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Thursdlly, June a, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pege B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.Rahal makes transition from track t4 CARl boardroOm
.

BY TltE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· :Two yean ago, Bobby Rahal was driving a race car. Now, he's driving CART.
. The three-time series champion who
won the 1986 Indianapolis 500 became
interim president and CEO after Andrew
Craig resigned under fire june 16. Rahal
immediately began a whirlwind tour.
"I've been on airplanes more than I've
been on the ground," said Rahal, who
quit racing after the 1998 season to concentrate on running his two-car team. ·
Since replacing Craig, the CART chief
since 1994, Rahal has been meeting with
key operatives. Included was Howard
lUtz, president of ABC Sports, whom
Rahal deems of major importance to
CART's future.
CART is suffering from declining TV
ratings, poor attendance at some venues,
a 4-year-old war with the IRL and the
staggering growth of NASCAR in the
last decade.
"Now I have a more precise idea of the

amount of work a CEO has to do ... promoter issues, team issues, sporting issues,
commercial issues;· Rahal said. "I knew it
was out there before I came on board,
but I just didn't know the full volume of
it:'
Rahal was one of Craig's strongest critics, often questioning the direction
CART was taking. Some of Rahal's fellow team owners are confident he will
attack the problems.
"I think Bobby is going to contribute
massively, because he has such a core
understanding of the business;· said Cal
Wells Ill.
Derrick Walker also thinks Rahal is the
right man for the job•
" I'd expect to see a very positive effect,
getting everybody back on track, not
only internally, but also the motor
groups, the manufacturers, sponsors and
the community of racing that has
become somewhat fragmented over the
last few years;' Walker said.

CART, which went public two years
ago. also has brought in marketing specialist Pat Leahy liom Target and former
vice president of operations for Mercedes
Hal Whiteford as its president of racing.
After Craig's resignation, the board also
selected Jim Hardymon, former chairman ofTextron, Inc. , as its chairman.
Bruce McCaw, another team owner
and board member, says personnel
changes have moved CART in the right
direction.
"I think there's an opportunity now to
pull people together," McCaw said. "This
is a business where everybody becomes
an instant expert on everything from
marketing to rules, and I think that
Bobby perhaps can provide some ,real
strong leadership."
One of the first moves by the balding,
mustachioed, 47-year old Rahal was a
phone call to Tony George, president of
the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and
fo11nder of the IRL.

Rahal called it "purely a social call," but
one that tft"Geoqre know that CART
remains open to some sort of accommodation that would bring the two aides
together, adeut for the Indy' 500.
"I wu ju'l:volunteering:· Rahal said. "I
always havelno· matter what my position,
a willingnea,to co~unicate and try to
solve an isSl!e that's on everybody's mind
all the time~ I
He said QttRT will keep an open period in its 2apl. schedule to allow its teams
to race at t'il'd'y in what now is an IRL
event.
Chip Ganassi'a team went last month,
with defending CART champion Juan
Montoya winning the nee and teammate
jimmy Vasser filiishing seventh. Now,
other CART teams are expected to follow Ganassi'a lead- but without risking
the future of their own series.
"By keeping our schedule open, we
can at least participate at Indy. and that
truly is the race ·that is important to our

sponsors:' Rahal said. "But that issue is
not ours to solve in a lot of respects.
"Our biggest issue is building openwheel racing, making investments in our
merchandising, activating our sponsors to
do more on behalf of their involvement
in the sport."
He thinks that will help attendance
and TV numbers.
"I think that's job one;' he said.
As committed as Rahal is to his new
job, he's not ready to remove the interim
tag.
"It's kind of like I have an action sheet
where I've written down all these projects or things I have to do;' he said. "I'm
ticking them off slowly as we go through
them all.
"But thinking about making this permanent, that's not even on the action
sheet yet:'

Kyle Petty will take the place of .
his late son, Adam, in the Sprint
Chevrolet for the rest of the
NASCAR Busch Series season.
"We've worked very closely
with Sprint to reach the right
decision," Petty said Tuesday. "I
want to drive the car, and they
want ·me to drive."
Adam was killed in a practice
session at New Hampshire International Speedway on May 12.
He was 19.
Kyle will see double duty this
weekend, driving the Petty
Enterprises' No. 44 pontiac in the
Winston Cup race Saturday night
in Dayton'a Beach, Fla., and Busch
carSundayinWestAllis,Wis.ASA
driver Scott Hansen will qualify
the No. 45 Busch car while Petty
·completes his driving duties in
Daytona.
Bi.ftle's run at the record
. Greg Biffie is chasing an
unprecedented fourth straight
NASCAR Craftsman Truck
Series victory in Saturday's Sears
DieHard 200 in West Allis, Wis.
"I think we're ready to do it,"
said Biffie, the defending champion on The Milwaukee Mile.
"When you win like this everyone expects you to go out and
\vin every race. Of course, that's
what we would like to do, too."
The Roush Racing driver has
won four of the last five events to
take a 54-point lead over Jack
Sprague in the season standings.
Biffle set a series record last year
with nine victories.

Gordon

.
•

from Pap II
, While it lasted, though, it was
• great.
;. . Gordon was Rookie of the Year
· in 1993. Two years later, he won
his first championship at 24, the
second-youngest to claim the
.$tock car racing's elite prize.
Now, Gordon isn't among the
' favorites in every race.
: · , "It's been a character-building
. year for me;' he said. "It's amazing
how much harder you work
. ,when you're running lOth or
·12th."
~ . In 1998, when he won his third
~ championship
while
tying
Richard Petty's record for most
• victories in a season, Gordon had
26 'top-five finishes in 33 races.
His victory in Sonoma and an
earlier one in Talladega, Ala., are
two of only three top-fives this
· year.
• At the height of his run, Gor; ~on was chidingly called Wonder
Boy by fans who resented his
9uick rise in the tradition-laden
· sport.
- Although he was easily the
most recognizable star on the cir. • j:uit' thanks in part to a
• squeaky clean image promoted by

.

June 30, 1000

Factory Invoices

Hometown Newspaper

our

"NEW'' FORD• LINCOLN• MERCURY
You will know what we paid, so you'll NEVER PAY TOO MUCH!

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 24

so Cents

Fireworks
:safety
.stressed
•

Petty to drive late
son's car for rest
of.2000 season.
Mike Skinner (1996) and Ron
Hornaday (1997) are the only
other series drivers to win three
consecutive races.
NHRA cuts deal
with ESPN
The NHRA and ESPN have
reached a five-year TV agreement
and multimedia partnership that
will put the NHRA Drag Racing
series on ESPN and ESPN2
through 2005.
The Streaker
Rusty Wallace will make his
SOOth consecutive NASCAR
Winston Cup start Saturday night
in the Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
Wallace, 43, who began the
streak in the 1984 Daytona 500,
has 50 career victories.
Wallace will be looking to
extend his lead in poles with his
seventh this year and third in a
row. No other driver has more
than two poles this season.
Double duty
Truck series regular Andy
Houston will drive Team Sabco's
No. 82 Chevrolet in Sunday's
Busch race at the Milwaukee
Mile.
"I love racing anything that has
wheels on it and take advantage
of any chance I get;• said Houston, the son of former Busch star
Tonuny Houston.
Andy has three victories in
three full seasons on the Craftsman Truck Series. He'll drive the
No. 60 Chevrolet in Saturday's
Milwaukee truck race.

Details, A3

Friday

teams and increasingly important to our

AUTO RACING NOTES

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

News of local servicemen, As
Reds lose; 4 share Hartford lead, 11

s.tu~

Hfth: 10.; LGw: 50S

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -The upcoming
Fourth of July holiday has many
Meigs County residents rushing
to stores to purchase smoke
bombs, botde rockets, Roman
candles, and various other types
of fireworks in preparation for the . ,
celebration of our nation's indePendence.
However, bright lights and loud
explosions that fireworks emit
can easily divert one's attention
away from the possibiliry of
injury or death.
State Fire Marshal Robert R .
Rielage warns all Ohioans to be
aware of the inherent dangers of
fireworks and to avoid discharging fireworks in Ohio, which is
against state law.
Rielage cited the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission's 1998 statistics as an illustration of just how dangerous fireworks can be. ·
Fireworks injhries sent 8,500
people to hospital emergency
rooms across the country that
year, the last for which statistics
are available.
About 56 percent of the
injuries were burns to the hands, ''
eyes and face. Children under the
~ge of 15 comprised 40 percent
o£..the Yi~QW. .. '.t ,
" ~
• FirewoYks, ' in ' alfS' fotm,
potentially dangerous. Even
sparklers, wJ:tich are ,popular
among children ~nd considered
harmless by 'most people, can
reach temperatures above 1,200
degrees Fahrenheit. ·
The Ohio Department of
Commerce's Division of State
Fire Marshal, in conjunction with
local fire and enforcement offi.:
clals, administen Ohio's fireworks
FI~IIE\IIKiiiiKS FAN -Josh Parker, Pomeroy, visited Kroger with his mother and grandmother Thursday after·
laws.
· Over the last year, the State Fire noon to look over the store's selection of fireworks that are on sale for the upcoming Fourth of July hoi·
!day. Parents must be cautious when l!!ttlng children play with fireworks because of possible Injuries that
can occur. (Tony M. Leach photo)
.
Plu~ ... hflty,' ..... AJ

am

DHS readies
for July 1
merger date
Stqff staying busy
reducing caseload
BY BRIAN . J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT While
the caseload of clients receiving
cash assistance has been reduced
dramatically, staff at the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services must now concentrate
on finding resolutions to those
cases which remain as an Octoher deadline approaches.
In the meantime, DHS, which
will become the Department of
Job and Family Services effective Sanirday, prepares for a
change in scope.
The name change reflects a
statewide merger of the DHS
and Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. That merger will
shift the focus of the county .
departments from providing traditional welfare benefits to
assisting the unemployed and
underemployed in finding job
opportunities.
As a condition of Ohio Works
First, Ohio's answer to federallymandated welfare reform legislation, those receiving cash assistance in October 1997 were
limited to a 36-month eligibility timeline.
Those who have received
uninterrupted cash assistance
since that time now face their
lifetime limit on cash benefits.
.When the reform plans
kicked in, the Meigs DHS
reported 846 cash assistance
cases. Now, according to Barbara

·zo

Chapman of the Meigs DHS,
cash assistance cases face the
October deadline, and another
51 face a second deadline : in
early 2001.
Staff at DHS have been working closely with those clients to
ensure that all steps to ensure
self-sufficiency have been taken .
After the client has reached
his 36-month ·limit, he might be
eligible for another 24 morttb
period of cash assistance·,
although a 24-month ineligibility period applies, and additional benefits are only granted in
cases of extreme family emer~
gency.
Chapman said that some of
those clients have been approved
for benefits through Social
Security's SSI Disability program, and the staff is working
cl.~sely to ~ee that whatevi:~
assiStance nught apply to the
remaining cases is available.
While receiving cash assistance, clients must either be
employed, be involved in job
training, or participate in the
~p~ent's Community Woric :
Experience program, which is ·
similar to the Ge(leral Relief
ahd General Assistance programS
of years past.
Meigs DHS has become
increasingly involved in job creation and economic development as a solution to the need
for welfare benefits, funneling
hundreds of thousands of doUars
in Prevention, Retention and
Contingency funds into ceonomic development efforts in

PluM.,. DNS, Pllp AJ •

'

2000 Gall

is ~er Recreation Festival opens Saturclaj

IIYKmNKiu.Y

The festival begins Saturday at 9 a.m.
on this .project."
Donations and sponsorship from busi- with opening ceremonies, followed at
GALLIPOLIS - Maintaining its tra- nesses and individuals makes the festival 9:30 a.m. by the baby and tot sparkler
dition of something for everyone, the admission-free. Bl:rine Said community contest.
35th Gallipolis River Recreation Festival support has been gratifyfrtg.
Other highlights of the day include
kicks off its four-day stand in the City
"Businesses and &lt;rfganizatlohs that have H9vercrafts from . noon-S . p.m., Chip
Park on Saturday.
, ' donated have been very generous this Bryant from 11-11:45 a.m.and 6:15-7
The River Recreation Comrni~ee, year," she said. "We aJ&gt;pTate it and the p.m., Perfection on Wheels BMX bike
working under the. auspices of the Gallia COf11IDUnity is urged to isupport those show from noon-12:20 p.m., 4:30- 4:50
County Chamber of Commerce, has bUsinesses.''
p.m. and 5:40-6 p.m., and the youth talprepared a full slate of activity, liom ·the
As final' preparations in ·the park were ent show from 2:30-4:30 p.m.
opening ceremony to the concluding made today, Blaine said the festival's
The festival queens parade will be 7
fireworks show on july 4 at 10 p.m.
biggest need was volunteeu, and encour- p.m., and the queen contest is set for 8
. "This year's f~tival offers more for all," aged anyone with time to 'spare to con
p.m. on the main stage. This year's queen
said Committee Chairman Carol Blaine. tact organizen about worJ,ing.
..candidates are Amber Davison, Erica
"We started planning a year ago, and we:
"If you have some time 'to contribute, Moody, Dezra Wrikeman, Christina ·
had an exceptional committee working it would be helpful;' she said.
Weaver, Amy Hall and Jennifer Lucas.
QVP NEWS EDITOR

the' mainstream media and lucrative endorsement contracts with
high-profile sponsors like Pepsi
- he was booed with enthusiasm.
Gordon wouldn't mind hearing
a little more noise, but isn't
depressed by the seeming silence.
He understands much more
about losing than most could
imagine.
"A lot of people forget I've
been racing since I was S years
old;' he said. "I've lost more races
than I've won." ·
Win or lose, Gordon is still
wildly popular. His car attracts the
biggest crowds in the pits on race
days. Fans clamor for his autograph.
"I love him!" exclaimed Cindi
Garrett, wearing her No. 24 cap
last weekend at the Save Mart
350k. "I don't care if he doesn't
win every race. He's always up
there and that never changes."
But, Gordon - who discounts
last season as a good one because
he had seven bad races - realizes
his profile is somewhat lower
with th~ emergence of Tony
Stewart and Dale Earnhardt, Jr.
"You have four outstanding
y•an like we had, then when you·
don't, you're not measuring up in
some people's minds," Gordon
said.

At 9 p.m., Shenandoah takes the main
stage.
Saturday also features a number of
"Kids Day" activities, ranging from the
Holzer Clinic Baby Olympics to roller
blade races sponsored by 0.0. Mcintyre
Park District.
Sunday celebrates faith, starting with
gospel music sponsored by Gallia County Ministerial Association from 9-11
a.m., followed by a service in the park. A
number of gospel singers and groups are
scheduled throughout the day; and a
youth campfire coordinated by the ministerial association is set for 9-11 p.m .
New Wave Riden-PWC Action Jet
Ski Show will be held at 7 p.m., and

Mason Counry Steel Drum Band will
perform on the main stage at 9 p.m. ·
Highlights of Monday's events include
New Wave Riders, noon- 12:45 p.m.,
2:30-3: IS p.m . and 8:45-9:30 p.m.; ·
magician John Slicer from 5-5:45 p.m.;
.
and a firecracker contest at 6 p.m.
Entertainment indudes The Posse at
8:30 p.m. and We Don't at 9:30. Youth
activities are also planned throughout the
day.
Tuesday's main events will be the
annual Fourth of July parade at 6 p.m:,
and the fireworks show at 10 p.m.
-·
New Wave Riders will perform from
noon-12:45 p.m. and 2:30-3:1 5 p.m.;
while Stillwater takes the stage at 8 P·llL

''

Waterworks
PfOINSS .
PDK Construction began
Installing guardrails for the new
Waterworks Park that Is to be
located along East Main Street
in Pomeroy. The park project will
offer sct)nlc views of the Ohio
River with picnic tables, Shelters, '
• grills for cooking outside and
playground e:qUipment for the
public to enjoy. 'Ji,e construction
of a new sheltar hQUBB, alao to
· be located within the park, Is
scheduled to begin sometime
·next week. Plans for the park
were recently returned by the
state so that project completion
can get under WflY. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

.

WOUB-TV plans 4-week outage

TociWs

'

I .

Sentinel
Paps

Z S1dlanl-l&amp;
C!!lend&amp;r
Claajjficdt
Comic•
Eclitoriala

AS
B4-6

Ohituarin

A3

BZ

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 7-S.I; Pick 4:2-0-3-2
Bl•l ,. 5: S-9-19-23-30

W.VA.
Daily 3: 0-9-8 Daily 4: 1+5-4
0 2000 Ohio Vallqr PubliahiniJ Co.

Bv BRIAN J, Ruo
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

tion OU Public Television to expand its services," said David Wiseman, director of
ATHENS- Regular viewers of"Sesame engineering.
Street,"" Antiques Roadshow," "Masterpiece
The Federal Communications CommisTheater," "Nova" and other pu,blic televi- sion has mandated the conversion to digital
sion programs may have to do without their television for all public and conunercial
favorite shows for a period this summer, or television stations.
watch them on a station other than WOUB.
The station will return to the ·'r on Aug.
·
The local PBS station at Ohio University 2
~
will sign off the air on July 2 and will be
' At that time, WOUB-TV will have a
the air for approximately four weeks, so that c1eaner an d c1earer channel 20 reception .
a new digital transmitter can be installed.
W
The university has been planning the digOUC-TV 44 in Cambridge, which
ira! conversion process since 1990, and the serves the northern part of the coverage
area, will not be affected.
,
conversion wi ll change the way television
programming is broadcast, according to a · Funding necessary to accomplish th:e
news release issued by the OU Telecommu- conversion comes from a grant from the
nications Center.
Federal Public Telecommunications FaciliWOUB-TV broadcasts on the Charter ties Program, from the Ohio Educational
Communications cable service on Channel Telecommunications Network Comrnis25.
sions and from OU.
"Ohio University Public Television apol"In addition to rep"'acing worn and obso,.... . . . . woua. .... AJ .
lete equipment, this installation will posi-

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suit dismissed
EAST LIVERPOOL (AP) Incinerator opponents who sued
Waste Technologies Industries
have failed to prove that the company's hazardous waste plant in
this eastern Ohio city caused
property values to drop, a judge
has ruled,
Citing lack of evidence,
Columbiana County Common
Pleas Judge Douglas Jenkins dismissed the- 1997 class-action lawsuit Wednesday.
The 32 opponents had sought
compensation for diminished
property values linked to construction of the incinerator, located across the Ohio River from
Chester, WVa.
The 32 opponents complained
that WTI's hazardous waste incinerator adveBely affected the surrounding water, air and land.They
sought compensation for diminished property values, arguing the
plant skewed the public's perception of the health and safety of the
Ohio Valley area.
"There is not sufficient basis to
"!"rr:mt this court in prolonging
litigation in this case by allowing
this matter to go to nial before a
jury upon mere allegations of misconduct that are not warranted;'
Jenkins wrote in the ruling.

Confrontation
wonies official
·· GRAFTON (AP) - A city
'()fficial says he's alarmed by a
·confrontation between guards
and inmates at a new private
· prison that resulted in five
'inmates being transferred to a
:'higher security facility.
'' Grafton Council President
Tom Smith watched a videotape
of the May 4 incident this week
' ·and said he was disturbed to see
'inmates threatening guards and
. disobeying orders at the North
~Coas~ Correctional Treatment
•Facility.
But state prison officials and
: representatives from CiviGenics,
the prison's operator, said the
' incident involved about 50
&lt;.iDJrultes and was "no big deal."
~ • The incident began when six
· iDJrultes in the outdoor recreation
yard took off their shirts and
·refused to put them back on.
-Eventually about 40 to SO
.inmates joined in by removing
•~heir shirts and threatening

!-guards, CiviGenics and ltate ol!i..ciah wd.
.

\

1.!;:rtclay, June 30, 2000

CINCINNATI (AP) -The Ohio agen· The Dtpartmmt of Human
cies serving the jobless and needy are Servias, which administtrl welfare,
being transformed, but so gradually even
anti the Bureau of Employmmt
clients =Y be unaware that Saturday is a
landmark for what officials hope will be a Strvius art merging whm tht state
national model for welfare reform.
begins budget year 2001 on July 1.
The Department of Human Services,
Tlu aim is to streamline services at
which administers ·welfare, and the Bureau
a new Departmmt ofJob
of Employment Services are merging
when the state begins budget year 2001 on
anti Family Services.
July 1, The aim is to streamline services at
a new Departmept of Job and Family SerCollins was unaware of the merger. Harvices.
But Ohio's change will take months to ris knew about it because it will affect the
filter down to all the county offices where duties of her contact at the Hamilton
Counry Department of Human Services.
people show up to apply for help.
"I don't think people who are getting
State officials say the merger will evenwelfare benefits are aware that anything is tually reduce paperwork and consolidate
going to change," said Katy Heins, a leader services under one roof. They consider it
of the Welfare Rights Coalition, which an important step in the national moveworks with and lobbies for welfare recipi- ment to get people off long-term welfare
ents. "It's just happening and it's going to rolls and into jobs, to reduce dependence
be a quiet thing. It might be a bigger deal on public assistance.
to people on the state level than it is on the
Jacqui Romer-Sensky, director of the
county level."
·
Ohio Department of Human Services and
One applicant, Debra Collins, emerged head of the new combined agency, said
from a county welfare services building Ohio has been working with federal offiThursday frustrated about what she cials to get them to sign off on the new
regarded as the slow pace of obtaining aid system.
Romer-Sensky said the federal governwhile she looks for a job. To get job information, she would have to go to a different ment is accustomed to helping fund programs for employment and human services
office 10 miles north.
Angel Harris walked from the building separately. She said they are also used to
with the latest round of paperwork she dealing with whole states or large groups
must file while she tries to take care of her of counties, instead of individual counties
two children, pass a high school degree •like they will under Ohio's new system. .
"That's really the issue. You're probably
equivalency test and pursue education to
not going to see wholesale change until we
land a job in nursing.

finish working through some of these federal issues;• Romer-Sensky said.
In most Ohio cities, job seekers must go
one place for employment information ~lld
another to apply for welfare benefits.
Romer-Sensky and Gov. Bob Taft on
Wednesday toured The Job Center in Qayton, an eight-acre building that offers job
information and welfare auista.n~e urtcier
one roof. It has served more ·than 1 .million
people in three years of operation.
State officials praise(i the Dayton center
as · a model for what they hope the st~te
agency merger could do toward helping
people ' improve their Jives.
Bobby Grubbs, 59. ofTrotwood, showed
up at the Dayton center looking fo;&gt;r work.
Grubbs retired last year after spending· 30
years as a federaL meat inspector. He •aid
he wants a job both for the money and .to
' keep busy.
Coming to The Job Center beats looking for work by running around knocking
on doors, Grubbs said.
.
"You've got a place where something is
supposed to be available;' he said. "If you
go knock on doors, you've wasted tinie.
My time is important."
AP correspondent James . Hannah in
Dayton contributed to this story.
•(

MORE LOCAL NEWS. ..
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MORE LOCAL FOLKS. ·

•' .

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Charrnlifg Shops - 4'•

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Clak Hill Financial- 13'1.

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1"'·

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. clollng quotes of
the previous day's ~ano­
actlono, provided by
Advest of Gallpollo.

"·--------------------------------------------~
'
~i
DHS
tive for the company to locate in

Otdat yout Vae~~tion -Pak B~~OR~ you.IQQva!!
'

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.

