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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.

.

'·

�•

Pomeroy court cases settled
POMEROY -Ten individ.uals forfeited bonds and several were fined in court by Mag\mate L. Scott Powell in
Pomeroy's mayor's court last
week.
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Charles N . Stambaugh, Ash )and, Ky., $98, expired regis·tration;
Patricia
Lehew,
Pomeroy, S1 35, public intoxiMar)t
R eitmire,
. cation;
Pomeroy, $60 plus costs. unsafe
vehicle; Randy Knopp, Middleport, $85, permit under 16
year old to ride in back of
. truck; Frank W. Houser, Rut. land, $135, public intoxication; Carl Davidson, Pomeroy,
· $135, disorderly condu ct; Car. _olyn D aviso n, Pomeroy. $135,
disorderly conduc t; Patric ia
. Baer, Pomeroy, $85, speed ;
Carl Taylor, M arion , $80,
speed ; Sherry
L. Ja cks,
Langsville, $91, speed .
Those fined in court were
Shawn Blanton, Bidwell, S700
,Plus costs, $300 suspended
upon completion of D.I.P.
'school within 90 days, 10 days
. 'j.ail, 180 days license suspension, two years probatio n, $65
plus costs, failure to control;
· Michael Bing, Pome roy, $150
pl,us costs, disorderly after
..w.a rning, $200 plus costs,
. ~nderage consumption, $100
. plus costs, possession .
Anthony Thomas, Middleport, $200 plus costs, underage
.~ Qnsumption; Crystal Gheen,
J'9meroy, $100 plus costs, pos.session , fine suspended with
.costs only, disorde.rly, $200
plus costs, contributing; Cyn. thia Faulk, Pomeroy, $150 plus
costs, disorderly; Timot,hy
,Faulk, Pomeroy, fine suspend.ed with costs only, assault.
.·, Charles Crothers, Delta,
J,'enn., $150 plus costs, FRA
suspension, three days jail suspended, two years probation,
...$?0 plus costs, defective
.exhaust, $100 plus costs, pos:S~ssion; Benjamin Morehouse,
?:anesville, $100 plus costs,
n.:ck.less operation, $600 forfeited to law enforcement
trust fund, $50 plus costs, left
.of center, $150 plus costs, disorderly after warning.
•. Lester Bush, Pomeroy, $150
'Plus costs, FRA suspension,
rhree days jail suspended upon
obtaining valid operators
license within 90 days:
Emanuel Mason, West Union,
·s1s0 plus com, no operators
license, three days jail sus_pended upon good behavior,
·S100 plus coats, dru1 paraphernalia: Ron Randolph,
Pomeroy, S150 plus com, falsi. ·ncatlon, 10 days jail, 40 hours
of community service or three
days in jail to be completed
,within 10 days, two yean proi!.ation.
::· Phyllis Johnson, Shade, SSS
.j)'lus costs, speed; Beverly
:Rose, Pomeroy, $100 plus
l:osts, no operarors license, $63
~Ius costs, fictitious tags;
:;Dwayne T. Madison, Middle-port, $50 plus costs, ACDA,
,SI 00 plus costs, three days jail
.iiJSpended, 90 days to obtain
:ilalid operators license, no
~perators license, $200 plus
· l:osts, underage consumption,
:t~ree days jail suspended , 40
~ours of communiry service.
,
Glenn E. Enslen, Jr.,
..Racine, $100 plus costs, rec kjess operation, $395 forfeited
)o Village of Pomeroy, $1500
forfeited to law enforcement
:trust fund ; Rebecca Terry,
· ·Pomeroy, $100 plus costs, no
o perators license, three days
· 1)il suspended, 90 days to
:Obtain valid operators lice nse;
::Catherine F. Cremeans, Mid~leport , $150 and costs, failure
1,o pay reinstatement fe es,
ib.ree days jail suspended, 90
days to obtain valid operators
license.
Lona K. Riffie, Pome roy,
$100 plus costs, expire d operators lice nse, three days jail
suspended , 90 days to obtain
valid operators li cense, $60
plus costs, expired tags; Kenneth M . Cordell, Pomeroy,
S ISO plus costs, five days j ail
suspended upon obtaining
valid ·o perators license within
90 days; Tina Slater, Middleport, $1 00 plus costs, public
intoxication, $163 plus costs,
falsifi cation, 90 days in jail, 87
days suspended , two years probation. ·6
Shane L. Leach, New
Haven, W.Va. , $200 plus costs,

Tuesda~June27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

10 days jail suspended, two
years probation, underage
consumption; Andrew L.
Reed, Reedsville, $400 plus
costs, $300 suspended upon
completion of D.I.P. school
within 90 days, 10 days jail
suspended to seven, two years
probation, OUMUAC, $100
plus costs, possession, $100
plus costs, drug paraphernalia.
Garrett C. Hubbard, Jackson, $100 plus costs, no operators license, three days jail suspended if obtain valid operators license within 90 days;
M eli nda Justi ce, Pomeroy,
$100 plus costs, public intoxication, 10 days jail suspended,
must enroll in in house program within two weeks.
Aaro n M . Devault, Pomeroy,
$50 plu s cos ts, ACDA, $63 plus
cos ts , unsafe ve hicle; Victor S.
Smith, Vinton, $700 plus costs,
10 days jail, $300 suspended
upon completion of D.I.P.
school within 90 days, credit
for time served, 180 days
license suspension, two years
probation, driving under the
influence, $50 plus costs, left
of center; William Chevalier,
Middleport, $150 plus costs,
three days,jail suspended, must
obtain valid operators .license
within 90 days, no operators
license.

·obituaries

Middleport court cases settled
MIDDLEPORT - Eleven were fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor Sandy
lannareli last week.
Fined were Michael R . Turner, Coolville,
$25 and costs, going wrong way on one way
street; Jessica A. Laudermilt, Pomeroy, $2~0
and costs, wrongful entrustment; Crystal D.
Gheen, Pomeroy, $500 and costs, three days
jail, driving under the influence, $200 and

John Keams Jr•

joe Conley, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, discosts, driving under suspension, $17 and costs,
speed, ~I 00 and costs, failure to appear.
orderly manner; Stephanie Conley, MiddleJean Ratliff, Middleport, $100 and costs, port, $100 and costs, disorderly by beig intoxpublic intoxication; Ben Harris, Middleport, icated; Charles McCloud, Middleport, $100
$100 and costs, public intoxication; Douglas
and costs, disorderly after warning, $100 and
Mowery, Pomeroy, $100 and cos.ts, public
intoxication; John L. Jeffers, Athens, $100 and costs, menacing threats; Neil Bonecutter,
costs, disorderly conduct, $100 and costs, pos- . Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly by
intoxication.
session.

POMEROY - Thf"fo llow- lie D. Lemaster, deed, Racine ;
Mark Kenneth Willi ams,
ing land transfers were
recently reported by Meigs Denise Irene Williams, to
County Recorder Judith A. Rob,ert R. Tobin, Jr., Sherri
D. Tobin, deed, Salisbury;
King:
Lewis A. Meek, to Debra L.
Fritz Buck, dec eased, to
Mary Buck, certificate, Letart; Meek, deed, Columbia ;
Ritchie A. Coe, Rhonda J .
Mary
Frances
Ewing,
deceased, Mary E. Buck, Coe, to Jeffrey Beatty, deed,
deceased, to Robert E . Buck, Columbia;
certificate, Pomeroy;
Robert E. Jacks, Donna Y.
Garnett Bachner, deceased, J~cks, to Robbie P. Jacks,
to Harold Rice, Frances Donna Y. Jacks, deed, Bedford;
Geo rge K. Church, Teresa
Minor, certificate, Rutland ;
Frances Minor, to Harold M. Church, to Jackie Lewis
Music, Patricia Ann Music,
Rice, deed, Rutland;
Elsie Roush, to Melvin L. deed, Olive;
. Roush, David L. Roush,
J .J. Derweiler Enterpris.e, to
deed, Portland;
Timothy A. Buechner, Debra
Beulah Autherson, to Car- S. Buechner, deed, Scipio.

Township hopes name
change will help end .confusion
HAMILTON (AP) Ohio
soon will have one less Union
among its townships.
Buder County's Union Townshi p in southwestern , Ohio is
becoming West Chester Township. The new name, officials
hope, eventually will eliminate
confusion with Ohio's 27 other
Union townships.
For years, the township has
suffered from its common name,
said Dave Gully, township administrator.
The township often gets mail,
bills, deliveries, emergency calls
and lawsuits intended for other
Union townships throughout the
state and in southwest Ohio including those in nearby Warren
and Clermont counties.

Voters
overwhelmingly
approved adoption of the West
Chester name in March.
Officials say the change will
cost the township about $25,000.
Mailing addresses in the township of more than 60,000 residents will not change.
They will continue to include
other municipalities in addition
to West Chester - Middletown ,
Hamilton or SharonviUe in different sections of the township. But
township officials soon will ask
postal officials to change the
mailing designation to West
Chester for every resident and
business in the township.
Residents are pleased with the
coming change that is begin at
midnight Tuesday.

Show us where You read the
newsPaPer on Uacation!
On the Beach. -ln the water. in
the mountains. etc••• You show
us! Have a ·Picture taken of You

Jeremy R. Ball

· MIDDLEPORT- John ~arns Jr., 78, Middleport, formerly of
GALLIPOLIS - Jeremy R. Ball, 19, of Gallipolis, died Saturday,
Hartford, W.Va., died Monday, June 26, 2000 in Overbrook Center, June 24, 2000 of injuries received in a four-wheeler accident.
Middleport.
He was born October 16, 1980 in Gallipolis,
Born Nov. 20, 1921 in Hartford, son of the late John Sr. and Nora
the son of the late James R. "Jimmy" Ball, who
Johnson Kearns, he was a retired city employee of Mason, W.Va ., a
died February 19, 1995, and Connie Reed
World War II veteran, and a member of American Legion Post 140 in
Fields of Gallipolis.
New Haven, W.Va., and Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason.
He was a 1999 graduate of Gallia Ac~demy
Surviving are his wife, Frances G. Kearns; four daughters, Paulette
High School. He was a former maintenance
(Charlie) Cundiff of Pomeroy, Sheryl (Harold) Carson of Rutland,
employee for Holzer Clinic.
Mary (Scott) Thomas of Letart, W.Va., and Rhonda Kearns of HartSurviving are his mother and stepfather,
ford; two sons, Buddy Eugene (Tina) Kearns of Point Pleasant, WVa.,
Connie and Michael E. Fields of Gallipolis; a
and Timothy (Marcia) Kearns of Long Bottom; i6 grandchildren and
twin brother;jarrod R . Ball of Gallipolis; a sis11 great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Louise HaU of Hartford, and
ter, Lindsay R. Ball of Gallipolis; his maternal
Alice Blaker of New Haven.
grandmother, Naomi Reed of Gallipolis; his
·He was also preceded in death by four brothers; Delmas, Ernest,
paternal grandparents, James H . and Leona Fay
Herman and Buddy; and a sister, Maxine Kearns.
Ball of New Haven, West Virginia; and several aunts, uncles and
Services will be 11 a.m. Wenesday in Foglesong Funeral Home, cousins.
Mason, with the R ev. Huhling Green officiating. Burial will be in
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by his maternal
Broad Run Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on grandfather, Leonard C. Reed.
Wednesday, one hour prior to services.
Services will be II a.m . Wednesday, June 28, 2000 in Willis Funeral
Military graveside rites will be conducted.
Home, with Pastor Jim Lusher officiating. Burial will be in Ohio Valley t-1emory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday, June 27, 2000 from 5-8 p.m.

-

Recorder p~;~sts
recent land transfers

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tueadey, June 27, 2000

.Sonya Medley

RACINE- Sonya Medley, ll..acin.,., died Monday, June 26, 2000 in
St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

from PageA1

Hazel G. Webb
LETART FALLS -. Hazel G. "Tiii"Webb, 79, Letart Falls, died Sunday, June 25, 2000 at her residence.
.
Born Sept. 5, 1920 in Letart Township, Meigs Counry, daughter of
the late Fred and Sally Roush, she was a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death by her husband; Francis "Tiny"
Webb; a sister, Nora Pearson; and a brother, Clarence Roush.
Surviving are a daughter, Janice Fife of Racine; and four grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.
Services were held at 2 p.m. today, Tuesday, June 27, 2000 in the
chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery, with the Rev. Tom Gill officiating.
There was no visitation. Arrangements are by Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine.

LOCAL STOCKS
· AEP-321•
. Akzo- 39~.

Gannett -

AmTech/SBC - 47'1•
Ashland Inc. - 35'1.

AT&amp;T - 32')•
:
·
·
.
·

rea dins the ~aUipolis 1\ailp tltrtbune•.The Daily
Sentinel or 39otnt laltasant ~tgtsttr while YOU are on
vacation havins fun in the sun. Time to have some
fun and win some CASH!

I

Bank One - 28~ "
Bob Evans - 15).
BorgWamer - 36lo
Champion- 3~
Charming Shops - 4.,_
City Holding - 6'o
Federal Mogul- 1o
Flnrtar - 22~

sn.

General Electric - 50
Harley Davidson - 35\

Kmart- 6'!.

Kroger - 201. ·
Lands End - 34l.
Ltd. - 21 '•
Oak Hill Flnanclal-14~

OVB-27),
One valley - 33~
Peoples - 13h
Premier- 6h
Rockwell - 33, .

The Daily Sentinel ·
(USPS l13·9ti0l
Ohio Vtlley Publlshln.a Co.

Published every aCtcrnoon, Monday through
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by 11tc
Ohio Valley Publ!shi na Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4"69, Ph . 992:·2156. SC(ond class post·
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Mtmbcn The As~Q~;latcd Preas., and the Ohio
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Middleport

Rocky Boots - 5
RD Shell - 621.
Sears-33
Shoney's - ' ·
Wai·Mart - 53~
Wendy's - 18,.
Worthington - 11l.
Dally sleek reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided
by
Acfvesl of Gallipolis.

"

.

Meigs
from Pllge A1
include plans for developing · a
website, and he encouraged all
crafters who participated in the
brochure project to attend.
Kenny Wiggins, coordinator of
the county's Recycling and Litter
Prevention program, met with
commissioners to discuss the status
of a recycling station in Chester.
The station was moved to Sumner Road after complaints from
Chester residents about the former
location at the Chester Commons.
Since the station was moved, it
has been the target of five vandalism incidents, and was recently
turned upside down.
A number of Chester residents
object to the move, and Wiggins
said he has seen a significant
increase in the quantity of recyclables which have been taken to
the Pomeroy site since the rrtrive.
The commissioners agreed to
meet Wiggins to inspect a Jlotential
site which is also near the Commons; but out of view.
Wiggins said that 190 signatures
have been obtained on petitions
opposed to the move.
Wiggins was also authorized to
purchase a recycling trailer.
The board approved appropriations. and tramfer requests from the
Care and Custody Grant of the
Juvenile Court, in the ~mount of
$11 ,392.50; the prosecuting attorney, in the amounts of $11 ,250,
and $185.03; the county auditor.
$1,1 00; and the counry coroner in
the amount of $4,265.

cil announced plans to inCrease
the reconnectio n fee.
Jay Shutt and Becky Hayes of
Floyd Browne Associates, presented council members with a draft
copy of its water and sewer rate
study. a part of the village's efforts
to seek funding for water and
sewer system improvements.
When asked, Hayes refused to
re.veal the contents of the report, or
to discuss what sort of increase in
rates is recommended in the
report.
The consultants also discussed a
number of documents relating to
mandates set forth for the village
. by the Ohio EPA, and the village's
efforts to meet those requirements.
Shutt said that samples taken
. from water wells on potential well
field sites show no volatile organic ,
compounds.
"This indicates that the volatile
organic compound content at the
village's well 4 appears to be isolated;' Shutt said.
·
Test drillin~~: and pumpinl!: qn
begin right away, Shutt s3ld, arid
properry owners of sites on
Lagoon Road where the samples
were drawn will be contacted.
Iannarelli asked council members to meet at Middleport Elementary School on Wednesday
evening so that they can tour the
village's three school buildings.
The village has begun discussing
possible uses for Meigs Local
School District's three facilities
located in Middleport, and
lannarelli said the tour will help
. familiarize council memben with
the buildin!!S, and will help to start
the planning.process.
.
The mayor reported that work
in General Hartinger Park is still
under way. Work on basketball
courts has been completed, and
park lights and restroom improvements are still to be done. The
work is being paid for rhrough the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources NatureWorks grant

VALLEY WEATHER

Cooler temps in forecast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cool-down is forecast for the
.
tn-county area over the next' several days as high pressure builds.
Highs through Thursday will be
mostly in the 70s, the National
Weather Service said.
A cold front was expected to
swe~ep across the state tonight,
clearing out most of the douds.
Lows of 55-65 were likely.
No rain was in rhe fore cast for
Wednesday or Wednesday night.
Showers or thunderstorms are
possible on Thursday, forecasters
said .
Sunset tonight will be at 9:05
and sunrise on Wednesday at 6:06
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Cloudy. A chance of

showers and thunderstorms Uljtil
midnight. Lows in the mid 60s.
Southwest wind 5 to I 0 mph
shifting to the northwest. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
cloudy.
Wednesday... Partly
Highs in the upper 70s.
Wednesday
night. .. Mosfly
cloudy with a chance of show~rs
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms during the day. Highs n&lt;:a r
80.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60 and highs near 80.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60 and highs in the mid 80s.

turnout gear, and suggested that
four to five new suits be purprogram.
chased every year. The new suits
lannarelli thanked County
will ~ep l ace the existing ones that
from Page AI
Engineer Robert Eason for his
the department currently u&gt;es,
cooperation in completing the
Council passed a recommenda- which, according to Shank, are
basketball court improvements, tion to hire a part-time police old and in poor condition .
and Bob's Market and Greenhous- officer, which would help reduce
Each new fire suit will cost
es and Hubbards Greenhouses for overtime expenditures that are approximately $1.400.
contributions toward the down- currently plaguing the Pomeroy
Council a,pthorized the . purtown beautification project.
Police Department.
chase of the locks and the new
Iannarelli advised council memCouncil also passed a resolution fire equipment wjth the stip uia-·
bers she expects monthly meetings th~t would allow transfer of tion that the purc hase of these
of all council committees, and $10,000 from the department's items cannot exceed Sl5 ,000.
written reports from those~ meet- · salary fund into the police supply
Councilman Victor Young ill
ings to be submitted at council account so that money could informed council that the state
meetings.
·would be available for the hiring has returned the plans for the
A number of issues which have of a part- time police officer.
Waterworks Park and that the
traditionally been discussed at
Council listened to the first park's progress is sta rtin g to move
council meetings are now to be reading of an amendment for the forWard at an accelerated rate.
discussed duting committee meet- eovironmental standards of the
Councilman John Mus~er
ings, with recommendations and Pomeroy zoning ordinance.
reminded council that a Riverfest
reports to be presented to the full
The amendment would pro- 2000 commi ttee meeting will
council.
hibit any individual, corporation take place at th e Pomeroy
Council refer!'l'd a traffic safety or business, for any purpose, from Municipal Building July 12 at
complaint to the street committee. mixing or preparing commercial 5:30 p.m. to discuss the SeptemAccording to lannarelli, she has fertilizer within village limits.
ber Big Bend Sternwheel Festireceived a numbef ·of complaints
Council met with Fire Chief val.
of traffic problems on the Wal- Chris Shank, who proposed the
Present, in additio n to Musser
nut/Rudand Street · block of purchase ·of replacement locks for and Young, were Councilmen
North Third Avenue, where traffic the fire station. The locks would Brian Shank, George Wright,
moves in both directions.
Larry Wehrung, Mayor John
cost an estimated $400.
Council will consider making
Shank also ·asked council to Blaettnar, and Clerk Katny
that block a one-way street, as is consider purchasing 10 sets of Hysell.
the remainder of North Third.
Manl'ey •noted ..a,w.nuffiber ol'
mobile homes in need of underhood.
pinning, as weU as other issues that
The woman led deputies tQ.an
he said should be addressed by the
area where they almost immedibuilding inspector.
ately found the body.
from Pllge A1·
He also noted. that doors and
·The 911 Center was utilized .as
windows of the old Park Street
an
Emergency Operations Center·.
Department.
School, which the village uses as a
Authorities reportedly found during the search, with the assisstorage facility, should be secured.
the body after a local woman, tance of the Gallia Counry .EmerClerk/Treasurer Bryan Swann
who was unaware that there was a . gency Management Agency.
reported that the public hearing
The Gallia County Sheriff's .
missing person until she went to
on the FY 2001 tax budget will be
church Sunday morning, called Office is conducting an investigaheld qn July I 0, during the regular
911 and informed dispatchers tion into the crash, and the Gallla
council meeting. ·
that she had seen a young man County coroner will later deterResident Gene Dodson noted a
driving through the neighbor- mine the cause of death.
problem with standing water in a
sewer drain on Walnut Street and
North Third Avenue, and a pothole in need of repair on Lincoln
II'RIIII , 'lAIII YI llllfAI, .
Street.
446·4524
. .
•
Council also:
• Approved payment of bills in
the amount of$33,652.85, with 63
Subscribe todoy. 992-2156
entries;
• Accepted a new employees'
handbook.

Trail

Search

7

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

$50,000.
Cremeans works out of an office
in the Meigs County Annex on
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. In
from PapAl
addition to her duties of evaluating
counties considered a 'dental children for dental disease, she will
health professional shortage area' assemble a Meigs County Oral
because there is only one dentist Thsk Fon:e whose objective will be
per every 10,088 individuals;' the to develop a plan for the community.
nurse added.
Activities will include teaching
She said the eventual goal is for
Meigs Counry to hire a dentist dental health to target populations,
who wiU work in the dental room doing outteach presentations to
at rhe Health Department. Grant service organizations, lobbying for
monies are available for establish- fluoridation of the water system,
ing such a program, according to integrating fluoride rinse programs
Torres, but the problem has been in all schools, and taking steps to .
coming up the required local recruit dental students to treat the
matching dollars, approximately uninsured and underinsured res1-

Dental

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 •.• ·

•

•

'

i

I

••

..

•

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
'
•

�•

Pomeroy court cases settled
POMEROY -Ten individ.uals forfeited bonds and several were fined in court by Mag\mate L. Scott Powell in
Pomeroy's mayor's court last
week.
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Charles N . Stambaugh, Ash )and, Ky., $98, expired regis·tration;
Patricia
Lehew,
Pomeroy, S1 35, public intoxiMar)t
R eitmire,
. cation;
Pomeroy, $60 plus costs. unsafe
vehicle; Randy Knopp, Middleport, $85, permit under 16
year old to ride in back of
. truck; Frank W. Houser, Rut. land, $135, public intoxication; Carl Davidson, Pomeroy,
· $135, disorderly condu ct; Car. _olyn D aviso n, Pomeroy. $135,
disorderly conduc t; Patric ia
. Baer, Pomeroy, $85, speed ;
Carl Taylor, M arion , $80,
speed ; Sherry
L. Ja cks,
Langsville, $91, speed .
Those fined in court were
Shawn Blanton, Bidwell, S700
,Plus costs, $300 suspended
upon completion of D.I.P.
'school within 90 days, 10 days
. 'j.ail, 180 days license suspension, two years probatio n, $65
plus costs, failure to control;
· Michael Bing, Pome roy, $150
pl,us costs, disorderly after
..w.a rning, $200 plus costs,
. ~nderage consumption, $100
. plus costs, possession .
Anthony Thomas, Middleport, $200 plus costs, underage
.~ Qnsumption; Crystal Gheen,
J'9meroy, $100 plus costs, pos.session , fine suspended with
.costs only, disorde.rly, $200
plus costs, contributing; Cyn. thia Faulk, Pomeroy, $150 plus
costs, disorderly; Timot,hy
,Faulk, Pomeroy, fine suspend.ed with costs only, assault.
.·, Charles Crothers, Delta,
J,'enn., $150 plus costs, FRA
suspension, three days jail suspended, two years probation,
...$?0 plus costs, defective
.exhaust, $100 plus costs, pos:S~ssion; Benjamin Morehouse,
?:anesville, $100 plus costs,
n.:ck.less operation, $600 forfeited to law enforcement
trust fund, $50 plus costs, left
.of center, $150 plus costs, disorderly after warning.
•. Lester Bush, Pomeroy, $150
'Plus costs, FRA suspension,
rhree days jail suspended upon
obtaining valid operators
license within 90 days:
Emanuel Mason, West Union,
·s1s0 plus com, no operators
license, three days jail sus_pended upon good behavior,
·S100 plus coats, dru1 paraphernalia: Ron Randolph,
Pomeroy, S150 plus com, falsi. ·ncatlon, 10 days jail, 40 hours
of community service or three
days in jail to be completed
,within 10 days, two yean proi!.ation.
::· Phyllis Johnson, Shade, SSS
.j)'lus costs, speed; Beverly
:Rose, Pomeroy, $100 plus
l:osts, no operarors license, $63
~Ius costs, fictitious tags;
:;Dwayne T. Madison, Middle-port, $50 plus costs, ACDA,
,SI 00 plus costs, three days jail
.iiJSpended, 90 days to obtain
:ilalid operators license, no
~perators license, $200 plus
· l:osts, underage consumption,
:t~ree days jail suspended , 40
~ours of communiry service.
,
Glenn E. Enslen, Jr.,
..Racine, $100 plus costs, rec kjess operation, $395 forfeited
)o Village of Pomeroy, $1500
forfeited to law enforcement
:trust fund ; Rebecca Terry,
· ·Pomeroy, $100 plus costs, no
o perators license, three days
· 1)il suspended, 90 days to
:Obtain valid operators lice nse;
::Catherine F. Cremeans, Mid~leport , $150 and costs, failure
1,o pay reinstatement fe es,
ib.ree days jail suspended, 90
days to obtain valid operators
license.
Lona K. Riffie, Pome roy,
$100 plus costs, expire d operators lice nse, three days jail
suspended , 90 days to obtain
valid operators li cense, $60
plus costs, expired tags; Kenneth M . Cordell, Pomeroy,
S ISO plus costs, five days j ail
suspended upon obtaining
valid ·o perators license within
90 days; Tina Slater, Middleport, $1 00 plus costs, public
intoxication, $163 plus costs,
falsifi cation, 90 days in jail, 87
days suspended , two years probation. ·6
Shane L. Leach, New
Haven, W.Va. , $200 plus costs,

Tuesda~June27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

10 days jail suspended, two
years probation, underage
consumption; Andrew L.
Reed, Reedsville, $400 plus
costs, $300 suspended upon
completion of D.I.P. school
within 90 days, 10 days jail
suspended to seven, two years
probation, OUMUAC, $100
plus costs, possession, $100
plus costs, drug paraphernalia.
Garrett C. Hubbard, Jackson, $100 plus costs, no operators license, three days jail suspended if obtain valid operators license within 90 days;
M eli nda Justi ce, Pomeroy,
$100 plus costs, public intoxication, 10 days jail suspended,
must enroll in in house program within two weeks.
Aaro n M . Devault, Pomeroy,
$50 plu s cos ts, ACDA, $63 plus
cos ts , unsafe ve hicle; Victor S.
Smith, Vinton, $700 plus costs,
10 days jail, $300 suspended
upon completion of D.I.P.
school within 90 days, credit
for time served, 180 days
license suspension, two years
probation, driving under the
influence, $50 plus costs, left
of center; William Chevalier,
Middleport, $150 plus costs,
three days,jail suspended, must
obtain valid operators .license
within 90 days, no operators
license.

·obituaries

Middleport court cases settled
MIDDLEPORT - Eleven were fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor Sandy
lannareli last week.
Fined were Michael R . Turner, Coolville,
$25 and costs, going wrong way on one way
street; Jessica A. Laudermilt, Pomeroy, $2~0
and costs, wrongful entrustment; Crystal D.
Gheen, Pomeroy, $500 and costs, three days
jail, driving under the influence, $200 and

John Keams Jr•

joe Conley, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, discosts, driving under suspension, $17 and costs,
speed, ~I 00 and costs, failure to appear.
orderly manner; Stephanie Conley, MiddleJean Ratliff, Middleport, $100 and costs, port, $100 and costs, disorderly by beig intoxpublic intoxication; Ben Harris, Middleport, icated; Charles McCloud, Middleport, $100
$100 and costs, public intoxication; Douglas
and costs, disorderly after warning, $100 and
Mowery, Pomeroy, $100 and cos.ts, public
intoxication; John L. Jeffers, Athens, $100 and costs, menacing threats; Neil Bonecutter,
costs, disorderly conduct, $100 and costs, pos- . Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly by
intoxication.
session.

POMEROY - Thf"fo llow- lie D. Lemaster, deed, Racine ;
Mark Kenneth Willi ams,
ing land transfers were
recently reported by Meigs Denise Irene Williams, to
County Recorder Judith A. Rob,ert R. Tobin, Jr., Sherri
D. Tobin, deed, Salisbury;
King:
Lewis A. Meek, to Debra L.
Fritz Buck, dec eased, to
Mary Buck, certificate, Letart; Meek, deed, Columbia ;
Ritchie A. Coe, Rhonda J .
Mary
Frances
Ewing,
deceased, Mary E. Buck, Coe, to Jeffrey Beatty, deed,
deceased, to Robert E . Buck, Columbia;
certificate, Pomeroy;
Robert E. Jacks, Donna Y.
Garnett Bachner, deceased, J~cks, to Robbie P. Jacks,
to Harold Rice, Frances Donna Y. Jacks, deed, Bedford;
Geo rge K. Church, Teresa
Minor, certificate, Rutland ;
Frances Minor, to Harold M. Church, to Jackie Lewis
Music, Patricia Ann Music,
Rice, deed, Rutland;
Elsie Roush, to Melvin L. deed, Olive;
. Roush, David L. Roush,
J .J. Derweiler Enterpris.e, to
deed, Portland;
Timothy A. Buechner, Debra
Beulah Autherson, to Car- S. Buechner, deed, Scipio.

