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'•
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Pomeroy • Middleport •

Olllo • Point Pl....nt, WV

Census helps Ohio researchers, Al
Dodgers sweep slumping Reds., B1

Hlp: SOl;..=

Sunday, Apr1123,

Details, A3

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April 24. 1000

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50, Number 21 6

,.,;i'

50 Cents

,..I·' {

Man jailed in wife's death

It's Time For Our

Cash Giveaway!

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -A Pomeroy man was jailed
Sunday night on charges of murdering his

One lucky customer will win $1000 cash, during the month
April! Just drop your name 1: phone number in our Customer
of the Month drop off and you could win the big cash prize.

wife.
According to Prosecuting Attorney John
Lenfes, Michael Jackson, 31, Pomeroy, is
charged with allegedly poisoning his wife, Victoria Jackson, 46, who was found dead at the
couple's Pomeroy home.
Lentes said that Victoria Jackson had been

No Purchase Necessary

Out Sells Marlboro 10·1

bedridden for some time, and that Michael
Jackson allegedly fon:ed her to· ingest a large
quantity of medication, resulting in her death.
The matter was still under investigation at
presstime.
Meanwhile, Mason County authorities are
investigating a fatal one-vehicle accident Saturday that killed a Gallipolis man.
Elmer E. Lamm, 75, died following a crash
on State Route 62 near Point Pleasant..accord-

ing to a Mason County Sheriff's Department
spokesman.
The spokesman said Lanun was southbound at 6:04 p.m. near the Indian Trading
Post, when he lost control of his 1989 Dodge
truck, crossed the road and struck a tree.
Lamm· was treated at the scene by Point
Pleasant EMS bd'ore being flown to St. Mary's
Hospital, Huntington,W.Va. He later died from
his il'\iuries.

SMOKER FRIENDLY

FLOWER FESTIVAL QUEEN - early Crow, center, was named 2000
Racine Flower Festival Queen Saturday morning. She was crowned by
1999 Queen Jody Hupp, right. Also shown is 2000 Racine Rower Fes·
tival Queen Runner-up Autumn Hill, left.

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8

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our own brand of Smoker Friendly
• FREE Lighter with every carton
• $1000 Giveaway during the month of April
• FREE C~ffee Mugs • FREE Magnets .

41
Carton

Crow named
flower queen

••
•

BY JIM FREEMAN ·
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

•

RACINE - Meigs County kicked off the 2000 festival season Saturday morning with the Racine Area Community Organization's
annual Flower Festival.
However, cloudy skies and cool temperatures were enough to test
the enthusiasm of even the most ardent festival goer.
Carly Crow, daughter of Mary and David Crow of Racine, was
named 2000 Racine Flower Festival queen.
She was selected from a field of six candidates, including Erin Bolin,
&lt;laughter of Kathy and Mike Bolin, Racine; Autumn Hill, daughter of
Lori and Dean J-!iU, Letart Falls; Stacy Lyons, claughter of Rhonda and
,~ -Jaeli:"L~ 'R:adii4'7Unber Mayiiira;""aauanter of Debbi and Cecil
Raci~~; and Lena Yoa~ham, dai!ghter of Nancy Pedigo,
Racine, and' Mark Yoacliam, Hurricane, W.Va. '
Autumn Hill was named Flower Festival queen runner-up.
Those brave enough or prepared to take the cool weather heard a
day's worth of entertainment at th e Star Mill Park stage, including the
Midnight Cloggers in the morning and other performers including
the local Carmel Bluegrass Band in the afternoon.
WINS PRIZEA parade was also held through downtown Racine earlier that
Steven Stewart
morning, with Dale Kautz having the winning entry
of Pomeroy won
a $25 gift certificate at Sun·
day's Easter
Egg Hunt in
Middlepprt. He
is pictured with
the fire department's.qwn
Easter Bunny,
who helped
award prizes to
the hundreds of
children attend·
ing. Each egg
contained a
prize.

•

"Mfynaro,

WINSTON
•22.43

CAMEL

'

Per
Carton
Save $4.50

•22.43

Per
Carton
Save $4.50

MONTCLAIR

DORAL
$18 00

$16.50 6~on

.

Save$7.50

BASIC
..

'20.00

Per
Carton

Save$4~

•

Per
•
Carton
Save$6.110

PYRAMID
$15.00 6:~n
1·

s.vese.oo

Havana

Troj)hy

Blossom

SALEM

Beechnut

.•13.32 Per doz. •13 .32 Per doz. •17.76 Per doz.

$22.43 6!~on
Save$4.50

'9.99

Newport
$22.93 ~~on

Per doz.

Mail Pouch

Bowie

Morgan

'9.84

Per doz.

'11.95

Perd~.

'' won a
PRIZE WINNERS - Billy Ferguson, above,
giant Easter basket, Amanda Shartiger a gold coin,
Robert Strohl a U.S. Savings Bond, and Kelsey Bur·
ton a bicycle in their respective age cateaories at
the Middleport Volunteer Fire Oepartment's Easter
Egg Hunt on Sunday. Prizes were contained In each
of the 2,000 eggs hidden at General Hartinger
Pari&lt;.

Save$4.00

Skoal $23.50 ~~r

GPC
$19.00

Red

6!:Wn

Save$5.00 .

Seal

.

•

Renegades

60t

'

$2.30

Per

can

Photos by Brian J•.Reed

SUPPORTER RECOGNIZED- Crestlyn Hill, center, and her husband,
Paul , were recognized for their ongoing support of the Racine Rower
Festival Saturday morning. She is shown with her granddaughter, Mad·
dison Hill, left, and Kathryn Hart, Racine Area Community Organization president, right.

I

·2SSldloo"'lentinel
12 ......

• La Gloria • Macawudo • Partagas

••.

..

• Don Tomas • Upmann • Punch
• Cohlba • Montecrlato
• Montecru% • Arturo Feunte
~ Nat Sherman

Calendar
Claujfied,s
Comica
Editoriaq
Obituaries
Sporti ,
Weatber

BUY J .GET 1 F·RE.E!
~

~Brand

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OIUO
Picl&lt; 3: 9-3-6; Picl&lt; .f: 2-546
Super LoUo: 4-6-16-26-39-40
Kidllr. ()..6-5-5-2-3
. '1gVA,
Ddy 3: 5-5-6 Ddy •= 8-8-1-7

.Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Frl

AS

lotteries

0 2000 Ohlo VaDey Publishing Co.

441-8204

6

FROM STAFF ¥,f'ORTS

1

WALMART PlAZA
2145 K.Eastern. Ave ..
·~

Deadline approaches for flood ·disaster assistance

'IOday's

Finest selection Of cigars in
the area, over 200 brands! .

12-5
I .

POMEROY -The ~~dline to apply for
fede':" and state disastei,_assistance is ~ May 6
for Y!Cnms of flash floo&lt;!ihg damage m February in the seven declared counties of
Adams, Galtia, Jackson, Lawrence, Mt;igs,
1
Pike and Scioto.
•
OffiCtals from the Fedetal Emergency ·
Ma?agement
Agency \FEMA) and the
1
Ohio Emergen.c y Management Agency
(Ohio EMA) announced last week that
southern Ohio storm vic\lms have only two
weeks left to register for ·disaster assistanc~ ·
programs.
The application deadline is set at 60 days
after the presidential declaratio·n of March 7.
The toll-free disaster assistance registration
number, 1-800-462-9029, is available from 8
a.m.-7 p.m. Monday through Friday and
fiom 1:~0-7 p.m. Saturday.
Those who have already applied may
check on the status of their application or

.

.

too

AI ofApril 18, 1,050 people
have called FBMA to regilter for

main goal .is to lessen the pain of disaster it, than tp discover
late that they should
recovery process;' said Ohio EMA Acting have registered and did not;' Gair said .
Executive Director Nancy Dragani.
Through April 18, 1,050 people have
tlila~ttr a11iltdnct.
May 6 is also the deadline for the disaster called to register for assistance.The following
victims to return the U.S. Small Business information gives a breakdown of the num.
her of Meigs and Gallia residents who have
update information by calling the toll-free Administration (SBA) loan packet.
Even if residents are not interest&lt;;d in called FEMA's toO-free line and registered
FEMA Helpline, 1-800-'525-0321, from 8
accepting a loan or think they cannot afford for disaster assistance, the approved number
a.m.- 6 p.m., Monday through Saturday.
As of April 18, 1,050 people have called a loan for damages to their homes or per- of temporary housing grants and the total
FEMA to register for disaster assistance. sonal property, completing the forms is approved dollars in temporary disaster housFEMA has issued more than $1,114,800 in required to be considered for IFG a.&lt;Sistance. ing grants: Galtia County, 3'5 registrations, 24
temporary disaster housing assistance grants As of April 20, 63 SBA disaster assistan.ce disaster housing claims approved, total grant
loans totaling $1,019,200 have been arnount-$66,993, four IFG claims approved,
to 65 I eljgible Ohio storm victims.
total grant amount-$3,64 I; Meigs County,
Ohio's Individual and Family Grant Pro- approved.
giarq (IFG) has approved $312,298 in grants
"Even ifpeople think their insur:ance may 60 registrations, 31 disaster housing claims
for disaster-related necessary expenses and cover the damage or that they have other approved, total grant amount-$38,002, five
5erious needs not covered by other assistance resources available to them, it is important . IFG claims approved, total grant amauntprograms.
that they register now;· FEMA Coordinating $20,899.
"The only way you may receive disaster. Officer Brad Gair said..
For more information, call Ohio EMA
aSsistance liom the state or federal programs
"Once the deadline of May 6 passes, it is representative Dick Kinunins at 6 I 4-799is by c·alling and registering. We want to too late to register to receive assistance. It is 3695 or FEMA representative Genie EhrJsrestore normalcy as quickly as possible. Our better to register for assistance and not need Lester at 312-408-5567 .

•
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�•

P~ge

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Attacking geese growing concem
CLEVELAND (AP) - The chance of an encounter with an
aggressive goose increases during the spring nesting season, and
those confrontations are more ~uent u Ohio's Canada geese
population increases.
Ohio Division of Natural Resources officials expect up to
90,000 Canada geese·in the stare this year, six times the amount of
about 10 years ago.
Complaints about nasry goose encounters also have jumped.
About 700 complaints were registered last year, nearly five times as
many as in 1990.ln 1998, ODNR got 485 complaints.
Cuyahoga Jed all Ohi&lt;? counti~s last year With 88 complaints.
While no one has been killed, there have been serious injuries,
said Dave Sherman, a wildlite biologist with ODNR's Division of
Wildlife. Last year, 107 Ohioans reported being attacked and injured
by Canada geese.
Even properry is not immune. Residents ofWesterville, a Columbus suburb, have reported geese attacking and scratching the paint
on their cars.
The goose population at ODNR's headquarters in Columbus is
such a nuisance that the agency issued atwritten "Goose Management Strategy 2000."
.
The geese are protected by Ohio law and the Federal Migratory
Bird Treary Act. Permits can be .obtained from ODNR to destroy
nests and eggs and round up the birds.
'TWo Canada geese crashed into Julie Froble of Cuyahoga Falls,
knocking her over the handlebars of her bicycle and headfirst onto
a Hudson roadway lasJ April. Froble, 56, was wearing a helmet. She
suffered a broken collarbone, broken bones in her foot and a head
injury. She was in a coma for a month and in the hospital for three
months.
"I will never ride in the spring ever again," the 56-year-old
Froble said. "I ·think they were probably trying to protect their
nest."

Quintuplets bom
WESTERVILLE (AP) -A suburban Columbus couple celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary and his 29th birthday with the
birth of their quintuplets at Mount Carmel St. Ann's Hospital.
The two boys and three girls, born to Gina and Mike Whalen of
Reynoldsburg, were delivered by Caesarean section at 8 a.m. Saturday, said Jennifer Judy, a hospital spokeswoman.
.
The babies were in fair condition and the mother in good condition, the hospital said Sunday. The hospital declined to release further information. A news conference was planned for Monday. The
family had no immediate comment.
Mrs. Whalen, 28, had been in St. Ann's since at least Thursday,
when the hospital announced the impending births.
On Jan. 18 in Dayton, quintuplets were born to Michael and
Michelle DiLullo of the Sidney area - between Dayton and Lima.
Those quintuplets were born by Caesarean section and ranged in
weight from 2 pounds, 8 1I 4 ounces, to 3 pounds, 3 I /2 ounces.
Their due date was March 29, but doctors feared prolonging the
pregnancy would put the mother's health at risk.

Man commib robbery
CLEVELAND (AP) - A man posed as a police officer investigating drug complaints in order to rob two men of cash and credit
cards, police said.
·
The phony officer wore a badge on a chain aroupd his neck,
which $orne plainclothes officers do, Cleveland police Sgt. Larry
l'lughes said.
'The man approached two men, who were in their 20s, Saturday
morning and searched them, taking S53 and two credit cards from
one man and $60 from the other, Hughes said.
The robber then told the men to lie on the ground and ran off
' with their money, he said. Police had not apprehended a suspect as
ofSunday.
·

Bike racks will be on buses
CLEVELAND (AP)- More than 10,000 people turned ciU\ for
the 30th annivenary Earth Day celebration at the Cleveland
Metroparks Zoo, and there was a special,. announcem~nt for cyclists
· ·
: in the region.
·
Ryan. McKenzie, of the Center for Sustainable Urban Neigh: borhoods, was at the event Saturday to display a rack that can hold
two bicycles and is attached to the front bumper of a bus.
.
His organization, with a grant from the Gund Foundation of
Cleveland, spent months marketing the rack to local transit agencies.
The result: the Northeast Ohio Areawide Coordinating Agency
, plans to announce Monday that transit agencies in Lorain, Lake and
• Medina counties will install the $1,000 stainless-steel
racks this
.
. .
. summer.
.
.
The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authoriry will install
' the racks in 2001.
U.S. Secretary of Health and Huma[\· Services Donna Shalala
returned to het hQmetown to remind the crowd that the modern
• environmental movement started in Cleveland when Cuyahoga
River debris caught fire in 1969.

Canton rap musician stabbed
CANTON (AP) - A 50-year-old man was charged with felonious assault in the stabbing of a local rap musician at the Canton
Centre shopping mall.
Ryan Bronson, 19, of Canton, was listed in guarded condition
Sunday in the intensive cate unit at Aultman Hospital, a nursing
supervisor said.
Po)ice said Tim Mannos, 50, of Canton, bumped into Bronson,
the men exchanged words and shoves, and then Mannos pulled a
knife in the shopping mall's food court.
The Saturday afternoon attack appears to have been jusr "a
chance meeting," said Canton police Detective Sgt. Greg
Boudreaux.
"One guy was corning in, one guy was going out, and they
bumped into each other:' he said. "Tempers flared, and here we are."
Bronson had been scheduled to perform at an invitation-only
record release parry later in the day.

Bank robberies lnaeasing
- CINCINNATI (AP) - Despite the threat· of federal prison,
sophisticated surveillance equipment and the fact that bank robberies are always reported, more people are out there trying.
· "Years ago, it used to be that they might work up to bank robbery," said Edwin H. Boldt, spokesman for · the FBI's 'Cincinnati
office. "They might knock off a little mom-and-pop grocery store,
then maybe move up to a liquor store. Not anymore."
Local banks have been hit 21 times already this year - compared
with 28 robberies in all of 1999.
•
Dayton this year has had 38 bank robberies, compared with
about 70 in 1999. More than 130 holdups happened in Columbus
last year. So far this year, that city has had about 40,
'

'
Mond-v, April 24, 200Q

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

A2 • The Deily Sentinel

Census proving helpful to Ohio researche~·
DAYTON (AP) - · Ohioans working on
family trees are turning to the census for
information, though they have to wait
decades longer than the U.S. government to
gain access to details.
Individual information collected by . the
census becomes public 72 yean after it is
taken. The forms filled out this year will
become available in 2072. In Ohio, the earliest available year is 1820 and the latest is 1920.
In two years, forms from 1930 will be made
.
public.
.
Through the years, census forms can show
a researcher where ail ancestor lived, the
names and ages of his wife and children, the
sort of job he held, whether he was literate,
and even, in some cases, whether he was
"blind, deaf and dumb, idiotic, insane,
maimed, crippled, bedridden, or other wise
disabled."
Leo Rasor of Bradford used the census to

Individual information Cf~lltcted
by the cmsus 'becomes public 72
years after it is t4km. The forms
filled out thi.s year will become
available in 2072.
learn about relatives he never knew he had.
He kriew his pat~rn.al grandparents had
eight children, but records from the late 19th
century showed that they had another three
who didn't Jive to adulthoed.
" If you're looking for somebody, the first
thing you do is look at th~ census:' he said.
Barbara Lindsey of f\eavercreek knew that
her huspand's grandfather had been
orphaned, and she wasn't sure where he grew
up.
She heard that he had been raised in a small
Pennsylvania town. She looked through the
town's census records line by line three differ-

ent times until she found him -listed under
a different first name.
"If I would not llave done that, I would
~ever had found him:' she said.
For black Americans, the search can 'be
more difficult. Before 1870, enslaved blacks
usually were listed by number, not name.That
makes it difficult to confirm a relative.
Cordelia Hill, a Wilberforce resident, says
·supplemental census records for slaves in 1850
and 1860 can provide more data.
Once a researcher · confirms an ancestor's
location through the census, other information can be found. Among them: birth certificates·, marriage licenses and church records.
But census data can be misleading.
Forebears disliked giving personal information to the government, just as some Americans do now, said Carole Medlar, genealogy
librarian at the Dayton and Montgomery
·
County Public Library.

New national cenletery starts taking applications
RITTMAN (AP) - Ohio
Ohio's only other national . In the past two years, work- cremated 'remains.
U.S. Rep. Tom Sawyer, Dwill soon have a second nation- cemetery, in Dayton, has abo.ut ers have moved 250,000 cubic
Ohio,
toured the site last week
al cemetery for veterans.
36,000 filled gravesites on an yards of soil, installed 450 tons
Beginning Monday, the Ohio 88-acre site. It has enough of stone and 110,000 brick with representatives of several
Western Reserve National gravesites to last until2012, but pa~~rs, and_pla~ted 7,000 trees. veterans groups. He said the
Cemetery, to be dedicated next should last longer with a recent
There ts sttll a lot of grass project was ahead of schedule
month, will begin taking appli- I 0-acre addition.
that needs to be planted, but and under budget.
"I'm struck by the absolute
cations for burial.
Donzell S. Taylor, president that is cosmetic work," Taylor
beaury
this faciliry is going to
Jeff Teas, director of th~ of Welty Building Co., said the said.
cemetery, said his office gets Rittman project to transform
On May 28, r;ligiou.s groups have," he said. "There were a lot
calls daily about burials at the the properry into a $14.7 mil- plan to consecrate the 15,900 of people who worked as
·
274~acre site in Medina Coun- lion hational cemetery is about burial sites and 3,000 niches for .team .to . make this a reality."
ty about 30 miles south of 98 percen.t complete.
Cleveland.
Workers are putting the fin"We are trying to get a feel ishing touches ·On the ·Visitors
I
as to how many there are who center and electronic carill&lt;;m
want to be buried here," 'he and are burying concrete cas.
said.
ings that will hold the caskets.
· It will likely be June before . Because the casmgs are c~v­
the first burial takes - ~lace, .Thas · ered by.)llhly a fe:" feet of dtrt, Find out the income tax consequences from
said. The cemetery wtll be a~metery will be able to
to handle 20 burials daily.
conduct, winter burials.

a

r-----------------------":"1
t•IVe .I•n one state
wor'k l·n another'.
H&amp;R BLOCK .

Cleveland council considen
crackdown on motel prostitution .

fil

CLEVELAND (AP) - Coun- hearing to declare the business a
ci)man Roosevelt Coats wants to nuisance.
motels"
put "no-tell
ness
in this city.
· out
. of .busi-'
Coats, 1aid 'l'~h plac.cs . rent •
rooms by the li01ir 'to prdstitutes '
· and drug dealers conducting
their business. He 'said ihe result
' is that efforts to revitalize ·neighborhoods are · ruined, because
people fear to invest where .illic- .
it activiry is.going oh.
Coats has proposed a city regulation that would force motels
and hotels near residential neighborhoods to rent rooms for no
less than a full day. Cl,eveland
Ciry Council's Legislation Committee considered the measure
last week and suggested some
changes. Coats is rewriting it for
consideration May 2.
Cornrniitee members suggested stopping lodging operations
from offering discounts, but
Coats said that would be hard on·
hotels and motels legitimately ·
trying to fill rooms.
Any such restriction on hotels
and motels would be unfair, said
Howard C. Nussbaum, executive
vice president of the Ohio Hotel
&amp; Lodging Association, in
Columbus.
"I think that it's symptom of'
a soc\al problem, not a hotel
problem," he said of prostitution
and drug abuse. "I think it's pifficult to legislate morality."
Nussbaum said lodging establishments need to be able to rent
roolns for less than a day.

618 East Main St..
1·740·992-6674

~-~~-:::::;::-........----:::::::-------~::-::---~~~1

This Mother-'s Day, a heartf~lt .. Thank
" could
be the best gift you could ever give your mother.
Don'·t .mlss this opportunity to say lt.

.To iJ~· Published
.Friday, Mciy 12th
'

The Daily ·Sentinel

a

Coats' original proposal
would have affected only motels
and hotels · operating within
1 ,000 feet of homes, churches,
schools, parks and hospitab. But
Councilman Jay Westbrook said
that would make it appear the
council condoned rent-by-thehour establishments elsewhere.
"It's almost like we're saying
it's OK," Westbrook said.
Coats said he was rewriting :
his proposal to apply the pro hi- ·
bition cirywide.
Mayor Michael R. White has
proposed an()ther ordinance to
battle prostitution in hotels and
motels. White's proposal, which
the council is considering, would
shut' down for dne year hotels,
motels and other buildings
where prostitutes or drug dealers
were caught twice by police.
Both instanc~s would have to
•result in convictions, and the
closings of the buildings could
occur only if a Cleveland
,Municipal Court judge holds a ·

Ll:l I.TI\L 1.\ \ \I I'll "···
1X3 GI'Htlnlj • $10.00

1x5 Greeting· $13.00

HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

(PICTURE)

(YOUR
MOTHER'S
NAME)

HAPPY

LOVE, JOHN,
JOEANO
SUSAN

OBITUARY

.
··'..
..

Steven Michael Durst

'

MOTHER'S

DAY
LOVE, JOHN,
JOE AND
SUSAN

Fill out the fcmn below and drop off the payment to
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.NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _......__ _ _ __.___:...:;~:.,.--

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l!iiii!&amp;ilillllliiiiliiiiliili..a&amp;iUi;&amp;;~~~~;;;~~i;'iMi;ai;ii;;Uii~i!;lil•liii~iiiiiiiiiii

DEATH NOTICE

.-

Charles E. Tate

•

brothers, Gerald Tate and Donald Tate.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the k.ev. Charles Mash officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Thesday.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion will conduc~ military graveside services.
·

Harold L Shiflet
MASON, W.Va.- Harold L. Shiflet, 83, Mason, died Sunday. April
23, 2000 in St. Mary'ss Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 12,' 1916 in Kanauga, son of the late Bert and Virginia
(Taylor) Shiflet, he was a retired truck driver for United States Steel,
Lorain.
'
He Was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and a member of
American Legion Srnith-Capehart Post 140 in New Haven,W.Va., and
Siewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Inez Glenn Shiflet; two
stepbrothers, Ralph Withers and Thomas Withers; and a sister, Helen V
Davis.
Surviving are a stepsister, Dorothy Lamb of Carroll; a sister-in-law,
Helen Gibson of St. Albans,W.Va.; nephew and niece,William A. "Bill"
Jr. and Kathy K. Davis of Mason, with whom he made his home; and
several other ni~ces and nephews.
.
Graveside services with military rites will be Wednesday, April 26,
2000 at 11 a.m. in Cunningham Memorial Park, St. Albans, with the
Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.

Ezra M. Tucker·

ROBERTSBURG, W.Va.- Ezra M. Tucker, 92, Robertsburg, died
CHESHIRE- Charles E. Tate, 78, Cheshire, died Sunday,April23, Friday, April 21, 2000 in Point Pleasant Center, following a brief illness.
2000 at his residence.
He was a retired farmer.
· · Born Dec. 27,1921 in Cheshire, son of the late Worthy and Evelyn
He was preceded in death by his wife, Clara May Runion Tucker; a
· Darst Tate, he was a graduate of Cheshire High School.
.
· · He was a member oflnternational Brotherhood of Carpenters Local daughter, Virginia Tucker Mattox; and a son, Robert Tucker.
Surviving are five daughters, Mildred Oldaker of Leon, W.Va. , and
· 650. He was a veteran of World War II; and a member of American
Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128 in Middleport, and VFW Post 4464 Betry Deschaine, Charlene Rarey, Sharon Thcker and Sandy Buck, all
of Columbus; four sons, Ronald Thcker of Pontiac, Mich., Darrell
i.ri Gallipolis. He attended Kyger United Methodist Church.
. Surviving are his wife, Virginia Backus Tate; four sons and daugh- Thcker of Dexter, Dorsel Tucker of Stoutsville, and Cecil Odell Tuckters-in-law, Carroll and Linda Tate, Homer and Carol Tate and Larry er of Robertsburg; 30 grandchildren and 48 great-grandchildre n; two
and Jeannette Tate, all of Columbus, and Michael and Barbara Tate of brothers, Elbert Tucker of Buffalo, W.Va., and Otis Tucker of Mount
Etna; six ·grandchildren a great-granddaughter; two sisters and broth- Pleasant, Mich.; and a sister, Oma Davis of Davisburg, Mich.
Services were held at 1 p.m. today, Monday, April 24, 2000 in Oma
ers-in-law, Clarice and parence "Smitry" Carpenter of Rudand, and
Chapel
Church, Grimms Landing, W.Va., with the Rev. Herbert Buck
Lydia and Raymond Smith of Columbus; and several nieces and
llfficiating. Burial was in Tucker Cemetery; Grimms Landing. Arrange·
nephews.
He was also preceded in death by . a sister, Eloise Smith; and two ments are by Raynes Funeral·Home, Buffalo, W.Va.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF
•·.

. .. .. . .
'

SYRACUSE

EMS answers 14 calls,

..

• ••
'"
•:· poMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency Services .answered
. 14 calls for assistance over the weekend. Units responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

, . • • t.bariquet

______

'

..,

. ....

The Daily Sentinel
..

(USPS~ 13-960)

..

Ohio V•lley hblltbl•l Ca.

...

Published every afternoon, Monday 1hrouKh

.

~-

Geo~a

.
reap1ng
'

ATLANTA (AP) -;\vhen states
sued tobacco companies en masse
...
over smokers' illnesses, Georgia
"
~
Member: The A$aociated Preaa, and llle Ohio ' joined in for a share of,~he cash settlement. Now attac,ks on the
o,;
' NeWipaper Anociation.
•.. POSl'MASTER: Snd addreas correc:tions to industry are taking a toll at home,
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court SJ., Pomeroy,
and state lawmakers want to cush.. Ohio 45769.
~
ion the blow.
•
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The General Asseml:1ly voted this
•
By C~rrltr or Molor Roule
year to · give protection from
.. One Wcc\:...................................................$2.00
.. One Month ................................................ $8.70
potentially bankrupting lawsuitsOne Year .. .......... .'................... ............... $104.00
and up to $6 million 'in tax breaks
SINGLE COPY PRICE
- to Brown &amp; WiJliamson, the
• Dally ........ ............. ............................... 50Centa
Kentucky-based tobacco giant that
•
• SubKribers not desirins; lo pay the t:arrier may
owns a large cigarette plant in
• remit in advance din:cl to The Daily Sentinel
:
on athre~. s.i• or 12 month basis. Credit will be
Macon.
giveQ' carrier el(:h week.
At the same time, lawmakers
• No subscription by mail permlltetl in arua
prepared to reap the first install• where home carrier aervice i.'lavailable.
ment of an expected $4.8 billion
.. Publisher reserve&amp; the right to adjust ratCI durfrom the national tobacco setdeJnatlle subKription period. Subactlptlon rate
ment, which Georgia joined to
chans,es may be implemented by c:hans:ing the
•
duration of the subscription.
recoup the cost of treating sick
smokers.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
•
loskle Meip Co.nty
Anti-smoking advocates say the
•
13 Weeks ................................................. $21.30
state is sending conflicting signals
~
l6 Wccka....... ............. ............... .'............. $53.!12
" S2 Weeks ............................................... $105.56
- blaming tobacco companies for
Ratn Otltskle Melp Coanly
13 Weeks ...................................... ........ ... $29.25
health problems and demanding
26 Weeka .................... ............................. S$6.611
compensation, then passing out
S2 Wecka .................... ........................... $109.72
.perks to keep them in business.
Reader Services
"It's a little schizophrenic;' said
Roger
Salazar, a spokesman for the
~,.
O•r ra1i1 COIHI'II II Ill ner111 II ID be
ttc1nft. If yo• lulri' •' ali ien'or 11 • ~tol')',
American Cancer Society. "It goes
cAIIIbe aewaroo• at (740) m-2UJ. We wll
to
show you how deep the pockets
ell!eck yofr llror•••••• ••d lillkt I
•. eorrtdlon If ••m•Md.
'ofBigTobac&lt;:o are and how much
•
l'(ewa Dtplrt•eala
inOuence they have over these•leg•. The ,..In n••ber b tn·1155. Depllrt•e•t
~ e.tt111M1 trtl
islatures."
, , Ge•er•t Manaaer......."................... l•t. UOl
Legislative leaders admit their
Newa ..... " ....................... " ........... - ...Ezt. 1101
t,
..................................................... or E•t.IICMi
positions
won't always jibe when
•·
Otlaer Senlcct
' AdYCMiflWI·· -"·M·-•"""'" ....- ........EJ:t.IIOf
dealing with tobacco, a legal prodClrt•latlon .................. - .................:. E:~t. II03
uct with harmful risks and eco• · Cllulntd Ada."""""""'""''"'"""'"Eit 1100
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the

.. ..

Chance of rainfall will linger
wind 10 to 15. mph. Chance- of
After some wet conditions rain 90 percent.
Tuesday.. .Cloudy with
a
linger into Tuesday, fair spring
weather witlf highs in the 60s are chance of light rain or drizzle.
expected in the tti-counry area Highs 50 to 55. Chance of precipitation 50 pea:ent.
for the rest of this week.
Tuesday night ... Mostly cloudy.
After some rainfall in the
region tonight, no rain is in the Lows around 40.
Extended forecast:
forecast for until Friday, the
cl()udy.
Wednesday... Partly
National Weather Service said.
Highs from the upper 50s to the
Lows tonight will be 35-45.
Tuesday will be mostly sunny lower 60s.
Thursday. .. Partly cloudy. Lows
with highs around 60.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:20 in the mid 40s and highs in the
'
p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at mid 60s.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a
6:39a .m.
chance of showers. Lows in the
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Rain, heavy at times. lower and mid 40s and highs in
Lows in the mid 40s. Northeast the mid 60s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Racine council OKs
purchase of pick~p
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RAC!NE - . A bid on a new
pickup truck for the service
department was approved when
Racine Village Council met last ·
week.
Bibbee Ford of Middleport's bid
of $22,503 was approved. A bid
from CleweU Ford of Cambridge
for $23,917.25 \vas also opened.
Clerk Karen Lyons was authorized to proceed with the purchase
from Bibbee Ford if the bid meets
specifications.
In other business, council also
approved a resolution authorizing
the clerk to transfer funds that will
pay for a new furnace and air conditioning unit for the new annex
building.
Street Commissioner Dennis

Wolfe discussed a drainage problem on Yellowbush Road.
Since the problem area is outside
of the village, Wolfe and two memhers of council will attend the Surton Township Trustees' meeting to
see if the township can correct the
problem.
Council discussed the condition
of the shelter house at the Old
Ferry Landing Park, and decided
to discuss at the next meeting
whether repairing the roof or
rearing down the structure is neeessary.
Council also approved the payment of bills.
Present, in addition to Hill and
Lyons, were Councilmen Robert
Beegle,Joe Evans, Bob fisher, Greg
Taylor and Larry Wolfe.

TUPPERS PLAINS
·Saturday, 12:24 p.m., Calaway Ridge, Lester Hawk, treated;
6:10p.m., Eagle Ric!ge,Jack Devore, treated.

Garden dub to meet

... •..

VALLEY WEATHER

6:15, p.m.,1278 Church St., Evelyn Stowe, HMC.

, Saturday, 10:29 a.m., assisted by Rutland, Kingsbury Road, Freda
· Mahr, Holzer Medkal Center;
·
4:45 p.m ., South Fourth 1\venue, Middleport, assisted by Rutland,
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Garden Club will meet on Tl\ursday
:· Alice Milh, HMC;
.
' •. 8:50 p.m., Riverside Apartments, Middleport, Maty Garnes, Veter- at 8 p.m. at the home of Janet Connolly. The program will concern
container gardening.
• aps Memorial Hospital;
:• • Sunday, 1:38 p:m., Miner1ville Hill, assisted by Sy axuse, Eli White,
~ HMC;
:;
.~
· ....._
'
' •
~zedu'ed
1
.: 8:56 P·m·.Jop~ Jl.~d,Todd Mooctilpaup., Camd.,..elaFk Memo• ·
1
ftACINE - Racine-Southern Alumni Banquet will be held on
:·: rial Hospital; ·
, ,.
•
·
\ .
May
27 at 6:30 p.m. in the Charles Hayman Gymnasium at Southern
: 9:24 p.m., Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, assisted by Pomeroy, Vicki
High School.
:Jackson, VMH;
The junior class will serve the dinner. The banquet will celebrate
:: 11:22 p.m., Pearl Street, Middleport, james Atkinson,VMH.
100.years of schools, from 1900 to 2000.All.former athletes and cheer•
POMEROY
•• Saturday, 1:11 p.m., South
leaders
will be recognized. ·
Third - Avenue, Middleport, Garette
Reunion years recognized will begin at 1920, and continue with
; Straight, HMC.
every fifth year.Tables will be available for the display of memorabilia,
;
..
REEDSviLLE
: Saturday, 12:49 p.m., State Route 124, assisted by Olive Township so graduates are encouraged to bring photos, letters, n~ws clippings
and other items to share. Uniforms will also be displayed.
: VFD, motor vehicle accident, Mary Stoller, refused tre~tptent.
The cost is $10 per person, with extra 'proceeds benefiting the
;:
RUTLAND
Southern
Alumni Scholarship Fund. Information is available from
:, Saturday, 1:06 a.m., assisted by Central Disp~tch, Cr~)neans Road,
Shirley Johnson at 843~5279, or the high school. Reservations should
.:': Geraldine Sexton, VMH;
..
1
be made by May 22.
5:27 p.m., 130 We he Terrace, Rosa Randolph, HMC.

