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                  <text>Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PREP SPORTS

OHSAA considers proposal
regarding transfers for sports
DAYTON (AP) Students
who · transfer to other schools
only for better athletic o pportunities. and foreign students who
are placed tn Ohi&lt;&gt; schools strictly to gain college athletic sc holarships may soon find that more
difficult .
The Ohio High School Athletic Association is considering
bylaw revisions that would
address both of those trends, the
Dayton Dally News reported
Sunday.
One proposed rule change
would make students ineligible
for a year if they transfer from one
school district to another after
they have started their freshman
year.
The second proposed rule
chan ge would make students
from foreign countries and
provinces ineligible for high
school athletics, unless their parents have become legal U.S. residents or th ey are in a foreign
exchange program listed by the
Council on Standards for Inter-

Tiger
from Page B1
1990.
'The guy is simply in a differ~
ent league," Faldo said.
Woods also beca,me the first
player since Watson in 1982 to
win the U.S. and British Opens in
the same year, and the first since
Nicklaus in 1972 to own three
major c haJ,pionships at the sa me
time.
· ·
Woods now goes to the PGA
Championship with a chance to
join Ben Hogan as the only players to win three majors in one
year.
Els also set a record - the first
player to finish second in three
straight majors. He now has been
runner-up to Woods six times,
more than any other player.
Els shot a 69, while Bjorn
closed with a 71 to finish at 277.
But the real challenge came
.from Duval, No. 2 in the world
ranking behind Woods. It was the
first ·tinle they ~\ve re - paired
together in the final group of a
final round- in a major championship, n o less.
Duval went out in 32 and was
only three strokes back until
Woods, perhaps sensing histo ry
slipping away, poured it on with
birdies on three of the next four
holes.
Meanwhile, Duv3l cru.mbled.
.He was playing for second until
hitting into the notorious Road
Hole bunker on No. 17 and taking four shots to get out. He fin ished with a 75.
"As good :is everything turned
on [he front nine was as 1b.1d as ·
everything turned on the back,"
Duval said.
"He si mply didn 't make rnis-

Reds
from Page 81
broken - bat groundout with the
bases loaded to end the in ning.
He pitched the mnrh for his 17th
save in 1H c hances.
T he Reds took advantage of
Brian Andcr&lt;o n's worst performance since June 17. Ande rson
(8 - 4) allowed eight hits in five
innings as the R eds· pt•lled ahead
5-1.
Dmitri You ng hit a solo homer
in the second , extending his hitting streak to I 0 games. The Reds

1

national Educational Travel.
A student m an approved
exchange program would be ineligible in tournaments.
The eight-member O HSAA
Board of Control passeil the
package of proposed rule changes
last week. T he entire package will
be explained to sc hool administrators in September.
The OHSAA 's 783 member
schools are to vote on the package in the first two weeks in
October. If a majoriry approves
the changes, they would take
effect Aug. 1, 2001.
"We took a survey of our
sc hools and found over 1.200 students transferred school distncts
last year," said Brookville High/
School principal Dale Creamer,
vice president of the OHSAA
board.
"I think I could safely say 95
percent of those transfers were for
athletic reasons, to play for a better team or have a better chance
at a college scholarship," he said.
Parents, coaches and adrninis-

rrators around the state have
expressed
concern
to
the
OHSAA abou t th e problem, saying it has caused turmoil in their
districts, Creamer said.
Some exceptions to the transer
rllle would be allowed · if a student's parents or legal guardian
have to change residence, or if a
sc hool closes. Another exception
is if superintendents of both
school districts enter into a writteh agreement that a transfe r
would protec t a student's physical
and mental well-being.
Currently, foreign students are
eligible for high school athl etics
in Ohio if their parents set up
legal guardianship with a family
in the state. If the proposed rule is
approved, those guardianship&lt;
would be void for eligibility purposes.
Creamer said the OHSAA has
not received any indication of
major resistance to the proposed
rule changes from member
schools.

takes, and he capitalized on the
holes you expect to capitalize on.
It was a spe·ctacular performance,
to say the least."
The other players to win the
Grand Slam were Gene Sarazen
in 1935, Hogan in 1953, Gary
Player i(l 1965 and Nicklaus in
'66 at Muirfield. Nicklaus went
on to win the Grand Slam two
more times.
Not o nly IS Woods the
youngest player to win all four
majors, h e did it In only his 93rd
sanction ed tournament, compared with 125 for Nicklaus.
Woods won $759,150 from the
record purse at the British Open.
lt was his sixth victory this year,
21st on the PGA Tour and 25
worldwide.
With the claret jug on a wooden table next to the first tee, shining in the bright sunlight over
Scotland, Woods set out for what
figured to be another breeze
along the coast of the North Sea.
Unlike the U.S. Open, a challenge awaited .
Duval made the Old Course
Took like PGA West in t~ Cali~
fornia desert, where he shot the
only final- round 59 in history.
After a nice lag putt from 70 fe et
on the first, Duval hit it stiff to 2
and s feet on the next two holes
for birdies.
Woods, in his trademark chianti
sweater and black slac ks, looked
uncomfortable from the start,
shiftin g hi s legs over his first two
birdie putts and missing bPth
from inside 10 feet. When h'e
finally m ade one on No. 4 from
18 feet, he showed more emotion
than he had all week by raising
the putter with his left h a nd and
punching the m with his right.
If there was a turning point, it
came on th e IOth hole.
Duval got a hu ge break when

his drive hit on the top of a pot
bunker and carried along the
baked turf to about pin high ,
where a simple chip left him 12
feet for birdie. The putt was on
line for the cup but stopped inches short.
He grimaced, scolded himse lf
under his breath and sulked off
the green, standing to the side as
Woods buried a 10-foot birdie to
build the lead back to four
strokes.
Despite a sore back, Duval
showed plenry of fight.
He also knew when ir was time
to concede. A sloppy bogey by
Duval and a routine birdie by
Woods on the 12th hole restored
the lead to six strokes, and Woods
cruised to victory.
That could make for a long
flight home. Duval and Woods
were scheduled to be on the sa me
charter plane to Florida - along
with the claret jug.
Such was the case iwo years ago
when Woods finished one stroke
our of a playoff at Royal Birkdale,
_wo.n by hi&gt; go.o.d _.friend Mark
O'Meara.
. ":[ brought the claret jug bac k
on the plane with Tiger,"
O'Meara said. " He held it and
knew that he wanted it some
day...
He has it now, holding on with
such a firm grip that anyo ne is
going to have a hard time wresting it away. Or any other major,
for that matter.
"I played th e regul ar tour
events. Tige r plays his own
events," Els said. 'Tm probably
living in an era where we're going
to see the next great player."
Then he paused, realizing what
had unfolded over the past four
days.
"We're already seeing that ."

added three runs in the fourth,
when
Griffey singled
and
Bichette hit his 15th homer.
"It was a good pitch, a sinker
down and away on the black just
above the knees," Anderson said .
" H e just dove out there. He's a
strong man and he lut it hard." .
Bichette has hi t safely in hi s last
17 games. The homer left him 8for-20 (.400) career off Anderson
with three homers.
Beniro Santiago's double only his 11 rh hit in his last 73 atbats - drove in ,the final run in
the fo urth .
larkin singled with one out in
the fifth and scored from first on

Griffey's double into the rightfield corner. Griffey took third on
a wild relay throw to Kelly Stinnett but was out at the plate when
Anderson - backing up ho me
- retrieved the ball and threw to
the catcher.
Mike Bell, called up by th e
Reds on July 12, made his ti m
start ar rhird and singled twice for
his first major league hits . Bell is
part of the first three-ge neratio n
family to play for the same ream
- his grandfather Gus and father
Buddy also played· for the Reds.
Buddy Bell now manages Colorado.

Monday, July 24, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

.. J;' I

I 'PRO BAS,~
Natlonoll.ooguo

E•atern Ohtlelon
W L Pet.

Team

Minnesota (Milton 8-6) at Boston (Ohka 0-0),

7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 9-6) at Ba!tiiTICH'e
{Parrish 0.0), 7:35p.m.
Kansas City (Suzuki 5-4) at Chicago White

Sox ; BueMo 1-0), 8:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Bottenfield 6-8) at TeKS.s (Rogers

GB

10·7). 8 :35 P ~ m .
Oakland (Appior 8-7) at Seattle (Moyer 10.
3). 10:05 p.m.
TVMCtay~a G1mea

AUanta ·.. ........ .................60 39 .606
New York ........... ... .. , ........ 53
Montreal .......................... 47
Florida ............... ...... ...... ..48
Philadelphia ................... 44

44 .546
6
48 .495
11
50 .490 11 112:
53 .45-4
15

Tampa Bay (Trachsel 6-9) at Oe!roit (Blair 6-

St. Louis ...... ................ .. 55 ~
Cincinnati ........ ......... ....... 50 48
Chicago ........................43 54
Pittsburgh .......................42 55
Milwaukee ...... .. ............... 40 59
Houston ......~ .. ... .............. as 63
Welt Ohdalon
Arizona .........
. ....... 56 -43
san Francisco ................. 53 43
Los Angeles ...... ............... 51 46
ColOrado ·~ ·· ~·· ·· ······ ...... ..48 48

MlnnMOia {Mays 5-11) at Boston (R.Marlinez 8-5), 7:05 p.m.
N .Y. Yar\k&amp;8S (Penitte 9-6) at Baltimore
(Ponson 5-6), 7:35 p.m.
Kansas Clly (Suppan 4-6) at Ct'licago White
So• (Parquo 9·3).,8:05 p.m .
Anaheim (Etherton 5-1 ) e.t Texas (Oiver 2·
5), 8 :35p.m.
Oakland (Heredia 11 · 7) at Seattle (S ele 11·
5). 10:05 p.m.

.566
1 1/2

.526
4
.500 e 112
San Diego ........................44 54 .449 11 112
Sund.y'a

a.m..

Cincinnati 5, Arizona 3
Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgt11
Chica~o Cubs s, Milwaukee 4
San Diego 6, Colorado 4, tO imings
Houston 15, St. Louis 7
Montreal 7, Aorlda 8
Los Angeles 5, San Francisco o
Atlanta 1, N.Y. Meta 0

EutemDIYIIIon

Team

WLTPttGFGA

NY·NJ ........................ 13 7
New EnglancL. .. .......... 9 9
Miami ......................... 7 11

2 41 39

29

5

36
41
48

5
D.C ............................. 5 t3 6

Los Angeles (Brown 9·3) at Colotaelo (Arro·

10 5·8), 9:05p.m.

32 35
26 32
21 34

Centtlll Dlwlelon
Tampa Bay ................ 12 9 2 38
Cnica~ ......... ,.... .. ... 10
~ 35
ColumbUs ................... 9 11 4 31
Dallas ........................ .9 11 4 31
WMtem Dlvi1ton
KansasCity ............... 12 5 5 •1
LosAngeles .............. 10 7 7 37
Colorado ........ .. ......... 10 10 3 33
San Jose ..................... 5 10 e 23
NOTE: Three points for a win and
for a tie

San Francisco (Gardner 6-4) at San Diego
(Meadows 7. 7), 1 0 :05 p.m.
tuead1y'e Cllmee
Milwaukee (D'Amico e-4) at Pittsburgh (Ben·
son 8-8) , 7:05p.m .
Montreal {lrabu 2-4) at N.Y. Mats (Rusch 8-

44
46
3B

e

p~ m .

Houston (Lima 3-13) a1 Cincinnati
{Williamson 3-7). 7 :35p.m
Chicago Cubs (Lieber 9-5) at Philadelphia
(WoH 8·5). 7:35 p.m.
Aoriela (Dempster 9· 7) 81 Atlanta (Giavine
11 -5), 7:40 p.m.
Arizona (R.Johnson 15-2) at St. Louis
(Stephenson 10-8), 8:10p.m.
Los Angeles (Park 10-7} at Colorado (Vosttli

40

33

39
41
40

33

t7
30
42
34
one point

34
30
27

Saturday'• G•mea
New England 2. San Jose 1
New Vor1&lt;-New Jersey 4, Miami 2
Ta""a Bay 2, los Angeles 0
Kansas City 3, Columbus 1

4·11), 9:05p.m.
San Francisco (Aueter 7·5) at San Diego
(Williams 4-3), 10:05 p.m.

........... ~ ....... 51
Boston ............... ............51
Toronto .. .. ........................53
Baltimore .. .... ._ .............. 43

BASEBALL
American

League

BOSTON RED SOX- Oesignaled 1B-DH

Commission
takes adion on
road closings

Mike Stanley for assignment. Optioned AHP
John Wasdin and 18-DH Morgan Burkhan to
Pawtucket ol the In ternational League. ACtivated RHP Rod Beck from the 15-day dis·
abled list. Recalled 38 Sean Berry from Paw·
tucket.

Romero from Salt Lake City of the PCL.
Placed RHP Mike Uncoln on the 15-day dis·
abled list.
NEW YORK YANKEES--Designated OF
Felix Jose tor as.!ignment.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS- Recalled LHP
Barry Zito from Sacramento of the PCL.
Assigned RHP Soon SeNice outright to Sacramento.
TORON TO BLUE JAVS- Act!ve.ted SS
Alex Gonzalez from the 15-day disableel list.
Optioned RHP Leo Estrella to Syracuse ol the
International League.
Natlon1t Laaau•
CINCINNATI
REDS- Acti\lated
RHP
Manny A-ybar from the 15-day disabled li st.
Agreed to terms with SS Barry Larkin on a
three-year contract extension through 2003 .
HOUSTON ASTAOS- Released LHP
Yorkis Perez unconditionally. Optioned RHP
Jose Cabrera to New Orleans of the PCL.
Recalled RHP Jason Green and LHP Wayne
Franklin from New Orleans.

BY BRIAN

o n Monday.
Mr. and

PCL.

.548
44 .537

Wom.n't Nlllon•l Bllkltblll Auoclatlun

GB

42

1

Eaatem Conflf'Wictl

.Tum

W
Cleveland ......................... l3

.530 1 112
54 .443
10
Tampa Bay .................... 38 58 .396 14 1/2
47

Central Olvlelon
....... 61 37 .822
Cleveland ..................... 50 41 .515 10 112
Detroit ........................ .. ..45 51 .4f.i9
15
Kansas Cily .................... 45 52 .464 151/2
Minnesota ............. .......... 44 57 .436 18 112
Weat Dlvlelon
.. .......... .57 40 .588
Seattle ..........
Daklana . .. ...... ·~- -~·· ·· ····sa
.546
4
Anaheim .......................,.53 46 .535
5
Te)(as .................... : ........ .46
,479 10 112
Sundly'e Gamea
Toronto 4, Bal1imore 1
N.Y. Yankees s, Tampa Bay 1
Boston 1, Ch;cago White Sox o
Oetroil 12, Kansas City 9
Cleveland 8, Minnesota 3
Oakland 5, Anaheim 0
Texas 3, Seattle 2
Today'aGimll
TamRa Bay (Lopez 6· 7) at Detroit (Nomo 39). 7:05 p.m.

Ch1cago .. .

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Signed CB
Michael Sw1ft. Released CB Isaac Harvin .

Weat11m Conference
3

.875

K·liouston .............. .... ...... 21

4 .840
112
""""""'··············· ·~··· ..... . I 4 9 .609 6 1/2
SIICI!imento ~ ... ~ ....... .. :..... 15 10 600 61/2
·utah ............................... 13 12 .520 81/2

so

BUFFALO BILLS-Signed DE Erik R owers.

Miami ................................9 15 .375
5
Indiana ..............................6 16 .273
7
Chartotte ........................... 5 18 .2 17 B 112

x·Los Angeles .................. 21

«

FOOTBALL

Sh•ver and TE Bryan Arndt.
CHICAGO BEAR S-Signed S Mike Brown
to a four-year contract .

Minnesota ........................ 11

13

.458

10

Potttand .......................... 7 16 .304 13 112
Seattle .. ,.......................... 4 19 .174 16 112
x-clinched playoff spot
S.turday'a Gemea
Cleveland 76, Miami 47
tndiana 80, Charlotte 59
Sacramento 61, PhOenix 60
Sund.y'a Games
New York 69. Houston 64

OT Barry

t here.
Commission ers, t r ustees and
other interc•a ed parties viewed

Stokes. Waived P Scan Terna.

MIAMI DOLPHINS-Waived
Hoelscher.

KCLLT
from Page 81
N at ionwide scored four runs in

the first and the third innings. fi nishing the game with -three in the
fourth .

Awards
from Page 81
Sheets (Gree n Braves).
Betwe e n the co nso lation
game and t he cham pi o n sh ip

ga me, Rob Be ll er was indu cted Into the KC LlT Hall of
Fame. H e re&lt;eived th e award
for thi s performan ce in the
197 4 tournament.
As a m e mber of the '74 City
lee and Fuel of Point Pleasant
squad. he led his team to five

DE David

th e road prior tn Mond ay's
m eetin g, and President JanL't
H Oward said 'i he was in favor nf
the closillt;.
The trustees, howL.·ver, rl'lked
that at least a portion of the
road rl'main open so th at lt
could be U&gt;nl '" a tlood mad,
and to ensure l.'lllt'rgency

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS--Signed RB
J.R. Redmond to a four-year contract. Signed
LB Rob Holmberg.
NEW YORK GIANTS- Placed CB Bashir
Levi ngston, T Jim Goff, HB Cordell Mitche ll
and FB Brian Aikins on the physically unabl e
to perform list
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Signed WA Sean
Oawkins.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS--Signed OL
Cosey Coleman to a lour-year contract and TE
Patrick Hape to a one-year contract
WASHINGTON REOSKINS-S igned RB
Gerard Arnold. Wai\led WA Ethan Howell and
LB Andre Reed .

access to rt'tl!dcn ccs o n neig hboring B e nt z Cl' lll t'tny a nd
Keebau~;;h -Fo ll rod

NEW POU.LTRY BUILDING - ·The OQen Qavilion sty~builrung_~Jl_S nolonlyJOOm_fQr_eilhibitiog_poultry. bulalsoshowing them , Looking-out
over the- grounds from the building were, from left, Ed Holter, fair board president, Jim Watson and Kenny Buckley. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

11 m 1les of c o~ stllnt .
strt!tC: I'IIn~ fFCltrMObllt- ro

Gulf Shoroes and Orange Beach
include sugary-whitt beaches
as some of the world 's most
buutlful shoreline .

Beller recorded thr ee home
run s, t wo triples , a doubl e and
three singles.

Or ~1nge

To"vn sh 1p.

Salisbury Townsh ip Trust ees
Ted Warner Jrid EJ Durst, and
lti cha rd !.\ailey. tow uship ckrk,
m~.:t with rh e co n1111 i'-isi on crs to
di sc us-; th e condition o f a
c ounty-owned ro;-~d leaJmg ro
th e o ld co unty l.mdfill ofT State
R out e 1-U .
Ac cording to thl.' trustees.
they ,Jrl' wil lin g to t.1kt· respon -

"ibili ty

for th~..·

road if t!K co m-

mi 'i'&gt; ioncrs wil l p.1y for th e
ma tL·rial n cc~..kd to repl ace a
-lil- foor cuh-cn w hich is in
poor condi ri n n .
( :om m is'i i o Ill' rs
;1pprovcd
the transfer of th e road to rhL'
tru -.tl'L..,, a11d agTt'l'd to pay for

th e cu lvert.
\Varner ' .l id th at rilL' ro :~ d is
numbe red :-~nd d oe~; not
have :-. name . and rhat it is u st· d
p rim;,ri ly :1s a tunlaroLIIl d &lt;.;JtL·
for "c hoo] ·bust' S.
not

Please see Roads, Page AJ

@.al1

1.800.745.7263
www. g ulfshores.tom

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

well-li t and equipped with sev-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

t'ral water spigo ts for thl' convt·-

P

OMEROY

nit·n cc o f animal handlers.

Exh 1bi tors
of
draft horses and
poultry at this
year's Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 14-19, wi ll be using
brand new bui ldings.

Th e seco nd buildin g coll srruned n ear the race tra ck over
th e hill from the midway area
wi ll ·house the draft horses. It IS
3H - by- 120 feet and divicl ed into
40 sta lls:
'
The uld dre~ ft horse be~rn

Thc-v wen: ·constructed with a
$26.SI.III state !-(rant, matched
dollar tor doll.Jr bv rhe Meigs
County Agricultural Society.
H o m e Creek E ntl'l' p ri 'lcs Inc. of
PtHllLTO\' bui lt the &lt;~ tructun·' ·
last ye ar. the O h10 Lq~isla­
tu rc set as id e SS n111lion doll ~1n
fnr L·apira l imprm'l'lll L'!lt'i to fair-

whic h i.;; located n e:-~r th e mid -

gnn1nds .

Th :n

ll H li H.'Y

tributed ac ros&lt;t th e
Ohio. Deparrment
ture .
With th e state
lo c J! fund s, a sma ll

wa&lt;~

di s-

&lt;;tate by the
of Agricul money and
anim al bam

wav on the hi ll wi ll be use d fo r

NEW BARN - This new draft horse barn located near other horse
barns by the race track has 40 stalls.
to he. used t(H exh ibitin g poultry in o nl' end and a small shu\v
ring 111 the oth er end h ~1 s been

built on the· hi ll.
The build ing wi ll be used for
both open class and 4-H
ex hibits , "cording to Ed

H o ltt'r, fair board pr~·si dcnr.
The building" 4ll- by - 75 fe et
and 1s b etween the cu m nH;' rc ial
bu ilding and th e sh ee p barn . It
is de signed in o pe n pavilio n
style and is surrou nded with
attrac tive wood fencing. It is

Underwood and Wise to

speak at fund-raiser, rally
BY MICHELE CARTER

We" Vir-

g mia Gov. Ceci l UndL"rwood and
U.S. Rep. Uol&gt; Wi se· will be two

Each recorded a si ngle and a dou ble. Adam Stewart had a double,
while Cody Jordan and Ricky
Wyant had a si ngle apiece.
Errett was the Poi nt player of
the g-Jme, havin g two hits. two
R.l3l, and scoring rhe game- ending run. Blac kston took t he
honor for Pomeroy.

4.

roads .
Acco rdmg to Kn1ghr. chl'
road actuall y Iics o n till·
SteJrn s' prop erty. and th ey have
maintain ed tlw road. alth ough
it is deemed impaso.;abk.
Pro secLitor John- ~nt-~~

,l L.h ·l'-t'd lru 'itl't.'.., L(. lll Wh itt· .md
Jim Bernard t h at th r;.· tru 'ilt't:s
would be rL·quirl·d to i n~r casc
the· w id th of thl..' road. and
111ain ta 111 it :1ftcr co nstru ction,
if it were to rcnuiJI opt·n .
After llll'L'till_!.!; with Engilll'L'i· R o lwrt E::~'i nt1 , however,
the tru.;;tees r ounrcred w ith a
req ue st that t he l' IH irc road be
rlo')l'd, and the CO!l llll i'ls ioners
ap p!TlVLd the cl osin g.
Th c· boani abo approved the
clo" m!:!- of Smith R oad, dlso in

New buildings up for use at Meigs fair

hailed by N.ttlonclf Gtogr~phlc

OVP NEWS STAFF

vic tories en route to the ti tl e.
H e pit c h ed in three of tho se
games, striking o ut IS of the
18 batters h e fa ced in Game

Delbert

of Stearns R oad. which they
sa id has not be e n mJintainc:d
by th e tru st ees in the 4(1 yL·ars
that the Stearns h ave li ved

CAROLINA PANTHERS--Released (l Clay

GREEN BAY PACKERS--Signed

Mr s.

Stea rns met with the c omnn..; . ; io ncr's with th e ir attorney,
C h arlc&lt;~ Knight, to re quest the
clost ng of a Olll'-llllk portion

National Football League

L Pet, GB
9 .591
NewVork ..... .................... 14 10 .583
Orlando ............................ 14 10 .583
Washington .............. ........ n 12 .479 21/2
Detroit...... .....
.. .. 10 12 .455
3

Mc·i~'

i'OMEROY

Co unty co mtni -:-.ion c rs ttwk
ac ti o n to clos t· two ro;Jd~ in
()nmgc Township fol lo,ving
di sc u ss ion
with
town sh ip
trustees and property owners
durin g their regular m c~..·t in g

PHILADELPHIA f=tHILUES-Optioned RHP
Mark Brownson to Scranton/INilkes·Barre of
ttle International League.

Pet.

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MASON. W.Va . Po m e roy's run ' came in the
third. Bradley Ramsburg, who
also 'p itched for the Indians, singled and scored on a Daylon
Jenkins fl y ball . Clayton Blac kston
recorded the other Pome roy lut
o n a bloop si ngle in the fourth .
Point 's leading h itters were
James Casto and Bobby Errett .

so Ce.nts

Devon White from ttle 15-day Clisabled list.
Optioned RHPAI Reyes to Albuquerque of the

Etlatern Division

New Yorl&lt; .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 42

LOS ANGELES DODGERS--ActJvaled OF

SoMdoy, July 211
All-Star game at Columbus, 3:30p.m.

American l.e1gue

W l

PRO HOOPS ·, 1

Hometown Newspaper

MINNESOTA TWINS--Recalled LHP J.C.

3·5). 7:35p.m.

TNm

Meigs County's

DETROIT TIGERS--Recalled AHP Erik

Houston (Hon 4-11) at Cincinnati (Hamisctl

7). 7:10

New York at Washington, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Charlene, 7:30p.m.
Ponland at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
C leveland at Phoenix. 10 p.m.
Tu..day'e G1mea
Seanle at Houston, 8:30p.m. ,
Orlando at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.

Hiljus from To ledo of tne International League.
Optioned 1B Eric Munson to Jacksonville of
lhe Southern League.

Today'oGomoo
.

TOCI1y'a Gamea

7·9), 7:05p.m.

July 25, 2000

•

Utah 69, Orlando 6e
Minnesota 80, Portlana 63
los Angeles 73, Sacramento 68

Cleveland (Rnley 8-7) at Toronto (Escobar

.561
.510
5
.443 11 1/2
.433 12 1/2
.404 15 1/2
.357
20

.552

Details, A3

2), 7:05p.m.

Central Dlvlalon

Tuesday

Time out for tips; society news, AS
Reds fall to Houston, Bl

Wednesday: Cloudy
Hl1h: 80s; 1ow: 60s

of '1t'VL'ral .,p~o:ah·r-, p.lrticipating in , c hi cken barlwcut· dinner" and
L-·H.:;m\ .md t:nrnbrc:.h.l flu tlw\t' in
,1
ttt' ll da nre.
r:t l \t' l r.tll y ' tln A;I H.T ICl ll Alloy,
The g ro up \\'ill .dso havt· their
\\'orkL·P...
ha,l'ball
throwing cage wirh fre e
' ' Thi~ 10, ,t rmn nlll!lil y. muhi cotrmv "ho w of "uppoq tOr the ba~eball beame&gt; ro th e first ISO
Am cric;n1 Alloys wo rker'i 11 1 thc:1r kids. The West Virginia Division
dllu·l\ to rl'npt' tl tilt• plant." orga- of Natural R csourc ~· s will have ib
ni zl'r St·ou Simms "aid . " \Vt· want Wildlife Di spl ay fres· for the pubto prov1de them with rhc fund s lic.
Tht· West Virgima Nation al
the y m:e d to keep tbe food
Cu.wd
"'ill h ave ~ a equipment dispantry open unri l th at happens."
play. 1 he Idl e Tymes I3and will
Th e rally is Aug . 20 from 12:311
perform and t here will be an
to .\ :311 p.m . ar Waha ma High
ant ique car diSplay.
School;and is spon sorl'd by l3end
Plene see R•lly. P•c• AJ
. Area C:A it E ·'"d !no! uni om in
CornmumrY Unit\· 21 11111, .1 fu n d

'

Cef11.8oo:Alt'~~~~ for • tr~ r _autlop ~uldt or hit our wtbslt• at www .tourolabama .org
•.

£

.,

the area, including Umted Stc·el
Work&lt;·" Lncal H5'l - L·, USWA
Lncal 51i6H and rhe U nited Min e
Workers as we ll as others.
Bend Area CARE w ill prepa re

,,

Today's

Sentinel
lSedlons-JlPages

the an tiq ue tractor d isp lay thi ~.
year. according ro Holrt•r.
P lans :-tn: bcin~ !l l :ttic to Jc dicat e th t· t wo new buildings in a

ribbon curting
takt' pbt·e

011

LL'rL'lliOilY

m

tht• opt· ntn g . .by of

the Mt·ig-.; c:ou nty F.tir.A ug. 14- .
"WHho u r thl'

~ tart·

nH.m ey we

wouldn't h ,lVt' tht•J:.t' bulldin~s
which JrL' ~ u ch ,Jtl :u.lditwn to
tht'

f~llr g rO Uild ~."

l OilllliL'lltt."d

Holt er.

DISCUSSES LEVY- Steve Beha, left, diSCusses the need for addi·
tiona! tax funding for the Carleton School and Meigs Industries with
Me1gs County Commissioners M1ck Davenport, Je ff Thornton and
Janet Howard, right. Beha wi ll ask commiSSioners to approve place·
ment of a levy on the November ballot, and introduced commissioners to a number of MR / DD cl1ents and boosters . (Brian J. Reed
photo)

Middleport hopes to acquire three school
buil~ings after vacated by school district
BY BRIAN

J. REED

hu1ld1ng' r.trr}.

u . . L.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials

AS

A3

School -1)i-.trict.

BS

Qbitu~ri~s

S(!orts

A4·

Middkpun w .Jl wc k " '
Ell'llll'l lt.n y Sc h(IOI . ~L'l~~
lulll nr H1gh Sehoul .l!ld tl1&lt;..· nld " rl' lHr.d " '-l·hnn l
.lnu l d 1 n~-. ati: cr .dl ,li'L' \·.h' .It~.· d hy the ' Mei!! ' Luc.d

B~-4

Bt,6

W~ather

A3

Lotteries
QffiQ
Pick J : 7-8-7
Pick 4: ~- 2-8-9
Buckeye Five: 1 -7- 11~23-27

\'£VA,
Daily 3: 8-2- 5 Daily 4: 6-2-0- 1

Mllll&gt;LEI'ORT ,JL.ljlllrl' M1ddlepon

ViiLlgl' C:ou tKil P·'""L'Li .1 I'L''- oluti()tl .It th L' ll' re~ ­
uLu m:'L' ting on Mond.1\' t'\'t'lllll~ ro p ur"' u '-· .111

.l~rL'L'l lli..' IH ,~· ith th L' -.~..· lll;ol hn.1rd to ,Kquirc till'
b~ulding-. . Council rt·prl'"il.' lltJtn·L·'i .md the' lil.1~l·"...
ec onon11 C dn·clopmcnt CO!l1 111i-.'i ion \\' 111 lllL'L' t
with thL· 'it' hool ho.trd ;lt ih rcgul.tr t ll t'l' tlll ~
ton ight to di .;;~· u-. , the \·ill.tgc \ iiltLTL''-t.
Till· building-. wtll b e .1h.mdo nnl hy thL' di,triL.·t
111 two )'L'Jr &lt;; wh t.:n a cnnsoli d ,ltl' d eit'tlll',llLl r\
s.clwo l ;md middl e o;; chool b11 1ldi ng arL' completed .
Council has dt&lt;;ctl&lt;t'i t:d COll\'L'rtJng the t:"klllL' Il t;lry huildmg. located on l&gt;l'tirl StrL.'l't, to .1 villagL'
hal l and jail f.Kility. It has al &lt;o disc u&lt;Sc' cl the pot e n tial ttH ero uo mic dc ve lopnlt'n t tlut th e ntllt' r

nf rhc

lllhldlc

-.~· h ol) l. Oll l'l'

Mt Li dlq'~l ' l't

ll1 gh SclHHlL ,\, .1 l't) Jl11lll111 11Y '-'-' llh-r ()] lc,hnl
otllc c " P ·lC L'. lu ~ .JI -.n hl·n1 d i "L u~,l·d.
I .1-.t night\ 1\'"(dll t t n n I ~ H111 , l h 7l'" thr \ Ill.i,:.!l..'·,
inrnn t .lll d .Hitih'l'l ll'" th L· L'L'Ulllllllll d nt· lop111L'IH
~roup to

pn1( ·ccd " 1th dl'-l U'-'1111 1, .1 11d 1\l'gtHl.l tinn . . wnh t h e '-t·huol b n.1rd t{, r ri ll' b t n l i.hth~"'

.Jnl ui. . nilm .
tv1 ,l)'l H

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\,li d

th l' l'( illlPlllll.

l lHillll l tt 1/l'. t:&lt;ll llJ~ rl,L'll llt l ' ILnrll\ ,\ 11
M il k &lt;:1\ilik !Iii I Chil,J ,_ \re\c' I lllill ~·c. M yro n
I )ut11e ld ,IJ HI t :oun(tlnun Bnb R l) l'llll\llll. wil l
work with .1 l · ttl7L' Il " •• id \'l ... ll r y lOll llllltt L'l' dl'dlr.lt -

d l' \'L'J optllt'llt

l'd ll) th L· St'hoo l btul dnl~ prn.JL'l't
work wah tlw ,r\H}l)l dJ -. trl t't.

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pl.Jn u~n ,Jlld

" \f./L' C.llll\Ut W.\it lllltl] th l· -.dHJuJ.., .l iT l· ]l)"l'd t U
tn,lk e p Lu1..;,~· Btl\ C hild-. "&lt;ltd .1( ],a..,t 1ng h t \ lll L'L' t111!( .

·'T h e ta.' p"yns o i' M1ddkpo n btllh the&lt;&lt;'

Please see $(hools. Page AJ

..

�BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Judge tosses out union lawsuit
: DAYTON (AP)- A la~uit alleging that officials of the International Union of El~ctronic Workers abused their powe.r and misused union funds has been dismissed by a federal judge.
U.S. DISlrict Judge .Gladys Kessler in Washington granted the
lltternational , union's motion for summary judgment, IUE officials
'3Jd on Mon day.
, "This deci&gt;ion clears the IUE's good name as a democratic
Llnion," 'aid IUE International President Ed Fire. " All of us are
pleased to finally put this unfortunate, costly, divisive experience
behind us."
The 1999 lawsuit filed by Ron Gilvin of Miamisburg contended
&lt;hat Fire and other union offi~ials abused their power when they
' uspended Gilvm as IU E secretary-treasurer in 1998. Gilvin later
was recalled from office by a membership vote.
·
The suit also alleged that Fire and other officials manipulated
Lfnion members and funds for their own political agendas.
Kessler ruled on Friday that the suspension and recall procedures
did not violate the law. She also found that Gilvin's activity was not
protected by the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act
of 1959, the def~ndants did not wrongfully use union power and
Gilvin was not removed as part of a scheme to suppress dissent.
· Gilvin, S I, who sought reinstatement and an unspecified amount
of damag~s. said he plans to appeaL
· "It's a shock," Gilvin said Monday. "Apparently the judge is saying because you're an officer you have no rights as a member."
The union has 122,000 members nationally an·d represents
13,000 autoworkers at five plants in the Dayton area.

Toledo schools get new leader

;

TOLEDO (AP) - The next superintendent of schools in Toledo
will be Eugene Sanders, the man who beaded the Board of Education's search committee.
~ The board voted Monday night to hire Sanders, an education
professor at Bowling Green State University. Sanders just recently
came up for consideration hi1melf. ·
H e will suc(ecd the retiring Merrill Grant.
Among the finalists for the job was Toledo businessman Bruce
Douglas, who made a brief run for governor two years ~go.

Tanks too full before blast
WILLOUGHBY (AP) - Tanks which leaked propane that
exploded were overfilled due to malfunctioning equipment, the
" 'pplier said.
The leaky tanks were overfilled at McKnight Cylinders Inc., near
Pittsburgh, which ships cylinders to AmeriCas Inc. facilities in
O hio, Michigan , Indiana, IUinois and Kentucky.
Presid~nt Len Carie blamed the problem on malfunctioning
equipment that fills and then weighs the tanks. McKnight tests and
repairs propane tanks and bas supplied AmeriGas · with filled
propane cylinders since May
One person was injured last week in a series of explosions at an
AmeriGas plant in Willoughby. The blasts destroyed a building and
,Iamaged dozens of vehicles.
An undisclosed number of overfi,lled tan ks were removed from
Home D epot stores over the weekend in the Tr~nton, Mich., area,
but AmeriCas is still trying to contact custome~ who may have
purc ha s~d them ea rlier la st week, said Home . Depot corporate
&lt;pokesman Tom G ray.

Crash involves sheriffs captain
NORWALK (AP) - Six people were injured when a sheriff's
captain responding to an emergency call tried to evade an uncom- -i ng-pas.ing vehi~le,-swerved and hit a-car Monday nighi;wthorities·
s.tid .
·
None of the injuries was believed to be life-threatening. Three
sLblings,Jamie Young, 5, Lindsey Young, 4, and Ashley Young, 3, were
transferred to Toledo Children's Hospital in stable condition.
Huron County Sheriff's Capt. Gregory A. Engfund, 49, and the
driver of the second vehicle, James D. Stotts, 57, of Molino, Fla., and
his fourth grandchild, Daphne Young, I, were treated at Fisher-Titus
Medical Center in Norwalk.
The children live with Stotts and were visiting relatives in Ohio.
Englund was responding to an emergency when an oncoming
truck pulled over to yield and was passed by another truck on State
Route 18, according to State Highway Patrol Lt. Walt Poffenbaugh.
Englund swerved to avoid the oncoming passing truck and lost
control, moving into the path of the Stotts vehicle, the authorities
re ported.
Norwalk is about 50 miles southwest of Cleveland.

Kasich mum on VP search
COLUMBUS (AP) - U.S. R ep. John Kasich was in the running,
but it was former Defense Secretary Dick Cheney being identified
.ts Texas Gov. George W Bush's likely runnin g mate.
Bush planned to make the offer Tuesday, two highly placed GOP
&lt;ources m d. Cheney has told associates he would accept it.
Kasich's spo kesman Bruce Cu thb ertson said the Republican congress man from O hi o won't b e otTermg Jny commt::nts until "it

i

co mes fro m the governor's mouth" that Cheney is the choice to
rnn nd out the Republi ca n ti cket.
Kasic h, 48. the H ouse budget chairma n, was eleCted to the 12th
Cong ress ional District in the Columbus are a in 1982. He is not
see ki ng el ection to a lOth term .
He starred a ca mpaign for president in February 1999 but pulled
o11 t of conte nt ro n 111 Jul y I &lt;J&lt;J'J, la cking enough money or support
rn the polls.
He was on ly able to r.ti sc' S 1.6 million in the first six months of
1'199, co mpared with Uus h's total of$36.25 million .
KaSJch was appomt n l budget chair in January 1995 arter th e
Republicans reg:uncd con&lt;rul of Co ngress. He played a lead role in
rlw GO P\ plans to cu t &lt;pend in g and balance th e budget and was
one ot the m.LJnr :1 uthors of the I 'J97 budget- balan cing plan.

Overha~l

of election expected

I IAM ILTON (A I') - The &lt;udden deat h of John F Holcomb, the
Bu tler Co unty prosecutor ti&gt;r 27 year&lt;, wi ll make it a challenge for
I lcmo c r:~t~ to retain th l.' only co un ty wide elected office held by a
I &gt;emoc rat. in dw GO P-do minJtcd co unty. '
1-l olcomb. 63. who nearly die d four ye ars ago from an aneurysni,
dLc d of a heart attack Sa tmday at River D owns race track in
c :in cm rutJ.
l ie had bct'n run n mg fu r re- elec tion in Novetnber aga inst Robin
Piper. :1 Rc p uhlican \v h~) w as a form er ass tstanc prosecuto r oil H olr-' llllb'~ 'lt:tfT.

I ) ,m C:urernwyer. an a,._j,t ant cou n ty prosecutor, has been desigIJ.Itl' d

Tueaday,July 25, 2000

Pomeroy, M.lddleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

the &lt;nterrm prosecutor to replace Holcomb. The Butler

r :o umy Demoua t1c PJrry r.; r lllmu~ t choo'l' .111 e le c tion ca ndidate to
r1111 ,1ga m 'it Piper.·

,
·
l! ulcomb WJ&lt; o gruff and blunt powcrh .&gt;use in law and politics in
tilt' fast - growin g, Sll b urba u C mcinnati co unty.
"H e was the lion that roored." sa1d Dr. Rr chard Burkhardt, the
&lt;' nlmry coro ner.

Wrongful-imprisonment
Ohio village helping
sougtit in molestation case European communities
DAYTON (AP) - A couple
whose convictions on childmolestation charges _were thrown
out after they spent nearly a dozen
years in prison asked a judge Monday to rule they were wrongfully
imprisoned.
A ruling in their favor would
allow them to seek damages from
the state.
Sixteen years ago, children at
the suburban Huber Heights
apartment
complex
where
Aldridge and M. Jenny Wilcox
lived accused the couple of molesting them. The two were convicted
and served 11 112 yem of a life
sentence before a judge threw out
the convictions in March 1996
after three of their. six accuse..-said
the crimes never happened.
Prosecutors said then that the
case was too old to retry and that
the. wimesses did not want to go
through another trial.
"These crimes never occurred;'
Harry Reinhart, Aldridge's attorney, told visiting Licking County
Judge Gregory Frost during the
hearing Monday in Monrgomery
County Common Pleas Court.
"They could not have occurred."
But Charissa Payer, assistant
Ohio attorney general, told Frost
that two of the accusers still maintain the couple molested them. She
said evidence will show that the
conviction was justified and that
the couple cannot prove they were
wrongfully imprisoned.
Both Aldridge and Wilcox took

the stand and denied ever molesting or having sexual contact with
children.
"Being sentenced to five life
senrences for something I didn't do
is traunJJtic,"Wilcox said.
Th~ cas~ began in !984 when
three brothers aged 7, I 0 and 11
were accused of being involved in
the sexual assault of a girl who
lived in the apartment complex.
One boy said then that Aldridge
and Wilcox, not be and his brothers, were the perpetrators. Th~ boy
identified the couple after police
showed him a photo spread and
told him that they were the two
other children had said were
involved.
Six children - aged 8 through
12 at the time - testified against
the couple at the 1985 trial.
Aldridge and Wilcox each were
convicted . of multiple counts of
rape and gross sexual imposition
and sentenced to life in prison.
In 1994, the three brothers
recanted their testimony when a
private investigator questioned
them.
After a hearing in 1996, Judge
Richard Parrott said he was convinced that the children who testified had been coerced into lying
and that more than 80 pages of
crucial evidence including
police reports listing other suspects
and medical exatm showing no
signs of sexual abuse among the
alleged victims - was omitted
from the cou pie's trial.

