<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7816" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7816?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-06T04:35:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18229">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/eeea303218186be0f2d2c284e4c9b2f9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>790cf9a707d64252814f9cfefef62d55</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25397">
                  <text>'

Pacae B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
SeenJ~ (Abbott 8-4)

7:05p.m.

at Detroit lNomo 5-1 0),

Oakland (HUdson 13·5) at Cleveland (ColOn

Eul
Teem
w L Pel.
Alllnlo .•...,...................... 76 48 .5t3
Nerw Yon~: ......................... 74 51

11-8). 7:05p.m.
.
Kansas City (Stein 4·3) at Toronto (Loaiza 7·
9). 7:05p.m.
GB

.592 2 1/"l

Florlda ............................. 51 e3 .492

15
Montreat ..................... ..... 53 68 .438 21 1/2
P1lilldolphla .................... 51 72 .4t5241/2
CentrJI

S1. Louis ...........................59 55 .556
Cincinnati .............. .........61 82 . .498
Chicago .•............. ...........54 59 .43&amp;
Mltwaukaa .......................53 11 .427
Plnsburgh ,........•.......... ... 51 72 .4t5
Houston .......................... 51 74 .406
Wool
San Francisco ..................71 52
Arizona ........................... 70 54
Los~ ..................... ~ 51
Colorado ........ .................82 63
San D;ego ..........•............. 60 65
lllondoy'o
Cincinnati 7, Philadelpnia 4

Texas (Rogers 11 -11 ) at N.Y. Yankees
(Clemens 10-6), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Aa.Ortiz 4-3) at Boston (Ohka 22), 7:05 p.m.
·
Tampa Bay (Aekar 4-B) at Minnesota {Redman 11-8), 8:05p.m.
Baltimore (Parrish 2-1) at Chicago White
Sox (Lowe 3-1), 8:05p.m.

7 112
t4 1/2

.P.RO HOOP$ ,

te

171/"l
t8 t/2

WNBA Playon Glance

.577
.565 1 1/2

ao.-

.504

9

.496
.480

10

Flret Round
CBoo1-ol-3)

blt«n Conferene.

12

Frld1y, Aug. 11
Ortando 62, Cleveland 55
S1turday, Aug. 12
New York 72, Washington 63

H-too 5, Chioogo Cubs 4
St. LOuis 7. Pittsburgh 4

_ Sam!l__-y, ~g. 13

_

Alllf11a·1,-COIOiii!IO • .

Cleveland 63, Ortando 54

San FranciiCO e, Florida 0

-,,Aug.14

- •. 5.Los
Angelos 1
San Diego
N.Y
. Mats 4, 10 inning5
Milwaukee te, AriZona 8

Todoy'o Ga.N.Y. Meta (Mahomes 4-1) a1 . San Diego

CEaton 4·2), 5~05 p.m.
P1111..tolphla CChen 6·2)a1 Cincinnati (Bell 5·
1), 7:311 p.m.

W11tern

--,··-

eont.... nc•

Aug. 11
LOS Angeles 88, Phoenht 71
f~doy,

laturdlly, Aug. 12

HOUlton 72, sacramento 64

11111day,Aug.U
LOI Angelll 101 , Pt\oenbc 78, Los Angeles
wins ltrln 2·0

llo-y, Aug. 14

Houl1on 71, llofemenlo 10, Houston wins
H&lt;ill2-4

Coru , ....,. l'ln~J•
llk.t~..t4)
I!IIIMn Con ..rencl

AIIarWa (MaddLDI 13·7) 81 Colotackl CRose 1.
1), 3:05p.m.
Florida! (C.Smrth 2_.) at San Francisco
(LHemande! 12·Sll), 3:35p.m.
Flhlladelphl• (Person e-4) at C!ncinnati
(WIIIamson 5-7), 7:311 p.m.
Chicago Cubs {Quevedo 1-5) at Houston
lMillef 2-4), 8:05p.m.
PittSburgh (Rttchle 6-6) at St. Louis (Ankiel
1·1), 8:10 ~.m.
Mltwaukee (Ha'fMS 11)..11) at Arizona
(Sclilllng 10.7), tO:Oil p.m.
Montreal (Thurman 3-3) at Los Angeles
(Brown 10.5), t0:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mats (Leiter 13-5) at San Diego
(Ciementl1·11), t0:05 p.m.

.

New York 78, washington 57, New York wins
series 2-0
Tltei&lt;Wf, Aug. 15
Cleveland 72. Orlando 43. Cleveland wins
series 2·1

Ch6cago Cuba (Wood 8-8} at Houston

(B.Powell 1-ll), 8:05 p.m.
- . g h Cs.ton,.; 1: 2) at St Louis (Kilo 14B), 8:10p.m.
- . CButt&lt;tn B-5) a1 ColOrado (YOohll s13), 8:05p.m.
Milwaukee (D'Amico 9 ..) a1 Arizona (GuZ·
man 3-3), 10:05 p.m.
.
Monlraal (Moore 1-3) at Los Angeles CVBid•
2-G), 10:10 p.m.
Florid• (Burnett 1·3) at San Francisco
CEstn 12·3), 10:15 p.m.

Thurscloy, Aug. 17
81111dty, Aug. 20
New York 51 , Cleveland 45
Mo-,, Aug. 21
Clevetand 58, New Yortl 43

New York 81 , Cleveland 67, New York wins
series 2-1

Willetn Conf.,.nce
Thursdlly, Aug. 17
Houston 77, Los Angeles 56

Sundey,Aug.20
HoJJston 74, Los Angeles 69. Houston wins
series 2-0
Chemplonahlp Sert..

(Boot-ol-3)
Thur8dly, Aug. 24
· Houston at New Ytrt 8 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 28
New Vorl&lt; at Houston, 1:30 p.m.

- L . e e g..

Eut

Toom

W L

New'lb&lt;k ................ .........aa 53
Bolton ............ ....•...........65 56

Sundey, Aug. 27
New York at Houston, t :30 p.m., It neces-

TotOntO ............................ 64 61
Bo~lmore

sary

.•............... .... ... 55 59

:::~7:·~:~ ~ :~~

Tampa Bay.......................54 69

=~ :

Dllroit ................. .. .... .. .. 61
Kansas City ..................... 58
Minnesota
............... 56
Seam
WMt
e .................. .... ...... 89
~::.nd
58
m .........................64

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

62 .496

71/2

t2

66 .468 15 112
70 .444 18 1/2
55

57
f!lt

.556
.537 2 t/2
.512 5 112
.455 12 112

Texas ------ - ---- --~~~- :,.:
N.Y. Yankees 12, texas 3
Detroit 3. Oakland 1
Baltimore 2. Kansas City 1
Bolton 7, Anlhelm e. t 1 innings
, . _ ~ 11 ,...""-'-... Whit Sox 4

o;;yij~ .,;,;;.,;
e
TocMy'a GltmM

Seanle (Garcia 4·3) at Detroit (Weaver 8.
10), 7:05p.m.
Oaldand (Heredia 13-8) at Cleveland (Finley
9·9), 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Reichert 7-6) at Toronto (Trachsel6·11), 7:05 p.ni.

