<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7767" 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/7767?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T18:20:16+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18179">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/52021cd432e3e9ac2a5ebe279e46ff95.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7feeac023d40e4f978762b0c0090e301</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25249">
                  <text>-'..
•
P~e

08 • 6unlllp 11imtll-6tntintl

540 Mlaeellaneoua
Merchlndlae

"MAZIIIOI.V LOW PRICES
WOLFFTANNINQ lEOS
euy FadOty Direct

Pets for Sale

710 Autoa for Sale

Ovtr 75 Tanka of Frntlwate r
Flan , locally Ralaed Paraktttal
Suppll11 . Flah Tank/ Pe t Shop,
2413 Jaekaon
AYinut .IPt.

1992 Nlnan Mulma Four Door,
Powtr Everything, Sunroof, CO,
Hlgl'l Mile ~to• . But Wall Main·
Iaine&lt;!, $4,000, Catt74o-446-aee:!.

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1996 Ford E· 150 Van , wheel
chair li lt, electric door . 20 .000
miles. excellent ahape , will take

Molasses makes comeback with farmers

e..olltnt Ftnanc:ing A&gt;la!._
Homo !Commoroial Units

e week old mate

BOMec pupa, no
papers. S1od; 8 weeki old mini•

1990 Lincoln Contlntntai, Mark
VII l.SC $4

turo Lop rabbill. $5.00 oec11: 740- '
.900, 7ol0-367~184.
742-2525.
1991 Olds cunas Calais, 4 cyl .,
AKC Golden Retriever Puppl11, Auto. 4 Door. ~uns Good, 11,200.
1"_10113·- ::--:--:-:-=
Roady Now, MilOS $200; Fo- 1:(740::):-:-41:::7

7
mal11 S225. No S.unday Calls 1892 Chtvy C.V.Mtr, Oj ,, te,OOO
Plu.M. 740-2~ .
miles, 2 dr.. c:&lt;lupe, red, 11800;
1990 Ford Tempo 4 c~t..,. dr.,
AKC Pomeranlant . 7 wka. old. 3 auto, t t3,000 miles, 1850; 198&amp;
males, Vet checked. 1300. (JAO) black Trana·Am, V·l, auto, t-tops,
-446-2463
pro ject car, t07 ,000

mu••.

AKC Reglltored Standard Poodle ,s_1.500
-:-:7-ol0-'-74.:2·.:m7,;.:;.;_'___
1
Pupa, 2 Ma let, For Peta Only. 1992" Grand Arn, very ""1\1\A eon·
Black InColor. 740-«1-9478.
..~
di110n , 13000, 7o10-892-3MO.

NEW ALBANY, Miss. (AP)
- Some Mississippi fanners are
finding molasses is .a sticky subject.
And they like it like that.
Molasses, which is made by
cooking down the juice sugar
cane or sweet sorghum stalks, is
making a comeback of sorts in
Mississippi's agriculture community, but growers say it never left.
" It's a 200-year-old prOduct
that people still love," said Gregg
Leath, a syrup supply dealer from
Westmoreland, Tenn.
Two generations ago, molasses
was the most common sweetener
in many Mississippi households,
simply because it could be produced at hom_(:.
Northeast Mississippi · syrup
producers usually opt to grow
sweet sorghum. which is ,planted
each year from seed, rather than
the ribbon cane that will grow
three or four years from a single
planting farther south.
While it requires more care and
expertise to turn mto syrup,
sorghum juice also has substantial
iron, potassium and calciu~, a
fact that makes some v1ew
sorghum molasses as a health
food. .
Many fanners, large and small
alike, are seeking new enterpris-

:::

thick, rich sweetener for whic~~
es to keep them profitable.
" Row crop farming in this consumers gladly pay from $30 t~ :
~~:
county is reversing itself," said $75 per gallon .
Patton
often
arranges
wit
'
Stanley Wise, Mississippi State
University •Cooperative Exten- sorghum and cane farmers to~
sion Service agent for Union combine their efforts at coun\)l:
'•
County. "This area, because it's fairs and local festivals.
He
tows
a
trailer-mounted;•
close to big markets in Memphis
' .
and Birmingham, would be well- crushing mill .to squeeze JU1cll"~
suited to a variety of specialty from sorghum brought by loc&lt;!f:
farmers , and ' together they c~~:
crops."
Sorghum can be a profitable the extract down mto molasses 11t .
enterprise for farmers willing to the accompanying wood-fired-;
.
commit the labor and initial syrup pan .
.
Fanners
who
participate
in
the.;
investment it takes to build the
storage and cooking facilities it Alcorn program average $30 p~ 1,
requires. Only about 5,000 acres gallon for their sales, which, with::
of the syrup source is grown typical yields of I00 to 150 gal ~ :
. now, compared with perhaps Ions per acre, are enough to make;
150,000 acres 40 years ago, said most row-crop fanners swoon. • :
William Patton, an extension
Those enticing P,rices keep:·
agronomy specialist with Alcorn Travis Chase of Algoma in the :
State University.
syrup business .
• :
Alcorn Extension's Small Farm
"I can sell more up there on:·
Program crisscrosses . the state, Highway 15 than I can possibly :'
giving active and potential syrup make," he said.
producers advice on growing and
. ·'-·
marketing their products. While
..-.
sorghum is relatively easy to
~·
grow and to sell, one major chal.
'
lenge comes in the labor-intensive
harvesting process.
-.., '.
An ellen bigger one is devel....~
• •
oping the part-art, part-science
• ••
skills involved iii cooking down
the juice until it becomes the
~ .... "

PUBUC NOTICE
Melga County board of
MR/DD Ia accepting 111l1d
btdo for the following two
vehlclu:
t. · ass School Bua.
IFDN860H2FVA08821 217
cho8111. Sold Ia Ia
condition. Ford Body and
guengJno.
1884 Bronco 11.
1FMBU148LEUD ZZZ3e
(Mfr'e Serial No.) v-e
engine. Will bl eald 11 11
condition. N.. .de body

-~.

.. -·.
.
--·

-..
. ..
~

~

Joint
Implant

z.

Surgeons, Inc.
•,,

'

work.

Seated bide to bt aent to:
Superintendent Melge
County Board of MR/DD
P.O. Box 307 Syracuea,
Ohlo45779
Envalop.. to be merkad
"BID"
To lnapect vehlclee, oeJI
992·8881 c!urlng normal
working houre (S am to 4
pm). Bin wiU be ojMnod at
12 noon an Ju• 30, 2000 111
tht offloea of Metga County
Board of MR/DD.
(8)11,18,25,310.

Details, A3

.

Joint Replacement... :
for all the things you
could be missing/

Public Notice

Trustee s~holarships awarded, As
Gordon wins Save Mart 350, B1

Tuesd.y
Hlfh:IOS;La.r:IOS

.

$25,000, 740-949-2640
Ptoannl (304)676·20113. Sun. I·
1993 Chray!er Concorde. 6 Cytin· 1998 Gto Tracker. ~WO . 5.910
4Pt.4. Mon-Sat 11 AAHIPM.
FREE COlor Gatatog
dtr, Power Evaryth lngl A.M/FM miles. Trim PkQ .• CO, air, cruise . 4GaiiToday 1-711~111
Brittany apanltll, 9 weeK&amp; old. Casselte. Ve~y Good Condition, dr. hardop, minor lelt front dam·
good loving homtl, rtrtt shots .
ago, $6300, 740-992·1506 days
"MDATHLON &amp; PENTIUM Ill SO good hunting otock. $1 00, HO· $5,000, 7ol0-448-3903.
or 740·949·2644 evenings.
Down Flnanclngl 660 -800 MHZ - 94~.
1993
Dodge Daytona troc: TUt'bO, 1=~-'-::'-'-="""':"--10·30-GB·HD. ~ II Credit Wet28,000 miles, minor dolllage, """· 40 Motorcycles
come. REQU IR EMENTS: Bonk Uti Puppltl, AKC Blackl Yellow, $3900
, 740·992·1506 or 740·949·
Ac:count, .$1 ,800 Month Groaa . Parents on Prem ises. Pups this
1195 YZF 600 Yamaha . excellent
264&lt; evenings.
COMPUTER BROKERS INC. 1· blautllul won't last tong. 740·-44 1·
condlllon , lots ol extras. $4500
801).887·3924.
0013.
1994 Oldsmobile Achieva, Good OBO, 740-742-2780.
work car. high milage , asking
AT A T Gtoba lyst Computer, 1.2 Two thr" year old Poodles , $1 ,500. (740)368-8047
1985-CB/700/SC Night Hawk "S'
G!Qaby1as, 16 MB, Cd-rom. Speak- AKC· CKC Registered lemale :
11 ,000 miles, new tires ancl lot ol
ers. Monitor, Modem, E11cellenl CKC Registered male, $50 each 1994 Toyota Tercel, two door, new accessories , new paint.
Condhion. (740~367 -7065
or $76 both. Call H0-843·1005 cold A/C , 4 speed, excellent gas $1 ,000.090.(304)675-7441 .
attor
51l"'·
mileage , one owner, $4000, 740·
Babybed, Changing Table, Hlgn
1987 Venture Yamana Dressed;
245·0333.
Chair, Stroller, Car Seal. Yorkle Terrier, !SI/2 months old.
1985
Honda XR80 Call 740·367·
$300.
~~r~a
Gray
Parrot,
$400.00
(304)675-2801 .
1995 Buick Skylark. -4 door, au- 0594.
(7.0)-446-4866
tomati c, cassette, air, 58,000
Cheese, Trail Bologna . Baking
miles, excellent cond ition. $6000 1991 Honda 1100 Interstate
Supplies , Snacks At : 775 Qui~
21.000 Miles, $2,100, 740· 446·
060,
740-992·3693.
FARM SUPPliE S
· Foods. ~184 S.R. 775 . Patriot.
8468.
.
OhiO.
1995 Monte Carlo Z-34 Sports
&amp; liVE STOC K
COupe. 3.4 titre V--6. PW. POl.. air, 1991 YZ 125 New Plastic. New
COMPUTER BLOWOUT! Com·
87,000 miles, 'llery sharp, asking Reeds, New Piston &amp; Rings. Very
paq, HP, IBM, Desktops, Laptops,
$8000, 740-992-7519.
Powerful Bike. Looks New, Front
Ecommerce !Website&amp;. Almoat 61 0 Farm Equipment
Forks Have Been Completely Ae·
Everyone Approvedlll1 Make
1996 Camara. V·&amp;, 59,000 mites,
Which Includes New Seals
SSSS On Thl Web! II No Money "3 Pt. Tractor Lifts With Ad j. minor front damage. runs, $4300, built
And Fluid. Rear Shock Has Been
Down. Free Color Printer 1·888· Forks $250 Each" ·used Lifl
740·992·1606 days or 740·949· Re charged Wllh Nitrogen And
Truck Forks $25 ·$75 Per Set•
479-2345 www.ejump-start.com
2644 avanlngs.
Checked For Bleed ·Off. Tires
740·379-2757.
In Excellent Condition, Chain
Soap Stone wood Burner 2 Atrii.ITI
1997 Blue Chevy lumina Good Are
And
Sp~ockels Are Like New,
Doors, 2 Bi Fold Doors, one Steel
(New) 644 New H·ouand Rounct Condition. $6,000 . (740)·441 · $1,800, 74()..446·7375.
Door. (740)-245-9019
Baler Net Wra,p with Bale Com· 0628
mand Cost-18,000 . Sell 1-4,900.
For Sale: 15 Longaberger Bu- Hay Tedder Hesson 17 .5 Ft 1997 Dodge Intrepid, 3 . ~ V-6. 1994 Honda Goldwing , Aspe n·
kets, year 1981 &amp; 1 983 . Sf900 Like New . Deutz Rake 59.000 mites, bump on 14;111 fender, cede. 17.000 Miles, Very Nice,
Wllh Helmets, $9,000, 740·
$7000, 740·992·1506 days Red,
(304)875·2~ .
1000. Call Andy Sigler (304)937- runs,
446-1420.
or
740·949·26441Wentngs.
Grubb's Plano- turilng &amp; repairl. 201t,
Problems? Neecl TUned? Call the
1997 Ford Escort. Automatic. AJ 1996 Kawasaki Vulcan 800, 7170
4)(4 Ford Diesel 1220 Tractor/ 5
C, New Tires , $7,000, 740·446· miles, red &amp; white, minor left side
piano Or. 740-446-4525
ft. finish mower, $8.850 lirm. E•celdamage, runs, $4000 , 740-992·
7233.
lent Condition. (740) 256-1468
1506 days or 740-949-2644
JNUTROL HE,.TING AND
1997 Ford E.:plorer, 4WD. 2 door, evenings .
COOLING EQUIPMENT
CAT 215 Backhoe, $43,000; 1983 Leather, Power Sun/Moon Root,
INST,.LLEO
R Modal Mack 350, 8 Speed,
CO. 56.000 miles. Alumi· 1996 Polaris XP!orer 300 4
"If You Don 't Cslf Us WB Both
$18,000; D4H Cat $44,000; 1987 6·disc
num Wheels, New tires, 100,000 Wheeler, Se'lleral New Parts ,
Lostt. • Free Estlrnatesl 740·4-46·
35 Ton Drop Deok Low Boy, mile warranty, E11cellent condition! $2,500, OBO, 740·245·5018, Or
6308, 1·800-291·0098.
$18,000; 1986 Jeep Wagoneer
evenings or 335"0104.
SUOO: 45' Toll Trailer $1.600: 40' (740)·367-7152
JET
leave message.
1997 Harley Davidson Classic.
Flat Extended Trailer $3,600; A40
AERATION MOTORS
Rapatred, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock . Ditch Witch $6.500: 2,000 Gatton 1998 Plymouth Breeze 4 Cylinder, 9,000 miles, sharp, $15.000. 74()Fuel Tank With Electric Pump , 10.500 Milas, Automatic, Loaded, 992-7410.
Cell Ron Evans, 1·800-537·9528.
$1 ,200; 550 Gallon Fuel Tank 740·256-8346.
1998 Honda 250 Aecon 4 Wheel·
With Gas Motor, $700; 2,000
METAL BUILDINGS. Does Your Gallon Water Tank $600; Misc. 87 Ford EXP, engine has cracked er, New Tires. (740)367-7192
Jack Hammers And Drills , Tran· head. 15• aluminum wheels, new· 1999 Yamaha VZF 600 R, 2000
Dealership Not Work For Y~u?
We Have Competitive. Prlcea &amp; slent And Levels, Misc . Tools, 1 er tires, many good .parts. $400 miles, 6 sp,, Includes 5 yr. warren·
NO Dealership Feast Call For A Yard Concrete Bllcket, Misc. OBO. (740)44Hl844
ty, showroom condition, $6500.
Sleet Beams, lock Well Crill
Free Brochure . El Dorado Build·
740-985·3929 or 740·423·5173.
94
Grard
Am,
40,
Loaded,
98,000
Press
S900:
Plate
Tamp
Thai
Fits
lng Systems 1-800-279-4300.
CAT •16 Hoe $3,800; Semi·U· miles. Good to Great condition. 750 Boats &amp; Motors
.WANT A COMPUTER? But No Grueman 14' Boat, 740-643-2916. Asking $4,000.(740)251!-1470
Cash? No Credit OK! Slow Credit
for Sale
OK! o Down: laptops Available. For Sale : Tobacco Stipks. 740· For sale· 198~ Bronco II lor
pans, 740·992·2221 .
19-112 Fl. Baja. Re-Finished In·
Reestablish Your Credit! Call 245-5121.
terlor. Runs Good . $1500 .
Nowiii1-80Q-247-3618.
CARS
FROII
$2g1110.
ImJohn Deere 317 Aiding Mower,
(304)675·8755:
Kohler Motor, Hydraulic Lilt, 50 pounds /Repos. Fee . $0 Down 124
MOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Mos.
019.9%
For
listings
1·800·
1979 Starcraft 23' Cuddy Cabin.
Inch Mower Nlcel $2500.
319-3323 X2156,
Inboard V·8 ; 1976 Crestllner 23'
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices, (304)875-3824.
Cuddy Cabin. no trailers. $5500
On Vinyl Skirting , Doors. Wind·
Mltsubishl :1!0500 Tractor, 4 Cy· 720 Trucka for Sale
080 for both , 740·992·1506 days
ows. Anchors. Water Heaters,
IInder Diesel, 4 Foot Brush Hog
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parrs, Fur·
1977 Ford F·250 351 Windsor 4 or 740·949-2644 evenings.
And Blade, $4,500, 740·448· Speed.
naces &amp; Heat Pumps . Bennetts
Runs Good, Body In Fair 1990 Fourwlnds Boat 20' Open
0399.
Mobile Home Supply, 740·448·
Condition, $200 Firm, 740·446· Bow,
lfO, 4.3, V-6 , $9,500. 740·
9418 www.orvb.comlbennan
N. H. 644 round baler 4'115' 7764, 740-446-41.52.
367-0162.
Must Sail: Royal Oak Resort Club, 1000ibs. net or twine wrap bale 1979 Full Size GMC Jimmy, $800
34 ft . 'Star Duster Houseboat .
Make An Ofler, Phone : 304·273· command, like new 14,900.
080. Call alter 6pm, no later lhan (304)675·4045.
Hesson tT5 hay tedder· $1900,
3301 :
9pm.
(7.0)446-0023
Deutz· P.T.O. side tedder Alfalfa
760, Auto Parts &amp;
NEW BRAND N~ME COMPUT- Rake, $1,000.(304)937-2016.
1990 Chevy V6. Good condition.
E~S • Almost Everyone 4p·
Accessories
proved With $0 Down! low Tor() Wheel Horse 520 H 20 HP, 21,000 on new engine. 5 speed
eo
Inch
Mower
Deck,
Like
New;
transmission.
Runs
Great.
Monthly Payments! 1·800·817Are You Looking For Engines &amp;
John Deere 165 Hydro 38 Inch (304)875-3569.
3476 Ed.330.
Transmissio ns? Give Me A Call
Nice, 74o-ol4»227.
19'0 Dodge Dakota 5·speed, At740--446-0519.
Pretty Broyhill Floral Seta with
newly rebuilt engine. $1500. Budget Priced Transmissions All
Two Blue Velvet Wing· Back 630
Llveatock
1984 Ford Bronc:o, 4x4, all , Types, .Access To Over 10,000
Chairs. All Like New. (740)38710 year old Tennessee Walker $2000, (304)576-2244.
7006
Transmissions. eve Joints, 740·
gelding, $1200; 6 year old Arabi·
RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNERS an mare with stud cold, $1100; 1991 Ford Ranger, 4 cyl., 5 245-56n.
apeod, $1,495; 1989 S-10, 4 cyl.,
74o-742·2625. .
Lilt lor Fuii·Size PICk·Up.
5 Speed, $1,795; 1995 S·IO Ex· Tommy
Tappan Hi Efficiency 90% Gas
$400. (304)675-8670.
4
Part
Whilfl
Cows.
Registered,
3
tended
C8b,
4
Cylinder,
Automat·
Furnaces, 011 Furnace&amp;, 12 Seer
lc, }JC, $5,795. Cars !rom $995 to
Hear Pump &amp; Air Conditioning Yaar&amp; Old, $850 Each, 740.258·
$5,495. CdOKS MOTORS 790 Campers &amp;
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty 6230 ewnlngo.
Motor Homes
(740)446-0103.
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800·872·5967 www.orvtl.cotnlben-- Family milk Cow, 4 yeara old, 314
Jeruy, 1/4 Holstein, Freshened 1991 ·S·10 Pick-Up 4 Cylinder, 5 1989 Winnebago Leshara 39,000
natt
May 1, $850 . (740)256-1724 Speed , New: Tires, Radiator, Miles; Generator Furnace , Good
Brakes, Battery, $1,800, Firm, Condition, $10,500, 740-441 ·0440
Sawmill $3,795. Saw Logs Into 8'1181'l lngs.
leave Message.
740-379-2807.
Boards, Plank•. Beams. Large
Hay &amp; Grain
Capacity. Best Sawmill Value An· 640
1992 Dodge Dakota King Cab, 1994 CO leman Destiny, Pop-Up
ywhere. FREE Information. 1-80DStraw For Sale, Wire Tied
90,000 miles. A/0, Power Every· Cain per. Sleeps 8-7. $3.000. 2
578·1363 . NORWOOD SAW· New
thing, 318 Magnum. $6.000 Flrml Antique Hair Dryer Chairs. Make
MILLS 252 Sonwill Ortve, Buflalo, Bales, 7ol0-256-6011 ,
QHor. (304)n3-6424.
·
(740)·992·5719
NV 14225.
Round bales ol hay lor oalo, 740·
949-3089.
1993 Chivy 5·10. 75,000 miles. Mountaineer Sllde·ln Camper.
SOCIAL SECURITY DlSABILITV
1 owner. Runs good, 27 miles to Fully self-contained . E11ce11ent
Claim Denied?· we Specialize in Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year gal.(304)875-8872.
condHion. (304)676-4045.
Appeals And Hearings. F~EE 'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
CONSUlTATION . Benafil Team count Available. Heritage Farm.
1995 Dodge Neon OOHC, 5 Sp, RV Generator Onam Marquis
Services, Inc. Toii·Free: 1·888· (304)875-5724.
A/C, 4 Wee! Dlac, 72,000 miles. 7000 plus all accessories to In·
836-.o52.
$4,000 080 Galt: (740)·367-1)()24 stall, 57 amps $2.250 or trade,
650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Like new, Call (740)441-0519
Swiss Cheese On Sale Week Of
1995 Toyota Tacoma, 4)(4. Ex·
19th; 775 Bulk Foods, 5184 S.R. Tobacco Plants For Sale . cellent Condition. $8500. Sharua Motor-Home, Short Mod·
(304)895-37401895-3789.
el, low miles. six sleeper. roof,
n5, Patrlo!, Ohio.
(304)675-7652.
air, fully equipped, reasonable.
Tobacco Ptan1s
waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
1997 Ford Ranger XLT, Extended (304)675-4045.
$21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI Now taking orders for thiS Spring. Cab, 4)(4, low mileage. Excellent
First Orders wltl Guarantee Beat&amp;
~37.00 Per 100: Att Brass Com·
Conduton. $14,900, (740)446·
SERVICES
Earlle~t
Plants. Dewhurst
pression Fittings In Stock
3909
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES Farmo,(304)695-37401895-3789.
22 Ft. Box Truck, No Engine.
JackSon, Ohio, 1·800-537·9529 .
810
Home
$1,500, 74o-448-2359.
TRANSPORTATION
'white Kenmore White Whirlpool ;
Improvements
85 White Cab Over, Runs Good,
Gold Maytag Waohlro $60 Each;
$3,000,
New
Clulch.
Now
Sleer
Whitt Kenmore White G.E. Dry·
BASEMENT
Front Tires. (7.0)381H1965.
ars. $50 Each; All Working Con· 71 0 Autos for Sale
WATERPROOFING
dltion Call Aher 5:45, 7-40·448· '86 Honda CRX, 2 ...let', recon~y
Unconditional lifetime guarantee .
730 Vena a. 4-WDs
90116,
repainted, 5 speed, hu new
Local references turnlshed . Es··
clutch,
locka
&amp; runs good, asking
1196 Chevrolet 1500 4x4 EMtend- lablahod 1975. can 24 ·H,.. (740)
WANT· ACOMPUTER???? BUT $950 oeo, 740-992-2904.
ed Cab Sport Z71 lruck. aluminum 446-0670, 1-600·267-0576. Rog·
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLOwheels, CD, Laredo Package, new ers Waterproollng.
GY We Finance_, ·o· Downl Past CARS FROM $200. POLICE IMtires, lef1 front damage, $14,000
Credit Problems OKII Even If POUNDS. Honda's Toyota 's,
oao. 740-992-1506 days or 740Turned Down BefOre!! Reestablish Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·
· Appliance Parts And Service: All
't'our Creditll1-800-669-0359.
ties. Call Now! 800·772-7470; 949·2644 Mnlng&amp;.
Name Brands Over 25 Years ExEXT. 7832.
1979 Chevy Short Bed 4 WO, perience All Work Guaranteed.
Building
550
Rebulh 5.0 H.O 4 Speed Trans., We Sell New Maytag Appl!ances.
1927 Chevrotel Capital, $6800, 2 Stereo,
Supplies
Many new Parts. $3,000. French City Maytag, 740·4413·
door, all original, garage kept 57
can:
(740~36Hl024
7795.
year&amp;.
7ol0-992-7553.
(3) All- lulldlngo
24x36 Was $6,690, Salt $3,850; 19114 Chevy Camara 2.8l 8 Cylin- 1995 Cnsvy 4x4, 314 Ton. 350 C&amp;C General Home Main·
30•ol2 Wu $10,0110, Salt $4,875; der, Automatic, T· Tops, AM/FM Engine, Automatic, A/C, $4,995, tenence· Painling , vinyl siding,
53•110 Wu $28,500,
7ol0-446-1021 .
carpentry, doors, windows. baths,
Caasette, AJC, Parts Car lnclud ·
Sal$13,200.
mobile home repair and more, For
Od,
$1,500,080
7.0-367-0018.
8oo-;l812-7817.
1991 Ford Conversion van, Mark frea estimate call Chet. 740·992·
Ill, new tirea,dual gas tanks, like 6323.
1988 Ford Mustang ,' $500, 1983
Block, brlh. sewer pipes. wind· Ford Muotong, $200, 1982 Dodge
now.$5900. 304·875·1731 ,
owa, lintels, etc. Claude Winters, Ram Truck,
Jims Drywall &amp; Constructloli .
$500,
oeo.
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245- (7.0)446-3398.
1992 Ford E)lplorer, 6 cylinder, New Construcllon &amp; Remode.ll
4WD, Eddie Bauer Series, Drywall , Siding, Roofs , Addl·
5121.
115,000 milas. lett side damage,
Bur Direct From Golden ·Gia nt 1988 Ford Tempo, 2 Engines, U· very clean , $4985, parts also lions, Painting, etc. (304)67 4·
Tow
Away,
S600
OBO,
740.388Mini Storages, Warehouses.
available, 740·992·15Qe days or 4623 or (304)674-0155.
Commercial -.nd Industrial All 0144,
7ol0-949-2644oven;ngs.
Livingston's Basement Wa~er
Steal Buildings, 1-600-628·1209, 1986 Pontile 6000 4 Doors, AJC,
Proofing. all basement repa•rs
1992
S-10
Bta,.,r,
4
WD.
}JC,
Tih,
Kenton, Ohio.
, free estimates . lifetime
High Mileage, Runs £)1Cillent, 2
5 Speed, Must Slit, $5,.00"080, done
guarantee. 12yrs on job e•perlOwner
Cat,
$1,500,
OBO
740·
740·448·3580 Leave Message If ence.(304)895-3667.
560 Peta for Sale
367-7.01 .
No -.nawer.
2 Ferrets with Cages , Very 1988 L' 1 T
lriendly with children . $150.00
mco n own Car. 8"1 ,000
1993 Grand Caravan. uaoo, 840 Electrical and
,388-0
,
mill&amp;,
$4,000
OBO
(740)4•6·
Refrigeration
144
(700 r
7oi0-949-2807'
1203, caNaltor ~ .
1993 S·10 Blazer Tahoe Package Residential or commercial wiring,
2 seven Week Old Sheltle Mina· I :-:
19::8:-9 -:0:""1-=yt.:o;_na~es:-.-:1-ol_s_o-:1-ne-w 4.3
Liter \'arlee \'·6, E)lcellent new service or repairs. Masler Ll·
ture Collie Puppies For Sate , partl&amp; tires. run&amp; great $950.080
Condition , 128,000 Miles. Runs
cenud electrician . Ridenour
$160, 740--93e0.
304-1175-6893
Great, ~M/FM Cassette, Power
Electrical, WV000308, 304·875Steering , Power Windows &amp;
1786.
!i Male Registered Border Collie 1990
Bulck· Park
Avenue .
Locka, Air, Tilt, And Crui&amp;e, Fac·
Pups, $150 Each. 740-26H767. (304)895-3647,
;.;.;,_:;..;.:,.::_;_:__~..-­
tory Aluminum Wheels. New Tires
-

Sunday, June 25, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

•,
·For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer .
offic!! hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington ·
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
Our next clinic date Is July 7.
Call (614) 221-6n1 for an appointment.

Melp County's

June 16, 2000

Hometown Newspaper

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 20

Albany
man dies
in farming
accident

Monda

so Cents

M'port sewer repairs under way
The wier at Mill Street lift station
is the last one to be replaced
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
MIDDLEPORT - R.epl acement of a final wier in th e Middleport sewer system will satisfY
an Ohio EPA requirement, and is
part of an ongoing repair and
maintenance program .
Myron Duffield, president of
the Middleport Doard of Public

FROM STAFF REPORTS
ALBANY - An Albany
man died Saturday after he
was thrown from and then
trapped under a tractor he
was driving.
According
to
Meigs
County
Sheriff
James
M.
Souls by,
Garold Vernon Douglas, 55, of
Wood
DoUCJas
Road,
Albany, was
found pinned beneath the
wheel and fender· of a farming·tractor on his property on
Road.
Haning
Ridge
Deputies believe that Douglas
was driving the tractor up an
incline, with a square baler
behind, when the tractor
flipped flipped up and over,
pinning Douglas beneath.
Douglas was found within
an hour after the accident by
his son, accorcling to the sher·
iff's report.
·
Meigs County Coroner
Douglas Hunter pronounced
Dougla.s d ~ad at the scene.
The cause of qeath ~
ruled as head and chest

Affairs, said village crews are

completing the work on Mill
Street, at th e "T," at little cost to
the village's sewer maintenance
fund.
The only cost for the project is
the material, Village Supervisor
Brent Manley said Friday, since
village workers are providing the
labor.
The wier is a concrete structure
that diverts storm water as it
leaves th e village sev.rerage system
and enters the ·Ohio River, and
the EPA has mandated that the
village repair a number of wiers
and install manholes to meet
compliance.
The project is only the latest
step . in 'an ongoing project to
make the repairs necessary to
EPA compliance, Duffield said.
The BPA, when reinstated over a

C[eWS'~'rit "AI•-th-AJQb

replacement will help the village meet

'i:

injuries ~

.

,,

Tl1e wier is a concrete
structure that diverts
storm water as it leaves
the village sewerage sys..::
tern and enters the Ohio
River, and the EPA has.
mandated that tire village
repair a n1tmber of wiers ·
and iustall manl1oles to ·
meet compliance.
storm and there's excess water in

the sewer system, it raises to a particul ar level, and then the wi er
allows storm water and sewage to
go into th e river."

·'Under normal circumstances,
storm water or sewage fro in
homes in Middleport goes to th•
nearest lift sration and is then carried to the treatment facility," ·-he
added.
·
Those wiers have been dam:
aged or destroyed through the
years since 1966, when the sewer
system was constructed, and mu~;t
now be replaced. '
•·
The wier at the Mill Street·litf
station is the last one to ·b:~
replaced, Duffi eld said.
,
year ago, made the repairs neces Th e village has two lift station~.
sary for EPA complinace a prior- In addition to the Mill Street
ity. Duffield said.
facility, the village operates anoth. "In all, there are 19 outflows er major lift station on Park
require- that go int the Ohio Riv~r," Street, as well as five smaller lift
Duffield saJB. "When there's a stations throu ghout the village.

Standards fill air at second.of free amphitheater concerts
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - When the crowd in
Pomeroy's riverside amphitheater lieard Tony
Tenaglia sing his first set of songs, it was
apparent to most that here was a Friday night
of ·et).tert.ainment which would take them
down memory lane. .
· Tenoglia, accompanying himself on the guitar, sang the old songs - the pop standards
from the '40s and '50s - music familiar to
the older audience attending the concert.
Selections like "Stardust,!' "Bye-Bye Blackbird," UDon't B1ame Me," and uoon't Get
Around Much Any More" received generous
applause and sparked an occasion:a) informal
~ing-along.

Tenaglia's father, a retired Athens doctor,
~oined his son on stage to sing some of the old
songs. Also performing with the guitarist was
Meigs County's talerted saxophonist, Chad
Dodson.
, Besides the large crowd which filled the
amphitheater seating and overflowed onto the
ENTERTAINING - Guitarist Tony Tenoglla was joined by his father for wall overlooking the river, a half-dozen or so
a medley of songs from the '40s during Friday night's summer con- boats puUed 'in to enjoy the music.
cert series sponsored by the . Pomeroy Blues and Jau Society in . It was the second in i' series of free concerts
being presented this summer by the Pomeroy
Pomeroy's amphitheater. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Today's

~

Sentinel

2 Sldlo."lS- 12 Pllps
C~endar

AS

Clastifieds
Comics
Editorial•

BH

Obituaries
Sports

A3

BS

M
81.6

Weather

&amp; Brakes, New Front Brake Ao·
tors, Front End Juat Aligned. ·
Asking $8 ,000 (Or Reaaonable
Oller) 7ol0-446-4648 II No Answer
Please La,.... MKsago.

A3

Lotteries
OtuQ

1995 Chovy 1500 Extended Cab,
-4X4, 350 Vorte11 Engine, Loaded,
91 ,000 mllea. Gold Color, Topper
to maten . Trailer Package ,
$15,200 Firm. E~~;cellent Condition.
(740)256-1421

Pick 3: 9-7-7; Pick 4: 6-5-2-0
Super Lotio: 5-7-11-37-4:&gt;-46
Kicker: 2-1-5-4-4-9

W.YA.
Daily 3: 4-2-2 Daily 4: 9-3-0-5

1995 Ford F· 150, Short wheel
biNd truck, Straight 6, Automat·
lc. Low mileage, (740)446-3494

0 '2000 O hio Valley Publishing Co.

'On new 2000 models. Offers end July 31.

•
I

, .

~

...... .. .,
~·

It was the second in a series offree led by Meigs County's own John Hurlbut
concerts being presented tllis summer. includes Rocky Thompso n on guitar and Jaybird on bass .
by tile Pomeroy Blltes and jazz
They will pay tribute to Ameticana with
Society, a group of local residents , vocal harmonies and tight rhythms in selec·interested in bringing quality live ~ tions from a variety of artists including Dylan,
The Grateful Dead, and Neil Young.
music to historic Pomeroy.
Guitar legend Jorma Kaukonen, who playej.i
The first concert featJtred Bill
with Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna in the
Dutcher, a full-time professional
'60s and '70s, will be on the amphitheater
guitarist, who took time }rom his stage july 14.
A Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee,
usual nightly gigs in ColltmbJts, to
Kaukonen has resided in Meigs County for
come to Pomeroy.
many years and in .1993 opened the Fur Peach
Blues and Jazz Society, a group of local residents 'interested in bringing quality live music
to histori~ Pomeroy. The first concert featured
Bill Dutcher, a full-time professional ~uitarist,
who took time from his usual nightly gigs in
Columbusvo come to Pomeroy.
T~e concerts, ·sponsored as a community
service by the PB&amp;Js will be continued
through July 21, every other Friday night, 8
p.m.
On July 7, The Cowboy Angels, featuring
vocals, guitars and bass, wiU perform. The trio

Ranch Guitar C amp, which attracts guitarists
here from around the world .
The final concert to be held on July 21 will
be presented by American Gypsy, featuring
guitar, violin and bass. Gypsy's music features
a blend ofjazz, classical, and world folk music.
In the group are 12-string guitarist Neil
Jacobs, master violinist Arbdiy Gips (who
recently emigrated from the Ukraine aria
received his classical training at th e Conservatory of Music in Kiev), and bass player John
Douglas, a recipient of the Ohio Arts Council
Individual Artist Award for Music Composition.