LOCKLAND (AP) - This
community is using its expertise in restoring old industrial
sites to help cities in Romania
and Serbia improve their quality of life.
"We look for this to be a
long-term relationship with
both cities," village Administrator Evonne Kovach toldThe
Cincinnati Enquirer for a Tuesday story.
Kovach recendy traveled to
Timisoara, in western Romania , on behalf of the US.
Agency
for
International
Development. She also is helping Pancevo in .central Serbia.
.The group sought her out
because of her work with
brownfields, or former industrial sites that have environmental problems. The village,
. just northeast of Cincinnati,
has several other projects in the
works to make new uses of the
brownfields.
Pancevo will receive about
$100,000 through U.S. AID to
help rebuild infrastructure
destroyed during the 1999
NATO bombing campaign ,
the mayor of that city said.
Srdjan Mikovic, the mayor
of Pancevo and an official in
the
opposition
Serbian
Renewal Movement, said that
his city was one of four in Serbia to be paired with cities in
the United Stares.

deceased, to Andrew . Carl
Mourning, Mary Frances Price,
Nona E. Nelson, Nona Story,
James G . Mourmng, Jam es
Gilbert Mourning, affidavit,
Middleport;
Thomas A. McMahon , Gale
L. McMah o n, to Edward B.
Ross, Ruth Ann Ross, deed,
Scipio ;
Edward B. Ross, Ruth Ann
Ross, to Thomas A. McMahon,
Gale l. McMahon, ~asement;
Patty Ann Pickens, Rankin
R. Pickens, to Michael P, Kloes,
Amy
L. Buckbee, deed ,
Chester;
PDK Construction Inc., to
Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester;
Crystal L. Whitlatch, John
Fisher, Jr., Sarah S. Fisher, to
Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester;
Ernestine Napper, to Columbus Southern Power, right of
way, Rutland;
Howard Logan, Eleanor J.
Logan, to Mary , Ann Fields,
deed, Syracuse;
Murl Boudinot, to Southern
Ohio Coal Company, d~ed,
Columbia;
Richard F. Fick, Jr:, Annette.
Kay Fick, Karen Fick Smith,
Tim L. Smith, to Rebecca
Edwards, deed, Chester;
· Carmel
Sutton
United
Methodist Church , to Tru stees
Sutton Township, deed , Sutton;
Paul CJay, to Equi credit Corporation, deed, Middleport ;
Lucille M . Sauer, deceased, to
Alb ert H . Sauer, affidavit.
Salem ;
Larriena Goody, Larr ie na
Ellison, to Richard Hagerty,

Dorothy Hagerty, deed, Salem;
James Goody, Karen Sue
Goody, to Richard Hager.ty,
Dorothy Hagerty, deed, Salem;
Clarmont P. Harris, Jr., Mary
A. Harris, to Charles R .
Cozart, deed, Olive;
Jack Morrow, Dorothy Johnson, to Jennifer Johnson, deed ,
Letart;
Roger A. Ritchie, Carolyn
Ritchie, to Janice R. Weber,
Janice R. Kestner, Jani ce R.
Ritchie, Charles A. Ritchie,
deed, Chester;
Nona E. Nelson, deceased, to
Patrick Rae Story, Margaret
Lynn ·Story, .M-arga ref Scllwao
Story, Steven Story, James D.
Story, certificate, Middleport;
Jerry St. Clair, Armeda K. St.
Clair, to Daryl E. Chafin, deed,
Olive;
·
Arthur C. Gibson, Jr., to
Harry L. Ramsey, Joanne J.
Ramsey, deed, Scipio;
Stephanie
D.
Cochran,
Stephanie D. Harruff, Joshua P.
Harruff, to Rasco Mills, Sandra
J. Mills, deed, Salisbury;
Pomeroy LTD., to Woda
Colonial Park Limit, deed,
Pomeroy;
Frank Herald, Jr., to Travis
Pierce, deed, Rutland;
Amy See, to Dwight Ashley.
Wanda Ashley, deed, Rutland;
Esther Landon , to Jeffrey
Neil Durst, Bryan David Durst ,
deed, Olive;
Jimmy R. Lee, Kimberly S.
Lee, to jimmy R. Lee, Kimberly S. Lee, deed, Pomeroy;
Kimberly S. Le e, Kimberly
Lee, Jimmy R . Lee, to Wayne
Pauley, Jr. , Cathy Pauley, deed,
Salisbury;

said to Campbell, who' said that
she felt the second, more inclusive plan, was unfa ir to her
Page AI
, employees and other employees
• Trussell and paid from the general fund .
Deputy Scott
Steve Beha, dire cto r of the
Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell
met individually with the board Carleton School and · Meigs
to discuss last week's action Industries, introduced commisadopting a new health insurance sioners to a number of students
plan through Anthem .
and clients of th e county 's
In addition to a 90/ 10 plan
programs .
He
approved for general fund MR / DD
employees,
commissioners announced the MR / DD board
approved a 100 percent reim- will request permission to place
bursement plan for employees at a levy on the Nov. 7 ballot.
the Departme nt of Jobs and
Beha said the board will
Family Services, which Trussell, request a levy to generate an
representing the Ohio Patroladditional $360,000 per year for
men's Benevolent Associa tion
local union , said was unfair to capiral improvements and operdeputies and will likely result in ating expenses, similar to levy
the filing of a grievance by requests made in past years and
union n1embers.
rejected by voters.
Trussell said the insurance
Beha said that be was not preagent who met with county pared Monday to present specif- ·
departments last week said that
ic millage for the levy request,
the 90/l 0 plan was the only plan
which WO!Jld be offererl to because pending electric utility
county employees, and that deregulation will change -the
deputies were required to , but rev.e nue generated by tax levies.
willing to, accept a number of
The deadline for placing
decreases in coverage because levies on the N\)vemb er ballot is
the plan was the only one Aug. 24, and Beha sa id that he
offered.
will meet with the commissionThe commissioners approved
the full-reimbursement plan for ers in early August to present
DJFS employees because the specific information about the
cost was fully reimbursable from levy proposaL
the state. Employees at the
The MR / DD board's last
agency do not pay any cost for successful levy was approved in
their health insuranc.e pian, November 1999, and the board
while general fund employees
has tried consistently for a numnow pay $30 and $200 per
month, respectively, for single ber of years to approve additional levy funds.
and family policies.
Campbell said she felt that the
Mary
Powell
of
the
second plan was unfair to Chester/Shade Historical Assoemployees, and that she was ciation discussed the success of
"disappointed"
that
other Chester/Shade Days, which
departments were not notified
took place the weekend of July
that the second plan was avail15 .
able.
Powell said the event, cenCommissioner Mick Davenport said that the plan was not tered around the Chester Couroffered to county departments thouse, was very successful, and
because the general fund and the that visi\ors registered from 27
individual general fund depart- Ohio towns, as did visitors from
ments could not bear the addiVirginia, West Virginia, Iowa and
tional cost.
"You above anyone else California.
The commissioners approved
should know the condition of
the general fund," Davenport a· contract between the DJFS
and God's NET, a Pomeroy teen
center, involving $60,715 in
Prevention, Retention and Con(USPS 21J.!I60)
Ohio VaiJey Publlshlna Co.
tingency funds from the TempoPublished every afternoon, Mond1y throua:h
. Friday, tll Coutl S1,, Pomeroy, Ohjo by_the
rary Assistan'~- to Ne_edy__F..ami=
- OtiiO- Villey ·ru&amp;IIShliij -compan~ POilie,.oy,lies program.
Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-21S6. Second class post•ae ptid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
The contract services will
.
Member: The Associated Preu, 1nd the Ohio
emphasize d~ug and alcohol-free
Newspape r A.nodation.
' programs for area teenagers , and
POSTMASTER: Send 1ddress conectiom to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun S1., Pomeroy,
will provide fundi~g for interOhio 45769.
•
vention and computer coordinaSUBSCRIPTION RATES
tors and other staff, and field
B~ Carrier or Motor Route
One \\'cek ..................... ,...................- ..... $2.00
trips and other events.
One Month ..... ... ......................... ....... $8.70
One Year ................ ,....... ....................... $104.00
Commissioners discussed with
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Swisher and approved changes
Daily ......................... ,.,, ... ,................... 50 Cenl5
in DJFS job classifications and
Subscribers not desiring to pay· the carrier may
titles, as mandated by the Ohio
remit in 11dvancc dirtct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basis. Cred it will be
Department of Administrative
liven carrier each week .
Services .
No ~ub~cripti o n by mai l permitted in areas
wh~re home carmr service is available
Commissioners also took
action to modify a proposal to
Publisher rese rves lhe right to adjust rates dur·
ing the subscription period. Subsc ription rue
provide employment substdies to
changes may be implemented bY changi ng the
dura1ion o f tl'le subscription.
the Village of Syracuse for lifeMAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
guards.
Inside Melgs Co unty
13 Weeks ............................................. $27.30.
Bob Wingett, grants adminis2:6 Weeks ................................................ $~3 . 82
trator for Syracu se, m et with
52 Weeks ......................................... ...... $105.56
Rates Ouulde Mel&amp;s County
c o rnmi ssioners
earlier
this
IJ Weeks ....... ~.....
.. .... ........ .... $29.25
26 Weeh..........
.. ............ S56.68
month to request assistance with
~2 Weeks... .
.. .......... Sll)9_72
payroll at the pooL At the tim e,
commissioners offered to subsiReader Services
dize positions to qualifying
empl oyees through th e county's
Our main co ncern In all stories Is to he
acc\U'IItc. U yo11 know or tn error In a story,
Summer Youth Employment
call the ne"uoom at (740) 99%·215$. We will
check JOUr lnformallon and make a
Program .
correction lrwarnnted.
New~ Deptrtmenls
Howard said Monday the
The main number l1 992·2155. Departmenl
board would offe r to pay
ertenslons are:
Genenl Manager ...... ...................... Ex.t. 1101..
employees $5. 15, rather than the
News ................................................. EJit. 1102
..................................................... Or Ext.II06
$6. IS offered to other SYEP
Other Stnk:es
Ad,er11slng: ...................................... Ext. 1104
participants, so that the village
Circulation ....................................... Ext. 1103
need not pay non -pa rticipatin g
ClaisiHed Adt .................................. Ext. 1100
employees additional wages.

faom

Mircea Lefchian , spokesman
for Timisoara, said his city was
paired with both Lockland and
Pancevo, as a go-between for
th~ Yugoslavs and the Americans.
.
The money is to be used
over the next 18 months to
repair hearing and w•ter systems in Pancevo, which sits on
the Danube River about 62
miles south of Timisoara,
Lefchian said. Timisoara is to
provide utilities and other
logistical help to run the program, he said.
"The Americans do not
want to go themselves to
Pancevo because of the regime
in Belgrade, and this is why
they will use us to direct the
funds and complete the programs," 'tefchian said.
Cl~anirrg the environment
also is high on .the list, Lefcbian said, after NATO bombs hit
the oil refinery in Pancevo,
polluting the region.
Pancevo, Lockland and
Timisoara were not partnered
before the NATO campaign,
but Kovach said the relationship among the three is already
strong.
"These
countries
are
halfWay around the world, but
all of a sudden you know them
and worry about · them," she
said. "They've lived very hard
lives that we cannot relate to."

Edward
J.
Maksimczak,
deceased,
Elbert
Mullins;
deceased, Gladies Mullins,
deceased, to Billie J. Maksimczak, affidavit;
Arline Davis, deceased, to
Max 0. Davis, deceased, affidavit;
Melvin H. Milliron , Linda D.
Milliron, to Wanda L. Eblin,
deed, Salisbury;
Wanda L. Eblin, to Howard
Searles, Mary Searles, deed, Salisbury;
Moses Norman, deceased, to
Myrtle Norman, c::ertificate,
Rutland;
Myrtle Norman , to Aric 0.
Patterson, ·
Christina
L.
Williams, deed, Rutland;
Lee E. Burnem, Nancy
Burnem, to Donald R. Holcomb, Jr. , deed, Salem;
Dean W. Prushing, Catherine
Marie Prushing, to James M .
Prushing, Jayne M. Prushing,
deed, Olive;
Theresa M . Church, to
·George K. Church, deed, Olive;
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy
Ervin, to Howard R . Ervin Ill,
Megan Ervin, deed, Sutton;
Jeffrey C. Harris, Deborah M.
Harris, to Thomas C. Lewis,
Barbara
M. Lewis, deed,
Lebanon;
Micha el D. Adkins, to Lynda
Adkins , deed, Minersville;
Lynda Adkins, Barbara S.
Alkire, deed, Minersville;
Effie Black, deceased, to Burdell Black , affidavit, Salisbury.

·The Daily Sentinel
1

,_, -

sons.
She said that she would meet.
with Police Chief Bruce Swift
PapAl
, about the complaints today.
Councilman Stephen Houch buildings, and paid for them, and
it 's only fair that the village have ins said he -was particularly eon corned with the foul language
a chance to take them back."
Childs also suggested that a complaint.
Council approved a resoluconsultant be retained to assist in
the preparation of a final plan tion authorizing the placement
for use which must be submitted of a 1-mill levy re·newal on the
to the Ohio Department qf Nov. 7 ballot, which would b~
Education .
used for street lights .
The resolution passed last
The levy would generate
night notes that 60 jobs and
approximately $28 ,000 per year
$15 ,000 in direct income tax
street lights, according to
for
revenue will be lost to the vilClerk Bryan Swann. Lights cost
lage when the schools close.
The economic development the village approximately $2 ,500
commission, he said, hopes that · per month.
the opportunities provided by
A renewal request was rejectthe availability of the schoQ]s ed by Middleport voters in the
might make up for at least part spring, and Iannarelli said this
of that loss.
would be the final opportunity
In other business, Winfred for voters to keep the lights on .
Dent, manager ofWayne's Place,
"If it fails this time, the lights
and
his
daughter, Vicky
will
go out in January," lann~rel­
Pumphrey, a bartender at the
tavern, met with council to dis- li said·.
Council also approved a resocuss their concerns that police
officers in the village are over- lution authorizing the village to
p atrolling the North Second pursue $150,000 in funding
Avenue esrablishment, and dri- through
the
Appalachian
ving customers away.
Regional Commission for street
According to Dent and paving.
Pumphrey, officers have been
The proposal includes $50,000
noted driving past the bar as frein village funds, $29,000 pledged
quently as every 10 minutes, and
sitting in an adjacent parking by the cou nty commissioners
lot, "hounding the bar and our and S192,000 in State Capital
Improvement Program (Issue II)
customers.''
Both Dent and Pumphrey funds for the paving of 5.3 miles
said they believe constant of streets in the village.
patrolling of the area is unneceslannarelli said an abandoned
sary, and that it has created an house at the corner of Walnut
uncomfortable environment for Street and North Fourth Avenue
the bar's patrons.
is being torn down, using funds
" We have worked hard for
from an anonymous source .
over six years to eliminate trouAfter meeting in executive
blemakers and to run a peaceful
business," Dent said last night. session, council voted to r_cplace
"We do not tolerate foolish- Village Inspector Denzil Hudson.
ness ."
In addition to co nstant
The position will be adverpatrolling of the bar, Dent and tised in The Daily Sentinel, and
Pl'mphrey said that officers applications will be available at
recently "charged into" the bar the police department during
from both of its entrances,
regular business hours. The posiwhich they feel was unwarranttion pays S6 an hour based on a
ed and inappropriate, especially
since the bar's staff understand part- time schedule, and the
that they are expected to coop- inspector receives 50 percent of
erate with police officers when all permit fees paid.
Councilman Roger Manley
they visit the bar on official
business.
said that the street committee,.
"They did this instead of meeting prior to last night's
approaching a.n d speaking to the council [meeting, discussed the
butender--en - duty;" Dem said. street ligh"iatWalnut S'treetana
... All of our bartenders have been
North Second Avenue, which
instructed to cooperate with
has been out of order for weeks .
officials."
•
A Lancaster firm is the only
Pumphrey said she and other
company
able to repair the light,
bartenders are routinely followed en route home by police he said, and a part has ' been
officers, and that one of the offi- ordered. He noted that a new
cers also used profane language stree t light . would co sf the vildirected toward one of the bar- lage $5,000.
tenders during a recent visit.
Iannarelli asked rhe cemetery
Dent said la st night that committee to seek bids on the
reports the bar is now for "sale
replacement of a set of steps in
are true, and that problems with
the police department are the the old portion of Riverview
primary reason . Bur, he said, he Cemetery. She said a family has
and the Dent family are now offered a contribution toward
determined to retain ownership the replacement of the steps.
lannarelli noted that the vilas a matter of principle.
lannarelli said last night that lage was accepting donations for
the bar does not present specific a yard sale to be held in August
problems to the community, to benefit the pool operation at
other than public intoxication General Hartinger Park.
and other cases common with
Council also approved the
bars, and that bar management
has been cooperative with police payment of bills in the amount
of $28,616 .96.
officers in the past.
Also present were Council
She also said, though, that officers might be following bar- members Bob Poo ler and Kathy
tend ers home for security rea- Scott.

Rally
from Page AI
Acc ording to Simms, much
more is being planned for the
eve nt. "This is going to be big,
real big," he satd.
American Alloys workers from

36x60" White Natural
Table &amp; 4 Chairs

\

Etlllt'"

Home Appliances...
The Best Value in Home Appliances.

r s.u•

IY_,, CI!IICIIw
w••~ ••
• 8 Cycles ui( IIIOonQO.••c.Jits
• • Tempe ,.lur~ Se11 11 ~'11
~ Wa!llle~r! StltWOJ!!;

• Wtule ·on·WMt Styii!IQ

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-33),

Akzo - 42 ),
AmTedi/SBC- 43 ),
Ashland Inc. - 33')•
AT&amp;T- 33\
Bank One- 33l.
Bob Evans - 1sl.
BorgWarner - 35),
Champi(m- 3~ .
Charming Shops- 5"1•

Clly'Holding- 7~
Federal Mogul- 91,
Flrstar.- 21 ~

' . ..,...-.....· e

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1•"'""1' •1• ~~' "'r ''
• ] 1"11111"''1"''' ' ,, mnqc
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Il l , ,.,, I• &lt;,!·, I.,,J

Buy the Pair For Only $699

'

Rocky Boots - Slo

General Electric - 531.
Harley Davidson - 42~
Kmart-7~14

RD Shell- 571.

KroQer -'- 21 ~.
Lands End- 31'/o
Ltd . - 22~.
Oak Hilt Financial- 151.
OVfl-26 ..
BBT -25'),
PeopleS - 14 Y~
Premier- 5'·
Rockwell- 38'!.

Sears - 31 ),
Shoney's-1
Wai·MBrt- 57),
Wendy's-18
Worthrngton- 10~

Daily stocl&lt; reporto are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day'a Iran•
actions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Mild conditions continue
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and sunrise on Wednesday at
6:25a.m.

A stationary high pressure
center is providing the triWeather forecast:
county area with sunny skies
Tonight ... Mostly
cloudy.
during the daytime and clear, Lows in the low to mid 60s.
cool nights .
Wedne~day... Partl:y _dfllld¥·- · Forec~a~st~e~r~s~sata temperatures
Higbs mainly in the low to mid
tonight again would drop into
80s.
the mid-50s to low 60s.
Wednesday night...Fair. Lows
On Wednesday, temperatures
will climb into the low to mid- from the upper 50s to mid 60s,
Extended forecast:
80s under mostly sunny skies,
Thursday... Fair. Highs 80 to
the National Weather Service
85
.
said . The daytime heating and ,
Friday
and
Sarurday... A
increased moisture being drawn
into th~ area will create a chance of showers and thunderchance of afternoon showers or storms. Lows in the 60s With
thunderstorms.
highs in the lower to mid 80s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:52

DISNEY'S THE KID (PGI I
7:10 l 8:200AILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:20

BIG

New SboU's SIIJrfing WeiiJUsuy
1110MA8 l Til ~~ 12·45 2·45 4·45

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

MAGI: RAIROAD

. ' . ' .

(Kid~onily &amp;llutlca~Aie&gt;: Bala.in,Peto Forda ·
'
....,.,., llillilftllilll&amp;

. ....

ALL AG[S. ALL IIMi:S S4.UiJ

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hiatt•

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S.II·Cin n•·•• Gu R1n1•
•Suol!i\..1 •t. l fo'• •· • 11 , ,,.~
•( lrWOIII(

Gannett- 56 11.

VALLEY WEATHER

~ --­

Reg. 359
ilr
Special $339.00

\;

Units log 6 calls

. ·~ ~ I

~

I

canceled

\

Sp.&lt;•al $389.00

statements.
Each was charged with seven
counts of criminal damaging and
will appear in Meigs County
Court on Wednesday.

POMEROY - Three men
confessed and been charged in
the vandalism of eight mailboxes
in the Shade area.
Monday, it was reported that
juveniles were charged, but Sheriff James M . Soulsby reportedtoRACINE -Summer reheanal
day that the alleged offenders for Southern Local Marching
were adults: Jason Skinner, 19, Band, ca nceled until further
Trimble, Thomas Burson, 18, notice.
Shade, and Jonathan Stewart, 20,
M iddleport.
According to Soulsby, th e
Athens County Sheriff's DepartPOMEROY - Units of the
, ment contacted his department Meigs
Emergency
Services
about the vandalism of mailboxes answered six calls for assistance on
o n State Route 681, Bearwallow Monday, Units responded as folRidge, Colburn Road and Gilkey lows:
Ridge.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:55 a.m., Main Street, assisted
A male from Athens County
chased a car followin g one of the by Rutland , Candy Tillis, Holzer
vandalism incidents and got a reg- Medical Center;
istration number from the car.
8:39 p.m. , Holzer Medical
After Skinner, the car's owner, Center Clinic, Terri Chambers,
was contacted, he confessed to HMC.
the department that he was the
RACINE
driver of the vehicle and had
I :45 p.m , County Road 28,
helped participate in the alleged assisted by Central Dispatch,
smashing of mailboxes.
Charles McKowen, treated.
He also reportedly ·implicated
RUTLAND
Burson and Stewart, and showed
L30 a.m., Beech Street, Katha sheriff's deputy where the dam- eryn Cox, refused treatment;
aged mailboxes were.
9:44 a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Jack
Burson and Stewart were later Jenkins, HMC;
questioned and admined their
9 p.m., Main Street, Tyler Eblin,
invo lvement, and gave written HMC.

the tri-county area have been out
of work since the plant shut
down earlier this year.
"This is an opportunity for all
of us to join together in a show of
support for the Ameri can Alloys
workers and to have a good time
while doing it," Simms said.
"There will be somethin g for
everyone."

I

42x42x60" Oak Pedestal
Table &amp; 4 Chairs

lbree charged

from

'~ . 41~

[ '

LOCAL BRIEFS

Schools

' "" '"""' l'ln f""'''U '

II I Cu tt Toa Mn" l ~ ~ tl tOftiiOI
· • ~ 1"~!;&gt;/'!" le "'~''" II·G "~' SrtiYn
• [' "'' r ·••llf" ! M 1Au1 P,t
• '1!· ·1·

Reg. $549 Spec1al $509.00

" N'tt~lwno

Reg. $549 Special 5509 00

I FREE DELIVERY I

Same as Cash

Pomero OH

FRE·E YA.RD SALE SIGN With Ad!. Get Yours Today....

The Dail Sentinel
•

'

• The Dal,ly..Sentlnel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Roads

Meigs County Reporter posts recent land.transfen
Land tr~nsfers posted
POMEROY - The following land transfers were recently
reported by Meigs County
Recorder Judith A. King:
.
' Mary J. Murray, to Rocky R.
Hupp, Carol J. Hupp, deed,
Salem;
Jeffrey R . Darst, Kitty S.
Darst, Elizabeth Ann Gilkey, to
Linn K. Darst, deed, Middleport;
Timothy P. Gillilan, Teresa R.
Gillilan, to Kathryn Wilderm
Meredith, deed, Chester;
Charles R. Swigger II,
deceased, to Janet L. Swigger,
affidaviti
Fannie L. White, deceased, to
Jeffrey R. Darst, Kitty S. Darst,
affidavit;
Loretta Ann Beegle, Loretta
Ann Meier, to Theodore Meier
Beegle, Shirley Beegle Huston,
Rita Beegle Fisher, deed,
Pomeroy;
Jean Lama Moore, deceased,
to David Bumgardner, Shirley
Bumgardner, deed, Middleport;
Larry B. Morris, to Joseph A.
Anderson, deed, Rutland;
Robbie P. Jacks, Stephanie L
Jacks, Donna Y.Jacks, Robert E.
Jacks, to Robert E. Ja cks,
Donna Y. Jacks, deed, Bedford;
Gerald Donohue, Linda K.
Donohue, to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, right of
way, Scipio ;
Franklin E . Ihle, Kathy l.
lhle, to Tuppers Plains Chester
Water District, right of way,
Bedford;
Terry R. Reuter, Mandy E .
Reuter, to Tupp e r Plains
Chester Water Distri ct, right of
way, Bedford ;
Robert V King , ·to Larry J.
Ball, Rita D. Ball, deed , Rutland;
Vincent
Davis, Virginia
Davts, ro Vincent C. Davis , Virginia M . Davis, deed, Lebanon ;
Vin ce nt C. Davis, Virguua M .
Davis, to Vincent C. Davis, Virginia M . Davis, deed, Lebanon;
Herbert W. Brown, to 'Hcrb~rt W. Brown Revocable, a ffi davit ;
Glenn E. Enslen, Patri c ia
Mc C ullo ugh , to Constance R .
Enslen, deed , Sutton ;
Davie Mae Butcher, R obe rt
Dale Butcher, Anita J- Butc her,
to Alpha G. Butcher, deed, Scipw;
Scott M . Dillon , to Ju lie E .
Dillon, deed, Chester.
Sally A. Ca loga r, to Wdliam P.
Moffett, affidavit ;
Rodney D. Tutti~. Br~nda
Kate Tuttle, to Eric D. Tuttle,
Candace L. Tuttle, deed,
Chester;
·Ray Wellman, R•y E. Wellman, to Robert B. Wellman ,
deed, Salem;
Golda
Ma e
M o urnin g,
deceased, Golda May Rou sh,

Tuesday, July 25, 2000

•

'1

�BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Judge tosses out union lawsuit
: DAYTON (AP)- A la~uit alleging that officials of the International Union of El~ctronic Workers abused their powe.r and misused union funds has been dismissed by a federal judge.
U.S. DISlrict Judge .Gladys Kessler in Washington granted the
lltternational , union's motion for summary judgment, IUE officials
'3Jd on Mon day.
, "This deci&gt;ion clears the IUE's good name as a democratic
Llnion," 'aid IUE International President Ed Fire. " All of us are
pleased to finally put this unfortunate, costly, divisive experience
behind us."
The 1999 lawsuit filed by Ron Gilvin of Miamisburg contended
&lt;hat Fire and other union offi~ials abused their power when they
' uspended Gilvm as IU E secretary-treasurer in 1998. Gilvin later
was recalled from office by a membership vote.
·
The suit also alleged that Fire and other officials manipulated
Lfnion members and funds for their own political agendas.
Kessler ruled on Friday that the suspension and recall procedures
did not violate the law. She also found that Gilvin's activity was not
protected by the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act
of 1959, the def~ndants did not wrongfully use union power and
Gilvin was not removed as part of a scheme to suppress dissent.
· Gilvin, S I, who sought reinstatement and an unspecified amount
of damag~s. said he plans to appeaL
· "It's a shock," Gilvin said Monday. "Apparently the judge is saying because you're an officer you have no rights as a member."
The union has 122,000 members nationally an·d represents
13,000 autoworkers at five plants in the Dayton area.

Toledo schools get new leader

;

TOLEDO (AP) - The next superintendent of schools in Toledo
will be Eugene Sanders, the man who beaded the Board of Education's search committee.
~ The board voted Monday night to hire Sanders, an education
professor at Bowling Green State University. Sanders just recently
came up for consideration hi1melf. ·
H e will suc(ecd the retiring Merrill Grant.
Among the finalists for the job was Toledo businessman Bruce
Douglas, who made a brief run for governor two years ~go.

Tanks too full before blast
WILLOUGHBY (AP) - Tanks which leaked propane that
exploded were overfilled due to malfunctioning equipment, the
" 'pplier said.
The leaky tanks were overfilled at McKnight Cylinders Inc., near
Pittsburgh, which ships cylinders to AmeriCas Inc. facilities in
O hio, Michigan , Indiana, IUinois and Kentucky.
Presid~nt Len Carie blamed the problem on malfunctioning
equipment that fills and then weighs the tanks. McKnight tests and
repairs propane tanks and bas supplied AmeriGas · with filled
propane cylinders since May
One person was injured last week in a series of explosions at an
AmeriGas plant in Willoughby. The blasts destroyed a building and
,Iamaged dozens of vehicles.
An undisclosed number of overfi,lled tan ks were removed from
Home D epot stores over the weekend in the Tr~nton, Mich., area,
but AmeriCas is still trying to contact custome~ who may have
purc ha s~d them ea rlier la st week, said Home . Depot corporate
&lt;pokesman Tom G ray.

Crash involves sheriffs captain
NORWALK (AP) - Six people were injured when a sheriff's
captain responding to an emergency call tried to evade an uncom- -i ng-pas.ing vehi~le,-swerved and hit a-car Monday nighi;wthorities·
s.tid .
·
None of the injuries was believed to be life-threatening. Three
sLblings,Jamie Young, 5, Lindsey Young, 4, and Ashley Young, 3, were
transferred to Toledo Children's Hospital in stable condition.
Huron County Sheriff's Capt. Gregory A. Engfund, 49, and the
driver of the second vehicle, James D. Stotts, 57, of Molino, Fla., and
his fourth grandchild, Daphne Young, I, were treated at Fisher-Titus
Medical Center in Norwalk.
The children live with Stotts and were visiting relatives in Ohio.
Englund was responding to an emergency when an oncoming
truck pulled over to yield and was passed by another truck on State
Route 18, according to State Highway Patrol Lt. Walt Poffenbaugh.
Englund swerved to avoid the oncoming passing truck and lost
control, moving into the path of the Stotts vehicle, the authorities
re ported.
Norwalk is about 50 miles southwest of Cleveland.

Kasich mum on VP search
COLUMBUS (AP) - U.S. R ep. John Kasich was in the running,
but it was former Defense Secretary Dick Cheney being identified
.ts Texas Gov. George W Bush's likely runnin g mate.
Bush planned to make the offer Tuesday, two highly placed GOP
&lt;ources m d. Cheney has told associates he would accept it.
Kasich's spo kesman Bruce Cu thb ertson said the Republican congress man from O hi o won't b e otTermg Jny commt::nts until "it

i

co mes fro m the governor's mouth" that Cheney is the choice to
rnn nd out the Republi ca n ti cket.
Kasic h, 48. the H ouse budget chairma n, was eleCted to the 12th
Cong ress ional District in the Columbus are a in 1982. He is not
see ki ng el ection to a lOth term .
He starred a ca mpaign for president in February 1999 but pulled
o11 t of conte nt ro n 111 Jul y I &lt;J&lt;J'J, la cking enough money or support
rn the polls.
He was on ly able to r.ti sc' S 1.6 million in the first six months of
1'199, co mpared with Uus h's total of$36.25 million .
KaSJch was appomt n l budget chair in January 1995 arter th e
Republicans reg:uncd con&lt;rul of Co ngress. He played a lead role in
rlw GO P\ plans to cu t &lt;pend in g and balance th e budget and was
one ot the m.LJnr :1 uthors of the I 'J97 budget- balan cing plan.

Overha~l

of election expected

I IAM ILTON (A I') - The &lt;udden deat h of John F Holcomb, the
Bu tler Co unty prosecutor ti&gt;r 27 year&lt;, wi ll make it a challenge for
I lcmo c r:~t~ to retain th l.' only co un ty wide elected office held by a
I &gt;emoc rat. in dw GO P-do minJtcd co unty. '
1-l olcomb. 63. who nearly die d four ye ars ago from an aneurysni,
dLc d of a heart attack Sa tmday at River D owns race track in
c :in cm rutJ.
l ie had bct'n run n mg fu r re- elec tion in Novetnber aga inst Robin
Piper. :1 Rc p uhlican \v h~) w as a form er ass tstanc prosecuto r oil H olr-' llllb'~ 'lt:tfT.

I ) ,m C:urernwyer. an a,._j,t ant cou n ty prosecutor, has been desigIJ.Itl' d

Tueaday,July 25, 2000

Pomeroy, M.lddleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

the &lt;nterrm prosecutor to replace Holcomb. The Butler

r :o umy Demoua t1c PJrry r.; r lllmu~ t choo'l' .111 e le c tion ca ndidate to
r1111 ,1ga m 'it Piper.·

,
·
l! ulcomb WJ&lt; o gruff and blunt powcrh .&gt;use in law and politics in
tilt' fast - growin g, Sll b urba u C mcinnati co unty.
"H e was the lion that roored." sa1d Dr. Rr chard Burkhardt, the
&lt;' nlmry coro ner.

Wrongful-imprisonment
Ohio village helping
sougtit in molestation case European communities
DAYTON (AP) - A couple
whose convictions on childmolestation charges _were thrown
out after they spent nearly a dozen
years in prison asked a judge Monday to rule they were wrongfully
imprisoned.
A ruling in their favor would
allow them to seek damages from
the state.
Sixteen years ago, children at
the suburban Huber Heights
apartment
complex
where
Aldridge and M. Jenny Wilcox
lived accused the couple of molesting them. The two were convicted
and served 11 112 yem of a life
sentence before a judge threw out
the convictions in March 1996
after three of their. six accuse..-said
the crimes never happened.
Prosecutors said then that the
case was too old to retry and that
the. wimesses did not want to go
through another trial.
"These crimes never occurred;'
Harry Reinhart, Aldridge's attorney, told visiting Licking County
Judge Gregory Frost during the
hearing Monday in Monrgomery
County Common Pleas Court.
"They could not have occurred."
But Charissa Payer, assistant
Ohio attorney general, told Frost
that two of the accusers still maintain the couple molested them. She
said evidence will show that the
conviction was justified and that
the couple cannot prove they were
wrongfully imprisoned.
Both Aldridge and Wilcox took

the stand and denied ever molesting or having sexual contact with
children.
"Being sentenced to five life
senrences for something I didn't do
is traunJJtic,"Wilcox said.
Th~ cas~ began in !984 when
three brothers aged 7, I 0 and 11
were accused of being involved in
the sexual assault of a girl who
lived in the apartment complex.
One boy said then that Aldridge
and Wilcox, not be and his brothers, were the perpetrators. Th~ boy
identified the couple after police
showed him a photo spread and
told him that they were the two
other children had said were
involved.
Six children - aged 8 through
12 at the time - testified against
the couple at the 1985 trial.
Aldridge and Wilcox each were
convicted . of multiple counts of
rape and gross sexual imposition
and sentenced to life in prison.
In 1994, the three brothers
recanted their testimony when a
private investigator questioned
them.
After a hearing in 1996, Judge
Richard Parrott said he was convinced that the children who testified had been coerced into lying
and that more than 80 pages of
crucial evidence including
police reports listing other suspects
and medical exatm showing no
signs of sexual abuse among the
alleged victims - was omitted
from the cou pie's trial.

LOCKLAND (AP) - This
community is using its expertise in restoring old industrial
sites to help cities in Romania
and Serbia improve their quality of life.
"We look for this to be a
long-term relationship with
both cities," village Administrator Evonne Kovach toldThe
Cincinnati Enquirer for a Tuesday story.
Kovach recendy traveled to
Timisoara, in western Romania , on behalf of the US.
Agency
for
International
Development. She also is helping Pancevo in .central Serbia.
.The group sought her out
because of her work with
brownfields, or former industrial sites that have environmental problems. The village,
. just northeast of Cincinnati,
has several other projects in the
works to make new uses of the
brownfields.
Pancevo will receive about
$100,000 through U.S. AID to
help rebuild infrastructure
destroyed during the 1999
NATO bombing campaign ,
the mayor of that city said.
Srdjan Mikovic, the mayor
of Pancevo and an official in
the
opposition
Serbian
Renewal Movement, said that
his city was one of four in Serbia to be paired with cities in
the United Stares.

deceased, to Andrew . Carl
Mourning, Mary Frances Price,
Nona E. Nelson, Nona Story,
James G . Mourmng, Jam es
Gilbert Mourning, affidavit,
Middleport;
Thomas A. McMahon , Gale
L. McMah o n, to Edward B.
Ross, Ruth Ann Ross, deed,
Scipio ;
Edward B. Ross, Ruth Ann
Ross, to Thomas A. McMahon,
Gale l. McMahon, ~asement;
Patty Ann Pickens, Rankin
R. Pickens, to Michael P, Kloes,
Amy
L. Buckbee, deed ,
Chester;
PDK Construction Inc., to
Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester;
Crystal L. Whitlatch, John
Fisher, Jr., Sarah S. Fisher, to
Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester;
Ernestine Napper, to Columbus Southern Power, right of
way, Rutland;
Howard Logan, Eleanor J.
Logan, to Mary , Ann Fields,
deed, Syracuse;
Murl Boudinot, to Southern
Ohio Coal Company, d~ed,
Columbia;
Richard F. Fick, Jr:, Annette.
Kay Fick, Karen Fick Smith,
Tim L. Smith, to Rebecca
Edwards, deed, Chester;
· Carmel
Sutton
United
Methodist Church , to Tru stees
Sutton Township, deed , Sutton;
Paul CJay, to Equi credit Corporation, deed, Middleport ;
Lucille M . Sauer, deceased, to
Alb ert H . Sauer, affidavit.
Salem ;
Larriena Goody, Larr ie na
Ellison, to Richard Hagerty,

Dorothy Hagerty, deed, Salem;
James Goody, Karen Sue
Goody, to Richard Hager.ty,
Dorothy Hagerty, deed, Salem;
Clarmont P. Harris, Jr., Mary
A. Harris, to Charles R .
Cozart, deed, Olive;
Jack Morrow, Dorothy Johnson, to Jennifer Johnson, deed ,
Letart;
Roger A. Ritchie, Carolyn
Ritchie, to Janice R. Weber,
Janice R. Kestner, Jani ce R.
Ritchie, Charles A. Ritchie,
deed, Chester;
Nona E. Nelson, deceased, to
Patrick Rae Story, Margaret
Lynn ·Story, .M-arga ref Scllwao
Story, Steven Story, James D.
Story, certificate, Middleport;
Jerry St. Clair, Armeda K. St.
Clair, to Daryl E. Chafin, deed,
Olive;
·
Arthur C. Gibson, Jr., to
Harry L. Ramsey, Joanne J.
Ramsey, deed, Scipio;
Stephanie
D.
Cochran,
Stephanie D. Harruff, Joshua P.
Harruff, to Rasco Mills, Sandra
J. Mills, deed, Salisbury;
Pomeroy LTD., to Woda
Colonial Park Limit, deed,
Pomeroy;
Frank Herald, Jr., to Travis
Pierce, deed, Rutland;
Amy See, to Dwight Ashley.
Wanda Ashley, deed, Rutland;
Esther Landon , to Jeffrey
Neil Durst, Bryan David Durst ,
deed, Olive;
Jimmy R. Lee, Kimberly S.
Lee, to jimmy R. Lee, Kimberly S. Lee, deed, Pomeroy;
Kimberly S. Le e, Kimberly
Lee, Jimmy R . Lee, to Wayne
Pauley, Jr. , Cathy Pauley, deed,
Salisbury;

said to Campbell, who' said that
she felt the second, more inclusive plan, was unfa ir to her
Page AI
, employees and other employees
• Trussell and paid from the general fund .
Deputy Scott
Steve Beha, dire cto r of the
Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell
met individually with the board Carleton School and · Meigs
to discuss last week's action Industries, introduced commisadopting a new health insurance sioners to a number of students
plan through Anthem .
and clients of th e county 's
In addition to a 90/ 10 plan
programs .
He
approved for general fund MR / DD
employees,
commissioners announced the MR / DD board
approved a 100 percent reim- will request permission to place
bursement plan for employees at a levy on the Nov. 7 ballot.
the Departme nt of Jobs and
Beha said the board will
Family Services, which Trussell, request a levy to generate an
representing the Ohio Patroladditional $360,000 per year for
men's Benevolent Associa tion
local union , said was unfair to capiral improvements and operdeputies and will likely result in ating expenses, similar to levy
the filing of a grievance by requests made in past years and
union n1embers.
rejected by voters.
Trussell said the insurance
Beha said that be was not preagent who met with county pared Monday to present specif- ·
departments last week said that
ic millage for the levy request,
the 90/l 0 plan was the only plan
which WO!Jld be offererl to because pending electric utility
county employees, and that deregulation will change -the
deputies were required to , but rev.e nue generated by tax levies.
willing to, accept a number of
The deadline for placing
decreases in coverage because levies on the N\)vemb er ballot is
the plan was the only one Aug. 24, and Beha sa id that he
offered.
will meet with the commissionThe commissioners approved
the full-reimbursement plan for ers in early August to present
DJFS employees because the specific information about the
cost was fully reimbursable from levy proposaL
the state. Employees at the
The MR / DD board's last
agency do not pay any cost for successful levy was approved in
their health insuranc.e pian, November 1999, and the board
while general fund employees
has tried consistently for a numnow pay $30 and $200 per
month, respectively, for single ber of years to approve additional levy funds.
and family policies.
Campbell said she felt that the
Mary
Powell
of
the
second plan was unfair to Chester/Shade Historical Assoemployees, and that she was ciation discussed the success of
"disappointed"
that
other Chester/Shade Days, which
departments were not notified
took place the weekend of July
that the second plan was avail15 .
able.
Powell said the event, cenCommissioner Mick Davenport said that the plan was not tered around the Chester Couroffered to county departments thouse, was very successful, and
because the general fund and the that visi\ors registered from 27
individual general fund depart- Ohio towns, as did visitors from
ments could not bear the addiVirginia, West Virginia, Iowa and
tional cost.
"You above anyone else California.
The commissioners approved
should know the condition of
the general fund," Davenport a· contract between the DJFS
and God's NET, a Pomeroy teen
center, involving $60,715 in
Prevention, Retention and Con(USPS 21J.!I60)
Ohio VaiJey Publlshlna Co.
tingency funds from the TempoPublished every afternoon, Mond1y throua:h
. Friday, tll Coutl S1,, Pomeroy, Ohjo by_the
rary Assistan'~- to Ne_edy__F..ami=
- OtiiO- Villey ·ru&amp;IIShliij -compan~ POilie,.oy,lies program.
Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-21S6. Second class post•ae ptid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
The contract services will
.
Member: The Associated Preu, 1nd the Ohio
emphasize d~ug and alcohol-free
Newspape r A.nodation.
' programs for area teenagers , and
POSTMASTER: Send 1ddress conectiom to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun S1., Pomeroy,
will provide fundi~g for interOhio 45769.
•
vention and computer coordinaSUBSCRIPTION RATES
tors and other staff, and field
B~ Carrier or Motor Route
One \\'cek ..................... ,...................- ..... $2.00
trips and other events.
One Month ..... ... ......................... ....... $8.70
One Year ................ ,....... ....................... $104.00
Commissioners discussed with
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Swisher and approved changes
Daily ......................... ,.,, ... ,................... 50 Cenl5
in DJFS job classifications and
Subscribers not desiring to pay· the carrier may
titles, as mandated by the Ohio
remit in 11dvancc dirtct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basis. Cred it will be
Department of Administrative
liven carrier each week .
Services .
No ~ub~cripti o n by mai l permitted in areas
wh~re home carmr service is available
Commissioners also took
action to modify a proposal to
Publisher rese rves lhe right to adjust rates dur·
ing the subscription period. Subsc ription rue
provide employment substdies to
changes may be implemented bY changi ng the
dura1ion o f tl'le subscription.
the Village of Syracuse for lifeMAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
guards.
Inside Melgs Co unty
13 Weeks ............................................. $27.30.
Bob Wingett, grants adminis2:6 Weeks ................................................ $~3 . 82
trator for Syracu se, m et with
52 Weeks ......................................... ...... $105.56
Rates Ouulde Mel&amp;s County
c o rnmi ssioners
earlier
this
IJ Weeks ....... ~.....
.. .... ........ .... $29.25
26 Weeh..........
.. ............ S56.68
month to request assistance with
~2 Weeks... .
.. .......... Sll)9_72
payroll at the pooL At the tim e,
commissioners offered to subsiReader Services
dize positions to qualifying
empl oyees through th e county's
Our main co ncern In all stories Is to he
acc\U'IItc. U yo11 know or tn error In a story,
Summer Youth Employment
call the ne"uoom at (740) 99%·215$. We will
check JOUr lnformallon and make a
Program .
correction lrwarnnted.
New~ Deptrtmenls
Howard said Monday the
The main number l1 992·2155. Departmenl
board would offe r to pay
ertenslons are:
Genenl Manager ...... ...................... Ex.t. 1101..
employees $5. 15, rather than the
News ................................................. EJit. 1102
..................................................... Or Ext.II06
$6. IS offered to other SYEP
Other Stnk:es
Ad,er11slng: ...................................... Ext. 1104
participants, so that the village
Circulation ....................................... Ext. 1103
need not pay non -pa rticipatin g
ClaisiHed Adt .................................. Ext. 1100
employees additional wages.

faom

Mircea Lefchian , spokesman
for Timisoara, said his city was
paired with both Lockland and
Pancevo, as a go-between for
th~ Yugoslavs and the Americans.
.
The money is to be used
over the next 18 months to
repair hearing and w•ter systems in Pancevo, which sits on
the Danube River about 62
miles south of Timisoara,
Lefchian said. Timisoara is to
provide utilities and other
logistical help to run the program, he said.
"The Americans do not
want to go themselves to
Pancevo because of the regime
in Belgrade, and this is why
they will use us to direct the
funds and complete the programs," 'tefchian said.
Cl~anirrg the environment
also is high on .the list, Lefcbian said, after NATO bombs hit
the oil refinery in Pancevo,
polluting the region.
Pancevo, Lockland and
Timisoara were not partnered
before the NATO campaign,
but Kovach said the relationship among the three is already
strong.
"These
countries
are
halfWay around the world, but
all of a sudden you know them
and worry about · them," she
said. "They've lived very hard
lives that we cannot relate to."

