<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7755" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7755?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T05:38:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18167">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1c637ef22171785ed7ad92c607bb2d0e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5b767b8af51d3c88a3b4e40539527c27</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25213">
                  <text>•

~'-~~ge=iDI;;o6~va~~~-=j:.n~-6n~~tia~r~l~;:;==,~Fi~;.p§~§§~y~·Mr;.ldd~le~port;;;·;G;•I;II~::I:•l·O~h~l~o~·§Po~l~m¥,~~~-~~~WV~~==~~~=l;;~~==~~~Sunda~Juna11,~
i4o

540 Mlec.llaneoua
MerchlndiH

Apartmenta
for Rent

2 1&gt;&lt;. g~~ago apt. 1 112 t&gt;a. w..n• t&lt;/ dfyor, go- doo&lt; -.bor,

!

-·room.304-17~

11-5.

1 Or 2 Btdroom Apanmonto, W•
ter &amp; Traan Pt ld , No Pets, 740·
aB-1100.
IEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDQIT PRICES AT JACK·
SDN ESTATES, 52 WtiiWOOd
DriYI rrom S289 to $370. Wolk to
&amp;hop I moviea . Call 740--448·

.- · Equot Houolng ~.

C~rltly' s Family t.lvlng, apart·

ment1 , home &amp; trlllll rentals ,
7&lt;10..992·451&lt;1, apartment&amp; avall-

lblo, lurnil1htd &amp; unlumllhtd.
Eflloltncy apt. ref&amp; dep. no poll
004-876-5182.

GraciOus living . 1 and 2 l»droom
apar1ments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port. From $273-$338. Call 740·
992-1106-4. Equal HouSing Oppor·

tunlloo.
Muon- 2 br. apt util. Included ,
ncurlty deposit. call 30&lt;1·773·
~~92 Doytlmo , or 304-882·3152
tvonlngo.

New 1 bedroom apartment, atova
A refrigerator, $300 month plus

utilities. no peto. 7&lt;1().992-7481 .

Nice efficiency apartment In quit
neighborhood In Middleport, $200
plus utilities. 740·992·6849 leave

muaago.

Now Taking Appllcallons- 35
Wea l 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water

Sowage, Trash. S3251Mo .. 740·
«B-0008.

Aval..ble Now: Twin Towers now

accepting applications lor 1 BR.
HUD subsidized apt. lor elderly

and
handica pped .
1304)075-8879.

540

Taking Orders For Tame Black

Buy Direct From Golden -Gianl
Mini StoJagea, WarthouAa,
Commercial And Industrial All
Stltl 8ulldlngo, HOO·B28·120V,
Koman. Ohio.

·P.M.

3711 TOO 1-888·233-8694. Equal
Hou~ng Opportunity
•

460 Space for Rent
Mobile Home Lot, Will Take 12 •

14 ·16 Wldes. 1125 Monlh $100
Depos it, References, 7•0·4•6·

0175.
~lver Park Mobile Home Com munlly, Pomeroy. Spaces at $120
pe/ month; office spaoe for rent,

woofera , wlbox, sesa, 740-687-

COMPUTER BLOWOUTI Com·
paq. HP. IBM. Duklopa. Laptops.
Ecommarce IWebliltt. Almost
Everyone Approvedlll Make

SUS On Tho Wobltl No Monoy

Jackoon Avonuo,(304)e75·7368.
GOOD

UB!D APPLIANCES

with Matching Hood $75.00 (740)·

Grwbb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.

Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or. 7~&amp;-&lt;1525

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOUNQ EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
•tt You Don't Calf us W•"Both

montn oldl3 month old. 1 Cocka·
teal wlcage; Sugar Bl~er w/cage.

1304)773·:5052.
AKC labrador Retlrever Pupplee,
3 Males, 2 Females, Chocolate 1
Black, Wormed , Shots, $225,

Kenmore Dryer, Se1rs Olshwash·
er, Pehny'l Microwa~a. Whitney
piano, MWing machine In cabinet,
Chlldcraft
Enc~clopedlaa

Roady: 8117!1)(). 74Q-246-92S3.

(740)448--4328

Beagle ·pup, mate, 6 months old,
shots, wormed , good hunting

AKC t=teglstered BriUany Spaniel

Pupo $100 (740)«&amp;-7410

stock.

Kirby vacuum cle.aner, all auachmenta Including shampooar, 5

Over 75 Tanka or Freshwater
Fish, Locally Raised Parakeets/
2.a13

1 Sofa, 3 Cushion 2 Rockel' Reclln~ro

And Lumbar Support All
For $200 Or Separate, Call 740·

- 7.
180 Gallon 'Fish Tank. Salt water

EXT. 7832.

1987 Dodge Daytona Approx .
13&amp;,QOO Miles, Aluminum Rims.
GoOd Work Car, $600, 740·245-

4195.

Mualcal
lnatrumanta

Locally. can: t·fl00.2!18'8218.

ow1, AncMra, Water Heaters,

Fruita a
Vagetablea

s1200.0BO 304-675-6693

1990 Chevy Corsica $1 ,000 Runs
Good, Great Work Car, Call 7..0.
«B-3755 Aller 5P.M.

1991 Lumina Z·34 $4,395. t99t
Lumina Euro $3,695. 1991 Camoro R/S T·Topo $4,295 . 1993
Flreblrd $5,395 . COOK MD·
TORS 1~40)-«e-ll103 '
1992 red Chovy Cavalier. •eorty
2 door, good running cond ition ,
great gas mileage , $2100, 7401192·2472.
1993 Dodge Daytona !roc Turbo,
28,000 miles, green with gray In·
terlor, minor damage, runs &amp;

s•.ooo·.

740·992·1506

days, 740·949-2644 evenings.
1993 Ford Taurus ·GL, Exce llant
Condition, Great A/C Heater.

88 .000 Miles . AsJc lng $3.900
· Must See To Appreciate, 740·

«1-1417.
Loaded, E~~: celle n t Condition,
1996 Cl'lavy Camaro, V-6 , btua

1996 Lincoln Town car Signature
Sarles·, 55,000 Miles, 1 Owner,
New Tires . Excellent Condition,

59.833 mllea, mamon with gnr; Interior, cruise, recovared theft,

asking $7000. 740·992·t'506

Conclillon .

1974 Honda ,360 l trHt bike 6000

(304)675-7652.

tit~.

1991

Harle~

David1on Classic,
E1oellent Condition, $13,500, 740-

$14 ,300, 7&lt;1().992·1:508.

367.0502.

1997 black Chevy S·1 0 Stepslde
Elltended Cab, 3 door, loaded,
25,000 mites, very sharp, tuU far·

Onlo. Valley wu offer ror sale by
public auction a 1999 Yamaha
225 1002071 , at 10:00 A.M. on

lngo , $11,100, 740·949·2045 or
74()-949-2203.

06124100 altho Ohio Valley Bank
Annex, 1&lt;13 frd Avenua, Gallipolis, DH. SOld to tho highest bidder

1998 Chevy extend-a-cab. •X4,
V·8. 5 sp, Loaded. 40,000 mllos.
$16.000 llrm. (304)773'52«, alter

•as Is- where Ia" without ••·
presaed or Implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Col·
lecllon Dept. at &lt;141·1038. OVB
reserves the rlght to accepV re·
ject rlny &amp; all bids, &amp; withdraw
Items rom sale prior to sale.

6PM .

730 Vans a 4-WDa
1979 Chevy Short Bid 4 WO,
Rebuilt 5.0 H.O 4 Spetd Trans..
Slereo, Many new Parts. $3,000.
Coli: 1740)·367·0024
1986 Chevy G20 HI top convor-

Terms ol Sale: CASH OR CERTI·
FlED CHECK.

1989 Blazer 4 WO. 4.3 Automat~.

Ohio Volley Bank Will Oiler For
Solo By Public Auction A 1999
Yamaha 225 1002071, At 10:00
A.M. On 8124100 At The Ohio
Valley Bank Annfuc, 143 3rd Ave.,
Gallipolis. OH. Sold To Tho High·

$2,800 740·367-Q138.

ast Bidder

sion van, loaded, new Hres ettan

$3500. 0B0304·675-6693.

~As Is · Where ts •

Wllhout Expressed Or Implied
Warranty &amp; May Be Seen By
Calling Tho Colloctlon Dept . At
740·441·1038 . OVB Reserves

1989 Ford Ranger XLT •b4

gray Interior, 5,9t0 miles, trim
paokage, CID, atr, pruise, 4 door
hardtop, mlnor left front damage.

asking $8.400. 740-992·1506.

B!ack fnterlor. PW/PL 26,500
miles, CO player. S16,000 (740)
388-8237 '

135 Masaay Ferguson diesel, ex·

Where Is• Wlll'lout Expressed Or
Implied warranty &amp; May Be Seen

cellent condition. 5' brush l'log ,

Rtllrtd Longabergor Baskotoand
Acctuorloa (740)«6-1280

68 New Holland baler w/2 cyl.
Wisconsin engine, excellent condition, never nu set outsicla ,
working the day II was retired,

.

&amp;750. 740-992·2087.

By caning The Collection Dept. At
740 -441·1038 . OVB Reserves

Tho Right To Accept /Reject Any
&amp; All Blda, &amp; Withdraw Items
From Sale Prio r To Sale. Term&amp;

01 Salo: CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

For Sale : Tobacco Sticka. 740·
245•5121.

Seized Cera From 1100 Sport,
Luxury. &amp; Economy Cera. Trucke,
4x4'a Utility &amp; Mora . For Current

John o'e er Gator 4x2 w/rollbar.

Listings: .
X11440.

wlndshltld. topper. rear1 bar tires.
llkt now condition, $4000, call
7oi0-887-ll859. .
20500 Tractor. ·4 Cy·

llndei- Diesel, 4 Foot Bruah Hog

And Blade; $4 .500. 740·446·
0399.

uv..tock

. 14 month old bull &amp; 2 yoor old bull
by Touchstone. Young Slmmental
cow due to frt~htn."$1,000 each.

740-&amp;4a-5253.
e yr. old Quarter Hore. mare

$800.00, 2 yr. old Morgin Filly
$700.00 or both lor $1000.00304·
876-1871 anor 6 pm.
·

1·600·3 11·5048
.

Ohio Valley Bonk Will Oiler For
Sate By Public Auction A 1998
Dodge ltrepld IIS8460, At 10:00
A.M. On 8124100 At Tho Ohio
Valley Bank Annex , U3 Third

Avenue, Galllpolli , OH. Sol~ To
The Hlghaot Bidder ' As Is •
Where ~~· Without EMprtssed Or

Implied Wananty &amp; May Be Saen
By Calling Tlio Colleetlon Dept. At

GALLIPOLIS .;.;.... Pesticides are
a necessary part of most farming
operations today and like other
~ools on a farm, pesticides and
other farm chemicals can be dangerous if certain precautions are
not heeded.
Gallia County Farm Bureau
Safety Coordinator Jackie Graham reminds anyone who works
around farm chemicals to take
these precautions: ·
• Pesticides can enter tlte body
through many different routes.
The most common route is
through the skin. People working
with chemicals should wear protective equipment and clothing to
prevent coniact and inhalation:

291-«1098.

AMoATHLON &amp; PENTIUM Ill SO
[)gwn Flnonclngt 5:50 ·BOO MHZ •
10·30·GB· HD. All Crtdlt Wtl·
coin1. REQUIREMENTS : Bank
Account, S 1 ,800 MonttT Grose.

COMPUTER BROKERS INC. 1·
eoo-N7·311Z4.

Siby Bed Maltreu, 2 lnf1n1 Car
Selll, 2 Baby Swings. E•cellent

CondHionl Baby Slrolilr

o8o5

7~

Kawasaki Jet mate new 650cc
engine , less than 5 hr. 29
mph,uses jet pump drive syste m
wl reverse. 3·passenger dry boat,

Includes trailer $2600•. 304-675·
7323.
Sea srar Trl.haut bass boat witl'l
135 Johnson outbo~rd, less than
1p hours on engine overhaul,
$3000.

760

Auto Parts a
A~caaaorles

Fiberglass Topper 011 From 1999
Toyota Toy coma $500; • Factory
Aluminum Mag Wheels , With 31
105Dx15 Inch Good Year Wrang·
er Radiale With Less Than 2.000
Miles, $700. 740~528 .

799

Campara a
Motor ·Homaa

1983 Chevy Man Camper, Auto,
Crulat, Fridge , Table, Bed , No
~ust. Great Weeka"nder, $2250

Livingston 's Basament Wa ter
Proofing, all basement repairs
done. free estimates , llfellme
guarantee . 12yrs on job uperi·

enco. (304)695·3667.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
~esldel'lllal or commercial wlrlnQ,
new service or repairs. Mas ter Ll ·
censed electrtclan . Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 304·675,
1786.

1---------Public Notice

1--;...:~:!!:..!!!:.:.!!:.:..._
PUBLIC NOTICE
Molgo County botrd of
MR/DD lo loeteptlng ltlltd
bldt .for the following two
vehlcloe:
1. 1985 ilchool Buo.
1FDN880H2FVAOI$821 217
chll.811. Sold II II
concjltlon. Ford Body and
engine. ·
·
2. 1884 Bronco . 11.
1FMBU14SLEUD 22231
(Mir'o Serial No.) V-8
eng Ina. Will be IOid 11 II
condition. Ntldo body

11••

worlc.

the outside so the pesticide cannot drain down into the hoots.
• Wear tight-fitting, non-fogging, chemical splash goggles or a
full face shield v.:hen pouring,
mixing or applying pesticides.
• Do not store or wash con taminated clothing with the family
laundry.
• Respirators prevent inhalation
of toxic chemicals. Read pesticide
labels to see if they call for respiraters.
• The hair . and skin on your
neck should be protected. There
.are several available types of head
gear: waterproof rain hats, washable wide~brimmed hard or
bump hats or caps.

1

·

IMASON
FURNITURE'SI
I ··
·
.
I

I
I
~;;v.::tr l
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
ud
I
I
I
I
\1.\Y \\'INNERS
I
I
Lena
Martin
Middleport,
OH
I
I
Rosalie McDade Leon, WV
I
I
I .Frances Huddleston Galli lis Fe , W I
I
Watch For June Winners In Our
· I
I
July Newspaper Ad. .
. 6/00 I

,

2000

·sa

. . . . ~ ...
Sedan

15,SOO~:rRebate

.

.

Friendly Local S~rvice!

,.

o

o

~-----------------~
'
'·

.,

. I
•~

H

---~ • • ~

.....

---·---~ ·, --- . . -

local Red Cross' 100-county
POMEROY - The American regwn.
R ed Cross Bloodmobile will
"All blood types are needed at
visit Pomeroy on Wednesday this time, but we are most conafternoon, and a
cerned about Type
blood shortage of
Ted Mazza,
0 negative and 0
several
types, manager of blood positive,"
Mazza
including Type 0
services, said
said .
negative,
has .
•
if
The bloodmobile
1
.nventorus
o
0
prompted the Red
will visit the Meigs
Cross to encourage
positive, A
County Multipurdonations.
negative and B pose Senior Center
June is the most
negative are . from 1 to 6 p.m.
difficult month for
Wednesday, and all
blood collections, currently critical
eligible donors are
according to the
at a one-day
urged to make time
Red Cross, and it is
supply level. A
to visit at that time.
difficu lt to maintain
three-day
Donors are must be
adequate blood supat least 17 years of
plies for th e summer
inventory is
age or older, weigh
months, when the needed to supply at least 105 pounds,
demand is often
all of the
and be in generally
IJospita Is in -the good health.
greatest due to vacations and graduaDonors can gentiortS.
local Red Cross' erally donate blood
Ted Mazza, man100-COIItlt}'
every 56 .days.
ager of blood serregion.
Mazza said the
vices, said inventoregion
collects
ries of 0 positiv~. A negative and annually about a fifth of its blood
are cu~rent!y., ripc;tl , = y at, high schools and colat a Qne-(lly · supply ~eve!. A
twO typeS o£ dottor liteS
three-day inven.tory is. needeil t':' that 1?f the: most ~ am Wlawll- .\
supply all of the hosp1tals m the · able durmg the summer.
FROM STAFF REPORTS

A KEEPER - 8-year-&lt;Jid Cheyenne Beaver, daughter ·Qf Doug and Tracy Beaver of Pomeroy, proudly dis·
plays her catch, a little sunfish. Cheyenne appeared to be a contender in the "littlest 'fi.sh" category.

Young anglers enjoy_fishing derby Ohiotourism could reap
rewards of shorter trips

.

.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

P

OMEROY ABOUT 75
youngsters and th¢ir parents ringed
the pond Sa~rday · at the Meigs
County Fish &amp; Game _Cl!-lb on West
Shade R.:oad for the annual fishing derqy.
The weather was hot, but many yoqng anglers
found shady spots to relax whj]e. waiting for the
prize-winning nibble.
, Club members said the ~nt has gone on every
year for more rnro decades and is held for kids up
to 15 years old.
Boys and girls, armed with fishing poles and
nightcrawlers (no miru1ows were allowed) , competed in separate divisions with young;ters winning
prizes for the biggest fish, smallest fish and most
When the fishing was over, Kevirt Payne won the
prize for largest fish in the boys division with an 8pound, 4-ounce catfish. Catching ·the littlest fish
was Jeremy Blackston, while Joshua Rif!le caught
the most fish, three.
In the gitb, division, Felicia See caught the largest
fish, a 6-pound catfish, whill' Katie Shej&gt;henl
caught the smallest. Bo.,Dara PoweU caught the
!DOS! fish, 13.
All youths also received door prizes and lunch.

BIG CAT- William Woods, 14, of Pomeroy, checks out
his catch, a 6-7 pound catfish. WOods is a regular at
the Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Club Youth Fishing
Derby.

.

. .

·
P

OMEROY -Heritage Day was
observed Sunday at Meigs ·
Museum with children from the
two-day heritage camp presenting
their projects and reports 011 th e early
1900 activities.
On displ ay were their slate pictures
depi cting life a hundred years ago,
summer· boxes they painted, wooden
vehicles they constructed .• and mari- .
o~ettes they made.
· Reseatch reports prepared by the
· children were on historical topics
from their communities, such as · settlers in Chester and the Civil War in
Portland, along with early games, river
boats, floods, and the hotse and buggy
days.
The children learned to square
dance, play marbles and· croquet, and

In Stock!

s~3goo
.
Per Month
OMAC S nart Buy • 36 Months @ 4.35%
Balloon Balance
IO:J"

.

Big Discounts ·On ~II
Buick's &amp;pontiacs

Sunroof, Automatic, CD Player

COLUMBUS (AP) - Laws
banning nonemergency 911
usage are not preventing frivolous calls that .tie up lines
reserved for life-and-death
emergencies, officials say.
Although the Columbus
City Council in 1994 made it
a first-degree misdemeanor to
improperly use 9!1, as many as
half of the calls coming into
t;:olumbus 911 are .not emergencies, said police Cmdr. Kim
Jacobs.
•. Some people call 911 for
airections or tow trucks. Oth.ers call for sports scores.
: "There's only so many
Jines," said Mark Adams, executive director of the National
Emergency N umb\'r Association, a 911 advocacy group
based in the Columbus suburb
Gahanna.
Several communities have
1aws banning the nonemergency use of9ll. There also is .
a state law making it a crime to
"'knowingly re port" a false
emergency on the 91 1 system.
"A lot of people don't know
the law," Adams told The
Columbus Dispatch for a
Monday story.
. The high volume of 911
·traffic makes strict enforce·ment unrealistic, officials say.
.. Authorities say they res.erve
'cili'aon~ for rH1!'tmlY'"Pi01ilem·atic offenders and' say that public ~du~atiQn is ~FiraJ1sw~r · ·
....Columbus police estunate
they pursue less than a dozen
cas~s a year : involving 911
callers.
Emergency calls are defined
by city law as "any situation
that requires an immediate
:response by police or fire per.sonnel oo preserve life or prop.erty."
'"You almost have to show
. that they did it ~n purpose,"
said Reynoldsburg j&gt;olice Lt. .
WiUiam Dodson, who oversees
patrol officers and the commu·rucations center in the Colum. bus suburb.
Problem calls that 91 1 personnel have wrestled with
ipc!ude hang-up calls - often
'1Y children - ·and calls made
because people have loaded
lit 1 onto speed dials and accidentally hit th e button, officials
sai.d .
; · But the truly frivolous calls
cause the most aggravation,
Jacobs said.
Through the years, Columbus dispatchers have received
·91 1 calls from people asking
.for directions around town.
.Ji&gt;uring football season, dispatchers . have received calls
s~eking the latest scores.

CINCINNATI {AP)
told The Cincinnati Post.
Ohip's to urist indu \try may
"A lot of times it works tq
benefit if high er gasoline prices your benefit if · you are a
limit vacation travel this sum- regional destination like we
nler.
are," .he said.
" We're hoping people will
Paramount's Kings Island
say, 'Let's just take a short jaunt officials think higher gas prices
to The Beach instead of driving could work to their advantage
all the way to Florida,"' said because more than 50 percent
Doug Martin, director of mar- of the park's guests travel 50
keting and sales at The Beach miles or less. The park attracted
Waterpark in Mason .
3.3 million visitors last year.
Gas prices in many parts of
"Typically when gas prices
the sta te jumped more chan 20
go up, people tend to stay closcents a gallon to $1.90. Production cuts by foreign suppli- er to home," said JetT Siebert,
ers, the strong economy, .the spokesman for Kings Island.
The Cincinnati Zoo and
start of vacati on seaso n and
n ew dean air standards are Botanical Garden, which drew
visitors from 38 states last year,
blamed for the sudden jump.
Previous sharp increases has had an increase in attenhave caused people to take dance this year, said director of
shorter but more frequent marketing Donna Oehler.
"I hope we do well," she
vacations, Tom Caradonio of
the Northern Kentucky Con- said. "But it makes you kind of
vention and Visitors Bureau antsy with the high gas prices."

:Meigs Musell01 celebrates Heritage Day with displays

Automatic, 4-Speed Trans., Rear Speller,
Air Conditioning. AM/PM Cassette

2 Dr.

Red Cross
cites blood

'

r-----------------,
Register To Win A

1

$3.000. 080. 30,4-175-8872.

Was Set11ng The Standards For
~att ng And Cooling. Free Estl·
m1tes, 7-40·4.. 6-6308 , 1·800·

used very little $3,500. 304'675·
1731 .

Routine
calls plague
911 centers

Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction .
Ne"W Construction &amp;· Remodel!
Drywall , Siding , Roofs, Add1 ·
l ions, Pa inting, etc . (304)674·
4823 or (304)874-0155.

The Right To Accept !Reject Any
&amp; All Bids, &amp; Withdraw Items
From Sail Prior To Sals. Terms
01 Sala : CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

521 ·'390°0

AMANA While Othoro Woro
TliJnktng AOout Quality. Amanna

1994 Ban tracker, tadpole 14 lt.
flsl'l finder, &amp; l'lp mercury wJ trailer

50 Cents

•

mobile home repair and more. For

lree estimate call Chet, 740·992·
6323.

I

740-.. 41 · 1038. OVB Reserves

I
I
I
I
I
I

c-

e
388·8804 . _ _ __
:::.:==.

• Wash your hands with soap
and water if they touch containers, equipment or clothes that
have come in contact with the
chemical.
.
. • Always wear unlined, elbowlength gloves when handling ·any
pesticide concentrate or chemicals that carry the words "Danger," "Poison" or· "Warning."
Never wear cotton or leather
gloves because they can absorb
the chemical!. Always · check
gloves carefully for leaks before
wearing them by 6lling the gloves
with water and squeezing.
• Wear unlined, lightweight
rubber boors· that cover your ·
ankles. Also wear trouseP legs on

I
I
I

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Flnonco With •o· Down. Pall
Prolllemo. No Problem. Ctll
Toll Frot 1-t17·2S3-ol082.

1994 16' Pontoon 25 HP Evlnrude
Motor, 11 cetlent Condillon, 740-

carpentry. dooro. wlndowo. baths,

for working with pestlci es

37 Ptoplo Ntoded To Loot Up

5 karat diamond bracelet 11 ~
llmale vatu, $6.~00 . must. 1111

1506 days. 740·949·2644 e"n·
lngs.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 1o

C&amp;C General Home Malf'l·
lenence- Painting , vinyl aiding,

Fann Bureau offers safe tjps·

2000 teSa1tre Custo•

.

11178 Stareraft 23', cuddy cabin.
Inboard V· 8, new cover, com·
pill ely restored In 1999: 1 i?l
Crestliner, cuddy cabin, sink, refrigerator, stereo. no trailers, wl.ll
sell bolh for $6,000, 7•0 -9 92-

Melp County's

5324.

:

••11112.

for Sale

June 12, 2000

uncondiUonal llftllmt gu.renllt.
local rtltrenctl furn la htd . El·

tras, hitch In cluded 304·773·

1 50TH Year Celebration

To. 30 Pounds In Tl'la Ntxt 30
Days , Free Samples , U0·4~t -

750 Boat. &amp; Motors

Monday

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOFINO

Staled bldo to be oent to:
(740)882-9032
$950.0BO 304-676-7653.
Superintendant Molgo
·1991 Ford Conversion van , Mark
The Rtgl'lt To Accept /Reject Any 1989 Winnebago Leshara 39,000
County Boord of MA/DD
Ill , new lires,dual gas tanks, like
&amp; All Bids, &amp; WUhdraw Items Milas; Generator Fu"rnace, Good
P.O. Box 307 Syrecuile,
new 16900. 304·675·1731 .
F.rom Sate Prior To Sale. TermS Condition. $10.:500. 740-441-ll«O
Ohlo45779
Leave Message.
Envolopoo to bo morkod
1992 ChevY 4x4 Excellent Cond•
01 Sale: CASH OR CERTIFIED
tlon. $8,500 740·367·0219, 740· I...;:C:.;HE;.;C:;K::.·- - - - - - - - 1 1999 24Ft. Jsyco Eagle Travel "BID"
367-7272.
1999 Yamaha YZF 800·R 2000 Traitor. Heat /AC. Like New • To lnepect . vehlcltl, cell
nflles,.6 apeed,lndudea 5 Y,. war· $11 ,750, 7•0·245·9179 .
992·8111 during nor.mol
1996 Ford Wlndstar Mini Van
working houro l8 am to 4
ranty,
showroom
condlllon,
740·
'
1999
Viking
8'
Pop-Up
Camper,
56,000 Miles, Looks And Runs
pm). Bldo will be openod at
985·3929,
304·423-5173.
With
Air;
&amp;
Many
Extras!
U&amp;ed
Like Newl740·«6-2544 .
12 noon on June 30, 2000 •t
76 Harley oa~ldson Sportster, l'A:Iee. $3,700,740-441-9511 .
the
offiCII Of Melgo County
$3500 llrm. 740·992·7493.
Board of UR/DD.
95· Sandpiper camper 5th ·wheel
27ft., self contained , tots of eM·
l8) 11, 18, 25,3 tc.

auacl'lments $500 o.b.o., Ctdar
oldng (now), hoH price .!10 ft. Muot
tako all 700· 10007 ft. (740)24!5-

:588&lt;1 after 9:Q0pm.

damage/rune. $4,150, 740·992·
1506.

Details, A3

Home
Improvement•

Sale By Public Auction A 1999

$8000, COlt 740-9C9-2078.

Selling For Balance /Frae Dellv-

1995 Oodgo lntrapld E.S. Blo~k

Third Avonua, GaJIII)ollo, OH. SOld
To Tho Hlghast Bidder 'Ao Is -

830

1971 Honda 35o C.L. 10,000 act.
miles. good cond. runs good , has
tltll $425.00 30ol-676-ol887

since 1982 . $1500 (740)6629032

810 Farm Equipment

Mllsublo~l

A/C , 4 Weal Disc, 72,000 milts.

Motorcycle•

740

1996 Chevrol't 1!500 4•4, utendecl cab. Sport Z71, aluminum
wheels, C/0, Larado package,
new tires. leh front damage, clean

Mercury Cougar 1754422, . At

Bennotto Hutlng &amp; Cooling, I·
800·872·5967 www.orvt&gt;.&lt;:amlbon-

ntH

1995 Dodge Neon DOHC, 5 Sp,

From Sale Prior To Sale . Terms

Of Sale: CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

1981 Yamaha 650 Fairing, new
llres, Always garaged , owned

198,9 Daytona ES . lots 01 new
parts&amp;
tires ,
runs
great

Ohio Valley Bank AnneM , 143

Systems Free a Year Warranty

90 ,000 miles. /VC, Power Evory·
thing. 316 Magnum. $8,000 Ftrml
(740)·1192·5719

740·441·1038. OVB Reserves
The Right To Accept /Reject Any
&amp; All Bids, &amp; Withdraw Ueme·

$8500 .

10:00 A.M. On 6124100 At Tho

Hoot Pump l Air Conditioning

1992 Dodge Dakota King Ceb,

1996 Kawasaki Vulcan aoo. We Sell New May1ag Appliances.
7,170 miles, red &amp; wl'llle. saddle Francn. City Maytag . 740-446bags &amp; windsl'lield, minor let1 side . _77...:9.:.5·- - - - - - - -

ley Bank Annex, 1~3 Third Ava ·
nut , Gallipolis, OH. Solei To The
Highest Bidder •As Is ·WI'Iere Is"
WithOut Expreuecl Or Implied
Warranty &amp; May Be Seen By
caning Tl'le. Collection Dept. At

cellent

Ohio ·valle)' Bank Will orrer For'

fAfH,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; L IVE STOCK

Furnaeea, 0 11 Furnaces, 12 Seer

1989 Ranger XLT Automatic.

A.M. On 813100 At The Ohio Vel·

Appliance Paris And Ser~ lce : All
Name Brands Over 25 Years EX·
perience All work Guaranteed.

mlleo $400.00 304-675-8888.

1il9 Mercury Coug1r. Red wlth

Claude Wlntoll (740~245·5121

proved Wllh $0 ·Downl . Low
Monthly Paymentot 1·600·817·
3-178 Ext. 330.

1988 Ford F-250, $1500 080; ~
Taurut $1700 080: 86 EtCamlno,
good oondltlon. $4,000 firm, 740·
992-5532.

1996 1500 Vulcan . bought new
last vear. only 2000 miles, extras.
$6,000,740-742-2760.

Recnargtd With Nitrogen A.M

· 810

1998 GEO Tracker. black with

SUawberrl.. Pick~ You oWn. c811:

ERS • Almost Everyone Ap ·

2067.

Ol'llo Valley Bank Wllf Offer For
Sale By Public Aucllon A t 985
Toyota PU &lt;lx.a 10587&lt;18, At 10:00

and-ends.

740-245·9047.

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·

1972 Ford 8000 Tandtm 1160
Cat Olen!, 13 apeed . double
frame cab good, $5000, 740-992·

lllblished t975. Call 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870, 1-8()0-267·0578 . Rog·
ers Waterproofing.

days or 7&lt;10·949·264&lt;1 evenings

Stawberrles Taylor's Berry Paten,
Weekdays 8 A.M. ·8 P.M. Satur·
d1y 8 -Noon. Closed Sunday's,

Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Fur·
nacea &amp;. Heat Pumps. Bennette
Mobile Homo Supply, 740· 448·
9416 www.otW.corn.tltnnelr

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

Cl'ltokad For Blee'd -Off. Tires
'Are In E~tcellent Condition. Chain
And Sprockets Are l lkt New,
11.800. 7&lt;1().4.46-7375.

t 995 Toyota Tacoma. 4X4 . Ex·

1997 Dodge Intrepid, 3.5 V-6 .

Party Wantad To Make Low
Monthly Payments On Plano. See

On Vinyl Sklrllng, Doors, Wind·

pounds /Aopos. Ftt. SO Down 124
Mos. 01IU% For Liatlf'IOI l·800319·3323 X2 t5i.

1987 Thunderbird Very Good
Condibon, $3,000. 740-441 ·0109.

$.16,000. 74Cl-446-6265.

CONSOLE PIANO. Responsible

580

lm·

1991 YZ 12&amp; New Ptutlc, Now
Rlttdl, NIW Pitton &amp; Ringo. Very
Power1ul Bike . Looks New, Front
Fortt Have aaen Cornp~tel~ Rebuilt Which Includes New Seals
And Fluid . Rear Shock Has Been

Blue Jacket legend questioned, A2
Semi-pro football; K-Mart 400 results, 11

· lUHd.y: CICM!CIJ
Hlp: lOS; \ow: IDI

SERVI CES

Motorcycle•

11193 S·10 Bluer Tahoe Pacl&lt;afll
4.3 Lltor ~or1tc V·8 , hctllt~t
condition, 1ae,ooo Miles, fhlftl
Great, AMJFM Clllthl, Powtf
Stttrl~g . Powtr Windows I
LOCka. Air. Tin, And Cruise, Ftc·
1D&lt;Y Aluminum Whotla. New Tlrtl
&amp; Brllltl, New Front Brake Ro F
E d J
All
d
tort, ront n
ust
gn1 ,
A'lklng $8,000 (Or Reuonablt
Offer) 7&lt;10-&lt;Wil-4548 II No Anowtr
Pltalt Leavo Mesooge.

$4,000 OBO Call:' (740)·367.01)24

with gray lnlerlor, 59,000 miles.
minor front damage, runs &amp;
drlvos . $4 ,600, 740·992·1506
days. 740-949-2644 evenings.

Registered Cocker Spaniel, fa·
mala, graat with kid&amp;, house
broke. Blonde In cOlor 304·576·

740

5805 after 4:30pm.

quality and pot Alms available lor
1818, 740-9C9-:W16,

Huge Inventory, Discount Pricea.

.28/MO.

1995 Chevy 271 , CD player.

$8.000. 740-446·3909.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

FROM

loaded , 53,000 mllas304 -675·

Mystic Poms - any breed dog
grooming av ailable. Also show

570

93 ChiYy trudi 54.2:50. I 89 Ttmpo$100.00000304-675-8872.

740-992-3685.

MET~L BUILDINGS. Don Your
Dulorohlp Not Work For You?
We Have Compatltlve Prices &amp;
NO Ooolorohlp F1111 Call For A

lng $yattma HIOQ-279-4300.

7~992-2904.

CARS

a 4·WO.

- ·-

83 Ford Ranger. $800: 85 Honda
CRX. 2 mter sports car, $12!:0,

1983 lincoln Continental Mark
Vt, 136,500 mlles,pw, ps, pi, 4 dr.,
lade green, runa great. $3,500,

Ltbs $400 ·$500 Black &amp; Yellow
Male &amp; Female. 7&lt;1().4.41-0013.

Fr11 Brochure. El Dorado Build·

730 Vena

$2,800. 7&lt;1().446-0208.

Palo Bluo. Floral Stripe. $1110.00
(740)-«8,7928

eryl1 ·800-482·7930 X-&lt;18.

1 H.P. Dyne·Toe Pump WHh PAC
FAB Fan Filter For largo Above
Ground Pool $175, 740·«1-«1013.

Avanua ,/Pt.

Pleasant. (304)675-2083. Sun. 1·
4PM, Mon-Sat 11 AM·6PM.