Township hopes name
change will help end .confusion
HAMILTON (AP) Ohio
soon will have one less Union
among its townships.
Buder County's Union Townshi p in southwestern , Ohio is
becoming West Chester Township. The new name, officials
hope, eventually will eliminate
confusion with Ohio's 27 other
Union townships.
For years, the township has
suffered from its common name,
said Dave Gully, township administrator.
The township often gets mail,
bills, deliveries, emergency calls
and lawsuits intended for other
Union townships throughout the
state and in southwest Ohio including those in nearby Warren
and Clermont counties.

Voters
overwhelmingly
approved adoption of the West
Chester name in March.
Officials say the change will
cost the township about $25,000.
Mailing addresses in the township of more than 60,000 residents will not change.
They will continue to include
other municipalities in addition
to West Chester - Middletown ,
Hamilton or SharonviUe in different sections of the township. But
township officials soon will ask
postal officials to change the
mailing designation to West
Chester for every resident and
business in the township.
Residents are pleased with the
coming change that is begin at
midnight Tuesday.

Show us where You read the
newsPaPer on Uacation!
On the Beach. -ln the water. in
the mountains. etc••• You show
us! Have a ·Picture taken of You

Jeremy R. Ball

· MIDDLEPORT- John ~arns Jr., 78, Middleport, formerly of
GALLIPOLIS - Jeremy R. Ball, 19, of Gallipolis, died Saturday,
Hartford, W.Va., died Monday, June 26, 2000 in Overbrook Center, June 24, 2000 of injuries received in a four-wheeler accident.
Middleport.
He was born October 16, 1980 in Gallipolis,
Born Nov. 20, 1921 in Hartford, son of the late John Sr. and Nora
the son of the late James R. "Jimmy" Ball, who
Johnson Kearns, he was a retired city employee of Mason, W.Va ., a
died February 19, 1995, and Connie Reed
World War II veteran, and a member of American Legion Post 140 in
Fields of Gallipolis.
New Haven, W.Va., and Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason.
He was a 1999 graduate of Gallia Ac~demy
Surviving are his wife, Frances G. Kearns; four daughters, Paulette
High School. He was a former maintenance
(Charlie) Cundiff of Pomeroy, Sheryl (Harold) Carson of Rutland,
employee for Holzer Clinic.
Mary (Scott) Thomas of Letart, W.Va., and Rhonda Kearns of HartSurviving are his mother and stepfather,
ford; two sons, Buddy Eugene (Tina) Kearns of Point Pleasant, WVa.,
Connie and Michael E. Fields of Gallipolis; a
and Timothy (Marcia) Kearns of Long Bottom; i6 grandchildren and
twin brother;jarrod R . Ball of Gallipolis; a sis11 great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Louise HaU of Hartford, and
ter, Lindsay R. Ball of Gallipolis; his maternal
Alice Blaker of New Haven.
grandmother, Naomi Reed of Gallipolis; his
·He was also preceded in death by four brothers; Delmas, Ernest,
paternal grandparents, James H . and Leona Fay
Herman and Buddy; and a sister, Maxine Kearns.
Ball of New Haven, West Virginia; and several aunts, uncles and
Services will be 11 a.m. Wenesday in Foglesong Funeral Home, cousins.
Mason, with the R ev. Huhling Green officiating. Burial will be in
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by his maternal
Broad Run Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on grandfather, Leonard C. Reed.
Wednesday, one hour prior to services.
Services will be II a.m . Wednesday, June 28, 2000 in Willis Funeral
Military graveside rites will be conducted.
Home, with Pastor Jim Lusher officiating. Burial will be in Ohio Valley t-1emory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday, June 27, 2000 from 5-8 p.m.

-

Recorder p~;~sts
recent land transfers

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tueadey, June 27, 2000

.Sonya Medley

RACINE- Sonya Medley, ll..acin.,., died Monday, June 26, 2000 in
St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

from PageA1

Hazel G. Webb
LETART FALLS -. Hazel G. "Tiii"Webb, 79, Letart Falls, died Sunday, June 25, 2000 at her residence.
.
Born Sept. 5, 1920 in Letart Township, Meigs Counry, daughter of
the late Fred and Sally Roush, she was a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death by her husband; Francis "Tiny"
Webb; a sister, Nora Pearson; and a brother, Clarence Roush.
Surviving are a daughter, Janice Fife of Racine; and four grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.
Services were held at 2 p.m. today, Tuesday, June 27, 2000 in the
chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery, with the Rev. Tom Gill officiating.
There was no visitation. Arrangements are by Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine.

LOCAL STOCKS
· AEP-321•
. Akzo- 39~.

Gannett -

AmTech/SBC - 47'1•
Ashland Inc. - 35'1.

AT&amp;T - 32')•
:
·
·
.
·

rea dins the ~aUipolis 1\ailp tltrtbune•.The Daily
Sentinel or 39otnt laltasant ~tgtsttr while YOU are on
vacation havins fun in the sun. Time to have some
fun and win some CASH!

I

Bank One - 28~ "
Bob Evans - 15).
BorgWamer - 36lo
Champion- 3~
Charming Shops - 4.,_
City Holding - 6'o
Federal Mogul- 1o
Flnrtar - 22~

sn.

General Electric - 50
Harley Davidson - 35\

Kmart- 6'!.

Kroger - 201. ·
Lands End - 34l.
Ltd. - 21 '•
Oak Hill Flnanclal-14~

OVB-27),
One valley - 33~
Peoples - 13h
Premier- 6h
Rockwell - 33, .

The Daily Sentinel ·
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Ohio Vtlley Publlshln.a Co.

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Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by 11tc
Ohio Valley Publ!shi na Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4"69, Ph . 992:·2156. SC(ond class post·
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Middleport

Rocky Boots - 5
RD Shell - 621.
Sears-33
Shoney's - ' ·
Wai·Mart - 53~
Wendy's - 18,.
Worthington - 11l.
Dally sleek reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided
by
Acfvesl of Gallipolis.

"

.

Meigs
from Pllge A1
include plans for developing · a
website, and he encouraged all
crafters who participated in the
brochure project to attend.
Kenny Wiggins, coordinator of
the county's Recycling and Litter
Prevention program, met with
commissioners to discuss the status
of a recycling station in Chester.
The station was moved to Sumner Road after complaints from
Chester residents about the former
location at the Chester Commons.
Since the station was moved, it
has been the target of five vandalism incidents, and was recently
turned upside down.
A number of Chester residents
object to the move, and Wiggins
said he has seen a significant
increase in the quantity of recyclables which have been taken to
the Pomeroy site since the rrtrive.
The commissioners agreed to
meet Wiggins to inspect a Jlotential
site which is also near the Commons; but out of view.
Wiggins said that 190 signatures
have been obtained on petitions
opposed to the move.
Wiggins was also authorized to
purchase a recycling trailer.
The board approved appropriations. and tramfer requests from the
Care and Custody Grant of the
Juvenile Court, in the ~mount of
$11 ,392.50; the prosecuting attorney, in the amounts of $11 ,250,
and $185.03; the county auditor.
$1,1 00; and the counry coroner in
the amount of $4,265.

cil announced plans to inCrease
the reconnectio n fee.
Jay Shutt and Becky Hayes of
Floyd Browne Associates, presented council members with a draft
copy of its water and sewer rate
study. a part of the village's efforts
to seek funding for water and
sewer system improvements.
When asked, Hayes refused to
re.veal the contents of the report, or
to discuss what sort of increase in
rates is recommended in the
report.
The consultants also discussed a
number of documents relating to
mandates set forth for the village
. by the Ohio EPA, and the village's
efforts to meet those requirements.
Shutt said that samples taken
. from water wells on potential well
field sites show no volatile organic ,
compounds.
"This indicates that the volatile
organic compound content at the
village's well 4 appears to be isolated;' Shutt said.
·
Test drillin~~: and pumpinl!: qn
begin right away, Shutt s3ld, arid
properry owners of sites on
Lagoon Road where the samples
were drawn will be contacted.
Iannarelli asked council members to meet at Middleport Elementary School on Wednesday
evening so that they can tour the
village's three school buildings.
The village has begun discussing
possible uses for Meigs Local
School District's three facilities
located in Middleport, and
lannarelli said the tour will help
. familiarize council memben with
the buildin!!S, and will help to start
the planning.process.
.
The mayor reported that work
in General Hartinger Park is still
under way. Work on basketball
courts has been completed, and
park lights and restroom improvements are still to be done. The
work is being paid for rhrough the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources NatureWorks grant

VALLEY WEATHER

Cooler temps in forecast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cool-down is forecast for the
.
tn-county area over the next' several days as high pressure builds.
Highs through Thursday will be
mostly in the 70s, the National
Weather Service said.
A cold front was expected to
swe~ep across the state tonight,
clearing out most of the douds.
Lows of 55-65 were likely.
No rain was in rhe fore cast for
Wednesday or Wednesday night.
Showers or thunderstorms are
possible on Thursday, forecasters
said .
Sunset tonight will be at 9:05
and sunrise on Wednesday at 6:06
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Cloudy. A chance of

showers and thunderstorms Uljtil
midnight. Lows in the mid 60s.
Southwest wind 5 to I 0 mph
shifting to the northwest. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
cloudy.
Wednesday... Partly
Highs in the upper 70s.
Wednesday
night. .. Mosfly
cloudy with a chance of show~rs
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms during the day. Highs n&lt;:a r
80.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60 and highs near 80.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60 and highs in the mid 80s.

turnout gear, and suggested that
four to five new suits be purprogram.
chased every year. The new suits
lannarelli thanked County
will ~ep l ace the existing ones that
from Page AI
Engineer Robert Eason for his
the department currently u&gt;es,
cooperation in completing the
Council passed a recommenda- which, according to Shank, are
basketball court improvements, tion to hire a part-time police old and in poor condition .
and Bob's Market and Greenhous- officer, which would help reduce
Each new fire suit will cost
es and Hubbards Greenhouses for overtime expenditures that are approximately $1.400.
contributions toward the down- currently plaguing the Pomeroy
Council a,pthorized the . purtown beautification project.
Police Department.
chase of the locks and the new
Iannarelli advised council memCouncil also passed a resolution fire equipment wjth the stip uia-·
bers she expects monthly meetings th~t would allow transfer of tion that the purc hase of these
of all council committees, and $10,000 from the department's items cannot exceed Sl5 ,000.
written reports from those~ meet- · salary fund into the police supply
Councilman Victor Young ill
ings to be submitted at council account so that money could informed council that the state
meetings.
·would be available for the hiring has returned the plans for the
A number of issues which have of a part- time police officer.
Waterworks Park and that the
traditionally been discussed at
Council listened to the first park's progress is sta rtin g to move
council meetings are now to be reading of an amendment for the forWard at an accelerated rate.
discussed duting committee meet- eovironmental standards of the
Councilman John Mus~er
ings, with recommendations and Pomeroy zoning ordinance.
reminded council that a Riverfest
reports to be presented to the full
The amendment would pro- 2000 commi ttee meeting will
council.
hibit any individual, corporation take place at th e Pomeroy
Council refer!'l'd a traffic safety or business, for any purpose, from Municipal Building July 12 at
complaint to the street committee. mixing or preparing commercial 5:30 p.m. to discuss the SeptemAccording to lannarelli, she has fertilizer within village limits.
ber Big Bend Sternwheel Festireceived a numbef ·of complaints
Council met with Fire Chief val.
of traffic problems on the Wal- Chris Shank, who proposed the
Present, in additio n to Musser
nut/Rudand Street · block of purchase ·of replacement locks for and Young, were Councilmen
North Third Avenue, where traffic the fire station. The locks would Brian Shank, George Wright,
moves in both directions.
Larry Wehrung, Mayor John
cost an estimated $400.
Council will consider making
Shank also ·asked council to Blaettnar, and Clerk Katny
that block a one-way street, as is consider purchasing 10 sets of Hysell.
the remainder of North Third.
Manl'ey •noted ..a,w.nuffiber ol'
mobile homes in need of underhood.
pinning, as weU as other issues that
The woman led deputies tQ.an
he said should be addressed by the
area where they almost immedibuilding inspector.
ately found the body.
from Pllge A1·
He also noted. that doors and
·The 911 Center was utilized .as
windows of the old Park Street
an
Emergency Operations Center·.
Department.
School, which the village uses as a
Authorities reportedly found during the search, with the assisstorage facility, should be secured.
the body after a local woman, tance of the Gallia Counry .EmerClerk/Treasurer Bryan Swann
who was unaware that there was a . gency Management Agency.
reported that the public hearing
The Gallia County Sheriff's .
missing person until she went to
on the FY 2001 tax budget will be
church Sunday morning, called Office is conducting an investigaheld qn July I 0, during the regular
911 and informed dispatchers tion into the crash, and the Gallla
council meeting. ·
that she had seen a young man County coroner will later deterResident Gene Dodson noted a
driving through the neighbor- mine the cause of death.
problem with standing water in a
sewer drain on Walnut Street and
North Third Avenue, and a pothole in need of repair on Lincoln
II'RIIII , 'lAIII YI llllfAI, .
Street.
446·4524
. .
•
Council also:
• Approved payment of bills in
the amount of$33,652.85, with 63
Subscribe todoy. 992-2156
entries;
• Accepted a new employees'
handbook.

Trail

Search

7

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

$50,000.
Cremeans works out of an office
in the Meigs County Annex on
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. In
from PapAl
addition to her duties of evaluating
counties considered a 'dental children for dental disease, she will
health professional shortage area' assemble a Meigs County Oral
because there is only one dentist Thsk Fon:e whose objective will be
per every 10,088 individuals;' the to develop a plan for the community.
nurse added.
Activities will include teaching
She said the eventual goal is for
Meigs Counry to hire a dentist dental health to target populations,
who wiU work in the dental room doing outteach presentations to
at rhe Health Department. Grant service organizations, lobbying for
monies are available for establish- fluoridation of the water system,
ing such a program, according to integrating fluoride rinse programs
Torres, but the problem has been in all schools, and taking steps to .
coming up the required local recruit dental students to treat the
matching dollars, approximately uninsured and underinsured res1-

Dental

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 •.• ·

•

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Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
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Th
.:.::;.:.:.e..:.D.:::ai::..Iy_s_en_tin_e_I

The Daily Sentinel

6TrA- (i)1.acl0 ~ W~ 9TAR·"TW'UL.M!!C1011V~*t""~---t-'ULMe

Dear Ann Landen : Many older
readers have written to you complaining
that their children and grandchildren are
ungrateful wretches who are only interested in their money. You have said many
times that an inheritance is a gift. May I
say a won! about that?
My folks are living in a paid- off
$500,000 home and sitting on a
$750,000 nest egg, which is still growing. They me ntion it often because . they
think it is significant to us. We don 't care
about it. My husband and I and all my
siblings are quite comfortable financially,
and we do not need our parents' money.
Here is what we DO want. We want
my parents to take some interest in visiting their grandchildren and spending
time with us while they are still healthy
enough to enjoy it. When my parents
retired, they moved 3,000 miles away.
They have the disposable income and
time to travel , yet they expect us to visit
them. I did that for several years when I

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

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

R. Shawn L-la
Managing Editor

t,arry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ull#n to 1111 •dilor tJn wll!k• . Jll.y sluH.Id lH ln1 tM• 300 'IIOIG. AU kt,.n .,. sd~t
141 HililttMi Ill lUI h t iJflnl •1UI iltciHt tlildnu lllftl t.l•plto•« IUUIII»t:. NtJ ~-- t.IUn will
H pM61UIIftl. lAtus slunJd IN ilt fH41oUII, IUMN11illt '""-'· '"" ,.,sa•liJ•s.
1'111 Ol'i"iolt' u prnsnl U. tit•
&amp;.tlow u. tlto~ t1NlllfiUIII of lilt OJN. V.U, hlilll,lltt
'i' fliilorNI booN, 14111nl Ollll,.,bl lttHid.

col"•"

c..

OUR VIEW

Not over
Korean U'ar survivors'
exploits need recognition
This past weekend, America and the world noted an anniversary
- .the beginning of the Korean War.
On June 25, 1950, Communist-led North Korea crossed the 38th
Parallel into democratic South Ko rea, and wtthm days, the U.S. and
the United Nations were committed to helping a free country
maintain its independence.
Envisioned as a " police action" that
The sarne valrus would last only a few months, the war
of valor, sacrifice instead lasted over three years and, technically, remains unresolved. Only an
. and endurance
armistice ' has kept war from breaking out
that have rnarked again, although ·b~th nations have come
all ofAmerica's perilously dose in the past five decades.
wars will be
· Often called the " forgotten war," Korea
is still emblazoned in the memories of
found in tile
Americans who helped to keep another
experiences of part of the world free of domination.
our Korean
By the same token, we should not forget
.
what happened in the cold, heat, isolation,
veterans.
. and su fiiermg
.
·
pam
t hat Korean veterans
experienced. In a time when aggression was a real concern to the
free world, the efforts of these soldiers need to be placed on a h1gh
pedestal.
Korea is thought of as different from World War II. That may
"'count for its "forgotten" status. Fewer troops were committed
than in World War II, but the casualty reports that came home had
the same impact of family and friends.
.
.
:It was fought in a distant land unfamiliar to most A~er1cans pnor
to 1950 but it remained on the minds of many once tt started.
We ..,;ere again fighting dictatorship, but the stakes were ~igher.
The development of the atomic bomb and the Sov1et Umon s perfection of its o\vn nuclear capabiliry in 1949 ended the Amencan
monopoly on such power.
.
China's entrance into the war on behalf of North Korea raised
fears of another all-encompassing conflict, but one everyone knew
could end civilization.
But for troops in the field, one thing was the same: the will to survive another day until the war was over. The story behmd that drtve
to live resulted in numerous acts of heroism from the international
f&lt;;&gt;rce fighting for democracy.
.
: Those acts are crying out for recognition as the observation of the
war continues over the next three years.
. The lion's share of attention t~nds to focus now on World War II
survivors. But the deeds of our troops who served in Korea are sto~ies that deserve to be explored.
. Seek them out. The same values of valor, sacrifice and endurance
. tl!at have marked all of America's wars will be found in the experiences of our Korean veterans.
: It may have taken 50 years, but their exploits deserve recognition
for their place in history. One only has to look at how many more.
countries are free today than there were in 1950 to appreciate what
th~~.e men and women did.
•

TODAY IN HISTORY

BY BECKY BAER

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Medicare issue becomes an election year game

Morton
Kondracke
•
NEA COLUMNIST

benefit for all.
That proposal soon became the Democrats'
lead promise in a bid to pull seniors back into
their camp. Then House Republicans felt they
had to respond - at least by looking active.
So they reserved $'10 billion over five years
for Medicare spending and set to work on a
prescription drug bill that Speaker Dennis
Hastert, R - 111., is anxious to pass before the
Independence Day recess.
.
The GOP vehicle, sponsored by Rep. B1ll
Thomas, Calif., offers seniors a choice of drug
·insurance plans and protection against drug
expenses greater than $6,000 a year.
Democrats had been relying on a government- based plan that's only slighdy more generous, but now two groups of Democrats, led
by Sen. Bob Graham, Fla., and Rep. Anna
Eshoo, Calif. , have come up with bills that
increase protection against catastrophic outlays.
Passage of any bill is practically imJ?ossible
because Senate GOP leaders do not share the
House J~adership's eagerness for a vote and
because, even if they changed their minds,
passage would require an . unobtainable 60
votes in the Senate.
But there is some desire to help the
Medicare system, as evidenced by the Clinton
administration's new bid to provide $21 billion over five years to help hospitals suffering
from losses of M edicare revenue .
New budget ·estimates coming out next
month are expected to show another huge
jump in Medicare savings that come at
providers' expense and will force some into
bankruptcy.
..
Failing to enact a prescription drug benefit,
Congress could vote $40 billion to help
providers. And next year, a new president and
Congress could work on long-term Medicare
Ieform, not just bid for election- year advantage.

feUow Republicans as·the "Gore tax."
The same . gam~ of catch-u~J bid-up and
one-up 1s bemg played m Congress, especially by Democrats and House Republicans.
Senate Republicans seem out of it.
Like Bush in the presidential race, Democrats have mostly set the Congressional agenda,
forcing House Republicans to at least cover
themselves politically by passing a patients'
rights bill and, soon, a prescription drug ben-.
efit.
House Republicans have set the agenda on
taX cuts, lifting the earnings limit for Social
Security recipients and passing marriage
penalty and "death tax" relief.
Whether anything liesides the earnings
limit actually gets signed into law this year is
deeply problematic. The Senate seems incapable t&gt;f producing a patients' rights bill. and
President Clinton is threatening ~o veto the
inheritance tax repeal if it passes.
Meanwhile, the House has 'passed a cam"
p~ign finance bill that Senate Republicans
have killed. And Senate Democrats . powered
through hate crimes and campaign disclosure
legislation lhat the GOP is trying to suffocate.
The drug benefit is probably the year's
highest-stakes bidding arena. RepublicanS and
moderate Pemocrats first wanted to make a
drug subsidy for low-income seniors a part ·of
overall · Medicare reform, but Clinton . (Morton Kondracke is executive editor
'tJ;umped that idea with an across-the-board Call, ihe newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

of Roll

,

'HARDBALL'

Capital punishment rises to.presidential debate
BY CHilli MAnHEWI
WASHINGTON - It's the executions that
get to me. I confess some dark human sympathy for killings of passion.! sense how obsession
might grab such hold of a tnal'! that he might
kill out of anger, or fear, or sheer, animal rage.
' But how do we deal with the cruel, joyous,
heartless taker of another person's life? What
should we do when one of our own, a human
being, is robbed of life by another's moment of
calculated pleasure?
I speaJc of the murder committed with
impunity and without pity.
For the first time in memory, the question of
what to do with these people ·m,Y rise this fall
to the level of presidential debate. During
George W. Bush's tenure as 1'el&lt;as governor, 131
convictea murderers have been put to death.
Bush has declared his confidence that in each
case the condemned earned his or her fate. ·
Thanks to modern science, we now have a
check on such decl~tions of perfection. Analyzing blood or other human material, we c:in
ascertain if the evidence used to convict
matches with the convicted.
The question even the most advanced science cannot answer is whether society has the
right to kill those whom science proves guilty.
That query is for us resolve.

By that, I mean we Americans. We can argue warranted special treatment.
But neither concern, the possibiliry of exefor decades over the root causes but ours is a
violent culture. Last year, 17,000 of us were cuting an innocent person, the difficulty of
.murdered. Ainericans were the victims. Ameri- executing even a guilty community hero,
. exempts us from the stark question of what to
·
'cans were the kiilers.
It does no good to shift the debate to that do when we confiont the opportunity to renrelated but different question of gun control. der punishment where punishment is clearly
While it's true that guns can be used kill peo- · due.
pie, people without guns fin4 other ways to
What do we do when a guruilan plaqs the
kill. Ten thousand of those American killings robbery of a fast-food restaurant, plans the syslast year were by firearms. Seven thousand were tematic execution of its low-paid workers, then
carries out the crime without hesitation, error
achieved by other means.
.
So the question is not what we do with the or mercy? What do we do when we catch this
·
guns alone. It's what we do with our killers. In assassin dead to rights?
his new book "Actual Innocence," Barry
Do we hesitate? Do we fear error? Do we
Scheck, Peter Neufeld and Jim Dwyer make show mercy?
"There are many who bring an understa.n d.
the case for giving all those on d~ath row access
. to state-of-the-art DNA testing. They point to able passion to the new debate over capital
cases where science has shown the jury wrong, punishment that arises from their fundamental
where the person ·found guilty W3$ actually mota! opposition to the penalty itself," Vice
President AI Gore said recendy. "I deeply
innocent.
Also thanks to Scheck and his coUeagues on respect that position. I do not share it."
Whether Gore or Bush wins in November, I
that leg.J "dream team" who defended O.J.
Simpson, we have the stark evidence of how a expect that one resolution of the 2000 presirich, glamorous celebrity gets a different kind dential election will be to re-endorse capital
of prosec.ution . The pre- trial decision to punishment.
(C/Iris Matthews, chief of the San .Prandsco
e&gt;Cempt Simpson fiom capital punishment in
this case of double-murder was an early signal Examiner~ Washingtmo Bureau, is host of "Hardto both jury and country that this defendant ball" on CNBC and MSNBC cable clwnnels.)

'

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Ann
Landers

talk to about your problems, the
problems seem less crucial.
Try acupuncture. This technique
has been known to
POMEROY - Life would
be very boring if we didn't increase the number of white
experience things periodically blood cells that help ward off
to challenge us and keep its on disease.
Enjoy the sense of touch.
our toes. Everyday irritations,
Pamper
yourself with a massage
though, may start to get to us.
Our health may suffer. The or backrub. Relief from
immu'ne system may not be able headaches and arthritis has been
to cope properly, and we may connected to having sex. Along
become sick. 'If we don't learn the same ·line, petting or playing
how to manage the dally hassles, with a dog or cat has been
we may not have the energy to proven to lower blood pressure.
Listen to music · or sounds
mne with a maior life crisis.
from
nature. Music has a calmWhat .can we do to help deal
with life's stress-builders? There ing effect on the body and
·
are
some very common mind.
Take a long relaxing bath.
"escapes" that can help us manage the stress we routinely face. Use scented oils or burn scented
If these suggestions are regularly candles as aroma therapy.
Use quiet reflection. Whether
followed, our new lifestyle will
prayer,
yoga, deep breathing or
help keep the immune system
progressive muscle relaxation,
working at its optimum level.
your
mind, body and soul will
Exercise. Moderate aerobic
activity can trigger the immune benefit from the tranquil medi~
system to work more efficiendy. tation.
Get away from the everyday
Eat a nutritious diet. Limit
of life. Take all of your
stresses
saturated fats and cholesterol,
but eat lots of fruits and vegeta- vacation days. Go away on long
.
bles - at least five a day. Your vveekends.
Laugh. Wateh funny movies
body needs the proper nutrients
and television shows. Comedy
to carry on its daily activities
Get plenty of sleep - eight lw been ttported as helping
hours is about average. There ila people ttciMir &amp;om llfe·threatlink between lack of lleep and a eningWnetaea.
depn~11ed immune IYJtem.
As you have heard • "Don't
Write about your feellnp. aweat the amall atufF." Don't let
Record your thoughtaln a jour- llttle annoyance• and irritation•
nal. Studies have shown that If get the beat of you. It illmpof:o
you write about what !1 bother- tant to learn hovv to cope with
ing you, you are le11 llkely to the daily occurn~nce1, 10 that
catch a cold.
you will have the coping mechTalk to others. If you have anillnl in place if a major critil
friends or family that you can happens.
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY OEVELOPMENT

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. Today is Tuesday, June 27, the !79th day of2000.There are 187 days
lcift in the year.
: : Today's Highlight in History:
.
· : On June 27, 1950, President Truman ordered the Air Force and
Navy into the KOrean conflict after the U.N. Security Council c'!led
on member nations to help South Korea repel a commurust mvaston.
· On this date:
· ; In 1844, Mormon leader Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum,
~re killed by a mob in Carthage, Ill.
.
: In 1847, New York and Boston were linked by telegraph wues.
· In 1893, the New York stock market crashed.
: In 1942, the FBI announced the capture of eight Nazi saboteurs
who had been put ashore fiom a submarine on New York's Long
l!i\and.
·'
;In 1944,duringWorldWar U,Arnerican forces compleied theircaptl).re of the French port of Cherbourg from the Germans.
: In 1957, more than 500 people were killed when Hurricane Audrey
s~mmed through coastal Louisiana and Texas.
,
In 1%9, patrons at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New Yorks
Greenwich Village, clashed with police in an incident considered the
birth of the gay rights movement.
; In 1973, former White House celunsel John W. Dean told the Sena(&lt; Watergate Committee about an "enemies list" kept by the Nixon
White H ouse.
' In 1980, President Carter signed legislation reviving draft registration.
ol
In 1985, legendary Route 66, which o r.iginauy stretched . fiom
C hicago to Santa Monica, Calif. , passed into history as officials decertified the road.
:Today's Birthdays:"Captain Kangaroo;• Bob Keeshan., is 73.Buslness
e:lecutive Ross Perot is 70. Opera singtr Anna Molfo is 66. The former chairman of the Joint C hie&amp; of Staff, Army Gen. John Shalikashvili, is 64. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt is 62. Singer-musician
Bruce Johnston CT.he Beath Boys) is 58. Actress Julia Duffy is 49.
ActresS Isabelle Adjani is 45. Country si nger Lorne Morgan 1s 41.
hotor Brian Drillinger is 40. Actor Tobey Magui!ll is 25.
·

as often as possible from across the country. When we take family vacations, we
invite my in-laws to join us, and they
arrange to meet us wherever we are.
They probably won 't leave us a dime, but
we will have some thing much more
valuable memories of time spent '
together as a family. That is som~thing
no inheritance can buy. Please print this.
ADVICE
- Conflic t in California
Dear California: If your parents are
was first married, but with three children not interested in visiting you and their
under the age of 6, it has ,become com- grandchildren, you shquld not pressure
plicated and expensive. My parents have them to do so. Face the reality, and
visited me once in the last 12 years. rejoice in the fact that your husband's
Their excuses are pretty lame - the mother (bless her) will fill that void.
planes are too crowded, the trip is too Down the road, your parents will regret
long, who would care for the cat? Our their lack of interest. I guarantee it. And
relationship has deteriorated badly over your in-laws will revel in the pleasure
they derive from the grandchildren's
the years, and I am sad about it.
love.
My in-laws are wonderful, and just
Dear Ann Landers: When I was 17,
the opposite of my parents. My motherI
met
the man I inte nd to marry. When
in-law, who has much less money, visits
I was 20, we moved in ' together, and I

TIME OUT
FOR TIPS

Medicare preswptwn drug legislation is
caught in a furious election-year game of
catch- up, bid-up and one-up that almost
guarantees nothing will pass Congress in this
semon.
But that's not all bad. It will free up money
to help ailing hospitals and nursing homes and
revive chances for broad-scale Medicare
reform next year.
Medicare isn't the only object of positioning and bidding wars between presidential
candidates and the parties in Congress; Social
Securiry, education, patients' rights, taxes, guns
and hate crimes are also on the docket.
On the presidential level, Vice !;&gt;resident.AI
Gore has been playing catch-up to Texas Gov.
George W. Busli in virtually every category of
bidding, but in the protess, Gore is also trying
to play political one-upmanship.
Bush made across-the-board tax cuts a key.
item on his agenda. Now Gore has doubled
the size of his proposed cut from $250 billion
to $500 billion over 10 years, with the benefits targeted to lower- and middle-income
voters.
Bush proposed allowing workers to invest
some of their Social Security taxes in equity
markel!l. Now Gore has come up with "retirement savings-plus;• an investment ·entidement
plan that would give lower-income citizens
$3 for every $1 they save.
Congressional Republicans t)to11ght. up
"lockboxes" for Social Security and Medicare
revenues. They got credit for the Social Security version, but Gore grabbed the Medicare
idea and made it his. Now House Republicans want 'credit for getting it passed.
Bush was first out with tough education
accountability proposals. Gore has matched
and raised him with promises of considerably
more money, though Bush is adding extra billions by the day. In an· area ·where he was
behind Gore, Bush this week, came out with
an education technology initiative that even
retains a telephone surcharge often derided by

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Page A~ r
Tuesday, June 27. 20DO •

Reader says that she, for one, doesn't care about a potential future inheritance

'Esta.b6slieti in 1948

I

By the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

TUesdiiJ. June 27, 2000

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COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

rededicated in a service at 2 p.m.