Report: Feds want to split Microsoft
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Justice Department and 19 states
are leaning toward asking a federal
judge to split Microsoft Corp. into
two or three seNrate companies,
according to published reports.
· Citing pel'ple familiar with .the
discussions, The Washington Post
and USA Today said in Monday's
editions that a Justice Department
plan being shared with states and
industry executives envisions
Microsoft being forced to split off
its Windows operating system from
the teSt of the company..
The rest of the company possi-

bly then would be split in two,
with one company handling applications software and the other the
company's Internet business,
including browser software.

tobacco while
of settlement
nomic rewards.
"The whole tobacco controversy is a mixed message," said House
Majoriry Leader Larry Walker. ''For
years the federal government subsidized tobacco, they taxed tobacco
and then they want to say tobacco's
killing people. .. . It's a struggle
between health and economic
.
. "
prospenty.
Walker said he refrained from
voting on both bills because
Brown &amp; Williamson is a client of
his Jaw 6rm.
Gov. Roy Barnes has signed into
law a $25 million cap on the
amoQnt of bond money corpora. tions must post while they appeal
massive punitive damage awards
imposed by a jury. Virginia, North
Carolina and Kentucky passed
similar laws.
Tobacco companie~ are anticipating a damage award of possibly ·
hundreds of billions of doUars in a
Aorida lawsuit filed on behalf of
500,000 smokers. Florida law
requires companies to post a bond
equal to the damage award while
they appeal, which cigarette makers say could force them into
bankruptcy.
In Georgia, the bond cap applies
even if the judgment is 11:ndered in
another state.
The Legislature also approve_P up
to $6 million in annual tax credits
for companies rhat manufacture
cigarettes in Georgia for export to
other countries:.

Rep. Robert Reichert sponsored the bill to help Brown &amp;
Williamson stay in business in
Georgia.
The company - which makes
Kools, Carltons and Lucky Strikes
- employs 2,900 at its Macon
plant.

.Mid-Valley Christian School
Middleport

Open lou
·Tuesday, April 25th 7:00-8:30
Downtown Middleport
'

.GiVing students in Kindergarten· 6th.grade a solid
foundation in which to bulld their lives on.
• Excellent Phonetic Reading Program

Call 740-992-6249 for Info packet.
.,,
,.

~

•

•

.

REEDSVILLE - Steven Michael Durst, 20, ofReedsville, died Fri. d:iy,April21, 2000.
. He was born August 30, 1979 in Parkersburg, West Virgini~. the son
· ·of Gary and Ruth Durst of Reedsvill~.
He was a 1998 graduate of Eastern High School, where he played
· football , basketball and baseball.l'le w;s an avid outdoorsman, active in
·fishing ·and wildlife management. He was currently attending Hocking
· ·College.
· .
In addition to outdoor activities, he enjoyed spending time with
·· friends and family. He will be sorely missed.
· · In addition to his parents, he is survived. by his brother, Bryan Durst,
and his wife, Suzanne, of Chester; his brother, Jeff Durst of Reedsville;
• .. a ' close fami ly friend, Mindy Sampson of Reedsville; his maternal •
"grandmother, Esther Landon; his paternal grandfather, Dawain Durst;
and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was prec~~ed in death by his paternal grandmother, Emma
Durst; and his maternal grandfather, Darrell Landon.
·
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, April 25, 2000 in White funeral
Home in Coolville. Burial will be in Heiney Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home on Monday, April 24, 2000 from 2-4 and 6-8
p.m.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be 1]13de to the Eastern High
School Athletic Boosters.

Ohio Valley Publishina Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S169, Ph. 992~2156. Se(:Ond t:laaa poat·
' ap paid at Pomeroy; Ohio.

'

MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: THE DAILY

.

"

Deadline For This Special Mother~ Day Tribute I• Monday, May 8, 12 noon

u£o.n .'S

.•

The Dally Sentinel • PaQe A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April 24, 2000

•

�•

P~ge

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Attacking geese growing concem
CLEVELAND (AP) - The chance of an encounter with an
aggressive goose increases during the spring nesting season, and
those confrontations are more ~uent u Ohio's Canada geese
population increases.
Ohio Division of Natural Resources officials expect up to
90,000 Canada geese·in the stare this year, six times the amount of
about 10 years ago.
Complaints about nasry goose encounters also have jumped.
About 700 complaints were registered last year, nearly five times as
many as in 1990.ln 1998, ODNR got 485 complaints.
Cuyahoga Jed all Ohi&lt;? counti~s last year With 88 complaints.
While no one has been killed, there have been serious injuries,
said Dave Sherman, a wildlite biologist with ODNR's Division of
Wildlife. Last year, 107 Ohioans reported being attacked and injured
by Canada geese.
Even properry is not immune. Residents ofWesterville, a Columbus suburb, have reported geese attacking and scratching the paint
on their cars.
The goose population at ODNR's headquarters in Columbus is
such a nuisance that the agency issued atwritten "Goose Management Strategy 2000."
.
The geese are protected by Ohio law and the Federal Migratory
Bird Treary Act. Permits can be .obtained from ODNR to destroy
nests and eggs and round up the birds.
'TWo Canada geese crashed into Julie Froble of Cuyahoga Falls,
knocking her over the handlebars of her bicycle and headfirst onto
a Hudson roadway lasJ April. Froble, 56, was wearing a helmet. She
suffered a broken collarbone, broken bones in her foot and a head
injury. She was in a coma for a month and in the hospital for three
months.
"I will never ride in the spring ever again," the 56-year-old
Froble said. "I ·think they were probably trying to protect their
nest."

Quintuplets bom
WESTERVILLE (AP) -A suburban Columbus couple celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary and his 29th birthday with the
birth of their quintuplets at Mount Carmel St. Ann's Hospital.
The two boys and three girls, born to Gina and Mike Whalen of
Reynoldsburg, were delivered by Caesarean section at 8 a.m. Saturday, said Jennifer Judy, a hospital spokeswoman.
.
The babies were in fair condition and the mother in good condition, the hospital said Sunday. The hospital declined to release further information. A news conference was planned for Monday. The
family had no immediate comment.
Mrs. Whalen, 28, had been in St. Ann's since at least Thursday,
when the hospital announced the impending births.
On Jan. 18 in Dayton, quintuplets were born to Michael and
Michelle DiLullo of the Sidney area - between Dayton and Lima.
Those quintuplets were born by Caesarean section and ranged in
weight from 2 pounds, 8 1I 4 ounces, to 3 pounds, 3 I /2 ounces.
Their due date was March 29, but doctors feared prolonging the
pregnancy would put the mother's health at risk.

Man commib robbery
CLEVELAND (AP) - A man posed as a police officer investigating drug complaints in order to rob two men of cash and credit
cards, police said.
·
The phony officer wore a badge on a chain aroupd his neck,
which $orne plainclothes officers do, Cleveland police Sgt. Larry
l'lughes said.
'The man approached two men, who were in their 20s, Saturday
morning and searched them, taking S53 and two credit cards from
one man and $60 from the other, Hughes said.
The robber then told the men to lie on the ground and ran off
' with their money, he said. Police had not apprehended a suspect as
ofSunday.
·

Bike racks will be on buses
CLEVELAND (AP)- More than 10,000 people turned ciU\ for
the 30th annivenary Earth Day celebration at the Cleveland
Metroparks Zoo, and there was a special,. announcem~nt for cyclists
· ·
: in the region.
·
Ryan. McKenzie, of the Center for Sustainable Urban Neigh: borhoods, was at the event Saturday to display a rack that can hold
two bicycles and is attached to the front bumper of a bus.
.
His organization, with a grant from the Gund Foundation of
Cleveland, spent months marketing the rack to local transit agencies.
The result: the Northeast Ohio Areawide Coordinating Agency
, plans to announce Monday that transit agencies in Lorain, Lake and
• Medina counties will install the $1,000 stainless-steel
racks this
.
. .
. summer.
.
.
The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authoriry will install
' the racks in 2001.
U.S. Secretary of Health and Huma[\· Services Donna Shalala
returned to het hQmetown to remind the crowd that the modern
• environmental movement started in Cleveland when Cuyahoga
River debris caught fire in 1969.

Canton rap musician stabbed
CANTON (AP) - A 50-year-old man was charged with felonious assault in the stabbing of a local rap musician at the Canton
Centre shopping mall.
Ryan Bronson, 19, of Canton, was listed in guarded condition
Sunday in the intensive cate unit at Aultman Hospital, a nursing
supervisor said.
Po)ice said Tim Mannos, 50, of Canton, bumped into Bronson,
the men exchanged words and shoves, and then Mannos pulled a
knife in the shopping mall's food court.
The Saturday afternoon attack appears to have been jusr "a
chance meeting," said Canton police Detective Sgt. Greg
Boudreaux.
"One guy was corning in, one guy was going out, and they
bumped into each other:' he said. "Tempers flared, and here we are."
Bronson had been scheduled to perform at an invitation-only
record release parry later in the day.

Bank robberies lnaeasing
- CINCINNATI (AP) - Despite the threat· of federal prison,
sophisticated surveillance equipment and the fact that bank robberies are always reported, more people are out there trying.
· "Years ago, it used to be that they might work up to bank robbery," said Edwin H. Boldt, spokesman for · the FBI's 'Cincinnati
office. "They might knock off a little mom-and-pop grocery store,
then maybe move up to a liquor store. Not anymore."
Local banks have been hit 21 times already this year - compared
with 28 robberies in all of 1999.
•
Dayton this year has had 38 bank robberies, compared with
about 70 in 1999. More than 130 holdups happened in Columbus
last year. So far this year, that city has had about 40,
'

'
Mond-v, April 24, 200Q

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

A2 • The Deily Sentinel

Census proving helpful to Ohio researche~·
DAYTON (AP) - · Ohioans working on
family trees are turning to the census for
information, though they have to wait
decades longer than the U.S. government to
gain access to details.
Individual information collected by . the
census becomes public 72 yean after it is
taken. The forms filled out this year will
become available in 2072. In Ohio, the earliest available year is 1820 and the latest is 1920.
In two years, forms from 1930 will be made
.
public.
.
Through the years, census forms can show
a researcher where ail ancestor lived, the
names and ages of his wife and children, the
sort of job he held, whether he was literate,
and even, in some cases, whether he was
"blind, deaf and dumb, idiotic, insane,
maimed, crippled, bedridden, or other wise
disabled."
Leo Rasor of Bradford used the census to

Individual information Cf~lltcted
by the cmsus 'becomes public 72
years after it is t4km. The forms
filled out thi.s year will become
available in 2072.
learn about relatives he never knew he had.
He kriew his pat~rn.al grandparents had
eight children, but records from the late 19th
century showed that they had another three
who didn't Jive to adulthoed.
" If you're looking for somebody, the first
thing you do is look at th~ census:' he said.
Barbara Lindsey of f\eavercreek knew that
her huspand's grandfather had been
orphaned, and she wasn't sure where he grew
up.
She heard that he had been raised in a small
Pennsylvania town. She looked through the
town's census records line by line three differ-

ent times until she found him -listed under
a different first name.
"If I would not llave done that, I would
~ever had found him:' she said.
For black Americans, the search can 'be
more difficult. Before 1870, enslaved blacks
usually were listed by number, not name.That
makes it difficult to confirm a relative.
Cordelia Hill, a Wilberforce resident, says
·supplemental census records for slaves in 1850
and 1860 can provide more data.
Once a researcher · confirms an ancestor's
location through the census, other information can be found. Among them: birth certificates·, marriage licenses and church records.
But census data can be misleading.
Forebears disliked giving personal information to the government, just as some Americans do now, said Carole Medlar, genealogy
librarian at the Dayton and Montgomery
·
County Public Library.

New national cenletery starts taking applications
RITTMAN (AP) - Ohio
Ohio's only other national . In the past two years, work- cremated 'remains.
U.S. Rep. Tom Sawyer, Dwill soon have a second nation- cemetery, in Dayton, has abo.ut ers have moved 250,000 cubic
Ohio,
toured the site last week
al cemetery for veterans.
36,000 filled gravesites on an yards of soil, installed 450 tons
Beginning Monday, the Ohio 88-acre site. It has enough of stone and 110,000 brick with representatives of several
Western Reserve National gravesites to last until2012, but pa~~rs, and_pla~ted 7,000 trees. veterans groups. He said the
Cemetery, to be dedicated next should last longer with a recent
There ts sttll a lot of grass project was ahead of schedule
month, will begin taking appli- I 0-acre addition.
that needs to be planted, but and under budget.
"I'm struck by the absolute
cations for burial.
Donzell S. Taylor, president that is cosmetic work," Taylor
beaury
this faciliry is going to
Jeff Teas, director of th~ of Welty Building Co., said the said.
cemetery, said his office gets Rittman project to transform
On May 28, r;ligiou.s groups have," he said. "There were a lot
calls daily about burials at the the properry into a $14.7 mil- plan to consecrate the 15,900 of people who worked as
·
274~acre site in Medina Coun- lion hational cemetery is about burial sites and 3,000 niches for .team .to . make this a reality."
ty about 30 miles south of 98 percen.t complete.
Cleveland.
Workers are putting the fin"We are trying to get a feel ishing touches ·On the ·Visitors
I
as to how many there are who center and electronic carill&lt;;m
want to be buried here," 'he and are burying concrete cas.
said.
ings that will hold the caskets.
· It will likely be June before . Because the casmgs are c~v­
the first burial takes - ~lace, .Thas · ered by.)llhly a fe:" feet of dtrt, Find out the income tax consequences from
said. The cemetery wtll be a~metery will be able to
to handle 20 burials daily.
conduct, winter burials.

a

r-----------------------":"1
t•IVe .I•n one state
wor'k l·n another'.
H&amp;R BLOCK .

Cleveland council considen
crackdown on motel prostitution .

fil

CLEVELAND (AP) - Coun- hearing to declare the business a
ci)man Roosevelt Coats wants to nuisance.
motels"
put "no-tell
ness
in this city.
· out
. of .busi-'
Coats, 1aid 'l'~h plac.cs . rent •
rooms by the li01ir 'to prdstitutes '
· and drug dealers conducting
their business. He 'said ihe result
' is that efforts to revitalize ·neighborhoods are · ruined, because
people fear to invest where .illic- .
it activiry is.going oh.
Coats has proposed a city regulation that would force motels
and hotels near residential neighborhoods to rent rooms for no
less than a full day. Cl,eveland
Ciry Council's Legislation Committee considered the measure
last week and suggested some
changes. Coats is rewriting it for
consideration May 2.
Cornrniitee members suggested stopping lodging operations
from offering discounts, but
Coats said that would be hard on·
hotels and motels legitimately ·
trying to fill rooms.
Any such restriction on hotels
and motels would be unfair, said
Howard C. Nussbaum, executive
vice president of the Ohio Hotel
&amp; Lodging Association, in
Columbus.
"I think that it's symptom of'
a soc\al problem, not a hotel
problem," he said of prostitution
and drug abuse. "I think it's pifficult to legislate morality."
Nussbaum said lodging establishments need to be able to rent
roolns for less than a day.

618 East Main St..
1·740·992-6674

~-~~-:::::;::-........----:::::::-------~::-::---~~~1

This Mother-'s Day, a heartf~lt .. Thank
" could
be the best gift you could ever give your mother.
Don'·t .mlss this opportunity to say lt.

.To iJ~· Published
.Friday, Mciy 12th
'

The Daily ·Sentinel

a

Coats' original proposal
would have affected only motels
and hotels · operating within
1 ,000 feet of homes, churches,
schools, parks and hospitab. But
Councilman Jay Westbrook said
that would make it appear the
council condoned rent-by-thehour establishments elsewhere.
"It's almost like we're saying
it's OK," Westbrook said.
Coats said he was rewriting :
his proposal to apply the pro hi- ·
bition cirywide.
Mayor Michael R. White has
proposed an()ther ordinance to
battle prostitution in hotels and
motels. White's proposal, which
the council is considering, would
shut' down for dne year hotels,
motels and other buildings
where prostitutes or drug dealers
were caught twice by police.
Both instanc~s would have to
•result in convictions, and the
closings of the buildings could
occur only if a Cleveland
,Municipal Court judge holds a ·

Ll:l I.TI\L 1.\ \ \I I'll "···
1X3 GI'Htlnlj • $10.00

1x5 Greeting· $13.00

HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

(PICTURE)

(YOUR
MOTHER'S
NAME)

HAPPY

LOVE, JOHN,
JOEANO
SUSAN

OBITUARY

.
··'..
..

Steven Michael Durst

'

MOTHER'S

DAY
LOVE, JOHN,
JOE AND
SUSAN

Fill out the fcmn below and drop off the payment to
The Dally Sentinel "Mother's Day"
111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH 45769

----------------------------------------·--·-·A. 1x3 GREETING...$1 0.00
B. 1X5 GREETING W/PICTURE...$13.00
(PLEASE PRINT or TYPE)

.NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _......__ _ _ __.___:...:;~:.,.--

NAME(S): - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - _ _ _ _ ;_____
ADDRES·S: ______________________~

CITY, STATE:_.;._____________- ______._____
PHONE: ___U,li(j;t;H;~"~·'uii'm:To~;:;-;~-;;;;;;w;;i-""":'--:---

l!iiii!&amp;ilillllliiiiliiiiliili..a&amp;iUi;&amp;;~~~~;;;~~i;'iMi;ai;ii;;Uii~i!;lil•liii~iiiiiiiiiii

DEATH NOTICE

.-

Charles E. Tate

•

brothers, Gerald Tate and Donald Tate.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the k.ev. Charles Mash officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Thesday.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion will conduc~ military graveside services.
·

Harold L Shiflet
MASON, W.Va.- Harold L. Shiflet, 83, Mason, died Sunday. April
23, 2000 in St. Mary'ss Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 12,' 1916 in Kanauga, son of the late Bert and Virginia
(Taylor) Shiflet, he was a retired truck driver for United States Steel,
Lorain.
'
He Was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and a member of
American Legion Srnith-Capehart Post 140 in New Haven,W.Va., and
Siewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Inez Glenn Shiflet; two
stepbrothers, Ralph Withers and Thomas Withers; and a sister, Helen V
Davis.
Surviving are a stepsister, Dorothy Lamb of Carroll; a sister-in-law,
Helen Gibson of St. Albans,W.Va.; nephew and niece,William A. "Bill"
Jr. and Kathy K. Davis of Mason, with whom he made his home; and
several other ni~ces and nephews.
.
Graveside services with military rites will be Wednesday, April 26,
2000 at 11 a.m. in Cunningham Memorial Park, St. Albans, with the
Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.

Ezra M. Tucker·

ROBERTSBURG, W.Va.- Ezra M. Tucker, 92, Robertsburg, died
CHESHIRE- Charles E. Tate, 78, Cheshire, died Sunday,April23, Friday, April 21, 2000 in Point Pleasant Center, following a brief illness.
2000 at his residence.
He was a retired farmer.
· · Born Dec. 27,1921 in Cheshire, son of the late Worthy and Evelyn
He was preceded in death by his wife, Clara May Runion Tucker; a
· Darst Tate, he was a graduate of Cheshire High School.
.
· · He was a member oflnternational Brotherhood of Carpenters Local daughter, Virginia Tucker Mattox; and a son, Robert Tucker.
Surviving are five daughters, Mildred Oldaker of Leon, W.Va. , and
· 650. He was a veteran of World War II; and a member of American
Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128 in Middleport, and VFW Post 4464 Betry Deschaine, Charlene Rarey, Sharon Thcker and Sandy Buck, all
of Columbus; four sons, Ronald Thcker of Pontiac, Mich., Darrell
i.ri Gallipolis. He attended Kyger United Methodist Church.
. Surviving are his wife, Virginia Backus Tate; four sons and daugh- Thcker of Dexter, Dorsel Tucker of Stoutsville, and Cecil Odell Tuckters-in-law, Carroll and Linda Tate, Homer and Carol Tate and Larry er of Robertsburg; 30 grandchildren and 48 great-grandchildre n; two
and Jeannette Tate, all of Columbus, and Michael and Barbara Tate of brothers, Elbert Tucker of Buffalo, W.Va., and Otis Tucker of Mount
Etna; six ·grandchildren a great-granddaughter; two sisters and broth- Pleasant, Mich.; and a sister, Oma Davis of Davisburg, Mich.
Services were held at 1 p.m. today, Monday, April 24, 2000 in Oma
ers-in-law, Clarice and parence "Smitry" Carpenter of Rudand, and
Chapel
Church, Grimms Landing, W.Va., with the Rev. Herbert Buck
Lydia and Raymond Smith of Columbus; and several nieces and
llfficiating. Burial was in Tucker Cemetery; Grimms Landing. Arrange·
nephews.
He was also preceded in death by . a sister, Eloise Smith; and two ments are by Raynes Funeral·Home, Buffalo, W.Va.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF
•·.

. .. .. . .
'

SYRACUSE

EMS answers 14 calls,

..

• ••
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•:· poMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency Services .answered
. 14 calls for assistance over the weekend. Units responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

, . • • t.bariquet

______

'

..,

. ....

The Daily Sentinel
..

(USPS~ 13-960)

..

Ohio V•lley hblltbl•l Ca.

...

Published every afternoon, Monday 1hrouKh

.

~-

Geo~a

.
reap1ng
'

ATLANTA (AP) -;\vhen states
sued tobacco companies en masse
...
over smokers' illnesses, Georgia
"
~
Member: The A$aociated Preaa, and llle Ohio ' joined in for a share of,~he cash settlement. Now attac,ks on the
o,;
' NeWipaper Anociation.
•.. POSl'MASTER: Snd addreas correc:tions to industry are taking a toll at home,
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court SJ., Pomeroy,
and state lawmakers want to cush.. Ohio 45769.
~
ion the blow.
•
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
The General Asseml:1ly voted this
•
By C~rrltr or Molor Roule
year to · give protection from
.. One Wcc\:...................................................$2.00
.. One Month ................................................ $8.70
potentially bankrupting lawsuitsOne Year .. .......... .'................... ............... $104.00
and up to $6 million 'in tax breaks
SINGLE COPY PRICE
- to Brown &amp; WiJliamson, the
• Dally ........ ............. ............................... 50Centa
Kentucky-based tobacco giant that
•
• SubKribers not desirins; lo pay the t:arrier may
owns a large cigarette plant in
• remit in advance din:cl to The Daily Sentinel
:
on athre~. s.i• or 12 month basis. Credit will be
Macon.
giveQ' carrier el(:h week.
At the same time, lawmakers
• No subscription by mail permlltetl in arua
prepared to reap the first install• where home carrier aervice i.'lavailable.
ment of an expected $4.8 billion
.. Publisher reserve&amp; the right to adjust ratCI durfrom the national tobacco setdeJnatlle subKription period. Subactlptlon rate
ment, which Georgia joined to
chans,es may be implemented by c:hans:ing the
•
duration of the subscription.
recoup the cost of treating sick
smokers.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
•
loskle Meip Co.nty
Anti-smoking advocates say the
•
13 Weeks ................................................. $21.30
state is sending conflicting signals
~
l6 Wccka....... ............. ............... .'............. $53.!12
" S2 Weeks ............................................... $105.56
- blaming tobacco companies for
Ratn Otltskle Melp Coanly
13 Weeks ...................................... ........ ... $29.25
health problems and demanding
26 Weeka .................... ............................. S$6.611
compensation, then passing out
S2 Wecka .................... ........................... $109.72
.perks to keep them in business.
Reader Services
"It's a little schizophrenic;' said
Roger
Salazar, a spokesman for the
~,.
O•r ra1i1 COIHI'II II Ill ner111 II ID be
ttc1nft. If yo• lulri' •' ali ien'or 11 • ~tol')',
American Cancer Society. "It goes
cAIIIbe aewaroo• at (740) m-2UJ. We wll
to
show you how deep the pockets
ell!eck yofr llror•••••• ••d lillkt I
•. eorrtdlon If ••m•Md.
'ofBigTobac&lt;:o are and how much
•
l'(ewa Dtplrt•eala
inOuence they have over these•leg•. The ,..In n••ber b tn·1155. Depllrt•e•t
~ e.tt111M1 trtl
islatures."
, , Ge•er•t Manaaer......."................... l•t. UOl
Legislative leaders admit their
Newa ..... " ....................... " ........... - ...Ezt. 1101
t,
..................................................... or E•t.IICMi
positions
won't always jibe when
•·
Otlaer Senlcct
' AdYCMiflWI·· -"·M·-•"""'" ....- ........EJ:t.IIOf
dealing with tobacco, a legal prodClrt•latlon .................. - .................:. E:~t. II03
uct with harmful risks and eco• · Cllulntd Ada."""""""'""''"'"""'"Eit 1100
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the

.. ..

Chance of rainfall will linger
wind 10 to 15. mph. Chance- of
After some wet conditions rain 90 percent.
Tuesday.. .Cloudy with
a
linger into Tuesday, fair spring
weather witlf highs in the 60s are chance of light rain or drizzle.
expected in the tti-counry area Highs 50 to 55. Chance of precipitation 50 pea:ent.
for the rest of this week.
Tuesday night ... Mostly cloudy.
After some rainfall in the
region tonight, no rain is in the Lows around 40.
Extended forecast:
forecast for until Friday, the
cl()udy.
Wednesday... Partly
National Weather Service said.
Highs from the upper 50s to the
Lows tonight will be 35-45.
Tuesday will be mostly sunny lower 60s.
Thursday. .. Partly cloudy. Lows
with highs around 60.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:20 in the mid 40s and highs in the
'
p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at mid 60s.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a
6:39a .m.
chance of showers. Lows in the
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Rain, heavy at times. lower and mid 40s and highs in
Lows in the mid 40s. Northeast the mid 60s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Racine council OKs
purchase of pick~p
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RAC!NE - . A bid on a new
pickup truck for the service
department was approved when
Racine Village Council met last ·
week.
Bibbee Ford of Middleport's bid
of $22,503 was approved. A bid
from CleweU Ford of Cambridge
for $23,917.25 \vas also opened.
Clerk Karen Lyons was authorized to proceed with the purchase
from Bibbee Ford if the bid meets
specifications.
In other business, council also
approved a resolution authorizing
the clerk to transfer funds that will
pay for a new furnace and air conditioning unit for the new annex
building.
Street Commissioner Dennis

Wolfe discussed a drainage problem on Yellowbush Road.
Since the problem area is outside
of the village, Wolfe and two memhers of council will attend the Surton Township Trustees' meeting to
see if the township can correct the
problem.
Council discussed the condition
of the shelter house at the Old
Ferry Landing Park, and decided
to discuss at the next meeting
whether repairing the roof or
rearing down the structure is neeessary.
Council also approved the payment of bills.
Present, in addition to Hill and
Lyons, were Councilmen Robert
Beegle,Joe Evans, Bob fisher, Greg
Taylor and Larry Wolfe.

TUPPERS PLAINS
·Saturday, 12:24 p.m., Calaway Ridge, Lester Hawk, treated;
6:10p.m., Eagle Ric!ge,Jack Devore, treated.

Garden dub to meet

... •..

VALLEY WEATHER

6:15, p.m.,1278 Church St., Evelyn Stowe, HMC.

, Saturday, 10:29 a.m., assisted by Rutland, Kingsbury Road, Freda
· Mahr, Holzer Medkal Center;
·
4:45 p.m ., South Fourth 1\venue, Middleport, assisted by Rutland,
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Garden Club will meet on Tl\ursday
:· Alice Milh, HMC;
.
' •. 8:50 p.m., Riverside Apartments, Middleport, Maty Garnes, Veter- at 8 p.m. at the home of Janet Connolly. The program will concern
container gardening.
• aps Memorial Hospital;
:• • Sunday, 1:38 p:m., Miner1ville Hill, assisted by Sy axuse, Eli White,
~ HMC;
:;
.~
· ....._
'
' •
~zedu'ed
1
.: 8:56 P·m·.Jop~ Jl.~d,Todd Mooctilpaup., Camd.,..elaFk Memo• ·
1
ftACINE - Racine-Southern Alumni Banquet will be held on
:·: rial Hospital; ·
, ,.
•
·
\ .
May
27 at 6:30 p.m. in the Charles Hayman Gymnasium at Southern
: 9:24 p.m., Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, assisted by Pomeroy, Vicki
High School.
:Jackson, VMH;
The junior class will serve the dinner. The banquet will celebrate
:: 11:22 p.m., Pearl Street, Middleport, james Atkinson,VMH.
100.years of schools, from 1900 to 2000.All.former athletes and cheer•
POMEROY
•• Saturday, 1:11 p.m., South
leaders
will be recognized. ·
Third - Avenue, Middleport, Garette
Reunion years recognized will begin at 1920, and continue with
; Straight, HMC.
every fifth year.Tables will be available for the display of memorabilia,
;
..
REEDSviLLE
: Saturday, 12:49 p.m., State Route 124, assisted by Olive Township so graduates are encouraged to bring photos, letters, n~ws clippings
and other items to share. Uniforms will also be displayed.
: VFD, motor vehicle accident, Mary Stoller, refused tre~tptent.
The cost is $10 per person, with extra 'proceeds benefiting the
;:
RUTLAND
Southern
Alumni Scholarship Fund. Information is available from
:, Saturday, 1:06 a.m., assisted by Central Disp~tch, Cr~)neans Road,
Shirley Johnson at 843~5279, or the high school. Reservations should
.:': Geraldine Sexton, VMH;
..
1
be made by May 22.
5:27 p.m., 130 We he Terrace, Rosa Randolph, HMC.

Report: Feds want to split Microsoft
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Justice Department and 19 states
are leaning toward asking a federal
judge to split Microsoft Corp. into
two or three seNrate companies,
according to published reports.
· Citing pel'ple familiar with .the
discussions, The Washington Post
and USA Today said in Monday's
editions that a Justice Department
plan being shared with states and
industry executives envisions
Microsoft being forced to split off
its Windows operating system from
the teSt of the company..
The rest of the company possi-

bly then would be split in two,
with one company handling applications software and the other the
company's Internet business,
including browser software.

tobacco while
of settlement
nomic rewards.
"The whole tobacco controversy is a mixed message," said House
Majoriry Leader Larry Walker. ''For
years the federal government subsidized tobacco, they taxed tobacco
and then they want to say tobacco's
killing people. .. . It's a struggle
between health and economic
.
. "
prospenty.
Walker said he refrained from
voting on both bills because
Brown &amp; Williamson is a client of
his Jaw 6rm.
Gov. Roy Barnes has signed into
law a $25 million cap on the
amoQnt of bond money corpora. tions must post while they appeal
massive punitive damage awards
imposed by a jury. Virginia, North
Carolina and Kentucky passed
similar laws.
Tobacco companie~ are anticipating a damage award of possibly ·
hundreds of billions of doUars in a
Aorida lawsuit filed on behalf of
500,000 smokers. Florida law
requires companies to post a bond
equal to the damage award while
they appeal, which cigarette makers say could force them into
bankruptcy.
In Georgia, the bond cap applies
even if the judgment is 11:ndered in
another state.
The Legislature also approve_P up
to $6 million in annual tax credits
for companies rhat manufacture
cigarettes in Georgia for export to
other countries:.

Rep. Robert Reichert sponsored the bill to help Brown &amp;
Williamson stay in business in
Georgia.
The company - which makes
Kools, Carltons and Lucky Strikes
- employs 2,900 at its Macon
plant.

.Mid-Valley Christian School
Middleport

Open lou
·Tuesday, April 25th 7:00-8:30
Downtown Middleport
'

.GiVing students in Kindergarten· 6th.grade a solid
foundation in which to bulld their lives on.
• Excellent Phonetic Reading Program

Call 740-992-6249 for Info packet.
.,,
,.

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REEDSVILLE - Steven Michael Durst, 20, ofReedsville, died Fri. d:iy,April21, 2000.
. He was born August 30, 1979 in Parkersburg, West Virgini~. the son
· ·of Gary and Ruth Durst of Reedsvill~.
He was a 1998 graduate of Eastern High School, where he played
· football , basketball and baseball.l'le w;s an avid outdoorsman, active in
·fishing ·and wildlife management. He was currently attending Hocking
· ·College.
· .
In addition to outdoor activities, he enjoyed spending time with
·· friends and family. He will be sorely missed.
· · In addition to his parents, he is survived. by his brother, Bryan Durst,
and his wife, Suzanne, of Chester; his brother, Jeff Durst of Reedsville;
• .. a ' close fami ly friend, Mindy Sampson of Reedsville; his maternal •
"grandmother, Esther Landon; his paternal grandfather, Dawain Durst;
and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was prec~~ed in death by his paternal grandmother, Emma
Durst; and his maternal grandfather, Darrell Landon.
·
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, April 25, 2000 in White funeral
Home in Coolville. Burial will be in Heiney Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home on Monday, April 24, 2000 from 2-4 and 6-8
p.m.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be 1]13de to the Eastern High
School Athletic Boosters.

Ohio Valley Publishina Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S169, Ph. 992~2156. Se(:Ond t:laaa poat·
' ap paid at Pomeroy; Ohio.

'

MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: THE DAILY

.