Love Slat Cream ancr Mauve and

R&amp;D's U1ed Furniture &amp; Ap- · sears riding lawn mower, 10 hp
pllances Great Selection, Priced 36' cut, now battory $350. 304·
To Sell! ·come And Srowae. • 875·1731 .
Gcirnar Of Route 7 &amp; Addison
flke, "We Buy Furniture" 740- SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
367-o280.
. Clolm Donled? Wo Spoclallzo In
Appeals And Hearings. FREE
Ulld Window Unit Air Condition- CONSULTATION. Bonelli Toam .
oro. Guaranlttd. 7~7.
Services, Inc. Toll-Free : 1-8888311-4052.
WOOden bunk btd&amp; $40.00, olec.
stove S50.00 works good- ·304.-· STEEL BUILDINGS, Ntw, Musl
8?6-8868.
Sell. 301140 xt2 Wu $10,200 Now
$8,9&amp;0. 40a60xU Woa $16,400
530
AntlqUH
Now $10.971 : 50x100x18 Waa
127.590 Now $19.990: 801&lt;200•18
Buy or sell. Riverine Antlquet ,
Wae $58 ,780 Now $39,990. 1·
1124 Eall Main on SR 124 E. Po81J0..4011.5126.
rrio,.Y. 740-982·2528 or 740·992·
1539. Ruu Moore, owner.
STEEL BUILDINGS: 4 Only 2 •
25x30. 2 ·50a140, Mull Movol

Merchendlee

Jackson

POUNDS . Honda's Toyota'&amp;,
Cheyy1, Jeep1. And Sport Ullll·
lies. Call Now! 800-772-H7 0;

drlvoa,

Supplies . Fish Tank/Pot Shop,

yro. old, St3:50 now. asking $650
. 080, 740-898·!1054

Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gao

540 Mlacellaneoue

sso. 740·898·3054 .

III&lt;S new, $8!10, 740-992·9285.

Vlno Str.oet. Call 740·446·7398.
1·888-318.0128.

.

Pete for Sala

2 Pomeranian• Pupa, Male , 5

JET
AERt\l'ION MOTORS
Ropalrtd. Ntw &amp; Rallul~ In StOCk.
Call Ron Evana, t ·8CJ0.537·9528.

CARS FROM $200 . POLICE IM·

72Q Truc;ka for Sale

7362.

Yellow Lob Pup, $50, 740·3868915.

11308. 1·800-291.()()98.

710 Autoe for Sale

y - 740-1192·7553.

1 Mate Black Lab Pup ; 1 Male

Lost.• FrH Estimates I 7..0·4&lt;18·

TRAN SPORTATION

door. all original, garage kept 57

2 Rottwellor pup&amp; , 2 Cottlo pups, 1
tr1 cororecl, 1 Laule, all shots &amp;
· 740-742.0703.
4 week old AKC Chocall• Lobi.
$250. Cll(304)e75·!1636.

... 1-()172

7-·7843.

1927 ChfYrolet Capital, $6800, 2

Gold 30" Electric Cook Stove

REimiNnALHOMEOWNERS

4782.

Building
Suppllea

18 wk old St. Bernard $100.00
30H76-1871 . Alter 8 pm.

Washers, dryers, refrigerator&amp; ,
rengea . Skaggs Appllances , 76

New And Used Furniture Store
Uow Holiday Inn; Kanauga, Big
Savings On New Couches, Good
Hoopitat Btd, 1992 17 112 Fl. Cobia Runabout Boat. New Condt·
tlon . Check Us Out! 740·448·

Tobacco Pranta For Salt , can

560

Nowlllt-80Q.247·3616.

Far Sate: Reconditioned .w ash·
era, dryers and refrigerators .
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

Waterline Special: 31" 200 PSI
$21 .15 Ptr 100: t• , 200 PSI

Father Day Idea- like new Mid·
Uft d\alr, 7&lt;10.992-7239.

OK! 0 Down; laptops Available .
Reeatabllal'l Your Credltt Call

Fronch City Maytag. 740-448n95.

650 Seed a Fertilizer ·

Rio Grtnde, OH Call 740·245·
5121 .

moust. $800. 7&lt;10-742-2050.

WANT A COMPUTER? But No
Caah? No Crtdll OKI Slow Credit

Appliances :
Reconc;tltlonecl
Waahers, Dryers. Ranges. Aefrlgratora, 90 Day Guarantee! We
Sell New Maytag Appliances.

180,740-898-~ .

Block , brick, aewer pipes, wind·
ow1. lintels. a1c. Claude Winters.

Dtlk top computer, windows 98,
under warranty, 13" Compaq p,...
brio, monitor, J)finter, keyboard &amp;

MERCHAN DISE

Antiquo Bath Tub lor Sale (740)·
•31111-8413

tra , Cottee tEnd Tablts, Kitchen

Tobit, 8 Cholro , T.V. Coblnll,
740-2&gt;46-5585.

~50

Oown. Free Color Printer 1·888·
419-2345 www.ejurnp-start.com

Minlmu poOl &amp; apa heater,
.200,000 BTU LP gas, 2 yro. old,
$850, cai1740-66NI888.

HouMhold
Gooda

Pygmy billy goat, 8 monU\S old,

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Down! Past
Crtdll Problema OKII Even It
Turntd Down S.lorett Reestablish
'lbur Crtdlt!II·II00-659-031i9.

.

.$350 per month, $350 deposit:
740-849·2093 or 614-876-1881 .

510

Uttd FurrMtur1: Couch, 2 RICtkt-

liON EVANS ENTIRPAIIES
Jod&lt;lon. Ohio, 1·1100-537·9528

Kenmore araekable wastier/dryer,

VJIIage Green Apartments· 2
bedrooms. total eleetric, appnanc·
es furnished, laundry room facill·
Uea and close to sel'loot, appllcauonl a~allable at ofUce, 740·992·

740-258·1e71 .

137.00 Per 100; All Brass Com,..._ Fllllngo In Stock

Clarion CO-ptoyor hood unH. rnod11 DRB:W75, 31ia4. 4-EclipH 5a7
IPIIktrs, Cloastlre 302 ampllfler,
2a1SO woH, 2·SL audio 10' oub·

Goate Nubian. polled odtrltU buck wethtrt,milll:trt. laying hen
&amp; cllldls 30ol-ll76- 111215.

Rlll)btrrlu limited Quantity,

EOH.

Unfurnished .5 Room Apartmenl,
In Point Pleasant, WV. E•cellent
eondltlort, Re ferences /Deposit
Required, 740-4&lt;16·0041 Arter 5

Llv8ltock

830

MerchandiH

Bedroom tultt· t)Ookctse headbaird, k..,., loolbolrd, 8·drawor
dreuer w/mtrror, 1-drawer cna&amp;t,
1300, 7MH~fl&amp;.~.

8888.

Ml~eellaneoua

even did some cooking. They made
biscuits, snickerdoodles and lemonade.·
Campers receiving certificates for
completi ng the program were Kelsey'
Howell, Cale Reeves, Jordan Wood,
Craig Jones, Nathan Cook, Trenton
Cook, Mike Ball, Morgan Kennedy,
Eric Wood, Josh Parker and Taylor
Parker.
Adults working in the program were
Patty Cook, Margaret Parker, Maxine
Whitehead, the Rev. William Middleswarth, Keith Ashley and Joyce
Da.vis.
Camper Kelsey Howell, left, looks
over an antique doll buggy on display
at the museum. (Charlene Hoefiich
photo)

Todafs

Sentinel
2 hctions- 12 .....
Calendar

. AS

Classitieds

BH

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BS

M
A3
B1.6_
Al

lotteries
QlDO
Pick 3: (&gt;..IW;; Pick 4: 4-4-3-3
Supot Loao: 1()..11- 16-19-22-44
Kidrer: 1~9-5-{)
~VA.
Daily 3: 7-9-5 o.i1y 4: 8-2-7-7

"

. . .- . . . . . . -

..- -. ........ . . _ __

_

__ _ __

. ...... -

- . -

... . .. ..,

'

·----- ----· -······-J·-- -

I

�~

..

..

•

Spiders aplenty at Hiram
HIRAM (AP)- There's no shortage of subjects for students at
Hiram College's new tarantula research program.
.Biologist Sam Marshall has amassed 750 of the spiders. some as
big as a man's fist , for students to study at the small liberal arts school
in northeast Ohio.
The 42-year-old professor joined Hiram last year as director of
the college's biological field station where part of his job involves
getting undergraduates to for us on how the 60 species of tarantulas
behave.
"Despite the fact that .they're the most famous of spiders, very little research is actually done on tarantulas," Marshall told the Akron
Beacon Journal.
Historically, most spider biologists have tended to study spiders
native to their regions in North American and Europe, while most
species of tarantulas are found elsewhere - in tropical and subtropical spots, he·said.
While Marshall said his work at Hiram is a spider enthusiast's
dream, some students struggle with spider phobia.
Richard Blatchford gets in the face of big tarantulas and tries to
make them angry.The 20-year-old from Tennessee prods them with
forceps to determine how they defend themselves.
The scariest ones " rear up on their hind legs, display their fangs·
and make a hissing sound;' Blatchford said.

Law allows for businesses
COLUMBUS (AP)- Faculty members at Ohio universities can
start businesses based on thei"r research under a new law designed to
make the state more competitive in luring top teachers - and their
research dollars - to state-supported universities.
Gov. Bob Taft, who signed the legislation last week, said the law
marks the start of Ohio's efforts to compete in ·technology-dominated markets.
Until now, faculty members were considered to have a conflict of
interest if they owned more than 5 percent of a coml'any hired to
manufacture and market products university researchers developed.
The state set the restrictions to prevent faculty members from
using taxpayer-financed equipment for private gain or from letting
their financial interests distort research findings.
The new law waives the 5 percent limit and allows faculty members to enter into contracts that give them a financial interest in
products developed from their research.
Professors who build businesses out of their research provide a
great "reputational value" for universities, said David Allen, Ohio
State University's assistant vice president for technology partnerships.
Allen said with the limit gone, he hopes faculty members will get
paid berween 10 percent to 20 percent for creating products and
starting companies.

Funeral homes hit the Web
DAYTON (AP)- Funeral homes are connecting with the Internet to help people send condolences when a friend or co-worker
· dies.
"All funeral homes with Web sites will be getting into it in the
next six months to a year;' said Dale Morris of Morris Sons Funeral Homes.
In a highly mobile age, the e-condolence is an i&lt;Jea whose time
has come, said .To1pmy Routson g. co-owner of Routsong Funeral
Home, which is about to go online.
.
·.
"The nuclear family and the peripheral family are just not located at home anymore," Routsong told the Dayton Daily News. "We
think in our global comrnWJity it's very necessary:•
Littleton and Rue Funeral Home in Springfield is putting a tag
line on its newspaper obituaries, inviting people to post e-mail condolences on the home's Web site. The Web site for Baird Funeral
Home in Troy has been accepting e-mail condolence measages on a
limited basis for nearly two yean.
Littleton and Rue owner Tom Rue said he was excited when the
designer of his Web site, Funera!Net of Portland, Ore.• ofl'ered him
the computerized-condolences service about six months ago.
Almost 300 families have used the service, Rue estimated.

'IWin toddlen hospltall:zed
CHARDON (AP) -Twin toddler&amp; were hospitalized after they
spent up to an hour in a hot parked car that they wandered into
undetected.
Christopher Love was in critical condition early Monday at
Rainbow Babies &amp; Children's Hospital in Cleveland. His brother
Collin was in satisfactory condition.
The 2 112-year-old rwins could have died if an older brother
hadn't found them Saturday in the hot car, which had temperatur~s
reaching the high 80s, said Lt. Tom McCaffrey of the Geauga County Sheriff's office.
The twins' mother, Gail Love, 42, of Chardon Township, told
authorities she had put the boys down for a nap about noon. An
amateur beekeeper, she then went to tend her hives. The mother
told police she had peeked in at the boys about I :30 p.m., and they
were still sleeping.
·Then, shortly after 3 p.m., the boys' teen-age brother discovered
them in the car. The rwins were taken first to Geauga Hospital, then
flown by helicopter to Rainbow.
Although the incident appears to be an accident, McCaffrey said
he w11l ask the county prosecutor to review the case.
Chardon is located about 25 miles east of Cleveland.

Replica built of flying ace's home
COLUMBUS (Al\) -The bungalow where Worlp War I 'pi\ot
Edd1e R1ckenbacker grew up now has a twin . .
A cedar replica of the home where Ric kenbacker lived from 1893
to 1909or 1910 was dedicated Saturday at Motts Military Museum
in nearby Groveport.
In 1996, officials wanted to buy Rickenbacker's hous.e and move
it to the grounds of the museum, which displays items from periods
of U.S. military history. The ciry stopped the project for fears it
would end the bungalow's status as a national landmark.
Organizers then decided to build a ,eplica of the 1 112 story
frame house, which had rwo rooms on the first floor and two more.
smaller rooms in the attic. A combination kitchen and living area
was added in 190Q.
.
The original had no electricity or running water and no heat
except from the kitchen stove. It was built by Rickenbacker's father
for about $300.
The most-decorated U.S. pilot ofWorld War I grew up there with
six other children. He lived in the house until he was abput 20.
Rickcnbacker died in 1973 at 82.
1'he new version, which resembles how the house looked in 1919
and even comes with an outhouse, w.ill have furnishings from the
time when Rickenbacker was a boy. Constwction began in April
.1999 and is expected to be finished next month.
The house was built was donated material, labor and cash. The
estimated cost is $50,000.

•

Monday, June 12, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pee- A2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

•

.--• .
..-

Proficiency test prep begins with choosing a guide

COLUMBUS
(AP)
The Toledo-based Equal
Building wheelchair ramps to
Justice Foundation sued
settle a lawsuit will cost $14 "
the city for violatir?g
million more than anticipated
curb-ramp requirements
because the city miscalculated
the number of cutb ramps
incl.uded in the
needed and their com.
Americans With
" I' m outraged that last year
Disabilities Act. The
the city could be so far off on
what this project would cost federal act requires cities
our taxpayers and that our
to make curbs accessible
managers were not held
to .people in wheelchairs.
accountable," Mayor Michael
Coleman said in .a statement.
his group will go before U.S.
The Toledo-based Equal District Judge James Graham
Justice Foundation sued the to ensure that any changes to
city for violating curb-ramp the consent decree are done
requirements included in tlie properly. ·
Americans With Disabilities
Still, the city's attitude ha~
Act. The federal act requires changed considerably and now
cities to make curbs accessible it accepts responsibility for
to people in wheelchairs.
fixing the ramps, he said.
Columbu s now plans to
"It's clear · the city has
spend $20 million to construct turned around a lot from
more than 11,000 ramps, where they were on this last
about $1,.800 a ramp. Under
year," he said.
the previous plan , the city was
The city has not figured out
to spend $6.2 million to build
where the money will come
5,000 ramps, an average of
from, said . Steve Campbell,
$800.
Coleman's deputy of chief of
Coleman said the problem
state. ,
arose because former Mayor
"We're confident that we
Greg Lashutka's administration didn't accurately calculate will meet this obligation withthe number and price of the out jeopardizing the priority
ramps. Lashutka did not return , co,m mitments in the city bud'
a call Saturday seeking com- get," he · said.
The city has hired a conment.
struction
. manager to oversee
In a settlement reached la1t
year with the found~tion, the the wheelchair ramp project.
So far, the city has built
city agrued to install the ramps
by December, Officials · now 1,204 ramps. But the city also
aay that deadline cannot be found that 478 have to be
rebuilt because the slope is too
met.
Mark Finnegan of the steep, which can cause wheelEqual Justice Foundation .said chairs to tip.

Mayor wants
to oring back
·dollar-nouse lottery
COLUMBUS (AP) City
officials are trying to reif1State a
program where homes could be
bought for a dollar as long as
those who · buy . the houses
promise to fix them up to code
and live in them for at least four
. years.
· In the Urban Homestead pro-·
gram, which operated from 1975
to 1992, the city purchased with
(ederal dollars over 500 homes .
that were repossessed by the U.S.
Department of Housing and
Urban Development. · Names
were drawn out of a hat to d~cide
who gets to buy the homes for a
dollar.
Mayor Michael Coleman is
proposing a Urbai1 Homestead
2()()0 program, which would use
inc'entives similar to the dollarhouse lottery to boost homeownership. Columbus' homeownership rate is at 49 percent, compared with 68 percent nationally
and 74 percent in Columbus suburbs.
'
Coleman has also created the
Columbus ·Housing Trust Corp.
to admini.ster more than S20 million in city-backed bonds for
down payments and construction.
The Department ofTrade and
Development has not been able
to r.nd records showing how
\ effective the program was or how
many homesteaders lived in the
homes when the progr~m · was
closed out,~pokeswoinan Cynthia
Rickman said.
Coleman ~ants to bring back
the program because it g'ives
opportunities for young people
and families.

•

Dan Crane, a biologist
Wright State University, said
liminary test results on the
of five descendants of Blue
~nd five Swearin'gens show
rwo men were not the same.
tests suggest Blue Jacket was
Indian, but do not exclude ·
possibility he was white,
said.
Crane received the DNA ·
pies from Robert Van Trees,
first raised questions about
Blue Jacket story while
research in the early 1980s on
family history.
Van Trees, 82, of su~•url&gt;a1
Fairborn, says he found no
dence of a man named
maduke Van Swearingen. H&lt;lW!OV
er, he said there was a
maduke Swearingen, born .
17 63 in western
who disappeared one day
family never saw him again.
Van Trees said that last sunum
he tracked down descendants
Swearingen and Blue
around the country and went
their homes. He collected
samples and submitted them
Crane:
Mark Seielstad, '!'esearch
ate at Harvard Un\versity's
of Public Health, said the
tests would probably be able
determine whether Blue
and Swearingen were the
man ii the descendants are ·
they say they are. However,
said the test is not 100 pet:cet
foolproof.
But the results give ammun:
tion to.some historians.

.. · WASHINGTON (AP)- Until
last month, the National Park Ser~
· vice had been sharply increasing
the number of fires set to clear
brush and rehabilitate landscapes,
tripling the area burned in just four
years.
.
:: That changed when a fire set at
·Bandelier National Monument got
ciut of control. leading to an infer-

v..,

(tJSPUIJ.HO)
hblll.... eo.
· ,Published every tfternoon, Mond1y throuah
Frldty, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by 1ho
Oblo Vllloy Publlthlaa Company., Pomeroy,
.Ohio 43769, Ph. 992·2156. So-.! cl.,. pool•
111 ptld •• Pomeroy, Ohio.

.

Oltlo

·Mnaber: The Aq,ocilled Prm. tnd the Ohio

:Newtpapcr Auocittion.
.PQSTMASTERt 5end addnu c:orrcctiont to
&lt;The O.tl~ Sentinel, lll Court St., Pomeroy,
'Ohio 45769. .
SUBSCRJmON RATES
:
By ClnlororMotorlloolt
One - k.................... .............................. S2.00
One Mofllh ..... ...........................................l8.70
:o~ Yetr ............................................... Sto.t.OO

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dally .................................................... 30 CenlJ

Subacribel'l not duirina to PlY the canter mty
' remit In advance directiO The Dally Senllnel
on a three, 1ht or 12 monlh bUll. Crcdll will be
.a111en urrler c~ch week.
No Jubterlption by 111111 r,rmlued In •re••
where homt etrrlcr ll!rvlce 1 1111i11blc.

Publilhcr mervealhe riJhl lo adju11 fiiCI dur·
Ina the subiCriptlan pc:rlod. Subscription rale
· chanaes ml)' be implemented by chlnaln11hc
~d\iralion of the subscriP'kln.

PAYMENTWITH PICTURE)

-ki... . . . ... . . . . .' . . . . .
IIIAILSUBSCRimONS
lntlde Melp Coo117

Send to:
The Dally Sentinel

13

S27.30

6Weekl ................................................. m .s2

lll Court Street Pomeroy, Ohlo.45769

52 WeekJ ............................................... SIOl..l6
'
Rain O.llhle Melp Cooaly
:13 WeekJ ................................................. I29.2S
· 26 Weeks .......................... ....................... l$6.68
~l Weekl ..., ........................................... $109.72

1r-------~----------------~------~----------,
Child's Nam~(s) &amp;'Age(s): .
.
·
.

c

.

Reader Services
·'

Our m1la COKtnl II 111.11trltt II te bt
acc•ratt. If rou lulo• of •• error I" • 11•1'11
:NIIIIIo - - II (740) m•lll$, W. will
'd11cclr. JO•r lafor•ltloa lid ••ke I ·
·comdloll u Wll'fllltfd,
.

.

Nt•• DtplrtiiHb

n 1 .... •••IMr li tt2·ll55. Departraenl

- SUBMITTED BY:

L------------------------------------------------------~
tiURRYI PICTURE DUDLIN118
FRIDAY, .tUNE 81, 80001

ureulo•••n=
Gf:M:rll MIDIICf..,...,_, _ _.£1.L 1111
N1 .,1.................- _............-

..... Eat.

1101

.......... - .......................... - ....- .....or E11. 1106
·

Otltlr SeJYktt
---·""''-'""''•"llo.4

·Ad.ert111·-·.......

:elrcllllltkla ....................................... £11.1103

&lt;C;IIMIIWAdi.. -·-"-"""""'"'-"ExL IIIlO

•

"

,

•

no that destroyed more than 200
homes in Los Alamos, N.M., and
caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage.
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt
halted aU "prescribed fires" by the
Park Service in the West indefinitely. saying an investigation found
"serious systemic problems in the
way the Park Service conducts prescribed burns."
'Park Service Director Robert
Stanton told a House panel last
week that the agency is changing
its policies and training to prevent
similar problems.
It was Babbite who changed
policy in 1995 ·. to encourage use of
such fires. He eyen helped set a prescribed fire in! an Idaho national
. forest in 1998. ''
Congressional critics say federal
land managers should rely more on
"mechanical thinning" using
people .and machines to cut down
trees and undergrowth. Rep. Helen
Chenoweth-Hage, R-Idaho, said
the Clinton administration relies
too much on prescribed fires
because of a "dogmatic, anti-s~i­
ence, anti-technology, anti-people
. ..
b1as.
"Fire alone is not sufficient to
the task;' she said.
But forestry experts say that
when properly monitored, prescribed fires ·are among the best and
cheapest ways to prevent catastrophic wildfires.
",As you get away from developed areas, fire becomes a more
viable alternative there's a
reduction in cost, and in threats to
life and property," said Pari&lt; Service
fire specialistTom Zimmerman ." ...
We're just trying to provide the
most appropriate and cost-effective
treatment."
Last year, the Park Service set a
record 326 fires that burned
139,000 acres, according to a computer-assisted analysis of the
agency's fire data. That was a 62
percent jump over the previous
· year and triple the acreage burned
in 1996. But it still represented only
0.2 percent of Park Serv.ice land.

Sunday. 11 :47 p.m., State
Route 124, Donald Salmons,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RUTLAND
Saturday, 6 :16 p.m., State
Route 1192. assisted by Scipio
Township, motor vehicle accident, Jerry Holley, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
Saturday, 11:30 p.m., Second
Street, assisted by Central Dispatch, Brian Parsons, Pleasant Valley Hospital.

GALLIPOLIS National
Award winner Dave Purdy and
his wife, Della, will be speakers at
2 p.m . Friday at the local Parkinson's Disease support group,
Grace United Methodist Church,
600 Second Ave. The topic will be
accepting and undewanding
Parkinson's Disease.

Vandalism
reported
RACINE - Tim Willis of
Racine reported to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department this
weekend thar someone had
scratc hed his car and dented his
truck lid while he was swimming.

Grade cards ready
RACINE - Southern High
School grade cards are ready to be
picked up at the school office,
any weekday berween 7 a.m . and
3 p.m.

Arrest made

EMS units log 8
calls

SYRACUSE - A Syracuse
woil\an was arrested for domestic
violence over the weekend.
According to Meigs County
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Systems Sheriff James M. Soulsby,Jennifer
answered eight calls for assistance Arthur, age unreported, was
over the weekend. Units respond- arrested following an altercation
with Greg Hurlow and his brothed as follows:
er, Tim H uri ow at a Seventh
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Street
residence.
Sunday, 6:07 a.m., Lincoln
She is expected to appear in
Heights, assisted by Pomeroy as
First Responder, Denise Smith, Meigs County Court today.

LOCAL STOCKS

In ali, the Park Service set 3,760
prescribed fires since 1970, burnirig
about 926,000 acres, an area nearly
the size of Rhode Island. By contrast, agency workers battled 43,456
wildfires that burned nearly 5.5
million acres during the same peri~
od.
Some agenty officials and outside experts say more prescribed
fires are needed to prevent the kind
of catasrrophic wildfires that blackened 1 million acres ofYellowstone
National Park in 1988.
"Even when that number (of
prescribed fires) is doubled, it's a
drop in the bucket;' said Ronald
Myers, director of the National Fire
Management Program of The
Nature Conservancy, an environmental group. "I hope Congress is
patient and lets this thing run its

"I think land managers would
be shooting themselves in the foot
to limit themselves to one tool or
the other;' Stephenson said.
While the current debate focuses on the West, prescribed fires also
are set elsewhere, most notably
Florida. The Park Service's top site
for prescribed fires is the Big
Cypress National Preserve, which
had 388 set blazes since 1980 that
burned nearly 534,000 acres - . an
area equivalent to 74 percent of the
preserve.
"We burn throughout the year,
whenever the conditions are .
appropriate, to remove those hazardous fuels so we don't get those
big, screaming fires we can't control;' said Larry Belles, the preserve's
fire chiet:
Second was the adjoining Everglades
National Park, where 363
course."
Besides the low cost, prescribed fires that burned 105,244 acres have.
fires can help prime soil for new been set since 1970. Officials at the
Florida parks said their ecosysrems
seedlin~ and spur the reprodu ction
of species such as giant sequoias, depend on fires every three to 15
said Nate Stephenson, a U.S. Geo- years.
"Two hundred years ago, lightlogical Sutvey scientist who studies
ning
would ·strike somewhere out
fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon
national parks in California. On the in what are now rhe Miami subother hand, he said, mechanical urbs, and over the next few weeks
treatments produce less smoke and the fire would bum into the center
do not leave fire scars on surviving of the Everglades;· said Bob Panko.
fire manager for the Everglades.
trees.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

AEP-34\

Akzo-4oY,

AmTechJSBC- 48~
Ashland Inc. - 35lo
AT&amp;T -34),
Bank One - 32'•

Bob Evans-14~
BcirgWamer - 39lo
Champion - 2'4
Charming Shops- 5~
City Holding- 8~
Federal Mogul- 10
Flrstar- 24l.

Gannett - 60 "!.
General Electric - 49%
Harloy Oavldson - 37),
I&lt; mart - 7'1.
Kroger - tall
l.ands End - 29

Ltd.- 22),
Oak Hill Financial OVB-27),
One valley - 36l.
Peoples -14'4
PremierAoci&lt;Well - 39~

7'·

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell-62~
Sears- 33),
Shoney's -·~.
Wai·Mal1- 54
Wendy's-20
Worthington - 12\

15

Daly stock reporta are lhe
qu- of
the previous day's transactions , provided by
Adves1 of Gallipolis.
4 p.m. closing

VALLEY WEATHER
Rain forecast through Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS'

Scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected tg continue through most of th e
week , forecasters said.
As a cold front brings into the
tri·county showers and thunderstorms, temperatures Monday night will drop into the
60s, the National Wea.ther Service reported.
Highs Tuesday will be in the
mostly in the 80s and Tuesday
night lows will be in the 60s.
Forecast
Today... Showers and thunderstorms likely north. Partly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms south.
Highs from the mid 80s so uth.
Tonight ... ~howers and thunderstorms likely again. Lows in

the 60s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs mostly in the 80s.
Extended forecast
Tuesday night ... A chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the 60s.
Wednesday... A chance o(
showe rs and thunderstorms.
Highs in the 80s.
Thursday... A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in
the 60s . Highs 80 to 85.
Friday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
60s. Highs 80 to 85.

Subscribe today.
WRING VAlUY Cltlf'.\A
"\i
j
446 ·4524 .. ' ,, " "" ., •
FRI 619- THURS 6/15/00
' I I

I

F

lOX Offla Wlll OHN AT

6:30 PM 101 MNlNG SHOWS
12:30 PM 101 IWliiiiS

Sanart •••

~

Don't waste your time
at the locallnconvel'iience Store.
(~
(Thafs Right INCONVENIENCE)
Just stop by your area Smoker Friendly Store for the
fastest and friendliest service for all your tobacco needs.
No Lottery - Deli - or Fuel Pump lines to wait in.
(We Promise)
We'll get you in and out quickly and for a lot less, too.

SIIIOIIfl
fRIINOU'

'

RACINE

To address group

:&lt;Until N.M. blaze, Park·Service
was setting more 'prescribed fires'

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
photographs of local kids - ges
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will. appear In the
J!JIY 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is Included.

I PHONE N~.:

The first concerts of the summer in Pomeroy and Middleport gave
music lovers a choice of venues and musical styles Friday evening.
Guitarist Bill Dutcher, above, performed for a large crowd gathered for
the first show of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society's Summer Concert Series at Pomeroy's Riverside Amphitheater. The summer concert series will continue throughout the summer months. Meanwhile,
in Middleport's Stewart-Bennett Memorial Park, the Big Bend Community Band, below, led by Toney Dingess, performed a number of
songs in a picturesque setting - adjacent to the Meigs County AllWars Memorial, which was recently restored. The Middleport Community Association, Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, and the
Riverbend Arts Council sponsored this first in a series of summertime
events in the park. (Photos by Tony M: Leach and Brian J. Reed)

,

•.The Daily Sentinel

-THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE AD-

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department will
offer an immunization clinic from
9to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.Tuesday at the health department, 112
E. Memorial Drive. Parents · or
legal guardians must accompany
all children, and bring shot
records. Donations are accepted
foe administration of immunizations, and nobody will be denied
services because of an inability to
'
pay.

GALLIPOLIS - Hartley Watson, 91, Crown City, died Monday,
June 12, 2000, at Holzer Medical Center.
· · The son of the late Crawford and Susan Moore Watson, he was
' retired from Gallipolis Vault Co.
· · · Watson is survived by a daughter, Dorothy (Richard) Rodgers of
·· · Gallipolis; two sons, Bobby G. (Carolyn) Watson of Gallipolis and
· · jinm1y H . (.Barbara) Watson of .Berea; four grandchildren and nine
· great-grandchildren.
He was· also preceeded in death· by five sisters, Edna Carter, Elva
McCombs, Ruby Sheets, Lottie Smith and Melva Bennett. ·
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Willis Funeral Home with the
Rev. Don Wheeler officiating. Burial will follow at Ohio Valley Mem. · ory Gardens. Friends may caU the funeral home Tuesday from 5-8 p.m.

Complete the fonn below and
enclose a sna1shot or wallet sized
picture plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. I more than one child
is in the _picture, enc;lose an .
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE

I
I

MIDDLEPORT- John Edward Lyons Sr., 82, of Middleport, died
- Saturday, June I 0, 2000 at his residence.
He was born on May 7, 1918, in Middleport, the son of tbe late
; Lindsey and Lynda! Parker Lyons. He was a retired boilermaker with
· Charleston Local 667. He was a member of Middleport First Baptist
Church, a World War II Navy Seabee, a member of Middleport
Masoi1ic Lodge 363 for more .than 50 years, and was a 32nd degree
member of Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus and a member of the
Shrine.
· Surviving are his wife of 58 years, Rosemary Schramm Lyons; three
. sons and daughters-in-law: John and Janice Lyons of Middleport,
Tonuny and Esther Lyons of Lapeer, Mich., and Bernard and Suzell
· . Lyons of Clarkston, Mich.; a daughter and son-in-law, Linda and James
· . C ramer of Zanesville; 11 grandchildren and four great grandchildren;
a brother and sister-in-law, Lindsey and Elizabeth Lyons of Tuppers
Plains; a sister, Virginia Moore of Columbus; and several nieces and
,nephews.
,
He also was preceded in death by his daughter, Debbie Miller.
. Funeral services will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Burial will follow
at Riverview Cemetery in Middleport.
· Friends may call a~ the funeral home on Monday from 7 to 9 p.m.

.'

Parent's Name: - - - - - - - . , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - 11 City
&amp; State: .
·

Clinic planned

Harley Watson

Baby Edition

I

Pleasant Vall ey H ospital;
6:34 p.m ., State Route 124,
assisted by Reedsville as First
R espo nder. Susie Kerwin, Camden-Clark M emorial Hospital .
POMEROY
Saturday. 5:03 p.m ., East Main
Street, assis ted bv Central Dis- ·
patch , Patty Sha n~. Holzer Medical Ce nrec
10: 32 p.m ., Spring Avenue,
ass isted by Central Dispatch,
Sracy All en, Pleasant Valley Hospital ;
.
Sunday. 9:12 p.m. , Ash Street,
assisted by Central Dispatch ,
Natasha Graham, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

COOLVILLE
Norm
Arringron , a dramati st from
Princeton, WVa ., will have Vacation Bible School at White's
Chapel Wesleyan Church in
Coolville, for both childten and
parents, June 19-23 from 6 to
8:30 p.m.

John Lyons Sr.

The Daily Sentinel

PICTURES IIUIT tl Ill t1 FR11A1
JUliE U, 2000. PICTURII CAll tl
P1CitU UP AUlA JUl~ lOIII, 1000

Robert•aob'Durieux

. ..

