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Society news and notes,
Reds lose to Mets, 81

thursday: aoudy

High: 80s; low: 60s

Details, A3

Wednesday

AS

August l. 1000

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en 1ne
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 48

50 Cents

Renovation expert tours Middleport schools
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDL EPORT C on ve rtin ~ schoo l
bll ildmgs in Middlt·p o rt fo r o th er uses will
cosr a lor o f mon ey. bur th e Middl epor t
Pla nn ing C ommi ssio n p lan ~ ro pursue tlw
buildings a~ a m ean s toward eco no m 1c
developme nt .
Th e co mmi ss ion me-t with a resto rati o n
expert o n Tue sday mornin g and ro ured th e
di stric t's three bui ldin gs in rh e vi llage to
begin the process o f pl annin g th e btnldin gs'
fu tures.

Meigs fair
plans get
board's nod

Memb ers of tht· planning Comim ss to n. a
ci ti ze ns' ad vi\ory g;oup and mcmb L·rs of
Middlep ort Village Council lll&lt;'t w ith rhe
M eigs Local Sc hool ll o .~rd l.tst wee k ro ask
th e bo ard to turn the buil din !'s bac k over to
· th e vi ll age onn: thL·y art· vacate J .
T h e buildin gs wi ll be· aband oned by the
d istri c t w he n :t I H .' W consoliJ ateJ d emenrar y o;c hool and new middl e sc hool are huilr
an d re:1dy for occu patiOn in 20U2.
Do n L11tdc r o f Shad e. pres id t·n t of
R t.' naiso;ance In spe ctions. to ured th e M eigs
Middle Sc hoo l b uildi ng. form erl y Midd le-

Please see Tour, Page A3

·somewhere over the rainbow

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Wire Brush
Tempered steel brls1tes
remove paint fast. 11 102

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TSP90

Heavy-Duty Cleaner

Powdered lormulo cleans
ttoors, walls and woodwork.
4~ lb. tub. 10274

t'ntn l's was d isn1 s~c d :m d it w :as
IHHt'd that th e ~l'CITtar y \ o fli Cl'
o n th l· fairl!;ro u nds will he o pen
Frielty ,m d Saturd"Y· K a. m .- ~
p.m . tu h.111 dlt· rq4istratio ns fo r
o pt' n cbss t• m r il'S. N o e 11tr it·~ wi ll
b~..· ac cqHcd .tf(cr 4 p.m . on S.Jtur~..by. said Deb bie \Vatso n .... ~..· c n· r.tr y.
Purch,llit,' of .1 St":Jso n o r lll l'lllber'i hip tit: kl·t 1'&gt; rl'llll irn l ro m ak~..·
emri c"' in th e vano us o pt·n dass
~..kp .n tm cn ts, and :1s has h ct' ll th e
prac ti ce in the pa'it entries w ill bL·
&lt;lCCl'ptcd only in pt'r'io n .t nd not

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Heat Gun
Vonatlle. High and low
settings. 20176

Please see Fair, Page A3

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These two girls, Elizabeth Young of Peet&gt;les, left, and Che lsea Freeman of Racine. s hown standing on
the Pomeroy Levee, appeared to be look ing for the legendary pot of gold. The rainbow was provi ded
cou rtesy of th e Pom eroy Vol untee r Fire De partm ent which was t esting a fi re truck' s wate r pump Tuesday even ing . (Staff photo)

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Calendar
Cla ssifieds
Con1ic s
Edito rials
Obituaries
Svorts
Weather

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Please see Festival, Page Al

1 Sections- 11 Pages

I a. ~ cAck the SHOP ONLINE button
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Today's

llnCI your ~~ pqltlclpGHng
Ace ftcirdware store jn the •~i
ACE ,STORF I&gt;U«ECJO~ sect19n

1

No registratio n is required
for the spelling be l' or the cosMIDDLEPORT - Middle- tume contest.
po rt C mnm um ty Associatio n
Young and old are invited to
discussed fin al plans to r th e Sec- enter their favo ri te stuffed bear
o nd Annu al H oney Bear Festival for judging to take place at the
_duri1~g th e associatio n's m onthly
festival. Th e bears will be on dismeeting on Tu esday m orning.
play at the Ohio River Bear
The day- lon g festi val will be Co mpany All g. 9- 12, and will b e
held Aug. 12. and Steve Conl on , tagged .
the "ll ee- 13&lt;-ard ed Man ," will
Th e cutest bear, the bear who
hea dli nl' the day's entertai n- ha' traveled th e farthest , the oldm ent. A number o f contests anJ est bea r and th e most -unusual
d tsplays are also pla nn ed for the bea r w ill be awarded " Bear
fe·stival.
llucks," as well as a Best of Show
The Univers ity o f Ri o bear. llears may be picked up
G rande w ill co nd uct a spell ing th e fo llowing week at Ohi o
bee fo r children. and $23 cash River Bear Company.
pn zes will be
C onnw:nded t o d1t" Tf, J.q -/.&gt;".( ,, .. 111'.1/ Jo n , who presents
first-pla ce fini sher ,,.jlf ! lu IJ -~~~~ 12. · information
in each of three
about bees and
dlltf ,)It l'i' ( (111/P'l,
ca tegories: grades
performs a chi ll rll, "J),,- h , .mid
thre e and fo ll r:
ing display of a
~ r~1dc'i fi v~ and
.\1 ,111.' wlfl.h~,"il t ll&lt;' "bee beard ." w ill
' ix; tl nd grad L'S
p e rfor m in a pro '"" dtl)' ',
'cvc..·n and eight.
recrive net cage
Olt lT( ri; H 1/11·11 f. . -f
T har
co n test
at 12: 30, 2: 30,
f11U1tbt"i" l ~/ (tUfl('i.'
beg lll ~ at I p.m . at
and 4:30 p.m .
the U R G Meigs a1 1d di' l''•l)'-' .II'&lt;' .tis·' M yro n Duffield
C:enter on Mtll
will pl ay the cal" ''""'' J i•'•
Strl't't.
il ope·
during
'" ' /&lt; .· !il.il
C htl dre' ll
three show s, at
und er 12 ca n also
1~ : 1 5. 2 and 5
w in pr izL:s in th e H onL'Y llcar p.m. , ;l!ld addi tional mu sic by
Colonng Co ntest. Th e bear pi c- Bill Cadle will begin at 3 p.m.
turts robe co lornl for the com - T.J. King will present hi s po pupe titi on c:m be pickt' d up at t he larju AAiing act at I :45 and 3: 45 .
Wirk er llu ggy, M idd lep ort
C ont est wmn ers will be
l)e parrm enr Sron·, Ri verbend ann oun ce d at 4 p.m .
An tiq ue and Craft Mall. Offi ce
Mary Wtse of th e Ri verbend
Service· .md Supply, D an's. and Arts Council announ ced that
th e Oh1o R ivn Bea r Co mpa ny. Ju .t ni t.t Lod\llick will coordinate
The compktcd pictun·.; n1us t an art ~ h ow. including a numb er
be tt l!"ll l' d 111t u pa rti c ipa t in ~ of hn o rigina l pieces, Jt th e.· Arts
mt• rch.mr" hy Augu. . r I( f, ami Coun cil buildin ~ o n North Secwill d i~pbyc d :tr rhr t~~ri va l.
n ne! Ave nu e durin g the ft-sti va L
A co'\t ll lll t' co nt est i ~ abo
M erc hant sid t:&gt;walk ' al es,
o p e n ro chi ldren .1gcs three to
crattcrs displays, a siil'nt au ction .
tin· .llld ,\~l'S six tt..l l'lgh t. P.trents \V,tl kin g; tours an J .1 framers
.tn.· .1~ kl'd tn d rt''' th ei r hoy-; and n 1.1rkt.·t .m: also pbnn l· d. and
gn-J.., 11 1 .1 lx'L' or h\.'ar co.;, tunn·.
l·o u cc~:-.iu n .;, wi \1 o tli:r a va ri L~ ty
All l' !HLI!lts w dl rccl'JVL' a o t- t(&gt;o ~b .
" l k.lr Huc k'' wo rrh \() r erCL'Ilt
T he eve nt i~ ~ p o n sorl·d by th t·
u tY any purch ase· ,tt Ohio Riwr Community As~o c iat io n , VillJgt'
lk·ar C:omp.my. .1n d fi r'i t ;md o f Middleport. Peo ples Banki ng
~ccon d - pl.t n:
w inn c"rs
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New technology initiatives
Sentinel begin at University of Rio Grande

· Racine wreck

......... , ;,~:;a ·c•irto ACE~RDwARE.CQM

Planning completed
for Honey Bear Festival
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

· POMERO Y - l'lans fo r th e
1.,37th M eigs County Fair moved
~tward Mo nd "y night wh en the
M~ i gs Co unty Fair 13oard met to
di sc uss exh ibi ts, em l' rtainm ent.
;nd a variety · o f o th er eve nrs
~v hich will li ve n up th e R oc k
Sp ri ngs fai rgro unds Au g. 1 ~- l ~.
A ribbon cutting cere mony t o
ded ica tl' tw o new bar ns bui lt rill';
summ er was plannl'd fo r I0 a.m .
o n th e openin g day of the fm.
Th e barns, Olll' t(n small ani m al' and thl' uth t'l l ~ n d raft horses, Wl'rt' con str uctl'd wi th a
$26,51)1) stat e· g ran t nut&lt;hed dollar to r eloll ar by the Meigs, Co un ty Fair lhxtrd. Th e ceremo ny will
tak e place at the small ;mima l
barn o n the hill.
At1er b~ in g discontinued fo r a
COllple of years, the fair board is
brihg mg bac k nwrorcross_ The
eve nt has been sc heduled for 7
p .m . Monday in fi·o nt o f the
grandstand and plan ~ were mad e
for .cnn'itn1C:ting rhe tra c k o n t h ~:
Sunday before the fair op ens.
Signup wil l bt·gin at ~ p.m. on
Aug. I~ and this ye ar in additi on
to m o torcyrl t·s. four-\vh l' d c rs
will be included . Practi ce will
begin at 6 p.m . wtth th e co mp etitio n to get underway at 7.
Copll'S of the rule s w ill be
available rh1 s wt·cke nd ;1t th e "'L'C n:t :~ ry's office o n t hl' t'i:urground.;;_
R L· gistrat io n fo r op~ n cLtss

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- Building renovation expert
Donald Linder,
second from left,
-joined memt&gt;ers
of the Middleport
Planning Commission and others
for a tour of Middleport's three
school t&gt;uildings.
(Brian J. Reed
photo)

buildin ~.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTI NEL NEWS STAFF

97

TOUR SCHOOLS

po rt Hi gh School, rhe "centra l build ing"
loca ted beh ind it . and Mid dl eport Elem entary Sc hool on Pearl Street , to perform a
prelim inary cva,lua tio n of the buildmgs.
Pri o r ro the ro u r, llll' lllbcro.; o f th e pla n ning Co mmi ss io n o utli ned son 1e propost:d
usc·s for th e bllildin ~s.
M ayor Sa nd y lann arelli sai d th e vi lla ge
wo u ld seno usly co n, id er re locatin g th e vil lage o fli ces. now loca ted in a c~ ntur y-o l d
buildin ~,; o n R ace Street , to th e el emen tary

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Lotteries

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Pick 3: 3-5- -ti Pick 4: 7-11 l
Buckeye Five: H-1 S- 16-.1 "t -.15

At le as t three people we re reporte d injured in a two-vehicle accident
Tue s day on State Route 124 nea r Raci ne . Meigs EMS reported th at
Vio let Moo re and Pau l Conle y we re tre ated at the sce ne by the Racine
s quad , while Brenda Blanke ns hip was tra nsported to Cabell Huntington Hos pital , Hu ntington, W.Va., by the Syracuse squad following the
12;.30 p,m. crash. (Dave Harris pheto)

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Daily 3: 1-9-.1 Daily 4: 1•-2-2-.7

RI O C R AN ll E - Stu dent, .tt t he- Un iwrsi tv of
c; r,mdc / lt io G r.IIHk Cmlllllllllity Co lkgc will
'iUO ll he able to ,Jttt'l H.I ci.I'i'iC'i \\ hik .1way ti-om ram pu'&gt; rlunks w .1 Ill'\\" "g ranr - tlnllkd progr;m1 bri llg in t;
'itatr-of- th c-.Irt tCt"hnnh,gy to th '-· univcr'i ity
A~ p.1rt of .m ( )hill Ho.1rd \l( R q;;cnto.; pn.)~r.l m ,
ltiu Grand L: \\"a~ ,\warded .1 $ l lf/i.(Hl0 TL"rl mology
lnitiat!\'i..' GrJllt l.t"t Nn\"L' Illhc..·r l"hc cn l l q_~L' 1.;, nnw
punin~ the nnv t l· c h n ol o~y 111 pLin·.
" rilL' purpn.;t..• of the gr.ult \\",\' w in ~..·rt'. l 't' dio.;td llCl' karning o prmm." .,,ud Kll lhT\ky M t.:yer. dm..·ctnr of C.llllp u'i co mputin ~ .md Tl &lt;.'t\\ nrkmg at R io
Gr~ndc . Ar;, ,1 l'lmditton \)f rih· gr.mt. Itin t ~ r;1 11 Je 1s
n utrhm~ th e (undJng to p.1y for tcl"hnolog:y
1111prove Jn L'llh .
" We wi ll h.tw .1 t&lt;&gt;t.tl nt' $2 111. 111 111 th .tt \\'ill be
'ipt'nt tmY.m.l t l.'c hno l n~it..•, tln-. yc.u-." Ml'yn '\,lid.
A~ ~art of rl!~~. 1111 pn) 'l'Jlll.' llt\, Rill Gr;1 nd ~ will
m~t.1l i ».1 \Xt'id c Arc.\ Nnwnrh. cn llll L'l"t inn her\\\'t'll
l li~)

the lti o ( ;r,mdl' r.11npm .111d m M t·i~~ ~t:JltL' r in
MidJkport.
Th t· ll l'W cm Hl t'Lt io n \viii all ow cum putl·rs .lt. the
Meif.." C:e nt er to be Jddcd to the' lt ioNe t technol Ob'Y nct\\'ork. so computer~ o n both C J mpu ~&gt;cs will
lw ahk to connect V•/lth t..•ach ot her.
M eigs Ct•nt n st u d.L·nt ~ " ·ill th en get Informa tion
fro m Ri oNL'r .mJ h ~tVL' nl'\\" lntl'rn l't C1 lllnL'l"tions_
" YXk wd l ,il'io be puttin~ in vidt' o cnnfcrcnci ng
:l l ! LI vidl•n tcac h1ng l'ljt llp mcn t \11 the Melb'i Center
1nc.ttion .md in th l' lit..' \\" [,·,m, SrhD01 of Btl ' in ess
011 tht&gt; Ri o (;r.mJ e c .11 11pu ~ ." ML·yc-r s.t iJ.
T hl· Evam Schoo l of Bu.;;in l'""· bt'ing fu r n1r;,hl'd
with o.;t;H c - of:- th c -~J rl L'L]lllplllt.'nt, '" ~;.·xpl'ctcd to be
comp leted this tJII and op en for ~t LH.iCllt\ 111 w imer
quartL' L
Video c..·qulpmL·nt '''ill ,lllow Mt' l~T'\ Center ~r u ­
. dl'nts. tn t,l)&lt;l· p~rr itl •Lm"' b"in~ hoJ,l.;ll tilt'. Rio.
Please see URG. Page A3

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BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Bush to campaign In~
AKRON (AP) - Republican presidential c.ndid.tte George W
Bush, who stumped acrms - Ohio en route to the Republican
National Convention in Philadelphia, plans to campaign in Akron
' ~m Friday after the convention ends.
- The Bush campaign said the candidate, who will make his accep.~&lt;Jnce speech at the convention's closing session Thursday night, will
: . ~ampaign with running mate Dick Cheney during a train stop in
Akron.
The train trip, dubbed the "Change the Tone'' swing, will begin .
' in Pittsburgh and will include four stops in Michigan on Saturday
-and three in Illinois on Sunday.
: · The Akron stop will be a rally adjacent to the downtown Quak'er Hilton Hotel near the Amtrak terminal, the Bush campaign said.
·· The rally will be open to the public, but tickets will be required.
.'The campaign plans to announce later ·how tickets will be distrib' uted, probably through local political organizations, Republican
National Committee spokesman Dave Schnirrger said.
Bush campaigned in Cincinnati, Dayton and Columbus on Sun. 'tlay and Monday en route to the convention. No Republican has
been elected president without carrying Ohio.

Auistant takes prosecutor'"s job
FAIRRELD (AP) - A h:m gtime assistant to former Butler
County Prosecutor John Holcomb will take his place as the Demo-cratic candidate in the November election.
The county's Democratic party chose Dan Gattermeyer on Tuesday to replace Holcomb, who died of a heart attack on July 22.
Holcomb, 63, was the county's prosecutor for 27 years and the
Democrats' only countywide elected official. Gattermeyer, an assistant prosecutor for IS years, was chosen to fill the last five months
·. of Holcomb's term and replace him in the election.
·• Gattermeyer, 42, will face Republican Robin Piper, who worked
for Holcomb for 14 years.
Holcomb had come under scrutiny last year for his long-standing
practic~ of raising campaign (Unds from employees, who were asked
to donate about 2 percent of their salaries.
· Gattermeyer said he would discontinue the practice of collecting
''from emplovees.
'· "It's something John and I had a difference of opinion on," Gat' ·rermeye~ said. "There was nothing wrong with it. It was just some:.thing I didn't want to do."
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Knife attack yields sentence

CANTON (AP) -A man whose arnck on his estranged wife
left two knife blades broken off'in her chest has been sentenced to
22-1/2 years in prison for attempted murder.
Keith Lewis Yun, 36, was convicted Tuesday in Stark County
, Common Pleas Court for the May 13 attack against Dayna Yun, 26.
. Judge Richard D. Reinbold Jr. sentencedYun for attempted mur.der, felonious assault, aggravated burglary, fleeing police, domesnc
violence and ignoring a court order to stay away from the victim.
Yun's attorney, Barry Wakser, said his client didn't dispute the
,stabbing but said during the one-day trial that Yun didn't intend to
kill his wife when he broke into her Canton house.
The victim's six young children- four fathered byYun- were
in the house when Yun broke through a window and trapped his
• wife in the kitchen, according to police.
. Yun beat her and stabbed her with an 8-inch DUtcher knife anda
. 4-inch paring knife, breaking the blades, according to police.

Escapee retumlnc to Dayton
DAYTON (AP) -An escaped prisoner who was caught at an
Indianapolis motel is to be returned to the Montgomery County
. jail in the next few days.
Keith Pattenon, 29, and Rhonda Allen, 21, both of Dayton, are
being held in Indianapolis. Patterson escaped from the county jail
on Saturday, along with another prisoner who remains at large.
:Allen is accused of being their accomplice.
. Tips led police and FBI agents to a motel, where Patterson and
· Allen were arrested Tuesday following a brief chase on foot.
At the time of the escape, Patterson was charged with violating
· probation, felonious assault and aggravated robbery.
Jail authorities said Patterson and his cell mate, Robert Wigging. -ton, escaped from a visitation area when an observation window
was loosened.
Wiggington,31 . remains at large. He had been jailed on bank rob"
·· bery and parole violation charges.

Buggy accident Injures three
GARRETTSVILLE (AP)- An Amish man and his two children
were injured seriously Tuesday night when a car traveling in the
same direction on a rural road slammed into the rear of their h orse- ·
drawn buggy, authorities said.
The victims, all thrown from the buggy, were taken by helicopter
to Akron hospitals: Menno M . Eicher, 26, of Garrettsville, to Akron
Ge neral Medical Center, and his children, 5-year-old C indy and 4year-old Matthew, to Children's Hospital Medical Center.
The car driver, Richard E. Stallsmith, 79, of Englewood, Colo..
wasn't injnred. He was charged with failing to keep a safe distance
between vehicles, authorities said.
The crash occ urred about 6:05 p.m . along state Rt. 88 in nearby
Nelson Township, in Portage County about 35 miles southeast of
Cleveland.

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

High school senior lensd hand to delegates
PHIL)..DELPHIA (AP) - High school
senior Jeremy Galen has to be the only teenage volunteer at the Republican National
Convention whose job helping delegates is a
step down politically.
Back home in Cleveland Heights, Ohio,
' the 17-year-old Galen is managing Gordon
Short's campaign for Cuyahoga County
treasurer.
Galen has been spending much of his
time in Philadelphia holding cardboard signs
on aluminum poles that help guide Ohio
delegates to and from events', up and down
escalators and toward the right bus.
He doesn 't mind the routine work, even
though he's running a political campaign
when not in school.

"It's in Philadelphia, it's the 2000 convention, I've had access to both sessions," he said
Tuesday while standing at a street corner
overrun with police. protesters and delegates. "So far, I'm in awe of how spectacular
the whole event has been."
Cynthia Henderson and her husband,
Ronald, were in a cab on the way ~o a
reception Tuesday afternoon when they got
a firsthand look at the convention's latest
protest.
Crowds oi'people protesting against the
death penalty, chemical weapons and other
issues swelled across police lines near the
Heildersons' downtown hotel and began
swirling around their cab.

Homeless agree to leave abandoned
building before wre~ers come

Lawmaker wants to
extend emissions testing
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio
motorists with cars less that) six
years old paid more than $38.4
million last year for state-required
exhaust system tests, despite a 98.5
percent pass rate for such autos.
State Rep. Ron Young, R Painesville, has introduced a bill
that would stretch the current
new-car tes\ing exemption from
two years to five years.
State Sen. Leigh Herington, DKent, agreed with the idea.
"When you have 98 of I 00
people passing it, why would you
keep testing vehicles less than six
years· old," Herington ' told The

CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
homeless men who had refused
to leave an abandoned buildin g
that the city wants to tear down
packed up their belongings and
left Tuesday as an attorney prepared a lawsuit over th eir
removal.
Advocates said the lawsuit
will claim th at the property
belongs to the homeless
because they have openly been
living on it for 21 years and
have squatters' rights.
David Campbell walked out
of the dilapidated five-story
former bakery Tuesday afternoon after talking with social
workers and homeless advo-

Plain Dealer for Wednesday story. ••
Ohio currently exempts from
testing only those cars that are up
to two years old, except for those
resold or coming from out of
state.
Exempting more cars would
not significantly hurt ai r quality.
sai d Heid1 Greismer, spokeswoman for the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, which
administers the program.
"The effect on the environment would be nlinimal;' she said

School board member sues board
COLUMBUS (AP) - A city
school board member is taking
his colleagues to court, accusing
them of fostering racial discrimination throughout the district 's
schools.
Board member Bill Moss is
one of more than 50 people listed as plaintiffs in a federal class
action discrimination · lawsuit
filed against the school board
Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
The suit asks for $39 million
in damages, Columbus television
station WCMH reported. Those
who filed the suit said they
would us&amp; the money fonounseling for students and for
minority teacher training programs.
Allegations include claims
that :
Black students receive
harsher discipline than white
students, leading to more black
student suspension., expullions
and dropouts.
Black administrators are
punished more severely than
their white counterparts.
- The school board treats
black parents unfairly.
.- The district uses a quota
system to limit the number of
black and minority teachers.
"What you have is white folks
in charge of white success, and
white folks in charge of black
failure," Moss said Tuesday.
Others told the television station that they feared legal action
would take away, rather than
promote, efforts to achieve
equality.
" I just worry that this kind of
attemp t or mmt by these individuals, including a coll eagu e of
mine on the board, is really
nothing more than an attempt to
get attentio n for themse lves,"
said sc hool board member Mark
Hatc h.
Listed as defendants in the

Delta Kappa 1nternational, a
Bloomington, lnd.-based organization that studi es public• education.
The organization criticized
the Columbus distri~t for not
having a stated philosophy on
matters such as how to close
race- and gender-based gaps in
student achievement, how to
recruit teachers and improve
their training, and how to make
decisions about buildings.

Protesters snarled and spat through the
cab windows, slapped stickers on the cab
and rocked the vehicle back and forth ; said
Mrs. Henderson , an alternate from Chillicothe, Ohio.
"What was so funny was a second wave of
protesters came through, mainly young girls,
who started heckl ing them , saying, ' Why are
you being so mean to them? They haven't
done anything,"' Mrs. Henderson said.
After a few minutes, the couple bailed out
of the cab and headed for police protection
at the curb.
"1 love those blue police lines," Mrs.
Hende rson said .

ca tes as a police helico pter ci rcled. · Edward lauriano. who
had left earlier in the day,
returned to support his friend.
Ca mpbell
earlier
had
pledged not to leave th t; inner
city property even if it meant
risking his life.
The homeless call the build-ing "Camelot," and about six
homel ess people live in a shack
and two tents made of plastic
and blankets on an overgrown
lot next to the bu-ilding. When
the weather is · bad , up to 30
people, includin g children,
gath er in the building that has
been empty si nce 1979.

Horne and auto discounts.

Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER
113 "I', .,2nd Street

Netlonwldt Mutuellntur~nce Comp1ny end affllleted Compenlu

Home Offtce: Ont Netlonwldt Piau, Calumbul, OH 0215-2220

992.5479

Nollonwldo' lo o roglotorod fodtrol oorvlco mork of
Nttlonwlde Mututllnaurance Company

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HOPE lights the way/
You can help light the
way to n cure (or cancer
ana honor lovea ones
who have battlea this
aisease.

At nightfall, on August 25th, a beautiful ana touching
Luminary ceremony takes place.
Canales are placea in luminary bags
ana are linea arouna the Relay For Life
track. After the canales are lit the names of those honorea are
rememberea in a touching ceremony.
.
The votives burning through the night are a glowing tribute to a
love one touchea by cancer ana serve to rem ina us all of the
purpose of Relay For Life!

long li st of communit y, gove rn me nt and business leaders.
The suit is based in part on an
audit re ce ntl y performed by Phi

BIDWELL - James Col~ man, 67, Bidwell, died Wednesday, Aug. 2.
2000 at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by McCoy- Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton.

· AEP -

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your lunrlmrry

Akzo - 43:1
AmTech/SBC - 43 11' •
Ashland Inc. - 33

General Electric - 5~.
Harley Davidson - 44
Kmart -11.

AT&amp;T- 31 ~.
Bank One - 32~

21 ~.
Lands End - 34 ~

Kroger -

Bob Evans - t60..
BorgWarner - 34~.
Champion - 2'1.
Charming Shops - 5\
City Holding - 7'/,
Federal Mogul - 9 ~
Firstar- 21 ~.

Ud . - 20 ~

Oak Hil Financial - 15\

OVB - 26),
BBT -25

PeQples- 14 · ~.

Premier - 5,,
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Call Anytime

992"·2136
667·3161
446-2265
211 West Second Street
42120 State Route 7
164 Upper River Road
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
PDmeroy, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio
Visit us on the webl www.fbsc.com

•

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Sears- 31

Shoney's -l.
Wal-l!art - 54 '/,
Wendy's- 1B~
Worthington - 10~.
Da~y stock reports are the
4 p.m. dosing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis .

VALLEY WEATHER

Drier weather on horizon
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The last of the showers and
thunderstorms should move out
of the tri-county area Thursday
night, leaving the region with
several days of fair -weather.
High pressure building behind
a cold front should produce
mostly sunny skies and highs in
the 80s on Friday and into the
weekend, the National Weather
Service sai d.
Overnight lows will be in the
60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:44
and sunrise on Wednesday at 6:33
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... A chance of showers
: and thunderstorms. Fog from late
· evening on. Lows in the mid 60s.

Tour
from PapAl
In addition to housing the
· police department, offices for
: the clerk and mayor and facili: ties for th e department of public
· works, the village would likely
seek the funds necessary to con. st ruct a jail facility in the buildmg.
lannarelli said Tuesday she
·had spoken\vith Juvenile Offi~er Carl Hy se ll and Judge
Robert Buck about the need for
a juvenile holding facility, since
juveniles are now transpbrted to
M cArthur or other distant
towns while their ca~s are
decided.
· Preliminary discussions have
olso been initiated by Police
C hi ef Bruce Swift about a
regional adult jail facility, which
cou ld be used to house Middleport prisoners as well as prison-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
~ve r y

l'ublishcd

dtcrnooil, Monday through

Fnda) . I l l \ourt St., Pomeroy. Oh1o, by the
Ohltl Val ley Publ ishi ng Com pa ny.' Second

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Reader Services
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•ccuratt. U }OU kno"" or Mn error In 11 story,
ra il ltlt newsroom 11 17401 992-21.5~ . We
~ill chtr.k yo or lnformatlnn and make a
mrn~: llon U warranted.
flltw" Uepartmtnls
The ma in nombtr Is ~l-ZI!!. Depanmtnl
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1104

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POMEROY A divorce
action has been filed in Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court by
William E. Rice, Syracuse, against
Regina L. Rice,Jackson.

Licenses issued

LOCAL STOCKS

MAIL SUBSCRIM'IONS
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Your aonation of $5.00 will

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Member: The Associated Press. and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send address correc tions to

su it arc board membe rs and a

For Tomatoes, Peppers,
· Sweet Corn &amp; Melons
Call Cliffords Hill &amp; Sons ·

Divorce filed

Nationwide"'
Financial Sarvtcea

The Daily Sentinel • Page A ;1

LOCAL BRIEFS

Whether yau're at home or on the road,
Nationwide• haa loll of wayo to oava you money. So call
uo today to find out mora about our air bag dlocount,
ufe driver dlacount, home and car dlocount and more.
Natlonwtde lo On Your Side•

Insurance &amp;

'

Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday.. .Showers and thunderstorms likely. Fog early. Highs
in the lower 80s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Thursday night ... Cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms through 3 a.m. Lows in
the nlid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the lower 60s and highs in the
nlid 80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
ers held on cou nty charges in
Meigs County and the surrounding area.
Such a facility would provide
a boost in revenue, which will
be needed, since the loss of the
schools and their employees will
cost the village $15,000 a year in
lost income taxes, and up to
$50,000 in other revenue ,
according to Planning Commission President Mick Ghilds.
Childs said he has discussed
using part of the school space as
a satellite branch for a local business college, and the village has
also discussed proposing an
expanded facility for the University of Rio Grande's Meigs
Ce nter, which now occupies
space on Mill Street.
The village could also lease
the space to a developer, and
enjoy proceeds from the lease
agreement, Linder said.
My ron Duffield reported on a
recent discussion with community leaders in Nelsonville, who
re ce ntly formed a non - profit
foundation for the renovation of
a sc hool building there, He
added that he plans to have similar discussions with res idents in
N ewark , whic h is about" to
underta ke a similar project.
Linder saidthe buildings were
in relatively good shape, but
added that th e cost o f upgrades
to current building codes would
likel y be the large st expense to
the village if it chooses to
assume responsibility for the
buildings.
"You're lookmg at some big
dollars," Linder sa id, referring to
the cos t of in stalling elevatots,
sp rinkler and fire alarm syste ms
and other code-requi re d modifications that would be necessary
if the use of the buildings is
changed .
. While th e build!llgs wi ll likely be used for both th e 2000-01
and part of the 200 1-02 sc hool
yea r. those invo lwd in investigati ng the potential uses and
needs of the buildu1gs have
emphasized that th e planning
process must begin immediately,
so that the village will be prep ~red to act on ce the buildings
are avai labl e .

POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Joseph
Eugene Higgs, 23, and Tara Lynne
Wolfe, both of Point Plrasant,
WVa.; James Allon Watson, 33,
Reedsville, and Arney Marie
Nutter, 26, Coolville; E. Matthew
Craddock, 25, Middleport, and
Kourtney Ladonn Smathers, 25,
Gallipolis; Damon Earl Fisher, 31 ,
and Joni Ann Dixon, both of Gallipolis; Anthony C. Ward, 32, and
Melissa Ann Figgins, 28, both of
Point Pleasant.

Arrests made
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Police arrested a Pomeroy man
on two charges, and three juveniles and an adult in another incident.
Steven Miracle, 24, Pomeroy,
was arrested Friday on charges of
felony domestic violence and falsification. He was scheduled to
appear in Meigs County Court
on Tuesday.
Three juveniles and an adult,
Ronnie Smith of Rutland, were
arrested on charges of underage
consumption, and Snlith on three
counts of contributing to the
delinquency of a minor. He was
placed in . the Middleport Jail
pending a Tuesday court hearing.
According to Pomeroy Police
Chief Jeffrey Miller, the charges
were filed following a vist to a
Peacock Street home, where drug
paraphernalia and 'growing lights
were reportedly found . Other
charges may be p~nding , Miller
said.
.,

Clarification
POMEROY - Meigs County
Prosecutor John Lentes clarified a
report on the settlement of the
Fred Priddy civil lawsuit, which
appeared in the Sunday TimesSentinel .

URG
from PapAl
Grande campus, and allow students on the Rio Grande campus
to interact with professors at the
Meigs Center.
"It's fully two-way and interactive," Meyer said.
In addition to being able to
participate in classes at the Meigs
Center and Rio Grande campus,
people around the world may be
able to watch classes over the
Internet. This will allow Rio
Grande faculty to teac h •classes

Festival
from Page Al

&amp; Trust Co., University of Rio

Grande Meigs Center, Pleasant
Valley Hospital's Middleport
Clinic, Fisher Funeral Homes.

Lentes said that an auctioneer
must be chosen by the Internal
Revenue Service. but that the
date for the sale of personal property will not likely be announced
in that time.

Those who believe they own
property involved in the s.1le are
asked to contact the prosecutor's
office at 992-63 71.

Delay reported
CHESTER -The arrival of a
new recycling building for the
Chester community has been
delayed, according to Litter and
Recychng Coordina tor Kenny
Wiggins.
Wiggins said the county's recychng trailer will visit the community at least once a week vntil the
new building arrives.

EMS logs 11 calls

MIDDLEPORT- MichaelS. Southern, 29, of Middleport, died on
Monday, July 31. 2000, as the result of injuries susta ined in an automobile accident.
Born on Ju ly 19, 1971 in Gallipolis, he was the son of Ella Mae
Burns Southern of Mason, West Virginia, and Roberl T. and Carol
Southern of Middleport.
·
He was a Sergeant in the United States Army.
Along With his pan:nts, he is survived by a son, Brenton Micha~l
Southern of Athens; a grandmother, Violet Burns of Clifton, West Vi,(- .
gima: two sisters and brothers-in-law, Robm and Jeff Lahmers of El
Paso, Texas, and Rhonda and Rick Hovatter of Ashland; a brother,
Bobby Oenny Brendez) Southern of Ashland; two step-sisters, Christy
Williams of Middleport. and Jenny (Robert) Hendrix of Syracuse: two
step-brothers, Donald Dye Jr. of Gallipolis. and Tun (C rystal) Baker of
Middleport; hi s form er wife, Sandra Whaley of Athens ; five nieces and
nephews; and special friend s.
He was preceded in death by two grandfathcrs ,Jake Burns and John
Sidney Southern: a grandmother. Lula Southern; an a~nt, Phyllis
Blake; and a cousin, Carman Burns Compson.
Services will be 3 p.m. Thursday, Augu st 3, 2000 at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport. Officiating will be Dr. James R. Acree and Pastor Don Roach. Burial will follow in Letan Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call on Wednesday, August 2, 2000 from 5-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

POMEROY - Units of the
Emergency
Services
Meigs
answered 11 calls for assistance on
Tuesday. Units responded as follows:
10:16 a.m., Overbrook Nursi ng
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Center, Perry Hill, PVH.
12:29 a.m., Starcher Road,
Margaret Hartley, Holzer Medical
Center;
8:49 a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
Center, Clara Davis, HMC;
10:15 a.m ., Meigs Mine 2,
POMEROY -Trinity Church
James
Emmest,
O'Bleness of Pomeroy will hold an all-youMemorial Hospital.
can ~ eat pancake dinner on Friday
POMEROY
from 4-8 p.m. The cost is SS for
8:49 p.m., Lincoln Hei gr ·· , adults and S3 for children 12 and
Audrey Backus , treated;
under. All proceeds with benefit
9:45 p.m., State Route 124, the church's youth group, Serassisted by Central Dispatch , vants with a Testimony (SWAT).
Larissa Petrie, HM C.
RACINE
12:41 p.m., SR 124, motor
vehicle accident, Violet. Moore,
TUPPERS PLAINS A
Paul Conley, treated.
square dance will be heW at the
RUTLAND
9:25 a.m., Holzer Clinic, Jack Tuppers Plams VFW hall, Saturday, 8-11 p.m. True Country will
Smith,HMC;
2:34 p.m., Beech Grove Road, provide the music and Clifford
James Calsey, Pleasant Valley Hos~ Longenette will be the caller. ..,
pi tal.
SYRACUSE
12:41 p.m., SR 124, motor
POMEROY
Bedford
vehicle
acciden t,
Brenda
meetTownship
Trustees,
regular
Blankenship, Cabell Huntington
ing, Tuesday, Aug. 8, 7 p.m. at the
Hospital;
8:24 p.m., High Street, Elsie townhall.
Roush, PVH.
TUPPERS PLAINS

Pancake dinner
scheduled

Dance set

Trustees to meet

completely over the Internet.
The new video equipment also
lets Rio Grande students to have
conferences with and learn from
professors at other college campuses across the country.
"The whole idea is that it provides flexib!lity for the students in
the Meigs Center," Meyer said.
One final element of the
improvements is the connection
of Meigs Center phone lines to
Rio Grande's phone system . .All
technology improvements should
be completed by fall quarter, and
video conferencing classes will
begin in winter quarter.

Fruth Pharmacy, Ohio R1ver
Bear Company, Feeney- Bennett
Post 128, Amencan Legion.
Riverbend Arts Co un ci l and
Pepsi Cola Bottlmg Co.
ln ot her business, Duffi eld
announced that Judy Kay's
Restaurant has opened on North
Second Avenue.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
Police dispute . MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
Boulder assault
992-2156
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Police
have ordered adchtional tc'Sts on evidence in the Jon.Benet Ramsey iliying
and in an attempted assault on another girl months later to detennine if
there is a link between the two crin1es.
Police Chief Mark Beckner said
Tuesday he doubts cl1e perpetr.ltor of
the still-unsolved attempted sexual
a&lt;Sault was imnlved i11 JonBeneti sbying, but "we are going to go as far as
take a second look at it:'
"In any case }UU can find o;ome
sunilarities. It kind of depends on
which theoty )UU are looking at;' he
said."[ cocud probably pull out a thousand cases and find some similarities."
The 14-)'t'ar-old girl, who attended the "'me dance academy as JonBene~ was att:Jcked in hei bed in September 1997, accordmg to police
R'J'OI1&gt;. The girl's mother intcm1ptcd
the would.- be assault; d1e anacker fled
ami the girl wasn't injuJtxt

Michael 5. Southem

..•.. M4~'!!~~ tQ
~ ~

locttled AI 33
• • ~ 7 Mrnulcs North of Athens

Fair

from PageA1
by telephone.
Watson also said that Saturday is
the only day when camping and
parking spaces can be reserved.
The cost for reserved parking
in specified areas is $20 a week,
which does not include entry
into the fairgrounds.
For space to park trailers and
campers or to pu t up tents, the
cost is $7 5, which must be paid
on Sat"urday when the ;pace
reservation is made. Only one
tent is pernlitted on eac h space
a n~ th e rules specifY that "quiet
hours" begin at 12:30 a.m.
Season and membership tickets
Jre now on sak and will remain

on sale until the fair ope ns on
Aug. 14 .
Season tickets are S 12 and
enmle the purchaser to gate
adm.ission and free porkin'g for the
entire fair. Memb ers hip tic kl'ts are

Announced
meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliat;y,
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m at
the hall.