Call The Dai.ly S,entinel at 99·2-212~nbefotG you. go:on Vacat
and we will hold yout newg~a~er-g while you at9 away·. Pick up gout·
vacatfon-~ak when you get home and racafve a cou~on fot a.
~R~~· Medium Pe~~etonl Pizza and 2.Colw ftorn ·oornlno'g

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
plan to reduce the number of
uninsured motorists by lowering premiums in Los Angeles
and San francisco begins Saturday with civic leaders across
the nation watching to see if it
could work elsewhere.
· "I believe it's the best insurance that's ever come along,"
said 66-year-old Grace Luna,
who has applied for the lowcost policy.
The program, which was
approved by the Legislature last
year, will be run by the California Automobile Assigned
Risk Plan, a coalition of insurance companies. The agency
can find car insurance for
problem drivers who would
have difficulty getting it otherwise.
Officials from Connecticut,
Illinois and New Jersey have
aske,d for data on whether significant numbers of people
sign up for the plan. Also
watching are Washington,
Kentucky and Louisiana,
which have considered similar
programs, CAARP regional
director Richard Manning
said.
"They're looking to see
how well it does, how elfectively it is presented to the
public and how many people
end up buying the insurance;•
he said.
CaliforDia's proof-of-insurance law requires owners of
the state's nearly 27 million
vehicles to show they have

'.
""il

...

Meigs Cqunty. and can be used to
train workers who fall within the
: · from Page A1
200 percent of poverty guideJioes
~·
limit adopted by the commission.
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) t the county.
ers for Temporary Assistance to
The sequel to the long and bit• ifhe coun~ commijlsio11~rs iu1!'; . Neec!Y fami,lies p~. a'loth r
~r ijght_QVer ,the Confederat'
urip'l&amp;te_&amp;nted contrt&gt;l in s~nding -sou~ie ·of funding' Milabfe' under ' ·' flag flying at the state Capitol is
• those discretJ.onary funds, and the Ohio Works First
·
already in the works.
This focus on employment ~r­
=board and Swisher have deterThe flag will come down on
·~ mined that using those funds to vices will intensify under the :new
Saturday, but few expect that to
·further the county's economic merger, and the agency's client base
end the fray anytime soon: A
development work is the most will expand beyond the traditional
new flag will go up at a Con• effective use of the funds. ·
welfare client, to include mernbers
federaie monument on the
; "We're going to grow our own · of the general public who !find
Statehouse grounds.
~obs;' Swisher said.
,themselves searching for work.
The NAACP and other flag
~ In addition to providing funds
Swisher said he has requested a
opponents insist they'll contin"ifor a contract with the Meigs staff membet from OBES be
ue to boycott the state until no
County Chamber of Coimnerce assigned the DJfS office to assist
Confederate flag flies on the
for economic development and his staff in providing job services.
Statehouse grounds.
"We hope to pull back i9to
=tourism services, conunissioners
''The first response to our
were able to p~dge $242,000 .for Meigs ·County as Irulny of thc;;se
request was 'Never: Then we've
.training of workers at a new empl(1jlflent services as we can
seen this movement from one
~!telecommunications center to be which were bert and then taken
position of sovereignty to
~located in Pomeroy.
away through the years:• Swisher
another:' said Dwight James,
Those funds acted as an incen- said, noting that job search servjces
executive director of the state
w
and employment training could be
chapter of the National Associa=
included.
tion for the Advancement of
Colored People. "It's all true to
In addition to those job services,
il
DJFS will continue to operate the
form in a South that's resistant
:
(USPS 213-NOI
county's Child Support Enforcef
to change:'
Publlshe~:~:-.~~~~~:~':n~~ thro 111h ment AgenCy; children's and aduij
The Confederate flag rose on
Fridly, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
protective services, Food Stamps
the
Statehouse dome in 1962 to
Ohio V.llcy Publl1hlna Comptlny., Pomeroy,
d
Ohio 4!769, Ph. 992-2156. "'"'"" don .....
an Medicaid programs.
Civil War's centencelebrate

a

s The Daily Sentinel

.'

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=

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~

ap p~ld at Ptlmeroy, Ohio.

11t

Member. The Alsocll1cd Preu, and the Ohio

~

This Summer's Special -a
$1 0.00 value
Compliments of:

r:.:1lLYRIA (AP) - A judge
~proved a $21.5 million settleiient in a class-action lawsuit
s:g..inst a chemical plant for
l!';Plosions that _spread a cloud of
chloric aCid over the Clty m
.
. About6,000 people were evac~ted from their homes after two
~I &lt;&gt;Mons at Aztec Catalyst Co.,
;,hich made chemicals used in
lhe manufacture of plastics. M2ny
people complained of eye and
~piratory irritation after the
~losions, which destroyed two
fitilldings.
: ! In the agreement approved
~ursday by a Lorain County
Gommon Pleas judge, Aztec
(Xnies that re5idents sulfeted any·
-~gt. The company settled
~th several residents outside of
i&amp;;, case, some weeks after the
eXplosions happened.

and

~

POSTMASTER: Send tddrcu corrcctlont 10

,..

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court 81., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S769.

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The
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Ncwsp~per Asloclation.

SUISCRimON RATIS
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rcacrvCI tlte ri&amp;ht to ldjust rates dur·
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13 Wecu ................................................. S27.30
.. 211 Weclco ................................................$.!3.82
.Sl Wc:eb.... .'..........................................SIO.S ..S6
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13 Wcclo ................................... :.............$29.25
26 \Veeb .................................................SS6.68
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NeWI DeplltJHIIII

Hu!lllry- Your ~I DomlnO'a Pizza Number

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extellllont are:
GtltiW Manapr.•
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• To qualify for FREE pim couP&lt;&gt;n. Vacatiori-Pak must be for 5.dayli or longer.
One Pizza coupon per family while promotion lasts. All pizza orders for pick up only.
wiU be given when
Vac-Pac at
Tribune or Sentinel omce.

•

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the

Safety

•

from PapAl

Marshal's office has focused on
educational efforts for the fireworks industry. The office held 11
in~service rraining sessions for
wholesalers,
manufacturers,
exhibitors and out.:Of-state shippers in Ohio.
The marshal's office also held
workshops to educate local fire
department inspectors and fireworks exhibitors on the latest
safety techniques for use in public
fireworks ·displays.
The Marshal's fireworks administrator, fire inspectors and investigators also attend classes to discuss
the inspection and regulation of
the 52 retail fireworks outlets in
Ohio.
Inspections of retail fireworlis
facilities began in early June and
will continue through the summer holiday season. Each fireworks retailer is also required to
have a security officer, deputy
sheriff, or police officer on duty
during store hours from June 20
to july 6.
These officers are charged with
assuring adequate safety and
crowd control, including enforcement of the no smoking ban in
and around the retail premises.

The marshal's office also maincains a Fireworks Incident Team
(FIT). This team consists of
inspectors, investigators and
senior staff officers who will
respond to any major fireworks
incident that may occur in Ohio.
They will also assist local
authorities in· securing the scene,
help determine the cause and origin of the incident, di~minate
information to the media and
public, and add their expertise on
any fireworks .related issue.
There are three categories of
fireworks in Ohio: rrick or novelty fireworks, L3G (display fireworks) and 1.4G (consumer (ireworks).
Trick and novelty lireworks
include items such as sparklers,
snaps, glow snakes and smoke
bombs. These can be sold anywhere in Ohio and used anywhere.
The second type of firework is
the 1.3G fireworks .
These are also known as display
fireworks and include items such
as aerial shells that are fired from
mortars.
They can only be sold by a
licensed manufacturer or wholesaler to a licensed manufacturer, wholesaler or exhibitor, and can
only be discharged by a licensed
exhibitor in accordance with
Ohlo laws regarding exhibitions.

nial. Some see the flag as a symbol of Southern he~itage; others
regard it a :reminc!C:£ ,Qf.'slavery Jt
and hate. South Carolina is the
last state to fly the Confederate
flag atop its Statehouse.
Last month, after much
debate and several demonstrations, the Legislature voted to
remove the flag from its home
of 38 years and place a similar
one al a nearby Confederate
soldiers monument.
"As far as we're concerned, it
brings finality to the issue," said
Deb Woolley. spokeswoman fpr .
the South Carolina Chamber of
Commerce, one of the most
influential flag opponents.
The NAACP has said
expanded sanctions could target
the state's burgeoning film
industry, for example. But finding broad support to continue
the fight will be difficult, said
Rick Silver, partner in a
Columbia public relations firm
who helped lead one of several
anti-flag organizations that
sprang up in the past year.
The last type of firework is the
1.4G fireworks. These are commonly referred ,to as consumer
fireworks. They include items
such as firecrackers, bottle rockets, Roman candles and fountains
and can only be sold by a licensed
manufacturer or wholesaler.
Anyone over the age of 18 may
purchase these items, · but must
sign a form stating that they will
transport the fireworks outside
the State of Ohio within 48
hours (or 72'for non-residents of
Ohio). These fireworks cannot
legally be discharged in Ohio.
For those consumers purchasing any type of consumer fireworks, the following safety tips
should always be followed:
• Always read and follow label
directions;
• Have an adult present;
• Buy from reliable sellers;
• Use outdoors only;
• Always have water handy;
• Never experiment or Jrulke
your own fireworks;
• Light only one firework at a
time;
• Never relight a "dud" fire.
work;
• Never give fireworks to small
children;
• Store fireworks in a cool dry
place;
• Never throw or point fireworks at anyone;

. ..

..

.

..

VALLEY WEATHER

Warmer conditions returning
BY lHE ASSOCIAT£0 PRESS
Weather forecast:
Southerly winds will bring
Tonight...Mostly dear. Lows 50
increasing temperatures and to 55. Calm wind.
humidity levels to the lric-ounty
Saturday... Sunny. Highs in the
mid
80s.
.
area over the weekend, the
National Weather Service said
Saturday night ... Clear. Lows 55
friday.
to 60.
By Sunday, it will be hot and
muggy again. Highs will be
Extended forecast:
around 85.
Sunday. .. Mostly clear. Highs in
Temperatures on Saturday will the mid and upper 80s.
be a little cooler, with highs in the
Monday... Pardy cloudy. Lows
low 80s.
60 to 65 and highs around 90. .
No rain was in the forecast
fourth of July... Partly cloudy
until Monday.
with a chance of showers and
Sunset tonight will be at 9:05 thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
and sunrise on Saturday at 6:07 60s and highs in the mid aod
a.m.
upper 80s.

LOCAL -BRIEFS
EMS units
log7 calls

Park, Racine, July 9 with a 1 p.m.
porluck dinner.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency Services
answered seven calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :36 a.m., Carpenters Hill
Road, Kathryn Evans, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
5:52 a.m., Main Street, Roger
Black, Holzer Medical Center;
7:29a.m., College Road, assisted by Syracuse, Gene Harris,
HMC;
7:42 p.m., Fourth Street, Sally
Watson, treated;
9:19 p.m., Middleport Park,
David Maxson, Camden-Clark .
Memorial Hospital.

Rescheduled
RACINE - Due to the July 4
holiday, curbside recycling in
Racine will be held on July 5. . •

Tnastees to meet
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Towl)ship Trustees will meet Wednejday, 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
town hall.

Physicals today

RACINE - Sports physicals
will be provided free of charge a't
the office of Dr. Douglas Hunter
in Racine this afternoon.
Athletes who plans to particiRACINE
pate in any sports during tqe
2 p.m., State Route 124, Mar- &gt;t:hool year are to pick a physical
vin Eddy, treated .
card at the school prior to the
SYRACUSE
physical and have it signed by a
10:27 p.m., Sellers Ridge, parent.
Robin Portal, refused treatment.
Athletes shod wear short and
loose clothing. Girls grade 10,) i
and 12 will be seen from 3-5 p.m.
and boys, grades 10, 11 and L2
RACINE The Theiss will get their exams from 5c7
reunion 'fill be held at Star Mill p.m.

NAACP vows to continue
boycott of South Carolina

e

While you're on vacation don't miss the news or your Free* .Pizza.

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A-3

coverage when they register
with the Department of Motor
Vehicles.
But in high-risk, inner-city
areas, many residents risk ille~
gaily driving without insurance rather than pay premiums
that can run three times as
mud) as those offered in the
pilot program.
Nearly 1.8 million vehicles
out of 6 million in Los Angeles
lack insurance and nearly
80,000 out of 412,000 in San
Francisco, according to Tim
Hare, spokesman for the state
Insurance Department. ·
"But we don't know how
many of the people in those
areas will quality for the program," Hart said.
"That's why it's called an
experiment."
Participants must have dean
driving records and meet
income 'and other guidelines
to be eligible for the four-year
pilot prog&lt;am. It charges $450
annually for a bare-bones auto
policy in Los Angeles County
and $410 in the San Francisco
area. There is a 25 percent surcharge for unmarried, male
drivers 19 to 25.
Douglas Heller of the Santa
Monica-based foundation for
Taxpayer
and
Consumer
Rights supports the program.
"Now many people whQ
can't afford regular coverage
will no longer have to make
that unfair decision between
breaking the law and gettin'g to
work," he said.

S

Qalllpolll and Pornaroy ~tote~ only. (Pick-up only)

••Judge appnwes
~~-

Gannett- 59'4
General Eloctrlo - 49\
Harley Davidson - 38!.

AT&amp;T-32

~on.

Smith disagrees, · saying the
.inmates were "definitely in con-trol for the whole evening."
•. The inmates who instigated
, the confrontation were placed in
. :segregation and transferred June
23 to Lorain Correctional Institution, a maximum-security
-prison, Andrews said.
The North Coast Correctional. Treatment faciliry, which
; b~gan accepting inmates feb. 29,
'""Ohio's first . state-owned, pri_vate-run prison.
.. . The 552-bed, minimum-s,ecurity prison is designed to house
male inmates with felony DUls
and/ or other drug and alcohol
abuse problems.

(Editor~ note: This obituary 11/dS unintentionally omitted from Thursd•y~
Doily Sentitrel. The Daily Sentitrel •pologizef for •ny inconvenient&lt; to the
family.) ··
·

if'-.
•
orAEP- 30\
~Akzo-41
AmTech/SBC - ·45'•

.\~·

.

~;. MIDDLEPORT - Harley R . Swisher, 85, of Middleport, died on ,
-.:Thesday, June 27, 2000 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant,
· · WesWirginia.
' · He was born on February 3, 191'5, son of the late Pearl and Dora · '
"'
•PWiins Swisher.
0· · He was formerly employed in the maintenance department of Foote
' Mineral. He was a member of the New Haven American Legion Post
" 'No. 140, Middleport Masonic Lodge, and a was veteran of the U.S.
Navy during World War II.
"· He is survived by his wife, Roberta Swisher of New Haven, West
"·Virginia; a son, Melvin (Sherry) Swisher of Middleport; two stepsons,
:;.Russell (Patricia) Maynard of Mason, West Virginia, and Paul (Jill)
Maynard of Point Pleasant, West Virginia; a stepdaughter, Ann (David)
I 'Zirkle of Racine; two grandchildren, Carrie Smith of Sanditon, Vir'ginia, and Melissa Swisher of Middleport; stepgrandchildren, Terri
\"Hysell of Nitro, West Virginia, Debbie Maynard of Racine, Brenda
! ·S wann of Middleport, Jessica Maynard and Courtney Maynard, both
'· of Point Pleasant, Sairulntha HoUy of Huntington, West Virginia, and
Ruuell Maynard of Hartford, West Virginia; nine grandchildren and a
-gnoat-great granddaughter, and a sister, Edna Hampton ofWadsworth.
~ . · In addition to his parents, he was p::eceded in death by his wife,
Arlene Neutzling Swisher; and two sisters, Lucille Wolf and Loraine
·
.: Walburn.
" ·. ·Services were held at 1 p.m. today, Friday, June 3Q, 2000 in Fisher
.'-·Funeral Home in Middleport, with Glenn Lambert and Carl Swisher
officiating. Burial was in Gravel Hill Cemetery, with graveside military
" services.Visi!ation was held in the funeral home on Thunday,June 29,
2000 from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
'
'
Masonic services were conducted at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, June 29,
·- 2000.

LOCAL STOCKS

Get Your Vacation Pak while

'•· "It's not something that we
consider to be a riot situation or
-one· that was completely out of
:.hand," said Joe Andrews, a
. lpokesman for the Ohio Depart..
, tnent of Rehabilitation and Cor-

•
ow-income
car
.. •
.. Insurance·program
tested on West Coast

Hadey R. SWisher

Subscribe today.
992-2156

'

\

_,

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

••
••
••

a•sadion

•••

--'L

2ClQU

Welfare, job agencies·merge.this week --·

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

WASHINGTON COURT
Cf.IOUSE (AP) - A WOJruln
killed while delivering pizzas
- 'appealed to have died of nwsive
_injuries to the head, Fayette
°County Co~Qner IU!ph Gebhart
said.
Police found the body of Pre_cious Canter, 31, of Washington
'·Court House, at about 4 a.m.
Thursday lying near her car in an
' alley behind a middle school
parking lot.
' Co-workers at Pizza-N' ·Motion had reported her missing
-".ifter she failed to return from a
" delivery, Police ~hief Larry
Mongold said.
_ _ Gebhart said an autopsy would
be conducted to determine the
exact cause of death and to establish if Canter had been raped.
Canter, who was 4 feet 11
·' Inches tall and weighed about 90
pounds, was found with her
shorts around her ankles and her
blouse pulled over her head,
Gebhart said.
Mongold said he would not
·'speculate-on whether Canter had
been robbed.
Police had no suspects, he said,
:Uiding that the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and ldeni:ification had been asked to help
-rollect and analyze evidence.

11,

Friday, June 30;

PomtrOy, Middleport, Ohio

1-PageA 2 • The Dally Sentinel

..

Reunion July 9

-

L

•

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'

WOUB
from PapAl
ogizes to members and viewers
for an inconvenience that the
WOUII transmitter replacement
will cause, but promises to keep
the outage as short as possible,"
said Carolyn Bailey Lewis, director of the Telecommunications
·
Center.
"WOUB realizes that public
television is an important service
·to Jrulny children and families
throughout the region," Lewis
said ..
When the new transmitter is in
place and WOUB returns to the
air in August, WOUB and
WOUC-TV will begin testing a
24-hour service, with a goal of24
hour transmission on Sept. 17.
WOUB-TV 20 will continue

with regular programming by
direct feed to the Athens area
cable system, Time Warner, and
will not be affected by the transmission period.
.
The counties, in addition llo
Meigs, to be alfected by the outage will include fairfield, Gallia,
Jackson, Hocki!lg, Licking, Perry,
Pickaway, Ross, Vinton, an!l
Washington in Ohio, and Jackson,
Mason, Pleasants, Wirt and Wood
in West Virginia.
The Telecommunications Center also operates six radio station!:
WOUB 1340, WOUB-FM 9b3,
WOUC-FM, 89.1, WOUH-fM,
91.9, WOUL-FM, 89.1, ami
WOUZ-FM. 90.1.
Local viewers in the Bend area,
with service from Charter &lt;;ommunications, can view many of
the same PBS programs on West
Virginia Public Television, which
broadcasts on cable channel 20. ·

• Never carry fireworks in your in Ohio, or to falsity an applicapocket;
tion when purchasing firework!::
• Never shoot fireworks in
First-time offenders are subject
metal or glass containers;
up to a $1,000 fine and silc
• Always wear eye p~tection months imprisonment. Subseand never have any part of the quent violations become felonies
body over the firework;
of the fifth degree.
•·
• Stay away from "consumer
fireworks" and illegal explosives.
..
Under Ohio's fireworks law, •
Subscribe today. 992-2156'
stilf penalties can be applied for
the illegal possession or discharge
of fireworks. It is a first-degree
misdemeanor for non-licensed
individuals to disch~ fireworks

M~

MYSELF lo IRENE
7:00 U:30 DIALY

IIATIN£&amp;8 &amp;AT/SUN 1:00 I 3:30

......
•

�...•

.

PageA4

;•_ he Daily Sentinel

•

Frldllf, June :so, 2000

'

'E.sta.bf'und in 1948

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

,

.~Eih~'l

R. Shewn Lewis
Managing Editor

Lllrry Boyer
Adverttalng Director

Chart- Hoeflich
General Manager

Dear Ann Landers: I read the letter
from "A Mom from N ew H yde Park,
N .Y.," who told of the unlikely jobs held
by Albert Einstein, Philip G lass and
Charles lves. I am enclming " T he Failure List;' which has been distributed to
players for many years by former basketball coaches Don.Meyer and David Lipscomb. I hope you will print it in yo~u
column. It could give hope to readen
who lack confidence. - Alex in Horton, Ala.
·
Dear Alex: Thank you for an item
that could help a great many young peo ~
pie (and older ones, as well) regain faith
in themselves after being told that they
don't have what it takes to succeed. Here
it is:
Failure List
Einstein was 4 years old before he
could speak.
Isaac Newton did poorly in grade
school and was considered "unpromis-

AllERT, I WANT YOU
TO EAT ALL ()1: VOUR

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-H2·2156 • Fax: H2·2157

Ch1rl11 W. Govty
Publlehtr

I

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

n..,

Utun tD lit• tiliJor u. wdtMN.
llaollltl 1M 1.11 tJJa JOO woMJ. AU kllerr on I Mi}tel
tu ditMa _. "'"" H •i&amp;~t«l W U.elllll•IIMm• ull telqi!Oifl lflllffi»r. No •"Jiltted l#tt1n will
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Co. 'I ~~ .0... ••• odlnwl11 lfOIItl.

I DUNNO-

OHIO VIEWS

lDOk"RIM

No power
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~

..~TODAY

IN HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Today is Friday, June 30, the 182nd day of2000. There are 184 days
left in the year.
;· Today's Highlight in History:
,
!, On June 30, 1971, the 26th ~endrnent to the Constitution, lowf.ring the minimum voting age to 18, was ratified as Ohio became the
~8th state to approve it.
.
• On this date:
,. In 1906, the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act
~ecame law.
.
·
·
;• In 1921, President Harding appointed former President Taft chief
fostice of the United States.
~ In 1934,Adolf Hitler began his "blood purge" of political and miliiiry leaders in Germany.
~ In 1936, the navel"Gone with the Wind" by Margaret Mitchell was
~blished in New York.
In 1952, "The Guiding Light," a popular radio progtam, made its TV
fbut on CBS.
~ I~ 1963, Pope Paul VI was crowned the 262nd head of the Roman
~olic Church.
• In 1971, a Soviet space mission ended in tragedy. when ·thtee cos~onauts aboard Soyuz 11 were found dead inside their spacecraft after
·" returned to Earth.
\t
.
.: In 1985, 39 American hostageS fiom a hijacked TWA jetliner in
Beirut -,vere freed after 17 days.
·: In 1986, in a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that states could
&lt;~.~daw homosexual acts ~en consenting adults.
: In 1994, the U.S. Figure SbringA.!!Ociation stripped Tonya Harding
(f the 1994 national championship and banned her for life because of
t!).e attaCk on rival Nancy Kerrigan.
Today's Birthdays: Singer Lena Home is 83. Actor Tony Musante is
64: Aaress Nancy Dussault is 64. Singer Glenn Shorrock (Little River
Ba'hd) is 56. J= mmician Stanley Cbrke is 49. Rock musician Hal
Li ndes (Dire Straits) is 47. Actor-comedian David' Alan Grier is 45 .

.

'

ADVICE
mg."
Beethoven's music teacher once said
of him, " As a composer, he is hope,less."
When Thomas Edison was a youngster, his teacher told him he was too stupid to learn anything. He was counseled
to go into a fi eld where he might succeed by virtue of his pleasant personality.
F. W Woolworth got a job in a dry
goods store when he was 21, but his
'

POMEROY - Three members of the
Rocksprings Raiders 4-H Club recently participated in the district 4-H health and safety
speaking and team skit contest held·at Jackson.
·~ The participant in the junior division of the
Health and Safety speaking contest was Whitney Thoene, daughter of Sale and Nancy
Thoene of Pomeroy. Her speech was entitled
"Cyberspace Safety."