Teen moms let.,_renting tips
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY -A seminar to teach positive parenting skills to teenage mothers was held Thursday
at the Meigs County Disttict Library by CHAMPS
(Creating Healthy and Maturing Parenting Skills).
Funding of $2.000 was proVidej:j by the Meigs
County United Methodist Cooperative Parish for
the program which dealt with nutrition, self-esteem
and frustration, financial planning, communication.
and discipline, appreciation of the. ~ hurch as a supportive friend, child development and healthy parent-child relationship.
Speakers were Linda .King, nutrition spe'cialist;·
Julie Wandling of Health Recovery Services; Katbi
VanMeter, a licensed social worker; EDen Marshall,
the Rev. Brian Harkness and Norma Torres, nursing
director of the Meigs County Health Department.
Mothers ranging in age from 14 to 23 attended
th e seminar, where they worked on developing
healthy self-esteem, how to handlt, frustrations
whi~h can sometimes lead to child ab,use, and posi-

·•

tive parenting skills:
Some of the funding \vent for incentives to get
the young mothers to attend the seminar.
They were given breakfast and lunch and· snacks
were. provided for their toddlers, along with free
totes
filled with' S25 worth of baby and child care
.
items.
·Gasoline vouchers for $5 were given to each
mother, two grand prizes of $50 gift cenificates
from Wal-Mart for diapers were awarded, along with
seven $10 gift certificates. In addition to the 22
ltlothers attending, three fathers came.
Coordinator for the program was Junie Maynard,
RN,BSN.
INCENTIVES - Totes filled with baby care items
were presented to each of the mothers attending
the CHAMPS seminar on positive parenting skills.
Here, Kathi VanMeter, a licensed social worker, preSBnts one to Megan McKinnon for her son, Jeffrey
Teachout. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

..

•'

·---

---·---~-

------·

.'~
·~

�•
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Veterans reflect on bloodshed so years later

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
.

Monday, June 28, 2000

BY THE AssociATED

Shooting leaves one dead

' WARREN (AP) -Three men were arreste in a shooting that
left two men dead and injured another man, the Trumbull ~ounty
sheriff said.
Ronald Shaffer, 18, Eric Porterfield, 28, and Dennis Gossett, age
unavailable, each were charged with two counts of aggravated murder and one count of aggravated burglary.
. Gary Bell, .39, of Leavittsburg, and Charles Mathey Ill, 39, of
Newton Falls, were shot to death Friday night. Also shot was David
Harper, 38, of Newton Township, who was listed in stable condition
with multiple gUnshot wounds Sunday at Cleveland MetroHealth
Medical Center.
Sheriff Thomas Altiere said the shooting occurred at Harper's
home. He declined to specify how the killings took place or to say
":hat type of gun was used. He said drugs were involved, but he
wouldn't elaborate about a motive.
Youngstown television station WKBN reported that the three
t)len were shot while sitting on the front porch. Harper's wife and
grandchild were on the porch and other people were in the house,
but no one else was hurt, the station said.

PRESS

Ohio veterans who dodged bombs and
bullets during the Korean War have not forgotten the sacrifices made by their comrades
who died in battle, but some have chosen not
to commemorate the war's 50th anniversary.
Sok Chan Cho, a lieutenant in the South
Korean Army who grew up in North Korea,
is trying to forget the war's final days in 1953.
He plans no commemoration of Sunday's
50th anniversary of the war's inception.
"Mostly I don't think about the war," said
.Cho, now 73 and a resident of Strongsvill~, a
Cleveland suburb. "I try to forget the war and
the tragedies it caused."
Cho does vividly remember one night
when he was leading a patrol. A firelight
erupted, and Cho was hit in the right knee.
"The bullet broke my leg, left a terrible

scar and shortened my leg by 3 inches after
the massive surgery," said Cho, who recovered
and stayed in the army for 10 years, rising to
the rank: of captain.
T he Greater Cleveland Chapter of the
Korean War Veterans Association also does not
plan a commemoration·of the anniversary.
Richard Danielson,
a Marine veteran
and a national association leader, said there are
no ceremonies in Cleveland because 12 association chapters in northeast Ohio could not
agree on what to do.
To honor what is· often termed "the forgotten war," Rick Maier is leading an effort to
build a Korean War memorial in Akron for
those who fought- and died- in the short,
savage conflict.
"I lost 14 men to an infiltrator. They had
their heads blown off," said Maier, a former

n,

Army machine gunner, now 70.
His group, the Korean War Veterans Association of Summit County, has been involved in
a dispute with another group over where to
build the memorial, but he is confident he cari
get the job done.
~
Because of the dispute, private benefacto~
are planning a second Korean War memor~
for the University of,Akron campus.
::
"We will have our memorial;' said Maier,
who arrived in Korea in August 1950, during
a time of heavy lighting. "We will have names
of all of those in Summit County wno died"
included in the memorial.
MaiJ!'s group wants to erect a statue of a
bundled-up Gl. M~ny soldiers fought in frigid
weather in mountainous regions of the Kore~
an peninsula.

•Federal Consumer Protection has confirmed that the fuel saving claims !lf this adveniaement are 100._, accurate.

:Woman set on fire dies

Device May Increase Gas Mileage by 22%

COLUMBUS (AP)- A woman doused with gasoline and set on
fire in March at a grocery store parking lot died after recently being
up,graded to fair condition.
Trishella McDaniel, 33, suffered second- and third-degree burns
to more than 70 percent of her body and had been listed in critical
condition at Ohio State University Medical Center, where she died
Saturday.
" She was upgraded to serious condition, then to fair condition a
co uple weeks ago, said Mary Van Fleet, hospital administrative manager.
"She totally, unexpectedly died,"Van Fleet said.
The Franklin County coroner has not determined a cause of
death.
: ·, Lana Williams, 28, has been charged with attempted murder.
P~osecutors are expected to review the charge.
Witnesses told police that McDaniel and Williams appeared to be
~rgu ing when Williams doused McDaniel with gasoline from a can
a n~ lighted it.
.. A stock boy who had been wheeling out a customer's groceries
g~abbed a carton of milk and poured it on McDaniel.
. A police officer who arrived at the scene used a fire extinguisher from his cruiser to put out the fire.

BOSTON- National Fuelsaver
Corp. of Boston has developed
alowcostautomotiveaccessory
called the Platinum Gas Saver
which is guaranteed to increase
gas mileage by 22% while
meeting all emission standards.
With a simple connection to
a vacuum line, the Gas Saver
adds microscopic quantities of
platinum to the air-fuel mixture
entering the engine.
Platinum has the unique ability
to make non-burning fuel burn.
With platinum in the flame zone,
you increase the percentage of
fuel burning in the engine from
68% of each gallon to 90%.
Since unburnt fuel is pallution,

this 22% of each gallon would
Iiormany burn when it reaches the
plalinwnofthecatalyticconvener.
Unfortunately, the converter's
platinum bums this fuel outside
oftheengine,wheretheheatand
energy produced from burning
this fuel cannot be harnessed to
drive your vehicle.
But when the Gas Saver adds
platinum to engine combustion,
22% more ·of . each gallon
burns inside. the engine so that
22% fewer gallons are required
to drive the same distance.
After studying this process
for five years, the government
concluded: "Independent testing
shows greater fuel savings with

the Platinum Gas Saver than the
22%claimed by the developer."
In addition to this study, the
Gas Saver has received patents
forcleaningo.tt caboltandraising
octane, making premium fuel
unnecessary for most vehicles.
Joel Robinson, the developer,
commented: ''We have sold over
400,000 Gas Savers. To our
surprise, as many people buy the
Gas Saver because it extends
.engine life (by cleaning out the
abrasive carbon deposits) as
buy it to increase gas mileage
or raise octane."
For further information call:
1-800-LESS-GAS
1-800·5 3 7. 7 42 7

Government Produced
Test Data
The govmunent studied fuel saving
~ data on vehicles made by several

auto makers using the Gas Saver.
This is the data they produced from
a tklct of IS identical5-lill:r vehicles.
V..kle Mlkt/111. Mlleo/pl. ...._...

N . - wltbout
wllb
lacreote
Gu Saver Gas Saver

12.0
11.3
14.1
13.0
s 12.2
6
9.6
7
13.3
8
9.8
9
14.3
10
10.8
II
14.1
12
IS.8
13
14.4
14
13.1
IS
12.9
Average 12.7

'•o Day ·sale
Prices Goad 'uasday, June 27th 8 Wednesday,·June 28th Only

NO RAINCHECKS

BONE·IN HAM

Steaks

c
Lb.

P·izza
3/$

16.6
20.1

18.8
17.1
13.3

17.9
13.1
18.4

13.9
17.6

17.S
IS.9
14.0
- 11.3

16.3

48.3%
46.9%

46.8%
44.6%
40.2%

38.S%
34.6%
33.7%
28.7%

28.7%
24.8%
10.8%
10.4%
6.9%
-12.4%
28.3%

WHILE SUPPLIES

LA T

SUNNYCANEPURECANE

JENO'S FROZEN
'•

17.8

1
2
3
4

"

Sugar-·

'

·~

., ..
~

51bl.
Limit 2 plene

OSCAR MAYER

Welners or Big &amp;
Juicy Hot Dogs
,...,, ....

c

KooiPops

c

lb. Package

UNITED'

Bananas

24 ct.

Garold Ve: aaon Douglas

Wilkesvilre 4th

Trustees to meet

Enrollment set

Vandalism at
motel

Leota Massar

2lta.

UNITED VALLEY BELL

2% Milk

79
Gallpn

Limit 4 please

LEAP APPLE OR

Macaron &amp;
heese Dinner

4/$1

rry Pie Filling

7oz.

Umlt 2 Please
21 oz.

'

298 ,SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE June 27 &amp; 28, 2000 ONLY

••

•

Man jailed

Hillside VIS

Licenses Issued

The· Daily Sentinel

Roundtable set

·Qarclen dub
meeting

..

Storms are possible tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

gal.

Lettuce

Workshop on tap

BU,thefts
are reported

LETART FALLS- Hazel Webb, 79, Letart Falls, died on Sunday,
June 25, 2000 at her residence.
·
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

3/$

head

Yard sale set

card shower
planned

LOCAL STOCKS

c

and Heidi Ann Tucker, 27, Middleport; Edward Eugene Patterson Jr., 31, Pomeroy, and Jamie
Lynn Holman, 28, Pomeroy; and
Patrick Samuel Cleland, 28, Middleport, and Karina Chavez, 23,
Pomeroy.

Civil suit filed

Hazel Webb

Water

Lbs.

Boosters to meet

of the world market.
This half-day session will give
those businesses or individuals
RACINE - Southern High
new to exporting the answers to School athletic boosters wiU meet
questions about choosing an Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
POMEROY - Units of the
ALBANY - Garold Vernon Douglas, 55, of Albany, died Saturday, Meigs Emergency Services
agent or distributor, payments, school.
June 24, 2000 in Meigs County at the place of his birth, the family answered 17 calls for assistance
documentation, and how the
farm established by his grandparents, Herbert and Amanda Douglas.
internet will change business.
over the weekend. Units respondHe was the son of Harold D. Douglas and ed as follows:
The cost is $20, including
Margery A. Douglas.
lunch.The registration •deadline is
CENTRAL DISPATCH
HARRISONVILLE - The
He was a graduate of Pomeroy High School.
Saturday, 12:13 a.m., Manuel
POMEROY - A personal July 12, and registration may be Harrisonville Senior Citizens and
He was ho!lorably discharged from the U.S. Road, assisted by Racine as First injury lawsuit has been filed in made by calling Buckeye Hills at Lend-a-Hand Ladies are sponsorArmy after serving from May 4, 1965 until Responder, Ernest Bush, Jackson Meigs County Common Pleas 374-9436.
ing a yard and bake sale Friday
April l9,1967, where he achieved the rank of General Hospital;
and Saturday at the town hall
C9urt by Howard W ri~esel,
Staff Sergeant.
·
3:14 a.m., State Route 684, Racine, against Matthew Wilson,
senior center building on SR 684
He received special recognition by Head- assisted by Rutland, Craig P'ortland, and others, alleging
from 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. each day.
quarters Company, First Brigade, 3rd Armored Stevens, O'Bieness Memorial iojuries from an a!JtO accident
Division, for his ·individual contribution to Hospital;
exceeding $25,000.
Troop Test Frontier Shield. H e also received
ATHENS - A card shower is
2:53 p.m., Haning Ridge, assistthe National Defense Service medal and rated ed by Pomeroy, farm accident,
planned for Carl Barnhill, who
EAST MEIGS Meigs
will celebrate his 96th birthday County Historical Society will ·
Marksman with the rifle.
Gerald Douglas, dead on arrival;
He was also a member of the Hocking Valley Sportsmen and a
on July 4. Cards may be sent in sponsor its first workshop for
4:26 p.m., Rocksprings Rehatremendo'!s help to the Albany Fair Board. He was an avid deer bilitation Center, Arvil Wiblin,
care of Kimes Convalescent Cen- local residents who want to write
hunter, known by his peers as one of the best shots around. He also OBMH;
POMEROY - Deputies with ter, 75 Kimes Lane, Athens, Ohio stories for the upcoming new
enjoyed tractor pulling and fishing.
.
the
Meigs County Sheriff's 45701.
Sunday, 2:06 a.m., Nye Avenue,
Meigs County History Book ,
He was an employee ofLe-AxWater District and a former longtime Keith Day, treated;
Department investigated a numMonday, 6 p.m. at the Eastern
employee of Richard .Grim Excavating. Over the years, he has also
10 a.m.;Rocksprings Rehabili- ber of complaints over the weekHigh School Library.
worked the family .farm, most recently as an irreplaceable partner with tation Center, assisted by Syra- end, including a breaking and
his son in Douglas Farm Services. He was loved and respected by all cuse, Dorothy Ciark, Holzer entering of a Salem Center store.
WILKESVILLE - "Let Freewho knew him.
dom
Ring" is the theme for the
Owners of the Pick and Shovel
Medical Center;
He is survived by hi~ loving wife of 34 years, Rhea Thompson Dou12:12 p.m., Broadway Street, carryout and store at Salem Cen- July 4 celebration at Wilkesville.
. REEDSVILLE - Olive Townglas, and a daughter, Kimberly Douglas of Charleston, South Carolina, assisted by Pomeroy, Ruby Fife, ter reported that a number of
Cash prizes ofS25 will be given ship Trustees will hold their reguand a son and daughter-in-law, Russell and Karen Douglas of Albany. Pleasant Valley Hospital.
coins, lottery tickets and beer to the best decorated bike or lar meeting July 5 at 7:45 p.m . at
He is also su.rvived by a (special) son and daughter-in-law, John and
were stolen in a breaking and other entry and best decorated the township garage following a
COLUMBIA TWP.
Tamara Lynch of Albany.
Sunday, 10:48 a.m., County entering incident on Friday night entry for ages 1-6 and 7-12, and budget hearing.
He has five grandchildren, Brittany and '!Yler Miller Douglas, and Road 55, motor vehicle accident, or Saturday morning.
cash prizes of$50 will be given to
Wyatt, Morgan and Grace Lynch; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Justin William, refused treatment.
Danny
Crislip,
Pomeroy, the best decorated children's float,
Sharon and Ned Swindell of Shade, and Patricia and Dale Arnold of
reported that a weed trimmer was best decorated adult float, and the
MIDDLEPORT
best horse entry. $50 and a trophy
Albany; two sisters-in-law, Sandy Hawk of Chauncey, and Cheryl PenSaturday, 1:57 a.m., Lincoln stolen from his home.
POMEROY -Veterans Affairs
dergast of Goose Creek, South Carolina; two brothers-in-law and sis- Heights, Audre Backus, treated.
Tim Fry of Nease Road, will be awarded to the most orig- Medical Center/Chillicothe will
ters-in-la~Virgil and Paula Thompson of Cameron, Illinois, and Leroy
Racine, reported that he came inal patriotic float or entry for all provide health care enrollment
RACINE
and Susan Thompson of Shawnee; and a brother-in-law, Dennis
Sunday, 6: 11 p.m., Dorcas home from church and found • ages.
Friday, 10 a.m.-noon and 1-2
Children are to register in front p.m. at the Veterans Service Office
Thompson of Obetz; three aunts, Grace Doqglas Frazier of Spring- Road, Sally Savage,JGH;
number of guns were missing
field, Edna Douglas Smith of Columbus, and Manda Eastman of
7:30p.m., SR 338, Hazel Webb, from his home. There was no of Mulholand's Store, and all at 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy:
Pomeroy; many nieces, nephews, and cousins. ·
forced entry, according to the other entries are to register at the West Virginia residents are weldead on arrival.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Margery A. Douglas, his
school. Registration is from 9:45 come to enroll. Proof of military
sherifi's report.
·REEDSVILLE
father, Harold D. Douglas, an infant sister Lenore E. Douglas, his mothto 10:45 a.m.
Saturday, 11:10 a.m., County
service is ·required at the time of
er-in-law Bernice Thompson, and a brother and sister-in-law, Terry Road 9, Tondea Chang, St'.Joseph
Queens, lire departments, enrollment.
politicians, antique and restored
.
and Sandy Mayles.
Memorial Hospital;
Services will be T\)esday, June 27, 2000 at I p.m. at Bigony-Jordan
automobiles; restored farm equipSunday, 12:52 a.m., SR 124,
p~becl
Funeral Home, Albany, with Pastor John King officiating. Burial will Laura Mitchell, treated;
ment, parade lovers and all chilPOMEROY
The
Meigs
&amp;e in Burlinghal)t Cemetery, where Military Graveside Services will be
dren are invited to participate.
9:26 a.m., SR 124, Arthur
POMEROY David L:
County Sheriff's Department
Lunch will be served on the Cogar, age unreported, Shade, was
conducted.
Davis, Camden Clark Memorial
continues to investigate a crimi- square. Information is available by
~ Friends may call this evening from 5~9 p.m. and anytime Tuesday Hospital.
placed in the Middleport Jail over
nal damaging complaint at the calling 669-8507 .
before services at the funeral home.
the weekend following an allege&lt;l
RUTLAND
Meigs Motel in Pomeroy.
·Saturday, 1:29 a.m., Lincoln
domestic violence incident.
:
According to Sheriff James M.
Street, Hallia Eblin, HMC.
Cogar is expected to appear itt
.. Soulsby, customers at the motel
SYRACUSE
Meigs County Court on Mon~
rented a room, tore mirrors from
EAST MEIGS -Leota Massar, 90, of East Meigs, died Wednesday,
POMEROY - Vacation Bible day.
Saturday, 10:51 p.m., Royal
June 21, 2000 in Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, Oak . Resort, assisted by Central the walls and caused other School will be held at Hillside
"extensive" damage.
Baptist Church in Pomeroy from
.
.
West Virginia, after an"' extended illness.
Dispatch, Stephanie Shamblin,
Several prank telephone calls 6:30-9 p.m., beginning Monday
Born in Hazel, she was the daughter of the late William C. and Mary HMC.
were apparently made from the and continuing through Friday.
Grace Fitch Smith and was a member of the Keno Church of Christ.
TUPPERS PLAINS
.room as well, and the matter The theme is "Noah's Ark." Buses
She Was also a member of the ·Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 274,
Saturday, 2:56 p.m., State
remains under investigation.
will pick up ,any interested chilin Guysville.
' ·'
Route Mary Goble, CCMH.
(USPS ZIJ·HO)
'
Along with her parents, she was preceded ln death by her husband,
dren who call the church at 992Ohio V•lley Publlahllll co.
"
6768. Children aged three and Publi1hed every arternoon, Monday t.hroua,h
Charles E. Massar; three sisters, Ulah Swan, Leona Babcock and Mary
Frida~. Ill Court S1., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
older are welcome to attend.
Riggs; and a foster nephew, Ray E. Justis.
·
Ohio Valle y Publiahina Company., Pomeroy,
MARIETTA --' Buckeye Hills
Ohio 4"69, Ph. 992·21.56. Second clau pos t·
She is survived by one son and daughter-in-law, Starling and Sandra
POMEROY
Marriage
aae paid It Pomeroy, Ohio.
is
sponsorDevelopment
District
Massar; a sister, Fern Price of Hebron; two grandchildren, Diana Mas- r licenses have been issued in Meigs
Mtmbtr; The Associated Prcu, and the Ohio
sar Buckley and her husband Kevin, and Charles William Massaf; three County Probate Court to James ing a small group roundtable disNewspa~r A5SO';iJtion.
cussion
on
exporting
basics.
The
great-grandchildren, Michelle, Miranda and Benjamin Buckley; a · D. Swart, and Alesia Marlene
POSTMASTER! Send ad drc5~ corrections to
nephew, David N. Riggs, whom she reared from childhood; a special Mullins, 36, both of Albany; event will be held July 19.
The Dill)' Sentinel, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy,
POMEROY
Winding
Trail
Experts
in
the
field
of
internafriend, Ruth Stethem of Long Bottom; and several nieces and Zachery Paul Ward, 21, and
Ohio4~769.
Garden
Club
will
meet
on
Tuestional
banking,
commerce,
shipnephews.
.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Robin Sue Barringer, 19, both of
By C.l'l'ltr or Motor Route
Services were held on Saturday, June '24, 2000, at 1 p.m. at White Portland; James L.Wrence Adams, ping · and internet technology day at 6 p.m. at the Park and Ride
One Weck ........ .... ................................ ......$2.00
funeral Home in Coolville, with the Pastor Jeff Wallace · officiating. 22, Reedsville, and Tasha from Chicago to Columbus will area near the Rocksprings Fair- One Monlh ................................................ $8.70
One Year ................................ ............ ... $104.00
8udal followed at the Massar Family Cemetery on East Shade River. Cheyenne Guess, 16, Portland; speak with companies across our grounds.
region wanting to take advantage
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Timmy Ray Hood, 40, Pomeroy,
Dilly .................. ............. ................... .. SO Cen1s , •

EMS units log
17 calls

NKING

FRESH HEAD

$

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

Llmlt2 pleaae

FRESH CHIQUnA

4/$

.

?,

$129

7.3-7.8 oz.

' ' ,... . r. r.

The Dally Sentinel • .Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport•. Ohio

Monday, June 28, 2000

AEP'-32'.Q
Akzo - 36'.1
·
AmTech/SBC - 48'•
Ashland Inc. - 38!.

AT&amp;T-34l.

Bank One- 28~
Bob Evans- 14'•
BorgWamer - 38!.
Champion - 3'1.
Charming Shops - 3'1.
City Holding-

n.

Federal Mogul-10~
FlnllaJ-22

Gannett - s~.
General Electric - 49~.
Harley Davidson- 33').

Kmart-6'·

Kroger -' 21~.
Lands End - 34),
Ud. - 21'•
Oak HIH Financial- 14~
OVB-27
One valley - 32'.1
Peoplea-13!.
Premier - 6~.
Rockwell - 33\

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell - 62
Sears-3~.

Shoney'a -!.
Wai-Mart- 53.,_
Wendy'&amp; - 1~.
Worthlnglon - 11 ~.

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes ol
the previous day's trans·
actions,

provided
Advesl of GeiiiPQIIa.

by

Condil;ions will become more
unstable across the tri-county area
as a cold front approaches this
evening, forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
repo~ed that showers and thunderstorms may enter the regio
tonight. Overnight lows will be in
the 60s.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Becoming
mostly
cloudy with showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly from late
evening on. Some thunderstorms
may contain . frequent lightning.
strong gusty winds, and heavy rainfall. Warm and muggy with lows
near 70. Southwest wind 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
· Tuesday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of ~howers, and perhaps a
thunderstorm. Highs 80 to 85.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thesday night ... Mostly cloudy.

A chance of showers early. Lows in
the lower and mid 60s.

Subscribers not desiring 10 pay the carrier may
remit !n advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basis. Credit wil l be
given canier each week.
No subscription by mail permitted in areas

where home ca rr ier service is available .
Publisher reserves th e right to adjust rates dur·
ina the s ubscription period. Subscription rate
cha naes may be implemented by changing the

duration of the subscriptioo.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Meigs Co•nty
13 Weeb............................... ..................$27.30

26 Weeks...... ,................................. ....... $53.82
52 Weeks .................. ...... ............... ... .... $105.56
Ritts Outlidt Melas County
13 Weelts .................... .... ...................·...... $29.'25
26 Wecks ............... ............ .................... .. $56.68
52 Weeks ........................ ....................... $ I 09.72

Reader Services
Our

~aaln

conttm Ia all stories Is to bt
If you know or 18 error In a SIOIJ,
call dae HWsroom at (740) 992·2155. We will
c:tluk )'OUr Information and make a
correct~ If •arnnted.
~rate.

•

News Depal1met1ts
The main numbtr Is 992-ZISS. Dtpanment
extenskla1 art: .

Genenl MIDIJff............................ EJlt. 1101
News................................................. E11 t. I IOZ
.. ....................1•• , ..., ................. ......

or Ext. 1106

· Other Senlc:e&amp;

Admtlslna...................................... Ext. 1104
Clrrulltlon....................................... Ext. 1103
Classified Ads.................................. Ext. 1100

TAKE THE·TEST...TAKE CONTROL

•

•

Tuesday, June 27, 2000- National HIV Testing Day
Early diagnosis of HIV/AIDS can help in the·treatment and prevention of
infections that can accompany it. Many new developments have been made
that give people living with HIV better healthcare options. ·
Get tested today and protect those you love ...

•

..

•
•
•
••

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

•
•

'
•

�•
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Veterans reflect on bloodshed so years later

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
.

Monday, June 28, 2000

BY THE AssociATED

Shooting leaves one dead

' WARREN (AP) -Three men were arreste in a shooting that
left two men dead and injured another man, the Trumbull ~ounty
sheriff said.
Ronald Shaffer, 18, Eric Porterfield, 28, and Dennis Gossett, age
unavailable, each were charged with two counts of aggravated murder and one count of aggravated burglary.
. Gary Bell, .39, of Leavittsburg, and Charles Mathey Ill, 39, of
Newton Falls, were shot to death Friday night. Also shot was David
Harper, 38, of Newton Township, who was listed in stable condition
with multiple gUnshot wounds Sunday at Cleveland MetroHealth
Medical Center.
Sheriff Thomas Altiere said the shooting occurred at Harper's
home. He declined to specify how the killings took place or to say
":hat type of gun was used. He said drugs were involved, but he
wouldn't elaborate about a motive.
Youngstown television station WKBN reported that the three
t)len were shot while sitting on the front porch. Harper's wife and
grandchild were on the porch and other people were in the house,
but no one else was hurt, the station said.

PRESS

Ohio veterans who dodged bombs and
bullets during the Korean War have not forgotten the sacrifices made by their comrades
who died in battle, but some have chosen not
to commemorate the war's 50th anniversary.
Sok Chan Cho, a lieutenant in the South
Korean Army who grew up in North Korea,
is trying to forget the war's final days in 1953.
He plans no commemoration of Sunday's
50th anniversary of the war's inception.
"Mostly I don't think about the war," said
.Cho, now 73 and a resident of Strongsvill~, a
Cleveland suburb. "I try to forget the war and
the tragedies it caused."
Cho does vividly remember one night
when he was leading a patrol. A firelight
erupted, and Cho was hit in the right knee.
"The bullet broke my leg, left a terrible

scar and shortened my leg by 3 inches after
the massive surgery," said Cho, who recovered
and stayed in the army for 10 years, rising to
the rank: of captain.
T he Greater Cleveland Chapter of the
Korean War Veterans Association also does not
plan a commemoration·of the anniversary.
Richard Danielson,
a Marine veteran
and a national association leader, said there are
no ceremonies in Cleveland because 12 association chapters in northeast Ohio could not
agree on what to do.
To honor what is· often termed "the forgotten war," Rick Maier is leading an effort to
build a Korean War memorial in Akron for
those who fought- and died- in the short,
savage conflict.
"I lost 14 men to an infiltrator. They had
their heads blown off," said Maier, a former

n,

Army machine gunner, now 70.
His group, the Korean War Veterans Association of Summit County, has been involved in
a dispute with another group over where to
build the memorial, but he is confident he cari
get the job done.
~
Because of the dispute, private benefacto~
are planning a second Korean War memor~
for the University of,Akron campus.
::
"We will have our memorial;' said Maier,
who arrived in Korea in August 1950, during
a time of heavy lighting. "We will have names
of all of those in Summit County wno died"
included in the memorial.
MaiJ!'s group wants to erect a statue of a
bundled-up Gl. M~ny soldiers fought in frigid
weather in mountainous regions of the Kore~
an peninsula.

•Federal Consumer Protection has confirmed that the fuel saving claims !lf this adveniaement are 100._, accurate.

:Woman set on fire dies

Device May Increase Gas Mileage by 22%

COLUMBUS (AP)- A woman doused with gasoline and set on
fire in March at a grocery store parking lot died after recently being
up,graded to fair condition.
Trishella McDaniel, 33, suffered second- and third-degree burns
to more than 70 percent of her body and had been listed in critical
condition at Ohio State University Medical Center, where she died
Saturday.
" She was upgraded to serious condition, then to fair condition a
co uple weeks ago, said Mary Van Fleet, hospital administrative manager.
"She totally, unexpectedly died,"Van Fleet said.
The Franklin County coroner has not determined a cause of
death.
: ·, Lana Williams, 28, has been charged with attempted murder.
P~osecutors are expected to review the charge.
Witnesses told police that McDaniel and Williams appeared to be
~rgu ing when Williams doused McDaniel with gasoline from a can
a n~ lighted it.
.. A stock boy who had been wheeling out a customer's groceries
g~abbed a carton of milk and poured it on McDaniel.
. A police officer who arrived at the scene used a fire extinguisher from his cruiser to put out the fire.

BOSTON- National Fuelsaver
Corp. of Boston has developed
alowcostautomotiveaccessory
called the Platinum Gas Saver
which is guaranteed to increase
gas mileage by 22% while
meeting all emission standards.
With a simple connection to
a vacuum line, the Gas Saver
adds microscopic quantities of
platinum to the air-fuel mixture
entering the engine.
Platinum has the unique ability
to make non-burning fuel burn.
With platinum in the flame zone,
you increase the percentage of
fuel burning in the engine from
68% of each gallon to 90%.
Since unburnt fuel is pallution,

this 22% of each gallon would
Iiormany burn when it reaches the
plalinwnofthecatalyticconvener.
Unfortunately, the converter's
platinum bums this fuel outside
oftheengine,wheretheheatand
energy produced from burning
this fuel cannot be harnessed to
drive your vehicle.
But when the Gas Saver adds
platinum to engine combustion,
22% more ·of . each gallon
burns inside. the engine so that
22% fewer gallons are required
to drive the same distance.
After studying this process
for five years, the government
concluded: "Independent testing
shows greater fuel savings with

the Platinum Gas Saver than the
22%claimed by the developer."
In addition to this study, the
Gas Saver has received patents
forcleaningo.tt caboltandraising
octane, making premium fuel
unnecessary for most vehicles.
Joel Robinson, the developer,
commented: ''We have sold over
400,000 Gas Savers. To our
surprise, as many people buy the
Gas Saver because it extends
.engine life (by cleaning out the
abrasive carbon deposits) as
buy it to increase gas mileage
or raise octane."
For further information call:
1-800-LESS-GAS
1-800·5 3 7. 7 42 7

Government Produced
Test Data
The govmunent studied fuel saving
~ data on vehicles made by several

auto makers using the Gas Saver.
This is the data they produced from
a tklct of IS identical5-lill:r vehicles.
V..kle Mlkt/111. Mlleo/pl. ...._...

N . - wltbout
wllb
lacreote
Gu Saver Gas Saver

12.0
11.3
14.1
13.0
s 12.2
6
9.6
7
13.3
8
9.8
9
14.3
10
10.8
II
14.1
12
IS.8
13
14.4
14
13.1
IS
12.9
Average 12.7

'•o Day ·sale
Prices Goad 'uasday, June 27th 8 Wednesday,·June 28th Only

NO RAINCHECKS

BONE·IN HAM

Steaks

c
Lb.

P·izza
3/$

16.6
20.1

18.8
17.1
13.3

17.9
13.1
18.4

13.9
17.6

17.S
IS.9
14.0
- 11.3

16.3

48.3%
46.9%

46.8%
44.6%
40.2%

38.S%
34.6%
33.7%
28.7%

28.7%
24.8%
10.8%
10.4%
6.9%
-12.4%
28.3%

WHILE SUPPLIES

LA T

SUNNYCANEPURECANE

JENO'S FROZEN
'•

17.8

1
2
3
4

"

Sugar-·

'

·~

., ..
~

51bl.
Limit 2 plene

OSCAR MAYER

Welners or Big &amp;
Juicy Hot Dogs
,...,, ....

c

KooiPops

c

lb. Package

UNITED'

Bananas

24 ct.

Garold Ve: aaon Douglas

Wilkesvilre 4th

Trustees to meet

Enrollment set

Vandalism at
motel

Leota Massar

2lta.

UNITED VALLEY BELL

2% Milk

79
Gallpn

Limit 4 please

LEAP APPLE OR

Macaron &amp;
heese Dinner

4/$1

rry Pie Filling

7oz.

Umlt 2 Please
21 oz.

'

298 ,SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE June 27 &amp; 28, 2000 ONLY

••

•

Man jailed

Hillside VIS

Licenses Issued

The· Daily Sentinel

Roundtable set

·Qarclen dub
meeting

..

Storms are possible tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

gal.

Lettuce

Workshop on tap

BU,thefts
are reported

LETART FALLS- Hazel Webb, 79, Letart Falls, died on Sunday,
June 25, 2000 at her residence.
·
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

3/$

head

Yard sale set

card shower
planned

LOCAL STOCKS

c

and Heidi Ann Tucker, 27, Middleport; Edward Eugene Patterson Jr., 31, Pomeroy, and Jamie
Lynn Holman, 28, Pomeroy; and
Patrick Samuel Cleland, 28, Middleport, and Karina Chavez, 23,
Pomeroy.

Civil suit filed

Hazel Webb

Water

Lbs.