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 7, ·~000
~~~~

LOCAL BRIEFS

LONG BOTTOM- Robert L. "Bob" Durieux, 71, Long Bottom,
.. died Friday, June 9, 2000, at Camden-Clark Memprial Hospital in
.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born on Sept. 13, 1928, in Mt. Vernon, son of I he Herbert
, · arid Gladys McConnohie Durieux. He was a sheet metal worker and
... ~ member of Local 33 in Akron.
• . Surviving are his wife, Susie Dangelo Durieux, Long Bottom: two
·.sons, Dwayne Durieux of Shreve and Jerry Durieux of Barberton; a
· ·. daughter, Connie Kosanovich, Barberton; two grandchildren; and rwo
sisters, Eline Bogantz, Lexington, and Patricia McCary, Akron .
Private services will be held at the convenience of the Durieux family.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer
Society.

EXTRA! EXTRA!

..

•

..

DNA.results raise questions .
about Blue Jacket legend .
DAYTON (AP) - DNA tests
have reignited a controversy over
whether the Shawnee war chief
Blue Jacket was an Indian or a
white man.
Blue Jacket led the Shawnees
against Army forces in the 1790s
that were trying to crush Indian
resistance in what is now Ohio.
He died in 1810.
The story of Blue Jacket being
white is more than a century old.
It was mentioned in a Daily Ohio
State jo1,1rnal commentary in
1877 and is dramatized in an outdoor theater production in Xenia
each summer. The drama ·is
among 1,300 projects in the
Library of Congress' Local Legacy program.
Gaylord Carlyle Hinshaw, a
seventh-generation descendant of
Blue Jacket, ha.s asked the Library
of Congress hot to refer to Blue
Jacket as a white man.
"I do not want it to be known
as history," said Hinshaw, of Nor. man, Okla. "It's a lie, and I want it
to be known as a lie."
A biography written in 1969
by Allan Eckert said Blue Jacket
was Marmaduke Van Swearingen,
the son of white settlers who ·was
adopted by the Shawne~s when a
hunting party came upon the 17•·
year-old boy in a West Virginia
woods in 1771. The Shawnees
named Vail Swearingen Blue
Jacket because he was wearing a
blue shirt when he willingly
joined their tribe.
But recent DNA evidence, tint
reported by The (Celina) Daily
Standard, ·raises questions about
the·. story.

All that jazz

VBS planned

COLUMBUS (AP) - Teachers ~eying to als that they advertise as applicable to Ohio's sions just because of the statewide testing program;· Bowen said.
prepare studenB for proficiency tests have many tests.
"If they're n101king them because they want
Materials include workbooks. for students
choices when it comes to preparation guidesmore IUaterial or want additional thin~. that's a
and teacher's editions.
too many, according to some.
,
The state Education Department is con- different story."
At least 10 companies now market curricuUntil
then,
however:
"Buyer
beware,"
BOV'fCrs
lum guides in Ohio aimed at making sure cerned about the proliferation of guides, though
said.
schools cover what's in the states standardized it isn't ready to regulate them yet.
Having to choose from a variety of curricu''My greatest concern is they may not be
tests. The 611 school districts around the state
lum
guides adds to the pressures associated with
can decide for themselves how to use the guides aligned with the Ohio course of study, from
which our tests are constructed;' said Bob Bow- the proficiency tests, said Richard ~ckert, a
to shape or supplement their curricula.
"I just t[¥nk the process of eliminating is very ers, the departm~nt'~ associate superintendent of middle school teacher with 17 years' experience.
"The state's coming in and· dictating that ·
time consuming. trying to figure out what the curriculum and assessment."They may give stubest products are for the money;• said Anne dents or parents a false sense of how well they're kids have to pass the test;' said Packert, 38,
. ..
teaches at Vail Middle School in Middletown
Stephens, the director of progra1m at ·domg.
The department plans to develop its own southwest Ohio. "Teachers are having to
Steubenville city schools.
Some companies, such as Englefield &amp; guidelines for preparation for the proficiency sure kids pass the test."
Because the state is rewriting the test that stuArnold Publishing of Columbus, publish mater- tests.
dents
will need to pass for graduation, school
''Ultimately, it's my goal within the next two
ial tailored to the standards measured by the
tesB. Others, such as Barrett Kendall Publishing years to eliminate that need for districts to be districts have to keep shopping for new test prep
of Austin, Texas, sell general preparation materi- out there having to make those kinds of deci- guides. That takes time and money, Packei;t said.

·City underestimates price to fix
wheelchair ramps by S14 million

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

_&lt;Monday, June 12, 2000

7:00 &amp; 9:20
MI'.TINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20

•

�~

..

..

•

Spiders aplenty at Hiram
HIRAM (AP)- There's no shortage of subjects for students at
Hiram College's new tarantula research program.
.Biologist Sam Marshall has amassed 750 of the spiders. some as
big as a man's fist , for students to study at the small liberal arts school
in northeast Ohio.
The 42-year-old professor joined Hiram last year as director of
the college's biological field station where part of his job involves
getting undergraduates to for us on how the 60 species of tarantulas
behave.
"Despite the fact that .they're the most famous of spiders, very little research is actually done on tarantulas," Marshall told the Akron
Beacon Journal.
Historically, most spider biologists have tended to study spiders
native to their regions in North American and Europe, while most
species of tarantulas are found elsewhere - in tropical and subtropical spots, he·said.
While Marshall said his work at Hiram is a spider enthusiast's
dream, some students struggle with spider phobia.
Richard Blatchford gets in the face of big tarantulas and tries to
make them angry.The 20-year-old from Tennessee prods them with
forceps to determine how they defend themselves.
The scariest ones " rear up on their hind legs, display their fangs·
and make a hissing sound;' Blatchford said.

Law allows for businesses
COLUMBUS (AP)- Faculty members at Ohio universities can
start businesses based on thei"r research under a new law designed to
make the state more competitive in luring top teachers - and their
research dollars - to state-supported universities.
Gov. Bob Taft, who signed the legislation last week, said the law
marks the start of Ohio's efforts to compete in ·technology-dominated markets.
Until now, faculty members were considered to have a conflict of
interest if they owned more than 5 percent of a coml'any hired to
manufacture and market products university researchers developed.
The state set the restrictions to prevent faculty members from
using taxpayer-financed equipment for private gain or from letting
their financial interests distort research findings.
The new law waives the 5 percent limit and allows faculty members to enter into contracts that give them a financial interest in
products developed from their research.
Professors who build businesses out of their research provide a
great "reputational value" for universities, said David Allen, Ohio
State University's assistant vice president for technology partnerships.
Allen said with the limit gone, he hopes faculty members will get
paid berween 10 percent to 20 percent for creating products and
starting companies.

Funeral homes hit the Web
DAYTON (AP)- Funeral homes are connecting with the Internet to help people send condolences when a friend or co-worker
· dies.
"All funeral homes with Web sites will be getting into it in the
next six months to a year;' said Dale Morris of Morris Sons Funeral Homes.
In a highly mobile age, the e-condolence is an i&lt;Jea whose time
has come, said .To1pmy Routson g. co-owner of Routsong Funeral
Home, which is about to go online.
.
·.
"The nuclear family and the peripheral family are just not located at home anymore," Routsong told the Dayton Daily News. "We
think in our global comrnWJity it's very necessary:•
Littleton and Rue Funeral Home in Springfield is putting a tag
line on its newspaper obituaries, inviting people to post e-mail condolences on the home's Web site. The Web site for Baird Funeral
Home in Troy has been accepting e-mail condolence measages on a
limited basis for nearly two yean.
Littleton and Rue owner Tom Rue said he was excited when the
designer of his Web site, Funera!Net of Portland, Ore.• ofl'ered him
the computerized-condolences service about six months ago.
Almost 300 families have used the service, Rue estimated.

'IWin toddlen hospltall:zed
CHARDON (AP) -Twin toddler&amp; were hospitalized after they
spent up to an hour in a hot parked car that they wandered into
undetected.
Christopher Love was in critical condition early Monday at
Rainbow Babies &amp; Children's Hospital in Cleveland. His brother
Collin was in satisfactory condition.
The 2 112-year-old rwins could have died if an older brother
hadn't found them Saturday in the hot car, which had temperatur~s
reaching the high 80s, said Lt. Tom McCaffrey of the Geauga County Sheriff's office.
The twins' mother, Gail Love, 42, of Chardon Township, told
authorities she had put the boys down for a nap about noon. An
amateur beekeeper, she then went to tend her hives. The mother
told police she had peeked in at the boys about I :30 p.m., and they
were still sleeping.
·Then, shortly after 3 p.m., the boys' teen-age brother discovered
them in the car. The rwins were taken first to Geauga Hospital, then
flown by helicopter to Rainbow.
Although the incident appears to be an accident, McCaffrey said
he w11l ask the county prosecutor to review the case.
Chardon is located about 25 miles east of Cleveland.

Replica built of flying ace's home
COLUMBUS (Al\) -The bungalow where Worlp War I 'pi\ot
Edd1e R1ckenbacker grew up now has a twin . .
A cedar replica of the home where Ric kenbacker lived from 1893
to 1909or 1910 was dedicated Saturday at Motts Military Museum
in nearby Groveport.
In 1996, officials wanted to buy Rickenbacker's hous.e and move
it to the grounds of the museum, which displays items from periods
of U.S. military history. The ciry stopped the project for fears it
would end the bungalow's status as a national landmark.
Organizers then decided to build a ,eplica of the 1 112 story
frame house, which had rwo rooms on the first floor and two more.
smaller rooms in the attic. A combination kitchen and living area
was added in 190Q.
.
The original had no electricity or running water and no heat
except from the kitchen stove. It was built by Rickenbacker's father
for about $300.
The most-decorated U.S. pilot ofWorld War I grew up there with
six other children. He lived in the house until he was abput 20.
Rickcnbacker died in 1973 at 82.
1'he new version, which resembles how the house looked in 1919
and even comes with an outhouse, w.ill have furnishings from the
time when Rickenbacker was a boy. Constwction began in April
.1999 and is expected to be finished next month.
The house was built was donated material, labor and cash. The
estimated cost is $50,000.

•

Monday, June 12, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pee- A2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

•

.--• .
..-

Proficiency test prep begins with choosing a guide

COLUMBUS
(AP)
The Toledo-based Equal
Building wheelchair ramps to
Justice Foundation sued
settle a lawsuit will cost $14 "
the city for violatir?g
million more than anticipated
curb-ramp requirements
because the city miscalculated
the number of cutb ramps
incl.uded in the
needed and their com.
Americans With
" I' m outraged that last year
Disabilities Act. The
the city could be so far off on
what this project would cost federal act requires cities
our taxpayers and that our
to make curbs accessible
managers were not held
to .people in wheelchairs.
accountable," Mayor Michael
Coleman said in .a statement.
his group will go before U.S.
The Toledo-based Equal District Judge James Graham
Justice Foundation sued the to ensure that any changes to
city for violating curb-ramp the consent decree are done
requirements included in tlie properly. ·
Americans With Disabilities
Still, the city's attitude ha~
Act. The federal act requires changed considerably and now
cities to make curbs accessible it accepts responsibility for
to people in wheelchairs.
fixing the ramps, he said.
Columbu s now plans to
"It's clear · the city has
spend $20 million to construct turned around a lot from
more than 11,000 ramps, where they were on this last
about $1,.800 a ramp. Under
year," he said.
the previous plan , the city was
The city has not figured out
to spend $6.2 million to build
where the money will come
5,000 ramps, an average of
from, said . Steve Campbell,
$800.
Coleman's deputy of chief of
Coleman said the problem
state. ,
arose because former Mayor
"We're confident that we
Greg Lashutka's administration didn't accurately calculate will meet this obligation withthe number and price of the out jeopardizing the priority
ramps. Lashutka did not return , co,m mitments in the city bud'
a call Saturday seeking com- get," he · said.
The city has hired a conment.
struction
. manager to oversee
In a settlement reached la1t
year with the found~tion, the the wheelchair ramp project.
So far, the city has built
city agrued to install the ramps
by December, Officials · now 1,204 ramps. But the city also
aay that deadline cannot be found that 478 have to be
rebuilt because the slope is too
met.
Mark Finnegan of the steep, which can cause wheelEqual Justice Foundation .said chairs to tip.

Mayor wants
to oring back
·dollar-nouse lottery
COLUMBUS (AP) City
officials are trying to reif1State a
program where homes could be
bought for a dollar as long as
those who · buy . the houses
promise to fix them up to code
and live in them for at least four
. years.
· In the Urban Homestead pro-·
gram, which operated from 1975
to 1992, the city purchased with
(ederal dollars over 500 homes .
that were repossessed by the U.S.
Department of Housing and
Urban Development. · Names
were drawn out of a hat to d~cide
who gets to buy the homes for a
dollar.
Mayor Michael Coleman is
proposing a Urbai1 Homestead
2()()0 program, which would use
inc'entives similar to the dollarhouse lottery to boost homeownership. Columbus' homeownership rate is at 49 percent, compared with 68 percent nationally
and 74 percent in Columbus suburbs.
'
Coleman has also created the
Columbus ·Housing Trust Corp.
to admini.ster more than S20 million in city-backed bonds for
down payments and construction.
The Department ofTrade and
Development has not been able
to r.nd records showing how
\ effective the program was or how
many homesteaders lived in the
homes when the progr~m · was
closed out,~pokeswoinan Cynthia
Rickman said.
Coleman ~ants to bring back
the program because it g'ives
opportunities for young people
and families.

•

Dan Crane, a biologist
Wright State University, said
liminary test results on the
of five descendants of Blue
~nd five Swearin'gens show
rwo men were not the same.
tests suggest Blue Jacket was
Indian, but do not exclude ·
possibility he was white,
said.
Crane received the DNA ·
pies from Robert Van Trees,
first raised questions about
Blue Jacket story while
research in the early 1980s on
family history.
Van Trees, 82, of su~•url&gt;a1
Fairborn, says he found no
dence of a man named
maduke Van Swearingen. H&lt;lW!OV
er, he said there was a
maduke Swearingen, born .
17 63 in western
who disappeared one day
family never saw him again.
Van Trees said that last sunum
he tracked down descendants
Swearingen and Blue
around the country and went
their homes. He collected
samples and submitted them
Crane:
Mark Seielstad, '!'esearch
ate at Harvard Un\versity's
of Public Health, said the
tests would probably be able
determine whether Blue
and Swearingen were the
man ii the descendants are ·
they say they are. However,
said the test is not 100 pet:cet
foolproof.
But the results give ammun:
tion to.some historians.

.. · WASHINGTON (AP)- Until
last month, the National Park Ser~
· vice had been sharply increasing
the number of fires set to clear
brush and rehabilitate landscapes,
tripling the area burned in just four
years.
.
:: That changed when a fire set at
·Bandelier National Monument got
ciut of control. leading to an infer-

v..,

(tJSPUIJ.HO)
hblll.... eo.
· ,Published every tfternoon, Mond1y throuah
Frldty, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by 1ho
Oblo Vllloy Publlthlaa Company., Pomeroy,
.Ohio 43769, Ph. 992·2156. So-.! cl.,. pool•
111 ptld •• Pomeroy, Ohio.

.

Oltlo

·Mnaber: The Aq,ocilled Prm. tnd the Ohio

:Newtpapcr Auocittion.
.PQSTMASTERt 5end addnu c:orrcctiont to
&lt;The O.tl~ Sentinel, lll Court St., Pomeroy,
'Ohio 45769. .
SUBSCRJmON RATES
:
By ClnlororMotorlloolt
One - k.................... .............................. S2.00
One Mofllh ..... ...........................................l8.70
:o~ Yetr ............................................... Sto.t.OO

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dally .................................................... 30 CenlJ

Subacribel'l not duirina to PlY the canter mty
' remit In advance directiO The Dally Senllnel
on a three, 1ht or 12 monlh bUll. Crcdll will be
.a111en urrler c~ch week.
No Jubterlption by 111111 r,rmlued In •re••
where homt etrrlcr ll!rvlce 1 1111i11blc.

Publilhcr mervealhe riJhl lo adju11 fiiCI dur·
Ina the subiCriptlan pc:rlod. Subscription rale
· chanaes ml)' be implemented by chlnaln11hc
~d\iralion of the subscriP'kln.

PAYMENTWITH PICTURE)

-ki... . . . ... . . . . .' . . . . .
IIIAILSUBSCRimONS
lntlde Melp Coo117

Send to:
The Dally Sentinel

13

S27.30

6Weekl ................................................. m .s2

lll Court Street Pomeroy, Ohlo.45769

52 WeekJ ............................................... SIOl..l6
'
Rain O.llhle Melp Cooaly
:13 WeekJ ................................................. I29.2S
· 26 Weeks .......................... ....................... l$6.68
~l Weekl ..., ........................................... $109.72

1r-------~----------------~------~----------,
Child's Nam~(s) &amp;'Age(s): .
.
·
.

c

.

Reader Services
·'

Our m1la COKtnl II 111.11trltt II te bt
acc•ratt. If rou lulo• of •• error I" • 11•1'11
:NIIIIIo - - II (740) m•lll$, W. will
'd11cclr. JO•r lafor•ltloa lid ••ke I ·
·comdloll u Wll'fllltfd,
.

.

Nt•• DtplrtiiHb

n 1 .... •••IMr li tt2·ll55. Departraenl

- SUBMITTED BY:

L------------------------------------------------------~
tiURRYI PICTURE DUDLIN118
FRIDAY, .tUNE 81, 80001

ureulo•••n=
Gf:M:rll MIDIICf..,...,_, _ _.£1.L 1111
N1 .,1.................- _............-

..... Eat.

1101

.......... - .......................... - ....- .....or E11. 1106
·

Otltlr SeJYktt
---·""''-'""''•"llo.4

·Ad.ert111·-·.......

:elrcllllltkla ....................................... £11.1103

&lt;C;IIMIIWAdi.. -·-"-"""""'"'-"ExL IIIlO

•

"

,

•

no that destroyed more than 200
homes in Los Alamos, N.M., and
caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage.
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt
halted aU "prescribed fires" by the
Park Service in the West indefinitely. saying an investigation found
"serious systemic problems in the
way the Park Service conducts prescribed burns."
'Park Service Director Robert
Stanton told a House panel last
week that the agency is changing
its policies and training to prevent
similar problems.
It was Babbite who changed
policy in 1995 ·. to encourage use of
such fires. He eyen helped set a prescribed fire in! an Idaho national
. forest in 1998. ''
Congressional critics say federal
land managers should rely more on
"mechanical thinning" using
people .and machines to cut down
trees and undergrowth. Rep. Helen
Chenoweth-Hage, R-Idaho, said
the Clinton administration relies
too much on prescribed fires
because of a "dogmatic, anti-s~i­
ence, anti-technology, anti-people
. ..
b1as.
"Fire alone is not sufficient to
the task;' she said.
But forestry experts say that
when properly monitored, prescribed fires ·are among the best and
cheapest ways to prevent catastrophic wildfires.
",As you get away from developed areas, fire becomes a more
viable alternative there's a
reduction in cost, and in threats to
life and property," said Pari&lt; Service
fire specialistTom Zimmerman ." ...
We're just trying to provide the
most appropriate and cost-effective
treatment."
Last year, the Park Service set a
record 326 fires that burned
139,000 acres, according to a computer-assisted analysis of the
agency's fire data. That was a 62
percent jump over the previous
· year and triple the acreage burned
in 1996. But it still represented only
0.2 percent of Park Serv.ice land.

Sunday. 11 :47 p.m., State
Route 124, Donald Salmons,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RUTLAND
Saturday, 6 :16 p.m., State
Route 1192. assisted by Scipio
Township, motor vehicle accident, Jerry Holley, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
Saturday, 11:30 p.m., Second
Street, assisted by Central Dispatch, Brian Parsons, Pleasant Valley Hospital.

GALLIPOLIS National
Award winner Dave Purdy and
his wife, Della, will be speakers at
2 p.m . Friday at the local Parkinson's Disease support group,
Grace United Methodist Church,
600 Second Ave. The topic will be
accepting and undewanding
Parkinson's Disease.

Vandalism
reported
RACINE - Tim Willis of
Racine reported to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department this
weekend thar someone had
scratc hed his car and dented his
truck lid while he was swimming.

Grade cards ready
RACINE - Southern High
School grade cards are ready to be
picked up at the school office,
any weekday berween 7 a.m . and
3 p.m.

Arrest made

EMS units log 8
calls

SYRACUSE - A Syracuse
woil\an was arrested for domestic
violence over the weekend.
According to Meigs County
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Systems Sheriff James M. Soulsby,Jennifer
answered eight calls for assistance Arthur, age unreported, was
over the weekend. Units respond- arrested following an altercation
with Greg Hurlow and his brothed as follows:
er, Tim H uri ow at a Seventh
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Street
residence.
Sunday, 6:07 a.m., Lincoln
She is expected to appear in
Heights, assisted by Pomeroy as
First Responder, Denise Smith, Meigs County Court today.

LOCAL STOCKS

In ali, the Park Service set 3,760
prescribed fires since 1970, burnirig
about 926,000 acres, an area nearly
the size of Rhode Island. By contrast, agency workers battled 43,456
wildfires that burned nearly 5.5
million acres during the same peri~
od.
Some agenty officials and outside experts say more prescribed
fires are needed to prevent the kind
of catasrrophic wildfires that blackened 1 million acres ofYellowstone
National Park in 1988.
"Even when that number (of
prescribed fires) is doubled, it's a
drop in the bucket;' said Ronald
Myers, director of the National Fire
Management Program of The
Nature Conservancy, an environmental group. "I hope Congress is
patient and lets this thing run its

"I think land managers would
be shooting themselves in the foot
to limit themselves to one tool or
the other;' Stephenson said.
While the current debate focuses on the West, prescribed fires also
are set elsewhere, most notably
Florida. The Park Service's top site
for prescribed fires is the Big
Cypress National Preserve, which
had 388 set blazes since 1980 that
burned nearly 534,000 acres - . an
area equivalent to 74 percent of the
preserve.
"We burn throughout the year,
whenever the conditions are .
appropriate, to remove those hazardous fuels so we don't get those
big, screaming fires we can't control;' said Larry Belles, the preserve's
fire chiet:
Second was the adjoining Everglades
National Park, where 363
course."
Besides the low cost, prescribed fires that burned 105,244 acres have.
fires can help prime soil for new been set since 1970. Officials at the
Florida parks said their ecosysrems
seedlin~ and spur the reprodu ction
of species such as giant sequoias, depend on fires every three to 15
said Nate Stephenson, a U.S. Geo- years.
"Two hundred years ago, lightlogical Sutvey scientist who studies
ning
would ·strike somewhere out
fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon
national parks in California. On the in what are now rhe Miami subother hand, he said, mechanical urbs, and over the next few weeks
treatments produce less smoke and the fire would bum into the center
do not leave fire scars on surviving of the Everglades;· said Bob Panko.
fire manager for the Everglades.
trees.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

AEP-34\

Akzo-4oY,

AmTechJSBC- 48~
Ashland Inc. - 35lo
AT&amp;T -34),
Bank One - 32'•

Bob Evans-14~
BcirgWamer - 39lo
Champion - 2'4
Charming Shops- 5~
City Holding- 8~
Federal Mogul- 10
Flrstar- 24l.

Gannett - 60 "!.
General Electric - 49%
Harloy Oavldson - 37),
I&lt; mart - 7'1.
Kroger - tall
l.ands End - 29

Ltd.- 22),
Oak Hill Financial OVB-27),
One valley - 36l.
Peoples -14'4
PremierAoci&lt;Well - 39~

7'·

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell-62~
Sears- 33),
Shoney's -·~.
Wai·Mal1- 54
Wendy's-20
Worthington - 12\

15

Daly stock reporta are lhe
qu- of
the previous day's transactions , provided by
Adves1 of Gallipolis.
4 p.m. closing

VALLEY WEATHER
Rain forecast through Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS'

Scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected tg continue through most of th e
week , forecasters said.
As a cold front brings into the
tri·county showers and thunderstorms, temperatures Monday night will drop into the
60s, the National Wea.ther Service reported.
Highs Tuesday will be in the
mostly in the 80s and Tuesday
night lows will be in the 60s.
Forecast
Today... Showers and thunderstorms likely north. Partly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms south.
Highs from the mid 80s so uth.
Tonight ... ~howers and thunderstorms likely again. Lows in

the 60s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs mostly in the 80s.
Extended forecast
Tuesday night ... A chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the 60s.
Wednesday... A chance o(
showe rs and thunderstorms.
Highs in the 80s.
Thursday... A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in
the 60s . Highs 80 to 85.
Friday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
60s. Highs 80 to 85.

Subscribe today.
WRING VAlUY Cltlf'.\A
"\i
j
446 ·4524 .. ' ,, " "" ., •
FRI 619- THURS 6/15/00
' I I

I

F

lOX Offla Wlll OHN AT

6:30 PM 101 MNlNG SHOWS
12:30 PM 101 IWliiiiS

Sanart •••

~

Don't waste your time
at the locallnconvel'iience Store.
(~
(Thafs Right INCONVENIENCE)
Just stop by your area Smoker Friendly Store for the
fastest and friendliest service for all your tobacco needs.
No Lottery - Deli - or Fuel Pump lines to wait in.
(We Promise)
We'll get you in and out quickly and for a lot less, too.

SIIIOIIfl
fRIINOU'

'

RACINE

To address group

:&lt;Until N.M. blaze, Park·Service
was setting more 'prescribed fires'

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
photographs of local kids - ges
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will. appear In the
J!JIY 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is Included.

I PHONE N~.:

The first concerts of the summer in Pomeroy and Middleport gave
music lovers a choice of venues and musical styles Friday evening.
Guitarist Bill Dutcher, above, performed for a large crowd gathered for
the first show of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society's Summer Concert Series at Pomeroy's Riverside Amphitheater. The summer concert series will continue throughout the summer months. Meanwhile,
in Middleport's Stewart-Bennett Memorial Park, the Big Bend Community Band, below, led by Toney Dingess, performed a number of
songs in a picturesque setting - adjacent to the Meigs County AllWars Memorial, which was recently restored. The Middleport Community Association, Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, and the
Riverbend Arts Council sponsored this first in a series of summertime
events in the park. (Photos by Tony M: Leach and Brian J. Reed)

,

•.The Daily Sentinel

-THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE AD-

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department will
offer an immunization clinic from
9to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.Tuesday at the health department, 112
E. Memorial Drive. Parents · or
legal guardians must accompany
all children, and bring shot
records. Donations are accepted
foe administration of immunizations, and nobody will be denied
services because of an inability to
'
pay.

GALLIPOLIS - Hartley Watson, 91, Crown City, died Monday,
June 12, 2000, at Holzer Medical Center.
· · The son of the late Crawford and Susan Moore Watson, he was
' retired from Gallipolis Vault Co.
· · · Watson is survived by a daughter, Dorothy (Richard) Rodgers of
·· · Gallipolis; two sons, Bobby G. (Carolyn) Watson of Gallipolis and
· · jinm1y H . (.Barbara) Watson of .Berea; four grandchildren and nine
· great-grandchildren.
He was· also preceeded in death· by five sisters, Edna Carter, Elva
McCombs, Ruby Sheets, Lottie Smith and Melva Bennett. ·
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Willis Funeral Home with the
Rev. Don Wheeler officiating. Burial will follow at Ohio Valley Mem. · ory Gardens. Friends may caU the funeral home Tuesday from 5-8 p.m.

Complete the fonn below and
enclose a sna1shot or wallet sized
picture plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. I more than one child
is in the _picture, enc;lose an .
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE

I
I

MIDDLEPORT- John Edward Lyons Sr., 82, of Middleport, died
- Saturday, June I 0, 2000 at his residence.
He was born on May 7, 1918, in Middleport, the son of tbe late
; Lindsey and Lynda! Parker Lyons. He was a retired boilermaker with
· Charleston Local 667. He was a member of Middleport First Baptist
Church, a World War II Navy Seabee, a member of Middleport
Masoi1ic Lodge 363 for more .than 50 years, and was a 32nd degree
member of Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus and a member of the
Shrine.
· Surviving are his wife of 58 years, Rosemary Schramm Lyons; three
. sons and daughters-in-law: John and Janice Lyons of Middleport,
Tonuny and Esther Lyons of Lapeer, Mich., and Bernard and Suzell
· . Lyons of Clarkston, Mich.; a daughter and son-in-law, Linda and James
· . C ramer of Zanesville; 11 grandchildren and four great grandchildren;
a brother and sister-in-law, Lindsey and Elizabeth Lyons of Tuppers
Plains; a sister, Virginia Moore of Columbus; and several nieces and
,nephews.
,
He also was preceded in death by his daughter, Debbie Miller.
. Funeral services will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Burial will follow
at Riverview Cemetery in Middleport.
· Friends may call a~ the funeral home on Monday from 7 to 9 p.m.

.'

Parent's Name: - - - - - - - . , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - 11 City
&amp; State: .
·

Clinic planned

Harley Watson

Baby Edition

I

Pleasant Vall ey H ospital;
6:34 p.m ., State Route 124,
assisted by Reedsville as First
R espo nder. Susie Kerwin, Camden-Clark M emorial Hospital .
POMEROY
Saturday. 5:03 p.m ., East Main
Street, assis ted bv Central Dis- ·
patch , Patty Sha n~. Holzer Medical Ce nrec
10: 32 p.m ., Spring Avenue,
ass isted by Central Dispatch,
Sracy All en, Pleasant Valley Hospital ;
.
Sunday. 9:12 p.m. , Ash Street,
assisted by Central Dispatch ,
Natasha Graham, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

COOLVILLE
Norm
Arringron , a dramati st from
Princeton, WVa ., will have Vacation Bible School at White's
Chapel Wesleyan Church in
Coolville, for both childten and
parents, June 19-23 from 6 to
8:30 p.m.

John Lyons Sr.

The Daily Sentinel

PICTURES IIUIT tl Ill t1 FR11A1
JUliE U, 2000. PICTURII CAll tl
P1CitU UP AUlA JUl~ lOIII, 1000

Robert•aob'Durieux

. ..

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 7, ·~000
~~~~

LOCAL BRIEFS

LONG BOTTOM- Robert L. "Bob" Durieux, 71, Long Bottom,
.. died Friday, June 9, 2000, at Camden-Clark Memprial Hospital in
.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born on Sept. 13, 1928, in Mt. Vernon, son of I he Herbert
, · arid Gladys McConnohie Durieux. He was a sheet metal worker and
... ~ member of Local 33 in Akron.
• . Surviving are his wife, Susie Dangelo Durieux, Long Bottom: two
·.sons, Dwayne Durieux of Shreve and Jerry Durieux of Barberton; a
· ·. daughter, Connie Kosanovich, Barberton; two grandchildren; and rwo
sisters, Eline Bogantz, Lexington, and Patricia McCary, Akron .
Private services will be held at the convenience of the Durieux family.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer
Society.

EXTRA! EXTRA!

..

•

..

DNA.results raise questions .
about Blue Jacket legend .
DAYTON (AP) - DNA tests
have reignited a controversy over
whether the Shawnee war chief
Blue Jacket was an Indian or a
white man.
Blue Jacket led the Shawnees
against Army forces in the 1790s
that were trying to crush Indian
resistance in what is now Ohio.
He died in 1810.
The story of Blue Jacket being
white is more than a century old.
It was mentioned in a Daily Ohio
State jo1,1rnal commentary in
1877 and is dramatized in an outdoor theater production in Xenia
each summer. The drama ·is
among 1,300 projects in the
Library of Congress' Local Legacy program.
Gaylord Carlyle Hinshaw, a
seventh-generation descendant of
Blue Jacket, ha.s asked the Library
of Congress hot to refer to Blue
Jacket as a white man.
"I do not want it to be known
as history," said Hinshaw, of Nor. man, Okla. "It's a lie, and I want it
to be known as a lie."
A biography written in 1969
by Allan Eckert said Blue Jacket
was Marmaduke Van Swearingen,
the son of white settlers who ·was
adopted by the Shawne~s when a
hunting party came upon the 17•·
year-old boy in a West Virginia
woods in 1771. The Shawnees
named Vail Swearingen Blue
Jacket because he was wearing a
blue shirt when he willingly
joined their tribe.
But recent DNA evidence, tint
reported by The (Celina) Daily
Standard, ·raises questions about
the·. story.

All that jazz

VBS planned

COLUMBUS (AP) - Teachers ~eying to als that they advertise as applicable to Ohio's sions just because of the statewide testing program;· Bowen said.
prepare studenB for proficiency tests have many tests.
"If they're n101king them because they want
Materials include workbooks. for students
choices when it comes to preparation guidesmore IUaterial or want additional thin~. that's a
and teacher's editions.
too many, according to some.
,
The state Education Department is con- different story."
At least 10 companies now market curricuUntil
then,
however:
"Buyer
beware,"
BOV'fCrs
lum guides in Ohio aimed at making sure cerned about the proliferation of guides, though
said.
schools cover what's in the states standardized it isn't ready to regulate them yet.
Having to choose from a variety of curricu''My greatest concern is they may not be
tests. The 611 school districts around the state
lum
guides adds to the pressures associated with
can decide for themselves how to use the guides aligned with the Ohio course of study, from
which our tests are constructed;' said Bob Bow- the proficiency tests, said Richard ~ckert, a
to shape or supplement their curricula.
"I just t[¥nk the process of eliminating is very ers, the departm~nt'~ associate superintendent of middle school teacher with 17 years' experience.
"The state's coming in and· dictating that ·
time consuming. trying to figure out what the curriculum and assessment."They may give stubest products are for the money;• said Anne dents or parents a false sense of how well they're kids have to pass the test;' said Packert, 38,
. ..
teaches at Vail Middle School in Middletown
Stephens, the director of progra1m at ·domg.
The department plans to develop its own southwest Ohio. "Teachers are having to
Steubenville city schools.
Some companies, such as Englefield &amp; guidelines for preparation for the proficiency sure kids pass the test."
Because the state is rewriting the test that stuArnold Publishing of Columbus, publish mater- tests.
dents
will need to pass for graduation, school
''Ultimately, it's my goal within the next two
ial tailored to the standards measured by the
tesB. Others, such as Barrett Kendall Publishing years to eliminate that need for districts to be districts have to keep shopping for new test prep
of Austin, Texas, sell general preparation materi- out there having to make those kinds of deci- guides. That takes time and money, Packei;t said.

·City underestimates price to fix
wheelchair ramps by S14 million

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

_&lt;Monday, June 12, 2000

7:00 &amp; 9:20
MI'.TINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20

•

�\

Page A4..

'

_h_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________()~~~~~C)II

Mct."1CIQ. June 12. 2000

T

The Daily Sentinel

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

'E.sta6CtSfUi in 1948

·.

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

,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles

w. Govey

Publls~r

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager
ua~n

Diane Key Hill
Controller

to llu MiiM 111n welco•e. 11te1 slw111d bt knt#NII JOO wort~~. A.U Mtun an 11tb}«t

*' «&lt;itbbg aM''""'' he dg,.«f turd i~td..de ddJNu •M ""'ltoNtiiMifiHr. No Mtu,ll14ltturs wUI
•• pMbllllletl. Lt111n llfDfll4 bt in good 1/Uit, llllln1111t1 g,,,,, 11111 JHno•litWs.
nt opU.io~JJ uprnsH in the co~ ..,. bdow11.n lhe toiUtrWU of tlte Q/tio \Wl#J hbllllliiiJ

Co. 'I HUorlaJ &amp;tHird. 11111tu otlre"'U' n«rJ.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Remedy
Plan to fund new construction
makes sense
• The News Tribune of Tacoma, Wash., on a road ban to protea
forests : An unrepaired wilderness road can fester like an untreated
wound, spreading ecological poison in the fonu of slides and erosion
that choke fragile salmon-bearing watersheds with sediment
That's why President Clinton's recent
proposed plan to ban new road construction
in 43 million acres of inventoried national
foresdand - including 1..9 million acres in
Washington state- makes sound and timely sense. The danger of improperly main•
tained roads in national forests is a problem
without an immediate remedy. The National Forest Service admits it has about an $8.4 billion backlog in main-·
tenance and reconstruction work to bring sections of a 380,000-mile
road network up to environmental and safety standards.
The plan has it1 critics. Enviromnentalists unsuccessfully sought an
outright ban on logging in inventoried areas - parcels of at least
5,000 acres- and in smaller uninvenroried areas as well. Although the
plan sets general criteria for logging and other commercial and recreational activities, it leaves .decisions on the types of uses and the levels
afforest protection in the hands oflocal forest service managers. That's
how it should be; conditions vary fium forest to forest, and local managers would be in the best position ro determine what types of activities e-ach forest could best accommodate.
Environmentalists also complain the proposed plan has a major geographical gap by not including 8.5 million roadless acres in Alaska's
Tongass National Forest. But there$ still plenty to like about the plan.
Because it tilts strongly in favor of preservation, it pushes the borders
of what is politically possible.
Republican members of Congress af!' already discussing W.ys to
block or delay the proposal. Sen. Larry Craig (R- Idaho) has complained that Clinton is trying to create an environmental "legacy" for
his presidency.
Craig may be right. If so, it's a legacy that future generations of
Americans are likely to appreciate.
• Leader-Herald of Gloversville, N.Y., on privatization of tl~e
Postal Swice: Postmaster General William·Henderson made an incred-.
ible admission to reporters the other day. He declared the Postal Service to be a dinosaur, it's core business under heavy assault fiom the
Internet and what's not under attack ripe for "commercialization"a kinder, gender sort of privatization.
"I think the Postal Service ultimately will be commercialized,"
Henderson told The Associated Press.
He makes a strong case: Bill payments account for a quarter of postal
revenues, and bill payments "eventually will go electronic."
The early adopters of PC technology already are using online bill
payment services. Within· five. years, there may be no more window
envelopes in your rilailbox. Magazines are the next biggest chunk of
postal business, and they, too, are moving toward the Internet.
The uncertainties ahead for the Postal Service argue well for commercialization - someday. Henderson says.
But why wait? If the Postal Service werr privatized now, then the
new owners would at least have the benefit of taking control of management when the service is not in the midst of a deep crisis. The new
owners could cut deadwood, get rid of outmoded operations and otherwise reap savings and prepare the organization for the disappearance
of bills fiom the maiL
· The alternative is to wait until the moment of ultimate crisis presents itself, when few people would want to touch it and some of the
best options, such as selling stock in the service and giving its employees shares, become problematic at best.
For years, the Postal Service has claimed it operates a lot like a private business. Maybe it's time to make the Postal Service live up to its
rhetoric. Let the Postal Service become a real private company. instead
of just playing otre in its TV commercials.

