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•

smith
•
without their input.
Once you have the power
of arromey. you should make
seva-al copies of the original
to gi~ to the perl(&gt;ns you
transact business with on
behalf of your parents. Banks,
insurance companies and othm sometimes insist that their
own power of attorney form
be used. Find out what forms
they require while your parents are still competent and
able to sign other documents,
and keep. a list of those to
whom you have given· copies
of the power of attorney.
If your parents have assets,
trUS!J are another option for
all of you to consider.
Although there can be fees
inherent in setting up a trust,
trusts can enable your parents'
assets .to be passed on to you
smoothly in order to help ease
some of the family's financial
burden in mel!lin~he needs
of aging family members.
Should your parents still be
in fairly good health, you may
want to look into getting
them long-term care insurance. While the premiums can
sometimes seem dauntingly
high. they may appear very
reasonable when you consider
that more than half of Americans over age 65 wiU need
some kind of extended care,
according to The New Yolk
Times.
Add that to the fact that tl!e
cost of nursing home cllre
regularly runs into the tens of
thousands of doUars annually.

•

•

..

·

•
•

While we're on insurance,
consider having your parents
get Medigap coverage, which
is supplemental insurance that
can help P"J medical bills that
Medicare ~n't fuUy cover.
One advantage to being a
baby boomrr is you have
plenty of company. When a
lot of people have similar
problems. they oli:en band
together to develop solutions.
In this case, there are oli:en
community ~treach programs like adult day care
enabling working SGs to
place eldc;rly parents , in safe,
daytime environments.
See if a similar program
exists in your community. You
can contact local religious and
civic organizations to find out
what might be available. You
can also rurit to your live-in,
older children for help with
caring for aging parents. You ·
cannot alford to bear the burden alone. Besides, enlisting a
child's help sends a great message about family roles up an~
down the generations.
WhiJ! being in the Sandwich Generation can be
stressful, try to reme~ber it
won't last forever.Your parents
will be gone one day and
your children will leave the
nest. For now though, it's a
rime for the extended family
to be together. Just make sure
that 'ou take care of yourself
itl the interim. Eat wiU, get
eno~ rest and exercise, take
a litttJ time for yourself once
in a while and try to enjoy the
positives.
(Mark Smith is an iniNOIImenl

Kneen
flU• l'a&amp;C Dl

dleport (Dave Diles Park).
If possible, to help in the
coordination, stop in it the
Recycling Office located in
the Meigs County Annex,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
or call 992-6360. Liability
waiver forms are n~eded for
all partkipants.
• • •
Reservations
still
being taken ·for die First
Meigs County M•r Gardeners' "Garden Party" on
June 16 from 5 to 8:30 p.m.
at the Meigs County Annex
located
on
Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy,
The keynote ·speaker will
be Frank Porter, proprietor
of Riverview Herbs, presenting a program on "Creative Landscaping." ri.earn
about landscape layout, the
use of native plants and
diverse plant material.
In addition, four breakout
sessions will be presented by
local Master Gardeners on
"Container
Gardening,"
"Garden Design," "Shade
Gardens" and . "Making
Soil."
,
The five presentations
and dinner are included in
the registration cost of $10
per person. Room is liniited. Registration forms ,'are
a-.ailable at the M, ·~
County Extension Ollie •.so
stop on by or call.
Pre-register by June 11 ·::.r
the Meigs Councy Extension Office. This program ' is
open to the general public.

hours. Plant roses that have
some reported resistance to
black spot.
For further information,
give our office a call at 9926696 for our Extension Fact
Sheet 3063, "Controlling
Rose Diseases."
• • •
Vegetable g(Owers, mark
your calendars to attend the
Annual Meigs/Washington
Counties Twilight Vegetable
Tour on June 13 fiom 6
.p.m. to dark.
This year's event will be
held at the Norbert Huck ·
Farm in Waterford, Washington County.
This multi-generational
vegetable farm supplies a
broad range of crops (romatoes, beans, squash,. melons,
peppers and sweet corn) to
the local populace. This
event is open to the public
- no preregistration needed, just show up. Directions
are available from the
Extension Office.
• • •
Volunteers are needed to
help clean up the Ohio
River bank in Meigs County.
,
The 13th Annual Ohio
River Sweep is scheduled
for June 16 from 9 a.m. to
noon. The Meigs County
Recycling &amp; Litter Pr~vention program will be &lt;;oor(Hal Kneen is Meigs Coun·
dinating clean-up sites m ty's Extension agent for agri·
executive with Smith Partntrs at Racine (old ferry landing). culture and natural resources,
Advest Inc. 1n its Gallipolis Pomeroy (levee) and Mid- Ohio State University.)
Q

office.)

Sundey, June 10,2001

720 1hlckl far ....
1111 et.wy . . . . . 2WD. 350
AUIOfftatic. 1•.000 Uilll, New
Tlroo. I' led With Cab. 14500
(1~

XLT. 4 CJI., 5 liP•• a/
1M7 0oc1go Da~&lt;o~~~. •
qt .• 5 op., no ruot, $1,000. 7&lt;10lt2·33114 . . .tdoyo. 740· 742·
11M

740

.

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Extru. SS.OOO

010.

Monday

81

(740)441-

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c. ss.aoo:
3020.

7f .O UC. 1·Ton Wroekor. 440
-

With-

un. 350 en.

gino. 4 Speed, 12700 (740)448301111

13 Dodgo Rolli. 8 Cyllndor. 2.25
- · &amp;1200080 ~J87"132

15 F·tl50 - · Tnx:k, 4 W11oo1
Drive. Ociod ~. (304)17514511
•

aa Food ~. mo. 4 Cylndor.

Autoftlatlc, Runo Good. $1400
080(740)44Hm

1N1 Dodge Ram 1500, 4WO, 318

V-1, SLT. PW. Pl,. CruiH. 72.000

-

(304)17lHI040

-

Dodgo Dokofa Spall. Ex1onded
Clb, 4x4, CruiH, Tilt, 5 Speed.

"

43K Mlloo. 118,000 (740)245-

Baoo Boat, 18' Gru..,..n C.,.l·
lonvor Wllh IOHP Uorc-Forco
And T - . (10014"8-1017

710

MllpCe•nlJ'I

Auto Parts •
ACCIIIIII'lll

so tent\ ·June

Ato You loOI&lt;ing For Enginol Or
Tranomloolonaf Glvo Uo A Call
At740 ue 0518.

... Mcod Tron_l_o
All typea, ACCIII To Over
10.000 Tronomloolono, Tran....
Coo... 740-2&gt;&amp;5-M77, Colt 33137e5.
New

Engine

(304)175-t !564

Stand,

•
I

Out

S40,

-Of Poll'•odon ATR Tno, 3151

75/R18; Almoll Brand Now. Fit
Moll 314 Ton &amp; 1 Ton plckupa, .
Eopoclolly Willi RaiMd Su-·
alon. Sot Ot 2 For Only &amp;150.
(7001441-1315

ASSOCIATED PRES$ WRITER

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. - The government Timothy McVeigh so despised
executed him by chemical injection
Monday. taking his life in exchange for
the 168 lives lost when he blew up the
Oklahoma City federal building six
years ago. He died silendy, with his eyes
open.
Instead of making an oral statement,
McVeigh, 33, issued a copy of the I ~75
poem "lnvictus," which concludes with
the lines: "I am the master of my fate; I
am the captain of my soul."
He was pronounced dead at 8:14a.m.
EDT by Warden Harley Lappin, becom-

Cindy
28' 11185 Dull:hmon eamper wltll
expando, $10,000 finn. 7&lt;10-lta·

$2500080.

7731.

1884 FO«&lt; F·2150. 4x4, 4·Speod.
Flat Bod, 300 8 Cylinder. Runa
Good, 174,000 Mlieo. 12100
(740)371HI278 .

810

1915 Chevy S·10, 4x4. 4 Speed,
2.8 V8, Now Tlroo. Solid Naw
Mexico Truck, 135,000 Mllet
$2400, (700)37H27B
1987 Plymouth VOjegar, New
Tlr11, New Alternator; Runs
Good; Naoda Brake Wort; $800.
(100)245-5844

1111 Cllryalor Town &amp; Country, Lim·
ltod. All Loothor. 4 Captalno
Chalro, Totally Loaded, 58K.

Homl

.n't fair what
happened
to the children and
others who were killed In
Oklahoma City. I don't
wish bad lor anyone, but I
think McVeigh deserves
his punishment.•

"'WaJorproollng.
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tanence- Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windowa, balha,
homo rwpolr and ...... For
lrte eollmalo c:aH Chef, 740-lli2·

For Solo Or Trade, 1889 Ford
Clubwagon XLT. FuMy tfandleap
~Ill. Fully Automatle, Hand Controll; Rolled Root, Tilt. Cruloo,
Po- Wlndowa, Good CGndltlon,

Llvlngaton'e Baaement Water
Proofing, all baaement repair.

840 Elec:trlcal 1ncl

740

Rlfrlget'ltlon
Aaoldentlal or commercial wiring.

ing the first federal prisoner executed in
38 yean;.
In Oklahoma City. about 300 survivors
and victims' relatives gathered to watch a
dosed-circuit TV broadcast of the execution, sent from Terre Haute in a feed
encrypted to guard against interception.
Others embraced each other at the
memorial marking the bombing site.
The lethal injection was administered
to McVeigh's ·right leg. McVeigh made
eye contact with his four wimcsses, then
with the 10 media wimesses, then squinted toward the tinted window shielding
the 10 victims• witnesses from his view.
McVeigh looked pale as he awaited

death. His hair was cropped short. A white
was puUed up to his chest as he lay on the
gurney.
When the first drug was administered,
he let out a couple of deep breaths, then a
fluttery breath. His head moved back, his
gaze fixed on the ceiling. and his eyes
were glassy.
In Oklahoma City, Kathleen Treanor,
whose 4-year-old daughter, Ashley. and
her husband's parents died in the bomb·
ing, watched ·the execution on dosed-circuit TV. Afterward, she held up a picrure
of her daughter and said:"J thought of her.
every step of the way." She said there w.i&amp;:

PI•--Mdl!p.U

lWo-car aash

,

, done, tree eatlmat11, lifetime
guarantee. 14yra on Job. experl·
eneo. (304)8115-3887.

(140)245-8212

2000 Warrior, Exeollont Condl•
tlon, 13700.(304)578-2!06

. SL!rely we&amp;-

IIAIEMEHr

WAlERPIIOOfiNQ
unconditional litollmo vuarontae.
Local reference• fumlahed. E•·
te75. cart 24 Hrw. (740)
«8-0870, 1-800-2117.()578. Roil·

6323.

1fB3 Ha~oy Davldoon Sportater.
$6,500 (1001441-952t

Pomeroy:
"I think the
punishment
is fair. It

Improvement.

(140)245-824e

Motorcyc:IM

Smith,

www.myd ai lys entinel.com

ies at 8:14a.m•
BY REx W. HUPPIIE

Vlt11at's your opinion of
the nniothy McVeigh
death sentence?

730 VIM • 4-WO.

'87 Chevy, 2 dr. van. 314 ton.
good olllpa. , _ tranoml.....,,
noodlllltlo work. 740·..2·1388

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh io

1 1. 1001 • VoL 51. No . 128

·speak

-

- Hrvlce Of -lrw. Ma- 1J.
c:enaed electrician. Ridenour
Electrical. WV0003041, 30-t-175·

1788.

Tracy
Lllwlon,

MlddJeo.
port: "for
killing 188
people?
Yes, he
deserVes
the death '
penalty."

supp~ssing

"Our music selection is
very large and completely on
compact disc. We cater to
each individual, without having to repeat songs over and·
over again. Our library reflects
music liom ~ig Band, '50s to
the top 40fli0m last week's
countdown." "
Corey is a full-time state
employee and Jenny quit her
job .to stay at home with their
two sons, Jacob and Joshua.
The two are planning a trip to
C hicago later this month for
the Mobile Beat Summer DJ
show and Conference.
"We hope to bring back
some great ideas and new
equipment," Corey said.
C&amp;J Productions can be
reached by calling 140-2561265 or by e-mail at
candj_production,@yahoo.co

said. ''But our services. have
also included Southern High
School, Southern Junior
High, Meigs Local High
School, Beal School, River
Valley Band Boosters, South
Gallia High School, Hannan
Trace Elementary, the Elks of
Gallipolis and union rallies for
the Gallipolis Developmental
Center. We also have a system
located every Thursday, Fridal!;
and Saturday at the Courtsid!!
Bar and GriU (formerly the
City Perk). There you can
· check out first hand what we
sound like and offer."
Jenny noted that the music
selection is also a contributor
to the business' success.
m.

Ave individuals were treated Saturday and one flown via
medical helicopter to Cabell Huntington Hospital In Hunting,
ton, W.Va. following a two-car accident near Ave Points on
Ohio 7. Amanda Curtis of Pomeroy was flown to the hospi- ,
tal after sustaining Injuries In the wreck. The accident Is,
under Investigation by the Ga111a-Meigs Post of Ohio State
Highway Patrol. (Dave Harris ·photo)
·

Kevin
Thom•.
Rutllncl:
"I don't
think he

deserves
10 ,018.

J

.

'thl·•" he

----'---'------'---;-:-----..;;
·

..

··Sjracuse COundi.
he
!lave
people,
I think
he ne~s to be punished,
but life In prison would be
a batter punishment. He
didn't have a right to kill
anyone, but we don't have
that right, either." .

THE OLD lONGSfllleq the 111r SuhdaY,·Bf\emoon as Myron Duffield entertained at his
calliope with the old songs, a part of Herit~ D«Y festivities Sunday. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Heritage Day - a festival
with an old-fashioned flavor ·.

Brl•n
Johnton
Pomeroy:

BY~

POMEROY ;_ Visitors to
the Meigs Museum in Pomeroy
Sunday afternoon were treated
to the sites and sounds of yesteryear along with a look ~t
some of today's creative talents.
Entertaining wi~h the old
songs at his calliope in its colorful red-and-gold circus wagon
was Myron Duffield of Middleport. His next stop will be t~e

..........
Sentinel
2 hlllrl- 12 ,..._

Calendar
c;;lassifie~s

comics
Editorials
ObitUaries

Sports
Weather

HOI!FUCit

SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

"Lethal
Injection
Isn't good
enough.
Anyone
who would
refer to
Innocent
children as
"collateral" deserves the
electric chair- or worse."

0

f1om PageDI

9-3,

1121'8

l~--~.~·------------------------------

Cl.l

se~ies

' 1N1 300EX. Runo G-t, lola Of

.

.

SPORIS: Reds win Ohio

lllc*lrcyclll

them first and finishing thelll.off with the second ~ppli~Cj.on.
Those ' with
standard
faomPip!D1
hyb{ids should resist the urge
that discolors the plani. This to rush in with post-emergent
piscoloration should fade herbicides when fields are
when .nprmal soil conditions passable. The ability for. these '
return, p,rovided that none of · pl;m~ to tolerate chemical
the othea 6Lctors mentioned applications is greatly reduce9
·are the cause.
'foUowing the stress of the lait
• Weed _s::ontrol in Tobacco: three weeka.Nlow growth to
U' not already developil)g resume, ani"purple color to
weed problems, those who set fade before }pplying pqgtwbacco.prior to the rains may emergent hernicides.
·
be wondering how long the
lo the meantime, Jnok for
herbicide will hold. out. Spar- the positive. As .in previous
tan users are likely to see years,. a few hours of duty at
more injury than usbal, which 4-H camp last week reorgais common for Spa~tan i~ wet · nized my perspective on the
conditions.
import&lt;jnt things. Look for
Plants almost
.. always grow family time at home to do the
out of this .injury. Do not same.
confuse .Spartan injury with
Agnews
vrrus infectiQn, which will
Blue mold forecast -As of
only beeome worse as the Thursday, blue mold had not
• • In cases w here been confirmed in Gallia
plant ma1pres.
fields were prepared, but County. However, with contobacco was not set, applying firmations in the Kentucky
more srartan is not recom- counties bordering Lawrence,
mended.
·
we can assume that blue mold
However, depending on the is here. Please help me find it,
cn~micals and rates already so that producers can take
.!applied, label permittipg, a action if .they desire, and we
half rate of Command may can attend to other issues .
control some of the grasses
To find out if confirmation
and ragweed, which are weak have·been made since Thursareas for Spartaf! · anyway. day, ph!Jse &lt;:heck the bulletin
Those with weed •nfestations boards at one of these cooperin set tobacco can count on ating businesses: Altizer's in
Poast to kill the grasses. The Thurman, Pope and Pope in
nuts edge and broadleaves that Lecta, S&amp;L Mini Mart in
are left, may be' limited to MercerviUe, and Owsley's in
mechanical contro1.
Crown City. D~ not )lesitate
Weed Control in Row to call the Extension Office at
Crops: In Round Up Ready 446-7007 if you suspect blue
fields. if weeds are large, rates mold in your plants.
should be increased to match
(Jennifer L. Byrnes is GaUia
the weed size, according to County's Extension agent for
the label. It is more efficient agriculture
and
natural
to kill larger weeds with the resources, Ohio State Univerfirst applil;ation rather than · sity.)

~es

•

.,.

PcJmliroy •llldcllport • Gllllpolil, Ohio • ~nt Pit RJ 1 11, WY

HIP=•••

~=Details, A2 ·

Lotteries

A3

OHIO
82=4 PICks: 4-2·1; Pick 4: li-5r:5-0
85 5uplr F.aFFIIX I &amp;-19-20-22-3&amp;45
M IOdlr. 9-7·344-7
A3 W.VA.:

81.3,6 Daly S: 9-!H Dilly 4: 7+2-5
A2 c ~001 Ohio Volley Publlthins eo.

Fourth of July parade down
Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., where he will be
representing Meigs County
. The festival with an old-fashioned flavor got a look at sever- ·
al pio'leer"skills.
Donna Davidson was there
making rag rugs on an oldfashioned loom, Sherry and
Jennifer Grady demonstrated
the art of creating candles from

aCidresses park
vanda m
Bv KAnE CROw
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

wicks dipped in hot wax, and
Margaret Parker showed how
to make butter using cream in a
jar and vigorously shaking it for
10 or so minutes. The butter
was th en served to those
attending on hot rolls made in
the museum kitchen during the
afternoon.
Special Heritage Day exhibits
featured artif.1cts and memora-

SYRACUSE Problems with park vandalism and
progress on the upgrading of the tennis courts were discussed at length Thursday by Syracuse Village Council.
Mayor Larry Laven dar said the Wildwood Ga.r den Club of
Syracuse has been working diligently on a beautification
project for the village. and has planted 13 dogwood trees in
front of London Pool.
On Wednesday evening, the mayor said, the pool was vandalized and items taken. One of the dogwood trees was
uprooted and bark was stripped from another.
. The mayor said the culprits, if found, will be prosecuted to
the fullest extent of the law, and he will enforce the curfew
ordinance with the help of local police and sheriff's
deputies.
The mayor asked residents report to the sheriff's department if suspicious activity is witnessed. The sheriff's department will, in turn, contact village police. Residents also may

PIHH- Herlt.p, A3

PIHse SH CoundL A3l

State budget includes courthouse renovations:.
,j

~&gt;-·- J REED
BY .

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMfROY The ,tate budget
1 approve4 ( last week by Gqv. Bob Taft
fncludes 1$75,000 for the renovation of the
Meigs County Courthouse.
State Rep. John Carey. R-Wellston, said
Friday the state's bien~ General Revenue
Fund Bu~et, as subn\itred by the Finance
Committee, includes $75,000 ih the first
year of the bu~t for improvements to the

19th-century building in Pomeroy. The
original budget as submitted to the govcr. nor, Carey said, included $75,000 for each
of the budgee, two years for the project.
Now, Carey said. tlie county wiD receive
only $75,000 in the first year.
"However, there \vill likely be funding
made available for Meigs County through
the stare capital budget, which will be submitted next year, so that the commissioners
can complete the job," he said.

30 years

of Ho1111e Care.
'

Your Used Car Superstore

446:22821'
1900 EASTERN AVE.
I

ToD Free l-877l446-2282
I

l

BUICK

PONTIAC

·

Holzer Home Care of Holzer Medical
Center is celebrating 30 y~rs of service
· . to our commumty.

JeffThornton, Meigs County Commis..
sion president, said last week the board has
received estimates from a number of con- .
tractors for the sandblasting and painting of:
the courthouse exterior. He estimates the : :
cost at about $35,000.
The balance of the state funds will be
used to renovate the interior of the court.:
house with paint and carpeting. to light the

Plene- ludpt. U

(

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

•

For more information on Home Care services,
call (740) 446·5301

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�\

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PageA'J.

The Daily Sentinel

lll•f I• •

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ef CIIJIIIIUI

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multiple foal deathi this spring.
Autopsies conducted at the Ohio
Department of Agrietllture laboratories
in Reynoldsbuq found periarditis in a
mare and a stallion who hJd died at
separate farms in Logan.
The condition also was found in a
gelding treated this week at Ohio State.
The g&lt;lding, a 4-year~ld Tennessee
walking horse named Silver, was
brought to the university late last
month from Pike County and has been
returned there.
"Prior to this, I don't think anybody
has seen much of this;' said Dr. Catherine Kobn, an Ohio State professor of
equine internal medicin~.
She said that this spring. more than
50 adult horses have died or been treat-

COLUMBUS (AP) - A l'll!'e and
deadly heart inflammation has been
reported in three Ohio horses. Two of
the three died and the third was
~klled Friday in improved but guarded condition from the Ohio State Uniwrsity ~'t!Cerinary medical center.
· The condition, known as pericarditis,
is an inOammation in the sac that surrounds the heart. It results in a buildup
of fluid and constriction of the heart
muscle.
Veterinarians in Ohio and Kentucky
suspect it .may result from the same
environmental toxins that have caused
more than 1,000 foals to be born dead
or near death since March.
At least rwo -of the three Ohio cases
came from farms that experienced

III'M" J

I
I .

•.....

..... ....

ou desipates

ed for pericarditis in Kentucky alone.
Kohn said Ohio Scite is cooperating
with the UniVI!rsity of Kentucky in
investigating the heart cases.
UK spokesman Haven Miller said
investigators have ·noted a higher incidence of pericarditis this spring, but
baVI!n't linked it to the wave of foal
deaths.
More than 1,200 foal deaths were
reported to the University o(Kentucky
berween March and mid- May, the end
of the foaling season.
The suspected source of the toxin is
the. eastern tent caterpillar, which feeds
on wild cherry trees in spring, possibly
excreting cyanide or mycotoxins into
the grass.

lapsed fiom oxygen depriv.ation and exposure.