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A look at
what state
. newspapers
· : are saymg

Ann
Landers

employer would not permit him to wait
on customers because he " didn 't have
enough sense to close a sale."
Michael Jordan was cut from his high
school basketball team. Boston Celtics
Hall of Farner Bob Cousy suffered the
same fate.
A newspaper editor fired Walt Disney
because he "lacked imagination and had
no good ideas."
Winston Churchill failed the sixth
grade and had to repeat it because he did
not complete the tests that were required
for promotion.
Babe Ruth struck out 1,300 times a major league record. He was .also the
most notorious womanizer in the sports
world.
A person may make mistakes, but isn't
a failure until he (or she) starts blaming
someone else. We must believe in ourselves, and somewhere along the road of
life, we must meet someone who sees

4-Hen participate in contest

President, not states create
our foreign policy

• The (Tiffin) Advertiser-Tribune: The original American
-states dumped the Articles of Confederation and agreed to hold a
constitutional convention because the lack of a central government
not only hindered commerce among the states and with other
nations, but it also made it nearly impossible to conduct foreign pol• icy. Nevertheless, more than 200 years later Massachusetts attempted to render an independent foreign policy toward Burma. Now
~ the Supreme Court has reiterated two centuries of constitutional
: law: States cannot make foreign policy.
The Massachusetts law in question for•
bade the state from doing business with
•
companies that do any business with
Burma.
The court's ruling, although narrowly
crafted to deal with the facts at hand, has
•
broad implications regarding city councils
and state governments that, apparently
:
bored with roads and sewers, attempt to
: influence dictatorships half of a world away.
. And for a simple, compelling constitutional reason. The president
is the head of state, and he must be able to conduct "effective diplo: macy," in the court's phrase. He can't very well do that if Massa: chusetts and 49 other states each have their own peculiar policies
: toward a particular nation. ·
• • Akron Beacon Journal: Half the Republicans in Washington
'
· ~ and some venerable Democrats, as well
- want EnergyI Secrebfy Bill Richardson to pay the price for the unexplained disappearance and suspicious reappearance of two computer hard drives
l:"ontaining U.S. nuclear secrets. The likelihood is, Richardson
~tcady has paid.
~- The continuing saga of the Energy Department's seeming inability to make the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico
secure probably has cost Richardson any chance of becoming choi'en as presumptive Democratic presidential nominee AI Gore's runiling mate. What Richardson's critics want, of course, 'is more immel!iate - his removal as energy secretary.
Creating a scapegoat of Richardson misses the point. What's nec~ssary is that a security problem that has not been solved be fixed as
~on as possible.
: • Wapakoneta Daily News: Motorists forced to pay $2 and
more per gallon of gasoline are justifiably angry.
: The worst part is, no one knows where or how to vent that frushation.
~ The refinery spin-meisters would have us believe the nasty old
l'nvironmental Protection Agency is behind the madness, what with
!ts mandate that some states produce a cleaner-burning gasoline in
response to pollution requirements and Clean Air Act standards.
~ But EPA director Carol ·Browner said the other day that there is
no evidence of a regional fuel-supply shortage and "no reasonable
~nswer" to the sudden spike in gas price.
.
t We suspected that all along, didn't we? And the refineries have
j!One nothing to convince us otherwise, with their thinly-veiled
!!rice hikes coming like clockwork this summer immediately in
advance of the weekends.

June :so, 1000

-

'

The Daily Sentinel
.

Friday,
'-~~-he_D_a_il.;..,y_se_n_ti_ne_I_ _ _ _.....;Iy the Bend
'.
Reader submits genius Jailure list' to boost confidence

·Page AS

.

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Have Nader's Raiders seen their final day?
I am no fan of Ralph Nader. His anti-corporate views are extremist, counter-factual and
demagogic. His anti-trade positions comefiom
Neanderthal caves. Moreover, it is a time of
general prosperity, following massive de-regulation of industry. Entrepreneurs are often idolized. Nader-style business-bashing deserves less
credence than ever.
But do not mistake my own views for political relevance. Nader is now the presidential
nominee of the Green Party. His oudook resonates with many· voters. And third p'arties in
America have been more important in our
political history than is generally understood. I
bet Nader will do quite well, with powerful
ramifications. f .,..
America has never developed a major socialist political parry Some scholars say that's
because we never had sem or peasants. But
.many Americans do have a conspiracy-theory
streak that comes out against big business,
which gives forth a screeching socialist sound.
Gasoline prices up? Forget OPEC, new envi- ·
ronmental regulations and pipeline malfunctions. In Naderland, a cabal ofbig oil companies
are responsible for stacking the deck. (Prove it,
and oil company executives go to jail.) Jobs
going overseas? Forget Adam Smith and the
· market system, forget that we have full employment, forget that imports yield lower prices for
consumers - keeping inflation down and
allowing the economy to keep on bubbling. No
matter; Nader says the big boys stole your job.
Nader, and Pat Bucpanan too, are rurming on
an old American principle: "We're Getting
Screwed" - usually partially true. Ross Perot
got 19 percent of the vote in 1992, after leading
the pack and running in the high 30 percentiles
that spring. George Wallace got 13 percent in
1968 (after rurming in the low 20s earlier on).
Wallace said, "there's not a dime's worth of dif-.
ference between the parties." So did Perot. So,
today, do Nader and Buchanan.
Will only one of them emerge as a serious

Ben
Wattenberg
NEA COLUMNIST
· polli ng
pro test can didate ? For now, N ad er 1s
higher than Buchanan \7 percent to 4 percent
in a recenJ surVey.)·l'dguess this gap will widen.
There may be space for only one candidate to
"send 'em a message."While Nader is of the left
and Buchanan of the right, American ideology
often forms into a U-shape, putting the two in
competition for certain anti-establishment voters. (Anti-trade, anti-immigtant Reagan Democrat union members, for example.)
Both candidates complain that they are fiozen
out of major news coverage and that they will
not be allowed to appear in the televised
debates of the major candidates in the falJ .
(Another corporate conspiracy.) They moan:
How can voters possibly get.their message? (Of
course•. even more people d&lt;;m't know my message, or. yours.)
But Buchanan has run twice in high-profile
Republican presidential primaries, and began a
third before bolting the GOP when his poll ratinS' plummeted. Most Americans know ,who
Buchanan is and what he stands for.
Although Nader is no newcomer, he is not
yet known as a political leader. His brief Green
Party campaign in 1996 was unfunded. This
time he says he'll raise S5 million. If he gets 5
percent of the vote, he will qualify the Greens
for federal funding in 2004.
.
There is a pattern. A Third Party candidate
with ideas gains momentum. As support grows,

his ideas are swiped, echoed, diluted and partially absorbed by one or both of the political vacuum cleaners we call major parties. It happened
with Perot, George Wallace, and earlier with
Progressive Robert LaFollette and Socialists
Eugene Debs and Norman Thomas. It is a
healthy process. (Watch the "Think Tank" onehour special "A Third Choice;· airing on PBS
on August 18 at 9 p.m.; consult local listings.)
For example, Gore is lashing out at pharmaceutical companies for overcharging. Is this a
response to Nader? Is it what Gore believes? Is
it focus-group driven? It's hard to tell with
Gore. But is trashing Big PharnJa a good idea?
Just as the Human Genome project. takes off?
When aging Baby BoomerS need medicines,
some of which haven't been invented yet and
won't be unless Big Pharma makes big pro6ts to
finance big research?
As m'\ior party candidates accommodate
some of the views of third party candidates,
they draw off some potential votes. As Election
Day approaches, this process% compounded by
the "Wasted Vote Syndrome." Some Nader supporters will say, I like Ralph, but he can't win,
so I'll vote for Gore because he's better than
Bush.
According to this analysis, Nader will gn up
some at first, Gore will move left some, Nader
will then go down some, but still take some
Gore votes.
What about Bush? Not needing the
Buchanan vote, he will keep mo'ling toward the
center to occupy some turf previously held by
Gore. Which means Bush will win py a bigger
margin than now expected, and Nader may set
up a permanent party of the left, crippling
Democratic presidential candidates for a long
time.

''

PARTICIPANTS -

'.

BenJamin
Blackbum
LONG BOTTOM - Benjamin Blackburn, son of· Nick
~nd Wanda Blackburn of Long
' ;Bottom, has enlisted in the
Navy's Delayed Entry Program.
Blackburn is a 2000 graduate
of Eastern High School , in
. Reedsville. He will attend train, ing at the Naval Training Center
. in Great Lakes, Ill., in July. Fol_Iowing his recruit training,
Blackburn will attend the Navy's
Advanced Electronics Computer
Field School.
Blackburn received a $4,000

•

"

enlistment bonus for joining •the
Navy. The Navy will also provide
$25,000 towards Blackburn's
future education through the
Navy College Fund.
Upon graduation, Blackburn
will be assigned to one of the
Navy's ships or shore installations
located around the world.

for up to one year.
The enlistment gilies the new
soldier the option to learn a new
skill, travel and become eligible
to receive as much as $50,000
toward a college education. After
completion of basic military
trammg,
soldiers
receive
advanced individual training in
their career job spe~iality.
Halfhill, a 2000 ·graduate of
Meigs High School in Pomeroy,
will report to Fort Jackson,
Columbia, S.C., on July 13,
2000, for basic training.
The recruit's parents an:
Lawrence and Sandra F. Hal£hill
of Rutland.

11ffany L Halfhill
RUTLAND - Tiffany L.
Haltbill . has joined the United
States Army under the Delayed
Entry Program.
The program gives young
men and women the opportunity to delay entering active duty

•••

"Emily Post writes on the subject that those
who come early are entitled to the best seats ..,
regardless."
Other pew blockers said they were planning
a quick exit after church and didn't want to be
held up in their rush for the door.
~eace.
.

(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.)

BY THE AsSOCIATED PRESS
If you missed "Survivor"
Wednesday night (what, you
were stranded on some tropical
isle?), here are the essential
developments on CBS' hit
adventure-reality show for
Week Five of the 13-week
series :
•
Voted
Off:
Da1ry
farmer/substitute teacher Dirk
(Tagi Tribe) .
• Remaining Castaways :
Colleen,
Gervase,
Greg,
Gretchen, Jenna, Joel (Pagong
Tribe). Kelly, Richard, Rudy,
Sean, Susan (Tagi Tribe).
•
Immunity · Challenge:
Swimmers from each tribe
"rescued" by canoe. Professional river guide Kelly, on losing to rival rower Gervase: "I
got beat by a guy wh·o can't

formance of "Something's
Coming.' '
• What Colleen Has Been .Up
To With Greg: "It's a re.ally passionate affair right now," she
confides. "It's going great."
• Culinary Highlight: Three

chickens won by Pagong in
Reward Challenge ; christen ed
Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner.
• Best Quote: " The only rea- ·
son I'd bring a Bible out be re
is if I needed toilet paper."
(Rudy) .
'
''

LOOKING FOR CHILD CARE? :
COAD Child Care Resource Network is a FREE
Community service that offers:

i.

POMEROY - Veterans Affairs Medical
Center/Chillicothe will provide health care
enrollment Friday, 10 a.m. to noon, and 1 to 2
p.m. at the Veterans Service Office at 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. West Virginia residents welcome. Proof of military servic;e
required at enrollment.

CALL: 1-800-577-2276
COAD: the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development ·

•••

SATURDAY, July 1
RACINE - Star Grange 778, regu'Iar session, Saturday, potluck supper, 6:30 p.m. with
regular meeting at 8 p.m. Inspection and elec, tion of officers. Members to take donations for
food bank.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge
, 411, F.&amp;A.M .• Saturday, 7:30 p.m . degree
work. Refreshments,.

•••

SUNDAY,July 2
'

~5,850*

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Wlndo~a &amp; Locka
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Automatic
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

2000 Chevy
Impala Sedan

1999 Chevy Blazer
LS 4 Door 4x4

2000 Buick
LeSabre Custom

~8,850* ~8,850*

CARPENTER Columbia Township
Trustees, Monday, 7 :30 p.m. at the firehouse.

• AMIFM CD System
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

SYRACUSE - Sutton Tdwnship Trustees,
Monday, 1:30 p.m at the Syracuse Village t{all.

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

818,550*

• Power Seat
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

VISIT OUR WE

•••

WEDNESDAY, July S
Scipio Township Trustees
PAGEVILLE meeting, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Pageville town
hall.

RACINE -Annual Lenard and Susan Jane
Roush reunion, Sunday, Star Mill Park,
RaCine. Dinner, 12:30 p.m. take covered dish,
meat and drinks provided .

The Community Calendar is published
as a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not designed
to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type: Items are printed only as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed to be
printed a specific number of days.

•

S0,850* 813,350*

POMEROY -Meigs Bank Boosters, Monday, 7:30 p .m. band rooni, Meigs High School.
Plans for band camp, working concessions, fair
booth.

LONG BOTTOM - Dave Dailey to speak,
7 p.m. Sunday adt the Long Bottom United
Methodist Church.

REEDSVILLE - Frank jones to speak, 7
p.m. Sunday, Reedsville United Methodist
Church.

2000 Buick
Century Sedan

1999 Oldsmobile
Alero GS Sedan

1999 Chevrolet
Cavalier Sedan

RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees,
Monday, 5 p.m for annual budget hearing followed by regular meeting.

.

West VIrginia's t1 Chevy, Pontiac,"Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

.car

Genm~YCiirvn',,,.t

f'CJ.v-r.:
·-

·"'''•....•

'

for a list of providers In your community. .·

MONDAY, July 3

LETART Letart Township Trustees,
Monday,
5 p.m. at the township office build.
mg.

'

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

•••

FRIDAY, June 30

an armrest."

'Survivor Kit': What happened this week

• Health Update: Greg has an
ear infection. Doesn't prevent
him from an impromptu per-

COMMUNITY CALENDAR.

It's time for this part of the service to be ended
George
Plagenz

Dear Ann Landers: I have never
seen thi s qu estion in your col umn, so I
am hoping you will print my lett er and
give me an answer.
When attending a spo rting event, am
I supposed to tip the ve ndors who walk
around selling beer, soda, peanuts, popcorn , and so on? I find the prices o utrageous to begin with, and do n't wa nt to
put out any more. I wa s recently at a
baseball game with some fr iends, and we
bought several beers and tipped the left over change, which was 50 cents. The
vendor seemed upset, and let us know it.
Is there a specific amount customers
are supposed to tip ? If we tip for beer,
should we also tip for soda, peanuts and
cotton candy? Don 't these peo~le get a
commission on what they sell? Please
tell me what to do. - St. Louis Reader

Dear St. Louis: While most vendors
make a small commission o n what rhey
sell, they still depend on tips to get by.
Si nce hard-working vendors carry heavy
loads of food and beverages directly to
your seat, yo u should indeed tip them .
T hat first kiss , that first emb race ...
R e membe r all those things that bro ught
yo'\ and your loved one together? Ann
Landers' new boo klet," H ow We Met," is
now available. T hi s coll ectio n of sentime ntal love stories will make a terrific
gift for that special someone. For a copy,
please send a self-addressed. long, business-size envelope and a c hec k or
money orde r for $5.50 (this includes
postage and handling) to : H ow We Met,
c/ o Ann Landers, P. O . Box 1 1562 ,
Chicago, IL 606 11 -0562 (i n C anada,
$6 .50).To find out more about Ann Landers and read her past co ~ . visi t the
Creators Syndicate ~eb pa ge at
www.creators.com.

MILITARY NEWS

(Ben Wattenberg, ~ senior fellow ~~ the American
Enterprise Institute, is the ~uthor if "Values Matter
Most" and is the host of the Weekly public televisioPI
program "Think Tank." You may send comments to
him via e-mail: Ul:ltmail@aol.com.)

Pew blockers earn the unspoken wrath and
concealed dirty looks of their fellow worshipers, who must hurdle knees, trip over people's feet and bang their shins on such impediments as extruding pew racks to get to their
seats.
A church member fiom Colorado used the
columns ofhis denomination's magaZine to take
aim at those who stake out the end seats for
themselves in church and won't budge.
·
His letter prompted comments fiom other
readers. Strangely, few of the responses were
sympathetic to his plight. Some sample letters:
"My advice to you is to get to church ro
minutes early. You'll have your choice of peWs
anywhere in the sanctuary." ·
,
"A lot of people suffer fiom claustrophobia.
They have a .fear of. being closed in, so they
head for the aisle seats. Too bad you can't be
more sympathetic toward them."
"I sit at the end of the pew because I want

success.

swim!"

Marvin Ours, representative
of the Ohio Rural Electric
Cooperatives , Inc., poses
with Meigs' contest
participants, Whitney
Thoene, Nathan Cook,
and s~ane Milho'an :

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

If I had my way, we would dispense with
"the peace" at the Sunday worship service.
"The peace" is the part of the service when
members of the congregation are asked to greet
their neighbors in the pews by saying, "May the
peace of the Lord be With you," or just, "Peace:'
It can turn into quite a production number.
Those who object to the practice have
referred to the peace by all sorts of uncompli. c1rcus,
. ""h
mentary names - "h
t ree-rmg
s owbiz time," "ring-around-the-sanctuary" and
NEA COLUMNIST
"fruit-basket upset;' the last being a parlor game
similar to musical chairs in which all the players
the services, the Rev. Charles E. Fuller would
dash around frantically when a signal is given.
One unhappy church parishioner mocking- say to listeners, "Turn around and shake hands
ly described the ritual as "Peace where there is with your neighbor behind you,"
no peace," an allusion to some of the more
I had trouble picturing how that would
enthusiastic participants - including pastors- . work, and I'm still not sure. If you turned
who indulge in aisle-hopping and emotional around to shake hands with the person in the
hugging and kissing.
pew behind you, and he was turning around to
A denominational magazine reported that its shake hands with the person behind him, and so
readers' m'\ior objection to the peace is that on from the fitmt of the church to the back,
they consider it to be a jarring intrusion into nobody would.be shaking hands with anybody.
But it is the "pew blocker" more than the
the mood of reverent worship.
People in evangelical, nonliturgical churches "peacemaker" who raises .the blood pressure of
are more likely to enjoy this Rotary Club some churchgoers.
geniality. They have been doing it for years,
Pew blockers are those who take the seats
while it is a rather recent development in the next to the aisle at either end of the row, makliturgical churches.
ing it impossible to have any civilized access to
I recall hearing "The Old-Fashioned Revival the available seating in between. Their motto is,
Hour" on the radio years ago. At some point in "We will not be moved."

Members of the team skit included Nathan
Cook, son ofTim and Patty Cook of Pomeroy,
and Shane Milhoan , son of Rhett and Carla
Milhoan of Pomeroy. "K .C. Learns to Play
Baseball Safely" was the title of the skit.
This annual contest is jointly sponsored by
the Ohio State ·University Extension · and
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc.

greatness in us. expects it from us, and
lets us know it. It is the golden key to

~~)

Hlltr.W'

1&lt;2)
0taSI1"KlbU&amp;

Friday, Saturday, Monday 9 am • 1 0 pm
Sunday 1 pm • 9 pm
CLOSED TUESDAY JULY 4TH

• Ta11es, TBgs.11tle Fees eldra. Prtces Good June ~h ThfOUQh July 2nd . Nol responsible lor typographical errors.

TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844

e

www.tompeden .com

�~ Page A 8 •

Tht Dally Sentinel

·- NATIONAL
1

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I.

1:

BRIEFS

I
'

Kellogg recalls toy cars
:. WASHINGTON (AP) - Kellogg Co. is recaUing 837,000 toy
;· can pacbged in cereal hoKes because the tires can detach from the
car wheels, posing a choking hazard.
·
The Battle Creek, Mich., company received two reports of the
:· tires detaching from the car wheels, but no injuries have been
;; re~orted, according to the Consumer Product Safety Conunission
:: wd Thursday.
:
The NASCAR Pull'N Go Hot Wheels cars are red and yellow
1 with a white hood. "Kellogg's" is written on the hood, and the num; ber "5" and "Terry Labonte" is written on the roof. The words
~ "China" and "MFG. FOR KELLOGG CO. TM" is printed on the
: underside. PuUing the car backward a few inches on a surface caus: es it to roll forward .
;
Several grocery stores nationwide sold the cars in spec~
·
:. marked boxes of Kellogg's Tri-Fun-Pak 40-ounce bolt, Kello · s
:: Froot Loops 43.6-ounce box, Kellogg's Mini-Wheats Frosted ite
:: Size 58.8-ounce box and Kellogg's Crispix 31.4-ounce box. The cars
;. were distributed inside the boxes from March to June of this year.
:·
Consumers ace advised to take the toy cars away from young chil:· dreil immediately, and send the cars to Kellogg to get a free replace;: ment item and postage reimbursement. The car can be sent to Kel:: logg Company, P.O. Box 185654, Battle Creek, Mich. 49018-5654.
: For more information, consumers can call Kellogg at 1-800-962: 0037 or check its Web site at www.kelloggs.com.

j

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I
I

M&amp;M's are no longer 'plain'

,.I•

:: t-/EWARK, N.J. (AP) -Say goodbye to plain M&amp;M's.
:: 'ft,fter 46 years as plain-old plain M&amp;Ms, the chocolate-coated'
: candies are being renamed milk chocolate M&amp;Ms.
"For a long, long time, our chocolate has been too good to be
.
:. called plain, but we were living with almost 50 years of heritage of
; calling them plain;· said Michael Tolkowsky, vice president for mar:: kefing and licensing at M&amp;M/Mars, based in Hackettstown, N.J.
:· :M&amp;M gave its candies the plain name in 1954, when it intro:: du'ced peanut M&amp;M's.
;::
This week, the company launched a $10 miUio.n ad campaign
··: with the slogan "Same great chocolate. Much better name;• and has
1' been phasing in the new versio ns of the brown-and- white packages
:, foO: a few months, Tolkowsky said.
:· :One television commercial now airing shows people describing
:: their professions with politically correct terms, such as "domestic
:: care giver" instead of baby sitter. Then, an animated red M&amp;M's
i.~ character stands up to say, " I am not a plain M&amp;M. I am a milk
i' chocolate M&amp;M."
: · :Calling the candies plain "never really fit the eating experience of
:. M~M 's,"Tolkows ky said.
:: ,He said the change isn't about helping sales, which rose 12 per;. cent last year.The company conducted consumer research that shows
;: the customers would not be confused by the name change and may
1: actually give the candy more attention.
·
:. Analysts said the name change shouldn't turn customers away.
:: " I think M &amp;M 's is an institution,'' said Ann Gurkin, an analyst at
:: Davenport &amp; Co. in Richmond,Va. She, for one, never thinks about
!' the varieties. "I call it M&amp;M's;' Gurkin said.