CHESTER
Chester
Township Trustees, special
meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

POMEROY Winding
Trail Garden Club, 6 p.m., Tuesday. Members to meet at the
Park and Ride at Rocksprings.

TUESDAY,June 27

CHESTER Wildwood
Garden Club, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
tour of the garden of Kay Fick,
Greenup Lanes, Route 7,

POMEROY
RACO
meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m Star
Mill Park, Potluck dinner.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department,
immunization clinic, Tuesday, 911 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 East
Memorial Drive. Take children's
shot records. Children must be
accompanied by parent or legal
guardian.

•••

T~SDAY,June29

RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters, Thurs~
day, 7 p.m. at the high school.

•••

FRIDAY,June 30
POMEROY Veterans
Affairs Medical Center/Chillicothe will provid~ health care
enroUment Friday, 10 a.m. to
noon, and 1 to 2 p.m. at the Veterans Service Offic.e at 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. West
Virginia residents welcome.
Proof of military service
required at enrollment.

POMEROY - Meigs Local
School District Board of EducaThe Community Calendar
tion, public hearing, Thesday,
is published as a free ser6:30 p.m. for public review of
vice to non-profit group•
the district continuous improvement; followed by Meigs Local wishing to announce meetSchool District's regular meet- . ings and special events. The
cal41ndar is not designed to
ing at 7 p.m. in the office at 320
promote sales or fund raisEast Main Street, Pomeroy.
ers of any type. Items are
printed only as space perCOOLVILLE ~ Revival
mill
and cannot be guaranservices, Orange Christian
Ch,urch, Tuesday to Saturday, 7 teed to be printed a specifp.m . Sunday the church will be
ic number of days.

became pregnant. We do plan to get
married someday, but we are m no
hurry.
Here's the problem, and I don 't know
how to deal with it. My mother, who is
very religtous, was horrified when she
found out I was expecting a baby. She
always hated that we were living togethe r, and she demanded to know when we
were going to get married. I told her in
a very nice way, "Someday, but not now."
That was three years ago. Since then , she
has made no effort to see her grandson.
I am very hurt by this.
H ow can I explain to my mo th er that
she has no reason to be embarrassed by
my situation and that she ne eds to accept
her grandson? - Wou nded in L.A .
Dear Wounded: Your mother is
" punishing" you because you are living
with the father of your child and seem
to be in no hurry to marry. She finds this
unacceptabl e, and frankly, I ca n see her
point. While I do not condone her

refusal to see you or her grandson (her
loss, I might add), I, too, wonder why
you don't legalize your relationship for
the child's sake. This does not make a
whole lot of sense to me.
Gem ofthe Day (Credit the Prairie .
Rambler): They say it is better to be
poor and happy than rich and miserable,
but how about a compromise, like b ~f:rjg
moderately rich and just moody?
Is that Ann Landers col umn ,you
clipped years ago yeUow with age' Po~; a
copy of her most frequently req u~ sted
poems and essays, send a self- addressed,
long, business-size envelop e and a chec k
or money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann
Landers, P. O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
606 11 -0562. (In Canada, send $6.25 .) To
find out more about Ann Landers and
read her past columns, visit the Creators
Syndica te
web
page
at
www.creators.com.

SOCIETY NEWS
Hanisonville news
Mrs. Judy Coomer of Illinois and Mrs. Mary Felts of Michigan took
their parents,Mr. and Mrs.Virgil King, on a trip to Florida to visit their
uncle, Leo King.
On the way home they visited Coomer's father-in-law, Obie
Coomer, Sr., of Kentucky, and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dockery of Cincinnati.
Ray Alkire of Columbus spent the weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Alkire.
Jessica McKinney and Meagan McKinney of Canal Winchester,
recently spent a week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Lowery.
Mrs. Alpha Bailey, who has been in Riverside Hospital in Columbus has been moved to the Holzer Rehabilitation Center. She is slowly improving and enjoys getting cards.
Virginia Gibson spent the weekend with her sister, Juanita
Richards, in Dayton.
Evelyn (Wilson) Hammond, her two daughters and three grandchildren of !Uinois, along with her sister, Lore~;~e, of California, were
recent dinner guests of their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stanley of
Snowville. They also visited friends in the Pomeroy area.

The program "Human Rights" was given by Moore and the
women worked on a quilt for one of the church members.
,Several scriptures was read by Moore and The Lord's Prayer ·w,.as
given to close the meeting.
:..'.' .
Along with Moore and Stout, those attending the meeting wer9. , ,
Mary Lisle, Elma Louks, Ruth Crouch and M arie Houdashelt.
. ' .. ' ,

UMW women meet
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Asbury United Methodist Women
held their regular meeting at the church last week. "
President Hope Moore read a poem, "Fathers Ale Wonderful People:• and Jean Stout gave the secretary's report. There was 26 sick calls
reported
The group's annual picnic will be held July 11 at the home of Mary
Lisle. A dinner will be held at the

IY Lll RIICH

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788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760
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Introclu~

Harvesting
strawberries
FOR AP SPECIAL 'IATUREI
NO\Y that the strawberry aea•on hu just about ended and
many stomachs have been filled
with this delicious fruit, let's look
at the coincidences that led to the
origin of the common garden
strawberry almost three centuries
ago.
This strawberry traces its lineage to two American species, the
Virginia strawberry and the
Chilean strawberry. The first is
native to the east coast of North
America. The second is native to
the west coast of North and
South America. The expanse of
the American continent was too
large ever to allow these two
species to "marry" under natural
conditions. So hdw and where
did these two species come
together?
It happened in Europe. The
Virginia strawberry was enjoyed
by early setders in the New World
and transplanted to gardens m
Europe by the 17th century.
Intrigue enters the story of
how the Chilean strawberry
made its way to Europe. Moving
the clock fotwanl to the early
18th century, we find French
King Louis XIV needing a spy to
observe Spanish fortifications in
Concepcion, Chile. For ihis task,
he chose Amedee Francois Frezier, who set sail on an armed merchant marine ship in 1712.
Amadee's posing as a merchant
marine enabled him to visit Spanish fortifications :is a tourist.
Secretly, he kept notes and made
sketches of ammunition storage
and escape routes. He also wrote
about the people, geography and
agriculture there.
One plant that caught his
fancy was the Chilean strawberry
which bore fruits larger than
those ·known' in Europe.

....

WYNGATE OF GA111POUS
And Assisted U$8: a Whole New
Level of Senior Care In Our Area
It's a new community tor
seniors who require clayto-day ustst:ance, whether

Its' simply needing a
helping hand with dally
tasks or higher levels of

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WYNGATEOF
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seniors with high quaUty,
personalized health
services along with the
best resldentiaiiMng.

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This lndudes private
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cooked meals and a host o,, .
sodal events.
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We take care of

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medications, dressing,
bathing, meals,
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transportation and
activities. This combination
of care and comfort leads
to a better Ufe, which

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allows, Mom and Dad to
stay more independent

today and tomorrow.
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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28
12:00 PM. TO 2:00 PM.
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EVERYONE IS WELCOME
"We will be serving lunch and refreshments
Please stop by and visit the new a~dition to your community.:~:.;
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GaiHpolls, Ohio 45631
(740) 441-9633

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PageA4

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The Daily Sentinel

6TrA- (i)1.acl0 ~ W~ 9TAR·"TW'UL.M!!C1011V~*t""~---t-'ULMe

Dear Ann Landen : Many older
readers have written to you complaining
that their children and grandchildren are
ungrateful wretches who are only interested in their money. You have said many
times that an inheritance is a gift. May I
say a won! about that?
My folks are living in a paid- off
$500,000 home and sitting on a
$750,000 nest egg, which is still growing. They me ntion it often because . they
think it is significant to us. We don 't care
about it. My husband and I and all my
siblings are quite comfortable financially,
and we do not need our parents' money.
Here is what we DO want. We want
my parents to take some interest in visiting their grandchildren and spending
time with us while they are still healthy
enough to enjoy it. When my parents
retired, they moved 3,000 miles away.
They have the disposable income and
time to travel , yet they expect us to visit
them. I did that for several years when I

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

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

R. Shawn L-la
Managing Editor

t,arry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ull#n to 1111 •dilor tJn wll!k• . Jll.y sluH.Id lH ln1 tM• 300 'IIOIG. AU kt,.n .,. sd~t
141 HililttMi Ill lUI h t iJflnl •1UI iltciHt tlildnu lllftl t.l•plto•« IUUIII»t:. NtJ ~-- t.IUn will
H pM61UIIftl. lAtus slunJd IN ilt fH41oUII, IUMN11illt '""-'· '"" ,.,sa•liJ•s.
1'111 Ol'i"iolt' u prnsnl U. tit•
&amp;.tlow u. tlto~ t1NlllfiUIII of lilt OJN. V.U, hlilll,lltt
'i' fliilorNI booN, 14111nl Ollll,.,bl lttHid.

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OUR VIEW

Not over
Korean U'ar survivors'
exploits need recognition
This past weekend, America and the world noted an anniversary
- .the beginning of the Korean War.
On June 25, 1950, Communist-led North Korea crossed the 38th
Parallel into democratic South Ko rea, and wtthm days, the U.S. and
the United Nations were committed to helping a free country
maintain its independence.
Envisioned as a " police action" that
The sarne valrus would last only a few months, the war
of valor, sacrifice instead lasted over three years and, technically, remains unresolved. Only an
. and endurance
armistice ' has kept war from breaking out
that have rnarked again, although ·b~th nations have come
all ofAmerica's perilously dose in the past five decades.
wars will be
· Often called the " forgotten war," Korea
is still emblazoned in the memories of
found in tile
Americans who helped to keep another
experiences of part of the world free of domination.
our Korean
By the same token, we should not forget
.
what happened in the cold, heat, isolation,
veterans.
. and su fiiermg
.
·
pam
t hat Korean veterans
experienced. In a time when aggression was a real concern to the
free world, the efforts of these soldiers need to be placed on a h1gh
pedestal.
Korea is thought of as different from World War II. That may
"'count for its "forgotten" status. Fewer troops were committed
than in World War II, but the casualty reports that came home had
the same impact of family and friends.
.
.
:It was fought in a distant land unfamiliar to most A~er1cans pnor
to 1950 but it remained on the minds of many once tt started.
We ..,;ere again fighting dictatorship, but the stakes were ~igher.
The development of the atomic bomb and the Sov1et Umon s perfection of its o\vn nuclear capabiliry in 1949 ended the Amencan
monopoly on such power.
.
China's entrance into the war on behalf of North Korea raised
fears of another all-encompassing conflict, but one everyone knew
could end civilization.
But for troops in the field, one thing was the same: the will to survive another day until the war was over. The story behmd that drtve
to live resulted in numerous acts of heroism from the international
f&lt;;&gt;rce fighting for democracy.
.
: Those acts are crying out for recognition as the observation of the
war continues over the next three years.
. The lion's share of attention t~nds to focus now on World War II
survivors. But the deeds of our troops who served in Korea are sto~ies that deserve to be explored.
. Seek them out. The same values of valor, sacrifice and endurance
. tl!at have marked all of America's wars will be found in the experiences of our Korean veterans.
: It may have taken 50 years, but their exploits deserve recognition
for their place in history. One only has to look at how many more.
countries are free today than there were in 1950 to appreciate what
th~~.e men and women did.
•

TODAY IN HISTORY

BY BECKY BAER

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Medicare issue becomes an election year game

Morton
Kondracke
•
NEA COLUMNIST

benefit for all.
That proposal soon became the Democrats'
lead promise in a bid to pull seniors back into
their camp. Then House Republicans felt they
had to respond - at least by looking active.
So they reserved $'10 billion over five years
for Medicare spending and set to work on a
prescription drug bill that Speaker Dennis
Hastert, R - 111., is anxious to pass before the
Independence Day recess.
.
The GOP vehicle, sponsored by Rep. B1ll
Thomas, Calif., offers seniors a choice of drug
·insurance plans and protection against drug
expenses greater than $6,000 a year.
Democrats had been relying on a government- based plan that's only slighdy more generous, but now two groups of Democrats, led
by Sen. Bob Graham, Fla., and Rep. Anna
Eshoo, Calif. , have come up with bills that
increase protection against catastrophic outlays.
Passage of any bill is practically imJ?ossible
because Senate GOP leaders do not share the
House J~adership's eagerness for a vote and
because, even if they changed their minds,
passage would require an . unobtainable 60
votes in the Senate.
But there is some desire to help the
Medicare system, as evidenced by the Clinton
administration's new bid to provide $21 billion over five years to help hospitals suffering
from losses of M edicare revenue .
New budget ·estimates coming out next
month are expected to show another huge
jump in Medicare savings that come at
providers' expense and will force some into
bankruptcy.
..
Failing to enact a prescription drug benefit,
Congress could vote $40 billion to help
providers. And next year, a new president and
Congress could work on long-term Medicare
Ieform, not just bid for election- year advantage.

feUow Republicans as·the "Gore tax."
The same . gam~ of catch-u~J bid-up and
one-up 1s bemg played m Congress, especially by Democrats and House Republicans.
Senate Republicans seem out of it.
Like Bush in the presidential race, Democrats have mostly set the Congressional agenda,
forcing House Republicans to at least cover
themselves politically by passing a patients'
rights bill and, soon, a prescription drug ben-.
efit.
House Republicans have set the agenda on
taX cuts, lifting the earnings limit for Social
Security recipients and passing marriage
penalty and "death tax" relief.
Whether anything liesides the earnings
limit actually gets signed into law this year is
deeply problematic. The Senate seems incapable t&gt;f producing a patients' rights bill. and
President Clinton is threatening ~o veto the
inheritance tax repeal if it passes.
Meanwhile, the House has 'passed a cam"
p~ign finance bill that Senate Republicans
have killed. And Senate Democrats . powered
through hate crimes and campaign disclosure
legislation lhat the GOP is trying to suffocate.
The drug benefit is probably the year's
highest-stakes bidding arena. RepublicanS and
moderate Pemocrats first wanted to make a
drug subsidy for low-income seniors a part ·of
overall · Medicare reform, but Clinton . (Morton Kondracke is executive editor
'tJ;umped that idea with an across-the-board Call, ihe newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

of Roll

,

'HARDBALL'

Capital punishment rises to.presidential debate
BY CHilli MAnHEWI
WASHINGTON - It's the executions that
get to me. I confess some dark human sympathy for killings of passion.! sense how obsession
might grab such hold of a tnal'! that he might
kill out of anger, or fear, or sheer, animal rage.
' But how do we deal with the cruel, joyous,
heartless taker of another person's life? What
should we do when one of our own, a human
being, is robbed of life by another's moment of
calculated pleasure?
I speaJc of the murder committed with
impunity and without pity.
For the first time in memory, the question of
what to do with these people ·m,Y rise this fall
to the level of presidential debate. During
George W. Bush's tenure as 1'el&lt;as governor, 131
convictea murderers have been put to death.
Bush has declared his confidence that in each
case the condemned earned his or her fate. ·
Thanks to modern science, we now have a
check on such decl~tions of perfection. Analyzing blood or other human material, we c:in
ascertain if the evidence used to convict
matches with the convicted.
The question even the most advanced science cannot answer is whether society has the
right to kill those whom science proves guilty.
That query is for us resolve.

By that, I mean we Americans. We can argue warranted special treatment.
But neither concern, the possibiliry of exefor decades over the root causes but ours is a
violent culture. Last year, 17,000 of us were cuting an innocent person, the difficulty of
.murdered. Ainericans were the victims. Ameri- executing even a guilty community hero,
. exempts us from the stark question of what to
·
'cans were the kiilers.
It does no good to shift the debate to that do when we confiont the opportunity to renrelated but different question of gun control. der punishment where punishment is clearly
While it's true that guns can be used kill peo- · due.
pie, people without guns fin4 other ways to
What do we do when a guruilan plaqs the
kill. Ten thousand of those American killings robbery of a fast-food restaurant, plans the syslast year were by firearms. Seven thousand were tematic execution of its low-paid workers, then
carries out the crime without hesitation, error
achieved by other means.
.
So the question is not what we do with the or mercy? What do we do when we catch this
·
guns alone. It's what we do with our killers. In assassin dead to rights?
his new book "Actual Innocence," Barry
Do we hesitate? Do we fear error? Do we
Scheck, Peter Neufeld and Jim Dwyer make show mercy?
"There are many who bring an understa.n d.
the case for giving all those on d~ath row access
. to state-of-the-art DNA testing. They point to able passion to the new debate over capital
cases where science has shown the jury wrong, punishment that arises from their fundamental
where the person ·found guilty W3$ actually mota! opposition to the penalty itself," Vice
President AI Gore said recendy. "I deeply
innocent.
Also thanks to Scheck and his coUeagues on respect that position. I do not share it."
Whether Gore or Bush wins in November, I
that leg.J "dream team" who defended O.J.
Simpson, we have the stark evidence of how a expect that one resolution of the 2000 presirich, glamorous celebrity gets a different kind dential election will be to re-endorse capital
of prosec.ution . The pre- trial decision to punishment.
(C/Iris Matthews, chief of the San .Prandsco
e&gt;Cempt Simpson fiom capital punishment in
this case of double-murder was an early signal Examiner~ Washingtmo Bureau, is host of "Hardto both jury and country that this defendant ball" on CNBC and MSNBC cable clwnnels.)

'

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Ann
Landers

talk to about your problems, the
problems seem less crucial.
Try acupuncture. This technique
has been known to
POMEROY - Life would
be very boring if we didn't increase the number of white
experience things periodically blood cells that help ward off
to challenge us and keep its on disease.
Enjoy the sense of touch.
our toes. Everyday irritations,
Pamper
yourself with a massage
though, may start to get to us.
Our health may suffer. The or backrub. Relief from
immu'ne system may not be able headaches and arthritis has been
to cope properly, and we may connected to having sex. Along
become sick. 'If we don't learn the same ·line, petting or playing
how to manage the dally hassles, with a dog or cat has been
we may not have the energy to proven to lower blood pressure.
Listen to music · or sounds
mne with a maior life crisis.
from
nature. Music has a calmWhat .can we do to help deal
with life's stress-builders? There ing effect on the body and
·
are
some very common mind.
Take a long relaxing bath.
"escapes" that can help us manage the stress we routinely face. Use scented oils or burn scented
If these suggestions are regularly candles as aroma therapy.
Use quiet reflection. Whether
followed, our new lifestyle will
prayer,
yoga, deep breathing or
help keep the immune system
progressive muscle relaxation,
working at its optimum level.
your
mind, body and soul will
Exercise. Moderate aerobic
activity can trigger the immune benefit from the tranquil medi~
system to work more efficiendy. tation.
Get away from the everyday
Eat a nutritious diet. Limit
of life. Take all of your
stresses
saturated fats and cholesterol,
but eat lots of fruits and vegeta- vacation days. Go away on long
.
bles - at least five a day. Your vveekends.
Laugh. Wateh funny movies
body needs the proper nutrients
and television shows. Comedy
to carry on its daily activities
Get plenty of sleep - eight lw been ttported as helping
hours is about average. There ila people ttciMir &amp;om llfe·threatlink between lack of lleep and a eningWnetaea.
depn~11ed immune IYJtem.
As you have heard • "Don't
Write about your feellnp. aweat the amall atufF." Don't let
Record your thoughtaln a jour- llttle annoyance• and irritation•
nal. Studies have shown that If get the beat of you. It illmpof:o
you write about what !1 bother- tant to learn hovv to cope with
ing you, you are le11 llkely to the daily occurn~nce1, 10 that
catch a cold.
you will have the coping mechTalk to others. If you have anillnl in place if a major critil
friends or family that you can happens.
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY OEVELOPMENT

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. Today is Tuesday, June 27, the !79th day of2000.There are 187 days
lcift in the year.
: : Today's Highlight in History:
.
· : On June 27, 1950, President Truman ordered the Air Force and
Navy into the KOrean conflict after the U.N. Security Council c'!led
on member nations to help South Korea repel a commurust mvaston.
· On this date:
· ; In 1844, Mormon leader Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum,
~re killed by a mob in Carthage, Ill.
.
: In 1847, New York and Boston were linked by telegraph wues.
· In 1893, the New York stock market crashed.
: In 1942, the FBI announced the capture of eight Nazi saboteurs
who had been put ashore fiom a submarine on New York's Long
l!i\and.
·'
;In 1944,duringWorldWar U,Arnerican forces compleied theircaptl).re of the French port of Cherbourg from the Germans.
: In 1957, more than 500 people were killed when Hurricane Audrey
s~mmed through coastal Louisiana and Texas.
,
In 1%9, patrons at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New Yorks
Greenwich Village, clashed with police in an incident considered the
birth of the gay rights movement.
; In 1973, former White House celunsel John W. Dean told the Sena(&lt; Watergate Committee about an "enemies list" kept by the Nixon
White H ouse.
' In 1980, President Carter signed legislation reviving draft registration.
ol
In 1985, legendary Route 66, which o r.iginauy stretched . fiom
C hicago to Santa Monica, Calif. , passed into history as officials decertified the road.
:Today's Birthdays:"Captain Kangaroo;• Bob Keeshan., is 73.Buslness
e:lecutive Ross Perot is 70. Opera singtr Anna Molfo is 66. The former chairman of the Joint C hie&amp; of Staff, Army Gen. John Shalikashvili, is 64. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt is 62. Singer-musician
Bruce Johnston CT.he Beath Boys) is 58. Actress Julia Duffy is 49.
ActresS Isabelle Adjani is 45. Country si nger Lorne Morgan 1s 41.
hotor Brian Drillinger is 40. Actor Tobey Magui!ll is 25.
·

as often as possible from across the country. When we take family vacations, we
invite my in-laws to join us, and they
arrange to meet us wherever we are.
They probably won 't leave us a dime, but
we will have some thing much more
valuable memories of time spent '
together as a family. That is som~thing
no inheritance can buy. Please print this.
ADVICE
- Conflic t in California
Dear California: If your parents are
was first married, but with three children not interested in visiting you and their
under the age of 6, it has ,become com- grandchildren, you shquld not pressure
plicated and expensive. My parents have them to do so. Face the reality, and
visited me once in the last 12 years. rejoice in the fact that your husband's
Their excuses are pretty lame - the mother (bless her) will fill that void.
planes are too crowded, the trip is too Down the road, your parents will regret
long, who would care for the cat? Our their lack of interest. I guarantee it. And
relationship has deteriorated badly over your in-laws will revel in the pleasure
they derive from the grandchildren's
the years, and I am sad about it.
love.
My in-laws are wonderful, and just
Dear Ann Landers: When I was 17,
the opposite of my parents. My motherI
met
the man I inte nd to marry. When
in-law, who has much less money, visits
I was 20, we moved in ' together, and I

TIME OUT
FOR TIPS

Medicare preswptwn drug legislation is
caught in a furious election-year game of
catch- up, bid-up and one-up that almost
guarantees nothing will pass Congress in this
semon.
But that's not all bad. It will free up money
to help ailing hospitals and nursing homes and
revive chances for broad-scale Medicare
reform next year.
Medicare isn't the only object of positioning and bidding wars between presidential
candidates and the parties in Congress; Social
Securiry, education, patients' rights, taxes, guns
and hate crimes are also on the docket.
On the presidential level, Vice !;&gt;resident.AI
Gore has been playing catch-up to Texas Gov.
George W. Busli in virtually every category of
bidding, but in the protess, Gore is also trying
to play political one-upmanship.
Bush made across-the-board tax cuts a key.
item on his agenda. Now Gore has doubled
the size of his proposed cut from $250 billion
to $500 billion over 10 years, with the benefits targeted to lower- and middle-income
voters.
Bush proposed allowing workers to invest
some of their Social Security taxes in equity
markel!l. Now Gore has come up with "retirement savings-plus;• an investment ·entidement
plan that would give lower-income citizens
$3 for every $1 they save.
Congressional Republicans t)to11ght. up
"lockboxes" for Social Security and Medicare
revenues. They got credit for the Social Security version, but Gore grabbed the Medicare
idea and made it his. Now House Republicans want 'credit for getting it passed.
Bush was first out with tough education
accountability proposals. Gore has matched
and raised him with promises of considerably
more money, though Bush is adding extra billions by the day. In an· area ·where he was
behind Gore, Bush this week, came out with
an education technology initiative that even
retains a telephone surcharge often derided by

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Page A~ r
Tuesday, June 27. 20DO •

Reader says that she, for one, doesn't care about a potential future inheritance

'Esta.b6slieti in 1948

I

By the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

TUesdiiJ. June 27, 2000

'

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COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

rededicated in a service at 2 p.m.

CHESTER
Chester
Township Trustees, special
meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

POMEROY Winding
Trail Garden Club, 6 p.m., Tuesday. Members to meet at the
Park and Ride at Rocksprings.

TUESDAY,June 27

CHESTER Wildwood
Garden Club, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
tour of the garden of Kay Fick,
Greenup Lanes, Route 7,

POMEROY
RACO
meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m Star
Mill Park, Potluck dinner.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department,
immunization clinic, Tuesday, 911 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 East
Memorial Drive. Take children's
shot records. Children must be
accompanied by parent or legal
guardian.

•••

T~SDAY,June29

RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters, Thurs~
day, 7 p.m. at the high school.

•••

FRIDAY,June 30
POMEROY Veterans
Affairs Medical Center/Chillicothe will provid~ health care
enroUment Friday, 10 a.m. to
noon, and 1 to 2 p.m. at the Veterans Service Offic.e at 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. West
Virginia residents welcome.
Proof of military service
required at enrollment.

POMEROY - Meigs Local
School District Board of EducaThe Community Calendar
tion, public hearing, Thesday,
is published as a free ser6:30 p.m. for public review of
vice to non-profit group•
the district continuous improvement; followed by Meigs Local wishing to announce meetSchool District's regular meet- . ings and special events. The
cal41ndar is not designed to
ing at 7 p.m. in the office at 320
promote sales or fund raisEast Main Street, Pomeroy.
ers of any type. Items are
printed only as space perCOOLVILLE ~ Revival
mill
and cannot be guaranservices, Orange Christian
Ch,urch, Tuesday to Saturday, 7 teed to be printed a specifp.m . Sunday the church will be
ic number of days.

became pregnant. We do plan to get
married someday, but we are m no
hurry.
Here's the problem, and I don 't know
how to deal with it. My mother, who is
very religtous, was horrified when she
found out I was expecting a baby. She
always hated that we were living togethe r, and she demanded to know when we
were going to get married. I told her in
a very nice way, "Someday, but not now."
That was three years ago. Since then , she
has made no effort to see her grandson.
I am very hurt by this.
H ow can I explain to my mo th er that
she has no reason to be embarrassed by
my situation and that she ne eds to accept
her grandson? - Wou nded in L.A .
Dear Wounded: Your mother is
" punishing" you because you are living
with the father of your child and seem
to be in no hurry to marry. She finds this
unacceptabl e, and frankly, I ca n see her
point. While I do not condone her

refusal to see you or her grandson (her
loss, I might add), I, too, wonder why
you don't legalize your relationship for
the child's sake. This does not make a
whole lot of sense to me.
Gem ofthe Day (Credit the Prairie .
Rambler): They say it is better to be
poor and happy than rich and miserable,
but how about a compromise, like b ~f:rjg
moderately rich and just moody?
Is that Ann Landers col umn ,you
clipped years ago yeUow with age' Po~; a
copy of her most frequently req u~ sted
poems and essays, send a self- addressed,
long, business-size envelop e and a chec k
or money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann
Landers, P. O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
606 11 -0562. (In Canada, send $6.25 .) To
find out more about Ann Landers and
read her past columns, visit the Creators
Syndica te
web
page
at
www.creators.com.