Boosters to meet

of the world market.
This half-day session will give
those businesses or individuals
RACINE - Southern High
new to exporting the answers to School athletic boosters wiU meet
questions about choosing an Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
POMEROY - Units of the
ALBANY - Garold Vernon Douglas, 55, of Albany, died Saturday, Meigs Emergency Services
agent or distributor, payments, school.
June 24, 2000 in Meigs County at the place of his birth, the family answered 17 calls for assistance
documentation, and how the
farm established by his grandparents, Herbert and Amanda Douglas.
internet will change business.
over the weekend. Units respondHe was the son of Harold D. Douglas and ed as follows:
The cost is $20, including
Margery A. Douglas.
lunch.The registration •deadline is
CENTRAL DISPATCH
HARRISONVILLE - The
He was a graduate of Pomeroy High School.
Saturday, 12:13 a.m., Manuel
POMEROY - A personal July 12, and registration may be Harrisonville Senior Citizens and
He was ho!lorably discharged from the U.S. Road, assisted by Racine as First injury lawsuit has been filed in made by calling Buckeye Hills at Lend-a-Hand Ladies are sponsorArmy after serving from May 4, 1965 until Responder, Ernest Bush, Jackson Meigs County Common Pleas 374-9436.
ing a yard and bake sale Friday
April l9,1967, where he achieved the rank of General Hospital;
and Saturday at the town hall
C9urt by Howard W ri~esel,
Staff Sergeant.
·
3:14 a.m., State Route 684, Racine, against Matthew Wilson,
senior center building on SR 684
He received special recognition by Head- assisted by Rutland, Craig P'ortland, and others, alleging
from 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. each day.
quarters Company, First Brigade, 3rd Armored Stevens, O'Bieness Memorial iojuries from an a!JtO accident
Division, for his ·individual contribution to Hospital;
exceeding $25,000.
Troop Test Frontier Shield. H e also received
ATHENS - A card shower is
2:53 p.m., Haning Ridge, assistthe National Defense Service medal and rated ed by Pomeroy, farm accident,
planned for Carl Barnhill, who
EAST MEIGS Meigs
will celebrate his 96th birthday County Historical Society will ·
Marksman with the rifle.
Gerald Douglas, dead on arrival;
He was also a member of the Hocking Valley Sportsmen and a
on July 4. Cards may be sent in sponsor its first workshop for
4:26 p.m., Rocksprings Rehatremendo'!s help to the Albany Fair Board. He was an avid deer bilitation Center, Arvil Wiblin,
care of Kimes Convalescent Cen- local residents who want to write
hunter, known by his peers as one of the best shots around. He also OBMH;
POMEROY - Deputies with ter, 75 Kimes Lane, Athens, Ohio stories for the upcoming new
enjoyed tractor pulling and fishing.
.
the
Meigs County Sheriff's 45701.
Sunday, 2:06 a.m., Nye Avenue,
Meigs County History Book ,
He was an employee ofLe-AxWater District and a former longtime Keith Day, treated;
Department investigated a numMonday, 6 p.m. at the Eastern
employee of Richard .Grim Excavating. Over the years, he has also
10 a.m.;Rocksprings Rehabili- ber of complaints over the weekHigh School Library.
worked the family .farm, most recently as an irreplaceable partner with tation Center, assisted by Syra- end, including a breaking and
his son in Douglas Farm Services. He was loved and respected by all cuse, Dorothy Ciark, Holzer entering of a Salem Center store.
WILKESVILLE - "Let Freewho knew him.
dom
Ring" is the theme for the
Owners of the Pick and Shovel
Medical Center;
He is survived by hi~ loving wife of 34 years, Rhea Thompson Dou12:12 p.m., Broadway Street, carryout and store at Salem Cen- July 4 celebration at Wilkesville.
. REEDSVILLE - Olive Townglas, and a daughter, Kimberly Douglas of Charleston, South Carolina, assisted by Pomeroy, Ruby Fife, ter reported that a number of
Cash prizes ofS25 will be given ship Trustees will hold their reguand a son and daughter-in-law, Russell and Karen Douglas of Albany. Pleasant Valley Hospital.
coins, lottery tickets and beer to the best decorated bike or lar meeting July 5 at 7:45 p.m . at
He is also su.rvived by a (special) son and daughter-in-law, John and
were stolen in a breaking and other entry and best decorated the township garage following a
COLUMBIA TWP.
Tamara Lynch of Albany.
Sunday, 10:48 a.m., County entering incident on Friday night entry for ages 1-6 and 7-12, and budget hearing.
He has five grandchildren, Brittany and '!Yler Miller Douglas, and Road 55, motor vehicle accident, or Saturday morning.
cash prizes of$50 will be given to
Wyatt, Morgan and Grace Lynch; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Justin William, refused treatment.
Danny
Crislip,
Pomeroy, the best decorated children's float,
Sharon and Ned Swindell of Shade, and Patricia and Dale Arnold of
reported that a weed trimmer was best decorated adult float, and the
MIDDLEPORT
best horse entry. $50 and a trophy
Albany; two sisters-in-law, Sandy Hawk of Chauncey, and Cheryl PenSaturday, 1:57 a.m., Lincoln stolen from his home.
POMEROY -Veterans Affairs
dergast of Goose Creek, South Carolina; two brothers-in-law and sis- Heights, Audre Backus, treated.
Tim Fry of Nease Road, will be awarded to the most orig- Medical Center/Chillicothe will
ters-in-la~Virgil and Paula Thompson of Cameron, Illinois, and Leroy
Racine, reported that he came inal patriotic float or entry for all provide health care enrollment
RACINE
and Susan Thompson of Shawnee; and a brother-in-law, Dennis
Sunday, 6: 11 p.m., Dorcas home from church and found • ages.
Friday, 10 a.m.-noon and 1-2
Children are to register in front p.m. at the Veterans Service Office
Thompson of Obetz; three aunts, Grace Doqglas Frazier of Spring- Road, Sally Savage,JGH;
number of guns were missing
field, Edna Douglas Smith of Columbus, and Manda Eastman of
7:30p.m., SR 338, Hazel Webb, from his home. There was no of Mulholand's Store, and all at 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy:
Pomeroy; many nieces, nephews, and cousins. ·
forced entry, according to the other entries are to register at the West Virginia residents are weldead on arrival.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Margery A. Douglas, his
school. Registration is from 9:45 come to enroll. Proof of military
sherifi's report.
·REEDSVILLE
father, Harold D. Douglas, an infant sister Lenore E. Douglas, his mothto 10:45 a.m.
Saturday, 11:10 a.m., County
service is ·required at the time of
er-in-law Bernice Thompson, and a brother and sister-in-law, Terry Road 9, Tondea Chang, St'.Joseph
Queens, lire departments, enrollment.
politicians, antique and restored
.
and Sandy Mayles.
Memorial Hospital;
Services will be T\)esday, June 27, 2000 at I p.m. at Bigony-Jordan
automobiles; restored farm equipSunday, 12:52 a.m., SR 124,
p~becl
Funeral Home, Albany, with Pastor John King officiating. Burial will Laura Mitchell, treated;
ment, parade lovers and all chilPOMEROY
The
Meigs
&amp;e in Burlinghal)t Cemetery, where Military Graveside Services will be
dren are invited to participate.
9:26 a.m., SR 124, Arthur
POMEROY David L:
County Sheriff's Department
Lunch will be served on the Cogar, age unreported, Shade, was
conducted.
Davis, Camden Clark Memorial
continues to investigate a crimi- square. Information is available by
~ Friends may call this evening from 5~9 p.m. and anytime Tuesday Hospital.
placed in the Middleport Jail over
nal damaging complaint at the calling 669-8507 .
before services at the funeral home.
the weekend following an allege&lt;l
RUTLAND
Meigs Motel in Pomeroy.
·Saturday, 1:29 a.m., Lincoln
domestic violence incident.
:
According to Sheriff James M.
Street, Hallia Eblin, HMC.
Cogar is expected to appear itt
.. Soulsby, customers at the motel
SYRACUSE
Meigs County Court on Mon~
rented a room, tore mirrors from
EAST MEIGS -Leota Massar, 90, of East Meigs, died Wednesday,
POMEROY - Vacation Bible day.
Saturday, 10:51 p.m., Royal
June 21, 2000 in Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, Oak . Resort, assisted by Central the walls and caused other School will be held at Hillside
"extensive" damage.
Baptist Church in Pomeroy from
.
.
West Virginia, after an"' extended illness.
Dispatch, Stephanie Shamblin,
Several prank telephone calls 6:30-9 p.m., beginning Monday
Born in Hazel, she was the daughter of the late William C. and Mary HMC.
were apparently made from the and continuing through Friday.
Grace Fitch Smith and was a member of the Keno Church of Christ.
TUPPERS PLAINS
.room as well, and the matter The theme is "Noah's Ark." Buses
She Was also a member of the ·Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 274,
Saturday, 2:56 p.m., State
remains under investigation.
will pick up ,any interested chilin Guysville.
' ·'
Route Mary Goble, CCMH.
(USPS ZIJ·HO)
'
Along with her parents, she was preceded ln death by her husband,
dren who call the church at 992Ohio V•lley Publlahllll co.
"
6768. Children aged three and Publi1hed every arternoon, Monday t.hroua,h
Charles E. Massar; three sisters, Ulah Swan, Leona Babcock and Mary
Frida~. Ill Court S1., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
older are welcome to attend.
Riggs; and a foster nephew, Ray E. Justis.
·
Ohio Valle y Publiahina Company., Pomeroy,
MARIETTA --' Buckeye Hills
Ohio 4"69, Ph. 992·21.56. Second clau pos t·
She is survived by one son and daughter-in-law, Starling and Sandra
POMEROY
Marriage
aae paid It Pomeroy, Ohio.
is
sponsorDevelopment
District
Massar; a sister, Fern Price of Hebron; two grandchildren, Diana Mas- r licenses have been issued in Meigs
Mtmbtr; The Associated Prcu, and the Ohio
sar Buckley and her husband Kevin, and Charles William Massaf; three County Probate Court to James ing a small group roundtable disNewspa~r A5SO';iJtion.
cussion
on
exporting
basics.
The
great-grandchildren, Michelle, Miranda and Benjamin Buckley; a · D. Swart, and Alesia Marlene
POSTMASTER! Send ad drc5~ corrections to
nephew, David N. Riggs, whom she reared from childhood; a special Mullins, 36, both of Albany; event will be held July 19.
The Dill)' Sentinel, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy,
POMEROY
Winding
Trail
Experts
in
the
field
of
internafriend, Ruth Stethem of Long Bottom; and several nieces and Zachery Paul Ward, 21, and
Ohio4~769.
Garden
Club
will
meet
on
Tuestional
banking,
commerce,
shipnephews.
.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Robin Sue Barringer, 19, both of
By C.l'l'ltr or Motor Route
Services were held on Saturday, June '24, 2000, at 1 p.m. at White Portland; James L.Wrence Adams, ping · and internet technology day at 6 p.m. at the Park and Ride
One Weck ........ .... ................................ ......$2.00
funeral Home in Coolville, with the Pastor Jeff Wallace · officiating. 22, Reedsville, and Tasha from Chicago to Columbus will area near the Rocksprings Fair- One Monlh ................................................ $8.70
One Year ................................ ............ ... $104.00
8udal followed at the Massar Family Cemetery on East Shade River. Cheyenne Guess, 16, Portland; speak with companies across our grounds.
region wanting to take advantage
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Timmy Ray Hood, 40, Pomeroy,
Dilly .................. ............. ................... .. SO Cen1s , •

EMS units log
17 calls

NKING

FRESH HEAD

$

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

Llmlt2 pleaae

FRESH CHIQUnA

4/$

.

?,

$129

7.3-7.8 oz.

' ' ,... . r. r.

The Dally Sentinel • .Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport•. Ohio

Monday, June 28, 2000

AEP'-32'.Q
Akzo - 36'.1
·
AmTech/SBC - 48'•
Ashland Inc. - 38!.

AT&amp;T-34l.

Bank One- 28~
Bob Evans- 14'•
BorgWamer - 38!.
Champion - 3'1.
Charming Shops - 3'1.
City Holding-

n.

Federal Mogul-10~
FlnllaJ-22

Gannett - s~.
General Electric - 49~.
Harley Davidson- 33').

Kmart-6'·

Kroger -' 21~.
Lands End - 34),
Ud. - 21'•
Oak HIH Financial- 14~
OVB-27
One valley - 32'.1
Peoplea-13!.
Premier - 6~.
Rockwell - 33\

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell - 62
Sears-3~.

Shoney'a -!.
Wai-Mart- 53.,_
Wendy'&amp; - 1~.
Worthlnglon - 11 ~.

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes ol
the previous day's trans·
actions,

provided
Advesl of GeiiiPQIIa.

by

Condil;ions will become more
unstable across the tri-county area
as a cold front approaches this
evening, forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
repo~ed that showers and thunderstorms may enter the regio
tonight. Overnight lows will be in
the 60s.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Becoming
mostly
cloudy with showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly from late
evening on. Some thunderstorms
may contain . frequent lightning.
strong gusty winds, and heavy rainfall. Warm and muggy with lows
near 70. Southwest wind 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
· Tuesday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of ~howers, and perhaps a
thunderstorm. Highs 80 to 85.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thesday night ... Mostly cloudy.

A chance of showers early. Lows in
the lower and mid 60s.

Subscribers not desiring 10 pay the carrier may
remit !n advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basis. Credit wil l be
given canier each week.
No subscription by mail permitted in areas

where home ca rr ier service is available .
Publisher reserves th e right to adjust rates dur·
ina the s ubscription period. Subscription rate
cha naes may be implemented by changing the

duration of the subscriptioo.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Meigs Co•nty
13 Weeb............................... ..................$27.30

26 Weeks...... ,................................. ....... $53.82
52 Weeks .................. ...... ............... ... .... $105.56
Ritts Outlidt Melas County
13 Weelts .................... .... ...................·...... $29.'25
26 Wecks ............... ............ .................... .. $56.68
52 Weeks ........................ ....................... $ I 09.72

Reader Services
Our

~aaln

conttm Ia all stories Is to bt
If you know or 18 error In a SIOIJ,
call dae HWsroom at (740) 992·2155. We will
c:tluk )'OUr Information and make a
correct~ If •arnnted.
~rate.

•

News Depal1met1ts
The main numbtr Is 992-ZISS. Dtpanment
extenskla1 art: .

Genenl MIDIJff............................ EJlt. 1101
News................................................. E11 t. I IOZ
.. ....................1•• , ..., ................. ......

or Ext. 1106

· Other Senlc:e&amp;

Admtlslna...................................... Ext. 1104
Clrrulltlon....................................... Ext. 1103
Classified Ads.................................. Ext. 1100

TAKE THE·TEST...TAKE CONTROL

•

•

Tuesday, June 27, 2000- National HIV Testing Day
Early diagnosis of HIV/AIDS can help in the·treatment and prevention of
infections that can accompany it. Many new developments have been made
that give people living with HIV better healthcare options. ·
Get tested today and protect those you love ...

•

..

•
•
•
••

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

•
•

'
•

�•
••
Th..---e_D_aii.;_y_se_nt_in_ei_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _O
__ P-IDIOn
The Daily Sentinel
Utao!isfid tn 1948
111

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

r---~~----===---~----~~

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

111E6REAT ·
MALL OF
CHINA.

n.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Still high
But OPEC bears the blame
for soaring gas prices

A look at
what U.S.
newspapers
·are saytng

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· Today is Monday,June 26, the 178th day of2000.There are 188 days
left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On June 26, \900, a commission that included Dr. Walter Reed
began the fight against the deadly disease yellow fever.
! On thi&lt; date:
: In 1870, the first section of Adantic City, N.J.'s Boardwalk was
9pened to the public.
: In 1917, the first troops of the American Expeditionary Fotce
trrived in France during World War I.
; In 1919, the NewYotk Daily News was first published.
: In 1925, Charlie Chaplin's classic comedy, 'The Gold Rush," pre.i,llered at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood.
· In 1945, the United Nations charter was signed by 50 countries in
San Francisco.
: ) n 1948, the Berlin Airlift began in earnest after the Soviet Union
ret off land and water routes to rhe isolated western sector of the Ger~
man
city.
,.
i ·ln 1959, President Eisenhower joined Britain's Queen Elizabeth II
lh ceremonies officially opening the St. Lawrence Seaway.
~ In 19(&gt;3, President Kennedy visited West Berlin, where he made his
6unous declaration: "lch bin ein Berliner" (I am a Berliner).
; In 1968, Chief U.S. Justice Earl Warren announced his intention to
!):stgn.
;. In 1975, citing what she call.ed a "deep and widespread conspiracy"
!s.;nst her government, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
~eclared a state of emergency.
~oday's Birthdays: Actress Eleanor Parker is 78. Jazz musician-film
Composer Dave Grusin is 66. Actor jo)ef Sommer is 66. Singer Dilly
t?avis Jr. (The Fifth Dimension) is 60. Singer Georgie Fame . is 57.
~ctor Clive Fr•ncis is 54. Actor Robert Davi is 46. Singer.'fnusician
~ick Jones is 45. Actor Gedde Wa9nabe is 45., Rock singer C hris
jsaak is 44. Rock singer Patty Smyth is 43. Singer terri Nunn (Berlin)
'- 39. Actor Mark McKinney is 38.

-

•

•

I

Mond.y, June 21, 2000

'

Utt•~ tv tit• •d1'Wr an wtkom•. Tlt•J rlwulll H ltu tho 300 •flf1ls. All kn•n tltw subject
to 11diti111 and m~Jt btt slg~t•d tmil inel~dl! tlddnsa ~Jnd 11/tpltone lflllnbtr. No llllligllt4lmen will
ht pvltlislt«i. Ufltn sl10uld bt irr rood lmle, tuldnssing iuu111, nut puso~talU"•·
oplitUUrttzpnssulln tht t:oiUIM bdow tlrt '"' ((lftii/UUS of tlct Ohio Valley Publilltlnt
Co. ; ftt.'Wrial b(Jonl, Mltlns fllh•rwin tWiftl.

• The New York Times, "" gasoline prices: Gasoline prices have
risen above $2 a gallon in C hicago and Milwaukee, about 25 percent
higher than two months ago, angering drivers and sending political
shock waves through Washinb'fon. Drivers blame retailers. Refiners
blame federal regulators, the courts and OPEC. Federal regulators suspect price fixin g. Some of these ch~rnes are plain wrong. Others have
JTtore merit but do not account for the whole problem.
_ The fact that gasoline prices across the country are about 25 percent
higher than they were a year ago is unsurprising. OPEC refuses to keep crude oil
prices under $28 a barrel as it promised in
the spring. As ofJune I, refineries have been
required to sell cleaner-burning gasoline which refiners say creates production problems. A federal court recendy ruled that
•
Unocal Corporation could charge refiners
royalties for a specific technique for produciJ;Jg cleaner-burning gasoline, forcing refiners to turn to more expen. sive methods.
• The Thlsa (Okla.) World, on phasiug out tire i,lreritanre tax: Presi.dent Clinton has vowed to veto a bill that would phase out the inheritance tax over I 0 years. Let's hope he reconsiders. The inherita,nce tax
is basically wrong, it does not bring in much money and it does ·nor
. accomplish the goal originally intended.
. To boot, it damages a lot of families who are trying to hang on to
hard-earned farms and small businesses.
·, In the hands of the politicians, the "death cax" has become a politi- .
. cal football. Th.e Republicans and more than 70 Democrats in the
J-louse voted to start cutting the inheritance tax rate next year and
- .continue it until 2010 when the tax would be gone.
-•.: That would result in revenue losses of about $75 billion a year or·a
total of $750 billion. But those figures don't consider how much the ·
. federal government spends in collecting the taX. Once those costs are
. factored in, the tax really adds relatively little revenue.
, · .. Every year, families that are subject to the tax spend millions in
estate planning and in setting up legal means to avoid the tax. This
·benefits no one. It is money that could better be spent in productive
investment.
The original intent of the inheritance tax, presumably, was to redis. tribute a big part of the forl:\lnes amassed by the very rich. But the very
· rich are able to legally avoid the tax. Democrats say that about half the
:tax t::tke comes from the very rich and have countered with a taX plan
that would exempt those who stand to lose small farms and small businesses.
• The Democrat plan might be better than nothing. But it presum. ably would reduce the tax take by a~out half, meaning that the
remaining tax would indeed be a simple punitive plan for wealthy
people.
The fact is that wealth, not poverty, generates new business, new
industry and new jobs. Forcing those citizens with wealtli to divert
resources to unfair taxes instead of productive investment is not good
for anyone, rich or poor. The death tax is'unfair, unproductive and irra. tiona!. It should be discontinued. It will be if the president decides
against using it as a political ploy and signs the GOP bill

!!!
J.
T~D~yS~~~
~-~~~~~t~.
~·~~~~d~--~--~~~~~~e~A~~
Reader shares yet 'another 1tow we met' story
Dear Ann Landers: I know you have
printed a great many "how we met" stories, and some of your re~ders are sick of
them, but mine is a little different. I hope
you will share it with your readers:
I was at my mother's funeral, consumed by grief. My mother was always
my best friend. She clapped loudest at my
school plays, and dried my tears when
my first boyfriend broke my heart. When
her illness was diagnosed, it fell to ine to
take care of her; preparing her meals, and
keeping the house up. I considered it an
honor.
Now my work was finished, and I was
alone. In the middle of the funeral service, I heard the church door open, followed by foo tsteps. An exasperated
young , man appeared, looked around
briefly, and seated himself next to me. He
folded his hands, and I could see that his
eyes were brimming with tears.
After a few minutes, he asked, "Why
do they keep calling Aunt Mary 'Mar-

~f~

74D-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

.Saturcl.y, June 21, 2000

Jli~N IN

Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

PageA4

occasion, mixed with the man's incredible mistake, struck me as hilarious. I
cupped my hands over my face, hoping
others would interpret it as sob~ of grief,
but the creaking pew gave me away. I
peeked at the bewildered, misguided
man, and was surprised to see that he was
laughing, too.
After the final "Amen;· we both
ADVICE
dashed out a side door of the church into
the parking lot. He then said, "Let's go
garet'?" I replied, "Because that was her get a cup of coffee." We married a year
later, and recently celebrated our 23rd
name. No one called her Mary."
"No;· he insisted, "that isn't correct. wedding anniversary. Whenever anyone
asks how we met, my husband tells them,
Her name was Mary Peters."
"This is not the funeral of Mary "Her mother and my Aunt Mary introduced· us , and it was truly a match made
Peters;' I replied.
"Isn't this the Lutheran church?" he in heaven." -- Ginny in the Midwest
asked.
Dear Ginny: Wrong church, right
"No," I told him. "The Lutheran pew. Thanks.. for sending it my way. I
church is across the street."
loved it.
Red-faced, he realized he was ar the
Dear Ann Landers: A few evenings
wrong funeral. The solemnity of the ago, my husband and I went to dinner at
a very fine restaurant. 1\vo men in busi-

Ann
Landers

SOCIETY NEWS

''

Birth announced
HENTOFF'S VIEW

Contempt for diverse ideas shrouding campuses
Stories nor likely to have been part of this
year's college graduation exetcises:
Last October - as reported by the Student
Press Law Center in Arlington, Va.- students
at California State University at Sacramento
stole 3,000 copies of the student newspaper.
They were enraged because the paper, The
State Hornet, had published the picture of a
Hispanic man being arrested and charged
with resisting arrest at a football game. There
had been violent incidents at the game,
including the death of a spectator.
The self-righteous censors then demanded
that the paper pledge never to publish anything that showed minorities in an unfavorable light.
In recent years, students have stolen, trashe&lt;l
and sometimes burned quantities of campus
newspapers around the couptry as a form of
vigilante protest. A recent issue of the Student
Press Law Center Report notes that since
September of last year, thieves have stolen
publications from nine colleges in eight states,
from California to Mississippi. In April, many
copies of two student publications at Yale
University were stolen, and theft took place at
five more colleges.
Frequently, these incidents are motivated by
a contempt for diversity of speech and ideas in
higher education. At prestigious Cornell University, the conservative campus paper, The
Cornell Review, published a parody of ebonies - a kind of informal black speech that
some educators thought should be considered
.
equal to standard English.
More than 200 copies of The Cornell
Review were stolen. Some were thrown into
trash cans and others were destroyed in a
merry bonfire. There was no public criticism
by members of the administration or the faculty of this transmogrification of the principle
of free inquiry in the academy.
Emboldened, the vandals attacked again
when The Cornell Review published an illustration· by syndicated newspaper cartoonist

prised, having interviewed other professors
with job security at a number of campuses
who are afraid to speak against assaults on
conservative newspapers lest they be accused
of being insensitive to black students.
The main campus newspaper, The Cornell
Sun, in reporting on my lecture, quoted professor Lawrence Moore, head of the American
Studies department, who had invited me. He
told The Cornell Sun that in my speech, I had
been mistaken about faculty silence concernNEA COLUMNIST
ing the thefts and bonfires. There had been
critical comment, he said.
But the night before, when I arrived on
Chuck Asay, tided "Which One ofThesc Kills
More Blacks?" There were three panels - a campus, Moore told me that he had been surKu Klux Klan · murder by fire; followers of prised at the lack of public criticism from any
Hitler in front of a large swastika; and a doc- of the faculty At dinner at his home, after my
tor about to perform an abortion in a Planned lecture, two professors said they had been disParenthood clinic. The student"thieves who appointe&lt;! that there had been no faculty crittook revenge on the newspaper were mostly icism. In my lectures, I said that someone
should teach the students who burned newsblack and Hispanic.
Cornell's dean of students, John Ford, told p.apers how 'unacceptable' books were burned
me when I was· reporting the first mocking of in bonfires in Germany in the 1930s. And, I
the free press on the part of students that he should have added, about how the Third
was not aware that any copies of the Cornell Reich criminalized jazz, labeling it "jewish
·
Review had been set on fire. 'J;'he second time black rubbish."
I
wrote
a
letter
to
the
Cornell Sun, correctit happened, I told him I had a photograph of
him standing at the burning without stopping ing Professor Moore. It was nor published. It
it. He then told me he saw. no reason for dis- did appear in the Cornell Review, where I
ciplinary action concerning this theft of more noted that Cornell's code of conduct states
clearly: "The right to free expression requires
than 500 issues .
A spokeswoman for the administration, respect for the rights of others."
But when I was reporting OR the burning of
sounding as if she had been trained at the
Clinton White House, called the burning ideas there, Barbara Krause - Cornell's judi"symbolic" -- adding that Cornell supports cial administrator in charge of disciplinary
both the right to publish and the right to action - assured me that the theft and
destruction of newspapers had not violated
protest what's printed.
. Last fall, I was invited to lecture at Cornell Cornell's code of conduct.
Cornell and a good many other colleges need
on, of all things·, freedom of speech and of the
courses
in respect for diversity of ideas among
press. I spoke in detail about Cornell's
students,
faculty and the administration, includapproval of arson and theft to shut down
.
diversity of ideas. At a faculty lunch, a profes- ing the often-distant college presidents.
sor took me aside and said, ''I'm glad you're
(Nat Hentoff is ~ nationally renowned authority
on the First Amendment and the rest of the Bill of
saying these things, because I can't."
·
She isalenured professor. I was not sur- Righrs.)

Nat
Hentoff

BUSINESS MIRROR

·New and old economies remain interdependent
BY JoHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK - It is a distinction familiar
to all now, .t he new economy and the old, but
in truth there is still just one economy. The
new n~eds the old, and the old 'is a major beneficiary of the new.
As distinguished from the old, the new is
based on utilizing mankind's mass of information. and turning it into practical products. It
doeJn' t so much rely on existing needs as on
creating new ones. ·
The old is centered on. supplying the
more-basic requirements of fuod, clothing,
shelter and transportation, and even the most
dedicated techies must concede they cannot
live on information alone.
But the two are ever-more reliant on each
other. The new economy, for instance, needs
the capital produced by the old economy, and
in some respects its biggest customer is the
old.
It's true that there was a time, no more than
a few years ago, when the new economy had
the notion of going its own way. But now the
differences are so blurred it is difficult to tell
on'e from ilie other. General Motors epitomizes the old, but it is one of the world's

largeit users of the new.
"
Faster than almost anyone had foreseen,
what were viewed as distinctly different 'e ntities have been merging into a hybrid. Management consultants now say that success is
most measurable in companies with a bit of
both.
In fact, a study conducted among 450
American and European companies by Mercer Management Consulting concludes that
"hybrids" have a greater pro~t potential than
pure Internet plays.
Operating in both physical and virtual
worlds, hybrids are more likely· to satisl)r consumers and generate higher margins for
investors, says Mercer's Georges Vialle. One
exaniple is the joining of AOL and Time
Warner.
The initiative has co,me from both old and
new. The new economy companies at first
tended to view their marker as made up of
individuals, but old economy businesses have
taught them otherwise.
The latter recognized that using new technologies produced enormous efficiencies in
. handling inventories and dealing with suppli· ers and · customers. Business-to-business

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

ness suits were seated at the table next to
us. They both made and received calls on
their cell phones throughout the entire
meal. Their conversations were easy to
hear, and their rapid-fire business chatter
was very disturbing to those of us within
listening range.
One of the men even got up and
walked into the men's bathroom while
using his phone. He was gone for several
minutes. When he came out of the bathroom, he was STILL talking on the
phone.
I was flabbergasted. Not only was this
man rude, but what on earth could the
client on the other end of that conversation have thought while he was in the
bathroom? Surely, business etiquette hasn 't become so casual that it is acceptable
to make a business call under such circumstances. What do you say? -- No
Name in Nebraska
Dear Nebra1ka: Those rude folks
·who insist on using their cell phones to

IH Third A... , Golllpollo,

740-441-2342

.'

Ohio

(B2B), or new econo)lly seUing to old, is now
where some of the biggest profits are. And in
the process, traditional business models are
being revdlutionized.
As a result, after being stalled for years, productivity has been rising at many old-line
companies, and the effect can be measured in
the bottom line and in the market value of
stocks.
The use of new technologies is even transforming industrial assembly lines. Cookie cutter devices that turned out standardize&lt;! prod~
ucts will instead be customizing orders to suit
individual tastes.
So what are srill called the old and new
economies are being transformed by each
other. Rather than going their separate ways
they are evolving ip ways neither foresaw. ·
They at'l! becoming interdependent.
In hindsight, the two aspects of the economy · seem so well matched that no other
course but mutual dependence could ever
have been imagined. But a casual check of the
1980s literature will show it wasn't anticipated.
·

aolm C.mn!lf is a hr&lt;siness analyst for The Associated Press.)

200 ~n St, Point Plenant, W.va.
30W7&amp;-1333

POMEROY - Amber and
Monte Riffie announce the birth
of a son, Jacob Donald James,
born May 11 at the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Riffle have
another son, Gabriel. Maternal
grandparents are Rex and Kathy
Cumings, and paternal· grandparents are Jim and Joyce Smith and
the late Donald Riffie. Maternal
great-grandparents are Kathryn
Teaford and the late Edward
Moore, and Gladys Cumings and
Jacob Riffle
the late Dave Cumings. Paternal
grandmothers are Carrie Roush·
..
.and the late Lester Roush, and the late Floyd and Lela Riffie.

Dof Aobserves birthdays
CHESTER - Quarterly birthdays were observed when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of America, mer recently at the hall.
Honored were Everett Grant, Erma Cleland, Goldie Frederick,
Betty Young, Betty Jackson. A cake for the occasion was decorated
by JoAnn Ritchie. Doris Grueser and Shirley Beegle were eo-hostesses for the meeting.
Julie' Curils presided at the meeting which opened with pledges
to the Christian and American flags, scripture reading, th'e Lord's
Prayer and the national anthem. Plans were made for a 6 p.m. carryin dinner at the second meeting in .July with Scottie and Esther
Smith.
It was noted that the books will be audited on June 30 at .7 p.m.
at the home of Doris Grueser. A report on the diltrict picnic was
given by Erma Cleland. Helen Wolf noted that her granddaughter
had received a scholanhip from the Daughten of America, as did
Rachel Ashley.
Others attending were Shirley Beegle, Jean Welsh, Sandy White,
Mary Holter, Opal Hollon, Ella Osborne, Ruth Smith, Helen Wolf,
Mary Barringer, Charlotte Grant, Thelma White, and a guest,
Richard White.
Reported ill were Zelda Weber, hospitalized, Betty Young, Margaret Amberger, and Marcia Keller.

Lutheran churches plan dey camp
Amazing Grace day camp will be conducted by the St.John and
·st. Paul Lutheran Churehes, July 10-14 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m each
.day f~ youth who have completed kiJ;Jdergarten to sixth grade. II
will be held at St. John Lutheran Church on Pine Grove Road near
Five Points.
Activities will include crafts, singing, games, recreation, and Bible
·study. There is no cost to participate. Lunch and snacks will be provided daily.
The day camp is a cooperative effort of St. John and St. Paul
'Lutheran Churches, the Southern Ohio Synod of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America, and the Lutheran Outdoor Ministries
in Ohio.
Additional information ,may be obtained by calling Pastor Donald
Fritz at 992-2010 or 992-2688. Registration will take place on the
first ·day of camp.

Trustee scholarships •arclecl

,Nicholas Michael

POMEROY - Nicholas A. Michael, a graduate of Meigs High
School, and Edward Aaron Schaekel, a graduate of Eastern High·
School, have been awarded trustee scholarships by the University of
Rio Grande. '
The scholarships cover partial tUition for the recipients, according
to Mark Abell, director of admissions at the university.
Nicholas, son of Mark and Denise Michael of Middleport, plans to
major in music.
.
Aaron is the son of Edward and Patricia Schaekel. He plans to major
in pre-med:
·

,.
I

Dof A hold dlstrld picnic
CHESTER - The annual picnic and district meeting of the
Deputies and Past Councilors Club of District 13, Daughters of
America, was held recently at Kackelmackel Park, Logan.
Mary C. Moose, president, conducted the meeting during which
time new officers were named. They are Jo Ann Ritchie, president:
Doris Grueser, vice president; Betty Biggs, secretary; and Charlotte
Blake, treasurer.
Several upcoming meetings were announced including a friendship meeting for District 13, .to be held at Chester lodge hall, noon
on Saturday Oct. 2 at 1 p.m. with potluck refreshments, and a
Christmas dinner on Dec. 2 at noon with a meeting to follow at 1
p.m. Guiding Star Council 124 will be the host group. The place
·
will be announced later.
Officers' reports were given by Biggs, secretary, and Opal Hollon,
treasurer. Get-well cards were signed for Zelda Weber, Chester
Council, arid Sylvia Bowens, Logan Council.
JoAnn Ritchie of District 13 announced the StateD of A session
to be held Aug. 14-1 7 ·at Dayton. Members interested in attending
are to call her at 740-992-7362. The death of Ritchie's uncle was
noted. Preceding the poduck picnic, Erma Cleland gave the blessing.
·
·
Attending were Biggs, Esther Harden, Margaret Cotterill, of
Guiding Star Council 134, Syracuse; Ella VanBibber, Edna Edgar.
Faye Trowbridge, Mary C. Moose, and Charlotte Blake, Logan
Council 120, and Hollon, Grueser, Ritchie, Cleland, and Mary K.
Holter, Chester Council 323.

Natural fiber carpet tips
NEW YORK (AP)- It is easy
to fall in love with the look of natuta! fibers. But it is important to
choose natural fiber carpeting carefully, and think.twice about using it
in high traffic areas, because it's not
as rugged as it looks.
Coir (the toughest), sisal and sea
,grass (the softest) look wonderful,
and they will all last longer if they

have a latex backing or if you use a
synthetic-felt pad with a rubberized back. For wall-to-wall use, you
need to glue the carpet direcdy to
the floor to prevent buckling. Metropolitan Home says you should
vacuum fiequendy and treat spills
right away with a dry shampoo.
Various brands are· available in most
hardware stores.

We want your photos!

Edward Scheekel

..

•

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Mother-daughter fellowship observed
POMEROY - "Showers of Blessings" was the theme of the
annual mother-daughter fellowship held recently at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.
Pat Thoma g:i:ve devotions using scripture .from Proverbs on the
theme, "The Wife of a Noble Character.: Prayers were given for
those attending and for the meal.
·
A salad course was served by the men of the church. Miniature
sprinkling cans with roses prepared by Linda Laudermilt were
given as favors . The dining area was decorated in keeping with the
theme.
Betty Spencer was mistress of ceremonies. The opening song was
"Showers of Blessings" with Marilyn Wolfe at the piano, Spencer
gave the opening prayer.
Jennifer Morris and Suzan Cleland read poems honoring mothers. Heidi Tucker sang "His Eye is On the Sparrow" and "His True
Love.:" Charldene Alkire was speaker on women of the Bible. She
compared Biblical women with modern-day ones. and read several
appropriate poems.
Mindy Gardner registered. the guests with Spencer presenting
mothers with corsages made and donated by Barbara Van Meter.
Recognized were Ruby Burnside, the oldest mother; Heidi Tucker, the youngest mother; and Maribelle Warner.. Laudermilt,
Spencer, and Jean Sim were given gifts for co-chairing the fellowship.
Mary Bowles had the closing prayer, and the evening concluded
with group singing of"Faith of Our Mothers."

The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a lew guidelines for
submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus and hiMI
good contrast. NegativeS also are accepted; however, please Include a
print along with the negative.
• Black·andwh~e photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus
and have good c011trast. Negatives also are accepted; however. please
Include a print .along with the negative.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In focus and
have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallet size and
no larger than 8 x 10.
• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reproduce
well on newsprint.
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are saved as
hlgtHesoluUon, hlgt&gt;quallty JPEG files.
• Adllantlx·type photographs are discouraged due to their unique sizes.
which do not translate well to newspaper columns. Adllantlx·type nega.
tlves are not accepted.
• Laserwriter prints of digital Images are discouraged since they do not
reproduce well 011 newsprint.
• Please be sure all subjects In photographs are clearly Identified on
the back of the photograph or 011 an attached sheet of paper.