,,"

,,' •

End nean for S.C. video gambling
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) In dark, the ongoing fight to eliminate video gambhng,
smoky rooms around the state, video gambling which was illegal until state lawmakers in 1986
players cashed out for the last time as South Car- amended a law barring money or property payolina prepared for life without the popular outs· from video machines.
machines.
Since then, anti-gambling forces have fought
A law banning video gambhng takes effect to oudaw the machines, a battle thar carne to a
Saturday, gutting a $3 billion annual industty. head in 1998 when then-Gov. David Beasley, a
Video gambling operators and players faced the Republican, called video gambling "a cancer on
end with a resigned indifference.
South Carolina" and vowed to get rid of the
"I'm not real sad about it going because it's industry.
been such a stresser;• said Kathy Babbitt, coVideo gambling operators responded by
owner of The Money Pit in Spartanburg: "I've pouring mon~y into the campaign ofDemocrat
had a lot of fun with this, and I've maQe a lot of Jint Hodges, who won the governor's race with
friends, but it's a lot of stress. It's a load."
a promise to call for a referendum on video gamMost of that stress, Babbitt said, has come from bling's future.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - An
unemployed man from El Salvador
who took the state's top-ranking
Catholic
clergyman
hostage
allegedly threatened to kill them
both if the archbishop didn't help
him obtain papers about his immigration status.
"If you do not assist me in getting what I need, then I will commit suicide and I will kill you;• the
man said, according to Archbishop
Patrick Flores.
The man threatened to detonate
a hand grenade, but it turned out
the device had no powder and
could not be ignited.
The 70-year-old archbishop,
w· •o was pushed to the ground at
the beginning ofWednesday's ninehour standoff but was not hurt,
spent the night in a hospital for
observation and was released
Thursday afternoon.
Speaking at a news conference
about rwo hours latet, Flores at
times cracked jokes to the delight
of relatives and chancery workers
seeing him for the first · time since
the ordeal. Asked how he felt, he

replied, " I'm alive;' and his eyes
welled with tears.
Flores said the hostage-taker was
distraught over being deported in
December.
The man told Flores that
although he has lived in the United
States for 25 years and is married to
a U.S. citizen, he was deported for a
IS-year-old marijuana possession
charge. Police have said the man
was facing deportation for driving
with a suspended license.
The man said he decided to take
Flores hostage to make a statement
"because he knew that I was very
important and because he wante.d
to use me as bait," the archbishop
said.
The "m an also said he resented
the church for accepting the
money of the poor when taking up
collections. Flores quoted him as
saying, "I hate this country. I hate
the church. I hate, hate, hate."
Nelson Antonio Escolero, 40,
surrendered Wednesday night after
police faxed him the immigration
papers he was demanding. He was
charged with two counts of aggra-

vated kidnapping and was being
held at the Bexar County Jail in
lieu of $2 million bond.
Escolero's attorney, Pat Hancock, said no decision has been
made on what type of plea to enter,
but he will try to get the bond
reduced.
He said that Escolero was a construction worker before his deportation, but that he has not been able

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Vigil set for site of hanging

;; J~CKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Rev.Jesse jackson says he has been
: assQred by federal and state authorities that sufficient manpower is
: beipg used to investigate the hanging death of a black Mississippi
!; teep-ager.
Raynard Johnson, 17, was (ound hanging from a pecan tree a few
from the front door of his rural Marion Counsy home June 16.
;;Officials said autopsy findings were consistent with suicide, butjohn:;son·s family questioned the ruling and called on Jackson and others
::to demand a federal investigation.
:: J~ckson also said Thursday he believes there are suspects in the
j;cas~. although officials have refused to confirm or deny that.
"Even though the government has not officially declared someone
itto be on the suspect list, ~?ere are persons who a~ aware of the cli,.mate before the lynching, Jackson told The Associated Press. He said
~~ily things point to a racially motivated killing, including the fact
1 jt~9oh?son and his brother had been friends with two 17- year-old
lfWhite guls.
:, T.he FBI is conducting a preliminary probe, and state authorities
::.ay 't heir investigations continue to be a priority.
J:~;ckson's Chicago office said a second autopsy by a forensic
;r.a~ologist at the farnily'.s request also found i. njuries consistent with
1 wctde, however tOXJcology tests were incomplete.
.
1, Jackson, Who spoke at the teen's funeral on Tuesday, said he plans
~~o !ead a prayer vigil Sunday at the site of the hanging to focus
1natlonal attention on the death.

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MEIGS COUNTY·ALL WARS MONUMENT
Erected and dedicated on May 29, 1927
Restored and rededicated on May 29,2000

'cASH IN ·1S MINUTES

. . . . . . _.....:w.,
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Payday Loans A Check Cashing

Bring your
• Last checking statement • Last pay check
* Photo 10 * Utility bill with name &amp;

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This-is to recognize and thank all those who gave to make the
Of this Historic Landmark possible. It will remain here to ·
----~.,.,.";:.future generations that lives were given for our freedom.

(,\!

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116 West Main Street

The American Legion - Feeney Bennett Post 128

Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-992-CASH
2274

r E-Mail: lnste_cesh@hotmall.com
~ ............ ,

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Bring This Ad In and Get A Loan For
'1300 par hundred

~~

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY .BIBBEE
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~~ch;' she said.

.

;, 'the millions of gallons of sewage that spewed from a ruptured
~nderwater pipe have been swept away by ocean currents, health
;f tlidals said. Tests show the water is again safe, said Barbara Adkison
~(the Miami-D~de County Health Department.
The spill occurred June· 20 when a contractor drove a concrete pi!- .
through the 54-inch sewage pipe while putting in a new pier at
,Miami Beach Marina.

;I

*'g

In Memory Of
Paul Hudson
Mrs. Mlldrecl Hudson

In Memory Of
Robert K. Hoeflich
Cllarlene E. Hoeflich

In Memory Of
Guy F. Gilkey
Olarles 8.. Helen Byer

In llileiJtDl'j Of

lnMemotyOf
Richard EWot Pickens
Betty P. Thomas

In MemolyOf
Emmet W. Shuler
Barbra Shuler

.
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, 4x4, 7,.3L Diesel, 6 ~pd ., Trllaer Pkg. ,
. Off Road Pkg., All Power EqUipment, XL.T

Mrs. Betty johnson

Marlon L Rife, Sr.
Mr. jotul Wolfe

In Memory Of

In Memory Of

Bonnie 8.. Dflbra Krautler

Paul E. HaplonstaU
IAmlle Haptonstall

In Memo!yOf
c.eorge Wm. Pickens
Betty P. l1lon)as

In Mel itDl'j Of
Frank Epple
Marilyn Epple ... 01lldren

In Memory
jos!ph A. Young, Sr.
joe 8.. ROWI!Ila Young, Jr.

" lll~Of
Ph1Wp E. KUDnger
Dane E. Fulrod

Ralph G. Martin

In Mel itDl'j Of
Ernest D. Barnhart
Mrs. Ruth Barnhart

lnMemo!yOf
Guy E. Rife
Mr. John J. Wolfe

In Memory Of
Max Dell1s

Jerry G. D«&lt;l1s

In Memory Of
Allen 8.. Curle Knopp Family
Wm. H. 8.. Lera Knopp jones

In MmtDl'j Of
FredJ!ck Fultz
john ... Mltl1yn Fultz

In Mtrnory Of
En1r11tt Alllon WW D
Ron ... Uncia Eulmln

In Memory Of
Harry 8..j11te DIVII
Mrs. Shalla A. Hubbard

lnMemo!yOf
Paul Hlldore
Robert E. By.-

lnMmiOI)'Of

In Mtrnory Of
ScottSiwlk
Mr. lllyllt 5hlnk

In Mlrnory Of

FeaHIY lllnnettl'alt 128
Ell Dlnnllon Post 467
Mrs. Celeste Collies
Mr. Orllndo Andreoni
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Heiuy Qatworthy
Mr.... Mrs Raymond Smith
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Olarles Tate
Myron 8.. june Duffield
Mr. EWs K. Myers

In Mel itDl'j Of

I

2000 FORD F350

StanJtrl johnson

Jack Krautler Jr.

a ..

Mr. Erick Omnlnpm

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2000 FORD F450
4x4, 7 ,3L Dleeel, 6 Spd., Air Coi1ditlantng,
Snow Plow Prep., 9' Oump Bed, More

SlmSmlth
Mrl. Yvonne Whlttlngtlon

WIUiam F. Sorden
Mr. WIUiam Sorden

lnMimolyOf
Liston Fultz
john 8.. Mltl1yn Fultz

WIIIIIm A. lewis WW I

In Meir1101y Of
Carence Ray Hawley
Nonnan 8.. jane Hawley

In Memory Of
Oscar Roush
Mrs. Lois CuMJngham

Denver E. Wells

In Memory Of
Herman f1occarl
Mr' 8.. Mrs. Mike Flocxarl

In Memory Of
w. Montgomery
Mrs. Ruby Montgomery

In MemotyOf
Cllarles joseph Pic:kms
Betty P. Thomas

In Melr1101y Of
N1cholas N. Ciruesser
Mr.jolmj. Wolfe

· nMtmoryOf
Eugene M. Harris
john 8.. Margorte 8.. Family

In Memory Of
Warren Spencer Pickens
Betty P. Thomas

· In Melnory Of
Samuel Eastman OvJ1 Was
Ron 8.. Unda Eastman

In MI!IJIOIY Of
Wamn a.. Wlma Davis
Mrs. Sheila A. Hubbard

In Melnory Of
Walter W. Bunce
Larry 8.. Reva Bunce

In Memory Of

In llileiJtDl'j Of

In Memory Of
Kenneth E. Byer

james Bodcl MIIIs

,,

james

Mrs. Allee MIIIs

Ronnie Smith
Mrs. Ywnne Whittington

In Mel nary Of
james Clatworlhy
Mrs. firma Oatworthy

In Ml!lltDl'j Of
·Elwood PhUUps WW II
)eanG!more

In Memory Of

Bill 8.. Kade Cillmore

lnMemotyOf
judy Wells

R~E.Byer

In Memory Of
Vernon L Weber
Quality Print Shop

In Memo!yOf

Betty Jo Martin

cart J. Horky Family'
Mr. jim Bailey
Denver 8.. Nora Rice

Mr. William H. King
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Russell Mozingo
Mr. jack Hawley
Robert 8.. Peg Schmoll
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Don Young
Mr. Shennan Buskert
Unda Douglas Ohio Ed. Sup. Gp.
Mrs. Belsy H. Parsons
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Roscoe Wise
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Max Boring

Mr. Ronal Jividen
Mr. jim Bradbury
Mr. HarokllAmley

Mr. Richards. Owen
Mr. james Buell
FandAM~

Norman E. 8.. Jane Hawley
Mr. Paul D. Neese

Lodge
Mr. Bernard alkey

Mr. CUrtis Jenkinson'

Mr. 8.. Mrs. Norman Van Maire
Mr. 8.. Mrs. RCI5COe Ate

james 8.. Shela Hubbard

Modern Woodsman
Olaries 8.. Daisy Blakesley

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Harry 8.. Genel/llie Richards
Loyd 8.. Ardella johnson
Lowell!.. Nancy Beavet
. Mr. 8.. Mrs Gedlo Grolaml
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Stieve 8.. Peggy Davis , Lyons Cub Pomeroy Middleport
Middleport t1re ~t
Disabled American Veterans 53
Mr. Ted Riley, Jr.

VFW Post 9053

Mr. 8.. Mrs William Swisher
Qty Nallonai IIAnic, Pt. Pleasant
Mlck's Barber Shop
CArpa\lw'a l..oc:.l Union
Mr' ... Mrl. BetiHo Ciltoluni
s. o. u. v. ClvU War
Mr. Carl Leonard wan.n

Downing Odlds A8f!!nf:J.
Binge
Mr. Roy Kellencn
Home National Bank
Smith Capebart Feet 140
Racine Am«. Legion l'ost 602
VIllage Of Middleport
Mr. 8.. Mrs. Frank Glrolami
1\oik. Maxine Bennett
Mrs. E. Maxine C••keJI
john 8.. Dotde Musser
Peoples Banking 8.. Trust
Mrs. GJoria J. Peartley
Mrs. Martha Odlds
Farmers Blltk
Ohio Vaky Bank
Rlverbald Ar1s Council
Mayor Sandy lannareiU

Fisher Funeral Home
Robert ... Carolyn Holland
Dewey ... PauUne HortDn

Michael ... Brenda Merritt
Rullln 8.. 1belma Collins
lloWy Middleport Per 1181'0)'
Mr. Richard Olllnbers
Vaughn'sSupar Market

Office Service ... Supply
Vllley Lumber 8.. Supply ,
Mr. john R. Philson
WjOS Televlp PorrldOJ

Lawrence H1Udore

Manning 8.. june Kioes
Mr. Fred Smith
FOE Ladles Awdllary 2171
Roy 8.. Maurita Miller

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Pauley Anne Kincaid

Robert 8.. Donna Byer
Uonel 8.. Mary Lou Bo8gs
WUIIam Keith Kincaid
Mr. Mlck Davenport
Earl H. Gilkey
Vldior 8.. ABc.e Wolfe
john P. K1nca1ci

Mr. Jeff Thornton'
American Electric Power

Don Tate Motors

Mr. Raymond L Walburn

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2000 FORD F350

2000 FORD F350

Crew Cab Dually, 4x4, 7 .3L. Diesel, Auto, At;, Leather,
All POwer Equipped, "707" Conver•lon

Aeg. C•b 4x4, XL.T, V-10, Auto, AC,
Tilt, Cruise, All Power, Trailer Taw Pkg.

1

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (.1\P) - Just in time for the Fourth of July
ekend, health officials Thursday reopened most of the beaches
11
iflosed nine days earlier by a giant sewage spill.
:
' Four miles of beach remained closed. The reopened beaches
'~'ncluded popu.Ltr tourist spots like Miami Beach's South Beach and
he be~ch at Bal Harbour.
· Rebeb Martinez, 24, one of many models who work on South
,l leach, wasted no time in hitting the water once the ban was lifted.
'I "I grabbed my flip-flops , my towel and my book and hit the

InMemotyOf

Raymond~

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2000 FORD F350

In Memory Of
Dr. Olarles J. Mullen
Mr. Howard Mullen

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Super'CIIb, 4x4, ~T. 7.3L Diesel, Auto,
AC, Tilt, Cruise, ALl Power, Off Road, I.Oo,aoa

InMemotyOf
Cleo Kerns
Judy Wells

JnMemotyOf

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Superoab, 4x2, 7.3L Oleeel, XLT,
Trailer
, AU Power
Loaded

In Memory Of
Bob&lt;llbnore
Mrs. jean GUmore

In' Memory Of
Jeff Ray Hawley
Mrs. Donna Hawley

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2000 FORD F250

lnMemotyOf
Nonnan Edward Hawley
Nonnan 8.. jane Hawley
Lewis Long
Mrs. Doroltly Long

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Beaches recover from spill

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Middleport, Ohio

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

to find work since he returned illegally. He has had trouble providing
for his three children, who are U.S.
citizens, the lawyer said.
"You have your family here, you
have your wife that you care about,
you have children, yo\J have
worked hard in this community
and then you find out that everything's going to be taken away from
you;• Hancock said.

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The Dally Sentinel• PageA7

MEIGS COUNTY ALL WARS MO
Stewart I Bennett Park

The Legislature last year approved the referertdum as part of a bill that also banned video
gambling unless voters decided to keep the
machines. Last October, the state Supreme Court
threw out the referendum, but kept the part of
the law banning video gambling on July I.
The State Law Enforcement Division said it
would make spot checks afi:er midnight Friday to
make sure machines are turned of£. Operators
lp.ve one week to get the machines out of the
state or destroy them.
Rhea McCary, vice president of operations at
Fast Freddie's, a West Columbia video gambling
parlor, said there was "a little bit of a somber
tone" among players this week.

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·!: · ~CHMOND,Va. (AP) - Police acting oh a telephone tip found
:: fiVFl?odies- at least some of them shot- scattered throughout a
•• suburban Richmond home.
:: Police Chief Carl Baker said a handgun was recovered at the home
:: TliUcsday, but he would not say whether all the victinu had been
l! sh~. He declined to identifY the victims and gave few details about
wJlat police found inside the small brick ranch house.
!; .The tip was called in to the Chesterfield County Emergency ·
;; Cmnmunications Center at 6 p.m., said Don Kappel, the county's
•· director of public affairs.
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:: ~ppel said some of the victims knew each other, but he gave no
'' ot~er details. "The investigation is quite new. lt~s quite intensive and
:: ongoing at this time."
/; Neighbors said a woman, two men and a boy and a girl had lived
:; in 'he house for at least three years, mostly keeping to themselves.
;; "They were not out of the ordinary at all;' said neighbor Travis
·
:: Wtlitlow.
;, "fVhitlow said the girl would come by his house periodically sell•i ing candy to raise money for various causes, but he knew little else
'1: about
.
the people.

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Man who held archbishop hostage thought clergyman could help him

F'we found dead in residence

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•J Friday, June 30, 2000

Friday, June 30, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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AU Legionnaires
Lany Banks ConstrucUon
Pat Johnson
Tim Fife
Ludewlc.d Celedon Co.
Pat Mullen Concrete Co.
· WV Electric
Kings Hardware .

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JERRY BI.BBE.E
Phone
740-992-2196

Valley Lumber
Keith ~les Towing
AEP PhiiHp Sporn
Sentinel I
WYVK.Radlo .,
.

WJ05-IV

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V~eofNHddlepo~

MiddlePort Trophies&amp;. Tees

Proclamation - Gov. Robert Taft .
Denise Pittinger - Ted Strickland
State Rep. - John Carey
Commissioner -Jeff Thornton
Co. Prosecutor - John Lentes
Mayor - Sanely lannareiU

···. r

Photographer - Ken Gilkey
Photographer - Paul Gerard

History -George A. Wolfe
History - Dolly A. Klelnschmldt
Refreshments - Ladles Al.1XIIIary
Acral Wreaths- Frands florist
Programs -Sue Baker

Meigs H.S. Band -Toney Dingess
·Vocallst- Sue Mason

Anyone wishing to make additional contributions to the Monument may do so by forwarding to Feeney Bennett
Post 128 Middleport, Ohio. Additional donations will go toward the balance owed on the restoration and then
into a perpetu~l maintenance fund. Additional names may still be added to the plaque.

461 S .. Third
Ave.
Middleport

www.jenybibbee.com

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We would also like to thank al.l those who had a part in the restoration of the
·monument and rededication celebration on May 29, 2000

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�Pllge A a •The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 30, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

AL: M's best in the l#st, Page B2
NL: Bere goes 'K'razy for Brewers, P(l~B2
Meres Sammy going?, Page B2
PGA: Green leads U.S. Senior Open, Page B3

Apostolic

Church of Chnst

Ep1scopal

Chrdl ol J .... Clorilt ...__
Van.Zaach and Ward lid.
Putor: Jarnc:s Miller

Po....,, Cb..-dl ol Cloriot

Gn&lt;t Epia&lt;opal a..,n
326 E. Main St., Pome'toy
Rev. James Bernac.ki, Rc:v.ICJ.tharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Sunday: Adult Educalion ·
Sunday School 10:1!5 a.m.
Holy Eucbtrist11:00 a.m.
Wedneldly: Holy EUcharist 5:00 p.m.

Sunday S&lt;hool- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Evenina ·7:30p.m.

Wonbip- 10:30 a.m.•6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Cllurcb of Jetu Christ

Apostolic: Flllb
New Uma Road
Sunday, lOa.m. l[lnd 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
Uberty ~bly or God
P.O. Box 467. Duddina Lane

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Muon. W.Va.

•

Putor: Neil Tennant

• . Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
· Monaolha Baptlll Churdt
Burlinaham - 742-7606

Pastor: John Swanson

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

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Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
Evenina Service -6:00p. m.
Wcdnciday Service- 7:30p.m.

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Hope Baptist Chun:h {Southem)

570 Orant St., Middleport
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

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RuU.od Flnt Baptlll Cburdt
Sunday School · 9:.30 a. m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

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POmtro)' Ftnc Blpllst

Eut Main St.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

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Flnt Southe.,. Bo~tlst
41872 Pomeroy P1ke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday S&lt;ltool - 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

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Ftnt Bapllll Churtb
Putor: Matk Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepon
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship · lO:lS a.m .• 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00 p.m.

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Rldne Flnt Bapd11
Pa1tor: Rick Rule
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicc11 • 7:00 P. m.

Sliver Run Baptlsl
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School · 10a.m.
Worship · lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00 p.m.
MI. Ualon Baptist
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre:
Sundty School-9:45 a.m.
£\lenin&amp;- 6:30 p.m.
. Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

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Old Bellttl

Will Boptlst Cbur&lt;b
28601 . Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunda~ School· 10 a.m.
E\lening- 7:00p.m.
Thursday Sel"o'Jces · 7:00

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Hllloldt Bapllat Church
St. Rt. 143 just of! Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sundaf S&lt;bool· 10 a.m.
Worshap- lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncsda~ Services •7 p.m.

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VIctory Bapllllladepeadut
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

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Foltb Bopdll Cbarcb
Railroad St., Muon
Sunder S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· '1 p.m.

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Fontt Run BapU1I
Paslor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship • 1l a.m.
ML Mol1ob Boptlst
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlcpon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig. Jr.
Sunday S&lt;bool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
AnllquiiJ Baptlal
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45t.m.
Sunday Evening • 6:00p.m.

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212 W. Maio St

Minisler: Neil Proudfoot

Rutland Free Will Baptlll
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rviccl • 7 p.m.

Catholic
III&lt;Ad Hw1 Cotlaolk Claurcll
• " 161 Mulberry Ave., Pom&lt;rDl, 992-5898
Pastor: Rc:'o'. Walle( E. Heinz
·· Sat. Con. 4:4B:1Sp.m.; Mass-5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45-9:1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30a.m.
Daile~ Mw • 8:30 1.m.

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Pomeroy
IJide Chun:b olCbritt
33226 Children's HolM Rd.
Sunday S&lt;hool- II a.m.
Worsh1p - lOa.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- "'1 p.m.

.

Sth and ~bin
Pastor. A1 Hanson
Youth Minister: Bill frazier
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 8: lS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Duvlllt Holl..,. Cburdt
310S7 State Route 323, Lanasvlle
Putor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. li. 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service • 1 p.m.

Kno Cburd of Cllrist

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor.Jeffrey Wallace
lst and Jrd Sunday

Cohlf)' Pllcrlm Cblpel

Beorwallow Rld&amp;e Cburcb ol Christ
Pa.stor:Tcrry Stewan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m.• 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Zloo Cburch or Chl1st

Pomeroy, Harrison\lille Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pas1or: Roser Watson
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

~i:!.

Sunday Sd&gt;ool • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Sc:rvicu • ? p.m.

--

-

Ell~

Pastor: K.1th bdcr
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10o.m.
Wor~hip • 9 a.m.

PonludllntCIIordooflbtNuo,...
Putor: William Justis
Sundoy Scbool-10:00 a.m.
Momln&amp; Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Servi« - 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Keith Roder
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worthip • 1la.m.
FMa!R•
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
Wor1hip • 9 a.m.

Other Churches

Htath (Mkll port)

AU-CIIordt
Aah St., Middleport
Putor Lcs Hayman
Sundoy S&lt;hool - 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service • 6:00 p.m.
Wedneadoy Servi« -7:00p.m.

Pastor: Rob Brower

Sunday S&lt;hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11:00 a.m.
MloenviUe
Pastor. Bob RobinJOn
Sunday School· 9 Lm ..
Wol1hip -10 o.m.

Rooe of Sharoa Hollo... Chur&lt;b

Ptorl Cblpol
Sundly S&lt;hool • 9 o.m .
Worship -10 a.m.

.

Ou-.:b Mlolltrla
47439 Reibel Rd.• Chetter
Puton: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: tO a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Servlo;eo - 7 p.m.
-

Aaope ur. Caler
"FUII-Goapel Oiurch~
Pl1t0n lobo .t Patty Wade
603 Se&lt;ODd Ave. Mason
.
773-5017
Servia: time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday 7po~

Pomti'O)'

Putor: Rob Brower
Sunday S&lt;bool - 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:43 a.m.

Plae Gron Bible Hollneu Chun:b
1(2 mile offRt. 325
Pastor: Re\1. O'Dell Manley
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Tupptn Ploln ChUJ&lt;h of Cbrist
Instrumental
Worship Service:· 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Youth- S:JO pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Churc~ ofChl1st
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rutlood CburcllorCbriJI
Sunday s~hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Brodfonl Church or Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister : Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sundty S~hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., 10::W a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Rullud
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servloea - 7 p.m.