SOCIETY NEWS
Hanisonville news
Mrs. Judy Coomer of Illinois and Mrs. Mary Felts of Michigan took
their parents,Mr. and Mrs.Virgil King, on a trip to Florida to visit their
uncle, Leo King.
On the way home they visited Coomer's father-in-law, Obie
Coomer, Sr., of Kentucky, and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dockery of Cincinnati.
Ray Alkire of Columbus spent the weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Alkire.
Jessica McKinney and Meagan McKinney of Canal Winchester,
recently spent a week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Lowery.
Mrs. Alpha Bailey, who has been in Riverside Hospital in Columbus has been moved to the Holzer Rehabilitation Center. She is slowly improving and enjoys getting cards.
Virginia Gibson spent the weekend with her sister, Juanita
Richards, in Dayton.
Evelyn (Wilson) Hammond, her two daughters and three grandchildren of !Uinois, along with her sister, Lore~;~e, of California, were
recent dinner guests of their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stanley of
Snowville. They also visited friends in the Pomeroy area.

The program "Human Rights" was given by Moore and the
women worked on a quilt for one of the church members.
,Several scriptures was read by Moore and The Lord's Prayer ·w,.as
given to close the meeting.
:..'.' .
Along with Moore and Stout, those attending the meeting wer9. , ,
Mary Lisle, Elma Louks, Ruth Crouch and M arie Houdashelt.
. ' .. ' ,

UMW women meet
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Asbury United Methodist Women
held their regular meeting at the church last week. "
President Hope Moore read a poem, "Fathers Ale Wonderful People:• and Jean Stout gave the secretary's report. There was 26 sick calls
reported
The group's annual picnic will be held July 11 at the home of Mary
Lisle. A dinner will be held at the

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Introclu~

Harvesting
strawberries
FOR AP SPECIAL 'IATUREI
NO\Y that the strawberry aea•on hu just about ended and
many stomachs have been filled
with this delicious fruit, let's look
at the coincidences that led to the
origin of the common garden
strawberry almost three centuries
ago.
This strawberry traces its lineage to two American species, the
Virginia strawberry and the
Chilean strawberry. The first is
native to the east coast of North
America. The second is native to
the west coast of North and
South America. The expanse of
the American continent was too
large ever to allow these two
species to "marry" under natural
conditions. So hdw and where
did these two species come
together?
It happened in Europe. The
Virginia strawberry was enjoyed
by early setders in the New World
and transplanted to gardens m
Europe by the 17th century.
Intrigue enters the story of
how the Chilean strawberry
made its way to Europe. Moving
the clock fotwanl to the early
18th century, we find French
King Louis XIV needing a spy to
observe Spanish fortifications in
Concepcion, Chile. For ihis task,
he chose Amedee Francois Frezier, who set sail on an armed merchant marine ship in 1712.
Amadee's posing as a merchant
marine enabled him to visit Spanish fortifications :is a tourist.
Secretly, he kept notes and made
sketches of ammunition storage
and escape routes. He also wrote
about the people, geography and
agriculture there.
One plant that caught his
fancy was the Chilean strawberry
which bore fruits larger than
those ·known' in Europe.

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�Page A 6 • Th9 Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Dictionary gets new words
NEW YORK (AP) - Unless you've been living on a desert
island for the past decade, you know what it is. But how do you
spell it?
"Dot-com" is preferred, according to the new edition of the
Random Ho'!se Webster's New College Dictionary. Or it can be
udot .com.~· but certainly not udotcom" or ".com."
According to Random House, the preferred terms are also
~·antiglare" (a type of headlight), "sky surfing" (aerial skateboarding),
"slamming" (change of long-distance service without customer's
permission) and "zettabyte" (one sextillion bytes).
Those are among the hundreds of words appearing for the first
time among 207,000 definitions in the 1999 edition of the dictionary due out next month.
· " It's very media-heavy," saidWendalyn Nichols, editorial director
for Random House References. "We just try to stay on top of current issues. Slang is the sexiest, but we also keep up with the latest
political leaders."
The dictionary will have competition from the other college die- ·
ponaries, including Merriam-Webster's, American Heritage and
~ebster's New World.
~ Random House's new words include ''24-7," "energy bar,"
\'megaplex," "fashionistas;· "Gen Y'ers" and "e-tailing." Only time
will tell how they weather the era.
Also included are "gaydar" (a homosexual's ability to spot another), "eye candy" (attractive person of limited merit) and "senior
moment" (brieflapse or moment of confusion).
: Some of the slang phrases included are "dead-cat bounce" (a
temporary recovery in stock prices after a steep decline) and "my
t&gt;ad!" (whoops).

Wallau named new ABC chief
: NEWYORK (AP) - ABC has a new top executive familiar with
~o~ppercuts and right crosses and not just through corporate
infighting.
: Alex Wallau , appointed president of the ABC television network
· on Monday, is also the network's on-air boxing analyst. He will continue in that job.
Wallau is a veteran ABC executive who has been interim chief at
~e network since Patricia Fili-Krushel left in March to join an
~nternet company. He reports to Robert Cillahan, president of the
~C broadcast group.
He takes over just as ABC completed an unprecedented third-tofirst jump in the season's ratings due largely to "Who Wants to Be a
Millionaire." Although the game show has brought in millions, some
critics believe ABC may be vulnerable if public enthusiasm fades
quickly.
" It's healthy short-term and [ believe it can be healthy longterm,"Wallau said. "We've got to find answep to a lot of important
issues. It can be done, but we need to be focused and alert and ereative."

Broadcast networks are in the process of redefining their relationships with affilia tes. Broadcasters are seeking cuts in the amount of
money they pay affiliated local stations to show their programs and,
ip some cases, want the stations to do the paying.
. Even though most ABC affiliates have contracts that last until
2004 or 2005, it doesn't mean ABC won't seek to renegotiate, Wallap said.
ABC also wants to change how it sells commercials, to convince
advertisers that they can buy ads on other ABC-owned properties,
like sports magazines affiliated with ESPN, when they advertise on
the network.

.''FREE''

Scientists say textbooks are big, Ideas they hold aren't
works;• George Nelson, director of the
WASHINGTON (AP) - Splashy color
Students lupt ltauy naming tJu
long-term math and science educadrawings of cells and word quizzes are staples
parts of cells might miss ltaming group's
tion
campaign,
Jaid in citing the texts' tenof U.S. high school biology textbooks, but
how
cells
worlc
and
how
tiW
might
dency to miss the big picture.
they do little to help students understand sciaffect
the
latut
cancer
rutarch.
The report comes as scientific advances
entific advances that are changing people's
such as the mapping of the human genetic
Jives, according to scientists who reviewed I 0
.AlMr'-' ~IMIDn
code raise imporsant public policy questions
top biology texts.
lor 111e AcMncernent 011c11noe
Students kept busy naming the parts of of heredity, and natural selection and evolu- that can't be answered with vocabulary
cells might miss learning how cells work and tion. The report said the books did not words: What genetic testing will the governhow that might affect the latest cancer encourage students to examine their ideas or ment allow? Or pay for? Or require?
"In a democracy, people should have a
research, the American Association for the relate lessons to hands-on experiments and
Advancement of Science contended Tuesday everyday life. It also concluded that the voice in malting these decisions, and that
as it gave all I 0 textbooks unsatisfactory rat- books covered too many subjects, focused on should come from an informed opinion
ings.
easy-to-test trivia and glossed over vital con- rather than just an emotional one," Nelson
The reviewers looked at how biology cepts.
said.
texts explained four key concepts in ~he dis- . "You wouldn't be asked to name all the
Reacting to the report, book publishers
cipline: cell structure and function, matter parts of an automobile when you are really said state standards drive the content of bioland energy transformations, molecular basis trying to understand how transportation ogy lessons.

Historians saY waming might
have saved many Italian Jews

Report says federal agencies aren't
domg enough to enforce disabilities act

WASHINGTON (AP) sages between Nazi secret service .
Secret intelligence documents officials in Rome and Berlin that
suggest Britain and the United were intercepted and decoded by
States knew several days before- British agents and shared with
hand in late 1943 that the Nazis U:S. intelligence agents.
were going to round up Rome's
One from Berlin on Oct. 11, .
Jews for "thorough eradication."
1943, said the "inunediate and
Now it's up to historians and thorough eradication of the Jews
analysts to debate whether lives in Italy" was in the interest of
could have been saved, officials "general security in Italy:•
said Monday at one of the largest
"The longer the delay, the
openings of declassified intelli- more the Jews ... have an opporgence records ever.
tunity (to escape) by moving to
"We now have a much better the houses of pro-Jewish Italians,''
picture of how the Holocaust in said the message ordering the
Italy began," said historian deportation "of the Jews without
Richard Breitman in a report he further delay."
co-authored for the U.S. governA message intercepted five
ment's Nazi War Criminals
days later from Rome said:
Records Interagency Working
"Actions against Jews started and
Group's release of some 400,000
finished today" and reported the
pages of intelligence records.
of more than 1,200 Jews.
seizure
"The release (of the docuNoting the "gap offour or five
ments) raises the historical question once again of what Allied days" before the order was exegovernments knew about the cuted, Naftali said British Prime
Holocaust during World War II Minister Winston Churchill or
and what might have been done ,American President Franklin
with information they possessed;' Roosevelt should have made, a ·
said Breitman ·and co-author statement warning the Jews.
"It is clear that had a statement
Timothy Naftali.
Their report was prepared for been made on the radio to the
the declassification of 400,000 effect that Allied forces feared for
pages of docurlfnts from the the safety of Romans, and particopice of Stt;ttegtc Services, the ularly the Jews of Rome, this
World War II predecessor to the might well have had an effect on
CIA.
decisions made by people to get
The documents included mes- out;' Naftali said.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ten
years after its enactment, the
Americans With Disabilities Act
is not being enforced aggressively enough by federal agencies, a study says.
The National Council of
Disability, an independent federal agency that makes policy
recommendations to the president and Congress, said Tuesday
that while agencies follow up
on complaints, they have been
"overly cautious, reactive and
lacking any coherent and unifying national strategy:•
The report cites underfunding, understaffing and the
bureaucracy culture as contributors to the problem, saying that
the "net impact has been to
allow the destructive effects of
discdmination to continue
without sufficient challenge in
some quarters."
The 1990 act prohibits discrimination against people with
disabilities, .and requires that
those people have access to
transportation and ' other public
accommodations.
Four federal agencies, the
Justice Department, Transportation Department, the Equal
Employment
Opportunity
Cortiltlission and the Federal
Communications Commission
ate the primary enforC:crs of the
act.

Help With
Medicare Expenses
Qualified
Beneficiaries
(called QMB):

Medicare
Medicaid

Health Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare
' Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co-

.

insurances(s) and deductibles
you are required to make as
part
of the
Medicare
Program.

Call Today!

•
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Specified
Low-Income
Medicare
Beneficiaries
Medicaid (ca)led SLMB):

1~800-992-2608

Or
992-2117

•
•

Tuesday, June 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

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

Meigs County
Department of
Job &amp; Family
Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
45760

Qualified Individuals - 1
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
This program provides the
same benefits as SLMB;
however,
the
income
standards are higher than
those allowed for SLMB.

Commonly asked
Questions:

More...
Help With
Q: Who determines whether
•
Me dlcare Expenses .· I am disabled?
· ~Q-..=u:.=a~liodl::lfi~e=d.;...'-=I~n=d:LljVl~·dlll!.lul&amp;lalusOL-..;;.•--..!!!2 A: Medicaid requires a
Medicaid (called QI-2);
disability determination
by the Social Security
Administration or by the
This program reimburses
Ohio Department of Job
you for the part. of the Part &amp; Family Services through
B premium that you have
its County Medical
Services (CMS).
already paid which went
toward home health care. Q Wh . th
h
at 1s e age w en I
.
.
:
You
will
receive
a
am considered "Aged"?
reimbursement check once a
year. The income limits are A: Age 65
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Q: What services are covered
by Medicaid?
Qualified Workin1 Disables
Individual (called QWDI);
A: Any of these services are
covered if they are
medically necessary for
This program pays for your
you:
Medicare Part A premium
Doctor Visits
only. QWDI can help you if
Hospital Care
you have lost· eligibility for
Immunizations
Substance .Abuse
Title ll disability benefits
Prescriptions
due to earnings.
Vision
Dental
Mental Health
Other...

•
;

•

•

In those agencies, the report
blames a Jack of leadership for
inconsistencies in enforcement.
Just within the Transportation
Department, the report says,
there are six sections that all
have different interpretations of
the Jaw, investigation methods
and priorities.
To fix these issues, the council recommends that the Justice
Department take a lead role in
ADA implementation across the
federal government, and the
other federal agencies should be
more aggressive ·in enfo~cing
ADA, as well as take part in
community outreach and education.
The council is not alone in
wanting more from the agencies
enforcing ADA. The American
Institute of Architects last week
called for "greater clarity and
certainty" from the Jus.tice
Department in the act's requirements. The industry group has
been frustrated with conflicting
statements fro·m state and federal government in building
codes.
"Architects have been striving to meet the intent of the
ADA since its adoptiop 10 years
ago, but can never be certain
they've met the requirements
unless they get sued," said R .K.
Stewart, a member of the AlA's
Accessibility Task Force.

•.

Inside:

•

Meigs girls hoop camp, Page B6.
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6 .

Page 81
Tuesday, June 17, 2000

'TuEsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Eastem physicals
set for June 28
EAST MEIGS - All Eastern
High School athletes in seventh
through 12th grades will be provided free spo rts physicals
Wednesday, June 28, at the VMH
in Pomeroy.
Physicals will be administered
from 8 a.m. until 11 a.m.
Physical cards and fall sports
packets may be picked up at the
Eastern High School office from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
Friday.
All students must obtain a
sports packet in order to participate in fall sports.

Feds plap to reclassify andro as a steroid drug
'•
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - ·President
Clinton's top drug policy adviser said the
muscle-building supplement that Mark
McGwire made famous sho ulil be classified as a steroid "within a few months."
"I've got to do something about andro,"
Barry M cCaffrey said in a speech to the
Citizenship Through Sports Alliance on
Monday. "I've got to get valid testing
completed, and I bet that's the way it
comes out: that andro is a steroid."
Androstenedione, comml'nly called
andro, is an unregulated food additive.
Sales soared in 1998, the \ie~r McGwire
hit a record 70 home runs for' the St. Louis
Cardinals, after it was reported that the

first baseman used it. McGwire stopped
LISing it last year.
McCaffrey said andro already meet' rwo
of three tests used by government laboratories to determine whether a substance is
a steroid.
" [ suspect we'll find that it meets the
third, although I have been saying that for
over a year now," McCaffrey said, admitting th at tests should have been finished
al ready.
If androstenedione does meet th e third
requirement, it would be declared a
steroid, illegal to use without a legitimate
medical reason.
Major League Baseball did not ban

andro despite a study it financed thar
found its use could be hazardous.
The NBA is considering a ban now. It
already is banned by the International
Olympic Committee, the NCAA, the
NFL and~ the men's and women's tennis
tours.

"We've regularly met with (baseball
officials) on a range of subjects, including
tlus," McCaffrey spokesman Robert Weiner said.
"T hey 're JUSt waiting for the feds. They
don't want to take the initiative on their
own. Certainly, other sports have taken an
injtiative."

Androstenedione su pplements are made

,,

Reds hold
off Cardinals

Mary Hope Memorial
Toumey set for July 19
ATHENS -The sixth ann ual
Mary Hope M emorial Women's
GolfTournament is scheduled for
July 19, at the Athens Country
C lub.
All proceeds from this year's
event will go to ben efit the
Appalachian Community Hospice.
The field is open to 64 golfers.
The entry fee is $55.
To register, call 740-592-1655.

CINCINNATI (AP) -The
new look was nice. The pitching
was even better.
After the Cincinnati Reds
hiked up their pants legs for
good luck and got a good per. forma nce from Denny Neagle,
their outlook was just a little bit
better, too.

Neagle pitched one of his best
games of the season when the
Reds needed it most, leading
them to a 3-2 victory Monday
in the opener of their make-orbreak se ries against St. Louis.
Trailing the Cardinals by B
I / 2 as the four- game series
opened, the Reds knew they
had to do something. Barry
Larkin, Ken Griffey Jr. and
Pokey R eese switched to old' style pants with legs that ended
just below the knee, showing off
their red socks.
Griffey and Dmitri Young
homered, the R eds moved to 7
1/2 back and the new look was
here to stay - for one more
day, anyway.
"Absolutely, dude," Larki n

Pastor Ron's football
training camp July 8
MASON, W.Va. - Pastor Ron
Branch of the Faith Baptist
C hurch, Mason, W.Va., will host
Bible study and a football tra·ining
cam~ on Saturday, July 8, from 9
a.m. to 1 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.
T hese sessions will be led by
Ron Branch II , defensive line
coach for Class AAA Musselman
High School. Branch is a 1998
graduate of Shepard Co1lege
wher he played middle guard and
was named a GTE Academic AllAmerican.
Re gistrJti.o n fee is $5 per fami ly the day of camp. Contact Pastor Branch at 304-773-5429 or
304-773-6151.

Wimbledon opens
in dramatic fashion
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Vince Spadea provided the
most drama on th e opening day
of Wimbledon by outlasting
14th-seeded Greg Ru sedski 6-3,
6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-7 (8), 9-7, ending
the longest losing streak in tennis
history at 2 1 matches .
Anna Kournikova pulled off
th e firsf mild upset of the
women's tournament by knocking o ut l Oth-seeded Sandrin e
Testud 7-5,5-7,6-4.
Two other seeded players went
out, men's No. 16 Nicolas
Lapentti and women's No. 15
Barbara Schett.
Top seeds Pete Sampras and
Martina Hingis had easy firstround wins. Sampras cruised to a
6-4, 6-4, 6-2 victory over Jiri
Vanek, extending his Wimbledon
record to 47-1 since 1993. Hingis
beat Angeles Montoli o 6-1, 6-2.
Other seeded men's winners
were No. 6 Cedric Pioline, No. 9
Thomas Enqvist and No. 11
Richard Krajicek .
Other seeded women's winners
. were N o. 5 Venus Williams, No. 8
Serena Williams and N o. 11 Anke
Huber.

•••••
Send Meigs County sports
news to the Sentinel by fax at
992-2157, or email to galtribune@eurekanet.com.
Contact sports editor Andrew'
Carter at 992-5287, ext. 21.

of a naturally occurring steroid hormone.
The body metabolizes andro into te.stosterone, which is considered a steroid.
When supplements of testosterone are
taken in hi gh doses, they are known to
have an anabolic effecr - increasing muscle size and mength.
McCaffrey's comments came after he
gave the keynote address at a conference
on performance-enhancing drug use
among athletes, sponsored by the Citizenship Through Sports Alliance.
The alliance co mprises major amateur
and professional sports leagues, including
. the U.S. Olympic Committee and the
National Football League.

said. " I' m not superstitious o r

anything, but are you kidding
me?"
Neagle is superstiti ous as well,
· but kept his pants legs at anklelength and showed that luck has
more to do with pitching th an
tailoring. He gave up Eric
Davis' two-run homer but little
else in 7 2-3 innings.
"When you get good pitching, you've got a chance to
win," manager Jack McKeon
said. " We got great pitching."
Neagle (6-2) felt some
urgency to be great. The Reds
had
lost 14 ' of 18 heading into
WINNING PITCHER Neagle pitched 7 2/3 innings to pick up the win for Cincinnati Monday as
the series, starting speculatio n
the Reds defeated St. Loulsti3'2· (AP)

that Neagle - a free agent after
the season - could be traded in
July if things didn't turn around.
T he left-hander gave up seven
hits, got Shawon Dunston to fly
out with the bases loaded in the
seve nth and once again left
Mark McG wire literally shaking
his head when he returned to
the bat rack.
"It's huge," Neagle said. "You
do n't want to panic and say it's
make-or- brea k for us, but if
those guys would sweep or win
three of four, obviously we'd be
in a bad situation.
" I didn't want to get a loss in
that first one and all of a sudden
my name is going around in
trade rumors. I've said it before:
I want to be around here."
The Cardi nals had won 1 1 of
13 headi ng into the series and
started the game off with a first pitch single by J.D. Drew. Jim
Edmonds singled him to seco nd
with two outs, and it looked like
the Reds were in trouble again.
But Neagle struck out MeGwi re on a 3-2 fastball and Drew
was Out trying to steal third on
the pitch , ending the threat anff
setting the tone.
McGwire, who had homered
in each of his last three games,
ended up going l -for-3 against
Neagle with a single that
extended his hitting streak to 10
games. He also struck out in his
first two at-bats, leaving him 3for-18 career agai nst Neagle
with nine strikeouts.
ul 've been able to have so me
success against him. 1 don't like
to talk about it," Neagle said.
"He may be the best home run

Pluse su Reds. Pace M

TRI~Cq 1UNTY JUNIOR GOLF
1

Hamisch continues:.
Cromley,~~arns two-stroke win to make progress
Fruth trophy. Nathan Fowler of
Riverside rolled in a putt on the
So far this year, cloudy threat- second hol e to edge by Bray
ening weather has been t~ Shamblin of Cliffside in that
norm for the three rounds of well-played duel.
Tri-County Junior Go lf. But, the
Then, Drew Shader was one
young linksters have turned each stroke behind them for fourth
day into bright, shining days · place, just ahead of Drew Bush,
with their exuberant, excitin~ Nathan Plantz and Jill Sallaz.
play.
.
.'.
"
in the 13-14 age bracket, the
The thtrd sessiOn was another deadlock for leadership was brofine example as the youthful ken during the round. Jeremy
swmgers played at Pme Htlls m , Banks of Pine Hills toured his
' home course w ith a nice round
Pomeroy yesterday.
C lose c?mp etition and classy of 40 to win the first place Fruth
camaraden e echpsed the dark trophy and grab the division lead
clouds, nary a drop of ram fe ll, 11 with 26 points.
an d age diVIsiOn races narrowed,
Jared Simms of Point Pleasant
conSiderably.
~won runner-up honors at 44,
Bryan Cromley of HVCC fin- - l.lrett Doeffinger was third with
ished strongly to post the low 1 ~6. and Heath Stanley captured
round of th e day and propel fourth by posti ng 47.
htm.1elf mto a formtdabl e lead
Stanley stands second in the
among the prcnuer 15-17 group. division chase with 20 points in
Cromley posted a dandy 39 what looks to be a two-way batfor the first place Fruth .Pharma- tie tor th e top award now.
cy trophy to forge a leading 24
Another two-player race has
pomts m the dtvtston.
formed in the 11 -12 bracket .
· Right on the heels of the Eric Milhoan surged ahead with
leader wete two others at 41, and a first place finish this we~.k &gt;t
a sudden -wm playoff was 3~ which makes his division required for the secon.d place Jea'ding total 29 points . Brenton
BY fRANK CAPEHART
OVP CORRESPONDENT

&lt;ll

•

C lark won the second place
Fruth trophy at 57, Evan Dunn
was third with 60.
Ryan Young snared fourth at
61 and is th e division runner-up
in standings with 21 points . O ne
stroke behind him came Mike
Lavender, just ahead of Garreth
Kaylor and Drew R eed .
It is really a tight battle in the
10 and under division with four
possible contenders.
Brandon Burnette surged into
th e lead with· a first place 58
strokes at Pine Hills, while Justin
Arnold won the second place
trophy with 69.
In th e point standings, Burnette leads with 19, just ono
ahead of Arnold at I B.
.Eth an Greene and lluddy
R ose tied for third this we ek
show 14 and 11 points respectively in th e division race.
Th e Juniors take off on Monday, July 3, but resume play at
Cliffside in Gallipolis on Monday, July 10, at Ba.m.
It should be 'another exciting
round that will determine division winners for the finale at
HVCC on July 17.

C INC INNATI (AP)
Asked what he thought of his
one and only minor league
rehab start, Cincinnati Reds
right-hander Pete Harnisch
responded that it was a matter of
perspective.
"If you look at it as a guy
who's pitching 15 to 17 starts
into the season, I'd say it was
pretty lousy," Harnisch said
Monday. "If you look at it like a
guy who hasn't been out there
for two months, I'd say it was
pretty good."
Harnisch, on the disabled list
since May 6 with a weak pitching shou lder, threw 5 1-3
innings for' Triple-A Louisville
on Sunday. He gave up six hits
and six runs - two earned while striking ou t six.
He's still trying to find his
1
touch after being ~way from the
mound for so long.
"It's just a question of trying
to get sharp," he said. " It's headed in the right direction. It \Ya S
a positive step. It was the least I
expected, maybe better th an
what I expected. It's going to

••

take some starts to get into a

rhythm."
Those starts are going to
come for the Reds, who plan to .
use him sometime next weekend during a series in Arizona .

Harnisch is willing to try,
though he's not sure exactly
what to expect.
"It's a pretty quick process, but
we'll learn on the go," he said.
Even if he's not all the way
back, his teammates are looking
forward to having him back.
"Just getting his leadership
back in the rotation will help,"
closer Danny Graves said. "lt
was tough for him to be on the
disabled list. He didn't feel like
he was part of the team."
Winchester ready to rifle
Reliever Scott Win chester was
getting ups et as he sat on the
bench for Triple-A Louisville
watching other pitchers warm
up Sunday.
"1 was thinking, 'Why am 1
not getting in this ga me? This is
the situation I've been pitching

Pluse su Notes, Pllp M

,,

�Page A 6 • Th9 Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Dictionary gets new words
NEW YORK (AP) - Unless you've been living on a desert
island for the past decade, you know what it is. But how do you
spell it?
"Dot-com" is preferred, according to the new edition of the
Random Ho'!se Webster's New College Dictionary. Or it can be
udot .com.~· but certainly not udotcom" or ".com."
According to Random House, the preferred terms are also
~·antiglare" (a type of headlight), "sky surfing" (aerial skateboarding),
"slamming" (change of long-distance service without customer's
permission) and "zettabyte" (one sextillion bytes).
Those are among the hundreds of words appearing for the first
time among 207,000 definitions in the 1999 edition of the dictionary due out next month.
· " It's very media-heavy," saidWendalyn Nichols, editorial director
for Random House References. "We just try to stay on top of current issues. Slang is the sexiest, but we also keep up with the latest
political leaders."
The dictionary will have competition from the other college die- ·
ponaries, including Merriam-Webster's, American Heritage and
~ebster's New World.
~ Random House's new words include ''24-7," "energy bar,"
\'megaplex," "fashionistas;· "Gen Y'ers" and "e-tailing." Only time
will tell how they weather the era.
Also included are "gaydar" (a homosexual's ability to spot another), "eye candy" (attractive person of limited merit) and "senior
moment" (brieflapse or moment of confusion).
: Some of the slang phrases included are "dead-cat bounce" (a
temporary recovery in stock prices after a steep decline) and "my
t&gt;ad!" (whoops).

Wallau named new ABC chief
: NEWYORK (AP) - ABC has a new top executive familiar with
~o~ppercuts and right crosses and not just through corporate
infighting.
: Alex Wallau , appointed president of the ABC television network
· on Monday, is also the network's on-air boxing analyst. He will continue in that job.
Wallau is a veteran ABC executive who has been interim chief at
~e network since Patricia Fili-Krushel left in March to join an
~nternet company. He reports to Robert Cillahan, president of the
~C broadcast group.
He takes over just as ABC completed an unprecedented third-tofirst jump in the season's ratings due largely to "Who Wants to Be a
Millionaire." Although the game show has brought in millions, some
critics believe ABC may be vulnerable if public enthusiasm fades
quickly.
" It's healthy short-term and [ believe it can be healthy longterm,"Wallau said. "We've got to find answep to a lot of important
issues. It can be done, but we need to be focused and alert and ereative."

Broadcast networks are in the process of redefining their relationships with affilia tes. Broadcasters are seeking cuts in the amount of
money they pay affiliated local stations to show their programs and,
ip some cases, want the stations to do the paying.
. Even though most ABC affiliates have contracts that last until
2004 or 2005, it doesn't mean ABC won't seek to renegotiate, Wallap said.
ABC also wants to change how it sells commercials, to convince
advertisers that they can buy ads on other ABC-owned properties,
like sports magazines affiliated with ESPN, when they advertise on
the network.