•

Only

games ocloeduled

Wldn.ct.y'e Gemet

BASEBALL

Amerlcen Leag 111
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Extended their
working agreement with Maryland Baseball
Umtted Pannership through the 2002 sea-

son.

BOSTON RED SOX-Signed RHP
Manny Oelcarman.
L dKA1NSAd.S CITY ROYALs-Named Oeric
a n er 1rector of scouting.
MINNESOTA TWINs-Optioned RHP Joe
Mays to Salt Lake of the PCL.

Natlonlil Leeou•

ATLANTA BRAVES-Optioned 2B Steve
Sisco lo Richmond of the International
League. Recalled AHP Gabe Molina from
Richmond .
COLORADO ROCK I ES~Piaced OF
Larry Walker on the 15-day d.isabled list.
Called up OF Adam Melhuse from Colorado
Springs of the PCL.

-

- DA&amp;KE-TBALL;·-·

National 811ketbell Aaaoclttlon
ATLANTA HAWKS~Signed G Anlhony
Johnson.
BOSTON CELTICS~ Signed G Chris
Carr.

CHARLOTTE HORNETS- Signed F-G

Darrin Hancock .

Phillies , who lost for the seventh
time in eight games. After his
eighth-inning double , Danny
Graves relieved and got four outs
hum_PageB1
for his 21st save in 24 chances.
performance, hitting the first
Reds Notes: Wolf lasted only
pitch in each of his three at-bats. three innings, matching the
Young got an intentional walk in shortest start of his career. In his
the ·seventh, when he was deter- last three starts, Wolf has given up
mined to get a triple to complete 21 runs in 15 1-3 innings ... . Scott
the cycle.
R olen singled in the fifth, ending
"The guys told me if I hit the an 0-for-17 slump.. .. Griffey and
hall, they don't care if it's to the Phillies Doug Glanv ille, Mike
first baseman, I've got to go for Lieberrhal and Pat Burrell were
three," he said.
o n the field early to film a segThe six-run inning provided me nt for a movi e tentatively
Pete Harnisch (5-6) with the called "Summer C atch." It's about
cushion he needed on an off- a p1tcher who makes it to the big
leagues and gives up a homer to
night.
He gave up nine hits and four Griffey in his first app earance....
walks in 5 1-3 mnings and was so Harnisc h threw the R eds' 82nd
·'angry at himself for walking two wild pitch of the season, one shy
batters to load the bases in the of the club record. ... Young's
sixth that he slammed his glove upper-dec k horner was the first
by a Red 1his season and the
and cap against the bench.
Tomas Perez had three doubles fourth overall. Mark McGwire,
and drove in three runs fo r the Preston Wilso n and Moises Alou

Reds

MNF
from PageB1
injuries - may have fo und an
answer at runnin g back .
Lamar Smith carried 15 times
for 86 yards, giving Miami a second co nsecutive solid outing. He
gained 72 yards on 17 rushes last
wee k against Tampa Bay's stingy
defense.
Smith co uld be relied on heavily early this season, especially
with J.J. Johnson facin g a fo urgame suspensio n fo r vi o latin g the
NFL's stero id policy.
"We felt like Lamar gave us the
best chance to run the foo tball,"
Do lphins coac h Vave Wannstedt
sa id. "Obviously. after today that
j ust reinforces o ur dec ision . H e
will be th e guy."
Miami still has other areas of
concerns . O li ndo Mare missed

FOOTBALL

L••au•

N8tlonal Football
BUFFALO BI LLS-Aeleated 08 Ph il
Stambaugh, P Jason van Dyke K Jon
Hilbert . DB Askarl Adams , DB Oa~id Byrd .
OS Quincy Coleman. FS Phillip Crosby, WR
Scott Pingel, WA Corey Sullivan, TE John
Jennings, C Spencer Riley, ,G Mike Tosaw,
LB Keith Kelsey, and OT Nathanie! Williams.
CINCINNATI BENGALS- Waived PK
Ooug Pelfrey.
CLEVELAND BROWNS- Released WR
Zola_ Davis, WR Owaune Jones , RB Greg
Robinette and OL Manuia Savea.
DALLAS COWBOYS~ Aeleased WA
Oarran Hall, WA Crew Cone, P Barry
C_antrell , TE Lawrence Han, TE J.J. Hug _g.ns , OL J.R. Conrad, OL Steve Scifres , OL
Chad Slaughter, OL Kendrick Gholston. OL
Keith Jackson and S Jason Kaiser. Placed
LB Brandon Tolbert on waivers -injured
reserve . Reached an injury senlemen1 with
OL Chris Brymer.
DENVER BRONCOS- Released FB
Ryan Christopherson, OL Jerome Davis, OL
Nathan Davis, G Allen DeGraffenreid and
CB William Hamp1on. Placed WR Muneer
Moore on injured reserve
- DETROIT LION~Piocod OB Mike Tomczak on injured reserve . Released WA
Henry Douglas, LB Scott Fields and S Ryan

S1ewan .
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS- Waived OL Joel
Davis, LB Josh Gentry, TE Ibn Green, RB
Mark Kacmarynski, L8 Paul Lacoste, OT
Craig Aobeen , OT Paul Snellings, RB
Tremayne Stephens, DB Scott Ttlomas and
WR Brian Wofford.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS- Waived WR
Scan Cloman. LB Jonathan Jackson, G Eric
King, S Percy King, FB Charles Kirby, WR
Brock McGrew, T Josh Rawlings. OT Kevin
Sluder and WR Germaine Stringer.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS~ Re l eased
TE Rob Tardio, G Brent warren, S Rodney
Rideau, OT Ryan Tujague and OLB Casey
Tisdale.
NEW YORK JET$-Waived TE Blake
Spence .
OAKLAND RAIDERS-Signed WA Andre
Rison .

PHILADELPH IA EAGLES- Waived CB

Tony Francis, WR Michael Lewis , K Rich
Maston , WR R11ki Nel$00, FB Anthony
Soutl'1ern, LB Marc Stockbauer, C Ty Wise.
T Raben Barr, S Lemar Marshall and TE Jed
Weaver.