Hyaell Rua Hollneu Chttr&lt;h
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worshif, • 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bib e Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

SolemC•ter
Pastor: Ron Pierce
Sundty SChool· 9:1~ a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Laurel c11rr Fm Mtthodlst Chun:~
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m:.
We'dnesday ~crvice. • 7:00 p.m.

Latter-Day S:Jmts

Hickory Hills Cbun:b ol Cbrtll
Evangelist Mike Moore:
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvi~s • 7 p.m.
Loopvlllt Cbl1otlon Cburth
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Gron Chun:h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday ~ehool • 10:30 1.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7 p.ni .

United Methodist

Church of God
ML Mol1ah Chun:h of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Uu
Sundt)' School· 9:45a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

SyroctUt Flnt Church or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 10 a.m.
Evenina Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph .
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10:30 a.m.

Lon1Boctom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Congregational

Rtetlt¥llle
Worthip- 9:30a.m.
Suridoy S&lt;hool • 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Month - 7:00p.m. service

Tritolty Cburcb
Second &amp;. Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev: Cr1i1 Crossman
Worsh1p 10:2S a.m.
Sunday School9:15 a.m.

Tupptn Pill• Sl. Paul ·
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunda~ School • 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

..

.-»

f'

Coolville Ualltd Metltodlll Porlllf " ·
PaMor: Helen Kline
Cooi... Cbordo
'
Main li. Fifth St.
Sunday SdtOol - 10 o.m.
Wonblp · 9Lm.
Tuesday Servloeo - 7 p.m.

S,-MIIIIoo
1411 Brld.. man St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m:

8elbtl Clllardt
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday S&lt;hool· 9 o.m.
Worship - 10 o.m.
Wedneldty Scrvicu • 10 a.m.

lluol CommuiiJ Cburdt

OlfRt.l24
Put~dsel
Hut
Sundl
ti t - 9:30 a.m.

Wonhip- • 10:

Hoc~CIIurcb

Ton:b ClNn:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sundoy Sclaool- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 a.m.

Chetttr
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool · 10 a.m.
Thui'Sday Services - 7 p.m.

· Folllt Vllkl Tobemlde Cbarcb
Batley Run Rood
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
·•
Sunday Evenini 7 p.m.
Tl!ilnday Servloe • 7 p.m., .

o

ML 011¥t Ublttd Mtlltodltt
0!1124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Cbarcb
Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday S&lt;hoollO a.m.
..Evealna • 7:30p.m. ·
Wedneoday Servlo;e - 7:30p.m.
57~ Pearl St.,

-

Putor: Brian Har~esa
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 o.m.
Worship 1I a.m.
Wednctday 7 p.m.

OrondStrut
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
Worship • lla.m.
Wednesday Servloea- 8 p.m.

Rudood Cburcll of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Mid~ Cam-111

EaiiLtlart

PasiOr: Bri1n Harkncsa
Sunday S&lt;hool· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedneoday - 7 p.m. ••

Gnbam Uolltd Mdhodlll
Worship- 9:30 o.m. (1st li. 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednnday Servio;e -'7:30p.m. .

Melp CqoperatJve hrlsh
Nortbeut OUittr

Chur&lt;b or God or Propheq
O.J. White Rd. oil St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesd&amp;y Services • 7 p.m.

Putor: Dewayno Stutler
Sunday School • 10 LIIL
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednndoy Servlo;ei • 10 a.m.

Folllt FuU Goopel Cburcb
Lon1 Boclom
Plltor: Stove Retd
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hlp • 9:34l Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdlr - 1 p.m.
Friday • fcllowlh1p service 7 p.m.

_,

HarrltoavUie Commuolty Cbun:b
Putor: Theron Durham
Sund~y • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedaesday - 7 p.m.

SL PoUJ Lutbena Cbun:b
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

CllritUoo Uoloa
Hartford, W.Va.
Putor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School · U a.m.
Worship • 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday scrv~e:e, 1:00 p.m.

Mon ..ISiar
Pastor: Dewayne SMier
Sunday S&lt;hool· 11 a.m.
Wol1hip • 10 o.m.

Our Sovlour Lulheroo Churc:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: Da'o'id Russell
Sunday S~hool- 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Christian Union

s-.Bie

Sunday S&lt;hool · 10 a.m.
Wonhlp - 9 a.m.

The c•ureh of Jmu

Lutheran

H1rtfont Chun:h of Cbristln

a-.
Cbrtatlut Followlhltl Cllun:h
Sunday aervlce,lO:OO a.m., 7:00p.m.

Tht Belleftn' Fellowohlp Mlalllr7
New Umc: Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Marpret J. Robinson
Servicea: Wcdncaday, 7:30p.m.
Suatlay, 2:30p.m.

SL Joh• Llilbtna Chorch
Pirie Orove
Re..,. Donald C. Fritz
WortbJR ·9:00a.m. 1,..
Sunday SCiibol - 10:00 a.nr.'"

Chun:ll ofCbriol
lntersecdon 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10!30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

CllrlotiiD Fellowablp Ctoter
Salem St. 1 Rutland
Pas10r: Roben E. Musser
Sundty School • 10 a.m. ,
WOt!hip-11 :15a.m., 7p.m.
Wedneoday Servlc:e - 7 p.m.

o

Coratei-Sulloa
Conncl &amp;. Buhan RdL
Rl&lt;lno.Oblo
Pastor: Dewalne Stutler
Sundoy S&lt;hoo - 9:30a.m.
Wol1hlp • 10:45 o.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m. ·

Sunday S&lt;hooll0:20-lla.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05·12:00 noon
Sacrtmr:nl Service 9-10:1S a.m.
Homemakina meetinJ, lit Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Dexter CbUJ&lt;b of Christ
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunbay school 9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m.

Filth Chapel
923 S. Third St., Mltldlepon
Putor Michael Panaio
Sunday service1 10 a.llJ.
Wednesday servia:, 1 p.m.

R,.rpoiiOd Cburdt of JauoCIIrilt
or Lotter Dey Soloh
Ponland-Raclne Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvlc;;cs · 7:00 p.m.

Cluist of Llne....DI)' Salall
Sl. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Reednllle Church ofCbrltl
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:~0 a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a'!m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

RockSprtap
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:15a.m.
WorshiJ? • 10 a.m.
Y~.uth Fellowslup. Sunday· 6 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiaca Churtb
73 Pearl St., Middleport.
P11stor: Rev. Doua Cox
Sunday Worship· 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Cb..-dlolllle N....-...

Putor: R... Samuel W. Buye

Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 •.m.
Wonhlp - 10:34l a.m .• 6:34l p.m.
Wednc:ld1y Scrvia.s · 7 p.m.

1!1olw-

HarrisonVille Road
Pallor: O..rles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.
leadinJ Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday WOT5hlp ·1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Putor: RtY. Herbert G11tc

Sunday Sdtool - 9:45 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wedncodoy Services - 7:30p.m.

Hol1ness
CommooltJ Cbarcb
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worshif"IO:OO a.m.
Sunday Servu:c-·7 p.m.

Mlddltport Cburcb olCIIrltl

~Cioordleflloe N -

C.lntl a.tor

DJt1¥llio CommUDily Cbun:b
Sunday S&lt;bool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp ·10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Mona Cloopol Cburcb
Sunday ocbool - 10 a.m.
Wol1hlp • 11 a.m.
Wedneldly Service -7 p.m.
Folllt Goopoi.Cburcll
Loni Bottom
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:4S o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday 7:30p.m.

-

eo...

Middleport Cllurcb ofllle Nuanae
Putor: Allen Mldatp
Sundoy S&lt;bool • 9:30a.m.
Wol1hlp -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdncldly Services- 7 p.m. ·
Putor: Alleo Mid&lt;tlp

ML Oil"
uaiiJ Cburc:b
Putor: Lawrc:M.e Bush
Sunday S&lt;hool • 9:30 a.m.
Evenlna - 7 p.m.
Wcdned1y Service • 7 p.m.
Uollttl Faith Cllurdt
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pasa
Pulor: Rev. Robert a Smith1 Sr.
Sunday S&lt;;hool • 9:30 a,m.
Wonhlp- 10:30 a.•m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servlo;e - 7 p.m.

-lOt Fellowlltlp

Cllurdt ofllle N111nae
Putor: Tere11 WaldKk
Sundoy Sc:hool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp - 10:45 a.m. 7 p.m.
Wednnday Servlt:ea • 7 p.m.
Sy......,Cb..-dloftbtNPutor Mike Adklno
Suodoy S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servloeo • 7 p.m.
P o - CllordoofllleNIIIftM
Putor: Ju Lavender
Sunday S&lt;hool· 9:30a.m.
Wor~hlp • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servlc:u • 7 p.m.

.m., 7:30p.m.

Fall GoopoiiJ&amp;Itlhouo

,

j

Friel-,, 111M SO, 2000

cartetoa lattrd!llo=h•d-111 cant~
Kin&amp;ll&gt;utY Road
Putor:CII'deHendeiiOO
Sunda1 sd.ool - 9:30 Lm.
WorWup Sc:rvloc: 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesdly l'li&amp;bt Servlcco

FRIDAY'S

- . . GoopoiBald Knob, on Co Rd. 31
Putor: Rev. Roau Willford
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 o.m.
Worship. 7 P·~·

HIGHLIGHTS

WbHt'l Cllolpd WaleJII
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. PbiUip Ridenour
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.
Wol'lhip • 10:30 a.m.
..
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Southern sports
physlclls set for todllf

Folnlew Bible Cburdt
Lehrt, W.Vo. Rt. 1
Putor: Brian May
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.
Follll Followthlp Cnroede ror Clorltl
P11tor: Re..,. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvery Bible Cburcll
Pomeroy Pike:, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blact.wood
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdty Service-7:30p.m.
SdnmUie Word or Fllllt
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Rololclna ur. Chu&lt;h
500 II. 2nd Ave., Middleport
PJstor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worahlp-10:00 am
Wedne~y Scrvica • 7 p.m.

RACINE - Sports physicals
for Southern High School will be
provided free of ~harge at the
office of Dr. Douglas Hunter in
Racine this afternoon.
Athletes who plans to participate in anY sports during the
school year are to pick up a physiCal card at !he school prior to the
physical alld have it signed by a
parent.
Athletes should"wear short and
loose clothing. Girls in grades 10,
11 and 12 will be seen from 3
p.m. to 5 p.m . and boys in gt11des
10, 11 and 12 will get their exams
from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Clllloa Tlherolde Cllurdt
Clifton, W.Va.
Sundoy S&lt;bool - 10 o.m.
Worship·. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:e - 7 p.m.

Jlri•~er ~uneral ~me ~Inc.

Mill Work ·
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

992-3978
Agency Inc.

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.,

A.-·

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SERVICES

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local
churches

590 Eu1 Mlln Stroot • Pomeroy. OH 45769
740-w.!-5-144
Jomeo
Ji. ·Director

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Bill Quickel lt2-ee77

740-892·5141

Bruce A. FQ - Direclor

Ntw Uft Vlc\0&lt;1 Ctattr
•
. 3773 Geor1" Creek Road, Gallipoll• OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Service&amp; • 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedneaday - 7 p.m. li. Yooth 7 p.m. ·
Full Goopol Cban:ll of the UYiq S.Ylw
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jeaae Monis
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30 p.m.
God'o TemJ&gt;It of Prolae
31665 M&lt;Oulre Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wtyne Bslcolm
Services: Thun. Nites 7;W pm
New church No Sunday service establllhed.

Pentecostal
Ptnlt&lt;OIIIIAueatbly .

St. Rt. 124,1W:inc
Putor: William Hoback
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Evenlna · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

CLASSIFIEDS!

NEW
HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME
w~ accept

Preneed 'Trollsftrs ..

111·1100
Lundy Brown

Direcfor

Reg1rn Brown
174

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME
Dignity and Service Always

Established 1913

992·2121

Streat 106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Presbyterian
Synaue Flni Ualled Preahyterlu
Pastor: Rev. Kri!lna Robinson ·
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo11hlp • U a.m.
HaniaoDYIIle Pretbyterlu Clltudl
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:45 a.m.
Middleport Preahylerllll
Sunday School · 9a.m.
W011hip • 10 a.m.

•

~ UNDATED

-(All) -The New
acquired outfielder
Oavid Justice from the CleV-eland
Indians lor outfielder Ricky
Ledee and two minor leaguers to
be name.d. Justice was hitting .265
with 21 homers and a team-high
58 RB!s for Cleveland. Ledee is
hitting .241 with seven homers
and 31 RBis.

'l',ork Yankees

.Matlnez pes on DL

Sevent11-Day Adventist
SeY....._DayAdnallll
Mulberry HI!. R~ .• Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawlnsky
Saturday Servlor;s:
Sabbath S&lt;hool - 2 p.m.
Wol1hip - 3 p.m. .

United Brethren
1\IL Hei-moa U l l l t d 1o Christ Cllurcll
Texu Communi!~ off CR. 82
Poston Robert Sandars
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m. 7:30p.m.
Wedneadoy Servi&lt;OS - 7:30p.m.

BOSTON (AI') - Red Sox
.._--:•ce Pedro Martinez was placed on
the 15-'day disabled. list with side
and 'shoulder problems. The move
~ retroacti~ to Monday, making MaTtinez eligible to be activated July 11, the day of the AllStar game.

MlB ovnuns 12

_Dod.- Slllplllllons

Edea Uolltd Bndt11o Ia Clol1at
2 1/2 miles north or Reedovllle
pn Slite Route 124
P"toh Rev.kotlort IO!arkley
Sundoy School • 11 a.m.
Sunday Wonhtp - 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servla:s • 7:30 p.m.
Wedneldiy YoUth Smice ·7:30p.m.

· LOS ANGELES (AP)
Twelve members of the Los
J\ngeles Oodgers had their suspensions overturned for their
Nics· in, a brawl with fans at
Wrigley Field last month.
:Gary Sheffield is the only
.Yeryday player that did not have
his suspension overturned. He
still faces a five-day suspension.

Apisl, Mlrtln to finish
llllltdl today

The thl.ngg which
"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken" are lrn!JO!I!Iible with
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy men ate !JO!:!:Ible
with Qod.

PHARMACY

in the

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

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FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
892·7075
172 North Second Ave.

•

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.

WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
The final match on Centre
Court at Wimbledon between
A:ndre Agassi and Todd Martin
was suspended in the fourth set
until today because of rain.
·. The second-seeded Agassi led
6;-4, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 0-1.
The aihnent in Pete Sampras'
·sore left leg was diagnosed as
· acute tendinitis, and he planned
to play his third-round . match
today against fellow American
Justin Gimel!tob.
,Upsets left only seven seeded
· men, the fewest after two rounds
sipce 1972, and seven seeded
women, the fewest since 1976.
.Alexandra Stevenson, a surp"rise
semifinalist last year in her first
Grand Slam tournament, lost to
Patricia Wartusch 7-6 (6), 6-3.
' Defcndin~ champion · Lindsay
Davenport, seeded second, rallied
for a 3-6, 6-3, 6-3 victory over
Elena Likhovtseva.

GOING, GOING, GONE - Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 26th home run of the season in the fifth inning against St.
Louis Thursday at Clnergy Field ~ The Reds lost, 12-3. (AP)

BUCKEYES IN THE NBA

OSU stars will·now be role players
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Karl said Thursday.
Scoonie Penn and Michael
"It's probably not going to be
Redd face something in the any guaranteed money there.
NBA that they never faced in He's probably going to have to
college .coming off the make an opportunity. Summer
bench.
" league is a good place to make
The backcourt mates w~ ·- that opportunity," Karl said.
Redd, a 6-foot-5 shooting
helped lead Ohio State to a Fin'&amp;lr
Four and a Big Ten title durin~ guard, was confident he had
their two years together ~s accomplished enough at Ohio
starters· will be backups in the State - including leading the
pros - i f they can play their way team in storing as a senior and
..· the entire Big Ten as a freshman
onto a 12-man roster.
Redd, who bypassed his senior'· - to merit a first-round selecseason, had predicted he would~~ tion.
be a first-round selection in _ No one ever doubted Redd's
Wednesday night's NBA Draft. ~ ability to handle the ball and ereHe slipped to Milwaukee at No. ··· ate llis own shot. But some
43, midway thrqugh the secolid scouts doubted whether he had a
round. ·Penn *as taken by good enough outside shot to be
Atlanta at No. 57, the second to an etfectivt scorer or was strong
last pick of !he entire draft.
enough to defend bigger players.
First-round draft picks . are ' · · Redd said he wasn 't conguaranteed contracts worth mil- i:erned with his detractors.
lions, while second-round picks ~ "I'm not worried what people
are guaranteed nothing more are going to say about me. . ..
than an invitation to summer they've said it my whole career.
league and training camp in It's just about me proving them
October.
wrong again," he said.
"I think it's July 7 we staJt
One thing worlcing in Redd's
practtcmg
m
Milwaukee. .favor is the Bucks' lack of depth
Michael, get ready, come out and in the backcourt. The team
see us;• Bucks coach George needs a reliable backup for
'C

•

put a lot of pressure on myself. And I caine
out and hit some pretty bad shots," said
Begay.
Begay's opening drive sailed left into the
trees and his approach shot almost hit a
fan.
·
But his birdie putts brought him back.
"The greens are so perfect right now
that if you get a good read, you'vej ust got
to get it going. It's going to go in," Begay
said.
·
The scores reflected it as 83 golfers in
the !56-player field finished under par.
Gamez, who had been struggling with
his putting, got everything going in the

Pleese 1H Hertford, Pap IJ

cards whip
Reds, 12-3

Justice from 'Dtbe

Third Ave.

Pastor: Re V. Cfark Baker---- ...
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvk:es • 7:00p.m.

Soallt 8elbtl New T_.,...t
Sliver Rid..
Putor: Robert Barber
. Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Sun. Worablp ·10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wtdneaday Servlto - 7 p.m.

Buy,

and after his early extt tn the St. Jude's
Classic, he lingered in Memphis to work
on his setup and his mental game.
" Had some time to soul search and realize sometimes when you're· on the inside
of the fence watching everyone gather the
apples, you've got to ... do things to get
better," he said.
Four days after getting his third PGA
Tour victory, Begay admitted he had some
butterflies as he pursued a second straight
tournament win.
He bogeyed his first hole, but ended
with four consecutive birdies .
"I was a bit nervous on the tee this
morning, just having won. I didn:t want to

Yanks acquire

33045 HUand Road, Pomeroy
Pa110r: Roy Hut:~ter
Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Evenlni 7:30 p.m.
Tundoy li. Thursday - 7:30 p.m.

992·5432

CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) - Winless
Not this time.
after 18 years on tour, Dan Forsman was
His chip caught the fringe, trickled onto
on the verge of shooting his best round of the green and· didn't stop rolling until it
the year. Then he found himself in a famil- hit the pin and dropped in.
"It was so amazing to have it be over
iar and frustrating position in the first
and have a 4 and 64, 6 under and tied for
round. of the Greater Hartford Open.
W ith no bogeys on his scorecard, Dan !he lead," he said. "It was a thrill."
Forsman had just one hole :left- But his
The round-saving par tied him for !he
third shot at the par-4 No. 18 sailed over first-round lead with Norah Begay,
the green and landed about 40 feet above ' Robert Gamez at)d Kirk Triplett. It also
from the hole.
was his best round of the year, two better
"At that point, I'm starting to say, 'Why than his 66 in the first round of the M C I
can't I just get it in. What's the matter Classic in April. His third place th ere was
here?" Forsman said Thursday. "Why is it his best finish of the year, but then his
one hole, one shot, one series of shots game went sour.
seem to be holding me back?'"
Forsman has missed the last two cuts,

NEW YORK (AP) - Surrounded by police everywhere he
went and booed for everything
he did, controversial Atlanta
Braves reliever John Rocker
·returned to Shea Stadium and
pitched a perfect eighth inning in
a 6-4 victory over the New York
Mets.
Rocker made a pregame statement to the media, again apologizing for his bigoted offseason
remarks about New York's diverse
p·opulation that got him a twoweek suspension.

Middleport r ••,....lll

Time to clean house?. Crow's Family Restaurant
Clean out your basement
or attic wnh the help of the

Four-way tie for the lead at Hartford Open

Mets fins MICOIM
Rocker back to Shea

-+

2&amp;1 South Second Ave.•Middleport. OH 45760

Page 81

shooting guard Ray Allen after
trading Vinny Del Negro.
"We absolutely have room on
this ballclub," said Milwaukee
general manager Ernie Grunweld.
In Atlanta, Penn will get a shot
at backing up second-year point
guard, Jason Terry.
The 5-10 floor general, a
Boston College transfer, was the
main ingredient in Ohio State's
resurrection as a college basketball power. In Penn's first season,
the Buckeyes went fium S-22 to
27- 9 and a Final Four appearance.
Last season, they went 23-7
and shared the Big Ten title with
eventual national champion
Michigan State.
"We we're surprised that
Scoonie was still available at 57,"
said Atlanta coach Lon Kruger.
"He's had a terrific career at
Ohio State and brings a real
good understanding of point
guard play and responsibilities.
"He's played against the best in
his college career and we expect
'that experience to pay off for

him."

CINCINNATI (AP) - Shawon Dunston , Eric Davis and
Renteria
homered
Edgar
Thursday, powering the St.
Louis Cardinals to a 12-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds and
a split of their four-game series.
Dunston had a run-scoring
single in the first and a threerun homer in the third, putting
the Cardinals ahead 6-0 and on
track for their 13th victory in
17 games.
By splitting the series, St.
Louis held its ground against its
closest pursuer in the NL Central "!;"he Cardinals are up by 8
112 games, matching their
biggest margin of the season.
Instead of reaching their stated goal of talcing three of four
to make up ground, the Reds
lost for the 16th time in 22
games. They play the Cardinals
three · times next we ek in St.
Louis, then don't meet them
again until a season-ending
series in Busch Stadium.
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a solo
homer, his fourth of the series,
as he again overshadowed
slumping Mark McGwire. But
the Reds couldn't overcome
another poor performance from
their starting rotation.
Ron Villone (7- 5) gave up
seven runs and eight hits in five. plus ·innings as he lost for the
fourth time in five decisions.
The Cardinals sent seven batters
to the plate in the first as part of
a three-run rally featuring RBI
singles by Davis and Dunston.
Dunston's three-run homer in
the third, his seventh, made it 60. Renteria and Davis hit solo
homers off reliever Manny
Aybar; and each drove in anoth-

er run off Scott Winchester.
Renteria went 8-for-18,
homered twice and drove '·in
seven runs in the series. Davis
started twice and went 4-for-8
with two homers and five RBis.
The Reds wasted a chance to
keep pace in the first inning
against a wild Andy Benes (8-3) .
After retiring the first two batters, Benes threw 15 balls in his
next 17 pitches, loading the
bases and falling behind Aaron
Boone 3-0 in the count.
After Boone took a fastball
for a strike, he flew out to the
warning track in left to end the
threat. Benes settled in and gave
up three runs and four hits in
seven mrungs.
Griffey completed sizzling
series with a solo homer in the
fifth, his fourth of the series and
26th of the season - two
behind McGwirec Griffey has
six homers in seven games
against McGwire 's team this
season.
. After slumping through the
first two months, Griffey has hit
12 homers in June, one more
than Albert Belle for the majo!
league lead.
By contrast, McGwire h~
one of his most miserable series,"
going 1-for-15 with a single,
nine strikeouts and three walks.
Struggling in Cincinnati is
nothing new for McGwire. He
hit the longest homer in stadium history . this season, a 473foot shot on May 5, but is only
10-for-55 (.182) career with
four homers in Cincinnati.
Reds Notes: The crowd of
45,771 was the largest in stadi-.

a

,..... -

...... Pep

.2

coach has
inoperabl~ tumor
BERLIN, Ohio (AP)
Perry Reese Jr., a popular basketball coach who led Berlin
Hiland High School in five of its
six state semifinal appearances,
has been diagnosed with an
inoperable brain tumor.
Reese, 47, was admitted to
Aultman Hospital in Canton on
Thesday after complaining of
flu-like symptoms and slight
memory loss.
. Following a series of neurological tests, including a CAT
scan and an MRI, doctors confirmed a mass behind his left eye
soc ket. Exploratory surgery
revealed the tumor was malignant and inoperable.
Reese was expected to be
released from the hospital today.
He will be placed under 24hour care through Hospice of
Holmes County.
" I think just about everybody
is still in shock. We're not able to
focus real well around here," said
Hiland athletics director Colin
Mishler. "He's respected around
the state.The support from people so far has been tremendous.