'
ATHENS (AP) - . Ohio University has designated about
30
restrooms across campus as being for either men or women.
The decision resulted from a campaign by student Collin Lovell,
who graduared Sarurday with an economics degree.
.
. "They (unisex bathrooms) are safe for transgender people who
might shock the general public walking into a men's iestlO&lt;Hll or a
women's restroom," said LoveD, a transgender student.
Ohio University is among a growing number of universities
nationwide that have accommodated or have considered accommodating the transgender population, a diverse range of people
who cross traditional gender boundaries.
The university doesn't track how many students identify themselves as transgender.
, ·
Terry Hogan, the university's dean of students, said unisex
restrooms are a matter of coll'ilnoil sense.
' '
"We're trying co make the climate on campus welcoming to all
srudenCS:' he said

. . . ~ ...... ban

JACKSON, Mils. (AP) - It was a daring scam that syphoned
hundreds of miDions of dollars from insurance companies at the
expense of their policyholden, and it was done right under the
·· .=
noses of regulators in 1M: !l:ltc:s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
65.
. Today, the rogue financier authorities say thought up and directClouds will cominue to
Sunset Monday night will
ed rhe I 990s scam is behind ban and awaiting trial Regulators
build over the region Tuesday be at 9 p.m. and sunrise on
~ they know how to prevent similar occurrences in the fuiUre
and there will be a chance of Tuesday at 6;02 a.m.
- by sharing vital information on bad guys.
. . . .: scattered showers and thunForecast
"We need a database of information available to us that will unveil
· derstorms, the National
Today: Sunny. High 83, low
anyone who has been involved in scams;' said Oklahoma Insurance
. Weather Servke said.
60.
Commissioner Carroll Fisher, whose state along ~th Mississippi,
: High pressure moving in . Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
ArlwJsas, Tennessee and Missouri felt the sting of Martin Frankel, a ·
:from the southeast will push 83,low 60.
native ofToledo.
,.
increasingly warm air into the
Wednesday: Sunny. High 87,
Fisher
said
the
N:d:ional
Association
oflnsurance Commissioners
region. Temperatures on Tues- low 66.
is trying to persuade Congres to give insurance regulators better
day will approach 90 degrees.
Thursday: S\lnny. High 87,
access to FBI files.
Lows tonight will be around · low 62.
·
Additional arnmuniti~ Fisher said, will come fiom a new federCOLUMBUS (AP) -A veteran Ohio mountain climber's Iat- allaw, rhe Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which begirining next month
est adveniUre on Mount EVI!reSt started as a rese:m:b. effOrt and will allow banks, securities and insurance regulators to exchange
GowlijiCW
ended as a rescue mission.
information.
Andy
Politz
was
on
an
expedition
that
set
out
to
find
the
remair)s
With those files, scams to bilk insurance companies might never
ZANESVILLE (AP) -About 1,000 people Sarurday celebrated
1: : the grand 6pening of a discount store's distribution center that of Andrew Irvine, who died in 1924 while trying to become the · ~ gotten off the ground.
: added more than 400 jobs to a community with a high unemploy- first person to scale the world's tallest mountain.The focus ofPolirz's
ment rate. ·
group changed on May 24 when it came to the aid of five climbers.
"Its an i.mprecedented rescue;'Polirz said "It used to be.ifyou get
: · Dollar·General's Zanesville Distribution Center cost more than
COLUMBUS (AP) -It Wasn't against rhe law, but the practice
: $60 million in grants and loans secured by the state and the into liouble that high on Mollnt Everest, you're deadWell, that's not
1Appalachian Regional Commission.
tbe caSe any more, and the miracle workers ·paved rhe way:•
. of hailing cabs downtown ha5 been discouraged for years. That's
Polirz's group rescued four of five climbers it aided. One Russian about to change.
..
. It also has contributed much needed jobs to Muskingum Counclimber
died
in
Polirz's
arms.
Starting
today,
cab
drivers
no
longer face tickets if they puD over
: ty, which has an unemployment rate of 5.2 percent. Ohio's unem"His eyes roDed back. and he had no pulse;' said Politz, 41, of in a no-stopping zone to pick. up a fare. New signs downtown will
ployment rate is 3.9 percent.
"It's good news for Ohio and great news for Zanesville and Upper ~n. who has been part of seven groups that have open bus lana to taxis durina mtricted hours and tell people it's all
: Muskingum County," Gov. Bob Taft said at Saturday's ceremony. climbed the 29,035-foot mountain. He reached the summit on one riabt to hail a cab.
.
11
: "This is one of rhe bigest projeca we've worked on. We tapped of those attempt~.
.
''Thac'l\vonderful:' cab driver Andai ~ Jai4,• he waited for
ewry conceivable aource of funding for this."
...
The climber "!ho died was one of three Ruaians who were a fire in a daiglwed wei zone Friday. "It\ convenience f.&amp; the cusscranded owrnight at about 28,100 feet above sea level. He had col- tomer. We need to be he to drop and pick. up die customer."

Rain likely on·Tuesday

atlends

center.-.

People can hal rahi in ca••mbiiS

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:
:

1:

J

nal cramps, headache, nausea
and vomiting.
Besides annual testing of
chicken houses, the rules
would require control of mice,
which .can spread the bacteria:
re(i'igerated storage of eggs;
and disinfection of henhous~s
anytime a flock is found coneaminated wiih salmonella.
Fartns also ·would be
required to have "biosecurity"
measures, sucll as · restricted
access to flocks and protective
clothing for workers. ·
The FDA would not ban
the practice of "forced molting:• which involves starving
older hens to get them to lay
'more eggs. Research suggests
forced molting increases the
incidence of salmonella.

,

Ruth Ryan

Budget

..

ft•Pa&amp;tA1

no display of emotion in the
room as the execution took.
place.
She said some of ·the victims were chuckling chat they
knew MCVeigh was dea'd
before the hordes of media
outside did.
Janice Smith, whose brother Lanny ~croggins died in
the bombing, prayed with her
children at the Ok.lahom~
City National Memorial,
then left afte~ getting word
that McVeigh wa~ dead.
"It's over," she said. "We

..,,

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Is it easy to apply?

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local health department Mon- .
day · to set up a vaccination
·'
.
appointment.
The inoculations took. place
Friday, the same day Stauffer
would have turned 16.
"He was looking forward to
getting his driver's license,"
Stauffer's mother said of her
son, who was youth minister
for rwo church groups.
Sta.uffe( was the first to be
stri~ken Wifh the same strain
of the bacteria · Neisseria
meningitidis. West Branch
sophomore Kelly Coblentz,
also 15, died May 28, two days ·
after Stauffer.
· Both had meningococcemia, a blood infection
caused by the Neisseria
meningitidis bacteria. The
same bacteria also cause
meningitis, a disease of the
brain.

YES! You can call the Meigs Countj Department of
Jo~. ar:Jd Fa111ily Services (fol:mer.ly Meigs, County
Dep,artJne~t of Humq.n Servicef) at 992-2117 011 1-800-9~2-2608 to apply or you cim have the appli~ation sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
. from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday until6:30 p.m.
•

There i~ ,no face-to-face interview.
,

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·

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Correction Polley

*Monthly Income .
Guidelines

Our main concam ,in all illorWteli
accurate. 11 you know of an
error In a llory, call the .-.mom.
at (740) 982·2158.
to be

2 ------------------· $968
3 ~-----.---------·-- $1 '220
,.

4 --~----------.:••• $1,471
5,--------~------~,$,1,723
'
6-------·······---$1,975
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"""'t

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~

News Departments

Generaltnlnager

Newa

•

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I

or
•'

(UIPI21HIO)

Public::: ~:-....y
through

Pomoroy,

.: : ,-.:. ·

Friday, 111 Court· St ..
. OhiO.
Socond-ctaaa

band, W,ilbert Crouser, a .brother, Leslie Dee), and a son, ~oy
Crouser.
Graveside services wiD be held on Tuesday, June 52, 2001, at
1 p.m. at dte Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
Friends may call at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Tues4ay from 10 a.m. until noon .

Coundl

=~

Lord women'a Bible study, 10
a.m. Tuesday, Abundant Grace
Church, Middleport. Refresh·
menta. Study on the book of
Ruth.

' EAST MEIGS -Eastern Band
Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m in
band room Meet the new band
director.
. POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, Tuesday, 10

p,_ and ·

the 01110 ~ Alloclallon.

a.m.

Poetmollfr: Send. add- corroc·

Ilona 10 Tho Dally Senllntl, 111 Court.
St .. Pomtroy, OhiO 45769.

POMEROY - Bedford Township
Trustees, 7 p.m. Tuesday at
meeting hall on McGrath Road.

Subscription raPes

Ext.13

~notdeflrtngtosopac;;:

Ext. 14

carrlfl may remit In .advaooo direct 10
Tho Daly Sentinel. Credt wll bf g~ven

EKI. 3

Cln:ullllon

EKI. 4

Cla11llled Ada

EKI. 5

To send e-mail ·
newsCmydallyaentinel.com

On the Web
www.mydally..ntinel.oom

992-2117 or Toll Free: 800-992-2608
.

SATURDAY
.
POMEROY -CPA and First Aid
classes, Saturday, June 16, 8:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the F.O.E. 2171
hall. All Interested In taking class·
es, 91111 Gena Lyons, 992·661 _
9.

---. No~by
-

Advartlalng

SUNDAY
RAVENSWOOD -Annual Mil·
hoan reunion, Sunday, noon, Mil·
hoan Homestead, Milhoan Ridge,
Reule 2, Ravenswood. Take cov·
ered dish and family history.

ma11 ponnllled !n a!Mf . -M!'llco It avollablf.

.

.

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MID suiHalallan
lntlcMMitiic&lt;Liti

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$53.82
$105.56

Community C-ltndar is pub-

--llelgaCounty
I S·Wffkl
$29.25
2t1
1 158.88
52Wffkl
1109.72

lished at a free service to non~
profit groupo wilhinc to
annDUJ;ICI meetinp and tp,ecial
·
.Venti, The caleqdar h not
detiped to promote ~ale• or

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her parents, she was preceded in death by her bus-

'.

i i Y - Otmo!Or...,.. S2
OMEKI. 12 O M $8.70
. OM,_.
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Other aervlcu

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~des

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fnNnPaaeA1

""""'rtmant
eKienuonall'e:
_,...

able to get fi'M tfeelthy Start covera~e for your kids.
Cell now for more Information. ·

• _j .

children.

department.
Co-manager of London
Pool; VeUessa Pickens, met ,
with council to discuss pool
operations. She_ said Greg
McCall wiD give swimming
lessons beginning July 23. The
cost is $35 per person, and
those interested may call the
pool at 992-5418.
Lavendar said he has
received numerous calls
regarding dog:s ru!lning l.oose.
The village has a leash law
which will be enforced, he
said. Dogs must be confined
to the owner's property.
Lavendar also said fourwheelers driving on village
streets are in violation of s~te
and village laws and must be
stopped. The law will be
enforced, he said.
Fire Chief Eber Pickens Sr.
said the department will get a
new Insurance Service Office
rating. and that it will be necessary to purchase additional
items, the cost of which will
be l!!!ss than 11,000. The new
raee could lower insurance
rates for residents, 'Pickens
said.
.. CouncU discussed garbage
service and needed cleanup of
a vacant property.
Cotterill reported the following balances in village
accounts: general, $29,216.80;
street
construction,
$18,212.76; state highway,
$2,037.53; cemetery, $264.03;
parks and recreation, $415.1 0;
fire department, $9,844.39;
water operating, $65,932.41;
pool, $8,731.35; enterprise
deposit lilnd, $4,154.37; total
of all funds, $138,808.74.
The next meeting wiD be
July 12.
Present, in addition to
Lavendar, Roush, and Cotterill were Council members
Mony Wood, . Donna Peterson, Katie Crow, Tucker
Williams and Eper Pickens Jr.

LOCAL EVENTS

The main number Is 992·2158.

* Even If your family'• Income .le higher, you may still be
·

•

Reader Serv•ces

Use the Chart Below. to see if you qualify:
·Family Size

She W3S born on May 12, 1918, in Blue Creek,W.Va.• daughter of the late Jan- and .Mary Slawter D~l. She was a homeII)3Ur and a IS-year member of the Meigs County SeniQr Citizens.
Surviving are three daughters and two sons-in-bw: Mary and
Jim Hobstetter of Rutlmd, Pat and Richanl Zeger of Galion
and Alice Levingston of Rutland; a stepson and his wife, Everly and Alice Crousei of Wheeling. W.Va.; nine grandchildren:
Beth Hobstetter Cremeans of Pomeroy, Cathy Hobstetter
Blakeman of Piktton, Jody I.evingston BrodJen ofWilmingtoO: N.C., L.B. Welty of Brunswick, Scott Welty of Bellview,
Vikki Welty Meeker of Buder, Stephanie Crouser Swartz and
Phillip Crouser Johnson of Columbus· and nine great-grand-

contact council members or
the mayor.
There is a 10 p.m. curfew in
foree in the village for children under 16.
"Dedicated citizens are
doing their best to improve
the town and others are not
content to see good things
done and do their utmost to
destroy." Lavendar said.
In other business, grants
administrator Robert Wingett
met with council to discuss
the tennis courti. Wingett said
h~ receiVI!d a bid from Larry's
Painting Services, Inc., Gallipolis, for 13,850. The bid
will be for painting the fence
and poles. The poles will be
sandblasted and painted and
the fence painted.
After the courts are painted,
it takes a month to cure,
Wingett said. The mayor
assured Wingett the tennis
courts will be locked until
Pomeroy has offered the light they can be used.
fixtures to the councy ·at no
"You can't afford to have
cost.
-•
people walking on the courts
Other interior and exterior with cleats or with skates am!
improvements might be made skateboards;' Wingett said.
if capiral funds are granted by · Wingett also. sa!d there will
the state, he said.
. · , .~e no spray .pamtmg. Wmgett
r-:.'
:
1:.
.
.
h
·
'-·'--~·
of' •as'h·authonzed
• ~·AN 0 ,g CJiiWIIWII
h . . to d. proceed
. 'fi " •
.
•
-Wit t, e proJect an ·to use
rhe nance comnutteet rou- nts' discretion on decisions
tinely
proposes
capital .that must be made.
imProvement funds in budget · Also· meeting with council
bills for counties in the 94th was Jeannie Allen regarding a
district.
large hole in the street . in
front of her property, the
result of the water and sewer
don't have ~P continue with departments' laying lines
him anymore."
under the street to accommoThe day heCore McVeigh's ''dace a new residence.
execution, his . attorneys said · ' (avendar and Councilman
that ·he was sorry for those . BiD Roush advised Allen that
who suffered but that he did- repairs will be made, as conn 't regret detonating a mas- tact has been made with the
sive bomb at the Alfred P. water board and sewer
Murrah Federal Building the worst act "of terrorism on
U.S. soil.
'
•"He never, I think, has
been the type' of guy to tell
fund-rel11rs _of any type. ?toms
people what he thinks that MONDAY
SYRACUSE - Republican Party are printtd only as space perthey want to hear," attorney meeting,. 7:30 p.m. Monday, Car· mits and cannot be guaranteed
to to. printed a apecific number
Robert Nigh said. "I think laton SChool.
of daya.
'
~ha~ he tries to be honest
RACINE - Racine Board of
about his true feeling ofsym- Public Affaire, 7 p.m. Monday,
Eathy and empathy without municipal bulldln~.
beirig inacturate ab'dut ' TUESDAY
.
MIDDlEPORT -ladlea for the
· them:•

·The -Daily Sentinel

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I

JWTLAND- Elsie Mae Deel Crouser, 83, of Rutland died
on Satunby,June 9, 2001, at Rockspring~ Rehabilitation Ceoter in Pomeroy, following an extended illness.
.

MASON, W.Va.- Ruth E. Ryan. 73, of Mason, W.Va .• died
on Sunday,June 10,2001, at PleaqntValley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
She was born Aug. 26, 1927, in Racine, ~laughter of the late
Eber and Pearl L. Dudding Roush. She was a homemaker, a
1945 graduate ofWahama High School, and a charter member
of the Mason Mothers Club.
Survivon include her husband, Edward A. Ryan of Mason;
three sons and daughters-in-law: Patrick J. and Rhonda Ryan
of Eagle Rock, Va., Michael R. and Linda Kay Ryan of Syracuse and James E. and Diane R}o:an of Fincasde, Va.; a daughter
and son-in-law, Rita C. and Philip Zimmermann, Bedford, Va.;
two sisters and brothers-in-bw,Jean and John ':Jack." Grueser of
Mason, W.Va., and Minnie L. ana Marion Rizer of Syracuse;
nine grandehildren: and nine great-grandChildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her sister,
Agnes Eileen Roush.
·
. The Mass of Christian Burial will be at St. Joseph Catholic
Church in Mason on Tuesday at 10 a.m., with Rev. Fr. Regis
Schlick officiating. .Burial will foil~ .at St. Joseph Catholic
Cemetery in Mason.
Friend$. may call at Fogelsong-lbcker Funeral Home in
Mason on Monday fiom 6 to 9 p.m., with the Rosary Service
at 8:30 p.m.
'
Memorial contributions may be made to the St. Joseph
Catholic Church, P.O. Box 264, Mason, W.Va. 25260.

ftvmPa&amp;eA1

i

for hours to get preventive
antibiotics and many questioned whether health officials
were being truthful ai1ollt the
risk of exposure .
Stark. County Health Commissioner William Franks said
the outbreak. has been the,
worst crisis he's faced in his 29
years in public health.
"We were battling panic and
fear even more than we· were
batding meningitis," he;. said.
To ease fears, health officials
gave precautionary vaccination
shots to 4,200 area high school
students and staff in the state's
first mass inoculation against a
meningitis-related outbreak.
About 1,600 students from
six AIIIInce-area schools stiU
need to receive vaccinations,
said Ohio Health Department
spokesl!lan Jay Carey. Het said
those students should call their

on

McVeigh

Srnall town wonders .when,. life
will return to normal after outbreak

ALLIANCE
(AP)
: Jonathan Stauffer wrote about
: trees, cows, football spirit and
friends for a school assignment
. on "what I like about my com'munity.''
·. "Most of what we do is for
. . the community, except foot: : ball - we do it for ·pride,"
: : wrote the IS-year-old fresh.man. a lineman on the Beloit
: :west Branch High School var: : sifY team.
Stauffer's mother, Diane,
. now comforts herself with the
: essay and other reminders of
: her son. He died in late May
.after falling ill from a meningi: :tis-related bacteria that also
:killed a classmate and left
another teen-ager critically ill.
The outbreak. shattered the
: calm of this tight-knit, bluecoUar city &lt;Jf 23,000. Thousands of people stood in line

•

nation's major egg farms.
"We see this as the beginning of a program to provide
the safest and most nutritious
product for the American
consumer," said Lou Carron,
the FDA's deputy director of
food safety initiatives. The
agency hopes to release the
rules for public comment by
the end of the summer, he
said.
Salmonella in eggs is
believed to cause as many as
125,000 illnesses a year. The
FDA set a goal during the
Clinton administration of cutting those cases by half in five
years. Approximately .one in
every 20,000 eggs is infected
with salmonella, which can
cause diarrhea, fever, abdomi-

Elsie Clauser

RAClNE - Roy Thomas Brunty, 73, Racine, died
Sunday,June 10, 20t)l, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was born on July 17,1927,in Mm, W.Y.L,son of the late
~ and Vada 'Walls Brunty. He W3S formaiy employed as a
nwntenance 'IYOibr for the Villagr ofl&gt;omeruy; and was a ~eran of the U.S. Army during World War II.
SIIIViving are his wifr, Linda Lou Young Brunty ofRacine; a
daughter, Peggy Sue Brunty ofAuburn,W.Va.; fout stepdaughters: Peggy White of Middleport. and Brenda White, Carolyn
Pridemore, Nancy Mackie Powers and Ebine Casto, all of
Auburn, W.Va.; a stepson, Hershel White of IUcine; a brocher,
Benny Ray "Chris" Brunty of Arizona; ~ sisters and four
"?&gt;then-in-law: Janet Brunty, ~otte and 07a Osborne,
Lmda and Jesse Osborne and Ruth and Danny Osborne, all of
Cleve~d, and Edna Mae and Frank Deem of Indiana; 19 ·.
grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and his mother-in-law
and farber-in-law, :Qeuy and Donald Maurer of Pomeroy.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a daughter,
Brenda ~runty. .. . .
GraVI!Slde servtces will be Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Pine GlOVe
Cemetery, ~th Dr.~ R.Acree Sr., officiating.
There willJ,e no calling hours.
Arrangemen~ are under the direction of Fisber-Acree
Funeral Home m Pqm~ ...,
•
Memorial contributioris cowml "funer.il eiepenSes may be
made to the Fisher-Acree Funeral Home, 590 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

golden cupob atop the building. and to complete a number
of landscaping improvement$,
including the replacement of
the front sidewalk and the
installation of period lighting
identical to that on Court and
Main Streets.
Thornton said the Village of

I

WASHINGTON (AP) Egg farmers would be
required for the first time to
take sanitation measures and
test their flocks for salmonella
bacteria under proposed ·government rules to reduce food
poisoning cases.
They would be the first regulations the Food and Drug
Administration has imposed
on farmers . to prevent foodborne pathogens. Food safety
ru~es
traditionally
have
focused on processors.
The egg rules, which are to
go to the White House for
approval this month, were
worked out with consumer
advocates and. the United Egg
.Producers, a trade group that
represents 80 percent of the

llandtDplar

.

Ea.fanns targeted with safety niles

=

LOCAL BRIEFS

11, 2001

Heart ailment mysteriously striking horses

n JJd1f,.l:re11

"'"' ""0011¥ CIUf

PI

MIDDLEPORT - As a part
mthe -series concau
in the park. The Big Bend
Community 8md will present~
Rag Day concert at Diles Pad;:
in downtown MiiHeport a 7
p.m. Th~ The public is
invited ID :~!tend lhe 6:ce pu:sen-

oe

'
POMEROYUnits of chr
Meigs Emergency Service
answered 15 calls for Z!l!isance
tllion.
om- the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Sat:wday. I :07 a.m., Main
Street, Rick. Price, Holzer MedPOMEROY - Childhood ical Cenrct;
immunizations will be offered at
10:09 a.m., Middleport. Jamie
a clinic at the Meigs County Parsoo,Jr:, HMC;
Health Department Tuesday
I I :22 a.m., Ohio 7. assia"ed by
from 9 1D 11 a.m and I to 3 Pomeroy and Chester, motor .
p.m. Children's shot m:onls are vehicle acrident, ArnaOOa Curto be presented and they are to tis, Cabell Huntington Hospital,
be accompanied by a parent or Diane Noblr, Cecil Noble,
Kay1ee Rose, Tyler Noblr, Trey
legal guardian.
Noblr,treated;
8:33 p.m., Pomeroy Pike,
Adam Chev31ier; treated;
Sunday. 12:00 a.m., Oliver
Street. Michelle Stlhl, HMC;
TUPPERS PLAINS
12~3 a.m., Ohio 124. Brnd .
VFW Post 9053 of Tuppers Miller, CabeD Huntingt'oh Hos- ·
Plains will ~ a dinner on pital;.
Thursday at 6:30 p.m.. foU.,.,...ro . 3:33 a.m., Higley Road, Mary
by a meeting at 7:30p.m.
Smith, Pleasant v.illey Hospital; :
6:48 a.m., County Road
Eight, Laura S-sringer, treated;
TUPPERS PLAf!'IS -The . 8:57 a.m.; River Heights Apt.,
Tuppers Plains Reg~onal Sewer Hyle Nickles, treated;
District will bold a regular
10:49 a.m., Middleport, Traci
meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Chapman, PVH;
12:27 p.m., South Fifth
CDI'".cl!rl
Avenue, Marion~. HMC.

P'mclnner
meeting

Set meeting

Band

set

POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT -The Big
Sun4ay, 12:38 a.m., Ohio 124,
Bend Community Band, under Monte Sinnot, Mary Keeney.
tbe direction of Roger Williams, refused treatment.
will perform a concert in Dave
REEDSVIlLE
Diles Park in Middleport on . Saturday. 2:49 p.m., Ohio 124,
Thursday at 7p.m.
motor vehicle accident, aSSisted
by Olive 1bwnship. Annondo :
Feix, Camden-Ciarlt Memorial ·
Hospital.
CHESTER -- Chester
SYRACUSE
Sarurday, 2:06 p.m., Forest ·
Township Board ofihutees will
hold their regubr monthly Run and Pinegrovc. motor
meeting on Thesday at 7 p.m. in vehkle accident, Gennee
the town hall.
drix, Donna Nease, treated
1UPPERS PlAINS
Saturday,2:52 p.m., Ohio 124,
motor vehicle accident, Hojosa .
MIDDLEPORT - State Pallacious, St. .Joseph's Hospital.

Hen-

Plins open door

provided by Mary Wise and
Paige Cleek. There were paintings by Gina Tillis, Judy Sisson,
Doris Carder, •Hilda , Qu!~kel,
Mary Wise, Pauline Parker,
Debbie
Johnson,
Chris
Burk.hamer, and Melissa Coleman, family sk.etchings by
Mary PoweU, and a display of
Pomeroy buildings in miniaIUre by Paige Cleek..
For refreshments on ..the
warm afternoon, fresh lemonade and cookies were served.

Heritage
. fromPipA1
bilia from several counties,
extensive historical displays
from rwo Syracuse fifthgraders - Chelsea Freeman
on the Battle ·of Buffington
Island, and Morgan Brown on
Dlennerhasset Mansion.
The event also included an
antique and new .quilt display

\

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-48~

Rockwel- 41ll

USB-22'1.

Gtlr~Ntt- 63~

Rocky Boots- 4ll

General Electric :_ 48

ADShel-61

,AmTecn5BC- 41\
Ashland Inc. - 40~

GKNLY-10~

BankOne-38
Bob Evans - I 7~
BorgWamer- 48l.
Champion - 3~.

Kroger- 25

Lands End - 37~

Sears-40
Shonay'a -lo
WaJ.Mart- 51
Wendy'&amp;- 24'·
Worthington - 12

0VB-25

quotes of the previous

Aldt Coal- 'lJ

AkZo-42\

Har1ey Davidson - 48'&gt;

Kman- 11~

AT&amp;T-22

Lid. -16
• Oak Hil Ananclai-14'-

Charming ShopS- 5~
City Holding - 9~

DuPont-47
Federal Mogul- 2'1.