Edward
J.
Maksimczak,
deceased,
Elbert
Mullins;
deceased, Gladies Mullins,
deceased, to Billie J. Maksimczak, affidavit;
Arline Davis, deceased, to
Max 0. Davis, deceased, affidavit;
Melvin H. Milliron , Linda D.
Milliron, to Wanda L. Eblin,
deed, Salisbury;
Wanda L. Eblin, to Howard
Searles, Mary Searles, deed, Salisbury;
Moses Norman, deceased, to
Myrtle Norman, c::ertificate,
Rutland;
Myrtle Norman , to Aric 0.
Patterson, ·
Christina
L.
Williams, deed, Rutland;
Lee E. Burnem, Nancy
Burnem, to Donald R. Holcomb, Jr. , deed, Salem;
Dean W. Prushing, Catherine
Marie Prushing, to James M .
Prushing, Jayne M. Prushing,
deed, Olive;
Theresa M . Church, to
·George K. Church, deed, Olive;
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy
Ervin, to Howard R . Ervin Ill,
Megan Ervin, deed, Sutton;
Jeffrey C. Harris, Deborah M.
Harris, to Thomas C. Lewis,
Barbara
M. Lewis, deed,
Lebanon;
Micha el D. Adkins, to Lynda
Adkins , deed, Minersville;
Lynda Adkins, Barbara S.
Alkire, deed, Minersville;
Effie Black, deceased, to Burdell Black , affidavit, Salisbury.

·The Daily Sentinel
1

,_, -

sons.
She said that she would meet.
with Police Chief Bruce Swift
PapAl
, about the complaints today.
Councilman Stephen Houch buildings, and paid for them, and
it 's only fair that the village have ins said he -was particularly eon corned with the foul language
a chance to take them back."
Childs also suggested that a complaint.
Council approved a resoluconsultant be retained to assist in
the preparation of a final plan tion authorizing the placement
for use which must be submitted of a 1-mill levy re·newal on the
to the Ohio Department qf Nov. 7 ballot, which would b~
Education .
used for street lights .
The resolution passed last
The levy would generate
night notes that 60 jobs and
approximately $28 ,000 per year
$15 ,000 in direct income tax
street lights, according to
for
revenue will be lost to the vilClerk Bryan Swann. Lights cost
lage when the schools close.
The economic development the village approximately $2 ,500
commission, he said, hopes that · per month.
the opportunities provided by
A renewal request was rejectthe availability of the schoQ]s ed by Middleport voters in the
might make up for at least part spring, and Iannarelli said this
of that loss.
would be the final opportunity
In other business, Winfred for voters to keep the lights on .
Dent, manager ofWayne's Place,
"If it fails this time, the lights
and
his
daughter, Vicky
will
go out in January," lann~rel­
Pumphrey, a bartender at the
tavern, met with council to dis- li said·.
Council also approved a resocuss their concerns that police
officers in the village are over- lution authorizing the village to
p atrolling the North Second pursue $150,000 in funding
Avenue esrablishment, and dri- through
the
Appalachian
ving customers away.
Regional Commission for street
According to Dent and paving.
Pumphrey, officers have been
The proposal includes $50,000
noted driving past the bar as frein village funds, $29,000 pledged
quently as every 10 minutes, and
sitting in an adjacent parking by the cou nty commissioners
lot, "hounding the bar and our and S192,000 in State Capital
Improvement Program (Issue II)
customers.''
Both Dent and Pumphrey funds for the paving of 5.3 miles
said they believe constant of streets in the village.
patrolling of the area is unneceslannarelli said an abandoned
sary, and that it has created an house at the corner of Walnut
uncomfortable environment for Street and North Fourth Avenue
the bar's patrons.
is being torn down, using funds
" We have worked hard for
from an anonymous source .
over six years to eliminate trouAfter meeting in executive
blemakers and to run a peaceful
business," Dent said last night. session, council voted to r_cplace
"We do not tolerate foolish- Village Inspector Denzil Hudson.
ness ."
In addition to co nstant
The position will be adverpatrolling of the bar, Dent and tised in The Daily Sentinel, and
Pl'mphrey said that officers applications will be available at
recently "charged into" the bar the police department during
from both of its entrances,
regular business hours. The posiwhich they feel was unwarranttion pays S6 an hour based on a
ed and inappropriate, especially
since the bar's staff understand part- time schedule, and the
that they are expected to coop- inspector receives 50 percent of
erate with police officers when all permit fees paid.
Councilman Roger Manley
they visit the bar on official
business.
said that the street committee,.
"They did this instead of meeting prior to last night's
approaching a.n d speaking to the council [meeting, discussed the
butender--en - duty;" Dem said. street ligh"iatWalnut S'treetana
... All of our bartenders have been
North Second Avenue, which
instructed to cooperate with
has been out of order for weeks .
officials."
•
A Lancaster firm is the only
Pumphrey said she and other
company
able to repair the light,
bartenders are routinely followed en route home by police he said, and a part has ' been
officers, and that one of the offi- ordered. He noted that a new
cers also used profane language stree t light . would co sf the vildirected toward one of the bar- lage $5,000.
tenders during a recent visit.
Iannarelli asked rhe cemetery
Dent said la st night that committee to seek bids on the
reports the bar is now for "sale
replacement of a set of steps in
are true, and that problems with
the police department are the the old portion of Riverview
primary reason . Bur, he said, he Cemetery. She said a family has
and the Dent family are now offered a contribution toward
determined to retain ownership the replacement of the steps.
lannarelli noted that the vilas a matter of principle.
lannarelli said last night that lage was accepting donations for
the bar does not present specific a yard sale to be held in August
problems to the community, to benefit the pool operation at
other than public intoxication General Hartinger Park.
and other cases common with
Council also approved the
bars, and that bar management
has been cooperative with police payment of bills in the amount
of $28,616 .96.
officers in the past.
Also present were Council
She also said, though, that officers might be following bar- members Bob Poo ler and Kathy
tend ers home for security rea- Scott.

Rally
from Page AI
Acc ording to Simms, much
more is being planned for the
eve nt. "This is going to be big,
real big," he satd.
American Alloys workers from

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LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-33),

Akzo - 42 ),
AmTedi/SBC- 43 ),
Ashland Inc. - 33')•
AT&amp;T- 33\
Bank One- 33l.
Bob Evans - 1sl.
BorgWarner - 35),
Champi(m- 3~ .
Charming Shops- 5"1•

Clly'Holding- 7~
Federal Mogul- 91,
Flrstar.- 21 ~

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Rocky Boots - Slo

General Electric - 531.
Harley Davidson - 42~
Kmart-7~14

RD Shell- 571.

KroQer -'- 21 ~.
Lands End- 31'/o
Ltd . - 22~.
Oak Hilt Financial- 151.
OVfl-26 ..
BBT -25'),
PeopleS - 14 Y~
Premier- 5'·
Rockwell- 38'!.

Sears - 31 ),
Shoney's-1
Wai·MBrt- 57),
Wendy's-18
Worthrngton- 10~

Daily stocl&lt; reporto are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day'a Iran•
actions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Mild conditions continue
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and sunrise on Wednesday at
6:25a.m.

A stationary high pressure
center is providing the triWeather forecast:
county area with sunny skies
Tonight ... Mostly
cloudy.
during the daytime and clear, Lows in the low to mid 60s.
cool nights .
Wedne~day... Partl:y _dfllld¥·- · Forec~a~st~e~r~s~sata temperatures
Higbs mainly in the low to mid
tonight again would drop into
80s.
the mid-50s to low 60s.
Wednesday night...Fair. Lows
On Wednesday, temperatures
will climb into the low to mid- from the upper 50s to mid 60s,
Extended forecast:
80s under mostly sunny skies,
Thursday... Fair. Highs 80 to
the National Weather Service
85
.
said . The daytime heating and ,
Friday
and
Sarurday... A
increased moisture being drawn
into th~ area will create a chance of showers and thunderchance of afternoon showers or storms. Lows in the 60s With
thunderstorms.
highs in the lower to mid 80s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:52

DISNEY'S THE KID (PGI I
7:10 l 8:200AILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:20

BIG

New SboU's SIIJrfing WeiiJUsuy
1110MA8 l Til ~~ 12·45 2·45 4·45

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

MAGI: RAIROAD

. ' . ' .

(Kid~onily &amp;llutlca~Aie&gt;: Bala.in,Peto Forda ·
'
....,.,., llillilftllilll&amp;

. ....

ALL AG[S. ALL IIMi:S S4.UiJ

-·
~[ :: -~
I ,

. erson's

~ ,....-;G;j
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hiatt•

Ell tit'"
S.II·Cin n•·•• Gu R1n1•
•Suol!i\..1 •t. l fo'• •· • 11 , ,,.~
•( lrWOIII(

Gannett- 56 11.

VALLEY WEATHER

~ --­

Reg. 359
ilr
Special $339.00

\;

Units log 6 calls

. ·~ ~ I

~

I

canceled

\

Sp.&lt;•al $389.00

statements.
Each was charged with seven
counts of criminal damaging and
will appear in Meigs County
Court on Wednesday.

POMEROY - Three men
confessed and been charged in
the vandalism of eight mailboxes
in the Shade area.
Monday, it was reported that
juveniles were charged, but Sheriff James M . Soulsby reportedtoRACINE -Summer reheanal
day that the alleged offenders for Southern Local Marching
were adults: Jason Skinner, 19, Band, ca nceled until further
Trimble, Thomas Burson, 18, notice.
Shade, and Jonathan Stewart, 20,
M iddleport.
According to Soulsby, th e
Athens County Sheriff's DepartPOMEROY - Units of the
, ment contacted his department Meigs
Emergency
Services
about the vandalism of mailboxes answered six calls for assistance on
o n State Route 681, Bearwallow Monday, Units responded as folRidge, Colburn Road and Gilkey lows:
Ridge.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:55 a.m., Main Street, assisted
A male from Athens County
chased a car followin g one of the by Rutland , Candy Tillis, Holzer
vandalism incidents and got a reg- Medical Center;
istration number from the car.
8:39 p.m. , Holzer Medical
After Skinner, the car's owner, Center Clinic, Terri Chambers,
was contacted, he confessed to HMC.
the department that he was the
RACINE
driver of the vehicle and had
I :45 p.m , County Road 28,
helped participate in the alleged assisted by Central Dispatch,
smashing of mailboxes.
Charles McKowen, treated.
He also reportedly ·implicated
RUTLAND
Burson and Stewart, and showed
L30 a.m., Beech Street, Katha sheriff's deputy where the dam- eryn Cox, refused treatment;
aged mailboxes were.
9:44 a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Jack
Burson and Stewart were later Jenkins, HMC;
questioned and admined their
9 p.m., Main Street, Tyler Eblin,
invo lvement, and gave written HMC.

the tri-county area have been out
of work since the plant shut
down earlier this year.
"This is an opportunity for all
of us to join together in a show of
support for the Ameri can Alloys
workers and to have a good time
while doing it," Simms said.
"There will be somethin g for
everyone."

I

42x42x60" Oak Pedestal
Table &amp; 4 Chairs

lbree charged

from

'~ . 41~

[ '

LOCAL BRIEFS

Schools

' "" '"""' l'ln f""'''U '

II I Cu tt Toa Mn" l ~ ~ tl tOftiiOI
· • ~ 1"~!;&gt;/'!" le "'~''" II·G "~' SrtiYn
• [' "'' r ·••llf" ! M 1Au1 P,t
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Reg. $549 Spec1al $509.00

" N'tt~lwno

Reg. $549 Special 5509 00

I FREE DELIVERY I

Same as Cash

Pomero OH

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The Dail Sentinel
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• The Dal,ly..Sentlnel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Roads

Meigs County Reporter posts recent land.transfen
Land tr~nsfers posted
POMEROY - The following land transfers were recently
reported by Meigs County
Recorder Judith A. King:
.
' Mary J. Murray, to Rocky R.
Hupp, Carol J. Hupp, deed,
Salem;
Jeffrey R . Darst, Kitty S.
Darst, Elizabeth Ann Gilkey, to
Linn K. Darst, deed, Middleport;
Timothy P. Gillilan, Teresa R.
Gillilan, to Kathryn Wilderm
Meredith, deed, Chester;
Charles R. Swigger II,
deceased, to Janet L. Swigger,
affidaviti
Fannie L. White, deceased, to
Jeffrey R. Darst, Kitty S. Darst,
affidavit;
Loretta Ann Beegle, Loretta
Ann Meier, to Theodore Meier
Beegle, Shirley Beegle Huston,
Rita Beegle Fisher, deed,
Pomeroy;
Jean Lama Moore, deceased,
to David Bumgardner, Shirley
Bumgardner, deed, Middleport;
Larry B. Morris, to Joseph A.
Anderson, deed, Rutland;
Robbie P. Jacks, Stephanie L
Jacks, Donna Y.Jacks, Robert E.
Jacks, to Robert E. Ja cks,
Donna Y. Jacks, deed, Bedford;
Gerald Donohue, Linda K.
Donohue, to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, right of
way, Scipio ;
Franklin E . Ihle, Kathy l.
lhle, to Tuppers Plains Chester
Water District, right of way,
Bedford;
Terry R. Reuter, Mandy E .
Reuter, to Tupp e r Plains
Chester Water Distri ct, right of
way, Bedford ;
Robert V King , ·to Larry J.
Ball, Rita D. Ball, deed , Rutland;
Vincent
Davis, Virginia
Davts, ro Vincent C. Davis , Virginia M . Davis, deed, Lebanon ;
Vin ce nt C. Davis, Virguua M .
Davis, to Vincent C. Davis, Virginia M . Davis, deed, Lebanon;
Herbert W. Brown, to 'Hcrb~rt W. Brown Revocable, a ffi davit ;
Glenn E. Enslen, Patri c ia
Mc C ullo ugh , to Constance R .
Enslen, deed , Sutton ;
Davie Mae Butcher, R obe rt
Dale Butcher, Anita J- Butc her,
to Alpha G. Butcher, deed, Scipw;
Scott M . Dillon , to Ju lie E .
Dillon, deed, Chester.
Sally A. Ca loga r, to Wdliam P.
Moffett, affidavit ;
Rodney D. Tutti~. Br~nda
Kate Tuttle, to Eric D. Tuttle,
Candace L. Tuttle, deed,
Chester;
·Ray Wellman, R•y E. Wellman, to Robert B. Wellman ,
deed, Salem;
Golda
Ma e
M o urnin g,
deceased, Golda May Rou sh,

Tuesday, July 25, 2000

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_Th_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________I_)~illicall
The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6tufied in 1948

Page A4
naesclay, July 15, 1000

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OUR VIEW

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Honzons

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, July 25, the 207t h day of2000.There are 159 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 25, 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of th e Army.
the first officer to hold the rank.
On this date:
In 1593, France's King Henry IV converted from Protestantism to
Roman Catho licism.
In I 868, Congress passed an act creating the Wyoming Territory.
In 1909, French aviator LouiS Ulenot flew across the English C hannel in a monoplane, traveling from Calai s to Dover in 37 minutes.
In 1944, Bing C rosby and the Andrews Sisters recorded Cole
Porter's "Don't Fence Me In" 111 Lus Angeles for Decca Records.
In 1946, the United States detonated an ato mi c bomb at Uikini
Atoll in the Pacific 111 the fiN underwater test of the device.
In 1952, Puerto Rico bec ame· a self-governing com monwealth of
the United States.
In 1956, 51 people died when the Italian liner Andrea Doria sa nk
after colliding with th e Swedish ship Stockholm ofl'the N ew England
coa~t.

In !978, Louise Joy Brow n, th e fim test tuhe baby, was born in Oldham , England; she had been co nceived through in- vitro fertilizati o n.
In 1985. a spokeswoman for R oc k Hudson co ntl rmed that the
actor, hospitalized in Pam. was sut1'erllt f: fr&lt;llll AID~ . (Hudson d1ed the
following October.)
In 1994, Israeli Prim e Minister Yitzhak R;~bin and Jo rdan 's King
HUssein sign ed a dc:claration at th e \Xihite House endin g th eir co untries' 46-year-o ld fimml state o f war.
Ten years ago: The US amba«ador to lr.ll! , Apri l GI.!Spie.m et w ith
Iraqi Pre&lt;&gt;ident Sadda111 Husse in to di ~c uli.., Iraq\ eco nom ic Jisput c
with Kuwair. The Senatl' torrnall y dcnou nccJ Sc.:n. J) ,wc DurcnbL·rger, R - Minn ., for fin :mci;Jl lmp rn pri L·tic,. Co median ll mc;.l!1J lL' lt1rr
sparked controve rsy with an off-key renditm n of the "Star-Sp ;~ngl e d
Banner" during .1 doubl e- header .It Ja ck Murphy Starli11m in '&gt;an
Diego.
Five years ago: A bomb expl ode d on a Paris subway. kill ing &gt;t'Vl'lt
people and Injuring at least 60. A U.N. war cr in1 es tribunal Jmb ctcd
Bosni;m Serb leader Radovan KaraJz1c, arl lJY commander (;en . lta tko
Mladic, and 22 o th er Serbs ftn w.1r crime s.
One year ago : The Wooch toc k '&lt; )&lt;) music fest iva l 111 !\.on 1e, N.Y.,
ended in fires and looting. Lance Annc;trong ro de to victory in the:
Tour de Fran ce. M orocco held ,a fu neral tor King Hassan II .
To day's Birthda y.: Actress E1tdk (; etty is 77 . Actres- 1\nrba ra H.1rr is
is 65. Musician Verd111e White (Ea nh , Wind &amp; Fire) is 4'!. Model actress iman is 45 . Ca rtoonist !Cay Uillm[.,"ley ("C urti s'') is 43. 1-l.ock
muSician Thurston Moore (So ni c Yo uth) is 42. Actress ll lc,ma Dougla.s
is '35. Country si nger Marty Urown IS 35. Actor Matt Le UI,mc is 33.
Actor Brad R enffo is \H .

Tuesday, July 25, 2000'

DEAR ABBY:. A 70-year-old man
wrote that hE has been seeing a recently widowed woman , and they are considering living together. He asked how
he should introduce a live-in companion to friends. You gave him a variety of
choices, running the gamut from ."best
friend," "partner" and "sweetheart" to
ufriend.''
Abby, there is NO acceptable term to
call someone you are shacked-up with.
A person's age does not matter. If they
are living together in sin, that is what it
is!
We need to stop accepting unacceptable behavior. Your best advice for
"Confused" should have been to do the
right thing: Marry the lady. -- TIRED
OF ALL THIS MISBEHAVING , SANTEE, CALIF.
DEAR TIRED: I disagree. The gentleman did not ask whether 'Or not he

' people married. A license is simply a
matter of record against iny litigation.
if an e lderly couple has spelled out all
their health and financial involvements
for each other, let them be hu sband and
wife. Our·courts still rule fairly whether
eve ry detail is spelled out or a marriage
license is in sight .
Certainly the license concep t is
ADVICE
good, as it prohibits underage un ions
and marriage falsifications. But for the
should marry the lady. Times . have government to use' it as a gun to rob the
changed. Seniors who live together elderly of pension or handicap benefits
choose to do so for a variety of reasons, is a disservice.
which are usually well thought out.
Why California needs to charge a
Read on:
$60-plus marriage license fee (tax) is
DEAR ABBY: Tell the 70-year-old another issue. It's an impediment to the
Florida widower not to hesitate in call- poor. Ma,ybe Florida charges as much.
ing the widow his wife. Long before Yes-- she can be his "best friend," etc.,
governme~ts issUed licenses, a marriage
but in God's eyes and those of their witwas -- and still is -- essentially an oral nesses , that couple ca n also be husband
contract. A license per se does not keep and wife. -- PASTOR WIL NUCK-

Dear

Abby

SOCIETY NEWS

New enterprises may be source
of more jobs
Jobless figures for Jun e were release d for Ohio and West Virginia
last week. For the tri-co unty area. Gallia and Mei~,'S counties co ntinued a slight decline, while Mason County saw an increase.
Gailia's unemployment was 7.3 percent, Meigs was at 10.5, and
Mason went to 6.5, up from 5.6 during May.
Officials pomted out decreases in JOblessness were partly attn butable to the number of people hired to comp lete the census. Those
jobs, however, are nearing an end, and point up the area's crying
need for employment expansion.
Temporary employment won't get the job don e. Building a
stronger source of jobs in the tri-county area is the onlv way of
bringing those monthly rates down where they need to be. Like
closer to the national average of 4 percent, and in some places. even
lower.
That's eaSier said than done. A Toyota plant fills a lot of the need
for new jobs. But if th ere aren't enough manufacturers around, then
it's time to investigate other possibilities.
The Appalachian R egiona l Commissio n's town meenng in Iron ton earlier this month told us there are other horizons to investigate .
The expanding communications industry of1'ers one \vay of bringing in new JObs .
·
Attracting those jobs to the tri-county is a task requmng a cooperative.effort an1ong econon1ic development offices in eac h county
One county might stand a chance at seizing the brass ring, but think
of the possibilities if a unifi ed approach to job creati on was formed .
It also means that in a changmg employment sceue, with tec h nology playing a maJOr part in nearly everything, the area has to be
made more attractive to these kinds of companies.
Improvement of telecommunications access for th e area should be
given a detailed analysis if the future of the job sce ne lies th ere.
Landin~ th e-big-ti ~ket--job~ &lt;:r.,ator is "ill a goalr Bur diversifyin g
and reaching out into other businesses tapping into the use of the
internet actually has some possibiliti es for southern Ohio and West
Virginia. And it could very well be that the region , removed from
urban centers, is well-suited for such enterprises.
If isolation is the primary concern about re locating business here.
technology has provided the way to bndge the country wtth the
city. The sooner we tap into opportunities it provides, the better.

_Th_e_D_-_ru~ly_S_e_n_ti_ne_J__· ---------~~~~t!
No matter what they call it, reader says they are still shacking up

Page AS

Ladies report on wreaths

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Incoherent foreign policy requ,ires an open debate
Congre;sional Republicans say they might
" "' pay for Middle East peace. Democrats
oppose free trade agreements. President·C iinton
bombed Serbia , but wouldn't stop genocide in
Rwanda. The GOP presidential candidate says
he wouldn 't stop genocide either, but he wants
to bu ild a $100 billion missile shield ove r the
United States.
What does all this add up to' It doesn't add
up at all as a coherent foreib'll poli Gy for the
world's only superpower. And it surel y c ries out
for a robust foreign policy debate Ill the first
presidential electio n of the 21st century.
U niortunately. that isn't likely to happen -as
evidenced by the fact that Vice President AI
Gore and Texas Gov. George W. l3ush were
askL·d only tW'O minutt's' worth of question ~
about fore ib~' issues during hour-long telev ision
interviews on July 16.
H,Jf of those questions Wt're about missile
defense, a worthy topic, but left a world of subjects uncovered, including how much of fi.tture
budget surpluses should be devoted to defense
al1d foreign aid and where it's appropriate to
se nd U.S. toret·s.
There are a few people - besides ult ra-isolatio mst Reform Par~ ca~&lt;did.1te- [&gt;at Bu chanan
- who are trying valiantly to trigger the needed debate.
One of them is Gen. James Jones, commandant of the Marine Corps, who " warn ing that
a country that spends only 2.9 percent of its
gros~ domestic product o n defense, as America
now clocs, is bound to lose influence in the
world.
Two oth ers are Scm. Max C leland, D- Ga ..
""d l'at Roberts, R-Kan .. who have bunched a
-.l:ric'i ol St: naLe disL·ussiuns aimt·d at f.1shionmg
•1 bipartisan U.S . foreign .md military strategy,
wht ch they think the United States doesn't haw

practically nowhere in public discussion, except
as the potential cost of the "robust" anti-missile
shield that Bush favors.
C leland told me he's afraid that missile
defense - what he calls "the Maginot Line in
the sky" - will dominate the foreign policy
and defense discussion that occurs this year,
obscuring"the mismatch between our commitments and our resources."
"We've downsized o ur forces by one-third
the past decade,'' C leland said, .. but we've
NEA COLUMNIST over
i1icreased overseas deployments by . more than
300 percent. It can't go on. That's what the real
debate ought to be about."
On the Senate floor m April, in one of his
comm erce and political interests haw proscolloquies
witll Roberts, C leland brought up
pered.
"13ut," Jones told me in an interview, "we some o ther subjects: congressional Republicans'
can't kid o urselves that we can always do more refusal to ratify arms treaties and their slowness
with less, that we ca n be le" modern than we in paying U.N. dues, Democratic opposition to
need to be forever, and that because things are trade agreements, and the adtninisrration\
" hurnanitarian interventions in violation of
OK today they will be OK forever."
He said that at the current rates of spendi ng, national sovereignty."
"The sum total of our actions has been far
the military serv1ces can't adequately replace
agmg aircraft and ships, retain top-quality per- more unilateral than any of us would have
sonnel, aond maintain a presence in crucial areas intended,'' C leland sai d. "This is relatively incoherent,'' though other nations think it's "orgaof the world.
"Va€Uums will be ·~created and people will nized" and are offend ed by it. ~"We have to get back to some basic undermove in who don't wish us well:.' said Jones. ·
standing
of who we are and what we are doing
"That\ just the nature of the world."
Jones said he isn't sure who this country's in the world," h e added .
Both of the presidential candidates have made
next " peer rival" will be - possibly C hina, possibly Russia - but he is sure there will be one speeches on foreign and defense policy. Bush
leaves the impression that he wants to spend
or more eventually.
The United States also fa ces threats from ter- more on defense but would be cautious about
rorist groups and smaller hostile countries, he committing U.S. forces overseas.
Gore apparencly would maintain the C lint011
said, which someday may be able to detonate a
weapon of ma&gt;S destruction instde the United policy uf humanitarian interventions, increase
States. ·That 's my 2 1st century Pearl Harbor foreign aid , and stick with current defense.
spendin g levels, w hich Congress and the
nightmare,'' he said .
Jones quotes favorably an estimate from for- administration lately have in creased.
But America's mle in the world is too impormer Democratic Defense Secretary Harold
now.
·'
tant
to be voted on impressionisticaUy.The cane
In congress ional testimony, speeches and Brown that the United States ought to be
intnview s. Jones has been sayin~; that past spend ing 1 percent to 1 .5 percent more of didates need to be grilled on it, and they need
cktense investments - averaging 8 percent of GDP on defense than it is.That means $100 bil- to grill each other.
the mtion's GDP over the past 60 years and 6 lion to S1SO billion a year mo re than the cur(Morto11 Koudracke is cxewti11e editor ~J' Roll
percent during the Cold War - established the rent $300 billion budget.
Coil,
tire nelt'spaper if Capitol Hill.)
So much money - or the need for it. - is
··,L'Oiriry umbrella ·• under ·which U.S. va lu es,

Morton
Kondracke

'HARDBALL'

Clear division if candidate strength to decide race
ble of dmng down the road. in tim, hiS candidacy, whi ch came out of nowhere two years
ago, resembles a high- flying stock ljkc Amazon.com. It's not about his past petformance.
H t'rl' ''\ how it worb:
It's about the ni che he has created for future
People see Gc·orge W. Bush a.s II lore likeabk sales.
In marketing lingo, G eorge W. Bush has
than lm ri val. and more of a leader. They see A1
"branded"
himself as the young political entreC o re ,J, ;J ju nior p•utncr in th L· C linton admin l'itr ;ttion \ 'itrong t'conornic record , a.o:; more
preneur from the American SouthwesL He carries
with h1111 th e spirit of the hotshot start- up,
cx pcri J.-'Ilcc:d in national and world po licy than ~
the I PO about to make a fortune for voters
Bu sh. a~ soli d on abortion nghts.
T h1, clear division of assets will Jccidt· tht· with the m oxlt' to get aboard early.
For months, ever since his Dresde n-style
c k·L"t ion thi '\ Nov. 7.
Fnrgct t11L·- poll numbers. T hree weck o; ago, bombin g ofJo hli McCain in South Carolina ,
!lush was ah ead in the Gallup by 12 po ints. Bu1h has worked at this se lf-branding. He 's
Tod.1y h..,· \ up by two. Two Wf..'l'b fn jm now, Amen ca's Sonny Uoy. the kid w1th the sun shine smile. th e ready handshake fo r black and
fi.,lluWlll~ hi . ; bourKc ti·01n th t• R.cpublic m
Lonvt· ntion, he'll be flying high a~.1i 11.
white hancl\ alike. Like Ike , J ac k, Ronm e and
Thl'"L' numh LT~ m c ~n alm o'i t not hi ng today. Uill , he's radi.ttl'll that same o utdoorsy gleam
T hey wi ll mt&gt;a n absol urd y nothing come th:u h ::~.5~ .llwayo.; , wh t' nl'ver Am ericans havl' had
Nove mhl' r.
the option , outshined the downtown firm of
Wh:1r \.\'ill m.HttT 1s tilt· strcnt--.rth ~ )f rh"· two Dewey. Dukakis &amp; Dole.
IJH.:n \ J~'\l't~ .1 ~ candid,lt es. Why? Ike a usc \vht:n
Uush own s another ready asset: Hl' 's got the
vo tt·n get down to deciding thi " tir11t p ret;idcn - look of a le-ader. As governor of a 'itatc, he cartial electio n of th e rentll ry, they will pick the ri e'i th e resu me of the guy- in-charge down
man wi th the best cham.T of protlTt lllg th eir there in " don 't- mess- with-Texas" cou ntry.
Th ese arc the qualiti es likeahility and
a."ets. Th ey al ways do.
In 111 ak lll g rh e1r1c.m.: ful .lSSt'"'inh.: nt, th r:y will leadership ~ that po llsters luvc ID-cd as
look .It wh ich man, uu ~ h or Gore, jo; the most Bu sh's strengths. Peopl e like him beca use th ey
soli d bet to pl' rform ((,r th em .
like him . He's a leader for the undeniabl e reaUush. as I said , has so me obviou s strcn!,'lhs. son th at he's not been a follower, a v1ce presiUnfortunately, must have to do with t he "Uent.
By co ntrast, Gore's strength is of a bri ck-andpromise, th e notio n of wha t he might be capa-

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
WASHINGTON - Bush vs. (;o re is a battle bct\wcn the "brand" and .. brick and mortar," between Amazon .co m and thl' blu e chips.

mortar kind.
The economy is the strongest in world history. When .the Democrats took charge, the
growth rate was zero. Now, that's the size of the
deficit. Seven years ago, middle-class voters had
worries. Now they have savings . Duri(lg tl)e
Bush recession of th e early 90s. they were
angry that their kids, whose colleges cosi them
so much, didn't have jobs. In 2000, they are a
little jealous of what their kids are doing.
Gore has two other assets, both money in the
bank: One is experience. He's been working
a l ongsid~ th e likes of Robert Rubin and
Robert R eich. He 's got th e keys to the factory
that produced the balanced budget, the free
trade, the growth, all those miUions of 4111 (k)s
out there.
•·
Second, and men hate ·to hear this, he's got an
issue of direct, perso nal importance to th~ ·
largest interest ~roup in the ~mcrican elcc ..
toratc - wmncn . (;ore 1s pro-choice. Bush is
not. Gore backs the co nstitutional right to an
abortion . Uush doesn't.
·
So don 't look .J t th e polls. They're tickle.
Assay the assets. Weigh Bush's so- f.1r-sucecssful
branding against Gore 's bricks and m ortar. Ask
yourself: Which little pi~oy has bll!!t his house
with straw and which with brick' ·

(Cirris Afauhm•s, dlief &lt;
1. tire Smr Fra11cisco
Examiucr's Wasf1ir~~to t1 Burctm, is host t!{ "Hard·
/,a/1'' "" CNHC a111l MSNBC: c.tblc rlwrlllcls. 77rr
1999 editiam of'iflardball" wa' p11blished b)' To ttrhstolle BO&lt;&gt;ks.)

the Ohio Department encampment at Mt. Union
College in Alliance in June. He was delegate for
POMEROY - A report on the wreath laying the camp along with James Oiler of Rio Grande
ceremony at the Buffington Island Battlefield was and Keith Ashley of Rocksprings. Ashley was
given at the first regular meeting of the newly elected Ohio Department council and appomted
organized Maj. Daniel McCook Circle \04, Ladies as Buffington Island Battlefield chairman. A preof the Grand Army of the Republic.
sentation on the Underground Railroad was a
Whitney Ashley, president, thanked all those highlight of the meeting.
who assisted in hosting the reception for the parA report was given on the protest concerning
ticipants of the Buffington Island ceremony, the die National Archives proposed increases in fee s
Civil War Memorial Day ceremonies at the Meigs for pre- \900 rnilitary records. Information o n this
County Civil War statue, and the charter luncheon was given at the department encampment and
resulted in mote letters of protest.
and induction ceremonies.
She noted that she has received four requests for
Trowbridge noted that this year's ceremonies at
membership from Huntington, W.Va., and Barbara the Civil War monument on Memorial Day
James requested II applications for family mem- attracted the largest crowd yet and he thanked
bers. Ashley also announced the district meeting at camp members who attended the services that
Bridgeport in September.
weekend at the Spring Hill Cemetery in HuntingFaye Wallace showed a pair of Civil War glasses ton where the camp presented a wreath.
Keith Ashley reported on the crowd of 600 at
used by her grandfather who fought in the Civil
War. She noted that the glasses had only one lens Canal Winchester where a statue to Alfred Canas his eye was shot out at the Battle ofWinchester. non, hero of Andersonville Prison, was dedicated.
Work is being planned to assist in the project
Ashley played "Taps" on the bugle at the cerewith the Sons of Union Veterans to locate ail mony. He also rep&lt;jrted on the marker dedication
Union soldiers in Meigs County.
for Charles Schorn of Pomeroy, one of Meigs
Jean Hilton of Parkersburg gave a report on the County's three Civil War Congressional Medal of
Ohio Department meeting in June at Mt. Union Honor winners.
The commander reported on Buffington Island
College. She talked of the impressiveness of the
ceremonies she witnessed there and the presenta- Battlefield wreath-laying ceremony attended by
tio 0 on the Underground Railroad museum at · well over a hundred with 20 wreaths being preFlushing.
sen ted . Ron Eastman was commended for his stirThe members then enjoyed a Civil War pro- ring patriotic comments at the ceremonies.
gram by James Cline of Beverly, followed by
David North of Gallipolis reported on the dedrefreshments and discussion time.
ication of the statue to Gen. William T. Sherman of
.
Lancaster on July 2. Three members of the camp
Veterans hear
hero---participated, and over 6oo speetators were present.
The camp has wntten a letter of protest to the
MIDDLEPORT -James Cline of Beverly Federal
· Commission be cause of
spoke on the history of Cpl. John Perry Wolfe, Jr. the failure of both
stations in Huntingof Racine, at a recent meeting of Brooks-Grant ton, W.Va., to cover
Island event for
Camp Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War the last three years
request for them to do
held at Middleport.
~
so.
Cline said that Wolfe carried a $5 million payTrowbridge reported on
dedication
roll for the Union Army in a dilapidated trunk as of a new veterans' monument to
Col. Lemuel
a part of his duties. There were 72,000 Union Zenas Cadot at Mound Hill Cemetery in Gallipotroops who hadn't been paid in four months as lis. Relatives from as far as California came for the
rebels had been attacking payroll transports. Oeser- event. The camp provided. fife and drum and a million was beginning to occur as a result. With itary gun salute for the 63 attendees. Plans are
Rebels watching for armed guards, Cpl. Wolfe of being made for two more monument dedications
Company E, 4th W.Va. Infantry iraveled with this fall.
nothing but a pistol as his protection without
Members were encouraged to write articles for
identification and boarded a train for Harper's the new Meigs County history book. One memFerry.
ber showed an original navy can non rammer and
Upon delivery he was asked what was in the another an original Civil War smoking pipe.
trunk . He replied that he didn't know for sure, but
James Cline was welcomed as a new member of
he had a good idea. Cline then displayed a repro- the camp based on his uncle, Silas D Wolte of
duced roster of Cpl. Wolfe's company.
Company D, 18th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Silas
Michael Trowbridge, commander, conducted died in the Battle of Stone's River, Tenn ., and IS
the meeting with Gerald Crawford reporting on buried there in the natio nal cemetery.

OLLS, FAIR OAKS, CALIF.
DEAR EX-WIFE; You r certai nl y
DEAR PASTOR NUCKOLLS:
· don't want it to appea r that you don 't
admire yo~r compassion and your wis- care th at you r ex-hmba11d ha s died .
dom . I know there are pastors such as Simply say: " Yes, I'm fine . I'm sure th&lt;·
yourself who are willing to perform children would love to hear from you."
"commitment ceremonies ." I hope the
DEAR ABBY: I would lake to add
couple in question takes your letter to this to your "You Kn ow When You're
heart.
Getting Old" collection:
DEAR ABBY: My ex-husband
You know you're getting old when
passed away recently. We were married you don't recpgni ze a sin gle cele brity in
for 17 years -- divorced for 16 -- and the "Today's Birthday" colu mn of your
we had three children. Both of us had newspaper' -- JOSEPH H . Z IMMER happily remarried years ago.
MAN . WILMINGTON , DEL.
Since his death, my closest friends
To receive a collection of A bby's
(and even my sister) keep asking me, most memorable -- and most frequ ent""Are you OK?" .. Are you going to bc .all ly req ue sted -- poems and essays. se nd a
right? " I find this very annoying.
business-sized . sel f-addre ssed envel op e.
I think their sympathy should be plus check or mon ey . o rder fur $3.\1 5
expressed to my children instead of me. ($4.50 111 Canada) to : Dear Abby's
Have you any suggestions as to what I " Keepers." P.O. Ilox 447 , Mount Morcan say to them? -- E.X.-WIFE IN ris, IL 6\054-0447. (Pomge is· included.)
·
KENTUCKY

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TUESDAY,July 25
POMEROY
American
legion Auxiliary. Drew Webster
Post 39, 2 p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY - Chamber of
Comm erce board meetin g, 7:30
a.m. Tuesday.
RACINE - The Racine Area
Co mmunity Organization will
m eet Tlaesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park. There will be a potluck
"'
dinner.
MIDDLEPORT - A "splash
bash", Middleport Pool, Tuesday,
5 to 7 p.m. No admission, free
food and games, ages 10 to 18.
Sponso red by John l cntes, M eigs .
County Prosecutor Abstine nce
Education Program funded by
Meigs County Departme nt of
Children and Family Services,
Meigs County Health Department, Wellness Block Grant, and
other age ncies.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township TruSiees will meet in
special session on Tuesday ~t 5
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station
to discuss personnel and flood
mi~igation issues .

WEDNESDAY,Juiy 26
RACINE - The PomeroyRacine Lodge 164 Free and
Accepted Masons special meeting, W ednesday at 7:30 p.m. to
discuss work in the Master Mason
degree. Refreshments.
POMEROY Wildwood
Garden C lub, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
home of Chris Chapman, Water
Street, Syracuse.
REEDSVILLE - Mt. Oliver
Church, 7:30 service Wednesday.
Rev. John Elswick, speaker. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites public.
THURSDAY, July 27
POMEROY Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
in regular session Thursday, 8
p.m .. Meigs SWCD Otlice.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
RUTLAND - Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's Fel lowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Rutland Church of Christ. Program, Jane Wise, Janet Bolin and

Judy Snowden. Pomeroy C hurch ,
devotions; report on wonu n of
the Bible.
SHAD-E - R eviva l Thursday
through Saturday. Graham Chapel
Church betwe en Count y Road[
75 and county road 25 . Singer&gt;
for Thursday, Chuck and Shirley
Dailey of Athens; for Friday Marti
Short of Chester: for Saturday.
Proclaim of New Haven . W. Va,
Evangelist. Rev. John El swtc k,
Athens.
FRIDAY,July 28
RACINE - AU th ose inter"
ested in playin g volleyball fo r
Sou thern Juni or Hi gh. m ee t Friday, 4 p.m. at th&lt;· school. For more
information , call' Becky Adkin•.
949-1062.
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.

of local

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSU MER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
W

How do you dec1de what type of business
would be appropriate when establi shing your
ow n at- home business ?
I
To answer this question , make a list of all
paid and volunt ee r positions and jobs you have
had throughout your li fe . include military service and trainin g. Co nsider your interests,
hobbies , talents and skills. Note degrees, specialized instnrction, licenses and credentials
you have for specific responsibilities. Also
record any accomplishments, honors, awards
and successful programs that you have had .
Based upon this inventory, what type of
work do yo u e njoy ' At what do you excel'
Could you turn a part-time hobby into a
thriving bu siness' What could be your niche ?
Envision how you co uld incorporate cus-.
tomi-zed twists o n co nventional enterprises .
Once you have chosen your business, decide
where you will work. If it is going to be in the
home, check lo cal regulations and zoning laws
to determine the legality of establishing a busi ness n your neighborhood .
If the business will be in the home, set aside
a specific part of your house for th e business.
With customers coming to your h '11i1e; you
may want to have outside aGcess and be closed
off from the rest of th e ltous c. This not only
offers privacy to your clients, but it also allows ,

Based upon this inventory, what type of
work do you enjoy? At what do you
excel'? Could you turn a part-time ·
hobby into a thriving business'? What
could be your niche? Envision how you
could incorporate customized twists on
conventional enterprises.
separat ion of work and home for you . in addi tion it is important to have another telep hone
line and answering machme foi the busmess,
so fami ly calls will not interfere with the busi ness.
It would be wise to hire -severa l professi o n- .,:
als to help your with your bu siness. An
accountant ca n help you establish a bookkeeping and record system . A law yer cou ld be co nsulted on an as-needed ba sis for le ga l advi ce o n
setting up the business and how to prevent
lawsuits. An in suran ce agent can talk to you
about coverage.
Financial advisors anc\ co nsultant s, c hambers
of co n1mercc , organizations for bu siness pro fesvonals, sm all busin ess developm e nt centers,
bari'ks, libraries and oth e rs who have homebased businesses would ·also be exce ll ent
sources of advice .
Wi t h appropriate skill s, abilities and apti tud e, a home - ba sed bu si ness does not haw to
be ju st a dream. With tun c. effo rt a n d
resources, it can be a reality.

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have ASpecial Meigs
County Fair Preview Edition • .This Year's Edition Promises To
Be One Of The BIGGEST AND BEST EVER!
Look For Thi1 Special Edition In Your
Friday, Augulf 11th Paper .
BE SURE YOUR
BUSINESS IS A PART
OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

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DAVEorMATI
at

992-2155
FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Daily Sentinel

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_Th_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________I_)~illicall
The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6tufied in 1948

Page A4
naesclay, July 15, 1000

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euY! THeYPeS'!RVep "0 Pka! ALL OF ~M r

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Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

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noud.