PITTSBURGH STEELERS--Waived OT

Kris Farris, T Chris Conrad, OL Todd Burger,
WR Shawn McWashington, TE Jason
Gavadza, FB Joey Goodspeed, K Kyle Atteberry, CB Tim Strickland, LB Jonathan Foster and OE Johnny MitchelL Placed WR ,Will
Blackwell on the physically unable to perform list.
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Cut· P Louie Aguiar.
Released DE Vince Arney, OL Andrew Kline
and WR Phil Savoy. Signed WR Chris
Thomas.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS- Released WR
Pat Batt~aux, OE Seneca Knight, OT Glenn
MaHhews, TE Terrance McCaskey, G Reg·
gie Nelson, FB Durrell Price. WR Calvin
Schexnayder, CB Eric Sloan, WA Kevin
Swayne and S Fred White.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS- Aclivated TE

r.aJ~maf!~~:~

- Touo-CHolllng -1441)-at N.Y. Yan,..,. (Neorgle 3-3), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Men:ker0-2) at Boston (Wakefield
8-7), 7:05p.m.
.
Tampa Bay {Aupe 4-4} at Minnesota
{Romero 2-2), 8:05p.m.

Tuesday,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

four field goals (33, 30. 48 and 51
yards) and Damon Huard we nt a
third co nsec utive game without
leading the otfen;e to a touchdown.
Hu ard played three qu arte rs,
going 16-of-23 fo r 138 ya rds. l:lut
he see nun gl_y left ple nty of :oo m
fo r Jay Fiedler to take ow r the
starting j o b before th e seaso n
opener.
Fiedler, w ho had art hroscopic
surgery to repair torn cartilage in '
his right hi p on Aug. 3, re tllrn ed
to pra ctice Saturday and shou ld
play significa ntly in Miami 's ex hibition final e Friday agai nst N ew
O rl eans. H is perfo rmance could
be an impo rtant showi ng in th e
race to replace Dan Marino, the
NFl.'s caree r passin g leader.
''I' m a little fru stra ted, bu t I' m
not going to push the pan ic bt•tto n," Hu ard said. " It's preseaso n .

We'll be fi ne. I know it's goi ng to
turn arou n d .''

Gr eg Clark . Placed RB Paul Smith on
Injured reserve . Waived CB Mikki Allen. WR
Jermaine Arrington , WA Eric Chew, OT
Daniel Greer, DT Tony Plantin, DE Danny
Scott and K James Tuthill.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Waived DT
Brad Culpepper, CB Scott Milanovich , C
Eric DeGroh, WR Tavarus Hogans, WR
Michael Williams, OL Aaron Humphrey, OL
Oamon1e McKenzie, LB Antony Jordan, LB
Kinnon Tatum, CB Terrance Parrish, FB
John Waerig and P John Shay.
WASHINGTON AEDSKINS- Waived OT
Doug Brown , S Quincy Sanders, K Clay
Rush, K Peter Elezovic, LB Anthony Palerson, OL Lamont Bryant. WA Jammie Deese,
WR Tommy Naah, QB Leon Murray, DL Eric
Stevenson, DB Eric Whitfield and OB Clay
Scanlon. Placed OL Derek G. Smith and AS
Gerard Arnold on injured reserve .

HOCKEY

Nttlon•l
Hockey
LeiQUI
CAROLINA
HURR
ICANESSigned F
Jeff Daniels to • one-year contract and D
Mike Rucinski to a two-year contract.
Sognel! G Bul!!f Amid&lt;&gt;.vski, C Reggie Berg.
b Jeremiah McCarthy and D Harlan Pratt .
Named Jerry Peters director of media rela tions and Brian Tatum as team services
manager.

NASHVILLE PREDATORS- Signed D

Marc Moro to a multiyear conlract.
PHOEN IX
COYOTES-Signed
D
Aadoslav Suchy to a three-year contract.

also have reached the red seats....
Griffey went 2-for-4 , extending
his hitting streak to seven games
and raising his average to a season- high .257 .. .. C hris Stynes
had four hits.

NFL CAMP NOTEBOOK

Details, A3

Rison hooks up with Raide
PR6SS
players released Monday, dearing the way fo r
It took just one week for five-time Pro ·Bowl and- year pro Anthony McFarland to move into
selection Andre Rison to find a new team.
starting lineup .
C,ulpepper, entering his sixth season with
Rison, who spent the last three seasons with
Kansas City but was waived Aug. 14.,signed with the Bucs, started 61 games the past four years,
Oakland Raiders on Monday.
1998 led.one of the league's top defenses with
"The day I was released I already knew where I sacks. He's fourth on the dub 's career sack list
was going," Rison said.
33.
The Chiefs said their decision to waive Rison was
McFarland, a No. 1 pick who played sparin g!)'
based on the desire to develop young talent, not the a rookie in 1999, will take over Culpepper's
33-year-old receiver's performance in training
Third-string quarterback Sco tt Milanovich,
spent parts of four seasons with the Bucs, was
camp.
Last season, Rison had just 21 catches and no released. He re-signed late last seas on after T • ••.L-1
touchdowns, but reportedly maintained rigorous Dilfer was injured, and went 3-for-8 for 9 yards
conditioning program during the offseason.·
one interception this preseason.
Rison has !On&gt;e ongoing legal i!Sues, including a
Milanovich's release improved the· chances
scheduled court appearance next morlth for not rookie Joe Hamilton, a seventh-round draft
returning a rented S1,000 tape machine to a music from Georgia Tech, will make the team as the
store.
quarterback behind Shaun King and Eric Z eier.
Rison has played for five teams in 11 NFL seaAlso released were center Eric DeGroh; receivers
sons. In 170 games, he has 702 catches - 12th most Tavarus Hogans and Michael Williams;
in league history - for 9,599 yards and 78 touch- linemen Aaron Humphrey and Damonte
downs.
zie; linebackers Antony Jordan and Kinnon Tatum .
Dolphins
cornerback Terrance Parrish; fullback John Wa,eri.,,
J.J. Johnson , whom Miami was counting on as its and punter John Shay.
starting running back, faces a four-g&gt;me suspension
Lions
for violating the NFL's steroid policy, a football
Quarterback Mike Tomc za k wa s placed
so~ rce familiar with,the case said.
•"
injured reserve, three days after the 16-year vet:era,n\
Johnson appealed the suspension. Th~.- source, who broke his leg in an exhibition loss to Oakland.
did not want to be identified, said unless the ruling
He was subbing for No. 1 quarterback Charlie
is overturned by commissioner Paul Tagliabue,John- Batch, who recently resumed practice after recoverson would miss the first four games this season. A ing from a broken bone in hi s right knee, but is
decision on the appeal is expected bef&lt;,&gt;re Miami's being held out of games.
·
opener against Seatde on Sept. 3.
Tomczak was 6-of-12 for 37 yards before he was
The league declined to comment, but it has a no- knocked down by Oakland linebacker Greg Bickert
tolerance policy regardi1!g steroid use, which means and stayed on the ground, curled up in pain and
Johnson, 26, would be suspended fQ.i his first grasped his shin.
offense.
Cowboys
Johnson, a second-round pick in 1999, s.t arted
Darran Hall. a kick-return specialist who fuinbled
four games as a rookie and led the team with 558 two kickoffs against Denver last weekend, was
yards rushing with four touchdowns. ·
among 13 players released Monday.
Falcons
The release of Barry Cantrell makes it likely that
Pellom McDaniels, a reserve defensive end, will Micah Knorr will open the season as Dallas' punter.
miss this season because of small blood clots on his
By releasing Lawrence Hart and J.J. Huggins, the
lungs.
competition for the' third tight end JOb was narMcDaniels, 32, frrsr experienced shortness of rowed to former Cowboys Tyji Armstrong and
breath Aug. 8 at the Falcons' first practice after Rickey Brady. .
returning (rom an Aug. 5 exhibition In Tokyo.
Linebacker Brandon To.lbert was waived, but will
The 6-foot-3, 295-pound McDaniels did not miss return to Dallas' injured list if not claimed. Offensive
a game or practice, but his breathing problems per- lineman Chris Brymer rec eived an inj ury settlesisted. The clots were discovered Sunday night.
ment.
McDaniels indicated doctors might advise him to
Also released were safety Jason Kaiser; offensive
stop playing football. He is being treated with linemen J.R . Conrad, Steve Snfres and Chad
blood-thinning medication and will remain hospi- Slaughter; defensive lin emen Kendrick Gholston
talized through Wednesday.
and Keith Jackson, and receiver Drew Cone.

