<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7741" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7741?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T10:39:24+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18153">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/067e2892c2f1fe4a9d35d0cd21e1a426.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7e0bd7f6e25d60257495fbe6fdf7714b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25171">
                  <text>.

'

I

•r
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pap B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Kings Island coaster to reopen, A2
Texan leads Memorial, 11

s.turd~

Hlp: IDI; Low: lOS
Thursday, Ml'f 25, 2000

Details, A3

Frid
May 26,2000

THE MEMORIAL

••

The Golden Bear celebrates a Silver Anniversary
'

•

!Were pressure of major championship vgolf, he .
~ly buckled,.almost always knew what shot to hit
and how to pull it off.
. Perhaps that's why he counts his yictory in the
t'&lt;/77 Memorial as "the most difficult win I've ever
1
liad in the game of golf."
Why? NiCklaus wasn't just playing golf that we~k.
He was filling his caddie's pocket ·with cigarette
butts he found on the course, worrying about loose
trash, whether the course was roped properly.
"I can't think of anything else that I've been more
involved in - other than my family and my playing
golf- than Muirfield Village;' Nicklaus said.
The tournament began in 1976. Only four other
PGA Tour events are younger. But the Memorial has
evolved quickly into one of the most marquee stops
on lour.
"

s.o (•• nh

Clerk of Cour.ts to retire
J.

tide department, which issues certificates of titles for motor vehiclJ:s.
POMEROY - Next Wednesday,
The title division processes 15,000
Larry Spencer will review his figures, titles and collects over S2.2 million in
balance his books and close his ledger fees and sales taxes each year. In 1973,
book for the last time.
Spericer and his staff would have been
Spencer has announced his · retire- overwhelmed by a quaher of that busi'
¢ent
as Meigs. County Clerk of ness.
Courts, effective May 31 , citing health
Both offices have seen a number of
reasons. He has served in the elected changes and a dramatic increase in
'
position since January 1973.
work volume in the past 27 years,
As clerk, he has been responsible for Spencer said.
;two sepente divisions, the legal departBut the advent of the computer and
.ment, which oversees the filing of its ever-growin~ presence in public
~riminal, civil and domestic case docu- offices has increased efficiency and
ments for the Court of Common Pleas lightened the work load for Spencer
~nd the Court o'r Appeals, and the auto and his six deputies. ·
BY BRIAN

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.

LEAVING
COURTHOUSE
-Clerk of
Courts Larry E.
Spencer will
retire next
week, after 27
years of ser·
vice. He is pic·
tured in his
office on the
third floor of the
Meigs County
Courthouse,
where he has
overseen the
operations of
the title and
legal divisions.
(Brian J. Reed
photo)

Wh en Spencer succeeded Evelyn
Lucke as clerk, he worked with two
deputies, Nellie Brown in the thirdfloor legal department, and Ruth
Moore, who processed title work
downstairs.
" I've been very fortunate to have
such loyal staff," Spencer said. "I've
had very little turnover."
Spencer is the son of Elson and
Dorothy Powell Spencer of Racine,
and is married to the former Kay Avis.
They have a son and daughter-in-law,
Michael and Lois Frank Spencer, and a
granddaughter, Ashley.
Prior to his election, he worked as a

a

Pluse see Cl1rk. Pip A:l

t.•

~uspects
.

Gone.fish in'

Congress sends
Clinton S15 billion

~. .

'1\ ••

tema1n
..- -. loose

on
•: •

Factory
Invoices
.

.

in all our

FROM STAFF REPORTS

:;MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
O_Qunty Prosecuting Attorney John
[.eiltes said Thursday he expects
&amp; three men who robbed five
people at gunpoint at a Micldleport
furniture store Monday night will
be apprehended and charged.
Information about the robbery
was riot released until Thursday.
Lentes said that three men,
dressed in military-issue coats and
masks, armed with shotguns,
foreed their · way. into a private
gathering at C II( J Furniture out~de of · Pomeroy late Monday
evening, and took "an undeteruiined but unspecifie~ sum of cash
and jewelry" from five people who
had been ready to leave the build-

.

"NEW" FORD • LINCOLN • MERCURY VEHICLES .··
You

farm bailout

will know what we paid; so you'll NEVER PAY TOQ MUCH!

.,o/o

!pg.

The store was not open for business at the time, Lentes said.
· After pushing their way into the
store, the individuals were bound
With duct tape and pushed to the
floor while they were robbed, and,
according to Lentes, a gun went of£
inadvertendy during the robbery.
"It was a terrifYing experience
for the victims, I'm sure," Lentes
said. "We are pursuing some leads
and investigating the matter."

~enate

The weather has been perfect for fishing, and folks with poles alld tackle boxes can be found all along
the Ohio River during these warm spring dayil. On Thursday, Rick McClellan and his 2·year-old grand·
daughter, K'tayon Garnes, both of Pomeroy, enjoyed an afternoon of fishing at the amphitheater at the
Pomeroy levee. Among their catches were the !!&gt;·pound catfish shown here. (Staff photo)

agrees to estate tax cut, school board bill .

COLUMBU~ (AP) -Two priority billsone to phase out the estate tax for most
bhioans, the other to keep intact the state
school board - were on their way to Gov.
Bob Taft on Thursday as lawmakers wound up·
l hi! bulk of the work for the 123rd General
~ssembly.
•
: Lawmakers planned to recess for the sumiller later Thursday, with only a few sessions
planned in September as members campaign
for· the Nov. 7 election. Further sessions are

scheduled after the election.
The Senate passed the tax and school board
bills with little debate.
Under the estate tax cut, almost 80 percent
of Ohioans who are left money, property or
other assets would stop paying taxes on the
inheritance by 2002.
Taxes wouldn 1t have to be paid on estates of
$200,000 or less after January 2001. Taxes
wouldn't have to be paid on estates of
$338,000 or less after January 2002. The state

now takes a share on estates worth more than
$25,000.
The bill also increases the percentage,of the
estate tax collected by local counties and
municipalities.. Local entities now collect 64
percent. They would collect 70 percent after
2001 and 80 percent after 2002.
The bill passed 32- 1.
But Sen. Michael Shoemaker warned of
draining state resources, considering the Ohio

Pluu -am., Pip AJ

&lt;,

Contest winners

WASHINGTON (AP) growing 300 acres of cotton
Lawmakers say their $15 billion would receive an additional
farm bailout should help pro- $12,000.
ducers survive this year and
Agriculture Secretary Dan
make the111 less dependent on Glickman praised the insurance
government aid in the future.
overhaul, qut he said Congress
In addition to giving farmers also should have done somedirect payments this year, the thing about the 1996 farm law,
measure would pour $8.2 bil- which ended a Depression-era
lion into the federally subsidized system of price supports and
crop insurance program, starting production controls.
with next .Year's crops. That
"The bleeding continues, and
money will make the insurance we're getting ready to apply yet
touch cheaper
another very
and available Agriculture Secretary Dan expensive
for
more
tourniquet
Glickman praised the
crops.
when the sit"By provid- insurance overhaul, but he uation actualing producers said Congress also should ly calls for a
more affordblood transfuhave
done
something
able levels of
sion," Giickabout the 1996 farm law, man said.
coverage,
there should
which ended a DepresThis is .the
be less neea
third
straight
sion-era system of price
for Congress
year
that
supports and production . Congress
to pass emerhas
controls.
gency asstspassed
a
t(Jnce on a
• multibillion
year to year basis," said Sen. Pat dollar package of farm-income
Roberts, R-Kan.
assistance to compensate for low
The insurance can cover rev- commodity prices.
enue losses as well as weatherThe money has stabilized
farm income and land values,
related crop failures.
Congress gave final approval said Alan Barkeep, ,an economist
to !he aid package Thursday and with the Federal Reserve Bank
sent it to President Clinton for of Kansas City. Now, with cattle
his expected signature. The Sen- and hog prices on the rebound,
ate passed the legislation 91-4 "things are a bit brighter than
after the House had passed it on they were 18 months ago," he
a voice vote.
said.
The ' legislation includes $5.5
USDA officials say the extra
billion in cash payments that are money for crop insurance will
expected to be sent to . growers pay for itself by making farmers
in late August or September, less dependent on other forms
of government assistance.
USDA officials say.
In addition to reducing preThe payments would mean an
estimated S16,000 this year for a miums, coverage will be
500-acre· corn farm, while a expanded to fruit, vegetables
typical wheat grower would get
about S19,000 more. A farmer Plleu- Ballaut. ..... .A:J

Patrol: Probe of possible drugs
Sentinel in Taft's office!mail ·room closed
. Toclay's

Rain goes away...for now
: DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Not
even the biggest names in golf
can stay dry at the Memorial
Tournament.
No sooner had Arnold Palmer
put his tee in the ground to start
Wednesday's practice round a.t
Muirfield Village Golf Club than
a few drops of rain splashed on his.
head.
. ' He stepped back from the ball
and looked over at tournament
host Jack Nicklaus as if to say,
"Can't you prevent this?"
Palmer, J:'licklaus and Gary
Player - golfs big three of the
1960s - got in nine holes with
very few other raindrops falling.
By late afternoon, it Was sun and
not rain that drenched the course.
Rain and the Memorial Tournament are forever linked.
'Around central Ohio, heavy rains

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pome roy, Ohio

Volmnl' s.u. Number zs.o

Woods can kill off two
streaks at the Memorial
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - How course that figures to be a stiffer
about this for a streak? Tiger test with wet, heavy rough and
Woods is 0-for-10 when it comes smaller greens with more conto making a successful title tours.
defense.
"It's going to present quite a
· "To be honest with you, I challenge with some of these
could care less;· Woods said on changes because we're not really
the eve of the Memorial, where . used to them,"Woods said. "We're
he is the defending champion in a not used to seeing ihe balls roll as
tournament chat has never had a they are rolling now. But that's the
J:!~peat winner in its 24-year histo- fun of it."
ry.
Everything has been fun for
"I've always believed once Woods lately. Last year's tourna)'\lu're at a tournament site, then ment kicked off a stretch in
your reign is over;' he said. which he won seven of his last 10
· "You're champion of the tourna- PGA Tour events. And while he's
ment for 51 weeks, and when the not wrapped up title defenses, he
\Veek comes around, then the still craves winning.
tournament is up for grabs for
What he could do without are
anyone in the field."
the thrills required in his 2-stroke
· And that could be just about victory over Masters champion
anybody.
Vijay Singh last year. Woods was
David Duval was on the all over the map at Muirfield, but
puuing green as the sun set relied on a brilliant short game to
Wednesday over Muirfield Vil- close with 69.
lage, trying to find a secret to
"To do it with unconventional
what has kept him winless the methods made it even a little bit
more special," he said.
past 14 months.
.
'Tve done very well here," he
Nothing made it better, howevsaid, and the record bears that er, than having Nicklaus congratout. He has finished second twice ulate him. Woods and Fred Couand was third twice in his six trips ples are the only players to win all
to Memorial.
three PGA Tour events with livErnie Els, another·player who is ing legends as the tournament
0-for-'00, took the last two weeks hosts - the Memorial, Bay Hill
off to rest his ailing back and was (Arnold Palmer) and the Byron
anxious to get started.
Nelson Classic.
Paul Azinger, who won · the
"To see him on the 18th green
M.emorial in '93 by holing a as 1 was coming off, to have him
bunker shot on the 18th hole to congratulate me personally right
beat the late Payne Stewart, went there on the green, that's when it
fishing after the MCI Classic and kind of sunk in that I won his
is playing his fifllt tournament in tournament;' Woods said.
five weeks.
The Nicklaus-Woods· connec,He, too, feels his best golf is tion is strong. From the time he
fight in front of him.
was a k,id, Woods set his sights on
' ·And then there's Nicklaus topping the record of 18 profesboth of them.
sional majors won by Nicklaus.
Jack Nicklaus, the tournament And it was Nicklaus who predictfounder, endured another emo- ed in 1996 that Woods might win
tional ceremony Wednesday in more Masters than he and Palmer
which he raced through his combined.
speech to avoid breaking down
Woods said the first time he
after every sentence.
met Nicklaus was as a freshman in
' The Golden Bear was honored high school. He was a special
on the silver anniversary of the guest at a clinic where Nicklaus
Memorial, and said nothing could was the host, and the Bear asked
be better - except to be paired the Tiger to hit a few shots.
Sunday with his 31-year-o]d son,
With a 5-iron, Woods said he
Gary, who earned his way into his hit a couple of draws, then a coufather's tournament.
ple of fades. Finally, Nicklaus told
: "To have Gary in the field adds him, "You just might have a
to the memories that I will take fu cure in this game."
away from this year's tournaMter telling the story, Woods
ment:' Nicklaus said.
paused and smiled.
It all started today on a golf
"Here I am;' he said.

Melp County's

~er been a problem for Nicklaus. Under the most

who earned his PGA Tour card and earned his way
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Jack Nicklaus could tournament golf."
It was no different than the last time Nicklaus was into a tournament whet&lt;' he gn::w up. .
have used the emotional c.ontrol Wednesday that
"To have Gary in the field adds to the memories
honored by a tournament that means so much to
helped him win 18 major championships.
that
I will take away from this year's tournament:'
He nervously stroked his blond hair. · His eyes him. The tears flowed more freely than his words
when Augusta National paid him tribute with a Nicklaus said.
shifted. His chin buckled.
The Memorial honors a great player from the past
He rushed through his speech so he wouldn't monument in 1998 to mark his 40th straight
each year. Nicklaus has no input on the selection.
.
have to stop after every sentence and fight back appeannce.
Then Nicklaus went out and nearly won the Mas- He leaves that up to the Captain's Club, a group of
tears.
In his last full season on tour, Nicklaus was hon- ters at age 58. Repeating that kind of performance 23 golf dignitaries that includes two former presidents.
ored by the Memorial Tournament, which he d eat- at Muirfield Village could take some doing.
Nicklaus wanted this year's honotee to be U.S.
The defending champion is Tiger Woods, who
ed 25 years ago and nurtured into one of the preOpen
champion Payne Stewart, who died in a plane
returns
from
a
disappointingfinal
round
in
Germier events on the PGA Tour.
"Where we stand today is obviously a very special many to try to conquer a course that has been crash Oct. 25.
But the Captain's Club insisted char the Silver
place to me;' Nicklaus said, his voice cracking dur- toughened by thicker rough and smaller greens.
Anniversary
recognize the Golden Bear.
Ernie Els is feeling as good about his back as his
ing a 50- minute ceremony on the 18th green that
"He's certainly not an egotistical guy when it
was attended by 15,000 people, the Ohio State game, no surprise since the Big Easy always tends to
comes
to this kind of thing;• former President
warm up as the U.S. Open draws near. 1\vo-time
marching band and his 9Q..year-old rocher.
"My hope is that Muirfield Village will forever winner Hal Sutton, Masters champion Vijay Singh George Bush said. "He was gracious about it, very
emotional."
~
stand as representation for my love and respect for and David Duval are also back at Jack's place.
Controlling his emotions on the golf course has
And so is that other Nicklaus, 31-year-old Gary
the game, and the Memorial for my passion for

2 Sldlons- 11,...

in May are · casually called
"Memorial weather."
Of the 96 rounds played in the
24 previous tournaments, 22 have
been delayed, interrupted or ca~­
celed because of the weather.
There have been 28 suspen'sions
of play; 1ix times rounds couldn't
start on time and twice they have
been wiped of£ the board entirely
because of heavy rains.
Over the yean, Nicklaus has
been aggravated by such facts but
has learned to accept them. ~ur­
ing ceremonie• Wednesday honoring Nicklau1, he even joked

Calendar

A6 '
B4-6
B7

Clauifieds
Comics
Editorials
ObituariCs
Sport•

A4
A3
Bl-3
A3

Weather

Lotteries
OHIO
Siiniiiiel'ii Ea1ster Cofciifrlg r.nn·t est were Dfeileilf,

abollt.it
"I always like tl'li• time of year,"
he said, explaining why the tournament is in May, "because I
believed it was a dry, pleasant time
of year. We've found out differently."
\

J

"

...

----

- .....

Pick 3: 6-7-9; Pick 4: 6-2-3-8
Bu~ 5: 12-14-20-36-37

ed with cash prizes by Matthew Haskins , sales representative, far left.

"WYA,

Andrea Buckley, 8 , Carissa Wolfe, 7, and Kristen Eblin, 8, front row,
were first, second and third place winners in the older children's cat·
egory, while Keilah Jacks' , 10, Whitney Thoene, 12, and Lilly Jacks, 9 ,
Y!eie v.:lnners In the older ege group. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Dlily 3: 0-3-0 Daily 4: 8-3-6-8

••.

..----~~~-··

••

.. -....:..-~,.

0 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

• ·••~--..,__. -.,. • • ,

... ...,,., ,

COLUMBUS (AP) -The State Highway Patrol
found no wrongdoing in its investigation into an allegation of possible drug smuggling out of Gov. Bob
Taft's office mail room by four minimum security
prisoners there on a work program.
An allegation of drug QSe by inmates was made, said
Lt. John Born, a patrol spokesman, who did not know
its source. However, investigators found no illegal
substances during a search of the mail room area
Thesday, and urine tests on the prisoners detected no
drugs, Born said Thursday.
No one was arrested or charged in the investigation, he said.
The patrol led the probe because it is responsible
for the governor's security and for investigating
crimes within·state government offices.
Investigators had watched the inmates for a couple
.of weeks, sometimes using surveillance equipment,
and on Tuesday afternoon they used the drug-sniffing
· dogs to search several areas in the Riffe Building,

,, ,,.,.~,,- . -) .,,. , ..._.,. , ~,.:. ------::--•·----------

·

-.-.··•

-:7:--

L-

l

-·

where the mail room is located, Born said.
"We went into it loolcing for drugs a whole, not .
one specific lcind;' Born said.
The Columbus Dispatch, quoting sources it did not
identify, reported Thursday that the scheme apparently involved using the mail for marijuana deliveries.
Scott Milburn, the governor's spokesman, said
Thursday that no scheme has been uncovered, nodiing was found to show that the mail was used and no
drugs have been found.
.
The inmates had been allligp.ed to the governor's
office on a work program from Pickaway Correctionallnstitution,just south of Columbus, to sort mail
and compile news stories relevant to state government.
Milburn said inmates have worked in the governor's office for at least 20 years without incident.
"The governor believes it's unfortunate. Up until
now, no inmates have been suspected of wrongdoing," Milburn said.

as

(• -

�Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

hge A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
aerk kills alleged robber
SPRINGBORO (AP) - A man who police say tried to rob a
service station w:.s shot by the station's clerk.
T he clerk opened fire on two males who tried to rob him
' WedneS&lt;by, police said . Police called the shooting an ac t of selfdefense against a teen-ager who was pointing a loaded .380-caliber
pistol at the clerk and dema nding money.
The wounded 17-year-old suspect was released from Miami Valley Hospital T hursday afternoon and jailed at the.Warren County .
Juvenile Detention Center on a charge of aggravated robbery,
authorities said. They were still searc hin g fo r the other suspec t Friday.
Warren County Prosecutor T im O liver said he doesn't think the
d erk at the BP service station broke any laws.
.
" The preliminary indications are that certainly no charges be filed
agai nst the clerk," he said.
Police would not release the identity of the clerk.
Springboro is about 20 mil es south of Dayton.

City deans up sludge spill
C OLUMBUS (AP)- City officials are spending some $300,000
to ctean up at least 300 tons oflime sludge that spilled into a ditch .
The ditch leads to the Olentangy Jtjver, just upstream from a
stretch where biologists found four bluebreast darter fish last summ er.
"We're finding the sludge all over the area," said Lynn Kelly, the
·city's water supply and treatment coordinator. "As soon as the river
gets to the point where we can see the bottom, we should be able
, to find out just how much we're talking about."
Officials said they didn't realize a pipe carrying the sludge from a
water-treatment plant had rusted through until last week. Bicyclists
riding along the river noticed .a light-colored substance suspended
below the water's surface.
·
The gooey sludge is a minor skin irritant for humans, but it can
choke off life at th e bottom of the river, making it difficult for bot. tom- feeding fish to find food.
. Last summer, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency biologists
discovered the bluebreast darter. The fish are considered an important water-quality indicator because they can't tolerate pollution.

VIllage, township feud over lines
RICHFIELD (AP) - It's a feud between Richfteld Village and
the surrounding, less populated Richfield Township.
Judge John Adams of Summit County Common Pleas ordered
•the county council on Thursday to redraw township boundaries to
exclude the village.
, The ruling came in response to a suit filed by township landowners who want to secede from the village.
Township Trustee Robert Luther, a farmer, said he hopes the
township now c:in fight off village annexation.
Village Mayor Donald Larsen warned that splitting rhe community, which is near Akron and was the home of the now-demolished
Coliseum arena, would create division among residents.
The issue arose because the village, created inside the township in
1967, has grown to twice the population of the township. Village
· residents are citizens of the township, and can outvote township res-idents. At .the same time, township residents have no voice in village
. decisions.
The township has been losing land to annexation, including last
week's annexing of a housing subdivision. Annexations usually
occ ur because the village can provide water service to developers,
'and the township cannot.

Lancaster police win honor
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.Justice Department has honored the Lancaster, Ohio, police department for the quick recovery
·. of an abducted 3-year-old girl in April 1999.
Detective David Bailey accepted the Officer of the Year Award for
Missing and Exploited Children Investigations on behalf of the
.- department, about 30 miles southeast of Columbus.
~ · Bailey and his colleagues recovered the child, Ashley Taggart, three
· days after her abduction.
A doctor who examined the child estimated that she was about
.. six hours from her death when she was recovered, according to the
U.S. Office of Justice Programs.
Ashley's kidnapper, Jason Wagner, was sentenced in February to
44 years to life in prison.
"The Lancaster police department's immediate investigation and
swift recovery saved a child's life," said Deputy Attorney General
Eric H . Holder Jr.
The award was part of the 17th annual National Missing Chil. dren's Day ceremony Thursday.

Bill restricts land purchases in fo~

Sheriff: Man confessed
E·Z PAY
PAY BY MAIL OPTION
to killing teen-ager
the assailant tried to rape her, then
pushed her off a bridge into the
Tuscarawas River.
She was found Wednesday
morning by a passer-by and was
treated at Union H ospital. She
gave police a desc ription.
Sheriff Harold McKinunie said
Vaca admitted the killing to officers Wednesday night.
The two girls were approached
as they left a Hollywood Video
store in the New Towne Mall.Vaca
said he intended to rob the girls,
McKimmie said.
He said the arrest "alleviates a
lot of fear that had been permeating in the county. People were in
fear for their daughters."
Authorities said the suspect's
brother-In-law, Jeff Mulinix, provided information that led to the
arrest.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

;1
•'-----------------------------------------~--------

,.

LOCAL STOCKS

.•'

.

'

• AEP - 351.

•Convenient

. Akzo ~ 39l.

ArnTech/SBC - 42\i.
• Asbland Inc. - 34l.

AT&amp;T -33l,
Bank One -- 32')•
· Bob Evans ~ 12'.1
·~ BorgWarner - 41 l.
• Champion : Charming Shops - 5~.
"' City Holding - 9~.
~ Federal Mogul - 11 '.1
•·, Flrstar - 25lo

•Safe .

2'·

•Flexible

..

ro

19~

Ltd. - 49 ~

.

Oak Hill Financial -

OVB-27

One Valley - 35~·
Peoples - 151.
Premier -- 7'!.

Rockwell - 40'lo

The ·Daily Sentinel

Ho11e

~~Supreme Court's sch.;ol funding
t;~ling May II. That decision
ll:~und that Ohio's system of pay~~in'g for public schools remains
:::un constitutional,
primarily
;;because it relies too heavily on
, ·local property taxes.
~ Shoemaker noted that legisla£.:tive · leaders and Taft have
" promised to work with existing
.
•t revenue and don't want
to raise
'.. taxes.
~
"This (estate taX cut) squeezes
~- those eKisting revenues," said
Shoemaker, a Bourneville Demo""-crat.
•· The debate was stronger on the
~ scl;lool board bill. Proponents say
·~ the bill is necessary because the
;(.. original plan creating the
appointed members was included
~ in the multi-subject !995 budget
· ~ - bill.The Supreme Court in recent
~ rulings has found similar bills vio:• late the Legislature's "single-sub'\. . .. ul
: .Ject r e.
•; _Sen. Robert Cupp, a Lima
~ Republican, said the "hybrid''
i: board of elected and appointed
:0: members was an idea that had
"·proven 1tself.
~: · "011r appointed members and
~ o11r elected members are improv-

'"

t':

~·'~ -r:~To
~---------------,
get a currentweather
•
~
report,checkthe

:..... . - Sentinel
••

: .The Daily Sentinel
O~lo Velleyhblo.lal Co.
·Published every lfternoon, Monday throulf,h
'Friday, Ill Court Sr.e Pometoy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishln&amp;'Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S769, I'll. 991-21.56. Second cl151 post·
IJC ptld 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.

Family Practice Physician

Mmber. The AMOCiatcd Preas, and ihc OhiO·
Newapaper Asaoelalion.

Aria L. McVicker·

POSTMASTER: Send address co"'ctiona to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cqurt St., Pomeroy,
Obk&gt; 4l769.

Is Now Accepting ·New Patients

Holzer Clinic !!

1•

'

Residency ~t Doctors Hospital,
. Columbus, OH. Dr. McVicker is
Board Certified by the American
Osteopathic: Board of
Family Physicians.

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .................................................... .50 Cenll
. • Sublcrlbcn not delllirin&amp;lo pay the Clltrltr nuy
remit In advance direct to The Dally Sentinel
on a three, si.11 or 12 month buis. Credit ""Ill be
. . glve11 can~er etch week.

'.

992-0060

&lt;

'

... ,.

'

f.; •

'

Holzer Clinic •.....Keeping the Promise!

Holzer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

•

II'IVW.holtrrcllnlc.com

'
•

•

aru1

R egis tration is now o pen
through July 7. Students may register M onday through Thursday
from 8: 30 a. m.-6 p.m., amj Friday
from 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
GCC offers both one and twoyea r' programs in co mputers,
ofli ce
accou nting,
medi cal
admini stration, , executive office
administration
and business
adm.inistration.

Barbecue set

me nt .

Registration open

GALLIPO LI S- Schedul es for
the
summer quarte r, beginnin g
PO M ERO Y Burlingham
Modern Woodmen will have a July 3, at Gallipolis Career Colfund raising smorgasbord dinner lege have been released.

POMEROY - The following land transfers were recenrly reported .by M eigs County
R ecorder Judith A. King:
Larry D. Gindlesberger, Pamela D. Gin diesberger, to Harry L. Ramsey, Joanne ]. R amsey,
deed, Scipio;
Southern Local School District, to O hio
Power Company, right of way, Sutton;
Jamie Barrett, Melissa. Bat:rett, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way, C hester;
Federal Hocking Local School, to Colum bus Southern Power, right of way, R ome Twp.
(Athens County) ;
Eddie Halirri, to Adam T. Ramseyer, Erin L.
Nash, Rita T. Ramseyer, deed , Bedford;
Marcella L'. Hoy, to Carolyn A. C harles, C arolyn A. Jeffers, deed; Sutton;
Daisey Mallory, to David ]. Bell, April K.
Bell, deed, Scipio;
Seldon R . Flemming, deceased, to Ida
Flemming, certificate, Olive;
Ida V. Flemming, to Kathy L. Sargent, Dennis]. Sargent, deed, Olive;
Thomas G. Beegle, de ceased, to Harold

RAC IN E - T he R ac ine Volunteer First Department will have
a chicken barbecue Sunday wi th
serving to begin at 1L a.m. The
auxiliary will sell dessert and
homemade ice cream.
I

Lawson, deed, Sutton;
R obert G. Edwards, to James s_ Stettler,
Pamela S. Stettler, deed, O live;
Mi chael H. Cline, Joyce N . Cline, to James
R. Priddy, Sr. , Ruth A. Priddy, deed, Middlepo_rt;
R obert G. Edwards, to Eric L. Johnson,
Sharon R .J ohnson, deed, Olive;
Robert L. Dempsey, deceased, to Mary B.
Dempsey, affidavit, Middleport;
John Thomas, C heryl L. Thomis, to Duane
Edward Abshire, Debra Lee Abshire, deed, Salisbury;
Juanita L. Spencer, dece,ased, to Spencer
Ru ssell, affidavit;
William J. Bias, Michael A. Reed, to State of
Ohio, deed, Letart;
.
William]. Bias, Michael A. R eed, to State of
Ohio, deed, Letart;
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R . Coomer, to
State of Ohio, deed, Letart;
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R . Coomer, to
State of Ohio, deed, Letart;
Barbara M . Pierce, C larenc e Thomas Wolfe,

R osalie Wolfe, to State of O hio, deed, Letart;
Barbara M. Pierce, to State of Ohio, deed ,
Letart';
Mark R . Jarrell , Aimee L. Jarrell , to Gary
Roush, Te r i J. Roush, deed , Letart;
Bishop of the Roman Catholic C hurch, to
Jeffers Coal Truc ki ng and Excavating Inc.,
deed, Salisbury;
Henry N orvel Lauhon, deceased, to Margaret S. Lauhon , affidavit, Letart;
Norvel Lauhon , to Susan Schleder, deed,
. Letart;
Cecil V. Dillon, Flossie N . Dillon, to LarryV.
Dillon, C ynthia A. Dillon , deed, Olive;
David E . Grubser, Eileen E Grueser, to Paul
P Simon, Allie M. Simon, de ed, Salisbury;
Ralph H. Ballard, Wilma M. Ballard, to
David A. Ballard, Brenda L. Vandyke, Melvin
D. Ballard , deed, C hester;
Brenda Vandyke, Rydell Vandyke, Melvin D.
Ballard, Sharon Ballard, to David A. Ballard,
deed, Chester;
David A. Wolfe. John T. Wolfe, Marilyn J.
Wolfe, to Troy S. Hoback, deed, Letart.

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Firm issues smoke alarm recall
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Maryland company is recalling about
34,000 smoke alarms that can fail to go off when smoke or fire is present. An electrical part in the alarm can also burn out, releasi':'g smoke
and melting the cover.
Universal Security Instruments of Owings Mills, Md., has received
three reports of alarms failing, releasing smoke and one report of
minor smoke damage to a mobile home's wall , the Consumer Product
Safety Commission said Thursday. No injuries have been reported.
The four types of smoke' alarms recalled are made of white plastic
ahd have the manufacture date code and model number imprinted on
the back. Some alarms do not have the brand name on the unit, so
consumers should check the model number.
The first two types are the Safe T Alert brand, model SA-785, and
the Universal brand, model SS- 785.Both are described as an "AC only
unit" and have date code BCSR.
The other two arc the Universal model SS-795 , and the USI Electric model USI-1203. Both are described as an "AC/ DC unit w/ battery backup" and have date code BESS.
The safety commission advises consumers to call Universal Security
Instruments toll-free at 1-800-390-4321 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
EDT Monday through Friday to receive a fre e replacement alarm .

1

my grandfathers were township
trusees, so I'm a third-generation
politician."
He attends1 Heath United
from PapAl
Methodist Church in Middlepayroll clerk for Alum Creek port.
Dam in Delaware. He is' a Past
· Spencer's replacement will be
Master of the Pomeroy-Racine F appointed by the Meigs County
&amp; AM Masonic Lodge, a Past Republican Central Committee,
Patron of the Evangeline Chapter which will meet no sooner than
Order of Eastern Star of Middle- I 0 days after his last day of serport, at;td is Presently_ Grant vice.
Prelate of the Royal Order of
ln the meantime, Meigs C ounAmaranth of the Grand Court of ty Commissioners have the
West Virginia.
option of appointing an interim
He is also a member of the York clerk of courts.
Rite in Middleport, Aladdin TemSpencer's
longest- se rving
ple Shrine in Columbus and the deputy, Marlene Harrison, has
Athens County Shrine Club.
expressed an interest in the
He has ·also been active in appointment. She and Betsy H erRepublican politics. ·
ald Nicodemus, a Democrat, are
"I couldn't help getting into vying for the offic.e in the
politics," Spencer said. "Both of November general election .

sunflower growers.
• $340 million for tobacco
dutaliOII of the tubscription.
growers,
to compensate fo r falling
MAILSUBSCRII'TIONS
cigarette sales.
l••kk Melli CnDtJ
from PapAl
ll Weeko .................................................$27.30
• $200 million for the govern26 W..to ................................................$53.82
l2 Weeki ............................................... $ I05.56
and other commodities (or which ment to buy surplu s commodiRite~ O•lllde Mtlp CoiiiiJ
insurance hasn't been available ties, including apples, black-eyed
ll Wecto .................................................$29.25
26 Wecto ............................. ................ .... Sl6.68
before.
peas, cherrles, citrus, cranberries,
s2 wecu ......................................... .... ..s 109.72
The federal subsidy for the onions, melons, peaches and potamost popular level of insu rance toes.
Reader Services
will rise from 42 percent to 59 · • $100 milli on for cottonseed
o.r ..,. coaeen II all Moria 11 to be
producers.
percent.
a«•rttt. If'" luto" of •• tri'Or Ia • dor)'1
,.u ......- • •• (740&gt; m-2155. w. ..111 ... The $5.5 billion in direct farm
• $25 million to fruit growers in
cllltck , .. r ldor••tloa aid •akt 1
the
Northeast who have been hurt
payments
would
go
to
grain
and
cemctlol thrarnakrd.
Nrwa Dtpan•nbl
ne lllll aa•ber II '"-J155. IJtP-rtiiMII cotton producers who have annu- by plum pox virus.
al "market-transition" contracts
It was the second maj or victory
. exteatkWiaart:
·eeMral Maupr-......................-Ext.llOI
in as many days for fa rm organizawith the government.
Newi .......... "...............................- ... Elt• 1102
.._ ................................................ or Ext. 1106
An additional $1.6 billion in tions, who on Wednesday were celOther Servkt:•
the legi~latio n is earmarked for ebmting the House's approval of
AdMrtltlne...................................... Ext. 1104
Clrculatloa.............................. .;........Ext, llOJ
special conunodities, including:
permanent normal trode relations
;OU~-~~A~d~o-~
.. ·~-"~"·~
·-~
..,.~
.. ·~·..~
·
·~
·
···
~
.. E•x•t.•li•OO~
• $500 million for soybean and · for C hina.
L
(hanac• may be implemented by th..ainathe

To Schedule an Appolnt111ent.
.Call (740). 446-5137 . .
Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis, OH

No subsc;:riptioA by mail pcrmined In
where 1\ome ttnierseno~ i1 available.

Publi 1htr reterYe&amp; the right to adju&amp;tratet durin&amp; the subacriptkm period. Subscription rate

.

88 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH

SUBSCRII'TION-RATES
IJ C1rrkt or Motor Ro•lt
One Wect ............................... ................... $2.00
OIHI M011th ................................................ S8.10

:, OaeYcar .............. ....... .'......................... $104.00

..
.
Dr. Arle McVIcker, completed her

Urgent Care Center

Fund-raiser
planned

Monday at the haU . Serving will
be from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. and there
will be ea t-in and carry out servi ce for a donation .
There will also be a bake sale
table and a plant sale. The Modern Woodmen H ome Office will
match up to S2,500 of the money
raised. T he money will l1e given
to the MeigS' Emergency Medical
Servi ce fo r automatic detibulators
and to the Scipio Fire Depart-

Land transf_
ers posted by county recorder

Clerk

(VSPSZll-9601

Aria L. McVicker, DO
I

•

Daily stock repo~s are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis.

5:48 p.m., Hiland Road, Matie
Ball, Holze r Medical C enter;
7:33 p.m., State -Street, Austin
Phillips, Veteran s Memo rial Hospital;
·
8:39 p:m., State Route 143,
Alice C hapman, HMC.
COLUMBIA TWP.
.
6:02p.m., Mount Union Road,
co nt rolled bu rn.
RUTLAND
8:37 p.m., Ogdin Road, Evere tt
Hutto n, treated.

Dance group cuts performances
NEW YORK (AP) - The dan ce group founded by modern dance
pioneer Martha Graham has pulled out of two major festivals and suspended its operations for the foreseeable 'future because of financial
problems.
The announcement was made after a unanimous vote Thursday by
the board of the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance, the
umbrella. organization for th e Martha Graham Dance Company, its
school and its junior troup e.
"We don't have the funds to go forward today," Francis M ason, act- ,
ing chairman of the center's board, told The New York Times. "We
continue to seek those funds. This will be a suspension. That's what
we're hoping."
The Manhattan- based center would have faced an accumulated
deficit of$500,000 if it had continued operations this year, The Times
said.
The company, the school and · the junior troupe were to suspend
operations ,today. The suspension forces the immediate cancellation of
performances at the American Dance Festival in Durham, N.~. , where
the company was to open its season on June 8, and at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, where it was to open "The Legacy of Martha
Graham and Paul Taylor;' a two-week festival scheduled for September.

•

Hours: 8 AM to 5 PM

At

15~

ing the quality of education in
Ohio;' Cupp said.
Shoemaker, however, said the
school board has been a "political
football" caught in the middle of
fights over education among the
Legislature, the governor and the
courts.
. "We've been discussing this
basically since the early '80s," he
said. "We talk about the state
board being the problem when
we don 't want to face up to the
situation that exists."
Sen. Gene Watts, a Dublin
Republican, said he initially was
against the idea of mixing elected
and appointed members. He figured it would lead to political
squabbling between the two
groups.
"We have a governance that
works better than I thought it was
going to when we passed it," he
said.
The Senate also agreed with
House amendments on a bill to
make it easier for school districts
whose buildings need immediate
help, but don't yet qualify for state
aid, to begin repairs or construction. Any money raised locally
would count as matching money
required by the state to qualify for
its ~onstruction assistance programs.
Taft is expected to sign all three
bills.

~·

992-2155

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Core ~
Monday-Friday 1 :00 pm to 9:00 pm
Weekends a Holidays 1:oo.pm to g:oo pm

'

Wai-Mart - 55·
Wendy's - 21 '.1
Worthington - 11 ~

from PapAl

~

r

..

Krager --

Lands End - 31 '-

"'\.

••
••

The Daily Sentinel :

.Urgent Care is now available for those unexpected
ailments that occur after hours. .
·

Sears - 36' •

Shoney's - 1Y.

·Bills

(.

For More Information
Call Today... Switch To Office Pay

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Center

RD

Kmart - t Y
.

'.

.._

Receive A Bill For Your Paper
Directly From

and jerking riders around a little
bit more than we liked," said park
spokesman Jeff Siebert. "We
wanted to make sure that this
small section was as smooth as the
remaining 7,000 feet of track."
Park officials maintain thar Son
of Beast's downtime has more to
do with comfort than safety, but
there has been speculation that
the problems were more serious
than park officials had reported.
As Siebert put it, "the urban
legends about Son of Beast's status
are flying everywhere."
Siebert said the delay in
reopening the ride was necessary
so carpenters could make several
adjustments to the problem area. ·

Boots - 5~
Shell-60~

Rocky

Gannett -- 63\
General Electric - 50'.1
Harley Davidson - 38

.,:··--------------------------------------------~--~
'
••

Correction

EMS calls posted

•
•

LOCAL BRI E FS

RAC INE - Ron Cammarata,
vi
ce
president of the Southern
and variable wind. C hance of rain
Local Board of Educatio n, pre30 percent.
Saturday...Showers and thun- sented diplomas to the graduate~
derstorms likely. H ighs in the during Southern High SchooJis
lower and mid 80s. Cha nce of conunencement program Sunday
night. It had earlier been reported
rain 70 percent.
. Saturday nighL.Showers and that Bob Collins, board p resident,
thunderstorms likely. Lows 60 to made the presentations.
65.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderPO MEROY - Un its of the
storms. Highs in the mi d 70s .
Services
Meigs Emergency
Memorial Day... Partly cloudy answered five calls for assistance
with a chance of showers. Lows in on Thursday. Units responded as
the mid 50s and highs near 70.
follows:
TuesdaT... Most1y clear. Lows in
CENTRAL DISPATCH
the mid 50s and highs in the
upper 70s.

Showers and t hunderstorms
will return to the tri-county area
early· Sat urday and continue
i ntermittently through the weekend.
However, the National Weather
Service promises dry and sunny
·c_onditions on Memorial Day.
Htghs on Saturday will be 70-75 in the north and 75-80 in the
south.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:50
p.m. and sunrise on Sanirday at
~:08 a.m.
·
:
Weather forecast:
~~ni
ht .. .Increasing cloudiness.
·:A an of showers after mid:~ · tght. Lows in the mid 50s. Light

:.

New roller coaster to reopen
KINGS MILLS (AP) - ·,Paramount's Kings Island ·official~ say
the park's new wooden roller
coaster has been cleared by safety
officials and 'is ready to reopen
after three weeks of inactivity due
to repair work.
Special previews of the Son of
Beast coaster were delayed late
last month after the. ride's electrical system was da1naged by lightning.
· The ride opened April 28, but
was closed the neKt day after park
officials discovered a rough 1.5foot section of track during an
inspection.
. "This particular section at the
top of the second hill was moving

Showers returning Saturday

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY WEATHER

local property owners to sell land to the I.:!.S.
COLUMBUS (AP) - The government Rep. Gene Krebs, a Camden Republican.
The bill's sponsor, R ep. Nancy Hollister, a Forest Service.
couldn't expand Wayne National Forest by buy"This bill is not the answer to the rax-base
ing more private land for four years under leg- Marietta Republican, said the forest provides
..
islation approved T hursday by the O hio House. limited economic benefit to residents despite its problem of these areas," Sutton said.
Congress stu ted limiting land purrh=s !n
The bill imposes a four-year moratorium on reputation as a recreational area with a variety
the
Wotyne forest in 1995. T hat was m response
the permission Ohio gives the U.S. Forest Ser- of uses.
She said it's time to step back and plan the to complaints from the forest's neighbors. T\l~y
vice to buy land in LI southern Ohio counties.
said their county governments and school .,U~
It al,lo creates a conunittec to study the for- forest's futu re over the next 70 years.
"We need to think about how big the Wayne I triers couldn't afford to have more .land dropped
est's economic impact and whether to extend
sho uld be;' Hollister said."This offers an oppor- from the tax rolls.
the moratorium.
T he legislation affects land in Hocking, MopSupporters of the bill say expanding the for- tunity for all parties involved, conservationists,
roe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry, Athens, Gallia,Wishest h1.1rts local government because of lost tax sports men, to come together and work with the
legislative commission on desperately needed ington,Jackson.Vinton and Lawrence counties.
revenue.
Also Thursday, the House approved a bill ~~t
"As you keep taking private property and long-term reconun endations."
would
ban trains from blocking_streets identiRep. Betty Sutton, a Barberton Democrat
removing it from the taK rolls, you find local
governin_g bodies slowly starving to dea th ," said who opposed the bill, said no one is forcing fied ts emergency crossings.

NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP)
- The Thscarawas C ounty sheriff
said T hursday that a man arrested
in the stabbing death of a 17-yearold girl who had given him a ride
confessed during police questioning.
Matthew Vaca, 27, of New
Philadelphia, was arrested Wednes- .
day night in Coshocton County.
He was being held on a probation
violation in the Tuscarawas County Jail while the county prosecutor
reviewed the case, police and prosecutors said.
Authorities say Elizabeth Reiser, of Dover, was stabbed in the
neck Tuesday night after she and a
friend gave a ride to a man who
offered them $20 to drive him
home.
Reiser's friend, a 17-year-old
New Philadelphia girl. told police

Friday, May 26, 2000

v'

Bailout

Dems: It's too early to fret about Gore and polls
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -AI
Gore met with Democratic leaders from around the country and
reassured them his campaign has a
winning strategy against George
W. Bush. Several of the Democrars said they were comfortable
after their pep rally and strategy
session that Gore's lagging poll
numbers aren't a serious problem
-yet.
.
The likely presidential nominee
told supporters at a $1 million
Democratic National Committee
fund- raiser Thunday night that
he expects "a good healthy, hard
tight ahead of us and we're going
to win it. And we're going to win
it solidly."
Molly Beth Malcolm, chairwoman of the Texas Democrati c
Party, made an analogy that
Democratic women use from

time to time when tal.king about campaign staff of Gore, who trails
Bush, the likely Republjcan nom- Bush in key states and by 5 to 10
points in national polls. Party offiinee.
"Bush is so new (to the cials say the meeting was planned
narional audience) and he's a nice long before Gore dropped behind
guy; but he's one of those guys in recent polls.
you want to go out and date in
college;' said Malcolm, a former
Republican. "You know you'll
have a good time, but he's not
wjlo anybody wants to marry"
She was one of 72 party leaders
from 34 states, Puerto Rico and
"Democrats abroad" who spent
'F hursday in Nashville for a pep
rally/ strategy meeting with the

10x-iii'"••

•:30 PM FOIIVINING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOI MATIIIHS

Hubbard's
Greenhouse Sale
Closeout Sale for the Season!
All Flats &amp; 1.0" Hanging
Baskets 54.50
while they last
4" Pots Cutting
Geraniums 75(t
Seed Geraniums 50(t
Asst. Shrubbery Buy 1 Reg.
Price Get 1 FREE
Open Dally 9-5

992-5776
Close Sundays

.•

�Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

hge A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
aerk kills alleged robber
SPRINGBORO (AP) - A man who police say tried to rob a
service station w:.s shot by the station's clerk.
T he clerk opened fire on two males who tried to rob him
' WedneS&lt;by, police said . Police called the shooting an ac t of selfdefense against a teen-ager who was pointing a loaded .380-caliber
pistol at the clerk and dema nding money.
The wounded 17-year-old suspect was released from Miami Valley Hospital T hursday afternoon and jailed at the.Warren County .
Juvenile Detention Center on a charge of aggravated robbery,
authorities said. They were still searc hin g fo r the other suspec t Friday.
Warren County Prosecutor T im O liver said he doesn't think the
d erk at the BP service station broke any laws.
.
" The preliminary indications are that certainly no charges be filed
agai nst the clerk," he said.
Police would not release the identity of the clerk.
Springboro is about 20 mil es south of Dayton.

City deans up sludge spill
C OLUMBUS (AP)- City officials are spending some $300,000
to ctean up at least 300 tons oflime sludge that spilled into a ditch .
The ditch leads to the Olentangy Jtjver, just upstream from a
stretch where biologists found four bluebreast darter fish last summ er.
"We're finding the sludge all over the area," said Lynn Kelly, the
·city's water supply and treatment coordinator. "As soon as the river
gets to the point where we can see the bottom, we should be able
, to find out just how much we're talking about."
Officials said they didn't realize a pipe carrying the sludge from a
water-treatment plant had rusted through until last week. Bicyclists
riding along the river noticed .a light-colored substance suspended
below the water's surface.
·
The gooey sludge is a minor skin irritant for humans, but it can
choke off life at th e bottom of the river, making it difficult for bot. tom- feeding fish to find food.
. Last summer, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency biologists
discovered the bluebreast darter. The fish are considered an important water-quality indicator because they can't tolerate pollution.

VIllage, township feud over lines
RICHFIELD (AP) - It's a feud between Richfteld Village and
the surrounding, less populated Richfield Township.
Judge John Adams of Summit County Common Pleas ordered
•the county council on Thursday to redraw township boundaries to
exclude the village.
, The ruling came in response to a suit filed by township landowners who want to secede from the village.
Township Trustee Robert Luther, a farmer, said he hopes the
township now c:in fight off village annexation.
Village Mayor Donald Larsen warned that splitting rhe community, which is near Akron and was the home of the now-demolished
Coliseum arena, would create division among residents.
The issue arose because the village, created inside the township in
1967, has grown to twice the population of the township. Village
· residents are citizens of the township, and can outvote township res-idents. At .the same time, township residents have no voice in village
. decisions.
The township has been losing land to annexation, including last
week's annexing of a housing subdivision. Annexations usually
occ ur because the village can provide water service to developers,
'and the township cannot.

Lancaster police win honor
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.Justice Department has honored the Lancaster, Ohio, police department for the quick recovery
·. of an abducted 3-year-old girl in April 1999.
Detective David Bailey accepted the Officer of the Year Award for
Missing and Exploited Children Investigations on behalf of the
.- department, about 30 miles southeast of Columbus.
~ · Bailey and his colleagues recovered the child, Ashley Taggart, three
· days after her abduction.
A doctor who examined the child estimated that she was about
.. six hours from her death when she was recovered, according to the
U.S. Office of Justice Programs.
Ashley's kidnapper, Jason Wagner, was sentenced in February to
44 years to life in prison.
"The Lancaster police department's immediate investigation and
swift recovery saved a child's life," said Deputy Attorney General
Eric H . Holder Jr.
The award was part of the 17th annual National Missing Chil. dren's Day ceremony Thursday.

Bill restricts land purchases in fo~

Sheriff: Man confessed
E·Z PAY
PAY BY MAIL OPTION
to killing teen-ager
the assailant tried to rape her, then
pushed her off a bridge into the
Tuscarawas River.
She was found Wednesday
morning by a passer-by and was
treated at Union H ospital. She
gave police a desc ription.
Sheriff Harold McKinunie said
Vaca admitted the killing to officers Wednesday night.
The two girls were approached
as they left a Hollywood Video
store in the New Towne Mall.Vaca
said he intended to rob the girls,
McKimmie said.
He said the arrest "alleviates a
lot of fear that had been permeating in the county. People were in
fear for their daughters."
Authorities said the suspect's
brother-In-law, Jeff Mulinix, provided information that led to the
arrest.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

;1
•'-----------------------------------------~--------

,.

LOCAL STOCKS

.•'

.

'

• AEP - 351.

•Convenient

. Akzo ~ 39l.

ArnTech/SBC - 42\i.
• Asbland Inc. - 34l.

AT&amp;T -33l,
Bank One -- 32')•
· Bob Evans ~ 12'.1
·~ BorgWarner - 41 l.
• Champion : Charming Shops - 5~.
"' City Holding - 9~.
~ Federal Mogul - 11 '.1
•·, Flrstar - 25lo

•Safe .

2'·

•Flexible

..

ro

19~

Ltd. - 49 ~

.

Oak Hill Financial -

OVB-27

One Valley - 35~·
Peoples - 151.
Premier -- 7'!.

Rockwell - 40'lo

The ·Daily Sentinel

Ho11e

~~Supreme Court's sch.;ol funding
t;~ling May II. That decision
ll:~und that Ohio's system of pay~~in'g for public schools remains
:::un constitutional,
primarily
;;because it relies too heavily on
, ·local property taxes.
~ Shoemaker noted that legisla£.:tive · leaders and Taft have
" promised to work with existing
.
•t revenue and don't want
to raise
'.. taxes.
~
"This (estate taX cut) squeezes
~- those eKisting revenues," said
Shoemaker, a Bourneville Demo""-crat.
•· The debate was stronger on the
~ scl;lool board bill. Proponents say
·~ the bill is necessary because the
;(.. original plan creating the
appointed members was included
~ in the multi-subject !995 budget
· ~ - bill.The Supreme Court in recent
~ rulings has found similar bills vio:• late the Legislature's "single-sub'\. . .. ul
: .Ject r e.
•; _Sen. Robert Cupp, a Lima
~ Republican, said the "hybrid''
i: board of elected and appointed
:0: members was an idea that had
"·proven 1tself.
~: · "011r appointed members and
~ o11r elected members are improv-

'"

t':

~·'~ -r:~To
~---------------,
get a currentweather
•
~
report,checkthe

:..... . - Sentinel
••

: .The Daily Sentinel
O~lo Velleyhblo.lal Co.
·Published every lfternoon, Monday throulf,h
'Friday, Ill Court Sr.e Pometoy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishln&amp;'Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S769, I'll. 991-21.56. Second cl151 post·
IJC ptld 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.

Family Practice Physician

Mmber. The AMOCiatcd Preas, and ihc OhiO·
Newapaper Asaoelalion.

Aria L. McVicker·

POSTMASTER: Send address co"'ctiona to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cqurt St., Pomeroy,
Obk&gt; 4l769.

Is Now Accepting ·New Patients

Holzer Clinic !!

1•

'

Residency ~t Doctors Hospital,
. Columbus, OH. Dr. McVicker is
Board Certified by the American
Osteopathic: Board of
Family Physicians.

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .................................................... .50 Cenll
. • Sublcrlbcn not delllirin&amp;lo pay the Clltrltr nuy
remit In advance direct to The Dally Sentinel
on a three, si.11 or 12 month buis. Credit ""Ill be
. . glve11 can~er etch week.

'.

992-0060

&lt;

'

... ,.

'

f.; •

'

Holzer Clinic •.....Keeping the Promise!

Holzer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

•

II'IVW.holtrrcllnlc.com

'
•

•

aru1

R egis tration is now o pen
through July 7. Students may register M onday through Thursday
from 8: 30 a. m.-6 p.m., amj Friday
from 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
GCC offers both one and twoyea r' programs in co mputers,
ofli ce
accou nting,
medi cal
admini stration, , executive office
administration
and business
adm.inistration.

Barbecue set

me nt .

Registration open

GALLIPO LI S- Schedul es for
the
summer quarte r, beginnin g
PO M ERO Y Burlingham
Modern Woodmen will have a July 3, at Gallipolis Career Colfund raising smorgasbord dinner lege have been released.

POMEROY - The following land transfers were recenrly reported .by M eigs County
R ecorder Judith A. King:
Larry D. Gindlesberger, Pamela D. Gin diesberger, to Harry L. Ramsey, Joanne ]. R amsey,
deed, Scipio;
Southern Local School District, to O hio
Power Company, right of way, Sutton;
Jamie Barrett, Melissa. Bat:rett, to Columbus
Southern Power, right of way, C hester;
Federal Hocking Local School, to Colum bus Southern Power, right of way, R ome Twp.
(Athens County) ;
Eddie Halirri, to Adam T. Ramseyer, Erin L.
Nash, Rita T. Ramseyer, deed , Bedford;
Marcella L'. Hoy, to Carolyn A. C harles, C arolyn A. Jeffers, deed; Sutton;
Daisey Mallory, to David ]. Bell, April K.
Bell, deed, Scipio;
Seldon R . Flemming, deceased, to Ida
Flemming, certificate, Olive;
Ida V. Flemming, to Kathy L. Sargent, Dennis]. Sargent, deed, Olive;
Thomas G. Beegle, de ceased, to Harold

RAC IN E - T he R ac ine Volunteer First Department will have
a chicken barbecue Sunday wi th
serving to begin at 1L a.m. The
auxiliary will sell dessert and
homemade ice cream.
I

Lawson, deed, Sutton;
R obert G. Edwards, to James s_ Stettler,
Pamela S. Stettler, deed, O live;
Mi chael H. Cline, Joyce N . Cline, to James
R. Priddy, Sr. , Ruth A. Priddy, deed, Middlepo_rt;
R obert G. Edwards, to Eric L. Johnson,
Sharon R .J ohnson, deed, Olive;
Robert L. Dempsey, deceased, to Mary B.
Dempsey, affidavit, Middleport;
John Thomas, C heryl L. Thomis, to Duane
Edward Abshire, Debra Lee Abshire, deed, Salisbury;
Juanita L. Spencer, dece,ased, to Spencer
Ru ssell, affidavit;
William J. Bias, Michael A. Reed, to State of
Ohio, deed, Letart;
.
William]. Bias, Michael A. R eed, to State of
Ohio, deed, Letart;
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R . Coomer, to
State of Ohio, deed, Letart;
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R . Coomer, to
State of Ohio, deed, Letart;
Barbara M . Pierce, C larenc e Thomas Wolfe,

R osalie Wolfe, to State of O hio, deed, Letart;
Barbara M. Pierce, to State of Ohio, deed ,
Letart';
Mark R . Jarrell , Aimee L. Jarrell , to Gary
Roush, Te r i J. Roush, deed , Letart;
Bishop of the Roman Catholic C hurch, to
Jeffers Coal Truc ki ng and Excavating Inc.,
deed, Salisbury;
Henry N orvel Lauhon, deceased, to Margaret S. Lauhon , affidavit, Letart;
Norvel Lauhon , to Susan Schleder, deed,
. Letart;
Cecil V. Dillon, Flossie N . Dillon, to LarryV.
Dillon, C ynthia A. Dillon , deed, Olive;
David E . Grubser, Eileen E Grueser, to Paul
P Simon, Allie M. Simon, de ed, Salisbury;
Ralph H. Ballard, Wilma M. Ballard, to
David A. Ballard, Brenda L. Vandyke, Melvin
D. Ballard , deed, C hester;
Brenda Vandyke, Rydell Vandyke, Melvin D.
Ballard, Sharon Ballard, to David A. Ballard,
deed, Chester;
David A. Wolfe. John T. Wolfe, Marilyn J.
Wolfe, to Troy S. Hoback, deed, Letart.

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Firm issues smoke alarm recall
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Maryland company is recalling about
34,000 smoke alarms that can fail to go off when smoke or fire is present. An electrical part in the alarm can also burn out, releasi':'g smoke
and melting the cover.
Universal Security Instruments of Owings Mills, Md., has received
three reports of alarms failing, releasing smoke and one report of
minor smoke damage to a mobile home's wall , the Consumer Product
Safety Commission said Thursday. No injuries have been reported.
The four types of smoke' alarms recalled are made of white plastic
ahd have the manufacture date code and model number imprinted on
the back. Some alarms do not have the brand name on the unit, so
consumers should check the model number.
The first two types are the Safe T Alert brand, model SA-785, and
the Universal brand, model SS- 785.Both are described as an "AC only
unit" and have date code BCSR.
The other two arc the Universal model SS-795 , and the USI Electric model USI-1203. Both are described as an "AC/ DC unit w/ battery backup" and have date code BESS.
The safety commission advises consumers to call Universal Security
Instruments toll-free at 1-800-390-4321 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
EDT Monday through Friday to receive a fre e replacement alarm .

1

my grandfathers were township
trusees, so I'm a third-generation
politician."
He attends1 Heath United
from PapAl
Methodist Church in Middlepayroll clerk for Alum Creek port.
Dam in Delaware. He is' a Past
· Spencer's replacement will be
Master of the Pomeroy-Racine F appointed by the Meigs County
&amp; AM Masonic Lodge, a Past Republican Central Committee,
Patron of the Evangeline Chapter which will meet no sooner than
Order of Eastern Star of Middle- I 0 days after his last day of serport, at;td is Presently_ Grant vice.
Prelate of the Royal Order of
ln the meantime, Meigs C ounAmaranth of the Grand Court of ty Commissioners have the
West Virginia.
option of appointing an interim
He is also a member of the York clerk of courts.
Rite in Middleport, Aladdin TemSpencer's
longest- se rving
ple Shrine in Columbus and the deputy, Marlene Harrison, has
Athens County Shrine Club.
expressed an interest in the
He has ·also been active in appointment. She and Betsy H erRepublican politics. ·
ald Nicodemus, a Democrat, are
"I couldn't help getting into vying for the offic.e in the
politics," Spencer said. "Both of November general election .

sunflower growers.
• $340 million for tobacco
dutaliOII of the tubscription.
growers,
to compensate fo r falling
MAILSUBSCRII'TIONS
cigarette sales.
l••kk Melli CnDtJ
from PapAl
ll Weeko .................................................$27.30
• $200 million for the govern26 W..to ................................................$53.82
l2 Weeki ............................................... $ I05.56
and other commodities (or which ment to buy surplu s commodiRite~ O•lllde Mtlp CoiiiiJ
insurance hasn't been available ties, including apples, black-eyed
ll Wecto .................................................$29.25
26 Wecto ............................. ................ .... Sl6.68
before.
peas, cherrles, citrus, cranberries,
s2 wecu ......................................... .... ..s 109.72
The federal subsidy for the onions, melons, peaches and potamost popular level of insu rance toes.
Reader Services
will rise from 42 percent to 59 · • $100 milli on for cottonseed
o.r ..,. coaeen II all Moria 11 to be
producers.
percent.
a«•rttt. If'" luto" of •• tri'Or Ia • dor)'1
,.u ......- • •• (740&gt; m-2155. w. ..111 ... The $5.5 billion in direct farm
• $25 million to fruit growers in
cllltck , .. r ldor••tloa aid •akt 1
the
Northeast who have been hurt
payments
would
go
to
grain
and
cemctlol thrarnakrd.
Nrwa Dtpan•nbl
ne lllll aa•ber II '"-J155. IJtP-rtiiMII cotton producers who have annu- by plum pox virus.
al "market-transition" contracts
It was the second maj or victory
. exteatkWiaart:
·eeMral Maupr-......................-Ext.llOI
in as many days for fa rm organizawith the government.
Newi .......... "...............................- ... Elt• 1102
.._ ................................................ or Ext. 1106
An additional $1.6 billion in tions, who on Wednesday were celOther Servkt:•
the legi~latio n is earmarked for ebmting the House's approval of
AdMrtltlne...................................... Ext. 1104
Clrculatloa.............................. .;........Ext, llOJ
special conunodities, including:
permanent normal trode relations
;OU~-~~A~d~o-~
.. ·~-"~"·~
·-~
..,.~
.. ·~·..~
·
·~
·
···
~
.. E•x•t.•li•OO~
• $500 million for soybean and · for C hina.
L
(hanac• may be implemented by th..ainathe

To Schedule an Appolnt111ent.
.Call (740). 446-5137 . .
Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis, OH

No subsc;:riptioA by mail pcrmined In
where 1\ome ttnierseno~ i1 available.

Publi 1htr reterYe&amp; the right to adju&amp;tratet durin&amp; the subacriptkm period. Subscription rate

.

88 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH

SUBSCRII'TION-RATES
IJ C1rrkt or Motor Ro•lt
One Wect ............................... ................... $2.00
OIHI M011th ................................................ S8.10

:, OaeYcar .............. ....... .'......................... $104.00

..
.
Dr. Arle McVIcker, completed her

Urgent Care Center

Fund-raiser
planned

Monday at the haU . Serving will
be from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. and there
will be ea t-in and carry out servi ce for a donation .
There will also be a bake sale
table and a plant sale. The Modern Woodmen H ome Office will
match up to S2,500 of the money
raised. T he money will l1e given
to the MeigS' Emergency Medical
Servi ce fo r automatic detibulators
and to the Scipio Fire Depart-

Land transf_
ers posted by county recorder

Clerk

(VSPSZll-9601

Aria L. McVicker, DO
I

•

Daily stock repo~s are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis.

5:48 p.m., Hiland Road, Matie
Ball, Holze r Medical C enter;
7:33 p.m., State -Street, Austin
Phillips, Veteran s Memo rial Hospital;
·
8:39 p:m., State Route 143,
Alice C hapman, HMC.
COLUMBIA TWP.
.
6:02p.m., Mount Union Road,
co nt rolled bu rn.
RUTLAND
8:37 p.m., Ogdin Road, Evere tt
Hutto n, treated.

Dance group cuts performances
NEW YORK (AP) - The dan ce group founded by modern dance
pioneer Martha Graham has pulled out of two major festivals and suspended its operations for the foreseeable 'future because of financial
problems.
The announcement was made after a unanimous vote Thursday by
the board of the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance, the
umbrella. organization for th e Martha Graham Dance Company, its
school and its junior troup e.
"We don't have the funds to go forward today," Francis M ason, act- ,
ing chairman of the center's board, told The New York Times. "We
continue to seek those funds. This will be a suspension. That's what
we're hoping."
The Manhattan- based center would have faced an accumulated
deficit of$500,000 if it had continued operations this year, The Times
said.
The company, the school and · the junior troupe were to suspend
operations ,today. The suspension forces the immediate cancellation of
performances at the American Dance Festival in Durham, N.~. , where
the company was to open its season on June 8, and at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, where it was to open "The Legacy of Martha
Graham and Paul Taylor;' a two-week festival scheduled for September.

•

Hours: 8 AM to 5 PM

At

15~

ing the quality of education in
Ohio;' Cupp said.
Shoemaker, however, said the
school board has been a "political
football" caught in the middle of
fights over education among the
Legislature, the governor and the
courts.
. "We've been discussing this
basically since the early '80s," he
said. "We talk about the state
board being the problem when
we don 't want to face up to the
situation that exists."
Sen. Gene Watts, a Dublin
Republican, said he initially was
against the idea of mixing elected
and appointed members. He figured it would lead to political
squabbling between the two
groups.
"We have a governance that
works better than I thought it was
going to when we passed it," he
said.
The Senate also agreed with
House amendments on a bill to
make it easier for school districts
whose buildings need immediate
help, but don't yet qualify for state
aid, to begin repairs or construction. Any money raised locally
would count as matching money
required by the state to qualify for
its ~onstruction assistance programs.
Taft is expected to sign all three
bills.

~·

992-2155

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Core ~
Monday-Friday 1 :00 pm to 9:00 pm
Weekends a Holidays 1:oo.pm to g:oo pm

'

Wai-Mart - 55·
Wendy's - 21 '.1
Worthington - 11 ~

from PapAl

~

r

..

Krager --

Lands End - 31 '-

"'\.

••
••

The Daily Sentinel :

.Urgent Care is now available for those unexpected
ailments that occur after hours. .
·

Sears - 36' •

Shoney's - 1Y.

·Bills

(.

For More Information
Call Today... Switch To Office Pay

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Center

RD

Kmart - t Y
.

'.

.._

Receive A Bill For Your Paper
Directly From

and jerking riders around a little
bit more than we liked," said park
spokesman Jeff Siebert. "We
wanted to make sure that this
small section was as smooth as the
remaining 7,000 feet of track."
Park officials maintain thar Son
of Beast's downtime has more to
do with comfort than safety, but
there has been speculation that
the problems were more serious
than park officials had reported.
As Siebert put it, "the urban
legends about Son of Beast's status
are flying everywhere."
Siebert said the delay in
reopening the ride was necessary
so carpenters could make several
adjustments to the problem area. ·

Boots - 5~
Shell-60~

Rocky

Gannett -- 63\
General Electric - 50'.1
Harley Davidson - 38

.,:··--------------------------------------------~--~
'
••

Correction

EMS calls posted

•
•

LOCAL BRI E FS

RAC INE - Ron Cammarata,
vi
ce
president of the Southern
and variable wind. C hance of rain
Local Board of Educatio n, pre30 percent.
Saturday...Showers and thun- sented diplomas to the graduate~
derstorms likely. H ighs in the during Southern High SchooJis
lower and mid 80s. Cha nce of conunencement program Sunday
night. It had earlier been reported
rain 70 percent.
. Saturday nighL.Showers and that Bob Collins, board p resident,
thunderstorms likely. Lows 60 to made the presentations.
65.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderPO MEROY - Un its of the
storms. Highs in the mi d 70s .
Services
Meigs Emergency
Memorial Day... Partly cloudy answered five calls for assistance
with a chance of showers. Lows in on Thursday. Units responded as
the mid 50s and highs near 70.
follows:
TuesdaT... Most1y clear. Lows in
CENTRAL DISPATCH
the mid 50s and highs in the
upper 70s.

Showers and t hunderstorms
will return to the tri-county area
early· Sat urday and continue
i ntermittently through the weekend.
However, the National Weather
Service promises dry and sunny
·c_onditions on Memorial Day.
Htghs on Saturday will be 70-75 in the north and 75-80 in the
south.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:50
p.m. and sunrise on Sanirday at
~:08 a.m.
·
:
Weather forecast:
~~ni
ht .. .Increasing cloudiness.
·:A an of showers after mid:~ · tght. Lows in the mid 50s. Light

:.

New roller coaster to reopen
KINGS MILLS (AP) - ·,Paramount's Kings Island ·official~ say
the park's new wooden roller
coaster has been cleared by safety
officials and 'is ready to reopen
after three weeks of inactivity due
to repair work.
Special previews of the Son of
Beast coaster were delayed late
last month after the. ride's electrical system was da1naged by lightning.
· The ride opened April 28, but
was closed the neKt day after park
officials discovered a rough 1.5foot section of track during an
inspection.
. "This particular section at the
top of the second hill was moving

Showers returning Saturday

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY WEATHER

local property owners to sell land to the I.:!.S.
COLUMBUS (AP) - The government Rep. Gene Krebs, a Camden Republican.
The bill's sponsor, R ep. Nancy Hollister, a Forest Service.
couldn't expand Wayne National Forest by buy"This bill is not the answer to the rax-base
ing more private land for four years under leg- Marietta Republican, said the forest provides
..
islation approved T hursday by the O hio House. limited economic benefit to residents despite its problem of these areas," Sutton said.
Congress stu ted limiting land purrh=s !n
The bill imposes a four-year moratorium on reputation as a recreational area with a variety
the
Wotyne forest in 1995. T hat was m response
the permission Ohio gives the U.S. Forest Ser- of uses.
She said it's time to step back and plan the to complaints from the forest's neighbors. T\l~y
vice to buy land in LI southern Ohio counties.
said their county governments and school .,U~
It al,lo creates a conunittec to study the for- forest's futu re over the next 70 years.
"We need to think about how big the Wayne I triers couldn't afford to have more .land dropped
est's economic impact and whether to extend
sho uld be;' Hollister said."This offers an oppor- from the tax rolls.
the moratorium.
T he legislation affects land in Hocking, MopSupporters of the bill say expanding the for- tunity for all parties involved, conservationists,
roe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry, Athens, Gallia,Wishest h1.1rts local government because of lost tax sports men, to come together and work with the
legislative commission on desperately needed ington,Jackson.Vinton and Lawrence counties.
revenue.
Also Thursday, the House approved a bill ~~t
"As you keep taking private property and long-term reconun endations."
would
ban trains from blocking_streets identiRep. Betty Sutton, a Barberton Democrat
removing it from the taK rolls, you find local
governin_g bodies slowly starving to dea th ," said who opposed the bill, said no one is forcing fied ts emergency crossings.

NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP)
- The Thscarawas C ounty sheriff
said T hursday that a man arrested
in the stabbing death of a 17-yearold girl who had given him a ride
confessed during police questioning.
Matthew Vaca, 27, of New
Philadelphia, was arrested Wednes- .
day night in Coshocton County.
He was being held on a probation
violation in the Tuscarawas County Jail while the county prosecutor
reviewed the case, police and prosecutors said.
Authorities say Elizabeth Reiser, of Dover, was stabbed in the
neck Tuesday night after she and a
friend gave a ride to a man who
offered them $20 to drive him
home.
Reiser's friend, a 17-year-old
New Philadelphia girl. told police

Friday, May 26, 2000

v'

Bailout

Dems: It's too early to fret about Gore and polls
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -AI
Gore met with Democratic leaders from around the country and
reassured them his campaign has a
winning strategy against George
W. Bush. Several of the Democrars said they were comfortable
after their pep rally and strategy
session that Gore's lagging poll
numbers aren't a serious problem
-yet.
.
The likely presidential nominee
told supporters at a $1 million
Democratic National Committee
fund- raiser Thunday night that
he expects "a good healthy, hard
tight ahead of us and we're going
to win it. And we're going to win
it solidly."
Molly Beth Malcolm, chairwoman of the Texas Democrati c
Party, made an analogy that
Democratic women use from

time to time when tal.king about campaign staff of Gore, who trails
Bush, the likely Republjcan nom- Bush in key states and by 5 to 10
points in national polls. Party offiinee.
"Bush is so new (to the cials say the meeting was planned
narional audience) and he's a nice long before Gore dropped behind
guy; but he's one of those guys in recent polls.
you want to go out and date in
college;' said Malcolm, a former
Republican. "You know you'll
have a good time, but he's not
wjlo anybody wants to marry"
She was one of 72 party leaders
from 34 states, Puerto Rico and
"Democrats abroad" who spent
'F hursday in Nashville for a pep
rally/ strategy meeting with the

10x-iii'"••

•:30 PM FOIIVINING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOI MATIIIHS

Hubbard's
Greenhouse Sale
Closeout Sale for the Season!
All Flats &amp; 1.0" Hanging
Baskets 54.50
while they last
4" Pots Cutting
Geraniums 75(t
Seed Geraniums 50(t
Asst. Shrubbery Buy 1 Reg.
Price Get 1 FREE
Open Dally 9-5

992-5776
Close Sundays

.•

�..

Page A~

_Th_e_D_ai~ly_Se_n_tin_·e_I______________~()=~·~~·C)II
The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~-----=------~--------------------------.

rou

t+1 TAKIN6 YOU

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflleh
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewl1
Managing Editor

Larry BQyer
Advertl•lng Dlreelor

Dl•ne Kay Hill
Controller

OFF CMSTffS' lfJD
PUTTIN~

-KIDDIE RIDES

FOR A YEJR.

MEIGS COUNTY HONORS ITS WORLD WAR II VETERANS WHO
DIED IN SERVICE TO THEIR COUNTRY. MEIGS COUNTY THANKS
THESE HEROES AND THEiR FAMILIES FOR THEIR ULTIMATE
SACRIFICE TO INSURE OUR FREEDOM.

U tters to th l rdiiiJr au "'~lromt. TI"J !llto11ld b. l•n th1111 JOO wonU• .AU l1tt1" "" • ubjtcl
tdiU.,tJl4nd must bt •itJnd 1111d indude addr.u s1rd itltphmte lf.l4tffHr. IVa M1Ui6""- "'Utn -.ill
bf.' publi.rhed. l•.tren li,wu/d H in lood Ulllll, addrtSJIIII U.tUtl, 1101 ptnOIItllilifJ,
n, opillifmJ rxpru.ud itt th t mlu1n" bd flll' an Ill• ~on unsu s oftht O#lht Vall•y PublUhln•
C't1. ·~ tditOI'Ui f boord. unfeu t"htrwilt noted.

'

OUR VIEW

Celebrate

WORLD WAR II SOLDIERS KILLED IN ACTION
NAME

Congratulations to Class of
2000 upon graduation
To the C lass of 2000:
It is graduation tin1e, and our graduating seniors are beginning to don caps and gowns, and look toward their futures.
School trips, class activities, and, graduation parties move to the forefront of
our community's social calendar, and
th()se of us who graduated years ago
recall · our own experiences at alumni
celebrations throughout the communiIt appears that Social s~curity will be the
ty.
big Presidential campaign issue. There is an
tntr
Graduation season, then, is a period
· elemental question behind the debate: What 's
of celebration and reflection.
better, wealth or income?
o
We join our neighbors in congratuWho is richer, Joe, with a million dollars in
lating the Class of 2000, and wish for
the bank, drawing 5 percent interest per year,
them much success in their future acaequaling $50,000 a year, OR Jane, with no
demic, professional and personal
money in the banli getting $50,000 per year
endeavors.
from a public pension?
When Joe dies, his kids get the million
The hard. work of 12 years has paid
bucks.
When Jane dies her kids get burial
ofT for our area graduates, and now the real work begins. ColNEA COLUMNIST
expenses from Uncle Sam. ·If Joe gets very
lege and work require continued diligence and hard work, and
sick, with costs beyond those covered by his
life as an adult requires responsibility.
health insurance, he can take money from his
Students in high schools today are inundated with messages
bank a~count.Jane has no bank account. IfJoe . get 70 percent of her projected earnings,
about 'drugs and alcohol, and the dangers of drinking and dridecides to travel around the world, he takes unless the law is changed mandating her to
ving, and those messages are of vital importance.
money out of his bank account, buys a new pay more in Social Security taxes or work
While messages of personal responsibility are often diluted
suitcase and a funny hat. Jane, lacking wealth, more years. But, depending on the details of
with clever slogans and icons of pop culture, the importance
. just keeps getting her monthly check.
the of the various personal account plans, the
of behaving responsibly remains perhaps the most important
Wealth is better than income. If, over the government could make Joe almost whole in
lesson that we can present as our graduating seniors embark
din of demagoguery, that i; explained in the the event of adverse circumstances. If Joe
on their journey into the real world.
course of the campaign, George Bush comes invested unwisely, or unluckily, or during an
out
ahead of AI Gore.
; Most of us can recall the name of a teen, standing on the
unprecedented long term market decline, the
Gore's argument that Bush's plan for partial government might pledge -to make good up
brink of"the real world," who died tragically as the result of
privatization of Social. Security is "a risky to 80 percent or 90 percent of what Joe
~omeone's irresponsible behavior.
scheme."
What's risky is to do nothing. If would have received had he stayed in Social
As the members of the Class of 2000 enjoy their last sumSocial Security policy remains unchanged Security as we now have it. That's better than
l}ler of childhood, we urge them to stiy sober, to drive careJane will receive about 70 percent of her ben- Jane's 70 percent.
!Mlly, and to remember that their high school experiences are
efits in the 2030s.
Where would such money come from?
QOt the e1_1d, but are only the beginning of life.
Gore says the stock markets are too risky to From U.S. general revenues, the same magic
: While "the real world" involves hard work, dedication and · invest pension funds. But in the definitive
mountain from which AI Gore gets his mon ey
~esponsibility, it also brings freedom, opportunity lind reward.
"Stocks for the Long Run," author Jeremy to transfor·m the 70 percent into 100 percent.
• We hope that our graduates, and their peers, will enjoy life
Siegal of the University of Pennsylvania ana- That spending, of course, could ultimately
(o its fullest this summer, will carry these memories among
lyzed American data over 200 years. He found raise federal taxes or ignite inflation.
their most cherished, and will remember that responsible and
that, after discounting for inflation, stocks
(And, by the way. Jane too has risk, even
s'afe behavior will likely ensure a lifetime of other precious
went up an average of 7 percent per year. though her pension is backed by Uncle Sam.
Moreover, they were less risky than bonds in What if the nation is in a long war, or facing
memories .
•
any given decade.
a terrible epidemic, or the Congress decides
Still, Gore says, "too risky." Gore says some- to means-test Social Security, or longevity
thing can happen that hasn't happened before. goes up to 125?)
Let's suppose that the U.S. markets defy expeGore's 'arguf!lenl is that Bush's "risky" tax
rience and instead of rising, they stay flat, or cut proposal , coupled with his "risky" Social
fall . Is Jane then better off than Joe?
Securiry proposal, would cut general revenues
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
In
the
2030s,
remember,
Jane
will
only
·
too mllch.
No.
· Today is Friday, May 26, th~ 147th day of2000.There are 219 days
lett in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 26, 1940, the Allies began their' troop evacuation fium
Dunkirk, France.
On this daie:
In 152 1, Martin Luther was banned by the £diet ofWoqns because
of his religious belie6 and writings.
In 1805, Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned king of Italy.
I saw no ghosts or ghouls, and nothing
' In 1865, arrangements were made in New Orleans for the surren~ ,
went bump in the night.
·
der of Confederate forces west of the Mississippi.
One of the housekeepers at the Buxton
In 1868, the impeachment
of President Andrew Johnson ended
Inn said she has been startled 'on occasion to
with his acquittal on all remaining charges.
see
doors open and shut when nobody else
In I 913, Actors' Equity Association w.t&lt; organized.
was around. My waiter - a college student
In 1960, U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge accused the Soviets
said that the night before, he saw two
of hiding a microphone inside a wood carving of the Great Seal of the
wine bottles leave their secure perches in the
United States that had been presented to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.
inn 's win e ra cks and fall to the floor for no
In 1969, the Apollo 10 astronauts rerurned ro Earth after a successearthly reason .
lUI eiWift•qay dress rehearsal for the first manned moon lan.ding.
' In 19"81, 14 people were killed when a Marine jet crashed onto the
But that was as scary as things got during
flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz off Florida.
NEA COLUMNIST
my weekend at the historic hostelry in
In 1991 , a Lauda Air Boeing 767 crashed in Thailand, killing all223
Granville, Ohio. where eerie things have
people aboard.
been happening since · the inn opened in
In 1994, Michael Jackson and Li1a Marie Presley were married in
1812.
experience.
1
me Dominican Republic. (The marriage ended in 1996.)
Many of the occurrehces have taken·place
But during the two nights I occupied
Ten years ago: Soviet maverick politician Boris N.Yeltsin failed in a
in room seven -. my room. Guests in the room seven, things couldn't have been mo te
second round of vo'ting to win the presidency of the R ussiaiJ Federa.mom said they have seen a red rocking chair unghostly. My nights' sleep were restful and
tion. (He succeeded in a third round of balloting three days later.)
rock back and forth when no one was sitting undisturbed. ·
Five years ago: In the tobacco industry's largest recall ever, Philip
in it. Furniture in th e inn has been heard to · So, are there such things as ghosts? Many
Morris USA halted sales of sevenl cigarette brands, including some
move from one location to another during people think so.
versions of top-selling Marlboro, beause some 6Iten were contamithe middle of the r\jght.
·Hans Holzer, a famous parapsychologist,
nated.
As I mentioned in a previous column, a tells about a medium who went with him to
Todays BirthdaY': Singer Peggy Lee Is 80. Actor James AtneM is 77.
wom~n stayin!! in room seven reported that a haunted house to try to contact a ghost
Actor Alec McCowen is 75. Open sinj!erTeresa Sttaw is 61. Sportsthe atr was _sllflmg m the room one nigbt, . who was disturbing the household.
caster Brent Musberger is 61. Rc;x:k singer-musician Levon Helm
when one srde. of her face became suddenly , · During the seanc~, the medium said,
(The BaiJd) is 58. Rock musician Garry Peterson (Guess Who) is 55.
cold .
"Something touched me." She said she felt a
~inger Stevie Nicks is 52. Actor Philij:i Michael Thomas is 51 . Actress
"It was not like any other cold I have ever woman's presence. She went into a trance
Pam Grier is 51 . Country singer Hank Williams Jr. is 51 . ,Former astrofelt ," &lt;he said. "It ·was the clammy cold you and reportedly held a conversation with the
naut Sally K. Ride is 49. Actreu Margaret Colin is 43. C ountry singer.a.so:!.ate with moss and li chen growing on a spirit of a woman who said she had been a
songwriter Dave Robbins (BlackHawk) is 41. Actress Genie FrancL&lt; is
.roc .
servant 1in the house during the Civil War.
38. Comedian Bobcat Goldthwait is 38. Singer Lenny Kravitz is 36.
Others ha~ reported having the same
The servant had had a baby that died.

1) Malcolm Clair Allen
2) John Patrick Andrews
3) John William Bable
4) Leo Dow Bailey
5) Lawrence A. Baker
6) George L. Bearhs
7) Chester R. Bell
· 8) Charles S. Bennet
9) Floyd Edward Blake
1O) Ted Bl.azewlcz
11)Louls Dale Bolin
12) James W. Boring
13) Richard Herbert Boring
14)Edgar 0. Bradford
15) Earl .E. Brown
16) George D. Burson.
17) James Allen Canode
18) Stanley E. Casto
19) Howard Edward Collins
20) Sidney Asa Cook
21) Kibble L. Cowdery
22) John William Cowie
23) Howard Mart Crary
24) Charles R. Crislip
25) Elmer C. Dailey
26) Jake M. Dailey
27) Thurman L. Dailey
28) Paul H. Damewood
29) PFC David H. Davidson
30) Robert Russell Davis .
31) Luther Deem
32) Thomas E. Duerr
33) Walter Rex Dunfee
34) Danny Seymour Dunn
35) . Emmett Alton Eastman
36) David A. Eynon .
37) Horace Farley ·
38) William Fish
39) John C. Fisher
.
40) Alexander H. Fogle
,,
41) Albert Franz
42) William J. Freeman Jr•
43) Oval Arthur Gandee
44) Fred Gears
45) George R. Gibson
46) George M. Gillilan
,
47) Max; Gorby
48) Robert L. Greathouse
49) .Charles- Harv~y Hauck
50) George W. Hayman
51) Henry H. Hermsen
52) Rodney D. Hlnis
53) Nyman L. Hogue ·
54) Charles Alfred Hunnell
55) Gerald James Hysell
56) Worley Jacks ·
57) Robert M. Jackson
58) Herman L. Jaynes
59) David Meridith Jenkins
· 60) Harold Story Jones
61) Harry Jones ,
62) David James Joseph Jr.
63) Arthur Edward Kaylor

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Opposing private investment is risky, too
Ben
Wattenberg

.

TODAY IN HISTORY

I

.
(CONTEST ! PRIZES! Submit a bumper :
sti cker slogan or a rhyme using the word :
"risky;"or tht· phrase "risky scheme." Email to :
Warm ailaoLco m)
Assum e the worst: the Bush tax cut turns :
o ut to be too big. It is politically easier to :
change tax rates, we do it often, than to :
change th e structure of Social Security, which .
happens rarely, with blood and feathers in the :
chamber.
Th e iss ue remains - wealth. Albert Einstein said " the most powerfuHorce in the uni- ·
verse is compound interest." Wealthy people
always understood that: Make money ofT your
money. Alas. non-rich people don't have . a
stash of money off which to make money. But ,
th e so-called "401 - K Revolution,'' which
includes IRAs, Keoghs, Roths. and more, has •
shown that when the non- rich are encouraged to accumulate a stash, compound inter- :
est follows, and they end up with that flexible :
wonder - wealth .
For me, this is no-brainer. The puzzle is :
why is it being so vigorously opposed, partie- :
ularly by the AFL-CIO After all. it would ·
make all union metnbers part of the wealth- :
owning class. Is that bad? Once, the non-rich :
had no pensions. Now they have Social Secu- :
riry. Once. the non-rich had no wealth. Now :
is the time to give them wealth as well as pen- :

.

sions.

•

Samuel Gompers, th e patron saint of the
American labor movement was asked "What
does labor want?" His answer was: "More."
The current leadership, self-sryled activist progressivcs. seem to be saying "No More Than
Th e Same, Please."
,
That AI Gore is following this line is equally mys\erious. The case in favor js so strong
th at opposing it is politically dangerous, even
risky, even possibly a risky scheme. ,

;
·
:
:
.

(Hen Hltweuberg is a colrrmnist for Newspaper
Educatiofl Association.)

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

No needfor Ghostbusters on this night

,I

a ute

to America's Armed Forces

YOU ON

lo

The hard
1vork of 12
years has
paid offfor
area
CJ·raduates,'.
atld now the
rea 1 work
,
begtns.

A5

Friday, May 11, 1000

'£sta6lisfutf in.l948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

The Da lly Sentinel •

trw

George R.
Plagenz

.'