"

Deadline For This Special Mother~ Day Tribute I• Monday, May 8, 12 noon

u£o.n .'S

.•

The Dally Sentinel • PaQe A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April 24, 2000

•

�PageA4
Sentinel

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24,2000

- The Daily Sentinel

The Daily S~ntinel
'E.sta6[isfid In 1948

Dear Ann Landers: I have a. message
for all your readers who. may be unaware
that they are living with an addict. Contrary to popu,lar belief, an addict is typically a white, middle-aged male professional. He appears to be perfectly normal, and shows no outward signs of the
disease until the addiction has taken con- .
trol of his life.
.
- My husband, a respected and successful physician, is currently in a treatment
ct:nter for his substance-abuse addiction.
The signs of ever-growing depression
· Were blamed on a variety of other causes
- turning 40, seasonal affective disorder,
job stress and family circumstances, to
name a few. As a loving and concerned
wife, I tried everything in my power to
relieve ' him of stress. The children and I
were walking on eggshells, catering to his
anxiety, irritability and mood swings.
- What we did not know was that he
was addicted to prescription· medication.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
I

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

..

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

'BOOT TIMt
TilEY DID c;of(liiiNG
ABOOTTH£S£
MOOO~KG~....

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utt~ 10 tltr rdlwr an ,.,~Jcrn,ul. TJ••:1 rlw~tld be- l•ss tlrun 300 wrmh. ..Ut ldten tuV 1t1b}«t
1o Nili11g ami1J111.1t ~ f igntd tmd intludt alldnu aM ltlepho"t 1t11.11tbtr. No Mmigntd kum wiU
IH pll.irlilhtd. Lllltrr ,;lwuld 1H in f(ood ifllilt, addnui"l isliNel, lftN ptrwnalilin.
Tl•• opi•ifuu upnJud. in tht ctllumn INlow Brt thl! conun1113 ofdlt OhW Vallty P~tblis,littt
CO. '1 tditorloiiHHlrd, unltu uthtrwiu 11uted.

OUR VIEW:

Vigilance
US. 33 project must remain
closely monitored

•
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0

'T ODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, April 24, the !15th day of 2000. There are 251
i' qays left in t.he year.
: • Today's Highlight in History:
! ~ On April 24, 1800, Congress approved a bill establishing the
: Library of Congress.
.
,
·• On this date:
~ In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La Marseillaise;' was
, composed by Capt. Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle.
~
In 1877, federal troops were ordered out of New Orleans, ending ·
! the North 's post-Civil War ·rule in the South.
:
In 1898, Spain declared war on the United States after rejecting
• America's ultimatum to withdraw from Cuba.
;
In 1915, the Ottoman Turkish Empire began the .brutal mass
~ deportation of Armenians during World War I.
In 1916, some 1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter Rising
r by seizing several key sites in Dublin. (They surrendered to British.
' forces five days later.)
l In 1953. British statesman Winston Churchill was knighted by
~ Queen Elizabeth II.
• . In 1968, leftist students at Columbia University in New York
• began a weeklong occupation of several campus buildings. .
~
In 1970, the People's Republic of C hina launched its first sate!; lite, which kept transmitting a song, "The East is Red."
: In 1980, a failed attempt to free the American hostages in Iran
: resulted in the deaths of eight U.S. servicemen.
~ In 1986, the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King Edward VIII
. Fhad given up the )3ritish ihrone, di ed in Patis at age 89.
~ 10day's Birthdays: Critic Stanley Kauffmann is 84. Actor J.D. Can~ non is 78. Actress Shirley Mac Laine is 66. Author Sue Grafton is 60 .
; Actress-singer-director Barbra Streisand is 58. Chicago Mayor
:Richard M.'Daley is 58. Country singer Richard Sterban (The Oak
: Ridge Boys) is 57. Rock musician Doug Clifford (Creede nee
· : Clearwater Revival) is 55. Actor-playwright Eric Bogosian is 47 .
~ Actor Michael O'Keefe is 45. Rock musician David J (Bauhaus) is
~ 43. R ock mu sician BiUy Gould (Faith No More) is 37. Rock musi·
~ cian Patty Schemel (Hole) is · 33. Rock musician Aaron Comess
: (Spin Doctors) is 32.

t.

••

ADVICE
Finally, an observant coUeague intervened, and persuaded my husband to get
the help he. desperately needed. If this
intervention had not taken place, I am
convinced the addiction would have
taken over his life.
If any of your readers suspect that a
family member or a friend might be
addicted to alcohol or drugs, and notices
that he or she is losing interest in everyday activities and is often depressed, I
hope they will have the courage to step

.

who vary widely in terms of income, educational attainment, health, functional abilities,
f living arrangeme~ts and access to support
services.
Today almost 35 million Americans, or
BY CONCEPCION DOOLEN
one in eight, are age 65 or older, and three
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER
out of five are women. Over the next 40
America is growing older, and most older years, the population .aged 65 and over will
Americans are women. Because women are more than double, while the number of perliving longer than mim, the health, econom- sons age 85 and over will more than triple. In
ic and social challenges which lace older 2040, for every 100 men 65 years of age and
Americans are most often the challenges older, there will be 166 women.
faced by women.
. Currently, the average life expectancy at
While stereotypes often portray older birth is 79.4 years for women and 73.9 years
adults as a homogeneous group, older Amer- for men. L.ife expectancy is expected to
icans are probably more diverse than any increase into the next century, and it is likeother "age" group. Not only do the terms ly to increase at a slightly higher rate among
. "elderly," "senior" and "older" include pet· women.
Not only do women have a longer aversons whose ages span more than four
- · decades, they encompass groups of persons age life expectancy than men, they tend to

r

HENTOFF'S VIEW:

Are Elians rights guarante~d for the future?
When next1 speak to a high-school class
..
about the nature of fundamental individual
.,,
freedoms, we will talk about the bright line
between the rights of Elian's father and the
. ,,
boy's future.
....
The philosopher Hans Jonas emphasizes th e
, .,
need to "respect the right of each human life
to find its own way and be a surprise to itself.''
Once in America, no one - except for
someone who has committed a crime in his
NEA COLUMNIST
country of origin ~should be sent back to a
country from which he will not be free to
\·
;'
leave. Not all prisoners are behind bars, a fact
that has escaped the liberals and conservatives
.
who are locked into the absolutism of family for generations, have learned to be careful of
valj.i,e! i,nJ,hiJ,~ase,. .
.
· ,
. ; , .,. _ce[!ain .~~i~~ t~ey say in public. C?~sii!5!: t~e
I wonder ,{ Rep. Charles Rangel, Thomas new cH1ef autocrat of RuSSia, a cold-~earted
Friedman and.oJ})er advocates oft})e bonds of graduate of the . KGB. Apd remepJb~r;who
blood have ever spoken, as I have, to al)y of 6rished a respectable second in that election
the invisible men condemned to Castro's -the leader o.(Jhe hardly obsolet!! Co.mmu-.
gulags for advocating democracy. Some of nist Party.
·
·
cr.
them had loving fathers.
I note that many family-values Am.\'ricans
Years ago, 1 was in a room witb .the mag- have been ~alling in to . talk-show ra.&lt;Jio stanetic Che Guevara, who professed not to t;mns, speaking to televtSion cameras m the
understand English. But he ignored the inter- h~s of the Capitol, ~nd w~iting col~rnJ1S lee;preter when 1 asked him "Can you ever envi- turmg Cuban-Amertcans m Mtamt f9r their
sion free elections in Cuba?""
extremism on behalf of a boy's right lp grow
Guevara laughed derisively, and said, in u~ as unfettere(,l as they themselves have in
S~nish, "Here?" And he kept laughing. He th1s country.
.,
was prophetic.
Complacent in their own rreedow, they
Yet 1 hear both academics and lay folk . have urged that Elian be returned to h,is roots.
assure us that, in time, Castro will be gone and They do not mention that once ba4 home
democracy will come to Cuba. And Elian, he will be included in ·a "Student Cumulative
long since reunited with his father and still Dossier" - a file kept by his teachers of not
renowned, will perhaps run for high office m only his academic record, but also his political
that' liberated country.
and religious development.
These seers are willing to bet this boy's
However much his Cuban father loJVes him,
future life on a hiving father and tpe specula- his son - in mind and saul, if ho~, body tion that a nation long conditioned - under belongs,. after all, to the Cuban state.,.
Batista and Castro - to authoritarian rule · Katie Couric, NBC's prominen\ .; political
will surely insist on constitj.itional democracy scientist, spet.ks sardonically of thosr' who do
once Castro is interred. And, perhaps, as hap- not want our illustrious attorney ge'neral to
pened to Lenin's statues, Castro's Ozymandian send Elian to a place without the right to disrelics will be toppled.
sent. They must, she said, "be talk!'.tg about
:!i ·
But look at another country whose people, Miami."

N

,,,

at
•'
Hento£r

Some of those people in Miami who appall
Couric with their zeal· have experienced - as
she has not - what Pascal Fontaine describes
in th e· section on Cuba in "The Black Book ·
of Communism'! (Harvard· University Press) :
"To control the population, the Direccion
Special del Ministerio del Interior (DSMI)
recruits chivatos (informers) by the thousand.
The DSMI works in three different fields:
One section keeps a file on every Cuban citizen; another keeps track of public opinion;
· the third, in charge of the 'ideological line,'
ke~ps an eye on die church and its v~~ious
congregations through infiltration."
The U.S. clergy who have so ardently sup. P?~t~d th ~ blof:!d rights ?f.~Ii,in's father ~ave
not mentwned a report'ln the ·Apnl 10 1ssue
of Editor &amp; · Publisher about the 'press freedoms that readers and writers enjoy' in Cuba:
,,''A favorite .tactic is plating reporters under
· house arrest to prevent th em from covering
events that could prove embarrassing to the
go-:ernment. Upwards of two dozen journalist· were subjected to that treatment in the past
six months."
.
Che Guevara's laughter reverberates as .I hsten to the passionate indictments of those of
us who are so cruel as to not understand the
heartfelt wisdom of Janet Reno: "The law is
very clear. A child who's lost his mother
belongs with the sole surviving parent."
Even when the ultimate parent is Big
Brother?
On 1\pril 18, the United Nations Human
Rights Commission Condemned Cuba for its
"continued violation of human rights and
fundamental freedoms."
But now the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals
has ruled that, despite Clinton and Reno,
Elian will finally have his due-process day in
court, and may yet live in freedom .

.

m.

Missionary Society meets

=

Reunion planned
A 10.~ reunion will be held by !he Meigs High School class of1990 on
. May 27 at the Sambuty Eementuy School near ~ Members are to
send a check foi$20 per couple for $10 for singles to AmyJohnson 6406 Gold. en Leaf Court, Bradenton, Aa., 34202.Aftemoon activities will include a family picnic at Salisbury at 1 p.m with food provided At 8 p.m. there will be an
adult only reunion party there with appetizers.

(Nat Hetitoff is a nationally renowned authority
o11 the First Amendmmt and tit~ rest qf the Bill qf
Rights.)

Drop in savings an oddity i~ time ofprosperity
NEW YORK - In a profound irony, this
happens to be National Savings Month 2000,
so declared by broker Merrill Lynch to raise
public a-.yareness of the need to develop good ·
financial habits.
Need you be reminded it is the same month
in which some small investors lost their savings
in the stock market? And the same month, of
course,' in which many people had to borrow
to pay their taxes?
It also used to be the month when Americans could feel relieved of their tax burdens,
having worked long enough and earned
enough to cover their federal , state and local
tax liabilities for the. year.
That latter pleasure is not, however, to be
enjoyed in April anymore, with ·the so-called
Tax freedom Day having been pushed back all
the way to mili-~y. at least as the Tax Foundation calculates it.
Meanwhile; the savings rate bobs just a bit
above or below zero, the latter rate being a
. consequence of borrowing rather than saving.
Your grandparents couldn't possibly under&gt;tand
it.
The vital question for policy-makers and
others involved in this situation Is whether it is
a just a bad habit that muse be corrected - or

•

is it a sign ·of stress on the inodein''l\merican 's only a matter of time before they do.
budget.
''I
· Based on Tax Foundation studies, families in
The bad-habit theorists conteNd that the 1958 saved a greater percentage of their
problem goes way bacli to childhood and poor incomes than in I 998.
In the earlier year, federal taxes accounted
parental training. Advertisers develc)p aJJd ·pro-.
mote the habit, they say, and mbneylenders for14.2 percentof incomes, and state and loc'al
·make it 'possible.
taxes 3.7' percent. And the savings rate was 6.5
Plausible atg\lments can be developed to percent. In 1998, federal taxesrepresented 25.9
support such views, but debaters '2an develop percent of incomes and state and local taxes
equally convincing positions that suggest sav- ' were 13.1 percent. The savings rate was under ·
ing, mit spending, is inborn or dev.iloped early l percent.
in many people.' ·
The comparability of such numbers is lessth~ MerriU Lynch survey suggest' there is ened by social changes. Workers do save more
some truth in this, citing the findings in a study now than before with contributions to Social
of515 younb"ten; aged 12 to 17. It showed 59 Security. And th ey have 401(k)s and corporate
percent s:ived half of what they ,e3)-ned, either · pension not included in savings rates.
B\lt it is hard to deny taxes have something
in jobs or through allowances for· duties performed, and spent the rest.
to do with the lack of.101vings in conventional.
Based on any standard, a 59 p~h:ent savings . formats, and why, according to Merr~l' Lynch,
rate is quite good, but teen-age~ tl~n't have the half of American faff\ilies have less than SJ ,000
financial obligations of adults. 'l'~~y aren't, for in net .savings and investments.
example, faced with the adult-siz\: tax bills.
Rather than bad habits or early' training or
Taxes now claim a greater share of the medi- some other cause, the answer to that perplexan two-income family's taxes .t\1:,m the com- ing question of why Americans do·· not . sa~e
bined total of money spent on food, clothing, might be an inability to save, odd as that might
housing and transportation - all necessities.
seem in an age of incredible wealth and prolAnd the tax portion is rising. ,Nobody yet is perity.
making the dum that it is in di~~ct proportion
(John Cuuniff is a business analyst for The Ass~­
to the' slowdown in savings, but it is .probably dated Press.)
·
'
i

marry men older than themselves. Seven out
of 10 "baby boom" women-those born
between 1946 and 1964-are expected to
outlive their husbands. Thus, many can
expect to be widows for 15 to 20 years.
One of every six older women is a member of a minority group-African American,
Hispanic, Native American or Asian American/Pacific Islander. By the year 2030, one in
four older Americans, irrespective of gender,
will be a inember of a minority group.
Of the individuals age 65 and older,
women represent 60 percent of all aged
Social Security recipients, Their reli~nce on
Social Security is great-25percent of unmar.ried elderly women rely on Social Security
as their only source of income.
For more information, call Social Security's toO-free number, 1-800-772-1213, or
visit our website at www.ssa.gov.

MON:DAY, April 24
POMEROY - Veterans
Service
Commission,
7 : 30 p:m.., Veterans Ser"
vice Office, 117 East
Memorial
Drive,
Po~eroy.

POMEROY
Meigs
County · License Bureau
354
East
Main · St .,
Pomeroy, closed Monday
until I p.m for installation of new computer
system.

POMEROY - Ameri ca:. Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Unit 39 ,
Tuesday, 1: 15 p.m .
POMEROY Immunization
clinic, Meigs
eounty Health Department, 9 to 11 a.m. and I
to 3 p.m . Tuesday. Children to be accompanied
by parent /g uardian. Take
shot record s.
WEDNESDAY, April 26

RUTLAND -Rutland
Garden Club, 1 p.m .
Monday at the home of
Dorothy
Woodard,
Langsville.
RACINE - · Free skin
testing clinic, Racine
Fire Station, Monday,
4;30 to · 6:30 p.m. by
Connie Cotterill, R.N.,
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse .

CHESTER- The bifthday ofEnna Cleland, deputy state councilor, WoiS
Celebntecl at a ..ecent ~ofChester Council 323, Daughters ofAmerica,
held at the haD.
Carried out by the good of the order conunittee, gitis were presented to her
by JoAnn Ritchie who also read the poem,"Friends:' Other reading\ on spring
and Easter were given by Esther Smith, MaryJo Barringer, Doris Grueser and ·
Opal Hollon. Refreshments were seMd with mernben singing Happy Birthday to Mn. Qeland.
.
Julie Curtis, councilor, conducted the meeting which opened with pledges
to the Christian and American ~ and.scripture reading by Laura Mae Nice
liom Psalms. it V'lll! reported that EstherWright is confined to a musing home
atThe Plains. Mary~ Halter Mad a letter from member Lora Dameo.wod now
in Ulbana, and a thank )'011 note WoiS read by the recOiding ~ fi:om Jo
Ann Ritchie, complimenling the council on ics work at the spring rally.
Helen Wolf WoiS pianist. Door prizes were \VOn by Jean ~ Laura Mae
. Nice, Helen Kline, Kathryn Baum, and &amp;!her Smith. BettyJadaon and CharIoae ~ Meter were welcomed into the lodge. Others present were Man:ia
Kdler, Ruth' Smith, Gary Jialter, EDa Osborne, Margaret Ambelger, Opal
Eichinger, Sandy White, Everett G1211t, Goldie Frederick, Thelma White, and

TUESDAY, April 25
CHESTER
The
Chester Shade Historical
Association will have its
quarterly meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester courthouse.
RACINE
The
Racine Area Community
Organi'zation . will met
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m . at Star
Mill Park. There will be a
potluck dinner.

Opa!Honon.

RUTLAND -. Leading
Creek Conservancy District , Wednesday, 5 p .. m.
regular board meeting ,
THURSDAY, April 27
PORTLAND
The
Lebanon
Township
Trustees will meet at 5
p.m Thursday at
the
township building .
The Community Calendar is published as a
free s.ervice to nonprofit groups wishing
to announce meetings
and special events. The
calendar is not
deligned to promote
sales or fund raisers of
any type. Items are
printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be
printed a specific
number of days.

New •mbers lnduded into sorority

POMEROY - Sellm new members were inducted into Ohio £Ia Phi
Chapter ofBeta Sigma Phi Sororit):
·
The new members, pledges for the past year, have completed the training
'
necessary for membeiShip.
The meeting w.JS hosted by Karin Johruon and Tina Hosken at the Johnson home. ·
HEMLOCK GRoVE -1\venty..fivc year certificates were presented to .
Presiding over the ceremony were Cheryl Facemyer, presicjent;Hosken, vice
Ziba and Sylvia Midkilf at a recent meeting of Hemlock Grange held at the president, and Jolmson, secretary.
·
hall.
.
.
The new members are .Jena Tenoglia, Sherry Bibbee, ]an Davis,Jayne Ann
Rosalie Story, master, conducted the meeting with Opal Grueser giving !he Collins,Lorre Hill, Gretchen Anderson, and Dena R01eberry.The chapter now
legislatM: report. She and her husbmd Roy hall attended the legislative con~ has 28 members.
ference held ·at Friendly Hi.lk.
·
Members elected delegates for the state convention. It WoiS announced that
the Grange inspection will be held on July 6. Pomona~ May meeting will be
held at Hemlock Grange. Members were reminded to turn in pop tlbs, used
HARRISONVlll.E- Final pi= have been made for the Harrjsonville·&lt;:ye glasses. and Campbell soup labels for the redemption progt:llll at that time. Scipio Alwnni&amp;iociation~ annual dinner and dan~e to be held May Z7 at 6:30
The county baking contest will also be held at that meeting.
. p.m at !he fiartisonville SchooL
Jim Fry will be mowing this month and cleaning will be done by Story and
Classes to be honored are 1930,1940,1950 and 1960.
·
NancyWell. Members and Iii.ends reported ill were Bob Brewer, HerbertWhaA baked ham and chicken dinner will be served at a cost of$1 0 for adull5
:ley and George Zeigler.
and $7 for children under 12,$3 for the dance only. and $2 for dues only.Those
.Rosalie Jolmson,lecturer, ~onducted the progmn.lnformalion on how the unable to attend are asked to send their dues.
date of~ is determined w.IS giwn, Helen Swartz ~ a reading, and JohnReseMtions are to be made with Joy W~man dark, P. 0. Box 706, Syra- ··
son conducted a quiz on trees.
·
cuse 45779 no later than May 20. Reservations may aho be called to Harold
The May meeting ~ be preceded by refreslunen15 of hot ~ baked Graham at 740-,42-3033.
. beans and potato salad
Alwnni officers are Grnham, president; Larry Clark, vice president; Virgil

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
. 992·2156

·· Hemlock Granp presents cerllfkates

\

and he now sits in jail awaiting trial. Doc in Siler City, N .C .
Dear Doc: The evidence seems overwhelming. H is best hope is to get J ohnnie Cochran to defend him.
Gem of the Day (Credit former Vice
President Dan Quayle): "It isn't .pollution
that' is harming the environment, it's the
impurities in our air and water that is
doing it."
"A Collection of My Favorite Gems
of the Day" is ihe perfect little gift for
that special someone who is impossible
to buy for. Send a self-addressed, long.
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $5.25 . (this includes
postage and handling) to: Collection, c/o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, C hicago,
Ill. 60611-0562 (in Canada, $6.25) . To
find out more about Ann Landers and
read her past col umns, visit the Creato rs
Syndicate
-... web
page
at
www.creacors.com.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Birthday observed at DofA meeting

RACINE - · Lillian Hayman hosted a ~enF meeting of the Bertha M ..
' ' ~ Misi&lt;&gt;mry Socieq&lt;
.
.
- • During the meeting coriducted by Mary1&lt;.Yost, it WoiS reported that the
' . white
quota has been filled and mailed. Plans were made for a \VOrk session at the next meeting to be held at the home of Nondus Hendricks with
· Mary K Yost IQ have the progtam. The group will. meet at 10 a.m. to cut quilt
, ·blocks.
The names of 10 deceased memben were sent toVetemns Memorial Has.
pita! A-uxiliary memorial aee. They we1e Vm Beegle, Blanch W..tterson, Gretta Simpson, Marie Roush, Edna Pickens, Mabel Roush, Frances Wi!cOlllm,
Ollie Mae Cmm,\\2nda ~.and Bertha Sayre.
Nonda Henclricb had the program· using '1esus as the theme. She read
scripture ~m Matt. 28 and each member had a reading on die theme. Hen~
' dricks gave prayer and ~ts Wete served to those named and BarbaJa
Gheen, Mmjorie Grinun, Linda Grinun, Martha Lou Beegle, Geraldine Qeland, and Naomi Stoban.

BUSINESS MIRROR:

BY JOHN CUNNIFF

the store, but it was so heavy, he couldn't
lift it. He then tried to grab a rack full of
cigarettes. The clerk stopped him.
The man drove away empty-handed,
but was spotted by the police for driving
a stolen car. The police pursued him with
lights ~hing and sirens blaring. Tl'Us rattled the culprit, and he ended up in a
ditch. He then abandoned the car, and
sought refuge inside a nearby mobile
home. He was arrested, and charged with
possession of a stolen vehicle, speeding to
elude police, careless and reckless driving, and failure to stop for a police car.
His bond was set at $2,000.
While being escorted back to Siler
Cfity by the police, the man asked if he
could stop and get his potato cl'Ups, since
he had paid for them. The clerk at the
convenience store identified him as the
man who tried to steal the cash register,
and he was charged with attempted robbery. His bond was increased to $15,000;

SOCIETY NEWS

"..

Alumni completes plans

Reeves, treasurer; and

.

FHEE I. N~PECTU)N

SHAVER REPAIR

CLINIC
FRUTH' PHARMACY

786 N. 2nd, Middleport

Joy Wiseman Clatk,
.pilse&lt;;reW'v.ilt
.iiiiiiiiii'O.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _IIJ!II_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'I

---------------------------------------------- IJp To $600 Rebate or NO~:=:~.. 'DI.200 I
BIRTHDAY
.

.

RUTLAND - Shawn David
ReGYes recendy celebrated his
fifth birthday with a party a~ the
home of his parents, Julie King
and Dave Reeves, Pageville, ·
Road.
A Power Ranger theme was
·presented and .cake and io:e
cream were served.
Attending besides his parents
was his sister, Bobbie ,r\nne
Reeves; his maternal grandmother, Joan King of Harrisonville; and
his paternal

'

'!

'

Ann
Landers

in. It could save a life. - Mrs. Doctor,
Anywhere, Any Town
Dear Mrs. Doctor: You have written
an important letter, and I thank you.
Drug abusers can be extremely skillful at
[1iding their addiction. They are masters
at deception. Because physicians have
easy access to drugs at the office (and can
write prescription~. they are particularly
vulnerable. Again, let me say I love the
way my readers look out for one anoth·
er.
Dear Ann Landers: I have a stupid
crook story that deserves space in your
column . It happened in my hometown '
of Siler City, N .C.
A young man attempted to rob a convenience store near my office. He bought
a bag of potato chips, and while the clerk
was making c!J.ange, he attempted to grab
the money from the cash register..When
the clerk quickly closed the drawer, the
man tried to take the cash register out of

Older Americans:
Men and women

!'

•

Monday, April 24, 2000

SOCIAL SECU-RITY

1

A

ye'u ago, Ohio Valley Publishing Co. took a stand in
favor of the extension of U.S. 33 from Darwin to
Ath ens.
•
The newspapers joined an army of
Build tire
residents of M eigs, G~llia, Mason and
other nearby communities who recogDarrvin-toni zed how vital safe and modern high Atlrens
ways ar£ to the region's economic
connectorfuture. &gt;I
in our lijetime!
A year later, the same tired, old .issues
raised by opponents and dismissed by those involved in the
funding and construction of highways at the state and federal
levels continue to complicate this important issue.
The Coalition Against Superfluous Highways, an Athensbased group which has opposed the highway project since it
fir st appeared on the books, earlier this month ftled a second
lawsuit in federal court in an attempt to stop the project in its
tracks.
While proponents who have dedicated countless volunteer
hours supporting the proJeCt were not surprised by the second
CASH lawsuit, it is vital members of the communities positively affected by any road construction remain vigilant in
support of the Darwin-to-Athens project.
Looking into the future, just at the horizon, one can see a
flicker of light at the end of the tunnel. Industry has taken
notice of our region; now is not the time to become complacent.
Those who signed petitions and wrote letters, and attended
public hearings and Ohio Department of Transportation
meetings must closely watch the situation as it continues to
unfold, for the fate of U.S. 33 will affect the economic climate
of the community for years to come.
While CASH members may dismiss the economic importance of modern highways, and may exaggerate the project's
environmental threats, those of us who live and work here
know how important this road is.
Although the project remains, at this time, on the tier I priority list, and although property will be purchased in coming
months, the possibility the road will not be completed is a
possibility none of us can afford to become reality.
Speak y(,lur voice, have your opinion heard. We believe there
are far more folks out there who support this crucial project
and realize what it means to our future than there are "aginners" like the CASH crop. That said, if you don't speak up
now, you may live to regret it.
·
Build the Darwin-to-Athens connector - in our lifetime!

Page AS

Reader dispels myths about alcohol and drug addiction

nI

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

If the

,

.,~.

.

--~

-~--~·

.... ·- .....

---···-·

~ --·-- -

grandparents, Eugene '1ake" and
Juanita P,..eeves. Others attending
we&lt;e Jeff King, Harrisonville,
Mandy, Charles and Josh Neutzling, Darlene, Jake and Matt
Older, all of Pageville; Patty,
Rodney, Missy, Jenny, and Billy
Reeves, Rick and Teresa Reeves,
Davey and z 'ack Young,
Snowville; Rose, Brittany, Sum"
·mer and Ashley King of King
Ridge Road; Randy, Rachel,
Jodi. Brandi Jill • and Randall
Reeves, all of Pomeroy.

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

.. - ... ... -- -· ..

Yc:iu can aave up to 50% on your utility billa, be cool
and comfy all summer and warm and cozy next
winter before you make one payment!
Or take an Jnetant rebate on HleCt modele.

A hot summer Ia forecast. Hurry, the acMdule It
filling up and the,. Will be no lower prtcee thla year• .

Hotline 1-800-247-8180.

d White Serviee8
'

-· ---~------

- ·-.-

· ----~-

•

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�PageA4
Sentinel

•'

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•

24,2000

- The Daily Sentinel

The Daily S~ntinel
'E.sta6[isfid In 1948

Dear Ann Landers: I have a. message
for all your readers who. may be unaware
that they are living with an addict. Contrary to popu,lar belief, an addict is typically a white, middle-aged male professional. He appears to be perfectly normal, and shows no outward signs of the
disease until the addiction has taken con- .
trol of his life.
.
- My husband, a respected and successful physician, is currently in a treatment
ct:nter for his substance-abuse addiction.
The signs of ever-growing depression
· Were blamed on a variety of other causes
- turning 40, seasonal affective disorder,
job stress and family circumstances, to
name a few. As a loving and concerned
wife, I tried everything in my power to
relieve ' him of stress. The children and I
were walking on eggshells, catering to his
anxiety, irritability and mood swings.
- What we did not know was that he
was addicted to prescription· medication.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
I

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

..

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

'BOOT TIMt
TilEY DID c;of(liiiNG
ABOOTTH£S£
MOOO~KG~....

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utt~ 10 tltr rdlwr an ,.,~Jcrn,ul. TJ••:1 rlw~tld be- l•ss tlrun 300 wrmh. ..Ut ldten tuV 1t1b}«t
1o Nili11g ami1J111.1t ~ f igntd tmd intludt alldnu aM ltlepho"t 1t11.11tbtr. No Mmigntd kum wiU
IH pll.irlilhtd. Lllltrr ,;lwuld 1H in f(ood ifllilt, addnui"l isliNel, lftN ptrwnalilin.
Tl•• opi•ifuu upnJud. in tht ctllumn INlow Brt thl! conun1113 ofdlt OhW Vallty P~tblis,littt
CO. '1 tditorloiiHHlrd, unltu uthtrwiu 11uted.

OUR VIEW:

Vigilance
US. 33 project must remain
closely monitored

•
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0

'T ODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, April 24, the !15th day of 2000. There are 251
i' qays left in t.he year.
: • Today's Highlight in History:
! ~ On April 24, 1800, Congress approved a bill establishing the
: Library of Congress.
.
,
·• On this date:
~ In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La Marseillaise;' was
, composed by Capt. Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle.
~
In 1877, federal troops were ordered out of New Orleans, ending ·
! the North 's post-Civil War ·rule in the South.
:
In 1898, Spain declared war on the United States after rejecting
• America's ultimatum to withdraw from Cuba.
;
In 1915, the Ottoman Turkish Empire began the .brutal mass
~ deportation of Armenians during World War I.
In 1916, some 1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter Rising
r by seizing several key sites in Dublin. (They surrendered to British.
' forces five days later.)
l In 1953. British statesman Winston Churchill was knighted by
~ Queen Elizabeth II.
• . In 1968, leftist students at Columbia University in New York
• began a weeklong occupation of several campus buildings. .
~
In 1970, the People's Republic of C hina launched its first sate!; lite, which kept transmitting a song, "The East is Red."
: In 1980, a failed attempt to free the American hostages in Iran
: resulted in the deaths of eight U.S. servicemen.
~ In 1986, the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King Edward VIII
. Fhad given up the )3ritish ihrone, di ed in Patis at age 89.
~ 10day's Birthdays: Critic Stanley Kauffmann is 84. Actor J.D. Can~ non is 78. Actress Shirley Mac Laine is 66. Author Sue Grafton is 60 .
; Actress-singer-director Barbra Streisand is 58. Chicago Mayor
:Richard M.'Daley is 58. Country singer Richard Sterban (The Oak
: Ridge Boys) is 57. Rock musician Doug Clifford (Creede nee
· : Clearwater Revival) is 55. Actor-playwright Eric Bogosian is 47 .
~ Actor Michael O'Keefe is 45. Rock musician David J (Bauhaus) is
~ 43. R ock mu sician BiUy Gould (Faith No More) is 37. Rock musi·
~ cian Patty Schemel (Hole) is · 33. Rock musician Aaron Comess
: (Spin Doctors) is 32.

t.

••

ADVICE
Finally, an observant coUeague intervened, and persuaded my husband to get
the help he. desperately needed. If this
intervention had not taken place, I am
convinced the addiction would have
taken over his life.
If any of your readers suspect that a
family member or a friend might be
addicted to alcohol or drugs, and notices
that he or she is losing interest in everyday activities and is often depressed, I
hope they will have the courage to step

.

who vary widely in terms of income, educational attainment, health, functional abilities,
f living arrangeme~ts and access to support
services.
Today almost 35 million Americans, or
BY CONCEPCION DOOLEN
one in eight, are age 65 or older, and three
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER
out of five are women. Over the next 40
America is growing older, and most older years, the population .aged 65 and over will
Americans are women. Because women are more than double, while the number of perliving longer than mim, the health, econom- sons age 85 and over will more than triple. In
ic and social challenges which lace older 2040, for every 100 men 65 years of age and
Americans are most often the challenges older, there will be 166 women.
faced by women.
. Currently, the average life expectancy at
While stereotypes often portray older birth is 79.4 years for women and 73.9 years
adults as a homogeneous group, older Amer- for men. L.ife expectancy is expected to
icans are probably more diverse than any increase into the next century, and it is likeother "age" group. Not only do the terms ly to increase at a slightly higher rate among
. "elderly," "senior" and "older" include pet· women.
Not only do women have a longer aversons whose ages span more than four
- · decades, they encompass groups of persons age life expectancy than men, they tend to

r

HENTOFF'S VIEW:

Are Elians rights guarante~d for the future?
When next1 speak to a high-school class
..
about the nature of fundamental individual
.,,
freedoms, we will talk about the bright line
between the rights of Elian's father and the
. ,,
boy's future.
....
The philosopher Hans Jonas emphasizes th e
, .,
need to "respect the right of each human life
to find its own way and be a surprise to itself.''
Once in America, no one - except for
someone who has committed a crime in his
NEA COLUMNIST
country of origin ~should be sent back to a
country from which he will not be free to
\·
;'
leave. Not all prisoners are behind bars, a fact
that has escaped the liberals and conservatives
.
who are locked into the absolutism of family for generations, have learned to be careful of
valj.i,e! i,nJ,hiJ,~ase,. .
.
· ,
. ; , .,. _ce[!ain .~~i~~ t~ey say in public. C?~sii!5!: t~e
I wonder ,{ Rep. Charles Rangel, Thomas new cH1ef autocrat of RuSSia, a cold-~earted
Friedman and.oJ})er advocates oft})e bonds of graduate of the . KGB. Apd remepJb~r;who
blood have ever spoken, as I have, to al)y of 6rished a respectable second in that election
the invisible men condemned to Castro's -the leader o.(Jhe hardly obsolet!! Co.mmu-.
gulags for advocating democracy. Some of nist Party.
·
·
cr.
them had loving fathers.
I note that many family-values Am.\'ricans
Years ago, 1 was in a room witb .the mag- have been ~alling in to . talk-show ra.&lt;Jio stanetic Che Guevara, who professed not to t;mns, speaking to televtSion cameras m the
understand English. But he ignored the inter- h~s of the Capitol, ~nd w~iting col~rnJ1S lee;preter when 1 asked him "Can you ever envi- turmg Cuban-Amertcans m Mtamt f9r their
sion free elections in Cuba?""
extremism on behalf of a boy's right lp grow
Guevara laughed derisively, and said, in u~ as unfettere(,l as they themselves have in
S~nish, "Here?" And he kept laughing. He th1s country.
.,
was prophetic.
Complacent in their own rreedow, they
Yet 1 hear both academics and lay folk . have urged that Elian be returned to h,is roots.
assure us that, in time, Castro will be gone and They do not mention that once ba4 home
democracy will come to Cuba. And Elian, he will be included in ·a "Student Cumulative
long since reunited with his father and still Dossier" - a file kept by his teachers of not
renowned, will perhaps run for high office m only his academic record, but also his political
that' liberated country.
and religious development.
These seers are willing to bet this boy's
However much his Cuban father loJVes him,
future life on a hiving father and tpe specula- his son - in mind and saul, if ho~, body tion that a nation long conditioned - under belongs,. after all, to the Cuban state.,.
Batista and Castro - to authoritarian rule · Katie Couric, NBC's prominen\ .; political
will surely insist on constitj.itional democracy scientist, spet.ks sardonically of thosr' who do
once Castro is interred. And, perhaps, as hap- not want our illustrious attorney ge'neral to
pened to Lenin's statues, Castro's Ozymandian send Elian to a place without the right to disrelics will be toppled.
sent. They must, she said, "be talk!'.tg about
:!i ·
But look at another country whose people, Miami."