a

Dues
Defensive tackle Brad Culpepper was among 12

r==::=::::=:::::=:::===T=::;;::=======T=:::::========-r:==========
Public
1

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE 01' R!AL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER OO.CV-Q03
Chase Blink or Toae, N.A.

lka TIXII Commerce Bank,
National Aaeoclatlon; 11

C t0 dl
Ul

an,

PI1 C till

·VI•

n

Jerome N. McKenzie, et of.,
Delendanta
Court ol Common Pltaa,
Melga County, Ohio
en purauanco ol an Order
ol Sale en the above entitled
action, I wiiC ollar lor tile 11
public auction In the above
county, on the 20th day ol
September, 2000 at 10:30
a.m. at the door ol the
_courthouae thil following

Public Notice

dHctCbed IIIC . .hilt!

Situated Cn the State of
Ohio, County or Malga and
In the Townahlp ol Oliver:
Bllflg 2.23 acrea, more or
1111, out ol the Northweot
corner ol Lot No. 1185,
Section 9, Town 4, Range 11
and bounded and doacrlbed
oaloiCowa:
SEE
LEGAL
DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A".
EXHIBIT"A"
Beginning 8.00 rode Weot
of the common corner ol

Ianda owned by K. W.
Emrick, T. Kibble, Sar~h M.
Kibble, and Herbert
WIUComo and on the North

Notice

Public Notice

line of Lot No. 1165 (thla
aamo point being 72 rods
Wool ol tho North West
corner ol Lot No. 1165);
thence South 3' Weal a
dlatanco ol 36.5 rode; more
or Cua, along the Weat nne
or Lot owned by Herbert
Williams, to the center of
State Route No. 680; thence
North approxcmatecy 38'

dlatanca ol 12.8 rods to tha
placo ol baglnnlng.
AUDITORS PARCEL NO.
09·00577 .000.
Appraised at: $20,000.00
and cannot be sold for Ieee

than two-thirds (2/3) olthat
amount.

Jamaa M. Souloby
Shorlll of Meigs County
John D. Clunk .t0005376
Weat 18 rods, more or leas, Andrew A. PaCaaCy M0042515
to Southeut comer ol land Attornayslor PlaCntlll
owned by or formerly
75 Milford Drive
owned by Ira Kibble; thence Hudoon, Ohio 44236
North 21.6 rods, more or (330) 342·8203
l11o, to the North line ol Lot
No.1185; thence Eaotalong (8)22,29
North line ol Lot No. 1165, a (9)5 3TC

You"'"'

Here are some of the most popular "Thank you" ad sizes.
(other sizes are available)
Please see Matt or Dave at The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992-2156 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

2 col. x 5" $64.50
Sunday 2x5 $96.50

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1 col. x 2"
$13.60
Sunday 1x2
$19.30

I I
I I
I I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

L-----------.J

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 6l

I
I
I
I

Donors
give 91
units

1 col. x 3"
$19.35
Sunday 1x3
$28.95

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

placemem o n th ~ salary
sch edule , pay elates, use of perso nal l~a ve, travel rennbui'semcnt and plannin g peri od,.
During th e meetin g the bo"rd
hi red fo ur tL·achers o n one-year

godl o n~ , IJennls Gilmon..o; fo ur

SENTINEL NEW S STAFF

co nt racts. The y we re Su za nn e

ga ll ons, C ha rle ~ Mu grage,
William Cook, Jeanette Rad fiml: one gallo n. Robt•rt W. Barton. Annr Frances Shrimp lin .
Fi rst- tim e donors were: jdr
Nottingham, Arthu r Hess, Maril yn Wilcox, Shari Bobb,
Mi chael
Abl es,
P:nn eh
ll uonphrey. Sprin g "Lightfoot,
Jl,.,. Rn u&lt;h, Lo is Johnson, John
T oylor. M.11 ,. Bailes, Amy H ackney. Bill C:.o r" vell, and R and y

POMEROY - The Mei J;S
Local Board of Edu cation ratified a new tluec:- year contract
Tu esday with th e Meib'S Local
Teachers Association providing
for a 3.45 perc ent salary
mcrease.
Hi ghli ghts of th e co ntract
provide for:
• An increase in base salary
!rom $ 20 ,3110 to $2 1,000 , (a
3. 45 pcr~e nt increase, whi ch
pushes the salary scal e up fo r all
teachers in the district);
• EmplCJyees hirc·d since 1998
to co ntmu e to pay 10 pt&gt;rcen t of
th e co~t o f their medi cal in sur-

C ammarata, GRADS ; jani ce
H ay nes. sc ience ; and Mark

(IlL·

Contract includes
3. 45 salary hike

Senio r C: iti zt'ns C ente r in

Pomeroy.
Multiple- gallo n donors were:
sew n gall ons. Linda Haley; six

J oh n ~on.
IJ o HuP-.

hy

Ll) ll\ ll\ll11i ty \ -Vh t: Tt.'

"' foll nw~:
PO MEROY -

Paul Marr.

Th olll &lt;L\ H Jrt, M.1ry K. SpcnLc r,

anee;

David King, Ger.tld ltmo ,;ht,
Euni ce: Jones. Dcnni ~ ( ;i\mort.•,
j e;111 Durst , Uerry Co ughenou r.