After her own death she had remained in
th e house, believing it was the best way to
be near her child.
At that moment, Holzer told the ghost
woman, " You must go from here and join
your husband and child. who are waiting for :
you on the other side."
:
After that, says Holzer, the ghost n!!.ver :
both ered th e fatnily again.
·
:
Susy' Smith, author of"Prominent Ameri- :
can Ghosts," says ghosts appear occasionally :
at the places where., they were happiest or :
saddest or .at th e scene of a great crime of ·
ac cident in whi ch they were involved.
:
The · renown ed Society for Psychical :
Research in london, made up of psycholo- :
gists, ph ysicists and doctors, has an open :
mmd on th e subject of ghosts.
:
Whil e conceding that many ghost stories :
o riginate in people's imaginations, it does go :
so far as to say that the existence of ghosts is ·
not impossible.
·
So, if you're going to be spending the •
ntght at the Buxton Inn sometime, it probably wouldn 't hurt to 1ay the prayer we
learned as children ("Now I lay me down to
sleep...") before pulling the c.overs over your
head for the night.
Just to be on the safe side.

CITY

KILLED IN ACTION

Middleport
Chester
Columi:Jia Twp.
Pomeroy

Germany
Luzon Island
Germany
France

Pomeroy

Pacific

North Africa
Middleport
Olive Twp.
England
Pacific
Pomeroy
Salisbury Twp . Okinawa
Reedsville
France
haly
Reedsville
Great Bend
France
Adriatic Sea
Racine
Pratts Fork
Italy
Columbia Twp~ South Pacific
Germany
Rutland
France
. Middleport
Bedford Twp. South Pacific
Germany
Reedsville
Syracuse
Pacific
Italy .
Keno
Germany
OllveTwp.
Syracuse
Germany·
Portland
South Pacific
Long Bottom Germany
Western Front
Bash an
Pomeroy
France
France
Pdroeroy
Minersville
At Sea
Pomeroy
Pacific
Rutland
Germany
At Sea
Racine
Chester Twp. Luxembourg
Syracuse
Europe
Sliver Run
Middleport
Pomeroy
Pomeroy
Lebanon Twp.
Pomeroy
, Harrisonville
Chester Twp.
Salem
.. Twp.

France
Belgium

,

Belgium~

Germany
Germany
Germany
Stateside

Pomeroy
Letart

lwoJima
Germany

Pomeroy
Rutland .
Pomeroy
Rutland
Langsville
Middleport
Salisbury Twp.

Europe
France
France
Italy
Germany
Bataan Peninsula
France

Bedford Twp.

South Pacific

Minersville
Italy
Tuppers Plains Normandy

NAME
64) Philip Edward Killinger
65) Clarence William Knapp
66) Floyd Eugene Koblentz
67) Robert Ira Landaker
68) Carl W. Lewis
69) Ernest Lynch
70) John S. Mallet
71) Kenneth Raymond Matlack
72) Howard S. McCloud
, 73) Arthur McDaniel
74) Ottle Junior McGraw
75) Herbert D. McNamee
76) Col. Albert D. ·Miller
17) Charles Edward Miller
78) Cecil Neighbors
79) Wendell Lee Nelson
80) Hobart M. Nelson
81) George E. Pankes
82) George E. Parker
83) George Herman Parker
84) Bruno J. Pierotti
85) James B. Powers
86) Millard Wayne Prince
87) George Pullins
8~) Ralph David Pullins
89) John Edward Radekin
· 90) Clarence Hudson Reed
91) Qavld Keast Reed
92) Lewis Norman Rockwell
93) Harle1 L. Rood
94) Ciul Edward Roush
95) Harold W. Russell
96) Harold S. Sarson
97) Dean Arthur Sayre
98) E~ward J. Schoonover
99) Theodore "Ted" R. Scott
· 100) Manring T. Seyfried
101) Jewell Preston Sinclair
102) Edward R. Skinner
103) Sam~;~el Winslow Smith
104) Wade Dale Smith
1OS) Gilbert J. Spencer
106) Clalr'E. Spires
107) Chester Freemont Steward
108) Chester Owen Stobart
109) William M. Swauger
110) Charles R. Swindler
111) John
Taylor
112) Maurice John Thorton
113) Dana Edward VanMeter
114) Wllll~m Denzil Venable
115) Lewis Franklin Walker
116) Paul Joseph Ward
.
117) Charles Donald Weed
118) Leo Dearold Wells
119) James W. White
120) Denver William Whittington
121) Calvin Floyd Will
122) Donald Norris Winters
123) Ray A. Wolfe
124) Leonard Ellison Wood
125) James E. Wylie

w.

CiTY

KILLED IN ACTION

Pomeroy
Dexter
Chester
.Pomeroy
Sutton Twp.

Philliplnes
Pacific
Stateside ·
France
France

Pomeroy
Tuppers Plains Germany
Middleport
North Africa
Mi~dleport

Europe
Lebanon twp. New Guinea
Pomeroy
Phillipines
Letart Falls · Phillipines
Columbia Twp.
Dexter
Germany
Chester Twp •
Chester Twp.
Pomeroy
Pomeroy
Long Bottom

France
France
Philllpines
lwo Jima
France

Olive Twp.
Columbia Twp.
Dexter
Pomeroy
Chester Twp.

Germany
Italy
France
Germany
Saipan

Middleport
Pomeroy
Letart Falls

Italy
France
Luzon Island

Rutland
Forest Run
Pomeroy
Bedford Twp.
Pomeroy
Reedsville
Portland
Sutton 1\vp. ·

France
Mediterranean
Luzon tsland
Western Front
Italy
Aleutian Islands
South Pacific
Luzon Island

Columbia Twp.
Racine
Germany
Pomeroy
lwo Jima
Pomeroy
Austria
Salisbury Twp.'Stateside
Orange Twp. Germany
Pomeroy
Stateside
Pomeroy
Germany
Portland
Africa
.Portland
Germany
Scipio Twp.
Europe
Orange Twp. Burma
Columbia Twp. Belgium
Pomeroy
Atlantic
Racine
France
·Belgium
Middleport
Middleport
England
·Middleport
Philliplnes

And To Veterans Of All Wars &amp; Conflicts We Thank You!
·The .S ources From Which This List Was Compiled Were The Middleport Monument, .The Book
· . "Those Who Gave All" Published By The Meigs County Pioneer &amp; Historical Society,
The Meigs Co. Library And The Daily Senti.nel.
· Any Inaccuracies Are Unintentional.

.'

,(George R . Plagetrz is a rolunwist for Newsp,a· •
per Emerprisc Association.)
·. :

This salute Is compliments of Crow and Crow Attorneys -At-Law

.

'

�..

Page A~

_Th_e_D_ai~ly_Se_n_tin_·e_I______________~()=~·~~·C)II
The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~-----=------~--------------------------.

rou

t+1 TAKIN6 YOU

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflleh
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewl1
Managing Editor

Larry BQyer
Advertl•lng Dlreelor

Dl•ne Kay Hill
Controller

OFF CMSTffS' lfJD
PUTTIN~

-KIDDIE RIDES

FOR A YEJR.

MEIGS COUNTY HONORS ITS WORLD WAR II VETERANS WHO
DIED IN SERVICE TO THEIR COUNTRY. MEIGS COUNTY THANKS
THESE HEROES AND THEiR FAMILIES FOR THEIR ULTIMATE
SACRIFICE TO INSURE OUR FREEDOM.

U tters to th l rdiiiJr au "'~lromt. TI"J !llto11ld b. l•n th1111 JOO wonU• .AU l1tt1" "" • ubjtcl
tdiU.,tJl4nd must bt •itJnd 1111d indude addr.u s1rd itltphmte lf.l4tffHr. IVa M1Ui6""- "'Utn -.ill
bf.' publi.rhed. l•.tren li,wu/d H in lood Ulllll, addrtSJIIII U.tUtl, 1101 ptnOIItllilifJ,
n, opillifmJ rxpru.ud itt th t mlu1n" bd flll' an Ill• ~on unsu s oftht O#lht Vall•y PublUhln•
C't1. ·~ tditOI'Ui f boord. unfeu t"htrwilt noted.

'

OUR VIEW

Celebrate

WORLD WAR II SOLDIERS KILLED IN ACTION
NAME

Congratulations to Class of
2000 upon graduation
To the C lass of 2000:
It is graduation tin1e, and our graduating seniors are beginning to don caps and gowns, and look toward their futures.
School trips, class activities, and, graduation parties move to the forefront of
our community's social calendar, and
th()se of us who graduated years ago
recall · our own experiences at alumni
celebrations throughout the communiIt appears that Social s~curity will be the
ty.
big Presidential campaign issue. There is an
tntr
Graduation season, then, is a period
· elemental question behind the debate: What 's
of celebration and reflection.
better, wealth or income?
o
We join our neighbors in congratuWho is richer, Joe, with a million dollars in
lating the Class of 2000, and wish for
the bank, drawing 5 percent interest per year,
them much success in their future acaequaling $50,000 a year, OR Jane, with no
demic, professional and personal
money in the banli getting $50,000 per year
endeavors.
from a public pension?
When Joe dies, his kids get the million
The hard. work of 12 years has paid
bucks.
When Jane dies her kids get burial
ofT for our area graduates, and now the real work begins. ColNEA COLUMNIST
expenses from Uncle Sam. ·If Joe gets very
lege and work require continued diligence and hard work, and
sick, with costs beyond those covered by his
life as an adult requires responsibility.
health insurance, he can take money from his
Students in high schools today are inundated with messages
bank a~count.Jane has no bank account. IfJoe . get 70 percent of her projected earnings,
about 'drugs and alcohol, and the dangers of drinking and dridecides to travel around the world, he takes unless the law is changed mandating her to
ving, and those messages are of vital importance.
money out of his bank account, buys a new pay more in Social Security taxes or work
While messages of personal responsibility are often diluted
suitcase and a funny hat. Jane, lacking wealth, more years. But, depending on the details of
with clever slogans and icons of pop culture, the importance
. just keeps getting her monthly check.
the of the various personal account plans, the
of behaving responsibly remains perhaps the most important
Wealth is better than income. If, over the government could make Joe almost whole in
lesson that we can present as our graduating seniors embark
din of demagoguery, that i; explained in the the event of adverse circumstances. If Joe
on their journey into the real world.
course of the campaign, George Bush comes invested unwisely, or unluckily, or during an
out
ahead of AI Gore.
; Most of us can recall the name of a teen, standing on the
unprecedented long term market decline, the
Gore's argument that Bush's plan for partial government might pledge -to make good up
brink of"the real world," who died tragically as the result of
privatization of Social. Security is "a risky to 80 percent or 90 percent of what Joe
~omeone's irresponsible behavior.
scheme."
What's risky is to do nothing. If would have received had he stayed in Social
As the members of the Class of 2000 enjoy their last sumSocial Security policy remains unchanged Security as we now have it. That's better than
l}ler of childhood, we urge them to stiy sober, to drive careJane will receive about 70 percent of her ben- Jane's 70 percent.
!Mlly, and to remember that their high school experiences are
efits in the 2030s.
Where would such money come from?
QOt the e1_1d, but are only the beginning of life.
Gore says the stock markets are too risky to From U.S. general revenues, the same magic
: While "the real world" involves hard work, dedication and · invest pension funds. But in the definitive
mountain from which AI Gore gets his mon ey
~esponsibility, it also brings freedom, opportunity lind reward.
"Stocks for the Long Run," author Jeremy to transfor·m the 70 percent into 100 percent.
• We hope that our graduates, and their peers, will enjoy life
Siegal of the University of Pennsylvania ana- That spending, of course, could ultimately
(o its fullest this summer, will carry these memories among
lyzed American data over 200 years. He found raise federal taxes or ignite inflation.
their most cherished, and will remember that responsible and
that, after discounting for inflation, stocks
(And, by the way. Jane too has risk, even
s'afe behavior will likely ensure a lifetime of other precious
went up an average of 7 percent per year. though her pension is backed by Uncle Sam.
Moreover, they were less risky than bonds in What if the nation is in a long war, or facing
memories .
•
any given decade.
a terrible epidemic, or the Congress decides
Still, Gore says, "too risky." Gore says some- to means-test Social Security, or longevity
thing can happen that hasn't happened before. goes up to 125?)
Let's suppose that the U.S. markets defy expeGore's 'arguf!lenl is that Bush's "risky" tax
rience and instead of rising, they stay flat, or cut proposal , coupled with his "risky" Social
fall . Is Jane then better off than Joe?
Securiry proposal, would cut general revenues
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
In
the
2030s,
remember,
Jane
will
only
·
too mllch.
No.
· Today is Friday, May 26, th~ 147th day of2000.There are 219 days
lett in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 26, 1940, the Allies began their' troop evacuation fium
Dunkirk, France.
On this daie:
In 152 1, Martin Luther was banned by the £diet ofWoqns because
of his religious belie6 and writings.
In 1805, Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned king of Italy.
I saw no ghosts or ghouls, and nothing
' In 1865, arrangements were made in New Orleans for the surren~ ,
went bump in the night.
·
der of Confederate forces west of the Mississippi.
One of the housekeepers at the Buxton
In 1868, the impeachment
of President Andrew Johnson ended
Inn said she has been startled 'on occasion to
with his acquittal on all remaining charges.
see
doors open and shut when nobody else
In I 913, Actors' Equity Association w.t&lt; organized.
was around. My waiter - a college student
In 1960, U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge accused the Soviets
said that the night before, he saw two
of hiding a microphone inside a wood carving of the Great Seal of the
wine bottles leave their secure perches in the
United States that had been presented to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.
inn 's win e ra cks and fall to the floor for no
In 1969, the Apollo 10 astronauts rerurned ro Earth after a successearthly reason .
lUI eiWift•qay dress rehearsal for the first manned moon lan.ding.
' In 19"81, 14 people were killed when a Marine jet crashed onto the
But that was as scary as things got during
flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz off Florida.
NEA COLUMNIST
my weekend at the historic hostelry in
In 1991 , a Lauda Air Boeing 767 crashed in Thailand, killing all223
Granville, Ohio. where eerie things have
people aboard.
been happening since · the inn opened in
In 1994, Michael Jackson and Li1a Marie Presley were married in
1812.
experience.
1
me Dominican Republic. (The marriage ended in 1996.)
Many of the occurrehces have taken·place
But during the two nights I occupied
Ten years ago: Soviet maverick politician Boris N.Yeltsin failed in a
in room seven -. my room. Guests in the room seven, things couldn't have been mo te
second round of vo'ting to win the presidency of the R ussiaiJ Federa.mom said they have seen a red rocking chair unghostly. My nights' sleep were restful and
tion. (He succeeded in a third round of balloting three days later.)
rock back and forth when no one was sitting undisturbed. ·
Five years ago: In the tobacco industry's largest recall ever, Philip
in it. Furniture in th e inn has been heard to · So, are there such things as ghosts? Many
Morris USA halted sales of sevenl cigarette brands, including some
move from one location to another during people think so.
versions of top-selling Marlboro, beause some 6Iten were contamithe middle of the r\jght.
·Hans Holzer, a famous parapsychologist,
nated.
As I mentioned in a previous column, a tells about a medium who went with him to
Todays BirthdaY': Singer Peggy Lee Is 80. Actor James AtneM is 77.
wom~n stayin!! in room seven reported that a haunted house to try to contact a ghost
Actor Alec McCowen is 75. Open sinj!erTeresa Sttaw is 61. Sportsthe atr was _sllflmg m the room one nigbt, . who was disturbing the household.
caster Brent Musberger is 61. Rc;x:k singer-musician Levon Helm
when one srde. of her face became suddenly , · During the seanc~, the medium said,
(The BaiJd) is 58. Rock musician Garry Peterson (Guess Who) is 55.
cold .
"Something touched me." She said she felt a
~inger Stevie Nicks is 52. Actor Philij:i Michael Thomas is 51 . Actress
"It was not like any other cold I have ever woman's presence. She went into a trance
Pam Grier is 51 . Country singer Hank Williams Jr. is 51 . ,Former astrofelt ," &lt;he said. "It ·was the clammy cold you and reportedly held a conversation with the
naut Sally K. Ride is 49. Actreu Margaret Colin is 43. C ountry singer.a.so:!.ate with moss and li chen growing on a spirit of a woman who said she had been a
songwriter Dave Robbins (BlackHawk) is 41. Actress Genie FrancL&lt; is
.roc .
servant 1in the house during the Civil War.
38. Comedian Bobcat Goldthwait is 38. Singer Lenny Kravitz is 36.
Others ha~ reported having the same
The servant had had a baby that died.

1) Malcolm Clair Allen
2) John Patrick Andrews
3) John William Bable
4) Leo Dow Bailey
5) Lawrence A. Baker
6) George L. Bearhs
7) Chester R. Bell
· 8) Charles S. Bennet
9) Floyd Edward Blake
1O) Ted Bl.azewlcz
11)Louls Dale Bolin
12) James W. Boring
13) Richard Herbert Boring
14)Edgar 0. Bradford
15) Earl .E. Brown
16) George D. Burson.
17) James Allen Canode
18) Stanley E. Casto
19) Howard Edward Collins
20) Sidney Asa Cook
21) Kibble L. Cowdery
22) John William Cowie
23) Howard Mart Crary
24) Charles R. Crislip
25) Elmer C. Dailey
26) Jake M. Dailey
27) Thurman L. Dailey
28) Paul H. Damewood
29) PFC David H. Davidson
30) Robert Russell Davis .
31) Luther Deem
32) Thomas E. Duerr
33) Walter Rex Dunfee
34) Danny Seymour Dunn
35) . Emmett Alton Eastman
36) David A. Eynon .
37) Horace Farley ·
38) William Fish
39) John C. Fisher
.
40) Alexander H. Fogle
,,
41) Albert Franz
42) William J. Freeman Jr•
43) Oval Arthur Gandee
44) Fred Gears
45) George R. Gibson
46) George M. Gillilan
,
47) Max; Gorby
48) Robert L. Greathouse
49) .Charles- Harv~y Hauck
50) George W. Hayman
51) Henry H. Hermsen
52) Rodney D. Hlnis
53) Nyman L. Hogue ·
54) Charles Alfred Hunnell
55) Gerald James Hysell
56) Worley Jacks ·
57) Robert M. Jackson
58) Herman L. Jaynes
59) David Meridith Jenkins
· 60) Harold Story Jones
61) Harry Jones ,
62) David James Joseph Jr.
63) Arthur Edward Kaylor

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Opposing private investment is risky, too
Ben
Wattenberg

.

TODAY IN HISTORY

I

.
(CONTEST ! PRIZES! Submit a bumper :
sti cker slogan or a rhyme using the word :
"risky;"or tht· phrase "risky scheme." Email to :
Warm ailaoLco m)
Assum e the worst: the Bush tax cut turns :
o ut to be too big. It is politically easier to :
change tax rates, we do it often, than to :
change th e structure of Social Security, which .
happens rarely, with blood and feathers in the :
chamber.
Th e iss ue remains - wealth. Albert Einstein said " the most powerfuHorce in the uni- ·
verse is compound interest." Wealthy people
always understood that: Make money ofT your
money. Alas. non-rich people don't have . a
stash of money off which to make money. But ,
th e so-called "401 - K Revolution,'' which
includes IRAs, Keoghs, Roths. and more, has •
shown that when the non- rich are encouraged to accumulate a stash, compound inter- :
est follows, and they end up with that flexible :
wonder - wealth .
For me, this is no-brainer. The puzzle is :
why is it being so vigorously opposed, partie- :
ularly by the AFL-CIO After all. it would ·
make all union metnbers part of the wealth- :
owning class. Is that bad? Once, the non-rich :
had no pensions. Now they have Social Secu- :
riry. Once. the non-rich had no wealth. Now :
is the time to give them wealth as well as pen- :

.

sions.

•

Samuel Gompers, th e patron saint of the
American labor movement was asked "What
does labor want?" His answer was: "More."
The current leadership, self-sryled activist progressivcs. seem to be saying "No More Than
Th e Same, Please."
,
That AI Gore is following this line is equally mys\erious. The case in favor js so strong
th at opposing it is politically dangerous, even
risky, even possibly a risky scheme. ,

;
·
:
:
.

(Hen Hltweuberg is a colrrmnist for Newspaper
Educatiofl Association.)

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

No needfor Ghostbusters on this night

,I

a ute

to America's Armed Forces

YOU ON

lo

The hard
1vork of 12
years has
paid offfor
area
CJ·raduates,'.
atld now the
rea 1 work
,
begtns.

A5

Friday, May 11, 1000

'£sta6lisfutf in.l948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

The Da lly Sentinel •

trw

George R.
Plagenz

.'

After her own death she had remained in
th e house, believing it was the best way to
be near her child.
At that moment, Holzer told the ghost
woman, " You must go from here and join
your husband and child. who are waiting for :
you on the other side."
:
After that, says Holzer, the ghost n!!.ver :
both ered th e fatnily again.
·
:
Susy' Smith, author of"Prominent Ameri- :
can Ghosts," says ghosts appear occasionally :
at the places where., they were happiest or :
saddest or .at th e scene of a great crime of ·
ac cident in whi ch they were involved.
:
The · renown ed Society for Psychical :
Research in london, made up of psycholo- :
gists, ph ysicists and doctors, has an open :
mmd on th e subject of ghosts.
:
Whil e conceding that many ghost stories :
o riginate in people's imaginations, it does go :
so far as to say that the existence of ghosts is ·
not impossible.
·
So, if you're going to be spending the •
ntght at the Buxton Inn sometime, it probably wouldn 't hurt to 1ay the prayer we
learned as children ("Now I lay me down to
sleep...") before pulling the c.overs over your
head for the night.
Just to be on the safe side.

CITY

KILLED IN ACTION

Middleport
Chester
Columi:Jia Twp.
Pomeroy

Germany
Luzon Island
Germany
France

Pomeroy

Pacific

North Africa
Middleport
Olive Twp.
England
Pacific
Pomeroy
Salisbury Twp . Okinawa
Reedsville
France
haly
Reedsville
Great Bend
France
Adriatic Sea
Racine
Pratts Fork
Italy
Columbia Twp~ South Pacific
Germany
Rutland
France
. Middleport
Bedford Twp. South Pacific
Germany
Reedsville
Syracuse
Pacific
Italy .
Keno
Germany
OllveTwp.
Syracuse
Germany·
Portland
South Pacific
Long Bottom Germany
Western Front
Bash an
Pomeroy
France
France
Pdroeroy
Minersville
At Sea
Pomeroy
Pacific
Rutland
Germany
At Sea
Racine
Chester Twp. Luxembourg
Syracuse
Europe
Sliver Run
Middleport
Pomeroy
Pomeroy
Lebanon Twp.
Pomeroy
, Harrisonville
Chester Twp.
Salem
.. Twp.

France
Belgium

,

Belgium~

Germany
Germany
Germany
Stateside

Pomeroy
Letart

lwoJima
Germany

Pomeroy
Rutland .
Pomeroy
Rutland
Langsville
Middleport
Salisbury Twp.

Europe
France
France
Italy
Germany
Bataan Peninsula
France

Bedford Twp.

South Pacific

Minersville
Italy
Tuppers Plains Normandy

NAME
64) Philip Edward Killinger
65) Clarence William Knapp
66) Floyd Eugene Koblentz
67) Robert Ira Landaker
68) Carl W. Lewis
69) Ernest Lynch
70) John S. Mallet
71) Kenneth Raymond Matlack
72) Howard S. McCloud
, 73) Arthur McDaniel
74) Ottle Junior McGraw
75) Herbert D. McNamee
76) Col. Albert D. ·Miller
17) Charles Edward Miller
78) Cecil Neighbors
79) Wendell Lee Nelson
80) Hobart M. Nelson
81) George E. Pankes
82) George E. Parker
83) George Herman Parker
84) Bruno J. Pierotti
85) James B. Powers
86) Millard Wayne Prince
87) George Pullins
8~) Ralph David Pullins
89) John Edward Radekin
· 90) Clarence Hudson Reed
91) Qavld Keast Reed
92) Lewis Norman Rockwell
93) Harle1 L. Rood
94) Ciul Edward Roush
95) Harold W. Russell
96) Harold S. Sarson
97) Dean Arthur Sayre
98) E~ward J. Schoonover
99) Theodore "Ted" R. Scott
· 100) Manring T. Seyfried
101) Jewell Preston Sinclair
102) Edward R. Skinner
103) Sam~;~el Winslow Smith
104) Wade Dale Smith
1OS) Gilbert J. Spencer
106) Clalr'E. Spires
107) Chester Freemont Steward
108) Chester Owen Stobart
109) William M. Swauger
110) Charles R. Swindler
111) John
Taylor
112) Maurice John Thorton
113) Dana Edward VanMeter
114) Wllll~m Denzil Venable
115) Lewis Franklin Walker
116) Paul Joseph Ward
.
117) Charles Donald Weed
118) Leo Dearold Wells
119) James W. White
120) Denver William Whittington
121) Calvin Floyd Will
122) Donald Norris Winters
123) Ray A. Wolfe
124) Leonard Ellison Wood
125) James E. Wylie

w.

CiTY

KILLED IN ACTION

Pomeroy
Dexter
Chester
.Pomeroy
Sutton Twp.

Philliplnes
Pacific
Stateside ·
France
France

Pomeroy
Tuppers Plains Germany
Middleport
North Africa
Mi~dleport

Europe
Lebanon twp. New Guinea
Pomeroy
Phillipines
Letart Falls · Phillipines
Columbia Twp.
Dexter
Germany
Chester Twp •
Chester Twp.
Pomeroy
Pomeroy
Long Bottom

France
France
Philllpines
lwo Jima
France

Olive Twp.
Columbia Twp.
Dexter
Pomeroy
Chester Twp.

Germany
Italy
France
Germany
Saipan

Middleport
Pomeroy
Letart Falls

Italy
France
Luzon Island

Rutland
Forest Run
Pomeroy
Bedford Twp.
Pomeroy
Reedsville
Portland
Sutton 1\vp. ·

France
Mediterranean
Luzon tsland
Western Front
Italy
Aleutian Islands
South Pacific
Luzon Island

Columbia Twp.
Racine
Germany
Pomeroy
lwo Jima
Pomeroy
Austria
Salisbury Twp.'Stateside
Orange Twp. Germany
Pomeroy
Stateside
Pomeroy
Germany
Portland
Africa
.Portland
Germany
Scipio Twp.
Europe
Orange Twp. Burma
Columbia Twp. Belgium
Pomeroy
Atlantic
Racine
France
·Belgium
Middleport
Middleport
England
·Middleport
Philliplnes

And To Veterans Of All Wars &amp; Conflicts We Thank You!
·The .S ources From Which This List Was Compiled Were The Middleport Monument, .The Book
· . "Those Who Gave All" Published By The Meigs County Pioneer &amp; Historical Society,
The Meigs Co. Library And The Daily Senti.nel.
· Any Inaccuracies Are Unintentional.

.'

,(George R . Plagetrz is a rolunwist for Newsp,a· •
per Emerprisc Association.)
·. :

This salute Is compliments of Crow and Crow Attorneys -At-Law

.

'

�. Frl~ay, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

The Community Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events.
The
calendar
is
not
designed to promo!&lt;' sal&lt;'s or
fund-raisers of any typ&lt;'.
Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot '"'
guaranteed to be printNI a
specific number of days.

•••

•••

Ll)NC BOTTOM -·
ll i~h

I ~'11!-!

Eastern

Srhnnl d.ISs nf I %0 picnic,
lh,tt,ll1l Co1.mtnmity Uuild-

111!-!." S. lll ml.1y.

....
tmntL

SYRM"USF -- R .t&lt;·in•· l-li ~h
s~

hP\ '\

lh•u•~·

~liS:&lt;-

\lf ]9htl pit: llil". rl·si -

,,1 1\dh Wing:l·tt. S.1tll n b y.

111.'•'11.

1955, and 1960 to be honored.
Door open at 5 p.m.; meeting at
6 p.m. , and dinner at 7 p.m. Price
$10 a person in advance; SIS at
the door.

•••

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport' High School Class of 1950
will h&gt;vc a get-together at Riverbend Arts Council, 1-5 p.m.

•••

IIIII Ill

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Open door
session by State Rep. Jo hn C.n\')'.
R-Wellston, Friday, 9-10 a.m.

•••

~OMEROY

Veterans
Affairs Medical Center-C hillicothe will provide health rare
enrollment Friday, I 0 a. m.-noon
and 1-2 p.m. at the Veterans Service Office, 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Proof of military service
required.

•••

SATURDAY
RACINE - RACO to sponsor a collection of. canned food
and non-perishable items to be
given to the Meigs County
.lii&gt;ooperative Parish on Saturday, 8
a.m. to noon at the corner of
Third and Pearl streets. Monetary
gifts will also be accepted.

I'( 1~\1'\U 1Y M,•i h"' High
'
Sdh,,,] ,·!Js, ,,( l 1)l)() 1\'ll n' ion Saturd.l\·.
S.1 hsbur y Elc..•mt'Jlt,ny
SdhH l\ tn Pl'llh.' my. F.unily p icnic
.11 I I' n1 .; .1dult gatlwring at t!
p.m . Qm·~·a im;s n;:1y bl· direc tl'd
Ill J\\" 1-hnnphr,•ys, 9')2-910\.

111111.
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni Association, annual dinner and dance,
May 27, 6:30 p.m. Class;·s to be
honored arc 1930, 1940, 1950,
and 1960. Dinner for adults is
$10, children under 12, $7, dance
orily. $3.

•••

CLIFTON, W.Va. - Special
services Sunday 7 p.m. at Clifton
Tabernacle, Harvey Wagner, evangdist.

••• •

MONDAY

•••

BURLINGHAM - Memorial Day services, Burlingham,
Monday at 1 p.m., at church and
cemetery, with Feeney-Bennett
Post 129, American Legion, conducting cemetery service. T he
Rev. Keith Kapple, speaker. Music
by Denver Rice, Junior and Rita
White, and Bob White. Vocals by
Colleen Brickles. and Rita White.

•••

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, Ameri can Legion,
Memorial Day parade and ceremony in Pomeroy Monday. The
parade to form at the tennis court
on East Main Street at 9:30 a.m.
and move out · at 10 a. m.
Although advance registration is
not required, any bands, individu-

Roland T Keesee, Son ' of the late
Raymond and Ada Keesee. He made the
supreme sacrifice ·as they "fought for
freedom. He died Sept. 26, 1950, in
Seoul, Korea. He was a member of the
3rd Battalion, lst Marines, 1st Marine
Division. He is survived by five
brothers, Kenneth, . Galion, Oh, Jack,
and Elbert Lee Keesee, Col. Oh, Bill,
Gainsville, GA. Two sisters, Christine
Cicel o{ Reynoldsburg, Oh, Genevie
Pozzee, Center, TX, Rev. james Keesee,
Middleport.
love and miss you big brother.

•••

COOLVILLE Coolville
Carthage-Troy Alumni Association annual dinner Saturday at the
sc hool in Coolville. Anyone who
attended, worked, or taught at the
school invited. Classes of 1925,
1930, 1935, 1940, 1945, 1950,

Reader concerned about
brother's love life
Dear Ann Landers: I need
your opinion on a very important matter. My brother "Jack"
has a son named "Jack Jr." from a
previous relationship with a
woman he had known for a very
short time. The relationship lasted only a year, and my brother
has not seen the woman or the
child for the past six years .'
Two years ago, Jack started a
new relationship with another
woman, and now has another
son. Jack and his girlfriend have
decided to name this new baby
"Jack Jr." I told my brother it
was wrong to give his new son
this name because he already has
a son named Jack Jr., and it
could cause emotional problems,
not to mention confusion, for
those children when they get
older.
What do you think, Ann? I
value your opinion, and feel it
would carry a lot of weight with
my brother. - A Concerned
Sister
Dear. Sister: Since there ,
already ts a Jack Jr. on the scene,
a second Jack Jr. would be very
confusing, and the confusion
could last a lifetime. Meanwhile,
I have some unsolicited advice
for your brother: Get a vasecto~
my. .
Dear Ann Landers: 'IWo
years ago, my wife of 41 years
and the mother of my two wonderful children died ofliver cancer. We had been childhood
sweethearrs, and when she died,
part of my world died with her:
I found myself heartbroken and
single at the age of 61.
I felt lost and terribly lonely.
Within two months, I became
involved with a wonran who had
lost her husband two years
before, and we fell in love. Or at
least I thought it was love. I
wonder now if I really knew the
difference between being · "in .
love" and being \"li n heat."
Less than a year later, we married. It didn 't take long for me
to figure our I had made a mistake. My new wife was incapable
of reaching out to my adult chi!- ·
dren and grandchildren, and I
wasn't seeing them nea rly as
often as I wanted. My children
worried that they were losing
their father.
I could not make my new wife

SUNDAY
MI DD LEPORT David
Bryan , G"llipolis, to speak at the
"Hope Baptist. Sunday School,
9:45 a. m. and wo111hip 11 a.m.
and b p.m.

RACINE -. Memorial Day
services by Racine Post 602 .
American Legion, 10 a.m. Monday at the Memorial Park. Dinner
to follow.

In Memory of Roland T. Keesee

ah, organizations, or others wishing to participate are asked ro
contact Howard Mullen , 9923782.

Wednesday. An executive session
will be held at 6 p.m. to discuss
personnel matters and the business meeting will follow at 7 p.m.

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Village Council. special session

PORTLAND Lebanon
Township trustees, 4 p.m Wednesday, township building.

•••

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

•••

Salute 0
To Alumni

'

\

'

•
\

)
I

•

'

&lt;

•

•

,

''

Dennis Michael
Southern High Schoo l
Class of 1980

.

Drive Safely This Memorial Day

Robert Burton .
Pomeroy H h School

.

•·~·t· '
;;

::- .

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY BIBBEE

Ann
Landers

•

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

!•

•
••

ADVICE
No. 1 if it meant giving up my
children. I am a family man, and
always will be. After 10 months
of stress and argume nts, we
divorced.
I have since found that I can
live atone. I hope men who have
lost their wives will read this and
take my advice: Please give
yourself at least two years before
you consider remarrying, especially if you have children who
love you. Your judgment and
mental capabilities are not normal after the death of a spouse.
You must give yourself plenty of
time to get your head on
straight. - Older and Wiser
Widower in Georgia
Dear Wise Widower: You
have written a fine letter and
provided excellent cou nsel for
widowers, who, by the way, have
it a lot ·easier than widows who
have lost spouses. Hostesses are
always look,ing for an extra man
-- rarely do they look for an
extra woman. Thank you for sitting in my chair today. Your
advice is sane, sensible and practical.
Dear Ann Landers: What
does a 15-year-old girl do when
she g~es to her boyfriend's
house after school, and his
mother invites her to stay for
supper, and the supper is something she doesn't like at all?
In fact, she hates it.
Please answer in the paper. I
would just die if my boyfriend
knew I was writing about this.
- No Name or City or State
or Country
Dear No City, State or
Country: Whenever a person is
a dinner guest and the food is
terrible - I mean, you jmt can't
get it down - push it around
thd plate, and make it appear
that you have eaten some of it.
If the hostess says, " Oh, you're
not eating anything," explain
that you had a big lunch.

""«,. "
"t

..

~

~

'

"t

~
~

'·
••

•••

SPO SORED BY THESE LOCAL MERCHANTS

••
1"

•••
...

,."·

••·:

1999 FORD EISO
Conversion, VS, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM case,
r--Tl;,;\;,1,,;;cruloe, TV Etc. SAVE THC)U5,ANDSI

Dairy Queen Brazier

•,.
t

992·3322

;,.

Supercab 4x4, 7.3 L Diesel, auto, AMIFM case, CO,
all power equip "707" Convers19n

Shoe Place I Locker 21
992·5627

•
~

,

Many, many extras

CHESTER, OHIO

•~·

••
••••
••

2001 FORD FISO

985·3308

~

•

$upercrew 4x4, 5..4L V8, auto, air cond , 6 Disc CO, all power

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.Ridneour Supply

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

",

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Brogan Warner ·
Insurance
POMEROY, OHIO
"

..••
.,"•.
..
••

2000 FORD F350

9992·5020

992·6128

992·6687

J
••

Reg. Cab 4x4, 6 .SL, V- 10, auto. air cond, XL.T, trailer tow, ·
Cass CO, LOADED

MIDDLEPORT, OH

King Hardware

Trophies &amp; Tees ·

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

The DaiJy Sentinel
992·2155

.

POMEROY, OHIO

•"·,,.
••
••

Crow's Family
Restaurant
992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO

;.,

..•r.
·.-.
......

Quality Print Shop

'

200 I FORD' EXPLORER

2000 FORD WINDSTAR

Sport Trae 4)(4, VB , auto, A/C, tilt, cruiee, all power wtpower aeat ,
MuchMore
.

LX Sport Wagon , 3 .81 , auto, 4 doors
Quad seating, dual NC . LOADED

992·3345

Fisher Funeral Home

'

•

POMEROY
992·5444

""'
'

JERA¥ B ·I·BBEE
461 S. Third

www.jerrybibbee.com

Middleport

992·2121 .

POMEROY, OHIO

..

Fruth Pharmacy
·992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

::••

."'".

Phone
740 - 992-2196

· MIDDLEPORT

Ewing Funeral Home

:-•
..;

'

~

RACINE
949·2210

.

••

•••••
'•'

Ave.

Insurance
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO .

Home Nafional Bank Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharma

•••

'
',,

MIDDLEPORT
992·5141

Downing·Chllds·~ullen·Musser

SYRACUSE
992·6533

992·2955

POMEROY, OHIO

Far111ers Bank
"Your Bank for Life',

ruwz••2265
Plaln1 915·3136
.
.

Pomeroy·949.•2136
Gallipolis·
(

Ridenour TV &amp; Appliance
985·3307

•

.CHESTER,
OHIO
..p

.••,

'

,.

"

•

~ '

'

I

.

�. Frl~ay, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

The Community Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events.
The
calendar
is
not
designed to promo!&lt;' sal&lt;'s or
fund-raisers of any typ&lt;'.
Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot '"'
guaranteed to be printNI a
specific number of days.

•••

•••

Ll)NC BOTTOM -·
ll i~h

I ~'11!-!

Eastern

Srhnnl d.ISs nf I %0 picnic,
lh,tt,ll1l Co1.mtnmity Uuild-

111!-!." S. lll ml.1y.

....
tmntL

SYRM"USF -- R .t&lt;·in•· l-li ~h
s~

hP\ '\

lh•u•~·

~liS:&lt;-

\lf ]9htl pit: llil". rl·si -

,,1 1\dh Wing:l·tt. S.1tll n b y.

111.'•'11.

1955, and 1960 to be honored.
Door open at 5 p.m.; meeting at
6 p.m. , and dinner at 7 p.m. Price
$10 a person in advance; SIS at
the door.

•••

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport' High School Class of 1950
will h&gt;vc a get-together at Riverbend Arts Council, 1-5 p.m.

•••

IIIII Ill

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Open door
session by State Rep. Jo hn C.n\')'.
R-Wellston, Friday, 9-10 a.m.

•••

~OMEROY

Veterans
Affairs Medical Center-C hillicothe will provide health rare
enrollment Friday, I 0 a. m.-noon
and 1-2 p.m. at the Veterans Service Office, 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Proof of military service
required.

•••

SATURDAY
RACINE - RACO to sponsor a collection of. canned food
and non-perishable items to be
given to the Meigs County
.lii&gt;ooperative Parish on Saturday, 8
a.m. to noon at the corner of
Third and Pearl streets. Monetary
gifts will also be accepted.

I'( 1~\1'\U 1Y M,•i h"' High
'
Sdh,,,] ,·!Js, ,,( l 1)l)() 1\'ll n' ion Saturd.l\·.
S.1 hsbur y Elc..•mt'Jlt,ny
SdhH l\ tn Pl'llh.' my. F.unily p icnic
.11 I I' n1 .; .1dult gatlwring at t!
p.m . Qm·~·a im;s n;:1y bl· direc tl'd
Ill J\\" 1-hnnphr,•ys, 9')2-910\.

111111.
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni Association, annual dinner and dance,
May 27, 6:30 p.m. Class;·s to be
honored arc 1930, 1940, 1950,
and 1960. Dinner for adults is
$10, children under 12, $7, dance
orily. $3.

•••

CLIFTON, W.Va. - Special
services Sunday 7 p.m. at Clifton
Tabernacle, Harvey Wagner, evangdist.

••• •

MONDAY

•••

BURLINGHAM - Memorial Day services, Burlingham,
Monday at 1 p.m., at church and
cemetery, with Feeney-Bennett
Post 129, American Legion, conducting cemetery service. T he
Rev. Keith Kapple, speaker. Music
by Denver Rice, Junior and Rita
White, and Bob White. Vocals by
Colleen Brickles. and Rita White.

•••

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, Ameri can Legion,
Memorial Day parade and ceremony in Pomeroy Monday. The
parade to form at the tennis court
on East Main Street at 9:30 a.m.
and move out · at 10 a. m.
Although advance registration is
not required, any bands, individu-

Roland T Keesee, Son ' of the late
Raymond and Ada Keesee. He made the
supreme sacrifice ·as they "fought for
freedom. He died Sept. 26, 1950, in
Seoul, Korea. He was a member of the
3rd Battalion, lst Marines, 1st Marine
Division. He is survived by five
brothers, Kenneth, . Galion, Oh, Jack,
and Elbert Lee Keesee, Col. Oh, Bill,
Gainsville, GA. Two sisters, Christine
Cicel o{ Reynoldsburg, Oh, Genevie
Pozzee, Center, TX, Rev. james Keesee,
Middleport.
love and miss you big brother.

•••

COOLVILLE Coolville
Carthage-Troy Alumni Association annual dinner Saturday at the
sc hool in Coolville. Anyone who
attended, worked, or taught at the
school invited. Classes of 1925,
1930, 1935, 1940, 1945, 1950,

Reader concerned about
brother's love life
Dear Ann Landers: I need
your opinion on a very important matter. My brother "Jack"
has a son named "Jack Jr." from a
previous relationship with a
woman he had known for a very
short time. The relationship lasted only a year, and my brother
has not seen the woman or the
child for the past six years .'
Two years ago, Jack started a
new relationship with another
woman, and now has another
son. Jack and his girlfriend have
decided to name this new baby
"Jack Jr." I told my brother it
was wrong to give his new son
this name because he already has
a son named Jack Jr., and it
could cause emotional problems,
not to mention confusion, for
those children when they get
older.
What do you think, Ann? I
value your opinion, and feel it
would carry a lot of weight with
my brother. - A Concerned
Sister
Dear. Sister: Since there ,
already ts a Jack Jr. on the scene,
a second Jack Jr. would be very
confusing, and the confusion
could last a lifetime. Meanwhile,
I have some unsolicited advice
for your brother: Get a vasecto~
my. .
Dear Ann Landers: 'IWo
years ago, my wife of 41 years
and the mother of my two wonderful children died ofliver cancer. We had been childhood
sweethearrs, and when she died,
part of my world died with her:
I found myself heartbroken and
single at the age of 61.
I felt lost and terribly lonely.
Within two months, I became
involved with a wonran who had
lost her husband two years
before, and we fell in love. Or at
least I thought it was love. I
wonder now if I really knew the
difference between being · "in .
love" and being \"li n heat."
Less than a year later, we married. It didn 't take long for me
to figure our I had made a mistake. My new wife was incapable
of reaching out to my adult chi!- ·
dren and grandchildren, and I
wasn't seeing them nea rly as
often as I wanted. My children
worried that they were losing
their father.
I could not make my new wife

SUNDAY
MI DD LEPORT David
Bryan , G"llipolis, to speak at the
"Hope Baptist. Sunday School,
9:45 a. m. and wo111hip 11 a.m.
and b p.m.

