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                  <text>Sunday, June 4, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
720 Trucka for Sale
1989 Ranger XLT lt.utomallc,
$2,800, 7&gt;40-...&amp;-0208.

1995 S.tO

E~eltndld

Cab Au·
lomatic AIC, $!5,89$; 199!5 Chryl·
ler Van Town &amp; Country, Loaded
One Owner $4 ,395; 1989 S-10
$1,795 : Cars From $1 ,895 To
$3 , 79~ . COOK IIOTORS, 740·
446·0103.
1995 Toyota Tacoma , 4X4 . Ea·
cellent
Condition .
$8500 .
(304)1175-7652.
1996 Ford Ranger $3,000: 1994
Dodge Caravan $2 ,500 ; 1993
Chrysler Van $2 ,200 ; 1993
Dodge Caravan $2 ,000; 1993
Chevy Aatro Work Van. $2,000:
1990 Chevy Pick -Up $3,000;
1986 Ford Ranger 4~e•. $1 ,800,
B&amp;D Auto Sates. Hwy. 160 N .,
Clallipol~ . 740-44H865.
1997 black Chevy S· 10 Stepsk:le
Extended Cab, 3 door, loaded .
25,000 miles. very sharp, lu!l far·
lngs. $11 ,100, 7.t0·949-2045 or
740·949·2203.
.
1998 Chevy extend·a·cab. 4X4,
V-8, 5 sp, Loaded . 40,000 miles,
$16,000 firm . (304)n3-52·U, after
6PM.
78 GMC General, 1r1 axle dump,
18' Allab aluminum bed. air gate.
290 Cummings. 13 speed, notation front tires. new paint , gdod
asphalt truck, $13,000, 740·"2·
0002.

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
1978 Ford Highboy 4x4, 460, Au·
tomatic. Runs GOOd. $2,500. 740·
441·0592.
1979 GMC. loaded with
$4900. caN 74().992·2822.

e•1ras.

1987 Chevy, heavy 1/2 ton, new
350 ci motor, luel Injected, 4 wheel
drive, good paint, solid truel(, 740·
992·4212.

1988 Toyota EFI , 4 WO, 5 Speed.
PIS, Accessor ies, 740·245·5991 .
1989 Jeep Cherokee Limited,
150.000 Miles. Leather Interior.
Power E~o~erythingl Price Negotl ·
able! 740·388-0013.
1990 Ford Bronco tl XLT 4JC4,
740-696·1017.

1990 Plymou th Voyager. Bad
Transmls&amp;lon $500 Or Best Offer,
740.388·9147.
19.92 Chevy 4x4 Excellent Candl·
lion, $8,500 740-367·0219, 74().
367-7272.
1993 S·10 Blazer Tahoe Package
4.3 Liter Vortec V·6 ,. Excellent
Con d\Uon, 126.000 Miles, Run s
Great . AM /FM Casse tte, Power
Ste ering, Power Windows &amp;
Locks, Ail, Tilt, And Cruise, Fac·
tory Aluminum Wheels. New Tires
&amp; Brakes . New Fron t Brake AO·
tors , Front End Just Aligned ,
Asking $6,000 lOr Reasonable
Offer) 740-446-4548 If No Answer
Please Leave Message.
1996 Geo Tra cke r 4 WO, Con·
MPG. Fun 11'1 Sum·
mer And Trailer, Great Shap e,
740-245·5109.
~o~ertabl e. 30 +

1996 S- 1 0 , E~elended Cab, Au·
tomatic, Loaded, 740·441-9627,
Leaw Message.

740

760

Auto

Pilrt. &amp;

790

Campera &amp;

Motor Homes

Accetaorlea

. 8UGgll Pl'lee~ Tranomlulono All
Typao, Aeeoto To Over 10 .000
Tranomlulonl. eve Jolntl, 740245-l!lln.
·
Electric Hydr•uUc Llfl Gale lor
Fuii· Sizo
Pick-Up.
1400 .
(:i04)1175-8870.
Fibergla11 Topper Oft From 1999
Toyota Toyeoma $500; ~ Factory
Aluminum Mag Wheelt, With 31;
t050Jd5 tncn Good Year Wrang·
er Radials With llll Than 2,000
Mil... S700, 740 U&amp;~528.

Cond~lon. $10,500, 7&lt;a-&lt;.11.()440

l.eMMeulgl.
1i99 VIking 8' POp-Up Clmper.
l'llln Air, &amp; Man~ Exlrul Usod
'l'wtee, $3,700,740-441-9511 .
3!5 ' Self-Contained Like New,
Dutchmen Sllde·Out Camper,

7&gt;40-.U 1.()953.

SERVICES

790

WATERPAOORNQ
Unconditional llfellme guaranlee.
Local JtfeJtnceo !urnlsned. Es·
tablished 1975. Cal 24 Hrs. (740)
446-0870, 1·800-287-0576. Aog ·

,

Northwest at risk of potato blight

C&amp;.C

General

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) The Northwest potato crop is at
high risk of late blight, the disease
that caused the Irish potato
famine, a Washington State University re searcher warns.
Plant pathologist Dennis Johnson said coor. wet weather last
week increased the risk of the fungus appearing and similar conditions are el'.pected to continue.
· "Any more rainfall in May will
increase the risk," Johnson said.
" It '~ a ~isease th~.t can ruin a
grower fmancmlly.
·
There was no indication that
late blight had already appeared
this year. But it has shown up in
Washington every year since
1990.
Washington is the nation's second-biggest potato producer, after
Idaho, and the crop is worth more
than $400 million per year. Many
of Washington'ls pbtatoes are
processed into frozen french fries.

Home

Main·

ltntnc:t· Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doon, windows, battls,
mobi5e t10rn1 repair and mora. For
fret esllmate call Cht~l. UG-992·

6323.
Jim&amp; Drywall &amp; Construction.
New Construcllon &amp; Remodel/
Drywall , Siding, Roof&amp;, Addi·
tiona. Palnllng. elc. I304}6H ·
4623 01 (304)67 4-{J 155 .
.Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing. all basement repairs
done, free estimates. lllet!me
guarantee. 12yrs on job e~tperl·
ence. 1304)895-3887.

810

::::':"":-:-~..,..;..:..:.;~:..._-

Home
Improvement•

1989 Winnebago Luhoro 39.000

Mites; Generator Furnace, Good

Tuneport 1y1tem comp.lete with
I 000 cfm bulle~ lias, st .000 080:
3!50 turna trana. w/1httt kit' 1500
OBO; 7&gt;40-985-3518.

C.mpert &amp;
Motor Homee

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiri ng,
new service or repairs. Master li·
camper, 32' king, S'500, call ·740~&amp;rsWaterproofing.
cense d electrician . Ridenour
698·3469 after 11 am.
..:;:.p:.;p;;:lla:;:n:;_:ce:;:;;a;:,:rls;:..,.An"'d.....,.e,.-rv""ice':-:A,.fll
"'
Electrical, WV000306, 304-675·
1786 ·
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex1985 Coaehmen 36' Fiflh Wheal
perience All Work Guaranteed.
, Camper eal Nice Condition,
We Sell New Maytag Appfiances.

1978 Swiss Colony Firth Wheel

French Clly Maytag, 740·446·
7795.

$8,000, 7 - 8·8028.

Curing barn conversion eyed
TIFI'ON, Ga. (AP) - For
decades, tobacco growers cured
their tobacco in wooden barns
with flues that distributed heat
from coal or wood fires . The
smoke never came .in direct contact with the large, green leaves.
Technology c hanged in the
1960s, and barns today resemble
windowless mobile homes, as
farmers load leaves into the structures and cook them with burners
that ~II th~ b~rns w1th heat. Problem ts, sc1ent1sts say, those bumers release a gas that rea~ts w1th
the tobacco to cr:ate ~arcmogens.
lnd~stry offic1als, m search of
sa~er c1gar~tt~s, want the gr.o wers
!O mvest "!llh~ns o~ dollars m curmg-bam mod1ficanons. .
T?bacco researchers say .com- ·
bu~non gases, .particularly mtrous
m1de from d1rect-fired burners, ·
react w1th the naturally occurnng
!obacco alkaloids dunng the cur-.
mg
p~ocess .to
produce
mtrosammes, wh1ch can cause
cancer.
Converting 45,000 barns in
the six flue-cured tl)bacco states
- Florida, Georgia, Alabama,
North and South Carolina and Virginia - could cost up to $270
million, from $3,000 to $6,000
per barn.
Lawton Matttll.~w~ c.h.,i,.

the Georgia Tobacco Commission, said farmers are upset th at
they are being asked to pay some
of the conversion costs.
"What's on the minds of a lot
of growers is th at nitrosamine is
just one of 40 or SO carcinogens
in tobacco," said Matthews, who
grows 37 acres near Moultrie.
"What's a concern ... is that this
is the first of many changes we'll
have to spend for - that we'll
just keep adding more expenses."
The Tobacco Industry Leadership Group, representing all segments of the industry, recommended in December that growers replace direct-fired heating
systems with systems that vent the
gases outside.
The organization pl ans to
establish an $85 million fund to
assist farmers _ · $60 million in
direct subsidies and $25 million in
loan~. Farmers who convert thi s
year would receive $3,000 per
bam; those who wait until next
year would get $2,600 per barn.

Johnson said late blight often
develops where irrigation sprinlders·overlap, and within the first
80 to 100 feet out from the center
of pi:vot-center sprinkler systems.
Late blight can be prevented by
fungicide sprays, which need to
be applied several times during
the growing season, said John son,
who is trying to develop plants
resistant to the fungus.
·"We will al'l\lays have to live
with late blight," Johnson said.
"But we wi ll be able to manage
it 'more easily, at a lower cost in
the future ."
· The fungus caused the Irish
potato famine 150 years ago, and
has since spread around the world.
It breeds beneath the warm,
moist canopy of the potato plant's
leaves. The fungus starts from
infected seeds, unharvested potatoes and cull piles. It is spread by
spores that are moved . by wind
and water.

1999 Fo ur Wheeler 80 Yamaha
$1900.00 (740)-367-7708. (740)·
446·9237
1999 Yamaha Warr ior. 360.
Loaded with e~etraa . Very goOd
shape . $3.500 . 1304)675·35821
(740)949·2953.

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale
14 Ft John Boat With Trailer
$350. 740·387-7401.

1979 Fiberlorm V-boltom boat,
18.4 lt ., ilo 170 hp. Mercrulstr
motor, $3000. 740·367·01 19 alter
5:30.
1987 Ba ss Tracker Tournament
TX Bass boa t , 45 hp. Mercury
outboard, till and Trlny trolling
motor, depth finder, and trailer,
call 740·992·34113.
1990 Pro-Craft. Stalker·150 15.5ft,
40hp Mercury Motor. Trolley Mo·
tor anct Pro-Craft Trailer. $5000
(740)388-0593

Mel1s County's
CLAY CENTER, Neb. (AP)
- · A two-year study by University of Nebraska researchers
showed that soybeans genetically
altered to resist a popular herbicide produced lower yields than
conventional soybeans.
The NU Institute of Agricu Iture
and Natural Resource s study
showed Roundup Ready soybeans
yield 6 percent less than their
closest relatives and 11 percent
less than hi gh-yielding soybean
varieties. That averaged to three
fewer bushel s per acre - or 480
fewer bushels on a 160-acre field .

11 a.m.-7 p.m.

760

Auto Parta &amp;
Acceeaorlea

350 short block 10/1 compres·
aion, 248·510 cam &amp; 194 double
pumper, never ran, $1,000 oeo,
740·985·3519.

'

M It G acquires Shell Chemical
FROM STAFF REPORTS ·•

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WVa. Shell
Chemical in Gallipolis Ferty has been acquired
by Mossi and Ghisolfi Overseas SA (M &amp; G), an
international PET {polyethylene terephthalate)
manufacturing company, as well as three similar
Shell facilities worldwide, for an undisclosed
amount.
It is believed the new organization wiU have
a .significant manufacturing competitive advantage thanks to the combination of world class
manufacturing facilities with sup erior scale, efficiency and quality.

"M &amp; G will capitalize its engineering exper- G Finanziaria lndustriale S.p.A., a family owned
tise and comntit the necessary capital resources company based in Tortona, ltaly, and founded
to bring the Point Pleasant facility up to world by Vittorio Ghisol6 in 1953.
class standards," said Marco Ghisolfi, CEO of
M &amp; G's involvement with PET dates to
the new company, which has been renamed M · · 1982, when the company installed one of the
&amp; G Polymers USA LLC.
first solid stating facilities in Europe. M &amp; G
"The combination of the M &amp; G and Shell companies also produce polyester films and
PET businesses offers significant synergies in PET foam resin for lightweight packaging.
Shell's Mason County plant originally
the areas of manufacturing, marketing and
research and development, creating a formida- opened in the 1950s under the auspices of
ble player in the packaging application segment Goodyear, and was later acquired by Shell.
of the PET industry," he said.
Announcement of M &amp; G's intent to acqu ire
M &amp; G is a wholly owned subsidiary of M &amp; the facility was made earlier this year.

TENNIS COURT DAMAGE - Syracuse Mayor Larry Lavender,
inspected condition at Syracuse Park's tennis courts Fnday. The
courts will be repaired through a $21,000 NatureWorks grant that
was awarded to the village for park improvements.

Syracuse gets
S42K grant

for park aid
BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

ley, Norman
Weber and Jim
Thomas, pictured
accepting a contribution from
Unda Lute of
near Chester.
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Opc~rat&lt;

23 Varletleo of Wine Coolei'J
• Imported Been Ciob • Check • M/C
•Vila
• Local Buk Debit Canb • We Act:epl

All Maa1fadtani'J Coupou
State Mlalm-l'rlcll 011 Beer A All
'l'oboJcco Products

Wlnlton .................. 21.43/carton ............. 2.15/pack
Camel ..................... 21.43/carton ............. 2.15/pack

Salem ..................... 21.43/certon ............. 2.15/pack
Dor11 .......................17.50/carton ............. 1.75/paCk
Monarch ................. 14.41/carton ............. 1.50/pack
Kool ••••••••.••••••••••••••. 23.83/carton .•••••••••••• 2.40/pack
GPC ....................... 18.51/carton............. 1.89/pack
VI~ ................... 18.58 carton ............. 1.89/ eck

.~ ........ 27 .811

1111Wass13,900
DBIND

1111 ~INTURY

12,900

13,900

CD Player,

Power Windows

In 1 roll of 5 only
S..t ..................72• alngle e~n
14.18/S Pk roll with ·u.oo llllllln Rttme
Wolf..... 8.45/5 Pk roll with $1.011 oflln atore coupon

Was 514.900

Power Sea4 Cassette,
Loaded

roll!$2.85 can

1!1!1 1 ell , 'l'o••- ,., ~. ,..,, If-, !Jc.,
Cocal Dtllw /Jeww~••r

SMOKIN'
ROB'S
Discount1btiacco Warebouse

.

Catfish tourney raises $6,000 for needy kids
.

8v 0ATHERN HAMM
OVP NEWS STAFF

.

CARE - the qcronym f~r .
Community As$istance and Relief
for Everyone - sponsors several
fund..raisers during the year, but
·the spring caiftsh tournament is
the largest.

MASON, W.Va. -This isn't a big fish tale,
- the 2000 Bend Area CARE Catfish Tournament w&lt;~;~ a whopping success.
' ·
Wi~h a huge turnou~ of97 boats, the Satur•.. '
day "catch and release" event saw record '
crowds come out to r3ise money for ChristJ1
..
mas gifts for needy children. " ,,..- .,
• ·
Officials estatimated about $6,000 raised. ing, R edman · Chewing Tobacco and Akzo
Tournament spokesman Tim Roush mar- 1 Nobel, .the event br ings fishermen, women
veled, "We've never had a crowd like this. The and children out to catch the biggest fish in
response has been g reat and we're going to 9,opes of taking home a cash prize of $200.
able to make a lot of kids happy at Christmas." ' But, if that didn 't happen, contestants could
. CARE - the acronym for Commimity
.'II win' over $2,000 awarded in door prizes.
· Assistance and Relief for Everyone - sponThe event, known as the largest catfish
sors .several fund-raisers duri11g the year, but to urnament east of the M ISsissippi, drew conthe spring catfish tournament is the !~c. .~" te'Stants tium as far away as Michigan and
Sponsored by B1,1dweiser Point Dlscribut- rfnnsylvania.

Tom Sneedon of Rice Landing, Pa., came
with fishing buddy James Stewart. "The hospitality here is hard to beat. We've told our
wives how friendly everyone is and what a
great atmosphere th ey have at this tourna-

ment."
Stewart agreed, "We heard abo ut it in the
West Virginia Outdoors newspaper. Elvis
(tourn ament organizer Elvis Zerkle) puts us
up in his house and feeds us steak. You don't
find hospitality like that everyday."
The tournament began at 6:30 a.m., with
ideal weather of crisp breezes, cool temperatures and murky water conditions. As th e
flotilla was launched, a variety of pleasure
crafts in every size took off to find the ideal
·
fishin g spot.

Please see Catfish, Pllp AJ

SYRACUSE - A $21 ,000
state Natu~e Works grant has
~een awarded to the Syracuse by
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources for the repavement
of tennis courts, new fencing
and the support of facilities
througho ut Syracuse Park.
Grants announced by th e
governor are among a total of
$3,420,283 in State N atureWorks funds awarded to Ohio
communities for local parks and
recreation improvements.
The I 08 awards represent the
sixth annual round from a total
of more than $50 miUion in
competitive grants to be funded
by the Ohio Parks and Natural
Reso urces Fund bond issue,
approved by voters in November 1993.
The Syracuse project will cost
a total of 528,000, made up of
the $21,000
NatureWmks
grant, along wi th a $7,000
match from local funds.
Specific improvements to be
undertaken include repavi11g
and painting of the tenni s
courts,
repainng
fence s
throughout th e park, and sandblasting and repainting of lampposts that light the tennis court.
"Work on the project should
begin around late summer or

Specific improvemmts
to be tmdertaken ittclJtde
repaving and paintitrg
of the tennis co11rts,
repairing fences througllor4t the park, and sar~d­
blastillg atzd repainti11g
of lampposts that light
the tmnis court.
early fall," sa i'd Syracuse Grants
Administrator Robert Wingett.
"We are wairing for the Real
Estate and Land ·Manageme nt
Division of ODNR to return.
the written agreements for us to
proceed with the work."
The Nature Works grant is but
one of several grants Syracuse
has received over the years to
help fund the development of
the !D-acre park complex.
Past grants have been awarded
to upgrade conditions at London Pool , li ght and fence the
ballfields and build a boat
launching facility.
"Providing such a ni ce park ·
facility to th e public wou ld not
be possibl e without gram funds
like these," said Mayor Larry
Lavender, "as well as the support
from county governm ent, village resid ents, volunteer help

Pleese see Grant,. Pace A3

Fort Randolph re-enactments
Sentinel bring' local flistary .back to life
Toclay's

2 Sa:t!...-.- 12 P11p1
C;!lsmd!!r
Clilllifi!!dl

A6
B~-4

Q2mi~1

D~

Editorial~

M
AJ

QbiiYI[ill
:ii!!Utl
Wci!di!!I

Bl; fi

AJ

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3: 0-1-4; Pick 4: 3-8-8-3
Super I..ouo: 8-18-19-20-24-34
Klebr: 2..().7-340

"EVA,
. Daily 3: 6-7-0 Daily 4: 3-7-5-0
C 2CKJO Ohio ValleT Publishing Co.

BY CATHERINE HAMM
0VP NEWS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Visitors to
Point Pleasant's fort Ra1,1dolph might have
expected to se~ Daniel Boone come
strolling into the ort during Saturday's public tours.
After all, Boonq trading post was just a
mile away and he].Would have been right at
home with the sotlters, artisans, and tra..Ppers
and traders who · ~ re talking with VIsitors
during the living llistory .event.
The first weekend .of each month, .reenactors and history buffi present programs
to educate and entertain the public.
Craig Hesson and Mike Trowbridge are
two who devote their time to the fort. ·
"We want to make history come alive and
'to do the tight thing in telling history," said
Hesson, a teacher at North
. Point Elemen-

.

'·

so cents

M iddleport • Pomercy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 5

While children
can be treated
absolutely free at
Shriners hospitals, it still takes
money to support
the facilities, provide the treatment and continue research.
Every spring
Shfiners set
aside two days to
distribute a
tabloid telling
about the
Shriners hosp~
tals and the work
they do, and asktng.others ,for

Boal wnh 175Hp Ebln RUde MoiOr

1996, 2111. Bau Tracker Party
Barge , with 65H P Engine .
(304)882-2715.

Hometown Newspaper

kids

Galli~lis'

Sunday

· June 5, 2000

the

First State Mmimum Store

Htlllft Mon.·Sat
h .m.-10 p.m.

a·1

For

The proposed deadlin e for the
conversions is Jul y I, 200 I.
Growers who fail to comply
would be excluded from the pricesupport program.

Owned &amp;

Monday

The Irish potat2 famine was a
wave of starvation and disease
that claimed. I million lives, a
dirt&lt;ct result of widespread potato blight on the crop much of that
~ation relied on for food and profIt.

1994 Tracker. 17fl. Bas's Boat
with 1995 Merc ury 60Hp motor
-and trailer, 1999 19ft. Javlln Bass
(Fitch) and traile r, used 5 times.
1998 Marada, 18ft. Sport1 with 3.0
Mercruiser and Traile r, 2 1995
Sea Ooo Wave Runners SPI 750,
with double tra ile r, New Marada
boats in stock. and on Sale. Call
now and beat the 4th ol July rush!
J.S . Marine (740)25H I60

Middleport Alumni awards, A2
Reds sweep Twins in interleague play,

JVoger Saturdav
were Wait Man-

1998 Yamaha 350 warrier with
e11tras. asking $3.000 or take over

paymenJS. 740-949-2529.

I

Tu•ICI.y

Details, A3

Motorcycles

1991 vz 125 New Plastic, New
Reeds, New Piston &amp; Rings. Very
Powerful Bike. Looks New, Front
Forks Have Been COmpletely Rebuilt Which lnclud'&amp; New Seals
And Fluid. Rear Shock Has Been
Recharged , With Nitrogen And
Checked For Bleed -Off. Tires
Are In Excellent Condition, Chain
And Spro ckets Are Uke New,
s 1,800, 740·446·7375.

·

.Hlah: tos; Low: 40S

·--:-- - -----,.-------·

'

•,

tary who loves history and loves sharing it
with others.
" The ,school kids enjoy coming here and
seeing how things use to me. It's a great
learning experience," he added.
. Trowbridge is a noted iocal historian who
· savors the experience of stepping back in
time.
"We all try to keep 'researching and learning," he said.
.
Tbe original fort ·was build in 1776 and
named for Peyton Randolph, a leader in the
Virginia House of Burgesses and a leader in
the first and second Continental Congress.
Built by Matthew Arbuckle, it was the furthest west military outpost and home to a
garrison of 100 men, plus ofiicers. It was
abandoned in 1778 and burned by the Indi-

PIHie- Fort, Pllp ~

READY TO FIRE - Fort Randolph opened for the season this past weekend with the
first in a series of living history events. Local re-enactors donned period clothing and
tal.ked to guests about life at the fort in the late 1700s. Here, a group gets ready to
fire the cannon. (Catherine Hamm photo)

�Sentinel

....

~unci
cheCks
stopped·lOO.OOO
gun
buys
.
'.

Plnkerlngton

Hovatter

Broderick

Williamson

Burk

Fry

Swackhamer

Brewer

Delay

Bintz

Grim

· '

Students honored at Middleport Alumni banquet
MIDDLEPORT - More than 275
;Uumni and guests attended the annual
Middleport High School Alumni Association banquet and dance held over
Memorial Day weekend.
Highlighting the festiviries was the
awarding of 11 scholarships and recognition of alumni classes. A ceiling of
-orange and black balloon floated above
the banquet area . Multiple centerpieces
fearuring mirror s with bowls of floating
candles and accents of confetti were
arranged on the formally set banquet
tables, ami lighted trees provided the
background fore ·the Yellow Jacket them
which predominated the banquet and
social areas. A social hour preceded the
dinner. w
Yvonne Hackett Scally, president,
.extended the· welcome. Given special
recognition was Earl Knight, principal of
MHS for many years Now in his 90s he
was presented a MHS ball cap and was
given a standing ovation by the alumni.
Nancy Roller Cale, secretary, read a
letter from Phyllis Hilbert Townsley
relating that her mother MHS's oldest
alumni is living in Cincinnati and that
her grandfather was the first graduate of
MHS in 1899. Scally reported on the ill-

ness of Dixie Pierce Arbuckle, treasurer. ·
Harold Lohse was recognized as the
oldest attending alumni. He was presented an MHS mug as were the members of
the reunion classes, 1935, 1940, 1945,
and 1950. Other classes recognized were
1955, 1960, and 1965. Families with
large numbers of alumni were also recognized. Several door prizes including
an MHS mascot bear donated by Susan
Baker of the Ohio River Bear Co. were
awarded. Willard Miller won the bear
dressed in the orange and black summer
uniform of the MHS majorettes.
Robert "Ginny" Ginther, led in the
MHS fight song and Alma Mater.
Playing for the dance was the Jay Flippen Dance Band.
Awarded the $1,000 McComasMoore Scholarship was Andrea D. Bintz,
daughter of Dan and Melanie Bintz of
Cambridge, granddaughter of Rowena
Warren Young and Joseph Young.
The Crawford-Gray-Lewis Scholarship was awarded to Robert Adam Grim
of Middleport, son of Robert Grim and
Mary Boggs Bates.
Susan G. Park Scholarships recipients
and their relationship to MHS alumni
were:

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
.Home destroyed in blast
AKRON (AP) - A family left for vacation just hours before
their house exploded Sunday, fire officials said. No one was hurt.
Officials had not determined a cause of the explosion that apparently ignited in the basement about 6:35 a.m., said Akron Fire Capt.
Douglas Ott.
East Ohio Gas checked the main line serving the house, and
found no problems, spokesman Neil Durbin said.
Firefighters had the flames under control within 20 minutes, but
they spent an hour digging through debris before they were able to
confirm nobody was inside when the house exploded, Ott said.
Firefighters later learned that the family who lived in the house
were on vacation.
· Damage to the house aqd contents was estimated at $90,000.

• Jessica Lynn Pinkerton of Liberty,
Mo., granddaughter of Nancy Hardey
Cooper;
• Kalad Hovatter of Ashland, grandson
of Ri chard and Gail Hovatter;
• Joshua Martin Broderick of
Pomeroy, grandson of Artie Mae Baker;
• Andrew Robert Burk ofWheelersburg, Evelyn Irene Knopp.Vogelsong;
• Michael Davis of Worthington , son
of Charles "Bob" DeLay.
• Heather Ashley Fry, Middleport,
granddaughter of John James Fry;
• Stacey Elizabeth Brewer, Middleport, daughter of Carol Brewer and
granddaughter of Robert V King.
• Tyson Davis Swackhamer, Madison,
son of Richard Swackhamer;
• Michael L. Williamson of Pomeroy,
grandson of Donna McCooL
Alumni from reunion classes attending the banquet were as follows:
1935: Edison Baker, Middleport.
1940: Martha Robson Cunningham,
Lima; Betty Allens\vorth, Grarpus; Gene
and Janet Harris, Columbus; Martha\
Kaulf Collins, Venice, Florida; Denver
Rice, Middleport; William Suter, Barnwell, South Carolina; Martha Dabney,
Palm Harbor, Florida; Michael Hackett,

Ft. Myers , Florida ; Dorothy Stobart
White, Roscommon, Michigan; Evelyb
Knopp Vogelsong, Wheelersburg; Mil·
dred Moseley, St. Albans, West Virginia;
Dorothy Long, Middleport.
1'945: Barbara bolter Vale, Zellwood,
Florida; Robert Ginther, Columbus.
1950: Raymond Walburn, Middleport; Fred Hoffman, Middleport; Charles
Stobart, Columbus; Grate MacDonald
Hanawalt, Merritt Island, Florida; Emma ·
Jane Buell Doser. Johnson City, Tennessee; Carla Owens Winebrenner,
Letart, West Virginia; David Sneller,
Columbus; Norma Jean Custer, Middleport; Grace Abbott, Pomeroy; Donna
Ruth Hyath, Wellston; Naomi Overturf
Durst, Gallipolis.
1955: Fred Lewis, Cleves; Willard
Miller, Wooster; Iris Van Cooney Stanley,
Franklin; Ronald Fultz, · Westerville;·
Sheila Stover Hubbard, Lancastr; Harold
Thomas, Middleport; Ruth Winchester
Ward, Colorado Springs, Colorado;
Yvonne Hackett Scally, Middleport;
Nancy Roller Cale, Middleport; Patricia
Baker Ru.Sell, Hot Springs Village, Vir~
ginia; Gary Wayland, Coolville; Phyllis
Ebersbach, Orchard Lake, Michigan;
Ruby Vaughari, Middleport.

State to help provide 911 service for 9 Ohio counties.
CARROLLTON (AP) -When someone
in 'Carroll County in eastern Ohio calls 911, a
phone rings I 00 miles away in Erie, Pa. Calls
from Washington County· in extreme southeastern Ohio are answered 90 miles away in
Columbus.
· Washit;tgton and Carroll are among nine of
Ohio's 88 counties that the state is trying to
help establish their own 911 service to eliminate any delay in getting help.

The Governor's Office of Appalachia is
working with county officials to provide 911
services using state and federal money so
those counties won't have to reroute their
calls into other counties' 911 cent~rs. Currently, dispatchers must call back tO· the sheriff
where the call came from to get emergency
seryices to the scene. ,
Officials in Carroll, Harrison, Meigs and
Noble counties plan to establish 911 service

this year. That would leave Columbiana;
Monroe, Morgan, Vinton and Washington
counties without emergency call centers, 13
years after they were lntioduced in the. state. ·
Ohio legislators are considering a bill .to
implement 911 service for cell phones, but
the state still has counties without the basic
service, Joy Padgett, director of the Governor's
Office of Appalachia, told The Columbus Dis~
patch for a Sunday story.

'

Let Everyone Know Your.Dad Is S~~eone .Very
Special With AFather's Day Thank You Ttibute ·
To ~e P~blished In 'The J?aily Sentinel
On_Friday, June 16th!.

Driver's body found at truck stop
MONROE (AP) - A truck driver, whose body was found in the
parking lor of a truck stop, was apparently run over by a truck,
police said.
Truck driver Eddie Case, of New Market, Tenn., stumbled into
Bishop's Truck Service in this city about 25 miles north of Cincinnati around 3 a.m. Saturday, police said. He thought someone had
stolen his new tractor-trailer rig and was angry, witnesses said.
Three hours later, the body of the 42-year-man was found lying
in a porking spot berween rwo trucks in the nearby Stony Ridge
Tru ck Plaza parking lo1.
"There's a lot of pieces we are still trying to get together:• said
police Sgt. P.J. McQueen.
Night watchman Leon Bishop was in Bishop's Truck Service
when Case entered the building.
"He was just mad at the world," said Bishop, who ushered Case
outside.
Case apparently continued his tirade at the Stony Ridge Truck
Plaza, where a fuel-desk clerk called police. Case had disappeared by
the time police arrived, but they were called back to the trnck stop
at 6 a.m. when his body was found.
Dr. Warren Young, Warren County coroner, said it appeared Case
was killed wben a truck ran over him. Autopsy and toxicology
reports were not complete.
Police said they were investigating a report that Case had scuffied
with another man in the parkin~ lot a short time befo·re his death.

HAPPY
fATHER'S
DAY

fromPapA1
The designated ZQne included
the Gallipolis pod! from the
Racine locks, to the Winfield
locks and down to the Gallipolis
locJ&lt;s. The final weigh-ins were
completed by 4:30p.m., followed
by awarding of cash prizes, a trophy and drawings for a wide
assortment of door prizes.
. Members of the Kanawha
River Garfish Anglers Club
brought eight teams to compete.
The coed club has over 80 members, and counts the ·cARE tournament as one of their favorites.
"They put on a first class tour-

, Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohio
· Newspaper As&amp;ae;:latlon.

