted up
and you give them a good insideout pass, that's an awfully good
percentage shot for them."

Amber Vining of Meigs (20) goes hi&amp;h for a shot against River valley's Cynthia Ward
during the Marauders' 5945 sectional win last night at Rio .Grande. (Dave Harris photo)

driv~(~:, upset with

Melga 59, River Valley.45 .
waverly
54 ·,.·"111·..........._··45'.'
I•
..... '. ~ .. ~R J
,_.

Lewis touts ln.-.ce

BY MARK WIWAMI
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

, HIGH FLYER -

. ,,,, .
IC

S11sp•Jied ~er

. tpsa[m n9:IJJ
!francis FLORIST
Order my sttps in thy~wiJrJ:
MeiB• Counly~ ow.., FL&gt;~u•
4'•
a,nJ ftt not any intttuitu
- flllt
IIIII p
.., -, fiaue
740-992-2844
dom
, .inion 1:'nue:&lt;
, .r_:m::.:e._
- -~~~7=40-~99=2~-629:.!::8~~~
"'' u•.s.• Y- ·r...,.... ~
FUNEIW.IIOIIII

at Luoaavllle Vllley .

1 Leesb~g Fairfield v. 8 Western,
·1:oo
'
2 WhHe Oak v. 7 Portsmouth Clay,

. . LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tiger
Woods shot a 3-under-par 68 that
left him within four shots of J.P.
Hayes' Nissan Open lead.
Hayes, whose only tour victory
came in the t 998 Buick Classic,
began 'with an eagle 3 on &gt;the first
· h!lle, then birdied No.2 to jumpst:lrt his round of 64:.
Robin Freeman was one shot
back at 65. His brother, Jeff freeman, a club p'ro; was another,shot
behind in a group at .66 with ·
Mark Brooks, Neal Lancaster and
BobTway. .
Nick Price, making his first
U.S. start of the year, fired a 67.
Defending champion Ernie Els.
WQS at 69, David Duval and John
D'aly at 70..

.

Sunday School- 10 o.m.

.

atAIIXMider

1 .oak Hill v. 8 Symmes valley, 1:oo
2.Waterford v, 7 Eastern, 2:45

~ .SPORTS WRITER

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' ci.\w !=hie&amp; and drivers will do the best they

tan."
·
DAYTOf':lA olJ.EACH, Fla. (AI') -W~th a . Earnh~rdt figures they already are.' And
retord 33 VJcto~t~s at Daytona lnternat•~n- that certainly wasn't good enough when the
a! Speedway, D,ale E~tnhardt has h~d · httle F,ords of qualifying race winners BiD Elliott
reason t~ cornplam about racmg . at and Ricky Rudd,SOO polesitter Dale Jarrett
NAS~AR s most famous track.
.
and Rusty Wallace proved far superior to
Hes got . on~,~, no~. Earnhardt ts upset the Chevys and l'ontiacs.
about the aerod~am1c rules for the DayEarnhardt criticized NASCAR's new
to~a 5'?&lt;J ~n S~rj~y -. ve~y upset.
· .. shock-absorber rule, which requires all of
They JU.st k1~e~ the rac1~g at '?aytona,_·, the Winston Cup teams to use the same
the seven-tame set,Jes champ1on sa1d T~urs- shocks and springs and allows only minor
day after he ~d the other Che~rolet dr.•vers adjustments.
·
were humbled qy th~ Fords m a · patr of . "They took racing out of the hands cif the
qualifying races. ';'- ,
drivers and crew chiefS," said Earnhardt,
~ut NASCAR,,won t budge, so the race who for the first time in 1 I years failed · to
wtU ~ on Sundax with Fords expected to win a qualifying race. "We can't adjust and
dommate.
. . '
make our cars drive like ~ want."
. ."We'~ not gojlig ~o chan~ anything,"
But Gary Nelson, once atop crew chief
sald M1ke Helton·, v1ce preSJdent for · the and now ·Winston Cup series director, says
sanctioning body.;~l ge! the feeling.that run- that's not so.
1 ning 500 iniles for.·a $9.3 million pune, the
•

new rules
.

"There might be 1,000 adjustments that
wiD affect handling;· he .said." If we change
the target and. move it somewhere now, they
start from zero."
·
If he's wrong, the 52nd Daytona 500
could be as boring as the rest of the week,
when the only real excitement was a shoving match Wednesday between Tony Stewart and Robby Gordon, and a chargeThursday from I 1th position to fourth in the second qualifier by Earnhardt's son, Dale Jr.
NASCAR hopes that part of the problem
in the qualifiers was that drivers didn't try to
pass for fear oflosing several positions in the
draft. FaDing below 15th position in a qualifying race means a car is in jeopardy of the
missing .the hig show.
·
The sanction'ing body was happy with the
\competition last Sunday, when Chevy drivers Jeff Gordon and Sterling Marlin nearly
·
Plelse IH D.ytonl. Pqe It

PI•••-RadHot.. ...p82

----------~'~,,'~'------~----~--------------------~------------~---------------------------- 1

Reds wi:U .·
retire Rerez
jersey ·:
•

Forut Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson

Scrvi(;cs . 7 p.m.

Beaver Eastern 51, Southern 48
Green 75, South Galli&amp; 62

atNissanOpen

f\ . " GoopoiBaJd Knob, 00 Co. Rd. 31
Pallor~ Rev.'ltopr Wllllord
Sunday SchoOl - 9::!0 o.m.
..
Worship- 7 P·!"· . .

Coolville Road

. DIVIIIOn IV I!BCIIOnlll
Thuraday'a ...utt•

-: Woods doses pp

ca.tet.Lilwd••l 'etfoiriiCinardl
Klloabury Road
.
Putor: Clyde Hendei'IOn
. Sunda? School· 9:30 a.m.
.
Worahop !!crvlco 10::!0 a.m.
•
No Sunday 01 Wedaeaday Ni&amp;hl Scrvlcoo

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RIO GRANDE - Senior
guard Brooke Wi~iams led all
score~ with 18 points to n•··~~­
Meigs to a 59-45 win over
River Valley Thursday night in
the Division II se$1ional at the
University of Rio Grande's
Newt Oliver Arepa.
The decision · sent coach
Rori Logan's MiltaudetS into
district Jllay for ...the second
straight year.
Every Meigs player on the
roster, which features· all
seniors and junio~, saw action
in last night's win over the
scrappy RaiderS. 1
~'This ballclub has a lot of
depth:' Logan.said of his Yeleran baUclub. "We .go about I 0
deep. . With a :tournament
game, .I wanted '~t everyone
in early, just in c¥e we needed
them later."
·
. The Maraud~,r~, who Jed
from wire to wire, led by as
many as six poi~ts late in the
first quarter and weathered.
their most seriot.ls threat when
River Valley guard Cynthia
Ward's baby-ho'9'k shot with
31 sec0 nds left cut the Meigs
lead to 11-8. ·:: · '
But the Raiders ~ they suffered through - ~ ., first half .in
which the return on th~ir 5. for-31 field-gc:li.J shooting
investment was 11 of their 12
first-half poin~!: --,.- paid so
much attenti9.~ ··,. to junior
guard Amber Vining (six first-

•

Eden Ualltd Brdltru Ill Cbrilt
2 l/2 miles nortll of Reedsville
on Stato Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Roben Markley
Sunday School ~ 11 a.m

S...llllltChtl New T - - 1
SllverRidp
PaRot:Robertuo.ber
Sunday School•• 9 a.m.
Sun. Wor&gt;hlp- '10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednadoy. Scrvlco - 7 p.m.

sNNca OsloltNt:

2:45

Wedncldly Service • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ro)' HuDtcr

Saturday'• achaclult
'
Jackson at Wellston

~.

M~

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., "7:30p.m.
Wc&lt;!,ncsday Services - 7:30p.m.

Ullllld Faldi'Ciwdr .

Toay'a achadula

Saturday'l aci!BCIUII

United Brethren

Sunday School • 9130 a.m.

Rt. 7.on Pomeroy By-Piu
Pastor: Rev. Rqbert E. Smith, Sr.

_

Southern at Eastern
Meigs at VInton County .. ·
'Nelsonville·York at Alexander
.Weterford at Federal Hocking
'Miner at Trimble
Belpre at Wellston

Middleport P.....,ylerlon
Sunday School -·9 a.m.
Wor1hip · 10 a.m.

, Worship • 3 p.m ..

~~

8-6

· atAJaxandar

Worship ... 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 9:4S a.~.

Sabbil~ School - ~p.m.

AU.

13·2 17·2
8·7 12·7 .

Trimble
8·7 9·10
Federal Hocking
8-7 9-8
Miller
' 0-15 0·18

....l

·.

Putor: Roy Lawinsky
S11turday Services:

2·12 2·15

GIRLS

Middleport Pool.
T!olrd Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday Schooi·IO a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7;00 p.m.

M- J:flapol Cbun:h
Sunday school • 10· ~.m ..

M~ Olive C..•oaiiJ Cllur&lt;tt

:

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S....lli·Day Adv..!hl
Mulberry Hos. Rd., Pomeroy

fallb Gooptl a...;..;
l.!&gt;nll!oliom
·'
Sunday School · 9::!0 a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
· Wednadoy 7::!0 p.m.

.Southern
.Waterford

Pentecost&lt;JI
PUior. William Hobac:k
Su'nday School • 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wtc!nesday Services - 1 p.m.

AU.

TVC

=

Poolecwlal Allolalrly
So. Ro. 1:14, Racine ·

TVC

14-1 17-1
9~ 10-10
8·7 9·10
8·9 6-12
6·9 6·13

Hocking

Eastern

·-'Ill

Seventh -Day Adventist

Sunday School - 9::!0 a.m.
W9rshlp · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Sy..C.. Cbun:b otlbe N Pasoor Mike 1\dloino.
· Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcoo · 1 p.m.

.

D7eovlle CollulluiiiiJ Chun:h
Sun~~ School· 9:30a.m.
Wenhop -10:30 ~.m., 7 p.m.

Wonhlp- II a.m.
Wedneaday Service • 1 p.m.

Belpre
Alexander
t,Wiga
WeHB1on
'NelsonviKe·York
'Vlnlon County

•

31665 Mc&lt;l\aire Rd. Pomeroy, Obio ·•·••
. Pulor; Wayne Baleolm
service~ Thurs. Nlleo 7:00pm
&gt;r
New dturdl No Sunday service catablished .~

HoniloovUie l'nlbylerlaa Cllurcti

""-:EdaeiHarl
Sunday School • 9::!0 a.m.'
·Wonlllp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

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Full Goopel Cloun:b otlbe uYiq Savior:.·
· Rt.338, Anllquily
· •
Pastor: JeSse Morris
:.
Assl. Putors: Jim Morrl1
(
' Servi~: Saturday 7:30p.m.

llutl C..IIIIIIIIIJ Clnln:ll

orr Ro. 1:14

&gt;'

New Ult VktorJ Ceoler
Jn3 Gears" Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Putor; Bill Stiten
.,.
Sltnday .Se~ic:es • 10 a.m. A 7 p.m.
ll
Wcdneaday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youoh 1 p.m. :

Wodhip • 10 I.Jfi.
Wednesday Seryioes . lO a.m.

.• Told!Chii!Jb
.
Co. lid. 63 .
Sunday School- 9.:30 a·.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

..

-:rvcOhlo

Putor: Emeritus Lawrence. Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonlllp- 10:00 am
Wednadoy Scrvle&lt;s ·1 p.m.

Sunday School- 9 a.m.

Enler-~Jdse

Hal mess
Com•ually Cllorch
. Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Stre~t, Rutland
Sunday Won~lp-10 : 00 a.m.
SU!Jd&amp;y service-7 p.m.

..

Wil~e!iv ill c

Meigs Cooperative Parish

ML Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine
Pastor: Brice Uu
Sunday School • 9:45 o.m. ·
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services .- 7.p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunda)' School and Worship- 10 a.m.
.
Evening Services"· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services* 6:30p.m.

Pastor,&amp;\rius Hurt
Sunday S!hoo l · 10 a. m.
Wor.ohip • 11 a.m.

'

BOYS

lldoklolllJie Cllordl .·

500 N, lnd Ave., Middleport

Red men
gunners
lead nation

CNP STAFF ~ITER

.. Prep Basketball

Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Schoo19:30 1.m.
Even ina · 7 p.m.

1411 llrldpmu 51., sy .......
Rav. Mile!; Tbompoon,Pulor
Sunday School· 10 •·•·
Evenlna - 6 p.m.
Wcdnadoy Scrv~. 7 p.m.

Meigs bounces River Valley
BY G.

Sllvenvllle Word ol Fold!

SyracUJC Flnl Uolled Preobylerlu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh.ip- 11 a.m.

.,..._.........

Grand Streel
Sunday School- 10 m.m.
Wurship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services .~ p.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor: Re~t. Blaekwood
Sunday School • 9:30 il.m.
Wor~~hip ' 10 : 30 a.m., 7:)0 p.m.
Wcdneld1y Service· 7:30p.m.

Pres byterian

Hockla1110rt Cburch

FRIDAY's

Calvll)l Bible Chortb

Sunday Evcnln11 p.m.

Belbtl Church

Pastor: Rev. Ralph SpirCs .
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m. .
Worship· )0':30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Tburiday Services- 7 p.m.

Worship • 9:30 a.011., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Rutland Church ol GOO

J:alth Baptist Churth
Railrottd St., Mason
Sunday School- I0 a. m.

;a(.

Fatdl Fetlo• t \ er-de for CW
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dtcke111
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

ToWnship Rd., 468C

MI. Olive Onlled Melhodltl

Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School-11 a.m.

Hlllilde BaPtist Cburch
So. Ro. 143 juso offRo. 7

.,.

Foidl Volley Tabera- Cbou'dl
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rlwson

Sunday Scllool • 10 a.m.
·
Wonhip-9un.
Tuesday Services * 1 p.m.

Graham United Methodist
9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd·Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesdu y Serv ice· 7:30 p.m.

W.Va.

Wedneaday Service • 7:30p.m.

Coolville Unllld MeiWIII Pulall
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Cllordt
Main A Fifth So.

Worship ~

, Hartronl Cllion:b or Cllrlallo·
"""""., · O.rlltlaa Unidia
Hartf~rd ,

Pastor: f5riln Hukneu

United Methodist

Christ1an Un1on

$unday School tO a.m.
, E,..enina • 7:30 p.m.

Sunday Sdoooi·IO 11-m.
Wor~hip - 1t a.m.

St, Paul Luthel'lln Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St'., Pomeroy
• . Rev. Donald C. Fritz ·
Suriday School - 9:45a.m;
Worship · II a. m.

Dexltr Chun:h or Christ
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday schOol 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship -10:30 a.m.

Mlcldle-.t Com•UIIkJ Cllurch
.S7$ Pearl St., Middlepon
· Piitor: Sam Anderson · ·

fltday, Febnulry 11,2000

Wor&gt;hlp • 7:00 p.m.
Wednadoy Bible Sludy - 7:00p.m.

Pulor: 'lltcron Durham

Sunday • 9:30 a.ni. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

Page 81

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Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.

_ _ c_.,.....,

Roc:lae

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry'Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Rus,\ell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

rea._.,

Mlallley
New Lime Rd., Ruoland
Puoor: Rev. MIIJir&lt;O J. Robinson
Scrvic:a: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Cblltb

Ealllellrt
Pas10r: Brian Harkncu
Sunday School * 101.111.
Worship • 9 ·a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

St. John Lutheran Churth
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Frill
Worship-9:00a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a. m.

Reednllle Church of Chrlsl

Tbe Beileven•

MoralqSW

Lutheran

· Wcmhlp - 9:30 a.m. 1 p.m .

·sunday School - 9:30 a:m:
Worship • 9:30 o.m. and 7 P:m·
Wedneoday -7 p.m.
· Friday - fellowship setVIce 1 p.m.

·

Pa.'!IOr: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Wor~hip · 10 a.m. .

Sunday Schooll0:20-11a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood · II !05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9· iO:IS a. m.
Homemaking meeting, t11t Thurs.·. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Oent: Zupp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.

Faldl F1dl Goopel Cloun:lo
LonaBouom
PIIIOr: Steve Reed

Pastor: oewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo -9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

Tbe Chur&lt;h or J ..us
' ChriJI or Loner-Day So lob
Sl. RO.I60, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Hemlock Grove Chun:h

llodoolo7-

Racine, Ohio

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor JCrry Singer
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School *9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

H-. Cb-.a FtlloMIIIpCbllftb
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
YoUih Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednclday service, 7:00 p.m. ·

Dewtyne StUller

.CII'IIIII s 'uM
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.

lleorpnlzed Cbun:b or Jesus ChriJI
of Latter Day Salnls

Chur&lt;h

Worship · ll :l5a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service • 7 p.m..

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday ServiCes,- 10 ~m•.

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hills Church or Chrl1t
Eva ngelist Mike Moore
Sund11y School- 9 a.m. ,
Worship · 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m:
Wednuday Serviq:s -1 p.m.

Solem So .. Rulland
P011or: Roben 1!. Muuer
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Sooiii'Yllle
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 1.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00 p.m.

Bradrord C hurch of Christ

~ - - l p c.ioler

Worship · 10:1S a.m.

Laurel Clllf F~ Melbodlol Churtb
Pastor: Ounles Swiger

Corne r of St. Rt 124 ~Bra d bury Rd.
Min ister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Supday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshi p-8:00a.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00p.m.
· Wednesd ay Services • 7:00p.m.

923 S. Third SL, Middlepo&lt;l
Puooi Micllaol Pooaio
Sunday tervice, 10 L M .
W~y ~ervk:c, 1 p.m.

.

~

r.n1ow Die Chn:lo
Lcwt, W.VI. Rl. 1

• Pas10r: Mike Foreman

PollbCioopel

SundBy School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Rev. Malk Michael
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study pnd Youth. 7 p.m.

. Rulland Church or Christ
Su ndlly School ·9:30a.m.
Worsh ip. 10:30 a.m.,·7 p.m.

First Raptl!it Church
Pastor. Mark Monow
6th unU Pnlmer St. Middleport
Sunduy School-9: 15a.m.
Wmsh ip · HI: 15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
\V;:dno:sda)' Service- 7:00p.m.

l'omcroy Church of Chri1t . • .
212 W. Main St .
Minister: Danny Bias
Sund&lt;l}' School · 9:30a.m.
Wt&gt;rsllip· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m. ·

. Pastor: Ke1lh Rader
•
Sunday School· 9:1$ 1.m. :
- - Wor~hif * 10 a.m.
. Youoh Fcllowslup, &amp;undoy - 6 p.m.

Hysell Run HoU•eu Cburcll

Bradbury Church or ChriS!
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worsbip · 10:30 a.m.

AppelJieCeoler
•Puii..Oospel C!.UI'(h•
PaSion John A Patty Wide
603 Second Ave. Muoo
773-S017
Servk:le dme: Sundt; l0:30 a.m.
Wedneoday pm

Rock~

Sunda~

Fir-st Southern Baplist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pnstur: E. Lamar O'll ryant
SunJa)' Schon l · 9:30 u.m
w~n·s hi p. 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p;m.
Wnl m:o;Uuy Services • 7:()() p.m.

Church of Christ

.........y

Sunday Worship. 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m . .
Wednesday Sel'\lice. 7:30p.m.

Insuumental
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion· 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
You th· S:30 pm Sunda'y
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

- 47439 Reibel
Ou......
Mlolalrioo
lid., Clleslcr
,._., llev. Mary and Huold Coolt
S\llldly Services: 10 a.m. 4 6 p.m.
Wedncoday S.rvicea -1 p.m.

Pastot: Connie Fi1n11
Sunday School , 9:U a.m.
Worship- 10:30 1.m .
Bi~le Study Tuesday . 10 a.m.

Wealeyaa Bible Hoi- Church
15 Pearl So .. Middlepo",
Pastor: Rev. Doua Cox

Tuppen Plolo Chun:h or Chrlll

Pomeroy First Baptist '
Eust Ma in St.
Sunday School · 9:30'a: m.
Wnrship · l!J:Jil il .m.

.~

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
WOf'Ship • 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday wofship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 o.tn., 6:30p.m~ - . Wednesday SeNice!- 6:)(} p.m.

:i:!:r-.

....... a......

Rd.,

Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roget Watson
·
Sunday School- 9:30 1.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Hopea HJtpllst Chun-h (Southern)
Pustor: lim Diuy
~70 Gram St., Middleport .
· SunLiuy school · 9:30a.m.
Worship· II A.m. und 6 p.m.
Wednc!iduy Service • 7 p.m.
Rutlund l~lrst Baptist Church
Sufll.lay Sct.oul . 9:30a.m.
Wor.ihip . 10:45 a.m.

hstor. Chad Emrick

-.,
• .,.Hoi-Rutland
Cllon:lo
l..eadina: Creek

Pmstor:Teny Stewan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

PlolorLoallarSwodoy Sdooal- 10:00 L•.
6:00 p....
W
yServico·7:00p.m.

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Pllpi• Cllapol

Wcdne..Jay Service-7:00p.m.

Bearwallow Rld&amp;e Chu~h or Chrht

AlhSI..~

MIMnTUie

Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday Schooi9:JO a.m.
Worship - ll a.m., 7:00 p.m.

Paslur-Jeffrcy Wallace
Isl and Jrd Sunday

--Qowcll

Wor$hip -10:30a.m.

Harrisonville Road

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunda~ School- 10:30 a.m.

-

Baptist

Wcll nl'~tloy

CaJVII)I

Keoo Cbiii'Ch or Quill

Liberly Assembly u(God
1' ,0 . Uo'l( 467, Dut.kling Lunr
, M~tsoli, W.Vu.
Jlttslor: Neil Ten nant
Sunday Sc1vicc~- 10:00 a.m. und 7 p.m.

'.L

Puror:
Joc:bon
Sunday schoo • 9:30 t .m.
Sunday worship. 10:30 a.m.&amp;:? p.m.

Mlddlepon Clourdt o1 CbriJI

Assembly of God

' .

aarr

Ott1cr Cl1l!rclws

Sundily School-9:30a.m.

'f'ednesdty pn1ycr service - 7 p.m.

Church of Jesus CbrUt
Apottolk Fohh
New Lima Road
Sunday, 10 m.m. and 7:30p.m. •
Wedncs;day, 7:30p.m.

. 28601 Sl. Rt. 7, Middleport
Su11day School· 10 a.m.
" • ~ ' '. EVening: - 7:00'p:m. :• ·
Thursday' Service~· 7:00

H..oh !Middlopon)
P~t."or: VerMpyc.Sullivan

lluvllle Holl- C""rdo
31057 Stat~ Route llS, Langsvlle

The Daily Sentinel

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'
. &lt;;:INCINNATI (~'f!) -;The.
Citlcinnati Reds will retire the
No. 24 jersey wori'i' by.Tony
Perez in a ceremony prior to a
game with the Florida·Marlins
on May 27. ·. __ _
Perez, an executi~wiih the
Marlins, w~l be in . ted into
the National Base · I 1-laD of
- Fame in Coopers~Q~~~n: ""· Y.,
on July 23. His je~y, number
is just the sixth to be re tired by
the Reds; along ~tli Fred
Hutchinson (1),Jo~~~~ Bench ·
(5), Joe Morgan,.,(8),, 1 'red
Kluszewski (18) :I¥ ·Frank .
Robinson (20) . .
Becimse of Perez, ~en Griffey Jr. switched numSers after
beitlg trade&lt;! to Cit\tlirtnati by
the Seattle Mariners.
·
I The 10-time AU-Sbi' outfielder wore No. 24 \\{jt~ Seat- .
. de but Will assume No. 30
' with Cincinnati. .Tha~ the,
number his father ~ ~ a·
teammate of Perez...,-pen~~·
Morwr:t ·and Pete. Rose , w•th .
the Big Red Machine~liams of ·
the '70s.
·oo•
Ken · Griffey Sr., :tJifbench
cqac~. wllh the ,Re*.' wiU
$Witch to No. 33.
'•

Beaver Eastem tops Southem ·51-48

five rebounds.
Junio,r Kati Cummins also had
ALBANY - Tied at 48-48 · a good game and placed second
with just 36 seconds remaining, on the scoring , charts with
Beaver Eastern rallied behind a eleven points. Cummins had a
Cindy Leach . coast-to-coast consistent game and helped fuel
score in claiming a 51 -48 Divi- Southern's comeback with lhle.
sion IV sectional championship
Eastern was led by Cindy .
win over Southern Thursday . Leach, who netted a team-high
night at Alexander.
17 points, including the tie- .
'Be,aver Eastern (1 5-6), the breaking and eventual winning
defending regional runner-up, bucket at the end. Sophomore
claimed its second straight sec- Ruby Johnson came off the
tiona! with former North Gallia bench to notch I 0 points, while
, Coach Rob Day at the helm.
Kelly Roberts· added eight a11d ,
' Slightly , overshadowed by Brandi Southworth added ·
E'\Stern 's win was a stellar per- seven.
.formance by Southern senior
The 6rst quarter could have ,
Kim Ihle, who notched a game- been the difference in the game.
higlt 21 points. lhle was all .over Southern outscored Eastern in
the Ooor in a husding effort, that the second and third quarters
also saw the senior guard grab and tied with them in the 6nale.
six rebounds and two steals.
The 16-6 outbUrst by the Eagles
Also playing their final games · was just too much to conquer. ·
were Souther~ gals Stacy Lyons,
Eastern jumped to a 6-0 lead ,
Heather Oatley, . and Sarah . in the first minute of play.
Brauer: ·• ~yons helped ke~p Southern called a quick time ,
Southern 1n the game early With out to recover a~d responded ·
a cou~le steals and seve~] with two consecutive· steals and
sc~res, while ending up "':'ith six lay-ups from seniors Lyons and ;
pomtl. .
. · llda. .
, , , .,
·l
•
Dalley, 1liMl cwo id; Ja'l ~ ' S"tFz* Q~ ot1 &lt;1111 -8·0 :
ets· in the third ·qu~t_er 'c:ome.' run spa~ed b)' ·sAs m'rnovers :
back and grabbed five tmportant , and Leach steals. Cummins ,
rebounds. Brauer played a great ended the run with a baseline
second
quarter to notCh all of
•
PIIIME MOVIII - Southern senior Kim lhle (left) drives the lane
her four points, while claiming
.,. t 1 - ............... . .
a&amp;ainst BeiMI' Eastem In Thursday's sectional. (Scott WOlfe photo)
. BY Sco1T WoLFE

SEN)'INEL CORRESPONDENT

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Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Frkl8y, February 11, 2000

Inside:

URG baseball ptwiew, Page B2
.No. 1 UC wins again, Page B6
Scoreboard, Page B6
Po...,..y W~e Chordt orCbrbt
33226 Chililren's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II o.m.
Worship - IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Apostolic
Churtb or Jesus Chrisl AllcKlolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: Jumes Miller
Sund1y School- IO:lO a.m.
EYcning - 7:30 p.m.

Sib and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Minis1cr: Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services .~ p.m.

Mnranatha Baptist Church
13urlingham · 742·7606 '
Pas!Or: John Swanson
Sunday School* 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
Eve ning Service ·6:00p.m.
\Vednc'id:Jy Service - 7:30p.m.

Zion Chun:h or Cbtiol

PIDe Gron IUble Hollaeu Churclt
112 mi le off Rl. 325
- ~Wor: Rev-:-D"'Ikl~Manlcy ........,.... Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor:ship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sef\!ice · 7:30p.m.

..
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Rullud

Salem c..wr
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:1!5 a.m.

P~tor:

~

Racine First Baptisl
· P;1stor: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor.~ hip · 10:40 11.m .. 7:()() p.m.
Wcdriesliay Services· 7:00 p .m.

Lan~svllle Chrtstion

Silver Run Baptist
P.:tStor: Steven K; tittle
Sullday School · lOa.m.
Wor~hip- J I a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedrresdoy Services~ 7:00p.m.
Mt. Union. Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School ~9:45 a.m.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m,

Putor: Philip Sturm
Sundliy School: 9:30a.m.
. Won~hip Service; 10:30 a.m.
· ·Dible Study, Wednesday, ~:30 p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist ChuNii
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pll.Stor : Daniel Mc1.~a
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship· )1]:30 a.n1.
Wedne~ay Bible Study • 6J00 p.m.

Old Beohel Fr.. Will Boptlst Church
· "

"'

. Pastor: Rev. Janles R. Acree, Sr.
Sunda~ School·lO a.m.
Worshtp • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne5day Services ·7 p.m.

\ 'lctory Baptist lndependant
523 N. 2nd So. Middlcpo"
Pa9t0r: James E. Keesee
Worship· lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servkes- 7 p.m.

· Off 124 behind

II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • '7 p.m.
Worship ~

Forest ~un Baptist

Church of God

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mai n S1., Middleport
Pas1or: Rev. Gil bcrl Craig, Jr.
Su!J{lfly Sc hool ·9:30 a.m.
WOrship · !0:45a.m.
Anliquil)' Baptist
Stmllay School· 9:30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:45 o.m.
Stlllday Eveni ng· 6:00p.m.
f{ulhmd f'rl!e Will Baptist
Salem St.
!'astor: Rev. Pa!]l Taylor
Su111.l:ty School · 10 u.rn.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wc-Uncsd;•y Services· 7 p.m.

Northeast O~ter
Alfred
Paslor: Shuron Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - ·11 a.m.o6:30 p.m.
.

,

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship· 9 a.m.
.Sunday SchQOI • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m'Y 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

SyraCWIC Flm Church ol GOO
Apple and Second St&amp;.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Raf!dolph
. Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Catholic

Sac:red lltan CatholiC' Church
ll1l Mu lberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-ssqg
I'&lt;~Slllr: Re v. Wulter E. Heinz
Sa1. O:&gt;n: 4:45-5: l5~.m.; ~ass~ 5:30 p.'m,
Sun. Con. · 8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9:30a.m.
Dailey Milss - 8:30 a.m.
•.

LOngBollotD
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Church oiGod of Prophecy

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

O.J. Wh ite Rd. off St'. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunduy School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Reedsville

'Worship· 9:30a.m.

.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
. UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
·
First Sunday of·Month-7:30p.m. service

Congregat io nal

Tappen Plains Sl. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beatlie

Trinity Cbun:b
. Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Sunday sch~ aed wonlllp 10:25

Sunday SchOOl- 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

EplSCOp:ll
Groce Epl..,pal Church
· 326 E. Main St, Pomeroy
Rev. JameS Bemac:ki, .Rcv. Karharln Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Euc:harisl and
Sund~y

·

Cealral CluSter
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship. II a.m.
Wc:dne5day Services-7:30p.m.

Schoolll :00 a.m.

www.fro&amp;net.net/-deanery

Pastor: Kc1th Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.

Flallroods
Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship . ll a.m.

'

Olliotl T.....,_ Cborch
.
Clifton, .w.va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Scrv~ • 1 p.m.

, .

N&lt;tZ iHCfl C

.

.

Middleport Cburdt ot lbe N Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship~ '10:30 a.m., 6:30 ·p.m.

Wednesday Servicel • 7 p.m.

Pu1or. Allen Mldcap......
ReedavUie Fellowlhlp
Churth orthe Nazan1e
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor&lt;hip - 10:45 a.m .. 1 p.m.
Wed~csday Services • 7 p ~m.

God'• Te•ple of Pralle

Pomteoy Churdl ollbe Naanao
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Orimm.Jr:
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesd~y SeiVices • 7 p.m.

Chesler Churdl Of the NIDnae
Pas10r: Rev. Herben OI'IIC
Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea- 1 p.m.
Rulland Church of liM Nuareae
Pastor: Rev. 'Samuel W. Buye

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
. Wednelday Sc:rvice1 • 7 p.m.

P0111ud Flnl Clourdl of die N o -

Pasaor: Mart Mataon

Sunday School-10:30 a.m.
Momiq Wonhlp ·li:IS a.m.
Sunday S.rvioe .' 6 p.m.
Wedne!ldaJ Services- 7 p.m.,

-,..
~

·Putor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evenina ~ 1 p.m.
Wedncday strvioe - 7 p.m.

ol'l

•
'

•

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":~

Hermon Ualled Bntllrell
Ia Cllrbt C~urch
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sand~rs

'

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

..

..&lt;',

. ...... GoopeiJJablbo•
33045 Hllond Road, Pomeroy
·

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenlna 7:30p.m.
Tu-y ATbo-y • 7:30p.m.

•

'

·.=

. Wbl4'i ~ Wealeflll
,

PasoorcRev, Phillip Ridenour
Sunday SChool - 9:30a.m.

Wo(Shlp • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday S.rvico ·1 p.m.

Worship ~ 9 a.m.

ATTEND THE ..CHURCH OF VO.UR .CH.OIC.
E·
_
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-- -~-..:...

.Crow'• Family Reataurant
'FIIflrilg Kentuclcy Fried Chlclctn"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

"We accept P......, 7fcnufitr•"

·112•1200
Regan&amp;uw,l
174

,,

ll

I

•

FIRE &amp; .8 ,\FETV
~l.la &amp; SERVICE
112-7071

,..lp, ,... 82 .