OUR VIEW

•

Honzons

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, July 25, the 207t h day of2000.There are 159 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 25, 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of th e Army.
the first officer to hold the rank.
On this date:
In 1593, France's King Henry IV converted from Protestantism to
Roman Catho licism.
In I 868, Congress passed an act creating the Wyoming Territory.
In 1909, French aviator LouiS Ulenot flew across the English C hannel in a monoplane, traveling from Calai s to Dover in 37 minutes.
In 1944, Bing C rosby and the Andrews Sisters recorded Cole
Porter's "Don't Fence Me In" 111 Lus Angeles for Decca Records.
In 1946, the United States detonated an ato mi c bomb at Uikini
Atoll in the Pacific 111 the fiN underwater test of the device.
In 1952, Puerto Rico bec ame· a self-governing com monwealth of
the United States.
In 1956, 51 people died when the Italian liner Andrea Doria sa nk
after colliding with th e Swedish ship Stockholm ofl'the N ew England
coa~t.

In !978, Louise Joy Brow n, th e fim test tuhe baby, was born in Oldham , England; she had been co nceived through in- vitro fertilizati o n.
In 1985. a spokeswoman for R oc k Hudson co ntl rmed that the
actor, hospitalized in Pam. was sut1'erllt f: fr&lt;llll AID~ . (Hudson d1ed the
following October.)
In 1994, Israeli Prim e Minister Yitzhak R;~bin and Jo rdan 's King
HUssein sign ed a dc:claration at th e \Xihite House endin g th eir co untries' 46-year-o ld fimml state o f war.
Ten years ago: The US amba«ador to lr.ll! , Apri l GI.!Spie.m et w ith
Iraqi Pre&lt;&gt;ident Sadda111 Husse in to di ~c uli.., Iraq\ eco nom ic Jisput c
with Kuwair. The Senatl' torrnall y dcnou nccJ Sc.:n. J) ,wc DurcnbL·rger, R - Minn ., for fin :mci;Jl lmp rn pri L·tic,. Co median ll mc;.l!1J lL' lt1rr
sparked controve rsy with an off-key renditm n of the "Star-Sp ;~ngl e d
Banner" during .1 doubl e- header .It Ja ck Murphy Starli11m in '&gt;an
Diego.
Five years ago: A bomb expl ode d on a Paris subway. kill ing &gt;t'Vl'lt
people and Injuring at least 60. A U.N. war cr in1 es tribunal Jmb ctcd
Bosni;m Serb leader Radovan KaraJz1c, arl lJY commander (;en . lta tko
Mladic, and 22 o th er Serbs ftn w.1r crime s.
One year ago : The Wooch toc k '&lt; )&lt;) music fest iva l 111 !\.on 1e, N.Y.,
ended in fires and looting. Lance Annc;trong ro de to victory in the:
Tour de Fran ce. M orocco held ,a fu neral tor King Hassan II .
To day's Birthda y.: Actress E1tdk (; etty is 77 . Actres- 1\nrba ra H.1rr is
is 65. Musician Verd111e White (Ea nh , Wind &amp; Fire) is 4'!. Model actress iman is 45 . Ca rtoonist !Cay Uillm[.,"ley ("C urti s'') is 43. 1-l.ock
muSician Thurston Moore (So ni c Yo uth) is 42. Actress ll lc,ma Dougla.s
is '35. Country si nger Marty Urown IS 35. Actor Matt Le UI,mc is 33.
Actor Brad R enffo is \H .

Tuesday, July 25, 2000'

DEAR ABBY:. A 70-year-old man
wrote that hE has been seeing a recently widowed woman , and they are considering living together. He asked how
he should introduce a live-in companion to friends. You gave him a variety of
choices, running the gamut from ."best
friend," "partner" and "sweetheart" to
ufriend.''
Abby, there is NO acceptable term to
call someone you are shacked-up with.
A person's age does not matter. If they
are living together in sin, that is what it
is!
We need to stop accepting unacceptable behavior. Your best advice for
"Confused" should have been to do the
right thing: Marry the lady. -- TIRED
OF ALL THIS MISBEHAVING , SANTEE, CALIF.
DEAR TIRED: I disagree. The gentleman did not ask whether 'Or not he

' people married. A license is simply a
matter of record against iny litigation.
if an e lderly couple has spelled out all
their health and financial involvements
for each other, let them be hu sband and
wife. Our·courts still rule fairly whether
eve ry detail is spelled out or a marriage
license is in sight .
Certainly the license concep t is
ADVICE
good, as it prohibits underage un ions
and marriage falsifications. But for the
should marry the lady. Times . have government to use' it as a gun to rob the
changed. Seniors who live together elderly of pension or handicap benefits
choose to do so for a variety of reasons, is a disservice.
which are usually well thought out.
Why California needs to charge a
Read on:
$60-plus marriage license fee (tax) is
DEAR ABBY: Tell the 70-year-old another issue. It's an impediment to the
Florida widower not to hesitate in call- poor. Ma,ybe Florida charges as much.
ing the widow his wife. Long before Yes-- she can be his "best friend," etc.,
governme~ts issUed licenses, a marriage
but in God's eyes and those of their witwas -- and still is -- essentially an oral nesses , that couple ca n also be husband
contract. A license per se does not keep and wife. -- PASTOR WIL NUCK-

Dear

Abby

SOCIETY NEWS

New enterprises may be source
of more jobs
Jobless figures for Jun e were release d for Ohio and West Virginia
last week. For the tri-co unty area. Gallia and Mei~,'S counties co ntinued a slight decline, while Mason County saw an increase.
Gailia's unemployment was 7.3 percent, Meigs was at 10.5, and
Mason went to 6.5, up from 5.6 during May.
Officials pomted out decreases in JOblessness were partly attn butable to the number of people hired to comp lete the census. Those
jobs, however, are nearing an end, and point up the area's crying
need for employment expansion.
Temporary employment won't get the job don e. Building a
stronger source of jobs in the tri-county area is the onlv way of
bringing those monthly rates down where they need to be. Like
closer to the national average of 4 percent, and in some places. even
lower.
That's eaSier said than done. A Toyota plant fills a lot of the need
for new jobs. But if th ere aren't enough manufacturers around, then
it's time to investigate other possibilities.
The Appalachian R egiona l Commissio n's town meenng in Iron ton earlier this month told us there are other horizons to investigate .
The expanding communications industry of1'ers one \vay of bringing in new JObs .
·
Attracting those jobs to the tri-county is a task requmng a cooperative.effort an1ong econon1ic development offices in eac h county
One county might stand a chance at seizing the brass ring, but think
of the possibilities if a unifi ed approach to job creati on was formed .
It also means that in a changmg employment sceue, with tec h nology playing a maJOr part in nearly everything, the area has to be
made more attractive to these kinds of companies.
Improvement of telecommunications access for th e area should be
given a detailed analysis if the future of the job sce ne lies th ere.
Landin~ th e-big-ti ~ket--job~ &lt;:r.,ator is "ill a goalr Bur diversifyin g
and reaching out into other businesses tapping into the use of the
internet actually has some possibiliti es for southern Ohio and West
Virginia. And it could very well be that the region , removed from
urban centers, is well-suited for such enterprises.
If isolation is the primary concern about re locating business here.
technology has provided the way to bndge the country wtth the
city. The sooner we tap into opportunities it provides, the better.

_Th_e_D_-_ru~ly_S_e_n_ti_ne_J__· ---------~~~~t!
No matter what they call it, reader says they are still shacking up

Page AS

Ladies report on wreaths

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Incoherent foreign policy requ,ires an open debate
Congre;sional Republicans say they might
" "' pay for Middle East peace. Democrats
oppose free trade agreements. President·C iinton
bombed Serbia , but wouldn't stop genocide in
Rwanda. The GOP presidential candidate says
he wouldn 't stop genocide either, but he wants
to bu ild a $100 billion missile shield ove r the
United States.
What does all this add up to' It doesn't add
up at all as a coherent foreib'll poli Gy for the
world's only superpower. And it surel y c ries out
for a robust foreign policy debate Ill the first
presidential electio n of the 21st century.
U niortunately. that isn't likely to happen -as
evidenced by the fact that Vice President AI
Gore and Texas Gov. George W. l3ush were
askL·d only tW'O minutt's' worth of question ~
about fore ib~' issues during hour-long telev ision
interviews on July 16.
H,Jf of those questions Wt're about missile
defense, a worthy topic, but left a world of subjects uncovered, including how much of fi.tture
budget surpluses should be devoted to defense
al1d foreign aid and where it's appropriate to
se nd U.S. toret·s.
There are a few people - besides ult ra-isolatio mst Reform Par~ ca~&lt;did.1te- [&gt;at Bu chanan
- who are trying valiantly to trigger the needed debate.
One of them is Gen. James Jones, commandant of the Marine Corps, who " warn ing that
a country that spends only 2.9 percent of its
gros~ domestic product o n defense, as America
now clocs, is bound to lose influence in the
world.
Two oth ers are Scm. Max C leland, D- Ga ..
""d l'at Roberts, R-Kan .. who have bunched a
-.l:ric'i ol St: naLe disL·ussiuns aimt·d at f.1shionmg
•1 bipartisan U.S . foreign .md military strategy,
wht ch they think the United States doesn't haw

practically nowhere in public discussion, except
as the potential cost of the "robust" anti-missile
shield that Bush favors.
C leland told me he's afraid that missile
defense - what he calls "the Maginot Line in
the sky" - will dominate the foreign policy
and defense discussion that occurs this year,
obscuring"the mismatch between our commitments and our resources."
"We've downsized o ur forces by one-third
the past decade,'' C leland said, .. but we've
NEA COLUMNIST over
i1icreased overseas deployments by . more than
300 percent. It can't go on. That's what the real
debate ought to be about."
On the Senate floor m April, in one of his
comm erce and political interests haw proscolloquies
witll Roberts, C leland brought up
pered.
"13ut," Jones told me in an interview, "we some o ther subjects: congressional Republicans'
can't kid o urselves that we can always do more refusal to ratify arms treaties and their slowness
with less, that we ca n be le" modern than we in paying U.N. dues, Democratic opposition to
need to be forever, and that because things are trade agreements, and the adtninisrration\
" hurnanitarian interventions in violation of
OK today they will be OK forever."
He said that at the current rates of spendi ng, national sovereignty."
"The sum total of our actions has been far
the military serv1ces can't adequately replace
agmg aircraft and ships, retain top-quality per- more unilateral than any of us would have
sonnel, aond maintain a presence in crucial areas intended,'' C leland sai d. "This is relatively incoherent,'' though other nations think it's "orgaof the world.
"Va€Uums will be ·~created and people will nized" and are offend ed by it. ~"We have to get back to some basic undermove in who don't wish us well:.' said Jones. ·
standing
of who we are and what we are doing
"That\ just the nature of the world."
Jones said he isn't sure who this country's in the world," h e added .
Both of the presidential candidates have made
next " peer rival" will be - possibly C hina, possibly Russia - but he is sure there will be one speeches on foreign and defense policy. Bush
leaves the impression that he wants to spend
or more eventually.
The United States also fa ces threats from ter- more on defense but would be cautious about
rorist groups and smaller hostile countries, he committing U.S. forces overseas.
Gore apparencly would maintain the C lint011
said, which someday may be able to detonate a
weapon of ma&gt;S destruction instde the United policy uf humanitarian interventions, increase
States. ·That 's my 2 1st century Pearl Harbor foreign aid , and stick with current defense.
spendin g levels, w hich Congress and the
nightmare,'' he said .
Jones quotes favorably an estimate from for- administration lately have in creased.
But America's mle in the world is too impormer Democratic Defense Secretary Harold
now.
·'
tant
to be voted on impressionisticaUy.The cane
In congress ional testimony, speeches and Brown that the United States ought to be
intnview s. Jones has been sayin~; that past spend ing 1 percent to 1 .5 percent more of didates need to be grilled on it, and they need
cktense investments - averaging 8 percent of GDP on defense than it is.That means $100 bil- to grill each other.
the mtion's GDP over the past 60 years and 6 lion to S1SO billion a year mo re than the cur(Morto11 Koudracke is cxewti11e editor ~J' Roll
percent during the Cold War - established the rent $300 billion budget.
Coil,
tire nelt'spaper if Capitol Hill.)
So much money - or the need for it. - is
··,L'Oiriry umbrella ·• under ·which U.S. va lu es,

Morton
Kondracke

'HARDBALL'

Clear division if candidate strength to decide race
ble of dmng down the road. in tim, hiS candidacy, whi ch came out of nowhere two years
ago, resembles a high- flying stock ljkc Amazon.com. It's not about his past petformance.
H t'rl' ''\ how it worb:
It's about the ni che he has created for future
People see Gc·orge W. Bush a.s II lore likeabk sales.
In marketing lingo, G eorge W. Bush has
than lm ri val. and more of a leader. They see A1
"branded"
himself as the young political entreC o re ,J, ;J ju nior p•utncr in th L· C linton admin l'itr ;ttion \ 'itrong t'conornic record , a.o:; more
preneur from the American SouthwesL He carries
with h1111 th e spirit of the hotshot start- up,
cx pcri J.-'Ilcc:d in national and world po licy than ~
the I PO about to make a fortune for voters
Bu sh. a~ soli d on abortion nghts.
T h1, clear division of assets will Jccidt· tht· with the m oxlt' to get aboard early.
For months, ever since his Dresde n-style
c k·L"t ion thi '\ Nov. 7.
Fnrgct t11L·- poll numbers. T hree weck o; ago, bombin g ofJo hli McCain in South Carolina ,
!lush was ah ead in the Gallup by 12 po ints. Bu1h has worked at this se lf-branding. He 's
Tod.1y h..,· \ up by two. Two Wf..'l'b fn jm now, Amen ca's Sonny Uoy. the kid w1th the sun shine smile. th e ready handshake fo r black and
fi.,lluWlll~ hi . ; bourKc ti·01n th t• R.cpublic m
Lonvt· ntion, he'll be flying high a~.1i 11.
white hancl\ alike. Like Ike , J ac k, Ronm e and
Thl'"L' numh LT~ m c ~n alm o'i t not hi ng today. Uill , he's radi.ttl'll that same o utdoorsy gleam
T hey wi ll mt&gt;a n absol urd y nothing come th:u h ::~.5~ .llwayo.; , wh t' nl'ver Am ericans havl' had
Nove mhl' r.
the option , outshined the downtown firm of
Wh:1r \.\'ill m.HttT 1s tilt· strcnt--.rth ~ )f rh"· two Dewey. Dukakis &amp; Dole.
IJH.:n \ J~'\l't~ .1 ~ candid,lt es. Why? Ike a usc \vht:n
Uush own s another ready asset: Hl' 's got the
vo tt·n get down to deciding thi " tir11t p ret;idcn - look of a le-ader. As governor of a 'itatc, he cartial electio n of th e rentll ry, they will pick the ri e'i th e resu me of the guy- in-charge down
man wi th the best cham.T of protlTt lllg th eir there in " don 't- mess- with-Texas" cou ntry.
Th ese arc the qualiti es likeahility and
a."ets. Th ey al ways do.
In 111 ak lll g rh e1r1c.m.: ful .lSSt'"'inh.: nt, th r:y will leadership ~ that po llsters luvc ID-cd as
look .It wh ich man, uu ~ h or Gore, jo; the most Bu sh's strengths. Peopl e like him beca use th ey
soli d bet to pl' rform ((,r th em .
like him . He's a leader for the undeniabl e reaUush. as I said , has so me obviou s strcn!,'lhs. son th at he's not been a follower, a v1ce presiUnfortunately, must have to do with t he "Uent.
By co ntrast, Gore's strength is of a bri ck-andpromise, th e notio n of wha t he might be capa-

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
WASHINGTON - Bush vs. (;o re is a battle bct\wcn the "brand" and .. brick and mortar," between Amazon .co m and thl' blu e chips.

mortar kind.
The economy is the strongest in world history. When .the Democrats took charge, the
growth rate was zero. Now, that's the size of the
deficit. Seven years ago, middle-class voters had
worries. Now they have savings . Duri(lg tl)e
Bush recession of th e early 90s. they were
angry that their kids, whose colleges cosi them
so much, didn't have jobs. In 2000, they are a
little jealous of what their kids are doing.
Gore has two other assets, both money in the
bank: One is experience. He's been working
a l ongsid~ th e likes of Robert Rubin and
Robert R eich. He 's got th e keys to the factory
that produced the balanced budget, the free
trade, the growth, all those miUions of 4111 (k)s
out there.
•·
Second, and men hate ·to hear this, he's got an
issue of direct, perso nal importance to th~ ·
largest interest ~roup in the ~mcrican elcc ..
toratc - wmncn . (;ore 1s pro-choice. Bush is
not. Gore backs the co nstitutional right to an
abortion . Uush doesn't.
·
So don 't look .J t th e polls. They're tickle.
Assay the assets. Weigh Bush's so- f.1r-sucecssful
branding against Gore 's bricks and m ortar. Ask
yourself: Which little pi~oy has bll!!t his house
with straw and which with brick' ·

(Cirris Afauhm•s, dlief &lt;
1. tire Smr Fra11cisco
Examiucr's Wasf1ir~~to t1 Burctm, is host t!{ "Hard·
/,a/1'' "" CNHC a111l MSNBC: c.tblc rlwrlllcls. 77rr
1999 editiam of'iflardball" wa' p11blished b)' To ttrhstolle BO&lt;&gt;ks.)

the Ohio Department encampment at Mt. Union
College in Alliance in June. He was delegate for
POMEROY - A report on the wreath laying the camp along with James Oiler of Rio Grande
ceremony at the Buffington Island Battlefield was and Keith Ashley of Rocksprings. Ashley was
given at the first regular meeting of the newly elected Ohio Department council and appomted
organized Maj. Daniel McCook Circle \04, Ladies as Buffington Island Battlefield chairman. A preof the Grand Army of the Republic.
sentation on the Underground Railroad was a
Whitney Ashley, president, thanked all those highlight of the meeting.
who assisted in hosting the reception for the parA report was given on the protest concerning
ticipants of the Buffington Island ceremony, the die National Archives proposed increases in fee s
Civil War Memorial Day ceremonies at the Meigs for pre- \900 rnilitary records. Information o n this
County Civil War statue, and the charter luncheon was given at the department encampment and
resulted in mote letters of protest.
and induction ceremonies.
She noted that she has received four requests for
Trowbridge noted that this year's ceremonies at
membership from Huntington, W.Va., and Barbara the Civil War monument on Memorial Day
James requested II applications for family mem- attracted the largest crowd yet and he thanked
bers. Ashley also announced the district meeting at camp members who attended the services that
Bridgeport in September.
weekend at the Spring Hill Cemetery in HuntingFaye Wallace showed a pair of Civil War glasses ton where the camp presented a wreath.
Keith Ashley reported on the crowd of 600 at
used by her grandfather who fought in the Civil
War. She noted that the glasses had only one lens Canal Winchester where a statue to Alfred Canas his eye was shot out at the Battle ofWinchester. non, hero of Andersonville Prison, was dedicated.
Work is being planned to assist in the project
Ashley played "Taps" on the bugle at the cerewith the Sons of Union Veterans to locate ail mony. He also rep&lt;jrted on the marker dedication
Union soldiers in Meigs County.
for Charles Schorn of Pomeroy, one of Meigs
Jean Hilton of Parkersburg gave a report on the County's three Civil War Congressional Medal of
Ohio Department meeting in June at Mt. Union Honor winners.
The commander reported on Buffington Island
College. She talked of the impressiveness of the
ceremonies she witnessed there and the presenta- Battlefield wreath-laying ceremony attended by
tio 0 on the Underground Railroad museum at · well over a hundred with 20 wreaths being preFlushing.
sen ted . Ron Eastman was commended for his stirThe members then enjoyed a Civil War pro- ring patriotic comments at the ceremonies.
gram by James Cline of Beverly, followed by
David North of Gallipolis reported on the dedrefreshments and discussion time.
ication of the statue to Gen. William T. Sherman of
.
Lancaster on July 2. Three members of the camp
Veterans hear
hero---participated, and over 6oo speetators were present.
The camp has wntten a letter of protest to the
MIDDLEPORT -James Cline of Beverly Federal
· Commission be cause of
spoke on the history of Cpl. John Perry Wolfe, Jr. the failure of both
stations in Huntingof Racine, at a recent meeting of Brooks-Grant ton, W.Va., to cover
Island event for
Camp Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War the last three years
request for them to do
held at Middleport.
~
so.
Cline said that Wolfe carried a $5 million payTrowbridge reported on
dedication
roll for the Union Army in a dilapidated trunk as of a new veterans' monument to
Col. Lemuel
a part of his duties. There were 72,000 Union Zenas Cadot at Mound Hill Cemetery in Gallipotroops who hadn't been paid in four months as lis. Relatives from as far as California came for the
rebels had been attacking payroll transports. Oeser- event. The camp provided. fife and drum and a million was beginning to occur as a result. With itary gun salute for the 63 attendees. Plans are
Rebels watching for armed guards, Cpl. Wolfe of being made for two more monument dedications
Company E, 4th W.Va. Infantry iraveled with this fall.
nothing but a pistol as his protection without
Members were encouraged to write articles for
identification and boarded a train for Harper's the new Meigs County history book. One memFerry.
ber showed an original navy can non rammer and
Upon delivery he was asked what was in the another an original Civil War smoking pipe.
trunk . He replied that he didn't know for sure, but
James Cline was welcomed as a new member of
he had a good idea. Cline then displayed a repro- the camp based on his uncle, Silas D Wolte of
duced roster of Cpl. Wolfe's company.
Company D, 18th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Silas
Michael Trowbridge, commander, conducted died in the Battle of Stone's River, Tenn ., and IS
the meeting with Gerald Crawford reporting on buried there in the natio nal cemetery.

OLLS, FAIR OAKS, CALIF.
DEAR EX-WIFE; You r certai nl y
DEAR PASTOR NUCKOLLS:
· don't want it to appea r that you don 't
admire yo~r compassion and your wis- care th at you r ex-hmba11d ha s died .
dom . I know there are pastors such as Simply say: " Yes, I'm fine . I'm sure th&lt;·
yourself who are willing to perform children would love to hear from you."
"commitment ceremonies ." I hope the
DEAR ABBY: I would lake to add
couple in question takes your letter to this to your "You Kn ow When You're
heart.
Getting Old" collection:
DEAR ABBY: My ex-husband
You know you're getting old when
passed away recently. We were married you don't recpgni ze a sin gle cele brity in
for 17 years -- divorced for 16 -- and the "Today's Birthday" colu mn of your
we had three children. Both of us had newspaper' -- JOSEPH H . Z IMMER happily remarried years ago.
MAN . WILMINGTON , DEL.
Since his death, my closest friends
To receive a collection of A bby's
(and even my sister) keep asking me, most memorable -- and most frequ ent""Are you OK?" .. Are you going to bc .all ly req ue sted -- poems and essays. se nd a
right? " I find this very annoying.
business-sized . sel f-addre ssed envel op e.
I think their sympathy should be plus check or mon ey . o rder fur $3.\1 5
expressed to my children instead of me. ($4.50 111 Canada) to : Dear Abby's
Have you any suggestions as to what I " Keepers." P.O. Ilox 447 , Mount Morcan say to them? -- E.X.-WIFE IN ris, IL 6\054-0447. (Pomge is· included.)
·
KENTUCKY

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TUESDAY,July 25
POMEROY
American
legion Auxiliary. Drew Webster
Post 39, 2 p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY - Chamber of
Comm erce board meetin g, 7:30
a.m. Tuesday.
RACINE - The Racine Area
Co mmunity Organization will
m eet Tlaesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park. There will be a potluck
"'
dinner.
MIDDLEPORT - A "splash
bash", Middleport Pool, Tuesday,
5 to 7 p.m. No admission, free
food and games, ages 10 to 18.
Sponso red by John l cntes, M eigs .
County Prosecutor Abstine nce
Education Program funded by
Meigs County Departme nt of
Children and Family Services,
Meigs County Health Department, Wellness Block Grant, and
other age ncies.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township TruSiees will meet in
special session on Tuesday ~t 5
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station
to discuss personnel and flood
mi~igation issues .

WEDNESDAY,Juiy 26
RACINE - The PomeroyRacine Lodge 164 Free and
Accepted Masons special meeting, W ednesday at 7:30 p.m. to
discuss work in the Master Mason
degree. Refreshments.
POMEROY Wildwood
Garden C lub, Wednesday, 1 p.m.
home of Chris Chapman, Water
Street, Syracuse.
REEDSVILLE - Mt. Oliver
Church, 7:30 service Wednesday.
Rev. John Elswick, speaker. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites public.
THURSDAY, July 27
POMEROY Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
in regular session Thursday, 8
p.m .. Meigs SWCD Otlice.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
RUTLAND - Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's Fel lowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Rutland Church of Christ. Program, Jane Wise, Janet Bolin and

Judy Snowden. Pomeroy C hurch ,
devotions; report on wonu n of
the Bible.
SHAD-E - R eviva l Thursday
through Saturday. Graham Chapel
Church betwe en Count y Road[
75 and county road 25 . Singer&gt;
for Thursday, Chuck and Shirley
Dailey of Athens; for Friday Marti
Short of Chester: for Saturday.
Proclaim of New Haven . W. Va,
Evangelist. Rev. John El swtc k,
Athens.
FRIDAY,July 28
RACINE - AU th ose inter"
ested in playin g volleyball fo r
Sou thern Juni or Hi gh. m ee t Friday, 4 p.m. at th&lt;· school. For more
information , call' Becky Adkin•.
949-1062.
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.

of local

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSU MER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
W

How do you dec1de what type of business
would be appropriate when establi shing your
ow n at- home business ?
I
To answer this question , make a list of all
paid and volunt ee r positions and jobs you have
had throughout your li fe . include military service and trainin g. Co nsider your interests,
hobbies , talents and skills. Note degrees, specialized instnrction, licenses and credentials
you have for specific responsibilities. Also
record any accomplishments, honors, awards
and successful programs that you have had .
Based upon this inventory, what type of
work do yo u e njoy ' At what do you excel'
Could you turn a part-time hobby into a
thriving bu siness' What could be your niche ?
Envision how you co uld incorporate cus-.
tomi-zed twists o n co nventional enterprises .
Once you have chosen your business, decide
where you will work. If it is going to be in the
home, check lo cal regulations and zoning laws
to determine the legality of establishing a busi ness n your neighborhood .
If the business will be in the home, set aside
a specific part of your house for th e business.
With customers coming to your h '11i1e; you
may want to have outside aGcess and be closed
off from the rest of th e ltous c. This not only
offers privacy to your clients, but it also allows ,

Based upon this inventory, what type of
work do you enjoy? At what do you
excel'? Could you turn a part-time ·
hobby into a thriving business'? What
could be your niche? Envision how you
could incorporate customized twists on
conventional enterprises.
separat ion of work and home for you . in addi tion it is important to have another telep hone
line and answering machme foi the busmess,
so fami ly calls will not interfere with the busi ness.
It would be wise to hire -severa l professi o n- .,:
als to help your with your bu siness. An
accountant ca n help you establish a bookkeeping and record system . A law yer cou ld be co nsulted on an as-needed ba sis for le ga l advi ce o n
setting up the business and how to prevent
lawsuits. An in suran ce agent can talk to you
about coverage.
Financial advisors anc\ co nsultant s, c hambers
of co n1mercc , organizations for bu siness pro fesvonals, sm all busin ess developm e nt centers,
bari'ks, libraries and oth e rs who have homebased businesses would ·also be exce ll ent
sources of advice .
Wi t h appropriate skill s, abilities and apti tud e, a home - ba sed bu si ness does not haw to
be ju st a dream. With tun c. effo rt a n d
resources, it can be a reality.

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have ASpecial Meigs
County Fair Preview Edition • .This Year's Edition Promises To
Be One Of The BIGGEST AND BEST EVER!
Look For Thi1 Special Edition In Your
Friday, Augulf 11th Paper .
BE SURE YOUR
BUSINESS IS A PART
OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

•

Call
DAVEorMATI
at

992-2155
FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Daily Sentinel

�......

_

.-

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Finns seek online privacy
WASHINGTON (AP) - lnter.net industry titans are putting aside
their differences, just this once, to agree on a public service campaign
on online priv~cy tQ be announced Ty~sday,
The group,' called Privacy Partnersltip 2000, will fund print, radio
and Web ads dedicated to educating the public about privacy issues
and offerin g tips on how to protect per&lt;onal information online.
The 36 companies. headlined by ferocious competitors such as
America Online, IBM. Intel, Microsoft, ReaiNetworks and Verizon •
Co mmunications, will also try to point consumers to privacy education Web pages on TRUSTe's Web site.
TRUSTe, a San Jose, Calif., compa ny that runs a Privacy Seal program that shows that a Web site adheres to privacy principles, organized the initiative.
Even o n an issue as publicly popular as privacy.TRUSTe spokesman
Dave Steer said, it wasn't easy to reach a consensus.
"Getting (the top 12) companies who compete fiercely in the market to agree on one thing. I think, is a miracle," Steer said.
The campaign will run full -page ads in 26 major daily newspapers ,
and the companies will contribute more than $300,000 in advertising space o nline .
"With privacy sta tements and third-party seals of approval being
ubiqu itous," said Bob Lewin, CEO and 'executive director of
TRUSTe, tlus education campaign is the next step toward achieving
g r eater privacy protection online."
For Microsoft , the campaign is an extension of a single mantra.
'The power oVer one's personal information belongs in the hands
of that individual," said Richard Purcell, the Redmond, Wash .-based
company's director of corporate privacy.

Tuesday,July 25, 2000 .

THURMONT, Md. (AP) -' Offe ring a
glinuner of hope after [\VO gru eling wee ks of
Mideast peace talks at Camp David, the White
H o use indicated that J s ra~J and the PJ)estinians
could be maki ng "some'' progress toward
resolving their bitter disputes.
The assessment came as C linton plunged
into inten~iv e, hands-on mediatio n following a
four-day trip to Japan, keeping long, late-night
hours in an effort to shep herd the two sides
toward a historic accord.
" They are trying to find areas of agreement;' White House spokesman Joe Loc khart
told reporters on Mo nday, the 14th day of talks
at the secluded presidential retreat in the
mo untains of Maryland. "They have probably

found some."
For the most part, the summit's American
hosts h;we avoided any characterization of the
•ubstance of the talks, other than to note how
difficult and divisive the issues are .
The main point of dispute is Jerusalem ,
which both sides claim as their capital. Also on
the table is the fate of several million Palestinian refugees and the boundaries of a future
Palestinian state.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was
stepping in as lead mediator again Tuesd;ly,
with Clinton planning a daylong ·absence to
attend a memorial service iro.,Arkansas for
Diane Blair, a University of Arkansas political
science professor and a close friend who died

of cancer.
Clinton was leavi ng at lunchtime and
returning after midnight, Loc khart said.
Albright twice has -tlken the.- reins at the
sununit, most recently while Clinton. attended
an economic summit on Okinawa. She filled
in for him one day during the first week as
well.
After meeting until 5 a.m.· Monday with
d,e legates from both sides, C linton headed into
a fresh round o f talks in the evening. Asked if
the negotiators might pull another all- nighter,
Lockhart said: "It's certainly possible."
" ) think everyone is feeli ng the effect of
some late ni ghts, but they're still at it," he
added.

ou ou'd Win •••

NEW YORK (AP) - Central Park, the storied ciry playground
and a magnet for millions of tourists, was closed and sprayed w1th pesticides after authorities found mosquitos carrying the West Nile virus.
The ciry began spraying late Monday and planned to reopen the
843-acl1' park Tuesday. A free performan ce by the N ew York Philharmonic that was expected to draw 30,000 people was postponed by a
day.
Virus-carrying mosquitoes have been fo und in the park and on
Staten Island. Th e city is expanding spraying across the city, using the
synthetic pesticides Sumithrin and Resmethrin , wluch can cause·
breathing problems fo r th e elderly and people w ith respiratory ail-

ments.
"The public should not have a great deal of apprehe nsiOn." Mayo r
R udo lph Giulia ni said.
The ·discovcry of infected mosquitoes marks the firs t time that the
pot entially deadly virus has been fo und in mosquitoes in N ew York
C ity th1$ year. Earlier this summer, the virus was fo und in birds and
mosquitoes 1n the suburbs.
Last year, the viru s killed seven people and infected 62 others in the
m ctropoli t:m:~.rca . In the most senous cases. the virus causes infection
rc'iu lrlng in encephalitis, or .-;welling of th e brain.
To staunch a new o utbreak this year, the ciry em barked on a program of trappmg and testing mosq uitoes, placmg fl ocks of'\entincl"
chickens around the ciry to detect the presence of the virus early and
placing rnosqu ito larvae-eating fish in water treatment plants.

I

HIGHLIGHTS
Rodriguez out
for the season
ARLINGTON, Te xas (AP) Reigning
AL
MVP
Ivan
Rodriguez will mi ss the rest of
the seaso n for the Texas R angers
after breaking his right thumb in

Brown making an impact in training camp
BEREA (AP) - Just two weeks into his
first NFL training camp, defensive end,
C&lt;;mrtn ey Brown . ha s been described
many ways. He's fast. He's strong. He's
rough .. . smarr ... polite ... quiet.
And now, a new tag.
'There are freaks and then there are
freaks," said Brown ~ tight end Mark
Campbell. "Co urtney Brown is a freak .
He's killing people when ever he wants."
With al most every snap in practice,
Brown, C leveland's No. I draft pick, seemingly turns in a play that makes the crowd
cheer or o ne that sends shivers through his
teammates' and coac hes' spin es.
Coming off the ball during Monday
morning's practice, he put a 360- degree

spin move on Roger C hanoine and went
past the backup tackle like he was standing still.
.
Earlier in camp, Brown used his brute
strength to manhandle Campbell.
"l came off as fast as I co uld and he still
pushed me back about two yards," C ampbell said.
Brown has JUmped over would- be
blockers, swatted down passes and chased
down running backs fro m behind . He's
made offensive lineman look silly with a
variety of moves.
"He's everything that he was advertised
to be and mavbe even a little bit more,"
said Browns ~each C hris Palmer, who's
had trouble hiding his smile when speak-

ing of Brown .
And while everyone in th e Browns'
organization has something to say abo ut
Brown, the 6- foot -4, 266-pounder Sl'CilJS
unfazed by it all.
"I've still got a lot of thin gs to learn ," he
said.
Brown 's NFL educatio n moved into a
high er phase during th e weekend, wht'll
he made his pro debut ag•inst Indianapolis right tackle Adam M eadows, who protects Colts quarterback Peyto n Mannin g
for a living.
Brown , who is expected to play both
end positions, more than held his own
against Meadows, a nd: beating hi111 badly
during a pass-rush drill .

Panthers sign Swann
to 1-year deal
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP)
- Defe nsive ta ckle Eric Swann
signed a one - year deal with the
Caroli na Panth ers. S\va nn. a I 0year veteran, \V.ts released by Arizona two weeks ago.
He has undergone seve n knee
operations over his career :m d

C INCINNATI (AP) - Players sat around the long fo lding
tables in the middl e o f the
Houston Astros clubhouse,
exchan ging
sa tisfied
nods
between bit es of barb ecued
chicken.
Hands extended in congrJtulations when Glen Barker final ly joined them in his dirt-covered uniform , clutching a g1 ft
certificlte fur appcarmg o n the
~L1r uf the game slww.
The Astros aren't usuall y like
this after a gaml" - gloom is the
norm . Uut th~:re was som ethin g
to celebrate Monday night luilowing a Ill- inning, 7-5 victory
over the Ci ncin mti R eds.
For th e first rime th i~ season .
thr worst team in thl' majors
had a real winning streak.
"You never \\.'ould luve

m iSsed IH of 34 games t he last
two seasons with the C ardinals.

Summerall retires
from broadcasting
LOS ANl. ELES (A P) - Pat
Summera ll. 70,- announced hi s
retirement as an NFL b roadcaster.

Yes. take us
With YOU this
summer!!
'·

Just show us where YOU read
our newsPaPer while
on vacation!
• On the Beach
• In the Water • The Boat.
.
• Mountains • Fisf1inl! • Etc.
'

.

·•

._rj;
C~eativ~ '----

1

'

dlC:ctivc;.· aftt:r t ht· 20U I '\cason.
H l'' final assignm t· nt for Fox

Sports will be the play-by-play
· ca ll of the Super !Jowl in January
21102.

MANKATO, Minn . (AI') First- round drati cho ice C hr is
H ova n sib'll ed w ith the Minm:so-

'

Here•s what to do
• When You return home. submit your Picture and exPlanation to one of our offices.
• All Photos must be in eood taste. we reserve the rieht to reject anY and all Pictures.
• Contest ends SePtember 21. 2000 • Photo(sJ will be PUblished at alater date
• All Photos become the ProPertY of Ohio ValleY Publishine fo.r Promotional PurPoses
• Contest not oPen to OUP emPloYees &amp;immediate families • All decisions of the judees final

&lt;The most interesting and or unique wiLL
have chance to win...

er sa1 d. " This is a

ta Vlk inb"·
·-~&gt;:.-;;::-+-Hovan. an All-American ,; 1

Thomas just says
no to Bulls
MILWAUKEE (AI') - Bucks
forwa rJ Tin1 Th o n1as said he
pbm to rprn down a co ntract
offer from the C: ilil'J!'O llulls and
,1 guaranteed st.a rting spot with
the I )c·troit Pt sto ns to rt·turn to
~1ilwa uh:C: n ext seaso n.
Th o ma s rt: p o rteJly w as ofFen:J
a si,-year. $(&gt; 7 mi llion deal by
C htcago. rh&lt;..· largest co mr:1 cr
.dlowl'd uud c r the NIIA \ collec tive barg;1in i n~ .tgrn: m t· tlt .
Free :t~.tt'nt s c.u 1't ~ i ~ n comr.tds

until At;g. I, hu t l ll....Iny alrl·ady
luve nud l' ora l ro mmitlllt'IH S.

Pamevik beats Garcia
in SAS Invitational
StOCKH O LM . Sweden (AP)
je;;pcr P:l n lt'\·ik h t• ;Jt StT~ i o
( ; ,lr~· i a bv three &lt;., troke-.. cardin g a
4- un tk r~ p.lr (ll'i to g ivt· t h e

-

Nnrdi c All "S t.m .1 .\-.\ tis· wi th
the R s·s t of the World .Jtis·r the
fi rst rnu nd in th t• SAS ll wirarion-

.11.
Two

pb ynl
tht.• tlnn.'

m:'Hc1ll:.., . \HT&lt;.'

SllllUit ,.l l l\..' O li S f y

111

or

Nordic Clplt.l ls
Stockholm,
Swt•den; Copl'n h:Jgen. I kntn :-trk;

,list Place· $100 2nd Place Sso 3rd Place Szs

Mark O'Mcar.J. till' World
tt.•;mi \ c tptal ll fur th e th trd
. , n-.ugln yc.u-. lo•a by fivt.• . ; trokt.·s
(fil-7-1) to Sws·skn \ Robert
K .Ir l..,~on in the nrlll' r lll.Hch in
Stork holm.
In Copt·nh.lgt.·n . thL· Nord i c~
dnlppcd botll m.th: ht.'"· Brir i;;; h
C)pL' ll r u n t ~&lt;.·r-up T h Oitld" Bj orn
uf I k nn1.trk lo\t to ~Ia -a yc.tr\
Ll rit i1h Open s·h.IIII J' Il&gt; IJ l'aul
LI\\'Ti l' of ScotLnHI ()(, - 7 1• .111d
R t.'tH.:f Goosen of Suu th Afn ca
l'dgnl Norway\ Per l-I ;Hl!.,'rS flh.l
71l-71.
Tht.'re wnc .. p!it-.. in I h.•J.,lllki,
with Swt•den'" P.11rik Sjol .md
rou(ln~

Carlo~

~r :lllL u

uf

Paraguay 67 -7 4 . .111sl Lkmh .ml
L.mgn of Gt&gt;rm.tny lw.1ti ng J=inLmd\ Anssi K.1n kknt1 L' tl (l 4J-72.

bi~

thin g r ight

ne w.' ~· ------

sivc lineman at · Uoston College,

:md H t'l..; inki . F111bnd .

r

guessed that we wouldn't win
th ree in a row until now," Bark-

was th e 25th ove r;Jll pi ck.

. ••• you show us.
'-. -= '.~-·-·
You name at
Just have a Picture taken of YOU readins
The GalliPolis
DailY
Tribune. The DailY Sentinel
.
.
or The Point Pleasant Resister
While You are havins vacation fun in the sun!
Time to have some fun and WIN SOME CASH!

For More Information Call
~alhpolis iatlp ~ribune 446-2342
992-2156
The Daily Sentinel
~oint ~leasant l\egtster
675-1333

'1.\

Vikings sign Hovan

)

" He probably has more tools for a
yo ung guy than I've seen in a whil e," said
Meadows. a fou r-year vet. "I've seen th e
o lder defcmive ends plays. H e's got speed,
qu ick ness and strcnb'lh . H e's b"'t all th e
abi lity. As lo ng as he keeps working, it's
scary how ~ood he's goin g to be. He 's
going to be o ne of the best in th e NFL."
Mannin g, too, was impressed.
" You see right away;· M an ning said .
" He's a very special player."
Brown sa1d Saturday's ~nimnlaj;t" was a11
&lt;.·ye-opcnn for him and muc h different
tfom anyth ing h e's t'xpen enced in th e
NFL thus far

Astros top
Reds, 7-5

Stoc ker's stea l attempt.

Trigger lock recall issued
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Master Lock Co. has volunwrily recalled
about 752,000 gu n loc ks, offer ing free replacements to customer&lt;, the
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said Mo nday.
Two •halves of some locks can be manually separated without a key,
tht.• COillllliSSIOI1 sa id.
The Milwaukee company. th e statement said , reports no co nsumer
complaints of disabled locks because of the problem.
The recalled items are desc ribed a&lt; key-operated, rigger locks fo r
so me Sm1th &amp; Wesson and Walther firearms.
The locks were sold since June 20, 199'•. with "M aster Lock tough
under fire" imprinted o n the items' blac k rubber pads.
Packaging carries the words: "Made to exclusive Master Lock specifi r.1ti o n'\ in China ."
·

TuEsDAY'S

.~ he: thn: w to seco nd base on ~vin

Striking driver alleges violence

Mosquito concems dose park

Page 81
TUesday, July 15, 1000

a game agai nst th e Anaheim
Angels.
The All-S tar catcher began the
day b,minr; .347 with 27 home
run s and H.1 RBis .
He was hurt in the..· first inning
wh en his thumb hit M o Vaughn 's
bat on a swinging third strike as

BALTIMORE (AP) - The Bill &amp; Melinda Gates Foundation has
given Johns Hopkins Univer&lt;ity a five-year, $20 million grant to
study if inexpensive vitamin and mineral pills can help save Jives in
poor countries.
Alfred Sommer, dean of the university's School of Public Health,
will be the principal investigator in the study. His researc h has found
that giving young children in developing countries vitamin A supplements reduced their death rate by as much as 30 percent .
Sommer's finding has led to programs in more than 70 co untri ~s to
combat vitamin A deficiency, wltich can cau&lt;e blindness and susceptibility to fatal cliseases. Hopkins researchers have begun to study the
role of other nutrients.
The grant will fund research into the combination of nutrients that
will most efficiendy protect children and women.
Studies will be conducted in Nepal, Bangladesh, India, Ghana and
Zanzibar, Sonuner said.
" We're at the cutting edge of a lot of important and interesting
findings regarding micronutrients and tltis money will help us get the
answers we need," he said.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page 86
WN8A update, Page 86
Daily Scoreboard, Page 86

'.Some' agreement seen at camp David

Gates donates to research

NEW YORK (AP) - A driver for a trucking company involved
in a bitter strike with .the Teamsters sa id company offic ials Jlaid him
to damage property and falsely blame co-workers for wrongdoing to
ger them fired.
Anthony Holly said $10,000 was wired by Overnite Transportation
Inc. officials to his bank account. His federal affidavit was reported
Tuesday by T he New York Times.
Compa!ly officials denied Holly's accusations.
The nine-month dispute is rancorous, with Overnice accusing
union members of shooting at and vandalizing its trucks. Contract
talks have covered about 1,800 workers at 22 .terminals, though the
Tea1mten say theY' have-wo n votes to represent 3,600 Workers af'37
of 166 terminals.
Holly said he did not break any truck. windows, as ·asked, but Jed
company officials to believe he did.
Holly also said he lied to company officials and the National Labor
Relations Board about two Teamster&lt; supporters, whom he had
accused of threatening him for crossing the picket line.
The drivers, Kyle Brooks and Paul Holder, we re fired by Overnite.
"Overnite had me brainwashed," Holly said. "! thought the Teamsters were crooked Mafia and gangsters. As I got to know them, I saw
it's not true."
Overnice spokesman Ira Rosenfeld said his Virginia-based employer never paid workers to destroy property or commit violence ot perJUry.
"It is a lie if anybody says anytlting different," he said.
He acknowledged that Overnite had wired S10,000 to Holly. but
he said it was a loan while Holly was experiencing financial troubles.