Jac ky
Co ugh enour,
!.lilly
Spencer, Philip Ololinbt·r. David
Ell io tt , R obert Smith. l.l nan
Shank, Susann a Hec k, Anna
Shrimplin. Lloyd Blac kwood,
Patrici(l Barton , Li1u.la Vaniil Wagc·n , Bill Carswell , Barbara
Ro t;h"· Bcmadette And erso n,
Barb;m Matrh cws-Crow, Jacki e
Hilck brand. Donald May.
R oge r Gaul , and Janet Peavley.
RAC IN E
- C harles
Mugrage, Evelyn Mu grage.
Patsy Cornell, Arthur Rou sh,
Larry C ircle. Paula l.ll\l\Vn, Shari
Bobb, Harry Holter, Michael
Ables. Jeanette· Radford, Pamela
Humph rey, Eli z.obeth Ayres
Th oren. Spring Li ghtfoot .
C l:o ren&lt;T Dugan , and Barbara
I )u g.uL
MIDDL EPO RT - Jennifer

Pomeroy Elementary students eagerly exit the school bus Tuesday morning en route to another exciting
year of school. Tuesday was the first day back to school for hund reds of Meigs Local and Eastern Local
children who woke up yesterday realizing summer va cation was all but over. Students in the Southern Local
District will report for classes Monday. (Tony M. Leach photo)

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OME ROY Mt· i ~s
CO ll !l t i;liiS wiJI "Ji ght
th l.·l pa rh nf hope·"
w h en thl.· Alllnicm
C,lll (l.'r SOCil.' ty\ R l'l.ty
!l)r Life t.1 k c~ &lt;aridc Fri cby ni~h t
on till' M l'iL.."
, High Sch on[ p.u-k -

P

2 col. x 3"
$38.70
Sunday 2x3
$57.90

in 11; lot.

T hl' h t· n d ir not on ly r.mn
lllOill'Y t() r G ll l tTr \'l'\t'.lrl." h .llld
Tl'l'.ltll ll'llt.

\\ '.t V

b11t it ~ i VL'" rt' '\tdt'llt'l ,\

to n·t"o~J liLl' . th o"c, who Jrt•

l."Jt~ccr o.; urvivon, .llld
ti HJ\l.'

rill.'

ft'llH.'Ill h lT

w ho lmr their h .Htk· with

d l \l' ,l\1,.' .

Actlv itil''\ will bq!;i n
co mmu e

.It (,

p.m.,

.til nigh t .m d up unnl

noon Saturday. ·
Ar 7 p.m. su rvivor&lt; w11l join
to!!,l'thcr to w;:~ lk .1 vinory l.1p

Cl l'S ,

Swann , so c ial studi es, all

at

Meigs High Sc hool: and Nikki
Whitlat ch, fourth grade, Rutland Elementary.
Th e re sig11atJons of Linda
Smith and C hri s Sto ut from
teachin g posi ti ons were accepted.
Hired as s ub s titut ~ teachers
were Penn y Uurge, Laura Ellis,
Dorothy Sue Faulkner. Catherm e Gros venor- Han, Am y King,
Nico le M. Ko uvaras, Mary Ann
N eal. G inge r Patterson, Delmar
G. Pullins, and ~ h a ron Thompso n ,

• Sevt·ranc(' pay 111 th e thm.i
Al so approve d durin g the
ye ar of the co ntr :t r.: t to be
m c:cting was the.· e mploy m e n t of
incrc·ased by 35 addi tional days D an Flo nnmo at a sa lary of
of pay;
$30,1-\20 as the safe and dru g• C reati o n of a "calami ty lt:aw
fret" sc hools coordin at or for
;:a ssistance program" when:by a
Me igs Local usmg tilnds from
teacher can donate up to fi ve the Safe and Dru g-Free G rant
sick days to anoihcr teac her
Prog;ram .
w hu is un th:rgoi11g a catast ro ph C ontracts at th e• rate of $9.1ll
ic illness.
an hour were J\Varded to six
• A "school calendar ro mmitaides who provide &lt;;t•rvlces to
tt' L'" w h ost' functi o n wi l1 bt" to
han dicapp ed children . Th ey
recomm end a sc hoo l calendar ro
were Sherry Eagl e, Donna Jacks,
th e Board for adoption.
Pe nny Kl ein , C andy O hlin ger
• Clearin g up co ntract lanand Donna Shato, aid es; and
guage issues relat ing to redu cti o n m statT, transfe rs and vacan -

Please see Board, Pace A:S

Native returns to historic Peoples
house ... with a little bit of help
FR OM STAFF REPORTS

POM ERO Y - How do you
gl't c i ~il t to ns ot furlli turc , a
pialh), c.1rto n ;d(c r orr_o n of vin t.lgc b ook ~ ;md oth lT pn sonal
bL·Inng1ngs up ..1 hillsid t' and .'\t l
~ r t.'p~ .111d intn .1 home?
Nnn1 1:1 G ib ~o n M,mc's wao;;
THE EASY WAY - Worke rs with
t he Central Van a nd Storage Co.
used th e platform of a Kanawha
Stone Co. boom truck to move
eigh t ton s of books, furniture and
othe r belongings in to the new
home of Norm a Grbson Maness.
th e granddaughter of Judge C.E.
Pe oples.

fa ced with that ve ry prl'di cam ent
Mon day w hen wo rk ers wi th
Central Van .md Storage arrived
wtt h a truckl oad of boxco; for he r
new ho m e.
Maness soon empl oyed a boo m
Lru ck fi-o m th e.: Kanawha Sto ne
Co., C harlesto n, W.Va ., and the
bclo nl( lll b" we rl" easil y lifted from
tht· strc·ct, th ro ug h ~he air and
rrees, w rhe rambling front porch
o f tlw houst', ,vhcn: workers
bega n th e m oving process.
' Maness is m oving into the C. E.
l't&gt;o pk s homt·. a loomm g Victorian ho m t' o n Buttt&gt;rnut Avenu e.
Maness, . w h o grew up in t h e
h OIIll', p; the grand daughtt.·r of

Relay for Life scheduled Friday at high school lot

.

2 col. x 2"
$25.80
Sunday 2x2
$38.60

teacher deal

FROM STAFF REPORT S

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.,.

-Local
new

POMEROY
M eigs
( :ounr}o residents Jonatcd 9 1
ton its of blood Aug. 16 when tlw
R ed Cross llloo dmobile vi sited

Please see Blood, Page Al

II

50 Cents

Big first step

SYRAC USE
- Ca rol yn
C ~ h .1rl e~. I h rL1 Th on Ja&lt;; 1 Patricia
Elh m. !lobby O rd . Oris Smith.
I )t,.·bor;-ih Lowery, l'erc Sisson,
:&lt;mlllev R oush; LONC; BOTTO M - Sharo n Van noy.
Henry BJhr. Jcfr Nomngham,
Va kn ~ N o tring lu m. and Ml.·r-

;...