Homecominc
POMEROY - Homecoming
will take place at Hysell R4n
Holiness C hurch off SR 124 on
County Road 15 on Saturday. A
potluck dinner will be held ;11
noon on the church grounds with
singing. Bible School will be held
at the .church Aug. 7-12 from
'6 :30-8:30 p.m. All children are
encouraged to participate.

Revival set
DANVILLE - A revival will
be held at the Pinegrove Bible
Holiness Church three miles from
Danville on Rowlesville Road,
Aug. 10-13, 7 p.m. each day
except Sunday, 6 p.m. Evangelijt,
the Rev. Roy M cCarty of Pennsylvania.

$15 and include admission and
parking as well as voting privilege! on Me igs County Fair
Bo~r&lt;i business.
They are available from any fair
board member or at the Sugar
Run Flour Mill in Pomeroy. ·
Season tickets can be · purchased at Joe's Country Market in
Rutland: Waid Cross Sons,
Racine; Baum Lumber Co.,
Chester; Sugar Run Flour Mill,
Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy,
McDonald's, Gloeckner's Restaurant, Pomeroy: Little John's Food
Mart, Tuppers Plains; Whaley's
Gcocery, State Route 681 · at Darwin; Helen Baer, Syracuse; Dorsel
Larkins, Long Bottom; Dan's,
Middleport; Reed 's Co untry
Store, Reedsv ille; Little John 's
Food Mart. Middleport: and Rutland Department Store.
Season tickets are sold only to
llld ividuals, not &lt;.:o mpa111es or
orgamzano ns.

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA

446 •452 4

Canning
Sup-plies by
Micromatic
&amp;Presto

OLD fWl 11 1~ WI ',[
~!I~

Jll( I&lt;. ',ON

7

i'l~t

FR17/28/00 · THURS 8/3/00
lOX OffiCI WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PMJOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM lOR MATINIIS
THOMAS AND THE MAGIC·
RAIL.ROAD (G)
6:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:00

SCARY MOVIE (R)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20

THE PATRIOT (R)
9:00 DAILY

DISNEY'S THE KID (PG) )
7:10 &amp; 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 I 3:20

BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WV

773·5583

7:15 &amp; 8:1 5 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15-3:15

X·MEN (PG-13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

WHAT LIES BENEATH (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

POKEMDN 2000
7:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:00

STARTING 8/4/00
COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
HOLLOW MAN {R)
&amp; SPACE eewsoys (PG13)

•I
•

�.'

.

I

• Page A

a •The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Bush to campaign In~
AKRON (AP) - Republican presidential c.ndid.tte George W
Bush, who stumped acrms - Ohio en route to the Republican
National Convention in Philadelphia, plans to campaign in Akron
' ~m Friday after the convention ends.
- The Bush campaign said the candidate, who will make his accep.~&lt;Jnce speech at the convention's closing session Thursday night, will
: . ~ampaign with running mate Dick Cheney during a train stop in
Akron.
The train trip, dubbed the "Change the Tone'' swing, will begin .
' in Pittsburgh and will include four stops in Michigan on Saturday
-and three in Illinois on Sunday.
: · The Akron stop will be a rally adjacent to the downtown Quak'er Hilton Hotel near the Amtrak terminal, the Bush campaign said.
·· The rally will be open to the public, but tickets will be required.
.'The campaign plans to announce later ·how tickets will be distrib' uted, probably through local political organizations, Republican
National Committee spokesman Dave Schnirrger said.
Bush campaigned in Cincinnati, Dayton and Columbus on Sun. 'tlay and Monday en route to the convention. No Republican has
been elected president without carrying Ohio.

Auistant takes prosecutor'"s job
FAIRRELD (AP) - A h:m gtime assistant to former Butler
County Prosecutor John Holcomb will take his place as the Demo-cratic candidate in the November election.
The county's Democratic party chose Dan Gattermeyer on Tuesday to replace Holcomb, who died of a heart attack on July 22.
Holcomb, 63, was the county's prosecutor for 27 years and the
Democrats' only countywide elected official. Gattermeyer, an assistant prosecutor for IS years, was chosen to fill the last five months
·. of Holcomb's term and replace him in the election.
·• Gattermeyer, 42, will face Republican Robin Piper, who worked
for Holcomb for 14 years.
Holcomb had come under scrutiny last year for his long-standing
practic~ of raising campaign (Unds from employees, who were asked
to donate about 2 percent of their salaries.
· Gattermeyer said he would discontinue the practice of collecting
''from emplovees.
'· "It's something John and I had a difference of opinion on," Gat' ·rermeye~ said. "There was nothing wrong with it. It was just some:.thing I didn't want to do."
: I •

;

..

.,

Knife attack yields sentence

CANTON (AP) -A man whose arnck on his estranged wife
left two knife blades broken off'in her chest has been sentenced to
22-1/2 years in prison for attempted murder.
Keith Lewis Yun, 36, was convicted Tuesday in Stark County
, Common Pleas Court for the May 13 attack against Dayna Yun, 26.
. Judge Richard D. Reinbold Jr. sentencedYun for attempted mur.der, felonious assault, aggravated burglary, fleeing police, domesnc
violence and ignoring a court order to stay away from the victim.
Yun's attorney, Barry Wakser, said his client didn't dispute the
,stabbing but said during the one-day trial that Yun didn't intend to
kill his wife when he broke into her Canton house.
The victim's six young children- four fathered byYun- were
in the house when Yun broke through a window and trapped his
• wife in the kitchen, according to police.
. Yun beat her and stabbed her with an 8-inch DUtcher knife anda
. 4-inch paring knife, breaking the blades, according to police.

Escapee retumlnc to Dayton
DAYTON (AP) -An escaped prisoner who was caught at an
Indianapolis motel is to be returned to the Montgomery County
. jail in the next few days.
Keith Pattenon, 29, and Rhonda Allen, 21, both of Dayton, are
being held in Indianapolis. Patterson escaped from the county jail
on Saturday, along with another prisoner who remains at large.
:Allen is accused of being their accomplice.
. Tips led police and FBI agents to a motel, where Patterson and
· Allen were arrested Tuesday following a brief chase on foot.
At the time of the escape, Patterson was charged with violating
· probation, felonious assault and aggravated robbery.
Jail authorities said Patterson and his cell mate, Robert Wigging. -ton, escaped from a visitation area when an observation window
was loosened.
Wiggington,31 . remains at large. He had been jailed on bank rob"
·· bery and parole violation charges.

Buggy accident Injures three
GARRETTSVILLE (AP)- An Amish man and his two children
were injured seriously Tuesday night when a car traveling in the
same direction on a rural road slammed into the rear of their h orse- ·
drawn buggy, authorities said.
The victims, all thrown from the buggy, were taken by helicopter
to Akron hospitals: Menno M . Eicher, 26, of Garrettsville, to Akron
Ge neral Medical Center, and his children, 5-year-old C indy and 4year-old Matthew, to Children's Hospital Medical Center.
The car driver, Richard E. Stallsmith, 79, of Englewood, Colo..
wasn't injnred. He was charged with failing to keep a safe distance
between vehicles, authorities said.
The crash occ urred about 6:05 p.m . along state Rt. 88 in nearby
Nelson Township, in Portage County about 35 miles southeast of
Cleveland.

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

High school senior lensd hand to delegates
PHIL)..DELPHIA (AP) - High school
senior Jeremy Galen has to be the only teenage volunteer at the Republican National
Convention whose job helping delegates is a
step down politically.
Back home in Cleveland Heights, Ohio,
' the 17-year-old Galen is managing Gordon
Short's campaign for Cuyahoga County
treasurer.
Galen has been spending much of his
time in Philadelphia holding cardboard signs
on aluminum poles that help guide Ohio
delegates to and from events', up and down
escalators and toward the right bus.
He doesn 't mind the routine work, even
though he's running a political campaign
when not in school.

"It's in Philadelphia, it's the 2000 convention, I've had access to both sessions," he said
Tuesday while standing at a street corner
overrun with police. protesters and delegates. "So far, I'm in awe of how spectacular
the whole event has been."
Cynthia Henderson and her husband,
Ronald, were in a cab on the way ~o a
reception Tuesday afternoon when they got
a firsthand look at the convention's latest
protest.
Crowds oi'people protesting against the
death penalty, chemical weapons and other
issues swelled across police lines near the
Heildersons' downtown hotel and began
swirling around their cab.

Homeless agree to leave abandoned
building before wre~ers come

Lawmaker wants to
extend emissions testing
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio
motorists with cars less that) six
years old paid more than $38.4
million last year for state-required
exhaust system tests, despite a 98.5
percent pass rate for such autos.
State Rep. Ron Young, R Painesville, has introduced a bill
that would stretch the current
new-car tes\ing exemption from
two years to five years.
State Sen. Leigh Herington, DKent, agreed with the idea.
"When you have 98 of I 00
people passing it, why would you
keep testing vehicles less than six
years· old," Herington ' told The

CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
homeless men who had refused
to leave an abandoned buildin g
that the city wants to tear down
packed up their belongings and
left Tuesday as an attorney prepared a lawsuit over th eir
removal.
Advocates said the lawsuit
will claim th at the property
belongs to the homeless
because they have openly been
living on it for 21 years and
have squatters' rights.
David Campbell walked out
of the dilapidated five-story
former bakery Tuesday afternoon after talking with social
workers and homeless advo-

Plain Dealer for Wednesday story. ••
Ohio currently exempts from
testing only those cars that are up
to two years old, except for those
resold or coming from out of
state.
Exempting more cars would
not significantly hurt ai r quality.
sai d Heid1 Greismer, spokeswoman for the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, which
administers the program.
"The effect on the environment would be nlinimal;' she said

School board member sues board
COLUMBUS (AP) - A city
school board member is taking
his colleagues to court, accusing
them of fostering racial discrimination throughout the district 's
schools.
Board member Bill Moss is
one of more than 50 people listed as plaintiffs in a federal class
action discrimination · lawsuit
filed against the school board
Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
The suit asks for $39 million
in damages, Columbus television
station WCMH reported. Those
who filed the suit said they
would us&amp; the money fonounseling for students and for
minority teacher training programs.
Allegations include claims
that :
Black students receive
harsher discipline than white
students, leading to more black
student suspension., expullions
and dropouts.
Black administrators are
punished more severely than
their white counterparts.
- The school board treats
black parents unfairly.
.- The district uses a quota
system to limit the number of
black and minority teachers.
"What you have is white folks
in charge of white success, and
white folks in charge of black
failure," Moss said Tuesday.
Others told the television station that they feared legal action
would take away, rather than
promote, efforts to achieve
equality.
" I just worry that this kind of
attemp t or mmt by these individuals, including a coll eagu e of
mine on the board, is really
nothing more than an attempt to
get attentio n for themse lves,"
said sc hool board member Mark
Hatc h.
Listed as defendants in the

Delta Kappa 1nternational, a
Bloomington, lnd.-based organization that studi es public• education.
The organization criticized
the Columbus distri~t for not
having a stated philosophy on
matters such as how to close
race- and gender-based gaps in
student achievement, how to
recruit teachers and improve
their training, and how to make
decisions about buildings.

Protesters snarled and spat through the
cab windows, slapped stickers on the cab
and rocked the vehicle back and forth ; said
Mrs. Henderson , an alternate from Chillicothe, Ohio.
"What was so funny was a second wave of
protesters came through, mainly young girls,
who started heckl ing them , saying, ' Why are
you being so mean to them? They haven't
done anything,"' Mrs. Henderson said.
After a few minutes, the couple bailed out
of the cab and headed for police protection
at the curb.
"1 love those blue police lines," Mrs.
Hende rson said .

ca tes as a police helico pter ci rcled. · Edward lauriano. who
had left earlier in the day,
returned to support his friend.
Ca mpbell
earlier
had
pledged not to leave th t; inner
city property even if it meant
risking his life.
The homeless call the build-ing "Camelot," and about six
homel ess people live in a shack
and two tents made of plastic
and blankets on an overgrown
lot next to the bu-ilding. When
the weather is · bad , up to 30
people, includin g children,
gath er in the building that has
been empty si nce 1979.

Horne and auto discounts.

Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER
113 "I', .,2nd Street

Netlonwldt Mutuellntur~nce Comp1ny end affllleted Compenlu

Home Offtce: Ont Netlonwldt Piau, Calumbul, OH 0215-2220

992.5479

Nollonwldo' lo o roglotorod fodtrol oorvlco mork of
Nttlonwlde Mututllnaurance Company

,
~ '~- send aMessage ~f LO\Ie - '~V Ana L lit a Canale V
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.

HOPE lights the way/
You can help light the
way to n cure (or cancer
ana honor lovea ones
who have battlea this
aisease.

At nightfall, on August 25th, a beautiful ana touching
Luminary ceremony takes place.
Canales are placea in luminary bags
ana are linea arouna the Relay For Life
track. After the canales are lit the names of those honorea are
rememberea in a touching ceremony.
.
The votives burning through the night are a glowing tribute to a
love one touchea by cancer ana serve to rem ina us all of the
purpose of Relay For Life!

long li st of communit y, gove rn me nt and business leaders.
The suit is based in part on an
audit re ce ntl y performed by Phi

BIDWELL - James Col~ man, 67, Bidwell, died Wednesday, Aug. 2.
2000 at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by McCoy- Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton.

· AEP -

34:0

your lunrlmrry

Akzo - 43:1
AmTech/SBC - 43 11' •
Ashland Inc. - 33

General Electric - 5~.
Harley Davidson - 44
Kmart -11.

AT&amp;T- 31 ~.
Bank One - 32~

21 ~.
Lands End - 34 ~

Kroger -

Bob Evans - t60..
BorgWarner - 34~.
Champion - 2'1.
Charming Shops - 5\
City Holding - 7'/,
Federal Mogul - 9 ~
Firstar- 21 ~.

Ud . - 20 ~

Oak Hil Financial - 15\

OVB - 26),
BBT -25

PeQples- 14 · ~.

Premier - 5,,
ROCkw~ll -

Your Bank#n~. .
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&amp; Savings Company
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Member FDIC

Call Anytime

992"·2136
667·3161
446-2265
211 West Second Street
42120 State Route 7
164 Upper River Road
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
PDmeroy, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio
Visit us on the webl www.fbsc.com

•

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Sears- 31

Shoney's -l.
Wal-l!art - 54 '/,
Wendy's- 1B~
Worthington - 10~.
Da~y stock reports are the
4 p.m. dosing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis .

VALLEY WEATHER

Drier weather on horizon
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The last of the showers and
thunderstorms should move out
of the tri-county area Thursday
night, leaving the region with
several days of fair -weather.
High pressure building behind
a cold front should produce
mostly sunny skies and highs in
the 80s on Friday and into the
weekend, the National Weather
Service sai d.
Overnight lows will be in the
60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:44
and sunrise on Wednesday at 6:33
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... A chance of showers
: and thunderstorms. Fog from late
· evening on. Lows in the mid 60s.

Tour
from PapAl
In addition to housing the
· police department, offices for
: the clerk and mayor and facili: ties for th e department of public
· works, the village would likely
seek the funds necessary to con. st ruct a jail facility in the buildmg.
lannarelli said Tuesday she
·had spoken\vith Juvenile Offi~er Carl Hy se ll and Judge
Robert Buck about the need for
a juvenile holding facility, since
juveniles are now transpbrted to
M cArthur or other distant
towns while their ca~s are
decided.
· Preliminary discussions have
olso been initiated by Police
C hi ef Bruce Swift about a
regional adult jail facility, which
cou ld be used to house Middleport prisoners as well as prison-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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l'ublishcd

dtcrnooil, Monday through

Fnda) . I l l \ourt St., Pomeroy. Oh1o, by the
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POMEROY A divorce
action has been filed in Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court by
William E. Rice, Syracuse, against
Regina L. Rice,Jackson.

Licenses issued

LOCAL STOCKS

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Member: The Associated Press. and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.
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For Tomatoes, Peppers,
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Divorce filed

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A ;1

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Whether yau're at home or on the road,
Nationwide• haa loll of wayo to oava you money. So call
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Insurance &amp;

'

Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday.. .Showers and thunderstorms likely. Fog early. Highs
in the lower 80s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Thursday night ... Cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms through 3 a.m. Lows in
the nlid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the lower 60s and highs in the
nlid 80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
ers held on cou nty charges in
Meigs County and the surrounding area.
Such a facility would provide
a boost in revenue, which will
be needed, since the loss of the
schools and their employees will
cost the village $15,000 a year in
lost income taxes, and up to
$50,000 in other revenue ,
according to Planning Commission President Mick Ghilds.
Childs said he has discussed
using part of the school space as
a satellite branch for a local business college, and the village has
also discussed proposing an
expanded facility for the University of Rio Grande's Meigs
Ce nter, which now occupies
space on Mill Street.
The village could also lease
the space to a developer, and
enjoy proceeds from the lease
agreement, Linder said.
My ron Duffield reported on a
recent discussion with community leaders in Nelsonville, who
re ce ntly formed a non - profit
foundation for the renovation of
a sc hool building there, He
added that he plans to have similar discussions with res idents in
N ewark , whic h is about" to
underta ke a similar project.
Linder saidthe buildings were
in relatively good shape, but
added that th e cost o f upgrades
to current building codes would
likel y be the large st expense to
the village if it chooses to
assume responsibility for the
buildings.
"You're lookmg at some big
dollars," Linder sa id, referring to
the cos t of in stalling elevatots,
sp rinkler and fire alarm syste ms
and other code-requi re d modifications that would be necessary
if the use of the buildings is
changed .
. While th e build!llgs wi ll likely be used for both th e 2000-01
and part of the 200 1-02 sc hool
yea r. those invo lwd in investigati ng the potential uses and
needs of the buildu1gs have
emphasized that th e planning
process must begin immediately,
so that the village will be prep ~red to act on ce the buildings
are avai labl e .

POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Joseph
Eugene Higgs, 23, and Tara Lynne
Wolfe, both of Point Plrasant,
WVa.; James Allon Watson, 33,
Reedsville, and Arney Marie
Nutter, 26, Coolville; E. Matthew
Craddock, 25, Middleport, and
Kourtney Ladonn Smathers, 25,
Gallipolis; Damon Earl Fisher, 31 ,
and Joni Ann Dixon, both of Gallipolis; Anthony C. Ward, 32, and
Melissa Ann Figgins, 28, both of
Point Pleasant.

Arrests made
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Police arrested a Pomeroy man
on two charges, and three juveniles and an adult in another incident.
Steven Miracle, 24, Pomeroy,
was arrested Friday on charges of
felony domestic violence and falsification. He was scheduled to
appear in Meigs County Court
on Tuesday.
Three juveniles and an adult,
Ronnie Smith of Rutland, were
arrested on charges of underage
consumption, and Snlith on three
counts of contributing to the
delinquency of a minor. He was
placed in . the Middleport Jail
pending a Tuesday court hearing.
According to Pomeroy Police
Chief Jeffrey Miller, the charges
were filed following a vist to a
Peacock Street home, where drug
paraphernalia and 'growing lights
were reportedly found . Other
charges may be p~nding , Miller
said.
.,

Clarification
POMEROY - Meigs County
Prosecutor John Lentes clarified a
report on the settlement of the
Fred Priddy civil lawsuit, which
appeared in the Sunday TimesSentinel .

URG
from PapAl
Grande campus, and allow students on the Rio Grande campus
to interact with professors at the
Meigs Center.
"It's fully two-way and interactive," Meyer said.
In addition to being able to
participate in classes at the Meigs
Center and Rio Grande campus,
people around the world may be
able to watch classes over the
Internet. This will allow Rio
Grande faculty to teac h •classes

Festival
from Page Al

&amp; Trust Co., University of Rio

Grande Meigs Center, Pleasant
Valley Hospital's Middleport
Clinic, Fisher Funeral Homes.

Lentes said that an auctioneer
must be chosen by the Internal
Revenue Service. but that the
date for the sale of personal property will not likely be announced
in that time.

Those who believe they own
property involved in the s.1le are
asked to contact the prosecutor's
office at 992-63 71.

Delay reported
CHESTER -The arrival of a
new recycling building for the
Chester community has been
delayed, according to Litter and
Recychng Coordina tor Kenny
Wiggins.
Wiggins said the county's recychng trailer will visit the community at least once a week vntil the
new building arrives.

EMS logs 11 calls

MIDDLEPORT- MichaelS. Southern, 29, of Middleport, died on
Monday, July 31. 2000, as the result of injuries susta ined in an automobile accident.
Born on Ju ly 19, 1971 in Gallipolis, he was the son of Ella Mae
Burns Southern of Mason, West Virginia, and Roberl T. and Carol
Southern of Middleport.
·
He was a Sergeant in the United States Army.
Along With his pan:nts, he is survived by a son, Brenton Micha~l
Southern of Athens; a grandmother, Violet Burns of Clifton, West Vi,(- .
gima: two sisters and brothers-in-law, Robm and Jeff Lahmers of El
Paso, Texas, and Rhonda and Rick Hovatter of Ashland; a brother,
Bobby Oenny Brendez) Southern of Ashland; two step-sisters, Christy
Williams of Middleport. and Jenny (Robert) Hendrix of Syracuse: two
step-brothers, Donald Dye Jr. of Gallipolis. and Tun (C rystal) Baker of
Middleport; hi s form er wife, Sandra Whaley of Athens ; five nieces and
nephews; and special friend s.
He was preceded in death by two grandfathcrs ,Jake Burns and John
Sidney Southern: a grandmother. Lula Southern; an a~nt, Phyllis
Blake; and a cousin, Carman Burns Compson.
Services will be 3 p.m. Thursday, Augu st 3, 2000 at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport. Officiating will be Dr. James R. Acree and Pastor Don Roach. Burial will follow in Letan Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call on Wednesday, August 2, 2000 from 5-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

POMEROY - Units of the
Emergency
Services
Meigs
answered 11 calls for assistance on
Tuesday. Units responded as follows:
10:16 a.m., Overbrook Nursi ng
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Center, Perry Hill, PVH.
12:29 a.m., Starcher Road,
Margaret Hartley, Holzer Medical
Center;
8:49 a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
Center, Clara Davis, HMC;
10:15 a.m ., Meigs Mine 2,
POMEROY -Trinity Church
James
Emmest,
O'Bleness of Pomeroy will hold an all-youMemorial Hospital.
can ~ eat pancake dinner on Friday
POMEROY
from 4-8 p.m. The cost is SS for
8:49 p.m., Lincoln Hei gr ·· , adults and S3 for children 12 and
Audrey Backus , treated;
under. All proceeds with benefit
9:45 p.m., State Route 124, the church's youth group, Serassisted by Central Dispatch , vants with a Testimony (SWAT).
Larissa Petrie, HM C.
RACINE
12:41 p.m., SR 124, motor
vehicle accident, Violet. Moore,
TUPPERS PLAINS A
Paul Conley, treated.
square dance will be heW at the
RUTLAND
9:25 a.m., Holzer Clinic, Jack Tuppers Plams VFW hall, Saturday, 8-11 p.m. True Country will
Smith,HMC;
2:34 p.m., Beech Grove Road, provide the music and Clifford
James Calsey, Pleasant Valley Hos~ Longenette will be the caller. ..,
pi tal.
SYRACUSE
12:41 p.m., SR 124, motor
POMEROY
Bedford
vehicle
acciden t,
Brenda
meetTownship
Trustees,
regular
Blankenship, Cabell Huntington
ing, Tuesday, Aug. 8, 7 p.m. at the
Hospital;
8:24 p.m., High Street, Elsie townhall.
Roush, PVH.
TUPPERS PLAINS

Pancake dinner
scheduled

Dance set

Trustees to meet

completely over the Internet.
The new video equipment also
lets Rio Grande students to have
conferences with and learn from
professors at other college campuses across the country.
"The whole idea is that it provides flexib!lity for the students in
the Meigs Center," Meyer said.
One final element of the
improvements is the connection
of Meigs Center phone lines to
Rio Grande's phone system . .All
technology improvements should
be completed by fall quarter, and
video conferencing classes will
begin in winter quarter.

Fruth Pharmacy, Ohio R1ver
Bear Company, Feeney- Bennett
Post 128, Amencan Legion.
Riverbend Arts Co un ci l and
Pepsi Cola Bottlmg Co.
ln ot her business, Duffi eld
announced that Judy Kay's
Restaurant has opened on North
Second Avenue.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
Police dispute . MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
Boulder assault
992-2156
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Police
have ordered adchtional tc'Sts on evidence in the Jon.Benet Ramsey iliying
and in an attempted assault on another girl months later to detennine if
there is a link between the two crin1es.
Police Chief Mark Beckner said
Tuesday he doubts cl1e perpetr.ltor of
the still-unsolved attempted sexual
a&lt;Sault was imnlved i11 JonBeneti sbying, but "we are going to go as far as
take a second look at it:'
"In any case }UU can find o;ome
sunilarities. It kind of depends on
which theoty )UU are looking at;' he
said."[ cocud probably pull out a thousand cases and find some similarities."
The 14-)'t'ar-old girl, who attended the "'me dance academy as JonBene~ was att:Jcked in hei bed in September 1997, accordmg to police
R'J'OI1&gt;. The girl's mother intcm1ptcd
the would.- be assault; d1e anacker fled
ami the girl wasn't injuJtxt

Michael 5. Southem

..•.. M4~'!!~~ tQ
~ ~

locttled AI 33
• • ~ 7 Mrnulcs North of Athens

Fair

from PageA1
by telephone.
Watson also said that Saturday is
the only day when camping and
parking spaces can be reserved.
The cost for reserved parking
in specified areas is $20 a week,
which does not include entry
into the fairgrounds.
For space to park trailers and
campers or to pu t up tents, the
cost is $7 5, which must be paid
on Sat"urday when the ;pace
reservation is made. Only one
tent is pernlitted on eac h space
a n~ th e rules specifY that "quiet
hours" begin at 12:30 a.m.
Season and membership tickets
Jre now on sak and will remain

on sale until the fair ope ns on
Aug. 14 .
Season tickets are S 12 and
enmle the purchaser to gate
adm.ission and free porkin'g for the
entire fair. Memb ers hip tic kl'ts are

Announced
meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliat;y,
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m at
the hall.

Homecominc
POMEROY - Homecoming
will take place at Hysell R4n
Holiness C hurch off SR 124 on
County Road 15 on Saturday. A
potluck dinner will be held ;11
noon on the church grounds with
singing. Bible School will be held
at the .church Aug. 7-12 from
'6 :30-8:30 p.m. All children are
encouraged to participate.

Revival set
DANVILLE - A revival will
be held at the Pinegrove Bible
Holiness Church three miles from
Danville on Rowlesville Road,
Aug. 10-13, 7 p.m. each day
except Sunday, 6 p.m. Evangelijt,
the Rev. Roy M cCarty of Pennsylvania.

$15 and include admission and
parking as well as voting privilege! on Me igs County Fair
Bo~r&lt;i business.
They are available from any fair
board member or at the Sugar
Run Flour Mill in Pomeroy. ·
Season tickets can be · purchased at Joe's Country Market in
Rutland: Waid Cross Sons,
Racine; Baum Lumber Co.,
Chester; Sugar Run Flour Mill,
Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy,
McDonald's, Gloeckner's Restaurant, Pomeroy: Little John's Food
Mart, Tuppers Plains; Whaley's
Gcocery, State Route 681 · at Darwin; Helen Baer, Syracuse; Dorsel
Larkins, Long Bottom; Dan's,
Middleport; Reed 's Co untry
Store, Reedsv ille; Little John 's
Food Mart. Middleport: and Rutland Department Store.
Season tickets are sold only to
llld ividuals, not &lt;.:o mpa111es or
orgamzano ns.

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA

446 •452 4

Canning
Sup-plies by
Micromatic
&amp;Presto

OLD fWl 11 1~ WI ',[
~!I~

Jll( I&lt;. ',ON

7

i'l~t

FR17/28/00 · THURS 8/3/00
lOX OffiCI WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PMJOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM lOR MATINIIS
THOMAS AND THE MAGIC·
RAIL.ROAD (G)
6:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:00

SCARY MOVIE (R)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20

THE PATRIOT (R)
9:00 DAILY

DISNEY'S THE KID (PG) )
7:10 &amp; 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 I 3:20

BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WV

773·5583

7:15 &amp; 8:1 5 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15-3:15

X·MEN (PG-13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

WHAT LIES BENEATH (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

POKEMDN 2000
7:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:00

STARTING 8/4/00
COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
HOLLOW MAN {R)
&amp; SPACE eewsoys (PG13)

•I
•

�_h_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________~------~~~~illiC)II

Page A4:

T

MaRRI~ AmaL'T"V, WfofeN You RQTfRe., You'LL
Have. eNoU$H 1o 8UY ~ca~R;PTtOt-l PRIJG4$!

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74D-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

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

,

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utten ;.., tht rditor rArr wrlcomt. Thty should bt ftu than J(HJ words . .4./ll~nrn· an rubjtcl
to rditinJ a11d mwst bt sirnN a11d ittcfudt addrrss and ttltphonr numbtr. No 11ruixnrd lrttrn .,;u
k p,U,llshrd. Ultrn .tlwrdd bt in good IJJSlt, addrrmng i.uu.rs, not fHr'IOnalilirs.
Tilt opinions tzprtssrd in tltt cuJurtm btlII"' arf zbt t(JIIs,uus of thr Ohiu llal/ry Publishint
Co. 'J rdiwriJJI boorrJ, •m/ru olhrrwiu noud.

·-

•
•.
••
••,
••
••
•
•

.

..• .'.
••
••

OUR VIEW

Pleading

•

ADVICE
in his study.
6. This being Easter Sunday, we
ask Mrs. Lewis to come forward
and lay an egg on the altar.
7. A bean supper will be held
on Tuesday evening in the church
hall. Music wiU follow.
8. At the evening service
tonight, the sermon topic will be
"What is HeU?" Come early, and
listen to our choir practice.
9. The Scouts are saving: aluminum cans, lx&gt;ttles and other
items to be recycled . Proceeds

WEDNESDAY, August 2
TUPPERS PLAINS - Junior
high cheerleader tryouts planned.
Sign in at high school office before
Wedhesday. High school cheerleaders pick up athletic packets there.

.1

report revt· a lin ~ how st'nior c1rizens p:iy a Ji sproportionarely high price for prescriptio n drub"·
:Thaes harJi y r1eW\. Thar tJcr has bet·n trllnlpett·d in the lri -co unry:area for mon ths, parncularly by Ohio Sixth Utstnct U.S. I-lep.Ted
Stl:ickland, D-Lucasvdk. Stnckhnd has promoted a st udy with sim I!ac finding; in a btd to get Congress to act o n priciug reform.
:What's probably news is the fact this report came out the week of
t~ Republi ca n National Conventi o n.Timing is everything. and this
reeort's co nclusiOn that seniors will pay more for prescription Jrugs
by-2010 is likely to have an impact on 'the GOP
It is also has to say so meth ing to Dt&gt;mocrats, whose own co nventiM is later this momh.
Of course, Republi caos' pbtform for this electio n is already set.
B~t the call for relieving the cost burden on seniors •vho require
pr~scription drub" will reverberote throughout the fall.
· The message will be se nt loud and ckar that o ur senior populati"!lueeds help 111 af!iJrding needed dru g;.
rf th e GOP snll ru les the Ho use a,.f Se nate - and possibly the
W:J1ite House - imposin g t·ontro ls on pharmace utica l pricing
wcin't happen. Less gover nment IS the key behind Republi can ph ilospphy. So is saving mo ney.
There's nothing wrong with that stance. especially "nee most
experts believe providiug a prescription benefit m Med ica re wmdd
break th e program .
There's no point in adding it to Medtcare if there's no Medrcare
to be had.
Yet we are still left with the probl em that daily confronts a significant portiorr of our population. Ignoring it doesn't mean it will go
away.
Legislators, and whoever sits in the Oval Office co me January. wtll
have to address rhe - i ss u~~ pe rhaps by correc tin g soii1e oT the rules
that favor pharmaceutical makers' advantage over the market .
We are not end orsing regulation.That would only hamming drug
m a nuf~ c turers' co mpetitiveness and adversely affect the economy.
What ts needed IS a balanced approach to maktng prescriptio n drugs
less of a finan cial cross to bear for those who can least afford them.
The situation not only affects seniors but also yo unge r people
who siri1ilarl y find th emselves makin g choi ces between mying on

their medicine or spending limited in come on other necessitit's.
In a country when: medical breakthroughs art commonplace,
making them ava ilabl e to al l is a reasonable expectation. As the parties present the nomination to th t"i r respect ive presi dential ca ndi dates. th~i r campaigns ~hould provJtle some answers on what can be
done about presm pti on drug pric es.
Because if neither candidate has an answer to the prob lem, both
will know about it when they scan vote totals on elernon night.

RUSHER'S VIEW

Greed, bias of unions are affecting our schools
This is a particularly difficult column for
me to write because, o n my mother's side; I
com e from a long line of teachers. My mother was a teach er, and so was her sister. So were
both of their parents. In addition, I remember
fondly the many teachers I had, in the public
schools of New Yo rk and elsewhere, in elementary and seco ndary school.
My memory for nam es is so poor that I
once forgot my coll ege mom mate 's nam e
whl'n I was introd ucing: him to a visiting
deba te tt·anL yet I can still remember the
name - and the face - of my fifth-grade
h.·acht.·r, Miss Parr iL· ia Donovan, anJ the acute
sense ot· loss I fe lt when she retired from
teac hing to ge t married. (This was in the days
\ovhen married women worked ar home, nor
outside.)
And the vast majority of Am ericans clearly
feel th e same way - not o nly about the
teachers tl)ey themselves had in their school
Jays, but abo ut the teachers who today are
teaching the current generation of schoolchildre n. We are mre of thel'r kindness and
their dedication.
When Americans tell pollsters that, for
them , education ts. th e numb~r-on e issue in
the co untry. th ey are expressi ng their deep
co ncern over many things: the breakdown of
school disciplin e, the prevalence of drugs. the
dumbing-down of th e cur.riculum and such
grotesqu e practi CL'S as "social promotion." But
not -one pason in 3 hundred wc uld drt'am of
criti cizin g the teac hers rhemselves.
So. as I say. this is a hard column to wrice.
For I have come to believe that a substa ntial
part of the probl em w ith America's public
1chools today is th e rapacious g reed and liberal policical bias of the two huge unions that
claim to represe nt Ameri ca 's 3.1 million

William
Rusher
NEA COLUMNIST
teachers: the National Education Asso ciation
(the biggest union in the United States) and
the American Federation ·ofTeach ers. Unlike
the teachers themselves , these two bureaucracies have only one objective: to expa nd the
number of teachers, with a view to in c reasing
their own political clout.
And that clout is huge. In some states, nearly a third of th e. member~ &lt;&gt;f- thr:H;!ate-legislaturc are teachers organiz~d and deployed by
the NEA and the AFT. In Congress, both
organizations are joined at the hip with the
Democratic party, which is forever o n the
lo okout for ways to increase the number of
teachers - all for the good of"the children ,"
of course.
.
That is what is behind the constant demand
for smaller-sized classes. Despite assertions to
the contrary, there is little real evidence chat
smaller classes substantially improve the qu altty of edup tion . l:lut they certainly increase
the required number of teachers - which is,
of course, the real point. Much the same is
true of the demand for bilingual education,
and all th e other ways in which both states
and th e federal government are forever being
urged to throw money at the schools. Where

Today isWed!le,Jay. Aug. 1, the 2 Lith day of 21 IIIII. There art' I 51
days left 111 the ye.lf.
Today's Highlight in H1story:
Tt&gt;n years ago. on Au~TU st ~. I'J&lt;JO. Iraq invad . :d Kuwait, seizing control of the 01 !- n ch t'111ll:~lfl'. 1 1 n.:~ id ent l3ush com:iemnnl the incursion
a~ .1n act of "naked .lggrl·,ston." (Thl' Iraqis w~ n: later dnvcn out in
Operation D ese11 Storm.)
On this date:
In 1776, 1ncmbcrs of the CominL"nt. d ( ~ nllgrc:"~s bt:gan .ltt,K hi ng- tiH.:ir
s1gnatures to the !Jeclarati 1m of !JJdepertdL·nct.'.
" In I R76, tron tiersman " Wild lldl" ll ickok "'"shot .IIIli kille-d wl11k
playing poker at a ~aJo on i11 I )eadwood, S.l}
In 192 1, o pera ~1 ngc r Enrico C:.trmu died 111 \Japk·s, luly.
In 1923. th (' 2Sith pn..·'&gt;itkr tt ofrhc UnHL'd Sr:HL'&lt;:i, W:1rren G. Harding.
d1ed in S,m Frano..;co
In 11)34, Gnrn.m PrL'\;Idt·nt 1'.1ul vo11 1-lll h_k'nburg d~t._•d , paving tlw
\V,lY tOr Ad o!( Hnk·r\ con1pktc Ll kc-o\·cr.
In 19JlJ. Albt: rt [In..,tt·iil '~lg n nl a k·tlLT to !'resident Franklin lt(JOseve lt urging ncawm o( an M l)lllii.." ''-'\."apon.., rcscan.: h pmgr:l.IIL
In I ~43, ,l N .1\'V p.ttrol tmpt·du bo at. I'T I119, co mmanded by Lt.
John F. Kci1neJy. ..,,tnk ,Jti:l'r being -.he:trL·d in two by a Japant~e de str~y ­
er off tht: Solomon Islan ds . (KL'Illll'dy \\"J'I c n~ dited with saving rllL'Ill -

does the money actually go ' A 1989 report of
the Wisconsin Policy Res ea rc h In stitute
found that as little as 26 percent of elementary
school district funds actually reac hed the
classroom.
With the federal . government spending
upwards of $ 100 billion a year on education,
it should co me as no surprise that the NEA .
and AFT are major players in American politics . But, being unions, and therefore taxexempt under the Internal Revenue Code,
t hey musr di sclose fully rhe exrent of their
political activities and expenditures. And these
are taxable unl ess segregated fro m the ir ge nera! operations and cond ucted through a
politica l action committee.
And yet, although the NEA (for example)
regularly engages in almost every conceivable
form of political activity in support of candidates and legislation it f.1Vors, and by no
m eans con fines th ese activities to its PAC, at
-least sinEe- l-994-it- has reported- no politicai- expenditures whatever on its tax returns.
Fo r this little oversight, the NEA is currently being hauled before the Internal Revenue
Service and the Federal Election Commission
by the·Lafl'dmatk'.I:egal Foundation .Wh at sort
of arrogan ce, do you suppose, prompted the
NEA to disregard the tax laws so cavalierly?
Probably they were counti ng on the historic
be nevolence of th e American people toward · : .~
teac hers. Let's hope the lawsmt exposes these ~
unions, instead, for what th ey really are: ·•
· armies of the liberal left , organized to shake -~
dow n America n society for their own aggrandizement.