N

,,,

at
•'
Hento£r

Some of those people in Miami who appall
Couric with their zeal· have experienced - as
she has not - what Pascal Fontaine describes
in th e· section on Cuba in "The Black Book ·
of Communism'! (Harvard· University Press) :
"To control the population, the Direccion
Special del Ministerio del Interior (DSMI)
recruits chivatos (informers) by the thousand.
The DSMI works in three different fields:
One section keeps a file on every Cuban citizen; another keeps track of public opinion;
· the third, in charge of the 'ideological line,'
ke~ps an eye on die church and its v~~ious
congregations through infiltration."
The U.S. clergy who have so ardently sup. P?~t~d th ~ blof:!d rights ?f.~Ii,in's father ~ave
not mentwned a report'ln the ·Apnl 10 1ssue
of Editor &amp; · Publisher about the 'press freedoms that readers and writers enjoy' in Cuba:
,,''A favorite .tactic is plating reporters under
· house arrest to prevent th em from covering
events that could prove embarrassing to the
go-:ernment. Upwards of two dozen journalist· were subjected to that treatment in the past
six months."
.
Che Guevara's laughter reverberates as .I hsten to the passionate indictments of those of
us who are so cruel as to not understand the
heartfelt wisdom of Janet Reno: "The law is
very clear. A child who's lost his mother
belongs with the sole surviving parent."
Even when the ultimate parent is Big
Brother?
On 1\pril 18, the United Nations Human
Rights Commission Condemned Cuba for its
"continued violation of human rights and
fundamental freedoms."
But now the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals
has ruled that, despite Clinton and Reno,
Elian will finally have his due-process day in
court, and may yet live in freedom .

.

m.

Missionary Society meets

=

Reunion planned
A 10.~ reunion will be held by !he Meigs High School class of1990 on
. May 27 at the Sambuty Eementuy School near ~ Members are to
send a check foi$20 per couple for $10 for singles to AmyJohnson 6406 Gold. en Leaf Court, Bradenton, Aa., 34202.Aftemoon activities will include a family picnic at Salisbury at 1 p.m with food provided At 8 p.m. there will be an
adult only reunion party there with appetizers.

(Nat Hetitoff is a nationally renowned authority
o11 the First Amendmmt and tit~ rest qf the Bill qf
Rights.)

Drop in savings an oddity i~ time ofprosperity
NEW YORK - In a profound irony, this
happens to be National Savings Month 2000,
so declared by broker Merrill Lynch to raise
public a-.yareness of the need to develop good ·
financial habits.
Need you be reminded it is the same month
in which some small investors lost their savings
in the stock market? And the same month, of
course,' in which many people had to borrow
to pay their taxes?
It also used to be the month when Americans could feel relieved of their tax burdens,
having worked long enough and earned
enough to cover their federal , state and local
tax liabilities for the. year.
That latter pleasure is not, however, to be
enjoyed in April anymore, with ·the so-called
Tax freedom Day having been pushed back all
the way to mili-~y. at least as the Tax Foundation calculates it.
Meanwhile; the savings rate bobs just a bit
above or below zero, the latter rate being a
. consequence of borrowing rather than saving.
Your grandparents couldn't possibly under&gt;tand
it.
The vital question for policy-makers and
others involved in this situation Is whether it is
a just a bad habit that muse be corrected - or

•

is it a sign ·of stress on the inodein''l\merican 's only a matter of time before they do.
budget.
''I
· Based on Tax Foundation studies, families in
The bad-habit theorists conteNd that the 1958 saved a greater percentage of their
problem goes way bacli to childhood and poor incomes than in I 998.
In the earlier year, federal taxes accounted
parental training. Advertisers develc)p aJJd ·pro-.
mote the habit, they say, and mbneylenders for14.2 percentof incomes, and state and loc'al
·make it 'possible.
taxes 3.7' percent. And the savings rate was 6.5
Plausible atg\lments can be developed to percent. In 1998, federal taxesrepresented 25.9
support such views, but debaters '2an develop percent of incomes and state and local taxes
equally convincing positions that suggest sav- ' were 13.1 percent. The savings rate was under ·
ing, mit spending, is inborn or dev.iloped early l percent.
in many people.' ·
The comparability of such numbers is lessth~ MerriU Lynch survey suggest' there is ened by social changes. Workers do save more
some truth in this, citing the findings in a study now than before with contributions to Social
of515 younb"ten; aged 12 to 17. It showed 59 Security. And th ey have 401(k)s and corporate
percent s:ived half of what they ,e3)-ned, either · pension not included in savings rates.
B\lt it is hard to deny taxes have something
in jobs or through allowances for· duties performed, and spent the rest.
to do with the lack of.101vings in conventional.
Based on any standard, a 59 p~h:ent savings . formats, and why, according to Merr~l' Lynch,
rate is quite good, but teen-age~ tl~n't have the half of American faff\ilies have less than SJ ,000
financial obligations of adults. 'l'~~y aren't, for in net .savings and investments.
example, faced with the adult-siz\: tax bills.
Rather than bad habits or early' training or
Taxes now claim a greater share of the medi- some other cause, the answer to that perplexan two-income family's taxes .t\1:,m the com- ing question of why Americans do·· not . sa~e
bined total of money spent on food, clothing, might be an inability to save, odd as that might
housing and transportation - all necessities.
seem in an age of incredible wealth and prolAnd the tax portion is rising. ,Nobody yet is perity.
making the dum that it is in di~~ct proportion
(John Cuuniff is a business analyst for The Ass~­
to the' slowdown in savings, but it is .probably dated Press.)
·
'
i

marry men older than themselves. Seven out
of 10 "baby boom" women-those born
between 1946 and 1964-are expected to
outlive their husbands. Thus, many can
expect to be widows for 15 to 20 years.
One of every six older women is a member of a minority group-African American,
Hispanic, Native American or Asian American/Pacific Islander. By the year 2030, one in
four older Americans, irrespective of gender,
will be a inember of a minority group.
Of the individuals age 65 and older,
women represent 60 percent of all aged
Social Security recipients, Their reli~nce on
Social Security is great-25percent of unmar.ried elderly women rely on Social Security
as their only source of income.
For more information, call Social Security's toO-free number, 1-800-772-1213, or
visit our website at www.ssa.gov.

MON:DAY, April 24
POMEROY - Veterans
Service
Commission,
7 : 30 p:m.., Veterans Ser"
vice Office, 117 East
Memorial
Drive,
Po~eroy.

POMEROY
Meigs
County · License Bureau
354
East
Main · St .,
Pomeroy, closed Monday
until I p.m for installation of new computer
system.

POMEROY - Ameri ca:. Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Unit 39 ,
Tuesday, 1: 15 p.m .
POMEROY Immunization
clinic, Meigs
eounty Health Department, 9 to 11 a.m. and I
to 3 p.m . Tuesday. Children to be accompanied
by parent /g uardian. Take
shot record s.
WEDNESDAY, April 26

RUTLAND -Rutland
Garden Club, 1 p.m .
Monday at the home of
Dorothy
Woodard,
Langsville.
RACINE - · Free skin
testing clinic, Racine
Fire Station, Monday,
4;30 to · 6:30 p.m. by
Connie Cotterill, R.N.,
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse .

CHESTER- The bifthday ofEnna Cleland, deputy state councilor, WoiS
Celebntecl at a ..ecent ~ofChester Council 323, Daughters ofAmerica,
held at the haD.
Carried out by the good of the order conunittee, gitis were presented to her
by JoAnn Ritchie who also read the poem,"Friends:' Other reading\ on spring
and Easter were given by Esther Smith, MaryJo Barringer, Doris Grueser and ·
Opal Hollon. Refreshments were seMd with mernben singing Happy Birthday to Mn. Qeland.
.
Julie Curtis, councilor, conducted the meeting which opened with pledges
to the Christian and American ~ and.scripture reading by Laura Mae Nice
liom Psalms. it V'lll! reported that EstherWright is confined to a musing home
atThe Plains. Mary~ Halter Mad a letter from member Lora Dameo.wod now
in Ulbana, and a thank )'011 note WoiS read by the recOiding ~ fi:om Jo
Ann Ritchie, complimenling the council on ics work at the spring rally.
Helen Wolf WoiS pianist. Door prizes were \VOn by Jean ~ Laura Mae
. Nice, Helen Kline, Kathryn Baum, and &amp;!her Smith. BettyJadaon and CharIoae ~ Meter were welcomed into the lodge. Others present were Man:ia
Kdler, Ruth' Smith, Gary Jialter, EDa Osborne, Margaret Ambelger, Opal
Eichinger, Sandy White, Everett G1211t, Goldie Frederick, Thelma White, and

TUESDAY, April 25
CHESTER
The
Chester Shade Historical
Association will have its
quarterly meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester courthouse.
RACINE
The
Racine Area Community
Organi'zation . will met
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m . at Star
Mill Park. There will be a
potluck dinner.

Opa!Honon.

RUTLAND -. Leading
Creek Conservancy District , Wednesday, 5 p .. m.
regular board meeting ,
THURSDAY, April 27
PORTLAND
The
Lebanon
Township
Trustees will meet at 5
p.m Thursday at
the
township building .
The Community Calendar is published as a
free s.ervice to nonprofit groups wishing
to announce meetings
and special events. The
calendar is not
deligned to promote
sales or fund raisers of
any type. Items are
printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be
printed a specific
number of days.

New •mbers lnduded into sorority

POMEROY - Sellm new members were inducted into Ohio £Ia Phi
Chapter ofBeta Sigma Phi Sororit):
·
The new members, pledges for the past year, have completed the training
'
necessary for membeiShip.
The meeting w.JS hosted by Karin Johruon and Tina Hosken at the Johnson home. ·
HEMLOCK GRoVE -1\venty..fivc year certificates were presented to .
Presiding over the ceremony were Cheryl Facemyer, presicjent;Hosken, vice
Ziba and Sylvia Midkilf at a recent meeting of Hemlock Grange held at the president, and Jolmson, secretary.
·
hall.
.
.
The new members are .Jena Tenoglia, Sherry Bibbee, ]an Davis,Jayne Ann
Rosalie Story, master, conducted the meeting with Opal Grueser giving !he Collins,Lorre Hill, Gretchen Anderson, and Dena R01eberry.The chapter now
legislatM: report. She and her husbmd Roy hall attended the legislative con~ has 28 members.
ference held ·at Friendly Hi.lk.
·
Members elected delegates for the state convention. It WoiS announced that
the Grange inspection will be held on July 6. Pomona~ May meeting will be
held at Hemlock Grange. Members were reminded to turn in pop tlbs, used
HARRISONVlll.E- Final pi= have been made for the Harrjsonville·&lt;:ye glasses. and Campbell soup labels for the redemption progt:llll at that time. Scipio Alwnni&amp;iociation~ annual dinner and dan~e to be held May Z7 at 6:30
The county baking contest will also be held at that meeting.
. p.m at !he fiartisonville SchooL
Jim Fry will be mowing this month and cleaning will be done by Story and
Classes to be honored are 1930,1940,1950 and 1960.
·
NancyWell. Members and Iii.ends reported ill were Bob Brewer, HerbertWhaA baked ham and chicken dinner will be served at a cost of$1 0 for adull5
:ley and George Zeigler.
and $7 for children under 12,$3 for the dance only. and $2 for dues only.Those
.Rosalie Jolmson,lecturer, ~onducted the progmn.lnformalion on how the unable to attend are asked to send their dues.
date of~ is determined w.IS giwn, Helen Swartz ~ a reading, and JohnReseMtions are to be made with Joy W~man dark, P. 0. Box 706, Syra- ··
son conducted a quiz on trees.
·
cuse 45779 no later than May 20. Reservations may aho be called to Harold
The May meeting ~ be preceded by refreslunen15 of hot ~ baked Graham at 740-,42-3033.
. beans and potato salad
Alwnni officers are Grnham, president; Larry Clark, vice president; Virgil

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
. 992·2156

·· Hemlock Granp presents cerllfkates

\

and he now sits in jail awaiting trial. Doc in Siler City, N .C .
Dear Doc: The evidence seems overwhelming. H is best hope is to get J ohnnie Cochran to defend him.
Gem of the Day (Credit former Vice
President Dan Quayle): "It isn't .pollution
that' is harming the environment, it's the
impurities in our air and water that is
doing it."
"A Collection of My Favorite Gems
of the Day" is ihe perfect little gift for
that special someone who is impossible
to buy for. Send a self-addressed, long.
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $5.25 . (this includes
postage and handling) to: Collection, c/o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, C hicago,
Ill. 60611-0562 (in Canada, $6.25) . To
find out more about Ann Landers and
read her past col umns, visit the Creato rs
Syndicate
-... web
page
at
www.creacors.com.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Birthday observed at DofA meeting

RACINE - · Lillian Hayman hosted a ~enF meeting of the Bertha M ..
' ' ~ Misi&lt;&gt;mry Socieq&lt;
.
.
- • During the meeting coriducted by Mary1&lt;.Yost, it WoiS reported that the
' . white
quota has been filled and mailed. Plans were made for a \VOrk session at the next meeting to be held at the home of Nondus Hendricks with
· Mary K Yost IQ have the progtam. The group will. meet at 10 a.m. to cut quilt
, ·blocks.
The names of 10 deceased memben were sent toVetemns Memorial Has.
pita! A-uxiliary memorial aee. They we1e Vm Beegle, Blanch W..tterson, Gretta Simpson, Marie Roush, Edna Pickens, Mabel Roush, Frances Wi!cOlllm,
Ollie Mae Cmm,\\2nda ~.and Bertha Sayre.
Nonda Henclricb had the program· using '1esus as the theme. She read
scripture ~m Matt. 28 and each member had a reading on die theme. Hen~
' dricks gave prayer and ~ts Wete served to those named and BarbaJa
Gheen, Mmjorie Grinun, Linda Grinun, Martha Lou Beegle, Geraldine Qeland, and Naomi Stoban.

BUSINESS MIRROR:

BY JOHN CUNNIFF

the store, but it was so heavy, he couldn't
lift it. He then tried to grab a rack full of
cigarettes. The clerk stopped him.
The man drove away empty-handed,
but was spotted by the police for driving
a stolen car. The police pursued him with
lights ~hing and sirens blaring. Tl'Us rattled the culprit, and he ended up in a
ditch. He then abandoned the car, and
sought refuge inside a nearby mobile
home. He was arrested, and charged with
possession of a stolen vehicle, speeding to
elude police, careless and reckless driving, and failure to stop for a police car.
His bond was set at $2,000.
While being escorted back to Siler
Cfity by the police, the man asked if he
could stop and get his potato cl'Ups, since
he had paid for them. The clerk at the
convenience store identified him as the
man who tried to steal the cash register,
and he was charged with attempted robbery. His bond was increased to $15,000;

SOCIETY NEWS

"..

Alumni completes plans

Reeves, treasurer; and

.

FHEE I. N~PECTU)N

SHAVER REPAIR

CLINIC
FRUTH' PHARMACY

786 N. 2nd, Middleport

Joy Wiseman Clatk,
.pilse&lt;;reW'v.ilt
.iiiiiiiiii'O.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _IIJ!II_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'I

---------------------------------------------- IJp To $600 Rebate or NO~:=:~.. 'DI.200 I
BIRTHDAY
.

.

RUTLAND - Shawn David
ReGYes recendy celebrated his
fifth birthday with a party a~ the
home of his parents, Julie King
and Dave Reeves, Pageville, ·
Road.
A Power Ranger theme was
·presented and .cake and io:e
cream were served.
Attending besides his parents
was his sister, Bobbie ,r\nne
Reeves; his maternal grandmother, Joan King of Harrisonville; and
his paternal

'

'!

'

Ann
Landers

in. It could save a life. - Mrs. Doctor,
Anywhere, Any Town
Dear Mrs. Doctor: You have written
an important letter, and I thank you.
Drug abusers can be extremely skillful at
[1iding their addiction. They are masters
at deception. Because physicians have
easy access to drugs at the office (and can
write prescription~. they are particularly
vulnerable. Again, let me say I love the
way my readers look out for one anoth·
er.
Dear Ann Landers: I have a stupid
crook story that deserves space in your
column . It happened in my hometown '
of Siler City, N .C.
A young man attempted to rob a convenience store near my office. He bought
a bag of potato chips, and while the clerk
was making c!J.ange, he attempted to grab
the money from the cash register..When
the clerk quickly closed the drawer, the
man tried to take the cash register out of

Older Americans:
Men and women

!'

•

Monday, April 24, 2000

SOCIAL SECU-RITY

1

A

ye'u ago, Ohio Valley Publishing Co. took a stand in
favor of the extension of U.S. 33 from Darwin to
Ath ens.
•
The newspapers joined an army of
Build tire
residents of M eigs, G~llia, Mason and
other nearby communities who recogDarrvin-toni zed how vital safe and modern high Atlrens
ways ar£ to the region's economic
connectorfuture. &gt;I
in our lijetime!
A year later, the same tired, old .issues
raised by opponents and dismissed by those involved in the
funding and construction of highways at the state and federal
levels continue to complicate this important issue.
The Coalition Against Superfluous Highways, an Athensbased group which has opposed the highway project since it
fir st appeared on the books, earlier this month ftled a second
lawsuit in federal court in an attempt to stop the project in its
tracks.
While proponents who have dedicated countless volunteer
hours supporting the proJeCt were not surprised by the second
CASH lawsuit, it is vital members of the communities positively affected by any road construction remain vigilant in
support of the Darwin-to-Athens project.
Looking into the future, just at the horizon, one can see a
flicker of light at the end of the tunnel. Industry has taken
notice of our region; now is not the time to become complacent.
Those who signed petitions and wrote letters, and attended
public hearings and Ohio Department of Transportation
meetings must closely watch the situation as it continues to
unfold, for the fate of U.S. 33 will affect the economic climate
of the community for years to come.
While CASH members may dismiss the economic importance of modern highways, and may exaggerate the project's
environmental threats, those of us who live and work here
know how important this road is.
Although the project remains, at this time, on the tier I priority list, and although property will be purchased in coming
months, the possibility the road will not be completed is a
possibility none of us can afford to become reality.
Speak y(,lur voice, have your opinion heard. We believe there
are far more folks out there who support this crucial project
and realize what it means to our future than there are "aginners" like the CASH crop. That said, if you don't speak up
now, you may live to regret it.
·
Build the Darwin-to-Athens connector - in our lifetime!

Page AS

Reader dispels myths about alcohol and drug addiction

nI

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

If the

,

.,~.

.

--~

-~--~·

.... ·- .....

---···-·

~ --·-- -

grandparents, Eugene '1ake" and
Juanita P,..eeves. Others attending
we&lt;e Jeff King, Harrisonville,
Mandy, Charles and Josh Neutzling, Darlene, Jake and Matt
Older, all of Pageville; Patty,
Rodney, Missy, Jenny, and Billy
Reeves, Rick and Teresa Reeves,
Davey and z 'ack Young,
Snowville; Rose, Brittany, Sum"
·mer and Ashley King of King
Ridge Road; Randy, Rachel,
Jodi. Brandi Jill • and Randall
Reeves, all of Pomeroy.

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

.. - ... ... -- -· ..

Yc:iu can aave up to 50% on your utility billa, be cool
and comfy all summer and warm and cozy next
winter before you make one payment!
Or take an Jnetant rebate on HleCt modele.

A hot summer Ia forecast. Hurry, the acMdule It
filling up and the,. Will be no lower prtcee thla year• .

Hotline 1-800-247-8180.

d White Serviee8
'

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- ·-.-

· ----~-

•

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•

. Page Ae • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Aprll24, ~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily &amp;o'reboard, Page B6

Bittemess and accusations in Reno's hometOwn::

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Page 81

•I

Repaln snarl air traffic
BOSTON (AP)- Delays and cmcellations at the nation's ninth busiest
mport 'M!re fek nationwide """' the Boster holiday weekend after LOgan
lntrrnational Airport's r.1dar system went dark.
· Delays 'M!re expected to continue today as comrollen amiting the repair
.r! the airport's mdar ~ guided arriving plartes using a comp(Ere r.~dar
iystem. 6om three regional airpotts.
The centnl adar antenna was apparently toppled by wind Saturday
inorning.And while new equipment was flown in Sunday, it was expected
to take ~ days to .,..,mble.
: "I wish it was happening last weekend, or next weekend Bur there's really no ideal time;' said Bart Bartanowicz, New. England regional administntot for the Fede~ Aviation Aclminislntion
Air tr.dlic had been slowed, leaving more spaces between planes for safety reasons, the officials said Some airlines, such as US Aitw.lys, were rerouting Logan passengen by bus to the airport in Manchester, N.H., 45 miles to
the north.
: Until the new ll!dar is ready, FAA officials said, Logan was using a triangular"composite" system of radar from Truro, on Cape Cod; Cummington,
in western Massachusetts near the Berkshire Mountains; and Providence,
R.I.
Cancellations were expected to continue. US !Urways, MetroJet and US
Airways Expr= '!flllOunced Sunday UJat they were canceling selected Oights

toda}:

Vote set on tentative contrad
LOSANGET ES (AP)- Both sides in the three-week-old janitotS' strike
\We"' hopeful a proposed contract could end the walkout that has been
marked by mass prorescs and the marshaling of potent political firepoweL
Janitors were set to vote today at ti)eir union's downtown headquarters
and would be back to work tonight if they ratify the deal, the union said
Suflda¥
The tentative agreement for 8,500 unionized workers· was reached on
Saturday with major cleaning companies. Negotiators for both sides refused
to discuss detlils pending the r.~tification vote bu!'soid they favored the pro-

posal.

.

A Sunday union statement said it includes "significant improvements to
the pay proposals rejected by janitors on April3 when they voted to strike."
· "It's a good deal;' Mike Gaicia, president of Service Employees Intrrnational Union Local1877, said Satufda¥
"I think it's a decent deal for both sides;' said Dick Davis, chief negotia.tor for nine of 18 cleaning companies. Those firms represent 97 percent of
the affected buildings.

MIAM.I (~) - Depicted as the devil, called a
traitor and wot.e, Attorney Gene~ Janet Reno /
has taken the bront of the blame from the
Cuban-American conununity for her decision to
we force to return Elian Gonzalez to his fattier.
Protesters and conununity leaders in Reno's
hometown ~re offering up a bitter judgment
against the qation's top law enforcement official
after long supporting the former prosecutor who
grew up here.
·
She has become the No. 1 target for CubanAmericans. Signs and angry words targeting her
have multiplied following Sarurday's rud to snatch
Elian. Her actions - President Clinton said the
Elian case was handled by her- have been criticized by the governor and Miami's nJayor.
"There is a sense that this was personal ... that
this person the community helped in her career
would do something so outrageous," said Dario

Moren~ a politi~ scie~ce prof~r at ~rida

International Uruveruty an Miami. "The r.ud on
this fJmily's house was symbolic of a r.rid on
everybody;s house:'
The scene at the house was quiet on F..aster
Sunday, a day after protesters poured into the
streets of Little Havana after federal agents
grabbed the 6-year-old boy and took him to
Washington, D.C.
,
More than 350 people were arrested and protesters started more than 200 fires, mostly burning
tires and trash Saturday. As they marched, many
carried signs with a picture of Reno with horns.
Another called her a tr.riror, while others likened
her to a Nazi.
One sign read: "Reno, you have bettayed our
trust. Ten children in Waco and Elian condemned
today;' a reference to the deadly 1993 r.rid on the
Branch Davidian compound in TelW.

MondiiJ. Apttl 14, 1000

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sporls
More than 350 l)eople were arrested and protesters started more than 200 fires, mostly
burning tires and trash Saturday. (AP photor .

1:00

Newspaper:.Several loopholes in Ohio's campaign finance law~
COLUMBUS (AP) A
recently uncovered scheme to
trade access to cop stare officials
for big political donations is only
one of many loopholes in Ohio's
campaign finance laws and has
state leaders talking ·reform, a
newspaper reported Sunday.
"We need to fundamentally
change the way we conduct the
people's business;' said Secretary
of State Ken Blackwell. "Th ! people's confidence in the 'political
and legislative process is at an alltime low. Government needs to
be more transparent."
Ohio lawmakers established
campaign contribution limits in
1995. But the law is convoluted

and allows many to rake advantage
of the system, The Columbus Dispatch 'said in a story published
Sunday.
Gov. Bob Taft recently has been
criticized for his role in recruiting
members to an exclusive club that
promised invitations to a reception at the governor's mansion
and other gatherings at taxpayerowned sites in eJ&lt;change for at
least a S25,000 pledge. ·
In response, Taft and other
statewide officeholders, such as
House Speaker Jo Ann Davison,
R-R~ynoldsburg, have called for
the full disclosure of all donations.
Blackwell plans to introduce a
plan for sweeping campaign

finance reforms next month. porate· contributions under a
Some opposition is expected in loophole in state law.
;
the Senate, where President
Three corporations donate4
Richard Finan, . R -Cincinnati, $100,000 apiece when the $1.5
refuses to consider any changes in million downtown facility opened
state campaign finance laws.
· in the mid-1990s. Th~ building
"Every time you bring a cam- fund has attracted major corporal~
paign-finance bill to the Senate d;,nors every year sit~ce, including
floor, it becomes a circus;· Finan
•
.
$5,000 from tobacco giant PhiliD
said. "We're not going to have
~
that." . ·
Morri.&lt; in December, the newspa7
Another ·example of campaign per said.
,
finance loophole involves the
And while caps on contrib\1~
Ohio GOP's headquarters. The tions apply to a party's state candi!.
building's bookcases and other date fund - which provides cash
furniture were built-in so they direcdy to candidates - the Legcould be funded by the parti~_ _islature exempted the state cam~
building fund, which is the ·only ~fund, which can be used for
fund eligible. to receive direct cor- more generic expenditures.
:

WHILE SUPPLIES

Prices Good fuesday, April 29tb 8 Wednesday, April 21th Only
TONY'S ITALIAN STYLE
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2/$

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'

POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE APRIL, 25, 26TH, 2000 ONLY
'

•

- ----~ ---·----- ·

--- --- -- ---------···~-

!

'

Wednlldey'e echedule
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy,
4:30

NO WAY, DANTE- Los Angeles catcher Todd Hundley makes the
tag on Clnflnnati right fielder Dante Bichette at home plate during

Track &amp; Field
Tu11day'a achedule
South Gallla at Vinton County,
4:30
Gallia Academy at Logan, 4:30
Meigs at Vinton County, 4:30
River valley at Meigs, 5:00

Dodgers ·complete sweep

Buckeyes bali IU

64oz.

reg hlc!&lt;ory smoke,

4:00

LAS VEGAS (AP)- Stuck in a
winless slump, AI Unser Jr. got
some inspiration from his ailing
~ughter to keep r~cing.
: )t paid off Saturday when
.Unser snapped a five-year victory
{!iought by winning the Vegas
Indy 300.
Unser dedicated the win to his
13-year-old daughter, Cody, who
has been paralyzed since February
1999 with a rare neurological
hifection in her spinal cord.
Unser, compering in only his
third Indy Racing League race,
led the last 20 laps to win an
Indy-car race for the first time
since 1995.
Unser, who was running second
when
leader
Scott
Goodyear's engine failed with 20
laps to go, finished 12.531 seconds ahead of pole sitter Mark
Dismore.
It was the final IRL race before
the lndi:mapolis )500 next month,
a race Unser has won twice.

10 Lit.

FRESH CALIFORNIA

Tfllnle
Today'l IChedUie
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy,

luplred Unser wins
atVeps

-

29

Tullday'1 .chedule
Beckley at Point Pleasant, 1:00
Meigs at Galli a Academy, 4:30
South Gallia at Raceland, 5:00
Wahama at Eastern, 5:00
Wellston at South9rn, 5:00

a

"'

12 oz. ·pkg.

$

.

'

Softball
·
Today'• .chedull
; · Ironton at South Gallla, 4:30
, Marietta at Gallla Academy, 5:00
Athens at River Valley, 5:00
Meigs at Wellston, 5:00
· ·Point Pleasant at Warren, 5:00
. Miller at Eastern, 5:00
. Waterford at Southern, 5:00

ROCK SPRINGS -The seventh annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held on Saturday, May 6th at the Riverside
QolfCou~sc: in.f-iason. ;he tourrlment Wtl1 · ~ at 8.30 a.m.,
with shot gun stat!. .... .
The tournament will' be a four
man scramble, bring your own
team format. Each team must
have a handicap of 40 o~ above
with only one team member with
a handicap of 1.1nder 10.
The entry fee is $55 per person,
which includes one mulligan,
cart, lunch and beverages. Prizes
include clubhouse credit and a
cash pot.
For mqre information call
Meigs High School football
qiach Mike Chancey at 740-9922158 (work) or 740-992-0064
(hpme).

Tea Bags
'

· .Meigs at Gallia Academy, 4:30 ·
Wahama at Eastern, 5:00

Melp Football GoH
: Toumey Mly 6

LA T

34.5

$

bypa~~

BaHball
Today'• .chedull
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 5:00
River Valley at Athens, 5:00
Waterford at Southern, 5:00
Miller at Eastern, 5:00
Meigs at Wellston, 5:00
Tu11day'1 .chedul•
Point Pleasant at Roane County,

wo Day·Sala
NO RAINCHECKS

Nolan
stable a er
emergency

MONDAY'S

"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Starting pitcher Brandon Steen
led Ohio State to. a 9-3 win Sunday over Indiana with the help of.
six double plays . .
Steen (5-3) went 7 1-3 innings,
. giving up eight hits, three runs
• and four walks~He was aided by
his defense, which fell one double
play shy of the NCAA mark for
double plays in a game.

j.

Sunday's 11-3 Dodger win at Cinergy Field. The victory gave the
Dodgers a sweep of the weekend series. (AP)

· "Any time you get beat like we did over
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sweep? This was
the last three days, it's an embarrassment,"
a swamping.
Shawn Green ho.mered during an eight- third baseman Aaron Boone said. "You
run sixth inning as the Los Angeles Dodgers know during a long season you're going to
finished off their first· Cincinnati sweep in · go through perioc4 where you're not playing well, but we're better than this. There's
. 12 yeatS with an 11-3 victory Sunday.
The Dodgers pummeled the Reds' pitch- no reason to play the way we are."
It was fitting that victory No. 1,000 over ·
ing staff during the three-game series, piling
the
Reds came in Cincinnati. Los Angeles is
up 36 runs and 37 hits with eigbt homers.
At 1-1-6, Los Angeles is off tp its best start the only visiting 'NL team with a winning
.....110 1988. .
...; •
reco~ at Ri~nt Stadium.(Cinergy .
The Reds won two-of-three in Los Ange- Field, going 120-115 since 1970.
les last weeke.nd, but didn't even cqme close
The Dodgers , hadn't swept a series in
in the rematch.
Cincinnati since taking three in June 1988.
"We got good pitching in all three games They made this one a refetence point - ·
and when you do that, you give your offense Los Angeles hadn't scored so many runs in a
a chance;.' Dodg~rs manager Davey Johnson series since piling .up 38 in three games
said." And we jumped all over their staff this against Colorado in 1996.
·
time. That's the difference."
'
"We scored a lot of runs and a few of us
haven't
even hit our stride yet;' marveled
Baseball's first professional .team played
like amateurs in its 1,000th loss to the Green, who was hidess iri the 6rs'r two
Dodgers. The Reds ·committed two errors games. "That's a great sign."
and. let in runs on a passed ball and a' wild
It's a measure of the Reds' pitching staff.
pitch.
Cinciru\ati hadn't given up 36 runs in a
'•

three-game span since 1981 and hadn't
allowed s.o many runs in a series since 1969.
Manager Jack McKeon had a difficult
time Sunday when he tried to think of the
"Bad News Bears" movies for a reference
point.
"You go through streaks like this. It's kind
of like the 'Barefoot Bears; or whatever you
call 'em;' McKeon said. "But you can't
' "
I~• . ~
,paruc.
·•
,
1
' Todd Hundley got the 5odgels goin~;
with a two-run homer in the second· off
Ron Villone (2-1), who completed a trilogy
of poor starts by the Reds. The NL's worst
pitching staff melted down in the sixth,
when Los Angeles sent 11 batters to the
plate for eight ·runs.
The crowd of 29,124 rose to its feet and
booed each departing R eds pitcher as the
Dodgers put together their biggest inning in
two years. The Reds also had two errors in
the inning, let in runs on Benito Santiago's

Plan -

Reels, Pip Btl

AUSTIN, Texas (AJ.l) - Nolan
'Ryan, baseball's career strikeout
leader, was in stable co ndition
today after emergency doublebypass surgery.
R yan . was in near-perfect
health for a 53-year-old Hall of
Fame pitcher. Family history,
however, made him a perfect
candidate for heart disease.
Doctors were I,as ril y sum moned Sunday at R ound Rock
Medical Center, where Ruth
Ryan drove her husband after he
felt chest pains and experienced
shortness of breath during a
morning walk in the Austin suburb of Round Rock . Ryan is part
owner of a minor league baseball
·
team there.
Mark Felger, who performed
the rwo-hour operation to clear
an arterial blockage, and Reid
Ryan planned a news conference
toni:ghr .
An electrocardiogram -a.nd
blood tests showed Ryan did not
have a · heart attack, Texas
Rangers spokesman John Blake
said.
"However, doctors felt like
there was blockage of (an) artery
and suggested the Heart Hospital
of Austin for an angiogram;' J.J.
Gottsch, director of public relations for the Round Rock
Express, the team that Ryan and
his son own, told the Austin
American- Statesman.
When asubstantial blockage of
the left main coronary artery
leading into Ryan 's heart was
indic~ted, Felger performed the
bypass at 3 p.m.
:,, The surgery was successful, '
Gottsch said. Ryan is expected to
be hospitalized for about a week,
Blake said.
The younger Ryan said the
family has had a history of heartrelated problems and that doctors
indicated that heredity played a
large pan in his. father's co ndition.
"We feel confident that he ...
can continue to lead the active
lifestyle he is accustomed .to,"
Reid Ryan said.