A look at
what U.S.
newspapers
are saytng

HENTOFF'S VIEW

American students discover the Constitution
In Miami, a couple of years ago, I was asked
to talk to a large number of high-school students about the Constitution. Before I began,
one of their teachers told me, "Don't be upset
if you can't hold their at!ention . All they really care about is music and clothes."
I told them stories about how Americans
fought for' and gained our. liberties. One of the
main causes of the American Revolution, I
said, was the furious frustration of the
colonists, whose homes and businesses were
raided at will by British troops looking for
contraband and turning everything upside
down, including the early Amc;ricans. And
that's why, l added, we have a Fourth Amendment to the Bill of Rights. I also told of cases
in which students had gone to court to establish their constitutional rights.
They listened intendy, and at the end there
was a standing ovation . Not for me, but for
their discovery of America!
But most students in the nation are as ignorant as the general public is of their constituc
tionalliberties and responsibilities. Not knowing their own rights, they are indifferent to
the abuse of the Gonstitutional liberties of
others. But, at last, there is now an extraordinarily clear and compelling book about the
Constitution for high-school students, as well
as for their teachers and librarians.
"We the Students: Supreme Court Cases
For and About Students" is published in
paperback by Congressional Quarterly in
Washington, and is co-sponsored by the
Supreme Court Historical Society. (I believe it
is the most important book the Society, of
which I am a member, has ever sent forth
because its young readers will, in years to
come, spread the word about why and how
we have inore freedom - if we use it - than
any other country.)
The author of the book is Professor Jamin
B. Raskin .of American University's Washington College of Law. The range of Supreme

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, June 12, the !64th day of 2000. There are 202
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 12, 1987, President Reagan visiting divided Berlin, publicly challenged Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev to "tear down
this walL"
· On this date:
In 1665, England installed a municipal government in New York,
formerly the Dutch settlement of N ew Amsterdam.
In 1776,Virginia's colonial legislature became the first to adopt a
Bill of Rights.
In 1838, the Iowa Territory was organized.
In 1898, Philippine nationalists declared independence from
Spain.
In 1937, rhe Soviet Union executed eight army leaders in a purge
under Josef Stalin.
In 1939, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was
deditated in Cooperstown, N. Y
In 1963, civil rights kader Medgar Even was fatally shot in fiunt
of his home in Jackson, Miss. '
In 1967, the Supreme Court struck down state laws prohibiting
interracial marriages.

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
Co11rt deCisions on student constitutional
rights is all here: the right to speak and not to
speak; freedom of the student press; free exercise of religion and nonestablishment of religion in the schools; the limits of searches of
students and their belongings; the due-process
rights of students; school segregation and
·integration; harassment by teachers and by
students; and a section on abortion and birth
controL
Raskin even tells students how to brief a
case as they go to court. He doesn't include
what Justice William Brennan used to advise
constitutional lawyers in his later years on the
Supreme Court:"lfyour state constitution has
stronger rights and liberties than the federal
Constitution, do not include any reference to .
the federal Constitution in your brief. If you
do, Chief Justice Rehnquist will snatch · the
case away from the state court, and you may

lose."

living document." As The Washington Times
reported in December 1999, teams of Ameri- ,
can University law students - MarshallBrennan Fellows - are in a number ofWashington high schools telling students why they
are Americans.
The Raskin Awakening is sorely needed
throughout the country because a national .
tesr last year revealed that, as Andrea Billup~
noted in The Washington Times, "One-third
ofArnerica's high school seniors lack even a
basic knowledge of how their government is
run." It's .even worse than that, as I can testifx
after visiting high schools in a numbet of'
states'through the years.
One of the most enthusiastic tutors joining
the Brennan-Marshall Fellows in the "We the
Students" program is Kenneth Starr, who
teaches once a week at Anacostia High School
in southeastern Washington.
I doubt that many - or any - of the
White House crew and their allies in the ·
media who demonized Starr during the·
impeachment process have ever been in that
high school, which is in a largely black part of
Washington,let alone devoted .time to .making
the Constitution come off the pages for these
students. It's just as well. I'd hate to have the
Constitution interpreted by those malign
spinners.'
·.
In ' :i recent conversation, Starr sounded'
delighted with his current role, and pointed'
out that "the students ·are very sensitive to
issues of order and an ordered society because·
many of them live where they need more
order, a more structured environment."
He takes them to hear oral arguments at the~
Supreme Court and, he tells me, he wishes the
Court would open up those arguments to the :
public by broadcasting them on television ·to '
the nation. So do L

Jamin Raskin was not content to enclose
these student rights· and liberties in a book.
He has developed a constitutional-law curriculum based on "We the Sttidents" that he
intends to make av.aila)&gt;le ro high schools .
across the nation.
Already, students in District of Columbia
high schools are discovering that - as Chief · (Nat Hem'!lf is a nationally trnowned authority ·
Justice John Marshall said at the dawn of the on the First Amendment and the rest of the Bill of
,
American republic - "the Constitution is a Rights.)

r

BUSINESS MIRROR

JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK- If a corporation reported
contradictory numbers like those in the latest ·
government job report investor suspicions
would be aroused. They'd wait for verification.
JudiCious patience, however, was not
deemed necessary in accepting the Labor
Department's announcement that the May
jobless rate rose to 4.1 percent from 3.9 percent in April. Stach soared.
They soared because bad news, in a way, is
good news.
.
A very hot economy, as this has been, is
viewed as an invitation by the Federal
Reserve to raise interest rates, an invitation it
has eagerly accepted. In one year's time it has
raised rates 1. 75 pecentage points.
And so, investors concluded, if the strong
economy finally was showing signs of wilting
under the Fed's assault, then maybe the Fed
would relentand raise · interest rates no more.
And so they rushed to buy stocks.
.But did the economy wilt? And io suddenly? Did total employment really fall by nearly
1 million jobs in May, as the labor Department reported. Or, as can happen , will the size

A very hot economy, as this has
been, is viewed as an invitation by
the Federal Reserve to raise interest
rates, an invitation it has eagerly
accepted. In one year's time it has
raised rates 1. 75 pecentage points.
of the decline be revised later on?
Revisions are not at all unusual, considering the complexity involved in gathering and
adjusting the numbers . Adjustments to
account for seasonal factors, for example, can
be thrown off by unseasonable weather.
.
In addition, s&lt;;&gt;me of the nulflbers may not
add up. As the Wall Street Journal points out,
while US. Census hiring added 357,000 jobs,
overall government employment was down
by 111,000, according to another measure.
Given such numerical fodder in a corporate cjuarterly report, stock analysts would at
least hesitate before buying into them. But no
such reservations could be detected last Friday. The market simply jumped.
The instant response was based primarily
on the government 'numbers as evidence of a
slowing of the economic expansion, the Fed

goal that had for a year proved elusive and
frustrating. Now, maybe, the Fed would relent.
And maybe it won't. An expansion that has:
lasted longer than anyone ever imagined it.
would, and which showed no signs Of slowing
despite a year of the Fed's best efforts, isn't
likely to lie down so suddenly. ,.
Unlike the stock marker, the Federal·
Reserve has the luxury of reviewing the state·
of the economy in slow motion. What it findsin its study of the employment numbers
ntight not be what was seen by invesrors.
.
May's numbers, that is, await verification,.
and until then nobody can say with assurance
that the Fed considers its job doni!. Both
May's and june's numbers, and any revisions,.
will be closely studied.
But what has already been proven by events
. is that there is still a very strong investor desire.
for stocks, ready to. pounce on any news and
call it bullish .
You can assume ihat when you see a fractional change in a government figure producing multibillion-dollar changes in the prices
of stocks.

aohn C.umiff is a business a11alysr for The Assodated Press.)

the

Page AS
Mond•y. June 12. 2000

Reader alerts Ann.to another (Eppie' in the world
Deu Ann Landen: My
moljler, Ethel M . Lewis, has been
a )Dy.ll reader of yours for many
yean. I remember how she always
taped your columns to ihe refrigerator. Your word was "law" in
our house.
In 1977. I was on a business
trip, . and · found myself in the
ADVICE
home of a cousin I had never met
before. When I spoke of my
mother, she said, "You mean other Eppies out there? If so, I
'Eppie'?" It was the first time I would like to hear from you.
had ever heard Mom refereed to Please · write to me at the Chicaby that name. It turned out that go Tribune, 435 N . Michigan
one of the younger kids couldn't Ave., Chicago, Ill. 60611.
say "Ethel;' and instead called ·her
Dear Ann Landers: Your
·"Aunt Eppie."That name stuck.
response to "David in Oregon"
I know your real name is knocked me on my heels.You said
Esther Pauline and your nick- Oregon was one of the nation's
name is "Eppie .~' I think it's an most sane and sensible states, a
unusual name, and don't know role model for all the others, and
anyone else who has it: Mom is so on. I was totally baffled when I
going to be 85 in ' a few months. read your comments. .
She is still alert and totally "with
Apparently, you are not aware
it." Just thought you would like to of our Measure 11. It says, "Three
know.- Robert Herington, Hol- strikes, and you're out." That law
land, N.Y.
·
has put coundess young people in
Dear Robert Herington: prison. And now, Gov. Kitzhaber
Thanks for alerting me to the fact is screaming that he wants more
that there is another Eppie prisons built. What we need is
around. I knew of one in Min- free rehabilitation programs, not
neapolis whose last name was places where people can be
Epstein, and there's an "Eppi" in locked up for smoking pot.
Chicago -- an attornei whose last
The truth is that so many jobs
name is Episcope. Are there. any · have gone overseas that our

young people are up against it.
They are depressed, so they turn
to drugs for comfort -- something to ease the pain. They have
vel)' litde mopey I? buy drugs, so
they turn to crime to support
their habit. It's a vicious circle.
NoW, do ·you get it? Oregon
needs ·help. I am signing my
name, and you can print it. -Matjorie Miller, Tillamook, Ore.
Dear
Marjorie
Miller :
You 've written quite an unsettling letter. (Sen. Wayne Morse,
.where are you now that we need
you?) lf your Gov. Kitzhaber
would like to write to me and
verify that he is indeed building
more prisons to accommodate
the pot smokers, I will print his
letter.
Dear Ann Landers: On
Valentine's Day, niy husband was
rushed ro the hospital, where he
passed away a few hours later.
That afternoon, my granddaughter called me and said, "Grandma,
I have something to read to you ."
In between sobs, she read your
column with the letter from the
man who wanted to shout to the
world how much he loved his
wife,Jennie.
.
I know that letter was written
about someone else, but it sounded as if it were meant for me. My

SOCIAL SECURITY
can affect retirement benefits website, www.ssa .gov, or call
Retirement planner and
walks .individuals through our toll-free number, 1-800the retirement planning and 7721213, and ask
the factoffer online
application process.
sheet, Military Service and

name is also Jennie, and Illy husband and I had been married 51
years. He, roo, had been in the
Army, and we also were married
after the war.
Ann, it was as if my husband
had given me a valentine. You
don't kpow how much comfort it
gave me. Bless you. - Jennie in
Newell, S.D.
Dear Jennie: And you don't
know how happy I am that you
derived comfort from that column.Thanks for letting me know.

BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCiAL SECURITY MANAGER

The pl~nner can be accessed
directly at www.ssa.gov/retire
or
by
using
the
link
www.ssa.gov provided on the
Social Security Online homepage.

Social
Security
recently
unveiled a new electroniC service to help Americans better
prepare for their financitl
future-an online retirement
Questions and Answers
!llanner. The planner will allow
Q. I think I may be eligible
individuals to compute esti- for Social Security benefits on
mates of their future Social my ex-husband's Social SecuriSecurity retiremenf benefits ty record. Can I get a Social
online.
Setur'ity Statement showing
Whether you're 25, 35, 45 or benefits on his record?
55, it's never too early to plan
A. For information about
for your future retirement. potential benefits on someone
Planning for your future finan- else's record, you should '"II or
cia! security can now be as easy visit your local Social Security
as one, two, three.
office. If your former spouse is
The Social Security Retire- stiU living, privacy rules prohibment Planner provides uaen it us from givins you hil Statewith three options for obtain- ment. But we can tell you what ·
ing an estimate of their Social benefits you may be entitled to,
after we have established your
Security retirement benefit:
• the Quick Planner provides . relationship to him.
·
a very rough estimate;
Q. My son just enlilted.in the
• the Online Calculator pro- Navy. Do people in the military
duces a benefit estimate based pay Social Security taxes?
on past, present and projected
A. Yes, people who serve in
future information input by the military active duty or on
users; and
active ·duty for training have
• a Detailed and the most paid into Social Security since
elaborate estimate that requires 1957. While those' who served
an individual to download and in the military before 1957 did
install a software program on a not pay · into Social Security,
· their Social Security records are
personal computer.
The ·Social Security Retire- credited with special earnings
ment Planner also provides for Social Security purposes.
links to important factors that For more information go to our

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Care. Hoers

Monday-Friday 1:00pm to 9:00pm ·
Weekends a Holidays 1:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Urgent Care Center
88 East Memoriai .Dr.
Pomeroy, OH
'992-0060

Social Security.
Q. How much money do I
have to earn Social Security
credits?
A. As you work and pay
taxes, you earn Social Security
"credits". In the year 2000, you
earn one credit for each $780 in
earnings you have - up to a
maximum of four credits per

Holzer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

year.~--------------------~::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~

Let Everyone·Know Your Dad Is Someone Very
.Special With·AFather's Day Thank You Tribute
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 16th!

HAPPY

ROCKSPRINGS
Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club, 7:30
p.m., Monday Fairgrounds office.
ROCKSPRINGS- Countywide Girl Scouts bridging ceremony, 7 p.m., Rocksprings Fairgrounds: Poduck dinner.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 1 p.m., at the
municipal building.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, Monday, 7:30 p.m. in
the band room at the high school.
·All patents of high school band
members are encouraged to
attend since upcoming band

PICTURE

FATHER~s

activities will be discussed .

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p.m
meeting. Hall located at 28051 St.
Rt. 7, Cheshire.

addition to that box of chocolates
or bouquet of flower&gt;. For a COllY·
please send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a
check or money order for $5.50
(this includes postage and handling) to: How We Met, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, IL 60611 -0562 (in Canada,
$6.50) . To find out more about
Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web
page
at
www.creators.con1 .

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

'
COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

Gem of the Day (Sent in by
E.D. in Hannibal, Mo.) : A child's
prayer: Thank you, God, for the
baby brother, but what I really
wanted was a pony.
That first kiss, that first
embrace , .. Remember all those
things that brought you and your
loved one together? Ann Lander)'
new booklet, "'How We Met," is
now available. This collection of
sentimental love stories will make
a terrific Valentine's Day gift for
that special someone. It's a perfect

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Center

(or

MONDAY,june 12

Cautious Fed hasn't cooled hot economy
BY

TODAY IN HISTORY

~,.

Ann
Landers

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyar
A!lvartlalng Dlntetor

___

Rv

The Daily Sentinel
______;;...._,_

DAY

•••

(YOUR
FATHER'S
NAME)

WEDNESDAY,June 14
TUPPERS PLAINS Big
Bend Farm Antique Club,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m at the Fairgrounds office.

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE,&amp;

SUSAN

POMEROY American
Red Cross Bloodmobile, Meigs
County Multipurpose Senior
Center, Wednesday, 1 to 6 p.m.
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
annou·nce meetings and special ·events. The calendar is
not designed to promote
sales
fund raisers of any,
type. Items are. printed only
as space per~its and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

or

'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

HAPPY
FATHER'S
DAY
YOUR FATHER'S NAME

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

SUSAN
1r------~---------~
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greetlng...$10.00
I

.

------------------------------,
B. 1 X 4 Greeting with Plcture...$13.00

1

I

(PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE)

I FATHER.'S NAME

1

.I YOUR NAPt!'E(S)
I
I
I ADDRESS:

I

I

t

I

I
I

I CITY I STATE

I

ZIP
PHONE:
SEND COUPON AND PAYMENT TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL UfATHER'S DAY"
.
110 COURT STREET. POMEROY, OHIO 45769
·

L---.-----------------------,...:.1-------------------------------.J
I

I

Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute is Monday! June 12l 5:00 pm.

Subscribe today.
992-2156
.

.

'

•

�\

Page A4..

'

_h_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________()~~~~~C)II

Mct."1CIQ. June 12. 2000

T

The Daily Sentinel

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

'E.sta6CtSfUi in 1948

·.

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

,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles

w. Govey

Publls~r

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager
ua~n

Diane Key Hill
Controller

to llu MiiM 111n welco•e. 11te1 slw111d bt knt#NII JOO wort~~. A.U Mtun an 11tb}«t

*' «&lt;itbbg aM''""'' he dg,.«f turd i~td..de ddJNu •M ""'ltoNtiiMifiHr. No Mtu,ll14ltturs wUI
•• pMbllllletl. Lt111n llfDfll4 bt in good 1/Uit, llllln1111t1 g,,,,, 11111 JHno•litWs.
nt opU.io~JJ uprnsH in the co~ ..,. bdow11.n lhe toiUtrWU of tlte Q/tio \Wl#J hbllllliiiJ

Co. 'I HUorlaJ &amp;tHird. 11111tu otlre"'U' n«rJ.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Remedy
Plan to fund new construction
makes sense
• The News Tribune of Tacoma, Wash., on a road ban to protea
forests : An unrepaired wilderness road can fester like an untreated
wound, spreading ecological poison in the fonu of slides and erosion
that choke fragile salmon-bearing watersheds with sediment
That's why President Clinton's recent
proposed plan to ban new road construction
in 43 million acres of inventoried national
foresdand - including 1..9 million acres in
Washington state- makes sound and timely sense. The danger of improperly main•
tained roads in national forests is a problem
without an immediate remedy. The National Forest Service admits it has about an $8.4 billion backlog in main-·
tenance and reconstruction work to bring sections of a 380,000-mile
road network up to environmental and safety standards.
The plan has it1 critics. Enviromnentalists unsuccessfully sought an
outright ban on logging in inventoried areas - parcels of at least
5,000 acres- and in smaller uninvenroried areas as well. Although the
plan sets general criteria for logging and other commercial and recreational activities, it leaves .decisions on the types of uses and the levels
afforest protection in the hands oflocal forest service managers. That's
how it should be; conditions vary fium forest to forest, and local managers would be in the best position ro determine what types of activities e-ach forest could best accommodate.
Environmentalists also complain the proposed plan has a major geographical gap by not including 8.5 million roadless acres in Alaska's
Tongass National Forest. But there$ still plenty to like about the plan.
Because it tilts strongly in favor of preservation, it pushes the borders
of what is politically possible.
Republican members of Congress af!' already discussing W.ys to
block or delay the proposal. Sen. Larry Craig (R- Idaho) has complained that Clinton is trying to create an environmental "legacy" for
his presidency.
Craig may be right. If so, it's a legacy that future generations of
Americans are likely to appreciate.
• Leader-Herald of Gloversville, N.Y., on privatization of tl~e
Postal Swice: Postmaster General William·Henderson made an incred-.
ible admission to reporters the other day. He declared the Postal Service to be a dinosaur, it's core business under heavy assault fiom the
Internet and what's not under attack ripe for "commercialization"a kinder, gender sort of privatization.
"I think the Postal Service ultimately will be commercialized,"
Henderson told The Associated Press.
He makes a strong case: Bill payments account for a quarter of postal
revenues, and bill payments "eventually will go electronic."
The early adopters of PC technology already are using online bill
payment services. Within· five. years, there may be no more window
envelopes in your rilailbox. Magazines are the next biggest chunk of
postal business, and they, too, are moving toward the Internet.
The uncertainties ahead for the Postal Service argue well for commercialization - someday. Henderson says.
But why wait? If the Postal Service werr privatized now, then the
new owners would at least have the benefit of taking control of management when the service is not in the midst of a deep crisis. The new
owners could cut deadwood, get rid of outmoded operations and otherwise reap savings and prepare the organization for the disappearance
of bills fiom the maiL
· The alternative is to wait until the moment of ultimate crisis presents itself, when few people would want to touch it and some of the
best options, such as selling stock in the service and giving its employees shares, become problematic at best.
For years, the Postal Service has claimed it operates a lot like a private business. Maybe it's time to make the Postal Service live up to its
rhetoric. Let the Postal Service become a real private company. instead
of just playing otre in its TV commercials.

A look at
what U.S.
newspapers
are saytng

HENTOFF'S VIEW

American students discover the Constitution
In Miami, a couple of years ago, I was asked
to talk to a large number of high-school students about the Constitution. Before I began,
one of their teachers told me, "Don't be upset
if you can't hold their at!ention . All they really care about is music and clothes."
I told them stories about how Americans
fought for' and gained our. liberties. One of the
main causes of the American Revolution, I
said, was the furious frustration of the
colonists, whose homes and businesses were
raided at will by British troops looking for
contraband and turning everything upside
down, including the early Amc;ricans. And
that's why, l added, we have a Fourth Amendment to the Bill of Rights. I also told of cases
in which students had gone to court to establish their constitutional rights.
They listened intendy, and at the end there
was a standing ovation . Not for me, but for
their discovery of America!
But most students in the nation are as ignorant as the general public is of their constituc
tionalliberties and responsibilities. Not knowing their own rights, they are indifferent to
the abuse of the Gonstitutional liberties of
others. But, at last, there is now an extraordinarily clear and compelling book about the
Constitution for high-school students, as well
as for their teachers and librarians.
"We the Students: Supreme Court Cases
For and About Students" is published in
paperback by Congressional Quarterly in
Washington, and is co-sponsored by the
Supreme Court Historical Society. (I believe it
is the most important book the Society, of
which I am a member, has ever sent forth
because its young readers will, in years to
come, spread the word about why and how
we have inore freedom - if we use it - than
any other country.)
The author of the book is Professor Jamin
B. Raskin .of American University's Washington College of Law. The range of Supreme

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, June 12, the !64th day of 2000. There are 202
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 12, 1987, President Reagan visiting divided Berlin, publicly challenged Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev to "tear down
this walL"
· On this date:
In 1665, England installed a municipal government in New York,
formerly the Dutch settlement of N ew Amsterdam.
In 1776,Virginia's colonial legislature became the first to adopt a
Bill of Rights.
In 1838, the Iowa Territory was organized.
In 1898, Philippine nationalists declared independence from
Spain.
In 1937, rhe Soviet Union executed eight army leaders in a purge
under Josef Stalin.
In 1939, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was
deditated in Cooperstown, N. Y
In 1963, civil rights kader Medgar Even was fatally shot in fiunt
of his home in Jackson, Miss. '
In 1967, the Supreme Court struck down state laws prohibiting
interracial marriages.

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
Co11rt deCisions on student constitutional
rights is all here: the right to speak and not to
speak; freedom of the student press; free exercise of religion and nonestablishment of religion in the schools; the limits of searches of
students and their belongings; the due-process
rights of students; school segregation and
·integration; harassment by teachers and by
students; and a section on abortion and birth
controL
Raskin even tells students how to brief a
case as they go to court. He doesn't include
what Justice William Brennan used to advise
constitutional lawyers in his later years on the
Supreme Court:"lfyour state constitution has
stronger rights and liberties than the federal
Constitution, do not include any reference to .
the federal Constitution in your brief. If you
do, Chief Justice Rehnquist will snatch · the
case away from the state court, and you may

lose."

living document." As The Washington Times
reported in December 1999, teams of Ameri- ,
can University law students - MarshallBrennan Fellows - are in a number ofWashington high schools telling students why they
are Americans.
The Raskin Awakening is sorely needed
throughout the country because a national .
tesr last year revealed that, as Andrea Billup~
noted in The Washington Times, "One-third
ofArnerica's high school seniors lack even a
basic knowledge of how their government is
run." It's .even worse than that, as I can testifx
after visiting high schools in a numbet of'
states'through the years.
One of the most enthusiastic tutors joining
the Brennan-Marshall Fellows in the "We the
Students" program is Kenneth Starr, who
teaches once a week at Anacostia High School
in southeastern Washington.
I doubt that many - or any - of the
White House crew and their allies in the ·
media who demonized Starr during the·
impeachment process have ever been in that
high school, which is in a largely black part of
Washington,let alone devoted .time to .making
the Constitution come off the pages for these
students. It's just as well. I'd hate to have the
Constitution interpreted by those malign
spinners.'
·.
In ' :i recent conversation, Starr sounded'
delighted with his current role, and pointed'
out that "the students ·are very sensitive to
issues of order and an ordered society because·
many of them live where they need more
order, a more structured environment."
He takes them to hear oral arguments at the~
Supreme Court and, he tells me, he wishes the
Court would open up those arguments to the :
public by broadcasting them on television ·to '
the nation. So do L

Jamin Raskin was not content to enclose
these student rights· and liberties in a book.
He has developed a constitutional-law curriculum based on "We the Sttidents" that he
intends to make av.aila)&gt;le ro high schools .
across the nation.
Already, students in District of Columbia
high schools are discovering that - as Chief · (Nat Hem'!lf is a nationally trnowned authority ·
Justice John Marshall said at the dawn of the on the First Amendment and the rest of the Bill of
,
American republic - "the Constitution is a Rights.)

r

BUSINESS MIRROR

JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK- If a corporation reported
contradictory numbers like those in the latest ·
government job report investor suspicions
would be aroused. They'd wait for verification.
JudiCious patience, however, was not
deemed necessary in accepting the Labor
Department's announcement that the May
jobless rate rose to 4.1 percent from 3.9 percent in April. Stach soared.
They soared because bad news, in a way, is
good news.
.
A very hot economy, as this has been, is
viewed as an invitation by the Federal
Reserve to raise interest rates, an invitation it
has eagerly accepted. In one year's time it has
raised rates 1. 75 pecentage points.
And so, investors concluded, if the strong
economy finally was showing signs of wilting
under the Fed's assault, then maybe the Fed
would relentand raise · interest rates no more.
And so they rushed to buy stocks.
.But did the economy wilt? And io suddenly? Did total employment really fall by nearly
1 million jobs in May, as the labor Department reported. Or, as can happen , will the size

A very hot economy, as this has
been, is viewed as an invitation by
the Federal Reserve to raise interest
rates, an invitation it has eagerly
accepted. In one year's time it has
raised rates 1. 75 pecentage points.
of the decline be revised later on?
Revisions are not at all unusual, considering the complexity involved in gathering and
adjusting the numbers . Adjustments to
account for seasonal factors, for example, can
be thrown off by unseasonable weather.
.
In addition, s&lt;;&gt;me of the nulflbers may not
add up. As the Wall Street Journal points out,
while US. Census hiring added 357,000 jobs,
overall government employment was down
by 111,000, according to another measure.
Given such numerical fodder in a corporate cjuarterly report, stock analysts would at
least hesitate before buying into them. But no
such reservations could be detected last Friday. The market simply jumped.
The instant response was based primarily
on the government 'numbers as evidence of a
slowing of the economic expansion, the Fed

goal that had for a year proved elusive and
frustrating. Now, maybe, the Fed would relent.
And maybe it won't. An expansion that has:
lasted longer than anyone ever imagined it.
would, and which showed no signs Of slowing
despite a year of the Fed's best efforts, isn't
likely to lie down so suddenly. ,.
Unlike the stock marker, the Federal·
Reserve has the luxury of reviewing the state·
of the economy in slow motion. What it findsin its study of the employment numbers
ntight not be what was seen by invesrors.
.
May's numbers, that is, await verification,.
and until then nobody can say with assurance
that the Fed considers its job doni!. Both
May's and june's numbers, and any revisions,.
will be closely studied.
But what has already been proven by events
. is that there is still a very strong investor desire.
for stocks, ready to. pounce on any news and
call it bullish .
You can assume ihat when you see a fractional change in a government figure producing multibillion-dollar changes in the prices
of stocks.

aohn C.umiff is a business a11alysr for The Assodated Press.)

the

Page AS
Mond•y. June 12. 2000

Reader alerts Ann.to another (Eppie' in the world
Deu Ann Landen: My
moljler, Ethel M . Lewis, has been
a )Dy.ll reader of yours for many
yean. I remember how she always
taped your columns to ihe refrigerator. Your word was "law" in
our house.
In 1977. I was on a business
trip, . and · found myself in the
ADVICE
home of a cousin I had never met
before. When I spoke of my
mother, she said, "You mean other Eppies out there? If so, I
'Eppie'?" It was the first time I would like to hear from you.
had ever heard Mom refereed to Please · write to me at the Chicaby that name. It turned out that go Tribune, 435 N . Michigan
one of the younger kids couldn't Ave., Chicago, Ill. 60611.
say "Ethel;' and instead called ·her
Dear Ann Landers: Your
·"Aunt Eppie."That name stuck.
response to "David in Oregon"
I know your real name is knocked me on my heels.You said
Esther Pauline and your nick- Oregon was one of the nation's
name is "Eppie .~' I think it's an most sane and sensible states, a
unusual name, and don't know role model for all the others, and
anyone else who has it: Mom is so on. I was totally baffled when I
going to be 85 in ' a few months. read your comments. .
She is still alert and totally "with
Apparently, you are not aware
it." Just thought you would like to of our Measure 11. It says, "Three
know.- Robert Herington, Hol- strikes, and you're out." That law
land, N.Y.
·
has put coundess young people in
Dear Robert Herington: prison. And now, Gov. Kitzhaber
Thanks for alerting me to the fact is screaming that he wants more
that there is another Eppie prisons built. What we need is
around. I knew of one in Min- free rehabilitation programs, not
neapolis whose last name was places where people can be
Epstein, and there's an "Eppi" in locked up for smoking pot.
Chicago -- an attornei whose last
The truth is that so many jobs
name is Episcope. Are there. any · have gone overseas that our

young people are up against it.
They are depressed, so they turn
to drugs for comfort -- something to ease the pain. They have
vel)' litde mopey I? buy drugs, so
they turn to crime to support
their habit. It's a vicious circle.
NoW, do ·you get it? Oregon
needs ·help. I am signing my
name, and you can print it. -Matjorie Miller, Tillamook, Ore.
Dear
Marjorie
Miller :
You 've written quite an unsettling letter. (Sen. Wayne Morse,
.where are you now that we need
you?) lf your Gov. Kitzhaber
would like to write to me and
verify that he is indeed building
more prisons to accommodate
the pot smokers, I will print his
letter.
Dear Ann Landers: On
Valentine's Day, niy husband was
rushed ro the hospital, where he
passed away a few hours later.
That afternoon, my granddaughter called me and said, "Grandma,
I have something to read to you ."
In between sobs, she read your
column with the letter from the
man who wanted to shout to the
world how much he loved his
wife,Jennie.
.
I know that letter was written
about someone else, but it sounded as if it were meant for me. My

SOCIAL SECURITY
can affect retirement benefits website, www.ssa .gov, or call
Retirement planner and
walks .individuals through our toll-free number, 1-800the retirement planning and 7721213, and ask
the factoffer online
application process.
sheet, Military Service and

name is also Jennie, and Illy husband and I had been married 51
years. He, roo, had been in the
Army, and we also were married
after the war.
Ann, it was as if my husband
had given me a valentine. You
don't kpow how much comfort it
gave me. Bless you. - Jennie in
Newell, S.D.
Dear Jennie: And you don't
know how happy I am that you
derived comfort from that column.Thanks for letting me know.

BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCiAL SECURITY MANAGER

The pl~nner can be accessed
directly at www.ssa.gov/retire
or
by
using
the
link
www.ssa.gov provided on the
Social Security Online homepage.

Social
Security
recently
unveiled a new electroniC service to help Americans better
prepare for their financitl
future-an online retirement
Questions and Answers
!llanner. The planner will allow
Q. I think I may be eligible
individuals to compute esti- for Social Security benefits on
mates of their future Social my ex-husband's Social SecuriSecurity retiremenf benefits ty record. Can I get a Social
online.
Setur'ity Statement showing
Whether you're 25, 35, 45 or benefits on his record?
55, it's never too early to plan
A. For information about
for your future retirement. potential benefits on someone
Planning for your future finan- else's record, you should '"II or
cia! security can now be as easy visit your local Social Security
as one, two, three.
office. If your former spouse is
The Social Security Retire- stiU living, privacy rules prohibment Planner provides uaen it us from givins you hil Statewith three options for obtain- ment. But we can tell you what ·
ing an estimate of their Social benefits you may be entitled to,
after we have established your
Security retirement benefit:
• the Quick Planner provides . relationship to him.
·
a very rough estimate;
Q. My son just enlilted.in the
• the Online Calculator pro- Navy. Do people in the military
duces a benefit estimate based pay Social Security taxes?
on past, present and projected
A. Yes, people who serve in
future information input by the military active duty or on
users; and
active ·duty for training have
• a Detailed and the most paid into Social Security since
elaborate estimate that requires 1957. While those' who served
an individual to download and in the military before 1957 did
install a software program on a not pay · into Social Security,
· their Social Security records are
personal computer.
The ·Social Security Retire- credited with special earnings
ment Planner also provides for Social Security purposes.
links to important factors that For more information go to our

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Care. Hoers

Monday-Friday 1:00pm to 9:00pm ·
Weekends a Holidays 1:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Urgent Care Center
88 East Memoriai .Dr.
Pomeroy, OH
'992-0060

Social Security.
Q. How much money do I
have to earn Social Security
credits?
A. As you work and pay
taxes, you earn Social Security
"credits". In the year 2000, you
earn one credit for each $780 in
earnings you have - up to a
maximum of four credits per

Holzer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

year.~--------------------~::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~

Let Everyone·Know Your Dad Is Someone Very
.Special With·AFather's Day Thank You Tribute
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 16th!

HAPPY

ROCKSPRINGS
Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club, 7:30
p.m., Monday Fairgrounds office.
ROCKSPRINGS- Countywide Girl Scouts bridging ceremony, 7 p.m., Rocksprings Fairgrounds: Poduck dinner.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 1 p.m., at the
municipal building.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, Monday, 7:30 p.m. in
the band room at the high school.
·All patents of high school band
members are encouraged to
attend since upcoming band

PICTURE

FATHER~s

activities will be discussed .

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p.m
meeting. Hall located at 28051 St.
Rt. 7, Cheshire.

addition to that box of chocolates
or bouquet of flower&gt;. For a COllY·
please send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a
check or money order for $5.50
(this includes postage and handling) to: How We Met, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, IL 60611 -0562 (in Canada,
$6.50) . To find out more about
Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web
page
at
www.creators.con1 .

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

'
COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

Gem of the Day (Sent in by
E.D. in Hannibal, Mo.) : A child's
prayer: Thank you, God, for the
baby brother, but what I really
wanted was a pony.
That first kiss, that first
embrace , .. Remember all those
things that brought you and your
loved one together? Ann Lander)'
new booklet, "'How We Met," is
now available. This collection of
sentimental love stories will make
a terrific Valentine's Day gift for
that special someone. It's a perfect

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Center

(or

MONDAY,june 12

Cautious Fed hasn't cooled hot economy
BY

TODAY IN HISTORY

~,.

Ann
Landers

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyar
A!lvartlalng Dlntetor

___

Rv

The Daily Sentinel
______;;...._,_

DAY

•••

(YOUR
FATHER'S
NAME)

WEDNESDAY,June 14
TUPPERS PLAINS Big
Bend Farm Antique Club,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m at the Fairgrounds office.