(Willia m A. R11sher is a Distillgllishcd Fellow of
t!Je ClareiiiOII I IIIStitJIIe for tlte St11dy ~f States mmrsliip m1d Political Plrilosophy.)

RYAN'S VIEW

bers oft ht· crew. )
In \945, PrcsidL·nt Tnm\ ,\11, Sc)\"iet le.idcr Jmef Stalin cmd Urimh
Prnne Mmi stcr Clellll'llt Artl ee concluded tlw Po t~d a n 1 confl·rt'lll't...'.
In 1964, thL· Prnugon rL·portL·J the tir~t of two att.K k" on U.S.
d e'i troy~r.s by Nonll VH:tnaJllt'"e torpedo hoals m the Gulf ofTon kin
In I'JHII, H5 people \\'L· re ki ll ed when a bomb exp lod,·d at tht· tr.tin
station in Bologn ,l. lt.Ji y.
In I 'JH5. 137 peop le were killed whe n a Delta Air Lin,·s jetliner
cras hed whilt: ;ltt cmp{lng tu land .1t I ),J (b~- rort Worth lntt-r n,ltlon,d
Airport.
Today ' \ Bi rthd.1y': Actn·-;, ik.nnn.· Straigh t i" H2 . ForniL'r Sen . l',llll
Laxalt, R -Ncv.. " 7H . Adm ( :.~troll () 'Connor is 76. Actor P,·ter
O'Toole IS 6H. Cou ntry singer H.mk Cochran is 65. R ock mu sll·ian
Garth Hu.dsnn (1 he Band) " !&gt;.1. Movie dm•ctor Wes Craven is 61.
Singer Edward l'.tttt'n (C!Jdys Knight &amp; T he Pips) is 61. Actor Ma x
Wright is 57 . Actress Joanna Cm1dy IS 55 . Actress Kathryn Harrold is
50. Singer P ndrew Gold is 4Y. S i n~er Mojo Nixon is 43. Actress Vic. mm Jar ks011·" 41 Acrrc'« A~oiiMlla i&lt; 3'!
•·

Glimpse ifAfrican poverty has sobering dfoct
meols. We splurged for lunch o ne day at the
Th~ pill's have begun to app &lt;:ar 111 ~::ve r y
swanky Norfolk Hotel. and I rerncrnber being
roo m of the house. Mm quito rqwll em, G \tll - greatly amused by the folks in th eir crisp sa fa n
(Ordcr t&lt;l pt·s. b&lt;~ttl'rll's on thL· dinin~ room ~ outfits heading out in Land Rovcn to luxurit.1bk·. T-shn·ts . h.lt:-.. h,tnd.HmJs, t~nny pack~ oil ous loJ ges in the hu sh .
rile bedroom fl oor.
We·; on the· other hand, were borrowin g a
lVLl l.-\fi.t pi1J,, Wooli tt. binocubrs. l·Jmt:ras Toyo ta fiom one of tht: num anJ ht:"aJing ro
on th e kacht.:n co ullttT. (;llldt'hoob , paper- the mud huts m y aunt shared with three other
b.,ck novels, pl ayin~ c.mb on th e cot1oe tabll'. mi ssiona ri es iti a poor Tanzan ian village not
My hu ~b~111 d ,md I go to tl h· "itorl' for ~;rn ­ far from Lake Victoria .
LL'ric-. and ill L'V it.l bly return Wit h somL· thin~
" Th e outhouse really isn't too baJ ," I wrote
else tO r our trip: ,\ spr.1y that \viii remove in my journal the day after we ar~ived . " Bur
wrmk les from o ur dmhes , small packs of I'll never go in there at night.That's wh en the
Kleem·x, a first aid ktt.
roaches co me out - the size of mice. Wh en
All thew Jtt· m ~ will be uo;;eful. but I suspec t the sisters go in there at night , they bring a
Wt.''rc gathering film and toothbrush cove rs broom an d sweep th e roaches into the ho le
for th e s:amc rt·asons a pregnant women buyo; before going to the bathroo m."
mob il t"o;; and bootit.'s. l3y ..;urrounding ou rI spent two weeks in th e vill age. visitin g my
-:t·lves w ith th e par:1phLT nalia of the L'VL't it. we aunt's neighbors and playin~ with the c bil pull the t:V~nt itsl' lf a littll' closer.
Jren, who repeatedly sa ng the one English
We've been \Vairing for this trip to Kenya song they knew- "Ewrybody Loves Saturfor more th:tn a ye:tr. carrying on a stt·a J y e- day Ni ght" - and begged me to pa int th eir
mail co rre~p o nd ence with a pack.1ger in nails with my pink polish. One day, we han dNatrobi as we pic(eJ together Ollr itinerary. ed out jelly beans. eac h. chtld rece ivi ng three.
But m truth I've been W ;J itlllg ~ in c e 11 )~4 . the An hou r later, I noti ced 6- war-o ld Musa sti ll
yt·ar of my last trip to Atfi,·:t.
had two in his hand . Wh~n
aun t asked
I vi"i in·d my aunt. ,1 ( :athohl' nun who ha.., why, he wou ldn't answer. Hi, 'i i ~tcr exp lained
il ve d in Kenya and T.m z,l!ll.t t~)r more rhan 40 he \Vas s.1ving them for hie; mother.
year~ . Upon my arr ival in NJirubi. we ~tayed
Despite poverty aud dro ught , de&lt;pite tie ids·
fo r fo ur days in a hmrel f(, ,. '\vo rkin J!; girls' ' that had turned hard and dusty, people invited
and missio naries for S211 a day. including us into their homes for tea and a hard- boiled
BY JOAN RYAN

"'Y

-YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

825 Third Avt .. Gtlllpollt, Ohio
. 740448-2342
.

egg. or a D o ublt· C:oh and ri ce. When we
passed people on the road. thev never failed to
stop and spend 10 minmes J~ st gree-ting us.
(Huw arc yo u today? Nzuri. How dJLl you
awake' Nzqri. H ow is you r famil y' Nzur i.
How ar~ yo ur crops' N zuri .) Wh en 1 leti rhe
village to n:.·turn to the Unitt'd Stares, some of
the women ca me to my :mnt's ho me and
pressed sh1ll111gs into my hand, know111g 1
faced a lo ng j o urney.
At th e airport in Nairobi, I told mv aunt 1
would return . I didn 't kn ow It wou ld ·take me
16 years and that I would be returning with a
husband .md son. M y aunt won 't be there·
she's on a prolo nged tnp to the Unite d States:
So we're goin g on a safari, staying in beautiful
lod~cs, sometimes flying o n c hartered planes
from place to pla ce.
And durin ~ an overnight in NJtrobi, Wt''rc
booke d in to th e Norfo lk Hote l.
I shudder ro thmk I'll be one of t hose people who onct· amu sed me, whose visi t~ to
Kenya fit cleanly into ·the frames of th ei r
Nikons. l kn ow I won't find 011 tht-. trip what
I dH.I durmg my prt·vium DilL' . l3ut I won der if
it \V III bl' ~imply because my ninerary ha ~
changed or lx·c amL' I have.
ljt''"' N.yan IJ a ulll llllllist fo r rht S(m Fr1111 cisco
Clmlllirlt•. Sc11d c(ml/ll f llts ''' Iter ill (Me !l{ rhis

11ewspaper

or

sc11d

lu•r

('·mai(

}Mil rya11 @sf!!atc.C0/11.)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
- 7 4D-IifU2-21 515

-

,11

200 Moln ~l"e~lq!.PJnoonl, w.v.. l
..... 75· 1333

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains YFW Ladies Auxiliary.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.

PAGEVILLE -'Scipio Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Pageville
townhall.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS

POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustees, Thursday, 6 p.m
at the township hall on Rocksprings Road.

FRIDAY, August 4

THURSDAY, August l

REEDSVILLE - Olive township trustees, 7:30 p.m. Friday at
township office on Joppa Road.

POMEROY Health care
enrollment,Veterans Affairs Medical
Center, Chiillicothe. Thursday and
Friday, 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 2
p.m. at the Veterans Service Office,
117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Proof of military service required.

SAT\,IIU)AY- Homecoming,
Hysell l(un Holiness Church off
State Route 124,CountyRoad 15,
Sarurday. Potluck dinner at noon
on the church groups. Singing.

' POMEROY- PERI, 1 p.m.
luncheon, at noon Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Building.

S~A1f,Augun6

POMEROY -Gospel sing fea-

ruring New Horizons, , Sunday, 2
p.m., Popular Ridge Free Will Baptist Church.

Holiness Ch urch, Bible school,
Monday through Aug. 12. 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. All children invited.

MIDDLEPORT H obson
Christian Fellowship. speml sc rvice, 7 p.m. Sunday, Hershel White
and special singers.

MIDDLEPORT - Friends of
the Ltbrary, 7 p.m. Monday at the
Middleport Library.

SYRACUSE
Eichinger
reunion, Sund1y, Carleton School ,
Syracuse. Covered dish dinner,
12:45 p.m.
POMEROY - Tyler family
reunion, noon Sunday Jt the Poplar
Ridge fellowship hall.
MONDAY, August 7
CARPENTER Columbia
Township Trustees, regu lar meeting. Monday, firehouse. 7:30p m.
POMEROY -

H ysell Run

Is that Ann landers column
you clipped years ago yellow with
age' For a copy of her most fre quently requested poems and
essays. send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a
check or money orde r for $5.25
(this includes postage and handling) to : Gems. c/t&gt; Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chi cago, Ill.
6061 1- 0562. , (In Cana da , send
$6.25 .) To find out more about
Ann Landers and read her past
columns , visit the Creators Syndicate
web
page
at
www.creators.com.

staff at the tire outlet store called
and said a man driving a car of
that description had just left after
having them put on two new
tires .
At the outlet store, deputies
.found a receipt for the tire installation, with the thief's name and
'address. They went to his hou se
and found him. as weU as all four
stolen tires. Deputies returned to
the o utlet store. where employees
discovered they were also missing
two tires. which they later identified as the ones in the thief's
trunk. The man was booked on
two counts of theft.

1H1\NK YOU

to all the businesses that supported Chester-Days, all
wnrkers, participants, prize winners and visitors who
helped to make the celebration a success .
Racine Home National Bank
BaumLumber
Ridenours Supply
,
Ohio River Bear Company
Fanner's Bank
Pamida Inc.
VFW
Chester Ladies Auxiliary
Brook's Pizza
Karen Griffith
John Fick

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

~prescription drng price message
~
makes itself heard
.-n advocac y group calkd Fami li es USA has come o ut with

Ann
Landers

will be used to cripple childrc.n.
thi nk I have heard everything, I
I 0. The eighth-graders will be receive J letter like yo urs. M y stuperforming Shakespt'arc's " Ham- pid croo k se nes certamly has vallet" in the church baS&lt;'ment o n idated my beli ef that there is
Friday. The congrebra ti on JS mvit- no thing so dumb that someone,
ed to atte nd thi s tragedy.
sO ml'\vher~ won 't do it. H en~'s
11 . For those who have chil- the story:
dren and don 't-kn ow it, we have a
A 20- yt·ar-old Louisiana man
new nursery.
stopped at a SL' rvi cc station, stole
12 . Eight new choir robes ore two new tires. and stasht."d them
urgently needed. due to th e addt- in th e trunk of his car. A short
tion of scverJI new mcmbl'rs and time btt:r, according to deputies,
th e dctcriora[ion of somt.' oldt.·r lw showt'li up at a tire outlet store
ones.
1n :t tll'Jrby to\Vn, and paid to
Dear Ann Landers: Here's haw the stole n tires put on his
another stu pid crook story that I car. While at the outlet store, he
read in our local paper, ·rh e stole two of th eir tires and stashed
Slidell, La. , Sentry-News. My them in hi s trunk.
father always sa id that when God
Work~rs. at the service station
was giving out brains, some peo- noti•ce d the missing tires, notified
ple were standing in tht' w rong deputies, and called around asking
line and th e supply ran out. I other tire: dealers ro be on the
guess this proves it. -- Helen in lookout for the man and his ca r.
Louisiana
While deputies spoke to the
Dear Helen: Just wh&lt;' ll I workers a[ the St' rvice station, the
•

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A

Aucust 1, 1000

·Ann prints hilarious church bulletin bloopers
Dear Ann Landers: A while
back, you printed some bloopers
that appeared in church bulletins.
Here are a few more for the lisr. - Christie in Indiana
Dear Christie: Thanks for
sending them on. Here is the
revised version:
1. Don't let worry kill you -let the church help.
2. Remember in prayer the
·many who are sick of our church
an d communiry.
3. The rosebud on the altar this
mormng is to "announce the birth
of David Alan Smith, the sin of
Rev. and Mrs. Julius Smith.
4 .Wednesday, the Ladies' Liturgy Society will meet. Mrs. Jones
will sing "Put Me in my Little
Bed," accompanied by the pastor.
5. Thursday, there wiU be a
meetin~; of the Little Mothers
Club. All wishing to become little
mothers, please see the minister

ttNesr WJ.~ar You save F~ itofe RePeaL. oF n-ra

'L5ta6[isfwf in 1948

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. August 1. 1000

~PQRGVR PLatt, iF V~ KiPS STaRT ioDaY To

.The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Syracuse Village Hall.

Taz's Marathon
Linda's Beauty Shop
C. C. K. Convenience Store
Dan's Clothing
People's Bank
WMPO. WYVK • 92
Chester Firemen
DebRon Fence Builder
Shade River Ag
Holten's Holsteins
Tuppers Plains VFW

Ohio State Hannonica Championship Winners:
Dominicb Dirienzo, Erie, Pa 1st
Gene Goodwin, Pomeroy, Oh 2nd
Jack Ely, Columbus, Ob 3rd

The Community Calendar
is published a• 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.

Winners- TVNCR Combo- Tammy Snider, Groveport;
Lloyd Middleton Doll· Lloyd Blackwood, Ohio Bicentennial shirts - Vicki Pullins and Goldie Frederick all
·
Chester.
Because of the volunteers and these people and others
(too many to mention) the Chester-Shade Historical
Association Trustees THANK YOU! See you in 2001, 3rd
weekend in July.

SOCIETY NEWS
.)

Birth announced
NEW MARSHFIELD - lohn and Christi Sickles of New ·Marshilefd announce the birth of a son,
John C. Sickles II on July 12 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.

Named award winner
MIDDLEPORT Candace
Casey has been named a United
States National Award Winner in
English.
She attended Meigs Middle School in Middlepo~t and was
nominated for the award by a
teacher at the school. She will
appear in the USAA Official Year·
book, which is published nation·
CaHy
ally.
The Academy selects USAA winners upon the
recommendation of teachers, coaches, counselors
and other qualified sponsors and upon the Standards
of Selection set forth by the Academy. The criteria
for selection are a student's academic performance,
i;l!crest and aptitude, leadership qualities, responsibility. e nthusiasm. motivation to learn and improve,
citizenship, attitude and cooperative spirit, dependability. and recommendation from a teacher or
director.
Casey is the daughter of Jim and Rhonda Casey
of Calera, Ala. , torine rly of Pomeroy, and the granddaughte r of Jim and Connie Casey of M iddleport
and Linda Saxon of Point Pleasant, WVa .

'

1Ooth birthday celebrated
SHADE - The 100th birthday
of Edna Nora Dixon Fulton was
celebrat ed recently at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
wtth a party hosted by the srafr
there for her and her family of
five generation s.
Mrs. Fulton was b orn July
20, I900, on Grlkey Ridge in
Ath ens County to Victor and Jane
Dixon She attended elementary
Dixon
sc hool in a one-roo m sc hool
house rhe n \Wilt o n to graduate from Shade High
Sc hool in 1918. Soon after grad uation. Dtx o n marnt·d George Fu lt o n and nlOvc:d to ;~ farm in Shade
where they rais,d thei r children.
.
She ami he r hu sband had nine children, Loutse
Sla ter, Hubert Ful ton (de ceased). Mildred Hoope r.
' Freda MJston (deceased), Phyllis Pratt. Norma Fulton (deceased). Jean Jordan , a nd twins Carol Gabriel
and Dorrell Fulton.
She worked as a homemaker most of her life ond
as a cook for a iratcrnity in later years . Following th e
de~t h of her husba nd in 1960. Edna remained on
thctr t:nm in Sh ade for Sl'Vcr:l.l years bdOn· moving
tn Ath ens Ill till' 19Hils
Mrs. Fulton cam&lt;· to R oek&lt;prlng; Rehabilitation
-

L.

Center in 1996. She attends many of the faulities
group activities, including church servi ces, socials,
and arts and crafts.

MCCI holds Medicare forum
POMEROY - When it comes
to cancer and preventive core, JUst
what does Medicare cove r' "
That's what was discusS&lt;d in a
recent program sponsored by the·
Meigs County Cancer Initiative
(MCCI) at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
Julie Leonard, beneficiary education manager of Notionwide
REACHING OUT Medicare, spoke about the difler- Julie Leonard ences between Medieart' Parts A
talked on cancer and B and what cancer sc reenings
screen lngs and are covered far both men and
what Medicare women .
pays In a Meigs
She talked abou t thinb" to
County Cancer
keep in mind when worki ng with
Initiative (MCCI)
Medicare under any cirCLunstan c~s.
program at the
not just preventive care. A few of
Senior Citizens
Center. About her suggestions were:
• If you arc tn the hosp1tal for 2.1
60 senior citi·
days.
you may be asked to leave 1f
zens attended.
your con dition does not improvt·.
However, if you are not ready to leave, yo u hoVl' untrl
the next day to call KePro, who will review th&lt;' case.
It may take three days to revtew, and du ~m g the
review period Medicare will pay for your time in the
hospital. After the review, ,f KePro al';tees with
Medicare1S decision, you have umil noon dw twxr tb y
to leave the hospi tal before you w ill be indiv idu all y
charged for your stay;
• Your doctor cannot chargt: you in cxct:ss of thL·
M edi care approved amoum. Thnt.'fotl'. tl L'\'LT pay ti.1r
services up fro nt without firs t waiting fo r .1 tl. tu l ru ling from Medicare:
• Make sure your doctor submjb ,1 Mt·dir,JrL· cl.illll
form for you --it's the law. Most cbims. dt.' niL•rl ,trc duc
to errors on the form ;
• Medicare will help v·: ith rt·co n :"~trur t i\'t: ~llll~LT)"
after a ma st~:ctomy and also \vid1 br:~ s ami pm s rh t...''&gt;l'~:
• Medicare- dol'S pay 100 pt:rccnt nfbb \\'Ork:
• There is no deductible t(,r prt'Vl'lltivl· ~ er\· icc,, 1...:.
manunograms. prostatt: scn.•c n 1 n ~. l'tc YtHI geJJ L'.rally
only pay 20 percent of the M t·dic.trL· .1ppnwed
amount aftc·r the yearly Part ll dedu ctible.
The Medicare forum is Jll't onl' o f m.111y probr.1111 ~
that MCC I will plan t()r the community w L·ncnurage and motivate pt·opk to takt· cha rgL· nf tht•n :1 L'.dth.
providl.' e-ducation. and pro m ott· ~ early dt'kl'tH'll ,1nd
prL'\'t·mion of ca JH.-t..•r. E mp ha "&gt; l ~ of tltc cn:tlmnn ~~ to
develop and implt·mctH p rog ra111~ to r.li~L· puhhc
,1\varcncss of eancl'r issue\.
New members an.· wl'icnnlt'd to . l..,~ l~t 111 tht· lo.dttion's tight a~ inst cann·r. and tJUL'StlOTH m:-ty bl.'
dircctl'd to Carol Ad:un ~. co-c h.lirlll:m . 7-l0- 1) 1)2 2J 11 . MCC I is m thL· prn c L· s~ ~l d J"t nbutlll~ lnll ,nn,llton 0 11 callLL'r to c.':h _· h of ti ll' hhr.lrtt''&gt; 111 Potnnoy,
Middkport. lt.:Kint..·.•md Ea~tl'l' n EIL' IllL'Ilt.ll"y.

f2oJl.

1.800.745.7263
www .9u l hhorfs .c om

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•

1.8oo.ALABAMA for a

fr~~ vacatio n 9uld~ or hit our wfb5ltf at www .toura laba ma.org

.

--

- . ---·

�_h_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________~------~~~~illiC)II

Page A4:

T

MaRRI~ AmaL'T"V, WfofeN You RQTfRe., You'LL
Have. eNoU$H 1o 8UY ~ca~R;PTtOt-l PRIJG4$!

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74D-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

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

,

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utten ;.., tht rditor rArr wrlcomt. Thty should bt ftu than J(HJ words . .4./ll~nrn· an rubjtcl
to rditinJ a11d mwst bt sirnN a11d ittcfudt addrrss and ttltphonr numbtr. No 11ruixnrd lrttrn .,;u
k p,U,llshrd. Ultrn .tlwrdd bt in good IJJSlt, addrrmng i.uu.rs, not fHr'IOnalilirs.
Tilt opinions tzprtssrd in tltt cuJurtm btlII"' arf zbt t(JIIs,uus of thr Ohiu llal/ry Publishint
Co. 'J rdiwriJJI boorrJ, •m/ru olhrrwiu noud.

·-

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••
••,
••
••
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..• .'.
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OUR VIEW

Pleading

•

ADVICE
in his study.
6. This being Easter Sunday, we
ask Mrs. Lewis to come forward
and lay an egg on the altar.
7. A bean supper will be held
on Tuesday evening in the church
hall. Music wiU follow.
8. At the evening service
tonight, the sermon topic will be
"What is HeU?" Come early, and
listen to our choir practice.
9. The Scouts are saving: aluminum cans, lx&gt;ttles and other
items to be recycled . Proceeds

WEDNESDAY, August 2
TUPPERS PLAINS - Junior
high cheerleader tryouts planned.
Sign in at high school office before
Wedhesday. High school cheerleaders pick up athletic packets there.

.1

report revt· a lin ~ how st'nior c1rizens p:iy a Ji sproportionarely high price for prescriptio n drub"·
:Thaes harJi y r1eW\. Thar tJcr has bet·n trllnlpett·d in the lri -co unry:area for mon ths, parncularly by Ohio Sixth Utstnct U.S. I-lep.Ted
Stl:ickland, D-Lucasvdk. Stnckhnd has promoted a st udy with sim I!ac finding; in a btd to get Congress to act o n priciug reform.
:What's probably news is the fact this report came out the week of
t~ Republi ca n National Conventi o n.Timing is everything. and this
reeort's co nclusiOn that seniors will pay more for prescription Jrugs
by-2010 is likely to have an impact on 'the GOP
It is also has to say so meth ing to Dt&gt;mocrats, whose own co nventiM is later this momh.
Of course, Republi caos' pbtform for this electio n is already set.
B~t the call for relieving the cost burden on seniors •vho require
pr~scription drub" will reverberote throughout the fall.
· The message will be se nt loud and ckar that o ur senior populati"!lueeds help 111 af!iJrding needed dru g;.
rf th e GOP snll ru les the Ho use a,.f Se nate - and possibly the
W:J1ite House - imposin g t·ontro ls on pharmace utica l pricing
wcin't happen. Less gover nment IS the key behind Republi can ph ilospphy. So is saving mo ney.
There's nothing wrong with that stance. especially "nee most
experts believe providiug a prescription benefit m Med ica re wmdd
break th e program .
There's no point in adding it to Medtcare if there's no Medrcare
to be had.
Yet we are still left with the probl em that daily confronts a significant portiorr of our population. Ignoring it doesn't mean it will go
away.
Legislators, and whoever sits in the Oval Office co me January. wtll
have to address rhe - i ss u~~ pe rhaps by correc tin g soii1e oT the rules
that favor pharmaceutical makers' advantage over the market .
We are not end orsing regulation.That would only hamming drug
m a nuf~ c turers' co mpetitiveness and adversely affect the economy.
What ts needed IS a balanced approach to maktng prescriptio n drugs
less of a finan cial cross to bear for those who can least afford them.
The situation not only affects seniors but also yo unge r people
who siri1ilarl y find th emselves makin g choi ces between mying on

their medicine or spending limited in come on other necessitit's.
In a country when: medical breakthroughs art commonplace,
making them ava ilabl e to al l is a reasonable expectation. As the parties present the nomination to th t"i r respect ive presi dential ca ndi dates. th~i r campaigns ~hould provJtle some answers on what can be
done about presm pti on drug pric es.
Because if neither candidate has an answer to the prob lem, both
will know about it when they scan vote totals on elernon night.

RUSHER'S VIEW

Greed, bias of unions are affecting our schools
This is a particularly difficult column for
me to write because, o n my mother's side; I
com e from a long line of teachers. My mother was a teach er, and so was her sister. So were
both of their parents. In addition, I remember
fondly the many teachers I had, in the public
schools of New Yo rk and elsewhere, in elementary and seco ndary school.
My memory for nam es is so poor that I
once forgot my coll ege mom mate 's nam e
whl'n I was introd ucing: him to a visiting
deba te tt·anL yet I can still remember the
name - and the face - of my fifth-grade
h.·acht.·r, Miss Parr iL· ia Donovan, anJ the acute
sense ot· loss I fe lt when she retired from
teac hing to ge t married. (This was in the days
\ovhen married women worked ar home, nor
outside.)
And the vast majority of Am ericans clearly
feel th e same way - not o nly about the
teachers tl)ey themselves had in their school
Jays, but abo ut the teachers who today are
teaching the current generation of schoolchildre n. We are mre of thel'r kindness and
their dedication.
When Americans tell pollsters that, for
them , education ts. th e numb~r-on e issue in
the co untry. th ey are expressi ng their deep
co ncern over many things: the breakdown of
school disciplin e, the prevalence of drugs. the
dumbing-down of th e cur.riculum and such
grotesqu e practi CL'S as "social promotion." But
not -one pason in 3 hundred wc uld drt'am of
criti cizin g the teac hers rhemselves.
So. as I say. this is a hard column to wrice.
For I have come to believe that a substa ntial
part of the probl em w ith America's public
1chools today is th e rapacious g reed and liberal policical bias of the two huge unions that
claim to represe nt Ameri ca 's 3.1 million

William
Rusher
NEA COLUMNIST
teachers: the National Education Asso ciation
(the biggest union in the United States) and
the American Federation ·ofTeach ers. Unlike
the teachers themselves , these two bureaucracies have only one objective: to expa nd the
number of teachers, with a view to in c reasing
their own political clout.
And that clout is huge. In some states, nearly a third of th e. member~ &lt;&gt;f- thr:H;!ate-legislaturc are teachers organiz~d and deployed by
the NEA and the AFT. In Congress, both
organizations are joined at the hip with the
Democratic party, which is forever o n the
lo okout for ways to increase the number of
teachers - all for the good of"the children ,"
of course.
.
That is what is behind the constant demand
for smaller-sized classes. Despite assertions to
the contrary, there is little real evidence chat
smaller classes substantially improve the qu altty of edup tion . l:lut they certainly increase
the required number of teachers - which is,
of course, the real point. Much the same is
true of the demand for bilingual education,
and all th e other ways in which both states
and th e federal government are forever being
urged to throw money at the schools. Where

Today isWed!le,Jay. Aug. 1, the 2 Lith day of 21 IIIII. There art' I 51
days left 111 the ye.lf.
Today's Highlight in H1story:
Tt&gt;n years ago. on Au~TU st ~. I'J&lt;JO. Iraq invad . :d Kuwait, seizing control of the 01 !- n ch t'111ll:~lfl'. 1 1 n.:~ id ent l3ush com:iemnnl the incursion
a~ .1n act of "naked .lggrl·,ston." (Thl' Iraqis w~ n: later dnvcn out in
Operation D ese11 Storm.)
On this date:
In 1776, 1ncmbcrs of the CominL"nt. d ( ~ nllgrc:"~s bt:gan .ltt,K hi ng- tiH.:ir
s1gnatures to the !Jeclarati 1m of !JJdepertdL·nct.'.
" In I R76, tron tiersman " Wild lldl" ll ickok "'"shot .IIIli kille-d wl11k
playing poker at a ~aJo on i11 I )eadwood, S.l}
In 192 1, o pera ~1 ngc r Enrico C:.trmu died 111 \Japk·s, luly.
In 1923. th (' 2Sith pn..·'&gt;itkr tt ofrhc UnHL'd Sr:HL'&lt;:i, W:1rren G. Harding.
d1ed in S,m Frano..;co
In 11)34, Gnrn.m PrL'\;Idt·nt 1'.1ul vo11 1-lll h_k'nburg d~t._•d , paving tlw
\V,lY tOr Ad o!( Hnk·r\ con1pktc Ll kc-o\·cr.
In 19JlJ. Albt: rt [In..,tt·iil '~lg n nl a k·tlLT to !'resident Franklin lt(JOseve lt urging ncawm o( an M l)lllii.." ''-'\."apon.., rcscan.: h pmgr:l.IIL
In I ~43, ,l N .1\'V p.ttrol tmpt·du bo at. I'T I119, co mmanded by Lt.
John F. Kci1neJy. ..,,tnk ,Jti:l'r being -.he:trL·d in two by a Japant~e de str~y ­
er off tht: Solomon Islan ds . (KL'Illll'dy \\"J'I c n~ dited with saving rllL'Ill -

does the money actually go ' A 1989 report of
the Wisconsin Policy Res ea rc h In stitute
found that as little as 26 percent of elementary
school district funds actually reac hed the
classroom.
With the federal . government spending
upwards of $ 100 billion a year on education,
it should co me as no surprise that the NEA .
and AFT are major players in American politics . But, being unions, and therefore taxexempt under the Internal Revenue Code,
t hey musr di sclose fully rhe exrent of their
political activities and expenditures. And these
are taxable unl ess segregated fro m the ir ge nera! operations and cond ucted through a
politica l action committee.
And yet, although the NEA (for example)
regularly engages in almost every conceivable
form of political activity in support of candidates and legislation it f.1Vors, and by no
m eans con fines th ese activities to its PAC, at
-least sinEe- l-994-it- has reported- no politicai- expenditures whatever on its tax returns.
Fo r this little oversight, the NEA is currently being hauled before the Internal Revenue
Service and the Federal Election Commission
by the·Lafl'dmatk'.I:egal Foundation .Wh at sort
of arrogan ce, do you suppose, prompted the
NEA to disregard the tax laws so cavalierly?
Probably they were counti ng on the historic
be nevolence of th e American people toward · : .~
teac hers. Let's hope the lawsmt exposes these ~
unions, instead, for what th ey really are: ·•
· armies of the liberal left , organized to shake -~
dow n America n society for their own aggrandizement.

(Willia m A. R11sher is a Distillgllishcd Fellow of
t!Je ClareiiiOII I IIIStitJIIe for tlte St11dy ~f States mmrsliip m1d Political Plrilosophy.)

RYAN'S VIEW

bers oft ht· crew. )
In \945, PrcsidL·nt Tnm\ ,\11, Sc)\"iet le.idcr Jmef Stalin cmd Urimh
Prnne Mmi stcr Clellll'llt Artl ee concluded tlw Po t~d a n 1 confl·rt'lll't...'.
In 1964, thL· Prnugon rL·portL·J the tir~t of two att.K k" on U.S.
d e'i troy~r.s by Nonll VH:tnaJllt'"e torpedo hoals m the Gulf ofTon kin
In I'JHII, H5 people \\'L· re ki ll ed when a bomb exp lod,·d at tht· tr.tin
station in Bologn ,l. lt.Ji y.
In I 'JH5. 137 peop le were killed whe n a Delta Air Lin,·s jetliner
cras hed whilt: ;ltt cmp{lng tu land .1t I ),J (b~- rort Worth lntt-r n,ltlon,d
Airport.
Today ' \ Bi rthd.1y': Actn·-;, ik.nnn.· Straigh t i" H2 . ForniL'r Sen . l',llll
Laxalt, R -Ncv.. " 7H . Adm ( :.~troll () 'Connor is 76. Actor P,·ter
O'Toole IS 6H. Cou ntry singer H.mk Cochran is 65. R ock mu sll·ian
Garth Hu.dsnn (1 he Band) " !&gt;.1. Movie dm•ctor Wes Craven is 61.
Singer Edward l'.tttt'n (C!Jdys Knight &amp; T he Pips) is 61. Actor Ma x
Wright is 57 . Actress Joanna Cm1dy IS 55 . Actress Kathryn Harrold is
50. Singer P ndrew Gold is 4Y. S i n~er Mojo Nixon is 43. Actress Vic. mm Jar ks011·" 41 Acrrc'« A~oiiMlla i&lt; 3'!
•·

Glimpse ifAfrican poverty has sobering dfoct
meols. We splurged for lunch o ne day at the
Th~ pill's have begun to app &lt;:ar 111 ~::ve r y
swanky Norfolk Hotel. and I rerncrnber being
roo m of the house. Mm quito rqwll em, G \tll - greatly amused by the folks in th eir crisp sa fa n
(Ordcr t&lt;l pt·s. b&lt;~ttl'rll's on thL· dinin~ room ~ outfits heading out in Land Rovcn to luxurit.1bk·. T-shn·ts . h.lt:-.. h,tnd.HmJs, t~nny pack~ oil ous loJ ges in the hu sh .
rile bedroom fl oor.
We·; on the· other hand, were borrowin g a
lVLl l.-\fi.t pi1J,, Wooli tt. binocubrs. l·Jmt:ras Toyo ta fiom one of tht: num anJ ht:"aJing ro
on th e kacht.:n co ullttT. (;llldt'hoob , paper- the mud huts m y aunt shared with three other
b.,ck novels, pl ayin~ c.mb on th e cot1oe tabll'. mi ssiona ri es iti a poor Tanzan ian village not
My hu ~b~111 d ,md I go to tl h· "itorl' for ~;rn ­ far from Lake Victoria .
LL'ric-. and ill L'V it.l bly return Wit h somL· thin~
" Th e outhouse really isn't too baJ ," I wrote
else tO r our trip: ,\ spr.1y that \viii remove in my journal the day after we ar~ived . " Bur
wrmk les from o ur dmhes , small packs of I'll never go in there at night.That's wh en the
Kleem·x, a first aid ktt.
roaches co me out - the size of mice. Wh en
All thew Jtt· m ~ will be uo;;eful. but I suspec t the sisters go in there at night , they bring a
Wt.''rc gathering film and toothbrush cove rs broom an d sweep th e roaches into the ho le
for th e s:amc rt·asons a pregnant women buyo; before going to the bathroo m."
mob il t"o;; and bootit.'s. l3y ..;urrounding ou rI spent two weeks in th e vill age. visitin g my
-:t·lves w ith th e par:1phLT nalia of the L'VL't it. we aunt's neighbors and playin~ with the c bil pull the t:V~nt itsl' lf a littll' closer.
Jren, who repeatedly sa ng the one English
We've been \Vairing for this trip to Kenya song they knew- "Ewrybody Loves Saturfor more th:tn a ye:tr. carrying on a stt·a J y e- day Ni ght" - and begged me to pa int th eir
mail co rre~p o nd ence with a pack.1ger in nails with my pink polish. One day, we han dNatrobi as we pic(eJ together Ollr itinerary. ed out jelly beans. eac h. chtld rece ivi ng three.
But m truth I've been W ;J itlllg ~ in c e 11 )~4 . the An hou r later, I noti ced 6- war-o ld Musa sti ll
yt·ar of my last trip to Atfi,·:t.
had two in his hand . Wh~n
aun t asked
I vi"i in·d my aunt. ,1 ( :athohl' nun who ha.., why, he wou ldn't answer. Hi, 'i i ~tcr exp lained
il ve d in Kenya and T.m z,l!ll.t t~)r more rhan 40 he \Vas s.1ving them for hie; mother.
year~ . Upon my arr ival in NJirubi. we ~tayed
Despite poverty aud dro ught , de&lt;pite tie ids·
fo r fo ur days in a hmrel f(, ,. '\vo rkin J!; girls' ' that had turned hard and dusty, people invited
and missio naries for S211 a day. including us into their homes for tea and a hard- boiled
BY JOAN RYAN

"'Y

-YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

825 Third Avt .. Gtlllpollt, Ohio
. 740448-2342
.

egg. or a D o ublt· C:oh and ri ce. When we
passed people on the road. thev never failed to
stop and spend 10 minmes J~ st gree-ting us.
(Huw arc yo u today? Nzuri. How dJLl you
awake' Nzqri. H ow is you r famil y' Nzur i.
How ar~ yo ur crops' N zuri .) Wh en 1 leti rhe
village to n:.·turn to the Unitt'd Stares, some of
the women ca me to my :mnt's ho me and
pressed sh1ll111gs into my hand, know111g 1
faced a lo ng j o urney.
At th e airport in Nairobi, I told mv aunt 1
would return . I didn 't kn ow It wou ld ·take me
16 years and that I would be returning with a
husband .md son. M y aunt won 't be there·
she's on a prolo nged tnp to the Unite d States:
So we're goin g on a safari, staying in beautiful
lod~cs, sometimes flying o n c hartered planes
from place to pla ce.
And durin ~ an overnight in NJtrobi, Wt''rc
booke d in to th e Norfo lk Hote l.
I shudder ro thmk I'll be one of t hose people who onct· amu sed me, whose visi t~ to
Kenya fit cleanly into ·the frames of th ei r
Nikons. l kn ow I won't find 011 tht-. trip what
I dH.I durmg my prt·vium DilL' . l3ut I won der if
it \V III bl' ~imply because my ninerary ha ~
changed or lx·c amL' I have.
ljt''"' N.yan IJ a ulll llllllist fo r rht S(m Fr1111 cisco
Clmlllirlt•. Sc11d c(ml/ll f llts ''' Iter ill (Me !l{ rhis

11ewspaper

or

sc11d

lu•r

('·mai(

}Mil rya11 @sf!!atc.C0/11.)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
- 7 4D-IifU2-21 515

-

,11

200 Moln ~l"e~lq!.PJnoonl, w.v.. l
..... 75· 1333

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains YFW Ladies Auxiliary.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.

PAGEVILLE -'Scipio Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Pageville
townhall.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS

POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustees, Thursday, 6 p.m
at the township hall on Rocksprings Road.

FRIDAY, August 4

THURSDAY, August l

REEDSVILLE - Olive township trustees, 7:30 p.m. Friday at
township office on Joppa Road.

POMEROY Health care
enrollment,Veterans Affairs Medical
Center, Chiillicothe. Thursday and
Friday, 10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 2
p.m. at the Veterans Service Office,
117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Proof of military service required.

SAT\,IIU)AY- Homecoming,
Hysell l(un Holiness Church off
State Route 124,CountyRoad 15,
Sarurday. Potluck dinner at noon
on the church groups. Singing.

' POMEROY- PERI, 1 p.m.
luncheon, at noon Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Building.

S~A1f,Augun6

POMEROY -Gospel sing fea-

ruring New Horizons, , Sunday, 2
p.m., Popular Ridge Free Will Baptist Church.

Holiness Ch urch, Bible school,
Monday through Aug. 12. 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. All children invited.

MIDDLEPORT H obson
Christian Fellowship. speml sc rvice, 7 p.m. Sunday, Hershel White
and special singers.

MIDDLEPORT - Friends of
the Ltbrary, 7 p.m. Monday at the
Middleport Library.