. I

Tribe,i Red Sox lose'weekend to /romantic weather'
';.';(

BOSTON (AP)1- Ever the romantic, ·
Pedro Martinez likes long walks in the
rain and curling up in bed on a stormy
•
night.
"I think it's romi ntic. It's nice to cuddle in," he said Su~day after his start was
rained out for the fourth consecutive
game. "I like cloudy days and storms
when I'm sleepit}.g. ··'But that's if I'm
sleeping - not to play baseball."
·
The Red Sox and Cleveland Indians
postponed their entire series this weekend because of a storm that drenched
Boston. The same storm postponed

Martinez' originally scheduled start on
Thursday night, in Detroit.
Because of the long layoff, Martinez
warmed up in the outfield on Sunday
for about 12 minutes arid pushed his
start back to TUesday in Texas . His
brother Ramon will pitch the series
opener against the Rangers, and Jeff
Fassero will pitch on Wednesday.
" I know, being ·a power pitcher, you
normally lose your touch if you go too
long without throwing," said Pedro
Martinez, who added that it was his idea
to reschedule. "Nine days is too long."

Three times the Red Sox and Indians
came to the ballpark, and three times
they left without a pitch being thrown.
Sunday was a double-dip: The team
postponed a doubleheader that had t&lt;&gt;
be scheduled because of Saturday's rainout.
"It's almost like an All-Star break,"
said Indians fi~st baseman Richie Sexton. "But I don't think anybody really
cares. You get hanged and you move on,
jump on a plane and head to Seattle."
Sunday's game was rescheduled for
6:05 p.m. on June 8, which had been an

GREENSBORO OPEN

Sutton wins second tour event in April
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)
- Hal Sutton used some gutsy
play down the srretc~ to win his
second tournament 11!',, a month,
shooting a 71 Sunday to capture
the
Greater
Greensboro
Chrysler Classic.
Sutton beat Tiger Woods four
weeks ago in the Play s Championship by one stroke. He held
a one-shot lead ove.t playing
partner Andrew Magee with
four hol es left at Forest Oaks
Country Club.
And once again Sutton was
clutch,' nailing a 10-foot birdie
putt on No. 15, while Magee
bogeyed for a two-shot swing
that enabled the 20-rrar PGA
Tour veteran to pick up his 13th
career victory witb a 14- under
274.
The $540,000 first-place prize

i

moved Sutton 'to S2.3 million,
his best season as a pm. It was
also the fifth time in his career
he's won two toutnat11ents in a

as he escaped with a drive into
the right woods on the par-S
13th hole. He parred as Sutton
bogeyed, but Magee wasn't so
season.
lucky two holes later as he
Sutton really won this event in hooked the ball off the tee into
the first tWo days, g~ing 13 the left woods.
under and building a big lead as
He punched out into th e fairhe shot a 64 on Friday. He was way and Was actually 15 yards
just 1 under over his final 36 closer to the green than Sutton.
· But his approach shot from
holes.
Magee's !-under fin(~~ routfd about 120 yards came up short
' was good enough for second of the green, while Sutton stuck
place, three shots behind Sutton. • his shot close to the pin.
Magee's first pitch was 8 feet
Magee hasn't won since 1994,
but has seven second-place fin- short and he missed his par putt
ishes since then.
after Sutton had put the pressure
Mark Calcavecchia and Dud- on, rolling his 10-footer into the
ley Hart tied for third, another center Of the cup.
shot · back. Calcavecchia fired a
Cakavecchia missed his last
final-round 65 to make a late two cuts and didn't break 70 in
charge, while Hart had a 70.
Magee pulled within one shot
·PielnnePGA.PIIpH

off-day f0r both teams . Cleveland will
stop in on its way home from a road trip
in Milwaukee, and the Red Sox will
come home for one day between series
at Florida and Atlanta.
To make up the other games, the
teams wilr play a pair of split doubleheaders on Sept. 20 and 21. Both days
will have separate admission games at
1:05 p.m. and 7:05 p.m.
The Indians left after Sunday's rainout
for Seattle. Chuck Finley, Charles Nagy
and Jaret Wright will pitch for Cleveland there.

Shaq's 46

ints

too much or Kings
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It's
The Kings trailed by six with
been Shaquille O'Neal's season, 4:30 to play before L.A. scored
and if what happened Sunday is six str.right to put them away.
an accurate indication, the playThe Kings trailed by 16 points
offi might be his, too.
when Webber fouled out, but
O'Neal equaled a career play- scored I 0 straight to make it
off high \vith 46 points, and also 105-99. But that's as close as the
had 17 rebounds and five · Kings would get.
blocked shots as the Los Angeles
Bryant beat the shot clock
Lake.rs opened the playoffi with with a jumper and, after Divac
a 117-107 victory over the missed rwo free throws, O 'Neal
pesky Sacramento Kings.
made a short bank shot and a
Kobe Bryant scored 23 points dunk to make it 111-99 with
. and Glen Rice .18 for the Lak- 3 :03 left.
ers.
.
Webber picked up his fifth
. Chris Webb~r. limited to 27 • foul, and a technical as well,
minutes by fouls , led the Kings with 1:14left in the third quatwith a career playoff-high 28 ter and the Lakers up ·8 6- 76. It
points•and five rebounds before was 91 -79 entering the final
fouling out with 6:53 left.
period, and Webber fouled out
Jason Williams added 20 rwo seconds after returning to
points and Tony Delk 17 .·
the game.

\

\

.

' '

�•

•

. Page Ae • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Aprll24, ~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily &amp;o'reboard, Page B6

Bittemess and accusations in Reno's hometOwn::

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Page 81

•I

Repaln snarl air traffic
BOSTON (AP)- Delays and cmcellations at the nation's ninth busiest
mport 'M!re fek nationwide """' the Boster holiday weekend after LOgan
lntrrnational Airport's r.1dar system went dark.
· Delays 'M!re expected to continue today as comrollen amiting the repair
.r! the airport's mdar ~ guided arriving plartes using a comp(Ere r.~dar
iystem. 6om three regional airpotts.
The centnl adar antenna was apparently toppled by wind Saturday
inorning.And while new equipment was flown in Sunday, it was expected
to take ~ days to .,..,mble.
: "I wish it was happening last weekend, or next weekend Bur there's really no ideal time;' said Bart Bartanowicz, New. England regional administntot for the Fede~ Aviation Aclminislntion
Air tr.dlic had been slowed, leaving more spaces between planes for safety reasons, the officials said Some airlines, such as US Aitw.lys, were rerouting Logan passengen by bus to the airport in Manchester, N.H., 45 miles to
the north.
: Until the new ll!dar is ready, FAA officials said, Logan was using a triangular"composite" system of radar from Truro, on Cape Cod; Cummington,
in western Massachusetts near the Berkshire Mountains; and Providence,
R.I.
Cancellations were expected to continue. US !Urways, MetroJet and US
Airways Expr= '!flllOunced Sunday UJat they were canceling selected Oights

toda}:

Vote set on tentative contrad
LOSANGET ES (AP)- Both sides in the three-week-old janitotS' strike
\We"' hopeful a proposed contract could end the walkout that has been
marked by mass prorescs and the marshaling of potent political firepoweL
Janitors were set to vote today at ti)eir union's downtown headquarters
and would be back to work tonight if they ratify the deal, the union said
Suflda¥
The tentative agreement for 8,500 unionized workers· was reached on
Saturday with major cleaning companies. Negotiators for both sides refused
to discuss detlils pending the r.~tification vote bu!'soid they favored the pro-

posal.

.

A Sunday union statement said it includes "significant improvements to
the pay proposals rejected by janitors on April3 when they voted to strike."
· "It's a good deal;' Mike Gaicia, president of Service Employees Intrrnational Union Local1877, said Satufda¥
"I think it's a decent deal for both sides;' said Dick Davis, chief negotia.tor for nine of 18 cleaning companies. Those firms represent 97 percent of
the affected buildings.

MIAM.I (~) - Depicted as the devil, called a
traitor and wot.e, Attorney Gene~ Janet Reno /
has taken the bront of the blame from the
Cuban-American conununity for her decision to
we force to return Elian Gonzalez to his fattier.
Protesters and conununity leaders in Reno's
hometown ~re offering up a bitter judgment
against the qation's top law enforcement official
after long supporting the former prosecutor who
grew up here.
·
She has become the No. 1 target for CubanAmericans. Signs and angry words targeting her
have multiplied following Sarurday's rud to snatch
Elian. Her actions - President Clinton said the
Elian case was handled by her- have been criticized by the governor and Miami's nJayor.
"There is a sense that this was personal ... that
this person the community helped in her career
would do something so outrageous," said Dario

Moren~ a politi~ scie~ce prof~r at ~rida

International Uruveruty an Miami. "The r.ud on
this fJmily's house was symbolic of a r.rid on
everybody;s house:'
The scene at the house was quiet on F..aster
Sunday, a day after protesters poured into the
streets of Little Havana after federal agents
grabbed the 6-year-old boy and took him to
Washington, D.C.
,
More than 350 people were arrested and protesters started more than 200 fires, mostly burning
tires and trash Saturday. As they marched, many
carried signs with a picture of Reno with horns.
Another called her a tr.riror, while others likened
her to a Nazi.
One sign read: "Reno, you have bettayed our
trust. Ten children in Waco and Elian condemned
today;' a reference to the deadly 1993 r.rid on the
Branch Davidian compound in TelW.

MondiiJ. Apttl 14, 1000

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sporls
More than 350 l)eople were arrested and protesters started more than 200 fires, mostly
burning tires and trash Saturday. (AP photor .

1:00

Newspaper:.Several loopholes in Ohio's campaign finance law~
COLUMBUS (AP) A
recently uncovered scheme to
trade access to cop stare officials
for big political donations is only
one of many loopholes in Ohio's
campaign finance laws and has
state leaders talking ·reform, a
newspaper reported Sunday.
"We need to fundamentally
change the way we conduct the
people's business;' said Secretary
of State Ken Blackwell. "Th ! people's confidence in the 'political
and legislative process is at an alltime low. Government needs to
be more transparent."
Ohio lawmakers established
campaign contribution limits in
1995. But the law is convoluted

and allows many to rake advantage
of the system, The Columbus Dispatch 'said in a story published
Sunday.
Gov. Bob Taft recently has been
criticized for his role in recruiting
members to an exclusive club that
promised invitations to a reception at the governor's mansion
and other gatherings at taxpayerowned sites in eJ&lt;change for at
least a S25,000 pledge. ·
In response, Taft and other
statewide officeholders, such as
House Speaker Jo Ann Davison,
R-R~ynoldsburg, have called for
the full disclosure of all donations.
Blackwell plans to introduce a
plan for sweeping campaign

finance reforms next month. porate· contributions under a
Some opposition is expected in loophole in state law.
;
the Senate, where President
Three corporations donate4
Richard Finan, . R -Cincinnati, $100,000 apiece when the $1.5
refuses to consider any changes in million downtown facility opened
state campaign finance laws.
· in the mid-1990s. Th~ building
"Every time you bring a cam- fund has attracted major corporal~
paign-finance bill to the Senate d;,nors every year sit~ce, including
floor, it becomes a circus;· Finan
•
.
$5,000 from tobacco giant PhiliD
said. "We're not going to have
~
that." . ·
Morri.&lt; in December, the newspa7
Another ·example of campaign per said.
,
finance loophole involves the
And while caps on contrib\1~
Ohio GOP's headquarters. The tions apply to a party's state candi!.
building's bookcases and other date fund - which provides cash
furniture were built-in so they direcdy to candidates - the Legcould be funded by the parti~_ _islature exempted the state cam~
building fund, which is the ·only ~fund, which can be used for
fund eligible. to receive direct cor- more generic expenditures.
:

WHILE SUPPLIES

Prices Good fuesday, April 29tb 8 Wednesday, April 21th Only
TONY'S ITALIAN STYLE
,,.

Lb.

Pizzas
2/$

LIPTON
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$1''

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'

POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE APRIL, 25, 26TH, 2000 ONLY
'

•

- ----~ ---·----- ·

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!

'

Wednlldey'e echedule
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy,
4:30

NO WAY, DANTE- Los Angeles catcher Todd Hundley makes the
tag on Clnflnnati right fielder Dante Bichette at home plate during

Track &amp; Field
Tu11day'a achedule
South Gallla at Vinton County,
4:30
Gallia Academy at Logan, 4:30
Meigs at Vinton County, 4:30
River valley at Meigs, 5:00

Dodgers ·complete sweep

Buckeyes bali IU

64oz.

reg hlc!&lt;ory smoke,

4:00

LAS VEGAS (AP)- Stuck in a
winless slump, AI Unser Jr. got
some inspiration from his ailing
~ughter to keep r~cing.
: )t paid off Saturday when
.Unser snapped a five-year victory
{!iought by winning the Vegas
Indy 300.
Unser dedicated the win to his
13-year-old daughter, Cody, who
has been paralyzed since February
1999 with a rare neurological
hifection in her spinal cord.
Unser, compering in only his
third Indy Racing League race,
led the last 20 laps to win an
Indy-car race for the first time
since 1995.
Unser, who was running second
when
leader
Scott
Goodyear's engine failed with 20
laps to go, finished 12.531 seconds ahead of pole sitter Mark
Dismore.
It was the final IRL race before
the lndi:mapolis )500 next month,
a race Unser has won twice.

10 Lit.

FRESH CALIFORNIA

Tfllnle
Today'l IChedUie
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy,

luplred Unser wins
atVeps

-

29

Tullday'1 .chedule
Beckley at Point Pleasant, 1:00
Meigs at Galli a Academy, 4:30
South Gallia at Raceland, 5:00
Wahama at Eastern, 5:00
Wellston at South9rn, 5:00

a

"'

12 oz. ·pkg.

$

.

'

Softball
·
Today'• .chedull
; · Ironton at South Gallla, 4:30
, Marietta at Gallla Academy, 5:00
Athens at River Valley, 5:00
Meigs at Wellston, 5:00
· ·Point Pleasant at Warren, 5:00
. Miller at Eastern, 5:00
. Waterford at Southern, 5:00

ROCK SPRINGS -The seventh annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held on Saturday, May 6th at the Riverside
QolfCou~sc: in.f-iason. ;he tourrlment Wtl1 · ~ at 8.30 a.m.,
with shot gun stat!. .... .
The tournament will' be a four
man scramble, bring your own
team format. Each team must
have a handicap of 40 o~ above
with only one team member with
a handicap of 1.1nder 10.
The entry fee is $55 per person,
which includes one mulligan,
cart, lunch and beverages. Prizes
include clubhouse credit and a
cash pot.
For mqre information call
Meigs High School football
qiach Mike Chancey at 740-9922158 (work) or 740-992-0064
(hpme).

Tea Bags
'

· .Meigs at Gallia Academy, 4:30 ·
Wahama at Eastern, 5:00

Melp Football GoH
: Toumey Mly 6

LA T

34.5

$

bypa~~

BaHball
Today'• .chedull
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 5:00
River Valley at Athens, 5:00
Waterford at Southern, 5:00
Miller at Eastern, 5:00
Meigs at Wellston, 5:00
Tu11day'1 .chedul•
Point Pleasant at Roane County,

wo Day·Sala
NO RAINCHECKS

Nolan
stable a er
emergency

MONDAY'S

"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Starting pitcher Brandon Steen
led Ohio State to. a 9-3 win Sunday over Indiana with the help of.
six double plays . .
Steen (5-3) went 7 1-3 innings,
. giving up eight hits, three runs
• and four walks~He was aided by
his defense, which fell one double
play shy of the NCAA mark for
double plays in a game.

j.

Sunday's 11-3 Dodger win at Cinergy Field. The victory gave the
Dodgers a sweep of the weekend series. (AP)

· "Any time you get beat like we did over
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sweep? This was
the last three days, it's an embarrassment,"
a swamping.
Shawn Green ho.mered during an eight- third baseman Aaron Boone said. "You
run sixth inning as the Los Angeles Dodgers know during a long season you're going to
finished off their first· Cincinnati sweep in · go through perioc4 where you're not playing well, but we're better than this. There's
. 12 yeatS with an 11-3 victory Sunday.
The Dodgers pummeled the Reds' pitch- no reason to play the way we are."
It was fitting that victory No. 1,000 over ·
ing staff during the three-game series, piling
the
Reds came in Cincinnati. Los Angeles is
up 36 runs and 37 hits with eigbt homers.
At 1-1-6, Los Angeles is off tp its best start the only visiting 'NL team with a winning
.....110 1988. .
...; •
reco~ at Ri~nt Stadium.(Cinergy .
The Reds won two-of-three in Los Ange- Field, going 120-115 since 1970.
les last weeke.nd, but didn't even cqme close
The Dodgers , hadn't swept a series in
in the rematch.
Cincinnati since taking three in June 1988.
"We got good pitching in all three games They made this one a refetence point - ·
and when you do that, you give your offense Los Angeles hadn't scored so many runs in a
a chance;.' Dodg~rs manager Davey Johnson series since piling .up 38 in three games
said." And we jumped all over their staff this against Colorado in 1996.
·
time. That's the difference."
'
"We scored a lot of runs and a few of us
haven't
even hit our stride yet;' marveled
Baseball's first professional .team played
like amateurs in its 1,000th loss to the Green, who was hidess iri the 6rs'r two
Dodgers. The Reds ·committed two errors games. "That's a great sign."
and. let in runs on a passed ball and a' wild
It's a measure of the Reds' pitching staff.
pitch.
Cinciru\ati hadn't given up 36 runs in a
'•

three-game span since 1981 and hadn't
allowed s.o many runs in a series since 1969.
Manager Jack McKeon had a difficult
time Sunday when he tried to think of the
"Bad News Bears" movies for a reference
point.
"You go through streaks like this. It's kind
of like the 'Barefoot Bears; or whatever you
call 'em;' McKeon said. "But you can't
' "
I~• . ~
,paruc.
·•
,
1
' Todd Hundley got the 5odgels goin~;
with a two-run homer in the second· off
Ron Villone (2-1), who completed a trilogy
of poor starts by the Reds. The NL's worst
pitching staff melted down in the sixth,
when Los Angeles sent 11 batters to the
plate for eight ·runs.
The crowd of 29,124 rose to its feet and
booed each departing R eds pitcher as the
Dodgers put together their biggest inning in
two years. The Reds also had two errors in
the inning, let in runs on Benito Santiago's

Plan -

Reels, Pip Btl

AUSTIN, Texas (AJ.l) - Nolan
'Ryan, baseball's career strikeout
leader, was in stable co ndition
today after emergency doublebypass surgery.
R yan . was in near-perfect
health for a 53-year-old Hall of
Fame pitcher. Family history,
however, made him a perfect
candidate for heart disease.
Doctors were I,as ril y sum moned Sunday at R ound Rock
Medical Center, where Ruth
Ryan drove her husband after he
felt chest pains and experienced
shortness of breath during a
morning walk in the Austin suburb of Round Rock . Ryan is part
owner of a minor league baseball
·
team there.
Mark Felger, who performed
the rwo-hour operation to clear
an arterial blockage, and Reid
Ryan planned a news conference
toni:ghr .
An electrocardiogram -a.nd
blood tests showed Ryan did not
have a · heart attack, Texas
Rangers spokesman John Blake
said.
"However, doctors felt like
there was blockage of (an) artery
and suggested the Heart Hospital
of Austin for an angiogram;' J.J.
Gottsch, director of public relations for the Round Rock
Express, the team that Ryan and
his son own, told the Austin
American- Statesman.
When asubstantial blockage of
the left main coronary artery
leading into Ryan 's heart was
indic~ted, Felger performed the
bypass at 3 p.m.
:,, The surgery was successful, '
Gottsch said. Ryan is expected to
be hospitalized for about a week,
Blake said.
The younger Ryan said the
family has had a history of heartrelated problems and that doctors
indicated that heredity played a
large pan in his. father's co ndition.
"We feel confident that he ...
can continue to lead the active
lifestyle he is accustomed .to,"
Reid Ryan said.

. I

Tribe,i Red Sox lose'weekend to /romantic weather'
';.';(

BOSTON (AP)1- Ever the romantic, ·
Pedro Martinez likes long walks in the
rain and curling up in bed on a stormy
•
night.
"I think it's romi ntic. It's nice to cuddle in," he said Su~day after his start was
rained out for the fourth consecutive
game. "I like cloudy days and storms
when I'm sleepit}.g. ··'But that's if I'm
sleeping - not to play baseball."
·
The Red Sox and Cleveland Indians
postponed their entire series this weekend because of a storm that drenched
Boston. The same storm postponed

Martinez' originally scheduled start on
Thursday night, in Detroit.
Because of the long layoff, Martinez
warmed up in the outfield on Sunday
for about 12 minutes arid pushed his
start back to TUesday in Texas . His
brother Ramon will pitch the series
opener against the Rangers, and Jeff
Fassero will pitch on Wednesday.
" I know, being ·a power pitcher, you
normally lose your touch if you go too
long without throwing," said Pedro
Martinez, who added that it was his idea
to reschedule. "Nine days is too long."

Three times the Red Sox and Indians
came to the ballpark, and three times
they left without a pitch being thrown.
Sunday was a double-dip: The team
postponed a doubleheader that had t&lt;&gt;
be scheduled because of Saturday's rainout.
"It's almost like an All-Star break,"
said Indians fi~st baseman Richie Sexton. "But I don't think anybody really
cares. You get hanged and you move on,
jump on a plane and head to Seattle."
Sunday's game was rescheduled for
6:05 p.m. on June 8, which had been an

GREENSBORO OPEN

Sutton wins second tour event in April
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)
- Hal Sutton used some gutsy
play down the srretc~ to win his
second tournament 11!',, a month,
shooting a 71 Sunday to capture
the
Greater
Greensboro
Chrysler Classic.
Sutton beat Tiger Woods four
weeks ago in the Play s Championship by one stroke. He held
a one-shot lead ove.t playing
partner Andrew Magee with
four hol es left at Forest Oaks
Country Club.
And once again Sutton was
clutch,' nailing a 10-foot birdie
putt on No. 15, while Magee
bogeyed for a two-shot swing
that enabled the 20-rrar PGA
Tour veteran to pick up his 13th
career victory witb a 14- under
274.
The $540,000 first-place prize

i

moved Sutton 'to S2.3 million,
his best season as a pm. It was
also the fifth time in his career
he's won two toutnat11ents in a

as he escaped with a drive into
the right woods on the par-S
13th hole. He parred as Sutton
bogeyed, but Magee wasn't so
season.
lucky two holes later as he
Sutton really won this event in hooked the ball off the tee into
the first tWo days, g~ing 13 the left woods.
under and building a big lead as
He punched out into th e fairhe shot a 64 on Friday. He was way and Was actually 15 yards
just 1 under over his final 36 closer to the green than Sutton.
· But his approach shot from
holes.
Magee's !-under fin(~~ routfd about 120 yards came up short
' was good enough for second of the green, while Sutton stuck
place, three shots behind Sutton. • his shot close to the pin.
Magee's first pitch was 8 feet
Magee hasn't won since 1994,
but has seven second-place fin- short and he missed his par putt
ishes since then.
after Sutton had put the pressure
Mark Calcavecchia and Dud- on, rolling his 10-footer into the
ley Hart tied for third, another center Of the cup.
shot · back. Calcavecchia fired a
Cakavecchia missed his last
final-round 65 to make a late two cuts and didn't break 70 in
charge, while Hart had a 70.
Magee pulled within one shot
·PielnnePGA.PIIpH

off-day f0r both teams . Cleveland will
stop in on its way home from a road trip
in Milwaukee, and the Red Sox will
come home for one day between series
at Florida and Atlanta.
To make up the other games, the
teams wilr play a pair of split doubleheaders on Sept. 20 and 21. Both days
will have separate admission games at
1:05 p.m. and 7:05 p.m.
The Indians left after Sunday's rainout
for Seattle. Chuck Finley, Charles Nagy
and Jaret Wright will pitch for Cleveland there.

Shaq's 46

ints

too much or Kings
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It's
The Kings trailed by six with
been Shaquille O'Neal's season, 4:30 to play before L.A. scored
and if what happened Sunday is six str.right to put them away.
an accurate indication, the playThe Kings trailed by 16 points
offi might be his, too.
when Webber fouled out, but
O'Neal equaled a career play- scored I 0 straight to make it
off high \vith 46 points, and also 105-99. But that's as close as the
had 17 rebounds and five · Kings would get.
blocked shots as the Los Angeles
Bryant beat the shot clock
Lake.rs opened the playoffi with with a jumper and, after Divac
a 117-107 victory over the missed rwo free throws, O 'Neal
pesky Sacramento Kings.
made a short bank shot and a
Kobe Bryant scored 23 points dunk to make it 111-99 with
. and Glen Rice .18 for the Lak- 3 :03 left.
ers.
.
Webber picked up his fifth
. Chris Webb~r. limited to 27 • foul, and a technical as well,
minutes by fouls , led the Kings with 1:14left in the third quatwith a career playoff-high 28 ter and the Lakers up ·8 6- 76. It
points•and five rebounds before was 91 -79 entering the final
fouling out with 6:53 left.
period, and Webber fouled out
Jason Williams added 20 rwo seconds after returning to
points and Tony Delk 17 .·
the game.

\

\

.

' '

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

The Dally Sentinel Page B3

P•ga B2 The Dally Sentinel

Public Notice

Public Notice
N THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUN'N
OHIO
Gordon Proctol: D recto
Ohio Department of
TrlnaportltiOn
Pit nUN
CABE NO OO.CV-D32
JUDGE I'III!D W CROW

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

"

Unknown TranafereM
Au gna ate of Carlton
Young Decelttd at 1
Dtltndlntl
LEOAL NOncE FOR
PUBUCAnON
[Two (2) n11111on1 Pureuant
To II C 1307)
Tht
Unknown
Trlnaftreta, Alolgna, Hera,
end Dev •••• ol Ce lton
Young D101111d Art t '(,
Brtdgtmtn Deceaaad L
Eart 8 dgeman DICIIIId
and o Oar v, B ldgtman
Dlctalld and 1 paraon•
claim ng by th ough o
undt them w take notlca
that they hevt bttn named
•• defendant• by ao don
P octo
Dl aoto
Oh o
Department
of
Trtntpo tetlon
who
nat luted C111 No 00 CV
032 now pend ng rn the
Common P 111 Court of
Mtlgt County Oh o which
11 an action to eppropl'llte
ct 11 n
p optrty for
h ghway purpoata name
the making conllructlng o
Imp ovlng of Stall Rout
338 8eotlon 3 ll3t and t
f X the VI Ul Ol llld
pro pony
The property oought to ba
opp or.rlelld
1 mora
IPIO f Ollly data lbtd II
fo lowe
PAROEL3-WR
MEG-338 3 ll3t (2.20)
ALL RIGHt TITLE AND
N'liEREST IN FI!E 8 MPLE
IN THE FOLLOW NO
DESCRIBED PROPERTY
WITHOUT UMITAT ON OF
EXISnNG ACCESS R GHTS
AND IIESERVINQ ANY
EXISnNG R GHT TO HAVE
ACCESS TO THE OH 0
RIVI!II BUT FOR
III!CIIEAnONAL
PURPOSES ONLY
Sltulttcl In lhl Townlh p
of Llllrl. County of Me 111
Stall Of Oh o and n 34
Acre 1.01 Commona, Town
2N Range 12W and
boundtcl end doeorlbad 11
Ia owa
Bt ng • parcel of end
y ng a ong the R ght tide Of
the centerline of 1 aurvey
medt by the Dtptlrtmtnt of
Tl'anaportetlon and ba na
ocated w th n the boundtry
pa nta Of Percel No 3WR 11
dt neated upon tha
Dtpa tment
of
Trlneportatlon 1 Right 01
Way plan MEG 338-3 538
(2 20) Sheet 8 of 1 and
•corded on or about
December 12 111118 In P et
Book 17 Page a n the
ecorda of the Rtco de a
ONIOI Malgl County Oh o
I I Uncleri!Ood that llld
of ltnd oonlllne
0 184 Heater•• (0 4011
oc aa) mo • or l111 of
wh ch the preatnt Old
which occup u
0 ooo
Htctl I I (0 000 IC aa)
MQI'IO 1111
The above dtaO bed ""'
1 not a part of any
currently 111gnad
Aud tor a Perce Numbt
Th a Perce w11 baaed
upon 1 eurvey of Stele
ROUII 338 fo the Oh o