Inside:

' I
(
THANKS, BARRY - Reds s hortstop Barry Larkin acknowledges the applause of the Cinergy Field crowd
during his first at-bat Monday against Houston. (AP)

Yes, a team pi cked to contc.::nd
in th e NL Central has. just gotc
ten its tirst three -game wi 1,ni ng
streak of the seaso n , and it czn ne
at the expense of anothe r team
that ha s faikd to live up to
expectat1om
Th e R cd1 had emot io n and a
little extra motivation go mg tOr
the m when th ey took th e fiel d
M o nd;1y for the first time si t~e c:
captain Barry Lark in got hi s
tll ree-year. $27 mi lli on extensJon.
The 2H ,741 fan s c hs·ned
loud ly when Lark in 's n alll e was
&lt;1nnounced as parr of t h e ~ ta rt­
mg lin eu p. Th ey gave hun a
lulf- minute sta nd ing ovatio n
w he n he came to b,lt t(.&gt;r th t·
fir"t time . prompting hirn to

step out of th e box and wave
twtce.

"It wa s n ir.:e again," said
Lark in, w ho's gotten ova tions in
each o f the last four games.
It got even ni cer for Cin cinnati whe n Sean Casey doubled
ho me two nm s off C hri s H o lt
to tie it in the fourth and Ken
Gritley Jr. tn pled with th e bases
loaded for a 5-2 kaJ in th e
fifth .
The R ed s Wt'ft' up on. a team
known for falling apart when it
ge ts b ehind . Rarcl v do th e
A stro~ pull otT .1 gnrty comeback .
''That has no t bt:t' n our
M.O. ," manager Larry Dierker
said. " Th1s felt like last ys·ar or
the yeJ r hefore. when we d id
thar J lor. Thu year, we've not
J onc· it at all."
Ths·y did 1t ar;ain st th e R c·ds ·
hullpen , whi ch had not blown a
save sin ce Jun e 21.
Denn ys- -1 '-eyes- took over in
the sixth for Pete Harni sc· h.
who twi sted his ankk whik
ru nnin g the bases 111 the prcvio u ~ mning. Reyes immediatel y
g:~ve up a two- run ~1 ngl e to
pinch-hittn Matt Mieske th &lt;lt
c ut it t o 3- 4.
Th 1ngs still loo ks·d good to r
tht· Reds. who had a chan ce ro
n .lO Y&lt;.' to 4 11'2 ga mt·s bchm d
idls· St. Lo uis in ths· NL Ce ntral
by ho ldin g on. All -Star cl osn
Dannv G raVL'S canw on in the
ninth . their clost•st thing to a
.;; urc thing.
On this night . G raws (~- ~)
Lv:-~ .;; n 't '\ li ft' of .mythin g. Hi"
.; ink cr someti mes ..;uycd up and
lus cou trul Cll lll' ;t i!J Wt.'Tlt -

Please see Reds. Page 86

REDS NOTEBOOK

Redmen sign eight
Larkin signing brings new problems baseball recruits

C INC IN NAT I (AP) - First
base man Sean Cas&lt;:'y w.ts sittin g:
at h o m e \.vatc hmg tt! ll'vi si on
Su nday mg hr when a sw n ning
ann uu n n• m t' llt scrolled across
thL· bottom of t he sc reen .
Th e sm ..JI. mov1n ~ rype said
th at tlw C in cinnati Reds had
agreed to a t hree - ¥ear contract
t'x t ens ion w1t h sh orts to p

Barry

Larkin .
" ) thOllf(ht it W:JS a typo,"
Casey said Mo nd ay.
It wasn 't. One of the weirdest
days in th e l~ e d;' rccellt history
bt•g,ltl wnh Larkin bi &lt;H:ki n ~ :-l
tr,l~k to thL· New York Mcts and
ended w ith him gL• nin g a .;;run ni ng l'.Xtt:' n siu tl - three yt·ars at
$27 m illi on .
A ti n a topsy- tu rvy tis-e sla&lt;ys o f
th e R eds b11 ttin g heads With
th eir fL'a lll rapuin, they g:1ve in
and gave th e .16-yl'a r-o\d Larkin
what he had a&gt;ked fo r - a
,bance to stay in ~ 1 s hom etown .
" I was a little shocked, just
lwl .\li\ L' o f rh c way t'vt·~yd~ in g
\\' h
draw n out." outtidde r
Dmitri Youn g; s,ml before Mo nday ni ght 's game· a~;ains t Houston. "Evid ently the powers that

be saw the reaction tfom th e
players, the trent o tEce and most
importantly the fa ns.
n
"Wh e n he ca me to bat and
got all those standing ova tio ns
and all. I believe that took a toll
rt ~ht th e re. 13arry got what he
wanted , the team go t what it
wanted and everybody's happy."
H:~pp y and harried, too. Wh e n
Larkin walked into th e clubhouse M o nday, h e still h:~d th e
look of someone who had been
through an ordeal.
"J' rn drained," he said , sitting
in his dressing c ubicl e. " It's hc en
emoti onal , nun. This ha ~ bn· n a
rough thret.•, fo ur. fi ve days fo r
m e. I' m a little rnore at ease, but

Larkin ag ret'd that thL' f;lns'
reaction over the wci..·kt.·nd had
SO illL'th"ing to do with i·t. H e ~o t
ex ten d ed standing ov.1ti o n s
bdlHe each :It - bat an J pro Larkin ban ners tlappcd around
th e stadiwn .
" On ce :-~gain I'll ..;ay I apprL'Ci atc thl' supp ort I've fL'L·eivcd over
th l' !.1St s'Clllp i&lt;' of sbvs.'' L1rkm
sa id .
H ts tea tmnat t·~ '''LTL' rc II L'VL'd
that tht• o n..ica l was o \·L· r. I)cspitc
losi ng st:trtcr Dcim y NL',·Jgk i11 :1
trade to tlw Y:mkecs .md h.IVing
rhcir (L'&lt;l!ll r.I~Ham ..,Jw ppL·d 111 .1
tr.lth:. LIH: Rl'lh d1oppL'd thL·ir
I ( 1- !.!:.lllll' ddil·it in lulf in tht·
NL. Ct.·ntr.d ll ll' Ll~r rwo week ....

it 's been draining. It 's been tax-

" H:win g tlut whole tl11ng
bL· hin d U \ 1 ~ IJugt·:· ( :,ISt.'Y '\;Jid .
"We WL'l"l' lookin g over ou r
shou ldt·rs bt'l,HISC we \\ 'LTcn 't
Sll fL' \VIut \\':1~ gn ing on wit h
Lark in."

ing. And yesterday ca me as a total
shoc k."
O nl y fiw da ys l'arli er, th t·
Red s h ad to ld Larkin th ey
couldn 't give him a three- year
contract for $27 .9 million . General ma nager Jim 13 owden
ar ranged a tr&lt;1dc with th e New
York M ets that Lark in bl oc ked.
H ours later, owner Carl Lindn er
did an abou t-face and offere d
the th ree-year. S27 mill io n deal.

Tlwrl· \ o ne louse.:' r:nd : H m\·
the R eds m l\ pay t(&gt;r it. l.1rkin
Jdc:rrnln earlv a thlfd ofrhc $27
lllilli on on· r .1 5 yea~. but th~·
R eds still have bud!'t'! problems.

Ple1se see Larkin. P1ge B6

...

RIO C RAND E - Th e Un ivn~i t v uf R 10 ( ;r,llldL· b.J'il'b,ill
tc.un h.1s sig:ned L' ig:ht Il l'\\" pbyers for t he .:2( )(I 1 ..;c ~ho n .
H easl s"o.JC h Url' llt Cl.1rk l1.1s
bruu~h t in ~l'\:er,d pl.tyns who
should be famili .1 r tn snu tlln n
Ohio baseball otll. c i a n : Jd~ ) ...
Hcadlillln g rhc li q nf rt·nuirs
I" form t· i· ~1 h t'l'l~_.or..;burg H1g:h
Sd1nul .tn· T im S u tton .
ThL· ldi: lun dn
w.1~ .1 tworim l' Team ( )h in mctllhl.'r .md
nam ,·d A\1 - South'ern
( llno

Fwing rou ntkd o u t hi ~ c.IT&lt;.'&lt;.' r
wJt ll .11 1 .lp pc.tr.llll't' in rlw Ohio
AII - St.lr M1zunu :.LTJL'~.
I ) unn pl.1ycd c.ltl·l_lLT .111d tlurd
h,I\L' f~)l" tht:· Colden 1\ocb: r..;
ovn till' t"ourse o f hi.;; C:lrccr
Thv twu - ;.t'.Jr ~t;l rttT l\II.IH.'d AIITVC hono r~ .b ,1 sen 1ur.
I h om. J\ c.nnc d h,)ll\lr.Jh ll'
lll L'tlr!on All- Olnn hnnor..; .md

.ur Ail - S()( : ~t· l ccnon ,1\ .1
'eninr .1t U.1k HJII.
1-k ph~'t.'l l ~hort'-tnp .111 d
\\,1..,

h .J ttln~

Cuntl·r t.'lllL' nn two orcJ-..1\Jll., .

pndwd p(htlll _:.! .1 l·.1n·n
.ln'r.Jgc of .--Hill .

Sutton·, IJ,t nf .lt"h lt·\·t·IIIL' lH' Jt
thL· prq) level inclllde .111
Lm hcatL'Il
pttrh in g
rl't:'I H\l
thro u gh ti.n1r ye,lr' o( ~ 0111).1L'Il tiot l .md .l·n o- hittcr l.1st ~L·.1~otl.

~\"l llmL'"
V.dln -, /\ ntlH.lll\
( h\'t.'lh will .11-..l l _11llll thl· ltnllllt'l1 t ~)r the upcnmJn ~ \l'.l'-011.
(h\t'll"
hold ..
n..unwr,Hl\
\ynllllL"" V.rlk~ lnttl l lt!, tl'l"Drd ..

C L1rk r.1idcd JtcbPn ( ·,)unry
t(Jr three new pla yer ~. i ncl ud JII ~
Wc\l .;ton .,t.lr" Brt•nt Ewin~ .IIlli
Sh.1ne Dllll n ami 0.1k I Jill

.ltld

.; t.mdout Matt Tlwm.1 .. .

( 1h.to All - ~t.lr i\ 1171\tl n

Ewing \\.,1\ .1 two - tilllt.' AllTr i - Valley Contl·r~n cl' pcr-

Cl.1rk ·., b.Hch of r i L'\' t.dL'IH
.d .. o in L" Iu ~k, ( ~ i,) ,i\ c;wn·\ Jn'h
J=tl'ld'. J.Jrrcd Kie .. ling (lt" Lt·~.-·~­
hur~ F:uti s· ld .Ills! I luhhn Clltl~
111.lll\ ( 'hn .. \\'.1rd .

formn at pitrher .md "hnrt,top,
and w,J.., ~ dn_. tl·d ~lTOIH.t te rllll
All -&lt;.. )hio thi .. p.1..;t '-t'.l\011.

\\,\~

nnnl

( )J nll itt

.:!(I! HI.

~L'Ulltd tt'.llll

All -

Il L· w.t'&lt; .1hn .1 thnx -tllllt' Ail S\)( ' .. ekdion .111d pl.tyl·d Ill ti1L'
'L' tlL'"

�......

_

.-

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Finns seek online privacy
WASHINGTON (AP) - lnter.net industry titans are putting aside
their differences, just this once, to agree on a public service campaign
on online priv~cy tQ be announced Ty~sday,
The group,' called Privacy Partnersltip 2000, will fund print, radio
and Web ads dedicated to educating the public about privacy issues
and offerin g tips on how to protect per&lt;onal information online.
The 36 companies. headlined by ferocious competitors such as
America Online, IBM. Intel, Microsoft, ReaiNetworks and Verizon •
Co mmunications, will also try to point consumers to privacy education Web pages on TRUSTe's Web site.
TRUSTe, a San Jose, Calif., compa ny that runs a Privacy Seal program that shows that a Web site adheres to privacy principles, organized the initiative.
Even o n an issue as publicly popular as privacy.TRUSTe spokesman
Dave Steer said, it wasn't easy to reach a consensus.
"Getting (the top 12) companies who compete fiercely in the market to agree on one thing. I think, is a miracle," Steer said.
The campaign will run full -page ads in 26 major daily newspapers ,
and the companies will contribute more than $300,000 in advertising space o nline .
"With privacy sta tements and third-party seals of approval being
ubiqu itous," said Bob Lewin, CEO and 'executive director of
TRUSTe, tlus education campaign is the next step toward achieving
g r eater privacy protection online."
For Microsoft , the campaign is an extension of a single mantra.
'The power oVer one's personal information belongs in the hands
of that individual," said Richard Purcell, the Redmond, Wash .-based
company's director of corporate privacy.

Tuesday,July 25, 2000 .

THURMONT, Md. (AP) -' Offe ring a
glinuner of hope after [\VO gru eling wee ks of
Mideast peace talks at Camp David, the White
H o use indicated that J s ra~J and the PJ)estinians
could be maki ng "some'' progress toward
resolving their bitter disputes.
The assessment came as C linton plunged
into inten~iv e, hands-on mediatio n following a
four-day trip to Japan, keeping long, late-night
hours in an effort to shep herd the two sides
toward a historic accord.
" They are trying to find areas of agreement;' White House spokesman Joe Loc khart
told reporters on Mo nday, the 14th day of talks
at the secluded presidential retreat in the
mo untains of Maryland. "They have probably

found some."
For the most part, the summit's American
hosts h;we avoided any characterization of the
•ubstance of the talks, other than to note how
difficult and divisive the issues are .
The main point of dispute is Jerusalem ,
which both sides claim as their capital. Also on
the table is the fate of several million Palestinian refugees and the boundaries of a future
Palestinian state.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was
stepping in as lead mediator again Tuesd;ly,
with Clinton planning a daylong ·absence to
attend a memorial service iro.,Arkansas for
Diane Blair, a University of Arkansas political
science professor and a close friend who died

of cancer.
Clinton was leavi ng at lunchtime and
returning after midnight, Loc khart said.
Albright twice has -tlken the.- reins at the
sununit, most recently while Clinton. attended
an economic summit on Okinawa. She filled
in for him one day during the first week as
well.
After meeting until 5 a.m.· Monday with
d,e legates from both sides, C linton headed into
a fresh round o f talks in the evening. Asked if
the negotiators might pull another all- nighter,
Lockhart said: "It's certainly possible."
" ) think everyone is feeli ng the effect of
some late ni ghts, but they're still at it," he
added.

ou ou'd Win •••

NEW YORK (AP) - Central Park, the storied ciry playground
and a magnet for millions of tourists, was closed and sprayed w1th pesticides after authorities found mosquitos carrying the West Nile virus.
The ciry began spraying late Monday and planned to reopen the
843-acl1' park Tuesday. A free performan ce by the N ew York Philharmonic that was expected to draw 30,000 people was postponed by a
day.
Virus-carrying mosquitoes have been fo und in the park and on
Staten Island. Th e city is expanding spraying across the city, using the
synthetic pesticides Sumithrin and Resmethrin , wluch can cause·
breathing problems fo r th e elderly and people w ith respiratory ail-

ments.
"The public should not have a great deal of apprehe nsiOn." Mayo r
R udo lph Giulia ni said.
The ·discovcry of infected mosquitoes marks the firs t time that the
pot entially deadly virus has been fo und in mosquitoes in N ew York
C ity th1$ year. Earlier this summer, the virus was fo und in birds and
mosquitoes 1n the suburbs.
Last year, the viru s killed seven people and infected 62 others in the
m ctropoli t:m:~.rca . In the most senous cases. the virus causes infection
rc'iu lrlng in encephalitis, or .-;welling of th e brain.
To staunch a new o utbreak this year, the ciry em barked on a program of trappmg and testing mosq uitoes, placmg fl ocks of'\entincl"
chickens around the ciry to detect the presence of the virus early and
placing rnosqu ito larvae-eating fish in water treatment plants.

I

HIGHLIGHTS
Rodriguez out
for the season
ARLINGTON, Te xas (AP) Reigning
AL
MVP
Ivan
Rodriguez will mi ss the rest of
the seaso n for the Texas R angers
after breaking his right thumb in

Brown making an impact in training camp
BEREA (AP) - Just two weeks into his
first NFL training camp, defensive end,
C&lt;;mrtn ey Brown . ha s been described
many ways. He's fast. He's strong. He's
rough .. . smarr ... polite ... quiet.
And now, a new tag.
'There are freaks and then there are
freaks," said Brown ~ tight end Mark
Campbell. "Co urtney Brown is a freak .
He's killing people when ever he wants."
With al most every snap in practice,
Brown, C leveland's No. I draft pick, seemingly turns in a play that makes the crowd
cheer or o ne that sends shivers through his
teammates' and coac hes' spin es.
Coming off the ball during Monday
morning's practice, he put a 360- degree

spin move on Roger C hanoine and went
past the backup tackle like he was standing still.
.
Earlier in camp, Brown used his brute
strength to manhandle Campbell.
"l came off as fast as I co uld and he still
pushed me back about two yards," C ampbell said.
Brown has JUmped over would- be
blockers, swatted down passes and chased
down running backs fro m behind . He's
made offensive lineman look silly with a
variety of moves.
"He's everything that he was advertised
to be and mavbe even a little bit more,"
said Browns ~each C hris Palmer, who's
had trouble hiding his smile when speak-

ing of Brown .
And while everyone in th e Browns'
organization has something to say abo ut
Brown, the 6- foot -4, 266-pounder Sl'CilJS
unfazed by it all.
"I've still got a lot of thin gs to learn ," he
said.
Brown 's NFL educatio n moved into a
high er phase during th e weekend, wht'll
he made his pro debut ag•inst Indianapolis right tackle Adam M eadows, who protects Colts quarterback Peyto n Mannin g
for a living.
Brown , who is expected to play both
end positions, more than held his own
against Meadows, a nd: beating hi111 badly
during a pass-rush drill .

Panthers sign Swann
to 1-year deal
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP)
- Defe nsive ta ckle Eric Swann
signed a one - year deal with the
Caroli na Panth ers. S\va nn. a I 0year veteran, \V.ts released by Arizona two weeks ago.
He has undergone seve n knee
operations over his career :m d

C INCINNATI (AP) - Players sat around the long fo lding
tables in the middl e o f the
Houston Astros clubhouse,
exchan ging
sa tisfied
nods
between bit es of barb ecued
chicken.
Hands extended in congrJtulations when Glen Barker final ly joined them in his dirt-covered uniform , clutching a g1 ft
certificlte fur appcarmg o n the
~L1r uf the game slww.
The Astros aren't usuall y like
this after a gaml" - gloom is the
norm . Uut th~:re was som ethin g
to celebrate Monday night luilowing a Ill- inning, 7-5 victory
over the Ci ncin mti R eds.
For th e first rime th i~ season .
thr worst team in thl' majors
had a real winning streak.
"You never \\.'ould luve

m iSsed IH of 34 games t he last
two seasons with the C ardinals.

Summerall retires
from broadcasting
LOS ANl. ELES (A P) - Pat
Summera ll. 70,- announced hi s
retirement as an NFL b roadcaster.

Yes. take us
With YOU this
summer!!
'·

Just show us where YOU read
our newsPaPer while
on vacation!
• On the Beach
• In the Water • The Boat.
.
• Mountains • Fisf1inl! • Etc.
'

.

·•

._rj;
C~eativ~ '----

1

'

dlC:ctivc;.· aftt:r t ht· 20U I '\cason.
H l'' final assignm t· nt for Fox

Sports will be the play-by-play
· ca ll of the Super !Jowl in January
21102.

MANKATO, Minn . (AI') First- round drati cho ice C hr is
H ova n sib'll ed w ith the Minm:so-

'

Here•s what to do
• When You return home. submit your Picture and exPlanation to one of our offices.
• All Photos must be in eood taste. we reserve the rieht to reject anY and all Pictures.
• Contest ends SePtember 21. 2000 • Photo(sJ will be PUblished at alater date
• All Photos become the ProPertY of Ohio ValleY Publishine fo.r Promotional PurPoses
• Contest not oPen to OUP emPloYees &amp;immediate families • All decisions of the judees final

&lt;The most interesting and or unique wiLL
have chance to win...

er sa1 d. " This is a

ta Vlk inb"·
·-~&gt;:.-;;::-+-Hovan. an All-American ,; 1

Thomas just says
no to Bulls
MILWAUKEE (AI') - Bucks
forwa rJ Tin1 Th o n1as said he
pbm to rprn down a co ntract
offer from the C: ilil'J!'O llulls and
,1 guaranteed st.a rting spot with
the I )c·troit Pt sto ns to rt·turn to
~1ilwa uh:C: n ext seaso n.
Th o ma s rt: p o rteJly w as ofFen:J
a si,-year. $(&gt; 7 mi llion deal by
C htcago. rh&lt;..· largest co mr:1 cr
.dlowl'd uud c r the NIIA \ collec tive barg;1in i n~ .tgrn: m t· tlt .
Free :t~.tt'nt s c.u 1't ~ i ~ n comr.tds

until At;g. I, hu t l ll....Iny alrl·ady
luve nud l' ora l ro mmitlllt'IH S.

Pamevik beats Garcia
in SAS Invitational
StOCKH O LM . Sweden (AP)
je;;pcr P:l n lt'\·ik h t• ;Jt StT~ i o
( ; ,lr~· i a bv three &lt;., troke-.. cardin g a
4- un tk r~ p.lr (ll'i to g ivt· t h e

-

Nnrdi c All "S t.m .1 .\-.\ tis· wi th
the R s·s t of the World .Jtis·r the
fi rst rnu nd in th t• SAS ll wirarion-

.11.
Two

pb ynl
tht.• tlnn.'

m:'Hc1ll:.., . \HT&lt;.'

SllllUit ,.l l l\..' O li S f y

111

or

Nordic Clplt.l ls
Stockholm,
Swt•den; Copl'n h:Jgen. I kntn :-trk;

,list Place· $100 2nd Place Sso 3rd Place Szs

Mark O'Mcar.J. till' World
tt.•;mi \ c tptal ll fur th e th trd
. , n-.ugln yc.u-. lo•a by fivt.• . ; trokt.·s
(fil-7-1) to Sws·skn \ Robert
K .Ir l..,~on in the nrlll' r lll.Hch in
Stork holm.
In Copt·nh.lgt.·n . thL· Nord i c~
dnlppcd botll m.th: ht.'"· Brir i;;; h
C)pL' ll r u n t ~&lt;.·r-up T h Oitld" Bj orn
uf I k nn1.trk lo\t to ~Ia -a yc.tr\
Ll rit i1h Open s·h.IIII J' Il&gt; IJ l'aul
LI\\'Ti l' of ScotLnHI ()(, - 7 1• .111d
R t.'tH.:f Goosen of Suu th Afn ca
l'dgnl Norway\ Per l-I ;Hl!.,'rS flh.l
71l-71.
Tht.'re wnc .. p!it-.. in I h.•J.,lllki,
with Swt•den'" P.11rik Sjol .md
rou(ln~

Carlo~

~r :lllL u

uf

Paraguay 67 -7 4 . .111sl Lkmh .ml
L.mgn of Gt&gt;rm.tny lw.1ti ng J=inLmd\ Anssi K.1n kknt1 L' tl (l 4J-72.

bi~

thin g r ight

ne w.' ~· ------

sivc lineman at · Uoston College,

:md H t'l..; inki . F111bnd .

r

guessed that we wouldn't win
th ree in a row until now," Bark-

was th e 25th ove r;Jll pi ck.

. ••• you show us.
'-. -= '.~-·-·
You name at
Just have a Picture taken of YOU readins
The GalliPolis
DailY
Tribune. The DailY Sentinel
.
.
or The Point Pleasant Resister
While You are havins vacation fun in the sun!
Time to have some fun and WIN SOME CASH!

For More Information Call
~alhpolis iatlp ~ribune 446-2342
992-2156
The Daily Sentinel
~oint ~leasant l\egtster
675-1333

'1.\

Vikings sign Hovan

)

" He probably has more tools for a
yo ung guy than I've seen in a whil e," said
Meadows. a fou r-year vet. "I've seen th e
o lder defcmive ends plays. H e's got speed,
qu ick ness and strcnb'lh . H e's b"'t all th e
abi lity. As lo ng as he keeps working, it's
scary how ~ood he's goin g to be. He 's
going to be o ne of the best in th e NFL."
Mannin g, too, was impressed.
" You see right away;· M an ning said .
" He's a very special player."
Brown sa1d Saturday's ~nimnlaj;t" was a11
&lt;.·ye-opcnn for him and muc h different
tfom anyth ing h e's t'xpen enced in th e
NFL thus far

Astros top
Reds, 7-5

Stoc ker's stea l attempt.

Trigger lock recall issued
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Master Lock Co. has volunwrily recalled
about 752,000 gu n loc ks, offer ing free replacements to customer&lt;, the
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said Mo nday.
Two •halves of some locks can be manually separated without a key,
tht.• COillllliSSIOI1 sa id.
The Milwaukee company. th e statement said , reports no co nsumer
complaints of disabled locks because of the problem.
The recalled items are desc ribed a&lt; key-operated, rigger locks fo r
so me Sm1th &amp; Wesson and Walther firearms.
The locks were sold since June 20, 199'•. with "M aster Lock tough
under fire" imprinted o n the items' blac k rubber pads.
Packaging carries the words: "Made to exclusive Master Lock specifi r.1ti o n'\ in China ."
·

TuEsDAY'S

.~ he: thn: w to seco nd base on ~vin

Striking driver alleges violence

Mosquito concems dose park

Page 81
TUesday, July 15, 1000

a game agai nst th e Anaheim
Angels.
The All-S tar catcher began the
day b,minr; .347 with 27 home
run s and H.1 RBis .
He was hurt in the..· first inning
wh en his thumb hit M o Vaughn 's
bat on a swinging third strike as

BALTIMORE (AP) - The Bill &amp; Melinda Gates Foundation has
given Johns Hopkins Univer&lt;ity a five-year, $20 million grant to
study if inexpensive vitamin and mineral pills can help save Jives in
poor countries.
Alfred Sommer, dean of the university's School of Public Health,
will be the principal investigator in the study. His researc h has found
that giving young children in developing countries vitamin A supplements reduced their death rate by as much as 30 percent .
Sommer's finding has led to programs in more than 70 co untri ~s to
combat vitamin A deficiency, wltich can cau&lt;e blindness and susceptibility to fatal cliseases. Hopkins researchers have begun to study the
role of other nutrients.
The grant will fund research into the combination of nutrients that
will most efficiendy protect children and women.
Studies will be conducted in Nepal, Bangladesh, India, Ghana and
Zanzibar, Sonuner said.
" We're at the cutting edge of a lot of important and interesting
findings regarding micronutrients and tltis money will help us get the
answers we need," he said.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page 86
WN8A update, Page 86
Daily Scoreboard, Page 86

'.Some' agreement seen at camp David

Gates donates to research

NEW YORK (AP) - A driver for a trucking company involved
in a bitter strike with .the Teamsters sa id company offic ials Jlaid him
to damage property and falsely blame co-workers for wrongdoing to
ger them fired.
Anthony Holly said $10,000 was wired by Overnite Transportation
Inc. officials to his bank account. His federal affidavit was reported
Tuesday by T he New York Times.
Compa!ly officials denied Holly's accusations.
The nine-month dispute is rancorous, with Overnice accusing
union members of shooting at and vandalizing its trucks. Contract
talks have covered about 1,800 workers at 22 .terminals, though the
Tea1mten say theY' have-wo n votes to represent 3,600 Workers af'37
of 166 terminals.
Holly said he did not break any truck. windows, as ·asked, but Jed
company officials to believe he did.
Holly also said he lied to company officials and the National Labor
Relations Board about two Teamster&lt; supporters, whom he had
accused of threatening him for crossing the picket line.
The drivers, Kyle Brooks and Paul Holder, we re fired by Overnite.
"Overnite had me brainwashed," Holly said. "! thought the Teamsters were crooked Mafia and gangsters. As I got to know them, I saw
it's not true."
Overnice spokesman Ira Rosenfeld said his Virginia-based employer never paid workers to destroy property or commit violence ot perJUry.
"It is a lie if anybody says anytlting different," he said.
He acknowledged that Overnite had wired S10,000 to Holly. but
he said it was a loan while Holly was experiencing financial troubles.

Inside:

' I
(
THANKS, BARRY - Reds s hortstop Barry Larkin acknowledges the applause of the Cinergy Field crowd
during his first at-bat Monday against Houston. (AP)

Yes, a team pi cked to contc.::nd
in th e NL Central has. just gotc
ten its tirst three -game wi 1,ni ng
streak of the seaso n , and it czn ne
at the expense of anothe r team
that ha s faikd to live up to
expectat1om
Th e R cd1 had emot io n and a
little extra motivation go mg tOr
the m when th ey took th e fiel d
M o nd;1y for the first time si t~e c:
captain Barry Lark in got hi s
tll ree-year. $27 mi lli on extensJon.
The 2H ,741 fan s c hs·ned
loud ly when Lark in 's n alll e was
&lt;1nnounced as parr of t h e ~ ta rt­
mg lin eu p. Th ey gave hun a
lulf- minute sta nd ing ovatio n
w he n he came to b,lt t(.&gt;r th t·
fir"t time . prompting hirn to

step out of th e box and wave
twtce.

"It wa s n ir.:e again," said
Lark in, w ho's gotten ova tions in
each o f the last four games.
It got even ni cer for Cin cinnati whe n Sean Casey doubled
ho me two nm s off C hri s H o lt
to tie it in the fourth and Ken
Gritley Jr. tn pled with th e bases
loaded for a 5-2 kaJ in th e
fifth .
The R ed s Wt'ft' up on. a team
known for falling apart when it
ge ts b ehind . Rarcl v do th e
A stro~ pull otT .1 gnrty comeback .
''That has no t bt:t' n our
M.O. ," manager Larry Dierker
said. " Th1s felt like last ys·ar or
the yeJ r hefore. when we d id
thar J lor. Thu year, we've not
J onc· it at all."
Ths·y did 1t ar;ain st th e R c·ds ·
hullpen , whi ch had not blown a
save sin ce Jun e 21.
Denn ys- -1 '-eyes- took over in
the sixth for Pete Harni sc· h.
who twi sted his ankk whik
ru nnin g the bases 111 the prcvio u ~ mning. Reyes immediatel y
g:~ve up a two- run ~1 ngl e to
pinch-hittn Matt Mieske th &lt;lt
c ut it t o 3- 4.
Th 1ngs still loo ks·d good to r
tht· Reds. who had a chan ce ro
n .lO Y&lt;.' to 4 11'2 ga mt·s bchm d
idls· St. Lo uis in ths· NL Ce ntral
by ho ldin g on. All -Star cl osn
Dannv G raVL'S canw on in the
ninth . their clost•st thing to a
.;; urc thing.
On this night . G raws (~- ~)
Lv:-~ .;; n 't '\ li ft' of .mythin g. Hi"
.; ink cr someti mes ..;uycd up and
lus cou trul Cll lll' ;t i!J Wt.'Tlt -

Please see Reds. Page 86

REDS NOTEBOOK

Redmen sign eight
Larkin signing brings new problems baseball recruits

C INC IN NAT I (AP) - First
base man Sean Cas&lt;:'y w.ts sittin g:
at h o m e \.vatc hmg tt! ll'vi si on
Su nday mg hr when a sw n ning
ann uu n n• m t' llt scrolled across
thL· bottom of t he sc reen .
Th e sm ..JI. mov1n ~ rype said
th at tlw C in cinnati Reds had
agreed to a t hree - ¥ear contract
t'x t ens ion w1t h sh orts to p

Barry

Larkin .
" ) thOllf(ht it W:JS a typo,"
Casey said Mo nd ay.
It wasn 't. One of the weirdest
days in th e l~ e d;' rccellt history
bt•g,ltl wnh Larkin bi &lt;H:ki n ~ :-l
tr,l~k to thL· New York Mcts and
ended w ith him gL• nin g a .;;run ni ng l'.Xtt:' n siu tl - three yt·ars at
$27 m illi on .
A ti n a topsy- tu rvy tis-e sla&lt;ys o f
th e R eds b11 ttin g heads With
th eir fL'a lll rapuin, they g:1ve in
and gave th e .16-yl'a r-o\d Larkin
what he had a&gt;ked fo r - a
,bance to stay in ~ 1 s hom etown .
" I was a little shocked, just
lwl .\li\ L' o f rh c way t'vt·~yd~ in g
\\' h
draw n out." outtidde r
Dmitri Youn g; s,ml before Mo nday ni ght 's game· a~;ains t Houston. "Evid ently the powers that

be saw the reaction tfom th e
players, the trent o tEce and most
importantly the fa ns.
n
"Wh e n he ca me to bat and
got all those standing ova tio ns
and all. I believe that took a toll
rt ~ht th e re. 13arry got what he
wanted , the team go t what it
wanted and everybody's happy."
H:~pp y and harried, too. Wh e n
Larkin walked into th e clubhouse M o nday, h e still h:~d th e
look of someone who had been
through an ordeal.
"J' rn drained," he said , sitting
in his dressing c ubicl e. " It's hc en
emoti onal , nun. This ha ~ bn· n a
rough thret.•, fo ur. fi ve days fo r
m e. I' m a little rnore at ease, but

Larkin ag ret'd that thL' f;lns'
reaction over the wci..·kt.·nd had
SO illL'th"ing to do with i·t. H e ~o t
ex ten d ed standing ov.1ti o n s
bdlHe each :It - bat an J pro Larkin ban ners tlappcd around
th e stadiwn .
" On ce :-~gain I'll ..;ay I apprL'Ci atc thl' supp ort I've fL'L·eivcd over
th l' !.1St s'Clllp i&lt;' of sbvs.'' L1rkm
sa id .
H ts tea tmnat t·~ '''LTL' rc II L'VL'd
that tht• o n..ica l was o \·L· r. I)cspitc
losi ng st:trtcr Dcim y NL',·Jgk i11 :1
trade to tlw Y:mkecs .md h.IVing
rhcir (L'&lt;l!ll r.I~Ham ..,Jw ppL·d 111 .1
tr.lth:. LIH: Rl'lh d1oppL'd thL·ir
I ( 1- !.!:.lllll' ddil·it in lulf in tht·
NL. Ct.·ntr.d ll ll' Ll~r rwo week ....

it 's been draining. It 's been tax-

" H:win g tlut whole tl11ng
bL· hin d U \ 1 ~ IJugt·:· ( :,ISt.'Y '\;Jid .
"We WL'l"l' lookin g over ou r
shou ldt·rs bt'l,HISC we \\ 'LTcn 't
Sll fL' \VIut \\':1~ gn ing on wit h
Lark in."

ing. And yesterday ca me as a total
shoc k."
O nl y fiw da ys l'arli er, th t·
Red s h ad to ld Larkin th ey
couldn 't give him a three- year
contract for $27 .9 million . General ma nager Jim 13 owden
ar ranged a tr&lt;1dc with th e New
York M ets that Lark in bl oc ked.
H ours later, owner Carl Lindn er
did an abou t-face and offere d
the th ree-year. S27 mill io n deal.

Tlwrl· \ o ne louse.:' r:nd : H m\·
the R eds m l\ pay t(&gt;r it. l.1rkin
Jdc:rrnln earlv a thlfd ofrhc $27
lllilli on on· r .1 5 yea~. but th~·
R eds still have bud!'t'! problems.

Ple1se see Larkin. P1ge B6

...

RIO C RAND E - Th e Un ivn~i t v uf R 10 ( ;r,llldL· b.J'il'b,ill
tc.un h.1s sig:ned L' ig:ht Il l'\\" pbyers for t he .:2( )(I 1 ..;c ~ho n .
H easl s"o.JC h Url' llt Cl.1rk l1.1s
bruu~h t in ~l'\:er,d pl.tyns who
should be famili .1 r tn snu tlln n
Ohio baseball otll. c i a n : Jd~ ) ...
Hcadlillln g rhc li q nf rt·nuirs
I" form t· i· ~1 h t'l'l~_.or..;burg H1g:h
Sd1nul .tn· T im S u tton .
ThL· ldi: lun dn
w.1~ .1 tworim l' Team ( )h in mctllhl.'r .md
nam ,·d A\1 - South'ern
( llno

Fwing rou ntkd o u t hi ~ c.IT&lt;.'&lt;.' r
wJt ll .11 1 .lp pc.tr.llll't' in rlw Ohio
AII - St.lr M1zunu :.LTJL'~.
I ) unn pl.1ycd c.ltl·l_lLT .111d tlurd
h,I\L' f~)l" tht:· Colden 1\ocb: r..;
ovn till' t"ourse o f hi.;; C:lrccr
Thv twu - ;.t'.Jr ~t;l rttT l\II.IH.'d AIITVC hono r~ .b ,1 sen 1ur.
I h om. J\ c.nnc d h,)ll\lr.Jh ll'
lll L'tlr!on All- Olnn hnnor..; .md

.ur Ail - S()( : ~t· l ccnon ,1\ .1
'eninr .1t U.1k HJII.
1-k ph~'t.'l l ~hort'-tnp .111 d
\\,1..,

h .J ttln~

Cuntl·r t.'lllL' nn two orcJ-..1\Jll., .

pndwd p(htlll _:.! .1 l·.1n·n
.ln'r.Jgc of .--Hill .

Sutton·, IJ,t nf .lt"h lt·\·t·IIIL' lH' Jt
thL· prq) level inclllde .111
Lm hcatL'Il
pttrh in g
rl't:'I H\l
thro u gh ti.n1r ye,lr' o( ~ 0111).1L'Il tiot l .md .l·n o- hittcr l.1st ~L·.1~otl.

~\"l llmL'"
V.dln -, /\ ntlH.lll\
( h\'t.'lh will .11-..l l _11llll thl· ltnllllt'l1 t ~)r the upcnmJn ~ \l'.l'-011.
(h\t'll"
hold ..
n..unwr,Hl\
\ynllllL"" V.rlk~ lnttl l lt!, tl'l"Drd ..

C L1rk r.1idcd JtcbPn ( ·,)unry
t(Jr three new pla yer ~. i ncl ud JII ~
Wc\l .;ton .,t.lr" Brt•nt Ewin~ .IIlli
Sh.1ne Dllll n ami 0.1k I Jill

.ltld

.; t.mdout Matt Tlwm.1 .. .

( 1h.to All - ~t.lr i\ 1171\tl n

Ewing \\.,1\ .1 two - tilllt.' AllTr i - Valley Contl·r~n cl' pcr-

Cl.1rk ·., b.Hch of r i L'\' t.dL'IH
.d .. o in L" Iu ~k, ( ~ i,) ,i\ c;wn·\ Jn'h
J=tl'ld'. J.Jrrcd Kie .. ling (lt" Lt·~.-·~­
hur~ F:uti s· ld .Ills! I luhhn Clltl~
111.lll\ ( 'hn .. \\'.1rd .

formn at pitrher .md "hnrt,top,
and w,J.., ~ dn_. tl·d ~lTOIH.t te rllll
All -&lt;.. )hio thi .. p.1..;t '-t'.l\011.

\\,\~

nnnl

( )J nll itt

.:!(I! HI.

~L'Ulltd tt'.llll

All -

Il L· w.t'&lt; .1hn .1 thnx -tllllt' Ail S\)( ' .. ekdion .111d pl.tyl·d Ill ti1L'
'L' tlL'"

�Page B 2 • The Dall~ Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
540 Mltcellaneoua
Merctlanfllse
Huge nven ory D scoun P cas
On'IJny Sk

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150

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Dead/,., tub#flel ro cMnge
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MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
MENTAL RETARDATION AND
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DSAB,mES
Pou b t pa fime open ng fo a
P eachoo na uc o a Ca e on
School 10 "'"" on our Spocia E&lt;}
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1·h70 w 24 h expando $325 00
a mon dep &amp; e
he Camp
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or 8 Hot Sub Sandwich
weth ch1ps &amp; Dnnk
For only $4 50
Open 4 pm Dally
Closed Mondays

Be wet A hens and Pome ay 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes

S260-$300

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New &amp; W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
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A &amp; Sk n -e88-928-3426

Cerpel • Upllolatory C eon ng
Gua an ud Wo k W h Fabu ous
Ruu 1 Fo a F ee El
lol '""-·-~ngln

thll nll'tlpapet liiUbject 10

Odd Jobe Linda 740-4&lt;18-7804

lhe Fodorol Fal Hou~ng Act
ol 1188 wll~h rnakeo 1 ega
to adverUM any P*trence
mltatlOn Ot d ICtlm natiOn
boNd on race color rtllglon
sex famllalltatua or natiOnal
olig n or any m0f11ion o
make any eucl\ prole enco
mlllllon o CIIIIC!Imlnal on

FREE
YARD SALE

N&amp;w 3 BR 2 BA Ooub ew de
$~00 Down 1245 Pe Mon h
Ffee De overy 888-9:18 3426
28x52 Ooub aW de $500 Down
aka o e paymen s 800 69

8777

Boon
740

'"

Thia newspaper w no1
know ng y accept

acM!Irtlaementa a real esta e
whch 1
10atono the
law 0u oadara are haraby
nlormed ha a dwe ngs
adverUS8d n thll newapape
ln available on an equa

Land Home 0 scoun Cen e EZ
Te ms Vo Land 0 Ou s 740

446-3583 Gary

C""""'ny

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mmedla e open ng&amp; tor prates
tiOna s w~h ou grow no
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f

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Opportunity

come
S ea&lt;lyWork
Uniforms Fu nltlhed
C A MS PROCE SSOR $20 $40

Successfu Candidate
R8QU emen s
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2
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h
w Hazma aM Tank En
do semen 5

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s Easy T a ng P o ded

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888 565 5 9 EXT 642

---- - -- - - -+

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE No h

DOTJl!OO!!!I!I

C ean 0 JVing Reco d
s able Empk7;ment Badcg ound
Owne ~lease

Town EZ Wo k 6 8 H o u s
Week 'I No Se ng Ne $52K
Yea y
BOO 535 4385
24

'Two Vea s Experience

Thu~ay

WANT A COMPU TER ? BUT
NO CASH ? MMX TECH NOLO
G'r' We F nance o Qown Pas

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Rou o w n 2TLllCa Olfl rcvour

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C ed P ob em s OK E e
T ed Dow Be o e Rees ab sh
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Building
Supplies

550

Hours

Opera a s Needed
Qua e v M leege
Pay Guaran ee
nte ested Dr vers
Shoo~ Ca
BOO 824 2857
EOEIWF

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5 Speed
$2 500

EARN $90 000 YEAR V Repa
g NOT Rep ac ng Lo g Cracks
n W nd sh e ds F ee V deo

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Te!ftmarket!ng

SUIIIIER JOBS
oCo ege S udents
oH gh S.:hoo G ads
-High Schoo Sanlo s

NEL pEAQLINE

00 p m the day befo e he ld
• o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on
OOpm F day

Earn up to S1Sihou
Ex e en e pe 18nce to

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Dead nu t ub}« to change
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Mo o A d P
682 894

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-aoo.tzt-5753
Clv c Deve opmen G oup.i
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e $750 740

COMPUTE R BLOWOUT Com
paq HP BM Desk ops ap ops
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App o ed
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4 9 2345

886

Yard Sale
WANTED

Gallipolis
&amp; Vic nity

Ass s an Tan g
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40 446 0

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE .

I

Terry Is
Happy
B1rthday
LoveYa

t

Anvone lOok ng a earn $$

REG STER OEAPLINE
2 deya be o e the ad
• o unby430pm
Sa urday &amp; Monday ed on

-

cee Oh

35 Proven Loca ons Loca
G ea ncome BOO BOO 3470

80Q-826 8523 US Canada

hedaybeoe head
1 o run Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 200pm F day

v

1- rid"""'t 1411&lt;14
"~~'Ddt

FINANCIAL

210

Public Notice

another tract beginning tt a
rolnt 80 pol•• ·~" of 11
orton e eouthoaat corner
on tlla bank line of
Dlllaburg thence north 58
pol.. to • poat neor tho
Stile Road thence with tht
meandering l&gt;l tho road
lOUth 32 deg 1111 11 polll
to a poet thanco Iouth 48
poloe to a poat tllonce
nonh 80 dogrtaa wool I
polea to tho ploce at
beginning conlllnlng 1 314
aero of land In BociiOfl I
Town a Rongo 13 of tht
Ohio Company a Purchlll
which real eelltt wat tho
11ma real eellto convoyed
to L D Davia from Adlm
Btarham by dlld reoordod
In Volume 104 Pogo 382
Malge County Dead
Record•
ANd alto tht
lntoroll of LD Davia In Loll
No 283 and No 211 In
Pomeroy EXCEPT the river
andlng In front ol Lot No
283 It being tha Intention to
dtacrlbt 111 the ltnd
convoyed to L D D1vlt by
c D Raed lying book of
Lolt No 283 and 284
located In tha Firat Word of
Pomeroy Ohio ond b•low
Korrt Run Which rNI 111111
woa conveyed to LD Davit
by J D Reid and wile by
dead racordad In Volume
110 Page 184 Molgl
county
Roaordo
EXCEPTING
AND
EXCLUDING therefrom What
parcel of lond lying betwlln
tho aaat Uno of on 101100
acre ptrcol convoyed to
L D Davie of Nyo Avenue
wh ch porcol wa lnoludld
In the davl.. In Hem V oflhl
Lao! Will and Totllmont of
L D Davtt d1011ald
Permanent Porcol Not
18 0541 ODD 11-00542 000

----------·I

The Oually L nk

we Olle
Outstand ng Plfy &amp; Benefit&amp;
Safety Awa ds P og am
Up ToOa e Equipmen
Compa ny Ma en ng 401 k) P o
gam
Husband &amp; W e Teams We

appra aid 11 S20 000 00 and
cannot aall lor Iota than
tw&lt;l"lhlrda of appraleemont
Thla appraloel It baaed on
vlau11 lnapoctlon of that
part of the premlaea to
WhiCh ICCIII Wll readily
avall1blo The 1ppralt1r1
uaumo no roaponalblllty
tor and give no weight to
unknown legal m1ttora
ncludlng but not llmHid to
oonaoalad or lttont daltcta
and or the praetnce of
harmful or toxic chtm call
pollullnta or 01111
Torma of Salt
Ten
Percent (10%) day of 1111
ba anct within 30 daya
Jamaa M Soulaby Sherlll
of Mtlga County Ohio
Stephen D Milot Attorney
18 Weal Monument Avenue
Deyton Ohio 45402
(7) 25 (8) 18 3TC

P«4

Be Pa d n Advance

70

with ad!
Get yours
today
The Da1ly
Sent mel

Fan Back
Ca Se a

AU. Los11 Found Ads Mua

SEN

SIGN

appa H E
en y 90 o/. Gas
F naes 0 Funaes 2See
Hea Pump &amp; A Ca nd on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea w a any
Be ne s Hea ng 8 Coo ng
800 872 596 www orvb com/be

Public Notice
the Nil hllf of100 acr11 lot
number 308 and bounded
and ducrlbld aelollowt to
wl~ercel No 1 Beginning
ot the 1111 corner of Somuel
Reynell a lot on wl\lch he
raelded In tho yoar 1884
thence nonh 37 degre..
wett olong 11ld Rtynall a
llnatwo hundred nino"' INI
·•
to • atoke thence north 54
degre.. eaat 75 loot to a
at1k1 thence touth 37
d-ra•• w11t 75 laet to the
-•
piece of beginning Being
the
nme
promlau
conveyed
from
WS
Donemore end wile to
Ctllndo Denomore by dNd
dtttd Ftbr~ory 8th 1884
end recorded In Vol 77
Pogo 355 358 and 357
Record of Doado of Melge
Co~"::P~r.:: coal and other

SHERIFFS SALE
mlntrela therein ond tho
Un tad Stltll of AmtriCI
right to mlna lht 11m1 va Tlmolhy D Jonea II al
wllhout ancumbronca to the
Molge County Common
IUrfiCI and Ill WIYI lnd
Pltu Call No 98-CV 109
rlghta of woy olong ony
In purauanco of on order
mineral 111m 11 hereby lttuld from Common Pleaa
r..trvod to lht Iormor Coun within and lor tho
grontoro the r holra ond County of Melgt State of
Ohio on tho tlth d1y of
•-::~~~ tho tome rtll March
2000 end to me
111111 conva~od to J..ala
directed will offer lor 1111
Moore from lmo Reed by at Public Auction In tho
d..d racordtd In Deed Molga County Common
Baoll 152 Pogo 388 or the Ploat Coun Bocond StrHI
Melgt County Dud Pomeroy Ohio 45789 on the
Record• ond convoyed by 31at day of Auguot 2000 11
J11111 Moore to George J
10 30 AM of aold day tht
PUBUC NOTICE
Moore by dtld recorded In following Real Elllle to wH
Situated In 1~1 VIllage of
Tho Homo Natlonel Bank
DNd Bock 180 Poge 180 of
hot 1 mobile home on
the Molga County Deed Pomeroy County of Melga
and Still of Ohio
Recorda
approximately ona hill (1121
and tunhor dtacrlbod aa
acrtlotfor llloln Racing
Porcol No 2
Information for the pr co
The following reol ettate followt
and to vlaw propeny call
altuoted In lht VIllage of
Beglnn ng on the woat of
1149-2210 and otk lor George
Pomeroy County of Melge Nyo Avenue at tho point 18.Q543.000
George Lawrance
and Btote of Ohio In 1DO where the Nonh and South
Located at 1512 Nye
ne and ot 255 lnteralclthe Avtnut Pomeroy
Collection Olftcer
acne lot 307
OH
HomtNotloneiBank
Beginning
at
the Woat aldo ol Nyo Avenue 45789
(7) 17 18 19 20 21 23 24
northweat corner ol Charlet 108 loot which Ia a point
Said prapany haa - n
25 28 27 1OTC
Heat lot where he realded half way betwotn o tormar apprallld at S4 000 000 ond
In May 1879 thence nonh filing alation and garage cannot aell lor loae than
Public Notice
Public Notice
36-112 degrHt wtlt2831oel thanco aouth 58 deg w..t two th rde of appr1111m1nt
to tho aouth aide of a road
lol owing tho aouth line of Thla appral..l Ia baaed on
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERifPS SALE
thence aouth 51 1/2 dogrHI
80 acre porctl and v eual lnepoctlon of that
Atttntlon home ownert
Unllld Stattl of America waat 120 loot along aald exttntlon thereof to the part of tho prtmlaaa to
located In tha Shady Cove va John w Rouah Sr 11 road thence South 36 1/2 weatllna of propony ownld which ICCIII Wll rlldlly
ar11 In Sallabury Townah p 11 Molga County Common degroet w..t 82 teat along by L D Davit propeny to available Tho approlaero
There
will bt a public Plea Cell No 99-CV-1137
aid road thence south 25 the aouth line thertof aaauma no rtlponalblllty
Happy Ad
meeting
tor Haurd
In purtuance to an ardor degreea and 31 teat waat thence In an eaotorly tor and give no weight to
Mitigation Grant money l•uld from Common Pleaa 189 along told road thence direction along tho 1outh unknown legal mattora
held on July 27th at 4 oo pm Coun within and lor the touth 75 dagroea aaat 54
line of tho L D Davlo Including but not llmltld to
~~·,
&amp;-,tU-, Z'c.t
r;
at Rutland Civic Center A 1 County ot Malgt Statt of 1 2 feet lo the nonheaat property to tho eouth lno of concea od or lattnt delicta,
25 1911
homo ownona lntoroatld aro Ohio on the tat day of corner of lot formerly Lot No 255 thence Nonh and or tho pretence of
encouraged to attend
November 1999 lnd to mt owned by Mra Kokn
following aald llno to tho harmful or toxic chamlcolt.
t-~-­
(7) 24 25 2 tc
directed I will offer lor aale thence along aald Dornlck 1 place ol beginning
The
Torma of Sale
Ten
"~"«4"' ~
at Public Auct on In the lint nonh 54 dograaa aatt foregoing reol oatato being Percent (10%) day of 1111
Molgt County CounhouH 275 teet to lhe place of tho 11mt real oatatl aa waa balonca within 30 dayo
7~ ed '·~~ t&lt;Ui ,_
davlaed to Mary Francoa
_.!:P.!u!.!b!!l~lc~N!.o~t!!l~c:.:!e~-l
Second Strnt Pomeroy beginning containing 1
1(.oi .,. ,.,. et~tJ.-re
Jam11 M Souloby Sherlll
Ohio on Friday Augull31 83100 acraa mora or laat
Davit In Item Ill of tht Laat of Malga County Ohio
turuld~
SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL
at 10 00 AM of aald day
Permanent Parcel No 16- Will and To1tament of L D Stephen D Mllll Attorney
ESTATE
the following Rill Ettate to 0111.0 &amp; 0.1111.000
1(j«J4....,U..U
Davia doce1aed which rtal 18 Welt Monument Avenue
THE STATE OF OHIO
wit
Located at 435 Rutland ollltl ncludod Lot No 288 Deyton Ohio 45402
MEIGS COUNTY
Situated In the VIllage of Street Middleport Ohio of Pomeroy Ohio tha eamo (7) 25 (8) 18
GREEN TREE FINANCIAL
Pomeroy Melga County 4587().1061
be ng lot No 8 In tht Town
SERVING
and Sllto of Ohio ond In
Sold propony haa been of Dlllaburg
And alao
VS
CASE NO 99 CV 109
ROBERT JAMES at al
DEFENDANTS
In pursuance of an Order
of Solo In the obova entitled
action I will oller lor 1111 II
public auction at tho
Courthoull atopa In
Pomeroy Ohio In the above
nomad County on 25th dey
Augutt 2000 at 10 40
m
the
following
dncrlbod real . .,.,.
tltuated In tha County of
Malga and State of Ohio
and In tha VI logo of
Mldd epon to wit
Being oil one hundrod
alxty lour (184) and ono
JIJI4'~ · hundred alxty I ve (185) n
Phillip Jonas Addition to
aeld v lage except tho
fallowing deacrlbed tract of
land which wat sold to M C
Hoban bolng a part of lot
number ona hundred alxty
tour (1 64) bounded and
Guess Who
daacrlbad •• follow•
Beglnn ng at tho Southwell
=========:icornar of M C Hoban 1 lot
number one hundred alxty
th
aa (183) and runn ng
760 Auto Parts &amp;
Wastorly along tht Nonh
Accessories
aide of M II Stroot nine and
one ha I { ) INI to tha end
40
ol a certain atone wa
thence Nonh n nataan and
one hall (t 9 ) degreea
East to the rear or Nonh
CASH LOANS!
end or ot number one
•BadCedtOK
hundred olxty lour (184)
thence Eaatarly along the
Easy Qual fy ng
North I no of 11ld lot
• FasI Serv ce
numbar ono 1 xty tour to
• Low Paymen s
the Northwaat corner ol
Coni den al
M c Hoban a lot number
one hundred a xty throe
(1631 thence Southerly a
distance of 1DO loot to tho
SERVICES
p ace of beginning
Said Premlaaa Located at
532 Ml Stroot M ddleport
810
Home
Ohlo45750
Improvements
Bald Promlaoa Appralttd
at $8 000 oo and cannot ba
aold lor Iota than twa-thlrda
olthot omounL
Stops Herpes Outb eakS
TERMS OF SALE 10% ol
96% Success Rale
appralaad value down
romalnder upon tender of
Tol F aa 1 877 EVERCLR
dlld
nfo www avarclr com
Jamea M Boulaby Bher II
of Melgt County, OH
MontH Cope (10087128)
Attorney tor Plalnllll
t75
Third Street Suitt

992-9200
or 949-4900

no

- - lllbjKIIo chlltlf1e
dill 10 /Oolltayf.

Honea Oependabte l.ady Wou d
L kt To Mow You Lawn 0 Do

1STTIIIE BUYERS
Used ~ g Home Ca
Pre-App CMI 888 736 33J2

New 0

New 4 W de $250 Down S £9
Pe Monh Fee A FeeSk
688 928 J42e

• 3D p m Thundly

16 Large P1zza
w1th 31tems
only $11 50

TRANSPORTATION

Tranepon.tlon

O..d net IUb/~1 to cNnge
due to ho day•

R BUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p

Fa ms 304 895-3 40 895 3789

304)6 5-7279

SOC AL SECURITY ISSI?

7 &amp; Rac1ne
P1zza Express

Tobacco Plants
Now ak ng o de s o h s Sp g
F s Odesw GuaaneeBes&amp;
Ea es
Pan s
Dewhu s

"'ll -

"WeddingS

P

NEW BR AN D NAME COM PUT

,.110 2 Bedrooms Alf Cood 1fOO

P-H-0-T-o-G-R A-P-11-Y

Pets
SQorts Teams

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

En...,....

0 No E~ejle lence Pad

Ta
g G ea Bene s Ca 7
Days BOO 429-3660 E J 365

a o un Sunday

4

Profess•onal
Services

for

REAL ESTATE

Be Pa d n Advanc.

DO p m Frlct.y

230

oppo~unily bas~

TR BUNE OEADUNE 2 00 p m
he day be ... he od

REG STER OEAQLINE
2 dllya be ore he ad
• a un~4 JOgn
Saturday &amp; Monday ed on

328-85 0 E If 29

2 ...,. ...,. ""'lei
1 to run IP;' 4 30 p.m
Sot.-y 1111-.y lellllon

63 Pome oy OH •5769 ATTN
Healll&gt; Commlulonor by July 27

ALL G VHway Ads Must

ed on

FREE DEBT CONSOL OAT ON
App ca on W Se
e Reduce
Paymen s To 65 ~ CASH N
CENT VE OFF~A Ca
800

Salary commensura 1 with eKPf(lence Sana eaume o PO Box

Gi\teaway

&amp; Monday ed lion
200pm Fide~
SENT NEL DEADLINE
OO pm lhe daybeoe held
• o un Sunday &amp; Monday

1 00 p m. ""' cloy "'" od
1 ta run Sundoy lllondoy
1 DO p.m Friday
FIEOiSTtR QfAW tiE

Cal (304)ll75-4040 lbda'/1

Part time pot ion avaMable to an
RN o coo d nt 1 g ant funded
en dhood mmun za on p og am
and We come Home Mottle and
CI'IICI hOrne vsta on p og am to
a oc1 publ c hea h agency Re
qu 11 30 hou liwtlk max mum

Now H

New To You T if! Shoppe
9 Wes 5 ms on A hens
40 592 ~2
a a y c o h g and house ho d
ems S 00 bag u e e e y
u sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 ()()-5 30

320 Mobile Homes

SENTINEL Of!DUNE

To Sn Wl1h Ekltr
ly IA&lt;Iy 740-245-5570

TA BUNE DEAQUNE 2 DO p m

due oholny•

lo IO run Suncloy I Mondoy
2 DO p.m Frldof

Notd Somoont

Be PI d In Aclvenco

""' cloy ...... ""' ...
1 10 run Sundoy I llond&lt;rt
odtlon 200pm Frldew
SENT NEL DEJ!PUNE
00 p m ""' cloy belore lhO od
1 10 run Sundoy I lloncley
ocl don
00 p m frl&lt;low
REGISTER DEADLINE
2 doyl beiOre ho od
latorunbyC30pm
Saturdew • Mondoy oclltion
4 30 p m Thuma,
O.dl Ml IUD/fiCt to cMnge

eo. 307

TRIBUNE Pf*QUNE 2 00 p m.
""' ClOy botDro ""' lei

Syqcuoe OH 45779

30 Announcements
ALL. Announc.ment Ads Muat

40

y n A bany Aca

demc qua y g ea cu cu um
sma c uses sotne nd dua
lad progtammlng

SENTINEL QEAPL!NE
1 00 p m. the tMy betCMe thl lid

s.tun~o,

Schools
Instruction

Public Notice
0 Sutton In t h1 Caun ty 1
Melgt
tnd Stell of Ohio
'
Sllultl
In
sutton
Townahlp Melge County
Ohio btlng 1 pon 1 the
Narthwott quorter of
Section 11 Townahlp 2
Rona• 12 beginning at an
1
1 1 th
nh 11 0 1
ron P n n 1 no
.,.
tlld nonhwoll quortor Dl
Section 11 w~lch Ia 18 fill
aaat from lha center of tho
Roclne Buhon Rood
11 of
lhlnca •long the eaat "'
aeld road aouth 22 3 4
degraea watt 272 25 feet
end touth 15 1 2 degraee
wett 254 IItt to an Iron PIn
In the center eatl 485 INI
thence nonh 505 37 INt to
tht north nne of eectlon 11
thtnoe olong the ooct on
uno aouth 88 degr111 waat
310 17 foot to the r,••c• of
beginning contlln na 4 21
ocret more or Iota
Locetad II 48384 Karr
Roed Racine OH 45771
1 d
(Lond only IXC U . .
monufocturld hamel
Bald propany hll blln
1pprolatd 1t $10 000 00 ond
connot aall lor ltll thon
two-thlrda of appllllmenl
Thla opprolea It bottd
upon t vltuol lnaptctlon of
thot pon of the prtmiHI to
which occaaa wat rotdlly
evellabla The approlatre
lttume no rllponelbltlty
1
d 1
1 hit0
or on II VI no w• II
unknown legal mottera
Including but not llmltld to
canceolld or lltent del-.
ond/or tho preetnce of
hormlul or toxic chomlcola
pollullnte or gottl
Term a of Bolo Ten
Percent (10%) doy of 1111
bolonca within 30 doya
Jomoa M Boluleby, Sherlll
of Mtlgt county Ohio
Stlphtn D Mlaa Attorney
18WtttMonumontAvtnue
Dlyton Ohio 45402
(7) 25 (8) 1 1 3TC

°

IIOB l£ HOllE OWNERS

- - --

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

MERCHANDISE

2

ALJ,. Va d Se e1 Mua
Be Pa d n Ad va nce
OEAQLINE 2 00 p m

510

he dey befo e he ed

Household
Goods

s o

un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 200pm F day
ASK ABOUT HOW YOU
CA N GET A FREE

YARDSA ESGN

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

800

a

Columbua Ohio 43211
(814) 221 7272 Ext 144
(7) 25 (8) a 8 3TC
Public Notice

PO STAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H g No E pe e ce Pad
a n g G ea Bene s Ca
Days 800 429 3660 E

140
s gn

80

566

Business
Training

JET
AERA ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n S OCk
Ca Ro E a ~ 800 53 9528

Auction
and Flea Market
150

Up To

EARN YOUR CO

EGE DEGREE

OU CKLV Bache o 1 Mu e

1

Sa e Ro
K chen

D oc o a e By Co ts pondence
Based Upo P lo Educe on Ancl

Short S udy Cou se For FREE n
o ma on Book e Ph one CAM
BR DGE STATE UN VERS TV
800 9&amp;4 83 6

t

sage

e

4

La ge Ea

ng Room Ba h 2
Bed ooms Deck F on &amp; Be
Ha c1 ap A cess be 545 0 Mo
P s Depos A a lib 111 8 oo
Ph one 40 446 0205 740 446
4254 Atte 5 PM

METAL BU LD NG S Doe&amp; Yo u
Dea a &amp;h p No Wo k Fo Yo
We Ha e Compe
a P ce&amp; &amp;
NO Oea e sh p Fua Ce

Fo A

F ee B or::hu e E Do ado Bu d
Sys ems 800 279 4300

no

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

SHERIFF B BALE
Bono Ont Fln1no al
Bervlo.. vt Jamot A
Cornahon ot a
Melgt County Common
Pl111 CUI No 99-CV-098
In punau1noa of an ardor
laautd from Common Pltll
Court wltllln tnd lor tha
County of Molga Btata of
Ohio on tho 22nd day of
February aooo and to mo
dlrtctld I wll ollor lor tt o
a Public Auction In tht
Melga County Common
Ploaa Coun Stcond St
Pomeroy OH 45788 on tho
31at day of Auguat 2000 at
10 15 AM of 11ld day tha
lo lowing Real Eatate 10
wt
S tuattd In the Townah p

Thlt newlpt,_.

ll••on''" au ...MpMIOI'l

•

he

I

phOnoll

WE D LIKE TO SHOW
YOU HOW YOUR AD IN
THIS SPACE COULD BE
SEEN BY OVER 10 MIL
LION PEOPLE

The ftmellctn
Communllll

ffilrkelpllcelll

�Page B 2 • The Dall~ Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
540 Mltcellaneoua
Merctlanfllse
Huge nven ory D scoun P cas
On'IJny Sk

°

ng Ooos Wnd

ow&amp; Ancho s Wa e Hea e s
Pumb ng &amp; Eec ca Pa &amp; Fu
nacn &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 40 446
94 6 www orW com/bennett

- -

150

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Personals

005

Want Academic Excelence n a

Sate fiWU''OMlefl
GRACE ACADEMY snow ac
cepting en 0 men 0 s uden s I(
8h o a admu ona s new

ALL.PononaiAdllluo
Be Plid n Actvance
TR BIJNE Qf AQUNE 2 00 p m
""' cloy belont ""'ad

expanded ac

10 run Sundoy • llondoy
od Uon 2 00 p m Fridoy

1

Cal now 740-594 5433

ll lo run SuncJav 6 Monday
ed on
00 p m Frid.y
REGISTER Qf&amp;DUNE
2doylbe-lheod

180 Wanted To Do
AU. W..ladTo Oo Adllluol

orun~t30pm

ill

•

81 Plld In AdYwlot

llondoy edition

430pmThu~

Dead/,., tub#flel ro cMnge
due ro ~to~H»y•

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
MENTAL RETARDATION AND
DEVELOPMENTAL
DSAB,mES
Pou b t pa fime open ng fo a
P eachoo na uc o a Ca e on
School 10 "'"" on our Spocia E&lt;}
uca on P eschoo C au Th ••
3 days a week Mus have cu
en Teach ng Ce lea on o L

EMPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

11 o

Help Wanted

$2 000 WEEK'Y Ma ng 400
B ocl"lu es Sa s ac on Gua
an eed Pos age &amp; Supp as Po
ded

Rush

Se

Add

cense from the onto Oepa tmen
o Edvca on and hav. o ~ w
ng o ob a n Ea y Educa 10n o

eued

Stamped E elope G CO DEPT
5 Box 438 ANT OCH TN
370
438 soan mmeCIIa18~

Handleapptcl ValdatlOn Send e
&amp;umt by Jti1 :18 10

canoton3 oCoriO on Strto

$106 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
IIENT FROII HOllE PART
TillE NO EXPER(ENCE RE
OU RED 800-757.0753

~0

POSTAL OBS $46 323 00 YR

~0

pm

Sale

GOOD CREDIT
BAD CREDIT
NOCREDIT1
le Us Ass s You n You New
M g Home Ca Fo P e A.pp ova
888-736-3332

-

o ess ona Ce

ed Pho og a

Reasonable ra es

ERS

A mos

E e yo e Ap

p o ed W h SO Down
Mon h 'I Paymen s
3478 E• 330

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Low
800 6 7

New Mode 3 BedrtlOmS 2 Bath
Do b ew de Loaded Jus l699
Down Hu y Wo n Las Oak
wood GawipOI;s 7&lt;10-446-3093

Call
"" appoo """"
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TURNED OOWN ON
No FN Unless we Wlf'l

888-582 3345

"""' 740-388-8375
1·h70 w 24 h expando $325 00
a mon dep &amp; e
he Camp
COI'&lt;ey aroa JOHII&gt;-5477

or 8 Hot Sub Sandwich
weth ch1ps &amp; Dnnk
For only $4 50
Open 4 pm Dally
Closed Mondays

Be wet A hens and Pome ay 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes

S260-$300

740-992 2 67

New &amp; W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
SBOO Down $245 per Month Ffoo
A &amp; Sk n -e88-928-3426

Cerpel • Upllolatory C eon ng
Gua an ud Wo k W h Fabu ous
Ruu 1 Fo a F ee El
lol '""-·-~ngln

thll nll'tlpapet liiUbject 10

Odd Jobe Linda 740-4&lt;18-7804

lhe Fodorol Fal Hou~ng Act
ol 1188 wll~h rnakeo 1 ega
to adverUM any P*trence
mltatlOn Ot d ICtlm natiOn
boNd on race color rtllglon
sex famllalltatua or natiOnal
olig n or any m0f11ion o
make any eucl\ prole enco
mlllllon o CIIIIC!Imlnal on

FREE
YARD SALE

N&amp;w 3 BR 2 BA Ooub ew de
$~00 Down 1245 Pe Mon h
Ffee De overy 888-9:18 3426
28x52 Ooub aW de $500 Down
aka o e paymen s 800 69

8777

Boon
740

'"

Thia newspaper w no1
know ng y accept

acM!Irtlaementa a real esta e
whch 1
10atono the
law 0u oadara are haraby
nlormed ha a dwe ngs
adverUS8d n thll newapape
ln available on an equa

Land Home 0 scoun Cen e EZ
Te ms Vo Land 0 Ou s 740

446-3583 Gary

C""""'ny

. . -,ua-

mmedla e open ng&amp; tor prates
tiOna s w~h ou grow no
company
f

Bu81neee
Opportunity

come
S ea&lt;lyWork
Uniforms Fu nltlhed
C A MS PROCE SSOR $20 $40

Successfu Candidate
R8QU emen s
Yaar;Od
2
CD
h
w Hazma aM Tank En
do semen 5

H Poe a P oess ngCa ms
s Easy T a ng P o ded

MUS T Own PC CA L NOW
888 565 5 9 EXT 642

---- - -- - - -+

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE No h

DOTJl!OO!!!I!I

C ean 0 JVing Reco d
s able Empk7;ment Badcg ound
Owne ~lease

Town EZ Wo k 6 8 H o u s
Week 'I No Se ng Ne $52K
Yea y
BOO 535 4385
24

'Two Vea s Experience

Thu~ay

WANT A COMPU TER ? BUT
NO CASH ? MMX TECH NOLO
G'r' We F nance o Qown Pas

ng Down Es ab shed Yo k M n s
Rou o w n 2TLllCa Olfl rcvour

Body by

J~;~Ke

F m ex home gym

w h 000 $25 740 9~9 3204

C ed P ob em s OK E e
T ed Dow Be o e Rees ab sh
You C ea
BOO 659 0359

Building
Supplies

550

Hours

Opera a s Needed
Qua e v M leege
Pay Guaran ee
nte ested Dr vers
Shoo~ Ca
BOO 824 2857
EOEIWF

AT&amp;T SPRINT Payphone Res

5 Speed
$2 500

EARN $90 000 YEAR V Repa
g NOT Rep ac ng Lo g Cracks
n W nd sh e ds F ee V deo

m
Te!ftmarket!ng

SUIIIIER JOBS
oCo ege S udents
oH gh S.:hoo G ads
-High Schoo Sanlo s

NEL pEAQLINE

00 p m the day befo e he ld
• o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on
OOpm F day

Earn up to S1Sihou
Ex e en e pe 18nce to

Ca mpu e 500 MHZ 40KCD ROM
56K Modem 64 Meg s Ram 8
e W ndow s 98
G G Ha d 0
200 Wa Spe ake s
c udes

you esume
Fun and tr endly workplace
B ng 'YO
ends and

4 30 p m Thursday

Dead nu t ub}« to change
due to hoi d•y•

earn e.: a$$

Mo o A d P
682 894

CA•L TODAY

-aoo.tzt-5753
Clv c Deve opmen G oup.i
M len m Te eserviC8s

e $750 740

COMPUTE R BLOWOUT Com
paq HP BM Desk ops ap ops
E om me

E e yo ne
SSSS 0

e Webs es Amos
App o ed
Make
The Web No Mo ey

Down Fee Coo P n e
4 9 2345

886

Yard Sale
WANTED

Gallipolis
&amp; Vic nity

Ass s an Tan g
Tan
Mee s

40 446 0

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE .

I

Terry Is
Happy
B1rthday
LoveYa

t

Anvone lOok ng a earn $$

REG STER OEAPLINE
2 deya be o e the ad
• o unby430pm
Sa urday &amp; Monday ed on

-

cee Oh

35 Proven Loca ons Loca
G ea ncome BOO BOO 3470

80Q-826 8523 US Canada

hedaybeoe head
1 o run Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 200pm F day

v

1- rid"""'t 1411&lt;14
"~~'Ddt

FINANCIAL

210

Public Notice

another tract beginning tt a
rolnt 80 pol•• ·~" of 11
orton e eouthoaat corner
on tlla bank line of
Dlllaburg thence north 58
pol.. to • poat neor tho
Stile Road thence with tht
meandering l&gt;l tho road
lOUth 32 deg 1111 11 polll
to a poet thanco Iouth 48
poloe to a poat tllonce
nonh 80 dogrtaa wool I
polea to tho ploce at
beginning conlllnlng 1 314
aero of land In BociiOfl I
Town a Rongo 13 of tht
Ohio Company a Purchlll
which real eelltt wat tho
11ma real eellto convoyed
to L D Davia from Adlm
Btarham by dlld reoordod
In Volume 104 Pogo 382
Malge County Dead
Record•
ANd alto tht
lntoroll of LD Davia In Loll
No 283 and No 211 In
Pomeroy EXCEPT the river
andlng In front ol Lot No
283 It being tha Intention to
dtacrlbt 111 the ltnd
convoyed to L D D1vlt by
c D Raed lying book of
Lolt No 283 and 284
located In tha Firat Word of
Pomeroy Ohio ond b•low
Korrt Run Which rNI 111111
woa conveyed to LD Davit
by J D Reid and wile by
dead racordad In Volume
110 Page 184 Molgl
county
Roaordo
EXCEPTING
AND
EXCLUDING therefrom What
parcel of lond lying betwlln
tho aaat Uno of on 101100
acre ptrcol convoyed to
L D Davie of Nyo Avenue
wh ch porcol wa lnoludld
In the davl.. In Hem V oflhl
Lao! Will and Totllmont of
L D Davtt d1011ald
Permanent Porcol Not
18 0541 ODD 11-00542 000

----------·I

The Oually L nk

we Olle
Outstand ng Plfy &amp; Benefit&amp;
Safety Awa ds P og am
Up ToOa e Equipmen
Compa ny Ma en ng 401 k) P o
gam
Husband &amp; W e Teams We

appra aid 11 S20 000 00 and
cannot aall lor Iota than
tw&lt;l"lhlrda of appraleemont
Thla appraloel It baaed on
vlau11 lnapoctlon of that
part of the premlaea to
WhiCh ICCIII Wll readily
avall1blo The 1ppralt1r1
uaumo no roaponalblllty
tor and give no weight to
unknown legal m1ttora
ncludlng but not llmHid to
oonaoalad or lttont daltcta
and or the praetnce of
harmful or toxic chtm call
pollullnta or 01111
Torma of Salt
Ten
Percent (10%) day of 1111
ba anct within 30 daya
Jamaa M Soulaby Sherlll
of Mtlga County Ohio
Stephen D Milot Attorney
18 Weal Monument Avenue
Deyton Ohio 45402
(7) 25 (8) 18 3TC

P«4

Be Pa d n Advance

70

with ad!
Get yours
today
The Da1ly
Sent mel

Fan Back
Ca Se a

AU. Los11 Found Ads Mua

SEN

SIGN

appa H E
en y 90 o/. Gas
F naes 0 Funaes 2See
Hea Pump &amp; A Ca nd on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea w a any
Be ne s Hea ng 8 Coo ng
800 872 596 www orvb com/be

Public Notice
the Nil hllf of100 acr11 lot
number 308 and bounded
and ducrlbld aelollowt to
wl~ercel No 1 Beginning
ot the 1111 corner of Somuel
Reynell a lot on wl\lch he
raelded In tho yoar 1884
thence nonh 37 degre..
wett olong 11ld Rtynall a
llnatwo hundred nino"' INI
·•
to • atoke thence north 54
degre.. eaat 75 loot to a
at1k1 thence touth 37
d-ra•• w11t 75 laet to the
-•
piece of beginning Being
the
nme
promlau
conveyed
from
WS
Donemore end wile to
Ctllndo Denomore by dNd
dtttd Ftbr~ory 8th 1884
end recorded In Vol 77
Pogo 355 358 and 357
Record of Doado of Melge
Co~"::P~r.:: coal and other

SHERIFFS SALE
mlntrela therein ond tho
Un tad Stltll of AmtriCI
right to mlna lht 11m1 va Tlmolhy D Jonea II al
wllhout ancumbronca to the
Molge County Common
IUrfiCI and Ill WIYI lnd
Pltu Call No 98-CV 109
rlghta of woy olong ony
In purauanco of on order
mineral 111m 11 hereby lttuld from Common Pleaa
r..trvod to lht Iormor Coun within and lor tho
grontoro the r holra ond County of Melgt State of
Ohio on tho tlth d1y of
•-::~~~ tho tome rtll March
2000 end to me
111111 conva~od to J..ala
directed will offer lor 1111
Moore from lmo Reed by at Public Auction In tho
d..d racordtd In Deed Molga County Common
Baoll 152 Pogo 388 or the Ploat Coun Bocond StrHI
Melgt County Dud Pomeroy Ohio 45789 on the
Record• ond convoyed by 31at day of Auguot 2000 11
J11111 Moore to George J
10 30 AM of aold day tht
PUBUC NOTICE
Moore by dtld recorded In following Real Elllle to wH
Situated In 1~1 VIllage of
Tho Homo Natlonel Bank
DNd Bock 180 Poge 180 of
hot 1 mobile home on
the Molga County Deed Pomeroy County of Melga
and Still of Ohio
Recorda
approximately ona hill (1121
and tunhor dtacrlbod aa
acrtlotfor llloln Racing
Porcol No 2
Information for the pr co
The following reol ettate followt
and to vlaw propeny call
altuoted In lht VIllage of
Beglnn ng on the woat of
1149-2210 and otk lor George
Pomeroy County of Melge Nyo Avenue at tho point 18.Q543.000
George Lawrance
and Btote of Ohio In 1DO where the Nonh and South
Located at 1512 Nye
ne and ot 255 lnteralclthe Avtnut Pomeroy
Collection Olftcer
acne lot 307
OH
HomtNotloneiBank
Beginning
at
the Woat aldo ol Nyo Avenue 45789
(7) 17 18 19 20 21 23 24
northweat corner ol Charlet 108 loot which Ia a point
Said prapany haa - n
25 28 27 1OTC
Heat lot where he realded half way betwotn o tormar apprallld at S4 000 000 ond
In May 1879 thence nonh filing alation and garage cannot aell lor loae than
Public Notice
Public Notice
36-112 degrHt wtlt2831oel thanco aouth 58 deg w..t two th rde of appr1111m1nt
to tho aouth aide of a road
lol owing tho aouth line of Thla appral..l Ia baaed on
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERifPS SALE
thence aouth 51 1/2 dogrHI
80 acre porctl and v eual lnepoctlon of that
Atttntlon home ownert
Unllld Stattl of America waat 120 loot along aald exttntlon thereof to the part of tho prtmlaaa to
located In tha Shady Cove va John w Rouah Sr 11 road thence South 36 1/2 weatllna of propony ownld which ICCIII Wll rlldlly
ar11 In Sallabury Townah p 11 Molga County Common degroet w..t 82 teat along by L D Davit propeny to available Tho approlaero
There
will bt a public Plea Cell No 99-CV-1137
aid road thence south 25 the aouth line thertof aaauma no rtlponalblllty
Happy Ad
meeting
tor Haurd
In purtuance to an ardor degreea and 31 teat waat thence In an eaotorly tor and give no weight to
Mitigation Grant money l•uld from Common Pleaa 189 along told road thence direction along tho 1outh unknown legal mattora
held on July 27th at 4 oo pm Coun within and lor the touth 75 dagroea aaat 54
line of tho L D Davlo Including but not llmltld to
~~·,
&amp;-,tU-, Z'c.t
r;
at Rutland Civic Center A 1 County ot Malgt Statt of 1 2 feet lo the nonheaat property to tho eouth lno of concea od or lattnt delicta,
25 1911
homo ownona lntoroatld aro Ohio on the tat day of corner of lot formerly Lot No 255 thence Nonh and or tho pretence of
encouraged to attend
November 1999 lnd to mt owned by Mra Kokn
following aald llno to tho harmful or toxic chamlcolt.
t-~-­
(7) 24 25 2 tc
directed I will offer lor aale thence along aald Dornlck 1 place ol beginning
The
Torma of Sale
Ten
"~"«4"' ~
at Public Auct on In the lint nonh 54 dograaa aatt foregoing reol oatato being Percent (10%) day of 1111
Molgt County CounhouH 275 teet to lhe place of tho 11mt real oatatl aa waa balonca within 30 dayo
7~ ed '·~~ t&lt;Ui ,_
davlaed to Mary Francoa
_.!:P.!u!.!b!!l~lc~N!.o~t!!l~c:.:!e~-l
Second Strnt Pomeroy beginning containing 1
1(.oi .,. ,.,. et~tJ.-re
Jam11 M Souloby Sherlll
Ohio on Friday Augull31 83100 acraa mora or laat
Davit In Item Ill of tht Laat of Malga County Ohio
turuld~
SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL
at 10 00 AM of aald day
Permanent Parcel No 16- Will and To1tament of L D Stephen D Mllll Attorney
ESTATE
the following Rill Ettate to 0111.0 &amp; 0.1111.000
1(j«J4....,U..U
Davia doce1aed which rtal 18 Welt Monument Avenue
THE STATE OF OHIO
wit
Located at 435 Rutland ollltl ncludod Lot No 288 Deyton Ohio 45402
MEIGS COUNTY
Situated In the VIllage of Street Middleport Ohio of Pomeroy Ohio tha eamo (7) 25 (8) 18
GREEN TREE FINANCIAL
Pomeroy Melga County 4587().1061
be ng lot No 8 In tht Town
SERVING
and Sllto of Ohio ond In
Sold propony haa been of Dlllaburg
And alao
VS
CASE NO 99 CV 109
ROBERT JAMES at al
DEFENDANTS
In pursuance of an Order
of Solo In the obova entitled
action I will oller lor 1111 II
public auction at tho
Courthoull atopa In
Pomeroy Ohio In the above
nomad County on 25th dey
Augutt 2000 at 10 40
m
the
following
dncrlbod real . .,.,.
tltuated In tha County of
Malga and State of Ohio
and In tha VI logo of
Mldd epon to wit
Being oil one hundrod
alxty lour (184) and ono
JIJI4'~ · hundred alxty I ve (185) n
Phillip Jonas Addition to
aeld v lage except tho
fallowing deacrlbed tract of
land which wat sold to M C
Hoban bolng a part of lot
number ona hundred alxty
tour (1 64) bounded and
Guess Who
daacrlbad •• follow•
Beglnn ng at tho Southwell
=========:icornar of M C Hoban 1 lot
number one hundred alxty
th
aa (183) and runn ng
760 Auto Parts &amp;
Wastorly along tht Nonh
Accessories
aide of M II Stroot nine and
one ha I { ) INI to tha end
40
ol a certain atone wa
thence Nonh n nataan and
one hall (t 9 ) degreea
East to the rear or Nonh
CASH LOANS!
end or ot number one
•BadCedtOK
hundred olxty lour (184)
thence Eaatarly along the
Easy Qual fy ng
North I no of 11ld lot
• FasI Serv ce
numbar ono 1 xty tour to
• Low Paymen s
the Northwaat corner ol
Coni den al
M c Hoban a lot number
one hundred a xty throe
(1631 thence Southerly a
distance of 1DO loot to tho
SERVICES
p ace of beginning
Said Premlaaa Located at
532 Ml Stroot M ddleport
810
Home
Ohlo45750
Improvements
Bald Promlaoa Appralttd
at $8 000 oo and cannot ba
aold lor Iota than twa-thlrda
olthot omounL
Stops Herpes Outb eakS
TERMS OF SALE 10% ol
96% Success Rale
appralaad value down
romalnder upon tender of
Tol F aa 1 877 EVERCLR
dlld
nfo www avarclr com
Jamea M Boulaby Bher II
of Melgt County, OH
MontH Cope (10087128)
Attorney tor Plalnllll
t75
Third Street Suitt

992-9200
or 949-4900

no

- - lllbjKIIo chlltlf1e
dill 10 /Oolltayf.

Honea Oependabte l.ady Wou d
L kt To Mow You Lawn 0 Do

1STTIIIE BUYERS
Used ~ g Home Ca
Pre-App CMI 888 736 33J2

New 0

New 4 W de $250 Down S £9
Pe Monh Fee A FeeSk
688 928 J42e

• 3D p m Thundly

16 Large P1zza
w1th 31tems
only $11 50

TRANSPORTATION

Tranepon.tlon

O..d net IUb/~1 to cNnge
due to ho day•

R BUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p

Fa ms 304 895-3 40 895 3789

304)6 5-7279

SOC AL SECURITY ISSI?

7 &amp; Rac1ne
P1zza Express

Tobacco Plants
Now ak ng o de s o h s Sp g
F s Odesw GuaaneeBes&amp;
Ea es
Pan s
Dewhu s

"'ll -

"WeddingS

P

NEW BR AN D NAME COM PUT

,.110 2 Bedrooms Alf Cood 1fOO

P-H-0-T-o-G-R A-P-11-Y

Pets
SQorts Teams

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

En...,....

0 No E~ejle lence Pad

Ta
g G ea Bene s Ca 7
Days BOO 429-3660 E J 365

a o un Sunday

4

Profess•onal
Services

for

REAL ESTATE

Be Pa d n Advanc.

