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Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

- --- .

Pomeroy,

.

.. .

~iddleport,

NATIONAL LEAGUE

. Details, A3

•

-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

days at Philadelphia . Danny
Bautista and Greg Colbrunn each
had three hits as the Diamondbacks won their third in a row.
Bautista's two- run double off
Wayne Gomes broke a 6- all tie m
the eighth.
Cardinals 4, Cubs 2
Sammy Sosa hit h is major
league-leadi ng 38th home run in
Chicago's loss to St. Lo uis at
Wrigley Field .
Sosa homered for the second
straight day, connectmg off Garrett Stephenson in the first .
Stephenson tied teammate Darryl
Kile with 13 victories ~ only six
NL pitchers have rea ched the
mark.
Giants 9, Expos 7
J.T. Snow hit a grand slam and
a solo homer, driving in a r arc erhjgh six runs as S;111 Fran cisco
won at Montreal.
Vladimir Guerrero hon1ered
twice for the Expos. T he teams
combined for eight home n1ns,
matching tht• reco rd for a ga me at
Olympic Stadium.
Snow hit his second grand slam
of the year and seve nth of his
career in the first inning. He

just the second time in nine
·starts since June 25, allowing
two runs and five hits in six
1nnmgs.
Jason lsringhausen pitched a
scoreless ninth for his 26 th

Hostetler
from PageBl

Commissioners plan pool fund-raiser
BY BRIAN
.

I

'(' ,.., '' ( ';
'i

.i

Auto, V6, 4 door, short bed, AM/FM' CD, A/C
'

[lt'L.: .lll

\\· . dkin~ . rr·d

thl"

with Michelle Pratt, a Meib" County
speec h therapi~t who works with th e
Ath ens C ity School Distri ct, to discuss an
enrichment program in local sc hools.
Pratt suggested the board meet with
the coo rdinator of Ohio University's
"Kids on Campus'' program, to discuss
the possi bility of integrating elements of
the " Kids on Campus" after school and
summertime programs into local sc hools .
Comn1issioners might incorporate

"Kids on Campus" into the Profi ciency
Test inte rvention program s now funded
through Temporary Assista nce to Needy

Families.
It was n oted tha t Athen s Coun ty commissiOners ;wd the Athens County
Department of Jobs and Family Services
an: curre ntly fundi ng " Kids on Ca mpu r;;,"
as are a number of other agc ncic"i and
Ath ens-area bu"iiJH.:sses.
" In o rd er to hr,·ak the cyclt- of depen-

ltu1Js and uth er approprlJtions adjusi,
m ents as su b mi tted by the grants offici!;

for the nafte rs' graqt, Cou nty Court and
Ju veni le Court .
·
The.:.· comll tission crs took no action tO
clos e the courthouse on Thursday. The
murrhouse is traditionally closed on
Thursday afternoo n during the Meigs
dence on w elt:uc, ir is importa nt to .; tar t Cou nty Fair, put the commissionerwith the co unty's you th ," Commissioner sagreed to le t officeholders determine if
Janet Howard said. " Prog ram s in the and when rheir offices would close durschools an: an l!llportanr parr of o ur wel - ing the week.
fa re reforms eflorr."
Also present were Commissioner Mick
Com ml ssioncrs approved tran sfers o f . Davenport and C lerk Gloria Kloes.

Log roll champion

'

Feeder winners

Aluminum Wheels, 4.0 V6, A!C,
AM/FM cass

A.

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1'3,600 M.Her
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..

Including ~r dlocounla, Blue Ribbon Clllma
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today.

Nationwide Is On Your Side"

Nationwide'

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~-,

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SIGNATURE SERIES
Auto, VB, A/C, leather, CD changer,
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On (v 19,1811- M.Her

Rod Tuttle and his draft horses, Prince and Bob, compete in the log roll
event during the draft horse contest at Wednesday's Meigs County·Fair.
Results of the draft horse contest held Wednesday at the Meigs County
Fair are as follows, in order by class: Class 1-Log Roll- Rod Tuttle, Glen

On(v

Jl.o,8oo M.Her
-~

~'

..

•,

.:

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V6, A/C, Power Equipment, leather
CD

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Auto, 4 cyl, A/C, AM/FM stereo

TOP HOG- Jessica Justice showed the grand champion hog at the

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,,

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•
Auto, A/C, cruise, tilt,
. AM/FM cass
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At that price, you could even hook up your treehouse.
Talk about hometown values. Sif!,n up now and fi,et

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Tuttle, Glen Tuttle, Rod Tuttle, Chuck Whittington; Class 2-Feed Run Rod Tuttle-;-Gien Tuttle; Rmnuttle, Glen Tuttle. cnuck Whlttlhgton; Class
3-Wagon Obstacle Course- Rod Tuttle, Glen Tuttle, Rod Tuttle, Glen Tuttle, Chuck Whittington; Class 4-Youth Feed Run- Andrew Everett.

FEEDER STEER - Brad Parker -is -~•ictlJred
the grand champion feeder steer, shown Tuesday at the Meigs
County Juni!Jr Commercial Feeder Steer Show. Also pictured are
Fair Queen Tara Rose, Fair King David Rankin, and Beef Princess
Amanda Windon.

Friday at the Fair

QUAD CAB
Auto, 360 VB, SLT package, A/C

more.

ht• \\,j 't b.ld , "II ,) i.Jldl' Ll',lg-U&lt;.'
lil'id.
" He's a little miracle," Hostetler

In other business, commissioners met

On(v -'J,/6&amp;. M.i(er .

matic person ."

Hostetler's youngest so n had
been left partially paralyzed fol lowing an accident on an all-terrain vehicle. The prognosis wasn't
good as doctors said it was doubtful Tyler would ever make a full
recovery.
But It wasn't long before Tyler

employees might qualify for the county's
Summer Youth Program.
In the meantin1e, the commissioners
will host a S10 per-person fund- raiser at
the pool next Monday, from 6-9 p.m.
The commissioners have pledged the
proc eeds from .the picni c-style event to
the pool's operation.
Advance tickets are available at the
Syracuse village offices and com missioners' office, as well as at political booths at
the Meigs County Fair, according to
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton.

REED

POMEROY - Meigs County commi ssioners will hold a fund-raiser to help
pay the operating expenses at London
Pool in Syracuse next week, and comm issioners tinalized plans for the event at
thei r regular meeting on Monday.
Earlier thi s summer, the village
requeste&lt;j assistance from the board in
paying the cost of payroll for part of the
staff of lifegu ards and pool manager, but
the CO llll11iSSiun ers said that, wh ile they
had no ready cash to ass ist the village,

SPORT TRACK
'

The 39-year-old Hostetler,
who took the New York Giants
to a Super Bowl title in 1990 after
Phil Simms was injured, isn't
looking for a chance to start. He
has seen enough of Couch to
know the second~year QB has a
bright future in the league.
Hostetler feels he could teach
Couch,j ust like Detmer ha s.
"I like him a lot," Hostetler said
of Couch, who has been heavily
criticized for sub-par performances in the Browns' first two
exhibition games. "And I only
think he's going to get better and
better. He's determined and he
looks like he's willing to work
hard. It looks like he's already
developed a thick skin ."
. Hostetler could be a calming
mflue nce on Couch, who relied
heavily on Detmer for guidance
last season.
"With a young guy, there arc a
lot of things that shou ld be
stressed and some things that
probably should be passed right
over," H os tetle r sa id. "Tim's head
is probably sp inning a _little. bit
right now."
Hostetler, who has also played
for the los Angeles Raiders and
Wa shington , said he's in great
shape, if not fo qtball shape.
When asked the last time he
picked up a football, Hostetler
laughed.
" I've thrown the ball around
with my sons," he said . ''I've really been enjoying then~."
He had an impressive workout
for San Fran cisco last November.
49ers GM Btl! Walsh ca me away
saying, "he looked good. He's
really a fine athlete and charisThere wa s no way Hostetler
could play for th e 49e rs, tho ugh .
Not when Tyle r ne eded him

J.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

won 1ts third in a row.

Service you can appreciate.

JEFF WARNER
113 w. 2nd Street

said. "He's not 100 percent, but
he's made a lot of progress. It's
really amazing."

'

Subscribe today • 992-2156

save.

Dave Burba (1 0-5) lost for
the first t1rne in six starts,
allowing four ruiJS .two
earned four hits and four
walks in fiye innings.

Hometown Newspaper

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

P:s punch out Tribe, 5-3
OAKLAND {AP) Ben
Grieve homered and drove in
two runs, and Matt Stairs also
drove in two runs at Oakland as
the A's won 5-3 over Cleveland.
It marked the third time in
four games following a season
high six-game losing streak.
Cleveland lost for just the
fourth time in 13 games.
Mark Mulder (7-8) won for

August 17, 1000

•

homered in the sixth and added a
sacri fi ce fly.
Marlins 7, Dodgers 3
R ya n Dempster pitched eight
impressive innings as Florida beat
visiting Los Angeles.
Dempster gave up one run and
three hits, striking out eight.
Luis Castillo . had three hits for
the Marlins, raising his average to .
.355 . Henry Rodriguez and Preston Wilson each had two hits and
drove in two runs for Florida.
Astros S, Pirates 4 ,
Jose Lima overcame two early
home runs as Houston came back
to beat Pittsburgh at En ron Field.
Adrian Browr led off the game
with a homer and Brian Giles
connected later in the first
inning. Lima has allowed a major
league-leading 38 home runs, an
Astros record.
Jeff Bagwell, Daryle Watd and
C hris Truby homered as Houston
Gi les homered, tripled and
doubled in his first three at-bats.
He was hit by a pitch in the
eighth inning and was left on
deck when the game ended.

Thursday

•

Helton keeps rolling toward .400
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Helton is 17-for-24 in the first
Just imagine what could hap- seven games of the Rockies' road
pen to Todd Helton in his next trip. He has lifted his average 26
game.
points in the last. 12 games.
Say he singles in his first two atHelton has 30 home runs and
bats Wednesday night . Then he 104 RB!s, putting a Triple Crown
gets up again. hits another single within reach. Sammy Sosa leads
and breaks his ankle sliding into the NL with 38 home runs and
s~cond base trying to stretch it
107 RBis .
into a double.
The M ets won the opener with
It would leave him our for the four runs in the seventh inning,
year. And it would leave him at taking advantage of four walKs
.400 - completely official for a and a wild pitch. New York won
full season.
the second game on Todd Zeile's
Helton raised his average to go-ahead home run in the eighth
.396, hitting three doubles and a inning.
home run Tuesday night for the
Braves 3, Padres 1
Colorado Rockies as they got
Andres Ga!arraga led Atlanta to
swept in a doubleheader by the another victory, hitting a threeNew York Mets, 7-5 and 4-3.
run homer in the seventh inning
By going 4-for-8, Helton now to beat San Diego at Turner Field.
has the required 502 plate appearGalarraga's 436- foot shot came
ances . needed to qualify for the with two outs. The Braves are 20batting title.
2 this year when he homers.
Helton's average is the highest
Chipper Jones went hitless for
for any hitter this late in a season Atlanta, leaving him two hits shy
since George Brett was batting of 1,000 for his career.
over .400 in September 1 980.
DBacks 11, Phillies 6
Brett finished at .390 in his bid to
Matt Williams hit a two-run
become the first major leaguer to homer and a three-run double as
reach the magic mark since Ted Arizona won at Veterans Stadium.
Williams hit .406 in 1941.
Williams has eight RBis in two

More Meigs County Fair scenes, AS
Nadeau makes most of opportunity, B1

Friday
Hlch: aos; Low: sos

Wednesday, August 16, 2000

Ohio

•

Jun ior Fair Swine Show Wednesday. She is pictured with David
Rankin, Meigs County Fair King, Kayla Gibbs, Swine Princess, and
Fair Queen Tara Rose .

.

'

Just1ce scores
top hog honor
ROCK SPRINGS - The
grand champi on market hog
wos shown by Jessi ca Ju stice at
the Meigs Co unty Junior Fair
Swine Show on Wedn esday, and
tht· reserve c hampion by
Eu gene Patterson .

N 1ck Detwiller an d C had
Hubbard were awarded grand
·and reserve c hampion showmanship hon o rs.

Mike McCoy of Bloomingburg served as judge for the
show, held in the show arena at
th e Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
Barrows and g ilts were shown
togeth er at this year's show,

,,

• 8-11 a.m. 4-H
Horse Fun Show, 4-H
show ring
• 9 a.m. Pet Show,
show arena
• 11 a.m. Junior Fair
Dog Obedience Show,
show arena
• 12:30 a.m. Kiddie
Tractor Pull "Pull of
Champions," show
arena
• 1 p.m. Harness
Racine, race track
• 2 p.m. Market Rabbit and Poultry Sale,
show arena
• 3 p.m Dairy Market
Feeder Sale, show

rather than being divided into
separate classes.
Classes - were divided by
weight only. with first place
results posted as follows: 2 102 11 lbs; C had Hubb ard; 2 12222 lbs.: Renee Colburn ; 222231 lbs.; Eugene Patterson ; 23 1235 lbs.; Elaine Putman; 238240 lbs.; Staci e Watson ; 240-243
lbs.; Alex Burroughs; 249-250
lbs.; Jessica Justice; 250-251 lbs. ;
C h ad Hubbard; 252-255 lbs .;
Eugen e Patt erson, 25R-21i2 lbs.
to Jessica Justi ce; 262- 21i9 lbs. ,
Mendy Guess .

Today's
..
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Sentinel
2 Sections - 12 Pages
Ann Landers
!:;lassifieds
{;Qmics

A5

82-4
B~

J;;ditori~ls

Obituaries
S~2rts
Weath~r

A4
A3
Bt, 6
A3

Lotteries
OIUO
Pick 3: 4-2-4; Pick 4:0-8- 1-7
Super Lotto: 21-2&gt;.36-~7
Kicker: 2-7-3-S-3-1

W.VA.
Daily J: 9-6-4 Daily 4: 5-6-6- 1

arena
• 3:30 p.m. Diary
Sweepstakes, show
arena
• 4 p.m. Market Hog
Sale, show arena
• 5 p.m. Market Steer
Sales, show arena
• 6 p.m. Tractor and
Truck Pull, pull track
• 6:30 p.m. B.J.
Smith, vocalist on hill
stage
• 7 p.m. Market .
Lamb Sale, show
arena
• 8 p.m. Commercial
Feeder Steer Sales,
show arena

RESERVE FEEDER STEER - Brett Parker took reserve champion
commercial feeder steer honors at the Meigs County Jun ior Fait
Commercial Feeder Steer Show on Tuesday. Also pictured are Beef
Princess Amanda Windon. Fa1r Queen Tara Rose, and Fair King
David Rankin .

Games draw youngsters to ring
ROCK SPRI NCS - l'op ul.tr
with youngster.;; att\:'ndi ng the
Ml'ihrs CoUJitv Fair Wc..·dn L·sJ .l\'
afternoon wer~· the kiddie gamL:,
stagl'd in the show rmg.
Thl' games were s po n ~o red bv
the Po n1eroy / Raunc: Ma \o ni ~
Lodge 16-l, M iJJ!eport Maso mc
Lodge 36.\ H arri sonvill e M ,lS onic Lodge 411 and Shade R1 ver
Maso ni c Lodge 453.
Cash prizes were award ed to
the winners in st•vt· ral age categories . Dan S mi~h emceed the

game s.
The winn er of

J $111 prize 111
th e VL'ggie _c ar derby w.ts 5-yt:.tro ld Colton H&gt;ll of i'Llllleroy, who
mad e hi ~ ve hi t lt· from ,1 large
zucchini with mcc round onions

for wheel s.
In th e Mountain Dew C hu g.

- ----·----

It was Tyler Hendricks who got the money
for emptying his can the qu ickest in the chug, but for Adam Lavender,
left. and Caleb Davis a cool drink in a hot show ring was win enough.

MOUNTAIN DEW CHUG -

Shelby J ohmo n t&lt;lo k lir&lt;t in the
under 6 ca tegory, Tykr I k ndricb
won in th e 7 to 9 age group. and
C.t' II L' Bul· kl~y in th l· I() tn 12

··'

Yl".lr ulds.
Tak ing the cas h ' prizes m the

Please see Kids,

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Pace A3

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Thursday, August 17, 2000
Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Mother charged
· in son's death
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
mother of a 5-year-old boy who
died last month in a fire he
apparently set was arrested
Wednesday on involuntary
manslaughter and child endan~ring charges.
Prosecutors said Angel Torr,
22, was charged because she
knew her son, William Lee
Welch, liked to set fires, yet didn't seek counseling for him and
improperly supervised him on
the day he died .
.
Following the July 5 fire in
the Westerville town house, firefighters said the boy had been
lcfi alone. A juvenile was supp'q sed to have been watching
the boy while hiS mother went
t\&gt; .1.storc.
""The rt•ason she ,·nded up
O,L' lllg .charg:t!d W&lt;lS Ius propcnslty .to start tires . She needed to be
mpn.· attentive,'' said Franklin
Lq unty
Prosec utor
Ron
()'Brien .
. The b;&gt;y had sta rted a fire in
[be ~ame [OWn house o n March
1.0 wh1le playing with a lighter,
mthorities said. After that fire ,
Wjlliam was sched uled to
u~)dergo voluntary counseling
for juvenile fire-setters through
the Westerville Fire Departmt:nt.

• But after an initial meeting
with a firefighter, Torr never
b,rought her son in for counseli?g, said Westerville Battalion
ChiefJohn Bokros.

hnpostors pli!lpe
·.. (Ounty auditor
· CLEVELAND
(AP)
CUyahoga County Auditor
Frank Russo has been getting an
earful lately about his bad
t&gt;~havior. But Russo says it's
three impostors - not he who have been rude to many
people.
, Authorities say three men
hove been bilking restaurants
a~d demanding refunds in
'
r'
l)US5o's
,name from stores, tor
sllOlen goods or items never purc ~ased .
: ·:They are trymg to ruin my
craracter," Russo said.
- - ; 0ne of the- thre &lt;-indignontlycu lls clerks he is Russo, that he
hris received shoddy service and
d~nunds a cash refund . The
o~her two claim either to be his
dttver o r a relative.
•" I've been in the book busin~ss 20 years and !'w hL'Jrd all
tile sob stories," said Anni e
Holden, m;~nager of Bord&lt;rs
~oks &amp; Music in Cleveland
fieights . "But the guy said he
Frank Russo. I thought, it's
t~e county audiror, I'm not
nJessing with him."
•Holden gave a man posing as
;i :Russo relative a $20 gift certilicate as well as a cash refund
fdr books that a · Russo impersqnaror telephoning the store
cl)limed to have purchased there.
'Holden is one of at least 10
a1jd maybe dozens of clerks
d.ped by the trio, said cou nty
s ~eriff's chief deputy, Dame!
Pltkach. Deputies have questioned but not yet charged three
stispects.

"i"'

'

~aoys

level rape
! accusation
;CLEVELAND (AP)- Seven
bbys claim they were fapecl 'ot
fqnciied by a 31-year-old man
s~h o took them on fishing trips
J~d sleepovers, police said.
· Authomies charged David · K.
Kdng, of Cleveland, w1th one
ci&gt;unt of rape Tuesday. and pros,·~utors said they will seek additilmal c harges from a Cuya hoga
C:ounty gra nd jury ((jng is in
.J.~ I o n SSIIII.OOO bond .
•Three of the boys. Jgcs 9, II
.1 ~d 12, told police tha t Kin g
r.;pc.:d them c;1 rlier ch1s month in
t 't.' b:a sc:m ent of hts house.
:The ot her four boys. Jgt•s 5-H.
,,i1d Kmg fo ndled th em at hi &lt;
libu se. ;md oJH.' of thL· bon s;ud
t&lt;:in~ fo ndkd him in the from
'~;lt ...~}f ht'\ r.1r while on .1 fi ~ h1n g
r ~1p . .trc ordtng t o .1 pohLL'
r,.-porr Th L' lllntk llr~ .Jrl' .\,lld to

~
: ! ·J\.1..' of t il l' bov~ ,l rL' bnHhl'f\ .

!J;J\ l '

\ l.lrtL' d I l l

jul\·.

h .~ . . he.1 lth prnhth .lt h ·L·p hL· r .lt holll L' .1 11J

J: IIL' ll mothLT

l~m '

rll c· &gt;r t:1th..:r " lcg.&gt;lly bh nd K lll~ .
\\'hn h.l\ known th.._· fmuly t(Jt"

Thursday, August 17, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
boys on fiShing trips and to play
video games at his house ·as a
way of helping the family.
"You would think after fi.ve
years you would know a person," said the boy's mother. " I
never thought he would do anything like this . He always had
young boys around. He took
them to the zoo, swimming, picnics, to his house."
She said the boys first told her
of the 'abuse last week when
they returned from a weekend
,.
stay at Ki ng 's ho use.

lndicb11ent
issued in killing

COLUMBUS (AP) - Tim Huffman and on, Kroger outbid Grand Rap1ds, Mich.-based
Curt Wells started Wednesday's Sale of Cham- rival Meijer Inc. for the •econd straight year,
pions livestock auction at the O hio State Fair bre aki ng Kroger'• own ! 999 record of$70,000.
The company will donate the steer to charbidding against ea ch other. As the winning bids
spiraled, they c hanged strategies.
ity.
"It's great to be part of thi• to support these
The tWO businessmen, who met for the first
kids,
to support agriculture," said Bruce Lucia,
.time at the annual auction, teamed up to buy
the reserve grand champion barrow. Their win- Kroger's Columbus area presid:nt.
Seth Andrews, 19, of Wooster, who showed
ning bid of$1 5,000, for the pig raised by Katie
the
winning steer, plans to use the $20,000 he'll
Gehret of Anna, was a record.
Wednesday's 33rd annual auction set four receive from the sale for college. He's a sophoot her records, incl,.ei·ng Cincinnati-based . more at Bowling Green State University in
Kroger Co.'s winning bid of $71,000 for the north\vesrern Q hio.
grand champion steer.
Former Gov. Jamc• Rhodes, who turns 91
With Gov. Bob Taft urging potential bidders next month and wos at his 52nd state fair, also

Professor accused of
leaking secret report

tion, sa id Sumnut Co unty Pro s-

Ckn·b nd St.ltL' Unin.·nity prot'"c.·s~or Ius bl'L'Il :tccuscd of k.1kmg a
sccrL· t govl'rnmcnt report on drug

Michael
Ca lbh.m .
w.1s sc hl'dulcd for
Friday 111 Summit Co u my
Conuno n Plt·as Court.
•
N dson 1s accust.:d of going to
Crocker's Restaurlllt and Bar
and shooting Mark Burton. 42 ,
of Tallmadge, in the abdonwn
Aug. 5. Nelson allegedly killed
Burton because he bchevcd the
cook had been mvolved with
Nelson 's estranged wife, who
also worked at the restaurant,
Callahan said.
After the shooting, Nelson
took off and abandoned his van
when it broke down in M ercer,
Pa., close to the Ohio Turnpike.
N elson was arrested Aug. 6
when Pennsylvania police found
him lying down on the side of
the road.
Arraignm~nt

Suspect car
didn•t hit jogger
AKRON (AP) Police
ruled
out the possibility
Wednesday that a car found in a
lake was the vehicle that hit and
kiiied a jogger.
Poli ce found a 1994 teal
C hevrolet Cavalier submerged
.in Summit Lake on Tuesday.
They initially said the car fit the
de~c riptio'\ of- tht&gt;-vehicle- that
killed Tracy Tomko, 22 , of
Akron, as she ran near her ap'artment comp lex early Friday.
But a man who saw a blue or
teal car about the time Tomko
was killt•d told police Wednesday that the veh1cle found in the
l;~ke was not the car he saw, said
polic· e Maj . Paul Callahan.
Poli ce now bdiew till' h11-skip
car may be a Ford model and
not a Cavalier.
· Damage to the from of the
ve hicle pulled from the lake was
" not c.&gt;used by a body stnking a
car," Callahan sai d. He also said
the car in the lake was reported ·
stolen Tuesday morning.
Police and Tomko's family
have been asking for t he public's
help in finding the motonst
who was driving the vehicle
that hit her. Tomko was an avid
jogger, and neighbors said she
ran most mornings .
Tomko's funeral was held
Wednesday m Euclid.

Court upholds
dosed records
CO LUMBUS
(A P)
Reco rds of investigations by the
state M edical Board are confidential under Ohio 's public
records law, the Oh1o Supreme
Court ruled Wednesday Ill a
de cision that reaffirmt~ d its
stance o n such re cords .
The co urt ruled 1t was
improper ti&gt;r the Medico) Boar,{
to .tllnw an individual from .1
pnvatl' comp;m y uno lnten' lt'W'co nductcd Jurin g in vestigation s. But. the cm1rc sa id, tht·
.1 ction did not \V.1i vc th L· ri ght of
pnv.t cy for md1v idu.1ls ll ~ ll1 L'd 111
thl' docutlll'nts .

CLEVELAND

(A I')

-

A

ri~burg.

Jl.1 ., wht) s.tid l'.lflyThLirsd.ly rh ;lt hL' had llU lOl lllll Cllt.
ThL· Ll\\·s uit w.1s tikd by Laredo
Natto nal B.n1k or Lm.:do. Tt·xa~ .
The L1wsuit scL·ks unspL·c itied
llllHIL'tary danugt·s .md to clea r
thc JJ.llllL' .s. of t h~._• lunk and Hank ,
w ho Iu s. been ch,1irm:m o f th e
in dependent bank hoidmg company for the past decade. His
fJt h~._· r 1s a forn1cr Mexican cabinet

trafli cking alleg;Hions again st one
of Mt•xico'5 most promi nL'Il t f:unilieS.
A federal laws uit fi led tim week
in C leveb nd accuses Donald
Sc hul z. clwnn.m of CSU's pohuC~l l scie nce departmcnL. of g1vi ug
the draft of a secret rt·purt wnttt·n
by the National Drug Intellige nce minister.
Center to newspaper reporters
The report accused the Hank
and congressional staffers.
family of being drug kingpins
The lawsuit alleges that the leak
who laundered money through
jeopardized U.S.-Mexico relations
the Laredo bank. The report was
and ruined the reputation of Carprepared by NDIC, a stralegi c
los Hank R o hn and his family.
Schulz has denied leaking the drug intelligence center under the
document and referred questions Justice Department and based in
to his attorney,James West, of Har- Jo hnstown, Pa.

attended the sale.
"It's a great fair," Rhodes said, dresse d in a
gray pinstriped suit and gray sweate r vest and
sporting " Pork" and "Beef- It's what's for
dmner" stickers. "They have more peop le here
by accident than most state fairs have 011 purpose."
Wells IS president of an electric and plumbing business m Anna. He said he had hoped to
buy Katie's p1g, but given the high bidding,
couldn't have done it without t he help of
Huffman, w ho owns an independent grocery
store in suburb an Columbus.
"Neither would 1," Hulfimn said. The two
plan to sell the meat at Hulfi1ian 's store.

According to tests former TV
host does not link to mailings
CLEVELAND (AI') - Prc limin .ay tt..'Sts on scx u,dly
cxpb t it packag:t_·s se nt to .1
f:~iJt•d

to find .1
DNA match to :1 former tt.· levision pL·rso Julity who killcd
him sl'if wh il e u nder inve stigadoZL'll

\\'0111L'Il

tion fi1r allegedly mailin t; thL'
materi al. newspapa and broadcast rt.· ports said.
Jud Rose, who was ,\ talk
show host o n C levebnd tel evi-

thl• p .! Ck.agc~ did liO t II LitL·lJ
gcllL'Cll lll .ltcri.!l from Rn ,~._· .
Tht..· reports .1lso :-..lid .1 typL· \\TitL'r found in R() \L'':o. hntll L'
did not nutdl thL· ty pe t"outHi

on many uf the

JH H L'' 111

the

n Llliin~s

nf undL'n\·c.tr .111 d
pornography.
OtliCJals who spoke "rth

The

AssoCJ ,Itt..:d

Prn'&lt;

on

sion and radw station s, killed
him se lf Aug. 4, th e day The

Wednesday
o uti oncd th.1t
mort• material I"L'Ill.llll ~ to be
te stcd :tnd tlut llo sl' i~ :.td l .t
suspect . Thc lllVl'Stlg:ltion o!"

Plain Dealer reported he was
bemg investigated.
Two days earlier, detectives
had searched his home m suburban Cleveland. Rose; 64, also
provided blood and saliva samples that cou ld be used in the
DNA testing.
The Plain Dealer and te'levisio n reports, citing unidentified
sources, said DNA lifted from

Rose prob:ably \Von't cond udc
for month s.
C uyahoga Co unty Coroner
Elizabeth Balraj, while declin in g con11nent on t he tc:st
results, said that her o tli ce has
been testing material related to
the case for months and turn in g the results ove r to prosc·cutors. Testing is co ntinuing, sht·
said.

Supreme Court denies one side the chance to speak in custody case
COLUMBUS (AP) -Atto rneys representing a Girard couple involved in an interstate
adoption -custody fight were barred Wednesday from presenting their clients' arguments in
front of the Ohio Supreme Court ne&gt;,:t wee~ . .
The written arguments of Richard and
Cheryle Asente, howeve r, will be considered
when the justices rule on whether Ohio or
Kentucky has jurisdiction over th e adoption
of 3 -year- oi~Justm_
. ·-The 'co urt Sa id the Asentes' attorneys ca n't
present nral argumt:nts on Tuesday became
one attorney. C harles Milless. misst·d a May 30
filing deadline by one llllllute.
Thr.:- co urt madt· It~ d ccJ ! . Illll wit hout
c:xpb nation .
Co urt ruks prohibit ~urtics from pn.: s ~._·nt­
ing or:1 l .t rgumt~ nts if thL·y f.1J! to till' th ctr
briefs on timL' .

Wht!e the court did not accept Milless' late
brief, it allowed him to submit written arguments responding to a brief by attOrneys for
Regina Moore and Jer ry Darning, Justin's
biological parents who live in Covington, Ky.
T.)le co urt could hove thrown out the
entire case becouse court rules allow justices
to dismiss an appeal 1f documents aren't filed

for arguments sin ce it adopted a rule speedin g
up custody cases to reduce the amount of
tune a c hild spends in foster ca re.
The Asent es , who adopted Ju stin's o lder
brother Joey in 1995, obtained custody of
Justin in 1998 and began trying to adopt h1m .
His biological parents changed their nunds
after sign\ng co nse nt-to-adopt forms and
in time:
want him retu rned .
Several _!}1C:ssages see king co mm ~Q. r frm1L
- A Kentucky JUdge has ruled 1ha! the
Milless and th e COU rt were not re turned
Asentes must · r~turn Ju stin w his biological
Wednesday.
Milless had blamed his mothds death on parents. The 11th Ohio District Court of
May 19 fo r delays in preparing his argumems . Appeals ruled that K,·ntu cky l1.1s jurisdiction
A bro ke n copy 111.1 clu ne also contribute d . in the ~.: ast· . The A~cntt' !!. tht'll a-;kni tilt' &lt;.Jh1o
to his tardint..:"ss on tl11..' day his brief was dm:, Supreme Cn un to ru le on jurisdiniotl.
Ml·.mwhilc, Justin has bL'L'Il h\·ing with rl1c
.md ru piL·s of hi s .lrgum~..·nt spill ed as hi;' tric:d
Ascntcs, but m,1ki ng . Wt'L'h· nd Yisib tn Kcn to dL·IiH-r thcm to thl· cou rt .
The ~,.· ,ls t..' ,\..1s t iu~ tina tht! court sc h ~dulc-J tllcky and his birth parents.

Fifteen union members arrested
CANTON (AI' ) Fifteen
union workers 'vt·re ,1rn:sted
Wednesday for blo cklllg the
en tr a nce to a li brary whi le
demo nstrating for a contra ct .
More than 60 people participated in a sit-in 1nside the library.
After
library
adm\ni st rators
refus ed to conlpr01mse in co ntra ct nt.'-gotiario ns , rhc.: dt&gt;monstratlon moved outside, satd Anne
Hill , director o f Sen·ice Employees lntnn ational U111on D1snicr
925 .
About I 00 union members
went on strike mort· than two
weeks ago beca.u se J new con trace
had not been reached With the
Stark Co un ty District Library.
Th e library system has about 200
emp loyees working under the o ld
contract that ex pired April I, Hill
sa id .
The umon 's chref nego tiator,
Ann e Muc ll n, was among t hose
c harged with 1111 ~de m eanu r c nm -

in c1dcm :md wtl l be arraigned
Thursday at th L· Stark Cou nty
Courthouse.
The untnn is seek ing p.ty
lllCI'l'JSt'S uf 6 pnrem the first
ye;1 r :1nd 5 pcrccnt 111 buth the:
secm 1d and third years of a threeyear contr:tcr . A Ji br;1nan's en try
rat e now IS S12 .7H an hour.
Hill s;&gt;id t he umon has reJeC tt·d
Jll offe r of 4 perce nt p.1y mneascs for ea ch of the three years and
demanded a fair- share clause.

· !:(It; !It\ IQ:!Iiiit;l Iii ,.1 ItllY Ill,: I~ 1lliiij~l Iij~i i·ll mal!~; IU:!Hl~~l I~lM i

DBV CONSTRUCTION .
We Do It All!
From the Foundation Up
Residential and
rcial

Pn il rc \. lld t hn ~c .liTe~ll'd wnc
t ,lk l' ll {() tilL' L ~Hil lt\" ,Jol JI WtdlO ll{

Middleport Water OHice
Wiii.Be Closed
On AUUUSt11 &amp; 18.

Stamp to honor
legislator
WASH INGTON (AP) - The
late R ep. Claude Pepper of Florida, a champiop of the elderly during a long career in Congress, will
be memorialized on a new postage
stamp next month.
The Postal Service said it will
issue the 33-cent stamp on Sept. 7,
o ne day before the 1OOth anniversary of his b~rth.
"The Claude Pepper stamp is a
fitting tribute to one of this country's fin est leaders and is an enduring reminder of his lifelong effort
on behalf of our nation's elderly
citizens," said Deborah K. Willhite,
postal senior vice president.
The stamp will be officially dedicated at a 10 a.m. ceremony in the
Cannon House Office Building,
with several members of Congress
taking part
Pepper, a Democrat from Florida, served in the Senate from 1936
through 1951 and in the House
from 1963 until his death on M ay
30, 1989.

Hasbro division
recalls toys
WASHINGTON (AP)
Playskool, a division of toy giant
Hasbro Inc., is recalling about
420,000 Busy Poppin' Pals toys
because children could choke or
be cut by small spring; that can
break loose from inside the toy.
Playskool, of Pawtucket, R, 1. , has
received 16 reports of spring;
breaking, including five instances
in whlch children put the broken
springs in their mouths with two
children suffering cuts, the Consumer Product Safety Conunission
said Wednesday.
The Busy Poppin' Pals is a 13inch-long whlte plastic toy with
blue, yellow and red buttons, levers
and knobs of various shapes' that
make animal characters pop up
from under the toy's base. The animals are hidden under blue, yellow
or red Lid.&lt; that have the numbers 1
through 5 on top. The pop- up animals are a giraffe. elephant, panda
bear, lion and monkey.
The toy has a white carry handle
and has the Playskool logo on the
!runt. The model number 54 15 and
"made in China" are imprinted on
the botto m of the toy.

The Daily Sentinel

co ne c t ion~

SUDst:"KII"TION RATES
By Carrier ur Motor R o uh~
One Week ... ..... .

.. ........... .. $2 .00

One Month ....
...... S8.70
One Year .......
. ............ SIO&lt;I .OO
SIN GLE COPY PRICE
......... .............c;o Cents
Daily ............ .
Suhscrihcr s not desiri ng to pay the carrier may
remit 1n advum:e dtrec t to The Dail y Scmind
una thrt'e, six or I 2 mnnth has is. Crcdtt wi ll be
gtvtrt \:~ m e r coch week .
No su bs...: nplt l}l' h)" mail permitt ed tn areas
where tromc: c.lrm r serv tcc l ~ :warlah lc.
.. llh lis hcr rtsc:n ·r.\ th e righl to adju st roles
"durtOI!l th e su t&gt;sc r1pti n n period. Suhscnrtiun
rate c h;m~ c~ rna)' he 1mplemcnted hy chungtng
the Uur at ton of the ~o u b ~ct t ptimt .

Wednesday, 2 :28 p.m., Rock
Springs Rehabilitation Center,
Elizabeth Salser, PVH .

Our m•ln concun In 1111 !lorles Is to ht
l t'turalt. If you knuw of an t'rror In a stnry,
n il ,he new~room 111 1740) 991· 21!5. \.\""
will check your lnfurn111tl•m und make u
I"Url1'rllon if warrMniC'd,
Nrw~

IJeparlnlenls

n e ntllln numher Is 99l·21S!i. Ue partm ~ nl
t-.tenslons are:

G«-ntl'lll MlllliJttr ........................... Ext . 1101
Ntws ................................................ EJ~:I . 1102
.................................. ................. or E:\1 .

1106

Other Serl'lrei
Ad \l'rlisln~ ..................................... Ext. 110_.
L"lrtu lalion...................................... Exl. 1103
Classl l'kd Ad§ ................................. Ext. 1100

TUPPERS PLAINS

•

Advisory lifted .
POMEROY -The boil advi~
sory in effect for areas of Pomeroy.,
affected by the recent Main Street ,
break has now been lifted.
The Pomeroy Water Department reported that tests show the
water is now safe to use without
boiling.

11:25
a.m.,
Oh,io
124,
Dewayne Stutier,Jackson-General
Hospital;
3:50 p.m., Fourth Street, Patri- ·
cia Adkins, HMC;
8:26 p.m., Broadway Avenue,
assisted by Pomeroy, Nan cy
Swartz, Holzer Medical Center;
LONG BOTTOM - A 2~ .
Wednesday, 12:50 a.m., Flatyear-old
Long Bottom boy is iii
woods Road, Ralph WeDs , Camcritical condition at Cabell ~ ;
den-Clark Memorial Hospital;
Huntington Hospical and a Long"
5:12 a.m., Edmunton Road,
Bottom man is in jail charged
Bernard Wilson, Pleasant Valley
with the child's injury
Hospital;
Meigs County Prosecutor John
lo1 :20 a.m., Mount Olive
Lentes said Michael "Tony'; ·
Road, assisted by Reedsville,
Gillilat:~. 32, of Rainbow Ridge :
RESERVE CHAMPION - Eugene Patterson, left, is pictured with the Opal Basim, CCMH.
Road ,·was charged with felonious ,
POMEROY
reserve champion market hog which he showed at Wednesday's
Wednesday, 6:46 p.m. Veterans assault.
Junior Fair Swine ShOw. Fair King David Rankin, Swine Princess Kay\ a
Lentes said that the child wa\
Hospital, Maude
. Memor ial
Gibbs, and Fair Queen Tara Rose are also pictured .
caken
to the Holzer M eigs Clinic ·
ARVADA, Colo. (AP) - ConClarkson, HMC
in Middleport and was then
fined to an office by an armed robRUTLAND
transported to the Huntington, :
ber who disabled the telephones,
Thesday, 12:56 p.m ., FairW.Va ., hospital for unspecified
five restaurant employees sent a
grounds, Eddie Willis, HMC;
ll1JUfleS.
silent plea for help by fax.
5:20 p.m ., Fairgrounds, Justin
Lentes said that the child lives
The gunman walked into BenGilke, treated;
in
the home Gillilan shares with ·
nett's Pit Bar-B-Que on Monday
11 :47 p.m., Village Manor,
his girlfriend, the child's mother:· ·
as the workers were getting ready
Eddie Willis, treated.
According to Sheriff James M .
to open for business.
SYRACUSE
Soulsby, Gillilan is in the Meigs '
"I was on the phone when this
Wednesday, Brewer Road,
County Jail and is expected to '
guy walked up and depressed the
Gene Wolfe,JGH;
appear in Meig; County Court '
receiver, pulled out a handgun and
7:35 p.m., Long Run, assisted
sometime
today.
rnld evervbody to get o n the
floor;' sa id manager Amber
Robinson.
•
The gunman took an undisson in the
and up category.
closed amount of cash, then forced
In the bubble gum blowing
the five employees into an office
contest, the winners were Colton
and ordered them to stay there.
Ervin in the under 6 group, ·
Before leaving, he took the teleRochelle Davis in the 7 to 9 ye~r ·
phone cords so they couldn't call
banana eating contest were Ben olds, Kelsey Boyd in the 10 to 12
police.
Tillis in the tinder 6 age group, age group, and Brenda Johnson i~ .
He didn't think to disable the
Zach Hendrix in the 7 to 9 year the 12 and up category.
:.
fax.
olds, Andrew Bissell in the 10 to
12 age group, and Suzanne John-

Man charged in
boy's injury

Robbery victims
fax for help

12

Kids

from PapAl

Homemaker wins
TV audition

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Marie Donato beat out 28,000
would-be actors vying to appear in
"The Sopranos" - and she didn't
even plan on auditioning.
Donato, a 50-year-old homemaker and grandmother of three,
tagged along with a friend to the
auditions that created a, well, mob
scene last month in Harrison, NJ
She hoped to get a glimpse of one
of the cast members from the popular HBO series about a fictional
New Jersey Mofia family.
The cast wasn't there, but several
casting directors i10ticed Donato's
looks. Her lack of acting experience cbdn't stand in the way.
Five days la ter, she arrived in
New York to meet th e show's
executive producer, David C hase.
" I'm an Italian-looking person,"
Donato said. "Honest and sincere.
Very straightforward. If onybody
knows me, they know I'll say what
I think, right off."
Donato shot one episode of the
show last week.