~000

Hometown Newspaper

lll an .

, ________ __

r-----------------------,_
...,. . . . -.. Ir-----------,I I

Meigs County's

Wilcox. Donna Davidson, Pam
Manley, Patricia Bun1gardn cr,
Arthur Hess. C harles Cook,
Ch.Jrks Fitchpat ric·k. Anna
lJrowning, Lind a Haley, 1-tolwrt
llartnn, Marilyn Wilcox. Raymo nd W1 lcCJx. Slml cy Fitchp.otrick. Drcma Bdl, Ellis M yers,
Michael Wdi(mg. Sr., Michad
Wilto ng;. Jr.. and Jennifer Hay-

Want to show your appreciation?

August 23,

a1

( ;:m:y, IJo nna Hawley, Norma

ADS

Wednesday

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED

MEI{;S COUNTY FAIR ""TIIANK

2 col. x -4"
$51.60
Sunday 2x4
$77.20

More Meigs County Fair scenes, AS
Phillies top Reds; Tiger's bogus balls, 81

Thursday

High: BOs; Low: 60s

down t h l' rd.1y p.1tlt .md t11 c1 1 wil l
hl' gu l'st&lt;; ,11 .1 n ·u.·prum
A &lt;;pcr i.d lumin.1ry 'cn·H.:l' \\'il l
lw hel d .It t\11\k, ,11 1d .llflT d ~.H
th ere will h.: p LTfnrt ll.lll (t'" hy
Elv1o.; 1111pc r~on.nnr I h\"l~ht [ ~, t' ll howc r. tltt· Big lknd Clo!-!;gt-r'.
.1ml U mln ( : o JJ\ l fllll\011. ,\ barbt·r..;flop qu .lrtt't, t( )ll owcd hy I)_ _I
R ork i11' R q.~~ i l'. whu \Y ill \...n·p
tht· lllll"'ic go in g unn l I .1 11 1.
A pizz.t p.ort\ ll"i ll be· ht·ld Jt
midnig!H .111d rh t' ll k.1r.IOkc \n il
till tht• tillll' till ti l [ I) .1.111. S.lt lll\.iay
wltl.'ll the "hicnd~o .111d F.1it h "
r h o ir Ut lik l thl.· dirl'l't l011 ot"A1 ny
P etTI II " ill . 111g .
Enlpl~o ly ~

t' \

o(

the

r-.ll'llllTS

Ltlnk , undn the dll'l't tiun of Jo
Ann C ri sp, .trc prcp .~ring rhe
lum inar it' s mad e of dl·ror.ncd
w h it e P•lf't' l' b ;1g~ . \( llllt' wi rh

nrhcr&lt;; wit h
trlbtltl.·o.;, p.lrt!.ll!y fi lkd \\'!t i l 'a nd
to ho ld a vo ti Vt' c:mdk.

llll' tllnrul

p l L tl l tT\,

.1 'Pt't'Lll

rcntcrn hr.l lh

A,

ofTIIL""d.l y n non.

l J."\

l'

lud hel'n puilho~,c d f"or $:)
1..' .\t' b .111d lh.-ror.1tcd hy Cri,p.

tltlll'

fnr rlw

pcro;on on till.' track from hc:gm 11111~ rn l'llli (1( llll' Rel.1y fnr 1 itl·.

Sentinel
:z

. AS
B2-~

BS

A4
A3
B1-3 , 6

M

OlllO

,111d. ot' ( our.,c . .1ll rbc
llHlllt'\ will be contnhmcd to rlw

prmr to tlte l'Vl'nt ,md h ave Olll'

Today's

Lotteries

11 1011}

L 1c h rt'Ll y tl' .llll C OII~l' t " of Ill
tv 15 p~opk· who 'L'l"~ donatiom

that

Please see House, Page Al

SIJorts

l l'l"l'-

( : .lll(t· r s~ ,,· lct y.

ll HW t'

We ath~r

lc-rn Fift-. M.ory WuJ(,·. Lorn
R .u1dolph .111d S,lr.lh 1-l oLh l' h ~) ld ­
LT. h.111k ~· mp l ")Yt' t'' · Tlw ,,Ill' will
unril

plans to

Obituari~s

l ll!ll l-

ll.l rl l'\

cntlllllll l'

shl·

Calendar
Classifieds
C otnics
Editorials

"L'r\' \(l'.
1

N ow,

bu 'il nl'&lt;;'i, "T he (; ibson AttiC. 11 into
roo m ~ of tht· Pt·opk s H o u ~e. She
also ph m a rn aju r n.:.· n ovation project tOr t he t(nlr- lwdronl ll h o use,

Sections - 1:z Pages

T h e lu111inarit'" w1ll be used tn
111 .1rk .1 p.1th .1nd ht-': htl'd ;1r du .J
durin~

Jud ge Peoples, who bui lt th e
home in 1905. H er late hm band,
Ray111o nd Maness, was a 1935
g raJu att' of Po meroy
High
School.
Pt'opk s w,1, a Co mm o n Pleas
Co urt Jud ~c· .mtl tli c·d in 1942.
M a n es~. a fo rme r
En gl ish
re acher. IS moving back to
Pomeroy li·01 n Mt. ll ora. Fla.,
w hc.-re " h ~:.· o perakd :1 11 ,mtiquar ian bt,ok -.rnre.

Pick 3:

~- S- .\;

Pick 4: h- 1-4-2

Buckeye S: .\.- 11 -l'-.!+-2fi

CREATIVE LUMINARIES - Some come wit h scanned pictures of
those remembered or honored , othe rs with tributes, or just co lorful
designs, and they'll all be displayed at the American Cancer Society's
Relay for Life Friday night. He re Jo Ann Crisp, Terri .Fife. and Mary
Wolfe of Farmers Bank work on decorating the s acks which wil l hO ld
lighted votive cand les nestled in sand to be used along the rela)' path .