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE,&amp;

SUSAN

POMEROY American
Red Cross Bloodmobile, Meigs
County Multipurpose Senior
Center, Wednesday, 1 to 6 p.m.
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
annou·nce meetings and special ·events. The calendar is
not designed to promote
sales
fund raisers of any,
type. Items are. printed only
as space per~its and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

or

'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

HAPPY
FATHER'S
DAY
YOUR FATHER'S NAME

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

SUSAN
1r------~---------~
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greetlng...$10.00
I

.

------------------------------,
B. 1 X 4 Greeting with Plcture...$13.00

1

I

(PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE)

I FATHER.'S NAME

1

.I YOUR NAPt!'E(S)
I
I
I ADDRESS:

I

I

t

I

I
I

I CITY I STATE

I

ZIP
PHONE:
SEND COUPON AND PAYMENT TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL UfATHER'S DAY"
.
110 COURT STREET. POMEROY, OHIO 45769
·

L---.-----------------------,...:.1-------------------------------.J
I

I

Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute is Monday! June 12l 5:00 pm.

Subscribe today.
992-2156
.

.

'

•

�••
Page A&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Monda~June12,zooq

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

SOCIETY NEWS

Rutland High School alumni gathers for reunioli:

Inside:

paily &amp;oreboard, Page B6
.

New arrival
POMEROY - Jennifer and
Dee Jay Richards announce the
birth of a son, Marcus Allen
Richards, May 2. The infant
weighed six pounds, 12 ounces.
Grandparents are David and
Betty Dunkle and l ee and Eva
Richards.

Birth announcement
LONG
BOTTOM
Matthew and Kristina Warner
Finlaw of long Bottom,
announce the birth of a daughter, Mattison Taylor Finlaw, May
1, at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, one 10unce and was 20
inches long.
· Maternal grandparents
are Cindy and Rick Koblentz of
Pomeroy, and Mark Warner of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents
are Steve and Debbie Finlaw of
Pomeroy. Maternal great-grandMattleon Taylor Flnlaw
parents are Bobby and Janice
Reynolds of Mason, and pater. nal great-grandparents are Bill and Naomi King of Middleport and
Gertrude Finlaw of Pomeroy.
·•

Evans birth
SYRACUSE - Michael and
Michelle Evans of Syracuse
announce the birth of their first
child, a son, Andrew Michael,
born May 11 at the Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed
seven pounds, nine ounces and
was 22 inches long.
Maternal grandparents
are Barry and Carolyn McCoy
of Syracuse Great-grandmother
is Genevieve Campbell of Leon,
W.Va. Paternal grandparents are
Denny and Linda Evans of
Racine. ·• Carolyn Salser ·o f
--.::;;:~---...1 Racine if a great-grandmother.

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
WllllaiMOII

HOMES: Q &amp; A
BY PoPuwl MEctt.t.NCS
A HEARST MAGAZINE
FOR fol' SPECIAL FEATURES

Question: Recendy, my husband and I purchased a two-bedroom country ranch, built in
1946. The house is in very good
condition, but it still has the original monster-like furnace, which
dispen~es aU its heat through a
grill on the main floor. The furnace's thermostat is in the master
bedroom, and the door to the
room must remain open for the
thermostat to sense the house's air
temperature. Can you give us any
advice about a new heating system?
Answer: The heating system
in your house is not a. centr.al
heating sy.tem in the modern
sense, although I have seen many
in operation in vacation homes
and cottages: It's called a pipeless
furnace, and the w:arm air it produces simply 110M through the
· large floor register imo the room
above. It does not use any other

••

•
I

ducts to distribute warm air
throughout the house, as does a
modei:n forced warm air sy.tem.
There are several problems
associated with pipeless furnaces.
Fint, the doors to aU rooms must
remain open in order for the
rooms to receive heat. Also, some
rooms tend to get too hot, while
others are uncomfortably cold.
Finally, the floor register itself gets
so hot it can pose a danger to
crawling infants, small children,
or adults walking in bare feet.
Since you have a. ranch house
with a basement, installing a
modern central heating system
will be relatively easy, especially if
the · basement is .unfinished. The
two most common central-heating options are a forced hot-air
system or a forced hot-water system. The former heats air with a
furnace, the latter heats water
with a boiler. Both heating systeJll$ can use natural gas. propane,
or fuel oU .

Williams, both of the class of 1952. She
graduated from Wyoming High School in
Wyoming,' Ohio and will be .mending the
University of Cincinnati majoring in arts
and sciences.
Michael Williamson of Pomeroy, grand~
son of the late Fred Williamson, · 1959,
Norma Holiday Wilcox, 1955, and Kenneth
Wilcox, 1953. He graduated from Meigs
and will be auending Ohio University in
the fall.
D'!ane Will, Jr. of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
grandson of Norman Will, 1932. The gradilate of Point Pleasant High School will be
attending Marshal University· where he
plans to major in secondary education.
Graduates attending the reunion were
Marcia Denison, 1926; Norman Will, 1932;
Doris Thomas, 1934; Harold Rice, 1935;
Thelma Snyder Halley, 1936; Burnie Knapp,
1939; Marjorie Rice, Donald Snyder,
Frances Hatfield Hendrix, Virginia Avis
Wyatt, Dorothy Colwell Emmons, Alta Will
Casdorph, ·Robert Hill, 1940; Maxine
. Ogdin Griffith, Mary Kathryn Davis
Holter, 1941; James B. Thomas, Kenneth
Brown,James C. Lanning, Verna Gail Martin
Cursi, 1942 .
Vernon Alvis, , 1943; Eleanor Taylor
Thomas, Edwin Nelson, Gerald Russell,
Irene Russell, 1944; Goldie Knotts Nelson,
Delma Riggs Nelson, 1945; Carol F. Pierce,
Catherine Colwell Shenefield, 1947; Bill
Buck, Jr. 1948; Barbara Starbuck Weygant,
Helen Atkerson, John Southern, 1949;
Samuel Bruce May, Mickey Williams, Paul
Patterson, Janet Ogdin Jones, Lois Weaver,
Fred George, Avanell Jordan George, Leon
McKnight, Bob Bobo, 1950.
.
Rose Slawter Patterson, Joan Snowden
May, Virginia Moore Michael, Lowell E.
Vance, Marie Little Birchfield, Shirley Cremeans. Simmons, 1951; Ronnie Williams,
Wanda Foster Williams, Elizabeth Hysell,
Evelyn Likens Hollon, Mary Dyke

'

Woodrum. Vivian L. Jones, Darlene· Wolfe
rKreuier, 1952; Neil R:ice Dicken, Barba(a
Grueser Van Meter, Joan Montgome~y
Corder, 1953. .
, .•
•
· Jim Nelson, Marian Jean Reed Srnit · •
1954; Donna Nelson, Jack Perry, Jo!JX(
Montgomery, Alberta Snowden Mon~
gomery, Russell Carson, Marilyn Thrn ~i
Paul Shoemaker, Phyllis Williams Pierc'e;
1955; William Brewer, Judy Stewart Het;
. rmann, Joe Bolin, Janet Bolin, Sharon
Bartrum Benschoter,Jim Dyer, 1956; LerO~
'
Chapman, Raymond Wilcox, Henry Mila~
Kenny Longstreth, Joyce Wolfe Crosself,
John Jeffers, 1957; Robert Goode, Thomti
J. Stewart, Emma Hysell Crow, Charlotte
"'
Harrison Harper, Charlotte Birchfi,el;sl
Grant, Douglas R. Long, Larry Carson,Ju4,Y
Hayes Eads, Sue Turner, 1958.
:p:
Lanna Turner Goode, Betty Longstret.J}i
David Carson, Elaine Dyer, Ronnie Rift:
1959; Clara Hysell, Albert Brewer, Eloili4
Musser Carson, John Brogan, Patty Cladti
,,.
Marjorie Rife, 1960; Don Madden, Ros~
Mace Madden, Janet Stewart Plum, Ma~~
garet Smith Edwards, 1961.
;•
Anna Ehrenfels Null, 1962; Bobby Popel•
Richard Lambert, David . Scragg, 196~:
Sherry Wolfe Finn, Rosemary Harless Pope~
Benny Slawter, Danny McDonald, Geralll
Saxton, Ancil Cross, Ann Weaver Hanin!ii
Sharon Quillen Wise, 1964; Mike Stewar~
Judy Cremeans McDonald, Cecil Johnson;
Ron Taylor, Will Lambert, Larry R~p~
Donald Smith, Suzy Parker Hysell, Tomm,x
Hysell, Carol Flocari Tate, 1965; Bever!~
Forbes Rupe, Ed Priddy, Jenny Pridd~
Long, Joetta Erlewine Eskew, 1966; Be maria:·
.,
Wilson, 196 7; David Rice, Sharon Carte:t,
Pratt, Larry Montgomery, and Roger Blacl¢,
1968.
.
· ~·

.

HARRISON, N.Y (AP) Dennis Paulson beat David Duval
with a 4-foot par putt on the
feurth playoff hole to win the
:!J'uick Classic.
Paulson, a first-time PGA Tour
winner, lost, to Duffy Waldorf on
the first playoff hole in the same
t9urnament last year.
Paulson closed with a 3-underp~r 68 at the Westchester Country Club course for ·an S-under
276 total. Duval finished with a
69. Sergio Garcia had a 6S to finish a stroke back. Greg Norman
shot a 67 to finish fourth at 278,
his first top-10 finish since the
British Open.

Mallon wins
'

.. ROCHESTER, N.Y (AP)
Meg Mallon closed with a 5~
'
under-par. 67 for an S-under
280
total and a two-stroke victory in
the RocheSter International.
' It was Mallon's 12th victory in
14 years on the LPGA tour.
Wendy Doolan (66) was second,
while Dale Eggeling (73) finished
third at 2&amp;4.
Defending champion !{arrie
Webb, who has 10 victories in 17
months; shot a 70 and finished at
two over to tie for 13th. It was
her oply time outside the top six
this year.

...

~

1

•

. .

-

Iish

Kite wins SBC
Senior Open
.
. "'
LONO ·GROVE, IU-. (AP) ·~ '

'

'

Tom Kite shot a final-round 4under-pai: 6S for a 9~under 207
· total and a victory in the SBC
Senior Open at the Kemper
Lakes Golf Club. Bruce Fleisher
(68)' fini1hed twO strokes back,
one ahead of third-place finisher
llrqce Summerhays (1\9).

•

Plav the

tor a

I

It Rochester

\

. ..

I
nd ot ·
d chips.

I.

Devils win stanley Cup

•
DALLAS (AP) -Jason Arnott
scored in double overtime as the
New Jersey Devils won their second Stanley Cup in six seasons
Saturday night with a 2-1 victory
over the Dallas Stars in Game 6 of
the finals. Devils defenseman
Scott Stevens won the Conn
Smythe Trophy as the playoff

MVP.

Lukas hone
takes Belmont

•
•

Come try our special recipe for fun and relaxation: Head south to the
Robert Trent Jones Golf Twl. Play as much championship golf as·you can
handle at the Tiail's Magnolia Grove course in Mobile, then buzz over to
.nearby Point 'Clear, Alabama and the famous Marriott Grand Hotel. Get in
more golf on the Trail's reso·n division courses at The Grand, and top it off
with a deep sea fishing trip, leaving from The Grand's picturesque marina..
The legendary' Grand HoteL home to southern hospitality and luxury for
more than ISO years, and recently named orie of the best places in the
world to stay by Conde Nast magazine,.is now a reson on the Trail.

-MAAAIOTI'S--~---

~;ru/ 9&amp;•tel .
RESORT AND GOLF CLUB

1.800 ..5H:9933.
•
•

1.800.949.4444

NEW YORK (AP) - Commendable, trained by D. Wayne
Cukas an&lt;) ridden by Pat Day, won
the Belmont Stakes· on Saturday.
. Commendable paid $39.60 as
ah 18-1 long shot. He snapped a
six-race losing streak dating to a
win in his debut Aug. 14. Lukas
has won four Belmonts and a
total of 13 Triple Crown races.
Aptitude finished second by 1
112 lengths. Unshaded, making
his Triple Crown debut, finished
third.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - The U.S. soccer team
beat Mexico 3-0 to win the U.S.
Cup for .the first time since 1995 ..
It was the .final tuneup for the
United States before it starts qualifying for the 2002 Wodd Cup.
· Brian McBride . scored what
proved to be the match-winning
goal late in the first half. Frankie
Hejduk and Ante Razov added
second half goals for the u.s.

.

0

.

·u.s. women victorious
NEWCASTLE, Australia (AP)
- Shannon MacMillan's penalty
kick with 11 minutes· remaining
gave the United States a 1-0 victory over Australia and the championship in the inaugural ·Pacific
Cup, a major tune-up for the
Olympics. '

.

MASON, W.Va. - Semipro football kicked off another
season in the tri-county area
Saturday as the Big Bend Coyotes faced the Ohio Cardinals.
The Cleveland-based Cardinals got \he better of the Coyotes ;!4-12 in an entertaining
and hard- hitting contest at .
Wahama High Scho9l.
·The Big Bend team featured
some former . top prep talent
from the tri-county area.
Quarterback Chris Lewis; an
ex-Gallia Academy running
back, threw a ·pair of scoring
.....,,
'
t
passes in the .first quarter ·to
help the Coyotes build a 12-6
lead, which they held at the
half.
Lewis hie former Blue Devil
tight end Terry Qualls and former Meigs standout Jim Porter
for' the Coyotes' only scores.
former River Valley tailback
Jimmy Gilmore . racked up
over 100 yards rushing.. The
Co~tes ~ushed for 'dose to
300 yards total.
Former · Point Pleasant
standout Scott Stanley and exRiver Valley stalwart Nate Polcyn a(lchored the Coyotes'
defensive line.
The Cardinals scored tyjjce
on (urnov:ers, an.S5-yard inter-.
ce('ti,&lt;;m fetu~n in the third
quarter ar.d a 91-yard return .
ot' 1a fum!ile late in th~ fourth
that snuffed out a Coyote scoring drive. ·
The next game is s~t f9r Ju)y .COYOTE CUT-BACK- Big Bend Coyote running back Jimmy Gilmore scoots through a hole for positive
1 at L.ouisville.
:yardage during the team's season opener Saturday at Wahama High School. (Andrew Carter photo)

~Stewart .eaptures
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - Suddenly,
Tony Stew:iit's got momentum. ·,
,
Last year's top NASCAR~fook'ie &amp;t?t off to
a struggling start in 2000, lt.anll:s''m'ostly to
bad Juck and the occ~ion(\\. mechanical
probte~·l
· . · '-. · ·
.
"It's kfd of like '• Wiiistob· Cup every
week," satd Joe Gibbs, Stewart's car owner
and a for¥ler NFL coacb. "Som,etHing different ca'8 happen to yqii and,ior .the .first ·
part of the season, the. (No.) 20 car seemed
like. everything did."
·
Good fortune is smiling on Stewart and
Joe Gibbs Racing now, though.
After dominating the previous week in
Dover, Del., Stewart made it t.wo in a row
Sunday
at·
Michigan Soeedway,
winning the
~(
.-&gt;1 1l
i£"
rai1l;ishor,tened Kmart 400.
. .
".{,' tliiiik·~
' I'm probably just encouraged
abolit t~e r st of the season," said Stewart,
seveftth
in e standings, trailing teammate
' ,.:f,.
\ .

u.s. men blank Mexico

ALABAMA'S

'

Pacers
whip L.A.
100-91

BY. ANDREW CARTER
• OVP SPORTS EDITOR

• 1

. '

Coyotes fall in season opener
..

.,

PTO hosts banquet
POMEROY - The Salisbury Elementar)' PTO sponsored an
academic banquet for students of Salisbury Elementary prior to the
closing of school.
A dinner was furnished and trophies were given to students making the honor roll three out of three times and two out three times.
Donald Hanning, principal, gave the welcome followed with devo,
tions by JoAnn Hays.
Recognized and presented trophies for making three out of three
honor rolls were:
Kindergarten, Courtney Baker, Emily Davis, Taylor Gilkey,
Kaitlin. Russell, Katrina Shockey, Justin Young;
·
Grade one, . Stevie Bunce, · Heath Dettwiller, Rachael Eakins.
Justin Ellis, Miranda. Grueser, Samantha King, Marissa McAngus,
Kelsey Shuler, Alaine Arnold, William Folmer, Nicholas Ingels,
Stephanie Smith, Conor Swartz;
Grade
two,
Darby
Gilmore, Scott Kennedy;
Grade three, Jamie Bailey, J. T. Evans, Morgan Kennedy, Andrew
O'Bryant, Caitlin Swartz;
Grade four, Amy Barr, Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy, Kirk
Legar, Aaron Story;
·
·
Grade five, Clayton Blackston, Sha!'na Clark, Andrew Garnes,
Bradley Ramsburg, Dru Reed, Jennifer Smith, and Caitlin
Williamson.
Receiving trophies for making the honor roll two out of the
three periods were:
Grade one, Alex Day, Danielle King;
Grade two, Breana Hemsley, Amber Ohlinger;
Grade three, Amanda Gilkey, Jessamyn Reynolds;
Grade four, Eric Wood;
Grade five, Faith Dye.

Page 81

Stanley

M&amp;anotta

RUTLAND - More than 270 Rutland
High School alumni and guests gathered at
the Rutlan&lt;l Civic Center recently for their
annual reunion.
Ben Slawter, president, welcomed the
alumni and guests who had gathered in the
auditorium extensively decorated in red and
black, the school's colors.
He recognized Marcia Dennison as the
oldest graduate of Rutland High School.
She graduated in 1926.
He also recognized the other 2000 officers, Sharon Quillen Wise, vice president;
Judy Cremeans McDonald, treasurer; and
Mary Wolfe Slawter, secretary pro tern.
A feature Qf the program which followed
the banquet was a salute to songs of yesteryear by Beverly Grate Adkins, and Tammy
Black Taylor, the recognition of reunion
classes, and the election of larry Rupe,
president; Ann Weaver Haning. vice president; Suzy Parker, secretary; and Beverly
Forbes Rupe, treasurer, for the 2001
reunion.
Six scholarships were awarded by the
Alumni. Association. They went to descendants of graduates. Receiving the scholar·
ships were:
Heather Grimm of Ironton, daughter of
Stephen Grimm, 19(&gt;6, who graduated from
· Dawson-Bryant High School in · Coal
Grove. She plans to attend Shawnee State
Universiry and major in physical therapy.
Kari Hughes of Williamstown, W. Va.,
granddaughter of Rose Slawter Patterson,
1951 and Paul Patterson, 1?50. She graduated from Williamstown High School and
will be attending Fairmont State College
majoring in business.
.
James Stanley of Pomeroy, son of Daniel
Stanley, 1967. He is a Meigs High School
graduate and will be attending Ohio University where he will major in biology.
Jessica Magnotta of Cincinnati, granddaughter of Wanda Williams and Ronald

Andrew Mlcllael Ev-

•

'

'

Monday, June 11. 1 •

Will

Marcus Allen Richards

The Daily Sentinel

..

II

'

.

.

Rou~h

breaks pro
record ·.
"'

'

soggy Kmart 4QO~

and series leader Bobby Labonte by 295
·
points after 14 of 34 races.
. "I feel like this has turned a lot of things
around for us," the 29-year-old driver
added. "I know rhe guys on my team are
pumped up. I can see it in their faces. I've
raced 21 years and worked with a lot of
people and I know what momentum does."
Stewart's Hom~ Depot Pontiac led only
three laps Sunday before storming past
Robert Pressley and into the lead on a
restart on lap 1S5 of what· was supposed to
be a 200-lap event.
As Stewart drove toward the finish, the
skies were threatening and a three-way batde raged behind him for second', with Dale
Earnhardt passing Dale Jarrett and then
holding off Labonte to take the· runner-up
spot.
NASCAR, which had red-flagged the
race for 94 minutes after rain began falling

on b.p 150, put out the fourth yellow flag of
the day on lap 192 when rain began pelting
down again.
·
The cars were brought onro pit road and
stopped just short of completing lap 195 in
hopes of waiting out the wet weather. But,
less thari five minutes later, with what was
left of the crowd of 170,000 being soaked
once more, th e race was ended.
"I was just praying for rain," said Stewart,
who knew anything could happen in a
four-lap shootout with Earnhardt, Labonte
and Jarrett.
Asked who he would have worried about
the most if the race had resumed, Stewart
said, "I knew the (No.) 18 (Labonte) is not
going to hurt me. He may go by me, but the
3 (Earnhardt) wouldn't have a problem
roughing you up a little bit on the way by
just to say hi, and he'd smile and laugh as he

Please see Kmert 400, Pllge 86

.

'

Roush broke his own previous record which had stood
since July 24, 1985, shooting a
31 followed by a 29.
Hattisoll, Matt Ti1.ompspn
and
. ,. tim·
,,, Rousli
r witnessed the
"round.,...,
,
Rous~ also,..shot a back nine
of27 '(L8) in men's league play ·
last W~n~~day.
Ro~,a memberoftheTriState}~9A based in Pittsburgh,
is tuning up for three events,
including the WVGA's Father
and Soli Glade Springs, the
Crown Royal Invitational in
Williamsburg,Va., and the West
Virginia Open in Bridgeport.
The amateur record at
Riverside belongs .to David'
Reed Sr. and Bob Greene.
Reed shot a 62 in July, 1981.
Greene matched that feat in
May, 1984.

tin1eout to "save" tean1n1ate Mark

Jackson, who became trapped
behind several angry lakers.
"It always comes ·down to me.
This is my team," Miller said. "I've
got to step up and I've got to do
everything."
~ '
The Laker.; struggled . in their
first full playoff game without
Bryant, who asked to play on his
sprained left ankle but was held
out by the team's medical staff.
None of the lakers assumed
Bryant's scoring load, and his
absence on defense was obvious
with every open shot taken by
Miller and Rose, who had 21
points.
"His defensive energy is probably what we missed the most,"
said Lakers gu'ard Derek Fisher,
who 'had 10 points and 10 assists.
"We feed off of him, and he's
tough to replace."
O'Neal, who ' dominated the
series' first two . games, had 33
points and 13 rebounds.
Game 4 in the best-of-seven
series is Wednesday night, with
Game 5 on Friday.

questions.

'

1·

Reggie Miller, who had 33
points after struggling in the first
two games, exemplified the Pacers' newfound swagger when he
muscled his way into Los Angeles'
huddlo during a fourth-quarter

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ken
Griffey Jr. was bored with the

I

ai

NO MISTAKE BY THE LAKE - Ken Griffey Jr. watches his game-tying,
three-run homer leave Jacobs Field Sunday. (AP)

t.

excited."

Griffey homers in Reds get-away day win

MASON, W.Va. - The
course rec.ord of 61 (-9) by a
professional at Riverside was
broken, June 9. by course head .
professional Ty Roush, as he
shot a round of 60 (~10) in a .
match .. play round against
Riv~rside member Craig Harn~on .

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Take away Kobe Bryant, add
18,345 enemy fans and clamp
several defenders onto Shaquille
O' Neal. Suddenly, the los Angeles lakers don 't look so invincible.
Erasing any notion that the
NBA Finals would be merely a
coronation, the Indiana Pacers
emphatically defended their
home court with a I 00-91 victory in Game 3 on Sunday night,
cutting Los Angeles' series lead to
2-1.
After losing two games in Los
Angeles without much of a fight,
the Pacers were talking trash.
shoving the lakers around and
reveling in the support of the basketball fanatics crammed into
Conseco Fieldhouse for the Pacers' first finals home game.
"We're not a team that's going
to be pushed around," Indiana's
Jalen Rose said. "We're not a team .
that's coming into the series like
we're the JV team. We have to be
on edge (and) we have to be

. No, he didn 't care about his
clutch three-run homer Sunday
or that he scored the winning
run. So what if he's hitting .232.
Oh, and that diving cat,h in
center? Yawn.
Griffey says he's tired of the
attention he's gotten since he
was traded to Cincinnati. It's
time to fo cus on rhe Reds.
And that's what Junior did on
Sunday after the Reds rallied ·
from .five runs down to beat the
Cleveland Indians 7- 5 in 13
innings and snap a season-high,
five-game losing streak.
'~It does a lot," said Griffey,
whose three-run shot in the
eighth tied it 5-S. "We avoided a
sweep. We battled our butts off
to ·win the game. It says a lot
about the guys in the locker
room that we didn't give up:"
Aaron ·Boone singled home
Griffey and Michael Tucker in
the 13th as the Reds finished
the initial portion of interleague
play at 1-5.
"This one could get us on a
roll," said Boone, who singled
off Scott Kamieniecki (1-3). " It
was a very important win. The
way we've been going, to come
back &amp;om down ScO and get a

wm was huge. We needed it
badly."
Griffey, who has struggled at
the plate while adjusting to NL
pitching, looked more like himself during the three-game series
back in one of his old AL
stomping grounds.
He went 6-for- ll with two
homers and five RBis, and has
now homered in three . of the
last four games. In his last eight
games, Griffey is 11-for-29
(.379) with four homers and
nine RBis.
"He's ~!ways a tremendous
threat," Reds manager Jack
McKeon said. "Now, he's starting to hit more singles, too. I'm
sure we're going to see a different Junior now. In a key situation, there is no question that he
is special."
In the 13th, Griffey singled
and went to third on Cleveland
second baseman Roberto Alamar's foolish throwing error.
Alomar, who didn't start
because of a sore left wrist and
entered in the l1 th as a pinchrunner, fielded Tucker's bunt but
tried to make apehind-the-back
throw to Karnieniecki COVering
the bag and the ball went into
Cincinnati's dugout.

Pleese-ltecls, .... H
'

I

�••
Page A&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Monda~June12,zooq

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

SOCIETY NEWS

Rutland High School alumni gathers for reunioli:

Inside:

paily &amp;oreboard, Page B6
.

New arrival
POMEROY - Jennifer and
Dee Jay Richards announce the
birth of a son, Marcus Allen
Richards, May 2. The infant
weighed six pounds, 12 ounces.
Grandparents are David and
Betty Dunkle and l ee and Eva
Richards.

Birth announcement
LONG
BOTTOM
Matthew and Kristina Warner
Finlaw of long Bottom,
announce the birth of a daughter, Mattison Taylor Finlaw, May
1, at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, one 10unce and was 20
inches long.
· Maternal grandparents
are Cindy and Rick Koblentz of
Pomeroy, and Mark Warner of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents
are Steve and Debbie Finlaw of
Pomeroy. Maternal great-grandMattleon Taylor Flnlaw
parents are Bobby and Janice
Reynolds of Mason, and pater. nal great-grandparents are Bill and Naomi King of Middleport and
Gertrude Finlaw of Pomeroy.
·•

Evans birth
SYRACUSE - Michael and
Michelle Evans of Syracuse
announce the birth of their first
child, a son, Andrew Michael,
born May 11 at the Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed
seven pounds, nine ounces and
was 22 inches long.
Maternal grandparents
are Barry and Carolyn McCoy
of Syracuse Great-grandmother
is Genevieve Campbell of Leon,
W.Va. Paternal grandparents are
Denny and Linda Evans of
Racine. ·• Carolyn Salser ·o f
--.::;;:~---...1 Racine if a great-grandmother.

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
WllllaiMOII

HOMES: Q &amp; A
BY PoPuwl MEctt.t.NCS
A HEARST MAGAZINE
FOR fol' SPECIAL FEATURES

Question: Recendy, my husband and I purchased a two-bedroom country ranch, built in
1946. The house is in very good
condition, but it still has the original monster-like furnace, which
dispen~es aU its heat through a
grill on the main floor. The furnace's thermostat is in the master
bedroom, and the door to the
room must remain open for the
thermostat to sense the house's air
temperature. Can you give us any
advice about a new heating system?
Answer: The heating system
in your house is not a. centr.al
heating sy.tem in the modern
sense, although I have seen many
in operation in vacation homes
and cottages: It's called a pipeless
furnace, and the w:arm air it produces simply 110M through the
· large floor register imo the room
above. It does not use any other

••

•
I

ducts to distribute warm air
throughout the house, as does a
modei:n forced warm air sy.tem.
There are several problems
associated with pipeless furnaces.
Fint, the doors to aU rooms must
remain open in order for the
rooms to receive heat. Also, some
rooms tend to get too hot, while
others are uncomfortably cold.
Finally, the floor register itself gets
so hot it can pose a danger to
crawling infants, small children,
or adults walking in bare feet.
Since you have a. ranch house
with a basement, installing a
modern central heating system
will be relatively easy, especially if
the · basement is .unfinished. The
two most common central-heating options are a forced hot-air
system or a forced hot-water system. The former heats air with a
furnace, the latter heats water
with a boiler. Both heating systeJll$ can use natural gas. propane,
or fuel oU .

Williams, both of the class of 1952. She
graduated from Wyoming High School in
Wyoming,' Ohio and will be .mending the
University of Cincinnati majoring in arts
and sciences.
Michael Williamson of Pomeroy, grand~
son of the late Fred Williamson, · 1959,
Norma Holiday Wilcox, 1955, and Kenneth
Wilcox, 1953. He graduated from Meigs
and will be auending Ohio University in
the fall.
D'!ane Will, Jr. of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
grandson of Norman Will, 1932. The gradilate of Point Pleasant High School will be
attending Marshal University· where he
plans to major in secondary education.
Graduates attending the reunion were
Marcia Denison, 1926; Norman Will, 1932;
Doris Thomas, 1934; Harold Rice, 1935;
Thelma Snyder Halley, 1936; Burnie Knapp,
1939; Marjorie Rice, Donald Snyder,
Frances Hatfield Hendrix, Virginia Avis
Wyatt, Dorothy Colwell Emmons, Alta Will
Casdorph, ·Robert Hill, 1940; Maxine
. Ogdin Griffith, Mary Kathryn Davis
Holter, 1941; James B. Thomas, Kenneth
Brown,James C. Lanning, Verna Gail Martin
Cursi, 1942 .
Vernon Alvis, , 1943; Eleanor Taylor
Thomas, Edwin Nelson, Gerald Russell,
Irene Russell, 1944; Goldie Knotts Nelson,
Delma Riggs Nelson, 1945; Carol F. Pierce,
Catherine Colwell Shenefield, 1947; Bill
Buck, Jr. 1948; Barbara Starbuck Weygant,
Helen Atkerson, John Southern, 1949;
Samuel Bruce May, Mickey Williams, Paul
Patterson, Janet Ogdin Jones, Lois Weaver,
Fred George, Avanell Jordan George, Leon
McKnight, Bob Bobo, 1950.
.
Rose Slawter Patterson, Joan Snowden
May, Virginia Moore Michael, Lowell E.
Vance, Marie Little Birchfield, Shirley Cremeans. Simmons, 1951; Ronnie Williams,
Wanda Foster Williams, Elizabeth Hysell,
Evelyn Likens Hollon, Mary Dyke

'

Woodrum. Vivian L. Jones, Darlene· Wolfe
rKreuier, 1952; Neil R:ice Dicken, Barba(a
Grueser Van Meter, Joan Montgome~y
Corder, 1953. .
, .•
•
· Jim Nelson, Marian Jean Reed Srnit · •
1954; Donna Nelson, Jack Perry, Jo!JX(
Montgomery, Alberta Snowden Mon~
gomery, Russell Carson, Marilyn Thrn ~i
Paul Shoemaker, Phyllis Williams Pierc'e;
1955; William Brewer, Judy Stewart Het;
. rmann, Joe Bolin, Janet Bolin, Sharon
Bartrum Benschoter,Jim Dyer, 1956; LerO~
'
Chapman, Raymond Wilcox, Henry Mila~
Kenny Longstreth, Joyce Wolfe Crosself,
John Jeffers, 1957; Robert Goode, Thomti
J. Stewart, Emma Hysell Crow, Charlotte
"'
Harrison Harper, Charlotte Birchfi,el;sl
Grant, Douglas R. Long, Larry Carson,Ju4,Y
Hayes Eads, Sue Turner, 1958.
:p:
Lanna Turner Goode, Betty Longstret.J}i
David Carson, Elaine Dyer, Ronnie Rift:
1959; Clara Hysell, Albert Brewer, Eloili4
Musser Carson, John Brogan, Patty Cladti
,,.
Marjorie Rife, 1960; Don Madden, Ros~
Mace Madden, Janet Stewart Plum, Ma~~
garet Smith Edwards, 1961.
;•
Anna Ehrenfels Null, 1962; Bobby Popel•
Richard Lambert, David . Scragg, 196~:
Sherry Wolfe Finn, Rosemary Harless Pope~
Benny Slawter, Danny McDonald, Geralll
Saxton, Ancil Cross, Ann Weaver Hanin!ii
Sharon Quillen Wise, 1964; Mike Stewar~
Judy Cremeans McDonald, Cecil Johnson;
Ron Taylor, Will Lambert, Larry R~p~
Donald Smith, Suzy Parker Hysell, Tomm,x
Hysell, Carol Flocari Tate, 1965; Bever!~
Forbes Rupe, Ed Priddy, Jenny Pridd~
Long, Joetta Erlewine Eskew, 1966; Be maria:·
.,
Wilson, 196 7; David Rice, Sharon Carte:t,
Pratt, Larry Montgomery, and Roger Blacl¢,
1968.
.
· ~·

.

HARRISON, N.Y (AP) Dennis Paulson beat David Duval
with a 4-foot par putt on the
feurth playoff hole to win the
:!J'uick Classic.
Paulson, a first-time PGA Tour
winner, lost, to Duffy Waldorf on
the first playoff hole in the same
t9urnament last year.
Paulson closed with a 3-underp~r 68 at the Westchester Country Club course for ·an S-under
276 total. Duval finished with a
69. Sergio Garcia had a 6S to finish a stroke back. Greg Norman
shot a 67 to finish fourth at 278,
his first top-10 finish since the
British Open.

Mallon wins
'

.. ROCHESTER, N.Y (AP)
Meg Mallon closed with a 5~
'
under-par. 67 for an S-under
280
total and a two-stroke victory in
the RocheSter International.
' It was Mallon's 12th victory in
14 years on the LPGA tour.
Wendy Doolan (66) was second,
while Dale Eggeling (73) finished
third at 2&amp;4.
Defending champion !{arrie
Webb, who has 10 victories in 17
months; shot a 70 and finished at
two over to tie for 13th. It was
her oply time outside the top six
this year.

...

~

1

•

. .

-

Iish

Kite wins SBC
Senior Open
.
. "'
LONO ·GROVE, IU-. (AP) ·~ '

'

'

Tom Kite shot a final-round 4under-pai: 6S for a 9~under 207
· total and a victory in the SBC
Senior Open at the Kemper
Lakes Golf Club. Bruce Fleisher
(68)' fini1hed twO strokes back,
one ahead of third-place finisher
llrqce Summerhays (1\9).

•

Plav the

tor a

I

It Rochester

\

. ..

I
nd ot ·
d chips.

I.

Devils win stanley Cup

•
DALLAS (AP) -Jason Arnott
scored in double overtime as the
New Jersey Devils won their second Stanley Cup in six seasons
Saturday night with a 2-1 victory
over the Dallas Stars in Game 6 of
the finals. Devils defenseman
Scott Stevens won the Conn
Smythe Trophy as the playoff

MVP.

Lukas hone
takes Belmont

•
•

Come try our special recipe for fun and relaxation: Head south to the
Robert Trent Jones Golf Twl. Play as much championship golf as·you can
handle at the Tiail's Magnolia Grove course in Mobile, then buzz over to
.nearby Point 'Clear, Alabama and the famous Marriott Grand Hotel. Get in
more golf on the Trail's reso·n division courses at The Grand, and top it off
with a deep sea fishing trip, leaving from The Grand's picturesque marina..
The legendary' Grand HoteL home to southern hospitality and luxury for
more than ISO years, and recently named orie of the best places in the
world to stay by Conde Nast magazine,.is now a reson on the Trail.