PI••• -

DIVIalon II Sactlonlll
1 Thurldly'a ...utta .
· atRioOranda
1

~~ ~~::l'~&gt;"'!l'}tPI"""'

'lf

BY DICK BRINSTER

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP)Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis,
speaking publicly for the first
.time since charged with murder
Jan. 31, said he was innocent and
expressed sympathy for the victims' families.
· He rel'frned to Maryland from
Adanta; where he wa5 charged
with killing two men after a
Super Bowl party and released
Tuesday on $1 million bond. ·
The bond requires Lewis to
stay in Maryland unless he is traveling to Georgia for court
appearances or meeting with
lawyers.
'

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Searching for
·local church?
Check the Sentinel

every Friclay/

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to tum pi'Q
'

:MINNEAPOLIS (All)
Minnesota coach Dan• Monson
said he bact not spoken with sus.p ended ., center Joel l'rzybilla,
I(Vhose parents said he plans to .
turn pro rather than return to the
Golden Gop hen' basketball team.
. ,Monson said the 1-foot l'r~y~
billa hadn't attended Classes since ·
suspended indefinitely Tuesday·
for what the first-year coach
o;haracterized as lack of commit~
mlmt to academics.
.
. .
,.

RIO GRANDE ·:.,. The Rio
Grande Redmen bask~iball team
is not only leading the American
Mideast Conference and the
NAIA in three-point shooting.
but the entire men's college basketbaD world,
As of Feb. 15, Rio Grande was
shooting .464 (234-of-504) from
three-poinl land. Lipscomb University of Nashville, Tenn., trails
the Redmen in NAIA Division I
. by 27 percentage points (.437)_
. Eckerd College, an NCAA
Division II school, out of St.
Petersburg, Fla., is the closest in
. percentage to Rio Grande's mark.
Eckerd was shooting at a .447 dip
as of Feb. 14.
Colorado State is the NCAA
Division I leader at .427, and
Emerson · College, of Boston,
Mass., is the NCAA Division Ill
leader at .429. The University. of
Maine-Fort Kent ·is the NAIA
Division II leader in three-point
·percentage at .435.
One of the main reasons for
Rio Grande's success is the con-:
sistency of senior guard/forward"
Jeremy May. May, a former Ohio
State walk-on, is third in N AlA
Division I in three-point percentage (.502) through 23 games. He
. ha5 canned 70·of. 134 attempts.
Junior guard .Scott Davis occupies the I Oth spot in the nation in
three-point percentage (.476).
Davis has made 70-of-147 shots
from deep.
Another reason is 'eruor center·
. Desroy Grant.
"So many people .have come'.
with the game plan tq take him'
(Grant) away,'' · Coach Earl
Thomas said. "Desi's just done a
great job kicking the .ball out to
our shooters."
Grant himself. is. making noise ·
on the. national leveL The 6-7
· Kingston, Jamaica, native is sixth
in field-goal percentage ~t the
NAIA Division I level.
Thomas said the inside-out
game has bc;en the key.·
"The best three in the world is
one that comes from the inside-.
out.': Thomas .. said. "When we'•ve
got (Scott) Davis and Oeremy)
May and (Nathan) Copas ond
Chris Beard and Joey. James and
some of those guys spotted up
and you give them a good insideout pass, that's an awfully good
percentage shot for them."

Amber Vining of Meigs (20) goes hi&amp;h for a shot against River valley's Cynthia Ward
during the Marauders' 5945 sectional win last night at Rio .Grande. (Dave Harris photo)

driv~(~:, upset with

Melga 59, River Valley.45 .
waverly
54 ·,.·"111·..........._··45'.'
I•
..... '. ~ .. ~R J
,_.

Lewis touts ln.-.ce

BY MARK WIWAMI
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

, HIGH FLYER -

. ,,,, .
IC

S11sp•Jied ~er

. tpsa[m n9:IJJ
!francis FLORIST
Order my sttps in thy~wiJrJ:
MeiB• Counly~ ow.., FL&gt;~u•
4'•
a,nJ ftt not any intttuitu
- flllt
IIIII p
.., -, fiaue
740-992-2844
dom
, .inion 1:'nue:&lt;
, .r_:m::.:e._
- -~~~7=40-~99=2~-629:.!::8~~~
"'' u•.s.• Y- ·r...,.... ~
FUNEIW.IIOIIII

at Luoaavllle Vllley .

1 Leesb~g Fairfield v. 8 Western,
·1:oo
'
2 WhHe Oak v. 7 Portsmouth Clay,

. . LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tiger
Woods shot a 3-under-par 68 that
left him within four shots of J.P.
Hayes' Nissan Open lead.
Hayes, whose only tour victory
came in the t 998 Buick Classic,
began 'with an eagle 3 on &gt;the first
· h!lle, then birdied No.2 to jumpst:lrt his round of 64:.
Robin Freeman was one shot
back at 65. His brother, Jeff freeman, a club p'ro; was another,shot
behind in a group at .66 with ·
Mark Brooks, Neal Lancaster and
BobTway. .
Nick Price, making his first
U.S. start of the year, fired a 67.
Defending champion Ernie Els.
WQS at 69, David Duval and John
D'aly at 70..

.

Sunday School- 10 o.m.

.

atAIIXMider

1 .oak Hill v. 8 Symmes valley, 1:oo
2.Waterford v, 7 Eastern, 2:45

~ .SPORTS WRITER

1

h

,

1

.

.

' ci.\w !=hie&amp; and drivers will do the best they

tan."
·
DAYTOf':lA olJ.EACH, Fla. (AI') -W~th a . Earnh~rdt figures they already are.' And
retord 33 VJcto~t~s at Daytona lnternat•~n- that certainly wasn't good enough when the
a! Speedway, D,ale E~tnhardt has h~d · httle F,ords of qualifying race winners BiD Elliott
reason t~ cornplam about racmg . at and Ricky Rudd,SOO polesitter Dale Jarrett
NAS~AR s most famous track.
.
and Rusty Wallace proved far superior to
Hes got . on~,~, no~. Earnhardt ts upset the Chevys and l'ontiacs.
about the aerod~am1c rules for the DayEarnhardt criticized NASCAR's new
to~a 5'?&lt;J ~n S~rj~y -. ve~y upset.
· .. shock-absorber rule, which requires all of
They JU.st k1~e~ the rac1~g at '?aytona,_·, the Winston Cup teams to use the same
the seven-tame set,Jes champ1on sa1d T~urs- shocks and springs and allows only minor
day after he ~d the other Che~rolet dr.•vers adjustments.
·
were humbled qy th~ Fords m a · patr of . "They took racing out of the hands cif the
qualifying races. ';'- ,
drivers and crew chiefS," said Earnhardt,
~ut NASCAR,,won t budge, so the race who for the first time in 1 I years failed · to
wtU ~ on Sundax with Fords expected to win a qualifying race. "We can't adjust and
dommate.
. . '
make our cars drive like ~ want."
. ."We'~ not gojlig ~o chan~ anything,"
But Gary Nelson, once atop crew chief
sald M1ke Helton·, v1ce preSJdent for · the and now ·Winston Cup series director, says
sanctioning body.;~l ge! the feeling.that run- that's not so.
1 ning 500 iniles for.·a $9.3 million pune, the
•

new rules
.

"There might be 1,000 adjustments that
wiD affect handling;· he .said." If we change
the target and. move it somewhere now, they
start from zero."
·
If he's wrong, the 52nd Daytona 500
could be as boring as the rest of the week,
when the only real excitement was a shoving match Wednesday between Tony Stewart and Robby Gordon, and a chargeThursday from I 1th position to fourth in the second qualifier by Earnhardt's son, Dale Jr.
NASCAR hopes that part of the problem
in the qualifiers was that drivers didn't try to
pass for fear oflosing several positions in the
draft. FaDing below 15th position in a qualifying race means a car is in jeopardy of the
missing .the hig show.
·
The sanction'ing body was happy with the
\competition last Sunday, when Chevy drivers Jeff Gordon and Sterling Marlin nearly
·
Plelse IH D.ytonl. Pqe It

PI•••-RadHot.. ...p82

----------~'~,,'~'------~----~--------------------~------------~---------------------------- 1

Reds wi:U .·
retire Rerez
jersey ·:
•

Forut Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson

Scrvi(;cs . 7 p.m.

Beaver Eastern 51, Southern 48
Green 75, South Galli&amp; 62

atNissanOpen

f\ . " GoopoiBaJd Knob, 00 Co. Rd. 31
Pallor~ Rev.'ltopr Wllllord
Sunday SchoOl - 9::!0 o.m.
..
Worship- 7 P·!"· . .

Coolville Road

. DIVIIIOn IV I!BCIIOnlll
Thuraday'a ...utt•

-: Woods doses pp

ca.tet.Lilwd••l 'etfoiriiCinardl
Klloabury Road
.
Putor: Clyde Hendei'IOn
. Sunda? School· 9:30 a.m.
.
Worahop !!crvlco 10::!0 a.m.
•
No Sunday 01 Wedaeaday Ni&amp;hl Scrvlcoo

'

'

RIO GRANDE - Senior
guard Brooke Wi~iams led all
score~ with 18 points to n•··~~­
Meigs to a 59-45 win over
River Valley Thursday night in
the Division II se$1ional at the
University of Rio Grande's
Newt Oliver Arepa.
The decision · sent coach
Rori Logan's MiltaudetS into
district Jllay for ...the second
straight year.
Every Meigs player on the
roster, which features· all
seniors and junio~, saw action
in last night's win over the
scrappy RaiderS. 1
~'This ballclub has a lot of
depth:' Logan.said of his Yeleran baUclub. "We .go about I 0
deep. . With a :tournament
game, .I wanted '~t everyone
in early, just in c¥e we needed
them later."
·
. The Maraud~,r~, who Jed
from wire to wire, led by as
many as six poi~ts late in the
first quarter and weathered.
their most seriot.ls threat when
River Valley guard Cynthia
Ward's baby-ho'9'k shot with
31 sec0 nds left cut the Meigs
lead to 11-8. ·:: · '
But the Raiders ~ they suffered through - ~ ., first half .in
which the return on th~ir 5. for-31 field-gc:li.J shooting
investment was 11 of their 12
first-half poin~!: --,.- paid so
much attenti9.~ ··,. to junior
guard Amber Vining (six first-

•

Eden Ualltd Brdltru Ill Cbrilt
2 l/2 miles nortll of Reedsville
on Stato Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Roben Markley
Sunday School ~ 11 a.m

S...llllltChtl New T - - 1
SllverRidp
PaRot:Robertuo.ber
Sunday School•• 9 a.m.
Sun. Wor&gt;hlp- '10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednadoy. Scrvlco - 7 p.m.

sNNca OsloltNt:

2:45

Wedncldly Service • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ro)' HuDtcr

Saturday'• achaclult
'
Jackson at Wellston

~.

M~

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., "7:30p.m.
Wc&lt;!,ncsday Services - 7:30p.m.

Ullllld Faldi'Ciwdr .

Toay'a achadula

Saturday'l aci!BCIUII

United Brethren

Sunday School • 9130 a.m.

Rt. 7.on Pomeroy By-Piu
Pastor: Rev. Rqbert E. Smith, Sr.

_

Southern at Eastern
Meigs at VInton County .. ·
'Nelsonville·York at Alexander
.Weterford at Federal Hocking
'Miner at Trimble
Belpre at Wellston

Middleport P.....,ylerlon
Sunday School -·9 a.m.
Wor1hip · 10 a.m.

, Worship • 3 p.m ..

~~

8-6

· atAJaxandar

Worship ... 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 9:4S a.~.

Sabbil~ School - ~p.m.

AU.

13·2 17·2
8·7 12·7 .

Trimble
8·7 9·10
Federal Hocking
8-7 9-8
Miller
' 0-15 0·18

....l

·.

Putor: Roy Lawinsky
S11turday Services:

2·12 2·15

GIRLS

Middleport Pool.
T!olrd Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday Schooi·IO a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7;00 p.m.

M- J:flapol Cbun:h
Sunday school • 10· ~.m ..

M~ Olive C..•oaiiJ Cllur&lt;tt

:

.•

S....lli·Day Adv..!hl
Mulberry Hos. Rd., Pomeroy

fallb Gooptl a...;..;
l.!&gt;nll!oliom
·'
Sunday School · 9::!0 a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
· Wednadoy 7::!0 p.m.

.Southern
.Waterford

Pentecost&lt;JI
PUior. William Hobac:k
Su'nday School • 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wtc!nesday Services - 1 p.m.

AU.

TVC

=

Poolecwlal Allolalrly
So. Ro. 1:14, Racine ·

TVC

14-1 17-1
9~ 10-10
8·7 9·10
8·9 6-12
6·9 6·13

Hocking

Eastern

·-'Ill

Seventh -Day Adventist

Sunday School - 9::!0 a.m.
W9rshlp · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Sy..C.. Cbun:b otlbe N Pasoor Mike 1\dloino.
· Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcoo · 1 p.m.

.

D7eovlle CollulluiiiiJ Chun:h
Sun~~ School· 9:30a.m.
Wenhop -10:30 ~.m., 7 p.m.

Wonhlp- II a.m.
Wedneaday Service • 1 p.m.

Belpre
Alexander
t,Wiga
WeHB1on
'NelsonviKe·York
'Vlnlon County

•

31665 Mc&lt;l\aire Rd. Pomeroy, Obio ·•·••
. Pulor; Wayne Baleolm
service~ Thurs. Nlleo 7:00pm
&gt;r
New dturdl No Sunday service catablished .~

HoniloovUie l'nlbylerlaa Cllurcti

""-:EdaeiHarl
Sunday School • 9::!0 a.m.'
·Wonlllp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

..·-

Full Goopel Cloun:b otlbe uYiq Savior:.·
· Rt.338, Anllquily
· •
Pastor: JeSse Morris
:.
Assl. Putors: Jim Morrl1
(
' Servi~: Saturday 7:30p.m.

llutl C..IIIIIIIIIJ Clnln:ll

orr Ro. 1:14

&gt;'

New Ult VktorJ Ceoler
Jn3 Gears" Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Putor; Bill Stiten
.,.
Sltnday .Se~ic:es • 10 a.m. A 7 p.m.
ll
Wcdneaday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youoh 1 p.m. :

Wodhip • 10 I.Jfi.
Wednesday Seryioes . lO a.m.

.• Told!Chii!Jb
.
Co. lid. 63 .
Sunday School- 9.:30 a·.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

..

-:rvcOhlo

Putor: Emeritus Lawrence. Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonlllp- 10:00 am
Wednadoy Scrvle&lt;s ·1 p.m.

Sunday School- 9 a.m.

Enler-~Jdse

Hal mess
Com•ually Cllorch
. Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Stre~t, Rutland
Sunday Won~lp-10 : 00 a.m.
SU!Jd&amp;y service-7 p.m.

..

Wil~e!iv ill c

Meigs Cooperative Parish

ML Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine
Pastor: Brice Uu
Sunday School • 9:45 o.m. ·
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services .- 7.p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunda)' School and Worship- 10 a.m.
.
Evening Services"· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services* 6:30p.m.

Pastor,&amp;\rius Hurt
Sunday S!hoo l · 10 a. m.
Wor.ohip • 11 a.m.

'

BOYS

lldoklolllJie Cllordl .·

500 N, lnd Ave., Middleport

Red men
gunners
lead nation

CNP STAFF ~ITER

.. Prep Basketball

Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Schoo19:30 1.m.
Even ina · 7 p.m.

1411 llrldpmu 51., sy .......
Rav. Mile!; Tbompoon,Pulor
Sunday School· 10 •·•·
Evenlna - 6 p.m.
Wcdnadoy Scrv~. 7 p.m.

Meigs bounces River Valley
BY G.

Sllvenvllle Word ol Fold!

SyracUJC Flnl Uolled Preobylerlu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh.ip- 11 a.m.

.,..._.........

Grand Streel
Sunday School- 10 m.m.
Wurship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services .~ p.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor: Re~t. Blaekwood
Sunday School • 9:30 il.m.
Wor~~hip ' 10 : 30 a.m., 7:)0 p.m.
Wcdneld1y Service· 7:30p.m.

Pres byterian

Hockla1110rt Cburch

FRIDAY's

Calvll)l Bible Chortb

Sunday Evcnln11 p.m.

Belbtl Church

Pastor: Rev. Ralph SpirCs .
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m. .
Worship· )0':30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Tburiday Services- 7 p.m.

Worship • 9:30 a.011., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Rutland Church ol GOO

J:alth Baptist Churth
Railrottd St., Mason
Sunday School- I0 a. m.

;a(.

Fatdl Fetlo• t \ er-de for CW
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dtcke111
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

ToWnship Rd., 468C

MI. Olive Onlled Melhodltl

Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School-11 a.m.

Hlllilde BaPtist Cburch
So. Ro. 143 juso offRo. 7

.,.

Foidl Volley Tabera- Cbou'dl
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rlwson

Sunday Scllool • 10 a.m.
·
Wonhip-9un.
Tuesday Services * 1 p.m.

Graham United Methodist
9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd·Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesdu y Serv ice· 7:30 p.m.

W.Va.

Wedneaday Service • 7:30p.m.

Coolville Unllld MeiWIII Pulall
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Cllordt
Main A Fifth So.

Worship ~

, Hartronl Cllion:b or Cllrlallo·
"""""., · O.rlltlaa Unidia
Hartf~rd ,

Pastor: f5riln Hukneu

United Methodist

Christ1an Un1on

$unday School tO a.m.
, E,..enina • 7:30 p.m.

Sunday Sdoooi·IO 11-m.
Wor~hip - 1t a.m.

St, Paul Luthel'lln Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St'., Pomeroy
• . Rev. Donald C. Fritz ·
Suriday School - 9:45a.m;
Worship · II a. m.

Dexltr Chun:h or Christ
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday schOol 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship -10:30 a.m.

Mlcldle-.t Com•UIIkJ Cllurch
.S7$ Pearl St., Middlepon
· Piitor: Sam Anderson · ·

fltday, Febnulry 11,2000

Wor&gt;hlp • 7:00 p.m.
Wednadoy Bible Sludy - 7:00p.m.

Pulor: 'lltcron Durham

Sunday • 9:30 a.ni. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

Page 81

J••
..

••

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.

_ _ c_.,.....,

Roc:lae

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry'Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Rus,\ell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

rea._.,

Mlallley
New Lime Rd., Ruoland
Puoor: Rev. MIIJir&lt;O J. Robinson
Scrvic:a: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Cblltb

Ealllellrt
Pas10r: Brian Harkncu
Sunday School * 101.111.
Worship • 9 ·a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

St. John Lutheran Churth
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Frill
Worship-9:00a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a. m.

Reednllle Church of Chrlsl

Tbe Beileven•

MoralqSW

Lutheran

· Wcmhlp - 9:30 a.m. 1 p.m .

·sunday School - 9:30 a:m:
Worship • 9:30 o.m. and 7 P:m·
Wedneoday -7 p.m.
· Friday - fellowship setVIce 1 p.m.

·

Pa.'!IOr: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Wor~hip · 10 a.m. .

Sunday Schooll0:20-11a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood · II !05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9· iO:IS a. m.
Homemaking meeting, t11t Thurs.·. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Oent: Zupp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.

Faldl F1dl Goopel Cloun:lo
LonaBouom
PIIIOr: Steve Reed

Pastor: oewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo -9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

Tbe Chur&lt;h or J ..us
' ChriJI or Loner-Day So lob
Sl. RO.I60, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Hemlock Grove Chun:h

llodoolo7-

Racine, Ohio

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor JCrry Singer
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School *9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

H-. Cb-.a FtlloMIIIpCbllftb
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
YoUih Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednclday service, 7:00 p.m. ·

Dewtyne StUller

.CII'IIIII s 'uM
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.

lleorpnlzed Cbun:b or Jesus ChriJI
of Latter Day Salnls

Chur&lt;h

Worship · ll :l5a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service • 7 p.m..

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday ServiCes,- 10 ~m•.

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hills Church or Chrl1t
Eva ngelist Mike Moore
Sund11y School- 9 a.m. ,
Worship · 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m:
Wednuday Serviq:s -1 p.m.

Solem So .. Rulland
P011or: Roben 1!. Muuer
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Sooiii'Yllle
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 1.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00 p.m.

Bradrord C hurch of Christ

~ - - l p c.ioler

Worship · 10:1S a.m.

Laurel Clllf F~ Melbodlol Churtb
Pastor: Ounles Swiger

Corne r of St. Rt 124 ~Bra d bury Rd.
Min ister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Supday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshi p-8:00a.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00p.m.
· Wednesd ay Services • 7:00p.m.

923 S. Third SL, Middlepo&lt;l
Puooi Micllaol Pooaio
Sunday tervice, 10 L M .
W~y ~ervk:c, 1 p.m.

.

~

r.n1ow Die Chn:lo
Lcwt, W.VI. Rl. 1

• Pas10r: Mike Foreman

PollbCioopel

SundBy School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Rev. Malk Michael
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study pnd Youth. 7 p.m.

. Rulland Church or Christ
Su ndlly School ·9:30a.m.
Worsh ip. 10:30 a.m.,·7 p.m.

First Raptl!it Church
Pastor. Mark Monow
6th unU Pnlmer St. Middleport
Sunduy School-9: 15a.m.
Wmsh ip · HI: 15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
\V;:dno:sda)' Service- 7:00p.m.

l'omcroy Church of Chri1t . • .
212 W. Main St .
Minister: Danny Bias
Sund&lt;l}' School · 9:30a.m.
Wt&gt;rsllip· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m. ·

. Pastor: Ke1lh Rader
•
Sunday School· 9:1$ 1.m. :
- - Wor~hif * 10 a.m.
. Youoh Fcllowslup, &amp;undoy - 6 p.m.

Hysell Run HoU•eu Cburcll

Bradbury Church or ChriS!
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worsbip · 10:30 a.m.

AppelJieCeoler
•Puii..Oospel C!.UI'(h•
PaSion John A Patty Wide
603 Second Ave. Muoo
773-S017
Servk:le dme: Sundt; l0:30 a.m.
Wedneoday pm

Rock~

Sunda~

Fir-st Southern Baplist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pnstur: E. Lamar O'll ryant
SunJa)' Schon l · 9:30 u.m
w~n·s hi p. 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p;m.
Wnl m:o;Uuy Services • 7:()() p.m.

Church of Christ

.........y

Sunday Worship. 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m . .
Wednesday Sel'\lice. 7:30p.m.

Insuumental
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion· 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
You th· S:30 pm Sunda'y
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

- 47439 Reibel
Ou......
Mlolalrioo
lid., Clleslcr
,._., llev. Mary and Huold Coolt
S\llldly Services: 10 a.m. 4 6 p.m.
Wedncoday S.rvicea -1 p.m.

Pastot: Connie Fi1n11
Sunday School , 9:U a.m.
Worship- 10:30 1.m .
Bi~le Study Tuesday . 10 a.m.

Wealeyaa Bible Hoi- Church
15 Pearl So .. Middlepo",
Pastor: Rev. Doua Cox

Tuppen Plolo Chun:h or Chrlll

Pomeroy First Baptist '
Eust Ma in St.
Sunday School · 9:30'a: m.
Wnrship · l!J:Jil il .m.

.~

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
WOf'Ship • 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday wofship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 o.tn., 6:30p.m~ - . Wednesday SeNice!- 6:)(} p.m.

:i:!:r-.

....... a......

Rd.,

Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roget Watson
·
Sunday School- 9:30 1.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Hopea HJtpllst Chun-h (Southern)
Pustor: lim Diuy
~70 Gram St., Middleport .
· SunLiuy school · 9:30a.m.
Worship· II A.m. und 6 p.m.
Wednc!iduy Service • 7 p.m.
Rutlund l~lrst Baptist Church
Sufll.lay Sct.oul . 9:30a.m.
Wor.ihip . 10:45 a.m.

hstor. Chad Emrick

-.,
• .,.Hoi-Rutland
Cllon:lo
l..eadina: Creek

Pmstor:Teny Stewan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

PlolorLoallarSwodoy Sdooal- 10:00 L•.
6:00 p....
W
yServico·7:00p.m.

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Pllpi• Cllapol

Wcdne..Jay Service-7:00p.m.

Bearwallow Rld&amp;e Chu~h or Chrht

AlhSI..~

MIMnTUie

Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday Schooi9:JO a.m.
Worship - ll a.m., 7:00 p.m.

Paslur-Jeffrcy Wallace
Isl and Jrd Sunday

--Qowcll

Wor$hip -10:30a.m.

Harrisonville Road

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunda~ School- 10:30 a.m.

-

Baptist

Wcll nl'~tloy

CaJVII)I

Keoo Cbiii'Ch or Quill

Liberly Assembly u(God
1' ,0 . Uo'l( 467, Dut.kling Lunr
, M~tsoli, W.Vu.
Jlttslor: Neil Ten nant
Sunday Sc1vicc~- 10:00 a.m. und 7 p.m.

'.L

Puror:
Joc:bon
Sunday schoo • 9:30 t .m.
Sunday worship. 10:30 a.m.&amp;:? p.m.

Mlddlepon Clourdt o1 CbriJI

Assembly of God

' .

aarr

Ott1cr Cl1l!rclws

Sundily School-9:30a.m.

'f'ednesdty pn1ycr service - 7 p.m.

Church of Jesus CbrUt
Apottolk Fohh
New Lima Road
Sunday, 10 m.m. and 7:30p.m. •
Wedncs;day, 7:30p.m.

. 28601 Sl. Rt. 7, Middleport
Su11day School· 10 a.m.
" • ~ ' '. EVening: - 7:00'p:m. :• ·
Thursday' Service~· 7:00

H..oh !Middlopon)
P~t."or: VerMpyc.Sullivan

lluvllle Holl- C""rdo
31057 Stat~ Route llS, Langsvlle

The Daily Sentinel

-·

..

'
. &lt;;:INCINNATI (~'f!) -;The.
Citlcinnati Reds will retire the
No. 24 jersey wori'i' by.Tony
Perez in a ceremony prior to a
game with the Florida·Marlins
on May 27. ·. __ _
Perez, an executi~wiih the
Marlins, w~l be in . ted into
the National Base · I 1-laD of
- Fame in Coopers~Q~~~n: ""· Y.,
on July 23. His je~y, number
is just the sixth to be re tired by
the Reds; along ~tli Fred
Hutchinson (1),Jo~~~~ Bench ·
(5), Joe Morgan,.,(8),, 1 'red
Kluszewski (18) :I¥ ·Frank .
Robinson (20) . .
Becimse of Perez, ~en Griffey Jr. switched numSers after
beitlg trade&lt;! to Cit\tlirtnati by
the Seattle Mariners.
·
I The 10-time AU-Sbi' outfielder wore No. 24 \\{jt~ Seat- .
. de but Will assume No. 30
' with Cincinnati. .Tha~ the,
number his father ~ ~ a·
teammate of Perez...,-pen~~·
Morwr:t ·and Pete. Rose , w•th .
the Big Red Machine~liams of ·
the '70s.
·oo•
Ken · Griffey Sr., :tJifbench
cqac~. wllh the ,Re*.' wiU
$Witch to No. 33.
'•

Beaver Eastem tops Southem ·51-48

five rebounds.
Junio,r Kati Cummins also had
ALBANY - Tied at 48-48 · a good game and placed second
with just 36 seconds remaining, on the scoring , charts with
Beaver Eastern rallied behind a eleven points. Cummins had a
Cindy Leach . coast-to-coast consistent game and helped fuel
score in claiming a 51 -48 Divi- Southern's comeback with lhle.
sion IV sectional championship
Eastern was led by Cindy .
win over Southern Thursday . Leach, who netted a team-high
night at Alexander.
17 points, including the tie- .
'Be,aver Eastern (1 5-6), the breaking and eventual winning
defending regional runner-up, bucket at the end. Sophomore
claimed its second straight sec- Ruby Johnson came off the
tiona! with former North Gallia bench to notch I 0 points, while
, Coach Rob Day at the helm.
Kelly Roberts· added eight a11d ,
' Slightly , overshadowed by Brandi Southworth added ·
E'\Stern 's win was a stellar per- seven.
.formance by Southern senior
The 6rst quarter could have ,
Kim Ihle, who notched a game- been the difference in the game.
higlt 21 points. lhle was all .over Southern outscored Eastern in
the Ooor in a husding effort, that the second and third quarters
also saw the senior guard grab and tied with them in the 6nale.
six rebounds and two steals.
The 16-6 outbUrst by the Eagles
Also playing their final games · was just too much to conquer. ·
were Souther~ gals Stacy Lyons,
Eastern jumped to a 6-0 lead ,
Heather Oatley, . and Sarah . in the first minute of play.
Brauer: ·• ~yons helped ke~p Southern called a quick time ,
Southern 1n the game early With out to recover a~d responded ·
a cou~le steals and seve~] with two consecutive· steals and
sc~res, while ending up "':'ith six lay-ups from seniors Lyons and ;
pomtl. .
. · llda. .
, , , .,
·l
•
Dalley, 1liMl cwo id; Ja'l ~ ' S"tFz* Q~ ot1 &lt;1111 -8·0 :
ets· in the third ·qu~t_er 'c:ome.' run spa~ed b)' ·sAs m'rnovers :
back and grabbed five tmportant , and Leach steals. Cummins ,
rebounds. Brauer played a great ended the run with a baseline
second
quarter to notCh all of
•
PIIIME MOVIII - Southern senior Kim lhle (left) drives the lane
her four points, while claiming
.,. t 1 - ............... . .
a&amp;ainst BeiMI' Eastem In Thursday's sectional. (Scott WOlfe photo)
. BY Sco1T WoLFE

SEN)'INEL CORRESPONDENT

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P~ge

a 2 • The .,.,,Y Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Frldly,

Febnlllry 18, 2000• .