W YA,
Daily 3: 6- .2-2 Daily 4: 0-.l-O- j

�•

~

~age

A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS·
'1,

'

., "

Detention onter needs money

· DAYTON (AP) - A new juvenile de!enuon center in New
lebanon will be ready thiS fall, but may not
rbe .inoiiey to open
·until next July.
~ :rhe $5.7 million center is one of a new se t of state centers for
.low-leveljuwnile offenders. It is being built by Montgomery County but pa1d for by the Ohio Department ofYouth Services.
· Cou nty officials said construction of the 50-bed cemer is almost
done. But state officials have notified them that they do not have
operating funds in their current budget, the Dayton Daily News
reported Wednesday.
The youth services department began its fiscal year July 1, but
money for the Montgomery County Center for Adolesce nt Services
will not be made available until next July.
" We have no local dollars available," Montgomery Counry
Admill!str~tor Debotah Feldman .aid.
The youth servie&lt;s department expected the ce nter to be ready
,1ext year, said deparrmc-nt spokestnan Kevin Miller.
:• ''When we first looked at the project we looked at it getting done
·in : spring 2001, and they are ahead of schedule and that's great,"
Miller said.
" The ce nter is e~pec tt:"d to cost $.2.5 million ro S3 nullion a year tO
operate.

have

Rabies shots recommended
· RAVENNA (AP) - The discovery of rabid b.1t-s IS prompting
_ h'L·alrh officials to recomtnend that anyont: "':ho com&lt;.'S into cont.tct
with J b.1t ge-t .1 rabit·s shot.
So tar thiS year, 25 rabid bm have bee n found in 1~ of Ohio's 88
counties, the Ohio Department of Health said Tuesday. Th.It compares with 30 rabies-p.;sitive bats tested in all of 19'J9 and 33 in
1998, accordmg to state health records.
Last week, a bar found inside a Ravenn:t home rested plmtiVL" for
rabies. The homeowner was urged to get a series of six rab1es shots
beca use the bat could have come in contact with her while she \Vas
rsfceping, said City Health ComnussJoner Lynette Hanna .
The shots are recommended because in the last SIX ca used 111 the
United States by bat-strain rabies, there was no evidence the victims
had been bitten, said Portage County Health CommissiOner Kenn~h Rupp. Researchers at the Centers for DISease Control don't
il.now how those victims contracted the disease, Ru pp said.
-. : Incidents involving people and bats increase each August and Sep. tember because the bats become more active then, he said.
~- The health department said three bats from Hamilton Counry
have tested positive for rabies this year. while Lake. Lucas, Morrow
and Pickaway counties each had two rabid bats.
- 'fhere has been one case each in Augla1ze, Cuyahoga, Fairfield,
Fryetie, Franklin. Geauga, Huron, Jackson , Lorain, Mahoning,
P&lt;?r.tage, Ross, Summit and Trumbull counties.

·. ·Disabled camper drowns iii pond
ASHLEY (AP) - A 57 - year-old Columbus man drowned in a
'Jldnd at a camp for physically and developmentally disabled people.
· 'The body of Ernie Gregory was found Tuesday by Recreation
Unlimited staff members, said Sgt. Scott Vance of the Delaware
County sheriff's office.
· "He had a fixanon with water," Vance said. Investigators believe
Gregory's death was accidental, he said.
" Gregory was among about 40 campers spending the week at the
165-acre Recreation Unlimited camp about 30 miles north of
-columbus. camp director Paul Hutthn md.
:,, Gregory, who had developmental disabilities, lived in a group
-h.on~e in-E:olum):ms, Hmtlin said.
-~- ·... Gregory was staying in a cabin supervised by a counselor. Grego.ty left the cabin to smoke a cigarottc Tuesday morning, Huttlin said.
. When Gregory didn't return after about 15 minuws, the counselor
looked for hun and alerted others.
: , Gregory\ body \\';1) found in shallow w,uer ncar tht: shorL', Hutdin soid.

Teen to stand trial as a juvenile

,, "
· HAMILTON (AI') - A tee n-age r whose infant daughter died
from muluple injunes will st:md trial in juvt!nile court.
•Judge David NiehariS of Butler County Juvenile Court mack the
ruling Tuesday after a psychiatrist testified that the 16- year-old might
be hdped by tre.Itment programs In the juvenile j ustice system.
: .. :he girl is chargt'd with mvoluntary manslaughtt' r, permitting
•!ild abuse and two counts of ch1ld enda nger ing. She has been held
~'.' •the Butler Co unty Juvenile Detention Center since her Jun e 9
..rrre~t

::No tnal date was set
::1 )r. Kenn eth Tepe is chid medical officer of the Center for Foren~: P ~ych 1.1try 111 H amilton H e testified that the girl h as a personal!;f)• disorder that causes her to be emotionally disconnected fmlll her
;u~roundin gs.
·: . l'o hce .ICcused her of shaking the b aby and sguc•ezing her face. She
denied abuSing the baby in any way.
:The inf.111t's t:Ithcr. Ramon Gomez Silva, 2 I, 11 being held 111 rh e
~a in ( :ounty ptl and IS c harg~d \VJth mu rder. involuntary
~~:1nslJughter. t\vo cou nts of fdoni ous assault and t\vo coums uf

fuli

' hild c nd.m ~ering .

.. .

Man injured at Piketon plant

::PIKETON (AP) - A man working at the Portsmou th Gaseous
ll!ffusiOn P!Jnt was critically injured Tuesday in an industrial accidam. otli c ~al s '" 'd.
~Guillerm o Barrientos of Fmdlay was in the mtenstvc c.1re unit at
ql1io State Universtty Medical C~nter in Columbus. whe re h~ was
be"mg tn.:atcd fur burns.
B.Irncmos work s f~r the IT Corp, whi ch works with Bechtel '
Joi(obs on cbnup work at the Piketon plant.
: _rr .1ppe.1r\ B.lrr H.: ntm. was mixing chemica ls when thev reacted ,
li~c hiel J.1 cobs spokeswo m an Sandy Chi lders s&gt;~d.
'
.: -An ot her wnrh ·r \\',1 ~ trea ted on sit e for minor burn s
:: :Ptkcro n l" .l bo lt t ( ,f) mik· s so uth of Columbus.

Report: Juvenile pleads guilty
\\A\ Hl NC; To N COURT HOUSE (AP) - A 16-ycor-o ld buy
pl e,H.kd gutlty Tul.:~cL1y to come.tluig cv1den u: 111 tlh: \l.tym g of J
pt77.1 dclt\·t.: ry dn\'L' f ..1 b ro:.dc.1 ~ t n.·porr o;,ttd
• f' h L· hoy plc .1 ded S'lltlty to o b ~; trll C tlllg J ll~tll'L' . ( ~ o lu lnb u s tt: \c\' 1\ l l&gt;ll
" ~ . Hion \X
/ BNS n..·portt.:d Tht...· buy. \\'ho~; c n .llll t. .' \\',1' not n.:k-.1scd
G1.·l .lllv.: hl· 1' .t .fll\'l' llik .1 l~o .l g rL'L' d to rc~ tJt~· .lg.um.t thrL'l' .diL·gcd
i~Lo mp hll.' " ( h,1rged Ill till.' lk.H h nf Prcl!i HI \ ( :JmL'r.
r hl' F 1\'"l.' fr L' ( lltt llt\' ~ h cntl' \ o Hi lt.' ,,lid TUL'"'t..Ll\' lll g ht th.H It lud
1 ;~ , lt llt•rlll l fl nn on thl· boy·\ plt..·.1
, ~
1
~ C .11Hcr. \ ! . \\,\' ltllll!d d..:.H.i l',l!'h· JtlllL' 1 J lll'.ll' h1..'1' l.l l' Ill ,111 .dky
bl'hind .1 llliddk '&gt;t ltool l1,lrktllg lnt ( :o-workcr\ ,1[ Pl 77.t- N - Mormn
I~.H:! rqJnrtl' d hn ltlt"lli!; .lftcr., h L· fuk·d to retu rn tintn .1 tk!J,·cry
.&lt;-)nl' n f d1c ot ha th ree li \1 \ pc ct~. M .ttthl'w M cC: ldlough . J t) , h.\\
l;L't' n du r g:c ..i w nh .lg:g:ra\'Jtt.•d murder..1gg r.w.HL' d rnbbt...•ry. kldn .lp ping .\llJ Llpt.· Thl· ot ht•r ~; u ~ pl'l'tli f.KL' k'"cr c h . 1rg-L·~