•

•
.•

-

It's been unreal."
Reese, a Canton native and
Canton Timken graduate, came
to Berlin Hiland prior to lh.e
1984-85 season.
··
Over the last 16 years, Re~
has posted a 304- 85 record and
in 1992 led the school's team to
it$ only state championship. The.
team advanced to its third con~
scc.utive semifinal this season. .
More than 400 people ha~ .
visited Reese at the hospital:·
One former player flew fiQm
Atlanta while another ended hi~
vacation in Hilton Head, S.C. •.
after only a day, to be near
Reese.
Don Hertler Jr., the he a~
football coach at North Canto.;
Hoover,had high praise for
Reese.
"He was the first coach 1
remember talking about real life
stuff with me. He taught me
how to treat people, how to be i
man . He is a one and only," he.
said. "He is the type of guy yoU:
keep in your ptllyers and yoU:
hope a miracle happens (Or
him."

••

I

�! ~· B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Frldey, June 30,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AMERICAN LEAGUE

2000

PITTSBURGH
(AP)
Sammy Sosa is so confused right
,
now, he doesn't know ifhe's com' '·
ing or going. All he knows is he
BV THE ASSOCit.TED PRESS
four hits at Chicago.
isn't going to New York.
;.. ,. The Seattle Mariners are having a good month,
Corey Koslde hit a two-run homer, and Ron
Where he goes next - to
' •:good enough to land them back in first place in Coomer and Marcus Jensen had two RBis apiece Toronto, to Cleveland, maybe
· ' •the AL West.
for the 1\vins. Minnesota had 16 hits, including even back to Chicago - even
_ , . Seattle's 7-2 victory over the Anaheim Angels three by Midre Cummings.
Sosa doesn't dare to guess.
-o,·on Thursday, combined with Oakland's 3- 1 loss to
Milton (8-2) improved to 5-0 with a 1.72 ERA
Sosa was as perplexed as anyone
;· i Texas, left the Mariners a half-game ahead of the in five daytime starts.
upon learning his long-rumored
' ' •.Athletics.
Roo !de Kip Wells (4-7) lost for the fourth time trade feU through Thursday when
· -•. ' Extending a club-record streak by winning in five decisions.
the Yankees traded for David Jus. their eighth series in a row, the Mariners grabbed
Rang•~• 3, Athletics 1
tice. The Yankees refused the
· ·•.s&lt;'&gt;le possession of the division lead for the first
At Oakland, Esteban Loaiza gave up one run in Cubs' demand for a package of
• '• time since June 2. Seattle finished its best-ever 7 1-3 innings as Texas became the first team to top prospects for Sosa, whose
. •.. HJ-game homestand 8-2 to push its June record win a series from the A's since mid-May.
production the last 2 1/2 seasons
~ •.!·to 19-7.
Loaiza (5-5) gave up his only run when Jason rivals the top power hitters in
"I've always liked our chances from Day 1," Giambi hit his 22nd homer in the eighth . John baseball history.
__.,outfielder Stan Javier said. "This team does a lot Wetteland pitched the ninth fo r his 20th save.
Now, instead of headi ng back
&gt;'' ·Of good things. It doesn't make mistakes."
Gil Heredia (9-6) allowed three runs on nine to the AL and a pennant race,
·' '' John Olerud hit two home runs and had three hits while pitching his first complete game of the Sosa is off to ... Milwaukee, of all
'l'· · J'I..Bls, while Javier and Robert Machado added season and third of his career.
places, and a weekend series he
: •chomers lor the Mariners.
Yankees 8, Tigert 0
probably didn't anticipate playing
,., _.. "We're playing pretty good baseball," said
Andy Pettitte pitched his second career shutout a few days ago.
"Right now, my main concern
0 lerud, who played on two World Series champi- as the Yankees won for the first time in six games
• ; •onship teams in Toronto. "We're getting real solid at Com eric a Park.
maybe is if somebody else is
; ."•.defense and we're getting some great pitching."
The Yankees scored eight runs on eight hits and going to come through,"Sosa said
•:' ·The Mariners have been in first place 60 of 87 an error in the fourth inning against Dave Mlicki after homering in the Cubs' 5-4,
days this season. Their record in Safeco Field is (2-9), including a record-tying three sacrifice to-inning loss to Pittsburgh. "But
•·• .. J!B-12, the best home mark in the AL.
flies.
this is not up to me. I've got to
;•. . · Olerud's second homer and seventh of the sea- . Pettitte (8-4) evened his career record for pitch-. keep playing and keep relaxing. If
son, a two-run shot off Kent Bottenfield (4-7), ing on three days' rest to 2-2 by allowing just six something happens, I've got to
•&gt;· •broke a 2-2 tie in 'the sixth. It came after Botten- hits. He struck out five and walked two in his first leave."
,;, field hit Edgar Martinez with a pitch, his second shutout since July 5, 1997, at Toronto.
For the first time since June 18,
·,., hit batter of the game.
The Tigers have been shut out a major league- Sosa left the park. His 448-foot
i :• · •Javier put the game out of reach with a two-run high 10 times this season.
home run into the center-field
homer off Mark Petkovsek in the seventh.
Red Sox 12, Orioles 4
seats off Josias Manzanillo gave
Jose Paniagua (1 -0) replaced Seattle starter Gil
Brian Daubach snapped a slump with two the Cubs a 4-2 lead in the eighth.
Meche in the sixth and gave up an RBI ground- homers and six RBis, and Tim Wakefield pitched It was his first homer in nine
out to Troy Glaus to tie the score. He then walked seven strong innings as Boston won at home, end- games.
two, one intentionally, before getting Benji Gil to ing a five-game losing streak.
But in a fitting finish to what so
ground out with the bases loaded to end the
Daubach went 4-for-4 with a three-run homer far has been a lost season for the
inning.
in the second off Scott Erickson (3-6) and a solo Cubs, the Pirates' Jason Kendall
Blue Jays 12, Devil Rays 3
shot in the seve.nth. Scott Hatteberg added a hit a two-run homer in the
eighth and a game-winning RBI
Brad Fullmer and Jose Cruz Jr. hit three-run three-run homer.
homers at Tampa Bay as Toronto won its seventh
In his fourth start of the year and first .since single in the lOth.
, consecutive series.
.
June 3,Tim Wakefield (3-5) gave up nine hits in 7
It was the slumping Cubs'
eighth loss in 10 games. Manager
'.;, Raul Mondesi and Tony Batista added two-run 1- 3 innings.
!Wmers for the Blue Jays, who have won seven of
The Orioles lost for the 10th time in 12 games. Don Baylor blames the collapse
!ight and leod the AL East by three games.
Royals 6, Indians 1
·•Fullmer, who went 4-for-4 with a walk and
Carlos Beltran homered from both sides of the
four RBls, homered during a four-run first- plate, and Chad Durbin gave up five hits in 8 2-3
inning off Cory Lidle (1-3).
innings in Kansas City.
·Frank Castillo (5-5) allowed three runs and 10
Durbin (2-3) walked five and struck out six.
hits in eight innings, struck out eight and walked Ricky Bottalico got the last out.
t~o. winning his fourth straight start.
Kansas City took a 1-0 lead after Cleveland
Twins 10, White Sox 1
starter Bartol\!. Colon (7-5) walked the first four
Minnesota's Eric Milton allowed five hits in batters in the first, tying a major league record.
seven innings, and Jay Canizaro had a career-high
·

•
•

•
•

•

.

partly on rhe distractions caused
by the trade rumors, which he
planned to address during a.team
meeting Friday.
"Every single day, guys are talking about who's going where,"
Baylor said. "I'd like to get all of
that behind us and start thinking
about baseball."
Sosa and Baylor don't often
agree, but they do now.
"lfsomething is going to happen, let it happen, but if it's not
going to happen, let me know so
I can go out and play my game,"
Sosa said.
Still, with the Cubs going
nowhere, and Sosa entering the
final year of his contract in 2001,
the Cubs feel the pressure to do
something with Sosa, with a trade
being the most obvious option.
"I think ultimately Sammy will
be traded;' said Tom Reich, Sosa's
agent . ."This one got real close.
But there was a difference of
opinion on the players. But 1
think ultimately there is a deal to
make."
Reich and Sosa were prepared
to talk contract with the Yankees
if a tentative trade was reached.
"We were ready to go, and
Sammy was ready to go, but there
.was no trade," Reich said. "They
got a guy Uustice) at a lesser cost,
but he's a formidable guy:•
Neither Sosa nor Reich is say-·
ing how much Sosa wants in his
next contract, but $15 million a
year seems a likely starting point.
Sosa is making $11 million this
· season.
For the first time in weeks, Sosa
raised the possibility of staying
with the Cubs, but they aren't
likely to meet his demands for a
big raise.
"If I stay here, they probably are
going to go . our there and get

some good players. They can
probably put a winning team out
there:• he said. "But we don't
know what's going to happen."
That's obvious . Asked if · he
thinks a deal will eventually ·get .
done, Sosa's uncertainty was
reflected in his answer:
"Probably, yes. Probably, no."
It isn't nearly as difficult to figure out the Cubs' going-nowhere
season. They led 3-1 following
Brant Brown's two-run homer in
the sixth and 4-2 following Sosa's
21st homer, yet found another
way to lose- their 16th loss in
31 one-run games.
Kendall, batting only because
shortstop Ricky Gutierrez let an
apparent inning-ending grounder
by Warren Morris roll through his
legs, tied it with his homer off
Todd Van Poppe!. Kendall won it
in the lOth with a one-out, basesloaded single offTim Worrell (01).
"Everybody will remember the
hit in the lOth, but the big one
was in the eighth:' manager Gene
Lamont said. "If he doesn't hit
that, we don't get to the 10th."
Notes: The Cubs are 2-7 on a
12-game road trip that winds up
this weekend .... Sosa's homer was
his t50th since Opening Day
1998, a span of less than 2 1/2
seasons .... Kendall had five RBis
in the series and his first two multiple-RBI games since May 19....
Pirates LF Wil Cordero didn't
start for the sixth time in seven
games because of the .stomach flu.
He entered in the fourth when
LF Bruce Awin strained his left
hamstring.Aven is expected 10 go
on the disabled list Friday, according 10 Lamont... .The Cubs are 15 against the Pirates.

•

j
j

l:

Brewers 8, Phillie• 6
:.Jason. B~re struck ~ut a season-high 13 in
•1ght mnmgs as M1lwaukee beat Phlladel'hia , snapping a three-game losing streak.
Bere (5-6) allowed three runs and six hits
or his first road win since April 7.
\: Raul Casanova hit a solo homer and an
l(BI double as the Brewers avoided being
i!rwept in the final series of a 10-game ·road
I!! '
'
tnp.
~. ;T he Phillies scored three runs in the fifth
tie it after the game was delayed almost
· eight minutes because the umpires lost track
·of the pitch count.
Roi:ki., 11, Gianu 4
Jeff Cirillo had three hits and drove in
")firee ·runs as Colorado took three of four at
:~·h,Ome from San Francisco.
~'~: N eifi Perez, Brent Mayne and Larry Walker
·:'each addlo'd two RBis for Colorado, and
~~~asato Yoshii (4-7) won his third straight.
:~· Cirillo has seven hits and nine RBls in the
•'.l~st two games. On Wednesday night, Cirillo
•• had three homers, drove in six runs and
•:1core d five in Colorado's 17- 13 win.
~:~·: 'Barry Bonds hit his 28th homer, tying
~ McGwire for the major league lead.
:•
Braves 6, Meu 4
~~ ,Back at Shea Stadium,John Rocker pitched
a perfect eighth inning as Atlanta beat New
.•·oYork, ending the Mets' seven- game winning
' ·' sireak.
:•, Andres Galarraga homered, tripled and
•..:Grove in four runt as Atlanta won the opener
:"of a four-aame seriea.
'-)~ Mike Pluita hit I two-run alnale, alvlna
;••?.lm an RBI In a Men rteord 12 ttrlilht

~

tq

~·"'

... .
..

..

games.
Winner John Burkett (6-3) started in place
of Greg Maddux, who felt ill after arriving at
the ballpark. Kerry Ligtenberg pitched a perfect ninth for his sixth save.
"New York starter Rick Reed (4-2) sustained a fractured left wrist when hit by
Andruw Jones' line drive.
Pirates S, Cubs 4
Sammy Sosa homered not long after learning he wouldn't be traded to the Yankees,. but
Chicago blew a late two-run lead· at Pittsburgh .
Jason Kendall hit a tying two-run homer in
the eighth, then won it with a bases-loaded
single through a drawn-in infield in the lOth
off Tim Worrell (0-1) .
Diamondbacks 7, Altros 1
Randy Johnson pitched five-hit ball in
eight innings. tied his season high with 13
strikeouts and got his NL-leading 12th victory as Arizona beat Houston at home.
Steve Finley hit his second homer in as
many nights for the Diamondbacks, who won
for the sixth times in eight games.
Johnson (12-2) ran his league-leading
strikeout total to 177 and lowered his
league-best ERA to 1.57.
Padres S, Dodgers 4
Wiki Gonzalez, Ruben Rivera and Phil
Nevin homered as San Diego won at Los
·
Angeles.
Padres starter Matt Clement (7-7) gave up
four runt on five hitt in tix-plus innings,
with six walks and six srrikeouu.
Darren Dreifort (4-7) aave up five runs on
lix hlt1 In six lnninll•·

..

Reels
,....,,....,

Jracllum history f'ot a weekday
afternoon pm• In the rtl\llar

or

dey. error Iince June 16, a tpan 111
Tht pNYio\11 I'ICOJd WU 42,543 lnnlnp. ... Since June 4, when
to Ht tht G.lanll on June 27, tblf WIN In Snc place by a h~f­
1990.... The C:.rdlllall hew tht pme, the Rada haVe faUtd to win

1111011, txcludhll openl111

111011 homen In the NL (132) and
the t'twett mort (41). Their
Infield hu noc commitlld an

COnHCuriW 1am11, ,,. :Barry
Larkin batttd lndoft' the latt four
pmtt and Wlnt 3-fol'-15.

.. '

BETHLEHEM, Pa, (AP) - Hubert Green knew
, .. he was playing well. He didn't know it was this
J· ..good.
.,. · Green shot a 6-under-par 65 Thursday, the lowest
opening round in the 21-year history of the U.S.
Senior Open.
. · "I told my wife last night that I was hitting the
• , golf .ball pretty solid," Green said. "But the U.S.
..; . ·Open is not your average fist fight."
Green's round was one stroke better than the old
.' Senior Open low shot by six golfers, most recently
,.. by Bob Charles in 1996. Charles' round came on a
... par-72 course, with the other five on 71s.
·
Green birdied six holes and shot par on the rest of
• the SauconValley course. He held a two-shot advan,, tage over Jack Nicklaus, who opened with a 67.
Green and Nicklaus will have stiff competition
. • fiom newcomers such as Tom Kite.
;.. After spending 28 years on the PGA Tour; Kite is
J, enjoying himself as a rookie on the Senior PGA
Tour.
The 50-year-old Texan has won two senior events
and is ranked No. 7 on the money list. Now, he's
• ·.going for his first victory in the Senior Open.
, · "We have been looking forward to getting in
. . here;• Kite said, referring to fellow senior rookies
. ,. Tom Watson and Andy North."We now have eight
majors instead of only four like the guys on the reg" ·ular tour. So that is the good news-bad news. They
, , · all seem to come in one chest."
, · . Kite won the SBC Senior Open three weeks ago
v · and captured The Tradition in April. He tied' for
~ · :32nd in the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach two weeks
'": ago, but doesn't think that gives him any advantage
here.
,
"This golf course Is going to be very hard, but it
:·, is not going to like Pebble Beach;' Kite said. "Peb:, ble Beach was just a very. very difficult setup. It was
. , a brutal golf course that everybody ' but one was
, . having difficulty on."
; : . The one, of course, was Tiger Woods, who is 26
,, •. years away from the Senior tour, which has no dom-; ,inant player.
~.
That's why Nicklaus, who missed the cut at Pebble Beach in what likely was his final U.S. Open, is
talking about winning another championship.
"You got to start with one, obviously," said Nicklaus, who has more PGA Tour victories than anyone

· Hartford

sa·

.'

.

except Sam Snead, but hasn't won a title since capturing the 1996 Tradition.
" It's been a couple years since I've won ·a golf
tournament. Certainly, the Senior Open is the premier event for senior golfers in the country and I'd
like to give it another shot."
A win at Saucon Valley this week would give
Nicklaus, 60, an automatic berth in the U.S. Open
again - perhaps his final chance of getting back to
.that major.
J
Among those-standing in the way is Dave Eichelberger, the 1999 winner. Eichelberger is trying to
become just the third player to win consecutive U.S .
Senior Open titles in the 21 -year history of the
event.
"I really feel like I am playing well and actually
feel like I have got a chance to do ir;· Eichelberger
said. "I feel I have got as good a chance as anybody
right now:·
Hale Irwin, who along with Woods were the only
two golfers to shoot in the 60s in two rounds at the
U.S. Open, said Pebble Beach was good preparation
for this week.
"I don't want to say I use the U.S. Open as preparation for this tournament, but I think the preparation in. terni.s of getting your mind set for the narrower fairways and the heavier rough is certainly
·
beneficial;' Irwin said.
Irwin, the 1998 champion, is among 156 golfers
playing the 6, 749-yard, par-71 course. The championship purse is $2.25 million, up fiom $1.75 million
in 1999.The winner receives $400,000.
The field · includes Larry Nelson; No. 1 on the
money list;.Ed Dougherty, laSt year's runner-up;Tom
Watson; Lee Trevino; and Arnold Palmer.
Trevino,.60, said he's pealdng after ending a 27month championship drought last weekend.
"I was hitting the ball pretty good and I got a
tremendous amount of confidence:• he said.
Larry· Laoretti, who won the Senior Open when
it was played here in 1992, returned to play his third
event of the year.
"If you win one tournament in your lifetime, the
one probably most important is the U.S. Open or
U.S. Senii&gt;r Open:· he said. "It gives you more
knowledge - that tournament is going to run forever."

Montoya wants to turn fortunes
around in Cleveland Sunday
Jimmy Vasser, Montoya's teammate, started if off
by winning the pole in 1996.Alex Zanardi led qualif)ling the next two years, and Montoya took the
pole last year.
In the rae~. Zanardi won in 1997 and 1998 and
Montoya cruised to victory last year on the 2.106mile course built on Burke's wide, bumpy runways
and taxiways.
With practice and provisional qualifying sched-.
uled Friday, the biggest competition this week is
expected to come from Roger Penske's driving duo
of Gil de Ferran and Helie Castroneves. They are
riding a hot streak.
The resurgent .Penske team has won three of the
last four races - two by de Ferran - and appears.
to have the strongest road-racing combination.
Honda-powered Reynards have won all three road
races this season.
"Our team brings a lot of momentum into Cleveland after winning the last·two races and taldng.the
pole in Portland," said Castroneves, whose first
CART win came two weeks ago in Detroit. "All of
our hard worldng is starting to pay off, and we just
need to keep focused on the job at hand and come
out in the points again this weekend."
The championship remains up for grabs at this
points, with seven different winners in the first eighr
races and just 24 points separating first from I Oth in
the standings.
Each race pays a maximum of 22 points, with one
for the pole, one for leading the most laps and 20 for
the winner.
•
"Really, nobody is out of this yet;' said former
Cleveland winner Michael Andretti, who is fourth
in the standings, 12 points behind Moreno. "St!&gt;mebody is going to get it going and run up a lot of
points in a hurry. I just hope it's me."

CLEVELAND (AP) - Juan Montoya knows it's
time to turn his disappointing season around.
The .defending CART champion is eighth in the
standings, 22 points behind leader Roberto
Moreno, entering the Marconi Grand Prix on Sunday.
"We need some wins:· said the 24-year-old
Colombian, whose second season on the circuit has
been marred by several bad outings .
The latest problem was an 18th-place finish after
an engine failure last Sunday in Pordand, Ore. A
week earlier, ·another mechanical problem left him
17th in Detroit.
They have destroyed the momentum he built last
month with the crossover victory in the IRL's Indy
500 followed by a win at The Milwaukee Mile.
A year ago. rookie Montoya trampled on the
CART competition, winning seven poles and seven
races. This season, he has been unable to find the
same consistency with his new combination of Lola
race cars and Toyota engines.
,
He did give Toyota irs first CART win at Mil"waukee, and has led far more laps - 541 of 1,187
- than anyone this season. But mechanical problems and some bad luck have marked most of his
runs.
Still, with 12 of 20 races left, Montoya remains
optimistic he can add another title to car owner
Chip Gar\assi's unprecedented four straight.
.
"This team is still the best out there," Montoya
said. "They can gather a lot of points in a short time.
"But we need to get it going right now."
This seems to be the right place for that to happen. Cleveland is where Ganassi's team has been
dominant in recent years, winning four straight
poles and three straight races on the temporary
Burke Lake front Airport road course.

.

''What•s The
Bis Buzz••

.

'

~
~

It's The
Meigs - Gallia - Mason

7st££ ...a£s

.
.~

~

getting his first win in February had 67 s. Defending champ Brent
Geiberger bogeyed his last two
in Los Angeles.
Triplett has found the 6,~20- holes and was also at 67 .
yard Tournament Players Chib at
NCAA champion Charles
11
River Highlands to his liking; He Howell finished with a l-over 71
missed the cut just orice in; 10 in his professional debut.
• right direction Thursday.
The winner takes home
· "I worked on my lefthand grip, tries and finished second in 1'995
$504,000
in the $2.8 million
to
Greg
Norman.
,
but the problem was I wasn't
Nine golfets were tied at 65: tournament, sponsored
by
working on my righthand grip to
Canon.
Geiberger
is
trying
i:omplement it. My forearms Mark Brooks, Doug Barron, J.L.
~ere11~ · lined up, so they were Lewis, Bobby Cochran, Steve become the first winner of cony.rorking against each other," he Lowery, Jason Caron, Mark Cal- secutive GHOs. His victory by
said. ·
cavecchia, Brad Faxon and Bart three strokes last year was his first
and oilly tour victory.
: He and Tom Sones, his short- Bryant.
·
Hal Sutton and Davis Love Ill
~me coach, tinkered with his
'
;krip ~UJ!day after he missed the
j;ur in Memphis.
.
VETERANS lu.&amp;:..1uv·J.'U.I1u...
; " It's a little awkward, but it's
115. Memorial
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
:getting my arms to work togeth-er. The speed on my ball is a lot
992-2104
l&gt;etter," said Gamez, winless on
OUTPATIENT
RURAL HEALTH CLINIC
ANCILJ..ARY SERVICE.
:tour since 1990..
Dr. Kashyap MD. Internal
•Laboratory
: He made seven birdie · putts
•Radiology (General X·Rays,
MediCine
X hursday, including several t 5EKO's I.Jltrasounds)
Pat Smith RNC FNP
;footers and an uphill 25-footer
*Physical Therapy
Acute and Chronic Healthcare (Evening Appointments Available)
:):In No.5.
•Massage, Speech,
Appointments Preferred,
; Triplett needed to get his feet
Occupational
Therapy
but Walk-ins are welcome
-dirty to secure a share of the lead.
·Monday thru Friday
Monday thru Fridays
~en·' his approach shot to the
8:00 am till 4:30 pm
8:30 am till 5:30 pm
i&gt;ar- 5 13th plugged in a greenside
:hazard, he took off his shoes and
24 HOUR SERVICES
locks, donned rain gear and took
SKILLED NURSING FACJUTY
HOME HEALTH
) full swing with his wedge.
•Qualified
Skilled
Nursing
Care
..
Hospice
Care
•Personal Care Aid
: "And out she comes, 15 feet
•Physical,
Speech
and
OccupatiOI),~I
Therapy
•Nutritional
Consultation
:tight !&gt;f the hole;• he said.
*Restorative Program
• He rolled in a 4-foot putt for
"INNER REFLECTIONS"
HEALm UNIT
l!irdie \nid ."turned a 6 into a 4
•services
Older
Adult
*Free
prettY quick." ·
Confidential
Assessments
Evaluation
24
• Triplett toiled for 11 years and
Hours •Program Focuses on
Issues Associated With Aging
266 tou~naments oit tour before
·
•Trained
Health Staff

7 Days
Yes, One Week!
4 Line Ad - 7 Times

• 'OIII'Pap

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BY THE ASSOCit.TED PRESS

Green shoots record 65,
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MARCO.NI GRAND PRIX

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Mariners top Texas take NewYork's not ~n the mix, Toronto,
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~·-F_rt_dl_y~,J_u_ne~30-,~~-----------------------------------------P~o~m~e~ro~y~,M~I~d~dl~epo~
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. You must l!e aprtvate individual selling one or ITI(Ire ~ems.
Each nem must be priced.
The total price must not exceed $300
No commercial ads, gal8ge •yard sales, services, rentals,
anin1als, etc.

____t•!'!.' _:1!~11!~ lt! ..
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rou_1r_ ~O.!IP!II! __
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HOSPITAL

1999 Chevrolet

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Last Day .To Pay Second Half Real
Estate Taxes Will ...Be

• Power Seat
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• Tilt &amp; Crulae

July 7, 200d.
Wilt VlrJIIftll'l 11 Chivy, llonllll, lulllll, Oldl,
And Cultllm V1n 0111er.
...
f
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CltoouoMt:h..,.niott

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Clll&amp;malll

.,=~~~Y..~III•101JIII
CLOIID niiiDAT AlLY 4TH

'1lltl, ,_,,Tll t ~HIIIflfl, ~-IIOIII.NIIIIOift T!IIGugii:::.:NCII::::;::~~=N;.;.:...::.._::,~---..1
lOll I R[l I BOO B:n ()Ill / • :l/2 / 11/l tl ~

www. l o mp!'dt ' IL&lt;o m

10% PENALTY Will Be Charged After The
July 7th Date .On Real Estate Taxes.
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER,
Howard E. Frank
.

I

:Name'--------------------------------------------............----~~--------------------------:1Address
City, State,
Zip_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;___ _
1 Phone

Coupon To: FREE • BEE _ "'
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(?~Q)

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_____ ~~ {7~{t)_8_8J-=.IJ.f~ _ :

Bls Buzz

In Meiss-Gallla-Mason··
-

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE COURT OF
'4 1/2 Acre tract of land
COMMON P~ MEIGS . dttded by MIX Manuel, Sr.,
COUNTY, OHIO
to Max Man uti, Jr. and
MID-STATE TRUST, VII
Gloria Man uti (Stt D.B.
PLAINTIFF,
178, Pg. 11111); lhtnct North
vs
following tht Eaat line or
KELLY R. COUNTY, ET AL MIX Manuel, Jr~ Eaat Hne to
DEFENOANTS
1 tha North Una ol I 00 Acre
CASE NO. QO.CV-()29
. Lot No. 222 which point Ia
NOTICE FOR PUBUCATION alao tha N.E. cornar ol tha
Kelly R. County and · Max Manual, Jr. 4 1/2 Acre
Luanne C. Countt, aka Inlet of land; thanca Eaal on
Louannt C. Counta, will tha North llna of 100 Acre
takl notice thet on March Lot No. 222 to tha pleca ol
20, 2000, Mld·Statt Trull, VII BEGINNING and containing
!lied 111 complaint egalnet 1.25 Ae,.., mDN or leu.
you In tho COUJ1 of Common
There It exctptod,
PI- ol Mtlga County, Ohio however,
from
thlo
roquootlng lho CouJ1 to conveyance 111 tha cool
terminate any lntoreot that , underlying Tracie 01)1 and
you havo In tho premlaoo ' Two which hot blln oold to
d•ocrlbad ulollowo:
tho Sunday Crook Cui.Co.,
Sltuat• In lho Townohlp ol ua D.B. 123, Pg. 2, Molgo
Lotart, Mtlgo County, Ohio, County, Ohio Recorda ol
btlng boundod and · Dtedo. ·- deocrlbtd •• lollowe:
Tht aboVe dttcrtiMd rul
BEGINNING on tho North atlato
btlng
mort
line ol100 Acre Lot No. 222 porllculorly .dttcrlbod 11
at thl N.W. corner of a 1 1/2 lotlowe: Situate In the
Acre tract of land now or townohlp of Letart, Molgo
formerly owned by Max eounty, Ohio, Soctlon I, T.
Manuel (S.E. O.B. 13e, Pg: 1N, R. 12W and baing mort
450); thtnca South particularly doacrlbod ••
following the Wtat Una ol lollowo: BEGINNING lor
Max Manutl't 1 1/2 Aero rtftrtnco at tht point of
lract of land to the road lnttrooctlon of tho Wall lint
ltadl.n g !rom Plante to ol100 Acre Lot No. 222 and
fairview; thence In o tht canter lint (at travelod
weaterly direCtion following on tho dtto _o l thla eurvty)
tho meondtrlngo ol aald of Manuel Roed: thence
road to tht s .E. eemar ol a fallowing tho uld ctntarllno

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

ol Manual Rood; thane•
fOllowing the oald ctn18rllno
or Manutl Road and tho
noxt lour (4) baarlngo and
dlatancu; thonct S. 811' 43'
34" Eaot, 218.47 !tat to a
point; thence s. 87' 22' a•
Eat, 287.17 !HI to a point;
lhlnct S. 811' 18' 21" Eatt,
35.70 rtat to a point; thonco
N. 17' 47' 42" Eatt, 550.44
rtat to a point btlng tho truo
point of beginning lor tht
following doocrlbod real
oatate; thence following the
agreed propoJ1y line or
Manuol, Official Record 52,
Pg. 747 and Counto Official
Record 81, Pg. 184, N. 08'
33' 44" Welt, 387.57 IHI to
on Iron pin oot In a ltnct
marking the. north llno or
100 Acre Lot No. 222 and
pealing an Iron pin ut at
28.411oot and 1 I" Locuat
at · 11.21 !Itt; th,nca
following oald fence
marking tho North llno of
100 Aere Lot No. 222, S. 811•
115' 14" E111, 217.117 IHt to
an Iron pin 111; lhtnct
following a lenct marking
tha property llno between
Rl!fta.Lutz Vol. 318, Pg. 411
and Count• Official Rocord
81, Pg. 184, S. 07' 37' 44"
Waat, 312.61 !oat to tho
cantor ol Monuol Road
paaolng an Iron pin aot at
2117.U .foot; thonce
following Manuel Rood, s .

88' 08' 24" Wtat, 115.1i feet

baing tht true pOint ol
IIEQtNNING and -lnlng
1.312 Acraa, mora or Ia~
and btlng tha . tame r.a al
111111 •• dtacrlbad .. In
Official Record 81, Pg. 114
but with a mort accurate
dtacrlptton by thlt
Survty for Counto · waa
porlormad on Juna18, ' " '
by Philip M. Roberto, Ohio
Roglatorad Surveyor No.
61116. Iron pin eel are 818 x
30" robor wllh ploatlc 11:1
capo labalod PMR 1181. All
oth1r monument• •r• ••

eurvitf.

noted.

"'

Subjoctto all logal 1ae-o.o,
ooeomantt and rlgl\1 ol
waya ol record•
FOR LAST SOURCE OP
TITLE SEE VOL 88, Pg .. 113·
of tht Olflclel Record., ,or:
Molge county, Ohio. I'II-I·
No. CJI.OOS113.ooo
Tho Plaintiff rtquaati'fllat
uld promlatt ba told, your
lntaraet therein forocloMd
and for eny other rallal ao
oholl ba 1uet ond aqu~a:
You aro required to
onewtr the oald eemptelnt
by Auguot 4, 2000 or
Judgment by Dolluh will ba
rondared agolntt you.
Mark K. McCown, Rtg. No.
11018743,
Attorney tor i&gt;lolntlll
Ill a. •· te, 23, 30 (7) 1

�._,.. B 4 • The O.lly Sentinel

Frlcley June 30, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

510

ANNOUN CEME N rS

005

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OALL!pOUS PAtLYTB!BUNE.

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satunloy a Mondoy odltlon
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ASIC ABOUT HOW YOU

PUBUC NOTICE
Thlo lo to not ly the genere
public thot the 2000.2001
budgot for tho Vllloge ol
Rutllnd Rut end Ohio will
be lVI leblt lor publ c
rovltw end commtnt lrom
Junt 26 2000 until Ju y 10
2000 11 tht Rutlend Vlllege
oHice
(1127.21 28 30
1712 3 5 a 79 10 tc

PUBUCNOTCE
Vllllgl Ol Sy ICUII Pub C
Htl lng lor 20012 budget ot
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13 2000
Sharon S Cot Ill
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In LOVUlg Memory of our
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CAN GET A FREE
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1 o run SUndoy A Monday
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odhlon 2 00 p.m F~clay

a

We think of you 1n
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Daughter
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OOpm heclaybolontlllod
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REO STER QEAQI.!NE
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4 30 p m Thulldoy
DMd RIO IUII/IC ID c:hellf/0
dw ID /rolldq1.

•••
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In Memory

E ee en Hourly Wage

Where tha Deals

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Help Wented

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBL C NOTICE
Tht A •• Agency on
Aging II Buckeye HI t
Hocklng Vtllty Roglonol

(7401 374 9436 lor t ICI onlc

Dtvtlopment
Oletrlcl
Routt 1 Box 288D
Mlrlttllt
Ohio 45750 1 requttt ng
p opo1111 to A lht mt a
Reap~• SoN ••• n Athon•
Hocking Melga Monroe
Morg1n Noblt Pt ry and
Wtthlngton Count e1
Dllt • ot oervlct 1nd
lund ng era ncluded In tht
RFP Technical ootlltenc•
eve l1blt upon equttt
Notlct ol Intent dtedl nt
July 10 2000 Completed
propoea 1 dtedl ne 5 oo
PM Ju 11 2000
C1ll

v

Dualo dealh In lomdy
Hems lor Sala
1999 21 fool Flagstaff !ravel
lranar Se Iconloined Used va1y
linle

1990 Bu ck laSGbre lour door
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Fo qukk sale 740 992 4103
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lor RN applicants All
specialties accepted

ed Pho og a

phe

40

.

Public Notice

Bualneaa
Training

140

The Dally Sentinel Page B-5

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Reasonable ra as

Giveaway

Ca or appo ment
304 6 s- 472
3046529

&amp; G •-ay Adt Mu1

Be Pt~ In Advlnct
TR BUNE DEAQLINE 2 00 p m.
he day bo- the od
1 o run Sundly
a Monday od111on
2 00 p m F~clay
SENT NEL QUQLWE:
1 OOp.m tllldoybolontheod
oto run Sundoy I Mondoy
1
ld ttoft 1 00 p m Frldly
REGIJTEA DEIQLitE:
2 dayo bolo,. tllo od
lltorunlly• 30pm
Slturday a Monday odltlon
4 30 p.m Thulldoy
Dttdllnoo lub/10111&gt; c:hellf/0
du.IO /rolldql

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY ISS ?
No Fee Uness WeWn
888-582-33&lt;15

11rv ce need•
Ploaot aubmtt eaumo o
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASANT WV 25550
OR FAX TO (3041 875-6975
AA/EOE

New 8•80 ~BR 2BA $268 po
mo lh Low Down Payment F eo
A

AI ealuta e advert ling n
h s newapape 1 sub ect o
he F-a Fa HOllo ng Act
or 1988 wh ch makes~ ega
o advert se any preference
Imitation or d scrim nation
baaed on ace co or of glor&gt;
sex tam a sra us o na ona
orlg n o any ntentlon o
make any such pre erence
mlta onordscrlmna on

Yt owtown Road No h p Oh o
Juno 30th Thru Ju~ 3rd

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Jo n Ou F1m ly ol
P oltu ona 1 to bo lht
toou co to commun ty heolth

F eo De ve

y 1 888 928

3426

o herdcopy pecktt
{81 30 1TC

I;:::C:a;:rd=o=f~T:h:a;n;ks~:;
The Har"' Pi ckens J
''
family would I ke to
thank all the r friends
ne ghbors
co
workers relatives for
a
the
prayers
support
food
thoughts and he pful
ness during this time
of great loss In our
fam ly
A specliil
thanks to the Rev Rick
Rule the Rev Steve
Fuller
and
our
wonderfu
Christian
family of the Raclrlt
F rst Bapt st Church
Our Harry will be so
very missed
Harry W Pickens Sr
&amp; family
Hyl a &amp; Rollert Eblin
&amp; Family

Help Wanted

BASBL
Transportation

A Manetta Ohio Based Company
*ATTENTION EXPERIENCED BASED
DRIVERS*
**New Top of the Industry Pay Package* •
•Startmg Pay $30 $34 CPM
• Premmm Benefits •1999 2000 Conv Models
• Ass gned D spatch • Pa d Vacat ons
•99% No Touch Fre1ght •Good Miles
• Also Opemngs for Part T1me &amp; Casuals
• Contact Safety &amp; Recrutmgs 800 333 84 79
Ext Ill 112 113 Local 740 373 64 79
*ProfessiOnal Pay For Profe8s1onal
Performance*

New Doub ow de 3 BR 2BA
$276 pe mon h Low Down Pay
men FeeA FeeDe ey
888 928 3426
32•80 Fac o y Repo No••
L ed n $49 950
888 69
6777

Dental Hyg1en1st
Part t me STM exper ence
requ red Subm t Resume to
230 Uppe Rver RD
Ga pols OH 45631

To o Whee Ho ae 520 H 20 HP
60 nch Mowa Deck L ke New
John Dee a 65 Hyd a 38 nch
N ct 740.446 9227

o

AU. Lcll A Found Adl Muol
Be Ptld n AdVInco

TR BUNE QI;APUNE I 00 p m.
theclaybolon hold
•to run Sundoy 1 Monday
.., 2 00 p m Frtdoy
.J
SENT NEL Qf!DUNE
1 oopm thedoybolon hood
II to run Sunclay &amp; Mondly
ld Uon I 00 p m Frtdoy
REGISTER QEADYNE
2doyobofo&lt;t hood
liD ... lly.30p.m
Sltunloy &amp; Mondoy ld ion
4 30 p m Thlllldty
"DHdd'ltH •ubJRI to chang~
du. ID holldoyo

Pome oy Da y Sen ne
Yard Bl~l Mutt Be Paid n
venct Deed ne
OOpm
dey befo • ht ad 1 to
Sundey • Mondty td

AI
Ad
the
un
on

CLASS A OTR
S ng e 0 e La e Mode Ke
wo hs W h Ree e s Wes Coas
Ca e

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

Yard Sale

REAL ESTATE

Fn Sat Mon
Lots of mce cloth1ng
toys curtams etc
Dale and L1nda
Teaford Res1dence
Bennger R1dge
Portland OH

••

1 OOpm F day Atk abou how

you can get 1 FREE ye d •• e
olgn

BOTH POS TIONS
A eas 25 Yea sOld
.Atleas 2 Yea s Expe .ence
Good MVR
Weeky Pay
Hea h

s ance Ava able

W kWe W hTheP bile

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 0

Help Wanted

Chicken BBQ and
Homemade Ice Cream

MA KE AT LEAST $5 000 P.ER
WEEK S mp e And Easy To
Lea n FREE tp o A www se

SERVICES

08ti2IUCC88S cOm/spe

clll98000

MUST REDUCE WYENTOIIYI
3To50Aceliacs0 Lanct n
The Cou v Woods MeadoW•
Rock Fo ma lona Aes dentla Or
Rec ea ona Land Con acf1
Ava abe 0% Down Ca fo
F ee Maps ANTHONY LAND
CO LTD -IOQ.21W316

810

Home
Improvements

Rae ne F•re Dept
July 4th
Servmg beg ns at 11 00 am
M zway Tavern
Frl Karaoke 9 00 1 00
$1 00 cover
Sat Jlu 1st Band Bad Hab t
9 00 1 00
$2 00 cove

HUNTERS HILL

3Tacso P me Recta one
Land 29 Ac IS Fo AI LDW AI
$27 000 Land Con ac 1 A a
ob • Ct Now 800 2 3 8385
An hony Land Company LTD

www cou trytyma corn

TRAN SPORTAl ION
RENTA lS

-

YARD SALE
June 30 and July 1
1001 Roush Lane Chesh re

Bam 5pm

MER CHAND IS E

~ And 481111 S R 1150 Bidwoll
t28h 830h 7 00 9To5
~tiling ""'

e..,.,_

510

'1'1111 -

Allllltrwr

Ftidly I Sorurday 383
~

Household
Goods

MasonVFW