RIO GRANDE BASEBALL 2000 PREVIEW

Retuming talent, new blood muld spell su~ss for Redmen
'

8v MA,IIII W11 u •MI
~CIAl

Local Flavor

TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande Redmen ue
ready to turn the corner as a qew millenruum of Rio Grande baseball
commences. The Redmen have rurned the~r collective l;lacks on a disRedmen from the Tri-County Area
appo10ting 1999 campaign, in which they struggled to a 10-30 finish
overall.
Scott George - Pomeroy, Meigs H.S.
Head coach Brent Clark, entermg his fourth season at the helm of
the Redmen, has brought m an unpresSlve freshman class, who are
Gary Stanley - Pomeroy, Meigs H.S.
ready to help spnngboard Rio Grande rnto the upper echelon of the
Jeremiah Bentley - Pomeroy, Meigs H.S.
American Mideast Conference.
Jason King - Mason, Wahama H.S.
John SP.aeth, a speedy outfielder, from Hamilton, Ohio and p1tcher
Adam Williams - Racine, Southern H.S.
Casey Co~. from Chillicothe, Ohio headline the rookie class. Rio welcomes back honorable mention AII-AMC .Performers Joe :homas
Corey_WIIIIams- Racine, Southern H.S.
(.324, 3 flR, 17 RBI) , Jason King (.357 ,2 HR., 23 RBI), randon
Jimmy Hall - Pt. Pleasant, Pt. Pleasant H.S.
Hutchinson ( 293, 4 HR, 26 RBI) and Keenan Perry ( 353, 6 HR, 31
RBI).
King, Petry and Hutchinson will give the Rednten some power 10 ed hitter, King will man at third base, while Thomas will play shortthe line-up Perry had a stellar freshman season leading the club 10 stop and pttch. Hutchinson will play nghtfield, w1th the other two
outfield slots open .
home runs and RBI
·
Other rerurnees include Randy Jones (.260, 0 HR, 12 RBI) behind . The pitching staff went through some growmg pains as Clark was
the plate, freshmen Adam Hames, Chris Good and Jason Romeo left with pnmanly freshmen after some early season lDJUnes and eligishould push for time as well Bryan Hawkins (.279, 1 HR, 13 RBI) IS bility problems
Rio will have sophomore Junmy HaU (3-2, 4.50 ERA) as one of the
back as second base.
anchors
of the staff and JUnior nghthander Gary Stanley and sophoPerr:y could push for the second base spot and will be the designat-

more Sc~tt George return from injuries. Cox, feU ow freshman Jererm-~
ah Bentley from Me1g! and transfer Chuck Brooks from Manetta Cor~~
lege, should help solid1fy the p1tching.
•:
Hutchinson (1-4, 3 saves) 11 expected to be the closer agam this sea;-· .
son Semor Jarrue Lambert 15 also back from mJury.
. ,
Lefties Jon:llhan Ervm and Brad Campbell and _fre shman Aaron ·
Rykowski will batde for significant time on the mound.
, ,
Clark will have a bevy of young!ters to choose from at almost every ·
poSition. Outfield and first base, should have the greatest compet1t10n =
for playmg time.
,
Clark enters the season wtth a 39-74-1 through his first three sea~
sons. Derrick Patrick rejoins him on th~ coaching staff thtS seasol'l ,
wtth new addttlon, DtU Haines.
The Redmen are.J"acmg a tough schedule.Jhis ~c:as.on. WJth_matcll~·­
ups agamst NCAA Dtvision I foes MarshaU and Ohio NAIA pow.et: ·
West Vtrgtrua State tS on the schedule as weU as P1keville College ..
Ohio Valley College to go along wtth the rugged AMC opponents., .
Shawnee State tS ranked 24th m the preseason poU while Ohio
Dorrumcan and Mt.Vernon Nazarene received consideration from t~e~
pollsters
.'
Rio began the season Thursday m Tennessee agamst Tennessee Terrf ,
pie. The Redmen will also play Lee Umversity and Tennessee Wesleyan :
durmg theu season-opemng swmg m the Volunteer State this week.:_
end.
·

Competitive Green takes inside track for Busch title
Bv MIKE HARRIS
AI' MOTORSPORTS WRITER

t

•

we're gomg to concentrate on.
"My goal .., to wm every race
we enter. I don't say we will wm
every .race, but I think we have a
chance everywhere we go."
Green tS going into the 2000
season wtth a game plan improve on second-place fimshes
at Daytona and m the pomts.
"So my goalts to WID the season opener and then, hopefully,
Green
that will mean that I will WID the
year-end title based on how last
year turned our:· he sa1d. "Sounds
like a great plan, don't you think'"
Among his chief competttors this year w1U be
brother Davtd, who won the Busch champtonshtp
in 1994 and IS back in the steppingstone series fuU
time after several frustratmg years trying to establish
himself ID WIDston Cup.
"I know how good David is," Green sa1d. "He tS

DAYTONA DEAC:::H, Fla. (AP) - Jeff Green
didn't rmnd Dale .Earnhardt Jr. and Matt Kenseth
gerung most of the headlines the last two yean in
NASCAR's Busch series.
Green, the you11gest of the three racmg brothers
from Owensboro, Ky., has gone about his job quietly and effectively. And when he rupped Kenseth
for second place m the senes last season, while
Earnhardt was wmning a second straight title, not
many people noticed.
.
Now With the two big-name drivers gone to the
Wmston Cup senes, Green finds himself the
favorite to win the Busch championship as the
teams head mto the season-opening NAPA Auto
Parts 300 on Sarurday at Daytona lnternattonal
Speedway.
"I don't pay any attenbon to that kind of talk:'
Green satd. "We know we can win races and have a
shot at the championship if we do our job. That's aU

Meigs
from Page II
first-half po1Dts and three fouls)
and front-linen Amy Hysell (two
first-half poiDts) and Jennifer
Shnmpbn (no pomts and two
fouls) that Williams was constantly left open to take peruneter
shots With little defenstve reSistance
As a result, Williams' five pomts
m the second quarter built the
Marauders' first double-digit lead
and led her to a 10-point tint half
and Meig! to a 22-121ead at halftilDe.
Metg!' defense and a generally
unproductive shootmg rught for
River VaUey resulted in Ward and
sophomore
center/forward
KriStin Smith bemg held to four
pmnts each before halftime.
Semor gnard Jessica Griffith, who
led the Raiders with 13 points
was held to three first-half pomts.
Williams scored SIX of her dub's
12 third-quarter points to drive
the Marauders to a 14-pomt lead

at the period's end
In the fourth quarter, Meig!'
lead fluctuated between 12 and
14 po10ts for the first two rmnutes, between 10 and 12 in the
next two rrunutes and eight and
10 pomts for most of the two
nunutes after that But when
Griffith nailed her second threepomter of the mght wtth 2:46
left, the Marauders' lead was
whittled down to a 48-41 margiD
Melg!'lead never shrank to single digits after that.
Metgs was m the rrudst of smkmg 14 consecutive foul shots after
nussmg the first one of the quarter with 5·17 left. The string
helped the Marauders counter
RiverVaUey's 10-for-21 field-goal
shooting, its most productive of
the night.
The foul shooting streak, which
started With two free throws from
Ashley Thomas With 4:45 left,
went to 14 strught With Williams'
two with 1:06 left that boosted
Metgs'lead to 56-44.
The game was the last for Gnffith, Ntkki Hollanbaugh, Casee

defi~1tely gomg to be one of the guys to beat this
year But thtS senes tS loaded w1th talented dnvers,
and nobody tS givmg anybody anythmg"
An unsuccdsful foray mto Wmston Cup sometimes hurts a driver's Image.
"It happened to me and 11 happened to David,"
Green sa1d. "You go to Wmston Cup for a couple
of years and not do so well, and all of a sudden you
can't dnve
"Then you come back to Busch and do pretty
weU, and you're a hero agam. It's all cherrustry, and
I thmk our team has got a lot of chermstry thiS

year."
Green, crew ch1ef Harold Holly and most of the
crew that helped him wm three races last year are
back, but they are part of a new team, PPC Racmg,
wtth a new car owner, John Bender, and a new car
number, 10.
"The main thmg ts that we know how to work
together," Green

s~ud. "It'll

be bustness as usual."

~"' •23

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Other national figures from the
NAIA show Rio Grande appc;aring in several other categories.
Nathan Copas 15 tied for 11th In
the nation in free-throw percentage (.852).
Rio Grande is 14th m the
nation in scoring at 85.1 points
per game and
14th in scoring
margin
(12.62).
In
addition to the
No. 1 ranking
in three-point
percentage, the
Redmen sport
a
top-five
showmg
m
May
overall
field
TopGun
J
goal percentage. Rio is No.
5 m that category (.502) through
26 games.
As the stretch dnve beg10s, Rio
Gr;~nde (20-7) is a factor m the
AMC race, currently one-half
game behind Sa~nt Vmcent with
three games to play.
'

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ver And Gold Colna PrQofttll,
Dlamondl, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Alngt l Prt-1930 U S Currency,
Sltrling, Etc. Ai:qullltlonl Jowotry
• M T.S. Coin Shop, 1St Second
Alllnut, GaJ4&gt;olla, 7-2842.

Wfiy walt? Starl milling Ohio
a1ng1 .. tonight Call toll frat 1·
801l-711e-2623. olfon&amp;lon 8178

will be racmg together agam That bnngs a srrule io ;
Jeff's face.
·
"We're pretty compettttve:' sa1d Green, at 37 fiv~
yean younger than Davtd and three years youngt;r ,
than Mark "Those guys really want to beat me, and
I reaDy want to beat them. We've bee!) that way m
everything since we were :ill little."
Dav1d agrees that jeff should be constdered the •
favorite to wm the Busch Senes title this year
'·
"He's earned that status:' the eldest brother sa1d.
"Jeff has worked hard. and they've put together
what looks like a reaDy good team over there. I've
got a good team, too, and I'd like to think that we'll
be battling each other aU year. That would be neat.'' ,
UnassurrungJeff shrugs offhtS favonte status.
~
"I'd rather be the underdog;· he said. "But It'$ ·
mce to have people say, 'We're gomg to have to bea~ •
that guy to wm this thmg' It makes aU the hard'
work and effort we put in week tn and week out.
rewardtng" _

Brand New
Slverldo LS
Sportllde Extended Clb 4x4

10

Ext 9735

40

All New 2000
Tahoe LS 4 Door

Wedemeyer• Auction Strvlet,
Clalllpclio, Otllo 7o40-378-2720.

320 Mobile Homes

-l~totmati01l.F800·ROMANcr.

...

fiVRIPIIpBI

Marauder football standout Justin Roush
was honored Tuesday night at halftime of the Meigs-Wellston basket·
bell game. Roush was the Division Ill state offensive player of year
and led the 11tate tn rushing and scoring. Roush was presented a
plaque from Marauder football coach Ml~e Chancey and was given a
staiiQing ovation from the large crowd. A plaque was also g1ven to the
school for their trophy case. Pictured from left to right are Chancey
and Roush. (Dave Htrria photo) , ,
•

Home Training Provided Muat
Own Computer. 1·800.223-1 149

W1th Davtd's return to :Susch, all three brothers

Justtce, Autumn Murphy and
Andrea Neutzting, the Raiders'
five seruors.
"Our kids played hard:' sa1d
River Valley head coach Tom
Weaver. "We're going to miss our
semors. It was my first bunch to
go through They were spectal
kids.
"They stuck wtth us, tt was a
tough season," he added "They
could have bailed out a long time
ago, but they didiJ't. They played
hard aU season "
Meig! (20-1) will now face
whteh
defeated
Jackson,
Portsmouth 58-56 at the Coal
Grove Sectional. The Marauders
meet the Ironladies at Chilltcothe
next Thursday at 8 p.m.
"We basically know what
(Beth) Howe can do and what
she does:• Logan said. "The Caldwell (Brandy) girlts very phySical,
a good rebounder and can score
tnSide. I know they've changed
coaches, so whether they play the
same style, the S3Jlle defense, we'D 1
have to find out between now
and Thursday."

Penonala

$15 · $45 Ptr Houri Country'a
Milot Eotabllohod l!odlcll ~
Blllrl Software Company Needl
hople To Procell Clalma From

'

HotShots

CAREER ACHIEVEMENT -

005

•

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL SERIES

Auction
and Flta Mlrket

-

'

'

80

Contract Poolllon Available For A
Group Facilitator For A Women's
S ppo 1 Q
~ E
1 A
u r roup, 1" 0 ven ngs
Week And Occa'IJonal Daytime
Snslona At Area Schools AP·
pllcanta With Knowledge 01 VIc·
tlm't Rights And Domeatlc
VIolence Issues Preferred High
School Diploma And Some Adell·
Ilona! Education ffialnlng In So·
clai Servtcea Required lnterooted
Applicants May Raply To. Per·
sonnel, PO Box 454, Galllpolla,
OH 45631
DENTAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hr
Dental Billing Software Company
Nooda Peopla To Procoaa Mecfl·
c:al Claims From Home. Training
PIOVkled. Must Own Compultr t.
801).223-1149 Ext. &lt;180.
Director of Nursing lntermediale
cate laclllly West VIrginia Reg·
laterad Nurse tlcenao requtrect
Minimum flva years full·tlme or
equivalent experience and two
years axperlance nuralng auper·
vlllon required Send resume to.
Services, Box 575, Point Plea•·
ani WV 25550

DRIVERS. Start Up To 36cpm
With Bonusas )II Miles Paid.
Average 2500 Mtloa Per Weak
AND Gat Home MOST WEE·
KENDSI All Aaalgnod '98 Or
No~or. Salellilo Equipped. Air •
Rlcto Conventlonale That Go
Homo Wllh You E•collent Banetits Packagol 23 w It vr OTR
t80Q.727-21188 EXT. 1ol!i
Otlvoro· 2 Week Paid COL Tralnlng, No Ellf). Noadod. Earn Up To
$32,000 f'lr FUll llorifllts Oan To.
day. 1·81!-230·8002 P.A M
1tlnlport www t23pom com
EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
Moctlcal lnauranco Billing Alllatancolmmedlatoly, If You Ha,. A
PC You Can Earn $25,000 To
150.000 Annually Call 1·800·
29t- Dept. 1109
IXCITINO
OPPORTUNITY.
Large Corporrdlon Ia Looking For
A Person To Train And Work
Hare In GaHipolls, Polqt Plaaaant,
&amp; Pomeroy If lbu Are Enthualaa·
tic, Ambitious, And Have A Way
With People, We Mil)' Be Able To
Otltr You This sr,ol Excellent
Frlngo Banollta II nttll~tad. Cell
304·428·8288 For ln1orvlew.
Amarjcan General Lift And Ac·
cldontlnsuranceeon.,.ny N·71
Expanding Bu11ne11 Seeking
&lt;lulllll«t HVAC lntlallera, Slort·
lng Salary $tO ·$14 Hoorly. Sond
Work Experience And Relerenc·
11 To ClA 095 c/o Gaii~~GIIs D•
lly Tribuna. 825 Third Avonuo.
ClllllpOIIa. OH oiM:It

Full Time V.hlclo Oporllor Ill·
requires 1 Clua B COL with en·
dorumentl. Mutt have 2 y11r1
driving oxporlanco and good drlv·
lng record. MROD experience
preferred Btntlha package Ap·
ptlcoUOnl mor bt oblolnod from
and 1ubmlttld to Athena County
Board of MROO, lOt W Union
811081, Athono, OH 45701 EOE
FULLER BRUSH CO 11 Looking
For People Who Would Llkl To
Start Their Own lualnua Work·
lng From Homo NO INVEST·
MENT Noodod. Llmllod Tlmt
Only Coli 800-882-7270 omon 1111·
-Oool.com

Part·time position for Aulatant
Youth StrYICII Coordlnltor.
B•chelor'a dtgrM In health, to·
ctal work or oll«t 11t1c1 or oqulvoltnt experience Mull POIIIII
excellent communication akljta,
ability 10 ltlch amaiVtargo groupo
and bt a liaison to IChoola, community agencies and ltmlllea.
Avorago of tfl.t8 hours par-k.
no other btntflta. lltx ttme with
mlnlm•l weekend/evening work
requlrect PoSitiOn "allsbfo mid·
February 2000 Muat bo depend·
able, Innovative and abte to work
wtlh minimal supervision Rtllable
transportation required. EEOC
lf1'4110Jer. SUbmH reoumoa to PO.
Bo• 631, Pomoroy, OH 05788 by
February 22. 2000. No ltllPitcallon
will be conokleract oltor that data.
Part·Time Workers At A&amp; A Auto
Dotal! At Fourlh Avenue, Galllpo·
lis, Apply In l'llraon

Ptrmenenl Fullllmt Jobs, 40•
hrs/woek. Clean Bulldlnga BUF·
FALO AREA. Muolllvo within 20
mllt1 radlaa of Buffalo Male or
Fomalo. Shllla. Call Nowl
(304)788·7290, "Bob.
Pleasant Valley Private Duly 11
accepting appllcatlona for 11111
teattd nuralng aaJialanta (WV or
Ohio) and Peraonat Care Aldta
Ptraonal Care Aldea muat have
al least one year experience pro·
vldlng peFJonal care. Hour1y as·
"gnmenta and Intermittent vtalta
available. Per diem pay and
fle•lble scheduling For more In·
formation or to co:npfete an ap·
pllcallon contact Pleasant Vtlley
Privata Duty, 101 t VIand St., Pt
Pteaaant, WV 255SO or call f.
SOD-748·0078 or (3Q.4)87S·7•00
AAIEOE

Po11a1 Job&amp; $48.323.00 Yr Now
Hiring .-No Experience -Paid
Training ·Great Beneflla, Call 7
Days 800-4211·3880 Eld J•385
POSTAL JOBS To SIB 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1·800·81 3·3585,
EXT 14210 8 AM ·9 PM, 7
OAVS Ids. Inc
POSTAL JOBS Up To St7 21 /Hr
Guaranteed Hlrt For Appllcatk&gt;rt
And Emm lnlormlltlon Call 8 A M
• 9 PM M·F t-888·898·5627 Ext
24·1007
RN'I
Arcadia- Nursing Center now ac·
copllng applcattono lor 1 lull umo
M·F 3·11 shift, Includes beneFit
packogo Part limo hou11 are alao
avallrlllle Plaaaa IPflly In poraon,
M·F 8·4 at Arcadia Nursing Can·
ter, Po Box !511, East Main
Stroot, Coolville, Ohio •s723.
EOE
Seamatre11 Wanted, Straight
Seams, Heavy VInyl, 740·368·
9310

SINGERS! GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY, ond EASY LISTEN·
INGI Call 1·800··~9-818• For
Appolnlmenl To Cqmo To Nash·
ville And Audition For Major
Record Producera And Concert
Promotrtt lnlllmel www wctn.tc
Bubltllute Vehicle Optrttora I,
II a Ill· requirements range from
operating a van, which requires a
regular license, to operating a
school bua, which require&amp; a
Class B COL with school bua,
pa11enger &amp; air brakt endorse·
menta Pay scale 11 S7 oo 10

St 0 00 per hour depending on
quallflcetlona Must have 2 yeare
driving experience and good drlv·
lng record M~OD e11per1ence
preferred. Applications mar bt
obtained from and sUbmtned to·
Atilano County Board of M~OO.
801 w Union Slraot, Athenl, OH
45701 EOE
Try Tho NEW MILLENIUM DIETl
Lou Pound• And lnchoa Sue·
cess Ourantetd. Eat All Day &amp;
Moft Awll)' Introductory Ollor S3f,
""'Shipping 81]0.715-1053

URGENTLY NE~DEO lor plalma
donora, urned 138 to $48 for 2
or 3 houro -kly. Coli Sara·Toe,
7oi0-592-888 t '
Wonlod E•porloncod Managing
Holr Styllot, Wllh Rotoroncu,
Wanllng A 'oath Rental, Coli
740-44f.t837.

WANTED: Your Support Will Bo
Appttclaled In The M•rch 71h
Ptlmary VOlt RopOOIIcan, Cartoo
P Wood, Golla County Commll·

-

Pillet Far By: CWtoa P. Wood

3852Sioll- tOt

Golllpoito, OH •M:It

Wanted, Care Giver For Elderly
Mon 7&lt;40-4&lt;11·4051 Or 74D-4&lt;1t·
3-413.

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 10 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS
SECURITY, MAIN·
TENANeE. PAliK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·113·
35&amp;5, EXT ,.2ft 8 AM. ·9 PM .
7 DAVS fdo, Inc.
Work From Homo SSD9 ·$8,000
Port·nmo /Full·Tlrno Contact Ko~
ly 1·888·882·2838, www amort·
""'"'Y'com PIIIOOCfo IOWin
MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel·
tent Income. Full Training. Com·
puttr Requlrtd Coli Modi Worf&lt;a
Tott·Froo 800·500·6333 e.t
2301.

140

Bualneu
Training

Clrolllpallo- Collogo
(C-.r Clolo To Homo)
Cdlbdayl7-7,
t ·1100-21+0452,
Reg f90.05.t27&lt;18

150

School•
ln1tructlon

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Sacholoro,
Maatera, Doctorate, By Correaponclonco Solid Upon Prior EducatiOn And Short Study Courtlt
F.or FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t-1100--8311

180

,

Wanted To

Do

Georges Portable S•wmlll, don't
ltaul yOur toa1 to 1t1o mill )uot cal
304-87fl.t957.
excellent cart for peraan In mr
home non~amoker •nd Mobile,
Vlry Roosonabll 1304)88N880

Houtoclunlng. ~olloblo Lady
With Reterenet• Rio Grandt To
Golllpollo I Surrounding Aro11,
Call Diana, 1&lt;10-2&lt;15-St 04.
Lon Hllplng Hind Ctoonlng llorv·
teo, lnluroct, - Eat1mata1, low
Rolli, Satlsfocllon GuoraniHdl
740-387-eo.a.

CCINIOIJOo\TIIIIU.t.
From $3,000 ·$150 0001
(t% -"trego Rate).
LOANI 0 A.C
For
ColtTol-1-.e1WIII,
CREDIT CA~D UP TO $3,000
U n - VISA IW:.. Bod Cro&lt;fh
Or No Croctlt. HI00-~31 7 Ext
oiOOO.

DARE TO BE RICH? No Expar·
1111 Will Troln. f.II8·838·4S30
www ocoquaotinll oom/heoltyllvlng
MEDICAL BILLER .15 ·$45 /Hr.
Madtcal Billing Soltwlrl Con1&gt;ony
Noodo Pooplo To Procell Mectl·
cal Clalma From Home Training
Provided Muol Own Co1111&gt;u!Of. 1·
BOQ.434.55t8 EICI 11117
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmjtad In·
come Potential No Experience
NICIIIIry Frlt Information l
CD·ROM lnvootmont &amp;•.985 •
$8.915. Financing ~vojlablt. It·
land Automated Medical Servlcoa, Inc. 100·322·1138, Exl. 050.
Void In KY,IN, CT
Noad A LOon? Try Dobl Consolo
ctollon $5,000 • 1200,000 Bact
Credit 0 K. FH 1·800·770-0092,
Ert 215
PEPSI /COKE /FRITO LAV
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE. BE YOUR OWl( BOSS
USALL CASH BUSINESSUS
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL·
LENT PROFITS t•800·73f.7233
EXT.703
Start Your Buainess Todey
Ptlmo Shopping Center Space
Available At Aflordabia Ralt
Spring Voltoy Pllzo. Call10101

220 Money to Loan
$$ Auto Loena, P.traon[lt Lo•nt,
Oobl Oonoolldollon, Morlgagoo
Afl(l Rollnonclng. Crectll Ptobloma
OK Contumaro Financial t-80D2•7·5t2SEif 113-4 VoldOH,KB

SU NEED CASH?? WE Pay
C11h For RemJinlng Paymenta
On Property Soldl Morl,ogul
Annultllll SettltmenUI mmedlolo Ouotoolll 'Nobody Butt
Our Prieta • N•tlonal Contract
Burtra 100·410·0731 Ex I 101
_., Mtlonalcctntroctoom
SFREE CASH NOW$ From
WoaHhy Fomllltt Untoodlng Mil·
Nonl ~To 11o1p lollTheir 'RI•oo. Wrlto lmmtdlattly
Wlnctfllle, 147-A IECOND AVE.,
t350, NEW YOII~. NEW YO~K
10011.

or

•••••lO()I(•·--·

RENTAL S

~

(t) t Ooublowldo. 1249 Par
Month, Low Down Payment, 1·
IIOH91-tm.

1 -3 Bedroom• Forecloaed
Homoo From $t8t/Mo. 4% Down
For Llatlnga &amp; Payment Details,
II00-319-3323Ext 1709.

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Bai:l Crtdll Legally
Into 1188-859-2580

(2). 14' Wldo. $187 Per Month
Low Down Payment, 1·800·891·
8777

t 52 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 3
Badrooma WiD Hook·Up, S375/
Mo. , Deposit Raquirtd, 1·888·
84().()521

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Application W !Sirvtce Reduce
P•ymenta To 8!5% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Call t · BOO·
328-85tO Elf 29

(3) 18•80 S25ol Per Month, Low
D
p
t F
AI 1 800
own avm•n ' rH r, •
•

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Reduce Interest Stop Collection
C.llall Hovo I Monthly Pll)'mont
FREE Contldonttal Help CCS·
Nan-P- Ht00.-127·9912
MONEV TO LOAN Sad Credit
OK Frto Appllcallon U S. Ap·
plleantl Oril)! f.B77·780-1939
NEED MONEV IMMEDIATELY?
Futoot CASH LOANS Available
Rogarctloaa 01 Crodll . Auto
Loono, CroctR Carcta, Cluaranltld
Dobl Consolldotlon, Cluoranlood
Credit Reatoratlon 30 ·Minute
Approvol. Call Toii·Frtt 1-811·
1123-7St5
YOU'RE APPROVEOI Crodll
Carda &amp; Loans, Regardt111 Of
~ur Current Croctlll In 2• Houro

aoo-an..a.a
230 Prof111lonal
Slrvlc11

TUANIO DOWN ON
IOCIAL IICUAITY 11111
No Fee Untou Wt Wlnl
t-888-1182·3345

Hf/IL !:SlAT I::

31 0

Homes for

Sala

• NO DOWNI HOMES NO C~EO.
IT NEEOEOI GOV'T FORE·
CLOSU~ESI GUA~ANTEEO AP·
PROVALI 1·800·380··820 EXT

asoe.

FINANCIAL

ATTENTION $1,800 Weekly
From Home Proc111lng Corpo·
rala Newslt1tlral $2 Plr Newslel·
terl Guar•ntetd Wttkly Paychocktl No Erporlancol Sta~ lm.-.olyl Col~.

(3)

" ,,,000
Pocl!ago On I.Wkot
&amp; Ha~tt Checking Account 1·
_.., 34to

Acroo MiL Groen Townahlp, 7&lt;10·

Al'TENTION $1,800 Wookly
Worklrfg From Home Proctlllng
Corporate Newslalteral 12 Per
Newaletterl Guaranteed Weekly
Paychlcksl No Experience Nee·
11saryl Homeworker• Needed
tmmedlatolyt Call NOW 800·•5349&lt;1011

Per Month Call f·

410

3 Bedroom Brick Homo, Double
Garege, Larga Lot, Finished
Basement, Maintenance Freet

ATIT • MCI • SPRINT What't
Tho Big Socret? Make $52K •
$t25K /Yr W /Phono Cordo.
Easyl FREE lnlol t-80Q.997·1811e
Ed I t !5!i (24 Hill)

l· ~l2~)~,F~
Euy Ar·
Fl·
I Iro~t~TI,:.mo
, •nd Buyoro
3 Btdroom.

Croctlt .....,..._ ~~~~,~~~-1

Will do houiOCIIInlng at roa..,..
able rat11. Prtcu art 1!50 for one
ltvol and &amp;85 lor two lovrllt Call
today lor an •PPolntment, 7o40992·3704.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommanda that you do bu&amp;l·
ne11 w:lth people you know, and
NOT to ..nd mont~ t~rough the
m•U until you have lnveatrgated
lho olferlng

VIllage Green Apartment•· 2
bedrooms, total electric, app~
11 furnished, laundry room flcll·
t111 and dOlt to school, BPS»~Ca·
tiona IYiilab$1 II oHice 740..182·
371 t TOO t ·11118·233-889&lt;1 Equal
Houllng ()ppottunoty

5 Bldrooma, 2 Bathl, ov.r 2,000
aq It , lor le11 than 1450 mo
FREE DeliVery &amp; Sat f·8IJ0.9&lt;18·

2br, tba Home w/Attochod Go·
rage, t 30 Soulh Pork Drive.
$38,000 (304)875-5697

Bualnaas
Opportunity

(I). '""AMAZING""'
llrywai··48R., 32r80··ovar 2308
oq « Payments low aa S4oe par
mo 1-80Q.908·5e78

Foot-.

Mother ol 2, will bobyallln homo.
Sandhill Rd . Flnctd In yl(cf.
1304)895-3141'

210

tor Sale

7~

3 Bedrooma With Garage, 1 112
&lt;M&amp;-07..

Sll8.

-

--

::88:.:1 .,:-8:.,:m..:;·~_;...-----

t 983 t4x70 Skyline, 2·3 bOd·
rooms, 1 1/2 b•ths, new Bertttr
carpet. excellant condition,
$10,000080, 7o4D-62·5&amp;8e.
1988 U•70 Crootrldgo 2 Bod·
rooms . .2 Baths, Mus1 Be t-tcwtd,
For Mort Information. 7•0·25et!&amp;l t Allor 8 ~ M
1984 Llberly a. 1987 Oakwood
Both 14K70, 3 Btdrooma, 2 Full
Botns, Now Uncttrplnnlng, Liberty
Hal Heal Pump, Both Vory Good
Condltlonl Must Salll 740·2•S·
9028 Evenlnga.
~999

Fortune trailer, t8x80, thrH
bldroomo, two balhs, vinyl aiding
ahlngled roof, central air and 200
amp urvlc:e, take OVtr paymentt,
740-7-12·1~ .

Country Living 3 Or • Bldroomo,
Por Cloalng Cotto &amp; Move In
7~3093

Doubtowldo On Lol $250 Qepooll
Roqultod, 304-738-7295
fLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc·
IOrvlio, Ohio: GIIANO OPENING
Llflgttt New lnwntory In South·
Ohio Speclala On Homaa
And Financing In Progre11. Call
Fot Ootalo, 1·888·565.0187

''n

2 Lot Models Mutt Go, Extra
Nlco, Loaded. Your Cholco $999
Down Hurry Won't Last Ol~woocl.
Gol\&gt;011, 740-44e·3093
1 Lef1 $2991Mo, lncludea Lot,
304-738-7295

Houae for aale· two atory 2·3
btdrooma, one bath, Middleport,
uklng $29,000 No down pay·
ment, Financing evallabla to
quatlltd Call f.IIOD-388-8194,

Now homo, 3 bodroomo, 3 btlhs,
2n1 aquare lett plua oversized
2 car aUachtd garage, wrepar·
ound porchea, many tmtnltiea,
_
.. views, CO!Mnlont toea·
non, 1189,000, Mlloul Inquirers
call 740-192·2•78 for mort lnfor·
. .lion

7-·-

On 2 lots In Syracuse, 10 rooms
ond bllh river vtow, S29,500,

On Ill 180 Largo It Rooms With
Boeemont, Clll Hoot, A/C, Ono
Car Garage ,Work Shop. Dna
Aclll Lind HoUio B-an Bula·
vlllo Plko And County Gorogaa
70Q 148 88118.
Ownor Rolocaftng, lrlcl! ~-. 3
lldn!ll, FR, LR, 2 t/2 ilaths, Gil
Flropllct, JtQkoon Plko. Prlaect
To Sail • &amp;120,000 00. 7o10-4&lt;1t.

7 -.
330 Farm• for Sala

350

Lots

a Acreage

1&amp; •crea, Pagevllle, Scipio Town
thlp Ret 102, $30,000, 740·992·

2 44 Acrta, Winding Crossroads
Subdivision, Very Nice Area,
Convenient Location Gallipolis
Addrooo. $23,000 7o40-245-5776

36 Acras Of Land On Lincoln
Plko. 7o40-25B-t47t
85 acre&amp;, wooded, great hunting,
off At 33, solid farm house with
bam/sheds walar reservoir, gas!
oil wtR, pond, Meigs County, 740992-6700, $!50 000

REDUCED PIICES
20 ACRES ·111,000
All Wooded, Wi1h Road That
Continues Into Wayne National
Foroot Off SR tolD &amp; SR 233
23 ACRES -$21,000
011 SA 7 South 01 GallipOliS No
Roatrlcttonsl NEEDS TLC S2 300
oown On Lind eon..ct
MEIGS COUNTY
CHEAPER THAN DIRT
8 Acres, $5,000, 10 Acres
$10,000 5+ Acres For $S,500
Call For Free Maps ANTHONY
LAND CO , LTD, f.81J0o2t 3-8365
www countrytyma com
Rivarvitw ted, suitable lor houaa
or trailer, never floodtdl $14,000
located In syracu11, OH, 740·
992-!700

All noa1 estate -sing In
tills newspaper Is sub)lct to
lhe Federal Fair Houllng Act
of t 988 which mlkeall Wlegat
to Advertise ·any pretereoce,
limitatiOn or dtscrtmlnation
baaed on race, color, rotiQIOn,
aax familial atatUa or 11a11ona1
Otlgln, Of 8lf'J tntentton 1D
make any auch pretoronce,
lrnttatlon or dtacrlmlnatton •
Ttl~ IIIWipajllll IMI no1

koowlngly -

•
1011which~ In vtololloo of tho
low OUt readofo ora~
lnlormocf 1hll all ~
ldVIItltedlnlhll , _ _

a~llflsements for

aro avalflblo on an equal
opportunity bull.

0141.

Small Lot, homo and bUilding •
820,000 080, 3 Bctrm, L.R • D.R.,
2 Both Kltehon, Utility. Noodl
Work. Lota of Po1ontlal Call
(3q4)ti75-8Ht IHor t2Noon for

Altl1t 'lb....

'

Thrae bedroom houae for aalt,
bath, good nolghborhood In
- · 142.1500, 7of0.943228

380

Raal Estell
Wanted

Nood 5 S.aludod Acroo With
Homtalta, Quiet ~oad, Galllal
Mtlg1 Counly, Deeded &amp; Sur·
VIYid, Under &amp;20,000 00 7·0·
44t-2317.
Wonttd to bUJ· building tot or 1·2
acrot, Flvt Polntal Chettar oroa.
7~.g()t4

•

3 Bedroom, 2 B•th, Full Base·
ment. Camp Coni•y $300month
+Dopoalt (304)(175-3230

Advartlaa your bualneu In this
vialbll roctt!on on well traveled
highway Wilt put up and matntaln
your olgn Call 740·992-8398 or
740-992·2272.

MERCHANDI SE

510

Household

Good1
Appliances
Recondlllontd
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Rtfrl·
gratora 90 Day Guarantttl
French City Maytag, 740· U8·
1795

February &amp; Msrch Sail
Thompsons Applanco Repa~
3407 Jacl&lt;&amp;on A,....
StarUng P&lt;lceo on Appllancoo
Rofrlgerators
95 00
llryertl
90 00
Electric Ranges 75 00
Washer&gt;
95 00
D~hwasher&gt;
65 oo
Fmze11
13500
IIBITlS OWir $1 00 •• 90 day Hnan- •

tv 1304)675-7388

•

For Salt Reconditioned Wllh·
era, dryers and refrlgeratora
Thompsons Appliance 3,.07
Jackson Avonuo, (304)875-73118

FOR LEAIE 011 SALE 5 Yoar
Old 2,000 Sq Ft 3 Bodroomo, 2
Batha, Energy Elllclanl Homo, 1. W'"'"""
Neer CIIIIB~o 13oM Club $1185/Mo ,
74-7,
One Bedroom, 1•2 Fourth Ave·
nuo, Galllpollt, Dopo1lt $250/Mo.,
Gaa Furnace, Appl!anctl Fur·
nlohod, 7oiQ.448.311e7.
Pilot Program, Renters Needed,
30H38-7295
Pilot Program, Rentera Needed,
304-738-7295

420

Mobllt Homes
for Rent

Ux70 Wllh E•pondo 3 Bod·
rooma, 1 112 Bathe, Air, 5
Mlnutu From Clalllpolla, On t4t,
No 1'1111. S375/Mo , Ptuo Dopoott,
Rtleroncoo, 7&lt;10 Ul 41124.