.

.

conduct business while in restaurants,
theaters, and so on, do so because they
think it impresses the people around
them.They are mistaken. Cell phones are
so common these days, thlry impress no
one. Unless it is an emecgency, users
should phone callers back at a more convenient time. And there is absolutely NO
excuse for using a cell phone in the bathroom.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the life
of a loved one? "Alcoholism: How to
Recognize It, How to Deal With It, How
to Conquer It". can turn things around.
Send a self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money order for
$3.75 (this includes postage and handling) to: Alcohol , c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, IU. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.55.) To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her , past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web page at www.creators.com.

•••

chambers.

MONDAY,June 26

.. .

•••

POMEROY -Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. · at the
office, •117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

CHESTER- ChesterTownship Trustees, special meeting,
Tuesday, 7 p.rn. at the town hall.

RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club, Monday at 1 p.m.;
home of Ann Webster.

POMEROY
RACO
meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m Star
Mill Park, Potluck dinner.

POMEROY Summer
practice, Meigs Marauder Band,
to begin Monday. Practices will
begin promptly at 9 a.m. and
end at noon. All members of the
horn line, drum line and guard
are to be in attendance. For
answers to questions regarding
the practices, call 992-5018.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department,
immunization clinic, Tuesday, 911 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E.St
Memorial Drive. Take children's
shot records. Children must be
accompanied by parent or legal
guardian.
·

RACINE - Meigs County
Republican Executive Conunirtee, 7:30p.m., Star Mill Park.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Agricultural Society,
Monday, 7:30 at the grange
anne!C, regular meeting.
MIDDLEPORT Mike
Warnke performance, 7 p.m.,
Ash Street Chutch. Special
music.
RACINE - The Southern
Local Board of Education, regular session, Monday, 5 p.m.,
Southern High School Cafete-

ria.
POMEROY
Vacation
Bible School, Hillside Baptist
Church in Pomeroy trom 6:30
to 9 p.m., Monday tluough Friday. Theme is "Noah's Ark."
Buses will pick up any interested
children who call the church at
992-6768. Children aged three
and older are welcome to attend.
MIDDLEPORT -Board of
Public Affairs, I p.m., council

TUESDAY, June 27

'·

..

POMEROY - Meigs Local
School District Board of Education, public hearing, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. for public review of
the district continuous improvement; followed by Meigs Local
School District's regular meeting ·
at 7 p.m. in the office at 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy.
COOLVILLE - Revival
services., Orange Christian
Church, Tuesday to Saturday, &lt;7
p.m. Sunday the church will be
rededicated in a service at 2 p.m.
POMEROY

-

Winding

'nail Garden Club, 6 p.m., Tuesday. Members to meet at the
Park and Ride at Rocksprings.·

The Community Calendar
iJ publillhed aa a fi:ee aervice
to non-profit groups wishing to announce meetings,
and special events. The calendar is not designed to ·
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are,
printed ol;lly as space per-.
mits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific
number of days.

·LOOKING FOR C

CARE?

COAD Child Care Resource Network is a FREE
Community service that offers:

• F.;ee referrals to help you find child care
• Information on choosing quality child care
• Help on guidance and discipline questions.

"

CALL: 1-800-577-2276
for a list of providers In your community. .·.
COAO.. the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development

FHEE I f\~I, E « :TI()f\

SHAVER REPAIR

CLINIC~~~
·· .

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport

- · --------'---------""-_...~-'---~---.....,_

____

�•
••
Th..---e_D_aii.;_y_se_nt_in_ei_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _O
__ P-IDIOn
The Daily Sentinel
Utao!isfid tn 1948
111

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

r---~~----===---~----~~

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

111E6REAT ·
MALL OF
CHINA.

n.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Still high
But OPEC bears the blame
for soaring gas prices

A look at
what U.S.
newspapers
·are saytng

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· Today is Monday,June 26, the 178th day of2000.There are 188 days
left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On June 26, \900, a commission that included Dr. Walter Reed
began the fight against the deadly disease yellow fever.
! On thi&lt; date:
: In 1870, the first section of Adantic City, N.J.'s Boardwalk was
9pened to the public.
: In 1917, the first troops of the American Expeditionary Fotce
trrived in France during World War I.
; In 1919, the NewYotk Daily News was first published.
: In 1925, Charlie Chaplin's classic comedy, 'The Gold Rush," pre.i,llered at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood.
· In 1945, the United Nations charter was signed by 50 countries in
San Francisco.
: ) n 1948, the Berlin Airlift began in earnest after the Soviet Union
ret off land and water routes to rhe isolated western sector of the Ger~
man
city.
,.
i ·ln 1959, President Eisenhower joined Britain's Queen Elizabeth II
lh ceremonies officially opening the St. Lawrence Seaway.
~ In 19(&gt;3, President Kennedy visited West Berlin, where he made his
6unous declaration: "lch bin ein Berliner" (I am a Berliner).
; In 1968, Chief U.S. Justice Earl Warren announced his intention to
!):stgn.
;. In 1975, citing what she call.ed a "deep and widespread conspiracy"
!s.;nst her government, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
~eclared a state of emergency.
~oday's Birthdays: Actress Eleanor Parker is 78. Jazz musician-film
Composer Dave Grusin is 66. Actor jo)ef Sommer is 66. Singer Dilly
t?avis Jr. (The Fifth Dimension) is 60. Singer Georgie Fame . is 57.
~ctor Clive Fr•ncis is 54. Actor Robert Davi is 46. Singer.'fnusician
~ick Jones is 45. Actor Gedde Wa9nabe is 45., Rock singer C hris
jsaak is 44. Rock singer Patty Smyth is 43. Singer terri Nunn (Berlin)
'- 39. Actor Mark McKinney is 38.

-

•

•

I

Mond.y, June 21, 2000

'

Utt•~ tv tit• •d1'Wr an wtkom•. Tlt•J rlwulll H ltu tho 300 •flf1ls. All kn•n tltw subject
to 11diti111 and m~Jt btt slg~t•d tmil inel~dl! tlddnsa ~Jnd 11/tpltone lflllnbtr. No llllligllt4lmen will
ht pvltlislt«i. Ufltn sl10uld bt irr rood lmle, tuldnssing iuu111, nut puso~talU"•·
oplitUUrttzpnssulln tht t:oiUIM bdow tlrt '"' ((lftii/UUS of tlct Ohio Valley Publilltlnt
Co. ; ftt.'Wrial b(Jonl, Mltlns fllh•rwin tWiftl.

• The New York Times, "" gasoline prices: Gasoline prices have
risen above $2 a gallon in C hicago and Milwaukee, about 25 percent
higher than two months ago, angering drivers and sending political
shock waves through Washinb'fon. Drivers blame retailers. Refiners
blame federal regulators, the courts and OPEC. Federal regulators suspect price fixin g. Some of these ch~rnes are plain wrong. Others have
JTtore merit but do not account for the whole problem.
_ The fact that gasoline prices across the country are about 25 percent
higher than they were a year ago is unsurprising. OPEC refuses to keep crude oil
prices under $28 a barrel as it promised in
the spring. As ofJune I, refineries have been
required to sell cleaner-burning gasoline which refiners say creates production problems. A federal court recendy ruled that
•
Unocal Corporation could charge refiners
royalties for a specific technique for produciJ;Jg cleaner-burning gasoline, forcing refiners to turn to more expen. sive methods.
• The Thlsa (Okla.) World, on phasiug out tire i,lreritanre tax: Presi.dent Clinton has vowed to veto a bill that would phase out the inheritance tax over I 0 years. Let's hope he reconsiders. The inherita,nce tax
is basically wrong, it does not bring in much money and it does ·nor
. accomplish the goal originally intended.
. To boot, it damages a lot of families who are trying to hang on to
hard-earned farms and small businesses.
·, In the hands of the politicians, the "death cax" has become a politi- .
. cal football. Th.e Republicans and more than 70 Democrats in the
J-louse voted to start cutting the inheritance tax rate next year and
- .continue it until 2010 when the tax would be gone.
-•.: That would result in revenue losses of about $75 billion a year or·a
total of $750 billion. But those figures don't consider how much the ·
. federal government spends in collecting the taX. Once those costs are
. factored in, the tax really adds relatively little revenue.
, · .. Every year, families that are subject to the tax spend millions in
estate planning and in setting up legal means to avoid the tax. This
·benefits no one. It is money that could better be spent in productive
investment.
The original intent of the inheritance tax, presumably, was to redis. tribute a big part of the forl:\lnes amassed by the very rich. But the very
· rich are able to legally avoid the tax. Democrats say that about half the
:tax t::tke comes from the very rich and have countered with a taX plan
that would exempt those who stand to lose small farms and small businesses.
• The Democrat plan might be better than nothing. But it presum. ably would reduce the tax take by a~out half, meaning that the
remaining tax would indeed be a simple punitive plan for wealthy
people.
The fact is that wealth, not poverty, generates new business, new
industry and new jobs. Forcing those citizens with wealtli to divert
resources to unfair taxes instead of productive investment is not good
for anyone, rich or poor. The death tax is'unfair, unproductive and irra. tiona!. It should be discontinued. It will be if the president decides
against using it as a political ploy and signs the GOP bill

!!!
J.
T~D~yS~~~
~-~~~~~t~.
~·~~~~d~--~--~~~~~~e~A~~
Reader shares yet 'another 1tow we met' story
Dear Ann Landers: I know you have
printed a great many "how we met" stories, and some of your re~ders are sick of
them, but mine is a little different. I hope
you will share it with your readers:
I was at my mother's funeral, consumed by grief. My mother was always
my best friend. She clapped loudest at my
school plays, and dried my tears when
my first boyfriend broke my heart. When
her illness was diagnosed, it fell to ine to
take care of her; preparing her meals, and
keeping the house up. I considered it an
honor.
Now my work was finished, and I was
alone. In the middle of the funeral service, I heard the church door open, followed by foo tsteps. An exasperated
young , man appeared, looked around
briefly, and seated himself next to me. He
folded his hands, and I could see that his
eyes were brimming with tears.
After a few minutes, he asked, "Why
do they keep calling Aunt Mary 'Mar-

~f~

74D-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

.Saturcl.y, June 21, 2000

Jli~N IN

Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

PageA4

occasion, mixed with the man's incredible mistake, struck me as hilarious. I
cupped my hands over my face, hoping
others would interpret it as sob~ of grief,
but the creaking pew gave me away. I
peeked at the bewildered, misguided
man, and was surprised to see that he was
laughing, too.
After the final "Amen;· we both
ADVICE
dashed out a side door of the church into
the parking lot. He then said, "Let's go
garet'?" I replied, "Because that was her get a cup of coffee." We married a year
later, and recently celebrated our 23rd
name. No one called her Mary."
"No;· he insisted, "that isn't correct. wedding anniversary. Whenever anyone
asks how we met, my husband tells them,
Her name was Mary Peters."
"This is not the funeral of Mary "Her mother and my Aunt Mary introduced· us , and it was truly a match made
Peters;' I replied.
"Isn't this the Lutheran church?" he in heaven." -- Ginny in the Midwest
asked.
Dear Ginny: Wrong church, right
"No," I told him. "The Lutheran pew. Thanks.. for sending it my way. I
church is across the street."
loved it.
Red-faced, he realized he was ar the
Dear Ann Landers: A few evenings
wrong funeral. The solemnity of the ago, my husband and I went to dinner at
a very fine restaurant. 1\vo men in busi-

Ann
Landers

SOCIETY NEWS

''

Birth announced
HENTOFF'S VIEW

Contempt for diverse ideas shrouding campuses
Stories nor likely to have been part of this
year's college graduation exetcises:
Last October - as reported by the Student
Press Law Center in Arlington, Va.- students
at California State University at Sacramento
stole 3,000 copies of the student newspaper.
They were enraged because the paper, The
State Hornet, had published the picture of a
Hispanic man being arrested and charged
with resisting arrest at a football game. There
had been violent incidents at the game,
including the death of a spectator.
The self-righteous censors then demanded
that the paper pledge never to publish anything that showed minorities in an unfavorable light.
In recent years, students have stolen, trashe&lt;l
and sometimes burned quantities of campus
newspapers around the couptry as a form of
vigilante protest. A recent issue of the Student
Press Law Center Report notes that since
September of last year, thieves have stolen
publications from nine colleges in eight states,
from California to Mississippi. In April, many
copies of two student publications at Yale
University were stolen, and theft took place at
five more colleges.
Frequently, these incidents are motivated by
a contempt for diversity of speech and ideas in
higher education. At prestigious Cornell University, the conservative campus paper, The
Cornell Review, published a parody of ebonies - a kind of informal black speech that
some educators thought should be considered
.
equal to standard English.
More than 200 copies of The Cornell
Review were stolen. Some were thrown into
trash cans and others were destroyed in a
merry bonfire. There was no public criticism
by members of the administration or the faculty of this transmogrification of the principle
of free inquiry in the academy.
Emboldened, the vandals attacked again
when The Cornell Review published an illustration· by syndicated newspaper cartoonist

prised, having interviewed other professors
with job security at a number of campuses
who are afraid to speak against assaults on
conservative newspapers lest they be accused
of being insensitive to black students.
The main campus newspaper, The Cornell
Sun, in reporting on my lecture, quoted professor Lawrence Moore, head of the American
Studies department, who had invited me. He
told The Cornell Sun that in my speech, I had
been mistaken about faculty silence concernNEA COLUMNIST
ing the thefts and bonfires. There had been
critical comment, he said.
But the night before, when I arrived on
Chuck Asay, tided "Which One ofThesc Kills
More Blacks?" There were three panels - a campus, Moore told me that he had been surKu Klux Klan · murder by fire; followers of prised at the lack of public criticism from any
Hitler in front of a large swastika; and a doc- of the faculty At dinner at his home, after my
tor about to perform an abortion in a Planned lecture, two professors said they had been disParenthood clinic. The student"thieves who appointe&lt;! that there had been no faculty crittook revenge on the newspaper were mostly icism. In my lectures, I said that someone
should teach the students who burned newsblack and Hispanic.
Cornell's dean of students, John Ford, told p.apers how 'unacceptable' books were burned
me when I was· reporting the first mocking of in bonfires in Germany in the 1930s. And, I
the free press on the part of students that he should have added, about how the Third
was not aware that any copies of the Cornell Reich criminalized jazz, labeling it "jewish
·
Review had been set on fire. 'J;'he second time black rubbish."
I
wrote
a
letter
to
the
Cornell Sun, correctit happened, I told him I had a photograph of
him standing at the burning without stopping ing Professor Moore. It was nor published. It
it. He then told me he saw. no reason for dis- did appear in the Cornell Review, where I
ciplinary action concerning this theft of more noted that Cornell's code of conduct states
clearly: "The right to free expression requires
than 500 issues .
A spokeswoman for the administration, respect for the rights of others."
But when I was reporting OR the burning of
sounding as if she had been trained at the
Clinton White House, called the burning ideas there, Barbara Krause - Cornell's judi"symbolic" -- adding that Cornell supports cial administrator in charge of disciplinary
both the right to publish and the right to action - assured me that the theft and
destruction of newspapers had not violated
protest what's printed.
. Last fall, I was invited to lecture at Cornell Cornell's code of conduct.
Cornell and a good many other colleges need
on, of all things·, freedom of speech and of the
courses
in respect for diversity of ideas among
press. I spoke in detail about Cornell's
students,
faculty and the administration, includapproval of arson and theft to shut down
.
diversity of ideas. At a faculty lunch, a profes- ing the often-distant college presidents.
sor took me aside and said, ''I'm glad you're
(Nat Hentoff is ~ nationally renowned authority
on the First Amendment and the rest of the Bill of
saying these things, because I can't."
·
She isalenured professor. I was not sur- Righrs.)

Nat
Hentoff

BUSINESS MIRROR

·New and old economies remain interdependent
BY JoHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK - It is a distinction familiar
to all now, .t he new economy and the old, but
in truth there is still just one economy. The
new n~eds the old, and the old 'is a major beneficiary of the new.
As distinguished from the old, the new is
based on utilizing mankind's mass of information. and turning it into practical products. It
doeJn' t so much rely on existing needs as on
creating new ones. ·
The old is centered on. supplying the
more-basic requirements of fuod, clothing,
shelter and transportation, and even the most
dedicated techies must concede they cannot
live on information alone.
But the two are ever-more reliant on each
other. The new economy, for instance, needs
the capital produced by the old economy, and
in some respects its biggest customer is the
old.
It's true that there was a time, no more than
a few years ago, when the new economy had
the notion of going its own way. But now the
differences are so blurred it is difficult to tell
on'e from ilie other. General Motors epitomizes the old, but it is one of the world's

largeit users of the new.
"
Faster than almost anyone had foreseen,
what were viewed as distinctly different 'e ntities have been merging into a hybrid. Management consultants now say that success is
most measurable in companies with a bit of
both.
In fact, a study conducted among 450
American and European companies by Mercer Management Consulting concludes that
"hybrids" have a greater pro~t potential than
pure Internet plays.
Operating in both physical and virtual
worlds, hybrids are more likely· to satisl)r consumers and generate higher margins for
investors, says Mercer's Georges Vialle. One
exaniple is the joining of AOL and Time
Warner.
The initiative has co,me from both old and
new. The new economy companies at first
tended to view their marker as made up of
individuals, but old economy businesses have
taught them otherwise.
The latter recognized that using new technologies produced enormous efficiencies in
. handling inventories and dealing with suppli· ers and · customers. Business-to-business

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

ness suits were seated at the table next to
us. They both made and received calls on
their cell phones throughout the entire
meal. Their conversations were easy to
hear, and their rapid-fire business chatter
was very disturbing to those of us within
listening range.
One of the men even got up and
walked into the men's bathroom while
using his phone. He was gone for several
minutes. When he came out of the bathroom, he was STILL talking on the
phone.
I was flabbergasted. Not only was this
man rude, but what on earth could the
client on the other end of that conversation have thought while he was in the
bathroom? Surely, business etiquette hasn 't become so casual that it is acceptable
to make a business call under such circumstances. What do you say? -- No
Name in Nebraska
Dear Nebra1ka: Those rude folks
·who insist on using their cell phones to

IH Third A... , Golllpollo,

740-441-2342

.'

Ohio

(B2B), or new econo)lly seUing to old, is now
where some of the biggest profits are. And in
the process, traditional business models are
being revdlutionized.
As a result, after being stalled for years, productivity has been rising at many old-line
companies, and the effect can be measured in
the bottom line and in the market value of
stocks.
The use of new technologies is even transforming industrial assembly lines. Cookie cutter devices that turned out standardize&lt;! prod~
ucts will instead be customizing orders to suit
individual tastes.
So what are srill called the old and new
economies are being transformed by each
other. Rather than going their separate ways
they are evolving ip ways neither foresaw. ·
They at'l! becoming interdependent.
In hindsight, the two aspects of the economy · seem so well matched that no other
course but mutual dependence could ever
have been imagined. But a casual check of the
1980s literature will show it wasn't anticipated.
·

aolm C.mn!lf is a hr&lt;siness analyst for The Associated Press.)

200 ~n St, Point Plenant, W.va.
30W7&amp;-1333

POMEROY - Amber and
Monte Riffie announce the birth
of a son, Jacob Donald James,
born May 11 at the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Riffle have
another son, Gabriel. Maternal
grandparents are Rex and Kathy
Cumings, and paternal· grandparents are Jim and Joyce Smith and
the late Donald Riffie. Maternal
great-grandparents are Kathryn
Teaford and the late Edward
Moore, and Gladys Cumings and
Jacob Riffle
the late Dave Cumings. Paternal
grandmothers are Carrie Roush·
..
.and the late Lester Roush, and the late Floyd and Lela Riffie.

Dof Aobserves birthdays
CHESTER - Quarterly birthdays were observed when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of America, mer recently at the hall.
Honored were Everett Grant, Erma Cleland, Goldie Frederick,
Betty Young, Betty Jackson. A cake for the occasion was decorated
by JoAnn Ritchie. Doris Grueser and Shirley Beegle were eo-hostesses for the meeting.
Julie' Curils presided at the meeting which opened with pledges
to the Christian and American flags, scripture reading, th'e Lord's
Prayer and the national anthem. Plans were made for a 6 p.m. carryin dinner at the second meeting in .July with Scottie and Esther
Smith.
It was noted that the books will be audited on June 30 at .7 p.m.
at the home of Doris Grueser. A report on the diltrict picnic was
given by Erma Cleland. Helen Wolf noted that her granddaughter
had received a scholanhip from the Daughten of America, as did
Rachel Ashley.
Others attending were Shirley Beegle, Jean Welsh, Sandy White,
Mary Holter, Opal Hollon, Ella Osborne, Ruth Smith, Helen Wolf,
Mary Barringer, Charlotte Grant, Thelma White, and a guest,
Richard White.
Reported ill were Zelda Weber, hospitalized, Betty Young, Margaret Amberger, and Marcia Keller.

Lutheran churches plan dey camp
Amazing Grace day camp will be conducted by the St.John and
·st. Paul Lutheran Churehes, July 10-14 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m each
.day f~ youth who have completed kiJ;Jdergarten to sixth grade. II
will be held at St. John Lutheran Church on Pine Grove Road near
Five Points.
Activities will include crafts, singing, games, recreation, and Bible
·study. There is no cost to participate. Lunch and snacks will be provided daily.
The day camp is a cooperative effort of St. John and St. Paul
'Lutheran Churches, the Southern Ohio Synod of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America, and the Lutheran Outdoor Ministries
in Ohio.
Additional information ,may be obtained by calling Pastor Donald
Fritz at 992-2010 or 992-2688. Registration will take place on the
first ·day of camp.

Trustee scholarships •arclecl

,Nicholas Michael

POMEROY - Nicholas A. Michael, a graduate of Meigs High
School, and Edward Aaron Schaekel, a graduate of Eastern High·
School, have been awarded trustee scholarships by the University of
Rio Grande. '
The scholarships cover partial tUition for the recipients, according
to Mark Abell, director of admissions at the university.
Nicholas, son of Mark and Denise Michael of Middleport, plans to
major in music.
.
Aaron is the son of Edward and Patricia Schaekel. He plans to major
in pre-med:
·

,.
I

Dof A hold dlstrld picnic
CHESTER - The annual picnic and district meeting of the
Deputies and Past Councilors Club of District 13, Daughters of
America, was held recently at Kackelmackel Park, Logan.
Mary C. Moose, president, conducted the meeting during which
time new officers were named. They are Jo Ann Ritchie, president:
Doris Grueser, vice president; Betty Biggs, secretary; and Charlotte
Blake, treasurer.
Several upcoming meetings were announced including a friendship meeting for District 13, .to be held at Chester lodge hall, noon
on Saturday Oct. 2 at 1 p.m. with potluck refreshments, and a
Christmas dinner on Dec. 2 at noon with a meeting to follow at 1
p.m. Guiding Star Council 124 will be the host group. The place
·
will be announced later.
Officers' reports were given by Biggs, secretary, and Opal Hollon,
treasurer. Get-well cards were signed for Zelda Weber, Chester
Council, arid Sylvia Bowens, Logan Council.
JoAnn Ritchie of District 13 announced the StateD of A session
to be held Aug. 14-1 7 ·at Dayton. Members interested in attending
are to call her at 740-992-7362. The death of Ritchie's uncle was
noted. Preceding the poduck picnic, Erma Cleland gave the blessing.
·
·
Attending were Biggs, Esther Harden, Margaret Cotterill, of
Guiding Star Council 134, Syracuse; Ella VanBibber, Edna Edgar.
Faye Trowbridge, Mary C. Moose, and Charlotte Blake, Logan
Council 120, and Hollon, Grueser, Ritchie, Cleland, and Mary K.
Holter, Chester Council 323.

Natural fiber carpet tips
NEW YORK (AP)- It is easy
to fall in love with the look of natuta! fibers. But it is important to
choose natural fiber carpeting carefully, and think.twice about using it
in high traffic areas, because it's not
as rugged as it looks.
Coir (the toughest), sisal and sea
,grass (the softest) look wonderful,
and they will all last longer if they

have a latex backing or if you use a
synthetic-felt pad with a rubberized back. For wall-to-wall use, you
need to glue the carpet direcdy to
the floor to prevent buckling. Metropolitan Home says you should
vacuum fiequendy and treat spills
right away with a dry shampoo.
Various brands are· available in most
hardware stores.

We want your photos!

Edward Scheekel

..

•

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Mother-daughter fellowship observed
POMEROY - "Showers of Blessings" was the theme of the
annual mother-daughter fellowship held recently at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ.
Pat Thoma g:i:ve devotions using scripture .from Proverbs on the
theme, "The Wife of a Noble Character.: Prayers were given for
those attending and for the meal.
·
A salad course was served by the men of the church. Miniature
sprinkling cans with roses prepared by Linda Laudermilt were
given as favors . The dining area was decorated in keeping with the
theme.
Betty Spencer was mistress of ceremonies. The opening song was
"Showers of Blessings" with Marilyn Wolfe at the piano, Spencer
gave the opening prayer.
Jennifer Morris and Suzan Cleland read poems honoring mothers. Heidi Tucker sang "His Eye is On the Sparrow" and "His True
Love.:" Charldene Alkire was speaker on women of the Bible. She
compared Biblical women with modern-day ones. and read several
appropriate poems.
Mindy Gardner registered. the guests with Spencer presenting
mothers with corsages made and donated by Barbara Van Meter.
Recognized were Ruby Burnside, the oldest mother; Heidi Tucker, the youngest mother; and Maribelle Warner.. Laudermilt,
Spencer, and Jean Sim were given gifts for co-chairing the fellowship.
Mary Bowles had the closing prayer, and the evening concluded
with group singing of"Faith of Our Mothers."

The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a lew guidelines for
submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus and hiMI
good contrast. NegativeS also are accepted; however, please Include a
print along with the negative.
• Black·andwh~e photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus
and have good c011trast. Negatives also are accepted; however. please
Include a print .along with the negative.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In focus and
have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallet size and
no larger than 8 x 10.
• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reproduce
well on newsprint.
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are saved as
hlgtHesoluUon, hlgt&gt;quallty JPEG files.
• Adllantlx·type photographs are discouraged due to their unique sizes.
which do not translate well to newspaper columns. Adllantlx·type nega.
tlves are not accepted.
• Laserwriter prints of digital Images are discouraged since they do not
reproduce well 011 newsprint.
• Please be sure all subjects In photographs are clearly Identified on
the back of the photograph or 011 an attached sheet of paper.

.

.

conduct business while in restaurants,
theaters, and so on, do so because they
think it impresses the people around
them.They are mistaken. Cell phones are
so common these days, thlry impress no
one. Unless it is an emecgency, users
should phone callers back at a more convenient time. And there is absolutely NO
excuse for using a cell phone in the bathroom.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the life
of a loved one? "Alcoholism: How to
Recognize It, How to Deal With It, How
to Conquer It". can turn things around.
Send a self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money order for
$3.75 (this includes postage and handling) to: Alcohol , c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, IU. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.55.) To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her , past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
web page at www.creators.com.

•••

chambers.

MONDAY,June 26

.. .

•••

POMEROY -Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. · at the
office, •117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

CHESTER- ChesterTownship Trustees, special meeting,
Tuesday, 7 p.rn. at the town hall.

RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club, Monday at 1 p.m.;
home of Ann Webster.

POMEROY
RACO
meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m Star
Mill Park, Potluck dinner.

POMEROY Summer
practice, Meigs Marauder Band,
to begin Monday. Practices will
begin promptly at 9 a.m. and
end at noon. All members of the
horn line, drum line and guard
are to be in attendance. For
answers to questions regarding
the practices, call 992-5018.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department,
immunization clinic, Tuesday, 911 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E.St
Memorial Drive. Take children's
shot records. Children must be
accompanied by parent or legal
guardian.
·

RACINE - Meigs County
Republican Executive Conunirtee, 7:30p.m., Star Mill Park.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Agricultural Society,
Monday, 7:30 at the grange
anne!C, regular meeting.
MIDDLEPORT Mike
Warnke performance, 7 p.m.,
Ash Street Chutch. Special
music.
RACINE - The Southern
Local Board of Education, regular session, Monday, 5 p.m.,
Southern High School Cafete-

ria.
POMEROY
Vacation
Bible School, Hillside Baptist
Church in Pomeroy trom 6:30
to 9 p.m., Monday tluough Friday. Theme is "Noah's Ark."
Buses will pick up any interested
children who call the church at
992-6768. Children aged three
and older are welcome to attend.
MIDDLEPORT -Board of
Public Affairs, I p.m., council

TUESDAY, June 27

'·

..

POMEROY - Meigs Local
School District Board of Education, public hearing, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. for public review of
the district continuous improvement; followed by Meigs Local
School District's regular meeting ·
at 7 p.m. in the office at 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy.
COOLVILLE - Revival
services., Orange Christian
Church, Tuesday to Saturday, &lt;7
p.m. Sunday the church will be
rededicated in a service at 2 p.m.
POMEROY

-

Winding

'nail Garden Club, 6 p.m., Tuesday. Members to meet at the
Park and Ride at Rocksprings.·

The Community Calendar
iJ publillhed aa a fi:ee aervice
to non-profit groups wishing to announce meetings,
and special events. The calendar is not designed to ·
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are,
printed ol;lly as space per-.
mits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific
number of days.

·LOOKING FOR C

CARE?

COAD Child Care Resource Network is a FREE
Community service that offers:

• F.;ee referrals to help you find child care
• Information on choosing quality child care
• Help on guidance and discipline questions.

"

CALL: 1-800-577-2276
for a list of providers In your community. .·.
COAO.. the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development

FHEE I f\~I, E « :TI()f\

SHAVER REPAIR

CLINIC~~~
·· .

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport

- · --------'---------""-_...~-'---~---.....,_

____

�I'

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Final platfonn meeting slated
CLEVELAND (AP) - Democratic officials will gather in Cleveland at the end of July to determine the final platform for the
Democratic National Convention.
Ohio Democratic Parry Chair~n David Leland said the city was
named Sunday at the Democratic National Committee's executive
committee meeting in Los Angeles, which also is the . site of the
national convention in August. Leland said 186 Democrats from
across the country will come to Cleveland July 28 and 29 to finalize
the platform that will be presented at the convention where Vice
President Al Gore is expected to be nominated for president.
Leland said the Cleveland gathering was the most important
meeting to the parry outside the convention.
"We are focused on education, making sure we preserve Social
Security, and it will talk about bringing everybody into a growing
economy," he said.

Parades highlight gay pride
.•

NEW YORK (AP) - Drag queens and dignitaries shared Fifth
Avenue in the always-colorful annual Gay Pride parade knoWn as
much for its politics as its revelry.
Gays also marched Sunday in parades in San Francisco, Chicago
and Atlanta.
N ew York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and U.S. Senate candidate
Hillary Rodham Clinton "!arched in Sunday's event in New York,
but Clinton's new Republican rival, Rep. Rick La:zio, chose to spend
the day campaigning upstate instead.
Political victories were celebrated as activists pointed to passage of
a hate-crimes bill in Albany and a Vermont law that allows civil
unions between homosexuals.
"It's a tremendously significant year;' said lesbian activist and former White House aide Virginia Appuzzo, one of the Heritage of
Pride Parade's grand marshals. "The changes have been dazzling."
Supporters of Mrs. Clinton shouted "You look gorgeous" and
'' We love you" as the first lady joined the parade accompanied by
· state and local officials.
Mrs. Clinton marched 20 paces behind a man in a pink tutu and
a Rollerblader wearing nothing but a thong. She gave the thumbsup sign and clapped her hands to the disco music.
"This year, because of the hate crimes bill In New York and the .
civil union law in Vermont, it's a year we can look back on and say
there's been some progress;' she told reporters. "I'm pleased to be
here on behalf of equal rights for gays and lesbians."
The parade, which commemorates the 1969 uprising at the
Stonewall Inn credited with sparking the modern gay rights movement, was led by Stonewall veterans in drag riding behind a rainbow
of balloons stretched across Fifth Avenue.

FBI chief hails imprisonment
WASHINGTON (AP) - Marking the 25th anniversary of the
slaying of two agents, FBI Director Louis Freeh praised a recommendation against parole for the American Indian activist who was
convicted of murdering them but is considered a political prisoner
by his supporters.
"The FBI cannot forget this cold-blooded crime, nor should the
American people;' Freeh said in a written statement Sunday.
On June 12, a parole examiner recommended that Leonard Peltier's two consecutive life sentences be continued until his next full
parole hearing in 2008. The U.S. Parole Commission will review the
examiner's recommendation in the next two months and make a
final decision.
· "It is a testament to the American judicial system and the American people that 25 years have not been able to erase or soften the
facts of the case," Freeh said, praising the recommendation a~d noting that Peltier's appeals of his conviction have failed. "The rule of
law has continued to prevail over the emotion of the moment:'
On June 26, 1975, FBI agents Ronald A. Williams and Jack R .. ·
Coler pursued a robbery suspect into the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. A shootout erupted with activiSts from the
American Indian Movement, and the agents were first wounded,
then shot in the head.
1\vo suspects were acquitted and a third freed for bck of evidence.
Peltier, after fleeing to Canada and being extradited to the United
States, was convicted and sentenced to consecutive life terms in
1977, despite defense claims that evidence against him had been falsified.
Peltier, 55, has suffered from health problems in recent years,
including lockjaw, borderline diabetes and a series of small strokes.
He also is said to be. nearly )&gt;lind in one eye.
·

Pizza magnate suit dropped
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A harassment case involving Papa
John's chief executive officer John H . Schnaner has been dismissed
from Jefferson Circuit Court.
Schnatter, 38, was sued in May 1998 by Lesli P.Workman, 30, who
alleged sexual discrimination, conspiracy, intentional infliction of
emotional distress, defamation and harassing communications.
Louisville-based Papa John's also Was named as a defendant.
The lawsuit and a counterclaim filed by Schnatter were dismissed
on June 5.
In her lawsuit, Workman claimed that after she met Schnatter, he
sent her roses, repeatedly called her at home, stopped by uninvited,
threw rocks at her window and continually made sexual advances
· even after she told him she could not ha~e a relationship with a mar·
ried man.
Schnatter countersued, alleging that Workman pursued him by
telephoning and paging him dozens of times, asking him for personal
advice, wanting him to pay her credit-card bills and trying to extort
$5 million from him and his company.
·
Attorneys declined to say whether they had settled the case. But
Judge John Potter, who also signed the dismissal order, .said the
lawyerS'told him the case had been settled.
.
Potter, who had ordered the parties to try to mediate the case, said
he didn't know the terms of the settlement.
Schnatter founded Papa John's in 1985 and has amassed a fortune
of more than $300 million.

Sclilsm looms tor Baptist poup
DALLAS (AP) - Texas' largest Baptist group may leave the
increasingly conservative Southern Baptist Convention - a move
that would dramatically drain membership and financial support
from the national organization.
The Baptist General Convention of Texas, the largest state convention in the denomination, is openly discUssing severing ,ties with
the national body, which two yean ago called for wives to "submit
graciously to the servant leadership of her husband:'
"We're not interested in siphoning off a lot of funds from Texas to
fund a Jerry Falwell-elane church," the· Rev. Clyde Glazener, president of the BGCT, told The Dallas Morning News for Saturday's
editions.
T he mod.erate Texas group funneled more than $45 million from
Tens churches to the national body in 1999 and accounted for 14
percent of its budget, according to the ni!W1paper.