-MAAAIOTI'S--~---

~;ru/ 9&amp;•tel .
RESORT AND GOLF CLUB

1.800 ..5H:9933.
•
•

1.800.949.4444

NEW YORK (AP) - Commendable, trained by D. Wayne
Cukas an&lt;) ridden by Pat Day, won
the Belmont Stakes· on Saturday.
. Commendable paid $39.60 as
ah 18-1 long shot. He snapped a
six-race losing streak dating to a
win in his debut Aug. 14. Lukas
has won four Belmonts and a
total of 13 Triple Crown races.
Aptitude finished second by 1
112 lengths. Unshaded, making
his Triple Crown debut, finished
third.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - The U.S. soccer team
beat Mexico 3-0 to win the U.S.
Cup for .the first time since 1995 ..
It was the .final tuneup for the
United States before it starts qualifying for the 2002 Wodd Cup.
· Brian McBride . scored what
proved to be the match-winning
goal late in the first half. Frankie
Hejduk and Ante Razov added
second half goals for the u.s.

.

0

.

·u.s. women victorious
NEWCASTLE, Australia (AP)
- Shannon MacMillan's penalty
kick with 11 minutes· remaining
gave the United States a 1-0 victory over Australia and the championship in the inaugural ·Pacific
Cup, a major tune-up for the
Olympics. '

.

MASON, W.Va. - Semipro football kicked off another
season in the tri-county area
Saturday as the Big Bend Coyotes faced the Ohio Cardinals.
The Cleveland-based Cardinals got \he better of the Coyotes ;!4-12 in an entertaining
and hard- hitting contest at .
Wahama High Scho9l.
·The Big Bend team featured
some former . top prep talent
from the tri-county area.
Quarterback Chris Lewis; an
ex-Gallia Academy running
back, threw a ·pair of scoring
.....,,
'
t
passes in the .first quarter ·to
help the Coyotes build a 12-6
lead, which they held at the
half.
Lewis hie former Blue Devil
tight end Terry Qualls and former Meigs standout Jim Porter
for' the Coyotes' only scores.
former River Valley tailback
Jimmy Gilmore . racked up
over 100 yards rushing.. The
Co~tes ~ushed for 'dose to
300 yards total.
Former · Point Pleasant
standout Scott Stanley and exRiver Valley stalwart Nate Polcyn a(lchored the Coyotes'
defensive line.
The Cardinals scored tyjjce
on (urnov:ers, an.S5-yard inter-.
ce('ti,&lt;;m fetu~n in the third
quarter ar.d a 91-yard return .
ot' 1a fum!ile late in th~ fourth
that snuffed out a Coyote scoring drive. ·
The next game is s~t f9r Ju)y .COYOTE CUT-BACK- Big Bend Coyote running back Jimmy Gilmore scoots through a hole for positive
1 at L.ouisville.
:yardage during the team's season opener Saturday at Wahama High School. (Andrew Carter photo)

~Stewart .eaptures
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - Suddenly,
Tony Stew:iit's got momentum. ·,
,
Last year's top NASCAR~fook'ie &amp;t?t off to
a struggling start in 2000, lt.anll:s''m'ostly to
bad Juck and the occ~ion(\\. mechanical
probte~·l
· . · '-. · ·
.
"It's kfd of like '• Wiiistob· Cup every
week," satd Joe Gibbs, Stewart's car owner
and a for¥ler NFL coacb. "Som,etHing different ca'8 happen to yqii and,ior .the .first ·
part of the season, the. (No.) 20 car seemed
like. everything did."
·
Good fortune is smiling on Stewart and
Joe Gibbs Racing now, though.
After dominating the previous week in
Dover, Del., Stewart made it t.wo in a row
Sunday
at·
Michigan Soeedway,
winning the
~(
.-&gt;1 1l
i£"
rai1l;ishor,tened Kmart 400.
. .
".{,' tliiiik·~
' I'm probably just encouraged
abolit t~e r st of the season," said Stewart,
seveftth
in e standings, trailing teammate
' ,.:f,.
\ .

u.s. men blank Mexico

ALABAMA'S

'

Pacers
whip L.A.
100-91

BY. ANDREW CARTER
• OVP SPORTS EDITOR

• 1

. '

Coyotes fall in season opener
..

.,

PTO hosts banquet
POMEROY - The Salisbury Elementar)' PTO sponsored an
academic banquet for students of Salisbury Elementary prior to the
closing of school.
A dinner was furnished and trophies were given to students making the honor roll three out of three times and two out three times.
Donald Hanning, principal, gave the welcome followed with devo,
tions by JoAnn Hays.
Recognized and presented trophies for making three out of three
honor rolls were:
Kindergarten, Courtney Baker, Emily Davis, Taylor Gilkey,
Kaitlin. Russell, Katrina Shockey, Justin Young;
·
Grade one, . Stevie Bunce, · Heath Dettwiller, Rachael Eakins.
Justin Ellis, Miranda. Grueser, Samantha King, Marissa McAngus,
Kelsey Shuler, Alaine Arnold, William Folmer, Nicholas Ingels,
Stephanie Smith, Conor Swartz;
Grade
two,
Darby
Gilmore, Scott Kennedy;
Grade three, Jamie Bailey, J. T. Evans, Morgan Kennedy, Andrew
O'Bryant, Caitlin Swartz;
Grade four, Amy Barr, Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy, Kirk
Legar, Aaron Story;
·
·
Grade five, Clayton Blackston, Sha!'na Clark, Andrew Garnes,
Bradley Ramsburg, Dru Reed, Jennifer Smith, and Caitlin
Williamson.
Receiving trophies for making the honor roll two out of the
three periods were:
Grade one, Alex Day, Danielle King;
Grade two, Breana Hemsley, Amber Ohlinger;
Grade three, Amanda Gilkey, Jessamyn Reynolds;
Grade four, Eric Wood;
Grade five, Faith Dye.

Page 81

Stanley

M&amp;anotta

RUTLAND - More than 270 Rutland
High School alumni and guests gathered at
the Rutlan&lt;l Civic Center recently for their
annual reunion.
Ben Slawter, president, welcomed the
alumni and guests who had gathered in the
auditorium extensively decorated in red and
black, the school's colors.
He recognized Marcia Dennison as the
oldest graduate of Rutland High School.
She graduated in 1926.
He also recognized the other 2000 officers, Sharon Quillen Wise, vice president;
Judy Cremeans McDonald, treasurer; and
Mary Wolfe Slawter, secretary pro tern.
A feature Qf the program which followed
the banquet was a salute to songs of yesteryear by Beverly Grate Adkins, and Tammy
Black Taylor, the recognition of reunion
classes, and the election of larry Rupe,
president; Ann Weaver Haning. vice president; Suzy Parker, secretary; and Beverly
Forbes Rupe, treasurer, for the 2001
reunion.
Six scholarships were awarded by the
Alumni. Association. They went to descendants of graduates. Receiving the scholar·
ships were:
Heather Grimm of Ironton, daughter of
Stephen Grimm, 19(&gt;6, who graduated from
· Dawson-Bryant High School in · Coal
Grove. She plans to attend Shawnee State
Universiry and major in physical therapy.
Kari Hughes of Williamstown, W. Va.,
granddaughter of Rose Slawter Patterson,
1951 and Paul Patterson, 1?50. She graduated from Williamstown High School and
will be attending Fairmont State College
majoring in business.
.
James Stanley of Pomeroy, son of Daniel
Stanley, 1967. He is a Meigs High School
graduate and will be attending Ohio University where he will major in biology.
Jessica Magnotta of Cincinnati, granddaughter of Wanda Williams and Ronald

Andrew Mlcllael Ev-

•

'

'

Monday, June 11. 1 •

Will

Marcus Allen Richards

The Daily Sentinel

..

II

'

.

.

Rou~h

breaks pro
record ·.
"'

'

soggy Kmart 4QO~

and series leader Bobby Labonte by 295
·
points after 14 of 34 races.
. "I feel like this has turned a lot of things
around for us," the 29-year-old driver
added. "I know rhe guys on my team are
pumped up. I can see it in their faces. I've
raced 21 years and worked with a lot of
people and I know what momentum does."
Stewart's Hom~ Depot Pontiac led only
three laps Sunday before storming past
Robert Pressley and into the lead on a
restart on lap 1S5 of what· was supposed to
be a 200-lap event.
As Stewart drove toward the finish, the
skies were threatening and a three-way batde raged behind him for second', with Dale
Earnhardt passing Dale Jarrett and then
holding off Labonte to take the· runner-up
spot.
NASCAR, which had red-flagged the
race for 94 minutes after rain began falling

on b.p 150, put out the fourth yellow flag of
the day on lap 192 when rain began pelting
down again.
·
The cars were brought onro pit road and
stopped just short of completing lap 195 in
hopes of waiting out the wet weather. But,
less thari five minutes later, with what was
left of the crowd of 170,000 being soaked
once more, th e race was ended.
"I was just praying for rain," said Stewart,
who knew anything could happen in a
four-lap shootout with Earnhardt, Labonte
and Jarrett.
Asked who he would have worried about
the most if the race had resumed, Stewart
said, "I knew the (No.) 18 (Labonte) is not
going to hurt me. He may go by me, but the
3 (Earnhardt) wouldn't have a problem
roughing you up a little bit on the way by
just to say hi, and he'd smile and laugh as he

Please see Kmert 400, Pllge 86

.

'

Roush broke his own previous record which had stood
since July 24, 1985, shooting a
31 followed by a 29.
Hattisoll, Matt Ti1.ompspn
and
. ,. tim·
,,, Rousli
r witnessed the
"round.,...,
,
Rous~ also,..shot a back nine
of27 '(L8) in men's league play ·
last W~n~~day.
Ro~,a memberoftheTriState}~9A based in Pittsburgh,
is tuning up for three events,
including the WVGA's Father
and Soli Glade Springs, the
Crown Royal Invitational in
Williamsburg,Va., and the West
Virginia Open in Bridgeport.
The amateur record at
Riverside belongs .to David'
Reed Sr. and Bob Greene.
Reed shot a 62 in July, 1981.
Greene matched that feat in
May, 1984.

tin1eout to "save" tean1n1ate Mark

Jackson, who became trapped
behind several angry lakers.
"It always comes ·down to me.
This is my team," Miller said. "I've
got to step up and I've got to do
everything."
~ '
The Laker.; struggled . in their
first full playoff game without
Bryant, who asked to play on his
sprained left ankle but was held
out by the team's medical staff.
None of the lakers assumed
Bryant's scoring load, and his
absence on defense was obvious
with every open shot taken by
Miller and Rose, who had 21
points.
"His defensive energy is probably what we missed the most,"
said Lakers gu'ard Derek Fisher,
who 'had 10 points and 10 assists.
"We feed off of him, and he's
tough to replace."
O'Neal, who ' dominated the
series' first two . games, had 33
points and 13 rebounds.
Game 4 in the best-of-seven
series is Wednesday night, with
Game 5 on Friday.

questions.

'

1·

Reggie Miller, who had 33
points after struggling in the first
two games, exemplified the Pacers' newfound swagger when he
muscled his way into Los Angeles'
huddlo during a fourth-quarter

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ken
Griffey Jr. was bored with the

I

ai

NO MISTAKE BY THE LAKE - Ken Griffey Jr. watches his game-tying,
three-run homer leave Jacobs Field Sunday. (AP)

t.

excited."

Griffey homers in Reds get-away day win

MASON, W.Va. - The
course rec.ord of 61 (-9) by a
professional at Riverside was
broken, June 9. by course head .
professional Ty Roush, as he
shot a round of 60 (~10) in a .
match .. play round against
Riv~rside member Craig Harn~on .

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Take away Kobe Bryant, add
18,345 enemy fans and clamp
several defenders onto Shaquille
O' Neal. Suddenly, the los Angeles lakers don 't look so invincible.
Erasing any notion that the
NBA Finals would be merely a
coronation, the Indiana Pacers
emphatically defended their
home court with a I 00-91 victory in Game 3 on Sunday night,
cutting Los Angeles' series lead to
2-1.
After losing two games in Los
Angeles without much of a fight,
the Pacers were talking trash.
shoving the lakers around and
reveling in the support of the basketball fanatics crammed into
Conseco Fieldhouse for the Pacers' first finals home game.
"We're not a team that's going
to be pushed around," Indiana's
Jalen Rose said. "We're not a team .
that's coming into the series like
we're the JV team. We have to be
on edge (and) we have to be

. No, he didn 't care about his
clutch three-run homer Sunday
or that he scored the winning
run. So what if he's hitting .232.
Oh, and that diving cat,h in
center? Yawn.
Griffey says he's tired of the
attention he's gotten since he
was traded to Cincinnati. It's
time to fo cus on rhe Reds.
And that's what Junior did on
Sunday after the Reds rallied ·
from .five runs down to beat the
Cleveland Indians 7- 5 in 13
innings and snap a season-high,
five-game losing streak.
'~It does a lot," said Griffey,
whose three-run shot in the
eighth tied it 5-S. "We avoided a
sweep. We battled our butts off
to ·win the game. It says a lot
about the guys in the locker
room that we didn't give up:"
Aaron ·Boone singled home
Griffey and Michael Tucker in
the 13th as the Reds finished
the initial portion of interleague
play at 1-5.
"This one could get us on a
roll," said Boone, who singled
off Scott Kamieniecki (1-3). " It
was a very important win. The
way we've been going, to come
back &amp;om down ScO and get a

wm was huge. We needed it
badly."
Griffey, who has struggled at
the plate while adjusting to NL
pitching, looked more like himself during the three-game series
back in one of his old AL
stomping grounds.
He went 6-for- ll with two
homers and five RBis, and has
now homered in three . of the
last four games. In his last eight
games, Griffey is 11-for-29
(.379) with four homers and
nine RBis.
"He's ~!ways a tremendous
threat," Reds manager Jack
McKeon said. "Now, he's starting to hit more singles, too. I'm
sure we're going to see a different Junior now. In a key situation, there is no question that he
is special."
In the 13th, Griffey singled
and went to third on Cleveland
second baseman Roberto Alamar's foolish throwing error.
Alomar, who didn't start
because of a sore left wrist and
entered in the l1 th as a pinchrunner, fielded Tucker's bunt but
tried to make apehind-the-back
throw to Karnieniecki COVering
the bag and the ball went into
Cincinnati's dugout.

Pleese-ltecls, .... H
'

I

�'
Monday June12

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

2000
Pomeroy /"iddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

83

Public Notlca

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personala

Profesalonal
Services

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

A Coun ry Ctartsman
You Fu H • Doc o s 6 lpplng
Refinish ng Can ng Repa rs Up
ho~le ~ Juno Special Recaon
ong (304)743- 00
PH.() T o-G-R A P-H-Y

Wedd ngs
Pots
Spor sTeams
P

a ess ana

Ce

ad Pho og a

phe
Reasonable rales
Ca to appolntmen

GO A CAMPGROUND Mom
be sh p 0
mesha e WE L
TAKE T Arne ca s Mos Sue
ess
C ampg o d And me

304}675 74 2
304}675 Z79

FINANCIAL

sha e Res a e C ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SALE S N ERNAT ON

Al 800 423 596
www resor sales com

24 Hou s

210

Business
Opportunity

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TV ISS 1
No FeeU esawewn

REPO SALE
Ne e lved n No Money Down
Sa • 0 o $5 000 Ca
BBB
565-06

Wooden bunk beds $40 00 e ec
s o e $50 oo wo ks good 30 ..
675 BB68

WANT A COMPUTER??? ? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F ance 0 Down Pas
C od P ob ema OK E on
Tu ned Down Be o e Raes abl sh
lbu Crod
BOO 659 0359

888 582 3345

550

BANK NG

540 Miscellaneous

HeadTe e

Building
Supplies

Merchandise

ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE $0
Down Ne s $SDK Wo
H s
Ca d VEND NG R e
A oa
To Fee
a
494 8695 24

Hrs

Se zed C1r1 From t&amp;OO Spo

Th a newtpape w1 no
kno'NI g y accept
advert sements fof rea esta e
wh ch s n viola on o he

LSWII.ISW"
COMMUN TY
SE ASSOC A

~~~~·I,~E~~SI~IIg~

aw Ou eaders a e he eby
n o meet hat a dwel ngs
edvM oe&lt;l n h o newepape
a eava abeonenaqua
opportun ty baas

AND HEALTH

HOW TO BUY A BUS NESS
W TH NO MONEY DOWN
MAKE YOUR FOR UNE W TH
ZERO CASH ORDER YOUR
COMP ETE PACKAGE AND
START OOAY ON Y $99 V SA
&amp; MASTERCARD ACCEPTED
24 HRS
DAYS /WEEK CA L
8 46 Q235 OL FREE

ll.•

.;,i..,;.••••l

REAL ESTATE

Now 4 W de 3BR 2BA $2 3
Pe Man h Low down Payman
F oo A F ee Do o y
8BB
928 3426

Lu• y &amp; Economy Ca s 1i uclcs
41t4s u ty&amp; Mot Fo Cu ant
L s ngs

X 440

New 6 eo 3BR 2BA S2BB pa
mon h Low Down Paymen F aa
A
F ee De e y
BBB 92B
3426

New Do b ew de 3 BA 2BA
S27C pe mon h ow Down Pay
me
F ee A
688 928 3426

F ee De

t y

321(80 Fac o y Repo Ne e
BBB 69
L ed n $49 950

677

310 Homes for Sale

BOO 3

5048

L!GAL NOTICE
Donna Flqk whaaa l11t
add•••• and whan pr111ant
place of realdenca •
unknown w I taka notice
that an May 12 2000
Norwell Bank Mlnnaaota
National A11oc atlon aa
TruiiH flied Ita Complaint
In Case No oo-cv-os In the
Court of Common Pleaa
Mtlga County Ohio alleging
that tht Defendant Donna
Fink hll Of cia ma to have
an nttfllt In the real eatate
dtecrlbld below
Situated In the County of
Melga In the State of Ohio
and In the Townahlp of
Rutland and bounded and
doacrlbed II IOIIOWI Bolng
In Fraction 4 Town 7 Range
14
Ohio Comptny •
Purchaot Baing Lot No ll
ol CLAIR MAR ESTATES 11
doecrlbad In Pill recordod
In Volume 4 Page 81 Me 11•
County Plet Recorda
The Potltloner further
allogea that by l'latan Of
deloult ol the Dtlendante(t)
In the paymont ol 1
promlooory nolo according
to Itt tonor tho cand llano
al a concurront mortgoge
dlld II VOn to leCUII lhe
payment al aald notlca ond
conveying tho p emlou
dotcrlbtd have bun
brcktn and tha aamo haa
become 1bao uta
The Petitioner p aya that
the Daltndlnla(a) named
abovo be required to
onawtr and 11t up their
lntorell n eald real eatate
o be forever barred I om
ouortlng the aame lor
lorecloaure
ol aald
mortgage the marahallng ol
any llena and the ae e ol
aald reo oetote and tho
proceeda ol aald aela
appllod to the payment ol
Petitioner o cia m In the
property order ollta p Ia lty
and lor euch athe and
further relief aa Ia luat and
equltab e
BY John D Clunk Eaq
10005378
Andrew A Palalay 110042515
Attornoya lor Plaintiff
Politi ana
75 Milford Drlva
Hudaan OH 44236
(330) 342 8203
(8) 12 19 28
(7) 3 10 17 8TC

$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T BANK REPOS
CALL NOW
800 360 4620
EXT 8509

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Musical
Instruments

NEW L ST NG
HUNTER'S H LL
s 0 P me Aec ea OI'IB
a d Touches USA Land 29
A es Fo As Low As $27 900

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

a

('1

Con a s A a ab a Ca

Now

800 2 3 8365 An hony

and Company L d www oun y

&amp;LJ. Yard sates Mus

tymecom

DEAQL!NE 2 00 p m
he day belaro he ad

WV HUNT NG U.NO
30 To 00 Ac e T ac s 0 P

Be Paid n Advance

1 to run Sunday
ad~on 200pm
F doy Mondoy edition
9 30 a m SMurday

HOME FORECLOSURES S 0
DOWN NO CREO T NEEDED
GOV T BANK REPOS
BOO
355 0024 Ext 8040

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Hun ng

a d

S a ng

A.

$ 6 500 97 Ac es Fo $5 000

Can Comb ne F ee Maps La d
Con ac A a ab a
8365

800 2 3

POSTAL JOBS 148 323 00 YR
NowH g NoEpe ene Pad
Tan g G ea Bene
Ca
Days 800.429 3660 Ex
566

140

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Was wood
0 a from $289 to $370 Wa k o
shop &amp; mo as Ca 740 446
2568 Equa Hous ng Opportun!y

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Don't 9et cau9ht in a Web"...
11

-0-

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.
A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!
So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Martha Boynton and John
Doe Unknown Spauae 11
t
0 I M th 1 B
any
"'
ayn on
whoae laot
place
al
raaldance le known aa 200
Laeley st eel Pomeroy OH
45769 but whaoe preaent
place ot ruldanca Ia
unknown will taka natlco
that on March 15 2000 11
10 15 am
conoeco
FlnancIaI Ill1 d II1 CampI1 Int
n Caaa No OO.CV-o28 In the
Court al common Ploao
Melga county Ohio ollaglng
1h11 1h 1 oe1en dan t(1 )
Martha Boynton ond John
Dot Unknown Spou.. II
any ol Martha Boynton
have or claim to have an
ntereal In the real eelate
deacrlbed below
Situated In the county al
Mega n lha state al Ohio
end n the VII age al
Pomeroy and bounded and
doac lbed 81 Ia Iowa
Beginning at 1 stake at the
co ner al Brock and Lawley

Streata thence unnlng
South eo deg 47 min W
112 lett to a llakt thence
South 9 deg 13 min E 40
1111 to a alike thence North
BD deg 47 min E 112 lett
to a atake thence North 9
deg 13 min W 40 feet to
tho ploce al beg nnlng Sold
lot lncludl&lt;l tile houaa and
barn end being a lot 40 IHI
wldt by 112111t dllp Tho
above dtacrlbed property II
part ol Lot No 463 al the
conaolldatlon ol Pomoroy
ao reported In Plat Book 2
Page 17 and 18 In the
recordt ol Me ga County
Racorder 1 Olllce and

conveying the premlaea
deacr bad have bean
broken and the aama has
become abao uta
The Petitioner praya that
the Defendant (1) named
above be required to
anawar and aet up tha r
lntareat In •• d real aatata
or be forever b*rred from
a..ertlng lha aame lor
laracloouro or uld
mortgage lha marahallng al
any IIana and tho aal11 of
aald raal 111011 and tho
prac11d1 ol ..ld aa a
appllod to tho paymant ol
PotHionor a Claim In lhe
propor ardtf ol Ita priority
and lor auch other and
lurthor relief aa Ia jull and
equitable
THE DEFENDANT(S)
NAMED ABOVE REQUIRED
TO ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THE 7TH DAY OF
AUGUSl: 2000
Caneaca Bank Inc
DonnIa Ralmor Co L~ A
Dannla Relme
Attomoy at Law
Attorney lor
PlalntiH Patltlanor
~0 Box968
Tw naburg OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(5)5 12 19 26
(7) 3 10 6TC

LEGAL NOTICE
On Saturday Juno 24
2000 at 10 00 a m the Home
National Bank wl I oHor lor
aale at public auction on the
Bank parking lot the
lo Iawing vahlclea
1987 Chevy 5-10
Vln 1GCBS14EIH2105740
111M Ford Van
Vln 1FDEE11N7RHIIII8111151141111
The Ierma ol the Nla are
caah
Tho Home National Bank
raaarvea tho right to rejlcl
any or all blda or to remove
any unit from the Nil at
anytime
Arrangement• may be
made to lnapect any ol the
above vahlclea prior to the
aale by calling 740 1141
2210
George Law enca
Home National Bank
(6) 12 16 19 23 4TC

contained o 103 acret mora
or looa
The Petitioner further
allegll that by reason ol
default ol the Delendant(a)
In the paymont ol a
pramlaaory nata acco ding
to Ita tenor tho condltlona
al a cancurrenl mortgage
deed given to secure the
paymont al oald nate and

--..,.,.,--..,..,....:--:':":~~

Bualne88
Training

110

A.neni:!On Deve ope s
33 Aces App ox rna ey 0 Ace
ake Mob e 'Home W h Add 0
dea Fo Hous g Campg ound
Esle e $99 500 740 388 8078

®Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal

aRUNERLAND
7~~

1492

Gala Co Wave Go
OH
SA 325 N Dee C eek Ad
0
Ac es $ 2 600 Cash 0
4 Ac

es Wh

Ban $2 ODD

$ Increased Pay Scale $

Ro

G ande Mob ey Ad G ea V ews
Dead End Road 6 Ac es $2 500
0 8 Ac OS W h Pond $29 500

ET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebui n S o k
Ca Ron E ans 800 53 9528

Chesh e Jesse C eek Ad 20
Pa ce s Beg nn ng A 6 A es
S 2 000 To 37 Ac es $47 000
Grea Homes S es And Hun g
Cay TIYp Marabe Rd
Ac as
$20 000 0 3 Ac es W h Ba n

$37 000 F end y A dge

Help Wanted

5 Acres

PHARMACIST

The Nursing and Rehabilitation Canter has
positions available for full time
employment Must be WV Certified

Fruth Pharmacy IS seekmg a pharmac1st
m th1s area Fruth Pharmacy mamtams
h1gh ranking by nanonal drugstore and
busmess pubhcauons Fruth ass1sts you
m your practice w1th good backup and
support We offer excellent benefits
and a compettttve salary Send your
resume to
Fruth Inc
Route 1 Box 332
Pomt Pleasant WV 25550
or call Ladd1e Burdette or Jerry Kelley
at 1 304 675 1612 or E ma1l
laddd1eb@fruthpharmacy com

P ean aubmlt re1111me to

Melg1 Co

Ru and Wh es H
Rd Nce9A esS 20000
A.c as S 4 ODD Wa a Dan e
SR325 N eSAcesS 60000
BaRdgeRd
Aes$000
Cash

SERVICES

810

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c a PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASAN'I: WV 25550
OR FAX TO (304) 67H971l
AA/EOE

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
u cond ona
e me g a an ee

Loca

e e en es

n shed Es

abshed 9 5 Ca 24Hs 40
446 OB70
800 287 05 6 Rog
ersWaepoo ng

ALZHEIMER S FACT #7
LOSS OF INITIATIVE It
FREE DEBT CONSQL CAT ON
App ca on W Se ce Reduce
Paymon 1 To 85% CASH N
CENT VE OFFER Co
800
32885 o EMI 29

RENTALS

'~II '~Ill MO~EY PROB
LE~S? NOW ACO£PT NO A~
PL CAT ONB 13 000 ~NC U ~
NO APPL CAT ON FEI I 877
~3-8317 EK'!: ~oa

DOWNTOWN IUitNIII
INI 011 0'1'101

'o Lalit Th ta lloomo 0 ttn

GO¥ T 'OITAL JOII Up
1b 1 aa~
~ no l'o
' ' " Cl
App corlon !xtm
,. on n10 mt ion ,.,,. a H a
,,. hnollll 100 l-eo. !•

,ori'IOu

ent on I I
Cit)

• Nlot 1b V 1W (7&gt;40)~131

840 Electrical and

aooo.

I A M I PM

997 Dodge n ep d 3 5 V 6
59 833 m es ma oo wl h gray n
e o c u se eco e ed he
a k ng $7000 740 992 506
days o 40 949 2C•4 e e ngs

and weeke ds

Refrigeration

Help Wanted

CNA Applicants

Join Our Family ol prololl onalo to belha reaource lor
cOtnmunlty health 11rvlca nelde

S o 000 Cash

110

normal to t1re of ho~~s~~~~;~;~'
bus ness act1v1t es, or
obi gat ons but most
regain the r w II to get invlliVB•OI
aga n
A
person
Alzhe mer s d sease may nA\IAI'I
aga n want to do the
they used to enjoy so much
Questions?
Call
Alzhermer s p ofessronals
Scenic H lis Nurs1ng Center
more nformallon

(740) 446 7150
Scenic H1lls
The Alzhe mer s Experts

®Pleasant Valley Hospital
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST/MLT
Pluunt Valley Hospital hal a lull time opportunity
II you mnt the following qualification•
Auocletn degr11 In Applied Sclanc.. or ralated
field plua eligibility lor ASCP certlftcatlon
Current
llcenat

wv

Excanant
Salary
Holldaya
Hospitalization
Vacation
Dental
Ute lnaurance
Rlllremant Long Term Disability
Join Our Family of profeaalonala to be tha reeourca
for community htllth aarvlca naeda
Pie- oubmlt raeumo to
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
C/D PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASANl: WV 25550
OR FAX TO (304) 67HI75
AA/EOE

I

�'
Monday June12

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

2000
Pomeroy /"iddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

83

Public Notlca

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personala

Profesalonal
Services

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

A Coun ry Ctartsman
You Fu H • Doc o s 6 lpplng
Refinish ng Can ng Repa rs Up
ho~le ~ Juno Special Recaon
ong (304)743- 00
PH.() T o-G-R A P-H-Y

Wedd ngs
Pots
Spor sTeams
P

a ess ana

Ce

ad Pho og a

phe
Reasonable rales
Ca to appolntmen

GO A CAMPGROUND Mom
be sh p 0
mesha e WE L
TAKE T Arne ca s Mos Sue
ess
C ampg o d And me

304}675 74 2
304}675 Z79

FINANCIAL

sha e Res a e C ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SALE S N ERNAT ON

Al 800 423 596
www resor sales com

24 Hou s

210

Business
Opportunity

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TV ISS 1
No FeeU esawewn

REPO SALE
Ne e lved n No Money Down
Sa • 0 o $5 000 Ca
BBB
565-06

Wooden bunk beds $40 00 e ec
s o e $50 oo wo ks good 30 ..
675 BB68

WANT A COMPUTER??? ? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F ance 0 Down Pas
C od P ob ema OK E on
Tu ned Down Be o e Raes abl sh
lbu Crod
BOO 659 0359

888 582 3345

550

BANK NG

540 Miscellaneous

HeadTe e

Building
Supplies

Merchandise

ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE $0
Down Ne s $SDK Wo
H s
Ca d VEND NG R e
A oa
To Fee
a
494 8695 24

Hrs

Se zed C1r1 From t&amp;OO Spo

Th a newtpape w1 no
kno'NI g y accept
advert sements fof rea esta e
wh ch s n viola on o he

LSWII.ISW"
COMMUN TY
SE ASSOC A

~~~~·I,~E~~SI~IIg~

aw Ou eaders a e he eby
n o meet hat a dwel ngs
edvM oe&lt;l n h o newepape
a eava abeonenaqua
opportun ty baas

AND HEALTH

HOW TO BUY A BUS NESS
W TH NO MONEY DOWN
MAKE YOUR FOR UNE W TH
ZERO CASH ORDER YOUR
COMP ETE PACKAGE AND
START OOAY ON Y $99 V SA
&amp; MASTERCARD ACCEPTED
24 HRS
DAYS /WEEK CA L
8 46 Q235 OL FREE

ll.•

.;,i..,;.••••l

REAL ESTATE

Now 4 W de 3BR 2BA $2 3
Pe Man h Low down Payman
F oo A F ee Do o y
8BB
928 3426

Lu• y &amp; Economy Ca s 1i uclcs
41t4s u ty&amp; Mot Fo Cu ant
L s ngs

X 440

New 6 eo 3BR 2BA S2BB pa
mon h Low Down Paymen F aa
A
F ee De e y
BBB 92B
3426

New Do b ew de 3 BA 2BA
S27C pe mon h ow Down Pay
me
F ee A
688 928 3426

F ee De

t y

321(80 Fac o y Repo Ne e
BBB 69
L ed n $49 950

677

310 Homes for Sale

BOO 3

5048

L!GAL NOTICE
Donna Flqk whaaa l11t
add•••• and whan pr111ant
place of realdenca •
unknown w I taka notice
that an May 12 2000
Norwell Bank Mlnnaaota
National A11oc atlon aa
TruiiH flied Ita Complaint
In Case No oo-cv-os In the
Court of Common Pleaa
Mtlga County Ohio alleging
that tht Defendant Donna
Fink hll Of cia ma to have
an nttfllt In the real eatate
dtecrlbld below
Situated In the County of
Melga In the State of Ohio
and In the Townahlp of
Rutland and bounded and
doacrlbed II IOIIOWI Bolng
In Fraction 4 Town 7 Range
14
Ohio Comptny •
Purchaot Baing Lot No ll
ol CLAIR MAR ESTATES 11
doecrlbad In Pill recordod
In Volume 4 Page 81 Me 11•
County Plet Recorda
The Potltloner further
allogea that by l'latan Of
deloult ol the Dtlendante(t)
In the paymont ol 1
promlooory nolo according
to Itt tonor tho cand llano
al a concurront mortgoge
dlld II VOn to leCUII lhe
payment al aald notlca ond
conveying tho p emlou
dotcrlbtd have bun
brcktn and tha aamo haa
become 1bao uta
The Petitioner p aya that
the Daltndlnla(a) named
abovo be required to
onawtr and 11t up their
lntorell n eald real eatate
o be forever barred I om
ouortlng the aame lor
lorecloaure
ol aald
mortgage the marahallng ol
any llena and the ae e ol
aald reo oetote and tho
proceeda ol aald aela
appllod to the payment ol
Petitioner o cia m In the
property order ollta p Ia lty
and lor euch athe and
further relief aa Ia luat and
equltab e
BY John D Clunk Eaq
10005378
Andrew A Palalay 110042515
Attornoya lor Plaintiff
Politi ana
75 Milford Drlva
Hudaan OH 44236
(330) 342 8203
(8) 12 19 28
(7) 3 10 17 8TC

$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T BANK REPOS
CALL NOW
800 360 4620
EXT 8509

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Musical
Instruments

NEW L ST NG
HUNTER'S H LL
s 0 P me Aec ea OI'IB
a d Touches USA Land 29
A es Fo As Low As $27 900

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

a

('1

Con a s A a ab a Ca

Now

800 2 3 8365 An hony

and Company L d www oun y

&amp;LJ. Yard sates Mus

tymecom

DEAQL!NE 2 00 p m
he day belaro he ad

WV HUNT NG U.NO
30 To 00 Ac e T ac s 0 P

Be Paid n Advance

1 to run Sunday
ad~on 200pm
F doy Mondoy edition
9 30 a m SMurday

HOME FORECLOSURES S 0
DOWN NO CREO T NEEDED
GOV T BANK REPOS
BOO
355 0024 Ext 8040

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Hun ng

a d

S a ng

A.