BBT-35~

P80f)les- 19~
Premier-

n

Daily stock reports are ·,
the 4 p.m. closing
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Advestlnc.
'

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•

A4

_The_D_aily_Se_ntin_·e_I

The Daily Sadinel

The Daily. Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: This is in response
to "Mme in Grmd P!2irie, Texas,"
who was shocked at some of tbe mire
and bck of respect shown at a funeral she attended. She sent a list of do's
and don ·u regarding fun en! etiquetre.
My mother~ away recently.
Shy and homebound, she knew very
few people. My siblings and I expected less than 25 attendees at her funera!. We wete stunned to see triple that
number gathered for Mom's service.
Some _.:e family members, but most
of them were our 6:iends, many of
whom had never met Mom. Some
wore chcsses and suits; others wore
jeans.
I wouldn't have cared if they had
come in their bathrobes. These wooderful people put their lives on hold
to come and reD me they cared about
me and were sorry about the I~ of
my mother.

111 Court St.. Pon.-oy, Ohio

740 182·2151• Fax: 912-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
A. SIMiwn Lewle
" neglng Editor

PullU.'*

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I

Maadll'f, June 11,1001

Funerals are about good feelings, not good clothes

I

Clwt11 W. Gowy-

PageA5

0

.,..two_,

NATIONAL VIEW

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
Your response to Marie was right
on target. It's noc: about what people
~ its what's in their hearts that
counts.- MOM'S DAUGHTER.
ROCKWAlL. TEXAS
DEAR DAUGHTER: Many
people wrote to comment on Maries
letter. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Bravo for )U11r
response to Marie regarding "proper
_and acceptable" funeral behavior.
When we buried my Herb, I violated

tbe "hug and acknowledgment" rule
$he listed. As re1aliws, 6:iends and
acquaincanees (well ewer 200) 61ed by
his Amerian dag-daped coffin, I
hugged each and every one - a
spontaneous reaction.
There should be no hard-and-liist
"rule$." Herb would have deplored a
rqpmented service. The entire group
e\'m joined in singing John Demers
"Take Me Home, Country Roads"
during tl}e service. More than a year
lat.er,l still receive compliments about
his wonderful send-of[ - "HUGGING
SUE," LEMOORE,
CAUF.
DEAR HUGGING SUE: Your
husband's funeral was a "love-in" at
the time you needed it most. Read
on:
DEAR ABBY: Two years ago my
best friend "Sara" (who was 13 at the
time) sulfered a major tragedy. Her

father, a long-haired biker in his mid30s,died.

When

we arrM!d for the funeral,

we were shocked to see most of the
adults wearing blue jeans and cut-off'

shirts. Her father had been dressed in
blue jeans, his favorite Harley shirt
and a leather jacket. His friends left
mementos (like a remote control) in
his coffin and cheerfully chatted
· about the good times.There were few
tears.

.

At first I thought it was improper. i
haw since changed my mind. I now
know that's exactly how her dad
would have wanted it. He wanted to
go out with a bang - and he sure
did!- AI I IE IN ST. CHARLES,
MO.
DEAR AI I IE: More . power to
him. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Hugs and
acknowledgments can be given any-

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

time, anyplace. After the viewing,
prior to my husband's service, a
mother held out her baby, who rook
my finger in her list. r knew then that,
yes, life does go on.
Every person in artendance took
away a little bit of my pain. I couldn 't
begin to tell you what they were
wearing.
CENTRAL
NEBRASKA READER
. DEAR' READER: I understand.
A woman named Patricia in Cincinnati related that she wore a bright
green dress for her husband's funeraL
A few days before his sudden death ·
he had admired it on display and said
it would look even better on her. She
wore it knowing his spirit was with
her, whispering. "You made the right
choice!" And, indeed, she did if it
brought her comfort.
Dedr Abby is 1uritle&gt;1 by Pauliue
Phillips dlld daughterJemmt Pllil/ii&gt;S.

•

ACADEMIC NEWS

J

Uf can hope new drng czar

-has relaxed his past position
: •Los Aaplet T"ames, on drug czar choia: President Bush's.
:drug czar nominee once told Congress that it should yank_all
presctiption privileges fi:om docton who recommend me~cal
. marijuana for their patients. The recent Supreme Court ruling.
· barring doctors fi:om prescribing medical marijuana, would
. give him authority to act on his convictions.We can only hope
that John P.Walters has become less extreme since he voiced his
:hard-line views to Congress in 1996, when he was a mere
·Republican drug policy consultant. _. ..
Bush's decision to appoint Walten to the nation's top "'1-tidrug post is baffling given the president's clear undersun~g
: that the nation's drug problem can best be solved by reducmg
· demand at home, not by eradicating supply fi:om abroad.
In recent years Walters has railed more loudly than anyone in
Washington against dmg treatment programs. He has called
them "the latest manifestation of the liberals' conunitment to a
'therapeutic state' in which the govermnent serves as. ~e ~nt
_ of personal rehabilitation." ... As a deputy to drug czars William
J. Bennett and Bob Martinez fi:om 1989 to 1993, Walters
became known for his preoccupation with drug seizures, military aid and other national security dimensions of dmg policy.
. Perhaps now that he will be in charge of a $19-billion bud. get, Walten will moderate his convictions. ... .
.
California physicians who recommend medical marijuana to
nauseated, emaciated cancey patients should not have to . fear
that federal agents will bust down their do~rs. •

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, June 11, the 162nd day of2001. There are
203 days left in the year.
Today's Highlights in History:
· On June 11,1776, the Continental Congress formed a committee to draft a Declaration of Independence fi:om Britain.
On this date:
.. .
.
in 1509, England's King Henry VIII married Cathf:[ine of
Aragon.
·
· .
.
·
In 1770, Capt. James Cook, commander of the British ship
Endeavour, discovered the Great Barrier Reef off Australia by .
running onto it.
In 1942, the United States and the Soviet Union signed a
lend-lease agreement to aid the Soviet war effort ;.n Wo,rld War
II.
j

'

Scliolanh•
awarded

HENTOFF'S VIEW ·

This is the way to niqke our public schools work
I've been ~iring and writing . u t

expect each child to learn. The school
schools fur some 40 years. Once in a
.. ' wOrks, he says, because it has committep
while, I find someone who has ~nted
teachers. "They come in early and stay
the wheel and discavered how to get all
late. The teachers go with them to colregardless of the income
leges. Some have gone in their own pock- ·
children to
or education of their parents, and regardets for supplies. ... Teachers here will do ·
less of whether the children have only one
everything they can to ma1ce sure kids are
successful."
parent at home.
t0
1
A current reinventor of the wheel of
A senior who had been in a.high schoo
learning is Dr. Gregory Hodge, the prin~
outside New York City explained the succipal of the-Frederick Douglass Ac:ulepty
COLUMNIST
cess ofthe .school-- and his own success
in central Harlem, a predominandy black
there -- ·succincdy: "They want you to
and Hispanic area ofNewYpr_k City. .
learn here.''
·
.
1 was iJ-Ot surprised w"e? 1 read a story _ There welf no e'Xeuses for not turning in . I have been in schools at which princi;
about his sc~ool earlier this year in Th~ the' 'work. At trle ·Frederick Douglass · pals are seldom seen because they don t
New York Times because I once wrote a Academy. the sniqents have four hours of want ~ take responsibility for problems
book _ "Does Anybody Give a Damn: homework a nighl.
that anse. And I know teachers who have
Nat Hentoff on Education" (Knopf, 1977)
The students there take Japanese and enabled. kids to learn in their classrooms,
_ about schools in "disadvantaged" Latin in middle school and can switch to but worry about sending the students on
neighborhoods that also expected all of French or Spanish · in high school. At to reachers who are ~;onvinced that chi!- .
their students to learn.And they did learn. Boston Latin, we. ~ to, take Latin and dten fi:om mean streets and homes WithOf the 1,100 ~liidl:nts at' the Frederick GreeiC as well as .&amp;neriqm history. The out books can ·learn only so _much.
Douglass Academy, a public school, ~0 kids at Frederick , Douglass can take
And I remember a president ~ed
petcen't are b4ck and 19 percen~ ~. H•s- advanc~d ,placeme~t cou~es not onJr, in Clinton w~o spe~t a lot of ti~e f~cus~ .
panic. Some come fi:om homes far below American history, ~ut also in calculus and ?n aff¥'~nve acnon to get nunor.lty kids ,
the poverty line. In a few of those homes, physics. I tlunked beginning physics.
·mto college. For _the most part, he •gnored
Moreover, the; students at Frederick the students who never get cl9se to gomg ..
one or both parents are dtug addicts, Sev' enty~two percent of the st1Jdents are e~gi- Douglas~. mentm;.rc;~entary-school chi!- to college because of principals, teachers
ble for free lunch. .
dren at the puJ&gt;~F,- school next door,:'Fhe and-school boards who do not expect all .
TJi~ dropout rate is 0.3 percent. If a stu- idea," Dr. H~ told The New York kids to learn, and so do not demand that
dent doesn't shQW up at a tutoring session, Times, "is to show students that they have they do.
his teacher calls his mother, father, or responsibilities to the Harlem community.
At a NewYork City school board meetother care~ver. Every s~dent is expected ~d tho/· are ee'P~;ted to be leaders and ing y~arS ago, I he~!? a black pare~t accuse
to go IO college.-As The New York Times help Harlem grow. .
. · the silent offi~ials. ~en you fail, whe~ _
repOrted,"InJuneoflastyear,114students •. NearJ3.osto~l'Lalln Schools, there w~ everybody fails my child, what happe~ .
graquated and 113 attended colleges, efemen~ry ~cJ!:ool kids , who, Without Nothing. Nobody gets fired. ~o?,Ung . ·
somJ going to [vy League or comparable ~entormg,. didO~ have much of a chanc~ · ~ppens to nobody, except_ my child.
. schook." The ) 1~th stu4ept was;accepted ~· believe that1diey. .could someday g~· to .. He w~ torn be~een gnef and t;age. So
by the Naval Academy.
college. But .our .Boston Latm prmctpal are many ~encan parents these days. At
During the Great Depression, I went to _didn't s~~~ us · out to be part of a larger the F£edenck Douglass .Academy, parents
a similar ·public school. All of us were responstbility.
.
se~ thet~ children grow m every way. And
So how ' come Frederic~ Dou~ass It IS a pubhc school.
expected to go to college. Most of us were
poor.At 'the Boston Latin S( hool, as at the Academy does what a pubhc school ts
(Nat Hentqff Is a mttiot~ally renowned
Frederick bouglas Academy, there . was supposed to.do --lift all boats? The pnnfirm, but not abusive, diScipline. And we cipal. who. reads every one of the I ,100 authority on the First Amendment a11d the Bill
had three hours of homework a night. report canis, demands that hts teachers ~Rights.)

Jearn;

Nat
H en £f

In 1947, the government announced the end of household
· and institutional sugar rationing, to take effect the next day.
In 1963. Buddhist monk Quang Due immolated himselfon
· 111 •J •v
a Saigon street to protest the government of South Vietnam~se
.'W},t.S, Hl~G,TON
President Ngo Dinh Diem.
,
In 1970, the United States presence in Libya came to an ~nd '
as the last detachment left Wheelus Air Base.
In 19_78,Joseph Freeman Jr. became the first black priest
ordained in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SaintS .
In 1979, actor John Wayne died at age 72.
BY CM.VIN WOOD)NARD
retary Donald H. Rumsfeld taking the case
"The Bush administration, I think,
In 1985, Karen Ann Quinlan, the comatose patient wl1ose
'WASHINGTON -. · President Bush to allies and Russians this week in advance learned fiom the Kyoto experience, where
case prompted a historic right-to-die court decisi9n,_died pr ;
seemed
to !;Ike a deep"breaih on foreign of Bush's ttip · to' Europe. The president you dOn't just charge in and say, 'Here's the
Morris Plains, N.J., at age 31.
,
,, , ·
policy when he came iltto office. North leaves Mbriday to visit five countries in six way we're going to do it:" Gordon said.
In 1986, a divided Supreme Court struck down a PenrtsylvaKorea could wait. Middle East negotia- days. 1
.
"Instead, they said, 'Let's talk."'
.
nia abortion law, while reaffirming its 1973 decision establishtions?
N&lt;?t
yet.
Meeti~
Russia's
leader?
•
Conclude,d,
fiom
a
scientific.
report
he
Ivo
Daalder,
another
European
affairs
.ing a constitutional right to abortion.
. ., .
had n;fliiested, that ,.~e now had "a ba•is ?f ·chief ,froJ;ll the , previous administration, ,
Ten years ago: President Bush authorized $1.5 billion in agri;,.r · 'f'?l!ft:s the rush?
If the world has beeri )V'I1ting for Bush ,sound !cien~e·~ ml':l:l which to act a~nst said B4sh has begun treating Russia with
cpltural credit . guarantees for the Soviet Union. Actress Julia "
to
exhaie, th~t wait maY be i;ver. ,'
· ' global ~r'?ffig. as-spokesman Art Aetsc~- newfound .respect ,in preparation for his
Roberts and actor Kiefer Sutherland called off their wedding ,
- Prompted by violence in the Middle er put it. Bush had earlier walked away meeting with President Vladimir Putin in
three days before it was to have taken place.
.
·
East, policy reviews at home and now his . fi:orp ~e umatifie~ Kyoto treaty on global a week.
.
Five years ago: Closinl?; a congressional career that had lasted
1
first&lt;
·trip
overseas,
Bush·
is
enga~ng
the
v.r.ji'rriing,
:md
he
faces
pressure
!lorn
:lluro"Russia
is
no
longer our t!nemy, and · ·
three-and-a-half decades, Bob Dole said goodbye to the Sen• ' •
V,nited Sqtes ·more vigorously in ma,trers p~an l~aders to propose a meanmgful alter- therefOre we shouldn't be locked into a
: ate to begin in earnest l;Iis campaign for the presidency.
.,
One year ago: A day after the death of Syrian President Hafez
wliere he had maintained dist;ptce..
nany~,
.
.
. .
Cold War mentality that says we keep the
spaGe
of
a
few
days,
Bush:
·
•
1\lfirmed
through
seruor
offiaals
that
peace
by blowing each· -other up:• Bush
ln'
the
Assad, his son, Bashar, was unanimously nominated by Syria's
• Sent Clf). Director George Tenet to lhf' t,Jt;nted S~tes ~ not abandon the said.
ruling Baath Party to suc~eed his father. An unruly group of _
U.S. allies are skeptical of Bush's missile
men doused -.yomen with water and groped them in .New .. , !=Q~ Middl~ East to reprise,his role fi:om the Balkans, despite ~artier pronounceme~ts
10
York's Central Park; some of the assaults were captured on
.,f;;lin"?~. '~dminis~tiop .~ a ?Iediator: tltat. c;op~ s~ould be reduced there defense plan. Some worry it would siart a·.
: home video. Gustavo Kuerten of Brazil won his second French
. :Jlmets JOID' meellng Fnday With Israeli sho~t. ~rd\' · ~ •·
.
. - . new round. of weapons proliferation
•'and Pales·u·-'·- security chie"- was the
"oretgn policy veterans of the Clinton
.
· ..
· Open tide, beating Magnus Norman 6-2, 6-3,2-6, 7-6 (6).
'""''
. .
"
·
· ~ · . . '.
·'
because adversaries nught devote themhi~estlevel of medianort brought to bear a~trallol!,i"'hQ naturally do not agree . 1 . b ild'
· il
bl ffc ilin
Today's Birthdays: Opera singer Rise Stevens· is 88. Actor~
'on
the
tWo
p:irties
by
the
Bush
administrawith
some
ofBush's
goals,
say
he
was
tone:.
ves
~old
u
t~g
IDIS~
es
_capa
hie
I~ 0
producer Richard Todd is 82. Author ·william Styron is' 76.
''tion.
,
deaf to iiJterilatioljal sensibilities during his b eils. eth -firs• .an_e ecnve s e can
Actor Gene Wilder is 66. Actor Chad Everett is 64. Comedian
•
S
'd
hi
drni
·
·
·
·
ha
·
fini
h
d
early months
in office.
u"W'
t 10h Cli
e t P1ace.
Johnny Brown is 64. Former auto racer Jackie Stewart is 62.
at
s a m,stranon, vmg s e campaign an"-.,1.;.
~~
I hink 1h E
11
a policy review, would resume talks with
Bush minimized Russia, spoke dismisnton, 1
_e urope;
ansJ
Country singer Wilma Burgess is 62. Si~ger Joey Dee is 61.
· iles and other mili- sively of vario•"
to persuade
.
No rth Korea over mtss
. Actress Adrienne Barbeau is 56. Rock musician Frank Beard
..,.. treaties and made clear he felt
himthey had da0chance
·1 " h actually
d
"b
·
th
tary threats. In March, he'd snubbed both would avoid investing the country heavily
. not to
~· , e 531 • ecause e
· (ZZ Top) is 52. Rock singer Donnie Vari Zandt (.38 Special) is
Secretary of State Colin Powell and South in matters not flirecdy tied to U.S. interests a~s.tratt~~ dido t really seem con49. Actor Peter Bergman is 48. Football Hall of Farner Joe
VIDCed Itself. _
.
Korea -which wants reconciliation with or ripe' for intervention.
. · Montana is 45. Country musician Smilin'Jay McDowell (BR5.r:-row. he Sat~ Europe knows Bush IS
the North- in refusing to'pick up nego- . That may be changing. at least in subde
; 49) is 32. Rock musician Dan Lavery (Tonic) is 32. Actor
tiations
left
over
fi:om
the
C~ton
adminw..ys,
said
Philip
Goflion,
who
directed
senous
and will probably . have to be.
Joshua Jackson is 23.
.
istration .
European affairs, fpr }i'resident Clinton's · accommodated m some fashion .
Thought for today: "It is impossible to defeat an ignorant
,
Began
.
the
hard
sell
of
his
proposed
National Securji)' Council in the mid(Calvin l%odW&lt;lrd covers the federal govemman in argument."' - William Gibbs McAdoo, American govmi«il~ riefem;, "'*"'· with Defense Sec- 1~.
mentjorThe Associated Press.)
Prnmpnt nffir.iol 11Rii)- 1Q41\
\J
1·

TQDAY ·

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Bush quickens the pa£e on foreig_n p~Ucy activity· .
·-·

... "'

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l.

y.s..

!!

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POMEROY -'- Matthew
Jacob Hosken, a fourth-grader
at Eastern Elementary, was
recendy chOsen to receive a
four-year full tuition scholarship to the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College.
The scholarship was awarded during an academic a~
ceremony at Eastern Elementary School by Jake Bapst, Project CHAMP of Rio Grande
College.
Every year, an honor roll student's name is pulled fi:om all
the names of the students'
honored at the awards ceremony. Hosken, 10, was the ·first
student to which a four-year
scholarship has been off'ered.
The scholarship was for one
year in the past.
In order to maintain the
scholarship. Hosken is expected to graduate fi:om high
school with at leas~ a 3.5 grade
point average (GPA) and score
highly on the American College 'lest.
·
Hosken al~y has planl to
- put the scholanhip tD good use
by becoming a zoologist in the
future.

Advisory
POMEROY- A boU advisoty issued to water customers
in the Village of Pomeroy has
been lifted.

Meetin1 set
ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbuty Township Trustees will
hold a special meeting on
Thursday _at 7 p.m., at the
township building.

Foreclosure
filed
POMEROY -

An action

~and

there is a large room
where soil is mixl:d with fertilizer and minerals suitable for
flower production. They
detailed the process liom the
planting of the seeds to the
four-day incubation period to
the transfer to .one of the
greenhouse where temperature and humidity are · controlled so that they grow into
seedlings ready for transplanting in six W~:ela.
From there they are transferred to the transplanting
room and prepared to go into
flats and then are returned to ·
the growing rooms until time
for distributing to retail stores
or being sent out to stores in:
12 other states.
They said seeds can begin as
early as October and continue
up through May. They have 11
temperature controlled ti'Ucla
that are used throughout the
season fur transportation.
The owners said the business
is now preparihg for flowers
!Iowen for a. J~e 23 show in
South Carolina. Members
were presented dragon · wing
begonia before leaving the
greenhouse.
.The group had lunch at Judy
Kay's Restaurant following the
tour. During a brief business
meeting. it was noted Pauline
Atkins and Marjorie Rice
attended the recent county
meeting at the library. Vicki
Nottingham is the new contact chairman for 2001-2003.
Programs for the fall tlower
show were distributed and the
program wa5 by the Rutland
Friendly Gardene1;5 on herbs
and herbal teas. Rutland Garden Club served refreshments.
The traveling prize for June
will be furnished by Donna
Jenkins. Atkins and Jenkins
planted flowers in the mini
parks. The gardening hint suggested planting pole beans next
to sunflowers so the beans will
climb the sunflowers for support.

SCHOlARSHIP WINNER - Matthew Jacob. Hosken, fQurthgrader at Eestem Elementary, was recently chosen to receive
a four·year scholarship to the University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College. (Submitted photo)

Road, Bernice Swartz, treated;
8:26 a.m., Red Hill Road,
usjsted by Rutland, Catherine
YOUng. Holzer Medical Cen~
rer;
6:34 p.m., HMC Clinic,
Mary Roush, HMC.
POMEROY
9: 18 a.m., Foodland Market,
Fteda Roach, · Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
10:21 p.m., Second Street,
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in Benny Spean, HMC.
Meijp County Common Pleas
Court by Kevin ADen Wyman
Taylor, 28, Middlep!)rt, and
·shannon Michelle ·Klein, 23,
New Haven, W.Va., and to
RUTLAND. Rudand
Robert Lee Johnson, 20, and Garden Club members took
Stacy Corine Wood, 16, both their annual tour of Bob's
of Pomeroy.
Greenhouse at Mason, W.Va.,
recendy.
Scott Barnitz and his father
were the tour guides for the
POMEROY- Units of the group. The Barnitz family has
Meigs Emergency Service been in the business for 31
answered five calls for assis- years with all six sons of Mr.
tance on Friday. Units and Mrs. Bob Barnitz being
involved in the business.
responded as follows:
· CENTRAL DISPATCH
The owners said the green6:56 a.m., Childtens Home houses cover more than nine
for foreclosure has been filed in
Meijp County Common Pleas
Court by Barbara Payne, Middleport, ' against Randy ';E.
King, . Coolville, an.ging
default on a land insrallment
contract, with $6,817.18 outstanding.

lssulclllcenHS

Clubtoun
a•eenhouse

Units log calls

'

.

'

Named to
"Who's Who'
RACINE - Ctystal Coleman of Racine, a Southern
High School graduate and
junior at Berea College in
Berea, Ky., has been named to
"Who's Who Among Students
in American Universities and
Colleges,"
"Who's Who" recognizes
junior and senior-level students of high acaemic standing who have demonstrated
excellence in character, leadership,
participation
in
extracurricular activities and
,service to others.
She is the daughter ofDavid
and Michaele Kucsma of
Racine.

Named to list
COOLVILLE -John Jackson of Coolville w~ named to
the dean's list· at the Lancaster
branch of Ohio University for
the winter quarter.

EamsJ.D~
COLUMBUS - Roberta
Caldwell
recendy
received her
Juris Doctorate
degree
fi:om Capital
University
Law School,
at ceremonies
-in Columbus.
Clklwell
She · plans

to practice in the area of education law.
She is a 1993 graduate of
Southern High School, and a
1997 graduate of Kent State
University with a degree in
political science.
She is the daughter of
Howie Caldwell of Tuppers
Plains and Larry and Christy
Lavender of Syracuse, arid the
granddaughter of Clyde and .
Mildred· Donahue of Vinton
and Howard and Marvene
Caldwell ofTuppers Plains.

Included in

yearbook
CHILLICOTHE - Jacob
D. Blake of
Chillicothe
has
. been
awarded the
United States
Achi evement
Academy's
United States
National
Honor Roll
llllce
Award.
He ·attends
the Unioto School, and will
appear in the United States
Achievement Academy's Official Yearbook, which is published nationally.
He also received two outstanding citizenship and academic awards at the school.
He is the son of David and
Tammy Blake of Chillicothe
and and the grandson of Marvin and Eva Milliron and John
Blake of Middleport, and the
late Sylvia-Blake.

.