HOG SHOWMAN - Nick Detwlller, far right, was grand champion
showman at Wednesday's Junior Fair Swine Show. Also pictured are
Fair Queen Tara Rose, Fair King David Rankin and Swine Princess
K_axta GiQbs. _ _ __ -,

Rescue attempts fail to reach sub
MOS COW (AP) - Underwater rescue capsules fighting to reach
118 seamen trapped on a Russian
nuclear submarine failed ag~in
Thursday as new evidence suggested a massive explosion shattered
large areas of the vessel and many
sailors had no time to escape.
Navy officials said there were no
signs oflife on the vessel. but some
of the crew could still be alive.
Rescue capsules trying to link up
with the submarine for the past
three days were again driven back
Thursday by racing currents and
swirling sand in the inky darkness

Dry weekend in area likely
chanCL' of showers and thunderstor m &lt; in the morning. Highs
from the upper 70s to the lower
80s. C hance of rain 50 percent .
Friday night. .. Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Extended forecast :
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 80s.
Sunday... Mostl y clear. lows in
the upper 50s and highs in tht·
lower 80s.
Monday. .. Mostly clear. l ows in
the uppe r 50s and highs 1n the
loswr 80s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms
should move out of the tri county area by Friday mornin g,
setting the stage for a dry weekend.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:25
and s unri~e on Friday ar.6:47 a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tomght .. .Showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows in the mid
and upper hOs ..Southwcst wind 1
to \0 mph . C han ce of rain 70
percen t.
cloud y.
A
Friday... Mo stly

""

LOCAL STOCKS
AmTech/SBC - 41 I.
Ashland Inc. - 36
AT&amp;T - 32\
Bank One ~ 34 \e
Bob Evans - 17',.
BorgWarner ~ 36}.
Champion - 2;[.·
Charming Shops - 5
City Holding - 9' . ,
Federal Mogul - 11 ..
Firstar - 231.

Gannett - 56 '.a
General Electric - 56~.
Harley Davidson - 45 '!,.
Kmart - 7
1
Kroger - 20 "
Lands End - 28'1,.
Ltd. - 191.
Oak Hill Financial -

OVB - L7'1.
BST - 26\
Peoples -

Premier Rockwell -

Simple to
Simply.
Magnificent
in an assortment of colors
and coundess designs, We ,
tan provide the memorial

VALLEY WEATHER

AEP - 35'1•
Akzo- 41 ·~~~~

From

We offer the finest granites

Reader Services

•

POMEROY - Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Services
answered 14 calls for assistance on
Tuesday and Wednesday. Units
responded as follows:

Toys with model number 6205
have diffet:ent springs, and are not
part of the recall.
Mass merchandise and toy stores,
including Toys R Us, sold these
· toys nationwide for about S!O.The
toys were sold from January 199&amp;
through August 2000.
The safety board advises consumers to take these toys away
from young children inunediately
and contact Playskool at 1-877518-9743 anytime or visit their
Web ~ite co receive a fre e,
redesigned replacement toy.

lo

The Da il y Sentinel, I l l Co urt St ., Pome roy,
Ohio 45769

IIH· yc.tn , offt•red w t.lkl' the

by Central Dispatch, Gerald
Moore,JGH.

CENTRAL DISPATCH

Ncw~papc r A~scci a lion .

POSTMASTER: Send addrus

·Double Reclining Sofa
wtmatching rocker
recliner

Units log 14 calls

treatment;

MAIL SURSCRIPTI ONS
In ddt Mclws Cuunly
. .... :$27.30
1.' Wce ks... -.................. S.HI\2
16 Wct:ks .. .
..... 5 105.56
52 Wee ks
fol11l~!i Oulside Mrl~s Cuunl)' ..
D Weeks .
. ..... $29 .2 ~
26 W~eks. .
........... .... SS6.6H
52 Weeks .......... ............................. S 109.72

·Double ·
Ric:lgeJJ Sofa with
matching rocker
recliner Er love seat

LOCAL BRIEFS

Tuesday, 10:50 a.m., state routes
"7 and 143, motor vehicle accident, Kevin Knapp, Judith Knapp.
Ashley Knapp, Susan Will , Christy
Will, Darrin Will, all refused

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Emergencies should be reported to
the Maintenance Garage;at 992-5711
or
Police Department at 992-6424

,.....,•

MIDDLEPORT - Garnet Rife:91, Middleport, died Wednesday,
Aug. 16, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.

Pllblishcd every afle rnoon, Monday through
!=riday, Ill Co urt St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Puhlish ing Company. Sn:umJ
da~~ postagt paid~~ Pomeroy, Ohio.
1\tcmber: The Associated Preis, and the Oh io

llul tresp.1ss ing for l of ~m g arlll~
.ltH.i p rt:vcnun g pt'opk fru111
L'll tt'flll g ,ltld L'XIt lll g thl' d 1 ~tl'ld

lt br.1ry'o; 111 .11 11 b r,mch . '.lid C.mtoll
po li cL~ Lt. Anth ony DL·Mco.

Gamet Rife

(USPS 213-960)

Dencil Hudson
740-992-7455
John Jeffers
7 40-742-8603

The Daily Sentinel ·Page A 3
.,

More hog winners

Five records set at Sale of Champions

CUYAHOGA FALLS (AI')
- A grand jury indicted a mln
Wednesday on charges that he
fa~1lly shot a cook at a remurant
and then scalped him .
Frt"dc:ric.-k ~Ndson, -+2. of
Cuyahoga Fa(\s, was ,·harged
wich on~ coun( of aggrav.ncJ
mun.ler with a firt·arm spl'nticaecutor

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

14 ~.

s).

39

Rocky Boots :- 51.
AD Shell - 6Ql,
Sears - 31 '1.
Shoney's - " ..
Wai -Mart - 49~~~~
Wendy's - 181/ oe
Worthington - 11 '1•

16
Daily stock reports are th e
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, pro\lided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

354 feet deep on ihe sea bottom.
Prime
Minister
Mikhail
Kasyanov said Thursday the situation was "close to catastrophic,"
according to Russian news reports.
Rescue teams heading (or the
scene by ship were not expected to
arrive until Saturday, raising featS
they would be too late. The navy
ha&lt; given contracbc tory estimates
of how long the Kursk's oxygen
could last, but some say air generotors may have been destroyed
when the submarine slammed into
the sea bed last Saturday.
Film of the subma rine being
studied Thursday showed massive
damage reaching from the front to
the conning tower that would have
sent the vessel crashing to the qottom in seconds, navy officials said.
The control room where most of
the crew work is below the tower,
suggestmg sailors could not escape
w hen the submarine went down .

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
7
446·4524

OLO ROUTt; JS WlS I
t JI\4 JAC+I.SDN PIKE

that's right for )'OU. Come
talk to our counselors. We'll
help )'OU select a memorial to be
.'
cherished.

520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy
Nenr the Muon Bridge

Phone 740-992-2588
Vinton 740·388·8603
Gallipolis 740·448·0852

Domino's Pizza
.992-2124

FRI0/11 /00 · THURS 8/1 7/00

BOX OFFICE WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVINJNG SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MATINEES

HOLLOW MAN (R)
7:15 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:30
BLESS THIS CHILD (R)
7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATlNEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15
SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:ao DAILY
NO PASSES/NO BARGAIN NIGHT
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20
NUTIY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7:1 0 &amp; 9:10 OAILY
MATINEES SAT SUN 1:11J.3:1 0
THE REPLACEMENTS (PG-13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILV
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:10
WHAT LIES BENEATH (PG13)
7:00 O.O.ILY

MONDAY· THURSDAY 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
FRIDAY· SATURDAY 10:00 a.m. to j:OO a.m.
SUNDAY 3:00p.m. to 12:00 p.m •

Large 11 Item
Everything Pizza
Only

$899

...

�.

..

' .

.'

.

•

Thursday, August 17, 2000
Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Mother charged
· in son's death
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
mother of a 5-year-old boy who
died last month in a fire he
apparently set was arrested
Wednesday on involuntary
manslaughter and child endan~ring charges.
Prosecutors said Angel Torr,
22, was charged because she
knew her son, William Lee
Welch, liked to set fires, yet didn't seek counseling for him and
improperly supervised him on
the day he died .
.
Following the July 5 fire in
the Westerville town house, firefighters said the boy had been
lcfi alone. A juvenile was supp'q sed to have been watching
the boy while hiS mother went
t\&gt; .1.storc.
""The rt•ason she ,·nded up
O,L' lllg .charg:t!d W&lt;lS Ius propcnslty .to start tires . She needed to be
mpn.· attentive,'' said Franklin
Lq unty
Prosec utor
Ron
()'Brien .
. The b;&gt;y had sta rted a fire in
[be ~ame [OWn house o n March
1.0 wh1le playing with a lighter,
mthorities said. After that fire ,
Wjlliam was sched uled to
u~)dergo voluntary counseling
for juvenile fire-setters through
the Westerville Fire Departmt:nt.

• But after an initial meeting
with a firefighter, Torr never
b,rought her son in for counseli?g, said Westerville Battalion
ChiefJohn Bokros.

hnpostors pli!lpe
·.. (Ounty auditor
· CLEVELAND
(AP)
CUyahoga County Auditor
Frank Russo has been getting an
earful lately about his bad
t&gt;~havior. But Russo says it's
three impostors - not he who have been rude to many
people.
, Authorities say three men
hove been bilking restaurants
a~d demanding refunds in
'
r'
l)US5o's
,name from stores, tor
sllOlen goods or items never purc ~ased .
: ·:They are trymg to ruin my
craracter," Russo said.
- - ; 0ne of the- thre &lt;-indignontlycu lls clerks he is Russo, that he
hris received shoddy service and
d~nunds a cash refund . The
o~her two claim either to be his
dttver o r a relative.
•" I've been in the book busin~ss 20 years and !'w hL'Jrd all
tile sob stories," said Anni e
Holden, m;~nager of Bord&lt;rs
~oks &amp; Music in Cleveland
fieights . "But the guy said he
Frank Russo. I thought, it's
t~e county audiror, I'm not
nJessing with him."
•Holden gave a man posing as
;i :Russo relative a $20 gift certilicate as well as a cash refund
fdr books that a · Russo impersqnaror telephoning the store
cl)limed to have purchased there.
'Holden is one of at least 10
a1jd maybe dozens of clerks
d.ped by the trio, said cou nty
s ~eriff's chief deputy, Dame!
Pltkach. Deputies have questioned but not yet charged three
stispects.

"i"'

'

~aoys

level rape
! accusation
;CLEVELAND (AP)- Seven
bbys claim they were fapecl 'ot
fqnciied by a 31-year-old man
s~h o took them on fishing trips
J~d sleepovers, police said.
· Authomies charged David · K.
Kdng, of Cleveland, w1th one
ci&gt;unt of rape Tuesday. and pros,·~utors said they will seek additilmal c harges from a Cuya hoga
C:ounty gra nd jury ((jng is in
.J.~ I o n SSIIII.OOO bond .
•Three of the boys. Jgcs 9, II
.1 ~d 12, told police tha t Kin g
r.;pc.:d them c;1 rlier ch1s month in
t 't.' b:a sc:m ent of hts house.
:The ot her four boys. Jgt•s 5-H.
,,i1d Kmg fo ndled th em at hi &lt;
libu se. ;md oJH.' of thL· bon s;ud
t&lt;:in~ fo ndkd him in the from
'~;lt ...~}f ht'\ r.1r while on .1 fi ~ h1n g
r ~1p . .trc ordtng t o .1 pohLL'
r,.-porr Th L' lllntk llr~ .Jrl' .\,lld to

~
: ! ·J\.1..' of t il l' bov~ ,l rL' bnHhl'f\ .

!J;J\ l '

\ l.lrtL' d I l l

jul\·.

h .~ . . he.1 lth prnhth .lt h ·L·p hL· r .lt holll L' .1 11J

J: IIL' ll mothLT

l~m '

rll c· &gt;r t:1th..:r " lcg.&gt;lly bh nd K lll~ .
\\'hn h.l\ known th.._· fmuly t(Jt"

Thursday, August 17, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
boys on fiShing trips and to play
video games at his house ·as a
way of helping the family.
"You would think after fi.ve
years you would know a person," said the boy's mother. " I
never thought he would do anything like this . He always had
young boys around. He took
them to the zoo, swimming, picnics, to his house."
She said the boys first told her
of the 'abuse last week when
they returned from a weekend
,.
stay at Ki ng 's ho use.

lndicb11ent
issued in killing

COLUMBUS (AP) - Tim Huffman and on, Kroger outbid Grand Rap1ds, Mich.-based
Curt Wells started Wednesday's Sale of Cham- rival Meijer Inc. for the •econd straight year,
pions livestock auction at the O hio State Fair bre aki ng Kroger'• own ! 999 record of$70,000.
The company will donate the steer to charbidding against ea ch other. As the winning bids
spiraled, they c hanged strategies.
ity.
"It's great to be part of thi• to support these
The tWO businessmen, who met for the first
kids,
to support agriculture," said Bruce Lucia,
.time at the annual auction, teamed up to buy
the reserve grand champion barrow. Their win- Kroger's Columbus area presid:nt.
Seth Andrews, 19, of Wooster, who showed
ning bid of$1 5,000, for the pig raised by Katie
the
winning steer, plans to use the $20,000 he'll
Gehret of Anna, was a record.
Wednesday's 33rd annual auction set four receive from the sale for college. He's a sophoot her records, incl,.ei·ng Cincinnati-based . more at Bowling Green State University in
Kroger Co.'s winning bid of $71,000 for the north\vesrern Q hio.
grand champion steer.
Former Gov. Jamc• Rhodes, who turns 91
With Gov. Bob Taft urging potential bidders next month and wos at his 52nd state fair, also

Professor accused of
leaking secret report

tion, sa id Sumnut Co unty Pro s-

Ckn·b nd St.ltL' Unin.·nity prot'"c.·s~or Ius bl'L'Il :tccuscd of k.1kmg a
sccrL· t govl'rnmcnt report on drug

Michael
Ca lbh.m .
w.1s sc hl'dulcd for
Friday 111 Summit Co u my
Conuno n Plt·as Court.
•
N dson 1s accust.:d of going to
Crocker's Restaurlllt and Bar
and shooting Mark Burton. 42 ,
of Tallmadge, in the abdonwn
Aug. 5. Nelson allegedly killed
Burton because he bchevcd the
cook had been mvolved with
Nelson 's estranged wife, who
also worked at the restaurant,
Callahan said.
After the shooting, Nelson
took off and abandoned his van
when it broke down in M ercer,
Pa., close to the Ohio Turnpike.
N elson was arrested Aug. 6
when Pennsylvania police found
him lying down on the side of
the road.
Arraignm~nt

Suspect car
didn•t hit jogger
AKRON (AP) Police
ruled
out the possibility
Wednesday that a car found in a
lake was the vehicle that hit and
kiiied a jogger.
Poli ce found a 1994 teal
C hevrolet Cavalier submerged
.in Summit Lake on Tuesday.
They initially said the car fit the
de~c riptio'\ of- tht&gt;-vehicle- that
killed Tracy Tomko, 22 , of
Akron, as she ran near her ap'artment comp lex early Friday.
But a man who saw a blue or
teal car about the time Tomko
was killt•d told police Wednesday that the veh1cle found in the
l;~ke was not the car he saw, said
polic· e Maj . Paul Callahan.
Poli ce now bdiew till' h11-skip
car may be a Ford model and
not a Cavalier.
· Damage to the from of the
ve hicle pulled from the lake was
" not c.&gt;used by a body stnking a
car," Callahan sai d. He also said
the car in the lake was reported ·
stolen Tuesday morning.
Police and Tomko's family
have been asking for t he public's
help in finding the motonst
who was driving the vehicle
that hit her. Tomko was an avid
jogger, and neighbors said she
ran most mornings .
Tomko's funeral was held
Wednesday m Euclid.

Court upholds
dosed records
CO LUMBUS
(A P)
Reco rds of investigations by the
state M edical Board are confidential under Ohio 's public
records law, the Oh1o Supreme
Court ruled Wednesday Ill a
de cision that reaffirmt~ d its
stance o n such re cords .
The co urt ruled 1t was
improper ti&gt;r the Medico) Boar,{
to .tllnw an individual from .1
pnvatl' comp;m y uno lnten' lt'W'co nductcd Jurin g in vestigation s. But. the cm1rc sa id, tht·
.1 ction did not \V.1i vc th L· ri ght of
pnv.t cy for md1v idu.1ls ll ~ ll1 L'd 111
thl' docutlll'nts .

CLEVELAND

(A I')

-

A

ri~burg.

Jl.1 ., wht) s.tid l'.lflyThLirsd.ly rh ;lt hL' had llU lOl lllll Cllt.
ThL· Ll\\·s uit w.1s tikd by Laredo
Natto nal B.n1k or Lm.:do. Tt·xa~ .
The L1wsuit scL·ks unspL·c itied
llllHIL'tary danugt·s .md to clea r
thc JJ.llllL' .s. of t h~._• lunk and Hank ,
w ho Iu s. been ch,1irm:m o f th e
in dependent bank hoidmg company for the past decade. His
fJt h~._· r 1s a forn1cr Mexican cabinet

trafli cking alleg;Hions again st one
of Mt•xico'5 most promi nL'Il t f:unilieS.
A federal laws uit fi led tim week
in C leveb nd accuses Donald
Sc hul z. clwnn.m of CSU's pohuC~l l scie nce departmcnL. of g1vi ug
the draft of a secret rt·purt wnttt·n
by the National Drug Intellige nce minister.
Center to newspaper reporters
The report accused the Hank
and congressional staffers.
family of being drug kingpins
The lawsuit alleges that the leak
who laundered money through
jeopardized U.S.-Mexico relations
the Laredo bank. The report was
and ruined the reputation of Carprepared by NDIC, a stralegi c
los Hank R o hn and his family.
Schulz has denied leaking the drug intelligence center under the
document and referred questions Justice Department and based in
to his attorney,James West, of Har- Jo hnstown, Pa.

attended the sale.
"It's a great fair," Rhodes said, dresse d in a
gray pinstriped suit and gray sweate r vest and
sporting " Pork" and "Beef- It's what's for
dmner" stickers. "They have more peop le here
by accident than most state fairs have 011 purpose."
Wells IS president of an electric and plumbing business m Anna. He said he had hoped to
buy Katie's p1g, but given the high bidding,
couldn't have done it without t he help of
Huffman, w ho owns an independent grocery
store in suburb an Columbus.
"Neither would 1," Hulfimn said. The two
plan to sell the meat at Hulfi1ian 's store.

According to tests former TV
host does not link to mailings
CLEVELAND (AI') - Prc limin .ay tt..'Sts on scx u,dly
cxpb t it packag:t_·s se nt to .1
f:~iJt•d

to find .1
DNA match to :1 former tt.· levision pL·rso Julity who killcd
him sl'if wh il e u nder inve stigadoZL'll

\\'0111L'Il

tion fi1r allegedly mailin t; thL'
materi al. newspapa and broadcast rt.· ports said.
Jud Rose, who was ,\ talk
show host o n C levebnd tel evi-

thl• p .! Ck.agc~ did liO t II LitL·lJ
gcllL'Cll lll .ltcri.!l from Rn ,~._· .
Tht..· reports .1lso :-..lid .1 typL· \\TitL'r found in R() \L'':o. hntll L'
did not nutdl thL· ty pe t"outHi

on many uf the

JH H L'' 111

the

n Llliin~s

nf undL'n\·c.tr .111 d
pornography.
OtliCJals who spoke "rth

The

AssoCJ ,Itt..:d

Prn'&lt;

on

sion and radw station s, killed
him se lf Aug. 4, th e day The

Wednesday
o uti oncd th.1t
mort• material I"L'Ill.llll ~ to be
te stcd :tnd tlut llo sl' i~ :.td l .t
suspect . Thc lllVl'Stlg:ltion o!"

Plain Dealer reported he was
bemg investigated.
Two days earlier, detectives
had searched his home m suburban Cleveland. Rose; 64, also
provided blood and saliva samples that cou ld be used in the
DNA testing.
The Plain Dealer and te'levisio n reports, citing unidentified
sources, said DNA lifted from

Rose prob:ably \Von't cond udc
for month s.
C uyahoga Co unty Coroner
Elizabeth Balraj, while declin in g con11nent on t he tc:st
results, said that her o tli ce has
been testing material related to
the case for months and turn in g the results ove r to prosc·cutors. Testing is co ntinuing, sht·
said.

Supreme Court denies one side the chance to speak in custody case
COLUMBUS (AP) -Atto rneys representing a Girard couple involved in an interstate
adoption -custody fight were barred Wednesday from presenting their clients' arguments in
front of the Ohio Supreme Court ne&gt;,:t wee~ . .
The written arguments of Richard and
Cheryle Asente, howeve r, will be considered
when the justices rule on whether Ohio or
Kentucky has jurisdiction over th e adoption
of 3 -year- oi~Justm_
. ·-The 'co urt Sa id the Asentes' attorneys ca n't
present nral argumt:nts on Tuesday became
one attorney. C harles Milless. misst·d a May 30
filing deadline by one llllllute.
Thr.:- co urt madt· It~ d ccJ ! . Illll wit hout
c:xpb nation .
Co urt ruks prohibit ~urtics from pn.: s ~._·nt­
ing or:1 l .t rgumt~ nts if thL·y f.1J! to till' th ctr
briefs on timL' .

Wht!e the court did not accept Milless' late
brief, it allowed him to submit written arguments responding to a brief by attOrneys for
Regina Moore and Jer ry Darning, Justin's
biological parents who live in Covington, Ky.
T.)le co urt could hove thrown out the
entire case becouse court rules allow justices
to dismiss an appeal 1f documents aren't filed

for arguments sin ce it adopted a rule speedin g
up custody cases to reduce the amount of
tune a c hild spends in foster ca re.
The Asent es , who adopted Ju stin's o lder
brother Joey in 1995, obtained custody of
Justin in 1998 and began trying to adopt h1m .
His biological parents changed their nunds
after sign\ng co nse nt-to-adopt forms and
in time:
want him retu rned .
Several _!}1C:ssages see king co mm ~Q. r frm1L
- A Kentucky JUdge has ruled 1ha! the
Milless and th e COU rt were not re turned
Asentes must · r~turn Ju stin w his biological
Wednesday.
Milless had blamed his mothds death on parents. The 11th Ohio District Court of
May 19 fo r delays in preparing his argumems . Appeals ruled that K,·ntu cky l1.1s jurisdiction
A bro ke n copy 111.1 clu ne also contribute d . in the ~.: ast· . The A~cntt' !!. tht'll a-;kni tilt' &lt;.Jh1o
to his tardint..:"ss on tl11..' day his brief was dm:, Supreme Cn un to ru le on jurisdiniotl.
Ml·.mwhilc, Justin has bL'L'Il h\·ing with rl1c
.md ru piL·s of hi s .lrgum~..·nt spill ed as hi;' tric:d
Ascntcs, but m,1ki ng . Wt'L'h· nd Yisib tn Kcn to dL·IiH-r thcm to thl· cou rt .
The ~,.· ,ls t..' ,\..1s t iu~ tina tht! court sc h ~dulc-J tllcky and his birth parents.

Fifteen union members arrested
CANTON (AI' ) Fifteen
union workers 'vt·re ,1rn:sted
Wednesday for blo cklllg the
en tr a nce to a li brary whi le
demo nstrating for a contra ct .
More than 60 people participated in a sit-in 1nside the library.
After
library
adm\ni st rators
refus ed to conlpr01mse in co ntra ct nt.'-gotiario ns , rhc.: dt&gt;monstratlon moved outside, satd Anne
Hill , director o f Sen·ice Employees lntnn ational U111on D1snicr
925 .
About I 00 union members
went on strike mort· than two
weeks ago beca.u se J new con trace
had not been reached With the
Stark Co un ty District Library.
Th e library system has about 200
emp loyees working under the o ld
contract that ex pired April I, Hill
sa id .
The umon 's chref nego tiator,
Ann e Muc ll n, was among t hose
c harged with 1111 ~de m eanu r c nm -

in c1dcm :md wtl l be arraigned
Thursday at th L· Stark Cou nty
Courthouse.
The untnn is seek ing p.ty
lllCI'l'JSt'S uf 6 pnrem the first
ye;1 r :1nd 5 pcrccnt 111 buth the:
secm 1d and third years of a threeyear contr:tcr . A Ji br;1nan's en try
rat e now IS S12 .7H an hour.
Hill s;&gt;id t he umon has reJeC tt·d
Jll offe r of 4 perce nt p.1y mneascs for ea ch of the three years and
demanded a fair- share clause.

· !:(It; !It\ IQ:!Iiiit;l Iii ,.1 ItllY Ill,: I~ 1lliiij~l Iij~i i·ll mal!~; IU:!Hl~~l I~lM i

DBV CONSTRUCTION .
We Do It All!
From the Foundation Up
Residential and
rcial

Pn il rc \. lld t hn ~c .liTe~ll'd wnc
t ,lk l' ll {() tilL' L ~Hil lt\" ,Jol JI WtdlO ll{

Middleport Water OHice
Wiii.Be Closed
On AUUUSt11 &amp; 18.

Stamp to honor
legislator
WASH INGTON (AP) - The
late R ep. Claude Pepper of Florida, a champiop of the elderly during a long career in Congress, will
be memorialized on a new postage
stamp next month.
The Postal Service said it will
issue the 33-cent stamp on Sept. 7,
o ne day before the 1OOth anniversary of his b~rth.
"The Claude Pepper stamp is a
fitting tribute to one of this country's fin est leaders and is an enduring reminder of his lifelong effort
on behalf of our nation's elderly
citizens," said Deborah K. Willhite,
postal senior vice president.
The stamp will be officially dedicated at a 10 a.m. ceremony in the
Cannon House Office Building,
with several members of Congress
taking part
Pepper, a Democrat from Florida, served in the Senate from 1936
through 1951 and in the House
from 1963 until his death on M ay
30, 1989.

Hasbro division
recalls toys
WASHINGTON (AP)
Playskool, a division of toy giant
Hasbro Inc., is recalling about
420,000 Busy Poppin' Pals toys
because children could choke or
be cut by small spring; that can
break loose from inside the toy.
Playskool, of Pawtucket, R, 1. , has
received 16 reports of spring;
breaking, including five instances
in whlch children put the broken
springs in their mouths with two
children suffering cuts, the Consumer Product Safety Conunission
said Wednesday.
The Busy Poppin' Pals is a 13inch-long whlte plastic toy with
blue, yellow and red buttons, levers
and knobs of various shapes' that
make animal characters pop up
from under the toy's base. The animals are hidden under blue, yellow
or red Lid.&lt; that have the numbers 1
through 5 on top. The pop- up animals are a giraffe. elephant, panda
bear, lion and monkey.
The toy has a white carry handle
and has the Playskool logo on the
!runt. The model number 54 15 and
"made in China" are imprinted on
the botto m of the toy.

The Daily Sentinel

co ne c t ion~

SUDst:"KII"TION RATES
By Carrier ur Motor R o uh~
One Week ... ..... .

.. ........... .. $2 .00

One Month ....
...... S8.70
One Year .......
. ............ SIO&lt;I .OO
SIN GLE COPY PRICE
......... .............c;o Cents
Daily ............ .
Suhscrihcr s not desiri ng to pay the carrier may
remit 1n advum:e dtrec t to The Dail y Scmind
una thrt'e, six or I 2 mnnth has is. Crcdtt wi ll be
gtvtrt \:~ m e r coch week .
No su bs...: nplt l}l' h)" mail permitt ed tn areas
where tromc: c.lrm r serv tcc l ~ :warlah lc.
.. llh lis hcr rtsc:n ·r.\ th e righl to adju st roles
"durtOI!l th e su t&gt;sc r1pti n n period. Suhscnrtiun
rate c h;m~ c~ rna)' he 1mplemcnted hy chungtng
the Uur at ton of the ~o u b ~ct t ptimt .

Wednesday, 2 :28 p.m., Rock
Springs Rehabilitation Center,
Elizabeth Salser, PVH .

Our m•ln concun In 1111 !lorles Is to ht
l t'turalt. If you knuw of an t'rror In a stnry,
n il ,he new~room 111 1740) 991· 21!5. \.\""
will check your lnfurn111tl•m und make u
I"Url1'rllon if warrMniC'd,
Nrw~

IJeparlnlenls

n e ntllln numher Is 99l·21S!i. Ue partm ~ nl
t-.tenslons are:

G«-ntl'lll MlllliJttr ........................... Ext . 1101
Ntws ................................................ EJ~:I . 1102
.................................. ................. or E:\1 .

1106

Other Serl'lrei
Ad \l'rlisln~ ..................................... Ext. 110_.
L"lrtu lalion...................................... Exl. 1103
Classl l'kd Ad§ ................................. Ext. 1100

TUPPERS PLAINS

•

Advisory lifted .
POMEROY -The boil advi~
sory in effect for areas of Pomeroy.,
affected by the recent Main Street ,
break has now been lifted.
The Pomeroy Water Department reported that tests show the
water is now safe to use without
boiling.

11:25
a.m.,
Oh,io
124,
Dewayne Stutier,Jackson-General
Hospital;
3:50 p.m., Fourth Street, Patri- ·
cia Adkins, HMC;
8:26 p.m., Broadway Avenue,
assisted by Pomeroy, Nan cy
Swartz, Holzer Medical Center;
LONG BOTTOM - A 2~ .
Wednesday, 12:50 a.m., Flatyear-old
Long Bottom boy is iii
woods Road, Ralph WeDs , Camcritical condition at Cabell ~ ;
den-Clark Memorial Hospital;
Huntington Hospical and a Long"
5:12 a.m., Edmunton Road,
Bottom man is in jail charged
Bernard Wilson, Pleasant Valley
with the child's injury
Hospital;
Meigs County Prosecutor John
lo1 :20 a.m., Mount Olive
Lentes said Michael "Tony'; ·
Road, assisted by Reedsville,
Gillilat:~. 32, of Rainbow Ridge :
RESERVE CHAMPION - Eugene Patterson, left, is pictured with the Opal Basim, CCMH.
Road ,·was charged with felonious ,
POMEROY
reserve champion market hog which he showed at Wednesday's
Wednesday, 6:46 p.m. Veterans assault.
Junior Fair Swine ShOw. Fair King David Rankin, Swine Princess Kay\ a
Lentes said that the child wa\
Hospital, Maude
. Memor ial
Gibbs, and Fair Queen Tara Rose are also pictured .
caken
to the Holzer M eigs Clinic ·
ARVADA, Colo. (AP) - ConClarkson, HMC
in Middleport and was then
fined to an office by an armed robRUTLAND
transported to the Huntington, :
ber who disabled the telephones,
Thesday, 12:56 p.m ., FairW.Va ., hospital for unspecified
five restaurant employees sent a
grounds, Eddie Willis, HMC;
ll1JUfleS.
silent plea for help by fax.
5:20 p.m ., Fairgrounds, Justin
Lentes said that the child lives
The gunman walked into BenGilke, treated;
in
the home Gillilan shares with ·
nett's Pit Bar-B-Que on Monday
11 :47 p.m., Village Manor,
his girlfriend, the child's mother:· ·
as the workers were getting ready
Eddie Willis, treated.
According to Sheriff James M .
to open for business.
SYRACUSE
Soulsby, Gillilan is in the Meigs '
"I was on the phone when this
Wednesday, Brewer Road,
County Jail and is expected to '
guy walked up and depressed the
Gene Wolfe,JGH;
appear in Meig; County Court '
receiver, pulled out a handgun and
7:35 p.m., Long Run, assisted
sometime
today.
rnld evervbody to get o n the
floor;' sa id manager Amber
Robinson.
•
The gunman took an undisson in the
and up category.
closed amount of cash, then forced
In the bubble gum blowing
the five employees into an office
contest, the winners were Colton
and ordered them to stay there.
Ervin in the under 6 group, ·
Before leaving, he took the teleRochelle Davis in the 7 to 9 ye~r ·
phone cords so they couldn't call
banana eating contest were Ben olds, Kelsey Boyd in the 10 to 12
police.
Tillis in the tinder 6 age group, age group, and Brenda Johnson i~ .
He didn't think to disable the
Zach Hendrix in the 7 to 9 year the 12 and up category.
:.
fax.
olds, Andrew Bissell in the 10 to
12 age group, and Suzanne John-

Man charged in
boy's injury

Robbery victims
fax for help

12

Kids

from PapAl

Homemaker wins
TV audition

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Marie Donato beat out 28,000
would-be actors vying to appear in
"The Sopranos" - and she didn't
even plan on auditioning.
Donato, a 50-year-old homemaker and grandmother of three,
tagged along with a friend to the
auditions that created a, well, mob
scene last month in Harrison, NJ
She hoped to get a glimpse of one
of the cast members from the popular HBO series about a fictional
New Jersey Mofia family.
The cast wasn't there, but several
casting directors i10ticed Donato's
looks. Her lack of acting experience cbdn't stand in the way.
Five days la ter, she arrived in
New York to meet th e show's
executive producer, David C hase.
" I'm an Italian-looking person,"
Donato said. "Honest and sincere.
Very straightforward. If onybody
knows me, they know I'll say what
I think, right off."
Donato shot one episode of the
show last week.

HOG SHOWMAN - Nick Detwlller, far right, was grand champion
showman at Wednesday's Junior Fair Swine Show. Also pictured are
Fair Queen Tara Rose, Fair King David Rankin and Swine Princess
K_axta GiQbs. _ _ __ -,

Rescue attempts fail to reach sub
MOS COW (AP) - Underwater rescue capsules fighting to reach
118 seamen trapped on a Russian
nuclear submarine failed ag~in
Thursday as new evidence suggested a massive explosion shattered
large areas of the vessel and many
sailors had no time to escape.
Navy officials said there were no
signs oflife on the vessel. but some
of the crew could still be alive.
Rescue capsules trying to link up
with the submarine for the past
three days were again driven back
Thursday by racing currents and
swirling sand in the inky darkness

Dry weekend in area likely
chanCL' of showers and thunderstor m &lt; in the morning. Highs
from the upper 70s to the lower
80s. C hance of rain 50 percent .
Friday night. .. Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Extended forecast :
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 80s.
Sunday... Mostl y clear. lows in
the upper 50s and highs in tht·
lower 80s.
Monday. .. Mostly clear. l ows in
the uppe r 50s and highs 1n the
loswr 80s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms
should move out of the tri county area by Friday mornin g,
setting the stage for a dry weekend.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:25
and s unri~e on Friday ar.6:47 a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tomght .. .Showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows in the mid
and upper hOs ..Southwcst wind 1
to \0 mph . C han ce of rain 70
percen t.
cloud y.
A
Friday... Mo stly

""

LOCAL STOCKS
AmTech/SBC - 41 I.
Ashland Inc. - 36
AT&amp;T - 32\
Bank One ~ 34 \e
Bob Evans - 17',.
BorgWarner ~ 36}.
Champion - 2;[.·
Charming Shops - 5
City Holding - 9' . ,
Federal Mogul - 11 ..
Firstar - 231.

Gannett - 56 '.a
General Electric - 56~.
Harley Davidson - 45 '!,.
Kmart - 7
1
Kroger - 20 "
Lands End - 28'1,.
Ltd. - 191.
Oak Hill Financial -

OVB - L7'1.
BST - 26\
Peoples -

Premier Rockwell -

Simple to
Simply.
Magnificent
in an assortment of colors
and coundess designs, We ,
tan provide the memorial

VALLEY WEATHER

AEP - 35'1•
Akzo- 41 ·~~~~

From

We offer the finest granites

Reader Services

•

POMEROY - Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Services
answered 14 calls for assistance on
Tuesday and Wednesday. Units
responded as follows:

Toys with model number 6205
have diffet:ent springs, and are not
part of the recall.
Mass merchandise and toy stores,
including Toys R Us, sold these
· toys nationwide for about S!O.The
toys were sold from January 199&amp;
through August 2000.
The safety board advises consumers to take these toys away
from young children inunediately
and contact Playskool at 1-877518-9743 anytime or visit their
Web ~ite co receive a fre e,
redesigned replacement toy.

lo

The Da il y Sentinel, I l l Co urt St ., Pome roy,
Ohio 45769

IIH· yc.tn , offt•red w t.lkl' the

by Central Dispatch, Gerald
Moore,JGH.

CENTRAL DISPATCH

Ncw~papc r A~scci a lion .

POSTMASTER: Send addrus

·Double Reclining Sofa
wtmatching rocker
recliner

Units log 14 calls

treatment;

MAIL SURSCRIPTI ONS
In ddt Mclws Cuunly
. .... :$27.30
1.' Wce ks... -.................. S.HI\2
16 Wct:ks .. .
..... 5 105.56
52 Wee ks
fol11l~!i Oulside Mrl~s Cuunl)' ..
D Weeks .
. ..... $29 .2 ~
26 W~eks. .
........... .... SS6.6H
52 Weeks .......... ............................. S 109.72

·Double ·
Ric:lgeJJ Sofa with
matching rocker
recliner Er love seat

LOCAL BRIEFS

Tuesday, 10:50 a.m., state routes
"7 and 143, motor vehicle accident, Kevin Knapp, Judith Knapp.
Ashley Knapp, Susan Will , Christy
Will, Darrin Will, all refused

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Emergencies should be reported to
the Maintenance Garage;at 992-5711
or
Police Department at 992-6424

,.....,•

MIDDLEPORT - Garnet Rife:91, Middleport, died Wednesday,
Aug. 16, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.