SYRACUSE
Eichinger
reunion, Sund1y, Carleton School ,
Syracuse. Covered dish dinner,
12:45 p.m.
POMEROY - Tyler family
reunion, noon Sunday Jt the Poplar
Ridge fellowship hall.
MONDAY, August 7
CARPENTER Columbia
Township Trustees, regu lar meeting. Monday, firehouse. 7:30p m.
POMEROY -

H ysell Run

Is that Ann landers column
you clipped years ago yellow with
age' For a copy of her most fre quently requested poems and
essays. send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a
check or money orde r for $5.25
(this includes postage and handling) to : Gems. c/t&gt; Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chi cago, Ill.
6061 1- 0562. , (In Cana da , send
$6.25 .) To find out more about
Ann Landers and read her past
columns , visit the Creators Syndicate
web
page
at
www.creators.com.

staff at the tire outlet store called
and said a man driving a car of
that description had just left after
having them put on two new
tires .
At the outlet store, deputies
.found a receipt for the tire installation, with the thief's name and
'address. They went to his hou se
and found him. as weU as all four
stolen tires. Deputies returned to
the o utlet store. where employees
discovered they were also missing
two tires. which they later identified as the ones in the thief's
trunk. The man was booked on
two counts of theft.

1H1\NK YOU

to all the businesses that supported Chester-Days, all
wnrkers, participants, prize winners and visitors who
helped to make the celebration a success .
Racine Home National Bank
BaumLumber
Ridenours Supply
,
Ohio River Bear Company
Fanner's Bank
Pamida Inc.
VFW
Chester Ladies Auxiliary
Brook's Pizza
Karen Griffith
John Fick

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

~prescription drng price message
~
makes itself heard
.-n advocac y group calkd Fami li es USA has come o ut with

Ann
Landers

will be used to cripple childrc.n.
thi nk I have heard everything, I
I 0. The eighth-graders will be receive J letter like yo urs. M y stuperforming Shakespt'arc's " Ham- pid croo k se nes certamly has vallet" in the church baS&lt;'ment o n idated my beli ef that there is
Friday. The congrebra ti on JS mvit- no thing so dumb that someone,
ed to atte nd thi s tragedy.
sO ml'\vher~ won 't do it. H en~'s
11 . For those who have chil- the story:
dren and don 't-kn ow it, we have a
A 20- yt·ar-old Louisiana man
new nursery.
stopped at a SL' rvi cc station, stole
12 . Eight new choir robes ore two new tires. and stasht."d them
urgently needed. due to th e addt- in th e trunk of his car. A short
tion of scverJI new mcmbl'rs and time btt:r, according to deputies,
th e dctcriora[ion of somt.' oldt.·r lw showt'li up at a tire outlet store
ones.
1n :t tll'Jrby to\Vn, and paid to
Dear Ann Landers: Here's haw the stole n tires put on his
another stu pid crook story that I car. While at the outlet store, he
read in our local paper, ·rh e stole two of th eir tires and stashed
Slidell, La. , Sentry-News. My them in hi s trunk.
father always sa id that when God
Work~rs. at the service station
was giving out brains, some peo- noti•ce d the missing tires, notified
ple were standing in tht' w rong deputies, and called around asking
line and th e supply ran out. I other tire: dealers ro be on the
guess this proves it. -- Helen in lookout for the man and his ca r.
Louisiana
While deputies spoke to the
Dear Helen: Just wh&lt;' ll I workers a[ the St' rvice station, the
•

·~

•·•
A

Aucust 1, 1000

·Ann prints hilarious church bulletin bloopers
Dear Ann Landers: A while
back, you printed some bloopers
that appeared in church bulletins.
Here are a few more for the lisr. - Christie in Indiana
Dear Christie: Thanks for
sending them on. Here is the
revised version:
1. Don't let worry kill you -let the church help.
2. Remember in prayer the
·many who are sick of our church
an d communiry.
3. The rosebud on the altar this
mormng is to "announce the birth
of David Alan Smith, the sin of
Rev. and Mrs. Julius Smith.
4 .Wednesday, the Ladies' Liturgy Society will meet. Mrs. Jones
will sing "Put Me in my Little
Bed," accompanied by the pastor.
5. Thursday, there wiU be a
meetin~; of the Little Mothers
Club. All wishing to become little
mothers, please see the minister

ttNesr WJ.~ar You save F~ itofe RePeaL. oF n-ra

'L5ta6[isfwf in 1948

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. August 1. 1000

~PQRGVR PLatt, iF V~ KiPS STaRT ioDaY To

.The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Syracuse Village Hall.

Taz's Marathon
Linda's Beauty Shop
C. C. K. Convenience Store
Dan's Clothing
People's Bank
WMPO. WYVK • 92
Chester Firemen
DebRon Fence Builder
Shade River Ag
Holten's Holsteins
Tuppers Plains VFW

Ohio State Hannonica Championship Winners:
Dominicb Dirienzo, Erie, Pa 1st
Gene Goodwin, Pomeroy, Oh 2nd
Jack Ely, Columbus, Ob 3rd

The Community Calendar
is published a• 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.

Winners- TVNCR Combo- Tammy Snider, Groveport;
Lloyd Middleton Doll· Lloyd Blackwood, Ohio Bicentennial shirts - Vicki Pullins and Goldie Frederick all
·
Chester.
Because of the volunteers and these people and others
(too many to mention) the Chester-Shade Historical
Association Trustees THANK YOU! See you in 2001, 3rd
weekend in July.

SOCIETY NEWS
.)

Birth announced
NEW MARSHFIELD - lohn and Christi Sickles of New ·Marshilefd announce the birth of a son,
John C. Sickles II on July 12 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.

Named award winner
MIDDLEPORT Candace
Casey has been named a United
States National Award Winner in
English.
She attended Meigs Middle School in Middlepo~t and was
nominated for the award by a
teacher at the school. She will
appear in the USAA Official Year·
book, which is published nation·
CaHy
ally.
The Academy selects USAA winners upon the
recommendation of teachers, coaches, counselors
and other qualified sponsors and upon the Standards
of Selection set forth by the Academy. The criteria
for selection are a student's academic performance,
i;l!crest and aptitude, leadership qualities, responsibility. e nthusiasm. motivation to learn and improve,
citizenship, attitude and cooperative spirit, dependability. and recommendation from a teacher or
director.
Casey is the daughter of Jim and Rhonda Casey
of Calera, Ala. , torine rly of Pomeroy, and the granddaughte r of Jim and Connie Casey of M iddleport
and Linda Saxon of Point Pleasant, WVa .

'

1Ooth birthday celebrated
SHADE - The 100th birthday
of Edna Nora Dixon Fulton was
celebrat ed recently at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
wtth a party hosted by the srafr
there for her and her family of
five generation s.
Mrs. Fulton was b orn July
20, I900, on Grlkey Ridge in
Ath ens County to Victor and Jane
Dixon She attended elementary
Dixon
sc hool in a one-roo m sc hool
house rhe n \Wilt o n to graduate from Shade High
Sc hool in 1918. Soon after grad uation. Dtx o n marnt·d George Fu lt o n and nlOvc:d to ;~ farm in Shade
where they rais,d thei r children.
.
She ami he r hu sband had nine children, Loutse
Sla ter, Hubert Ful ton (de ceased). Mildred Hoope r.
' Freda MJston (deceased), Phyllis Pratt. Norma Fulton (deceased). Jean Jordan , a nd twins Carol Gabriel
and Dorrell Fulton.
She worked as a homemaker most of her life ond
as a cook for a iratcrnity in later years . Following th e
de~t h of her husba nd in 1960. Edna remained on
thctr t:nm in Sh ade for Sl'Vcr:l.l years bdOn· moving
tn Ath ens Ill till' 19Hils
Mrs. Fulton cam&lt;· to R oek&lt;prlng; Rehabilitation
-

L.

Center in 1996. She attends many of the faulities
group activities, including church servi ces, socials,
and arts and crafts.

MCCI holds Medicare forum
POMEROY - When it comes
to cancer and preventive core, JUst
what does Medicare cove r' "
That's what was discusS&lt;d in a
recent program sponsored by the·
Meigs County Cancer Initiative
(MCCI) at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
Julie Leonard, beneficiary education manager of Notionwide
REACHING OUT Medicare, spoke about the difler- Julie Leonard ences between Medieart' Parts A
talked on cancer and B and what cancer sc reenings
screen lngs and are covered far both men and
what Medicare women .
pays In a Meigs
She talked abou t thinb" to
County Cancer
keep in mind when worki ng with
Initiative (MCCI)
Medicare under any cirCLunstan c~s.
program at the
not just preventive care. A few of
Senior Citizens
Center. About her suggestions were:
• If you arc tn the hosp1tal for 2.1
60 senior citi·
days.
you may be asked to leave 1f
zens attended.
your con dition does not improvt·.
However, if you are not ready to leave, yo u hoVl' untrl
the next day to call KePro, who will review th&lt;' case.
It may take three days to revtew, and du ~m g the
review period Medicare will pay for your time in the
hospital. After the review, ,f KePro al';tees with
Medicare1S decision, you have umil noon dw twxr tb y
to leave the hospi tal before you w ill be indiv idu all y
charged for your stay;
• Your doctor cannot chargt: you in cxct:ss of thL·
M edi care approved amoum. Thnt.'fotl'. tl L'\'LT pay ti.1r
services up fro nt without firs t waiting fo r .1 tl. tu l ru ling from Medicare:
• Make sure your doctor submjb ,1 Mt·dir,JrL· cl.illll
form for you --it's the law. Most cbims. dt.' niL•rl ,trc duc
to errors on the form ;
• Medicare will help v·: ith rt·co n :"~trur t i\'t: ~llll~LT)"
after a ma st~:ctomy and also \vid1 br:~ s ami pm s rh t...''&gt;l'~:
• Medicare- dol'S pay 100 pt:rccnt nfbb \\'Ork:
• There is no deductible t(,r prt'Vl'lltivl· ~ er\· icc,, 1...:.
manunograms. prostatt: scn.•c n 1 n ~. l'tc YtHI geJJ L'.rally
only pay 20 percent of the M t·dic.trL· .1ppnwed
amount aftc·r the yearly Part ll dedu ctible.
The Medicare forum is Jll't onl' o f m.111y probr.1111 ~
that MCC I will plan t()r the community w L·ncnurage and motivate pt·opk to takt· cha rgL· nf tht•n :1 L'.dth.
providl.' e-ducation. and pro m ott· ~ early dt'kl'tH'll ,1nd
prL'\'t·mion of ca JH.-t..•r. E mp ha "&gt; l ~ of tltc cn:tlmnn ~~ to
develop and implt·mctH p rog ra111~ to r.li~L· puhhc
,1\varcncss of eancl'r issue\.
New members an.· wl'icnnlt'd to . l..,~ l~t 111 tht· lo.dttion's tight a~ inst cann·r. and tJUL'StlOTH m:-ty bl.'
dircctl'd to Carol Ad:un ~. co-c h.lirlll:m . 7-l0- 1) 1)2 2J 11 . MCC I is m thL· prn c L· s~ ~l d J"t nbutlll~ lnll ,nn,llton 0 11 callLL'r to c.':h _· h of ti ll' hhr.lrtt''&gt; 111 Potnnoy,
Middkport. lt.:Kint..·.•md Ea~tl'l' n EIL' IllL'Ilt.ll"y.

f2oJl.

1.800.745.7263
www .9u l hhorfs .c om

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&lt;AF"LA '

LflaiJriJuJ;

) .·.
"&gt;. '

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4 " t/II.L•; ~ m.iJ.u.·aM.

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llll.d. ltai.uu. fllMlu.tu;.. @u.tt, in. a q.uielt. m..mwrl, J. t1uw.t;.JrJ. J.

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•

1.8oo.ALABAMA for a

fr~~ vacatio n 9uld~ or hit our wfb5ltf at www .toura laba ma.org

.

--

- . ---·

�,_

-

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

I

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Cases concluded in recent County Court session
POMEROY - Meigs County Court Judge Patrick H .
0 1Bnen procesSt.&gt;d a number of
cases last week .
Fined wer~ : Mauricis Flores,
Pomeroy, costs o nly. six n1on ths
Jai l sus pended to ten days. two
ye;m; probation. dOJnestic viole nce; Roy A . Ebhn . Syracuse.
S850 a nd costs, 10 days Jail suspended to three, o perators
li cem~
sus p~nd~d
for
six
months. one year probation, jail
sen ten ce and S550 suspended
upon
co mpletion of RTP
School. driving under the influence. costs on ly, no taillight. $25
and cos ts. seatbelt. cos ts only, 10
days p i\ suspe nded to three . one
yea r probation, child endangerment; Mary J e fle r&lt;, Middleport,
S25 and costs on eac h cou nt.
three co unts of pass ing bad
check s;
Bobbie
Ross iter,
Pom eroy, $300 and costs, seven
days jail, one year probation, jail
se nt ence and $150 suspended
upon ptoof of valid operators
li ce nse by September 20, 2000,
drivu1g u nder suspension, $10
and costs. expired regi stration .
Bria n Lambert, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, searbelt; Fred C.
Houghto n, Pome roy, $200 a nd
costs. five days Jail, o ne year probat iOn. Jail sen te nce and $100
suspended upon proof of a valid
operators li cense by September
20, 2000. drivi n g unde r suspension, $;25 and costs, seatbelt; Joy
B. Barrett, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
S25 and costs, ass ured clear dis tance ahead; Terry Alvarey,
Mason , W.Va. , $25 and costs for
eac h count, two counts passing
bad che c ks: Gregory D. Medley,
RJCine , $100 and costs for each
co unt. six months jail suspe nded
to 45 days. thre e cou nts passing
bad chec ks; Cora l Saltsman ,
Racine. S25 and costs, passing
bad c he ck;
Steve
H yse ll ,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, three
days Ja il suspended, underage
consumption; Roger Rou sh ,
Po meroy, $50 an d costs, open
container, SSO and costs, 10 days
jail suspended to two days, littering, $75 and com, 10 days jail
suspended to two days, one year·
probation, obstruc ting o fficial
business.
Timothy L. Lyous, Pomeroy,
$200 and costs, five days jail, one
Y";IL)liObation.j i!ils~ ntence and _
SI 00 suspen ded upo n proof of a
valid operators li c? nse within 90
days. driving under suspension,
costs on ly, failure to display
lt ce nse plates; Regina Walls,
Ru tland, S25 and costs for each
cou nt, two counts of passing bad
chec ks; Jenny L. Buck, Middleport. $200 and cos ts, 30 days j ail
suspended to five days, one year
probation.jai l se nten ce and $100
suspended upon proof o f a valid
operators license by Sep tembe r
20. 20011. driving u nder suspe nsion; Tra cy Owensby, Rutland,
cmts only. 60 day,s Jail suspended
to five davs, one year probat ion,
nukiug fa lse alarms; Peter A.
Sedlac ek. Derry, N .H .. $20 and
com, failure to con trol; Mi chael
ll. Blessing. Pomeroy, $200 and
cmts, 10 days jail, one year prob.J tion. J.li l sente n ce and $100
1mpc·nded upon proof of valid
l)pt'r.Hor&lt;; lice nse. dnv in g under
~u'f 't'll\lnn;

Troy

Durh am,

l'l111h:roy. Sl(J(JU a11U costs, thre e
yc.H~ ll cc me su spension, two
\em prob ation , 336 days jail.
driv ing under the influence .
C alv111 Mayle, Long Bottom ,
SXSO and costs , 10 days jail suspended to th ree. 91) day li cense
·' u' Pl'n sJo n. Ja il and $550 suspt'JHic d upon co mpletion of
· R r l' Sd 10ol wirhin 'ill days, one
H'.lr proh.1rion. driving u nder
dH· lll tl llt'llCl',$ 2(1() .111d COS t li,

l!.l\'\ j&lt;ll l ..,~1..,pcndl·J t6 three,

and costs for each co unt . three
days pi l sus pended, two cou nts
passing bad checks; Cha rlotte M .
Ke ller, Po meroy, $25 an d costs
for each cou nt , tlnt•t:: coun rs
passing bad checks; Michae l F.
Freeman , SyraCUSl'. sI on and
costs, one year probation , di so rderly conduct; H aro ld L. Whittekind, Pomeroy. SSO and costs,
open container ; Mi che ll e N.
King, C h eshire, $50 and costs..

year probation , jail sentence and
S 100 snspended upon proof of a
valid operators lice nse within 90
days, driving under suspension ,
com only, failure to control, $10
and cos[s, fi.cti cio us regisrration;
Dallas
S.
Moodispaugh,
i'o m eroy, $500 a nd costs. I 0 days
j:11l, s1x 111onths license suspension, two years probat ion, jail
sente nce and fine suspe nded
upon co mpletion of RTP

~ASTMAN'S
-

OUR SELECTION OF

HOMEGROWN
PRODUCE

Foodland
PRICES GOOD THRU
SATAUGS

Sc hool, driving under the influence, costs only, speed, S200 and
costs, two years probation, 10
days jail suspended to three, dri ving under suspension .
Chr istoph er A. Buchanon,
R eedsville, S200 and costs, three
days j ail suspended , eigl1t
month s proba tion , underage
consumption ; Ja son E. Slate r,
Pomeroy, costs o nly, 30 days jail
suspe nd ed to I 0, one year pro-

b:nion , resistm g arrest, $200 and
costs, o n ~ year probation, 30 _
days j ail suspended to three,
underage consumption, $200
and costs, one ye~ r probation . six
month s jail suspended to 40
Jays, driving under mspension,
costs o nl y, traffic sign vio lati on,
$100 an d costs, drug abuse;
Ri c hy L. -F ral ey, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, disorderly co nduct.

The Daily Sentinel

On the Fringe: The Shark, Page BJ
Buckeye f10ops slate released, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

t/ Sweet Corn
t/ Cantaloupes
t/ Tomatoes
t/ Green Beans

WEDNESDAY's

NASCAR beefs up safety in wake of fatal crashes

HIGHLIGHTS

INDIANAPO LI S (A I') - Whik investigators are still trymg to determin e w hat
ca used the crashes in which Adam Petry
and Kenny lrw m J r. died, NASC AR has
taken steps to help dri vers avoid stickm g
thro ttles.
The stock ca r sanctioning body Tuesday
told its Win ston Cup tea ms to install a
stop o n th e ca r's throttle assembly and an
on-off switch o n the steering w heel. w ith in reac h o f th e d river's thumb.
The new rub take etTect with th e
opening o f practice on Th ursday at th e
I ndia~apoli s M oror Speedway for th e
Brickyard 4tll ).
Altho ugh no conclusions have been
reached, there has been considerable spec-

Meigs Middle School
football meeting Aug. 4

Meigs goH squad
meets Monday

·And More

make big deal
MIAMI (AP) - T he Miami
H eat and Cha rl otte Horn ets
completed a nin e- playe r trade
that sent All-Star guard Eddie
Jones and forsva rd Antho ny
M ason to Mi ami for forward PJ
Brown and ~uard Jamal M ashburn.
Also traded wei~· O ti s Th orp~.
Tim Jam es an d R odney Buford
to C harlotte, and R icky D avis
and Dale Ellis to Miami.
Jones ave raged 20.1 points and
4.2 ass1srs pe r ga me last season .

Asst. Varieties
12 Pack 12 Oz. Cans or
6 Pack Half Liter NRS

UNDATED (AI') - O n th e
tlrst day that Nl3A free agents
were permitted to sign new con...
tracts, th e C hi cago Bulls agrec·d
to ter ms ·w ith fo rm e!- O rlando
guard R on M ercer, w ho averaged
16 .9 po_intL pt'Lgam e last season..____
Ph oen ix sign e d a player away
from Sacra mento, getting guard
Tony Ddk with a six-year, $19
mi llio n contract, wh1le the Kings
agreed r0 . re nns. w ith guard
Uo bby Ja ckson.
Severa l team s re-s1gned th e1r
own free agents. Tim Th o mas
stayed \vith Mi lw:1 ukc e tOr ju st
under $n7 milli o n for six yea rs,
Kurt Thomas re-signed wi th
New Yo rk, Amhony Carter resigned \VIth M1 ami. and Sam
l'erki ns re-s1gm.:d wi th In diana.
Also. Sn1t Po ll ard stayed with
·th e Kings, I Je~ll a s re -s ig ned
Hubert Dav is .md c;.,ry Trent,
D enver kept T;rriq Alxhd - W;~had,
and Joh n Srarb o;; :nd hl' was n:~1dy
to ~ i gn with Ura h t(H two yea rs.

34.5 Oz. Can

3 lb.

D COKE PRODUCTS

5

Big stars snub
Sydney Games

5

NOTEBOOK

UN l )i\TEll (AP) - A uurnber
of prom in t' IH arhiL•rt.&gt;o;;, Jnclu dmg
tennis stars Anna Kourn ikov:1 ~md
l't·te S.,mpr.IS . .md N llA A ll -St;~ r
. T im Dun c.m. turn ed down trips
to th t· Syd ney O lymp1 cs next

EA.

180 ct. 5 Subject 99¢

111011th .

Grade 'A'
Wampler
WHOLE FRYERS

Farm

one

SAUSAGE
1 lb. rolls

Superior
Premium

ICE

LB.

CLOSE To HOME

REAM

&amp;Ct~IH.hf.ttltit/1 J1inded

Tcn n i&lt;
pl.1 yer J.m - M lc h.lel
Gambill .liso dn:li ned .1 chance to
play, .ts wdl .1s SuropL·an 2011metc:r cham pion Doug \&gt;i/.1l.k..·r.
who dt·ciJl'd h e wa s not in good
cnou gh slupe to L"o mpett· ,lt thL·
British Olymp ic tria b.
Jekn.l D o ki c, Austr&lt;11ia's topr.lllked t L'IIIl i S phyn, SJid Sbt.•
\\'Ould on ly pl.1y 1f o rgan i zer~ met
.1 handful of demand .... including
lt'ttin l!; her srav at h ome imtc,td of
in th : Ol ym;;i c Vtlbge.
Via de I)i\".ll' of the Sacr.u ncnto
Kinl!s ,111d o.,t.Jr guard Akb:1ndar
Djordj n·1c ll'li l not play for th t·ir
Yugo'ih\· tL' :ll1 1.

Jones wins 1oom

at Stockholm

)

I

SUPERMARKETS

We reserve the right to lil)'lit quantities and are not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Prices effective thru Sat. August 5, 2000.

Injury bug
hammers
Bengals WR
CEO R CETOWN. Ky. (AI')
Sluk t"n rca mm :1tcs IHJddkd
and prayl·d Tul'-;~,.Lly :1s rt.'Cl'iva
l);u nay Scott b y on thl· pLKti n·
fie ld wrth ~ hmken k~. an
ambul.1 nce on r h ~..· \\·ay.
Th ree d.I);S bd(JJ-e rhell" tlr'it
pn.~.:;ea\011 gamt', th L
· Cmcinna ri
Ben ga l ~.;
wen· cop in g; wi th
another numbin g ~L·r back
A team that has known littk
but mio;~.;·r y for the past &lt;.kctde
Ius lo.;,t it.;, only provt"n rcrc:iver
fo r thl· '\l'.l..,n n . !L-aving .1 hu gl'
huk 111 an IIH.'X pcri cnrl'd
offt.•JJsc:.
''I'm nor t~·clmg roo good
ri ~ht 11 0\\'.'' Jowlll';ht
L·oach
U ~ucc Co,Jt·t ,,l id . p.n;,i11g tn
t ,lk L' dee p hrc.H ih lwt\\'L'l' ll \L' Illl'JJCL'" · .. T !Ji.., j.., .1 ,\Jork rn our

UEREA. Ohio (AI') - Tht'
Ckn· l.tnd Browns havt' not
rukd out th e po:;sibility of

-

STOCKHOLM. Swedm (AP)
- M ari ol Jone' won th e· 1!111
nH.'t t'rli in a wind~aJdt'd I U.(J:-1 "L·~-­
o nds ;~t the JJN - C ,1lan meet. ~he
tlmshed ..\11 seconds alll',ld of
1
', 11 n:1 Ph1tu-tl'vi ch
runnl'r- up Zll .•
Block

Pl.wt-r.., •d.Hnmnl down th L· ir
lw lm ~· ro;;, lo\\'LTcd rh L·Jr hc .uJ.., .l!ld
g.lthL'rL·d i 11 pr.1yt'1 .lft L' r ~colt
broh· b o th hon e' 111 !11 " lm\er
kl.! whih: bloc~ in~ nn J nhiHn~
'
'
'
pl.1y in pr.tctin·.
HL" w ,h rr.u i.,portL·d Lo ( ·Jnl ll1 -

1l ,lti t(w 'u rgn\' fn 1!1~ l·n ..1 rod

\

ninrh for hiS 26th save in 30
chan ces.
" I don't think it's any 111¥Stery
that I . don 't want to be ta ken
o ut of ,a gam e," said H ampton ,
who leads the Mets with three
co mpl~te _games this season .
" But we have a great bullpen ."
Franco. the R eds saves leader
With 14H and tops with the
M ets with 27 1, lost hi s closin g
job to Be n itez l;~_st season .
M ets sh ortstop Mike Bordick
went 3-fo r- 4 in his fourth game
sin ce being acquirec.~ from Baltimore.
Edgardo Alfonzo and 13ubba
Trammell added two hits apiece
for th e Mets, who wo n fo r th e
seventh tim e in eigh t games.
Uordick, Trammell and H ampton- the 7-9 hitters - were a
"ombined 5-for-9 wirh -rwo
Rl:lls and a run scored .
Steve Parris (5- 14) pitched
well for th e R eds afte r allowing
smglc rUns in ~tf1 e -fi rst t\~O
innin b"· H e allowed three runs
aJ)d seve r1 hi ts in six' innings and
has lost 10 of 13 d eCisio ns.
T he Mets took a 1-0 lead m
the first when Alfonzo si ngled,
Mike Piazza wa lked and R o bin
Ventu ra singled. .
H ampton gave N ew York a
rwo-run lead an inning 1ater
w ith a sacr itl ce Oy fo llowing
sin gles by Trammell and l3 ordick .
l:lordi ck m ade it 3-0 in the
sixth wi th an RHI smgle after
P,m is walked Todd Zeile and
Trammell wi th t\VO outs.
" He kept us in th e game for
six innings. but those walks can
kill you," R ,·ds manager Jack
McKeo n sa id .of Parri&lt;. "The
\vay we.· wc... rt.· hittin g. we had to
keep rhe runs dowr1 a li td e bir."

Browns say Zeus
could play in 2000
Orl&lt;mdo

' ,' ' .

.'

I I ' I' I ' '

.•

Uro\\·11 rl'turnin~

fi·om

,m eyl' i-lljury .111d pbymg this
seao;;on bm coac h ( :!1ris Palmer
..;,l id Tue'\d,ty rh.tr "nghr IH)\\1 1[
do L·~n 't look gnod.''
Palmer\ rc;ll llliL:nt .11 Bro\\'ns
tr:~min~ c.unp might bt" the
lll O'\t pe~ s un i'&lt; ti c asst:ssmc-nt yet
from C lt·vd .1nd coaches or front
otlice st.1tbbout Urown's health .
Thl' fight tackk w.l'i hurt
D L"c. 19 111 .1 g.m lt' ag.:tm'\t Jlcko;;nnv ille wh t' n a rdl.•rt'L' toso;ed a
wcightL·d pen alty fl.1 g th .lt accidenta ll y &lt;tru c k Brown 's ri~;ht
L'y~.:.· .

INJURED SPEEDSTER - Cincinnat i wide receiver Darnay Scott suf·
fe red a broken leg ·Tuesday, which will sideline him for the entire
2000 season . (AP )

ncx r to rlw rihia , tilt' L1rgt.'r hone
in the lower leg. H e' ll mi 's rhi"
'\(J~OI1 ,\lld LlHtld h.1VL' ,\ ditri cuJt
tltllL' rL·g,uni 11g t\111 ~pt'cd ti·o m
'ud1 .1 ..,l'\"L'rc injur y. tr.tinn P.wl
Sp.nhng s,tid .
·- Scot!. O lll' of ti"JL' lkn ~alS '
fl\t n l pLIYL'ro., io., m m r d,I ngcrou'\

.

'

Ple•se see NASCAR. Patce BJ

NEW YORK (AP) - Mike
Hampton 's left arm is great at
getting h itters. out. His left fo ot
and b at aren't too bad, either.
H am pton pitche d 7 1-3
strong i n ninbrs~ drove in a run
and sh owed off hi s quick reflexes Tuesday night in the New
York M ets' 3·2 victory over the
Cincinnati H.. l'ds.
H amp ton sru ck his foot ou t
to sto p C hris Styncs' bid fo r a
hit in th e third inning.
" It 's just a n:action pl ay,"
Hampton said of the kick save
th at kept th e R eds without a hit
unti l the next uming. "I see th e
ball co mm!l up the middle, I' m
just trying to knock it down."
H amp ton (1 1- 7) 1s al'o a
Threat when he bats. His seco nd-innin g sacrifrcc fly gave th e
•·•M - ;;!.() ead and left bim
fo ur lUll s shy of rying Tom
Seaver's dub record for pitc he rs
dri ving in runs.
Th ~ R eds chased Hamp ton IIi ·
th e eigh th after he allowed a
leauoff single to Stynes and an
Rl31 do uble to lJarry Larkrn.
One out la ter, Turk Wendell
reheved and gave up a rriple to
D ante' Bi che tte that sco red
Larklll.
John Fr;tnco G lll ll' on and got
Sean Casey to ground out. He
wa lked Alex Ocho.1. w ho th e n
sto le second . before strikmg out
13enito Santiago lookin g with
runners o n se cond and th ird .
" I k new it \Vas a good ' pi tch , I
was just wai tin g { 0 sec hi s
hand," said Franco, w ho jumped
after home-plate umpire Ed
Rapuano slowly calkd Santiago
out on a .1-2 fastball. " I co nsidn th e eighth inning to b~..· my
LET'S TALK ABOUT IT- Reds catcher Benito Santiago (left) and pitcher Steve Parri s converse during a ~ave sit uation .''
s toppage in Tuesday's lo ss to New York, which s napped Cincinnati 's four-game win streak. (AP)
Armando Ben irez pitched rh e

IL'dlll ...

'

1/2
Gallon

cars already have a throttle- sto p, whi ch
keeps the rod that co ntrols the throttle
from gomg past the point where it can
sti ck open even if th e gas pedal is released.
NASC AR has previously requi red a
shuto ff switch on the dash of each car, and
a few teams already had them On the
~ t ee ring column o r S[eeri ng wheel.
Triplett added .
"T h ese teams are run by competent,
intelligent people and we have been getting a lot of fe edb ac k," he said. " It's a diffi cult process, but it's one you go through
to try to find the answers. It's one we d o
every day, and no t just because of these

Reds' streak
ends in NY

NBA free agents fly

Mead
70 Count
One Subject

"We co ntinue to look at things . to ~o
thro ugh thinb" an d talk to peopl e,"Triplett
said Tuesday. " We continue to try to piece
thinb" together. It's a difficu lt thing to
recreate following: an acc ident what happened beca use of damage to thi s piece of
the ca r and that p1ece of the car."
Hut Trip lett said talks with crew ch iefs,
drivers and • ca r owners led to Tuesday's
rule c h ange~. w h1 ch he said we re at least a
step .in th e right dirt"Cti on .
" In trying to find something that was
eflective across the board and co mfortable
across the board, th(;!se wen: th e two areas
that cou ld be don e, and easily be done,
before this weekend,". he said.
Triplett poi nted o ut thar a number of

Heat. Hornets

CHUCK

8

ulation that cra~ h es on the samL' turn at
the sa m e track in wh ich Petry and Irwin
wo re killed were the di rec t res ul t of stu ck
thruttles .
l'etty, a 10-year-old fourth -generation
race drivt"r, dit:d May 12 in a crash in Turn
3 at New Hampshi re Inte rnatio nal Speedway during a practice fi&gt;r a Uusch G rand
National race.
Irw in , a regular m th e Wi mton Cup
scn es. was kill ed in ::1 crash during pqctice
o n Jul y 7 at nea rly th e sam e spot o n the
one-mile Loudon , N.H ., oval.
Kevin Triplett, di rector of operations for
NASCAR, stressed that inves tigators are
still lookin g fo r the cause of both acci dents.

ROCK SPRIN GS The
M eigs golf team has sc heduled a
meeting and practice on Au g. 7.
Prospective player s shou ld repo rt
to th e Pine Hills Go lf Co urse at 9
a.m. For informati o n call Coach
Krawsczyn at 992-6394.

GROUND

COKE

Page 81
Wednesday, August 1, 1000

MIDDLEPO RT Seventh
and e ig hth ~ ra ders interested m
pl ayin~ football at tl1e M eigs
Middl e Sc hoo l are asked to be at
the M eigs Middle School auditorium on Friday, August 4, at 9
a. m . for an organizatio nal meetmg.

Family Pack
5 lbs or More
Tenderbest Certified

10

yc.tr probation. no ope rators
lll' l' ll'l': Don na L. Dvrd. Parkersburl(. W. VJ .. $850 a~d costs, llX
. month li cL·nse su'i pension . 10
tb y., j;u] 'uspcnded to rhrec, one
Yl'.ir proh.Hion , jai l se nten ce :tnd
Sl:)(l ~tl'.. pcn dcd upon co mpletion &lt;If R Tl' School, driving
unde r the Influence; Su~:;an C.
C.Ihre ts( h. P0rtland . costs on ly.
311 doys pil suspcmkd to four .
tb.;o rdnl y condu ce j L·re my C.
Hubbard. Pomeroy. costs only. 30
d,,y.., Jad ..,u,pend ed to five o r
three d.l\'S o f RT P School and
two cby~ jold o;uo; pcnrlcd , two
ycH~&gt; prolxttion. rc c kk·ss operarioo; J:r mes 1). Collr ngswort h ..
Poml'roy. cos ts on ly. one yea r
probation. lC J day' j.1il suspended
ro one.: dJy. domL'~tJC VIOlence.
Mrclwlk Stahl. l'on1t•roy. S~5

three J .1ys Jail suspc·ndcd , o ne
)'t.'.H probation. drivin !; under
smpen sro n: C ha rles W. Uuck.
Rac.ine, costs only. 311 days Jail
suspended to 2lJ. one ' yt·ar probation. indu c in ~ p.mic. S20 .tnd
costs, disorderly rondu&lt;..-t; I h·bbie T.mnc r. Rutla nd. cosh on ly.
six month .; j:1i l suspcmiL•d to one
day. one year probJ.tion. domesti c violence: Robin R . Portc•r.
S200 and costs. five Lbys jJil. o ne

Inside:

.

nn dl'L'P p.Htnn .;, w hen he L·.11 1
o utrun dct~·n,I\'C b .trk~ .
" lt\ )!:Din~ to hL· .1 \'l'r)' h1g
c ha ll~o.· n~~..· t\.1r him to l'tllllL' b.h·k
,llld p·l.'rf(Jr lll .1r tht' ln"L"I b1..·
n cc J ~ to.'' Sp,n hn g ... . 11d .

Ple•se see Bengais, Page 86

L,l't momh . Clt-relanu pl.1ceJ
Brown cm 'tht· phy11c,dly umblttn pt: rfor m h'ir .
H1 . , ~ r . ty on rht' l1~r could bt'
t'Xtended for .mnthn lilX weeks
on Au g. ~7.
Brown cnu ld .1ho bt' n.:lr..'&lt;-1't~d
nr p l.K ~..·J on injun·d rc'\LT\'C l1..,t
fur thL' '\L~,l ..,O ll .
" If I \V;"!'i .1 he:.• ttl ng m .lll , 1 don ·,
rhink h e (B rn\\'n) 1~ going to he
.tbk t~' pL1\ ... P.dniL'l~ ,,11:1. " Bur

I'm h op ing th:lt hl' 's going to
wake up and say ' H ey, it's c ured .'
Uu t right now it doesn't look
goo d."
Palmer m ade n ck.1r, howevl'r,
that he would like to .:; ec Urown
r~ mrn .