Rain fails to dampen annual Catfish Tournament
BY PAM WIUIAMION
OVP NEWS STAFF ·

MASON,W.Va.· The overcast day was 61led with friends,
laughter, a little rain and a lot of
fish as Bend Area CARE held
its 11th annual catfish tournament in Mason last weekend.
"A little rain never hurt anybody," former State Sen. Bob
Dittmar said laughlingly as he
made his way down to Mason's
new courtesy boat dock to take
p~rr in the official dock dedicatipn ceremony, part of the daylong event.
The boat dock was completed last September and is just
one phase in Mason city and
CARE's multi-step plan to renovate Lotti Jenk's Memorial
Park.
Dittmar and Sen. Oshel Craigo, who was unable to attend,
were honored with .plaques,
recognizing their effoits in
helping provide funding for the
dock. ·
"All these things come about
by community ·effort, group
participation and everyone
coming together;• Dittmar said.

..

"It is taxpayers' money and we come here:•
were .just in the position we
Babbitt's daughter Emily. hi1
could bring it back to the Bend fishing partner, summed up the
area."
weather on the river in one
·
k
Sponsors Co r par ~mprove- word, "Cold."
ment projects include the
Contestants were fi:om West
Seabees, the Benedum Founda- Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky.
.tion, American Electric Power, Pennsylv~nia, Kentucky and
Great Kanawha Resource, Maryland and included catfish
Conservation and D~velop- clubs like Ohio Hills ofVinton,
ment and Western Soil Conser- · Ohio, }4nawaha Valley fi:om
vation.
Buffalo and the National MasThe new dock came ·in rers fi:om Portsmouth, Ohio.
handy Saturday for the 1'93 parWhile the fishermen braved
ticipants in the 2001 tourna- the currents on the rain swollen
ment.
river, kids dodged raindrops irt
Some fishermen arrived Fri- the park as they took part ·in
&lt;!aY and sl'ent the night in their watermelon eating contests,
cars to be sure they were up watermelon seed spitting conbright and early to stan fishing .tests, casting contests and even a
Saturday morning, despite driz- fi:og jul)'lp contest.
zling rain. _
· "It's nice for the kids, it's fun
."It wasn't bad out there, but it and he loves it:• Brooke Ely
took a lot of weight to keep said, referring to her 4-year old
your bait down on the bot- son Brett. "The frog jump was
tom;• fisherman Red Babbitt his favorite part."
said after returning fi:om his
Bend Area volunteers could
afternoon on the walet. "It be spotted through the day
would've been nice if the sun helping with all of the events,
.was shining but it was fun l!'lY- from marking watermelson
way. Bend Area do a great job, seed landing spots to weighing
they make it a lot of fun to in catfish.
,.

,,

'

"We want to help the com'munity;' Tim Roush, Bend
Area CARE volunteer said.
"Youth and hardship cases are
99.9 percent of what we do."
All proceeds fi:om Saturday's
event went to CARE's Chris~­
rria5 for Kids campaign.
..... .

"'· '

••

"''

1 I lVI I

• • •,

•

""

Federal Consumer Proiectlon hu confirmed the accuracy of the fuel saving described in this advertisement.

Device May Increase Gas Mileage by 22%
BOStoN - Nati01181 Fuelsaver
C01p. of BoaiOn haa developed a
low colt automotive IICCelsory
called the Platin1111 Gu Saver
which ia glilllilteed 10 increase
gil dlileage by 22% while
meetiag all emission a1111clards.
: With a aimple connettlon to a
VliCIIIUII·Une, the Oaa Saver adds
nilcroscopic quantities of
platinum to the air-fuel mixture
.eatcring the ensine.
· Platinum has the wtique ability
10 make non·buming fuel bum,
With platinum in the flame zone,
you increase the percentage of
fuel burning in the engine from
68% of each salton to 90% of
each gallon, a 22% increase.
Since unbumt fuel leaving an

engine is pollution, this 22% of
each gallon would nonnally bum
when it reaches the platinum of
the catalY.tic convener.
Unfonunarely, the converter's
platinum bums this fuel in the
tail-pipe;· where the heat and
energy produced from burning
this fuel cannot be harnessed to
drive your vehicle.
But when the Gas Saver adds
platinum 10 the air-fuel mixture,
22% more of each gallon
bums inside the engine so that
22% fewer gallons are required
to d,rive the same distance.
After studying this process for
five yean, the government
concluded: "Independent testing
shows sreater fuel savings with

the Platinum Gas Saver than the
22% claimed by the developer."
In addition to this government
study. the Gas Saver has received
patents for cleaning out carbon
and raising octane, making
premium fuel unnecessary for
most vehicles .
Joel Robinson, the developer.
commented: "We have sold
almost a half million Gas Savers.
To our surprise, as many people
buy the Gas Saver because it
extends engine life (by cleaning·
out the abl'a§ive cwbon deposits)
as buy it to increase gas mileage
or to raise octane ."

For funher information call:
1·890-LESS·GAS
1·800·537-7427

•

�'
•

Monday, June 11, 2001

K-Mm 400 results, 1\ye BJ
Diamond Round"l'&gt; A1gt 86

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

•

PaceBl
.............
,_. 11,-1

Mom\Y's
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM

Evening Dinners

11

/

'

CountJy Fried Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Mixed Vegetables
While or Brown Bread
Peach 1-(alvaa

attendance, the Center will be
issuing "auendance" cards to
participants. After
the
attendance card is punched nine
times, the tenth one will be "on
us". We also bave planned ·some
special monthly events such as a
SO's Rock &amp; Roll night, a
summer cookout, hot summer
nights, etc. So remember...on
Tuesday and Thursday. the
Senior Center is the place to be.

The Senior Center Evening
Meal pi'OJtllll is a areat place to
greet old and new friends and
enjoy a good meal. We are
pleased that the evening dinner
service hcs bl:en operating for

four years.
Beginning June I , 2001, the
susgested donation for he
evening meal is $5.00. To make
the evenina meals even more of
a bargain and to encourage

JUNE2001

'

18
Lemon Baked Chicken
AuGratin Potatoes
California Vegetables
While or er-n Bread
Purple Plums

Chicken ri Noodlaa
Perfection Salad
Whits or Brown Bread
Cantaloupe

Ham loaf

Sweet Potatoes
Seasoned Wax Beans
White or Brown Bread
Grapefruit Sections .

.

19
Chef's Salad
with Ham and Cheese
Tomato Soup
Roll
Banana

20
Scrambled Eggs
Hash Brown Potatoes
Pancakes with syrup
SausageUnk
'
Orange Juice

Broccoli Soup
Roast Beef Sandwich
with Tomatoes
White or Brown Bread
Fruit Juice • Fruit Pie

S~ory Pork Roast
Baked Potalo
Buttered Mixed VegetSbles
Flaky Croissant
Jello Ala Orange

THURSDAY
12
Grilled Burgers wilh
lhe works
French Frles
Onion Rings
Rootbeer Float
Strawberrv Pie

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

Swedish Meatballs
Potato Wedges
Cole Slaw
Bllcult
Banana Split

•

21

28
Star Spangled Beef Pepper
Steak over White Rice
Striped Carrots
Red Skinned Potatoes
Dinner Roll
Blueberry Cobbler

SPECIAL EVENT
THURSDAY, JUNE 14 ·SO's ROCK AND ROLL NIGHT
The Swingin' Seniors dance team in poodle skirts. will present their
·
music from the SO's Show.
TUESDAY, JUNE 19- Blood Pressure check 4: 15· 4:45.

The Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center i~ open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m .
until 4:30 p.m. Regularly
scheduled activities held
.j tbtiUI&amp;!ls!ut ..!J1L~,!lek include
sewing, quilting, poOl; bingo,
· cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knitting Circle meets on
y.'edn~sday from 10:00 a.m.
until noon.
Older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you can enjoy the
regular meal. A Ia carte items are
individually priced. The
suggested donation for the noon
meal is $1.50.

Ballroom Dance
Class
There is still time to register
for the ballroom dance classes.
Gerald Powell will teach
beginning ballroom dancing
classes at the Center on the
following dates from 7:00p.m.~:00 p.m.- June 7, 14, 28, JulyS
&amp; 12. The cost is $50.00 for the
5-week class and is limited to 10
couples. Call Patty Pickens at
992-2161 to sign up. Leather
shoes are required for the class.

·Fun and Games
with Sc.ott
Scott McKnight from the
VMH Behavioral Health unit
will be here on the following
dates to play games.
Come and have fun with us on
June 12 &amp; '26. All games begin
ap1 :00 a.m. and prizes will be
given to the winners.

Sweatshirt
Jacket Class

•

•

. You can learn how to
embroider a beautiful garden
pattern on your own sweatshirt
jacket at the Meigs Senior
Center. Dates for the classes are
June 7, 14 &amp; 28 from 6:00p.m.·
8:00 p.m. Pam Shatz is the
instructor and the cost for all of
the classes is $20.00.
Call Patty Pickens at 992-2161
for more information or to
register for the classes.

Vegetable

LONDON (AP) -

In a
major break with tradition,
there will be 32 seeded players - instead of 16 - at this
year's Wimbledon tennis
championships.
The move was announced
· Monday by The All Englmd
Club in a bid to assuage cbycourt experts who claim
Wimbledon's seeding policy
discriminates against them in
favor of grass-court specialists.
The new formub will be
adopted by all four Grand
Slam tournaments - Wimbledon and the U.S., Australian and French Opens.
Under the new system, the
32 seeds will be the top 32
pbyers on the ATP Entry System rankings and the WTA
Tour ratlkings. The order of
the seeds will be artanged on
a surface-based system.

2!,

•

Chicke11 Stir Fry ,
•
on Rice
~I·
White or Brown Bread •
Mandarin Oranges •
Spice Tomato cake

Cindy Wood from Jackson,
· Ohio will talk on the importani:e
of having your quilts appraised
for insurance purposes and as a
family heirloom. She will s~
at 10:30 a.m. on June 21.
~
Ms. Wood will do privale
appraisals . of your quilt fori
insurance · purposes for $20.00
per quilt. You will receive ' a
certified document. Please call
Patty Pickens at 992-2161 •to
schedule a time. .
:
At 1:00 p.m. there will be; a
workshop on embroidery. Pirn
Shultz will work with beginners
to learn
the basics of
.
cmbro1dery.
,
'
The Pomeroy Library will
have a displ'!y on quilts and ar;!a
residents arc enco11ragcd l o
bring in their favorite quilt {o{
display. Please ~all Patty ~tQ ·
make arrangements for space. ~

Schroeder wins
NFL Senior
Classk

.

•

Activity
Schedule

Watennelon

Let's Talk Quilt$

26

,

Wimbledon to
have J2 seeds
Instead of 16

,.;,oad Pudding Cake

Oven Fried Chicken
Seasoned Greens Beans .
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
ColeSlaw
Dinner Roll
ADDle Cherrv CrisD

Earthquake Cake

Golden Baked Chicken •
Bullered Uma Beans •
•
Bow Tl8 Pasta
White or Brown Bread

"•

19
Seven Layer Salad
Garlic Bread

15

.

25
26
28
21
Chicken ·Noodle Soup
Hungarian Pork CuUet
Hamburger Patty
Scalloped Potatoas
Mashed Potatoes
Cheese· Tomato Slice Peanulbutter Sandwich
with Ham, Turkey and
Sauerkraut
.Mariilllled Black
Crunchy Garden Slaw
Cheese casserole
WilMa.or Brown Bread
Bean Salad
Arabian Peach Salad
Cucumbers &amp; Onions
Tropical Mixed Fruit
Bun· Melon
Combread • cantaloupe

14

HIGllliGH'IS

21
22
Spaghetti with Meat
Hot Turkey Sandwich
~ •
Tossed Salad
with Mashed Potatoes
Italian Vegetables s-t &amp; Sour Gr8en Beans
Garlic Bread
•
Cranbeny Sauce
Pineapple Rings
Cinnamon Applesauce~ .
4

TUESDAY

.

14

13

12

Meigs Senior Fit and Firm Relay for Life Team

and

A total of $1,554 was raised by the team from the Meigs Senior Center who participated in the
American Cancer Society Relay for Life event. Walkers who participated were:
Mich~lle·
Fro~t row, left to rjght. Brittany Parsons, Sue Smith, Sonia Parsons, Peggy Bole, Lilly Kennedy.
Join Michelle .Garretson (Qr
Hal Kneen will present a Debb1e Jones, Thelma Jeffers, Joy Bentley, Maxine Little, Frank Ryther, Peggy Moore and Bette painting classes at the Senior
program on local vegetable Hobstetter.
Center. Classes will begin on
growers- and" the · 'Pr'oduce · ' Second Rdw: ·EIIie Blae1tnar. Clarice Krautter. Mary Bowen, Donna Jean Smith, Marianne Circle, I unc 19 and will continue for ·~
industry in our area on June 14.
weeks. The cost is $7 .00
The program begins at 11:00 Evelyn Wood, ~thr¥n Johnson, Charlotte Erlewine and Bill Little.
Back row- Bob Ord, Jack Handley, Ray Oliver, Dan Smith, Catherine Shenefield, Janet Peaveley, class and you will need to· blly
a.m. Hal will also sil)i some
your brushes.
""
so~gsand you can join in. . ' Sh~n Ours~ Jan Cleek, Harley Johnson, Roberta Murphy, and Michelle Buckley.
The beginner's , class ll
Not picture_&lt;~: Rita Slavfn, John_Bentlcy, Tammy Queen, Patty Pickens, Pam Davis. Shayne Davis. scheduled from 1:00 p.m.- 3'~
Bchnda Wellington and Leo Wellington. Thank you to C.C. Caldwell Trucking of Gallipolis for their p.m. &amp; the advanced class will
generous donation and support.
·
be held from 5:45 p.m.- 7:45 ,
p.m.
Mark your calendar for I une
28 if you celebrate a binhday
Call Patty Pickens at 992-21 ~ 1 ·
during the month. Scott
for more information or to
The Arthritis Support Group
McKnight will sing for your
register f~r the classes.
·:
Wednesday, July 18- a trip to
entertainment at the June 28 will meet on June IS in the
Other trips available with Park
••
.
conference room at the ·Meigs La Comedi·a Dinner theater and Tours are:
party.
Senior Center from I 0:30- the stage production of "The
August 17-19· to Lancaster, Diabetes Support Grollfl ,
.
'
Can You Imagine Being 11:30. Sarah McGrew. RN, is Wizard of Oz" with a delicious PA. Includes touring and Nancy Stevens, from Holzer
the coordinator.
buffet dinner. This trip is with "Noah". $330.00 per person.
Medical Center, is the facilitator
Allergic To People?
The Stroke Support Group will Park Tours and 15 people are August 24-26· to Rcfro fof the I:&gt;iabetes Support Group.
meet on June 13 at I :00 in the needed for a pickup in Me.igs Valley, Kentucky for a weekend The J unc meeting will be he1d
(NAPSl-Are you or oomeone conference room at the Meigs County. The cost is $75.00;
of country music. $260.00 per on I unc 2I. The me eli ng will
you know suffering from aymp~
Senior
Center,
Lia
Tipton
is
the
Saturday,
August
11a
trip
to
begin at 10:30 a.m.
•
person.
toma of social anxiety disorder, a
Beckley, WV, with dinner at
eonditjon characterized by an coordinator.
October 4·7- to Pigeon Forge,
intense, persistent fear and avoidThe Caring and Sharing Ryan's Steak House and "The TN and Dollywood Fall
ance of social, work or .perfor- Sup~rt Group meets the fourth Sound of Music" at the outdoor Festival. $390.00 per person.
mance situations? If eo, you are . Thursday of each month at the Theater West Virginia. This trip
November 30- December 2among the estimated 10 million
Meigs
County
Senior
Center
at
is
with
Park
Tours
and
15
·people
Frankenmuth
Christmas
Americana who have this debiliare needed for a pickup in Meigs Wonderland, Michigan. $255.00
1:00 p.m.
Do you have questions about
tating di110rder.
The topic for the June 28 . County. The cost is $50.00.
An awarei'!.ea._ campaign about
investments? If so, you can have
per person.
aoeial anxiety di1order which meeting will be "Pulmonary &amp;
Wednesday, September 26· a
For more information or to a private consultation with
aoked , • Are you Allergic to Peo· Cardiac Rehab" and will be trip to Ripley, a historical Ohio
make reservations, contact Alice Elizabeth Schaad, Investment
pie?" conducted over the laot two
presented
by
Darren
Hayes.
Riv.er
town
in
Brown
County.
Representative with Edwaid
Wamsley at 992-2161.
year8 hao motivated people to seek
Jones and find the answers :to
V1s1t the John
Rankin
house• ·an !
professional help or, at the very
'
'
'
I
least, made them feel l~sa alone,
Underground Railroad Station,
your questions.
·:
according to a survey of' caUero to
view historical homes and sites:
Ms. Schaad will be at tl(e
a toll-free phone line. sponsored aR
and visit the IJJysses S. Otl).nt
part of the campaign by a group of
There wi II not be a Cente~ on June 12 from J'O;QP ·
home
in
Georgetown.
Cunch
is
·~
patient and professional mental
representative from the Social a.m. • 11 :00 a.m.
Have you always wanted to included. The cost is '$50.00.
Appointments
are
neccss~ry
health organizations.
Security Office at the· Meigs
make a quilt? Well, now is your
"It •is very gratifying to leBrn
Sunday, November 18· a trip Multipurpose Senior center for this service. Call Patty
chance to do so. Pam Shultz will to Wheeling for the Statler
that people l!lhO saw the campaign
Pickens at 992-2161 to ma'ke
and called to receive more infor·
teach you how to create a Brothers concert . at Capital during June.
your appointment now.
;
mation felt it improved their project that can be used as a
Music
Hall,
a
dinner
cruise
on
understanding of this disabling
twin size quilt or as a throw. The the Gateway Clipper, and view
condition, and were prompted to
design is an applique flower and the Oglebay Winter Festiv~l of
seek professional support," said
a paper quilt garden. The Lights. This trip is with Park
Mary Guardino, executive director
finished size is 54" x 60".
of Freedom from Fear whlch opon·
Tours and 15 people are needed
Bored the effort along with the
The cost of this class is $40.00 for a pickup in Meigs County.
American Psychiatric Association
which includes everything The cost is $95 .00. ·
and the Anx'iety Dioorder8 AsRoci·
needed
to complete the project.
ation ofAmerica.
'
A thre,~,7 day trip, Oc!ob'r
It
will
' take two classes to 21·23, is schedul!ld
The survey of 960 caller• to the
·we ~re For Yo,u Li~e ~ fia~iJy•
to Naagara
phone line found :
.
complete and the dates arc June Falls at a very good price,' Of
Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds • Power Wheel Chair
• Two out of three(~!%) of
6 &amp; 13 at I: 15 p.m. Call Patty $225.00. This fall foliage trip
thooe surv•yed said they had
Portable Oxygen • Wheel Chairs
• Scooter
Pickens to register for the class, through ohio, Pennsylvania and
heard about social anxiety dloorder
Nebulizers.
•
Patient
Ufts
• Bedside Commodes
New York to Niagara Falls
compared with 38% who said they
CPAP/BIPAP
• Ufl Chairs
• Balh/Safety Items
had never heard of the disorder
includes two nights at a hotel
• Four in five (81%) said they
within walking distance of the
found the social anxiety disorder
Stacey Collins will present a Falls, 2 breakfasts, 2 dinners, a
campaign made them feel they
program on services offered 4-hour tour of the Niagara Falls
were not alone in suffering social
through the Athens Rehab. The area and a visit to the Casino. A
anxiety disorder symptoms
program will be held at the $50.00 deposit is required to .
• Three out of four (78%) Raid
Center of June 12 at 10:30 a.m. reserve a spac.c .
the campaign improved ·their

CLIFTON, NJ. (AP)

Paint with

Produce Program

pei'

Birthday Parties

Support Groups

Senior Center Trips

.

·Questions about
investments -·..

Make a Cozy
Flannel Quilt

Social Security

Rehab Services

understanding of social anxiety

disorder; a Rimilar number (75%)
Raid it helped them identify what
they were feeling
• Three in five (60%) Raid ii
motivated them to oeek additional

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUPPUESand BRACES
HOME OXYGEN an~
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT

.information about the disorder

and 44% said it motivated them to
oeek profesaional help

WE HONOR

SALES &amp; RENTALS
Pill DILIYIIY

446·2206

•• •

..........

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

1.• 100·····2206

141DJ•kl•• .....
hlllpalla, Olila 4563.

. 416 hrllq... ·-~
l•cll-, Olilo 41641

The Daily Sentinel
.

Inside:

740 -446-7283
1-800-458 -6844
Oh

.

.•

'

John Schtoeder's last victory .
in a professional golf tournament came 20 years ago on
another continent.
His only appearance in a
professional playoff was a loss
on the PGA Tour in 1979.
Things changed dramatically for the former TV. analyst
on Sunday.
The 55-year..,old Schroeder
beat Allen Doyle on the second playoff hole to win the
NFL Gol( Crassic, his first pro
victory since the 1981 Rover
Open in Bordeaux, Ftance.

SL VIncent

coach naaued
Zips' aSsistant
AKRON (AP) . Keith
Dambrot, who coached Mr.
Basketball LeBron James and
Akron St.Vincent-St. Mary to
the last t\VO Division lll state
championships, is moving to
.the University of Akron as an
assistant coach.
The Fighting Irish defended their tide March 24 with a
63- 53 victory over Casstown
Miami East. Three days earlier, the 6-foot-6 . 1/2 James
became the first sophomore
to win The Ohio Associated
Press' top basketball honor.
James also was the · Division
III player of the year.
"Leaving such great kids
and one of the best 'high
school programs in the country isn't easy,'' Dambrot said
Saturday in a prepared statement. "But to return to college coaching at my alma
mater and the university
where my mother taught is
special to me.'' ·
Akron coach Dan Hipsher
said . Dambrot's appointment
will be submitted to the university's trustees for approval
June 27.
Dambrot, Akron St. Vincent-St'. Mary's coach the past .
three seasons, will succeed
John Pigatti, who resigned in
May.
"He's a great fit and I'm
extremely excited to have
him on our staff,'' Hipsher
said.
After playing for Akron and
gtaduating with a degree in
management
· in
1982,
Dambrot wept on to get h'is
MBA from the university and
became a graduate assistant in
the basketball program. He
was a· full.:time assistant for
one season before becoming
head ·coach at Tiffin for t\VO
,years.