Pllblishcd every afle rnoon, Monday through
!=riday, Ill Co urt St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Puhlish ing Company. Sn:umJ
da~~ postagt paid~~ Pomeroy, Ohio.
1\tcmber: The Associated Preis, and the Oh io

llul tresp.1ss ing for l of ~m g arlll~
.ltH.i p rt:vcnun g pt'opk fru111
L'll tt'flll g ,ltld L'XIt lll g thl' d 1 ~tl'ld

lt br.1ry'o; 111 .11 11 b r,mch . '.lid C.mtoll
po li cL~ Lt. Anth ony DL·Mco.

Gamet Rife

(USPS 213-960)

Dencil Hudson
740-992-7455
John Jeffers
7 40-742-8603

The Daily Sentinel ·Page A 3
.,

More hog winners

Five records set at Sale of Champions

CUYAHOGA FALLS (AI')
- A grand jury indicted a mln
Wednesday on charges that he
fa~1lly shot a cook at a remurant
and then scalped him .
Frt"dc:ric.-k ~Ndson, -+2. of
Cuyahoga Fa(\s, was ,·harged
wich on~ coun( of aggrav.ncJ
mun.ler with a firt·arm spl'nticaecutor

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

14 ~.

s).

39

Rocky Boots :- 51.
AD Shell - 6Ql,
Sears - 31 '1.
Shoney's - " ..
Wai -Mart - 49~~~~
Wendy's - 181/ oe
Worthington - 11 '1•

16
Daily stock reports are th e
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, pro\lided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

354 feet deep on ihe sea bottom.
Prime
Minister
Mikhail
Kasyanov said Thursday the situation was "close to catastrophic,"
according to Russian news reports.
Rescue teams heading (or the
scene by ship were not expected to
arrive until Saturday, raising featS
they would be too late. The navy
ha&lt; given contracbc tory estimates
of how long the Kursk's oxygen
could last, but some say air generotors may have been destroyed
when the submarine slammed into
the sea bed last Saturday.
Film of the subma rine being
studied Thursday showed massive
damage reaching from the front to
the conning tower that would have
sent the vessel crashing to the qottom in seconds, navy officials said.
The control room where most of
the crew work is below the tower,
suggestmg sailors could not escape
w hen the submarine went down .

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
7
446·4524

OLO ROUTt; JS WlS I
t JI\4 JAC+I.SDN PIKE

that's right for )'OU. Come
talk to our counselors. We'll
help )'OU select a memorial to be
.'
cherished.

520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy
Nenr the Muon Bridge

Phone 740-992-2588
Vinton 740·388·8603
Gallipolis 740·448·0852

Domino's Pizza
.992-2124

FRI0/11 /00 · THURS 8/1 7/00

BOX OFFICE WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVINJNG SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MATINEES

HOLLOW MAN (R)
7:15 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:30
BLESS THIS CHILD (R)
7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATlNEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15
SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:ao DAILY
NO PASSES/NO BARGAIN NIGHT
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20
NUTIY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7:1 0 &amp; 9:10 OAILY
MATINEES SAT SUN 1:11J.3:1 0
THE REPLACEMENTS (PG-13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILV
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:10
WHAT LIES BENEATH (PG13)
7:00 O.O.ILY

MONDAY· THURSDAY 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
FRIDAY· SATURDAY 10:00 a.m. to j:OO a.m.
SUNDAY 3:00p.m. to 12:00 p.m •

Large 11 Item
Everything Pizza
Only

$899

...

�~ ...... ..

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... ~ • • .....

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El ~

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~

•

PageA4
•
•
0~~~~~~~~~~~·~D~•~I~I~---------------------•~und~.~~~·~A~u~pn_1~t~2-~~-

_T_h_e_o_a_i~Iy~s_en_t_i_n_ei________________________

The Daily Sentine~
'£mi!J/Uiid Ill 1941

~~
., . ~

f~

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Man having trouble getting over ex:fiancee

)~-

''

Dear Ann Landers: I am a single
mal e, dece nt-looking and in good shape.
My friends say I am " tall , dark and handsome" and sh o uld have no tro uble
attracting women. The problem is, four
yea rs ago, my fiancee broke off our
e ngage m e'nt , and I haven't been able to
develop a relationship with anyone else
s11Ke.
I am at the e nd of my rope. I put up a
good front for my friends, but I am desperatel y unhappy. My ex- fian cee married
;m o th L· r man wttlun a year after our
breakup Mea nwhik, I have been se n- ·
tl' ll Cl.'d to .l life of ~o litudc and despmr. I
h,l\'t.' tried to co nnec t with women at t he
uc.lc·h. the hbrary and throu gh friends,
but n othing se~...· ms to work out. I am
on ly .10 yean o ld , Ann . This ca n 't bL' all
there· " "' my life. What can I do to fa ll
m ln\'1...' .tg.tin ? -- Burning Out tn L.A.
Dear Burning Out: Don 't rn· to fall
111 lu\'l'. It \nm 't work .

•

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Un•n to ••• edikw an "'•korttt. TlatJ should H ltsttluJif JOO words. AU liners.,., ndl~ct
· · ro lflill~t.r 4UUI muu ~sir ned arul111tlruk addrtssllrul Ukphorw num~r. No llMifrttd ""'" wiU
, ,. lflblillwd. Ltlltrs sltou/41 bt in .rood teste, ildtlrcSJin.r lssu!'· not penotMJi!in
. .
Tlat opiniolts txpruud ill the .:olulftn ft.tlow an tltt COIUtiiJU.t oflht Oh10 V.u.ty P11bli.rllin.r
Co. 'r diltwiG/ board, 11rt.£t~J otllerwise rtOtftL

OUR VIEW

. . m: Pl(g[)OO~

.
QEJ.IAVI~ ~ NOT JU~
INAPPROP~IATE-

IT WA~ Olt;GQACEFUL
AND IMMORAL •••

Face off
:Political debate sewe valuable
-•. purpose in elections

'

'

.

' .

.~~ -You

can tell the political season has started when candida tes for
(llEce begin challenging their opponenrs to debates .
; ' Traditionally, the h oopla surrounding the fall campaign is
launched around 'Labor Day. Too far off, however, for three of the
fgur candidates for W est Virginia governor - including incumhlint Cecil Underwood - who want th e opportunity to match
totir viewpoints against Democratic candidate Bob Wise. Wise
• •
so far declined .
: : These challenges, a healthy sideline of the electoral process,
~~erate ' a lot of press, but sometimes few results, especially if one·
0; l"Ore of the candi dates are unwilling to participate.
; :.But when they do agree to m eet, the potential for candidates
~citing their message o ut is tremendous.
•: Candidates
often cite scheduling as a 'reaso n not to debate, or
.
tefuse to deal with independent or third party hopefuls.
'-But in races that will generate a lot of interest - such as West
Virg inia 's gubernator ial campaign, o r the Sixth District congressional race in Ohio - can didates should allow the time, for pubIii;lty purposes, if nothing else.
Asid·~ from the vis ibility a debate or question and answer peri~ offers for candidates, it's an opportunity for the public to learn
more about the people looking to represent them. They move
beyond being faces on a poster or TV.
:Even a presidential' debate, which most people would see or
hear through electronic media, is radically different from the diet
of sound bites and catchphrases that campaigns have become.
On that level, d ebates tend to be controlled, with rules set by
t'.e-candidates' manager~ . But- th~ give and take that ensues will
ri"'eal something from the candidates, no matter how much
r~earsal they've undergone. In that respect, they become .a little
nj:ere human and the m essage becomes clearer.
•
:;ocally, meet-the-candidates functions are very useful. Voters
lilerally meet these people and have an opportunity to question
t~m about issu es they consider Important.
:These events are not just e ntertainment for the politically
~ded. They are designed to reach the greatest number of peaPit! possible at a single time.
·
:jhat's because an election is about people making a decision.
'Ote more informed they are, the better enabled they are to make
tlieir choice: And there is no better way than in a face-to-face
meeting between candidates.
;When it happens, it's democracy at its best.

M

.

..

•

~~

•

.

••

TODAY
IN HISTORY
•
•t•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~oday is Thursday, Au g. 17, the 230th day o f 2000. Th ere are 136
~ left in the year.
... ::Yoday's Highligh t in Hi sto ry:
;e;;&gt;ne year ago, on Aug. 17 , 1999, more than 17,000 peop le were
k#]ed when a magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Turkey.
~n this date:
!Jn 1807, Robert Fulton's North R iver Steam Boat began heading
uf:New York 's Hud1on River on irs successful round- trip to Albany.
.Iii 1863, Federal batteri es an d ships bo mbarded Fort Sumter in
l l irleston harbor during the C ivil War.
;n, 1896, a prospecting party discove red gold in Alaska, a finding
r!ilt. touched off the Klondike gold ru&lt;h.
:In 1940, President R ooseve lt and Canadian Prime Minister
\tilliam Mackenzie King met in Ogdensb urg, N.Y. , where th ey
a~ed to set up a joint defeme cornmi ~&lt; ion.
::{ii 1943. the Alli ed co nqu e&lt;r o f Sicily was co mpleted as U.S. and
lkitish fo rces entered M essin a.
~n 1945, Indonesian natJOnalists declared their independ ence from
t~ N eth erlands.
~.!' 1962, East German border guards shot and mortall y wounded
I S!)'ear-nld Peter Fechter, who h&lt;I d attempted to cross the Berl in
~I into the weste rn senor.
j~ 1969, 24~ people were kill ed "' Hurn cane C amille slammed
ii~O the Gulf Cu.1st. '-.1
jn 1969, th t; Woodstock Mu s1c and Art Fair concluded near
~the! , N .Y
-ln 197H, th e first successful transatlanti c ba lloon flight ended as
Maxi e Ande"on, Be n Abruzzo and Larry Newman landed their
f~b l e Eagle II outside Pari s.
': -ten years J15o: Iraq said it wnuld " play host" to all foreign citizens
In: rhe country whu were from "aggressive natio ns," and place them
iri milita ry and civilian ,.ta rgets until the threat of war was over.
Altress-smger Pea rl Bailey died in Philadelp hia at age 72.
:Five years ago :J am es B. M cD o ugal, M c D ougal's ex-w ife, Susan H .
fvtcDougal, and Ark ansas Gov. Jii n Gu y Tu cker were indicted by the
\1(6itewa rer g rand j ury (James M cDougal was co nvi cted o n 18 of 19
counts of frau d and conspira cy; Tucker was fou nd gu ilty on one
c~iint o f fraud and ·o ne count o f co nsp iracy;
. Susa n M cD ougal was

.

thursday. Aupst 17, 1008
•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

The .D~ily . S~ntinel

"t'{!

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

..

Page AS.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Gore must attack Bush without being unlikable
Trailing badly and chronically, Vi ce President AI Gore faces a daunting set of tasks at
the Democratic National Convention, beginning with simultaneously convin cing people
to like him and dislike Texas Gov. George W.
Bush.
H e also has to somehow bo th finish the
task of consoli dating th e Democratic base
~nd begiq reaching outto swing voters, who
are now solidly pro- Bush .
On top of that, he has to educate an inattentive electorate about his program for
America's future and why it is better than the
one Bush unveiled - not very well- at the
Republican co nvention.
And, finally, he's got to dexterously handle
his Bill C linton problem, distancing himself
from the ethical mire of the last eight years
while emphasizing his role in the administratio n's policy successes.
Gore's problem isn't just that _he trailed
B ush by somewherebetwee n 10 and 17
.points after the GOP convention- a margi n
that probably .will narrow slightly in pre-Los
Angeles po lling.
The bigger problem is that, as Bush aid es
point o ut, in more than 225 national po lls
conducted since January 1999, Gore has
never led among likely voters, has never
exceeded 50 percent and has topped 46 perce nt only five tim es. Bush has cracked 50 percent 125 tim es.
In 95 polls conducted since Super Tu esday,
Bush led in 88, Gore in five and two were
ties, acco rding to a Bush analysis. All five
Go re leads were in M arch polling.
In one pre- GOP co nventi o n Gall up poll,
vo ters were as ked not o nly their preference
but whether they "would consider" votin g
fo r the two candidates. Bush was fa vored by
6 1 percent, Go re by only 46, suggesting a low
ce iling for his support.
D uring th e whole post-primary period,
wh ether Gore was attacki ng Bush on the
stump or co nducting a "posi tive" campaign,
whether he was wearing suits or po lo shirts

leave - it got accomplished despite o pposition from the Republicans.
"Gore w ill say. 'This may not be leadership
to them , but It's th e kind of leade rship that
the count ry wanted us to g ive , and we did ."' '
Starting with C linton 's speech o n Monday
night, Gore was to be portrayed as Clinton's
"partner in every good thing that happened
in the last eight years," a Gore adviser said.
It rema ins to be seen whether C linton will
NEA COLUMNIST
say that Gore disapproved of th e president 's
behavior during the M on ica Lewinsky scandal. White House aides said the president had
- Gore has consistently scored much lower no plan to do so.
net favorability ratings than Bush .
Gore apparently has de cided to put o n his
Bush has consistently our-polled Go re on "positive" face at the convention, promising
leadership, although Gore has led o n experi- n ot to lau nch " perso nal " attacks on Bush or
ence. The governor has big leads with inde- GOP vi ce presidential nonunee Dick
pende nts and Catho li cs and runs even with C henev. D emocrats insist that their focus
Gore among wome n.
groups. showed viewe rs responded negatively
Gore should have received a sizabl e hoosr to C heney's attacks on C linton~EJore;from his selection o f Sen. Joe Li eberman (DBut other Democratic speakers are free to
Conn .) as his running m ate, alt hough it's hard
attack, and will. And Gore definitely will
to b elieve last week's Gallup finding that th e
assail Bush's proposals as a return to the "hard
selection cur Bush's lead to only 2 points.
r ight" and "old guard" policies of the GOP
Bush , at the GOP convent ion , gave Core
Co ngress. disguised in th e "kinder, gentler"
two opportunities to narrow the gap further.
One was his failure to fix in peo ple's heads trappings invent ·:d by Bush's fat her.
Gore advisers also imhcate that Democratwhat the issues are in th e coming election.
ic
speakers w ill be "more substantive'' than
R e publicans spent two days putting on a
gauzy diversity show th at D em o crats dis- Republi ca ns were, detailing how Gore would
missed as a " masquerade ball" an d · two days · sustam th e current economic recovery and
sn iping at the alleged failures of the C linton- widen opportunity for "wo rking families "
rath er than " th e privil eged .''
Gore administration.
Low- balling expec tations, Bush advisers
The repeated charge that C linto n and Gore
"squandered" oppo rtuniti es for progress dur- predi ct Gore will get a co nvention bounce
ing the past eight years definitely gives big enough to bri ng him even with Bush
Democrats the chance to us e th e Dush tech- immed iately after the co nvention .
niqu e of cou nter-punching to reco unt their
Also low-balling, Gore advisers say they
record and rem ind vorers o f the distance the expect him to trail by 3 to 6 points on Labor
country has come econo mi cally and socially.
D ay. " That's good," one of them said. "Gore
"The argument that we haven 't led in eight isn't good as a fro nt- runn er.'' Not that he has
years is patently absurd," said one Gore advis- ever been one.
er. " Whether it's going from $200 bill ion
deficits to $ 2 trillion surpluses or providi ng
(l'vlortoll Kondracke is exeClltive editor of Roll
student loans, th e assault weapons ban , f.1 mily Call, the llfl uspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Kondracke

•

'HARDBALL'

Shaking ojJ Bill won't be easy for Democrats
BY CHRIS MArntEWS
LOS ANGELES - For AI Gore, the toughc·st part of winning the White House i&lt; getting
Bill C linto n to give it up.
Instead of yieldmg AI the spotlight this convention eve, Bill and f·EII arc grabbing all the
money and crowd attention they can muster.
Saturday, she holds a bi!S fund- raising con cert
for her New York Senate race . Sunday, he basks
at Malibu with Barbra Streisand: as she r.J kes in
S 10 millie n for Cli nton's post-presidential
library.
So the ques tion lingers in the L.A . air: When
is our charmed. politirally gifted, sorcerer of a
president going to finish with his tricks and let
his apprentice get a shot at center stage?
AI Gore has tried giving Clinton the hoo k.
Yo u don't see James C arville and Lanny Davis
or LJick Morris in Gore's cast of cam paign
aides . You do see a vJCe presidential run ning
m ate,Joe Lieberman, who sends a clear message
th at Gore wants to put the sordid aspt·cts of the
C linton era as f.1r as possible beh ind him . It was
the Connecticut senaror who call ed C linton 's
conduct "mm10ral." saying Clinton\ relationship with M onica Lewinsky made f.uhers like
him keep thei r daughters frum watching th e

everung news anymore.
P reparing to leave fo r C alifornia and the
Democratic convention , Bill C linton has o nce
again r.Jised the Mo ni ca story lor all tu reexamine. In a TV interview in Illinois, he told
of his spiritual "rebuilding" and said t hat "no
fair- minded perso n" would hbnie AI Gore_for
his misdeecls.
·
I expect Clinton 's brief moment of publi c
reflection to be fo rgotten amid the ~ans h celebrati ons of thi&lt; weekend. In the company of
C her and D iana R oss and other H o llywood
lovelies, th e president w ill take' quickly to the
role he has sought from youth : that of natio nal
prom king. H e will take his place in Beverly
Hills and Brentwood and Bel Air, not among
the gn:at heroes of the history boo ks but at th e
lip of the dance floor for all to see and admin-.
O n this point, at lea,t. Geo rge W Busl1 . had it
right in Philadelphia:
"Our current president cmboched the poten tial of a generation- so many tak·nts. su much
charm, such great skill . But in the end. to what
end? So much promise to no great purpose."
Alone among politicians, this president seems
to actually enjoy fu nd- mising evenrs like this
weekend's. He takes t he applause ~ those

who've paid to me nd as personal, their fri endship as authentic. He talks into the night, I'm
tuld, on this most valuable piece uf real estate:
the center o f this wealthy, successfu l and glittering group, all eyes and ears alert to w hatever he
has to share.
I . hav~ always rec ko ned that Santa Mo nica is
this presJdem's spiri tual home. and not because
of the obv 1ous pun .
Bi ll Cli nto n seem.~ m ost at home not in'
H ope, Ark ., w here he was born, nor in H ot
Springs, wherL' his mother raised him, but here
in rh e bnd of confected fantasy, here where the
predom inallt values are yollt h, sex, money,
celebrity, w inn111 g.
H c·n:, Bill Cl into n does not have to do. but
simply to be.
How fittin g th at his b'Tand parade should end
hc·rc in Ho llywood amo ng the actors, directors
and producc·rs who shan: hiS lifestyle: pursuing
the best-rem embered passions o f high .&lt;ehool
with the power and perks of middle :~ge.

(Chris 111•11/trll•s, cltitf&lt;!l' thc S.lll Frallrisw Exm11i11er's Was iJ i ll.~toll B11reau, is hast of jjHardba/1" on
CNBC •nd MSNBC caMe chaH11els. Tire 1999
editio11 rif "Hard!Jall" ll'tlS p11blisfrcd by TiJUdiSiotJe
Books.)

•'

Ann.
Landers
ADVICE
It sounds as if you are still depressed
ove r the breakup \Vith your ex- fian cee.
Yo u may need some professional h elp to
put It in the past. Please ge t it' M eanwhile, you ne ed to· start dating. Evaluate
your new acquaim:mcl"s acco rdi ng to
compatibility, mtcllige nce and good
character. Then: an: more women out
there looki ng for dece nt men than tht·
othl"r way around. You should h .1v~...· . no
trouble conn~rti n g OIKI...' yot_l pu t your

mind to it. Go get 'e m , Tiger.
Dear Ann Landers: Too many people have no idea whi ch qu estio ns ~re
appropriate and wh1 ch are not. May I
offer some guidance'
It is NEVER appropnate to ask:
-..
H ow much money do you make'
How muc h did you pay for th at'
Why aren't you m arried'
Why d o n't you have any children'
H ow old are you'
·
How tall are you'
How nm ch do you Wl.'igh ?
What religion arc: yoll?
I ca nno t bdicve how nHmy tilll L'" en wo rkers and cJ sua l friend s hJ\'t' a~kcJ me
these questions. If I s.ay. " It \ n o JH ' of your
. bu siness." th ~y accu~k me of h,l\· mg .111
attitude: probh:m. I h :l\'t' t n cd .t :-.kllt~.
"Why do you w ;l !H to k now'"' hu t it on ly
works ot: casintully. r-..1 mt of dtc (i lll l'.
pt•nplc think t hl'Y .ln.· '-' ntitJ cd to k ti u\\·
tlll.'SL' p cr~o ~J .tl thin gs_ . .md .lrL· itl l'n.:dibt y

King and Hollon take
baking and canning honors
RO C: K
S PRIN GS
C hnvl King of Po m e ro y
swept the M e igs Co unty
Semur Fair bakin g an d ca nning co mp eti t ion with 27
first pla ce award s a nd o n e
seco nd place for her canni ng
e ntrie s.
Evelyn H o ll on of Racin e
and Do nna J e nkin s of Rut la nd were the big winners in
t he baking diviSion .
T h e e n tries were j udged
on Sat urd ay afternoon, a nd
wi ll re main in pl ace in th e
t; o o n
Hunter' s
Buildin g
through Sa turda y eve nin g .
F i r st plac e winner s, by
'da~s. we re:
Pr ese r ves pe ac h , Emily ·
Bin g ,
Rutland ;
c h er r y,
C heryl
Kin g,
Pom e roy;
s traw b e rr y.
Don s
Sayre,
R ar ine: pe a r, Cheryl King ;
. Jam s bla c k r aspbeJ r y.
Maxine D ye r , Bi dwe ll : grape,
C h e r y l Kin g; str aw b e rry.
Tt•re~a Wil son, Ractn e;
Jellie &gt; app l e, Chery l
K i-111f. ~b b r k b-e-rry; C h cr y I
King ; grape , C h er y l Kin g;
,·)J erry, C h ery l Kll1g ; blue bn ry, C her yl King .
Spre .Ids .rppk butter,
Op .1 l lhn , ll icl wc· ll : s.Ind \\·i c h ~ ~H1...'.ld. Dor1 s S.lyt'l'.
IJ.... .1~ - I I ll'.

l'~e- klc·s

dill. Tr acy
lk .n·L·r. Pnm erny: b rc.td and
huttt•r.
MJ c hclt•
Sco t t,
L.1n,;wlilc: "'·c·e t. Op.1l Dyer:
R ~ l 1sh - e nd of the ga rdt" 11 . . Joy cL' f\.1an u l' l, s\vee t
peppn.
Ru by
Kin 15 .
l' o lll e r&lt;Jv : I 4 - Day. Mi c hel e
Scutl: n·1~.: um D l'r rt.· li sh . E m ily
i1 1n r;:
S ,l. .u o..·t'~ / c ar s u p C: h e r y l
King : c h t h s.llJ ce . C h e r yl
King . 'p.1g h e rn sau ct:.•, T..:re sa
\\' d '! Oil:
barbl'C LIC
SJUCt.' ,
C h t' r\'1 K111 g : ptz z:-~ s;au ce,
Tr.Hy lh·.n ·t: r ; tJ CO sauce .
T r.1cy B c ;tn.· r;
tOlllJ[ O

ju JCCS

JLII CC ,

IJ:ir i L· n e H ayes , Pomeroy;
,: r.1pe. Chery l King; V-8.
Tr:tcy Bt.:J vc r :
Ca nn e d fruit Appl es.tJJ Ce, C h ery l Kin g; blac kbe rri es. C h e r yl K 1n g: p eac h "' · C h ery l
Kin g: pears.
C h ervl
Ki n g;
ch err i es,
C: hn v l K i ng , blu e berrie s.
C: hcryl Ki n g:
C .1 n n e d
Ye g etab l es
bet·r s. w h o ll·. Da rll' n c Ha ye s:
b~...·ct~.

:-. li cl'd.

I' ;JtnCl .J

,C oo k.

l' n m L· roy ; b c,uJ s, l inu, C h t: r yl

1&lt;11 1~; b ,L' .1 n s , kidne y, C her yl
I&lt;J1 1g: bc.1n ~. '\ !l.lp , ()p :d Dyl·r:
h c'.liJS . she ll . Op :Ji D vcr; ca rrnt .... "'" D.n k!H' H .ty c s; pt:1.1S.
C h t· l yl K 1n g; ~\\'tT l pot.tt~&lt;.
C h . _· r yl K in~: \\· h ok \\'~ ~·
Cynd1

pn t .Jtlh.'S.
l) llllll'rov :

I ) ,j !' l l' ll l'
t ju.t ll t'IT d.

t• lL"'·

Ki1 g.

t ont.ll o c~. \\' ho lt•.
1-1 .J yl·~: ({1 111 ,\ ( I l l'~'
Rub y K 1 11 ~; lt ' ll l.l -

~rl'L' ll .

( : h L· r vl

K111 ~:

, . l. ~ l· r . Jhk

\ \Hl p. I LHl " S.1yrL'.
P L'Jl )l l"r
r111 gs. Tr .1 ~ y
1
lh·,t\Tr. 1 L' .II l\, yt· ll u\\" \\· .1:...:.
I' .J llll...' l ,l ll.t l.!;i..-" 1" . Cnoh·dl•.: :
C .t lllll'L I . Jlll' .Jt·
be~.· l·.
( ' Ill' I"\' I K 1ng: p oulr n ·. ClH·ryl

11,;,

I'

B.Jked

gDo d \

\\· hc." .lt

br c.l d .

ln .tf.
P .1 t ty

A,bc l k . M 1d dkp o rr : lcuf,
lH l' .J d . Peggy Cr.! lit'.
.~l1 ,ld IL· p n rr .
b .1n .111 .1
Jill\

'' !lltL'

ca ke, Lori Hayes;
Coo kie s - oatm ea l, Ev elyn
H o ll on; pl ain sugar. Donna
SmmT flatrlnrkiltg 11nd
Jenki1i s. 'Rurlahd; c h oco lat e·
c h ip. Ev e lyn H o ll on ; peanut
(QIIIIill,~ competitiou with
27 jlrst place .nvard.&lt; and but c~..· r . Doris Sayre; b rownie s, tct'd, Do n na J e nkin ~;
tiiU ucoud piau fot' Iter
br o wn it•s , no t Jt" 1..' d, D o illl.l
wn ttiug eutries. EPdyu
J enk in s:
l'~e·s .1pp k Evc·lvn Hol Hollou of Raciue and
Domw Jenkins of Rutland lon : pt"C.lll. E\'~ l y 11 H o ll on ;
pe .rc h . E\·e ly n H o ll on:
tl'Cl'l' tfte big wimra.&lt; i 11
C andY fud ge, ch o co tlrt~ bakiu.~ division.
l.l t~...·. Lo ri
H :-.ycs : fu dge.
brc .1d, Lon H ayes. Pomt· roy; p ~a n ut but t~...·r. Lori H ,ly t·~ :
.C o l cm;l ll ,
Z u cc hllll
b read,
l'H ty whir c, Mdi ~s a
lun
g
Uot
tom
;
Cookie
conAsb ec k ; baking powder bi s(C hoco late
Stre u &lt;e l
c uit s, Eve lyn H o ll o n , R.1unt•; t es t
Bar
s)
,
Donna
Jenki
ns.
vea st rolls. Eve lvn Hollon :
;nonkev bre.Jd , Opal D yer:
c innan;on ro ll s, Patt y Asb eck ;
muffin s, Linda R a thbu r n ,
Middl e pnrc :
C ak es - angel food, lind a
Rathburn; c h ocolatt·. Debo Subscribe today.
rah Mohler , Pome roy: spiCe
992 -2 156
c ake. Linda Rathburn : c arrot

Cheryl Kill,(/ of P~rneroy
SII'CJif rile Me((/s Co1mty

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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,
•

~DJAMFS
;;c ,..,
F

. ..

o;anna Lawson . CFS

Frnatli"'H&gt;t AdVIsor

111g

w h 11k

JARS GALORE - There was a time when everyone canned enough
fruits and vegetables to see them through t he winter.. Today, few
homemakers have the time or energy to can for the famrly, but do 1t
for the competition at the Meigs County Fair. Here Opal Tyree and
Dwight Logan look over a display of canned fruits . (Charlene Hoeflich
photo)

I'W!CEffi lNG

Locared 111 Peoples Bank
Court &amp; Second Slreet
Pomeroy, Onto 45 769

JIJI Peoples lnvestiiJentS
•

•

*'•'-" .,,..,.. a.n•, ·~-.u

._,,,._

Secunltes are oflered excluSively througt&gt; Raymond James Frnancral Servces. Member NASO/SIPC.
an tnde ndent broker/dealer, loCated at Peoples Ban!~. Investments AR E NOT FDIC INSURED. ARE
NOT e:K DEPOSITS, NOR AAE THE'f GUARANTEED BY THE FINANCI AL INSTI TUTION.
SUBJECT TO RISK AND MAY LOSE VALUE .

persistent. M aybe tf they see this in your
column. ir will help improve their nt;~n ­
ners. -- Ano nymous Out East
Dear Anonymous: Don 't count on
it. C lods ca n have very tough hides , and
even seemg it in print doesn't n1ake
mu ch of a dent .Yo ur best approach is to
co ntinue to refu se to answer nunuvyerblzznizz-type questions and instead ask a
question of you r own . Sample: "Why
wo uld you ask something as personal as
that'" P u t the ba ll in the questio ner's
court, and let 'e m sweat with it.
Dear Ann Landers: A long time
.1go, yo u pr intt'J J lette-r about lawyers
using the ride " Doctor." You said this
pr.K ti CL' \\'J ~ improper. Scn: ra l c ollc= ag:u e~
w ho hJ\T earned Jcadcim c d~g rces ar~
L" ll lll l...'rlled .1bout attor neys who ask to be
.ld dr~.· ~:-.e~.l 111 this mann er. Pl ease dabor .HL'. -- A-;sor i.Jtl' Professor in Kansas
Dear Professor: An atton11...'y w ho
h .1' l' .ll"ll l...'d .1 JD. Uuns Doctor). i ~ :1 doc-

tor the same as a Ph.D. It is an academic
degree. An attorney can be addressed as
" Doctor" if he or she prefers. Socially,
however, lawyers and academic professionals should not use their ntles. Those
w ho do, I fear, are suffering from j• seri ous case of low self-esteem and feel the
need to be pumped up.
Is alcohol ruining your life o r the life
of a loved one ' "Alcoholisnl: H ow to
Recognize It, How ro D eal With It, H ow
to Conquer It .. can tur n rhint,.rs around .
Send a sdf-addressed, long, bci~in ess-siz e
c.:nVcl ope and a check o r money o rder for
S3. 7'i (this includes postage and han dllllg) to: Alcohol , c/o Ann Lan ders, 1'0
llox 115&amp;2, C hi cago, Ill . 6061 1-056 2 (In
C.lll.tda, ~ l' ml S4 .55.) To find out m orL'
abour Ann Landers and read her pa &gt;t
colu mn \. v 1 ~ 1t the- Creawrs Syndil..' atL'
\\'L'b p.lg'L' .lt \\'\\ ' w .crea tors.com .

Antique tractor pull results listed
ROCK SI'IU NCS - Wi nn ers in rhe J nuqm·
n .K wr pldl whi ch WDk pb rc f\1o ndJy m g ht on
th~ pul\ tr.1rk WL'rl...' ,ltllHH l ll CC: d todJy.
Prt z~s r.1n g tn g from S:=ill for first w S I 0 fu r
fifth Wl'fl" .1wardcd .
""
Tht· \\"lll lll'P... h s tl'd li r ~t throu gh f1ft h r~...·spec­
uvcly. 111 t h e \'anum \H'lght t b sscs Wl'ft' JS fol lo\\'s:
Stancilrd
3500 pounds : Travi s Burbridge , l'ageville;
Wa yne Cot terill , Po mcroy; Jaso n M assie, Gallipolis: Fr&lt;·d Burso n, Shade; and Ediso n Hollon .
l'omc:ruy.
.
4500 pounds: H c· nry H art , Shade: Blai r Windon, Pomnoy: T.R R am slcy, Letart, WVa .; Kevin
Butcher, Po meroy: and Bill Jo nes, Pageville.
5500 po unds: Stes·e Cotteri ll , l'ageviil e; Bill
Burbridge, l'ageY ilk: M or to n llu tcher, Harriso nvi ll e; Bo b Jewell. Pom eroy: Heath er Battrell,
Ath ens
6500 pounds: M o rton Butcher, Harrisonville;
R ex But~ her, Pom eroy: Ter ry Smith , Racine;
Chuck Wingett , Albony.
7500 pounds: Lar ry H ollon , R:~ c ine ; Blair
Wi ndo n, Pome roy ; i:t ex Burc her, Pom eroy;
C hu ck Wingett , Albany; a nd R oger Taylor, Lct:Jrt,
WVa.
Stoc k
5500 po unds: Steve Cotterill , Pageville; Ryan
l:lattrell. Albany: Todd Bryant, Ga lhpoh s; John
Th omas, Pomeroy; and Tin'f'Snmh , C hester.
(,jOO pounds :
lar ry H ollo n, Racine: Ted

A WINNER - Larry Hollon won two first places irr
t he antique tractor pull Monday night at the Meigs
County Fair. He took firsts in the 6500 pou~ d,
stock class, and the 7500 pound standard class,
both with t his John Deere '60 tractor. Ho.llon" is
president of the Meigs Antique Farm Equipme-nt
Club, which has a n extensive di s play on t he fair-.
grounds . (Charlene Hoeflich photo )
Smith, R aci ne; Todd Bryant, Gallipoli s; Russell
Douglas, Albany ; and
manville.

Gl en

Kennedy, H a~ ::

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El ~

.,.., ...

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0~~~~~~~~~~~·~D~•~I~I~---------------------•~und~.~~~·~A~u~pn_1~t~2-~~-

_T_h_e_o_a_i~Iy~s_en_t_i_n_ei________________________

The Daily Sentine~
'£mi!J/Uiid Ill 1941

~~
., . ~

f~

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Man having trouble getting over ex:fiancee

)~-

''

Dear Ann Landers: I am a single
mal e, dece nt-looking and in good shape.
My friends say I am " tall , dark and handsome" and sh o uld have no tro uble
attracting women. The problem is, four
yea rs ago, my fiancee broke off our
e ngage m e'nt , and I haven't been able to
develop a relationship with anyone else
s11Ke.
I am at the e nd of my rope. I put up a
good front for my friends, but I am desperatel y unhappy. My ex- fian cee married
;m o th L· r man wttlun a year after our
breakup Mea nwhik, I have been se n- ·
tl' ll Cl.'d to .l life of ~o litudc and despmr. I
h,l\'t.' tried to co nnec t with women at t he
uc.lc·h. the hbrary and throu gh friends,
but n othing se~...· ms to work out. I am
on ly .10 yean o ld , Ann . This ca n 't bL' all
there· " "' my life. What can I do to fa ll
m ln\'1...' .tg.tin ? -- Burning Out tn L.A.
Dear Burning Out: Don 't rn· to fall
111 lu\'l'. It \nm 't work .

•

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Un•n to ••• edikw an "'•korttt. TlatJ should H ltsttluJif JOO words. AU liners.,., ndl~ct
· · ro lflill~t.r 4UUI muu ~sir ned arul111tlruk addrtssllrul Ukphorw num~r. No llMifrttd ""'" wiU
, ,. lflblillwd. Ltlltrs sltou/41 bt in .rood teste, ildtlrcSJin.r lssu!'· not penotMJi!in
. .
Tlat opiniolts txpruud ill the .:olulftn ft.tlow an tltt COIUtiiJU.t oflht Oh10 V.u.ty P11bli.rllin.r
Co. 'r diltwiG/ board, 11rt.£t~J otllerwise rtOtftL

OUR VIEW

. . m: Pl(g[)OO~

.
QEJ.IAVI~ ~ NOT JU~
INAPPROP~IATE-

IT WA~ Olt;GQACEFUL
AND IMMORAL •••

Face off
:Political debate sewe valuable
-•. purpose in elections

'

'

.

' .

.~~ -You

can tell the political season has started when candida tes for
(llEce begin challenging their opponenrs to debates .
; ' Traditionally, the h oopla surrounding the fall campaign is
launched around 'Labor Day. Too far off, however, for three of the
fgur candidates for W est Virginia governor - including incumhlint Cecil Underwood - who want th e opportunity to match
totir viewpoints against Democratic candidate Bob Wise. Wise
• •
so far declined .
: : These challenges, a healthy sideline of the electoral process,
~~erate ' a lot of press, but sometimes few results, especially if one·
0; l"Ore of the candi dates are unwilling to participate.
; :.But when they do agree to m eet, the potential for candidates
~citing their message o ut is tremendous.
•: Candidates
often cite scheduling as a 'reaso n not to debate, or
.
tefuse to deal with independent or third party hopefuls.
'-But in races that will generate a lot of interest - such as West
Virg inia 's gubernator ial campaign, o r the Sixth District congressional race in Ohio - can didates should allow the time, for pubIii;lty purposes, if nothing else.
Asid·~ from the vis ibility a debate or question and answer peri~ offers for candidates, it's an opportunity for the public to learn
more about the people looking to represent them. They move
beyond being faces on a poster or TV.
:Even a presidential' debate, which most people would see or
hear through electronic media, is radically different from the diet
of sound bites and catchphrases that campaigns have become.
On that level, d ebates tend to be controlled, with rules set by
t'.e-candidates' manager~ . But- th~ give and take that ensues will
ri"'eal something from the candidates, no matter how much
r~earsal they've undergone. In that respect, they become .a little
nj:ere human and the m essage becomes clearer.
•
:;ocally, meet-the-candidates functions are very useful. Voters
lilerally meet these people and have an opportunity to question
t~m about issu es they consider Important.
:These events are not just e ntertainment for the politically
~ded. They are designed to reach the greatest number of peaPit! possible at a single time.
·
:jhat's because an election is about people making a decision.
'Ote more informed they are, the better enabled they are to make
tlieir choice: And there is no better way than in a face-to-face
meeting between candidates.
;When it happens, it's democracy at its best.

M

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••

TODAY
IN HISTORY
•
•t•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~oday is Thursday, Au g. 17, the 230th day o f 2000. Th ere are 136
~ left in the year.
... ::Yoday's Highligh t in Hi sto ry:
;e;;&gt;ne year ago, on Aug. 17 , 1999, more than 17,000 peop le were
k#]ed when a magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Turkey.
~n this date:
!Jn 1807, Robert Fulton's North R iver Steam Boat began heading
uf:New York 's Hud1on River on irs successful round- trip to Albany.
.Iii 1863, Federal batteri es an d ships bo mbarded Fort Sumter in
l l irleston harbor during the C ivil War.
;n, 1896, a prospecting party discove red gold in Alaska, a finding
r!ilt. touched off the Klondike gold ru&lt;h.
:In 1940, President R ooseve lt and Canadian Prime Minister
\tilliam Mackenzie King met in Ogdensb urg, N.Y. , where th ey
a~ed to set up a joint defeme cornmi ~&lt; ion.
::{ii 1943. the Alli ed co nqu e&lt;r o f Sicily was co mpleted as U.S. and
lkitish fo rces entered M essin a.
~n 1945, Indonesian natJOnalists declared their independ ence from
t~ N eth erlands.
~.!' 1962, East German border guards shot and mortall y wounded
I S!)'ear-nld Peter Fechter, who h&lt;I d attempted to cross the Berl in
~I into the weste rn senor.
j~ 1969, 24~ people were kill ed "' Hurn cane C amille slammed
ii~O the Gulf Cu.1st. '-.1
jn 1969, th t; Woodstock Mu s1c and Art Fair concluded near
~the! , N .Y
-ln 197H, th e first successful transatlanti c ba lloon flight ended as
Maxi e Ande"on, Be n Abruzzo and Larry Newman landed their
f~b l e Eagle II outside Pari s.
': -ten years J15o: Iraq said it wnuld " play host" to all foreign citizens
In: rhe country whu were from "aggressive natio ns," and place them
iri milita ry and civilian ,.ta rgets until the threat of war was over.
Altress-smger Pea rl Bailey died in Philadelp hia at age 72.
:Five years ago :J am es B. M cD o ugal, M c D ougal's ex-w ife, Susan H .
fvtcDougal, and Ark ansas Gov. Jii n Gu y Tu cker were indicted by the
\1(6itewa rer g rand j ury (James M cDougal was co nvi cted o n 18 of 19
counts of frau d and conspira cy; Tucker was fou nd gu ilty on one
c~iint o f fraud and ·o ne count o f co nsp iracy;
. Susa n M cD ougal was

.

thursday. Aupst 17, 1008
•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

The .D~ily . S~ntinel

"t'{!