2 or 3 bedroom mobile home for
10nt, no pelt, 7o40-992·5658

-n.

Middleport· corner ol High Slreet
a Powtll Sttaot, 2 bedroom homo
wllh dining room, living room and
~ corpot and kllchOn
a.blnoto mako1 lho kllchon with
loll ol wlndDWI very \lrl(ltlt. Also a
large lot. Cute as can be. Ra~
ctuced to $33,000 Plouo call
Ootllo Turner Really, Dollie S
'1\J'ntr, Blokor II 7o40-9Q2·2688

2BR House In HarUord $250 per
month No Pets Reftrenct/Ot·
pooll Required Call 1304)882·
2018

Put Vou Tax Refund To Work,
$099 Down Only At Oakwood
Hom11 In Barbouravllle, 304·

7584.

HOMES FROM .111.30 /MO. t
·3 BA Aepoa/Forecloaurea, Fee,
4% Down For Llslllnga JPa~ment
DotaNI f·BIJ0.7t9-300t xtta5

2 or 3 bedroom, 148 Mulberry
Avo, S23e a month. $125 cfapoalt.
,.,.Info. can 7&lt;10-f!e?-9729

2 Bedroom nailer Beautiful Rlvfr
VIew In Kan•uga, No Pets, 740·

1·1/2 Acre, mortlle11. with
Houn Trailer &amp; Barn Millstone
Rd. 1304)S7B-3033

FORECLOSED HOt.IES Low Or 0
Downr Govn't And Bank Rtpo'a
Being Bold Nowl Financing Aval~
able Coli Nowl 1·800·3S5·0024,
Ext.IKMO

plua depoatt, will ..u on contract
wllh good raferencu, no pets.
740-flllfl-72..

Land Home Packag11 All Araaa
AI CIICII Rlllks 74().4.48.3583.

3BR/2BA 2 Family Rooms, Hlat
Pump/Central Air, Double Car
Garage Lynn Drive, New Haven.
Shown by appt only (30•)882·

polnlmtnt

For 11111 or rant- 2 bedroom
MUll tn Pomeroy, $350 month

Betwttn Athena and PomerOy, 2
, , 3 bedroom mobllt homes,
S210-S300, 7ol0-992·2t87

I AC~ES I POND
With Buutllul Building Site Be·
hind Pond lletwan Gallipolis &amp;
Jackoon, 2 Mttu 011 SR 35 Land
ConlraCI Available Fret Maps f·
740--1.

BY OWNER: All Amtnllleo 01
New Hom• Convenient Location
To Gallipolis And Holzer, 3 Bed·
rvomo, 2 Full Batha With Coromtc
Tile, Living Room With Vaulted
Coiling, Flroplaco, Dlni!'Q Room,
Cuttom Kllchtn, Har&lt;lwood
Floors, Sunroom, Deck, Walkout
Finished Baltmtnt With Bod·
room And Full Both, 2nd Bedroom
Or E"rclee Room. Family Room,
Fireplace And Gaa Logs, Large
Udllly ~oom, Worhhop, Covered
POliO With State 2 Cor Garage,
New Root. VInyl Siding Thermo·
"'"' Wlndowl, Ntw Heat Pump,
$128,500, 7•0·.. 1·1199 For Ap·

2 bedroom hou11 In Portland,
S300 p~.. 8IOCtrtc, heat wfth wood,
7o4D-MWS&lt;Ie

Loaded Slnglewldea Muat Go!
Save Thousands! No Lot Rent
For e Mos. Only 0 Oakwood,
Gallpolls, 740-446-3093

3BR Brick Ranch w/FiroplaCf&lt;, 2
FamllyRoom, 1Bath, Fuii-Baae·
ment, Large Corner Lots, Cant111t·
Air, Fenced Backyard, New Hoi·
Water Tank, New carpetlfam
room Digital Thermostat, Newly
refinished Hardwood Floors.
$78,000 (7&lt;10)t188·9062

2049.

HOUHI for Rent

460 Space for Rent

.. 1.0181

3 BR Furnished Trailer, next to
Wai·Marl In Mason. Central Air,
No Pete, ,Reference Required
1740)992-3911

440

Apartments
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshad and unfurnished, security
dep.oslt required, no pets, 740·
992·2218

Mollohan Carpet, Berber Stle,
202 Clark Chapel Road, Porter
Ohlo,7_7_

New And Ultd Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanaug•
Good Used Beds, Dr11aera,
Couches Dinettes, Etc Big SaY..
lngs On New Furniture 740..441·
4782
A&amp;O'a Uaed Furniture Great 81·
ltcllon, Priced To Selll
And Browser • Corner Of Route 7 .
&amp; Addison Pike, ·we Buy Furnl•
ture' 740-387-0260

·com•

Washer S9S, Dryer $12~. Eloctrtc
Range $75, Rotrlgorator SUO,
Freezar S175: Washer 1205;
Cryer $205 1 Year Warranty,
Skagga Appliances, 78 Vlnt
Street , Gallipolis, 7&lt;10...6-7388,
1·888 815-0128

530

AntlquH

Buy or sell Riverine Antiquea,
1124 East Main on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740·992-2528 or
1539.-Ruaa Moore, owner.

1•o-m.

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandl. .

$$BAD CREDIT? Got Cllh
Loans To $5,000. Debt Conooll·
dation To $200,000 Credit Cotdo,
Mortgag11, Refinancing And
Auto Loane Available Meridian
Credll Corp. 1-800-471-St t9 E"
t 180

Nice 1 Bedroom Garage Aparl·
ment, In Kanauga, Apptlanc.s ln..
eluded ,No Pots, D D $250/Mo ,
Call 740·888·7102, Or 7&lt;10·886·
1389

"Attention Prlmastar &amp; Cable TV
Cuatamers• Want A Better Deal? ·
frH Equipment, Frle lnatallatlon,
CoHTom t 740-388.01 t3

1 Bedroom Near Arbor's Nursing
Home, Economical Utllltlea, Quiet
Loea.tlon 1279/Mo , + Utllltlea, No
Pelt, 74D-448-2957

8 Person Hot-Tub Blue Ridge '
Mountain Stream Brand 211·11'2
HP Mololl $3,000 Now·WIH Sell
~$2,200 (304)682·3613

.2 Badroom Apartment Adjacent
To R60 Grandt Campus, 740-245·
15856.
2 Bedroom Apartment, New Ha·
van Area 1260 mo. lnchidtl WI·

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Finance With ·o· Down. Pall
CrtdJt Problems, No Prot:Hm Call
Toll Free f.B77-293-ol082,

480 First Avenue, (Galllpollt) 1
Apartment, $280 &amp; Dopoolt, Rol·
....... No 1'1111, 7•D-44t·0952,
740.88&amp;-4531

All Steel Bulldlngsll 24' Wide To
75' Wide Buildings To Fit Any
Need Price Everyone Elae •
Then Call Usl 1·800·825·0316
Worldwide BuNdlng Sales

torltraah Celt (304)773-!5577

BEAUTIFUL APAIITMINTI AT
BUDGET PRICIS AT JACK·
80N ESTATII, 52 Woetwood
Drive from S289 to $370 Walle to
ahop &amp; movlu Cell 740·448·
2!588 Equal HouaJng Opportunity
Cl'lrlsty's Family Living, apart·
menta, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·992·•514, ap•rtments avail·
lbto, furnlohad &amp; ..,fllrnlshed.

For Lttse One Bedroom, Unfurnished, Sacond Floor Ap•tment,
CO&lt;ntr 01 Second And Pint A/C,
$240/Mo • Water Included Sa·
c:urlty And Kay Deposll Refer·
tnces Required No Pels. 7·0·
..11-4-425.
Fumlahocf 2 Rooms &amp; Bolh Show·
or, Downotalra, Clean, No Poll,
Deposit &amp; Roteronceo Required,
74Q-.t4&amp;-1519
GraclousiNing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Rlvoralda Apartmonll In Mlddlo·
port From S273·$338 Croll 7•0·
992·5De4 Equal Houalng Oppor·
tunltlls
Nice, 2 bedroom 1 t bodroom
apartments lor rent, pleau cell
aher 6pm 7o40-92H9-41.
Now Taktng Applications- 35
Weat 2 Bedroom Townhoust
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash $315/Mo, 1•0·
&lt;146-00011
One Bedroom furnished Apartmant In Pt Plteunt Very Clean
end Nice No pets Phone
1304)875-1398
One bedroom furnished apMt·
ment In Middleport 740·99:2·
&amp;ttl.

Bar and Slx(6) Stools Ideal for
basement or gama room Call
1304)675·281 t
Complete DISH Network satellite
system, brand new, $99, 740·
992·1 162 or 304-773·530S alter

·Accounta
moat Everyone
Money Downll
mental! 1

I COM·
Mer·

AI·

No
Pay·
(Toll

_,

Computer Power Mac Pertorma:
OS 7 5 System, tOOMHz, Color
Monitor. Mouse Keyboard, Haw·
leu Packard Inkjet oeskWrltar
Color Printer 880C, External Mo·
dom 57K, Very Fall, Y2K ·OK,
Tons 01 Sottwoar, tntomot Roady:
($695) 7-8038
COMPUTERS • low Or
Down
Low ~onthiy Paymenta. Y2K
Compliant AlrAoat Everyone Ap·
Proved 1-800-617·3476 Ext 330.
COMPUTERS I 179 •19 /MO
EASV OUALIFVINGI FAST,
NEW 500 -800 MHz Complete
INTERNET, Software, Technical
Help, 800·300·28•0 Alfordablo
I ~llch::::::::"..._::::OIOD:!-.:188=..._ _ _ __
Firewood For Salt, 140 A Lood.
Heap Acceplld S90 Coni Split &amp;
Dtllvered, 740·25e-e813
Firewood For Sale, 140 A F•ce
Cold Call 7&lt;10-389-9848

so

For salt· Prime Star Syotom alao
wanted older RCA OlrectTV or
Hughes aystema with acceaa
card, PlY 1150 &amp; up cath11t Cell
Wolllt, 740.949·3315 leovo moo·
Coli

Spring Volloy Groen Ona Bod·
room Apartment•. Appliances
F-.Coll7o10-44e·tt589
TWin Towera now accepting ap·
pNcatlona for t BR HUO aubold·
lud apt. for etderiy and hindi·
~. EOH (304)17He79