RACINE -. Memorial Day
services by Racine Post 602 .
American Legion, 10 a.m. Monday at the Memorial Park. Dinner
to follow.

In Memory of Roland T. Keesee

ah, organizations, or others wishing to participate are asked ro
contact Howard Mullen , 9923782.

Wednesday. An executive session
will be held at 6 p.m. to discuss
personnel matters and the business meeting will follow at 7 p.m.

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Village Council. special session

PORTLAND Lebanon
Township trustees, 4 p.m Wednesday, township building.

•••

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

•••

Salute 0
To Alumni

'

\

'

•
\

)
I

•

'

&lt;

•

•

,

''

Dennis Michael
Southern High Schoo l
Class of 1980

.

Drive Safely This Memorial Day

Robert Burton .
Pomeroy H h School

.

•·~·t· '
;;

::- .

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY BIBBEE

Ann
Landers

•

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

!•

•
••

ADVICE
No. 1 if it meant giving up my
children. I am a family man, and
always will be. After 10 months
of stress and argume nts, we
divorced.
I have since found that I can
live atone. I hope men who have
lost their wives will read this and
take my advice: Please give
yourself at least two years before
you consider remarrying, especially if you have children who
love you. Your judgment and
mental capabilities are not normal after the death of a spouse.
You must give yourself plenty of
time to get your head on
straight. - Older and Wiser
Widower in Georgia
Dear Wise Widower: You
have written a fine letter and
provided excellent cou nsel for
widowers, who, by the way, have
it a lot ·easier than widows who
have lost spouses. Hostesses are
always look,ing for an extra man
-- rarely do they look for an
extra woman. Thank you for sitting in my chair today. Your
advice is sane, sensible and practical.
Dear Ann Landers: What
does a 15-year-old girl do when
she g~es to her boyfriend's
house after school, and his
mother invites her to stay for
supper, and the supper is something she doesn't like at all?
In fact, she hates it.
Please answer in the paper. I
would just die if my boyfriend
knew I was writing about this.
- No Name or City or State
or Country
Dear No City, State or
Country: Whenever a person is
a dinner guest and the food is
terrible - I mean, you jmt can't
get it down - push it around
thd plate, and make it appear
that you have eaten some of it.
If the hostess says, " Oh, you're
not eating anything," explain
that you had a big lunch.

""«,. "
"t

..

~

~

'

"t

~
~

'·
••

•••

SPO SORED BY THESE LOCAL MERCHANTS

••
1"

•••
...

,."·

••·:

1999 FORD EISO
Conversion, VS, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM case,
r--Tl;,;\;,1,,;;cruloe, TV Etc. SAVE THC)U5,ANDSI

Dairy Queen Brazier

•,.
t

992·3322

;,.

Supercab 4x4, 7.3 L Diesel, auto, AMIFM case, CO,
all power equip "707" Convers19n

Shoe Place I Locker 21
992·5627

•
~

,

Many, many extras

CHESTER, OHIO

•~·

••
••••
••

2001 FORD FISO

985·3308

~

•

$upercrew 4x4, 5..4L V8, auto, air cond , 6 Disc CO, all power

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.Ridneour Supply

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

",

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Brogan Warner ·
Insurance
POMEROY, OHIO
"

..••
.,"•.
..
••

2000 FORD F350

9992·5020

992·6128

992·6687

J
••

Reg. Cab 4x4, 6 .SL, V- 10, auto. air cond, XL.T, trailer tow, ·
Cass CO, LOADED

MIDDLEPORT, OH

King Hardware

Trophies &amp; Tees ·

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

The DaiJy Sentinel
992·2155

.

POMEROY, OHIO

•"·,,.
••
••

Crow's Family
Restaurant
992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO

;.,

..•r.
·.-.
......

Quality Print Shop

'

200 I FORD' EXPLORER

2000 FORD WINDSTAR

Sport Trae 4)(4, VB , auto, A/C, tilt, cruiee, all power wtpower aeat ,
MuchMore
.

LX Sport Wagon , 3 .81 , auto, 4 doors
Quad seating, dual NC . LOADED

992·3345

Fisher Funeral Home

'

•

POMEROY
992·5444

""'
'

JERA¥ B ·I·BBEE
461 S. Third

www.jerrybibbee.com

Middleport

992·2121 .

POMEROY, OHIO

..

Fruth Pharmacy
·992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

::••

."'".

Phone
740 - 992-2196

· MIDDLEPORT

Ewing Funeral Home

:-•
..;

'

~

RACINE
949·2210

.

••

•••••
'•'

Ave.

Insurance
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO .

Home Nafional Bank Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharma

•••

'
',,

MIDDLEPORT
992·5141

Downing·Chllds·~ullen·Musser

SYRACUSE
992·6533

992·2955

POMEROY, OHIO

Far111ers Bank
"Your Bank for Life',

ruwz••2265
Plaln1 915·3136
.
.

Pomeroy·949.•2136
Gallipolis·
(

Ridenour TV &amp; Appliance
985·3307

•

.CHESTER,
OHIO
..p

.••,

'

,.

"

•

~ '

'

I

.

�;

Page A 8 • The Dally Senti(lel

-

.;. .

..

•

..

.:

-

~-

-

-

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:
NBA: Pacers stop Knicks, Page B2
Daily &amp;oreboard, Page B3

The Daily Sentinel

•

Page 81
Friday, May 11, 1000
Apostolic

Church of Chr1st

Episcopal

C tturth or J H W Chriil Apollolk:

PomtrOy Churcb or Christ
212 W. Mai n St.
Minister: Ne il Proudfoo1
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 11..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -- 7 p.m.

Graco EpiKOpol Chun:•
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin. Cleray
Sunday: Adull Educaiion •
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucharist 1I :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist 5:00p.m.

VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pas10r: James Miller
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Evening · 7:30 p.m.
Church of Jesus Christ
Apostolic Faith
New Lima Road
Sund11.y, 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wedne5day, 7:30 p.m.

Pomeroy WetJ1Ide Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School • ll a.m.
Worstl ip • tOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices~ 7 p.m.
Mkldlepon Church of Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship· 8:1 5, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesd•y Services · 7 p.m.

Assembly of God
LlbenJ A&gt;,.mbl, orGod
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
S~ nday

MilSOn, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Services-- 10:00 11.. m. and 7 p.m.

Ktao Church ofChrbl
Wor.~hip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
Jst ~md Jrd Sunday

Baptist
Maranatha Baptist Chu rtb
Burli ngham · 742-7606
Pastor: John Swanson
Su nd11.y School · 10:00 a.m.
Morn ing Service I tOO a.m.
Evening Se rvice ·6:00 p.m.
Wedm:sd•y Servil.&gt;e · 7:30p.m.

Btt,.,.allow Rid&amp;• Chun:h ofChrill
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sund ay School ·9:30a.m.
, Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Hope Baptist Churc:h (Southern)
Pastor: Jim Ditty
570 Gr3 nt S1., Middleport
Sunduy bChool· 9:30 a. m.
Worship · 1I a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice· 7 p.m.

Zion C hurch of Christ
Pomero'y, Harri80nville Rd. (Rt.l4J)
Pastor: Roger WatsOn
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30•.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Tuppen Plaia Churc:h of Christ

Instrumen tal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion • 10 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:15 a.m.
Youth· 5:30pm Sunday
.
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Pomeroy Fin:t Baptist
East Main St.
SunUay School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sun d a~· School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wcdnesdoy Services - 7:00p.m.

Bradbury Churcb orChrlsl
Pasto r: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Rudand Church of Cbrllt
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wur5hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

First B11ptist Church
Pastor: Mark MortOw
6th and Palmer St., Mlddlepor1
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worshi p · 10:15 S.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdu y Service· 7:00p.m.

Bndford Churcb or Christ .
Comer of St. Rt. 124' &amp; Bradbury Rd.
, Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship. 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Radnt First Baptist

Pas tor: Ric k Rule
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worshi p · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedn esday Services· 7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Cburch or Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.tn.
Worship - 10a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sll¥cr Run Baptise
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School - 10a.m.
Worship · l la .m., 7:00p.m.
Wed nesday Servkcs· 7:00p.m.

LaniJI'o'llle Christian Chun:h
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Mt. 'Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Eve ning· 6:30 p.m:
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Hemlock Grove Cburth
PaStOr: Ocne Zopp
Sunday school-10:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Bapllst Churth
GJeut Bend, Route 124, Racine, 'OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Swtday Worship -10:30 a.m.
We~flesday Bib le Study· 6:00p.m.

R~nHie Churcb or Cbrltl

Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

v

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Cburcb
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Even i ng ~ 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:00

n..ter Churda or Chrltt

Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superi111endent
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.

Hlllsld• B•pll•l Cburch
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunda~ School · lO a.m.
Worsh1p · I !a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-?·p.m.

Church or Christ ,
Intersealon 7 and l24 W
Ev11.ngclist: DcMis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study • 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

VIctory Baptist lndepeadant
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: J~&amp;mes E. Kees~e
Worship - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chnst1an Un1on
Hartlord Church oT Chrltlln
Chrl1tlaa Ualoa
Hartford, W.Va.
P11.stor:Jim Hua,hes
Sunday SchoOl - 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Faith Baptist Churth
Rai lroad St., Mason

Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship- 1L a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
• Pastbr: Arius Hurt
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
~orship - 11 a. m.

Church of God
MI. Moriah Cboorch or God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.
Eve nina - 6 p.m. ·
Wed nesd11.y Services· 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: R~:v . Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonihip • 10;4!) a.m.

Rutland Cburth of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m., 6 . p.m.
Wednesday ServiCA:s • 7 p.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sund11.y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
S~_nday Eveni ng-6:00p.m.

Syncwe Flnl Chun:h or God
Apple and Second SIS.
Putor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 10 a.m.
Bvenin&amp; Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 6:30p.m.

Rutland Free Will Bapdst
Salem St.
1
Pastor: ReY. Paul Ta)·lor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m. ·
WcU nesday Services · 7 p.m.
.

'

.

Catholic
Soc:red Heart Cal•olle Chardl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rt\1. Waller E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4 : 45·5 : 1~p. m. ; Mass. !5:_30 p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:4S-9:1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass • 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass • 8:30 a.m.

Chun:h of God or Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Ro. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Congregational
Trlalty Chun:b
Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy
Pascor. Rev. Crala Crossman
Worshi p 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9:15a.m.

Ceotnol Outer
Albui'JP (Sy-)
Pu tar: Bob Robinson
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Warship • lla.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30 p.m.
Ea~rite

Pastor: Ke1th Rider
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
WOtShlp • 91.1!1.

Holiness

Flalwoodl
Pastor: Keith Rider
Sunday School·lO a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

CommunllJ Churrb
Pastor: Rtv. Amos Tillis
Mai n Street, Rucland
Sunday Wo rshi~lO :OO 11..m.
Sunday Scrv•ce-7 p.m.

Fonst Rua
,Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School·10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Danville Holloea Church
31057 State Route 32!!, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sund ay school • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship . 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service · 7 p.m.

Htatb (Middleport)
Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sundoy School . 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

c.t..ry Pll&amp;rlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sund11.y School 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00p.m.

MlaenwiUt
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

'

.

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

ROH of Sharoa Hollaest Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kini
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Pomervy
Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.

Pine Grove Bible HoiiDHI Chul'fh
l/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30 p.m.

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School- 9:15 a,m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m;
Youth Fellowship, Sunday · 6 p.m• .

Wealeyaa Bible Hallam Cllul'fh
15 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pasto r: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wor sh ip ~ 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rullud
Sckool ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday ~ervice!i • 7 p.m.

Hysell Ru• Hollaelil Chun:h
Rev. Mark. Micflael
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worshif, • 10:45 a. m., 7 p.m .
Thursday Bib e Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

Salem Cearer
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
WoJShip • 10:15a.m.

S unda~

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

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church ·
P1stor: Charles Swigger
Sunday Scbool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · J0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedncsda~ Service· 7:00p.m.

Bethu,

Paslor: Dewayne Stutler _
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship -·9 a.m.
Wednesday Service!- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp; Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Sunday Servloe • 6:30 p.m.

AIIISiretiChurch
Ash St., Middlepon
PUior ~~ Hayman ·
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:00 p.m .
Wednesday Service. 7:00 p.m.

·'

773-~17

Our Savlopr Luthen1n Church
Walnut and Henry Sts;, Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday Sthool • 10:QO a.m.
Wonhip • 11 ~.m.

St. Paul Luthena Chorch
· Comer Sycamore &amp; Seconct St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

United Methodist
Gnham Ualle&lt;l Methodlsl
Worslllp . 9:30a.m. (lSI &amp; 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Smlce ·7:30p.m.

Melp Cooperatln Pu1lb
Northtul Cluster

Cbater
Pastor: Jane Beauie
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Joppa .
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship • 9:30 un.
~unday School • 10:30 a.m.

SyniCUMCbun:borlbeNuamot
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Servic:ea • 7 p.m.

LonaBoUom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

1Reedtv•

Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Month • 7:00p.m. service

P-ero1 Cbun:b ollbt: N.....,..
Putor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School ·9:30a.m,
Worohlp . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m.

Tllppen l'lllao 5I. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Se~ioes ·7:30p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Marprct J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SUnday, 2:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Autmblr

St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School· W a.m;
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

S7$ Pearl St, Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
E\lenina; .. 7:30 p.m.
)
WednOiday Servloe • ·7:30 p.m.

Middleport Pentecotlal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark. Baker
••
Sund11.y School· 10 -a. m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian

'
Sync.,.. Mlulaa

Syneuse Flnt Ualled Presbyterian

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike 'lbompson;Pastor
Sunday $Chool· 10 a.m.
Evenlna • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

o,..vllle Caoa•ually Clnon:b
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

ReedOYIIIe Fellowoblp
Church or lht Nuareoe
Putor: Teroaa Waldeck
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worohlp · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcea • 7 p.m.

God'1 Temple of Praise
31665 McQuire Rd. Pome roy. Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service established.

The Belleven' fellewablp Mlnlslry

HocldaJIIIOrt Cburdl
Grand Street
Sunday !K:hool • 10 a.m.
Worohlp • II a.m.
Wcdnuday Services · 8 p.m.

Middleport Chun:b or lbt: Nuanot
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worihlp ·10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sef\'lces .. 7 p.m.
Pallor: Allen Mldcap

Alrred

Pas1or: Jane Beaule
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship ·11a.tn., 6:30p.m.

Full Gospel Chun:b or the Uvin&amp; Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor:'" Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30 p.m.

Faith Filii Gotpel Chorcb
LongBouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdar • 7 p.m•• ·
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m.

Hutl Commully Cbu.rc:h
OffRt. ll4
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

N.1 7;1rene

New Ufe VIctory Ce•ler
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services ·10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

H-.a Cbriauaa Fellowohlp CbSunday aervloe, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Ftllowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Krvicc, 7:00p.m.

Heibel Cburcb
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 o.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd.63
Sunday !K:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hlp · 10:30 a.m.

MI. Olive Ui)lte&lt;l Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 t..m.t 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Clifton T•bemacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesda)' Sel'\lice. 7 p.m.

Christian Fellowoblp c ..ter
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sund~y School · lO a.m.
Worship· 11:1S a.m.,·? p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Fallb Valley Toobonade Qurdl
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.fll .

Coolville Unlte&lt;l Methodist Parlsb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chu ....
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wor~bip • 9 Lm.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.

Rrjolclaa Ule Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Forem an
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Filth Chapel
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m .
Wednesday st:rvice, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday ScJoool - 10 Lm.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wedne5day 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

Stlvenvllle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sund11.y School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Service time: SUnday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday ? pm

M~ Caoamllllll1 Cborch

Luttwran

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor: Rev. Bl11.ckJood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedriesday Service · 7:30p.m.

APpeUI'eCealer
RFuli.Qoapel Church"
Pastoro loho I&lt; Patoy Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon

Eul Lellrl
Brian Harkness
Sui)day SchOol ·10 a.m.
Worship • 9 Lm.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

SL Joba Lulhenm Oturcb
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C..fritz
Worship. 9:00a.m.

Faith Fellowahlp Crusade for Cbrl1l
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Hlln'etl Outracb Mlsdotrles
47439 Reibel Rd., Che.!iter
Pa1ion: Rev, Miry i nd Harold Cook
Sunday services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicts • 7 p.m.

HarrlaoDlUit Community Chllrc:b
Pastor: 'I)eron Durham
Sunday • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
.

~astor :

Fairview Bible Chun:b
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00 p.m. ·

Other Churche s

MomlnaStar
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Pb!.tor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Harrl10nvllle Pretbyltrlan Churc:b

Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.

Middleport Prtabyterlaa
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m.

Scvcnth· D&lt;Jy Adventist

Faith~

Cbun:b
LonJ bottom
Sunday !K:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Worahip · 10:4! a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneocloy 7:30p.m.

U111tcd Brethren
ML Htnnoa United Brethren
Ia Cbrltl Cbun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
PMtor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7:30 p.m.

ML Ol~e Comm ..lly Church
Putor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Evenln&amp; • 1 p.m.
Wedncday Sl:rvioe • 7 p.m.

Eden Volltd Bretlunln Cbrloo ·
2 l/2 milea north of Reedsville
on Slate Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School • II a.m.
Sunday Worship . 10·00 a.m. &amp; 7;00 p.m.
Wtdnesday Service&amp;· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth S'ervice ·7:30p.m.

Ualtod Faith Cburch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By.Pus
Pastor; Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Suodliy School · 9:30 a.m.
Worahip · 10:30 a.m., .7 p.m.
Wednesday Service J 7 p.m.
Full Gotptl Lllhlhotatt
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunltr
· Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Evenln&amp; 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thunday ·7:30p.m.
South 11e11M1 N"'Taii1Mal
SllverRidae
Putor: Robert Barber
Sundaf School · 9 a.m.
Sun. Wontup • 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Servl&lt;e • 7 p.m.

.ATTE-ND THE CH.URCH OF YOUR CHOICE·

"We accept PreMed 'lra~era"

112·12M
Lundy Brown .
106 Mulberry Ave.

I~

...,...,

}_ .

~....

,. , ,.

-.

~

Pomerqy

)

Director

~i•~er ~unnal ;Honu &lt;"'""·I

'Featuring Kenluclcy Fried Chicken'

2114 Soulh Second A...•Micldleport, 011 45~801

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Bluco R. Flohtr • DlrEior

992·5432

590 Eul Main StrM! • Pomoroy, OH 45788

Thahlcs: ba uhto
God fot hf~

:francis FLORIST
MeijJo Cou101y ~ 0/deal Floriu

-flltiiiiiP

gift.

.,, ..

740-992-2644
740-992-6298

Lit U• S•M Your T"o•~'' W'~t'- SIMfw.l Car•

Searching for a
local church?
Check the Sentinel
eve'Y Friday/

172 North Second_ Ave.

- - - · ,.. .. n o •

740-992·5141

740-992·5«4

FIRE·&amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
882·7075

.

Hysell leads
Riverside league
MASON, W.Va. - Bob Hysell
of Syracuse has taken the lead in
this year's Riverside Senior
~ague golf standings. Hysell, a 1
retiree from Ravenswood Alu_minum , is carrying 6 1 points to .
:\ead Ralph Sayre of New HaveN
.who has 58.5 points. Herman
:J(napp is in third with 56.5.
~ Drizzling, misty conditions did
:not prevent 38 players from com:pering on Tuesday. Eight fourmao teams and two threesomes
·,yielded a three-way tie for first
"place for the day.
.
The team of Jerry Arnold, Ed
Wilson and Ralph Sayre finished
at a 10- under 60, as did the team
of Don Wilson, Cuzz Laudermilt,
Andy Anderson and Bob Hysell
and the fo u rsome of Herman
Knapp, Mike Bragg, C harley Yeager and fl oyd C hapman .
'Closest to the Pin' honors
went to Milt Maxwell on No. 14
and Ralph Sayre on No.7 . ·
,
, The highlight of the day
occurred when Herman Knapp
aced the #4 hole to help his team
tie for first and move himself into
third for the year.
Knapp used an eight-iron fro
the 141"-yard shot. It was the
eleventh hole-in-one of his golfing career.
• ·His
ace waS the fifteenth of the.
'
season at Riverside. It was witlte~sed by C harley Yeager, Mike
Bqgg arad Floyd Chapman.
. The top points leaders to date
?re: 1. Bob Hysell - 61; 2. Ralph
Sayre - 58.5; 3. Herm an Knapp 56:5; 4. Mike Bragg - 56; .5. Ed
Wilson - 55.5; 6. ~ndy~erson
- ~. ?. Dale Hamson - 54.5; 8.
Keith Woods - 50.5; 9. Dewey
Smith - · 49.5; 10. Don Roush 49.
ll.ferry Arnold - 48; 12. Cher
Thomas - 46.5; 13. Claude Proffitt - 45.5; 14 ~ Cuzz Laudermilt 45 .5; 15. Terry Hupp - 43 .5; 16.
Dana Winebrenner - 42 .5; 17 .
F)oyd Chapman - 42; 18. Don
Wilson - 41; 19. Buck Hall- 41 ;
20. (tie) Peat Carnahan and Gary
Moore - 40.5.

.

.

-·-R··- --~-

Southern hoop camp
begins Monci.Y
"'
·• RACINE - The Southe rn
Tornado basketball camp will be
held May 29-June 2 at Charles W
Hayman Gymnasium at the high
school.
• •
-:Highlights of the camp are a
~e camp t-shirt for all participants, a camp basketball, individual awards for contest winners,
ana certificate of participation.
Einphajjs of the camp will be on
p~$;ing, screens, defense, shooting,
rebounding, ball handling, and
the rules of the game.
The camp for boys and girls
grades 3-6 will be 8:30-11:30
.'a .m. each day, while the camp for
.grades 7-9 will be 12 noon to 3
:p.m. Cost of the camp will be
:$35 per camper o r S25 per
:Camper if more than one family
lnember participates.
~ To pre-register contact Coach
ltees Friday at the high school or
:bring money at 8 .a.m. Monday
.
;!llormng.

..- ··- -

••

.••
••
•

Eastern hoop

camp June 5·9

EAST MEIGS - The 2nd
i\,nimal Eastern Eagle baske tball
camp will be held Jun e 5-9 at
the Eastern High School gymnastum.
. Highlights of the camp are a
~e ·camp t-shirt for all partici. pains, a camp basketball, and indiyfdual awards for contest winOets. Emphasis of the camp will
on passing, screens, defense,
~liooting, rebounding, ball handling, and th e rules of th e game.
· :T he Eastern camp for boys and
~tr~s 3-6 will be 9 a.m. to 12
npon .

be:

...
-·.

- --- --- --··

Eagles bow out in semis
BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

.

Crow'•.Family Restaurant

n Cor. 9:15·

FUNERAL HOME

HIGHLIGHTS

s...olh·O.y Ad..atlsl
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy I.:awinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

M- Chapel Qureh
SundaY sc:hool·lO a.m.
Worahip • 11 Lm.
Wednclday Service • 7 p.m.

uh~IJ«a~bla

FRIDAY's

White's Claapel WHieyan
Coolville Road
·Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.I'll.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

PertiiDd Flnt Church of the N•u.rene
Pator: William J1J11i1

The Church or Jesua

Chiill orLattor·Day S.lnll
St. Rt . 160, 446·6247 or 446·?486
Sunday Schooii0:20-U a. m.
Relief Society/Priuthood 11:05·1 2:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9·10:15 a.m.
Homemakina meetlna. Jsc Thun. • 7 p.m.

Freedom Goopel Mlolon
Bold Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pl!itor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunda~ S&lt;:hool · 9:30a .m.
WorshiP"" 7 p.l'(l.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7·p.m.

Carmei-Sulloe
C11. rmel &amp; Basl\a.n Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewerl'le Stutler
Sunday Schoo • 9;30 a.m.
Worship : 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed . 7:00p.m.

.

Kingsbl.lfy Road •
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunda1 School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonh1p Service 10:30 Lm.
No Sunday or Wednesday Ni&amp;ht Services

ltulllod Churda or lbt: NIZ.Il"foe
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Buye

Reorpnlzed Chun:h or Jes11 c•rlst
or Latter Day Sol nil
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.

.

C.rldoa Jn.terdeaoml•atlollal Clt\U"'th

Chesler C.wdl oflbt: N.......,e
Putor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday S;chool • 9:30a.m.
Worslllp • II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services. 1 p.m.

own ·mind

CHILLOCOTHE - The
2000 track season came to a
close for several athletes at
Thursday's R.egion 11 semifinals at the Bobo Track.
Four members of the Eastern girls' squad competed in
individual events. High-flyer
Amber VanSickle competed in
the 100-meter hurdles and in
the high jump. Her time of
17.4 in the hurdles took fifth
i11 her heat but did not qualify
her for the finals on Saturday.
In the high jump, VanSickle
jumped 5 feet to take seventh.
Two leapers qualified for next
week's state championship at
that height, but due to having
fewer missed jumps, the other
competitors earned the right
to go to Dayton.
" I usually hit about 5-2,"
VanSickle said.
"She just didn't have the
spring in her legs," Eastern
head coach Arch Rose said.
Both Rose and VanSickle were
fresh off a 15- hour bus ride
with Eastern's senior trip.
"She probably hasn't eaten a
decent meal sinGe last night
(Wednesday) at eight," he
commented.
Jennifer Chadwell turned in
a time of 56.5 in running the
300-meter low hurdles but did
not place.
Becky Davis' shot put season
came to a close as she came up
against tough comp.e tition.

Pluse see Trlldl. Pllp Bl

HIGH FLYIN' EAQLE - Eastern's Jennifer Chadwell posted a time of 56.5 seconds in the 30Q-meter
hurdles Thursday at the Division Ill regional In Chillicothe. (Dan Polcyn photo)

Gordon makes Coca-Cola- 600 field
~

.

...

.

'

CONCOR.D, N.C. (AP) -Robby Gordon was well rested and feeling good Thursday, mainly because a software program his
crew designed help ed him relax.
Gordon is trying· to become just the third
driver to compete in the Indianapolis 500
and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day.
A poor qualifying effort for the 600, Sunday's second race, almost ruined his chances.
But instead of trying to figure out how he
could participate in Thursday's Carburerion
Day in Indianapolis, then race back to
North Carolina for a second day qualifying
attempt, Gordon just punched some numbers into a computer and waited for the
results.
·
The computer program told him no matt e~ what, he'd get into the Coca~Cola 600
on a provisional - · a free-pass into the race
based on owner's points standings.
So Gordon decided late Wednesday night

SE district
all-star
baseball
Sat~rday ATHENS - The top baseball players from around the
Southeast district take to the
field Saturday for the annual
Southeast District ' AU-Star
Series.
The games will be played at
R annow Field, located at
Athens High School in The
Plains.
Top senior players in Divisions I, II, Ill and IV are slated
to participate in th e games.
The Division 1- 11 all-star
game is pla.nned for noon. The
Division III - IV game will
begin ai approximately 3 p.m.
The rain date for both
games is Monday, with the
games slated for the same start
times.
Players participating in the
games were selected by the
Southeast District Baseball
Coaches Association.
A complete list of players
taking part in the games was
not available at presstime.

.;..j,-···- · ··--··-

Nicklaus
has ·his
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Not
many rookie professionals have
ready access to the greatest golfer
of all time.
Gary Nicklaus does, but like a
lot of sons, he doesn't always want
to listen to what his father has to
say.
"Sometimes we have different
ideas," a grinning Gary said as he
talked about his father, Jack Nicklaus. "Even though he's the greatest player that's ever played, he's
wrong sometimes, at least in my
mind."
After the laughter die d, he
added, "But he is getting smarter
as he gets older."
Twenty-six years after the 5year-old Nicklaus first skipped
' along with the Golden Bear at
the then-new Muirfield Village
Golf Club, the younger Nicklaus
played the course for keeps on
Thursday.
·
The 30-year-old Nicklaus shot
an even-par 72 in his first Memorial tournament as a professional.
He stands six shots off Harrison
Frazar's lead and in 19th place.
It ended up being a thoroughly
satisfying day for him despite the
pressure of playing in his dad's
hometown, on a course designed
and built by his father in a tournament his dad founded.
"I spent a lot of rime up here
watching this golf tournament
and knowing what this golf tournament means to my father, my
mother and what it has grown to
mean to me over the years," Gary
said. " I've wanted to play in this
tournament for a long rime. It's
very special for !lle to be here."

..

to stand on his rime for the 600 and flew to
Indianapolis relaxed and ready to go.
After Carb Day he made it back to Lowe's
Motor Speedway in time for the afternoon
practice session.
"I felt great because I knew we were in,"
Gordon said. " I slept great, got about eight
hours of sleep and the n didn't get up until 9
this morning. Then I had a good Carb Day
at Indy and a nice flight back here."
The only flaw in the new computer system was that it didn't tell Gordon which
provisional he would get.
Turns out he got the sixth of seven provisionals, meaning he'll start 42nd in the 600:
"That's a little disappointing, but that's the
way it goes," said Gordon, who will start
fourth in the Indianapolis 500.
"It's two different things. Put Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the pole here and he'd be 33rd
down there."

Earnhardt is indeed on the pole for Sunday's race at Lowe's Motor Speedway,
although his car wasn't nearly as dominant
Thursday as it was when he won the pole a
day before.
. Earnhardt was only the 20th fastest car in
the afternoon practice session when he ran
175.707 mph on the 1 112-mile, highbanked tri-oval.
'The fastest car of the day belonged to
Stacy Compton, who ran a 178.873 in practice.
The slowest car belonged to Darrell Waltrip, who failed to qualify for the final 600
of his career. Waltrip was one ofjust six cars
to try to qualify on Thm;sday. Of thdse, only
Compton and Mike Bliss made the field and used provisionals to do so.
Others failing to qualify Thursday were
Steve Grissom, a fill-in for Kyle Petty, Ted
Musgrave, Ed Berrier and Dave Marcis.

It W."&lt;~ •P i cial

.. .

I

daY..iix a lot of

reasons. His father was this year's
honoree of the tourname11t. His
mother and brothers and the rest
of the l~rge Nicklaus family followed him from behind the
gallery ropes.
Many fans came out to see the
Nicklaus who bears the most
striking resemblance to the
father, who grew up not far away
in the Columbus suburb of
Upper Arlington. Others followed Gary from his college days
at Ohio State - also his dad's
alma mater.
"It's great being here, playing in
this tournament in Columbus,
where I went to school," said
Gary, a rookie on the PGA Tour.
" And all the people who grew up
watching my father now get a
. . . _ -l\l!clrl........... 82

Texas Tomado calms winds at Memorial
. DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Jack
Nicklaus is responsible for the
changes on three of the par Ss,
rough that is as gnarly as it has
ever been and greens -tilat are
smaller and more contoured at
MuirfieldVillage.
That's not what made the first
round of the M emorial the
toughest scoring day in 10 years.
Not even th e tournament
founder can take credit for the
wind.
.
Only three players broke 70,
and 18 .broke par. The scoring
average wa.&lt; 74.35, th.e highest it
has been for an opening round
since it was 78.79 in 1990.
Swirling breezes and gusts up to
20 mph seemed to effect just
about everyone.·
Except Harrison Frazar.
The West Texas native felt
right at ho me Thursday with a
bogey-free round of 6- under 66
·that gave him a 3-stroke lead
over Kenny Perry and Tom
Scherrer.
"I just don 't get to the golf
course -and hope that ir blows 20
mph," Frazar said. " If it does, I
feel like I've got a pretty good
shot."
It did, and he does.
Frazar, whose best tournaOUT OF TROUBLE - Texas native Harrison Frazar chips our of the · ments have come in May,
(OUgh on the 15th hole at Mulrfleld. (AP)
birdied all the par Ss and got off

I

to a good start in search of his
first PGA Tour victory. Sunday is
a long way off, and plenty of
people are chasing him.
Greg Norn\an, back from a
five-week hiatus during which
he swam with sharks, looked
sharp in a round of 70. He was
joined by Justin Leonard, who
won a U.S. Amateur at Muirfield
and is trying to emerge from the
deepest slump of his career.
Tiger Woods, trying to successfully defend his first ride in a
to urnament where no champion has ever repeated, played it
safe and had no regreiS. He had
two birdies, a bogey on the parS fifth hole and had a 71, along
with Hal Sutton.
"Any rime you play the first
round, you don't want to put
yourself out of it ," Woods said .
"Under these conditions, it's
very easy to go out and shoot a
whole bunch over par."
Seven players knew the feeling by failing to break 80. .
Jack Nicklaus was not among
them. One day after an emotional ceremony in which he
was honored by the Memorial,
Nicklaus looked ragged on the
cours~ he built until finishing in
style with birdies on three of the ,

I

t

�;

Page A 8 • The Dally Senti(lel

-

.;. .

..

•

..

.:

-

~-

-

-

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:
NBA: Pacers stop Knicks, Page B2
Daily &amp;oreboard, Page B3

The Daily Sentinel

•

Page 81
Friday, May 11, 1000
Apostolic

Church of Chr1st

Episcopal

C tturth or J H W Chriil Apollolk:

PomtrOy Churcb or Christ
212 W. Mai n St.
Minister: Ne il Proudfoo1
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 11..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -- 7 p.m.

Graco EpiKOpol Chun:•
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin. Cleray
Sunday: Adull Educaiion •
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucharist 1I :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist 5:00p.m.

VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pas10r: James Miller
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Evening · 7:30 p.m.
Church of Jesus Christ
Apostolic Faith
New Lima Road
Sund11.y, 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wedne5day, 7:30 p.m.

Pomeroy WetJ1Ide Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School • ll a.m.
Worstl ip • tOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices~ 7 p.m.
Mkldlepon Church of Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship· 8:1 5, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesd•y Services · 7 p.m.

Assembly of God
LlbenJ A&gt;,.mbl, orGod
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
S~ nday

MilSOn, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Services-- 10:00 11.. m. and 7 p.m.

Ktao Church ofChrbl
Wor.~hip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
Jst ~md Jrd Sunday

Baptist
Maranatha Baptist Chu rtb
Burli ngham · 742-7606
Pastor: John Swanson
Su nd11.y School · 10:00 a.m.
Morn ing Service I tOO a.m.
Evening Se rvice ·6:00 p.m.
Wedm:sd•y Servil.&gt;e · 7:30p.m.

Btt,.,.allow Rid&amp;• Chun:h ofChrill
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sund ay School ·9:30a.m.
, Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Hope Baptist Churc:h (Southern)
Pastor: Jim Ditty
570 Gr3 nt S1., Middleport
Sunduy bChool· 9:30 a. m.
Worship · 1I a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice· 7 p.m.

Zion C hurch of Christ
Pomero'y, Harri80nville Rd. (Rt.l4J)
Pastor: Roger WatsOn
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30•.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Tuppen Plaia Churc:h of Christ

Instrumen tal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion • 10 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:15 a.m.
Youth· 5:30pm Sunday
.
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Pomeroy Fin:t Baptist
East Main St.
SunUay School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sun d a~· School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wcdnesdoy Services - 7:00p.m.

Bradbury Churcb orChrlsl
Pasto r: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Rudand Church of Cbrllt
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wur5hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

First B11ptist Church
Pastor: Mark MortOw
6th and Palmer St., Mlddlepor1
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worshi p · 10:15 S.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdu y Service· 7:00p.m.

Bndford Churcb or Christ .
Comer of St. Rt. 124' &amp; Bradbury Rd.
, Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship. 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Radnt First Baptist

Pas tor: Ric k Rule
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worshi p · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedn esday Services· 7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Cburch or Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.tn.
Worship - 10a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sll¥cr Run Baptise
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School - 10a.m.
Worship · l la .m., 7:00p.m.
Wed nesday Servkcs· 7:00p.m.

LaniJI'o'llle Christian Chun:h
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Mt. 'Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Eve ning· 6:30 p.m:
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Hemlock Grove Cburth
PaStOr: Ocne Zopp
Sunday school-10:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Bapllst Churth
GJeut Bend, Route 124, Racine, 'OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Swtday Worship -10:30 a.m.
We~flesday Bib le Study· 6:00p.m.

R~nHie Churcb or Cbrltl

Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

v

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Cburcb
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Even i ng ~ 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:00

n..ter Churda or Chrltt

Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superi111endent
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.

Hlllsld• B•pll•l Cburch
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunda~ School · lO a.m.
Worsh1p · I !a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-?·p.m.

Church or Christ ,
Intersealon 7 and l24 W
Ev11.ngclist: DcMis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study • 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

VIctory Baptist lndepeadant
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: J~&amp;mes E. Kees~e
Worship - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chnst1an Un1on
Hartlord Church oT Chrltlln
Chrl1tlaa Ualoa
Hartford, W.Va.
P11.stor:Jim Hua,hes
Sunday SchoOl - 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Faith Baptist Churth
Rai lroad St., Mason

Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship- 1L a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
• Pastbr: Arius Hurt
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
~orship - 11 a. m.

Church of God
MI. Moriah Cboorch or God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.
Eve nina - 6 p.m. ·
Wed nesd11.y Services· 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: R~:v . Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonihip • 10;4!) a.m.

Rutland Cburth of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m., 6 . p.m.
Wednesday ServiCA:s • 7 p.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sund11.y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
S~_nday Eveni ng-6:00p.m.

Syncwe Flnl Chun:h or God
Apple and Second SIS.
Putor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 10 a.m.
Bvenin&amp; Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 6:30p.m.

Rutland Free Will Bapdst
Salem St.
1
Pastor: ReY. Paul Ta)·lor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m. ·
WcU nesday Services · 7 p.m.
.

'

.

Catholic
Soc:red Heart Cal•olle Chardl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rt\1. Waller E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4 : 45·5 : 1~p. m. ; Mass. !5:_30 p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:4S-9:1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass • 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass • 8:30 a.m.

Chun:h of God or Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Ro. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Congregational
Trlalty Chun:b
Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy
Pascor. Rev. Crala Crossman
Worshi p 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9:15a.m.

Ceotnol Outer
Albui'JP (Sy-)
Pu tar: Bob Robinson
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Warship • lla.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30 p.m.
Ea~rite

Pastor: Ke1th Rider
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
WOtShlp • 91.1!1.

Holiness

Flalwoodl
Pastor: Keith Rider
Sunday School·lO a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

CommunllJ Churrb
Pastor: Rtv. Amos Tillis
Mai n Street, Rucland
Sunday Wo rshi~lO :OO 11..m.
Sunday Scrv•ce-7 p.m.

Fonst Rua
,Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School·10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Danville Holloea Church
31057 State Route 32!!, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sund ay school • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship . 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service · 7 p.m.

Htatb (Middleport)
Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sundoy School . 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

c.t..ry Pll&amp;rlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sund11.y School 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00p.m.

MlaenwiUt
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

'

.

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

ROH of Sharoa Hollaest Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kini
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Pomervy
Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.

Pine Grove Bible HoiiDHI Chul'fh
l/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30 p.m.

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School- 9:15 a,m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m;
Youth Fellowship, Sunday · 6 p.m• .

Wealeyaa Bible Hallam Cllul'fh
15 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pasto r: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wor sh ip ~ 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rullud
Sckool ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday ~ervice!i • 7 p.m.

Hysell Ru• Hollaelil Chun:h
Rev. Mark. Micflael
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worshif, • 10:45 a. m., 7 p.m .
Thursday Bib e Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

Salem Cearer
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
WoJShip • 10:15a.m.

S unda~

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

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church ·
P1stor: Charles Swigger
Sunday Scbool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · J0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedncsda~ Service· 7:00p.m.

Bethu,

Paslor: Dewayne Stutler _
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship -·9 a.m.
Wednesday Service!- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp; Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Sunday Servloe • 6:30 p.m.

AIIISiretiChurch
Ash St., Middlepon
PUior ~~ Hayman ·
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:00 p.m .
Wednesday Service. 7:00 p.m.

·'

773-~17

Our Savlopr Luthen1n Church
Walnut and Henry Sts;, Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday Sthool • 10:QO a.m.
Wonhip • 11 ~.m.

St. Paul Luthena Chorch
· Comer Sycamore &amp; Seconct St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

United Methodist
Gnham Ualle&lt;l Methodlsl
Worslllp . 9:30a.m. (lSI &amp; 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Smlce ·7:30p.m.

Melp Cooperatln Pu1lb
Northtul Cluster

Cbater
Pastor: Jane Beauie
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Joppa .
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship • 9:30 un.
~unday School • 10:30 a.m.

SyniCUMCbun:borlbeNuamot
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Servic:ea • 7 p.m.

LonaBoUom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

1Reedtv•

Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Month • 7:00p.m. service

P-ero1 Cbun:b ollbt: N.....,..
Putor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School ·9:30a.m,
Worohlp . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m.

Tllppen l'lllao 5I. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Se~ioes ·7:30p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Marprct J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SUnday, 2:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Autmblr

St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School· W a.m;
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

S7$ Pearl St, Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
E\lenina; .. 7:30 p.m.
)
WednOiday Servloe • ·7:30 p.m.

Middleport Pentecotlal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark. Baker
••
Sund11.y School· 10 -a. m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian

'
Sync.,.. Mlulaa

Syneuse Flnt Ualled Presbyterian

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike 'lbompson;Pastor
Sunday $Chool· 10 a.m.
Evenlna • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

o,..vllle Caoa•ually Clnon:b
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

ReedOYIIIe Fellowoblp
Church or lht Nuareoe
Putor: Teroaa Waldeck
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worohlp · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcea • 7 p.m.

God'1 Temple of Praise
31665 McQuire Rd. Pome roy. Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service established.

The Belleven' fellewablp Mlnlslry

HocldaJIIIOrt Cburdl
Grand Street
Sunday !K:hool • 10 a.m.
Worohlp • II a.m.
Wcdnuday Services · 8 p.m.

Middleport Chun:b or lbt: Nuanot
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worihlp ·10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sef\'lces .. 7 p.m.
Pallor: Allen Mldcap

Alrred

Pas1or: Jane Beaule
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship ·11a.tn., 6:30p.m.

Full Gospel Chun:b or the Uvin&amp; Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor:'" Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30 p.m.

Faith Filii Gotpel Chorcb
LongBouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdar • 7 p.m•• ·
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m.

Hutl Commully Cbu.rc:h
OffRt. ll4
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

N.1 7;1rene

New Ufe VIctory Ce•ler
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services ·10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

H-.a Cbriauaa Fellowohlp CbSunday aervloe, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Ftllowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Krvicc, 7:00p.m.

Heibel Cburcb
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 o.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd.63
Sunday !K:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hlp · 10:30 a.m.

MI. Olive Ui)lte&lt;l Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 t..m.t 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Clifton T•bemacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesda)' Sel'\lice. 7 p.m.

Christian Fellowoblp c ..ter
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sund~y School · lO a.m.
Worship· 11:1S a.m.,·? p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Fallb Valley Toobonade Qurdl
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.fll .

Coolville Unlte&lt;l Methodist Parlsb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chu ....
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wor~bip • 9 Lm.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.

Rrjolclaa Ule Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Forem an
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Filth Chapel
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m .
Wednesday st:rvice, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday ScJoool - 10 Lm.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wedne5day 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

Stlvenvllle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sund11.y School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Service time: SUnday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday ? pm

M~ Caoamllllll1 Cborch

Luttwran

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor: Rev. Bl11.ckJood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedriesday Service · 7:30p.m.