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

..

Page AS.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Gore must attack Bush without being unlikable
Trailing badly and chronically, Vi ce President AI Gore faces a daunting set of tasks at
the Democratic National Convention, beginning with simultaneously convin cing people
to like him and dislike Texas Gov. George W.
Bush.
H e also has to somehow bo th finish the
task of consoli dating th e Democratic base
~nd begiq reaching outto swing voters, who
are now solidly pro- Bush .
On top of that, he has to educate an inattentive electorate about his program for
America's future and why it is better than the
one Bush unveiled - not very well- at the
Republican co nvention.
And, finally, he's got to dexterously handle
his Bill C linton problem, distancing himself
from the ethical mire of the last eight years
while emphasizing his role in the administratio n's policy successes.
Gore's problem isn't just that _he trailed
B ush by somewherebetwee n 10 and 17
.points after the GOP convention- a margi n
that probably .will narrow slightly in pre-Los
Angeles po lling.
The bigger problem is that, as Bush aid es
point o ut, in more than 225 national po lls
conducted since January 1999, Gore has
never led among likely voters, has never
exceeded 50 percent and has topped 46 perce nt only five tim es. Bush has cracked 50 percent 125 tim es.
In 95 polls conducted since Super Tu esday,
Bush led in 88, Gore in five and two were
ties, acco rding to a Bush analysis. All five
Go re leads were in M arch polling.
In one pre- GOP co nventi o n Gall up poll,
vo ters were as ked not o nly their preference
but whether they "would consider" votin g
fo r the two candidates. Bush was fa vored by
6 1 percent, Go re by only 46, suggesting a low
ce iling for his support.
D uring th e whole post-primary period,
wh ether Gore was attacki ng Bush on the
stump or co nducting a "posi tive" campaign,
whether he was wearing suits or po lo shirts

leave - it got accomplished despite o pposition from the Republicans.
"Gore w ill say. 'This may not be leadership
to them , but It's th e kind of leade rship that
the count ry wanted us to g ive , and we did ."' '
Starting with C linton 's speech o n Monday
night, Gore was to be portrayed as Clinton's
"partner in every good thing that happened
in the last eight years," a Gore adviser said.
It rema ins to be seen whether C linton will
NEA COLUMNIST
say that Gore disapproved of th e president 's
behavior during the M on ica Lewinsky scandal. White House aides said the president had
- Gore has consistently scored much lower no plan to do so.
net favorability ratings than Bush .
Gore apparently has de cided to put o n his
Bush has consistently our-polled Go re on "positive" face at the convention, promising
leadership, although Gore has led o n experi- n ot to lau nch " perso nal " attacks on Bush or
ence. The governor has big leads with inde- GOP vi ce presidential nonunee Dick
pende nts and Catho li cs and runs even with C henev. D emocrats insist that their focus
Gore among wome n.
groups. showed viewe rs responded negatively
Gore should have received a sizabl e hoosr to C heney's attacks on C linton~EJore;from his selection o f Sen. Joe Li eberman (DBut other Democratic speakers are free to
Conn .) as his running m ate, alt hough it's hard
attack, and will. And Gore definitely will
to b elieve last week's Gallup finding that th e
assail Bush's proposals as a return to the "hard
selection cur Bush's lead to only 2 points.
r ight" and "old guard" policies of the GOP
Bush , at the GOP convent ion , gave Core
Co ngress. disguised in th e "kinder, gentler"
two opportunities to narrow the gap further.
One was his failure to fix in peo ple's heads trappings invent ·:d by Bush's fat her.
Gore advisers also imhcate that Democratwhat the issues are in th e coming election.
ic
speakers w ill be "more substantive'' than
R e publicans spent two days putting on a
gauzy diversity show th at D em o crats dis- Republi ca ns were, detailing how Gore would
missed as a " masquerade ball" an d · two days · sustam th e current economic recovery and
sn iping at the alleged failures of the C linton- widen opportunity for "wo rking families "
rath er than " th e privil eged .''
Gore administration.
Low- balling expec tations, Bush advisers
The repeated charge that C linto n and Gore
"squandered" oppo rtuniti es for progress dur- predi ct Gore will get a co nvention bounce
ing the past eight years definitely gives big enough to bri ng him even with Bush
Democrats the chance to us e th e Dush tech- immed iately after the co nvention .
niqu e of cou nter-punching to reco unt their
Also low-balling, Gore advisers say they
record and rem ind vorers o f the distance the expect him to trail by 3 to 6 points on Labor
country has come econo mi cally and socially.
D ay. " That's good," one of them said. "Gore
"The argument that we haven 't led in eight isn't good as a fro nt- runn er.'' Not that he has
years is patently absurd," said one Gore advis- ever been one.
er. " Whether it's going from $200 bill ion
deficits to $ 2 trillion surpluses or providi ng
(l'vlortoll Kondracke is exeClltive editor of Roll
student loans, th e assault weapons ban , f.1 mily Call, the llfl uspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Kondracke

•

'HARDBALL'

Shaking ojJ Bill won't be easy for Democrats
BY CHRIS MArntEWS
LOS ANGELES - For AI Gore, the toughc·st part of winning the White House i&lt; getting
Bill C linto n to give it up.
Instead of yieldmg AI the spotlight this convention eve, Bill and f·EII arc grabbing all the
money and crowd attention they can muster.
Saturday, she holds a bi!S fund- raising con cert
for her New York Senate race . Sunday, he basks
at Malibu with Barbra Streisand: as she r.J kes in
S 10 millie n for Cli nton's post-presidential
library.
So the ques tion lingers in the L.A . air: When
is our charmed. politirally gifted, sorcerer of a
president going to finish with his tricks and let
his apprentice get a shot at center stage?
AI Gore has tried giving Clinton the hoo k.
Yo u don't see James C arville and Lanny Davis
or LJick Morris in Gore's cast of cam paign
aides . You do see a vJCe presidential run ning
m ate,Joe Lieberman, who sends a clear message
th at Gore wants to put the sordid aspt·cts of the
C linton era as f.1r as possible beh ind him . It was
the Connecticut senaror who call ed C linton 's
conduct "mm10ral." saying Clinton\ relationship with M onica Lewinsky made f.uhers like
him keep thei r daughters frum watching th e

everung news anymore.
P reparing to leave fo r C alifornia and the
Democratic convention , Bill C linton has o nce
again r.Jised the Mo ni ca story lor all tu reexamine. In a TV interview in Illinois, he told
of his spiritual "rebuilding" and said t hat "no
fair- minded perso n" would hbnie AI Gore_for
his misdeecls.
·
I expect Clinton 's brief moment of publi c
reflection to be fo rgotten amid the ~ans h celebrati ons of thi&lt; weekend. In the company of
C her and D iana R oss and other H o llywood
lovelies, th e president w ill take' quickly to the
role he has sought from youth : that of natio nal
prom king. H e will take his place in Beverly
Hills and Brentwood and Bel Air, not among
the gn:at heroes of the history boo ks but at th e
lip of the dance floor for all to see and admin-.
O n this point, at lea,t. Geo rge W Busl1 . had it
right in Philadelphia:
"Our current president cmboched the poten tial of a generation- so many tak·nts. su much
charm, such great skill . But in the end. to what
end? So much promise to no great purpose."
Alone among politicians, this president seems
to actually enjoy fu nd- mising evenrs like this
weekend's. He takes t he applause ~ those

who've paid to me nd as personal, their fri endship as authentic. He talks into the night, I'm
tuld, on this most valuable piece uf real estate:
the center o f this wealthy, successfu l and glittering group, all eyes and ears alert to w hatever he
has to share.
I . hav~ always rec ko ned that Santa Mo nica is
this presJdem's spiri tual home. and not because
of the obv 1ous pun .
Bi ll Cli nto n seem.~ m ost at home not in'
H ope, Ark ., w here he was born, nor in H ot
Springs, wherL' his mother raised him, but here
in rh e bnd of confected fantasy, here where the
predom inallt values are yollt h, sex, money,
celebrity, w inn111 g.
H c·n:, Bill Cl into n does not have to do. but
simply to be.
How fittin g th at his b'Tand parade should end
hc·rc in Ho llywood amo ng the actors, directors
and producc·rs who shan: hiS lifestyle: pursuing
the best-rem embered passions o f high .&lt;ehool
with the power and perks of middle :~ge.

(Chris 111•11/trll•s, cltitf&lt;!l' thc S.lll Frallrisw Exm11i11er's Was iJ i ll.~toll B11reau, is hast of jjHardba/1" on
CNBC •nd MSNBC caMe chaH11els. Tire 1999
editio11 rif "Hard!Jall" ll'tlS p11blisfrcd by TiJUdiSiotJe
Books.)

•'

Ann.
Landers
ADVICE
It sounds as if you are still depressed
ove r the breakup \Vith your ex- fian cee.
Yo u may need some professional h elp to
put It in the past. Please ge t it' M eanwhile, you ne ed to· start dating. Evaluate
your new acquaim:mcl"s acco rdi ng to
compatibility, mtcllige nce and good
character. Then: an: more women out
there looki ng for dece nt men than tht·
othl"r way around. You should h .1v~...· . no
trouble conn~rti n g OIKI...' yot_l pu t your

mind to it. Go get 'e m , Tiger.
Dear Ann Landers: Too many people have no idea whi ch qu estio ns ~re
appropriate and wh1 ch are not. May I
offer some guidance'
It is NEVER appropnate to ask:
-..
H ow much money do you make'
How muc h did you pay for th at'
Why aren't you m arried'
Why d o n't you have any children'
H ow old are you'
·
How tall are you'
How nm ch do you Wl.'igh ?
What religion arc: yoll?
I ca nno t bdicve how nHmy tilll L'" en wo rkers and cJ sua l friend s hJ\'t' a~kcJ me
these questions. If I s.ay. " It \ n o JH ' of your
. bu siness." th ~y accu~k me of h,l\· mg .111
attitude: probh:m. I h :l\'t' t n cd .t :-.kllt~.
"Why do you w ;l !H to k now'"' hu t it on ly
works ot: casintully. r-..1 mt of dtc (i lll l'.
pt•nplc think t hl'Y .ln.· '-' ntitJ cd to k ti u\\·
tlll.'SL' p cr~o ~J .tl thin gs_ . .md .lrL· itl l'n.:dibt y

King and Hollon take
baking and canning honors
RO C: K
S PRIN GS
C hnvl King of Po m e ro y
swept the M e igs Co unty
Semur Fair bakin g an d ca nning co mp eti t ion with 27
first pla ce award s a nd o n e
seco nd place for her canni ng
e ntrie s.
Evelyn H o ll on of Racin e
and Do nna J e nkin s of Rut la nd were the big winners in
t he baking diviSion .
T h e e n tries were j udged
on Sat urd ay afternoon, a nd
wi ll re main in pl ace in th e
t; o o n
Hunter' s
Buildin g
through Sa turda y eve nin g .
F i r st plac e winner s, by
'da~s. we re:
Pr ese r ves pe ac h , Emily ·
Bin g ,
Rutland ;
c h er r y,
C heryl
Kin g,
Pom e roy;
s traw b e rr y.
Don s
Sayre,
R ar ine: pe a r, Cheryl King ;
. Jam s bla c k r aspbeJ r y.
Maxine D ye r , Bi dwe ll : grape,
C h e r y l Kin g; str aw b e rry.
Tt•re~a Wil son, Ractn e;
Jellie &gt; app l e, Chery l
K i-111f. ~b b r k b-e-rry; C h cr y I
King ; grape , C h er y l Kin g;
,·)J erry, C h ery l Kll1g ; blue bn ry, C her yl King .
Spre .Ids .rppk butter,
Op .1 l lhn , ll icl wc· ll : s.Ind \\·i c h ~ ~H1...'.ld. Dor1 s S.lyt'l'.
IJ.... .1~ - I I ll'.

l'~e- klc·s

dill. Tr acy
lk .n·L·r. Pnm erny: b rc.td and
huttt•r.
MJ c hclt•
Sco t t,
L.1n,;wlilc: "'·c·e t. Op.1l Dyer:
R ~ l 1sh - e nd of the ga rdt" 11 . . Joy cL' f\.1an u l' l, s\vee t
peppn.
Ru by
Kin 15 .
l' o lll e r&lt;Jv : I 4 - Day. Mi c hel e
Scutl: n·1~.: um D l'r rt.· li sh . E m ily
i1 1n r;:
S ,l. .u o..·t'~ / c ar s u p C: h e r y l
King : c h t h s.llJ ce . C h e r yl
King . 'p.1g h e rn sau ct:.•, T..:re sa
\\' d '! Oil:
barbl'C LIC
SJUCt.' ,
C h t' r\'1 K111 g : ptz z:-~ s;au ce,
Tr.Hy lh·.n ·t: r ; tJ CO sauce .
T r.1cy B c ;tn.· r;
tOlllJ[ O

ju JCCS

JLII CC ,

IJ:ir i L· n e H ayes , Pomeroy;
,: r.1pe. Chery l King; V-8.
Tr:tcy Bt.:J vc r :
Ca nn e d fruit Appl es.tJJ Ce, C h ery l Kin g; blac kbe rri es. C h e r yl K 1n g: p eac h "' · C h ery l
Kin g: pears.
C h ervl
Ki n g;
ch err i es,
C: hn v l K i ng , blu e berrie s.
C: hcryl Ki n g:
C .1 n n e d
Ye g etab l es
bet·r s. w h o ll·. Da rll' n c Ha ye s:
b~...·ct~.

:-. li cl'd.

I' ;JtnCl .J

,C oo k.

l' n m L· roy ; b c,uJ s, l inu, C h t: r yl

1&lt;11 1~; b ,L' .1 n s , kidne y, C her yl
I&lt;J1 1g: bc.1n ~. '\ !l.lp , ()p :d Dyl·r:
h c'.liJS . she ll . Op :Ji D vcr; ca rrnt .... "'" D.n k!H' H .ty c s; pt:1.1S.
C h t· l yl K 1n g; ~\\'tT l pot.tt~&lt;.
C h . _· r yl K in~: \\· h ok \\'~ ~·
Cynd1

pn t .Jtlh.'S.
l) llllll'rov :

I ) ,j !' l l' ll l'
t ju.t ll t'IT d.

t• lL"'·

Ki1 g.

t ont.ll o c~. \\' ho lt•.
1-1 .J yl·~: ({1 111 ,\ ( I l l'~'
Rub y K 1 11 ~; lt ' ll l.l -

~rl'L' ll .

( : h L· r vl

K111 ~:

, . l. ~ l· r . Jhk

\ \Hl p. I LHl " S.1yrL'.
P L'Jl )l l"r
r111 gs. Tr .1 ~ y
1
lh·,t\Tr. 1 L' .II l\, yt· ll u\\" \\· .1:...:.
I' .J llll...' l ,l ll.t l.!;i..-" 1" . Cnoh·dl•.: :
C .t lllll'L I . Jlll' .Jt·
be~.· l·.
( ' Ill' I"\' I K 1ng: p oulr n ·. ClH·ryl

11,;,

I'

B.Jked

gDo d \

\\· hc." .lt

br c.l d .

ln .tf.
P .1 t ty

A,bc l k . M 1d dkp o rr : lcuf,
lH l' .J d . Peggy Cr.! lit'.
.~l1 ,ld IL· p n rr .
b .1n .111 .1
Jill\

'' !lltL'

ca ke, Lori Hayes;
Coo kie s - oatm ea l, Ev elyn
H o ll on; pl ain sugar. Donna
SmmT flatrlnrkiltg 11nd
Jenki1i s. 'Rurlahd; c h oco lat e·
c h ip. Ev e lyn H o ll on ; peanut
(QIIIIill,~ competitiou with
27 jlrst place .nvard.&lt; and but c~..· r . Doris Sayre; b rownie s, tct'd, Do n na J e nkin ~;
tiiU ucoud piau fot' Iter
br o wn it•s , no t Jt" 1..' d, D o illl.l
wn ttiug eutries. EPdyu
J enk in s:
l'~e·s .1pp k Evc·lvn Hol Hollou of Raciue and
Domw Jenkins of Rutland lon : pt"C.lll. E\'~ l y 11 H o ll on ;
pe .rc h . E\·e ly n H o ll on:
tl'Cl'l' tfte big wimra.&lt; i 11
C andY fud ge, ch o co tlrt~ bakiu.~ division.
l.l t~...·. Lo ri
H :-.ycs : fu dge.
brc .1d, Lon H ayes. Pomt· roy; p ~a n ut but t~...·r. Lori H ,ly t·~ :
.C o l cm;l ll ,
Z u cc hllll
b read,
l'H ty whir c, Mdi ~s a
lun
g
Uot
tom
;
Cookie
conAsb ec k ; baking powder bi s(C hoco late
Stre u &lt;e l
c uit s, Eve lyn H o ll o n , R.1unt•; t es t
Bar
s)
,
Donna
Jenki
ns.
vea st rolls. Eve lvn Hollon :
;nonkev bre.Jd , Opal D yer:
c innan;on ro ll s, Patt y Asb eck ;
muffin s, Linda R a thbu r n ,
Middl e pnrc :
C ak es - angel food, lind a
Rathburn; c h ocolatt·. Debo Subscribe today.
rah Mohler , Pome roy: spiCe
992 -2 156
c ake. Linda Rathburn : c arrot

Cheryl Kill,(/ of P~rneroy
SII'CJif rile Me((/s Co1mty

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MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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•

~DJAMFS
;;c ,..,
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. ..

o;anna Lawson . CFS

Frnatli"'H&gt;t AdVIsor

111g

w h 11k

JARS GALORE - There was a time when everyone canned enough
fruits and vegetables to see them through t he winter.. Today, few
homemakers have the time or energy to can for the famrly, but do 1t
for the competition at the Meigs County Fair. Here Opal Tyree and
Dwight Logan look over a display of canned fruits . (Charlene Hoeflich
photo)

I'W!CEffi lNG

Locared 111 Peoples Bank
Court &amp; Second Slreet
Pomeroy, Onto 45 769

JIJI Peoples lnvestiiJentS
•

•

*'•'-" .,,..,.. a.n•, ·~-.u

._,,,._

Secunltes are oflered excluSively througt&gt; Raymond James Frnancral Servces. Member NASO/SIPC.
an tnde ndent broker/dealer, loCated at Peoples Ban!~. Investments AR E NOT FDIC INSURED. ARE
NOT e:K DEPOSITS, NOR AAE THE'f GUARANTEED BY THE FINANCI AL INSTI TUTION.
SUBJECT TO RISK AND MAY LOSE VALUE .

persistent. M aybe tf they see this in your
column. ir will help improve their nt;~n ­
ners. -- Ano nymous Out East
Dear Anonymous: Don 't count on
it. C lods ca n have very tough hides , and
even seemg it in print doesn't n1ake
mu ch of a dent .Yo ur best approach is to
co ntinue to refu se to answer nunuvyerblzznizz-type questions and instead ask a
question of you r own . Sample: "Why
wo uld you ask something as personal as
that'" P u t the ba ll in the questio ner's
court, and let 'e m sweat with it.
Dear Ann Landers: A long time
.1go, yo u pr intt'J J lette-r about lawyers
using the ride " Doctor." You said this
pr.K ti CL' \\'J ~ improper. Scn: ra l c ollc= ag:u e~
w ho hJ\T earned Jcadcim c d~g rces ar~
L" ll lll l...'rlled .1bout attor neys who ask to be
.ld dr~.· ~:-.e~.l 111 this mann er. Pl ease dabor .HL'. -- A-;sor i.Jtl' Professor in Kansas
Dear Professor: An atton11...'y w ho
h .1' l' .ll"ll l...'d .1 JD. Uuns Doctor). i ~ :1 doc-

tor the same as a Ph.D. It is an academic
degree. An attorney can be addressed as
" Doctor" if he or she prefers. Socially,
however, lawyers and academic professionals should not use their ntles. Those
w ho do, I fear, are suffering from j• seri ous case of low self-esteem and feel the
need to be pumped up.
Is alcohol ruining your life o r the life
of a loved one ' "Alcoholisnl: H ow to
Recognize It, How ro D eal With It, H ow
to Conquer It .. can tur n rhint,.rs around .
Send a sdf-addressed, long, bci~in ess-siz e
c.:nVcl ope and a check o r money o rder for
S3. 7'i (this includes postage and han dllllg) to: Alcohol , c/o Ann Lan ders, 1'0
llox 115&amp;2, C hi cago, Ill . 6061 1-056 2 (In
C.lll.tda, ~ l' ml S4 .55.) To find out m orL'
abour Ann Landers and read her pa &gt;t
colu mn \. v 1 ~ 1t the- Creawrs Syndil..' atL'
\\'L'b p.lg'L' .lt \\'\\ ' w .crea tors.com .

Antique tractor pull results listed
ROCK SI'IU NCS - Wi nn ers in rhe J nuqm·
n .K wr pldl whi ch WDk pb rc f\1o ndJy m g ht on
th~ pul\ tr.1rk WL'rl...' ,ltllHH l ll CC: d todJy.
Prt z~s r.1n g tn g from S:=ill for first w S I 0 fu r
fifth Wl'fl" .1wardcd .
""
Tht· \\"lll lll'P... h s tl'd li r ~t throu gh f1ft h r~...·spec­
uvcly. 111 t h e \'anum \H'lght t b sscs Wl'ft' JS fol lo\\'s:
Stancilrd
3500 pounds : Travi s Burbridge , l'ageville;
Wa yne Cot terill , Po mcroy; Jaso n M assie, Gallipolis: Fr&lt;·d Burso n, Shade; and Ediso n Hollon .
l'omc:ruy.
.
4500 pounds: H c· nry H art , Shade: Blai r Windon, Pomnoy: T.R R am slcy, Letart, WVa .; Kevin
Butcher, Po meroy: and Bill Jo nes, Pageville.
5500 po unds: Stes·e Cotteri ll , l'ageviil e; Bill
Burbridge, l'ageY ilk: M or to n llu tcher, Harriso nvi ll e; Bo b Jewell. Pom eroy: Heath er Battrell,
Ath ens
6500 pounds: M o rton Butcher, Harrisonville;
R ex But~ her, Pom eroy: Ter ry Smith , Racine;
Chuck Wingett , Albony.
7500 pounds: Lar ry H ollon , R:~ c ine ; Blair
Wi ndo n, Pome roy ; i:t ex Burc her, Pom eroy;
C hu ck Wingett , Albany; a nd R oger Taylor, Lct:Jrt,
WVa.
Stoc k
5500 po unds: Steve Cotterill , Pageville; Ryan
l:lattrell. Albany: Todd Bryant, Ga lhpoh s; John
Th omas, Pomeroy; and Tin'f'Snmh , C hester.
(,jOO pounds :
lar ry H ollo n, Racine: Ted

A WINNER - Larry Hollon won two first places irr
t he antique tractor pull Monday night at the Meigs
County Fair. He took firsts in the 6500 pou~ d,
stock class, and the 7500 pound standard class,
both with t his John Deere '60 tractor. Ho.llon" is
president of the Meigs Antique Farm Equipme-nt
Club, which has a n extensive di s play on t he fair-.
grounds . (Charlene Hoeflich photo )
Smith, R aci ne; Todd Bryant, Gallipoli s; Russell
Douglas, Albany ; and
manville.

Gl en

Kennedy, H a~ ::

I
•

�•
•
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Thursday, August 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Thursd-,. Aupst 17, :zooo

THURSDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Nade~u making strides

YOUTH

Shakeup at
L.L. softball
World Series

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. soccer wins big

•

n-•

All
Eutem
• B....,ft Sorllll, NAPAonllna.com 210
Noon • Saturday • ESPN
• Wlnlton Cup, Popsl 400
1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN
• Crllftlm8n Truck; Cftlc1C0175
12:30 p.m. • Aug. 27 • ESPN

-- - ·

1.

~

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

Llbonte, 3.105

J. Dllt ..,.., 3,084
I. OM £Mtn~ •. 2,;.48
4. Jeff btan. 2.9'4
I. TOI'IJI Stftart. 2.845
I. Rustr~.2.7M
' · Wllrd Burton. :2.711
.. RII*Y
2,700

Grll Blfltt. 3,048

TOOd Boci!M, 2.183

Nlfl1

MlltWillftiCit.:J,I$8

[lton

s.,w, 2,155

R~

LaJoie.

•

B 'omit: 200 laps/400

.Do,.,..,. .........,,

mlle!l

~I'OCO&lt;d(AICU"t

filM): Ward Burton, Pontiac,
188.843 mph, i\ug. 20, 1999
• Race tiCOfd: bale Jarrett.

4 . (4)

Dole Elml!ordt

7. (9) Morll Martin

8. (7) Jellllordon
9 . (8) Ward Burton
10. (-) Stove P•k

p--

.....

.,

-~~ ·
assumed It fa be- one of the
BOOines from nearby Chemung.
Park, the only Winston Cup
driver at Dale Earnhardt Inc.

whose name Is not Earnhardt,
tlad

never

even finished In the
top 10 on a road course
before. but tnere ne wa!l.
flashing first across the finish
line and later his smile.
The sentimental value of
being a native New Yorker was
somewhat undermined by the
tact that Park's hometown,
Ea!t Northport, is on Lon&amp;
Island. Unlike the three Bodine
brothers. who arew up less
than 20 miles away, Par1c's
hometown Is she hOurs away on
a day In which one can
smoothly traverse the five
bOroughs of New York City on
the way.
·
So moved by his trlumpn was
Park. hOwever. ttlat he said, "If
you had asked me three years

'•'

The Busch Grand National
series was off last week and
will return to action this
weekend at Mlch•n

-IY·

CRAmMAN TRUCK

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Rand)'
Tolsma finally tOOk a welf.

dese&gt;ved place In Ylctory Jane
when he _ , the Federated Auto_
Parts 250 at the last Truck

Series rece at Nastwille
Speedway USA. Tolsma
dominated tne seccnd """ or tne

event.

Tolsma QUSIIfteclseventh, bUt
ShOrt~ aftef the raco be&amp;M. ne
radioed crew chOir Gary
snowatter that the brakes ..vere
Ioci&lt;Irc up. The problem went
IWflt soon. howe't'er.
For 111e flm """or the 2SO.Iep
event, TolSma's Ood8e toflowed
Jacl&lt; Spr"""' 8B the two UUCkl
181&gt;1&gt;0dlhe field. Sllrolue
encountered mechanical
problems and rea out or the rooe.
When Tolsma took the lead on
lap 149, he
back.

newr-

J.tf Gonion ws. Tony Stewart
Both youna drlverw felt thftv had tne car to bill In the
Global Croslin&amp; Ill tne Gleo;, but o bumplflllnc;ldtnl btiWoen
thO two early In the race areatly hindered thllilcNnclo. After
the race, the two Indiana natives erc.aaect In a P'lnted pui){IO
excnanae In tne garace area.
'

NUCARTIIII-'aM--on-- ............
"This will blow over, but narsh words were Ukl by bOth
drlvera. The heat of battle often compel• rath lttionl, If
a&gt;1)'1nlnc. the shOutlna milCh showed just hOw mud! both ·

lloNiy Allloon 1111 tiM·

~AR ronklnp

rer: ·

FOIIJ.cOUrN''IGtorloe
wnft IIX, - I'IIOro
thin Ric- Patty.
Ruotr Willi- W81 tho
Rift d~v• to ·oq~~a~
,

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

' tllll toltrl, .... Jell
·~ ~
~ '',
~ wlttt •atrNic 'Of ~t
IIX ltr1tflllt ......
................nnln&amp;
It Wot~ 111M, N.Y.,

In 1197,lofllell won

-ln•rowli...,.

.....

POint and Wotklne . ·

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992·2196

• WMt: NAP4onllne.com 250

Mlchlpn
hosted one BGN
race ahas
year
smce 1992 .... Onty Mark
Martin has

• WMta: Michigan
SpeedWay, Brooklyn, MICh. (2·

mile track)

won more than

once. ancl he has onty two ....
cnevrotet holds e 5-3 edge over

now they Inadvertently

• Fonnat: 175 taps/175

miles

-

• Notable: This Is the first
Craftsman Truck event at
Chlcaao Motor Speedway..
Winston Cup regular Scott

Pruett wtll race In this event.

a.thn rn. Owl1ahn

Oeu NASCAR Thil Week,
A rrtchd 1nd I disagreed on this
question: Who

wl.!

X
Dear NASCAR This Week,
Why don'! you take the numbers
1h11 Adam Peny and Kenny Irwin
used (and any CMher racer who gets
killed in the car)and do not let !h.est
numbers be raaed with anymore?
Daren Dulaney
Fulton, Miss.

Pori\ thou&amp;ht R was a prank
unlll hlo - · en Eam
hardt fM, told him lha was
ton R W8SI'tillly t h e -

Because ir such a ru le had b(en
used throughout the history of motor·
spotb.the lowest number would~ in
the thousands ri&amp;htoow.

tlnlo NASCAR champion.
PII1&lt; first dro11t tor
Earnhtlrdt In tne Busch
GfOild Nlllonal Sarles.
ll...town: East

X

Ncirthport, N.Y.
Clr: No. I Pvnnzoll

CllevrOiet Monee CarlO,
by Dtle Eatnhardt
~"

--1:77

lno.

'

. . . . tllliit. fleut ArKtrews
ltartl, 1 win, 2tOI&gt;IiYO
ftnlshea. 1Cho1&gt;IO ftn.
lanes, 1 pole, $3,625,877

In ee.rn~n&amp;a •
Start IAua. 10.

199l,-OLWI!klna Glen!: - pole (Mordl 26,2000. It
lrllllol): victory lAte. 13,
2000, Ill WIIUdns Glen)

-.. """...,.._

.---.~

_.,... ••••• n _ _ .,. _ _

____,

.,_,.•.-er ..,. .. .,...,

"II r 1 - . - .... -W11UnCup-lrl

Wllltll-----·-?
second half of th is~ .,_. ,

·Abso,iutely. we didn't win It

Y.lllo'sNot

Burton has finished
11th or better In me last five
races. Burton currently sits
tourtllln the po~;:,nas
• NOr: ward Bur
tlnlshed 18th or worse In six of the
last seven races. ward Burton Is
• tiOTz Jeff

Dear NASCAR This Week,
A poem of heartfeh sympathy for
all driven who have lost their lives
in racing:
" An Ode to Adam and Kenny "
The NASCAR fans have great
""'ow
Forth£ risinx llai'J. or tomorrow
Their skills, their wit, their humur
Shall be missed by those who
knew them
We tip our caps to Adam and
Kenny
For we feel the sadness, that came
callin_B.
lois""Craven
Cameron, S.C.

on e fuolinlleece driol. I hOd

·A drtver doesn't talk as
lntellltently •• an eflCineer

does.
•we·re libeled winners
'Wilen you tall tnem you'YO
now. When "'" look Ill top
f!vH and wlrts, we·w lot a 101 a 11!101 wi(&amp;Ie-wll&amp;le you
need to &amp;et flxed, an
notch In thOle columns.
There are a lot.or drivers In e1111neer says, 'A little wta&amp;
waale?'
thll ...... WhO 1\aYen't
"'You sgy, 'Yeah. tf you can
bilon -to win It thlo
fix tnat. I can really drive the
lrlol:
heel&lt; out or this lhlni·' They'YO
'I thlnll IOU can take
- u m , not only from a · 101 a tOUCh Job uytnc to
flCure out what we realty
. dr!ver'l atandpolnt, but
need In these race cars. •
from a tum lllondpolnt,
Did It moon ..... - , . .
end take that momentum ~
beet auch • ..ublllhld
lnd UIO ft thiQUih tne

••••••••••••
VJIIO'aHot...

Alan Kulwicki ?
Michael Wilson
Franklin, Ind .

championship ~euon, on April I,
1993, Kulwicki died in a plane cruh
nu.r Brislol, Tenn.

to race my 11111 out to win ~
anct ~~~· &amp;uY whO's known

ror wtnnltlll lot of recea on

rold courau.

'ft'o iUM,. It 100 watChed
TV and relld newspaper&amp; ewer
!helot few dayl , tht)' had

ell thiiH road&lt;tcln&amp; expfrta
up here,
·we definitely weren1 the

r... rltao. we had to come

rrom 18th. we nld to pau
cars, end we had to race to
101 11. we hid ID be one or
the beet ID

wrn.'

co
co
1\)
I

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I just fin ished watching ttK! Brickyard 400 on ABC From green flag
10 checkered nag, I cou nt ed 114
com mercials. I think th is is out of
control, when we see more commer·
dais th111 we do racing.
Earl Johnson
Ta lbott, Tenn.

(11=

•

The 114 co mmercia ls, each JO
secomls lonH, is about the same rate
as televisio n standards governing

-

othe~ spons e\'entsa nd even prime·
lime programming.

Fan Tips
.

1. If two drivers have the same nUmber of
points at the end of the season, what is the
tiebreaker?
2. Who won the first Winston Cup Series race at
Michigan Speedway?

'l.llnoJOQJeA ata:J ·z
:u 051!'9ti 11lq1 SUJM 8::111 jO

J9QWnN "'

SIBMINY

Indy experience fuels drivers' concerns about track safety

X
LEGEND PASSES' He&gt;l&gt; Thomu,
who won two NASCAR Grand
National (now Wituton Cup) cham·
pionlhip1 and 48 race•, all in the
sp.~n of KVen season, died Aug. 8 at
tht: ap of 71.
Thomas was drivin&amp; the JO-called
MFabulows Hudson Hornell" when
he won championships in 19.51 and
!9$3.
HiJ c:lretr ended prematurely after
a 1956 crash at aev~iand County
Fairwooncb in Shelby. N.C.

X

X

GREENER PASTURES, PART

IT 'S NOT SO COMPUCATED'

TWO : Craftsman Tru-ck Serit:s

Mark Mar1in, himself an excellent
road racer, takes a simple approach
in roed-rourse events.
"The objed of road racinJ is to go
as fast Ill yw can and ltay out of \he
ditches," Man in nid.

contende r Andy Houston, the
second -generation driver from
Hickory, N.C., may well be on lhe
way co the 2001 Wirl!lton Cu p rook·
ie of the year race .
Hnu~ton will drive 1 ~cond Cal
Welts-owned Ford in nut week 's
400· miler at Michiean Speedw1y.
prompt1ng specu lation thai, at lhe
very leut , it is a uyout for a ride in
hi s second McOonald's·sponsored
car nea t year
Fueling sp.eculation chat it is a
done deal is news that Houston has
informed his truck tum to begin
looking fo r anolher driver.

X
MISTAKEN IDENTITY: Confusion reigned brieny early lut week
when D•le Janen of Johnson City,
Tenn., died after alen~th)' iii~Aug .
!I, the same day lllllhe Brickyard 400.
'Ole Winston Cup champion of the
same name is fine, ehhouK}I he was
slightly diwppoinled by a seventh·
place fi nish at lnd i•napo1is.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Dante Washington and Mario
Gori scored second-half goals as
th e Co lumbus Crew beat the
Miami Fusion 2-0 Wednesday
night in Major League Soccer.
The Crew did not get a shot on
goal until the 62nd minute , when
Washington ran down a lo ng pass
from Mike Lapp cr at midfield,
tion IS getting better because
raced passed two Miami defendof him," said Gordon, a threeers and sent a left-footer by
time series winner. 10 Vou ju~t
Miami goaltender Nick Rimando
look at how well they ran at
just as he was tripped u p from
Charlotte
ami a couple of
behind .
other places."
The Crew had only one o ther
What began with Nadeau 's
shot. Gori's goal in inju ry time.
team askmg Gordon's for some
The Fusion turn ed the ball over
help, has become a reciprocal
to th e Crew's Robert Warzycha
LIFE IS GOOD- Jerry Nadeau has been all smiles since joining forces with Hendrick Motorsports.
about 16 yards to the right of
Please see NASCAR, Pap Be
Nadeau has posted three Top 10 finishes in his last six races . (AP)
th eir goaL He passed it into the
pen alty area to a wide open Gori,
who easily got a left-foo te r passe d
~
Rimando from 12 yards.
Co lumbus goaltender Mark
Dougherty h ad five saves .
With the loss, Mrami (9-12-5,
32 points) failed to ti e Col um bus
MILWAUKEE (AP) - J eff D ' Amico was last of three relie vers who finished off the bloop sin gle scored Lopez.
Uoth teams squandered s~.:vcral sconng
(11 - 11-5, 38 pomts) for the
imp ressive even without his best stuff.
VICtory.
D' An!if\t allowed a run ir! t!Je fift!J on chanc~s. as the Reds stranded two_ mnn.ers
eighth and final MLS playoff spot. _ _ . The Milwaukee right- h'!flder earne&lt;! his
~
·
seventh straight victory and Rrchie Sexson Dante Bichette's two-out double over the in each of th e second through fourth
innings before leaving the bases loaded in
homered for the second straight game as the head of center fielder Marqurs Grissoni.
The Brewers had a chance to add to their the fifth.
Brewers completed their first sweep of th e
Th e lteds finished th e series 1-for-21\
Cincinnati Reds with a 5-1 vi c tory lead in th e fifth aft er D'Ami co led off the
JACKSONVILLE, Fb. (AP) inning with his second majo r league hit, a with runners in scoring position .
Wednesday night.
Jack sonville acqu ired b'llard Bren"We're getting runners in scoring posidoubl
e over th e head of Ken Grifrey Jr. in
D'Amico (9-4) scattered eight h its and
den Stai from Kansas City for an
tion, but we're not delivering." Reds man two walks in seven innings, striking out center field .
undisclosed draft choice.
D'Amico was safe at th ird o n a field er\ ager Jack McKeon s;ud. "We've gut fuur or
two.
T h e (,-foot-4, 3 12-pounder
Sexson, playing in his 16th game since choice as Ron ll elliard reached o n a sacri- five guys in the lirwup close to ..11111, but
fro m N ebrasb· started 59 of 68
b ei ng acquired from C leveland, h it the ti rst fi ce attempt. Two outs later, reli ever Scott tht:y'rt· nor getting h 1ts when WL' need them,
gamt·s h e played sin ce 1995,
pitc h he saw from Rob Bell (S-7) for his Sullivan walked Sexson b e fore gettill[( 011 JIIOSt OCCi.lSl OilS."
when he was selecre(l in the third
But ))'Amico persevered and the Llrewers
fifth homer, following a two-out single by Jemmy Burmtz o n a calle d third strik.,.
round of the NFL draft by the
addc.::d
two in surance runs in th e eighth o n
The
l:lrewers
rnade
it
31
in
the
sixth.
Geoff Jen kim.
Stt·clers.
That was all D'Amico needed in improv - C harlie Hayes singled and Luis Lopez \\•as an RBI single by pinch-hitter James Mouing to 7 - 0 wrth a 1.15 ERA in his last nine hit by a pitch with one out. Doth advanced ton and Grissom 's sacrifi ce tly.
The loss dropped th e R eds, who were 3o n Sullivan's error on a pickotftluow, before
starts .
"When you go out there without your an attempted suicide squ eeze by D'Amico 3 on the ir road trip, 6 I / 2 games be hind St.
GllEEN BAY, Wis. (AI') best stuff and get people out, that 's tht· si~;rr went awry as Hayes was tagged out at th'-· Lmns in the NL Ce ntra LThe· Cardinab beat .
With lin gering tend in itis in hi~
of a good pitcher." said Curtis Leskam c. the plate by catrher Jason LaRue. 13elli ard's Chic1g;o 5-1 ea rlier Wcd 1lesd:1y.
throwin g arm, Urett Favre sai d he
could be o ut of the Packen' lineup fflr their last two preseas.on

'

ga lliL'S.