.''FREE''

Scientists say textbooks are big, Ideas they hold aren't
works;• George Nelson, director of the
WASHINGTON (AP) - Splashy color
Students lupt ltauy naming tJu
long-term math and science educadrawings of cells and word quizzes are staples
parts of cells might miss ltaming group's
tion
campaign,
Jaid in citing the texts' tenof U.S. high school biology textbooks, but
how
cells
worlc
and
how
tiW
might
dency to miss the big picture.
they do little to help students understand sciaffect
the
latut
cancer
rutarch.
The report comes as scientific advances
entific advances that are changing people's
such as the mapping of the human genetic
Jives, according to scientists who reviewed I 0
.AlMr'-' ~IMIDn
code raise imporsant public policy questions
top biology texts.
lor 111e AcMncernent 011c11noe
Students kept busy naming the parts of of heredity, and natural selection and evolu- that can't be answered with vocabulary
cells might miss learning how cells work and tion. The report said the books did not words: What genetic testing will the governhow that might affect the latest cancer encourage students to examine their ideas or ment allow? Or pay for? Or require?
"In a democracy, people should have a
research, the American Association for the relate lessons to hands-on experiments and
Advancement of Science contended Tuesday everyday life. It also concluded that the voice in malting these decisions, and that
as it gave all I 0 textbooks unsatisfactory rat- books covered too many subjects, focused on should come from an informed opinion
ings.
easy-to-test trivia and glossed over vital con- rather than just an emotional one," Nelson
The reviewers looked at how biology cepts.
said.
texts explained four key concepts in ~he dis- . "You wouldn't be asked to name all the
Reacting to the report, book publishers
cipline: cell structure and function, matter parts of an automobile when you are really said state standards drive the content of bioland energy transformations, molecular basis trying to understand how transportation ogy lessons.

Historians saY waming might
have saved many Italian Jews

Report says federal agencies aren't
domg enough to enforce disabilities act

WASHINGTON (AP) sages between Nazi secret service .
Secret intelligence documents officials in Rome and Berlin that
suggest Britain and the United were intercepted and decoded by
States knew several days before- British agents and shared with
hand in late 1943 that the Nazis U:S. intelligence agents.
were going to round up Rome's
One from Berlin on Oct. 11, .
Jews for "thorough eradication."
1943, said the "inunediate and
Now it's up to historians and thorough eradication of the Jews
analysts to debate whether lives in Italy" was in the interest of
could have been saved, officials "general security in Italy:•
said Monday at one of the largest
"The longer the delay, the
openings of declassified intelli- more the Jews ... have an opporgence records ever.
tunity (to escape) by moving to
"We now have a much better the houses of pro-Jewish Italians,''
picture of how the Holocaust in said the message ordering the
Italy began," said historian deportation "of the Jews without
Richard Breitman in a report he further delay."
co-authored for the U.S. governA message intercepted five
ment's Nazi War Criminals
days later from Rome said:
Records Interagency Working
"Actions against Jews started and
Group's release of some 400,000
finished today" and reported the
pages of intelligence records.
of more than 1,200 Jews.
seizure
"The release (of the docuNoting the "gap offour or five
ments) raises the historical question once again of what Allied days" before the order was exegovernments knew about the cuted, Naftali said British Prime
Holocaust during World War II Minister Winston Churchill or
and what might have been done ,American President Franklin
with information they possessed;' Roosevelt should have made, a ·
said Breitman ·and co-author statement warning the Jews.
"It is clear that had a statement
Timothy Naftali.
Their report was prepared for been made on the radio to the
the declassification of 400,000 effect that Allied forces feared for
pages of docurlfnts from the the safety of Romans, and particopice of Stt;ttegtc Services, the ularly the Jews of Rome, this
World War II predecessor to the might well have had an effect on
CIA.
decisions made by people to get
The documents included mes- out;' Naftali said.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ten
years after its enactment, the
Americans With Disabilities Act
is not being enforced aggressively enough by federal agencies, a study says.
The National Council of
Disability, an independent federal agency that makes policy
recommendations to the president and Congress, said Tuesday
that while agencies follow up
on complaints, they have been
"overly cautious, reactive and
lacking any coherent and unifying national strategy:•
The report cites underfunding, understaffing and the
bureaucracy culture as contributors to the problem, saying that
the "net impact has been to
allow the destructive effects of
discdmination to continue
without sufficient challenge in
some quarters."
The 1990 act prohibits discrimination against people with
disabilities, .and requires that
those people have access to
transportation and ' other public
accommodations.
Four federal agencies, the
Justice Department, Transportation Department, the Equal
Employment
Opportunity
Cortiltlission and the Federal
Communications Commission
ate the primary enforC:crs of the
act.

Help With
Medicare Expenses
Qualified
Beneficiaries
(called QMB):

Medicare
Medicaid

Health Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare
' Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co-

.

insurances(s) and deductibles
you are required to make as
part
of the
Medicare
Program.

Call Today!

•
•

Specified
Low-Income
Medicare
Beneficiaries
Medicaid (ca)led SLMB):

1~800-992-2608

Or
992-2117

•
•

Tuesday, June 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

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

Meigs County
Department of
Job &amp; Family
Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
45760

Qualified Individuals - 1
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
This program provides the
same benefits as SLMB;
however,
the
income
standards are higher than
those allowed for SLMB.

Commonly asked
Questions:

More...
Help With
Q: Who determines whether
•
Me dlcare Expenses .· I am disabled?
· ~Q-..=u:.=a~liodl::lfi~e=d.;...'-=I~n=d:LljVl~·dlll!.lul&amp;lalusOL-..;;.•--..!!!2 A: Medicaid requires a
Medicaid (called QI-2);
disability determination
by the Social Security
Administration or by the
This program reimburses
Ohio Department of Job
you for the part. of the Part &amp; Family Services through
B premium that you have
its County Medical
Services (CMS).
already paid which went
toward home health care. Q Wh . th
h
at 1s e age w en I
.
.
:
You
will
receive
a
am considered "Aged"?
reimbursement check once a
year. The income limits are A: Age 65
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Q: What services are covered
by Medicaid?
Qualified Workin1 Disables
Individual (called QWDI);
A: Any of these services are
covered if they are
medically necessary for
This program pays for your
you:
Medicare Part A premium
Doctor Visits
only. QWDI can help you if
Hospital Care
you have lost· eligibility for
Immunizations
Substance .Abuse
Title ll disability benefits
Prescriptions
due to earnings.
Vision
Dental
Mental Health
Other...

•
;

•

•

In those agencies, the report
blames a Jack of leadership for
inconsistencies in enforcement.
Just within the Transportation
Department, the report says,
there are six sections that all
have different interpretations of
the Jaw, investigation methods
and priorities.
To fix these issues, the council recommends that the Justice
Department take a lead role in
ADA implementation across the
federal government, and the
other federal agencies should be
more aggressive ·in enfo~cing
ADA, as well as take part in
community outreach and education.
The council is not alone in
wanting more from the agencies
enforcing ADA. The American
Institute of Architects last week
called for "greater clarity and
certainty" from the Jus.tice
Department in the act's requirements. The industry group has
been frustrated with conflicting
statements fro·m state and federal government in building
codes.
"Architects have been striving to meet the intent of the
ADA since its adoptiop 10 years
ago, but can never be certain
they've met the requirements
unless they get sued," said R .K.
Stewart, a member of the AlA's
Accessibility Task Force.

•.

Inside:

•

Meigs girls hoop camp, Page B6.
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6 .

Page 81
Tuesday, June 17, 2000

'TuEsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Eastem physicals
set for June 28
EAST MEIGS - All Eastern
High School athletes in seventh
through 12th grades will be provided free spo rts physicals
Wednesday, June 28, at the VMH
in Pomeroy.
Physicals will be administered
from 8 a.m. until 11 a.m.
Physical cards and fall sports
packets may be picked up at the
Eastern High School office from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
Friday.
All students must obtain a
sports packet in order to participate in fall sports.

Feds plap to reclassify andro as a steroid drug
'•
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - ·President
Clinton's top drug policy adviser said the
muscle-building supplement that Mark
McGwire made famous sho ulil be classified as a steroid "within a few months."
"I've got to do something about andro,"
Barry M cCaffrey said in a speech to the
Citizenship Through Sports Alliance on
Monday. "I've got to get valid testing
completed, and I bet that's the way it
comes out: that andro is a steroid."
Androstenedione, comml'nly called
andro, is an unregulated food additive.
Sales soared in 1998, the \ie~r McGwire
hit a record 70 home runs for' the St. Louis
Cardinals, after it was reported that the

first baseman used it. McGwire stopped
LISing it last year.
McCaffrey said andro already meet' rwo
of three tests used by government laboratories to determine whether a substance is
a steroid.
" [ suspect we'll find that it meets the
third, although I have been saying that for
over a year now," McCaffrey said, admitting th at tests should have been finished
al ready.
If androstenedione does meet th e third
requirement, it would be declared a
steroid, illegal to use without a legitimate
medical reason.
Major League Baseball did not ban

andro despite a study it financed thar
found its use could be hazardous.
The NBA is considering a ban now. It
already is banned by the International
Olympic Committee, the NCAA, the
NFL and~ the men's and women's tennis
tours.

"We've regularly met with (baseball
officials) on a range of subjects, including
tlus," McCaffrey spokesman Robert Weiner said.
"T hey 're JUSt waiting for the feds. They
don't want to take the initiative on their
own. Certainly, other sports have taken an
injtiative."

Androstenedione su pplements are made

,,

Reds hold
off Cardinals

Mary Hope Memorial
Toumey set for July 19
ATHENS -The sixth ann ual
Mary Hope M emorial Women's
GolfTournament is scheduled for
July 19, at the Athens Country
C lub.
All proceeds from this year's
event will go to ben efit the
Appalachian Community Hospice.
The field is open to 64 golfers.
The entry fee is $55.
To register, call 740-592-1655.

CINCINNATI (AP) -The
new look was nice. The pitching
was even better.
After the Cincinnati Reds
hiked up their pants legs for
good luck and got a good per. forma nce from Denny Neagle,
their outlook was just a little bit
better, too.

Neagle pitched one of his best
games of the season when the
Reds needed it most, leading
them to a 3-2 victory Monday
in the opener of their make-orbreak se ries against St. Louis.
Trailing the Cardinals by B
I / 2 as the four- game series
opened, the Reds knew they
had to do something. Barry
Larkin, Ken Griffey Jr. and
Pokey R eese switched to old' style pants with legs that ended
just below the knee, showing off
their red socks.
Griffey and Dmitri Young
homered, the R eds moved to 7
1/2 back and the new look was
here to stay - for one more
day, anyway.
"Absolutely, dude," Larki n

Pastor Ron's football
training camp July 8
MASON, W.Va. - Pastor Ron
Branch of the Faith Baptist
C hurch, Mason, W.Va., will host
Bible study and a football tra·ining
cam~ on Saturday, July 8, from 9
a.m. to 1 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.
T hese sessions will be led by
Ron Branch II , defensive line
coach for Class AAA Musselman
High School. Branch is a 1998
graduate of Shepard Co1lege
wher he played middle guard and
was named a GTE Academic AllAmerican.
Re gistrJti.o n fee is $5 per fami ly the day of camp. Contact Pastor Branch at 304-773-5429 or
304-773-6151.

Wimbledon opens
in dramatic fashion
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Vince Spadea provided the
most drama on th e opening day
of Wimbledon by outlasting
14th-seeded Greg Ru sedski 6-3,
6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-7 (8), 9-7, ending
the longest losing streak in tennis
history at 2 1 matches .
Anna Kournikova pulled off
th e firsf mild upset of the
women's tournament by knocking o ut l Oth-seeded Sandrin e
Testud 7-5,5-7,6-4.
Two other seeded players went
out, men's No. 16 Nicolas
Lapentti and women's No. 15
Barbara Schett.
Top seeds Pete Sampras and
Martina Hingis had easy firstround wins. Sampras cruised to a
6-4, 6-4, 6-2 victory over Jiri
Vanek, extending his Wimbledon
record to 47-1 since 1993. Hingis
beat Angeles Montoli o 6-1, 6-2.
Other seeded men's winners
were No. 6 Cedric Pioline, No. 9
Thomas Enqvist and No. 11
Richard Krajicek .
Other seeded women's winners
. were N o. 5 Venus Williams, No. 8
Serena Williams and N o. 11 Anke
Huber.

•••••
Send Meigs County sports
news to the Sentinel by fax at
992-2157, or email to galtribune@eurekanet.com.
Contact sports editor Andrew'
Carter at 992-5287, ext. 21.

of a naturally occurring steroid hormone.
The body metabolizes andro into te.stosterone, which is considered a steroid.
When supplements of testosterone are
taken in hi gh doses, they are known to
have an anabolic effecr - increasing muscle size and mength.
McCaffrey's comments came after he
gave the keynote address at a conference
on performance-enhancing drug use
among athletes, sponsored by the Citizenship Through Sports Alliance.
The alliance co mprises major amateur
and professional sports leagues, including
. the U.S. Olympic Committee and the
National Football League.

said. " I' m not superstitious o r

anything, but are you kidding
me?"
Neagle is superstiti ous as well,
· but kept his pants legs at anklelength and showed that luck has
more to do with pitching th an
tailoring. He gave up Eric
Davis' two-run homer but little
else in 7 2-3 innings.
"When you get good pitching, you've got a chance to
win," manager Jack McKeon
said. " We got great pitching."
Neagle (6-2) felt some
urgency to be great. The Reds
had
lost 14 ' of 18 heading into
WINNING PITCHER Neagle pitched 7 2/3 innings to pick up the win for Cincinnati Monday as
the series, starting speculatio n
the Reds defeated St. Loulsti3'2· (AP)

that Neagle - a free agent after
the season - could be traded in
July if things didn't turn around.
T he left-hander gave up seven
hits, got Shawon Dunston to fly
out with the bases loaded in the
seve nth and once again left
Mark McG wire literally shaking
his head when he returned to
the bat rack.
"It's huge," Neagle said. "You
do n't want to panic and say it's
make-or- brea k for us, but if
those guys would sweep or win
three of four, obviously we'd be
in a bad situation.
" I didn't want to get a loss in
that first one and all of a sudden
my name is going around in
trade rumors. I've said it before:
I want to be around here."
The Cardi nals had won 1 1 of
13 headi ng into the series and
started the game off with a first pitch single by J.D. Drew. Jim
Edmonds singled him to seco nd
with two outs, and it looked like
the Reds were in trouble again.
But Neagle struck out MeGwi re on a 3-2 fastball and Drew
was Out trying to steal third on
the pitch , ending the threat anff
setting the tone.
McGwire, who had homered
in each of his last three games,
ended up going l -for-3 against
Neagle with a single that
extended his hitting streak to 10
games. He also struck out in his
first two at-bats, leaving him 3for-18 career agai nst Neagle
with nine strikeouts.
ul 've been able to have so me
success against him. 1 don't like
to talk about it," Neagle said.
"He may be the best home run

Pluse su Reds. Pace M

TRI~Cq 1UNTY JUNIOR GOLF
1

Hamisch continues:.
Cromley,~~arns two-stroke win to make progress
Fruth trophy. Nathan Fowler of
Riverside rolled in a putt on the
So far this year, cloudy threat- second hol e to edge by Bray
ening weather has been t~ Shamblin of Cliffside in that
norm for the three rounds of well-played duel.
Tri-County Junior Go lf. But, the
Then, Drew Shader was one
young linksters have turned each stroke behind them for fourth
day into bright, shining days · place, just ahead of Drew Bush,
with their exuberant, excitin~ Nathan Plantz and Jill Sallaz.
play.
.
.'.
"
in the 13-14 age bracket, the
The thtrd sessiOn was another deadlock for leadership was brofine example as the youthful ken during the round. Jeremy
swmgers played at Pme Htlls m , Banks of Pine Hills toured his
' home course w ith a nice round
Pomeroy yesterday.
C lose c?mp etition and classy of 40 to win the first place Fruth
camaraden e echpsed the dark trophy and grab the division lead
clouds, nary a drop of ram fe ll, 11 with 26 points.
an d age diVIsiOn races narrowed,
Jared Simms of Point Pleasant
conSiderably.
~won runner-up honors at 44,
Bryan Cromley of HVCC fin- - l.lrett Doeffinger was third with
ished strongly to post the low 1 ~6. and Heath Stanley captured
round of th e day and propel fourth by posti ng 47.
htm.1elf mto a formtdabl e lead
Stanley stands second in the
among the prcnuer 15-17 group. division chase with 20 points in
Cromley posted a dandy 39 what looks to be a two-way batfor the first place Fruth .Pharma- tie tor th e top award now.
cy trophy to forge a leading 24
Another two-player race has
pomts m the dtvtston.
formed in the 11 -12 bracket .
· Right on the heels of the Eric Milhoan surged ahead with
leader wete two others at 41, and a first place finish this we~.k &gt;t
a sudden -wm playoff was 3~ which makes his division required for the secon.d place Jea'ding total 29 points . Brenton
BY fRANK CAPEHART
OVP CORRESPONDENT

&lt;ll

•

C lark won the second place
Fruth trophy at 57, Evan Dunn
was third with 60.
Ryan Young snared fourth at
61 and is th e division runner-up
in standings with 21 points . O ne
stroke behind him came Mike
Lavender, just ahead of Garreth
Kaylor and Drew R eed .
It is really a tight battle in the
10 and under division with four
possible contenders.
Brandon Burnette surged into
th e lead with· a first place 58
strokes at Pine Hills, while Justin
Arnold won the second place
trophy with 69.
In th e point standings, Burnette leads with 19, just ono
ahead of Arnold at I B.
.Eth an Greene and lluddy
R ose tied for third this we ek
show 14 and 11 points respectively in th e division race.
Th e Juniors take off on Monday, July 3, but resume play at
Cliffside in Gallipolis on Monday, July 10, at Ba.m.
It should be 'another exciting
round that will determine division winners for the finale at
HVCC on July 17.

C INC INNATI (AP)
Asked what he thought of his
one and only minor league
rehab start, Cincinnati Reds
right-hander Pete Harnisch
responded that it was a matter of
perspective.
"If you look at it as a guy
who's pitching 15 to 17 starts
into the season, I'd say it was
pretty lousy," Harnisch said
Monday. "If you look at it like a
guy who hasn't been out there
for two months, I'd say it was
pretty good."
Harnisch, on the disabled list
since May 6 with a weak pitching shou lder, threw 5 1-3
innings for' Triple-A Louisville
on Sunday. He gave up six hits
and six runs - two earned while striking ou t six.
He's still trying to find his
1
touch after being ~way from the
mound for so long.
"It's just a question of trying
to get sharp," he said. " It's headed in the right direction. It \Ya S
a positive step. It was the least I
expected, maybe better th an
what I expected. It's going to

••

take some starts to get into a

rhythm."
Those starts are going to
come for the Reds, who plan to .
use him sometime next weekend during a series in Arizona .

Harnisch is willing to try,
though he's not sure exactly
what to expect.
"It's a pretty quick process, but
we'll learn on the go," he said.
Even if he's not all the way
back, his teammates are looking
forward to having him back.
"Just getting his leadership
back in the rotation will help,"
closer Danny Graves said. "lt
was tough for him to be on the
disabled list. He didn't feel like
he was part of the team."
Winchester ready to rifle
Reliever Scott Win chester was
getting ups et as he sat on the
bench for Triple-A Louisville
watching other pitchers warm
up Sunday.
"1 was thinking, 'Why am 1
not getting in this ga me? This is
the situation I've been pitching

Pluse su Notes, Pllp M

,,

�Tuesday June 27, 2000

P9 B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 27 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

520

Sporting
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which Is n v1o atlon or the
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.So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today.
KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlllhl

M/101
Public Notlca

nlcnnecllha a dwe ngs
advertised n lh I nOWipapa
a e ava abe on an equa
opportunity basil

PUBUC NOTICI
Thll Ia to notify the general
public thll the 2000 10001
budgtt lor the Vllllga of
Rutland Rutland Ohio will
be IVIIIIble lor publiC
ravlaw ancl oomment from
June zs aooo until July 10
2000 at the Rutland VIllage

Part time SMT experience
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1 00 p m tho dlly btfono lilt ICI
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POST"L JOBS $48 323 00 VA
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annual budgtl lor the year
2001 ahall be held on the
5th d1y of July aooo ot 7 30
p m at tha Townahlp
Garage on Joppo Road
The budgot moy be vl-d
11 the home of the clerk by
lppolniiiNinl alter the 25th
of June
(8) 271tc

More quest ons? Cal the
Alzhe mer s profess onals at
Seen c H1lls Nurs1ng Center for
more nformatlon (740) 446 7150
Scenic H Is 'The A zhe me s
Experets

PUBUC NOTICE
Orange Townahlp will
hold 1 Public Hearing on
the propoaed Budget lor
2001 on July e 2000 11 7 30
p m at the home of the
clerk Oaltl Follrod
(8)2711c

999 Yamaha YZF 800 R 2000
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PUBLIC NOTICE

FARM SUPPLIES
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Dad~~&amp;we

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Hrs

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A zhe mer s d saase who wander
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In Memory of
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Woltmor• o ~ uc on It •"
'•!'II''"'
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Alzheimer

K ens o a good home 7 weeks
old 740-44$ 08 9

day before tht ad It to run
Sunday 6 Monday ed t on
1 OOpm Foidty

0

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Dfnct

Send Resume App ca ona To
Aequo! ona F nt Jewt y 15
Second Av1nue Ga po a OH
4!831 Or Fax To 740-«8-2800

ATTENTION
Ea n On ne ncame
$500 $7 500 !Mon h
'lfflw pcpays com

All Yard SaltJ Mutt Bl Paid In
Advance Dead ne 1 OOpm the

Help Wanted

P!eaaant \Iaiiey Hospital

Ab t To Ma nage 0 he • And
Have Sa ea Ab y Some Com
puto Sk 1 Rtqu td Sa 1 y And
aoruo P ua Bentli Peckago

!NOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommends tha you do bus
ness w h peop e you know and
NOT o send money h augh the
rna un you ha e n es gated
he aHenng

70

AI ea esta a advertla ng n
1h I -PIO I IUIJIOCIIO
1ht Flderal Fa Housing Act
ol1te8 which makn k ftega
to advert se any preference
I mila ion o d scrlmlnatlon
based on ace coo e gkm
sex ami aJ sta. us o na ona
orlg n or any n entlon o
make any such pre e ence
mlta iOn o d scrim nation

Apartments
lor Rent

110

1989 Day ona ES lots ot new
parlsa Ht1 una grtll $9150 080
304-e7!Hl693

Bulrdlng
Supplies

550

ANNOUNCEMENTS

710 Autoa for Sale

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

DROWNING

IN~D~EBifTnl--~~~~

No QuaiHing Non profit debt
consolidation Bad/No credh
Save $1DGO In ntereall
Glbton Truat Inc

C&amp;C Gent 1 Home M1 n
enenct P1 nt ng Y ny 1 d ng
carpent v doo a w ndowe be Yll
mob 1 home repa and mo 1 Fo
" 11 ma • co cntt 7&lt;0 8U2
&amp;323

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-

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'I'D 111DW YOU IIOW YOW. /ilj Ill

£0ULI81 _.IY 0\DlO
fiiiWOMPIOft.L

a

W"NT A COMPUTEA1?71 BUT
NO CASH11 MMX TECHNOLO

QY

we

F nance o Down Pill

C ed 1 P obltma OK Evtn I
lU ntd Down Before Rtea ab ah
You Crt&lt;l« 1 800 859 0359

pU 110.&lt;14f•IIOIS

•

�Tuesday June 27, 2000

P9 B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 27 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

520

Sporting
Goode

540 Mlaceilaneoua
MerchandiM
Wood daybtd wkh o .gut pop-up
un t lne uel.. two rw n a ze ma
esse&amp; A n n y good &amp;hape
s 50 740-992 31144

530

80

Auction
and Flea Market

GenUtman Seek ng Compan on

for Rent

DRIVING POsmDNS
AVALABLE

Personals

005

420 Mobile Homes

Help Wanted

110

Tw o bed oo m mob e home rra
pefS 740-992 5856

CLASSAOTR
S ng a 0 ve La 8 Mode Ken
wo hs W h Ree e s West Coas
Ca oe

sh p From N ce Fema e Fo Ta ks
Wa ks &amp; F endsh p Senel Ae
p as To 553 Second Avenue
Apa men _.03 Ga po s OH
&lt;563

440
P-lf.O.T O.Q.R A-1'-H-Y
~eddngs

CLASSBOTR

""""

Sports Teams

Team S a gh Tuck La a Mode
Fegh nesW hSeepes Mus

P o ass ana Ce tlf ed Pho og a
pher

Ha e A B ake Endo semen s
aoo M les Aad us Home De ve

...

Ta k To G

S

VB

:UOO E•l 8400 SJ 99 Pe M nu e
u 6 9

-30 Announcements
GOT A CAMPGROUND Mom
lie sh p 0 T mesha e? WELL
J AKE T Ame cas Mos Sue
clss u Campg ound And T me
sha e Rasa a C ea nghouse G.a
FIESOAT SALES NTEANAT dN
A1.. 800 -'23 5967 24 Hou s
osortsales com

+w

Wan td Any Unwan ed Ch ck
ens Santy S anda d o a e No
Baby Ch cks P ease F om Bu
ao o Pon Peasan a ea ca
304 937 3348 0 304 937 2705

A klas 2 Yea s Expe tence

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Good MVA

WeekyPey
Hea h nsu ance Ava labiA
Wo&lt;k We W 1h The Pub! c

REA L ESTATE

4378764 Hrs8 30 AM 5PM

310 Homes1or Sale

Help Wanted
EAAN EXCELLENT NCOME
Med ca 8 e 1 N11dtd Ful
T a n ng P ov dad Home Com
pu e Flequ ed To F •• 800
772 5933 EX! f2005

v

Econom c Dtv.lopment
DlrBtor

Giveaway
AU. Qlv-1)' Ado Muol
Be I'll d In Advtnce

TRIBUNE D"'DUNE 2 00 p m.
IN Ill)' btloreiN ICI
It to run Sundlly
&amp; Monlll)' ICI lion
200pm F~doy
SENTINEL DfAQLINE
1 00 p m lhtlll)' befote 1hl ad
1 to run Sundly A Monday
ldmon 1 00 p m F~day
REO STER DEADLINE
2 d1y1 Mlore thlad
letorunby500pm
Sunday &amp; Mondoy td t on
5 00 p m Thurtdoy

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
N() Fee Un ess We W n
868-582 3345

Fo Mo e nfo ma on Ca 800

New To You Thr h Shoppe
9 Wes Stimson A hens
740 592 642
.Qua
co h ng and housaho d
ot ems S 00 bag aa e ave y
-ntu sday Monda~ h u Sa u day
9100-5 30

40

and tin root• Expe er\ced F ee
Es rna es Ae e ences (3041815
398

BOTH POSmONS
A leas 25 Years Okl

900 656

Mus Be a Yea s Sa
P45 11434

lntedgr/Extedpr fa!nJ!nq mobile
borne roota btmt outbulldlnga

Reasonable e as
ca lor appoln ment
(304)67s-7472
(304)67H279

S 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T /BANK AEPOS
CALL NOW
800 360 4620
EXT 6509

Seek ng Manage Fo Jewe y
Store App can ShOu d Be A Mo
va ed Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Cand da e Mua Be 0 gan zed

REGISTERED NURSE
SSIGN-00 BONUS $

540 Miscellaneous

..J'IIatanj Yallty

Merchandise

Hoapllll Cl,llfllltly haa
lull·tlme and p1rt...Umt
opportunltlea available
for RN appllclnta All
epecilltlea IOOiflltd..

2 Sea a 6 H P Go Ca 1 Ve y
Naw $750 ATV T es Used Tu
Tame • $30 P 0 Mud Sha ks
Jenson Base ube $ 25 ?•o-367

___............
........... _

0024 339-3248

o1o111 Our 'PIMIIV ol
PtoJtnl 1111"101111111

~X2•

Round Pool
and Aeceaao u

2116-

es

nc udea Pump
$1000 740

111¥10tMIIIt.