DO p m Frlct.y

230

oppo~unily bas~

TR BUNE OEADUNE 2 00 p m
he day be ... he od

REG STER OEAQLINE
2 dllya be ore he ad
• a un~4 JOgn
Saturday &amp; Monday ed on

328-85 0 E If 29

2 ...,. ...,. ""'lei
1 to run IP;' 4 30 p.m
Sot.-y 1111-.y lellllon

63 Pome oy OH •5769 ATTN
Healll&gt; Commlulonor by July 27

ALL G VHway Ads Must

ed on

FREE DEBT CONSOL OAT ON
App ca on W Se
e Reduce
Paymen s To 65 ~ CASH N
CENT VE OFF~A Ca
800

Salary commensura 1 with eKPf(lence Sana eaume o PO Box

Gi\teaway

&amp; Monday ed lion
200pm Fide~
SENT NEL DEADLINE
OO pm lhe daybeoe held
• o un Sunday &amp; Monday

1 00 p m. ""' cloy "'" od
1 ta run Sundoy lllondoy
1 DO p.m Friday
FIEOiSTtR QfAW tiE

Cal (304)ll75-4040 lbda'/1

Part time pot ion avaMable to an
RN o coo d nt 1 g ant funded
en dhood mmun za on p og am
and We come Home Mottle and
CI'IICI hOrne vsta on p og am to
a oc1 publ c hea h agency Re
qu 11 30 hou liwtlk max mum

Now H

New To You T if! Shoppe
9 Wes 5 ms on A hens
40 592 ~2
a a y c o h g and house ho d
ems S 00 bag u e e e y
u sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 ()()-5 30

320 Mobile Homes

SENTINEL Of!DUNE

To Sn Wl1h Ekltr
ly IA&lt;Iy 740-245-5570

TA BUNE DEAQUNE 2 DO p m

due oholny•

lo IO run Suncloy I Mondoy
2 DO p.m Frldof

Notd Somoont

Be PI d In Aclvenco

""' cloy ...... ""' ...
1 10 run Sundoy I llond&lt;rt
odtlon 200pm Frldew
SENT NEL DEJ!PUNE
00 p m ""' cloy belore lhO od
1 10 run Sundoy I lloncley
ocl don
00 p m frl&lt;low
REGISTER DEADLINE
2 doyl beiOre ho od
latorunbyC30pm
Saturdew • Mondoy oclltion
4 30 p m Thuma,
O.dl Ml IUD/fiCt to cMnge

eo. 307

TRIBUNE Pf*QUNE 2 00 p m.
""' ClOy botDro ""' lei

Syqcuoe OH 45779

30 Announcements
ALL. Announc.ment Ads Muat

40

y n A bany Aca

demc qua y g ea cu cu um
sma c uses sotne nd dua
lad progtammlng

SENTINEL QEAPL!NE
1 00 p m. the tMy betCMe thl lid

s.tun~o,

Schools
Instruction

Public Notice
0 Sutton In t h1 Caun ty 1
Melgt
tnd Stell of Ohio
'
Sllultl
In
sutton
Townahlp Melge County
Ohio btlng 1 pon 1 the
Narthwott quorter of
Section 11 Townahlp 2
Rona• 12 beginning at an
1
1 1 th
nh 11 0 1
ron P n n 1 no
.,.
tlld nonhwoll quortor Dl
Section 11 w~lch Ia 18 fill
aaat from lha center of tho
Roclne Buhon Rood
11 of
lhlnca •long the eaat "'
aeld road aouth 22 3 4
degraea watt 272 25 feet
end touth 15 1 2 degraee
wett 254 IItt to an Iron PIn
In the center eatl 485 INI
thence nonh 505 37 INt to
tht north nne of eectlon 11
thtnoe olong the ooct on
uno aouth 88 degr111 waat
310 17 foot to the r,••c• of
beginning contlln na 4 21
ocret more or Iota
Locetad II 48384 Karr
Roed Racine OH 45771
1 d
(Lond only IXC U . .
monufocturld hamel
Bald propany hll blln
1pprolatd 1t $10 000 00 ond
connot aall lor ltll thon
two-thlrda of appllllmenl
Thla opprolea It bottd
upon t vltuol lnaptctlon of
thot pon of the prtmiHI to
which occaaa wat rotdlly
evellabla The approlatre
lttume no rllponelbltlty
1
d 1
1 hit0
or on II VI no w• II
unknown legal mottera
Including but not llmltld to
canceolld or lltent del-.
ond/or tho preetnce of
hormlul or toxic chomlcola
pollullnte or gottl
Term a of Bolo Ten
Percent (10%) doy of 1111
bolonca within 30 doya
Jomoa M Boluleby, Sherlll
of Mtlgt county Ohio
Stlphtn D Mlaa Attorney
18WtttMonumontAvtnue
Dlyton Ohio 45402
(7) 25 (8) 1 1 3TC

°

IIOB l£ HOllE OWNERS

- - --

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

MERCHANDISE

2

ALJ,. Va d Se e1 Mua
Be Pa d n Ad va nce
OEAQLINE 2 00 p m

510

he dey befo e he ed

Household
Goods

s o

un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 200pm F day
ASK ABOUT HOW YOU
CA N GET A FREE

YARDSA ESGN

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

800

a

Columbua Ohio 43211
(814) 221 7272 Ext 144
(7) 25 (8) a 8 3TC
Public Notice

PO STAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H g No E pe e ce Pad
a n g G ea Bene s Ca
Days 800 429 3660 E

140
s gn

80

566

Business
Training

JET
AERA ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n S OCk
Ca Ro E a ~ 800 53 9528

Auction
and Flea Market
150

Up To

EARN YOUR CO

EGE DEGREE

OU CKLV Bache o 1 Mu e

1

Sa e Ro
K chen

D oc o a e By Co ts pondence
Based Upo P lo Educe on Ancl

Short S udy Cou se For FREE n
o ma on Book e Ph one CAM
BR DGE STATE UN VERS TV
800 9&amp;4 83 6

t

sage

e

4

La ge Ea

ng Room Ba h 2
Bed ooms Deck F on &amp; Be
Ha c1 ap A cess be 545 0 Mo
P s Depos A a lib 111 8 oo
Ph one 40 446 0205 740 446
4254 Atte 5 PM

METAL BU LD NG S Doe&amp; Yo u
Dea a &amp;h p No Wo k Fo Yo
We Ha e Compe
a P ce&amp; &amp;
NO Oea e sh p Fua Ce

Fo A

F ee B or::hu e E Do ado Bu d
Sys ems 800 279 4300

no

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

SHERIFF B BALE
Bono Ont Fln1no al
Bervlo.. vt Jamot A
Cornahon ot a
Melgt County Common
Pl111 CUI No 99-CV-098
In punau1noa of an ardor
laautd from Common Pltll
Court wltllln tnd lor tha
County of Molga Btata of
Ohio on tho 22nd day of
February aooo and to mo
dlrtctld I wll ollor lor tt o
a Public Auction In tht
Melga County Common
Ploaa Coun Stcond St
Pomeroy OH 45788 on tho
31at day of Auguat 2000 at
10 15 AM of 11ld day tha
lo lowing Real Eatate 10
wt
S tuattd In the Townah p

Thlt newlpt,_.

ll••on''" au ...MpMIOI'l

•

he

I

phOnoll

WE D LIKE TO SHOW
YOU HOW YOUR AD IN
THIS SPACE COULD BE
SEEN BY OVER 10 MIL
LION PEOPLE

The ftmellctn
Communllll

ffilrkelpllcelll

�•
Tua~ay,

Pomeroy, Mlddla.llOrt, Ohio

.Tuesday, ~uly 25, 2000

July 25, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEACrossword Puzzle

~BRIDGE

PHILLIP

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagles
"jthi!Ad in .Service"
"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hay11eld
25-3-3 $3.25/20 lbs
18-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Call 740-985-3831

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
legal papers. investment records, photo
I ~~~~~~~nllalcameras, household inventory and
I~
items will be safe.
For more tnformation call

BAUMLUMBER
ST. RT. 148
CHESTER

35537 Sl Rt. 7 North

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per

Watkins
Products
740-949-3027

•

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

W• h•VII the Slit EkMI'Its, Bilt Pay
and th4i lul; tamllu orlmtld .work
linvlronm&amp;nt In tod1y's automotMi
IndustryI

Sales Representative
Larry Schey
'

l

Call or stop In 1nd HLMik• Strgant.
Brl¥ Ross. or Brad Sang 1nd IMgln a
NWilrdlng Cll'&amp;lil" as an
Automotlv&amp; Sal&amp; Profli5slonal
TODAYI

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

750 East State Streei
· Athens,.Ohio 45701
-"A

Phone (740) 593-6671

..

-'ILLLEL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

A CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

FLAT~DUMP-LOG

SERVICE
Great Rates- Great

SMITH'
S
COfiSTR(IaiOff
• New Homes • Remodeling

Dozer work.

·

740-949-2610
-740-591 ·6304

'True~

992·1101
7 241 mo

740-992-S232
6/21/00 1 mo. pd.

Your
Concrete
Connection

MASONRY
BAC&lt;HOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

Quality Concrete Work
Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios

Residential, Commercia

Wood and Masonry
~

FREE EsnMATES

Fully Insured .

lrl•• Menlltl/llclne, o•l•

(740) 985-3948

19~, rLL L~ ~ RQ\.~1\JE . 'l\lEN l'l.\.
STAI\tl ~Sit€ IT t.loiD 1\l~ I'IGEQIS, lllRO~
COMI'MW~I, lltlll ~ICE ~T 1 1oM\ Nat;

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

Belore 6p.m. Leave Message
Aher 6 pm-740·985·4180

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

POPW LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to
2 7", 18' long,
$:35/ton,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

7 40/985-4465

a·

.

7/61mopd

GUARANTEED

AIR COHDITIOHIHG

TO WAKE UP II

Distributor
For all your health,
nutrition and
weight loss needs.

35

-~
Vemloh
Ingredient

31 Perwnnlal

candidate

Hlro&amp;G-

39- with

(oupporled)

6

--ongle
Mongrwlo

Belorw,to •

-

=:armed

7 Sacradoonga

8 Neighbor of Fr.
9 Awry

10
11
12
19
21

Englneparto

MldNot nation

Force unh

Medieval poem
Army
commend
(2

wdo.)

4•
Pass

4 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

22 Wluat
23 Talk back to

24 Rul-eotale

rmop

25 olctl'll&amp;&amp;

26 ~:(~p.)
26 " P81'11Iotence
ol Memory"
painter
29 Son ol Ruth
30 Hallen
Clpltat
31 Like the Gobi
37 Smoother

36 Pilfer
41 Labor
organizer

llud'"

BulldoJer &amp;: BackhfHI

Se"'ice•
Hou~~e &amp; Trailer Site•

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic SyateiiU &amp;:
Utilitie•
'
(7401 992·3131

Mllard

i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

laUIJ

&amp; flssoclates
Plumbing • Electrical·
Painting
Ray Milani

42994 Rt. 2, C•11y Rd
Mc.y,OH 45710
Gu&amp;l'BDteed Work

42 Ruoolon
ruler
43 Ending lor
"lOft'"
44 Tamarlalc ult

·-

BY PHILLIP ALDER

THE BORN LOSER

-

~'"w f\'&lt; DON'T v.JE

I"

IT'~ TOO 1--IIC.f. r... i'IIGf\T TO

~"'mo (,() li:f.~ r "

f\OP ItHI\E. c..Ni:. ..

W/&gt;0TE W(&gt;..\Q\II'IG
PWGIU.Io\~ 00 TV I

VIDEO TO W"\C.f\ I

"'-""' i
~~
I
~

~

li

~~~~!~~~~
BIG NATE
i!&gt;At&gt;t10LITH RONNIE
\oi~Y WOULD I
t&gt;0 SOME
7

tJ/

· THII&gt;IG

LIKE

THAT~

BEC.M JSE '(OU
WANT TO GO
OUT wtTH ME
VOU~SELF,
OBVIOU.SLY 1

••

PEANUTS
IS T~IS ONE Ol=THOSE
MOVIES WJ.IERE A BO't' IS

SENT OFF TO 60ARDIN6 5Cfl001..
EVER~BOD'r'

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

5

"Vol"

Kind ot moth

Good and bad

..... ...a .......

References Available

FN8

Q6

1
2
3
4
5

Opening lead: • 2

HOWARD
EXCAVAtiNG CO.

740-742-8015
-7

• 'fr\111
• s\U~r~~g
Grill
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

34 MNCI'o

DOWN

Cllevez

Phone 740·698-9400

• Top
• Re"'o&gt;~a·

SERVICE

PICKS ON J.IIM?

OR WloiERE A LITTLE 61RL
15 SENT TO LIVE Wl'fJ.I
lol~ AUNT, AND TJ.IE't' MAKE
J.IER PO ALL TJ.IE WORK?

ORA FAWN IS
LEFT ALONE IN
WOOPS AFTER
~liNTER S~OOTS

~ER

MOTHER?

CONSTRUCTION
Rep lacement Windows,

Seamless Guners &amp;

Someone who perpetrates a
demonstrable bridge blunder usually isn't named, unless he is competing in a major championship.
Yet we like to commend a producer of good play.
This deal, which I spotted in an
old newspaper column, occurred .
during the 1979 Bermuda Bowl
final between Italy and the United States.
The two auctions were identical , North's four no-trump showing a good hand with at least 5-5
in the minors. Both Wests understandably led the heart two, when
any black-suit card would have
defeated the contract.
The American declarer won
with dummy's ace, after which he
had to lose one diamond and two
clubs: one down.
The Italian South won trick one
with dummy's heart 10, cashed
lhe ace-king of di amonds and
heart ace (East dropping the nine),
played a spade to his ace, and took
the heart king, West playing the
eight. South ruffed th e spade jack
in dummy before exiting wit!J a
trump to East 's queen. A spade
retum would concede a ruff-anddis'card. and a club switch would
be equally unproductive. so the
contract made.
__Ihere ~e re two ~ urpri s in g
aspec ts of the report . The Italian
declarer-- Giorgio Belladonn a -wasn't named. And the author
passed no comment on West's
horrendous misdefense of keeping
the heart JaCk in his hand at tri ck
six . If he had played the card he
was known to hold, South would
have had a nasty guess to make.
If East has the last heart, declarer
must cash the heart queen. But
here that is fatal sin'ce East ruffs
and exits safely with a spade, collecting two club tricks at the end .

45 Ctou falcon
eyea
47 .Minecar

48 Thin all'llak
!ol omokel
49 · - Wonderful

LHe"
50 Lime tree
52 Chemical
oufflx
54 Tiger Woodo'
org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrtty Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Todlly's clue: L equals M

'F

SWFKV

KTTA
RX

JT

(ECHFSFYFGKX)

ETCEHT

XC

JT

CRMXTHBTX

SC

LGVT

olCK'S

SGVT

SCC

DRK

CD

XTMFCRXHP.'

I!MTXFolTKS
IFHH
YHFKSCK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Had the Blazers met the Pacers in the finals, NBC
was prepared to call it 'Must lZZ TV.'" - N.Y. Post's Peter Vecsey

'::~:~:~' 'O@ttl\~-~t.tfS"
ldltod by CU.Y I . POLLAN
O four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

WOlD
GAM I

the

be·

low to form four simple words ..

HOMERT

I I' I

12

K0 EVE

I II
J

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I II

I~

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N_U_E_U_D__,~~·

Ove rheard at group counseling
--.-..--.-.....,~·"' sessio n "I have had more tro uble
';'with myself than w1th any other
'--.L...--'---1-.J....J person I . - . - - - .."
f-·

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Comp lete

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chuckle

quoted

by fi! lin11 in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

ITER I
LETTERS

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

To get a current weather
report, check the

Oxygen . Jiffy- Belch . Wh aler· HOW to FAX

Sentinel

One lowe r level execut1ve to another: "My dog os 1n
th e advan ced co urse at obe dience school He knows
how to sit . heel . fetch and even HOW to FAX ..

Downspout, Garage room

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

JULY 251

!TUESDAY

Blown Insulation

(304) 882·2079
New Haven

Pass
5•

TIME FER JUGHAID

Hour:St~:: M·F .

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates

GAILliP'OliiS, OHIO 45631' CHESHIRE, OHIO

A

mochlne

58 Ftutlot
. ....,,..Pte,.,.-

Pass

•

Mike Hill· Owner ~

~~

company
33ZUZU-

• Q 3 2
•

Andrw57 Thrudwinding

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Soulb
West Nortb East

'

Independ~nt

• Q 3 2
• 96 5

...

JINES'

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;

• K 10 ·9 7 6 5 4

utnotet"

32 Wllhoul

• 9 7

Senior Citizen
Discount

HERBALIFE

East

•AJ
I K Q7 3
tl09865

IMied:icaJre Supplement; Life ln~urance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
- IIEm•erg,en)•-Flmds; Mortgage; ~ ·· ~
·
Medical • Nursing Home
~.

Albany, Ohio

West

"Jock- could

55 Act-. Dahl
56 Tennlo player

27DencerDuncen

Soulb

TREE SERVICE

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.

$1 9S

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

__ Contra~tors Welcome

23

• J 8 42

IW f!lcr, ~ st~tue ... ~;::i~:i~

LIFE
RANCE
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Free Estimates

Nttd It done, 11ve u• 1 call
FREE ESTIMATES
Great Prim on New Ntmtl

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

mo~wool

CONCRITE

tAKJ74

• K J 10 4 2

Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical work done

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

P/BCONlRAClOR~, INC.

w 9'oj'/it
1·800-311·3391

"You csll we hsul"

.

drink

I A 10

07-2HO

• 8

~~
'We feature Valvoline Products" ;
•
401 5th Street
Racine, OH 45771'

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

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

~~

Service

Hauling • Umeslona • :
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil •·
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servi1es
(740) 992-3470

53 Lemon-time

chopper
17Btowne
18 lndiiPDied
20 Medieval Hff
21 Seeoncl
prwoldenl

Nort

RACINE SERVICE CENTER

Now Renting

• Verticalo • Wood

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS ·

Raelna, Ohio

EXCfiVfiTINQ

011 Changelndudeslubo&amp; .u.~lmls
Special . choctttlllht.oitbraodo,;laWoJ

48 Unc&amp;.

t4 s 15 T.-.pped
16 Mille wood-

• 83

WAN,.ED
Free-Estimates

7122/TFN

B&amp;T TRUCKING

4ti

Anawer to Pr.vlout Puu..

42 "-tllo nlaht
before •• :'•

1 Kind ot ml...,.l
clepol~

tff'OLIHG and

29870 Beahan
Road
R I
ac ne, Ohl o
45771
740.949-2217
Sl
'
zes 5 X 10'
to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8 PM
1/21100 I nio. od,

[jj] 740•949•2700

UPTO 70% OFF

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE
ESTIMATES
740·992·1671

(NO SUNDAY CAU.S)

992·5479

992·2753

per 91"1"

Jf:,WICK'S

SELF STORAGE

40 Eject

7 S......
47 Rldtcute
l3 Surglclll alllch 51 Glouy Iabrie

·- .-

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740·992·7599

'
!

$300.00 Coverall
1
$500.00 Stlrburat
:
Progressive top nne. : :
Lie. # Q0.50 1111.,., ·

' 1

Ask for Jim

I

fZI

446·4995

740-992-9636

~ --- • Roollng~·-

sao·oo
ay ng

P I

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

144 'l1llnl Ave. Gallpolls

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES .

•.

Over 40 yrs expe!lence

• Mlni11 • Etc

- Pick-up &amp; delivery · Tires &amp;Detail '

• Decks

Pomeroy, OH

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

made to order at our
location

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

• Sieling

740 •• , . . . .

AU vertical blindo are

,.,~

• Garages

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolvlll•, OH 45723

1'

· Rutland, Ohio

111&amp; Ohio Vall&amp;y's automotlvti IAdv Is
continually looking for aggr&amp;si'VII and
motlvatsd palpl&amp; to flU sate positions.

7!18 1 mo. pd.

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

,1

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

SALES

••

AD Make&amp; Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Aldhorilled

' Club Bingo On
' Thursdays
, . AT e:!IO P.M.
Main St.,

ALDER

ACROSS

wv

992-2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

{PA) (CC)

I
Help With

r

IMPROVEMENT
Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classifieds.

Call 740·992·2155 to place ~
your classified ad.

.

or as ow as
•
er 1nc

Wednesday, July 26, 2000
You might have to revise your
• methods or tactics in order to have
' good dealings with thqsc with
· whom you' ll be involved in the
year ahead, but it' ll be worth the
solid ac hievements you make.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) By
availing yourself to groups ,o r
clubs today, you' ll have better
than average chances of meeting
some very influential contacts.
Big shQ,tS could become your
buddies. Leo, treat yourse lf to a
birthday gift. Send for your AstraGraph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
PO. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta. tion , New York, NY 10156. Be
· sure to state your Zodiac sign.
, VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) If
· you think you have constructive
ideas that could produce better
results where your career is con. cemed, do not hide your life
under a bushel. Make your concepts known.
• LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Someone fasci nat ing and even
dynamic is about to make. hi s or
her presence felt within you r
I

social circle. This person's influence will make your soc ial life
even better th an it already is.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) A
transformation for which you've
been hopin g looks like it cou ld
take place today. it will benefit not
only you, but those you love, as
well.
SAGlTIARlUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) The concessions you make
today could pay off quite handsomely for you as time marches
on. What you give now will be
returned to you in greater measure:
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Although you might be better
than you think at reading th e signals when opportunity presents
itself, you could have a tendency
not to trust it today. Believe in
yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Use your influence over your
immediate sphere of friends to
pluck out a fly in the ointment
today. Chances are it' ll be an ineffectiv•: acquaintance who' ll serve
as the detractor.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Fortunately, you' ll get in gear ear-

ly in the day and make a whole
bunch of good things happen fo r
you . Later on, you could ge t
caught up with too much trivia.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Even though you r reasoning may
leave a lot. to be des ired today.
chances are you'll luck out with
others taking over and mak ing the
right moves for you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20.)
Financial develop ments in the
market place today that appear
un to.ward fo r others wu kl end up
workin g out to you r benefit. II ' II
be because yo u' ll be in the nght
spot at the ri ght time.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
You ' re the one who wi ll be making the largest cont ri bution in a
jo int ve nture in which you' re
involved today. not your counterpart . Don't let anyone convince
you otherwise.
CANCER (June 2 1-J ul y 22)
Trust your luck today, becau se it
appears that those ve ry developments over wh ich you 'II have the
least control will be the ones that
wi ll shower you with the most
benefits.

{PA)(CC)

MajOf leagll!l Baseball. Flonda MEirlins at Atlanta Braves (l111e) (CC)

•

�•
Tua~ay,

Pomeroy, Mlddla.llOrt, Ohio

.Tuesday, ~uly 25, 2000

July 25, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEACrossword Puzzle

~BRIDGE

PHILLIP

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagles
"jthi!Ad in .Service"
"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hay11eld
25-3-3 $3.25/20 lbs
18-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Call 740-985-3831

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
legal papers. investment records, photo
I ~~~~~~~nllalcameras, household inventory and
I~
items will be safe.
For more tnformation call

BAUMLUMBER
ST. RT. 148
CHESTER

35537 Sl Rt. 7 North

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per

Watkins
Products
740-949-3027

•

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

W• h•VII the Slit EkMI'Its, Bilt Pay
and th4i lul; tamllu orlmtld .work
linvlronm&amp;nt In tod1y's automotMi
IndustryI

Sales Representative
Larry Schey
'

l

Call or stop In 1nd HLMik• Strgant.
Brl¥ Ross. or Brad Sang 1nd IMgln a
NWilrdlng Cll'&amp;lil" as an
Automotlv&amp; Sal&amp; Profli5slonal
TODAYI

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

750 East State Streei
· Athens,.Ohio 45701
-"A

Phone (740) 593-6671

..

-'ILLLEL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

A CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

FLAT~DUMP-LOG

SERVICE
Great Rates- Great

SMITH'
S
COfiSTR(IaiOff
• New Homes • Remodeling

Dozer work.

·

740-949-2610
-740-591 ·6304

'True~

992·1101
7 241 mo

740-992-S232
6/21/00 1 mo. pd.

Your
Concrete
Connection

MASONRY
BAC&lt;HOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

Quality Concrete Work
Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios

Residential, Commercia

Wood and Masonry
~

FREE EsnMATES

Fully Insured .

lrl•• Menlltl/llclne, o•l•

(740) 985-3948

19~, rLL L~ ~ RQ\.~1\JE . 'l\lEN l'l.\.
STAI\tl ~Sit€ IT t.loiD 1\l~ I'IGEQIS, lllRO~
COMI'MW~I, lltlll ~ICE ~T 1 1oM\ Nat;

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

Belore 6p.m. Leave Message
Aher 6 pm-740·985·4180

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

POPW LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to
2 7", 18' long,
$:35/ton,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

7 40/985-4465

a·

.

7/61mopd

GUARANTEED

AIR COHDITIOHIHG

TO WAKE UP II

Distributor
For all your health,
nutrition and
weight loss needs.

35

-~
Vemloh
Ingredient

31 Perwnnlal

candidate

Hlro&amp;G-

39- with

(oupporled)

6

--ongle
Mongrwlo

Belorw,to •

-

=:armed

7 Sacradoonga

8 Neighbor of Fr.
9 Awry

10
11
12
19
21

Englneparto

MldNot nation

Force unh

Medieval poem
Army
commend
(2

wdo.)

4•
Pass

4 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

22 Wluat
23 Talk back to

24 Rul-eotale

rmop

25 olctl'll&amp;&amp;

26 ~:(~p.)
26 " P81'11Iotence
ol Memory"
painter
29 Son ol Ruth
30 Hallen
Clpltat
31 Like the Gobi
37 Smoother

36 Pilfer
41 Labor
organizer

llud'"

BulldoJer &amp;: BackhfHI

Se"'ice•
Hou~~e &amp; Trailer Site•

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic SyateiiU &amp;:
Utilitie•
'
(7401 992·3131

Mllard

i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

laUIJ

&amp; flssoclates
Plumbing • Electrical·
Painting
Ray Milani

42994 Rt. 2, C•11y Rd
Mc.y,OH 45710
Gu&amp;l'BDteed Work

42 Ruoolon
ruler
43 Ending lor
"lOft'"
44 Tamarlalc ult

·-

BY PHILLIP ALDER

THE BORN LOSER

-

~'"w f\'&lt; DON'T v.JE

I"

IT'~ TOO 1--IIC.f. r... i'IIGf\T TO

~"'mo (,() li:f.~ r "

f\OP ItHI\E. c..Ni:. ..

W/&gt;0TE W(&gt;..\Q\II'IG
PWGIU.Io\~ 00 TV I

VIDEO TO W"\C.f\ I

"'-""' i
~~
I
~

~

li

~~~~!~~~~
BIG NATE
i!&gt;At&gt;t10LITH RONNIE
\oi~Y WOULD I
t&gt;0 SOME
7

tJ/

· THII&gt;IG

LIKE

THAT~

BEC.M JSE '(OU
WANT TO GO
OUT wtTH ME
VOU~SELF,
OBVIOU.SLY 1

••

PEANUTS
IS T~IS ONE Ol=THOSE
MOVIES WJ.IERE A BO't' IS

SENT OFF TO 60ARDIN6 5Cfl001..
EVER~BOD'r'

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

5

"Vol"

Kind ot moth

Good and bad

..... ...a .......

References Available

FN8

Q6

1
2
3
4
5

Opening lead: • 2

HOWARD
EXCAVAtiNG CO.

740-742-8015
-7

• 'fr\111
• s\U~r~~g
Grill
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

34 MNCI'o

DOWN

Cllevez

Phone 740·698-9400

• Top
• Re"'o&gt;~a·

SERVICE

PICKS ON J.IIM?

OR WloiERE A LITTLE 61RL
15 SENT TO LIVE Wl'fJ.I
lol~ AUNT, AND TJ.IE't' MAKE
J.IER PO ALL TJ.IE WORK?

ORA FAWN IS
LEFT ALONE IN
WOOPS AFTER
~liNTER S~OOTS

~ER

MOTHER?

CONSTRUCTION
Rep lacement Windows,

Seamless Guners &amp;

Someone who perpetrates a
demonstrable bridge blunder usually isn't named, unless he is competing in a major championship.
Yet we like to commend a producer of good play.
This deal, which I spotted in an
old newspaper column, occurred .
during the 1979 Bermuda Bowl
final between Italy and the United States.
The two auctions were identical , North's four no-trump showing a good hand with at least 5-5
in the minors. Both Wests understandably led the heart two, when
any black-suit card would have
defeated the contract.
The American declarer won
with dummy's ace, after which he
had to lose one diamond and two
clubs: one down.
The Italian South won trick one
with dummy's heart 10, cashed
lhe ace-king of di amonds and
heart ace (East dropping the nine),
played a spade to his ace, and took
the heart king, West playing the
eight. South ruffed th e spade jack
in dummy before exiting wit!J a
trump to East 's queen. A spade
retum would concede a ruff-anddis'card. and a club switch would
be equally unproductive. so the
contract made.
__Ihere ~e re two ~ urpri s in g
aspec ts of the report . The Italian
declarer-- Giorgio Belladonn a -wasn't named. And the author
passed no comment on West's
horrendous misdefense of keeping
the heart JaCk in his hand at tri ck
six . If he had played the card he
was known to hold, South would
have had a nasty guess to make.
If East has the last heart, declarer
must cash the heart queen. But
here that is fatal sin'ce East ruffs
and exits safely with a spade, collecting two club tricks at the end .

45 Ctou falcon
eyea
47 .Minecar

48 Thin all'llak
!ol omokel
49 · - Wonderful

LHe"
50 Lime tree
52 Chemical
oufflx
54 Tiger Woodo'
org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrtty Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Todlly's clue: L equals M

'F

SWFKV

KTTA
RX

JT

(ECHFSFYFGKX)

ETCEHT

XC

JT

CRMXTHBTX

SC

LGVT

olCK'S

SGVT

SCC

DRK

CD

XTMFCRXHP.'

I!MTXFolTKS
IFHH
YHFKSCK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Had the Blazers met the Pacers in the finals, NBC
was prepared to call it 'Must lZZ TV.'" - N.Y. Post's Peter Vecsey

'::~:~:~' 'O@ttl\~-~t.tfS"
ldltod by CU.Y I . POLLAN
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Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

WOlD
GAM I

the

be·

low to form four simple words ..

HOMERT

I I' I

12

K0 EVE

I II
J

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I II

I~

I;

I

I

N_U_E_U_D__,~~·

Ove rheard at group counseling
--.-..--.-.....,~·"' sessio n "I have had more tro uble
';'with myself than w1th any other
'--.L...--'---1-.J....J person I . - . - - - .."
f-·

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Comp lete

Ohe

chuckle

quoted

by fi! lin11 in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

ITER I
LETTERS

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

To get a current weather
report, check the

Oxygen . Jiffy- Belch . Wh aler· HOW to FAX

Sentinel

One lowe r level execut1ve to another: "My dog os 1n
th e advan ced co urse at obe dience school He knows
how to sit . heel . fetch and even HOW to FAX ..

Downspout, Garage room

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

JULY 251

!TUESDAY

Blown Insulation

(304) 882·2079
New Haven

Pass
5•

TIME FER JUGHAID

Hour:St~:: M·F .

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates

GAILliP'OliiS, OHIO 45631' CHESHIRE, OHIO

A

mochlne

58 Ftutlot
. ....,,..Pte,.,.-

Pass

•

Mike Hill· Owner ~

~~

company
33ZUZU-

• Q 3 2
•

Andrw57 Thrudwinding

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Soulb
West Nortb East

'

Independ~nt

• Q 3 2
• 96 5

...

JINES'

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;

• K 10 ·9 7 6 5 4

utnotet"

32 Wllhoul

• 9 7

Senior Citizen
Discount

HERBALIFE

East

•AJ
I K Q7 3
tl09865

IMied:icaJre Supplement; Life ln~urance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
- IIEm•erg,en)•-Flmds; Mortgage; ~ ·· ~
·
Medical • Nursing Home
~.

Albany, Ohio

West

"Jock- could

55 Act-. Dahl
56 Tennlo player

27DencerDuncen

Soulb

TREE SERVICE

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.

$1 9S

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

__ Contra~tors Welcome

23

• J 8 42

IW f!lcr, ~ st~tue ... ~;::i~:i~

LIFE
RANCE
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Free Estimates

Nttd It done, 11ve u• 1 call
FREE ESTIMATES
Great Prim on New Ntmtl

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

mo~wool

CONCRITE

tAKJ74

• K J 10 4 2

Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical work done

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

P/BCONlRAClOR~, INC.

w 9'oj'/it
1·800-311·3391

"You csll we hsul"

.

drink

I A 10

07-2HO

• 8

~~
'We feature Valvoline Products" ;
•
401 5th Street
Racine, OH 45771'

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

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

~~

Service

Hauling • Umeslona • :
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil •·
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servi1es
(740) 992-3470

53 Lemon-time

chopper
17Btowne
18 lndiiPDied
20 Medieval Hff
21 Seeoncl
prwoldenl

Nort

RACINE SERVICE CENTER

Now Renting

• Verticalo • Wood

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS ·

Raelna, Ohio

EXCfiVfiTINQ

011 Changelndudeslubo&amp; .u.~lmls
Special . choctttlllht.oitbraodo,;laWoJ

48 Unc&amp;.

t4 s 15 T.-.pped
16 Mille wood-

• 83

WAN,.ED
Free-Estimates

7122/TFN

B&amp;T TRUCKING

4ti

Anawer to Pr.vlout Puu..

42 "-tllo nlaht
before •• :'•

1 Kind ot ml...,.l
clepol~

tff'OLIHG and

29870 Beahan
Road
R I
ac ne, Ohl o
45771
740.949-2217
Sl
'
zes 5 X 10'
to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8 PM
1/21100 I nio. od,

[jj] 740•949•2700

UPTO 70% OFF

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE
ESTIMATES
740·992·1671

(NO SUNDAY CAU.S)

992·5479

992·2753

per 91"1"

Jf:,WICK'S

SELF STORAGE

40 Eject

7 S......
47 Rldtcute
l3 Surglclll alllch 51 Glouy Iabrie

·- .-

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740·992·7599

'
!

$300.00 Coverall
1
$500.00 Stlrburat
:
Progressive top nne. : :
Lie. # Q0.50 1111.,., ·

' 1

Ask for Jim

I

fZI

446·4995

740-992-9636

~ --- • Roollng~·-

sao·oo
ay ng

P I

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

144 'l1llnl Ave. Gallpolls

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES .

•.

Over 40 yrs expe!lence

• Mlni11 • Etc

- Pick-up &amp; delivery · Tires &amp;Detail '

• Decks

Pomeroy, OH

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

made to order at our
location

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

• Sieling

740 •• , . . . .

AU vertical blindo are

,.,~

• Garages

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolvlll•, OH 45723

1'

· Rutland, Ohio

111&amp; Ohio Vall&amp;y's automotlvti IAdv Is
continually looking for aggr&amp;si'VII and
motlvatsd palpl&amp; to flU sate positions.

7!18 1 mo. pd.

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

,1

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

SALES

••

AD Make&amp; Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Aldhorilled

' Club Bingo On
' Thursdays
, . AT e:!IO P.M.
Main St.,

ALDER

ACROSS

wv

992-2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

{PA) (CC)

I
Help With

r

IMPROVEMENT
Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classifieds.

Call 740·992·2155 to place ~
your classified ad.

.

or as ow as
•
er 1nc

Wednesday, July 26, 2000
You might have to revise your
• methods or tactics in order to have
' good dealings with thqsc with
· whom you' ll be involved in the
year ahead, but it' ll be worth the
solid ac hievements you make.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) By
availing yourself to groups ,o r
clubs today, you' ll have better
than average chances of meeting
some very influential contacts.
Big shQ,tS could become your
buddies. Leo, treat yourse lf to a
birthday gift. Send for your AstraGraph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
PO. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta. tion , New York, NY 10156. Be
· sure to state your Zodiac sign.
, VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) If
· you think you have constructive
ideas that could produce better
results where your career is con. cemed, do not hide your life
under a bushel. Make your concepts known.
• LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Someone fasci nat ing and even
dynamic is about to make. hi s or
her presence felt within you r
I

social circle. This person's influence will make your soc ial life
even better th an it already is.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) A
transformation for which you've
been hopin g looks like it cou ld
take place today. it will benefit not
only you, but those you love, as
well.
SAGlTIARlUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) The concessions you make
today could pay off quite handsomely for you as time marches
on. What you give now will be
returned to you in greater measure:
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Although you might be better
than you think at reading th e signals when opportunity presents
itself, you could have a tendency
not to trust it today. Believe in
yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Use your influence over your
immediate sphere of friends to
pluck out a fly in the ointment
today. Chances are it' ll be an ineffectiv•: acquaintance who' ll serve
as the detractor.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Fortunately, you' ll get in gear ear-

ly in the day and make a whole
bunch of good things happen fo r
you . Later on, you could ge t
caught up with too much trivia.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Even though you r reasoning may
leave a lot. to be des ired today.
chances are you'll luck out with
others taking over and mak ing the
right moves for you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20.)
Financial develop ments in the
market place today that appear
un to.ward fo r others wu kl end up
workin g out to you r benefit. II ' II
be because yo u' ll be in the nght
spot at the ri ght time.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
You ' re the one who wi ll be making the largest cont ri bution in a
jo int ve nture in which you' re
involved today. not your counterpart . Don't let anyone convince
you otherwise.
CANCER (June 2 1-J ul y 22)
Trust your luck today, becau se it
appears that those ve ry developments over wh ich you 'II have the
least control will be the ones that
wi ll shower you with the most
benefits.

{PA)(CC)

MajOf leagll!l Baseball. Flonda MEirlins at Atlanta Braves (l111e) (CC)

•

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 25, 2000

MAJOR LEAGU,E -BA-5--EBAL-L
field 6-5), 1:05 p.rn .

Parrish impressive despite loss to va·nkees
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

John Parrish made a perfec t major league
deout.
For one inning, at least.
Pitching against the New York Yankees, the
Baltimore lefty started Monday night's game
by striking out Chuck Knoblauch , Derek
on only 12
Jeter and Bernie Williams pitches!
"It's something I'll always remember," Parrish said.
Parrish was impressive, but still wound up
with the loss as the Yankees beat the Orioles
4-3 at Camden Yards.
Parrish's first game in the big leagues came
on the same day Ivan Rodriguez played his
final game of th e season for the Texas
Rangers.
The All-Star catcher broke his right thumb
when his hand hit Mo Vaughn's bat while
making a throw in the first inning against
Anaheim. Texas lost 6-5 in 12 innings.
"That's what happens when the team isn't
going good," Rodriguez said. "What can I do.'
But I have a strong mind and I'll be ready for
spring training."
Roger Clemens won his fifth straight start
since coming off the disabled list as the Yankees beat Baltimore. Relievers Mike Stanton
and Mariano Rivera closed out the Orioles.
"That's our game," Yankees manager Joe
Torre said. "You have a one-run lead in the
seventh, eighth or ninth inning ... Our
bullpen is one of our strong suits, and one run
has to be enough sometimes."
Parrish struck out nine in seven innings,
· allowing three earned runs and four hits.
Glenallen Hill, traded from the Chicago
Cubs to New York last Friday, led off the second inning with a home run in his first at-bat
for the Yankees.

"The main thing I wanted to do was go out dropped his appeal of a 1 0- game suspension
and help the team ," Parnsh said. " In the back for bumping plate umpire Ronald Kulpa
of my head I knew it \Vas the Yankees, but it twice during a Jul y 15 game.
was great pitching for the Orioles."
Milton gave up four hits and allowed only
Parrish, 22, never pit ched above Double-A one runner past first base.
before this year. He set down ll straight batWhite Sox 7, Royals 6
ters at one stretch, mixing a 93 mph fastball
Maggli o Ordonez hit a three-run home~
and Carlos Lee also &lt;irove in three runs as
with a swee ping cu rve.
..
Angels 6, Rangers 5, 12 innings
C hicago won at home.
A disappointing night for the Rangers saw
Ordonez put the White Sox ahead with a
them lose Rodriguez, then blow a three-run two-out horner. his 24th, in the seventh
lead in the ninth inning and eventually fall in mmng.
the 12th at home.
Johnny Damon had three hits and drove in
Texas thought it had won in the 1Oth when three runs fo r Kansas City.
Anaheim reliever Shigetoshi Hasegawa was
Devil Rays 4, Tigers 2
called for a balk with runners on second and
G reg Vaughn had three hits, including a
third. But the umpires huddled and reversed two-run single, as Tampa Bay won at Detroit.
the call, and the Angels escaped.
Albie Lopez improved to 4-0 lifetime
Tim Salmon had three hits for Anaheim, against the Tigers. Hideo Nomo lost for the
including a home run and an RBI single in seventh time in eight decisions.
the 12th. Scott Spiezio's two- out, two- run
Dodgers 4, Rockies 1
homer capped a three-run rally in the ninth.
Kevin Brown limited Co lorado to three hits
Angels left fielder Darin Erstad tied a major in eight innings and Gary Sheffield hit his
league record for putouts by an outfielder major league-leading 34th home run as Los
with 12 .
Angeles won at Coors Field.
Mariners 6, Athletics 4
Brown (10-3) held the Rockies to one hit
Seattle activated All-Star shortstop Alex in eight innings last Wednesday.
Rodriguez from the IS - day disabled list, but
Sheffield went 3-for-3 with a homer, triple
didn't need him to beat Oakland a4 Safeco and double, ami drove in three runs. Needing
Field.
a single to become the first Dodgers player to
Edgar Martinez hit his 25th home run and hit for the cycle since Wes Parker in 1970, he
Jamie Moyer defeated the Athletics for the was hit by a pitch in the seventh inning and
sixth srraight time.
walked in the ninth.
Kevin Appier matc hed a career high with
Giants 3, Padres 0
his fifth loss in a row.
Mark Gardner pitched seven scoreless
'!Wins 4, Red Sox 2
innings and won his fifth straight decision as
Eric Milton pitched eight scoreless innings San Fran cisco beat San Diego.
at Fenway Park and Minnesota beat Boston
Gardner, who took the rotation spot of
for the first time in eight tries this year.
Russ Ortiz to start the second half, has won
After taking batting practice,Ali-Star center five of his last six starts.
fielder Carl Everett of the Red Sox abruptly

PHOENIX (AP)
Brandy Reed
scored 31 points as Phoenix beat
Cleveland.
Tonya Edwards added 12 points for
Phoenix, and the Mercury (15 -9 )
held Cleveland to just four points in
.the final 4:08.
Reed hit 10 of 16 shots from the
floor and had eight r e bounds .
Ann Wauters scored 14 and Chasity
Melvin 11 to le ad Cleveland (13 10).
- l!hoenix played the second h-alf
without
point
guard
Michelle
Cleary, who twisted h er right knee
midway through the first half.
Fire 61, Shock 57
Sophia Witherspoon scored 18
points and Vanessa Nygaard added 16
as the Portland Fire beat the sl umping Detroit Shock 61-57 Monday
night.

Reds
from Page

81

just like the lead.
"They were hittin g my si nker," Graves
said. "That's my best pitch and they beat me
with it. I think it was si nking, but [ left a
coup le of them up."
Lance Berkman 's sac rifice fly with the
bases loaded tied it in the ninth . Graves
stayed in for th e lOth and gave up rwo-out
run-scoring singles to Bar~er and Bill Spiers.
Graves gave up six hits and three runs in
two innings, blowing a save for o nly the sec ond time in 19 chances. His ERA jumped

Browns
from Page 81
"You cou ld tell right away the intensity level was higher," Brown sat d." I know
t hat I'm always goi n g to have to be prepored and b e n·ady for anyt hin g."
After usin g their top pick last year on
QB T11n Couch, the Browns sw it c hed
their focu s to t he defensive future when
they sign e J Brown to a seven - year deal
whic h c an earn him $45 million . .
Th ey ig nored th e crit ics who said
Brown was too sma ll to go against 280pound l inema n. The Browns liked eve r ythmg they saw in Brown hi s size,

Tampa Bay (Yan 4-7) at Detroit f'Neaver 6-

Notionol LNgue

8), 7:05 p.m.
.
N.v_ Yankees (Gooden 4-3) at Baltimore
(Erid&lt;son S-7), 7:35 p.m .
.
Anaheim ('Nashbum 6-2) at Texas (PenshO
2-3), 8:35 p.m .
Oakland {Hudson 10-3) at Seanle (Abbon 63). 10:05 p.m.