320 Mobile Homea
tor Sttle

Personals

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7784 STATE ROUTE 7

PFIOCTOIMW OH -~

Otplrtmont
of ac 111 more o 111 ol
1i an1portat1on by 1eta by loh ch the prteent oad
the Ohio Otpo tment of which occuplaa 0 000
Treneportat on undt the Hacta •• (0 000 oc 11)
eupervlalon o R Doug •• moreo IHI
The above dtaOrtbtd area
B IIIII
Reg 111 td
Ia not 1 pert of any
Surveyor 7311
Tht a 1 tttrvtcl to the current r-aealgnad
OWner lo h m11 f and h 1 Audlto 1 Parcel Numba
Th I PI Cl Wll bllld
hll 8
IXICUtO I
•dm n atrato I IUCCIIIO I UpOn I IU VIY Of Still
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but
o
racreat on• pu poui on y the Oh o Deportment of
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Tr1n1po 11 on R gh Of Surveyo 7311
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Raco de 1 of ce Any adm n It 110 I IUCCIIIO a
p opoaad 1 uctu t l mua and 111 gne 111rvea •
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of and tg 111 to and f om
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P o
nat umenl
lndownt a unda atonda
tho ODOT 1 a no the gh Rate enc• Vo uma 28 at
to occeaa ht property at Page 345 Me 111 Coun y
anytime fo ma ntenanca Rtcorde a on ••
PARCEL 9-WD
pu po11a The andownt
MEG-338-3139 (2 20
wl ba r11pon1 b a lo he
ALL R Gill: TITLE AND
remove ol any pe ecno
NTEREST N FEE SIMPLE
p opt ty p o to any
IN THE FOLLOW NG
ma ntenenca ove the above
DESCR BED PROPERTY
deacrtbad pa eel and ODOT
WITHOUT UMITAnON OF
may and can tmove any
EX
BT NG ACCESS R GHTS
Imp ovementa to
he
tueted n the Townoh p
property w thout any lurtho
of
Letlrt
County of Me a•
companut on to
he
Stall of Oh o and n
landowne
Sect on 8 Town 2N Range
P lor
nat umen
Rtlt anoe Volume 28 et 12W end bounded and
Poa• 345 Melga Coun y dtocrlbtd •• fo owe
Baing 1 porce Of and y ng
Rtcorda oOitca
1 ong tht R ght a de Of the
PARCEL7WR
can tr nt Of 1 eurvey made
by tha Dtpa tment of
T aneportatlon and be ng
oct ed with n the boundary
poln 1 ol Parct No 9WD
at de naattd upon tho
Depa tmtnt
of
RGHTS
'I' aneportat on a R ght Of
AND RESERV NO ANY
Way p an MEG 331 3 5311
EX STING R GHT TO HAVE
(2 20) Shttt o of
and
ACCESS TO THE OH 0
aco ded on o ebout
RIVER BUT FOR
Dacamba 2 1999 n P ot
IIECREAnONAL
Book 17 Pega B n he
PURPOSES ONLY
Slluated n he Townah p raco d1 of the Reco de o
Off ct Mt 111 County Oh o
of Letart County of Me go
It 1 undtratood that aald
State of Oh o and n 34
Ac e Lot Commont Town Pa ct of and conto na
2N
Flange
2W and o 074 Hecla at (0 183
bounded and dttc bed ao ac 11) mo a o 111 of
which tha p ooant oad
IO OWl
Be ng a pa ce of and wh oh ocoup 11 0 000
lying along he R gh ode of Hocta ao (O 000 ac 11)
the cente ne of a aurvey mooor111
The above deac bed area
mede by he Dtpartmon of
a not a part of ony
T anaporta on and be ng
located w th n he boundary cu tnt y-aealgned
po nte Of Po cl No 7WR at Audllo a Parco Numbt
Th 1 Po eel waa boaed
dt naated upon the
upon a au vey of State
Dtpa tment
ol
Routt 338 lo the Oh o
Tranoportollon 1 R 11 ht Of
of
Woy pion MEG 338 3 539 Dtpa tment
(2 20) Shee a of 1 and Tranaportatlon by 9118, by
eco dad on o about tho Oh o Department ol
Dectmbt 12 1999 n Plat '11 onaportt ton unda the
Book 17 Page
n the auperv e an of R Doug aa
Reg 111 ad
reoo da of the Reco dtr 1 B IIIII
Surveyo 7306
OffiCI Mt go County Oh o
Ownt lo hlmee f end
n 1 undt llood tha 11 d
axacuto •
Pa eel of and conta na h 1 he 1
0 01 0 HtCII I I (0 025 adm n It ItO I IUCCIU01'8
lllrYII a I
acaa) moo or 111 of and •••
wh oh the p aaent oad ox etlng ghta of ng 101
wh oh acaupl11 0 000 end egreaa to end from
n dua
a ea
Pr or
Htotarao (0 000 oc aa)
net
ument
Rete
ence
moeo esa
The above dtac bed area Volume 28 at Page 345
1 not a pa t o any Melgl County RICO dtr I
omce
cu ent y 111 gnad
PARCEL22WD
Auditor 1 Perce Numbt
MEG-338-3 639 (2 20)
Th a Po ce was bned
ALL R Gilt TITLE AND
upon a au vty ol State
NTEREST
N FEE SIMPLE
Route 338 fa the Ohio
IN THE FOLLOW NG
Dapa tmont
of
DESCRBEDPROPERTY
Trenaportat an by 1998 by
WITHOUT UMITAnDN OF
the Oh a Department of
ltnaporta on undt tha EX STING ACCESS RIGHTS
Sltutttcl n the Townehlp
suparv alon of R Doug 11 of Lltart County of Me 111
IIIII
Rag ••• ad
Still Of OhiO and n
Survayo 7388
Thera Is nerved o the Section 8 Town ZN Range
2W and bounded end
Owner fo h mat I and h •
ht r1
IXICUIO I
dtaO bad •• followa
admlnlatrllore succenort Be na a PI eel of lond ly ng
and 111 gnt any ax at ng a ong tha R ght lldt of the
ght to have accett lo lhl contt ne oft aurvay made
by the Dtpa tment of
Ohio R vo
but fo
rtc aat one purpotta on y T anaportotlon and be ng
ocatad w lh n the boundery
The
ve frontage aa
d11cr bed aboVe and lound po nta al Po ce No 22WD
n Tha Oh o Department of 11 de lntatad upon the
of
1i snapo • on Right 01 Depa tment
Wty Plano 11 lleco dod n Trantportlt on a R gh Of
the
Mt go
County Woy p an MEG 338 3 538
Rtcordt 1 off co Any (2 20) Shttt 10 of t and
oco dtd on o about
p opolld It uctu 11 must
be app ovod by Tho Oh o December 2 999 n P 11
Dtjlar ment
of Book 17 Page B n tho
Tronapo lotion
The reca da of tha llaco de 1
1ndowne a unde lfande Off Cl Mtlga County Ohio
t 1 undt atood thll aald
that ODOT t a no tho lght
o acceea tha p oporty at Pa ca ol and contl n1
anytime lo ma n enance 0 076 Hocte •• (0 88
pu poau Tha andowne
moeo ••• at
the p 111n oad
w 1 be reopona b • fo the
emove ol ony pe oona wh ch occuplu o ooo
p ope ty p o
to ony Hacta 11 (0 000 oc ••
rn11 ntenance ave the above more o llaa
dllcr bed po ce end ODOT
Tho obove daac bed a ••
may and can amove any 1 not 1 pa t of any
mp ovtmtntt to the currantlr-augnad
p operty w hout any further Aud to 1 Parce Numbt
companaot on
a the
Thla Po ce w11 boaad
andownt
upon 1 au vey of Stott
P lo
lnat ument Routt 338 for the Oh o
Rtlerenct Volume 28 at Department
of
Page 348 Melga County Tranapartat on by 11198 by
Rtcordt IOfflct
the Ohl o Department of
Traneportat on undt the
PARCEL ti!A WD
tuptlrv alon Of R Douglae
ALL R Gill: TITLE AND
NTERI!ST N FEE SIMPLE II IIIII
Rea Ita ad
Burvtyo 7388
IN THE FOLLOWING
OWner lo h maa f end
DESCR BED PROPERTY
h a h1 1
axaouto 1
WITHOUT UMITAnON OF
EX ST NO ACCESS RIGHTS adm n II ltora IUDOIIIO I
Sltueted n the Towneh p and ••• gna r-rv•• al
of Letart, County of Mt ge ax etlna rtahta of nare••
IIIII of Oh 0 and In and egr111 to end from
ltctlon I Town 2N Range relldua arM
P lor
lnttrument
2W and bounded and
Relt ence Volume 28 11
dHCrlbed u followo
Bl ng 1 pore• of ond lying Page 348 MtiQI County
a ong the R ght a dt of tha Atcondl • Olliiit
centert nt ot a eurvey mede
Pureuant to R C 83 07
by the Dtpl tmtnt of and R c 183 08 •• d
Traneportat on and bt ng pt1 tone m111t1oned above
ocettcl w th n the boundery aho take lurthtr not ca lhll
palnta ol Porct No BAWO thoy hove 28 daye alta lht
aa de nuted upon lht comp atlon of lht Service
Dap• tmtnt
of by Pubjloat on w thin which
Trlnepartatlon a R ght 01 to anewa o otherw ••
Wey plan MEG 331 3 5311 deland •1• nit Pia nt ff 1
220) Shttt II of t and pot tlon
acordtd on or about
The o g nat of any each
Dacembe 2 1999 n Plat anewe o otht p tad ng
Book 17 Page B n the dtftnd ng 1111 net Pia nt It a
recorda of ha Rtco der a pot I qn muot ba I ed w th
the C ark of Common Pleat
omce Mt go County all o
It ta undtrelood thot 11 d Court of Me 111 County
Parcel of end con a ne Oh o at Ma 111 County
100 E11t
0 07&amp; Htcta I I (0 85 Cou thou11

"-----------1 a
r

Schoola
Instruction

230

I

510

HaoLandA Oo SEOho

BANK AEPOS ONLY t411 00
DOWN I ABBUIIE LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS W LL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOllE
IAIY P NANC NG AVA ABLE
304)75HHI

Wonlad -

t

COih

ntW CIIIM wl h Ul

Ohto Valley
Publishmg Co

Dan

SA 325 Nice 5 Aeroo $ 8000 dr
Briar Ridge Rd 7 Ac101 I !100

1'•-•

tiArJ!JI';~

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorlea

SE RVICE S

810

Home
Improvement•

Public Notice

s

a

an•

Public Notice
Second Street Pomt oy
Oh o 457811 tnd a copy of

anr auch anawe o other
piled ng defending ogelnlt
Pia nUff 1 ptlt t on muat ba
IIIVed upon Mtrk E Haya
Eaq
Aaala ant Alto ney
Otne 1 at 37 Weal Broad
St 111
Su ta
350
Co umbue Oh o 43215
4132
A fl U I to 1naw1 0
otht w •• dtltnd w thin
•• d 28 dtye w
null n
P a nt If pu tuant to C v
Ru o 55 Ilk ng the court to
grent a Judgment by dtllult
ago na any ouch pt1 aon
who fa 1 to an1wt o
othtrw 11 defend
Oo don P octor D rector
Oh o Department Of
T aneportttlon
4) 7 24 2TC

Public Notice
NOT CE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAT ON
Co umbua Oh o
ON ce of Contractl
Lega Copy Number 000258
UN T PRICE CONTRACT
Me ng Date 04110 2000
Sea td p Opoll I W bl
accep ed f om a p 1
qua If ad b dde a a tha
Oft co of Coni ac 1 of the
Oh o Dopa tmen
of
Tranoporta on Co umbuo
Oho unt OOOam
Wodneadoy May 10 2000
Fo
mp ov ng Stet on
MEG-68 2 24 Stitt Routt
68 n Mt ga County Oh o
n aceo dance w th p ane
and opec cat on1 by
p on ng
g ad ng and
osu ac ng w th aopholt
cone ttl
The dati 111 fo
comp tt on ol th 1 wo k
sho be ae aet forth n the
b dd ng p opoeal P ana
and Spec f cat ana a 1 on
f a n the Depertment Of
Tranoporta on
GORDON PROCTOR
D RECTOR OF
TRANSPORTAnON
4 17 242TC

Tho 1 w II ba 1 F oodpltln
Va ance Boa d mttt ng
Apll26 2000at200pm n
the
Me go
County
Con'im sa one a Office
Edward We ry
F oodp a n Manage
242 c

Public Notice
LEGAL NOncE
ATTEN CONTRACTORS
Sallobury Townoh p w II
be taking sealed b da on
Haza d M t gallon G tnt
ProJect wo k to be dona n
Sal abury Towneh p Work
w cons ot of a evatlon ol
homtt above 1 ood ave
Fo acope of wo k call (740)
9112-11831
de w be open
•
regu a
T-neh p
moe ng ht d at Se labury
Town•hlp
hi I
at
Rock~prlngo on May 9th at

a

B30pm

(4) 10 11

2 24 25 26 &amp;TC

In
In Loving Memory of

ROBERT N CLARK
who passed away
20 years ago
Aprll24 1980
A mllllon times we ve
though of you
mllllon times we ve
cried If love could bave
saved you
never would have
died In life we loved
you dearly

In dea b we love you still
In our hearts you bave a

place
Thai no one else can 811
Loved aod sadly missed
by Son Larry
daughter-in law Joy
Grandcblldren 1imra,

In loving memory of ou

dear and be &lt;md Mother
and GrandmOihe

LONA B CHEVAIJER
Who God called home a
ytar ago oday on

Aprill4 1999
Although she is gone from
ou sigh she will always
remain foreve n ou
heartS and memories
Sadly miSsed bullllCVCr I
forgo en by Garre Caryl,
Zenith Lowell Evelyn
the

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

The Dally Sentinel Page B3

P•ga B2 The Dally Sentinel

Public Notice

Public Notice
N THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUN'N
OHIO
Gordon Proctol: D recto
Ohio Department of
TrlnaportltiOn
Pit nUN
CABE NO OO.CV-D32
JUDGE I'III!D W CROW

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

"

Unknown TranafereM
Au gna ate of Carlton
Young Decelttd at 1
Dtltndlntl
LEOAL NOncE FOR
PUBUCAnON
[Two (2) n11111on1 Pureuant
To II C 1307)
Tht
Unknown
Trlnaftreta, Alolgna, Hera,
end Dev •••• ol Ce lton
Young D101111d Art t '(,
Brtdgtmtn Deceaaad L
Eart 8 dgeman DICIIIId
and o Oar v, B ldgtman
Dlctalld and 1 paraon•
claim ng by th ough o
undt them w take notlca
that they hevt bttn named
•• defendant• by ao don
P octo
Dl aoto
Oh o
Department
of
Trtntpo tetlon
who
nat luted C111 No 00 CV
032 now pend ng rn the
Common P 111 Court of
Mtlgt County Oh o which
11 an action to eppropl'llte
ct 11 n
p optrty for
h ghway purpoata name
the making conllructlng o
Imp ovlng of Stall Rout
338 8eotlon 3 ll3t and t
f X the VI Ul Ol llld
pro pony
The property oought to ba
opp or.rlelld
1 mora
IPIO f Ollly data lbtd II
fo lowe
PAROEL3-WR
MEG-338 3 ll3t (2.20)
ALL RIGHt TITLE AND
N'liEREST IN FI!E 8 MPLE
IN THE FOLLOW NO
DESCRIBED PROPERTY
WITHOUT UMITAT ON OF
EXISnNG ACCESS R GHTS
AND IIESERVINQ ANY
EXISnNG R GHT TO HAVE
ACCESS TO THE OH 0
RIVI!II BUT FOR
III!CIIEAnONAL
PURPOSES ONLY
Sltulttcl In lhl Townlh p
of Llllrl. County of Me 111
Stall Of Oh o and n 34
Acre 1.01 Commona, Town
2N Range 12W and
boundtcl end doeorlbad 11
Ia owa
Bt ng • parcel of end
y ng a ong the R ght tide Of
the centerline of 1 aurvey
medt by the Dtptlrtmtnt of
Tl'anaportetlon and ba na
ocated w th n the boundtry
pa nta Of Percel No 3WR 11
dt neated upon tha
Dtpa tment
of
Trlneportatlon 1 Right 01
Way plan MEG 338-3 538
(2 20) Sheet 8 of 1 and
•corded on or about
December 12 111118 In P et
Book 17 Page a n the
ecorda of the Rtco de a
ONIOI Malgl County Oh o
I I Uncleri!Ood that llld
of ltnd oonlllne
0 184 Heater•• (0 4011
oc aa) mo • or l111 of
wh ch the preatnt Old
which occup u
0 ooo
Htctl I I (0 000 IC aa)
MQI'IO 1111
The above dtaO bed ""'
1 not a part of any
currently 111gnad
Aud tor a Perce Numbt
Th a Perce w11 baaed
upon 1 eurvey of Stele
ROUII 338 fo the Oh o

320 Mobile Homea
tor Sttle

Personals

ModiiCIOIIClKSolo

raaJ--

All
ng In
this newhpaper II subted o
the Fodonll Fal Housing Act
of 1168 I01Iich mlkOI ~ Illegal
to ICMd8e any Pllferenoa

or---forreal-·

s.v. BigSSI
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n

llm~

baHd"" , _ cclol: religkln
111&gt;&lt; lorn 11a ota ua or natlcnll
cwlgln o any Intention o
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lrilllallon or clsalm 1'\111011
-

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Monday 4124 ilr&lt;lllJoldly 4125
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esperlence

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~~ISpolrthialtlcem. depe~~~::1!

M ltnn umT......apleased to announce the
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I ! 11 'I r 1 { r.11 f J 1
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I If II\ I H II\ I

110

•

F EETWOOD HOMES
7784 STATE ROUTE 7

PFIOCTOIMW OH -~

Otplrtmont
of ac 111 more o 111 ol
1i an1portat1on by 1eta by loh ch the prteent oad
the Ohio Otpo tment of which occuplaa 0 000
Treneportat on undt the Hacta •• (0 000 oc 11)
eupervlalon o R Doug •• moreo IHI
The above dtaOrtbtd area
B IIIII
Reg 111 td
Ia not 1 pert of any
Surveyor 7311
Tht a 1 tttrvtcl to the current r-aealgnad
OWner lo h m11 f and h 1 Audlto 1 Parcel Numba
Th I PI Cl Wll bllld
hll 8
IXICUtO I
•dm n atrato I IUCCIIIO I UpOn I IU VIY Of Still
and ••• gn1 eny ex 1 ng Route 338 to the Oh o
of
gh to hiVI ICCIII to thl Dtpe tment
T anoportotlon by tete by
Oh o II ve
but
o
racreat on• pu poui on y the Oh o Deportment of
The Iva I ontage ao T onaportot an under the
dtacrlbtcl above ond found euptrv a on ol R Doug 11
Reg Itt td
n The Oh o Doportmon of B IIIII
Tr1n1po 11 on R gh Of Surveyo 7311
OWne fo h m1111 and
Way P ono u Raco dod n
ht I
IXICUIO I
the
Mt go
Coun y h I
Raco de 1 of ce Any adm n It 110 I IUCCIIIO a
p opoaad 1 uctu t l mua and 111 gne 111rvea •
be epproved by The Oh o IX It ng ghtt of ng 111
Department
of and tg 111 to and f om
11 dualare1
Tronapo ta on
The
P o
nat umenl
lndownt a unda atonda
tho ODOT 1 a no the gh Rate enc• Vo uma 28 at
to occeaa ht property at Page 345 Me 111 Coun y
anytime fo ma ntenanca Rtcorde a on ••
PARCEL 9-WD
pu po11a The andownt
MEG-338-3139 (2 20
wl ba r11pon1 b a lo he
ALL R Gill: TITLE AND
remove ol any pe ecno
NTEREST N FEE SIMPLE
p opt ty p o to any
IN THE FOLLOW NG
ma ntenenca ove the above
DESCR BED PROPERTY
deacrtbad pa eel and ODOT
WITHOUT UMITAnON OF
may and can tmove any
EX
BT NG ACCESS R GHTS
Imp ovementa to
he
tueted n the Townoh p
property w thout any lurtho
of
Letlrt
County of Me a•
companut on to
he
Stall of Oh o and n
landowne
Sect on 8 Town 2N Range
P lor
nat umen
Rtlt anoe Volume 28 et 12W end bounded and
Poa• 345 Melga Coun y dtocrlbtd •• fo owe
Baing 1 porce Of and y ng
Rtcorda oOitca
1 ong tht R ght a de Of the
PARCEL7WR
can tr nt Of 1 eurvey made
by tha Dtpa tment of
T aneportatlon and be ng
oct ed with n the boundary
poln 1 ol Parct No 9WD
at de naattd upon tho
Depa tmtnt
of
RGHTS
'I' aneportat on a R ght Of
AND RESERV NO ANY
Way p an MEG 331 3 5311
EX STING R GHT TO HAVE
(2 20) Shttt o of
and
ACCESS TO THE OH 0
aco ded on o ebout
RIVER BUT FOR
Dacamba 2 1999 n P ot
IIECREAnONAL
Book 17 Pega B n he
PURPOSES ONLY
Slluated n he Townah p raco d1 of the Reco de o
Off ct Mt 111 County Oh o
of Letart County of Me go
It 1 undtratood that aald
State of Oh o and n 34
Ac e Lot Commont Town Pa ct of and conto na
2N
Flange
2W and o 074 Hecla at (0 183
bounded and dttc bed ao ac 11) mo a o 111 of
which tha p ooant oad
IO OWl
Be ng a pa ce of and wh oh ocoup 11 0 000
lying along he R gh ode of Hocta ao (O 000 ac 11)
the cente ne of a aurvey mooor111
The above deac bed area
mede by he Dtpartmon of
a not a part of ony
T anaporta on and be ng
located w th n he boundary cu tnt y-aealgned
po nte Of Po cl No 7WR at Audllo a Parco Numbt
Th 1 Po eel waa boaed
dt naated upon the
upon a au vey of State
Dtpa tment
ol
Routt 338 lo the Oh o
Tranoportollon 1 R 11 ht Of
of
Woy pion MEG 338 3 539 Dtpa tment
(2 20) Shee a of 1 and Tranaportatlon by 9118, by
eco dad on o about tho Oh o Department ol
Dectmbt 12 1999 n Plat '11 onaportt ton unda the
Book 17 Page
n the auperv e an of R Doug aa
Reg 111 ad
reoo da of the Reco dtr 1 B IIIII
Surveyo 7306
OffiCI Mt go County Oh o
Ownt lo hlmee f end
n 1 undt llood tha 11 d
axacuto •
Pa eel of and conta na h 1 he 1
0 01 0 HtCII I I (0 025 adm n It ItO I IUCCIU01'8
lllrYII a I
acaa) moo or 111 of and •••
wh oh the p aaent oad ox etlng ghta of ng 101
wh oh acaupl11 0 000 end egreaa to end from
n dua
a ea
Pr or
Htotarao (0 000 oc aa)
net
ument
Rete
ence
moeo esa
The above dtac bed area Volume 28 at Page 345
1 not a pa t o any Melgl County RICO dtr I
omce
cu ent y 111 gnad
PARCEL22WD
Auditor 1 Perce Numbt
MEG-338-3 639 (2 20)
Th a Po ce was bned
ALL R Gilt TITLE AND
upon a au vty ol State
NTEREST
N FEE SIMPLE
Route 338 fa the Ohio
IN THE FOLLOW NG
Dapa tmont
of
DESCRBEDPROPERTY
Trenaportat an by 1998 by
WITHOUT UMITAnDN OF
the Oh a Department of
ltnaporta on undt tha EX STING ACCESS RIGHTS
Sltutttcl n the Townehlp
suparv alon of R Doug 11 of Lltart County of Me 111
IIIII
Rag ••• ad
Still Of OhiO and n
Survayo 7388
Thera Is nerved o the Section 8 Town ZN Range
2W and bounded end
Owner fo h mat I and h •
ht r1
IXICUIO I
dtaO bad •• followa
admlnlatrllore succenort Be na a PI eel of lond ly ng
and 111 gnt any ax at ng a ong tha R ght lldt of the
ght to have accett lo lhl contt ne oft aurvay made
by the Dtpa tment of
Ohio R vo
but fo
rtc aat one purpotta on y T anaportotlon and be ng
ocatad w lh n the boundery
The
ve frontage aa
d11cr bed aboVe and lound po nta al Po ce No 22WD
n Tha Oh o Department of 11 de lntatad upon the
of
1i snapo • on Right 01 Depa tment
Wty Plano 11 lleco dod n Trantportlt on a R gh Of
the
Mt go
County Woy p an MEG 338 3 538
Rtcordt 1 off co Any (2 20) Shttt 10 of t and
oco dtd on o about
p opolld It uctu 11 must
be app ovod by Tho Oh o December 2 999 n P 11
Dtjlar ment
of Book 17 Page B n tho
Tronapo lotion
The reca da of tha llaco de 1
1ndowne a unde lfande Off Cl Mtlga County Ohio
t 1 undt atood thll aald
that ODOT t a no tho lght
o acceea tha p oporty at Pa ca ol and contl n1
anytime lo ma n enance 0 076 Hocte •• (0 88
pu poau Tha andowne
moeo ••• at
the p 111n oad
w 1 be reopona b • fo the
emove ol ony pe oona wh ch occuplu o ooo
p ope ty p o
to ony Hacta 11 (0 000 oc ••
rn11 ntenance ave the above more o llaa
dllcr bed po ce end ODOT
Tho obove daac bed a ••
may and can amove any 1 not 1 pa t of any
mp ovtmtntt to the currantlr-augnad
p operty w hout any further Aud to 1 Parce Numbt
companaot on
a the
Thla Po ce w11 boaad
andownt
upon 1 au vey of Stott
P lo
lnat ument Routt 338 for the Oh o
Rtlerenct Volume 28 at Department
of
Page 348 Melga County Tranapartat on by 11198 by
Rtcordt IOfflct
the Ohl o Department of
Traneportat on undt the
PARCEL ti!A WD
tuptlrv alon Of R Douglae
ALL R Gill: TITLE AND
NTERI!ST N FEE SIMPLE II IIIII
Rea Ita ad
Burvtyo 7388
IN THE FOLLOWING
OWner lo h maa f end
DESCR BED PROPERTY
h a h1 1
axaouto 1
WITHOUT UMITAnON OF
EX ST NO ACCESS RIGHTS adm n II ltora IUDOIIIO I
Sltueted n the Towneh p and ••• gna r-rv•• al
of Letart, County of Mt ge ax etlna rtahta of nare••
IIIII of Oh 0 and In and egr111 to end from
ltctlon I Town 2N Range relldua arM
P lor
lnttrument
2W and bounded and
Relt ence Volume 28 11
dHCrlbed u followo
Bl ng 1 pore• of ond lying Page 348 MtiQI County
a ong the R ght a dt of tha Atcondl • Olliiit
centert nt ot a eurvey mede
Pureuant to R C 83 07
by the Dtpl tmtnt of and R c 183 08 •• d
Traneportat on and bt ng pt1 tone m111t1oned above
ocettcl w th n the boundery aho take lurthtr not ca lhll
palnta ol Porct No BAWO thoy hove 28 daye alta lht
aa de nuted upon lht comp atlon of lht Service
Dap• tmtnt
of by Pubjloat on w thin which
Trlnepartatlon a R ght 01 to anewa o otherw ••
Wey plan MEG 331 3 5311 deland •1• nit Pia nt ff 1
220) Shttt II of t and pot tlon
acordtd on or about
The o g nat of any each
Dacembe 2 1999 n Plat anewe o otht p tad ng
Book 17 Page B n the dtftnd ng 1111 net Pia nt It a
recorda of ha Rtco der a pot I qn muot ba I ed w th
the C ark of Common Pleat
omce Mt go County all o
It ta undtrelood thot 11 d Court of Me 111 County
Parcel of end con a ne Oh o at Ma 111 County
100 E11t
0 07&amp; Htcta I I (0 85 Cou thou11

"-----------1 a
r

Schoola
Instruction

230

I

510

HaoLandA Oo SEOho

BANK AEPOS ONLY t411 00
DOWN I ABBUIIE LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS W LL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOllE
IAIY P NANC NG AVA ABLE
304)75HHI

Wonlad -

t

COih

ntW CIIIM wl h Ul

Ohto Valley
Publishmg Co

Dan

SA 325 Nice 5 Aeroo $ 8000 dr
Briar Ridge Rd 7 Ac101 I !100

1'•-•

tiArJ!JI';~

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorlea

SE RVICE S

810

Home
Improvement•

Public Notice

s

a

an•

Public Notice
Second Street Pomt oy
Oh o 457811 tnd a copy of

anr auch anawe o other
piled ng defending ogelnlt
Pia nUff 1 ptlt t on muat ba
IIIVed upon Mtrk E Haya
Eaq
Aaala ant Alto ney
Otne 1 at 37 Weal Broad
St 111
Su ta
350
Co umbue Oh o 43215
4132
A fl U I to 1naw1 0
otht w •• dtltnd w thin
•• d 28 dtye w
null n
P a nt If pu tuant to C v
Ru o 55 Ilk ng the court to
grent a Judgment by dtllult
ago na any ouch pt1 aon
who fa 1 to an1wt o
othtrw 11 defend
Oo don P octor D rector
Oh o Department Of
T aneportttlon
4) 7 24 2TC

Public Notice
NOT CE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTAT ON
Co umbua Oh o
ON ce of Contractl
Lega Copy Number 000258
UN T PRICE CONTRACT
Me ng Date 04110 2000
Sea td p Opoll I W bl
accep ed f om a p 1
qua If ad b dde a a tha
Oft co of Coni ac 1 of the
Oh o Dopa tmen
of
Tranoporta on Co umbuo
Oho unt OOOam
Wodneadoy May 10 2000
Fo
mp ov ng Stet on
MEG-68 2 24 Stitt Routt
68 n Mt ga County Oh o
n aceo dance w th p ane
and opec cat on1 by
p on ng
g ad ng and
osu ac ng w th aopholt
cone ttl
The dati 111 fo
comp tt on ol th 1 wo k
sho be ae aet forth n the
b dd ng p opoeal P ana
and Spec f cat ana a 1 on
f a n the Depertment Of
Tranoporta on
GORDON PROCTOR
D RECTOR OF
TRANSPORTAnON
4 17 242TC

Tho 1 w II ba 1 F oodpltln
Va ance Boa d mttt ng
Apll26 2000at200pm n
the
Me go
County
Con'im sa one a Office
Edward We ry
F oodp a n Manage
242 c

Public Notice
LEGAL NOncE
ATTEN CONTRACTORS
Sallobury Townoh p w II
be taking sealed b da on
Haza d M t gallon G tnt
ProJect wo k to be dona n
Sal abury Towneh p Work
w cons ot of a evatlon ol
homtt above 1 ood ave
Fo acope of wo k call (740)
9112-11831
de w be open
•
regu a
T-neh p
moe ng ht d at Se labury
Town•hlp
hi I
at
Rock~prlngo on May 9th at

a

B30pm

(4) 10 11

2 24 25 26 &amp;TC

In
In Loving Memory of

ROBERT N CLARK
who passed away
20 years ago
Aprll24 1980
A mllllon times we ve
though of you
mllllon times we ve
cried If love could bave
saved you
never would have
died In life we loved
you dearly

In dea b we love you still
In our hearts you bave a

place
Thai no one else can 811
Loved aod sadly missed
by Son Larry
daughter-in law Joy
Grandcblldren 1imra,

In loving memory of ou

dear and be &lt;md Mother
and GrandmOihe

LONA B CHEVAIJER
Who God called home a
ytar ago oday on

Aprill4 1999
Although she is gone from
ou sigh she will always
remain foreve n ou
heartS and memories
Sadly miSsed bullllCVCr I
forgo en by Garre Caryl,
Zenith Lowell Evelyn
the

�J

.Page 84 • The Dally SentiMI

Monday, April 24, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,.

f llllollftl-rvldalay, April

~. 2000

Tho Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Ohio
.
. .
..
'

:: ALLEY OOP

· NEA Cro11word Puzzle

'·~' ::::::'':..

DIPOtlll
PARft

CIIDfr PIOBLIMI???

•

No Credh • Slow CI'Mit ~ S.nkruptcy
Repo • Dlvordtd

· ARM...,.Tr.dor -&amp;
Equipment Part.
Factory Aathorbed

WORRYIID!!l
l:mbarraMm.nt •.
No
You're Treated whh Rttpectl

Cue-IMPart.
Dealers.

•

1000 St. Rt 1 Soutlr
CooiiJIU., OH 45123

7411174.1

St o p In And See

Steve Riffle
. Sal es Re presentative
Larry Schey

Sue'• Greeubouse

PSI

QualltJ', Vlll'let)', IAiw PriCIII • Tlaat'• Ul! .

CONSTRUaiON

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60 .
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94~ each
Mornlnl Star Rd. CR JO

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

Ra.elne, Ohio
1·740o94MIIS

740·992·1709
4/21100 I /no pel

HUBBARDS

OLD LOCK24
.CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) :&gt;\l~l-btt1

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 4570 1

..

GREENHOUSE

992-5776

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • WHkly • Monthly • Se.aaonal
Convenl•nce Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

Syracu11

Now Open For
Sprt_ng Season
Vegetable.f!ants,
· Bedding Plants,
Hongl~g Baskets,
Porcli Boxes,
Comblnatltm Pots,
Potted Geraniullls,
Phlox, ~leas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Daily 9-S
Sun ll-5

740•949-7039
"Get in while you can, apace i8 limited"
'X~ tt •I&gt; " '~~·"' 1M

s.,.,... s.ee

AMD K6-2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6.4 Gig bar~ Drive, 17" Monitor .26
DPI., CO-Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Net.work
·Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color Printer Windows 98 Second Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month FREE! Frognet Internet
Access! $899.00
Computer PerfortttAIIU Upgrades
11 oCqurt Straet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Located beside The Grill .
· 740-992·1135

..4LLLR.
Cellular
Jeff Warner
Ins.
.
992-5479

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

992·1550
·-lhe Appliance
Man

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

g
N

c

coNCRRE ucrHOE sERVIas M
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVI(ES As

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL ·• 0
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N
Brian Morrlaon/Racille, Ohio
R
1'
(740) 985-3948
y
E

Ken.Youns
-4!;;)00 t l'f'IO. pel.

R
E

4f21t/00 1 mo

.

Do1or work.

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
1711-2417 or 448-1428
Cell Phone 674-3311

Fax 304-675 -2457

•Drivewoys •Tennis Courts
· •Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

*****************
** "&amp;"
*
.
*

**
*

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

:

**

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
ENDTOEND
:
MAY'S &amp; 6- ALL DAY

*· .

..

*

*****************

,

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm

740-992-5050
· (Randy)

J&amp;l IIISUUTIOII I
COIISIIUCTIOII

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

:

frH Estimates

Shade River ·
Ag. se vice

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Co~crete &amp; Block Work,
.Blown Insulation

lli2·2772

For All Your Home
lmcrovement Naede

Nutrena Hunters
de Dog Food
$6.75/50 I ltag
Nutrena Weste n.-Eti&amp;e
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lit. ltilg
S rtn Seeds 8 Ferttltzer

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

Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand a,nd Dirt

949·2249
Racine, Ohio

'

.

We Service All Mak:es
Washers- Dryers
Ranges· Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

Ill I. lad

......,,lido
4/1WOO 1 mo pd.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
New Roof&amp; • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Eatlmatu

Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

Size- JD 550 G.

A.prU s~ao..e,.. Brins

Cell for minimum ·
rate
FI'N E1tlm1tN
Pond "tlmetee
welcome ·

740·992·7599

SELF STORAGE
21870 Ba•han ·
Road
Recine, Ohio

45n1

PlYing ""··~
per 1111'¥ ,
$300.0(1 Covvtlll
$500.00 Starbu~

740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

· Progra1llve top line.

7:00AM· 8 PM

Uc.lloo-50

·'

WI

SEAMLESS
GUTTERS&lt;',
~&amp;S.{/a

1·800·311·339.1

~

Hf.IOUnG and
EXCAVATinG

Centruteu Welel me

..

Albany,_Ohio

Auto loclif'Pottl
All replacement
. parts

Free Dellve;y

I 0 X 20 $(J0

740-742-9501

992-1717

. ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

"Take ~he pain our.-1
ofpainting- n
Let me do it for

• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
741).992·1671

Leave Message
After 6pm-614-985-41

7/22/l'FN

a

•• 7 8 4 3
• I 2

A 5 2

-

• 10

• Q J 10 8
Sou til
• K9
• Q85
+AKJB4

•••

••
: ~~~-----~----~~
l' BARNEY

IWty

Te~

41

,__
,

·wunla

Sfvn eh htt

54Computeruy
55 ltttnolo citY

Be sick

57 Tiniest

se Achy

DOWN

~thin culno

1 Bugle.,.,,

26
27
30
32

3

2 eun.tructlon
beam (2 wdo.)

Sun. epeech
Fedora, e.g.

Writer Christie
Emotional
shock

• J 10 9 7 4

•• 5
• A 7 4 3

: .......~

34 FonnerVP
Aockt1et.ter
. 35 Of a olckty
color
36 Had I IRICk
37 Dloeneumber

Venuo de -

4 -rlanda

5~o - Ata

I

8 Work Yrithout

- - (IAIM

Comp~~lllltve

ending

7 Worhot'o

chancee)
11 Ma. Cannon

olyte

12 wdl.)

12Sn-

a Prudent

partlcleo

• K 9 2

Soutll
INT

A LITTLE ITALIAN WITH

OIL AN' VINIIAR It ·

WeR

Paso

13 Mineral
18 That llltng'o
20 Acquires •
21 NOl l! H I '
22 Publishing .

blunders .
Comic Carvey
24 The Beach ·
Boya••·--:

23

Around"

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

YOU'LL SPOIL
THAT OL' .ALII

North
3 NT .