H L' '\.l!d the ~..· i ght-ycar veteran
has be en going to team meetings and has be~n Vt'fy atten tive.
Brown has fi·equently been on
the side lin es during tramrnJ&gt;
C'illl lp, usually Wt'aring h1 s No.
77 Clevd,md _1ero;;ey.
Through a tl'am spokesma n ,
Brown declin ed to co nun ent .
Hi ~.; .t~~..· nt.To m Condon, did not
re turn ,1 call see king co mment
Brown · h,lS been limited to
workn1g out on .:1 .:; tanonary
bicyck :llld doing o;ome li ght
WL'ight lifting.
H i~ \\'orkout regimen I" a C1r
cry ti·om \\'h.tt tlH.' 6-t(1o t-7,
."\511- pnund lincm.m ~ ~ m~d to.
P.1lmer saH.l Uro\\'11, \\·ho once
lilted wei~ht1 twir e ,, da). would
t.1ke four to ~1x \Yc&lt;..·h to ge t m
playing s h ;~pe if lw Wl're• cleart"d

Please see Browns, Page 86

�,_

-

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

I

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Cases concluded in recent County Court session
POMEROY - Meigs County Court Judge Patrick H .
0 1Bnen procesSt.&gt;d a number of
cases last week .
Fined wer~ : Mauricis Flores,
Pomeroy, costs o nly. six n1on ths
Jai l sus pended to ten days. two
ye;m; probation. dOJnestic viole nce; Roy A . Ebhn . Syracuse.
S850 a nd costs, 10 days Jail suspended to three, o perators
li cem~
sus p~nd~d
for
six
months. one year probation, jail
sen ten ce and S550 suspended
upon
co mpletion of RTP
School. driving under the influence. costs on ly, no taillight. $25
and cos ts. seatbelt. cos ts only, 10
days p i\ suspe nded to three . one
yea r probation, child endangerment; Mary J e fle r&lt;, Middleport,
S25 and costs on eac h cou nt.
three co unts of pass ing bad
check s;
Bobbie
Ross iter,
Pom eroy, $300 and costs, seven
days jail, one year probation, jail
se nt ence and $150 suspended
upon ptoof of valid operators
li ce nse by September 20, 2000,
drivu1g u nder suspension, $10
and costs. expired regi stration .
Bria n Lambert, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, searbelt; Fred C.
Houghto n, Pome roy, $200 a nd
costs. five days Jail, o ne year probat iOn. Jail sen te nce and $100
suspended upon proof of a valid
operators li cense by September
20, 2000. drivi n g unde r suspension, $;25 and costs, seatbelt; Joy
B. Barrett, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
S25 and costs, ass ured clear dis tance ahead; Terry Alvarey,
Mason , W.Va. , $25 and costs for
eac h count, two counts passing
bad che c ks: Gregory D. Medley,
RJCine , $100 and costs for each
co unt. six months jail suspe nded
to 45 days. thre e cou nts passing
bad chec ks; Cora l Saltsman ,
Racine. S25 and costs, passing
bad c he ck;
Steve
H yse ll ,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, three
days Ja il suspended, underage
consumption; Roger Rou sh ,
Po meroy, $50 an d costs, open
container, SSO and costs, 10 days
jail suspended to two days, littering, $75 and com, 10 days jail
suspended to two days, one year·
probation, obstruc ting o fficial
business.
Timothy L. Lyous, Pomeroy,
$200 and costs, five days jail, one
Y";IL)liObation.j i!ils~ ntence and _
SI 00 suspen ded upo n proof of a
valid operators li c? nse within 90
days. driving under suspension,
costs on ly, failure to display
lt ce nse plates; Regina Walls,
Ru tland, S25 and costs for each
cou nt, two counts of passing bad
chec ks; Jenny L. Buck, Middleport. $200 and cos ts, 30 days j ail
suspended to five days, one year
probation.jai l se nten ce and $100
suspended upon proof o f a valid
operators license by Sep tembe r
20. 20011. driving u nder suspe nsion; Tra cy Owensby, Rutland,
cmts only. 60 day,s Jail suspended
to five davs, one year probat ion,
nukiug fa lse alarms; Peter A.
Sedlac ek. Derry, N .H .. $20 and
com, failure to con trol; Mi chael
ll. Blessing. Pomeroy, $200 and
cmts, 10 days jail, one year prob.J tion. J.li l sente n ce and $100
1mpc·nded upon proof of valid
l)pt'r.Hor&lt;; lice nse. dnv in g under
~u'f 't'll\lnn;

Troy

Durh am,

l'l111h:roy. Sl(J(JU a11U costs, thre e
yc.H~ ll cc me su spension, two
\em prob ation , 336 days jail.
driv ing under the influence .
C alv111 Mayle, Long Bottom ,
SXSO and costs , 10 days jail suspended to th ree. 91) day li cense
·' u' Pl'n sJo n. Ja il and $550 suspt'JHic d upon co mpletion of
· R r l' Sd 10ol wirhin 'ill days, one
H'.lr proh.1rion. driving u nder
dH· lll tl llt'llCl',$ 2(1() .111d COS t li,

l!.l\'\ j&lt;ll l ..,~1..,pcndl·J t6 three,

and costs for each co unt . three
days pi l sus pended, two cou nts
passing bad checks; Cha rlotte M .
Ke ller, Po meroy, $25 an d costs
for each cou nt , tlnt•t:: coun rs
passing bad checks; Michae l F.
Freeman , SyraCUSl'. sI on and
costs, one year probation , di so rderly conduct; H aro ld L. Whittekind, Pomeroy. SSO and costs,
open container ; Mi che ll e N.
King, C h eshire, $50 and costs..

year probation , jail sentence and
S 100 snspended upon proof of a
valid operators lice nse within 90
days, driving under suspension ,
com only, failure to control, $10
and cos[s, fi.cti cio us regisrration;
Dallas
S.
Moodispaugh,
i'o m eroy, $500 a nd costs. I 0 days
j:11l, s1x 111onths license suspension, two years probat ion, jail
sente nce and fine suspe nded
upon co mpletion of RTP

~ASTMAN'S
-

OUR SELECTION OF

HOMEGROWN
PRODUCE

Foodland
PRICES GOOD THRU
SATAUGS

Sc hool, driving under the influence, costs only, speed, S200 and
costs, two years probation, 10
days jail suspended to three, dri ving under suspension .
Chr istoph er A. Buchanon,
R eedsville, S200 and costs, three
days j ail suspended , eigl1t
month s proba tion , underage
consumption ; Ja son E. Slate r,
Pomeroy, costs o nly, 30 days jail
suspe nd ed to I 0, one year pro-

b:nion , resistm g arrest, $200 and
costs, o n ~ year probation, 30 _
days j ail suspended to three,
underage consumption, $200
and costs, one ye~ r probation . six
month s jail suspended to 40
Jays, driving under mspension,
costs o nl y, traffic sign vio lati on,
$100 an d costs, drug abuse;
Ri c hy L. -F ral ey, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, disorderly co nduct.

The Daily Sentinel

On the Fringe: The Shark, Page BJ
Buckeye f10ops slate released, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

t/ Sweet Corn
t/ Cantaloupes
t/ Tomatoes
t/ Green Beans

WEDNESDAY's

NASCAR beefs up safety in wake of fatal crashes

HIGHLIGHTS

INDIANAPO LI S (A I') - Whik investigators are still trymg to determin e w hat
ca used the crashes in which Adam Petry
and Kenny lrw m J r. died, NASC AR has
taken steps to help dri vers avoid stickm g
thro ttles.
The stock ca r sanctioning body Tuesday
told its Win ston Cup tea ms to install a
stop o n th e ca r's throttle assembly and an
on-off switch o n the steering w heel. w ith in reac h o f th e d river's thumb.
The new rub take etTect with th e
opening o f practice on Th ursday at th e
I ndia~apoli s M oror Speedway for th e
Brickyard 4tll ).
Altho ugh no conclusions have been
reached, there has been considerable spec-

Meigs Middle School
football meeting Aug. 4

Meigs goH squad
meets Monday

·And More

make big deal
MIAMI (AP) - T he Miami
H eat and Cha rl otte Horn ets
completed a nin e- playe r trade
that sent All-Star guard Eddie
Jones and forsva rd Antho ny
M ason to Mi ami for forward PJ
Brown and ~uard Jamal M ashburn.
Also traded wei~· O ti s Th orp~.
Tim Jam es an d R odney Buford
to C harlotte, and R icky D avis
and Dale Ellis to Miami.
Jones ave raged 20.1 points and
4.2 ass1srs pe r ga me last season .

Asst. Varieties
12 Pack 12 Oz. Cans or
6 Pack Half Liter NRS

UNDATED (AI') - O n th e
tlrst day that Nl3A free agents
were permitted to sign new con...
tracts, th e C hi cago Bulls agrec·d
to ter ms ·w ith fo rm e!- O rlando
guard R on M ercer, w ho averaged
16 .9 po_intL pt'Lgam e last season..____
Ph oen ix sign e d a player away
from Sacra mento, getting guard
Tony Ddk with a six-year, $19
mi llio n contract, wh1le the Kings
agreed r0 . re nns. w ith guard
Uo bby Ja ckson.
Severa l team s re-s1gned th e1r
own free agents. Tim Th o mas
stayed \vith Mi lw:1 ukc e tOr ju st
under $n7 milli o n for six yea rs,
Kurt Thomas re-signed wi th
New Yo rk, Amhony Carter resigned \VIth M1 ami. and Sam
l'erki ns re-s1gm.:d wi th In diana.
Also. Sn1t Po ll ard stayed with
·th e Kings, I Je~ll a s re -s ig ned
Hubert Dav is .md c;.,ry Trent,
D enver kept T;rriq Alxhd - W;~had,
and Joh n Srarb o;; :nd hl' was n:~1dy
to ~ i gn with Ura h t(H two yea rs.

34.5 Oz. Can

3 lb.

D COKE PRODUCTS

5

Big stars snub
Sydney Games

5

NOTEBOOK

UN l )i\TEll (AP) - A uurnber
of prom in t' IH arhiL•rt.&gt;o;;, Jnclu dmg
tennis stars Anna Kourn ikov:1 ~md
l't·te S.,mpr.IS . .md N llA A ll -St;~ r
. T im Dun c.m. turn ed down trips
to th t· Syd ney O lymp1 cs next

EA.

180 ct. 5 Subject 99¢

111011th .

Grade 'A'
Wampler
WHOLE FRYERS

Farm

one

SAUSAGE
1 lb. rolls

Superior
Premium

ICE

LB.

CLOSE To HOME

REAM

&amp;Ct~IH.hf.ttltit/1 J1inded

Tcn n i&lt;
pl.1 yer J.m - M lc h.lel
Gambill .liso dn:li ned .1 chance to
play, .ts wdl .1s SuropL·an 2011metc:r cham pion Doug \&gt;i/.1l.k..·r.
who dt·ciJl'd h e wa s not in good
cnou gh slupe to L"o mpett· ,lt thL·
British Olymp ic tria b.
Jekn.l D o ki c, Austr&lt;11ia's topr.lllked t L'IIIl i S phyn, SJid Sbt.•
\\'Ould on ly pl.1y 1f o rgan i zer~ met
.1 handful of demand .... including
lt'ttin l!; her srav at h ome imtc,td of
in th : Ol ym;;i c Vtlbge.
Via de I)i\".ll' of the Sacr.u ncnto
Kinl!s ,111d o.,t.Jr guard Akb:1ndar
Djordj n·1c ll'li l not play for th t·ir
Yugo'ih\· tL' :ll1 1.

Jones wins 1oom

at Stockholm

)

I

SUPERMARKETS

We reserve the right to lil)'lit quantities and are not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Prices effective thru Sat. August 5, 2000.

Injury bug
hammers
Bengals WR
CEO R CETOWN. Ky. (AI')
Sluk t"n rca mm :1tcs IHJddkd
and prayl·d Tul'-;~,.Lly :1s rt.'Cl'iva
l);u nay Scott b y on thl· pLKti n·
fie ld wrth ~ hmken k~. an
ambul.1 nce on r h ~..· \\·ay.
Th ree d.I);S bd(JJ-e rhell" tlr'it
pn.~.:;ea\011 gamt', th L
· Cmcinna ri
Ben ga l ~.;
wen· cop in g; wi th
another numbin g ~L·r back
A team that has known littk
but mio;~.;·r y for the past &lt;.kctde
Ius lo.;,t it.;, only provt"n rcrc:iver
fo r thl· '\l'.l..,n n . !L-aving .1 hu gl'
huk 111 an IIH.'X pcri cnrl'd
offt.•JJsc:.
''I'm nor t~·clmg roo good
ri ~ht 11 0\\'.'' Jowlll';ht
L·oach
U ~ucc Co,Jt·t ,,l id . p.n;,i11g tn
t ,lk L' dee p hrc.H ih lwt\\'L'l' ll \L' Illl'JJCL'" · .. T !Ji.., j.., .1 ,\Jork rn our

UEREA. Ohio (AI') - Tht'
Ckn· l.tnd Browns havt' not
rukd out th e po:;sibility of

-

STOCKHOLM. Swedm (AP)
- M ari ol Jone' won th e· 1!111
nH.'t t'rli in a wind~aJdt'd I U.(J:-1 "L·~-­
o nds ;~t the JJN - C ,1lan meet. ~he
tlmshed ..\11 seconds alll',ld of
1
', 11 n:1 Ph1tu-tl'vi ch
runnl'r- up Zll .•
Block

Pl.wt-r.., •d.Hnmnl down th L· ir
lw lm ~· ro;;, lo\\'LTcd rh L·Jr hc .uJ.., .l!ld
g.lthL'rL·d i 11 pr.1yt'1 .lft L' r ~colt
broh· b o th hon e' 111 !11 " lm\er
kl.! whih: bloc~ in~ nn J nhiHn~
'
'
'
pl.1y in pr.tctin·.
HL" w ,h rr.u i.,portL·d Lo ( ·Jnl ll1 -

1l ,lti t(w 'u rgn\' fn 1!1~ l·n ..1 rod

\

ninrh for hiS 26th save in 30
chan ces.
" I don't think it's any 111¥Stery
that I . don 't want to be ta ken
o ut of ,a gam e," said H ampton ,
who leads the Mets with three
co mpl~te _games this season .
" But we have a great bullpen ."
Franco. the R eds saves leader
With 14H and tops with the
M ets with 27 1, lost hi s closin g
job to Be n itez l;~_st season .
M ets sh ortstop Mike Bordick
went 3-fo r- 4 in his fourth game
sin ce being acquirec.~ from Baltimore.
Edgardo Alfonzo and 13ubba
Trammell added two hits apiece
for th e Mets, who wo n fo r th e
seventh tim e in eigh t games.
Uordick, Trammell and H ampton- the 7-9 hitters - were a
"ombined 5-for-9 wirh -rwo
Rl:lls and a run scored .
Steve Parris (5- 14) pitched
well for th e R eds afte r allowing
smglc rUns in ~tf1 e -fi rst t\~O
innin b"· H e allowed three runs
aJ)d seve r1 hi ts in six' innings and
has lost 10 of 13 d eCisio ns.
T he Mets took a 1-0 lead m
the first when Alfonzo si ngled,
Mike Piazza wa lked and R o bin
Ventu ra singled. .
H ampton gave N ew York a
rwo-run lead an inning 1ater
w ith a sacr itl ce Oy fo llowing
sin gles by Trammell and l3 ordick .
l:lordi ck m ade it 3-0 in the
sixth wi th an RHI smgle after
P,m is walked Todd Zeile and
Trammell wi th t\VO outs.
" He kept us in th e game for
six innings. but those walks can
kill you," R ,·ds manager Jack
McKeo n sa id .of Parri&lt;. "The
\vay we.· wc... rt.· hittin g. we had to
keep rhe runs dowr1 a li td e bir."

Browns say Zeus
could play in 2000
Orl&lt;mdo

' ,' ' .

.'

I I ' I' I ' '

.•

Uro\\·11 rl'turnin~

fi·om

,m eyl' i-lljury .111d pbymg this
seao;;on bm coac h ( :!1ris Palmer
..;,l id Tue'\d,ty rh.tr "nghr IH)\\1 1[
do L·~n 't look gnod.''
Palmer\ rc;ll llliL:nt .11 Bro\\'ns
tr:~min~ c.unp might bt" the
lll O'\t pe~ s un i'&lt; ti c asst:ssmc-nt yet
from C lt·vd .1nd coaches or front
otlice st.1tbbout Urown's health .
Thl' fight tackk w.l'i hurt
D L"c. 19 111 .1 g.m lt' ag.:tm'\t Jlcko;;nnv ille wh t' n a rdl.•rt'L' toso;ed a
wcightL·d pen alty fl.1 g th .lt accidenta ll y &lt;tru c k Brown 's ri~;ht
L'y~.:.· .

INJURED SPEEDSTER - Cincinnat i wide receiver Darnay Scott suf·
fe red a broken leg ·Tuesday, which will sideline him for the entire
2000 season . (AP )

ncx r to rlw rihia , tilt' L1rgt.'r hone
in the lower leg. H e' ll mi 's rhi"
'\(J~OI1 ,\lld LlHtld h.1VL' ,\ ditri cuJt
tltllL' rL·g,uni 11g t\111 ~pt'cd ti·o m
'ud1 .1 ..,l'\"L'rc injur y. tr.tinn P.wl
Sp.nhng s,tid .
·- Scot!. O lll' of ti"JL' lkn ~alS '
fl\t n l pLIYL'ro., io., m m r d,I ngcrou'\

.

'

Ple•se see NASCAR. Patce BJ

NEW YORK (AP) - Mike
Hampton 's left arm is great at
getting h itters. out. His left fo ot
and b at aren't too bad, either.
H am pton pitche d 7 1-3
strong i n ninbrs~ drove in a run
and sh owed off hi s quick reflexes Tuesday night in the New
York M ets' 3·2 victory over the
Cincinnati H.. l'ds.
H amp ton sru ck his foot ou t
to sto p C hris Styncs' bid fo r a
hit in th e third inning.
" It 's just a n:action pl ay,"
Hampton said of the kick save
th at kept th e R eds without a hit
unti l the next uming. "I see th e
ball co mm!l up the middle, I' m
just trying to knock it down."
H amp ton (1 1- 7) 1s al'o a
Threat when he bats. His seco nd-innin g sacrifrcc fly gave th e
•·•M - ;;!.() ead and left bim
fo ur lUll s shy of rying Tom
Seaver's dub record for pitc he rs
dri ving in runs.
Th ~ R eds chased Hamp ton IIi ·
th e eigh th after he allowed a
leauoff single to Stynes and an
Rl31 do uble to lJarry Larkrn.
One out la ter, Turk Wendell
reheved and gave up a rriple to
D ante' Bi che tte that sco red
Larklll.
John Fr;tnco G lll ll' on and got
Sean Casey to ground out. He
wa lked Alex Ocho.1. w ho th e n
sto le second . before strikmg out
13enito Santiago lookin g with
runners o n se cond and th ird .
" I k new it \Vas a good ' pi tch , I
was just wai tin g { 0 sec hi s
hand," said Franco, w ho jumped
after home-plate umpire Ed
Rapuano slowly calkd Santiago
out on a .1-2 fastball. " I co nsidn th e eighth inning to b~..· my
LET'S TALK ABOUT IT- Reds catcher Benito Santiago (left) and pitcher Steve Parri s converse during a ~ave sit uation .''
s toppage in Tuesday's lo ss to New York, which s napped Cincinnati 's four-game win streak. (AP)
Armando Ben irez pitched rh e

IL'dlll ...

'

1/2
Gallon

cars already have a throttle- sto p, whi ch
keeps the rod that co ntrols the throttle
from gomg past the point where it can
sti ck open even if th e gas pedal is released.
NASC AR has previously requi red a
shuto ff switch on the dash of each car, and
a few teams already had them On the
~ t ee ring column o r S[eeri ng wheel.
Triplett added .
"T h ese teams are run by competent,
intelligent people and we have been getting a lot of fe edb ac k," he said. " It's a diffi cult process, but it's one you go through
to try to find the answers. It's one we d o
every day, and no t just because of these

Reds' streak
ends in NY

NBA free agents fly

Mead
70 Count
One Subject

"We co ntinue to look at things . to ~o
thro ugh thinb" an d talk to peopl e,"Triplett
said Tuesday. " We continue to try to piece
thinb" together. It's a difficu lt thing to
recreate following: an acc ident what happened beca use of damage to thi s piece of
the ca r and that p1ece of the car."
Hut Trip lett said talks with crew ch iefs,
drivers and • ca r owners led to Tuesday's
rule c h ange~. w h1 ch he said we re at least a
step .in th e right dirt"Cti on .
" In trying to find something that was
eflective across the board and co mfortable
across the board, th(;!se wen: th e two areas
that cou ld be don e, and easily be done,
before this weekend,". he said.
Triplett poi nted o ut thar a number of

Heat. Hornets

CHUCK

8

ulation that cra~ h es on the samL' turn at
the sa m e track in wh ich Petry and Irwin
wo re killed were the di rec t res ul t of stu ck
thruttles .
l'etty, a 10-year-old fourth -generation
race drivt"r, dit:d May 12 in a crash in Turn
3 at New Hampshi re Inte rnatio nal Speedway during a practice fi&gt;r a Uusch G rand
National race.
Irw in , a regular m th e Wi mton Cup
scn es. was kill ed in ::1 crash during pqctice
o n Jul y 7 at nea rly th e sam e spot o n the
one-mile Loudon , N.H ., oval.
Kevin Triplett, di rector of operations for
NASCAR, stressed that inves tigators are
still lookin g fo r the cause of both acci dents.

ROCK SPRIN GS The
M eigs golf team has sc heduled a
meeting and practice on Au g. 7.
Prospective player s shou ld repo rt
to th e Pine Hills Go lf Co urse at 9
a.m. For informati o n call Coach
Krawsczyn at 992-6394.

GROUND

COKE

Page 81
Wednesday, August 1, 1000

MIDDLEPO RT Seventh
and e ig hth ~ ra ders interested m
pl ayin~ football at tl1e M eigs
Middl e Sc hoo l are asked to be at
the M eigs Middle School auditorium on Friday, August 4, at 9
a. m . for an organizatio nal meetmg.

Family Pack
5 lbs or More
Tenderbest Certified

10

yc.tr probation. no ope rators
lll' l' ll'l': Don na L. Dvrd. Parkersburl(. W. VJ .. $850 a~d costs, llX
. month li cL·nse su'i pension . 10
tb y., j;u] 'uspcnded to rhrec, one
Yl'.ir proh.Hion , jai l se nten ce :tnd
Sl:)(l ~tl'.. pcn dcd upon co mpletion &lt;If R Tl' School, driving
unde r the Influence; Su~:;an C.
C.Ihre ts( h. P0rtland . costs on ly.
311 doys pil suspcmkd to four .
tb.;o rdnl y condu ce j L·re my C.
Hubbard. Pomeroy. costs only. 30
d,,y.., Jad ..,u,pend ed to five o r
three d.l\'S o f RT P School and
two cby~ jold o;uo; pcnrlcd , two
ycH~&gt; prolxttion. rc c kk·ss operarioo; J:r mes 1). Collr ngswort h ..
Poml'roy. cos ts on ly. one yea r
probation. lC J day' j.1il suspended
ro one.: dJy. domL'~tJC VIOlence.
Mrclwlk Stahl. l'on1t•roy. S~5

three J .1ys Jail suspc·ndcd , o ne
)'t.'.H probation. drivin !; under
smpen sro n: C ha rles W. Uuck.
Rac.ine, costs only. 311 days Jail
suspended to 2lJ. one ' yt·ar probation. indu c in ~ p.mic. S20 .tnd
costs, disorderly rondu&lt;..-t; I h·bbie T.mnc r. Rutla nd. cosh on ly.
six month .; j:1i l suspcmiL•d to one
day. one year probJ.tion. domesti c violence: Robin R . Portc•r.
S200 and costs. five Lbys jJil. o ne

Inside:

.

nn dl'L'P p.Htnn .;, w hen he L·.11 1
o utrun dct~·n,I\'C b .trk~ .
" lt\ )!:Din~ to hL· .1 \'l'r)' h1g
c ha ll~o.· n~~..· t\.1r him to l'tllllL' b.h·k
,llld p·l.'rf(Jr lll .1r tht' ln"L"I b1..·
n cc J ~ to.'' Sp,n hn g ... . 11d .

Ple•se see Bengais, Page 86

L,l't momh . Clt-relanu pl.1ceJ
Brown cm 'tht· phy11c,dly umblttn pt: rfor m h'ir .
H1 . , ~ r . ty on rht' l1~r could bt'
t'Xtended for .mnthn lilX weeks
on Au g. ~7.
Brown cnu ld .1ho bt' n.:lr..'&lt;-1't~d
nr p l.K ~..·J on injun·d rc'\LT\'C l1..,t
fur thL' '\L~,l ..,O ll .
" If I \V;"!'i .1 he:.• ttl ng m .lll , 1 don ·,
rhink h e (B rn\\'n) 1~ going to he
.tbk t~' pL1\ ... P.dniL'l~ ,,11:1. " Bur

I'm h op ing th:lt hl' 's going to
wake up and say ' H ey, it's c ured .'
Uu t right now it doesn't look
goo d."
Palmer m ade n ck.1r, howevl'r,
that he would like to .:; ec Urown
r~ mrn .

H L' '\.l!d the ~..· i ght-ycar veteran
has be en going to team meetings and has be~n Vt'fy atten tive.
Brown has fi·equently been on
the side lin es during tramrnJ&gt;
C'illl lp, usually Wt'aring h1 s No.
77 Clevd,md _1ero;;ey.
Through a tl'am spokesma n ,
Brown declin ed to co nun ent .
Hi ~.; .t~~..· nt.To m Condon, did not
re turn ,1 call see king co mment
Brown · h,lS been limited to
workn1g out on .:1 .:; tanonary
bicyck :llld doing o;ome li ght
WL'ight lifting.
H i~ \\'orkout regimen I" a C1r
cry ti·om \\'h.tt tlH.' 6-t(1o t-7,
."\511- pnund lincm.m ~ ~ m~d to.
P.1lmer saH.l Uro\\'11, \\·ho once
lilted wei~ht1 twir e ,, da). would
t.1ke four to ~1x \Yc&lt;..·h to ge t m
playing s h ;~pe if lw Wl're• cleart"d

Please see Browns, Page 86

�•

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

ON THE FRINGE

1965 12 Curbside \lan w/ hydra
c It exc cond 80 000 m iles

13 000 OBO

10~~;40 moD e home str ped out
e xce I ant s to age un 1 under
S I 000 ca I 304 675 3003

figured he had a fightmg chance 111 the
Greg Norman says he has a new lease on next e1ght maJOrs Now he IS talking about
gomg hard for the next 10 years -- even
hfe It nught also be hiS last one
F1ve weeks and one day after surgery to taking on T1gcrWoods
I d love to be part of that n valry he
repair a torn labrum m h11 nght h1p Nor
man returns to co mpetition Thursday 111 saJd I know there sa huge gap 111 age but
The InternatiOnal one of 75 tournaments there was a 15-year age d1fferen ce between
he has won around the world m a career me and Jack N1cklaus when I JOmed the
that covers 25 years
, tour and we competed
In thelf last encounter a 46 year old
The goal was for th e Shark to recover m
tunc for the PGA Champwnsh1p He IS NICklaus shot a 31 o n the back mne over
two weeks ahead of sched ule wh1ch "JUSt ca1ne a four stroke defictt agamst Norman
as well
and won hiS SIXth Masters So whatever
T unc IS not on my Side he md on the miSery Norman endured from that loss
day before surgery
nught actually become mouv'\uon
Hale lrwm won the US Open when he
Forg1ve N orman 1f he ts m a hurry
was
45 Juhus Boros became the oldest
H e turned 45 m February an age when
most players start looking ahead to the player to wm a maJOr the 68 PGA C ham
Semnr lour or the broadcast booth Ne1
pwnsh1p when he was 48 And 111 an era
ther mtcrests Norman He already IS busy long before ab crunches were all the rage
destgmng co u r~es botthn g wme mvcntmg Old Tom Morns won the Dnt!Sh Open at
tun grass markeung clothes d!Stnbutmg 46
golf clubs and postmg v1deo of hiS hip
If Norman really has the body of a 20
yea r old there shou ld be no reason why he
surgery on Shark com
And after rehab1htat10n at warp speed he cant compe te wah Woods contend 111
once aga~ n has carved out tune to pound maJors be fit enough to holSt a trophy
He IS not that old that he has forgotten
balls on the range
what 1t IS hke to launch dnves 300 yards or
So much to do so little t1me
In Apn l before he reahzed hiS nght hip more He st1ll remembers the days when he
was the root of hiS dtscomfort Norman stood on the first tee and wondered who

Huge Ga age Sate At 2 Jet 87
Ute M 1
eek Road Aug 3 4
5 Fu n tu e d she$ I nen s b d
c age home nter o
c oc ks
son e an t (lues and 2 lam y ga
rage sa e on Cheilnu R dge Rd
Aug 345

c

80
1110

2 Big Sa e Cays
E\lery Sat G P:M
Eve y lues 6 PM
li uckloads Of
New &amp; Used terns
From Severa States
Se ling To Tne PuDic &amp; Deale s
1 PIE!ce Dozens &amp; Case Lots
Bowen Aucllon Service
Gary Bowen Auctioneer
4 Proct~lllt Ohio
FIH Markel
Jus Ac oss
Huntng on WV
31stB idge

Sundlly Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER QEAQUNE

2 daya before lhl aa

Auction
and Flea Market
AUCTION

Ia

to run by4 30p m
Saturday a Monday
adltlon 4 30 Thuraday

Deadlln•• aubjact to
chimp due to holld•Y8

ANNOUNCEMENTS

New To You Th fl Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens
74().592 1642
Qua ty c oth ng and houiehold
tems $1 00 Dag sa e every
Tl"lurselay Monday thru Saturday

Bill Moodlspaugh Auct oneer ng
buy se 1 estates cons gnm ent
aucl on Thu sdays 6pm M dd e
port Ohio &amp; WV L ce n se 740

992 9707 740 969-2623

900530
40

Giveaway

Free To Good Home 4 Month
0 d Fema e K tten 2 Yeats Old
Neutered Dec awed Mate Whl1e

Cal

740 256 9240 Aile 6

441 9443 741).446 0200

Palm Coast Florida Lot With A
Ut t t es No Mob te Or Modula
Homes $4 600 740 U6 9590 Or
740 446 7110 Se ng To Se tte
Estate

70

Yard Sale

180 Wanted To Do

Absolute Top Do a A u S S
ve And Gold Co ni P oolse s
D amonds Ant que Jewe ry God
Rings Pre 1930 US C urrency
Ste ng Etc A.cqu s I ons Jewe y
MTS Con ShOp 151 Second
Aw.nue Ga pols 740 446 2842

304 675 5965

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Roo! ng S d ng Guile Pa nt ng
Deck s Concrete Wo k Free Es
1mates (304)675 3243
Wanted
Se v ce
Top Tr m
ng Fu
mates B

9568

To Do Mounts Tree
Bucket Truck Serv ce
Remova Stump G nd
y n su ed F ee Est
dwel Ohio 1 800 838

0 740 383 9648

(304)675 8950

Help Wanted

5

Aug 3 4 th d nouse on Allen St
eteclr c range

Day &amp; n ght sh ft worke s needed
lor adult g oup nome 74 0 99:2

5023

OR VER

1 700 MILE AVCl

L.ENGTH OF HAUL And Much
Morel Ca Days Even ng s Wee
kends 1 888 TRLDA VE !1 888

675-3748) EOE

ots ol c othes

msc 9 4

FINANCIAL

~ug us t

3 5 on County Road 3 1
between At 24 and County A d
28 II a n August 7 9

v

3112

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PU BL SHING CO
recommends that you de bu sl
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT to send money througl"l he
ma unt you nave nlo'etl gated
he offerng
Sta
Your Bus nes s Today
P r me ShOpp ng Ce n e S pa ce
Ava abe At Aflo dab e R ate
Sp ng Va ey P aza Cal 740 440

010
230

Professtonal
Servtces

PHOlo-G-RAPH-Y
Wedd ngs
Pets
Sports Teams
P o ass on a Ce t fed Photogra
pher
Reasonable a es
Ca to appo nlment
(304 675 7472
(304 675 7279

A1Jgus 1 6 Long Run Ad on e
m e I om Bashan F re Oep t 740
949 0807

Augu st 4 5 6 earn ? 3 tam y
I st t me ever Ant que s guns
uck oo l bo11 clothes g ass t e
cab net fu n tu re ools drapes
awn and ga den 225 amp L n
co n we de and m sc Ra e ne
Ol"llo 3 m as pa s Sou hern HS
towards Po tland !urn on to Po
1 and Ad or Co un Ad 35 3 4
m e Wat ct1 lo s gns 740 949

Between Athen s and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bod oom n) Ob • homos

12ro-13oo 74o 992 2167

lmme d a e Open ngs For Home
He a th A des Mu s Be Carl l ed
N us ng Ass stant Or Ce II ed
Home Health A de App y n Pe
son To Medl P va e Ca e 4 2
Seco nd Avenue Ga 1p o s Call
740 441 1877

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI7
No Fee Un ess We Wm
1 888 582 3345

REAL ESTATE

Internal an a Company E)(pands
E Co mmerce $25 $75K Polen
tal Fu T a n ng Pad Vaca on
1 688 827 9733

v

1990 14x70 Breeze wood 3BR
Very go od co nd I on $ 2 000
(304)675 6355 May Leave Mes
sage

v

Avallab e Now
Tw n Towers now accept ng
appt cat ons lor- 1 BA
HUD subsld zed apt ore derly
and hand capped EOH

304)675 6679

age G een Apa rtments 2
bed ooms Iota e ec c app anc
es !urn she d aund y oom ac
es and c ose to scnoo appt ca
10ns ava abe at off ce 740 992
37 1 TOO 1 888 :233 669 4 Equa
Hous ng Opportunity

MERCHANDISE
510

For Sale By Owne 3 Bed oo ms
2 Sa h B c k Hone W 1 Fu
Basemen 2 Ca Ga age &amp; 24x40
Bu d ng On La ge La In G een
Scho o 0 s c May Co ns de
Lea se w lh Op on To Bu y 74 0
4 46 1522

19b7 Jeep Grand Che okee Lar
edo a I powe r 49 000 m es V 8
ow ng package lac ory CD paver
and casse e e11ce ant co nd 1 on
ns de and ou ask ng S 8 900
c a 740 949~026 or 740 949
3099 eave message
1997 Jeep Wrang

App ances
Ae cono on ed
Was he s Dryers Ran ges Aefr
gra to s 90 Day Guarantee! We
Se New Maytag Appl ances
F ench C ty May lag 740 440
7795

996 14)(70 2 Bedroom s 2 Baths
Ga den Tub L aund r y Room
Stove Rei gerator 0 shw asher
HP Tota E ec t c $19400 080
Cal 740 446 7935 Lea ve Me s
sage

no

ami

PW

7 40

Old Penn es Some Canad an $3
A P ece 0 d Co mbs (ShO ) To
Ho d Up Ha $5 Fo 2 Coa Mn
e we ght Check $5 740 245

Motorcycles

1994 Kawasak 500 Vu can 4500
m le s $2750 080 also 1995 Ka
wasak 800 Vulcan S d 2000
m les $4250 080 Do h exce l en
shape ca \ 740 949 2181
996 Ho nea 300 2WD g oOd
cu nd I on $2500 Ca before
OAM' o
be ween 9 1 PM
(304 675 3156

5630

Ra nb ow Sweeoe Look s Run s
Good 1304)675 1725

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

1998 Ya maha Banshee Good
Cond I on $3 800 740 4&lt;16-0048

Tappan H Ell c ency 90 o Gas
Fu naces 0 I Fu naces 12 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond t on ng
Sys ems Free 8 Yea Wa an y
Ben nett s Hea t ng &amp; Co o ng 1
800 872 5967 www o vb com ben
nett
So laB ed $75 Ca Sea $25
$ 5 W oo den
B ouncy Cha
Table and Cha s S40 EKe sauc
e $2 5 P aypen $3 0 304 )675
8995 even ngs

999 Suzuk GS 500 E Mo o cy
c e Le ss ha n 1 BOO m es Ca
go st ap::; mat c h ng he me &amp;
acke l $4 000 304 675 Bi' 5 a
e 7PM
-Hondn CR 125 Be te Than New
P o C Cu I E ~haus G aph cs K t
Sea Cove V Fo ce Rad Va ve
Wesco Aebu 1 $3 200 Ca 740
367 7563

YOUR CHOICE 3 OR 4 BED
A C
Sk 1 ng Comp e e Set Up Pay
men $275 WAC Ca Fo P e
Approva 1 888 736 3332

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessortes

PUBLIC NOnCE
The Village of Rutland
Rutland Townohlp and
Salisbury Townohlp will
have a public meeting on
August 1Oth 2000 at 6 00
PM at Rutland Civic Center
Tha purpooe of thla meeting

Wale ne Spec a 3 4 200 PSI
$2 95 Pe 100 1 200 PS
S37 00 Per 100 A B ass Com
p esson Ft1ng s In S ock
JaCkson Oh o 1 BOO 537 9528

790

550

998 Damon pop up seeps 6 8
dge fu nace s ove po ta poll e
used 4 mas $5250 740 992
5409

Buildtng
Supplies

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

with tho Ohio Emergency
Management
Admlnlotratlon All reoldento of

SUMMER JOBS
-co lege Stuoen s
-H gh Schoo Grads
•H gh SchOo Sen o s
Anyone oak ng o ea n SS
Elrn up to 115/hour
Exce en expe tnce o
your resume
Fun and I end y wo kp ace
ng you
tnds and
ea n ex1 aSS

receiving grant funding to
mitigate flood damage to
~.

~~
www eomlct com

SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
GREEN TREE FINANCIAL
SERVING

e

C~LL TOD~V

1 &amp;OO.Ut-51'53
C v c Ceve opme n G oup
M I M um Tt Iii ~ ces

va d sa le OAV tlu 1&lt;1 ng 28 0 5 1
SA 7 August 2 3 4 s Some h ng
fo eve yonf!

NO DOWN PAYMENT
No Down Pa ymen Aeq u eel W
G ov e nme n1 Spon so ed Lo a n
Good C ad S ead~ ncom e Re
qu ad Ca Today Mo ~ no ma
1 on To O v a l y nd epeno e nce
M o tgade Se v ces 26 1 ~ a o
s o n La kew oo a OH 44 0 1
MB 1679 1021 eoo 84 5 o038

SERVICES
810

AKC pup s She 1 es sab e
s
b ue me e s M n Schnau ze 5
sat peppe Pome an an s b ad
&amp; b own $2 00 $35 0 c a 74 0
696 1085

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOF NG
Uncond t ana I e me gua antee
Loca efe ences lu n shed Es
ab sh&amp;CI 97 5 Ca 24 H s 740)
446 087 0
BOO 287 0576 Rog
e s Wae pool ng

doocrlbed
realCounty
eotateof
attuated
In tho
Metga and Stoll of Ohio
and In tho Village of
Middleport to wit
Bolng tote one hundred
olxty lour (164) and one
hundrad alxty llvo (185) In
Phillip Jonoo Addition to
uld VIllage oxcapt tho
following ducrlbod treat of
tend which w11 aold to MC
Hobart baing a part of lot
number ono hundred alxty
lour (184) bounded and
daacrlbad u follow•
Beginning at tho Southw01t
cornar of MC Hobart 1 lot

C&amp;C Ge 11e a
Hom e Ma n
ene nc e Pa n ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows bans
mob e nome epa and mo e Fa
ee est mfl e ca CM 740 992
6:323

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

hund lad alxly lour (184)
thonoa Eutarly olong the
North llno of uld lot
number one elxty four to

the Northwlll cornor of
MC Hobart 1 lot number
one hundred alxty three
(163) thence Southorly a
dlotanco of t 00 rut to the
place of beginning,
Sold Promisee Located at
532 Mill Stroot Middleport
Ohio 45760
Sold Premlooa Approlaod
at $8 000 00 and cannot be
oold lor looo than two thirds
of that amount

TERMS OF SALE 10% of

deed
Jamu M Souloby Sheriff
ol Melga County OH
Montee Copo (10067926)
Attorney lor Plaintiff
175 S Third Stroot Suite
G

75

mR.n/LPn

Hospital hu lR lmlledlalr optnlnd for a Pari

IB a new lease on

Norman needs anoth er maJOr to vahdate

hun as one of the be st Any \l ctOr) at thiS
stage m IllS career would cert ifY h1m as one
of the gr&lt;atest competitors
It all starts thiS week w1th The R eturn
of the Shark The Fm al EpiSode

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

The Daily
Sentinel

In Memory

~ ""'~

900

Columbuo Ohio 43215
(614) 2211-7272 Ext 144
(1) 25 (B) 2 6 JTC

,.,...~"

~fhd..t. ~
•p·uwt~­

- A&lt;UJul( 2 191?

SU4 ?lt4m( Z'!l
'UIIIetfoue
~-pu.,
~Sht/4&amp;
9'&lt;&lt;~•uMittt.e"

Shop at home...

Buy from the Classifieds!

Gtganttc Garage Sale
Levt s &amp; Guess
Lots of new ttems
Somethtng for everyone
Frt &amp; Sat Aug 4th &amp; 5th
7am-5pm
Ketth Otler Restdence
St At 325 Langsvtlle Oh

740 742 2076

'J

llntr/full llmt kn/LPn Prior Holle Hullh
txptrtlnct Is prrftrrtd Musthnt Ohio ud
West Vlrqlnla nurslnq llctnsr
af7 40·992·2104, r&amp;l

If

lnlrrrslrd

Big Buzztt

253.