Reds win three-game Ohio series
CLEVELAND (AP) and
bounced their way. The
pitching wai excellent, the
fielding held up and maybe
best of all, nobody got

Balli dropped in

hurt.
For once this season.
things went right for the
Cincinnati Reds
Rookie Chris Reitsma
shut down Cleveland for 7
2-3 innings to get his first
win in 10 starts, and the ·
Reds finally got some
breaks Sunday in a 9-3 win
over the Indians.
Little has gone Cincinnati's way in 200 I. The
Reds have been without
Ken Griffey Jr. most of the
season, All-Star shomtop
Barry Larkin is one of
eight players on the disabled list, and they haven't
fielded their projected
Opening Day lineup once

all year.
"We got some breaks and
took advantage," Sean
Casey said. "It gave us confidence. We've ·had some
tough times, but these guys
have never quit; Things
went our way today."
Reitsma (3-5) started the
season 2-0, but hadn't won
since April 14 before handling the Indians, who

................,

DR. HOOK - Indians man*r Charlie Manuel, left, comes to the mound to remove starting pitcher Jaret Wright in lhe second :
inning Sunday. (APJ

Meigs
Le ion

Los An les takes
game .t .;ree

sp 1ts pair

I

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Shaquille O 'Neal fouled out,
Kobe Bryant lost his outside touch and Allen Iverson was
standing at the free-thrQW line with a chance to tie Game 3.
The momentum in the NBA Finals was turning Philadelphia's way with just o\rer twO minutes remaining Sunday. and
. a C:,~,s and rude crowd was all set to erupt. Surely, this
::f
r
e the moment when the series turned the 76ers'
One cbng later, that opportunity was lost.
Iverson's foul shot hit the back of the rim and bounced
harmlessly away, and the 76ers squandered what turned out
to be their only chance to tie the gam~ .
Robert Horry scored seven points the rest of the way, and
the Los Angeles Lakers pulled out .a 96-91 victory Sunday
night for a 2-1 lead in the finals.
1
"We have players that make critical plays. We're very
pleased with the way we respond to pressure and the way we
respond to difficult things. There's no playoffS that doesn't
have critical moments,'' Lakers coach Phil Jackson said .
Iverson's missed foul shot was one critical moment, and
the next' one came with 47 seconds left when Horry was left
open and swished a 3-pointer for a 92-88 lead.
Iverson missed a 3-pointer with 38 seconds left, and Raja
Bell missed one siX seconds later, but Tyronn Lue fouled
Iverson on a 3-point attempt, and he made all three free
throws to cut the Lakers' lead to 92-91 with 27.6 seconds
left.
Horry made two from the line with 21.3 left for a 94-91
lead, and Iverson then drove to the basket anc,l had to
attempt a high~arching shot over the outstretched arm of
Bryant. It missed, Horry was fouled on the rebound and
·
made both shots to wrap up the victory.
"I knew that guys were going to come in here, play well,

PIDDCIMDUkln••:S

BYDAVI!HARRII

OVP CORRESONDENT

SKY HIGH- Lakers' Kobe Bryant shoots past Philadelphia
76ers' Dikembe Mutombo in the second half of game 3 of
the NBA finals Sunday II). Philadelphia. (AP)

Jeff Gordon wins Kmart 400
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - Don't into the pits on th e final stop, Gordon
look now, but Jeff Gordon is back on fell from second to 1Oth with only 25
top in NASCAR.
laps left in the rat e.
Gordon moved to the head of the
Rudd, who had tire problems of his
· 'I,Vinston Cup standings by overcoming own, also made a second stop and came
a series of obstacles Sunday in the out right behind him in 11th.
Kmart 400 and giving Hendrick
They zigzagged th eir way through
Motorsports its JOQth win.
the field with Gordon running
It was the second consecutive win for three- wide at times and Rudd follow Gordon, who took·a 26- point lead over ing - and were right behind leader
Dale Jarrett by beating Ricky Rudd Sterling Marlin. when a cautio n came
out on lap 189.
with a pass on the final lap.
1
"I only know one way and that's to
"I've seen him do a lot of things over
go for it," Gordon said. "When people the years that have made me shake my
ask me what it is I love about racing, I head," said crew chief Robbie Loomis.
say winning. It's the only thing I like to . "But he made some gripping moves
do."
out there to get back in it that I couldGorddn proved that at Michigan n't believe."
· International Speedway with gutsy driGordon took over the lead with a
ving to overcome a bad final pit stQp, fantastic jump on the restart to pass
't\VO restarts and an -intense duel with Marlin in Turn I on lap 194.
Rudd.
Then Gordon had to survive ano th er
When loose lug nuts forced him back restart when Shawna Robinson, the

"f ~ I
~

II

I

••

'"

-~ '

•

•

'

. I

I

'\

first woman in a Winston C up race in
12 years, brought out the seventh caution flag of the race with a spin in Turn

2.
The race went green with four laps to
go, and G o rdon and Rudd began their
stirring duel.
Rudd m ade his move coming out of
Turn 4 with one lap to go. His Ford
went high on the track and looked past
Gordon, then changed direction by
sliding low and passing G ordon's
1
Chevrolet on the inside in ches before
· the finish line.
Gordon wasted no time re taking the
lead, sweeping up high on th e track in
Turn I to pass Rudd. He th en drifted
down th e track to block R.udd fro m
making another move and' held him off
around the tra.ck and at the fini sh lin e
by .085 seconds.
The final result was cl ose, but the last

Ple•s• IH Gordon, 8J

ROCK SPRINGS
After a one year hial:jls, the
Meigs American Legion team
took to the field Sunday, and
split a double header with
Gallipolis. Meigs took the first ..
contest in come from behind
fashion by a 7-6 score. And
then dropped the night cap
11-5.
Meigs took a 2-0 lead in
the first game, Chris Lyons
and John Stanley both walked
and later came into score on a
single off the bat of Eric
Runyon.
Gallipolis plated a run in
the top of the second inning.
Merola launched a triple to
center field and scored on a
fielders choice ground out to
cut the Meigs to 2-1.
Gallipolis scored three runs
in the fifth inning to take a 42 lead. Nida singled and
Gibbs walked both runnen
ca me into scored on wild
pitches, Merola reached on aMeigs error and came intoscore on a single off the bat of
Hardy.
But Meigs came back to
plate five runs in the bottom
of the inning to take a 7-4·
lead. Lyons and Stanley both·
singled, Runyon rached on an
error a single off the bat of
Andy Davis, another Gallipo~ .
lis error, a walk a single by ·
C asy Dunfee and a single by
Nick D ettwiller scored two.
runners and gave Meigs the.
wm .
Gallipolis added two more ·
runs in th e top of the seventh
to make it close, but fell ·a run :
short. A walk to Hardy, and
singles off the bats of DraY.
an,d Warren along with ~
coule of Meigs errors plated
the runs.
·:
Josh Lynch in releif of :
Andy Davis picked up the : :
win, the two combined to
give up five hits, walk three.
and strike out six. Davis had a:
pair of singles to lead Meigs~
D ettwiller. Lyons, Stanley;
Runyon, and Dunfee all ..
added singles.
·

PleDIIMD ....... M

.

.• .

~~

�~....... 11, 2001

•

.•

110 Hllpw.nlld

510

110HIIpw.llld

Goods

•

... -

Ftilr lttlu*igAI:I

..,.,

aordlu•• ....•

-

Planned P a r - 01 SOUthOhio Hoi An Ope ... FaJ A

... -

.. . . ..,adlp .... ....
I M ' ICW' h IML: 5 L"'

Position Wil PrOYicle HealUI
S.:r-ingl For PPSEO'I Mate

F_..

l~~~;:·!;·~·~·~';·~,..~:J~I ...,. .... "' • leollll""'ininCIW. . IIueto' .,,• .-

.-,...-.. . . . . - " ID jcln

a -*'II -

Cfid be-

.... lndullrYl -

c.- .. - - .Hill
-Nl.nAide
TrUiing a.- -.tilly. H il a
lng

005

Peraor II

GanUsman SHidolg WhHe F•
mala Over 50 Y..,. For
And Frlendiililp. Reply To: 553
2nd A~en... Gallipolio, Ohio

w-

••

451131 . _ . .• ..,

....

WORK FROM HOllE

·----

-ToYoullirift ~
7 -·1842
Qualley clolhlng and houHhold
Hemo. •1 .00 bag oats ovary
Thu.-y. - y lhru Saturday

2 lllttct .......... 112

~

tared Black Lab, 112 Reglelered
GoiCICn Rllrls-. lwkl Old.

I W

FiN 4 Femala Pupplal. I W -

Old. ......... Sliepllenll Colli Mix

-to

With
Good
(3041182-3146
FiM

Temperment

a gocd '-"'· 740-

112-3004- 5pm.

Yard Sale
Gllllpolls

l VIcinity
Yard Sale· Indoor/ Ouldooro,
Jirla 13,14,15, Rain Or Sliliie,ll23
•th Avenue. Earl And Carrier
Walllo Eotata. Antique~/ Coliecll·
. bill; JCWIIrty. Alu.,_., ttSO'o
Chrome- Set, TMpoll, Old

.

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

-~~~lncUdliig
puJdiCiing. pn&gt;ducllan,

"-*"Y""'""""""'.................. Sund_

•=Cnly
...
-.allln1*"'
ear.. rJo
311

lliiclotdgl
Raect, - · OH
4&amp;114. btlc....,i1AriEEO

Employor.

~

GE
.._,
C&lt;JnkHocking,
Rtoonl
Player,
Fenton, Anclior

Fancy Hondwork.· Linen Dollleo.
Two Old Oullte, 1840'o Phono/
Radio Combo, 1820's Wicker
Sola Table (Nicej, Hall V-s. 78
Recordo. Granlle Ware. Chriet,
· Old w d
maa IIems,
oo
o~~:ee .
11120'1 Claw Foor Chair, Ulonlilo,
1930'1 Magazine Table, Cryetal
C.nt..p -~- w/Candleo, Set Gil·
tells Gla-e, Tabla Clothe, And

a

LDIIOISmoiDecoratlveHousehold: Condlee, Corning
Dlnnerwaro Service, Plastic
Wars. CookwaJt, Kitchen llomo,
Small Applloncae, ClUb Alum Set,
Luggage, Mona Clothing. Dock,
Baekell, Syloanla TV w/Sttnd,
Blankets. Towels, Bed Llnono,
CLauehmplon•"cSOiann"i'nwglnJagrSacke
E
•
• n •a·
DIU, Utility Stand, GE PortebiO
TV, b.,.... Cycle. 1/2 Size Bed.
Coolerl, Cold Peck Cannero, Picture Frames, Food Proceslor.
Many Boa Loll. Workiiliopl Yard
&amp; Garden: Mowot, Tillar, Contoln·

Chad~''·

er1 01 Misc. HardWare, Sabetlaw,

Circular Saw, Orilla, Hand Tool•,
Tire 8alan011r, Push Plow, Siring
Trimmer, L~wn Toola, Painting
Supplleo, Cartop CaJritf5, Soxoo
And Boxao 01 Mite. llomo. Frlday, June 15th, Moot Items Will
Be Hall Price. Nolo: This Ellra
Clun Household 01 Goode Hal
Been Wall Maintained And Cared

ad lor 100 bed skilled nurolng
lacllll)', to prOYide assistance 1o
rehab Hrvlcaa director, evaluations, , , . _ . ond needed day·
"!'daY eervlcel. Elc;eHonl IIppa•·
lt.oilly to be part o1 a progr-ive
reliab dapt .. providing bolli lnpa·
tlent and outpatient· tervlce•.
Facility hu oxcellent compliance

Auction
end FJ• Market

Rick PeaJCon Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
aucllon 11rvlce.
Llcenaed
III,Ohlo &amp; Woet VIrginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304·773-t447.

90

,Wanted

to Buy

AbtOIUit Top Dollar: U.S. Sliver,
Gold Coins, ProofHia, Diamonds,
Gold Ringe, U .S. Currency,·
M.T.S . Coin Shop. 151 Second
-Galpotil. 740-446-21142.

ELIP( ov r,1ENT
SERVIC ES

.,

,

110

Help Wlnted
-arARHARcti·2001·

· Slngtfl, Bandl &amp; Vocal Group&amp;,
All Styles/ Agua . Malo• Record
Label Seeking Now Artiots.
ComJng To Huntington , WV
(9011427-2839 or (9011427-9514

•

'SU~MIII WORK' ,.112 Issei
Appt." College StudanJII '0! HS
Gradualtt, Entry Le vel Svc/
sales. Conditions Apply. Open·
lnge Throughout Tri·State Area,
(3041552-4014
www.worldoratudento.com'np .

,.'

,.I·
I

A New Callari 400+ DRIVERS
NEEDED IN JUNE. Eaperlenced
Orlvore·1·800· 858·2353 Need
Your COL? We Ollar 14 Day COU
Co. Paid Tuition . Lifetime Job
Placemenl. Regional &amp; OTR .
CALL TODAY 1·1100·448-811119.

• •

.. ....

Hlckon. CrHk of Allitno, A 158
.,
bed skilled nureliig facility, Is ac·
cepllng applications lor RNa ;
LPN:a and STNA'e. Varying full·
lime, part·llmo, and contingent
poiililciio
1 lui lime RNI
LPN 7 p.7 A lor skilled care. 1 full
11,.. 1111•10 long-term care JA.3PI
3P-11P, 1 part lim- day shift RN

av-

Suporvilor
3full lime 2P· IOP STNA'e ekllad
unit, 1 lull lima 10P-tA STNA't
aklllod unit, 1 lull lime 1OP·8A
Sn.tA tong....,. caro.
Appliconte !IIUUI be onergellc,
oett-cllrtelld, and motivated team·
ptauera. ~ull time polttion1 come
'
with and eacellanl bontlll pack·
ago that lneludeo a iililft dlfferen·
till for PM elilillt, health &amp; lite In·
aurance. •o1k,. paid· vacation, 7
paid holldayolyear. F.l ealblo
tpendlng account , credit union ,
ovary other week-end and holiday
off, and rna••· Hourty wage com·
moneurete with eaperlence.
Please call 740·797· 4561 M· F
8A-4:30P to schedule an prolea·
llonallnlervlew. E.O.E.
LPN Or CMA Wanted In Busy
Phyolclan'a Office In Point Plese·
ant. Pleate Send R•sume To:
P.O. Boa 857, Barboursollla. WV
25504 or Faa (31141522·3812
IIAINT!NAIICI POIITIOH

AVAILAILE
Muet have a min'"""' ol3 years
expononce and plan rolalld ..,.
· pervlelon. Knowledge Iii oompreaelon, goneraiOfC u wt1 oe van·
oue mechanical, 11ac1r1ca1 and
plumbing ayetome. Knowlldgo In
bulkllng codes and oelely regula·
Iiane a plus. Pleaoe Hnd
JStUrnea 10 5conlc Hills Nursing
Cenler, 311 8ucluldgo Rood, Sid·
Will, OH 45614. Ann: Candy
Sif111son. 5conlc Hille is an EEO
Employer
Maintenance, Full·time, Apply In
PortiOn, Holiday Inn, GaH~ils

McClure's Restaurant now hiring
all 3 locations, fUll or part·tlme,
pick up application at location &amp;
bring back between 9:30am &amp;
1O:OOam, Mondajlhru Saturday.
Needed E~eperl enced Crew for
Selling and Finishing Sectional
Housing. Sand Pricing lnlormaUon
and e~eperlence to: Southern
Homes, PO Box 829 , Jackson ,
OH45640

Own A Computer? Put II
To Work?
www.woikoutofyourtlome.com
Own a P.C.? Put lito Workllor a
!reo bOOkiOI call: 800-429·5653 or
visit ua online:
www.getpcwork.com

---

•

.l

j

I

"

-linglos,
... glel go ..,5lolly
31 ,
aonable off• ,.fuNd •

--... _A_

...._....,_tono,oollapln
~-.-

lilon-FJL,

H , Sol!0-5c

for Rent

1 Bedroom Apartment In N. .

-

bediOOill.. 2 bilL r

(304)112-3131

I ... 2 - · ....tw-. u... .......,_, Malrily

2185
~ent l.Dcallon Orl R - 1110
StlwHn Gallipolis And HolztJ
Hoopltal. 3 Bed""'"", Balli, Living

c-

Gollpcllo
Collogt
{Ca...,. Clole To IbM)
Ca1Todayl740 448 13117,
1-214-0452,
Reg-12748.

Room. Family Room. -

_7110t_________

GrNt
Good
Con·
dillon Ntlghborhood,
- • Ha......_•A
Hou'•'
'
,_,,_.,
Church, SSO,OOO Make ' Offer,'
(31141875-l818
Houee For Sale In . Macon ,
(304'773-5828
·

perlanee. CaN Mike. (740)44fRoollng, Sid•
lng, Concrell, Interior &amp; E.,.rior
Painting . Froe Eollmaloo. Call
(30416 75-7738Af1Air 5pm
David's General Conlractora,
PI
bl
El
I
p I I
um ng.
ectr c.
a nl ng
Decko, . Iliac.
Work, Call
(740'2511-8373 Or Coli Pllone 1-

1

New home 3.875 acr•, 56x26'6•
3 bedroom, 2 balh c:alhlldral eel·
I
lh
h I
I
I
ngo roug au • coun Y wa sr,
heat pump, 740· 742·2444 day·
lime, 740-742·1807ovonlngo.

~

s

With

Appllanceo, Full Size BaHIMnt,
24a24 Finished Garage, la10
Wood Storage Building, CIA &amp;
Gas Heal. Eacellenl Neighborhood. Too Much To Mennon.
Ra.ly To Mowi Into. Cal For Appoilllm... (7410)1 te 8518

Tlllero ReptiJad . Free plck·up,
OtiW.ry Available. 21 Yeaf5 Er-

::.;.:::..::::.______
Freelance EngUiili Riding liiCIRiC·
tor, 151 Hour. Call Agnto 0
(740)441-o1114
.:...::.:.~:...:.:______
General Weekly Houoeeloanlng,
Have Reteroncto, Call (74014411-8305 II No Answer. Leave Mao-

Spolting
Goods

SingJ. Shot. Youth Model, 20
a..gt.IJ04)675-1511&amp;

530

Antiques

Buy Of sen. Riverine Anliques,
112A fill an SR 124 E. Po15311__
___ .._740-192·
740-192·2526

"*"'•

ltH1777• .

14 Wiele, 3 lleciR&gt;om. Only

1 -11212421

-

1 - ..... ~
S1 ,GOO UCK 2 Ton Air Condl·
IO&lt;, Range, NC Included, $211 - · 2 Tan Col, 1 line Set. lnPlul Dopa1it &amp; Rater.._. HUD
etatted, $2,285. $1 ,000 Back.
Aj;pc Ill. (740)441-151t
Sl215 Hot Prioo. F'" Eotimateo.
1 fiDDm fumilbed Eft"ICiJ ICf, All Coil For a.- On Other Sizes.
Ulllitill Paid, Shared llalli, 818 If You Don't Call Us, We
Sacond Av..-, Gallipolio, OH
Boll Loeel
- 4411308
0..
Speciallly
1-740
1-100l125imo. (7~)f18 ;:1115

11 H. -

$4H. pw _ ,_ IIAUTIPUL APAIITIIENTll AT
'"'" S210. per onon. cal , _ I· BUDGET PRICES AT .lACK,
IOO-etl.f777.
ION ESTATES, 52 W•stwood
-2000 14d0 Front Kildien, DIM fnlm S2lll' lo $313. - t o
Mull Go, Only Ste,IIO. FIHI• ohop &amp; movies. Call 740· 441wood Homu. ProctOrVille. Toll

FrM 1 -

25111. EquellloUeing Opporlunlly.

515 0117

291-

.

1 room air cundiliuner. 1 rear
bumper for sale, 3 antiques for
I&amp;Je. 4 spoke wheels, 1 antique
~-7~-3254-

15 For Flberglaeo Boat , Molar,
Tr8Uer;
Fiberglass Pop· up
Camper. 44 Utility Traile&lt;. $2400
080 (3041578·3238 leave

1---'---......;......;.:....;....:;::::..._

'

Nice three bedroom cape cod,
basomenl, garage, llroplace,
country selling, TPC water,
8oullien1 Schooil. 740-H2-6347.
Price reduoed to• quick sale, 2
homes -lng on one !olin Mid·
disport.
740-882-8154.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your loge to the mill jull call
~304;._;-8;;.75-:..1;.:95;;.7;.:,.- - - - -

Route 7 South, Nowtr, Larger
Homo. Vo•y Nice, Consider
trade-Iii, (7401446-911118

W.ooo.

slay at horne mom will blbysll In

my home, tor children age 4 or
older 740-9411-3128
'
•
Wanted To Open A Houle &amp; Of·
lice Cltsnlng Sorvlco, In Macon
County. II
You Need This
Sa•vlco, Please Write To: 125
While Pine, Pliny,
25082.
Email AI· Allon1wlleaol com
·
·
Weed Eating Hllloldeo, Ditches,
_
Eic. Mowing, Clean-up, Removal
01 Unwanted Items . Odd Jobs.
Call Sieve (7401448-7804

320

Mobl.le Homes
for

Sale

'1' Only· Lol Modal Doublewlde·
4 Bedroom, 2 Bath, wac $54,985,
Now $42,987· Price Good Till
6·25·01, Hurry To Oakwood·
Gallpolls, (7401446-3093

wv

•STOPr·
Don't
PurchaH
A
New
Manufacturing Home Without
Calling 1·888·884·7258. We Can
Save You ThouSandS On A
New Palm Harbor Homt. Clll
Today! Over 20 Homes On

Will do general hoLiHcleanlng,
have rele•ences, call 740·882·
8781.

Display.

Will Repair Automoblltt, Lawn
Mowera, and Farm Tractora, Alao

(41 2000 MOdel Singles Leftover.
Save Thouaanda. Fleetwood
Homes Of Proctorville, Toll Free,
1-888·586-()187

Engine And Tranemleolon Repair.
ASE
Certified Mechanic.
(740)441..01119

FINANCIAL

14r80 Kirkwood Moblla Home
With Stooo. Relrlgorator, AIC,
And All Blinds. All EleclriC, $5500
(304)875-8489

14170 Southern Dream, free De·
livery lreo Setup only $9995 1·
688·9211-3426
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . )-~-::------­
recommends that you do busl· 14x70 w/Expando, 2 Bedroom, 2
ness with people you know, and Balh. CIA, SIR, (3041675·7730
NOT to send money through the
mall until 10u have lnveellgated 16 Wide. Only $195 .00 Per
llio offering.
Month, 8.H% Flald lnlereet Rate
With Atr And
Underpinning
Star! Your Buelneso Today... 1·688·928·3428
Prime Shopping Center Space
Ava ilable AI Affordable Rate . 1971 Bonanza; 12x85 mobile
Spnng Valley Plaza, Call 740·448· home, $2,000, 740-949·2072.
0101 .
1998· Fioelwood Highland Pa•k
230 Profeaslonsl
Doublewlde, 28x44, 3 Bedrooms,
I
2 Balh, Canlfal Air &amp; Heal, Ap·
erv Cel
pllances (Stove, Relrlgaralorj
TURNED DOWN ON
Front &amp; Back Or!cke, Reaeonabll
BOCIAL SEC.URITY /881?
Priced. (3041875·4878 (304)875·
No Fee Unlosa We Wlnl
5030
1-886·582·3345
2 Uaod Mobile Home, Payments
0 $145 Monlli. Will Finance.
1-888·738·3332

Hal-

REAL ESTAfE

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Only
$345.00 Per Month 8.99% Flxod
lrllaJOol Rail, 1·688·828·3428

Sale

FaCioJY Gool32r80 $10,000 Ole·
count only $1000.00 Down, Do·
llveJY, and aetup paid by Factorj
1·800·891-&amp;m

•
•

Easy IRdlor work
fleillle haln
fui/Pid Ume ling!
PosllllnsftWng
qulddy!!

ge.

4'lll8' AboY1 Ground Pool.
Send Filler, Pump, Skimmer, Va·
cuum lncludacl. Needs Liner And
Ladder, $200. Phone (3041875·

W.'OIIII'h'l:dtlnal
SlnglewldH. Doubltwldee, Anr
Yur. Any Make. Top Dollar Paid
Wllh Purchaoe Of A New Polm

-

· Call . . .4 7256

330

Ferma

toi Sale

Farm Houoe, llaulltully llemo-

daled, 2813 Square Foal. 17 14t:t·
... Pond............ Pool,llemo, Garage, Fruit r-. ca.
To - .. $215.000. (74014411-

4230

340

B•Jneuand
Buildings

Buiiln- with upllaiJO aparlmtnt
for aale, 241 Salem Street, Ru·
!land. Ohio, 135.000. call 741H4.2·

2572. !load lnoome.
Office building In Mlnerl\lllle, 1100
oq. ft ., ale, covered parking, eel~
lng Jon, S30Q/mo., 814-8711-111111 .

Owner RetirinG- Btildlng FO&lt; Sail
In Galllpolla. Ohio, On lloule 7.
Has Large Parking Lol. Hao 4
Rontale, Also loll Ot Floor
Space, Good Income . Call
(7401381- 781111

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
2 loll, Zoned •ComrntR:Ial, Within
The VIllage Of illo Grande.
(7401215 5858
IIIIINIR LAND
7-1-14112
Gellla Co.· Rio Grenclo, Prf.
vate Dead End Road, 13 Wooded
Acres, $27,000. Koirr Road, 8
14t:tto, $21,000 Or 5 Aatl Willi
Pond 125,000. Cheiililro, 8 Aatl,
$11 ,500 or24 Aatl Wllh Huge
Bam, $31,0001 Clay T - I p.
Bam • Slniom On 31 Aatl
$32,000. Tycoon IJike Area,
14 AcrH. $13,800.

11e1g1

eo.- r._,.

PlalnSRIIIIt. 7 Aat1 $11,500 Or 31
AcrN, $27,500. Carr Road, 18
AcrN $23,000 Or Elllra Large
Pole Bam On 8AcrH, $30,500.
DanYille, 5 Ac,..,
$10,500.
Rutland, 9 Acrtl, $8,500.

Just a lew o1 the ~
available. Call now tor mapa and
- r lllllngel OWner financing
with slight propeny markup.
Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't Have IJind? We Doll! Hurry
on1y 10 lola Loll, 304·736-7295.

RErHAIS

410

Hou181 for Rent

1 -3 Bedrooms ·Foraclostd
HoniH·F""" $189/Mo., 4% Down,
30 Yurt tl 1.5% APR. F9r llll·
lngt, 800-31.._3323 Elll. 1708.

&gt;iorth 4111 Ava., Middleport, 2
room afftency, ullllllu paid, d•
poiili &amp; relerlnCH, no peto, 74011112.0185.

1504 LNvt Me nge

.