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SANTA FE, N.M. {AP) -By
the time Stephen Fiance draws
back the .curtain of a voting
[llachine in N ew Mexico's presidential primary, it will be too late
to help the candidate of his
ch?ice - three months too late.
J;&lt;ew Mexico is one of five
states quietly bringing the primary season to an end on Tuesd~y. Democrat AI Gore and
Republican George W. Bush
clinched their nominations in
e~rly March before half the
states even voted.
. :Fiance, a Santa Fe real estate
~g~nt, supported Democrat Bill
~~dley and is none too happy to
have h.is vote rendered meaning\e~s in the nominating process.

catfish

PICTURE

'•

Last year, the report said,.all state agencies
had access to "computer databases that record
past felony convictions, and many accessed
databases with other disqualifying information such as fugitive status, court restraining
orders, mental illness and domestic violence
misdemeanor convictions:'
The Clinton administration long has
argued that the states are better equipped
than the FBI to do background checks, but
some states have not wanted to pay the costs:
Tw(nty-six states handle some or all their
checks.
The overall national rejection rate has
remained 2.4 percent since 1994, despite the
Nov. 30, 1998, switch to computerized
instant checks and the addition then of
checks on long-gun purchasers. Only handgun buyers were checked before.
A second statistics bureau report largely
recapped data already released by the Justice
Department during its debate with the
National Rifle Association over gun controls
during the past few months.
The gun owners' group opposed President
Clinton's gun · control proposals and argued
federal prosecutors were not enforcing existing gun laws. The administration said federal
prosecutors were focusir.g on serious offenders and shifting smaUer cases to state and local

prosecutors and that combined gun prosecutions we.re up.
The report said -preliminary 1999 data
showed 6,728 defendants were charged with
federal firearms offenses, up from 6,287 in
1998. It also showed that berween 1992 and
1997 the number of federal firearms defendants decreased 19 percent, from 7,621 to
5,993 .
The report attributed part of this decline
to th e Supreme Court's 1995 Bailey vs. United States decision limiting prosecutors' ability to charge defendants with using a firearm
during a violent or drug offense. It estimated
that 2,500 more defendants would have been
charged with illegal gun possession berween
1995 and 1998 if the court had ruled differently.
The bureau said prosecutors compensated
by seeking longer sentences for weapon use.
. In a statement, Deputy Attorney General
Eric Holder said that since 1992, combined
state and federal gun prosecutions grew by
more than 22 percent. When final data are
assembled, "the number of people charged
with federal gun crimes in 1999 should be
equal to the number of people charged in
1992, even though there has been a dramatic
drop in gun crimes during that period,"
Holder said.

.Presidential primary season sputtering to an end

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;·WASHINGTON (AP) Background
~~ks blocked 204,000 of the more than 8.6
~\hon pro~pective gun sales last year,
lrci:ording to a Justice Department report that
shows state and local police rejected a higher
percentage of would-be gun buyers than the
Fill.
~1he 1999 figures brought the number of
p~hase rejections since the Brady Act instituted background .checks in February 1994 .
to 536,000 out of almost 22.3 million appli,
cat1~ns, the department's Bureau of Justice
Statlsllcs reported. That confirmed earlier
estimates of more than 500,000 rejections.
The bureau's report provided the first hard
numbers on the differences between checks
bj' state and local police and those by the
FBI.
. The FBI performed 4.5 million of the 8.6
million last year, compared with 4.1 million
py state and local agencies.
. . The rejection rate among state and local
agencies was 3 percent, compared with 1.8
percent for the FBI.
The report · attributed this difference to
state agencies' access to more detailed crimin~l h.istory records than the FBI's. In 1999,73
percent of rejections were because would- be
buyers had been convicted of or indicted on
felony charges.

The Daily Sentinel

Student has wont apartment
ADA (AP) - With beer bottles, books and pizza boxes littering
all corners of his apartment, it's no wonder John Anderson's home·
was chEJsen messiest coUege ap,artment in America.
But it's not the kind of place you'd expect to find an environmental studies major.
· Anderson, a junior at Ohio Northern University, claims he's not
the messy one.
·
" At least three or four people stay at my place every night," he
said in an application sent into the contest.
"Everyone thinks they can throw trash ~verywh ere. I am the only
one that ever cleans up the place, but I can't handle their mess so I
decided to let it go until someone else deans it up, which doesn't
happen."
Anderson, 21, a native of Dover, entered the contest sponsored by
an Internet apartment search company at the urging of his friends.
He said he hadn't seen the living room floor in his one-bedroom
apartment since Christmas. So far, the filth has c:laimed one victim.
Anderson had to thr.;w out his. math book "because it was soaked
in an unknown liquid."
The mess, though, prdved to be profitable. Anderson won
$10,000.
.
"College is reaDy the last time you can really get away with being
a slob;' said Bob Orr, contest coordinator for apartments.com,
·
·
·
which sponsored the contest.
Anderson's mother, Charlotte, said she and her ~usband couldn't ,
be prouder.

1-960: Lynn Buchanan Kitchen,
Mason, West Virginia; Judy Clark Montgomery, Santa Rosa, California; Lo~t'ta
Hanning Roller, Belpre; Dennis Wal 0
burn, Belpre; Marianne Woodgerd,
Columbus; Carter French, Middlepqrt;
Bill Stobart, Canal Winchester; Jerry P.ry,
Montgomery, Alabama; JeffKokovitch,
Gilbert, Arizona; Bonnie Van CooneY,
Westerville; Roger Bennett, Ann Arbor,
Michigan; Jerry Spires, Pasadena, Texas;
Olivia Bowles Lockett, Shaker Heights!
Barbara Fry; Pomeroy; Don Grueser;
Ruth Ann Farmer Boyer, Middleport; .
Phyllis HilbettTownsley, Fayetteville;Jan
Hauck.
1965: Alan Wallace, Ft. Myer,Virginia;
Barbara Hoffner McMahon, Apopka,
Florida; Tommy Lyons, Lapeer, Michigan; Jerry Van lnwagen, Pomeriy; Seren
Lewis Livingston, Northbrook, Illinois;
Jerry Davis, Gallipolis; Robert Swanson,
Nashville, Tennessee; Paul Gerard, Middleport; Suzanne .Bradbury Say·re,
Racine; Christine Bahr Williams, Gal~
lipolis;Judy Well, Shade; David Vujaklija,
Reedsville; ?oger Sriles, Pataskala; Diane
Van Cooney Lynch, Middleport.

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 5, 2000

Ex1. 1103

.I:!:~~:t.

1100

Bradley . quit the race after.
March's Super Tuesday contests.
"We could have had a very
timely impact on the presidential
race if this .primary had been in
February or early March. But
once again we find ourselves
behind the curve and out of the
action," Fiance said.
Also holding presidential primaries are Alabama, Montana,
New Jersey and South Dakota.
Fiance plans to vote Tuesday
because he's interested in state
and local. races: Congress, the
Legislature and county offices.
But many New Mexicans probably will skip the primary because
it won't affect the presidential
nominations.

Turnout was certainly low for happening- a primary with no
Kentucky's primary two weeks presidential contest and only
ago. Only 14 percent of regis- local interest.
The state Democratic and
tered Democrats and 11 percent
Republican parties have left priof Republicans voted.
"It is traditionally the presi- mary .e lection turnout efforts dential contest that draws people such as telephone banks - to
to the polls, whether it's a prima- local candidates. ·
Meanwhile, the Gore and
ry or general election," said F.
Bush
campaigns in NewJv!exico
Chris Garcia, a political science
professor at the University of already have turned their attention to the general election.
New Mexico.
Bush visited Albuquerque last
George "Jeep" Gilliland, head
of the New Mexico Federation week, holding fund-raisers ·and
of Labor, said simply, "We:re out speaking on national defense
matters at a rally that drew about
of the ballgame."
The Legislature rejected last 500 people.
But not once at the rally did
year a proposal to move up the
date of the state's presidential Bush appeal to people to turn
primary to avert exacdy what's out for Tuesday's primary.

namimt. It has a real family
aanosphere and everybody helps
everybody else," siid Scotty Hill.
Robert Boring of Pomeroy,
0 hio, has been coming to the
event for six years.
"I'm going to try and catch a
fish this time;' he joked as he and
partner David Ward of Middleport, Ohio, checked their boat .
before the launch.
·
"You have a lot of fun when
you fish with me," Ward said.
"Fishing is great way to get away
from it all. And, I like the fact that
you're making a donation to help
out little kids.
. "I'll buy a hat and a T-shirt
from the tournament too, and
that's another way to help out;'
he added. ·
While fishing was going on in
the river, events on dry land side
were raising money too.
Lotti Jenks Memorial Park
with its stately stone fence row
and arch way provided a natural
gathering place · for contestants
and families to take advantage of

a food sale sponsored by the
Mason VFWAu'!'iliary Post 9191,
tournament merchandise sal~s.
and children's activities · that
included a frog jumping, casting
and watermelon eating contests.
The children's events were
sponsored by Mason County
Republican Party candidates.
Republican assessor candidate
Wayne Richardson was the big
winner of the . $500 raffie, but
announced he was donating the
money back to CARE.
Last year, CARE spent over
$11,000 . on toys, cloth.ing and
food for needy families. Names
are provided by the school system
and CARE coordinates wrapping
the gifts.
Santa Claus, - and h.is alter
ego, Tommy Johnson - deliver
gifts with the assistance of a band
of good :1atured elves, in a large
truck.
The 6f0Up will always include
several extra gifts.
~
"We've delivered to apartment
buildings;• recalled one volunteer,

"and you see little kids looking
out a window at Santa, so we'll
have·some extra gifts marked boy
gift or girl ,gift just in case there
are kids who weren't on the list."
According to : one · volunteer,
that is the most heartwarming
and heartbreaking experience.
"It's lots of fun to see the kids
so excited, but I didn't realize that
type of poverty existed in Mason
Counry," the volunteer said.
''We've been to houses with plywood floors and plywood
counter tops where they spilled
firewood in the living room floor.
I've seen men walk out with tears
running down their face and
their heads down . It's hard to
take, but we know we're making
a difference."
Organizer Elvis Zerkle comments community support for
the success. "Every bit of money
we raise stays right here in the
Bend Area. We couldn't do it
without the support of the businesses and people of the tricounty area."

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS units
log 14 calls

Saturday, 3:49 p.m ., SR 338,
John Ramsey, HMC.
RUTLAN.J)
Saturday, 9:15 p.m .. Star Hall
POMEROY - Units of the Road , D.J. Richards, OBMH;
M eigs
Emergency
Services
7:38 p.m ., Hog Hollow Road,
answered 14 ca lls for assistance Joyce Grady. Jac kson General
over the weekend. Units respond- Hospital.
ed as follows:
SYRACUSE
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Sunday, 9:18 p.m., College
Saturday, 2:29 a.m ., Crew
Street, assisted by Ce ntral DisRoad, Brett Florian, treated;
patch, Floyd Reynolds , PVH .
9:31 a.m., Dead Man 's Curve,
Melisa Francis, Holzer Medical
Center;
3:06 p.m., South Second
POMEROY - Ohio UniverAvenue, Wilma Sargent, HMC.
sity College of Osteopathic MedMIDDLEPORT
Sa.turday, 1:32 p.m., High icine Childhood Immunization
Program (CHIP) will provide free
Street, Emma Clatworthy.
immunization for all area children
POMEROY
from
birth through 18 years of
Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Middleport
Police Department, Mark Allen age.
Immunizations will be WednesDaniel, HMC;
8:46 p.m., Long HoUow Road, day at McDonald's in Pomeroy
motor vehicle accident, assisted from 4:30-6 p.m ., and June 17 at
by Central Dispatch,John Aieker, Reed's Store in Reedsville from
10 a.m.- I p.m.
refused treatment;
McDonald's will provide a free
9:28 p.m., State Route 681,
Tyler Heddleston, O'Bleness coupon ro every child immunized during "the Pomeroy clinic.
Memorial Hospital;
The hepatitis vaccine is a threeSunday, 2:48 a.m., SR 554,
shot
series over a minimum of
assisted by Middleport, trailer fire,
four months and is now required
Carol Stover, no injuries;
7:42 p.m., South Third Avenue, upon a c hild entering either a
assisted by Central Dispatch, pre-school or kindergarten .
To receive · immunizations,
Sheyane Ohlinger, HMC;
9:45 p.m., Middleport Police please bring your child's previous
Department, assisted by Central shot records.
For more information about
Dispatch as First Responder,
Michael Tabler, Pleasant Valley the inununization program, call
1- 800-844-2654 or contact your
Hospital.
local health department.
RACINE

Immunizations set

Grant
from Page Al
and the commitment of town
officials."
In addition to the NatureWorks
grant, the village has also obtained
grant financing to purchase a new
$171.983 fire truck, scheduled to
arrive in August, and begin a
$67,370 repaving project benefitting Fourth Street, Sixth Street

Storms likely in area tonight

from PageA1
ans in 1779.
The current fort was constructed in 1974 to mark the anniversary
of Lord Dunsmore's War. But, in
the last five years, more buildings
have been added.
The grounds are maintained by a
group of dedicated volunteers who
mow the grass and act as hosts for
visitors who come during the
weekends.
One group assisting \vith the living history events are the Fort Lee
Scouts of Charleston. Fort Lee,
along with Fort Greenbrier and
Randolph, were important military and economic capstones in
early American history. Mad Ann
Bailey carried messages between
the three.
Member
Gilbert
Casto
enthralled visitors with his trapping
and trading stories.
"There were 1,000 deer lcilled
and the hides sent to Fort Pitt, to
be eventually shipped to Europe
for leather," he told two ·children
eying a hide and the belts of other
animals.
Women, too, played an important in the life of the fort. Joan
Eggleton and Barbara Kemper
made history come alive with the

The threat of showers and
thunderstorms in the tri-county
area will end Monday night as an
advancing high pressure system
pushes out the douds.
Then, for the rest of the week,
skies will remain fair.
Lows tonight will be 45-55.
Highs on Tuesday will ne 65-70.
Fair skies will prevail for the
rest of rhe week and · a warming
trend will begin on Wednesday.
Temperatures wiU reach the 80s
by Wednesday.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:58
p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at
6:03 a.m.

work in another?

618 East Main St.
1-740-992-6674

Tonight.. .Showers and thunderstonm likely. Lows in the mid
50s. Northwest wind 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 6!)s.
Tuesday night... Clear. Lows in
the upper 40s.
Extended forec;ast:
Wednesday... Ciear and warmer.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Thursday. .. Mosdy dear. Lows
in the mid 50s and highs in the
mid 80s .
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the lower 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.

LOCAL STOCKS
AkZo-39~

Among the visitors were Robin AmTeeh/SBC- 45
and Peter Foley of Glenwood, who Ash&gt;end Inc. - 35
brought their four children to AT&amp;T -35~
Bank One - 36'1•
experience American history. Bob Evans - 14'··
"They can learn much more by BorgWarner seeing something like this, than Champioo - 2').
Charming Shopsreading it in a book."
C~y Holding - 10
The fort is located in Krodel Feclera&gt; M~ul - 9~.
Park and is open from June-Octo- Flrstar - 277•
ber on Saturday and Sunday from 9
a.m.-5 p.m. The first weekend of
each month, a special Jiving history event is planned, including July
1, Patriots' Call to Arms; Aug. 5,
Traders Rendezvous; Sept. 2, Fall
Rendezvous; Oct. 5-8, Battle
Days; Nov. 4, Harvest Festival; and
Dec. 2, Grand Illumination.

Live in one state,

Weather forecast:

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AEP-34\

Fort

A population-based formula,
adopted by th e legislature in
1994, is used to determine the
proportional share of grant funds
available in each county. Applications are then ranked competitively by ODNR on a broad
range of criteria.

VALLEY WEATHER

•'

wonderful aroma of fire pit cooking.
Eggleston stirred a pot of deer
stew, while Kemper offered visitors
scones with butter and a glass of
raspberry lemonade.
"The men at the fort and their
families would have eaten a variety
of.meat such as deer, rabbits, possums, but not beef since that was
needed for milk. Of course they
would have had homemade ale,
beer and wine, and they did love.
their peach brandy;· said Eggleton.
Plans are underway to plant a
authenric colonial garden, complete with fence to keep out
unwanted creatures.

and College Road in Syracuse.
ODNR Director Sam Speck
said the department received a
total of 198 applications for this
round of NatureWorks grants.

40'·

5'·

Gannett - 63'!.
General Electric- 52').
Harley Davidson- 36').
Kmart - 8~

Kroger- 18~.
Lands End - 34l.

Ltd. - 2n.
Oa~ Hm Financial - 16

OVB-27),

One Valley - 40l.

Peoples - 15~,

Premier-7\
Rockwell - 41\

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Rocky Boots - 5\
AD Shell - 62~
Sears-38'1.
Shoney's - ~y..

Wai-Mart - 59).
Wendy's - 20),
Worthongton- 12),
Daily stock reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing qu01es of
the previous day's trans·
actions , provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

�Sentinel

....

~unci
cheCks
stopped·lOO.OOO
gun
buys
.
'.

Plnkerlngton

Hovatter

Broderick

Williamson

Burk

Fry

Swackhamer

Brewer

Delay

Bintz

Grim

· '

Students honored at Middleport Alumni banquet
MIDDLEPORT - More than 275
;Uumni and guests attended the annual
Middleport High School Alumni Association banquet and dance held over
Memorial Day weekend.
Highlighting the festiviries was the
awarding of 11 scholarships and recognition of alumni classes. A ceiling of
-orange and black balloon floated above
the banquet area . Multiple centerpieces
fearuring mirror s with bowls of floating
candles and accents of confetti were
arranged on the formally set banquet
tables, ami lighted trees provided the
background fore ·the Yellow Jacket them
which predominated the banquet and
social areas. A social hour preceded the
dinner. w
Yvonne Hackett Scally, president,
.extended the· welcome. Given special
recognition was Earl Knight, principal of
MHS for many years Now in his 90s he
was presented a MHS ball cap and was
given a standing ovation by the alumni.
Nancy Roller Cale, secretary, read a
letter from Phyllis Hilbert Townsley
relating that her mother MHS's oldest
alumni is living in Cincinnati and that
her grandfather was the first graduate of
MHS in 1899. Scally reported on the ill-

ness of Dixie Pierce Arbuckle, treasurer. ·
Harold Lohse was recognized as the
oldest attending alumni. He was presented an MHS mug as were the members of
the reunion classes, 1935, 1940, 1945,
and 1950. Other classes recognized were
1955, 1960, and 1965. Families with
large numbers of alumni were also recognized. Several door prizes including
an MHS mascot bear donated by Susan
Baker of the Ohio River Bear Co. were
awarded. Willard Miller won the bear
dressed in the orange and black summer
uniform of the MHS majorettes.
Robert "Ginny" Ginther, led in the
MHS fight song and Alma Mater.
Playing for the dance was the Jay Flippen Dance Band.
Awarded the $1,000 McComasMoore Scholarship was Andrea D. Bintz,
daughter of Dan and Melanie Bintz of
Cambridge, granddaughter of Rowena
Warren Young and Joseph Young.
The Crawford-Gray-Lewis Scholarship was awarded to Robert Adam Grim
of Middleport, son of Robert Grim and
Mary Boggs Bates.
Susan G. Park Scholarships recipients
and their relationship to MHS alumni
were:

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
.Home destroyed in blast
AKRON (AP) - A family left for vacation just hours before
their house exploded Sunday, fire officials said. No one was hurt.
Officials had not determined a cause of the explosion that apparently ignited in the basement about 6:35 a.m., said Akron Fire Capt.
Douglas Ott.
East Ohio Gas checked the main line serving the house, and
found no problems, spokesman Neil Durbin said.
Firefighters had the flames under control within 20 minutes, but
they spent an hour digging through debris before they were able to
confirm nobody was inside when the house exploded, Ott said.
Firefighters later learned that the family who lived in the house
were on vacation.
· Damage to the house aqd contents was estimated at $90,000.

• Jessica Lynn Pinkerton of Liberty,
Mo., granddaughter of Nancy Hardey
Cooper;
• Kalad Hovatter of Ashland, grandson
of Ri chard and Gail Hovatter;
• Joshua Martin Broderick of
Pomeroy, grandson of Artie Mae Baker;
• Andrew Robert Burk ofWheelersburg, Evelyn Irene Knopp.Vogelsong;
• Michael Davis of Worthington , son
of Charles "Bob" DeLay.
• Heather Ashley Fry, Middleport,
granddaughter of John James Fry;
• Stacey Elizabeth Brewer, Middleport, daughter of Carol Brewer and
granddaughter of Robert V King.
• Tyson Davis Swackhamer, Madison,
son of Richard Swackhamer;
• Michael L. Williamson of Pomeroy,
grandson of Donna McCooL
Alumni from reunion classes attending the banquet were as follows:
1935: Edison Baker, Middleport.
1940: Martha Robson Cunningham,
Lima; Betty Allens\vorth, Grarpus; Gene
and Janet Harris, Columbus; Martha\
Kaulf Collins, Venice, Florida; Denver
Rice, Middleport; William Suter, Barnwell, South Carolina; Martha Dabney,
Palm Harbor, Florida; Michael Hackett,

Ft. Myers , Florida ; Dorothy Stobart
White, Roscommon, Michigan; Evelyb
Knopp Vogelsong, Wheelersburg; Mil·
dred Moseley, St. Albans, West Virginia;
Dorothy Long, Middleport.
1'945: Barbara bolter Vale, Zellwood,
Florida; Robert Ginther, Columbus.
1950: Raymond Walburn, Middleport; Fred Hoffman, Middleport; Charles
Stobart, Columbus; Grate MacDonald
Hanawalt, Merritt Island, Florida; Emma ·
Jane Buell Doser. Johnson City, Tennessee; Carla Owens Winebrenner,
Letart, West Virginia; David Sneller,
Columbus; Norma Jean Custer, Middleport; Grace Abbott, Pomeroy; Donna
Ruth Hyath, Wellston; Naomi Overturf
Durst, Gallipolis.
1955: Fred Lewis, Cleves; Willard
Miller, Wooster; Iris Van Cooney Stanley,
Franklin; Ronald Fultz, · Westerville;·
Sheila Stover Hubbard, Lancastr; Harold
Thomas, Middleport; Ruth Winchester
Ward, Colorado Springs, Colorado;
Yvonne Hackett Scally, Middleport;
Nancy Roller Cale, Middleport; Patricia
Baker Ru.Sell, Hot Springs Village, Vir~
ginia; Gary Wayland, Coolville; Phyllis
Ebersbach, Orchard Lake, Michigan;
Ruby Vaughari, Middleport.

State to help provide 911 service for 9 Ohio counties.
CARROLLTON (AP) -When someone
in 'Carroll County in eastern Ohio calls 911, a
phone rings I 00 miles away in Erie, Pa. Calls
from Washington County· in extreme southeastern Ohio are answered 90 miles away in
Columbus.
· Washit;tgton and Carroll are among nine of
Ohio's 88 counties that the state is trying to
help establish their own 911 service to eliminate any delay in getting help.

The Governor's Office of Appalachia is
working with county officials to provide 911
services using state and federal money so
those counties won't have to reroute their
calls into other counties' 911 cent~rs. Currently, dispatchers must call back tO· the sheriff
where the call came from to get emergency
seryices to the scene. ,
Officials in Carroll, Harrison, Meigs and
Noble counties plan to establish 911 service

this year. That would leave Columbiana;
Monroe, Morgan, Vinton and Washington
counties without emergency call centers, 13
years after they were lntioduced in the. state. ·
Ohio legislators are considering a bill .to
implement 911 service for cell phones, but
the state still has counties without the basic
service, Joy Padgett, director of the Governor's
Office of Appalachia, told The Columbus Dis~
patch for a Sunday story.

'

Let Everyone Know Your.Dad Is S~~eone .Very
Special With AFather's Day Thank You Ttibute ·
To ~e P~blished In 'The J?aily Sentinel
On_Friday, June 16th!.

Driver's body found at truck stop
MONROE (AP) - A truck driver, whose body was found in the
parking lor of a truck stop, was apparently run over by a truck,
police said.
Truck driver Eddie Case, of New Market, Tenn., stumbled into
Bishop's Truck Service in this city about 25 miles north of Cincinnati around 3 a.m. Saturday, police said. He thought someone had
stolen his new tractor-trailer rig and was angry, witnesses said.
Three hours later, the body of the 42-year-man was found lying
in a porking spot berween rwo trucks in the nearby Stony Ridge
Tru ck Plaza parking lo1.
"There's a lot of pieces we are still trying to get together:• said
police Sgt. P.J. McQueen.
Night watchman Leon Bishop was in Bishop's Truck Service
when Case entered the building.
"He was just mad at the world," said Bishop, who ushered Case
outside.
Case apparently continued his tirade at the Stony Ridge Truck
Plaza, where a fuel-desk clerk called police. Case had disappeared by
the time police arrived, but they were called back to the trnck stop
at 6 a.m. when his body was found.
Dr. Warren Young, Warren County coroner, said it appeared Case
was killed wben a truck ran over him. Autopsy and toxicology
reports were not complete.
Police said they were investigating a report that Case had scuffied
with another man in the parkin~ lot a short time befo·re his death.

HAPPY
fATHER'S
DAY

fromPapA1
The designated ZQne included
the Gallipolis pod! from the
Racine locks, to the Winfield
locks and down to the Gallipolis
locJ&lt;s. The final weigh-ins were
completed by 4:30p.m., followed
by awarding of cash prizes, a trophy and drawings for a wide
assortment of door prizes.
. Members of the Kanawha
River Garfish Anglers Club
brought eight teams to compete.
The coed club has over 80 members, and counts the ·cARE tournament as one of their favorites.
"They put on a first class tour-

, Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohio
· Newspaper As&amp;ae;:latlon.

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SANTA FE, N.M. {AP) -By
the time Stephen Fiance draws
back the .curtain of a voting
[llachine in N ew Mexico's presidential primary, it will be too late
to help the candidate of his
ch?ice - three months too late.
J;&lt;ew Mexico is one of five
states quietly bringing the primary season to an end on Tuesd~y. Democrat AI Gore and
Republican George W. Bush
clinched their nominations in
e~rly March before half the
states even voted.
. :Fiance, a Santa Fe real estate
~g~nt, supported Democrat Bill
~~dley and is none too happy to
have h.is vote rendered meaning\e~s in the nominating process.

catfish

PICTURE

'•

Last year, the report said,.all state agencies
had access to "computer databases that record
past felony convictions, and many accessed
databases with other disqualifying information such as fugitive status, court restraining
orders, mental illness and domestic violence
misdemeanor convictions:'
The Clinton administration long has
argued that the states are better equipped
than the FBI to do background checks, but
some states have not wanted to pay the costs:
Tw(nty-six states handle some or all their
checks.
The overall national rejection rate has
remained 2.4 percent since 1994, despite the
Nov. 30, 1998, switch to computerized
instant checks and the addition then of
checks on long-gun purchasers. Only handgun buyers were checked before.
A second statistics bureau report largely
recapped data already released by the Justice
Department during its debate with the
National Rifle Association over gun controls
during the past few months.
The gun owners' group opposed President
Clinton's gun · control proposals and argued
federal prosecutors were not enforcing existing gun laws. The administration said federal
prosecutors were focusir.g on serious offenders and shifting smaUer cases to state and local

prosecutors and that combined gun prosecutions we.re up.
The report said -preliminary 1999 data
showed 6,728 defendants were charged with
federal firearms offenses, up from 6,287 in
1998. It also showed that berween 1992 and
1997 the number of federal firearms defendants decreased 19 percent, from 7,621 to
5,993 .
The report attributed part of this decline
to th e Supreme Court's 1995 Bailey vs. United States decision limiting prosecutors' ability to charge defendants with using a firearm
during a violent or drug offense. It estimated
that 2,500 more defendants would have been
charged with illegal gun possession berween
1995 and 1998 if the court had ruled differently.
The bureau said prosecutors compensated
by seeking longer sentences for weapon use.
. In a statement, Deputy Attorney General
Eric Holder said that since 1992, combined
state and federal gun prosecutions grew by
more than 22 percent. When final data are
assembled, "the number of people charged
with federal gun crimes in 1999 should be
equal to the number of people charged in
1992, even though there has been a dramatic
drop in gun crimes during that period,"
Holder said.

.Presidential primary season sputtering to an end

(USPS ZJ3o960)

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;·WASHINGTON (AP) Background
~~ks blocked 204,000 of the more than 8.6
~\hon pro~pective gun sales last year,
lrci:ording to a Justice Department report that
shows state and local police rejected a higher
percentage of would-be gun buyers than the
Fill.
~1he 1999 figures brought the number of
p~hase rejections since the Brady Act instituted background .checks in February 1994 .
to 536,000 out of almost 22.3 million appli,
cat1~ns, the department's Bureau of Justice
Statlsllcs reported. That confirmed earlier
estimates of more than 500,000 rejections.
The bureau's report provided the first hard
numbers on the differences between checks
bj' state and local police and those by the
FBI.
. The FBI performed 4.5 million of the 8.6
million last year, compared with 4.1 million
py state and local agencies.
. . The rejection rate among state and local
agencies was 3 percent, compared with 1.8
percent for the FBI.
The report · attributed this difference to
state agencies' access to more detailed crimin~l h.istory records than the FBI's. In 1999,73
percent of rejections were because would- be
buyers had been convicted of or indicted on
felony charges.

The Daily Sentinel

Student has wont apartment
ADA (AP) - With beer bottles, books and pizza boxes littering
all corners of his apartment, it's no wonder John Anderson's home·
was chEJsen messiest coUege ap,artment in America.
But it's not the kind of place you'd expect to find an environmental studies major.
· Anderson, a junior at Ohio Northern University, claims he's not
the messy one.
·
" At least three or four people stay at my place every night," he
said in an application sent into the contest.
"Everyone thinks they can throw trash ~verywh ere. I am the only
one that ever cleans up the place, but I can't handle their mess so I
decided to let it go until someone else deans it up, which doesn't
happen."
Anderson, 21, a native of Dover, entered the contest sponsored by
an Internet apartment search company at the urging of his friends.
He said he hadn't seen the living room floor in his one-bedroom
apartment since Christmas. So far, the filth has c:laimed one victim.
Anderson had to thr.;w out his. math book "because it was soaked
in an unknown liquid."
The mess, though, prdved to be profitable. Anderson won
$10,000.
.
"College is reaDy the last time you can really get away with being
a slob;' said Bob Orr, contest coordinator for apartments.com,
·
·
·
which sponsored the contest.
Anderson's mother, Charlotte, said she and her ~usband couldn't ,
be prouder.

1-960: Lynn Buchanan Kitchen,
Mason, West Virginia; Judy Clark Montgomery, Santa Rosa, California; Lo~t'ta
Hanning Roller, Belpre; Dennis Wal 0
burn, Belpre; Marianne Woodgerd,
Columbus; Carter French, Middlepqrt;
Bill Stobart, Canal Winchester; Jerry P.ry,
Montgomery, Alabama; JeffKokovitch,
Gilbert, Arizona; Bonnie Van CooneY,
Westerville; Roger Bennett, Ann Arbor,
Michigan; Jerry Spires, Pasadena, Texas;
Olivia Bowles Lockett, Shaker Heights!
Barbara Fry; Pomeroy; Don Grueser;
Ruth Ann Farmer Boyer, Middleport; .
Phyllis HilbettTownsley, Fayetteville;Jan
Hauck.
1965: Alan Wallace, Ft. Myer,Virginia;
Barbara Hoffner McMahon, Apopka,
Florida; Tommy Lyons, Lapeer, Michigan; Jerry Van lnwagen, Pomeriy; Seren
Lewis Livingston, Northbrook, Illinois;
Jerry Davis, Gallipolis; Robert Swanson,
Nashville, Tennessee; Paul Gerard, Middleport; Suzanne .Bradbury Say·re,
Racine; Christine Bahr Williams, Gal~
lipolis;Judy Well, Shade; David Vujaklija,
Reedsville; ?oger Sriles, Pataskala; Diane
Van Cooney Lynch, Middleport.

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 5, 2000

Ex1. 1103

.I:!:~~:t.

1100

Bradley . quit the race after.
March's Super Tuesday contests.
"We could have had a very
timely impact on the presidential
race if this .primary had been in
February or early March. But
once again we find ourselves
behind the curve and out of the
action," Fiance said.
Also holding presidential primaries are Alabama, Montana,
New Jersey and South Dakota.
Fiance plans to vote Tuesday
because he's interested in state
and local. races: Congress, the
Legislature and county offices.
But many New Mexicans probably will skip the primary because
it won't affect the presidential
nominations.