STIHJ.:.
www.JubJu.&amp;a.com

:-: CllWOf TIIWEEI

See us for Your Stihl '
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

a 0v0f t11o put low

Heaou, Dele bmhlrctt

accumulated an lmprH...,. 1rrer of tlllent
for the Winston Cup teem
he OWnt - the No. 1
Pennzell Clltvrolets
driven fay lteve P1rtt.

Ridenour
Supply

Ty Nonis, Steve Hrnlel,

crew chief Paul Andrews

St. At. 248
Chester
985·3308

end enjln"r o...
Chltpont!Oflll htHI
dlltlqulltled tMiftMIYel
wtt11 rtv• te...,e. Sunday
It Watklne Glen, It wH

Favre, who hasn't practic ed in a
week, said it W &lt;\S too soon to tell
w hethn his streak o f 125 con\ecLHive rq~ular-~L·a~on starrs longest in NFL history by ,I quarterback - is in jeopardy.
"I've played a lo ng tim l'. and
I've been fortunat e not to have
mjuries," th e three-tim t' MVP
said . "This isn't somet hing I' m
used tu, but it's p tirt of th e ga 111e.
I'd much rather be om practiung
with the tt'ammatt's, but I guess 1t
haLl to COllie 'iO illt' rime. I'm j u st
trying to deal with it."

IMir Park 'I tum. end tt

w• the pit c"w that

Wamerout
with sore arm

pv• Perk e r..cr he never
relinquished.

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ST. LOUIS,. Mo. (AP) - Kurt
Warner ts getting a lor of rest rhis
Wl't·k due to a sore arm, although
the· St. Louis Rams quarterback
doc sn 't appear concerned.
"As many timt.•s as we thrmv in
c.u np anJ as many reps as I've
uh·n , it's normal to gt"t some
typL' of 1\0rcncss," Warnt&gt;:r said
Wednesday. " We're just trying to
atta.:k it while the problem i&lt;
sndl so it feel s good come Mouday night in the opener."
Warner didn't practice Tuesday
or Wednesday and was hopeful of
getting on the field on today.
H e's played spa ringly in the
preseason, and won't ger more
th an o ne qua rter of work against
the llill s this weekend.

Browns put
Detmer on
injured list

sween·
r mGt·"'· Re\!15"" " -i-n.net~~ ~.._
1 9 84

. . . .. . to play in the softball series.
"Little League's __ preference is
that the softball division be for
grrls," Van Au ken said. "It would
be nice if-there were a legal solu•
tion to it."
Richie Reyes ar1d four other
· boys sign ed up for the g irls team
alter their usual summer baseball
league disbanded.
Reyes doesn't see what th e fuss
is about and says the girls' team
n ee ded more players .
"We were all brought up to
believe that an athlete's an, ath lete." h e said. · ,
'
Four teams have indicated they
wo n't play the tearn.
A Philippines team had originally threatened not to play, but
players changed their minds and

Please see Softball, Pa1e 86

Bengals unveil new stadium to fans
Mike Brown says his father would
be proud of new facility

C LEVELAND (AP)
C leve land llrowns backup
quarterbac k Ty D et mer was
placed on the injured reserve
li st Wednesday and will mi ss
th e rt•st of tht• season.

C IN C INNATI (AP) - Tht'
Cinc innat i lkn~al s expl'rted
abo ut .20,! 10() pL'opk to clrtt•nd
au open homL' fnr thl' lr;un 's

Detmer . .'\2. injured his
Achrlks' tendon during Saturday's game aga in st C hica-

th e tirst publil·

lll'W holll l',

lll tlt l' d

but in stead

1 I Jt 1,( HJO

,lll l'Sti-

"hm· ·c.:.·d up for
V ll'\\'

of 1-'.llll

Brown St.1dium.
So many pco.pk shO\·VL'd up
W L"dllt'SdJ. y dut a sc:ron d ope n
house will be: plannt..'d so mt•ti me
in the lll'Xt (Oup k L'f \\'l.'l·k~ ..~,l id
'tadium spokcswoma11 Brooke
Hill.
" Pt•op le an.• "ril l pouring in
lwrl·," Hill s,.t id ,\s rhc .;;i:\ - hflur
O J)l'll house \\', IS draw111g t f&gt; ,\
rlosl' .!round 1\l p.111 \X/ednt·,tl.ty

go .
Th e nine -yea r NFL veteran had smgery Monday and
will need up to eight
m o nths for injury rehabilitati o n .
The Injur y kft rookie
Spergon Wynn as the ba c kup
to seco nd -yea r stan e r Tim
Couch .

lll~llt .

Offensi ve tukl e Jeremy
McKinn ey also was pla ce d
on the injurl'd rese rve li st.
Th e Browns on Wedn esda y waived defensive linemen Eric C handler a nd Teto
Simpson, ofl"ensive linemen
Steve Estes and Mik e Guil li~m s , wide. re ce ivers Jeff
Klopf and Kofi Shuck, tight
end Trevon Matthews and
d efensive ba c k Nate Terry.

KALAMAZOO, Mich . {AP)The Little League Softball World
Series rs in an uproar this year
because boys who joined a girls
team are playing in what has tr•ditionally been an all-girls event.
Parents, teams and tournament
officials say th e five 16-year-old
boys from Arizona have an unfair
physical advantage, and may even '
pose a danger to girls.
Some teams are threatening not
to play the team , and the tournam ent direct&lt;\ himself is protestmg .
" It looks like they stacked the
deck . Those boys are huge," said
Val Maslauskas, a parent from a
Massac husetts tearti whose players
wore mouthguards to protect
themselves in a I 0-2 loss to the
Arizona team Wednesday. "We're
trying for equality for these girls
and this is not equal."
The crowd e rupted in cheers
wh e n one of the boys was thrown
out at second base ahd booed at a
c,o llision between an Arizona boy
and a Westfield girl at first b ase.
"Th ey m ade catches in the outfield that no gi rl could have gotten to," said Kelly Popko, who
played third base for ·Westfield,
Mass.
Little League Baseball Inc.
made its softball and h ardhall
division s non- gender specific in
1974 after losing lawsuits filed by
boys demanding to play softball,
spokesman Lance Van Auken said
Wednesday.
The first girl played in the Li)d e League f1a;eball World Serie~

·

Favre battles tendinitis

• Familiar faces wm handle the
broadcast·booth duties in next
year'S Fo• Sports telecasts of
Winston Cup races .
Fox Sports has signed
retlrln&amp; driver Darrell WaltriP
and ace crew chief La rr~
McReynolds to provide ekpert
analysts. One of the worst-kept
setrets in the sport is that
longtime CBS announcer Mike
Joy will be the play-by-play man .

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

t.

.Jags acquire staf'

Ulm

AROUND THE GARAGE

" I don 't .ee why it should be any
different in NASCAR . I think
(NASCAR) can tate step&amp; to im·
prove these tracks and make them
ufer."

0

..Ls::

X

Crew blanks Miami

"

'

FJltl.
....- 1ete

1\) '"'I

••••••••••••

••••••••••••

Jeff Gordon, while takina pllins to
be p•tient and respectful, quietly
sugestcd thai NASCAR needs to up
the ante in safety facilit iea at itJ
tracks.
The e11pcricncc of racinsat lndi·
anapolis Motor Speedway, where the
impcndins vi•it of Formula One hu
uiqered a mauive moderniz.ation
dfor1 , lurned the heads or many
Winston Cup drivers.
"look It what Fonnull One madt:
them do to chat facility," Go rdon
uid. " I'm sure they (Indy officials)
didn't want lo make those chanp.
It wu required to hoal an inlerna·
tKmal ifand pril race.

track~

Alan Kulwicki was the 1992 Win·
ston Cup champion. Following his

seventh In points.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
• WMI: CtliC8fO 175
• When: 12:30 p.m.. Aug . 27
• Where: Ctlicago Motor
Speedway, Cicero, 111. jl-m ile

Your Tum

on an·~ rnacn1ne.

·

• For m•r r••~"~• ·

-CH GRAND NAnGIW.

Aus. 19.

-taterooctc:ouroo

BUSCH GRAND NAnGNAL

drivers wanted to wtn tne r~ and
betrayed themtelves. •

• llae r.cod: Mark Martin,

Ford, 169.571 mph,
1995

whorw Parle won hlo first
Wln&amp;ton Cup rece tn an
Elll'lllardt.qwnod Chew-.
In 1998, Parle competed.
on tne same weeletnd. In
Cnlttom., Truck, Busch
North and-~·
Mocllfto&lt;l raceo ot tne Glen.
Shortly lhllrelftor. Ean&gt;
hartlt loft Pork 1 meolll8

a place where It seems like 1
got my· start. •

FEUD OfT HE WEEK

•

most of any driver.... Bill Elliott

IS the active leader with seven.

• Wilen: Noon, Saturday

•-=

DaYe

Pontia.., 180.054 mph,
Au&amp;. 19, 1999

Blaney,

attention. and It was at hiS

at Watkins Glen beCause this Is

woulct not have been surprising
to see Steve Park win a
Winston Cup race. but at
watkins Glen?
It would not have been
surpriSifli to see a native New
Yor1cer win the Global Crossing
at the Glen, but enterln&amp; the

• OuMffrtfll reoonl:

season .... David Pearson WOf1
nine rsces at this track, the

drew Dale Earnhardt's

tiM..-...... told
SMIOitQrJHIIIo¥e
lllltftnleftona.-ceu,..
Hordt-ltRCR
...,.uck d8J lllla-nd
Som- ...........lxtll
Couldn't quite let by
Trlded h.,.h commenta
with ltawort
In ....,.., of flllln1 out
c.. he build on th ..7

I 'd pt m~ first win , I
would only hope It would come

N . Y .- ~

• DefiiMIIIW cbi""IGR: Dale
Earnhardt Jr.

Ford In -manufacturer wins .

lt was It Wlll:klns Glen,
N.Y., where Ste1le Plfk first

SiO where

WINSTDNCU'
WATKINS GLEN,

• Notlible: Labonte's point
lead stretched to 101 points,
his highest marain of the

NASCAA This W.el&lt;

FMOM LAST WEEK

·

miles

__ Steve

• 'Neekly ranklngs by NASCAR This Week wrtter Monte Dutton .
Last week's ranklnQ Is tn parentheses.

5. (3) RultJWII ....
8. (I) TonyS-•t

• ffM'tMt: 125 IBps/250

1999

.,.

.,.,_,2M!)

TOI' TEN

1. (1) Bobby IJIIIOftto
2. (2) Dllo Jorrott
3. (8) Jill Burtan

Ford, 173.$97 mph , June 13,

••••••••••••

JOt Runrnlft, 2,521

2,m

Johnlon,

• WhHe: Michigan
Speedway, Brooklyn, Mich .
(2-mile track)

oenr.s..r.:.eee

caw, .-wood, 2,341
.Nmrn~e

•-:Peosl400

presented by MeiJer
• Whet~: 1 ~.m .. Sunday

SIM Gt!uom. 2.~12

2.~3

Dlrt1l Grtlrl. 2.417

10. Jeff Gotdon, 2,076

WINSTON CUP

liolnton. l , 793
tlu't lllud, 2.710
Jldt 51nf.», 2.705
~ Talnl. 2.113

ICawtn ...... 2.set
Ron Homatlllf, 2.8A2

"*·
Ma11 M•lin, 2,696

t.

_,., GrHn. 3.497
JIIOI'I Nllt, 2.tl0

ON THE SCHEDULE

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - , A
loss would have put the Am e ri,
cans in danger of World C up
elimination, but the United States
dominated from start to fini sh,
routing Barbados 7 - IL
Eddie Pope scored in th e 14th
mmute, tlrian McBride and JoeMax Moore made it 3-0 by halftime and Tah Ramos added his
first international goal since 1998
in th e 72nd minute.
It matched the largest victory
margin ever for the Upited States
- an d it was the first time the
Americans ever scored seven
goals in a World Cup qualifier.

The decision by powerful
Hendrick Motorsports to put
unproven Jerry Nadeau in one
of its· cars was a n1ajor surprise.
Althm!gh N adea u hadn't "
been in Winston Cup racing
long e nough to be considered
a journeyman, his · first two
seasons gave little promise of
anything else.
Now, after a half-season as
the junior partner to Jeff Gordon and Terry Labonte,
Nadeau is prospering. Gone is
his habit of wrecking em and
finishing poorly.
"When you go out there
knowing you have good
equipment, it makes life easier," Nadeau said. "If anything, I
feel less pressure."
With more assets than he
had with the now-defunct
Elli ott-Marino
team · and
underfunded Melling Racing,
Nadeau is making a major
contribution at Hendrick .
After a lon e iop- 10 finish in
his first 80 starts, Nadeau has
three in his last six races.
Whai\ more, h e's helping
Gordon in his resurgence:
"At times, I think our situa-

IF YOU BUILD IT - Bengals owner and general manager Mike Brown
welcomes fans to the new Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati. (AP)

fhl' me of till' c rowd that
jan\Jllnlnuny do\VJJtown \trt·ets
,1ruu11d th t· ~ taJium stunned
Hamdton Courlty Commisstont'r Bob Ucdingluu ~. who
pushed for a ~:o.tlcs tax innc:.tse to
p;1y for ne-w riverfront st,tdiums
for th e Bengah :md the Cwclnnati Reds.
"Clearly, thi.;; L'Xcc eds nur
expectations. ~eVL'ra1 tim ~s over,"
Bedinghaus s;~ id . " And m any of
thcsl' people aren't rickc•r hold -

ers. Th is is tndy a community
c·vem- JUSt people coming out
ttl :O.l' l' what we've been ta1king
;tbo ut.''

Coullty taxpayers in 1996
app roved a h a lt~ce nt sales tax
J!KI'l' .l~l' to build the nt:w
6(,.5111l-seat stadium and the
nearby baseball park . Uengals
ownci Mik e Brown had threatent'd to move hi s team to
anothlT riry if he wasn't given a
n l'w stadium .
Brown &lt;aid Wedn"'day that he
\v;~-; hap py that the team was
ahlt· to \tay in C incinnati .
"It 1mght have been easier to
11\0Vl' thLi t e.llll, but it wouldn 't
have been better.'' tlrown said.
"The Llc·ngals started here and
they belong to the people of thi's·
CO I11 11llll1i ty."

Fan s seemed
enthusiastiC
Wednesday night as they toured
the $453.2 million facility.
:
"C incinnati is such a conserv:
ative town , and now we have

o;,ometh ing that is so modern ,:"'
salll Elizabeth Skillman. " It's so
fun1ri sti c.''

Ple111 IM len1als, Pllp XX

�•
•
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:
Daily

The Daily Sentinel encourages
your support of these area
businesses who make this page
possible.

Sc~reboard,

•

The Daily Sentinel
Page B6

Page Bl
Thursd-,. Aupst 17, :zooo

THURSDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Nade~u making strides

YOUTH

Shakeup at
L.L. softball
World Series

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. soccer wins big

•

n-•

All
Eutem
• B....,ft Sorllll, NAPAonllna.com 210
Noon • Saturday • ESPN
• Wlnlton Cup, Popsl 400
1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN
• Crllftlm8n Truck; Cftlc1C0175
12:30 p.m. • Aug. 27 • ESPN

-- - ·

1.

~

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

Llbonte, 3.105

J. Dllt ..,.., 3,084
I. OM £Mtn~ •. 2,;.48
4. Jeff btan. 2.9'4
I. TOI'IJI Stftart. 2.845
I. Rustr~.2.7M
' · Wllrd Burton. :2.711
.. RII*Y
2,700

Grll Blfltt. 3,048

TOOd Boci!M, 2.183

Nlfl1

MlltWillftiCit.:J,I$8

[lton

s.,w, 2,155

R~

LaJoie.

•

B 'omit: 200 laps/400

.Do,.,..,. .........,,

mlle!l

~I'OCO&lt;d(AICU"t

filM): Ward Burton, Pontiac,
188.843 mph, i\ug. 20, 1999
• Race tiCOfd: bale Jarrett.

4 . (4)

Dole Elml!ordt

7. (9) Morll Martin

8. (7) Jellllordon
9 . (8) Ward Burton
10. (-) Stove P•k

p--

.....

.,

-~~ ·
assumed It fa be- one of the
BOOines from nearby Chemung.
Park, the only Winston Cup
driver at Dale Earnhardt Inc.

whose name Is not Earnhardt,
tlad

never

even finished In the
top 10 on a road course
before. but tnere ne wa!l.
flashing first across the finish
line and later his smile.
The sentimental value of
being a native New Yorker was
somewhat undermined by the
tact that Park's hometown,
Ea!t Northport, is on Lon&amp;
Island. Unlike the three Bodine
brothers. who arew up less
than 20 miles away, Par1c's
hometown Is she hOurs away on
a day In which one can
smoothly traverse the five
bOroughs of New York City on
the way.
·
So moved by his trlumpn was
Park. hOwever. ttlat he said, "If
you had asked me three years

'•'

The Busch Grand National
series was off last week and
will return to action this
weekend at Mlch•n

-IY·

CRAmMAN TRUCK

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Rand)'
Tolsma finally tOOk a welf.

dese&gt;ved place In Ylctory Jane
when he _ , the Federated Auto_
Parts 250 at the last Truck

Series rece at Nastwille
Speedway USA. Tolsma
dominated tne seccnd """ or tne

event.

Tolsma QUSIIfteclseventh, bUt
ShOrt~ aftef the raco be&amp;M. ne
radioed crew chOir Gary
snowatter that the brakes ..vere
Ioci&lt;Irc up. The problem went
IWflt soon. howe't'er.
For 111e flm """or the 2SO.Iep
event, TolSma's Ood8e toflowed
Jacl&lt; Spr"""' 8B the two UUCkl
181&gt;1&gt;0dlhe field. Sllrolue
encountered mechanical
problems and rea out or the rooe.
When Tolsma took the lead on
lap 149, he
back.

newr-

J.tf Gonion ws. Tony Stewart
Both youna drlverw felt thftv had tne car to bill In the
Global Croslin&amp; Ill tne Gleo;, but o bumplflllnc;ldtnl btiWoen
thO two early In the race areatly hindered thllilcNnclo. After
the race, the two Indiana natives erc.aaect In a P'lnted pui){IO
excnanae In tne garace area.
'

NUCARTIIII-'aM--on-- ............
"This will blow over, but narsh words were Ukl by bOth
drlvera. The heat of battle often compel• rath lttionl, If
a&gt;1)'1nlnc. the shOutlna milCh showed just hOw mud! both ·

lloNiy Allloon 1111 tiM·

~AR ronklnp

rer: ·

FOIIJ.cOUrN''IGtorloe
wnft IIX, - I'IIOro
thin Ric- Patty.
Ruotr Willi- W81 tho
Rift d~v• to ·oq~~a~
,

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

' tllll toltrl, .... Jell
·~ ~
~ '',
~ wlttt •atrNic 'Of ~t
IIX ltr1tflllt ......
................nnln&amp;
It Wot~ 111M, N.Y.,

In 1197,lofllell won

-ln•rowli...,.

.....

POint and Wotklne . ·

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992·2196

• WMt: NAP4onllne.com 250

Mlchlpn
hosted one BGN
race ahas
year
smce 1992 .... Onty Mark
Martin has

• WMta: Michigan
SpeedWay, Brooklyn, MICh. (2·

mile track)

won more than

once. ancl he has onty two ....
cnevrotet holds e 5-3 edge over

now they Inadvertently

• Fonnat: 175 taps/175

miles

-

• Notable: This Is the first
Craftsman Truck event at
Chlcaao Motor Speedway..
Winston Cup regular Scott

Pruett wtll race In this event.

a.thn rn. Owl1ahn

Oeu NASCAR Thil Week,
A rrtchd 1nd I disagreed on this
question: Who

wl.!

X
Dear NASCAR This Week,
Why don'! you take the numbers
1h11 Adam Peny and Kenny Irwin
used (and any CMher racer who gets
killed in the car)and do not let !h.est
numbers be raaed with anymore?
Daren Dulaney
Fulton, Miss.

Pori\ thou&amp;ht R was a prank
unlll hlo - · en Eam
hardt fM, told him lha was
ton R W8SI'tillly t h e -

Because ir such a ru le had b(en
used throughout the history of motor·
spotb.the lowest number would~ in
the thousands ri&amp;htoow.

tlnlo NASCAR champion.
PII1&lt; first dro11t tor
Earnhtlrdt In tne Busch
GfOild Nlllonal Sarles.
ll...town: East

X

Ncirthport, N.Y.
Clr: No. I Pvnnzoll

CllevrOiet Monee CarlO,
by Dtle Eatnhardt
~"

--1:77

lno.

'

. . . . tllliit. fleut ArKtrews
ltartl, 1 win, 2tOI&gt;IiYO
ftnlshea. 1Cho1&gt;IO ftn.
lanes, 1 pole, $3,625,877

In ee.rn~n&amp;a •
Start IAua. 10.

199l,-OLWI!klna Glen!: - pole (Mordl 26,2000. It
lrllllol): victory lAte. 13,
2000, Ill WIIUdns Glen)

-.. """...,.._

.---.~

_.,... ••••• n _ _ .,. _ _

____,

.,_,.•.-er ..,. .. .,...,

"II r 1 - . - .... -W11UnCup-lrl

Wllltll-----·-?
second half of th is~ .,_. ,

·Abso,iutely. we didn't win It

Y.lllo'sNot

Burton has finished
11th or better In me last five
races. Burton currently sits
tourtllln the po~;:,nas
• NOr: ward Bur
tlnlshed 18th or worse In six of the
last seven races. ward Burton Is
• tiOTz Jeff

Dear NASCAR This Week,
A poem of heartfeh sympathy for
all driven who have lost their lives
in racing:
" An Ode to Adam and Kenny "
The NASCAR fans have great
""'ow
Forth£ risinx llai'J. or tomorrow
Their skills, their wit, their humur
Shall be missed by those who
knew them
We tip our caps to Adam and
Kenny
For we feel the sadness, that came
callin_B.
lois""Craven
Cameron, S.C.

on e fuolinlleece driol. I hOd

·A drtver doesn't talk as
lntellltently •• an eflCineer

does.
•we·re libeled winners
'Wilen you tall tnem you'YO
now. When "'" look Ill top
f!vH and wlrts, we·w lot a 101 a 11!101 wi(&amp;Ie-wll&amp;le you
need to &amp;et flxed, an
notch In thOle columns.
There are a lot.or drivers In e1111neer says, 'A little wta&amp;
waale?'
thll ...... WhO 1\aYen't
"'You sgy, 'Yeah. tf you can
bilon -to win It thlo
fix tnat. I can really drive the
lrlol:
heel&lt; out or this lhlni·' They'YO
'I thlnll IOU can take
- u m , not only from a · 101 a tOUCh Job uytnc to
flCure out what we realty
. dr!ver'l atandpolnt, but
need In these race cars. •
from a tum lllondpolnt,
Did It moon ..... - , . .
end take that momentum ~
beet auch • ..ublllhld
lnd UIO ft thiQUih tne

••••••••••••
VJIIO'aHot...

Alan Kulwicki ?
Michael Wilson
Franklin, Ind .

championship ~euon, on April I,
1993, Kulwicki died in a plane cruh
nu.r Brislol, Tenn.

to race my 11111 out to win ~
anct ~~~· &amp;uY whO's known

ror wtnnltlll lot of recea on

rold courau.

'ft'o iUM,. It 100 watChed
TV and relld newspaper&amp; ewer
!helot few dayl , tht)' had

ell thiiH road&lt;tcln&amp; expfrta
up here,
·we definitely weren1 the

r... rltao. we had to come

rrom 18th. we nld to pau
cars, end we had to race to
101 11. we hid ID be one or
the beet ID

wrn.'

co
co
1\)
I

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I just fin ished watching ttK! Brickyard 400 on ABC From green flag
10 checkered nag, I cou nt ed 114
com mercials. I think th is is out of
control, when we see more commer·
dais th111 we do racing.
Earl Johnson
Ta lbott, Tenn.

(11=

•

The 114 co mmercia ls, each JO
secomls lonH, is about the same rate
as televisio n standards governing

-

othe~ spons e\'entsa nd even prime·
lime programming.

Fan Tips
.

1. If two drivers have the same nUmber of
points at the end of the season, what is the
tiebreaker?
2. Who won the first Winston Cup Series race at
Michigan Speedway?

'l.llnoJOQJeA ata:J ·z
:u 051!'9ti 11lq1 SUJM 8::111 jO

J9QWnN "'

SIBMINY

Indy experience fuels drivers' concerns about track safety

X
LEGEND PASSES' He&gt;l&gt; Thomu,
who won two NASCAR Grand
National (now Wituton Cup) cham·
pionlhip1 and 48 race•, all in the
sp.~n of KVen season, died Aug. 8 at
tht: ap of 71.
Thomas was drivin&amp; the JO-called
MFabulows Hudson Hornell" when
he won championships in 19.51 and
!9$3.
HiJ c:lretr ended prematurely after
a 1956 crash at aev~iand County
Fairwooncb in Shelby. N.C.

X

X

GREENER PASTURES, PART

IT 'S NOT SO COMPUCATED'

TWO : Craftsman Tru-ck Serit:s

Mark Mar1in, himself an excellent
road racer, takes a simple approach
in roed-rourse events.
"The objed of road racinJ is to go
as fast Ill yw can and ltay out of \he
ditches," Man in nid.

contende r Andy Houston, the
second -generation driver from
Hickory, N.C., may well be on lhe
way co the 2001 Wirl!lton Cu p rook·
ie of the year race .
Hnu~ton will drive 1 ~cond Cal
Welts-owned Ford in nut week 's
400· miler at Michiean Speedw1y.
prompt1ng specu lation thai, at lhe
very leut , it is a uyout for a ride in
hi s second McOonald's·sponsored
car nea t year
Fueling sp.eculation chat it is a
done deal is news that Houston has
informed his truck tum to begin
looking fo r anolher driver.

X
MISTAKEN IDENTITY: Confusion reigned brieny early lut week
when D•le Janen of Johnson City,
Tenn., died after alen~th)' iii~Aug .
!I, the same day lllllhe Brickyard 400.
'Ole Winston Cup champion of the
same name is fine, ehhouK}I he was
slightly diwppoinled by a seventh·
place fi nish at lnd i•napo1is.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Dante Washington and Mario
Gori scored second-half goals as
th e Co lumbus Crew beat the
Miami Fusion 2-0 Wednesday
night in Major League Soccer.
The Crew did not get a shot on
goal until the 62nd minute , when
Washington ran down a lo ng pass
from Mike Lapp cr at midfield,
tion IS getting better because
raced passed two Miami defendof him," said Gordon, a threeers and sent a left-footer by
time series winner. 10 Vou ju~t
Miami goaltender Nick Rimando
look at how well they ran at
just as he was tripped u p from
Charlotte
ami a couple of
behind .
other places."
The Crew had only one o ther
What began with Nadeau 's
shot. Gori's goal in inju ry time.
team askmg Gordon's for some
The Fusion turn ed the ball over
help, has become a reciprocal
to th e Crew's Robert Warzycha
LIFE IS GOOD- Jerry Nadeau has been all smiles since joining forces with Hendrick Motorsports.
about 16 yards to the right of
Please see NASCAR, Pap Be
Nadeau has posted three Top 10 finishes in his last six races . (AP)
th eir goaL He passed it into the
pen alty area to a wide open Gori,
who easily got a left-foo te r passe d
~
Rimando from 12 yards.
Co lumbus goaltender Mark
Dougherty h ad five saves .
With the loss, Mrami (9-12-5,
32 points) failed to ti e Col um bus
MILWAUKEE (AP) - J eff D ' Amico was last of three relie vers who finished off the bloop sin gle scored Lopez.
Uoth teams squandered s~.:vcral sconng
(11 - 11-5, 38 pomts) for the
imp ressive even without his best stuff.
VICtory.
D' An!if\t allowed a run ir! t!Je fift!J on chanc~s. as the Reds stranded two_ mnn.ers
eighth and final MLS playoff spot. _ _ . The Milwaukee right- h'!flder earne&lt;! his
~
·
seventh straight victory and Rrchie Sexson Dante Bichette's two-out double over the in each of th e second through fourth
innings before leaving the bases loaded in
homered for the second straight game as the head of center fielder Marqurs Grissoni.
The Brewers had a chance to add to their the fifth.
Brewers completed their first sweep of th e
Th e lteds finished th e series 1-for-21\
Cincinnati Reds with a 5-1 vi c tory lead in th e fifth aft er D'Ami co led off the
JACKSONVILLE, Fb. (AP) inning with his second majo r league hit, a with runners in scoring position .
Wednesday night.
Jack sonville acqu ired b'llard Bren"We're getting runners in scoring posidoubl
e over th e head of Ken Grifrey Jr. in
D'Amico (9-4) scattered eight h its and
den Stai from Kansas City for an
tion, but we're not delivering." Reds man two walks in seven innings, striking out center field .
undisclosed draft choice.
D'Amico was safe at th ird o n a field er\ ager Jack McKeon s;ud. "We've gut fuur or
two.
T h e (,-foot-4, 3 12-pounder
Sexson, playing in his 16th game since choice as Ron ll elliard reached o n a sacri- five guys in the lirwup close to ..11111, but
fro m N ebrasb· started 59 of 68
b ei ng acquired from C leveland, h it the ti rst fi ce attempt. Two outs later, reli ever Scott tht:y'rt· nor getting h 1ts when WL' need them,
gamt·s h e played sin ce 1995,
pitc h he saw from Rob Bell (S-7) for his Sullivan walked Sexson b e fore gettill[( 011 JIIOSt OCCi.lSl OilS."
when he was selecre(l in the third
But ))'Amico persevered and the Llrewers
fifth homer, following a two-out single by Jemmy Burmtz o n a calle d third strik.,.
round of the NFL draft by the
addc.::d
two in surance runs in th e eighth o n
The
l:lrewers
rnade
it
31
in
the
sixth.
Geoff Jen kim.
Stt·clers.
That was all D'Amico needed in improv - C harlie Hayes singled and Luis Lopez \\•as an RBI single by pinch-hitter James Mouing to 7 - 0 wrth a 1.15 ERA in his last nine hit by a pitch with one out. Doth advanced ton and Grissom 's sacrifi ce tly.
The loss dropped th e R eds, who were 3o n Sullivan's error on a pickotftluow, before
starts .
"When you go out there without your an attempted suicide squ eeze by D'Amico 3 on the ir road trip, 6 I / 2 games be hind St.
GllEEN BAY, Wis. (AI') best stuff and get people out, that 's tht· si~;rr went awry as Hayes was tagged out at th'-· Lmns in the NL Ce ntra LThe· Cardinab beat .
With lin gering tend in itis in hi~
of a good pitcher." said Curtis Leskam c. the plate by catrher Jason LaRue. 13elli ard's Chic1g;o 5-1 ea rlier Wcd 1lesd:1y.
throwin g arm, Urett Favre sai d he
could be o ut of the Packen' lineup fflr their last two preseas.on

'

ga lliL'S.

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a 0v0f t11o put low

Heaou, Dele bmhlrctt

accumulated an lmprH...,. 1rrer of tlllent
for the Winston Cup teem
he OWnt - the No. 1
Pennzell Clltvrolets
driven fay lteve P1rtt.

Ridenour
Supply

Ty Nonis, Steve Hrnlel,

crew chief Paul Andrews

St. At. 248
Chester
985·3308

end enjln"r o...
Chltpont!Oflll htHI
dlltlqulltled tMiftMIYel
wtt11 rtv• te...,e. Sunday
It Watklne Glen, It wH

Favre, who hasn't practic ed in a
week, said it W &lt;\S too soon to tell
w hethn his streak o f 125 con\ecLHive rq~ular-~L·a~on starrs longest in NFL history by ,I quarterback - is in jeopardy.
"I've played a lo ng tim l'. and
I've been fortunat e not to have
mjuries," th e three-tim t' MVP
said . "This isn't somet hing I' m
used tu, but it's p tirt of th e ga 111e.
I'd much rather be om practiung
with the tt'ammatt's, but I guess 1t
haLl to COllie 'iO illt' rime. I'm j u st
trying to deal with it."

IMir Park 'I tum. end tt

w• the pit c"w that

Wamerout
with sore arm

pv• Perk e r..cr he never
relinquished.

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ST. LOUIS,. Mo. (AP) - Kurt
Warner ts getting a lor of rest rhis
Wl't·k due to a sore arm, although
the· St. Louis Rams quarterback
doc sn 't appear concerned.
"As many timt.•s as we thrmv in
c.u np anJ as many reps as I've
uh·n , it's normal to gt"t some
typL' of 1\0rcncss," Warnt&gt;:r said
Wednesday. " We're just trying to
atta.:k it while the problem i&lt;
sndl so it feel s good come Mouday night in the opener."
Warner didn't practice Tuesday
or Wednesday and was hopeful of
getting on the field on today.
H e's played spa ringly in the
preseason, and won't ger more
th an o ne qua rter of work against
the llill s this weekend.

Browns put
Detmer on
injured list

sween·
r mGt·"'· Re\!15"" " -i-n.net~~ ~.._
1 9 84

. . . .. . to play in the softball series.
"Little League's __ preference is
that the softball division be for
grrls," Van Au ken said. "It would
be nice if-there were a legal solu•
tion to it."
Richie Reyes ar1d four other
· boys sign ed up for the g irls team
alter their usual summer baseball
league disbanded.
Reyes doesn't see what th e fuss
is about and says the girls' team
n ee ded more players .
"We were all brought up to
believe that an athlete's an, ath lete." h e said. · ,
'
Four teams have indicated they
wo n't play the tearn.
A Philippines team had originally threatened not to play, but
players changed their minds and

Please see Softball, Pa1e 86

Bengals unveil new stadium to fans
Mike Brown says his father would
be proud of new facility

C LEVELAND (AP)
C leve land llrowns backup
quarterbac k Ty D et mer was
placed on the injured reserve
li st Wednesday and will mi ss
th e rt•st of tht• season.

C IN C INNATI (AP) - Tht'
Cinc innat i lkn~al s expl'rted
abo ut .20,! 10() pL'opk to clrtt•nd
au open homL' fnr thl' lr;un 's

Detmer . .'\2. injured his
Achrlks' tendon during Saturday's game aga in st C hica-

th e tirst publil·

lll'W holll l',

lll tlt l' d

but in stead

1 I Jt 1,( HJO

,lll l'Sti-

"hm· ·c.:.·d up for
V ll'\\'

of 1-'.llll

Brown St.1dium.
So many pco.pk shO\·VL'd up
W L"dllt'SdJ. y dut a sc:ron d ope n
house will be: plannt..'d so mt•ti me
in the lll'Xt (Oup k L'f \\'l.'l·k~ ..~,l id
'tadium spokcswoma11 Brooke
Hill.
" Pt•op le an.• "ril l pouring in
lwrl·," Hill s,.t id ,\s rhc .;;i:\ - hflur
O J)l'll house \\', IS draw111g t f&gt; ,\
rlosl' .!round 1\l p.111 \X/ednt·,tl.ty

go .
Th e nine -yea r NFL veteran had smgery Monday and
will need up to eight
m o nths for injury rehabilitati o n .
The Injur y kft rookie
Spergon Wynn as the ba c kup
to seco nd -yea r stan e r Tim
Couch .

lll~llt .

Offensi ve tukl e Jeremy
McKinn ey also was pla ce d
on the injurl'd rese rve li st.
Th e Browns on Wedn esda y waived defensive linemen Eric C handler a nd Teto
Simpson, ofl"ensive linemen
Steve Estes and Mik e Guil li~m s , wide. re ce ivers Jeff
Klopf and Kofi Shuck, tight
end Trevon Matthews and
d efensive ba c k Nate Terry.

KALAMAZOO, Mich . {AP)The Little League Softball World
Series rs in an uproar this year
because boys who joined a girls
team are playing in what has tr•ditionally been an all-girls event.
Parents, teams and tournament
officials say th e five 16-year-old
boys from Arizona have an unfair
physical advantage, and may even '
pose a danger to girls.
Some teams are threatening not
to play the team , and the tournam ent direct&lt;\ himself is protestmg .
" It looks like they stacked the
deck . Those boys are huge," said
Val Maslauskas, a parent from a
Massac husetts tearti whose players
wore mouthguards to protect
themselves in a I 0-2 loss to the
Arizona team Wednesday. "We're
trying for equality for these girls
and this is not equal."
The crowd e rupted in cheers
wh e n one of the boys was thrown
out at second base ahd booed at a
c,o llision between an Arizona boy
and a Westfield girl at first b ase.
"Th ey m ade catches in the outfield that no gi rl could have gotten to," said Kelly Popko, who
played third base for ·Westfield,
Mass.
Little League Baseball Inc.
made its softball and h ardhall
division s non- gender specific in
1974 after losing lawsuits filed by
boys demanding to play softball,
spokesman Lance Van Auken said
Wednesday.
The first girl played in the Li)d e League f1a;eball World Serie~

·

Favre battles tendinitis

• Familiar faces wm handle the
broadcast·booth duties in next
year'S Fo• Sports telecasts of
Winston Cup races .
Fox Sports has signed
retlrln&amp; driver Darrell WaltriP
and ace crew chief La rr~
McReynolds to provide ekpert
analysts. One of the worst-kept
setrets in the sport is that
longtime CBS announcer Mike
Joy will be the play-by-play man .

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

t.

.Jags acquire staf'

Ulm

AROUND THE GARAGE

" I don 't .ee why it should be any
different in NASCAR . I think
(NASCAR) can tate step&amp; to im·
prove these tracks and make them
ufer."

0

..Ls::

X

Crew blanks Miami

"

'

FJltl.
....- 1ete

1\) '"'I

••••••••••••

••••••••••••

Jeff Gordon, while takina pllins to
be p•tient and respectful, quietly
sugestcd thai NASCAR needs to up
the ante in safety facilit iea at itJ
tracks.
The e11pcricncc of racinsat lndi·
anapolis Motor Speedway, where the
impcndins vi•it of Formula One hu
uiqered a mauive moderniz.ation
dfor1 , lurned the heads or many
Winston Cup drivers.
"look It what Fonnull One madt:
them do to chat facility," Go rdon
uid. " I'm sure they (Indy officials)
didn't want lo make those chanp.
It wu required to hoal an inlerna·
tKmal ifand pril race.

track~

Alan Kulwicki was the 1992 Win·
ston Cup champion. Following his

seventh In points.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
• WMI: CtliC8fO 175
• When: 12:30 p.m.. Aug . 27
• Where: Ctlicago Motor
Speedway, Cicero, 111. jl-m ile

Your Tum

on an·~ rnacn1ne.