25

,
28 tn 1 rrenzled·

East
All pass

olllte

J9 Prepares

(oheepokln,

Opening lead: ??

P,dl. .

e.g.)
31 Oye
Ingredient
36

Opening leads

BuUdoo"r &amp; Bodchoe
Service;
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Siteo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sytlenu &amp;
Utilitie•

.l kft/Oyl IT TAt:fS MOti~Y TO
\
MAICe MONfY, BUT
l&gt;Of6 IT At,Y/ AY6

Til PREPAUTION

tMVfTO

g(jrJer CUiu

TA~t

tltiN&amp;

TO

MA~f

.!ttuun.tttra .Sttflfl:u

317 N; 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760 ·
740 -992 -1818
Compie1111 Accountinf

•

$0Mf0Nf

••

•

-

&amp;L.Sf'S1

4·24

&amp; Ta..t: S111rvkfl•

C.R . King - C. D. Gater
25 Years E ertence

:...Vt:EellffES(Ei!: FINN..L'( LET f'l'i.""'
.-.._~- 1\\~

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO;
PEOPL&amp;S SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL

,..

M-1 ~:;1 ~E

...
&amp;EI\ C:i.EJ.t! WII.O

WE~~ PIJ..'(I~C:&gt;

WoE /It Til£ &amp;.LL
wcr."'' [TOOK

01\, Tl\£1\'£ w~~ t-10

eMf_ 1~"-T D~'( .

7

v~ct!

SERVICES

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

· Box 189 ·

lftl

..

41

till

EACH ONC. t:!O METIC:·
.ULOU!&gt;LY IWID · CRAFTED,

SIGNED

&amp;Y '(0UtlS TRUL'&lt;!

~

I

'

0.

:'PEANUTS

:~
· --~--------.. ~---._~------~~~
j
MUST ee A STRAN6E COUNTR'(..
EVe~ TIME THE'f HAVE 1\N ELECTION
. VIOLINS Sf(EAK OUT••

42 Dopreosed

43 Shedlo _
44 Norwegian.

copllel

48 Challenge ·
47 Egyptian
goddeoo

•

41 Fuel

"' .

53 Caviar

••

50 "Gl'IDh"lf!ol
52 Cut down ... ,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

• ,.•

by Lull Clmpoe

.

C I t My CiP1or ~ orw CIHiod ham quota- by lomouo poopo, put one!
,
. . -.Each-In l1o clpho&lt;- f&lt;li onothor.
•.

Todlfl en.: 8 equals P

'KTY

JYOMYK

ALC

TNKY

LE

INXNDIXD

E I G .y

KTY

UYYB

KL

KTY

EM L I

NMY · CXZYOIZYZ : ' -

DCAJ
ESGY

e· J

FTL
F T L

ONJYA

JKYXDYW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ."What rna!teo Christ's teechlnge dlfflcuh lo that they
obligate ua'to do 1011111hlng 1110ut them,'- John J. Wille

TIAT DAILY d.~ '1) Jih.l puzzu• P\,!;0 ~"U ~..
....4

ltr CLAY

/) 'Cl ~Q: 1 WOlD
'b P&lt;ro · "••

I. POI&amp;AN

.

Roorrange lottert of
0 four
tcr~~mblod words

. low 10 form four simple
,--·

Eleven, he will know that the
eight isn't West's fourth -highest:
Subtracting eight (the value of the
card led) from II tell s East that
there should be only three cards
higher than the eight in the other
three hands. Yet East can see four
card s higher than the spade eight:
dummy 's queen, jack and 10, and
his ace. So West has led top of
nothing, not fourih-highest.
With those strong red suits in
the dummy; it is logical for East
to win the first trick with the ·
spade ace and switch to th'e club
queen. Here that works well, net·
ting t.he first five tricks.

r!AGAZINE~ \

NU!15£~Eb, MD

Abner'•
c....,lor

WOti:IS. E

~.;....,--

·1-T--T-:

If East applies the Rule of

I'M GOIII6 TO SEU. 'EM,
JU!&gt;T Ltk.E Tt:IE ONE!&gt;
WU S.EE

...

Actor Aida
"Charge"

llllr1
40 A Fonda

B v"i'uiLLIP ALDER

This week, let's have a look at
opening leads, For the first two
days, there will be some comments on general approaches,
starting with no-trump contracts.
Usually, you lead from your
longest suit. You hope to establish
. the long cards, get back in, and
cash the winners that declarer cannot ruff. Yet there is an i mportant
aspect to this , approach: If YO!!.
lead fourth· htghest from your
longest and strongest, you should
have at least one honor in the suit.
With no honor, lead the top card
if the top two are touching .(for
example, the nine from 9-8-6-53), or the second-highest if~ top
two are not touching (for example, the seven from 9-7-6-5-3) .
West didn't obse.rve this principle, leading che spade four.
Understandably, East won with
the ace, then returned the spade
five, the higher of two remaining
cards. Yet South took I 0 consecutive tricks : two spades, three
hearts and five diamonds.
West should have led the sp,acle ..
eigbt.

.

Guy

u-~+-4-~-+~ · 27~
covering

33

\_;.:

{.

+Q9732
• 6 5
Eut

jweat

I

Middleport, 9hlo 45760
Local • 843-5284
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final E!xpenS!)s; College, Retirement,
·
1
•
·
- Emergency funds; Mortgage; ·
WANTED .. Fu11 ·ttme
oyment 10. your own
MaJor
· Med'1ca1• Niursmg
· H. om~ .
~
. emp
·
horne ·as a Horne Servtces Worker wtth Buckeye
----·
Community Services. We provid.e salary plus ·j
110 H1lp Wantld
ben~ fits and a daily room and board rite·. You '.!
provide a home, guidance and friendship in a ;
family atmosphere. Requires ability to teach ' 1
,
personal living skill and a commitment. to the ~
growth and .de.velopment of an individual with~
mental retardation . Home must be in Meigs ~
COMGIIAr.ter
County. I interested, contact Cecilia at
;
•
A WIIID Wolt"D COMPANY
l-800,531-2302 . E ual op ortunity Employer . .
'
Charier Communications is seeking a Syetem
Technician .1 for its plant in Point Pleasant, wv. the
WANTED: Buckeye Community Services has a
successful candidate will, under general supervision,
part-time position available in Meigs County:
be responstble lor prevent1ve maintenanc~ and repair
hrs/Wk: 8 am Sat lhru 8 am Mon;
of the plant Including trunk and distribution &amp;¥Stem,
j!&gt;erlorm routine maintenance and repairs while
required . Position requires teaching personal
providing
technical support for service relatecj
community skills to· two Individuals with
problems. Must have NCTI Service Technician Course
retardation. The work environment Is informal
or equivalent and at least 2 yrs experience 1111
rewarding. The requirements are: high
Service or Installer RefiEIIr Technician. A valid driver's
dlploma/GED, .valid driver's license, three
license and satisfactory driving record are required. ;
Salary commensurate with experience, exCellent
good driving experli'mce and adequ1aat~~en~~!~~~~;
benefits.
.
insurance coverage. B.C.S. offers Q
Submit resume to:
In the field of MR/DD. Starting
Charter Communlclllons
$5.50/hr.
.
Vacation/sick
benefits.
1737 Elat Seventh Street
.
applicants need to specify position· of interest
Parkersburg, WV 26101
Attn: M. Schultz
1se110 resume to:
EOE
P.O. Box804
Drug/Smoke fr941 workplace
Jacklon, OH 48640-0804.
"\'.
All applications must be post-marked by 4/28/0~)!J
Equal Opportunity Employer.. •
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Lefs wait a wee\&lt;
and diG him lAP .

•'

. ·'

Advertise in ·
this space for
I
· $25 per
month.

atepte
citY
51 Expl'lU fn

48

19 .- - r l &lt;
20RIM11ha . (f11celrt-)

• AK3

(740) 992·3111

LINDA'S r
PAINTING

17

~10

HOWARD
EXCAVAIING CO.'
'''P"ftrt"•r rtf

'Toll Free

· Interior
FREE ESTIMATES , ·
Before 6p.m. •

11

•'

.••,..........

10 X I 0 $rHJ

'l

'•

For the·best deals in the area
for Pre·owned cars &amp; trucks

, Rll Ouallly

.,..,...

14 Wonty
15 Chalkboard

II

•'
:'

992·3490

HARJWEI.I .
S'IDRAGE
s·c RL 7

!

RIVERVIEW
MOTORS

Trade-In's Welcome
Your last stop car shop

Free E•tinutiea

alupwatch
• Downpot1'1

· 12
.or~
_.,_....

~

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovei•:Sand • Topsoil•
All Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Servkes
(740) 9~2-3410

40large .....
focMd bird
42 Loelw, e.g.
48 "RoH - -

I UMde

ALDER

,._,.to Prwtaua Puzzle

31 Sptsh

ACROSS

PHILLIP

.,-

Across from Super-America in lower Pomeroy ·

VIOLENGE

!mEAKSOUT

a

f

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

740·992· 7945

.

Service ·

Dozer for Hire
Rate $50 per hour

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement WindOws
•
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENml
'' FREE ESTIMATES

Dump Truck

I ~t.ondling timber large!
or
tracks. Top
prices paid also.

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

Dailey
Trucking

"We're Back"

'

I

.,.'

S A YE T

I' I

1:~

to her obnoxious date, 'Til ·
forgive you for being so rude, " she
~ sighed , "after all you were just
1
.._.--'--...._..__,_....J~
being - • - - • - ••.'

I I I'

I

I

T H R u E N·

I.

.....-...,,.-TI....;.,-1.;..
· . ;;l..,.;il.;..,j,....-4 Q
·.
L ......I.I--.L.--I.L-..1..--L.._,

Comploto !Ito chuckle quotod
by filling In tho milling worcb
you develop from atep No. 3 below.

:~49~r~~~~~\~r~Y~~s~:a~Rt~~-RE-s~lr'-,T.I2_,r~,-r.l•~.~,.r-~l'~-~1~'~1'~· ~1

To get a current weather
report, check the
'

TR0 0 M

5

. SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS
Lesson - Baton - Ebony · Weasel • BE the BOSS
It's wise to remember that the person who knows how
will alWays have a job. The person who knows why will
3lways BE the BOSS.

.

Sentinel

•
•
'

J

I MONDAY
.

SERVICE
.
ADVISOR

.

.

Mu1 Flowero/1 ·

'

Exc~pti.imal

opportunity for
the right candidate.
should have a
track record and be kn~lwl•~dK&lt;eab•le[l
in all aspects of service operatl()ns.
Must be organized and
oriented. Customer satisfaction
must be top priority. Appli~nt
m~st
Jtave ~;:omputer literacy.
Performance based

Are Your Plant Beds
Reedy?
Weeding: Mulching:
Prunlng:Edglng
·Planting and Retaining
Walls

Free Estimates .
Mike Sharp
740-849-311011

ALZHEIMER'S FACT #5
Changes In personality:
. P.eople's personalities
ordinarily change somewhat
with age. But a person with
Alzheimer's disease can
change drastically, becoming
e&gt;dremely confused,
suspicious, ·or fearful.
If you have questions, call the
Alzheimer's professionals at
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
more information.

Advertise
in. this
space fo·r
s1so per·
month.

•,

Continue today to draw into an

endeavor lho,. who e&lt;&gt;utd help
runher a cause you'd like to promote . Don't exclude clubs or

Thesday, April ~. 2000
Bonds wilh the one you love

can be areatly Olrenathened in the
year lhead. II there hils been •
void In your life, II may now soon
, be
~eftlled .
'
• TAURUS
(April 20-May :10)
Sh0111d you feellr neceuaey tciclay
•
•
to Ult mort UMIIIYtnetl than
you'd UKUilly UM to adYingt I
• . penonallllltlltt, do 10 with 1 dtb ·
humor to lt!Mft tht !tlnl· 'fey·
•• or
ln1 to patoh up 1 bmlctrt tonttlnct?
• 111t AitJD.CIIilh MJ!Ghmllktr tin
htlp y01iunailttntl whtt to do to
m.U tht ttiiiiOitlhlp work, Mall

~

.•

.

(74b) 44~·7150
. $cenlc Hills:
''The Alzheimer's EXIlerts"

800• 964·3673-

.