Turnout was certainly low for happening- a primary with no
Kentucky's primary two weeks presidential contest and only
ago. Only 14 percent of regis- local interest.
The state Democratic and
tered Democrats and 11 percent
Republican parties have left priof Republicans voted.
"It is traditionally the presi- mary .e lection turnout efforts dential contest that draws people such as telephone banks - to
to the polls, whether it's a prima- local candidates. ·
Meanwhile, the Gore and
ry or general election," said F.
Bush
campaigns in NewJv!exico
Chris Garcia, a political science
professor at the University of already have turned their attention to the general election.
New Mexico.
Bush visited Albuquerque last
George "Jeep" Gilliland, head
of the New Mexico Federation week, holding fund-raisers ·and
of Labor, said simply, "We:re out speaking on national defense
matters at a rally that drew about
of the ballgame."
The Legislature rejected last 500 people.
But not once at the rally did
year a proposal to move up the
date of the state's presidential Bush appeal to people to turn
primary to avert exacdy what's out for Tuesday's primary.

namimt. It has a real family
aanosphere and everybody helps
everybody else," siid Scotty Hill.
Robert Boring of Pomeroy,
0 hio, has been coming to the
event for six years.
"I'm going to try and catch a
fish this time;' he joked as he and
partner David Ward of Middleport, Ohio, checked their boat .
before the launch.
·
"You have a lot of fun when
you fish with me," Ward said.
"Fishing is great way to get away
from it all. And, I like the fact that
you're making a donation to help
out little kids.
. "I'll buy a hat and a T-shirt
from the tournament too, and
that's another way to help out;'
he added. ·
While fishing was going on in
the river, events on dry land side
were raising money too.
Lotti Jenks Memorial Park
with its stately stone fence row
and arch way provided a natural
gathering place · for contestants
and families to take advantage of

a food sale sponsored by the
Mason VFWAu'!'iliary Post 9191,
tournament merchandise sal~s.
and children's activities · that
included a frog jumping, casting
and watermelon eating contests.
The children's events were
sponsored by Mason County
Republican Party candidates.
Republican assessor candidate
Wayne Richardson was the big
winner of the . $500 raffie, but
announced he was donating the
money back to CARE.
Last year, CARE spent over
$11,000 . on toys, cloth.ing and
food for needy families. Names
are provided by the school system
and CARE coordinates wrapping
the gifts.
Santa Claus, - and h.is alter
ego, Tommy Johnson - deliver
gifts with the assistance of a band
of good :1atured elves, in a large
truck.
The 6f0Up will always include
several extra gifts.
~
"We've delivered to apartment
buildings;• recalled one volunteer,

"and you see little kids looking
out a window at Santa, so we'll
have·some extra gifts marked boy
gift or girl ,gift just in case there
are kids who weren't on the list."
According to : one · volunteer,
that is the most heartwarming
and heartbreaking experience.
"It's lots of fun to see the kids
so excited, but I didn't realize that
type of poverty existed in Mason
Counry," the volunteer said.
''We've been to houses with plywood floors and plywood
counter tops where they spilled
firewood in the living room floor.
I've seen men walk out with tears
running down their face and
their heads down . It's hard to
take, but we know we're making
a difference."
Organizer Elvis Zerkle comments community support for
the success. "Every bit of money
we raise stays right here in the
Bend Area. We couldn't do it
without the support of the businesses and people of the tricounty area."

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS units
log 14 calls

Saturday, 3:49 p.m ., SR 338,
John Ramsey, HMC.
RUTLAN.J)
Saturday, 9:15 p.m .. Star Hall
POMEROY - Units of the Road , D.J. Richards, OBMH;
M eigs
Emergency
Services
7:38 p.m ., Hog Hollow Road,
answered 14 ca lls for assistance Joyce Grady. Jac kson General
over the weekend. Units respond- Hospital.
ed as follows:
SYRACUSE
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Sunday, 9:18 p.m., College
Saturday, 2:29 a.m ., Crew
Street, assisted by Ce ntral DisRoad, Brett Florian, treated;
patch, Floyd Reynolds , PVH .
9:31 a.m., Dead Man 's Curve,
Melisa Francis, Holzer Medical
Center;
3:06 p.m., South Second
POMEROY - Ohio UniverAvenue, Wilma Sargent, HMC.
sity College of Osteopathic MedMIDDLEPORT
Sa.turday, 1:32 p.m., High icine Childhood Immunization
Program (CHIP) will provide free
Street, Emma Clatworthy.
immunization for all area children
POMEROY
from
birth through 18 years of
Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Middleport
Police Department, Mark Allen age.
Immunizations will be WednesDaniel, HMC;
8:46 p.m., Long HoUow Road, day at McDonald's in Pomeroy
motor vehicle accident, assisted from 4:30-6 p.m ., and June 17 at
by Central Dispatch,John Aieker, Reed's Store in Reedsville from
10 a.m.- I p.m.
refused treatment;
McDonald's will provide a free
9:28 p.m., State Route 681,
Tyler Heddleston, O'Bleness coupon ro every child immunized during "the Pomeroy clinic.
Memorial Hospital;
The hepatitis vaccine is a threeSunday, 2:48 a.m., SR 554,
shot
series over a minimum of
assisted by Middleport, trailer fire,
four months and is now required
Carol Stover, no injuries;
7:42 p.m., South Third Avenue, upon a c hild entering either a
assisted by Central Dispatch, pre-school or kindergarten .
To receive · immunizations,
Sheyane Ohlinger, HMC;
9:45 p.m., Middleport Police please bring your child's previous
Department, assisted by Central shot records.
For more information about
Dispatch as First Responder,
Michael Tabler, Pleasant Valley the inununization program, call
1- 800-844-2654 or contact your
Hospital.
local health department.
RACINE

Immunizations set

Grant
from Page Al
and the commitment of town
officials."
In addition to the NatureWorks
grant, the village has also obtained
grant financing to purchase a new
$171.983 fire truck, scheduled to
arrive in August, and begin a
$67,370 repaving project benefitting Fourth Street, Sixth Street

Storms likely in area tonight

from PageA1
ans in 1779.
The current fort was constructed in 1974 to mark the anniversary
of Lord Dunsmore's War. But, in
the last five years, more buildings
have been added.
The grounds are maintained by a
group of dedicated volunteers who
mow the grass and act as hosts for
visitors who come during the
weekends.
One group assisting \vith the living history events are the Fort Lee
Scouts of Charleston. Fort Lee,
along with Fort Greenbrier and
Randolph, were important military and economic capstones in
early American history. Mad Ann
Bailey carried messages between
the three.
Member
Gilbert
Casto
enthralled visitors with his trapping
and trading stories.
"There were 1,000 deer lcilled
and the hides sent to Fort Pitt, to
be eventually shipped to Europe
for leather," he told two ·children
eying a hide and the belts of other
animals.
Women, too, played an important in the life of the fort. Joan
Eggleton and Barbara Kemper
made history come alive with the

The threat of showers and
thunderstorms in the tri-county
area will end Monday night as an
advancing high pressure system
pushes out the douds.
Then, for the rest of the week,
skies will remain fair.
Lows tonight will be 45-55.
Highs on Tuesday will ne 65-70.
Fair skies will prevail for the
rest of rhe week and · a warming
trend will begin on Wednesday.
Temperatures wiU reach the 80s
by Wednesday.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:58
p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at
6:03 a.m.

work in another?

618 East Main St.
1-740-992-6674

Tonight.. .Showers and thunderstonm likely. Lows in the mid
50s. Northwest wind 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 6!)s.
Tuesday night... Clear. Lows in
the upper 40s.
Extended forec;ast:
Wednesday... Ciear and warmer.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Thursday. .. Mosdy dear. Lows
in the mid 50s and highs in the
mid 80s .
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the lower 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.

LOCAL STOCKS
AkZo-39~

Among the visitors were Robin AmTeeh/SBC- 45
and Peter Foley of Glenwood, who Ash&gt;end Inc. - 35
brought their four children to AT&amp;T -35~
Bank One - 36'1•
experience American history. Bob Evans - 14'··
"They can learn much more by BorgWarner seeing something like this, than Champioo - 2').
Charming Shopsreading it in a book."
C~y Holding - 10
The fort is located in Krodel Feclera&gt; M~ul - 9~.
Park and is open from June-Octo- Flrstar - 277•
ber on Saturday and Sunday from 9
a.m.-5 p.m. The first weekend of
each month, a special Jiving history event is planned, including July
1, Patriots' Call to Arms; Aug. 5,
Traders Rendezvous; Sept. 2, Fall
Rendezvous; Oct. 5-8, Battle
Days; Nov. 4, Harvest Festival; and
Dec. 2, Grand Illumination.

Live in one state,

Weather forecast:

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AEP-34\

Fort

A population-based formula,
adopted by th e legislature in
1994, is used to determine the
proportional share of grant funds
available in each county. Applications are then ranked competitively by ODNR on a broad
range of criteria.

VALLEY WEATHER

•'

wonderful aroma of fire pit cooking.
Eggleston stirred a pot of deer
stew, while Kemper offered visitors
scones with butter and a glass of
raspberry lemonade.
"The men at the fort and their
families would have eaten a variety
of.meat such as deer, rabbits, possums, but not beef since that was
needed for milk. Of course they
would have had homemade ale,
beer and wine, and they did love.
their peach brandy;· said Eggleton.
Plans are underway to plant a
authenric colonial garden, complete with fence to keep out
unwanted creatures.

and College Road in Syracuse.
ODNR Director Sam Speck
said the department received a
total of 198 applications for this
round of NatureWorks grants.

40'·

5'·

Gannett - 63'!.
General Electric- 52').
Harley Davidson- 36').
Kmart - 8~

Kroger- 18~.
Lands End - 34l.

Ltd. - 2n.
Oa~ Hm Financial - 16

OVB-27),

One Valley - 40l.

Peoples - 15~,

Premier-7\
Rockwell - 41\

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Rocky Boots - 5\
AD Shell - 62~
Sears-38'1.
Shoney's - ~y..

Wai-Mart - 59).
Wendy's - 20),
Worthongton- 12),
Daily stock reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing qu01es of
the previous day's trans·
actions , provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

�•

. ~Th_e_D_a~t'ly~S_en_ti_ne_I________________()_~illictll

Page A~

'Esta5risfw{ in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74o-992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

--

-

GfA~tFR.

MAKIN6SO~

stahler@lfuse.net

General Manager

,.

HELEN THOMAS
IS REAll'1
GONE.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Dear Readers: I have just read an
: exceUent book that will be especi;ally
: valuable to the current crop of coUege
: gnduates now embarking on careeq, or
· struggling with what career path to· fol: low. Maria Shriver is the author. and her
· book is ·loaded with wisdom and wit. It is
also a fascinating overview of her own
career in television and what life is like
being married to Arnold Schwarzenegger,
the Austrian-born bodybuilder, actor,
mega-successful businessman and father of
t~eir four children.
You will be startled 1by Maria's candor,
boggled by her energy, and charmed by
her humility.The title of the book is "Ten
Things I Wish I'd Known - Before I
Went Out into the Real World." The publisher is Warner Books. The price is $19.95
(Canada $27.95) . P.S.: Better hu,rry and
get your copy, because this book is going
. to seU like hot cakes.
Dear Ann Landers: Thank you for

... JUST

Clla!UWIMll'· toOl'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

:. ~T_h_e_D_a_il~y_S_e_n_ti_ne_l____________ll1f_·~~~~~~~--------------~M~·~~~Pa~.~~!~~~.z~~~!
Ann addresses (tasteless' wedding ceremonies

Monday, June 5, 1000

====~=---------~--------~

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

•

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

...

Unen to tlt 11 Miror art w~tfcoml!. They .fhou/4 lu l1ss th11n JOO words. AU lt!f"' ll.rf nb}ttl
10 1dltlng (.,td ,.,,st bt tiRIItd a11d inrlud• addren and trd~phon11 m1m1Hr. No ~~Jiflt114111tllln wiU
be pubiUh11d. Utters should be in good 14UIII, addrts.dng issues, niH pllnUIIal~tles.
.
Tilt opinior16 .uprru11d in drt colllmlf bdow aN th11 constiiSIIS of the Oltw V•ll•y PubllllulfJ
Co. 'I tditorial bo.anl, Mnl11n odtr,.,.,iu rwtrd.

NATIONAL VIEWS

..

It works
Bush deserves some credit
for Social Security proposal

-

Ann
Landers
--------

ADVICE
saying in your column that having a, large,
faney wedding for a third or fourth marriage is in poor taste. Here is another topic
I wish you would address: Pregnant
Brides.
Recently, a socially prominent woman
in our city put on a huge wedding for her
daughter, who was in her eighth month of
pregnancy. No attempt was made to hide
her condition. The bride looked as .if she
might deliver any minute. What is wrong
with these people? I would appreciate

· your views.- No Name, No City, Please
When people regain their sanity and
Dear No Name: (have no comment. put religion back into marriage, it will be
l'mjust happy when a pregnant bride gets a better day for all of us. - Disgusted in
married. Too many of them don't, The Cumberland, Md.
next letter may be of interest to you:
Dear Cumberland: Very few men or
Dear Ann Landen: I was pleased women of the cloth will officiate at wed·when I read in a recent column of yours dings that are "spec.tator events:' A couple
· that it is in po 0 r taste to have a huge of slcy--divers wrote to me a while back,
church wedding for a third or fourth mar- and said they wanted to be married in a
riage. I can go one step further. In last plane, and then, parachute out together,
Sunday's bridal section of the C'!mber- holding hands. They asked if I could help
land, Md., Times-News, there was an . them find a minister who would do the
action photo in a church of a bride and service. They said they "weren;t very religroom wearing fuU ,wedding regalia. The · gious:' and any kind of minister would be
bride was carrying their child down the OK with them. I told them I didn't know
aisle.
any mirusters "who weren't very reliChurch weddings used to be religious gious," and to go to city hall.
ceremonies. Now, they are nothing more
Dear Ann Landers: I read the letter
than high-visibility spcial events. Of from the woman whose husband would
course, it is commendable that couples hang up on callers who did not identifY
who have children out of wedlock wish to themselves. You said the proper response
get married, but why don 't they go to the in such circumstances is, "May I tell her
courthouse to legalize their union?
who is calling?"

Years ago, when I headed a small ad
agency, a client phoned my office. and
without saying who he was, asked to
speak to the boss. The receptionist properly asked, "May I teD him who is calling?"
The diller replied, "Sure!"
After that, he was known around 'the
office as Mr. Sure. - Still Laughing in
New Hampshire
Dear N :H.: I laughed, too. Thanks for
a good closer for a Monday column.
Forget to save some of your favorite
Ann Landers columns? "Nuggets and
Doozies" is the answer. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size envelope and
a check or money order for $5.25 (this&lt;
includes postage and handling) to:
Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers, P.Q. Box
11562, Chicago, IU. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $6.25.) To find out more ·
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web
page at wi.Vw.crearors.com.

--

MEIGS COUNTY 4-H NEWS
Meigs County Better Liveltock Dairy 4-H Club
The Meigs County Better
Livestock ' Dairy 4-H Club met
recently at the home of advisor
Ed Holter, with 13 members, two
Cloverbuds and two advisors present.
New officers were elected and
it was decided to keep the rule
that the privilege to show at the
fairis lost if too many meetings ,
are missed.The apple sale was discusse!l.
The . club provided refreshments.
Carson E. Yost, News Reporter

• Albany (N.Y.l nmes Union,"" Texas Gov. George Bush5 Social
Security plan: Texas Gov. George W Bush, the presumptive GOP nominee for president, deserves a sha re of support for his proposal to allow
individuals to invest a portion of. their Social Security payroll taXes m
the stock market. But he also deserves to be challeng~d on the nsks
inherent in his plan, wh ich could leave millions of older Americans
worse off when they retire if their investments fail.
To be sure, Mr. Bush needs to fl esh out the details of his plan.Yet he
is leaving that task to bipartisan negotiations
- an alternative that makes procedural
A look
sense but at the same time deprives the pub·at what
lic of a chance to draw firm concluSions
U.S. 11e111spapers ·about his proposed overhaul.
are saying
The broad outline is clear enough, however. Under the Bush plan, workers could
invest a portion of their payroll taxes- presumably 2 or 3 percent to private stock accounts . ....
Some experts have computed the advantage of a private a cco~nt this
way: For someone in his or her early 30s who earns approxtmately
$32,000 a year and 'invests over a working lifetime, benefits would
reach about $1,400 a month, compared with S1, 100 under the present
system. But those fi gures also assume the market will grow an average
of 8 percent a year during that period - an assumption that nught
well prove disastrous if there were a severe downturn or prolonged
recession.
Nonetheless. some· kind of investment strategy seems essential if the
: system is to remain solvent when the baby boom generation retires ....
. Even Vice President AI Gore, who has denounced the Bush plan a.s too
: rjsky, acknowledges that some kind of cash infusion will be necessary.
: But his plan has its dr~wbacks a.s well.
. .
.
: While he would use the interest saved on paytng down the debt to
; prop up Social Security, his plan involves the use ofi OUs similar to
: those used to disguise the SIZe of budget defiCJ~ dunng the Reagan,
• Bush and Clinton years. In essence, Mr. Gores plan would reqmre
: future generations to pay back th ose IO U s, and the money would
: have to come from general taX revenues....
: • '111e 1\llsa (Okla.l World, on child care:The military way is to
: define the problem, meet it head-on and solv&lt;; it. Maybe that doesn't
; always work the way the military expects it to, but in the case of chtld
: care for its personnel, the effort is a success.
: About l 0 years ago, the Defense Department recognized that the
; child-care system in the military was av.;ful. So, it set out to fix 1t._
Now, a study by the National Women s Law Center says the milttary
; child-care system today is a model for the nation.
: Prior to rhe 1989 Military C hild Care Act, which m;mdated that the
: military implQve child care, the military system somewhat mirrored
' the public programs - high turnover, low pay, poorly tramed staffi,
. long waiting lists and high costs.
: Changes were made. A network of child-care center:' and programs
for care in homes before and after school were established. It tnpled
: the number of child-care slots, required training and enforced health
and safety standards and child-to-staff ratios. More important, it raised
; the pay of caregtvers to $10 an hour, much higher than the average pay
: in the private sector. In addition, it provided subsidies for low-income
. families to guarantee that they receive quality care.
' This program could be dismissed as another big-government spend: ing spree. But those who serve the!" country m the military deserve to
· have their kids taken care of properly.
No less should be expected in the private sector.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday,June 5, the !57th day of2000.There are 209 days
: left in the year.
' Today's Highli~;ht in History:
On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated after
claiming victory in California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.
On this date:
In 1783, Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier publicly demonstrated
their hot-air balloon in a 10-minute flight over Armonay, France.
In 1794, Congress passed th e Neutrality Act, prohibiting Americans
· fiom enlisting in the service of a foreign power.
In 1884, Civil War hero Gen. William T. Sherman refused the
· Republican presidential nomination, saying, " I will not accept if nom. inated and will not serve if elected."
.
· In 1917,about 10 million American men began registering for the
; draft in World War I.
·
· In 1933, the United States went off the gold standard.
In 1940, the World War II Battle of France began.
. In 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall, speaking at Harvard
· University, outlined an aid program for Europe that became known as
the Marshall Plan.
.
ln 1967, war broke out in the Mid~asr as 1srael t:aided Egyptianmil. irary targeL&lt;. Syria,Jordarl and Iraq entered the conflict
. .
: In 1975, Egypt reopened th e Suez Canal to 111ternaoonal shippmg,
; eight years after it was d a.ed because of the 1967 war wrth IsraeL
: In 1976, 11 people died when the Teton Dam m Idaho burst.
. Ten years ago: Auth oriti es m O akland County. Mtch., moved to pre. vent furth er use of Dr, Ja ck Kevorkian's suicide device that Janet
: Adkins had used a day earli er to take her own life.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Disbarment and why it will be 'Clinton's legacy
I intend to visit the Clinton presidential
library when it opens. I will be especially
curious to see a documented list of what he
has done to be the fi rst president in our history to thoroughly distinguish himself from all
others.
Where, for example, will. there be the contempt of court ruling against him by U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright for "undermining the ·integrity of the judicial ,system'"
No other president had one. ·
And in what room will there be anoth er
unprecedented part of his legacy - the recommendation by the Arkansas . Supreme
Court Committee on Professional Conduct
that William Jefferson C linton be the first sitting president to be disbarred' He will likely
be out of office before his appeals are con-.
eluded, but in this, too, he is - as Duke
Ellington used to say of cer tain musicians "beyond category."
Clinton's supporters, a horde of energized
Uriah Heeps, criticized the disbarment recommendation. But they understandably
ignore what the Arkansas State Supreme
Court said in 1998, when it disbarred another attorney: "There is simply no place in the
law for a man or woman who will not tell the
truth even when his interest is involved."
T his further unraveling of the president's
contention that he has been the victim of
relentless persecution for an essentially private
sexual relationship leads me to predict which
books about this modern Job will be of most
value to historians of the Am erican presidency a century from now.
Barely meriting a footnote, I expect, will be
Jeffrey Toobin's widely publicized "A Vast
Conspi racy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President"
(Random House).This N ew Yorker magazfne
reporter and ABC-TV legal analyst concludes
that the brouhaha was all about "a menopausal
man having an affair with a young woman

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
from th e office."
"The ' Huntin g of the President: T he Ten
Year Campaign to Destroy Bill and Hillary
Clinton" (St. Martin's Press) delivers its message right .on the cover. The , authors, Joe
Conason and Gene Lyons, devote many pages
and extensive so urce notes to demonstrate
th at the president - · who is only human like
the rest of us - was done in by an intricate
conspiracy of hi s insatiable enemies.
But there is no substantive analysis in their
book of how Clinton violated the Constituti on as he and his janizaries - these two
authors among them - tried to stave off his
conviction o n the articles of impeachment.
Historians to come will fi nd an extensive
record of C linton's serial contempt for the
Constitution in Richard Posner's" An Affair of
. State: The Investigation, Impeachment and
Trial of President C linton" (Harvard University Press). Posner - chi ef judge of the 7th
.U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, a senior lecturer at the University of C hicago Law School·,
and the author of remarkably, penetrating
books on the law - goes far deeper than
Toobin, Conason and Lyons:
"Clinton engaged in a pattern of criminal
behavior and obsessive public lying, the tendency of w hi ch was to disparage, undermine,
and even subvert the judicial system of the

United States, th e American ideology of th e
rule oflaw, and th e role and office of the pres'ident." To do all of that he engaged in
"obstruction of justice, includin g perjury
when comtnitted in either a civil or a crinlinal proceeding" and "tampering with, or
intimidating witnesses."
The best journalism is a rough draft of history, and future historians will spend con!ii:lerable tim e with "Truth at Any Cost: Ken
Starr and the Unmaking of Bill C linton "
(HarpcrCollins), by Susan Schmidt of Tpe
Washington Post and Michael Weisskopf ' of
Time magazine.
After interviewing more than 150 of those
directly involved - including Starr and 25 ,
members of his staff, alpng with 14 of Clin- ·
ton's lawyers , advisers and ai~ es, 13 officia)' of
the justice Department and the Secret s Jrvice, and many others in the cast of thi s constitutional drama - they have produced the
factual narrative, in cluding abundant source
material, to illuminate Judge Posner's constitutional and other conclusions.
'
Starr himself is not spared for his fa ilu res as
a bumbling prosecutor, ~nd Clinton could ·be
' played in a movie by WC. Fields if this wer~ a
comedy. Clinton, of course, woul d be Micawber in "David Copperfield." .
As Henry Hyde said before the full House
on Dec. 18, 1998: " Impeachable offenses are
those w hi ch demonstrate a fundamental
betrayal of public trust. They suggest the federal official has deliberately failed in his duty
to uph old the Constitution and laws. he was
sworn to uphold."
Future historians will be puzzled as to why
so many Americans and writers of books
allowed themselves to be gull ed by this songand-dance man .

(Nat Hertt'!!J is a 11ationally renowned autlwrity
on the First A metrdtnerlt ar1d the rest of the Bill of
Riglrts.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Maybe the slowdown is the Fed's work,
because consumers know enough about numbers, as in rising interest rates, to consider taking
a breather. But maybe not. For~ full year they
ignored the Fed, as the world's mightiest monetary power ·raised rates six times,and they still
maintain a gut full of confidence.
Maybe the economy is slowing simply dut of
boredom. As economist William Dunkejberg
observes, after all that getting and spending
Americans have an awful lot of stuff and probably feel like chucking half of it.
Anything can be overdone, and after a while
it's no longer fun. Even in the stock market. If
you listened to brokers over the past few weeks
you heard· the same refrain, "There's an 'absence
of buyers."
New cash flowing into mutual funds, which
added up to $2.3::76 trillion during the decade
of the '90s (bringing the total to more than $6
trillion) ~ as been slowing in recent weeks.
Many folks have become fully invested, but you
can bet th at just as many are weary of the stock
market's jolts and wary of it aD.
.
,
A particularly significant fib'llre, released dur- ·
ing the past week by the Commerce Departmerit, showed purchases of goods ·over the
'Internet continued to grow during the first
quarter of the year. The news was gre~ted by
new-age enthusiasts as additional evidence of
progress, as they viewed it.

Rocksprings Raiders
The Rockspring1 Raiders met
recently at the Meigs County
.Museum in Pomeroy with 10
membtrs and one advisor present.
· ' Officers were elected, dues and
projects were discussed. Since the
meeting was an organizational
meeting, no demonstrations or
.reports were-given.
Brooke and .t\ndrew O'Bryant
.

They strained the evidence. While Internet
sales grew to $5.26 billion during the first foLr
months of the year, the total was a mere 1.2 pe,rcent higher than the $5.20 billion in the fiqal
months of 1999.
:
It was hardly sufficient evidence to support :ill
the noise created by Internet promoters, a(ld
hardly the kittd of growth number people h~d
associated with the 1990s. It wa.s only 0.7 P"?'cent of all retail sales.
It sounds like time for a rest. H aving used ~P
all their superlatives. even the stock brok.irs
sound tired and,Jike so many others, might prefer things to slow down so they can take a proper vac.ation.
How long that wili be, as are all such assumptions, is hidden in the mists of the futute.
Nobody foresaw record highs (with only miri!=&gt;r
interruptions) ·Week after week for 500 wee,ks
or so.They didn't see the expansion coming ~~~d
they cannot say w hen the hiatus will end.
But, if yo\l judge from the consumer surveY..
it may not be as long as the Federal R eserve
would like. While those surveys suggest Amencans are slO\ving dowri, they also show that spirits and confidence remain high .
·
'
And more importantly, the preponderdl1ce:of
evidence shows the economy:s health is unusua.lly robust for its age, largely free so far of inOation and the rheumatism that affiicts long
expansions.

..

The Pioneers 4-H Club met
on May 21, 2000 at the home of
Tom and Debbie Drake with 17
members and one advisor present.
It was decided the club would
try to sell 4- H bears; do a comShade Valley 4-H Club
munity service for Senior CitiThe Shade Valley 4-H Club
zens;
and help serve the Chester
met on recently at the home of
Jan Haynes with six members and Alumni,
Tricia Congo demonstrated
four advisors present.
Animal tag-in, project books how to do refinishing while
and club dues were discussed. Nancy Pickens showed how to
Swimming and snacks provided take measurements. Tina Drake
by Ann and Teresa Collins were showed how to sei a table and
enjoyed.
demonstrated proper table manWorking on crafts for Clover- ners.
buds and project books will be
Refreshments were provided
done at the next meeting.,
'
by the Poolers. ,
Wade Collins, News Reporter
The next meeting will be held
this week With Tiffany Hensley
Pioneers 4-H Club
The Pioneers 4-H ·Club met and Tricia Congo to give demonrecently at the Patty Picken's strations.
Erin Gerard and Ashley Life
home with 12 members and one
advisor present.
will provide refreshments.
BuyingT-shirts, serving food ar
Amanda
Yeager,
News
alumni dinners and conununity Reporter
service projects were discussed.
·Nancy Pickens demonstrated
some of the .interesting foods in
the "Global Gournlet" book and
the "Your the Chef' book.
Outdoor sports were enjoyed
and .refreslunen~ were ~erved by
Nancy Pickens and Tricia Congo.
·Plans for the on-goirig year and
a demonstration by Nancy Pickens and 1\:icia Congo will be done
·
at the next meeting,
Amanda . Yeager,
News
. Reporter

I

Overbrook Center will be hosting a
"Meet the Candidates and Community"
picnic on Saturday june 17, 2000 at
12:00 noon to 2:00p.m.
The Public is cordially invited for. an
afternoon of good food, fun and
informational conversation.
Contact Mike Crites for additional information
at (740) 992-6472
"0\?et'bt'ook Centet' A Celebt'ation of Life"

~~

fa

333 Paglt Street

Middleport, Ohio 45160
(7401992-6472

A'Grahd Time·on the Trail

.

In the American presidential eleclion
ofNov. s, 1932,Democrat Frmklin n
· ~ polled ,22,809,638 wtes to
· 15,758,901 for Hetbert Hoover, the

•••
According to "The People's
Almanac." the most ~ in a lllOYie

were the 127 Jolm Barrymore
RepublicanincumbentR~car- · ·bestm.W, on Mary A!ror and Estelle
ried 42 of the 48 states.
Taylor in the 1926 film "Dolt Juan•

•••

The most rain ever recorded in one
minute was 1.5 inches at Barot on the
• Caribbean· island of Guadeloupe on
Nov. 26, 1970.

••••

Lupg cancer mortility, Dtes are 23
times higher fur ·male smokers and 13
times higher for female smokeis than
for those who~ smoked.

Saturday. June 17th
Pine Hills Golf Coune
Pomeroy. Ohio
· Reglstratlol) 8:00 a.m. - Shotgun Start 9:00 a.m.
·
Blind Draw . ·
Registration Fee: $40.00
Includes: Gteen Fees, Cart, Lunch and Five
Entries In Door Prize Drawings
Prlu• ior ToP Three Te=•• Donat.dltyl

'

· First Place - Trussell for Sheriff Committee
Second Place - Pat Story, Candidate for Prosecutor
Third Place - John Fisher, Candidate for County
· Commissioner
Oth- ........ Donated 1tyJ
Closest To Pin - Marlene Harrison, Candidate for
. Clerk of Courts
Longest Drive - Jim Sheets, Candidate for
.
County Commissioner
.
Straightest Drive - Howard Frank, Candidate for
·
.County Treasurer
n .... DoOr ...... Do-ted.
Judy King, Candidate for County Recorder
Rick Crow, Candidate for CQmmon Pleas Court Judge
Eugene Triplett, Candidat'\ for County Engineer
Scramble Sponsored by:
Trussell for Sheriff Committee
. Stephen Carson, Treasurer, 33938 Bas,han Rd.,
Long Bottom, OH
.
·
For More Information Call 949-3235

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on the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail. With 378 holes of world-class
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under the majestic magnolias after a round of golf on the Trail's
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at The Grand-named one the best places in the world to stay by
Conde Nast magazine.
Come experience the Grand Hotel in Alabama-a grand resort on the TraiL
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,,.nd

0

•

MEET ·THE C1\NDID1\ TES

NEWS BRIEFS

•

!:
I.

The K-9 Kids Plus met recently at the Middleport Park with
five members and two advisors
present. Officers were elected,
· days to have meetings were
plapned and papetwQrk was completed.
The group discussed when it
was acceptable to use dog treats
for training. They enjoyed playing
in the park and Amber and Erin
Perkins provided refreshments.
Erin Perkins, News Reporter

..
.'•·

Economic pace leaving Americans weary
BY JoHN CUNNiFF
NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe a slowdown is
really what's called for. You have heard the Federal Reserve talk about that for at least year, but
there are other signs as well that the past
decade's pace has left Americans tired.
All those records. In the 199Qs they bought
6.8 million new houses and 38. 1 million exist- .
ing units, and they paid record-high prices for
them.They boosted car and small truck buying
to a record· of almost 17 million vehicles in
1999, and of course they pushed the stock matkets higher than ever before.
They built some of the wodd's biggest companies in a mere fraction! of the time it took to
build companies such as U.S. Steel and AT&amp;T,
and they took over ownership through massive
p'urchas~s of mutual funds and stocks.
they turned a theoretical information age
into a reality seemingly in a blink, raised living
standards. cut ca.ts, reduced unemployment to
what some believe is the irreducible minimum ,
raised gross domestic product every year since
1991 (after adjusting 'for inflation) artd, of all
things, paid enough raxes to end budget.deficits
for the first time in three decades.
They earned steadily rising wages, donated
record amounts to charity, spent with abandon
and borrowed as if the next year always would
be better, and they were right. And they never
seemed to tire - until now.