Monday, June 28, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

lacking, federal auditors say

Carrey, alter-e~o boost 'Me,
·
Myself &amp; Irene to box-office win

WASHINGTON (AP) Medicare, the nation's health
Inspections offacilities providing insurance program for ihe elderdialysis to Americans with kid- ly and disabled, covers costs for
ney failure are few and far Americans of any age who must
between, and serious ·violations undergo kidney dialysis. In dialyof quality standards are on the sis, a machine filters wastes from
rise, congressional investigators the blood, taking over that job
say.
for diseased or damaged kidneys.
The procedure usually must
The proportion of the nation's
approximately 3,800 dialysis be done every few days and is
facilities subjected to inspections very expensive. Although fewer
each year declined from 52 per- than 1 percent of Medicare's 39
cent in 1993 to 11 percent in million beneficiaries - about
1999, according to a report 300,000 people - are dialysis
General patients, the cost of their care
Monday by the
Accounting Office.
comprises 5.2 percent of
Of 409 facilities inspected last Medicare spending, or about
year, 15 percent had deficiencies $12.8 billion per year.
severe enough that, if uncorrectMedicare pays state inspectors
ed, would warrant expulsion and contracts with private groups
liom Medicare, the federal health to oversee the quality of care at
care program that pays most dial- dialysis facilities. Those with seriysis patients' bills. That compares ous violations can be threatened
with 6 percent in 1993.
. with expulsion liom the proIn a separate review of inspec- gram, but they are generally pertion documents, the inspector mitted a grace period to correct
general of the Health and the problems first.
Human Services Department
"The threat of termination
found instances of. life-threaten- brings qearly all facilities Into
ing problems at some facilities, compliance for a while, but they
inCluding the reuse of improper- do not necessarily stay that way,"
ly cleaned dialysis equipJp.ent.
said the report by GAO, the
"Shoddy treatment of people investigative arm of Congress.
with poor kidneys under any
It
recommended
that
condition is inhumane:' said Sen. Medicare use payment denials or
Charles Grassley, R -Iowa, chair- reductions as punishment more
man of the Senate Special Com- often and that Congress act to
mittee on Aging, which called a allow fines against the most serihearing on the reports.
ous offenders.

LOS ANGELES (AP) -1\vo
Jim Carreys for the price of one
proved irresistible for moviegoers . .
"Me, Myself &amp; Irene;· starring Carrey as a cop whose dual
personalities fall for the same
woman, debuted as the top .
weekend film with $24.2 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
"Chicken Run," featuring the
voice of Mel Gibson in an ani10ated adventure of hens on the
lam from their poultry farm,
opened in second place with
$17.5 million.
With no other new movies in
wide release, the overall box
office slumped for the third
straight weekend compared to
last year. The top 12 movies
grossed $101.4 million, down 20
percent from the same weekend
a year ago.
Studios expect things to heat
up next weekend and into the
Fourth of July as three big
movies debut. Gibson's RevolutionUy War flick "The ·Patriot"
opens Wednesday, followed by
George Clooney in "The Perfect
Storm" and Roliert De Niro in
"The Adventures of Rocky and
Bullwinkle" on Friday.
"The box office hasn't had a
stellar blockbuster release in the
past few weeks, but the stage is
set for a really big weekend this

WASHINGTON (AP) - Parents are not making wide use of
readily available technology that
can restrict what they consider
objectionable television shows or
Internet sites liom being viewed
by their children, a study finds.
1\vo in five parents surveyed
reported having a y-chip or other
device on their sets that can block
programs with ·violence, sex and
crude language. Only half of those
parents have activated the devices,
according to the study released
Mpnday by the Annenberg Public
Policy Center at the UniVersity of
Pennsylvania.
Also, one-half of families say
they have Internet access at home.
But before allowing their children
to search the Internet, only one.third of parents have activated soft.ware filters that can block certain
Web sites.
A 1996 telecommunications
law required all new televisions, 13
inches and larger, sold after Jan. 1 to
be equipped with the v-chip technology. Content-blocking software
can be bought or downloaded for
free. Some Internet access
providers include the software
with their services.
,
"But parents are not using thesJ
tools to guide their children's
(viewing);' senior researcher Amy
Jordan said.
Fewer than one in five youngsters can get around v -chip restrictions and only one in 20 children
can evade computer filtering technology. the study found.
"Few children can circumnavigate their parents' blocking
attempts," researchers reported.

•

Page a·1

55 brands.
sales in excess of $35 billion.
The announcement of the sale ended a
Nabisco Holdings, which makes Ritz
crackers, Snaclr.well's snacks, Oreo cookies bidding war that had involved financier Carl
and Life Savers candy, is 80.6 percent owned Icahn as well as a venture of France's
Danone SA and Britajn's Cadbury
by Nabisco Group of Parsippany, N.J.
Nabisco Group said Sunday that after Schweppes PLC.
The Danone-Cadbury offer reportedly
shedding the Nabisco Holdings unit, what
remained of the group - essentially it's cash was for about $50 a share. ~&gt;anone, a leading
from the Nabisco sale - would be sold to manufacturer of cookies and crackers, hall
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. for $9.8 billion. hoped for an American foothold with th~
Iro nically, R .J. Reynolds Tobacco had deal , while Cadbury was more interested in
been a subsidiary of the group - previous- Nabisco's candy holdings.
James M . Kilts, president and chief execuly known as RJR Nabisco - before it was
spun off in March 1999 as a separate pub- tive of Nabisco, said the transactions woulo
licly traded entity. It makes Winston and · fulfill management 's pledge of last May to
maximize its value to shareholders.
..
Camel brand cigarettes.
Philip
Morris
revealed
that
after
th,e
Philip Morris, which produces Marlboro,
Benson &amp; Hedges and Parliament brand cig- transaction is completed in October, it wi).l
arettes, also owns Miller Brewing Co. and begin W!&gt;rk on an initial public offering of
such brands as Jell- 0, Maxwell House, Oscar 20 percent of the stock in the newly cotn•
Mayer and Post cereals. The purchase fills a bined food company.
It said the !PO was expected in early
gap in its food portfolio, which had not
2001,
with proceeds used to .retire some of
included cookies and crackers.
The deal will add 18 brands to its existing the debt incurred in the Nabisco purchase.

OVersi~ of dialysis fadlities

Study finds
v-chips not
widely used

Monday, June 16, 1000

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Eastem physicals

set for June 28

coming week," said Rob ert
Bucksbaum of Reel Source,
which tracks movie ticket sales.
"Me, Myself &amp; Irene" marked
Carrey's return tci gross-mit
comedy as he reunited with
"Dumb &amp; Di?.mber" creators
Peter and Bobby Farrelly. Carrey
plays a mild-mannered Rhode
Island policeman whose obnoxious alter-ego gets loose while
escorting a suspect (Renee ZeUweger) to New York.
Reuniting Carrey and the
Farrelly brothers "is .t he closest
thing to a sure thing you can
get," s~id Tom Sherak, head of
distribution for 20th Century
Fox, which released "Me, Myself
&amp; Irene."
"Somebody said comedy is
king, and they're right."
Playing in 3,020 theaters,
"Me, Myself &amp; Irene" averaged .a
healthy $8 ,013 per cinema,
compared
with · "Chicken
Run's" average of $7,025 in
2,491 theaters.
"Chicken Run" was the first
film produced under a long- ,
term deal between DreamWorks
and British clay-animation studio Aardman, which created the
Oscar-winning "Wallace &amp;
Gromit" shorts. The voice cast
also includes Miranda Richardson,JuJia Sawalha and Jane Horrocks.

'Baby Edition
The Dally Sentinel Baby Edition Is
a Special Edition filled with
photographs of local kids • a_ges
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION wm appear In the
July 7th Issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative Is Included.

JU.I

a, IHt.

PIOQIIt
CA. •1 PICIIEI UP AFTII JIIL1 tiTM,

I

Send to:
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r-------------·-·--------------------------,I
I Child's Name(s) &amp; Age(s):

Parent's ,Name:
City &amp; State:
****THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE ADI
I
I
I PHONE No.: _ _.___ _ _ _ _ SUBMITTED BY: - - - - - -

1
I

L-------------------------------------·-··-·-·-··
..
HURRYI
DIADLINI ae·
PIO~URI

·MONDAY .JJINI 18, 11000.1

•

who won here in 1997, finished close
behind Marlin in third.
While Gordon pushed to stay ahead,
crew chiefR.obbie Loomis worried about
gas.
" I think it was really close," he said . " I
think we had enough for one more lap
but it's hard to tell on a road co urse."
Gordon said he kept gunning even
though he was only catching glimpses of
Marlin irl his mirrors.
"I wasn't going to let any of those guys
get up to me," he said. " I was really afraid
the caution was going to come out more
than anything else."
Rusty Wallace, a road-course specialist
with six victories on NASCAR tracks

IJeiins July 5
SYRACUSE - · The Annual
Hubbard Little League Tourna~
ment will get under way in Syracuse on July 5. The tournament is
sponsored by the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department.
The tournament drawing will
be held on June 30. Entry fe e is
$25.
For more information call Eber
Pickens Jr. at 740-992-5564 or
740-992-7181.

•••••
Send Meigs C ounry sports
· news to the Sentinel by fax at
992-2157. Email items to galtri. bune@eurekan et.com.

...,

Please SH NASCAR, Pip B&amp;

CINCINNATI (AP) - Six
games into a pivotal homestand,
· the C in cinnati Reds are still
trying to get it right. They're
down to their last four chances
to turn their season around.
The consensus pick to win
the NL Central is closer to fifth
place than first after losing two
of three over the weekend to
the San Diego Padres.
Rookie Brian Tollberg made
another impre ssi v~ start and
closer Trevor Hoffinan survived
another late rally as San Diego
won 5-4 Sunday, dropping the
R eds a season- high 8 1/2 games
behind St.Louis.
By losing 14 of 18 si nce June
5, the Reds have fallen farth er
from first than they 've been
since 1998, when they fini shed
25 games out. Their b est hope is
the schedule: seven games
against the Cardinals in the next
11 days, including four at home
beginning Monday.

Hubbard Toumey

..

that turn right, had the pole but fini shed .a
disappointing 26th after spinning wtrh
three laps to go.
In Winston Cup history, o nly Gordon ,
Wallace, Do bby Allison and Richard Petry
have had six road course victories.
Wallace qualified with a tra ck reco rd
99.309 mph Friday, beating Gordon 's previous best pole speed of 98.711 mph on
the track's current configuration, set du ring qualifying in 1998.
On Sunday, both engines and drivers
got sick in a ra ce with fairly low attrition
for a road event.
John Andretti made an early departure .

Reds' losing ·
skid.goes on

SYRAC USE - On Saturday,
July 29, all form er members of
the Hits and Misses Senior Girls
Softball team and their families
will have an all day reunion at the
Syracuse ball field and poll.
The park is reserved for th e day
and a free pass to swi m will be
provided by the team . The team
was organized in 1966 by Ke nny
Wiggins and continued for 23
years through the 1988 season. It
is believed to be .the first girls
slow pitch softball team in Meigs
County.
There were over 125 girls on
the teams, and if you have any
addresses we would appreciate
your phone call at 740-992-5002,
so that each player can receive a
letter as soon as possible.

MASON, WVa. - Pastor Ron
Branch of the Faith Baptist
C hurch , Mason, W.Va., will host
Bible study and a footb all training
camp on Saturday, July 8, from 9
a.m. to l p.m. on the church
grounds.
The football portion is offered
to local young men who plan to
play football in the fall. It will be
geared towards defensive players
who have not attended a major
. camp this summer.
These sessions will be led by
Ron Branch II, defensive line
~oach for Class AAA Musselman
' High School. Branch is a 1998
graduate of Shepard College
wher he played middle guard and
was named a GTE Academic All Am erican.
Registration fee is $5 per f.1ntily the day of camp. Contact Pastor Branch at· 773-5429 or 7736151.

PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

.o..~

sure."
Gordon, workipg with a new crew
chief, has had a rocky season by his standards with only o ne other win - at Talladega. He acknowledged that winning on
the road course was important.
Gordon, w ho lives in Pittsboro, Ind.,
considers the 1.95-mile track in the hills
of Northern California's wine country his
home course since he was born a 15minute drive away in Vallejo.
Gordon started fifth and traded the lead
with several drivers over the first threequarters of the 112-lap race. He managed
his fuel and kept his Chevrolet in front for
the final 26 laps to finish 4.1 seco nds
ahead of Sterling Marlin. Mark Martin ,

Team captain Barry Larkin
thinks they need to win at least
three of those four. He and several others spoke o ut during a
postgame team mee ting - the
second of the homestand about their uninspired play
Sunday and how it has to
change fast.
I
"The lac k of enthusiasm was
disappointing," Larkin said. "We
have a couple of tough weeks
coming up. We've got to go out
with the right att\tude and

focus."

ANGRY JUNIOR - ·Ken Gr,~ey Jr. voices his displeasure over a call at first base during Cincinnati 's 54
loss to San Diego Sunday , ,Cinergy Field. The Reds have lost 14 of 18 games. (AP)

The . Padres seemed more
intense Sunday, doing the little
things right as Brian Tollberg
(2-0) did just about everything
right during his second major

league start.
Last Tuesday, Toll berg allowed
only one ~ it and one u nearn-ed
run in seven innings of a 3-1
victory over Ari zona in his
major league debut. He 'was
almost as good on Sunday,
blanking the . R eds on six hits
through seven innings .
He faded in the eighth, getting an out before giving up ,a
walk and a hit. The PadrC!J
bull.pen then let in four runs· in
th e inning , with Hoffmanstruggling through his second
subpar appearance of the series.
Hoffman, who gave up three
ninth-inning runs on Friaaj,
allowed RBI pinch singles b y
Eddie Taubensee and Chris
Stynes that cut i.t to 5-4. He got
Juan Castro to fly out and end
the inning, then allowed one
single in the nimh before dosing out his 19th save in 21
games.
"That's a good team over
there," said Padres second baseman Bret Boone, ·who played
for the R eds two years ago. "We
were sure they were going tc;&gt;
come back on us, like they have
all year."
~:
The Reds won 96 games last·
year with a flurry of comebacks.
The difference this year is those .
comebacks seem to stop one hit
short.
" I do n't know if anything's
missing," said firs t baseman Sean
Casey, who singled to exte nd
his hitting sneak to nine games.
"We lost 5C4 today, in extra
innings Friday. Last year, thos\'
gaines went our way. Hopefully,
they 'll start going o ur way
again."
¥

North wins W. Va.

Pastor Ron•s tralnln1
camp July a

Complete the form below and
'· enc.·lose a sna~hot or wallet slz.ed
picture plus a .oo charge for each
photograph. I more than one child
Is Tn tl1'_picture, enclose an
addltlonal52.00 per child. ·(ENCLOSE
•un •••• h

SONOMA, Calif. (AP) -Jeff Gordon
had to wait until he had blown •away the
rest of the competition at Sean Point
Raceway to start thinking abonl winning
the next race.
1
" Somebody's sure to ask if w; can make
it seven in a row," Gordon said,," l'm wondering already."
·.
The three-time Winston Cup champion
extended his road-course wiqning streak
to six Sunday by winning the Save Mart
Kragen 350 by more than 4 ieconds.
"We have won the last five, road courses
and the last two here, so I Jwped we had
what it would taJ.;e to do it aj,;,tin," he said.
"I knew if we didn't have a strong n,m ,
there was go ing to be even· more pres-

Hits and Misses
softbaU reunion set

· ATHENS - The sixth annual
Mary Hope M emorial Women's
GolfTournament is sc heduled for
July, 19, at the Ath ens C ountry
Club.
All proceeds from this year's
event will go to benefit the
Appalachian Community Hospice.
The field is open to 64 golfers.
Th e entry fee is $55 .
To register, call 740-592-1655.

COMING FRIDA.Y, )ULY 7, 2000
The Daily Sentinel

PICTUit

EAST MEIGS -All Eastern
High School athletes in seventh
through 12th grades will be provided free sports . physicals
Wednesday, June 28, at the VMH
in Pomeroy. Physicals wiU be
administered from 8 a.m. until 11
a.m, o n that day.
Physical cards .and fall sports
packets may be picked up at the
Eastern High School office fro.m
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mo nday through
Friday. AU students must obtain a
sports packet in order to participate in fall sports.

Rainbow Warrior reigns over Save Mart 350

Mary H~pe Memorial
Toumey set for July 19

EXTRA! EXTRA!

.

The Daily Sentinel

MLS: Crew defeats New Englat~d, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6·

for nearty S15

Morris to acquire
NEW YORK (AP) - A little over a year
after gerting out of the cigarette business, the
nation's No. 1 cookie ·and cracker maker is
back with BigTob,;o.
Philip Morris . Companies Inc., the
world's largest tobacco firm and parent
company of Kraft Foods, said Sunday it has
reached an agreement to purchase Nabisco
Holdings Corp. for S14.9 billion plus the
assumption of $4 billion in debt.
Philip Morris chairman and chief executive Geoffrey C. Bible said in a statement
that the purchase at $55 a share will greatly
expand the company's food offerings.
"The combination of Kraft and Nabisco
wiU create the most dynamic co~pa ny in
the food industry, both in terms of absolute
earnings levels and revenue and earnings
growth rates."
Kraft and Nabisco together produced
revenue of $34.9 billion last year, Philip
Morris said. The combined food company is
expected to be second in the world only to
Nestle of Switzerland, which has annual

Inside:
"

football classic
BY

DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

MEIGS HOOP CAMP - Fifty·flve Meigs County young people participated in the annual Meigs Maraud·
er Basketball Camp. Front row. left to right, Zach Schwab, Michael Manuel , Crockett Crow, Joey Mor·
gan, Morgan Kennedy, Taylor Deem, Anthony Frederick, Joey Blackston, Jacob Sellers and Zach Whitlach. Second row, left to right, Mlghael Ball; Steven Stewart, Travis Eblin, Jacob Barnes, Austin Dunfee, Aaron Story, Frank Stewart. Ben Copplck and Kyle Boggs. Third row, left to right, Josh Williams,
Dustin Knapp, Clayton Blackston, Casey Richardson, Michael Blaettner, Andy Garnes , Andy McAngus,
Cory Dill, David Poole, Dan Bookman and Dustin Vanlnwagen . Fourth row, left to right, Jesse Hanson,
Adam Lambert. Zack Burns, Josh Taylor, Corey Jarvis, Ryan Frazier, Weston Fife, Doug Dill, David Boyd
and Eric VanMeter. Fifth row, left to· right, Heath Nelson , Tyson George, Justin Bell, Brandon Bell, Jeremy Blackston, Ross Well, Matt Hoi ey, Justin Coleman, Zach Bush and Justin Warner. Back row, left to
right, Meigs head coach Chris Stout and assistant coach Chuck Knopp. Hustle Award: Josh Taylor. Third
grade free throw award: Frank Stewart. Fifth grade free throw award: Dan Bookman. Sixth grade free
throw award: Zach Bush . Camp MVP"and 7th·9th grade free throw award : JE)remy Blackston. (Sentinel
photo)

CHARLESTON, W. Va.
Josh Cordell's last play in Saturday's North/ South All-Star
Football Classic ended up pretry
much like most of his other
plays, with him having penetrated into the offensive backfield
and making life difficult for the
South Cardinals.
Only on the last one, the
Hannan graduate planted the
South QB, right into the turf in
the east end zon e of Laidley
Field, right below th e sco reboard. He djdn :t get a sack,
because the passer did get the
ball off, but the signal caller got
thrown like a rag do ll for his
trouble.
So went Cordell's day as the
North came back to win the
game 20-·18 in a game which
was more of a showcase for
defense than anything else. The
two squads combined for 11
turnovers - four bv th e North
and seven by the S~uth.
Cordell also silenced any critics who might have doubted his

potential because of his origins'
at th e small Mason County·
school. The offensive tackle who
drew Cordell's number hailed
from a C lass AAA school but ·
needed co nstant he lp with Cordell. In several passing situa-·
tions, the Mason Countian drew
double and even triple teaming
from the South offe nsive line
and backs.
When asked about the chance
to finally face 'big-time talent',
Co rdell respond ed, " I th ink
people are peopl e. A AA_A
school doesn't make the people
at a A school any smaller,
~· 1 think we had a lo t of talent
out here today, but I think :t
stood up with the best of the11L
There's a lot who stood out." .
The two oth er Mason Coun- .
tians in the game played on special teams. Point Pleasant alum:
nus Eric Hanning hit everythin~
in sight on the coverage an(! .
return units . Wahanu's B eau ~
Gerlac h h~d a block while on·
the punt return unit , which

Plelse -

AII·S.. r, Pllp . .

•

•

•

�I'

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Final platfonn meeting slated
CLEVELAND (AP) - Democratic officials will gather in Cleveland at the end of July to determine the final platform for the
Democratic National Convention.
Ohio Democratic Parry Chair~n David Leland said the city was
named Sunday at the Democratic National Committee's executive
committee meeting in Los Angeles, which also is the . site of the
national convention in August. Leland said 186 Democrats from
across the country will come to Cleveland July 28 and 29 to finalize
the platform that will be presented at the convention where Vice
President Al Gore is expected to be nominated for president.
Leland said the Cleveland gathering was the most important
meeting to the parry outside the convention.
"We are focused on education, making sure we preserve Social
Security, and it will talk about bringing everybody into a growing
economy," he said.

Parades highlight gay pride
.•

NEW YORK (AP) - Drag queens and dignitaries shared Fifth
Avenue in the always-colorful annual Gay Pride parade knoWn as
much for its politics as its revelry.
Gays also marched Sunday in parades in San Francisco, Chicago
and Atlanta.
N ew York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and U.S. Senate candidate
Hillary Rodham Clinton "!arched in Sunday's event in New York,
but Clinton's new Republican rival, Rep. Rick La:zio, chose to spend
the day campaigning upstate instead.
Political victories were celebrated as activists pointed to passage of
a hate-crimes bill in Albany and a Vermont law that allows civil
unions between homosexuals.
"It's a tremendously significant year;' said lesbian activist and former White House aide Virginia Appuzzo, one of the Heritage of
Pride Parade's grand marshals. "The changes have been dazzling."
Supporters of Mrs. Clinton shouted "You look gorgeous" and
'' We love you" as the first lady joined the parade accompanied by
· state and local officials.
Mrs. Clinton marched 20 paces behind a man in a pink tutu and
a Rollerblader wearing nothing but a thong. She gave the thumbsup sign and clapped her hands to the disco music.
"This year, because of the hate crimes bill In New York and the .
civil union law in Vermont, it's a year we can look back on and say
there's been some progress;' she told reporters. "I'm pleased to be
here on behalf of equal rights for gays and lesbians."
The parade, which commemorates the 1969 uprising at the
Stonewall Inn credited with sparking the modern gay rights movement, was led by Stonewall veterans in drag riding behind a rainbow
of balloons stretched across Fifth Avenue.

FBI chief hails imprisonment
WASHINGTON (AP) - Marking the 25th anniversary of the
slaying of two agents, FBI Director Louis Freeh praised a recommendation against parole for the American Indian activist who was
convicted of murdering them but is considered a political prisoner
by his supporters.
"The FBI cannot forget this cold-blooded crime, nor should the
American people;' Freeh said in a written statement Sunday.
On June 12, a parole examiner recommended that Leonard Peltier's two consecutive life sentences be continued until his next full
parole hearing in 2008. The U.S. Parole Commission will review the
examiner's recommendation in the next two months and make a
final decision.
· "It is a testament to the American judicial system and the American people that 25 years have not been able to erase or soften the
facts of the case," Freeh said, praising the recommendation a~d noting that Peltier's appeals of his conviction have failed. "The rule of
law has continued to prevail over the emotion of the moment:'
On June 26, 1975, FBI agents Ronald A. Williams and Jack R .. ·
Coler pursued a robbery suspect into the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. A shootout erupted with activiSts from the
American Indian Movement, and the agents were first wounded,
then shot in the head.
1\vo suspects were acquitted and a third freed for bck of evidence.
Peltier, after fleeing to Canada and being extradited to the United
States, was convicted and sentenced to consecutive life terms in
1977, despite defense claims that evidence against him had been falsified.
Peltier, 55, has suffered from health problems in recent years,
including lockjaw, borderline diabetes and a series of small strokes.
He also is said to be. nearly )&gt;lind in one eye.
·

Pizza magnate suit dropped
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A harassment case involving Papa
John's chief executive officer John H . Schnaner has been dismissed
from Jefferson Circuit Court.
Schnatter, 38, was sued in May 1998 by Lesli P.Workman, 30, who
alleged sexual discrimination, conspiracy, intentional infliction of
emotional distress, defamation and harassing communications.
Louisville-based Papa John's also Was named as a defendant.
The lawsuit and a counterclaim filed by Schnatter were dismissed
on June 5.
In her lawsuit, Workman claimed that after she met Schnatter, he
sent her roses, repeatedly called her at home, stopped by uninvited,
threw rocks at her window and continually made sexual advances
· even after she told him she could not ha~e a relationship with a mar·
ried man.
Schnatter countersued, alleging that Workman pursued him by
telephoning and paging him dozens of times, asking him for personal
advice, wanting him to pay her credit-card bills and trying to extort
$5 million from him and his company.
·
Attorneys declined to say whether they had settled the case. But
Judge John Potter, who also signed the dismissal order, .said the
lawyerS'told him the case had been settled.
.
Potter, who had ordered the parties to try to mediate the case, said
he didn't know the terms of the settlement.
Schnatter founded Papa John's in 1985 and has amassed a fortune
of more than $300 million.

Sclilsm looms tor Baptist poup
DALLAS (AP) - Texas' largest Baptist group may leave the
increasingly conservative Southern Baptist Convention - a move
that would dramatically drain membership and financial support
from the national organization.
The Baptist General Convention of Texas, the largest state convention in the denomination, is openly discUssing severing ,ties with
the national body, which two yean ago called for wives to "submit
graciously to the servant leadership of her husband:'
"We're not interested in siphoning off a lot of funds from Texas to
fund a Jerry Falwell-elane church," the· Rev. Clyde Glazener, president of the BGCT, told The Dallas Morning News for Saturday's
editions.
T he mod.erate Texas group funneled more than $45 million from
Tens churches to the national body in 1999 and accounted for 14
percent of its budget, according to the ni!W1paper.

Monday, June 28, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

lacking, federal auditors say

Carrey, alter-e~o boost 'Me,
·
Myself &amp; Irene to box-office win

WASHINGTON (AP) Medicare, the nation's health
Inspections offacilities providing insurance program for ihe elderdialysis to Americans with kid- ly and disabled, covers costs for
ney failure are few and far Americans of any age who must
between, and serious ·violations undergo kidney dialysis. In dialyof quality standards are on the sis, a machine filters wastes from
rise, congressional investigators the blood, taking over that job
say.
for diseased or damaged kidneys.
The procedure usually must
The proportion of the nation's
approximately 3,800 dialysis be done every few days and is
facilities subjected to inspections very expensive. Although fewer
each year declined from 52 per- than 1 percent of Medicare's 39
cent in 1993 to 11 percent in million beneficiaries - about
1999, according to a report 300,000 people - are dialysis
General patients, the cost of their care
Monday by the
Accounting Office.
comprises 5.2 percent of
Of 409 facilities inspected last Medicare spending, or about
year, 15 percent had deficiencies $12.8 billion per year.
severe enough that, if uncorrectMedicare pays state inspectors
ed, would warrant expulsion and contracts with private groups
liom Medicare, the federal health to oversee the quality of care at
care program that pays most dial- dialysis facilities. Those with seriysis patients' bills. That compares ous violations can be threatened
with 6 percent in 1993.
. with expulsion liom the proIn a separate review of inspec- gram, but they are generally pertion documents, the inspector mitted a grace period to correct
general of the Health and the problems first.
Human Services Department
"The threat of termination
found instances of. life-threaten- brings qearly all facilities Into
ing problems at some facilities, compliance for a while, but they
inCluding the reuse of improper- do not necessarily stay that way,"
ly cleaned dialysis equipJp.ent.
said the report by GAO, the
"Shoddy treatment of people investigative arm of Congress.
with poor kidneys under any
It
recommended
that
condition is inhumane:' said Sen. Medicare use payment denials or
Charles Grassley, R -Iowa, chair- reductions as punishment more
man of the Senate Special Com- often and that Congress act to
mittee on Aging, which called a allow fines against the most serihearing on the reports.
ous offenders.

LOS ANGELES (AP) -1\vo
Jim Carreys for the price of one
proved irresistible for moviegoers . .
"Me, Myself &amp; Irene;· starring Carrey as a cop whose dual
personalities fall for the same
woman, debuted as the top .
weekend film with $24.2 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
"Chicken Run," featuring the
voice of Mel Gibson in an ani10ated adventure of hens on the
lam from their poultry farm,
opened in second place with
$17.5 million.
With no other new movies in
wide release, the overall box
office slumped for the third
straight weekend compared to
last year. The top 12 movies
grossed $101.4 million, down 20
percent from the same weekend
a year ago.
Studios expect things to heat
up next weekend and into the
Fourth of July as three big
movies debut. Gibson's RevolutionUy War flick "The ·Patriot"
opens Wednesday, followed by
George Clooney in "The Perfect
Storm" and Roliert De Niro in
"The Adventures of Rocky and
Bullwinkle" on Friday.
"The box office hasn't had a
stellar blockbuster release in the
past few weeks, but the stage is
set for a really big weekend this

WASHINGTON (AP) - Parents are not making wide use of
readily available technology that
can restrict what they consider
objectionable television shows or
Internet sites liom being viewed
by their children, a study finds.
1\vo in five parents surveyed
reported having a y-chip or other
device on their sets that can block
programs with ·violence, sex and
crude language. Only half of those
parents have activated the devices,
according to the study released
Mpnday by the Annenberg Public
Policy Center at the UniVersity of
Pennsylvania.
Also, one-half of families say
they have Internet access at home.
But before allowing their children
to search the Internet, only one.third of parents have activated soft.ware filters that can block certain
Web sites.
A 1996 telecommunications
law required all new televisions, 13
inches and larger, sold after Jan. 1 to
be equipped with the v-chip technology. Content-blocking software
can be bought or downloaded for
free. Some Internet access
providers include the software
with their services.
,
"But parents are not using thesJ
tools to guide their children's
(viewing);' senior researcher Amy
Jordan said.
Fewer than one in five youngsters can get around v -chip restrictions and only one in 20 children
can evade computer filtering technology. the study found.
"Few children can circumnavigate their parents' blocking
attempts," researchers reported.

•

Page a·1

55 brands.
sales in excess of $35 billion.
The announcement of the sale ended a
Nabisco Holdings, which makes Ritz
crackers, Snaclr.well's snacks, Oreo cookies bidding war that had involved financier Carl
and Life Savers candy, is 80.6 percent owned Icahn as well as a venture of France's
Danone SA and Britajn's Cadbury
by Nabisco Group of Parsippany, N.J.
Nabisco Group said Sunday that after Schweppes PLC.
The Danone-Cadbury offer reportedly
shedding the Nabisco Holdings unit, what
remained of the group - essentially it's cash was for about $50 a share. ~&gt;anone, a leading
from the Nabisco sale - would be sold to manufacturer of cookies and crackers, hall
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. for $9.8 billion. hoped for an American foothold with th~
Iro nically, R .J. Reynolds Tobacco had deal , while Cadbury was more interested in
been a subsidiary of the group - previous- Nabisco's candy holdings.
James M . Kilts, president and chief execuly known as RJR Nabisco - before it was
spun off in March 1999 as a separate pub- tive of Nabisco, said the transactions woulo
licly traded entity. It makes Winston and · fulfill management 's pledge of last May to
maximize its value to shareholders.
..
Camel brand cigarettes.
Philip
Morris
revealed
that
after
th,e
Philip Morris, which produces Marlboro,
Benson &amp; Hedges and Parliament brand cig- transaction is completed in October, it wi).l
arettes, also owns Miller Brewing Co. and begin W!&gt;rk on an initial public offering of
such brands as Jell- 0, Maxwell House, Oscar 20 percent of the stock in the newly cotn•
Mayer and Post cereals. The purchase fills a bined food company.
It said the !PO was expected in early
gap in its food portfolio, which had not
2001,
with proceeds used to .retire some of
included cookies and crackers.
The deal will add 18 brands to its existing the debt incurred in the Nabisco purchase.

OVersi~ of dialysis fadlities

Study finds
v-chips not
widely used

Monday, June 16, 1000

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Eastem physicals

set for June 28

coming week," said Rob ert
Bucksbaum of Reel Source,
which tracks movie ticket sales.
"Me, Myself &amp; Irene" marked
Carrey's return tci gross-mit
comedy as he reunited with
"Dumb &amp; Di?.mber" creators
Peter and Bobby Farrelly. Carrey
plays a mild-mannered Rhode
Island policeman whose obnoxious alter-ego gets loose while
escorting a suspect (Renee ZeUweger) to New York.
Reuniting Carrey and the
Farrelly brothers "is .t he closest
thing to a sure thing you can
get," s~id Tom Sherak, head of
distribution for 20th Century
Fox, which released "Me, Myself
&amp; Irene."
"Somebody said comedy is
king, and they're right."
Playing in 3,020 theaters,
"Me, Myself &amp; Irene" averaged .a
healthy $8 ,013 per cinema,
compared
with · "Chicken
Run's" average of $7,025 in
2,491 theaters.
"Chicken Run" was the first
film produced under a long- ,
term deal between DreamWorks
and British clay-animation studio Aardman, which created the
Oscar-winning "Wallace &amp;
Gromit" shorts. The voice cast
also includes Miranda Richardson,JuJia Sawalha and Jane Horrocks.

'Baby Edition
The Dally Sentinel Baby Edition Is
a Special Edition filled with
photographs of local kids • a_ges
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION wm appear In the
July 7th Issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative Is Included.

JU.I

a, IHt.

PIOQIIt
CA. •1 PICIIEI UP AFTII JIIL1 tiTM,

I

Send to:
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r-------------·-·--------------------------,I
I Child's Name(s) &amp; Age(s):

Parent's ,Name:
City &amp; State:
****THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE ADI
I
I
I PHONE No.: _ _.___ _ _ _ _ SUBMITTED BY: - - - - - -

1
I

L-------------------------------------·-··-·-·-··
..
HURRYI
DIADLINI ae·
PIO~URI

·MONDAY .JJINI 18, 11000.1

•

who won here in 1997, finished close
behind Marlin in third.
While Gordon pushed to stay ahead,
crew chiefR.obbie Loomis worried about
gas.
" I think it was really close," he said . " I
think we had enough for one more lap
but it's hard to tell on a road co urse."
Gordon said he kept gunning even
though he was only catching glimpses of
Marlin irl his mirrors.
"I wasn't going to let any of those guys
get up to me," he said. " I was really afraid
the caution was going to come out more
than anything else."
Rusty Wallace, a road-course specialist
with six victories on NASCAR tracks

IJeiins July 5
SYRACUSE - · The Annual
Hubbard Little League Tourna~
ment will get under way in Syracuse on July 5. The tournament is
sponsored by the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department.
The tournament drawing will
be held on June 30. Entry fe e is
$25.
For more information call Eber
Pickens Jr. at 740-992-5564 or
740-992-7181.

•••••
Send Meigs C ounry sports
· news to the Sentinel by fax at
992-2157. Email items to galtri. bune@eurekan et.com.

...,

Please SH NASCAR, Pip B&amp;

CINCINNATI (AP) - Six
games into a pivotal homestand,
· the C in cinnati Reds are still
trying to get it right. They're
down to their last four chances
to turn their season around.
The consensus pick to win
the NL Central is closer to fifth
place than first after losing two
of three over the weekend to
the San Diego Padres.
Rookie Brian Tollberg made
another impre ssi v~ start and
closer Trevor Hoffinan survived
another late rally as San Diego
won 5-4 Sunday, dropping the
R eds a season- high 8 1/2 games
behind St.Louis.
By losing 14 of 18 si nce June
5, the Reds have fallen farth er
from first than they 've been
since 1998, when they fini shed
25 games out. Their b est hope is
the schedule: seven games
against the Cardinals in the next
11 days, including four at home
beginning Monday.