1'1 I•IANT VALUY HOII'ITAL
t/0 I'IIIIIIIIIEL
1110 VAU.IV DIIIVI
PT PLIAIAIR ¥1'111110
011 PAX 10 (304) I7HI7I

Ttl. s newapape w no
knowingly accept
aCWertisements for eaJ esta e
which Is n v1o atlon or the
aw Ou eadera a e he eby

.So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today.
KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlllhl

M/101
Public Notlca

nlcnnecllha a dwe ngs
advertised n lh I nOWipapa
a e ava abe on an equa
opportunity basil

PUBUC NOTICI
Thll Ia to notify the general
public thll the 2000 10001
budgtt lor the Vllllga of
Rutland Rutland Ohio will
be IVIIIIble lor publiC
ravlaw ancl oomment from
June zs aooo until July 10
2000 at the Rutland VIllage

Part time SMT experience
required Submit Resume to
230 Upper R ver Rd

(8)27 28 28 30
(7)23U71110to

28 ac 1 Fa m $!5 000 House
Ban 2Buldnga Ga poll Ol'lo
C ty Schoo 1 and Wa e

Gallipolis Ohio 45631

1740)2~

Are You Connec ed?
ne ne Uses Waned
$350 $650/week
68626 33
www e-commb z ne

4
bedroom two bath nground poe
n ce v ew Pome oy 740 992
2943

FINANCIAL

210

HOME FORECLOSURES S 0
DOWN NO CRED T NEEDED
GOV T BANK AEPOS 1 600
355 0024 Ex 8040

Business
Opportunity

mmed a e Open ng fo A Food
Me chand se To Se v ce S o es
n The G•lllpolla And Pomeroy
A ea

A1J. Loot 6 Found Ado Mull
Be PI d In Advance
TR BUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p m
tho Ill)' btfore IN ad
11 to run Sunny &amp; Monday
tdiHon 2: 00 p m Frldly
SENTINEL Qf&amp;QL!Nf
1 00 p m tho dlly btfono lilt ICI
1 to run Sunday &amp; Monday
ldldon 1 00 p m Ffldoy
REGISTER DEADLINE
2 days before the ad
tl0runby500pm
Sunday &amp; Mondoy ICI ton
5 00 p m Thurad_,

Ei&lt;Celent Hou y Wage

Pease Ca The Fa low ng
Numbe Fo More nformatiOn

He shey s P e Sec ed Routes
Ava abe n L m ed A eas M n
nves Unde SSK Po en a
Ea n ngs 0 e $951&lt; One Y
666 745 5552 24 H s
MAKE AT LEAST S5 000 PER
WEEKI S mp e And Easy To
Lea n FREE nfo A www se
c e s2success comlspe
ca96000
OWN A P ECE OF THE OLD
WEST 40 Ac es n S a e 01
Wyom ng $29 900 Low Down
Low Man h y Owne W F nance
A ve &amp; F sh ng Lake Access
E ec Ava abe OK To Bu d
Ca Owne
Red
888 547

EOE
GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$ B 35 Hour Fu Bene ts No Ex
pe ence Requ ed Fee Appllca
lon And Exam In o ma Qn 888
728 9063 E• ens on 170
(7
AM 7PM CST)

MUST REDUCE INVENTORY
3 To eO Ac 8 1' ac &amp; 0 land n
The Coun y woods Meadows
Flock Fo ma ons Res den a 0
Aec eat ana Land Coni ac s
Ava abe 10% Down Ca Fo
F te Maps ANTHONY LAND
CO LTD 1-213 8365

Gallla Co OH SA' 325 N Dee
Rd
o Ac es $ 2 500
Cash A o G ande Mob e~ Ad
Las Lo On Oead End 3 Wood
ed Ac es $27 000 Cash 0 6
Ac es $23 500 Chesh e Jesse
C eek Ad 6 Aces $12 000 6
Ac es $20 000 0 37 Ac as
$47 000 Cay liYp Ma abe Ad
3 Ao ea w th Ba n $37 ooo
FrendyAdge 15Aces$0000
Cash

AT&amp;T BELL
Payphone R es 45
P oven Loca 10ns
Huge $$ Loca Rou e
800 800 3470

1-801).883.2471
EKtens on 483

2624

GREATEST HOME BUSINESS
GUARANTEED CALL
888
321 5999

Me g1 Co Beau fu Coun y
Tuppe s ~a ns Rea N ce Home
W h 0 d SchOo House $89 000
Cash Ba n Ho se A ena On 6
Ac.res $34 000 0 12 Ac es
$24 000 Aut and Wh es H Ad
N ce 9 Acres $12 000 0
Ac
es $14 000 Wa e Danv e SA
325 N ce 5 Ac es $ 8 000 0
Brio Aklge Ad
1 Ac es $ 000
Cash

Jacklon Co Sc o o Twp C ab
ree Spangenbe g Ads Beau
lu F e ds Woods G ea Fo
Homes 0 Hun ng 5 Ac es
S 9000 0 W h A Home S35000
Cash Count Wa e
4 Pa ce s
To See Between Oakh I M n
lod SA279 11 AcesS 6000
o 34 Aces Wlh c oak $27 ooo
Cash County Wa e Beave P ke
5 Ac es N ce Woods S 5 ooo
Cash
Many Mo e Ava abe Fo Home
S tes 0 Hun ng Ca Now Fo
Maps And Finane ng no 10 Yo
OFF Cash Buys

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Dan Have L.and? We Do Hu y
Only o Lois Left :!04 736 7295

URGENTLY NEEDED p aoma
donort. ea n S35 o $45 lo 2 o 3
hou s week y Ca Sera Tee 740..
592 665

A1J. Ytld Seln Muol
Be hid In Adv•nce
Qf&amp;DUNE 2 00 p m
IN dey befo111 lilt ad
II to run Sunday &amp; Mondlly
ldltlon 2 00 p m Frkloy

740

1990 Chevy V6 Good cond t on
2 ooo on new ang ne 5 speed
ansm ss on
(304)675 3559

Runs

G ea

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; Aebu n n S OCk
Ca I Ron Evans 800 537 9528

740 985 3929 0 740-423-5 73

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
• Bad Credit OK
• Easy Qualify ng
• Fast Serv ce
• Low Payments
• Con11dent al

To o Whee Ho se 520 H 20 HP

60 nch Mowe Deck l ke New
John Dee e 65 Hyd o 38 Inch
N ce 740 446 9227

630

Livestock

Now Tak g App ca ans 35
Wes 2 Bed oom Townhouse
Apa tmen 6 Inc udes Wa e
Sewage T ~sh $325 Mo 740
446 0006

Avellab e Now
1W nTowe s now accep ng
app IC&amp;tlons fa BR
HUD subsidized ap fore de 1y
and hand capped EOH
(304)675 6679

Tommyll 1o Fu Sze PckUp
$400 (304)675 6870

790
Huge nven o y D scoun P ces
OnVny Sk ng Ooos W nd
ows Ancho s wa e Hea e s
Pumbng &amp; Eec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Heal Pumps Benne 6
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orw comlbennen

Mlllenn um TefeHfv en
s pleased to announce the
G and open ng of Ita new We 1-

140

Ave NW
DC 20036

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
EAS
Amos Eve yone Ap
p oved W h $0 Down
ow
Month y Paymen s
800 6 7

MERCHANDISE

510

New

Buslneae
Training

nlerellod n MAKING MONEY
01" lilt NERNET? ENTRE!'IlE

3476 E)( 3XI

NEUAS wanlod In 111t DOT COM
INDUSTRY Open VOU own HOME
OFRCE GeiWIIt IUbsllntio
INCOME

RES DENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Tappan H E c ency 90 Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naCfiS 2 See
He a Pump &amp; A Cond ton ng
Svstems F 18 8 Yea Wa an y
Bennetls Heat ng &amp; Coo ng
800 872 5967 www orvb corrvben

SER VICE S

BUSINESS OWNERS!
You nvo ces n o Cash
Non Pa o m ng n o ces
No as Ca S eve
888
2226

ston ca ng cen er
We a e now sett ng l4J
nterviiW appo ntments fo
outbound tetese!"'ICe posnons
No ol!p181ionc:o noceosary

Eam upol15/h
with quanorty salary fYiewa
Monogome~ opportunn•ava
llllt 40 KIMt&lt;lcai/DtntoiiPIId

150

CAEO T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAC CRED T B"NKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDO EMENTB
AAA RATING 90 80 DAYS 1
800-422

Schoola
lnetructlon

Ylelllonll\111- 3 lhllll dol y

B Moael lptugtr. Auct OnN ng
buy •• 111 tt coni gnment

Fllx 1&gt;1t IChtdUIIIIG SIMI you

me

-ce-withuo

ouctlon- Tllurodl)'t epm l.lldGit

-rd-'"-~

Cl 1-aoo.t2f.I7S3

port on o 1 wv L ctnet 1&lt;0

IN-9107 740-...aea:l

C~"''" O,OIITUN TV
MIDICAL I ILLIIII lorn Up To
Ioiii&lt; Nn ,UII 'Ttllnlnl "CC llt(G
111110111~ bt~

'IDIIIAL POITAL JOII
VP To I I I• Mou H ng ,or
1000 ' " Oo! ,o ,_, nl on
ham na ron niO mellon '•at 1
H II 'u ltntlll 1 100 I l l
fRO, httnllorl 11 t (I A M "'

'M &lt;i IT)

Tu n
A so
Any
982

Wt loOk
1o mttting you
lor ..
GOY T 'OITA~ JOII" Up
To 111 14 Hour M r ng 'or 1000.

4 W de 3BA 2BA $2 3

New 5•60 3BA 2BA $266 pe
(nOn h ow Down Payment F ee
A F ee Oe VI y 1 888 928
3426
New Doub aw de 3 BA 2BA
$276 pe month Low Down Pay
men Ftl A Ftt Dl very 1

,~II

hPtrltnotd In Ca n;
Morita 110 st7 7111

,.,

'"1111

lJONIY '"01
LIMI? NOW ACOi'TINII A'
,LICAT ONI 13 000 AND U,
NO A"L CATION ' I I
171
lo43 1387 ·~t 402

199&amp; Fo d E 150 Von Whto
cho
11 t tel c doo 20 ooo
rfl I I IJICI tnt lhlpl W lkl

Stereo Luxman Atce VI JVC
CUlt t DICk JVC CD 2 Adv

us 000 740-t-49-2&amp;40

7t28

740

on Spuko ,

saeo

740 44e

Faoto y Rtpo Ntvo
L vtd n 109 950 1 I l l Ul
8177

186&amp; Fo d Muotong $500 t U83
Fo d Muotong $200 1982 Dodgt
Ram T uok
$500
OBO
{7401446-3398

New 11•10 ' ltclrooma 1 111~1
(Qardtn TIID) leland
Ap

"u•

111 T me lurer Qovernmanl
llokU Lo1n1 A MP loll one
AOOIPIId Onry AI DlkWOOCI Otl

pl tnot On AOII 1411 00/Mo
DIPO•I 140.:111 CMI

NEED MONEY
Fastest CASH LOANS
regardlen o1 cred t Auto
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restoration 30-min.~ln~u:t~~e
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85 VZF 80Q Vlmaha IJICI ant
cond !on o o o " u $4500
OBO 740 702 2780

1-80().447~

/I4011VI'•

Stops Herpes Outbreaks!
96% Success Rate
Toll Free 1 877 EVEACLA
Into www everclr com

Home
Improvement&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NO
Uncond t ona fe me gua an ee
L.oca e e encea ru n shed Ea
ab ohed 1975 Cs 24 H s 740)
446 0670 1 600 267 0575 Aog
esWBepoong

TRAN SPORTATIO N

3~xeo

1111180 IICI It

\tnt on 1111 (I AM I ,M
OU)

Household
Goods

688 928 3426

'1111 DIIT OONIOLIDAT ON
App DillOn W llrv Ot "tduot
,eymenll To 11'11 OAIM IN
OINTIVI 0~'1" 011 100

''" Cal flor App ntlon ll•aml
nation
n10n111110n '"""' Hrt
'ul ileMIMI 1 100-HI 110' Ill

810

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs n o
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac ty Bes Sawm Va ue An
ywhe e FREE no ma ion 1 800
578 1363 NORWOOD SAW
MILLS 252 Sonw Orl e Bu a o
NY 14225

I

~oR www...,_..com~oucctu

App ances
Aecond oned
Washe s Drye 1 Ranges Ref
g ato s 90 Day Gua an ee We
Se New Maytag App ances
F ench C y May ag 740 4-'6
7795

Pe Man h L.ow down Paymen
F ee A F ee De VI y 888
928 3426

Campera &amp;
Motor Homes

Send SASE to
Dept CA

nen

POST"L JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H ng No Expe ence Pa d
Tan ng G ea Bene s Ca 7
Days BD0--429-361!0 e" J 385

199 YZ 25 New Past c New
Reeds New P s on &amp; R ngs Very
Powe u B ke t.ooks New F ont
Fo ks Have Been Camp e ety Re
bu Wh ch l.nc udea New Sea s
And F u d Rea Shock Has Been
Ae cha ged W th N 1 ogen And
Che cked Fo B eed 0 f T es
A e n Exce en Cond t on Cha n
And Sp ockets A e L ke New
$ 600 740-446 7375

annual budgtl lor the year
2001 ahall be held on the
5th d1y of July aooo ot 7 30
p m at tha Townahlp
Garage on Joppo Road
The budgot moy be vl-d
11 the home of the clerk by
lppolniiiNinl alter the 25th
of June
(8) 271tc

More quest ons? Cal the
Alzhe mer s profess onals at
Seen c H1lls Nurs1ng Center for
more nformatlon (740) 446 7150
Scenic H Is 'The A zhe me s
Experets

PUBUC NOTICE
Orange Townahlp will
hold 1 Public Hearing on
the propoaed Budget lor
2001 on July e 2000 11 7 30
p m at the home of the
clerk Oaltl Follrod
(8)2711c

999 Yamaha YZF 800 R 2000
m as 6 sp nc udea 5 yr warran'1 snow oom cond on $6500

JANITROL HEAT NG AIID
COOL NO EQUIPMENT
NSTALLED
Yo u Don Ca Us Ws Bo h
Lose F ee Eat rna es 740 446
6308 1 800 29 0096

DOWNTOWN BUS NESS
SPACE OR OFFICE
Fo ease Th ee Rooms C ean
&amp; N~ To V ew 740 446-9539

W LDL FE JOBS TO $6 9 HA
Fede a Bene &amp; Pa k Range s
Sacu ly Ma n enance No Exp
Fo Some Fo n o Ca
800
391 5856 EX! 4299

Motorcycles

A public hearing on the

Fu n shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downs a s C ean No Pes Re
e ences &amp; Depos Flequ ed 740
446- 5 9

Waned CERTIFIED WELDERS
B dge exp he pru Bene s n
c uded Send esume o PO Box
268 Nelsonv e Oh o 45764
EOE
DA VERS TAKE HOME MORE
BE HOME MORE Ave age 999
Wage Was $45 255 www oeh
transpo com

Public Notice

1990 Dodge Dakota 5 speed
new y ebu t eng ne S 500
984 Fo d B onco 4K4 a
$2000 (304)576-22«

HUNTERS HILL
3 Trac s 0 P me Rec eat on a
Land 29 Ac es Fa As Low As
$27 000 Land Cont ac s Ava I
800 213-8365
abe Cal Now
An hOny Land Companv LTO
wwwcountrytyme com

Ti ash Serv ce needs a o ve
Loade wl1h COL S yea d v ng
experience equ ed Ca 740
388 9685

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

RE NTALS

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Dad~~&amp;we

c eok

Hrs

SECRETARY Fo Busy Non
P o Agency Loca ed n Jack
1011 Oh ot,A M n mum 0 H gh
Sch6o 0 J&gt; oma And Two Yea s
Ex~• ence Must Possess Good
Commun cal on Sk s W en
And 0 a) E~~:pe ence n M c o
sa t Word And Exce Send Ae
sume By Ju y 10 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 Iva S ee Ga po
s Oh o 45514 0 FAX 740 446
80 4 EOE Mlfni

on her Bltthday

BRUNER LAND
741H41 14D2

ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE $0
Down Ne s $501&lt; Wo k 7 H s
Candy VEND NG A e n A ea
To Fee
877 494 8695 24

FOOD MERCHANDISER
PART TIME

Hellen Amott
COMPUTER BLOWOUT Com
paq HP IBM Desktops Lap ops
Ecomme ce Webs ea Amos
Eve yone App oved
Make
$$$$ On The Web No Money
Down FeeCoo P n e 1888
479 2345 www ~jump-s art com

s Fact #8

Safe Return s a specla p ogram
that ass sts n tha safe return
home of nd v duals w th
A zhe mer s d saase who wander
and become ost It s sponsored
by the Nationa Alzheimer s
Assoc auon Reglstrat on fo ms
can be obta ned by call ng
Seen c H lis Nurs ng Center
Ask fo Kelly Bryant or Pam Jones
(740) 446 7150

In Memory of
5 9 ac aa 3400 squa e oo

60 loat and Found

Woltmor• o ~ uc on It •"
'•!'II''"'
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...

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Alzheimer

K ens o a good home 7 weeks
old 740-44$ 08 9

day before tht ad It to run
Sunday 6 Monday ed t on
1 OOpm Foidty

0

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for youl!
shopping needs, at your fingertips.

Dfnct

Send Resume App ca ona To
Aequo! ona F nt Jewt y 15
Second Av1nue Ga po a OH
4!831 Or Fax To 740-«8-2800

ATTENTION
Ea n On ne ncame
$500 $7 500 !Mon h
'lfflw pcpays com

All Yard SaltJ Mutt Bl Paid In
Advance Dead ne 1 OOpm the

Help Wanted

P!eaaant \Iaiiey Hospital

Ab t To Ma nage 0 he • And
Have Sa ea Ab y Some Com
puto Sk 1 Rtqu td Sa 1 y And
aoruo P ua Bentli Peckago

!NOTICE!
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommends tha you do bus
ness w h peop e you know and
NOT o send money h augh the
rna un you ha e n es gated
he aHenng

70

AI ea esta a advertla ng n
1h I -PIO I IUIJIOCIIO
1ht Flderal Fa Housing Act
ol1te8 which makn k ftega
to advert se any preference
I mila ion o d scrlmlnatlon
based on ace coo e gkm
sex ami aJ sta. us o na ona
orlg n or any n entlon o
make any such pre e ence
mlta iOn o d scrim nation

Apartments
lor Rent

110

1989 Day ona ES lots ot new
parlsa Ht1 una grtll $9150 080
304-e7!Hl693

Bulrdlng
Supplies

550

ANNOUNCEMENTS

710 Autoa for Sale

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

DROWNING

IN~D~EBifTnl--~~~~

No QuaiHing Non profit debt
consolidation Bad/No credh
Save $1DGO In ntereall
Glbton Truat Inc

C&amp;C Gent 1 Home M1 n
enenct P1 nt ng Y ny 1 d ng
carpent v doo a w ndowe be Yll
mob 1 home repa and mo 1 Fo
" 11 ma • co cntt 7&lt;0 8U2
&amp;323

_
-

.

'I'D 111DW YOU IIOW YOW. /ilj Ill

£0ULI81 _.IY 0\DlO
fiiiWOMPIOft.L

a

W"NT A COMPUTEA1?71 BUT
NO CASH11 MMX TECHNOLO

QY

we

F nance o Down Pill

C ed 1 P obltma OK Evtn I
lU ntd Down Before Rtea ab ah
You Crt&lt;l« 1 800 859 0359

pU 110.&lt;14f•IIOIS

•

�..
Po~. Middleport,

Page B4 • The Dellv Sentinel

Ohio

Tueldey, June 27,2000

Tuesday, June 27, 2001'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP
PHILLIP
liomelmprovementa done by

CHRISTY'S FAMILY LIVING
204 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, OH 45760
Rentals
Apts, Home Trallen,
Janitorial-Maid Residential or Commercial
Maintenance
Residential or Commercial
Home Repaln Interior &amp; Exterior
Call for eatlmatea 9-5 pm Mon-Frt
We work Mon..S.t II· 5 pm
and we do accept emergency calla
Clllor Ratni·740·992-4SI41 ·740.742·740S Eve. .s

Ill CONDmONIIII

SlUICE
(304) 112·2079

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
, Sales Representative
Larry Schey
.............

' ~""
. 750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
· · Athens,.Ohio 45701
'
.
·"A Better

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per
month.

• New Homee

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

• Garagn
• Siding

N••• It ••••· tlfl •• • eell
FREE ESTIMATES
Oreet Prl111 •• New Hem••

992·2753 .

Cellular
Jeff Warner
Ins.
.
.

'

992·5479

BANKRUPTCY
oblla-uon•

a.n relltW • debkw of fh'wnolal

tnd ~ • f* dtttrlbutton of

. . . . . . . Gftdttora. ,.,.,..,. tM'III'MOulh blnllrUpiO) ...., .-!Ill
cena~n ~. known .. ......,..,..~ for hllor tMr pereon~l uee.
Ttlltnwy fnolude • ar, 1 hDu•, olothll. IIMII hotlllhokl goocll. You lftOuld
t1r101 .,Y t~UHUont l'lipf'dlng Mnlkruptey 10 1n domly tMifON p1 c 11 dlltg

For InfOrmation regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592·5025 Athena

f/21/001 mopa

VOUB

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydt uullc ltoH repairs,

CONNECJIQN

cylecler repall s, ol
Salts- 5 auL bucklls
to 55 gal. cbns
2 Yz miles out of

Quality Drlvew•ya,
Patloa, Sidewalks.
25 yeara experience
Free Eatlmaatn

Chester on SR 248

740·985:11~!....

IStandling timber large

or

tracks. Top

. prices paid also.

.

Dozer work.

: ,,.. Estl•etel
: CaD T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050

~QH~BEir;

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

Advertise
in .thls
space for
$50 per
month.

sttfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE
"Ah. .d In Service"
11titrn W.. Prill.I:!% SiMI Ft~~L ..............15.25/SO • bag
llulmll6" lalllliJ l'lllts.................................. 'U5/SO ._ big
lutrn limn Prille 21" Dig Ftod.......-..........-'6.75/SO • . bag
..._1 '" ~~y~r Cntmltlls......-..............:......_.•s.Mtso ._ bag
...,_ 5aakh hed ............................ _..,.....- .. '6.75/SO •. bag
SW. lh-12% CaJtlt FIIIL...............-...........'6.75/100 ._bag

Call740·985·3831
35537 St.lt. 7 lloriiJ

7

I

Tht Ohio Y..IIU'I autlllmotlve IlL liar II
conttnually loolclng for IlliZI 1tv. and
rnottv.t.d f*iplt to til .... pwlliwe.
Wt haVII tht lilt B&amp;Nntw..JIIIt Pall
and tht 11m famly Ol . . lllld WDI'k
avlronmtnt In toRy's IIUtiomottvl
IndustryI

1

Call

or atop In

and

Construetfon
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen

1\(....,'lftdor .t
Eqajpmomt Puu
Fadoi'J A1llltorir.ecl
e--m PIUtli
Deaden.

........

10011 St. Rt. 1 Soutlr
Coot4, OH 46m

,

...
......

fteippU.ce
We Service All Makes
Washers- Dry~rs
Ranges~ Refrigerators
Freeurs· Dish Washers

Ill I. lad

PGm•rey.Dide
&amp;1111 1 mopd.

ATI:30 P.M.

M1ln St.,
Pom~roy,OH

PlYing SIO.OO
per gllll'
$300.00 eov.rall
Prograealw top line.
Uc. I D0-50 "~"""'

.(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916
2,000 sf. Modem Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease. Prime Locatior on
Pomeroy By-Pass..
Also 600 sf. of Seperate·Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953-992-6810 - 992-5404

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

"o·~··~l'•
Pamtmg

•NewHomaa
•Garages
. •Complete
Remodeling
stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-1192·1871

"You 'lit lrltdlht rut...
now try'tht •ut"
Interior ~ Exterior
Residcnlial - Comnterical

WILLIS' .
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

..__.

-~QP ,

1·800·31 1- 391
Fr,ee E•timates
c•••,••••,. Wei.....
Albany, Ohio

'

$500.00 Starburat

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, converUI:)le ·&amp; Vinyl tops,
Four wpeeler seats,' motorcycle seats,
boat covers. carpets, etc.
.·Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

(740) 112-IOIJ
(Molllle) 74!1-JJI-OIIJ
Insured

7/WI'FN

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Thuradays

...:..UUC. Sa Jllllt.

Brien Rosa, or Brad Sang and begin a
NWIIrdlng CII'W' H an
AutamotiVI &amp;ala Prof IIOolLI
.
TODAYI

I

'

992·1101

SALES

Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks • Garages I
Free EsllmaU.

-'IWA

Pomeroy Eagl..
Club Bingo On.

SMITH•s CO"mtOCTIO"

.

ALDER

'"'' ... 1

Man

•
1

Septic Syoterm &amp;:
Utilitie•

6121100 1 mo. pd.

(740) 992·3131

LINDA'S
PAINTING

'••
••
: .BARNEY

' South

Pass
t•

•

l I.ET'S SEE-· WHAT WOULD
J • PAW LIKE FER SUPPER-·

.... .
THE BORN

"
LIVo:&gt;

·r
~
. YOU ~1-D i"N'\'Tro.Je&gt;Le:. WI TI-l 1-N'&lt;

Mike Sharp
740·949·3606

&lt;.o!-\I'UI~ VIW~

Cfr

~

6\G \lf'l\.f.! ~0 Tf\"-Th NO\iflt

~

.,

...

l 00~1 El/tt\ f\1\IJ( 1\ C.O~~UicJ.I

WO~T ~\ ...

\Hio.T t-¥.f.. GOI~ ~D?

The

CoutltrJ Candl8 Shop

!
~

S~»&amp;ciQI Scant
of the Month

'j SEJ!TIC'TANKS. LEACH BI'DS INSTALLED, WArEA·GA
ELECTRIC UNES, BASEMENr-FOOTERS, MOBILE 'HOME
SET UPS, ROAD BUUJING-I.AND CLEARING, HORIZONTAL
I

f'en Young
61151 mopd.

'.

Cultom Carpet, Vlay~ ·
Commerdal an Cenmlc
111e,AII ~of
Hardwood oorl:t
Carpet Bladlaaa
Restretchlaa.
30 Yrs. Experience
MilE YOUNG
74H92·7724
PAT YOUNG
740-949. ..

.

I

•

~lA
New Summer Oaya
Thur &amp; Frl10 am· 8 pm
saturciiiY 10 am • 4 pm .
On othar dayalf we ara
home, Wt Ira OPEN.

· 1"1'1' DAD'S

SIMPLY
TOO

PSI

amuc•
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, . Pole
Buildings, Etc.

Joseph Jacka
740-992-2068

RUN AN
AD .

•
ver 1se

•
s1ness

Pass
Pass

Dbl.
46

"What, never?"
"Hardly ever!"
That should give you a big hint
in solving today's defensive
dilemma. How do East and West ·
defeat four spades?
It would be pessimism person·
iijed for North to bid fewer than
four spades on the second. round.
West leads the heart eight, East
taking the first two tricks in the
suit. What now?
Obviously there are no more
side-suit tricks available for the
defense. So, in this situation, you
should break the rule taught to
yo11 at your grandmother's knee
by giving declarer a ruff-and-dis- ·
card!
So, East should continue with
a low heart. Now we tum to West.
If he doesn't ruff with the spade
queen, ·one feels homicide would
be justifiable on. East's part'
I'm happy to report no murder
in I:fbbe Sountl, Pia., wh·en Mary
Ann War.ner (West) and Jim
McGraw got this defense right.
The lines above continue:
"He's hardly ever sick at sea!
Then give three cheers, and one
cheer more for the hardy Captain
of the Pinafore!"

COMPOSEI(HAD A
KAc1H.. LIFE, DIDN'T l-IE?

hrs.

20 Adhesive
aubalance t
21 Afflnned .J
22 Predatory •
birds
23 Marathon
24 Mldaaot
nation
25 Go~ cry
27 llfollowo
Aug.
,
28 Plaintiff
: •·
29 Actual belngi ·
31 Ofsummar ' ·
33 Light pink : '
wine

CaD 111-2111

'Your

(

•
er1nc

• Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES '

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I•

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created trom quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each le«er in the cipher stands for another.

•

'
I'

Today's ciU9: C equals 8
'Z VRLGEFSME
XMYGSGOR:
R P 0 M E' l
ZLGSP

MEYT

LV R
VNSPB

C G F F P R S

SLVS,
S L G E F

DVBCYP . ' -

BPX.

SLP
G

A

HMLE

•J

-.
-.........

O four
Rearrange letters of . '"''
terombled words ·be· •

'1

low to form four slrnple words.

'.

.•

."

~;

•

-.• &lt;''
"I'm
scared , the fe llow told
F I K E N 1::::his skydiving instructor. 'I'm ap--,r--T"""-r~ri-:.J
prehensive . which means I'm
5
I
.1 ": scared with a · · · • • • - educa-

••'
'

;

El

R17

!TUESDAY

..

•

_ _:;

I

A

Compl_ele !he chuckl.• quoted -;
by filling In the mlsotng words
•
you develop from step No. 3 below. :

--I.L....L._..J, V

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
.

•

I

•

. •'

'

1111111 !
i

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I
I

Proper . Anise • Quart • Viscid • DROP it IN
"Will this acid dissolve this silver coin?" the teacher

;

•.

'•
.
asked. "No way," one student replied, "if it would , you . ::'
wouldn't DROP it IN."

JUNE 27 )"!