K -9 Kids Plus

and Chris Parker served refreshments, The next meeting will be
held at the Meigs County Museum.
Jennifer Grady, N ews Reporter

•

,,

•

'

�•

. ~Th_e_D_a~t'ly~S_en_ti_ne_I________________()_~illictll

Page A~

'Esta5risfw{ in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74o-992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

--

-

GfA~tFR.

MAKIN6SO~

stahler@lfuse.net

General Manager

,.

HELEN THOMAS
IS REAll'1
GONE.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Dear Readers: I have just read an
: exceUent book that will be especi;ally
: valuable to the current crop of coUege
: gnduates now embarking on careeq, or
· struggling with what career path to· fol: low. Maria Shriver is the author. and her
· book is ·loaded with wisdom and wit. It is
also a fascinating overview of her own
career in television and what life is like
being married to Arnold Schwarzenegger,
the Austrian-born bodybuilder, actor,
mega-successful businessman and father of
t~eir four children.
You will be startled 1by Maria's candor,
boggled by her energy, and charmed by
her humility.The title of the book is "Ten
Things I Wish I'd Known - Before I
Went Out into the Real World." The publisher is Warner Books. The price is $19.95
(Canada $27.95) . P.S.: Better hu,rry and
get your copy, because this book is going
. to seU like hot cakes.
Dear Ann Landers: Thank you for

... JUST

Clla!UWIMll'· toOl'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

:. ~T_h_e_D_a_il~y_S_e_n_ti_ne_l____________ll1f_·~~~~~~~--------------~M~·~~~Pa~.~~!~~~.z~~~!
Ann addresses (tasteless' wedding ceremonies

Monday, June 5, 1000

====~=---------~--------~

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

•

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

...

Unen to tlt 11 Miror art w~tfcoml!. They .fhou/4 lu l1ss th11n JOO words. AU lt!f"' ll.rf nb}ttl
10 1dltlng (.,td ,.,,st bt tiRIItd a11d inrlud• addren and trd~phon11 m1m1Hr. No ~~Jiflt114111tllln wiU
be pubiUh11d. Utters should be in good 14UIII, addrts.dng issues, niH pllnUIIal~tles.
.
Tilt opinior16 .uprru11d in drt colllmlf bdow aN th11 constiiSIIS of the Oltw V•ll•y PubllllulfJ
Co. 'I tditorial bo.anl, Mnl11n odtr,.,.,iu rwtrd.

NATIONAL VIEWS

..

It works
Bush deserves some credit
for Social Security proposal

-

Ann
Landers
--------

ADVICE
saying in your column that having a, large,
faney wedding for a third or fourth marriage is in poor taste. Here is another topic
I wish you would address: Pregnant
Brides.
Recently, a socially prominent woman
in our city put on a huge wedding for her
daughter, who was in her eighth month of
pregnancy. No attempt was made to hide
her condition. The bride looked as .if she
might deliver any minute. What is wrong
with these people? I would appreciate

· your views.- No Name, No City, Please
When people regain their sanity and
Dear No Name: (have no comment. put religion back into marriage, it will be
l'mjust happy when a pregnant bride gets a better day for all of us. - Disgusted in
married. Too many of them don't, The Cumberland, Md.
next letter may be of interest to you:
Dear Cumberland: Very few men or
Dear Ann Landen: I was pleased women of the cloth will officiate at wed·when I read in a recent column of yours dings that are "spec.tator events:' A couple
· that it is in po 0 r taste to have a huge of slcy--divers wrote to me a while back,
church wedding for a third or fourth mar- and said they wanted to be married in a
riage. I can go one step further. In last plane, and then, parachute out together,
Sunday's bridal section of the C'!mber- holding hands. They asked if I could help
land, Md., Times-News, there was an . them find a minister who would do the
action photo in a church of a bride and service. They said they "weren;t very religroom wearing fuU ,wedding regalia. The · gious:' and any kind of minister would be
bride was carrying their child down the OK with them. I told them I didn't know
aisle.
any mirusters "who weren't very reliChurch weddings used to be religious gious," and to go to city hall.
ceremonies. Now, they are nothing more
Dear Ann Landers: I read the letter
than high-visibility spcial events. Of from the woman whose husband would
course, it is commendable that couples hang up on callers who did not identifY
who have children out of wedlock wish to themselves. You said the proper response
get married, but why don 't they go to the in such circumstances is, "May I tell her
courthouse to legalize their union?
who is calling?"

Years ago, when I headed a small ad
agency, a client phoned my office. and
without saying who he was, asked to
speak to the boss. The receptionist properly asked, "May I teD him who is calling?"
The diller replied, "Sure!"
After that, he was known around 'the
office as Mr. Sure. - Still Laughing in
New Hampshire
Dear N :H.: I laughed, too. Thanks for
a good closer for a Monday column.
Forget to save some of your favorite
Ann Landers columns? "Nuggets and
Doozies" is the answer. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size envelope and
a check or money order for $5.25 (this&lt;
includes postage and handling) to:
Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers, P.Q. Box
11562, Chicago, IU. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $6.25.) To find out more ·
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web
page at wi.Vw.crearors.com.

--

MEIGS COUNTY 4-H NEWS
Meigs County Better Liveltock Dairy 4-H Club
The Meigs County Better
Livestock ' Dairy 4-H Club met
recently at the home of advisor
Ed Holter, with 13 members, two
Cloverbuds and two advisors present.
New officers were elected and
it was decided to keep the rule
that the privilege to show at the
fairis lost if too many meetings ,
are missed.The apple sale was discusse!l.
The . club provided refreshments.
Carson E. Yost, News Reporter

• Albany (N.Y.l nmes Union,"" Texas Gov. George Bush5 Social
Security plan: Texas Gov. George W Bush, the presumptive GOP nominee for president, deserves a sha re of support for his proposal to allow
individuals to invest a portion of. their Social Security payroll taXes m
the stock market. But he also deserves to be challeng~d on the nsks
inherent in his plan, wh ich could leave millions of older Americans
worse off when they retire if their investments fail.
To be sure, Mr. Bush needs to fl esh out the details of his plan.Yet he
is leaving that task to bipartisan negotiations
- an alternative that makes procedural
A look
sense but at the same time deprives the pub·at what
lic of a chance to draw firm concluSions
U.S. 11e111spapers ·about his proposed overhaul.
are saying
The broad outline is clear enough, however. Under the Bush plan, workers could
invest a portion of their payroll taxes- presumably 2 or 3 percent to private stock accounts . ....
Some experts have computed the advantage of a private a cco~nt this
way: For someone in his or her early 30s who earns approxtmately
$32,000 a year and 'invests over a working lifetime, benefits would
reach about $1,400 a month, compared with S1, 100 under the present
system. But those fi gures also assume the market will grow an average
of 8 percent a year during that period - an assumption that nught
well prove disastrous if there were a severe downturn or prolonged
recession.
Nonetheless. some· kind of investment strategy seems essential if the
: system is to remain solvent when the baby boom generation retires ....
. Even Vice President AI Gore, who has denounced the Bush plan a.s too
: rjsky, acknowledges that some kind of cash infusion will be necessary.
: But his plan has its dr~wbacks a.s well.
. .
.
: While he would use the interest saved on paytng down the debt to
; prop up Social Security, his plan involves the use ofi OUs similar to
: those used to disguise the SIZe of budget defiCJ~ dunng the Reagan,
• Bush and Clinton years. In essence, Mr. Gores plan would reqmre
: future generations to pay back th ose IO U s, and the money would
: have to come from general taX revenues....
: • '111e 1\llsa (Okla.l World, on child care:The military way is to
: define the problem, meet it head-on and solv&lt;; it. Maybe that doesn't
; always work the way the military expects it to, but in the case of chtld
: care for its personnel, the effort is a success.
: About l 0 years ago, the Defense Department recognized that the
; child-care system in the military was av.;ful. So, it set out to fix 1t._
Now, a study by the National Women s Law Center says the milttary
; child-care system today is a model for the nation.
: Prior to rhe 1989 Military C hild Care Act, which m;mdated that the
: military implQve child care, the military system somewhat mirrored
' the public programs - high turnover, low pay, poorly tramed staffi,
. long waiting lists and high costs.
: Changes were made. A network of child-care center:' and programs
for care in homes before and after school were established. It tnpled
: the number of child-care slots, required training and enforced health
and safety standards and child-to-staff ratios. More important, it raised
; the pay of caregtvers to $10 an hour, much higher than the average pay
: in the private sector. In addition, it provided subsidies for low-income
. families to guarantee that they receive quality care.
' This program could be dismissed as another big-government spend: ing spree. But those who serve the!" country m the military deserve to
· have their kids taken care of properly.
No less should be expected in the private sector.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday,June 5, the !57th day of2000.There are 209 days
: left in the year.
' Today's Highli~;ht in History:
On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated after
claiming victory in California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.
On this date:
In 1783, Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier publicly demonstrated
their hot-air balloon in a 10-minute flight over Armonay, France.
In 1794, Congress passed th e Neutrality Act, prohibiting Americans
· fiom enlisting in the service of a foreign power.
In 1884, Civil War hero Gen. William T. Sherman refused the
· Republican presidential nomination, saying, " I will not accept if nom. inated and will not serve if elected."
.
· In 1917,about 10 million American men began registering for the
; draft in World War I.
·
· In 1933, the United States went off the gold standard.
In 1940, the World War II Battle of France began.
. In 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall, speaking at Harvard
· University, outlined an aid program for Europe that became known as
the Marshall Plan.
.
ln 1967, war broke out in the Mid~asr as 1srael t:aided Egyptianmil. irary targeL&lt;. Syria,Jordarl and Iraq entered the conflict
. .
: In 1975, Egypt reopened th e Suez Canal to 111ternaoonal shippmg,
; eight years after it was d a.ed because of the 1967 war wrth IsraeL
: In 1976, 11 people died when the Teton Dam m Idaho burst.
. Ten years ago: Auth oriti es m O akland County. Mtch., moved to pre. vent furth er use of Dr, Ja ck Kevorkian's suicide device that Janet
: Adkins had used a day earli er to take her own life.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Disbarment and why it will be 'Clinton's legacy
I intend to visit the Clinton presidential
library when it opens. I will be especially
curious to see a documented list of what he
has done to be the fi rst president in our history to thoroughly distinguish himself from all
others.
Where, for example, will. there be the contempt of court ruling against him by U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright for "undermining the ·integrity of the judicial ,system'"
No other president had one. ·
And in what room will there be anoth er
unprecedented part of his legacy - the recommendation by the Arkansas . Supreme
Court Committee on Professional Conduct
that William Jefferson C linton be the first sitting president to be disbarred' He will likely
be out of office before his appeals are con-.
eluded, but in this, too, he is - as Duke
Ellington used to say of cer tain musicians "beyond category."
Clinton's supporters, a horde of energized
Uriah Heeps, criticized the disbarment recommendation. But they understandably
ignore what the Arkansas State Supreme
Court said in 1998, when it disbarred another attorney: "There is simply no place in the
law for a man or woman who will not tell the
truth even when his interest is involved."
T his further unraveling of the president's
contention that he has been the victim of
relentless persecution for an essentially private
sexual relationship leads me to predict which
books about this modern Job will be of most
value to historians of the Am erican presidency a century from now.
Barely meriting a footnote, I expect, will be
Jeffrey Toobin's widely publicized "A Vast
Conspi racy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President"
(Random House).This N ew Yorker magazfne
reporter and ABC-TV legal analyst concludes
that the brouhaha was all about "a menopausal
man having an affair with a young woman

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
from th e office."
"The ' Huntin g of the President: T he Ten
Year Campaign to Destroy Bill and Hillary
Clinton" (St. Martin's Press) delivers its message right .on the cover. The , authors, Joe
Conason and Gene Lyons, devote many pages
and extensive so urce notes to demonstrate
th at the president - · who is only human like
the rest of us - was done in by an intricate
conspiracy of hi s insatiable enemies.
But there is no substantive analysis in their
book of how Clinton violated the Constituti on as he and his janizaries - these two
authors among them - tried to stave off his
conviction o n the articles of impeachment.
Historians to come will fi nd an extensive
record of C linton's serial contempt for the
Constitution in Richard Posner's" An Affair of
. State: The Investigation, Impeachment and
Trial of President C linton" (Harvard University Press). Posner - chi ef judge of the 7th
.U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, a senior lecturer at the University of C hicago Law School·,
and the author of remarkably, penetrating
books on the law - goes far deeper than
Toobin, Conason and Lyons:
"Clinton engaged in a pattern of criminal
behavior and obsessive public lying, the tendency of w hi ch was to disparage, undermine,
and even subvert the judicial system of the

United States, th e American ideology of th e
rule oflaw, and th e role and office of the pres'ident." To do all of that he engaged in
"obstruction of justice, includin g perjury
when comtnitted in either a civil or a crinlinal proceeding" and "tampering with, or
intimidating witnesses."
The best journalism is a rough draft of history, and future historians will spend con!ii:lerable tim e with "Truth at Any Cost: Ken
Starr and the Unmaking of Bill C linton "
(HarpcrCollins), by Susan Schmidt of Tpe
Washington Post and Michael Weisskopf ' of
Time magazine.
After interviewing more than 150 of those
directly involved - including Starr and 25 ,
members of his staff, alpng with 14 of Clin- ·
ton's lawyers , advisers and ai~ es, 13 officia)' of
the justice Department and the Secret s Jrvice, and many others in the cast of thi s constitutional drama - they have produced the
factual narrative, in cluding abundant source
material, to illuminate Judge Posner's constitutional and other conclusions.
'
Starr himself is not spared for his fa ilu res as
a bumbling prosecutor, ~nd Clinton could ·be
' played in a movie by WC. Fields if this wer~ a
comedy. Clinton, of course, woul d be Micawber in "David Copperfield." .
As Henry Hyde said before the full House
on Dec. 18, 1998: " Impeachable offenses are
those w hi ch demonstrate a fundamental
betrayal of public trust. They suggest the federal official has deliberately failed in his duty
to uph old the Constitution and laws. he was
sworn to uphold."
Future historians will be puzzled as to why
so many Americans and writers of books
allowed themselves to be gull ed by this songand-dance man .

(Nat Hertt'!!J is a 11ationally renowned autlwrity
on the First A metrdtnerlt ar1d the rest of the Bill of
Riglrts.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Maybe the slowdown is the Fed's work,
because consumers know enough about numbers, as in rising interest rates, to consider taking
a breather. But maybe not. For~ full year they
ignored the Fed, as the world's mightiest monetary power ·raised rates six times,and they still
maintain a gut full of confidence.
Maybe the economy is slowing simply dut of
boredom. As economist William Dunkejberg
observes, after all that getting and spending
Americans have an awful lot of stuff and probably feel like chucking half of it.
Anything can be overdone, and after a while
it's no longer fun. Even in the stock market. If
you listened to brokers over the past few weeks
you heard· the same refrain, "There's an 'absence
of buyers."
New cash flowing into mutual funds, which
added up to $2.3::76 trillion during the decade
of the '90s (bringing the total to more than $6
trillion) ~ as been slowing in recent weeks.
Many folks have become fully invested, but you
can bet th at just as many are weary of the stock
market's jolts and wary of it aD.
.
,
A particularly significant fib'llre, released dur- ·
ing the past week by the Commerce Departmerit, showed purchases of goods ·over the
'Internet continued to grow during the first
quarter of the year. The news was gre~ted by
new-age enthusiasts as additional evidence of
progress, as they viewed it.

Rocksprings Raiders
The Rockspring1 Raiders met
recently at the Meigs County
.Museum in Pomeroy with 10
membtrs and one advisor present.
· ' Officers were elected, dues and
projects were discussed. Since the
meeting was an organizational
meeting, no demonstrations or
.reports were-given.
Brooke and .t\ndrew O'Bryant
.

They strained the evidence. While Internet
sales grew to $5.26 billion during the first foLr
months of the year, the total was a mere 1.2 pe,rcent higher than the $5.20 billion in the fiqal
months of 1999.
:
It was hardly sufficient evidence to support :ill
the noise created by Internet promoters, a(ld
hardly the kittd of growth number people h~d
associated with the 1990s. It wa.s only 0.7 P"?'cent of all retail sales.
It sounds like time for a rest. H aving used ~P
all their superlatives. even the stock brok.irs
sound tired and,Jike so many others, might prefer things to slow down so they can take a proper vac.ation.
How long that wili be, as are all such assumptions, is hidden in the mists of the futute.
Nobody foresaw record highs (with only miri!=&gt;r
interruptions) ·Week after week for 500 wee,ks
or so.They didn't see the expansion coming ~~~d
they cannot say w hen the hiatus will end.
But, if yo\l judge from the consumer surveY..
it may not be as long as the Federal R eserve
would like. While those surveys suggest Amencans are slO\ving dowri, they also show that spirits and confidence remain high .
·
'
And more importantly, the preponderdl1ce:of
evidence shows the economy:s health is unusua.lly robust for its age, largely free so far of inOation and the rheumatism that affiicts long
expansions.

..

The Pioneers 4-H Club met
on May 21, 2000 at the home of
Tom and Debbie Drake with 17
members and one advisor present.
It was decided the club would
try to sell 4- H bears; do a comShade Valley 4-H Club
munity service for Senior CitiThe Shade Valley 4-H Club
zens;
and help serve the Chester
met on recently at the home of
Jan Haynes with six members and Alumni,
Tricia Congo demonstrated
four advisors present.
Animal tag-in, project books how to do refinishing while
and club dues were discussed. Nancy Pickens showed how to
Swimming and snacks provided take measurements. Tina Drake
by Ann and Teresa Collins were showed how to sei a table and
enjoyed.
demonstrated proper table manWorking on crafts for Clover- ners.
buds and project books will be
Refreshments were provided
done at the next meeting.,
'
by the Poolers. ,
Wade Collins, News Reporter
The next meeting will be held
this week With Tiffany Hensley
Pioneers 4-H Club
The Pioneers 4-H ·Club met and Tricia Congo to give demonrecently at the Patty Picken's strations.
Erin Gerard and Ashley Life
home with 12 members and one
advisor present.
will provide refreshments.
BuyingT-shirts, serving food ar
Amanda
Yeager,
News
alumni dinners and conununity Reporter
service projects were discussed.
·Nancy Pickens demonstrated
some of the .interesting foods in
the "Global Gournlet" book and
the "Your the Chef' book.
Outdoor sports were enjoyed
and .refreslunen~ were ~erved by
Nancy Pickens and Tricia Congo.
·Plans for the on-goirig year and
a demonstration by Nancy Pickens and 1\:icia Congo will be done
·
at the next meeting,
Amanda . Yeager,
News
. Reporter

I

Overbrook Center will be hosting a
"Meet the Candidates and Community"
picnic on Saturday june 17, 2000 at
12:00 noon to 2:00p.m.
The Public is cordially invited for. an
afternoon of good food, fun and
informational conversation.
Contact Mike Crites for additional information
at (740) 992-6472
"0\?et'bt'ook Centet' A Celebt'ation of Life"

~~

fa

333 Paglt Street

Middleport, Ohio 45160
(7401992-6472

A'Grahd Time·on the Trail

.

In the American presidential eleclion
ofNov. s, 1932,Democrat Frmklin n
· ~ polled ,22,809,638 wtes to
· 15,758,901 for Hetbert Hoover, the

•••
According to "The People's
Almanac." the most ~ in a lllOYie

were the 127 Jolm Barrymore
RepublicanincumbentR~car- · ·bestm.W, on Mary A!ror and Estelle
ried 42 of the 48 states.
Taylor in the 1926 film "Dolt Juan•

•••

The most rain ever recorded in one
minute was 1.5 inches at Barot on the
• Caribbean· island of Guadeloupe on
Nov. 26, 1970.

••••

Lupg cancer mortility, Dtes are 23
times higher fur ·male smokers and 13
times higher for female smokeis than
for those who~ smoked.

Saturday. June 17th
Pine Hills Golf Coune
Pomeroy. Ohio
· Reglstratlol) 8:00 a.m. - Shotgun Start 9:00 a.m.
·
Blind Draw . ·
Registration Fee: $40.00
Includes: Gteen Fees, Cart, Lunch and Five
Entries In Door Prize Drawings
Prlu• ior ToP Three Te=•• Donat.dltyl

'

· First Place - Trussell for Sheriff Committee
Second Place - Pat Story, Candidate for Prosecutor
Third Place - John Fisher, Candidate for County
· Commissioner
Oth- ........ Donated 1tyJ
Closest To Pin - Marlene Harrison, Candidate for
. Clerk of Courts
Longest Drive - Jim Sheets, Candidate for
.
County Commissioner
.
Straightest Drive - Howard Frank, Candidate for
·
.County Treasurer
n .... DoOr ...... Do-ted.
Judy King, Candidate for County Recorder
Rick Crow, Candidate for CQmmon Pleas Court Judge
Eugene Triplett, Candidat'\ for County Engineer
Scramble Sponsored by:
Trussell for Sheriff Committee
. Stephen Carson, Treasurer, 33938 Bas,han Rd.,
Long Bottom, OH
.
·
For More Information Call 949-3235

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on the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail. With 378 holes of world-class
golf'at eight different sites, the Trail is, according to The New York
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Now you can enjoy fine dining,.tennis, sailing or sipping juleps
under the majestic magnolias after a round of golf on the Trail's
Magnolia Grove course in nearby Mobile, or one of the resort courses
at The Grand-named one the best places in the world to stay by
Conde Nast magazine.
Come experience the Grand Hotel in Alabama-a grand resort on the TraiL
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,,.nd

0

•

MEET ·THE C1\NDID1\ TES

NEWS BRIEFS

•

!:
I.

The K-9 Kids Plus met recently at the Middleport Park with
five members and two advisors
present. Officers were elected,
· days to have meetings were
plapned and papetwQrk was completed.
The group discussed when it
was acceptable to use dog treats
for training. They enjoyed playing
in the park and Amber and Erin
Perkins provided refreshments.
Erin Perkins, News Reporter

..
.'•·

Economic pace leaving Americans weary
BY JoHN CUNNiFF
NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe a slowdown is
really what's called for. You have heard the Federal Reserve talk about that for at least year, but
there are other signs as well that the past
decade's pace has left Americans tired.
All those records. In the 199Qs they bought
6.8 million new houses and 38. 1 million exist- .
ing units, and they paid record-high prices for
them.They boosted car and small truck buying
to a record· of almost 17 million vehicles in
1999, and of course they pushed the stock matkets higher than ever before.
They built some of the wodd's biggest companies in a mere fraction! of the time it took to
build companies such as U.S. Steel and AT&amp;T,
and they took over ownership through massive
p'urchas~s of mutual funds and stocks.
they turned a theoretical information age
into a reality seemingly in a blink, raised living
standards. cut ca.ts, reduced unemployment to
what some believe is the irreducible minimum ,
raised gross domestic product every year since
1991 (after adjusting 'for inflation) artd, of all
things, paid enough raxes to end budget.deficits
for the first time in three decades.
They earned steadily rising wages, donated
record amounts to charity, spent with abandon
and borrowed as if the next year always would
be better, and they were right. And they never
seemed to tire - until now.

K -9 Kids Plus

and Chris Parker served refreshments, The next meeting will be
held at the Meigs County Museum.
Jennifer Grady, N ews Reporter

•

,,

•

'

�'•
Monday, June 5, 2000

Pomeroy,.Middleport, Ohio

Page AS • The Dally SenUnel

SPECIAL· RECOGNITION - Left to right, John Bentz, who had all As
and Ryan Amberger and Myca Michael who have been on the A/B
honor roll all six years, were given special recognition at the Syracuse Elementary School awards program. They are pictured with
John Thorne of Philip Sporn Plant, the school's partner in education.
Not pictures but also on the A/B honor roll all six times was Chelsia
Smith.

HONOR ROLL ALL YEAR - These Syracuse Elementary School students made the honor roll all four nine-weeks' grading periods. They
were given special recognition by AEP.Phllip Sporn Plant representative by Jo~n Thorne, seated front right during an awards ceremon(.

Ashley Teaford, fifth grade; and John Bentz, also .honored for all six
years of having straight As , Ryan Amberger, Myca Mi chael,
Chelsea Smith, also honored for A/B honor all six years, sixth
grade.
Students who was recognized for having perfect attendance for
the 1999-2000 school year were· Chris Cogar of the fifth grade;
Joseph Nottingham and Kevin Hill, who was also honored for 3
st~aight years perfect attendance, sixth grade.
During the school year the Philip Sporn plant honored several
students for their academic efforts. Each nine weeks a student was
recognized from each class for being the hardest worker in a particular subject.
Selected for the first nine - week grading period were, first
through sixth, Justin Jacks, Colby Roseberry Tina Prunry, Ashley
Robie, Samantha Gray and Chelsea Smith, all reading. Special
awards went to LD/DH Eric W(lson, mathematics; and special
recognition ·to Bobby Eblin, Bradley Patterson, art; Jenny Warner, John Bentz, physical education; and Jenny Warner, music.
Second nine week honorees were AsWey Runyon, Judd Burke
Bradley Brown and Corey Brinager, all mathematics; AsWey Ashworth and Chris M&lt;m, science; LH/ DH. Bobby Eblin, language
arts; with special recognition to Chris Moss and Jacob Hunter,
art; Patrick Johnson and Mallory Hill, physical edUcation; and
Nikiea Arnott, music.
Third nine week grading period: Jessica Riffie, Jenn Kautz,
Andrew Young, reading; Stephanie Cun~ff. science; Laura Runyon, social studies; Nikiea Arnott, mathe.tlatics; LD/DH, Eric Wilson, science: ·and special A.J. Simpson and Caidin Nease, art; Trenton Roseberry and AsWey Robie, physical education.
The fourth grading p,eriod students honored were Michael
l'reeman mathematics; Ellie Dudding, Dustyn Johnson, and Jessica Durham, social studies; Christopher Cogar, mathematics; Linda
Eddy, social studies; LD/DH: Bobby Eblin, social studies. Special
recognition went to Nathan McClure and Chance Collins, art;
Allie Rees, Weston Roberts, physical education, and Linda Eddy
and Tiffariy Willis, music.
·
Year-end awards to the students who worked the hardest overall for the entire year were presented to Jessica Riffie,Justin Wandling, Bradley Brown, Tyler Circle, Angela Young, Nikiea Arnott,
Kyle Kinnan
The AEP-Philip Sporn Plant also has three other Partnership
Schools Mason Elementary, Mason, W.Va.; Ravenswood Grade
School, Ravenswood, W.Va.; and Green Elementary, Gallipolis.

AEP presents aw~uds
SYRACUSE Representatives of the American Electric
Power Philip Sport . Plant, joined with the Syracuse Elementary
School to honor studen ts on their achievements during the 19902000 school year.
AEP is a partner in education with the school. John Thorne,
technician, an d Sa m Hawley, senibr plant clerk, assisted in presenting awards to t he studen'ts.
Students who was recognized for being on the honor roll for
the entire year were: Ellie Dudding, Ashley Freeman, Victoria
Freeman,James Hart, Daniel Imboden, Breanna Taylor, Catherine
Woods , second grade; Zachary Ash, Merri Collins, Megan Gray,
Alex Hawley, Emma Hunter, Chelsea Pape, Samantha Patterson,
Weston Robe~ts. Jaime Warner, third grade; Morgan Brown,
Lindsey Buzzard, Heather Cundiff; Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah Eldabaja , Trenton Roseberry, fourth grade; Nicholas Buck, Chance
Collins, Olivia Dudding. Tyler Harkness, Amber Hill, Mallory
Hill, Jacob Hunter, Nathan McClure, Adam Phillips, Allie Rees,

'

'

Birth announced
PO ~ROY - Mendi and Rusty Haning of Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy, annout;~ce the birth of a daughter, Elizabeth
Dawn Haning, on Friday, May 26 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
-

•••

POMEROY -The 110th annual Memorial Day· celebration at
the Burlingham Cemetery was attended by nearly a hundred area
·
residents.
The Rev. K~ith Kapple of Marietta was the speaker with music
being provided by Junior and Rita White, Denver Rice Bob
White, and Coleen Brickles.
The "good neighbor" award was presented to Bob White who
has been activt in 1e~eral -f!lnd-raising projects for local families.
Roses were p~esented to the oldest and the youngest women
attending and cups and caps went to the oldest and youngest men
there.
"· · ~
Participating in the cemetery ceremony was the honor guard
from Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion.

Page 81
Monday.JuneS.lOOO

MONDAY, June 5
LETART Letart Township Trustees, Monday, 5 p. m.
at the office building.'
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30 p. m ., township office on
Joppa Rd.
RACINE Racine Vil lage Council, 7:30 p. m. ,
municipal building.
RACINE -Racine Chaptel' 134, Order of Eastern
Star, regular meeting on
Monday
at
7:30
p. m .
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting .
. RACINE Vacation
Dible School's Road Rally
2000 "In The Race With
Jesus" , will be held through
Friday, 9:30-noon, at the
First Baptist Church 1n
Racine .
MIDDLEPORT VBS,
Bradford Church of Christ,
through Friday from 9 to
11:30 .a.m. at the church . All
children- in the community,
pre-school through teens, are
invited. "SanZone Discovery
Center" will be the theme .
POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Central
Committee, to appoini Clerk
of Courts, 7:30 p.m., · Meigs
. County Courthouse.
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30 p.m. Syracuse ' Village
hall.

Memorial Day services at Burlingham

MIDDLEPORT
Mid.dleport Community Associa~
cion,
8 :30 a.m.. Peopl'e:s
Bank .
POMEROY
Meigs
County Heath Department,
immunization clinic, Tuesday.
1 to 7 p.m . Children to be
accompanied
by
p arent /g uardian . Shot records
to be taken .
POMEROY
Eagles
Auxiliary meeting, Tuesday,
7 :30 p.m . at the h~ll.
CHESTER
Chester
Shade Histori cal AssociatiQn,
meeting, Tuesday, 7 :30p.m : at
the
Chester
courthouse.
Chester Shade Days and
other activities will be dii cussed.

•••

FRIDAY, June 9
POMEROY Widows
Fellowship will meet in
Chester Park for a pot luck
picnic. Those attending are
asked to bring a covered dish
and table service. In case of
rain, the event will take place
at the Church of Christ,
Middleport,

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
promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed
· a specific number of
days.

Be S1nart •••
I;
~~
store.
~
Don't waste your time

.

. .·

at the local Inconvenience
~
~sJlgbt INCQNVENENCE)·
Just ltop by your.,.. Smoker Friendly Store for the

fastest and friendliest.service for all your tobacco needs.
.
No LotterY- Dell-::'or FUel Pump lines to wait ln.
(We Promise)
We'D get you in and out quickly and for a lot less, too.

SOCIAL SECURITY
MORE LOCAL NEWS.
be . drawn down to pay benefits until the funds are MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Sodal Security
exhausted in 2037.
Subscribe todDy.
In its 60th report to Congress, the Trustees also
992-2156
solvent until 203 7
reported the folloWing:
BY VALREA THOMPSON
MANAGER SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE

The Social Securiry Board of Trustees' annual
report reveals that the long-range financial picture
of Social Securiry's programs has improved since last
year.. Specifically, the Board announced that Social
Securiry's trust fund assets will not be depleted 'until
2037.
The Trustees urged bipartisan legislative action to
restore the long-term balance to Social Security.
While the news is positive, we must not delude
ourselves. with wishful thinking. The Social Security Trust Funds simply will not fix ·themselves. Our
strong ecl!nomy gives us a window of opportunity
to strengthen Social Securiry for future generations
of workers.
The annual report also indicates that in 2015,
trust fund expenditures will begin to exceed tax
revenues. Beginning in 2025, trust funds assets will

• Tbe Old-Age and Survivors and Disabiliry
Insurance Trust Funds paid benefits amounting to .
$385.8 billion in 1999, and there were 44.6 million
beneficiaries on the rolls at the end of 1999.
• In 1999 an estimated 152 million people worked
in jobs covered by Social Securiry.
• Administrative expenses were $3.3 billion in
1999, or about O.'J percent of benefit payments for
the year.