.1------====~======-----.....J

1

110

Help Wanted

The BehiVIoral Health unn !Inner RenectJonll 1nt1
llllled Nulling FICIIIIV liiiFI It Vlllr&amp;ll MlmDrlll
HDIPIIII hive lmmldllll DPIIIIRDI llr Plrl Uml lAd
lUll Dill 1r Plr Dllm Rlllltlr&amp;d IIUrllll. UCIRIId
PncUCII 1111'111. 11111 Telted 111n1n1 llllltlnta.
aertltrlc 11111/0r Paycb. blllrtence prallmd.
ThDIIIntereltld JIIIIH COntect

HUMAN RESOURCES at
J4D·II2·21114. 111 20110 lrriRIIImlrviiWI.
110

~

It's The
Meigs- Oallia- Mason

Rn/LPn 6 STnft

number one hundred thcty

appraleed value down
remainder upon tender of

2 cefl oo m Porne oy SJOO p us
u ano aeo o s 740 992
u

he satd

Help Wanted

Holzcr Home Ctre of Velrrus Memorial

CASE NO 99 CV 109
ROBERT JAMES et at
DEFENDANTS
In purauonce of an Order
of Sate In the above entitled
action I will offer loraalo II
public auction at the
Courthouoo otepa In

thrao (183) ond running
Wutorly along the North
aida of Mill Street nino and
ona hall ( /o) loot to the and
of a certain otone wall
thonca North nlnatlln and
one/hall (18 /o) degrtea
Enl to lhl r01r or North

Dogh ous e made om o d o ak
whiskey ba e ca pe ed op om
ho se s r1 ng R. sh ng es $ 25
740 949 2853

RENTALS

C 2000 by NEA Inc

HOM~ HML

4

BATHS A C Sk t ng Cam p ete
Set Up P ce $ 9 866 Pay ments
$199 Mo WAC Ca Fo P e Ap
888 736 3332

NEW HOME OR HUNT NG

110

vs

~I mAugu~~e200~ol~~!~ n ~

SINGLEW OE 3 BEDROOMS 12

NEEDS A 0 e Sou he Oho
Ra ng r-19 F nm 4 Tn 47 Ac a
T ac s Ca Us Tod ay Fo FREE
MAPS And L s ng 0 A Tn s
Land
Anthony Land Company ltd
1 800.213 8385
www co~o~nl ytyme com

cent repatrcd

named County on 25th day plrue con lad lhr Home Hullh Coordlulor

Land Home Pa ckages AI A eas
A C ed A sks Oakwood Ga
po s 740 446 3093

NEEO LAND'?
We C u en y Ha ve Ove 80
T ac s 0 Lan d Reed y Fa Yo

Fmt came shoulder surgery after the 98
Masters followed by seven m o nths of
rehab and questions about whether he snll
had the deme Norman answered that
when he nearly won the 99 Masters and
probabl ) shou ld have won Ius tlurd DntiS h
O pen
This June after a humblmg 82 111 the sec
ond round of the US Open at Pebble
Beach Norman diScove red a torn labrum
m his nght h1p wh1 ch probablv ca used hiS
shoulder problems m th e fi rst place
Once the surgery IS done It s 100 per

Get yours
toaay...

thesa areas lntereeted In

end or lot number one

Tglemarke! IOQ

almost as often as he s been m contentiOn

with ad!

Pomeroy Ohio In the above

Redu c ed P c e
7 ~26
998
T a e L e Campe Used On y 5
T mes S Smells New Seeps 6
$10 300 Se ous lnqu es Ony
Pease 740 446 16 6 9 30 5 30
Daly 740 446 8580 Aile 5 30

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

locate hiS last PGA Tour VICtory -- the
World Sen es of Go lf at Flfestone H IS last
wm anywhere was the Holden lnterna
nonal m Australia on Feb 8 1998
Smce then he been m operaung rooms

SIGN

Public Notice

AMANA Wh l e 0 he s We e
Th nk ng AbOut Qua l y A manna
Wa s Se n ng T he Standa rds Fo
Heat ng An d Cool ng F ee Es
ma es 740 44 6 6308
800
29 0098

BUD GET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes woo d
0 ve f on $289 to $370 Wa k o
shop &amp; mov e s C a 740 44 6
2568 EQua Hous ng Oppo un y

Norman has to count ba ck three years to

YARD SALE

ohould be In attendance
(B)t23456789

All Steel Buildings
5011 00 70x 125 00x200
Up To 50% 01 Bes Of e
800.77~ 9694

New 14 W de $250 Down $ 49
Pe Month F ee A Fre e Sk
ng 1 888 928 3426

Will

FREE

Public Notice

Ia to dlacuaa flood
mltlgetlon grent funding

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

ROOMS SINGLE 16X60

I know when you play at that level
1ntumdauon IS a wondenul Silent tool to
use he sa1d I ve had 11 When I 111 up
agamst It 1t won t be a facto r
Now 1f he can on ly remcmbt::T h oV~. to "

a better an gl e then that s go t to be bevond a ce rta in po 1n t
sa ve yo u from a pretty h ar d c rash
Se\era l e n e rgy absorb1ng wa ll
h e sa 1d
You hav e to app la t d good t oo
sys
tem s al so have been sugge sted
Tnplett
sa
1d
NASCAR
wil
l
co
n
NAS C AR for tak1ng st eps hk e
nnue to l ook at more wa)S to to NASCAR
these
from Page Bl
But Tt~plc tt &gt;a1d A l o t of thw gs
Le t s face 1t 11 s no t h ow fa st In crease dnv er safe t y
Some dnvers hav e st ggeste d th e we vc been pre se nted wlth are still
two trag1c acCi dents but hope - you go a s h ow fast you sto p If
u
se
of a to e c lip to manuall y p ull a JU St 1d eas Tnere s noth1ng to sh ow
yo u can tut so1neth1ng at a s lowe r
fully so no more occ ur
speed tha t s got to be good If yo u stu ck thr ottle back bu t Tnp le tt h ow effec ti ve thc v are
Wlll ston Cu p d n ve r J e remy May
Were not 100 percent co n
sa 1d
There I S a po in t 111 tun e
f1eld sa 1d th e n ew r ul es mak e good h ave more tune when yo u r e hav
Vlll ce d wh at s avaJi able Tight now
1n g problems -- say you re a1m ed \\h e n a toe chp 1S no t effec tiv e
se n se
that we ve see n IS th e nght
Some
crew
dn
ef~
hJve
told
us
The) don t tah anyt h1n g av,ay at the wall or so meth1ng h kc that
trom t he ra ce c ars they don t - to co r rec t a httl e b1t then th s you co uldn t bnng 1t ba c k With a a n swer
aft e c t co mpetition but they can 1S a good th1n g Ev e n 1f you l11t at s I&lt; d ge h a mm cr \\ h e n 1t ge ts ,.--..,....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....

their home or business

Fo ec osu e Pay Back Pay men s
&amp; Move n 740 446 3570

lllJJOrs but Norman sees so me smula nues

hfe Th iS " gomg to make me more cxc1t
ed to go back and play
Wah a rebu 1lt shoulder and a repa1red
h1p Norman finally has a clean b11l of
health What he no longer has arc excuses
Norman doc sn t need the mon ey JUSt
the hardware
At stake IS hiS place m hiStory al though
h1s losses always seem to ou twe1gh hiS
gams N ot many have played at such a !ugh
level for such a lon g t1me
From 1976 to 1998 Norman \\On at
leasr one tournament every year bur !991
He has led the money hst on both Sides of
th e AtlantiC had the best sconng average
on the PGA Tour five nmcs and has w1dd
ed such mflu ence that th e game now has a
lucrative World Golf Champwnsh1p senes
He nught better be remembered for
wm mng the Saturday Slam m 1986 the
year he led all four nuj ors after the th1rd
round and walked off wltn only a Silver
claret JUg He IS th e o nly man to lose all
four maJors m a pla)off

NASCAR

Antiques

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandtse

was gomg to finiS h second Woods IS 21
years younger and has tWICe as many

I

99 7 4~4 Honda 400 250 Hou s
Exce en Cond on $4 000 740
245 5747

A&amp;O s U sed Fu n lure &amp; Ap
p anc es G eat Se ee l on P cad
To Se
Come And 8 owse
Co ner Of Rou e 7 &amp; Add son
P ke We Buy Fu n lu e 740
367 0280

530

Need We 1 And Sept c? No Dow n
Paym ent Requ ed Large Se ec
I on 01 Home s Ca 1 800 948
5678

0 Ac e Go I Ran ge 5 ooo Sq
Foo P o Sh op G ea Ca~; h Bu s
ne ss Mo e Ac eage Ava abe
740 245 574 7

ooo

4843

Fro m RSI'I t To Own low Down
Payment Low Month y Payment
Ca I 1 800 948-5678

Busmess and
Bu1ld1ngs

54

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

BATHS DOUBLE WIDE A C
Sk r ng Co mp e e Set Up Pay
men s $259 Mo WAC Ca Now
1 888 736 3332

340

e

m es Good Cond on 5 Speed
CO P aye (304 675 6643 o 675

740

28K52 Daub eW de $50 0 Down
Take ave paymen s 800 69
6777

3 Bed ooms 1 Bath
Ca Ga
age 3 4 Acre Ga po s Fer v
$75 000 Ca 1304 675 2415
Leave Message

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

TRANSPORTATION

1992 Mob e Home on 6 6 Aces
3 Bed oo ms 2 Baths Ga age &amp;
Barn All Fenced In Pond Ask ng
$45 000 740 379 2388

SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOMS 12

Household
Goods

1994 Chevy 4x4 manua 0 ack
$9000 OBO call 740-949 701
19911 Fo d Ranger extended ca b
4 wd sp ash 4 0 5 speed all opons 72000 m les nee $1 0500
740 742 2707

Hu ge nvento y 0 sco unt P ces
On V nyl Sk t ng Doo s W nd
ows An cho s Wa e Hea e s
P umb ng &amp; E ectr ca t Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pump s Benne s
Mob e Home Su pp y i'40 446
94 6 www o vb com/benne

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa she s dryers efr gerat o s
anges Skaggs Appl ances 76
V ne St eet Ca 740 446 7398
1 888 81 8 0128

New 3 BR 2 BA Ooub ew de
$300 Down $245 Pe Mon h
F ee De ve y 1 ~88 928 3426

Cape Coo W h Oh o Ave v ew
4 Bed oom s Fo rna LA Fo rna
OR £ Fu Ba hs Baseme n In
gro nd Pool Edge 0 Ga po s
$187 500 740 446 7928

Ga age sa e Thursday &amp; F day
4 h hOuse alte Naza ene Chu ch
n Chaste ots o k ds c othe s
ran or sh ne

1989 Oa~wood 14x7 0 n go od
cond I on on rented ot new heat
pump AI maJ Or appl an ces a
b g tan ce po ch &amp; ca port Ask
ng $14000 (304)675 7123

A\la tabl e 9 1s 1995 14)(72 2
Bedrooms 2 Ba hs Re ge a or
Stove Washe 0 ye Hook Up
La ge Fenced Back Ya d F ont &amp;
Ba~k Po en ve
N ce Exce ent
Cond on $400/Mo P us Uti es
740 256 93 82

New 16 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Down $245 pe Month Free
A r &amp; Sk
888 928 3426

Lo ca Co mpany see~ n g Data
En y C e k w lh knowle dge of
ba s c accoun n g p oced ure s
compu e sk s ol ce mach ne
elf c en cy &amp; en oys wok ng w th
oth er!!. SeM resume c o Po nl
Pl easant Re gs e ML 34 200
Man S eel PI Peasant WV
25550
Now Hr ng
AI pos o n s Ful &amp; Pa 1 me
ava ab e 401 K pad vaca ons
comp el! ve sla ng sata y Ap
n pe son a G no s n Pt
p
P easant

2 BA Mob e Home $300 mo nth
+ e erences &amp; $200 depos t n
New Haven ac ass tram New Ha
ven Sch oo (304) 882 2219 o
304 882 2219

Tar a TownhOuse Apar men s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms :2
Ftoo s CA
2 Ba h Fu ly Car
peted Adu 1 Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease Pu s Secu y Oepos t Re
Qu ed Days 740 446 348 t
Even ngs 7 40 367 0502 7 40
446 010

1i pie AAA Roofing

$OOPM NoEa~Saes

at oss I om Ches1er F re House

-:

1985 14x70 3 Bed oom s Good
Shape $10 500 Ca Aile 6 PM
740 367 713

210

Aug 3 • t st house past cl"lurch
o C l"le s1er bunk bed s tot s of
stull 9 4

1993 Mob e Home 2 Bed oo ms
1 Bath App ances W 0 Hook
Up large Va d 5 M es F om
Rod ney 4844 Co aM
Road
$350 Mo Plus De pas 1 And Ap
P cat on 6 14 433 9010 0 6 4

~~~~~~~~~~. , _94_6_3_30_7_______________

1974 2BA New cape no wa e
heate p umbmg po ch &amp; AC
S ove Relr ge alo On ren ed
IO (304)882 3232

Ga age Sa le Saturday Augu s t
Slh 116 Kneon 0 ve 900 AM

356 Wh 10 Road
Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

420 Mobtle Homes
lor Rent

Honest Dependable Lady Would
L he To Mow Your Law n Or Do
Odd Jobs L nda 740-440 7604

W II Haul Junk or Trash $35 a

~M

Th s newspaper w II not
know ng y accept
advert sements fo eal estate
wh ch s n v10 at on of the
law Our eaders a e hereby
n!Ofmed that at dwe 1ngs
advef1sed nthsnewspape
are eva able on en eque
opportunty bass

Doz
Eu e

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

A ck Pearso n Auc on Company

lui t me auct oneer camp e e
serv ce
L ce nsed
auc on
lt66 Oh o &amp; West V ~ n a 304
773-5785 Or 304 773 5447

6306 I 600 29 0096
JET
AEAATON MOTORS

1994 Chevy 4x4 manu a back

$9 000 OBO 740 949 1701

Mag c Chef m c owave oven $50
6 ya d sa e aD e $ 35 w h e
daybed sp ead &amp; sham s S 00
140 992 5694 or 740 992 3886

the Federal Fa HouSing Act
of 1968 wh ch makes i1 I ega
to advef1 se any preference
I m tat on or d scnm nat on
based on ace coo el g on
sex fam a status o nal anal
o gn o any nenton to
make any such p efe ence
m tat on or d scnm nat on

(Carems C ose To Home)
Ca Today 740 446-4367
1 800 2 4 0452
Reg il90 05 12748

load

'Rlursday To Saturday 9 A M

AI ea estate ad\lertis ng n
thiS newspape s subject to

Gallipolis Clreer College

Carpet &amp; Upholtlery Cleaning
Guaranteed Work W h Fabu ous
Result s! Fo a F ee Est mate
Ca 1304)675-4040 Tooav

II You Don Ca Us We Bo n
Lose Fee Est mates 740 446

Aepa ed New &amp; Rebu In Stock
Ca 1 Ron Evans
800 537 9528

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Wanted To Buy Used Mob le
Home s Cal 740446 0 17 5 0

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Now Tak ng App ca ons 35
Wes 2 Bed oom Tow nhouse
Apa men s
Inc ua es Water
Sewage T ash $325 Mo 740
446 0008

140

Lost Rewa d M xed Ma e Aetr ev
er Red w th 3 Wh te Paws Walks
W th A L mp On A ght Front Paw
L os t Between Kempe &amp; Wl"ll!e
Road On State A ou e 160 Ca I

740

COOLING EOU PMENT
INSTALLED

592 6651

304-453-2587

1986 Che\ly 350 3 4 To n Au
oma c A 4~4 $3 995 740 446
1021

JAN TROL HEATING AND

U RGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono s earn 535 o $45 lo 2 or 3
hours weekly Ca Se a Tee 740

74~816-ZZII

30 Announcements

540 Miscellaneous
f.'erchandise

..-.
'

-'

The Shark battles back from injury to face Father Time
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Southern Loca Schoo 0 s
t ct s accept ng appt cat ons lo
the pos t ons of E eme ntary Pr n
c pa H gh Schoo L brar an and
Voca nst umentat Mus c Teach
e lor tl"le 2000 0221 sehoo yea r
A.l app c ants mus poss ess tl"le
p oper cerlif cat on to these pos
Io n s PhOne 74 0 949 2669 fo
lu ther nto mat on These p os •
I ons w t be f eel ASAP Pease
send nqu res to Mr James L a
w ence Super ntendent Southern
Local Sc hoo s Box 76 Rae ne
Oh o 45771 SLSD sa n Equal
Oppor un ty Emplo~e r

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

~~~~~~--------------------~~~==~~------~--------~~~~~~J

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

]=Jt££ ••• 8££
Advertise In Classified

7 Days
Yes One Wee ki
4 Line Ad - 7 T1mes

Help Wanted

~ Pleasant Valley

v

Hospital

ro111r_ ~O.!'P!I! _

NURSING ASSISTANTS
CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hospitals Home Health,
Hospice and Prtvate Duty areas are
accepting applications for

FULL·TIME I PART·TIME I PER DIEM
Excellent pay, flexible scheduling and
mileage reimbursement available For more
Informatlon contact Pleasant Valley Home
Care services 1011 Viand Street Pt
Pleasant, WV 25550 or call (304) 675·7400
Join our family of professionals to be the
resource for community health needs
AAJEOE

One Letter Per Box Allow Box for Space Between Words

' 11111111111 111 111111111111111
:Name._________________________________________________

Address._________________________________________
: City, State, Zip._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.:.__

1 Phone. ~---~~~~~~----------~----~--------•Return Coupon To FREE· BEE
Da1ly Sentmel
lll Court St Pomeroy, OH

_

(1~Q),~I-~!~8-

··rhe Bu! Buzz

~

•No Cancellaltons

•No Ahbrevtaltons Pie 1se
•Customer Can Renew Free

___F~ (7~0) 992·1187

In Meu!s·Gath~--M-a;o-n~· -

•
•

�•

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

ON THE FRINGE

1965 12 Curbside \lan w/ hydra
c It exc cond 80 000 m iles

13 000 OBO

10~~;40 moD e home str ped out
e xce I ant s to age un 1 under
S I 000 ca I 304 675 3003

figured he had a fightmg chance 111 the
Greg Norman says he has a new lease on next e1ght maJOrs Now he IS talking about
gomg hard for the next 10 years -- even
hfe It nught also be hiS last one
F1ve weeks and one day after surgery to taking on T1gcrWoods
I d love to be part of that n valry he
repair a torn labrum m h11 nght h1p Nor
man returns to co mpetition Thursday 111 saJd I know there sa huge gap 111 age but
The InternatiOnal one of 75 tournaments there was a 15-year age d1fferen ce between
he has won around the world m a career me and Jack N1cklaus when I JOmed the
that covers 25 years
, tour and we competed
In thelf last encounter a 46 year old
The goal was for th e Shark to recover m
tunc for the PGA Champwnsh1p He IS NICklaus shot a 31 o n the back mne over
two weeks ahead of sched ule wh1ch "JUSt ca1ne a four stroke defictt agamst Norman
as well
and won hiS SIXth Masters So whatever
T unc IS not on my Side he md on the miSery Norman endured from that loss
day before surgery
nught actually become mouv'\uon
Hale lrwm won the US Open when he
Forg1ve N orman 1f he ts m a hurry
was
45 Juhus Boros became the oldest
H e turned 45 m February an age when
most players start looking ahead to the player to wm a maJOr the 68 PGA C ham
Semnr lour or the broadcast booth Ne1
pwnsh1p when he was 48 And 111 an era
ther mtcrests Norman He already IS busy long before ab crunches were all the rage
destgmng co u r~es botthn g wme mvcntmg Old Tom Morns won the Dnt!Sh Open at
tun grass markeung clothes d!Stnbutmg 46
golf clubs and postmg v1deo of hiS hip
If Norman really has the body of a 20
yea r old there shou ld be no reason why he
surgery on Shark com
And after rehab1htat10n at warp speed he cant compe te wah Woods contend 111
once aga~ n has carved out tune to pound maJors be fit enough to holSt a trophy
He IS not that old that he has forgotten
balls on the range
what 1t IS hke to launch dnves 300 yards or
So much to do so little t1me
In Apn l before he reahzed hiS nght hip more He st1ll remembers the days when he
was the root of hiS dtscomfort Norman stood on the first tee and wondered who

Huge Ga age Sate At 2 Jet 87
Ute M 1
eek Road Aug 3 4
5 Fu n tu e d she$ I nen s b d
c age home nter o
c oc ks
son e an t (lues and 2 lam y ga
rage sa e on Cheilnu R dge Rd
Aug 345

c

80
1110

2 Big Sa e Cays
E\lery Sat G P:M
Eve y lues 6 PM
li uckloads Of
New &amp; Used terns
From Severa States
Se ling To Tne PuDic &amp; Deale s
1 PIE!ce Dozens &amp; Case Lots
Bowen Aucllon Service
Gary Bowen Auctioneer
4 Proct~lllt Ohio
FIH Markel
Jus Ac oss
Huntng on WV
31stB idge

Sundlly Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER QEAQUNE

2 daya before lhl aa

Auction
and Flea Market
AUCTION

Ia

to run by4 30p m
Saturday a Monday
adltlon 4 30 Thuraday

Deadlln•• aubjact to
chimp due to holld•Y8

ANNOUNCEMENTS

New To You Th fl Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens
74().592 1642
Qua ty c oth ng and houiehold
tems $1 00 Dag sa e every
Tl"lurselay Monday thru Saturday

Bill Moodlspaugh Auct oneer ng
buy se 1 estates cons gnm ent
aucl on Thu sdays 6pm M dd e
port Ohio &amp; WV L ce n se 740

992 9707 740 969-2623

900530
40

Giveaway

Free To Good Home 4 Month
0 d Fema e K tten 2 Yeats Old
Neutered Dec awed Mate Whl1e

Cal

740 256 9240 Aile 6

441 9443 741).446 0200

Palm Coast Florida Lot With A
Ut t t es No Mob te Or Modula
Homes $4 600 740 U6 9590 Or
740 446 7110 Se ng To Se tte
Estate

70

Yard Sale

180 Wanted To Do

Absolute Top Do a A u S S
ve And Gold Co ni P oolse s
D amonds Ant que Jewe ry God
Rings Pre 1930 US C urrency
Ste ng Etc A.cqu s I ons Jewe y
MTS Con ShOp 151 Second
Aw.nue Ga pols 740 446 2842

304 675 5965

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Roo! ng S d ng Guile Pa nt ng
Deck s Concrete Wo k Free Es
1mates (304)675 3243
Wanted
Se v ce
Top Tr m
ng Fu
mates B

9568

To Do Mounts Tree
Bucket Truck Serv ce
Remova Stump G nd
y n su ed F ee Est
dwel Ohio 1 800 838

0 740 383 9648

(304)675 8950

Help Wanted

5

Aug 3 4 th d nouse on Allen St
eteclr c range

Day &amp; n ght sh ft worke s needed
lor adult g oup nome 74 0 99:2

5023

OR VER

1 700 MILE AVCl

L.ENGTH OF HAUL And Much
Morel Ca Days Even ng s Wee
kends 1 888 TRLDA VE !1 888

675-3748) EOE

ots ol c othes

msc 9 4

FINANCIAL

~ug us t

3 5 on County Road 3 1
between At 24 and County A d
28 II a n August 7 9

v

3112

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PU BL SHING CO
recommends that you de bu sl
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT to send money througl"l he
ma unt you nave nlo'etl gated
he offerng
Sta
Your Bus nes s Today
P r me ShOpp ng Ce n e S pa ce
Ava abe At Aflo dab e R ate
Sp ng Va ey P aza Cal 740 440

010
230

Professtonal
Servtces

PHOlo-G-RAPH-Y
Wedd ngs
Pets
Sports Teams
P o ass on a Ce t fed Photogra
pher
Reasonable a es
Ca to appo nlment
(304 675 7472
(304 675 7279

A1Jgus 1 6 Long Run Ad on e
m e I om Bashan F re Oep t 740
949 0807

Augu st 4 5 6 earn ? 3 tam y
I st t me ever Ant que s guns
uck oo l bo11 clothes g ass t e
cab net fu n tu re ools drapes
awn and ga den 225 amp L n
co n we de and m sc Ra e ne
Ol"llo 3 m as pa s Sou hern HS
towards Po tland !urn on to Po
1 and Ad or Co un Ad 35 3 4
m e Wat ct1 lo s gns 740 949

Between Athen s and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bod oom n) Ob • homos

12ro-13oo 74o 992 2167

lmme d a e Open ngs For Home
He a th A des Mu s Be Carl l ed
N us ng Ass stant Or Ce II ed
Home Health A de App y n Pe
son To Medl P va e Ca e 4 2
Seco nd Avenue Ga 1p o s Call
740 441 1877

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI7
No Fee Un ess We Wm
1 888 582 3345

REAL ESTATE

Internal an a Company E)(pands
E Co mmerce $25 $75K Polen
tal Fu T a n ng Pad Vaca on
1 688 827 9733

v

1990 14x70 Breeze wood 3BR
Very go od co nd I on $ 2 000
(304)675 6355 May Leave Mes
sage

v

Avallab e Now
Tw n Towers now accept ng
appt cat ons lor- 1 BA
HUD subsld zed apt ore derly
and hand capped EOH

304)675 6679

age G een Apa rtments 2
bed ooms Iota e ec c app anc
es !urn she d aund y oom ac
es and c ose to scnoo appt ca
10ns ava abe at off ce 740 992
37 1 TOO 1 888 :233 669 4 Equa
Hous ng Opportunity

MERCHANDISE
510

For Sale By Owne 3 Bed oo ms
2 Sa h B c k Hone W 1 Fu
Basemen 2 Ca Ga age &amp; 24x40
Bu d ng On La ge La In G een
Scho o 0 s c May Co ns de
Lea se w lh Op on To Bu y 74 0
4 46 1522

19b7 Jeep Grand Che okee Lar
edo a I powe r 49 000 m es V 8
ow ng package lac ory CD paver
and casse e e11ce ant co nd 1 on
ns de and ou ask ng S 8 900
c a 740 949~026 or 740 949
3099 eave message
1997 Jeep Wrang

App ances
Ae cono on ed
Was he s Dryers Ran ges Aefr
gra to s 90 Day Guarantee! We
Se New Maytag Appl ances
F ench C ty May lag 740 440
7795

996 14)(70 2 Bedroom s 2 Baths
Ga den Tub L aund r y Room
Stove Rei gerator 0 shw asher
HP Tota E ec t c $19400 080
Cal 740 446 7935 Lea ve Me s
sage

no

ami

PW

7 40

Old Penn es Some Canad an $3
A P ece 0 d Co mbs (ShO ) To
Ho d Up Ha $5 Fo 2 Coa Mn
e we ght Check $5 740 245

Motorcycles

1994 Kawasak 500 Vu can 4500
m le s $2750 080 also 1995 Ka
wasak 800 Vulcan S d 2000
m les $4250 080 Do h exce l en
shape ca \ 740 949 2181
996 Ho nea 300 2WD g oOd
cu nd I on $2500 Ca before
OAM' o
be ween 9 1 PM
(304 675 3156

5630

Ra nb ow Sweeoe Look s Run s
Good 1304)675 1725

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

1998 Ya maha Banshee Good
Cond I on $3 800 740 4&lt;16-0048

Tappan H Ell c ency 90 o Gas
Fu naces 0 I Fu naces 12 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond t on ng
Sys ems Free 8 Yea Wa an y
Ben nett s Hea t ng &amp; Co o ng 1
800 872 5967 www o vb com ben
nett
So laB ed $75 Ca Sea $25
$ 5 W oo den
B ouncy Cha
Table and Cha s S40 EKe sauc
e $2 5 P aypen $3 0 304 )675
8995 even ngs

999 Suzuk GS 500 E Mo o cy
c e Le ss ha n 1 BOO m es Ca
go st ap::; mat c h ng he me &amp;
acke l $4 000 304 675 Bi' 5 a
e 7PM
-Hondn CR 125 Be te Than New
P o C Cu I E ~haus G aph cs K t
Sea Cove V Fo ce Rad Va ve
Wesco Aebu 1 $3 200 Ca 740
367 7563

YOUR CHOICE 3 OR 4 BED
A C
Sk 1 ng Comp e e Set Up Pay
men $275 WAC Ca Fo P e
Approva 1 888 736 3332

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessortes

PUBLIC NOnCE
The Village of Rutland
Rutland Townohlp and
Salisbury Townohlp will
have a public meeting on
August 1Oth 2000 at 6 00
PM at Rutland Civic Center
Tha purpooe of thla meeting

Wale ne Spec a 3 4 200 PSI
$2 95 Pe 100 1 200 PS
S37 00 Per 100 A B ass Com
p esson Ft1ng s In S ock
JaCkson Oh o 1 BOO 537 9528

790

550

998 Damon pop up seeps 6 8
dge fu nace s ove po ta poll e
used 4 mas $5250 740 992
5409

Buildtng
Supplies

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

with tho Ohio Emergency
Management
Admlnlotratlon All reoldento of

SUMMER JOBS
-co lege Stuoen s
-H gh Schoo Grads
•H gh SchOo Sen o s
Anyone oak ng o ea n SS
Elrn up to 115/hour
Exce en expe tnce o
your resume
Fun and I end y wo kp ace
ng you
tnds and
ea n ex1 aSS

receiving grant funding to
mitigate flood damage to
~.

~~
www eomlct com

SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
GREEN TREE FINANCIAL
SERVING

e

C~LL TOD~V

1 &amp;OO.Ut-51'53
C v c Ceve opme n G oup
M I M um Tt Iii ~ ces

va d sa le OAV tlu 1&lt;1 ng 28 0 5 1
SA 7 August 2 3 4 s Some h ng
fo eve yonf!

NO DOWN PAYMENT
No Down Pa ymen Aeq u eel W
G ov e nme n1 Spon so ed Lo a n
Good C ad S ead~ ncom e Re
qu ad Ca Today Mo ~ no ma
1 on To O v a l y nd epeno e nce
M o tgade Se v ces 26 1 ~ a o
s o n La kew oo a OH 44 0 1
MB 1679 1021 eoo 84 5 o038

SERVICES
810

AKC pup s She 1 es sab e
s
b ue me e s M n Schnau ze 5
sat peppe Pome an an s b ad
&amp; b own $2 00 $35 0 c a 74 0
696 1085

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOF NG
Uncond t ana I e me gua antee
Loca efe ences lu n shed Es
ab sh&amp;CI 97 5 Ca 24 H s 740)
446 087 0
BOO 287 0576 Rog
e s Wae pool ng

doocrlbed
realCounty
eotateof
attuated
In tho
Metga and Stoll of Ohio
and In tho Village of
Middleport to wit
Bolng tote one hundred
olxty lour (164) and one
hundrad alxty llvo (185) In
Phillip Jonoo Addition to
uld VIllage oxcapt tho
following ducrlbod treat of
tend which w11 aold to MC
Hobart baing a part of lot
number ono hundred alxty
lour (184) bounded and
daacrlbad u follow•
Beginning at tho Southw01t
cornar of MC Hobart 1 lot

C&amp;C Ge 11e a
Hom e Ma n
ene nc e Pa n ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows bans
mob e nome epa and mo e Fa
ee est mfl e ca CM 740 992
6:323

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

hund lad alxly lour (184)
thonoa Eutarly olong the
North llno of uld lot
number one elxty four to

the Northwlll cornor of
MC Hobart 1 lot number
one hundred alxty three
(163) thence Southorly a
dlotanco of t 00 rut to the
place of beginning,
Sold Promisee Located at
532 Mill Stroot Middleport
Ohio 45760
Sold Premlooa Approlaod
at $8 000 00 and cannot be
oold lor looo than two thirds
of that amount

TERMS OF SALE 10% of

deed
Jamu M Souloby Sheriff
ol Melga County OH
Montee Copo (10067926)
Attorney lor Plaintiff
175 S Third Stroot Suite
G

75

mR.n/LPn

Hospital hu lR lmlledlalr optnlnd for a Pari

IB a new lease on

Norman needs anoth er maJOr to vahdate

hun as one of the be st Any \l ctOr) at thiS
stage m IllS career would cert ifY h1m as one
of the gr&lt;atest competitors
It all starts thiS week w1th The R eturn
of the Shark The Fm al EpiSode

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

The Daily
Sentinel

In Memory

~ ""'~

900

Columbuo Ohio 43215
(614) 2211-7272 Ext 144
(1) 25 (B) 2 6 JTC

,.,...~"

~fhd..t. ~
•p·uwt~­

- A&lt;UJul( 2 191?

SU4 ?lt4m( Z'!l
'UIIIetfoue
~-pu.,
~Sht/4&amp;
9'&lt;&lt;~•uMittt.e"

Shop at home...

Buy from the Classifieds!

Gtganttc Garage Sale
Levt s &amp; Guess
Lots of new ttems
Somethtng for everyone
Frt &amp; Sat Aug 4th &amp; 5th
7am-5pm
Ketth Otler Restdence
St At 325 Langsvtlle Oh

740 742 2076

'J

llntr/full llmt kn/LPn Prior Holle Hullh
txptrtlnct Is prrftrrtd Musthnt Ohio ud
West Vlrqlnla nurslnq llctnsr
af7 40·992·2104, r&amp;l

If

lnlrrrslrd

Big Buzztt

253.

.1------====~======-----.....J

1

110

Help Wanted

The BehiVIoral Health unn !Inner RenectJonll 1nt1
llllled Nulling FICIIIIV liiiFI It Vlllr&amp;ll MlmDrlll
HDIPIIII hive lmmldllll DPIIIIRDI llr Plrl Uml lAd
lUll Dill 1r Plr Dllm Rlllltlr&amp;d IIUrllll. UCIRIId
PncUCII 1111'111. 11111 Telted 111n1n1 llllltlnta.
aertltrlc 11111/0r Paycb. blllrtence prallmd.
ThDIIIntereltld JIIIIH COntect

HUMAN RESOURCES at
J4D·II2·21114. 111 20110 lrriRIIImlrviiWI.
110

~

It's The
Meigs- Oallia- Mason

Rn/LPn 6 STnft

number one hundred thcty

appraleed value down
remainder upon tender of

2 cefl oo m Porne oy SJOO p us
u ano aeo o s 740 992
u

he satd

Help Wanted

Holzcr Home Ctre of Velrrus Memorial

CASE NO 99 CV 109
ROBERT JAMES et at
DEFENDANTS
In purauonce of an Order
of Sate In the above entitled
action I will offer loraalo II
public auction at the
Courthouoo otepa In

thrao (183) ond running
Wutorly along the North
aida of Mill Street nino and
ona hall ( /o) loot to the and
of a certain otone wall
thonca North nlnatlln and
one/hall (18 /o) degrtea
Enl to lhl r01r or North

Dogh ous e made om o d o ak
whiskey ba e ca pe ed op om
ho se s r1 ng R. sh ng es $ 25
740 949 2853

RENTALS

C 2000 by NEA Inc

HOM~ HML

4

BATHS A C Sk t ng Cam p ete
Set Up P ce $ 9 866 Pay ments
$199 Mo WAC Ca Fo P e Ap
888 736 3332

NEW HOME OR HUNT NG

110

vs

~I mAugu~~e200~ol~~!~ n ~

SINGLEW OE 3 BEDROOMS 12

NEEDS A 0 e Sou he Oho
Ra ng r-19 F nm 4 Tn 47 Ac a
T ac s Ca Us Tod ay Fo FREE
MAPS And L s ng 0 A Tn s
Land
Anthony Land Company ltd
1 800.213 8385
www co~o~nl ytyme com

cent repatrcd

named County on 25th day plrue con lad lhr Home Hullh Coordlulor

Land Home Pa ckages AI A eas
A C ed A sks Oakwood Ga
po s 740 446 3093

NEEO LAND'?
We C u en y Ha ve Ove 80
T ac s 0 Lan d Reed y Fa Yo

Fmt came shoulder surgery after the 98
Masters followed by seven m o nths of
rehab and questions about whether he snll
had the deme Norman answered that
when he nearly won the 99 Masters and
probabl ) shou ld have won Ius tlurd DntiS h
O pen
This June after a humblmg 82 111 the sec
ond round of the US Open at Pebble
Beach Norman diScove red a torn labrum
m his nght h1p wh1 ch probablv ca used hiS
shoulder problems m th e fi rst place
Once the surgery IS done It s 100 per

Get yours
toaay...

thesa areas lntereeted In

end or lot number one

Tglemarke! IOQ

almost as often as he s been m contentiOn

with ad!