Hubbard Toumey

..

that turn right, had the pole but fini shed .a
disappointing 26th after spinning wtrh
three laps to go.
In Winston Cup history, o nly Gordon ,
Wallace, Do bby Allison and Richard Petry
have had six road course victories.
Wallace qualified with a tra ck reco rd
99.309 mph Friday, beating Gordon 's previous best pole speed of 98.711 mph on
the track's current configuration, set du ring qualifying in 1998.
On Sunday, both engines and drivers
got sick in a ra ce with fairly low attrition
for a road event.
John Andretti made an early departure .

Reds' losing ·
skid.goes on

SYRAC USE - On Saturday,
July 29, all form er members of
the Hits and Misses Senior Girls
Softball team and their families
will have an all day reunion at the
Syracuse ball field and poll.
The park is reserved for th e day
and a free pass to swi m will be
provided by the team . The team
was organized in 1966 by Ke nny
Wiggins and continued for 23
years through the 1988 season. It
is believed to be .the first girls
slow pitch softball team in Meigs
County.
There were over 125 girls on
the teams, and if you have any
addresses we would appreciate
your phone call at 740-992-5002,
so that each player can receive a
letter as soon as possible.

MASON, WVa. - Pastor Ron
Branch of the Faith Baptist
C hurch , Mason, W.Va., will host
Bible study and a footb all training
camp on Saturday, July 8, from 9
a.m. to l p.m. on the church
grounds.
The football portion is offered
to local young men who plan to
play football in the fall. It will be
geared towards defensive players
who have not attended a major
. camp this summer.
These sessions will be led by
Ron Branch II, defensive line
~oach for Class AAA Musselman
' High School. Branch is a 1998
graduate of Shepard College
wher he played middle guard and
was named a GTE Academic All Am erican.
Registration fee is $5 per f.1ntily the day of camp. Contact Pastor Branch at· 773-5429 or 7736151.

PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

.o..~

sure."
Gordon, workipg with a new crew
chief, has had a rocky season by his standards with only o ne other win - at Talladega. He acknowledged that winning on
the road course was important.
Gordon, w ho lives in Pittsboro, Ind.,
considers the 1.95-mile track in the hills
of Northern California's wine country his
home course since he was born a 15minute drive away in Vallejo.
Gordon started fifth and traded the lead
with several drivers over the first threequarters of the 112-lap race. He managed
his fuel and kept his Chevrolet in front for
the final 26 laps to finish 4.1 seco nds
ahead of Sterling Marlin. Mark Martin ,

Team captain Barry Larkin
thinks they need to win at least
three of those four. He and several others spoke o ut during a
postgame team mee ting - the
second of the homestand about their uninspired play
Sunday and how it has to
change fast.
I
"The lac k of enthusiasm was
disappointing," Larkin said. "We
have a couple of tough weeks
coming up. We've got to go out
with the right att\tude and

focus."

ANGRY JUNIOR - ·Ken Gr,~ey Jr. voices his displeasure over a call at first base during Cincinnati 's 54
loss to San Diego Sunday , ,Cinergy Field. The Reds have lost 14 of 18 games. (AP)

The . Padres seemed more
intense Sunday, doing the little
things right as Brian Tollberg
(2-0) did just about everything
right during his second major

league start.
Last Tuesday, Toll berg allowed
only one ~ it and one u nearn-ed
run in seven innings of a 3-1
victory over Ari zona in his
major league debut. He 'was
almost as good on Sunday,
blanking the . R eds on six hits
through seven innings .
He faded in the eighth, getting an out before giving up ,a
walk and a hit. The PadrC!J
bull.pen then let in four runs· in
th e inning , with Hoffmanstruggling through his second
subpar appearance of the series.
Hoffman, who gave up three
ninth-inning runs on Friaaj,
allowed RBI pinch singles b y
Eddie Taubensee and Chris
Stynes that cut i.t to 5-4. He got
Juan Castro to fly out and end
the inning, then allowed one
single in the nimh before dosing out his 19th save in 21
games.
"That's a good team over
there," said Padres second baseman Bret Boone, ·who played
for the R eds two years ago. "We
were sure they were going tc;&gt;
come back on us, like they have
all year."
~:
The Reds won 96 games last·
year with a flurry of comebacks.
The difference this year is those .
comebacks seem to stop one hit
short.
" I do n't know if anything's
missing," said firs t baseman Sean
Casey, who singled to exte nd
his hitting sneak to nine games.
"We lost 5C4 today, in extra
innings Friday. Last year, thos\'
gaines went our way. Hopefully,
they 'll start going o ur way
again."
¥

North wins W. Va.

Pastor Ron•s tralnln1
camp July a

Complete the form below and
'· enc.·lose a sna~hot or wallet slz.ed
picture plus a .oo charge for each
photograph. I more than one child
Is Tn tl1'_picture, enclose an
addltlonal52.00 per child. ·(ENCLOSE
•un •••• h

SONOMA, Calif. (AP) -Jeff Gordon
had to wait until he had blown •away the
rest of the competition at Sean Point
Raceway to start thinking abonl winning
the next race.
1
" Somebody's sure to ask if w; can make
it seven in a row," Gordon said,," l'm wondering already."
·.
The three-time Winston Cup champion
extended his road-course wiqning streak
to six Sunday by winning the Save Mart
Kragen 350 by more than 4 ieconds.
"We have won the last five, road courses
and the last two here, so I Jwped we had
what it would taJ.;e to do it aj,;,tin," he said.
"I knew if we didn't have a strong n,m ,
there was go ing to be even· more pres-

Hits and Misses
softbaU reunion set

· ATHENS - The sixth annual
Mary Hope M emorial Women's
GolfTournament is sc heduled for
July, 19, at the Ath ens C ountry
Club.
All proceeds from this year's
event will go to benefit the
Appalachian Community Hospice.
The field is open to 64 golfers.
Th e entry fee is $55 .
To register, call 740-592-1655.

COMING FRIDA.Y, )ULY 7, 2000
The Daily Sentinel

PICTUit

EAST MEIGS -All Eastern
High School athletes in seventh
through 12th grades will be provided free sports . physicals
Wednesday, June 28, at the VMH
in Pomeroy. Physicals wiU be
administered from 8 a.m. until 11
a.m, o n that day.
Physical cards .and fall sports
packets may be picked up at the
Eastern High School office fro.m
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mo nday through
Friday. AU students must obtain a
sports packet in order to participate in fall sports.

Rainbow Warrior reigns over Save Mart 350

Mary H~pe Memorial
Toumey set for July 19

EXTRA! EXTRA!

.

The Daily Sentinel

MLS: Crew defeats New Englat~d, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6·

for nearty S15

Morris to acquire
NEW YORK (AP) - A little over a year
after gerting out of the cigarette business, the
nation's No. 1 cookie ·and cracker maker is
back with BigTob,;o.
Philip Morris . Companies Inc., the
world's largest tobacco firm and parent
company of Kraft Foods, said Sunday it has
reached an agreement to purchase Nabisco
Holdings Corp. for S14.9 billion plus the
assumption of $4 billion in debt.
Philip Morris chairman and chief executive Geoffrey C. Bible said in a statement
that the purchase at $55 a share will greatly
expand the company's food offerings.
"The combination of Kraft and Nabisco
wiU create the most dynamic co~pa ny in
the food industry, both in terms of absolute
earnings levels and revenue and earnings
growth rates."
Kraft and Nabisco together produced
revenue of $34.9 billion last year, Philip
Morris said. The combined food company is
expected to be second in the world only to
Nestle of Switzerland, which has annual

Inside:
"

football classic
BY

DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

MEIGS HOOP CAMP - Fifty·flve Meigs County young people participated in the annual Meigs Maraud·
er Basketball Camp. Front row. left to right, Zach Schwab, Michael Manuel , Crockett Crow, Joey Mor·
gan, Morgan Kennedy, Taylor Deem, Anthony Frederick, Joey Blackston, Jacob Sellers and Zach Whitlach. Second row, left to right, Mlghael Ball; Steven Stewart, Travis Eblin, Jacob Barnes, Austin Dunfee, Aaron Story, Frank Stewart. Ben Copplck and Kyle Boggs. Third row, left to right, Josh Williams,
Dustin Knapp, Clayton Blackston, Casey Richardson, Michael Blaettner, Andy Garnes , Andy McAngus,
Cory Dill, David Poole, Dan Bookman and Dustin Vanlnwagen . Fourth row, left to right, Jesse Hanson,
Adam Lambert. Zack Burns, Josh Taylor, Corey Jarvis, Ryan Frazier, Weston Fife, Doug Dill, David Boyd
and Eric VanMeter. Fifth row, left to· right, Heath Nelson , Tyson George, Justin Bell, Brandon Bell, Jeremy Blackston, Ross Well, Matt Hoi ey, Justin Coleman, Zach Bush and Justin Warner. Back row, left to
right, Meigs head coach Chris Stout and assistant coach Chuck Knopp. Hustle Award: Josh Taylor. Third
grade free throw award: Frank Stewart. Fifth grade free throw award: Dan Bookman. Sixth grade free
throw award: Zach Bush . Camp MVP"and 7th·9th grade free throw award : JE)remy Blackston. (Sentinel
photo)

CHARLESTON, W. Va.
Josh Cordell's last play in Saturday's North/ South All-Star
Football Classic ended up pretry
much like most of his other
plays, with him having penetrated into the offensive backfield
and making life difficult for the
South Cardinals.
Only on the last one, the
Hannan graduate planted the
South QB, right into the turf in
the east end zon e of Laidley
Field, right below th e sco reboard. He djdn :t get a sack,
because the passer did get the
ball off, but the signal caller got
thrown like a rag do ll for his
trouble.
So went Cordell's day as the
North came back to win the
game 20-·18 in a game which
was more of a showcase for
defense than anything else. The
two squads combined for 11
turnovers - four bv th e North
and seven by the S~uth.
Cordell also silenced any critics who might have doubted his

potential because of his origins'
at th e small Mason County·
school. The offensive tackle who
drew Cordell's number hailed
from a C lass AAA school but ·
needed co nstant he lp with Cordell. In several passing situa-·
tions, the Mason Countian drew
double and even triple teaming
from the South offe nsive line
and backs.
When asked about the chance
to finally face 'big-time talent',
Co rdell respond ed, " I th ink
people are peopl e. A AA_A
school doesn't make the people
at a A school any smaller,
~· 1 think we had a lo t of talent
out here today, but I think :t
stood up with the best of the11L
There's a lot who stood out." .
The two oth er Mason Coun- .
tians in the game played on special teams. Point Pleasant alum:
nus Eric Hanning hit everythin~
in sight on the coverage an(! .
return units . Wahanu's B eau ~
Gerlac h h~d a block while on·
the punt return unit , which

Plelse -

AII·S.. r, Pllp . .

•

•

•

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
Page

82 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

440

540

Apalbi!Mie
for

Rent

Ml.,:ellaneoua
Men:handlae

Now Tak ng App ca on1 3!
Wu 2 Bad oom ToWnhoull

630

••v

May

$850 (740 25&amp; 724

Bia Buzz••

4X4 Ex

lj)pllcaltona for BR
HUD aublidlzeG apo for tldol1y

Huga n entory; 0 sco n P eea

and htndtcappod EOH
3&lt;)0 6 5-1!67i

owa Ancho a Wa a Hea a a

On v y Sk

Seek ng Ma age Fo

ewe y

S o e App can Should Be A Mo-

997 Ford Range XLT El(ftr\ded
Cab 4X4 ow m eage E" 1 en
Cond on S 4 900

740

3909:-=::-:--:-----:-:--::--:--

~

ERS
A moa E 1 yont Ap
P o ed W h $0 Down Low
Mon h ~ Pa~men 1
800 8 7
3471 E&gt;t 330

Prole811onal
Services

ed PhO og e

Bowm $3 795 Blw Logo n o
Boa ell P an~a Beams ll gt
Ctptc ty Btl Bowm VI ut An
ywho o FREE nfo mellon aoo&amp;78 3&amp;3 NORWOOD SAW
M LLB 252 Sonw D vt BuNt 0
NY 422&amp;

51 o

1!1.!1!. J!'!•- ~.!IP!I.!

_~UJ'!,I _:J!e_ft!~ ~!

MERCHANDI SE

No Fee Unaaa Wt Wn
866 582 3345

Advertise In Classified

4 Line Ad - 7 Times

TURNED DOWN ON

SOC AL SECURITY 18817

]=ll££ ••• 8££ "

7 Days
Yes One Week'

REI DINTIAL HOME OWNERS

DOWNTOWN IUIINUI
IIPIICI Oft 0,~1
Fo L•••• Th u Room• c otn
l Nlot To Vllw 740 4&lt;16-&amp;5311

~

Its The
Meigs - Gallaa - Mason

••e

NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT

543-8357 EXT 402

a ed Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 ga ed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Ha e Sa es Ab y Some Com
p e Sk sReq ed SaayAnd
Bonus Pus Benefi PaCkage

Home Supp y 740 448

94 6 WWWONb !lOIM&gt;onnolt

FREE FREE MONEY PROB
EMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
P CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APP CAT ON FEE 8 7

Rata Manager

1

$8500

ng Doo • Wnd

Pumbng&amp;Eactfca Pa a Fu
nacu &amp; Haa Pumps Benne 1

Mob

Personals

83

OYtningl

A¥11oblo1Win r...... oow occopllnQ

005

Page

Trucka for S.le

HI 0001

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dally Sentinel

Fllllily mill&lt; Ccw 4 yt1t1 old 314
A Ho a 1 n F eahlned

Je

A.pa men 1 nc udal Wa a
Sowogo T llh 532!/Mo 740

Uveatock

The

One Letter Ptr Box Allow Box for Sptct Between Warde

Houaehold
Goode

:11111111111111111111111111111

:Nam•·-------------------------------------------iAdd~••·----------------------------------------

/&gt;J N ootatoldvtrtong n
th I n-papt I IUbjtct to

he Fedt ll Fl~ HOUI ng All.
of 11ee which mokn tt 000
to advert so ony prtfortnct
mta on or d acrlmlnauon
battd on 101 co"' rt gk&gt;n
so• am Ia tta uo o l\lllono
o g n o ony ntent~ o
makt ony IUCh prtft tnCI
mta lon o d ecrlm na on

SECRETARY Fo Buoy No
F:t o

Agency Lo 1 td

ack

son Ohio A M n mum 0 H gh

Schoo 0 p om a And Two Yta s
Expe enca Mus Possess Good
Commun ea on Sk 1 W en
And 0 a

Expe ence n Me o

Wo d And E co Send Ro
oumo By Ju y o 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 ve S eo Ga po
o Oho 456 4 0 FAX 740 446
60 4 EOE MIFIH

10

T h 1 - w not

"""'"noiY.,.,.
advenloementa

I

mo h
A

3426

Ntw Ooub ow do 3 BR 2BA
$278 po mon h Low Down Pay
FtaA

m1n

.~~!~~(1iC!)

FetOa ey

118a.928 3428
32x80

Ftc

o 1J

Rip

Ne e

868 89

Public Notice

550
R&amp;D a U&amp;ed F n u e &amp; Ap
p ancea G ea Se ec on P cect
To Se
Come And 8 own
Co ne 0 Rou e
&amp; Add son
P ko We B v Fu n u e 740

REAL ESTATE

310

Eanupto$5/h

LEGAL NOTICE

Building

Donna Fink whoaa 1111
lddrell lnd WhOII p!llent
place of r11ldenao Ia
unknown will taka natloe
that on May 12 2000
Norweet Sank Mlnneeota
National Aaaacl1tfon at
TruoiH flied Ito Complllnt
In Coot No OO.CV-115 In the
Court of Common Plooe
Melge County Ohio olleglng
that the Dofandont Donna
Fink hoe or clolmo to hove
an lnllrllt In tho real ntota
deter bid bllow
Bltuetod In the County ol
Molga In tha Stele of Ohio
ond In the Townohlp of
Rutllnd 1nd bounded and
d.oi'fbld d liilluaa ...,.
In F110Uon 4 Town 7 Rl':'!f!
14
Ohio Compony •
Purcholl Bllng Lot No t
of CLAIII MAll I!STATI!S 1e
dllorfbed In Plot rooordad
In VOlume 4 Poga 11 Mefgo
County Plot llocorda
The Pelltlonor furlher
allegot thot by ,...on of
daflult of the Defondlnll{l)
In the poymonl of 1
proml11ory note according
to Ita tenor the conditione
of a concurrent mortgage
daed 11 ven to ucura the
peymenl ol oold nottca 1nd
conveying the promloea
doacrlbtd hove baen
brolcon ond the eomt hee
bacome obooluta
Tha Petlllonar p aye that
tho Defendanto(e) nomtd
above bo roqulrod Ia
1nower end oel up their
1n11r111 In aold real eatote
or bo lorovor barred from
ouortlng tho otmo for
forecloaure of uld
mortgago the marohallng of
ony Ilene and the oole ol

Supplies

367 0260

Homes for S.la

S 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T BANK REPOS
CA L NOW
800 360 4820

w h q arterly aa 1ry ~ewe
Managemen oppo unftlea ava
able 40 KilAedlcai/OtntaVPald
acatlo a ave able 3lhlfta dl y.
F ed&gt;O schodu lng Start 10
new ca ee with us

EXT 8509

Ca 600-9211-6753
fo an appoOitmen

we ook forward to rnoeting jOU

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

OOV T POSTAL ~018 Up
To$ 824 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F ee Ca Fo AppH a ton IE •m

AU. Yard Sa e1 Muat

a on nomalonfedea He

Be Pa d n Advance
DEADLINE 2 00 p m
he day before he ad

F Bene s 60D-598 4504 E•
ens on 5 5 B ~ M 6 PM

est

o un Sunday
edtton 200pm
F day Monday ed on
9 30 a m Sa urday
1

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae
2 Sea e e H P Go Ca Ve y
New $750 ATV T os Used T rt
Tame S $30 P 0

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

M d Sha ks

Jenson Basetube S 25
0024 339-3246

40 387

NUI'IIng All ltlln Tl'll n ng

Cion (Prot to tho public

BRUNER LAND
74D-441 492

.....,..-v~ogoc.- •

now accep ng applications for
persons nte H td n beeom ng I

Gol 1 Co Off SA 325 N Dee
C oak Rd 0 A as $ 2 800

c.rtHIId
Hull ..
-·
Thoso
W11trostad
should
contact

DON
200 8 Rllchlt lwt

~Htnaon

HOME FOAEC OSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV BANK REPOS 800
355 0024 Ext 6040

--WV2e1M
(3041m-t311

A equa oppor un ty amp (1Jtr

Cash R o G an de Mob ey Ad
Las La On Dead End 3 Wood
ed Ac ea $2 ooo Cash o a
Ac es $23 500 Chesh e ass e

CeekRd 8Aces$2000
Ac as $20 ooo 0

3

8

A es

$47 000 Cay Twp Ma abe Rd
3

Ac as

w

Fendy~dge

Cash

h Ba

$3 ooo

5AcesSOOOO

AMDATHLDN &amp; PEN UM

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors ea n $35 o $45 to 2
housweeky CaSeaTe

$0

==~------

Down F nanc ng 550 800 MHZ

0 30 GB HD A C ed We

3

come REOU AEMENTS Bank
$ aoo Mon h G oss
Aecou

0

592 665

COMPUTER BROKERS NC
60D-66 -3924

1----------i
790

OH

999 Yamane VZF 600 R 2000
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ml es e sp ndudes 5 yr warran

y show oom cond on $8500

40.985-3929 or 74D-423-5 73

SERVICES

810

:f~ {7~0tlt1J-:.1Jft - :
In Meles-Gallla-Mason"

taWttpoong

SERVICES

Help Wanted

Public Notice

Public Notice

oold rool 11tott ond the
proc11d1 of llld llle
oppllod to lhe poyment of
Petitioner 1 cltlm In the
property order of Ita prlo~~
1nd for tuch other and
further relief oe ltjuot ond
equlllble
BY: John D Clunk Etq
100015378
AndrewA Paltltyl0042515
Attorney• lor Plaintiff
Pttftloner
75 Milford Drive
Hudoon OH 44236
(3301342-8203
(8) 12 19 28
(7) 3 10 17 lTC

wide by 112 !ell dMp The
obove deacftllld property 11
port of Lot No 413 of the
contolldotlon of Pomeroy
•• reported In Pill Book Z
Page 17 end 18 In the
record• of Melgl County
Rocordtlr 1 Office ond
conbllned 0 103 1cro1 more
or
The Potltloner further
alfogoo that by ,.. .on of
doflult of tho Ooflndlnt(ol
n the poymont of 1
promfooory note 1ccordlng
to Ito tenor thO condition•
of 1 concurrent mortgage
dHd given to eiCUre the
p1yment of told note ond
conveying tho proml•••
doocrlbtd have boen
brokan ond the aamo h11
become ablolute
The Petitioner pr1y1 thai
tho Dtltndont C•l nomed
lbOVI bl requlrod to
tniWII and Ill ur thtfr
111 1111to
tln uldborred
or be..forever
from
a0.. rtlng the ..me for
foreclooure of oald
mortgage the 11111rehollng ot
r
d h
r 1
:~Yd ~:: ~~~~~ee :~de~.:'e
proc11d1 of 11ld ule
applied to the p1yment ol
Petlllonor 1 Clolm In the
proper order ol Ill priority
and lor ouch other lnd
lurther relief 11 11 jUit 1nd
equltlble
THE DEFENDANT(&amp;)
NAMED ABOVE REQUIRED

bldl will then bo opened
and ro1d a oud at 10 t5
AM on Monday July 17th
2000. lor work 11 lollowt
A dollgn-bu d propoul
lor repl1cement of 1
concrote bean 1 mple 1p1n
bridge_ and abutmenll over
Klngobury Run on Couniy
Rood 20 (Rockaprfng~
Rood) by a new HS 20-44
IOICI dollgned etructure 40
clear e ngle epan
24
rotdwoy w dth fnclud na
thouldore The contractor
thell provide an Eng neer,_
oeal w th the dea gn of me
otructu'" only contraCIOt'S
lhll 1re qualff ed ODOT
blddore will be co111ldered
B d apec flcttlona may Ill
plokld up at lhe Melgl
County EnglnHr 1 Olllce or
the Office of the Me 111
County CommfHionera
The Boord of Melge
County Commloalonore
moy occept thO lowoet II d
or eelect thelllet bid fo the
Intended purpoae and
re11rved the lght to accept
and or any part the eof and
will -•rd a cant act to that
bidder wh ch • In lhe beet
lntoraet of Melgo County
Gloria Kl0111 Cltrt
Board of Me ga County
Cammloalonera
{6126 (7} 3 2TC

Public Notice
··•o•il NO""'ICI!
..., "
"
M1rlh1 Boynton and John
Doe Unknown Spou.. II
on~ of Marthl Boynton
WhOII 1..1 piiCI Of
rllfdlncl II known II 200

Ill••

~oloy ·:~7~::~::~~~[-~0~H!lllntor

45789
pfoce
unknown will ttkt notice
that on March 11 2000 11
10 15 1 m
Conuco
Ft111nclol flied 111 complolnt
In CIH No IIO-CV-112111n the
Court ol Common Pl111
Melgo County, Oh o IIIIIJing
th1l the belond1nt(1)
Mirth• Boynton ond Johll
Dot Unknown Spou.. II
on111 of M1rtho Boynton
have or Cfllm IO have Ill
lntereot In the reol oolote
deoorlllld below
o
Sltueted In lht County of TO ANSWER ON
R
Mtlgt In the Stitt ol Ohio BEFORE THE 7TH DAY OF
and In the VIllage ol AUGUSt 2000
Pomeroy ond bounded and Contoco Bonk Inc
deocrlbtd 11 follow a Dennlo Rofmor Co LP.A.
Blglnnlng et a ollkt 1 t tho
Dennfo RofiiNI&lt;
cor- of Brook ond Llowfey
Attomoy ot Law
Strooto tho nee running
Attorney for
South 80 dtg 47 min w.
Plolnlffl Pltftloner
112 IHt to 1 etokt thlnco
FlO Box 1188
South 8 dog 13 min E 40
Twtnaburg OH 44087
fHt to 1 mko thonco North
(330) 425-4201
dog 47 min E 112 toet
(I) 5 12 19 28
to o ottkt thence North 8
(7) 3, 10 8TC
dog 13 min w 40 foot to
Public Notice
tho place ol bog nn ng Sa d
lot Included tho houoo end
Sallebury Townlhlp will
blm and llllng 1 lot 40 fMI
hold o Public HMrlng on
the Budget lor yHr 2001
In Memory
Thurodoy ~uly lth e 30 pm
al the Townohlp Hall
llockoprlngo
In Lovnag Memory of (8122 28 2 tc

1

Bwlerrk

Uncond ont 1 me gua an 11
LOCI 1 1 tncll u nlahtd E1

tab ahtd 175 Ct 24 Hll
448 0870 800 287 0&amp;18

Public Notice

Hippy Ad
DY-a:-w
TIIUGiri,Oh"e
HerA Cell And

WbhHerHa""
lllrthdq!

Artw Mae

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROO, NO

H1Pl OYMENT

I

!(IJ_-

eo

Campers &amp;
Motor Homaa

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

11 0

•No Cancellations
•No Abbreviations Please
•Customer Can Renew Free

"The Ble Buzz

HUO a proved Pomeroy ne
bedroom a u es and app anoes
es paid

opponunlt)' baa 1

We ara now aett ng up
ervlew appo ntmtn slo
outbound ale&amp;&amp;rvlce posltons
No expe Je ce neceSBary

ZIP·------------""""7"-----

Coupon To FREE BEE
Dally Sentinel
111 Court St Pomeroy

1

ow Dow Pa~me Free
o v see 928

F •• Do

n1o mod tha I dWI ngl
odveftised n lh 1 11tW1ptpo
a e a aMable on an aqua

G and open g o It$ ,_Wei
1 on ca ng cente

State

: Phon•
New 8&gt;80 38R 2BA $261 PI

1o eel Htl e
which It n o1 on of lho
law Ou tadell 1 e haroby

M ltnn um Ttlnervk:es
s p eased to announce the

City

(740
~og

She l111es wllh w m
memory and will
forever more
Sadly mrsaed by
Hwband Son
DuU(lhter &amp; Famda.s

Public Notice
REQU!IT FOR PIIOPOIAL
Notloo to Conti'IICIIoro
In IOOOrdlnOo With
etotlon 307 • of tho Ohio
lleYIHd Coclo lilted bldo
Will bo reotfVId by the
llo1rd ol Melgl County
Court
Comm11110n1re
HOUII Pomeroy Ohio
407e9 unlll 3 00 PM on
F Idly July 14th 2000 Tht

Card or Thtnk•

The ~ra L Eblen

mmed a 1 Open ng Fo A Food
Mt handll ToSa ctSou
n h1G1 po 1A d Pom1oy

JANITROL HIATIHO AND
COOUNO EQU PMENT
NSTALLED
You Don Co 111 Wo So h
Lo•• F •• Et ma •• 740 448
11308 600 29 0098

HENTALS

All

JET

Exoellon Houny wogo

P 11a1 Ca

Tht

AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa td Now l RtbU~ n Stock
ca Ron Evans BOD-53 9528

Fo ow g

NUIT'Iltr FO Mo 1 fo motion

Dental Hyg1emst

·-2471

·-1011-

Part time STM

experience
requ red Submit Resume to
230 Upper R ver RD
Gallipolis OH 45631

EOe

OOV T POSTAL 018 Up To
I 135 Hour F~ No E•
po onco ~tqu 1&lt;1 FrH AP9IICI
ton Arid E,.m nformo ~

721 &amp;013 Ex tna on
A.M PM CST

70

FREE DEBT CONSO OAT ON
App ct on W So Cl Reduct
Paymon 1 To 81'- CASH N
CENT VE OFFER Ca
800
328 85 0 E.t 29

ue
1

•

•

Family WONid Wet to
lhanlt all their frltriiU
and rtlatlves for their
111pport fotlll anti
prayers tl11rlng the lo11
11j "'" wife motht~
gmtulmother anti great
gmndm11tht~ Speaal
lhanlls to Pastor Marlt
MQrrow, Athtm Pollet
Dq!r and Sargent
Dale Holcomb of the
State Htghway Patrol
Samuel A Eblen
&amp;Family

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
Page

82 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

440

540

Apalbi!Mie
for

Rent

Ml.,:ellaneoua
Men:handlae

Now Tak ng App ca on1 3!
Wu 2 Bad oom ToWnhoull

630

••v

May

$850 (740 25&amp; 724

Bia Buzz••

4X4 Ex

lj)pllcaltona for BR
HUD aublidlzeG apo for tldol1y

Huga n entory; 0 sco n P eea

and htndtcappod EOH
3&lt;)0 6 5-1!67i

owa Ancho a Wa a Hea a a

On v y Sk

Seek ng Ma age Fo

ewe y

S o e App can Should Be A Mo-

997 Ford Range XLT El(ftr\ded
Cab 4X4 ow m eage E" 1 en
Cond on S 4 900

740

3909:-=::-:--:-----:-:--::--:--

~

ERS
A moa E 1 yont Ap
P o ed W h $0 Down Low
Mon h ~ Pa~men 1
800 8 7
3471 E&gt;t 330

Prole811onal
Services

ed PhO og e

Bowm $3 795 Blw Logo n o
Boa ell P an~a Beams ll gt
Ctptc ty Btl Bowm VI ut An
ywho o FREE nfo mellon aoo&amp;78 3&amp;3 NORWOOD SAW
M LLB 252 Sonw D vt BuNt 0
NY 422&amp;

51 o

1!1.!1!. J!'!•- ~.!IP!I.!

_~UJ'!,I _:J!e_ft!~ ~!

MERCHANDI SE

No Fee Unaaa Wt Wn
866 582 3345

Advertise In Classified

4 Line Ad - 7 Times

TURNED DOWN ON

SOC AL SECURITY 18817

]=ll££ ••• 8££ "

7 Days
Yes One Week'

REI DINTIAL HOME OWNERS

DOWNTOWN IUIINUI
IIPIICI Oft 0,~1
Fo L•••• Th u Room• c otn
l Nlot To Vllw 740 4&lt;16-&amp;5311

~

Its The
Meigs - Gallaa - Mason

••e

NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT

543-8357 EXT 402

a ed Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 ga ed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Ha e Sa es Ab y Some Com
p e Sk sReq ed SaayAnd
Bonus Pus Benefi PaCkage

Home Supp y 740 448

94 6 WWWONb !lOIM&gt;onnolt

FREE FREE MONEY PROB
EMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
P CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APP CAT ON FEE 8 7

Rata Manager

1

$8500

ng Doo • Wnd

Pumbng&amp;Eactfca Pa a Fu
nacu &amp; Haa Pumps Benne 1

Mob

Personals

83

OYtningl

A¥11oblo1Win r...... oow occopllnQ

005

Page

Trucka for S.le

HI 0001

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dally Sentinel

Fllllily mill&lt; Ccw 4 yt1t1 old 314
A Ho a 1 n F eahlned

Je

A.pa men 1 nc udal Wa a
Sowogo T llh 532!/Mo 740

Uveatock

The

One Letter Ptr Box Allow Box for Sptct Between Warde

Houaehold
Goode

:11111111111111111111111111111

:Nam•·-------------------------------------------iAdd~••·----------------------------------------

/&gt;J N ootatoldvtrtong n
th I n-papt I IUbjtct to

he Fedt ll Fl~ HOUI ng All.
of 11ee which mokn tt 000
to advert so ony prtfortnct
mta on or d acrlmlnauon
battd on 101 co"' rt gk&gt;n
so• am Ia tta uo o l\lllono
o g n o ony ntent~ o
makt ony IUCh prtft tnCI
mta lon o d ecrlm na on

SECRETARY Fo Buoy No
F:t o

Agency Lo 1 td

ack

son Ohio A M n mum 0 H gh

Schoo 0 p om a And Two Yta s
Expe enca Mus Possess Good
Commun ea on Sk 1 W en
And 0 a

Expe ence n Me o

Wo d And E co Send Ro
oumo By Ju y o 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 ve S eo Ga po
o Oho 456 4 0 FAX 740 446
60 4 EOE MIFIH

10

T h 1 - w not

"""'"noiY.,.,.
advenloementa

I

mo h
A

3426

Ntw Ooub ow do 3 BR 2BA
$278 po mon h Low Down Pay
FtaA

m1n

.~~!~~(1iC!)