•

The league screened about
64,000 people over an 18year period and found that
the incidence of hearing
loss had increased from 15
percent to 60 percent in
all age groups.
I

skis; increased aircraft, snowmobiles, noisy toys and even loud
health clubs, we are all at risk!'
Another survey by the league,
taken last year during International Noise Awareness Day, sug-gests that noises from vehicles of
all types are the most disturbing
to the 647 respondents, most
{84.4 · percent) of whom are
Americans.
Motorcycles are the second·
worst offenders, they said, followed by airplanes or helicopters.
Big annoyances to those living .in
cities are bars, nightclubs and
other recreational sites.

"The range of noises to which
people are exposed is wide and
clearly speaks to the pervasiveness of noise pollution," Nadler
.says. "When" noise interferes with
. sleep, talking on the telephone,
work and study, qualiry of life is
affected. A life intruded •on by
repeated noises is certainly not a
life of pleasure and contentment."
The good news in the survey,
she says, is that more people 40 percent of the respondents .in
contrast to 5 to 10 percent in
previous studies - say they have
complained to authorities about
noise. The bad .news is that only
20 percent say that their complaints were acted on.
Nadler points out that noiseinduced hearing loss, though preventable, is permanent. It's estimated that 28 million Americans
suffer from hearing loss, making
1t the number one disabiliry in
the United States.

HrGffiiGHTS ·

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
photographs of local kids • @lies
new~om to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is included.
Complete the form below and
enclose a sna,shot or wallet sized
pictUre plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph: I more than one 'Child
is m tbe _p1cture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE
PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)
PICTUREI IIUIT IIIII 11 FRI.A'I
JUIIIII, 1100. PICTURII CAll II
PICIEt UP AnER JUl1 IOTII, 1100

Send to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r---------~-----· ------------·-··-·-·-··-·--·-··-·-·- ·--·-

1 Child's Name(s) &amp; Age(s): --"!- - - ' - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
1 Parent's N a m e : - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City &amp; State:
.
· ·
.
1
-THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE AD-

Rocker the Terrible

strikes again
AT LANTA (AP) Braves
reliever John Rocker had a confrontation with the Sports Illustrated reporter who wrote . the
story in which Rocker made
o~ensive comments about gays,
mmorities, .inunigrants and his
own teammates.
The reporter, Jeff Pearlman, said
Rocker threatened him in a service tunnel beneath Turner Field
about two hours before Ailarita's
game against the New York Yankees, though . there was no physical contact between the two.
Rocker also attempted to get
Pearlman banned from the clubhouse.

•i

Redlegs
sweep Twins

UNDATED
(AP)
Louisiana-Lafayette and San Jose
State advanced to the College
World Series for the first time.
Defending national champion
Miami was eliminated in the
best-of-three super regionals by
in-state rival Florida ·State. Also
headed to Omaha, Neb., are Stanford , C lemson , Louisiana State,
Southern California and Texas.

PGA: Scherrer wins

Kemper Open
POTOMAC, Md.!AP) -Tom
Scherrer became th'i ninth firsttime winner at the Kemper
Open, closing with a 4-under-par
67 for a 13-under 271 total and a
two-stroke victory.
Steve Lowery, the leader or coleader after each of the first three
.. rou'fios~ shot :1'71 and'tiedfoi'
ond with Justin Leonard (69),
Greg Chalmers (68), Kazu hiko
Hosokawa (66) and Franklin
Langham (70).

sec-

· Chicago WMe Sox (Baldwin 8-1)
at Cincinnati (Parris 2-7), 7:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Burba 5-1) at Milwaukee (D'Amico 2-3), 8 :05p.m.
N.Y Yankees (Mendoza 5-3) at
Montreal (Hermanson · 5-3), 7 :05
p.m.
Boston (Schourek 2-5) at Florida
(Cornelius 0-1 ), 7:05 p.m.
· Detroit (Miicki 2-6) at Pittsburgh
(Cordova 3-4), 7:05p.m·.
Baltimore (Mussina 2-6) at N.Y.
Mats (Hampton 6-4), 7:10p.m.
Tampa Bay (Liqle 0-1) at Philadelphia (Ashby 2-6), 7:35p.m.
Toronto (Wells 9-2) at Atlanta (Bur·
kelt 4-2), 7:40p.m.
Arizona (Morgan ·1-o) at· Chicago
Cubs (Valdes 1-t), 8:05p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 3-6) at Houston
(Eiarton 3-1), 8:05p.m.
Kansas City (Suzu~l 2-0) at St.
Louis (Hentgen 4-5), 8 :10p.m.
Los Angeles '(Brown 4-1) at Texas
(Glynn 0-0), a:35 p.m.
Colorado (Yoshil 1-6) at Seattle
(Sele 5·2), 10:05 p.m.
San Diego (Eaton 1-Q) at Oakland
(Appier 5-3), 10:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Hernandez 4-5) at
Anaheim (Schoenewels 5-3), 10:05
p.m.

•••••

I

SUBMITTED B Y : - - - - - -

L----------------------------------·-··-·-·----·--·.1
HURRYI PIOTURI DIADLINI 18
FRIDAY, JUNE II, 10001

Send Meigs Counry sports
news to the Daily Sentinel by fax
at 992-2157. Email items to galtribune@eurekanet.com.
Contact sports edito( Andrew
Carter at 446-2342, ext. 121.

·I

••

'

Shaquille O ' Neal, rendered ineffective entire career."
most of the game by Portland's doubleO'Neal had 18 po)lltS and nin e
and triple-teaming defense, scored nine rebounds and was 8-of-12 from the line,
points in the fourth quarter, punctuating including two that tied it at 77 with 2:44
the rally with a thundering dunk on a lob . to play.
pass from Bryant that put Los Angeles
When Portland built a 16-point lead in
the third "]Uarter, a disgusted Jackson
ahead 85-79 with 40 seconds to play.
The usually unemotional O'Neal waved called timeout.
his index fingers at the crowd with an
The former Chicago coac h, hired to
amazed expression on his face as he ran transform this collection of talent into a
downcourt.
championship team, let his players have it.
"They were playing their best ball the
" I got in their faces," Jackson said, "and
whole game and we were just scratching they responded very well,"
and clawing," O'Neal said. "The Blazers
O'Neal had something to say, too.
are a fabulous team and this is probably a
rivalry that's going to last throughout my
Please see NBA, Page B&amp;

cws field set

1

I ·PHONE: No.:

LOS ANG'ELES (AP) - The Los 15-0 run and went on to beat the TrJiJ
Angeles Lakers are going where everyone Blazers 89-84 o n Sunday night in th e
expected them to go: the NBA Finals.
biggest fourrh-quarter rally ever in a
The route - they took to get there, Gan1e 7.
" It took everything we had;' forward
though,.was as tough as it can get - seven
brutal games against Portland in the West- Glen Rice said. "We were down 15 and
ern Conference finals, two home losses to time was running .o ut. The big thing wa.•
the Trail Bl~ers , and a finale that featured we didn 'c ·pani c."
one of the greatest fourth-quarter playoff
Los Angeles advances to the NBA Finals
for
the first time iliJce 1991, with Game 1
comebacks of all time.
"It takes a lot of character," said Lakers on Wednesday against the Indiana Pacers
guard Brian Shaw, one of the game's in the Staples Center. The Lakers will be
heroes. "This shows what this team is hard -pressed to top this one, though.
"Game 7s are very interesting, but I've
made of."
Down by 15 points with just over 15 never seen any quite like that one before,"
minutes to play, Los Angeles mounted a Lakers coach Phil Jackson said.

Today'e Ga11111
lnterleague

Baby Edition

Health: What Did You Say?
NEW YORK
(AP)
Through the din, it's harder than
ever to make out what people are
saying.
That's because more of you --'
regardless of age - are losing
your hearing, according to a
long-term study by the Noise
Center at the League for the
Hard of Hearing. And, says
Nancy Nadler, the center's director, the din is one of the culprits.
The league screened about
64,000 people over an 18-year
period and found that the incidence of hearing loss had
increased from 15 percent to 60
percent in all age groups.
" These statistics defy the trend
of general improved health," says
Nadler. "One explanation can .be
found in the ·overall increase in
environmental noise pollution in
our sociery. Our lives grow noisier with each passing decade.
From personal stereo systems, to
video arcades, leaf blowers, jet

Lakers rally to beat Blazers,,advance to finals

·Sunday's results
Montreal 1 , Bahimore 0
N.y, Yankees 7, Atlanta 6
Tampa Bay 15, NY Mats 5
Cincinnati 3, Minnesota 2. 10 ·
innings
Cleveland 3, St. Louis 2
Colorado 7. Milwaukee 1
Kansas City 7, Pittsburgh 5·, 11
innings
Detroit 3, Chicago Cubs 2. 12
innings
Philadelphia 6, Boston 5. 12
Innings
Chicago White Sox 7, Houston 3
Toronto 7, Florida 2
San Francisco 18, Oakland 2
Anaheim 8, Los Angeles 7
Seattle 6, San Diego 4
· Texas 7, Arizona 6

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, ·1000
The Daily Sentinel

•••

MONDAY's

Major League Baseball

EXTRA!

A lot of people think that Social Securiry was
intended to be their sole means of support when
they retire. Well, that just isn't so. Social Securiry .was
never meant to work alone. When ·yo.u're making
plans for retirement, plan to supplement your
income from Social Security with savings, pensions
and qther investments. Th!!n, when it's your time to
retire, you'll be sure you have the financial securiry
you need ... and the kind of retirement you worked
for.

The Daily Sentinel

More sports, Page B6

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS

Inside:

CINCINNATI (AP) - Jack
McKeon's move paid off immediately and decisively.
The Cincinnati Reds manager decided to put shortstop Juan
Castro at third base in th e 1Oth
inning as part of a doubleswitch Sunday. Moments later,
CastrO robbed Minnesota's Matt
Lawton of a double by getting
to his grounder down the line.
In the bottom of the inning,
Castro doubled and scored on
Pokey Reese's single to give the
Reds a 3-2 victory and a threegame interleague sweep.
It turned out to be a pretry
good hunch by McKeon .
"You ·get lucky sometimes,''
McKeon said. " If he boots that
(grounder), people are saying,
'Why do you have him in
th~re&gt;' 'But h e's 'Vrobably the'•
best defensive guy we've got on
the bench infield-wise. Then he
tomes up with the key hit."
Things went that way for the
Reds most of the weekend,
allowing them to win two close
games from the slumping Twins.
A disputed strikeout in Friday
night's game the Twins
thought there was catcher's
interference- set up the Reds'
. 4-3 win.
This time, Dante Bic bette
tied it in the sixth with his
fourth homer in four games and
Castro made the difference irt
the 10th.
"I was just trying to make
contact;' Castro said. " The guy
was throwing hard and when I
came off the bench, I wasn't 100
percent loose."
The Twins' offense was tight
all
weekend, batting .204. Mark
SUNDAY'S HERO- Pokey Reese of Cincinnati gets a lift from teammate Aaron Boone following Reese's
Redman struck out a careergame-winQing RBI against Minnesota yesterday. The Reds won , 3-2 in 10 innings. (AP)
'

Stewart
wiris
MBNA400
•

f'

DOVER, DeL (AP) - Tony
Stewart's greatest struggle might
not be the one he wages on the
track.
·
It might li,&lt;: with his candor.
The Rushville Rocket can
dominate a Jace, as he did Sunday, yet g~t !logged dowrr talking
about how he was booed at
Lowe's Motllr Speedway for
things he either did or did not
say to a reporter about rabid
NASCAR fans.
.
So the reaction of 130,000
people at Dover Downs International Speedway to his victory in
the MBNA Platinum 400 was
· important to him ..
VICTORY DOUSE -Tony Stewart (center) gets a champagne bath
"To have people stand up and from his pit crew after winning the MBNA Platinum 400 Sunday at
cheer, that's lnuch better than Dover Downs lnternationah Speedway in Delaware. (AP)
the trophy and the money," he
said after a rousing ovation for an photographers yet downs with Winston Cup history has
outstanding performance. "It's some of them. He questions the become a megastar in a burliterally been hell for me over qualiry of some writers yet will- geoning sport in less than a sea..
w hat one guy wrote.
ingly fills their notebooks with son and half.
Stewart is a contradictory quotes.
The beginning of this, his seccharacter off the traj;k.
One thing is certain. The 29- ond ·season, has been difficult. A
He is adored by :f·great num- year-old driver from Rushville, mechanical breakdown, two
ber offans yet' dislikeji by others. Ind. - the greatest rookie in
Pluse ... NASCAR, Pill• H
He has lost his patience with

high nine in six innings Sunday,
but got no decision beca use th e
offense gave him little help.
"This whole series was
tough ," Redman sa id. " 'We
pitched some pretty good
games and were right in there.
Today was a heartbreaker."
The Twins had plenty of
chances. Reds starter Osvaldo
Fernandez left the game after
the third inning, when he.
jammed hJS right elbow on a
swing that produ ced a linedrive out. Elmer Dessens then
gave up a pair of runs and Redman had a chance for his fifth
wtn.
· The game was delayed for a
couple of minutes in the fourth
when Ken Griffey Jr. had the
bat slip out of his hands on a
•hit the 10- year-old
swing.'
granddaughter of R eds owner
Carl Lindner, sitting behind the
Reds' dugout. She had to go to
a hospital for a few stitches to
close a cut on her forehead .
"I wouldn't mind as much if
it was an adult but when it's a
kid , that's the kind of thing that
ruins an at"bat or your whole
day," said Griffey, who singled
and struck out three times. "You
•
just don't want to see things like
that happen unl ess it's some
loudmouth who's been on you
· the whole time."
Bichette, the Reds' hottest
hitter, tied it with a two-run
homer in the six th. Bichette has
gone 10-for-16 in hiS last four
games and hit safely 'in his last
eight overall.
Dan'ny Graves pitched the
lOth, putting himself in line to

rc

Please see Reels, Pa1e B&amp; .

Warrick inks S42M
deal with Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - Four
days of negotiations resulted in a
seven-year, S42 million contract
between the Cincinnati Bengals
and first-round draft pick -Peter
Warrick in one of the fastest
signings of a Bengals top pick
since 1994.
The deal also allows the Bengals to concentrate on their final
major signing, that of running
back Corey Dillon.
Warrick signed the deal Sunday evening ,at the suburban
Indian Hill home of Bengals
executive vice president Katie
Blackburn, team officials said.
The Bengals called a news conference (or Monday morning.
"This .is a really positive step,"
said Blackburn, the Bengals' lead
negotiator. "This sends a message that we're ready to get on
the right track this year."
Warrick, a wide receiver from
Florida State, was the fourth
overall pick in the NFL draft.
He'll get more than $10 million
in signing and reporting bonuses this year, agent Jim Gould
said.

"He's very, very, very happy,
happy to be in early;· Gould
said. "This will be so importa nt
for Peter's adjustment to the
team and the community."
The contract contains a voidable seventh year, mea ning th e
deal would be shortened to six
years ifWarrick plays 45 percent
of the downs in any season.
If Warrick reaches all of th e
performance goals to kick in the
conrract•s various esca lator
clauses, he will make $42 million.
T he Bengals have a history of
holdouts by first- round draft
picks. Quarterback Akili Smith
misse d virtuaU,. all of training
camp last year, limiting him as a
rookie.
With the Bengals planning to
get rid of.receiver Carl Pickens,
they n eeded Warrick signed
before training ca mp so he
could move into a starter's role.
"There are a lot of promising
things going on with the Bengals, and we like to think that
Peter's signing is now o ne of
those things;• Gould said .

�'•
Monday, June 5, 2000

Pomeroy,.Middleport, Ohio

Page AS • The Dally SenUnel

SPECIAL· RECOGNITION - Left to right, John Bentz, who had all As
and Ryan Amberger and Myca Michael who have been on the A/B
honor roll all six years, were given special recognition at the Syracuse Elementary School awards program. They are pictured with
John Thorne of Philip Sporn Plant, the school's partner in education.
Not pictures but also on the A/B honor roll all six times was Chelsia
Smith.

HONOR ROLL ALL YEAR - These Syracuse Elementary School students made the honor roll all four nine-weeks' grading periods. They
were given special recognition by AEP.Phllip Sporn Plant representative by Jo~n Thorne, seated front right during an awards ceremon(.

Ashley Teaford, fifth grade; and John Bentz, also .honored for all six
years of having straight As , Ryan Amberger, Myca Mi chael,
Chelsea Smith, also honored for A/B honor all six years, sixth
grade.
Students who was recognized for having perfect attendance for
the 1999-2000 school year were· Chris Cogar of the fifth grade;
Joseph Nottingham and Kevin Hill, who was also honored for 3
st~aight years perfect attendance, sixth grade.
During the school year the Philip Sporn plant honored several
students for their academic efforts. Each nine weeks a student was
recognized from each class for being the hardest worker in a particular subject.
Selected for the first nine - week grading period were, first
through sixth, Justin Jacks, Colby Roseberry Tina Prunry, Ashley
Robie, Samantha Gray and Chelsea Smith, all reading. Special
awards went to LD/DH Eric W(lson, mathematics; and special
recognition ·to Bobby Eblin, Bradley Patterson, art; Jenny Warner, John Bentz, physical education; and Jenny Warner, music.
Second nine week honorees were AsWey Runyon, Judd Burke
Bradley Brown and Corey Brinager, all mathematics; AsWey Ashworth and Chris M&lt;m, science; LH/ DH. Bobby Eblin, language
arts; with special recognition to Chris Moss and Jacob Hunter,
art; Patrick Johnson and Mallory Hill, physical edUcation; and
Nikiea Arnott, music.
Third nine week grading period: Jessica Riffie, Jenn Kautz,
Andrew Young, reading; Stephanie Cun~ff. science; Laura Runyon, social studies; Nikiea Arnott, mathe.tlatics; LD/DH, Eric Wilson, science: ·and special A.J. Simpson and Caidin Nease, art; Trenton Roseberry and AsWey Robie, physical education.
The fourth grading p,eriod students honored were Michael
l'reeman mathematics; Ellie Dudding, Dustyn Johnson, and Jessica Durham, social studies; Christopher Cogar, mathematics; Linda
Eddy, social studies; LD/DH: Bobby Eblin, social studies. Special
recognition went to Nathan McClure and Chance Collins, art;
Allie Rees, Weston Roberts, physical education, and Linda Eddy
and Tiffariy Willis, music.
·
Year-end awards to the students who worked the hardest overall for the entire year were presented to Jessica Riffie,Justin Wandling, Bradley Brown, Tyler Circle, Angela Young, Nikiea Arnott,
Kyle Kinnan
The AEP-Philip Sporn Plant also has three other Partnership
Schools Mason Elementary, Mason, W.Va.; Ravenswood Grade
School, Ravenswood, W.Va.; and Green Elementary, Gallipolis.

AEP presents aw~uds
SYRACUSE Representatives of the American Electric
Power Philip Sport . Plant, joined with the Syracuse Elementary
School to honor studen ts on their achievements during the 19902000 school year.
AEP is a partner in education with the school. John Thorne,
technician, an d Sa m Hawley, senibr plant clerk, assisted in presenting awards to t he studen'ts.
Students who was recognized for being on the honor roll for
the entire year were: Ellie Dudding, Ashley Freeman, Victoria
Freeman,James Hart, Daniel Imboden, Breanna Taylor, Catherine
Woods , second grade; Zachary Ash, Merri Collins, Megan Gray,
Alex Hawley, Emma Hunter, Chelsea Pape, Samantha Patterson,
Weston Robe~ts. Jaime Warner, third grade; Morgan Brown,
Lindsey Buzzard, Heather Cundiff; Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah Eldabaja , Trenton Roseberry, fourth grade; Nicholas Buck, Chance
Collins, Olivia Dudding. Tyler Harkness, Amber Hill, Mallory
Hill, Jacob Hunter, Nathan McClure, Adam Phillips, Allie Rees,

'

'

Birth announced
PO ~ROY - Mendi and Rusty Haning of Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy, annout;~ce the birth of a daughter, Elizabeth
Dawn Haning, on Friday, May 26 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
-

•••

POMEROY -The 110th annual Memorial Day· celebration at
the Burlingham Cemetery was attended by nearly a hundred area
·
residents.
The Rev. K~ith Kapple of Marietta was the speaker with music
being provided by Junior and Rita White, Denver Rice Bob
White, and Coleen Brickles.
The "good neighbor" award was presented to Bob White who
has been activt in 1e~eral -f!lnd-raising projects for local families.
Roses were p~esented to the oldest and the youngest women
attending and cups and caps went to the oldest and youngest men
there.
"· · ~
Participating in the cemetery ceremony was the honor guard
from Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion.

Page 81
Monday.JuneS.lOOO

MONDAY, June 5
LETART Letart Township Trustees, Monday, 5 p. m.
at the office building.'
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30 p. m ., township office on
Joppa Rd.
RACINE Racine Vil lage Council, 7:30 p. m. ,
municipal building.
RACINE -Racine Chaptel' 134, Order of Eastern
Star, regular meeting on
Monday
at
7:30
p. m .
Refreshments will be served
following the meeting .
. RACINE Vacation
Dible School's Road Rally
2000 "In The Race With
Jesus" , will be held through
Friday, 9:30-noon, at the
First Baptist Church 1n
Racine .
MIDDLEPORT VBS,
Bradford Church of Christ,
through Friday from 9 to
11:30 .a.m. at the church . All
children- in the community,
pre-school through teens, are
invited. "SanZone Discovery
Center" will be the theme .
POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Central
Committee, to appoini Clerk
of Courts, 7:30 p.m., · Meigs
. County Courthouse.
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30 p.m. Syracuse ' Village
hall.

Memorial Day services at Burlingham

MIDDLEPORT
Mid.dleport Community Associa~
cion,
8 :30 a.m.. Peopl'e:s
Bank .
POMEROY
Meigs
County Heath Department,
immunization clinic, Tuesday.
1 to 7 p.m . Children to be
accompanied
by
p arent /g uardian . Shot records
to be taken .
POMEROY
Eagles
Auxiliary meeting, Tuesday,
7 :30 p.m . at the h~ll.
CHESTER
Chester
Shade Histori cal AssociatiQn,
meeting, Tuesday, 7 :30p.m : at
the
Chester
courthouse.
Chester Shade Days and
other activities will be dii cussed.

•••

FRIDAY, June 9
POMEROY Widows
Fellowship will meet in
Chester Park for a pot luck
picnic. Those attending are
asked to bring a covered dish
and table service. In case of
rain, the event will take place
at the Church of Christ,
Middleport,

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
promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed
· a specific number of
days.

Be S1nart •••
I;
~~
store.
~
Don't waste your time

.

. .·

at the local Inconvenience
~
~sJlgbt INCQNVENENCE)·
Just ltop by your.,.. Smoker Friendly Store for the

fastest and friendliest.service for all your tobacco needs.
.
No LotterY- Dell-::'or FUel Pump lines to wait ln.
(We Promise)
We'D get you in and out quickly and for a lot less, too.

SOCIAL SECURITY
MORE LOCAL NEWS.
be . drawn down to pay benefits until the funds are MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Sodal Security
exhausted in 2037.
Subscribe todDy.
In its 60th report to Congress, the Trustees also
992-2156
solvent until 203 7
reported the folloWing:
BY VALREA THOMPSON
MANAGER SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE

The Social Securiry Board of Trustees' annual
report reveals that the long-range financial picture
of Social Securiry's programs has improved since last
year.. Specifically, the Board announced that Social
Securiry's trust fund assets will not be depleted 'until
2037.
The Trustees urged bipartisan legislative action to
restore the long-term balance to Social Security.
While the news is positive, we must not delude
ourselves. with wishful thinking. The Social Security Trust Funds simply will not fix ·themselves. Our
strong ecl!nomy gives us a window of opportunity
to strengthen Social Securiry for future generations
of workers.
The annual report also indicates that in 2015,
trust fund expenditures will begin to exceed tax
revenues. Beginning in 2025, trust funds assets will

• Tbe Old-Age and Survivors and Disabiliry
Insurance Trust Funds paid benefits amounting to .
$385.8 billion in 1999, and there were 44.6 million
beneficiaries on the rolls at the end of 1999.
• In 1999 an estimated 152 million people worked
in jobs covered by Social Securiry.
• Administrative expenses were $3.3 billion in
1999, or about O.'J percent of benefit payments for
the year.

•

The league screened about
64,000 people over an 18year period and found that
the incidence of hearing
loss had increased from 15
percent to 60 percent in
all age groups.
I

skis; increased aircraft, snowmobiles, noisy toys and even loud
health clubs, we are all at risk!'
Another survey by the league,
taken last year during International Noise Awareness Day, sug-gests that noises from vehicles of
all types are the most disturbing
to the 647 respondents, most
{84.4 · percent) of whom are
Americans.
Motorcycles are the second·
worst offenders, they said, followed by airplanes or helicopters.
Big annoyances to those living .in
cities are bars, nightclubs and
other recreational sites.

"The range of noises to which
people are exposed is wide and
clearly speaks to the pervasiveness of noise pollution," Nadler
.says. "When" noise interferes with
. sleep, talking on the telephone,
work and study, qualiry of life is
affected. A life intruded •on by
repeated noises is certainly not a
life of pleasure and contentment."
The good news in the survey,
she says, is that more people 40 percent of the respondents .in
contrast to 5 to 10 percent in
previous studies - say they have
complained to authorities about
noise. The bad .news is that only
20 percent say that their complaints were acted on.
Nadler points out that noiseinduced hearing loss, though preventable, is permanent. It's estimated that 28 million Americans
suffer from hearing loss, making
1t the number one disabiliry in
the United States.

HrGffiiGHTS ·

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
photographs of local kids • @lies
new~om to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is included.
Complete the form below and
enclose a sna,shot or wallet sized
pictUre plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph: I more than one 'Child
is m tbe _p1cture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE
PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)
PICTUREI IIUIT IIIII 11 FRI.A'I
JUIIIII, 1100. PICTURII CAll II
PICIEt UP AnER JUl1 IOTII, 1100

Send to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r---------~-----· ------------·-··-·-·-··-·--·-··-·-·- ·--·-

1 Child's Name(s) &amp; Age(s): --"!- - - ' - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
1 Parent's N a m e : - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City &amp; State:
.
· ·
.
1
-THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE AD-

Rocker the Terrible

strikes again
AT LANTA (AP) Braves
reliever John Rocker had a confrontation with the Sports Illustrated reporter who wrote . the
story in which Rocker made
o~ensive comments about gays,
mmorities, .inunigrants and his
own teammates.
The reporter, Jeff Pearlman, said
Rocker threatened him in a service tunnel beneath Turner Field
about two hours before Ailarita's
game against the New York Yankees, though . there was no physical contact between the two.
Rocker also attempted to get
Pearlman banned from the clubhouse.

•i

Redlegs
sweep Twins

UNDATED
(AP)
Louisiana-Lafayette and San Jose
State advanced to the College
World Series for the first time.
Defending national champion
Miami was eliminated in the
best-of-three super regionals by
in-state rival Florida ·State. Also
headed to Omaha, Neb., are Stanford , C lemson , Louisiana State,
Southern California and Texas.

PGA: Scherrer wins

Kemper Open
POTOMAC, Md.!AP) -Tom
Scherrer became th'i ninth firsttime winner at the Kemper
Open, closing with a 4-under-par
67 for a 13-under 271 total and a
two-stroke victory.
Steve Lowery, the leader or coleader after each of the first three
.. rou'fios~ shot :1'71 and'tiedfoi'
ond with Justin Leonard (69),
Greg Chalmers (68), Kazu hiko
Hosokawa (66) and Franklin
Langham (70).

sec-

· Chicago WMe Sox (Baldwin 8-1)
at Cincinnati (Parris 2-7), 7:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Burba 5-1) at Milwaukee (D'Amico 2-3), 8 :05p.m.
N.Y Yankees (Mendoza 5-3) at
Montreal (Hermanson · 5-3), 7 :05
p.m.
Boston (Schourek 2-5) at Florida
(Cornelius 0-1 ), 7:05 p.m.
· Detroit (Miicki 2-6) at Pittsburgh
(Cordova 3-4), 7:05p.m·.
Baltimore (Mussina 2-6) at N.Y.
Mats (Hampton 6-4), 7:10p.m.
Tampa Bay (Liqle 0-1) at Philadelphia (Ashby 2-6), 7:35p.m.
Toronto (Wells 9-2) at Atlanta (Bur·
kelt 4-2), 7:40p.m.
Arizona (Morgan ·1-o) at· Chicago
Cubs (Valdes 1-t), 8:05p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 3-6) at Houston
(Eiarton 3-1), 8:05p.m.
Kansas City (Suzu~l 2-0) at St.
Louis (Hentgen 4-5), 8 :10p.m.
Los Angeles '(Brown 4-1) at Texas
(Glynn 0-0), a:35 p.m.
Colorado (Yoshil 1-6) at Seattle
(Sele 5·2), 10:05 p.m.
San Diego (Eaton 1-Q) at Oakland
(Appier 5-3), 10:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Hernandez 4-5) at
Anaheim (Schoenewels 5-3), 10:05
p.m.

•••••

I

SUBMITTED B Y : - - - - - -

L----------------------------------·-··-·-·----·--·.1
HURRYI PIOTURI DIADLINI 18
FRIDAY, JUNE II, 10001

Send Meigs Counry sports
news to the Daily Sentinel by fax
at 992-2157. Email items to galtribune@eurekanet.com.
Contact sports edito( Andrew
Carter at 446-2342, ext. 121.

·I

••

'

Shaquille O ' Neal, rendered ineffective entire career."
most of the game by Portland's doubleO'Neal had 18 po)lltS and nin e
and triple-teaming defense, scored nine rebounds and was 8-of-12 from the line,
points in the fourth quarter, punctuating including two that tied it at 77 with 2:44
the rally with a thundering dunk on a lob . to play.
pass from Bryant that put Los Angeles
When Portland built a 16-point lead in
the third "]Uarter, a disgusted Jackson
ahead 85-79 with 40 seconds to play.
The usually unemotional O'Neal waved called timeout.
his index fingers at the crowd with an
The former Chicago coac h, hired to
amazed expression on his face as he ran transform this collection of talent into a
downcourt.
championship team, let his players have it.
"They were playing their best ball the
" I got in their faces," Jackson said, "and
whole game and we were just scratching they responded very well,"
and clawing," O'Neal said. "The Blazers
O'Neal had something to say, too.
are a fabulous team and this is probably a
rivalry that's going to last throughout my
Please see NBA, Page B&amp;

cws field set

1

I ·PHONE: No.:

LOS ANG'ELES (AP) - The Los 15-0 run and went on to beat the TrJiJ
Angeles Lakers are going where everyone Blazers 89-84 o n Sunday night in th e
expected them to go: the NBA Finals.
biggest fourrh-quarter rally ever in a
The route - they took to get there, Gan1e 7.
" It took everything we had;' forward
though,.was as tough as it can get - seven
brutal games against Portland in the West- Glen Rice said. "We were down 15 and
ern Conference finals, two home losses to time was running .o ut. The big thing wa.•
the Trail Bl~ers , and a finale that featured we didn 'c ·pani c."
one of the greatest fourth-quarter playoff
Los Angeles advances to the NBA Finals
for
the first time iliJce 1991, with Game 1
comebacks of all time.
"It takes a lot of character," said Lakers on Wednesday against the Indiana Pacers
guard Brian Shaw, one of the game's in the Staples Center. The Lakers will be
heroes. "This shows what this team is hard -pressed to top this one, though.
"Game 7s are very interesting, but I've
made of."
Down by 15 points with just over 15 never seen any quite like that one before,"
minutes to play, Los Angeles mounted a Lakers coach Phil Jackson said.