,_ boclroom, 1270/mo. pluo utili·
l!ta and dePOII1, ont bedroom,
f22!1/mo ; Third Stroot, Racine,
Oh, 7&lt;1().241-.

~~~~~~~::::

I

�r

.

.. ...

~....

~

•

•

..

,.

,
P~ge

a 2 • The .,.,,Y Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Frldly,

Febnlllry 18, 2000• .

RIO GRANDE BASEBALL 2000 PREVIEW

Retuming talent, new blood muld spell su~ss for Redmen
'

8v MA,IIII W11 u •MI
~CIAl

Local Flavor

TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande Redmen ue
ready to turn the corner as a qew millenruum of Rio Grande baseball
commences. The Redmen have rurned the~r collective l;lacks on a disRedmen from the Tri-County Area
appo10ting 1999 campaign, in which they struggled to a 10-30 finish
overall.
Scott George - Pomeroy, Meigs H.S.
Head coach Brent Clark, entermg his fourth season at the helm of
the Redmen, has brought m an unpresSlve freshman class, who are
Gary Stanley - Pomeroy, Meigs H.S.
ready to help spnngboard Rio Grande rnto the upper echelon of the
Jeremiah Bentley - Pomeroy, Meigs H.S.
American Mideast Conference.
Jason King - Mason, Wahama H.S.
John SP.aeth, a speedy outfielder, from Hamilton, Ohio and p1tcher
Adam Williams - Racine, Southern H.S.
Casey Co~. from Chillicothe, Ohio headline the rookie class. Rio welcomes back honorable mention AII-AMC .Performers Joe :homas
Corey_WIIIIams- Racine, Southern H.S.
(.324, 3 flR, 17 RBI) , Jason King (.357 ,2 HR., 23 RBI), randon
Jimmy Hall - Pt. Pleasant, Pt. Pleasant H.S.
Hutchinson ( 293, 4 HR, 26 RBI) and Keenan Perry ( 353, 6 HR, 31
RBI).
King, Petry and Hutchinson will give the Rednten some power 10 ed hitter, King will man at third base, while Thomas will play shortthe line-up Perry had a stellar freshman season leading the club 10 stop and pttch. Hutchinson will play nghtfield, w1th the other two
outfield slots open .
home runs and RBI
·
Other rerurnees include Randy Jones (.260, 0 HR, 12 RBI) behind . The pitching staff went through some growmg pains as Clark was
the plate, freshmen Adam Hames, Chris Good and Jason Romeo left with pnmanly freshmen after some early season lDJUnes and eligishould push for time as well Bryan Hawkins (.279, 1 HR, 13 RBI) IS bility problems
Rio will have sophomore Junmy HaU (3-2, 4.50 ERA) as one of the
back as second base.
anchors
of the staff and JUnior nghthander Gary Stanley and sophoPerr:y could push for the second base spot and will be the designat-

more Sc~tt George return from injuries. Cox, feU ow freshman Jererm-~
ah Bentley from Me1g! and transfer Chuck Brooks from Manetta Cor~~
lege, should help solid1fy the p1tching.
•:
Hutchinson (1-4, 3 saves) 11 expected to be the closer agam this sea;-· .
son Semor Jarrue Lambert 15 also back from mJury.
. ,
Lefties Jon:llhan Ervm and Brad Campbell and _fre shman Aaron ·
Rykowski will batde for significant time on the mound.
, ,
Clark will have a bevy of young!ters to choose from at almost every ·
poSition. Outfield and first base, should have the greatest compet1t10n =
for playmg time.
,
Clark enters the season wtth a 39-74-1 through his first three sea~
sons. Derrick Patrick rejoins him on th~ coaching staff thtS seasol'l ,
wtth new addttlon, DtU Haines.
The Redmen are.J"acmg a tough schedule.Jhis ~c:as.on. WJth_matcll~·­
ups agamst NCAA Dtvision I foes MarshaU and Ohio NAIA pow.et: ·
West Vtrgtrua State tS on the schedule as weU as P1keville College ..
Ohio Valley College to go along wtth the rugged AMC opponents., .
Shawnee State tS ranked 24th m the preseason poU while Ohio
Dorrumcan and Mt.Vernon Nazarene received consideration from t~e~
pollsters
.'
Rio began the season Thursday m Tennessee agamst Tennessee Terrf ,
pie. The Redmen will also play Lee Umversity and Tennessee Wesleyan :
durmg theu season-opemng swmg m the Volunteer State this week.:_
end.
·

Competitive Green takes inside track for Busch title
Bv MIKE HARRIS
AI' MOTORSPORTS WRITER

t

•

we're gomg to concentrate on.
"My goal .., to wm every race
we enter. I don't say we will wm
every .race, but I think we have a
chance everywhere we go."
Green tS going into the 2000
season wtth a game plan improve on second-place fimshes
at Daytona and m the pomts.
"So my goalts to WID the season opener and then, hopefully,
Green
that will mean that I will WID the
year-end title based on how last
year turned our:· he sa1d. "Sounds
like a great plan, don't you think'"
Among his chief competttors this year w1U be
brother Davtd, who won the Busch champtonshtp
in 1994 and IS back in the steppingstone series fuU
time after several frustratmg years trying to establish
himself ID WIDston Cup.
"I know how good David is," Green sa1d. "He tS

DAYTONA DEAC:::H, Fla. (AP) - Jeff Green
didn't rmnd Dale .Earnhardt Jr. and Matt Kenseth
gerung most of the headlines the last two yean in
NASCAR's Busch series.
Green, the you11gest of the three racmg brothers
from Owensboro, Ky., has gone about his job quietly and effectively. And when he rupped Kenseth
for second place m the senes last season, while
Earnhardt was wmning a second straight title, not
many people noticed.
.
Now With the two big-name drivers gone to the
Wmston Cup senes, Green finds himself the
favorite to win the Busch championship as the
teams head mto the season-opening NAPA Auto
Parts 300 on Sarurday at Daytona lnternattonal
Speedway.
"I don't pay any attenbon to that kind of talk:'
Green satd. "We know we can win races and have a
shot at the championship if we do our job. That's aU

Meigs
from Page II
first-half po1Dts and three fouls)
and front-linen Amy Hysell (two
first-half poiDts) and Jennifer
Shnmpbn (no pomts and two
fouls) that Williams was constantly left open to take peruneter
shots With little defenstve reSistance
As a result, Williams' five pomts
m the second quarter built the
Marauders' first double-digit lead
and led her to a 10-point tint half
and Meig! to a 22-121ead at halftilDe.
Metg!' defense and a generally
unproductive shootmg rught for
River VaUey resulted in Ward and
sophomore
center/forward
KriStin Smith bemg held to four
pmnts each before halftime.
Semor gnard Jessica Griffith, who
led the Raiders with 13 points
was held to three first-half pomts.
Williams scored SIX of her dub's
12 third-quarter points to drive
the Marauders to a 14-pomt lead

at the period's end
In the fourth quarter, Meig!'
lead fluctuated between 12 and
14 po10ts for the first two rmnutes, between 10 and 12 in the
next two rrunutes and eight and
10 pomts for most of the two
nunutes after that But when
Griffith nailed her second threepomter of the mght wtth 2:46
left, the Marauders' lead was
whittled down to a 48-41 margiD
Melg!'lead never shrank to single digits after that.
Metgs was m the rrudst of smkmg 14 consecutive foul shots after
nussmg the first one of the quarter with 5·17 left. The string
helped the Marauders counter
RiverVaUey's 10-for-21 field-goal
shooting, its most productive of
the night.
The foul shooting streak, which
started With two free throws from
Ashley Thomas With 4:45 left,
went to 14 strught With Williams'
two with 1:06 left that boosted
Metgs'lead to 56-44.
The game was the last for Gnffith, Ntkki Hollanbaugh, Casee

defi~1tely gomg to be one of the guys to beat this
year But thtS senes tS loaded w1th talented dnvers,
and nobody tS givmg anybody anythmg"
An unsuccdsful foray mto Wmston Cup sometimes hurts a driver's Image.
"It happened to me and 11 happened to David,"
Green sa1d. "You go to Wmston Cup for a couple
of years and not do so well, and all of a sudden you
can't dnve
"Then you come back to Busch and do pretty
weU, and you're a hero agam. It's all cherrustry, and
I thmk our team has got a lot of chermstry thiS

year."
Green, crew ch1ef Harold Holly and most of the
crew that helped him wm three races last year are
back, but they are part of a new team, PPC Racmg,
wtth a new car owner, John Bender, and a new car
number, 10.
"The main thmg ts that we know how to work
together," Green

s~ud. "It'll

be bustness as usual."

~"' •23

Qptnlng In Adult Group Home,
. . . Of ltmato, 7&lt;10-9Q:!·l023

~TART
DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meatlng Eligible SinQitl In Your Area Call For Mora

30

COLORADO SKI LODGING
Keystone IBreckenridge Nail 80
Condo /Home Choices DIS·
COUNTS. Lodging 11.111 Tlckoto.
1100-750·7293
Coma
Celebrate
George
Waahlngtons Blrlhday With
Frlenda And Supporters Of Dennis Salisbury Free SpagheHI Otn·
ner Where AM Vets Building,
Kanagua When Feb 22 2000.
'Ana. 5 00 PM To 8 00 PM
Paid For By Frtonda And
S\.IIPOI'Iolll Of
Donnlo Salllbury
Far ShertH.
Hartford Diner Hourt, Mon-Thur

6AM·7PI.I Fri·8AM·3AM Sat·
&amp;AM All Night Sunday till ~PM
I Glen Paulk Will Not Be Reapon·
slblo For Any Bltlo Made By An·
VON Other Than Myooll.
Gton l'lluttt

Mlaa Alllloy Palm Reader For An
Erilertalnlng Elopottonco, Call 7&lt;40713-t7t2, Chlllkx&gt;lho, Ohio
Now To l'ou Thrift Sh9 West &amp;liMOn, Alhona
7o40-51l2·t842
Quality clothing and houaehold
ltema. $1 .00 bag salt •~•ry
Thulld&amp;y Monday lhru Salurday
9 00.5.30
'

3, Month 01~ German Shepherd
Mixed Pup, Had 1st Shots &amp;
V(ormed, 740-441-1560.

'

Bh11ar Puppy 12 Weeks Mala:
710-446·7559, 740-44 Hit 18

Qounlor Top Kitchen Stove, 2
"'ens 0~ Top Cabinets Wilt
11orks. 740-448·2380
PI'PPIII Mother Rogl&amp;terad Air•
dote, 7o40-258-t372 Mer 6 P.M

Til Glveawa~.

Horse Manura·
. , Haul 740-448·3117
,.. Lost and Found
""

2000
Chevy Silverado 4x4
Brand New

C~colate Lab LoaU South State

ROute 7 On Wadneaday,2/
1(.2000. Green Collar, Montha
Ofil 7-...7232

• Remole Keyleu Enlry
• Running Boards

•

~ortec v-a, Automatic

e

..

• Vortec V-8, Automatic

a

• Power WlndoWI
Locks
• A.h •mlnum Wheels

F ndl M!Mod Golden Retriever
1 Rodney Area 2 Days Ago
740-448·1500
Ftund: Boys 1975 Clautlng or
P~nl Pleasant lnltlalo on Ring
a111 C R H (304)782·2281.

'

• Exterior Appearance
t Tilt Cruise

a

L t· Bllllotcs VIcinity Jackson
P , Paul Roynoklo. ~IWBidl 7&lt;40-

ir

L9fl Block Slbto With Rep Nolo·
book Ori 325 Near 554, 740.2•5·
50158.
14;t Goldon Relrlovor c,..,. City
AIM. R-tdl740-258-t
Lf!OI. Malt vonow ~ab. Children's
Ptta. Plallo Call 740·4•8·7084
._._
'""'Any lntormollon
Yard Sill

Other national figures from the
NAIA show Rio Grande appc;aring in several other categories.
Nathan Copas 15 tied for 11th In
the nation in free-throw percentage (.852).
Rio Grande is 14th m the
nation in scoring at 85.1 points
per game and
14th in scoring
margin
(12.62).
In
addition to the
No. 1 ranking
in three-point
percentage, the
Redmen sport
a
top-five
showmg
m
May
overall
field
TopGun
J
goal percentage. Rio is No.
5 m that category (.502) through
26 games.
As the stretch dnve beg10s, Rio
Gr;~nde (20-7) is a factor m the
AMC race, currently one-half
game behind Sa~nt Vmcent with
three games to play.
'

All New 2000 Pontiac

Brand

New 2000 Pontiac

70

Brand New 2000 Chevy

•••

sii:iii* sliJi* 'Si2i0*
3800 V-8 PoWir
•Remote Keylna Entry
t

t Aluminum Wheels

•·Automatic,

• Air Condlllonlng

• Air Conditioning

• AMIFM CD System
t Aluminum Wheels

• AMIFM Cauelte

~

t
'

' '·•
":

rJ.fl'

~•

hll

••

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:1.

'

•"'••

I

\

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL--Mull
Be Polct In Adwrnco.
2:00p.m
tho d1l)' - . . tho od
II IO run. SUndly
••·2:00p.m.
PEApyttE~

Frtctor.llondll)'·10:00a.IILI111Riy.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

ill Void Beleo Mull Be Pold In

Amnce. -Uno: 1:00pm llle
before the ad Ia to run,
~ • 'Mand•y tdiUanPdctll)',

Auction

Gmuhw(:hevrnlet

and Flea Market

@
l:IIJIOit&gt;

"

~

OIOemblole

West VIrginia's 11 Chewy, Pontiac, Bilek, Olda,
And CUIIOII.VIn Dealer.

,,
Monday· Saturday 9 am • 8 pm

TOLL FREE 1·800·822-0417 • 372-'2844

'

1pm·7
e

www.tompcden.corn

"
"

BIM Moodlopaugh Auctioneering,
~~11111 utatu: conolgnmonl
IIU)tlon ovory Thurodoy, lpm,
MlctctiiPOit, OhiO • wv Ltconoo,
7~.

Albk Ptaraon Auction Comp'iny.
tuq limo aucllonoor, complolo
,."'etlan atrvlce. Llc•naad
fl!i.OIIIO
Wee! VIrginia, 304•
77»716 Or 304-773-&amp;447

a

•"

•

Glvaaway

7~-7127

OVER 200, 2110 MODillllVIUOI PICKUPS TO CHOOSE FRIMI

5300 V·8

E r~PLOY~1ENT

SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

12,000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400
Broch.ureal Satisfaction Guaranllldl Postage &amp; Supplies Provldodl Rush Saii·Addrossed
Stamped Envetopal GICO DEPT
S, Box 1438, ANTIOCH, TN
370tt •t438 Start Immediately
$oi!,OOO Near /Potantlrlll OoctOII
Need People! Proceaa Madlcal
Claim• From Home, We Train
MUST Own C01111&gt;uttr 888·332·
501! Ext 1700 .!lolly
$100 WEEKLY IE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERI·
ENCE NECESSARY! (24 Hr.
flacorded Mesuga) 1·800·854·

Harrla Stt•k House Now Hiring
1300)(175-91'28
, _ Motllotlng
$25-$7Mir
www any· 1-clf'loMm.com
f.888-8t5-tll82

LITTLE CAESARS Ia Now Hklng
For Area Supervlaora I Management Tralneea In The GaiJipolla
Alto. CompotRivo PliJ 1 Bonefltl
Available Plene Send Reaume
Attantton To Scott Goodwin, ~0
Bor tO BIII&gt;DUIIVIIII, WV 2~.
Fa• 30'-738-3092
LPN'I
Arcadia Nulling Cantor now ac·
captlng apptlcaltona lor lui I part
time LPN'I Must be IIIIo to work
all sNfta a be a team player. At·
qulred strong supervisory sldlll
Pleaat apply In peraon at Eatt
Main Street, Coolville, OhiO, 740.
387·3156, 1.1-F 8 OQ.4;00p. IDE
Manager Retail Jewelry Store
Retail Salea And Computer Experience Necea&amp;ary Benefits
Available Apply. Acqulaltlona
Fine Jewelry, 151 Second Avenue, Gatlipolla.

MtttonnlumT-n
~ pllallld to announce tho
Grand opening of Ill,.,. Wol~
.., cattJng center
We are now oottlng up
lnloiVIaw appotntmonto lor

MEDICAL BILLING Earn E&lt;eol·
lent $ $ $ I Procenlng Claims
From Home. Full Training Provld·
oct Computtr ReQuired Call
Modi·Proo Toll Fru 1·888·313·
804V Ext 3125.

oullound
· -pooiNo-rtonco~
StarUng wago II SMv.
with ~rly ltloryManagemonl ClllPOifll1lltoa aval·
oiOt~L'Dontai'Pald
vacallon• IVIItablt 31111111 dally
Flerlblo achtdullng Slort your
new care. with ual
Cal 1'80Q.Il29-57S3
for an appolntmlnl
Wt took - t d 1o moollng JOuf

Art You Connected? Internet
Uatro Notdedl $2~ ·7~ /Hr PT I
FT 888·491-9224 WWW.WOrk•OUI·
ol·your·!&gt;Dmo com

Mom'a Wanted: Mom'• Stay At
Home Willi 'lbur Famu~ Call Now
For Froa Canollt, 1-877·449~
9915
'

&amp;169Extll04e

Now stor• IIIII Umo tnd port limo
caahtera, manager end book·
kttper. Send raaumea c/o The
Dolly Sentlnol, PO. Bo• 7211-75,
Po._, OH 45788.

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS. Froo
Samploo 1.DM 3 ·5 Pounda E,.ry ASIEMBLY AT HOME II Crafto,
Wtekl Aa Setn On TV! Malta Toya, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,
Fat, Stops Hunger. Boooto Enir· ~ping Groat Payl CALL HIOOgyl Only $19 95 Buy 2/t FREEl 1 .1;,;9S-0380~:.:;;.,:Exl;:,;;I2D::.;.f,::l2::,4.:.::;;:__
Fat ·Biockoll St 1.15 1·800·133· ' '
3288 www unltodpharmocoutl·
ATTENTION·WORK
qtlo.oom, COO'S /CroctM Canto.
Earn An E='~:~~.500+ pllft
Sharo 'lbur America
Monlh Call 1·800·825·2048 Or
VIall wwwHomo8uodeoucorn
~xptore New Cult urea, Make A AVONI All Artaal To B•.., or 8811
Qlfference In Your Communlly
"''
With EF Foundation For Foreign Shlrtoy Speo11, 304-875-1&lt;129
Study Hoal Famllloo Opan Tholr Cortlnect Nu1111 AldOl: Rotating
Hom11 And Hearta To lnterna- lhllll Intermediate &lt;:Ire center.
tlonal Exchange Studtnta Inter- w11 t VIrginia certification ,..
national Exchange Coordlnatore qulrtd Point Pltllant Center,
Work With EKchange Students, Statt Route 62, Route 1, 80K
111ah Scllools, And Hoot FamiiiOI. 328. Point Ploasant, WV 2S550
Pliiltlon Not Pald• ExptnaaacR•· EOE.
t&amp;.bUrsed ln~en 11ve Trave 1. ont~t Cathy 800·871·2528 Or Computer lltorota peliOn who will
A1lxtl 800-318·3735.
lmput au tranaactlona and proTta&amp;h Service Will Pick-Up For duct llarloua reporting (hourly
••
A Month In Tho Gallla aatary), amokt·lree envkonment
.., 00
'Pllllo ll8lld reoumo to: P. 0 Box
Cfl."'ty Aroa, 74(),4.18-8487
t&amp;l, Chooh!M, OH o151520

'

• Vortee

Buy

Announcements

2"Gulnea Pigs With Cage a Ac·
cftsorlea Must Stay Together,
GbodHomeO" ..., 740-44 1-1 31• 2 ,
~
•n,
a!"M,Ie Dalmatians 1 Year Old,

833 '550* 828 850* 121 950*
'
'
'

Wanted to

AbiOiuto Top Oollor. All U.S Sll·
ver And Gold Colna PrQofttll,
Dlamondl, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Alngt l Prt-1930 U S Currency,
Sltrling, Etc. Ai:qullltlonl Jowotry
• M T.S. Coin Shop, 1St Second
Alllnut, GaJ4&gt;olla, 7-2842.

Wfiy walt? Starl milling Ohio
a1ng1 .. tonight Call toll frat 1·
801l-711e-2623. olfon&amp;lon 8178

will be racmg together agam That bnngs a srrule io ;
Jeff's face.
·
"We're pretty compettttve:' sa1d Green, at 37 fiv~
yean younger than Davtd and three years youngt;r ,
than Mark "Those guys really want to beat me, and
I reaDy want to beat them. We've bee!) that way m
everything since we were :ill little."
Dav1d agrees that jeff should be constdered the •
favorite to wm the Busch Senes title this year
'·
"He's earned that status:' the eldest brother sa1d.
"Jeff has worked hard. and they've put together
what looks like a reaDy good team over there. I've
got a good team, too, and I'd like to think that we'll
be battling each other aU year. That would be neat.'' ,
UnassurrungJeff shrugs offhtS favonte status.
~
"I'd rather be the underdog;· he said. "But It'$ ·
mce to have people say, 'We're gomg to have to bea~ •
that guy to wm this thmg' It makes aU the hard'
work and effort we put in week tn and week out.
rewardtng" _

Brand New
Slverldo LS
Sportllde Extended Clb 4x4

10

Ext 9735

40

All New 2000
Tahoe LS 4 Door

Wedemeyer• Auction Strvlet,
Clalllpclio, Otllo 7o40-378-2720.

320 Mobile Homes

-l~totmati01l.F800·ROMANcr.

...

fiVRIPIIpBI

Marauder football standout Justin Roush
was honored Tuesday night at halftime of the Meigs-Wellston basket·
bell game. Roush was the Division Ill state offensive player of year
and led the 11tate tn rushing and scoring. Roush was presented a
plaque from Marauder football coach Ml~e Chancey and was given a
staiiQing ovation from the large crowd. A plaque was also g1ven to the
school for their trophy case. Pictured from left to right are Chancey
and Roush. (Dave Htrria photo) , ,
•

Home Training Provided Muat
Own Computer. 1·800.223-1 149

W1th Davtd's return to :Susch, all three brothers

Justtce, Autumn Murphy and
Andrea Neutzting, the Raiders'
five seruors.
"Our kids played hard:' sa1d
River Valley head coach Tom
Weaver. "We're going to miss our
semors. It was my first bunch to
go through They were spectal
kids.
"They stuck wtth us, tt was a
tough season," he added "They
could have bailed out a long time
ago, but they didiJ't. They played
hard aU season "
Meig! (20-1) will now face
whteh
defeated
Jackson,
Portsmouth 58-56 at the Coal
Grove Sectional. The Marauders
meet the Ironladies at Chilltcothe
next Thursday at 8 p.m.
"We basically know what
(Beth) Howe can do and what
she does:• Logan said. "The Caldwell (Brandy) girlts very phySical,
a good rebounder and can score
tnSide. I know they've changed
coaches, so whether they play the
same style, the S3Jlle defense, we'D 1
have to find out between now
and Thursday."

Penonala

$15 · $45 Ptr Houri Country'a
Milot Eotabllohod l!odlcll ~
Blllrl Software Company Needl
hople To Procell Clalma From

'

HotShots

CAREER ACHIEVEMENT -

005

•

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL SERIES

Auction
and Flta Mlrket

-

'

'

80

Contract Poolllon Available For A
Group Facilitator For A Women's
S ppo 1 Q
~ E
1 A
u r roup, 1" 0 ven ngs
Week And Occa'IJonal Daytime
Snslona At Area Schools AP·
pllcanta With Knowledge 01 VIc·
tlm't Rights And Domeatlc
VIolence Issues Preferred High
School Diploma And Some Adell·
Ilona! Education ffialnlng In So·
clai Servtcea Required lnterooted
Applicants May Raply To. Per·
sonnel, PO Box 454, Galllpolla,
OH 45631
DENTAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hr
Dental Billing Software Company
Nooda Peopla To Procoaa Mecfl·
c:al Claims From Home. Training
PIOVkled. Must Own Compultr t.
801).223-1149 Ext. &lt;180.
Director of Nursing lntermediale
cate laclllly West VIrginia Reg·
laterad Nurse tlcenao requtrect
Minimum flva years full·tlme or
equivalent experience and two
years axperlance nuralng auper·
vlllon required Send resume to.
Services, Box 575, Point Plea•·
ani WV 25550

DRIVERS. Start Up To 36cpm
With Bonusas )II Miles Paid.
Average 2500 Mtloa Per Weak
AND Gat Home MOST WEE·
KENDSI All Aaalgnod '98 Or
No~or. Salellilo Equipped. Air •
Rlcto Conventlonale That Go
Homo Wllh You E•collent Banetits Packagol 23 w It vr OTR
t80Q.727-21188 EXT. 1ol!i
Otlvoro· 2 Week Paid COL Tralnlng, No Ellf). Noadod. Earn Up To
$32,000 f'lr FUll llorifllts Oan To.
day. 1·81!-230·8002 P.A M
1tlnlport www t23pom com
EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
Moctlcal lnauranco Billing Alllatancolmmedlatoly, If You Ha,. A
PC You Can Earn $25,000 To
150.000 Annually Call 1·800·
29t- Dept. 1109
IXCITINO
OPPORTUNITY.
Large Corporrdlon Ia Looking For
A Person To Train And Work
Hare In GaHipolls, Polqt Plaaaant,
&amp; Pomeroy If lbu Are Enthualaa·
tic, Ambitious, And Have A Way
With People, We Mil)' Be Able To
Otltr You This sr,ol Excellent
Frlngo Banollta II nttll~tad. Cell
304·428·8288 For ln1orvlew.
Amarjcan General Lift And Ac·
cldontlnsuranceeon.,.ny N·71
Expanding Bu11ne11 Seeking
&lt;lulllll«t HVAC lntlallera, Slort·
lng Salary $tO ·$14 Hoorly. Sond
Work Experience And Relerenc·
11 To ClA 095 c/o Gaii~~GIIs D•
lly Tribuna. 825 Third Avonuo.
ClllllpOIIa. OH oiM:It

Full Time V.hlclo Oporllor Ill·
requires 1 Clua B COL with en·
dorumentl. Mutt have 2 y11r1
driving oxporlanco and good drlv·
lng record. MROD experience
preferred Btntlha package Ap·
ptlcoUOnl mor bt oblolnod from
and 1ubmlttld to Athena County
Board of MROO, lOt W Union
811081, Athono, OH 45701 EOE
FULLER BRUSH CO 11 Looking
For People Who Would Llkl To
Start Their Own lualnua Work·
lng From Homo NO INVEST·
MENT Noodod. Llmllod Tlmt
Only Coli 800-882-7270 omon 1111·
-Oool.com

Part·time position for Aulatant
Youth StrYICII Coordlnltor.
B•chelor'a dtgrM In health, to·
ctal work or oll«t 11t1c1 or oqulvoltnt experience Mull POIIIII
excellent communication akljta,
ability 10 ltlch amaiVtargo groupo
and bt a liaison to IChoola, community agencies and ltmlllea.
Avorago of tfl.t8 hours par-k.
no other btntflta. lltx ttme with
mlnlm•l weekend/evening work
requlrect PoSitiOn "allsbfo mid·
February 2000 Muat bo depend·
able, Innovative and abte to work
wtlh minimal supervision Rtllable
transportation required. EEOC
lf1'4110Jer. SUbmH reoumoa to PO.
Bo• 631, Pomoroy, OH 05788 by
February 22. 2000. No ltllPitcallon
will be conokleract oltor that data.
Part·Time Workers At A&amp; A Auto
Dotal! At Fourlh Avenue, Galllpo·
lis, Apply In l'llraon

Ptrmenenl Fullllmt Jobs, 40•
hrs/woek. Clean Bulldlnga BUF·
FALO AREA. Muolllvo within 20
mllt1 radlaa of Buffalo Male or
Fomalo. Shllla. Call Nowl
(304)788·7290, "Bob.
Pleasant Valley Private Duly 11
accepting appllcatlona for 11111
teattd nuralng aaJialanta (WV or
Ohio) and Peraonat Care Aldta
Ptraonal Care Aldea muat have
al least one year experience pro·
vldlng peFJonal care. Hour1y as·
"gnmenta and Intermittent vtalta
available. Per diem pay and
fle•lble scheduling For more In·
formation or to co:npfete an ap·
pllcallon contact Pleasant Vtlley
Privata Duty, 101 t VIand St., Pt
Pteaaant, WV 255SO or call f.
SOD-748·0078 or (3Q.4)87S·7•00
AAIEOE

Po11a1 Job&amp; $48.323.00 Yr Now
Hiring .-No Experience -Paid
Training ·Great Beneflla, Call 7
Days 800-4211·3880 Eld J•385
POSTAL JOBS To SIB 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1·800·81 3·3585,
EXT 14210 8 AM ·9 PM, 7
OAVS Ids. Inc
POSTAL JOBS Up To St7 21 /Hr
Guaranteed Hlrt For Appllcatk&gt;rt
And Emm lnlormlltlon Call 8 A M
• 9 PM M·F t-888·898·5627 Ext
24·1007
RN'I
Arcadia- Nursing Center now ac·
copllng applcattono lor 1 lull umo
M·F 3·11 shift, Includes beneFit
packogo Part limo hou11 are alao
avallrlllle Plaaaa IPflly In poraon,
M·F 8·4 at Arcadia Nursing Can·
ter, Po Box !511, East Main
Stroot, Coolville, Ohio •s723.
EOE
Seamatre11 Wanted, Straight
Seams, Heavy VInyl, 740·368·
9310

SINGERS! GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY, ond EASY LISTEN·
INGI Call 1·800··~9-818• For
Appolnlmenl To Cqmo To Nash·
ville And Audition For Major
Record Producera And Concert
Promotrtt lnlllmel www wctn.tc
Bubltllute Vehicle Optrttora I,
II a Ill· requirements range from
operating a van, which requires a
regular license, to operating a
school bua, which require&amp; a
Class B COL with school bua,
pa11enger &amp; air brakt endorse·
menta Pay scale 11 S7 oo 10

St 0 00 per hour depending on
quallflcetlona Must have 2 yeare
driving experience and good drlv·
lng record M~OD e11per1ence
preferred. Applications mar bt
obtained from and sUbmtned to·
Atilano County Board of M~OO.
801 w Union Slraot, Athenl, OH
45701 EOE
Try Tho NEW MILLENIUM DIETl
Lou Pound• And lnchoa Sue·
cess Ourantetd. Eat All Day &amp;
Moft Awll)' Introductory Ollor S3f,
""'Shipping 81]0.715-1053

URGENTLY NE~DEO lor plalma
donora, urned 138 to $48 for 2
or 3 houro -kly. Coli Sara·Toe,
7oi0-592-888 t '
Wonlod E•porloncod Managing
Holr Styllot, Wllh Rotoroncu,
Wanllng A 'oath Rental, Coli
740-44f.t837.

WANTED: Your Support Will Bo
Appttclaled In The M•rch 71h
Ptlmary VOlt RopOOIIcan, Cartoo
P Wood, Golla County Commll·

-

Pillet Far By: CWtoa P. Wood

3852Sioll- tOt

Golllpoito, OH •M:It

Wanted, Care Giver For Elderly
Mon 7&lt;40-4&lt;11·4051 Or 74D-4&lt;1t·
3-413.

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 10 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS
SECURITY, MAIN·
TENANeE. PAliK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·113·
35&amp;5, EXT ,.2ft 8 AM. ·9 PM .
7 DAVS fdo, Inc.
Work From Homo SSD9 ·$8,000
Port·nmo /Full·Tlrno Contact Ko~
ly 1·888·882·2838, www amort·
""'"'Y'com PIIIOOCfo IOWin
MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel·
tent Income. Full Training. Com·
puttr Requlrtd Coli Modi Worf&lt;a
Tott·Froo 800·500·6333 e.t
2301.

140

Bualneu
Training

Clrolllpallo- Collogo
(C-.r Clolo To Homo)
Cdlbdayl7-7,
t ·1100-21+0452,
Reg f90.05.t27&lt;18

150

School•
ln1tructlon

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Sacholoro,
Maatera, Doctorate, By Correaponclonco Solid Upon Prior EducatiOn And Short Study Courtlt
F.or FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t-1100--8311

180

,

Wanted To

Do

Georges Portable S•wmlll, don't
ltaul yOur toa1 to 1t1o mill )uot cal
304-87fl.t957.
excellent cart for peraan In mr
home non~amoker •nd Mobile,
Vlry Roosonabll 1304)88N880

Houtoclunlng. ~olloblo Lady
With Reterenet• Rio Grandt To
Golllpollo I Surrounding Aro11,
Call Diana, 1&lt;10-2&lt;15-St 04.
Lon Hllplng Hind Ctoonlng llorv·
teo, lnluroct, - Eat1mata1, low
Rolli, Satlsfocllon GuoraniHdl
740-387-eo.a.

CCINIOIJOo\TIIIIU.t.
From $3,000 ·$150 0001
(t% -"trego Rate).
LOANI 0 A.C
For
ColtTol-1-.e1WIII,
CREDIT CA~D UP TO $3,000
U n - VISA IW:.. Bod Cro&lt;fh
Or No Croctlt. HI00-~31 7 Ext
oiOOO.

DARE TO BE RICH? No Expar·
1111 Will Troln. f.II8·838·4S30
www ocoquaotinll oom/heoltyllvlng
MEDICAL BILLER .15 ·$45 /Hr.
Madtcal Billing Soltwlrl Con1&gt;ony
Noodo Pooplo To Procell Mectl·
cal Clalma From Home Training
Provided Muol Own Co1111&gt;u!Of. 1·
BOQ.434.55t8 EICI 11117
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmjtad In·
come Potential No Experience
NICIIIIry Frlt Information l
CD·ROM lnvootmont &amp;•.985 •
$8.915. Financing ~vojlablt. It·
land Automated Medical Servlcoa, Inc. 100·322·1138, Exl. 050.
Void In KY,IN, CT
Noad A LOon? Try Dobl Consolo
ctollon $5,000 • 1200,000 Bact
Credit 0 K. FH 1·800·770-0092,
Ert 215
PEPSI /COKE /FRITO LAV
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE. BE YOUR OWl( BOSS
USALL CASH BUSINESSUS
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL·
LENT PROFITS t•800·73f.7233
EXT.703
Start Your Buainess Todey
Ptlmo Shopping Center Space
Available At Aflordabia Ralt
Spring Voltoy Pllzo. Call10101

220 Money to Loan
$$ Auto Loena, P.traon[lt Lo•nt,
Oobl Oonoolldollon, Morlgagoo
Afl(l Rollnonclng. Crectll Ptobloma
OK Contumaro Financial t-80D2•7·5t2SEif 113-4 VoldOH,KB

SU NEED CASH?? WE Pay
C11h For RemJinlng Paymenta
On Property Soldl Morl,ogul
Annultllll SettltmenUI mmedlolo Ouotoolll 'Nobody Butt
Our Prieta • N•tlonal Contract
Burtra 100·410·0731 Ex I 101
_., Mtlonalcctntroctoom
SFREE CASH NOW$ From
WoaHhy Fomllltt Untoodlng Mil·
Nonl ~To 11o1p lollTheir 'RI•oo. Wrlto lmmtdlattly
Wlnctfllle, 147-A IECOND AVE.,
t350, NEW YOII~. NEW YO~K
10011.

or

•••••lO()I(•·--·

RENTAL S

~

(t) t Ooublowldo. 1249 Par
Month, Low Down Payment, 1·
IIOH91-tm.

1 -3 Bedroom• Forecloaed
Homoo From $t8t/Mo. 4% Down
For Llatlnga &amp; Payment Details,
II00-319-3323Ext 1709.

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Bai:l Crtdll Legally
Into 1188-859-2580

(2). 14' Wldo. $187 Per Month
Low Down Payment, 1·800·891·
8777

t 52 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 3
Badrooma WiD Hook·Up, S375/
Mo. , Deposit Raquirtd, 1·888·
84().()521

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Application W !Sirvtce Reduce
P•ymenta To 8!5% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Call t · BOO·
328-85tO Elf 29

(3) 18•80 S25ol Per Month, Low
D
p
t F
AI 1 800
own avm•n ' rH r, •
•

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Reduce Interest Stop Collection
C.llall Hovo I Monthly Pll)'mont
FREE Contldonttal Help CCS·
Nan-P- Ht00.-127·9912
MONEV TO LOAN Sad Credit
OK Frto Appllcallon U S. Ap·
plleantl Oril)! f.B77·780-1939
NEED MONEV IMMEDIATELY?
Futoot CASH LOANS Available
Rogarctloaa 01 Crodll . Auto
Loono, CroctR Carcta, Cluaranltld
Dobl Consolldotlon, Cluoranlood
Credit Reatoratlon 30 ·Minute
Approvol. Call Toii·Frtt 1-811·
1123-7St5
YOU'RE APPROVEOI Crodll
Carda &amp; Loans, Regardt111 Of
~ur Current Croctlll In 2• Houro

aoo-an..a.a
230 Prof111lonal
Slrvlc11

TUANIO DOWN ON
IOCIAL IICUAITY 11111
No Fee Untou Wt Wlnl
t-888-1182·3345

Hf/IL !:SlAT I::

31 0

Homes for

Sala

• NO DOWNI HOMES NO C~EO.
IT NEEOEOI GOV'T FORE·
CLOSU~ESI GUA~ANTEEO AP·
PROVALI 1·800·380··820 EXT

asoe.

FINANCIAL

ATTENTION $1,800 Weekly
From Home Proc111lng Corpo·
rala Newslt1tlral $2 Plr Newslel·
terl Guar•ntetd Wttkly Paychocktl No Erporlancol Sta~ lm.-.olyl Col~.

(3)

" ,,,000
Pocl!ago On I.Wkot
&amp; Ha~tt Checking Account 1·
_.., 34to

Acroo MiL Groen Townahlp, 7&lt;10·

Al'TENTION $1,800 Wookly
Worklrfg From Home Proctlllng
Corporate Newslalteral 12 Per
Newaletterl Guaranteed Weekly
Paychlcksl No Experience Nee·
11saryl Homeworker• Needed
tmmedlatolyt Call NOW 800·•5349&lt;1011

Per Month Call f·

410

3 Bedroom Brick Homo, Double
Garege, Larga Lot, Finished
Basement, Maintenance Freet

ATIT • MCI • SPRINT What't
Tho Big Socret? Make $52K •
$t25K /Yr W /Phono Cordo.
Easyl FREE lnlol t-80Q.997·1811e
Ed I t !5!i (24 Hill)

l· ~l2~)~,F~
Euy Ar·
Fl·
I Iro~t~TI,:.mo
, •nd Buyoro
3 Btdroom.

Croctlt .....,..._ ~~~~,~~~-1

Will do houiOCIIInlng at roa..,..
able rat11. Prtcu art 1!50 for one
ltvol and &amp;85 lor two lovrllt Call
today lor an •PPolntment, 7o40992·3704.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommanda that you do bu&amp;l·
ne11 w:lth people you know, and
NOT to ..nd mont~ t~rough the
m•U until you have lnveatrgated
lho olferlng

VIllage Green Apartment•· 2
bedrooms, total electric, app~
11 furnished, laundry room flcll·
t111 and dOlt to school, BPS»~Ca·
tiona IYiilab$1 II oHice 740..182·
371 t TOO t ·11118·233-889&lt;1 Equal
Houllng ()ppottunoty

5 Bldrooma, 2 Bathl, ov.r 2,000
aq It , lor le11 than 1450 mo
FREE DeliVery &amp; Sat f·8IJ0.9&lt;18·

2br, tba Home w/Attochod Go·
rage, t 30 Soulh Pork Drive.
$38,000 (304)875-5697

Bualnaas
Opportunity

(I). '""AMAZING""'
llrywai··48R., 32r80··ovar 2308
oq « Payments low aa S4oe par
mo 1-80Q.908·5e78

Foot-.

Mother ol 2, will bobyallln homo.
Sandhill Rd . Flnctd In yl(cf.
1304)895-3141'

210

tor Sale

7~

3 Bedrooma With Garage, 1 112
&lt;M&amp;-07..

Sll8.

-

--

::88:.:1 .,:-8:.,:m..:;·~_;...-----

t 983 t4x70 Skyline, 2·3 bOd·
rooms, 1 1/2 b•ths, new Bertttr
carpet. excellant condition,
$10,000080, 7o4D-62·5&amp;8e.
1988 U•70 Crootrldgo 2 Bod·
rooms . .2 Baths, Mus1 Be t-tcwtd,
For Mort Information. 7•0·25et!&amp;l t Allor 8 ~ M
1984 Llberly a. 1987 Oakwood
Both 14K70, 3 Btdrooma, 2 Full
Botns, Now Uncttrplnnlng, Liberty
Hal Heal Pump, Both Vory Good
Condltlonl Must Salll 740·2•S·
9028 Evenlnga.
~999

Fortune trailer, t8x80, thrH
bldroomo, two balhs, vinyl aiding
ahlngled roof, central air and 200
amp urvlc:e, take OVtr paymentt,
740-7-12·1~ .

Country Living 3 Or • Bldroomo,
Por Cloalng Cotto &amp; Move In
7~3093

Doubtowldo On Lol $250 Qepooll
Roqultod, 304-738-7295
fLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc·
IOrvlio, Ohio: GIIANO OPENING
Llflgttt New lnwntory In South·
Ohio Speclala On Homaa
And Financing In Progre11. Call
Fot Ootalo, 1·888·565.0187

''n

2 Lot Models Mutt Go, Extra
Nlco, Loaded. Your Cholco $999
Down Hurry Won't Last Ol~woocl.
Gol\&gt;011, 740-44e·3093
1 Lef1 $2991Mo, lncludea Lot,
304-738-7295

Houae for aale· two atory 2·3
btdrooma, one bath, Middleport,
uklng $29,000 No down pay·
ment, Financing evallabla to
quatlltd Call f.IIOD-388-8194,

Now homo, 3 bodroomo, 3 btlhs,
2n1 aquare lett plua oversized
2 car aUachtd garage, wrepar·
ound porchea, many tmtnltiea,
_
.. views, CO!Mnlont toea·
non, 1189,000, Mlloul Inquirers
call 740-192·2•78 for mort lnfor·
. .lion

7-·-

On 2 lots In Syracuse, 10 rooms
ond bllh river vtow, S29,500,

On Ill 180 Largo It Rooms With
Boeemont, Clll Hoot, A/C, Ono
Car Garage ,Work Shop. Dna
Aclll Lind HoUio B-an Bula·
vlllo Plko And County Gorogaa
70Q 148 88118.
Ownor Rolocaftng, lrlcl! ~-. 3
lldn!ll, FR, LR, 2 t/2 ilaths, Gil
Flropllct, JtQkoon Plko. Prlaect
To Sail • &amp;120,000 00. 7o10-4&lt;1t.

7 -.
330 Farm• for Sala

350

Lots

a Acreage

1&amp; •crea, Pagevllle, Scipio Town
thlp Ret 102, $30,000, 740·992·

2 44 Acrta, Winding Crossroads
Subdivision, Very Nice Area,
Convenient Location Gallipolis
Addrooo. $23,000 7o40-245-5776

36 Acras Of Land On Lincoln
Plko. 7o40-25B-t47t
85 acre&amp;, wooded, great hunting,
off At 33, solid farm house with
bam/sheds walar reservoir, gas!
oil wtR, pond, Meigs County, 740992-6700, $!50 000

REDUCED PIICES
20 ACRES ·111,000
All Wooded, Wi1h Road That
Continues Into Wayne National
Foroot Off SR tolD &amp; SR 233
23 ACRES -$21,000
011 SA 7 South 01 GallipOliS No
Roatrlcttonsl NEEDS TLC S2 300
oown On Lind eon..ct
MEIGS COUNTY
CHEAPER THAN DIRT
8 Acres, $5,000, 10 Acres
$10,000 5+ Acres For $S,500
Call For Free Maps ANTHONY
LAND CO , LTD, f.81J0o2t 3-8365
www countrytyma com
Rivarvitw ted, suitable lor houaa
or trailer, never floodtdl $14,000
located In syracu11, OH, 740·
992-!700

All noa1 estate -sing In
tills newspaper Is sub)lct to
lhe Federal Fair Houllng Act
of t 988 which mlkeall Wlegat
to Advertise ·any pretereoce,
limitatiOn or dtscrtmlnation
baaed on race, color, rotiQIOn,
aax familial atatUa or 11a11ona1
Otlgln, Of 8lf'J tntentton 1D
make any auch pretoronce,
lrnttatlon or dtacrlmlnatton •
Ttl~ IIIWipajllll IMI no1

koowlngly -

•
1011which~ In vtololloo of tho
low OUt readofo ora~
lnlormocf 1hll all ~
ldVIItltedlnlhll , _ _

a~llflsements for

aro avalflblo on an equal
opportunity bull.

0141.

Small Lot, homo and bUilding •
820,000 080, 3 Bctrm, L.R • D.R.,
2 Both Kltehon, Utility. Noodl
Work. Lota of Po1ontlal Call
(3q4)ti75-8Ht IHor t2Noon for

Altl1t 'lb....

'

Thrae bedroom houae for aalt,
bath, good nolghborhood In
- · 142.1500, 7of0.943228

380

Raal Estell
Wanted

Nood 5 S.aludod Acroo With
Homtalta, Quiet ~oad, Galllal
Mtlg1 Counly, Deeded &amp; Sur·
VIYid, Under &amp;20,000 00 7·0·
44t-2317.
Wonttd to bUJ· building tot or 1·2
acrot, Flvt Polntal Chettar oroa.
7~.g()t4

•

3 Bedroom, 2 B•th, Full Base·
ment. Camp Coni•y $300month
+Dopoalt (304)(175-3230

Advartlaa your bualneu In this
vialbll roctt!on on well traveled
highway Wilt put up and matntaln
your olgn Call 740·992-8398 or
740-992·2272.

MERCHANDI SE

510

Household

Good1
Appliances
Recondlllontd
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Rtfrl·
gratora 90 Day Guarantttl
French City Maytag, 740· U8·
1795

February &amp; Msrch Sail
Thompsons Applanco Repa~
3407 Jacl&lt;&amp;on A,....
StarUng P&lt;lceo on Appllancoo
Rofrlgerators
95 00
llryertl
90 00
Electric Ranges 75 00
Washer&gt;
95 00
D~hwasher&gt;
65 oo
Fmze11
13500
IIBITlS OWir $1 00 •• 90 day Hnan- •

tv 1304)675-7388

•

For Salt Reconditioned Wllh·
era, dryers and refrlgeratora
Thompsons Appliance 3,.07
Jackson Avonuo, (304)875-73118

FOR LEAIE 011 SALE 5 Yoar
Old 2,000 Sq Ft 3 Bodroomo, 2
Batha, Energy Elllclanl Homo, 1. W'"'"""
Neer CIIIIB~o 13oM Club $1185/Mo ,
74-7,
One Bedroom, 1•2 Fourth Ave·
nuo, Galllpollt, Dopo1lt $250/Mo.,
Gaa Furnace, Appl!anctl Fur·
nlohod, 7oiQ.448.311e7.
Pilot Program, Renters Needed,
30H38-7295
Pilot Program, Rentera Needed,
304-738-7295

420

Mobllt Homes
for Rent

Ux70 Wllh E•pondo 3 Bod·
rooma, 1 112 Bathe, Air, 5
Mlnutu From Clalllpolla, On t4t,
No 1'1111. S375/Mo , Ptuo Dopoott,
Rtleroncoo, 7&lt;10 Ul 41124.

2 or 3 bedroom mobile home for
10nt, no pelt, 7o40-992·5658

-n.

Middleport· corner ol High Slreet
a Powtll Sttaot, 2 bedroom homo
wllh dining room, living room and
~ corpot and kllchOn
a.blnoto mako1 lho kllchon with
loll ol wlndDWI very \lrl(ltlt. Also a
large lot. Cute as can be. Ra~
ctuced to $33,000 Plouo call
Ootllo Turner Really, Dollie S
'1\J'ntr, Blokor II 7o40-9Q2·2688

2BR House In HarUord $250 per
month No Pets Reftrenct/Ot·
pooll Required Call 1304)882·
2018

Put Vou Tax Refund To Work,
$099 Down Only At Oakwood
Hom11 In Barbouravllle, 304·

7584.

HOMES FROM .111.30 /MO. t
·3 BA Aepoa/Forecloaurea, Fee,
4% Down For Llslllnga JPa~ment
DotaNI f·BIJ0.7t9-300t xtta5

2 or 3 bedroom, 148 Mulberry
Avo, S23e a month. $125 cfapoalt.
,.,.Info. can 7&lt;10-f!e?-9729

2 Bedroom nailer Beautiful Rlvfr
VIew In Kan•uga, No Pets, 740·

1·1/2 Acre, mortlle11. with
Houn Trailer &amp; Barn Millstone
Rd. 1304)S7B-3033

FORECLOSED HOt.IES Low Or 0
Downr Govn't And Bank Rtpo'a
Being Bold Nowl Financing Aval~
able Coli Nowl 1·800·3S5·0024,
Ext.IKMO

plua depoatt, will ..u on contract
wllh good raferencu, no pets.
740-flllfl-72..

Land Home Packag11 All Araaa
AI CIICII Rlllks 74().4.48.3583.

3BR/2BA 2 Family Rooms, Hlat
Pump/Central Air, Double Car
Garage Lynn Drive, New Haven.
Shown by appt only (30•)882·

polnlmtnt

For 11111 or rant- 2 bedroom
MUll tn Pomeroy, $350 month

Betwttn Athena and PomerOy, 2
, , 3 bedroom mobllt homes,
S210-S300, 7ol0-992·2t87

I AC~ES I POND
With Buutllul Building Site Be·
hind Pond lletwan Gallipolis &amp;
Jackoon, 2 Mttu 011 SR 35 Land
ConlraCI Available Fret Maps f·
740--1.

BY OWNER: All Amtnllleo 01
New Hom• Convenient Location
To Gallipolis And Holzer, 3 Bed·
rvomo, 2 Full Batha With Coromtc
Tile, Living Room With Vaulted
Coiling, Flroplaco, Dlni!'Q Room,
Cuttom Kllchtn, Har&lt;lwood
Floors, Sunroom, Deck, Walkout
Finished Baltmtnt With Bod·
room And Full Both, 2nd Bedroom
Or E"rclee Room. Family Room,
Fireplace And Gaa Logs, Large
Udllly ~oom, Worhhop, Covered
POliO With State 2 Cor Garage,
New Root. VInyl Siding Thermo·
"'"' Wlndowl, Ntw Heat Pump,
$128,500, 7•0·.. 1·1199 For Ap·

2 bedroom hou11 In Portland,
S300 p~.. 8IOCtrtc, heat wfth wood,
7o4D-MWS&lt;Ie

Loaded Slnglewldea Muat Go!
Save Thousands! No Lot Rent
For e Mos. Only 0 Oakwood,
Gallpolls, 740-446-3093

3BR Brick Ranch w/FiroplaCf&lt;, 2
FamllyRoom, 1Bath, Fuii-Baae·
ment, Large Corner Lots, Cant111t·
Air, Fenced Backyard, New Hoi·
Water Tank, New carpetlfam
room Digital Thermostat, Newly
refinished Hardwood Floors.
$78,000 (7&lt;10)t188·9062

2049.

HOUHI for Rent

460 Space for Rent

.. 1.0181

3 BR Furnished Trailer, next to
Wai·Marl In Mason. Central Air,
No Pete, ,Reference Required
1740)992-3911

440

Apartments
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshad and unfurnished, security
dep.oslt required, no pets, 740·
992·2218

Mollohan Carpet, Berber Stle,
202 Clark Chapel Road, Porter
Ohlo,7_7_

New And Ultd Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanaug•
Good Used Beds, Dr11aera,
Couches Dinettes, Etc Big SaY..
lngs On New Furniture 740..441·
4782
A&amp;O'a Uaed Furniture Great 81·
ltcllon, Priced To Selll
And Browser • Corner Of Route 7 .
&amp; Addison Pike, ·we Buy Furnl•
ture' 740-387-0260

·com•

Washer S9S, Dryer $12~. Eloctrtc
Range $75, Rotrlgorator SUO,
Freezar S175: Washer 1205;
Cryer $205 1 Year Warranty,
Skagga Appliances, 78 Vlnt
Street , Gallipolis, 7&lt;10...6-7388,
1·888 815-0128

530

AntlquH

Buy or sell Riverine Antiquea,
1124 East Main on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740·992-2528 or
1539.-Ruaa Moore, owner.

1•o-m.

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandl. .

$$BAD CREDIT? Got Cllh
Loans To $5,000. Debt Conooll·
dation To $200,000 Credit Cotdo,
Mortgag11, Refinancing And
Auto Loane Available Meridian
Credll Corp. 1-800-471-St t9 E"
t 180

Nice 1 Bedroom Garage Aparl·
ment, In Kanauga, Apptlanc.s ln..
eluded ,No Pots, D D $250/Mo ,
Call 740·888·7102, Or 7&lt;10·886·
1389

"Attention Prlmastar &amp; Cable TV
Cuatamers• Want A Better Deal? ·
frH Equipment, Frle lnatallatlon,
CoHTom t 740-388.01 t3

1 Bedroom Near Arbor's Nursing
Home, Economical Utllltlea, Quiet
Loea.tlon 1279/Mo , + Utllltlea, No
Pelt, 74D-448-2957

8 Person Hot-Tub Blue Ridge '
Mountain Stream Brand 211·11'2
HP Mololl $3,000 Now·WIH Sell
~$2,200 (304)682·3613

.2 Badroom Apartment Adjacent
To R60 Grandt Campus, 740-245·
15856.
2 Bedroom Apartment, New Ha·
van Area 1260 mo. lnchidtl WI·

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Finance With ·o· Down. Pall
CrtdJt Problems, No Prot:Hm Call
Toll Free f.B77-293-ol082,

480 First Avenue, (Galllpollt) 1
Apartment, $280 &amp; Dopoolt, Rol·
....... No 1'1111, 7•D-44t·0952,
740.88&amp;-4531

All Steel Bulldlngsll 24' Wide To
75' Wide Buildings To Fit Any
Need Price Everyone Elae •
Then Call Usl 1·800·825·0316
Worldwide BuNdlng Sales

torltraah Celt (304)773-!5577

BEAUTIFUL APAIITMINTI AT
BUDGET PRICIS AT JACK·
80N ESTATII, 52 Woetwood
Drive from S289 to $370 Walle to
ahop &amp; movlu Cell 740·448·
2!588 Equal HouaJng Opportunity
Cl'lrlsty's Family Living, apart·
menta, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·992·•514, ap•rtments avail·
lbto, furnlohad &amp; ..,fllrnlshed.

For Lttse One Bedroom, Unfurnished, Sacond Floor Ap•tment,
CO&lt;ntr 01 Second And Pint A/C,
$240/Mo • Water Included Sa·
c:urlty And Kay Deposll Refer·
tnces Required No Pels. 7·0·
..11-4-425.
Fumlahocf 2 Rooms &amp; Bolh Show·
or, Downotalra, Clean, No Poll,
Deposit &amp; Roteronceo Required,
74Q-.t4&amp;-1519
GraclousiNing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Rlvoralda Apartmonll In Mlddlo·
port From S273·$338 Croll 7•0·
992·5De4 Equal Houalng Oppor·
tunltlls
Nice, 2 bedroom 1 t bodroom
apartments lor rent, pleau cell
aher 6pm 7o40-92H9-41.
Now Taktng Applications- 35
Weat 2 Bedroom Townhoust
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash $315/Mo, 1•0·
&lt;146-00011
One Bedroom furnished Apartmant In Pt Plteunt Very Clean
end Nice No pets Phone
1304)875-1398
One bedroom furnished apMt·
ment In Middleport 740·99:2·
&amp;ttl.

Bar and Slx(6) Stools Ideal for
basement or gama room Call
1304)675·281 t
Complete DISH Network satellite
system, brand new, $99, 740·
992·1 162 or 304-773·530S alter

·Accounta
moat Everyone
Money Downll
mental! 1

I COM·
Mer·

AI·

No
Pay·
(Toll

_,

Computer Power Mac Pertorma:
OS 7 5 System, tOOMHz, Color
Monitor. Mouse Keyboard, Haw·
leu Packard Inkjet oeskWrltar
Color Printer 880C, External Mo·
dom 57K, Very Fall, Y2K ·OK,
Tons 01 Sottwoar, tntomot Roady:
($695) 7-8038
COMPUTERS • low Or
Down
Low ~onthiy Paymenta. Y2K
Compliant AlrAoat Everyone Ap·
Proved 1-800-617·3476 Ext 330.
COMPUTERS I 179 •19 /MO
EASV OUALIFVINGI FAST,
NEW 500 -800 MHz Complete
INTERNET, Software, Technical
Help, 800·300·28•0 Alfordablo
I ~llch::::::::"..._::::OIOD:!-.:188=..._ _ _ __
Firewood For Salt, 140 A Lood.
Heap Acceplld S90 Coni Split &amp;
Dtllvered, 740·25e-e813
Firewood For Sale, 140 A F•ce
Cold Call 7&lt;10-389-9848

so

For salt· Prime Star Syotom alao
wanted older RCA OlrectTV or
Hughes aystema with acceaa
card, PlY 1150 &amp; up cath11t Cell
Wolllt, 740.949·3315 leovo moo·
Coli

Spring Volloy Groen Ona Bod·
room Apartment•. Appliances
F-.Coll7o10-44e·tt589
TWin Towera now accepting ap·
pNcatlona for t BR HUO aubold·
lud apt. for etderiy and hindi·
~. EOH (304)17He79

,_ boclroom, 1270/mo. pluo utili·
l!ta and dePOII1, ont bedroom,
f22!1/mo ; Third Stroot, Racine,
Oh, 7&lt;1().241-.