Now Taking Appllcellons- 35
Wut 2 Bedroom Townhouoo
Apartment•. Includes Water
Sewage. Truih, UtiO/Mo., 740·

I' While Fiberglass Truck Top·
...... !load Condtlon, Wil Fit 1987

T1r1 Townhouse Apartments.
Vory Spaclouo, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floon, CA. 1 112 - · Fuly Car·
paled, AduH Pool Baby Pool,
Pallo, Start 1315/Mo. No Pete,
Leuo Pluo Security Ooposil Rts
qulrod , Dayo: 740·448-3481:
Evenlngo: 740·387·0502, 740'
446-0101 .

Boautltul - . ; .... ""'"" round
.51 carat eolllaiJe diamond In 14K

tteoooe.

·

a

TWin RlvlrT..,.;. ,_IICCfl)lilg
appllcttllonllor 1 BR.
HUD uubuldlzld apl. I« -.ty
... · EOH. (3041875-

111179.

Two 2 bedr~m apartment• for
rot1lln Sy.-, $325 per monlli
pluo $200 dl!x*. 740-3711-8111 .

740-112-31102:
Gravely Tiller, liolary Plow, Sulky,
Dual WhHIU With Spacers, 30'
Mower, Elactrlc Start Parts. 1986
Mercury Topaz , S550: Window
Air Conditioner, $80 &amp; 2 Mlcrowaveo, $25.00 Each. Call Alter,
4:30pm, Treadmill. older. Works
Good, $30. (740144 Hl972

On Uncoln PIU. (7.W)388 8153

480

For

Lllle

IINullful,1800 Sq. Foot, Reo1crod
2nd Floor Apartment In Hlllorlc
Dletrlct. Ideal For Proleoolonal
Couple. All Modern Ainenitlel. 3

King Size wateJbad, Saga Dream

Cut, $100 Each. (31141675-4815

Bedroomo: Spaclouo living; H/2

Large compoater at Virgil's Berry
Patch on Rt. 1 2• East of Syra,
..... 740-992·7449.

Bathe, RHr Deck. HVAC. $8001
mo. Pluo Utllllloe. Security And
Key Deposit No Palf. Roleronctt
Required. (7401448-4425 Or

Uke new 27 boot solar blanket lor
above ground swimming pool, $60
phone 740-992·3890.

(740)418 3135

. 510

HouHholcl

Maytag waiilier, 12000 STU wind·
ow alr~condltlo.ner, both in excel·
lent condition. $100 each; !rea .
sora &amp; chair, lair condition, 740·
882·7807.
\
MOilLE HOllE OWNERS

Goods
5 Piece Dining Room , Black &amp;
Gold, Glaes Top; Kids Bedroom
Set, Twin Bunko, 1·Nightlland, 2·
Chesll. Winnie Pooh Shall Silo,
Comlorler, Curlalne, Decals; 1 Sol
Swag Curtains In Teals, 100'184';
Computonzld
Caoh Ragloilr,
lnlernet Acceselbla. {74013392787 (740)387-o502
Appliances:
Raco~dltlonad
Waiilief5, Oryoro, Rangeo, Reftl·
gratore, Up To 90 Days Guaranteed! We Sell Now Maytag Ap·
pllanoea, French City Maytag ,

7-7185.

1

1082 Sunoet Drloe, VtJy Good
Condhlon. Oepoelt &amp; Reference•
Required, No Pail. Call (74014464118

owe, Anchors, Water Heaters,

Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parte, Fur·
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps. Benneus
Mobile Home Supply, 740· 446·
9418 www.oNb.convbennetl

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beem1, Plpt~ Rebar For Concrete, .
Angle, Channel, Flat Ba•. Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Waii&lt;Wayo. New 55 Gallon Drums
'Wilh Lid &amp; Ring, $7.00 Each. l&amp;L
Scrap Mllalo (740)446-7300
Oak &amp; Popular lumber. Call For
Mora lnloJmatton. (3041882·3258
Altar9pm

Sulldlng
· supplies

Block, brick , sewer plpel, wlnCt·
owe, llntela, ·etc. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH. Call 740·245·
5121 .

560

Pets for Slle

1 Year Old Male Weimaraner,
$250, (7401446-1551
AKC Himalayan Persian C~t. I
Year Old, Female , $200 OBO .
{740j446-1981
.
AKC Shollle pups, trio, bl blacka,
•able/whitt, vet checked,' cham·
pion lines, $350, 740-969-1085.
1

French City Pol Grooming Has
Moved To Point Pleasant, Now
Called Roae's Pet Grooming. Call
For Appointment (3041675-5010
Jack Rusaell Terrier pupa, pure
brlld, no papet'e, $150 each. 740·
898-7055.
Purebred Jack Ruasell Terrier
Puppies. 7 Weeks Old, Tails
Docked, Wormed, First Shots,
S250 (3041875-3386
Raglaterad Lab
Puppies,
Chocolate &amp; Slack, Excellenl
Hunting Prospecto. (7401448 ~

0080

580

Fruits

&amp;

· Strawberries, Pick Your Own. Call
Claude Wlnlef5, (740)245-Q12t
Strewbafrlao, You Pick· We Pick .
Taylor's Berry Patch, 2884 Kerr
Road. Open 8· 8 Monday, Wed·
nesday &amp; Friday, 8·4 Saturday,
Closod Sunday. (740j245-91M7

FARM SIJPPIII:-S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

81 0 Farm Equipment
K

Flnenallig

on

Now

'81 Pontiac Bunblrd, v-e, s sp.,
air, nice car, $2500, 740·848·

2700.
1885. Cavallo•. Oreal Shape.
(3041875-51112

John

1987 Ch 1 L""
II
4
rye" •-•ron,
Y •·
dar, 25MPG, Auto, PS, PB, Cold
Air, Till, Cruloe, AMIFM ca-llo.
Many New Parte, 165,000 Mllao.

(740)388 8997
1989 Taurua , V·l, auto, good
body &amp; Interior, good projCCI cart
$500, 740-742·2367
1980 Ford Probe, 3 Iller, auto,
needs body work· to run or could

3917.

1991 Flroblrd Formula, Tuned
Poll 305, 5· Spa 0 d, T-Top, CD,
Many New Peril. Well Main·
tatned, $2700; 1876 Chevy 112
Ton L.W.B . 4x4, 35x14.50 Thornbllds, 350, Auto, Many Now Parto,
$2800 (740138HII1

2000 Chrytler Sebllng LXI, Sun·
mol, loadld, Ertril ShaJp, Eacal·
lonl Condition, $'15,900 Arm, Call
(7401388-8780 After epm.
2000 VW Stelle, Red, Auto
Transmission, Turbo, Sunroof,
Leather State, Showroom Condl..
lion, Garage Koipt, $17,900. 2000
BonneYille SSE!, Loaded , Sunrool,
CD, Leather Saate , Custom
Wheala, Show.room Condition,
Garage Kept, $23,900. (7401448-

2

· Furnacea, 011 Furnacea, 12 Saar
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning

.

Bedroom, 1-112 Bath , All
Eleotrlo, In PortOI Area, You
Pay
Deposit I
Utlllll11.
(740l381H182
2 Bedroom Trailer. looaltd Ia·
hind The LaCentlna In Galllpolll
Ferry. WV. 12&amp;0 .Pur_Monlh
Pluo oapoall, (740)ee2·8387
(3041675-7115 .

for Sale

Auto

Parts &amp;

Acceesorles
Are You Looking For Engines Or
Transml11ions? Give Me A Call
AI741K48-0519.
ludget Priced Tranamlaalona

AU Types, Acceas To Over
10.000 Tranamltalone, Transter
cases , 740·245·5877, Cell: 339 ·
3785.
.
New Engine · Stand. , $40 ,
(3041675-1564

790

Campers

&amp;

Motor Homes
28' 1895 Dutchman camper with
erpando, S10,000 llrm, 740-992·

95 Oo&lt;lge NfO!l, 103,000 Miles, 5
Speed, Cold Air. Needt Polnttd.
$1800 OBO (740121111-1233

SEflV ICE S

me.
810

91 Chryoler SobJing LXI , V·8 ,
Auto, Asking $8200, (740)258 0252 Or (74012e&amp;-1118

Home

IASIII!NT
WAT!RPROOFINCl

uncondlllonal lifetime guarantee.

Local relerances lurnlahed. Es·'
tabllshld 1875. Call 24 Hra. (7401
448·0870, 1·800·287·0578 . Rag·
era Watsrproofing.
C&amp;C General Home Main ·
lononce· Painting, vi n11 •!ding,
carpentry, doors, wlndowa, bathe,
mQbilt home repair and more. For
fret astlmate pall Chet, 740·992·

8323.
Llvlngaton'l Ba~tment Water

Proofing, f.ll b11eman1 rapalre
dana, free eatlmaln , Ufelln\e
guarantee. , "Yrl on job ex per I·

Sytttmt Fru 8 Year Warranty
Bannetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800.872-5867 www.orvb.comlben·

New And Used Furniture Store
Balow Holiday Inn, Kenauga. We
lull Grave Monumanto
4nd
VaiH. (7401448--4782
Used Kenmore Waoher, $75 For
Pair· Call (7401448-2881

nett

Stereo Solid Slate Conoole
Record And 8 Track Tapa Pia1e•.
,r.MIFM Radio Mode By Capehart.
Neode Minor Rapalf5. Ma~e 0""'(7401446-0094 After 8pm

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Wanting To Trado A Pair Of
Barred Roclc Bantams For Anolh·
., Pair Of Puro BJOid Banty Of
Any Kind. (3041837·3346

840

Hay

l

111,000 (7401245 -

1=::...----=--

Grein

Hey &amp; BJ!ghl Wire T1e Straw, YHr
'Aound DtiiVOIY &amp; Volume Die·
coun1 Available. Heritage Farm.
(304)875•5724.

J)

DaliOil 'spa~~, Elllen&lt;lld
Crullo, Tilt, 5 Speed ,

pi2yed poorly in the field and trailed 9-0
after three innings.
Cleveland manager Charlie Manuel kept the
clubhouse doors closed a little longer than
usual following the game and scolded his players about their flat effort.
"We've played four or five games like that
this year," Manuel said. "Sometimes I think we
need to be more alert when games start. I
don't know if we took them lightly or what.
"We need to keep our intensity, especially
against second-division teams. We could have
won this series, but we didn't. Today we beat
ourselves."
Reitsma didn't do anything special, but
stayed in the strike zone and allowed the Indians just one run through seven innings. He
gave up nine hits, walked one and struck out
one.
Reitsma, who ended a personal five-game
losing streak, was lifteli after Jim Thome's tworun homer in the eighth.
"I wanted a complete game," Reitsma said.
"I wanted a shutout. There aren't many of
those. But I left a couple of balls up."
Casey .and Pokey Reese drove in two runs
apiece, and Michael Tucker had three hits as
the Reds beat Jaret Wright (2-1) and won two
of three in Ohio's interleague series.
Thome hit his 1Oth homer in 15 games and
former R:eds catcher Eddie Taubensee had a
solo shot for the ·Indians, who made three
errors and probably could have been charged
with two others.
It was the Reds' day from the start. They
scored five runs in the first offWright, who
pitched poorly but didn't get much help from
his defense, either.
Wright, making his fifth start of the season
following elbow surgery, allowed eight runs -six earned-- and six hits in just 1 1-3' innings,
equaling his shortest career regular-season

Gordon
from Page 11
but the last two races have been Gordon
routs on the scoreboard. He Jed 381 of 400
laps a week earlier while winnin g the MBNA
Platinum 400, and showed the way for 143 of
200 this time for a two-race total of 524 of
600.
"It was just everybody for themselves at the
end and we came up second," Rudd said. "The
mistake I made was 1 went in frorit before the
white-flag lap. If I had made my move later, I
maybe could have held him off. But once he
got past me, I knew it was over."
The victory put Rick Hendrick itito the
record book as just the third car owner with
100 victories. Petty Enterprises has 27 1 and
Junior Johnson 139.
But H endri ck couldn 't be at the track to

start.
"Nothing was gaing right," Wright said. "I
could have nude better pitches but there are
going to be games like that."
Wright's day started badly and got worse.
He should have retired the first two llatters,
but the Indians didn't catch Brady Clark's foul
pop before he singled and shortstop Onur
Vizquel lost Tucker's short Oy in the sun.
"I saw it go up," said Vizquel, who Was 15
feet away fiom the ball when it landed. "But I
never saw it again until it hit the ground."
Wright then walke'd Alex Ocho~, ancl Casey
ripped an RBI infield single off the right-hander's foot. D. T. Cromer's sacrifice fly made. it
2-0 and the runners advanced on left fielder
Russell Branyan's throwing error.
Reese hit .a two-run single and stayed alive
long enough in a rundown on a delayed steal ,
for Bill Selby to make it 5-0.
Wright didn't get out of the second when
the R eds scored three more, two coming;
when reliever Steve Woodard threw away ·
O choa's comebacker. Casey's RBI single made ·
it 8-0.
Juan Castro's sacrifice fly put .the Reds up 9- ·
0 in the third.
Taubensee hit .his second pinch-hit homer ·
this season in the sixth inning to end Reitsma's .
shutout bid.
Thome's homer in the eighth was his 16th
of the season.
Game notes
Woodard, who has asked the Indians to trade
him, allowed one run in 6 2-3 inriings . ... The
Reds' two -week, 12-game road trip resumes
against the White Sox on Tuesday. Cincinnati
is 5-4 on its longest trek since 1989. ...
Wright's quickest career exit came against
New York in the I 998 ALCS, when he lasted
just two- thirds of an inning.... Sunday marked
the 42nd anniversary of Rocky Colavito's
four-homer game for the Indians and 35 years
since Cleveland's Sonny Siebert no-hit Washington. Colavito's was the ·last four-homer
game in the AL. ... Robbie Alomar is batting
.429 (21-for-49) with five homers and 16 RBI
during his 13-game hitting streak
celebrate the win. His father, "Papa" Jo e Hendrick, is scheduled to have heart surgery on
Monday. So Hendrick remained in North
Carolina to be with him.
So the three Hendrick cars, including Terry
Labonte and Jerry Nadeau, donned stickers on
their Chevy that said, "Get Well Pop."
"The only thing that takes away from this
win right now is that we co uldn 't have Rick
and Pop here," Gordon said. "But I know Rick
was excited. He was thrilled and he would
have loved to have been here."
Marlin fin ished third in a Dodge, and was
followed by Jeremy Mayfield, Ryan Newman
and Hut Stricklin in the best finish for car
owner Juni e Donlavey since 1998.
Robinson, in a Ford splashed with pink
pai nt, finished 34th.
"It's better to finish 34th than have a torn·up car," Robinson said. ''I'm here to learn and
I did that."
·

NASCAR WINSTON .C.UP .
KMART 400 RESULTS

RelldenUal or commercial wiring.

new Mrvlce or repairs . Muter Ll·
cenaed electrician . Riden our
EleCifiCii c WV000306, 304·675·
1·71111.

Sunday
At Michigan International SpatciWsr
Brooklyn, Mich.
2 Mllll
1. (1) Jell Clordon, Chevrolel, 200,
1240,137.
2. (2) Ricky RUdd, Fold, 200, $123,257.
3. (29) Stenlng Marlin. Dodge. 200 ,
$85,280.
4. (91 Jeremy Mayllold, Ford. 200 ,
$98,614.
5. (1 21 Ayan Newman. Ford, 200 ,
$47,315.
6. (231 Hut Stricklin. Fo•d. 200, $57,140.
7. (13) Jeff Burton, Fold, 200,$91,286.
8. (4) Davo Blaney. Dodge. 200.
$47;965.
9. (6) Bill Elllotl, Dodge, 200, $71 .638 .
1o. (81 Kevin Harvlck. Chevrolot, 200,
$94,042 .
.
II . (14) Jimmy Spencer, Ford, 200.
$62,735.
.
.
12. (10) Johnny Benson, Pontiac, 200,
$53,400.
13. (251 Bobby Labonte, Pontiac, 200,
$92.317.
14. (33) Ken Sc tvadar, Pontiac, 200,
$57,701 .
.
15. (311 Metl Kenselh, Ford . .200, .•
$54,040.
16. (201 Mark Martin, Fold, 199. $83,041.
17. (17) Jeff Green. ChoYJolot, 199,
$38,390.
18. (21) Dale Jarrett. Ford, 199, $83,1 17.
18. (361 Jason Lallier. Dodge, 199,
$54;080.

! ; ;:.:;;:..::.:=-----1,,

Philly's Tyrone Hill gDeS for two
during game three. (AP)

GET 'EM -

Improvements

840

for Rent

I

750 Bolls &amp; Motors

85 Chryelsr Concord, '19,800
Highway Miles, A· I Condition,
,$8500 (740)441- 1559

IIEIIDIINTIAL HOllE DWNIIII
Tappan HI Efllclenc 1 90% Gas

f1omPageBI

96 300EX, Runs Great, Loto Of
Eatraa. $3,000 OBO, (7401446 8218

...... (3041895·3887.

Mobile Homee

Reds·

2000 Warrlo•. Exce llent Condl·
lion, $3700.(3114)576·2505

2927

Drl;,, Good Condition, (3041175·
1468

foul with 6:28 left.
The Sixers pulled to 84-82 on a putback
by Mutombo with 4:26 left, and neither
team scored again until O'Neal dunked an
offensive rebound with 3:04 left to make it
86-82.
O'Neal fouled out "les&gt; dun a minute
luer, but the takers weren't finished. Not
with Hotry scuring their final seven points.
"I guess you'd "ave to say Robert Horry
stepped into a massive role again like he
docs," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said.
"That's the reason he plays fourth quarters
for us."
Notes: O'Neal scored 14 points in the
first quarter, going 6-for-7 from the line ....
Derek Fisher again pi2yed tight defense on
Iverson, although the referees didn't let
him get away with as much holding as he
did in Game 2. He fouled out with 2:47
remaining.... Former president Bill Clinton was among those in allendance. He
received a mixed ovation. Heavyweight
boxing champion Hasim Rahman also
auended.

es

. por1ater,

760

Three 'bedroom hDUM tor rent In
Pomeroy, no pots, 740-882·5858.

420

99 ChJYCilr Town &amp; COUntry, Limlied, All ~eathor, 4 Captains
Ch
T
l
d
K
airs, otally oade . 58 •
(7401245-9248
For Sala Or Trada, 1989 Ford
Clubwagon XLT, Fully Handlcop
Lilt, Fully Aulomallc, Hand Con·
trois, Raised Roo!, Tilt, Cruloe,
Power Windows, Good Condlllon.
{7401245-9212
740 MotorcyciH

1889 Grand Pria GT, Wh ile, 4
door; 24,500 miles, CO, well cared
IOJ, (7401441 - 0218, (7401591·
7110

15 F·1tl0 Flatbed , Truck, 4 Wlitll

Pilot Program, Renlort Noodlld,
304·738-71!95.

1885 Chevy 8·10, 4a4, 4 SpHCI,
2.8 VI, New Tlreo, Solid New
MJ1xlco Truck, 135,000 Mlleo
t2400. (7401379-9278

Base B:al, 18' ·G•umman Chal,
Ienger With 50HP Mere-Force
And Trallef, (7401446-7017

Wagon (Will Trade For Small Hay
Balorl. 100 lb, 314 Hartford , 1/4
BfOWII Swlu Bull. (74013117-7031

Ia Your Renl $4007 Now 3
Bedroom , 2 Bath Ranch Style
Home From Rent To Own.
(7401448 3583

{74013~8

1997 Ford Crown VIctoria L)(,
43,000 Milos, Ea011ilenl CondMion,
eau AltAir tlpm, (31141875-1ne

1 Aow Field Chopper And· Silage

2nd Row.

It 4-WDI

s
740-985-1~~~~~~~::

ba parted out, $500 lln'n,
1990 Pontiac Flreblrd Fo•mula
350, V·8, auto, 98,000 milia. rod.
eliliiP ca~ $2,850, 740-742·2357. ·

Balers With John Dteft Cftdll
Approval. Call Or Stop By Nowll
Carmichael's Ftrm &amp; Lawn
(74014411-24121.801).594-1111

Condo For Renl , North Myrtle

Vans

1984 Ford F·250. 4x4, 4·SpHd.
Flat Bod, 300 11 Cylinder, Run•
Good, 114,000 Miles, $2800

c

Oetrt Mower Conditioner• And

740-992-em aftOJ 5pm.

a,

550

Vegetsblas
Huge Inventory, Dlicount Prices,
On Vln11 SkiJtlng, Doors, Wind·

3 bedroom home Minersville
area, river view, references required, depotll required, no peta,

Beach. Slotps
(740l441H1657

Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100: 1• 200 PSI
S37 .00 Per 100; All Brass Com·
pr-. Fllllngo In Slack
RON EVANI ENTERPIIIBES
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537·11528

Hewlett Packa•d, Windows 98.
Cornea With lnk)tt Printer, Cam·
era, &amp; Scanner. Desk &amp; Chair,

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiM In Stock.
Call Ron Evans. 1-1!00·537·9528.

730

TRAN SPORTAl ION

Mlsc:ellaneoue

710 Autos for Sale

Problome? Neild Tunlld? Call The
Plano Dr. 740-148-4525

1..........,.;.1 HarbaiWo OislrlbuiOr,
Call For Product Or Opportunity.
(7401441-1982

9ene &amp; Xaty 'FinK
want to tliank all for
tlie cards tliey sent
for our
6otli Wedding
!Anniversary and tlie
lovely flowers from
our daughter 'Betli ..

Merchandise

Grubb's Plano-- Tuning &amp; Repairs.

Mobile home lot for rent In Mid·
dllport, Sl25 pet monlh, 11110 one
lot lor doublewlde. 1160 per

lot For Ref'!l, Centenary

540

gold letting. alzo 4·1/2, $899,

1600. (740~171

Trailer

·C16..._..,LLC

Chevy Or Older, $50 Firm.
(740)2li6-4181

480 Space for Rent

month, 740-112-311N.

1-188-974-JOBS

II Foot Wide Inside, 16 Foot
Long, 4 WhHI Tlallar, $850, Call
(740)44&amp;-0928

Card of Thanka

$6-$7

24 Foot Round Above Ground
POGI. Good Condlllon, $500 Call
{3041713-5155 Altar 5pm

Final Days, Nallonwlde lnvenlorj
Rlductlonl (304)738-3409
INTRDOUCTDRY
Balo Prloo
.1
(Newt 48'&gt;125', 3 bedroom, 2 btf11,.
8' axtoriOJ walle, vyntl window&amp;, •
1011 ol goodloo. IOnlyl S3t.31
square foot. Wt'rt dealing
Colea'e Mobile Homoo, Stall Ro·
uta 50 East Alhtno, Ohio, 740·
592· t872.

-JOBS

Or (740)3711-8047 Aher 5:00pm

Orl.elveAI'I

Help Wlnted

su

Detrollllloul Engine Runs Good,
SS!iO; Antique Double Tub Waiili·
lng Machin•· Fairbanks And
- . . . $300; Call {740144jH1728

Opportunity

S

110

2 Jaeger lnduotJiel Air Compres·
1011: I Runt !load,
motor, lbe Other loin Parts, But Is
Rebulldllile, 1600 Bolli; 4 Horoe
Gooseneck Trailer. S1500; Ap·
pniOC. 40 1110, $8.00 Eacli;
3110 Ford Engine And TransmiB· .
elan. 75 · RIIIC $300; 8V 53

oao

Buslneu

the 6nt of two. Mmy in the aowd groaned.
undoubtedly hmng WbK.b to Game 2
when Pbiladdphia missed JO fR,e throws in
J
the fOurth quarter.
" I don't want to &gt;ay we let it slip away," lverto attempt a !Ugh-arching shot ova- the son said. "We· w~ right th~. kept fighting
outstrerched ann of Bryant. It missed, Horry and just weren't able to pull it oiL
was fouled on the rmound and made bo1b
Bryant shot justl-for-14 in the St"Cond half.
shots to wrap up the victory.
but the damage he did in the second quarter
"I knew thal guys were going to come in p!OIIM to be more important. He hit eight
h~. play weD. hit shots. We wanted to win straight shots- all but two of them fiom the
this, and we had to gt'l it," O'Neal said. "Now perimetrr - to give the takers a. lead that
the next g.une is Wednesday, and we're going slowly dwindled the rest of the way, but never
· to try to do the same thing."
got lower than one.
Bryant scored 32 points, half of them in the
Bryant grew up in· nearby Lowrr Merion,
second quarter when be gave the l.ahn the P:i., but has not been a fan favorite in Philly.
lead for good. O'Neal had 30, and Horry
The crowd booed him louder than any of
scored 12 of his 15 in the fourth quarter. · . the o!her takers during pregame introduc. lve~n had 35 points for Philadelphia, · lions, and he was the object of a derisive chant
mcludmg 14 in the fourth qll21ter, while just 17 second$ into the game.
Mutombo added 23 points and 12 rebounds
He quieted !hem with a steady string of
and Eric Snow scored 14.
jump shots during !he second quarter.
O'Neal, who also had 12 rebounds and four
After his 20-footer gave the Lakers a 40-30
blocks, drew his sixth foul with 2:21 left for lead, be stuck his tongue out and wagged it
backing over Mutombo.lt came with !he Lak- quickly fiom side to side while backpedaling
en leading by just two poiniS.
downcoun.
·•1 didn't think the best. defensive player in
" We just block it out;' Bryant said of the
the. game would be Bopping like tlut. It's a crowd. ••our motto is it's just a whole lot of
shame that the referees buy into that," O'Neal · noise."
said. "I wish he'd stand up and play me like a
Bryant had 20 points at halftime as Los
man instead of Bopping and crying every time Angeles held a 10-point lead.
I hack him dawn.lt's just a s~e. and you can
The Sixers got within three early in the
quote · me on that. And underline it three four!h before Horry hit a wide-open 3-pointtirnes."
er · and !hen Oushed a vicious dunk over
Just 15 seconds after O'Neal sat down for Mutombo. O'Neal foUowed with another
good. Iverson went to !he foul line and missed dunk for an 80-72 lead, but picked up his fifth

Up age

Hentwood Floon. Large Kltclieri.