Although nol necessarily visible Although you' re apt to have a lit·
Wednesday, June 28, 2000
The harder you lry in the year now, rewarding applications will tie trouble getting out of the start·
ing blocks, you'll be an excellent
ahead, the luckier you 'II become. be found in time.
LIBRA
(Sept.
23-0ct.
23)
As
stretch
runner.
You have the chance to bring
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
about a marked improve~eni' in , ·long as someone who is managing
a
critical
matter
for
~ou
is
sue·
Only
if you permit yourself to
both your personal and material
cessful, don't change · horses for move about freely both mentally
affairs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) change sake. This person is about and physically today can you fee l
Don't. give up on your optimistic , .to become,even luckier for you. productive and happy at the same
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) time. Even mundane tasks will
attitude regarding a project or
. endeavor that has not proven suc- Persons with whom you're asso- take on new meaning.
ARIES (March 21~April 19)
; cessful as yet. It could occur today ciated will, in large part, be
. by continuing to doing things 10 responsible for some fortuitous , Generally luck comes more readhappening for you today. tly to those who have prepared
the·best your ability. Cancer, 1reat things
.
k .
b ff
lhemselves for success through
yourself to a bjrthday gift. Send The1r 1uc wt 11 ru o on you.
"' d
h
h
·
SAGITI'ARIUS
(Nov.
_Dec.
hard
work
.
•
o
ay,
t
r~ug
yow
23
; for your Astra-Graph predictions
.
efforts, you' ll be lucky m tumtng
: for the year ahead by mailing $2 21) .Yoo could expenence
a
tum
'
. .s. ear
. m
· 10 •.1 ,,.·Jk
purse .
1
.
. . 1 a sow
f
h
be
d
; and SASE to Astro-Graph, c/o lhis or t e tter to ay m a cnttca
·TAURUS (Apri l 20-May 20) ·
; newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Mur- area where your personal efforts Through your ienacity, willing: ray Hill Slation; New York, NY have bee~. severely _hampered. ness 10 take personal conlrol and
· I0156. Be sure to state your Opportumt:es abound ~n the same responsibility and an ability to
· Zodiac sign.
places you ve met reststam:e.
bounce back, success in your
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) "ProCAPRI~ORN (Dec . 22-Jan. endeavors are reasonably certain
• ceed, not postpone" should be 19) Be n1ce to everyone you today.
· your motto today. Pocus all of encounter t~day reaardless of ,. OEMl!lll (May 21-Junc 20)
· · your enerJies on your molt mean· their 1tatlon . in 'Ire, bec:au11 Alletl you now pones• that arc
1
lnaful objective, and don't take 11 throuah new friend1hlpa you not reldlly available 1oday 10 per, brcath,cr until everythlnal•, 11 fin· · develop now, aood ·thlna•. could_ •ona who compete •aalnat you In
Ished.
' VIROO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22) ·~~J~&amp;rJsrQ~~O-P~b. 19, reality, come from past hard w~rk.
):rmost 1111 of your lnvolvtmentl Don't ba upllt If early lndicllo_r• Armed wllh aceomplishment5.
or peno~:~tll encounter• will pro· don't look too aood today. people want to help you •uceeed.
ducc somethlna of value today.
•

I

i

i

.

COMYFIOll. and IBID~

1·800-291-5600

!

cl.othn

'Birthday
...

,JJ

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or

1

47 Odoroua
48 Singer
1
Anllo1
50 COI'I'Ode
'
52 RICicet-alrlnsC
materia~
,
53 JFK Into

6
Bneaaawapaper
deUnred directly to
your daar

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5284

GualltyWiulow
Syst•s, Inc.

--even

keel
,'
42 An-.:dote ;
ccllectlon •
43 Looa force- ·•
44 Kind ol moth,
48 Llka old
!

A PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUAR.ES

A TRAGIC LIFE 15 ROMANTIC
Wi-lEN IT i-IAPPENS
SOME80D'( EL5E ..

I T"AT

lm rovement Needs

• Room Add~lone

•

!

18 louisiana

~~ ~~~:.-;: pr~ .

L.

: PEANUTS

882·2772

• Replacement Windows

• •

Susan -

41

_ J_ _J...

Oarap Doon &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

13 Actress

8 Name 'tor
Athena
9 Longlnga
11 Break In two
12 Original
lnhablllnto

Eut
t•
Pass
All pass

AI

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

(NO SUNDAY CAl I S)

West North

-~6 IV -1.l IG

VInyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacentcnl Windows,
~mlcu OuiiCrs &amp;
Do'YIIspout, Garage room
lddltiollli, Pole Buildina.

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
'
Major Medical • Nursing Home . ~

~~

~tion !"

IIi tllllUTIOIII
COIISliUmotl

For All Your Home

740-992·7599

suffix
37 Llat..ndlng
abbr.

~f'-1.!:

740-992-1709

, Actreu oe1anr,
2 "- - Around '
(Beach Boys
song)
3 Pork or beef
4 Mad. apeclallol
5 Fr. holy woman
6 Swiss river
7 Seductive arlo

1-·

£1131/ t mo pd.

FNelhtlmate•

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Qaragn

i"'f&gt;'(BE
COULD

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

BISSELL .ILDIU
INC.

HE.'S

RIG.HT .

WE

New ROofs • Repairs
• Coaling • Gutters
• Siding • Dryyiall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

DOWN

"No, never!"

Free E•timate•

MIIIIOI• DO~ •IIID IOADII•IIUCIIIG • TUIICINJIG

agcy.

27 Go to court
30 Stir
32 Exit
34 Sign of
affection
35 Skloreae
36 CIMimlcal

For which light opera did W.S .
Gilbert pen these lines?
"And I'm never, never sick at
sea! "
"What, never?"

Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

After 6pm-614-985-4180

Jessica -

BY PHILLiP ALDER

We~dlng:

Before 6p.m. •.
Leave Mmage

57 Actrass

Ruff and discard

CHICKIN
R PIIKIII.

LANDSCAPE

FREE ESTIMATES

do
49 Queaay feeling
15 Act,.oo Dahl
51 Ancient
1e ABA member 54 Toughen
17 Emulate Meryl 55 Fur-bearing
SI-p
animal
19 Like pie?
56 Sunrloe
20 Some
direction

Opening lead: ., 8

QUALITY

"Take the pain out
ofpaintingLet me·do it for you"
Interior

4S What sultora

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

EII&amp;/'.R-

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLAnONS

• K 10
•AKQ62
• 5 • 2
• J 8 3

•

•· Service•
TraUer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

219E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

The"Appliance

• Q3

South
• 6 5t z
• J 75t
• J t 8
• 10 7

Hou., &amp;

740-992-5232

toot•

wenderera

East

• 83
• 10 7 6 3
•96542

EXCAVATING CO.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Answer to Prevlou• Puu •

.....

45 Moving lruck

23 Ronuck
HTholclllm

West

FRIIO

BulUlo•er &amp;: Backhoe

06-17'CIO

•AJt87
• 10 9
• A K Q
•AKQ

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Ufetime Warranty
Local Contractor
.~,VIIQL/111; Prices D.R. Bissen
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Estirnates 740-378-6349

"We're Back"
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes
992~1550

No

nio. ""·

Se If-Storage

•

14 Spnlce up

Gravel• Sand • Topsat1•
Fill Dirt• Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

High &amp; Drv

1 Thin coiiHI

e Outoft-n
hamNr

Hauling • Umestone •

''! ,..,pr,
' wllp a

39 Bualneoo·
women Llluder
CO Fotty
42 Shoemaker'•

employ...
12UHde

EXCfiYfiTIHCI

Now Renting

ACROSS
10 Sllra'

HfiQUHG ancn

2H70Beahan .
. Road
Recine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM · 8 PM

•
•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

�..
Po~. Middleport,

Page B4 • The Dellv Sentinel

Ohio

Tueldey, June 27,2000

Tuesday, June 27, 2001'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP
PHILLIP
liomelmprovementa done by

CHRISTY'S FAMILY LIVING
204 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, OH 45760
Rentals
Apts, Home Trallen,
Janitorial-Maid Residential or Commercial
Maintenance
Residential or Commercial
Home Repaln Interior &amp; Exterior
Call for eatlmatea 9-5 pm Mon-Frt
We work Mon..S.t II· 5 pm
and we do accept emergency calla
Clllor Ratni·740·992-4SI41 ·740.742·740S Eve. .s

Ill CONDmONIIII

SlUICE
(304) 112·2079

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
, Sales Representative
Larry Schey
.............

' ~""
. 750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
· · Athens,.Ohio 45701
'
.
·"A Better

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per
month.

• New Homee

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

• Garagn
• Siding

N••• It ••••· tlfl •• • eell
FREE ESTIMATES
Oreet Prl111 •• New Hem••

992·2753 .

Cellular
Jeff Warner
Ins.
.
.

'

992·5479

BANKRUPTCY
oblla-uon•

a.n relltW • debkw of fh'wnolal

tnd ~ • f* dtttrlbutton of

. . . . . . . Gftdttora. ,.,.,..,. tM'III'MOulh blnllrUpiO) ...., .-!Ill
cena~n ~. known .. ......,..,..~ for hllor tMr pereon~l uee.
Ttlltnwy fnolude • ar, 1 hDu•, olothll. IIMII hotlllhokl goocll. You lftOuld
t1r101 .,Y t~UHUont l'lipf'dlng Mnlkruptey 10 1n domly tMifON p1 c 11 dlltg

For InfOrmation regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592·5025 Athena

f/21/001 mopa

VOUB

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydt uullc ltoH repairs,

CONNECJIQN

cylecler repall s, ol
Salts- 5 auL bucklls
to 55 gal. cbns
2 Yz miles out of

Quality Drlvew•ya,
Patloa, Sidewalks.
25 yeara experience
Free Eatlmaatn

Chester on SR 248

740·985:11~!....

IStandling timber large

or

tracks. Top

. prices paid also.

.

Dozer work.

: ,,.. Estl•etel
: CaD T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050

~QH~BEir;

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

Advertise
in .thls
space for
$50 per
month.

sttfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE
"Ah. .d In Service"
11titrn W.. Prill.I:!% SiMI Ft~~L ..............15.25/SO • bag
llulmll6" lalllliJ l'lllts.................................. 'U5/SO ._ big
lutrn limn Prille 21" Dig Ftod.......-..........-'6.75/SO • . bag
..._1 '" ~~y~r Cntmltlls......-..............:......_.•s.Mtso ._ bag
...,_ 5aakh hed ............................ _..,.....- .. '6.75/SO •. bag
SW. lh-12% CaJtlt FIIIL...............-...........'6.75/100 ._bag

Call740·985·3831
35537 St.lt. 7 lloriiJ

7

I

Tht Ohio Y..IIU'I autlllmotlve IlL liar II
conttnually loolclng for IlliZI 1tv. and
rnottv.t.d f*iplt to til .... pwlliwe.
Wt haVII tht lilt B&amp;Nntw..JIIIt Pall
and tht 11m famly Ol . . lllld WDI'k
avlronmtnt In toRy's IIUtiomottvl
IndustryI

1

Call

or atop In

and

Construetfon
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen

1\(....,'lftdor .t
Eqajpmomt Puu
Fadoi'J A1llltorir.ecl
e--m PIUtli
Deaden.

........

10011 St. Rt. 1 Soutlr
Coot4, OH 46m

,

...
......

fteippU.ce
We Service All Makes
Washers- Dry~rs
Ranges~ Refrigerators
Freeurs· Dish Washers

Ill I. lad

PGm•rey.Dide
&amp;1111 1 mopd.

ATI:30 P.M.

M1ln St.,
Pom~roy,OH

PlYing SIO.OO
per gllll'
$300.00 eov.rall
Prograealw top line.
Uc. I D0-50 "~"""'

.(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916
2,000 sf. Modem Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease. Prime Locatior on
Pomeroy By-Pass..
Also 600 sf. of Seperate·Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953-992-6810 - 992-5404

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

"o·~··~l'•
Pamtmg

•NewHomaa
•Garages
. •Complete
Remodeling
stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-1192·1871

"You 'lit lrltdlht rut...
now try'tht •ut"
Interior ~ Exterior
Residcnlial - Comnterical

WILLIS' .
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

..__.

-~QP ,

1·800·31 1- 391
Fr,ee E•timates
c•••,••••,. Wei.....
Albany, Ohio

'

$500.00 Starburat

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, converUI:)le ·&amp; Vinyl tops,
Four wpeeler seats,' motorcycle seats,
boat covers. carpets, etc.
.·Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

(740) 112-IOIJ
(Molllle) 74!1-JJI-OIIJ
Insured

7/WI'FN

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Thuradays

...:..UUC. Sa Jllllt.

Brien Rosa, or Brad Sang and begin a
NWIIrdlng CII'W' H an
AutamotiVI &amp;ala Prof IIOolLI
.
TODAYI

I

'

992·1101

SALES

Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks • Garages I
Free EsllmaU.

-'IWA

Pomeroy Eagl..
Club Bingo On.

SMITH•s CO"mtOCTIO"

.

ALDER

'"'' ... 1

Man

•
1

Septic Syoterm &amp;:
Utilitie•

6121100 1 mo. pd.

(740) 992·3131

LINDA'S
PAINTING

'••
••
: .BARNEY

' South

Pass
t•

•

l I.ET'S SEE-· WHAT WOULD
J • PAW LIKE FER SUPPER-·

.... .
THE BORN

"
LIVo:&gt;

·r
~
. YOU ~1-D i"N'\'Tro.Je&gt;Le:. WI TI-l 1-N'&lt;

Mike Sharp
740·949·3606

&lt;.o!-\I'UI~ VIW~

Cfr

~

6\G \lf'l\.f.! ~0 Tf\"-Th NO\iflt

~

.,

...

l 00~1 El/tt\ f\1\IJ( 1\ C.O~~UicJ.I

WO~T ~\ ...

\Hio.T t-¥.f.. GOI~ ~D?

The

CoutltrJ Candl8 Shop

!
~

S~»&amp;ciQI Scant
of the Month

'j SEJ!TIC'TANKS. LEACH BI'DS INSTALLED, WArEA·GA
ELECTRIC UNES, BASEMENr-FOOTERS, MOBILE 'HOME
SET UPS, ROAD BUUJING-I.AND CLEARING, HORIZONTAL
I

f'en Young
61151 mopd.

'.

Cultom Carpet, Vlay~ ·
Commerdal an Cenmlc
111e,AII ~of
Hardwood oorl:t
Carpet Bladlaaa
Restretchlaa.
30 Yrs. Experience
MilE YOUNG
74H92·7724
PAT YOUNG
740-949. ..

.

I

•

~lA
New Summer Oaya
Thur &amp; Frl10 am· 8 pm
saturciiiY 10 am • 4 pm .
On othar dayalf we ara
home, Wt Ira OPEN.

· 1"1'1' DAD'S

SIMPLY
TOO

PSI

amuc•
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, . Pole
Buildings, Etc.

Joseph Jacka
740-992-2068

RUN AN
AD .

•
ver 1se

•
s1ness

Pass
Pass

Dbl.
46

"What, never?"
"Hardly ever!"
That should give you a big hint
in solving today's defensive
dilemma. How do East and West ·
defeat four spades?
It would be pessimism person·
iijed for North to bid fewer than
four spades on the second. round.
West leads the heart eight, East
taking the first two tricks in the
suit. What now?
Obviously there are no more
side-suit tricks available for the
defense. So, in this situation, you
should break the rule taught to
yo11 at your grandmother's knee
by giving declarer a ruff-and-dis- ·
card!
So, East should continue with
a low heart. Now we tum to West.
If he doesn't ruff with the spade
queen, ·one feels homicide would
be justifiable on. East's part'
I'm happy to report no murder
in I:fbbe Sountl, Pia., wh·en Mary
Ann War.ner (West) and Jim
McGraw got this defense right.
The lines above continue:
"He's hardly ever sick at sea!
Then give three cheers, and one
cheer more for the hardy Captain
of the Pinafore!"

COMPOSEI(HAD A
KAc1H.. LIFE, DIDN'T l-IE?

hrs.

20 Adhesive
aubalance t
21 Afflnned .J
22 Predatory •
birds
23 Marathon
24 Mldaaot
nation
25 Go~ cry
27 llfollowo
Aug.
,
28 Plaintiff
: •·
29 Actual belngi ·
31 Ofsummar ' ·
33 Light pink : '
wine

CaD 111-2111

'Your

(

•
er1nc

• Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES '

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I•

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created trom quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each le«er in the cipher stands for another.

•

'
I'

Today's ciU9: C equals 8
'Z VRLGEFSME
XMYGSGOR:
R P 0 M E' l
ZLGSP

MEYT

LV R
VNSPB

C G F F P R S

SLVS,
S L G E F

DVBCYP . ' -

BPX.

SLP
G

A

HMLE

•J

-.
-.........

O four
Rearrange letters of . '"''
terombled words ·be· •

'1

low to form four slrnple words.

'.

.•

."

~;

•

-.• &lt;''
"I'm
scared , the fe llow told
F I K E N 1::::his skydiving instructor. 'I'm ap--,r--T"""-r~ri-:.J
prehensive . which means I'm
5
I
.1 ": scared with a · · · • • • - educa-

••'
'

;

El

R17

!TUESDAY

..

•

_ _:;

I

A

Compl_ele !he chuckl.• quoted -;
by filling In the mlsotng words
•
you develop from step No. 3 below. :

--I.L....L._..J, V

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
.

•

I

•

. •'

'

1111111 !
i

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I
I

Proper . Anise • Quart • Viscid • DROP it IN
"Will this acid dissolve this silver coin?" the teacher

;

•.

'•
.
asked. "No way," one student replied, "if it would , you . ::'
wouldn't DROP it IN."

JUNE 27 )"!

Although nol necessarily visible Although you' re apt to have a lit·
Wednesday, June 28, 2000
The harder you lry in the year now, rewarding applications will tie trouble getting out of the start·
ing blocks, you'll be an excellent
ahead, the luckier you 'II become. be found in time.
LIBRA
(Sept.
23-0ct.
23)
As
stretch
runner.
You have the chance to bring
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
about a marked improve~eni' in , ·long as someone who is managing
a
critical
matter
for
~ou
is
sue·
Only
if you permit yourself to
both your personal and material
cessful, don't change · horses for move about freely both mentally
affairs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) change sake. This person is about and physically today can you fee l
Don't. give up on your optimistic , .to become,even luckier for you. productive and happy at the same
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) time. Even mundane tasks will
attitude regarding a project or
. endeavor that has not proven suc- Persons with whom you're asso- take on new meaning.
ARIES (March 21~April 19)
; cessful as yet. It could occur today ciated will, in large part, be
. by continuing to doing things 10 responsible for some fortuitous , Generally luck comes more readhappening for you today. tly to those who have prepared
the·best your ability. Cancer, 1reat things
.
k .
b ff
lhemselves for success through
yourself to a bjrthday gift. Send The1r 1uc wt 11 ru o on you.
"' d
h
h
·
SAGITI'ARIUS
(Nov.
_Dec.
hard
work
.
•
o
ay,
t
r~ug
yow
23
; for your Astra-Graph predictions
.
efforts, you' ll be lucky m tumtng
: for the year ahead by mailing $2 21) .Yoo could expenence
a
tum
'
. .s. ear
. m
· 10 •.1 ,,.·Jk
purse .
1
.
. . 1 a sow
f
h
be
d
; and SASE to Astro-Graph, c/o lhis or t e tter to ay m a cnttca
·TAURUS (Apri l 20-May 20) ·
; newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Mur- area where your personal efforts Through your ienacity, willing: ray Hill Slation; New York, NY have bee~. severely _hampered. ness 10 take personal conlrol and
· I0156. Be sure to state your Opportumt:es abound ~n the same responsibility and an ability to
· Zodiac sign.
places you ve met reststam:e.
bounce back, success in your
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) "ProCAPRI~ORN (Dec . 22-Jan. endeavors are reasonably certain
• ceed, not postpone" should be 19) Be n1ce to everyone you today.
· your motto today. Pocus all of encounter t~day reaardless of ,. OEMl!lll (May 21-Junc 20)
· · your enerJies on your molt mean· their 1tatlon . in 'Ire, bec:au11 Alletl you now pones• that arc
1
lnaful objective, and don't take 11 throuah new friend1hlpa you not reldlly available 1oday 10 per, brcath,cr until everythlnal•, 11 fin· · develop now, aood ·thlna•. could_ •ona who compete •aalnat you In
Ished.
' VIROO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22) ·~~J~&amp;rJsrQ~~O-P~b. 19, reality, come from past hard w~rk.
):rmost 1111 of your lnvolvtmentl Don't ba upllt If early lndicllo_r• Armed wllh aceomplishment5.
or peno~:~tll encounter• will pro· don't look too aood today. people want to help you •uceeed.
ducc somethlna of value today.
•

I

i

i

.

COMYFIOll. and IBID~

1·800-291-5600

!

cl.othn

'Birthday
...

,JJ

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or

1

47 Odoroua
48 Singer
1
Anllo1
50 COI'I'Ode
'
52 RICicet-alrlnsC
materia~
,
53 JFK Into

6
Bneaaawapaper
deUnred directly to
your daar

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5284

GualltyWiulow
Syst•s, Inc.

--even

keel
,'
42 An-.:dote ;
ccllectlon •
43 Looa force- ·•
44 Kind ol moth,
48 Llka old
!

A PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUAR.ES

A TRAGIC LIFE 15 ROMANTIC
Wi-lEN IT i-IAPPENS
SOME80D'( EL5E ..

I T"AT

lm rovement Needs

• Room Add~lone

•

!

18 louisiana

~~ ~~~:.-;: pr~ .

L.

: PEANUTS

882·2772

• Replacement Windows

• •

Susan -

41

_ J_ _J...

Oarap Doon &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

13 Actress

8 Name 'tor
Athena
9 Longlnga
11 Break In two
12 Original
lnhablllnto

Eut
t•
Pass
All pass

AI

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

(NO SUNDAY CAl I S)

West North

-~6 IV -1.l IG

VInyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacentcnl Windows,
~mlcu OuiiCrs &amp;
Do'YIIspout, Garage room
lddltiollli, Pole Buildina.

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
'
Major Medical • Nursing Home . ~

~~

~tion !"

IIi tllllUTIOIII
COIISliUmotl

For All Your Home

740-992·7599

suffix
37 Llat..ndlng
abbr.

~f'-1.!:

740-992-1709

, Actreu oe1anr,
2 "- - Around '
(Beach Boys
song)
3 Pork or beef
4 Mad. apeclallol
5 Fr. holy woman
6 Swiss river
7 Seductive arlo

1-·

£1131/ t mo pd.

FNelhtlmate•

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Qaragn

i"'f&gt;'(BE
COULD

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

BISSELL .ILDIU
INC.

HE.'S

RIG.HT .

WE

New ROofs • Repairs
• Coaling • Gutters
• Siding • Dryyiall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

DOWN

"No, never!"

Free E•timate•

MIIIIOI• DO~ •IIID IOADII•IIUCIIIG • TUIICINJIG

agcy.

27 Go to court
30 Stir
32 Exit
34 Sign of
affection
35 Skloreae
36 CIMimlcal

For which light opera did W.S .
Gilbert pen these lines?
"And I'm never, never sick at
sea! "
"What, never?"

Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

After 6pm-614-985-4180

Jessica -

BY PHILLiP ALDER

We~dlng:

Before 6p.m. •.
Leave Mmage

57 Actrass

Ruff and discard

CHICKIN
R PIIKIII.

LANDSCAPE

FREE ESTIMATES

do
49 Queaay feeling
15 Act,.oo Dahl
51 Ancient
1e ABA member 54 Toughen
17 Emulate Meryl 55 Fur-bearing
SI-p
animal
19 Like pie?
56 Sunrloe
20 Some
direction

Opening lead: ., 8

QUALITY

"Take the pain out
ofpaintingLet me·do it for you"
Interior

4S What sultora

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

EII&amp;/'.R-

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLAnONS

• K 10
•AKQ62
• 5 • 2
• J 8 3

•

•· Service•
TraUer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

219E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

The"Appliance

• Q3

South
• 6 5t z
• J 75t
• J t 8
• 10 7

Hou., &amp;

740-992-5232

toot•

wenderera

East

• 83
• 10 7 6 3
•96542

EXCAVATING CO.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Answer to Prevlou• Puu •

.....

45 Moving lruck

23 Ronuck
HTholclllm

West

FRIIO

BulUlo•er &amp;: Backhoe

06-17'CIO

•AJt87
• 10 9
• A K Q
•AKQ

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Ufetime Warranty
Local Contractor
.~,VIIQL/111; Prices D.R. Bissen
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Estirnates 740-378-6349

"We're Back"
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes
992~1550

No

nio. ""·

Se If-Storage

•

14 Spnlce up

Gravel• Sand • Topsat1•
Fill Dirt• Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

High &amp; Drv

1 Thin coiiHI

e Outoft-n
hamNr

Hauling • Umestone •

''! ,..,pr,
' wllp a

39 Bualneoo·
women Llluder
CO Fotty
42 Shoemaker'•

employ...
12UHde

EXCfiYfiTIHCI

Now Renting

ACROSS
10 Sllra'

HfiQUHG ancn

2H70Beahan .
. Road
Recine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM · 8 PM

•
•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

�PIKHI

B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, June 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Girls Basketball Camps

TODA 'S ·S COREBOARD
TIIIPUE.,___, Moo•ool, 7: 'NoiMdl.

1--

........,.

- . 8: - · Cokndo, 8; Mot1ln, Son
5; ~ Cokndo, 5,
HoME RuN&amp; - UcGwlro, St. Loult, 21:

-~~~ - -

a-.

-~
Toom
W L
...~.
.. - - - ............................ Now 'lbltl .........................42 3t
Montreal ......................... .37 35
Floridl ........................ ..... 38 31
Plllladllphia ...... ..............3t 42

-

·~·

.v •

.875
3
.514 7 Yl
.'t
.421
14

c..-~

. s.nFrwocioco,21; WLOt,..,.

--

~•-.

- ; n-,

;

-~•nau,

.15117
~6H~~0:.~::,'"~
.488 7t/2
nlil II- 800 8 ~ N 'lbltl
.•t1D121/t. '
, 1, . . ,1. 1; . , .w
.t--1, .000,
.413
t3
:u8; Johnoon, Artzono, 11·2, .1140, uo; Mad·
.405 t3t/2
cluic, · 11-2, .818, Ut ; ~. St..l.oula, tO.
.347
18
4, .714, 4.57;-. Sl. l.OlH, Nl, .700, 4.44;
8~. Sl. l..oulo, 11-4, .Ba2, 3.a2; Padi,
.587
1.00
11-4,.8112, 4.t 0.
.1!83
2
8TRIKEOVTB-..IoMIOII, Arizona, liM;
.514 e 112
Aacio, Cdoraclo, 104; .-.AllarD, 102;
.514 e t/2
Oomplltr, Flolkla, 101 : emwn, Loa Angollo,
.458 8 t/2
e.-&gt;, Pltllbt.rgh, ll8; l&lt;llo, St. I.Dult, 118.
lloncloJ'a !111,_
SAVES ,..., Flarido, 22; Holmon,
Clncini111113, St L&lt;&gt;u1a 2
.' Son Diogo, Ill; llonltez,- 'lbltl, 17;Agulltro,
N.Y. Mats 10, Florldo 5
j GNcogo, 15; - · Sl. L&lt;&gt;ula, 13; Jlmonoz,
Arizona 8, HOU01on t
1 CclorodD, 12; · - _ t2: NM, San
San Diogo a, Loa~ 5
·
12; ShoW, 1.00 Angllto, 12.

EutDMolon
T_,
W L
CllllllootM ....................... t5 to
l..or&lt;lon ............................ 13 10
- - ...................... 12 11
12 ta
Conlon .............................. 7 t8
WMIDivlalon
Ccol&lt; COurdy .................... t4 11
River Clly .........................14 11
c..o~a Cclr11y ................. 11 11
Sprlnglllld .......................12 t3
Evanwllo .........................a 1•

ee:

-..101111 .......................

/ Ffonclaco,

if
J.

~

2
.521 2 t/2
.411t0 t/2
.411 tO 1/2
.1141l
.527 81/2
.4N
t2

.417tlt/2
·18

.!lill
.588 1/2
.5:10 5 112
.488 t t/2

Iow1ng campers, first row: Alicia Werry, Justine Dowler, Megan Garnes, Jlllan Jenkins, Samantha Pierce,
Kat1e Jeff~rs, ~aria Drenner, Mindy Chancey and Kayte Davis. Second row: Mlrantla Beha, Jenni Young,
Reene Batley, Tirzah Dodson, Lindsay Bolin, Angela Wilson, Sarah Stobart. Jessica Blaettnar and Jaynee
Davis. Th1r~ row: Miranda Young, Anna Hartenbach, Kayla McCarthy, Samantha Cole, Meghan Haynes,
Brooke. Bolin. Shannon Soulsby, Corrie Hoover, Brandi Thomas, Bobbl Napper and Chrissy Miller. Fourth
row: M1ck Davenport, Darin Logan, Michelle Drenner and Coach Ron Logan. Absent whan picture was
taken ~as Krystal McDaniel. Subway, Vidao Touch, Vaughan's Video, Dairy Queen Brazier, McDonalds and
Wendy s were sponsors both the morning and afternoon camps. (Sentinel photo)

NGtlhomDivlolon

Toarn
W L
Powtuckot (AadSOx) ........45 28
~ndlano) ...............44 28
Sctanton (PNIIII) ...........43 32
Aoc:heat•
35 38
Syracuoo
oys) ........33 38
Ott.- (EJ&lt;pos) ................27 43
Boui)Mim OMolon
Durllam (OMRaya) ........39 37
Noflolk (Mota) ..................37 42
Charlolla (WijtaSox) .......34 39
Rlclmond ( - ) ....., ....24 150

J..C:Wl .........

Reels
from PageB1
hitter of all time. I just want to
stay quiet and keep making good
pitches and hopefully · he'll stay
'
. ,
gmet.
Griffey hit a two-run homer in
the first off Garrett Stephenson
(9-4), extending his hitting streak
to 10 games. He's homered five
times during the streak, giving
him 23 overall.
Dmitri Young homered with
two outs in the fifth, one of his
three hits, to break a 2-all tie and
leave Stephenson with another
tough loss. The right-hander was
the NL pitcher of the month in

·Notes
fromPageB1
in. I don't understand,"' he said.
"I was actually a little bit miffed.
They let me linger, then told me
afterwards."
·They gave him the news he has
awaited for nearly two years; He
was headed back to the major
leagues.
_ The Reds called up Winchester
Qn Monday to fill Rob Bell's ros~er spot. He'll be used out' of the
bullpen in whatever role is need-

ed.
Winchester smiled broadly and
paused for a moment as he tried
til think of words to describe
what this meant.
"It's a great, great positive to be
in;' he said. "I never knew in the
last two years if this day would
·e ver come."