~~~~~~~::::

I

�•
~.

...... B 4 • The Deity Sentinel
~

140

Public ttoe~ce

71!) Autoe lor s.lo ·

MarchandiM

JETlotCJIOIIS
AIMI10H

"""'
""''"'&lt;4od:......
- .......
tn - ·
o.-llorl
1.-&amp;37-.

EGIII,ANO,.OKUIID,
,_
·~--'IIIIHQ
,_
...."""'.." .
IIPOUII,~-WHOlE llllll"'eNCI 18
UNKNOWN, COURT OF
COIIIIQN PL1AS, IIElGI
COUNTY. Olm
11E1C18 COUNTY
COURTHOUIE
IECONO
ITREET

1N0-80 Hondlo F&lt;om $211111o.,
1~1 0 Down, 24 Monlht 0
or
eon
0111oe aooo '"' -1121. 18.11% ~ 800-3tt-3323 ExL
.., ........... AntiNiocl&amp; 3801.
..._.......,..Full Voralona. I · 1981 Monte Carlo, v-e Motor,
~1tl·1411.
Run1 Goad. Good - 1800.00
740-448-8853

•

.,.,. ..,... ow•••

Huttlrw.oby, ~ , _ ,,

On V~ klrUng, Doora, Wtna-

- · Anoi\Ora, Water Hutoro,
- . g 1 Etecirlc.l ,..,.., Fur·
ltiCia I Hoot PU111P1- hnnono
Mobllt Homo Supply, 740-448·

Mit.

C.

TO DUINOANT It'

I'~E¥~~~~·~~~
~-. .
-.-·

POIIEIIOY. OH 417W
IN IIEJQI coUNTY COURT

1i88 Trono-Am 350, Automotlc,
Good Condition, $1 ,195 . 740·
441 03110.
1990 Chryoler LeBaron Automat·
lc, With Air, 4 Doors, 85 ,000
· - S2 ·~ 7'"2~ t290
_., · -· ~ ~
·
1993 Ford Mul1ong LX. 4 Cylln·
dor, Automatic,
PW, Exc.lPOL,
80,000
Mllel. OnoAlr,
Onnor,
lent Condition, $5,000 . 740-3792484.

01' COIIIION Pl..EAII
POMEROY, QHIO
LAVERN JORDAN,
Mid

IIARY JORDAN,

IIIIIIIIITIAL HOllE OWNERS

Tappen HI Elllclency 90% Gao
Furnac~~, 011 Furnaces, 12 Sttr
Hoot Pump I Air Conditioning
.lyottmo Froi a War Parts &amp; La·
bor warranty Bonnons Htatlng &amp;
~. 1-81)0.872,5987.
Ron'a ca,.o 8hop,740-742-8412.

excellent

condition,

seeoo,catl740-949-2181.
1994 Garnet ~ Buict&lt; Rogel, 2

~;'l1~~~"'ro"n~~:~n~v$7,'1h~":,
_740-..;_24_15-5009..;__·- - - - -

STEEL BUILDINGS • Mullllqul·

1995 Buick Loaabro Cullom 4

0Widl1~·7930 x~9.

Doors, Loadad,
aluminum
Whatll, AJC, Tilt, Cruise, Pwr,
locks, Pwr Windows , Pwr 5ealt,

Ex~tl~ Inventory 2) 25x30,
30a40, ~. SeWng For BaUance

elite

$8,200.00: (2,000 Undo( Book
Steal Buildings, New, Must Soli. .Yall»)l 740-882-7512 ·
30x40 x12 Wu S10,200 Now
·se,tto; 40x50xt4 was $18,400 19911 Mercury Soble, six cyllnatr.
Naw 110,171; 5Dx100x18 Wat
127,11110 Now $19,990; 80x200x18

W l •e 780 N 139 9"0
II " •
' • ' I•
100-40e-51
28. OW

new tires, loaded, nice car,

$4495; 1993 Aorooter, 81,000
1994 For Ranger XL, 79,000

mllea, new Ures. nice van, ,.295;
miles, bedllner, air, nice truck,

Waterline Special: 314 2oo PSI $3995: 1993 Dooge Dynaoty. six
•21.85 Per 100: 1' 200 PSI cylinder, lour door, good car,
$37.00 Per 100;.AII Broil Com· $2895.
-""" Flttlrt~ln s- ·
Rutland C11t Solos
RON EVANS ENTEAPRI8!8
740-742·:j311 or 1·888-818-9609
-·Ohio, t-800-531-951!8
WE FINANCE. COMPUTERS! As HONOA'I $100, $500 &amp; UP. PO·
Soon On TV • All Approved! Bad LICE IMPOUND. Honda's Toyo-·
Crtdll • Bankruptcy OKAYI No ta's, ChtVW'S, Jeeps, And Sport
Credit Check! No Turndownal UIINIIeo. Call Nowl 800-772-7470;
Froo lntornoll 888·827-7502 EXT.8336.
-.pc-cradM.oom
Blaze King woodburner With

Blowr, Excollont Condition, Will
Daher $400 OBO, 740 448 8111!2.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o• Downl Paot
Crodlt Problamo OKII Even If
1\lmod Down llllorell R-tablllh
'IIIII' Crodlllll-800-t115&amp;-0359.

CARS FROII 12t/MO. lm·
poooda lllapoo. Fee. 10 Down 124
Moo. 019.11% For listings t-aoo319-3323 X2t 58.

720 1'r\ICica for Sale

own1n

.o·:r •·30
p' M'
..
Vo

11M! St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying SIO.OO

P« III'IJ'

$300.00 eo-.11
15110.00 Sllrbul'lt

YOIH'S

Moat...,~-

740-1192·1388.
1975 Chevy 112Tori Pick-Up,

· UIPINDUIIVICI

Southern Ohio Displsal

•Room lddiUot II • Rlmotllllng
oNewO.,...
oEIIclrfcll • Pluml1lng
•Roallng &amp; Gulln
•VInyl Sldlntl&amp; PUtllng
. oPatJo. POrd1 Dlcb

for
•JIIoldelo!lal

-c-

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•ladulrtal
Sonia&amp; Melp oad Golllo
Couty

992·6215

eauror~lal\ormalloa

HILL'S
SELF STORAOE

~

cup

Reglatered

Mal•

Road

A•aponalbll party wanlitd to
make klw monltlly paymenls on

plano. Soo locolly. Cell; 1·800·

or Trade

oTOP
• f\111\0'1•'

eeea.

Ford 2000 Oltaet Tractor: 3800
Dioaot, 4doo Fonl ~- 9N
Ford With Bush Hog &amp; Blade,
74C)o211 11122. '
' . '

Q J 10

•KJ

ta Hord-hanc~et~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
S&lt;iulb
19
3t

P888
5t

West . North . Eaal
t•
Pus .
3NT Pus
Dbl
Pass
Pus
Pass Pass · Pus
Pass
Pass

..-+-+- -f

Cellular·
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

New Construction &amp;
Reniodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets· Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Garages

Free Estimates
740· 742-3411

Bryan Reeves

•

www.sunsethome.com

•

'•
r

•

•
'

'

Wfl.'(

m YOU ~

i"al(,I i't(, ?

GOOD TIMES.

local.live music

In Memor'y
In :Mtmory'of
:My .:Husband · ·

'1Ucliard JuniDr JacMJ
wlio drjlarlrd fiis lift
'ftb. I 8, 1,87
Our fitarts sn/1 acfit
witfi st~dntss and
· stcrtl ltttn still flow
'111/iat it meant to lose you
J(o ont will tvtr know
Wife 'frula, Cfiildrtn, &amp;, .9Jandcliildrtn

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CARPET SERVICE
&amp; Scotch
Guard $40 - Any

· Clean

Normal Size Room.

..', .

74Q-7 42·2706
74(}446·1141

•

BISSELL BUILDERS ..
INC.
'

COMMERCIAL and RESIOfllllAL

There is an old saying that if
your opponent£ never make a
contract that you double , you
aren't doubling. enough. Yet
there is nothing mo.re frustrating
than doubling a contract · that
was dying . perforce, only to
watch the opponents run to another contract and make that.
What do you think of the bidding in today's deal? And if you
were sitti~ West, what. would ·
you lead against five diamonds?
South was nght to open in the
higher-ranking of two five-card
suits. Then, on the second round,
he had to jump to show his extr.t
strength. North thought about rebidding three spades, to hunt out
a 5-3 spade fit, but that would
have . led to three no-trump by
South. West, seeing a bird in the
hand, would probably . have
passed it out and led the h~art
king. However, when North bid
three no-trump, West made a
lead~ directing double, asking for
. a lead of dummy's first~bid suit.
(Without the double , East would
probably lead the club two .
- North makes the contract by
winning with dummy's king and
· playing the spade queen.) Taking
the hint, Slillth fi19-,tO five, dia-,
monds, where he expected his
partner to have some support.
Now the spotlight was on
501'\E PEOP~E
REALLY NEE!&gt; 1t&gt;
West. As he was so strong in de(:,ET A Uf'EO .
. datez's second suit, he open~d
with a trump, which defeated the '
THJT]Q
contrnct. If declarer led' the spade ·
/
queen, West would wjn with .the
ace and play another,trump. If instead South took two he.art ruffs
in the dummy, whe;n .in with the
spade ace , West would cash two
heart tricks. On any ·other lead,
though, declarer could win 11

tricks.
L£ARN£P 1D AVOIO 'IWOSE ......

News Hotline
News .Botllne
NewsBotllne

'

1

·,

'

'

'FREE ESTIMATES

1-:

740·992·7599

j

780

'

High &amp; IJri t•

Auto Parts a.

~

•
Self~Storage: •••

Typea, Acctll To Ovor 10,000
Transmlnlono, eve Joints, 740·
245-5877.

1988 Ford Truck 4 Wheel Drive,
Runo Good And 4 Wheel Drive
Workl Good All&lt;lng $2,000, 304773-5339.

SERVICES

1887 Chevy Von, Clood ohapo.'
.

1989 SolO Rod 4K4, Tinted Wlndowo, 81,000 Milos, Power Stnr·
lng, Power Brakao, Great Shopel
740-319-2198.

810

740·992·5212.

Home

lmprovemenll

TII M l',f'OnT ATIO N

carpentry, dQoro, windows, batho,
mobile homo ..,.. and mDfW. For
rroo 0111ma11 call Chtt, 74D-992·

8323.

Jlma Drywill' &amp; Construction.
New Construccion &amp; Rtmotself
Drywall, Siding, ROOII, Addl ·
Ilona, Pointing, otc. (304)874·
4823 or (304)874-01155.
Lhtlngeton'a

· Prooflrig,,all

710 Auto• for Sale

aaiam.nt

~111m1.n1

Water

repairs

dono, lroo oillmt\t•· llfollmo
guoronttt. 12Yr• on Job expert·
onco. (304)895-3887.

W flllltltC Bonnevllll, lour door,
IIICIIIIIt condltton, lhlrp, $4850,

'

840

ROIERI BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

..

'

'

.

446-2342
.
992-2,156
.

~

.,

..........,_,_ .._

\

... ""-\

I

'·

I

"'

~

I

;;-

MdtN~or&amp;

Erpitpllllri Pad. ·
Factory A..ithorbed

J'

.

~IHPaJts

,.,. .•.
Dealen.

. 111110 It Rt. 7 8oulh

wl~ng.

or ropatro. Molter ll·

Coollttlll, OH 417»

;

Electrical, WV000308, 304-e75•
1788. .

,,
I

•

1'

I'll
M

,

Semce•

nI

Trailer Site&amp;
Land'Ciearing &amp;

·

Houae &amp;

Grading

Sepllc Syoee- &amp;:

U1illtiea

1740) t92·JIU

..

RUO..IItt
llpllotnle-' '

cenaed electrician. Ridenour

.I

Bu/Uo•r &amp; :Q..ciJJoe ·

7/WTFN

Refrigeration
or c&lt;&gt;mn*clal

• Garagea

•

'

t

...

....... .

COUlC'· OUt

p

·',,

~-

HOWARD
EICIVITIIIG CO.

• New Homes
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
. 740-992-1&amp;71

E~cala"d

A~

..W -

I ,

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
A couple of problems n)if!ht got
~umP&lt;din your lap today, ~ut instead of bogging you down,
something very fortuitous could

.·'

' IASIMENT
WATERPROOF1NG

CIC General Home Malntentnct• Palnllng, vinyl aiding,

a

1-1mo. pe.

Unconditional llrelime guarantee.

Evanlnga: 740-258-1585.

•

'

33795 Hilarid Rd•. '
~I
.Pomeroy, Ohio · •

(

.... w, ·~"' ·

All replacemen~
parts

FruDtllvtiy .
740-742-9501 .

"·Toll Free

" Saturilay, Feb. 19, 2000
Hn ,the year ahe•d yotir greatchance&gt;, for success will
'jllntosr ,much from Lady Luck ·
from your own efforts.
,, _......, ,in there an~ wait for the
to intervent: on your behalf.
AQUA'RIUS (Jan: 20"Feb.
Don't go shopping today too
because 2s time tidts on,
.,m,•r,.:' likdy to have a chango of
&lt;tbpu'l: what is. important to
JJ,OU 1n reg:uds to what you w:mt
to purchose. Trying to patch up a

••In•

admifoicioO an~ respect of others.

.~1oken ~on1:m,c~~ The Astronph Matchnta'ker can help you
pdersta••~ what to dq, to 11,na~e

~

he', .,retaupnship work'. M~H
t6 Ma,t~hn!aker, clo this
,)lewsl"f"• P.O. Box 1758, M~r­
.,.~y· Hoi Sf.&gt;bon, New York, NY .
~0156 . .
.
• PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
:roday yoilr ·Splendid attriDute of
'\varning ' to get along with all

· :ps

1round you ' wjll ,\erve you well.
fiour open-mindedness and abiUIY ro :acctpt other points of View

t'ward"
t.lowship.

Y8U

with

good

~·

of them.

TAUR.US (April 20-May 20)
·The wor11 thing that ca.n happen
to ·a Ta!Jhls is to be placed' in an
' opposing posit.iqn with someone
.. quite: unpleasan~. Bu.t the . way
. you handle it wdl gam y0 u the

\

.GEMINI (May 21-Jun~· 20)
Even if it looks early on, like
you•re being c:ut in the role of a
·~patsy," the joke will be on everyone else. What you do with
that lcript will win you an
Oscar. ·
·
CANCER. (June 21-july
22) Try to avoid heavy topics
like· politics ' or religion f!Jday
when engaged io- '~nvenations '
with .othen. By simply rei\\sing
to respond, you cim tilm the talk

around:
·

LEO (luly 23-Aug. 22) .

Be careful when out shopping to,

day that you don't purchase the.
first itents you spor: Look
· nou'nd, bec.:awe b~rgains for 1thc
uac~ sa rile pieces wiJI be pl~.-: ,., _

fW.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt.
I

,

'

,.

22) Any oue-on-one dealing you
might have tO encounter t0day
could be a. trifle tr,icky, but if
rou're ' prepared to listen•to reaSun :md iuake 3 few .compromis es\ the' outcome could be eJtcep tional.. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct ,
, . ·23) You n1ight want to Wait :1
little before y.oU get started with.
today's plans, because as the day
wears on, the work gets easiC'r. ,
!t.s the jobs get easter, they become more lim.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24Nov.' 22) Try to steer de1r of
, any group involventcnts today
1hat show sigos of .hampering
your mobility. The more active
you can btcome, the more you'll
. make ofthe &lt;lay.
SAGITTfiR IUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Shoulcl you got otT
on the wrong foot, when ~f)'irtg
·ro work with sOmeone. today,
stop and . regroup. ·Upon reflection. yoU'll find a more tompa.ti" ble way to deal with one another.
' · CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~
jon. ·19) People ·who,. philmophy, diametrically· oppos~J youn
should be given litde anrntion today. Stick to your owp guns and
you'D know you're doilig what's

,.

. ri@lltlilryou.

ot

J, ·,

'

.

·,

43 Acrobatic leal
45 Muol..l
•
oymbol
,
47 Sponloh child ·
48FMtharwrap '
41 Cotrao wool
50 "ROM - - ~
roM"
52 Snoke
53 Gplfer. 'I prDp .
154 Pirie

eummer

CEL'EBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

c.a.brity Clphtr ~.,.. CfMied from QUOIIIIOnl bV lamout PeoPle. peat ·and prasent
. EICh litltiintM clpNr lllnd:llof another. TO&lt;Uy's dw: L. *lUlls W

'T

'M V

ZE

OHJW

HYM

OPW

YVO

0 V

LHE

'o

H

J

LYSJ

OY

W .

UY

IWSTYAIA .E. "
'I'

OPHO

E Y R S 1W A D

IWSTVRIAE.'

(HBOYS)

Tl

OYY
HAHY

S T B J ·Z H Y
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There Is only one difference between a madman an~
me. I am not mod." - Salvodor Dan
·
'•

'::~::~' S©HltM
\\.~lA4 £~s·
lrt C\o\'r L POUAH
ltortOnOo ltlltro of
0 lour
· ecromblod words

low

10 form lour olmplo

WGID
lAM I

,

tho
boo

wordo.

,.. .~NDEED
· I rrI I
"T"t...,1r-c"TII'I~,_II___,,

I

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......
5

~,=~D:E;::L:::B:N:::::f~ I
s I I"·_ ,

.

,I

I

RE NV

.

.

1

M

was afraid of speaking before
a group of people. Granny told me
that If I couldn't be a good speaker
II cou!d be a good ----- •· --. ,

t--ri"'...,.I....;.;."TI=;.r-•..:."1-.-1
1 1

L-.1..-.1.--.1..-.1..-.1.,--1

e

Campi... tho chuckle quo1od
~Y lilflnv In tho rnlllfng words
you do1111Dp lr- 11ap No. 3 below.

r r.14: r I' J' .,. I

II II I III

Fervor· Latch - Fancy- Pencil- OFFICE
While listening to lhe evening news my husband observed that lhe cheapest way to trace your family tree is
to run for public OFFICE.

Now Rentla&amp;. ,'

"'"· loll or chromo, $71100 080,

the Pips

SCII..I.M lETS ANSWERJ

992-2156

9.
...••

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)' ·.

.

31 Surly

8 rm:R~~Bf~u~m I'
6 ~~:~:~~~~lETTERS'

'_·,

140-742·7200 or 740-7 42-2875.

•I

34 Moot rloquo

!JUT SHE STILL HASN'T

I
I

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemimt Wlndws
• Room Additions
• Roofing
.

noll

35 - Knight and

/

BURKE'S

dllenao
19 Genuo ol anlo ·
20 Not digital
22 Revolt
(2 wdo.)
23 Smelled
strongly
24 Llg~t
25 Repreoento.
Uvea
•
27 Guido's high ·
32 Ethiopian tluo"

SunutRottN

91, 1200 Hartey Davldaon, new

Rogtetortd Yorkohlro Bo•r For I ;;..;,.,;=;.,;.=,.;,;.;.;.;.._ _
'1997 Ford Expodltlon 4 WD
....l -oo ·r·"~t3
. ~- ' -~ .
40,000 Mlieo, Excallont Condition,
840. Hay 1 Grain
124,1100, 740-387-o2te.
1998
Jeep Wrangler Wlitto /Grey
Bright wo. Tie Straw War
'Round Dollvory I Volume Dis· Cloth Interior, 22,000 Mlleo, Still
count Available. Horltogo l'arm. Undlf Wouanty, 115.000. Deyo:
740·448·5712, Evinlngo: 740·
(304)11H124.
4411-4418.

'

t A K

You're rr.tod with Retpeell

woo.

'

WA7643

No~'*"-ment...

Scrubbed&amp;
cleaned .·
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 ·Any
Normal Size Room.

19to Ford Aoroatar, 4.0 lltro 8
oyllndlr onglno, 11,110 actual ·Local references furnished . Ell·
rnllol, now IO.a. Yf!Y good condl' . tabllshed.l975. Call 24 Hro. (740)
448·0870, 1·800·287·0578. RogFonU 'N Fofm-. · ~ Mo- llon.l4000. 740-742·23113.
... Welorprool"ll.
tqr, "•Int. Clarilnora O(Oom,'
1991 Ford Ranger 4K4 XLT, 1993
lotBOO· (304)17&amp;-3ea4. .
4.3 .motor 'wlth 70,000 mll11, 5
'·
' ' opetd, PL. P.W, toO many extrlo Appliance Parte And Service: All
,.,., ""'Aokii800.00,Hoy
Name Brands OVer 25 Yeara Ex·
""~.00. (740~·~:~
. ., 10 manllon, ..... 740-742:3114.
parlance All work Guaranteed,
1893 i=-2150 4xol, 7.3 Diolol, Stan- Froncl&gt; City Maytag, 740·446·
830
LIVfttock
dard Tranoml11lon, 177,000 nte.
Milos, ·Muot Soot $12,500 OBO.

"•

I "Scooby-•
10 Ewo'o mota
ffOn• (ScOt)
13 Actron
4ocq...,lln• -

Opening lead: ??

740 · MOiorcycln

Fonl

140 ... .... ..........

.. 9 8 6 4
985
• 7 5 4
.. 10 8 3 z

(740) 367-0266
l-800-950-3359

810 Ftlrm Equipment
tt85 Conversion Van 150 302
AccoiiOI'IH
Engine, Good CondiUpn, St ,195,
0% Flnonclng Now Avatlbate On 740-3BIM104.
·Budget PriCed Tranam1111ona All
John D11rt Balers And Mower

740-38&amp;-9338.

Eaal

• A J 10
9 K Q J 10 9

Bv PHIWP ALDER

SHOP AT HOME

1984 Bronco II, V.8. · 4x4, 4
Speed. 75,000 miles. Real Nice.
$3,200. (304)675-3824.

Sit Of Ttnlkln Spring~; F• Ellrt
Condlllorl, $3,000. catl 740-682·

Wesl

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

CLASSIFIED81

21180.

Condlllonoro. Carmichael's Farm
I Lawn 1-100·594-1111 Or 740·
4411.2412 GaiUpollo, Ohio. Don't
Milt OUr John Dlllnl Dey Fallfull'f 12. 11:00 A.M.
Btllr. Vlfmtar 805C With Extra

Phone (740) 59:~-61&gt;711

GAL.UPou:5, QHIO 451131• CHEIHIRE, 0-~~::­

c.,.t

730 Yana I 4-WDt

21=-

• 9 8 3
• A 7 6 5

WORRYIIGI!!

740-742-2706
740-446-1141

78 Ford Bronco. 35 t robulll en·
gina. 4 apead, $2400, 740·742·
FARf11 SUPPLIES
11. LIVESTOCK

.. z

No CredH • Slow CfO!IH • Ellnlcruptcy
Repo • Dlvordod

c.-.... s ••u

=·-----

11 Ad17 ,.._."-~&gt;
11 Haw Zea'J JCI

02-11-00

•K7532

lOIII'

1117 Toyol8 Tecom•. Maroon,

motor I .tirea, ~40·742·

...

• Bolta1t Servl..
•Lisltt 01 .. 11. 1

1N3 Oldo, body, tiro a &amp; lntorlor 4x4, Sony CD P-layer, Btdllner,
•Client. netdl molor wtth atan- Bug Guard, Window Flares. Ask·
er on driver's aide; 1989 Chevy 1ng PoyoH. CIM: (304)175-8835 or
Geo Metro, nHdl lranamlaaion, (304)875-3383.

1:::

North

~

·I oio. od.

1

19915 White Ford E!Cplorer XLT. •
Wheel Drive, 4Door, New Tires,
Moon Aooi/CD, lotdtd. $18,000

Firm.

WOOl

15~

. lilJRKE'S

Financing Available.
304 7 11502
PIANO FOR SALE: Spl,.na·oy'.m/Coor n-i. I.,(:;;;,;:;)6;.;5-;,;;;
1
aolt. Take On Small n
1897 black ChevY S.tO Stepsldt
lifo Down Willi 'Good ~·•we .- · 1 Extondod Cab, 3 door. loaded,
l.ocaly.CaiiB00-346'1775.
. 25,000 mllea, 111ry oharp, lull lar590
For Sale
~"J:~~o, 740-949-2045 or
288-8211.

mon•r

• Q

eon.truetfon

Racine, Ohio
45771
.
740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houl'li
7:00AM ·BPM

~RI!!!

Dachshund Show Quality, 1250, 85,.0.00 Milos, BCyl Engine . TIIV
740-441·1&amp;10.
.
· , Cruise &amp; Air. $4,800. 080.
(304)576-99t1.
570
Mullcal
1995 Dodge 1500 SLT V-8 Maglnllrumonta
num, Topper, Reese Hitch, Rtd
FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO. and Gley. (140)-388410B

1 TrlnMI
7 llanv·l111JJ J

12 llralr! lor 13 Umen1
14 A
Filling

·"SWAMP JEUCE"
Fri &amp; Sat Night

t993 GMC Son·oma. New Tlraa,

-10--

ACROSS

ALDER

Live Band

304-n:l-5305.

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

)I;

PDmeroy,

ap., 90,000
miles, oxcellent
D~ac~ha~h~u;ndit~o~bra~td~-~P~Iea~s~e:ca~l:llt893
Fc.O 11angor
Splash, 4oondl·
cyt, 5
tlon, $5.000, 740·992-t 182 or

Til

i

BRIDGE

Soulh

667·7321

29870Bahan

(1)21,28,(2)4,11,18,25,
etc

&amp; drag slicks.
AKC Pomeranian Pup, Seven 3.50
Watkl Old. Vtt Checked Firat
-.l40-211&amp;6M1.
1987 Chevy S· tO. Runs Good.
74_7_1·_
IIKC Pomeranian Puppy, Male, .:.(304
___:;)6_7_5-_
· ----Whltl 3 months old, Will bt 1990 Mltaublshl Mighty Max,
_ , 112150.00. (7«1)·388 8642.
Hus~and't 1l'uclt, Wife Says Has
. Looking lqr lomole longhair 11&gt; Goi$3,000, 740-3811-b579.

The Deily Sentinel• Page 8S1

I

1...------...-r
•r., Stil

~-':'

99Z·7945

992;93~ or 1-800-809-ml .

ers. Turbo 350 transmlealon with
1!11ft ktt. Fclil &amp;-Inch roar-end w1t11

740-448-2066 ill'le
Purobrod St.
Sl50oach, cal

" 91 ')

•

• e2
• Q9 4

50 Yrs. Combined
Experience
Honest &amp; Reliable
Free
Estimates
.
.
Senior Citizens
. Discount

proridn .... dlopooal

llon./$1400.(304)882·3813.'
Block, brick, oowor pipes, ·wind·
owa, lintels, ale. ClaUde Wlnter.o. 1988 Chevy S-10. Robulll ' 350
Rio Granda, OH Call H0-245· engine wl.th new lntakt, holly
5121.
carb, and heada. Hooker htld·

Pete for Sale

Pomeloy, Middleport, Ohio

u ..........

Diamond Plate, FtatBtid.
Good Stlclcer,.Y,Irta, New Ex·
hausl. Excellent Running Condl·

..

,~-

DfiMIL
PLOMBI"G

Ready f11r a ehaqe?

740-992-1709

Melga

tirluy, February 18,2000

'

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative.
Larry Schey

East State Street
IAtl1ens, Ohio 45701

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

PSI·
CONSTRUCTION

Ohio

'87 Chevy Silverado, t/2 ton. an-

atne lrozl/locbcl up, many IXIJ8s.

Tjl llhi· (J!I [ld col!

Truck seats, car seats, qeadliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 • S:QO
OV.r 40 yra experience

Pomtroy, Ohio
. ln1oroot, oald
. IMilng . gonaralfy
22 yn. Local
II 17.111 A,CrBI,
21, Columbia
.
M11111 Counly, Ohio.
· You are raqulrtd to
. anow1r lha Complolnl
wllhln 25.doyl attar 1111 1111
publf..tlon of thlo notice,
which will bo publlohtd
Remodeling,
once ooch week for olx
Roofing New
I U - I v l - k l , irond lho
laat publication . will bt
Additions, Pole
madl on 2-211, 2000.
· You; en•- muet ba ftl4d
Buildings, Etc.
wltlt 1111 Cltrlt ol Courl end
Free Estimates
10rvod on coun11l for
Plalnlllf8: Herman A.
C.1'81111, SOWASH, CARSON
• FERRIER, 3t N. Colltfll
2117/CO 1 mo pd.
Stroll, Athtne, Ohio 4&amp;701.
In can of your failure to
anowor or otttorwloal ·i~~~:-~~-'!!"'...,
roopond aa permitted by 1111
Ohio Auloa of Civil
Procedure wltltln the tlr!MI
ltatad, judgmont by defaun
wllf ba tfitdorecl llgalnll
• Drh,ow•y Stoilo
for tho rolla!
• Lt•4111pe M~terlel .
the Complaint.
Larry Sponcor
Clorlt of Courl of Common
&amp;••PIHI

A~to,

Building
Supplies

550

Club Bl......
. On
• ._.Thurwdaya

,.. flllmltte

1984 Eoglo Talon,. outomotlc,
loaded,

zoe»:

.. ..

PHILLIP

Progre181vo top llno.
YS.
I:IL-~~~!:!2..!=::1
ROBERT HOMAN, ET AL..
Uc. I CI0-50

tel4 Chevy Suburban Garage
Kept, Low Mllol, 740-44&amp;-2302.

18,

__

,.UJ.EYOOP

Business Services

PLAINTlFFS,

MTD Wood 8illltlof, 5 hp, 20 ton.
Huakavomo 257 Chain Saw wl
Inolucllng JAMES C. EGRI,
20 Inch bar. Both
wholt
,..._
In
Elcallont Condlllon. $800.
unlutown.
(304)175-71137.
1983 Grond Am 82K $3;995;
C.M No. lloCV-058
_ ~
t982 Cavalier R/S UK $3,195; l ~-oiUIGfll ~~ w. Crow, Ill
-1111Jh~"
Door, ~il.-li-t 891 Lumina !uro 88K $4,115:F...,
IX7 Cllrlfll Door,
· New ProMazda 10tK $1,395. Cook
NOTICE
Hung 38"xao 8 lite Door, Mo- 740-446-0103. .
Plalntltt. hava
.lo40.(304)87s.4004.
lhll
ltM Chevy Btrotta. 3.1 VB, All
Now MUitnium 01111 Eat All Dey Power. Excellent Condition. Call
AnO Molt Away, Call Tracy At Ahar 5PM, (304)875-80111 .
740-441·1912.

.,.._.now.

F~, February

Pomeroy, lllddlapatt. Ohio

'

. .._...... .

.

.
"

"''

'

'

�•
~.

...... B 4 • The Deity Sentinel
~

140

Public ttoe~ce

71!) Autoe lor s.lo ·

MarchandiM

JETlotCJIOIIS
AIMI10H

"""'
""''"'&lt;4od:......
- .......
tn - ·
o.-llorl
1.-&amp;37-.