APpeUI'eCealer
RFuli.Qoapel Church"
Pastoro loho I&lt; Patoy Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon

Eul Lellrl
Brian Harkness
Sui)day SchOol ·10 a.m.
Worship • 9 Lm.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

SL Joba Lulhenm Oturcb
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C..fritz
Worship. 9:00a.m.

Faith Fellowahlp Crusade for Cbrl1l
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Hlln'etl Outracb Mlsdotrles
47439 Reibel Rd., Che.!iter
Pa1ion: Rev, Miry i nd Harold Cook
Sunday services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicts • 7 p.m.

HarrlaoDlUit Community Chllrc:b
Pastor: 'I)eron Durham
Sunday • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
.

~astor :

Fairview Bible Chun:b
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00 p.m. ·

Other Churche s

MomlnaStar
Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Pb!.tor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Harrl10nvllle Pretbyltrlan Churc:b

Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.

Middleport Prtabyterlaa
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m.

Scvcnth· D&lt;Jy Adventist

Faith~

Cbun:b
LonJ bottom
Sunday !K:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Worahip · 10:4! a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneocloy 7:30p.m.

U111tcd Brethren
ML Htnnoa United Brethren
Ia Cbrltl Cbun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
PMtor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7:30 p.m.

ML Ol~e Comm ..lly Church
Putor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Evenln&amp; • 1 p.m.
Wedncday Sl:rvioe • 7 p.m.

Eden Volltd Bretlunln Cbrloo ·
2 l/2 milea north of Reedsville
on Slate Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School • II a.m.
Sunday Worship . 10·00 a.m. &amp; 7;00 p.m.
Wtdnesday Service&amp;· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth S'ervice ·7:30p.m.

Ualtod Faith Cburch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By.Pus
Pastor; Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Suodliy School · 9:30 a.m.
Worahip · 10:30 a.m., .7 p.m.
Wednesday Service J 7 p.m.
Full Gotptl Lllhlhotatt
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunltr
· Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Evenln&amp; 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thunday ·7:30p.m.
South 11e11M1 N"'Taii1Mal
SllverRidae
Putor: Robert Barber
Sundaf School · 9 a.m.
Sun. Wontup • 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Servl&lt;e • 7 p.m.

.ATTE-ND THE CH.URCH OF YOUR CHOICE·

"We accept PreMed 'lra~era"

112·12M
Lundy Brown .
106 Mulberry Ave.

I~

...,...,

}_ .

~....

,. , ,.

-.

~

Pomerqy

)

Director

~i•~er ~unnal ;Honu &lt;"'""·I

'Featuring Kenluclcy Fried Chicken'

2114 Soulh Second A...•Micldleport, 011 45~801

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Bluco R. Flohtr • DlrEior

992·5432

590 Eul Main StrM! • Pomoroy, OH 45788

Thahlcs: ba uhto
God fot hf~

:francis FLORIST
MeijJo Cou101y ~ 0/deal Floriu

-flltiiiiiP

gift.

.,, ..

740-992-2644
740-992-6298

Lit U• S•M Your T"o•~'' W'~t'- SIMfw.l Car•

Searching for a
local church?
Check the Sentinel
eve'Y Friday/

172 North Second_ Ave.

- - - · ,.. .. n o •

740-992·5141

740-992·5«4

FIRE·&amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
882·7075

.

Hysell leads
Riverside league
MASON, W.Va. - Bob Hysell
of Syracuse has taken the lead in
this year's Riverside Senior
~ague golf standings. Hysell, a 1
retiree from Ravenswood Alu_minum , is carrying 6 1 points to .
:\ead Ralph Sayre of New HaveN
.who has 58.5 points. Herman
:J(napp is in third with 56.5.
~ Drizzling, misty conditions did
:not prevent 38 players from com:pering on Tuesday. Eight fourmao teams and two threesomes
·,yielded a three-way tie for first
"place for the day.
.
The team of Jerry Arnold, Ed
Wilson and Ralph Sayre finished
at a 10- under 60, as did the team
of Don Wilson, Cuzz Laudermilt,
Andy Anderson and Bob Hysell
and the fo u rsome of Herman
Knapp, Mike Bragg, C harley Yeager and fl oyd C hapman .
'Closest to the Pin' honors
went to Milt Maxwell on No. 14
and Ralph Sayre on No.7 . ·
,
, The highlight of the day
occurred when Herman Knapp
aced the #4 hole to help his team
tie for first and move himself into
third for the year.
Knapp used an eight-iron fro
the 141"-yard shot. It was the
eleventh hole-in-one of his golfing career.
• ·His
ace waS the fifteenth of the.
'
season at Riverside. It was witlte~sed by C harley Yeager, Mike
Bqgg arad Floyd Chapman.
. The top points leaders to date
?re: 1. Bob Hysell - 61; 2. Ralph
Sayre - 58.5; 3. Herm an Knapp 56:5; 4. Mike Bragg - 56; .5. Ed
Wilson - 55.5; 6. ~ndy~erson
- ~. ?. Dale Hamson - 54.5; 8.
Keith Woods - 50.5; 9. Dewey
Smith - · 49.5; 10. Don Roush 49.
ll.ferry Arnold - 48; 12. Cher
Thomas - 46.5; 13. Claude Proffitt - 45.5; 14 ~ Cuzz Laudermilt 45 .5; 15. Terry Hupp - 43 .5; 16.
Dana Winebrenner - 42 .5; 17 .
F)oyd Chapman - 42; 18. Don
Wilson - 41; 19. Buck Hall- 41 ;
20. (tie) Peat Carnahan and Gary
Moore - 40.5.

.

.

-·-R··- --~-

Southern hoop camp
begins Monci.Y
"'
·• RACINE - The Southe rn
Tornado basketball camp will be
held May 29-June 2 at Charles W
Hayman Gymnasium at the high
school.
• •
-:Highlights of the camp are a
~e camp t-shirt for all participants, a camp basketball, individual awards for contest winners,
ana certificate of participation.
Einphajjs of the camp will be on
p~$;ing, screens, defense, shooting,
rebounding, ball handling, and
the rules of the game.
The camp for boys and girls
grades 3-6 will be 8:30-11:30
.'a .m. each day, while the camp for
.grades 7-9 will be 12 noon to 3
:p.m. Cost of the camp will be
:$35 per camper o r S25 per
:Camper if more than one family
lnember participates.
~ To pre-register contact Coach
ltees Friday at the high school or
:bring money at 8 .a.m. Monday
.
;!llormng.

..- ··- -

••

.••
••
•

Eastern hoop

camp June 5·9

EAST MEIGS - The 2nd
i\,nimal Eastern Eagle baske tball
camp will be held Jun e 5-9 at
the Eastern High School gymnastum.
. Highlights of the camp are a
~e ·camp t-shirt for all partici. pains, a camp basketball, and indiyfdual awards for contest winOets. Emphasis of the camp will
on passing, screens, defense,
~liooting, rebounding, ball handling, and th e rules of th e game.
· :T he Eastern camp for boys and
~tr~s 3-6 will be 9 a.m. to 12
npon .

be:

...
-·.

- --- --- --··

Eagles bow out in semis
BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

.

Crow'•.Family Restaurant

n Cor. 9:15·

FUNERAL HOME

HIGHLIGHTS

s...olh·O.y Ad..atlsl
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy I.:awinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

M- Chapel Qureh
SundaY sc:hool·lO a.m.
Worahip • 11 Lm.
Wednclday Service • 7 p.m.

uh~IJ«a~bla

FRIDAY's

White's Claapel WHieyan
Coolville Road
·Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.I'll.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

PertiiDd Flnt Church of the N•u.rene
Pator: William J1J11i1

The Church or Jesua

Chiill orLattor·Day S.lnll
St. Rt . 160, 446·6247 or 446·?486
Sunday Schooii0:20-U a. m.
Relief Society/Priuthood 11:05·1 2:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9·10:15 a.m.
Homemakina meetlna. Jsc Thun. • 7 p.m.

Freedom Goopel Mlolon
Bold Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pl!itor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunda~ S&lt;:hool · 9:30a .m.
WorshiP"" 7 p.l'(l.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7·p.m.

Carmei-Sulloe
C11. rmel &amp; Basl\a.n Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewerl'le Stutler
Sunday Schoo • 9;30 a.m.
Worship : 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed . 7:00p.m.

.

Kingsbl.lfy Road •
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunda1 School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonh1p Service 10:30 Lm.
No Sunday or Wednesday Ni&amp;ht Services

ltulllod Churda or lbt: NIZ.Il"foe
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Buye

Reorpnlzed Chun:h or Jes11 c•rlst
or Latter Day Sol nil
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.

.

C.rldoa Jn.terdeaoml•atlollal Clt\U"'th

Chesler C.wdl oflbt: N.......,e
Putor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday S;chool • 9:30a.m.
Worslllp • II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services. 1 p.m.

own ·mind

CHILLOCOTHE - The
2000 track season came to a
close for several athletes at
Thursday's R.egion 11 semifinals at the Bobo Track.
Four members of the Eastern girls' squad competed in
individual events. High-flyer
Amber VanSickle competed in
the 100-meter hurdles and in
the high jump. Her time of
17.4 in the hurdles took fifth
i11 her heat but did not qualify
her for the finals on Saturday.
In the high jump, VanSickle
jumped 5 feet to take seventh.
Two leapers qualified for next
week's state championship at
that height, but due to having
fewer missed jumps, the other
competitors earned the right
to go to Dayton.
" I usually hit about 5-2,"
VanSickle said.
"She just didn't have the
spring in her legs," Eastern
head coach Arch Rose said.
Both Rose and VanSickle were
fresh off a 15- hour bus ride
with Eastern's senior trip.
"She probably hasn't eaten a
decent meal sinGe last night
(Wednesday) at eight," he
commented.
Jennifer Chadwell turned in
a time of 56.5 in running the
300-meter low hurdles but did
not place.
Becky Davis' shot put season
came to a close as she came up
against tough comp.e tition.

Pluse see Trlldl. Pllp Bl

HIGH FLYIN' EAQLE - Eastern's Jennifer Chadwell posted a time of 56.5 seconds in the 30Q-meter
hurdles Thursday at the Division Ill regional In Chillicothe. (Dan Polcyn photo)

Gordon makes Coca-Cola- 600 field
~

.

...

.

'

CONCOR.D, N.C. (AP) -Robby Gordon was well rested and feeling good Thursday, mainly because a software program his
crew designed help ed him relax.
Gordon is trying· to become just the third
driver to compete in the Indianapolis 500
and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day.
A poor qualifying effort for the 600, Sunday's second race, almost ruined his chances.
But instead of trying to figure out how he
could participate in Thursday's Carburerion
Day in Indianapolis, then race back to
North Carolina for a second day qualifying
attempt, Gordon just punched some numbers into a computer and waited for the
results.
·
The computer program told him no matt e~ what, he'd get into the Coca~Cola 600
on a provisional - · a free-pass into the race
based on owner's points standings.
So Gordon decided late Wednesday night

SE district
all-star
baseball
Sat~rday ATHENS - The top baseball players from around the
Southeast district take to the
field Saturday for the annual
Southeast District ' AU-Star
Series.
The games will be played at
R annow Field, located at
Athens High School in The
Plains.
Top senior players in Divisions I, II, Ill and IV are slated
to participate in th e games.
The Division 1- 11 all-star
game is pla.nned for noon. The
Division III - IV game will
begin ai approximately 3 p.m.
The rain date for both
games is Monday, with the
games slated for the same start
times.
Players participating in the
games were selected by the
Southeast District Baseball
Coaches Association.
A complete list of players
taking part in the games was
not available at presstime.

.;..j,-···- · ··--··-

Nicklaus
has ·his
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Not
many rookie professionals have
ready access to the greatest golfer
of all time.
Gary Nicklaus does, but like a
lot of sons, he doesn't always want
to listen to what his father has to
say.
"Sometimes we have different
ideas," a grinning Gary said as he
talked about his father, Jack Nicklaus. "Even though he's the greatest player that's ever played, he's
wrong sometimes, at least in my
mind."
After the laughter die d, he
added, "But he is getting smarter
as he gets older."
Twenty-six years after the 5year-old Nicklaus first skipped
' along with the Golden Bear at
the then-new Muirfield Village
Golf Club, the younger Nicklaus
played the course for keeps on
Thursday.
·
The 30-year-old Nicklaus shot
an even-par 72 in his first Memorial tournament as a professional.
He stands six shots off Harrison
Frazar's lead and in 19th place.
It ended up being a thoroughly
satisfying day for him despite the
pressure of playing in his dad's
hometown, on a course designed
and built by his father in a tournament his dad founded.
"I spent a lot of rime up here
watching this golf tournament
and knowing what this golf tournament means to my father, my
mother and what it has grown to
mean to me over the years," Gary
said. " I've wanted to play in this
tournament for a long rime. It's
very special for !lle to be here."

..

to stand on his rime for the 600 and flew to
Indianapolis relaxed and ready to go.
After Carb Day he made it back to Lowe's
Motor Speedway in time for the afternoon
practice session.
"I felt great because I knew we were in,"
Gordon said. " I slept great, got about eight
hours of sleep and the n didn't get up until 9
this morning. Then I had a good Carb Day
at Indy and a nice flight back here."
The only flaw in the new computer system was that it didn't tell Gordon which
provisional he would get.
Turns out he got the sixth of seven provisionals, meaning he'll start 42nd in the 600:
"That's a little disappointing, but that's the
way it goes," said Gordon, who will start
fourth in the Indianapolis 500.
"It's two different things. Put Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the pole here and he'd be 33rd
down there."

Earnhardt is indeed on the pole for Sunday's race at Lowe's Motor Speedway,
although his car wasn't nearly as dominant
Thursday as it was when he won the pole a
day before.
. Earnhardt was only the 20th fastest car in
the afternoon practice session when he ran
175.707 mph on the 1 112-mile, highbanked tri-oval.
'The fastest car of the day belonged to
Stacy Compton, who ran a 178.873 in practice.
The slowest car belonged to Darrell Waltrip, who failed to qualify for the final 600
of his career. Waltrip was one ofjust six cars
to try to qualify on Thm;sday. Of thdse, only
Compton and Mike Bliss made the field and used provisionals to do so.
Others failing to qualify Thursday were
Steve Grissom, a fill-in for Kyle Petty, Ted
Musgrave, Ed Berrier and Dave Marcis.

It W."&lt;~ •P i cial

.. .

I

daY..iix a lot of

reasons. His father was this year's
honoree of the tourname11t. His
mother and brothers and the rest
of the l~rge Nicklaus family followed him from behind the
gallery ropes.
Many fans came out to see the
Nicklaus who bears the most
striking resemblance to the
father, who grew up not far away
in the Columbus suburb of
Upper Arlington. Others followed Gary from his college days
at Ohio State - also his dad's
alma mater.
"It's great being here, playing in
this tournament in Columbus,
where I went to school," said
Gary, a rookie on the PGA Tour.
" And all the people who grew up
watching my father now get a
. . . _ -l\l!clrl........... 82

Texas Tomado calms winds at Memorial
. DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Jack
Nicklaus is responsible for the
changes on three of the par Ss,
rough that is as gnarly as it has
ever been and greens -tilat are
smaller and more contoured at
MuirfieldVillage.
That's not what made the first
round of the M emorial the
toughest scoring day in 10 years.
Not even th e tournament
founder can take credit for the
wind.
.
Only three players broke 70,
and 18 .broke par. The scoring
average wa.&lt; 74.35, th.e highest it
has been for an opening round
since it was 78.79 in 1990.
Swirling breezes and gusts up to
20 mph seemed to effect just
about everyone.·
Except Harrison Frazar.
The West Texas native felt
right at ho me Thursday with a
bogey-free round of 6- under 66
·that gave him a 3-stroke lead
over Kenny Perry and Tom
Scherrer.
"I just don 't get to the golf
course -and hope that ir blows 20
mph," Frazar said. " If it does, I
feel like I've got a pretty good
shot."
It did, and he does.
Frazar, whose best tournaOUT OF TROUBLE - Texas native Harrison Frazar chips our of the · ments have come in May,
(OUgh on the 15th hole at Mulrfleld. (AP)
birdied all the par Ss and got off

I

to a good start in search of his
first PGA Tour victory. Sunday is
a long way off, and plenty of
people are chasing him.
Greg Norn\an, back from a
five-week hiatus during which
he swam with sharks, looked
sharp in a round of 70. He was
joined by Justin Leonard, who
won a U.S. Amateur at Muirfield
and is trying to emerge from the
deepest slump of his career.
Tiger Woods, trying to successfully defend his first ride in a
to urnament where no champion has ever repeated, played it
safe and had no regreiS. He had
two birdies, a bogey on the parS fifth hole and had a 71, along
with Hal Sutton.
"Any rime you play the first
round, you don't want to put
yourself out of it ," Woods said .
"Under these conditions, it's
very easy to go out and shoot a
whole bunch over par."
Seven players knew the feeling by failing to break 80. .
Jack Nicklaus was not among
them. One day after an emotional ceremony in which he
was honored by the Memorial,
Nicklaus looked ragged on the
cours~ he built until finishing in
style with birdies on three of the ,

I

t

�NB·A PLAYOFFS

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Two rebound and pass to Jalen Rose
yean ago, Patrick Ewing made .an for a game-clinching dunk with
unexpected return from a shat- 2.4 seconds left.
tered wrist in a Game 2 at IndiThe Knicks were livid at themana. In a Game 2 a year later, also selves for letting . an opportunity
on the road, his season ended slip away, especially while COining
when he tore his Achilles' tendon. so close to tying the series despite
Another Game 2 in Indiana dealing with the uncertai nty of
came and went Thursday night, not knowing whether Ewing...is
and another injury to Ewing out for the rest of the playoffs.
threatens to change everything.
Rose led the Pacers with 24
After straining a tendon in his points, Reggie Miller had 19 for
right foot in the first quarter, the second straight game and Rik
Ewing did not return as Indiana · Smits scored 10 of his 12 in the
' beat New York 88-84 to take a 2- fourth quarter long after
0 lead in the Eastern Conference Ewing was gone. Davis grabbed
finals. The severity of his injury 16 rebounds for the Pacers, who
was to be learned later today trailed for mu ch of the game, but
when Ewing undergoes an MRI. scored the final six points to win
" They played against us last it.
year without Patrick, and they
Larry Johnson (25 points, seven
beat us;' Indiana coach Larry Bird r~bounds) and Kurt Thomas {1 0
said. uwe Can't let up."
points, eight rebounds) had strong
The Knicks dido 't let down games in Ewing's absen ~e. but
. after losing their center. In fact, N cw York couldn't make t~
, they played pretty well right up plays it needed down the ~!retch.
until the end.
Thomas helped keep New York
.. But out of timeouts, the Knicks ahead despite playing with five
tlidn't line up any big men under fouls, scoring on consecutive pos· the basket as Dale Davis went to . sessions and grabbing several big
the foul line with 5.8 seconds left. rebounds on both ends. Indiana
He missed both, but was able to , tied it, though, with 3:01 left
outjump Charlie Ward for the when Smits picked up a loose
day's Regional Finals.
VanSickle will compete in the
long jump on Saturday.

Track
fromPage81

Amber Baker will run in . the
800- and 3200-rrieter runs on
Saturday. She will be joined by
Broderick in the 3200.

Davis' best throw of 26 feet,
nine inches failed to qualify for
the finals.

Baker finished third in the 3200
at the district meet. Broderick
took fourth to qualify

Holly Broderick ran in the
400-meter preliminaries and
turned in a time of 70.4. She
failed to qualify for Saturday's
finals but will compete in the
3200-meter run.

Finally, the lone boys· team
member to qualify, Matt Boyles,
will compete in two races on Saturday. Boyl,es will appear in both
the 1600- and the 3200-meter
runs.

While none of the athletes
qualified . for the finals, several
Lady Eagles and one Eagle will
compete in other events at Satur-

South Gallia's 400~meter relay

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S·Serles LS Pickup

q2,9

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunflre Sun &amp; Sound

*

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
•AM/FM CD

ball, dunked and was fouled for a
three-point play th~t made it 8080.
Houston hit a jumper, Miller
made a layup, and Thomas and
Rose exchan ged jumpers to make
it 84-84 with 55 seconds left.
Houston missed a bank shot
and Miller was fouled with 28
seconds left, making both for an
8&amp;-84 lead. The Knicks then isolated Sprewell and managed to
get him matched one-on-one
against the o-foot Travis Best, but
hi&gt; turnaround jumper was long.
"We got what we
The
play worked perfectly - everything but the shot," Sprcwell said .
Ewing injured his foot with just

w:t4ld.

Greg Norman, like Jack
Nicklaus a two-time winner
of the Memorial, now lives
just down the road from Gary
Ni cklaus.

faomPage 81
Gary, a rookie on the PGA
Tour. " And all the people who
grew up watching my _.,father
now get a chan ce tot.witth me
play a little bit here. It's ni ce."

For that matter, Norman is a
neighbor to the whc;&gt;,le family,
since all five Nicklaus children
live within 10 minutes of Jack
and Barbara in No.r th Palm
I! each ,' Fla .

Ja ck Nicklaus shot a 3- over
75. but birdied thre e of th e
last four holes - · including a
chip -i n from 35 feet on the
closing ho le.

''I'd like to have given him
my finish, but obviously you

Norman said the younger
Nicklaus changed after finishing second to. Phil Mickelson
at the BellSouth Classic in
early April, losing on the first
playoff hole.
'

They speak on the phone,
talking about things that are
sometimes difficult for fathers

thing for Gary Nicklaus, not
be in the shadow of Jack
Nicklaus ."

later, he stood in the fairway staring at the trees, then left his
approach 40 feet short.
"I was happy with the way I
played," Norman said. "I hit a lot
of solid shots, and given the conditions of the swirling wind, you
had to hit the ball solid."
This made Frazar's round that
much more impressive. He missed
only one fairway, three greens and
saved par the two times he was in
'a bunker.
What wind? Fr;~zar grew up in
Abilene, Texas, where, reporters
surmised, he used to hear the
wind rattle through the trees.
"Well, that's not true. In Abilene, there aren't any trees," Frazar
said. "A calm day is 30 (mph),
Then in high school I moved to
Dallas, where a calm day is 20. If
I'm playing well, l'm ·comfortable
with it.
The reason Frazar plays his best .
golf in May is because he takes
the last three months of the year
off to hunt and fish.
"It takes me a couple of months
to knock the rust off," he said.
Frazar is coming off a serious
disappointment in New Orleans,
where he was in the lead until

making a double bogey on the
71 st hole with an aggressive play
at the pin. He missed the play'?ff
by one stroke.
"If I'm going down, I want to
go down in flames," he sa.id.
"That's the way I am."
,
If he wins this week, or goes
down in Hames, he probably
·
won't blame the wind.

under six minutes rentaining in

the first quarter after going
against Davis in the low post. He
sat with his foot wrapped in icc
for a few minutes before walking
to the locker room with two
team doctors.
The news came quickly and
was not good. Ewing had what
the team called a sprained peroneal tendon in his right foot and
would not return.

Memorial
from Page 81

last four holes for a 75.
And he wasn't the only Nicklaus making some noise.
Gary Nicklaus, his 31-yea,r-old
son who . used to romp around
Muirfield as a kid, made his
Memorial debut by taking a share
of the lead early in the day before
3-putting two of the last three
holes for a 72.
team of Josh Duty. Brian Barnes,
· Th~ wind blew only about 20
· Matt Bess and Dana Bickle failed mph on Thursday under gorto qualify for the finals after turn- geous, sunny skies. Still, it was
ing in a time of 48.9 seco!lds.
enough to cause players to stare at
the tree tops and fiddle through
Duty ran a strong first leg, but a their irons looking - hoping slight mistiming on the handoff for the right one.
to Barnes put the Rebel sprinters
"I hit some solid shots that
too far behind the pack to chal- looked like I didn't know what· I
lenge in their heat.
was doing:• said David Duval,
"They worked real hard;' South who often was well short of the
Gallia head coach Curry Ryan pin and wound up with a 73.
Norman, after holing an 8-foot
said. "This is the first time in
birdie
putt on No. 15 that put
school history we've gotten this
him in the lead , hit his approach
far.
right at the flag on the 215-yard
"Everybody but Matt .(Bess) 16th. It caught a blast of wind and
returns next season. I'm proud of sailed into the bunker. One hole
them."

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Am GT Coupe Or Sedan

. Friday, May 28, 2000

Po~roy,

The lndlanapoll• Motor Speed·...
way (home of the Indy 500) was
built on 328 acres of farmland in
1909, financed by four local
businessmen.
Cancelled? .
Rejected?
Accidents?
Tickeu?
New Driver?

Has fOur .
drMng record
broughl you t
I ICteecbiag
halt?

Call Us First
For A Quote

11

•Low down payment
•Low monthly payments
•Immediate SR:22 flllnga.
•Preferred ·AND high risk :
drivers welcome

·992·5479

.1999 Chevrolet

1999 Chevy

1999 Pontiac

Prlzm Sedan

Lumina Sedan

Grand Am SE1 Sedan

St. Louis 7, Flortda e

Atlanta 7. Milwaukee 3

Chicago Cubl6, C&lt;lloratlO s

San Fiandsco 4 , Montreal1
Houston 10, Phftadelphla 6
Arizona 7, PittSburgh 5 ·

American League

c Flrley, CLEVELAND, 66: Burta, CLEVELAND,

· 60; Mussioa, ·Baltlmore, 59; Clemena, New York,
57; Hudson, Oakland, 55; 0 . Hernandez, New
York, 53.
.SAVES : PeJCival, Anaheim, 14: TSJones,
Detroit 13; MRlvera , New York, 12; Wetteland.
Texas, 12; Koch , Toronto, 10; Dlowe, Boston. 9 ;

•V-6 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

• Automatic
1 Air Condlllonlng
• Low Mlleal

• Ram Air V-6 Power
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Tilt.&amp; Cruise

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels
•

2000 Biulck
Regal LS Sedan

Century Sedan

Brand New 2000 Chevy ·
Silverado LS Ext. Cab 4x4

• Vortec V·B Power
• 4 Captain Chairs
Windows &amp;

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Aluminum Wheels!

1999 Chevy Blazer
LS4Door4x4

~3,950* ~7 ,350*

•21 350* 823,95 •24,950*
~ndows a. Locka

• Power Driver Seat
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

( .1tt'\'n~

.~· ~ ~

..

'

West VIrginia's t1Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Cuslom Van Dealer.
'

TOLL FREE 1·800·822-0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden.com
•

•

'

PRO

• Power Window &amp; Locks
·• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Fully Loaded!

q9,950*

28 . Kevin Lepage . 95,
29. Kemv lrw10. 895.
30. Jerry Nadedu. Bn.

31 . Kyle Peny, 854 .
32 Stacv Compton. 772.
33 . Kenny- Wallace, 764 .
34. Dave Blanev. 745.
35. Eliott Sadler. 713.
36. Robbie Gordon, 650.
37 Wally Oallenbach. 638.
38. Darrell Wattrip ,£32 .
39 Brett Bodine. 595.
40. Soot! Pruen, 583.

Btnbatl
American League

•

.ANAHEIM ANGELS: Sent RHP Brett Hinch·
liffe outr\ght to Edmonton of the Pacific Coast
League.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Re called LHP
Jesus Pena hom Cha rlotte ol the International
League. Optioned LHP Sco t1 Eyre and C Josh
Pau l to Charl one
CLEVElAND INDIANS: Recalled RHP
Justin Speier from Buffalo of 11le lntemational
League Optioned RHP nm Drew to Buffalo
Promoted RHP J.D. Brammer tram .Akron ol the
Eastern League to Bullalo of the International
League. and LHP C C Sabathia from Kinston of
the Carolina League 10 Akron.
MINNESOTA TWIN S Sent CF Tori! , Hunt~ r
to thei r minor league camp Recalled INF JasonQ,
Maxwell from Salt Lak e of the Pa cifiC Coas1
League

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS . Released SS
Kevin Stocker and AHP Dwight Goode,n.
Reca 11ed INF Fel1x Martinez and LHP Doug
Creek from Durham of the International league.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS· Placed LHP Lance
Painter on the I S-day disabled list, re troactive to
May t7 . Recalled LHP Clayton Andrews lrom
Syracuse of the International League. Placed
INF Homer Bush on the 15·day disabled list.
retroactive to May 22. Recalled INF Chris Wood·
ward lrom Syracuse .
NaUonallea~ua

CHICAG O CUBS: Optioned RHP Kyle
Farnsworth to Iowa of the Pacific Coast League.
Recalled RHP Matt Karchne r !rom Iowa
FLORIDA MARLINS: Purchased the con·
tract of RHP Reid Cornelius fro ru Calgary of !tie
Pacili c Coast Le ag ue. Optioned RHP Joe
Strong to Calgary.

MONTREAL EXPOS ' Called up C Charl ie
O'Bri en from Harrisburg of 1he Eastem League.
Placed LHP Mall Stank on the 15-day disa led
list. Transferred RHP Scott Strickland from the
15· to the 60-day disabled list.
Basketball
National Baaketball Aeaociallon
ATlANTA HAWKS: Named Lon Kruger
coach .
,
Football
National Football League

CINC INNATI BENGALS: Re leased P Greg
Mueller.
DENVER BRONCOS: Signed G David Oiaz·
Infante.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS : Signed CB
K1waukee Thomas.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Waived P
Kareem Anderson, WR Ryan Shaw and LB Bar·
rin Simpson .
NEW YORK JETS: Signed DT Jason Fergu·
son, WR·KR Dwight Stone, WR Brandon Camp·
bell and WR Wlndrell Hayes.

Hockey
Nltlonal Hockey LHgue
ANAHEIM MIGHTY OUCKS : Traded C
Espen Knutsen to the Columbus Blue Jackets
lor a 2001 fourth-round entry dral! pick.
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Exercised their
contract options on G Jamie Storr and AW Glen
M.urr.t~~.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

Jack Coleman

29.2000

Your courage and bravery
still inspire us all, and the
memory of your smile fills .
us with joy and laughter.
We Love and Miss You,
Friends and Family

l '

We hold you in our thoughts
and memories forever.
Sadly missed and loved by
Family &amp; Frelnds

Ernest Kauff

Mother
The days we shared were
sweet. I long to see you agaiJ!
in God's heavenly glory.
Daughter Nancy Manley

Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels

June 11, 1942 - Jan. 10, 1999
Molher

Feb.21,1937-Jan.9,2000
Uncle/Sisler
Corporal · Marines

You were a light in our life
thai burns forever in our
hearts.

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God hold
you in the palm of His hand.

Sandy

Candy Burkhamer
Violet Jeffers

Donald E. Yost, Jr.

Donald Yost, Jr.

June 6, 1978 ·Apr. 13, 2000

June 6, 1978 ·Apr. 13, 2000

Thank you for the
wonderful days we shared
together. My prayers will be
with you until we meet
again.

Your courage and bravery
still inspire us all, and the
memory or your smile fills
us with joy and laughter.

Patrica Mossman

Nov. 19, 1936 • Nov. 13, 1996

1

Kristiana Smith
were s lighlln our life
burns forever in our hearts.
We Love You Angel!
Daddy, Mommy and Kami

Betty R. McKnight
Nov. 11, 1943 : Dec. S, 1996
Mother
You were a lighl in our life
that burns forever in our
hearts.
IS9llv &amp;

Chris Davis &amp; Family

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

Franklin p. Jarvis
(..,._1lrw

Kem&gt;v Perry ...................................... 36·33-li9

.•

Herbert Whaley

t
..... t;..,. .-, ......:

Harrison Frazar.................................. 33·33E66
Tom Schener ................... ,..... "... .,, .... 33·36z69

24. Micl!ael Waltrio. 99&gt;1.
25 . Joe Nemechek, 994 .
26. Robert PreS61ey, 982.
27 . Bobby Hamilton, 978.

Kazuhll&lt;o Hosokawa .......................... 4H9=63
David Sutherla.nd ...............................40-« ~84
Roger Maltbie .....................................42·•2~

' .

• TBl!es. TaQs. Tille Fees eletra. Rebate included in sale p!'ice ol new vehicle listed where applicable\ .. On approved credit.
On ,.lected modelS. Not responsllle for typographical errors. Pr~es Good May 26th Tllfwgh May 281h.

..;;;;.

&amp;wt

~0,850* ~3,250* ~3,450*

1999 Buick

• Power
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

!liD!