Today'e Ga11111
lnterleague

Baby Edition

Health: What Did You Say?
NEW YORK
(AP)
Through the din, it's harder than
ever to make out what people are
saying.
That's because more of you --'
regardless of age - are losing
your hearing, according to a
long-term study by the Noise
Center at the League for the
Hard of Hearing. And, says
Nancy Nadler, the center's director, the din is one of the culprits.
The league screened about
64,000 people over an 18-year
period and found that the incidence of hearing loss had
increased from 15 percent to 60
percent in all age groups.
" These statistics defy the trend
of general improved health," says
Nadler. "One explanation can .be
found in the ·overall increase in
environmental noise pollution in
our sociery. Our lives grow noisier with each passing decade.
From personal stereo systems, to
video arcades, leaf blowers, jet

Lakers rally to beat Blazers,,advance to finals

·Sunday's results
Montreal 1 , Bahimore 0
N.y, Yankees 7, Atlanta 6
Tampa Bay 15, NY Mats 5
Cincinnati 3, Minnesota 2. 10 ·
innings
Cleveland 3, St. Louis 2
Colorado 7. Milwaukee 1
Kansas City 7, Pittsburgh 5·, 11
innings
Detroit 3, Chicago Cubs 2. 12
innings
Philadelphia 6, Boston 5. 12
Innings
Chicago White Sox 7, Houston 3
Toronto 7, Florida 2
San Francisco 18, Oakland 2
Anaheim 8, Los Angeles 7
Seattle 6, San Diego 4
· Texas 7, Arizona 6

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, ·1000
The Daily Sentinel

•••

MONDAY's

Major League Baseball

EXTRA!

A lot of people think that Social Securiry was
intended to be their sole means of support when
they retire. Well, that just isn't so. Social Securiry .was
never meant to work alone. When ·yo.u're making
plans for retirement, plan to supplement your
income from Social Security with savings, pensions
and qther investments. Th!!n, when it's your time to
retire, you'll be sure you have the financial securiry
you need ... and the kind of retirement you worked
for.

The Daily Sentinel

More sports, Page B6

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS

Inside:

CINCINNATI (AP) - Jack
McKeon's move paid off immediately and decisively.
The Cincinnati Reds manager decided to put shortstop Juan
Castro at third base in th e 1Oth
inning as part of a doubleswitch Sunday. Moments later,
CastrO robbed Minnesota's Matt
Lawton of a double by getting
to his grounder down the line.
In the bottom of the inning,
Castro doubled and scored on
Pokey Reese's single to give the
Reds a 3-2 victory and a threegame interleague sweep.
It turned out to be a pretry
good hunch by McKeon .
"You ·get lucky sometimes,''
McKeon said. " If he boots that
(grounder), people are saying,
'Why do you have him in
th~re&gt;' 'But h e's 'Vrobably the'•
best defensive guy we've got on
the bench infield-wise. Then he
tomes up with the key hit."
Things went that way for the
Reds most of the weekend,
allowing them to win two close
games from the slumping Twins.
A disputed strikeout in Friday
night's game the Twins
thought there was catcher's
interference- set up the Reds'
. 4-3 win.
This time, Dante Bic bette
tied it in the sixth with his
fourth homer in four games and
Castro made the difference irt
the 10th.
"I was just trying to make
contact;' Castro said. " The guy
was throwing hard and when I
came off the bench, I wasn't 100
percent loose."
The Twins' offense was tight
all
weekend, batting .204. Mark
SUNDAY'S HERO- Pokey Reese of Cincinnati gets a lift from teammate Aaron Boone following Reese's
Redman struck out a careergame-winQing RBI against Minnesota yesterday. The Reds won , 3-2 in 10 innings. (AP)
'

Stewart
wiris
MBNA400
•

f'

DOVER, DeL (AP) - Tony
Stewart's greatest struggle might
not be the one he wages on the
track.
·
It might li,&lt;: with his candor.
The Rushville Rocket can
dominate a Jace, as he did Sunday, yet g~t !logged dowrr talking
about how he was booed at
Lowe's Motllr Speedway for
things he either did or did not
say to a reporter about rabid
NASCAR fans.
.
So the reaction of 130,000
people at Dover Downs International Speedway to his victory in
the MBNA Platinum 400 was
· important to him ..
VICTORY DOUSE -Tony Stewart (center) gets a champagne bath
"To have people stand up and from his pit crew after winning the MBNA Platinum 400 Sunday at
cheer, that's lnuch better than Dover Downs lnternationah Speedway in Delaware. (AP)
the trophy and the money," he
said after a rousing ovation for an photographers yet downs with Winston Cup history has
outstanding performance. "It's some of them. He questions the become a megastar in a burliterally been hell for me over qualiry of some writers yet will- geoning sport in less than a sea..
w hat one guy wrote.
ingly fills their notebooks with son and half.
Stewart is a contradictory quotes.
The beginning of this, his seccharacter off the traj;k.
One thing is certain. The 29- ond ·season, has been difficult. A
He is adored by :f·great num- year-old driver from Rushville, mechanical breakdown, two
ber offans yet' dislikeji by others. Ind. - the greatest rookie in
Pluse ... NASCAR, Pill• H
He has lost his patience with

high nine in six innings Sunday,
but got no decision beca use th e
offense gave him little help.
"This whole series was
tough ," Redman sa id. " 'We
pitched some pretty good
games and were right in there.
Today was a heartbreaker."
The Twins had plenty of
chances. Reds starter Osvaldo
Fernandez left the game after
the third inning, when he.
jammed hJS right elbow on a
swing that produ ced a linedrive out. Elmer Dessens then
gave up a pair of runs and Redman had a chance for his fifth
wtn.
· The game was delayed for a
couple of minutes in the fourth
when Ken Griffey Jr. had the
bat slip out of his hands on a
•hit the 10- year-old
swing.'
granddaughter of R eds owner
Carl Lindner, sitting behind the
Reds' dugout. She had to go to
a hospital for a few stitches to
close a cut on her forehead .
"I wouldn't mind as much if
it was an adult but when it's a
kid , that's the kind of thing that
ruins an at"bat or your whole
day," said Griffey, who singled
and struck out three times. "You
•
just don't want to see things like
that happen unl ess it's some
loudmouth who's been on you
· the whole time."
Bichette, the Reds' hottest
hitter, tied it with a two-run
homer in the six th. Bichette has
gone 10-for-16 in hiS last four
games and hit safely 'in his last
eight overall.
Dan'ny Graves pitched the
lOth, putting himself in line to

rc

Please see Reels, Pa1e B&amp; .

Warrick inks S42M
deal with Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - Four
days of negotiations resulted in a
seven-year, S42 million contract
between the Cincinnati Bengals
and first-round draft pick -Peter
Warrick in one of the fastest
signings of a Bengals top pick
since 1994.
The deal also allows the Bengals to concentrate on their final
major signing, that of running
back Corey Dillon.
Warrick signed the deal Sunday evening ,at the suburban
Indian Hill home of Bengals
executive vice president Katie
Blackburn, team officials said.
The Bengals called a news conference (or Monday morning.
"This .is a really positive step,"
said Blackburn, the Bengals' lead
negotiator. "This sends a message that we're ready to get on
the right track this year."
Warrick, a wide receiver from
Florida State, was the fourth
overall pick in the NFL draft.
He'll get more than $10 million
in signing and reporting bonuses this year, agent Jim Gould
said.

"He's very, very, very happy,
happy to be in early;· Gould
said. "This will be so importa nt
for Peter's adjustment to the
team and the community."
The contract contains a voidable seventh year, mea ning th e
deal would be shortened to six
years ifWarrick plays 45 percent
of the downs in any season.
If Warrick reaches all of th e
performance goals to kick in the
conrract•s various esca lator
clauses, he will make $42 million.
T he Bengals have a history of
holdouts by first- round draft
picks. Quarterback Akili Smith
misse d virtuaU,. all of training
camp last year, limiting him as a
rookie.
With the Bengals planning to
get rid of.receiver Carl Pickens,
they n eeded Warrick signed
before training ca mp so he
could move into a starter's role.
"There are a lot of promising
things going on with the Bengals, and we like to think that
Peter's signing is now o ne of
those things;• Gould said .

�•
Pomero~

Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

Public Notice
TRANSPORTATION

71 0

Autos for Sale

C.O.RS FROM $200 POLICE M
POUNDS Honda s Toyota a
CMvy5 Jeeps And Spo 1 U

I es Ca Now 800 772 H70
EXT 7832

AVIUable Now Tw n Towe s now
aceepl ng app cat ons o BR
HUD subs d zed ap o e de y
and
hand capped
EOH
(304)675 6679

ANNOUNCEMENT S

005

CUSTOMER SEAV CE Ta~o 0
do • W th Phone 0 ~C Fu 0

Personals

Pa t T me A11a abe

P-H 0-T.Q.G.R A P tt-Y
Weddings
Pes
Spo tsTeams
P o ess ona Ce
ed Pho og a

888 526

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605

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
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C ed

phe
Reasonable a es

P ob ems OK

E en

t 985 ~an&amp; Am 305 HO 5 Speed
CD PLaya 3 2 Speake s New
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038

Tu ned Down Be o e Aees ab sh
Yo C odk
80&lt;Hl59.()359

Ca o appo ntmen
(304)6 5-7472
304)675 7279

RENTAL S
REAL ESTATE

31 0 Homes for Sale
$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOVT BANK REPOS
CA
NOW
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EXT 8509

Wan ed To Oo

Se

Moun s Tee

ce Bucke T uck Se

ce

Top T m Remova sump G na
ng Fu y nsu ed F ee Es
ma es B awe on o aoo 838
9566 0 740 388 9648

cess u Campg o nd A d T me

sha e Resa e C ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SA ES NTEANAT ON
AL 800 423 5967 24 Hou s

000 Lo s o Ex as

740

388 8366

MERCHANDISE
REPOSALE
Ne\le l ed n No Money Down
Sa e Ovo $5 000 Ca
888
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30 Announcements
GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be sh p 0 r mesh a e? WELl
TAKE T Ame cas Mos Sue

94 Mans on 6x80 w h ou a Lo
S2

Bank

510
2 Bed oom House 2 Ba hs 924
Eas e n A enue Ga po s $3751
Mo Oepos Aefe encet Re
qu ed No Pe s 740 44S 2282

Ca 9am 4pm Pease ask fo
G 0110 Bob

www eso sa es com

Household
Goods

App ances
Reeond oned
Weshe s 0 ye s Ranges Re
g ato • 90 Day Gua an ee We
Se New Maytag App ances
F oe nch C y May ag 740 446
7795

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
FINANCIAL

11 D Help Wanted
OWN A COMPUTER ? PUT T
TO WORK 1850 $3 50Q Mo P
IF FAEE Deta s Log 0 to http
www hbn com Access Code
5298

New To You Th ift Shpppe
9 Wes S mso A nens
740 592 842

a a y c o h ng and hOuseho d
em s S 00 bag sa e e e y
Thu Sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 OQ-5 30

40

Giveaway

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PAAT
T ME NO EX PEA ENCE RE
OU RED 800 757 0753

210

New And U~ed Fu n u e S o e
Be ow Ha day Inn Kanauga
g

AT &amp; T MC
SPRINT Wha 1
The B G SEC AET1 7 Make B G
$$$ All CASH FAEE nlo
800 997 9888 E.:
55 24 H s

S987 85 WEEKLY P oce55 ng
HUO FHA Mo gage Ae unds No

E11pe ence Aequ ed Fo FREE
no ma on Ca
BOO so 6832
E11 300

Seek ng Manage Fo Jewe y
Sto e App can Shou d Be A Mo
\18 ed Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 gan z:ed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab 'i Some Com
pue Sk s ReCju ed Sa a y And
Bo us Pus Bene Package

AT&amp;T BELL
PAYPHONE ROUTES
30 P oven Loca ions
$2K Wk~ 800 800 3470

AI ea as ate adwn sing n

Sav ngs On New Couches Good
Hosp a Bed 992 7 2F Co
b a Runabou Boa New Cond
on Check Us Out 740 446
4782

c advert ae any pre 8rence
mna ono dsc mna on
based on ace co or 8 lgkln
sex fam a sta us o na ona
orlgn o any n anton o

make any such p efe ence
mlta lon o dlscrlm nat on

Th s newspape w no
know ng vacce~t

advert semen s fo ea estate
when s nvloa ono the
aw Ou readers are he eby
nfomled ha a dwellngs
adven sed n th s newspaper
are avaUable on an equal
opportun ty basis

.lo--------•1.1

Send Resume App ca t ons To
Acqu s ons F ne Je we y 5
Second Ave nue Ga po &amp; OH
4563 0 Fax To 740 446-2£00

994 Dodge tnt ap d v 6 Au
omatc Cuse A Powe Wnd
ows Powe Loc:ks Ch ome
Whee s 15 900 740 379 2922
Evenngs

e

th s newspape s sub act to
he Fade a Fa Hous ng Act
of 1968 which makes h ega

New 4 Wde 3BR 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h ow down Paymen1
F 88 A

F ee De

ey

888

926 3426

85 Honda C v c CAX 5 speed
new c: u ch uns &amp; ooks good
··~ ng $ 800 740.992 2904

New 6x80 3BA 2BA $268 pe
mon h Low Down Paymen F ee
A F ee De ve y
888 928
3426
New Ooub ew de 3 BA 2BA
$276 pe mon h ow Down Pay
men F ee A F ee De e v
888 928 3426

32x80 Fac o y Repo Neve
ved n $49 950
866 69
6777

The Da•ly Sentinel • Page B3

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Mpnday, June 5 2000

Middleport, Ohio

992 Fo d Tempo GL AC PW
C ulse $2 750 (304 675 40 4

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

LEGAL NOTICE
Mortha Boynton 11r1d JOhn
Doe Unknown Spouaa II
eny of Mortha Boynton
WhOII l ..t place Of
l'llldence le known •• 200
Laaley StrNI Pomeroy OH
45789 but whooa pr..ant
piece ol r .. ldance Ia
unknown will take notice
that on follarch 1e 2000 at
10 t5 am
Conaaco
Financial flied 111 Comptelnt
In C.M No QO.CV.OZ8 In the
Court ol Common Pie..
Malga County Ohio alleging
thot the Delendant(a)
Martha Boynton and John
Doe Unknown SpOUII If
an\1 of Martha Boynton
have or claim to have an
lntereat In the real eatate
daacrlbad below
Situated In the County ol
Melgo In the Slote of Ohio
and In the VIllage of
Pomeroy and bounded and
deacrlbtd aa tollowa
Beginning at a atake at the
corner ol Brock and Lawley
Streetl thence running
South 80 dtg 47 min W
112 laet to a atake thence
South 9 dog 13 min E 40
IHt to a atakt thence North
80 dog 47 min E 112 feet
)o a etake thence North II
Ctag 13 min W 40 teet to
the place of beginning Bald
lot Included tha houll and
barn and btlng a lot 40 feet
wide by 112 faat deep Tha
above deacrlbad property 11
pan of Lot No 463 of the
coneolldatlon of Pomeroy
11 reported In Plat Book 2
Page 17 and 18 In the
recorde of Melga County
Recorder a Olflca and
contained 0 103 acrea more
or leaa
Tha Petitioner further
ellegaa that by reaaon ot
datault of the Dafendant(a)
In tha payment of a
promlaaory note according
to Ita tenor tha conditione
ol a concurrent mortgage
deed given to aacura the
payment of eald note end
conveying the pramla11
deacrlbad have bun
broken end the aama hea
become abaoluta
The Petitioner pray• that
tho Defendant (1) named
above be required to
anower and aat up their
lnttreat In 11ld real aatata
or ba forever barred lrom
aaaertlng the aama lor
torecloaure ol aald

ON THE TRAIL RIGHT NOW7
LUSH FAIRWAYS
VELVEn' GREENS

BAlMY BREEZES

3 78

GOLF-AND W E WON T TAKE
ALL OF 1ll£ GREEN

OUT OF YOUR WALLET

1 800 949 4444
www rt}golf com

i
Public Notice

Public Notice
mortgage the marehellng of
anr. IIana and the aaleo ol
•• d real eatate and the
procaada of aald ••••
applied to the payment ol
Patillo- a Claim In the
proper order ol Ill priority
and for auch other and
further relief a• le 1uat and
equitable
THE DEFENDANT(S)
NAMED ABOVE REQUIRED
TO ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THE 7TH DAY OF

WANT A COMPUTEA 11 BUT
NO CASH ? MMX Techno ogy
W .f nance W th 0 Down Pas
Crtd P oblems No P ob em Ca
ToU F ee 877 293 40~2

AUGUSt 2000
B and New 26x58 Modu a Home
Sm h s Cusom Cabnas 3 Bed
oom s 2 Ba hs P ce $45 ooa
Mus Be Mo ad Ca 740 388
9622

995 S 0 Ex ended Cab Au
toma c AIC $5 895 995 Chrys
e Van Town &amp; Coun ry Loaded
One Owne $4 395 989 S 10
$ t 795 Ca s F om $1 895 To
$3 795 COOK MOTORS 740
446 0 03

340 Business and
&amp;. Yard S.let Mutt
Be Pa d In Advance

Buildings

QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
tho day before 11to od
it to run Sunday
Mlldon 200pm
F~day Monday ediUon
9 30 o.m Sotunloy

TEACHERS RET AEES FULLER
BRU SH Needs Men Women
Who Want To Supp amen The
ncome FexbeHous Unm ad
ncome Ca Now
800 340
3202

Are You Connected?
nte ne Use &amp; wan ed
$350 1850/Week
88826 33
www e commb z ne

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
2 am y ya d sa e June 9 h &amp;

on 9am Spm 39271 Sate Ro
u e 68 W Darwin between A 33
&amp; Snowv a
A Yad5aesMult8ePedtn

SLAND V EW MOTEL
At 7 Gol polo Oho

Ae

Fou Un sAnd U y Aoom Pus
One F oo Home n Two Apa
men s) Can Be Conve ad Back
To Nlc:e S ng a Home

House 0 sa e on Baum Add 1on
Ad
bah nd Ches e Ska e A
Way) 4 bod oom 2 ba h LR OR
FA u y a ea u y equ ppad
k chen CIA gas hea n ce b g
o 2 ca ga age oa 740 985
346

Advance Oetd ne 1 OOpm the
day befo 1 the ad 1 to r.un
Sund1y • Monday edition
1 OOpm F fdoy

POSTAL JOB S $48 323 00 YR
Now H ng No Expe ence Pad
Tan ng G ea Benef s Ca 7
Day&amp; 600.429 3660 Ex J 566

140
pers Pans acoss

wckMake

Fun

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

(330) 425-4201
(8) 5 12 19 2tl

(7) 3 10 lTC

P ck Up

Public Notice

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNT"l OHIO
CaM No 3011110
Docket 0 Pogo 200
NOTICE
Ravlllcl Cocta
SIC 2171 01 (A)
Notice Ia hereby given
that Tina Loulae Sutton

1998 Chevy ex end a c:ab 4X4

V 8 5 sp Loaded 40 OOQ m es
$16 000 m 304 773 5244 efta
6PM

790

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

Caaa No 30800 of 31865
Pl81aant Vlaw Rd Raclnt
Ohio Mtlgl hat applied to
tha Common Pleat Court
Probate Olvl1lon of Malga
County Ohio lor an ordar
to change hl.n.er name to
Angel LouiM Sulton
Said application will be
haard In tha Malga County
PrObata Court at 2 00 p m
on tha 5th day ol July 2000
at tha
Courthouaa
Pomeroy Ohio
Tina L. Sutton Applicant
Tha State of Ohio Malgl
County
Paraonally appeared
belora ma Judith R Slaeon
Deputy Clark and made
eolemn oath that the notice
a copy of which Ia hereto
attached w.. published
one lima to wll on the 5th
day of Juna 2000 (baing at
leaot lhlrty doyo prior to tho
5th day of July 2000 the
data the application Ia to bl
heard aa mllrltlonad In aald
notice) In the Dally Sentinel
a newapaper of general
clrculallon In the County
alorettld
Judith R Slaeon
Swom to bafore and algnad
In my preaanca lhla 1at doy
of June 2000
(S) 5 1TC

S.uy wnlms ..... AN•awdlal~ ~IIIII

,.T

810

2id'

Proteaalon1l
Services

180 Wanted To Do

- " Mt Ufe Grl....
Domino 1 P :ua n Pt P 11aan
lltxlbll houtlopg~ n POriOn
304175 eaea

TUANID OOWN ON
IOC AL IICUR TV 181 ?

NO Ftl Un Ill WI Win
888 e82 3345

KAINER RIDGE
The P Ice Hat Seen Reduced On
Th s 23 Ac: e T ac Of Wo ods
And H s On y $23 000 Loco ad
On K no Rood 011 SA 7 &amp;
Nt~hbo hood
CINTEAPO NT RUN
Beaut fu Pond On e + Ao 1 Lo
P Ul Fou, Othl I 5 + Ac I Lo I
Alldy Fo You New Home Lo
ctlld 3 M ill Off SA 35 Neal The
Jtckoon Go a County L 111

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond t ana e me gua an ee
Loca e • ences u n shed Es
tablshed 1975 Ca 24 H s (740
446 0870
800 267 0!76 Aog
o • Wate p ooflng

Both Birthday

Celebrltlon

forV~rBahr
Tuppers Platns
Elementary Gvffi
Sun June 11th 2-4
Frtends and Fa:tnily
Welcome
No Gtfts Please

DNA LABAATOAY SERVICES
A 1 877 974 7999 Resu ts n 5
Bus ne01 Day&amp; PAN FREE
PROCEDURE Cou Adm" be
Aesu ta W h lnte eat F ee F

ANTIQUE. AND COLLE.CilBI.ES
Nice old Iron bed chllc;f s pressback rocker small
painted stepbadt cupboard dresser w/ marble
Inlay mission style rocker fancy wood bed, tall
antique trunk. old pictures and frames Early baby
stroller waD cabinets school slall! unusual
wrench adv Williams &amp;. Scarbeny (Hudson cars
OaiUpoUs Ohio) G W Cooper Thurrn&amp;n Ohio adv
picture small Purity Feeds display: Prim woodel1
vase Prim wood !X)ol box Sev adv boxes and
tins baskets lamps &amp;. lanterns bed wanner old
dishes old bottles horse collars old saddle slf\81el
trees hand forged hdwe Items hand planes
brass flashllghts good selection of anUque tools

ANGUS AND CHIANOU8 Bu o

P ce d Reasonab y Sate Run
Fa ms Jockoon 740 i88 !395

A

Tappin H E e ency 90 v. Gas
Fu nac:es 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hu Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ams F eo 6 Yea Pa &amp; &amp; La
bo Wa anty Benne s Hu ng &amp;
Coo ng
60 0 872 5967
www orvb com'bennett

A~

ng Ho 8111740)3811-83!6

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

99 vz 25 New P aat c New
Reeds New P 1 on &amp; R nge Very
Powe fu 9 kl Look s New F on
Fo ks Have .Seen Comp ete y At
bu Wh cl't Inc: udaa New Sea 1
And F u d Rea Shock Has Seen
Aeena ged W h N ogen And
Checked Fo B eed o T es
A e n Exc:e an Cond on Chan
And Sp oc:ke s A e L let New
$ 800 740 448 7375

DON'T M 88 OUT ON THE 8AV
NQS CALL TODAY FOR FAll
MAPS

11002 313U
AnthOI1)' land Co L d

750 Boats &amp; Motora

for Sale

www QQUQ!rytyme com

Now Tak ng App co on• 35
Wtt 2 Bed oom Townhoutt
Ape ment1
no ud11 wa er
S.wogo T llh 1325 Mo 740
4410008

T.obacco Bed s
256 47

...,.,

8580 ST RT 588 (OLD RT 35) GALUPOUS, OHIO

~RATERN TY ISSUES? CALL

1998 Yamaha 350 wa
1x 11 uk ng S3 000 o
paymon • 740-949-2529

Look ng To Buy A Ntw Homa?
Don H~vo L4nd? WI Oo Hu ry
On Y 0 Loto loN ~ 13112e5

Ad

Home
Improvements

150
FREE FREE MONEY PROB
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CATION FEE 1 677
543 1357 EKT 402

You can go to Las Vegas 11 you re lucky
enough to make It through thla door "

SERVICES

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
Amos Eve ~one Ap
p1 oved W th SO Down Low
Mon h y Paymento
800 6 1
3476 Ext 330

nanc ngA.va abe n

EARN A LEGA' COLLEGE DE
GREE OU CKLY Ba che o 1
Mute 1 Doc o 1 1 By Co 1
spondenct Baled Upon P o Ed:
uca on And Sho S udy Cou 1t
Po FREE no mo on Book 11
Phono CAMBA DQE STATE
UN VERS TV 100 864 83 8

1

.. Arliltllllljptl II cei!ICII I'IIIIHrNHIII.......
IIIII• lallar tlla CHell ulllliMI s-Ay tllay fiiY fia~
HI wUt 1~1 aeds ........

HUge nven o y 0 Scoun P cas
On V ny Sk t ng Ooo s W nd
ows Anc no s Wa e He a e s
Pumb ng&amp; Eect ca Pa s Fu
nallas &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e t1ome Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb com/bennet!

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Woa wood
0 ve om $289 o $370 Wa k to
shop &amp; moves Ca 740 446
2568 Equal Hous ng Opportun ty

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1

KIT N CARLYLE ® by Larry Wright

FARM SUPP LIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1

HERMAN® by J1m Unger

JET

Ch

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

580

BRUNER LAND
74().4411492

e cohng

Conaaoo Bank Inc
Dlnnla Reimer Co L~A.
Dennie Reimer
Attorney at Law
Attorney for
Plalntlll Petitioner
PO Box888
Twlnaburg OH 44087

(304)675-8870

AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu n S ock
Ca Flon Evans -aoo 537 9528

omod od

c Hyd au c l

Fu S ze

AttentiOn Deve ope s
33 Ac es App ox ma ely o Ac e
Lake MOb e Home W h Add On
Idea Fo Hous ng Campg ound
Es a e 199 500 740.388 8678

Business
Training

Budge
Types Access To Ove 10 000
T ansm ss ons
2-45 5677

E ec

JAN TROL HEAT NO AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
NSTALLED
You Don I Ca Us WB So(h
Lose F ee Es1 ma es 740 ·446
6308 800-29 0098

Go 1 Co A New 0 I SA 325
Dee C eek Ad
t 1 Ac: es
1&lt;5 ooo o 14 Aces $19 ooo
R o G ande Mob ey Ad Basi
Bu d ng S es n The Couf'\ v e
Ac es S2t 500 8 Aces w h
Pond $29 500 0
5 Ac es
13 500 Caeh Chesh e Jesse
C aek Ad 20 Pa c:e s Beg nn ng
A 6 Ac es S 2 000 To 37 Ac es
$47 000 G ea Homes S tes And
Hun ng Cay Twp Ma abe Ad
Ac es $20 ooo o 3 Ac es
W h Ba n $37 000 F end y
A dge 5 Aces I tO 000 Cash
P ce

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F a&amp; Ca Fo App c:a on E~eam
na on nfo ma on Fede a H e
Fu Benef s 800 598 4504 Ex
ton s on 5 5 (8 A M 6 PM
CST

Two am y Thu sday &amp; F day
June 8 9 Bam 4pm SA 7 Tup

2 Bedrooms W h 2 Expando
Rooms Adjacen To L:a ge
Rooms C A Gas Hea No Pets
Oepos I And Aefe ences Ae
qu od 740-367 7584

2 Boo ooms Yard 5 M o&amp; ~ollth
2 8 Ga po s $275 Mo $150
Oepos
ncludes Wa e T ash
740 256 6769

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV T BANK AEPO S
800
355.()()24 Ext 6040

ng am Be ge Company w be
accep ng app c:a ons fo Oeck
Mnds a he Bu eau 0 Emp oy
men P ogams 225SIIhS P
P easan WV on June 6 h June
7 h and 8 h om 8 ooam
3 OOpm You mus have va d
p c u e D and secu y ca d o
apply EOE MJ~N

1995 Toyo a Tacoma 4X4 E~~:
ce ant Cond on
$8500
(304)675 7652

HOLES OF WORLD ClASS

for Sale

8

~7 Paop a Needed To Lose Up
to ~0 Pound&amp; n The Nu 30
Days Fee Samp es 7-'0 44
9&amp;2

WOULDN T YOU MrHER BE

750 Boats &amp; Motors

CARS FROM $28 MO
m
pounds Repos Fee SO Down /24
Mos C 99 Fo Ls ngs 800
3 9 3323 X21 56

12x60 Mob e Home Two Bed
oo ms Located Beh nd Fox s
P zza Sandh Road $37!5 Pe
Mon h nc udes Wa e Sewe
Cal 304)675 3423

~nngFever

MISC. TOOLS
Wilker Turner 6" planer jOinter reese hitch
ml5c smaD hand tools tool boxes plus more.