EGIII,ANO,.OKUIID,
,_
·~--'IIIIHQ
,_
...."""'.." .
IIPOUII,~-WHOlE llllll"'eNCI 18
UNKNOWN, COURT OF
COIIIIQN PL1AS, IIElGI
COUNTY. Olm
11E1C18 COUNTY
COURTHOUIE
IECONO
ITREET

1N0-80 Hondlo F&lt;om $211111o.,
1~1 0 Down, 24 Monlht 0
or
eon
0111oe aooo '"' -1121. 18.11% ~ 800-3tt-3323 ExL
.., ........... AntiNiocl&amp; 3801.
..._.......,..Full Voralona. I · 1981 Monte Carlo, v-e Motor,
~1tl·1411.
Run1 Goad. Good - 1800.00
740-448-8853

•

.,.,. ..,... ow•••

Huttlrw.oby, ~ , _ ,,

On V~ klrUng, Doora, Wtna-

- · Anoi\Ora, Water Hutoro,
- . g 1 Etecirlc.l ,..,.., Fur·
ltiCia I Hoot PU111P1- hnnono
Mobllt Homo Supply, 740-448·

Mit.

C.

TO DUINOANT It'

I'~E¥~~~~·~~~
~-. .
-.-·

POIIEIIOY. OH 417W
IN IIEJQI coUNTY COURT

1i88 Trono-Am 350, Automotlc,
Good Condition, $1 ,195 . 740·
441 03110.
1990 Chryoler LeBaron Automat·
lc, With Air, 4 Doors, 85 ,000
· - S2 ·~ 7'"2~ t290
_., · -· ~ ~
·
1993 Ford Mul1ong LX. 4 Cylln·
dor, Automatic,
PW, Exc.lPOL,
80,000
Mllel. OnoAlr,
Onnor,
lent Condition, $5,000 . 740-3792484.

01' COIIIION Pl..EAII
POMEROY, QHIO
LAVERN JORDAN,
Mid

IIARY JORDAN,

IIIIIIIIITIAL HOllE OWNERS

Tappen HI Elllclency 90% Gao
Furnac~~, 011 Furnaces, 12 Sttr
Hoot Pump I Air Conditioning
.lyottmo Froi a War Parts &amp; La·
bor warranty Bonnons Htatlng &amp;
~. 1-81)0.872,5987.
Ron'a ca,.o 8hop,740-742-8412.

excellent

condition,

seeoo,catl740-949-2181.
1994 Garnet ~ Buict&lt; Rogel, 2

~;'l1~~~"'ro"n~~:~n~v$7,'1h~":,
_740-..;_24_15-5009..;__·- - - - -

STEEL BUILDINGS • Mullllqul·

1995 Buick Loaabro Cullom 4

0Widl1~·7930 x~9.

Doors, Loadad,
aluminum
Whatll, AJC, Tilt, Cruise, Pwr,
locks, Pwr Windows , Pwr 5ealt,

Ex~tl~ Inventory 2) 25x30,
30a40, ~. SeWng For BaUance

elite

$8,200.00: (2,000 Undo( Book
Steal Buildings, New, Must Soli. .Yall»)l 740-882-7512 ·
30x40 x12 Wu S10,200 Now
·se,tto; 40x50xt4 was $18,400 19911 Mercury Soble, six cyllnatr.
Naw 110,171; 5Dx100x18 Wat
127,11110 Now $19,990; 80x200x18

W l •e 780 N 139 9"0
II " •
' • ' I•
100-40e-51
28. OW

new tires, loaded, nice car,

$4495; 1993 Aorooter, 81,000
1994 For Ranger XL, 79,000

mllea, new Ures. nice van, ,.295;
miles, bedllner, air, nice truck,

Waterline Special: 314 2oo PSI $3995: 1993 Dooge Dynaoty. six
•21.85 Per 100: 1' 200 PSI cylinder, lour door, good car,
$37.00 Per 100;.AII Broil Com· $2895.
-""" Flttlrt~ln s- ·
Rutland C11t Solos
RON EVANS ENTEAPRI8!8
740-742·:j311 or 1·888-818-9609
-·Ohio, t-800-531-951!8
WE FINANCE. COMPUTERS! As HONOA'I $100, $500 &amp; UP. PO·
Soon On TV • All Approved! Bad LICE IMPOUND. Honda's Toyo-·
Crtdll • Bankruptcy OKAYI No ta's, ChtVW'S, Jeeps, And Sport
Credit Check! No Turndownal UIINIIeo. Call Nowl 800-772-7470;
Froo lntornoll 888·827-7502 EXT.8336.
-.pc-cradM.oom
Blaze King woodburner With

Blowr, Excollont Condition, Will
Daher $400 OBO, 740 448 8111!2.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o• Downl Paot
Crodlt Problamo OKII Even If
1\lmod Down llllorell R-tablllh
'IIIII' Crodlllll-800-t115&amp;-0359.

CARS FROII 12t/MO. lm·
poooda lllapoo. Fee. 10 Down 124
Moo. 019.11% For listings t-aoo319-3323 X2t 58.

720 1'r\ICica for Sale

own1n

.o·:r •·30
p' M'
..
Vo

11M! St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying SIO.OO

P« III'IJ'

$300.00 eo-.11
15110.00 Sllrbul'lt

YOIH'S

Moat...,~-

740-1192·1388.
1975 Chevy 112Tori Pick-Up,

· UIPINDUIIVICI

Southern Ohio Displsal

•Room lddiUot II • Rlmotllllng
oNewO.,...
oEIIclrfcll • Pluml1lng
•Roallng &amp; Gulln
•VInyl Sldlntl&amp; PUtllng
. oPatJo. POrd1 Dlcb

for
•JIIoldelo!lal

-c-

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•ladulrtal
Sonia&amp; Melp oad Golllo
Couty

992·6215

eauror~lal\ormalloa

HILL'S
SELF STORAOE

~

cup

Reglatered

Mal•

Road

A•aponalbll party wanlitd to
make klw monltlly paymenls on

plano. Soo locolly. Cell; 1·800·

or Trade

oTOP
• f\111\0'1•'

eeea.

Ford 2000 Oltaet Tractor: 3800
Dioaot, 4doo Fonl ~- 9N
Ford With Bush Hog &amp; Blade,
74C)o211 11122. '
' . '

Q J 10

•KJ

ta Hord-hanc~et~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
S&lt;iulb
19
3t

P888
5t

West . North . Eaal
t•
Pus .
3NT Pus
Dbl
Pass
Pus
Pass Pass · Pus
Pass
Pass

..-+-+- -f

Cellular·
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

New Construction &amp;
Reniodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets· Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Garages

Free Estimates
740· 742-3411

Bryan Reeves

•

www.sunsethome.com

•

'•
r

•

•
'

'

Wfl.'(

m YOU ~

i"al(,I i't(, ?

GOOD TIMES.

local.live music

In Memor'y
In :Mtmory'of
:My .:Husband · ·

'1Ucliard JuniDr JacMJ
wlio drjlarlrd fiis lift
'ftb. I 8, 1,87
Our fitarts sn/1 acfit
witfi st~dntss and
· stcrtl ltttn still flow
'111/iat it meant to lose you
J(o ont will tvtr know
Wife 'frula, Cfiildrtn, &amp;, .9Jandcliildrtn

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CARPET SERVICE
&amp; Scotch
Guard $40 - Any

· Clean

Normal Size Room.

..', .

74Q-7 42·2706
74(}446·1141

•

BISSELL BUILDERS ..
INC.
'

COMMERCIAL and RESIOfllllAL

There is an old saying that if
your opponent£ never make a
contract that you double , you
aren't doubling. enough. Yet
there is nothing mo.re frustrating
than doubling a contract · that
was dying . perforce, only to
watch the opponents run to another contract and make that.
What do you think of the bidding in today's deal? And if you
were sitti~ West, what. would ·
you lead against five diamonds?
South was nght to open in the
higher-ranking of two five-card
suits. Then, on the second round,
he had to jump to show his extr.t
strength. North thought about rebidding three spades, to hunt out
a 5-3 spade fit, but that would
have . led to three no-trump by
South. West, seeing a bird in the
hand, would probably . have
passed it out and led the h~art
king. However, when North bid
three no-trump, West made a
lead~ directing double, asking for
. a lead of dummy's first~bid suit.
(Without the double , East would
probably lead the club two .
- North makes the contract by
winning with dummy's king and
· playing the spade queen.) Taking
the hint, Slillth fi19-,tO five, dia-,
monds, where he expected his
partner to have some support.
Now the spotlight was on
501'\E PEOP~E
REALLY NEE!&gt; 1t&gt;
West. As he was so strong in de(:,ET A Uf'EO .
. datez's second suit, he open~d
with a trump, which defeated the '
THJT]Q
contrnct. If declarer led' the spade ·
/
queen, West would wjn with .the
ace and play another,trump. If instead South took two he.art ruffs
in the dummy, whe;n .in with the
spade ace , West would cash two
heart tricks. On any ·other lead,
though, declarer could win 11

tricks.
L£ARN£P 1D AVOIO 'IWOSE ......

News Hotline
News .Botllne
NewsBotllne

'

1

·,

'

'

'FREE ESTIMATES

1-:

740·992·7599

j

780

'

High &amp; IJri t•

Auto Parts a.

~

•
Self~Storage: •••

Typea, Acctll To Ovor 10,000
Transmlnlono, eve Joints, 740·
245-5877.

1988 Ford Truck 4 Wheel Drive,
Runo Good And 4 Wheel Drive
Workl Good All&lt;lng $2,000, 304773-5339.

SERVICES

1887 Chevy Von, Clood ohapo.'
.

1989 SolO Rod 4K4, Tinted Wlndowo, 81,000 Milos, Power Stnr·
lng, Power Brakao, Great Shopel
740-319-2198.

810

740·992·5212.

Home

lmprovemenll

TII M l',f'OnT ATIO N

carpentry, dQoro, windows, batho,
mobile homo ..,.. and mDfW. For
rroo 0111ma11 call Chtt, 74D-992·

8323.

Jlma Drywill' &amp; Construction.
New Construccion &amp; Rtmotself
Drywall, Siding, ROOII, Addl ·
Ilona, Pointing, otc. (304)874·
4823 or (304)874-01155.
Lhtlngeton'a

· Prooflrig,,all

710 Auto• for Sale

aaiam.nt

~111m1.n1

Water

repairs

dono, lroo oillmt\t•· llfollmo
guoronttt. 12Yr• on Job expert·
onco. (304)895-3887.

W flllltltC Bonnevllll, lour door,
IIICIIIIIt condltton, lhlrp, $4850,

'

840

ROIERI BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

..

'

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446-2342
.
992-2,156
.

~

.,

..........,_,_ .._

\

... ""-\

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'·

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MdtN~or&amp;

Erpitpllllri Pad. ·
Factory A..ithorbed

J'

.

~IHPaJts

,.,. .•.
Dealen.

. 111110 It Rt. 7 8oulh

wl~ng.

or ropatro. Molter ll·

Coollttlll, OH 417»

;

Electrical, WV000308, 304-e75•
1788. .

,,
I

•

1'

I'll
M

,

Semce•

nI

Trailer Site&amp;
Land'Ciearing &amp;

·

Houae &amp;

Grading

Sepllc Syoee- &amp;:

U1illtiea

1740) t92·JIU

..

RUO..IItt
llpllotnle-' '

cenaed electrician. Ridenour

.I

Bu/Uo•r &amp; :Q..ciJJoe ·

7/WTFN

Refrigeration
or c&lt;&gt;mn*clal

• Garagea

•

'

t

...

....... .

COUlC'· OUt

p

·',,

~-

HOWARD
EICIVITIIIG CO.

• New Homes
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
. 740-992-1&amp;71

E~cala"d

A~

..W -

I ,

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
A couple of problems n)if!ht got
~umP&lt;din your lap today, ~ut instead of bogging you down,
something very fortuitous could

.·'

' IASIMENT
WATERPROOF1NG

CIC General Home Malntentnct• Palnllng, vinyl aiding,

a

1-1mo. pe.

Unconditional llrelime guarantee.

Evanlnga: 740-258-1585.

•

'

33795 Hilarid Rd•. '
~I
.Pomeroy, Ohio · •

(

.... w, ·~"' ·

All replacemen~
parts

FruDtllvtiy .
740-742-9501 .

"·Toll Free

" Saturilay, Feb. 19, 2000
Hn ,the year ahe•d yotir greatchance&gt;, for success will
'jllntosr ,much from Lady Luck ·
from your own efforts.
,, _......, ,in there an~ wait for the
to intervent: on your behalf.
AQUA'RIUS (Jan: 20"Feb.
Don't go shopping today too
because 2s time tidts on,
.,m,•r,.:' likdy to have a chango of
&lt;tbpu'l: what is. important to
JJ,OU 1n reg:uds to what you w:mt
to purchose. Trying to patch up a

••In•

admifoicioO an~ respect of others.

.~1oken ~on1:m,c~~ The Astronph Matchnta'ker can help you
pdersta••~ what to dq, to 11,na~e

~

he', .,retaupnship work'. M~H
t6 Ma,t~hn!aker, clo this
,)lewsl"f"• P.O. Box 1758, M~r­
.,.~y· Hoi Sf.&gt;bon, New York, NY .
~0156 . .
.
• PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
:roday yoilr ·Splendid attriDute of
'\varning ' to get along with all

· :ps

1round you ' wjll ,\erve you well.
fiour open-mindedness and abiUIY ro :acctpt other points of View

t'ward"
t.lowship.

Y8U

with

good

~·

of them.

TAUR.US (April 20-May 20)
·The wor11 thing that ca.n happen
to ·a Ta!Jhls is to be placed' in an
' opposing posit.iqn with someone
.. quite: unpleasan~. Bu.t the . way
. you handle it wdl gam y0 u the

\

.GEMINI (May 21-Jun~· 20)
Even if it looks early on, like
you•re being c:ut in the role of a
·~patsy," the joke will be on everyone else. What you do with
that lcript will win you an
Oscar. ·
·
CANCER. (June 21-july
22) Try to avoid heavy topics
like· politics ' or religion f!Jday
when engaged io- '~nvenations '
with .othen. By simply rei\\sing
to respond, you cim tilm the talk

around:
·

LEO (luly 23-Aug. 22) .

Be careful when out shopping to,

day that you don't purchase the.
first itents you spor: Look
· nou'nd, bec.:awe b~rgains for 1thc
uac~ sa rile pieces wiJI be pl~.-: ,., _

fW.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt.
I

,

'

,.

22) Any oue-on-one dealing you
might have tO encounter t0day
could be a. trifle tr,icky, but if
rou're ' prepared to listen•to reaSun :md iuake 3 few .compromis es\ the' outcome could be eJtcep tional.. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct ,
, . ·23) You n1ight want to Wait :1
little before y.oU get started with.
today's plans, because as the day
wears on, the work gets easiC'r. ,
!t.s the jobs get easter, they become more lim.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24Nov.' 22) Try to steer de1r of
, any group involventcnts today
1hat show sigos of .hampering
your mobility. The more active
you can btcome, the more you'll
. make ofthe &lt;lay.
SAGITTfiR IUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Shoulcl you got otT
on the wrong foot, when ~f)'irtg
·ro work with sOmeone. today,
stop and . regroup. ·Upon reflection. yoU'll find a more tompa.ti" ble way to deal with one another.
' · CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~
jon. ·19) People ·who,. philmophy, diametrically· oppos~J youn
should be given litde anrntion today. Stick to your owp guns and
you'D know you're doilig what's

,.

. ri@lltlilryou.

ot

J, ·,

'

.

·,

43 Acrobatic leal
45 Muol..l
•
oymbol
,
47 Sponloh child ·
48FMtharwrap '
41 Cotrao wool
50 "ROM - - ~
roM"
52 Snoke
53 Gplfer. 'I prDp .
154 Pirie

eummer

CEL'EBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

c.a.brity Clphtr ~.,.. CfMied from QUOIIIIOnl bV lamout PeoPle. peat ·and prasent
. EICh litltiintM clpNr lllnd:llof another. TO&lt;Uy's dw: L. *lUlls W

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OHJW

HYM

OPW

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IWSTYAIA .E. "
'I'

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E Y R S 1W A D

IWSTVRIAE.'

(HBOYS)

Tl

OYY
HAHY

S T B J ·Z H Y
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There Is only one difference between a madman an~
me. I am not mod." - Salvodor Dan
·
'•

'::~::~' S©HltM
\\.~lA4 £~s·
lrt C\o\'r L POUAH
ltortOnOo ltlltro of
0 lour
· ecromblod words

low

10 form lour olmplo

WGID
lAM I

,

tho
boo

wordo.

,.. .~NDEED
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"T"t...,1r-c"TII'I~,_II___,,

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was afraid of speaking before
a group of people. Granny told me
that If I couldn't be a good speaker
II cou!d be a good ----- •· --. ,

t--ri"'...,.I....;.;."TI=;.r-•..:."1-.-1
1 1

L-.1..-.1.--.1..-.1..-.1.,--1

e

Campi... tho chuckle quo1od
~Y lilflnv In tho rnlllfng words
you do1111Dp lr- 11ap No. 3 below.

r r.14: r I' J' .,. I

II II I III

Fervor· Latch - Fancy- Pencil- OFFICE
While listening to lhe evening news my husband observed that lhe cheapest way to trace your family tree is
to run for public OFFICE.

Now Rentla&amp;. ,'

"'"· loll or chromo, $71100 080,

the Pips

SCII..I.M lETS ANSWERJ

992-2156

9.
...••

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)' ·.

.

31 Surly

8 rm:R~~Bf~u~m I'
6 ~~:~:~~~~lETTERS'

'_·,

140-742·7200 or 740-7 42-2875.

•I

34 Moot rloquo

!JUT SHE STILL HASN'T

I
I

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemimt Wlndws
• Room Additions
• Roofing
.

noll

35 - Knight and

/

BURKE'S

dllenao
19 Genuo ol anlo ·
20 Not digital
22 Revolt
(2 wdo.)
23 Smelled
strongly
24 Llg~t
25 Repreoento.
Uvea
•
27 Guido's high ·
32 Ethiopian tluo"

SunutRottN

91, 1200 Hartey Davldaon, new

Rogtetortd Yorkohlro Bo•r For I ;;..;,.,;=;.,;.=,.;,;.;.;.;.._ _
'1997 Ford Expodltlon 4 WD
....l -oo ·r·"~t3
. ~- ' -~ .
40,000 Mlieo, Excallont Condition,
840. Hay 1 Grain
124,1100, 740-387-o2te.
1998
Jeep Wrangler Wlitto /Grey
Bright wo. Tie Straw War
'Round Dollvory I Volume Dis· Cloth Interior, 22,000 Mlleo, Still
count Available. Horltogo l'arm. Undlf Wouanty, 115.000. Deyo:
740·448·5712, Evinlngo: 740·
(304)11H124.
4411-4418.

'

t A K

You're rr.tod with Retpeell

woo.

'

WA7643

No~'*"-ment...

Scrubbed&amp;
cleaned .·
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 ·Any
Normal Size Room.

19to Ford Aoroatar, 4.0 lltro 8
oyllndlr onglno, 11,110 actual ·Local references furnished . Ell·
rnllol, now IO.a. Yf!Y good condl' . tabllshed.l975. Call 24 Hro. (740)
448·0870, 1·800·287·0578. RogFonU 'N Fofm-. · ~ Mo- llon.l4000. 740-742·23113.
... Welorprool"ll.
tqr, "•Int. Clarilnora O(Oom,'
1991 Ford Ranger 4K4 XLT, 1993
lotBOO· (304)17&amp;-3ea4. .
4.3 .motor 'wlth 70,000 mll11, 5
'·
' ' opetd, PL. P.W, toO many extrlo Appliance Parte And Service: All
,.,., ""'Aokii800.00,Hoy
Name Brands OVer 25 Yeara Ex·
""~.00. (740~·~:~
. ., 10 manllon, ..... 740-742:3114.
parlance All work Guaranteed,
1893 i=-2150 4xol, 7.3 Diolol, Stan- Froncl&gt; City Maytag, 740·446·
830
LIVfttock
dard Tranoml11lon, 177,000 nte.
Milos, ·Muot Soot $12,500 OBO.

"•

I "Scooby-•
10 Ewo'o mota
ffOn• (ScOt)
13 Actron
4ocq...,lln• -

Opening lead: ??

740 · MOiorcycln

Fonl

140 ... .... ..........

.. 9 8 6 4
985
• 7 5 4
.. 10 8 3 z

(740) 367-0266
l-800-950-3359

810 Ftlrm Equipment
tt85 Conversion Van 150 302
AccoiiOI'IH
Engine, Good CondiUpn, St ,195,
0% Flnonclng Now Avatlbate On 740-3BIM104.
·Budget PriCed Tranam1111ona All
John D11rt Balers And Mower

740-38&amp;-9338.

Eaal

• A J 10
9 K Q J 10 9

Bv PHIWP ALDER

SHOP AT HOME

1984 Bronco II, V.8. · 4x4, 4
Speed. 75,000 miles. Real Nice.
$3,200. (304)675-3824.

Sit Of Ttnlkln Spring~; F• Ellrt
Condlllorl, $3,000. catl 740-682·

Wesl

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

CLASSIFIED81

21180.

Condlllonoro. Carmichael's Farm
I Lawn 1-100·594-1111 Or 740·
4411.2412 GaiUpollo, Ohio. Don't
Milt OUr John Dlllnl Dey Fallfull'f 12. 11:00 A.M.
Btllr. Vlfmtar 805C With Extra

Phone (740) 59:~-61&gt;711

GAL.UPou:5, QHIO 451131• CHEIHIRE, 0-~~::­

c.,.t

730 Yana I 4-WDt

21=-

• 9 8 3
• A 7 6 5

WORRYIIGI!!

740-742-2706
740-446-1141

78 Ford Bronco. 35 t robulll en·
gina. 4 apead, $2400, 740·742·
FARf11 SUPPLIES
11. LIVESTOCK

.. z

No CredH • Slow CfO!IH • Ellnlcruptcy
Repo • Dlvordod

c.-.... s ••u

=·-----

11 Ad17 ,.._."-~&gt;
11 Haw Zea'J JCI

02-11-00

•K7532

lOIII'

1117 Toyol8 Tecom•. Maroon,

motor I .tirea, ~40·742·

...

• Bolta1t Servl..
•Lisltt 01 .. 11. 1

1N3 Oldo, body, tiro a &amp; lntorlor 4x4, Sony CD P-layer, Btdllner,
•Client. netdl molor wtth atan- Bug Guard, Window Flares. Ask·
er on driver's aide; 1989 Chevy 1ng PoyoH. CIM: (304)175-8835 or
Geo Metro, nHdl lranamlaaion, (304)875-3383.

1:::

North

~

·I oio. od.

1

19915 White Ford E!Cplorer XLT. •
Wheel Drive, 4Door, New Tires,
Moon Aooi/CD, lotdtd. $18,000

Firm.

WOOl

15~

. lilJRKE'S

Financing Available.
304 7 11502
PIANO FOR SALE: Spl,.na·oy'.m/Coor n-i. I.,(:;;;,;:;)6;.;5-;,;;;
1
aolt. Take On Small n
1897 black ChevY S.tO Stepsldt
lifo Down Willi 'Good ~·•we .- · 1 Extondod Cab, 3 door. loaded,
l.ocaly.CaiiB00-346'1775.
. 25,000 mllea, 111ry oharp, lull lar590
For Sale
~"J:~~o, 740-949-2045 or
288-8211.

mon•r

• Q

eon.truetfon

Racine, Ohio
45771
.
740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houl'li
7:00AM ·BPM

~RI!!!

Dachshund Show Quality, 1250, 85,.0.00 Milos, BCyl Engine . TIIV
740-441·1&amp;10.
.
· , Cruise &amp; Air. $4,800. 080.
(304)576-99t1.
570
Mullcal
1995 Dodge 1500 SLT V-8 Maglnllrumonta
num, Topper, Reese Hitch, Rtd
FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO. and Gley. (140)-388410B

1 TrlnMI
7 llanv·l111JJ J

12 llralr! lor 13 Umen1
14 A
Filling

·"SWAMP JEUCE"
Fri &amp; Sat Night

t993 GMC Son·oma. New Tlraa,

-10--

ACROSS

ALDER

Live Band

304-n:l-5305.

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

)I;

PDmeroy,

ap., 90,000
miles, oxcellent
D~ac~ha~h~u;ndit~o~bra~td~-~P~Iea~s~e:ca~l:llt893
Fc.O 11angor
Splash, 4oondl·
cyt, 5
tlon, $5.000, 740·992-t 182 or

Til

i

BRIDGE

Soulh

667·7321

29870Bahan

(1)21,28,(2)4,11,18,25,
etc

&amp; drag slicks.
AKC Pomeranian Pup, Seven 3.50
Watkl Old. Vtt Checked Firat
-.l40-211&amp;6M1.
1987 Chevy S· tO. Runs Good.
74_7_1·_
IIKC Pomeranian Puppy, Male, .:.(304
___:;)6_7_5-_
· ----Whltl 3 months old, Will bt 1990 Mltaublshl Mighty Max,
_ , 112150.00. (7«1)·388 8642.
Hus~and't 1l'uclt, Wife Says Has
. Looking lqr lomole longhair 11&gt; Goi$3,000, 740-3811-b579.

The Deily Sentinel• Page 8S1

I

1...------...-r
•r., Stil

~-':'

99Z·7945

992;93~ or 1-800-809-ml .

ers. Turbo 350 transmlealon with
1!11ft ktt. Fclil &amp;-Inch roar-end w1t11

740-448-2066 ill'le
Purobrod St.
Sl50oach, cal

" 91 ')

•

• e2
• Q9 4

50 Yrs. Combined
Experience
Honest &amp; Reliable
Free
Estimates
.
.
Senior Citizens
. Discount

proridn .... dlopooal

llon./$1400.(304)882·3813.'
Block, brick, oowor pipes, ·wind·
owa, lintels, ale. ClaUde Wlnter.o. 1988 Chevy S-10. Robulll ' 350
Rio Granda, OH Call H0-245· engine wl.th new lntakt, holly
5121.
carb, and heada. Hooker htld·

Pete for Sale

Pomeloy, Middleport, Ohio

u ..........

Diamond Plate, FtatBtid.
Good Stlclcer,.Y,Irta, New Ex·
hausl. Excellent Running Condl·

..

,~-

DfiMIL
PLOMBI"G

Ready f11r a ehaqe?

740-992-1709

Melga

tirluy, February 18,2000

'

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative.
Larry Schey

East State Street
IAtl1ens, Ohio 45701

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

PSI·
CONSTRUCTION

Ohio

'87 Chevy Silverado, t/2 ton. an-

atne lrozl/locbcl up, many IXIJ8s.

Tjl llhi· (J!I [ld col!

Truck seats, car seats, qeadliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 • S:QO
OV.r 40 yra experience

Pomtroy, Ohio
. ln1oroot, oald
. IMilng . gonaralfy
22 yn. Local
II 17.111 A,CrBI,
21, Columbia
.
M11111 Counly, Ohio.
· You are raqulrtd to
. anow1r lha Complolnl
wllhln 25.doyl attar 1111 1111
publf..tlon of thlo notice,
which will bo publlohtd
Remodeling,
once ooch week for olx
Roofing New
I U - I v l - k l , irond lho
laat publication . will bt
Additions, Pole
madl on 2-211, 2000.
· You; en•- muet ba ftl4d
Buildings, Etc.
wltlt 1111 Cltrlt ol Courl end
Free Estimates
10rvod on coun11l for
Plalnlllf8: Herman A.
C.1'81111, SOWASH, CARSON
• FERRIER, 3t N. Colltfll
2117/CO 1 mo pd.
Stroll, Athtne, Ohio 4&amp;701.
In can of your failure to
anowor or otttorwloal ·i~~~:-~~-'!!"'...,
roopond aa permitted by 1111
Ohio Auloa of Civil
Procedure wltltln the tlr!MI
ltatad, judgmont by defaun
wllf ba tfitdorecl llgalnll
• Drh,ow•y Stoilo
for tho rolla!
• Lt•4111pe M~terlel .
the Complaint.
Larry Sponcor
Clorlt of Courl of Common
&amp;••PIHI

A~to,

Building
Supplies

550

Club Bl......
. On
• ._.Thurwdaya

,.. flllmltte

1984 Eoglo Talon,. outomotlc,
loaded,

zoe»:

.. ..

PHILLIP

Progre181vo top llno.
YS.
I:IL-~~~!:!2..!=::1
ROBERT HOMAN, ET AL..
Uc. I CI0-50

tel4 Chevy Suburban Garage
Kept, Low Mllol, 740-44&amp;-2302.

18,

__

,.UJ.EYOOP

Business Services

PLAINTlFFS,

MTD Wood 8illltlof, 5 hp, 20 ton.
Huakavomo 257 Chain Saw wl
Inolucllng JAMES C. EGRI,
20 Inch bar. Both
wholt
,..._
In
Elcallont Condlllon. $800.
unlutown.
(304)175-71137.
1983 Grond Am 82K $3;995;
C.M No. lloCV-058
_ ~
t982 Cavalier R/S UK $3,195; l ~-oiUIGfll ~~ w. Crow, Ill
-1111Jh~"
Door, ~il.-li-t 891 Lumina !uro 88K $4,115:F...,
IX7 Cllrlfll Door,
· New ProMazda 10tK $1,395. Cook
NOTICE
Hung 38"xao 8 lite Door, Mo- 740-446-0103. .
Plalntltt. hava
.lo40.(304)87s.4004.
lhll
ltM Chevy Btrotta. 3.1 VB, All
Now MUitnium 01111 Eat All Dey Power. Excellent Condition. Call
AnO Molt Away, Call Tracy At Ahar 5PM, (304)875-80111 .
740-441·1912.

.,.._.now.

F~, February

Pomeroy, lllddlapatt. Ohio

'

. .._...... .

.

.
"

"''

'

'

�•

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Febru8ry 11, 201»

•

SPORTS

TO DAY'S SCOREBO·A RD
•

f _.PREP HOOPS
Dl~lolon

li Glrla Sectlonalo

at Rio Grande

45
59

3-S

2-3

fi

ea.
13

KtlstinSmith .............. 4,.&amp;

0-4
0-1

0-0
0..0

10
8

Chelsea DeGaml0 .....3-9

'0..0

0-1

Au1umn Murpny .......... 1 -3

0-0

1-.4

Chnsten Balrd ............ 1· 1

0-0

0.0

Jess~a

2:RI. :1:111.

Cifif1itl1 ... ........ 1-5
C~ntnla Ward ......... .. 5·16

Amy Lse .........•.......•..... o
Brigette Batnea .............O

o

G-O
G-O

0
0

G-0
G-0

Totllll

Molga 59, River V.lley 45

elm~:

o

Rachel Chapman .......... O
T
P'~
n
.ara ~,ens .. .......... ..... .

AlvBf VatiQy ....................8 4 8 25 •
Melgs ............................. 1t 11 12 25 .
River Valley (4-18)

Slacy Lyono .................. 2
Kall Ccmmins ............... 5
Tammy Fryar ................. 1

e

11

o.
0

•n

2·2
1·2

n__n
""'

2 10.13

6
11
2

o
0
0

•n

48

A.. lota; 6 (Cummins 3). Foulo; 15.

-

Esotom (1H)

film
2olll. a:lll.
Cindy l.each .................. 7
1
Kelly Rober1o •....•.......... 4

· Brandi Southwonh ..... ... 3
Ta boy Klfl9 ................... .1·
3
Bobbi Cnug ................ ...O
2
Nikki Tackett .................2
2

fi £11.

0·

0.2 17
G-0 · 8

0
0

1·2
2·3

1
4

0

0.2

0

0

1-2

5

Ward 3). Tot!l FGP:: 19-63 (.302). Tumovera:

12.

Ohio Girls Basketball

2:RI. :1:111.

Brooke Williams ....... 4-12

2-2

fi

4-4

ea.
1B

Amber VinillQ ... -......... 5-5
O.Q
4-5
14
ShnqnonPnce ......... .. 1· 1
0-4
4·4
6
Jennifer Shrirnplln ......2·5
0·0 · 2·4
6
Ashley Thomaa .......... 1 -3
0·1
4·5
6
Amy Hy,o!l ................ 2-8 · 0-0
1-4
5
TiHeny Halfhiii ............0· 1
o-o
2-2 · 2
Juli"eSpaurL ............. 0-1
0·0
'1 -2
1
Slephanle Wig_ol. ... -... 0:.1.
O:Q
.1:2
1
• Tota ls
t5-37
2-7 23-32 59
Assists: 9 (Price 15). BlOcked shots: 3.
Fouls: 16. Rebounds: 23 (Hysell 8). Steal•: 7
(H vsell, Price &amp; Vining 2 each). Total FG•: 17·
44 (.386): Tum.:~vers: 15.