Greg Kraft ........................................~35 - 35= 70
Gabriell;-ljenstedl ...........
.. .. 34 ·36=70
E11ttrn Olvltlon
lsringhausan, Oakland. 9; · t&lt;arsay; CLEVE · Greg Norman ............................... ...... 36·3ol=70
IHm
lllll.~WI
Justin Leonard .................................. 36·34 =70
LAND, 9.
Tonight's gam••
NHL conf..-enct ftn111
Boston ............................26 17 .605
Olin Browne .
.................... 34 ·37=71
Florida (Sanchez 4·3) at CINCINNATI (VII·
New York ......................... 26 17 605
Mark Calcavecchia ..... ...
.. .... 36·35=71
lone 6·1), 7:35 p.m.
NL leaders
Thurtday'a acore
Toronto .................... ......... 25 24 :sto
4
Hat Sutton ...........................
.. .... 36 -35.. 71
Atlanta (Giavlne 7· 1) at Hous10n (Lima 1·7),
Colorado 2, Dalles 1: series tied 3·3 •
Balllmore ......................... 20 25 .444
7
8:05p.m.
BATTING: Vidro, Montreal , .394; V. Guer· Tiger WOOds .....................
.. ... 36·35.:71
Tampa Bay ....................... 15 30 .333
12
.. .. 36·35=71
N.Y. Mets (Hampton 5·4) at St. Louis ·(Hent· rero, Mon1ceal, .390; Helton, COlorado, .388; Greg Chalmers ........... ,......
Tonight's gomo
gen 4-4), 8:10P.-m.
Edmonds. St. Louis, .386; Piazza. New York, Brad Elder .........................................36·35: 71
New Jersey at Pniladefphia , 7 p.m.
Centre! Dlvltlon
...... 37·34::::71
Plnsburgh (Cqrdova 1·4) at Colorado {Yoshll .366; Giles, Ptnsburgh, .361 ; Atfonzo, New York, David Edwards ..................
Chicago ........... .... .. .... ....... 26 20 .565
1·5), 9:05p.m.
• .352.
John Huston ................ .................. 35·36=71
Stturday'a game
CLEVELAND ......... ........ 24 19 .556
RUNS : Edmonds, St. Louis, 48 : Helton. Col· Rich Beem ... ............... ......
.. .. 34 ·37:o:71
Milwaukee (Snyder 0.0) at Arizona (R. John·
Colorado at Dallas, 7 p.m.
Kansas City . ... ..... ......... .23 23 .500
3
son 7-1), 10:05 p.m.
orado, 43; Bagwell, Houston, 43 ; BondS, San Sooll Verplank .....
..37-34=71
Minnesota ........................ 20 28 .417
7
Montreal (lrabu 2-3) at San Diego (Hitch· Francisco. 43; Vldro , Montreal, 41 ; Kent. San Bob Estes ..
. -...... 34 ·37=71
Detroi\ .............................. 16 21 .372
. ... 34 ·38=72
Francisco. 41 ; Green. los Angeles, 39; Vina. St. Gary Nicklaus ..... ....... ........
8'&gt; cook 1-6). 10:05 p.m.
Joe Ozaki...
...............
..36-36:::72
Philadelphia (Byrd t-3) at l os Angeles (K louis, 39; S. Finley, Arizona , 39.
W11tern Dlvlalon
RBI : S . Sosa, Chicago, 48; S. Finley, An · Glen Day .
. 35·37=72
Brown 3-1), 10:10 ~ . m .
Texas .............................. 25 21 .543
. .. 34-38=72
Chicago Cub~ (Tapani 2·5) at San Francisco zona, 48; Giles, Pittsburgh, 47 ; McGwire , St. V1jay Singh ..........
Anaheim ..... ................... 25 22 .532
'
Louis, 46; Galarraga. Atlanta , 43; Helton, Col· Mark Brooks .......
..36·36=72
(Gardner 2-2), 10.35 p .m.
Wlnaton Cup Sertaa
Seanle ............................ .23 21 .S23
1
.36·36=72
orado, 42; Hidalgo , Houston, 41 ; Kent, San No!ah Begay Ill _..
Oakland .......................... 24 24 .500
2
Francisco, 41 .
Jonathan l&lt;aye .......................... .. 38·34=72
The NASCAA Winston Cup schedule, win·
Saturd•y"• gam11
Atlanta (Burkett 3-2) at Houston (Reynolds
HITS: Vidro .. Mon1real. 69: V. Guerrero. Jerry Kelly ........
............38·34=72
ners in parentheses, and driver polnt standings:
Thurad•y'a score•
.. ..... 35-37=72
Montreal, 64 ; Derek Bell, New York , 63: E.O. Br&amp;nt Geiberger ..
5·0) . 1:15 p.m.
Feb. 20 - Day1 ona 500. Daytona Beach,
Anaheim 3, Minnesota 1
.. 36·36=72
Fla (Dale Jarrell)
Pit1sburgh (Ritchie 2·3) at Colorado (Kart 1- Young, Chicago, 62: Giles, Pillsburgh , 61 ; S. Pau l Azinger
CLEVELAND 4, Detroit 1
..35·37::::72
Sosa , Chicago, 61 , Helton, Colora do, 59 ; Tom Leh man........................
2), 4:05p.m.
f=eb~ 27 - Dura Lube/Kman 400 , Ro~ l ng­
Baltimore 5, Seattle 1
. 37 -35=72
Chtcego Cubs (Downs 1-1) at San FranCIS - Owens, San Diego, 59, Edmonds. St. Louis, 59: Ted Tryba ..... .....
ham, N.C (Bobby Labonte)
Toronto 11, Boston 6
S. F1n!ey. Arizona , 59.
Bill Glasso n .................. ..... .. ... 39-33=72
March 5 - Carsdirect.com 400, las Vegas .
co (Ortiz 3·5), 4:05p.m.
Oa~land 6. Tampa Bay 3
DOUBLES: Vldro, Montreal, 17, E.O. Young, Paul Goydos
.37·35::::72
(Jef1 Burton)
Milwaukee (Bere 3-3) al Arizona {Reynoso
TeMas 5, Kansas City 3
Chicago. 17: Cirillo, Colorado, 16, Green, Los Steve Lowery
.... 37·36=73
March 12 - Cra cker Barrel 500. Hampton.
2·4L 4:35p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 7, Chicago White SaM o
. .............
.. ... 39-34=73
Ga . (Dale Earnhardt)
.
Florida (Penny 3·6) at CINCI NNATI (Bel! 3- Angeles . 16; A.B . White , Montreal, 16: L. Gon· Skip KendalL
Ke1th Fergus
35·38 =73
zalez, Arizona , 15; 5 are tied with 14.
3), 7:35 p,m
March 19 - Mali com 400, Darl ington, S.C.
Tonight's games
. ........... 34-39 =73
TRIPL ES: Goodwin, Colo(ado, 7, Cedeno. Joel Edwards ...
(Ward Burton)
N.Y. Mel&amp; (Reed 3· 1) at St. Loui s (Andy
Toronto (Castillo 1·4 ) at Detroit (MIIcki 2-5) , Benes 4-2), 8:10 p.m.
. .38-35=73
Houston. 4; Womack. Arizona 4: V1na. St. Jim Furyk ...... .
March 26 - Food C1ty 500, Brfstot, Tenn.
7:05p.m.
Fred Funk .. ·.37·36 =73 · (Rusty Wallac e)
Montreal {Vazquez 5-1) at San 01ego Louis, 4; 8 are tied With 3
Oakland (Mulder 2·1) at Baltimore (Erickson (Clement 5·3), 10:05 p.m.
.. .............. 37-36 :::73
HOME RUNS: McGwire , St . Louis. 20, David Duval..
April 2 - DirecTV 500. For1 Worth . Texas.
1-1 ), 7:05p.m.
........... 37·36 =73
(Dale Ea mnardt.Jr.)
Philadelphia (Person 4·2) at Los Angeles Bonds. San Franctsco. 19: S. Finley. Arizona . Carlos Franco ........
Boston (A. Mar1inez 3-3) at N. V. Yankees · {Dreifort 3-1). 10:10 p.m.
17; Hidalgo, Houston, 15; Edmonds , St. Louis. Mark O 'Meara .
36-37=73
April 9 - Goody's 500, Martinsvi lle Va
(Cone 1·3\, 7:05p.m
15, S. Sosa, Chicago, 15: GriHey Jr. CINCIN· Shigeki Maruyama
...... 36·37 =73
iMa rk Martin)
Seattle (Sele 4·2) at Tampa Bay (Trachsel 3NATI, 14; Shell1eld , Los Angeles, 14.
Rocco Mediate.. .. ........ .......
. .. 35·38=73
April 16 - DieHard 500, Tal ladega. Ala.
Sunday's gamea
3), 7:15p.m.
Flor;Qa at CINCINNATl, 1:15 p.m
38-35=73
(JeH Gordon)
STOLEN BASES : L. Castillo, Florida, 18; Ernie Els .
Anaheim (Etnenon O·O) at Kansu City
Cedeno, Houston, 17; E 0 . Young, Chlcag:&gt;, 16; Jel1 Slu'man ..
.38·35 =73
April 30 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontan a.
N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 2:10pm.
(Fussell 3·2) , 9:05 p.m.
Reese, CINCINNATI, 15; Goodwin, Colorado , Neal Lancaster .........
.. ..... 37-37 =74
Allanta at Houston . 3:05p.m.
Calif. (Jeremy Mayfield)
Pittsburgh at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
14. Owens, San Diego . 12: 0 . Veras . Atlanta . Frank Nobilo ...
.39-35=74
. Te)(as (Oliver 1-2) at Minnesota (Milton 3-1),
May s - Pontiac E~e ci tem e nt 400. Rich8:05p.m.
12.
T1m Herron .....
. . 37·37 =74
mond, Va . (Dale Eamhardl Jr.)
Montreal at San D1ego, 4:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Finley 3·3) at Chicago White
..... 37·37 =74
PITCHING (6 decisions) : Stephenson, St. Mike Weir ....
Chicago Cubs at San Francisco, 4:05p.m
May 28- Coca -Cola 600 . Concord, N.C.
Sox \Eldred 4-2). 8:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 4:10p.m.
Louis, 7-0. 1.000. 4 34 : Graves, CINC INNATI. 6· Scott ·Hoch ........
.. .... 34·40 =74
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.
Milwaukee at Arizona, 4·35 p.m.
37·37 =74
0, 1.000 , 2_ 18; R.O Johnson, Arizona, 7· 1, .875, Duffy Waldor1 .
June t1 - Kmart 400 , Brooklyn . Mich.
·
·
Saturday'• game•
1.44; Glavlne, Atlanta, 7-1, .875 , 2.94 , Villone , Fred Coup les ..
39·35 =74
June 18 - Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
Boston (Rose 3·2) at N.Y. Yankees (HernanCINCINNATI. 6·1 , .957 , 3.83; G Maddux. Larry Mlze .....
.. ... 36-38 =74
June 25 -· Save Mart/K ragen 350~. SonoAL leaders
dez 4·4). 1:05 p.m.
A!1anta , 6· 1, .857 , 2.41 ; Va zquez, Montre al, 5· 1, BOb Tway . . .
.
37·37 =74
ma, Cali!.
Seanle (Tomko 2·2) at Tampa Bay (Rekar 1·
. ... 39·35 =74
SATIING : I. Rodriguez, Te)(as, .381; Erstad, .833, 2.83 ; Pavano, Montreal, 5·1 , .833, 3.22. • Peter Jacobsen .....
July 1 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
2), 4:15p.m .
·
STRIKEOUTS: A.D. Johnson. Arizona, J13; a-Luke Donald
.................. ... ... 35-39=74
Anaheim, .377; E. Martlnel, Seattle.. 370; M.J.
July 9 - New England 300, Loudon, N H.
Tor.onto (Munro 1·0) at Detroit" (Noma 2·3), Sweeney, Kansas City, .352: A. Rodriguez, Astacio , Co lorado , 70; Dempster, Flori da, 67; G. Steve Stncker .
37-37 =74
July 23- Penn sy lvania 500, Long Pond
5:05p.m.
Sealtle, .352; Posada , New York, .345 ; Lawton, Maddux, Atlanta, 61 ; Benson, Pittsburgh, 58, Brad FaKon .... .............
.. .. 38·36=74
Aug . 5 - Brickyard 400 , Indianapolis.
Te)(BS (Clark 3·2} at Minnesota (Mays 1-6), Minnesota.. 343.
Person, Philadilphla. 58: Lieber, Chicago, 58: J.l. Lewis.......................
. ........ 37-37=74
Aug . 13 - Global Crossing at The Glen .
7:05p .m.
RUNS: A. Rodriguez , Seattle, 47 ; Mondes1, Kite , St. lows, 58; A. Leiter, New York , 58.
Chris Perry ..
.. ............. 39-35=74
Walkins Glen , N.Y.
CLEVELAND (Wright 3-2) al Ch~ago While Toronto, 39; Glaus, Anaheim, 39, C. Delgado,
SAVES: Alfonseca, Flo ri da, 14; Benitez , ' Steve Jones
.. .....J. ......... : ......... 39·35=74
Aug. 20- Pepsi 400, Brook lyn , Mich.
.Sox (Parque 3·2), 7:05 p.m.
.. ...... 37-37= 74
Toronto, 38; I. Rodriguez. Texas , 38; Erstad, New York, 12; Shaw, Los Angeles , 11 ; Rocker. J.P. Hayes... ... ..............
Aug. 26- goracing.co m 500, Bristol, Tenn .
Atlanta, 10; Veres , St. Louis , 9; HoHman, San Raben Damron ..
.. .... 37-37=74
Sept. 3 - Southern 500 , Darlington, S .C .
Oakland (Hudson 5·2) at Baltimore (Johnson Anaheim, 37; TeJada , Oakland, 35.
;
0' 2). 7:05p.m.
· '
Sept. 9- Chevmlet Monte Carta 400, Rich ·
RBI: E. Martmez, Sea ttle, 54; Jason Giambl, Diego, 9; Graves, CINCINNATI, 8; Urbina, Man· Brla_n ~atts ...... ............................... 39:35: 74
, · Anaheim (Bottenlletd 3-5) at Kansas City Oakland, 51; M. Vaughn, Anaheim, 46; M.J. treal. 8.
Chns DIMarco ... ................. ... ....... ..... 37 38-75
mond, Va.
Sept 17 - New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
\ (Witaslck 0·4), 8:05p.m.
Sweeney, Kansas Cily, AS; A. Rodriguez, Seat.. .......40·35=75
Fuzzy Zoe ller ... ..... ....... ...
Sept. 24 - MBNA .com 400 , Dover, Del.
Billy Mayfair ............ ........ ........... .. ..... 36·39=75
lie, 45; M. Ramirez, C LEVELA~D . 45; I.
Brian Henninger ................................. 38·37=75
Oct. 1 - NAPA AutoCare 500. Martinsville.
l
~
Sunday's garnet
Rodrtguez, Texas, 42 .
Va
Toronto at Detroit, 1·05 p m
HrTS: Erstad, Anaheim, 75; I. ROdriguez,
Jack Nicklaus ................. . ....... ...... 41-34=75
Jay Haas:........................
...... 36·39:::75
Oct. 8 - UAW·GM Quality 500, Concord,
TelCas, 69; M.J. Sweeney, Kansas City, 63; law·
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
a·Hunter Haas ...........
Oakland at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
ton , Minnesota, 62; M . Vaughn, Anaheim, 62;
............... 37·38=75
N.C.
NBA conference finalt
Jay Don Blake .. .. ............ .... .... .. ... 37·39=76
Oct. 15- W1nston 500, Talladega , .Ala.
Gneve, Oakland, 59; A. Rodr1uuez, Seattle, 57;
Anaheim at Kansas Clly,t!:0.5 p.m.
Matt Gogel ... ...... .. ...... ... .............. .... 38·38=76
Oct. 22 - Pop Secret Microwave 400,
C. Delgado, Toronto, 57; GWi111ams , Tampa Bay,
Texas a1 Minnesota, 2:05 p.m.
Thur1day's score
Stewa rt Cink ....... .............. ..
....38·38=76
Rockingham, N.C.
CLEVELAND at Chicago While So11, 2:05 57; Segul, Texas, 57.
........ 35-41 =76
Nov. 5 - Checker Auto Parts/Dura lube
Indiana 88, New York 84 ; Indiana leads Billy Andrade ...
p.m.
DOUBLES: Glaus, Anaheim, 16; Lawton,
Frank Lickliter ..... ... .............. .... ....... 39-37 =76
500k, Avondale, Ari z.
Boston at N.Y. Yankees , 8:05p.m.
Minnesota, i6; Olerud, SeaU1e, 16; TNi)(on, seri es 2·0
Jerry Smith ............ .....
.......38·38:::76
Nov. 12- Pennzo\1400, Homestead. Fla.
Boston, 15; 7 are tied with 14.
Tonlght'e game
Joey Sindelar .................... . ......... 37·39=76
No'v. 19 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga
National League
TRIPLES: CGuzman, Minnesota, 7; T.
Andrew Magee .................................. 38·38,..76
Hunter, Minnesota, 4; Ourham, Chicago, 4;
Driver Standing•
L.A. Lakers at Portland, 9 p.m.
1.'Bobby Labonte, 1,601 .
E111ern Division
Platt , Oakland, 3; A. Kennedy, Anaheim. 3: SinDon Pooley .... ..... ... ........... ....... .. ....... .39-37=76
S.turdey's game
2. Ward Burton, 1,598.
Steve Flesch .................................38·38=76
gleton, Chicago, 3; J.A. Valentin, Chlcago,·3; T.
Ium
ll1l I. ~ · WI
Indiana at New York. 3:30p.m.
Scott Dun-.p .... ......... ...... ... ....... ........41·35=76
3. Mark Martin, 1.568.
Martinez. New York, 3; Polonla, Detroit, 3;
Atlanla .................... ... .. ..... 32 14 .696
4. Jeff Burton, 1,542.
Javier, Seante, 3.
Jelf Maggen .... ....... ...
........ 40·36=76
6
Montreal ............ ........ ....... 25 19 .568
5. Dale Earnhardt, 1,523.
HOME RUNS: Jason Giambi, Oakland, 17;
John Cook ....................... .......... ........ 37·39=76
Sunday'e game
New Vorl&lt; .................... ..... 25 22 .532
7'k
M. vaughn, Anaheim, 17; I. Rodriguez, Texas,
Stuart Appleby ................... ....... ....... 38·38=76
6. Dale Jarrett. 1,470.
L.A. Lakers at Portland, 3:30 p.m.
Flonda ..............................22 26 458
11
15'1.
16; Glaus, Anaheim, 15; A. Rodriguez , Seatlle ,
Kevin Sutherland ................. ............. 38·38=76
7. Rusty Wallace, 1,436.
Philadelphia .............. ....... 16 29 356
15; C. Delgado, Toronto, 15; C. Everett, Boston,
Jim Caner .. ................. .. ..... ............... 37·40=77
B. Ricky Rudd, 1.411
central Dlvlelon
-14; E Manlnez, Seanle , 14.
9. Jeff Gordon 1,400.
Corey Pavln ....................................... 37-40=77
Franklin Langham .. .. ................... ......38·39=77
10. Teny Labonte, 1,357.
St. Louls ...........................28 18 .609
STOlEN BASES: Damon, Kansas City, 16;
C)NCINNATI ....... ......... .... 26 20 .565
DeShields, Baltimore, 15; Mondesl, Toronlo, 13;
Tom Pernice Jr......... ........ ............ ...... 38·39=77
11 . Tony Stewart, 1,330.
2
Edward Fryatt ................. .. ................ 36-42=78
Milwaukee .................. .. ....20 27 .425
B•.% A. Kennedy, Anah eim, 11 ; Febles, Kansas Cltv,
12. Bill Ellion, 1.300.
B
11; Mclemore, Seante , 11 ; A Alomar, Cl EV!:Memorial resultl
John Daly . ......................................... 40·38=78
13. Mike Skinner, 1,263.
... Plttsburgh ................... .. .... 19 26 .422
LAND, 10.
Kevin Wentworth .... ,................. ........ Ao-38=78
14. Matt Kenseth, 1,2 14.
Chicago..... ....................... 16 30 .375
11"
PITCHING (6 decisions) Baldwin, Chicago,
OUBL.IN, Ohio (AP) - Results Thursday Robert Allenby .............. ............ ....... .. 37-41 • 78
,tiduston ........................... 17 29 .370
11
15. ~eremy Mayfield, 1,204.
1i. K~Schradar, 1,169.
7·1 , .875, 3.29; Helling, Texas, 7·1 , .875, 3.22; from the first rourkt of the $3 million Memorial Craig A.Spence............. ........ .. ..,. ..... ,~.4141·18.- ..
17. Dale Eamnardt Jr. , 1,156.
Nelson. New York, 6·1, .857, 1.40; Fassero, Tournament, played on the 7,1 93-yard, par 36· Nick Faldo ..... .. ............... : .. ................. 38·41 =79
-:
We1tern Dlvlalon
19. Chad unte. 1.149.
Boston, 5-1, .833, 3.40; D. Wells, Toro.n to, 8-2, 36· 72 Muirtield Village Golf. Club course (a· Dennis Paulson ............... ........ ........ .. 37·42=79
-AJ1zona .............................30 16 .652
19. Sterling Marlin, 1,126.
Soon Gump ..................... .... ............. 39·40=79
4 • .BOO, 3.62; P. Martinez, Boston, 7·2, .778, 1.19; denotes ama1eur):
t.os ·Angeles .....................25 19 .568
20. Steve Park, 1,125.
Graeme Storm ....... :........................... 44·37:::81
e
Hudson, Oakland, 5·2, .714, 5.01; Schoe'Colorado ........................ ..23 21 .523
21 . Johnny Benson. 1, 122.
8
newels, Anaheim, 5-2, .714, 4.99; Mendoza,
Darren Fichardt ... .................... .... .... ..42·40=82
'San Frar\cisco .................. 21 23 .477
. a-Aaron Baddeley . . ... .. . ....... .. ..... .44-38=82
22 John Andmtti, 1, 108 .
11
New York, 5-2, .714, G}4.
S•nDiego ..................... ... 19 27 .413
23 . Jimmy Spencer, 1,068
Rory Sabbatini ............ ,}.................... 42·4 1=83
STRIKEOUTS: P. Martinez, BaSion, 95; C.

Ryan Lee Lemley
Brand New 2000 Chevy
Full Size Converslon·Van

The Dally Sentinel • ~age B 3

.i

Thuredey'a ecorea

Leona Eblin

All New 2000
Buick LeSabre Custom

Middleport, Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOA.RD

and sons to discuss. particularly two strong-wi lled and
admittedly stubborn men like
the Ni cklauses.

"Gary has got talent, just as
much as anybody else out here
on
this tour," Norman said.
Nor man , who has a son of
hi s own, feels a kinship with
"He's a great kid, a grear
the Ni cklau ses.
player, a good golf swing. He
just
ne eded to believe in himH e is a longtime friend of
the se nior Ni c kbu s and now is self.
a friend of Gary as well.
"He needed to do some-

Asked if he knew how his
so n had played, he said, "I
know he 3-putted three of the
la st four holes. whi ch obviously hurt him .

~2,950* ~7 ,950*
• Air Conditioning
• Power Sunroof
• AM/FM CD

can't do that."

Nicklaus

Ewing injured in Knicks' loss
/

Friday, May 26, 2opo

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge B 2 • TtW Dally Sentinel

Nov. 3, 1944 • Dec. 11, 1999
Husband &amp; F1tber

Wesl VIrginia's ~1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

~,.. . !_,. -

c;;:w
Ge•JmrJc:C:ht••:n•l...

.. : . '

.,

-

~~~j
'"''" '""

&lt;2)
Olelsrnoblle

FRIDAY 9 am • 10 pm
SATURDAY 9 am • MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY 1 pm • 9 pm

We hold you in our thoughts
and memories forever.
Tammy Jarvis,
Sons Michael &amp;
Corey·Jarvls

·Taxes. Tagl nue Fees ell•a. Prices GOOCI May 26ih Through May 2Bih. Not responsible for typog•~phical errprs.

,,

Aug.l6, 1920 ·Apr. 10, 2000
Husband
Thank you for the
wonderful days we shared
together. My prayers will be
with you until we meet
again.
Mary Whaley
I•

Marie Rizer
Oct. 21, 1927 ·July 9, 1999
Mother
You were a light in our
life that burns forever
in our hearts.
Biii-Kenny-Bill-Vicki

Our love will live forever,
Sarah Pullins

You'll always be our hero.
Chris &amp; Erica Smith
&amp;

Bert Bodimer
Richard Bodimer
Aug. 20, 1919 ·Apr. 20, 1982
Sept. 14,1945 · June 29, 1997
Husband &amp; Son
Though out or sight, you'll
forever be in my heart and
mind.
Helen
'·'

�NB·A PLAYOFFS

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Two rebound and pass to Jalen Rose
yean ago, Patrick Ewing made .an for a game-clinching dunk with
unexpected return from a shat- 2.4 seconds left.
tered wrist in a Game 2 at IndiThe Knicks were livid at themana. In a Game 2 a year later, also selves for letting . an opportunity
on the road, his season ended slip away, especially while COining
when he tore his Achilles' tendon. so close to tying the series despite
Another Game 2 in Indiana dealing with the uncertai nty of
came and went Thursday night, not knowing whether Ewing...is
and another injury to Ewing out for the rest of the playoffs.
threatens to change everything.
Rose led the Pacers with 24
After straining a tendon in his points, Reggie Miller had 19 for
right foot in the first quarter, the second straight game and Rik
Ewing did not return as Indiana · Smits scored 10 of his 12 in the
' beat New York 88-84 to take a 2- fourth quarter long after
0 lead in the Eastern Conference Ewing was gone. Davis grabbed
finals. The severity of his injury 16 rebounds for the Pacers, who
was to be learned later today trailed for mu ch of the game, but
when Ewing undergoes an MRI. scored the final six points to win
" They played against us last it.
year without Patrick, and they
Larry Johnson (25 points, seven
beat us;' Indiana coach Larry Bird r~bounds) and Kurt Thomas {1 0
said. uwe Can't let up."
points, eight rebounds) had strong
The Knicks dido 't let down games in Ewing's absen ~e. but
. after losing their center. In fact, N cw York couldn't make t~
, they played pretty well right up plays it needed down the ~!retch.
until the end.
Thomas helped keep New York
.. But out of timeouts, the Knicks ahead despite playing with five
tlidn't line up any big men under fouls, scoring on consecutive pos· the basket as Dale Davis went to . sessions and grabbing several big
the foul line with 5.8 seconds left. rebounds on both ends. Indiana
He missed both, but was able to , tied it, though, with 3:01 left
outjump Charlie Ward for the when Smits picked up a loose
day's Regional Finals.
VanSickle will compete in the
long jump on Saturday.

Track
fromPage81

Amber Baker will run in . the
800- and 3200-rrieter runs on
Saturday. She will be joined by
Broderick in the 3200.

Davis' best throw of 26 feet,
nine inches failed to qualify for
the finals.

Baker finished third in the 3200
at the district meet. Broderick
took fourth to qualify

Holly Broderick ran in the
400-meter preliminaries and
turned in a time of 70.4. She
failed to qualify for Saturday's
finals but will compete in the
3200-meter run.

Finally, the lone boys· team
member to qualify, Matt Boyles,
will compete in two races on Saturday. Boyl,es will appear in both
the 1600- and the 3200-meter
runs.

While none of the athletes
qualified . for the finals, several
Lady Eagles and one Eagle will
compete in other events at Satur-

South Gallia's 400~meter relay

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S·Serles LS Pickup

q2,9

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunflre Sun &amp; Sound

*

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
•AM/FM CD

ball, dunked and was fouled for a
three-point play th~t made it 8080.
Houston hit a jumper, Miller
made a layup, and Thomas and
Rose exchan ged jumpers to make
it 84-84 with 55 seconds left.
Houston missed a bank shot
and Miller was fouled with 28
seconds left, making both for an
8&amp;-84 lead. The Knicks then isolated Sprewell and managed to
get him matched one-on-one
against the o-foot Travis Best, but
hi&gt; turnaround jumper was long.
"We got what we
The
play worked perfectly - everything but the shot," Sprcwell said .
Ewing injured his foot with just

w:t4ld.

Greg Norman, like Jack
Nicklaus a two-time winner
of the Memorial, now lives
just down the road from Gary
Ni cklaus.

faomPage 81
Gary, a rookie on the PGA
Tour. " And all the people who
grew up watching my _.,father
now get a chan ce tot.witth me
play a little bit here. It's ni ce."

For that matter, Norman is a
neighbor to the whc;&gt;,le family,
since all five Nicklaus children
live within 10 minutes of Jack
and Barbara in No.r th Palm
I! each ,' Fla .

Ja ck Nicklaus shot a 3- over
75. but birdied thre e of th e
last four holes - · including a
chip -i n from 35 feet on the
closing ho le.

''I'd like to have given him
my finish, but obviously you

Norman said the younger
Nicklaus changed after finishing second to. Phil Mickelson
at the BellSouth Classic in
early April, losing on the first
playoff hole.
'

They speak on the phone,
talking about things that are
sometimes difficult for fathers

thing for Gary Nicklaus, not
be in the shadow of Jack
Nicklaus ."

later, he stood in the fairway staring at the trees, then left his
approach 40 feet short.
"I was happy with the way I
played," Norman said. "I hit a lot
of solid shots, and given the conditions of the swirling wind, you
had to hit the ball solid."
This made Frazar's round that
much more impressive. He missed
only one fairway, three greens and
saved par the two times he was in
'a bunker.
What wind? Fr;~zar grew up in
Abilene, Texas, where, reporters
surmised, he used to hear the
wind rattle through the trees.
"Well, that's not true. In Abilene, there aren't any trees," Frazar
said. "A calm day is 30 (mph),
Then in high school I moved to
Dallas, where a calm day is 20. If
I'm playing well, l'm ·comfortable
with it.
The reason Frazar plays his best .
golf in May is because he takes
the last three months of the year
off to hunt and fish.
"It takes me a couple of months
to knock the rust off," he said.
Frazar is coming off a serious
disappointment in New Orleans,
where he was in the lead until

making a double bogey on the
71 st hole with an aggressive play
at the pin. He missed the play'?ff
by one stroke.
"If I'm going down, I want to
go down in flames," he sa.id.
"That's the way I am."
,
If he wins this week, or goes
down in Hames, he probably
·
won't blame the wind.

under six minutes rentaining in

the first quarter after going
against Davis in the low post. He
sat with his foot wrapped in icc
for a few minutes before walking
to the locker room with two
team doctors.
The news came quickly and
was not good. Ewing had what
the team called a sprained peroneal tendon in his right foot and
would not return.

Memorial
from Page 81

last four holes for a 75.
And he wasn't the only Nicklaus making some noise.
Gary Nicklaus, his 31-yea,r-old
son who . used to romp around
Muirfield as a kid, made his
Memorial debut by taking a share
of the lead early in the day before
3-putting two of the last three
holes for a 72.
team of Josh Duty. Brian Barnes,
· Th~ wind blew only about 20
· Matt Bess and Dana Bickle failed mph on Thursday under gorto qualify for the finals after turn- geous, sunny skies. Still, it was
ing in a time of 48.9 seco!lds.
enough to cause players to stare at
the tree tops and fiddle through
Duty ran a strong first leg, but a their irons looking - hoping slight mistiming on the handoff for the right one.
to Barnes put the Rebel sprinters
"I hit some solid shots that
too far behind the pack to chal- looked like I didn't know what· I
lenge in their heat.
was doing:• said David Duval,
"They worked real hard;' South who often was well short of the
Gallia head coach Curry Ryan pin and wound up with a 73.
Norman, after holing an 8-foot
said. "This is the first time in
birdie
putt on No. 15 that put
school history we've gotten this
him in the lead , hit his approach
far.
right at the flag on the 215-yard
"Everybody but Matt .(Bess) 16th. It caught a blast of wind and
returns next season. I'm proud of sailed into the bunker. One hole
them."

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Am GT Coupe Or Sedan

. Friday, May 28, 2000

Po~roy,

The lndlanapoll• Motor Speed·...
way (home of the Indy 500) was
built on 328 acres of farmland in
1909, financed by four local
businessmen.
Cancelled? .
Rejected?
Accidents?
Tickeu?
New Driver?

Has fOur .
drMng record
broughl you t
I ICteecbiag
halt?

Call Us First
For A Quote

11

•Low down payment
•Low monthly payments
•Immediate SR:22 flllnga.
•Preferred ·AND high risk :
drivers welcome

·992·5479

.1999 Chevrolet

1999 Chevy

1999 Pontiac

Prlzm Sedan

Lumina Sedan

Grand Am SE1 Sedan

St. Louis 7, Flortda e

Atlanta 7. Milwaukee 3

Chicago Cubl6, C&lt;lloratlO s

San Fiandsco 4 , Montreal1
Houston 10, Phftadelphla 6
Arizona 7, PittSburgh 5 ·

American League

c Flrley, CLEVELAND, 66: Burta, CLEVELAND,

· 60; Mussioa, ·Baltlmore, 59; Clemena, New York,
57; Hudson, Oakland, 55; 0 . Hernandez, New
York, 53.
.SAVES : PeJCival, Anaheim, 14: TSJones,
Detroit 13; MRlvera , New York, 12; Wetteland.
Texas, 12; Koch , Toronto, 10; Dlowe, Boston. 9 ;

•V-6 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

• Automatic
1 Air Condlllonlng
• Low Mlleal

• Ram Air V-6 Power
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Tilt.&amp; Cruise

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels
•

2000 Biulck
Regal LS Sedan

Century Sedan

Brand New 2000 Chevy ·
Silverado LS Ext. Cab 4x4

• Vortec V·B Power
• 4 Captain Chairs
Windows &amp;

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Aluminum Wheels!

1999 Chevy Blazer
LS4Door4x4

~3,950* ~7 ,350*

•21 350* 823,95 •24,950*
~ndows a. Locka

• Power Driver Seat
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

( .1tt'\'n~

.~· ~ ~

..

'

West VIrginia's t1Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Cuslom Van Dealer.
'

TOLL FREE 1·800·822-0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden.com
•

•

'

PRO

• Power Window &amp; Locks
·• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Fully Loaded!

q9,950*

28 . Kevin Lepage . 95,
29. Kemv lrw10. 895.
30. Jerry Nadedu. Bn.

31 . Kyle Peny, 854 .
32 Stacv Compton. 772.
33 . Kenny- Wallace, 764 .
34. Dave Blanev. 745.
35. Eliott Sadler. 713.
36. Robbie Gordon, 650.
37 Wally Oallenbach. 638.
38. Darrell Wattrip ,£32 .
39 Brett Bodine. 595.
40. Soot! Pruen, 583.

Btnbatl
American League

•

.ANAHEIM ANGELS: Sent RHP Brett Hinch·
liffe outr\ght to Edmonton of the Pacific Coast
League.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Re called LHP
Jesus Pena hom Cha rlotte ol the International
League. Optioned LHP Sco t1 Eyre and C Josh
Pau l to Charl one
CLEVElAND INDIANS: Recalled RHP
Justin Speier from Buffalo of 11le lntemational
League Optioned RHP nm Drew to Buffalo
Promoted RHP J.D. Brammer tram .Akron ol the
Eastern League to Bullalo of the International
League. and LHP C C Sabathia from Kinston of
the Carolina League 10 Akron.
MINNESOTA TWIN S Sent CF Tori! , Hunt~ r
to thei r minor league camp Recalled INF JasonQ,
Maxwell from Salt Lak e of the Pa cifiC Coas1
League

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS . Released SS
Kevin Stocker and AHP Dwight Goode,n.
Reca 11ed INF Fel1x Martinez and LHP Doug
Creek from Durham of the International league.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS· Placed LHP Lance
Painter on the I S-day disabled list, re troactive to
May t7 . Recalled LHP Clayton Andrews lrom
Syracuse of the International League. Placed
INF Homer Bush on the 15·day disabled list.
retroactive to May 22. Recalled INF Chris Wood·
ward lrom Syracuse .
NaUonallea~ua

CHICAG O CUBS: Optioned RHP Kyle
Farnsworth to Iowa of the Pacific Coast League.
Recalled RHP Matt Karchne r !rom Iowa
FLORIDA MARLINS: Purchased the con·
tract of RHP Reid Cornelius fro ru Calgary of !tie
Pacili c Coast Le ag ue. Optioned RHP Joe
Strong to Calgary.

MONTREAL EXPOS ' Called up C Charl ie
O'Bri en from Harrisburg of 1he Eastem League.
Placed LHP Mall Stank on the 15-day disa led
list. Transferred RHP Scott Strickland from the
15· to the 60-day disabled list.
Basketball
National Baaketball Aeaociallon
ATlANTA HAWKS: Named Lon Kruger
coach .
,
Football
National Football League

CINC INNATI BENGALS: Re leased P Greg
Mueller.
DENVER BRONCOS: Signed G David Oiaz·
Infante.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS : Signed CB
K1waukee Thomas.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Waived P
Kareem Anderson, WR Ryan Shaw and LB Bar·
rin Simpson .
NEW YORK JETS: Signed DT Jason Fergu·
son, WR·KR Dwight Stone, WR Brandon Camp·
bell and WR Wlndrell Hayes.

Hockey
Nltlonal Hockey LHgue
ANAHEIM MIGHTY OUCKS : Traded C
Espen Knutsen to the Columbus Blue Jackets
lor a 2001 fourth-round entry dral! pick.
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Exercised their
contract options on G Jamie Storr and AW Glen
M.urr.t~~.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

Jack Coleman

29.2000

Your courage and bravery
still inspire us all, and the
memory of your smile fills .
us with joy and laughter.
We Love and Miss You,
Friends and Family

l '

We hold you in our thoughts
and memories forever.
Sadly missed and loved by
Family &amp; Frelnds

Ernest Kauff

Mother
The days we shared were
sweet. I long to see you agaiJ!
in God's heavenly glory.
Daughter Nancy Manley

Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels

June 11, 1942 - Jan. 10, 1999
Molher

Feb.21,1937-Jan.9,2000
Uncle/Sisler
Corporal · Marines

You were a light in our life
thai burns forever in our
hearts.

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God hold
you in the palm of His hand.

Sandy

Candy Burkhamer
Violet Jeffers

Donald E. Yost, Jr.

Donald Yost, Jr.

June 6, 1978 ·Apr. 13, 2000

June 6, 1978 ·Apr. 13, 2000

Thank you for the
wonderful days we shared
together. My prayers will be
with you until we meet
again.

Your courage and bravery
still inspire us all, and the
memory or your smile fills
us with joy and laughter.

Patrica Mossman

Nov. 19, 1936 • Nov. 13, 1996

1

Kristiana Smith
were s lighlln our life
burns forever in our hearts.
We Love You Angel!
Daddy, Mommy and Kami

Betty R. McKnight
Nov. 11, 1943 : Dec. S, 1996
Mother
You were a lighl in our life
that burns forever in our
hearts.
IS9llv &amp;

Chris Davis &amp; Family

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

Franklin p. Jarvis
(..,._1lrw

Kem&gt;v Perry ...................................... 36·33-li9

.•

Herbert Whaley

t
..... t;..,. .-, ......:

Harrison Frazar.................................. 33·33E66
Tom Schener ................... ,..... "... .,, .... 33·36z69

24. Micl!ael Waltrio. 99&gt;1.
25 . Joe Nemechek, 994 .
26. Robert PreS61ey, 982.
27 . Bobby Hamilton, 978.

Kazuhll&lt;o Hosokawa .......................... 4H9=63
David Sutherla.nd ...............................40-« ~84
Roger Maltbie .....................................42·•2~

' .

• TBl!es. TaQs. Tille Fees eletra. Rebate included in sale p!'ice ol new vehicle listed where applicable\ .. On approved credit.
On ,.lected modelS. Not responsllle for typographical errors. Pr~es Good May 26th Tllfwgh May 281h.

..;;;;.

&amp;wt

~0,850* ~3,250* ~3,450*

1999 Buick

• Power
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

!liD!

Greg Kraft ........................................~35 - 35= 70
Gabriell;-ljenstedl ...........
.. .. 34 ·36=70
E11ttrn Olvltlon
lsringhausan, Oakland. 9; · t&lt;arsay; CLEVE · Greg Norman ............................... ...... 36·3ol=70
IHm
lllll.~WI
Justin Leonard .................................. 36·34 =70
LAND, 9.
Tonight's gam••
NHL conf..-enct ftn111
Boston ............................26 17 .605
Olin Browne .
.................... 34 ·37=71
Florida (Sanchez 4·3) at CINCINNATI (VII·
New York ......................... 26 17 605
Mark Calcavecchia ..... ...
.. .... 36·35=71
lone 6·1), 7:35 p.m.
NL leaders
Thurtday'a acore
Toronto .................... ......... 25 24 :sto
4
Hat Sutton ...........................
.. .... 36 -35.. 71
Atlanta (Giavlne 7· 1) at Hous10n (Lima 1·7),
Colorado 2, Dalles 1: series tied 3·3 •
Balllmore ......................... 20 25 .444
7
8:05p.m.
BATTING: Vidro, Montreal , .394; V. Guer· Tiger WOOds .....................
.. ... 36·35.:71
Tampa Bay ....................... 15 30 .333
12
.. .. 36·35=71
N.Y. Mets (Hampton 5·4) at St. Louis ·(Hent· rero, Mon1ceal, .390; Helton, COlorado, .388; Greg Chalmers ........... ,......
Tonight's gomo
gen 4-4), 8:10P.-m.
Edmonds. St. Louis, .386; Piazza. New York, Brad Elder .........................................36·35: 71
New Jersey at Pniladefphia , 7 p.m.
Centre! Dlvltlon
...... 37·34::::71
Plnsburgh (Cqrdova 1·4) at Colorado {Yoshll .366; Giles, Ptnsburgh, .361 ; Atfonzo, New York, David Edwards ..................
Chicago ........... .... .. .... ....... 26 20 .565
1·5), 9:05p.m.
• .352.
John Huston ................ .................. 35·36=71
Stturday'a game
CLEVELAND ......... ........ 24 19 .556
RUNS : Edmonds, St. Louis, 48 : Helton. Col· Rich Beem ... ............... ......
.. .. 34 ·37:o:71
Milwaukee (Snyder 0.0) at Arizona (R. John·
Colorado at Dallas, 7 p.m.
Kansas City . ... ..... ......... .23 23 .500
3
son 7-1), 10:05 p.m.
orado, 43; Bagwell, Houston, 43 ; BondS, San Sooll Verplank .....
..37-34=71
Minnesota ........................ 20 28 .417
7
Montreal (lrabu 2-3) at San Diego (Hitch· Francisco. 43; Vldro , Montreal, 41 ; Kent. San Bob Estes ..
. -...... 34 ·37=71
Detroi\ .............................. 16 21 .372
. ... 34 ·38=72
Francisco. 41 ; Green. los Angeles, 39; Vina. St. Gary Nicklaus ..... ....... ........
8'&gt; cook 1-6). 10:05 p.m.
Joe Ozaki...
...............
..36-36:::72
Philadelphia (Byrd t-3) at l os Angeles (K louis, 39; S. Finley, Arizona , 39.
W11tern Dlvlalon
RBI : S . Sosa, Chicago, 48; S. Finley, An · Glen Day .
. 35·37=72
Brown 3-1), 10:10 ~ . m .
Texas .............................. 25 21 .543
. .. 34-38=72
Chicago Cub~ (Tapani 2·5) at San Francisco zona, 48; Giles, Pittsburgh, 47 ; McGwire , St. V1jay Singh ..........
Anaheim ..... ................... 25 22 .532
'
Louis, 46; Galarraga. Atlanta , 43; Helton, Col· Mark Brooks .......
..36·36=72
(Gardner 2-2), 10.35 p .m.
Wlnaton Cup Sertaa
Seanle ............................ .23 21 .S23
1
.36·36=72
orado, 42; Hidalgo , Houston, 41 ; Kent, San No!ah Begay Ill _..
Oakland .......................... 24 24 .500
2
Francisco, 41 .
Jonathan l&lt;aye .......................... .. 38·34=72
The NASCAA Winston Cup schedule, win·
Saturd•y"• gam11
Atlanta (Burkett 3-2) at Houston (Reynolds
HITS: Vidro .. Mon1real. 69: V. Guerrero. Jerry Kelly ........
............38·34=72
ners in parentheses, and driver polnt standings:
Thurad•y'a score•
.. ..... 35-37=72
Montreal, 64 ; Derek Bell, New York , 63: E.O. Br&amp;nt Geiberger ..
5·0) . 1:15 p.m.
Feb. 20 - Day1 ona 500. Daytona Beach,
Anaheim 3, Minnesota 1
.. 36·36=72
Fla (Dale Jarrell)
Pit1sburgh (Ritchie 2·3) at Colorado (Kart 1- Young, Chicago, 62: Giles, Pillsburgh , 61 ; S. Pau l Azinger
CLEVELAND 4, Detroit 1
..35·37::::72
Sosa , Chicago, 61 , Helton, Colora do, 59 ; Tom Leh man........................
2), 4:05p.m.
f=eb~ 27 - Dura Lube/Kman 400 , Ro~ l ng­
Baltimore 5, Seattle 1
. 37 -35=72
Chtcego Cubs (Downs 1-1) at San FranCIS - Owens, San Diego, 59, Edmonds. St. Louis, 59: Ted Tryba ..... .....
ham, N.C (Bobby Labonte)
Toronto 11, Boston 6
S. F1n!ey. Arizona , 59.
Bill Glasso n .................. ..... .. ... 39-33=72
March 5 - Carsdirect.com 400, las Vegas .
co (Ortiz 3·5), 4:05p.m.
Oa~land 6. Tampa Bay 3
DOUBLES: Vldro, Montreal, 17, E.O. Young, Paul Goydos
.37·35::::72
(Jef1 Burton)
Milwaukee (Bere 3-3) al Arizona {Reynoso
TeMas 5, Kansas City 3
Chicago. 17: Cirillo, Colorado, 16, Green, Los Steve Lowery
.... 37·36=73
March 12 - Cra cker Barrel 500. Hampton.
2·4L 4:35p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 7, Chicago White SaM o
. .............
.. ... 39-34=73
Ga . (Dale Earnhardt)
.
Florida (Penny 3·6) at CINCI NNATI (Bel! 3- Angeles . 16; A.B . White , Montreal, 16: L. Gon· Skip KendalL
Ke1th Fergus
35·38 =73
zalez, Arizona , 15; 5 are tied with 14.
3), 7:35 p,m
March 19 - Mali com 400, Darl ington, S.C.
Tonight's games
. ........... 34-39 =73
TRIPL ES: Goodwin, Colo(ado, 7, Cedeno. Joel Edwards ...
(Ward Burton)
N.Y. Mel&amp; (Reed 3· 1) at St. Loui s (Andy
Toronto (Castillo 1·4 ) at Detroit (MIIcki 2-5) , Benes 4-2), 8:10 p.m.
. .38-35=73
Houston. 4; Womack. Arizona 4: V1na. St. Jim Furyk ...... .
March 26 - Food C1ty 500, Brfstot, Tenn.
7:05p.m.
Fred Funk .. ·.37·36 =73 · (Rusty Wallac e)
Montreal {Vazquez 5-1) at San 01ego Louis, 4; 8 are tied With 3
Oakland (Mulder 2·1) at Baltimore (Erickson (Clement 5·3), 10:05 p.m.
.. .............. 37-36 :::73
HOME RUNS: McGwire , St . Louis. 20, David Duval..
April 2 - DirecTV 500. For1 Worth . Texas.
1-1 ), 7:05p.m.
........... 37·36 =73
(Dale Ea mnardt.Jr.)
Philadelphia (Person 4·2) at Los Angeles Bonds. San Franctsco. 19: S. Finley. Arizona . Carlos Franco ........
Boston (A. Mar1inez 3-3) at N. V. Yankees · {Dreifort 3-1). 10:10 p.m.
17; Hidalgo, Houston, 15; Edmonds , St. Louis. Mark O 'Meara .
36-37=73
April 9 - Goody's 500, Martinsvi lle Va
(Cone 1·3\, 7:05p.m
15, S. Sosa, Chicago, 15: GriHey Jr. CINCIN· Shigeki Maruyama
...... 36·37 =73
iMa rk Martin)
Seattle (Sele 4·2) at Tampa Bay (Trachsel 3NATI, 14; Shell1eld , Los Angeles, 14.
Rocco Mediate.. .. ........ .......
. .. 35·38=73
April 16 - DieHard 500, Tal ladega. Ala.
Sunday's gamea
3), 7:15p.m.
Flor;Qa at CINCINNATl, 1:15 p.m
38-35=73
(JeH Gordon)
STOLEN BASES : L. Castillo, Florida, 18; Ernie Els .
Anaheim (Etnenon O·O) at Kansu City
Cedeno, Houston, 17; E 0 . Young, Chlcag:&gt;, 16; Jel1 Slu'man ..
.38·35 =73
April 30 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontan a.
N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 2:10pm.
(Fussell 3·2) , 9:05 p.m.
Reese, CINCINNATI, 15; Goodwin, Colorado , Neal Lancaster .........
.. ..... 37-37 =74
Allanta at Houston . 3:05p.m.
Calif. (Jeremy Mayfield)
Pittsburgh at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
14. Owens, San Diego . 12: 0 . Veras . Atlanta . Frank Nobilo ...
.39-35=74
. Te)(as (Oliver 1-2) at Minnesota (Milton 3-1),
May s - Pontiac E~e ci tem e nt 400. Rich8:05p.m.
12.
T1m Herron .....
. . 37·37 =74
mond, Va . (Dale Eamhardl Jr.)
Montreal at San D1ego, 4:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Finley 3·3) at Chicago White
..... 37·37 =74
PITCHING (6 decisions) : Stephenson, St. Mike Weir ....
Chicago Cubs at San Francisco, 4:05p.m
May 28- Coca -Cola 600 . Concord, N.C.
Sox \Eldred 4-2). 8:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 4:10p.m.
Louis, 7-0. 1.000. 4 34 : Graves, CINC INNATI. 6· Scott ·Hoch ........
.. .... 34·40 =74
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.
Milwaukee at Arizona, 4·35 p.m.
37·37 =74
0, 1.000 , 2_ 18; R.O Johnson, Arizona, 7· 1, .875, Duffy Waldor1 .
June t1 - Kmart 400 , Brooklyn . Mich.
·
·
Saturday'• game•
1.44; Glavlne, Atlanta, 7-1, .875 , 2.94 , Villone , Fred Coup les ..
39·35 =74
June 18 - Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
Boston (Rose 3·2) at N.Y. Yankees (HernanCINCINNATI. 6·1 , .957 , 3.83; G Maddux. Larry Mlze .....
.. ... 36-38 =74
June 25 -· Save Mart/K ragen 350~. SonoAL leaders
dez 4·4). 1:05 p.m.
A!1anta , 6· 1, .857 , 2.41 ; Va zquez, Montre al, 5· 1, BOb Tway . . .
.
37·37 =74
ma, Cali!.
Seanle (Tomko 2·2) at Tampa Bay (Rekar 1·
. ... 39·35 =74
SATIING : I. Rodriguez, Te)(as, .381; Erstad, .833, 2.83 ; Pavano, Montreal, 5·1 , .833, 3.22. • Peter Jacobsen .....
July 1 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
2), 4:15p.m .
·
STRIKEOUTS: A.D. Johnson. Arizona, J13; a-Luke Donald
.................. ... ... 35-39=74
Anaheim, .377; E. Martlnel, Seattle.. 370; M.J.
July 9 - New England 300, Loudon, N H.
Tor.onto (Munro 1·0) at Detroit" (Noma 2·3), Sweeney, Kansas City, .352: A. Rodriguez, Astacio , Co lorado , 70; Dempster, Flori da, 67; G. Steve Stncker .
37-37 =74
July 23- Penn sy lvania 500, Long Pond
5:05p.m.
Sealtle, .352; Posada , New York, .345 ; Lawton, Maddux, Atlanta, 61 ; Benson, Pittsburgh, 58, Brad FaKon .... .............
.. .. 38·36=74
Aug . 5 - Brickyard 400 , Indianapolis.
Te)(BS (Clark 3·2} at Minnesota (Mays 1-6), Minnesota.. 343.
Person, Philadilphla. 58: Lieber, Chicago, 58: J.l. Lewis.......................
. ........ 37-37=74
Aug . 13 - Global Crossing at The Glen .
7:05p .m.
RUNS: A. Rodriguez , Seattle, 47 ; Mondes1, Kite , St. lows, 58; A. Leiter, New York , 58.
Chris Perry ..
.. ............. 39-35=74
Walkins Glen , N.Y.
CLEVELAND (Wright 3-2) al Ch~ago While Toronto, 39; Glaus, Anaheim, 39, C. Delgado,
SAVES: Alfonseca, Flo ri da, 14; Benitez , ' Steve Jones
.. .....J. ......... : ......... 39·35=74
Aug. 20- Pepsi 400, Brook lyn , Mich.
.Sox (Parque 3·2), 7:05 p.m.
.. ...... 37-37= 74
Toronto, 38; I. Rodriguez. Texas , 38; Erstad, New York, 12; Shaw, Los Angeles , 11 ; Rocker. J.P. Hayes... ... ..............
Aug. 26- goracing.co m 500, Bristol, Tenn .
Atlanta, 10; Veres , St. Louis , 9; HoHman, San Raben Damron ..
.. .... 37-37=74
Sept. 3 - Southern 500 , Darlington, S .C .
Oakland (Hudson 5·2) at Baltimore (Johnson Anaheim, 37; TeJada , Oakland, 35.
;
0' 2). 7:05p.m.
· '
Sept. 9- Chevmlet Monte Carta 400, Rich ·
RBI: E. Martmez, Sea ttle, 54; Jason Giambl, Diego, 9; Graves, CINCINNATI, 8; Urbina, Man· Brla_n ~atts ...... ............................... 39:35: 74
, · Anaheim (Bottenlletd 3-5) at Kansas City Oakland, 51; M. Vaughn, Anaheim, 46; M.J. treal. 8.
Chns DIMarco ... ................. ... ....... ..... 37 38-75
mond, Va.
Sept 17 - New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
\ (Witaslck 0·4), 8:05p.m.
Sweeney, Kansas Cily, AS; A. Rodriguez, Seat.. .......40·35=75
Fuzzy Zoe ller ... ..... ....... ...
Sept. 24 - MBNA .com 400 , Dover, Del.
Billy Mayfair ............ ........ ........... .. ..... 36·39=75
lie, 45; M. Ramirez, C LEVELA~D . 45; I.
Brian Henninger ................................. 38·37=75
Oct. 1 - NAPA AutoCare 500. Martinsville.
l
~
Sunday's garnet
Rodrtguez, Texas, 42 .
Va
Toronto at Detroit, 1·05 p m
HrTS: Erstad, Anaheim, 75; I. ROdriguez,
Jack Nicklaus ................. . ....... ...... 41-34=75
Jay Haas:........................
...... 36·39:::75
Oct. 8 - UAW·GM Quality 500, Concord,
TelCas, 69; M.J. Sweeney, Kansas City, 63; law·
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
a·Hunter Haas ...........
Oakland at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
ton , Minnesota, 62; M . Vaughn, Anaheim, 62;
............... 37·38=75
N.C.
NBA conference finalt
Jay Don Blake .. .. ............ .... .... .. ... 37·39=76
Oct. 15- W1nston 500, Talladega , .Ala.
Gneve, Oakland, 59; A. Rodr1uuez, Seattle, 57;
Anaheim at Kansas Clly,t!:0.5 p.m.
Matt Gogel ... ...... .. ...... ... .............. .... 38·38=76
Oct. 22 - Pop Secret Microwave 400,
C. Delgado, Toronto, 57; GWi111ams , Tampa Bay,
Texas a1 Minnesota, 2:05 p.m.
Thur1day's score
Stewa rt Cink ....... .............. ..
....38·38=76
Rockingham, N.C.
CLEVELAND at Chicago While So11, 2:05 57; Segul, Texas, 57.
........ 35-41 =76
Nov. 5 - Checker Auto Parts/Dura lube
Indiana 88, New York 84 ; Indiana leads Billy Andrade ...
p.m.
DOUBLES: Glaus, Anaheim, 16; Lawton,
Frank Lickliter ..... ... .............. .... ....... 39-37 =76
500k, Avondale, Ari z.
Boston at N.Y. Yankees , 8:05p.m.
Minnesota, i6; Olerud, SeaU1e, 16; TNi)(on, seri es 2·0
Jerry Smith ............ .....
.......38·38:::76
Nov. 12- Pennzo\1400, Homestead. Fla.
Boston, 15; 7 are tied with 14.
Tonlght'e game
Joey Sindelar .................... . ......... 37·39=76
No'v. 19 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga
National League
TRIPLES: CGuzman, Minnesota, 7; T.
Andrew Magee .................................. 38·38,..76
Hunter, Minnesota, 4; Ourham, Chicago, 4;
Driver Standing•
L.A. Lakers at Portland, 9 p.m.
1.'Bobby Labonte, 1,601 .
E111ern Division
Platt , Oakland, 3; A. Kennedy, Anaheim. 3: SinDon Pooley .... ..... ... ........... ....... .. ....... .39-37=76
S.turdey's game
2. Ward Burton, 1,598.
Steve Flesch .................................38·38=76
gleton, Chicago, 3; J.A. Valentin, Chlcago,·3; T.
Ium
ll1l I. ~ · WI
Indiana at New York. 3:30p.m.
Scott Dun-.p .... ......... ...... ... ....... ........41·35=76
3. Mark Martin, 1.568.
Martinez. New York, 3; Polonla, Detroit, 3;
Atlanla .................... ... .. ..... 32 14 .696
4. Jeff Burton, 1,542.
Javier, Seante, 3.
Jelf Maggen .... ....... ...
........ 40·36=76
6
Montreal ............ ........ ....... 25 19 .568
5. Dale Earnhardt, 1,523.
HOME RUNS: Jason Giambi, Oakland, 17;
John Cook ....................... .......... ........ 37·39=76
Sunday'e game
New Vorl&lt; .................... ..... 25 22 .532
7'k
M. vaughn, Anaheim, 17; I. Rodriguez, Texas,
Stuart Appleby ................... ....... ....... 38·38=76
6. Dale Jarrett. 1,470.
L.A. Lakers at Portland, 3:30 p.m.
Flonda ..............................22 26 458
11
15'1.
16; Glaus, Anaheim, 15; A. Rodriguez , Seatlle ,
Kevin Sutherland ................. ............. 38·38=76
7. Rusty Wallace, 1,436.
Philadelphia .............. ....... 16 29 356
15; C. Delgado, Toronto, 15; C. Everett, Boston,
Jim Caner .. ................. .. ..... ............... 37·40=77
B. Ricky Rudd, 1.411
central Dlvlelon
-14; E Manlnez, Seanle , 14.
9. Jeff Gordon 1,400.
Corey Pavln ....................................... 37-40=77
Franklin Langham .. .. ................... ......38·39=77
10. Teny Labonte, 1,357.
St. Louls ...........................28 18 .609
STOlEN BASES: Damon, Kansas City, 16;
C)NCINNATI ....... ......... .... 26 20 .565
DeShields, Baltimore, 15; Mondesl, Toronlo, 13;
Tom Pernice Jr......... ........ ............ ...... 38·39=77
11 . Tony Stewart, 1,330.
2
Edward Fryatt ................. .. ................ 36-42=78
Milwaukee .................. .. ....20 27 .425
B•.% A. Kennedy, Anah eim, 11 ; Febles, Kansas Cltv,
12. Bill Ellion, 1.300.
B
11; Mclemore, Seante , 11 ; A Alomar, Cl EV!:Memorial resultl
John Daly . ......................................... 40·38=78
13. Mike Skinner, 1,263.
... Plttsburgh ................... .. .... 19 26 .422
LAND, 10.
Kevin Wentworth .... ,................. ........ Ao-38=78
14. Matt Kenseth, 1,2 14.
Chicago..... ....................... 16 30 .375
11"
PITCHING (6 decisions) Baldwin, Chicago,
OUBL.IN, Ohio (AP) - Results Thursday Robert Allenby .............. ............ ....... .. 37-41 • 78
,tiduston ........................... 17 29 .370
11
15. ~eremy Mayfield, 1,204.
1i. K~Schradar, 1,169.
7·1 , .875, 3.29; Helling, Texas, 7·1 , .875, 3.22; from the first rourkt of the $3 million Memorial Craig A.Spence............. ........ .. ..,. ..... ,~.4141·18.- ..
17. Dale Eamnardt Jr. , 1,156.
Nelson. New York, 6·1, .857, 1.40; Fassero, Tournament, played on the 7,1 93-yard, par 36· Nick Faldo ..... .. ............... : .. ................. 38·41 =79
-:
We1tern Dlvlalon
19. Chad unte. 1.149.
Boston, 5-1, .833, 3.40; D. Wells, Toro.n to, 8-2, 36· 72 Muirtield Village Golf. Club course (a· Dennis Paulson ............... ........ ........ .. 37·42=79
-AJ1zona .............................30 16 .652
19. Sterling Marlin, 1,126.
Soon Gump ..................... .... ............. 39·40=79
4 • .BOO, 3.62; P. Martinez, Boston, 7·2, .778, 1.19; denotes ama1eur):
t.os ·Angeles .....................25 19 .568
20. Steve Park, 1,125.
Graeme Storm ....... :........................... 44·37:::81
e
Hudson, Oakland, 5·2, .714, 5.01; Schoe'Colorado ........................ ..23 21 .523
21 . Johnny Benson. 1, 122.
8
newels, Anaheim, 5-2, .714, 4.99; Mendoza,
Darren Fichardt ... .................... .... .... ..42·40=82
'San Frar\cisco .................. 21 23 .477
. a-Aaron Baddeley . . ... .. . ....... .. ..... .44-38=82
22 John Andmtti, 1, 108 .
11
New York, 5-2, .714, G}4.
S•nDiego ..................... ... 19 27 .413
23 . Jimmy Spencer, 1,068
Rory Sabbatini ............ ,}.................... 42·4 1=83
STRIKEOUTS: P. Martinez, BaSion, 95; C.

Ryan Lee Lemley
Brand New 2000 Chevy
Full Size Converslon·Van

The Dally Sentinel • ~age B 3

.i

Thuredey'a ecorea

Leona Eblin

All New 2000
Buick LeSabre Custom

Middleport, Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOA.RD

and sons to discuss. particularly two strong-wi lled and
admittedly stubborn men like
the Ni cklauses.

"Gary has got talent, just as
much as anybody else out here
on
this tour," Norman said.
Nor man , who has a son of
hi s own, feels a kinship with
"He's a great kid, a grear
the Ni cklau ses.
player, a good golf swing. He
just
ne eded to believe in himH e is a longtime friend of
the se nior Ni c kbu s and now is self.
a friend of Gary as well.
"He needed to do some-

Asked if he knew how his
so n had played, he said, "I
know he 3-putted three of the
la st four holes. whi ch obviously hurt him .

~2,950* ~7 ,950*
• Air Conditioning
• Power Sunroof
• AM/FM CD

can't do that."

Nicklaus

Ewing injured in Knicks' loss
/

Friday, May 26, 2opo

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge B 2 • TtW Dally Sentinel

Nov. 3, 1944 • Dec. 11, 1999
Husband &amp; F1tber

Wesl VIrginia's ~1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

~,.. . !_,. -

c;;:w
Ge•JmrJc:C:ht••:n•l...

.. : . '

.,