$ 6 500 97 Ac es Fo $5 000

Can Comb ne F ee Maps La d
Con ac A a ab a
8365

800 2 3

POSTAL JOBS 148 323 00 YR
NowH g NoEpe ene Pad
Tan g G ea Bene
Ca
Days 800.429 3660 Ex
566

140

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Was wood
0 a from $289 to $370 Wa k o
shop &amp; mo as Ca 740 446
2568 Equa Hous ng Opportun!y

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Don't 9et cau9ht in a Web"...
11

-0-

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.
A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!
So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Martha Boynton and John
Doe Unknown Spauae 11
t
0 I M th 1 B
any
"'
ayn on
whoae laot
place
al
raaldance le known aa 200
Laeley st eel Pomeroy OH
45769 but whaoe preaent
place ot ruldanca Ia
unknown will taka natlco
that on March 15 2000 11
10 15 am
conoeco
FlnancIaI Ill1 d II1 CampI1 Int
n Caaa No OO.CV-o28 In the
Court al common Ploao
Melga county Ohio ollaglng
1h11 1h 1 oe1en dan t(1 )
Martha Boynton ond John
Dot Unknown Spou.. II
any ol Martha Boynton
have or claim to have an
ntereal In the real eelate
deacrlbed below
Situated In the county al
Mega n lha state al Ohio
end n the VII age al
Pomeroy and bounded and
doac lbed 81 Ia Iowa
Beginning at 1 stake at the
co ner al Brock and Lawley

Streata thence unnlng
South eo deg 47 min W
112 lett to a llakt thence
South 9 deg 13 min E 40
1111 to a alike thence North
BD deg 47 min E 112 lett
to a atake thence North 9
deg 13 min W 40 feet to
tho ploce al beg nnlng Sold
lot lncludl&lt;l tile houaa and
barn end being a lot 40 IHI
wldt by 112111t dllp Tho
above dtacrlbed property II
part ol Lot No 463 al the
conaolldatlon ol Pomoroy
ao reported In Plat Book 2
Page 17 and 18 In the
recordt ol Me ga County
Racorder 1 Olllce and

conveying the premlaea
deacr bad have bean
broken and the aama has
become abao uta
The Petitioner praya that
the Defendant (1) named
above be required to
anawar and aet up tha r
lntareat In •• d real aatata
or be forever b*rred from
a..ertlng lha aame lor
laracloouro or uld
mortgage lha marahallng al
any IIana and tho aal11 of
aald raal 111011 and tho
prac11d1 ol ..ld aa a
appllod to tho paymant ol
PotHionor a Claim In lhe
propor ardtf ol Ita priority
and lor auch other and
lurthor relief aa Ia jull and
equitable
THE DEFENDANT(S)
NAMED ABOVE REQUIRED
TO ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE THE 7TH DAY OF
AUGUSl: 2000
Caneaca Bank Inc
DonnIa Ralmor Co L~ A
Dannla Relme
Attomoy at Law
Attorney lor
PlalntiH Patltlanor
~0 Box968
Tw naburg OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(5)5 12 19 26
(7) 3 10 6TC

LEGAL NOTICE
On Saturday Juno 24
2000 at 10 00 a m the Home
National Bank wl I oHor lor
aale at public auction on the
Bank parking lot the
lo Iawing vahlclea
1987 Chevy 5-10
Vln 1GCBS14EIH2105740
111M Ford Van
Vln 1FDEE11N7RHIIII8111151141111
The Ierma ol the Nla are
caah
Tho Home National Bank
raaarvea tho right to rejlcl
any or all blda or to remove
any unit from the Nil at
anytime
Arrangement• may be
made to lnapect any ol the
above vahlclea prior to the
aale by calling 740 1141
2210
George Law enca
Home National Bank
(6) 12 16 19 23 4TC

contained o 103 acret mora
or looa
The Petitioner further
allegll that by reason ol
default ol the Delendant(a)
In the paymont ol a
pramlaaory nata acco ding
to Ita tenor tho condltlona
al a cancurrenl mortgage
deed given to secure the
paymont al oald nate and

--..,.,.,--..,..,....:--:':":~~

Bualne88
Training

110

A.neni:!On Deve ope s
33 Aces App ox rna ey 0 Ace
ake Mob e 'Home W h Add 0
dea Fo Hous g Campg ound
Esle e $99 500 740 388 8078

®Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal

aRUNERLAND
7~~

1492

Gala Co Wave Go
OH
SA 325 N Dee C eek Ad
0
Ac es $ 2 600 Cash 0
4 Ac

es Wh

Ban $2 ODD

$ Increased Pay Scale $

Ro

G ande Mob ey Ad G ea V ews
Dead End Road 6 Ac es $2 500
0 8 Ac OS W h Pond $29 500

ET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebui n S o k
Ca Ron E ans 800 53 9528

Chesh e Jesse C eek Ad 20
Pa ce s Beg nn ng A 6 A es
S 2 000 To 37 Ac es $47 000
Grea Homes S es And Hun g
Cay TIYp Marabe Rd
Ac as
$20 000 0 3 Ac es W h Ba n

$37 000 F end y A dge

Help Wanted

5 Acres

PHARMACIST

The Nursing and Rehabilitation Canter has
positions available for full time
employment Must be WV Certified

Fruth Pharmacy IS seekmg a pharmac1st
m th1s area Fruth Pharmacy mamtams
h1gh ranking by nanonal drugstore and
busmess pubhcauons Fruth ass1sts you
m your practice w1th good backup and
support We offer excellent benefits
and a compettttve salary Send your
resume to
Fruth Inc
Route 1 Box 332
Pomt Pleasant WV 25550
or call Ladd1e Burdette or Jerry Kelley
at 1 304 675 1612 or E ma1l
laddd1eb@fruthpharmacy com

P ean aubmlt re1111me to

Melg1 Co

Ru and Wh es H
Rd Nce9A esS 20000
A.c as S 4 ODD Wa a Dan e
SR325 N eSAcesS 60000
BaRdgeRd
Aes$000
Cash

SERVICES

810

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c a PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASAN'I: WV 25550
OR FAX TO (304) 67H971l
AA/EOE

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
u cond ona
e me g a an ee

Loca

e e en es

n shed Es

abshed 9 5 Ca 24Hs 40
446 OB70
800 287 05 6 Rog
ersWaepoo ng

ALZHEIMER S FACT #7
LOSS OF INITIATIVE It
FREE DEBT CONSQL CAT ON
App ca on W Se ce Reduce
Paymon 1 To 85% CASH N
CENT VE OFFER Co
800
32885 o EMI 29

RENTALS

'~II '~Ill MO~EY PROB
LE~S? NOW ACO£PT NO A~
PL CAT ONB 13 000 ~NC U ~
NO APPL CAT ON FEI I 877
~3-8317 EK'!: ~oa

DOWNTOWN IUitNIII
INI 011 0'1'101

'o Lalit Th ta lloomo 0 ttn

GO¥ T 'OITAL JOII Up
1b 1 aa~
~ no l'o
' ' " Cl
App corlon !xtm
,. on n10 mt ion ,.,,. a H a
,,. hnollll 100 l-eo. !•

,ori'IOu

ent on I I
Cit)

• Nlot 1b V 1W (7&gt;40)~131

840 Electrical and

aooo.

I A M I PM

997 Dodge n ep d 3 5 V 6
59 833 m es ma oo wl h gray n
e o c u se eco e ed he
a k ng $7000 740 992 506
days o 40 949 2C•4 e e ngs

and weeke ds

Refrigeration

Help Wanted

CNA Applicants

Join Our Family ol prololl onalo to belha reaource lor
cOtnmunlty health 11rvlca nelde

S o 000 Cash

110

normal to t1re of ho~~s~~~~;~;~'
bus ness act1v1t es, or
obi gat ons but most
regain the r w II to get invlliVB•OI
aga n
A
person
Alzhe mer s d sease may nA\IAI'I
aga n want to do the
they used to enjoy so much
Questions?
Call
Alzhermer s p ofessronals
Scenic H lis Nurs1ng Center
more nformallon

(740) 446 7150
Scenic H1lls
The Alzhe mer s Experts

®Pleasant Valley Hospital
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST/MLT
Pluunt Valley Hospital hal a lull time opportunity
II you mnt the following qualification•
Auocletn degr11 In Applied Sclanc.. or ralated
field plua eligibility lor ASCP certlftcatlon
Current
llcenat

wv

Excanant
Salary
Holldaya
Hospitalization
Vacation
Dental
Ute lnaurance
Rlllremant Long Term Disability
Join Our Family of profeaalonala to be tha reeourca
for community htllth aarvlca naeda
Pie- oubmlt raeumo to
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
C/D PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASANl: WV 25550
OR FAX TO (304) 67HI75
AA/EOE

I

�Morlday, June 12, 2000

Po!Mf'oy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge B4 • The Dally S.ntlnel

!Moncley, June 12,2000

ALLEYOOP

CRBDrr PROBLEMS???
No CredH • Slow CredH • Blnkruptc:y
Rtpo • Dlvordtd

WORRYING!!!
No Embtrraument...

SMITH'S CO"STROCTIOH
.• ·New Hom••
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodallng
• Decks
• Rooting

Nttd It done,

You're Treated with Raapec:tl

gl~•

MaltMTrador&amp;
Equipment Parts
Fac:tory Aathorized

u• a .1111

Cue-IH Parts

FREE ESTIMATES
Ottlt Prleu on New Homtt

992·2753

992·1101

DealeQ.

1000 sr. Rr. 7 Soulh
Coolvll/t, OH 45123

f4DIIJ_.Ba

0117.., \n'&lt;l

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

1Z1

15/221 mo

46909 SR 124

Racine

Camping~

Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

7 40·949·7039
·~Gel in

while you can, •pace

.......,
..&amp;llu:&amp;L
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell
+
30Yrs. Exp.
Free EstlmaLes 740-378-6349
NOI'ICE

&lt;! Handyman crew wtiJ do
yard work, painting inside
and out. carpenter work,
roobng, stdlng. Have own
tools. Free Estimates

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

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

Dozer work.
fru Estimate•
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8 :00pm

740-992-5050
(Randy)
1m

41

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Quahty Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800-291-5600

Aunt 5
Candles &amp;Crafts
•Ft•4rtlrtrt •Cu41t Rellllr
•W..4werkiiS •Wrul••
SR 143 I$J2-'3'!:fj7

"Ahead In Service"
Nulrltta Weslem Pride 12" Sweel Feed...................15.25/50 lb bag
llvlrtt~~~16" Rabbi! Pelllb .................................... 16.95/50 lb. bag,
llulr1111 Hunttn Pride 21" Dog Faod.....................16.75/50 lb. bag
llulr1111l6" Layer Crumbels................................. •s.99/50 lb. bag
llulrllll Saakh Feed ............................................. 16.75/50 lb. bag
5hldl River 12" Callie Fted..............;.................16.75/100 lb. bag

Call740·985·3831
..;3;.;.S..;S3;.;.7.;;St;.;.• .;,;11;;..;..7;.;.llol;.;.rtt.;.;.._...,_ _...;.P;;;••;;.;•;.;r•.:;Y•..;;OI.;;;W;;.•.J

LIIBD
Cl)ester, OH
.Stale Route 248
• E.teo Rooke,. and Aee.,....rieo
• Trlliuo by.Lionel A MTH
• K-Line
• GIIJ'II'&amp;Veo Traek
• Albelll'll
• Model Power
• Lifeline

• Atl•

Free Estimates

u limited"

Progreaalve top 11ne.
1111- ·

'

N

c

E

T

[II]

E

(304) 112·2079
NewH ven WV

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

MARCUM

Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
: • Replacement Windpws

i •. .:,. Rqom Additions

~' llt.9~

. 992·1550
The Appliance
Man

!

1-800.311·3391

Ken Young
4119100 1 mo. pd.

. YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLAnONS

Free E~limalea
Contractors Welce111e
Albany, Ohio

I

'

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydrauhc HoH repcirs,
cylnder repairs, ol
Sales· 5 gal. bucklts
to 55 gal. drums
2 Y, miles out of
Chester 'on SR 248

Joseph J..cks
740·992•2068
5131/1

ftelppDaaca

LINDA'S
PAINTING

MID

"Take IIU! pain out

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

'

lnlerlol'
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m. :
Leave Message
Aher 6 pm- 614-985·4180·

1111. hd
Pa111810J,Oido
4/10100 1 mo pd.

n
,

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

'

(7401 992·3131
;

; ,~•

'f,

Pll
C0N81111C1111
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
'
Buildings, ~tc;

J&amp;l IIISULAftOII &amp;
COIISIIUCnOII
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Qluntry Candle Shop
S~Jaclal

Scant
of the Month
. Sala

New Summer Daya
Thur &amp; Frl10 am -6pm
; · Slturda~ 1o am - 4 pm
On other dayalf we are
homi, we ars OPEN.

Decks, Boat. Docks,

Fr. . E•tlnu~t••
740·992-1709

t mo. od.

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
. Blown Insulation
992-2n~

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

••
,•
•
'•

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

~~~

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
Waters Edge of Syracuse

QAIWf10U5,

OHIO 4!1831• CHESHIRE, miiiUJ..

•

1

• op · 1
• ...~"·
"

· ••1(\\\l

Gl'n4'"""

.$-

VOUR

'

Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging ·
Planling and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Deck!#
Free E.stimalea '

740·742·8015 or
1-877·353·7022

TOO 1·800-750-0750
Office For Details

. . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .
C~mtact
A

~

;.:

•

·.._·

..

•

y

••
::
,•

~
#"A

·::a·

.·
. '' ' '

'

'' 6REAT, "OF COURSE; 6EIN6
A RELATIVE TERM ..

'
'

Advertise in
this space for·
s100 per
month.

.. .

''.'

.
L

'•

-------.J:!~

i.,
\

·: -..;...~----....;.\
••

'. .
Thesday, June 13, 2000
. This might be a year of ups and
~ downs for you, but aniled with
: new knowledge and experience,
: you can get the jump on things
l more quic]j:ly than before and
I come out on the plus side of the
f ledger.
'
GEMINI .(May 21--June 20)
·: Tasks you dislike doing may be
l _made even more distasteful to you
: today because of a negative atti: tude. Put a smile on your face and
: things will run more smoothly.
I Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph
Malchmaker can help you underst~d what to do to make the rela• tionship work. Mail $2.75 to
j Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
~ P.O. Bo~ 1758, Murray Hill Sta'1 tion. New York, NY I0 I56.
'• CANCER (June 21-July 22)
: When in charae or in possession
l of someone else's property todtiy,
take e~lra cure to be prolecli ve of
his or her belonalnas. If you
break somelhing. you'll be held
: accounlable.
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Should
{ a disagreemenl arise today
~ between you and your mute. tulk
L1~ings out and resolve your dif·

'
f

Phone 992-2155
•J

;

l

per inch

7 Jeane

trademark

the Clrrlngtons

pod

t0
11
12
19
21

Mit. IChOOI
Poet Ogden -

Pass

Pass

22 Cantankerous

23

Jecob'a sibling
Semester

Like

beets

CroSIIed a river

24
25
26
27

Machine port
Altrol
Zoo home

Mualc holla
Stolen

property

29 Genus of

olive trees

30 Blrd's
home
31 Scottloh·
Gaelic
37 " t think,
therefore,

Dbl.
Pass

Pass

--"

38 Sleeplng-

9

alcknesolly
40 Roqulrea
41 Hlghlande
group
42 Greaey
43 Room pert
45 Order ol
whalel
·48 Soulhwaotarn
Indiana
47 Oock
48 Life etory, lor
ehort
50 a11n1teln'e
nickname
52.:.. Ungua
(airline)
53 lletwelin
Colo.
and Mo.

BY PHILLIP ALDER
During the month of April, I
ran a duplicate in Hobe Sound,
Fla. One day, due to a clash with
a major golf tournament at the
club, we had only five-and-a-half br--1--1-tables, half the normal turnout.
That meant a good 30-minute sitout for one pair each round. So,
we called Anne Chatham to ask if 1-..l.....L.-1-.!......L..she would be wi)ling to partner
CELEBRITY CIPHER
me. Anne arrived in time for the
.
by Luis Campos
.
second round. This was our first
Celebrity C~1 coyplogn\mt ore creolod from quotations by famous peopkl, pall and
present. Each letter In the cipher &amp;lands 'or another.
board out of the slot.
Today's clUB.' A oqusls B
North should have opened
three hearts. lf you are holding an
'OP
RZM
SJKE
EZ
TEYDXF
PZV
excellent seven-bagger, start with
IVFJEKFTT,
RZM
TWZMNH
YJEEFYK
a three-bid (or sometimes a fourbid, especially when nonv~lneraRZMVTFNP
JPEFY
IVFJE
YFZYNF . '
. ble against vulnerable opponents).
Over my takeout double, I
(YFHTCDK
NDKFAJGCFV)
NJXJY
think South should have shut her
eyes and jumped to three noJYVDKIEZK
. trump. She has eight tricks, and a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "M..ybe t alii some kind of ve'Y lqlaltaniiMtlngs In
decent partner will.produce numthe IIDUI of people without willing H.' - Lila Kedrova
ber nine. Note that that contract
WOlD
can be made. '
lAM I
Four diamonds was too high
when Anne led the spade nine.
After winning my queen with her
ace, declarer drew trumps: Anne
disca~ded 'an en~ouraging club .
seven· and .two •of her useless
'.,
hearts. Now came a spade to dum·
t :
my's 10: I won wit.h the king and
exited safely with a spade.
G L E E- 0
This left declhrer to broach t'he
clubs herself, and she couldn ' t
win. If she played ·1ow to dumo · I. don'l ·
aoout gettmg
my's eight, I would win with the
h-..,;.:R~H~I:..,::E~T~ ';' ·wrinkles too
in life. In my way
10. If she led low to the queen . I
6
7
:;
!:
·of
lhinking
they
will
come at ex- ·
would win with the ling and
L.--l.I.-.1..-L.
.
.....L.,_.J.'
:aclly
the·.----•
-.
switch to the heart ace. Yet when
.. .
.
.
South tried the club jack from ·
1,....----..,R--:-1. ,. .0...,.A-M~E
hand, my partner won with the ace
I
G Complete
the chuckle quoted
and played another club, giving
_ •
.
•
.
.
_
by flllin; In the mlulng words
1-..L.....L-L-...L....L.....I you develop from step No. 3 below.
me two more tricks in the suit for .
one down.
A PRINT NUMBERED
W' LETTERS
With a long minor, always
think three no-trump .

I'

Sentinel

i

:.s,
.

9

Jean·Paul-

39 TV_... about 8 TwDpeal--

10 7 4

To get a current weather
report, check the

I'

i

thriftily)
Author

I I I' I I

'

•

6

-=-,'

Mike Sharp ·
740-949-3606 :

'
I

'

.'

I

Quality Drlv-aya,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Fru Eatlmaatea

5 - out(uae

I I' I e I
I 1 I I I l.

mo. pa~

~

•,
.: •
•,
'
'
• •·
•:
:,
•
:,

ffiOC.OU.TE
1:, TI-lE :&gt;TN'F
OF 1-\Y l.l FE I

l

CONCRETE
CQtU:IIii~IQtl

•:
::

•:
Now Taking Applicalions for 1 Bedroom
Apartment
' ,
:•
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
: · Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On-Site Laundry,
, Community Room, 24 Hour' Maintenance
•
Provided
:
Call or Come By Our Office .Located at
•
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
•
Office Hours
:
Monday and Thursday 10 am . 3 pm
•
Phone (740) 992-6419

;
•
...
~

•

"'

740·992·5212. :'

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement. 1;$/
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home . ~.
r:::.o:~~

A.f\ ... B(i:E.~IT':&gt; lf\C. 5T/'.ff
. Of LifE!

.13795 Hiland Rd.:
Pomeroy, Ohio ~

Advertise your business

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

THE BORN LOSER ..

High &amp; Dry
Sel.f-StoragJj

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box189

'

Now Renting{

.

The

.

!

'

I Selenc:e rooma
2 Tennla player
Naataae
3 Tardy
4 "Social" and

Bridge from reality

QUALITY
LANDSCAPE

740·985::'.!~! ..... L--20-Y-rs_._Ex...:p~
. •Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

mo pd.

LATI·BREAKIN'
NEWS, ELVINEY !!

Bulldooer &amp;: Backhoe
· Se"'ieeo
Hou.., &amp; Trailer Siteo

4/281

25 Dyed
28 Make amanda

patron
37Repeel

2"
3"

Opening lead: •

:1

ofpointinsLet me oo_
uf.or: you"

Pass

4•

l'M READY FER TH'

740·985-4141
- 4
Residential· decks, kitchens, Commercial· metal studs;.
bathrooms, ciasto.m ·
drywall, suspended ceilings
remodeling, handicap access
Mike w. Marcum :
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
OWner
•'
vinyl siding

T&amp;D

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters .
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimales

MIKE YOUNG
740.992-7724
PAT YOUNG
7411-949-8046

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

.Custom Carpet, Vinyl,
Commen:lal an Ceramic
Tile, All ~~ of
..-rdwood ooring,
Carpet Binding and
Restretchlng.
30 Yrs. Experience

• RPoflng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

3+

. y~.

Long Bottom, Ohio

car)
56 Slocklnga
57 WrRor
Hemingway

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
West North East
South

R;'

Sepric Syole"" &amp;
Urilitieo

54 United
55 Two- - (amalt

,DOWN

34 Cryatat·
con,.tnlng
atone
351ron
36 Raatauront

• J 94

s

48 ~lty
obllgeled
51 Becan'MI fond
of (2 wda.)

2t Tr.....CovenHI
32Bedeck
.
33 Mora pettld

Q4 2

• 9 6 3 2
• K 10 5

t

A

SON

.,.

" A2

" A-.-K Q J

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

&amp;

..

18 "Cycle" start
20 Drone

South
e A J 6.

M

, •. . , ••a.
""diP'

e K

• 9 87 5
• 10 9 8 6
+1'5
e A732

'

17 Ylew

0&amp;-12-00

• 10 3
YKQJ7543
• 8
• Q8 6
East

West

(740) 992-347Q

BUILDING

•) Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

'

Bulldozer Services ;

20Yn•xpei1elct l

For Your Pel'slltttls.

, BISSELL IUILD.EIS
INC.

Nort

Fill Dirt • Mukh • ~·

CONCRETE · BACKHOE SERVIQS
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVIQS

GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING
SERVICE

o,.. For &amp;roo111111

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

Pougllkeepele,

New YOflc

Gravel• Sand • Topsoil ·

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

Poma ·

• NewHomea
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

18. ColleGe In

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
Q:
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N :

R

7 Leo'a oon

EXCfiYfiTIHQ .
Hauling • Umestone • :

41 Etale, e.g.
44Uncle
.

1 Eaallf ftowera ot5 -and ..ucer

"fiOUnQ ......

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC • ..

~

ACROSS
13 Nome'a piKa
14 Put Into a
conllllner
15 Olataatelul

'

7/22/TFN

"We're Back"

1i211M 1 .n.i. Del.

Mystic

740.GG2·1671

815100

S"fiDE RNER fiQ SERVICE

L

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks - Garnges.l

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hou,..
7:00AM ·8 PM

$300.00 coverall
$500.00 Slarburet

(7 40) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Comtruetlon

7~949-2217

2,000 sf. Modem Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
for Lease. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass. ·
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-795.3-992-6810-992-5404

OLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGROO"D
'' 6129/mo.

'

'

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

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

750 Easl Stale Slreel
· Alhens, Ohio 45701

29870Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Under Niw Ownt[fhlp

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

'

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

SELF STORAGE

I '

par g•lflt

Uc. II OQ..SO

BRIDGE

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eeglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'Your ·

'···--·-

1

. .... . ....

Indian-Impel-Atlas-Trusty -LISTEN to IT
"You have the treedom ot speecn," the clerk told his
scream ing client "and I have the right not to LISTEN to
.IT."

IMONDAY

JUNE 121

I

'Birthday

ferences promptly. Letting things negotiating with someone who is
linger would prolong' the tension a sharp horse lrader if you try to
and agony.
be too coy about things . Lay all
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) your cards on the table.
Take extra precautions over what
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
you say· tQday to a person who is Be careful how you conduct your·
a known gossip. Given half the self in front of an audience today,
chance, this individual will distort because your image couhl be a bit
your comments, and you will be fragileat this time. Poor behavior
blamed.
would lessen the esteem in which
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2~) Sit- you're held.
uations that have the elements of · · PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
being a financial risk should be You should profit from your past
avoided today. It isn't likely you experience should u situations
would be able to overcome the arise today that is very similar to
odds.
one that previously caused you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) trouble. Stop and . remember
The very people who are near and before you leap again into the
dear to you could put your fray.
.
patience ro lhe tesl today, but try, , ARIES (Murch 21-Apnl 19)
to be understanding and allow Bec~use your JUdgment coul~ be
them a little human . frailties. a lrtfle faulty today. you mtghl
They'll appreciate your kindness. allow your~ll'lf 10 Ill: unduly intluSAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. enced by the udvtce of people
21) Althouah you love to· chal who are more off the murk than
wilh everyone, you might be a lit- you are. Be careful.
tie too free about whut you say
TAURUS (April 20·Mny 20)
today. You could reveal some Lead by eumple today, not by
important information 1o someone ls~u.lns . orders or using pressure
who'll use it agninsl you.
Incites to gel your way. If you
CAP~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jnn. ~have i~ ~ dlclalorial or demand·
19) Youcouid end up outsmanins t~g way,n II only aggravnle asso·
yourself today when bargaining or elates.

,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Brov11 11 PHioburph I

1

�Morlday, June 12, 2000

Po!Mf'oy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge B4 • The Dally S.ntlnel

!Moncley, June 12,2000

ALLEYOOP

CRBDrr PROBLEMS???
No CredH • Slow CredH • Blnkruptc:y
Rtpo • Dlvordtd

WORRYING!!!
No Embtrraument...

SMITH'S CO"STROCTIOH
.• ·New Hom••
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodallng
• Decks
• Rooting

Nttd It done,

You're Treated with Raapec:tl

gl~•

MaltMTrador&amp;
Equipment Parts
Fac:tory Aathorized

u• a .1111

Cue-IH Parts

FREE ESTIMATES
Ottlt Prleu on New Homtt

992·2753

992·1101

DealeQ.

1000 sr. Rr. 7 Soulh
Coolvll/t, OH 45123

f4DIIJ_.Ba

0117.., \n'&lt;l

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

1Z1

15/221 mo

46909 SR 124

Racine

Camping~

Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

7 40·949·7039
·~Gel in

while you can, •pace

.......,
..&amp;llu:&amp;L
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell
+
30Yrs. Exp.
Free EstlmaLes 740-378-6349
NOI'ICE

&lt;! Handyman crew wtiJ do
yard work, painting inside
and out. carpenter work,
roobng, stdlng. Have own
tools. Free Estimates

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

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

Dozer work.
fru Estimate•
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8 :00pm

740-992-5050
(Randy)
1m

41

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Quahty Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800-291-5600

Aunt 5
Candles &amp;Crafts
•Ft•4rtlrtrt •Cu41t Rellllr
•W..4werkiiS •Wrul••
SR 143 I$J2-'3'!:fj7

"Ahead In Service"
Nulrltta Weslem Pride 12" Sweel Feed...................15.25/50 lb bag
llvlrtt~~~16" Rabbi! Pelllb .................................... 16.95/50 lb. bag,
llulr1111 Hunttn Pride 21" Dog Faod.....................16.75/50 lb. bag
llulr1111l6" Layer Crumbels................................. •s.99/50 lb. bag
llulrllll Saakh Feed ............................................. 16.75/50 lb. bag
5hldl River 12" Callie Fted..............;.................16.75/100 lb. bag

Call740·985·3831
..;3;.;.S..;S3;.;.7.;;St;.;.• .;,;11;;..;..7;.;.llol;.;.rtt.;.;.._...,_ _...;.P;;;••;;.;•;.;r•.:;Y•..;;OI.;;;W;;.•.J

LIIBD
Cl)ester, OH
.Stale Route 248
• E.teo Rooke,. and Aee.,....rieo
• Trlliuo by.Lionel A MTH
• K-Line
• GIIJ'II'&amp;Veo Traek
• Albelll'll
• Model Power
• Lifeline

• Atl•

Free Estimates

u limited"

Progreaalve top 11ne.
1111- ·

'

N

c

E

T

[II]

E

(304) 112·2079
NewH ven WV

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

MARCUM

Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
: • Replacement Windpws

i •. .:,. Rqom Additions

~' llt.9~

. 992·1550
The Appliance
Man

!

1-800.311·3391

Ken Young
4119100 1 mo. pd.

. YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLAnONS

Free E~limalea
Contractors Welce111e
Albany, Ohio

I

'

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydrauhc HoH repcirs,
cylnder repairs, ol
Sales· 5 gal. bucklts
to 55 gal. drums
2 Y, miles out of
Chester 'on SR 248

Joseph J..cks
740·992•2068
5131/1

ftelppDaaca

LINDA'S
PAINTING

MID

"Take IIU! pain out

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

'

lnlerlol'
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m. :
Leave Message
Aher 6 pm- 614-985·4180·

1111. hd
Pa111810J,Oido
4/10100 1 mo pd.

n
,

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

'

(7401 992·3131
;

; ,~•

'f,

Pll
C0N81111C1111
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
'
Buildings, ~tc;

J&amp;l IIISULAftOII &amp;
COIISIIUCnOII
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Qluntry Candle Shop
S~Jaclal

Scant
of the Month
. Sala

New Summer Daya
Thur &amp; Frl10 am -6pm
; · Slturda~ 1o am - 4 pm
On other dayalf we are
homi, we ars OPEN.

Decks, Boat. Docks,

Fr. . E•tlnu~t••
740·992-1709

t mo. od.

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
. Blown Insulation
992-2n~

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

••
,•
•
'•

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

~~~

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
Waters Edge of Syracuse

QAIWf10U5,

OHIO 4!1831• CHESHIRE, miiiUJ..

•

1

• op · 1
• ...~"·
"

· ••1(\\\l

Gl'n4'"""

.$-

VOUR

'

Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging ·
Planling and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Deck!#
Free E.stimalea '

740·742·8015 or
1-877·353·7022

TOO 1·800-750-0750
Office For Details

. . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .
C~mtact
A

~

;.:

•

·.._·

..

•

y

••
::
,•

~
#"A

·::a·

.·
. '' ' '

'

'' 6REAT, "OF COURSE; 6EIN6
A RELATIVE TERM ..

'
'

Advertise in
this space for·
s100 per
month.

.. .

''.'

.
L

'•

-------.J:!~

i.,
\

·: -..;...~----....;.\
••

'. .
Thesday, June 13, 2000
. This might be a year of ups and
~ downs for you, but aniled with
: new knowledge and experience,
: you can get the jump on things
l more quic]j:ly than before and
I come out on the plus side of the
f ledger.
'
GEMINI .(May 21--June 20)
·: Tasks you dislike doing may be
l _made even more distasteful to you
: today because of a negative atti: tude. Put a smile on your face and
: things will run more smoothly.
I Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph
Malchmaker can help you underst~d what to do to make the rela• tionship work. Mail $2.75 to
j Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
~ P.O. Bo~ 1758, Murray Hill Sta'1 tion. New York, NY I0 I56.
'• CANCER (June 21-July 22)
: When in charae or in possession
l of someone else's property todtiy,
take e~lra cure to be prolecli ve of
his or her belonalnas. If you
break somelhing. you'll be held
: accounlable.
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Should
{ a disagreemenl arise today
~ between you and your mute. tulk
L1~ings out and resolve your dif·

'
f

Phone 992-2155
•J

;

l

per inch

7 Jeane

trademark

the Clrrlngtons

pod

t0
11
12
19
21

Mit. IChOOI
Poet Ogden -

Pass

Pass

22 Cantankerous

23

Jecob'a sibling
Semester

Like

beets

CroSIIed a river

24
25
26
27

Machine port
Altrol
Zoo home

Mualc holla
Stolen

property

29 Genus of

olive trees

30 Blrd's
home
31 Scottloh·
Gaelic
37 " t think,
therefore,

Dbl.
Pass

Pass

--"

38 Sleeplng-

9

alcknesolly
40 Roqulrea
41 Hlghlande
group
42 Greaey
43 Room pert
45 Order ol
whalel
·48 Soulhwaotarn
Indiana
47 Oock
48 Life etory, lor
ehort
50 a11n1teln'e
nickname
52.:.. Ungua
(airline)
53 lletwelin
Colo.
and Mo.

BY PHILLIP ALDER
During the month of April, I
ran a duplicate in Hobe Sound,
Fla. One day, due to a clash with
a major golf tournament at the
club, we had only five-and-a-half br--1--1-tables, half the normal turnout.
That meant a good 30-minute sitout for one pair each round. So,
we called Anne Chatham to ask if 1-..l.....L.-1-.!......L..she would be wi)ling to partner
CELEBRITY CIPHER
me. Anne arrived in time for the
.
by Luis Campos
.
second round. This was our first
Celebrity C~1 coyplogn\mt ore creolod from quotations by famous peopkl, pall and
present. Each letter In the cipher &amp;lands 'or another.
board out of the slot.
Today's clUB.' A oqusls B
North should have opened
three hearts. lf you are holding an
'OP
RZM
SJKE
EZ
TEYDXF
PZV
excellent seven-bagger, start with
IVFJEKFTT,
RZM
TWZMNH
YJEEFYK
a three-bid (or sometimes a fourbid, especially when nonv~lneraRZMVTFNP
JPEFY
IVFJE
YFZYNF . '
. ble against vulnerable opponents).
Over my takeout double, I
(YFHTCDK
NDKFAJGCFV)
NJXJY
think South should have shut her
eyes and jumped to three noJYVDKIEZK
. trump. She has eight tricks, and a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "M..ybe t alii some kind of ve'Y lqlaltaniiMtlngs In
decent partner will.produce numthe IIDUI of people without willing H.' - Lila Kedrova
ber nine. Note that that contract
WOlD
can be made. '
lAM I
Four diamonds was too high
when Anne led the spade nine.
After winning my queen with her
ace, declarer drew trumps: Anne
disca~ded 'an en~ouraging club .
seven· and .two •of her useless
'.,
hearts. Now came a spade to dum·
t :
my's 10: I won wit.h the king and
exited safely with a spade.
G L E E- 0
This left declhrer to broach t'he
clubs herself, and she couldn ' t
win. If she played ·1ow to dumo · I. don'l ·
aoout gettmg
my's eight, I would win with the
h-..,;.:R~H~I:..,::E~T~ ';' ·wrinkles too
in life. In my way
10. If she led low to the queen . I
6
7
:;
!:
·of
lhinking
they
will
come at ex- ·
would win with the ling and
L.--l.I.-.1..-L.
.
.....L.,_.J.'
:aclly
the·.----•
-.
switch to the heart ace. Yet when
.. .
.
.
South tried the club jack from ·
1,....----..,R--:-1. ,. .0...,.A-M~E
hand, my partner won with the ace
I
G Complete
the chuckle quoted
and played another club, giving
_ •
.
•
.
.
_
by flllin; In the mlulng words
1-..L.....L-L-...L....L.....I you develop from step No. 3 below.
me two more tricks in the suit for .
one down.
A PRINT NUMBERED
W' LETTERS
With a long minor, always
think three no-trump .

I'

Sentinel

i

:.s,
.

9

Jean·Paul-

39 TV_... about 8 TwDpeal--

10 7 4

To get a current weather
report, check the

I'

i

thriftily)
Author

I I I' I I

'

•

6

-=-,'

Mike Sharp ·
740-949-3606 :

'
I

'

.'

I

Quality Drlv-aya,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Fru Eatlmaatea

5 - out(uae

I I' I e I
I 1 I I I l.

mo. pa~

~

•,
.: •
•,
'
'
• •·
•:
:,
•
:,

ffiOC.OU.TE
1:, TI-lE :&gt;TN'F
OF 1-\Y l.l FE I

l

CONCRETE
CQtU:IIii~IQtl

•:
::

•:
Now Taking Applicalions for 1 Bedroom
Apartment
' ,
:•
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
: · Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On-Site Laundry,
, Community Room, 24 Hour' Maintenance
•
Provided
:
Call or Come By Our Office .Located at
•
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
•
Office Hours
:
Monday and Thursday 10 am . 3 pm
•
Phone (740) 992-6419

;
•
...
~

•

"'

740·992·5212. :'

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement. 1;$/
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home . ~.
r:::.o:~~

A.f\ ... B(i:E.~IT':&gt; lf\C. 5T/'.ff
. Of LifE!