•

•
•

May. but has gone 1-4 in June as about winning as many games as
the Cardinals scored a total of 10 possible."
runs in his five starts.
Notes: Davis' fourth-inning
" I made two mistakes, it was 3- homer was his first since his
2 and what can you say?" grand slam off' Neagle on May 7.
Stephenson said. "I do the best I He's 4-for-19 career off Neagle
can and I don't ever give up. with three homers.... Drew batThat's why we're winning, ted leadqfl' for the first time this
because we never give up. That's season, going 1-for-4. .. . RHP
what's so good about this team." John Ambrose was optioned to
Danny Graves got McGwire to Double-A Arkansas and RHP
hit into a forceout to end the Mark Thompson was recalled
eighth, then retired the . side in from Memphis.... With Reese
order in the ninth for his 1 lth slowed by a sprained ankle and
save in 12 chances.
Chris Stynes limited by a pulled
While the Reds felt a one-day hamstring, Larkin batted leadoff
dose of relief, the Cardinals for the first time since July 3,
looked at it as just another game. 1996 and went 0-for-4.... Sean
"This is not the time of the Casey had three hits, extending
year to talk about leads," manager his hitting streak to 10 games.
Tony La Russa said. "We talk

The Reds got him from Cleveland on July 31, 1997 along with
Gr.tves, Jim Crowell and Damian
Jackson in exchange for John
Smiley and Jeff Br.tnson.
One year later, he had surgery
on his right shoulder to fix a torn
rotator cuff. He appeared in only ·
six games in Double-A last year as
· he made his comeback.
A solid half-season at Louisville
- 2- 4 with a 3.27 ERA in 36
relief appeannces - put him in
line for a call-up.
"When you get sent down to
the minors, you never know if
you're going to get back up
there;' he said. "Especially corning
off an injury, you don't knoW
how you're going to feel."
Winchester's shoulder was tired
during spring training, when he
failed to make rhe team. He said
the tiredness went away about a
month ago and he's had no problems since.
· ·

Barry .batting leadoff
With Pokey Reese hobbled by
a sprained ankle and Chris Stynes
slowed by a pulled hamstring,
Barry Larkin ended up batting
leadoff Monday for the first time
since July 3, 1996.
Although Larkin doesn't particularly care to bat first, he· didn't
object to the move.
"It's no real big deal;' he said. "I
haven't talked to anyone about it.
I'd assume it's to try to spark
something. Whatever it takes.
That's cool."

Baltimore (Muaolna 5· 7) 111 Booton
(Schouratc 2-e), 7:115 p.m. 1
.
TOICII!o (Eocobor 6-8) at Tampa Bay Cfrach·
·~5-7), 7:15p.m.
. CIOYeland (Finlay 5·5) at Kanaaa City (Suzukill-1), 8:05p.m.
Mlnnosota (Maya 3·8) at Chicago WM1 Sox
(Baldwin tO.~ p.m.
Anaheim (
r 2·0) at
(Saloll-3),
t0:05 p.m.
Texa'i (Partaho 2.0) at Dateland (Hudoon a.
2), 10:05 p.m.
,
ClomM
N.Y. Yarl&lt;aea (Ford O.Q) at DatroH (Biolr 4t ), 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Johnoon O.e) at Boa11ln (R.Mor·
!Inez 6-4), 7:05 p.m.
Torcxoo (Walls 12·2) atlOmpa Bay (Yon 45), 7:t5 p.m.
Cleveland (Rigdon t ·t) at Kanaaa Clly
(Witaalck 1·7). 8:05p.m.
Mlooosota (Uncoln O.Q) at Chloogo Whb
5o&gt;&lt; (Eldred 11-2), 6:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Hil 3-4) at Saa1lle (Mayor 8-2),
10:05 p.m.
r..., (Holing 7·7) at Ollc!Md (Applor 8-3),
t0:05 p.m.

w•.

S-•

-naodoy'·

Nal._l ~uolltatf-

· WLTPio
Now'~...............7 8 s 21
NY-NJ ............ ,............8 7 t 2$
Mlaml\ ........................8 8 • 22
D.C. '............................4 10 4 18
ControiDivlolon
Chicagt! ......................&amp; 7 3 30
Tampa aay ..................u e o 21
CctumiKII ...................8 7 • 22
Dolao .........................&amp; g 3 21
nDivlolon
- C i t y ............... lt 2 4 37
7 4 7 28
....................7 I I 22

-.
.
.
.
.
=
w....

101

Ana•

..
30
21
24
28

GA
21
28
27
38

4t
35

35
28

28 30
21 34
,
30 t~
23 18
23 37

p.m.'·

.

. -......
E

1\naoial at OC Unllad, 7:30 p.m.
~~allo6.:~· 7:30p.m.
II

·

8 p.m.

a-

111 OC Unkld, 3J&gt;.m.

ow'lllrk-Naw.laluyll,......
.
Bay, 7 p.m.
JoH at COiurnbua, 7:30p.m.
Cfty II Now Enallnd, 7:30 p.m.
·; ~Ana- at Doliao, 1:30 ~.m..

c.

. .;,

Eattlm Cotlfa;•iW
W L - G8
..........................1 e .583
............................? e .538 1/2
............................8 B .1500 .
I
w.ltington .......:...............e 8 .eoo
t
~

fol'' 'lbilc ...........................&amp;

John Ambrose to Arkanaae of the Texas

Laaguo,
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Placed OF Tony
Gwynn and FIHP Stan Spencer on the tlklay
dilabled lilt. Transforred ss Chns Gomez
from the t5· to the 80-day disabled 1111.
Recalled FIHP Will Cunnano from Las Vegas o1
the Pacfflc Coa81 League. Puit:hated the con·
tract ol OF Dusty Alan tram Us Vogaa.
FOOT&amp;ALL

7 .418
8 .333

2
..... , .......................4
3
.............................3 8 .273 31/2
...........................2 11 .184 51/2
I; •' "fJMtem
uaton .......................... 12 2 .8117
Ang-.. ..................... 10 2 .833
I
1111,_ .:.......................&amp; 4 .8117
3
IIHotnbc .............................&amp; 4 .ee7
3
......... ......................8 8 .818 31/2
Uillt ..................................&amp; 7 .533 41/2
Pliorllnd ............................2 8 .200
8
............................ ..2 g .182 81/2

l
.'

EXPLAINING PLAN- Dennis Eichinger, Meigs High School principal,
explained the continuous improvement plan completed by educators
and community leaders over the past ·several months to the Meigs
Local Board of Education Tuesday. The· report card from the State
Department of Education put the district in an "academic emergency•
category on the basis of low proficiency test scores. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

.513
.488 3t/2
.488 3 t/2
.324
14

Amaflooni.Mgue
DETROIT TIGER5-,Iogreed to Ierma with
RHP Mark Woodyard, OF Milot Durham, RHP
Andrew Warren, RHP Jeremy Johnson, RHP
Nathan Tekavec, C Forrest Johnson. OF
t.la-fllrluott, RHP Emmanuat Yalemln, OF
AniOine Tel~l, flHP Jellray t.euenborger, t B
Joaaph Gefbor, 18 Shawn Lamboit, and RHP
Shawn Hannah.
Nolonaii.Mgue
CINCINNATI REDS-Recalled RHP Scott
Wlnchaatar tram LOuisville of the lntornatlonal
Laague.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Activated C
Todd HUndleY from the dltabled !lat. Optioned
C Paul L.oDuca to AlbUquerque altho Pacific
Ccaat Laaguo.
ST. LOUIS CAROfNI\1.8-Agreed to terms
wllh LHP Clwls Narvaton, RHP Shaun Stokoe,
COon Moylan, and 1B John Galland aulgned
NalveJon to Johnson City Of tlla Appalaehl8n
Loaguo and Stotcaa, Moylan and Gail Ia Now
Joraay of the Now York·Penn League.
Recoiled RHP Mark Thompoon from Memilhlo
ol tho Pacific C..ll leagua. Op11oned RHP

~:''iiiiM'jjOii,ii\, ~ ~~.:,:.:..:..
AD~
WitdfliLJ r'aO.rnM
..., JoH ot Now 'lllrk·- .Joruy, 7:30

r..-.;

BATTING-Helton, COlorado, .3711; Yldro,
Montreal, .371; Guerrero, Montr•l, ·.HI;
CastllkJ, Florida, .3115: Ploua, Now 'lbltl, .3110;
OWens, San o;ego, .348; ~. Loa
IH, .348.
RUNS-1-illton, Colorado, 72; Edmondo, 81.
Louis, 7t; Bandt, San FronciiiCO, 85; Baawoil,
Houston, 64; Alfonzo, New Vortc, eo; StMafntld,
Loa Angotti, 58; Janos, Atlanto, 81;
GIUd-. Los Angllll, 58.
Rlli-Kenl, San FranciiiCO, 72; Helton, COl·
orado, 85; Sooa, Chi&lt;llgo, 811; Sheffield, 1.00
Angella, 811; Guorr..,, Montreal, 115; Glloo,
Plttsbu~gh, 84; Piazza, Now '11111&lt;, 52.
HITS-Vklro, Montreal, 101 ; Guetr.a, Mon~
!real, 99; OwOIW, San ();ego, 87; You1g. Chica·
go, 95; Kern, San Fral'lllaoo, 115; HeiiCOI, Ccl·
orado, 94; AJones, Atianta, 13,
COU~S-Yidro, M - . 25; Cirillo, COl·
orado, 25; Green, Los Ang...., 25; Young,.
Chlcago, 25; Atfonzo, New York, 24; Whtte,
Montreat, 23; Kent, San Francl100, 23; Zele,
New Yol1&lt;, 23.

~-

...

-

Pol. GB
.8t6
.8tt
1/2
.573
3
,47$
tO
.478
10
.386 t81/2

eo. .......

NotlonoiF-II~ue

PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Signed LB
Babe Northern 10 a two.year contract.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signad DE Jeff
Poaay. Waived CB Lamar Grant and LB Jake
Michel.

.........,.._

;,

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

HESTER - Residents here will
once again be able
to dispose of recyclable refuse once
plans are finalized• for ti)e return
of a recycling slation.
The station was removed due
to complaints about the site.
. Kenny Wiggins, director of the
Meigs County R ecycling ' :lr!'d
Litter Prevention Program , said
the former recycling station had
been moved to an area on Sumner Road after a number of residents voiced their complaints
about the station's location near
th e Chester Commons.
" I really don 't know who
complained;' said Wiggins. "All I
know is that someone mentioned
so mething about the station damaging trees in the cotnntons area."
Wiggins met with Meigs
Cou nty Commissioners Monday
to discuss the current status of the
recycling sta tion and possible
solutions.
•·
Since being moved to Sumner
Road, the station has been the
target of several vandalism incidents and was recently turned
upside down, spilling its contents
all over the ground.
W iggins said he has seen a substantial increase in the quantity of
recyclables that are being deposited at the Pomeroy site, du e in part
to th e removal of the Chester station.
H owever, since its removal, a
number of C hester residents have
objec ted to the move.
Wi ggins said that over 190 signatures were obtained for the stati.on's return and thar commissioners agi;Ced to meet with him

Showing off the Red legs

42X -42 X

.'

Subscribe today992-2156

I

I

'

.

.,

'

Please IH Plan.. Pqe Al

landlords to be responsible for
their tenants' past-due balances'.
Roger Manley, a landlord and
village council member, said the
group represented yesterday was
"strictly opposed" to any policy
that would require them to pay
.
t-:o---BY BIIIAN· J; REED
their tenants' bills.
·
· SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
"We feel that it's unfair;' ManMIDDLEPORT Should ley said, "but we want to be a
landlords be responsible for their part of the solution, not a part of
tenants' delinquent water bills?
the problem."
The Middleport Board of
Myron Duffield, president of
Public Affairs has started consid- the BPA, said that the board has
ering the possibility of making began considering both the
the owners of rental properties causes of the large amount of
ultimately responsible for the uncollectable debt and possible
past- due water bill balances of solutions.
their tenants.
"The reaction to this is preThe village public works sys- mature," Duffield said. "We're
tem faces some $35,000 in nowhere near a resolution or any
uncollected utility bills action."
money that could be applied to
Duffield said that once resithe millions of dollars in dents move away. leaving a delin;.
improvements the village faces quent account balance, they are
due to an aging water and sewer- often hard to locate. Other~,
age system, and mandates from move out and leave the water
the Ohio Environmental Protec- running, resulting in an extreme~ ·
tion Agency.
ly high final bill not likely to be
Other area villages have poli- collected.
cies in place which, in effect,
The water department has also
require that landowners be been forced to adjust the deposits
responsible for the water charged to new customers.
accounts on their property.
Threatened legal action by
Leading Creek Conservancy Southeastern Ohio Legal SetDistrict and Tuppers Plains- vices has resulted in a change of
Chester Warer District, for exam- policy. Rather than a flat $60
ple, do not allow tenants to open deposit, the deposit is based on
water accounts. In Gallipolis, a an average threecmonth usage,
$125 deposit and eight-page decreasing the amount of money
application make a joint agree- the village can hold to offiet past
ment between tenants and land- due balances.
"We're looking for a way to
lords.
At Tuesday's regular BPA resolve the issue, not to penafue
meeting,
a number of Middle- landlords," Duffield said.
RECYCLING STATION - Kenny Wiggins, director .of the Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention Proport landlords shared concerns
The BPA took no action on
gram , inspects a recycling station in Syracuse, which Is identical to the newly constructed station that will
about
a
policy
that
would
require
the
issue Monday.
be placed In Chester - near the original location on the Commons. (Tony M. Leach photo)

the building were taken dnring .
POMEROY - Three men the incident.
charged in the breaking and
The men were later indicted by
entering of the old Park Street rhe Meigs County grand jury.
Sch ool in Middleport entered
As charged against the three
gui lty pleas ,in Meigs County men, breaking and entering is a
Common Pleas Court Monday.
fifth-degree felon y, punishable by
C harles L. Stewart, Gary T. a year in prison and a ·$2,500 fine .
R ydenbark and Ri chard WarSentencing for the'three was set
necke II appeared before Judge for Aug. 7 at 10 a.m. In the meanFred W. Crow. Ill and admitted to time, a pre-sentencing investigatheir roles in• the incident.
tion was ordered, and the men
According to Middleport were ordered to submit applicaPolice Chief Bruce , Swift, t he tion for placement in the Meigs
men were caught in the act of
County Community Corrections
breaking into the school building,
program.
now used as a storage building for
T hey were also ordered to subthe Village of Middleport.
PieeH see PINs, Pep AJ
A number of bicycles stored in

$inqle Pedestal Mostalqia
Oalc Table with
4 Arrowbac;lc Side Chairs

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL SPORTS.
MORETheLOCAL
FOLKS.
Daily Sentinel

must have over the next five years to get to

May make
landlords pay
tetwnt's bills

FROM STAFF REPORTS

$329·95

o n h ow to sustain the momentum , which w e

billing issue

Bv ToNY M. LEAcH .

111ree plead guilty ·
in M'port break-in
SJlf PRICE

improvement, which is 14 of 25 standards, and ·
then another five years to become an effec tive
school district, wh ere 26 or more of the perfonnance standards wo uld be met.
Eichinger said that the questions the committee has had to consider are " Where are we
now with q,ur .schools and our achievements,
and whore ~e want to go?"
To get answers to the questions, Eichinger
explained th at the committee performed a
needs assessment by reviewing available academic informatio11 including proficiency test
scores, doing surveys, analyzing data and then
putting together a plan.
"The plan basically describes how to get
where we need to go, and lets us know if and
when we get there. It also gives information

Chester recycling station to return BPA .considers

Please see Recycle, Page Al

In an attempt to break the team
out of its slump, Larkin, Ken Griffey Jr. and Reese wore their pants
legs hiked up just below the knee,
showing their red socks.
''I'm wearing ·em to try to
change things up a litde bit;'
Larkin said.

that action be taken through a community
committee to come up with a comprehensive
plan which hopefully will result in improved
scores.
Last night, several members met with the
board
to present the co mmittee's continuous
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
improvement plan. Speaking for the group at
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - A continuous Improve- the board meeting were Dennis Eichinger,
ment plan with strategies aimed at improving Meigs High School principal , and Mary
the Meigs Local School District's status of O'Brien, Meigs Middle School assistant prin"academic emergency" was presented to the cipal.
Board of Education Tuesday night by a comEichinger said it is the the committee's goal
mittee of educators and community mem- to improve the proficiency test rate for the 27
state performance sta ndards from the current
bers.
A report card based on profic iency test eight to between nine and 13 within the next
scores issued last year by tl)e State Department five years.
That, he said, would move the district into
of Education found the district passing only
eight o( the 27 state performance standards an academic watch status.
putting the district in the lowest category of
Following those five years , Eichin ger said
the committee has set an additional three
achievement.
years
for reaching the status of continu ous
Because of that rating, the state required

Board eyes continuous
improvement program

..

t..ouiiiYilla (Reds) ..............45 32 .584
lndlanapoill (Br-) .....41 35 .538 31/2
COIUITtluo (Yarl&lt;aea) .......37 38 .607
8
ToledO (Tlgerst,~:.::;:.:::;::·~.! .443 tO 1/2
Charlolle 117"'~"3
SyraCliH B, Durham 7
Ind ...~,, 3, Norfolk 2
Columbus 9, Ottawa 5
LouiiiYille 2, Pawtucl&lt;ot t
Rochaater 7, Richmond 2
SCraniOn,WIIkOI·Barro 8, Toledo 5, tO
IMinga
Tocloy'o Clomaa
Bdfato a1 Chailolle
Durllam at Syracuoo .
lndlanapolia at Nclrfolk
Ott.- at COIU&lt;Ttlua
Pawtuckat atl.oulavllla
Richmond at Aocl&gt;eatlt'
Tolo&lt;lo at SaantoMVtilloo·Barro
Weclnlld-r"• GamM
Charlolle
Cclombusatat- LouiiiYilla
PawtUckat at Indianapolis
Richmond at Syracuse
SctanloiVWIIkeo·Birro at Rochaater, 2
Toledo at Ottawa
Buffalo at Durham

s-.

N.Y. Yankaas (Ccila toll) at Dllrott (Ncmo 2·

lt/2
2

-omDivlalon

•a..

7), 7:05 p.m.

.480
.3&amp;1

lh-.,..-

e

A~ERNOON CAMPERS -The afternoon session of the Lady Marauder basketball camp featured the fol·

.eoo

Rk:hmond at COnton
.. Chillicothe
EvaniiYillo at Dullola County
Ccol&lt; COUnly at London
Springfield at River City

18: Jlllr, Now Vorl&lt;, 15; Mct..amorw, Saattle,
1St'
1'1TCHING (10 Ooclalont)-Wtlia, TORIIIIO,
t~; .887, 3.55; Baldwin, Chicago, 10.2, .833,
3.5!1; Eld...t, Chicago,
818, 3.114; Hudoon,
Oakland, B-2, .BOO, 4.24: Malllnez, eo-., 11-3,
.1eo. 1.44; Sale,
8-3, .121. 4.32:
lluilla, Clovoland, 8-3, .727, 5.72;Applar, Oak·
iln!I~B-3 . .727, 4.05.
STIIIKEOIJTB-MarUMz~n, 140; Fin~· 1111; Nomo,
114; Buita,
, 13; Colon, Clweland, to;
. , 811; Muul... Boltlmoro, 811.
WES--..IonM, o.troil, 20; 1111
ltn,
,18;Ptldvoi,Anoholm, te;:nd.
T~, 18; Klxll, Toronto, 17; LaM, Bolton,
17; ~NOW 'lbltl, 17.

~

.580
.580

Rlclwnond 81l'ocllov'o
Ccoli Coun1y
Canton ., c..ola Cc\r11y, 2
London at E-IIYilo
. Sprlnglleld at Jot.-wn
Clllllloolht ., River Cfty

Mondtli, 1'broi11a, 20; o.stHida, a.ltlmotll,

,...,.._

50 Cenb

Plan targets better scores

JohnltoWn 4, Springfield 2, 2nd game
River Cfty 5, ChiNicolho 1

ao;,- . Clevllancl, ta: Lawton. MMIOola,

G8

I

2
.eoo 2t/2
7
.304

.52:1

Jollnotown 4, Springfield 3, tat gomo

Ana-

Pel.
M3

.565

Rk:hmond 4, Cook Coun1y 2

m

Amlrlcoiii.Mgua

GB

Con1on at Dullolt County, ppd ., rain
London tO, Evanovlllo 7

ea:

-·-,..-

Pel.

.eoo

llonclor'I-

R-....,

8

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 22

AIMrkwn LMgue lt.IIIIMIOII I • • , , , .
Atlanta (Giavlno 1-4) at Montrtol (Mr.a 2·
8ATTING-Gan:lapam1, Boston, .383:
5), 7:05 p.m.
•
Cl'kago Cubo (Wood 3-4) II ~
Etolad. Anaheim, .372; Floclrlguer, T-., .38t;
(Ritchie 4-4), 7~ p.m.
.
Mat1lnu. - · .357: Deiaoldo, 'lblonlo, .31511;
Aorlda (Sanchez 4-8) II N.Y. Mill (Ruooh s - . Ka,... City, .382; Raclllguez, Saat·
5-5), 7:10p.m.
til, .348.
Milwaukee (Haynoo 7-8) at l'tlllldolphla
IMIS Aodrig,.., Saa111e, 74; Deigldo,
(Schilling 2·4). 7:38 p.m.
ToroniD, 83; MondMI, Totonto, 151; QIIIUI, Ana·
St. LOuis (1&lt;11~ 10-4) at ClndnnaU (Ponto 3- heim, 57; Glambl, Olklal)d, 57; DutNm, Chk:a·
t 0) , 7:35 p.m.
go, 57; Entod, Anallelm, 58.
San FrandiiCO (Ealeo 8-3) at Cclonldo
Saaltll, 77; - · Ollc·
(Jar.ris 2·2), 9~ p.m.
lihl
.. • 73; ~.- Cfty, 71 ; Delgado,
Hoootoo (EiariOn 5-3) at Arizona (DUI2·7),
· 11: Rodrigue, s..m.,
Wlliomt,
t0:05 p.m.
.
Now 'lbltl, ea; E - . llollon, 88.
san 01ego (CUnnane H) at Loa Angollo
?.'' HITs-Entad, Anaheim, t21; Sweeney,
(Gagne 1-4), 10:10 p.m.
Cfty, 101 ; RodrigueZ, Toxaa, 101 ; Dll·
· 118; -.auoz, Saa111e, 118; LawAtlanta (Muli'K&gt;IIand 7-8) at (Hor·
,, t.t6MIIola, liM; Wlilami, New York, 88;
manoon 11-4), 7~ p.m.
staul. Toxu, 88.
Cticago Cubo (LJebor &amp;-8) Ill Plltobur;h
. ~~~.8aa111e.~;U~
(Cofdova 5-5), 7:05p.m.
24: D y e , - City, 23; SWMnl)',
Florida (Penny 4-8) at N.Y. -(II.J. Jonol
cttv. 22; -O.Shteldl, 81Jtirnore, 22;
2-3), 7:t op.m.
Anahllm, 2t; Garclaparra, Bolton, 21;
Milwaukee (Sny&lt;lor 3·2) at l'tllladllpllla
T-. 21; Segul, Toxas, 21 .
(Ashby 2·7), 7:38 p.m.
PL.E&amp;-Guzman,
Mlnnooota,
12;
St. l.oulo (Hentgen 8-8) at Clncln..tl
, cnlcago, e; Kamody, Anaheim, 5;
(DessansO.O), .7:35 p.m.
N
Booton; !; 7 ara110d wllh 4.
San FranciiiCO (LHe.....- e.8) at COl·
- •••-ME RUNil-Dalgodo, Toronto, 27;
orado (Bohanon 3-e), ~~p.m .
QIIUI, Anahllm, 33; Everett, Bolton, 23;
Hooaton (lima 1o11) at AriZona (Mdnon 7·
Floddguez, T-, 23; Gian'lll, Clakland, 2t;
2), t 0:05 p.m.
San Diego (Eaton t.Q) at l.os
(Parle ~.Anahalm, 21;lhoma, CieYellind, 2t;
J1111too,c-....2t: - · s-.21 .
9-4), t0:05 p.m.
&amp;TOLEN~~- City, 2t;

!oo!Divlolon
Toam
W L
Toronto .................... ........42 34
New York .........................37 33
Boaton ............................ 37 34
Baltimore ........................30 43
Tampa Bay ...................... .30 43
Central OMolon
hlcaiJO ............... ..........48 27
lavetand ........................38 35
Ka""'o City .....................35 38
Mlmasota .......................33 44
Dllroll .............................30 42
WHI Dlvlolon
Oakland .......................... 44 30
Saettle ............................43 30
Anaheim .........................38 38
Texas ..............................34 39
Mondav'aMinnesota t D, Aneheim
Detroit t3, Clevlland 2

Metes County's

June 18, 1000

Ana-.

~~·TodWI
~=-'
GamM

MORNING CAMPERS- The following young ladies took part In the 2000 Lady Marauder basketball camp
held last week. Pictured in the front row from left to right are: Mandy Hannan, Morgan Lentes, Jamie Ba~
ley, Tara Capehart, Emily Fields, Devan Soulsby, Deanna Cundiff, Hannan Hoffman and Tallsha Beha. Sec·
ond row: Kelsey Fife, Catle Thomas, Whitney Smith, Patti Vining, Jennifer Smith, Lindsay McKinney, Shenna Ftelds, Amy Barr and Christeena Young. Third row: Shannon Price, Ashley Thomas, Amber VIning, Tiffany
Quails and Coach Ron Logan. Not pictured are Amorette Salser and Ma~orie Bratton. (Sentinel photo)

_

1.00 Angollo 74, YillhiiVIon 72
70, Or1ando 1511
IJIII1811,- eo
Wedl"latdr(a GlmM
- a t - 'lbltl, 7:30p.m.
HoUilon or a..toao, 7:30p.m.
Mlomlat Oflando, 7:30 p.m.
1.00 Angollo Ill lndianl, 8 p.rn.
Mlnneo&lt;llaatSiclomlnto,tOp.m.
Clowland .. Polland, 10 p.m.
0otro1t at Saa111e, t 0 p.m.

100, 2!; Olilloy Jt, Cindnnoll, 23; - · Colo
- . 21 : Clwrtlo, Molibtol, 21: EdiiiDillll,
8t loulo, 21 ; PIUlol, NOW 'lbltl, 21 ; Komll.
I,!IOAngtlto. 21 •
8TOLEN lASES a rtwtn coa.da 34.
CMIJIIO Floltdo 32 'ibo • CNcogo • 25•
•~ '• - ·- ;a 11Q,~~~ ,' tl;

St. Lou!o.........................44 3t
Clncinnotl ........................38 31
Pittsburgh ....•..........••..... .31 .t3
Mi!Waulcoe .......................31 44
Chicago ..........................30 44
Hoooton ......................... .211 41
WOol OMolon
Atlzana ...........................44 3t
~ado ............. ............40 31
San Francieoo..................37 35
1.00 Angeioo .....................38 311
San Diego ........................34 40

· Details, A3

1.00 Angollo 72, 'lbltl87
o .. at.Mt 14. PhoeniX e1
0o11a! IM, Cllortotlo I t
-i2,f'oniiWI78.

AftZOnl. 7; Q,af.O:I. CdorldD, 7; ~Col­

Wednesday

Kathryn Beich 4-H scholarship, A6
Reds fall to Cards; NBA Draft, Bl

lbursclay
High: 70s; Low: 50s

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Today's

Sentinel
2 Sadloo"'S- us

Pllps

Calendar
Classified•
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
· Sports
Weather

A6
84-6

87
M
A3
Bl~J. 8
A3

Lotteries
.OHIQ

Pi&lt;t 3: 8-3-5; Pick 4: 5-5-9-5
But:bye 5: 3-7-S-18-23

'¥}'A,
Daily 3: 7-9·2 Daily 4: 8-5-3-6
C 2000 Ohio Valley l'ublishing C o.

Two named Outstandin Rural

Ciinicians at Pleasant Va ley
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- MichaeiW Corbin,
MD, and Mark W. N olan, MD, obstetricians/ gynecologists at Pleasant Valley · Hospital, were recently
nam ed Outstanding Rural Clinicians of the Year by
the Marshall University School of Medicine; according to Michael G. Sellards, executive director of
PVH .
"It is nice to be appreciated by someone, especially your colleagues, for doing something that makes
you feel good;' Corbin remarked.
" It is a job, but it is more than that;' he added. "It
is about helping the community and being a part of
the community. It is my little way of making an
impact."
The awards were recently announced at the MU
School of Medicine's general faculty and awards presentation, and the physicians were also honored at the
·PVH medical staff meeting.,

This distinction has been awarded for the past five
years to honor clinicians who demonstrate a commitment to foster education in the clinical environment. Through the teaching, students in the medical
profession receive on-thejob knowledge of procedures in the different fields of medicine.
joAnn Raines, MUSoM's assistant dean for academic affairs and rural prognms, presented the awards
to the doctors.
·
"They have a clear understanding of what needs
to be taught: teach it well. It is their interaction with
students that is most deserving," Raines commented .
"What the students think and say about you is the
real honor. You also learn a lot from their questions;•
Nolan remarked.
Raines also praised th e doctors for providing students with ' educational opportunities.

Please see DoctOn, Pltp Al
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