·

• For m•r r••~"~• ·

-CH GRAND NAnGIW.

Aus. 19.

-taterooctc:ouroo

BUSCH GRAND NAnGNAL

drivers wanted to wtn tne r~ and
betrayed themtelves. •

• llae r.cod: Mark Martin,

Ford, 169.571 mph,
1995

whorw Parle won hlo first
Wln&amp;ton Cup rece tn an
Elll'lllardt.qwnod Chew-.
In 1998, Parle competed.
on tne same weeletnd. In
Cnlttom., Truck, Busch
North and-~·
Mocllfto&lt;l raceo ot tne Glen.
Shortly lhllrelftor. Ean&gt;
hartlt loft Pork 1 meolll8

a place where It seems like 1
got my· start. •

FEUD OfT HE WEEK

•

most of any driver.... Bill Elliott

IS the active leader with seven.

• Wilen: Noon, Saturday

•-=

DaYe

Pontia.., 180.054 mph,
Au&amp;. 19, 1999

Blaney,

attention. and It was at hiS

at Watkins Glen beCause this Is

woulct not have been surprising
to see Steve Park win a
Winston Cup race. but at
watkins Glen?
It would not have been
surpriSifli to see a native New
Yor1cer win the Global Crossing
at the Glen, but enterln&amp; the

• OuMffrtfll reoonl:

season .... David Pearson WOf1
nine rsces at this track, the

drew Dale Earnhardt's

tiM..-...... told
SMIOitQrJHIIIo¥e
lllltftnleftona.-ceu,..
Hordt-ltRCR
...,.uck d8J lllla-nd
Som- ...........lxtll
Couldn't quite let by
Trlded h.,.h commenta
with ltawort
In ....,.., of flllln1 out
c.. he build on th ..7

I 'd pt m~ first win , I
would only hope It would come

N . Y .- ~

• DefiiMIIIW cbi""IGR: Dale
Earnhardt Jr.

Ford In -manufacturer wins .

lt was It Wlll:klns Glen,
N.Y., where Ste1le Plfk first

SiO where

WINSTDNCU'
WATKINS GLEN,

• Notlible: Labonte's point
lead stretched to 101 points,
his highest marain of the

NASCAA This W.el&lt;

FMOM LAST WEEK

·

miles

__ Steve

• 'Neekly ranklngs by NASCAR This Week wrtter Monte Dutton .
Last week's ranklnQ Is tn parentheses.

5. (3) RultJWII ....
8. (I) TonyS-•t

• ffM'tMt: 125 IBps/250

1999

.,.

.,.,_,2M!)

TOI' TEN

1. (1) Bobby IJIIIOftto
2. (2) Dllo Jorrott
3. (8) Jill Burtan

Ford, 173.$97 mph , June 13,

••••••••••••

JOt Runrnlft, 2,521

2,m

Johnlon,

• WhHe: Michigan
Speedway, Brooklyn, Mich .
(2-mile track)

oenr.s..r.:.eee

caw, .-wood, 2,341
.Nmrn~e

•-:Peosl400

presented by MeiJer
• Whet~: 1 ~.m .. Sunday

SIM Gt!uom. 2.~12

2.~3

Dlrt1l Grtlrl. 2.417

10. Jeff Gotdon, 2,076

WINSTON CUP

liolnton. l , 793
tlu't lllud, 2.710
Jldt 51nf.», 2.705
~ Talnl. 2.113

ICawtn ...... 2.set
Ron Homatlllf, 2.8A2

"*·
Ma11 M•lin, 2,696

t.

_,., GrHn. 3.497
JIIOI'I Nllt, 2.tl0

ON THE SCHEDULE

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - , A
loss would have put the Am e ri,
cans in danger of World C up
elimination, but the United States
dominated from start to fini sh,
routing Barbados 7 - IL
Eddie Pope scored in th e 14th
mmute, tlrian McBride and JoeMax Moore made it 3-0 by halftime and Tah Ramos added his
first international goal since 1998
in th e 72nd minute.
It matched the largest victory
margin ever for the Upited States
- an d it was the first time the
Americans ever scored seven
goals in a World Cup qualifier.

The decision by powerful
Hendrick Motorsports to put
unproven Jerry Nadeau in one
of its· cars was a n1ajor surprise.
Althm!gh N adea u hadn't "
been in Winston Cup racing
long e nough to be considered
a journeyman, his · first two
seasons gave little promise of
anything else.
Now, after a half-season as
the junior partner to Jeff Gordon and Terry Labonte,
Nadeau is prospering. Gone is
his habit of wrecking em and
finishing poorly.
"When you go out there
knowing you have good
equipment, it makes life easier," Nadeau said. "If anything, I
feel less pressure."
With more assets than he
had with the now-defunct
Elli ott-Marino
team · and
underfunded Melling Racing,
Nadeau is making a major
contribution at Hendrick .
After a lon e iop- 10 finish in
his first 80 starts, Nadeau has
three in his last six races.
Whai\ more, h e's helping
Gordon in his resurgence:
"At times, I think our situa-

IF YOU BUILD IT - Bengals owner and general manager Mike Brown
welcomes fans to the new Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati. (AP)

fhl' me of till' c rowd that
jan\Jllnlnuny do\VJJtown \trt·ets
,1ruu11d th t· ~ taJium stunned
Hamdton Courlty Commisstont'r Bob Ucdingluu ~. who
pushed for a ~:o.tlcs tax innc:.tse to
p;1y for ne-w riverfront st,tdiums
for th e Bengah :md the Cwclnnati Reds.
"Clearly, thi.;; L'Xcc eds nur
expectations. ~eVL'ra1 tim ~s over,"
Bedinghaus s;~ id . " And m any of
thcsl' people aren't rickc•r hold -

ers. Th is is tndy a community
c·vem- JUSt people coming out
ttl :O.l' l' what we've been ta1king
;tbo ut.''

Coullty taxpayers in 1996
app roved a h a lt~ce nt sales tax
J!KI'l' .l~l' to build the nt:w
6(,.5111l-seat stadium and the
nearby baseball park . Uengals
ownci Mik e Brown had threatent'd to move hi s team to
anothlT riry if he wasn't given a
n l'w stadium .
Brown &lt;aid Wedn"'day that he
\v;~-; hap py that the team was
ahlt· to \tay in C incinnati .
"It 1mght have been easier to
11\0Vl' thLi t e.llll, but it wouldn 't
have been better.'' tlrown said.
"The Llc·ngals started here and
they belong to the people of thi's·
CO I11 11llll1i ty."

Fan s seemed
enthusiastiC
Wednesday night as they toured
the $453.2 million facility.
:
"C incinnati is such a conserv:
ative town , and now we have

o;,ometh ing that is so modern ,:"'
salll Elizabeth Skillman. " It's so
fun1ri sti c.''

Ple111 IM len1als, Pllp XX

�•
Thursday August 17 2000

11age B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

Thursday August 17 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

••

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Rockies KO Mets; Braves shut down
BY THE ASSOC ATED PRESS

Personals

005

Help Wanted

110

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Todd H !ton helped the Col
o ado Ro kies wm by gettmg h t
as well a h u ng
H lton was n the JTUddle of
two late rail es as Colorado
bounced back frorr a double
header s ~eep w th a 7 5 w n over
the New York Mets on Wednes
day mght
Helton went 1 for 4 droppmg
h s maJor league leadmg average
one po nt to 39&gt; He was hit by
a p tch n the s 11th scttmg up a
three run nn ng and doubled
dunng a three run e ghth

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SHERIFFS SALE
REAL. ESTATE
CASE NUMBER OOCV002
LESAL.LE NATIONAL BANK,
AS TRUSTEE Plaintiff VI
VIRGINIA MARSHALL., ol II

Defendant a
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

Public Notice

In pureuance of en Order

of Sale to mt directed from
laid Court In the 1bov1

In Memory

P easant Va ley Hosp ta cu rent y has the ro owing
fu t me opportun ty ava abe

9 1)()-5 30

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~Pleasant Valley
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~· ~735
30 Announcements

..

who IS 18 for 28 on the first
e ght games of Colorado s road

r p to ra1se hi s ave age 17 pmnts
In o her NL games Jt was An
zona 5 Philatlelph a 1 Atlanta 4
San D ego 1 St LouiS 5 Chicago
l Sa1 Frannsco 4 Montreal I
Los Angeles I 0 Flor da 4 Mil
waukee 5 Cmcmnat1 1 and
Houston II P ttsburgh I 0
At New York t was 1 all m the
s xth when Ne fi Perez Singled
With one out Helton who had
already struck out and flied out
batted With two outs
Left hanC!eCI Glendon Rusch
(8 I 0) then plunked the lefty h1t
tmg Helton

110 Help Wanted

START
OAT NG TON GHT
Have Fun Mee ng E g be S n
g es n You A ea Ca Fe Mo e
n1o ma on
800 ROMANCE

iI

I was happy I got h t Helton
sa d I was t feel ng part cularly
good at the plate
Helton JS closer to 400 th s late
m the season than anyone s nee
George Brett m 1980 Brett had a
400 average n September before
end ng at 390 n hiS b d to
becon e the first maJOr leaguer to
reach the mag c mark smce Ted
W1lhams h1t 406 m 1941
The med a makes a b1g deal
about 1t but I beheve 11 s not
gomg to happen &gt;aJd Helton

•

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lit no 17 to lht northweat
corner of the aamt on the
eoulh line of High Slrttl
thence easterly following
the aouth line of High SlrHt
to the placa of beginning

MERCHANDISE

EA S

saJd

double off M1ke DeJ a1 to p II
the Mets to 7 5 Gab Wh t g t
four outs for hiS fourth save
Right out of the bullpen 1 1y
control
was
n peccahle
Public Notice
Bohanon sa1d When I m that
aouth 11 .. of High SlrHI112 way I m able to con trol the1r
1 2 fett wtlttrly of the bats
northeaat corner ol lot no
Braves 4, Padres 1
17. of Burnep a Addition to
Kev
n
M llwood gave up one
Po roy to a point which 11
feat waatarly of hit n SIX shutout mnmgs before
lazewlc • weet comer end
11 marked by a tilt tel on leavmg w1th a knee mJury for
1he uppar tldt of brick host Atlanta M1llwood left a
retaining wall lhonca oouth stramed tendon after making four
8dtg 50 tlll7012feelto
warmup p1tches before the sev
a mark on 1 atoll• wall
thence northweatwerdly enth mnmg He s not expected

AA/EOE

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Jeffrey Hammonds followed
w1th an RBI smgle for a 2 I lead
and Larry Walker hit a two run
smgle
We needed this game m a b1g
way after the outcome last n ght
Rockies manager Buddy Bell

SE RVICI:cS

810

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NQ

to rruss a start
The Braves who completed a
three gan e sweep went ahead 1
0 when Andres Galarraga h11 his
24th homer With two outs m the
fourth Andruw Jones added an
RBI double off Kev n Walker (6
1) m a three run e ghth
Scott Kamen eck1 (2 1) got
ne out for the w n and John
R ck r p tched the mnth for hiS
11th ave
D1amundbacks 5 Phillie• 1
lla
M II r had a career

h gh four hm and drove m two
runs and Armando Reynoso (10
7) p tchcd 7 2 3 strong nn ngs as
Ar zona completed a three game
sweep at Philadelph a
M1ller was 7 for 13 m the

ser es as Anzona won Its fourth
stmght
Cardtnals 5 Cubs 1
Edgar Renteria hlt a three run
homer and Darryl Kile (14 8)
pitched a s x hitter to lead St
LoUis at Wngley F eld
RenterJa s 13th boner off

•
•
Kev n Tapam (8 9) ended a five.
game homerless streak by ~~
Cardmals their longest of the sea
son Shawon Dunston also h1t a
solo homer his 1Oth n the sev
enth
Sammy Sosa the maJors home
run leader at 38 was hitless liT
four at bats
Attro1 11 P~rate1 10
Houston h t SIX home runs for
the second time 1n four days and
Mmses Alou h1t hJS fifth homer n
four games
Scott Elarton (13 4) won his
fourth stmght deciSion and for
the mnth time m 10 deCISIOns
and the Astros took over the l'!L
lead m homers With 188
The Astros SIX home runs gave
them three more than St LoUis
this season The Astros have hit SIX
home runs three t mes n team
hiStory all this season ncludmg
Sunday agamst Philadelphia
Jeff Bagwell Chr s Truby Lance
Berkman T1m Bogar and JuliQ
Lugo also homered for Houston
at Enron F1eld

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Blue Jays ground Angels
BY THE AS SOC ATED PRESS

Carlo&gt; Delgado kept the Toran
to Blue Jays above the 500 mark
and kept them from ge tmg s "ept
by the A• al e m Angels
Delgado h t a two run ho 1 er
w th one out n the bottom of the
n nth g v ng Toronto an 8 6 v c
tory Wednesday
The Blue Jays who came m
onega ne over 500 moved With
n SIX games of the first place
New York Yankees n the AL East
Toronto s 4 1 2 behmd Oakland
for the wild card b t also trails
three other tecuns
We played poorly on the road
so you don t want to come back
here and lose two m a row and
fall back to 500 11anager J m
Fregos sa d
In otl er AL -games t was
Toronto 8 Anahe1m 6 Boston 4
Tampa Bay 3 Texas 5 New York
0 Ch cago 7 Bait n ore 3 Kansas
C ty 9 M nesota 3 Detroit 12
Seattle 8 and Oakland 7 Cleve
Ia d 6
At Toronto Dave Mart nez s n
gled w th one out n he mnth off
Lou Pote (1 1) Delgado ~ho
v.ent ? for 5 w th fo r RBis
then hlt a 3 ? p h fo h s 35th
ho 1 er
Pote gave up two n on th ee
htsm113nngs
I left t up 1 tie and ha ces
are he s not go g to uss t Pote
sad
B lly Ko ch (6 ?) p tched a pel
fe et n nth for the v
Anahe ms Troy Gla s h t h s
35th homer and D ar n Erstad h t
his 20th ms g h s J) O league
leadmg h1t total to 18&gt;
The Angels blew a J 3 lead m
the seventh before tymg th e game
at 6 n the e1ghth on ca tcher
Dar n Fletcher s error
The Blue Jays scored th ee runs
m the seventh on DelgJdo s RBI
grounder off starter Scott Schoe
newe s and Tony Bat sta s two
run homer off Mark Petkovsek
Bat sta has 35 homers mcludmg
17 m the seventh mmng or later
Jose Cruz Jr added his 24th
homer for Toronto

for host Boston
13 streak by go ng 3 for 4 wnh
For the th1rd stra1ght game the three RBls as Kansas C1ty
Red Sox failed to score m the snapped a seven game losm~
first five mmngs But they took streak at the Metrodome
advantage of rei evers Paul Wilson
Rey Sanchez and Hector Ornz
(0 2) and Doug Creek after Ryan added three hits ap1ece and Mark
Rupe left w th a 2 I lead after siX Qumn homered as the Royals gQI
nn ngs
16 hits to back Br an Meadows
Steve Cox went 3 for 4 and (2 0)
scored Tampa Bays first two runs
Meadows makmg hiS thtfd
With a tr ple m the second and his appearance smce coJTUng from
e ghth homer n the s xth
San D ego m a trade last month
Rolando Ar OJO (2 I) allowed allowed three runs and SIX hits m
JUst one other h1t M guel Ca ro s e ght mmngs
smgle m seven mnmgs
Kansas C ty took a 1 0 lead on
Derek Lowe got the last four McCarty s I Oth homer be for&lt;::
outs for his 27th, save ltl 32 ""s.con!l!l.f?u ntmoff) S..~¥\
chancts
(:! 2Y n the tli ra nnmg

Rangers 5 Yankees 0

T1gers 12 Marmers 8

At Arlington Bnan S korski
Juan EncarnaciOn and DeiVI
pitched Jnto the e1ghth mnmg_m Cruz h t two run -homers as
his ma.Jor league debut as Texas Detroit completed a three game
snapped ts I 0 game los ng streak sweep at Seattle
The Mar ners lost the r season
to New York
Gabe Kaple went 0 for 4 to worst fifth stra ght The T gers
end his 28 game hitt ng streak
beat Sea de for the fifth t me 11
longest m the maJors thiS season
s x games and won for the SIXth
Stkorski called up from Tr pie
nme m seven games
A Oklahoma o make the spot
J eff Weaver (8 10) gave up
start I outed the Yankees to four seven runs on e1ght hm n 5 2 3
h ts before leav ng after walking nn ngs but got the w n He gave
Derek Jet er lead ng off the up home runs to Edgar Martml'll:
e ghth M ke Venafl o fin shed the and Carlos Gu lien walked nop&lt;::
four h1tter
and struck out s x
Rusty Greer had a two run
Rei ever Bre t Tomko (6 4)
tr pie and Rafael Palme ro hit his gave up a two run smgle t&lt;&gt;
30th hom er for Texas
DaJTUon Easley to break a 7 all tie
Orlando Hernandez (8 I 0) lost
n the SIXth
hJS fourth stra ght start allowmg
Athlettcs 7 lnd1ans 6
five runs and e1ght hits m seven
Terrence Long s two run dou
mmngs
blc capped a three run rally m the"
Wh1te Sox 7 Ortoles 3
n 1 th g v ng Oakland a three
Frank Thomas h t his AL high game sweep at hon e
Long vl o went 3 for 5 also
37th homer and J m Parque final
ly got hJS I Oth w n for Ch cago at tr pled a d jcored to cut t to 6 4
Camden Yards
1 the e gh h
Thomas h t a hree run shot n
Clevela d closer Bob W ckman
1 the seco 1d to put the Wh1te Sox
(1 2) loaded the bases w th one
up 6 0
out before pmch h1tter Jasqn
Parque (10 4) allowed three G1ambu nfield s ngle nade t 6
runs five h ts and two walks 1n 5 Long followed With a double
stx plus mnmgs
down the left field hne Wtck
Btll S1mas ret red all SIX batters mans second blown save m seven
he faced and Kmh Foulke chances
Doug Jones (3 I ) pitched a
worked the mnth
M1ke Muss na (7 13) gave up scoreless mnth for the wm as the
SIX runs and seven hits m only As won the r third stra ght
four mmngs hiS shortest stint of
Trav s Fryman h1t two home
the season
runs and drove 10 four runs but
Red Sox 4 Devil Rays 3
Royals 9 Twtnl 3
Cleveland lost 1ts third stratght
Carl Everetts two run s ngle
Dave McCarty broke an 0 for
h ghl ghted a three run seventh

unco d ona
• me gua an"
Lo a e e encu u n sned Es
ao s ed 9 5 Ca 24 H s 740
446 0870
eoo 29 0576 Aog
eswaep oo ng

NBA

ed Pho og a

Historic four-team deal shakes up leagu&amp;
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC Al SECUR TV SS

No eeu es WeW
888 582 3345

REAL ESTATE
No Down
a ge Se ec

BOO 948

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

EMPLOYMENT
SER VICE S

110

BOSTON (AP) - The first lace sa d
Boston also sent guard Dana
four team trade n NBA h story
was completed when mne players Barros to D allas Utah gets center
sw tched tea us w th Howard Bruno Sundov fro 1 Dallas the
EJSley go ng to Dallas Danny Maven cks get forward B 11 Cur
Fortso to Golden State Donyell ley from Golden State and the
Marshall to Utah and Robert Jazz sent forward Adan Keefe to
the Warnors
Pack to Boston
It was a deal that was n aga n
The C It cs also get center John
out
aga n It kept gettmg closer
H ot Rod
ams from Dallas
Utah s first ound p ck n 2001 and then o e p ece would fall
and a
ubstanual amount of o u Jazz VICe pres dent Kev n
0 Connor sa l We feel v.e ve
a I general manager Chr s Wal

w,u

Help Wanted
ash away $4 0 a p k
304 6 5 6 58 0 304

$65
$25
$4 0

won Dallas fee ls they ve won
When you shake the deal down
everyone got what they wanted
The Warr ors felt the deal solid
fied the r roster
Gomg nto tmmng ca mp W&lt;::
have redefined vhat ve have n
ou _. bac kco ur t and frontco~t
alo g v th what we feel I)
young core grou p that w ll ~
able to learn and grow togethel"~.
ass stant gene ral 1 anager G~ry,
F zs 1 1 ons a d

&gt;

�•
Thursday August 17 2000

11age B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

Thursday August 17 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

••

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Rockies KO Mets; Braves shut down
BY THE ASSOC ATED PRESS

Personals

005

Help Wanted

110

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Todd H !ton helped the Col
o ado Ro kies wm by gettmg h t
as well a h u ng
H lton was n the JTUddle of
two late rail es as Colorado
bounced back frorr a double
header s ~eep w th a 7 5 w n over
the New York Mets on Wednes
day mght
Helton went 1 for 4 droppmg
h s maJor league leadmg average
one po nt to 39&gt; He was hit by
a p tch n the s 11th scttmg up a
three run nn ng and doubled
dunng a three run e ghth

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Public Notice

SHERIFFS SALE
REAL. ESTATE
CASE NUMBER OOCV002
LESAL.LE NATIONAL BANK,
AS TRUSTEE Plaintiff VI
VIRGINIA MARSHALL., ol II

Defendant a
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

Public Notice

In pureuance of en Order

of Sale to mt directed from
laid Court In the 1bov1

In Memory

P easant Va ley Hosp ta cu rent y has the ro owing
fu t me opportun ty ava abe

9 1)()-5 30

•• To good home Fema e K
en 4 mo 2 Yea o d Wh e Mae
C~t.. Neue ed &amp; Oec awed
(740 256-9240

Public Notice

~Pleasant Valley
~
Hospital

~· ~735
30 Announcements

..

who IS 18 for 28 on the first
e ght games of Colorado s road

r p to ra1se hi s ave age 17 pmnts
In o her NL games Jt was An
zona 5 Philatlelph a 1 Atlanta 4
San D ego 1 St LouiS 5 Chicago
l Sa1 Frannsco 4 Montreal I
Los Angeles I 0 Flor da 4 Mil
waukee 5 Cmcmnat1 1 and
Houston II P ttsburgh I 0
At New York t was 1 all m the
s xth when Ne fi Perez Singled
With one out Helton who had
already struck out and flied out
batted With two outs
Left hanC!eCI Glendon Rusch
(8 I 0) then plunked the lefty h1t
tmg Helton

110 Help Wanted

START
OAT NG TON GHT
Have Fun Mee ng E g be S n
g es n You A ea Ca Fe Mo e
n1o ma on
800 ROMANCE

iI

I was happy I got h t Helton
sa d I was t feel ng part cularly
good at the plate
Helton JS closer to 400 th s late
m the season than anyone s nee
George Brett m 1980 Brett had a
400 average n September before
end ng at 390 n hiS b d to
becon e the first maJOr leaguer to
reach the mag c mark smce Ted
W1lhams h1t 406 m 1941
The med a makes a b1g deal
about 1t but I beheve 11 s not
gomg to happen &gt;aJd Helton

•

.'

••

•

:I

•

•'
''

• "'

AERA ON MO OA S
Repa ed New &amp; Reb
5o k
Ca Ao E ans eoo 53 95 e

''

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Prior
lnat ument
references
Volume 85
Page 903
100
Property add ran
High Street Pomeroy Ohio
45769
Appraised at $15 000 00
Torma of Sale 10% Cooh
day of aalo and balonco by
Confirmation of Sale
Jamaa M Soulaby
Shariff Melgl County
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and Flea Market

80

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Every Sa 6 PM
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li uck oads 0
New &amp; Used ems
FomSe era Saes
Se ng To he PubliC &amp; Dea e s
P~ece Dozens &amp; Case o s

150

Schools
Instruction

Bowen Auc on Serv ce
Gary Bowen Aue lonee
P oc orv lie Ohio
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520

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Hu ng on WV

TRANSPORTATION
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740-8M-2218
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Edgardo Alfonzo and Kurt
Abbott homered to fin sh ex Met
Bnan Bohanon (7 8) m th
e1ghth and Todd Ze le h tan Rill

following tho aouth lint of
lit no 17 to lht northweat
corner of the aamt on the
eoulh line of High Slrttl
thence easterly following
the aouth line of High SlrHt
to the placa of beginning

MERCHANDISE

EA S

saJd

double off M1ke DeJ a1 to p II
the Mets to 7 5 Gab Wh t g t
four outs for hiS fourth save
Right out of the bullpen 1 1y
control
was
n peccahle
Public Notice
Bohanon sa1d When I m that
aouth 11 .. of High SlrHI112 way I m able to con trol the1r
1 2 fett wtlttrly of the bats
northeaat corner ol lot no
Braves 4, Padres 1
17. of Burnep a Addition to
Kev
n
M llwood gave up one
Po roy to a point which 11
feat waatarly of hit n SIX shutout mnmgs before
lazewlc • weet comer end
11 marked by a tilt tel on leavmg w1th a knee mJury for
1he uppar tldt of brick host Atlanta M1llwood left a
retaining wall lhonca oouth stramed tendon after making four
8dtg 50 tlll7012feelto
warmup p1tches before the sev
a mark on 1 atoll• wall
thence northweatwerdly enth mnmg He s not expected

AA/EOE

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Jeffrey Hammonds followed
w1th an RBI smgle for a 2 I lead
and Larry Walker hit a two run
smgle
We needed this game m a b1g
way after the outcome last n ght
Rockies manager Buddy Bell

SE RVICI:cS

810

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NQ

to rruss a start
The Braves who completed a
three gan e sweep went ahead 1
0 when Andres Galarraga h11 his
24th homer With two outs m the
fourth Andruw Jones added an
RBI double off Kev n Walker (6
1) m a three run e ghth
Scott Kamen eck1 (2 1) got
ne out for the w n and John
R ck r p tched the mnth for hiS
11th ave
D1amundbacks 5 Phillie• 1
lla
M II r had a career

h gh four hm and drove m two
runs and Armando Reynoso (10
7) p tchcd 7 2 3 strong nn ngs as
Ar zona completed a three game
sweep at Philadelph a
M1ller was 7 for 13 m the

ser es as Anzona won Its fourth
stmght
Cardtnals 5 Cubs 1
Edgar Renteria hlt a three run
homer and Darryl Kile (14 8)
pitched a s x hitter to lead St
LoUis at Wngley F eld
RenterJa s 13th boner off

•
•
Kev n Tapam (8 9) ended a five.
game homerless streak by ~~
Cardmals their longest of the sea
son Shawon Dunston also h1t a
solo homer his 1Oth n the sev
enth
Sammy Sosa the maJors home
run leader at 38 was hitless liT
four at bats
Attro1 11 P~rate1 10
Houston h t SIX home runs for
the second time 1n four days and
Mmses Alou h1t hJS fifth homer n
four games
Scott Elarton (13 4) won his
fourth stmght deciSion and for
the mnth time m 10 deCISIOns
and the Astros took over the l'!L
lead m homers With 188
The Astros SIX home runs gave
them three more than St LoUis
this season The Astros have hit SIX
home runs three t mes n team
hiStory all this season ncludmg
Sunday agamst Philadelphia
Jeff Bagwell Chr s Truby Lance
Berkman T1m Bogar and JuliQ
Lugo also homered for Houston
at Enron F1eld

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Blue Jays ground Angels
BY THE AS SOC ATED PRESS

Carlo&gt; Delgado kept the Toran
to Blue Jays above the 500 mark
and kept them from ge tmg s "ept
by the A• al e m Angels
Delgado h t a two run ho 1 er
w th one out n the bottom of the
n nth g v ng Toronto an 8 6 v c
tory Wednesday
The Blue Jays who came m
onega ne over 500 moved With
n SIX games of the first place
New York Yankees n the AL East
Toronto s 4 1 2 behmd Oakland
for the wild card b t also trails
three other tecuns
We played poorly on the road
so you don t want to come back
here and lose two m a row and
fall back to 500 11anager J m
Fregos sa d
In otl er AL -games t was
Toronto 8 Anahe1m 6 Boston 4
Tampa Bay 3 Texas 5 New York
0 Ch cago 7 Bait n ore 3 Kansas
C ty 9 M nesota 3 Detroit 12
Seattle 8 and Oakland 7 Cleve
Ia d 6
At Toronto Dave Mart nez s n
gled w th one out n he mnth off
Lou Pote (1 1) Delgado ~ho
v.ent ? for 5 w th fo r RBis
then hlt a 3 ? p h fo h s 35th
ho 1 er
Pote gave up two n on th ee
htsm113nngs
I left t up 1 tie and ha ces
are he s not go g to uss t Pote
sad
B lly Ko ch (6 ?) p tched a pel
fe et n nth for the v
Anahe ms Troy Gla s h t h s
35th homer and D ar n Erstad h t
his 20th ms g h s J) O league
leadmg h1t total to 18&gt;
The Angels blew a J 3 lead m
the seventh before tymg th e game
at 6 n the e1ghth on ca tcher
Dar n Fletcher s error
The Blue Jays scored th ee runs
m the seventh on DelgJdo s RBI
grounder off starter Scott Schoe
newe s and Tony Bat sta s two
run homer off Mark Petkovsek
Bat sta has 35 homers mcludmg
17 m the seventh mmng or later
Jose Cruz Jr added his 24th
homer for Toronto

for host Boston
13 streak by go ng 3 for 4 wnh
For the th1rd stra1ght game the three RBls as Kansas C1ty
Red Sox failed to score m the snapped a seven game losm~
first five mmngs But they took streak at the Metrodome
advantage of rei evers Paul Wilson
Rey Sanchez and Hector Ornz
(0 2) and Doug Creek after Ryan added three hits ap1ece and Mark
Rupe left w th a 2 I lead after siX Qumn homered as the Royals gQI
nn ngs
16 hits to back Br an Meadows
Steve Cox went 3 for 4 and (2 0)
scored Tampa Bays first two runs
Meadows makmg hiS thtfd
With a tr ple m the second and his appearance smce coJTUng from
e ghth homer n the s xth
San D ego m a trade last month
Rolando Ar OJO (2 I) allowed allowed three runs and SIX hits m
JUst one other h1t M guel Ca ro s e ght mmngs
smgle m seven mnmgs
Kansas C ty took a 1 0 lead on
Derek Lowe got the last four McCarty s I Oth homer be for&lt;::
outs for his 27th, save ltl 32 ""s.con!l!l.f?u ntmoff) S..~¥\
chancts
(:! 2Y n the tli ra nnmg

Rangers 5 Yankees 0

T1gers 12 Marmers 8

At Arlington Bnan S korski
Juan EncarnaciOn and DeiVI
pitched Jnto the e1ghth mnmg_m Cruz h t two run -homers as
his ma.Jor league debut as Texas Detroit completed a three game
snapped ts I 0 game los ng streak sweep at Seattle
The Mar ners lost the r season
to New York
Gabe Kaple went 0 for 4 to worst fifth stra ght The T gers
end his 28 game hitt ng streak
beat Sea de for the fifth t me 11
longest m the maJors thiS season
s x games and won for the SIXth
Stkorski called up from Tr pie
nme m seven games
A Oklahoma o make the spot
J eff Weaver (8 10) gave up
start I outed the Yankees to four seven runs on e1ght hm n 5 2 3
h ts before leav ng after walking nn ngs but got the w n He gave
Derek Jet er lead ng off the up home runs to Edgar Martml'll:
e ghth M ke Venafl o fin shed the and Carlos Gu lien walked nop&lt;::
four h1tter
and struck out s x
Rusty Greer had a two run
Rei ever Bre t Tomko (6 4)
tr pie and Rafael Palme ro hit his gave up a two run smgle t&lt;&gt;
30th hom er for Texas
DaJTUon Easley to break a 7 all tie
Orlando Hernandez (8 I 0) lost
n the SIXth
hJS fourth stra ght start allowmg
Athlettcs 7 lnd1ans 6
five runs and e1ght hits m seven
Terrence Long s two run dou
mmngs
blc capped a three run rally m the"
Wh1te Sox 7 Ortoles 3
n 1 th g v ng Oakland a three
Frank Thomas h t his AL high game sweep at hon e
Long vl o went 3 for 5 also
37th homer and J m Parque final
ly got hJS I Oth w n for Ch cago at tr pled a d jcored to cut t to 6 4
Camden Yards
1 the e gh h
Thomas h t a hree run shot n
Clevela d closer Bob W ckman
1 the seco 1d to put the Wh1te Sox
(1 2) loaded the bases w th one
up 6 0
out before pmch h1tter Jasqn
Parque (10 4) allowed three G1ambu nfield s ngle nade t 6
runs five h ts and two walks 1n 5 Long followed With a double
stx plus mnmgs
down the left field hne Wtck
Btll S1mas ret red all SIX batters mans second blown save m seven
he faced and Kmh Foulke chances
Doug Jones (3 I ) pitched a
worked the mnth
M1ke Muss na (7 13) gave up scoreless mnth for the wm as the
SIX runs and seven hits m only As won the r third stra ght
four mmngs hiS shortest stint of
Trav s Fryman h1t two home
the season
runs and drove 10 four runs but
Red Sox 4 Devil Rays 3
Royals 9 Twtnl 3
Cleveland lost 1ts third stratght
Carl Everetts two run s ngle
Dave McCarty broke an 0 for
h ghl ghted a three run seventh

unco d ona
• me gua an"
Lo a e e encu u n sned Es
ao s ed 9 5 Ca 24 H s 740
446 0870
eoo 29 0576 Aog
eswaep oo ng

NBA

ed Pho og a

Historic four-team deal shakes up leagu&amp;
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC Al SECUR TV SS

No eeu es WeW
888 582 3345

REAL ESTATE
No Down
a ge Se ec

BOO 948

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

EMPLOYMENT
SER VICE S

110

BOSTON (AP) - The first lace sa d
Boston also sent guard Dana
four team trade n NBA h story
was completed when mne players Barros to D allas Utah gets center
sw tched tea us w th Howard Bruno Sundov fro 1 Dallas the
EJSley go ng to Dallas Danny Maven cks get forward B 11 Cur
Fortso to Golden State Donyell ley from Golden State and the
Marshall to Utah and Robert Jazz sent forward Adan Keefe to
the Warnors
Pack to Boston
It was a deal that was n aga n
The C It cs also get center John
out
aga n It kept gettmg closer
H ot Rod
ams from Dallas
Utah s first ound p ck n 2001 and then o e p ece would fall
and a
ubstanual amount of o u Jazz VICe pres dent Kev n
0 Connor sa l We feel v.e ve
a I general manager Chr s Wal

w,u

Help Wanted
ash away $4 0 a p k
304 6 5 6 58 0 304

$65
$25
$4 0

won Dallas fee ls they ve won
When you shake the deal down
everyone got what they wanted
The Warr ors felt the deal solid
fied the r roster
Gomg nto tmmng ca mp W&lt;::
have redefined vhat ve have n
ou _. bac kco ur t and frontco~t
alo g v th what we feel I)
young core grou p that w ll ~
able to learn and grow togethel"~.
ass stant gene ral 1 anager G~ry,
F zs 1 1 ons a d

&gt;

�....

~

.....

-

'

'

...

Thursday; August 17, 2000

Page B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

.

.,.
~

~jdpy, ~uguat 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page

B~

LLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

Rocky R. Hu_Bp, Agent

SECURITY·

Box 189

Advertise your
message
$8.00 column inch weekdays
o.oo coiUITln inch Sundays

..

I
f

Public Notice

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Coeo No. : OOCV035
Judge: Fred W. Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LISollo Nollonol Bonk, n
Tt!JotH, undor the Pooling
and Servicing Agroement
~oted 6-1·99, Sorloo 1 - 2
C/O Superior Bonk, FSB,
plllntiH, va, Roy Stover, at
ol., dolendonta.
Roy Stover, whoot 1111
known oddreu Ia 461
Georgto
Cnok
Rd.,
Qolllpollo, OH 45631, and
the
unknown
heln,
dlvla•••·
lagateee,
executora, edmlnletratora,
opouoeo and ooolgna end
tho unknown guordlonl of
minor and/or Incompetent
holro al Roy Stovor, oil
whoaa raaldancea era
unknown and cannot by
reooonobl• diligence be
aacertalntd, will take notice
thot on the 31 ot day of
Morell, 2000, LoSollt
Notlonol Bonk, 11 TnuotH,
under tho Pooling and
SliiVIclng Agreomont dated
6-1-98, Strleo 1899-2 c/o
Superior Bonk, FSB flied Ill
Complaint In tho Common
Plooo Court, and tho ob)tcl
and demond for relief of
which ploadlng Ia to
fonclooe the lion of
plolnll"''
m o rt g
recorded upon the following
d-rlbed rill eollto to wh: .
Property Address: 206
Buttornut Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788 and being moro
particularly deecrlbod In
mort gag a
plolntm's
recorded In Martgoge Book
90, pogo 424, at thll County
Rocordor'o O"lce.
All of tho above nomed
defendant• are required to
onewor within twenty..lght
(28) doya afltr loot
publication, which oholl be
publlohod once •
for
elK coneocuttve
or

be required.
Blddtro m~ot comply with
tho prevailing wogo rotoo on
Public lmprovemento In
Molgo County and th•
Vllloge ol Syrocuao, Ohio ao
dotormlned by the Ohio
Department of Industrial
Rolatlono.
Tho Vlllsgo of Syrocuao
raserveo the right to waive
lrregulsrlllta and reJect ony
or all bldo.
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
Sharon Cottrill
Clerk-Treeaurer
(8) 10, 17, 2TC

•11•

_..

;·eiii"Ni~F
SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
All
1 PI inti"
omoya or 1
P.O. Box 11410
Clnclnn111, OH 45201·5480
($J 3) 24 t-3IOC
~-·
(7) 27, (8) 3, 10, 17, 24,
6TC

_:..=..:~:::....:.:.=:!!!:!:....-1

LEGAL NOTICE
Seoled prcpooalt will be
roctlvod It tho OHice of tho
Moycir, Municipal Building,
Third Street, Syracuoe,
· Ohio, until 4 p.m. local time
on Thurodoy, September 7,
2000, far furnlohlng all
labor,
materlata
and
oqulpment neceaaary to
complete tho project known
11
Syracuse
Street
Rllurfaclng, and at sold
limo end place, publicly
opened and read aloud.
Contrac1 documonto, bid
ehttll ond opeclflcotlono
con be obtained at aold
o"lco altar Augual14, 2000,
at $25.00 por oet, which
money will be refunded to
the unauccessful bidders
upon the return of the
complete oat In good
condition no more than ten
(1 O) days after the bid date.
Chock• oholl be mode
poyoble 10 the VIllage of
Syrocuoo, Ohio.
Thlo project Ia a Minority
Buelnooa Eflterprloo (MBE)
Sei·Aolde ProJect. Eoch
blddor
muat
submit
ovldenco that It ~a a Minority
Buelneaa Enterprlae aa
cortlflod by the State Equal
Employment Opportunity
Coordinator.
Each bidder 11 roqulrod to
lurnloh with Ita propoul, a
Bid Guaranty and Contract
Bond In accordance with
Sec11on 153:54 of tho Ohio
Rovloed Code. ·Bid security
lurnlohtd In Bond form ,
ohall be IIIUid by a Suroty
Company or Corporation
ilconled In the State of Ohio
to provide told surety.
Each propoul must
contain tho full nome of tho
Party or portlea submitting
tho propoaol and all
peraon1 lntereated therein .
Eoch bidder muat submit
evidence or 111 experiences
on project• of almllor olzo
and complexity. The owner
Intend• and requlrea that
thlo proJect be complotod
no later than September 30,
2000.
All contractors and
aubcontractora Involved
with thlo project will, to tho
oxtont practlcoblo, uso Ohio
Producta,
materials ,
service• and labor l.n the
lmplemontotlon of this
pro I• ct.
Additionally,
contractor compliance with
tho Equal Employment
Opportunity requirements
of Ohio Administrative Coda
Chapter 123, the Governor's
EJ(ecutlve Order 94-9 shall

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
· Final Expenses; College, Retirement.iJJ
IEineJrgei~Y Funds; Mortgage;
~
Medical •
Home
._, _ _.