FetOa ey

118a.928 3428
32x80

Ftc

o 1J

Rip

Ne e

868 89

Public Notice

550
R&amp;D a U&amp;ed F n u e &amp; Ap
p ancea G ea Se ec on P cect
To Se
Come And 8 own
Co ne 0 Rou e
&amp; Add son
P ko We B v Fu n u e 740

REAL ESTATE

310

Eanupto$5/h

LEGAL NOTICE

Building

Donna Fink whoaa 1111
lddrell lnd WhOII p!llent
place of r11ldenao Ia
unknown will taka natloe
that on May 12 2000
Norweet Sank Mlnneeota
National Aaaacl1tfon at
TruoiH flied Ito Complllnt
In Coot No OO.CV-115 In the
Court of Common Plooe
Melge County Ohio olleglng
that the Dofandont Donna
Fink hoe or clolmo to hove
an lnllrllt In tho real ntota
deter bid bllow
Bltuetod In the County ol
Molga In tha Stele of Ohio
ond In the Townohlp of
Rutllnd 1nd bounded and
d.oi'fbld d liilluaa ...,.
In F110Uon 4 Town 7 Rl':'!f!
14
Ohio Compony •
Purcholl Bllng Lot No t
of CLAIII MAll I!STATI!S 1e
dllorfbed In Plot rooordad
In VOlume 4 Poga 11 Mefgo
County Plot llocorda
The Pelltlonor furlher
allegot thot by ,...on of
daflult of the Defondlnll{l)
In the poymonl of 1
proml11ory note according
to Ita tenor the conditione
of a concurrent mortgage
daed 11 ven to ucura the
peymenl ol oold nottca 1nd
conveying the promloea
doacrlbtd hove baen
brolcon ond the eomt hee
bacome obooluta
Tha Petlllonar p aye that
tho Defendanto(e) nomtd
above bo roqulrod Ia
1nower end oel up their
1n11r111 In aold real eatote
or bo lorovor barred from
ouortlng tho otmo for
forecloaure of uld
mortgago the marohallng of
ony Ilene and the oole ol

Supplies

367 0260

Homes for S.la

S 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T BANK REPOS
CA L NOW
800 360 4820

w h q arterly aa 1ry ~ewe
Managemen oppo unftlea ava
able 40 KilAedlcai/OtntaVPald
acatlo a ave able 3lhlfta dl y.
F ed&gt;O schodu lng Start 10
new ca ee with us

EXT 8509

Ca 600-9211-6753
fo an appoOitmen

we ook forward to rnoeting jOU

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

OOV T POSTAL ~018 Up
To$ 824 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F ee Ca Fo AppH a ton IE •m

AU. Yard Sa e1 Muat

a on nomalonfedea He

Be Pa d n Advance
DEADLINE 2 00 p m
he day before he ad

F Bene s 60D-598 4504 E•
ens on 5 5 B ~ M 6 PM

est

o un Sunday
edtton 200pm
F day Monday ed on
9 30 a m Sa urday
1

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae
2 Sea e e H P Go Ca Ve y
New $750 ATV T os Used T rt
Tame S $30 P 0

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

M d Sha ks

Jenson Basetube S 25
0024 339-3246

40 387

NUI'IIng All ltlln Tl'll n ng

Cion (Prot to tho public

BRUNER LAND
74D-441 492

.....,..-v~ogoc.- •

now accep ng applications for
persons nte H td n beeom ng I

Gol 1 Co Off SA 325 N Dee
C oak Rd 0 A as $ 2 800

c.rtHIId
Hull ..
-·
Thoso
W11trostad
should
contact

DON
200 8 Rllchlt lwt

~Htnaon

HOME FOAEC OSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV BANK REPOS 800
355 0024 Ext 6040

--WV2e1M
(3041m-t311

A equa oppor un ty amp (1Jtr

Cash R o G an de Mob ey Ad
Las La On Dead End 3 Wood
ed Ac ea $2 ooo Cash o a
Ac es $23 500 Chesh e ass e

CeekRd 8Aces$2000
Ac as $20 ooo 0

3

8

A es

$47 000 Cay Twp Ma abe Rd
3

Ac as

w

Fendy~dge

Cash

h Ba

$3 ooo

5AcesSOOOO

AMDATHLDN &amp; PEN UM

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors ea n $35 o $45 to 2
housweeky CaSeaTe

$0

==~------

Down F nanc ng 550 800 MHZ

0 30 GB HD A C ed We

3

come REOU AEMENTS Bank
$ aoo Mon h G oss
Aecou

0

592 665

COMPUTER BROKERS NC
60D-66 -3924

1----------i
790

OH

999 Yamane VZF 600 R 2000
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ml es e sp ndudes 5 yr warran

y show oom cond on $8500

40.985-3929 or 74D-423-5 73

SERVICES

810

:f~ {7~0tlt1J-:.1Jft - :
In Meles-Gallla-Mason"

taWttpoong

SERVICES

Help Wanted

Public Notice

Public Notice

oold rool 11tott ond the
proc11d1 of llld llle
oppllod to lhe poyment of
Petitioner 1 cltlm In the
property order of Ita prlo~~
1nd for tuch other and
further relief oe ltjuot ond
equlllble
BY: John D Clunk Etq
100015378
AndrewA Paltltyl0042515
Attorney• lor Plaintiff
Pttftloner
75 Milford Drive
Hudoon OH 44236
(3301342-8203
(8) 12 19 28
(7) 3 10 17 lTC

wide by 112 !ell dMp The
obove deacftllld property 11
port of Lot No 413 of the
contolldotlon of Pomeroy
•• reported In Pill Book Z
Page 17 end 18 In the
record• of Melgl County
Rocordtlr 1 Office ond
conbllned 0 103 1cro1 more
or
The Potltloner further
alfogoo that by ,.. .on of
doflult of tho Ooflndlnt(ol
n the poymont of 1
promfooory note 1ccordlng
to Ito tenor thO condition•
of 1 concurrent mortgage
dHd given to eiCUre the
p1yment of told note ond
conveying tho proml•••
doocrlbtd have boen
brokan ond the aamo h11
become ablolute
The Petitioner pr1y1 thai
tho Dtltndont C•l nomed
lbOVI bl requlrod to
tniWII and Ill ur thtfr
111 1111to
tln uldborred
or be..forever
from
a0.. rtlng the ..me for
foreclooure of oald
mortgage the 11111rehollng ot
r
d h
r 1
:~Yd ~:: ~~~~~ee :~de~.:'e
proc11d1 of 11ld ule
applied to the p1yment ol
Petlllonor 1 Clolm In the
proper order ol Ill priority
and lor ouch other lnd
lurther relief 11 11 jUit 1nd
equltlble
THE DEFENDANT(&amp;)
NAMED ABOVE REQUIRED

bldl will then bo opened
and ro1d a oud at 10 t5
AM on Monday July 17th
2000. lor work 11 lollowt
A dollgn-bu d propoul
lor repl1cement of 1
concrote bean 1 mple 1p1n
bridge_ and abutmenll over
Klngobury Run on Couniy
Rood 20 (Rockaprfng~
Rood) by a new HS 20-44
IOICI dollgned etructure 40
clear e ngle epan
24
rotdwoy w dth fnclud na
thouldore The contractor
thell provide an Eng neer,_
oeal w th the dea gn of me
otructu'" only contraCIOt'S
lhll 1re qualff ed ODOT
blddore will be co111ldered
B d apec flcttlona may Ill
plokld up at lhe Melgl
County EnglnHr 1 Olllce or
the Office of the Me 111
County CommfHionera
The Boord of Melge
County Commloalonore
moy occept thO lowoet II d
or eelect thelllet bid fo the
Intended purpoae and
re11rved the lght to accept
and or any part the eof and
will -•rd a cant act to that
bidder wh ch • In lhe beet
lntoraet of Melgo County
Gloria Kl0111 Cltrt
Board of Me ga County
Cammloalonera
{6126 (7} 3 2TC

Public Notice
··•o•il NO""'ICI!
..., "
"
M1rlh1 Boynton and John
Doe Unknown Spou.. II
on~ of Marthl Boynton
WhOII 1..1 piiCI Of
rllfdlncl II known II 200

Ill••

~oloy ·:~7~::~::~~~[-~0~H!lllntor

45789
pfoce
unknown will ttkt notice
that on March 11 2000 11
10 15 1 m
Conuco
Ft111nclol flied 111 complolnt
In CIH No IIO-CV-112111n the
Court ol Common Pl111
Melgo County, Oh o IIIIIJing
th1l the belond1nt(1)
Mirth• Boynton ond Johll
Dot Unknown Spou.. II
on111 of M1rtho Boynton
have or Cfllm IO have Ill
lntereot In the reol oolote
deoorlllld below
o
Sltueted In lht County of TO ANSWER ON
R
Mtlgt In the Stitt ol Ohio BEFORE THE 7TH DAY OF
and In the VIllage ol AUGUSt 2000
Pomeroy ond bounded and Contoco Bonk Inc
deocrlbtd 11 follow a Dennlo Rofmor Co LP.A.
Blglnnlng et a ollkt 1 t tho
Dennfo RofiiNI&lt;
cor- of Brook ond Llowfey
Attomoy ot Law
Strooto tho nee running
Attorney for
South 80 dtg 47 min w.
Plolnlffl Pltftloner
112 IHt to 1 etokt thlnco
FlO Box 1188
South 8 dog 13 min E 40
Twtnaburg OH 44087
fHt to 1 mko thonco North
(330) 425-4201
dog 47 min E 112 toet
(I) 5 12 19 28
to o ottkt thence North 8
(7) 3, 10 8TC
dog 13 min w 40 foot to
Public Notice
tho place ol bog nn ng Sa d
lot Included tho houoo end
Sallebury Townlhlp will
blm and llllng 1 lot 40 fMI
hold o Public HMrlng on
the Budget lor yHr 2001
In Memory
Thurodoy ~uly lth e 30 pm
al the Townohlp Hall
llockoprlngo
In Lovnag Memory of (8122 28 2 tc

1

Bwlerrk

Uncond ont 1 me gua an 11
LOCI 1 1 tncll u nlahtd E1

tab ahtd 175 Ct 24 Hll
448 0870 800 287 0&amp;18

Public Notice

Hippy Ad
DY-a:-w
TIIUGiri,Oh"e
HerA Cell And

WbhHerHa""
lllrthdq!

Artw Mae

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROO, NO

H1Pl OYMENT

I

!(IJ_-

eo

Campers &amp;
Motor Homaa

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

11 0

•No Cancellations
•No Abbreviations Please
•Customer Can Renew Free

"The Ble Buzz

HUO a proved Pomeroy ne
bedroom a u es and app anoes
es paid

opponunlt)' baa 1

We ara now aett ng up
ervlew appo ntmtn slo
outbound ale&amp;&amp;rvlce posltons
No expe Je ce neceSBary

ZIP·------------""""7"-----

Coupon To FREE BEE
Dally Sentinel
111 Court St Pomeroy

1

ow Dow Pa~me Free
o v see 928

F •• Do

n1o mod tha I dWI ngl
odveftised n lh 1 11tW1ptpo
a e a aMable on an aqua

G and open g o It$ ,_Wei
1 on ca ng cente

State

: Phon•
New 8&gt;80 38R 2BA $261 PI

1o eel Htl e
which It n o1 on of lho
law Ou tadell 1 e haroby

M ltnn um Ttlnervk:es
s p eased to announce the

City

(740
~og

She l111es wllh w m
memory and will
forever more
Sadly mrsaed by
Hwband Son
DuU(lhter &amp; Famda.s

Public Notice
REQU!IT FOR PIIOPOIAL
Notloo to Conti'IICIIoro
In IOOOrdlnOo With
etotlon 307 • of tho Ohio
lleYIHd Coclo lilted bldo
Will bo reotfVId by the
llo1rd ol Melgl County
Court
Comm11110n1re
HOUII Pomeroy Ohio
407e9 unlll 3 00 PM on
F Idly July 14th 2000 Tht

Card or Thtnk•

The ~ra L Eblen

mmed a 1 Open ng Fo A Food
Mt handll ToSa ctSou
n h1G1 po 1A d Pom1oy

JANITROL HIATIHO AND
COOUNO EQU PMENT
NSTALLED
You Don Co 111 Wo So h
Lo•• F •• Et ma •• 740 448
11308 600 29 0098

HENTALS

All

JET

Exoellon Houny wogo

P 11a1 Ca

Tht

AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa td Now l RtbU~ n Stock
ca Ron Evans BOD-53 9528

Fo ow g

NUIT'Iltr FO Mo 1 fo motion

Dental Hyg1emst

·-2471

·-1011-

Part time STM

experience
requ red Submit Resume to
230 Upper R ver RD
Gallipolis OH 45631

EOe

OOV T POSTAL 018 Up To
I 135 Hour F~ No E•
po onco ~tqu 1&lt;1 FrH AP9IICI
ton Arid E,.m nformo ~

721 &amp;013 Ex tna on
A.M PM CST

70

FREE DEBT CONSO OAT ON
App ct on W So Cl Reduct
Paymon 1 To 81'- CASH N
CENT VE OFFER Ca
800
328 85 0 E.t 29

ue
1

•

•

Family WONid Wet to
lhanlt all their frltriiU
and rtlatlves for their
111pport fotlll anti
prayers tl11rlng the lo11
11j "'" wife motht~
gmtulmother anti great
gmndm11tht~ Speaal
lhanlls to Pastor Marlt
MQrrow, Athtm Pollet
Dq!r and Sargent
Dale Holcomb of the
State Htghway Patrol
Samuel A Eblen
&amp;Family

�Monday, June 26, 2000

Monday, June 26, 2000

ALLEYOOP

•

Home Improvements done by

CHRISTY'S 'FAMILY LIUING
204 N. 2nd Ave.
-Middleport, OH 45760
Rentals
Apts, Home Trailers,
Janitorial-Maid Residential or Commercial
Maintenance
Residential or Commercial
Home Repairs Interior &amp; Exterior
Call for estimates 9-5 pm Mon-Frl
We work Mon-Sat 9 • 5 pm
and we do accept emergency calla
Cal for Ritts 1·740.992-4514 1-740.742-7403 Evlllllgs

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Ill CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(304) 112·2079

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

r''•

75o East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
-"A Better

Phone (740) 593-6671
"

• New Homee
• Gel'lgH
• Siding

N... It ......

'

Cellular
Jeff Warner . Ins~

'

992-5479

I

'

BANKRUPTCY
can JWI'-vli1 ct.btor of ftn1nd1l obllpttonl and am,. aflllr dllb'lbulkM'I or
aaMtt among creditors. A ~ tolna through benllruptcy ""Y m.tn
etrtllln praperty, known •• "txtmpt" PfOPirtY, tor hie; ar Mr f*"'CHHII uee.
Tnlt miV Include I ctlr, I hou. ., CIOihtl, tnd houlthold gooda. You thould
dlrtet tnY qUHIIont "'I'M'dlng ~kruptcy to 1n Mtomey Hfort proottdlng.

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens

2 Y. miles out of
Chester on SR 248
740·985~4194
.,....,,

......

ISttandling timber large
or
tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Do1er work.
Free Estimates
CaUT&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050

. youR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Drlvewaya,
Patloe, Sldewalka.
25 yeal'l experience
FrH Eattmaatea

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

u

Factory Authorized

c-.IHPut.
Dealen.
10IJO St 1ft. 7 South
Coo/VII'-o OH 46713

'41 I Jo.aJII

61151 mo pd.

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTAUAnONS
Custom Carpet, Vlayl,
Commercial an Ceramic
Tile, All Types or

H•nlwood Fiooring,
Cllrpet Binding and
Restretchi1111•

30 Yrs. Experience
MIKE YOUNG
74G-992-7724
PAT YOUNG

740-949-11046

PSI
c~
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

Pomeroy,OH
Paying $10.00

740-949-2217
Slzee 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

per PIIJII

~.00 Coverall

$500.00 Starburlt

Progreaalve top una.
lie. II ()0.50 , , _

Over 4Q yrs experlenc!t

1Z1

Cltll or stop In and .._MIIc. S•11a11L
Brl:ln Rosa. or Br-.1 Sling and bagln a .
I'IWIIrdlng ca.- • an
AutornotiW 5ala PNfwllonal
TODAY!

...

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Mlln St.,

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
t
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler s~ats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00

W• hiYII thl Bat a...nta. 11111 Pllu
and thl Bat fllmly orllnllld work
avlroni!NIIt In todlly's automotMI
lndustryl

Ill I. lad
..........,,

AT6:30 P.M.

Rutland, Ohio

'*'*

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges· RefrigeratorsFreezers-_ Dish Washers

2M70 Baehan

A &amp; D Auto Up o atery • P ua, Inc

T1Mi Ohio V.llly'a eui:Dmotlvl Iader Is
contlnUIIItu looking for 1111111'881W and
IIIOtlvllt.l
to fill ..... potlltlons.

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs - Decks - Garages
Free Estimates
740-742-3411
Bryan Reeves
www.suns thome.co

SELF STORACE

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

[It]

HOUI'I

7:00AM-8 PM
1 1

1

mo.

"Ahead In Service" ·
llull'llla Wlllem Pride 12\ 5wltl Fttd ..................'5.25/SO lb bag
llull'llla 16" llalllit Pellts ...................................'6.95/SO .. bag
llull'llla Hunllrs Pride 21" Dog Footi.....................'6.75/SO .. bag
llllrlna16" Layw Cnnallek ............. ,.......,...........'S.99/SO lb. bag
lltltrena Suatdt Feed.....................................:......,'6.75/SO lb. bag
5hat1e RIYtr 12\ Callie Fttd ................................S6.75/100 lb. bag

Call740·985·3831
.35537 St. Rt. 7 Nertll

P•••rer, 01t1e

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, cOin and card
legal papers, Investment records, photo
I :~~~~nl:altcameras, household Inventory and
I!
items will be safe.
For more Information call

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.
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404
, ...11-lfl#.
Painting • .

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUctiON

.

• New Homes

"You\ltlrlltll the rut...
IIDW trylht 6tsl"
.

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

Interior ~ Exterior
Residential ~ Commerical
Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

1740) tt2-IOI:S
!Mobile) 740-"HI&amp;:s

740-992-1671

lnspred

7/22fTFN

IUIII.IDa

c~DS--Ia-

.. •.

':

No1111
.,.__
•AQJ71
• KJ 3
• J 10 5 4

.,

(740) 992-3470

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
· Ufetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R~ Bissell
30 Yrs. E.xp.
Free Estirnates 740-378-6349
Now Renting

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232 .
6121/00 1 mo. pd .

. LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
ofpain tinsLet me do il for you" '
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Messoge

After 6pm-614-985-4180

"We're Back"

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

Well&amp;

East

• 10 8 3

• 9 4 2

• 8 54
tAQ
•QJ983

• 2
t K 9 7 2
• A 10 6 5 2

South

13~11y

•AQI0976
• 06 3

~'='\~:--

joiMII •

45 Worah
45

14Agree

15 Pu- gently 1 1 16Sout55
highly

,_.rd

AoiM holiday seSmoo17MII, oehool ·
57

18- Jllllll

21

MtWorb
23 lJibor org,
21 Pinochle 1erm
21Smelteetpup
2t Mo. Farrow
30 Spirit
31-33-lo
38 1940e 111m otar
37 " Form"

Pnpo..cl

5e Dlocouragn

Anotomlcal

Pltut-

• K5

ollort

DOWN
1 Drlvero' oro.

2 Orthodontfllt'a
~Mg.

3 Elhlot:&gt;lon title l!!l..!..L.:..I~:.t.:::.
4 "BytMIIIM-

-

-to Phoenix"
5 Mor8 olegonl

7 lnotruct

I No lla, -or

e watk

8 Joke

unotadlly

•K4
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
8oath
West North East

__...,

I•

Pass

Pass

2•

I•
4•

10 Plrll MBIIOn
11 Dongorcolor
13 Con_,.te .
Wllholl
18 Stain
.
It Dlcfn, oxlot ·20 - Newton· :John
22 Scunle
23 Allrlbuto
24 - ochnltzol
25 Walking In

water

Pass

27 "Scooby _ ..
32 Print unlto
34 s-pstakoo

All pus

Opening lead: • Q

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

''mer .•"•

n

1·80Q;o311·3391
Free Eetimatee
Codrtetors Weloo111e

' W15' ~pd.

' '

Bu/ldooer &amp; Baclclaoe
Se"'ic8s
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sites

1

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Septk Sy.aenu &amp;
Utilitie•

17COI 992·3131

.l'Vf

r.""'

A GICEAT IPM fO, A IOOIC

AIOUT

A L.ONl&gt;Orl

snftr urcG.ll/11... I

QUALITY

AL~

.l

Nf~l&gt;

f

. . i-frte ~g~~T. .!

LANDSCAPE
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks
Free Estimates '

~=::!:=======
'· . . .

•

~~t
~::~~~~J }~;d~~~~~~~~=
winning play, How can the

OLIVf 0, TWIST ~
IN YOU, MA,TI/til,

defenders defeat four beans here
after West leads the club queen?
Note that because it is in the

.........

~

~~;;;~~~~~~~~!:::::==:::;::::::::~==-....:""~':·!l&gt;~I~(.~J~e~N~S~1~..!;~
";;

Mike Sharp
740·949-3606

WIT!'\(&gt;...~~~ VKAA\ ~\~ .

e,y H\E:. \11-\E f\(. ~'XV "-W"-Y,
fiE. OWNED 01/QC. 800 !
I

Ii:T!i:T'5:t::'~UiEEl

• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
FrH Estimates

IS TI~ERE A REASON

FOR THIS?

5131/ 1 mo pd.

J&amp;L IISULATIOI &amp;
COISTIUCncil

To get a current weather
report, check the

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;:
DOwnspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown llllulation
I
1182-2772 I
For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

Sentinel

I MONDAY
'¥our
'Birthday .
t

:· Tuesday, June 27, 2000
;
A number of new avenues
, could open up for you in the year
' ahead that might make it possible
. for you to fulfill several ambitious
~ goals . A couple of friends may be
• responsible for your good luck.
~
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
• The last thing you'll want to be
;_ today is a loner, so if plans areri't
1 already in the mill, suggest an
; activity you know your friends
; would enjoy doing. They 'll hap: pily join in . Trying to patch up a
r broken romance? The Astro:. Graph Matchmaker can help you
l understand what to do to make the
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
1 Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
i P.O. Boll 1758, Murray Hill Sta; tion, New York, NY 10156.
! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) What
· makes you a true leader today is
j that you'll genuinely show con} cem for everyone who is in your
., cadre. You'll have no trouble
• gaining support for your direc·
t tions.
: VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
~ Speak softly if you want to attract
~ someone's attention today. Kind
:· words in a gentle voice will be
~ much more powerful than issuing

•

r IRC

l

\

.Syste~~s, Inc.

and out, carpenter work,
roollng, sldlng. Have own
tools. FM!s Estimates

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800-291·5600

tract.
This is the key principle that
West forgot : When you lead a low
card from length, whether at trick .
one or later in the play, it guaran- .
tees an honor in that suit.
So, with ihe diamond 10 and
jack conveniently in the dummy,
West knows that his panner holds
the king. If West pauses to consider his options, he will realizf
tluit
must win trick 'two wid
the diamond ace, then continue
with the queen. It should be the
work of a moment for East to
overtake with the king and to give
his partner the decisive diamond
ruff.

lie

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

NODCE

·South's
suit directly below his partner's,
two-hean rebid promises

at least a six-card suit. Wilh only
five hearts -· about which North
knows from the opening bid -South would rebid in a minor suit
· or no-trump, or raise spades.
West led t he obvious club
queen : seven, ace, four. Easi
switched to the equally obvious
diamond two, West winning with
his queen and cashing the ace. Yet
whatever West did now, declarer
wquld win,the, tri~k,-draw trumps, .
and run the spades for his con-

New Roofs • Repairs

Quahty Window

Last Th11rsday, I gave a deal in
which I misdefended because I
di.dn 't count declarer's tricks,
There are many aspects to good
defense, trick-counting being one.
This week, let's look at the various strings a good defensive toxophilist has for his bow.
This deal is difficult to get right
because we all tend to play the
"obvious" card without thought.

•
\

\

· forceful commands.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Generally it 's not wise to broadcast the perks showeted on you by
someone who showed you a little
favoritism, unless this person
wants this kind of recognition.
Kno_w tbe difference,
. SCORPI~ (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
W_hen predtcated up~n unselftsh
·thmkmg, mos~ dectstons have a
":'ay of workmg_out welL Just
such a one that w1ll posse~s these
ele~ents may .be called for today.
You II deterrmne well.
SAGITTo:\~lUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Producttvuy must have a pur~ose for you today. Dev?te so!lle
ttm~ to a labor of ,love m whtch
you re presently mvolved, and
your day will be one of fulfill- ·
ment.
.
CA~~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) :Xlns ts an ex~el.Ient da~ for all
affrurs of congemaltty that mvolve
apan~ership arrang7ment. It'll be
espectally relevant 1f your cohort
is a member of the opposite gender.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19)
Make some of those artistic
changes in your personal domain
that you've been'wantlng to do for

' I

some time. You're in an especially creative frame of mind today,
and things will turn out welL
'. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
People like you and will be
including you in some pleasant
plans of a social nature in which
you 'II end up figuring prominently. It'll be your kind disposi·
tion that makes you so enjoyable.
ARIE;S (March 21-April 19)
Someone who has a hi story of
looking out for your interests will
once again be helpful today in get·
ling something you want. Show
your appreciation io this long
.standing benefactor.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
What will win you a raft of
admirers today will be the charm,
wit, humor and tack you so skillfully employ in your contacts with
others. Enjoy the limelight; you're
entitled.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Someone will step torwar&lt;ltO&lt;Iay
frof!l whom you'll now be able to
request help for something confidential you could not entrust to
just anybody. It'll put a smile on
your face .

Operate a
SMile

45 Like the
Sohllra
47 Work without
--(rlok)
45 Swloo river
·
48 lka'o InIto, • _•
10 Medical

BY PHILLIP ALDER

"'"'''Df

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

43

My error to you

~pacliil ~cant
of tha Month ·
~lila
New Summer Days. ·
Thur ~ Frl10 am - 8 pm
Saturdey 1q am- 4 pm .
On other days If wt 11'8
home, we are OPEN.

Ken Yo""B

.

Angry

38 Took

~CaM~ Shop

992·1550
Tht Apphance
Man

game

outburot

The

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

~~ /l'offit

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

2 Handyman aew will do
yard work, .plllnllng lnalda

44c~45 - - otandotlll

mo-t

Bulldozer Services

ltJJ

748-992·7599

r.:~::.llc

35

Medicare Supplement; Life lnsurance;·Burial
and Final Expens.es; College, Retirement, rifT
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
.
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~

New Homes • Vinyl ·
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Add~lons
• Roofing
COMMERCIAl. and RESIDEIIIW'
FREE ESTIMATES '

1 Without

•

- t o Prevlouo Puzzto

31Lubr~

40 Maclll,. gun
41 O'Hare Info
42 In a dlftlcult

12 Slow muolcal

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
All Dirt • Mukh •

·
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Local 843·5264

IISSELL IUI~EIS
INC.

ACROSS
7

HAUU"CI and
EXCfiVfiTI"CI

/

Albeny, Ohio

NIA Cro••word Puzzle

BRIDGE

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagl"
Club Bingo On
Thuradaye

~

PHILLIP
ALDER

Advertise FreeEatlnu~tee
in this
740-192-1709
space for
$50 per
MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
month.

SHADE RIVER fiCI SERVICE

l'r. 1'1'. aa

tiVI Ul •••

~dar A:

EqaipmentPut.

SALES

'

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hpdtauhc Hose repairs,
cylnder repairs, on
Sctles· S gal. huckets
to 55 gal. dnms

; An Ma'

6(!9/rno.

.. -'IWB
.I

• Remodeling
• Dlc:ka
• Roofing

PIBft

FREE ESTIM-TES
Great Prl111 111 New Htmll
992·2753
992·1101.,,7/QOin»

Advertise in
· this space for
.s1oo per ........Sunsa·Bome
Constraetfon
month.

•

.. .

SMITH•s CO"mtamo"

The
Oally' Sentinel. • Page 85 .
-

Pomeroy, Mlddle!)Ort. Ohio

euntx

,

52 Compooo pt, ;
13 Comporotfve •
:
ending
54 Lllltaro o1 the
olplulbllt

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
Celebrity Cipher cryptograrn1ar. oraated from quotltlonl by f•mou• peoplt, paa1 anti
~. Each - I n tho Cipher
let onolhor.

,,.ndlu

Today's clue: W oquals
'ETI

DGTECH

TSSVJCtMH

DWM

BCPHRITGGY
KRGC

VI

ZTMC

ZIIP

IIMKCP

ZCCGH

PCHBIIIHYDGC

ZIIP

T

ETPMKT

RIC.'

DCSOETI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Security Ia when I'm very much In
somebody extraonllnary who tovea me back."- Shelley Wlnterw

''

love wltti :.

.
:·
'

,.••

111A1 Dl1L1
'I!ZZLII

'

O four
Roorronoo letters of
scrambled words

1

.I

tt.o
ba-

low to fonn four olmple words.

p E p R0

. ·''

• t

Rl

. h-i,....,-r.-r...,..,...,..1""T.- I

•

-

'I s A I E· N

;I

'

,.,

R Q A T ~I ·wm this acid
1
sif.~1 ver coin?" the teacher asked. 'No
:..;way," one student replied, "if it
,___,__,.___..__.~.""' I would, you wouldn't·--- it·- ." ,

u

I I t' I

··11-.....,..r_c,--vr-o...,rrs-.--11 8

I I I

rr

$
A
' V

PRINT NUMBERED LETifRS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

i~

Complolo tho chuckle Quoted

_
•
•
_
_
by filling In the missing word•
L--'--'---'---'~.L.....J you develop from steP No. 3 below.
I

I~

13

...I I

14

IS

"'..'•'•,
•

f '
I I l·'
.

'

SC:IAM LITS ANSWDS
Asthma- Epoch -Rocky- Mohair- HAS an E:CHO ' :
A teens dad wanted him to leam money.management. :
"Money talks," the dad lectured his son, "but creqit HAS . -'
an ECHO."
.

�Monday, June 26, 2000

Monday, June 26, 2000

ALLEYOOP

•

Home Improvements done by

CHRISTY'S 'FAMILY LIUING
204 N. 2nd Ave.
-Middleport, OH 45760
Rentals
Apts, Home Trailers,
Janitorial-Maid Residential or Commercial
Maintenance
Residential or Commercial
Home Repairs Interior &amp; Exterior
Call for estimates 9-5 pm Mon-Frl
We work Mon-Sat 9 • 5 pm
and we do accept emergency calla
Cal for Ritts 1·740.992-4514 1-740.742-7403 Evlllllgs

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Ill CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(304) 112·2079

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

r''•

75o East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
-"A Better

Phone (740) 593-6671
"

• New Homee
• Gel'lgH
• Siding

N... It ......

'

Cellular
Jeff Warner . Ins~

'

992-5479

I

'

BANKRUPTCY
can JWI'-vli1 ct.btor of ftn1nd1l obllpttonl and am,. aflllr dllb'lbulkM'I or
aaMtt among creditors. A ~ tolna through benllruptcy ""Y m.tn
etrtllln praperty, known •• "txtmpt" PfOPirtY, tor hie; ar Mr f*"'CHHII uee.
Tnlt miV Include I ctlr, I hou. ., CIOihtl, tnd houlthold gooda. You thould
dlrtet tnY qUHIIont "'I'M'dlng ~kruptcy to 1n Mtomey Hfort proottdlng.

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens

2 Y. miles out of
Chester on SR 248
740·985~4194
.,....,,

......

ISttandling timber large
or
tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Do1er work.
Free Estimates
CaUT&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050

. youR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Drlvewaya,
Patloe, Sldewalka.
25 yeal'l experience
FrH Eattmaatea

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

u

Factory Authorized

c-.IHPut.
Dealen.
10IJO St 1ft. 7 South
Coo/VII'-o OH 46713

'41 I Jo.aJII

61151 mo pd.

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTAUAnONS
Custom Carpet, Vlayl,
Commercial an Ceramic
Tile, All Types or

H•nlwood Fiooring,
Cllrpet Binding and
Restretchi1111•

30 Yrs. Experience
MIKE YOUNG
74G-992-7724
PAT YOUNG

740-949-11046

PSI
c~
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

Pomeroy,OH
Paying $10.00

740-949-2217
Slzee 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

per PIIJII

~.00 Coverall

$500.00 Starburlt

Progreaalve top una.
lie. II ()0.50 , , _

Over 4Q yrs experlenc!t

1Z1

Cltll or stop In and .._MIIc. S•11a11L
Brl:ln Rosa. or Br-.1 Sling and bagln a .
I'IWIIrdlng ca.- • an
AutornotiW 5ala PNfwllonal
TODAY!

...

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Mlln St.,

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
t
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler s~ats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00

W• hiYII thl Bat a...nta. 11111 Pllu
and thl Bat fllmly orllnllld work
avlroni!NIIt In todlly's automotMI
lndustryl

Ill I. lad
..........,,

AT6:30 P.M.

Rutland, Ohio

'*'*

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges· RefrigeratorsFreezers-_ Dish Washers

2M70 Baehan

A &amp; D Auto Up o atery • P ua, Inc

T1Mi Ohio V.llly'a eui:Dmotlvl Iader Is
contlnUIIItu looking for 1111111'881W and
IIIOtlvllt.l
to fill ..... potlltlons.

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs - Decks - Garages
Free Estimates
740-742-3411
Bryan Reeves
www.suns thome.co

SELF STORACE

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

[It]

HOUI'I

7:00AM-8 PM
1 1

1

mo.

"Ahead In Service" ·
llull'llla Wlllem Pride 12\ 5wltl Fttd ..................'5.25/SO lb bag
llull'llla 16" llalllit Pellts ...................................'6.95/SO .. bag
llull'llla Hunllrs Pride 21" Dog Footi.....................'6.75/SO .. bag
llllrlna16" Layw Cnnallek ............. ,.......,...........'S.99/SO lb. bag
lltltrena Suatdt Feed.....................................:......,'6.75/SO lb. bag
5hat1e RIYtr 12\ Callie Fttd ................................S6.75/100 lb. bag

Call740·985·3831
.35537 St. Rt. 7 Nertll

P•••rer, 01t1e

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, cOin and card
legal papers, Investment records, photo
I :~~~~nl:altcameras, household Inventory and
I!
items will be safe.
For more Information call

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.
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404
, ...11-lfl#.
Painting • .

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUctiON

.

• New Homes

"You\ltlrlltll the rut...
IIDW trylht 6tsl"
.

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

Interior ~ Exterior
Residential ~ Commerical
Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

1740) tt2-IOI:S
!Mobile) 740-"HI&amp;:s

740-992-1671

lnspred

7/22fTFN

IUIII.IDa

c~DS--Ia-

.. •.

':

No1111
.,.__
•AQJ71
• KJ 3
• J 10 5 4

.,

(740) 992-3470

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
· Ufetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R~ Bissell
30 Yrs. E.xp.
Free Estirnates 740-378-6349
Now Renting

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232 .
6121/00 1 mo. pd .

. LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
ofpain tinsLet me do il for you" '
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Messoge

After 6pm-614-985-4180

"We're Back"

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

Well&amp;

East

• 10 8 3

• 9 4 2

• 8 54
tAQ
•QJ983

• 2
t K 9 7 2
• A 10 6 5 2

South

13~11y

•AQI0976
• 06 3

~'='\~:--

joiMII •

45 Worah
45

14Agree

15 Pu- gently 1 1 16Sout55
highly

,_.rd

AoiM holiday seSmoo17MII, oehool ·
57

18- Jllllll

21

MtWorb
23 lJibor org,
21 Pinochle 1erm
21Smelteetpup
2t Mo. Farrow
30 Spirit
31-33-lo
38 1940e 111m otar
37 " Form"

Pnpo..cl

5e Dlocouragn

Anotomlcal

Pltut-

• K5

ollort

DOWN
1 Drlvero' oro.

2 Orthodontfllt'a
~Mg.

3 Elhlot:&gt;lon title l!!l..!..L.:..I~:.t.:::.
4 "BytMIIIM-

-

-to Phoenix"
5 Mor8 olegonl

7 lnotruct

I No lla, -or

e watk

8 Joke

unotadlly

•K4
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
8oath
West North East

__...,

I•

Pass

Pass

2•

I•
4•

10 Plrll MBIIOn
11 Dongorcolor
13 Con_,.te .
Wllholl
18 Stain
.
It Dlcfn, oxlot ·20 - Newton· :John
22 Scunle
23 Allrlbuto
24 - ochnltzol
25 Walking In

water

Pass

27 "Scooby _ ..
32 Print unlto
34 s-pstakoo

All pus

Opening lead: • Q

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

''mer .•"•

n

1·80Q;o311·3391
Free Eetimatee
Codrtetors Weloo111e

' W15' ~pd.

' '

Bu/ldooer &amp; Baclclaoe
Se"'ic8s
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sites

1

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Septk Sy.aenu &amp;
Utilitie•

17COI 992·3131

.l'Vf

r.""'

A GICEAT IPM fO, A IOOIC

AIOUT

A L.ONl&gt;Orl

snftr urcG.ll/11... I

QUALITY

AL~

.l

Nf~l&gt;

f

. . i-frte ~g~~T. .!

LANDSCAPE
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks
Free Estimates '

~=::!:=======
'· . . .

•

~~t
~::~~~~J }~;d~~~~~~~~=
winning play, How can the

OLIVf 0, TWIST ~
IN YOU, MA,TI/til,

defenders defeat four beans here
after West leads the club queen?
Note that because it is in the

.........

~

~~;;;~~~~~~~~!:::::==:::;::::::::~==-....:""~':·!l&gt;~I~(.~J~e~N~S~1~..!;~
";;

Mike Sharp
740·949-3606

WIT!'\(&gt;...~~~ VKAA\ ~\~ .

e,y H\E:. \11-\E f\(. ~'XV "-W"-Y,
fiE. OWNED 01/QC. 800 !
I

Ii:T!i:T'5:t::'~UiEEl

• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
FrH Estimates

IS TI~ERE A REASON

FOR THIS?

5131/ 1 mo pd.