T111lnlng

· 30

-lgoi·

• • CC!Id-

..._calla..,l. 7 - 1317.
....,
14 ll-148t. --.
$1"- I * _ ,, c a l - 1-100-

Loiundry· Main Floor. 2 Miles
City. 0Nan 8chooll,
FIIID
Lots 01 Eatra'e Call Evenings.
(740)4411-37M, Oaya (740j448-

Buslneu

0..0..

::.
M::.u::.II::HI::..:.I::.1::
N_S_Sh_u_H_lf_.to
__
_ 3-l =::aquired; 110 peb, 740-

-

r:a. e· ,.,. Wilt Aec

Af*b•••ls

By Owner· Capo Cod. Formal
living R - And Dining With

- · 125- S751hr. Paid - .
1-688-878-1042

Home• for

--~­

Ohio, ()pon M-W. IH,

440

(304)513 !ll11

o

..

- - S8.125. 1or-

2, llaoon County SUS,OOO

~Ordlr-··.

310

--ln--....

Acr• A • - · Orl Norlli """"

12H75' lw f'TI FT

210

50 £1111,-.(liL

eo

awn...

oage.

.-..US

Ilia-••: -

lric. IJ04)675-70C2 -~
----

For
On.._ c.n$8,125-any-. .. hc:L 2 8 , . ,.. Nl, On Rldlld
........ -.g. CGWs- LallnC $£ • (7.,..._1401
520

Baoutiful Rollna Fann Land -

1B&amp;B Conotnletlon·

care.oo

l .al _ _ _ _ ,.....

4 Blldroom, 3 flalh HouH, City
MOre
Weier Orll Acm W'ilh

AI Make - . . _ Lawn Tractors,

Gallipolis Area, Jonllor, Floor
1-886-861-o5CO

NC;
-On

4 Bed CMIIHouM In IUo Grinde•
Could Be UHCI AI Rental
Piopelly. (7401245 • •

Houaes Fo~ Sale. 2 Bedroom t
PRN Phyalcal Therapy Aaslotant
Bath, $750 Down Payment, Near
nteded
for
progr1111vt
rehab
Addrsee•re Wanted lmmedlaielyl
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call Dtvld
I·
No Experience Neceaury. Work department In t 00 bed skilled 800·333-89 10
nuf51ng
leclllly,
providing
bolh
In·
N. Homo. C.ll (4051447-8397
patient and outpatient tharapy
oervlcea. Excellsnt opportunlly lor 1 Aero Rlve~ronl B1ick &amp; Vinyl
INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
the
right candida it, greal leam, 3BR, 2 Bath, 2 Flreplacao, Hard:
EXPANDING PfT-FrT 125·$851
wood Floors, Approa. 2.000 aqlt
excellent regulatory compliance Full
HR POTENTIAL
Beoomenl. (740l448-053a
'
h lll ory, lnl. raeltd oandldalta
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
ahould
apply
to
:
Rockapnnga
Re·
100% ramodeled houso In p 0 •
MAILORDEA
hablllla!lon Center, 38759 Rock· moray, greal price, mu11 ·oee, wlli
CALL TOLL FREE
springe Road , Pomeroy, Ohio consider land contract, 740·8 •
1-81111·558·9069
98
45719, All ison Barnell, MPT, Ro· 8783,
Licenced Contractor Looking For hob Services Dlrtclor, Equal Op·
Help. Experience Not Neceuarr porlunll)' Emplojer Encourr,lng 3 112 ·MIIaa Out Sandhill Road
Workplloe Dlvtf511y.
(304)875-2507
•
(3041875-111138

•· .

•

RelumeAndRelCLA 524, c/o
Dolly T..,._, 82.5 Thin!
- - Gelllpclle, Oliki 41i131
Wan..d: Over The road Driver.
Must Be AI Least 23 Yaef5 Old.
Havo 1 nor Verifiable Elperlance. Call (304)578-2t44 Local,
1·177~800 PfDIIIPII e80714
For Lctng Dillenoe. Local

... ...... ,,

1)'.

-Diywr. -

- - Onlrwv-.
N 0111-~~~-.

3 Badro.,. Hou•• WHh Full .
Ba-enl &amp; Garage 0r1 1 Acre
01 Loind On llediiiOIId Ridge
(304j671HIM

180 ..,1 _._.. -.,0 Do

~~],~~~~~~~~~

U - Whirlpool RefrigeJator,
-Good; 5,00W 10,000 BTU

a-.

Manager.

140

oav-..

S1t.l50. FIM 0u1vorJ &amp; Set Up.

Room, Family Room w/Wood
Bumer &amp; Big ScrHn. Large
O.CU With J.cuzzl, Fenc.dl In
Bact Yard, P - Dilve, llalnlenance FrH. 2 ,200 SqFI
Uvlng Area. Rouah Lane.
{740)317-GZll

Pall.-

lor.

60

~-

· Coil

www.IIICINMWiddl--.can
bperlencad Caohier Neodo~
WOrt F""" Horne.
F...
(304)'95 3IMn

Ful lime pliyelc:alllierli&gt;lll ,__

Fraa KHteno. Liller Trained.
(3041875-35211

70

MANAGER

•
Iii a 1N"9'ooei.. IIUIIIng
... ,....,. 2: • '**'·~

Giveaway

(740)~11

-IIETAIII'

Ch'l
- -Diolary
- -Menilble . l(lli'tl
. .. ~

I:OIHI:OO.

40

tiiiJ St-s. 3D4-41'15-1429.

----u.. . .

3 Bedroom Brick Ranch. U.ing
Room &amp; Dining Room Fir•
place &amp; Patio. KHchen w/Ap·

--

AVON! AIAIUII To Buy or Sel.

. . . ·~- .. 7 • •

310 Homes for Sale

S.Stollllb2or3
Cal -Tee, 740-

MAIL ORDER (MI)I21-0816

-·"'-'"'
... ,, .........

_0.. _ _ . _ ,

-

NEEDED· plaoma

S25.CJO- $75.G1Mir PTIFT

30 Anllclunc.1lent

-·· .fer.... _
...

'

llmt.p,.,,..,,

On 2 Story -

ATTEHTION:

......

..... lift . . .

Man To R..,..,. Top Of

7150

atll21.

2

.

~- 1 -. al (740)448-

waH? Start mHIIng Ohio
elnglnlonigh11-800-761·2823

•'

TNe

75 hour courN, luting for 11 s-P....,.. F...
dayo, Monday through Frida; lila, ~ ...
1:30 "' 4:311. Tliil il • graal .... Apply AI UlHiyle Furnhuro, No
..._ Coli. Apply In por1unilyl
- "'·- ~wil
gin In July.""'
Slop
farbe... 851 Third Avenue. Gallipolis.
IIJI)IIcation or ..,.lad Slotihonie 01*&gt;.

Wlir

,

And
C.... l1iroi9IOUt
Tile Sennc.. A•ea. Candidate
Must Be CartuniiWd To lbe Reproduction Health Of lhn And
Women And Mainlain A ProChcii&lt;e l'liilolollhy. s.nd Cover
~And R....,.: Per'"'"nel·
HI Richland AvMue, Alhena.

Ohio 45101 £DE.

-.~~~~g~on.

. . . . . Cl' _ , . . . . ., ID

.... 1liia

~

.-,740-WC

•

F . - - - ... _

.._Or llo

-Or___
.....
................ . Lol-------·___
.....
.. ......,...,..

,.
,,

.

Houlehold

The 0e11y Sentinel•,...

Pomeroy, llldclepolt, Ohio

•

'

20. (31 Mike Skinner. Chevrolol, 199,
$78,014 .
21 . (43) Robert Presaley, Ford, 199,
$82,115.
22. (381 Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolet, 199,
$48,440.
23. (16) Steve Park, Chevrolet, 199.
$86,333.
24. (1 9) Bobby Hamilton Jr.. Chevrolet.
199, $88,080.
25. (371 Tony Stewart, Pontiac , 198.
$57,490.
26. (42) Tony I.Aibonte, Clievrolet, 198.
$71,970.
27. (221 K~IB Petty, Dodge . 198.
$35,990.
28. (411 Jerry Nadeau , Chevrolet, 198.
$46,840.
29. (351 Michael Wallrip; Chevrolet. · t 98,
$45,840.
.
30. (341 Case~ AlWOod, Dodge, 198.
$39,085
31. (281 Kevin Lepaga, Chevrolet. 198,
$37,915.
32. (271 Aon Hornaday Jr.. Pontiac, 197,
$35,340.
33. (28) Brett Bodine , Ford . 197,
$35.265.
34. (321 Shawna Robinson, Ford, 197,
$35,190.
35. (51 Ricky Craven, Ford , 198,
$35,115.
,
38. (241 Buckshot Jones, Dodge, 186,
engine !allure , $43,085.
37 . (151 John Androlll, Dodge , 188,
ClaSh, $70,042 .

38 . (401 Ward BuMn. Dodge, 184,
engine failure, $68,040.
39. (7) Dale Earnhardt Jr., ChevToltl,
171, engine failure, $69,593.
40. (391 Elliott Sadler. Ford, 158,
$52,835.
41 . (181 Rusty Wallace, Ford, 118.
$79,940.
42. (30) Todd Bodine. Ford, 38, craoh,
$34,760 .
43. (111 Kurt Busch. Fold, 18, crash,
$42,089.

Ract StltlstiCI
Winner's Avo•age S""ed: 134.203 mph.
Time of Race: 2 houra, 58 minutes , 50
seconds.
M&amp;rgin of VIctory: 0.085.
Caution Flags: 8 for 34 laps.
Lead Changes: 17 among 7 drivers.
IJip leaders: J.Gordon 0; R.Audd 1·2;
J.Gordon 3·22; O.Earnhardl Jr. 23-24;
J.GoJdon 25·30; J.Soneon 31·41 ;
B.Jones 42'; C.Earnhardt Jr. 43-~.C:
J.Gordon 45·92; S.Marlln 93; J.Gordon
94·123 ; S.Marlln 124·13 1; M.Kenoeth
132·141 : J .Gordon 142· 174; S.Marlin
175·193; J.Gordon 194·198; R.Rudd
199; J.Gordon 200.
Point Btandlngo
1, J.Clonlon, 1,11H. 2, D.Jarretl, 1.970.
3, S.MMin, 1,869. 4, R.Rudd, 1.81111. 5,
T.Siewart, 1,791 . 8, A. Wallace, 1,788. 7,
J.Banson, 1,755. 8, S.Park, 1,748. 9,
K.Harvlck, 1,855. 10, B.IJibon\e, 1 ,6 13.

�llclf'.dr;, June 11, 2001

'

The Deily

.......

p.

s! ntinel•

.

85

- ..

XKA Cro••word Puzzle

ACMII

•

II.F.A.

A&amp;D Alti Up~lhtll'f' ~lie.

.
....... •••
................
·----..
.,__..

Rutland, Ohio

Dtlftttll)'fl
lllllfct.ill&amp;

,,..

ROBOTMAN

A·J~

Box : RY
1
f.11·\ .i f port Ot110

Writeset

r''

il

~ ''f)IJ

Local843-5214
Medicare Supplement; Ufe Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
hnsion &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

• Gravel s..d •
ToJIIIII • li1ll Dirt
•Mulch
Bulldozer Servlcts

,.......-.

CQNSTRJCTION

SUNNY DAZE lAWN &amp;
GAlDEII SElVICE

Mowl"'- weed
1118111'111
Eatllli. Tlllllll.
Spodalbe Ia ...
CUIIItnldlool.
. Prunlnf. PressUre
..................biD&amp;.
Wlsblnll
electrical, aWD•
!eao-,uciRJ&gt;IIr
pord!a,&amp; ........

Owner

Free E:.:,t,r'1Jtes

9

......2-7445
591-9254

(II

•'

Hourly rates
Bu•IIIH•
740-541-G350

949-1405

591-5011

AD Makes Tnctor &amp;

-----..... ·

,.

,.••a.,••

I• 40-949-1
1

$50 per

Cell#

c.u

4-747-1715

- month~
'

•Niwtlomel

·:

Remalttl'ng

Stop • CCimplfe .

TOPSOIL

I

'

·

:.

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR

KUPS TIE

su•aull! HEAT
OUT AND WillER
TillE HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT ".5llo
OF OAM•PIMO

10· x 20 S50 DO

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS

~40) 992-5072

PRICING

FACTORY DIRECT

OUALITY
WINDOW.

TIM DEEM

Reaidenllal Pr-.re Wuhlng. Single Wldt!e,
Double Wldes, Boat's Decks, AVa, and
camper's, swimming pools and famHiqulpmentI've ~e waahed things from fiiNng stallon
parking lots, RV's and hOmes to a corporate
Lear.JBI.

.,

I also- Degrease automobUe and truck motor's

as well as diesel and lnduslrial equipment
enginea, sUCh u bulldozer's, baclchoes; and
endloadel'll. ~ I can help you caR me after 5:00.
Jfml Sc:ollltiZ-3002
or email at: onemancorporation@frognet.net

CQNTRACTING
Roofing, Siding,
Wf!1Cion, Deckl,

Hill'• Self
Ster•t•

2S1870 lluhln ROid
Racine, Ohio

Pore.,.., Garage~,
Room.Adcl.

45171

· Free Estimates
Toll Free

740-949-2217

1·866-992-CJ021
74CH92-CJ021
Locally owned &amp;

Sizes 5' X 10'
to 10' x30'

.

operated

Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

WV028120

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

·---·
Aem aclelllll

·-Oil....""mlllntl
• Eloc!rlc* •

lloollng .. ,
YlnvJIIdlng • hinting
• Plllo lnd f'olcl! Dockl
I
I

Free Estimates

V, C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pcmttoy.'Otllo

Geuerai/Spedallzed Typing
Temporary Oftk,e Assistance
Mailing LabeiiiiEnvelopes
Cassette 1'nmlcrijltlon
Numei'OU.I Dulness Support Services
25 yeal'lfSecretarllll Experience

,

740.667-3224 or 740-667.0038

Lowest

Poe mo. Ohio
· Do'cr · !"a_
• Co~&lt;hoc .• ,,..._.

small

for

londKQP!nQ
Shoun Seth

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

/lh Hood'Jb SI&lt;J)lATion~

74().992-5232

1-304-675-7124

Pd 1

Sides SeniEe l!lltallatloa
Spe£iUb.i"'in Sl!eet Metal n.ctwork
"Tnme" s.tol It Senke For
Gallla, Muon, aDd Moip COUllliel
Lkenled IIJid lolllured
wv 005176

Moson,WV

304-773-553~

.

("'4TlrAA~

youo dill for .........
nutrllori, or lUll looll yow
IIIII*' wlllllllllilll

•.No Carry Outs

~/nllmllla..,hll

• Mounting, ,Bii:J.xlra · '·

c.n yodr ~odop 1ncNiii

Available ·

.,..._ cnfi"ICiocll,

Olher ·spec~all

-l{llol'_,_.

.

t:':

155R12

While Suppllea L.alt

-J&amp;L
· -Elillrplllo
dlltr-,

.....
.,...n,...
....... tor you
(740)•11W121

1&amp;5-IIOR13

Come In And See

165-80R13
175-IOR13

Or

185-IOR13

I

open for lunch
Monday thru Friday
Try our Rotisserie chicken,
homemade potatoe salad,
macaroni salad &amp; baked
beans.
Open 11 :00 a.m.
We Deliverll

Sat. June 16
from 8:30 am to 4 pm at
F.O.E. #2171
· All those interested in
taking these classes
call Gene Lyons

992-9200

at 992·6619

Now

&amp; cyunct....
Also Sell Different TYpe• Of 0111
Chest..-, Ohio
(IQriJI•r W1mer Heating
&amp; Cooling building)

R.~lr Hydrlullc

"

•

yOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

55

••
•
''

CONTRACTOIIS, INC.
Racine, Ohki 45771 '

·

Flot Work,

,1 .

Replocomonlll, • W1llu
and Drlva ' St...tl ·
C~to

• T!)p • ~I • Trim
• Stump &amp;rincling
• lluCklt Truck

I
:'

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE
MQwlnQ&amp;

TrlmmlnQ

.
' .

.

740-992·5065

' .

25 years experience
.
I
Free
at mat88

e

..

avafl•bte.

Spcci8lth8nks to lyle
Oene
. ' B8ker Auto Value ·
&amp; •II our loyal ,

.

""742""VV
01\15 or customers &amp;. friends.
7lf\r
'tl:'t-:"10"'" · ' · Ouodoor Power' ,
1 877-~~
•

'"

I

' •

,

Brlng.ln gour.repalr work
we'll 'get gou going for ·
spring ~
·

SPECIAL FINANCE DBPARTMIBNT I

Bankruptcy? Credll Problems?
"We Can Hetp"D .

'

•

·~

...

BISSELL
IUILDIRI INC.
Now Homos • VInyl

or 1 REAL DEAL on 1-newTawn tractor,
lawn mover or Wled trimmer.

one
j

''

Windows • Room

•

740-992~7599

.• Selaa &amp; Slrvlce
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy

.992-2975

(NO SUNDA\' CALLS) L.,;,;p.;..r.r~..,;;....----..iiOI~U

I

Cellular·
Jeff Warner Ins.

·Additions • Rooftng

FREE ESTIMATES

· Ask For Mike Hindle

; ·

.•Ropl..,..,.nl

COMMII&lt;IALIIIIIIIIIIDOOW.

Cell Us Flnt Or We 8oth Losel

79 or 446-9800

Sldlns • Now Garqa

•

.J

Tuesday, June t2 , 2001
Patience and stick-to-itiveness will aid you in the year
ahead in achieving a number of
things you 've' been wanting for
a lon~ time . They'll come
about when the timing is righl.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20l
.. Should someone or something impede your progress
today and deny you a success
for which you've (ought hard
and long, losing your temper
..over il will only add insult Jo
injury. Trying to patch up a.
broken romance• The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help
you undersland what to do to
make the relationship work .
Mail $2.75to Malchmaker. c/o ..
. this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758.
Murruy Hill Slation, New
York. NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ·
-- Before you start . swinging
that hummer today, you'd best
take the time to think out all
your Sleps ' beforehand . If
you're unprepared, you could
)nuke u mess out of your project.
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22) .. If
you tlidn't ha\'e b'ud luck.
)'ou'd huvc no luck at all. So be
philos011hicul aboul it. 11'11 help

ll!asf•Cent/1edTtd.,klans
- Onr 23 yrs •XP.-

.

1(

992-5479

"£-tfS• ::!:

I I I I I

~
- -----

'Birthday.

740-982 ~122

Every Spring Tune-Up
geJ a FREE -Blade Sharpening.
New equipment art:lvlng dally
SN Manning, Wayne or Jim

•

..

',..

"..

I

I

'Your

Patloa, Sidewalks,, - Afl.:v~:':~

Free Es~meteo

Sorvlna Okloood W.V.
WV 111)31712 -," t

.

~pallty Drlvewayl,

· • Footon, Walll, Stepo • ·

'

'

.

740-985-;t948
COKCRETf/ILOCK/BRICK

50 r...:h

I
I I' I I p
I
I

13M College Rd.
I

30

S@\\c{\

SYRACUSE SMALL
INQII\11 DOCTORS

---

46Smlllesl

JUNE 11' 1-_.

Tree Service

,,

P/1

992-1717

JDID'

qr'(140) 9,,5 4384
24t16tir8/7, qaya Per Week '

--

TC

.

. (140) 985.419'4

=-·

I

lOx 10$40
10x20$60

h~ld

-·-•::::.c. =

I Is I _

St. Rt. 7

CPR &amp; First Aid
Classes

33=-··
34c..

-~1he 45 prince
28 Muddy
Chrislmal

1-·

HARTWELL
STORAGE

•

Alrtea

32 Clu1' ef

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

~

1-8110-250-9077

Residential Commerdil N.., Clllll!lruction

IMPERIAL TIRE

Whothor you'll lf'jlng to

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d'ol
some interesting facts
31 Bad ~
plural
IOUIId
lrllcle
•
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'
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10
h!celsol
-· and highlights how
37 Comic
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BARNEY
one needs to be lucky
DeLuiM
canton
41
org. 11 :;;: 38 I 53 EtploMge
44"
'I
I
1
2
with
the
questions
·
BENNY GOOGLE'S PAYIN' ME
wllhlcMI
orQ.
IUIIIJc
c.w
when under the spotTWO DOLLARS TO MOW HIS
lights. Some of you
· LAWN, UNCLE
will have "Ask MariSNUFFY!!
lyn" in your Sunday
paper. She receives
good questions from
· her readers. For exam. pie, Michael Perlman,
from Seattle, asked
what foreign country
is the first you cross if
you fly due south from
Detroit Airpon. Well,
for $125,000, what is
your answer?
By way Of a hint,
this deal occurred in
that country's 1968
Mixed Teams Championship.
The auction wouldCELEBRITY CIPHER
n't be repeated often.
by Lui• Campos ·
First, East opened a
Ctllllrtty Clplltr crypiO(p'Omllt1! CAIIIed lrom quolationa by famous
pllllllo, put end
Each lot1orln lila cipher sJands for another.
light third-lland one
Todsy's clue: H equals J
club. Then South
THE BORN LOSER
'ZLPI!
G'D
OMD .D GRRGMEPB
made a 'heavy weak
f&gt;NYTt\l~ ~IN.. 0\/EIZ."'' '[ TOOK. 'I'HE. ~~~~OLE. FAto'lllX
MN
CYRPCVYY,
DVBA
M~IY-WOC~~~ jump overcall. West,
no
appealing
with
WOCKWD, ~'(?
TI-\E.~~ ...
f'FJC£,.~ ~
OLVEFPR
FBKIWGPYVEPA
action, selected a neg!/~.... ' ·""'""""'" ~TI\l~ ~~~
ative double that in·
$M
DGAP
LGR
EVDP
NIOOT IT t--~---l.- 1 principle promised at
(MBYVEIM
FBKI.' least four beans. Finally, East decided to
HPBBT
RPE~EPY'R)
conven it into a penalFBPPE .P
ty double by passing.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "What's missing in tho musical iheater
West, Cecille Fisll11 producers willing to nurture now work." - (Producer) Hat
Prince
'·, -·
-- - - - - =::.....t.......:.:;.;~-;.;..-r.;.;;..-J •er, staned wilh ·her two· • .
top clubs. East, Don - .....---=-~~""""::-"":'-'"::!'~~""""!'--"='"""..., • 1jf"";;;r...-T:::::====:::-~ D11Costa. dropped the
T::~:~;~'
~- ~
:r lleiiN. llO 'ICU ttE11EMBE~ ANYr'HINEo
~l:~~ri;~~
rJUS.T
WAS
eight 00 the second
1~111~ ~y CLAY ~. POLl"N _;...__ __
WE WE~E 'T~U(,HT•
round. Reading this
·
··
.-.BOUT
O
R.arrange
l•tt•r•
af the
THIS YE"Il? :t IXlN'T !
TO !:J&gt;.y
higheSt SpOt-Card as a
four scrambf•d wards b.·
~NO WHOSE FIIIJLT IS
THAT.
suit-preference signal low tv form four slmpt. wards.
TH~T? THE "TIMHt:lt.S"!
for beans, Fisher conSCE J 0 0
tinued with the hean
-.--T':"".,..::--i,...:.,.,....-1
four to her partner's
king . East cashed the L-....L.....L--lL--...L.....J..--l
club king, played a
UME 0 S
nptC,..,.,.c U"'&gt;&gt;.:11 bean to his partner's l--,r.3-.-l--,ll":'4--,l~
~~dli::hd~WI ace, and ruffed a hean.
. . .
.
Then he continued :=~==~~~
with another club, I
N 0 J I T 1..~''
During a·ny sports seaso11 th e .
I-lOW CAN 1 f.lELP BEIN6
STR..,.N6E 61RL .. I1LUIAVETO KEEP which guaranteed a
,.
biggest and most freque~ t white
, 1 ADMIT
JEALOUS KNOWIN6 CIWCK AND
AN EVE ON 1-lEit.SOIINDS LIKE
second trump trick for
. . . .
lie told by husband's is, "Tbe
I'M CRAZED
,1.\MCIE ARE AT CAMP T06ETHER
51-IE COOLCI SE 61VfN6 AwAV . two down. If declarer
games almost over, dear, I'll be
:·WITH
WI-IILEI'MINSUMMERSOIOOL?
~RTROOPMOVEMENT5 .. :
ruffed high in hand,
in VI D I lthereina ---·---."
~EALOU51/!
West's nine would
6
G) Complete the chuckle quo1ed
P;l
,
..
·
score. Alternatively, if
.
by BIHng in the mi&gt;ling words
~
5
· •l South ruffed in the
you develop from step No. 3 below.
.!
l~ dummy, he couldn't
PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN I
THESE SCNJARES
!
~ pick up East's spade :i;~~~;:;~~;:;~;::=:;=:=;~=;::::;::~
king. .
UNSCR.. MBlE ABOVE lETTERS
II
Heading due south
TO GET ANSWER
from Detroit airport
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
takes you over CanaNumber- Whirl- Build - Anyhow - DRYER
da. If you got it right,
'The laundromat is a great place to meet men," one
I'm sorry to tell you cutie said. "Yea," sighed the second cutie, "but who wants
that in this column, a guy that can't afford a DRYER?"
it's only Monopoly
money.