Pomeroy Ohio In the above

Redu c ed P c e
7 ~26
998
T a e L e Campe Used On y 5
T mes S Smells New Seeps 6
$10 300 Se ous lnqu es Ony
Pease 740 446 16 6 9 30 5 30
Daly 740 446 8580 Aile 5 30

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

locate hiS last PGA Tour VICtory -- the
World Sen es of Go lf at Flfestone H IS last
wm anywhere was the Holden lnterna
nonal m Australia on Feb 8 1998
Smce then he been m operaung rooms

SIGN

Public Notice

AMANA Wh l e 0 he s We e
Th nk ng AbOut Qua l y A manna
Wa s Se n ng T he Standa rds Fo
Heat ng An d Cool ng F ee Es
ma es 740 44 6 6308
800
29 0098

BUD GET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes woo d
0 ve f on $289 to $370 Wa k o
shop &amp; mov e s C a 740 44 6
2568 EQua Hous ng Oppo un y

Norman has to count ba ck three years to

YARD SALE

ohould be In attendance
(B)t23456789

All Steel Buildings
5011 00 70x 125 00x200
Up To 50% 01 Bes Of e
800.77~ 9694

New 14 W de $250 Down $ 49
Pe Month F ee A Fre e Sk
ng 1 888 928 3426

Will

FREE

Public Notice

Ia to dlacuaa flood
mltlgetlon grent funding

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

ROOMS SINGLE 16X60

I know when you play at that level
1ntumdauon IS a wondenul Silent tool to
use he sa1d I ve had 11 When I 111 up
agamst It 1t won t be a facto r
Now 1f he can on ly remcmbt::T h oV~. to "

a better an gl e then that s go t to be bevond a ce rta in po 1n t
sa ve yo u from a pretty h ar d c rash
Se\era l e n e rgy absorb1ng wa ll
h e sa 1d
You hav e to app la t d good t oo
sys
tem s al so have been sugge sted
Tnplett
sa
1d
NASCAR
wil
l
co
n
NAS C AR for tak1ng st eps hk e
nnue to l ook at more wa)S to to NASCAR
these
from Page Bl
But Tt~plc tt &gt;a1d A l o t of thw gs
Le t s face 1t 11 s no t h ow fa st In crease dnv er safe t y
Some dnvers hav e st ggeste d th e we vc been pre se nted wlth are still
two trag1c acCi dents but hope - you go a s h ow fast you sto p If
u
se
of a to e c lip to manuall y p ull a JU St 1d eas Tnere s noth1ng to sh ow
yo u can tut so1neth1ng at a s lowe r
fully so no more occ ur
speed tha t s got to be good If yo u stu ck thr ottle back bu t Tnp le tt h ow effec ti ve thc v are
Wlll ston Cu p d n ve r J e remy May
Were not 100 percent co n
sa 1d
There I S a po in t 111 tun e
f1eld sa 1d th e n ew r ul es mak e good h ave more tune when yo u r e hav
Vlll ce d wh at s avaJi able Tight now
1n g problems -- say you re a1m ed \\h e n a toe chp 1S no t effec tiv e
se n se
that we ve see n IS th e nght
Some
crew
dn
ef~
hJve
told
us
The) don t tah anyt h1n g av,ay at the wall or so meth1ng h kc that
trom t he ra ce c ars they don t - to co r rec t a httl e b1t then th s you co uldn t bnng 1t ba c k With a a n swer
aft e c t co mpetition but they can 1S a good th1n g Ev e n 1f you l11t at s I&lt; d ge h a mm cr \\ h e n 1t ge ts ,.--..,....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....

their home or business

Fo ec osu e Pay Back Pay men s
&amp; Move n 740 446 3570

lllJJOrs but Norman sees so me smula nues

hfe Th iS " gomg to make me more cxc1t
ed to go back and play
Wah a rebu 1lt shoulder and a repa1red
h1p Norman finally has a clean b11l of
health What he no longer has arc excuses
Norman doc sn t need the mon ey JUSt
the hardware
At stake IS hiS place m hiStory al though
h1s losses always seem to ou twe1gh hiS
gams N ot many have played at such a !ugh
level for such a lon g t1me
From 1976 to 1998 Norman \\On at
leasr one tournament every year bur !991
He has led the money hst on both Sides of
th e AtlantiC had the best sconng average
on the PGA Tour five nmcs and has w1dd
ed such mflu ence that th e game now has a
lucrative World Golf Champwnsh1p senes
He nught better be remembered for
wm mng the Saturday Slam m 1986 the
year he led all four nuj ors after the th1rd
round and walked off wltn only a Silver
claret JUg He IS th e o nly man to lose all
four maJors m a pla)off

NASCAR

Antiques

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandtse

was gomg to finiS h second Woods IS 21
years younger and has tWICe as many

I

99 7 4~4 Honda 400 250 Hou s
Exce en Cond on $4 000 740
245 5747

A&amp;O s U sed Fu n lure &amp; Ap
p anc es G eat Se ee l on P cad
To Se
Come And 8 owse
Co ner Of Rou e 7 &amp; Add son
P ke We Buy Fu n lu e 740
367 0280

530

Need We 1 And Sept c? No Dow n
Paym ent Requ ed Large Se ec
I on 01 Home s Ca 1 800 948
5678

0 Ac e Go I Ran ge 5 ooo Sq
Foo P o Sh op G ea Ca~; h Bu s
ne ss Mo e Ac eage Ava abe
740 245 574 7

ooo

4843

Fro m RSI'I t To Own low Down
Payment Low Month y Payment
Ca I 1 800 948-5678

Busmess and
Bu1ld1ngs

54

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

BATHS DOUBLE WIDE A C
Sk r ng Co mp e e Set Up Pay
men s $259 Mo WAC Ca Now
1 888 736 3332

340

e

m es Good Cond on 5 Speed
CO P aye (304 675 6643 o 675

740

28K52 Daub eW de $50 0 Down
Take ave paymen s 800 69
6777

3 Bed ooms 1 Bath
Ca Ga
age 3 4 Acre Ga po s Fer v
$75 000 Ca 1304 675 2415
Leave Message

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

TRANSPORTATION

1992 Mob e Home on 6 6 Aces
3 Bed oo ms 2 Baths Ga age &amp;
Barn All Fenced In Pond Ask ng
$45 000 740 379 2388

SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOMS 12

Household
Goods

1994 Chevy 4x4 manua 0 ack
$9000 OBO call 740-949 701
19911 Fo d Ranger extended ca b
4 wd sp ash 4 0 5 speed all opons 72000 m les nee $1 0500
740 742 2707

Hu ge nvento y 0 sco unt P ces
On V nyl Sk t ng Doo s W nd
ows An cho s Wa e Hea e s
P umb ng &amp; E ectr ca t Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pump s Benne s
Mob e Home Su pp y i'40 446
94 6 www o vb com/benne

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa she s dryers efr gerat o s
anges Skaggs Appl ances 76
V ne St eet Ca 740 446 7398
1 888 81 8 0128

New 3 BR 2 BA Ooub ew de
$300 Down $245 Pe Mon h
F ee De ve y 1 ~88 928 3426

Cape Coo W h Oh o Ave v ew
4 Bed oom s Fo rna LA Fo rna
OR £ Fu Ba hs Baseme n In
gro nd Pool Edge 0 Ga po s
$187 500 740 446 7928

Ga age sa e Thursday &amp; F day
4 h hOuse alte Naza ene Chu ch
n Chaste ots o k ds c othe s
ran or sh ne

1989 Oa~wood 14x7 0 n go od
cond I on on rented ot new heat
pump AI maJ Or appl an ces a
b g tan ce po ch &amp; ca port Ask
ng $14000 (304)675 7123

A\la tabl e 9 1s 1995 14)(72 2
Bedrooms 2 Ba hs Re ge a or
Stove Washe 0 ye Hook Up
La ge Fenced Back Ya d F ont &amp;
Ba~k Po en ve
N ce Exce ent
Cond on $400/Mo P us Uti es
740 256 93 82

New 16 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Down $245 pe Month Free
A r &amp; Sk
888 928 3426

Lo ca Co mpany see~ n g Data
En y C e k w lh knowle dge of
ba s c accoun n g p oced ure s
compu e sk s ol ce mach ne
elf c en cy &amp; en oys wok ng w th
oth er!!. SeM resume c o Po nl
Pl easant Re gs e ML 34 200
Man S eel PI Peasant WV
25550
Now Hr ng
AI pos o n s Ful &amp; Pa 1 me
ava ab e 401 K pad vaca ons
comp el! ve sla ng sata y Ap
n pe son a G no s n Pt
p
P easant

2 BA Mob e Home $300 mo nth
+ e erences &amp; $200 depos t n
New Haven ac ass tram New Ha
ven Sch oo (304) 882 2219 o
304 882 2219

Tar a TownhOuse Apar men s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms :2
Ftoo s CA
2 Ba h Fu ly Car
peted Adu 1 Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease Pu s Secu y Oepos t Re
Qu ed Days 740 446 348 t
Even ngs 7 40 367 0502 7 40
446 010

1i pie AAA Roofing

$OOPM NoEa~Saes

at oss I om Ches1er F re House

-:

1985 14x70 3 Bed oom s Good
Shape $10 500 Ca Aile 6 PM
740 367 713

210

Aug 3 • t st house past cl"lurch
o C l"le s1er bunk bed s tot s of
stull 9 4

1993 Mob e Home 2 Bed oo ms
1 Bath App ances W 0 Hook
Up large Va d 5 M es F om
Rod ney 4844 Co aM
Road
$350 Mo Plus De pas 1 And Ap
P cat on 6 14 433 9010 0 6 4

~~~~~~~~~~. , _94_6_3_30_7_______________

1974 2BA New cape no wa e
heate p umbmg po ch &amp; AC
S ove Relr ge alo On ren ed
IO (304)882 3232

Ga age Sa le Saturday Augu s t
Slh 116 Kneon 0 ve 900 AM

356 Wh 10 Road
Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

420 Mobtle Homes
lor Rent

Honest Dependable Lady Would
L he To Mow Your Law n Or Do
Odd Jobs L nda 740-440 7604

W II Haul Junk or Trash $35 a

~M

Th s newspaper w II not
know ng y accept
advert sements fo eal estate
wh ch s n v10 at on of the
law Our eaders a e hereby
n!Ofmed that at dwe 1ngs
advef1sed nthsnewspape
are eva able on en eque
opportunty bass

Doz
Eu e

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

A ck Pearso n Auc on Company

lui t me auct oneer camp e e
serv ce
L ce nsed
auc on
lt66 Oh o &amp; West V ~ n a 304
773-5785 Or 304 773 5447

6306 I 600 29 0096
JET
AEAATON MOTORS

1994 Chevy 4x4 manu a back

$9 000 OBO 740 949 1701

Mag c Chef m c owave oven $50
6 ya d sa e aD e $ 35 w h e
daybed sp ead &amp; sham s S 00
140 992 5694 or 740 992 3886

the Federal Fa HouSing Act
of 1968 wh ch makes i1 I ega
to advef1 se any preference
I m tat on or d scnm nat on
based on ace coo el g on
sex fam a status o nal anal
o gn o any nenton to
make any such p efe ence
m tat on or d scnm nat on

(Carems C ose To Home)
Ca Today 740 446-4367
1 800 2 4 0452
Reg il90 05 12748

load

'Rlursday To Saturday 9 A M

AI ea estate ad\lertis ng n
thiS newspape s subject to

Gallipolis Clreer College

Carpet &amp; Upholtlery Cleaning
Guaranteed Work W h Fabu ous
Result s! Fo a F ee Est mate
Ca 1304)675-4040 Tooav

II You Don Ca Us We Bo n
Lose Fee Est mates 740 446

Aepa ed New &amp; Rebu In Stock
Ca 1 Ron Evans
800 537 9528

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Wanted To Buy Used Mob le
Home s Cal 740446 0 17 5 0

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Now Tak ng App ca ons 35
Wes 2 Bed oom Tow nhouse
Apa men s
Inc ua es Water
Sewage T ash $325 Mo 740
446 0008

140

Lost Rewa d M xed Ma e Aetr ev
er Red w th 3 Wh te Paws Walks
W th A L mp On A ght Front Paw
L os t Between Kempe &amp; Wl"ll!e
Road On State A ou e 160 Ca I

740

COOLING EOU PMENT
INSTALLED

592 6651

304-453-2587

1986 Che\ly 350 3 4 To n Au
oma c A 4~4 $3 995 740 446
1021

JAN TROL HEATING AND

U RGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono s earn 535 o $45 lo 2 or 3
hours weekly Ca Se a Tee 740

74~816-ZZII

30 Announcements

540 Miscellaneous
f.'erchandise

..-.
'

-'

The Shark battles back from injury to face Father Time
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Southern Loca Schoo 0 s
t ct s accept ng appt cat ons lo
the pos t ons of E eme ntary Pr n
c pa H gh Schoo L brar an and
Voca nst umentat Mus c Teach
e lor tl"le 2000 0221 sehoo yea r
A.l app c ants mus poss ess tl"le
p oper cerlif cat on to these pos
Io n s PhOne 74 0 949 2669 fo
lu ther nto mat on These p os •
I ons w t be f eel ASAP Pease
send nqu res to Mr James L a
w ence Super ntendent Southern
Local Sc hoo s Box 76 Rae ne
Oh o 45771 SLSD sa n Equal
Oppor un ty Emplo~e r

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

~~~~~~--------------------~~~==~~------~--------~~~~~~J

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

]=Jt££ ••• 8££
Advertise In Classified

7 Days
Yes One Wee ki
4 Line Ad - 7 T1mes

Help Wanted

~ Pleasant Valley

v

Hospital

ro111r_ ~O.!'P!I! _

NURSING ASSISTANTS
CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS
Pleasant Valley Hospitals Home Health,
Hospice and Prtvate Duty areas are
accepting applications for

FULL·TIME I PART·TIME I PER DIEM
Excellent pay, flexible scheduling and
mileage reimbursement available For more
Informatlon contact Pleasant Valley Home
Care services 1011 Viand Street Pt
Pleasant, WV 25550 or call (304) 675·7400
Join our family of professionals to be the
resource for community health needs
AAJEOE

One Letter Per Box Allow Box for Space Between Words

' 11111111111 111 111111111111111
:Name._________________________________________________

Address._________________________________________
: City, State, Zip._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.:.__

1 Phone. ~---~~~~~~----------~----~--------•Return Coupon To FREE· BEE
Da1ly Sentmel
lll Court St Pomeroy, OH

_

(1~Q),~I-~!~8-

··rhe Bu! Buzz

~

•No Cancellaltons

•No Ahbrevtaltons Pie 1se
•Customer Can Renew Free

___F~ (7~0) 992·1187

In Meu!s·Gath~--M-a;o-n~· -

•
•

�'

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(

Wednesday, August 2, 2000 .

--

. . . '

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page B 5 •.

AAULLWE~v~of.onP~~~~----~----------~---------=======~====~======================~~~

'

"JI.h~ad in .S&lt;~rvicll"

SECURITY

" Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25·3·3 $3.25!20 lbs
16·8·8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
I
, legal papers, investment records, photo
cameras, household inventory and
lse1ntirnen1ta items will be safe.
For more information call

Call 740-985-3831
35537

BAUMLUMBER
ST. R,., 248

Pomeroy

St. Rt. 7 North

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

CHESTER

715 3 mo

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

Watk.ins
Products
'l40-949-302'l

continually looking for aggi'ISSM and
motlvat&amp;d PEOPlE to fill sal&amp;s positions.

Stop In And See
Steve R1ffle
Sales Representati,v e
...,..
Lar ry Schey

•

W&amp; haw thE BEst BEnEfits. BEst Pay
. and tiM 8§n family oriEnt&amp;d work
Envlronm&amp;nt In today·s automotivE
Industry!

•

(

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve
6129/mo.

Call or stop In and SH- Mik&amp; SErg&amp;nt
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and b&amp;gln a
rEWarding carEEr as an
Automotive Salts ProfEssional
TOOAYI

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

740 Bb'-GBBB

Mon. Frl8:3o. s:oo

(74o&gt; 742.:.8888
1-888-521-0916

A CRAFTY.
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAl and RESIDENTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

ALLtEl

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Great Rates- Great

SMITH'S
COHSTRLICTIOH
• New Homes • Remodeling

Call T&amp; R Logging
a fl e a· H:UIJ pm
74U-9\12-5050
(llandv)

South
2 NT

BARNEY

CONCRETE

Milard~

BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

Fully Insured.

Irion Morrbu/Riclnt, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

·•

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
YOu GAN yiAIT If YOu £.1t:f,

Plumbing· Electrical·
l&gt;ainting
Ray Milard ·
42994 Rt. 2, Carsey Rd
Albany, OH 45710
Phone 740·698·9400
Guaranteed Work
References Available

THE BORN LOSER

~\':&gt;N.l) "- SIU.Y GAllf_l

Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Great Prlcu on New Homes

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of pa intirtgLet me do it for yoll,
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

992·1101
7 24 1 mo

JINES'

d

POPLAR LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to

2 T', 18' long.

Your
.Concrete
Connection
Oyality Concrete Work

Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios
llALLIF'OLI15 OHIO 45831• CHESHIRE , OHIO

1-

p

. 'fr\1'1'1

• 'o
al
~emo"
'

&lt;;\lll'l'l9
• Gill'
" ~ll\9

$35/ton,

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

6/10 of mile north
of SR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

Free Estimates

Before 6 p.m. leave Message
Alter 6 pm· 740-985-4180

740/985-4465

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

GUARANTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(304) 882·2079

7161mopd

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

dumm\ ·s nmc

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

Wood and Masonzy
~

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
· Free Estimates
740-742-8015
Toll Fr e 877-35 ·7022

"We feature Valvoline Products"

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

401 5th Street

,1

BIG NATE
PLUS, SHE LIVES . LIGHT
.. YEARS /'o.WA'i ON PENAL
COLONY XR30q . SHE'S
/'o. LSO 1\ vAI1PtRE OH,

r

740•949·2700

7/22/TFN

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

PR~ ·

FE!&lt;.

TO

CAL L

HER A
"" GRAPH I C
NOVEL
HEI'.OINE"

- II

~;

•

$1895

PEANUTS

Mike Hill· Owner

ACES Ali:.E ~~6 ~ER THAN KtN65. RI6~T?
K INGS ARE ~~6~ER TI-tAN Q.UEEN5.
AND QUEENS ARE ~ ~6~ER TtlAN JOES

Hour:~~~-:~~~ M-F

------~m ~-------

r

IMPROVEMENT

Tired of st~ring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classifieds.

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

or one·mont
or as ow as
•

one

4 Tt11ue

kuer day for you in tlw soc ial

Thursday, August J, 2000
Communication Js the key element in the development of many
new contac.ts for you. both socially and professionall y. in th e yea r
ahead . They "II prove IU be producti ve and beneficial.
LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22) E•pec t
so metl1in g good lo happen today.
because you're on a roll where
your maJor hopes and goals can
be realized . There\ lots of justification for feeling fortunate .
Know where 10 look for roman ce
and yo11' ll find it. The AstraGraph Matchmaker instantly
reveals which signs are romanti·
cally perfect for you . Mail $2 .75
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 1758; Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY 10156.
VIRGO (Aug . 2.1-Sept . 22)
Try to wrap things up pertaining
10 a project that cou ld generate
financial returns. Today's aspects
are on your side, while postponem~nt cou ld b~ ynur nemesis .
Ll BRA ( s~pl. 2.&lt;-0ct. 231
There's a good chance that you
~:o uld tnt!!.!l soml.!on..: 111:w today
"ho wi ll introdu.;,· you and

SAG ITTARIUS !Nov. 2.1-Dcc
211 Today. if you lrcat everyone
with whom you' ll he involved as
specia l. ii' II add q_uil e a bil of
additional luster to your image
and help your popularity reach a
new hi gh point.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) Lady Luck could join up with
tenacity of purpose today and
together operate hand and glove.
The trick is for you to begin the
process, then the harder you work.
the luckier you'll get.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-hb 191
Somelhing good is in star~ for
you today that could come ahm11
through a pers011 you kn ow
socially. You could make a new
friend or full in iov~ .
Pl~CES (Fe h. 20- ~larch 21l 1
There might he a cri1i.·a l sh1ft in
conditions lhut could hcg in t"

nh.:lu&lt;..k yo u 111 :1 group you \ ' 1.!
h111\.!L.!J tn j~1in . It l'Ollld h L' a rl.'d -

develop, startin~ toda~ Ho\\L'\l'r.
lhcr ~~n !\&lt;;S WJII ail h.: I\ P I k i ll~ JJI

'

..

.-

.

lrr+-+-

-.,phere .

SCORPIO (0c·L J~ - No1 . 221
Lad y Luck is poised Ill do a hetle r .toh for yoLJ toda y I han you' re
apt to . ~o it might be a gu oU lirn e
lo !ct ~vents control and dict1te
you r cm1rse of ;JLI iun .

yo ur favor. not at:a in:-.1 ~\HI .

ARIES tMarl'll 21 -,\jml l'l1
CompCk·nt alli t:.., wil l ~o.' 1lllh..' tn
vo ur aid toda y wht.&gt;n th L' \ -.~..·~..· 'd ll

~tmggling w.it h sn md11 in ~ ; tH t
~l't' nl unahk tu do ;lltlllL' Ir ~ ll ll . I' L'

invo lved i.n an imporLtnl tlnd~,.· r~
takin g. a~~ f tll' hL'Ip. 1f I IL'L'l'\'; 11 ·}
1Apn l 2 1l - ~ l "'

TA URUS

211 1II

won ·t hL ~ impl ) lnd, th,ll lll'fp..,
vou ful fi II \ our ~,.· ' I K'L'l~ lll lll h ltld ~ l ~

~uncerning

ypu r L"t llllllll'rl'l,ll

maten ~ll an~ur-. _

wa, 1.1 lot of h.1rd
thi . . .

( 'll ; Jil L'L'"
\\tlrh.

.II'L'

11r
II

tl1 .11 kd up

to

GEM it\1 1 ~fa1 21-.l un,· :'II•
Be it ;1 11 ~..· n tL.·rpi t"L' \11' . 1 " t lL·I. Ji
gathJ.:ring in \\hiL'il ~t'll 11:1\L' .1
per~o nal h~md in d il l'L'Itll~ ltld; t: .
it Wlff

h d\l'

~ lll.'l.:~.· ......

L'\L'l'ffL•nt

umkr

L h .ilh..L'" \111

~~~ ur i.'~ ll'L'

Cc\i\'C ER !June· cl -.l uh ~:' 1
You ma\ ,1,1rt thL' d.1: ..,ftm 1:
m~a..,ur l t; '\.! and l.'; t k·ul~ll111 '~ L'.IL'h
.., t~p h..:l'(l r~,.· tah.111~ 11. hut tllll L' ~ nu
.

g1.'t :nur..,L·If ~t 1 in~. :nu l.'uul d
h~.·...: , , mc,:

an

anl:l/ tll!-!1!

lurk~ !' i ni ..,flL'r.

..

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..
..
.

WOlD
GAM I

\

' .
'.
..
' .

..-.·
'

LAUBBE

II
UGLIT

I

~~ 0 N N K

1:';

A quo te from a-f:3ni'tnfs comic .
'If you have no charity in your
I.
. 1
.
~heart. you have the worst k1nd of
1
'--..L......I-.1-....L.....J ~heart- - - - -- - "

r---,,.--..,,.5--.-,.--i'

fa-.. t and

I

ROPEYS

1-.....,r--..;I"""'TI;,.G-.I,,.:...I-I e

I

. ....J
1---l-.J.-.L._J..-L..

e

Como lele the chuckle quoted
'by f dl ing in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below

PRINT NUMBoRED l EfffRS I
IN THESE SQUARES "

~ UNSCRAMBLo LETToRS TO /
~ GET ANSWER
•

1

1

•

.

•

•
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Fabri~ - Na1ve- Gravy -Jagged-

GARBAGE

We had eaten so much lake out food that after a home
cooked meal my son arose from the table and promptly
threw a ch 1na plate in the GARBAGE.

wilh l hc &lt;~ L'L' , Ill' ... hould col-

IWEDNESDAY

lm rovement Needs

Help With Your

pul in his di :llnond kin g al trick
t11·o. \Vhelhe r declarer ducks or

Sentinel

Replacement Windows,

NewHaven WV

o nd Hand Hi gh. he wnuld have

To get a current weather
report, check the

.••

992-2772
For All Your Home

amuaernent
2 Glnoeng plant
3 San Jose
Sherko'org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and

present Each letter In lhe cipher stands for another.

Today's clue; F "''IJI!Is J

' CXLES

IWR,

FRUDO

MDPMMDZ,
'

MWZ

IDLZO

OLCPZD-

.,

Seamless Gultcrs &amp;
Duwnspou1, G;Hage room
additions, Pole Bui lding,
Garage Doors &amp; Opem:r,
Decks, BOat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insula! ion

king

drnppL·d umkr Jummy·-. ace .
South cl:timcd I I tricks.
Nolc• 1ha1 il only sa\es lhe
o\crt ri ck~ if Ea:--t decli nes to win
wil h IllS diamond queen. Yet if
West had onh l1earcl about Sec-

kct onl y one d1amond trick and
fall 10 ddeal.
This play 1sn't as absurd as it
looks. because if Sout h has the
diamond queen, Wesl's king is
doomed . And if East has queenthird .

."~'\:

Vin yl Siding, Roofing,

AftL·r w innin g

,l'cnnd di ~unonJ f i n ~ sse . When

w in ~

Racine , OH 45771

thock.IOihar oil hrend eioilobloi

1 Shout of

East
All pass

that su&lt;.:cet:'ded and rhe

Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical work done
011 Chailgelndudes lubo&amp; cllllu~lovok
Special

North
3 NT

wi th 1f1e qll c'en. Ea&lt;~ returned a
-.. pallc. hut J~,.· L· I arL'r wo n and took

843-5264

RACINE SERVICE CENTER

West
Pass

II looked beltcr 10 broach the
Jiamnnd . . uit. So . after wi nning
Irick one (a duck risks a club
switd1 1. So11lh led a diam ond to

I

Al'l!&gt; ONE MORE THING

FREE ESTIMATES

37 Slippery fish
38 "So be Ill"

hi s spark suit tn heal th e cont ract. .

~'((~I

i

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Reti rement.IJj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
1lfl/ivmtlnllll
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~....,. _ _•
.

Free Estimates

mark
33 1957·Ruoolan
oatelttte

thm We st wou ld eSiablis h and run

( RE.:':&gt;\

KOW C.Otf\L "'- ""'
BN..L.. TAA.T f\\TS
HI(. fOOl f'Ct.t. 1
\) C.Oi'l~\ 001(0
f"\R.?

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Local

Anawer to Prevloue Puzzle

31 Pronunciation

di ... t ribu tccl. th ere was a dan ger

....

Need It done, gl11e us a call

992·2753

rtJT NOIOl&gt;Y f\fe'~ GAN&lt;.f£.6.

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

FREE ESTIMATES

40 Kind of jerk?
41 " Pod" otart
1 Cheoed
42 Tropical
7 Mark (pepero)
dl-H
12 Hold t..t
44 Aloo
13 More Indigent 45 Harper Valley
14 T.S. Ello1'o
grp.
"The - Men" 46 -School of
15 tnfant'o toy
whaleo
18 " As far- - .,. 48 Antenna ·
know"
51 Pul-lzeo
17 "Eurekll"
55 Gratify
18 Harem room
56 Put Into 1
21 Ghostly
oecret
23 UK time
language
28 Plant holde•o 57 An Aotalre
28 Sub 58 Sloeplog(aecretly)
olckneoo fly
29 Sw111 river
30 Brown ohadeo
DOWN

36 Actor Foxx

Bv Pill LUI' ALDER
In Maxim 25. Ptahhotpe ·
cla1med. "One who is serious all
day wi ll never have a good time.
wl1ile one who is frivolous all day
wil l neve r ~stab li s h a house hold. "
in many bridge deals, each side
t1:ies to establ ish a suit, to turn low.
cards into winners. Although seri·
ous in hi s dforl to try to stop that
estab li shme nt . sometimes a
defender misses th e key play.
Agains t three no-trump, West
leads fourth -hi ghest from hi s
longest and strongest. What happens after that'
Declarer had eig ht tr icks in hi s
househo ld : lwo spades, four
heans. one diamond and one club.
He cou ld have frivolously hoped
fur a .1- .1 cl ub split. Yet eve n if th e
m i ssi n ~ clubs were so favorably

&amp; Associates

• Certllltd Ill Meigs &amp;
At~ns Couatles
'Located Easlern School
Dlstrld &amp; Tuppers Plains
Head Start
' CPR &amp; First Aid
'IS yrs. Experlenlt
Call Jackie 985-43~~
7/26 1 mo

MASONRY

•

ACROSS

Stop the switch

(740) 992-3831

JACKIES C~ CARE
• Openings oa aft shlhs

-,

Opening lead: • 6

Se·nJices

740-992-5232

.. 10 3 2
• Q8 6
.. K Q to 6

NEA...,.....
Crossword Puzzle

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

BuUdo•er &amp; Ba ckho~

Septic System• &amp;
Utilities

.. J 9 5

.. 9 8 ,
t K 7 2

__ _________--.

.. A 8 7 5

~aoftPAII

Hou"" &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

East

•QI0762

• A K 4
or A K Q J
• 5 3

HeJdlg

33795 Hiland Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio

West

South

/

P/B(ONTRACTOR~, IN(.

l1'S

•

8 3
7 6 4
AJi094
9 4 3

• J 2

nd1m"41i!(l{

1·800·311 ·3391

7 40-949-261 0
7 40-591-6304

I lim

6/21 /001 mo pd

9'«fintF ~ .Y~

Service
" You call we haul"

• Decks
• Roofing

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Dozer work.

• Verticals • \l'ood
• Minis • Etc

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

Racine, Ohio
FLAT-DUMP-LOG
SERVICE

f3E Th/IJ 6EE\&lt;.Y.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Now Renting

Standing timber lat·ge
or small track s. Tnp
1•rices paid also.

Frtt Estimates

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

B&amp;.T TRUCKING

WANTED

UPTO 70% OFF

L..IX.II..II..Ili.U' :!;8-,I,U;

Ask for Jim

9-n; MQI.lri, 1 WOR1&lt;Y 1001? l'OI&lt;TRAYAl OF
lilt 1.1\SFIT I&amp; ALMOST 1Co STRCMG .\1~
Dtf~tCULT 10 lltl\E~ii. At-NONE; COULl)

(740) 992·3470

.

r•~~•·l

..
..
t
..

'

Advertl•se ··n
th•s
I space for.
$1 00 per·
month.

stery. pus, Inc

Over 40 yrs experience

446·4995

INC.

0

Truck seats, car seats. headliners.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vlnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.

m ad e lo order at our
loca tion

BISSELL BUILDERS

Hauling • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt• Mukh •
Bulldozer Services

Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30' ·
Hours
7:00AM - 8 PM

~====~":,~:'11::mD:1mo::'·~M·~::::::::::::::~ ~
~~~~~~~r

144 Third Avt. GaUipohs

740-992-9636

• Garages .
• Siding

Dealers.

All vertical bliml• are

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
- Pick-up &amp; delivery - Tires &amp; Detail

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
• per ga")8
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starbural
Progressive top line.
Ll-. I 00-50 """"'"

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Rutland, Ohio

ThE Ohio VallEy's automotlv&amp; lEadEr Is

7118 1 ma pd

An Mabs Tractor &amp;

A &amp; D Auto Up

SALES

HILL'S
~WICK'S.
SELF.STORACE HfiCJLI"G and
29670 Baahan
Road
EXCfiVfiTittG

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

DIPOYSAG
PARft

PHILLIP
ALDER

_;__

NPOODG . '
TLZCWWE'O

WM
IWR

YZDLC
VPUU

ZWJDZCL

FWt
JD

LEG

OWZDUI

JULES,

WE

DEG .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : 'People stat1 perades - politician$ just gel out in
lront and act like they're leading.' - Dana Gillman Rinehart
C 200g try NEA. Inc.

2

AUGUST21

�'

Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(

Wednesday, August 2, 2000 .

--

. . . '

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page B 5 •.

AAULLWE~v~of.onP~~~~----~----------~---------=======~====~======================~~~

'

"JI.h~ad in .S&lt;~rvicll"

SECURITY

" Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25·3·3 $3.25!20 lbs
16·8·8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
I
, legal papers, investment records, photo
cameras, household inventory and
lse1ntirnen1ta items will be safe.
For more information call

Call 740-985-3831
35537

BAUMLUMBER
ST. R,., 248

Pomeroy

St. Rt. 7 North

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

CHESTER

715 3 mo

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

Watk.ins
Products
'l40-949-302'l

continually looking for aggi'ISSM and
motlvat&amp;d PEOPlE to fill sal&amp;s positions.

Stop In And See
Steve R1ffle
Sales Representati,v e
...,..
Lar ry Schey

•

W&amp; haw thE BEst BEnEfits. BEst Pay
. and tiM 8§n family oriEnt&amp;d work
Envlronm&amp;nt In today·s automotivE
Industry!

•

(

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve
6129/mo.

Call or stop In and SH- Mik&amp; SErg&amp;nt
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and b&amp;gln a
rEWarding carEEr as an
Automotive Salts ProfEssional
TOOAYI

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

740 Bb'-GBBB

Mon. Frl8:3o. s:oo

(74o&gt; 742.:.8888
1-888-521-0916

A CRAFTY.
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAl and RESIDENTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

ALLtEl

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Great Rates- Great

SMITH'S
COHSTRLICTIOH
• New Homes • Remodeling

Call T&amp; R Logging
a fl e a· H:UIJ pm
74U-9\12-5050
(llandv)

South
2 NT

BARNEY

CONCRETE

Milard~

BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

Fully Insured.

Irion Morrbu/Riclnt, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

·•

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
YOu GAN yiAIT If YOu £.1t:f,

Plumbing· Electrical·
l&gt;ainting
Ray Milard ·
42994 Rt. 2, Carsey Rd
Albany, OH 45710
Phone 740·698·9400
Guaranteed Work
References Available

THE BORN LOSER

~\':&gt;N.l) "- SIU.Y GAllf_l

Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Great Prlcu on New Homes

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of pa intirtgLet me do it for yoll,
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

992·1101
7 24 1 mo

JINES'

d

POPLAR LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to

2 T', 18' long.

Your
.Concrete
Connection
Oyality Concrete Work

Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios
llALLIF'OLI15 OHIO 45831• CHESHIRE , OHIO

1-

p

. 'fr\1'1'1

• 'o
al
~emo"
'

&lt;;\lll'l'l9
• Gill'
" ~ll\9

$35/ton,

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

6/10 of mile north
of SR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

Free Estimates

Before 6 p.m. leave Message
Alter 6 pm· 740-985-4180

740/985-4465

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

GUARANTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(304) 882·2079

7161mopd

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

dumm\ ·s nmc

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

Wood and Masonzy
~

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
· Free Estimates
740-742-8015
Toll Fr e 877-35 ·7022

"We feature Valvoline Products"

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

401 5th Street

,1

BIG NATE
PLUS, SHE LIVES . LIGHT
.. YEARS /'o.WA'i ON PENAL
COLONY XR30q . SHE'S
/'o. LSO 1\ vAI1PtRE OH,

r

740•949·2700

7/22/TFN

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

PR~ ·

FE!&lt;.

TO

CAL L

HER A
"" GRAPH I C
NOVEL
HEI'.OINE"

- II

~;

•

$1895

PEANUTS

Mike Hill· Owner

ACES Ali:.E ~~6 ~ER THAN KtN65. RI6~T?
K INGS ARE ~~6~ER TI-tAN Q.UEEN5.
AND QUEENS ARE ~ ~6~ER TtlAN JOES

Hour:~~~-:~~~ M-F

------~m ~-------

r

IMPROVEMENT

Tired of st~ring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classifieds.

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

or one·mont
or as ow as
•

one

4 Tt11ue

kuer day for you in tlw soc ial

Thursday, August J, 2000
Communication Js the key element in the development of many
new contac.ts for you. both socially and professionall y. in th e yea r
ahead . They "II prove IU be producti ve and beneficial.
LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22) E•pec t
so metl1in g good lo happen today.
because you're on a roll where
your maJor hopes and goals can
be realized . There\ lots of justification for feeling fortunate .
Know where 10 look for roman ce
and yo11' ll find it. The AstraGraph Matchmaker instantly
reveals which signs are romanti·
cally perfect for you . Mail $2 .75
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 1758; Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY 10156.
VIRGO (Aug . 2.1-Sept . 22)
Try to wrap things up pertaining
10 a project that cou ld generate
financial returns. Today's aspects
are on your side, while postponem~nt cou ld b~ ynur nemesis .
Ll BRA ( s~pl. 2.&lt;-0ct. 231
There's a good chance that you
~:o uld tnt!!.!l soml.!on..: 111:w today
"ho wi ll introdu.;,· you and

SAG ITTARIUS !Nov. 2.1-Dcc
211 Today. if you lrcat everyone
with whom you' ll he involved as
specia l. ii' II add q_uil e a bil of
additional luster to your image
and help your popularity reach a
new hi gh point.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) Lady Luck could join up with
tenacity of purpose today and
together operate hand and glove.
The trick is for you to begin the
process, then the harder you work.
the luckier you'll get.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-hb 191
Somelhing good is in star~ for
you today that could come ahm11
through a pers011 you kn ow
socially. You could make a new
friend or full in iov~ .
Pl~CES (Fe h. 20- ~larch 21l 1
There might he a cri1i.·a l sh1ft in
conditions lhut could hcg in t"

nh.:lu&lt;..k yo u 111 :1 group you \ ' 1.!
h111\.!L.!J tn j~1in . It l'Ollld h L' a rl.'d -

develop, startin~ toda~ Ho\\L'\l'r.
lhcr ~~n !\&lt;;S WJII ail h.: I\ P I k i ll~ JJI

'

..

.-

.

lrr+-+-

-.,phere .

SCORPIO (0c·L J~ - No1 . 221
Lad y Luck is poised Ill do a hetle r .toh for yoLJ toda y I han you' re
apt to . ~o it might be a gu oU lirn e
lo !ct ~vents control and dict1te
you r cm1rse of ;JLI iun .

yo ur favor. not at:a in:-.1 ~\HI .

ARIES tMarl'll 21 -,\jml l'l1
CompCk·nt alli t:.., wil l ~o.' 1lllh..' tn
vo ur aid toda y wht.&gt;n th L' \ -.~..·~..· 'd ll

~tmggling w.it h sn md11 in ~ ; tH t
~l't' nl unahk tu do ;lltlllL' Ir ~ ll ll . I' L'

invo lved i.n an imporLtnl tlnd~,.· r~
takin g. a~~ f tll' hL'Ip. 1f I IL'L'l'\'; 11 ·}
1Apn l 2 1l - ~ l "'

TA URUS

211 1II

won ·t hL ~ impl ) lnd, th,ll lll'fp..,
vou ful fi II \ our ~,.· ' I K'L'l~ lll lll h ltld ~ l ~

~uncerning

ypu r L"t llllllll'rl'l,ll

maten ~ll an~ur-. _

wa, 1.1 lot of h.1rd
thi . . .

( 'll ; Jil L'L'"
\\tlrh.

.II'L'

11r
II

tl1 .11 kd up

to

GEM it\1 1 ~fa1 21-.l un,· :'II•
Be it ;1 11 ~..· n tL.·rpi t"L' \11' . 1 " t lL·I. Ji
gathJ.:ring in \\hiL'il ~t'll 11:1\L' .1
per~o nal h~md in d il l'L'Itll~ ltld; t: .
it Wlff

h d\l'

~ lll.'l.:~.· ......