•

'

~~~rMr~/.~~~!'!'!1tM~~

r11 II lillian, New. Dnl, NY
10156
OIMINilMIY 21 ·lunt 20) A·
llitlt prl¥10y Wflh tht OM ~011 .
lol'l "" ~o ttltlth totll)' In 1\trthtrlnl your ttllllonthlp, Don't
allow an lnttrloptl 10 lntNdt
UfM!II y011r tPIOf·
CAI'ICIJI. (lint 21·luly 22l

la'i•sroups ·· one misht tie perfeel for you. ·
·
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Keep

your mind on the tasb at hand
today ,no lllllller how hard or
unallrocdvettiey ure lor yootodo.
If you 1et !ldetrocked by hobbie•
or the like, your encraieK will be

mlldirocted,
VIROOIAua. 2~·Sepr. 22)AK '
101111111 you don't pu•h your luck
bty011d NtiiOftablt limit• totlllr,·
dtvtlo~mtlnt• thut tnuy bt A1111 •
chancy could tum 0111 quilt !UC·
...rully. It amatt, itat fooll•h ..
LIIRA (ltpl. 2Jo0t!t, 23)
IIMttlflllllctit pioJtoll-ttd lht
ltou• ••vttlll y011r allln OOtlli
tum out to lit wry =ln1 to tht
lyt, Tht tll'oll II
In do 10
will lit well wotth YOtl! tltN.
ICOJI.PIO (0.1, M•No11 22)
Tht type or •• tlllllfll you ml1h1

J!OIMII IOU)&gt;. 1111)' hlw 111011 ta

ilo with your de-thM y011r
phftltetappe~rwt. Mtmi!M or
tht ~Itt pndtr will niMI 11111
~~ lltrlltfYf,
IA011TAJI.IUI (Nov, 2~·0.0 ,

211 Because you're likely to be
very strongly ff'!Oiivated today, lhe
probabitilies 1'1r material acquisi·
rion are very good. Go ofter what
)'OU truly want .
r~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
191 You could have an extra da•h

of boldnm and ncllementaboul
you today, in addition to your cU!·
tomary pe110nality Dllributet •• oil
of which make you mo~e chorl•·
matic: .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. !9)
While olhtill ml1h1 lanoro the
· pllaht of an unfonunute peroon.
· yourcon~CiouaiKn'lllkety to per·
mit r,ou to do ao. Ta your cNdil,
you naoma throuah for thl• per•

110n.

PilCH~ (l'tb. 21~Mulllh 20)
lomtont with whom you 'l't
·~ Jnuly a!lltllllutttllllld who ha•
do,. •omtthlnl notublt Nltnily .
would wtluomtl ynur oammtntl,
II will puy olf It you 11k1 thtlln11
to complllllllllthl• lntflvlduul.
Alllll (Mulllh 21•Aprll ' l9)
ICHp bu1lnm mutln1• mlcily
bu•ln111 loduy, und dntl't utt11npt
tn hrln1 IOIIIIIIIIII•Itltl Into tht
lflllllllon, ThoM ll1ht diYII'IIIon•
could .undormlnt iny mlou1
talk1, .
. ·

~

••'

•

-·

.,

l
I

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•
'

�J

.Page 84 • The Dally SentiMI

Monday, April 24, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,.

f llllollftl-rvldalay, April

~. 2000

Tho Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Ohio
.
. .
..
'

:: ALLEY OOP

· NEA Cro11word Puzzle

'·~' ::::::'':..

DIPOtlll
PARft

CIIDfr PIOBLIMI???

•

No Credh • Slow CI'Mit ~ S.nkruptcy
Repo • Dlvordtd

· ARM...,.Tr.dor -&amp;
Equipment Part.
Factory Aathorbed

WORRYIID!!l
l:mbarraMm.nt •.
No
You're Treated whh Rttpectl

Cue-IMPart.
Dealers.

•

1000 St. Rt 1 Soutlr
CooiiJIU., OH 45123

7411174.1

St o p In And See

Steve Riffle
. Sal es Re presentative
Larry Schey

Sue'• Greeubouse

PSI

QualltJ', Vlll'let)', IAiw PriCIII • Tlaat'• Ul! .

CONSTRUaiON

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60 .
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94~ each
Mornlnl Star Rd. CR JO

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

Ra.elne, Ohio
1·740o94MIIS

740·992·1709
4/21100 I /no pel

HUBBARDS

OLD LOCK24
.CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) :&gt;\l~l-btt1

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 4570 1

..

GREENHOUSE

992-5776

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • WHkly • Monthly • Se.aaonal
Convenl•nce Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

Syracu11

Now Open For
Sprt_ng Season
Vegetable.f!ants,
· Bedding Plants,
Hongl~g Baskets,
Porcli Boxes,
Comblnatltm Pots,
Potted Geraniullls,
Phlox, ~leas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Daily 9-S
Sun ll-5

740•949-7039
"Get in while you can, apace i8 limited"
'X~ tt •I&gt; " '~~·"' 1M

s.,.,... s.ee

AMD K6-2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6.4 Gig bar~ Drive, 17" Monitor .26
DPI., CO-Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Net.work
·Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color Printer Windows 98 Second Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month FREE! Frognet Internet
Access! $899.00
Computer PerfortttAIIU Upgrades
11 oCqurt Straet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Located beside The Grill .
· 740-992·1135

..4LLLR.
Cellular
Jeff Warner
Ins.
.
992-5479

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

992·1550
·-lhe Appliance
Man

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

g
N

c

coNCRRE ucrHOE sERVIas M
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVI(ES As

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL ·• 0
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N
Brian Morrlaon/Racille, Ohio
R
1'
(740) 985-3948
y
E

Ken.Youns
-4!;;)00 t l'f'IO. pel.

R
E

4f21t/00 1 mo

.

Do1or work.

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
1711-2417 or 448-1428
Cell Phone 674-3311

Fax 304-675 -2457

•Drivewoys •Tennis Courts
· •Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

*****************
** "&amp;"
*
.
*

**
*

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

:

**

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
ENDTOEND
:
MAY'S &amp; 6- ALL DAY

*· .

..

*

*****************

,

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm

740-992-5050
· (Randy)

J&amp;l IIISUUTIOII I
COIISIIUCTIOII

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

:

frH Estimates

Shade River ·
Ag. se vice

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Co~crete &amp; Block Work,
.Blown Insulation

lli2·2772

For All Your Home
lmcrovement Naede

Nutrena Hunters
de Dog Food
$6.75/50 I ltag
Nutrena Weste n.-Eti&amp;e
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lit. ltilg
S rtn Seeds 8 Ferttltzer

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

Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand a,nd Dirt

949·2249
Racine, Ohio

'

.

We Service All Mak:es
Washers- Dryers
Ranges· Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

Ill I. lad

......,,lido
4/1WOO 1 mo pd.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
New Roof&amp; • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Eatlmatu

Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

Size- JD 550 G.

A.prU s~ao..e,.. Brins

Cell for minimum ·
rate
FI'N E1tlm1tN
Pond "tlmetee
welcome ·

740·992·7599

SELF STORAGE
21870 Ba•han ·
Road
Recine, Ohio

45n1

PlYing ""··~
per 1111'¥ ,
$300.0(1 Covvtlll
$500.00 Starbu~

740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

· Progra1llve top line.

7:00AM· 8 PM

Uc.lloo-50

·'

WI

SEAMLESS
GUTTERS&lt;',
~&amp;S.{/a

1·800·311·339.1

~

Hf.IOUnG and
EXCAVATinG

Centruteu Welel me

..

Albany,_Ohio

Auto loclif'Pottl
All replacement
. parts

Free Dellve;y

I 0 X 20 $(J0

740-742-9501

992-1717

. ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

"Take ~he pain our.-1
ofpainting- n
Let me do it for

• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
741).992·1671

Leave Message
After 6pm-614-985-41

7/22/l'FN

a

•• 7 8 4 3
• I 2

A 5 2

-

• 10

• Q J 10 8
Sou til
• K9
• Q85
+AKJB4

•••

••
: ~~~-----~----~~
l' BARNEY

IWty

Te~

41

,__
,

·wunla

Sfvn eh htt

54Computeruy
55 ltttnolo citY

Be sick

57 Tiniest

se Achy

DOWN

~thin culno

1 Bugle.,.,,

26
27
30
32

3

2 eun.tructlon
beam (2 wdo.)

Sun. epeech
Fedora, e.g.

Writer Christie
Emotional
shock

• J 10 9 7 4

•• 5
• A 7 4 3

: .......~

34 FonnerVP
Aockt1et.ter
. 35 Of a olckty
color
36 Had I IRICk
37 Dloeneumber

Venuo de -

4 -rlanda

5~o - Ata

I

8 Work Yrithout

- - (IAIM

Comp~~lllltve

ending

7 Worhot'o

chancee)
11 Ma. Cannon

olyte

12 wdl.)

12Sn-

a Prudent

partlcleo

• K 9 2

Soutll
INT

A LITTLE ITALIAN WITH

OIL AN' VINIIAR It ·

WeR

Paso

13 Mineral
18 That llltng'o
20 Acquires •
21 NOl l! H I '
22 Publishing .

blunders .
Comic Carvey
24 The Beach ·
Boya••·--:

23

Around"

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

YOU'LL SPOIL
THAT OL' .ALII

North
3 NT .

25

,
28 tn 1 rrenzled·

East
All pass

olllte

J9 Prepares

(oheepokln,

Opening lead: ??

P,dl. .

e.g.)
31 Oye
Ingredient
36

Opening leads

BuUdoo"r &amp; Bodchoe
Service;
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Siteo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Sytlenu &amp;
Utilitie•

.l kft/Oyl IT TAt:fS MOti~Y TO
\
MAICe MONfY, BUT
l&gt;Of6 IT At,Y/ AY6

Til PREPAUTION

tMVfTO

g(jrJer CUiu

TA~t

tltiN&amp;

TO

MA~f

.!ttuun.tttra .Sttflfl:u

317 N; 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760 ·
740 -992 -1818
Compie1111 Accountinf

•

$0Mf0Nf

••

•

-

&amp;L.Sf'S1

4·24

&amp; Ta..t: S111rvkfl•

C.R . King - C. D. Gater
25 Years E ertence

:...Vt:EellffES(Ei!: FINN..L'( LET f'l'i.""'
.-.._~- 1\\~

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO;
PEOPL&amp;S SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL

,..

M-1 ~:;1 ~E

...
&amp;EI\ C:i.EJ.t! WII.O

WE~~ PIJ..'(I~C:&gt;

WoE /It Til£ &amp;.LL
wcr."'' [TOOK

01\, Tl\£1\'£ w~~ t-10

eMf_ 1~"-T D~'( .

7

v~ct!

SERVICES

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

· Box 189 ·

lftl

..

41

till

EACH ONC. t:!O METIC:·
.ULOU!&gt;LY IWID · CRAFTED,

SIGNED

&amp;Y '(0UtlS TRUL'&lt;!

~

I

'

0.

:'PEANUTS

:~
· --~--------.. ~---._~------~~~
j
MUST ee A STRAN6E COUNTR'(..
EVe~ TIME THE'f HAVE 1\N ELECTION
. VIOLINS Sf(EAK OUT••

42 Dopreosed

43 Shedlo _
44 Norwegian.

copllel

48 Challenge ·
47 Egyptian
goddeoo

•

41 Fuel

"' .

53 Caviar

••

50 "Gl'IDh"lf!ol
52 Cut down ... ,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

• ,.•

by Lull Clmpoe

.

C I t My CiP1or ~ orw CIHiod ham quota- by lomouo poopo, put one!
,
. . -.Each-In l1o clpho&lt;- f&lt;li onothor.
•.

Todlfl en.: 8 equals P

'KTY

JYOMYK

ALC

TNKY

LE

INXNDIXD

E I G .y

KTY

UYYB

KL

KTY

EM L I

NMY · CXZYOIZYZ : ' -

DCAJ
ESGY

e· J

FTL
F T L

ONJYA

JKYXDYW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ."What rna!teo Christ's teechlnge dlfflcuh lo that they
obligate ua'to do 1011111hlng 1110ut them,'- John J. Wille

TIAT DAILY d.~ '1) Jih.l puzzu• P\,!;0 ~"U ~..
....4

ltr CLAY

/) 'Cl ~Q: 1 WOlD
'b P&lt;ro · "••

I. POI&amp;AN

.

Roorrange lottert of
0 four
tcr~~mblod words

. low 10 form four simple
,--·

Eleven, he will know that the
eight isn't West's fourth -highest:
Subtracting eight (the value of the
card led) from II tell s East that
there should be only three cards
higher than the eight in the other
three hands. Yet East can see four
card s higher than the spade eight:
dummy 's queen, jack and 10, and
his ace. So West has led top of
nothing, not fourih-highest.
With those strong red suits in
the dummy; it is logical for East
to win the first trick with the ·
spade ace and switch to th'e club
queen. Here that works well, net·
ting t.he first five tricks.

r!AGAZINE~ \

NU!15£~Eb, MD

Abner'•
c....,lor

WOti:IS. E

~.;....,--

·1-T--T-:

If East applies the Rule of

I'M GOIII6 TO SEU. 'EM,
JU!&gt;T Ltk.E Tt:IE ONE!&gt;
WU S.EE

...

Actor Aida
"Charge"

llllr1
40 A Fonda

B v"i'uiLLIP ALDER

This week, let's have a look at
opening leads, For the first two
days, there will be some comments on general approaches,
starting with no-trump contracts.
Usually, you lead from your
longest suit. You hope to establish
. the long cards, get back in, and
cash the winners that declarer cannot ruff. Yet there is an i mportant
aspect to this , approach: If YO!!.
lead fourth· htghest from your
longest and strongest, you should
have at least one honor in the suit.
With no honor, lead the top card
if the top two are touching .(for
example, the nine from 9-8-6-53), or the second-highest if~ top
two are not touching (for example, the seven from 9-7-6-5-3) .
West didn't obse.rve this principle, leading che spade four.
Understandably, East won with
the ace, then returned the spade
five, the higher of two remaining
cards. Yet South took I 0 consecutive tricks : two spades, three
hearts and five diamonds.
West should have led the sp,acle ..
eigbt.

.

Guy

u-~+-4-~-+~ · 27~
covering

33

\_;.:

{.

+Q9732
• 6 5
Eut

jweat

I

Middleport, 9hlo 45760
Local • 843-5284
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final E!xpenS!)s; College, Retirement,
·
1
•
·
- Emergency funds; Mortgage; ·
WANTED .. Fu11 ·ttme
oyment 10. your own
MaJor
· Med'1ca1• Niursmg
· H. om~ .
~
. emp
·
horne ·as a Horne Servtces Worker wtth Buckeye
----·
Community Services. We provid.e salary plus ·j
110 H1lp Wantld
ben~ fits and a daily room and board rite·. You '.!
provide a home, guidance and friendship in a ;
family atmosphere. Requires ability to teach ' 1
,
personal living skill and a commitment. to the ~
growth and .de.velopment of an individual with~
mental retardation . Home must be in Meigs ~
COMGIIAr.ter
County. I interested, contact Cecilia at
;
•
A WIIID Wolt"D COMPANY
l-800,531-2302 . E ual op ortunity Employer . .
'
Charier Communications is seeking a Syetem
Technician .1 for its plant in Point Pleasant, wv. the
WANTED: Buckeye Community Services has a
successful candidate will, under general supervision,
part-time position available in Meigs County:
be responstble lor prevent1ve maintenanc~ and repair
hrs/Wk: 8 am Sat lhru 8 am Mon;
of the plant Including trunk and distribution &amp;¥Stem,
j!&gt;erlorm routine maintenance and repairs while
required . Position requires teaching personal
providing
technical support for service relatecj
community skills to· two Individuals with
problems. Must have NCTI Service Technician Course
retardation. The work environment Is informal
or equivalent and at least 2 yrs experience 1111
rewarding. The requirements are: high
Service or Installer RefiEIIr Technician. A valid driver's
dlploma/GED, .valid driver's license, three
license and satisfactory driving record are required. ;
Salary commensurate with experience, exCellent
good driving experli'mce and adequ1aat~~en~~!~~~~;
benefits.
.
insurance coverage. B.C.S. offers Q
Submit resume to:
In the field of MR/DD. Starting
Charter Communlclllons
$5.50/hr.
.
Vacation/sick
benefits.
1737 Elat Seventh Street
.
applicants need to specify position· of interest
Parkersburg, WV 26101
Attn: M. Schultz
1se110 resume to:
EOE
P.O. Box804
Drug/Smoke fr941 workplace
Jacklon, OH 48640-0804.
"\'.
All applications must be post-marked by 4/28/0~)!J
Equal Opportunity Employer.. •
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Lefs wait a wee\&lt;
and diG him lAP .

•'

. ·'

Advertise in ·
this space for
I
· $25 per
month.

atepte
citY
51 Expl'lU fn

48

19 .- - r l &lt;
20RIM11ha . (f11celrt-)

• AK3

(740) 992·3111

LINDA'S r
PAINTING

17

~10

HOWARD
EXCAVAIING CO.'
'''P"ftrt"•r rtf

'Toll Free

· Interior
FREE ESTIMATES , ·
Before 6p.m. •

11

•'

.••,..........

10 X I 0 $rHJ

'l

'•

For the·best deals in the area
for Pre·owned cars &amp; trucks

, Rll Ouallly

.,..,...

14 Wonty
15 Chalkboard

II

•'
:'

992·3490

HARJWEI.I .
S'IDRAGE
s·c RL 7

!

RIVERVIEW
MOTORS

Trade-In's Welcome
Your last stop car shop

Free E•tinutiea

alupwatch
• Downpot1'1

· 12
.or~
_.,_....

~

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovei•:Sand • Topsoil•
All Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Servkes
(740) 9~2-3410

40large .....
focMd bird
42 Loelw, e.g.
48 "RoH - -

I UMde

ALDER

,._,.to Prwtaua Puzzle

31 Sptsh

ACROSS

PHILLIP

.,-

Across from Super-America in lower Pomeroy ·

VIOLENGE

!mEAKSOUT

a

f

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

740·992· 7945

.

Service ·

Dozer for Hire
Rate $50 per hour

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement WindOws
•
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENml
'' FREE ESTIMATES

Dump Truck

I ~t.ondling timber large!
or
tracks. Top
prices paid also.

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

Dailey
Trucking

"We're Back"

'

I

.,.'

S A YE T

I' I

1:~

to her obnoxious date, 'Til ·
forgive you for being so rude, " she
~ sighed , "after all you were just
1
.._.--'--...._..__,_....J~
being - • - - • - ••.'

I I I'

I

I

T H R u E N·

I.

.....-...,,.-TI....;.,-1.;..
· . ;;l..,.;il.;..,j,....-4 Q
·.
L ......I.I--.L.--I.L-..1..--L.._,

Comploto !Ito chuckle quotod
by filling In tho milling worcb
you develop from atep No. 3 below.

:~49~r~~~~~\~r~Y~~s~:a~Rt~~-RE-s~lr'-,T.I2_,r~,-r.l•~.~,.r-~l'~-~1~'~1'~· ~1

To get a current weather
report, check the
'

TR0 0 M

5

. SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS
Lesson - Baton - Ebony · Weasel • BE the BOSS
It's wise to remember that the person who knows how
will alWays have a job. The person who knows why will
3lways BE the BOSS.

.

Sentinel

•
•
'

J

I MONDAY
.

SERVICE
.
ADVISOR

.

.

Mu1 Flowero/1 ·

'

Exc~pti.imal

opportunity for
the right candidate.
should have a
track record and be kn~lwl•~dK&lt;eab•le[l
in all aspects of service operatl()ns.
Must be organized and
oriented. Customer satisfaction
must be top priority. Appli~nt
m~st
Jtave ~;:omputer literacy.
Performance based

Are Your Plant Beds
Reedy?
Weeding: Mulching:
Prunlng:Edglng
·Planting and Retaining
Walls

Free Estimates .
Mike Sharp
740-849-311011

ALZHEIMER'S FACT #5
Changes In personality:
. P.eople's personalities
ordinarily change somewhat
with age. But a person with
Alzheimer's disease can
change drastically, becoming
e&gt;dremely confused,
suspicious, ·or fearful.
If you have questions, call the
Alzheimer's professionals at
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
more information.

Advertise
in. this
space fo·r
s1so per·
month.

•,

Continue today to draw into an

endeavor lho,. who e&lt;&gt;utd help
runher a cause you'd like to promote . Don't exclude clubs or

Thesday, April ~. 2000
Bonds wilh the one you love

can be areatly Olrenathened in the
year lhead. II there hils been •
void In your life, II may now soon
, be
~eftlled .
'
• TAURUS
(April 20-May :10)
Sh0111d you feellr neceuaey tciclay
•
•
to Ult mort UMIIIYtnetl than
you'd UKUilly UM to adYingt I
• . penonallllltlltt, do 10 with 1 dtb ·
humor to lt!Mft tht !tlnl· 'fey·
•• or
ln1 to patoh up 1 bmlctrt tonttlnct?
• 111t AitJD.CIIilh MJ!Ghmllktr tin
htlp y01iunailttntl whtt to do to
m.U tht ttiiiiOitlhlp work, Mall

~

.•

.

(74b) 44~·7150
. $cenlc Hills:
''The Alzheimer's EXIlerts"

800• 964·3673-

.

•

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~~~rMr~/.~~~!'!'!1tM~~

r11 II lillian, New. Dnl, NY
10156
OIMINilMIY 21 ·lunt 20) A·
llitlt prl¥10y Wflh tht OM ~011 .
lol'l "" ~o ttltlth totll)' In 1\trthtrlnl your ttllllonthlp, Don't
allow an lnttrloptl 10 lntNdt
UfM!II y011r tPIOf·
CAI'ICIJI. (lint 21·luly 22l

la'i•sroups ·· one misht tie perfeel for you. ·
·
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Keep

your mind on the tasb at hand
today ,no lllllller how hard or
unallrocdvettiey ure lor yootodo.
If you 1et !ldetrocked by hobbie•
or the like, your encraieK will be

mlldirocted,
VIROOIAua. 2~·Sepr. 22)AK '
101111111 you don't pu•h your luck
bty011d NtiiOftablt limit• totlllr,·
dtvtlo~mtlnt• thut tnuy bt A1111 •
chancy could tum 0111 quilt !UC·
...rully. It amatt, itat fooll•h ..
LIIRA (ltpl. 2Jo0t!t, 23)
IIMttlflllllctit pioJtoll-ttd lht
ltou• ••vttlll y011r allln OOtlli
tum out to lit wry =ln1 to tht
lyt, Tht tll'oll II
In do 10
will lit well wotth YOtl! tltN.
ICOJI.PIO (0.1, M•No11 22)
Tht type or •• tlllllfll you ml1h1

J!OIMII IOU)&gt;. 1111)' hlw 111011 ta

ilo with your de-thM y011r
phftltetappe~rwt. Mtmi!M or
tht ~Itt pndtr will niMI 11111
~~ lltrlltfYf,
IA011TAJI.IUI (Nov, 2~·0.0 ,

211 Because you're likely to be
very strongly ff'!Oiivated today, lhe
probabitilies 1'1r material acquisi·
rion are very good. Go ofter what
)'OU truly want .
r~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
191 You could have an extra da•h

of boldnm and ncllementaboul
you today, in addition to your cU!·
tomary pe110nality Dllributet •• oil
of which make you mo~e chorl•·
matic: .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. !9)
While olhtill ml1h1 lanoro the
· pllaht of an unfonunute peroon.
· yourcon~CiouaiKn'lllkety to per·
mit r,ou to do ao. Ta your cNdil,
you naoma throuah for thl• per•

110n.

PilCH~ (l'tb. 21~Mulllh 20)
lomtont with whom you 'l't
·~ Jnuly a!lltllllutttllllld who ha•
do,. •omtthlnl notublt Nltnily .
would wtluomtl ynur oammtntl,
II will puy olf It you 11k1 thtlln11
to complllllllllthl• lntflvlduul.
Alllll (Mulllh 21•Aprll ' l9)
ICHp bu1lnm mutln1• mlcily
bu•ln111 loduy, und dntl't utt11npt
tn hrln1 IOIIIIIIIIII•Itltl Into tht
lflllllllon, ThoM ll1ht diYII'IIIon•
could .undormlnt iny mlou1
talk1, .
. ·

~

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�' Page Be ·• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.Hlp: $0s; Low: 401

'

TODAY'S S-COREB.OARD
,
,.

:no-oy.-

~·- lied 3-3

Jimmy Green
Jus1iri Leonard

St. t.oolo 8, San Jote 2. -

It:. .:. . . . . ....... ,,. t J7

Billy Mallfal
Brad Ekler

Scolt~rron

Slll

- - ....................... 12
7 .832
1/2
:........................... 12
8 .eoo
,
.Mlnlleoi ........................ IO
8 .~
2
·l'hilodolphlll ....................8 11 .353 5 112
.•
COntrol DMolon
.... l.o&lt;i. ......................... 12
7 .832
Clnci!lnoli .............. :......... &amp; 10 ...W 3 1/2
.......... ....................... 7 11 .388 41/2
.......................... 8
11 .353
s
Pittlbulgh .········· .............8 12 .333 5 112
Chicago .......................... 7 14 .333
6
WootDIYIOion
1.01 MgeiH ................... 11
8 .847
ArilOI18 .... :.................... 12
7 .532
Son Dlogc&gt;... ................... tO . II .15211
2
~ado ... .................... 10
10 .!00 2 1/2
Son Fnuteloco..................7 · 11 .389 4 112
Seturdly'a Ol:mee
N.Y. Melt 8, Chicago Cubs 3, 111 game
N.Y. Mels 7, Chicago Cuba 6, 2nd game
LDo AngOios 16, Cincinnati 2
San Diogo 8. Hou11o118, 10 innl"li•
San Francilco 8, Arizona 6
Florida 4, Philadelphia 2
Milwaulcoe 7, Mon1real3
Atllnla 4, PiltabCJrgh 2
Colorado 7, St L.ouit 6
lundiY'I Gamee
Florida • . Phlledeipnill 2
At10111a 5, Pl1toburgh 3
N.Y. Mots 15, Chicago Cubs 6
LDo Angoleo 11, Clnolnneti 3
Montreal B. Mllwaulcoe 4
San Diego 11, Houaton 10
San Francilco 12, Arizona 7
. St l.oult 8 , Colorado 3, 6 1/21MIC1111, rain
,
TOdly'tGaLos Angel" (Dfelfort 1·1) 11 N.~ Mota
.p.lahomeo 1·0), 1:10 p.m·.
COlorado (Aa1aclo 1·2) a1 St. Louio (Kilo 3·
1), 1:10 p.m.
·
• Philadelphia (Wo~ 1-1) a1 Florida (Feman·
,dez 2-2), 7:05_p.m. .
TUHdlly'• BilrMI
Colorado at Montreal, 7:05 p.m.
Arlzonal1 Philadelphia, 7:05p.m.
San FranciiCO at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
san Diogo at Pmaburgh, 7:05p.m.
Cincinnati at N.Y. Mott, 7:10p.m.
Los Angeles at Atlanta, 7:40 p.m.
Chicago Cuba at Houeton, 8:05p.m.
· • Milwaukee at St. Louis, 8:10 p.m.
AmwlconLNgue
Eaotom DlvlolOn

111m

em.
.708

WI

8 .888

t

8 .600

2

Jill I.

'New Vorl&lt; ................ ....... 12

5

t~more ... .......... .......... t1

aton ............................ 9
Toronto ..........:... ............ .. ;

Eaet.m Co;•fw•.a.
lndllln1 va. MllwiUIItl
Sundly, April Zl
lndlane 88, Mllwaukeo 85, lndiailo laeds
Hries 1.0
· ·
Thlirodo)', April 27
Mllweukee at lndlane, 8 p.m.
Soturdly, Apo'IIH

Sundoy, April Zl
.
New VoB D2. Toronto 88, New York l88dS
aeries 1.0
·
WICI-,Apo1128
Toronto at New York, If p.m.
•
Sundoy, April 30 .
Now Yor1c at Toronto, 12:30 p.m.

Chllrkme n. Pttllldtlphll
Soturdoy, Ap~l 22
Philadelphia 92, ChOrlotte 82, Philadelphia
leeds series 1-0
Mandlv, Ap~l24
Phlktdelphla at ChSrfotte, 8 p.m.
,rldty, April 2t
ChSr1otte at Phlled~phla. 8 p.m.

Mondov,Moy1

Charlotte at ptjladelphia, TBA. if necessary
Thuledoy, Moy 4
Philadelphia~ at Chaf1otte, TBA. if necessary

WHt•m Conference

LA. lek... V I . - ·
Sundly, Apo'll23
LA. Lekert 117, Sacramento 107, LA. lak·
0&lt;11 lead series 1-0
Thurocloy, April %7
•
8acramen1o at LA. L.akers, 10:30 p.m.
Sundoy, April 30
LA. Lekerol1 Sacramento, 5:30p.m.
Tlleedoy, Moy 2
LA. Lakers. at Sacramento, TBA, If neces-

681\&lt;

·

F~ay,

TuMcaly'e Gllme

Ottawa at Toronto, 1 p.m., If necasMry

wootom

eon-...

81. loula n . hn J -

ll L I fll liE liA

NY-NJ ......................... 2 4 0
Miami ..................... .... 1 2 3
Now t;;ngland ..... ..........t 2 3
D.C. ........................... 1 4 0
Ct~tnl DMoton
Callas ............ ............. 3

a

o

8
4
7
9

12
5
B
t4

9

8

11

6

Tempe Bay ..................3 3 o . 9 tO
Chicago .... .. ................ 2 3 t
7 1t
COlumbus ...................2 3 1 7 8
Waatem Dlvlalon
Kansas City ... ....... ....... 5 o · t 18 t 2
LDsAngeles ................4 o 2 14 14
Cc&gt;orado ....................3 3 0 9 . 8
sanJose .....................2 2 1 1 8

Portland vL Mlnneeota
sunc~~y, Aprtl 2:1
Portland 91, Mlnnt10t1 88, PorUand leads
series 1-0
l¥~n01doy,~t28

Minnesota at Ponland, 10:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 30
Portland at Minnesota. 3 p.m.
Tu.doy, Moy 2
Portland at Minnesota, TBA., if neceuary
Thurldoy, Moy •
Mtnneso1a at Portland, TBA, Wnecessary
SMI Anlonlo vo. Phoenix
S11urdoy, ~I 22
Phoenix 72, San AntonkJ 70, Phoenix leads

Son-·

Tuudoy, April :IS
Phoenix 11
9:30 p.m.
a.tvrdoyApo'IIH
san Antonio at~-~ p.m.
1\rudly, M 2
' '
sen·Antonio a1 Pho&amp;mc, ~ ~ -.ary

Thurocloy, Moy 4
Phoenbc at San Amonlo, TBA, 11 necena.ry

WOUWN'T YOU II.'JIIER BE

ON THE TRAIL RIGHT NOW?

a

LUSH FAIRWAYS,

13

VE~;

•
e
11

for a tie.

.
Sl1urdly'a Gomea
COlorado 3, Columbus 2
New Yori&lt;-Now Jersey 3. OC Unhed 2. OT

Jam

Buffalo (Indians) .............
PaW1uclcot (RedSox) ........ 7
Screnton (Phllllils) ........... 6
Syracuae (BiuoJays) ........ 5
Ottawa (Expos) .. ..... ....... ..4
Aoehea1er(Orloles) ......... 5

BALMY BREEZES.

378 HOLES OF WORLD·C!ASS

\

.

fill.

ALL OF

o,_111oroopon.......,
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Anal scores
Sunday from tho $3 million Groat" Greensboro
Chrysler Cillealc, olayed on 1h8 7,062-yard,
par-72 Forest Qaka Country Club:
Hal SU110n
' 87-64-72·71 -274
Andrew Magee
70-88-88·7t - 277
Milk Ceicavocchla 72·70·7HI5 - 278
Dudley Han
72-117.fl9·10- 278
IJoug Dunekoy .
67-7t ·72-71 - 29t
71·7t-88·10-29t
CMsPerry
Jonethanl&lt;aye
71-117-7t ·72 - 28t
Jeeper Pamovlk
89-89-74-10-292
Kenny Perry
73·70-89-10- 292
SCOtt Verplank
88-74-70·72 - 292
Shlgekl Muuyama 7t-119-70·72 - 292
Omar Uresti
87-72-89-74- 292
CraiQ A.Spance
73-86-75.fl9- 293
Bob 'Estae
88-72·73-70- 293
!larry Choeemen 70-88·73·74 - 293
Tom lohman
73-70-71-70- 284

· PGA
ftD111Pip81

his previous three rounds at Forest Oaks, yet carded the best 18 of the day to dOH at t O..arider 278.
· He birdieol three of' his final four hole! f&lt;ir'hia best
round of th'e year and best finish since he tied for
ihird in the 1999 Canon Greater Hartford Open.
: Magee got off to a terrible start off the tee. His
first two drives found the right rough. However, he
"'as able to scramble and salvage par before closing

~E GREEN

1111.

.539 3 1/2
8
7
.6
8

4
8
11
13

w.etem Dtvi~Jon

Indianapolis (Brewers) ... tO
Columbus (Yankees) .......8
I.Dulavllla (Redo) ............to
Tole® (11gero) .................4

GOLF-AND WE WON'T TAKE

OUT OF YOUR WAU.ET.

.786

. Southern Dlvlalon
Durham (DoviiRays) ...... .. 9
ChSrlotte (WMeSox) ....... 7
,Nor1olk (Mot8) .......... ..... ... 7
Richmond (Btavea) ..........4

GREErois.

4

.429
.4t7
.400

5
5
5
.385 5 t/2

.692

.539

2
.389 41/2
.235
7

1.800.9,t9.4444
www.rtjgolf.com

5 .687

4 .867
7 .586
9 .308

8uftdly•a oa,....

''

t/2
t

5

Screntor&gt;WIIlcii·Barre 2, Bullalo 0
Chilriono 7,Aictlmond 3

DUrham 7, NDrfol&lt; I
Tolado 5, I.Dulavllle 2
Rochestel' 3, Pawtucket 1, 1st game
P~uckat 3, RoenesttH' 1, 2nd game
Syracuaa at ottawa, 2, ppd., weather

Tadoy'o Glltnfll

Indianapolis Bt COlumbus

. Louisville at Totedo
Ottawa at ScrantorvWilkas-Barre

.

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J.

•

I

REED

MIDDLEPORT - Village
Council will seek grant funds
to pave a portion of Mill Street
this summer .
A resolution authorizing
Mayor Sandy lannarelli to ft.!e
a grant application was
approved when council met in
regular session Monday.
lannarelli said the proposed
project, to be submitted
.through the Community
Development Block Grant
formula program, woul&lt;j pave
MiD Street from the corporation limit to South Fifth
Avenue.
It would complete a countylevel project to pave Bradbury
Road from the intersection of
State Route 7 to the corporation limit on Middleport Hill.
The resolution was approved
.
on Ian emergency baSJS.
The cost of the project will
be determined before the project application is submitted to
Buckeye Hills/ flocking Valley
Regional Development District for consideration.
In other business, Councilman Roger Manley reported
~Jn the success of last week's
• village cleanup-.Worlcing"ClOS'e .
ly with Ge11eral Refuse Service, village crews coUected
and disposed of .I 02 tons of
refuse, not including regular
trash pickup.
Residents ~ere encouraged
to place unwanted items at
curbside for free coUection in
an attempt to improve the
appearance of private properties in the community.
Council
members and
lann.arelli, street supervisor
Kenny Madden, and those
attending last night's meeting
agreed that the event was sue- .
cessful.
Manley said that 13
"rolloff" trailers were filled to
capacity, at a cost to the viUage
of$1,938.The village coUected
350 tires at a cost of$175, and
General Refuse Service, which
hauled the material away, will
be paid $97 5.
Manley said the village has
closely examined any problems
with the event in preparation
for next year, noting that the
viUage will likely do pickups
by neighborhoods
on given
« ·
days next year.
Madden said that the new
village dump trucks were especially useful during the project,

12

NOTE: Three points tor a wtn and one point

Llllltva.-

1&amp;1'1111~

6
B
3

San Jose 5, Callas 0

passed baD and DeAnys Reyes' wild pitch, and
hung their heads after Green's two-run homer to
center made it 11-2.
By the bottom of the inning, the fans were booing every misstep, even razzing a ball boy who let a
foul grounder scoot through his leg;.
. Carlos Perez (2-1) gave up nine hits and two runs
in five inning;. Green threw Dante Bichette out at
the plate on Sean Casey's two-out single to right to
end the fifth with Los Angeles up 3-2.
. Cincinnati's 'pitching staff brought the NL's highest ear11ed run average (5.87) into the game al!d
lived up to it.Villone, who lasted only 2 2-3 inning;
dunng a 13-9loss to San Francisco on Tuesday, routinely feU behind on batters, going to three-hall
counts on 11 of the first 22 he faced.
· It caught up with Villone in the sixth, when the
D'odgers got rolling on Adrian Beltre's RBI double,
Santiago's passed ball and Hundley's sacrifice fly.

·.

!um

Loe Angelat 2, Miami o
W'*'ndoy'o Gomoo
san Jose at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.

fmmPip81

•

BY BRIAN

..'

e..wm Dlvl81on

Chicago 1, New England t, tie
Kansas City t, Tampa Bay 0

Reels

•.

•

Mljor Leeguo Socoer

Moyl

Ulah 104, Seattloll3, Utah leads Blfille t ·O
fllondoy, Aprtl 24
S8Bttla at Utah, 10:30 p.m.
SOiurdey, Ap~l H
Utah at saattle, !:30 p.m.
Wednndoy, May 3
Utah at Seanla, TBA, ~ neeessary
Frtdoy, May 5
Saettle al utah, TBA, Wnec-ry

1\rudly'a Ga..,.

Todoy'a Qama

72-71-88 - 211
72-71-68 - 21 t

Sacramento at LA L.akers, TBA, If neces·

MiMeeota at N.Y. Yankees, 7!05 p.m.

. Toronto at Ottawa, 1 p.m.

..

69·70.71 - 210

so Cents

I

CDBG
project

208

Lanny Wadkins

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

~pproves

208

209
210
2t 0
210
68·71 -71 - 210

Hometown Newspaper

M'port

~ring Fever

207
207
208
208
208

7t-87-72 - 2t 0
71-72-88 - 211

Meigs County"s

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SOI~. Ap~l22

TOdly'aG.,._

OT ·(Toronto leeds

204
205
205
205

68-89-72 72·71-67 73-70-87 65-76-89 -

Jim Thorpe

sary

Minnesota (Mitton 1.0) at N.Y. YankHa

""'f.

t97
202
202
203

Kerm~ Zarley
Jim Albus

'

Volume 50, Number 227

68·71 ·70 - 209

Tom Jenkins

e

v-

Tuoedoy, Moy 2

8, t&lt;o11111o City 5
·
Oakland 3. Balilmore 2, t1 innl"li•

r::,:to•~=

BUFFALO BILL8-Signed DB Aaka\1
Ce11i1o on tho 15 &lt;IIY dillbled list, · Adamo, DB DaYid Brr,d, T JQn Carmoo,
., AprM 18. INF P - 0.... from
Ponland oltho EoOiom Leogue.
l¥R Kwamo CoYII LB Dulttfl Cohtn. T
~ AS'TII08--Ai:tlvmtd RHP Scott , Shena Cook, liB Juon Corle, FB· Phillip
Elarton from lie d - llll. ~ OF Crosby, ' C8 Reggie Durden, TE twan
Glen - 1 0 Ntw 011-. ollhe PCL
Gustafoon, CB Joy Hill, CB Courtnoy
SAN DIEGO PADRES--ClpliQned OF Mike Jackson,, WR' Corey Jones. 1-B Fred .
Dorr 10 Leo
«the PCL Activeted c car- Jones, LB Keith Kelsey, DE Jarrett Pr"Olot H.....- from tho 15-dey dlsat;ed list
cell , C Spencer RUev., F=B Josh .Roth , ~B
Phil Stambaug'!: WR Cotey Sullivan, G
FOOT1IAI.l .
Mike Toaaw, Dr Nate Williams and CB
Hollktnol ,_II Leaguo
Kanyana Wright

New York at Toronto, TBA, ff necessary
Frtdty, IItty 5
Toronto at New York. TBA, tf necessary

CNcego Withe Sox D, De1rolt 4

, Toronto 2, Ottawa
hrieo, 3·2)

Ed Douot&gt;erry
Dana ailigley
Andy Nonh
John Mehaffey
All on Doyle
John Jaa&gt;bs
Doug T-1
Dave Eichelberger
Roy VUcinich
Wehor Hall
Gibby Gilbert
Bob Murphy
Jim Ahem

t-o

tt.w York VL Toronto

s-.

-Coni-

67-88-84 69.e&amp;-85 66-87-89 66-87-IIS 66-86-70 89-88-88 89-87-89 88-70-89 10·72-85 70-IIS-89 70· 7&lt;·64 72-72-84 70·72-IIS 89-89·70 65-73-70 -

Dave Stoclrton

WICI-,Moy 3
Miami 11 Detrof!: TBA, ~ necessary
.rrtdoy;Moy 5
Deiroh 11 Miami, TBA; ~ necessary

Mi..._s,r.... 4

.

Lerry Nelson
HaJe Irwin
Bruce FleiSher
David lundslram
Gil Moroan
Jim Coli&gt;er1
Hugh Baioc:dli

Thu-, lhy4

Sundly'a CllimM
Tampa Bay t, Anaheim 0
N.Y. Van"""" 10, Toronto 7
Cl811elond et Booton, 2, ppd., cain

Ntdlonal Hoolwy ........

Ntdlonlllelgue
FLORIDA MARUN 5-Piacld INF lull

Pawtucket at BuffalO
Richmond at Durham
Rochester at Syracuse
Qnly gemeoocheduled
Tuwdey'aGemw
Indianapolis at COh.mbus

Louisville at Toledo
Norfolk at ChMotte

Ottawa at Scrantorvwmces-Barre
Pawtucket at Buffalo
Richmond at Dt.fham
Rochester at Syracuse

B
ED

R CARE
ON 2000 ,

WILL .BE HERE FRIDAY,

BAsEBALL
Amtrtcon(,.._
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Optioned OF
M&lt;:Karahrl&amp;tensen to Charlone of the lmematlonal
- ue. ActlvatecllNF Herbert Perry.
DETR IT TIGER5-Piacod RHP Brian

Reyes later let in a run with the Reds' 19th wild
pitch in 19 games, most in the majors.
.
Ken Griffey Jr., bothered by a sore back in the first
two games of the series, went 1-for-5 with a checkswing infield single. He was 2-for-11 during the
·
· three games.
Notes: Los Angeles is 1,000-973 against the
Reds. The only team with more wins over Cincinnati is San Francisco, which has 1,086 .... Kevin
Brown, who broke the small finger .on his right
. hand while trying to bunt on April 8, threw without problem again Sunday and is s~heduled to
return against Atlanta on Tuesday.. :.The sixth inning
was the Dodgers' biggest since they scored nine runs
agaimt Chicago on Ap~il 24, 1998. It was the biggest
inning allowed by the Reds since they gave up eight
to the Giants on July 24, 1998 .... Orel Hershiser,
who tied the major league record by hitting four
Houston Astros on Wednesday, relieved in ~he eighth
and hit Boone .... The RJ,ds wore their all-red caps
at home for the first time since 1992 and went back
to red sleeves for the first time since the 'second
game of the season. \

within two of Sutton, who three-putted the third
hole from 20 feet.
Magee gave a shot back ·on the next hole, leaving
his first chip in the high rough for a bogey. .
Sutton moved in front by four shots on No. 6 ·
wi.th an 8-foot birdie putt. But Magee responded a
hole later, hitting a beautiful approach shot within 6
tete for a birdie as each · player made the turn at
even-par 36.
Minutes later, Sutton puUed back in front by three ·
by matching birdies with Hart. Magee also was
putting the heat on with birdies at Nos. I 0 and 11 ,
before"fading at the fateful 1Sth hole.

,, .

'

•'

Victoria jackson
apparently died
ofan overdose

BY BRIAN

J.

&gt;

I

I
·I

.

that her husband later , confessed
to law enforcement investigators
that he had forced his wife to
ingest a number of different medications .

Lentes said that Victoria Jackson
was disabled, and was confined to
bed.
BY BRIAN J. REED
App earin g before C ounty
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - A Pom eroy Court Judge Patrick H. O 'Brien
man was arraigned Monday on a Monday,Jackson indicated that he
charge of aggravated murder fol- would retain legal counsel.
The charge of aggravated murlowing the Easter Sunday death
der carries a possible penalty of
of his wife.
Michael Jackson , 31, has been 20 years to life in prison. Lentes
charged in Meigs County Court said the case will go to the Meigs
in the death of his 46-year-old County grand jury when it convenes Thursday.
wife,Victoria Jackson .
Pomeroy Police Chief Jeflrey
A preliminary hearing in
Miller said Jac kson was charged County Court has been set for
after his wife died at Veterans Friday.
O 'Brien set Jackson's bond at
Memorial Hospital in the early
evening S1mday.
$500,000 cash . Lentes requested
Miller said the police depart- the half-million dollar bond
ment received a telephone call because, he said, Jackson has an
Sunday eveniu g from a family extensive criminal history, includmember ofVictoria Jackson, ask- ing a number of theft and buring that th e police "check in on glary convictions, as well as a past
her...
prison sentence.
Wl\en Patrolman Mark Proffitt
In addition to those offenses,
arrived at the ·Jacksons' Lincoln which took place in other coun,
Heights
med- ties, .I.entes saia that h'is office has
, .
. ' home, emerge'fwy
.
teal persol)nel were at the scene, investigated a number of comafter. an, '?v~~fs~ call had been plaillts against Michael Jackson
relating •ro: the care of his wife,
phiced·m Meig; County EMS.
Vi ctoria Jac;kson apparently and the handling of his wife's
MliRtiER SUSPI!!CT- Michael Jackson of Pomeroy
in Meigs County Court on Monday on aggra· died of an overdose of prescrip- money.
Jackson remains in the Meigs
vated murder charges. He is accused of murdering his wife, Victoria Jackson, on Easter Sunday. (Brian J. tion medication. Miller and ProsReed photo.)
.
ecuting Attorney John Lentes said County Jail.
. (

~community Waters'
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -, "We aU live downstream from
somebody, and someone else lives PQWnStream from us.
So it makes sense ~o take care ofwater in our backy.ud;'
That's ac£otding to Vicki Morrow, equcation specialist fur the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District, which is sponsoring Soil and Water Stewardship
Week,Aprii30-May 7.
The theme of this year's event is "Community
Waters." The focus of this year's national observance is
on the total watershed management approach to natural resource conservation:
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners Monday morning signed a proclamation recognizing the
Soil and Waten;hed S.tewardship Week.
A watershed is defined as an area ofland that sheds
water in1o a common water body, such as a river or
lake.ln Meigs County, some watersheds include Lead-.
'i ng Creek, Shade River and the Ohio River.
·"Developing a positive stewardship attitude is
important as we work together to maintain an adequate supply of clean. water," said Morrow. "Our local
consety.ttion district would like to help take the leadership to bring all interested groups and individuals
together to discuss how to improve the health of our
own watersheds."

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'

Pomeroy man
arraigned in
wife's death

Soil and Water Stewardship Week theme_

The Meigs SWCD is accepting applications for its
Logjam/Debris Removal Project, funded through
$142,000 from the · Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Soil and Water Conservation.
The money is to be useQ fur the remov;U of logjams
and other debris from streams. Landowners can apply
for fundi,ng on that project by ct?ntacting the Meigs
SWCD at 992-4282.
In addition, the Meig; SWCD recently hired Jim
Freeman as a wildlife/watershed specialist in part to
help coordinate stream recovery efforts in the Leading
Creek Watershed.
Modern conservation efforts are now focused on
ways to keep natural water supply systems clean, helping to keep down costs in water treatment facilities.
For example, farmers are no~ installing grassed
waterways and filter strips along their fields and
streants to prevent soil and nutrients from being
washed into the streams.
The technology is available to ensure a clean water
supply. The teal challenge, according to Morrow, is to
develop the collective community and political will to ·STEWARDSHIP WEEK - Vicki Morrow and Jim Freeman of the Meigs
get the j_ob done.
County Soil and Water Conservation District are pictured with Meigs
For information, call the Meigs SWCD during County Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton, Janet Howard and Mick Davbusiness hours at 992-4282. The office· is located at enport during the declaration of this Yreek as Soil and Water Stew3310 I Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
ardship Week. (Brien J. Reed photo)

Commi-ssioners f)K pay raise for public defenders

I

•THE DAILY SENTINEL
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
IF YOUR BUSINESS IS INTERESTED
IN PARTICIPATING .IN THIS SPECIAL
SECTION CALL:
992~21'55
MATT HASKINS, EXT. I 05 OR
DAVE HARRIS, EXT. I 04
BEFORE MAY 10 2000

Aprill5, 1000

•,•

maf11n.

Milwaukee at indiana, lBA. If neceuary

Teus 8, Mlmesota 3

Boston at TOIC81, 8:05 p.m.
. Tempe Bay 01 Kansas Cllty, &amp;·05 p.m
Baltimore 11 Chicago White Sox, 8:05 p.m.
Clavelond at 5aa111e, t0:06 p.m.
Toronto at Oeicland, 10:05 p.m.
: Ootrolt 01 Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.

PCL

286

Details, A3

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Anal scores Sunday
from the S t .4 miHion Las Vegas Senior Classic,
played on the 8,963-yarif, pcu-72 TF&gt;C al Sum-

Mondor, Moy 1

Mlamlva.Detrolt
Soturdly, April 22
Miami 95, Detroll85, Miami leads Hri"
1\rudly, April 25
De1rolt 11 Miami, 7ffim.
Sotu
, April 2t
Miami at Oel:mit, 12: p.m.

'69·73·73-7·1 -

tha t!kloy disabled i ot. Recalltd
· RHP D
Borl&lt;owstd from Toledo of the lntor·
natlanel
.
SEAn
MARINERS PlaCid RHP Fled·
dy Gllrcla on the l !kloy dillablod lhtt, llocallod
RHP Kevin Modaet from 1lJcoma of the PCL
TEXAS RAAGERS- Piacad INF Fronli
Catalanotto on lhe 15•day disabled list.
Recalled 3B M~o Lamb from Oklahoma of the

Lae v.po Banlor ScotM

Indiana at Mllwaul&lt;lla,.TBA, Wnecaesary

11 .450 4 112
11 .3811 5 112

(Clemens 1-1), t:05 p.m.
· . BostOn (R.Martlnoz 3.0) 11 Texao(RogO&lt;I t·
3), 8:05 p.m.
' Bahlmonl (Muulna 0-1) at Chicago ' WMo
j!lox (Eidrod 0-0), 8:05p.m.
Cleveland (Finley 1.01 at saemo (Meche at), 10:05 p.m.
• Toronto (Wells 2·1) 01 Oakland (Appior 3-1),
!0:05p.m.
: De1roi1 (Mlk&gt;kl 0-3) at Anaheim (HHI t-3),
10:05 p.m.

Davis Lovell!
Brian Hannlngot
Skip Kendall

Indiana at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.

Tamp&amp; Bay .......................7
Central Dlvlolon
Chicago .... .. .................. t2
6 .667
Cleveland ........................ 9
6 .eoo 1 t/2
MiMesota .. .....................9 11 .450 . 4
Kansas City ..................... 8 12 .400
5
De1roi1 ...... .......................4 t3 .235 7 t/2
WMIDiviOion
llaaltla ... ., ........ .............. 11
8 .847
Analiilm .........................9 10 .474
3
Oakland ..........................8
11 .389
4
· T""as ..................... .. .......7 11 .3811 4 t/2
&amp;Murdlv'• Qemea
• Cleveland at Boston, ppd ,, rain
Toronto 8, N.Y. Yankoes 2
Chicago \Vhlte 6.14, Detroit&amp; ·
saenlo 4, Kaneastity 2
Ba111more 4, Oakland 3
Tempe Bay 11, Anaheim D, tO Innings

•

Tom Sctitrrer
Soon Dunlop

San Jol8 at St. Louil, D p.m.

~=

811·12·71 ·72 '- 284
811·70-73-72 - 284
71 · 72-119-72 - 284
7t -87-73-73 - 284
!111-73·74-69 - 285
10-81!-7• · 73 - 285
·72·70-70·73 - 285
72-BUS-78 - 285
88-72·71 -78 - 285

Bradbury cheerleaders win honor, A&amp; ,
Marauder girls topple Wellston, Bl

Weclnesd~

Moncl8y, Aprll24, 2000

POMEROY - Meigs County Commissioners approved a pay raise for the
county's two public defenders when they
met in regular session on Monday.
The commissioner,; met with Mike
WestfaU, David Bodiker and John Alge of
the Ohio Public Defender's Office, who
submitted a proposed contract for fiscal
year 2001.
The contract calls for a 3 percent
increase in pay for the county's two public
defenders, Steven Story and Pat Story. The
attorneys represent indigent criminal
defendants.
The total ·contract for this year, which
commissioners 'approved Monday, is
$40,781,$1,200 less than last year's, despite
the pay raise.
That difference is the result of a change
in the reimbursement formula for the state,
which means that the comity will actuaUy

Attorneys are paid a flat fee
for their.. services, rather than
being paid on a case-by-case
basis, and each will receive an
annual increase of about
' $6,000 . .
pay less, although the attorneys wiD make
more.
..
Attorneys are' paid a flat fee for their services, rather th:i~ being paid on a case-bycase basis, and each wiD receive an annual
increase of about $6,000.
Roy Taylor and Jeanne Jindra ·o f the
University of Rio Grande's Crossroads
program met with the board to discuss
progress in training clients of the Department of Human Services in job readiness.
Some clients at DHS are required.to participate in the program, whieh teaches

.

basic job readiness skiDs, and provides
refresher work in academic subjects.
The program, thus far, has a 65 .percent
placement rate,Jindra said, meaning that 65
percent of the participants have been
placed in paying jobs,
The program will become more intensive as the O~tober deadline approaches for
those who are netting their 36-month
lifelong limit on cash assistance.
A new Life Skills class wiD begin at the
Meigs Cente.r in Middleport, where most
clients are served.
Taylor, Jindra and commissioners also
discussed problems with transportation
which many clients face.
Public transportation, subsidies for auto
purchases and other options taken in other
counties are being considered, but Jindra
said that a lack of transportation is not
accepted as an excuse for those clients who
are participating in Crossroads.

Steve Beha, Gladys Cumings, Kathleen
Fryar and Brenda Barnhart met with commissioners and Pomeroy Mayor John
Blaettnar for the declaration of May 4 as
the National Day of Prayer in Meig;
County.
A slate of events throughout the week
and a Thursday prayer service at the courthouse steps are planned.
Fryar will serve as the event's chairman
this year.
-d
The commissioners also approved. establishment of new funds for the Microenterprise Loan program, New Horizons housing program and the Violence Against
Women program, and funds were appropriated in each.
·
.Bills in the amount of $295,761.13 were
approved.
Present were Commissioners Janet
Howard, Jeffrey Thornton and Mick Davenport, and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Toclay's

Sentinel

2~1db.'li-12PIIps

Calendar

Clauififdl
C!i!mi!;l

A5
BH
B5

Edinui!!la

M

QbiWII:i~l

4J

Sl!!i!Il!
Wtalb~r

Bl, ~
A~

Lotteries
owo
Pick.3: 2-5-6; Pick 4: 9-3-2-4
Bu~ 5: !&gt;-17-19-21-27

W:YA.
Daily 3: 0-3-1 Daily 4: 6-4-1 -6
C 2000 Ohio Vallty Publishing Co.

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