-·NOTE. THE. EAJU.Y SfARTING TIME..
AUCTIONEER U.SUE A LEMLEY

6 Family Yard Sale
115 4th St

New Haven
Duncans Res
June 6th &amp;7th

740-

"923 (HOME) OR 740-Z&lt;JS-9866 (BARN)
"UCENSED AND BONDED BY STATE OF OHIO"
CASH/APPROVED CHECK ONLYIIII
FOOD
RESI'ONSIIll.t lOR ACCIDENTS OR LOST PRom:m1

�•
Pomero~

Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

Public Notice
TRANSPORTATION

71 0

Autos for Sale

C.O.RS FROM $200 POLICE M
POUNDS Honda s Toyota a
CMvy5 Jeeps And Spo 1 U

I es Ca Now 800 772 H70
EXT 7832

AVIUable Now Tw n Towe s now
aceepl ng app cat ons o BR
HUD subs d zed ap o e de y
and
hand capped
EOH
(304)675 6679

ANNOUNCEMENT S

005

CUSTOMER SEAV CE Ta~o 0
do • W th Phone 0 ~C Fu 0

Personals

Pa t T me A11a abe

P-H 0-T.Q.G.R A P tt-Y
Weddings
Pes
Spo tsTeams
P o ess ona Ce
ed Pho og a

888 526

4660 0 V s www 4 ee nfo com
605

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F nance 0 Down Pas
C ed

phe
Reasonable a es

P ob ems OK

E en

t 985 ~an&amp; Am 305 HO 5 Speed
CD PLaya 3 2 Speake s New
Pa IS Ask ng $2 750 740 245
038

Tu ned Down Be o e Aees ab sh
Yo C odk
80&lt;Hl59.()359

Ca o appo ntmen
(304)6 5-7472
304)675 7279

RENTAL S
REAL ESTATE

31 0 Homes for Sale
$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOVT BANK REPOS
CA
NOW
800 360 4620
EXT 8509

Wan ed To Oo

Se

Moun s Tee

ce Bucke T uck Se

ce

Top T m Remova sump G na
ng Fu y nsu ed F ee Es
ma es B awe on o aoo 838
9566 0 740 388 9648

cess u Campg o nd A d T me

sha e Resa e C ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SA ES NTEANAT ON
AL 800 423 5967 24 Hou s

000 Lo s o Ex as

740

388 8366

MERCHANDISE
REPOSALE
Ne\le l ed n No Money Down
Sa e Ovo $5 000 Ca
888
56f&gt;.O 67

30 Announcements
GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be sh p 0 r mesh a e? WELl
TAKE T Ame cas Mos Sue

94 Mans on 6x80 w h ou a Lo
S2

Bank

510
2 Bed oom House 2 Ba hs 924
Eas e n A enue Ga po s $3751
Mo Oepos Aefe encet Re
qu ed No Pe s 740 44S 2282

Ca 9am 4pm Pease ask fo
G 0110 Bob

www eso sa es com

Household
Goods

App ances
Reeond oned
Weshe s 0 ye s Ranges Re
g ato • 90 Day Gua an ee We
Se New Maytag App ances
F oe nch C y May ag 740 446
7795

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
FINANCIAL

11 D Help Wanted
OWN A COMPUTER ? PUT T
TO WORK 1850 $3 50Q Mo P
IF FAEE Deta s Log 0 to http
www hbn com Access Code
5298

New To You Th ift Shpppe
9 Wes S mso A nens
740 592 842

a a y c o h ng and hOuseho d
em s S 00 bag sa e e e y
Thu Sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 OQ-5 30

40

Giveaway

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PAAT
T ME NO EX PEA ENCE RE
OU RED 800 757 0753

210

New And U~ed Fu n u e S o e
Be ow Ha day Inn Kanauga
g

AT &amp; T MC
SPRINT Wha 1
The B G SEC AET1 7 Make B G
$$$ All CASH FAEE nlo
800 997 9888 E.:
55 24 H s

S987 85 WEEKLY P oce55 ng
HUO FHA Mo gage Ae unds No

E11pe ence Aequ ed Fo FREE
no ma on Ca
BOO so 6832
E11 300

Seek ng Manage Fo Jewe y
Sto e App can Shou d Be A Mo
\18 ed Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 gan z:ed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab 'i Some Com
pue Sk s ReCju ed Sa a y And
Bo us Pus Bene Package

AT&amp;T BELL
PAYPHONE ROUTES
30 P oven Loca ions
$2K Wk~ 800 800 3470

AI ea as ate adwn sing n

Sav ngs On New Couches Good
Hosp a Bed 992 7 2F Co
b a Runabou Boa New Cond
on Check Us Out 740 446
4782

c advert ae any pre 8rence
mna ono dsc mna on
based on ace co or 8 lgkln
sex fam a sta us o na ona
orlgn o any n anton o

make any such p efe ence
mlta lon o dlscrlm nat on

Th s newspape w no
know ng vacce~t

advert semen s fo ea estate
when s nvloa ono the
aw Ou readers are he eby
nfomled ha a dwellngs
adven sed n th s newspaper
are avaUable on an equal
opportun ty basis

.lo--------•1.1

Send Resume App ca t ons To
Acqu s ons F ne Je we y 5
Second Ave nue Ga po &amp; OH
4563 0 Fax To 740 446-2£00

994 Dodge tnt ap d v 6 Au
omatc Cuse A Powe Wnd
ows Powe Loc:ks Ch ome
Whee s 15 900 740 379 2922
Evenngs

e

th s newspape s sub act to
he Fade a Fa Hous ng Act
of 1968 which makes h ega

New 4 Wde 3BR 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h ow down Paymen1
F 88 A

F ee De

ey

888

926 3426

85 Honda C v c CAX 5 speed
new c: u ch uns &amp; ooks good
··~ ng $ 800 740.992 2904

New 6x80 3BA 2BA $268 pe
mon h Low Down Paymen F ee
A F ee De ve y
888 928
3426
New Ooub ew de 3 BA 2BA
$276 pe mon h ow Down Pay
men F ee A F ee De e v
888 928 3426

32x80 Fac o y Repo Neve
ved n $49 950
866 69
6777

The Da•ly Sentinel • Page B3

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Mpnday, June 5 2000

Middleport, Ohio

992 Fo d Tempo GL AC PW
C ulse $2 750 (304 675 40 4

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

LEGAL NOTICE
Mortha Boynton 11r1d JOhn
Doe Unknown Spouaa II
eny of Mortha Boynton
WhOII l ..t place Of
l'llldence le known •• 200
Laaley StrNI Pomeroy OH
45789 but whooa pr..ant
piece ol r .. ldance Ia
unknown will take notice
that on follarch 1e 2000 at
10 t5 am
Conaaco
Financial flied 111 Comptelnt
In C.M No QO.CV.OZ8 In the
Court ol Common Pie..
Malga County Ohio alleging
thot the Delendant(a)
Martha Boynton and John
Doe Unknown SpOUII If
an\1 of Martha Boynton
have or claim to have an
lntereat In the real eatate
daacrlbad below
Situated In the County ol
Melgo In the Slote of Ohio
and In the VIllage of
Pomeroy and bounded and
deacrlbtd aa tollowa
Beginning at a atake at the
corner ol Brock and Lawley
Streetl thence running
South 80 dtg 47 min W
112 laet to a atake thence
South 9 dog 13 min E 40
IHt to a atakt thence North
80 dog 47 min E 112 feet
)o a etake thence North II
Ctag 13 min W 40 teet to
the place of beginning Bald
lot Included tha houll and
barn and btlng a lot 40 feet
wide by 112 faat deep Tha
above deacrlbad property 11
pan of Lot No 463 of the
coneolldatlon of Pomeroy
11 reported In Plat Book 2
Page 17 and 18 In the
recorde of Melga County
Recorder a Olflca and
contained 0 103 acrea more
or leaa
Tha Petitioner further
ellegaa that by reaaon ot
datault of the Dafendant(a)
In tha payment of a
promlaaory note according
to Ita tenor tha conditione
ol a concurrent mortgage
deed given to aacura the
payment of eald note end
conveying the pramla11
deacrlbad have bun
broken end the aama hea
become abaoluta
The Petitioner pray• that
tho Defendant (1) named
above be required to
anower and aat up their
lnttreat In 11ld real aatata
or ba forever barred lrom
aaaertlng the aama lor
torecloaure ol aald

ON THE TRAIL RIGHT NOW7
LUSH FAIRWAYS
VELVEn' GREENS

BAlMY BREEZES

3 78

GOLF-AND W E WON T TAKE
ALL OF 1ll£ GREEN

OUT OF YOUR WALLET

1 800 949 4444
www rt}golf com

i
Public Notice

Public Notice
mortgage the marehellng of
anr. IIana and the aaleo ol
•• d real eatate and the
procaada of aald ••••
applied to the payment ol
Patillo- a Claim In the
proper order ol Ill priority
and for auch other and
further relief a• le 1uat and
equitable
THE DEFENDANT(S)
NAMED ABOVE REQUIRED
TO ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THE 7TH DAY OF

WANT A COMPUTEA 11 BUT
NO CASH ? MMX Techno ogy
W .f nance W th 0 Down Pas
Crtd P oblems No P ob em Ca
ToU F ee 877 293 40~2

AUGUSt 2000
B and New 26x58 Modu a Home
Sm h s Cusom Cabnas 3 Bed
oom s 2 Ba hs P ce $45 ooa
Mus Be Mo ad Ca 740 388
9622

995 S 0 Ex ended Cab Au
toma c AIC $5 895 995 Chrys
e Van Town &amp; Coun ry Loaded
One Owne $4 395 989 S 10
$ t 795 Ca s F om $1 895 To
$3 795 COOK MOTORS 740
446 0 03

340 Business and
&amp;. Yard S.let Mutt
Be Pa d In Advance

Buildings

QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
tho day before 11to od
it to run Sunday
Mlldon 200pm
F~day Monday ediUon
9 30 o.m Sotunloy

TEACHERS RET AEES FULLER
BRU SH Needs Men Women
Who Want To Supp amen The
ncome FexbeHous Unm ad
ncome Ca Now
800 340
3202

Are You Connected?
nte ne Use &amp; wan ed
$350 1850/Week
88826 33
www e commb z ne

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
2 am y ya d sa e June 9 h &amp;

on 9am Spm 39271 Sate Ro
u e 68 W Darwin between A 33
&amp; Snowv a
A Yad5aesMult8ePedtn

SLAND V EW MOTEL
At 7 Gol polo Oho

Ae

Fou Un sAnd U y Aoom Pus
One F oo Home n Two Apa
men s) Can Be Conve ad Back
To Nlc:e S ng a Home

House 0 sa e on Baum Add 1on
Ad
bah nd Ches e Ska e A
Way) 4 bod oom 2 ba h LR OR
FA u y a ea u y equ ppad
k chen CIA gas hea n ce b g
o 2 ca ga age oa 740 985
346

Advance Oetd ne 1 OOpm the
day befo 1 the ad 1 to r.un
Sund1y • Monday edition
1 OOpm F fdoy

POSTAL JOB S $48 323 00 YR
Now H ng No Expe ence Pad
Tan ng G ea Benef s Ca 7
Day&amp; 600.429 3660 Ex J 566

140
pers Pans acoss

wckMake

Fun

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

(330) 425-4201
(8) 5 12 19 2tl

(7) 3 10 lTC

P ck Up

Public Notice

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNT"l OHIO
CaM No 3011110
Docket 0 Pogo 200
NOTICE
Ravlllcl Cocta
SIC 2171 01 (A)
Notice Ia hereby given
that Tina Loulae Sutton

1998 Chevy ex end a c:ab 4X4

V 8 5 sp Loaded 40 OOQ m es
$16 000 m 304 773 5244 efta
6PM

790

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

Caaa No 30800 of 31865
Pl81aant Vlaw Rd Raclnt
Ohio Mtlgl hat applied to
tha Common Pleat Court
Probate Olvl1lon of Malga
County Ohio lor an ordar
to change hl.n.er name to
Angel LouiM Sulton
Said application will be
haard In tha Malga County
PrObata Court at 2 00 p m
on tha 5th day ol July 2000
at tha
Courthouaa
Pomeroy Ohio
Tina L. Sutton Applicant
Tha State of Ohio Malgl
County
Paraonally appeared
belora ma Judith R Slaeon
Deputy Clark and made
eolemn oath that the notice
a copy of which Ia hereto
attached w.. published
one lima to wll on the 5th
day of Juna 2000 (baing at
leaot lhlrty doyo prior to tho
5th day of July 2000 the
data the application Ia to bl
heard aa mllrltlonad In aald
notice) In the Dally Sentinel
a newapaper of general
clrculallon In the County
alorettld
Judith R Slaeon
Swom to bafore and algnad
In my preaanca lhla 1at doy
of June 2000
(S) 5 1TC

S.uy wnlms ..... AN•awdlal~ ~IIIII

,.T

810

2id'

Proteaalon1l
Services

180 Wanted To Do

- " Mt Ufe Grl....
Domino 1 P :ua n Pt P 11aan
lltxlbll houtlopg~ n POriOn
304175 eaea

TUANID OOWN ON
IOC AL IICUR TV 181 ?

NO Ftl Un Ill WI Win
888 e82 3345

KAINER RIDGE
The P Ice Hat Seen Reduced On
Th s 23 Ac: e T ac Of Wo ods
And H s On y $23 000 Loco ad
On K no Rood 011 SA 7 &amp;
Nt~hbo hood
CINTEAPO NT RUN
Beaut fu Pond On e + Ao 1 Lo
P Ul Fou, Othl I 5 + Ac I Lo I
Alldy Fo You New Home Lo
ctlld 3 M ill Off SA 35 Neal The
Jtckoon Go a County L 111

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond t ana e me gua an ee
Loca e • ences u n shed Es
tablshed 1975 Ca 24 H s (740
446 0870
800 267 0!76 Aog
o • Wate p ooflng

Both Birthday

Celebrltlon

forV~rBahr
Tuppers Platns
Elementary Gvffi
Sun June 11th 2-4
Frtends and Fa:tnily
Welcome
No Gtfts Please

DNA LABAATOAY SERVICES
A 1 877 974 7999 Resu ts n 5
Bus ne01 Day&amp; PAN FREE
PROCEDURE Cou Adm" be
Aesu ta W h lnte eat F ee F

ANTIQUE. AND COLLE.CilBI.ES
Nice old Iron bed chllc;f s pressback rocker small
painted stepbadt cupboard dresser w/ marble
Inlay mission style rocker fancy wood bed, tall
antique trunk. old pictures and frames Early baby
stroller waD cabinets school slall! unusual
wrench adv Williams &amp;. Scarbeny (Hudson cars
OaiUpoUs Ohio) G W Cooper Thurrn&amp;n Ohio adv
picture small Purity Feeds display: Prim woodel1
vase Prim wood !X)ol box Sev adv boxes and
tins baskets lamps &amp;. lanterns bed wanner old
dishes old bottles horse collars old saddle slf\81el
trees hand forged hdwe Items hand planes
brass flashllghts good selection of anUque tools

ANGUS AND CHIANOU8 Bu o

P ce d Reasonab y Sate Run
Fa ms Jockoon 740 i88 !395

A

Tappin H E e ency 90 v. Gas
Fu nac:es 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hu Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ams F eo 6 Yea Pa &amp; &amp; La
bo Wa anty Benne s Hu ng &amp;
Coo ng
60 0 872 5967
www orvb com'bennett

A~

ng Ho 8111740)3811-83!6

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

99 vz 25 New P aat c New
Reeds New P 1 on &amp; R nge Very
Powe fu 9 kl Look s New F on
Fo ks Have .Seen Comp ete y At
bu Wh cl't Inc: udaa New Sea 1
And F u d Rea Shock Has Seen
Aeena ged W h N ogen And
Checked Fo B eed o T es
A e n Exc:e an Cond on Chan
And Sp oc:ke s A e L let New
$ 800 740 448 7375

DON'T M 88 OUT ON THE 8AV
NQS CALL TODAY FOR FAll
MAPS

11002 313U
AnthOI1)' land Co L d

750 Boats &amp; Motora

for Sale

www QQUQ!rytyme com

Now Tak ng App co on• 35
Wtt 2 Bed oom Townhoutt
Ape ment1
no ud11 wa er
S.wogo T llh 1325 Mo 740
4410008

T.obacco Bed s
256 47

...,.,

8580 ST RT 588 (OLD RT 35) GALUPOUS, OHIO

~RATERN TY ISSUES? CALL

1998 Yamaha 350 wa
1x 11 uk ng S3 000 o
paymon • 740-949-2529

Look ng To Buy A Ntw Homa?
Don H~vo L4nd? WI Oo Hu ry
On Y 0 Loto loN ~ 13112e5

Ad

Home
Improvements

150
FREE FREE MONEY PROB
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CATION FEE 1 677
543 1357 EKT 402

You can go to Las Vegas 11 you re lucky
enough to make It through thla door "

SERVICES

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
Amos Eve ~one Ap
p1 oved W th SO Down Low
Mon h y Paymento
800 6 1
3476 Ext 330

nanc ngA.va abe n

EARN A LEGA' COLLEGE DE
GREE OU CKLY Ba che o 1
Mute 1 Doc o 1 1 By Co 1
spondenct Baled Upon P o Ed:
uca on And Sho S udy Cou 1t
Po FREE no mo on Book 11
Phono CAMBA DQE STATE
UN VERS TV 100 864 83 8

1

.. Arliltllllljptl II cei!ICII I'IIIIHrNHIII.......
IIIII• lallar tlla CHell ulllliMI s-Ay tllay fiiY fia~
HI wUt 1~1 aeds ........

HUge nven o y 0 Scoun P cas
On V ny Sk t ng Ooo s W nd
ows Anc no s Wa e He a e s
Pumb ng&amp; Eect ca Pa s Fu
nallas &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e t1ome Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb com/bennet!

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Woa wood
0 ve om $289 o $370 Wa k to
shop &amp; moves Ca 740 446
2568 Equal Hous ng Opportun ty

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1

KIT N CARLYLE ® by Larry Wright

FARM SUPP LIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1

HERMAN® by J1m Unger

JET

Ch

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

580

BRUNER LAND
74().4411492

e cohng

Conaaoo Bank Inc
Dlnnla Reimer Co L~A.
Dennie Reimer
Attorney at Law
Attorney for
Plalntlll Petitioner
PO Box888
Twlnaburg OH 44087

(304)675-8870

AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu n S ock
Ca Flon Evans -aoo 537 9528

omod od

c Hyd au c l

Fu S ze

AttentiOn Deve ope s
33 Ac es App ox ma ely o Ac e
Lake MOb e Home W h Add On
Idea Fo Hous ng Campg ound
Es a e 199 500 740.388 8678

Business
Training

Budge
Types Access To Ove 10 000
T ansm ss ons
2-45 5677

E ec

JAN TROL HEAT NO AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
NSTALLED
You Don I Ca Us WB So(h
Lose F ee Es1 ma es 740 ·446
6308 800-29 0098

Go 1 Co A New 0 I SA 325
Dee C eek Ad
t 1 Ac: es
1&lt;5 ooo o 14 Aces $19 ooo
R o G ande Mob ey Ad Basi
Bu d ng S es n The Couf'\ v e
Ac es S2t 500 8 Aces w h
Pond $29 500 0
5 Ac es
13 500 Caeh Chesh e Jesse
C aek Ad 20 Pa c:e s Beg nn ng
A 6 Ac es S 2 000 To 37 Ac es
$47 000 G ea Homes S tes And
Hun ng Cay Twp Ma abe Ad
Ac es $20 ooo o 3 Ac es
W h Ba n $37 000 F end y
A dge 5 Aces I tO 000 Cash
P ce

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F a&amp; Ca Fo App c:a on E~eam
na on nfo ma on Fede a H e
Fu Benef s 800 598 4504 Ex
ton s on 5 5 (8 A M 6 PM
CST

Two am y Thu sday &amp; F day
June 8 9 Bam 4pm SA 7 Tup

2 Bedrooms W h 2 Expando
Rooms Adjacen To L:a ge
Rooms C A Gas Hea No Pets
Oepos I And Aefe ences Ae
qu od 740-367 7584

2 Boo ooms Yard 5 M o&amp; ~ollth
2 8 Ga po s $275 Mo $150
Oepos
ncludes Wa e T ash
740 256 6769

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV T BANK AEPO S
800
355.()()24 Ext 6040

ng am Be ge Company w be
accep ng app c:a ons fo Oeck
Mnds a he Bu eau 0 Emp oy
men P ogams 225SIIhS P
P easan WV on June 6 h June
7 h and 8 h om 8 ooam
3 OOpm You mus have va d
p c u e D and secu y ca d o
apply EOE MJ~N

1995 Toyo a Tacoma 4X4 E~~:
ce ant Cond on
$8500
(304)675 7652

HOLES OF WORLD ClASS

for Sale

8

~7 Paop a Needed To Lose Up
to ~0 Pound&amp; n The Nu 30
Days Fee Samp es 7-'0 44
9&amp;2

WOULDN T YOU MrHER BE

750 Boats &amp; Motors

CARS FROM $28 MO
m
pounds Repos Fee SO Down /24
Mos C 99 Fo Ls ngs 800
3 9 3323 X21 56

12x60 Mob e Home Two Bed
oo ms Located Beh nd Fox s
P zza Sandh Road $37!5 Pe
Mon h nc udes Wa e Sewe
Cal 304)675 3423

~nngFever

MISC. TOOLS
Wilker Turner 6" planer jOinter reese hitch
ml5c smaD hand tools tool boxes plus more.

-·NOTE. THE. EAJU.Y SfARTING TIME..
AUCTIONEER U.SUE A LEMLEY

6 Family Yard Sale
115 4th St

New Haven
Duncans Res
June 6th &amp;7th

740-

"923 (HOME) OR 740-Z&lt;JS-9866 (BARN)
"UCENSED AND BONDED BY STATE OF OHIO"
CASH/APPROVED CHECK ONLYIIII
FOOD
RESI'ONSIIll.t lOR ACCIDENTS OR LOST PRom:m1

�Monday, June 5, 2QOO

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

OOP
.::ALLEY
.
.

CRIDI'r PROBLEMS???

DIPOYIII
PDft

SMITH•s CONSTRUCTIOn

No Credit • Slow Crtdlt • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

•New Homes
• Garage•
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment...

.

Need It done, give u1 1 call
FREE ESTIMATES
Orta.t Prices on Ne• Homes

You're Trallled with Respect!

992-2753 .

AD Mabs Tractor ·a
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
.
Dealers.

I

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulll

Coolville, OH ..sm

74007~111

992·11 0I '""oo,..,,.

Hours M·F 9 am - 7 pm
Sat.9am -1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service ·
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

740·949-2804

~122

•

I mo pd .

.... . .

r~

OLD LOCK24

Easl State Street
IAthe~•s, Ohio 45701

Racine
46909 SR 124
Camping- Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

•mrrno.

"A Better

740-949-7039
.

.

"Gel in wl,ile you can, apace is limited"

Sunseri Jfome
Construction
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabine1s Vinyl Siding·
Roofs- Decks. r.ar&gt;oe&lt;
Free Estimates

.AlltEL
'. '

.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

'

"We're Back"

.

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.
.
Dailey
·Trucking

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Dump Truck
Servtce
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime

--

Sand and Dirt

Racine, o•to

WANTED
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Quality Window
Syste11s, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
·992-4119 or
1~800-291-5600

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(R'andy)

Candee &amp;Crafts
9Z 143 9m.::ffi7

S"fiDE ltiVEit fiG SEitVICE
"Ahead In Service"
Nutrena Wl!lern Pride 12" Swttt Feed................... 5.25/50 lb bag
Nutreno 16" RabbH PeHets....................................'6.95/SO lb. bag
Nutrena Huillers Pride 21" Dog Food .....................'6.7S/SO lb. bag
Nutrena 16" layer Crumbe~ ................................. '5.911/SO lb. bag
Nutrena S&lt;ra11h Feed ............................................. '6.75/SO lb. bog
Shode River 12" Canle Feed................................'6.75/100 lb. bog
1

Call 740·985·3831

,_.,, Olllo

35537 St. Rt. 7 Nor1lo

BIUILUMBD
State Route 248

Chester, OH

• Eoteo Rocketo and Aeceooorieo

• Tralru by Lionel 4 MTII
• K-Line
• Athearn

• Atlu

• Gori!J'aYeo Traek
• Model Po..,er
• Lifeline

'

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS
Custom Carpel, VInyl,
Commercial an Ceramic
Tile, AII'JYr.;:s or
Hardwood F oorlng,
Carpet Binding and
Rest retching.
30 Yrs. Experieni:e
MIKE YOUNG
740·1)92·7724
PAT YOUNG
74t-949-G046

PSI
CIINITRUCTDtl
Remodeling,

Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

740·992·1709

BISSELl BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
•'Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RBIDENTI~L
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Albany, Ohio

4)19100 1 mo. pd .

• K J 3 2

(304) 882·2079

Bulldoser &amp; Backhoe

LINDA'S
PAINTING

AnER YOU WORK ON
YORE SCHOOL
lOOKS II

"Take the "pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you" '
lnlerior
FREE ESTIMATES

e·s

.I. YIONl&gt;tfl. IF ..

~VeJ C.ONIII&gt;eJ~P
A GAIEf~ ·

NewS ITEM•
\' BIL.L. 6ATfS

SON

BUILDING
Long Bottom, Ohio
. 740-985·4141
Residential- decks~ kitchens,
Commercial· me1al studs,
bathrooms, custom
drywall, suspended ceilings
remodeling, handicap access
Mike W. Marcum'
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
Owner
vinyl siding

Before 6 p.m. ·

Leave Message
Aher 6 pm· 614-985-4180

High &amp; Dr~
Self-Storage

·-

We Service All Makes
Washers· Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

L.OSl" NINf .

IN POt,ITIC.$1•

BIL,.ION
OOLLA,S IN

•

ONE l&gt;AY!''

BORN LOSER

'"F"-'/0~...\TE~ Of 1&lt;\l~E'. f~ 1'1\~
'(OU\11., C,ODZILlJ\ If:&gt;. WD-'~ !

'W~I\T I~ '11\E WO~t&gt;
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1-1"-T(.Il,\"""?

,..

l~i'I'T OO...T "~~Of

"- 1-\l~~f&gt;..TC..f\-"

HYDRAUUCS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose repairs;
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales· Sgal. buckets
lo SS gal. drums
2 !h miles out of
Chester on SR 248.

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

4/281 mo

STAMMERttoi!O... PLUS, .
f&lt;ALF · THE STUFF HE'S

'

)&gt;d.

T'E'LLING. ME' I$
TOTALLY

Advertise'
in this :
.space for
'
$50 per .
month.·:..

IllES'
(740) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

740-985·4194

513111 mo pd.

He~ .ALL FL~TERE'D!

HE'$ &amp;LUSHIN6, HE'S

.

T&amp;D

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Piu'mbing
Free Estimates

&lt;

740-992-5212•

4{19/00 t mo pd.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

fi:(I-IC.l\ ~L.I'\'~

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Ill I. lad
Pameroy, Dille

~

'.

, PITCHER! IT ~URTS . ....,....,
M'i NECK WATCI-UN6
OTI-lER TEAM ~IHIOME
RUNS OVER M't' I-lEAD 1

w.-.OM&amp;!

MAV6E
JUST FACE TI-lE
OTHER WA't', AND T&gt;IEN I
WON'T I-lAVE TO TURN AROUND
EVER'o' TIME ... '{ES, T!-115 15
601N6 TO BE MUCI-l BETTER ..

us1ness
•
''

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local-843-5284 ·
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mongage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
..~.

·~
·~

. , 11

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····~
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Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
Apartment
Senior~, Disabled, Handicapped
Range, Refrrgerator, A/C, On-Site Laundry
Community Room, 24. Hour Malntenancl!'
Provided
Call Of Come By Our Office L.ocated at
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
OffiCe Hours
Monday and Thursday 10 am - 3 pm
Phone (740) 992-6419
TOO 1·1100-750-0750
Contact Office For Details

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VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) of faith in someone who promised
· TUESDAY, June 6, 2000
Keep
your focus on your .objec- to do one of your jobs for you . ·
new
attitude
in
the
year
A
•
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
ahead gains you the ability to use tives at all limes 1oday and continue
to
visualize
success.
What
Opportunities
that develop for
your expertise more effectively so
you can more easily fulfill your you conceive. is .achievable, so you have to be acted upon as soon
don'l give up hope if things don't as they pop up. The longer you
material desires.
wait, the more they can be dilutGEMINI (May 21-June 20) happen fasl enough.
LIBRA
·{Sept.
23-0ct.
23)
ed.
They · may even evaporate
When you place yourself in the
position to respond to your incli- Unless you get yo)lr ideas to the right ·before your eyes .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
nations and impulses, things are mar~etplace, people can't be
likely to work out better for you. expected to be aware of what you . Maners that are directly under
Don'i let anyone but yourself have to offer. Find and contact your control should remain so
struccure your day. Trying to patch those who know the ins and outs today. If you allow someone el se
·
to take lhe reigns on your behalf.
up a broken romance? The Astro- of marketing.
Graph Matchmaker can help you · SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) il could cause problems no one
understand what to do to make the There's a possibility today that expected ,
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to you may be able to earn more
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, from a side venture than you can
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- from your base source. Check out This could be one of 1hose limes
tion, New York, NY 10156.
ways tO do SO, Si~Ch as using the when you learn u greu1 deal by
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Internet.
·
teaching u matter to someone. The
Get your important work out of
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. fresh insight · you gain will be
the way early today while the 21) Everything you put in writing enormously helpful.
influences are working in your today, such · as contracu and
TAURUS (April 20-Muy 20)
favor. They could quickly change agreements, should work out just · Things could go your way today
on you as the clock ticks on.
fine for you, but those oft'·lhe-cuff and tum out quite beneficial for
LflO (July 23-Aug. 22) An pacts could blow up in your face.
agreement is only os good os the Get that signature.
intent of the ponicipont~. Deal
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
solely ~ith those you know whose 19) Favorable financial returns are you materially. Don'tlet someone
ethics are on par with yours, and in the offing today for work or who is jealous of .lhat fact spoil
don't let any lust minute, unlcst- services you personully perform, your upbeul, happy mood.
• ~:d person in on lhc deal.
· hul I wnulo:.ln't place tt whole lui

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DOWN

Not wlnnlnv

Com~lala

1 Producer

31 Maon v.hlcle

4 Mountain

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(-.)
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32 Walter'a ..ward
dHllned
33

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charge

3

em.

on

a lke'a lnltlela

• Electrical ...n

tOUnloc~

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Paredl7 ttyena'a kfn

Change

genatlc.olly

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c.ondldltn

West

Pass

North
P888
2NT

East
Pass
Pass

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3•
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Paaa

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P.-s

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24 Opportune

as Take--

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28 Ooze (out)
30 Unmarried

-man

Pass

34 ShNWd

Pass

35Ne-

mucullne

nor....,lnlne

31

Most, if not all, capital cilies
suffer from traffic congestion.
(However, anyone who has lived
in, say, Pads or Rome will laugh
when they hear New Zealanders
from Wellington complain about
its rush hour.)
There is a traffic jam in bridge:
a blocked suit. Then, you must
first cash the blocking honors
before crossing to lhe other hand
in another suit to gain access to
the remaining winners. Somelimes, careful planning at trick
one may be required .
This deal caused amusement in
a class. South's last bid was a
slight gamble -- but 1 wanted to
end on a high note!
After West led the heart jack,
declarer said that it was laydown.
She put her cards on the table and
claimed these 13 lricks: six
spades, two hearts, four diamonds
and one club. The opponents
accepted lhat, bul I asked her to
play on -- and she promptly won
trick one with dummy's heart
queen! Now she couldn't get four
diamond tricks because she had
burned up her .dummy entry.
In desperation. she ran the ·
spade; suil and received some
help. East forgol about retaining
equallenglh with the dummy, dis·
carding a diamond. This permitled declarer to play off the diamond ace, overtake the diamond
queen with dummy's king, cash
the diamond jack while pitching a
club loser, then take the diamond
three, throwing her last low club.
So, 1he conlract made afler all!
If you're curious, play through
the deal and see what happens if
East stays glued to her four diamonds. Who wins trick 13 and
with what card?

oan Rather'•

network

:II Fly
31F,._Ior
atratchlng
40 Oerman aub
42 Stop

44Prophttl

48 On a-wtth
1

solm~0:

52 UO, llomlln

53 Olwa-of

appnmol

(okay) .

THATDAILT c:iti':I'O ,t. ..... .( _ /) 'C ~C:..e WOlD
PUULII 0~ ~QU ~J,.
~ J;i(,f"-.:J
IAMI
Uito~

by CLAY I. POLLAN

O Rearrange

letters of the
four scrambled words below ro form four simple worda.

I

OXTERP

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TRYAP 1o·
.---,:--T-...,r::-T-1°,
Upon receiving my passport 1.
I~~~~~~:;:l~"~l:;:~~~dec1ded I really needed the trip if 1
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Complete .tho
quoted
by Mlmg 10 the m1111ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below .

PRINT NUMBERED LEITfRS IN
THESE SQUARES

. , UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I

SCR.lM LETS ANSWERS
Postal- Ninlh - Threw- Martyr- WASN'T ANY

While working for a temp agency my daughter ccncluded that she had to find someone'&amp; talenll where
there WASN'T ANY.

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.by Luis Campo~
~ Cipllor Cfcr)l'llii*&gt;UO-&amp;INIW 01W -lrom quatlllano b y - peaplo, Pllllnl

. . . -. El1o:ll-ln,. dplilr- ""........
Today's clw: I equ~~ls U

'LMY

I!YADAW

WYZYX

OAF
CAW'L

8ME8JYW

LMY

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AYYXALY

PYIAIDY

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(IAOIKWEDL)

CAW
YRXJYX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In my youth there Were WOida you
front of a gl~. Now you can1eay 'gi~. •- Tom Lehrer
0-

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FRWJYYO

YHH

OYYC.'-

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"' IlEA, ....

'Birthday

...

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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
w
aters Edge of Syracuse

c,._

27

I MONDAY

'Your

•'

SERVICES

.·~·~.

South

Sentinel

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL

p::-.·~··•:-.•···········
,.

·numbera

12~

· To get a current weather
report, check the

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

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

55 Olvlnv duck
Ill Ex1reme t.r
57 S.nlora

25 Creme--

LMYF

Ill IIISULAfiOII &amp;
COIISTIUCTIOII
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage DOQrs &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
· Blown Insulation
992-2772
For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

Joined

54 Army order
( 2 -.)

Opening lead: • J

fl.f(.ENT

20 Yrs experiiiKt

1811-3881

51~11y

ao Card apo1

. BY fHILLIP ALDER

'·

NowRentmg

RONm

I .

Uncloa the road

Vtilitie•
(7401992·3831 .

ftalpplianca

Anlla...-11

of
13
41 Tom lrobw'a
14 Stick (to)
nelworl&lt;
15 T•· turna
43 - 8t. UuNIIt
1BT-o1f,ll
41 111111 111111 (Ill*.)
ak:Uwa
48 Opp. of NNw
17 II alii&lt;* autllx 47 "Opal" end
11CompOMr
48 Amount

Vulnerable: North-South
Deller: North

SeM1ir:e•

&amp;

• 2
¥86532
• 10 8 6 5
• KQ9

t A Q

Hou.., &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp; : ·
Grading
Septic Sy•terw &amp;:

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

East

• i 5
• J 10 9 4
• 9 7 4
• 8 6 53

Puzzle

• A 4 2

"'"""'

New Haven WV

Weal

•A7

HOWARD
EXCAVATING C~.
U..-t.onel:fea Pll

Wild..,...,

40

24~

South
•AKQJ108

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
R
E FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED ~
R
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
T
¥
(740) 985·3948
E
4!24100 1 mo pd .

GUARANTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE

1 ll&lt;lgerd highly

7 Woratr'pp•d

CrOIIWOrd

34 L8cld119 Iron
~ Townmep

Tennla-caurt
dlvklenl.
23 Do a tailor'•

• J 10 7

I

ACROSS

21

•KQ

•'

'~
,;

DIPIRftlllf

'•

Free Estimates
Contractors Weloe11e

Ken Youns

•hdral11n •CII41• Rlllll1
•Wt~4WtrltiRI •Wr111~1

·
'

1-800-311·3391

615/00 1 mo. Old.

Antl3's

'
!

. ~~ /7&lt;{/iJ-

992·1550
The Appll•nce
Man

Dozer work.
frH Estimates

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GOnERS

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

.

949·2249

.

06-011·00

• 7 6 4 3

(740) 992-347P .

MARCUM

011111 For Greo11ln1
For Your Pet's Nuds.

No

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.i
·•.'·
c
· CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVIaS M:
0
N
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVICES :.;.s
c
()

Poms

• New Homes
• Garages
· • Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

ALDER

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel • Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services ·,

lnsurtd· Professional Service

Mystic

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 1 O'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM -8 PM
11211&lt;10 1 mo. nd,

.. ..

tJ..OO'i\E~ ~~~!IT"­

.

""'

1·•·1

7/22{1'FN

992-5479
.

(740} 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

2,000 sf. Modern Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease·. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600.sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404

CAMPGROUttD

Phone (740) 593-6671

11110/lln

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

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

~·

Lie. 1 oo-50

'

NEA

BRIDGE
PHILLIP

HILL'S
WICK'S ·tfl
. ' SELF STORAOE If:,
"fiOUHCI anCI
29670 Baahan
EXCAVfiTinG
Road

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Uosll[ ~l!t DWDIDibiD

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'" Sales Representative
I
&lt;+,
Larry Schey

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaiYJII
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.

The O.lly SenUnel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. ~nda~June5,2000

1

�Monday, June 5, 2QOO

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

OOP
.::ALLEY
.
.

CRIDI'r PROBLEMS???

DIPOYIII
PDft

SMITH•s CONSTRUCTIOn

No Credit • Slow Crtdlt • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

•New Homes
• Garage•
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment...

.

Need It done, give u1 1 call
FREE ESTIMATES
Orta.t Prices on Ne• Homes

You're Trallled with Respect!

992-2753 .

AD Mabs Tractor ·a
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
.
Dealers.

I

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulll

Coolville, OH ..sm

74007~111

992·11 0I '""oo,..,,.

Hours M·F 9 am - 7 pm
Sat.9am -1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service ·
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

740·949-2804

~122

•

I mo pd .

.... . .

r~

OLD LOCK24

Easl State Street
IAthe~•s, Ohio 45701

Racine
46909 SR 124
Camping- Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

•mrrno.

"A Better

740-949-7039
.

.

"Gel in wl,ile you can, apace is limited"

Sunseri Jfome
Construction
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabine1s Vinyl Siding·
Roofs- Decks. r.ar&gt;oe&lt;
Free Estimates

.AlltEL
'. '

.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

'

"We're Back"

.

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.
.
Dailey
·Trucking

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Dump Truck
Servtce
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime

--

Sand and Dirt

Racine, o•to

WANTED
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Quality Window
Syste11s, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
·992-4119 or
1~800-291-5600

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(R'andy)

Candee &amp;Crafts
9Z 143 9m.::ffi7

S"fiDE ltiVEit fiG SEitVICE
"Ahead In Service"
Nutrena Wl!lern Pride 12" Swttt Feed................... 5.25/50 lb bag
Nutreno 16" RabbH PeHets....................................'6.95/SO lb. bag
Nutrena Huillers Pride 21" Dog Food .....................'6.7S/SO lb. bag
Nutrena 16" layer Crumbe~ ................................. '5.911/SO lb. bag
Nutrena S&lt;ra11h Feed ............................................. '6.75/SO lb. bog
Shode River 12" Canle Feed................................'6.75/100 lb. bog
1

Call 740·985·3831

,_.,, Olllo

35537 St. Rt. 7 Nor1lo

BIUILUMBD
State Route 248

Chester, OH

• Eoteo Rocketo and Aeceooorieo

• Tralru by Lionel 4 MTII
• K-Line
• Athearn

• Atlu

• Gori!J'aYeo Traek
• Model Po..,er
• Lifeline

'

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS
Custom Carpel, VInyl,
Commercial an Ceramic
Tile, AII'JYr.;:s or
Hardwood F oorlng,
Carpet Binding and
Rest retching.
30 Yrs. Experieni:e
MIKE YOUNG
740·1)92·7724
PAT YOUNG
74t-949-G046

PSI
CIINITRUCTDtl
Remodeling,

Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

740·992·1709

BISSELl BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
•'Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RBIDENTI~L
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Albany, Ohio

4)19100 1 mo. pd .

• K J 3 2

(304) 882·2079

Bulldoser &amp; Backhoe

LINDA'S
PAINTING

AnER YOU WORK ON
YORE SCHOOL
lOOKS II

"Take the "pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you" '
lnlerior
FREE ESTIMATES

e·s

.I. YIONl&gt;tfl. IF ..

~VeJ C.ONIII&gt;eJ~P
A GAIEf~ ·

NewS ITEM•
\' BIL.L. 6ATfS

SON

BUILDING
Long Bottom, Ohio
. 740-985·4141
Residential- decks~ kitchens,
Commercial· me1al studs,
bathrooms, custom
drywall, suspended ceilings
remodeling, handicap access
Mike W. Marcum'
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
Owner
vinyl siding

Before 6 p.m. ·

Leave Message
Aher 6 pm· 614-985-4180

High &amp; Dr~
Self-Storage

·-

We Service All Makes
Washers· Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

L.OSl" NINf .

IN POt,ITIC.$1•

BIL,.ION
OOLLA,S IN

•

ONE l&gt;AY!''

BORN LOSER

'"F"-'/0~...\TE~ Of 1&lt;\l~E'. f~ 1'1\~
'(OU\11., C,ODZILlJ\ If:&gt;. WD-'~ !

'W~I\T I~ '11\E WO~t&gt;
.~ '(CJU

1-1"-T(.Il,\"""?

,..

l~i'I'T OO...T "~~Of

"- 1-\l~~f&gt;..TC..f\-"

HYDRAUUCS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose repairs;
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales· Sgal. buckets
lo SS gal. drums
2 !h miles out of
Chester on SR 248.

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

4/281 mo

STAMMERttoi!O... PLUS, .
f&lt;ALF · THE STUFF HE'S

'

)&gt;d.

T'E'LLING. ME' I$
TOTALLY

Advertise'
in this :
.space for
'
$50 per .
month.·:..

IllES'
(740) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

740-985·4194

513111 mo pd.

He~ .ALL FL~TERE'D!

HE'$ &amp;LUSHIN6, HE'S

.

T&amp;D

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Piu'mbing
Free Estimates

&lt;

740-992-5212•

4{19/00 t mo pd.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

fi:(I-IC.l\ ~L.I'\'~

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Ill I. lad
Pameroy, Dille

~

'.

, PITCHER! IT ~URTS . ....,....,
M'i NECK WATCI-UN6
OTI-lER TEAM ~IHIOME
RUNS OVER M't' I-lEAD 1

w.-.OM&amp;!

MAV6E
JUST FACE TI-lE
OTHER WA't', AND T&gt;IEN I
WON'T I-lAVE TO TURN AROUND
EVER'o' TIME ... '{ES, T!-115 15
601N6 TO BE MUCI-l BETTER ..

us1ness
•
''

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local-843-5284 ·
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mongage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
..~.

·~
·~

. , 11

,"'

!~
,' ~

,•

r,
,•
l;
I' •

····~
~

Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
Apartment
Senior~, Disabled, Handicapped
Range, Refrrgerator, A/C, On-Site Laundry
Community Room, 24. Hour Malntenancl!'
Provided
Call Of Come By Our Office L.ocated at
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
OffiCe Hours
Monday and Thursday 10 am - 3 pm
Phone (740) 992-6419
TOO 1·1100-750-0750
Contact Office For Details

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VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) of faith in someone who promised
· TUESDAY, June 6, 2000
Keep
your focus on your .objec- to do one of your jobs for you . ·
new
attitude
in
the
year
A
•
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
ahead gains you the ability to use tives at all limes 1oday and continue
to
visualize
success.
What
Opportunities
that develop for
your expertise more effectively so
you can more easily fulfill your you conceive. is .achievable, so you have to be acted upon as soon
don'l give up hope if things don't as they pop up. The longer you
material desires.
wait, the more they can be dilutGEMINI (May 21-June 20) happen fasl enough.
LIBRA
·{Sept.
23-0ct.
23)
ed.
They · may even evaporate
When you place yourself in the
position to respond to your incli- Unless you get yo)lr ideas to the right ·before your eyes .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
nations and impulses, things are mar~etplace, people can't be
likely to work out better for you. expected to be aware of what you . Maners that are directly under
Don'i let anyone but yourself have to offer. Find and contact your control should remain so
struccure your day. Trying to patch those who know the ins and outs today. If you allow someone el se
·
to take lhe reigns on your behalf.
up a broken romance? The Astro- of marketing.
Graph Matchmaker can help you · SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) il could cause problems no one
understand what to do to make the There's a possibility today that expected ,
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to you may be able to earn more
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, from a side venture than you can
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- from your base source. Check out This could be one of 1hose limes
tion, New York, NY 10156.
ways tO do SO, Si~Ch as using the when you learn u greu1 deal by
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Internet.
·
teaching u matter to someone. The
Get your important work out of
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. fresh insight · you gain will be
the way early today while the 21) Everything you put in writing enormously helpful.
influences are working in your today, such · as contracu and
TAURUS (April 20-Muy 20)
favor. They could quickly change agreements, should work out just · Things could go your way today
on you as the clock ticks on.
fine for you, but those oft'·lhe-cuff and tum out quite beneficial for
LflO (July 23-Aug. 22) An pacts could blow up in your face.
agreement is only os good os the Get that signature.
intent of the ponicipont~. Deal
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
solely ~ith those you know whose 19) Favorable financial returns are you materially. Don'tlet someone
ethics are on par with yours, and in the offing today for work or who is jealous of .lhat fact spoil
don't let any lust minute, unlcst- services you personully perform, your upbeul, happy mood.
• ~:d person in on lhc deal.
· hul I wnulo:.ln't place tt whole lui

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Most, if not all, capital cilies
suffer from traffic congestion.
(However, anyone who has lived
in, say, Pads or Rome will laugh
when they hear New Zealanders
from Wellington complain about
its rush hour.)
There is a traffic jam in bridge:
a blocked suit. Then, you must
first cash the blocking honors
before crossing to lhe other hand
in another suit to gain access to
the remaining winners. Somelimes, careful planning at trick
one may be required .
This deal caused amusement in
a class. South's last bid was a
slight gamble -- but 1 wanted to
end on a high note!
After West led the heart jack,
declarer said that it was laydown.
She put her cards on the table and
claimed these 13 lricks: six
spades, two hearts, four diamonds
and one club. The opponents
accepted lhat, bul I asked her to
play on -- and she promptly won
trick one with dummy's heart
queen! Now she couldn't get four
diamond tricks because she had
burned up her .dummy entry.
In desperation. she ran the ·
spade; suil and received some
help. East forgol about retaining
equallenglh with the dummy, dis·
carding a diamond. This permitled declarer to play off the diamond ace, overtake the diamond
queen with dummy's king, cash
the diamond jack while pitching a
club loser, then take the diamond
three, throwing her last low club.
So, 1he conlract made afler all!
If you're curious, play through
the deal and see what happens if
East stays glued to her four diamonds. Who wins trick 13 and
with what card?

oan Rather'•

network

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31F,._Ior
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40 Oerman aub
42 Stop

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THATDAILT c:iti':I'O ,t. ..... .( _ /) 'C ~C:..e WOlD
PUULII 0~ ~QU ~J,.
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PRINT NUMBERED LEITfRS IN
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. , UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

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SCR.lM LETS ANSWERS
Postal- Ninlh - Threw- Martyr- WASN'T ANY

While working for a temp agency my daughter ccncluded that she had to find someone'&amp; talenll where
there WASN'T ANY.

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.by Luis Campo~
~ Cipllor Cfcr)l'llii*&gt;UO-&amp;INIW 01W -lrom quatlllano b y - peaplo, Pllllnl

. . . -. El1o:ll-ln,. dplilr- ""........
Today's clw: I equ~~ls U

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In my youth there Were WOida you
front of a gl~. Now you can1eay 'gi~. •- Tom Lehrer
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'Birthday

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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
w
aters Edge of Syracuse

c,._

27

I MONDAY

'Your

•'

SERVICES

.·~·~.

South

Sentinel

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL

p::-.·~··•:-.•···········
,.

·numbera

12~

· To get a current weather
report, check the

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

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55 Olvlnv duck
Ill Ex1reme t.r
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54 Army order
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Opening lead: • J

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'·

NowRentmg

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Uncloa the road

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ftalpplianca

Anlla...-11

of
13
41 Tom lrobw'a
14 Stick (to)
nelworl&lt;
15 T•· turna
43 - 8t. UuNIIt
1BT-o1f,ll
41 111111 111111 (Ill*.)
ak:Uwa
48 Opp. of NNw
17 II alii&lt;* autllx 47 "Opal" end
11CompOMr
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Vulnerable: North-South
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219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
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CONSTRUCTION

Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 1 O'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM -8 PM
11211&lt;10 1 mo. nd,

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992-5479
.

(740} 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

2,000 sf. Modern Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease·. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600.sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404

CAMPGROUttD

Phone (740) 593-6671

11110/lln

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

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

~·

Lie. 1 oo-50

'

NEA

BRIDGE
PHILLIP

HILL'S
WICK'S ·tfl
. ' SELF STORAOE If:,
"fiOUHCI anCI
29670 Baahan
EXCAVfiTinG
Road

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Uosll[ ~l!t DWDIDibiD

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'" Sales Representative
I
&lt;+,
Larry Schey

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaiYJII
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.

The O.lly SenUnel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. ~nda~June5,2000

1

�P•ge Be • The D•lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Jurnt 5, 20QO

Carleton graduation, A&amp;
Reds lose; Dei on joins Redskins, ·Bl

Wednesday
HIP: lOt; Low: 50S

Details, A3

Reds
from PlgeBl
get the win and' become the first Reels pitcher to
stan 8-0 since Mike LaCoss in 1979.
Castro's backhanded stop of Lawton's grounder
ended the inning. He came to bat with one out in
the bottom of the inning against LaTroy Hawkins
(1-2) and hit a ball towards the gap in right-center.
Jacque Jones cut it off but the ball deflected off his

· glove. leaving Castro safe with a double.
"If! get to the ball, I shoufd be able to make the
play;• Jones said glumly.
Reese, 0-for-4 with two strikeouts, lined a single
up the nuddle on the next pitch from Hawkins.
Jones charged hard hoping to make a play at home,.
but the ball bounced over his head, allowing Castro
to score without a throw.
"That's the way the game goes," Twins manager
Tom Kelly said. "Castro gets in the game and makes
a ternfic. play on Lawton's ball, then he gets the hit.
He was ;ust m the right spot."

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL' SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
The Daily Sentinel
~ubsfribe today
992-2156
.I

Melp County's

,_'

Hometown Newspaper

NBA
from

misses during the Lakers' run that wiped out a 75• 60 lead. Wallace also missed two free throws with
P~~tland trailing 81-79 with 1:25 to go.
Plge Bl
We nussed some shots down the stretch" said
Wallace, who averaged 23.3 points in the ~ries.
"Phil made a couple of comments and I pulled "Can't do nothing about that, and it's all said and
the guys together and said, 'We have come too far to done with now.. .. We know we played as hard as we
blow it so let's fight, let's claw, let's hit shots."'
could play, so we can walk around with our heads
Kobe Bryant, the other half of the superstar tan- up."
dem that is supposed to lead this franchise back to
Scotti7 Pippen, brought to Portland to provide the
its historic greatness, had 25 points, 11 rebounds, leadership the team needed to win a championship,
seven assists and four blocked shots. He made just six fouled out With 25 seconds to go with t 2 points and
of 12 free throws, but he sank two from the line to 10 rebounds. He was just 3-of-W from the field, 1put the Lakers ahead for good, 81-79, with 1:34 for-7 after the first quarter.
remaining.
Steve Smith scored 18 points for Portland but was
Shaw made three crucial 3-pointers for the Lak- j ust 1-for-5 from the field in the fourth quarter.
ers, one at the end of the third quarter and rwo durThe Lakers trailed 71-58 after three quarters but
ing the big fourth-quarter rally. He and Rice each outscored Portland 31-13 in the fourth. After shootscored 11 points.
ing 50 pen:ent through three quarters, the Blazers
. Rasheed Wallace scored 30 points on 13-for-26 shot 22 percent in the .fourth (5-for-23).
.
shooting but had six of the Blazers' 13 consecutive

IRES

G4~ .

INIIire

1111

majlr

NASCAR
from
... PageB1

accidents and some bad lu ck have hurt him as
much as good fortune helped him to rookie records
of three victories and a fourth-place finish last season in the series standings.
" We had a car that should have won at Richmond," he said of a lost opportuniry last month.
" This was a nice way to come back."
. Later, he rolled his eyes skyward, playfully mockmg the question of a writer for whom he otherwise
expresses respect.
Stewart left Dover Downs n'i nth in the series
standings, but aware that many in the sport made
h1~1 the offseason favorite to win the championship.
We want to wm more races, but need to finish in
the top five, and if we do the points will take care of
themselves;• he said.
•
T hat's exactly what happened Su nday, when
Stewart dominated both The Monster Mile and the
competition, leading 242 of 400 laps.
· "We had an unbelievable car;• he said "We never
had to change anything but air pressure."
. The only real problem for Stewart was the possibihry he would be beaten on fuel mileage, as he was
a year ago by current points leader and Joe Gibbs be.

''FREE''

Help With
Medicare Expenses
Qualified . Medica.r e
Beneficiaries Medicaid
(called QMB):

Health Insurance
•
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the coCall T~day!
1-800-992-2608

Or
992-2117
Meigs County
Department of
Job &amp;Family
Servic~s

175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
45760

Quick

s

20S/6sm

will meet or beat
competitor's advertised
price on the same tire.
~mit:. 1=~

Mother, son
.face charges

Tire Rotation and
Brake Inspection

in accident

22

8

BY BRIAN J, REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Servia. Include• up to
quart• of Motorc:raft
and new Motorcreft
llher. Dleael vahlclaa
be extra.

Genn, Michelil, Bli
UNIROY/i, B.f.

Per Tire

bem

Racing teammate Bobby Labonte.
But Kyle Petry, driving in relief of teammate John
Andrett1, tapped Sterling Marlin, who spun and
brought out a caution flag with nine laps remaining.
Conung out of a previous caution, rookie Matt
Kenseth had made a run at Stewart, but was· unable
to pass him with 13 laps to go.
.
Stewart this time. He started 16th in his Pontiac
passed Jeremy Mayfield for the lead on lap I 07 and
by the halfway point looked like on bad luck could
be his undoing.
"We had a car that could drive away from everybody," he said.
He went to the front for the final time on the
337th lap, and beat Kenseth's Ford by 1.215. seconds.
~abonte finished third, followed by the Fords of
senes champion Dale Jarrett and teammate Ricky
Rudd.
."We were happy ro come home in tl)e top five,"
satd Labonte, who leads Ward Burton by 82 points
in the standings.
~ike Labonte, who went the final .1 07 laps last year
Without a stop,Jarrett had won in 1998 with a lOtlap run. Knowing he couldn't outrun those ahead of
him, he was going to try it again.
·
. "We ;"ere going to try to steal it;• Jarrett said. "But
11 wasn t meant to be.
"The
best car won, and that's the way it should.
..

June 6, 2000

Wheel Alignment Cooling System

Transmission

Service

95
2·Wheel
Check

5quarts of a~

4-wheel

and·-and
toe.
lid.* may be

Additional pill
required on some vettles.

-

IIDtcatllilklgl conlrola
lj)pl*) •ROid test

rldlatar lor lelilt• Check

lttst--~~~~~~"""'"
1111 IIIIa t i r*or

' *"

.... at bjC..Illltlllll•

of any Internal auton~~atlc 1
transmission

ofcoollnt

an unrelated witness said that
she had seen Jeremy Shockey
POMEROY - A man from driving the truck.
Shade and his mother will face
Lentes said at least five others,
criminal charges in connection all rel atives of th e parties
with Friday's death of a 10 year- involved, witnessed the ac ciold boy in Bedford Township.
dent, but did not dispute DeboJeremy Shockey, 26, will be rah Shockey's story.
charged with aggravated vehi cLentes said that Jeremy
ular homicide, involuntary Shockey was driving under a
manslaughter, failure to control, financial responsibility adminisdriving under suspension, leav- trative .license suspension, and
il'g the scene of an accident and was wanted on a warrant from
a seat belt violatio n , Meigs Athens County.
Counry Prosecuting Attorney
That, Lentes said, is believed
John Lentes said.
CRUISIN' Healt/1Net Ill pilot Rick
to be the reason that Deborah
His mother, Deborah Shock- Shockey took the blame for the
LaRock cruises over downtown Huntington
ey, 44, also of Shade, will be accident.
at about 143 knots, or 155 miles per,h()ljr.
The average speed fcir the Eurbcopter
charged with falsification and
Lentes said an open beer botAStar 3508 helicopter is 130 miles per
obstruction of justice after tle was found in the truck, and
hour, and the crew can reach Pomeroy
attempting to take the blame for that Jeremy Shockey said that he
from Huntington In about 20 minutes. (Mil·
the accident, which killed Dalla had consumed "at least 18
lissla Russell photo)
·
Castle, 'her nephew, and injure
beers" following the accident,
his brother Dakota Castle, ,
after returning to his home.
Lentes added.
Lentes said that law enforceThe elder Castle was proment officers will continue to
nounced dead at the scene of
investigate how muc h he had to
the accident on Jones Road near drink before taking the wheel of
Burlingham, and his younger
the truck.
brother was transported to ChilJeremy Shockey remains in
dren's Hospital in Columbus by
tl'\e Meigs , Cou nry Jail on the
MedFiight.
BY MIWISIA Rlllllll
' tion.
"Cabell~Hu ntingtqn is a 300-bed facility
Athens Counry warran~. The
Dakota Castle has been
'.•!'! OVPN~SSTAFF
-.
~ _;I:~roughMay,the HealthNetill ,helic·opter with :1 trauma surgeon :on staff 24 'hours a
aggravated vehicular homicide
released from the hospital.. .
._._ _ r. ~LIPOUS-:..=-?~n....mi\i::"'"
made 1iJli~hts in~ GaUia .", Counry, seven . d;i};" Burley· added. "And··!he only bu~n unit
ch~ tQ l:ie ,til(:!! ~ llim .it · ·
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State ·
· · utes matter:• That's tile motto · . flights in ·Meigs County and· ·25 flights in in the state is located here a. well''
·
a second-degree felony, and the
Highway
P~U'OI
reported
that
.
_ of t~e speciaJ!y tr~ined ,me11 Ma.•on C ounty already this ye~r; and since its . . •:some situations can dictate ·art imme.d.iate ' the boys were riding atop a involuntary
m~nslaughter
and women of l':lealthN et cohception in 1986, HealthNet III, has com- call to the nearest aeromedical senrice," noted ·
charge is a third-degree felony.
number of bales of hay in ;r trail.
Aeromedical Services.
., pleted in excess of20,000 missions through- Gallia Counry EMS Dire~tor Terry Reed,
Leaving the scene of an accier pulled· by a pickup truck
These paramedics, nurses and pilots are pre- . out Ohio, 'west Virginia and Kentucky.
· "Cases such . as vehide accidents that uivolve
dent is a felony of the fifth
when hay fell off the rruck bed,
pared for any kip.d of medical emergency. and
''CabeU-Huntington Hospital is the nearest pedestrians or when the vehicle roUs ·over, a
degree. ·
carrying the boys with it.
are expected to perform miracles on a 'daily trauma center for this area;• noted Clinton collision at speeds . greater than 30 miles an
The
falsification
charge
When troopen began their.
.·
Burley, flight ·paramedic for H FalthNet III.
basis. .
.
.
against
Deb.orah
Shockey
is a
investigation immediately fol: H eald1Net Ill, ~ased. at Cabell-Huntington.. "When we are called, it's not because the hour or motorcycle accidents.
lowing the accident, Deborah first-degree misdemeanor, and
!'lospital in Huntington, WVa., is the service emergencx services at the sc'e ne can't handle
"It is ·up to the first qualified EMS rrained
the obsrruction ofjustice charge
that local emergency services rely on when an the sjtuatlon, but because the victim need~ person on the scene, whether, that is a first • Shockey allegedly claimed that
she was driving the vehicle, but .......... e~~a...... ,...AS
jnjulid·person needs immediate trauma atten- special care that is not available ta ·them there.
Plene 1ft HHHhNit. ,... AS

HealthNet
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Medicare ·Expenses Q: Who d~termines whether

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_,Q~u=.lat:.!l~ifi~le~di!!..--~In~d~i!.]y~id!i:!.u!i:!.awlLis--=-~2 A: Medicaid requires a

Counry Co uncil on Aging, $35,000, for
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
two chassis for the home- delivered meal
. POMEROY - Meigs Counry Com- program; Chester Township, $15,000 to
missioners annbunced · the award of be used as local matching funds for Issue
$;149,000 in Communiry D!:Velopment II paving projects; Salem Township VFD,
:Qlock Grant formula funds to a number $29,000 for the expansion of the ftrebf fire departments and other agencies house; Bashan VFD, $29,000 for a tanker
during their regular meeting on Monday. truck chassis; and Middleport Village,
·commissioners are required to hold a $29,000 for matching funds for. Issue II
second public hearing on the 2000 grant paving projects.
''
In addition to the grants,:the counry
program at their next meeting, but President Janet Howard made the announce- set aside $10,000 for adminstration cost,~,
and S10,000 to be used in the fair housment Monday.
.
. The following agencies will receive ing program.
H
oward
said
commissionen,
in
making
'funding from the program:
· .. Scipio Voh1riteer Fire Department, the awards, considered townships and
i .f2,00&lt;J; :f9r a tanker rruck to be .pur- agendes which receive little ·funding
chased from the Syracuse VFD; Me1gs from other soui:ces, an'd which haye net .

insurances(s) and deductibtes
.you are required to make as B premium that you have ·
part of · the . Medicare alrea4y paid which went
Wh .
tQward home health care.
Program•.
""ou
wl"ll
·
at 1s the
~.~
r ece1ve
a :
. age when 1
•
: am considered "Aged"?
reimbursement
check
once
a
··
Specified Low-In,oi»p
Medicare Beneficiaries year. The ~ncome limits are .A: Age 65
Medicaid (called SJ,MB):
higher than QI-1 Medicaid·. . i
Q: What serVices are covered
.
.
.
"" by Medicaid? ·
This" type of Medicaid pays Qualified Working Disables
.
only for your Medicare Part Individual (called QWDI):
:Any of these services are
B premium.
·
~-.
covered if they are
.f
Q.

This program pays for you~

Qualified .Individuals - 1
Medicare Part A premium
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
only. QWDI can help you if
This program provides the you have lost eligibility for
same benefits as SLMB; Title II disability benefl.t~
\.
however, · the
income due to earnings.
,
'(
standards are higher than
those allowed for SLMB.

medically necessary for
you:
Doctor Visits
Hospital Care
Immunizations
Substance Abuse
Prescriptions
Vision
Dental
Mental Health
Other...

.

gets $149,000 in block grants for projects

Bv BRIAN J. REED

disability determination
by the Social Security
~dministration or by the
Ohio Department ofJob
. ~ Family Services ~hrough
~~ts County Medical
·Services (CMS).

This pro,gram reimburses
you for the part of the Part

.

~unty commission

I am disabled?

Medicaid (called QI-2):

.

give consideration to those smaller rural
communities, and will be happy to assist
them in the .application process."
The application process begins in
Marth, she said.
"I hope that. the townships and agencies which did not receive funding tl:lls .
time will reapply next year;• Howard
urged ..
Comrnissionen approved a subdivision
in Columbia To\vnship, as submitted by
Commluloner Janet Howard ·
the owner and developer, Doug Campbell. ·
The subdivision, to be known as
received CDBG funding in the recent .
Chestnut Ridge, consists of 14 lots, three
p'asi.
" I would encourage the .communities to seven acres each, on a total of 60 acres.
The subdivision plans will be reviewed
in outlying areas to consider applying for
· funds next year," Howard said. "We rry to by Counry Engineer Robert Eason and

"I would encourage the communities in outlying area,s to consider applying for funds next
year. J.tt try 'to give consideration to those. smaller rural communities, and will be happy to
assist them in the application
process."

Prosecuting Attorney John Lemes prior
to being recorded in the counry
recorder's offic.e.
At the request of Department of
Human Services Director Michael
Swisher, the board approved a maintenance contract with Mobbs Int., for service for the agency's telephone system.
The one-year conrract was approved at
a cost of $6,500.
The board also approved a contract
between the DHS and DMG Magnus, in
the amount of$3,995, for upgrading the
Windows system on the ·agency's co mputer system.
Training, in the amount of $375, was

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Pomeroy ponders hiring part-time police officer
cannot watch everything all of the time," Council heard from Sarah Fisher,
Miller: "A ,part-time officer would who' repr~ents the Pomeroy Mer- Village Councij.' dis- also help· lower overtill).e costs that we are
chants Association, about plantih~~~n~~·~;a~~·~~·~t;n~le police officer and experiencing in our department."
ng pots, flower posts, birdhouses
recent acts
during its regular
Afte r listening to Miller, counc il
meeting
approved the transfer of$1 0,000 from the
and other various items that are
" Police
proposed the police salary fund into the supply account
being vandalized and stolen from
'fri;lm the police salary and will discuss the hiring of a pa~-time
transfer of $1
... , ~~~ P~~eroy parking lot.
fund into
supply account so a officer at a later date.
· ·
.
,
~·,,..,.N.~,r : Y.·~1 ,1 ·1 ·
·
ofliice.r ~o uld be hired. ,
Council heard from Sarah. Fisher, who j ~~'.l \~:3:$"'" ~-1&gt; \'Jt'.
j'
•
w:ould help alleviate represents the Pomeroy Merchahts Associ- the barparrops who usually cause such discurrently plaguing arion, about planting pots, flower posts, turbances.'~
overtime
"This iS another good reason for cou ncil
the det&gt;artme
birdhouses and other various items that .are
to
hire a par1-time officer," added Miller.
The ne·wh•2!fi!fed ofli ce r wpuld work .b eing vandalized and stolen frotn \he
"Out officers ate busy with other police
three days a
and would start around Pomeroy parking lot.
matters,
and like I said before, we can't
Fisher also complained about youths
July 1.
"With sumlfler coming ·up, we desper- hanging out in the parking lot, whom she watch everything all of the time."
Fisher also noted a trash problem on the
ately need a . ew officer," said Miller. thought are the cause of the vandalism, and
" Domestic vi nee cases are up 75 per- indicated that police seem to be doing parking lof and asked when weeds could
·be mowed.
·
cent from las ' year ·and various other · nothing abo ut it.
Mayor John Blaetmar informed Fisher
"It's
really
not
just
the
kids
creating
this
crimes are inert: ing as well."
"The office that we have right now problem;' Miller respo nded. " It is usually that he and MiUer wo uld.discuss options to

· M. LEAcH
NEWS STAFF

'

. • · . added

try and eradicate the vandalism problem
and that he would see what could be done
abo ut the youth hanging out on the parking lot area.
Blaettnar also said that he would get the
weeds •mowed down and get the trash
picked up.
Council discussed Census 2000 and the
idea that water meter readers would obtain
census information.

"We could develop forms for the meter
readers to take with them;' said Blaetmar.
"They know the people o·n their routes
and could probably obtain this information
in the quickest amount of time."
"It is the smartest thing to do," said
Councilman Victor Young Ill. "If we don't
get this information in a timely fashion, we
could possibly lose out on important grant

money.''

PIHH ne Pollee, Pllp AS

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