L'\L'l'ffL•nt

umkr

L h .ilh..L'" \111

~~~ ur i.'~ ll'L'

Cc\i\'C ER !June· cl -.l uh ~:' 1
You ma\ ,1,1rt thL' d.1: ..,ftm 1:
m~a..,ur l t; '\.! and l.'; t k·ul~ll111 '~ L'.IL'h
.., t~p h..:l'(l r~,.· tah.111~ 11. hut tllll L' ~ nu
.

g1.'t :nur..,L·If ~t 1 in~. :nu l.'uul d
h~.·...: , , mc,:

an

anl:l/ tll!-!1!

lurk~ !' i ni ..,flL'r.

..

.•
..
..
.

WOlD
GAM I

\

' .
'.
..
' .

..-.·
'

LAUBBE

II
UGLIT

I

~~ 0 N N K

1:';

A quo te from a-f:3ni'tnfs comic .
'If you have no charity in your
I.
. 1
.
~heart. you have the worst k1nd of
1
'--..L......I-.1-....L.....J ~heart- - - - -- - "

r---,,.--..,,.5--.-,.--i'

fa-.. t and

I

ROPEYS

1-.....,r--..;I"""'TI;,.G-.I,,.:...I-I e

I

. ....J
1---l-.J.-.L._J..-L..

e

Como lele the chuckle quoted
'by f dl ing in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below

PRINT NUMBoRED l EfffRS I
IN THESE SQUARES "

~ UNSCRAMBLo LETToRS TO /
~ GET ANSWER
•

1

1

•

.

•

•
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Fabri~ - Na1ve- Gravy -Jagged-

GARBAGE

We had eaten so much lake out food that after a home
cooked meal my son arose from the table and promptly
threw a ch 1na plate in the GARBAGE.

wilh l hc &lt;~ L'L' , Ill' ... hould col-

IWEDNESDAY

lm rovement Needs

Help With Your

pul in his di :llnond kin g al trick
t11·o. \Vhelhe r declarer ducks or

Sentinel

Replacement Windows,

NewHaven WV

o nd Hand Hi gh. he wnuld have

To get a current weather
report, check the

.••

992-2772
For All Your Home

amuaernent
2 Glnoeng plant
3 San Jose
Sherko'org.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and

present Each letter In lhe cipher stands for another.

Today's clue; F "''IJI!Is J

' CXLES

IWR,

FRUDO

MDPMMDZ,
'

MWZ

IDLZO

OLCPZD-

.,

Seamless Gultcrs &amp;
Duwnspou1, G;Hage room
additions, Pole Bui lding,
Garage Doors &amp; Opem:r,
Decks, BOat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insula! ion

king

drnppL·d umkr Jummy·-. ace .
South cl:timcd I I tricks.
Nolc• 1ha1 il only sa\es lhe
o\crt ri ck~ if Ea:--t decli nes to win
wil h IllS diamond queen. Yet if
West had onh l1earcl about Sec-

kct onl y one d1amond trick and
fall 10 ddeal.
This play 1sn't as absurd as it
looks. because if Sout h has the
diamond queen, Wesl's king is
doomed . And if East has queenthird .

."~'\:

Vin yl Siding, Roofing,

AftL·r w innin g

,l'cnnd di ~unonJ f i n ~ sse . When

w in ~

Racine , OH 45771

thock.IOihar oil hrend eioilobloi

1 Shout of

East
All pass

that su&lt;.:cet:'ded and rhe

Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical work done
011 Chailgelndudes lubo&amp; cllllu~lovok
Special

North
3 NT

wi th 1f1e qll c'en. Ea&lt;~ returned a
-.. pallc. hut J~,.· L· I arL'r wo n and took

843-5264

RACINE SERVICE CENTER

West
Pass

II looked beltcr 10 broach the
Jiamnnd . . uit. So . after wi nning
Irick one (a duck risks a club
switd1 1. So11lh led a diam ond to

I

Al'l!&gt; ONE MORE THING

FREE ESTIMATES

37 Slippery fish
38 "So be Ill"

hi s spark suit tn heal th e cont ract. .

~'((~I

i

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Reti rement.IJj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
1lfl/ivmtlnllll
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~....,. _ _•
.

Free Estimates

mark
33 1957·Ruoolan
oatelttte

thm We st wou ld eSiablis h and run

( RE.:':&gt;\

KOW C.Otf\L "'- ""'
BN..L.. TAA.T f\\TS
HI(. fOOl f'Ct.t. 1
\) C.Oi'l~\ 001(0
f"\R.?

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Local

Anawer to Prevloue Puzzle

31 Pronunciation

di ... t ribu tccl. th ere was a dan ger

....

Need It done, gl11e us a call

992·2753

rtJT NOIOl&gt;Y f\fe'~ GAN&lt;.f£.6.

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

FREE ESTIMATES

40 Kind of jerk?
41 " Pod" otart
1 Cheoed
42 Tropical
7 Mark (pepero)
dl-H
12 Hold t..t
44 Aloo
13 More Indigent 45 Harper Valley
14 T.S. Ello1'o
grp.
"The - Men" 46 -School of
15 tnfant'o toy
whaleo
18 " As far- - .,. 48 Antenna ·
know"
51 Pul-lzeo
17 "Eurekll"
55 Gratify
18 Harem room
56 Put Into 1
21 Ghostly
oecret
23 UK time
language
28 Plant holde•o 57 An Aotalre
28 Sub 58 Sloeplog(aecretly)
olckneoo fly
29 Sw111 river
30 Brown ohadeo
DOWN

36 Actor Foxx

Bv Pill LUI' ALDER
In Maxim 25. Ptahhotpe ·
cla1med. "One who is serious all
day wi ll never have a good time.
wl1ile one who is frivolous all day
wil l neve r ~stab li s h a house hold. "
in many bridge deals, each side
t1:ies to establ ish a suit, to turn low.
cards into winners. Although seri·
ous in hi s dforl to try to stop that
estab li shme nt . sometimes a
defender misses th e key play.
Agains t three no-trump, West
leads fourth -hi ghest from hi s
longest and strongest. What happens after that'
Declarer had eig ht tr icks in hi s
househo ld : lwo spades, four
heans. one diamond and one club.
He cou ld have frivolously hoped
fur a .1- .1 cl ub split. Yet eve n if th e
m i ssi n ~ clubs were so favorably

&amp; Associates

• Certllltd Ill Meigs &amp;
At~ns Couatles
'Located Easlern School
Dlstrld &amp; Tuppers Plains
Head Start
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AUGUST21

�Wednesday, August 2, 2000

Ohio

Page B 6 ·The Daily"Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
PRC) BASEBALL
National Lllag ue

Eaat Dlvllion

W L Pet.
.. 66 40 .623

Team
Atlanta
New York
Ftonda
Mont•eal
Ph1 lade!phta

GB

571 5 1/2
48 1
15
466 16 1/2
438 19 112

60 45

.51 55
.48 55
4659
Central Dlvl•lon

5848 547

St LOUIS
Cincinnati
Ch1cago
Ptllsburgh
Milwaukee
Houston

54 52
49 56

509

46 59
44 63

438 11 1/2

Ar1zona
Los Angeles
Colorado
San 0 1ego

46

sse
547

,

528

3

50

. 51 54 486 7 1/2
.. . .
48 5a -453
1l
Tu. .day'a Gamea
Colorado 2, Ch1cago Cubs 1
Pittsburgh 6, Los Angeles 0, first game
Los Angeles 5. P1ttsgurgh 3, second game
Montreal 4, St L.ou1s 0
Houston 4, Flonda 3

N.Y Mets 3, Cincinnatt 2
San Franc1sco 13, Milwaukee B

Atlanta 4, Arizona 2
San 01ego 1 o, Philadelphia 9, 10 1nnmgs
Todav'• Game•
C1ncrnnati (Dessens 5-0) vs. NY Mets (lelt·

ertt-o4). t 2·t opm
Los Angejes {Dreifon 7-7) at P1t1sburgh
(Stlva 7-4) 1 35 p m

San Francisco (Hernandez 10-7) at Milwaukee (Wnght 6-4) , 2:05pm.

Colorado (Rose 0-0) at Chicago Cubs
{Q uevedo 0-3), 2.20 p.m.
St LOUIS (Hentgen 9·8) at Montreal (John son 5-5) , 7·05 p. m
Houston (Miller 1·3) at Flor1da (Comehus 3·
5) 705 pm
Atlanta (Maddux 12·5) at Arizona ~Sch• lh ng
7·6), 10 05 p.m.
Philadelphia (Oaal 2-1 1) at San Diego
(Clement 9-10) 10.05 p.m
Thur8d1y'1 G1m11
Houston (Aey!Uds 7-8) at Florida (Sanchez

6-BI, 1 05 p.m.

••

Ch1cago Cubs (Wood 6-6) at San D1ego
(Tollber9 2·1). 5.05 o.m
Atlanta (Ashl:ly 7-7) at An zona (Anderson 8·
4). t005pm
P1ttsburgh (Cordova 6-7) at San Franc1sco
!OrtiZ 5-10), 10' 15 p m

East Division

W

Team
New York
Boston
Toronto .
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

...... ........ .57
54
.55
............. . .47
45

PRO SOCCER

18

.58 4S
56

6 ·7). 3·35 p m.
Detrort (Moetller 6· 7) at Anahe•m (Hill 5-6) .
405pm
Cleveland (Burba 10· 4) at Tampa Ba')l
{Rekar 4-6), 7OS 1&gt; m
Chr cago White So• (Ga rland 2·2) at Texas
(Helling 12· 7) , 835p.m
Boston (PMartmez 12·3) at Saanle (Ga11:aa
3·1J. 1005p m
Thu,.day'• Games
Te~eas (Rogers 10·8) at Toronto (F.Cas!llto 7·
5). 105 p m.
Kansas C1ty (Suzukr 5-61 at N Y. Yankees
(Clemens 9·6) , 7.05 p m
Clevetand (Bere 1-0} at Tampa Ba')l (Lopez
8 -7} , 7 t5 p m.

411 14 1/2

W•st Dlvl•ton

.. sa

8 1{2 1

377

.... 40 66

San Frarn:ISCO

4

467

L Pol

GB

44 564
49 524
4
53 .509 51/2

58 .448
12
433131{2
Centn1l Division
Chicago .................... . .65 41 613
Clevelancl
52 51 · 505 11 1/2
. ....49 56 467 151/2
Detroit .
.. 47 "'58 446 171{2
Kansas C1ty
M1nnesota
.
48 61 440181 /2
Weal Division
62 44 585
Seattle
.59 47 557
3
Oakland
57 51 528
Anahem1
6
50 54 481
11
Te•as
Tuesday's Games
· Dakland 3, Toronto 1, 10 1nmngs
N Y Yankees 5, Kansas Cit')l 4
Tampa Bay 6. Cleveland 5
C h1cago White Sox: 4, Te•as 3
Baltimore 10 Minnesota 0
Detrort 6, Anaheim 3
Sea"le 5, Boston 4 , 19mmngs
Today•s Games
Kansas C1ly (Stem 1-3) at N.Y Yankees
(Neagle 2·0), 12'05 p m
Minnesota (Radke 7-11) at Balt rmore (Aapp
6·7) , 3:05pm
Toronto (Carpenter 7· 10J ar Dakland (Mulder

59

Malor League Soccer

[ PRO FOOI.BALL
NFL Preseason
Friday's Games
New England at Detroit, 7 p m .
C1ncrnnat1 at Buffalo, 7 30 p m
washrngton at Tampa Bay 7 30 p m
Jacksonville at Carol rna. 8 p m
New Yor k Jets at Green Bay, B p m
Saturday 's Games
Mtam1at Pittsburgh 7 30 p m
Chteago at New York G1ants, B p m
lncl•anapo11s at Seanle, 8 p m
Kansa s Cny at Tennessee. 8 p m
New Orleans at M1nnesota, 8 p m
Oakland a t Sl LOUIS, 8 p m
Philad elphia at 8alt1 more. 8 p m
San .9rego at San Francrsco 9 p m
Atlanta vs Oallas at Tokyo 10 p m
Denver at Anzona , 10 p m

Eaatem Olvlak)n

W L
7

Team
NY·NJ
New England
M1am1

13

T P\s GF .GA
2 41 39 29

. 995323536

.7 11 5 26 32 41
5 13 6 21 34 48
DC
Central Olvlslon
Tampa Ba')l
12 9 2 38 44 33
10 8 5 35 46 39
Chicago . . .
9 11 4 31 36 41
Columbus .....
Dallas
9 11 4 31 40 40
Western Division
Kansas C1ty ..
12 5 5 41 33 11
Los Angeles
. 10 7 7 37 34 30
Colorado .....
. .. 10 10 3 33 30 42
San Jose
5 10 8 23 27 34
NOTE Th1ee pornts for a win and one p01nt
tor aM
Today'• Gam••
Dallas at New England, 7.30 p.rn
Ch1cago at Tampa Ba')l, 7 30 p m
New York-New Jersey at DC United , 7 30
p.m
Colorado at Kansas City, 8:30p m
Columbus at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Saturday'• G1m1s
Los Angeles at Kansas City. 4.30 p m.
Columbus at New England, 7 p.m
Dallas at Tampa Ba')l, 7 p m
DC Unrted at M1am 1, 7 30 p.m
San Jose at Colorado , 9 p m
Sunday'• Game
New York-New Jersey at Chicago, 4 p.m

PRO HOOPS
Women's National Basketball Association
Eastern Conference
Team
W L Pet.
x-New York
18 10 643
Cleveland ...
. ... 15 12 .556
Orlando .....
...... 14 14 .500
DetrOit
12 15 444
Washington.
.. .. 11 t6 407
Mram• ...
. ...... 10 18 357
lnd18na
....
. ... 7 20 259
Charlotte . . ...... . ....... 7 21 250
Weat«n Conre~nc•
)(-Los Angeles
. 25
3 893
•-Houston
.... .. 23
5 821
Phoenr:IC
.1B 10 6430
Sacramento
18 10 643
.. ... 15 12 555
Utah .
Mrnnesota
. 13 14 481
Portland
.10 18 357
Seanle .
. 5 23 .179
II(·CIIrK:hed playoH spot
Tuesday'• Gamea
Houston 68, Washrngton 60
Phoen•x 84, Orlando 71
Portland 54, M1am1 50
Seattle 66, lnd!ana 60
Todly'a Games
Los Angeles at Detroit, 7 30 p m.
Utah at Mrnnesota, 8 p.m
Mlam1a 1Sacramento, 10 p m
Thuraday'a Games
Wash\ngton atlndrana, 7 p m
Utah at Clevela nd, 7 p m
Seattle at PhoenUI, 10 p m.

GB
2112
4
5 1/2
6 1/2
8
10 1/2

11
2
7
7
91(2
11 1/2
15
20

TRANSAC'IONS
BASEBALL
American League
ANAHEIM ANGELS- Placed AHP AI
Levme on the 15-day d•sabled li s! Recalled
AHP Matt W1se !rom Edmonton ol the PCL
BALTIMORE OA I OLES ~ Aecalled AHP
Jason Johnson l!om Rocheste r ol the lnterna·
t1onal League
BOSTON RED SOX ~ Piaced INF Jose
Offerman on the 15·day drsabled list Recalled
1B·DH Morgan Burkhart from Pawtucket ot the
International League
CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Placed AHP
Sean Lowe on the 15-day d1 sabled list,
re1roact1ve to July 29
CLEVELAND INDIANS- Agreed to terms
w1th LHP Brran Tallet and assrgned h1m to
Mahonrng Va lley of the New York-Penn
League.
DETROIT TIGERS- Tran sferred INF Gregg
Jeffer•es from the 15- to the 60-da')l d1snbled
list Purchas ed the contract of RHP Adam
Bernero from Toledo ol the lnternat1onal
league Op tiOned AHP Efli&lt;.HIIJUS to Toledo
MINNESOTA TWINS ~ Act111a1ed C Dan
Ardo1 n Desrgnated C Marcus Jensen lor
ass1gnment
OAKLAND ATHLETICS~ Piaced 38 Olmedo Saenz on the 15-day disabled Irs! Recalled
28 Jose Ortrz from Sacramento of the PCL
SEATILE MARINERS-Recalled AHP G1t
Meche from Tacoma of the PCL and placed
h1m on the 15-day drsabled lrst. ratroact1va to
July 31 Act1vated RHP Bnan Sweeney and
transferred h1m from Tacoma to New Haven of
the Eastern Lea gue
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS- Placed 3B
V1nnv Cast111a on the 15-day disab led list,
retroact•ve to Jul')l 30 Called up 38 Aubrey
Huff and RHP Billy Taylor from Durh am of the
International League . Recalled LHP Mrke
Duvall from Durham
TEXAS RANGERS--Pla ced LHP Darren
Ol1ver on the 15-da')l disabled list. retroactive to
July 31 . Recalled RHP Jonathan Johnson from
Oi&lt;lahoma of the PCL Announced the resignation of Ct1uck McMichael. d1rector ol scout1ng ,
effec llve Aug 31
TORONTO BLUE JAY S--Placed 28 Homer
Bush on the 15-day diSabled tr st
National League
ARIZONA DIAM.OND8ACKS- Oplloned tB
Erub1al Durazo to Tucson ot the PCL Recalled
OF Jason Cont1 from Tu cson
FLORIDA MARLIN S- Named R1cK Williams
d1rector ol player development and Rob Lea1y
maJor league advance scout
HOUSTON ASTROS--Purchased the contract ol C Raul Chavez lrom New Orlea ns of
the PCL
MONTREAL EXPOS--Optroned OF Milton
Bradley to Oltawa of the International League
PITISBURGH PIRATES-Agreed lo terms
wrth INF Mrke Ben1am1n on a two -year contract
eKtens1on Activated SS Ennque W1l son tr om
the t 5-day drsabled l1st.
SAN DIEGO PAORE &amp;-Aecalled OF M1ke

Buc~eyes open 2000-01
CO LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ·
At lea&gt;&lt; 'I I teams that played m
tllls year's NCAA tournament
and three tlut played in th.e postseason Nattonal lnvrtatwn Tournament ht gh!Jgh.t Oh.JO State's
11\&lt;'n s
ba sketball
sc hedule.
rcle:r-.ed Tuesday.
The Bu ckeyes will play two
cxhtbt[ion games, then open the
regu lar seaso n at home agamst
Yak o n Nov. 17 before traveling
to An cho rage, Alaska, for the
21!00 Alask.I Sh.ootout Nov 22 o-

_,,

The Shootout tl eld will
Jnt:lll(.k• Dl'Paul. F\o ru.h State,
Mi sso un. Rh ode lsbnd. Syracuse·, Valpmtso ond h. ost Ab ska -

An cho ragc.
Ohio Stote wdl play host to
M.t ssJ dHis(,.'tts on De c. I 0, St.
John'&lt; O il Ike 13 and Kansas on

Dec. 23 to htghlight the no nconference home sc hedu le.
The Bu ckeyes will travel to
Alabama on Feb. 17 for a nattonally-tclevtsed co ntest wi th. the
Cr imson Ttde.
The Big Ten season gets under
way Jan . 3 at home agam st
Northwestern.
Four of the Buckeyes' tlrst five
B1g Ten games w1ll be at ho me ,
but they wtll be on the ro;&gt;d fm
six of their las t e ight regular-sc·ason games .
M1chigan Sta te and Oh1o St.Ite,
the co-c hamp10n s of th e B1g Ten
last year. wtll meet twt ce in seven
days 111 January Ol11o St ate will
play Iowa, lnd1 ana. Purdue and
M1chiga n once and the otfwr
conference teams tw tce.
The Bu c kevl'S hJ.vc o ne
re maimn g dat&lt;' to fill ami ar&lt;'

Darr from Las Vegas of the PCL
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Aaaocl..lon
BOStON CELTICS- S1gned C Mark
Blount
CHICAGO BULLS--Agreed to terms With G
Ron Mercer
DALLAS
MAVERICKS- Re-signed
G
Hubert Dav1s and F Gary Trent.
DENVER NUGGET$- Ae·stgnecl G Tanq
Abdui-Wahad and F Ryan Bowen
INDIANA PACERS- Ae-stgned F-C Sam
Pe1kms to a one· year contract
MIAMI HEAT - Acqu.red G Eddie Jones, F
Anthony Mason, G Ricky Davis and G-F Dale
Ell1s from the Charlotte Hornets lor F PJ
Brown, G Jamal Mashburn, F!C Otts Thorpe, G
Ttm James and G Rod ney Buford Ae·Signed
G Anthony Carter to a one-year contract .
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Re-signed F Ttm
Thomas to a multiyear contract
NEW JERSEY NETS-Named Sidney Levv
d1rector of marketing
NEW YORK KNICKS- Ae·s.gned F Kurt
Thomas
PHOENIX SUNS--Agreed to terms with G
Tony Dt:~lk Named Aaron Nelson head athletiC
tra1ner
SACRAMENTO KINGS- Re-atgned F·C
Scot Pollard to a mult1year contract Stg ned G
Bobb')l Jackson to a mu111year contract
FOOTBALL
Natlon•l Footblll LHgue
BALTI MORE AAVENS-Agreeo to terms
with WA Trav1s Taylor on a f1ve -year contract
CAROLINA PANTHERS--Released G Greg
Brown and OT Jim Stull. Signed C Clay Shiver
and G Aol:l Bohlinger.
DALLAS COWBOYS-Signed OLJ .A Con·
fad and OG Steve ScrfreS Placed TE Mike
Lucky and S Sean Key on mj ured reserve.
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Signed DB Jere·
my Lrncoln and QB Marcus Crandetl
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS--Released OT
Noel Scarlett and LB Tony Ortiz.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Piaced AB
Destry Wright on Injured reserve. Signed RB
Pepe Pearson
ST LOUIS RAMS-Signed P lOUIS Agu1ar
to a one-vear contract Released K Jeff Hall
and G Antome McNutt.
HOCKEY
National Hockey L.ugu•
BUFFALO SABRES-Re-signed 0 Jason
Woolley to a one-year contract.
CALGARY FLAMES- Named Don Hay
coa ch
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Signe d F
Bates Battaglia. F Sandy McCerthy, 0 Steve
Halko, C Byron R1tCt11e, C Greg Koehler and
AW Shane W1111s Agreed to tef'ms with LW
Bnan Felsner and D Jon Rohloff.
CO LUMBU S BLUE JACKETS-Agreed to
terms wrth F Krzysztof Oliwa on a two-year
contract Signed F Steve Heinze, F Geoff
Sander&amp;an and F Matt David50n.
FLORIDA PANTHERS- Stgn&amp;d RW Oav1d
Emma and 0 Michel Per1ard
MINNESOTA WILD-Agreed to terms with
G Zach 81erk and 0 F1hp Kuba Announced
Todd Mclellan was named coach of C leveland
of the IHL
MONTREAL CANADIENS - Agreed to
terms with F Brran Savage on a one-yea r contract .
NASHVILLE PREDATOR S--Agreed tb
terms With F M1ke W&lt;:~tt
OTIAWA SENATORS--Named Roger Ne.l·
so n asststanl coach Agreed to terms w1th F
Magnus ANedson, D Chrrs Phillips D Shane
Hn1dy, FfN Ivan Ciermk and C John Emmons
on one-year cont racts
PHOENIX COYOTES-Stgned D Jushn
HOCking to a one-yea r contract Announced
NOfm Mac1ver was named assistan1 coach for
Spnngl1eld of the AHL
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF$-Ae·Signed F
Jonas Hoglund F Yamc Perreaul t ancl F Alyn
McCauley to one·year contracts Named Mur·
rav OirYer scout
VANCOUVER CANUCKS- Named Mike
Golub senror vrce pres1dent ol bustness opera tions

Details, A3
'.,.,...
d'

Meigs County's

#40021
XLT, V6, A/C, 3000 miles

1999 FORD
F-150 4X4
#39080
Auto, V6, XLT

1999 FORD
RANGER 4X4
#38811
XLT, V6, A!C, 22,000 miles

1999 DODGE
DURANGO SLT

slate again5t Yale

Buckeye Basketball 2000-01 p Ill .
N ov 7, One W orl d , K p.m.
Jan . 24, atWJSconsin. 8 p.m.
(exh ibition )
Jan 27. M1 ch1 gan Sta te. 3: 15
Nov. 13. Maratho n. H p.m. pIlL
(ex lu b1t10n )
J:in. 3 1, Indiana. 8 p.m.
Nov. 17,Y.lle , K p 111.
Fe b. 3, at Mmnesota, 8 p.m.
Nov. 22 - ~5. Alask.1 Shuo lu ut
Feb. 7, at Iowa , S p m .
(T BA), An c hor.1~e. Ala sb.
Feb. 10. Wisconsin. 12. IS p.m.
Dec 7, Denvt'r, X p 111
Feb. 14. at Purdu e. 6 p.m.
Dec l 0. Ma ssac hu -.l·th, 5 p 111.
Feb. 17, at Abbama, 3·30 p.m
D ec. 13. St.John'&lt;. &lt;) p.m
Feb. 22, lllmm s, 7 p.m.
D ec 1(), M on: h L·.td Sr:Hc.:. K
Feb. 24, .It Northwestern. 8
p 11 1.
p.m.
Dec. 20. Robert Mo1 m, S
Mar 3. at Penn State, 12·15
p Ill.
p.m.
IJcL ~3. Kansas, 4 p.m .
M arch K- 11 at Btg Ten To urDeL .'\!l, Copptn St.lll', NtHJ I L
tJ.uncnt , Ch H ago

1998 FORD
F-150 SC 4X4
#39430
Auto, 5.4 VB, XLT, Bright HerD&lt;;

from Page 81
I h~..·

dt'fh tJng scth .t( k ro .1 tc,nn .1lrcady lunncd by
llljllfle &lt;; , lllL'Xpt"rJellLl' and a holdlllJU r \' \\.'J". .1

nut
~&lt; ntt. ~:-.~. h ct. mll' the l:kngals'
r~,.·c c!n:r w h en
du~y

k.i dtll ).!:

rt'IL·.l~t·d

C:.tr! P1 ckcns

JUSt

bl.' fon:

the ~Llt t ot' tr.t llll!lf; cam p Scott
lud r, H t,:.ltlht·s for 1,( J22 yards last

yea r..1nd h.1s 32'J n.:cep t10ns for
i. l5 h y.mb m .;; Jx seasons.
P1 ckem. the Dengal s'. al l-tun e
k ader 111 rcc~pnom Jnd rece1vmg
tn ut hdo\\ 11\ -. Igned wah the Tcnn~..·~~t.·.._· l tum la st \h·c k.
fh c re.m 1'&lt;; top f!v e re nu mmg
l't'CL'JVl'f~ -

b\·

rook1e&lt;;j Peter War-

nc k and Ron Du g:t n.;,,

~ec nnd ­

year players Crai~; Yeast and
LJamon Gntlin and tOurth - year
pbyer James Ht111do n - have a
total of 43 NFL c atLhe~ amon g

rht:m
Second-year quarrnb.1c k Ak.ih
Smi th IS stilllearnm g and runmn g
back Corey Dillon is h o ldtng o ut
t n a co ntrac t di spute, kavmg
unprove n backup.;, ;It that pmltlon
J\ \ve il .
The lk·ngals vvnc coun un g on
a b1g year fro m Scot t
'"The team was real shook up
atier the practtce," Smith sa td . "It
brought tears to my eyes because
he's a btg part of our offense, a
rea l btg part .
''He's one of th e be~t ren·Iver'i
111 the league and th&lt;· No. 1
receiver 0 11 our ll'atn . o.;o o.; ome-

Browns

as he dtd from ft· ar o f an t"ye
1nj ury Hi s father wa1 bltnded

from Page 81

The
!l.'ag u~..·
~ u ~ p~.-· tH~ed
Urown Jnd dl nncly bu r lt fu..·d
th e pt: n.l lt y 111 btl· FL"h r u.lfy.

~~~'~'Of\

B ro\\11

-.ho,.e d H.'krtc Jeff

rnp )~.-·ttc to

the gTO itl1d .lftl'r
ht: \\.1~ hu \\'Jt h the fla g. \V ht c h
\\,1, \\l'Jglt!t·tl '" Hit Bl h
I hL· ltJI'IIt.lll ~. 11d ht ~ .H ted

by

g lau CO III&lt;I

Tflplt.·rte h.1 ~ not hn· n

ll t' ~.

1996 FORD
RANGER 4x4
#39233

Hund on was stunned wht'n he
s;i\v Sq.H I on the gro und.
" We thought he was just playmg around and wou ld get right
b:~c k up ." Hundon sa id . " But '
w hen he b id down and rolled
ovt.· r t o h1 s std~,.·, we knew it was
p rcrry scrto us_"
W;1rr1 ck . Scott's roommate, was
\Vith i11111 wh~..·n the- trainers told
him th e lL•g \V;'!S broken.
·· 1 :-..1w htm put hi s head down
;md 1t Jlmost brought tears to my
Scott hMi bel'll cxpt'L t L'd H) ey&lt;'&lt;." Warri ck sa1d "I hate to see
start on one '&gt; ilk with WJ.1 n ( k. &lt;I that happen to anybody.
ti rs t- ro und draft p1ck o u t o t·
" I k was somebody that I was
Fl o rlCb SUtL', o n th t• o th l't
I~..·.I rmng ffo m day m and day out:
Coskt &lt;.ll ci Yc.tst, G1 ttlin ,IJld 1 as far .ts runnmg my routes and
Hundon wil l compck tC1 r Scott \
co mtn~ otr the ball. We'll pray for
-.tr~.rtmg &gt;.po l. \\lt th YL'.l \t -.t.IJflng
hnn and hopt· that everythtng
Fnda y'o.; pn..',l'.l,on opL'IlL' r 111 Buf- wi ll work out."
tolo

\h o\\!11 ~l)!. ll l'd .1 ~IX-)l" .H ,
lw!~1n · !.t ~ 1 ,,., t ~ n ll

•

•

#A04662
Auto, V6, A/C, XLT,
49,000 miles

Please see Fair, Page Al

$27

l l lll\ f.lt

Dr~il v

:-;, uriu cl • Suhsr,-ilrc !Jida)'!
'N2-2 15r,

nts
house

403
•

IDS

•

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~

'

putt Wednesday afternoon on the greens at Pine I Golf Course in Me igs County. Balmy weather present·
ed a great opportunity for golfers to venture out to the course and get in a few rounds. (Tony M. Leach photo)

MINERSVILLE A 42year-old Min ersvill e man ts m
Jail following execution of a
search warra nt and the discovery
of hundreds of marijuana plants
at hts home.
The home of Michael Norton
was searched during the county"s annu al eradication effort,
whic h got under way Wednesday.
Offi cers fn the air reportedly
saw a number of six-foot h1gh
plants surrounding Norton's
house. and paths leading from
th e hou se to the manjuana
patch, accordmg to Prosecutin.g
Attorney John Le nte&gt;.
Each year in August, Meigs
County sheriff"s depun es, and
agents of the Major Crimes Task
force and the &lt;¥tio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation, conduct
a co un ty-w1de effort to eradicate m arijuana seen from helicopters.
Often, arrests are not posstble
because plant!! found on private
land cannot be duectly tied to
landowners or res1dems, Lent es
said.
On'ce inside th e Norton
home , Lentes said, officers
reportedly found 403 marijuana
plants.
Evidence suggests Norton was
allegedly operating what Lentes
descr ibed as an "indoor growing
operation"": indoor growmg

hghts. prs of labeled seeds', and
loose marijuana and packages of
marijuana ready for sale ·and disrnbution.
Deputies also
reportedly
found an AKS firearm and a
loaded 30-round clip in a freezer in Norton 's house .
"When deputies approached
the house , they heard runnmg
footsteps and the sound of a
freezer door slam," Lentes said .
"Norton later said that he had
actually contemplated shooting
the officers and agents and then
hunself.'"
The c harge of traffick.ing in
manJuana carries a firearm
specification,
Lentes
satd,
because of Norton's alleged
intent to fire the gun. Local offictals have referred the case to
the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency and the U.S . Attorney's
office.
" Because of t he large number
of plants, his all eged plans to ftre
at officers and his believed
mtent to distribute the maryuarla. the feds have been conracred," Lentt's said.
If the DEA does not go forward with the prosecution of
the case agai nst Norton, Lentes
sa1d, additional local charges will
be ftled .
No other arrests have been
reported sm ce the eradication
began, although a number of
plant s from throughout the
co unry have been seiz ed .

Bloodmobile to.visit Pomeroy 4-H members hold Livestock
Red Cross continues call
for blood donors
FROM STAFF REPORTS

I'OM EltOY - Th e Americ.m Red
Cross Blnodmuhile will be vi~it ing
Pom eroy on Aug. 1(J seeking blood
donors as tht.: lge n cy works tt)ward
replem shmg lowere d mvcntorics pnor to
the Labor Day hohday.
The bloodmobile w ill be at the Meil&gt;'
Semor Cen t er, Mu lberry Heights 111
Pomeroy, from 1-6 p.m.
To give blood, indi viduals must be at
least 17 years of age or older. weigh at le ast
IOS pounds and be m good health .
An tmhvtd ual can genera 11 y don .n e
blood evl'ry 56 J ays, smi Ted M.tzza .

semor d irec tor, donor ser vices, Greater
Allcghemes Region. Red C ross Blood
Services.
H e dcscnbed the local blood muatton
has improved signitlcantly in recen t
weeks. but said that across the country a
critical sh ortage mil exiSts for several
blood types, especially types 0 positive
and 0 negative.
National R ed Cross bl ood inventory
has rc mam ed below the cntJcal supply
level of 511,1 11111 umts nf donated blood as
of the end of Jul y, .Jccording to Mazza.
"Scver;1l rcg10ns sull have less than a
day 's mpply of these blood types." ' said
Mazza . ''We try and mamtain at least thre e
days' supply.'"
" The most commonly transfused blood

Please see Blood. Page A3

Learning·Laboratory/Skillathon
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RUTLAND About 215 Me1gs
Coun ty 4 - H members participated in a
livesto ck learmng lab oratory /skillathon.
held recently at the Rutland Civic Center
fo r beef. she ep, swme, dairy, poultry, rabbit,
goat and horse projects.
Ohio State University Extension spec~aliSts, along with 4- H and Jumor Fair
advisors provided the educational base for
the event whtch m ade learning and
knowledge assessment fun.
The livestock lea rnm g laboratory
kits/skill at hons are designed as a series of
nine learning stati ons, each wtth a fa cthtator. Participants rotated from statmn t o
station attempting to perform specific

hvestock related tasks.
· The station facilitator allowed the parti cipants to test t heir own project knowledge and abilities. The techmque IS
referred co as expe riential learnin g or
"learmn g by doin g.'"
The objectives of skillathon s are to
enh ance knowledge of the hvestock
mdustry ; prov1de a fun , hand s-on method
of evaluating a. member's project, knowledge and abtlities; help youth feel more
comfortable commumcati ng with an
adult; gam self-confidence and skills in
one- on-one communication ; develop
responsibility for project completion;

Summer building p~ojects on schedule at Southem
Bv ToNY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - Construction 1s
11 car rn g completion on vanous
butlchng renovation s and addt tions at South.crn High School.
.u1d das11es an: set to begin on
~e heduk Aug . 28.

Rcnov.ltw ns

to

rhc

htgh

sc hool, w hiCh opened m 1961 ,
wll! up~:tr,li.k ex tstmg classrooms
and create several n ew class-

Eagles, Marauders, Tornadoes....
we've got you covered!!
"11/('

ff l'l' . l gL' IIl

1995 FORD
RANGER 4X4

" Thcir.here's the one abou t
Fland1..'fS th e Be e C harmer
w ho wa s hen.· 111 the 1920s,"
sa id Jtll Ramey. the Em"s
..,pokt:s\voman. ·:He was suppcm·d to ch arm all of these
hl't'~ riMt were on thts thing
th.It looked hke an old-fashmncd w as hboard. But it didn't
work . The be es flew off and
ended up stingmg everybody"
Thi s yl'ar, amiqu e far m
ma chm es will be on loan from
the Slate Run Historical Farm.
V1sitors can try th eir hand at

POT RAID

rs find

n·prt -

ttJ.Jtld L· d

tntlltnll

body\ gof t("l &lt;; tt.•p 11p .rnd ~t.l rt
lllJkm g
"Oillt'
pi.1J"
(T he
recctvers) .'HL' going to h.IVL' b1g
shoes to fill ."
Scott kif the field 111 .111 .11\lbu l:mn..· .1ftn pla y 1.' t ~ ;m d Lo.H hl'~
h~.-·ard J sKb.·mn g sn.1p ,m~,.l li:l\\
lum fa!l to d JL' ru rf dtttnt g .1
mor nm g wo rkuut 1-f l' \\.1 -. h! m.: kmgcort tnh.lrk R ob~,.· rt l k .ttl on .1
runntng pl.ty \Vhen .111odwr pl.l\'~.: r go t b luLkL·d tnto h1111 .. LIIH..llll);
o n th e b,ll·k of lm k ,;

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Ohio State Fair ts celebrating
its 150th birthday this year. It
would have been the 151st, but
an outbreak of ASiatic cholera
forced orgamzers of th e 1849
fair to cancel the event.
This year's fair starts Friday
and runs through Aug. 20.
Orgamzers are planning birthday ce lebrations that tnclude a
new hi storical exhibit, in additiOn to the "anunals, shows,
rides an d food .
Thl" H1story 111 the Makmg
exhtbit is J USt in side the front
gate. The displays are interactive to gtve kids a chanc e to
t!xpenence aspects of O h io
dunng)he first Ohio State Fair
in 1850
· La Von Sh ook, offi cial fair
hisiorian. compil ed most of the
infOr matio n used m the exhlb11 Shook recently wrote a 584page book," A Complete Hi story of the Ohto State Fa~r."
Ask hmi about th e World
W.Ir 11 years when th e federal
governn1ent took over the farrgrounds for mil1tary trammg
.md storage, and h e' ll thumb
through t he pages for a tt:w
seconds. Then, he' ll open the
book to a copy of tb e document sent by the War Department to then-Gov.John Bnckcr.
"The ,. gove rnment leased
th e t;rounds for $1 but agreed
to pay fo r all damages to the
grounds. So before th e Army
- ·-took over, the· a"'siStant d trector
of agriculture took 350 pho tos
of every inch of the plact'","
Shook satd.
At the end of th e war, O hio
received $ 1.2 million to m.tke
up for th t: damagl'.
Those nnssed years mean
th at the 200U fair is the !47th .
Orgamze rs
are
planning
,mother bash Ill 21103 for what
tl•,.y'r&lt;· calling .. " fair's ! 50th
,Jnmversary, as opposed to
birthday.
The fatr's mi ssed yL'ars are
among countless facts and sto-

~~~ C•·nt'

Youth on the links

State
Fair
.,.
turns 150
this year

2000 FOR~
RANGER 4X4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 49

#A03051

Jan . .1, Northwestern, 7 p.m.
Jan. 6, at llhnois. 8 p.m.
Jan. 10. Penn State, 8 p.m .
Jan 13, Mmnesota , 12:15 p.m .
Jan. 18. Michtgan, 7 p.m.
Jan 21 . at Mic h1 gan State, I

August 3, 2000

I,

VB, Auto, A/C, 17,000 miles

lookmg for ,mother nppont.•nl.
Every O h10 State ga me.
mclu chn g dw two cx !u bmom ,
will be .televised 111 211011 - 111, the
sc hool sat d

Thursday

'•'.

Auto, V6, A/C, 51,000 miles

Bengals

Meigs society news &amp; notes, AS
Mets, Leiter silence Reds, 81

Frld•y
Hlch: aos; Low: &amp;OS

EDI~Lt:- Construction
ue
labor on new addi·
tions t&gt;eing built alongside Southern
School. New additions w111
hOuse a media center, computer laboratory and several science classrooms. (Tony M. Leach photos)

Local Supenn tendent Jam es
Lawrenc e. "We are very exttl'd
about tht• upgrades and are quite
anxious 1:o s~e the students' reac tion .' '
"The new rooms will house
busmess office ed ucatton classes,
sophomore and senior Engli sh
classes. biology classes and speci al
edu ca tion
classes,"
added

fOUl\ IS

Lawrence.
However, pace of constru(tion
on the new additions to the

The LOS t of the tlt.'W renovation s ~~ estim ate d at Jrou nd the
$5011.11011 to $WO,IIOU ra n ~t' ami
th t' imprnvc nlt:' ri ts -;hould be
complett"d w h en students return
tn th e cl.tso;ruo lll on Aug. 28.
" Tht• re novati ons to the rQotns
tn side the high sc hool arc conung
:t long vny ni cl'ly." s:11d So uth ern

school, which include a new
m edia center. comput er labo ratory and sc 1ence classrooms, hav~
been temporarily slowed b eca use
of il delay in th e shtpm ent of steel
to the construction sttc.
"We have been gettmg phone
calls from severalmdividuals who
art" concerned," said Lawrence.

"Then;&gt; seems w be a rumor ctrculaung around th e area that the
delay m co nstru ctiOn wil1 result
m the cancdlat1on of the first day

of classes unt1l after Labor Day."
"Thi-. rumor is not true,"
added Lawrence. '" I have perso nally me t With the prinCipal, variOus board members and the co ntractors to formulat e a construc tion sch edule that will com CJ de
co mfortably with the first day of
classes.'"
"Stud&lt;nts will definitely be
returning to sc hool on Aug. 2H.'"
he said.
Progress is also co ntinu ing on
the new Southern Local Elementary School prOJe Ct n ext to the
high sc h ool.

Please sea Projects. Page A3

Today's

Sentinel
Paps

l Sections - 11
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Weather'

AS
B2-4
BS
A3
Bl. 6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-.1-11; Pick 4: 2- 4-1-5
Super lotto: 2-!&gt;-5-37-4()-44
Kicker: J -7-4-9-.&gt;-9

\1:VA,
Daily l: 7-3-6 Doily 4: '9-8-0-7

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