J&amp;L IISULATIOI &amp;
COISTIUCncil

To get a current weather
report, check the

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;:
DOwnspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown llllulation
I
1182-2772 I
For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

Sentinel

I MONDAY
'¥our
'Birthday .
t

:· Tuesday, June 27, 2000
;
A number of new avenues
, could open up for you in the year
' ahead that might make it possible
. for you to fulfill several ambitious
~ goals . A couple of friends may be
• responsible for your good luck.
~
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
• The last thing you'll want to be
;_ today is a loner, so if plans areri't
1 already in the mill, suggest an
; activity you know your friends
; would enjoy doing. They 'll hap: pily join in . Trying to patch up a
r broken romance? The Astro:. Graph Matchmaker can help you
l understand what to do to make the
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
1 Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
i P.O. Boll 1758, Murray Hill Sta; tion, New York, NY 10156.
! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) What
· makes you a true leader today is
j that you'll genuinely show con} cem for everyone who is in your
., cadre. You'll have no trouble
• gaining support for your direc·
t tions.
: VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
~ Speak softly if you want to attract
~ someone's attention today. Kind
:· words in a gentle voice will be
~ much more powerful than issuing

•

r IRC

l

\

.Syste~~s, Inc.

and out, carpenter work,
roollng, sldlng. Have own
tools. FM!s Estimates

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800-291·5600

tract.
This is the key principle that
West forgot : When you lead a low
card from length, whether at trick .
one or later in the play, it guaran- .
tees an honor in that suit.
So, with ihe diamond 10 and
jack conveniently in the dummy,
West knows that his panner holds
the king. If West pauses to consider his options, he will realizf
tluit
must win trick 'two wid
the diamond ace, then continue
with the queen. It should be the
work of a moment for East to
overtake with the king and to give
his partner the decisive diamond
ruff.

lie

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

NODCE

·South's
suit directly below his partner's,
two-hean rebid promises

at least a six-card suit. Wilh only
five hearts -· about which North
knows from the opening bid -South would rebid in a minor suit
· or no-trump, or raise spades.
West led t he obvious club
queen : seven, ace, four. Easi
switched to the equally obvious
diamond two, West winning with
his queen and cashing the ace. Yet
whatever West did now, declarer
wquld win,the, tri~k,-draw trumps, .
and run the spades for his con-

New Roofs • Repairs

Quahty Window

Last Th11rsday, I gave a deal in
which I misdefended because I
di.dn 't count declarer's tricks,
There are many aspects to good
defense, trick-counting being one.
This week, let's look at the various strings a good defensive toxophilist has for his bow.
This deal is difficult to get right
because we all tend to play the
"obvious" card without thought.

•
\

\

· forceful commands.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Generally it 's not wise to broadcast the perks showeted on you by
someone who showed you a little
favoritism, unless this person
wants this kind of recognition.
Kno_w tbe difference,
. SCORPI~ (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
W_hen predtcated up~n unselftsh
·thmkmg, mos~ dectstons have a
":'ay of workmg_out welL Just
such a one that w1ll posse~s these
ele~ents may .be called for today.
You II deterrmne well.
SAGITTo:\~lUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Producttvuy must have a pur~ose for you today. Dev?te so!lle
ttm~ to a labor of ,love m whtch
you re presently mvolved, and
your day will be one of fulfill- ·
ment.
.
CA~~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) :Xlns ts an ex~el.Ient da~ for all
affrurs of congemaltty that mvolve
apan~ership arrang7ment. It'll be
espectally relevant 1f your cohort
is a member of the opposite gender.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19)
Make some of those artistic
changes in your personal domain
that you've been'wantlng to do for

' I

some time. You're in an especially creative frame of mind today,
and things will turn out welL
'. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
People like you and will be
including you in some pleasant
plans of a social nature in which
you 'II end up figuring prominently. It'll be your kind disposi·
tion that makes you so enjoyable.
ARIE;S (March 21-April 19)
Someone who has a hi story of
looking out for your interests will
once again be helpful today in get·
ling something you want. Show
your appreciation io this long
.standing benefactor.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
What will win you a raft of
admirers today will be the charm,
wit, humor and tack you so skillfully employ in your contacts with
others. Enjoy the limelight; you're
entitled.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Someone will step torwar&lt;ltO&lt;Iay
frof!l whom you'll now be able to
request help for something confidential you could not entrust to
just anybody. It'll put a smile on
your face .

Operate a
SMile

45 Like the
Sohllra
47 Work without
--(rlok)
45 Swloo river
·
48 lka'o InIto, • _•
10 Medical

BY PHILLIP ALDER

"'"'''Df

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

43

My error to you

~pacliil ~cant
of tha Month ·
~lila
New Summer Days. ·
Thur ~ Frl10 am - 8 pm
Saturdey 1q am- 4 pm .
On other days If wt 11'8
home, we are OPEN.

Ken Yo""B

.

Angry

38 Took

~CaM~ Shop

992·1550
Tht Apphance
Man

game

outburot

The

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

~~ /l'offit

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

2 Handyman aew will do
yard work, .plllnllng lnalda

44c~45 - - otandotlll

mo-t

Bulldozer Services

ltJJ

748-992·7599

r.:~::.llc

35

Medicare Supplement; Life lnsurance;·Burial
and Final Expens.es; College, Retirement, rifT
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
.
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~

New Homes • Vinyl ·
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Add~lons
• Roofing
COMMERCIAl. and RESIDEIIIW'
FREE ESTIMATES '

1 Without

•

- t o Prevlouo Puzzto

31Lubr~

40 Maclll,. gun
41 O'Hare Info
42 In a dlftlcult

12 Slow muolcal

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
All Dirt • Mukh •

·
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Local 843·5264

IISSELL IUI~EIS
INC.

ACROSS
7

HAUU"CI and
EXCfiVfiTI"CI

/

Albeny, Ohio

NIA Cro••word Puzzle

BRIDGE

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagl"
Club Bingo On
Thuradaye

~

PHILLIP
ALDER

Advertise FreeEatlnu~tee
in this
740-192-1709
space for
$50 per
MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
month.

SHADE RIVER fiCI SERVICE

l'r. 1'1'. aa

tiVI Ul •••

~dar A:

EqaipmentPut.

SALES

'

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hpdtauhc Hose repairs,
cylnder repairs, on
Sctles· S gal. huckets
to 55 gal. dnms

; An Ma'

6(!9/rno.

.. -'IWB
.I

• Remodeling
• Dlc:ka
• Roofing

PIBft

FREE ESTIM-TES
Great Prl111 111 New Htmll
992·2753
992·1101.,,7/QOin»

Advertise in
· this space for
.s1oo per ........Sunsa·Bome
Constraetfon
month.

•

.. .

SMITH•s CO"mtamo"

The
Oally' Sentinel. • Page 85 .
-

Pomeroy, Mlddle!)Ort. Ohio

euntx

,

52 Compooo pt, ;
13 Comporotfve •
:
ending
54 Lllltaro o1 the
olplulbllt

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa
Celebrity Cipher cryptograrn1ar. oraated from quotltlonl by f•mou• peoplt, paa1 anti
~. Each - I n tho Cipher
let onolhor.

,,.ndlu

Today's clue: W oquals
'ETI

DGTECH

TSSVJCtMH

DWM

BCPHRITGGY
KRGC

VI

ZTMC

ZIIP

IIMKCP

ZCCGH

PCHBIIIHYDGC

ZIIP

T

ETPMKT

RIC.'

DCSOETI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Security Ia when I'm very much In
somebody extraonllnary who tovea me back."- Shelley Wlnterw

''

love wltti :.

.
:·
'

,.••

111A1 Dl1L1
'I!ZZLII

'

O four
Roorronoo letters of
scrambled words

1

.I

tt.o
ba-

low to fonn four olmple words.

p E p R0

. ·''

• t

Rl

. h-i,....,-r.-r...,..,...,..1""T.- I

•

-

'I s A I E· N

;I

'

,.,

R Q A T ~I ·wm this acid
1
sif.~1 ver coin?" the teacher asked. 'No
:..;way," one student replied, "if it
,___,__,.___..__.~.""' I would, you wouldn't·--- it·- ." ,

u

I I t' I

··11-.....,..r_c,--vr-o...,rrs-.--11 8

I I I

rr

$
A
' V

PRINT NUMBERED LETifRS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

i~

Complolo tho chuckle Quoted

_
•
•
_
_
by filling In the missing word•
L--'--'---'---'~.L.....J you develop from steP No. 3 below.
I

I~

13

...I I

14

IS

"'..'•'•,
•

f '
I I l·'
.

'

SC:IAM LITS ANSWDS
Asthma- Epoch -Rocky- Mohair- HAS an E:CHO ' :
A teens dad wanted him to leam money.management. :
"Money talks," the dad lectured his son, "but creqit HAS . -'
an ECHO."
.

�'

All-Star
from Page 11

sprung the returner into the
open, but the play was negated by
a clip later in the play.
The North took the first lead
of the game in the first quarter on
a one-yard run by Mussleman's
Todd Mosby. The South answered
with a Donald Amaker run from
seven yards out. Mosby then
added a three yard touchdown
run before the South's Robert
Gunter hit Kenny Ramsey with a
34 yard TD pass· with four seconds left in the second to set the
halftime tally at 14-12 favoring
the North due to the South's
failed PATs.
The South took an 18-14 lead
in the third quarter ·when an
errant shotgun snap by the North
found its way into the hands of
Clay County's J.R. Harper who
took the ball and scampered 42
yards for the score.
The final score came at the
8:02 mark of the fourth quarter
when Brooke High School tailback CliffSachini blasted through
the line cut to his left and scam-

NASCAR
fnHnPD&amp;eB1
after his car burst into flames on
the 14th lap, then hopped back
into another seat when an ailing
Tony Stewart spun out on the

I

)£§

Crew quashes Revolution, 3-1
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) j eff Cunningham's goal in the
69th minute put Columbus ahead
2-1 and the C rew went on to a 31 Major League Soccer victory
over the New England Revolu tion.
Cunningham was set up by
Brian West and Dante Washington , who had assists on all three
Columbus goals Saturday night.
Jason Farrell opened the scoring in the 15th minute on assists

Mond1y, June 26, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P•g• B6 • The Dally Sentinel

•

•

by Washington and Robert
Warzycha.
New England's Mauricio
Ramos made it 1-1 four minutes
later on an unassisted free kick
that went over the wall of
Columbus defenders and got just
inside the Crew's goalpost.
John Wilmar Perez scored to
clinch the victory in the 87th
minute. Washington and John
DeBrito assisted.
The Crew (6-7-4) moved one
pered for a 25-yard touchdown.
Sachini was the game's leading
rusher with 101 yards on nine
carries.
The South had two more
offensive opportunities, both of
which ended in interceptions.
The last Cardinal opportunity
came at the 1:41 mark from
inside its own 15 yard line. On
second down, Cordell planted the
passer bef9re an attempted double-pass was picked off on third
down.
The North Outstanding Player
honor went to defensive back
Isaac Weaver of Parkersburg, who
made the most of his opportunities, picking off two South passes
and recovering a fumble. The
South award went to Harper, the
Clay County defensive end.
The top South rusher was
James Monroe's Ben Thornton,
who gained 41 yards on eight
carries but fumbled twice.
For the North, David Patterson
of Liberty Harrison completed 9of-22 passes for 96 yards. He was
picked off twice. Morgantown's
Ronnie Rodamer caught four of
those passes for 65 yards in his last
scholastic appearance before he
heads to the University of Notre

point ahead of Dallas and into
third place in the MLS Central
Conference. New England (7 - 65) remained in first in the Eastern
Conference.
·The victory boosted Columbus' record against the Revolution to 14-3.
Crew
goalkeeper
Matt
Napoleon had four saves, compared with two for N ew England's Juergen Sommer.

-

TIIm

MontreaJ ........................1.37

C!Mond2~­

T"""*&gt; 8, -

35

lkln.JA4,geQ.
....
42. (23) Botlo Sold, Ford. 28, engine ldu~· ·.

T-I.~Bay5

Anollelrn 7, -

8, 11 1nn1ngo
Tlllly'a(Ridko ~ 11 Anoholm (Wul&gt;bl.m :1-11 . 4:05 p.m.
Dotrolt (Mooi'W 4-4) .. ~ {&amp;Jibe ..
2), 7:05p.m. ~-

Cinclnna11 ........... ........ .....36 38
Plttsbufllh .................. .....31 43
44

Chicago ..........................30 44
HOU61on ...................... .... 28 48

w..iitOivlaiOn
31

.!581

31

.!587

2

34 .1521 4 1/2
35 .1521 4 1/2
San Diogo ........ ................33 o40 .482 e 112

s.tu.,..Y.-

san Francisco 13, Houston 4

St. Louie

5, 131nningl

Ooldond 4, Cl1y 3
8MIIte ..., 8111inarl 2

R&gt;rida .............................38 38
Phlladolpllla .................... 31 42
Centrwl OIVtolon
St. Loois ....... .................... 44 30
Milwaukee .......................31

· $37,0110.
-38. (32) EJ1Iott · Ford, 81 , $48,048. : ~
ae. {U) Scon Pruett, F&lt;&gt;nl. 17, crasll.$37,02!1.
•
40. (28) Wily Dolionb8Ch Jt.. Ford, ..
1Anlmlsolon, $37,.o80..
41 . (24) KeYin ~. Fonl, o40, tranotnl,;-

Chlc8QO- 8aK I, N.Y. Yllni&lt;- 7

e. Loo .Angeles 1

Milwaukee 2. A-1

Flotida 7, CNcago Cubs 4
f'hiladolphla 8, Monttoll 1

Cinclnnatl11, San Diogo 5
N.Y. Mote 10, Plllabutgh B
COlorado •. Artzona o

N.Y. 7), 7:011 p.m.

Baltimore (Muoolna 5·7) ot • Booton
( - 2-8), 7:o5p.m.
TO&lt;Onlo (EIOOI&gt;Or 11-8) 01 Tompl Bay (Trach·
ool5-7), 7:15p.m.
a-nd (Finloy 11-5) .. Cl1y (Suzv.
ki :1-1 ), 8:Q5 p.m.
.
MI..- (Mayo So~ o1 Chicago Whlo SOx
(Baktwln 10.2), 1:05 p.m.
Anohlim ~ 2.Q) .. (Sola 11-,1),
!O:o5p.m.
, . _ ( P - 2~) II Ookilnd (Hud- 82), IO:o&amp; p.m.

Montreal 3, Phllad

'

(Anojo ....5), 8:05p.m.

Houston (Dc1ol1-4) 01 Arizona (Reynooo ....
B). 10:05 p.m.

San Diogo (Moadowl 5-5) It l.ol .Angllill

(Horshlsor I -4), 10:10 p.m.

TIIMUy'o-

A1iama (Glavin. 7-4) at Monttoll (Armu 2·

5), 7:05p.m.

Chicago Cuba (Wood 3-4) at l'lnaburgh
(Aitchla 4-4), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Sanchez 4-8) at N.Y. Moll (Rulch
5·5), 7:1 o p.m.
Milwaukee (Haynes 7-8) at f'hladolphia
(llohliilng
7:35p.m.
·
St. Loul8 1&lt;118 10-4) 11 Cincinnotl (Porrto 3·
10), 7:35p.m.
San Francloco (Eotoa fl-3) at Coio&lt;ado
(Jarvis 2·2). 9:05 p.m.
HOUIIton (EIIIIon 5-3) at Arizona (Oaal 2· 7),
10:05 p.m.
San Diogo (rBA) 11 LOll ~ (llNI1ort 46). 10:10 p.m.

2-41,

~--A-

partnth•••·
w

1. (5) Joi!Goidon, a-...t. 112. S143,02S.
2. (8) Slotting MaMin, ChO¥rol01, 112,

U0,7215.

a. (7) Mlt1l MottJn, Fanl, 112. &amp;75,11!0.

4. {3) Bobby Lat&gt;onte, Pontiac, 112,
$81,280.
5. (10) Rlclcy Rudel, Ford,112, $117,815.
'· ~ Dolo Eamhlr&lt;H, Chevrolet, 112,
$1111,1815.
7. {18) Dolo J4Wrtl1. Ford, 112. $811,!111!i.
8. {20) Jerry Nadoau. Chmoiol, 112,
t!58,785.

-rt.

1. (11) Robby Ganlon,f'ord, 112,$42,415.

&lt;••

10.
Tony
Pontiac, 112,$73,110.
11 . {11) Joe Nom~Choko Chevrolot, 112,

1815,700.

.

12. {28) MIC1tllol Wtltrlp, Cllevroitl, 112,
$53,475.
13. (17) Kenny WOIIaee, Cllevrottl, 112,

$113,3211.

14. {14) l!lol&gt;by Hamll1on, a-...t, 112,
$111,77S.
15. {21) Kon llohrad•, Pontiac, 112,

$46,778.
11. (30) J i l l - · Ford, 112, $111,225.

·
Am101..,~

(15• 810Ye Paol&lt;, Chevrolet, 112,

'fl . L ·Pet.

Gil

.15211

2

Toronto ..... .......................42 34
Now 'Vol1&lt; ......................... 37 33
lloaton ............................37 3&gt;4
Baltimore ........................30 43
Tampa Bay ....... ................ oo 43
C.-DMolon
Chk:ago ... ....................... 48 'Z1
CIOYOiand ........................39 34
Kansas City .....................3!1 38
WM1Dtvlolan

-·L.ooguo
BASEBALL

.!583
.1!21 21/2
.411 10 1/2 '
.411 10 112
.140
.5114

.!1115
.1189
.1527
.4811

8

112·
5
e 112

N.Y. Yankoeo 12, CNcago White 8aK 8

Clovelond 8, o.olt 1, 111 game

I..X271AWSLawn 'ltm:lor
• 17 hp, V-1Win engine

ClEVELAND INOtANil-OHignatod RHP,
Joimo Navaii'O and LHP Mike Mohler toi.
ualgtwntnt. Purchootd tho oontrlldo o1 LH!'Andrew Lmalno onc1 LHP Alan Newrnon 1rorrr
llulloio o11110 lntemational Laague.
.-;
DETROIT TIGERs-Activalod RHP Mal1t..
Johnoon from the list and dooivna1'!iltim for allignmont. Optioned 28 Jole Maclao•
10 Totodo o/ the lntemaUonal ~· Rocallact
RHP Noloon cruz 1nlm Toledo.
,
TORONTO BLUE JAYs-Rocaliod RHP
RO)' Halliday fl'orll Syracuse ol tho lntecna1lon-•
oi 1..11guo. Assigned RHP DoMin CUbllklft .ttl

NEW YORK METs-Qptlonod OF Jaoon
lY"or 10 Notlolk olthe intemationol Leag119.·
Rocallod INF.QF Mane Jol1nS&lt;I&gt; fl'orll NOI1olk. '
ST. ~OUIS CAROINALS-f'utchuod tho:

"""""ct o11NF Eduarcto Perez !rom Mamptil
of tho PCL Optlonod OF Larry Su11on and f!I1.R

Gene Stocltlcltune to Momphia. Rocoliod Sl#·
ton trom Momphio. Recalled RHP John:
Ambrolllrom Arkanau of the Toxas 1..8agu"'
HOCKEY
'
_ , Hockoy LAoguo
•,
BUFFA~O SABRES-Traded a 2000 atxth·
round plcl&lt; to Montroalfllr a 2001 fi11h·round
plclc.
CA~GARY FLAMES-Traded a 2000
eighth-round compenaatory plcl&lt; 10 Buffalo for a
2001 eighth·round plclc.
CAROUNA HURRICANES-Tradod a 2000
loul1h·round pick, P""'iously acquired 1rom.
Anaheim, a fifth-round compentOtory pick •nil
an eighth-round pick 10 A11an1a lor a

• 22·hp diesel engine
• 54-inch mower deck
• Automatic transmission

S3Q0*

· .•

Notional I.MgUO
"
ARIZONA DIAMONOBACKS-Activalod 1B
Erut&gt;ol Durazo 1rom 1he 111-day dloablod lot.
Dlllgnatod OF Bamanl Gilkey for uslgrvnem.
l'laood 36 MCIU WHIIa.. on 1he 15-clay dlooblodliot Recallod IF Danny Kiallenlnlm Tuo- CHICAGO
o/ 1110 PCI.. CUBS-Optioned OF Gary
Ma11hewo Jr. 10 Iowa o1 tho PCL
•
CINCINNATI REDS-Optioned RHP Rob
Boll10 L.oulovlllo o1111e lntemaUonal L.eague. ·

fouf11Hocotdplck.

SAVES700

GT235 Lawn tur4 Garden 7tuctor
• /8-hp V-Twin engine
• 48:inch Convertible mower deck
• Automatic transmission

LTJ66 Lawn 'JJuctor
16-hp v.71.vin engine
o 48·inch mower deck
• Automatic transmission

SAVE$300

o

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so Cents

·-:

BOSTON RED SOX-optionld RHP Bril{ltRooo10 Pawtuckot o/ tho intoma1ionoi ~oagt{o.­
Rocoliod OF tsrolll Alcamanl from I'IIW1Uelc01, :

4S5 Lawn tllld Gonlren 'lhrctor

48-inch convertible mower deck. • All-wheel steering
• AutomaJic transmission

o

·.

299'1

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS-Traded a 2000
loullh·round pick. previously acquired 1rort1
Toronto, 1o ~n for a fi11h·round corn:
-""Y pick, provlouliy acqUired 1rom Lj&gt;o
.Angol•, and a obctiHound pick. Tradod the
rlghls to Ban Simon 10 A11an18 for a 2000 ninthround pick.
·,.
COLORADO AVALANCHE-Traded 0 ~
112,
dis Ozotlnsh arM! a 2000 second-round plck·ili
Qarollna fOr 0 Nolan Pratt, • 2000 ft"l·"'"!'d
and 1w0 aa:oocl-round draft picks. .
.•
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Aoqulred D
. Deron Ouin1 fl'orll 1he New Jersey Dovlia ,lj)
axchlnge for pu1 oonslderallonl.
·•
DAllAS STARS-Tredod C Asron Gavw,
LW PIIYIII l'llt. ., a 2000 eighth-round plclc a)td
• 2002 - - plclc, pttvlouaty acquirall
1rom M I - . 1o Mi'lnosota for 0 Brall
IJJicow1ctt ond 20011hlrd and ninth-round plckl.
DETROIT REO WINGS-Tradod a 2001
thlrd·round pick to Nalllrvllle for a 2000 1ounllround plclc.

.47t
12
Minnesota ....... ....... .........32 44 .421 18 1/2·
Dotrol1 .............................28 42 .408
17

oakland ............................ 30
Sea!Ue ..... ............... ........43 30
Anaheim .........................38 36
Texas ............Sih.'.:dii(o'~

~-., ·.

Jollnny Banoon, Pontiac, 112,

Eaat~

Melp County's

__.,;.

15,

Syracuoe.

SONOMA, CIIW. !AI') - R - Sundoy
fl'orll 1110 NASCAR Wino.., Cup Serieo SINo
Mort 3110 111 Sllll Point Racowey - otlltllng
po11t1on ln
driver, make of car,
lapO ~.- OU1 (11 ony) and money

won;

-c.

Volume Sl. Numbe r 2 1

(Cono 1-8.o1 o.t!ol1 {Nomo2·

Sunot.y·oN.I(Motst, = O

Ia 1
Atlanta 5, Milwaukao 4
San Diego 5, Cinclnnatl4
Flol1da B, Chicago Cubo 7, 10 innings
St. Louie 2, Los .AngoiH 1
San Francisco 4, Houston 2
Arizona B, Colorado 3
Toclay'o a . . &lt;l
Flotida (COmoliuo 2·1) a1 N.l( MOll (L.oltor"
B·1), 7:10p.m.
St. LOOI (Stephenson 9-3) It Clnc:lnnoti
(Neagle 5-2), 7:35 p.m.
San Franclaco (Ruotllf H) at Colorado

$38,1140.
43. (18) John Andt0111,
$54,G15.

June 27, 2000

•

_

-

- 1 1 .- 5

Atlanta ............................411 211
New Vonc .................. .......41 31

T11m

68th lap.
Despite a number of harmless
Stewart was pale and weak
spins,
there were only four cauwhen he was pulled from his
Pontiac and treated for heat tions for 13 laps during the race.
exhaustion and nausea at the Eight drivers swapped the lead a
course medical facility. Andretti .total of 10 times and Gordon fin- ·
ished in 2 hours, 46 minutes, 14
finished 1Oth for Stewart.
"It's hard," Stewart said. seconds with an· average speed of
" Nobody likes to get out of a car, 78.782 mph.
especially one that they know can

SAVE

37. (41)-Proolloy, Ford, 111 , _

2, l!oMmoro 1

Tampalloyi,T-7

EaatOIVW L

Details, A3

34. (12) Jimmy~. Ford, 110, $47,150.;
35. (I) 811 alott. Ford. 118,$46,130.
•
311. (34• Btlan Slrm, Fanl, ll5, $37,110. • :

'Tolwllo
'· - .
-Cityl,~3

week."

. t he race."
WJn

•

.

o.olt 14, C1ollollnd • • 2nd game

Atizona ... .......•.... .......... ..43
Colorado ...... ............... ....38
San Fra~ ..................37
LOll .Angeles .....................38

Dame in the fall.
Gunter was the South's leading
passer, completing 4-of- 13 passes
for 50 yards. He has picked off
once.
The game, and the week of
practice .meant different things to
the Mason County trio. Gerlach
described the experience as ,
"Humbling. Everyone is real
good, a lot of talent."
Being a more vocal, emotional
individual, Hanning commented,
· "Best way to end a season. You
work hard for four years; it pays
off real good."
Cordell, growing more comfortable with being in the spotlight, spoke for himself and the
group. "We practiced hard all
week, eight days in 92 degree
weather and busted our butts and
all this is worth it. We were complaining halfway through that it
was too hot, and practice was
hard but we got through and it
was all worth it.
''It feels great to win. I'm proud
of my teammates and the guys
from the opposing schools in
Mason County. It's been a great

SCOREaOARD ~

TODAY'S

Tuesday

United Methodist Women meet, AS
Reds win; junior golf update, 81

Wednescl~

Hlp: 70s; Low: lOs

Commission OKs summer employment program
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENT1NE~ .NEWS STAFF

PO MEROY - A $214,000 contract
was awarded to Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency at Monday's regular meeting of Meigs County Commissioner.;, to
provide summ er youth employmel1t
o pportunities for teenagers.
C onmlissioner.; received bids from C AA
and a second from th e Crossroads program
of the Rio Grande Conm1unity College,
in the· amount of $216,924.
The program will operate through funds

fro m the Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families progr.Jm, an offShoot of Ohio's
· welfare reform plan. Commissioners have
broad discretion in spending the $1.4 million allocated for TAN F programs in
Meig; County.
The sunm1er youth program replaces
the Summer Youth Employment Trairiing
Program, a mainstay of th e Job Training
Partnership Act, a federal j obs program
which will fade away on July 1.
This year's program will begin July 3,
and will employ 60 diems between th e

ages of 14 and 21.
Most of those clients will be placed in
p~blic sector maintenance and clerical
positions, while others, all high-school
aged, will be considered for the Aviation
One pmgrain, which uses a military-type
format to reinforce math and science skills.
Commissioners also discussed using the
program to pay wages for lifeguards at
London Pool in Syracuse and the Middle·
port' Pool.
Robert Wingett, grants adnlinistrator for
Syracuse, met a gain with the board to dis-

cuss th e need tor assistance m paymg
salaries at the Londo n Pool.
He met with the board two weeks ago
to request the assistance, citing the fin ancial
hardship placed on Syracuse's general fund
by the 2000 pool operation, and sa id th at
the village will not be able to open the
pool next surrlmer if assistance wi th payroll
is nm offered by the county this year.
Comnlissioncrs otfered to assist with the
salary issue through the sununer youth
program, as long as training could be
incorporated as a part of the salary pack-

1

Missing
man's body
discovered
TRIBUNE NEWS STAFF

GALLIPOLIS - A search
for Jeremy Ball, 19, Gallipolis,
ended Sunday aft er Gallia
County sheriff's deputies and
Gallipolis volunteer firefighters
recovered his body, along with
the four-wh eeler h e was
reported missing on .
The body
was found

a

densely
wooded area
along Solar
Drive
m
Addison •
·Township around
12:30 p.m.
Ball, who was reported dead
at the scene, reportedly went
on a four-o/heeler Tide from a
friend's home around 5 p.m.
and did not return.
Gallia County sheriff's Chief
Deputy Dennis Salisbury said
BaU was reportedly going too
fast around a curve on the
four-wheeler, which is capable
of reaching speeds of up to 80
miles per hour.
Members of the Gallipolis
VFD began the initial search
for Ball around 8:30 p.m. Saturday. Approximately
75
friends, family members and
classmates joined in the search,
surrounding the area where he
was believed to have been ridmg.
A helicopter from the Washington
County
Sheriff's
Department wa.~ also called in
to assiSt.
The initial search was officially called off at I a.m. Sunday, but m~ stayed .through
the morninilf'
The search was renewed at 7
a.m. Sunday, with the addition
of a helicopter from the
Hamilton County Sheriff's

Please IH SHrch, Pllp Al

crafters ' initiati ve g rant, ann o un ced &lt;~

meetin g of the Meig; C ounty C rafters'
Ass o~iati on on July 5 at 7 p.m., at the
Chester Courthouse.
Diddle said that the plannin ,; sess1on will

Please see Meigs, Page A3

BY BRIAN J, REED

an

in

Justi n Diddle, ad ministrator of the county 's Appalachi an l~egi on al Com nlission 's

.SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

embankment

inco m e guidelines.

Middleport
employees
get raises

BY MILLJSSJA RussELL

over

age, and as long as the employees whose
salariL&gt;s are paid by d1e counry fa ll wi thi n
the necessary 200 percm t above poverty

THE RIGHT WAY - Bethany. Cremell!J~. oral health coordi·
nator for the Meigs County Health Department, left, shows

Sandy Hood and her 21-monttHJJd daughter, Megan, how to
properly brush one's teeth. (Charlene. Hoeflich photo)

Sinking her teeth into work
New dental health
coordinator on job

their parents bn the right way to brush 20 children a month in the dental lab at
and floss.
the Health Departinent.
In conjunction with her examinations,
Lawson does . ru~sessn1ents, some treatCremeans is preparing a computer data ment and makes referrals. She and her
base for all the children she sees. This will sciff also carry out a 'sealant program in
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
show how many boys and girls begin Meigs County schools.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
.daycare with decay, fractured or missing 1 According to Norma Torres, Health
OMEROY - There's a teeth and serve as a guide for establishing Department nursing dire.c tor,. many
right · way and a wrong a more comprehensive dental program in Meigs County children are not receiving
way to brush teeth, and the count}'.
early and adequate dental. care. One .f1f
teaching how to do it right
Cremeans' position is funded with a . the goals of the~t ftrnds, she said, will
is one of many duties of three-year grant from the Sisters of Saint be to .increase a
hess and educatepar· Joseph Charitable Fund of Parkersburg, ents about the · • rtance of gnod oral
Meigs County's new
tal health coordinator, Bethany
W.Va., which has as one of its goals to health.
means.
· support and promot~ health and wellness
As for the actual dental work needed,
Cremeans, who works through
in the Mid-Ohio Va1Jey.
as determined by the coordinator as she
Meigs County Healt/1 Department, a· •'if~&amp; S'UP!'lerner!ti'n1g that grant is funding visits daycare and preschool centers,
els around the county checking
from
.Middleport-Pcunc:roy Rotary! agency will make referrals to1 ~~~:~~
of kids in the over 40 daycare
Club for the putil,hase of toc•thb,rushes,! using· whqtev'er local· payment n
preschool
, denral floss
there ~· f'Qrres
· , , ; . ·• .
She discusses
disease,
· ~tThe
m cor1- t .
"Mei~ ·
6ne of 13
affects overall he;~~t~d grves
~~:~e~ by Dr. Mat]gie
strations for the
and sonde~imies •; .. ~,.w,IQn,
d~
who sees 19

e

..

MIDDLEPORT Police offi cers and all
other village employees were given a 5 percent
payraise during Monday evening's regular meeting of Middleport VIllage CounciL
Police officers' wages have been th e topic of
discuss ion for council for th e past several weeks.'
A number of officers have left the Middleport
force for the Pomeroy Police Department or
other agencies because of Middl eport's rel atively
low wages, according to Police Chief Bruce
Swift, who has met with council on th e issue.
· lq PQtn!"roy·f&lt;y.ex:unple:a starting patiOlman iapaid $8 .20 per hour, while Middleport nas been
paying $6.78 per hour to a new officer on th e
· forc e.
At its last meeting, council debated wh ether th e
village should proceed with July 4 fireworks, as
planned, because of the need for salary increases
for the officers.
With Mayor Sandy lannarelli breaking a tie
vote on the issue, coun cil did proceed with fireworks plans and the accompanying $5,000 price
tag, but pledged to consider pay raises as welL
Monday's vote for pay raises followed committee meetings held last week, as weU as an executive session last night.
· Police officers' pay raises were approved unani7
mously, whil'i! couilcil members Stephen Houchins and Kathy Scon voted against the salary
increases for street, sewer, water and office peJ-.
sonnel, and Councilman Roger Manley
abstained.
Houchins said that he felt police officers needed a more significant raise in order to bring their
wages in line with those in other police forces.
A merit rai se system will be implemented
beginning in 2001, lannarelli said.
of an
Council approved the second
fee of
ordinance increasing the
1
water service . from $20 to $45,
c ustom~;,;
whose water service is
due to non.
.
.
payment.
Myron Duffield, president of the Board of Public Affairs, said a numb er of custo mers con s istent- ~

ly wait until water service is shut off' before they ;
pay their bill.
·
He also said that the number of shut- offs this ·
month had decreased from 40 to 10, since coun- •

Pomeroy to ,pursue

•.

Today's

Sentinel
Paps

BY TONY M. LucN
I

Right now, during Deere Season 2000, we're offering 4.9% financing for 12 months
on a full line of]ohn Deere tracton~. So visit your participating John Deere dealer
today. Offer expires July 5, 2000...and, no, you can't borrow the car.

&lt;

J'
I'

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.
Jackso·n Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospit•l
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412
,,

• Df'flr...,. .Nir IS, 2000. Nrfld .._,...,....._.., )alln o.n C...hUiment ""'· bCIOI*III'IIf • •· ElwT1111: Bllldon.e purchlte tt 13,299.00 wi!h SO ibfn PIJ)IN!rd trhdHI , ITIIX'Ihly pill)ft"'tt''t 011283f10,b12 monthlll.,,ftAPft . 1'1111, hlf'it.eetuP.81'111 dlhlfyd'liqll CGJid it~et.-rnanfllrp~pn.~t Ohf ~ f'llnftl

...... ...,lll.......lrclullirt._.......... - ..........................

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -·

'

Ple1se sea Middleport. Pllp A3

2 Slttlons - 12

Pomeroy Village Council voted

to seek funding fot a new walking path during its

regular meeting Monday night.
The meeting was held last night after the regular
meeting was i canceled last

Cal!lm!tr
C!!IIIW!l!h

The board aVt110V
week.
The board approved a resolution to apply for an Ohio lution to apply WJmun
l'~t~ft!~~-:~
Department of Transportation
Department
. .: ,gc
ib~)~l:flv ll•censed
grant that would help pay for a
'tion grant that
·li.
'
!l')'!lri~~g .&gt;condi111
proposed walking path project.
J:i
The walking path wpuld
pay for a
walk/tag
cost around $326,000, made
path proje~.
'- ~ ,! '
up of $246,000 in grant
money, along with· a $70,000
. be parked on d1e
match from local funds, which would help pay for plain sight.
·
construction, lighting, park benches and water lines
Vehicles in ·~olation
if~,. &lt;Jrdiril}~ce would be
for the project.
towed at the Wllers
up to $100
The path would extend from McDonald's on West per ve hicle P.~.:r·· inc:.idc:nt;. :.]
Main Street, along the Ohio River, to Nye Avenue.
•
A similar path was proposed la.•t year, and Middlepf~
~~~~~~
I '

Jlditgrial~

Comi!;~

Obituild~~

S~2t~l
Wuth~r

fil

...

A5

'

BH
B5
A~

AJ
lU, fi
AJ

Lotteries

·-·•••

omo
Pick 3: 3-3-1; Pick 4: 0-8-2-0
Buckeye S: 9-1 &gt;.18-24-37
~VA.

Porll~fo~ Vi II age

.'c;lecided to pursue grant
funds for a new w,~~~:t~~:~iduring their tf!il!llar meeting on Monday
concernS'1 ' · other issues were also
evening. A number of
photo)
· ~.)
,.,
discussed. (Tony M.

,, .

Daily 3: 9..(1..9 Daily 4: 5· 9- 5-8
C 2000 Ohto Vall ey l\1 bli shi n ~; Co.

.

'·

�</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="25251">
            <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="25250">
              <text>June 26, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1510">
      <name>douglas</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1550">
      <name>massar</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1902">
      <name>webb</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