Eaot Dlvtllon
TMm

W

L Pet.

OB

...llama ..................... ......60 39 .606
New York .........................53 44 548

8
Monlroal ......................... 47 48 .495
11
Florida ............................ 48 50 . .490 II 1/2

Philadelphia ....... ............. 44 53 .454
c.ntr.1 Dlvlolon
s~. Lou~ ......... ................. 55 43 .561
C1nannat1 ..... ....... ............ 50 49
Chicago ........................ -13 54
Pittsburgh .................... 42 55
Milwaukee .
. ...... «&gt; 59
Houston ....................... .. 36 63
Wut Dlvlalon
Arizona ................... ........ 56 43
San Francisoo ........ , ........ 54 43
Los Angelos .................... 52 48
Colorado ......................... 48 49
San Oiego ................... ..... 44 55

15

~ - PROHOOPS

.505 5 1{2
.4-13 II 1/2
.433 121/2
.404 15 112
,364 19 112

Women'l National e . .ketball Auoclatlon
E11tern Conference

Team
.566
.557
1
.531 3 112

.495

7

.444

t2

Mondoly'l 0.1MI

T~'aGtmoo

(Williamson 3-7). 7:35p.m.
_Chtcago Cubs (Ueber 9-5) at Philadelphia
(NOll 8-5), 7:35 p.rn.
Florida (Dempster 9-7) at Atlanta (Gtavine
11-5), 740 p.m.
Arizona (R.Johnson 15-2) at St. Louis
(Siephonson 10-6). 8:10p.m.
Lo&amp; Angeles (Park 10-7) at C&lt;iorado (Yoshll
4-11), 9:05p.m.
San Francisco (Rueter 7-5) at San Diego
(Williams 4-3), 10:05 p.m.

Phoenix 67,

45
47
55
58

SEATILE MARINERs--Activated 55 AIOM
Rodriguez from the 15·day disablecl list.
Optioned OF Charles Gipson to Tacoma of the
PCL.
TORONTO BiwUE JAYS- Named Dave
Stewan pitching coach. Reassigned former
pitching coach Rick Langford to Syracuse of
the Internationa l League .
National League
CINCINNATI RED5---Named DeJon Watson major league scout.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS- Signed G Everett

GB

.531

2

.530

2

.439

11

.402 141/2

Mciver. Waived G ~ex Bernstein.
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Agreed to 1erms
with DT Eric Swonn an a one - ~ear contract.
GREEN BAY PACKER~greed to terms
with OT Chad Clifton on a four-year contract.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS-Signed RB Mark
Kacmarynski. Announced the retirement of AB
Dan Kendra.
PITTSBURGH STEELEAS-Signed OL
Ryan Thomassie. Released LB Mike Sands.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed OT Todd WBde
and CB Ben Kelly to multiyear contracts.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Signed DL Chris
Hovan.
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Signed DE Vince Arney.
Released Dl Samson SherrOd.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Signed LB
Steve Tovar. Released CB Damen Wheeler.
Agreed to terms with S Rogers Becken on a

11

Detron ............................ 45 52 .4&amp;4

16
Kansas City .................... .45 53 .459 16 1/2
Minne60ta ..... .................. 45 57 .441 18 1/2

.

West DIYIIIon

SoaUie .................. .. ,. ...... 58

0~

40

Monday'a Gamu

Portland (8- 16) snapped a three game l osing streak hnd won on the
road for the first time sin ce July 11 .
The Shock (10-13) have l ost three
straight since the All-Star break and
dropped to fifth place in the Eastern
Conference.
Liberty 78, Mystics 64
Vickie Johnson scored a season-.
high 22 points to lead N ew York to
its eighth victory in nin e games.
Johnson was 7-for-12 from th e
fie ld and put the clamps on the Mys tics' AII ~Star · forward--C h amique
Holdsclaw, who finished with 15
points on 7-for-15 shooting.
Tamika Whitmore added 16 points
for the Liberty (15-10) and center
• Tari Phillips had 14 points and a
team-high nine rebounds in front of
17,988 at the MCI Center.
Murrie! Page led the Mysti cs (11 13) with a season-high 18 points , on

8-for c l O shooting, and 11 r ebounds.
Sting 82, Fever 78, OT
Andr ea Stinson scored 21 of her
game-high 2 4 points in the second
· half and overtime as Charlotte rallied for irs third victory in four
ga m es.
C harlotte tied a franchise record
by connecting on mne 3-point-ers,
inc l uding S tinson's with 4.9 seconds
remaining in regulation to send the
gan1e inro overcimc .
Dawn Sta ley opened rh'e scoring in
overtime with a 3-poinrer for Ch:rr;olo tt e. Indt ana tied the game at 75-75
on two Danielle McCulley free
throws b·e fore Stinson gave Charlotte
(6-18) the lead for good with anot h er 3-poin t e r.
Williams led the Fever (6-17) with
a seaso n - high 2 1 points .

from I. 95 to 2.32.
"This was definitely a tough one," Graves
satd. "In this game, those things are going to
happen. In this rol e, you've got to accept fai lure. Tonight was one of those games where
I'm just going to have to take it."
•·
It was a sweet one for the Amos, who are
looking for anyt lung to fed good about
these days.
"Things are starting to turn around for us
a little bit," Barker said. " That's all you can
ask for in a season like this."
Manager Larry Dierker summed up the
mood.
"This was the biggest win of the year for
us," he said.
Reds Notes: The Reds managed only

one
baserunner in
the
final
five
Innings .... .. Left-hander Wayne Franklin.
made a memorable major league debut. He
came on to fa ce Griffey in the seventh and
cove red first bas e for the putout on a ·
grounder to seco nd .... Craig Biggio had a
homer, double and si ngle, the second time
this month he\ come up one hit shy of the
cycle .... Casey's double extended his hitting
streak to a ca reer- high 16 games . .,. Dmitri
Young doubled in his tlrst at-bat, extending
his hitting streak to 11 games .... Dante
Bichnte was U-for-4, ending his streak at a
season-high 17 ga mes.... The Reds had convened thl'lr hst mnt' save chances since Scou
William so n blew one on June 21 at Colorado.

strength and, maybe above all, attitude.
" He's got all the ro ols and he's coac hable," said defensive -end Derrick Al exa nder. " He liste ns to the coaches. He's very
attentive and loves what he does ."
Alexander, beginning h1 s seventh pro
season, ha s see n enough of Brown to
know he is witnessing potential grea tness.
"[don't kn ow when t he sw it c h is go1 ng
to go from ju st lea rning to domination,"
said Al exa nder. "But he's got hi s finger on
it . He's going ro dotm nate some day."
After practice, Brown's loc ker is a magnet for TV c:un era crews Jnd reporrcrs.
who stra in to hear wh;H the hum ble ~2 year-old , nt c kname d "T he Qu iet Storm"
1
at Penn Srate, ha s to say.

Brown doesn't gloat, preferring to take
a personal co mpliment and turn it into
one fo r the rea m .
It's a quality tha t's already earned him
prai se in C levela nd's lo c ker room .
"T he thing I lik e about him is that he's
such a good kid," sa id offe nsive guard Jim
P yne. " H e's unbclievob le on the field, but
o nce lt e co mes oil, he's just quiet and to
himself. H e's not shooting hi s mouth off.
He 's got 1t all ."
At IL•J st one of Brown's teammates
wouldn't m ind if the ktd occas ionally
opened h1s mo u t h .
" [ JUSt wis h h e'd talk a little more ," sai d
tackle St.l li n Co hn et. "Give me a little
'Hc·y. St.&gt;l in' once in a while JUSt so I
kn ow you'rl' alive."

e

.592

.. ..... .53 45 .541

~~:~ . ::::::::::::.::::.:::::::!: ~

5
.540
5
.474 II 1/2

Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 2
Minnesota 4, Boston 2
N.Y. Yankees 4. Baltimore 3
Chicago White SOM 7, Kansas City ,6
Anaheim 6, Texas 5, 12 imings
sunte 6, Dakland 4
·
Today'• Games
Tampa Bay (Trachsel6-9} at Detroit (Blair 6·
2), 7:05p.m.
Cleveland (Finley 8·7) at Toronto (Escobar
7-9). 7:05p.m .
Minnesota (Mays 5-11) at Boston (R .Martlnez 8-5), 7:05p .m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pettine 9-6) at Baltimore
(Erickson 5-7), 7:35p.m.
Kansas City (Suppan 4-6) at Ch.icago White
Sox (Parque 9·3), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Et herton 5-1) at Te..as (Oliver 2·
5), 8:35p.m.
Oa~land (Heredia 11-7) at Seattle (Sele 11·

5}.-10-;05-p,m,--

WednNd•v'• Gamn
Cleveland (COlon 9·7) at Toronto (Wells 153). 12:35 p.m.

Minnesota (Redman B-4) at Boston (Waice.

57

BASEBAll
American league

New York .................. ..... 52 42 .553
Boston ............................ 51
Toronto .................. ~ ......... 53
Baltimore ........................ 43
Tampa Bay ....................... 39

four-year contract.
NEW YORK GIANTS-Waived FB Brian
Aikins.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER&amp;-Waived FB
Jim Kins
HOCKEY
Natlonel Hockey League
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Agreed to
terms with o Sandis Ozolinsh on a five-year ·

-

contract.
.
CHICAGO 8LACKHAWKS-Ae.signed F
Michal Grosek to a two-year contract.
MINNESOTA WILD-Named Mike Ramsey
ana-Mar.O l r6ffibi8y asSiStanfCaacfies. Signed
o J.J . Oaigneauh.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Agreed to terms
with G Johan HOimqvist and G Vitali Yere.
meyev.

'

I

I

Larkin
from Page 81
Ch1d o pera ti n ~ offi cer Jo hn Allen sa id
Mond.ty the club is st ill studying rming t.cket prices th tS seaso n. The Reds have L.fk.in
md Ken Griffey Jr. under con tract, have to
1nvest S30 million 1n their new ballpark and

-

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'

Twin

Players willy be eligibie for arbitration Danny Graves, Casey. Pokey Reese among
them.
The Red s opened this season with a $44
million payroll. ranking 21st in the maj ors.
Allen said next year's payroll ·will be about the
sa me .
" I don't see it tremendously more than that,
and I don't see it dramatically below that,
eithe r," Allen said.

14 Gal. QPV

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699 99'g 1499 1fJ99

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'

After Rebate
will lose 14,000 seats in the current one when
the season ends. The outfield sta nds at Cinergy Field will be razed to make rooni for the
new ballpark , &lt;eheduled to open in 2003.
"We're not just . looking at 1t becau se of
Barn( Allen .aid. " It's someth ing we've been
talking about ."
Allen said the club's payroll won't change
substanttally next season, which will make for
a tight squeeze because some of th eir young

6
6 1/2
81/2
10
13
16 112

I' 'lRAN$ACI10NS '• I

Lt•o1.1•
L Pet.

1/2

Seattle at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Orlando at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday'• Gam••
Washington at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
Miami at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Clevelaod at Utah, 9 p.m.
Indiana at PhoeniM, 10 p.m.
Sacramento at Ponland , 10 p.m.

Wednelc:lly'a Glmu

W

G l e~Jeland

8 1/2

Tllelday'l Gam••

Houston {Eianon 9-4) at Cincinnati (Parris 512), 12:35 p.m.
l, Mllw&amp;.~kee (Haynes 9·9) at Pittsburgh (Silva
&amp;4), 7:05p .m.
,. Montreal {Hermanson 8-1) at N .Y. Mets
(ljompton 9-7), 710 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Tapani 6-8) at Philadelphia
(Citen 5-1l) , 7:35 p.rn .
Flol"ida (Burnett 1-0) at Atlanta (Millwood 5·
8), 7:40p.m.
Arizona (Reynoso 7-6) at St. Louis (Kile tt 6) . 8:10p.m.
.
Los Angeles (Perez 4-4) at Colorado
(Bohanon 4-7), 905 p.rn .
San Francisco (Estes 9-3) at San Diego
IEalon 2·1). 10:05 p.m.

Ealt Dlvl-'on

1/2
10 .565
1
13 .458 3 1/2
13 .434
4

Charlotte : .......................6 18 .250
,
Weetern Conference
X-LOS Angeles ....... ........... 21
3 .875
x-Houston ..
... 21
4 .840
PhOenix ..
...... .. ... ... 15 9 .625
Sacramento .... ............. ..15 10 .600
Utah ..
.J
.13 12 .520
Minnesota ..
... ... . 11 13 .458
........ ....8 16 .333
Portland .
Seattle .......................... .... 4 19 .174
x-clinched playoff spot
Monday's Qamea
New York 78, Washington 54
CharlOtte 82. Indiana 78, OT
Portland 61, Detroit 57

Milwaukee {D'Amico 6·4) at Pittsburgh (Ben·
son B-8), 7:05 p.m.
Montreal (Hermanson 8·7) at N .Y. Mets
(Ruscll 8·7), 7:10p.m.
Houston (Uma 3·13) at Cincinnati

Tum

GB

10 .600
10 .583

~~~~~·:::::::::::: ............. ::::~ ~~ :~~~ 51~

LOs Angefes 4, Colorado t
San Francisco. 3, San Diego 0
Only games scheduled

Amtrlc•n

W L Pet.

New York ................. .... .... 15
Orlando .. .............. .......... 14
.. 13
Cleveland ... -..
Washington ......
... 11
Detroit .... .
.10

Houston 7, Cincinnati 5, 10 innings

Chicago .... ,..................... 62 37 .626
CIOV018nd ......... ............... 50 47 .515

Reed leads .Phoenix past Cleveland, 61-57
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sox (Baldwin 12·4), 2:05 p.rn .

C.m,.. Division

WNBA UPDATE

.

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27 Exposures

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 25, 2000

MAJOR LEAGU,E -BA-5--EBAL-L
field 6-5), 1:05 p.rn .

Parrish impressive despite loss to va·nkees
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

John Parrish made a perfec t major league
deout.
For one inning, at least.
Pitching against the New York Yankees, the
Baltimore lefty started Monday night's game
by striking out Chuck Knoblauch , Derek
on only 12
Jeter and Bernie Williams pitches!
"It's something I'll always remember," Parrish said.
Parrish was impressive, but still wound up
with the loss as the Yankees beat the Orioles
4-3 at Camden Yards.
Parrish's first game in the big leagues came
on the same day Ivan Rodriguez played his
final game of th e season for the Texas
Rangers.
The All-Star catcher broke his right thumb
when his hand hit Mo Vaughn's bat while
making a throw in the first inning against
Anaheim. Texas lost 6-5 in 12 innings.
"That's what happens when the team isn't
going good," Rodriguez said. "What can I do.'
But I have a strong mind and I'll be ready for
spring training."
Roger Clemens won his fifth straight start
since coming off the disabled list as the Yankees beat Baltimore. Relievers Mike Stanton
and Mariano Rivera closed out the Orioles.
"That's our game," Yankees manager Joe
Torre said. "You have a one-run lead in the
seventh, eighth or ninth inning ... Our
bullpen is one of our strong suits, and one run
has to be enough sometimes."
Parrish struck out nine in seven innings,
· allowing three earned runs and four hits.
Glenallen Hill, traded from the Chicago
Cubs to New York last Friday, led off the second inning with a home run in his first at-bat
for the Yankees.

"The main thing I wanted to do was go out dropped his appeal of a 1 0- game suspension
and help the team ," Parnsh said. " In the back for bumping plate umpire Ronald Kulpa
of my head I knew it \Vas the Yankees, but it twice during a Jul y 15 game.
was great pitching for the Orioles."
Milton gave up four hits and allowed only
Parrish, 22, never pit ched above Double-A one runner past first base.
before this year. He set down ll straight batWhite Sox 7, Royals 6
ters at one stretch, mixing a 93 mph fastball
Maggli o Ordonez hit a three-run home~
and Carlos Lee also &lt;irove in three runs as
with a swee ping cu rve.
..
Angels 6, Rangers 5, 12 innings
C hicago won at home.
A disappointing night for the Rangers saw
Ordonez put the White Sox ahead with a
them lose Rodriguez, then blow a three-run two-out horner. his 24th, in the seventh
lead in the ninth inning and eventually fall in mmng.
the 12th at home.
Johnny Damon had three hits and drove in
Texas thought it had won in the 1Oth when three runs fo r Kansas City.
Anaheim reliever Shigetoshi Hasegawa was
Devil Rays 4, Tigers 2
called for a balk with runners on second and
G reg Vaughn had three hits, including a
third. But the umpires huddled and reversed two-run single, as Tampa Bay won at Detroit.
the call, and the Angels escaped.
Albie Lopez improved to 4-0 lifetime
Tim Salmon had three hits for Anaheim, against the Tigers. Hideo Nomo lost for the
including a home run and an RBI single in seventh time in eight decisions.
the 12th. Scott Spiezio's two- out, two- run
Dodgers 4, Rockies 1
homer capped a three-run rally in the ninth.
Kevin Brown limited Co lorado to three hits
Angels left fielder Darin Erstad tied a major in eight innings and Gary Sheffield hit his
league record for putouts by an outfielder major league-leading 34th home run as Los
with 12 .
Angeles won at Coors Field.
Mariners 6, Athletics 4
Brown (10-3) held the Rockies to one hit
Seattle activated All-Star shortstop Alex in eight innings last Wednesday.
Rodriguez from the IS - day disabled list, but
Sheffield went 3-for-3 with a homer, triple
didn't need him to beat Oakland a4 Safeco and double, ami drove in three runs. Needing
Field.
a single to become the first Dodgers player to
Edgar Martinez hit his 25th home run and hit for the cycle since Wes Parker in 1970, he
Jamie Moyer defeated the Athletics for the was hit by a pitch in the seventh inning and
sixth srraight time.
walked in the ninth.
Kevin Appier matc hed a career high with
Giants 3, Padres 0
his fifth loss in a row.
Mark Gardner pitched seven scoreless
'!Wins 4, Red Sox 2
innings and won his fifth straight decision as
Eric Milton pitched eight scoreless innings San Fran cisco beat San Diego.
at Fenway Park and Minnesota beat Boston
Gardner, who took the rotation spot of
for the first time in eight tries this year.
Russ Ortiz to start the second half, has won
After taking batting practice,Ali-Star center five of his last six starts.
fielder Carl Everett of the Red Sox abruptly

PHOENIX (AP)
Brandy Reed
scored 31 points as Phoenix beat
Cleveland.
Tonya Edwards added 12 points for
Phoenix, and the Mercury (15 -9 )
held Cleveland to just four points in
.the final 4:08.
Reed hit 10 of 16 shots from the
floor and had eight r e bounds .
Ann Wauters scored 14 and Chasity
Melvin 11 to le ad Cleveland (13 10).
- l!hoenix played the second h-alf
without
point
guard
Michelle
Cleary, who twisted h er right knee
midway through the first half.
Fire 61, Shock 57
Sophia Witherspoon scored 18
points and Vanessa Nygaard added 16
as the Portland Fire beat the sl umping Detroit Shock 61-57 Monday
night.

Reds
from Page

81

just like the lead.
"They were hittin g my si nker," Graves
said. "That's my best pitch and they beat me
with it. I think it was si nking, but [ left a
coup le of them up."
Lance Berkman 's sac rifice fly with the
bases loaded tied it in the ninth . Graves
stayed in for th e lOth and gave up rwo-out
run-scoring singles to Bar~er and Bill Spiers.
Graves gave up six hits and three runs in
two innings, blowing a save for o nly the sec ond time in 19 chances. His ERA jumped

Browns
from Page 81
"You cou ld tell right away the intensity level was higher," Brown sat d." I know
t hat I'm always goi n g to have to be prepored and b e n·ady for anyt hin g."
After usin g their top pick last year on
QB T11n Couch, the Browns sw it c hed
their focu s to t he defensive future when
they sign e J Brown to a seven - year deal
whic h c an earn him $45 million . .
Th ey ig nored th e crit ics who said
Brown was too sma ll to go against 280pound l inema n. The Browns liked eve r ythmg they saw in Brown hi s size,

Tampa Bay (Yan 4-7) at Detroit f'Neaver 6-

Notionol LNgue

8), 7:05 p.m.
.
N.v_ Yankees (Gooden 4-3) at Baltimore
(Erid&lt;son S-7), 7:35 p.m .
.
Anaheim ('Nashbum 6-2) at Texas (PenshO
2-3), 8:35 p.m .
Oakland {Hudson 10-3) at Seanle (Abbon 63). 10:05 p.m.

Eaot Dlvtllon
TMm

W

L Pet.

OB

...llama ..................... ......60 39 .606
New York .........................53 44 548

8
Monlroal ......................... 47 48 .495
11
Florida ............................ 48 50 . .490 II 1/2

Philadelphia ....... ............. 44 53 .454
c.ntr.1 Dlvlolon
s~. Lou~ ......... ................. 55 43 .561
C1nannat1 ..... ....... ............ 50 49
Chicago ........................ -13 54
Pittsburgh .................... 42 55
Milwaukee .
. ...... «&gt; 59
Houston ....................... .. 36 63
Wut Dlvlalon
Arizona ................... ........ 56 43
San Francisoo ........ , ........ 54 43
Los Angelos .................... 52 48
Colorado ......................... 48 49
San Oiego ................... ..... 44 55

15

~ - PROHOOPS

.505 5 1{2
.4-13 II 1/2
.433 121/2
.404 15 112
,364 19 112

Women'l National e . .ketball Auoclatlon
E11tern Conference

Team
.566
.557
1
.531 3 112

.495

7

.444

t2

Mondoly'l 0.1MI

T~'aGtmoo

(Williamson 3-7). 7:35p.m.
_Chtcago Cubs (Ueber 9-5) at Philadelphia
(NOll 8-5), 7:35 p.rn.
Florida (Dempster 9-7) at Atlanta (Gtavine
11-5), 740 p.m.
Arizona (R.Johnson 15-2) at St. Louis
(Siephonson 10-6). 8:10p.m.
Lo&amp; Angeles (Park 10-7) at C&lt;iorado (Yoshll
4-11), 9:05p.m.
San Francisco (Rueter 7-5) at San Diego
(Williams 4-3), 10:05 p.m.

Phoenix 67,

45
47
55
58

SEATILE MARINERs--Activated 55 AIOM
Rodriguez from the 15·day disablecl list.
Optioned OF Charles Gipson to Tacoma of the
PCL.
TORONTO BiwUE JAYS- Named Dave
Stewan pitching coach. Reassigned former
pitching coach Rick Langford to Syracuse of
the Internationa l League .
National League
CINCINNATI RED5---Named DeJon Watson major league scout.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS- Signed G Everett

GB

.531

2

.530

2

.439

11

.402 141/2

Mciver. Waived G ~ex Bernstein.
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Agreed to 1erms
with DT Eric Swonn an a one - ~ear contract.
GREEN BAY PACKER~greed to terms
with OT Chad Clifton on a four-year contract.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS-Signed RB Mark
Kacmarynski. Announced the retirement of AB
Dan Kendra.
PITTSBURGH STEELEAS-Signed OL
Ryan Thomassie. Released LB Mike Sands.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed OT Todd WBde
and CB Ben Kelly to multiyear contracts.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Signed DL Chris
Hovan.
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Signed DE Vince Arney.
Released Dl Samson SherrOd.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Signed LB
Steve Tovar. Released CB Damen Wheeler.
Agreed to terms with S Rogers Becken on a

11

Detron ............................ 45 52 .4&amp;4

16
Kansas City .................... .45 53 .459 16 1/2
Minne60ta ..... .................. 45 57 .441 18 1/2

.

West DIYIIIon

SoaUie .................. .. ,. ...... 58

0~

40

Monday'a Gamu

Portland (8- 16) snapped a three game l osing streak hnd won on the
road for the first time sin ce July 11 .
The Shock (10-13) have l ost three
straight since the All-Star break and
dropped to fifth place in the Eastern
Conference.
Liberty 78, Mystics 64
Vickie Johnson scored a season-.
high 22 points to lead N ew York to
its eighth victory in nin e games.
Johnson was 7-for-12 from th e
fie ld and put the clamps on the Mys tics' AII ~Star · forward--C h amique
Holdsclaw, who finished with 15
points on 7-for-15 shooting.
Tamika Whitmore added 16 points
for the Liberty (15-10) and center
• Tari Phillips had 14 points and a
team-high nine rebounds in front of
17,988 at the MCI Center.
Murrie! Page led the Mysti cs (11 13) with a season-high 18 points , on

8-for c l O shooting, and 11 r ebounds.
Sting 82, Fever 78, OT
Andr ea Stinson scored 21 of her
game-high 2 4 points in the second
· half and overtime as Charlotte rallied for irs third victory in four
ga m es.
C harlotte tied a franchise record
by connecting on mne 3-point-ers,
inc l uding S tinson's with 4.9 seconds
remaining in regulation to send the
gan1e inro overcimc .
Dawn Sta ley opened rh'e scoring in
overtime with a 3-poinrer for Ch:rr;olo tt e. Indt ana tied the game at 75-75
on two Danielle McCulley free
throws b·e fore Stinson gave Charlotte
(6-18) the lead for good with anot h er 3-poin t e r.
Williams led the Fever (6-17) with
a seaso n - high 2 1 points .

from I. 95 to 2.32.
"This was definitely a tough one," Graves
satd. "In this game, those things are going to
happen. In this rol e, you've got to accept fai lure. Tonight was one of those games where
I'm just going to have to take it."
•·
It was a sweet one for the Amos, who are
looking for anyt lung to fed good about
these days.
"Things are starting to turn around for us
a little bit," Barker said. " That's all you can
ask for in a season like this."
Manager Larry Dierker summed up the
mood.
"This was the biggest win of the year for
us," he said.
Reds Notes: The Reds managed only

one
baserunner in
the
final
five
Innings .... .. Left-hander Wayne Franklin.
made a memorable major league debut. He
came on to fa ce Griffey in the seventh and
cove red first bas e for the putout on a ·
grounder to seco nd .... Craig Biggio had a
homer, double and si ngle, the second time
this month he\ come up one hit shy of the
cycle .... Casey's double extended his hitting
streak to a ca reer- high 16 games . .,. Dmitri
Young doubled in his tlrst at-bat, extending
his hitting streak to 11 games .... Dante
Bichnte was U-for-4, ending his streak at a
season-high 17 ga mes.... The Reds had convened thl'lr hst mnt' save chances since Scou
William so n blew one on June 21 at Colorado.

strength and, maybe above all, attitude.
" He's got all the ro ols and he's coac hable," said defensive -end Derrick Al exa nder. " He liste ns to the coaches. He's very
attentive and loves what he does ."
Alexander, beginning h1 s seventh pro
season, ha s see n enough of Brown to
know he is witnessing potential grea tness.
"[don't kn ow when t he sw it c h is go1 ng
to go from ju st lea rning to domination,"
said Al exa nder. "But he's got hi s finger on
it . He's going ro dotm nate some day."
After practice, Brown's loc ker is a magnet for TV c:un era crews Jnd reporrcrs.
who stra in to hear wh;H the hum ble ~2 year-old , nt c kname d "T he Qu iet Storm"
1
at Penn Srate, ha s to say.

Brown doesn't gloat, preferring to take
a personal co mpliment and turn it into
one fo r the rea m .
It's a quality tha t's already earned him
prai se in C levela nd's lo c ker room .
"T he thing I lik e about him is that he's
such a good kid," sa id offe nsive guard Jim
P yne. " H e's unbclievob le on the field, but
o nce lt e co mes oil, he's just quiet and to
himself. H e's not shooting hi s mouth off.
He 's got 1t all ."
At IL•J st one of Brown's teammates
wouldn't m ind if the ktd occas ionally
opened h1s mo u t h .
" [ JUSt wis h h e'd talk a little more ," sai d
tackle St.l li n Co hn et. "Give me a little
'Hc·y. St.&gt;l in' once in a while JUSt so I
kn ow you'rl' alive."

e

.592

.. ..... .53 45 .541

~~:~ . ::::::::::::.::::.:::::::!: ~

5
.540
5
.474 II 1/2

Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 2
Minnesota 4, Boston 2
N.Y. Yankees 4. Baltimore 3
Chicago White SOM 7, Kansas City ,6
Anaheim 6, Texas 5, 12 imings
sunte 6, Dakland 4
·
Today'• Games
Tampa Bay (Trachsel6-9} at Detroit (Blair 6·
2), 7:05p.m.
Cleveland (Finley 8·7) at Toronto (Escobar
7-9). 7:05p.m .
Minnesota (Mays 5-11) at Boston (R .Martlnez 8-5), 7:05p .m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pettine 9-6) at Baltimore
(Erickson 5-7), 7:35p.m.
Kansas City (Suppan 4-6) at Ch.icago White
Sox (Parque 9·3), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Et herton 5-1) at Te..as (Oliver 2·
5), 8:35p.m.
Oa~land (Heredia 11-7) at Seattle (Sele 11·

5}.-10-;05-p,m,--

WednNd•v'• Gamn
Cleveland (COlon 9·7) at Toronto (Wells 153). 12:35 p.m.

Minnesota (Redman B-4) at Boston (Waice.

57

BASEBAll
American league

New York .................. ..... 52 42 .553
Boston ............................ 51
Toronto .................. ~ ......... 53
Baltimore ........................ 43
Tampa Bay ....................... 39

four-year contract.
NEW YORK GIANTS-Waived FB Brian
Aikins.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER&amp;-Waived FB
Jim Kins
HOCKEY
Natlonel Hockey League
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Agreed to
terms with o Sandis Ozolinsh on a five-year ·

-

contract.
.
CHICAGO 8LACKHAWKS-Ae.signed F
Michal Grosek to a two-year contract.
MINNESOTA WILD-Named Mike Ramsey
ana-Mar.O l r6ffibi8y asSiStanfCaacfies. Signed
o J.J . Oaigneauh.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Agreed to terms
with G Johan HOimqvist and G Vitali Yere.
meyev.

'

I

I

Larkin
from Page 81
Ch1d o pera ti n ~ offi cer Jo hn Allen sa id
Mond.ty the club is st ill studying rming t.cket prices th tS seaso n. The Reds have L.fk.in
md Ken Griffey Jr. under con tract, have to
1nvest S30 million 1n their new ballpark and

-

FHEE INSPECTH)N

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Assorted Patterns &amp; Colors

'

Twin

Players willy be eligibie for arbitration Danny Graves, Casey. Pokey Reese among
them.
The Red s opened this season with a $44
million payroll. ranking 21st in the maj ors.
Allen said next year's payroll ·will be about the
sa me .
" I don't see it tremendously more than that,
and I don't see it dramatically below that,
eithe r," Allen said.

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'

After Rebate
will lose 14,000 seats in the current one when
the season ends. The outfield sta nds at Cinergy Field will be razed to make rooni for the
new ballpark , &lt;eheduled to open in 2003.
"We're not just . looking at 1t becau se of
Barn( Allen .aid. " It's someth ing we've been
talking about ."
Allen said the club's payroll won't change
substanttally next season, which will make for
a tight squeeze because some of th eir young

6
6 1/2
81/2
10
13
16 112

I' 'lRAN$ACI10NS '• I

Lt•o1.1•
L Pet.

1/2

Seattle at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Orlando at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday'• Gam••
Washington at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
Miami at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Clevelaod at Utah, 9 p.m.
Indiana at PhoeniM, 10 p.m.
Sacramento at Ponland , 10 p.m.

Wednelc:lly'a Glmu

W

G l e~Jeland

8 1/2

Tllelday'l Gam••

Houston {Eianon 9-4) at Cincinnati (Parris 512), 12:35 p.m.
l, Mllw&amp;.~kee (Haynes 9·9) at Pittsburgh (Silva
&amp;4), 7:05p .m.
,. Montreal {Hermanson 8-1) at N .Y. Mets
(ljompton 9-7), 710 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Tapani 6-8) at Philadelphia
(Citen 5-1l) , 7:35 p.rn .
Flol"ida (Burnett 1-0) at Atlanta (Millwood 5·
8), 7:40p.m.
Arizona (Reynoso 7-6) at St. Louis (Kile tt 6) . 8:10p.m.
.
Los Angeles (Perez 4-4) at Colorado
(Bohanon 4-7), 905 p.rn .
San Francisco (Estes 9-3) at San Diego
IEalon 2·1). 10:05 p.m.

Ealt Dlvl-'on

1/2
10 .565
1
13 .458 3 1/2
13 .434
4

Charlotte : .......................6 18 .250
,
Weetern Conference
X-LOS Angeles ....... ........... 21
3 .875
x-Houston ..
... 21
4 .840
PhOenix ..
...... .. ... ... 15 9 .625
Sacramento .... ............. ..15 10 .600
Utah ..
.J
.13 12 .520
Minnesota ..
... ... . 11 13 .458
........ ....8 16 .333
Portland .
Seattle .......................... .... 4 19 .174
x-clinched playoff spot
Monday's Qamea
New York 78, Washington 54
CharlOtte 82. Indiana 78, OT
Portland 61, Detroit 57

Milwaukee {D'Amico 6·4) at Pittsburgh (Ben·
son B-8), 7:05 p.m.
Montreal (Hermanson 8·7) at N .Y. Mets
(Ruscll 8·7), 7:10p.m.
Houston (Uma 3·13) at Cincinnati

Tum

GB

10 .600
10 .583

~~~~~·:::::::::::: ............. ::::~ ~~ :~~~ 51~

LOs Angefes 4, Colorado t
San Francisco. 3, San Diego 0
Only games scheduled

Amtrlc•n

W L Pet.

New York ................. .... .... 15
Orlando .. .............. .......... 14
.. 13
Cleveland ... -..
Washington ......
... 11
Detroit .... .
.10

Houston 7, Cincinnati 5, 10 innings

Chicago .... ,..................... 62 37 .626
CIOV018nd ......... ............... 50 47 .515

Reed leads .Phoenix past Cleveland, 61-57
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sox (Baldwin 12·4), 2:05 p.rn .

C.m,.. Division

WNBA UPDATE

.

Kansas City (Reicher1 4·6) at Chicago VVhite

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�Southern -local honor rolls, As
Reds lose; Who will tame the Tiger? 81

Hlp: lOs; r:.~

Details, A3

Wednesday
July 26, 2000

•

at
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 . Number 4l

50 Cents

b

M'port wants old build•
Qfficials ask Meigs Local
to give village property
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Turning th e thr~e school
buildings in Middl eport over to the village
when the new Meigs middle and elementary
schools are completed two or three years fium
now was the main topic of discussion at last
night's meeting of the Meigs Local Board of
Education.
Meeting with the board to request a resolution of intent to do that were members of
Middleport's econo m1c development committee, Bill Childs, Mick Childs, Steve Dunfee, M yron Duffield and Councilman Bob

Robinson .
While no resolution or motion of intent
was passed at the ineeting, Superi ntendent Bill
Buckley did agree to confer with the board 's
attorney about drawing up a resolution to be
considered by the .board.
He stressed. howeve r, that any agreement
would be based o n acceptable use of the
stru ctures as approved by the board .
Buckley also advised that a copy of the resolution would be sent to Middleport M ayor
Sandy lannarelli prior to the n ext meeting of
coun cil , and that it would be brought before
the board at the Aug. 9 m eeting.
The superintendent also stressed that

monies set aside for demolition or renovation
ca nnot be used by anyone other than the
board - that the funds cannot be turned over
to th e village.

5

It was repeatedly emphasized th at the board
has a responsibility to see that the buildings
are put to good use and that they are not
allowell to remain empty and deteriorate, like
the old Pomeroy Junior High building which
was turned over many years ago to Pomeroy
·
Village.
Robinson assured the board that the village
is "serious about use (of the buildings) to be a
benefit to the community."
Bill Childs, spokesman .for the group, said
that a resolution would put the committee in
a position to proceed with planning for th e
use of the buildings.
"If Middleport comes up with a plan and
the board agrees to that plan as being acceptable use then we'll meet the challenge," com-

PieaH see Property, Page Al

MHS band gears
for games, contests
BY CHARLENE HOEA.ICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - With
the opening of school
less than a month away,
th e Meigs Marauder
Band is into daily practices m preparation for half-time
shows at football games and fall
competition.
....
Direetor Toney Dingess began
Monday through Friday practices,
9 a.m . until noon, nearly three
weeks ago. Daily practices will
continueunuricho-ol starrs:·
--Last week, the 87 band members
spent five days at Cedar Lakes,
Ripley, WVa., where emphasis was
on learning marching fundamentals and music, working on the
competition show, and addressing
other' issues which lead to quality
petformance.
The band members paid the ir
own way, ' $125 each, and as the
director, now in hi s 14th year,
pointed out, "then: was no trouble
with attendance bee&lt;~ use thesl' kids
are real loyal to the program."
Already this summer the band,
with its 32 new members. have
marched in several parades, includmg those held at Rutland and
Middleport on the Fourth of July.
The band 's fi rst show will be
presented on Au~ . 25 at the game
between Meib" and Gallia Academy. llefore then, the band will be
brin~in~ on board five e1ghth
grade smdents for the "front
ensemble," whi ch ploys bells and
other instruments fOr sound
effects.
A~ain this year, Meigs IJand
Boosters :md band members wiJl
be ope rann~ a food booth at the PRACTICING - It's se rious business when Meigs High School Band members get together every mornM eigs County Fair, Aug. 14- 19.
ing to practice . Pictured front is John Halar. tenor drummer. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

P

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BY TONY

M.

LEACH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - A resolution to
place a 4-rnill renewal levy on
the ballot at the November gen eral election was approved at
Saturday-'s regular meeting of the
Southern Local Board of Education.
The proposed new levy, to
run fromlan.l,'2091 tQ J)ec.31,
2003, would replace the current
operating levy that expires at the
end of this year.
Purchase of furniture for the
rooms being built onto the high
school from Thomas W. Ruff &amp;
Co. in
the
amo unt
of
'$33,617.03 was approved during the meeting. _
1t was noted that the furniture
purchase will be taken out of
the general fund and then reimbursed through the building
project funds. Dave Kucsma
voted against the purchase.
Purchase of a 1990 handica pp ed bus from the Meigs
Local School Distnct for SI ,000
was approved by the board . The
bus, with 215,000 miles on its
odometer, was purchased as a
possible replacement for th e district 's bus for handicapped studenrs which , ir was reported,
may not pass inspection this fall.
l n personnel matters, the
board accepted the resignations
of Ben Barksdale, Kim Romine
and Je nnifer Roush as teachers
for th e district, and authorized
the superintendent to advertise
th e position o f a full-time elementary principal with a salarv

The propo ..;cd lll'tl' ·
fI' I')', f 0 I'II/I ji·o 111
]a11. 1, 2001 to
Dec 31, 2003,
wo11fd. rt'J''''f~'. tire
wrre11t opcratw.\!
JcF)'

tluu t&gt;xpi •O- ,u

tire end of rltis

)'1'•11'.

range of$40,000 to $48,000.
Scott Wickline was hired as
varsity baseball coach for the
2000- 01 school year.
Participation in the Meigs
County Health Department's
school and community-based
li ce eradication program was
approved by the board.
The program is financed by
the M eigs County Department
of Human Services and will
allow for team s to periodically
visit elementary schools and
help nurses check for lice.
When lice is found, the health
• department will provide educational literature to students and
their families in the eradication
and prevention of lice.
The board approved the following bids as received in the
treasurer's office for the 2000-01
school year: Broughton , milk
distribution; Gordon Food Service, food and supplies; G &amp; M
Fuel Co., Inc., fuel and oil;
Hein er's Bakery, bread distribution; Warehouse Tire, tires ~nd

PleaH IH Renew. Page Al

Compa~

To S9.99

Knife With
Retractable
Blade

Factory Re&lt;onditiqned With
Manufacturer's Warranty

Assorted
Characters

••
•

Local Board of Education meeting by Bill Childs, right, representing
Middleport's community development committee, for the board to
give the village the three school buildings to be vacated when new
schools are opened in a couple of years. With Childs are Superintendent Bill Buckley, right, and Treasurer Mark E. Rhonemus . (Charlene
Hoeflich photo)

Southem Local:
voters asked
to renew levy

Striking up the band

Caesar
Salad
Kits

DISCUSSING PROPERTY- A request was made at Tuesday's Meigs

BIG LOTS
Bargain• • Clo•oouh

••
••

Levy proposals arrive

Todays

at Meigs elections board·: Sentinel
)·

J.' REED

'l

.,

ce ml·tery maintenance. anJ Ru t~
.
lJml Townsh1p a 1- mill levy;
POMEROY
As ne x t renewal fo r fire protection . .
month 's filing deadline f(Jr tax Rau ne V11lage has requested the
levies approaches , townships. vil - r&lt;·p lacem ent of a three- mill curlages and o th e r government rem expemes levy.
The Village of Middleport has
agencies have begun filing pap erwork needed to place levies on specified that 1ts 1- mill levy
renewal will be useJ to fin ance
the Novt·mber ballot.
To date. Lebanon Township stree t lights. The levy was reJected
Trustees. Ra cine Village and Rut- by six vmcs during th e Marc h
land Town ship haw fil ed petitions primary election , and pro ceeds
with the Meib'S Co un ty Boa rd of from the existing levy wi ll sto p
Electiom to place lt·v i l'~· on rh e ·alter ilh' second- half I '!911 co ll ecfa ll ballot. O n Monday. th e Village tioll pt' rlod, whi ch rt•cently cono f Middl eport voted to plan· a cluded. •
Mayor
Sandy
· Midd le port
current expenses levy o n the bal lann are ll i said M onclay night tlut
lot.
the village will have no choi('c
Lebanon trustct's have rcquestPlease see Levies, '-ge Al
eJ renewal of a 1- rnill ln'Y fo r
BY BRIAN
SENTIN EL NEWS STAFF

1 Sections - 11 Pages

A:!

Calengar
Cli!uiti~ds

l!H

Comics
Editorials
Obitl!aries

B:!
A4
A;}

S[!2&lt;1~

Bl,6

A3

Wei!th~r

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 1-6-8; Pick &lt;4: 5-I-J· 6
Buclu!ye S: 4-5-13-29-32

W.YA,

,

Daily 3: 0-1 -8 Daily 4: 1-2-3-6
(' 2000 Ollll&gt; \l~lh:y Puhlnhmg C..,

Reports in on sewer,.water systems
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - Two reports from a consulting firm have bet"n rece ived and are under review by
the Middleport lloard of Publi c Aflairs .
Myro n Duffield . preside nt of the three-man
board, m et with Middleport Vi llage Council on
M onday to discuss the board's activities.
Floyd llrowne Associates of Columbus has completed a preliminary draft of a water and sewer rate
survey, and an EPA Combined Sewer System Operating Plan , two of a number of studies required for
the village in its pursuit of g ran t and loan funds for
sewerage and water system improvements.
What the rate survey reveals remams a public
mystery, since Floyd Browne has advised th e board
that the contents of th e report should remain confidenti al until it is presented in final form .
It has been implied, however, in public discu~sions
of th e plan , that in creases in both water and sewe r
rates are suggested.
"This stud y is important in the process o f obtainmg monies fi.1r the necessa ry improvements required

to our water and sewer systems," Duffield said .
The EPA operating plan reveals that the village is
in compliance with all regulations except for the
village's need for a systematic method of cleaning
streets.
"This is a minimum requirement which assists in
protecting our waste water sewer system from being
overcome with excess debns," Duffield !laid.
.
H e also noted that undue stress is pl~ced on the
system when residents sweep grass ana dirt and pile
brush on the curb.
. "Rain carries the debris into the sewer system,
and then causes backups and a problem in the sewers handlmg excess water," Duffteld said.
In other news related to Middleport's public
works system, Du!li_eld reported that a major repair
at Mill and Second streets near the pump station
wer.e completed earli er this month .
The proj ect , which involved the replacement of a
defective wire, was completed by village crews,
which resulted in a savings of about $4.000.
'

PleaH see sewer. Page A:S

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