.Your
Concrete
Connection

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

• Opelllgs 01 al sWfts
• Cllllfttd In Meigs &amp;
AtiMts C011tlts

"l.o&lt;ated Eastem S&lt;Mol
Dlstlkt &amp; l'PP'" PWn
Head Stalt

'CPR &amp; First Aid
'15 yts. Exptllettce
Call Jackie 985-4308
7126 1 mo

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
The Stoll of Ohio, Mllgo
County

Provlco, InC., Pl1lntlff, v•
Donald A. Jotftlre, ot al.,
Defend onto
No. 9f.CY.134
In purouonco of on Ordor
of Solo In tho above ontltlod
ac11on,.l will olfor for oolo at
public auction, ot tho front
otopo of tho Courthoueo In

Pomeroy, In the 1bove
nomed County, on tho 21 at
day of Septombor, 2000, at
10:30 o'clock A.M., tho
following doocrlbod rui
eotote, tlluoto in tho County
of Melgo ond Stolt of Ohio
tawlt:
Being 1 part of 1 tract of
lend nonoferrtd to Douglao
and Sodlo M. Chapmon aa
recorded In Deed Book 309
11 Pogo 315, Molgo County
Rocordor'a Office, Melga
County, Ohio, olao being a
part of Froctlon 25,
Townahlp·&amp;·North, Ronge·
14-Woot, Rutland Townahlp,
Meigs County, Stolt of Ohio
and moro porllculorly
deacrlbed •• followa:
Beginning ot a point In
the centerline of • amall
crotk being the Northweot
corner ot 1 1.00
more
or ltll troct
In
Deed Book 31:111 Poao :z7s:

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

more or
troct tho
following two coureaa:
1. South 35 dogrHa, 30
mlnutoo, 37 eocondo Wilt a
dl11onco of 80.51 loot Ia o
point;
-2:-South 02- d""roll, 25
-·
mlnutoo, 13 aocondt Wtlt a
dlatonco of 94.17 foot to a
point being the Southwoot
corner of oold 1.00 ocro
mol'll or I•• trlcti
Thence leaving oald Wut
boundary South 37 dogrooo
11 mlnutot 32 aocondo
Wilt a dlotonce of 24.91
feet to a point In tho
centerline ol State Route
1124;
Thence along
centerline North 50
02 mlnutt8 1 33
Wool a dlotanco ol 153.97
loet to a point bolng the
lnttrooctlon
of the
centerline of State Route
1124 an:l the contorllne of
Township Rood 156;
· Tllencoloavlng oald Stoto
Route ,24 and olong tho
contarllno of aald Townohlp
Road 156 tho following
three courses:
1. North 30 dogrtll, 56
mlnutee, 01 eaconde Eaat a
dlllonco of 70.27 foot to a
point;
2. North 20 dogroto, 22
mlnutoa, 28 aecondt•Eaat a
dlollnct of 81 .21 feot to a
point;
3. North 18 dogreeo, 38
mlnuttl, 38 aeconde Eaat a
dlotonct of 247.16 loot to a
point:
Thence leaving oald
contorllnt South 89 dtgfteo
25 mlnutoo 56 oocondo Eatl
palling through a 518" Iron
pin 111 a dlotanco of 11.44
feet and going 1 total
distance of 175.05 loot to a
5/8" Iron pin aal;
Thonco South 28 degreoo
53 mlnutto 36 ucondo
Wtot 1 dlttance or 279.60
ltot to tho principal point
beginning containing 1.3639
acrea more or laaa aubject
to all legal eaaementa and
rlghto·ol·way.
Bearlnga were derived
from a prevlou1 ·•urvey
recorded In Dood book 313
at Pogo 275.
The above deacrlpllon

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.
"Take lhe pain oul
ofpainrinsLet me do il for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. •
Leove Messoge

1-800-311·3391
Free Estimatea
Contrectors Welcome

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

After 6pm· 740.985·4180

DEPOYSA&amp;

PARft
All Mabs Tractor &amp;
Eq.pp:ment Pa11s

Cellular
.Warner Ins.
992-5479

Factory Authorized
Case-lit Pairts '
Dealers.

•..

, ,.....

100C Sl. Rt. 7 Soulll
CoolviH•, OH 45723

Sieve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

~ .. -

• ' ...

,"/&lt;

. ...

NOTICE
2 Handyman crew will do

Phone (740) 593-6671

"

6/29/mo.

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp; R Logging
after 8:00 pm
7 40-992-5050

(Randy)

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomaroy,OH
PayiiiQ $110.00

per 11811)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progresalva top line.

painting Inside and out,
carpenter work, rooftng,
siding. Have own tools.
Free Estimates

740-742-3225

,&lt;

EXPRESS

mont

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
C:ONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

Replacement Windows ,

Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Ga rage room
additions. Pole Buildin g,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, Boat Docks,

992·2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

992-2753

Pass
Pass
Pass

TOMORROW IS
REPORT CARD

OAY

· FREE Estimates

740·992·7599

D. R. Bissell

30

If:,WICK'S.,

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

HfiOLinG and
EXCfiYfiTinG
..

11011m 1·mo. ""·

'
:THE
BORN LOSER

'•'"DO YOU f..V&amp;

,..

fEU. YOU

"'NA.':&gt;TW't'~ Tl~

NO. [ f\P-,1/E.

lt-1

mE ~TOf
M((JN0

WJE.m£0

ffilf&gt;\ i'\i m

l£fVX!L? I M.Uo}l, Wf'i..T
I:&gt;OOD 1':&gt; M~ r+IILOSO~Y

.,

fl\0~'{ .1

~.

~0011-l&amp;~~?

Hauling • Limestone •
· Gravel• Sond • Topsoil• '
Fill Dirt e Mulch •
Bulldozer Services '

7/53 mo

(7 40) 985-3948

one

or one
or as ow as

Pass

Although the number of fish in
it has dwindled appallingly, the
Atlantic Ocean is still known as
the Herring Pond in certain ·quar·
ters. On the other side ·of it lie the
British Isles, about whose resi dents an unknown 19th·century
wag wrote, "An Englishman is
never happy unless he is miserable ; a Scotsman is never at home
but ·when he is abroad; an Irish·
man is never at peace but when
he's fighting. "
Thi s deal features a peaceful
scrap between two Irishmen dur·
ing the 1965 Killarney Congress.
How should the play proceed in
six spades afler West leads the
club nine 0
Four clubs is Gerber, asking for
aces.
Declarer starts with II sure
tri cks: six spades. 1wo hearts, one
diamond and lwo clubs. Among
the several chances for number 12
are : lhe club queen might appear
in 1he first 1hree rounds: West
could have the diamond ac e;
declarer can find the heart queen.
After winning with the club
declarer. JJck Kell y, played a
diamond to 111c q.uec n. If Easl
win.-; thi s trick and returns a di amond. dec larer will pilch hi s 1hird
diamond 0..11 the club ace, ntff a
club to 1ry 10 drop th e queen. th en
be forced to guess I he hearts. Yet
East. David Cohen, ducked as if
he had never heard of the di a·
mond ace .
Howeve r, Kelly cotllinued
qrefully. He discarded a dia·
mond, not a hean, on the c Jub ace,
ruffed a club. and tried another
diamond . Yet when East captured
dummy 's kin g wilh the ace and
co~tinued with the di amond jack,
Kelly ruffed . Then he played
Wesl for the hea rt queen to make
lhe slam.

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy

city
29 Jacob's twin ·
30 Dye plant · '
31 Lions' homes
37 Roman fire 1
ad
•
38 r:nguage ~
sutffx
41 Gorman
.. ,.,
phllotopher :
42 Chinese
• •
(co b. form) ·
-,..~-·· an road :.s
Keep
•
5 Refuse lro!ft ·
smelting . ·'
7 Old name .~.
46 Toward the
center of .·..'.
49 Adoleocent
50 Is mistaken · ·
52 Wadding · •
words

;:

54 Ginger-

·•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C..lebrity Cipher ayptogramo oro cnNllOd from qUOI.Ilions by famous people

present. Each liner in the cipher standi lor another.

'

pas1 and . • •

·· 1

Today's clue: W equals J
'KVB

" CBZHHRCAVM

DKJBCV

ZCF

AH

FXAVM
FXZF

ZNKRF

FZAVMH

...
~

Y Z V' F

N B

Z H

NZJ

D.

EZAVFBJ.'

ZH

FXBT

ZCB

SZIFXZII

WZYLHKV
'·~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Common sense is not so common."- Vollaire
"Some folks are wise, and some are otherwise." - (Novelist) Tobias Smollett ' •! ·

,king and drj:lwmg trumps. ,_ t~e

(740) 992-3470

Fully Insured
lrloollorrhoo!lodH, Oltle

28 Hawaiian

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Certalnteed,
Simington
Ufetlme Warrantv 1
Local Contractor

Reasonable Prices

••
Pass

Easl
Pass
Pass

Over the pond

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC •
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEHTI~L
FREE ESTIMATES

Norlh
2NT

Opening lead: • 9

. 992-1101
724 t mo

•
vert1se
•
stness

CARPET

Blown lnsulatifl n,

West

'f'OU 'D ENJO'( &amp;ACKPACKIN6

A LOT MOKE, MARCIE, IF
YOVP LEARN TO ROLL UP
YOUK SLEEPIN6 eA6 ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

'

CarPet. UlnYI Coverlna It
Floor Tile Mill Direct

Concrete &amp; Block Work,

• 8 5 3

•K
Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: South

' Need It dent, give us 1 c1ll ·
FREE ESTIMATES
Ore1t PtiCII en New H!f!ll')

Call740-985-383l

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES

Pager (304) 540·4443

• Roofing

"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3·3. $3.25/20 lbs
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

740-992-9636

Phone (304) 67 4·6 t 00
4078 6th Street
Point Pleasanl , WV
Owner Mile Balch

• Siding

CONCRrn
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIa5
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercia

- PieR-up &amp; delivery · Tires &amp; Detail

'···,··

• Decks

"Jr.h~.:..d in ~~rvia~"

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
,

• Garages

P/B(0NiRA(i0R~r INC

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

• A 9 2

SMITH'S
conSTRamo"
• New Homes • Remodeling

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

' ·' '

Ask for Jim ...

11 /111/!!n

Soulb

•AKQJ98

8J21j(l[) 1 mo . pd.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Uc. , QC!-50

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Slop In And See

waa prepared tram an
actual aurvey made on the
30th day of Auguat, 1994, by
C. Thomu Smith, Ohio
Profeaelonal Survevor ,
16844.
Auditor's Parcel No. 11·
00025.000.
Said Premlaea located on
Stoto Route 124 and
Romaine Road.
Said Promloto Appraleod
at $15,000.00 ond connot be
eold for leta than twct-thlrda
of that amount.
TERMS OF SAtE: 10%
down ; balance In 30 day1.
Jamtl Souloby, Shorlfl ,
Molgo County, Ohio
Steven J. Gtloe, Attorney,
10053243
3T 8(17) (24) (31 )

WANTED

UNDA'S
. PAINTING

• 7 6 3
• 8 4
t A J 7 2
.. Q 10 6 2

740-992-S232

17401 992·3131

K Q4
Easl

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

Seplic Sy•lenu &amp;
Urililie•

Toll Free 877-&gt;&lt;~ .7nn

Albany, Ohio

750 East Slate Street
Ohio 45701
"A Better

t

"'A J 7 3

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

•

Se"'ices

740-742-8015_ . . _

/Putiny "" //oflit

Now Renting

House &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GOnERS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Bu/JJo•er &amp; Backhoe

Wood and Maaona
W!IIk

Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

CBII'I'IR

"'"""

Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios

7/22/TFN

1,.. R,.. 148

,,,,....., waa

Quality Cgnmtg Work

Mason, WV
304-773-5300
or
Reserve a spot for you, your team, or your le~tgue.

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

08-17..00

• 10 2
• K J 10 3

11011 LUMBER .

Public Notice

-----...----1
Pu bile Not
_

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and
collections, legal papers, investment records, oh&lt;lt&lt;&gt;l
albums, cameras, household inventory
sentimental items will~ safe.
For more·information call ~

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

JACXIES CHILD CARE

Public Notice

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SeCURITY"

·-

46 "Malcolm X"
Anaw.r ta Previous Puzzle
director
1 Biblical ludgo 47 Location
7 Dancer Rogero 51 Style of type
13 Tropical lizard 53 Fancy dive
14 " Selnleld"
55 Coilfomll'o
regular
neighbor
15 Instruction
56 Click beetle
period
57 See 55 Acros•
t 6 Seuped-up car 56 Bar lrulll
F.r.-+7
(2.wds.)
17 ABA mamber
DOWN
18 Heart
1 Type of
20 Different
monster
21 Israel's
2 "By the lima- ~~;::;.
neighbor
-to Phaonl•"
23 German city
3 Do a cleaning
27 Intellectual
chore
32· Hablluote
4 Not hard
33 River of
5 lennon'• love
northern
6 Mrt. Reagan
Fral1ce
34 Russian money 7 Basebell'o
21 Showo acom
11 Boseball'o
Lou35 Killed
22 Tennis playar
Slaughler
8
Workers'
assn.
36 Notice
Andre12 Advise,
9 Baakolbeil'o
39 Spirits
23 Architect
old·atyle
Archibald
40 Raw fish dish
Se•rlnen
19 Mine find
42 Hissing sound 10 Female
24 Be rude to
25 Long
undwlcheo
26 Author
Gardner
ACROSS

Sentinel

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2

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111'1
R" 'o c A N

4

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My neighbor complained to my

' I 6 ::: husband thai he had finally found
I
I
1. .....1.~ a use for a lool that his wife had ••.
-1..-1..-1..- L

f..]~r,-n,or-r,-~.--~"9-1 o..

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Complete the chuckle quoted

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bv filling in the mining words

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you deV'elop trom step No. 3 below .

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Knight - Youth - Genie • Osprey. USE IT

··1s th1s your suitcase?" the porter asked the woman
~~1hng she replied, "No, but my sister said 1could USE

AUGUST17I

-'Birthday

FRIDAY, Aug. 18, 2000
, A number of benefi cial things
oon happen 10 you in th e year
a\,ead as you slart to treat life
more philosophically than you
llo ve in Ihe past. A relaxed alt itude
~en s up your horizons and brings
luck.
; LEO (July 23· Aug . 22) Your
P.orulari ly is prese ntly at a hi gh
~int. and, because of lhi s, sever.
clj' good things could happen tor
y,ou toda y. ll 's all the rcsuh of
»&gt;ur buoyant. optimi slic alii tude .
Qet a JUmp on life by under·
spnding lhe influences thai' ll
~ve m you in lhe year ahead.
~en d for your Astro-Graph predictions by mailing $2 to AstroQraph. c/o thi s new spaper, P.O.
fl ox 1758, Murray Hill Stati on.
~ew York , NY I0 I 56 . Be sure 10
'!ate your Zodiac sign.
. VIRGO (A ug. 23-Se pt. 22) A
sferet de sire concerning your
Lj treer or an ambiti ous aim has
qeuer th an average chances of
qeing fulfilled ioday. At the very
l~ast . some door may open for yo u
t~ make thi s possible .
• LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 2J)
cf'_han~:c~ are you·re going to
rccei n• th at nominal supp orl
today thai you need from other' 10

effectively implement a prescm
plan of ac ti on. Move on il \vi lh
vigor.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 221
Through the good gra ces of
&lt;.m other you tna y get an opporlunily 1oday to make some extra
money 1h a1 could really co me in
handy. This migh1 be work rclal·
cd.
SAG ITfARIUS (Nov. 23·Dcc .
21) Look for nol only a fun day
with friend s today involving an
activity that might be more physical than mental. but for something very lucky lo come oul of
the encounter.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) A va luable lesson in optimism
mi ght be learned today when
so methin g about which you"final·
ly quit worrying takes a tum for
the better. You'llleam th ai frettin g
never makes things happen.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
Good limes could be had today
through getting out and min gling
with olhers. be they work· or
soc ial·related. There's a chance
you could make a new friend in
the process .
PISCES (Feb . 20·March 20)
Operate along lines of least res is ·

lance, and major achievement s of
a material na1ure are possible
loday. This is one of I hose days in
which you need to lei life happen
l o you.
AR IES (March 21·April 19)
Th e chances for success in your

maj or in vo lve ment s are already
exce llent today. Howeve r. the
more mc1hod ica l and dili2ent vou
beco me. lhe more li kely L;td y
Luck wil l lend some help. as wdl.
TAURUS (A pril 20· Ma y 20)
Capilali zc on whal yo u already
ha ve al hand, inslcad of placing
all your hopes on a pol of gold al
lhe end of a rainbow. The re i'
plenty of bounly wil hin you r
reach if yo u·n.· rcsoun.:eful.
GEM INI (Mav 2 1·Jun e 201
Temporarily sci itsidc an y per·
~o n a l

co nc"erns that c an wait. and

concentrale loday on those lhin g,
tha t will provide the greatest good

for lhe greatest number. Th e
rewa rds will be lremendous.
CANCER (June 21·Jul y 22)
Career-oriented man'e rs could
provide you wi th the greates l
array of op portunilies 10day.
They're exce ptionall y promi sing
for you, so long as you're nol
lookin g for a free ride.

'

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ITHURSDAY

~:-------------~~~~our

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News 2000 The Vote (liiJe) (CC)

t

I Conventioo (Live) (CC)

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Thursday; August 17, 2000

Page B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

.

.,.
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~jdpy, ~uguat 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page

B~

LLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

Rocky R. Hu_Bp, Agent

SECURITY·

Box 189

Advertise your
message
$8.00 column inch weekdays
o.oo coiUITln inch Sundays

..

I
f

Public Notice

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Coeo No. : OOCV035
Judge: Fred W. Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LISollo Nollonol Bonk, n
Tt!JotH, undor the Pooling
and Servicing Agroement
~oted 6-1·99, Sorloo 1 - 2
C/O Superior Bonk, FSB,
plllntiH, va, Roy Stover, at
ol., dolendonta.
Roy Stover, whoot 1111
known oddreu Ia 461
Georgto
Cnok
Rd.,
Qolllpollo, OH 45631, and
the
unknown
heln,
dlvla•••·
lagateee,
executora, edmlnletratora,
opouoeo and ooolgna end
tho unknown guordlonl of
minor and/or Incompetent
holro al Roy Stovor, oil
whoaa raaldancea era
unknown and cannot by
reooonobl• diligence be
aacertalntd, will take notice
thot on the 31 ot day of
Morell, 2000, LoSollt
Notlonol Bonk, 11 TnuotH,
under tho Pooling and
SliiVIclng Agreomont dated
6-1-98, Strleo 1899-2 c/o
Superior Bonk, FSB flied Ill
Complaint In tho Common
Plooo Court, and tho ob)tcl
and demond for relief of
which ploadlng Ia to
fonclooe the lion of
plolnll"''
m o rt g
recorded upon the following
d-rlbed rill eollto to wh: .
Property Address: 206
Buttornut Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788 and being moro
particularly deecrlbod In
mort gag a
plolntm's
recorded In Martgoge Book
90, pogo 424, at thll County
Rocordor'o O"lce.
All of tho above nomed
defendant• are required to
onewor within twenty..lght
(28) doya afltr loot
publication, which oholl be
publlohod once •
for
elK coneocuttve
or

be required.
Blddtro m~ot comply with
tho prevailing wogo rotoo on
Public lmprovemento In
Molgo County and th•
Vllloge ol Syrocuao, Ohio ao
dotormlned by the Ohio
Department of Industrial
Rolatlono.
Tho Vlllsgo of Syrocuao
raserveo the right to waive
lrregulsrlllta and reJect ony
or all bldo.
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
Sharon Cottrill
Clerk-Treeaurer
(8) 10, 17, 2TC

•11•

_..

;·eiii"Ni~F
SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
All
1 PI inti"
omoya or 1
P.O. Box 11410
Clnclnn111, OH 45201·5480
($J 3) 24 t-3IOC
~-·
(7) 27, (8) 3, 10, 17, 24,
6TC

_:..=..:~:::....:.:.=:!!!:!:....-1

LEGAL NOTICE
Seoled prcpooalt will be
roctlvod It tho OHice of tho
Moycir, Municipal Building,
Third Street, Syracuoe,
· Ohio, until 4 p.m. local time
on Thurodoy, September 7,
2000, far furnlohlng all
labor,
materlata
and
oqulpment neceaaary to
complete tho project known
11
Syracuse
Street
Rllurfaclng, and at sold
limo end place, publicly
opened and read aloud.
Contrac1 documonto, bid
ehttll ond opeclflcotlono
con be obtained at aold
o"lco altar Augual14, 2000,
at $25.00 por oet, which
money will be refunded to
the unauccessful bidders
upon the return of the
complete oat In good
condition no more than ten
(1 O) days after the bid date.
Chock• oholl be mode
poyoble 10 the VIllage of
Syrocuoo, Ohio.
Thlo project Ia a Minority
Buelnooa Eflterprloo (MBE)
Sei·Aolde ProJect. Eoch
blddor
muat
submit
ovldenco that It ~a a Minority
Buelneaa Enterprlae aa
cortlflod by the State Equal
Employment Opportunity
Coordinator.
Each bidder 11 roqulrod to
lurnloh with Ita propoul, a
Bid Guaranty and Contract
Bond In accordance with
Sec11on 153:54 of tho Ohio
Rovloed Code. ·Bid security
lurnlohtd In Bond form ,
ohall be IIIUid by a Suroty
Company or Corporation
ilconled In the State of Ohio
to provide told surety.
Each propoul must
contain tho full nome of tho
Party or portlea submitting
tho propoaol and all
peraon1 lntereated therein .
Eoch bidder muat submit
evidence or 111 experiences
on project• of almllor olzo
and complexity. The owner
Intend• and requlrea that
thlo proJect be complotod
no later than September 30,
2000.
All contractors and
aubcontractora Involved
with thlo project will, to tho
oxtont practlcoblo, uso Ohio
Producta,
materials ,
service• and labor l.n the
lmplemontotlon of this
pro I• ct.
Additionally,
contractor compliance with
tho Equal Employment
Opportunity requirements
of Ohio Administrative Coda
Chapter 123, the Governor's
EJ(ecutlve Order 94-9 shall

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
· Final Expenses; College, Retirement.iJJ
IEineJrgei~Y Funds; Mortgage;
~
Medical •
Home
._, _ _.

.Your
Concrete
Connection

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

• Opelllgs 01 al sWfts
• Cllllfttd In Meigs &amp;
AtiMts C011tlts

"l.o&lt;ated Eastem S&lt;Mol
Dlstlkt &amp; l'PP'" PWn
Head Stalt

'CPR &amp; First Aid
'15 yts. Exptllettce
Call Jackie 985-4308
7126 1 mo

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
The Stoll of Ohio, Mllgo
County

Provlco, InC., Pl1lntlff, v•
Donald A. Jotftlre, ot al.,
Defend onto
No. 9f.CY.134
In purouonco of on Ordor
of Solo In tho above ontltlod
ac11on,.l will olfor for oolo at
public auction, ot tho front
otopo of tho Courthoueo In

Pomeroy, In the 1bove
nomed County, on tho 21 at
day of Septombor, 2000, at
10:30 o'clock A.M., tho
following doocrlbod rui
eotote, tlluoto in tho County
of Melgo ond Stolt of Ohio
tawlt:
Being 1 part of 1 tract of
lend nonoferrtd to Douglao
and Sodlo M. Chapmon aa
recorded In Deed Book 309
11 Pogo 315, Molgo County
Rocordor'a Office, Melga
County, Ohio, olao being a
part of Froctlon 25,
Townahlp·&amp;·North, Ronge·
14-Woot, Rutland Townahlp,
Meigs County, Stolt of Ohio
and moro porllculorly
deacrlbed •• followa:
Beginning ot a point In
the centerline of • amall
crotk being the Northweot
corner ot 1 1.00
more
or ltll troct
In
Deed Book 31:111 Poao :z7s:

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

more or
troct tho
following two coureaa:
1. South 35 dogrHa, 30
mlnutoo, 37 eocondo Wilt a
dl11onco of 80.51 loot Ia o
point;
-2:-South 02- d""roll, 25
-·
mlnutoo, 13 aocondt Wtlt a
dlatonco of 94.17 foot to a
point being the Southwoot
corner of oold 1.00 ocro
mol'll or I•• trlcti
Thence leaving oald Wut
boundary South 37 dogrooo
11 mlnutot 32 aocondo
Wilt a dlotonce of 24.91
feet to a point In tho
centerline ol State Route
1124;
Thence along
centerline North 50
02 mlnutt8 1 33
Wool a dlotanco ol 153.97
loet to a point bolng the
lnttrooctlon
of the
centerline of State Route
1124 an:l the contorllne of
Township Rood 156;
· Tllencoloavlng oald Stoto
Route ,24 and olong tho
contarllno of aald Townohlp
Road 156 tho following
three courses:
1. North 30 dogrtll, 56
mlnutee, 01 eaconde Eaat a
dlllonco of 70.27 foot to a
point;
2. North 20 dogroto, 22
mlnutoa, 28 aecondt•Eaat a
dlollnct of 81 .21 feot to a
point;
3. North 18 dogreeo, 38
mlnuttl, 38 aeconde Eaat a
dlotonct of 247.16 loot to a
point:
Thence leaving oald
contorllnt South 89 dtgfteo
25 mlnutoo 56 oocondo Eatl
palling through a 518" Iron
pin 111 a dlotanco of 11.44
feet and going 1 total
distance of 175.05 loot to a
5/8" Iron pin aal;
Thonco South 28 degreoo
53 mlnutto 36 ucondo
Wtot 1 dlttance or 279.60
ltot to tho principal point
beginning containing 1.3639
acrea more or laaa aubject
to all legal eaaementa and
rlghto·ol·way.
Bearlnga were derived
from a prevlou1 ·•urvey
recorded In Dood book 313
at Pogo 275.
The above deacrlpllon

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.
"Take lhe pain oul
ofpainrinsLet me do il for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. •
Leove Messoge

1-800-311·3391
Free Estimatea
Contrectors Welcome

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

After 6pm· 740.985·4180

DEPOYSA&amp;

PARft
All Mabs Tractor &amp;
Eq.pp:ment Pa11s

Cellular
.Warner Ins.
992-5479

Factory Authorized
Case-lit Pairts '
Dealers.

•..

, ,.....

100C Sl. Rt. 7 Soulll
CoolviH•, OH 45723

Sieve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

~ .. -

• ' ...

,"/&lt;

. ...

NOTICE
2 Handyman crew will do

Phone (740) 593-6671

"

6/29/mo.

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp; R Logging
after 8:00 pm
7 40-992-5050

(Randy)

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomaroy,OH
PayiiiQ $110.00

per 11811)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progresalva top line.

painting Inside and out,
carpenter work, rooftng,
siding. Have own tools.
Free Estimates

740-742-3225

,&lt;

EXPRESS

mont

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
C:ONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

Replacement Windows ,

Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Ga rage room
additions. Pole Buildin g,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, Boat Docks,

992·2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

992-2753

Pass
Pass
Pass

TOMORROW IS
REPORT CARD

OAY

· FREE Estimates

740·992·7599

D. R. Bissell

30

If:,WICK'S.,

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

HfiOLinG and
EXCfiYfiTinG
..

11011m 1·mo. ""·

'
:THE
BORN LOSER

'•'"DO YOU f..V&amp;

,..

fEU. YOU

"'NA.':&gt;TW't'~ Tl~

NO. [ f\P-,1/E.

lt-1

mE ~TOf
M((JN0

WJE.m£0

ffilf&gt;\ i'\i m

l£fVX!L? I M.Uo}l, Wf'i..T
I:&gt;OOD 1':&gt; M~ r+IILOSO~Y

.,

fl\0~'{ .1

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~0011-l&amp;~~?

Hauling • Limestone •
· Gravel• Sond • Topsoil• '
Fill Dirt e Mulch •
Bulldozer Services '

7/53 mo

(7 40) 985-3948

one

or one
or as ow as

Pass

Although the number of fish in
it has dwindled appallingly, the
Atlantic Ocean is still known as
the Herring Pond in certain ·quar·
ters. On the other side ·of it lie the
British Isles, about whose resi dents an unknown 19th·century
wag wrote, "An Englishman is
never happy unless he is miserable ; a Scotsman is never at home
but ·when he is abroad; an Irish·
man is never at peace but when
he's fighting. "
Thi s deal features a peaceful
scrap between two Irishmen dur·
ing the 1965 Killarney Congress.
How should the play proceed in
six spades afler West leads the
club nine 0
Four clubs is Gerber, asking for
aces.
Declarer starts with II sure
tri cks: six spades. 1wo hearts, one
diamond and lwo clubs. Among
the several chances for number 12
are : lhe club queen might appear
in 1he first 1hree rounds: West
could have the diamond ac e;
declarer can find the heart queen.
After winning with the club
declarer. JJck Kell y, played a
diamond to 111c q.uec n. If Easl
win.-; thi s trick and returns a di amond. dec larer will pilch hi s 1hird
diamond 0..11 the club ace, ntff a
club to 1ry 10 drop th e queen. th en
be forced to guess I he hearts. Yet
East. David Cohen, ducked as if
he had never heard of the di a·
mond ace .
Howeve r, Kelly cotllinued
qrefully. He discarded a dia·
mond, not a hean, on the c Jub ace,
ruffed a club. and tried another
diamond . Yet when East captured
dummy 's kin g wilh the ace and
co~tinued with the di amond jack,
Kelly ruffed . Then he played
Wesl for the hea rt queen to make
lhe slam.

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy

city
29 Jacob's twin ·
30 Dye plant · '
31 Lions' homes
37 Roman fire 1
ad
•
38 r:nguage ~
sutffx
41 Gorman
.. ,.,
phllotopher :
42 Chinese
• •
(co b. form) ·
-,..~-·· an road :.s
Keep
•
5 Refuse lro!ft ·
smelting . ·'
7 Old name .~.
46 Toward the
center of .·..'.
49 Adoleocent
50 Is mistaken · ·
52 Wadding · •
words

;:

54 Ginger-

·•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C..lebrity Cipher ayptogramo oro cnNllOd from qUOI.Ilions by famous people

present. Each liner in the cipher standi lor another.

'

pas1 and . • •

·· 1

Today's clue: W equals J
'KVB

" CBZHHRCAVM

DKJBCV

ZCF

AH

FXAVM
FXZF

ZNKRF

FZAVMH

...
~

Y Z V' F

N B

Z H

NZJ

D.

EZAVFBJ.'

ZH

FXBT

ZCB

SZIFXZII

WZYLHKV
'·~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Common sense is not so common."- Vollaire
"Some folks are wise, and some are otherwise." - (Novelist) Tobias Smollett ' •! ·

,king and drj:lwmg trumps. ,_ t~e

(740) 992-3470

Fully Insured
lrloollorrhoo!lodH, Oltle

28 Hawaiian

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Certalnteed,
Simington
Ufetlme Warrantv 1
Local Contractor

Reasonable Prices

••
Pass

Easl
Pass
Pass

Over the pond

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC •
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEHTI~L
FREE ESTIMATES

Norlh
2NT

Opening lead: • 9

. 992-1101
724 t mo

•
vert1se
•
stness

CARPET

Blown lnsulatifl n,

West

'f'OU 'D ENJO'( &amp;ACKPACKIN6

A LOT MOKE, MARCIE, IF
YOVP LEARN TO ROLL UP
YOUK SLEEPIN6 eA6 ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

'

CarPet. UlnYI Coverlna It
Floor Tile Mill Direct

Concrete &amp; Block Work,

• 8 5 3

•K
Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: South

' Need It dent, give us 1 c1ll ·
FREE ESTIMATES
Ore1t PtiCII en New H!f!ll')

Call740-985-383l

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES

Pager (304) 540·4443

• Roofing

"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3·3. $3.25/20 lbs
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

740-992-9636

Phone (304) 67 4·6 t 00
4078 6th Street
Point Pleasanl , WV
Owner Mile Balch

• Siding

CONCRrn
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIa5
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercia

- PieR-up &amp; delivery · Tires &amp; Detail

'···,··

• Decks

"Jr.h~.:..d in ~~rvia~"

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
,

• Garages

P/B(0NiRA(i0R~r INC

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

• A 9 2

SMITH'S
conSTRamo"
• New Homes • Remodeling

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

' ·' '

Ask for Jim ...

11 /111/!!n

Soulb

•AKQJ98

8J21j(l[) 1 mo . pd.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Uc. , QC!-50

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Slop In And See

waa prepared tram an
actual aurvey made on the
30th day of Auguat, 1994, by
C. Thomu Smith, Ohio
Profeaelonal Survevor ,
16844.
Auditor's Parcel No. 11·
00025.000.
Said Premlaea located on
Stoto Route 124 and
Romaine Road.
Said Promloto Appraleod
at $15,000.00 ond connot be
eold for leta than twct-thlrda
of that amount.
TERMS OF SAtE: 10%
down ; balance In 30 day1.
Jamtl Souloby, Shorlfl ,
Molgo County, Ohio
Steven J. Gtloe, Attorney,
10053243
3T 8(17) (24) (31 )

WANTED

UNDA'S
. PAINTING

• 7 6 3
• 8 4
t A J 7 2
.. Q 10 6 2

740-992-S232

17401 992·3131

K Q4
Easl

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

Seplic Sy•lenu &amp;
Urililie•

Toll Free 877-&gt;&lt;~ .7nn

Albany, Ohio

750 East Slate Street
Ohio 45701
"A Better

t

"'A J 7 3

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

•

Se"'ices

740-742-8015_ . . _

/Putiny "" //oflit

Now Renting

House &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GOnERS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Bu/JJo•er &amp; Backhoe

Wood and Maaona
W!IIk

Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

CBII'I'IR

"'"""

Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios

7/22/TFN

1,.. R,.. 148

,,,,....., waa

Quality Cgnmtg Work

Mason, WV
304-773-5300
or
Reserve a spot for you, your team, or your le~tgue.

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

08-17..00

• 10 2
• K J 10 3

11011 LUMBER .

Public Notice

-----...----1
Pu bile Not
_

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and
collections, legal papers, investment records, oh&lt;lt&lt;&gt;l
albums, cameras, household inventory
sentimental items will~ safe.
For more·information call ~

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

JACXIES CHILD CARE

Public Notice

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SeCURITY"

·-

46 "Malcolm X"
Anaw.r ta Previous Puzzle
director
1 Biblical ludgo 47 Location
7 Dancer Rogero 51 Style of type
13 Tropical lizard 53 Fancy dive
14 " Selnleld"
55 Coilfomll'o
regular
neighbor
15 Instruction
56 Click beetle
period
57 See 55 Acros•
t 6 Seuped-up car 56 Bar lrulll
F.r.-+7
(2.wds.)
17 ABA mamber
DOWN
18 Heart
1 Type of
20 Different
monster
21 Israel's
2 "By the lima- ~~;::;.
neighbor
-to Phaonl•"
23 German city
3 Do a cleaning
27 Intellectual
chore
32· Hablluote
4 Not hard
33 River of
5 lennon'• love
northern
6 Mrt. Reagan
Fral1ce
34 Russian money 7 Basebell'o
21 Showo acom
11 Boseball'o
Lou35 Killed
22 Tennis playar
Slaughler
8
Workers'
assn.
36 Notice
Andre12 Advise,
9 Baakolbeil'o
39 Spirits
23 Architect
old·atyle
Archibald
40 Raw fish dish
Se•rlnen
19 Mine find
42 Hissing sound 10 Female
24 Be rude to
25 Long
undwlcheo
26 Author
Gardner
ACROSS

Sentinel

-----rec==::-- . .

I 1I I I
2

I

I

I~==::::::::0
111'1
R" 'o c A N

4

.

I

T U T RH

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' I 6 ::: husband thai he had finally found
I
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f..]~r,-n,or-r,-~.--~"9-1 o..

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Complete the chuckle quoted

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bv filling in the mining words

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..-----~
-

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you deV'elop trom step No. 3 below .

..

,.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Knight - Youth - Genie • Osprey. USE IT

··1s th1s your suitcase?" the porter asked the woman
~~1hng she replied, "No, but my sister said 1could USE

AUGUST17I

-'Birthday

FRIDAY, Aug. 18, 2000
, A number of benefi cial things
oon happen 10 you in th e year
a\,ead as you slart to treat life
more philosophically than you
llo ve in Ihe past. A relaxed alt itude
~en s up your horizons and brings
luck.
; LEO (July 23· Aug . 22) Your
P.orulari ly is prese ntly at a hi gh
~int. and, because of lhi s, sever.
clj' good things could happen tor
y,ou toda y. ll 's all the rcsuh of
»&gt;ur buoyant. optimi slic alii tude .
Qet a JUmp on life by under·
spnding lhe influences thai' ll
~ve m you in lhe year ahead.
~en d for your Astro-Graph predictions by mailing $2 to AstroQraph. c/o thi s new spaper, P.O.
fl ox 1758, Murray Hill Stati on.
~ew York , NY I0 I 56 . Be sure 10
'!ate your Zodiac sign.
. VIRGO (A ug. 23-Se pt. 22) A
sferet de sire concerning your
Lj treer or an ambiti ous aim has
qeuer th an average chances of
qeing fulfilled ioday. At the very
l~ast . some door may open for yo u
t~ make thi s possible .
• LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 2J)
cf'_han~:c~ are you·re going to
rccei n• th at nominal supp orl
today thai you need from other' 10

effectively implement a prescm
plan of ac ti on. Move on il \vi lh
vigor.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 221
Through the good gra ces of
&lt;.m other you tna y get an opporlunily 1oday to make some extra
money 1h a1 could really co me in
handy. This migh1 be work rclal·
cd.
SAG ITfARIUS (Nov. 23·Dcc .
21) Look for nol only a fun day
with friend s today involving an
activity that might be more physical than mental. but for something very lucky lo come oul of
the encounter.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) A va luable lesson in optimism
mi ght be learned today when
so methin g about which you"final·
ly quit worrying takes a tum for
the better. You'llleam th ai frettin g
never makes things happen.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
Good limes could be had today
through getting out and min gling
with olhers. be they work· or
soc ial·related. There's a chance
you could make a new friend in
the process .
PISCES (Feb . 20·March 20)
Operate along lines of least res is ·

lance, and major achievement s of
a material na1ure are possible
loday. This is one of I hose days in
which you need to lei life happen
l o you.
AR IES (March 21·April 19)
Th e chances for success in your

maj or in vo lve ment s are already
exce llent today. Howeve r. the
more mc1hod ica l and dili2ent vou
beco me. lhe more li kely L;td y
Luck wil l lend some help. as wdl.
TAURUS (A pril 20· Ma y 20)
Capilali zc on whal yo u already
ha ve al hand, inslcad of placing
all your hopes on a pol of gold al
lhe end of a rainbow. The re i'
plenty of bounly wil hin you r
reach if yo u·n.· rcsoun.:eful.
GEM INI (Mav 2 1·Jun e 201
Temporarily sci itsidc an y per·
~o n a l

co nc"erns that c an wait. and

concentrale loday on those lhin g,
tha t will provide the greatest good

for lhe greatest number. Th e
rewa rds will be lremendous.
CANCER (June 21·Jul y 22)
Career-oriented man'e rs could
provide you wi th the greates l
array of op portunilies 10day.
They're exce ptionall y promi sing
for you, so long as you're nol
lookin g for a free ride.