Dance Saturday N1ght 9 1
Mus1c by Kool Kountry
Members &amp; guests

�: Pege B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'·· Friday,. June "30, 2000

Friday, June 30, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~

.~omeroi,

~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 7

Middleport, Ohio

.

7

BRIDGE

. .

NBA Croaaword Puzzle

•
~

SMIT"•s COftrrD·OCTIOft

Homelmprovementa done by

;;

CHRIS1YS fAMILY LIVING

•• 204 N. 2nd Ave. '
Middleport, OH 45760
• Rentals
1ApJs, Home Trllllers,
: • Jaaltoriai.Mald Residential or Commercial
;
Maintenance
Residential or Commercial
: - Home Repairs Interior &amp; Exterior
Call for estimates 9-5 pm Mon-Frl
:·
••
WaworkMon-Sat9·5pm
~i
and we do accept emergency calls

•• ~

• New Hom11
• Garal!laa
' Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
' Roofing
give Ut 1 0111

Need It done,
. FREE ESTIMATES
'Grtlt Prleet on New Homll

MakM Trac:tor &amp;
Equipment PllrU
Fac:tory Autltorized
Case-IH PllrU
Dealers.
10011SI. Ri. TSouth
Coolville, OH 4!5723

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo on
Thur-..
- ays
"•·:r 11·30
· p·M·
Malh St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying S&amp;O.OO
psrv•ITJI
$300.00
coverall
$500.00Starburat
Progrelllve top line.

'

'
;

.
: ·~:Cal:;;,lor~R~al~ts;,l·;74~0·;99:2:;-4~51;=4:'·~74:;:0·:~4:2·=.74:03=£~vltl::::lag:•;- L _ _
99_2_·_2_7_5_3__9_9_2_·_J_l_O_I.;::.:511.7100
:.: ~1~mo~ .l_!7~10~18~7~..~~~1!1_j 1-....;L;.;Ic~.I;..;DO-SO..;..;.._,_,n_,..._. .
GUARANTEED
ill CONDITIONING
.SERVICE
(3041 112·2079

Advertise In
this space for

New Haven WV

month.

SALES

. $25 per

TM Ohio Val'-!!'• automotlvl 1-.r Is
continually looking for aggraslva and
rnutlvat.d pmpl&amp; to 1111 sala positions.

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

W• hav&amp; tiMI 11111 B&amp;Mftts. 11111 Pay
and th&amp; 11111 family orlsnted work
.&amp;nvlronm&amp;nt In toclay's autOmotiVII
Industry I
tall or stop In and - ... Mik&amp; S.rg&amp;nt.
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and b&amp;gln a
NWardlng caN&amp;r as an
Automotlv&amp; SaiH ProfHslonal

1"'-, ......

f'I

· 750 East State Street
1Athens, Ohio 45701
. "A Better

Phone (740) 5':13-6fl7l

TODAYI

Sunset HOlme
Construeflon
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Gar·ages I
Free Estimates
742-3411
Reeves

·.....

TheAppUMce

'

Ill I. lad
· Pomeroy, Oblo

cen rei"VI 1 debtor of flntncltl otlllgtlllont and art~ne- 1 fair dlttrlbuUon ot
tt..W tmong crMhors. A per10n going ·lhi'OUih blnkruptoy maw rttlln
Hrtlln propeny, ~Enown 11 "txtmpt" lti"DPPftV, tor hit or hlr peraon11 UH.

B/15' mopd.

Thla NY Include 1 cer, • houH, clothet, and houNhold goode. You thould
dlrtct any quntlont r.glf'dlng blnh.ruptcy to tn enomer before procftdlng.

FQr Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
(740) 592;5025 Athena
8J21100 1 mopeS.

youR

cylinder rtpaln,

on

Sales· 5 gal. buckets
to 55 gal. drums
2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

740·985·4194
'

Advertise
•
· In this
space for

.: $59 per
'
· month.

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1/21100 1 nio. ""·

WAN'rED.

Now Renting

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

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Do1er work.
free Estimates

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

740-992-5232
' 6121100 1 mo . pd.

"o·lt·Ri.le

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

"You'sot trlt4 tht rtlt ...
now try tht but"
Interior- Exterior ·
Residential - Ccmmerlcal

P&amp;inting

·1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates
C01tr~etors

Welcome

Albany, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

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

(740) 992·908:S
(Mobile) 740·:s:s9·016:J
ln~ured

7/22fTFN

.9"~ ~ 9&gt;o~Pt

"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you" '
Interior

Call for

740·992·1871

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Drlvewaya,
Patloa, Sldewalka.
25 yeara experience
Free Estlmaat11

PSI
C.-rRUCTDII

740.742·8015 dr
1-877-353·7022

P/BtONTRAtTOR~, INC.

"We're Back"

lriHIIni..;IIIIIH, OW.

6/115 1 mo pd.

740·992-1709

992·2772
For AU Your Home
lm rovement Needs

,pi

IISSELL IUILD.ERS
INC.

New Homes • Vinyl
St._
Rt._
1 lhrtll
Oltlo
,
• New Garages
.._35537
__
_ _ _ _ _ _P-oy,
_.....;.....,__.
: • Siding
Replacefl)ent
Windows

·r -------r-"7'--------. i
!

I

37Actor ...... 39 Dtddentot

Doy"
'7 tMtfecllvl
"a.cks-·

Fonn.. -

a arok.lb!Md
I SrMit

·

org~~nlama

10 Port oil
church
11 Clvtt dteorder

HueJIM

1

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
,
Sepric Syuenu &amp; .

'

17401992-3131 .

''

..

QUALITY
LANDSCAPE
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
· Walls: Wooden Decks

2SWII-ot•

26 Emltcohe ....t
tight
•
27 Work lor
'

Mike Sharp

,•

TH~

BORN LOSE:R

740·949·3606

r

·t

Tohoe

,

30 Cuptd
31 Knoll

••
37 Art1ut
•
38 Legal writ •

40

Ron In neutral

41 ' Mike keen. :
II

the

I

.!

I"

"' ,.&amp;JT 1\
1-Jf\'( I~ li \1\JI..i t NeE.t&gt;
CAN ~WITC.I-\ 1-\'( ~:~
Tf\i!U. FO!Qt\-:, OF IJ~UO lO
D\~\~C£
TO~~~~ tNJ./lf. VlDE.O .. .
! CAR~I E.li!.

i WIT\-\00\ 1-\'{

~I'
I

..Time"

28 Goor~or :

.

'

I
'

Free Estimate•

23 Synagogue •
24 Astray

'
,

'·l
''i
•'
&gt;

12 Graot --:~~~ .
19 Compo- , _
Rorem
t ·
21 Poured
I
22 Wltda.. ol i
IndiO
:

OP!*Ite
I
Another critical aspect of
42 Rlvor In , 1
defense is The Target: the number
Frence - '
43' Blrd'o~
of tricks the defenders need to
45 Long-necUc!
defeat the contract. How should
bird
48 Tran1mtttec1,
East use it in this deal after West
47 Swirl
,
leads his singleton spade?
41Motde- •
Two no-trump is the best open50 Anecdoto :
.
col141ctlon 1
ing bid with that South hand. It is
52 Compo. . PI!
too strong for one heart, yet not
53 Borb- !
l
strong enough for two clubs.
After that, Stayman uncovers the
'' '
CISLEBRITY CIPHER
heart fit.
by Luis Campoa
•
Cettbrlty Ciphltf a jplognlmo are crHied lfam quotaIlona by ra...,... pooplt, put and
It is almost instinctive among
''
prnent. Each Ienir 6n 1M cipher standi t01 lnort'lef.
defenders. to give partner a ruff
'
Today's ciiH!: 0 equals B
'
whenever possible. Rarely do
•
ZN
IIIWPH
IIICCPV
I
RKN
they stop for a moment to con·
' LYI L
sider the deal as a whole and how
.
IIIWPH
ZN
SDLV
STJ
tSLYHG
the play will develop . after the
ruff.
y H , \1
STTH • I
Z H t '
t C G
ZCLYHG.
Here, East, knowing his partner
'
'
had led a singleton, returned the
OSTDGCIL,
CT
ZHHLWTR
tKLKGH
II
spade two at trick two. West
Y
K
V
0
I
T
J
Z
H
Ill
0
0
C
C
P
V
.
;:
ruffed and switched to a cl.ub.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: , havo walked lhla earth for thirty years, and, out ot: :
Declarer won in the dummy and
gralltude, wal)llo leove 101M aouvenlr.• - VIncent Van Gogh
,,
played a trump. After putting up
"
the ace, East led another spade,
~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ ' I
but declarer ruffed high, drew the
:
missing trump, and claimed.
---_;;;~ tWIIi4 lor .ClAY I. POW.N
,1
East was unrealistic in expectO Roorrorioe ·tenoro or the
i"ooo...,-~""'
i
ing West to be .flble to overruff
four scrombltd words boo
_ ~:
low 10 form four ll!IIPit words.
-declarer on the third round of
spades. East couldn't see 21 highcard points. And as East could see
dummy's four jacks, he should
have known that South had to
have all 21 .
East should have considered
his target. Four tricks were needed, not three. East had to organize
his club ruff before giving West
the spade ruff. At trick two, East I
should have switched to the club
seven. Declarer will win in the
· dummy and play·a heart, but Eastwins with the ace and leads the
spade two. West ruffs and, reading East's card as a suit-preference signal, returns a club. East's
ruff defeats the contract.
To slow down your play, sit on
your free hand!

I

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I

,.
':~::' S&lt;Q'\tcill¥\-L&amp;£~S· :::: ;
:

Sentinel

SCitAM-LETS ANSWERS
Degree -Joint- Noisy- Unrest- STIRRING

A sampler my grandmother gave me still hangs in my
room. II reads : "Sugar Doesn't Make The Tea Sweet,
The STIRRING Does."

·I!
1

•

I FRIDAY
·~~~

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

NOTICE

2 Handyman crew wtll do

yard work, palnUng Inside
and out, carpenter work,
roofing, stdtng. Have awn
tools. Free Estimates

•

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

Saturday, July I, 2000
Both chance and friends might
be key elements in enabling you
to do something in the year ahead
' that will be more significant than
l, anything you've done previously.
l It could be 11 banner year.
l CANCER (June. 21-July 22)
1 Normally you like dealing with
; traditional things you can see and
l touch, but today you're actually
' luckier operating along progresl sive lines that involve intangibles.
Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph
j Matchmaker can help you under·
j stand what to do to make the rela1 tionshlp work. Mall $2,, to
~ Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
1 P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Stl·
: lion, New York, NY 10156.
; LBO (July 13·Aua: 11) If you
; keep your eye1 open today,
: chances are you'll be ablelo apol
; a sliver llnlnaln a 11111 expected
• place where othen rarely vlall,
: jual waltlna to do you aervlee ,
;
VIROO (Aua. 23·Sept. 12)
; Throuah • club, profeutonal aft'll·
1 latlon or In a larae aathertna of
;.. some sort you may Klubble upon

1
.

:a·s·"·
'

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'

l

•

'

..

·' I

,,•

,,

.

\.

•
er1nc

• Room
Additions
• Roofing

'J

I

-

.....

3!1 Ta..,.
38 Medttemo•n

Weal Nortll Eosl
Pass 3 •
Pus
Pasa 4 •
All pan

To get a current weather
report, check the

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTI~L
FREE ESTIMATES

I

'•
•'

•

•

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

Call740·985·3831

CI!II•UMIITIII!U'D

2 Y•ra(Sp.)
3 -B..nc
4 'tWice
5 •--Ctur

BY PHILLIP ALDER

'•

Local843·5264

,
"Ahead In Service"
llutnna Western Pride 12% Sweet Feed...................15.25/SO lb bag
llulnfta 16% Rabbit Pellets ....................................'6.95/501b. bag
llutnna Hunt111 Pride 71" ~ Food.....................16.75/51) lb. bag
llulrnl6% layer Crumbels.................................15.99/SO lb. bag
.._. Scratd! hed ............................................. 16.7S/SO lb. bag
Sflade lrler12% Catll. Feed ................................16.7S/100 lb. bag

1.1111 LUIIID

1 No-.. lnllnt P-r.;;t;=-

Slowing it down

New Summer DaYt
Thur &amp; Frl10 am • 8 pm
Saturday 10 am - 4 pm
On other daya If we •re ·
home, we are OPEN~

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

: SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

IT. 11'1'. 141

I

DOWN

Opening lead: u ·

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

(740) 985-3948

collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
santimental items will be safe.
For more Information can

3•

'

Sara

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

Fully Insured

I Pf&lt;llect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card

! BARNEY

S~acfld Scant
of tha Month
,I
.

Ken Young

34 Employing

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Soulb
2NT

28~u:Oiqy

" A 3
• K Q 4 3

Ae2
• AK 3

'

20 Porlo _...,.

Comonect
33 Ctty tn Ftorido

t

Country Candle Shop

992·1550
The Apphance
Man

c:ooot

•A91642

•KQ
•KQ764

-

541 s.t ol four
57 !Ieoni

32Gymnoot

Soulh

Compaopt.
41 Wintry
51 Ac*l tiki I

.....uc.

• J

• 7

- - l o Prevtoua-

S5 Awey from 1M

• Q J 10 4
Eoa1

West
• 5
• 8. 2
• 10 9 7 6 5
•98852

~

•

54 Anct.nl Jfttah

21 -stone
25Col-,btl

.. J 10 9 5

The

219E. ind
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appli8llces
Parts· All Makes

,._,._

-.tint

-

'Your

'Birthday

.,

FAEE ESniiATES

SECURITY

• J 10 7 3

g

Urilitie•

7 Dengoor
13 Put oil on

poe~tono

Nort

- HOWARD
EXCAVATING co;

Bulldoser &amp; Backhoe
Se"'U:e.
Hou~~t &amp; Trailer Sitea

T~gra..

ending

Hauling • Umestone • .
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch • :
Bulldozer Services ;.
(740) 992-3479

,,,., w•ao

1

41 Wa vlclarlouo

18 Swttd\

JIL IIISULAJIOII I
COIISIRUCJIOII
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

Fre• E•tlmates

CONCRm
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVIa.S
Re~ldentlal, Comman:la

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY" •

EXCfiVfiTina:

'

Advertise in
this space for
s1oo .per
month.

William Safranek, Attorney

Hydraulk Hose repairs,

[jl]

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

'
'

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

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

Road
Racine, Ohio

ACROSS

15 Stunted 11 C.UM
t78uf*IMI..

d 1m . 4 11

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

T&amp;D

Advertise
in this
space for

month.

~l.l.tEI.

'

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�•

Friday, June 30, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Plge B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

-TODAY'S SCORE.B OARD
Minnelota 10, Chicago White Sox 1
T - 3, Oaldllnd 1
SeatUe 7, Anlheim 2
N.Y. v.nk- 8, Detroit 0
Bolton 12, Baltimore 4
Kansas City e. Clewland 1

hat DlviiiOn
,...,..
W L Pet.
·~......;;..........................~ 30 .8 15
32
•..,... ''"" .........................~ ..........................3838 3841
.--.. .............................
l'hillldalphla .................... 33 43
Central DMIIOn
!'~natlit
4837 3240
_..,,
........................
~ukeeh .......................3332 4448
.....
....... ................
'~ton ..........................3271 4851

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

""""

St. Louis

2), 10:05 p.m.s.turclay'a Gemee
Boston (Waadln 0-3) at Chicago WMe Sox
(Sirolka7:') 1 pm
N.Y. Yank8e.
. (Hoirnandez 8-6) at Tampa Bay
(Lopez 4-5), 4. 1 ~Q,m.

8 1/2

"""'

.4211 12 1/2
.4tO

14

5

Milwaukee 8, Philadelphia e
Colorado 11, San Francleco 4
...... ~. h 5 Chicag c b 4 10 I I
o u ' ·
nn ngs
, , AtlantaSa
Dl ' Ns.Y; ~etaAng4 le 4
1
e
'
n ego • """
• Arizona 7, Houston 1
Todloy'e Gamaa
Florida (Smhh 1) at Montreal (Vazquez 6•
·4 ) 7 05
• : p.m.
Pittsburgh (Benaon 6·6) at Philadelphia

r"'"'"'1 ,

o.

~
~· ~~· 5:') at N.Y. Mets (Hatnp·
lj)n 7 5) 7 10
c~,;.~· (~.. -- "2) at Miiwa· .•
C•~
.._,.. ...,. ""'-'" ,...
~ee
i(Wrighl4-t), 8:05p.m.
Houeton (Holt 3-8) at St. Louis (Anklet 8-3),
8: to p.m.
Cincinnati (HarniSCh 0-4) at Arizona (Morgan
3~t), t0:05 p.m.
Colorado (AStaclo 8·5) at San Diego (Toll·
,berg 2.()), 10:05 p.m.
Loo Angelea (Brown 6·2) at San Francisco
•(Ortiz 4-7), t0:35 p.m.
Saturclay'a Gamaa
Atlanta (Maddux 9·2) at N.Y. Mets (Leiter 9·
1), 1:t5 p.m.
Cincinnati (Fernandez 2·1) at Arizona
(Reynoso~) . 4:05 p.m.
.
Loo Angelea (Perez 4-3) at San Francisco
(Rueler 5-4), 4:05 p.m.
HOUlton (Dotal 1·5) at St. Louis (Stephen·
eon H), 4:to p.m.
Florida (Oemptter 8-4) at Montreal (Pavano
8-4), 7:05p.m.
Ptt11burgh (Arroyo 0·1) at Philadelphia (Byrd
'H), 7:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Vaklea 1·t) at Milwaukee
(D'Amico 2-4), 8:05 p.m.
Colorado (Arrojo 5-5) at San Diego (Mead·
.owo6-5), 10:05 p.m.
Bunclay'a Gamaa
Atlanta at N.Y. Meta, 1.:10 p.m.
Florida at Montreal, 1:35 p.m.
Ptt11burgh at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
Houaton at St. Louis, 2:to p.m.
Cincinnati at Arizona, 4:35 p.m.
Colorado at San Diego, 5 p.m.
Loo Angeles at San Francisco, 8:05 p.m.
American League

r....

Eut Dlvlalon

w L Pet
Toronto .............................. 35 .557

08

New Yortc .................. ....... 38 35 .52t
3
Bolton ............................38 38 .5t4 3 1/2
Balllmot'e ........................32 44
Tampa Bay ..............:........ 31 45
Central Dlvlalon
Chicago .......................... 49 29
CIIIYeland ........................ 40 37
Kan881 City .....................37 39
Mlmeeota ....... ................35 45
~ .............................32 43
.., •
Waet Dlvlalon
45 31
Oeldand .......................... 45 32
Anaheim .........................40 38
lexu ..............................38 40
Thurad.v'a Gamaa
Toronto 12, Tampa l!ay 3

a.m. ............................

(R:'a.W,:~cr:~.~:')

-..~dke.5·9) at Cleveland (Burba

~-3), 7.05 p.m.
.
Toronto (carpenter 6:') at 8ahlmore (Pon·
aon "'4&gt;· 7 '05 p.m.
Oetroh (Moehler 5·4) at Kansas City (Suppan 2:'), 8:05 p.m.
Seame (Abbott 4·2) at Texas (Glynn 1.0),
8 '35 p.m.
Oakland (Prieto 1.0) at Anaheim (Washburn
3·2), 10:05 p.m.
Sunday'• Gamaa
Mlnneeota at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yank"' at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
Toronto at Baltlmot'e, t :35 p.m.
Oetroh at Kan881 City, 2:05 p.m.
Boeton at Chicago White Sox, 2:05p.m.
Oakland at •--•elm 8'05 p m
"""" 8:05p.m.
• ·
· ·
Seattle at TeKBI,

Major League Soccer
Eutam Dlvlalon
Team
W L T Pta Gl' OA
NY·NJ .........................8 7 2 28 29 28
New England ............... 7 6 5 28 30 27
Miami .........................8 8 4 22 24 27
D.C......... .................... 4 11 4 16 29 38
Central Dlvlalon
Tampa Bay ................ 10 8 0 30 37 29
Chicago .............. ......,g 7 3 30 4t 35
Columbus ...................8 8 4 22 28 32
Dallas .........................8 10 3 21 28 35
Weetern Dlvlalon
Kan881City ...............1t 2 4 37 30 12
LooAngelea ................ 8 4 7 31 25 1g
Colorado ................. ...8 9 1 25 24 37
San Joae .....................4 7 7 19 23 28
NOTE: Three points for a win and one point
for a tie.
Wadneaclay'a Gamee
San Jose 0; New Yortc-New Jersey 0, tie
Loa Angelea 2, DC Unhad 1
Tampal!ay 2, Columbus 1
Colorado 1, Dallas 0
Saturday'a 0111111
Colorado at DC Unfted, 3 p.m.
·
New Yortc·New Jersey at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
San Josa at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.
Loa Angeles at Dallas. 8:30 p.m.
Tueaday, July 4
New England at Miami, 4:30 p.m.
DC Un~ad at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Chicago at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Kansas City at San Jose, 9 p.m.
Columbus at Los Angelea, 10:30 p.m.

.421 10 1/2
.408 11 1/2

.628
.519 8 1/2
.487
1t
.437
15
.427 15 t/2
.592
.584
.513
.474

t/2

6
9

Elltarn Coni1N1108
Team
W
Ortando ............................. 8
Cleveland ..........................7
Oetroli ...............................7
Washington ...... ................. 8
New Yortc ...........................8
Miami ................................ 4
Indiana ..............................3

L Pet.
8 .571
e .538

GB

1/2
t/2
8 .500
1
7 .482 1 1/2
9 .308 31/2
9 .250
4

6 .538

1

......................8

~ ..........................

Todlly'eGamee
MlnnetOta (Radman 4-3) at Cleveland
(Brower 2·1), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yank- (Grimsley 3-2) at Tampa Say
(Rekat 2·4), 7:15p.m.
Toronto (Halladay 3·4) at Bahlmot'a (Rapp 45)• 7 ·.35 p·m·

,ago
32 .see
2
37 .520 5 112
37 ·. ~7 8 112
42 ~ 10 112

1 ~ti~maa

.· ~~

Houlton .......................... 13
Loo Angeles ..................... 11
~

.403 14 1/2
.348
1g

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

s.n

.5711
3
.5t4
8
.481 10 1/2
.434
14

I

w..tern C:onlwwa

at Kansas C~y
Bolton (Pichardo 2.0) at Chicago WhHel)ox
(Parque 7·2), 8:05p.m.
Seattle (Halama 7-3) at Texas (Roger• 7·5),
8:35p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 5·2) at Anaheim (Cooper 2·

Mmna ........... ~.~:"'32

Cdorado ......................... 42
LooAngelel ..................... 40
Francisco ..................38
'len Dlego ........................35

08

Charlotte .......................... .2 12 .143

Phoenix ..............................

2 .1187
2 .848

5 .843 31/2
5 .et5
4
5 .et5

Lhah .................................. 8" 7 .533
Portland ............................ 3 8 .273

4
5
8

seame .............................. 2 to .187 81/2
Toclay'a Gemae
Orlando at Miami, 1 p.m.
Phoenix at Weahlnaton, 7 p.m.
Indiana at New 'fori, 7:30 p.m.
Portland at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Lhah at Sacramento, g p .m.
Minnesota at Seall1e;-10 p.m.
s.turclay'a Gamee
Washington at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.
New York at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Miami at indiana, 8 p.m.
Cleveland at Loe Angelea, 8:30p.m.
Detroit at Sacremento, t 0 p.m.
Lhah at s.ame, 10 p.m.
8unclay'a
Phoenlx at Houaton, 4 p.m. •
Portland at Mlmeaota, e p.m.
Detroit at Loa Angel81, 9 p.m.

o-

BASEBALL
Major League Baaaball
MLB-Overturnad the three-game lUI·
pensions of Loa Angeles Oodgerl RHP
Terry Adams, RHP Darren Dreflort, RHP
Eric Gagne, LHP Onan Maaaoka, RHP
Alan Mills, RHP Antonio Osuna, RHP Chan
Ho Park, C Todd Hundley, 1B Eric Karroa,
OF Geronimo Berroa and OF Shawn
Green, the eight-game suspension of
Glenn Hoffman, coach, and, reduced the
lour-game suspension ol RHP Mike Fet·
tera to one game;
American League
·
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Optioned RHP
Gabe Molina to Rochester of the Intern&amp;·
tiona! League.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Traded OF
Ricky Ledee and two players to be named
to Cleveland lor OF David Justice. Placed
LHP Allen Watton on the t5-day disabled
list. Recalled RHP Craig Dingman and pur·
chased the contract ol LHP Randy Choate
lrom Columbus of the International
League. Transferred OF Roberto Kelly
from the 15 to the 80-day DL.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS-Placed
1B Erublel Durazo on the 15·day dlaablad
list. Recalled OF Jason Conti from Tucson
of the Pacific Coal! League.
ATLANTA BRAVES-Activated
SS
Ralael Furcal lrom the t5-day disabled
list. Optioned INF Mark De Rosa to Rich·
mond olthe International League.
CINCINNATI REDS-Optioned RHP
Scon Winchester to Louisville of the Inter·
national League. Activated RHP Pete Har·
nlsch from the t5-day disabled list.
BASKETBALL
National Baakatball Aaaoclatlon
PHILADELPHIA
78ERS-Exerclsed
their option' on G Aaron McKie.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS-Signed LB Jon
Hesse.
GRI;:EN BAY PACKEI'IS-- Signed RB
Rondell Mealey and OL Tim Beauchamp.
HOUSTON-Named Tony Wyllie vice
president of communication.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Signed LB
Chad Cascaddan. Agreed to Ierma with RB
Patrick Pass.
HOCKEY
·National Hockay League
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS-Named
Guy Charron assletant coach.
COLUMBUS BLUE 'JACKETS- Signed
D Lyle Odeleln.
.
LOS ANGELES KINGS-Re·elgned LW
Craig Johnson to a multiyear contract.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Signed C
Brandon Dietrich.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Announced
the retirement of LW Wendel Clark.

· 'p.l es ••
havi g,! racai ving
baing in
0
addi !on to what
is anticipated •
2 •• mora chances
to win.
3 •• mora winners •
t

TOUR DE FRANCE

Success hasn't lessened Lance
A.rmstrong's
passion for winning
...
FUTUROSCOPE, France (AP) -Winning the
Tour de France after beating cancef made Lance
Armstrong a global star. But fame, he says, hasn't
spoiled his appetite for victory or his desire to make
a-statement.
"I'm not here for the money or the notoriety;'
Armstrong said Thursday, two days before he
defends his tide in the world's most prestigious
E:yding event. ''I'm doing it to win a bike race and
prove that a cancer sufferer can overcome the illness
and win the hardest sporting event in the world.
"I'm coming here with the ambition to win."
Armstrong won the 1993 World Championship
and competed for the U.S. Olympic team in 1992
and 1996. But in October 1996, he was told he had
a 50 percent chance of survival after testicular cancer was detected and spread to his lungs and brain.
It was a diagnosis that made racing in, let alone
winning, the Tour de France a remote part of his
tboughts. But he did just that last summer, beating
his closest rival by more than seven minutes.
The incredible viCtory has made Armstrong a
household name in the United States, a rarity in a
sport dominated by Europeans. Personal endorsements have made him a multimillionaire and he's
been feted at the White House. Some have nicknamed him "Lance Inc."
He says the motivation remains the same, and it
seems that a simple look around him when the race
gets underway may give him an extra edge.
Cynical rivals still quiedy br.md his 1999 success a
fluke. French media, at a loss to explain how he
could have won the grueling race, launched a campaign of innuendo to suggest he had been on drugs.
!'Armstrong on another planet;' read one headline
in speru daily L'Equipe.
Others, meanwhile, said he only won because the
likes of Germany's Jan Ullrich and Italian Marco
Pantani didn't participate, or that Switzerland's Alex
~ulle, his closest rival in the end, would have won if
lle hadn't lost vital ~nutes with an early crash on
the Atlantic coast.
• Armstrong said such speculation was "ridiculous."
· "I've been doing this a long time;' he said. "From
Day 1, I proved I have class ... and that I can win
races. Why should this be a surprise now that I

l

y

1

. ?"
wm.
"At some point this has to stop - enough is
enough;' he said, raising his voice from a calm
monotone for the only time in 30 minutes.
Armstrong believes his physical condition is now
even better than last year, when he built up such a
strong lead after time trials and a stunning performance in the Alps that he had the race virtually
wrapped up as he emerged from the Pyrenees with
a handful of stages left.
The 2,250-mile Tour begins Saturday at Futuroscope, a futuristic theme park in western France, and
ends in Paris on July 23.
Armstrong says this year's course is harder, with
more climbing in the Alps.
But he's feeling more confident and says · he no
longer gets as nervous as before - something he
attributes to fatherhood. His wife, Kristen, gave
birth to Luke David in October, having been inseminated with sperm stored before Armstrong ·underwent chemotherapy.
One factor Armstrong he expects to play against
him is that he's no longer a surprise.
"It's hard the first time because you have no experience. But the second time you don't have the
anonymity;' he said. "As defending champion, you're
a marked man and so it's hard to repeat."
His preparation fot the Tour has been solid, with
strong finishes in most events he has entered.
But it could have been so different.
A May training session to acquaint himself With
the lOth stage of the Tour, high in the Pyrenees,
ended with Armstrong in his most dreaded environment: a hospital bed.
His team manager,Johan Bruyneel, was following
in a car and as he turned a sharp hairpin he saw
Armstrong lying bloodied, with a concussion, after
his front tire had blown. He had taken most of the
impact on his head.
The memories of his brush with cancer came
flooding back as he was rushed to hospital in an
ambulance, underwent X-rays and was kept
overnight.
"They were a scary few hours," he said at the
time. "It was a bit of a throwback for me."

MLB...PGA...NBA. .. MLS ...NFL...NASCAR...NHL...we've got you covered!!!

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