.13795 Hiland Rd.:
Pomeroy, Ohio ~

Advertise your business

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

THE BORN LOSER ..

High &amp; Dry
Sel.f-StoragJj

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box189

'

Now Renting{

.

The

.

!

'

I Selenc:e rooma
2 Tennla player
Naataae
3 Tardy
4 "Social" and

Bridge from reality

QUALITY
LANDSCAPE

740·985::'.!~! ..... L--20-Y-rs_._Ex...:p~
. •Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

mo pd.

LATI·BREAKIN'
NEWS, ELVINEY !!

Bulldooer &amp;: Backhoe
· Se"'ieeo
Hou.., &amp; Trailer Siteo

4/281

25 Dyed
28 Make amanda

patron
37Repeel

2"
3"

Opening lead: •

:1

ofpointinsLet me oo_
uf.or: you"

Pass

4•

l'M READY FER TH'

740·985-4141
- 4
Residential· decks, kitchens, Commercial· metal studs;.
bathrooms, ciasto.m ·
drywall, suspended ceilings
remodeling, handicap access
Mike w. Marcum :
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
OWner
•'
vinyl siding

T&amp;D

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters .
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimales

MIKE YOUNG
740.992-7724
PAT YOUNG
7411-949-8046

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

.Custom Carpet, Vinyl,
Commen:lal an Ceramic
Tile, All ~~ of
..-rdwood ooring,
Carpet Binding and
Restretchlng.
30 Yrs. Experience

• RPoflng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

3+

. y~.

Long Bottom, Ohio

car)
56 Slocklnga
57 WrRor
Hemingway

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
West North East
South

R;'

Sepric Syole"" &amp;
Urilitieo

54 United
55 Two- - (amalt

,DOWN

34 Cryatat·
con,.tnlng
atone
351ron
36 Raatauront

• J 94

s

48 ~lty
obllgeled
51 Becan'MI fond
of (2 wda.)

2t Tr.....CovenHI
32Bedeck
.
33 Mora pettld

Q4 2

• 9 6 3 2
• K 10 5

t

A

SON

.,.

" A2

" A-.-K Q J

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

&amp;

..

18 "Cycle" start
20 Drone

South
e A J 6.

M

, •. . , ••a.
""diP'

e K

• 9 87 5
• 10 9 8 6
+1'5
e A732

'

17 Ylew

0&amp;-12-00

• 10 3
YKQJ7543
• 8
• Q8 6
East

West

(740) 992-347Q

BUILDING

•) Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

'

Bulldozer Services ;

20Yn•xpei1elct l

For Your Pel'slltttls.

, BISSELL IUILD.EIS
INC.

Nort

Fill Dirt • Mukh • ~·

CONCRETE · BACKHOE SERVIQS
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVIQS

GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING
SERVICE

o,.. For &amp;roo111111

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

Pougllkeepele,

New YOflc

Gravel• Sand • Topsoil ·

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

Poma ·

• NewHomea
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

18. ColleGe In

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
Q:
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N :

R

7 Leo'a oon

EXCfiYfiTIHQ .
Hauling • Umestone • :

41 Etale, e.g.
44Uncle
.

1 Eaallf ftowera ot5 -and ..ucer

"fiOUnQ ......

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC • ..

~

ACROSS
13 Nome'a piKa
14 Put Into a
conllllner
15 Olataatelul

'

7/22/TFN

"We're Back"

1i211M 1 .n.i. Del.

Mystic

740.GG2·1671

815100

S"fiDE RNER fiQ SERVICE

L

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks - Garnges.l

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hou,..
7:00AM ·8 PM

$300.00 coverall
$500.00 Slarburet

(7 40) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Comtruetlon

7~949-2217

2,000 sf. Modem Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
for Lease. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass. ·
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-795.3-992-6810-992-5404

OLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGROO"D
'' 6129/mo.

'

'

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

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

750 Easl Stale Slreel
· Alhens, Ohio 45701

29870Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Under Niw Ownt[fhlp

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

'

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

SELF STORAGE

I '

par g•lflt

Uc. II OQ..SO

BRIDGE

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eeglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'Your ·

'···--·-

1

. .... . ....

Indian-Impel-Atlas-Trusty -LISTEN to IT
"You have the treedom ot speecn," the clerk told his
scream ing client "and I have the right not to LISTEN to
.IT."

IMONDAY

JUNE 121

I

'Birthday

ferences promptly. Letting things negotiating with someone who is
linger would prolong' the tension a sharp horse lrader if you try to
and agony.
be too coy about things . Lay all
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) your cards on the table.
Take extra precautions over what
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
you say· tQday to a person who is Be careful how you conduct your·
a known gossip. Given half the self in front of an audience today,
chance, this individual will distort because your image couhl be a bit
your comments, and you will be fragileat this time. Poor behavior
blamed.
would lessen the esteem in which
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2~) Sit- you're held.
uations that have the elements of · · PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
being a financial risk should be You should profit from your past
avoided today. It isn't likely you experience should u situations
would be able to overcome the arise today that is very similar to
odds.
one that previously caused you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) trouble. Stop and . remember
The very people who are near and before you leap again into the
dear to you could put your fray.
.
patience ro lhe tesl today, but try, , ARIES (Murch 21-Apnl 19)
to be understanding and allow Bec~use your JUdgment coul~ be
them a little human . frailties. a lrtfle faulty today. you mtghl
They'll appreciate your kindness. allow your~ll'lf 10 Ill: unduly intluSAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. enced by the udvtce of people
21) Althouah you love to· chal who are more off the murk than
wilh everyone, you might be a lit- you are. Be careful.
tie too free about whut you say
TAURUS (April 20·Mny 20)
today. You could reveal some Lead by eumple today, not by
important information 1o someone ls~u.lns . orders or using pressure
who'll use it agninsl you.
Incites to gel your way. If you
CAP~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jnn. ~have i~ ~ dlclalorial or demand·
19) Youcouid end up outsmanins t~g way,n II only aggravnle asso·
yourself today when bargaining or elates.

,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Brov11 11 PHioburph I

1

�••

.••
,...,. ... The O.lly Sentinel

Mondlly, June12,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOA·RD Kmart.400
........................ :!$ 34 .433 11/2

-

Tampa Bay....................... 23 38 .3n
c-..Dtvlolon
~ .......................... 37

-OMolon

._,

W L Pet.

G8

.838
.551

5

.542

I

~Yolk ::: ::: : :: : ~

MDnlr""' ..........................32 27
............................ .211 35
Phllodolptia ....................23 37
c.ntni!DMolon
St. Louls ...........................:w 211
Clnclnnotl ................._..M 21
PiltabtJrgh .......................27 33
Chleago .......................... 26 37
Milwaukee .......... .............25 37

.444
~2
.383 15 112
.548

.526 11/2
.4fi0

e

.013 8 1/2

.403

Houston .......................... 22 .a .365

9
12

WoatDMolon

Mzona ..................... ,, .... 37 25 .15e7
Colctado .................... .....34
loo AngeiH ..................... 33
San Froncisco ..................26
San Olego .... ......... .... ....... 27

25
27
31
34

.57e 1 1/2
.550
3
.475 7 1/2
.443 9 1/2

S11111&lt;14oy'aCt..lland I, ClnciMOII S

24 .807

c~ "'-""..,_......34 21 .m
KanouCily ..................... 32 29 .525
... .................... :!$ 35 .444
Detro~ ..................... :....... 23 35 .397 12

2
5
10
112

-OMolon

Oakland .......... ................ 34 21 .1148
............. ............... 32 27 .542
t/2
2
Analleim ......... ...............32 30 .511
To... ................ .............. 30 3t .492 3 t/2
.
TOdoy'oGamoa
Toronto (CUtillo 1-5) at Detro~ (Noma 2·5),
7:De p.m.
Chicago WhHo Sox (EI- &amp;-2) II Clov ..
land CRifldon 1-G), 7:05 p.m.
Booton (Rooe 3'3) at N.Y. Yankooa (Hemandez 8-4), 7:05p.m.
SOOttlo (Moyer 3'2) ol Kan,.. Cky (Batista
2·5), 8:05p.m.
.
Oaldancl (Het'adia 8-3) a1 Minnesota (Milton
5·1), 8:05p.m.

Tu-y'o Clamoo

Boston (P.Mardnez 9·2) at N.Y. Yankees
(Mendcza 5-3), 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Andr.,.. HI at Detroit (Blair 2·1).

N.Y. Yankoot 13, N.Y. Moll 5
CNcago WMe Sole 4, Chlcogo Cuba 3

7:05p.m.

Montrool 11, Tororno 2

land (ColOn 8-3), 7:011 p.m.

Anohelm10.Artzona3
Seanle 5, San Francisco 2
Florida 5, Tampa Bay 1
Delroll 1o, St Louis 1
Balllmore 11, Phlladelpllla 4
Milwaukee 5, Mlmesota 3
A11onta I, Boston 0
COiot'ldo 12, Texas IS
KaMas City 2, Pittlburgh t. 12 innlnga
l.&lt;&gt;o Angelu 7, Oakland 2
san Diego 13, Houston 3

12

Chicago Whlto Sox (Porquo &amp;-2) a1 c1....
Anaheim (Etherton 0-1) at Tampa Bay

(R-r 2·3) , 7:15 p.m.
Toua (l&lt;loling 7·4) at Balli'"""' (EHckaoo 2·
3), 7:35 p.m.
Seottte (Mocha 1-4) a1 Kansas City (Lo&gt;cton
0.0), ·8:05p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 3·2) at Minnesota (Mays 3·
7), 8:05 p.m.

Sunday'• Chmee
St. Louis 7. Ootron 3
Toronto 8, Montreal 3
Boston 5, Atlanta 3

Tampa Bay 7, Florida 6
Baltimore 7. Philadelphia 2
Milwaukee 5, Minnesota 3
Chicago Cubs e. Chicago WMe So• 5-

Cinolnnoll7, Clovlland

Ployoll Glonco

By The"-lllttd ,,...
FINIII
(IIM1-ol•7)
WedM ..Iy, Jun• 7
L.A. L.akers 104, lndle.na ar

s, 131nnlngo

Pittsburgh to, Kansas City e, 1o Innings
Colorado 9, Teqs e
Oakland e. LOs Angeles o
Anzona 3, Anaheim 2
SaeHie 9, San FrllflCisco 2

San Diego 4, Houston 1
N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees, ppd., rain

F~doy,Junel

LA. Lakers 111 , Indiana 104
Sundoy, Juno 11
Indiana tOO, LA. l.akers 9t, LA. l.akers
IMd aeries 2·1

Wedn..Uy,June14

Todoy'o Gomoo

L.A..Laker• at Indiana, 9 p.m.
Friday, Juno11
LA. l.akers at Indiana. 9 p.m.
Mondly, June 11
Indiana at LA. Lakero. 9 p.m.. d neceosary
WeclnMday, Jun• 2t

Allaroo (Millwood 4-5) at Pmsburgh (Anchia
4-3), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Penny 3-6) at Philadelphia (Polllte
·
0.0), 7:35p.m. ·
Montreal (Vazquez 6·2) at Milwaukee (Bore
3-5), 8:05p.m.
St Louis (An.Benes 5·3) at
Oiago
(Ciem«rt 5-5), t0:05 p.m.
Mzona (Anderson 5-t) at Los Angelos
(OJeilort 4-3), t0:10 p.m.
Clf)Cinnoll Chfl 4-4) a1 8an Froncllco
(Na!Mn 2·1), 10:15 p.m.

Indiana at LA. Lakera, e p.m•• if necessary

san

St.

Tuoadlly'o Gomoo

san

Louis (KIIe 9-3) at
otego (\.Qpez 0·
2), 5:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Burk&amp;H 4-3) at Pittsburgh (Anderson
t -4). 7:0S p.m.
Florida (Smith 0.0) at Philadelphia (Person
5·2), 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mats (Reed 3-t) at Chicago Cubs
(Tapani 4-6), 8:05p.m.
Montraai(Pavano e-3) at Mllwaukoo (Wright
t •1), 6:05 p.m.
Houston (Reynods 5·3) at Coklnldc (Atrojo
4·4), 9:05 p.m.
Arizona (Mo&lt;gan 1-0) at Los Angelos (Pari&lt;
7-4), 10:1 0 p.m.
,
Clnctnnoll (F......,..u 2-G) a1 son Froncloco (~M),10:15 p.m.
AmertcaniLNguo

EaolemDivtolon
Toom
W L Pet. GB
Now VOrl&lt; .........................33 24 .579
............................33 :!e .!1&amp;9
1
TORlriO .......................... :.33 31 .111 31/2

$38,200.
14. (3) Joff Gordon, Chavrolol, 193,
$47,250.
15. (40) Jimmy Sponcor, Ford, 193,
$41,650.
18. (20) Ken Schrader, Pontlac, t93,
$30,375 .
17. (23) lolaH Konsetn, Ford, 193, $37,650.
18, (5) .Joo - · ChavrOiot, 193,
$37,315.
.
19. (11) SooltPnJotl, Ford, 193, $26,000.
20. ~30) Mike Skimer, Chevrolet, 193,
$41 ,085.
21 . (12) Kevin Lapage, Ford, 193, $38,3e5.
22. (1 5) Michael Waltrip, ChevrOiat, t 93,
$36,t50.
23. (32) Jerry Nadeau, Chevrolet, 193,
$35.890.
2•. (11) Johnny Benson , I=Jontiac, 193,
$27,870.
25. (17) Dave Blaney, Pontiac, 193,
$24,t20.
26. (37) Torry Labonte, Chevrolet, t93,
$4t,960.
27. (21) Elliott SOdter, Ford, 193, $36,200.
26. (25) Robby Gorden, Ford, 193, $23,840.
29. (14) Stave Park, Chevrolet, 193,
$34,905.
30. (29) Rick Mast, Pontiac, t92, $35,2.0.
31 . (34) Kenny WOIIaee, ChevrOlet, 192,
$23,5t0.
32. (38) Chad Little, Ford, t 92, $34,4.0.
33. (43) Ed Barrlor, Ford, 192, $23,335.
34. (24) WOit)' Dallenbach Jr.. Ford, t92,
$28,265.
35. (1 B) Kenny Irwin, Chevrolet, 10:1,
S33,e95.
36. (42) Bratt Bodine, Ford, t 91, $23,150.
37. (~7) Mike Bliss; Pontiac, 19t , $23,090.
36. (38) G-ey Bodine, Chavrolel, 190,
acc&lt;lont. $30,090.
39. (35) KytePatly, Ponllac.1e7, engine laD·
ure, $30,855.
.0. (1 8) Mart&lt; Martin, Ford, t63, $40,920.
41. (22) Joromy Mayfield. Ford, 176, engine
fuilure, $40,885.
42. (33) Stacy Compton. Ford, 143,
$22,650.
43. (4t) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolst, t6, ·
accident, $30,815.
Rec• NoteboOk
Time of Race: 2 hrs., 41 mlns., 45 sees.
Margin of VICIOI'y: Under caUIIon.
Avorago Spaid: 143.826 mph.
Load Changes: 19 among 11 drivers.
cautiorn;: 41or 20 laps.
' Lap Laadero: Rudel 1, B.Labonte 2-8, Rudd
7·13, B.LabOnte 1&lt;4·19, Wallace 20-22, Rudd
23·54, M!l)'lield 55:55, Stewart 88-68, J.Gor·
don 69-70, Lepage 71-72, Mayfield 73·112,
B.Labonte113-118, Andrettl119; Mayfield t2o153, JarreH t54·t56, B.Labonte 157·178,
J.Burton 179, Prasstay 1110-164, Stowa• 185194.
Pdnt Standings: B.LabOnte 2,116, D.Eamhard1 2.018, w.Burton 2.014, Jarrett t ,955,
J.Surton ·1,865, Wallace 1,855, Stawan 1,821,
Rudd 1,813, Martin t,79B, J.Gordon t,732.

;

~om

the NASCAFI Winston Cup Series Kmart
400 at Mich~n Spaldway wllh flnllhlng pos&gt;
non, starting position (In parentheses), driver,
type of car, laps complated, raason o.. (W anY)

and money won:
1. (28) Tony Stewart. Pontiac, 194,
$123,800,
2. (9) Dale Earnhardt. Chevrolet, 194,
$80,575.
3. (1) Bobby Labonte. Pontiac, 194,
$79,175.
4. (26) Dale Jarrert, Ford, 194, $71,215.
5. (31) Robon Praastey, Ford, 194,$51,000:
e. (13) ward Burton, Pontiac, 194, $55,e75.
7. (4) Rusty wallace, Ford, 194, $49,625.
8. (B) Bill Ell~ Ford, 194, $44,750.
9. (10) Jam Androttl, Pontiac. 194, $50,200.
10. (39) Stoning Martin, ChavrOiat, 194,
$48,100.
11. (7) Jell Bunon, Ford, 194, $54,750.
12.. (2) Ricky Fludd, Ford, 194, $41,050.
13. (I) DOlo Jr, ~; 193,

BASEBALL
Amerlctln LAgue

BOSTON REO SOX-Activatad 26 Jose

Offerman from the 15-day disabled list.
PaWiuc~et

at the

NEW YORK YANKEES- Signed

FIHP

Optioned RHP Dan Smith to

International League.
Dwight

.

and held a lead of nearly
seven seconds over Janet!, who
dominated this race in winning a
from Pap 11
year earlier.
But his troubles began when all
was doing it. I didn't really like the leaders pitted under caution
seeing him back there at the end." after the can restarted. Mayfield
But Earnhardt, who barely held was sent to the rear of the longest
off Labonte ar the end - with ·. lin~ for the gleen-flag restart as a
the two bumping as they drove pe~ty for having one of his
side-by-side through the fourth Wofn •tires boance off a crewman
turn on the last green-flag lap opto pit road ,d.uring his stop.
also seemed happy with 'the t Mayfield's FCfrd, which restarted
abbreviated finish.
13th, got all ' the way to sixth
"We still ,weren't quite as good before.\his enpne_blew, bringing
as the 18 or the 20 at the end;' out another caution on-lap 176.
said Earnhardt, who moved put ? '"SOmething.l just broke," the
Ward Burton into second place in disappointed Mayfield Said. "We
the season standings, trailing know who had the best car here
Labonte by 98 points after 14 of again."
'
34 races.
• Meanwhile, Labonte, who won
Burton, who finished sixth, here last August, had taken charge
right behind Pressley, fell to thitd, aftei .taking thf lead from Jarrett
.four . points behind seveQ-time on lap 157. He built a lead of
series champion Earnhardt.
more than two secbnds over
Before the first rain came, it was Stewart before ~ayfiej4's engine
Jeremy Mayfield who loo~ed like .: blew.
·
the man to beat.
The leaders pitted On lap 178,
Mayfield led 85 of the first I 51 . during the caution, and Labonte

NS

NASCAR-I&lt;. .rt4CO Rooulto
BllOOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - AesuHI Sunday

'
laps

Gooden to a minor league contract

TEXAS RANGERS-Ileolgnated OF Jason
1or assignment.
TORONTO B~UE JAYs-Signed RHP
Dustin McGowan, RHP Michael Smith and SS
Me~

William Rivera.
Nai,_IL.Nguo
MONTREAL EXP05-Piaced RHP T.J
Tucl&lt;er on tho 15-day disabled list. Recalled
LHP David Mor,a from Ottawa of the International Laague. ranalerred LHP MaH Blank

from the 15- to 60-day CL

./

J

''FREE''

Medicare
Medicaid

Health.Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare .
Aged and Disabled Part B premium .and the coinsurances(s) and deductibles
you are required to make as
part
of the
Medicare
Program.

Call Today!

Specified
Low-Income
Medicare
Beneficiaries
Medicaid (called SLMB):

1-800-992-2608
Or

a1
Melp County's

More.~

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - An appeal for help
from the Meigs County commissioners
in operating th e London Pool in Syracuse came Monday during the boatd's
regular meeting.
Councilman Bill Roush and Robert
Wingett, grants administrator, met with
commissioners to request "manpower
assistance" in operation of the pool.
"We have . a dilemma with regard to
our pool, and our dilemma is ' your
dilemma," Wingett said. "We are. faced
'with the lack of funds to make it work."
Wingett said that last year; the com-

."

.,

.

~

"

~-"·

I, '

);

I

•

'' ·'• Free~~~ whelp you fipd chil~.~ · :,:
• Information on choosing quality child care l
• Help on guidance-and disciplin~ questions. ~.1
I

f!

BY BRIAN J. REED
NEWS STAFF

•

~ ¥QAD-Ihe Q,Q,~~- for .Ohio ~~Jan D~eJ~e!ll , ~

., ttte:.·v~iGgi;~i{~;;Mij~+~
• '

afford
fiieworks 'and pay r#ses
police officers? ·
The question was , discuss.e d during Monday's reg- ,
ular council m~eting, an!l.
the answer was appar(ntly,
"yes."
.
·
.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
cast a tie-breaking vote in
favor of. paying $5,000 for ,
·the anriuaf fireworks display,
after Councilmen Roger
Manley and Bob Pooler ·
voted . 'against !he expenditure, Councilors Kathy Scott
and Stephen Houc~ins voted
in favor.
· "It's · too late in the game
to change our minds,"
. lannarelli said, noting plans
for the' fireworks have been
·under 'flay since early this
year.
.
Police Chief Bruce Swift
•
met with council a month
·ago ·to discuss the relatively
!ovii salaries paid to hi$ offi- c~rs, and has said the village .
. will continue to lose 'qualified officers unless wages are
increased.
Last night, Poo1er made
reference to the wages paid
ro officers in other nearby

• ) 1' ;*)"

- ~·mro.oDly
as~~4
·~
~ ·~~
t-•,. Questions: .· .

•.:~; (''
-~. _..

1J

.

I

'

·:. ·-· . .
:'·'

-

1

jJ ....

•••

-.

•

,

II

{~

..

, .'¥

•

' '1

t

·

~

-

t

,

'/

{

C, • .., o

i

J~r ~t: -~~.~a!-~.~£~li!Y~::.... ·:

·1 • 1 Ndinimstr~tion

or by the

l'rogram ref~~~rses . :· ~hio·: .~~paftfil~ij~~J't JH~.'
you for the part o~ ~~. Part . &amp;'Family Servic~s thrQugh;
B premiu~ ~~~ -~~~ 'J ~ave 1: •• i~ ~~unty M~~~~,' ·.
'
already patd whicl} · -' went ": ,Sern,ces (CMS,) . .
toward home he~th ;, :Care. II-.''· J...:· , . ·"' ·
. · v. u
•
. , ···; .· · Q: ~ nat ts ~e age when I
0
will
recetv4! a . ~ -am
. . const"dere
.. d "Age
. d"'.
._~~ .
reimbursement check -once a
·
·
year. The income limits. are A: ..t\ge 65
higher than QI-1--Medicaid.
. Q:r)Vhat services. are covered:·.
.
. · ,,
, · by Medicaid? ·
Qualified Workini . nisables . ;, .
'·,
Individual' (called Qwrii): ; A:·Apy of these services are
·
,.covered if they are
:.l .
.
.
I
·~medically necessary for
This program pays for ·yo\lr ryou: · .
...
.
'.
'
Medicare · Part A- premium
Doctor Visits
.:
only. QWDI
can help you if
Hospital Care
.
0
"/ "
Immunizations
you have.· lost eligibiijty for
. '
Substance·At;'use
Title ll disability '·· benefi~s
..
Prescriptions
due to earnings. ·
'·
,,
Vision ·
'I·
'I
Dental
Mental Health
This

•

'

••

• '!

Pl1111 ·-

Cllulidl, ..... AS

on ~otme~
.,
The~ were Daniel Belcher, &amp;ggess, Breane
· Buc~ Sheryl L. Ca=n,DavidR. ~llimworth,
Jason E. cCiunts, R oben L. Diddle, Benjamin L. Gangwer; Reatha L. Klein, Robert A Klein, Melinda S. Laudermilt,Jennifer Mankin, Charles W McKinney,AnUnda S. Miracle, Jacquelyn M. Payne. TonyJ. Powell,Melissa D. Priddy, Tommy Pugh, Fred C. Rider, Wendy J.
Sizemore, Rick J. Smith and Shelley J. Welch. ·
Recognized and presented certificates fur hours
completed in the program were Mary Bunch, 500
hours; Sandra Darst, 400 hours; Sharon Buckley,
Ronald Grimm, and Fred C. Rider,.200 hours; and

REVIEw SAMPLE- Mike Mullen of Ohio's Hill Country Heritage Area reviews a tourism guidebook from _North Carolina

which will serve as a sample for a book to 1;&gt;e marked by Ohio' s hill counties. Meigs County Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton and Mick Davenport ar'!l also pletured. (Bri~n J. Reed photo)

'

Commissioners to ·spOnsor guidebook
.

.

. BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Director of heritage area
Michael Mullen is pursuing a
POMEROY-· 'MelgsCminty commissioners will sponsor a Hill Country · $110,000 grant to develop and
Heritage Area guidebook to be proposed
print the guidebook,
in a grant application by Ohio's Hill
which Wtrdd be sold
Country Heritage Area.
through retail outlets.
Michael Mullen, director of the heritage area, met with the commission!'fS
Monday to review a similar project created and' sold by a region in western North
Carolina.
: Mullen is pursuing a $110,000 gr.mt to
develop ar.d print the guidd&gt;ook, which ·
would be sold through retail outlets. The
grant application requires a government
sponsor, and Meigs County was asked to
sponsor the project because of its efforts
to promote heritage entrepreneurship
and tourism.
.
Mullen lll;lde specific reference to a .
crafters . brochure recently developed by

j

'

P l - . - GED, Pllp .U

the commissioners through a grant from
the Appalachian Regional Conimission,
designed to promote area, heritage crafis.
This "grassroots" elfort to promote the
area economy takes ~t;age of the
increasing importance ofitourism.to local
economy.
.
·~smokestack chasing is not all it's
cracked up to be;' Mnlleri said. "Ohio's
Heritage Areas are a good way to promote a sustunable economic development while -promoting a community's

assets.''
The guidebook would promote seven

"trails" fur tourists in the Appalachian
region of Ohio, and would emphasize
~'real and authentic" sites, such as the Serpent Mound in western Ohio, and
Mullen said, the Buffington Island,
Chester Courthouse · and other Civil
War-era attractions.in M eigs County and
the surrounding counties. The program
would include 31 of Ohio's 88 counties.
The grant application does not require
a cash committnent from the county; and,
,if approved, the guidebooks would generate revenue to fund Mullen's prognms.
The first phase of the project would
involve 25,000 copies of the thematic
guidebook, although Muhen noted the
North Carolina book has undergone a
number of printings.
The book would be available through
retail outlets, such as Barnes and Noble
and Amazon.com. The North Carolina
book sells for $11.95.

THE GRADUATES - Receiving GED diplomas
were left to right, front, Jem)ifer Mankin, Minia R.
Boggess, Wendy Sizemore and Mellnd"' laudermilt, and back, Daniel Belcher, Charles McKinney,
Fred Rider and Robert Klein. Several others were
· unable to attend because of work or school
schedules. (CharleneHoeflich photo)

'

'

992-2117

'

This type of Medicaid pays
only for your Medicare Part
B premium.

Meigs County
Department o(
Job &amp; Family
Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH

Governor: New court won't
solve school-fundirtg problem
COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob July. :
.
· Tali doesn't believe the Ohio
The governor's office will
Supreme Court would' recon- also establish .a Web site to take
sider its sc!tpol-funcling deci- comments from education
sion even if its makeup was groups and 'others about possichanged by the Nov. 7 election, ble solutions.
The Supreme Court has
nor would that be an appropriate solution to the state's ruled 4-3 against the state twice
school-funding · problems, the in the last 3~ years. In the latest
decision, the court said Ohio~
governor said.
funding
system still relies too
"The decision is there, the
· decision is a reality;' Tali said. much ·on local property taxes,
"This election isn ~ going to leading tli a disparity betWeen
rich and poor districts.
make that case go ~"
The Ohio Republii:an Party
Taft spoke at a lunch for
has
tatgeted the Nov. 7 re-elecStatehouse reporters where he
armounced he would lead a tion bid of Supreme Court Jusseries of field trips across Ohio tice Alice Robie Resnick, who
to discuss solution&lt; to the fund- wrote' the court'! decision last
ing dilemma with educators month that· said the state's
and citiiens. The first trip will school-funding system is still
be to southeast Ohio in mid- uncodstitutional.

I

Qualified Individuals
Medicaid (cal1ed Q0-1): .

1

This program provides the
'
same benefits as SLMB;
however,
the
income
standards are higher than
those allowed for SLMB.

45760

I

' '

. .

~1

I

1'.'

Other.~.

...
...

i

POMEROY -"These instructors have. given me
the courage, the confidence and the support 1 needed
to get my diploma.And thank you for being here at my
graduation;' said a beaming Minia R. Boggess as she
accepted her GED certificate Monday night.
Boggess was one of 22 Meigs County Adult Basic
and Literacy Education srudents awarded a general
equivalency diploma at the annual recognition dinner
in the Meigs High School cafeteria under sponsorship
of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
. Seveml students..spoke as they accepted certificates
from their,iiJslructo"• and p~es 'from Bernard Fultz

•

'
.
'•
Qualified Individuals '·- .2 .A:: M~dicaid requires a
..
Medicaid (called QI~2) fY
-~j.di~ability, de~ermina~on

••

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

CUSS tOn

'

Please see Pool, Pille .U

BY CWJUNE Ho&amp;uat

Police wages
.also topic of dis-

for a nat of providers In your community.- :1

Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton an'd
Mick Davenport pledged to in..,estigate
the possibility of obtaining funds through
the Prevention, Retention and Contingency program at the Department of
Jobs and Family Services (formerly the
Department of Human Services), or
summer youth employment funds. available through the Workforce Investment
Act program (formerly JTPA) .
Thornton, however, said no funds
would likely be available through local
county revenues to assist with the pool's
operation.

GED certificates
awarded to 22 I
ABLE students I.
i• .

CALL: l :-.800-577-:22.76 ·-~
•

cost. The $5,000 would cover half of the
payroll cost involved in operating the
pool, which costs the village about
$28,000 in salaries, chemicals and other
expenses.
"This pool serves not only the people
of Syracuse, but a lot of people in the

surro unding communities," he said.
"London Pool accomodates people in all
income categories, many of them of low
and moderate income. Families with
higher incomes often have private pools.
"The county has a real obligation to
recreation."
Wingett noted no county funds are
being spent on recreation programs, and
said the commissioners provided about
$5,000 to the pool's operation until two
years ago, when the commissioners
determined funding of village-run parks
and pools was inappropriate based upon
an opinion from the state auditor.

·fireworks ~

,•

'

Wingett said an estimated shortfall of
$10,000 this year might threaten the
pool's operation next year, if the county
is not willing to shoulder a part of the

Wingett said an estimated
shorifall of $10,000 this year
might threatm the pool's
operation next year, if the county
is not willing to shoulder
a part of the cost.

.debates

COAD Child ca&amp; Resource Network is a FREE
Community
service
that ofTen:
.
.
. ' . .'

.

rmsstoners gave a "strong indication"
they would assume part of the payroll
cost associated with the pool's operation.
The men asked the commissioners pay
for two lifeguards and the pool manager
for the season, at an estimated cost of
$5,000.
"We understand that you can't make a
direct payment to the pool, but we hope
that you can help us with the manpower
.
"
ISSUe.

-M'port
.Council

••

'LOOKING fOR CHILD CARE?

:h·

'

so Cents

Commissionen hear appeal for London Pool

.

'
1
w·
H
. e p tt . .
.
·
E.
·
,
.Q: W,bo dete~~es whether
Medtcare. , xpenses .:. I ·am disabled? · ·
·
I

Hometown Newsp•per

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volu me 5 1, Nu mber 11

Monday, · .:June ·~ 12 · Star
Boun
·Entertainment will have Benefit Karaoktf
from PapB1
" I thought that was the only ' 9 to 12 at Jimmy's Sports Bar I~
chance I had," Alomar said. "But I
Pomeroy. Eric Thorla has ·brain cancef
·
should have kept it."
and . needs ·''help with his,' tr~atmenf
After an intentional walk,
Boone hit his single down the '
expens~as. Th~re .will be, . ~ ,$~ ..fjQ. ~ov•,~
left-field line and the Reds won
for just the fourth time in 1 1~ • )charge at th~ door for donations~ A'n~

•

June 13, 2000

A&amp;

aJii!

Reds

games.
Manny Aybar, (1-2), Cincinnati's fifth pitcher, worked two
innings for the win.
Richie Sexson homered and
Kenny Lofton reached base six of
seven times for the Indians.
The Indians stranded 14 runners and left the bases load_ed ,in i
the bottom of the' . 1Oth :.vhen
Omar Vizquel hit into an inningending double play. Vizquel went
0-for-7 and left 12 runners oh ·
base, six in scoring position.
Cleveland also wasted a great
performance by starter ' c~uck
Finley, who took a one-h1t
shutout into the eighth.
.
Finley · had retired 18 of 19
entering the eighth when Boone
do~bled and Chris Stynes ~ing).ed.' ·

Tuesday

•

••

I

Qpalified
•
Beneficiaries
(called QMB):

Details, A3

~

~

Help With
Medicare Expenses

slipped to -sixth after his crew h
trouble removing a lug nut on tit
right rear tire.
:
"I felt like we had the best cit
before the caution came otlt
when Mayfield's car blew uJI:'
Labonte said. "You can look at lt
two ways. I feel like we we.f
lucky to get back to third."
"
After that: Stewart, who has n.S.
career victories; 't ook charge. !
On the restart, Pressley, wliO
got the lead by taking only tWh
tires on his qnal pit stop, sta~
low on - the track and Ste~
charged past, pulling Jarrett
Earnhardt along.
. Ste~rtjoins rookietDale Ear
hardt Jr. as the only drivers wiQi
two victories
this . season. He ::S
.
also the first driver tq win two 111
a row since he managed the fe:t
late last season in Phoenix, Ariil,
and Homestead, Fla.
::
Stewart, who averaged 143.9:1t
mph-in tile race, sai4 winning~
straight "is either impressive !f
lucky. The fact is we won. Thai's
"
.
.J I
all we care ab out. ·
·'"'

,l

,

Souvenir flag inside today
Eastern science fair participants,

~=~
HIJh: lOS: tow: 601

•

"••
·•'
.

••

-'

~-

Meigs cheer champs

Today's .

Sentinel
S.elll'h'll-

2

· The Meigs seventhgrade cheerle!lders
recently competed in
the U.S.A. Cheerieading
Federation where they
won first place. They
also received a trophy
for best tumbling and.
'jumps. The. group qualified to compete by winning in the Regional
USACF competition at .
Rio.Grande College. Tak•
lng part were left to
right, front. Katie ReedJ
co-capUlin; Sarah Wilks.
captain; Casey Manly. :
Peggy Duff, co-captain,
Michelle Neece, and
AShley Baylor, and back,
Clera Sisson, Jerry
Bentley, and Amanda
Hoyt. They were
coached by Crls Kelly.

12 ,..... .

Calendar
C!anlfieda

A5

BH

Comic•

BS

M
A3

Editprjils
. Obituaries
Sports
Wutber .

81.6
A3

lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-1-5

PICk 4: 3-0-1-7

WVA,
o.ily 3: 7-9-7 "

o.n, 4: 4-1-8-2

I

0 2000 O hio Valley Publbhing Co.

.f. .. .

.'t

'

..,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="440">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9879">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25215">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25214">
              <text>June 12, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5684">
      <name>durieux</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="469">
      <name>watson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