-

~~~j
'"''" '""

&lt;2)
Olelsrnoblle

FRIDAY 9 am • 10 pm
SATURDAY 9 am • MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY 1 pm • 9 pm

We hold you in our thoughts
and memories forever.
Tammy Jarvis,
Sons Michael &amp;
Corey·Jarvls

·Taxes. Tagl nue Fees ell•a. Prices GOOCI May 26ih Through May 2Bih. Not responsible for typog•~phical errprs.

,,

Aug.l6, 1920 ·Apr. 10, 2000
Husband
Thank you for the
wonderful days we shared
together. My prayers will be
with you until we meet
again.
Mary Whaley
I•

Marie Rizer
Oct. 21, 1927 ·July 9, 1999
Mother
You were a light in our
life that burns forever
in our hearts.
Biii-Kenny-Bill-Vicki

Our love will live forever,
Sarah Pullins

You'll always be our hero.
Chris &amp; Erica Smith
&amp;

Bert Bodimer
Richard Bodimer
Aug. 20, 1919 ·Apr. 20, 1982
Sept. 14,1945 · June 29, 1997
Husband &amp; Son
Though out or sight, you'll
forever be in my heart and
mind.
Helen
'·'

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
440

Apartment•
for Rent

540 Mlacellaneoua
Merchandise

A,.llablo Now TW1f1 Towers now
SFI
HllD suba d zed op o o do v
anj1
nand capped
EOH

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

aeeep no appl c• ont o

005

70

Yard

Sale

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Personal•
DIABETIC PATIENTS

HelpWanted

220 Money to Loan

POSTAL JOBS 148 323 00 YR
Now H ng No E11p6 ence Pa Cl
lian ng G ea Bene s Ca 1
Davs 1100-429-3660 E&gt;&lt;t J 566

BUSINESS OWNERSII
You n o eel no Cash
Non Pe a m ng n a cas
No es Ca 5 eve
888
2228

110

140

Business
Training

Go I po a CorN Coll011•
Ca ee s Close To Home

Ca Tcdav 740-446 4367
BOO 2 4-0452

Reg 190.05- 2748

150

340

AAA RA NG 90

80 DAYS

800-422 598

Business and
Buildings

ywhe a FREE n o ma on
800
578 363 NORWOOD SAW
M LLS 252 So w 0 e Bu Ia o
NY 4225

o advert se any prefe ence
mta ono dsc m10a on

KR NEAR OGE
he P ce Has Bee Reduced On
Th s 23 A e ac 0 Woods
Ad H sOny $23000 Locaed
On K ne Road 0 SR 1 &amp;
NeghbO hOOd
CENTERPO NT RUN
Beau u Po d On 6 Ac e o
P sFou Ohes5 Ace os
Ready Fo Yo New Home lo
caed 3M as ON SR 35 Nea The
Jackso /Ga a County l ne
DON'T M SS OUT ON THE SAV
NGS CALL TODAY FOR FREE
MAPS
800 2 3 8365
Anhonyla d Co Ld
www coy ntrvtvroe com

80

710 Autos for Sale
CARS FROM S200 POL CE M
POUND Ho da s Toyo as Che
vs Jeep,s And Spo U es
Ca Now 800 772 7470 EXT
7832
302
S800

Schools
Instruction

FREE FREE MONEY PROB
EMS N0\'1 ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CAT ON FEE
8 1
543 835 EXT 402

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be h p 0
mesh a e WE L
TA KE
Ame cas Mos Su
t ess
Campg ound A d me
' a e Aesa e C ea nghouse Ca
~ ESO AT SA ES NTERNA ON
A
800 423 596 24 Hou s

TRANSPORTATION

AJ rea estate advertis g n
h s newspape s subject lo
he Fodera Fa Hovs ng Act
ot 968 which makes ~ egal

know ng v ac e~
advert semen s fof ea es a e
which s n v10 a 10 o he
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n a med ha a dwe ngs
advert sed n h 5 newspape
aea a abe on a equa
opportun y basiS

TObatcO P~nts

F s Orde s wl Gua antee Be! a.

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs n a
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac v Bes Sawm Va ue An

Th s ewspape w no

90 $200 aero 740 319-2798

Ea es
Pa s
Oewhu 1
Fa ms 304 895 37401895 3789

Tu n
A so
Any
982

CRED T PROS EMS7 CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY
JUDGEMENTS
LAWSU TS

Tobaeco FIOa plan s Tennessee

Now lakong ordo a lor thiS SprllliJ

304)e75-6&amp;19

ANNOUNCEMENT S

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Proctorv

te

PUBUCNOTICE
Scipio townlhlp will
accapt lllled bld1 lor the
following
18110 Ford F.eoo 15 878 2
mllu
Serlll 1
F
IOOOHitaeo Sutphin pump
1110 Gal Permln 750 G1l
l'lnk, TranamiHion 2 lpeed
1xlo 298 Engine M1x QVW
19 500 )lydraullc brtkea
Scipio Townahlp reee..,.a
tho right to roluoo 1ny 1nd
all blda blda wll bo opened
Juno 7 2000@ the Scipio
Twp
Truat.. rogu11r
monthly meeting To vlow
tho lruak cont1ct Rlndy
Butcher @ 742 2302 or
Robart Jewell @ 742 2750
Blda may be m1lled 11
Scipio townlhlp
C 0 Connie Chipman
36385 SR 143
Pomeroy OH 457611
(5) 12 19 28 31c

510

~PP ances
Recond
Washe s 0 ye s Rang es Re
g a o s 90 Day Gua an ee
f onc h C y May ag 740 446

7795

CEN URY 2 SH PLEY REALTY

Oh o

Jus Ac oss
P H 0 T-D G R A P IH
Wedd ngs

Pos
Spo s Teams
P o ess ona Ce

ed Pho og a

phe
Reasonab e a es
Ca o apponmen
30465 42
304 675 2 9

I

Household
Good a

Flea Morllet

New o YouTh rt Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A ne s
740-592 842
0 a y co h ng and hO se ho d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
Ttm sday Mond ay h Sa u day
9 Q0-5 30

Public Notice

Pu bile Notice

Public Notice

On S1turdly May 27 2000
11 10 00 1m the Homo
Nallona Bank w II oHor lor
Hie at public auction on the
Bank parking lot the
following vehlclft
1996 Chevy CIV Vln
101JC5245T7163479
1993 Oldamoblle Cullaao
Vln 103WH14T7PD3S9647
1991 Ford Exp V n
1FMDU34Z5MUA93820
Tho torme of the aale are
caah
The Home National Bank
reaarv11 the right to reject
any or all bide or to remova
any un I from the aale at
anytime
Arrangomenll may be made
to nopacl any altha above
vehlclea prior to tho aala by
calll1ng 740-949-2210
28

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annul report Form
990 PF lor the K bble
Foundation Bernard V
Fultz Truateo a eva abla
for pub lc lnapoctlon at
Bernard 'l Fultz Law Oft ce
111 I 2 Wall Second Still
Pomeroy OH 45769 during
ragu ar bualneao houre lor
a
rlod of 180 daya
aul&gt;oaqu,ant to pu bllcatlon
notice
18 19 21 22 23 24 25
28 30 31 and (6) 1 12 tc

Second Street Poma oy
Oh o The Farmer a Bank
and Saving• Company
extended parking
ot
(beo de Powell a Super
va u) to aall for caeh the
following collalaral
1991 Pont ac Sunblrd
1G2JB14K7M750971 5
1994 Dodge Ram SLT

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Satu day May 27
2000 at 10 00 • m 1 public
aale will be held at 211 Well

Sportamen
Check ou ou week y unadve
lZed spec as P+ek p a ye n
he s o e 1i County Spo s
Shop nea Mason County Fa
gro nds P Pleasa
Mon Fn 9 30AM 6PM
Sa 9 30AM 3PM

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY /SSI?
No FeeUnessWeWn
888 582 3345

304 675 2968

Buy o se

R a ne An ques

24 Eas Man on SR 24 E Po

539 ~uss Moore owne

Me gs County B1kers
15th Annual Memonal Run
Sunday May 28 2000
Pomeroy Park ng Lot
Meet At Noon
Leave At 1 00 pm
Fol ow Old Route End at
Lakeview Tavern
L ve MuSIC Hot Food Cod
Dr nks
$5 Per Person
B1ke Stlow No Entry Fee
S1gn Up at 11 00 on Court
Street Awards g ven
All b1kes welcome
For more nformat1on
call740 742 8510

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale

YDola1l

210

Fu n u a Appl ances
All House~d Goods
An ques &amp; Co ectibles
:104 453-2587

37 Peop e Needed To ose Up
To 30 Pounds n The Ne)C 30
Days F ee Samp es 74 0 44
1982

Won I Laat

Business
Opportunity

580
FED UP W TH THE
RUN AROUND?
Wan A New Home W h No Has
s e? Ca Fa P e App o a
868 565 0 67

Supe vao W h Foo ng Expe
enee And 2 Gene a C eane a
Needed In ackso A ea Fu
TmePoslo Wok g500PM
1 30 A M Monday F day Bene
s A a ab e A e 30 Days
T anspo a on Needed Ca 740
2~5 7378

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

REPO SALE
Neve l eel n No Money Down
Se e 0 e $5 000 Ca
888
565 0 67
800 Sq F Ho se On P va e
Lo 7 M es F om Hosp a 740
446 3583

FINANCIAL

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

WANT A COMPUTER? BUT
NO CASH? MMX Tocnno ogy
W F nance W h 0 Down Pas
C ed P ob'ems No P Ob em Ca
To F ee 871 293 4082

440

Rae ne F re Dept
Chicken BBQ
and Homemade Ice Cream
Sunday May 28th
Serv ng beg ns at 11 00 am

Apartments
for Rent

New Insurance Asency
1s m need of a

11 0

Customer Service
Representative

Help Wanted

Expencnce preferred
Must be hccnsed or
Wllltng to become
hccnscd Salary and
benefils commensurate
W1th quahficahons
Expenenced and
qualified persons should
send resume with salary
requuemcnts to

$505 WE~KLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
OU RED 800 757 0753

lasunnce Aaency
~0 Box623
Jackson OH 45640

Yard Sale

EOE

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

esses good
a 740 99 2

~0)'0

URGENT Y NEEDED

p asma
clono 5 ea n $35 o $45 lo 2 o 3
hou s week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 685

New 6 80 38A 2BA $268 pe
mo h ow Dow Payme
Fee
A F ee De e y
888 928
3426

WANT EO

New D

h

HOM E FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV T BA NK REPOS
800
355 0024 EKI 8040

b ew de

$2 6 pe mon h

me
FeeA
688 928 3426

3 BA 2BA
w Pay
F eeDe ey
wD

~

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

Uncond ona
JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Rep~ ed New &amp; Rebu
S ock
ca Ron E ans

aoo-53 9528

e me gus an ee
oca e e ences u shed Es
ab shed 975 Ca 24 Hrs 740)
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rog
ers Wa e p oofing

M1zway Tavern
Fr Karaoke 9 00 1 00
$1 00 cover
Sat Dr ve South Band
9 00 1 00 $2 00 cover
Start ng Wed
May 31st open stage mght
from 7 oo 11 00
Br ng your own Instruments we
have the est

32x80 Fac o y Rep
L ed n $49 950
6

RACO Food Dnve
Rac1ne
Saturday May 27
8 to 12

n Advance

DEADLINE 2 00 p m

lhe day boltn heed
1

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

New 4 W de 3BA 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low do wn Payme n
F ee A F ee De e y
888
928 3426

AJ.J. Yanl Soles Muo

a. Pa d

Turkey &amp; Ham D~nner
Monday May 29th
Racme Amer can Leg1on Post
602 For more nfo
call 949 2855 or 949 2044
SERVICES

TheGa aCou yBoadO MA
DO s An Equa Oppo un y Em

a run Sundlv

ed on 200pm
Friday Monday ed on
G30 1 n Saturday

Saturday May 27th
2pm

origmal Broadcast of
last Middleport H1gh
Football Game against
Racne m 1966
(The only meeting betwBen
the schools)
will be Rebroadcast on
1390 ESPN
The

GREAT NCDME POATEN
T Al MED CAL B LLERS Ea n
Up To S45K Yea Fu -.; 8 nng
PC Rtq d Ca T en To F oa
688 eeo 6693 E• ~40

'

\

PUBLIC NOTICE
In compliance with
Amended Section 3111 11 of
tho Ohio Revlaad Coda a
full and complete copy of
the annual financial report
of Me go County Ia avall1bla
lor publ c lnapactlon 11 the
office of the Malga county
Aucj lo
Melga County
Courlhouae The AudHora
alllco houra are Monday
thoughF day 830am to
4 30 p m and the telephone
number a 740-992 26118
(5) 261 lc

Lllram e

3B7HC16Y9RM51 6235
The Farmere Bank and
Sovlnge
Company
Pomeroy Oh o roeervaa the
right to bid at th 1 eala and
to withdraw the above
collatera prior to sale
Further The Farma Bank
and Savlnga Company
rtaarvtl the right Ia reject
any or all blda aubmlttod
Further
the
above
co lateral w II be ao d In the
cond l ion II Ia In with no
exprou
or Implied
warrant •• given
For further Information
contact Shalla Buchanan at
6112 2136
(5) 24 25 28 3 TC

Public Notice

Antiques

me oy 740 9!J2 2526 o 740 992

C ean Houses Fo $ 0 H
0 Can He p 0 gan ze Fo Pa
es Baby Showe s B hdays
E c )74Q-44 856

Public Notice

Closed S ndays

530

W

8$

MERCHANDISE

CALL NORA DDNOHEW AT
(304)895-3445

Hun ngto WV
3 a Bndge
740-151-1218
304-46:1-2687

Page

Public Notice

Auction
and Flea Market

AUCTION
2BgSaeOays.
E erySa 6 PM
Eve y rues 6 P.M
liu koadsO
New &amp; used ems
F omSe'lea Saes
Se ngToTh&amp;Pubic&amp;Oea es
P ece Dozens &amp; Case La s
BOWEN AUCTION SERV CE
GARY BOWEN AUCTIONEER

The Dally Sentinel

340 Business and
Buildings

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
Notice Ia contracture In
accordance with aactlon
S07 88 of Ute Ohio Revised
Cape aealed blda will be
received by tho Board of
Meigs
County
Commissioners
Court
House Pomeroy Ohio
45789 unlll 3 00 PM on
Friday June 2nd 2000 Tho
blda will than be opened
and read aloud at 10 15
A M on Monday June 5th
2000 lor the following
RESURFACING WORK
ON DESIGNATED COUNTY
ROADS
BETWEEN
CERTAIN TERMINI
B d apeclllcaUona may be
picked up at the Molga
County Engineer o OHica o
the Office of lhe Melga
County Comml11 onera
The Board of Melga
County Commlaolonors
may accopl lha lowest b d
or aalect tho beat bid lor tho
Intended purpoao and
ro10rves the right lo accept
and or rajact any or a I blda
andlor any part lhareol and
w award a contract lo thai
bidder which lo In the boat
Interest of Molgo County
G orla Kl011 Clerk
Board of Melgo County
Commloalonare
(5) 19 26 2TC

110

Chrl• Gilkey
"Au"
Ctdlfllulllltat .,. .....

•• ,. ,,... tf , •• ,
Wtltft ,.••
Unele Dtrllll

Aunt Mt Mt ~e••
Aunt La h
Or•n•111• Ruth &amp; "' 1111
Jn Ollktf

Help Wanted

WANTED Buckeye Commumty Serv ces has a
part lime pos liOn ava lable n Me gs County 33
hrs/Wk 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon sleep over
requ red Pos ton requ res teach ng personal and
commun ty sk lis to 1nd1v duals w th mental
retardatiOn The work e w ronment s Informal
and reward1ng The requ rements are h gh
school d ploma/GED vahd dr ver s hcense three
years good dnv ng exper ence and adequate
automobile 1nsurance coverage B C S offers
comprehens ve tram ng n the I eld of MA!DD
Start ng sa ary $5 50/h Vacat on/s ck benefits
Interested appl cants need to spec fy posit on of
nterest and send resume to P 0 Box 604
Jackson OH 45640 0604 All appl cat ons must
be post marked by 6/1/00 Equal Opportumty
Employer

AN POSITIONS The Behavioral
Unit (Inner Reflections) and
Nurs1ng

Facility

Memorial

(SNF)

Hospital

have

opemngs for part t1me
Registered

Nurses

at

Health
Skilled

Veterans
Immediate

and

full

Genatric

t1me

and/or

Psych expenence preferred

STNA POSITIONS

The Sk1lled Nursing

Facility has part t1me opemngs for State
Tested nurs1ng Ass1stants
Those Interested please contact

Human Resources at
(740) 992 2104 ext 201
to arrange Interview

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
440

Apartment•
for Rent

540 Mlacellaneoua
Merchandise

A,.llablo Now TW1f1 Towers now
SFI
HllD suba d zed op o o do v
anj1
nand capped
EOH

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

aeeep no appl c• ont o

005

70

Yard

Sale

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Personal•
DIABETIC PATIENTS

HelpWanted

220 Money to Loan

POSTAL JOBS 148 323 00 YR
Now H ng No E11p6 ence Pa Cl
lian ng G ea Bene s Ca 1
Davs 1100-429-3660 E&gt;&lt;t J 566

BUSINESS OWNERSII
You n o eel no Cash
Non Pe a m ng n a cas
No es Ca 5 eve
888
2228

110

140

Business
Training

Go I po a CorN Coll011•
Ca ee s Close To Home

Ca Tcdav 740-446 4367
BOO 2 4-0452

Reg 190.05- 2748

150

340

AAA RA NG 90

80 DAYS

800-422 598

Business and
Buildings

ywhe a FREE n o ma on
800
578 363 NORWOOD SAW
M LLS 252 So w 0 e Bu Ia o
NY 4225

o advert se any prefe ence
mta ono dsc m10a on

KR NEAR OGE
he P ce Has Bee Reduced On
Th s 23 A e ac 0 Woods
Ad H sOny $23000 Locaed
On K ne Road 0 SR 1 &amp;
NeghbO hOOd
CENTERPO NT RUN
Beau u Po d On 6 Ac e o
P sFou Ohes5 Ace os
Ready Fo Yo New Home lo
caed 3M as ON SR 35 Nea The
Jackso /Ga a County l ne
DON'T M SS OUT ON THE SAV
NGS CALL TODAY FOR FREE
MAPS
800 2 3 8365
Anhonyla d Co Ld
www coy ntrvtvroe com

80

710 Autos for Sale
CARS FROM S200 POL CE M
POUND Ho da s Toyo as Che
vs Jeep,s And Spo U es
Ca Now 800 772 7470 EXT
7832
302
S800

Schools
Instruction

FREE FREE MONEY PROB
EMS N0\'1 ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CAT ON FEE
8 1
543 835 EXT 402

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be h p 0
mesh a e WE L
TA KE
Ame cas Mos Su
t ess
Campg ound A d me
' a e Aesa e C ea nghouse Ca
~ ESO AT SA ES NTERNA ON
A
800 423 596 24 Hou s

TRANSPORTATION

AJ rea estate advertis g n
h s newspape s subject lo
he Fodera Fa Hovs ng Act
ot 968 which makes ~ egal

know ng v ac e~
advert semen s fof ea es a e
which s n v10 a 10 o he
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n a med ha a dwe ngs
advert sed n h 5 newspape
aea a abe on a equa
opportun y basiS

TObatcO P~nts

F s Orde s wl Gua antee Be! a.

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs n a
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac v Bes Sawm Va ue An

Th s ewspape w no

90 $200 aero 740 319-2798

Ea es
Pa s
Oewhu 1
Fa ms 304 895 37401895 3789

Tu n
A so
Any
982

CRED T PROS EMS7 CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY
JUDGEMENTS
LAWSU TS

Tobaeco FIOa plan s Tennessee

Now lakong ordo a lor thiS SprllliJ

304)e75-6&amp;19

ANNOUNCEMENT S

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Proctorv

te

PUBUCNOTICE
Scipio townlhlp will
accapt lllled bld1 lor the
following
18110 Ford F.eoo 15 878 2
mllu
Serlll 1
F
IOOOHitaeo Sutphin pump
1110 Gal Permln 750 G1l
l'lnk, TranamiHion 2 lpeed
1xlo 298 Engine M1x QVW
19 500 )lydraullc brtkea
Scipio Townahlp reee..,.a
tho right to roluoo 1ny 1nd
all blda blda wll bo opened
Juno 7 2000@ the Scipio
Twp
Truat.. rogu11r
monthly meeting To vlow
tho lruak cont1ct Rlndy
Butcher @ 742 2302 or
Robart Jewell @ 742 2750
Blda may be m1lled 11
Scipio townlhlp
C 0 Connie Chipman
36385 SR 143
Pomeroy OH 457611
(5) 12 19 28 31c

510

~PP ances
Recond
Washe s 0 ye s Rang es Re
g a o s 90 Day Gua an ee
f onc h C y May ag 740 446

7795

CEN URY 2 SH PLEY REALTY

Oh o

Jus Ac oss
P H 0 T-D G R A P IH
Wedd ngs

Pos
Spo s Teams
P o ess ona Ce

ed Pho og a

phe
Reasonab e a es
Ca o apponmen
30465 42
304 675 2 9

I

Household
Good a

Flea Morllet

New o YouTh rt Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A ne s
740-592 842
0 a y co h ng and hO se ho d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
Ttm sday Mond ay h Sa u day
9 Q0-5 30

Public Notice

Pu bile Notice

Public Notice

On S1turdly May 27 2000
11 10 00 1m the Homo
Nallona Bank w II oHor lor
Hie at public auction on the
Bank parking lot the
following vehlclft
1996 Chevy CIV Vln
101JC5245T7163479
1993 Oldamoblle Cullaao
Vln 103WH14T7PD3S9647
1991 Ford Exp V n
1FMDU34Z5MUA93820
Tho torme of the aale are
caah
The Home National Bank
reaarv11 the right to reject
any or all bide or to remova
any un I from the aale at
anytime
Arrangomenll may be made
to nopacl any altha above
vehlclea prior to tho aala by
calll1ng 740-949-2210
28

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annul report Form
990 PF lor the K bble
Foundation Bernard V
Fultz Truateo a eva abla
for pub lc lnapoctlon at
Bernard 'l Fultz Law Oft ce
111 I 2 Wall Second Still
Pomeroy OH 45769 during
ragu ar bualneao houre lor
a
rlod of 180 daya
aul&gt;oaqu,ant to pu bllcatlon
notice
18 19 21 22 23 24 25
28 30 31 and (6) 1 12 tc

Second Street Poma oy
Oh o The Farmer a Bank
and Saving• Company
extended parking
ot
(beo de Powell a Super
va u) to aall for caeh the
following collalaral
1991 Pont ac Sunblrd
1G2JB14K7M750971 5
1994 Dodge Ram SLT

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Satu day May 27
2000 at 10 00 • m 1 public
aale will be held at 211 Well

Sportamen
Check ou ou week y unadve
lZed spec as P+ek p a ye n
he s o e 1i County Spo s
Shop nea Mason County Fa
gro nds P Pleasa
Mon Fn 9 30AM 6PM
Sa 9 30AM 3PM

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY /SSI?
No FeeUnessWeWn
888 582 3345

304 675 2968

Buy o se

R a ne An ques

24 Eas Man on SR 24 E Po

539 ~uss Moore owne

Me gs County B1kers
15th Annual Memonal Run
Sunday May 28 2000
Pomeroy Park ng Lot
Meet At Noon
Leave At 1 00 pm
Fol ow Old Route End at
Lakeview Tavern
L ve MuSIC Hot Food Cod
Dr nks
$5 Per Person
B1ke Stlow No Entry Fee
S1gn Up at 11 00 on Court
Street Awards g ven
All b1kes welcome
For more nformat1on
call740 742 8510

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale

YDola1l

210

Fu n u a Appl ances
All House~d Goods
An ques &amp; Co ectibles
:104 453-2587

37 Peop e Needed To ose Up
To 30 Pounds n The Ne)C 30
Days F ee Samp es 74 0 44
1982

Won I Laat

Business
Opportunity

580
FED UP W TH THE
RUN AROUND?
Wan A New Home W h No Has
s e? Ca Fa P e App o a
868 565 0 67

Supe vao W h Foo ng Expe
enee And 2 Gene a C eane a
Needed In ackso A ea Fu
TmePoslo Wok g500PM
1 30 A M Monday F day Bene
s A a ab e A e 30 Days
T anspo a on Needed Ca 740
2~5 7378

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

REPO SALE
Neve l eel n No Money Down
Se e 0 e $5 000 Ca
888
565 0 67
800 Sq F Ho se On P va e
Lo 7 M es F om Hosp a 740
446 3583

FINANCIAL

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

WANT A COMPUTER? BUT
NO CASH? MMX Tocnno ogy
W F nance W h 0 Down Pas
C ed P ob'ems No P Ob em Ca
To F ee 871 293 4082

440

Rae ne F re Dept
Chicken BBQ
and Homemade Ice Cream
Sunday May 28th
Serv ng beg ns at 11 00 am

Apartments
for Rent

New Insurance Asency
1s m need of a

11 0

Customer Service
Representative

Help Wanted

Expencnce preferred
Must be hccnsed or
Wllltng to become
hccnscd Salary and
benefils commensurate
W1th quahficahons
Expenenced and
qualified persons should
send resume with salary
requuemcnts to

$505 WE~KLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
OU RED 800 757 0753

lasunnce Aaency
~0 Box623
Jackson OH 45640

Yard Sale

EOE

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

esses good
a 740 99 2

~0)'0

URGENT Y NEEDED

p asma
clono 5 ea n $35 o $45 lo 2 o 3
hou s week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 685

New 6 80 38A 2BA $268 pe
mo h ow Dow Payme
Fee
A F ee De e y
888 928
3426

WANT EO

New D

h

HOM E FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV T BA NK REPOS
800
355 0024 EKI 8040

b ew de

$2 6 pe mon h

me
FeeA
688 928 3426

3 BA 2BA
w Pay
F eeDe ey
wD

~

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

Uncond ona
JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Rep~ ed New &amp; Rebu
S ock
ca Ron E ans

aoo-53 9528

e me gus an ee
oca e e ences u shed Es
ab shed 975 Ca 24 Hrs 740)
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rog
ers Wa e p oofing

M1zway Tavern
Fr Karaoke 9 00 1 00
$1 00 cover
Sat Dr ve South Band
9 00 1 00 $2 00 cover
Start ng Wed
May 31st open stage mght
from 7 oo 11 00
Br ng your own Instruments we
have the est

32x80 Fac o y Rep
L ed n $49 950
6

RACO Food Dnve
Rac1ne
Saturday May 27
8 to 12

n Advance

DEADLINE 2 00 p m

lhe day boltn heed
1

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

New 4 W de 3BA 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low do wn Payme n
F ee A F ee De e y
888
928 3426

AJ.J. Yanl Soles Muo

a. Pa d

Turkey &amp; Ham D~nner
Monday May 29th
Racme Amer can Leg1on Post
602 For more nfo
call 949 2855 or 949 2044
SERVICES

TheGa aCou yBoadO MA
DO s An Equa Oppo un y Em

a run Sundlv

ed on 200pm
Friday Monday ed on
G30 1 n Saturday

Saturday May 27th
2pm

origmal Broadcast of
last Middleport H1gh
Football Game against
Racne m 1966
(The only meeting betwBen
the schools)
will be Rebroadcast on
1390 ESPN
The

GREAT NCDME POATEN
T Al MED CAL B LLERS Ea n
Up To S45K Yea Fu -.; 8 nng
PC Rtq d Ca T en To F oa
688 eeo 6693 E• ~40

'

\

PUBLIC NOTICE
In compliance with
Amended Section 3111 11 of
tho Ohio Revlaad Coda a
full and complete copy of
the annual financial report
of Me go County Ia avall1bla
lor publ c lnapactlon 11 the
office of the Malga county
Aucj lo
Melga County
Courlhouae The AudHora
alllco houra are Monday
thoughF day 830am to
4 30 p m and the telephone
number a 740-992 26118
(5) 261 lc

Lllram e

3B7HC16Y9RM51 6235
The Farmere Bank and
Sovlnge
Company
Pomeroy Oh o roeervaa the
right to bid at th 1 eala and
to withdraw the above
collatera prior to sale
Further The Farma Bank
and Savlnga Company
rtaarvtl the right Ia reject
any or all blda aubmlttod
Further
the
above
co lateral w II be ao d In the
cond l ion II Ia In with no
exprou
or Implied
warrant •• given
For further Information
contact Shalla Buchanan at
6112 2136
(5) 24 25 28 3 TC

Public Notice

Antiques

me oy 740 9!J2 2526 o 740 992

C ean Houses Fo $ 0 H
0 Can He p 0 gan ze Fo Pa
es Baby Showe s B hdays
E c )74Q-44 856

Public Notice

Closed S ndays

530

W

8$

MERCHANDISE

CALL NORA DDNOHEW AT
(304)895-3445

Hun ngto WV
3 a Bndge
740-151-1218
304-46:1-2687

Page

Public Notice

Auction
and Flea Market

AUCTION
2BgSaeOays.
E erySa 6 PM
Eve y rues 6 P.M
liu koadsO
New &amp; used ems
F omSe'lea Saes
Se ngToTh&amp;Pubic&amp;Oea es
P ece Dozens &amp; Case La s
BOWEN AUCTION SERV CE
GARY BOWEN AUCTIONEER

The Dally Sentinel

340 Business and
Buildings

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
Notice Ia contracture In
accordance with aactlon
S07 88 of Ute Ohio Revised
Cape aealed blda will be
received by tho Board of
Meigs
County
Commissioners
Court
House Pomeroy Ohio
45789 unlll 3 00 PM on
Friday June 2nd 2000 Tho
blda will than be opened
and read aloud at 10 15
A M on Monday June 5th
2000 lor the following
RESURFACING WORK
ON DESIGNATED COUNTY
ROADS
BETWEEN
CERTAIN TERMINI
B d apeclllcaUona may be
picked up at the Molga
County Engineer o OHica o
the Office of lhe Melga
County Comml11 onera
The Board of Melga
County Commlaolonors
may accopl lha lowest b d
or aalect tho beat bid lor tho
Intended purpoao and
ro10rves the right lo accept
and or rajact any or a I blda
andlor any part lhareol and
w award a contract lo thai
bidder which lo In the boat
Interest of Molgo County
G orla Kl011 Clerk
Board of Melgo County
Commloalonare
(5) 19 26 2TC

110

Chrl• Gilkey
"Au"
Ctdlfllulllltat .,. .....

•• ,. ,,... tf , •• ,
Wtltft ,.••
Unele Dtrllll

Aunt Mt Mt ~e••
Aunt La h
Or•n•111• Ruth &amp; "' 1111
Jn Ollktf

Help Wanted

WANTED Buckeye Commumty Serv ces has a
part lime pos liOn ava lable n Me gs County 33
hrs/Wk 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon sleep over
requ red Pos ton requ res teach ng personal and
commun ty sk lis to 1nd1v duals w th mental
retardatiOn The work e w ronment s Informal
and reward1ng The requ rements are h gh
school d ploma/GED vahd dr ver s hcense three
years good dnv ng exper ence and adequate
automobile 1nsurance coverage B C S offers
comprehens ve tram ng n the I eld of MA!DD
Start ng sa ary $5 50/h Vacat on/s ck benefits
Interested appl cants need to spec fy posit on of
nterest and send resume to P 0 Box 604
Jackson OH 45640 0604 All appl cat ons must
be post marked by 6/1/00 Equal Opportumty
Employer

AN POSITIONS The Behavioral
Unit (Inner Reflections) and
Nurs1ng

Facility

Memorial

(SNF)

Hospital

have

opemngs for part t1me
Registered

Nurses

at

Health
Skilled

Veterans
Immediate

and

full

Genatric

t1me

and/or

Psych expenence preferred

STNA POSITIONS

The Sk1lled Nursing

Facility has part t1me opemngs for State
Tested nurs1ng Ass1stants
Those Interested please contact

Human Resources at
(740) 992 2104 ext 201
to arrange Interview

�·Friday, May 26, 2000

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

:;ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

BRIDGE

NEA
ACROSS
Skill

PHILLIP

DBPOYIA&amp;
PUft

SMITH'S COtiSTRUCTIOtl
No Credit • Stow Credit • Blt1tcnJptc:y
Repo • Dlvorded

• New Homes
. • Garages
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment...

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

AD Make. Tractor &amp;
EciuiJiment Parts

Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

Hied It done, gl•• ua 1 call

You're Treated with Rtspeetl

FREE ESTIMATES

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coo/villi, OH 45723

Great Price• on New Home•
992•2753
992•11 OJ

740117..111

1

01111001 mo

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulk Hose repairs,
cyhnder repairs, od
Sales· S gat buckets
toSS gal. drums

Quallty, Varlfty, Low Prlcea • That'• Ua!
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60

10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each
Mornlnc Star Rd. CR 10
Racine, Ohio
1•740-949-2115

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

.

~

\ales Representative
Larry Schey

rEast State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
'
"A Better

2 y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

740·985·4194
19
mo
t

Sunset Home
Construction

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free Estimates

-'llLtEL

Syracuse
Now Open For
Spring Semon
Vegetable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac trees, Assorted

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

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

Ken You"ll'
~tl19100

•Driveways •Tennis Courts
•Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Service
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

WAITED
Standing timber large
or small tracks . Top
prices. paid also.

Sing-Dane~- Party

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.

with Miss Mamie in
Annie Oakley's

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119 or
1-800-291-5600

Karaoke
· • Weddings·
Birthdays • Private
Parties

Call T&amp;R Logging
' after 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy )
1m . 4 1

h.lntBs

· CGlndk::s &amp;Crafts
•F~•4rai•m

•Ci•41• Rafill1

SR 143 992-3?:£57

35537 St. Rt. 7 Notfi

E

:

:

740·992·7599

' ·9~---:::::::::::::-:::----,

ll ••

•Ears

~

••

•

t. .. .. •

Free E:stimares.