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VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
: · · It could be onoofthose Jays
when everyone will hnve bet~
ler reasons for tloing things a
&lt;el1uin wuy thun you do. 11' 11
be easier to grin and bear it
. then to browbeat them into
compliance.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23).
· All of us are differenl. so it 's ;
a waste of time to try to make
· others O\'er in ~our own image
today. See the good in others
and ignore their imperfections.
. ' and they' ll ignore yours.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ·· You could muke one of
your bigger mistakes today if
you allow you..,elf to be undu ly influenced into taking a
speculative risk solely·on what
another sn)'s. Do your hornework first.
. SAG!TIARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) •• Avoid saddling
yourself with deadwood today.
If you can' t find anyone you
know who is competent even
to carry hi s or her own load, go
it alOne. Otherwi se you' ll have
more work to handle.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.

.
19) ·· The possibilities for
achieving !-iUec~ss. today are nil
if you ins1stupon doing things
in a hc lt er-skl'itcr fas hi o n.
Organi z;lli on and pl~mning urc
a must.

AQUARIUS !.I an. 20-Fol&gt;.
19 ) -- D on' t mak e mw mone-

tary mOYC!- llldliY just ·hc~:au~c

others ai·~ d oing sn . Comli ti n ns
me more trid.:y tllalltlsll&lt;d. an J
ycmr harUc;1m muncy l'Ollld go
Jow1i th ~ whc..:.

PISCES !Fch. 20·March 20 1
-- Sh ould yuu fed liH: rpow -·
crcd or m n mancuYt:rcd when

out in that hig worl d toduy.
don't c:om~ hmnc and takt.:.
your di ~appoi ntmcnt 0 11t ori
the famil y. l!' s not th e ~t· t,mlt .

ARIES !March 21-Apn l 19)
stmng ch.ance you
could take on un a~ s ignmen t
toda y 1hat is way beyond your
scope. lt"s good to be positi ve
about y.our abilities. but it mu st
be !ialted with realism.
TA URUS (Apnl 20-Mny
20) .. 11 ' II be your choice
today to go belly_up wi th your
fin unces if you choose to
ignore prudence and !ipcnd
foolis hl y. If you do. you will
only have yourself to blame
when you' re broke .
-~ Thcre '!-i a

I

t,

\

�\ •

.~

• •

•

• •
•

•
•

• •

Mariners win for 16th

time in 17 games;

•

By The Asociated Press

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~u cenh ·June 12, 1001 ·Vol. 51 . No :U'J

-·

....

....

Social
SecuriW
officials
meet

..

,._,,_

Pirates 11,
l'WiiiS 8

I

WASHINGTON (AP)
- President. Bush's new
Social Security conuniision
is getting down to work on
overhauling the massive
entidement progr;un, with
stock ,market investing on
the panel's list of potential
~-

"There
has been a
'
very
remarkable
chang~ in
the
approach
Americans
take to the
thought · of
owning a
mutUal
fund or some other saving
system that's connected with
the markets;' former Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick
· MoynihanofNewYork,cochairman of the i::onuriission, said at the panel's first
meeting Monday.
All 16 commission members - both Republicans
and Democrats- have supported privatizing the system to some degree. Critics
charged that Bush stacked
the commission with supportets. that .WQuld provide
po)itical ·weight with a

White Sox:S,

Cubs1

Reel Sox 5,
Phillie$ 4

•

'

Athletics.6,
Giants 2

Braves 4,

Yankees 1

b.WtiJan
. Jali'
i.;:.
. ei tq.. .p»&gt;
captpaign pie~ of creating pe,fsonal investment accounts.

The commtsston ''is
astonishingly unrep~nta­
tive of the array of views
held by most Americans
concerning Social Security's
future;• said Roger Hic!tey,
co-director of tjle · Institute
for America's Future.
Hickey noted that members include corporate executives · and financial investment officials, but no representatiVes or advocates for
Social Security beneficiaries.
But, said Estelle James, a
Democratic member ·and
World Bank consultant,
"The system has to change,
everyone agrees."
Any change must be
approved by Congress.
Clouding the reality of any ·
recommendations the com~ .
mission makes are next year's
congressional election, a
newly
Democratic-controlled Senate and stockmarket queasiness in a soft-

Marlins 7,
·atueJays 2

EXTRA! EXTRA!

..

Orioles 3,

Docfp1S5

Friday, July 13, 2001

EXpos 2

Daily Sentinel

·Diamondbacks
12, Royals 5

Mets 10,
Devil Rays 0

Brewen ·l
nce•s 3

Astros 6,
Rangers 5

Emma johnson
Daughter of

~on ·

••

•

•

•

in the bottom of the first
inning. A walk to Brad
Runyon, a Gallipolis error
and single off the bat of
· frwaPIIpB1
Travis Barton j,';ave Meigs a
added singles.
3-0 lead.
Gibbs was tagged with
In the third inning, Galthe loss, Rocchi also saw lipolis plated !hree· runs to
action on the m.o und. T~e tie the game at 3-all . .Kintwo gave up seven hiu, ney and Dray had singles in
walked four and struck out the inning, coupled with
six. Drayu had a pair of sin- tw,o Meigs errors and a hit
gles to lead Gallipolis, batter plated the runs.
Merola added his triple, and
Meigs took a 4-3 lead in
Hardy, Warren ·a nd Nida the bottom of the inning,
each had singles.
Jeff Brown was hit by a
· In the night cap, Gallipo- pitch, moved up on a fieldlis put five runs on the ·ers . choice off the . bat of
baord in the top qf the sixth Bradley Brannon and scored
inning and went on to ' on a 'single off the bat Bar. defeat Meigs 11-5.
ton.
Meigs took a 2-0 lead in
The two teams traded
the bottom of the first runs . in the fourth inning,
inning in the second game . . with Meigs scoring on a
Dettwiller singled and stole ground out off the bat of ·
second. Run ton followed · Lyons to make it 5-4 going
with a single and moved up into the sixth inning.
on a Gallipolis error. RunyGallipolis sent ten batters
on then scored on a sacri, to the plate in the sixth'
fice ·off the bat of Lyons.
inning to take a 11 - 5 lead,
Meigs added another run which is the way the game

ended. Warren and Merolahad singles in the inning,
Rocchi a double and Al)en
added the big hit, a three
run home run.
Merola was the winning
pitcher, giving up six hits, ·
walking three and striking
out six. Dray had twp singles and a double, allen a
single and the home run,
Kinney two singles, Rocchi
a double, Hardy, Merola,
Gibbs abd Caldwell each a
single.
Barton was tagged . with
the loss, giving up 14 hits,
walking one and striking
out three. Barton had a pair
of singles to lead Meigs,
Brad Runyon, Dettwiller,
Eric Runyon and Stanley
each added singles.
Meigs will travel to
Logan on Monday evening
for a make-up game.
·

Frank and janet johnson

PII•IHIIulh.AJ

appear in the July 13th issue. .
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved

e. 2001.

Sattlon1- I:IPipl

Plctu,.a can be

pic:kld up aftar ·July 11th, 2001.

life

McVeigh
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) Shari: :
· Sawyer shows her 3-year-old daughter pic- ·· ·
tures every day of a grandmother who died
six years ago when a truck bomb destroyed ·
the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
Despite the photos and stories, the little
girl is more familiar with Timothy McVeigh,
the man. executed Monday for the worst act
of terrorism on U.S . .soil.
"She's seen him on TV. she's seen him in
interviews, she's heard him talk and all she
gets to see of her grandmother are these picRIVER. SWEEP 2002. - Kenny Wiggins, director qf Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention Program,
tures," said Sawyer, a Waterloo, Ill., resident
right, and Hal Kneen, Meigs County agriculture extension agent, hung a banner at the Pomeroy levee
whose mother-in"law, Dolores Stratton, was
announcing the arri~l of River Sweep ·2001, an annual riverbank clean-up day that takes place on Saturamong the 168 people who died April 19,
day at various locations along the Ohio River. (Tony M. Leach photo)
1995, when McVeigh detonated his 7 ,ooo~
pound bomb.
McVeigh, 33, a decorated GulfWar veter~
an, died by chemical injection without uttering a word. His eyes rolled back; his lips
turned slightly blue and his gaunt face
calm
as he was pronounced dead at the U.S:.
8v TONY M. l.rAcH
"wt already have members located at the old terry landing;
Penitentiary, the first federal prisoner execut~
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
and in Middleport, the gathering
of
various
4-H
clubs,
ed
in 38 years.
·
POMEROY - Meigs County
spot will be in Dave Diles Park.
Boy
Scouts
and
senior
"He can never hurt us again. He can never
Recycling and Litter Prevention
This is the 13th year for the
call
our children 'collateral damage' again;:
citizen groups signed up sweep, which began in 1989 as a
Program will be doing its part to
said Amy Stiers, who lost her stepmother and
help protect the environment this
for t~e event. "
pilot project in the greater Cincina cousin .in the blast.
,
S~turday while participating in the
nati and northern Kentucky areas.
Some 232 survivors ·and victims' relatives
13th annual · Ohio River Sweep
Kenny Wiggin•
Communities located along the
gathered in Oklahoma City to · watch th~
2001.
entire length of the Ohio River
dosed-circuit broadcast of McVeigh's death~
Members of the prevention pro- Meigs Recycling and Litter Pre- joined in the following year and
Some met at the Oklahoma City National
gram, along with local volunteers, vention Program, said Monday united people from more than 100
Memorial, where the federal building once
will be out this weekend, physical- that coordinated clean up sites will counties in collecting river. bank
stood. Others ignored the execution alto~
ly removing refuse to help draw be established in Racine, Pomeroy, litter.
·gether, ada~a!lt_;l;h_~- weuld not let McVeigh
attention' to . the existing litter Middleport, and several other areas
" In . the years that the R,iver.
:
steal another moment. .
jn:Oble"m ari:'d to foster an attitude along the Ohio River.
Sweep.has been in existence, more
"A must have been fJearing away , the
&gt;Of" .wise stewaj'dsi).ip pr~ctices -- "We expect a 1&lt;1fge number of thaq '70 •million tons of'tf;lsh and
kitchen dishes," said Roli_Roddy, a ,survivor
toward olll' natural resources. . ' ' inaividuals to turn out on Satur- debl-is have been removed &amp;om ·
who was home at 8: 14 a.m. EDT when ·
More dian 3,000 miles of shore- day;• said Wiggins. "We already the Ohio River," said Jeanne !son,
McVeigh was pronounced dead. "They were
line, from Pittsburgh, Pa., to Cairo, have members of various 4-H project director for the Ohio
intended to be distractions.! mean, if I saw a
Ill., will be combed by volunteers Clubs, Boy Scouts and senior citi- River Valley Water Sanitation
piece of lint on a perfectly clean floor, I
(ORSANCO).
for trash and various debris. The zen groups signed up for the Commission
would have picked it up."
"Each
winter,
a
new
supply of
clean-up is the largest environ- event."
Some on Monday expressed sympathy for
In Pomeroy. volunteers will debris, some natural and some
mental event of its kind and will
McVeigh's father, Bill McVeigh, of Pendlemeet at the parking lot next to the manmade, collects along the Ohio
encompass six states.
ton, N.Y. But for many, the day was reserved
Kenny Wiggins, director of boat levee; the Racine site will be
for
thoughts cif lost loved ones~
Pluse IH 5-p. A3

Volunteers gear for River Sweep

Skateboarders, car doors
said to blame
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - Can skateboarders and
beautification volunteers live peaceably
together in downtown Middleport?
That was the question addressed at Monday
night's regular meeting of Middleport Village
Council, when damages to downtown flower
beds were discussed.
Mary Wise, one of several volunteers who
solicited donation.s and plan,ted flowers in a

LIM: HI
Details, A3

Lotteries
Buell.,. 5: 7-13-1&amp;-24-26

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

The ·naily Sendnel

A3 W.VA.

81.3.6 o.lly :S: I~ o.lly 4: 1&gt;-344
A3 c 2001 Ohio Valley Publithin1 CO.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

---------------------------------•
1

-

was

Coundl addresses damages

OHIO
Pick :S: 9-5-9; Pick 4: 1-4-6-~

Complete the form belo~ and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
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July

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Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

9 · ;aM3.MDIAMI2

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0 . _ - S.. 3. ClagDCID I
Cdorldo 12, 81. louio 3
0 II od 8, San F,.ICiooo 2•
•
"'.., ..,. 8. ~ Angoloo 5, 10 irring&amp;
, _ .. San Oiogo 1
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Cll: ........
Claiilo
A day :ofta- the end of their
At Arlington, pinch-hitter
112
Stlouie
33
.532 5
.831
IS-game winning meak, the Orlando Merced brought
31
.517 II
CIDgD
.458
11112
II
.500 7
.424 13 112
30
Delloil
Seaule Mariners started a new Texas bac;k fiom a 4-3 deficit
Qd
~·
7
2!1
A10 121f.l - C i y
.355 18
spurL
with a three-run homer off
.317 18
It 41
. _ s.r-s
w L
G8
John Oterud. Ichiro Suzuki Jeff Zimmerman (2-4) with
w l
48 13
.71fT
G8Arizona 12, Cily 5
and AI Martin homered as two outs in the ninth, inaking
.eoa
31 30
Arizona
38 25
.508 17
los Ang I7I I 1M 2!1
Ooklond
.492 18
.540 4
30 31
T-,.oSeattle won for the 16th time a winner of Jay Powell (2-1).
.518 51/2
Texas
.344 v
c.u.lo
32 311
21 .o10
-(-5-4)atTOIIII*&gt;(Michalal&lt;
SanFIWI.
31 32
5-4), 7:0S p.m.
in 17 games, routing the San Houston took two of three in
.4112 7
.-480 9
San Diogo
21 34
INTEIII.£AOUE PLAY
r - COilwr 4-2) at u. AngoJeo
Diego Padm 8-1 Sunday.
.. the
first Astros-Rangers
. . _ .. 0 . .
C""*- 6-2), 10:10 p.m.
John llibnu (5-4) scattered matchup.
-10.N.Y.Ylil
8
'
F'hlodoVoio 5, llolton 2
seva~ hio in seven shutout
(1'8raz :H)al TOIIII*&gt;(Panio 3~CID4.~-Sox3.
4), 7:0S p.m.
innings to complete an 11-1
-e.T-1
CD•n.- ~~at- (castilhom&lt;::Stand.
lo 5-4), 7:0S p.m.
U.Angoloo 2 , - 1
N.Y. - ( - 6-2) at Ballirnon! (MerTampa BoyS. N.Y.- 2
."Team-wise, it's great,"
•
-1·7). 7:0S p.m.
Dlltroill6. ... • .. 5
flabma said. "Eleven of 12
Mcwlllwl4, 8 r;ue2
........ (Anna Jr. 6-2) at N.Y. Yan, . . _., ,_...,. 2
-(l.llw2-l),
7:0Sp.m.
games at home. It's unbelievAt Minneapolis, Brian Giles
Clau*id 10. Clldlw.,. 2
~ (Rilclio CHI) alllolnJil (Miidd
able. We lost yesterday, but our singled to open a seven-run
4-11), 7:0S p.m.
81. louio 8, ~ 2
KansosCIIy3.Arizona2
Ill
I • (HIIIIilo!Jmm.• 1--7) .t c•;llaid
mood hasn't changed."
eighth inning and capped the
T-18.lioulloll4
· --.21, 7:05 p.m.
At 48-13, the Mariners rally with a two-run triple.
matched the 1939 New York Minnesota took an 8-1 lead
Yankees for the second-best after the second inning and
6 1-game record since 1900 was ahead 8-4 in the eighth.
behind the 1912 New York Jason Kendall had a go-ahead
Giano (50-11).
infield single, making a winner
Suzuki got his 1OOth hit offScott Sauerbeck (1-2).
with his home run, and the
· . seven-time batting champion
from Japan is on pace to finish
with 266 hi~. '!bich would be
a major league record.
In oiher interleague games, · At Comiskey Park, Chris
it Atlanta 4, New York Yankees Singleton hit a solo homer as
BIG SHOT - Houston
1; Arizona 12, !Unsas City 5; the White Sox won for the
Astros' pinch hitter
Houston 6, Texas 5; Pittsburgh 13th time in 16 games, taking
Orlando Merced
11, . Minnesota 8; Chicago two of three in the Crosstown
celebrates
White Sox 3; Chicago Cubs 1; Series. Kip Wells (3-2) outwhile running
toward first
Boston 5, Philadelphia 4; pitched Jon Lieber (6-4).
base after hitting
Cincinnati 9, Cleveland 3;
the game-winning,
Aorida 7, Toronto 2; Detroit 3;
3-run home run
Baltimore 3, Montreal 2; New
during the
York Mets 10, Tampa Bay 0;
ninth Inning
Oakland 6, San Francisco 2;
against the
Anaheim 6, Los Angeles 5; and
At Boston, Dante Bichette,
Texas Rangers,
Milwaukee 8, Detroit 3.
taking over as cleanup hitter
Sunday.(AP )
In the one National League because Manny Ramirez was
game, Colorado routed St. sick, went 3-for-4 with a
·Louis 12-3.
home run. Philadelphia led 3- nine,. and Mark Johnson and
At Seattle, Carlton Loewer 1 in the eighth before· Carl
Joe McEwing hit two-run
(0-1) made his first major Everett homered off Robert
homers. Albie Lopez (3-8) lost
league appearance since Sept. Person, Troy O'Leary hit a
his seventh straight decision.
20, 1999, and allowed six runs tying double off Rhea!
and six hits in 2 1-3 innings.
Cormier (3-1), and Troy
O'Leary allded another RBI
double to make a winner of
Hideo Nomo (6-3). J
At Oakland, Eric Chavez
and Jeremy Giambi hit conAt New York, Greg Maddux
secutive homers against Livan
(6-5) allowed one run and
Hernandez (4-9) in a threeseven hits in 6 2-3 innings to
run eighth. Mark Mulder (8defeat Mike Mussina (5-7),
At Toronto, Alex Gonzalez 3) allowed two runs and five
who gave up four runs hit a three-run double and hits in 7 2-3 innings.
three earned - and six hits in Derek Lee had a two-run
eight innings in losing his triple as Brad Penny (5-1)
third straight start. Atlanta defeated Esteban Loaiza (5-6)
Angels&amp;~
closed within three games of
Co~ing
NL East-leading Philadelphia
its closest margin since
The
At . Los Angeles, Garret
May 2.
·'
Anderson hit a one-out, solo
homer off Eric Gagt~e (1-4) in
At Baltimore, Jason Johnson the 1Oth after Jorge Fabregas
(6-3) came within an out of singled home the tyin~ run
· his first complete game in the against Jeff Shaw with one out
majors, taking a four-hitter
At !Unsas City, Luis Gonza- into the ninth before fading. in the ninth.
. lez and Erubiel Durazo hit Javier Vazquez (5-7) pitched a
three-run homers, and the six-hitter for Montreal.
.
I
•
Diamondbacks tied a team
The Daily Sentinel Baby
record for runs in an inning
Edition is a Special Edition filled
widt an eight-run fourth that
At
Detroit,
Jeromy
Burnitz
p.ut it ahead 12-1.
with; photographs of local
drove in five runs with two
'
homers, and Jamey Wright (5children. - ages newborn to four
At Tampa Bay, Kevin Appier 4) defeated Chris Holt (4-5).
(4-5) allowed four hits in
years old. The Baby Edition will
seven innings and struck out

•

•

Tuesday

81

MIRd'IJ• J II 11. J~

Pirates beat Twins
•

SPORIS: Earnhardt autopsy ordered sealed,

Pagell8

The Daily Sentinel

•

I

SHOWS
DAMAGE-

Mary Wise, a
volunteer whohelped with
.downtown
plantings,
shows members of Middleport Village
Council some
of the damaged fencing
which she
blames on
skateboarders
and careless :
motorists.
(Brian J. Reed·
photo)

downtown beautification project last month,
met with counCil to discuss damages to small
metal fences which were placed around the
downtown flower beds.
Wise said that the flowers' fences, putchased
with donations &amp;om Mason VFW, Bob's Market and Middleport Community Association,
have been damaged throughout the busiQess
district by car doors and by skateboarders.
The skateboarders and scooter riders, in particular, are creating an increasing menace to the
downtown plantings, and council should
enforce any ordinances relating to skateboarders, Wise said.

PluM ... Council. AJ

$·170,000 needed.for deaf inmate's interpreter:
COLUMBUS (AP)· - The state will
spend more than $170,000 over two years
to provide a deaf interpreter for a teenager in a SOl!thern Ohio juvenile detention facility.
The Department of Youth Services is
contracting witll Southern Ohio Medical
Center of Portsmouth to provide 40
hours a week of interpreting services for
the 18-year-old.
He is housed in the Ohio River Valley

Juvenile Correctional Facility in Franklin
Furnace on a sexual assault charge in
Monroe County. Franklin Furnace is on
the Ohio River 96 miles south of
Columbus.
.
The contract, approved Monday, calls
for increasing the tee n-ager's sign-lanf:,'Uage vo cabulary and skills. It also calls
for helping him communicate with
teachers and peers ··to aid in the development of appropriate behaviors in various

social situations."
The teen-ager "would not be able to
function in this environment without
these services," said Kevin Miller, a Youth
Services spokesman.
The tee n-ager can't read lips and has
limited sign-language a~ility, Miller said.
He has been imprisoned about a year, and
could serve \)ntil he 's 21 . He's tentatively
scheduled for a fall release.

.- - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

Diabetes? "Walk With Usl" .

Child's Name (s) &amp;Age (s):_·- - , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

'

Parent's Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:--.....;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_-,-_:__

"Walk With Us" is a low-impact diobetes"self.management
program that can help you feel your best. Join us at
Gallipolis City Pork (or Wai-Mart Pharmacy Entrance
if it rains or is colder than 50 degrees) every
Wednesday in June at .10:00 om. ·

~ ---------------,-,.City &amp; State:-----,---'••• The above lnformallo.a will be used In the ad. ooo
Phone N u m b e r : - - - - - - - - Submitted b y : - - - - - - - - - ,

--------------~---------------------------------~'

HU,RRV!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
\ FRIDAY JULY 6. 2001!

For more information, call

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the ljolzer
Difference.
I

(740) 446·5080
Sponsored by the HMC Diabetes Edvcati6n Depa~ent.
'·

••
•·

,.

'C

.,.., '

~

''

...

1./b

1,..

,,

"

•

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