'

..

.'

ITHURSDAY

~:-------------~~~~our

.'

. '

News 2000 The Vote (liiJe) (CC)

t

I Conventioo (Live) (CC)

•

�)

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

NASCAR

•

lavm Page 11
deal.
"We were looking at the way
we were doing our bodies and
the way they were doing theirs,
and we said, 'We need to change
.some things,"' Gordon said.
.After a slow start this year, Gor·~on has won twice and is beginning to look again like a driver
with 51 victories. Nadeau is tlat·tered by compliments, but insists
his new environment makes con:tributing
easy.
u
,
.
Its a dream come true JUSt to
be in this situation," he said. "To
have guys like Jeff and Terry as
teammates means a lot.
"When we go to the race track
and we're struggling a little, I've
~t people to go to get some
help."
• adeau doesn't act surprised
that his prospects ·have turned
around. He thought he could .
! rove his ability to drive a stock
: C~r given the proper tools.
: :Like so many drivers, he says
i~e hemistry" is the most impor'tant factor in any team. It's about
:vtting the right people in the
·;s(ght jobs and letting them do
;rl\eir work.
~

,.....
&lt;

•

~:.

Bengals
from Page 11

•- .She and her husband, William,
:;lanned to buy season tickets.
. :Bernard Smith, 39, also was
:M,tpressed with the new stadium.
~ . "It's like a crown jewel, man,"
~id Smith. "It makes you proud
·re be a Cincinnatian."
•• .' Also on Wednesday, a dispute
:~er vendors outside Paul Brown
Stadium was settled.
::. City officials agreed Wednesday
-~Q
new areas near the foot, ~--~·,n• stadium to vendors who want

:: ~" Softball

·.

lrum Page 11

wound up beating the
boys-and -gi rls s quad 3-2
Tuesday night.

Thursday, August 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
And, in a sport where no single-car team has won since 1998,
camaraderie among the drivers is
the key. Gordon says he and
Nadeau have that.
"jerry and I have a good line of
communication," Gordon said.
"We're both young and aggressive, and our driving styles are
similar."
Both are 29, and left-foot brakers, meaning simultaneous use of
the brake and gas pedal make
them go faster through the turns
but use more fuel. Gordon thinks
an exc hange of information will
help both continue to improve.
Despite Gordon's status as
NASCAR's biggest star and his
own as somewhat · of an upstart,
Nadeau is very comfortable.
"We get along real good," he
said. "We respect each other. This
kid's won three championships, so
he's doing something right."
· Thete are no high-profile
championships on Nadeau's
resume, and his story is nothing
out · of the ordinary. The driver
from Danbury, Conn., started like
many in go-karts, and was
encouraged by his father, a former racer.
But Nadeau didn't follow the
route of most major league drivers. His arrival in Winston Cup
racing in 1997 was really his

NASCAR debut.
"You don't have to run Busch,
you don't have to run late models," he said, referring to the limited time Gordon and Tony Stewart spent in stock cars before
moving to Winston Cup:" I think
they proved that you can do it
that
Crew chiefTony Furr thought
Nadeau's inexperience would
make things more difficult than
they have been.
"We expected a &gt;rni ng
curv);'• Furr said. "But he 's a lot
better than what I expected. He's
come along real quick."
Nadeau had very little money
when he decided to try for a
career in NASCAR. He is grateful for the chances he was given,
and says he moved up because he
gave " 11 0 percent."
Now, with the recent improvement, a ride to the winner's circle
no longer seems so improbable. In
fact, it looked for a while like that
could have come Sunday, when
Nadeau ran as high as fourth in
Watkins Glen, N.Y. But a handling problem put him out
halfway through the Global
Crossing.
"We can win this season,"
Nadeau said. "But I don't know
where it'll happen. We'll just have
to wait and see."

way."

to sell . peanuts, T-shirts, hats or the compromise, and some were
not.
other merchandise.
Tyrone Smith, 49, said the BenCincinnati City Manager John
Shirey said about 10 of the city's gals should have given up a little
30 licensed merchandise vendors space near their riverfront pr~c­
were . displaced because of con- tice fields for vendors since the
struction surrounding the stadi- practice fields were paid for with
um. Those vendors will g~t first tax dollars.
choice in the newly opened areas.
Vendor Linda NorWell, howevThe new agreement also will er, believed the compromise was a
open all of downtown north of good one.
Fourth Street to all vendors sell"Now we'll be throughout the
ing game tickets. That area previ- city," Norwell said.
ously was off-limits.
The Bengals begin their new
"This is a temporary solution; era Saturday with a preseason
we'll evaluate it after a couple of game against the Chicago Bears.
weeks," Shirey said.
Some vendors were happy with
Describing an "underc urrent of unhappiness,"
tournament director Bud
Vanderberg said he will
take the Issue to the
national Little League
board of directors next

week .
"I will do what' s in my
power to c hange thi s to
make sure it's all .,.g) rls
playing in this tournament ," he said.

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Eaat

TMm

W

L Pet.

G8

Atlanta ............................74 48 .817
New York .........................71 48 .582

3
14
Montreal ..........................51 85 .440
21
Philadelphia ....................50 88 .420 23 112

Florida ...................... .......60 60 .500

e-

st. Louis ...........................ee
Cincinnati .................... .... 58
Chicago ........................ .. 54
Milwaukee ....................... 51
Pi«sburgh .......... ............. 49
Houston ...................... .... 48

WMt

54 .560 I .. . _
60 .486 8 112
85 .454 11 112

69 .425
15
70 .412 16 1/2
73 .397 18 112

San Francisco ..................tl7 51 .568
Arizona ........................ ...87 53 .558
t
Los Angeles .....................81 58 .513 8 1/2
Colorado .........................60 60 .500
8
San Diego ........................ 57 64 .471 11 112
WednMday'a Gai!IM
Arizona 5, Philedelphla 1
Atlanta 4, San Diego 1
St. Louis 5. Chicago Cubs 1
San Francisco 4, Montreal 1
Los Angeles 10, Aorida 4
Coloredo 7, N.Y. Mots 5
Milwaukee 5, Cincinnati 1
Houston tt , Pinsburgh 10
Today'aGamM
Colorado (Voshll 5·12) at N.Y. Mota (Hampton 12·7), 1:t0 p.m.
San Francisco (Estes 11 ·3) at Montreal
(Moore t -2), 1:35 p.m.
Frlday'aGai!IM
Pittsburgh (Ritchie 5-tl) at Cincinnati
(Williamson 5· 7) , 7:35p.m.
Milwaukee (Haynes 10·10) at Houston
(Miller 1·4), 8:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (Person 8-4) at St. Louis
(Ankiel 7-7), 8 :10p.m.
F)orida (C.Smith t-4) at Colorado (Rose 1· ·
0), 9:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Quevedo 1-4) at Arizona
(Schilling 9·7), 10:05 p.m.
Montreal (Thurman 2·3) at San Diego
(Clement 1t · 10), 10:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Leiter 13·5) at Los Angeles
(Brown t0-5) , 10:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 13-6) at San Francisco
(Hernandezt1 ·9), 10:35 p.m .
American Llague
East

TNm

W

New Yorte .................... ..... 65
Boston ............................61
Toronto ............................62
Banimore ...................... .. 52
Tampa Bay ....................... 52
Cantral
Chicago ..........................72
Cleveland ........................ 61
Detroit .............................58
Kansas cny ..................... 55
Minnesota .......................55

L Pot. GB
.560 ·
.526
4

51
55

60 .508

8
87 .437 14 t/2
67 .437 14 1/2
48

.600

56 .521 9 112
61

.487 13 1/2

64 .482 18 112
67

.451

18

WMt
Seattle ............................69 52 .570
Oakland .......................... 65 54 .548
3
Anaheim .............. ........... 62 58 .517 61/2
Texas ............ .................. 55 63 .468 12 1/2
Wedneaday'o Gai!IM
Toronto 8, Anaheim 6
Boston 4, Tampe Bay 3
Texas 5, N.Y. Yankees 0
Chicago White Sox 7, BaHimore 3
Kansas City 9, Minnesota 3
Detrott 12, Seattle 8
Oakland 7. Cleveland 6
Today'aGamaa
Kansas City (Reichert 8-6) at Minnesota
(Redman 11 ·5), 1:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Baldwin 13-4) at Banimore (Parrish 1-1 ), 3:05 p'.m.
Anaheim (Mercker 0·1) at N.Y. Yankees
(Neagle 2·3), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Helling 14-6) at Boston (Wakefield 8·
7), 7:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
Frtday•,oa.....
Oakland (Hudson 13-4) at Detrott (Nomo 4·
10), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Abbott 8-4) at Cleveland (Colon 11·

8), 7:05 p.m.
Mimesota (Klmey 0-0) at Toronto (Loaiza 6·
8), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Ortiz 4·3) at N.Y. Yankees
(Clemans t0-6) , 7:05p.m.
Texas (Rogers tt -10) at Boston (Ohka t · 2),
7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Stein 3·3) at BaHimore (Rapp
8·8), 7:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Reker 4-7) at Chicago White
Sox (Gartand 2-4), 8:05 p.m.

Offerman oH the t 5-day disabled list.
OAKlAND ATHLETICS-!-Agreed to terms
witti Al-IP Tim Hudson on a four -year contract
extension.
TEXAS
RANG ERS- Optioned
RHP
Johnathan Johnson to Oklahoma of the PCL
Notional Loagua
MONTREAL EXPOS-Signed t B Lee

Stevens to a two·year contract extension.
NEW YORK METS-Sent INF-OF Man
Franco outright to Norfolk of the International
· League.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Activated C Mnch
Meluskey from the 15-day disabled list.
Optioned C Raul Chavez to New O~eans of tha
Wlnoton Cup Ser1ea
PCL
The NASCAA Winston Cup schedule, win·
BASKETBALL
ners in peranthesllfl, and driver point S1andings:
National Bookatball Aaooclatlon
Feb. 20 - Dltyrona 500, Daytona Basch,
CHICAGO BULLS-Signed C Dragan TarFla. (Dale Jarrett)
lac.
Feb. 27 - Dura Lube/Kmarl 400, Rocking·
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Acquired F
ham, N.C. (Bobby Labonte)
Danny Fortson and F Adam Keefe in a four-way
Merl:h 5 - Carsdiract.com 400, Las Vegas.
trade with Boston, Dallas and Utah. Utah
(Jen Burton)
racelved F Oonyell Marshall from Golden State
Marett 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton,
and C Bruno Sundov from Dallas. Dallas
Ga. (Dale Earnhatdl)
.
received G Howard Eisley from Utah, G Dana
March 19- MaN.com 400, Da~lngton , S.C.
Barros from Boston and F Bill Curley from
(Ward Burton)
•
Golden State. Boston received C John Williams
Marett 26 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn .
from Dallas and G ·Robert Pack and a 2001
(Rusty Wallece)
first-round draft pick from Utah.
April 2 - DirecTV 500, Fort Worth, Texas .
PHILADELPHIA 76ER5-Agreed to terms
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
with G Jermaine Jackson and F Toni Kukoc.
April 9 - Goody's 500, Martinsville, va.
SACRAMENTO KINGS-Signed F-G Pre(Marte ~in)
drag Stojakovic to a muttiyear contract extenApril 18 - DieHard 500, Talladega, Ala. (JeH . sion.
Gordon)
FOOTBALL
April 30 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana,
National Football Llagua
CaiH. (Jeremy Mayfield)
CLEVELAND ' BROWNS-Placed QB Ty
May 8 - Pontiac Exciloment 400, Rich·
Detmer and OT Jeremy McKinney on the
monel, VB. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
injured reserve list. Waived DL Eric Chandler,
May 26 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
DL Teto Simpson, OL Steve Estes, OL Mike
(Man Kanieth)
Guilliams, WR JeH Klopf, WR Kofi Shuck, TE
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400. Dover, Del.
Trevon Matthews and DB Nate Terry.
(Tony Stewart)
DALLAS COWBOYS-Signed QB Cha~ie
June 11 - Kmart 400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Tony
Puleri. Released TE Chris Smith.
Stewart)
DENVER BRONCOS-Waived OL Rod Mil·
June 19 - Pocono 500. Long Pond, Pa.
stead.
(Jeremy Mayfield)
·
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Acquired G
June 25 - Save Mart/Kregen 350k, Sono·
Brenden Stai from Kansas City.
ma. CaiH. (JeH Gordon)
July 1 - Pepsl 400, Daytona Basch, Aa.
(Jen Burton)
July 9 - New England 300, Loudon, N.H.
(Tony Stewart)
July 23 - Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
(Rusty Wallace)
Aug . 5 Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
(Bobby Labonte)
Aug. 13 - Global Crossing at The Glen,
Watldns Glen, N.'Y. (Steve Parte)
Aug. 20- Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug . 26- goracing.com 500, Bristol, Tenn .
Driver S.. ncllnga
1. Bobby Labonte, 3, 185; 2. Dale Jarrett,
2,064; 3. Dale Earnhardt, 2,948; 4. Jen Burton,
2,944; 5. Tony Stewart, 2,645; 8. Rusty Wal·
lace, 2,798; 7. Ward Burton. 2,711 ; 8. Ricky
f!udd, 2,708; 9. Marte Martin, 2,696; 10. Jen
Gotdon, 2,676; 11 . Man Kenseth, 2,447; 12.
Mike Skinner, 2,429; 13. Steve Parte, 2,236; 14.
Dale Eamhardt Jr., 2,235; 15. Bill Elliott, 2,231 .
18. Johnny Benson, 2, 168; 17. Ken Schrader,
2,157; 18. Joe Nemechek, 2, 127; 19. Chad Ln·
tie, 2,110; 20. Terry Labonte, 2,082; 21 . Ste~ing
Ma~in, 2,087; 22. Jeremy Mayfield, 2,030; 23 .
Robert Pressley, 1,943; 24. Jimmy Spencer,
1,914; 25. Jerry Nadeau, 1,891 ; 26. John
Andreni, 1,882; 27. Michael wanrtlp, 1,829; 28.
Kevin Lepage, t,747; 29. Kenny Wallace,
1,736; 30. Bobby Haminon, 1,675; 31 . Ellion
~dler, 1,619; 32. Dave Blaney, 1,526; 33.
Kenny Irwin, 1,440; 34. Wally Dallenbach Jr.,
1,411; 35. Stacy Compton, 1,391 ; 36. Darrell
wanrip, 1,311; 37. Kyle Petty, 1,274; 38. Rick
Mast, 1,131 ; 39. Brett Bodine. 1,169; 40. Soon

Come Out

And

SUPPOrt

The Meii!s
Countv

Fair!

PICKENS

Pruett, 1,154.

~-I&amp;Jb~NS',;f
BASEBALL
Amertc.on Llague
ANAHEIM ANGE~S-Signed L.HP Bryan
Ward and assigned him to Edmonton of the
PCL. Claimed 2B David Eckstein oH waivers
from Boston.
BOSTON RED SOX-Designated 3B Ed
Sprague for assignment. Activated INF Jose

HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

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11

ss~

From Orlglnal110 or 135 C-41 process rolls.
See one of our clerks for details of the
Fuji True Color Film Club Card.
HAVE 6 ROLLS DEVELOPED AND GET THE
SEVENTH ROLL DEVELOPED FBEE
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SWISHER-LOHSE
PHARWACV
Kenneth McCullough, R . Ph.
Chartae Riffle R. Ph.
Mon . thru Fri. 8 :00am to 9 :00pm
Sat. 8 am to 6 pm
Sunday 10:00 am to 4 :00pm
PRESCRIPTION PH. 882·2955
Friendly Service
Eaet Main
Open Weeknl 1hta 'til 8 :00
Pomeroy, Ohio

·.

IN THESE OHIO LOTTERY INSTANT GAMES!

.$
$
$
$
$

. WILD WINNINGS
2.050 ................:.................. 1
2,000 ...................:.............. 3
76 ....................................... 14
50 ...................................... 111
25 .................................. 5.312

MONEY GAME
$ 100 .................................... 12
$50 .......................... .......... 382
$ 25 ................................. 5,647
BEAT THE HEAT
$ 699 ....................................... 7
$ 60 .................................... 855
$ 26 ............................... 10,291
COFFEE BREAK CASH
$ 599 .......... ................... ...... 3
$ 100 .................................... 81
$ 60 ................................. 1, 705
26 ""''""' .................. 10.008

s

BIG MONEY SPECTACULAR
$ 600,000 ............................. 1
$ 50.000 ................................ 1
$ 5,000 .................................. 1
$ 1.000 ................................... 4
$ 500 .................................... 22
$ 100 ...................... :.......... 462
$ 50 ................................ 8.357
$ 20 ............................... 20,6.17

WINNING
PIIIZE
AMOUNT

TICKETS

REMAINING

BASEBALL BUCKS
$ 1,000 .................................... 2
$ 100 .................................. 141
$ 26 ............................... 15,242
MONEY MATCH
$ 1.600 ................................... 1
$ 100 ...................................... 7
$ 25 ................................. 7.030
COLD CASH
$ 500 ...................................... 2
$ 100 .................................... 33
$ 50 ................................. 1.456
$ 25 ................................ 3,834
EXTRA BINGO
$ 1.500 ................................... 1
$ 1.000 ................................... 3
$ 200 .................................... 42
$ 100 .................................. 120
$ 75 .................................... 105
$ 50 ................................. 5.598
$ 33 ................................. 4,775
$ 30 .............................. 12.379
$ 25 .............................. 15.638
$ 20 ............................... 27.020

•

PIIIZE
AMOUNT

WINNING
TICKETS
REMAIN 1 \JG

INSTANT BATTLESHIP"'
$ 25,000 ................................ 4
$ 5.000 .................................. 5
$500 .................................... 46
$ 125 ................................... 207
$ 100 .................................. 299
$ 40 ............................... 21,180
$ 25 ............................... 75,378
CASH WINFALL
$ 1.400 ................................... 1
$600 .... .............. .. ............... 2

$ 100 .................................. 157
50 ................................. 2.069
$ 25 .................. ............. 16,233

s

CASH KICKOFF
$ 1,000 ........................... ..... 2
$500 ..................................... 1
$ 100 ......................... ............ 5
$50 .... .............. ................. 488
$ 25 ................................ 6,646
HIGH 5
$500 ............................ .. 2
$ 100 .............................. ". 10
$50 ................. .. .......... 689
$ 30 ............................ 6.922

THANKYOUI
CONGRATULAnONII
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY!
$ 500 ................................. 569
$ 100 ............................... 7.377
$50 ............................... 27,889
$ 25 ............. .'................. 55,214
' AS OF AUGUST 8, 2000
ROYAL RICHES
$ 96 ......................................... 8
$ 48 ..................................... 755
$ 24 .... .............................. 7,124
JUMPIN' JACKPOT
$ 100 ..................................., 37
$ 25 .......................... ....... 9,543

There are over 409,931.
tickets still out there with
a prize of $20 or more. If
you total all the prizes on
these tickets, it come a to
more than $13 million!
FEEL LUCKY TODAY?

All listed Instant Ticket games may not be at ail agent locations . Tha Ohio Lottery Commisston reminds you to Please Play Responstbly
All lottery players are subject to the rules and regulations of the Oh io Lottary Commtssion. lob Taft, Governor
The Ohio Lottery is an Equal Opponunity Emplov-r and Service Provider. • C

2000

Oh10 Lottery Commission

OLC Graphtcs Dept ,

8! 00

�)

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

NASCAR

•

lavm Page 11
deal.
"We were looking at the way
we were doing our bodies and
the way they were doing theirs,
and we said, 'We need to change
.some things,"' Gordon said.
.After a slow start this year, Gor·~on has won twice and is beginning to look again like a driver
with 51 victories. Nadeau is tlat·tered by compliments, but insists
his new environment makes con:tributing
easy.
u
,
.
Its a dream come true JUSt to
be in this situation," he said. "To
have guys like Jeff and Terry as
teammates means a lot.
"When we go to the race track
and we're struggling a little, I've
~t people to go to get some
help."
• adeau doesn't act surprised
that his prospects ·have turned
around. He thought he could .
! rove his ability to drive a stock
: C~r given the proper tools.
: :Like so many drivers, he says
i~e hemistry" is the most impor'tant factor in any team. It's about
:vtting the right people in the
·;s(ght jobs and letting them do
;rl\eir work.
~

,.....
&lt;

•

~:.

Bengals
from Page 11

•- .She and her husband, William,
:;lanned to buy season tickets.
. :Bernard Smith, 39, also was
:M,tpressed with the new stadium.
~ . "It's like a crown jewel, man,"
~id Smith. "It makes you proud
·re be a Cincinnatian."
•• .' Also on Wednesday, a dispute
:~er vendors outside Paul Brown
Stadium was settled.
::. City officials agreed Wednesday
-~Q
new areas near the foot, ~--~·,n• stadium to vendors who want

:: ~" Softball

·.

lrum Page 11

wound up beating the
boys-and -gi rls s quad 3-2
Tuesday night.

Thursday, August 17, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
And, in a sport where no single-car team has won since 1998,
camaraderie among the drivers is
the key. Gordon says he and
Nadeau have that.
"jerry and I have a good line of
communication," Gordon said.
"We're both young and aggressive, and our driving styles are
similar."
Both are 29, and left-foot brakers, meaning simultaneous use of
the brake and gas pedal make
them go faster through the turns
but use more fuel. Gordon thinks
an exc hange of information will
help both continue to improve.
Despite Gordon's status as
NASCAR's biggest star and his
own as somewhat · of an upstart,
Nadeau is very comfortable.
"We get along real good," he
said. "We respect each other. This
kid's won three championships, so
he's doing something right."
· Thete are no high-profile
championships on Nadeau's
resume, and his story is nothing
out · of the ordinary. The driver
from Danbury, Conn., started like
many in go-karts, and was
encouraged by his father, a former racer.
But Nadeau didn't follow the
route of most major league drivers. His arrival in Winston Cup
racing in 1997 was really his

NASCAR debut.
"You don't have to run Busch,
you don't have to run late models," he said, referring to the limited time Gordon and Tony Stewart spent in stock cars before
moving to Winston Cup:" I think
they proved that you can do it
that
Crew chiefTony Furr thought
Nadeau's inexperience would
make things more difficult than
they have been.
"We expected a &gt;rni ng
curv);'• Furr said. "But he 's a lot
better than what I expected. He's
come along real quick."
Nadeau had very little money
when he decided to try for a
career in NASCAR. He is grateful for the chances he was given,
and says he moved up because he
gave " 11 0 percent."
Now, with the recent improvement, a ride to the winner's circle
no longer seems so improbable. In
fact, it looked for a while like that
could have come Sunday, when
Nadeau ran as high as fourth in
Watkins Glen, N.Y. But a handling problem put him out
halfway through the Global
Crossing.
"We can win this season,"
Nadeau said. "But I don't know
where it'll happen. We'll just have
to wait and see."

way."

to sell . peanuts, T-shirts, hats or the compromise, and some were
not.
other merchandise.
Tyrone Smith, 49, said the BenCincinnati City Manager John
Shirey said about 10 of the city's gals should have given up a little
30 licensed merchandise vendors space near their riverfront pr~c­
were . displaced because of con- tice fields for vendors since the
struction surrounding the stadi- practice fields were paid for with
um. Those vendors will g~t first tax dollars.
choice in the newly opened areas.
Vendor Linda NorWell, howevThe new agreement also will er, believed the compromise was a
open all of downtown north of good one.
Fourth Street to all vendors sell"Now we'll be throughout the
ing game tickets. That area previ- city," Norwell said.
ously was off-limits.
The Bengals begin their new
"This is a temporary solution; era Saturday with a preseason
we'll evaluate it after a couple of game against the Chicago Bears.
weeks," Shirey said.
Some vendors were happy with
Describing an "underc urrent of unhappiness,"
tournament director Bud
Vanderberg said he will
take the Issue to the
national Little League
board of directors next

week .
"I will do what' s in my
power to c hange thi s to
make sure it's all .,.g) rls
playing in this tournament ," he said.

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Eaat

TMm

W

L Pet.

G8

Atlanta ............................74 48 .817
New York .........................71 48 .582

3
14
Montreal ..........................51 85 .440
21
Philadelphia ....................50 88 .420 23 112

Florida ...................... .......60 60 .500

e-

st. Louis ...........................ee
Cincinnati .................... .... 58
Chicago ........................ .. 54
Milwaukee ....................... 51
Pi«sburgh .......... ............. 49
Houston ...................... .... 48

WMt

54 .560 I .. . _
60 .486 8 112
85 .454 11 112

69 .425
15
70 .412 16 1/2
73 .397 18 112

San Francisco ..................tl7 51 .568
Arizona ........................ ...87 53 .558
t
Los Angeles .....................81 58 .513 8 1/2
Colorado .........................60 60 .500
8
San Diego ........................ 57 64 .471 11 112
WednMday'a Gai!IM
Arizona 5, Philedelphla 1
Atlanta 4, San Diego 1
St. Louis 5. Chicago Cubs 1
San Francisco 4, Montreal 1
Los Angeles 10, Aorida 4
Coloredo 7, N.Y. Mots 5
Milwaukee 5, Cincinnati 1
Houston tt , Pinsburgh 10
Today'aGamM
Colorado (Voshll 5·12) at N.Y. Mota (Hampton 12·7), 1:t0 p.m.
San Francisco (Estes 11 ·3) at Montreal
(Moore t -2), 1:35 p.m.
Frlday'aGai!IM
Pittsburgh (Ritchie 5-tl) at Cincinnati
(Williamson 5· 7) , 7:35p.m.
Milwaukee (Haynes 10·10) at Houston
(Miller 1·4), 8:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (Person 8-4) at St. Louis
(Ankiel 7-7), 8 :10p.m.
F)orida (C.Smith t-4) at Colorado (Rose 1· ·
0), 9:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Quevedo 1-4) at Arizona
(Schilling 9·7), 10:05 p.m.
Montreal (Thurman 2·3) at San Diego
(Clement 1t · 10), 10:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Leiter 13·5) at Los Angeles
(Brown t0-5) , 10:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 13-6) at San Francisco
(Hernandezt1 ·9), 10:35 p.m .
American Llague
East

TNm

W

New Yorte .................... ..... 65
Boston ............................61
Toronto ............................62
Banimore ...................... .. 52
Tampa Bay ....................... 52
Cantral
Chicago ..........................72
Cleveland ........................ 61
Detroit .............................58
Kansas cny ..................... 55
Minnesota .......................55

L Pot. GB
.560 ·
.526
4

51
55

60 .508

8
87 .437 14 t/2
67 .437 14 1/2
48

.600

56 .521 9 112
61

.487 13 1/2

64 .482 18 112
67

.451

18

WMt
Seattle ............................69 52 .570
Oakland .......................... 65 54 .548
3
Anaheim .............. ........... 62 58 .517 61/2
Texas ............ .................. 55 63 .468 12 1/2
Wedneaday'o Gai!IM
Toronto 8, Anaheim 6
Boston 4, Tampe Bay 3
Texas 5, N.Y. Yankees 0
Chicago White Sox 7, BaHimore 3
Kansas City 9, Minnesota 3
Detrott 12, Seattle 8
Oakland 7. Cleveland 6
Today'aGamaa
Kansas City (Reichert 8-6) at Minnesota
(Redman 11 ·5), 1:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Baldwin 13-4) at Banimore (Parrish 1-1 ), 3:05 p'.m.
Anaheim (Mercker 0·1) at N.Y. Yankees
(Neagle 2·3), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Helling 14-6) at Boston (Wakefield 8·
7), 7:05 p.m.
Only games scheduled
Frtday•,oa.....
Oakland (Hudson 13-4) at Detrott (Nomo 4·
10), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Abbott 8-4) at Cleveland (Colon 11·

8), 7:05 p.m.
Mimesota (Klmey 0-0) at Toronto (Loaiza 6·
8), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Ortiz 4·3) at N.Y. Yankees
(Clemans t0-6) , 7:05p.m.
Texas (Rogers tt -10) at Boston (Ohka t · 2),
7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Stein 3·3) at BaHimore (Rapp
8·8), 7:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Reker 4-7) at Chicago White
Sox (Gartand 2-4), 8:05 p.m.

Offerman oH the t 5-day disabled list.
OAKlAND ATHLETICS-!-Agreed to terms
witti Al-IP Tim Hudson on a four -year contract
extension.
TEXAS
RANG ERS- Optioned
RHP
Johnathan Johnson to Oklahoma of the PCL
Notional Loagua
MONTREAL EXPOS-Signed t B Lee

Stevens to a two·year contract extension.
NEW YORK METS-Sent INF-OF Man
Franco outright to Norfolk of the International
· League.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Activated C Mnch
Meluskey from the 15-day disabled list.
Optioned C Raul Chavez to New O~eans of tha
Wlnoton Cup Ser1ea
PCL
The NASCAA Winston Cup schedule, win·
BASKETBALL
ners in peranthesllfl, and driver point S1andings:
National Bookatball Aaooclatlon
Feb. 20 - Dltyrona 500, Daytona Basch,
CHICAGO BULLS-Signed C Dragan TarFla. (Dale Jarrett)
lac.
Feb. 27 - Dura Lube/Kmarl 400, Rocking·
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Acquired F
ham, N.C. (Bobby Labonte)
Danny Fortson and F Adam Keefe in a four-way
Merl:h 5 - Carsdiract.com 400, Las Vegas.
trade with Boston, Dallas and Utah. Utah
(Jen Burton)
racelved F Oonyell Marshall from Golden State
Marett 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton,
and C Bruno Sundov from Dallas. Dallas
Ga. (Dale Earnhatdl)
.
received G Howard Eisley from Utah, G Dana
March 19- MaN.com 400, Da~lngton , S.C.
Barros from Boston and F Bill Curley from
(Ward Burton)
•
Golden State. Boston received C John Williams
Marett 26 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn .
from Dallas and G ·Robert Pack and a 2001
(Rusty Wallece)
first-round draft pick from Utah.
April 2 - DirecTV 500, Fort Worth, Texas .
PHILADELPHIA 76ER5-Agreed to terms
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
with G Jermaine Jackson and F Toni Kukoc.
April 9 - Goody's 500, Martinsville, va.
SACRAMENTO KINGS-Signed F-G Pre(Marte ~in)
drag Stojakovic to a muttiyear contract extenApril 18 - DieHard 500, Talladega, Ala. (JeH . sion.
Gordon)
FOOTBALL
April 30 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana,
National Football Llagua
CaiH. (Jeremy Mayfield)
CLEVELAND ' BROWNS-Placed QB Ty
May 8 - Pontiac Exciloment 400, Rich·
Detmer and OT Jeremy McKinney on the
monel, VB. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
injured reserve list. Waived DL Eric Chandler,
May 26 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
DL Teto Simpson, OL Steve Estes, OL Mike
(Man Kanieth)
Guilliams, WR JeH Klopf, WR Kofi Shuck, TE
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400. Dover, Del.
Trevon Matthews and DB Nate Terry.
(Tony Stewart)
DALLAS COWBOYS-Signed QB Cha~ie
June 11 - Kmart 400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Tony
Puleri. Released TE Chris Smith.
Stewart)
DENVER BRONCOS-Waived OL Rod Mil·
June 19 - Pocono 500. Long Pond, Pa.
stead.
(Jeremy Mayfield)
·
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Acquired G
June 25 - Save Mart/Kregen 350k, Sono·
Brenden Stai from Kansas City.
ma. CaiH. (JeH Gordon)
July 1 - Pepsl 400, Daytona Basch, Aa.
(Jen Burton)
July 9 - New England 300, Loudon, N.H.
(Tony Stewart)
July 23 - Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
(Rusty Wallace)
Aug . 5 Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
(Bobby Labonte)
Aug. 13 - Global Crossing at The Glen,
Watldns Glen, N.'Y. (Steve Parte)
Aug. 20- Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug . 26- goracing.com 500, Bristol, Tenn .
Driver S.. ncllnga
1. Bobby Labonte, 3, 185; 2. Dale Jarrett,
2,064; 3. Dale Earnhardt, 2,948; 4. Jen Burton,
2,944; 5. Tony Stewart, 2,645; 8. Rusty Wal·
lace, 2,798; 7. Ward Burton. 2,711 ; 8. Ricky
f!udd, 2,708; 9. Marte Martin, 2,696; 10. Jen
Gotdon, 2,676; 11 . Man Kenseth, 2,447; 12.
Mike Skinner, 2,429; 13. Steve Parte, 2,236; 14.
Dale Eamhardt Jr., 2,235; 15. Bill Elliott, 2,231 .
18. Johnny Benson, 2, 168; 17. Ken Schrader,
2,157; 18. Joe Nemechek, 2, 127; 19. Chad Ln·
tie, 2,110; 20. Terry Labonte, 2,082; 21 . Ste~ing
Ma~in, 2,087; 22. Jeremy Mayfield, 2,030; 23 .
Robert Pressley, 1,943; 24. Jimmy Spencer,
1,914; 25. Jerry Nadeau, 1,891 ; 26. John
Andreni, 1,882; 27. Michael wanrtlp, 1,829; 28.
Kevin Lepage, t,747; 29. Kenny Wallace,
1,736; 30. Bobby Haminon, 1,675; 31 . Ellion
~dler, 1,619; 32. Dave Blaney, 1,526; 33.
Kenny Irwin, 1,440; 34. Wally Dallenbach Jr.,
1,411; 35. Stacy Compton, 1,391 ; 36. Darrell
wanrip, 1,311; 37. Kyle Petty, 1,274; 38. Rick
Mast, 1,131 ; 39. Brett Bodine. 1,169; 40. Soon

Come Out

And

SUPPOrt

The Meii!s
Countv

Fair!

PICKENS

Pruett, 1,154.

~-I&amp;Jb~NS',;f
BASEBALL
Amertc.on Llague
ANAHEIM ANGE~S-Signed L.HP Bryan
Ward and assigned him to Edmonton of the
PCL. Claimed 2B David Eckstein oH waivers
from Boston.
BOSTON RED SOX-Designated 3B Ed
Sprague for assignment. Activated INF Jose

HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

Get the latest in sports news from the

Daily Sentinel
IS STILL WAITING TO BE WON

kasb Ku10ar, D
The Middleport Clinic
788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760

WINNING
PIIIZE
AMOUNT

TICKETS

REMAINING

ILUE CHIP STOCK
6.000 .................................. 2

s
s 100 .................................. 138
s 60 ................................. 3.036
$600 ..................................... 3

IN THE CHIPS
$ 2.000 .................................. 2
$ 100 .................................... 91
$ 25 ............................... 10,471

ll181nbll8nts:
l740J 992-4226
Accepting New Patients - Walk-Ins Welco~

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo Center
ay
4 Doubles
11

ss~

From Orlglnal110 or 135 C-41 process rolls.
See one of our clerks for details of the
Fuji True Color Film Club Card.
HAVE 6 ROLLS DEVELOPED AND GET THE
SEVENTH ROLL DEVELOPED FBEE
Try us.for All Your Photoflnlshlng Needs!

SWISHER-LOHSE
PHARWACV
Kenneth McCullough, R . Ph.
Chartae Riffle R. Ph.
Mon . thru Fri. 8 :00am to 9 :00pm
Sat. 8 am to 6 pm
Sunday 10:00 am to 4 :00pm
PRESCRIPTION PH. 882·2955
Friendly Service
Eaet Main
Open Weeknl 1hta 'til 8 :00
Pomeroy, Ohio

·.

IN THESE OHIO LOTTERY INSTANT GAMES!

.$
$
$
$
$

. WILD WINNINGS
2.050 ................:.................. 1
2,000 ...................:.............. 3
76 ....................................... 14
50 ...................................... 111
25 .................................. 5.312

MONEY GAME
$ 100 .................................... 12
$50 .......................... .......... 382
$ 25 ................................. 5,647
BEAT THE HEAT
$ 699 ....................................... 7
$ 60 .................................... 855
$ 26 ............................... 10,291
COFFEE BREAK CASH
$ 599 .......... ................... ...... 3
$ 100 .................................... 81
$ 60 ................................. 1, 705
26 ""''""' .................. 10.008

s

BIG MONEY SPECTACULAR
$ 600,000 ............................. 1
$ 50.000 ................................ 1
$ 5,000 .................................. 1
$ 1.000 ................................... 4
$ 500 .................................... 22
$ 100 ...................... :.......... 462
$ 50 ................................ 8.357
$ 20 ............................... 20,6.17

WINNING
PIIIZE
AMOUNT

TICKETS

REMAINING

BASEBALL BUCKS
$ 1,000 .................................... 2
$ 100 .................................. 141
$ 26 ............................... 15,242
MONEY MATCH
$ 1.600 ................................... 1
$ 100 ...................................... 7
$ 25 ................................. 7.030
COLD CASH
$ 500 ...................................... 2
$ 100 .................................... 33
$ 50 ................................. 1.456
$ 25 ................................ 3,834
EXTRA BINGO
$ 1.500 ................................... 1
$ 1.000 ................................... 3
$ 200 .................................... 42
$ 100 .................................. 120
$ 75 .................................... 105
$ 50 ................................. 5.598
$ 33 ................................. 4,775
$ 30 .............................. 12.379
$ 25 .............................. 15.638
$ 20 ............................... 27.020

•

PIIIZE
AMOUNT

WINNING
TICKETS
REMAIN 1 \JG

INSTANT BATTLESHIP"'
$ 25,000 ................................ 4
$ 5.000 .................................. 5
$500 .................................... 46
$ 125 ................................... 207
$ 100 .................................. 299
$ 40 ............................... 21,180
$ 25 ............................... 75,378
CASH WINFALL
$ 1.400 ................................... 1
$600 .... .............. .. ............... 2

$ 100 .................................. 157
50 ................................. 2.069
$ 25 .................. ............. 16,233

s

CASH KICKOFF
$ 1,000 ........................... ..... 2
$500 ..................................... 1
$ 100 ......................... ............ 5
$50 .... .............. ................. 488
$ 25 ................................ 6,646
HIGH 5
$500 ............................ .. 2
$ 100 .............................. ". 10
$50 ................. .. .......... 689
$ 30 ............................ 6.922

THANKYOUI
CONGRATULAnONII
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY!
$ 500 ................................. 569
$ 100 ............................... 7.377
$50 ............................... 27,889
$ 25 ............. .'................. 55,214
' AS OF AUGUST 8, 2000
ROYAL RICHES
$ 96 ......................................... 8
$ 48 ..................................... 755
$ 24 .... .............................. 7,124
JUMPIN' JACKPOT
$ 100 ..................................., 37
$ 25 .......................... ....... 9,543

There are over 409,931.
tickets still out there with
a prize of $20 or more. If
you total all the prizes on
these tickets, it come a to
more than $13 million!
FEEL LUCKY TODAY?

All listed Instant Ticket games may not be at ail agent locations . Tha Ohio Lottery Commisston reminds you to Please Play Responstbly
All lottery players are subject to the rules and regulations of the Oh io Lottary Commtssion. lob Taft, Governor
The Ohio Lottery is an Equal Opponunity Emplov-r and Service Provider. • C

2000

Oh10 Lottery Commission

OLC Graphtcs Dept ,

8! 00

�IUMSoeclaltV PIZZA

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fi'AT

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••

t

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