Southern (5·15}
l:!llw
~ il:fl1.
Kirn lhla ... .................... .5
·2
HeathAr Daile~ ---······· - -- -2
0
Sarah Bmue' ............... . 1
0

EII!1L

5-5

21

0·0
2·4

4
4

Cent. C:Oth. 29
SPflng. NW 66. Mlddlelown Mad1son 19

IIIIWEBT

Basve&lt; Eastern ~ 1, ~ 411
Cln. Seven Hi•s 52, Fayetteville 47
Cin. S1MM1i1 Coontry Day 73, Xenia Chrilt··
lan 22
·
Frankfort Adana 56 , Bainbridge Paint Valley
Franklin Ftmeoe Green 75, Crown City -s.

N. Lowilbu'll Triad 58, Middletown Chr. 54

POflsroouth E. 43, Manchester 10

Hilliard Davidson 81. Cols. Independence

g
'
Lewis CenlAr Olentangy 52, Vfeslervi11e
Nonh 48
Logan 73, Athens 42
Morlet1a 56, Chillicoeho 45
Mason 51 , Cin. Seton 30
NeWark 62. Dublin Scioto 45 .

85

·

Castalla Margaretta 68, Sandusky St.
MaiY'S 57
CrestlinA 42, Mount Gilead 37

NorthSide Christian 59, Evangel Christian

48

'
.
Steubenville Cent. Caih. 76, Bridgepon 52
Vll"9' Academy 62. t.\lsldngum Coui11)'
Christian 24

OlCford Tatawanda 43, Middletown 29
Pickerihgton 89, Cols. Franklin Heights 11
Upper Arlington 55, Marion Harding •1
Worthington Kilbourne 60, GahaMa -'40
DIYiaJonll

Belmont Union Local 88, Richmond Edison
Cin. McNicholas 58, N. Bend Taylor 31
Circleville 57, Unio1o 46
Graenfjeld McClain 47, Hilfsbom 37
Jackson 58, Portsmouth 56
Lancast8f Fairfield Union 50,. Thornville

S"heridan 42

"New
Concord
John
Glenn
55,
McConnelsville Morgan 40
Pomeroy Meigs 59, Cheshire ~lver Valley

Man'a Collage Baakatbal.l

Thui'M.Iy'a Scores
By 1llo Aseoclotod ,.,...
EAST

Fairleigh Dickinson 81, St Francis, NV 64

George Weshington 71, Virginia Tac:h 68
Monmoulh, N.J. 64, Long Island U. 53
Moun! Sl. Mary's, Md. 91, Sacred Hean 75
Noltheas1em n. Hantorcl61
OtJinnlplac 68, St. Francis, ~a. 55

M 74

-10

eutt• 84;-Wir..........-12

Gollia 82

n,

an. Sycamore
Cln. Western HN1s18
Cols. West 55, Mount Vernon 37
Delaware 4f, Thomas Worthington 43

!14, .~~¥on ee

An
Tlllk171, ot;o Doo••*-•57
. . ........ 73

~~~-- St Ill!, un.no 71

Ponn S1. 74, lndionl38

..........

co.n.~~w
Wright 81.48 .
, IIIII
to.~~w_, 'Ybqa~. IS, ~ 1!11. 58

...

I .... C

r

•••

Wlo,:m'Bav!1,

ca.:.._

•. Lamor 81,

Women•• COllege l!luk.U.II ·

F-

iiiF'X:

1Hinolo1111,
Oal&lt;land, Mich. 83, lnd.-IVAr&gt;lflll. Til
S . Illinois 51 , N. lowo 48
Tomple !14, C.jlOn 118
1/aiparlil&lt;&gt; 80, w. llllnolo 87
Wls..tlr8on Bay 81 , Wrlglrt S1. 48
Youngotown 51.118, Cl1lcogo St 58
SOUTHWEST
.
Cinclnnall 77, HOUIIOn 85
.
loultlana-MomMt 92, -T••• San Antonio

s.a.""""'

I

~""

· · --

u.

~~84~~48
N.Arlzone73.--S(5e

Now-~~~~. San~ SI.IIO
73, ~ 81.11

or_,

Oregon St. 57,
ngton 50
llacramon1o Sl. 80, Po&lt;1land 51. 55
San 010[10 77, Gonzog•M
Sau1hem Col 80, Arlzooaee

Flo:i.....,_.58,SouthAiobna35 .
Florida80, -ppl51

--71.
IJto1oon 110
Rotlcla·St. ~'rocn 74

Sl.w

-li
LSU 18,
iJblf1y

S1. Mary't, Cal. 7t:J, Portland 47
UCLA 58, Arizona St. 47
UNLV 88, I&gt;Jr Fotco 53
LIUih 85, Wyon;ng ee .

1111

17

J.Cent.Rotlcla!IO
50 -

12~
42
•• Ari&lt;.·Ullla Rock 38

.... lilionl 1i

IM,Aua11nPssy81
!.bray SliM, E. ~ 83
Noi1h c.roJJno 75, WOks For8111111

mt

~""

..,..___
J"#l ,

_;":
•'
~

:4r-

·~

. ·;.

•

I

..

RAILS-TO ~ TRAILS

. "' .
·...
-~=

.. ''

,..

·.··.~~

holds

v

-":.

CSI rai line

.•

. Ohio
ScOI'II

Woman'a

Collet1
•.

, 1llo - - ..Tttu,..,-.lleMIII:a
llld-AIMI.....,ConiMOMCe
Akron 1111, ....,_ .57
Kent liiO, Mllml so
llki-Cardlnlflt Conlw;wa

SE LDI-..70, Nlc:holll SL·51l
Show73, Balmoo18B
...... Til, Memphis 88
Tonn.-Marin ;2: ~ Sl 83, OT
Tenna••• 7tr~lltilllppi St. 75 ·

......

:...• ~'·· -.;,
. "'

'

•

ownership·

•

.. h

· ~ ...,
• Younga1own Stale ;o, Chlc:ago Slala-

TennnaH TeCh ee, Ter11'1811ee St. !55

·
· -state
- Coliotlllo
~...
Wright
58,~~~ 53
AIMriaan llldeut..CO.••• .
Ohio Dominican et, llflln 81
SHawnee St. ts, Urbana 54

T--Atll-1111, McN-o St. 53
Tulonl73, UAII1111
Vkglnla 72, Clomlon 83
Vkglnla Toc11:111, 61, BonilvonllKo 56

IIIDW!BT • .
Akron eo. ~~~ &amp;7

.,.,
: :_

-

Noft.Conft,...noe .
. '
Central 51. 82, Notre Dame, Ohio ~

Colt. Mlchlgli;llle, N. Illinois 53
Detro~ 11, 1..oY,1i1a. II, II

t

:. ~ .
;

• ~'
~ •'

.

BY KIMN Ki!U.Y
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

"JAWS"
. TRAINING -: .

...

-~ •

GALLIPOLIS. - A challenge
to a Gallia County Common
Pleas Court judgment in the
ownership of the former CSX
Railroad lil)e has been turned
down by the .Fourth District
Court of Appeals.
The appeal was sought by
attorneys for the 0 .0. Mcintyre
Park District after a local jury
found in February 1999 that the
line belongs to adjoining property owners and not the park
district. .
The judgmen,t arose from a
civil action ·filed by several
landowners who, citing agre_e ments with a previous rail operator, claimed the property
reverted to them if no longer
used by the mlroad.
.
CSX deedc:d..,the 11nc; to. lh~
park district·•in 1.993, The dis, ·trict hopes to t11rn the line into
. a Rails-to-Tr:tils bicycle and
hiki11g trail.

··.Larry Boyer of
Galli a Coun-

·the

No. 1 Cincy whomps Houston
HOUS roN (AP) - Hous- C incinnati coach Bob Huggins
ton · j ust didn 't ha \'C enough said. "If they don't play. harder
"!("in &lt;t No. I C in cinnati to than that in practi ce, they know
rcpcH hi story.
I'll run them until the puke. If
Kenyo n Martin had 26 poin ts you polled them what's- going
an d 17 rebmmds as Cinci nn at i to happen .t omorrow (in prachl'ld ofr a sceorid- half charge by tic e) they're probably more
H01m on fo r. a 77-65 victory cohcerned than I am."
Thursd.1y night that gave th e
T he Cougars got within
ll car,ats thclf fifth consec uti ve seven points twice, the last time
C onfe ren ce USA championship with 2:41 to play otn 3- pointan J 1r.rh straight victory.·
er by Gee Gervin, who had 18
'J he last time Houston pbyed ·. of ·his 26 _points in the second
ltost to a No. 1 t ea m was Jin. ha\f.
20. 1968, in "the game of the
T he . Bearcats led 46-28 at
century" aga inst UCLA in th e halftime but the Cougars startAstrodome before 52,693 fan s. ed the second .half with a I 3-7
lt. wa&lt; college basketball's first' run as Gervin scored seven
nationally ·televise-d regular sea- : points. Houston made six of its
so n gaine and the Cougars won first eight shots in · the second
7 1-69.
.
half.
.
DerMarr Johnson had I 9 .
T he 13earcats (24- 1, I 2-0) led
· C:.2- 4-1 wi th 12:48 to play b ut points for the Bearcats, who
th ey needed M arrin, who had have the nation 's longest win16 points in the second half, to ning strea k.
.
fuil th e Co ugars (8-1 6, 2 -9).
Reserve Roy Spears added 13
'' We play harder in prac tice," po ints for the Cougars.

Southem ·

score, then gave Southern its first
lead 45-44. Dr. Leach prescribed
another Eagle goal, then Cumfrom Rage Bl
. mins hlt the first of two free
throws to knot· the score· at 46-46
drive, then Sou th wprth canned at. the 2:53 mark.
a follow-up jumper for th~ 16-6
Eastern · was content to work
finale.
the ball for a good shot, but Lyons
Sou th ern (6-15) went on a 9-3 stifled those plans with a key steal
run to begin the second frame. out front. Lyons fed the fast break
C ummins tluplicated here earlier pass to lhle for the score and SHS
baseline drive, then lhlc nailed a lead 48- 46. Jolmson; perfect from
trey and a deuce, while Brauer the field, had been lost on the
r anned two free throws, the score Eastern bench for most of the
I9-15. Southern had the ball· second half, but when she came
.rgain, but turn ed it over.
C&lt;)u rtside; the Tornadoes .knew it.
l'.vo crucial back-to-back Johnron hit a IS- foot jumper to
jumpers by so phomo re Ruby knot the score at 48-48. · ·
Johnson th en clipped So uthern\
Both clubs traded possessions,
colllcba ~ k and again made it a ten but Southern got its final shot
poim gar)le at 25-15.
with 36 seconds left in the tie
Hole added six more point~ in game. SHS took the shot . and
the drive as SHS came closer at Leach grabbed the· rebound, .
25- 19 and 28-23.
immediately pushing the ball
Dailey and Cummins produced down floor for a coast-to-coast
four point quarters in · the third lay up and 50-48 Pike lead.
ro·u nd after Pike keyed on lhle.
Southern then turned the ball
The result opened up· the inside over and with· 11.4 seconds
pme for . Southern. Cummins fo uled Tabby King who missed
dmve the paint and then Tammy the first of a bonus. Southern got ·
Fryar made an important goa] to the rebound and sprinted down
. cut the Pike lead to one, 34-33.
co urt where they turned the ball Evcryiime So uthern made a over and fouled again, sending
· run, C indy Leach seemed to rise Southworth to the line with four
to th e occasion. Leach slipped seconds. She made · one and
back door to take a Kelly Roberts missed the second, but Pike got
feed to add to the EHS spread. At the rebound and held on for the
the I: 10 mark, lhle came right wm.
ba'k with a pair of free \!trows,
Southern hit 18-of-49 overall I
but Nikki Tack\!tt negated· the after hitting just 8-of-27 the first
bucket with one of her own and half. Southern hit 10-of- 22 in the
a 38-35 tally at the end of the second half. The Tornadoes hit
frame.
10- 13 . foul shots. Sou.thern ,
An ihle three pointer · tied the grabbed 25 rebounds (l.hle 6,
score for the first time at 40-40 at Brauer 5, Dailey 5), had 12
the -7 :16 mark,.but again, who but turnovers, seJen steals (Lyons 2,,
leach came to answer the call. lhle 2), six assists (Cummins 3,
Cummins drove baseline to tie Lyons 2) and I 5 fouls.
·
· rhe g:~me at 42-42, but Roberts
Eastern "· hit 22-of-54 overall.
grabbed a follow-up r~bound and Eastern grabbed 33 rebounds
drove it in for the score.
'. (Tacketr 5, King 5, Leach 5), had
At the 5:18 mark, Ihle · drove 13 turnovers, three steals, eight
the lane and was fouled to tie the assists (Leac~ 4) and l4 fouls.

• - 1.Y Emergenby
Medical Service

Daytona

race track, you 're going to see a poor race," first race.
,
.
he said. "We have no adjustments."
·
Mike· Skinner; ea~ily the best Chevy all
Stewart, who scuffied with Robby Gor- week, finished second to Rudd. Ward Bur.:
from PageB1
don after they collided i!l practic'e Wednes- . ton was third in a Pontiac, foliowed by the
day, managed to avoid any probleni's"Thurs- Chevys of Earnhardt Jr, and Michael Wal..:
nearly beat 500 favorite Jarrett in the day. They never came close on the ttack, but trip.
non- points Bud Shoo tout. But that's a pure Stewart wasn't concerned about thk
·
The biggest loser among the Chevys wa$
money event, where the emphasis is on
Although he was satisfied afte·r llil!l Ponti- 58-year-old Dave Marcis, who failed tq
winning, not on protecting positions.
ac finished fourth in the first qlialifier, make the field - and history. So ·he remain~
NASCAR believes there will be consid- Stewart was not optimistic about Sunday.
tied with Richard. Petty with 32 starts in the
erably more action Sunday in the season~
"We just can~t -run with those guys that race.
opening event. But defending Daytona 500 ran up front today;' .he said.
"lt's a big disappointment," Marcis said.
[f hampion Jeff Gordon thinks that aggresThe Chevys did. better in the seco!\d race, "It's going to be tough even watching it. I
sion might not include the ill-handling in which Rudd sta~ted on the pole -and led don't know what I'll do. I guess l'U
Chevys and Pontiacs.
for all 125 miles ori the 2 1/2-mile'· track. home ifl don't find a ride."
" Any time D aytona turns into a handling . But virtually ill the top Fords wererin the
··
·

'- .tries out the
new •Jaws·

pUr·

· · chased this
·, · week during a
• • training exercise. Fellow roscue wOrkers
and Kt~rt
Schoenfeld,

.. ~ . from Howell
':,, · Rescue Sys·fems, In yellow,
'
look on.
~tdlllissl(l Russell

go

. ptlotos)
'

Hours ·

DON
7
7Et·
M070RS
308. E.. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio 47569
-

Mon thru Frid11y
9:00-8:00
Sat 9:00-4: 00
Sun 1:00-5:00

·~

2000 CHEVY IMPALA
#4765, Red, loaded, V6,
Was $22,961;1

$21
38500
. I
.

truck Soldl . •·"
() i

1999 GIC

BONNEVILLE
14771, Sharp, Loaded, WAS $25,750

NOW

S24,505oo

2000 CHEVY SILVEUDO

#4581, Ext. Cab,

#4619, 3/4 ton, Trail,ering, auto,
·R~g cab, 4x4, Heavy duty, V8,
loaded, 2 tone paq.t Wae $29,331

. ·low o-.ly

.

w
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I

,,

.

r~

'

VI-~~~-·
- · ~· '~- -~' l~¥1~~~(~l&lt;'·'iJI!'~~-~~
..r

. a:. neW'.Iease·· orf,'life -_.-~-.'.

'

s.26.

a

•

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•

.

'

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~

..._..............

. • ................ . ......

•n;au•

19,70s.

PL, cruise, CD, 1 owner,
miles, WBs '32,9()() ................................................ :................ ('~(:....................................
.-.. :......IOW. 129,8501!11
.
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Is
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UE
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....
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197
.....
1
ltt.ta .D s.. -IE . V6, auto, ltl'f'c:&amp;88, tilt, crwse, PW, Ph Wa~ 22,995 .......... , ............... lOW .I ' , , ..
1991-JEEP WUIIILER • Red, Soft top, 17000 miles, 4x4, 6cyJ, ab'to, air, tilt, . .
.
' . · ..
·'
·· .
. 1°"
I
.
chrome wheels, ·was '17 ,~so ............. ~ ...... :...-... :.~ ..~..... ·:~···· .. ~ .... ~ ....._
.........~~ .......... :..................... IIOW 16,110"
1997 GIIC YUIOI• 4X4, 4 Dr, auto, air, VB, cruise, stereo, Was '27,995 ... ;..... :: .......:............. ,..... 10W *24,190"
IHI CHM S·IO •4 cyl, 5 spd, ca~s, 57000 miles, Was '4999 ·~·, ........ :.....:.................................... lOW 13,2W
1997 TOYOTl·TlCOIU • 4x4, 5speed, air, caBS, Black, Was '14,~ ..... :...................................... lOW 111,7W
'

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Ed Vollborrr··

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1•

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said; _...
,.
.
He was active in 4-H and FFA
• ··GALLIPOLIS - .\Vhlm l!Sked ~ -~ child, becoming FF:f.~­
what Ed Vpllborn plans to: do · dent in: i964. He atten!Rio
\Vith the ~tirement yea~ ,ahead Grande Cpmmunity Co
for
of him since leaving the Qhi~, · a time then earned his
and
State Univeni~ Exlf!J•i~n Janu• - ' M.S, degre~~ in Agricultu~ duary 31 he repbed, "I haven't had · cati9n from OSU by 1977.
·
much time to think about it_yef.'' · . "My fintjob outside of coUege
. Vollborn's 31 yean i~: agricul- , was . Vocational Agriculture
lUre with the. OSU .Ext. Will be Teacher for :the Jackson' City
llonon!d at. ~ Reti~me~t Recep· . -~hools which .was natu~ Coition Sunday. ·February 27, 2000 at low-1111 to- being active in fF1.. in
2' ·· PM at, the South District high ~hool." ·
· · 1 .'!·
E11tension Ctnter i~ Jac~'?n. He
"Fate dire~ted my c~eljpa\h
retired from .the pos1t1on ~f fi-om t~achmg to the;Jf.SU
~ider, Grazirig program for me Extensi~n \hrough an ·ope'ritil.$ in
J6-county South Dis!l'ict.
, Jackson·, " he said.
. , '
• 'VoDbor.n was \1orn .and raised
Volllx!rn will be most r-emem~
in the Rio Grande community. bered for his many accomplish~My pa~nts were farmen. A ments in raising gruing awarecmer in agricultu~ was almost ness and forage agricullllre.
c;rtain right from the start," he
·
BY KRis DonloN-TIMES SENTINEL STM'F

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pta··a·...

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Reti.re~s careers spans history:
of-M~g. emergency servic~s ·

Good Morning

'··

.

OUilnl · the

'

from Clsu ·-Extehst·

' ,,

out into fields, roads and back-.
yards with Fri&lt;lay's fresh r:tiqfall,
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
was to have crested at ;!· p;m.
GALLIPOLIS Several Satur&lt;lay.
'
· inches of rain . that fell •Friday
Null said the National Weathpushed streams and creeks out er Service, which operates a
of their banks, closed roads and gauge · for the Raccoon · at
fooced rescues of people strand- , Adamsville; near Rio Grande.
ed in · their vehicles, Gallia expected the crest to be at 22
County officials n!ported.
feet. The NWS lists flood stage
No . emergency declaration there at 18 feet.
was made in Gallia as of SaturThe flood warning . for the
day, but the county'~ Emergency Raccoon· was extended until 2
Operation~ Center was activated p.m. Saturday, but Null said the
and is expected to be staffed advisory co;&gt;uld be e)!tended
through . the ~eeken~ . until ~c~use of how slowly the creek
water levels begm recedmg.
, le:vel recedes.
. .
Local Emergency Planning · The EOC did not have ·an
Coordinator Mike Null said the · estim~te on the amount of rain
Raccoon Creek, swollen ··from
'
"
rains last weekend and spilling
P1111e ... Floats. Pap M

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exercise.
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.:_:_:__:__;_~~~~~-____:.._:___ _~~
1 ~--~--~--........_•.

.• .

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BY KIMN KI!U.Y

................,. ,..~ ·

obs12cles.

•

\'n

·AND BRIAN J. RI!!D

se.t of '1aws" to replaC::e the
"Thli aid set wM q11icldy becomaging set currendy used by the
ing obsolete," Reed added. "If
something
we~ to go wrong with
Emergency Medical Service.
therri, we could not have even got'1aws" are used to gain entry
ten parts to fix the problem."
into an automobile if an acci- The "Jaws" originally were
dent . victim is unable to .be
housed in the Gallia sheriff's
department. When an emergency
Iimoved by other means. Cut•
the county jailer had to leave
ten are used to pierce the arose,
his or her post and assist in the res. vehicle's roof, and _the
cue. The "jaw$" a~ now stored at .
· . ~E Roar -::- .r~nce:aear• ·
. h}rdtaulic '1aws" ate:~apable of. , •. ;!he EMS con~e~- ..• ·• ,. · .
·
.
County EtnergeN;~, Mfdlcal
~e~g back the roof. : apd . : An all-d:iy ~i!lg sepiqn was . · · remove·the roof -from .a\iehtcte during _a
held Tue~y for EMS ~nd n!scue
.·Tuesd\1)'. Rescue pere6hnel learned new
reinovmg doon .and other
.
'
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techniques for resculnc. trapped p11ssengers
.

'.

k ....... .-.... ..a.u :

Fl_
ooding engulfs·area
with emergencies

"I am really thankful that the ·
· . commissionen allOWC&lt;I us to utilize
. _ _ · Al-LIPOLIS
, .·the.money to purchase t.hls equipment and replace• the antiquated
Galli
equipment ihat we had u5ed previ~
County Com- .· ousl);"
said Terry Reed, Gallia EMS ·-.
missioners
director,
· The origi'nal "Jaws of Life" wen! .
· recently
,
approved $28,900 for new . ~ danated to the C!&gt;unty ·in the ·late ,
.

. •·

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994
GUND
• 4 Dr, auto, air, stereo, cruise
997 CHEVY CIIURO 121· Convertibie, BI~ck, l.Gaded, Wae '18;9.99.............;........................... NOW *17,45r
••••IUICILESIIIE • V6, all power, 25000 miles, Was 'IB,m .. :•. :~ ........................ ,............ :....... IIOW '16,920"
CHM llliiU U • Loaded; leather, V6, white,
31,000 miles~.::....... ;......... :.... ~ ........ :............................. .
.
sur1roof-.·was 119,90Q. .~.........................• ,•.•••••... ~ .. ·······1~ ......... '"'f '"··~:~ .~!
~ ~~
IIOW 117,900"
1997 OLDS CUT~$ SUPREME • 2 Dr, V6, 32,000 miles, auto, air, tii~ .................... ;....... ;................. ;: ..........;
lr.l'lllis.P.. Pw, PL, Was '13,9oo .......... :......................... ~ ...........·
:1...... ~:.. ~ ......................... NOW
1993 PONTIAC. GiAND AM· 5 sp, 4. cyl, air, cass, Was '6,800 .......·a.
:~: ..\ ~ ......................................... NOW.'4, 111" ·

The park district's attorn_ey,
Christopher C. Ru15ell of
Columbus, cited in the appeaj
what he believed were several .
errots in the trial. But finding
"none of the assignments (of
error) meritorious," the appellate court upheld the judgment.
"Having found no prejudicial.
trror, we overrule each of the
assignments of error raised by
the appella,nt," the court found;
in its decision, signed by Judge
William H. Harsha of Circleville.
·
Neither RuSsell or James T.
Boulger of Chillicothe, who
I,'Cpresented the property own-.
ers, we~ available' for comment;
,
Friday.
The-court noted that the time•
period for further appeal com-·
menced with the decision's filing l:ist \Veelt widJ"tJie el,m:', .~
It was the la~, sf.eo lh the;
legal wrangle be~en tbe .plop-:.

.,

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a

2000

.Wl,th Every lew

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. .,a '~.. ·g·.·,v·e·,. wr-·~ e:·~c·::::r;K. ;-.: ~~~s:;::".·.

- ~~ -

TIMESSENTINEL
sTAFF
.

February
FrH

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···~· ·~:t~~~-.

.

. Bv~ , RI.,r,

JaONTJAC:•

Now O•ly

·

MID WltiTER M_fiDtiESS Sfl

Y.

DoWie. AS

•

tmes

AniOrfi'

Idaho St. 72, E. Walhlng1on 55

c_....53, JoclllonvllleSI. 52

.

............ Monlol 70, T-~
.
Rice 13, Sen JaM SL 37 ·
s. UW158,
52

Lows: 20s
,

See Dl '

•

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8YiTaai78, Notthu eatem St. 50
TCU 11, UTEP 71
Tulsa 54,-40
P:AR WEaT
•

--·

•Dulle 70, N.C. Slll1e !14

a;;;;
-

.,..

Bam- Sl. 45
Clral-

- . - 81, GocifVe Wuhlnglon 50
St. Jooopn'07f. Foidl-1148
v.mont 74,' Nc»'llliMtan 87
IOU1H
AW&gt;Ime 118, SOuth Cerolna 87
Al*lrn 73,--. ee

""'"""73. .

.........,.

s.a1

:.;:;

SMU7e, FreonoStii,OT

01 ,'Niaglra 71
Hw1fonlll!l, lloolor! 62

J,lorthwootom S1. 58; . , ,.._ ee
'Oral Roberts 88, S. LIUih 5ll
sam HousiOn Sl. ea, lJunlr 53
UTEP lie, TCU 71
FAR WEST
Arizona Ill!, 5&lt;lu1hom ColiS
.Arizona Sl 104, UCLA 711
Boise 51. ~l.North r - 80
Col Poly·Sw 8Q, UC INino 75
E. Waeh!noton 87, Idaho 81. !14
Long BeaCh Sl. 78, Poclflc 5ll
Montano 73, CS Ncnhrldgl10, OT
N. Arizona re, Momano &amp;. 71
Now Mexico 78, 8YU 74
Now Mexico Sl. 57, Idaho 152
Now Clrlaans 81!. Danwr oM
Oregon 70, Waehlngton Sl53
Oregon St. 71, Wulllngl&lt;ln47
Portland 74, Sl. Mary's, COl. 118
Portland Sl. 80,
51. 85
SMU 85, Frsono Sl. 75
San Diego 82, Gonzaga 70
San Jose Sl. 52, Rice 48. OT
Tulsa 75, Hilwall 61
uc Santa Barbara 82, Col SI.·Fullorton 87
Utah Sl. 82, Nevada 53
.

I

S.C1

,.•

~ 74, " " " " - Sl. 71 ·' "'

58

.......

Daytona 500
•
preview

, health

•

Business
Silver Bridge Plaza's .'
On Cue

Revving up:

·;:

W. IIMIII7, .......,.,_51
Wltght 81. ee, Bull« 53
~81. 80. Chicago SloW

lob-

Waynsov111e 77, Ripley 37

ByllloAseoci-Thurodoy'• R-h•

,.
.,..rc- .
_,,
T.._
J11aen...._.COU,.Ifw.,w.,,..
..

Ttm.·MinlniMI,
81. 81
Tenneuee Tech 77, Teur I IN a •
Texao-Arllnglon 10. 81. 71

OlvllkJniV

Gin. Anderson 38, Cin. Walnut Hilt 3-4

...

samford 75, Florida- ee

Sugarcreek Gateway 81 , ZOarville Tus·
carawas vall. 25

Ohio Boya Baaketbllll

Dralco 71 ' s. - 5 1
Ev••••.er-~12
II ..Q-icago 80, CIMJand Sl 53
"""'ee. Olio St. eo
KlniiO,
-·
Olio 110
Mlc:hiiJOI111,
Wiocollllo173
Mlc:hiiJOI1 St !14, f'lldutll4
MilwiMOCa 78, uortn
'0- 87, OT

llrlllo'

w.

dooh 28
.
Maonolla Sandy l'aftoy 75. Steubenville

•

81. !14,

c.tmpbolll8,- as
Cent. Rotlcla118,- 81. !14
Fla. I - 81 , ~ Teol1118
Gaor!Jia 51. 74, - 8 8
l.o&lt;llllono·lofoy«M 12, Ktnlually !14
M...-y 51. 101, E . KM1luckyll8
Nlchollo St 80, SE l.oliolano 54

111

Buclloye Trail 50, Mattina Ferry ...
Fetlcit'f.-FrankWn &amp;t, Chnton-Massie 80

Dlvlalan I

-

,.

Healtsut
Promoting

'

Ohio ....... Collge 8oorH

AlabomoA&amp;M1111,~711
Aullln PMy ~. Mldch T•.

~··

24

Coo·-

lOUTH

, TOUrnllfMnt

39

,

::r
'

Hoi=

RobOrt Monla71 ' c...

UhiBC 87, Wognor 1111
VormoniiO,- u. 82
Vl11ot10\Io 81, 81. JoMPl'll1

s t - . eo. Indian Crook
eo V111G8111 Willren 38 , New
29
•• Go~~ n-••W.....OV ~ .
•I""'• ~
4
ian.;s;,illo Ma-ile
57, Millersi&gt;Yrg W.

ByTheAiooclltodPNU
Thu...ay•a R•utl8

Division IV Girls Sectional
at Alexander
8&amp;8Ver Eastern 51, Southern 48
Soulhem ............. ............ .6 17 12 13 = 48
BeuverEastern .. ~----- .... 16 12 10 13= 51

OT

Hannibal River 71, Sarahsville Shttrlan--

Ruby Johnoon ...............2
2 ll;ll 1Jl
51
16ttli
18
3~ 4-11
A.. lota: 8 (Leach 4). fOUl I : 14.
ing, Leach 5).
Rebounda: 33 (Taek911, K_
St••la: 3. Total FGa: 22·54- (.407}. TurTtOV. .:
~9 (OeGarrno 11 ). Steale: 11 (DeGarmo 4, . 13.

!!11m

Rock HW 83, Soulh Point 45
Spingboro 511. Goollen oM

R•"""ll&lt;lo: 25 Ohle 6). S1Nia; 7 (Lyons, 1hle
2). Total FOe: 1....9 (.367). Turnowra: 12.

CaseeJustlce ............ l -7
0-1
0-0
N ik~ Hoii/Vlba!!!lh., ....0-2
0.0 __!,2.
.l
- srepnan .John&gt;On .....Qol !1:!1 !1:!1 Q
Totals
1&amp;-52 3-11
4-10 45
...lots: 14 (Ward 7) . Blocked 1111011: I.
Foul•: 22. Foulad OUI: DeGarmo. Rebound•:

Molgs (1Q·11 ·

45

•

MONl-Y

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ly JIM Fi~UMAN·

-· ii~ES-$9NTINEL STN'F

J'or.t119re

.

"Good thlrtl' toN tD tlulu W,M ~Nit, :
ht U gttt'"'fly wla11t U left jiftt tMU ;
lui h tlt "
·

• P,OMERQY ,.:.....
than ' 40 years; Meig; ,
County Enlergency Medic~ Seryice Di~ctor Robert
Ill
fU •
E. B_yer ha ~n - i~volved in local fire departrnent5
llobel1 E.
and emergency :lerVIc~.
.
.
th 1 --~
M h · Stre · ·
·
·
That iiiYolvement is not likely to tine!, wh1ch was en oca= on ec amc
et In .
end with B~F's retirement Feb. 25. Pomeroy, selling advertising and cqvering Middleport,;
. · Byer"6~ of S~Lise, was born Pomero)\ Rutland and Wah~ a sportmg events .for ;.
and ,;,~ ·In Middl,port. "I am then-owner and publisher 01clc. Owen, an~ edttor;
'pll;)ud io bC one, of II,Je ·DucktoWn . Ch~t Tanne~ill. ~:fe also worked for the Oh1o Valley;
Boys " Byer said referring to the · Baking Co. m Mtddleport.
·
·
lqwe~ end of · Middleport below'
On April 2, 1959, Byer was _accepted as a member:
Lincoln Street. .
of the Middleport Volunteer-. F1re Departmen~ After-:
"- He graduated from Middleport ~· h~ ~te a safety colur'!~ for The Daily Sen-:
u~;.....:.....::...J Hi~ School in t953 ..and worked t111el ennde~ Come Ruprung.
,
..
IJar
at ·a· gro(:ery store for the railroad
At that tune, there was no emergency med1cal !ef-:
and the Middlepo;t Firestone store. vice 'in Meijp .County, amb!llance calls wen! wually:
In 1957, he joined the Army and received his fint h~dled by local funeral homes. In the early 1960s, the :
medical training in Man:h 1958. He was assigned to a MtddleportVID purchased a small van and converted.
6eld hospital in Germany and got .out of the Army in . it to haul patienm at a cost of around ~1,000.
. :
·February 19~9. ' ·
. .
..
,
Byer was a member of a comnuttee formed m;

lllf"

Heavy raln&amp;l)lade theSe &amp;lin8
f~iar ·s\lltl In the,Ohlp_Valley. (Steplllllle Sayre photo)
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Uyer then :M&gt;~ed IC'lleral yeao for The Oaily Sen-

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