Mike Sharp
7 40.949·3606

·Shop at home...

Bu from the Classifieds!

'ICAVATING CO.
,,, n ,..na nn·
lleullp

-aon

I Work wilhout

-

12 Negligible

--(ttkl

13

22U23 Candy24 W.._ ••

21 Bred

25 .... """ - .:
27 Oean Martin"•

Umo'lcln
18 Klmono ..sh
20 nme-- half

chancel)

11 Northern

constellation

nickft.me

28Gtazes
29 Portion out
31. Carrington
lomilyTV

South
11
3t
41

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
2t
3•
Pass

Hrfe1

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

331fteadow

moun

38 UK lime
40 Change
41 Poetic foot

Bu/lJo•er &amp; Backhoe
Seroicea

.Hou81l &amp; Trailer Sites·
Land Clearing &amp;

Grading
Seplic Sy•le,.. &amp;

Utililie•

(740)992·3838

•

'

rtlltn t ~·tor of flna11cltl obligations ud orrengt 1 fair •strht!H of attell
.... ton. A,.,.,. ~""I t•r..,t.ba.U.,tty mor rota~ dflato prtp0r1J,
btWJ101 .wnll!lpt• property, fwlllt or Mr pt~IOHIIIM. This f10J lnthH 1 cor, a
hoat~ datho1, ,,. h.. nl.ld gotd1. '" •haoW 1lroc1 "' 'l"ttloot ,.....,
baUruptcy to llfl tltOI'My Hloro 10'.....

ct11

..

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

M
A

s

R
y

IAA I

"Take the pai11 out
of painti11gLet me do it for you"

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Message
Aher 6pm· 614·985·4180

liB I. lad
Pomeroy, Ollla

f\OW WIO YOuR.
1"1"\1\ T~F

P"

YOU~~ YOU, \1\\I'-IK. YOU

Y. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

:..

f\1\'IE 00T

Waters Edge of Syracuse

•
•

•

•

... .. ... •

.. .. •

•

•

•

:
•

41281

•

•

•

•

20 Yrs experience

Residential· decks, liitchens; Comme . 1 t 1 d
bathrooms custom
·
rcta · me a stu s,
remodeling, handicap acteSI' drywall, suspended ceilings
kilchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

..

I

••.!
; ,..-----------------------------------,
~ WE llA'iE TO WRITE A SHORT
IPtEC~ FOR SOIOOLTAAT EXPRESSES I
,,,\JIJ"- PERSONAL P~ILOSOPI-IV ...

GUARANTEED

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(304) 882·2079
New Haven WV

liNES'
""'·Lo~·uu:~ ,

• ToP

•

f'erno""'

OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

•ir\1'11

, S\lli'IIP ,.
orwll~...

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

5!22 1 mo

Adverl'ise you~ .business
~n -1;his page .
·for'·, ~;n• ·'•,••·• 'q ih
for t.~. ~ . lbw·
C.~
·
.
.
S25 ·. per ·i.n .c h

Phone ·. 9 -·9 2-21 SS
,•

. HOW ABOUT, THAT'S GOOD..
1
'WHV ME?'' I'LL FIT IT IN

'·

~
•
•
••
•
I

. The .recommended line of play.
which is certai nl y preuy, is" to
duck a trump at tri ck two. Thi s
leaves everything under control.
Even if th e defenders lake their
heatt tricks. declarer succeeds via
fou r spades. five diamonds and
one club .
Still, why not go fo r the whole
taco? I would play like thi s: cl ub
ace, club ruff, diamond to the
jack, club ruff, trumps. If the
spades split 3·2, I end with all 13
tricks. Here, though, I still get
home, losing onl y one spade and
two hearts.
According to Toynbee, "America is a. large, friendly dog in a
very small room. Every time it
wags its tail it knocks over a
chair." Unless there's a bridge
player sitting on it.

mouthed
I
;
44 ~II 1teeplng
116 Singer
•
Anlta 47 Nerve •

network.

48 Formerly,

•
lonnerly •
50 Pouettlve:O

5zl:;'a:r
ar:.
Gil.
53 - Molnee, •
lowe

'•

..

' .

•

JSHR

LZVLXZ

PR'W

JSHR

RSPMT
FVO

IVOMRW .' -

KV

YZVEVZ

VC

FVO,

RS ,HR
XOIHW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If i1 weren't for lhe rocks In Hs bed, the stream would :
have no song." - Ca~ Perkins, on his ups and downs.

WOlD

DAM I

FA 0A

I II

I

BAJ 0 T

I:':

NYD AC

I agree with the theory of doing

t-"TI""""r.I,.....,.-T-I.:. random acts of ki ndness . EveryI . .3 1
. 1
.
~ one should do them and do them
L-..L.......L--lC......l....J "' - •• - •

I
•

THEI~IN

I..

I~

•

I

.

. , 0 to!"pl••·
1he chuckle qu••·d
1
1
•
•
by f!lllng in the miJSing words
you d~ot:'!'~ .l:O., · :Ot.op No. 3 below.
s

L-..L......L........,.....&amp;.......L.....J

f9 PRINT

NUMB!IEO lEIIERS IN
' THESE SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

Insist · Showy Tinge - Liking - NO THING

Sentinel

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

IFRIDAY

1

!•

'Your

&lt;

C:Oirthday

"'

~

I

•

SATURDAY, May 27. 2000
put a sm ile on your face . Help her tated others aren't likely to faze
: There mighi be a substantial give you her best by tending to you today. This em:iable ability io
: alleviation .in the year 'ahead of things that are meaningful to you. keep events in proper perspective
- many factors that were quite trouVIRGO (Aug. 2:i-Sept. 22) If makes you a winner.
: blesome in your life in the past. something worked successfully
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
I. t hese crosses could now tum into . for you in the past . employ it Some 'type of luxury item may be
"1 .,
· again today. Tradin g on experi- coming your way today through
!:.wrowns.
.
:· ; GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ence is far surer than fo llowtng the generosity of a family mem~ :Pon 't discount yo ur intuition new, u·mcsted procedures offered, ber. In reality, however, it wi ll be
: ' bday, because it's likely to be just by an outsider.
. .Lady Luck who is rewarding your
• as reliable as your logic. Instead .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A past efforts.
I utilize your wits collectively and -good performance at work today
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20 )
! guarantee yourself success. Try· promises rewards. Put forth' your Don't despair if a couple of your
) in.g to pateh up a broken romance ?. very best effort s, because the smaller interests bomb out on you
1, The Astro-Graph Matchma kercan
today, becmi se your successes are
powers that be are w.atc h'mg .
: help you understand what to do to
SCORPIO. (Oct. '24-Nov. 22) likely to come from larger issues
make the relation ship work . Mail Teaming up w.ith others could of more significance . Focus on
·: ·$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o thi s work out fortunate ly for you thtlm.
; new spaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur- today, so long as you keep finanARIES (March 21-April 19)
: ray Hill Station, New York, NY cial situations out of the piCture. Keep your focus .on the target
' J0156
When it becomes a matter of today and don't allow yourself to
CANCER (June 21-July 22) money, things could break down. get sidetracked by insignificant
: By tolerating minor failin gs in
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . details when you· re go ing after
'· those wtt· h. whom· you assocm
· te 21) .A dollar saved cou.ld turn out so mething meaningful.
~ today, you allow good things to to be a dollar wasted today if yo u
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
'•.' happen f or you. concentra1tng
focus more on prt'ce than on qual- The more influential your con·
·on
". nonessential detai ls derail s the ity. Evaluate merchandise you tucts are today, Ihe luckier you get
:: good you have going for you.
want for your household for their in your dealings and negotiati ng.
,.. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Lady true value.
Invol ve ment s with peop le who
• Luck may be ta k'mg a persona1
CAPR ICORN (De··.
, 22-Jan. lackcloutwillbeawasteoftime .
~ interest in you toda y and tr ying to
19) Little annoyances that devas-

!

.

1

Granny says that the only thing worse than arguing
over anyth1ng is to argue over NOTHING.

'I

League BasebaU. Atlanta &amp;aves at Houston Aslros (live) (CC)

•

··

•

To get a current weather
report, check the
•

'

'

1

50 FAR 11/E WRITTEN,''WI10
CMES?"AND 1'F0R6ET IT! "

('

•

month.

RACINE MOWER CLINIC·
•
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat. 9 am· 1·pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater•repalr &amp; supplies
Ownef- James A. Plcke~a
Shop Foreman- Sh.a ne Baker

'·

~

.. .;

Ek&gt;Y ; ( Oloo'\
~y [ VJ.IE.W
Tf\E N-i!&gt;WE~!

How did Arnold Joseph Toynbee, a British hi storian, describe
America?
Over the last three days, we
have been looking at timing the
play to bring home a contract that
an optimist would fai l to make.
Here is another example, played
in the exact geographic center of
the 48 conti guous states,
Lebanon, Kan . I saw it in aneth·
er column, the author of which I
will allow to remain anonymous .
How wou)d you try to make four
spades after West leads the club,
king ? . · •
Do you play that North's three·
spade rebid is forci ng? I think you
should -- no stopping on a pinhead .
The columnist pointed out,
correctly, that if declarer ruffs a
club at trick two, then cashes two
top trumps, he will fail. ·when
spades break 4-1 and the defender. with the long trumps has fewer than three' diamonds, it is all

••
•I

7 40·985·4141

~--·--·····~········ --·-~

740-949-2804

· ·· ~

Long Bottom, Ohio

$25 per

l 5NC&gt; \T W"".&gt;

•·
•·

mo. pd.

MARCUM &amp; SON
BUILDING

•:

P"

.. BIG NATE

740-992-$212 :

Insured· ProfesSional Servlte

Advertise In
this space for

Baby's 1iHing

1pot

over.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

=-====.

.'

Ot-1 II ?"

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

~:=====
-·

..

...

W...Y

Now Renting

4!19100 1 mo pd.

'

•

1•1

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges· Refrigerators
Freezers· Dish Washers

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE

•

(740) 742-8888 .
1·88a-s21-o916

The Appliance
- Man
981-3581

LINQA'S
PAINTING

42

BY PHILLIP ALDER

:

A &amp; D Aut.o Upholstery • Plus, Inc

4/24100 1 mope.

Contact Cj,ffice For Details

Are Your Plant Beds
· Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and .Retaining
Walls

• J 10 9 7

43 Large.

BANKRUPTCY

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppies

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

:,

AJ&gt;rll Shou1er1 .Dring
May Floltlen!!

nor Rep.
CloudY
30 Wild sheep
32 Counaet
34 Public offlcflll
35 Oen baby
36 Print unlta
37 Pt. Of ESL
39 Conclude
40 Human being
42 Rich 1011

Prepare for worst

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens

•

Size • JO 550 G
Rate $50 per hour

ONE MORE TIME ! I

\

• • Now Taking Applications for 1 !3edroom
•
'
Apartment
•,
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
• ' Range, Refrigerator, AJC, On-Site Laundry, '
Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
•
:
Provided
•
:,
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
,
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
Office Hours
,
:•
••
•
Monday and Thursday 10 am . 3 pm
•

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

•••.ln!IQl ••twN.ciW!'I

.

J;-m3~=~~t~.I : U IH

PEOPLES SECURrT'('S, UNITED FINANCIAL

. 740·992·7945

·.

•Bathi~

Phone (740) 992-6419
TOO 1·800·750·0750

welcome

•

Now Open For Gro11ntlng I
for Your Pet's Nnds.

r---------------.
:
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. ,

rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates

Chester, OH
State Route 248
Eoteo Rocket• and Acceooorl""
Train• by Lionel &amp; MTH
K-Line
• Gargraveo Track
Athearn
• Model Power
Atl..
• Lifeline

&amp;

:•

Dozer For Hire

tXIICIIy

26 Neither o.m.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutb

•

Mystic
Poms ·

BUILDERS

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Roorn Addltlons
• Roofing
COMMEROAL and RESIDEHIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

~.................:

992-2772
For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

DOWN

ABA members
20 "- Nights"
23 Duptlcllte
19

I A 4 2

''

740-742-9501
"Toll Free
- 2 2

(740) 985-3948

.{

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Blown Insulation

• J 10 8 7
• K J 9 8
• 3

• J 8 7

Free Delivery·

INC.

additions, Pole Building,

East

• 9
• A 54
• 9 6 5 2
I 'K Q 8 6 5

111mb

56 Tallies
57 Up to lido polnl
(2 wda.)
~~~

27

West

• 10 2

, R&amp;l Quality
Rtplao.mtllt
lut~ Body Parll
All replacement
parts

Brian Morrlson/Raclna, Ohio

BISSE~L

Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

Call for minimum

DEPAB,IIIf
BAUILUIBD
•

Contraetorl Welcome
Albany, Ohio
.

tJ/

Call740·985·3831

•

T

Rocky ~. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, phlo 45760
Local • 843-5264
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
"'lfflromrln/B
Major Medical.• Nursing Home.
----· .

"Ahead In Service"
NutJeno Wt!tern Pride 12% Sweet Feed...................15.25/SO lb bag
Nut1111ct 16% Rabbit Pellets....................................'6.95/SO lb. bag
NutJeno Hunters Pride 21% Dog Food .....................'6.75/SO lb. bag
NutJena16% layer Crumbek .........................:.......!U9/SO lb. bog
Nwn Snatch Feed .............................................'6.75/SO lb. bog
Shtde llv•12% Cattle Feed ................................16.75/100 lb. bag

•
•

· Free Estimates

SERVICES

•Wtt4WIIkltt •Wruthl

.SHADE RIVER fiG ·.sErtVICE

•

E

Downspout, Garage room

3
• A K Q 10 4
• 3

IAKQ43

0
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
FREE EST.IMATES •. ;FULLY INSURED N

R

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Call 740·367-7935
e/811 mo pa

Dozer work.
FrH Estimates

c

f'

Karaoke!

• 6 5 2

South

1-877-353-7022

CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES
MASONRY · BOBCAT SERVICES

N

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;

OH&amp;·OO

• Q76

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

0

Advertise i.n
this space for
s100 per
month.

Dump Truck

949•2249
Racine, Ohio

c

.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Galley .
Trucking

1 mo. pd.

North

/(.1'-1 • ,...:

1·800·311·3391

Man
Fa·x 304-675-2457

CII.J.lSSUfFQIEDSI

9"ul~ w .&lt;fJo!ld'

The Appliance

15 Bottleoeap ·
.16
17 CD- -

V::&lt;s;.)

-

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates
740-742-8015 or

Four 1core and

tan

Hauling • Umeslone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992·3470

Your

1

• ~ Nena- author
- u ........
10 Ante110111
~ m~':.nce
12 - Creed
55 Cries like •

· 14

'

• Naill!! • lt'leu Baths
A ll B1·ecdo

CLEAN ,. HOUSE
WITH THE

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

992·1550

Cell Phone 674-3311

.Sun 12·5

7/22fTFN

"We're Back"

992-5479

Shrubs

Open Daily 9·5

ESTIMATES
740·992-1671

Bryan Reeves · .
www.sunsethome.c6

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

u limited"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740· 742-3411

1121/M 1 mo. ad.

992-5776

7 40·949·7039

.....
...

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Ball &amp; Tackle

"Cet in while you can, space

11

. Racine, Ohio
45771

1tMIIfn

ALDER

45 RR depot
48Mined49 • ...,_,..,.

Opening lead: • K

OLD LOCK24 •
CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) 593-6671

Uc. I D0-50

T&amp;D

Sue's Greenhoue

.,WICK'S C.
SELF STORAGE HfiCJLIHG and29670 Bashan
EXCAVATIHG
Road

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per 9•11)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.

Puzzle

Crossword

f

1
,J

�·Friday, May 26, 2000

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

:;ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

BRIDGE

NEA
ACROSS
Skill

PHILLIP

DBPOYIA&amp;
PUft

SMITH'S COtiSTRUCTIOtl
No Credit • Stow Credit • Blt1tcnJptc:y
Repo • Dlvorded

• New Homes
. • Garages
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment...

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

AD Make. Tractor &amp;
EciuiJiment Parts

Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

Hied It done, gl•• ua 1 call

You're Treated with Rtspeetl

FREE ESTIMATES

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coo/villi, OH 45723

Great Price• on New Home•
992•2753
992•11 OJ

740117..111

1

01111001 mo

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulk Hose repairs,
cyhnder repairs, od
Sales· S gat buckets
toSS gal. drums

Quallty, Varlfty, Low Prlcea • That'• Ua!
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60

10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each
Mornlnc Star Rd. CR 10
Racine, Ohio
1•740-949-2115

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

.

~

\ales Representative
Larry Schey

rEast State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
'
"A Better

2 y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

740·985·4194
19
mo
t

Sunset Home
Construction

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free Estimates

-'llLtEL

Syracuse
Now Open For
Spring Semon
Vegetable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac trees, Assorted

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

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

Ken You"ll'
~tl19100

•Driveways •Tennis Courts
•Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Service
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

WAITED
Standing timber large
or small tracks . Top
prices. paid also.

Sing-Dane~- Party

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.

with Miss Mamie in
Annie Oakley's

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119 or
1-800-291-5600

Karaoke
· • Weddings·
Birthdays • Private
Parties

Call T&amp;R Logging
' after 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy )
1m . 4 1

h.lntBs

· CGlndk::s &amp;Crafts
•F~•4rai•m

•Ci•41• Rafill1

SR 143 992-3?:£57

35537 St. Rt. 7 Notfi

E

:

:

740·992·7599

' ·9~---:::::::::::::-:::----,

ll ••

•Ears

~

••

•

t. .. .. •

Free E:stimares.

Mike Sharp
7 40.949·3606

·Shop at home...

Bu from the Classifieds!

'ICAVATING CO.
,,, n ,..na nn·
lleullp

-aon

I Work wilhout

-

12 Negligible

--(ttkl

13

22U23 Candy24 W.._ ••

21 Bred

25 .... """ - .:
27 Oean Martin"•

Umo'lcln
18 Klmono ..sh
20 nme-- half

chancel)

11 Northern

constellation

nickft.me

28Gtazes
29 Portion out
31. Carrington
lomilyTV

South
11
3t
41

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
2t
3•
Pass

Hrfe1

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

331fteadow

moun

38 UK lime
40 Change
41 Poetic foot

Bu/lJo•er &amp; Backhoe
Seroicea

.Hou81l &amp; Trailer Sites·
Land Clearing &amp;

Grading
Seplic Sy•le,.. &amp;

Utililie•

(740)992·3838

•

'

rtlltn t ~·tor of flna11cltl obligations ud orrengt 1 fair •strht!H of attell
.... ton. A,.,.,. ~""I t•r..,t.ba.U.,tty mor rota~ dflato prtp0r1J,
btWJ101 .wnll!lpt• property, fwlllt or Mr pt~IOHIIIM. This f10J lnthH 1 cor, a
hoat~ datho1, ,,. h.. nl.ld gotd1. '" •haoW 1lroc1 "' 'l"ttloot ,.....,
baUruptcy to llfl tltOI'My Hloro 10'.....

ct11

..

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

M
A

s

R
y

IAA I

"Take the pai11 out
of painti11gLet me do it for you"

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Message
Aher 6pm· 614·985·4180

liB I. lad
Pomeroy, Ollla

f\OW WIO YOuR.
1"1"\1\ T~F

P"

YOU~~ YOU, \1\\I'-IK. YOU

Y. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

:..

f\1\'IE 00T

Waters Edge of Syracuse

•
•

•

•

... .. ... •

.. .. •

•

•

•

:
•

41281

•

•

•

•

20 Yrs experience

Residential· decks, liitchens; Comme . 1 t 1 d
bathrooms custom
·
rcta · me a stu s,
remodeling, handicap acteSI' drywall, suspended ceilings
kilchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

..

I

••.!
; ,..-----------------------------------,
~ WE llA'iE TO WRITE A SHORT
IPtEC~ FOR SOIOOLTAAT EXPRESSES I
,,,\JIJ"- PERSONAL P~ILOSOPI-IV ...

GUARANTEED

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(304) 882·2079
New Haven WV

liNES'
""'·Lo~·uu:~ ,

• ToP

•

f'erno""'

OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

•ir\1'11

, S\lli'IIP ,.
orwll~...

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

5!22 1 mo

Adverl'ise you~ .business
~n -1;his page .
·for'·, ~;n• ·'•,••·• 'q ih
for t.~. ~ . lbw·
C.~
·
.
.
S25 ·. per ·i.n .c h

Phone ·. 9 -·9 2-21 SS
,•

. HOW ABOUT, THAT'S GOOD..
1
'WHV ME?'' I'LL FIT IT IN

'·

~
•
•
••
•
I

. The .recommended line of play.
which is certai nl y preuy, is" to
duck a trump at tri ck two. Thi s
leaves everything under control.
Even if th e defenders lake their
heatt tricks. declarer succeeds via
fou r spades. five diamonds and
one club .
Still, why not go fo r the whole
taco? I would play like thi s: cl ub
ace, club ruff, diamond to the
jack, club ruff, trumps. If the
spades split 3·2, I end with all 13
tricks. Here, though, I still get
home, losing onl y one spade and
two hearts.
According to Toynbee, "America is a. large, friendly dog in a
very small room. Every time it
wags its tail it knocks over a
chair." Unless there's a bridge
player sitting on it.

mouthed
I
;
44 ~II 1teeplng
116 Singer
•
Anlta 47 Nerve •

network.

48 Formerly,

•
lonnerly •
50 Pouettlve:O

5zl:;'a:r
ar:.
Gil.
53 - Molnee, •
lowe

'•

..

' .

•

JSHR

LZVLXZ

PR'W

JSHR

RSPMT
FVO

IVOMRW .' -

KV

YZVEVZ

VC

FVO,

RS ,HR
XOIHW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If i1 weren't for lhe rocks In Hs bed, the stream would :
have no song." - Ca~ Perkins, on his ups and downs.

WOlD

DAM I

FA 0A

I II

I

BAJ 0 T

I:':

NYD AC

I agree with the theory of doing

t-"TI""""r.I,.....,.-T-I.:. random acts of ki ndness . EveryI . .3 1
. 1
.
~ one should do them and do them
L-..L.......L--lC......l....J "' - •• - •

I
•

THEI~IN

I..

I~

•

I

.

. , 0 to!"pl••·
1he chuckle qu••·d
1
1
•
•
by f!lllng in the miJSing words
you d~ot:'!'~ .l:O., · :Ot.op No. 3 below.
s

L-..L......L........,.....&amp;.......L.....J

f9 PRINT

NUMB!IEO lEIIERS IN
' THESE SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

Insist · Showy Tinge - Liking - NO THING

Sentinel

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

IFRIDAY

1

!•

'Your

&lt;

C:Oirthday

"'

~

I

•

SATURDAY, May 27. 2000
put a sm ile on your face . Help her tated others aren't likely to faze
: There mighi be a substantial give you her best by tending to you today. This em:iable ability io
: alleviation .in the year 'ahead of things that are meaningful to you. keep events in proper perspective
- many factors that were quite trouVIRGO (Aug. 2:i-Sept. 22) If makes you a winner.
: blesome in your life in the past. something worked successfully
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
I. t hese crosses could now tum into . for you in the past . employ it Some 'type of luxury item may be
"1 .,
· again today. Tradin g on experi- coming your way today through
!:.wrowns.
.
:· ; GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ence is far surer than fo llowtng the generosity of a family mem~ :Pon 't discount yo ur intuition new, u·mcsted procedures offered, ber. In reality, however, it wi ll be
: ' bday, because it's likely to be just by an outsider.
. .Lady Luck who is rewarding your
• as reliable as your logic. Instead .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A past efforts.
I utilize your wits collectively and -good performance at work today
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20 )
! guarantee yourself success. Try· promises rewards. Put forth' your Don't despair if a couple of your
) in.g to pateh up a broken romance ?. very best effort s, because the smaller interests bomb out on you
1, The Astro-Graph Matchma kercan
today, becmi se your successes are
powers that be are w.atc h'mg .
: help you understand what to do to
SCORPIO. (Oct. '24-Nov. 22) likely to come from larger issues
make the relation ship work . Mail Teaming up w.ith others could of more significance . Focus on
·: ·$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o thi s work out fortunate ly for you thtlm.
; new spaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur- today, so long as you keep finanARIES (March 21-April 19)
: ray Hill Station, New York, NY cial situations out of the piCture. Keep your focus .on the target
' J0156
When it becomes a matter of today and don't allow yourself to
CANCER (June 21-July 22) money, things could break down. get sidetracked by insignificant
: By tolerating minor failin gs in
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . details when you· re go ing after
'· those wtt· h. whom· you assocm
· te 21) .A dollar saved cou.ld turn out so mething meaningful.
~ today, you allow good things to to be a dollar wasted today if yo u
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
'•.' happen f or you. concentra1tng
focus more on prt'ce than on qual- The more influential your con·
·on
". nonessential detai ls derail s the ity. Evaluate merchandise you tucts are today, Ihe luckier you get
:: good you have going for you.
want for your household for their in your dealings and negotiati ng.
,.. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Lady true value.
Invol ve ment s with peop le who
• Luck may be ta k'mg a persona1
CAPR ICORN (De··.
, 22-Jan. lackcloutwillbeawasteoftime .
~ interest in you toda y and tr ying to
19) Little annoyances that devas-

!

.

1

Granny says that the only thing worse than arguing
over anyth1ng is to argue over NOTHING.

'I

League BasebaU. Atlanta &amp;aves at Houston Aslros (live) (CC)

•

··

•

To get a current weather
report, check the
•

'

'

1

50 FAR 11/E WRITTEN,''WI10
CMES?"AND 1'F0R6ET IT! "

('

•

month.

RACINE MOWER CLINIC·
•
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat. 9 am· 1·pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater•repalr &amp; supplies
Ownef- James A. Plcke~a
Shop Foreman- Sh.a ne Baker

'·

~

.. .;

Ek&gt;Y ; ( Oloo'\
~y [ VJ.IE.W
Tf\E N-i!&gt;WE~!

How did Arnold Joseph Toynbee, a British hi storian, describe
America?
Over the last three days, we
have been looking at timing the
play to bring home a contract that
an optimist would fai l to make.
Here is another example, played
in the exact geographic center of
the 48 conti guous states,
Lebanon, Kan . I saw it in aneth·
er column, the author of which I
will allow to remain anonymous .
How wou)d you try to make four
spades after West leads the club,
king ? . · •
Do you play that North's three·
spade rebid is forci ng? I think you
should -- no stopping on a pinhead .
The columnist pointed out,
correctly, that if declarer ruffs a
club at trick two, then cashes two
top trumps, he will fail. ·when
spades break 4-1 and the defender. with the long trumps has fewer than three' diamonds, it is all

••
•I

7 40·985·4141

~--·--·····~········ --·-~

740-949-2804

· ·· ~

Long Bottom, Ohio

$25 per

l 5NC&gt; \T W"".&gt;

•·
•·

mo. pd.

MARCUM &amp; SON
BUILDING

•:

P"

.. BIG NATE

740-992-$212 :

Insured· ProfesSional Servlte

Advertise In
this space for

Baby's 1iHing

1pot

over.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

=-====.

.'

Ot-1 II ?"

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

~:=====
-·

..

...

W...Y

Now Renting

4!19100 1 mo pd.

'

•

1•1

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges· Refrigerators
Freezers· Dish Washers

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE

•

(740) 742-8888 .
1·88a-s21-o916

The Appliance
- Man
981-3581

LINQA'S
PAINTING

42

BY PHILLIP ALDER

:

A &amp; D Aut.o Upholstery • Plus, Inc

4/24100 1 mope.

Contact Cj,ffice For Details

Are Your Plant Beds
· Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and .Retaining
Walls

• J 10 9 7

43 Large.

BANKRUPTCY

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppies

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

:,

AJ&gt;rll Shou1er1 .Dring
May Floltlen!!

nor Rep.
CloudY
30 Wild sheep
32 Counaet
34 Public offlcflll
35 Oen baby
36 Print unlta
37 Pt. Of ESL
39 Conclude
40 Human being
42 Rich 1011

Prepare for worst

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens

•

Size • JO 550 G
Rate $50 per hour

ONE MORE TIME ! I

\

• • Now Taking Applications for 1 !3edroom
•
'
Apartment
•,
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
• ' Range, Refrigerator, AJC, On-Site Laundry, '
Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
•
:
Provided
•
:,
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
,
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
Office Hours
,
:•
••
•
Monday and Thursday 10 am . 3 pm
•

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

•••.ln!IQl ••twN.ciW!'I

.

J;-m3~=~~t~.I : U IH

PEOPLES SECURrT'('S, UNITED FINANCIAL

. 740·992·7945

·.

•Bathi~

Phone (740) 992-6419
TOO 1·800·750·0750

welcome

•

Now Open For Gro11ntlng I
for Your Pet's Nnds.

r---------------.
:
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. ,

rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates

Chester, OH
State Route 248
Eoteo Rocket• and Acceooorl""
Train• by Lionel &amp; MTH
K-Line
• Gargraveo Track
Athearn
• Model Power
Atl..
• Lifeline

&amp;

:•

Dozer For Hire

tXIICIIy

26 Neither o.m.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutb

•

Mystic
Poms ·

BUILDERS

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Roorn Addltlons
• Roofing
COMMEROAL and RESIDEHIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

~.................:

992-2772
For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

DOWN

ABA members
20 "- Nights"
23 Duptlcllte
19

I A 4 2

''

740-742-9501
"Toll Free
- 2 2

(740) 985-3948

.{

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Blown Insulation

• J 10 8 7
• K J 9 8
• 3

• J 8 7

Free Delivery·

INC.

additions, Pole Building,

East

• 9
• A 54
• 9 6 5 2
I 'K Q 8 6 5

111mb

56 Tallies
57 Up to lido polnl
(2 wda.)
~~~

27

West

• 10 2

, R&amp;l Quality
Rtplao.mtllt
lut~ Body Parll
All replacement
parts

Brian Morrlson/Raclna, Ohio

BISSE~L

Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

Call for minimum

DEPAB,IIIf
BAUILUIBD
•

Contraetorl Welcome
Albany, Ohio
.

tJ/

Call740·985·3831

•

T

Rocky ~. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, phlo 45760
Local • 843-5264
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
"'lfflromrln/B
Major Medical.• Nursing Home.
----· .

"Ahead In Service"
NutJeno Wt!tern Pride 12% Sweet Feed...................15.25/SO lb bag
Nut1111ct 16% Rabbit Pellets....................................'6.95/SO lb. bag
NutJeno Hunters Pride 21% Dog Food .....................'6.75/SO lb. bag
NutJena16% layer Crumbek .........................:.......!U9/SO lb. bog
Nwn Snatch Feed .............................................'6.75/SO lb. bog
Shtde llv•12% Cattle Feed ................................16.75/100 lb. bag

•
•

· Free Estimates

SERVICES

•Wtt4WIIkltt •Wruthl

.SHADE RIVER fiG ·.sErtVICE

•

E

Downspout, Garage room

3
• A K Q 10 4
• 3

IAKQ43

0
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
FREE EST.IMATES •. ;FULLY INSURED N

R

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Call 740·367-7935
e/811 mo pa

Dozer work.
FrH Estimates

c

f'

Karaoke!

• 6 5 2

South

1-877-353-7022

CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES
MASONRY · BOBCAT SERVICES

N

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;

OH&amp;·OO

• Q76

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

0

Advertise i.n
this space for
s100 per
month.

Dump Truck

949•2249
Racine, Ohio

c

.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Galley .
Trucking

1 mo. pd.

North

/(.1'-1 • ,...:

1·800·311·3391

Man
Fa·x 304-675-2457

CII.J.lSSUfFQIEDSI

9"ul~ w .&lt;fJo!ld'

The Appliance

15 Bottleoeap ·
.16
17 CD- -

V::&lt;s;.)

-

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates
740-742-8015 or

Four 1core and

tan

Hauling • Umeslone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992·3470

Your

1

• ~ Nena- author
- u ........
10 Ante110111
~ m~':.nce
12 - Creed
55 Cries like •

· 14

'

• Naill!! • lt'leu Baths
A ll B1·ecdo

CLEAN ,. HOUSE
WITH THE

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

992·1550

Cell Phone 674-3311

.Sun 12·5

7/22fTFN

"We're Back"

992-5479

Shrubs

Open Daily 9·5

ESTIMATES
740·992-1671

Bryan Reeves · .
www.sunsethome.c6

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

u limited"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740· 742-3411

1121/M 1 mo. ad.

992-5776

7 40·949·7039

.....
...

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Ball &amp; Tackle

"Cet in while you can, space

11

. Racine, Ohio
45771

1tMIIfn

ALDER

45 RR depot
48Mined49 • ...,_,..,.

Opening lead: • K

OLD LOCK24 •
CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) 593-6671

Uc. I D0-50

T&amp;D

Sue's Greenhoue

.,WICK'S C.
SELF STORAGE HfiCJLIHG and29670 Bashan
EXCAVATIHG
Road

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per 9•11)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.

Puzzle

Crossword

f

1
,J

�•

Page B 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

SPORTS

"-HometoWn heroes:

®

Feeding needs:
St John's Pizza

·· Saluting four
Gallia County veterans

SMOKER
FRIENDLY

Memorial master.
Tiger roars to
third-round lead
'

apopular place

See 11

SeeD1
..·•'

•

tmts
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

-

Ga llipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasa nt • May 18, 1000

The River''

Saturday, May 27th
1

.·~ Out

12:00 to 2:00

Sells Marlboro 10·1

You Can Only Get It l:lere!

8

SMOKER
FRIENDLY
BRAND

48
Carton

0 ·.:;

,.

•

....

f.. . : ~ ~

1.

Gymnasium for the 32nd annual baccalaureate and commencement
program Friday night. Second In line were the other two valedictorians,
Wes Thoene and Jeremiah Smith,. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

MeigsHigh, y~~·~m~~ri,~~,tJ
--BY·CHAIILII'il HOIPLICH , .

TIMES-SENTINEL STW ·:- .~
;
POMEROY- Th~ warmth of
memories, the value ~f friendI

$21 43'
Solocl ·

s

181

•

Per .
Carton

$21 ·43
•

·MONTGIJ\IR
$17 • so·. Per
Carton

'9.99

21.43 6:~on

5

$22.93 6~on

Save $6.50

Save$4.00

PYRAMID

MALIBU

$15.00 6:~on

$18.00 6:~n

Save $4.50

Sav•$9.00

6:~on

23.93

5

Save$4.50
.'

EVE

6:~on

21.93

5

Save$3.00

'9.84

·Per doz.

Skoal $24.95 ~~r

7 e

Red
Seal :

Save$6.00

KOOLS

CAMBRIDGE ·

s17. 76 Perdoz.

Per doz.

Bowie

$17.50 6:~on

$19.50 6:~on

Beechnut

Save$5.50

Newport

BASIC

Morgans

SALEM

DORAL.

Save$6.50

19.50

Slarr

Save$5.50

Save $5.50

5

Per
Carton

Wlntermint onlY

Renegodes .

.

'-Cin

$2.30
,(J.,..,

..

Per

can

ships, the sadness .of" separation
and the personal·challenges of life
.after high school were themes
four VJile.dicto.r ians' speeches
explored Friday night at the 32nd
annual Meigs High School commencement exercises.
''The future is ours, and it
begins today,". · said Wesley
Thoene, one of the valedictorians
speaking to the 168 members of
the Class of 2000.
He stressed the need to be
"responsible in our duties and
re~ponsible for our actions; to
make a difference in our own
lives and in the world around us."
He called on his classmates to
let focus determine · reatity, and
q110ted Shal&lt;espeare, who said "It
is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves."
In his talk, Steve Beha II
stressed the important role classmates have on the lives of each
other, of the jour~ey taken
together. "We are all of the same
class, we are all true companions,
true friends."
He asked the graduates . to

Per
Carton

Good Mo rnin g!

Save $5.00 .

Finest selection of cigars in
the area, over 200 brandsl

&amp;oz.
· Can

Electrical fire· at Gallipolis
.beiiUty ·parlor Saturday. For
detalla, see P81• AT.

Cl•ulfttda

- ·-.

-···.---··

$7.99
.

-

WALMART PLAZA
2145 K Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
441-8204
Mon-Frl

--

,c;-~-~~~~~--~~~~- ----·
· -~~-

~- -~ ·------ ·

-

:~----··-

=

-

·-·...............--•

__ -c ·

'

twists and turns, abrupt stops,
even smoot\t paths, and asked his
classmates to· .remember the
"firsts" and the "lasts" of their
,·
school days. '
"They tell us the best part of
life is ahead;' said Smiddie, adding
that "if it's going to get better

Pl..se see MHS, Pap A7

· Sat 10-8

12·5

cam!q

Eclltoftl!t
MDIIJ

Obluldll
$JOJII!!

DJ-1

IUHrl
M
DJ-l

AI
11·1

"Pdd•

...

.Jtll"

CJ-1

C 2000 Ohio Valley Publishl"l Co.

RIO GRANDE - · "Graduation is a joyous time;' Robert
John Grubb U, co-valedictorian
at River Valley High School,
told members of the class of
2000 during graduation exercises Friday at the University of
· Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
Grubb and co-vaiedictorian
Nick Smith retlected on the past
and looked forward to the
future during their addresses to
classmates. RVHS graduated 142
seniors.
•
''If opportu.niry presents itself,
grab it;' Grubb said. "Experienci~ everything you can."
i Grubb, the son of Robert and
Debbie Grubb of Gallipolis, and
Smith, son of Mark and Jenny
Smith of Gallipolis, have been
"#-- ~ctive in numerous school 'aCtivities during tlieir RVHS careers,
'atl'd haW·•' received mimetous
,aWj!rds.
·,4:tJi;P.J1.~~,..o heard from salutatcman Yun,uko Yokokawa duri"ng ceremonies. She is the

MESSAGE FOR GRADS- Robert
John Grubb II, co-valedictorian of
the class of ~ at River Valley
High SChool, ~ftet\ed, on the past
and looked forward to 'the fl!ture
clurlng his graduation addrei!S Fti"day. (MIIIISsll Russell photos)
~·

d~te~
ofHerlim
and.-Tiiel!iU
•
., _f "':, 1:
'
.

'

'

PIIIH IMIIVHS. .... A2

READY FOR THE WORLD- River Valley High School seniors Katherine
Brabham, left. ancl Lottie Boggs fixed their caps prJ()( to graduation ceremonies Friday at the University of Rio Grande's Lyne Cet:rter.

.Chamber, Gl£ bid farewell to th1·ee staffers
BY K1111 DemoN

~Brand SMOKING

DlY

remember that "thoughts determine resppnses to life. We are ' not
victims of this world. When we
control our thoughts, we contro\
the wond." i
·Kyle Smiddie commented on
the journey (!Qm kindergarten to
graduation, a path with many .

•

·..

SMOKER

doesn't believe In wasting time,
so
waiting for the commencement program to begin, he
reviewed his valedictory speech with some friends, from. left, Seth
Rawson, Ryan Pratt, Jannlfer Shrlmplin and Joe McCall.

'

BUY 3 GET 1· FREE!
Cigarette
Rolling Tobacco

iiiiftiiMiiiQ SPEECH- Was

than this - wow! I can't wait."
. The "fuh times and .special
moments" of school will always
· be a part of our lives, said Jeremiah Smith. He talked about the
enduring friendships, the pride of
accomplishments, .the challenges
ahead.
"Ever since we have be.en in
school, we have sai&lt;), 'I can't Wait
untill'ni out of school.'The question today is - · how do you feel
now?"
.
After entering the auditorium
to the processional played by the
Meigs High School band directed
by Toney Dingess, and the
National Anthem, Joseph McCall
gave the invocation.
Heather Ferrell, class president,
extended the welcome, and
Tiffany Halfhill, treasurer, made
int;oductions. Special music ·
induded ·"Prospect" by the band,
aild "May the Music Never End"
by the chorus.
After addresses from valeqictorians and · introduction of the
salutatorian, Joshua David So.rden, the ·class was presented by
Dennis EiChinger, principal, , to
John Hood, board of education

·.Kennedy taking
state
ppsition
·•.

• La Gloria • Macanudo • Partagas •
Don Tomas • Upmann • Punch
• Ccihlba • Montecrlato
• Montecruz • Arturo Feunte

TOBACCO

Vol. l5, No. 14

FROM STAFF REPORTS

THE PROCESSIONAL'- Kyle Smlddle, left, and Steve Beha, two of
~he four. valediCtorian~ of the Class of 2000, led the processional of
., "'.6,8w.&amp;.r~uates around, the. building and into the Larry R. Morrison

WINSTON

-

River Valley
graduates
142 seniors

p.m~

SMOKER FRIENDLY

CAMEL

Highs: 70s Lows: 50s ·
Debllls Oft Pap AT

/

Live Remote By
11

MON EY

TIMES.SENTINEL STAff

.

GALLIPOLIS - Tli.ree staffe~s
with the Gallia County Chamber
of: C(lmfllerce/6allia· County
Community lmpravem.,nt Corp.
have submitted t'1ir resignations
in the past few \Yeeks to pursue
other job opportunities.
·A reception for Samantha
Reese and Pat E&gt;iUon was held
Friday to honor their. contribu- .
tions to the organizations. Both .
employees, along with their associate director, MarJean ·Kennedy,
turned in their resignations within the l~t two weeks.
"For personal reasons, I'm taking the summer off to .spend
inore time with my family and
will seek other employment in

IN APPRICIA110N - (fhl!lllber.of.Commerce/CIC employees Samantha
Reese arid Pat Dillon opened the gifts presented to them by chamber
board member Marianne Campbell. Their clocks were engraved, "With love
and appretiation ~ yc)ur chamber friends." (Kris Ootson photo)
the fall," said Dillon.
munity dignitaries came to offer
Many city, 'hamber and com- · goodbyes and thanks to them

.•

over donuts and coffee.
"Words caimot express my
appreciation for the support and
teamwork shown to me by Pat
and Samantha throughout my
work with the chamber and
Clc:· said . Marianne Campbell,
immediate past CIC president
and chamber board member.
"This has been one of the best
teams we've ever h·ad here at the
Chamber," said current Ch~mber
President and ClC board member Clyde Evans.
... Pat and Samantha were sincerely interested in the business
community and possess great
people skiUs. I feel they would be
. a great asset to any work place
they decide to go. We will miss
them," Evans added.
Resse thanked the chamber for
the clock she received as a parting gift, and noted that she would
"miss the safecy council, chamber
and retail merchants.

"It's been a lot of fun. I wish it
would have been possible for me
to stay longer," said Reese.
Reese will be pursuing a selfemployment endeavor with
Primerica Financial Services,
providing IRAs, mutual funds
and debt consolidations.
"I have never worked wirh
more professional, intelligent and
hard working individuals," said
Kennedy. "The communicy, CIC
and chamber will be hard-pressed
to replace their dedication and

smiles."
Kennedy's last day will be June
9, as she will be joining Gov. Bob
Taft's
Regional
Economic
Development Office in Chillicothe as the new regional representative for community development on June 19.
Dick Northup, consultant, was
recently 'hosen by the chamber
and C IC to lead both organizations.

...

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="439">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9878">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25173">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25172">
              <text>May 26, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