•

Wednesday, August 23, 2000

Wednesday, August 23, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

D

State to keep track of abusive caregivers
COLUMBUS (AP) R osemary Todd
was outraged when she learned th at a ca regiver who had dragged her disabled daughter
up the stairs of a group home by her feet got
a job at a nursing home after being suspended.
Todd recalled Tuesday that It wasn't unul
she learned that the ca regiver was treating he r
mother did she become "absolutely terri fied ."
Todd, 72, of Urbana , says she's confi dent
th~t legislation Gov. Bob Taft signed into law
Tuesday creating a registry w track abusive
and neglectful caregivers will prevent others

MRDD department, SJid .
from suffering as her fami ly has.
The registry also will se rvt' ao; .1 dt:tc rrl'nt
Before hiring any employee, se rvice
providers will be required to chec k the reg- ro caregivers, said state- Sen. Ro ~l.'fl Sp .lti.t , .1
istry of former ca regivers m the state Par ma H eights Republi ca n who ~ JHm ~ ort.: d
Department of M e ntal Retardation and the bill.
" It will send a strong mcssJgt.: to pt&gt;oplc
Developmental DISabilities system ·- who .
have abused , neglected or misappropriated who would har'm indi vidua ls dut th c1 r ab u ~e
will not be tolerated,'" he told a room full of
monl'y from their clients.
Under the law, those caregivers can't be MRDD advocates at Goodwill Columb LIS.
which · helps the disabled ga m imlependencc .
rehired .
ProfessmnJ l groups that had bL'L'Il wornL'd
"This is meant protect the most vu ln erable
citize ns from a smal1 number of employees that car~givcrs' rights would bl' vw l.ltr.:d now
who move from place to place ca usi n g say they're co nten't wtth prc c:w twn s the sure
harm.'' Kenneth Ritc hey, director of the state has taken .

th~·~·s

C INCINNATI (AP) - The machine
the platelets
bluod bank tlut servt.·s ~outhwcst o ut of one \ rm , (h~ -;ends rhe
L1hlo hopes to inc rease its su pply
rt•st of the b~od ba ck imo th~..·
of blood Without relying on other :H'm .
additional donors.
Aphen: sis Uonnrs can gl\·t• as
The Hoxworth Blood Center' often as rwtcl' :1 week
h as spent nearly $400,000 to buy
With the new m.Kh1nes.
automated
collection made by Sweden-ba, ~ d Gambro
I0
machmes thJt will allow some HCT, Hoxworth c 1n collect
donors to gtve t\VIet' as mu ch either o ne umt of platelets plus
blood as they would during a one umt of red blood cells. or
standard viSit.
two units of red blood cells at
The center ex pects ro collect once.
at least 1,000 additiona l units of
The machines will be avai lbloop thiS year. It hopes the . able beginning Monday at five
ma~hines will reduce the need
Hoxworth donor centers .
for emergency blood appeals.
, The canister-shaped devices
"It will take a different mind- are about four feet ta ll and are
set. But if we can convert just 10 topped with a computer scree n,
percent to 20 percent of our a panel of spmning knobs ,md an
donor base to thiS, we would be array of tubes lcadmg to a rack
self-sufficient," said Mark Folino, of blood bags. Whole blood is
director of donor operations.
split into it~ component parts,
Most donors give whole and th e blood products not
blood in a procedure involving a being collected are pumped
needle, a tube and a bag. Draw- back into the donor's arm.
ing blood this way takes about
o Hox'"\vorth made three emer15 minutes. Donors then have to gency blood appeals last year.
wait at least eight weeks before This summer. increased donor
they can safely. donate again.
recruitment helped the center
A smaU percentage of donors avOid emergency appeals, but
give platelets mstead of whole supplie s still were about 400
blood m a process known as units below ideal levels, said
apheresis. ThiS involves spending Susan Wilkinson, Hoxworth's
about 90 minutes hooked to a interim director.

TOLEDO (AP) - Opponmt'
of a plan to renovate ;1 IHstoric
155-ycar-old church nurched ro
till' Toledo Cat ho lic Diocese
l~.·~l dt•r's
home Tul•sday :md
demanded that their pri,·st be
t(Jrccd w restgn.
About 60 members of the St
. Patrick's Providence C hurch and
thc•Ir supporters "ked Tol edo
Catholic Diocese Bishop James
HotTman to stop the renovatmn .
The· bishop, who serves as spiritual leader of the 19-county diocese. was not home, so the group
left its demands taped to the door.
The church djspute has crea ted
ten sion among members of the
church near Gr:~nd Rapids, about

2?l

ut· lok\h l At
t\Hl t~ llli!J L'\ nppo , jll ~ t hL·
rl'lll)\'JtiOII S,l\ tiiL' Y h .l\l' btT ll f.ll gt'b ufr hr~..·,Ht...' mn g lt· r r~.T,, h.lt. h\t n g
phone L ,lll~ .md ' .llld.JJ,.
The Rc'l'. F Anihcolll' &lt; ; ,d l.1 ~ II c- r.
St. P.nri~.l 's p.l "tlll', h.l'- hL'L' ll llk't'tin g \\'ith oppon ~.·m~ ,lltd \,ltd .tbPut
.1 \\'C1..' k .tgo th.lt tlwy h.l\'l' .1 mud 1
dl':lrt•r umiLTst. tmltn ~ l) f d Jt' l"lli,'\,
\1 \ ' lh C\'

.1g;m1st tht· p.11 t ~h t ~lllll ltl \ pl.tn
to mow rhc Jll.llll .dt 1r to rilL' l L' tl ter of tlw church. rt...'.1rr.1 ngc t h L·
pt.' \\'S and TL' ILtC Ht' rh~..· tH g. Jn .
'' H e wants to m.1h· our d1u rc h
look non-dt•nomuun orl.tl ," ~. ll d
Virgima Oz;uzak ..1 12-yL·.tr lllL'll1 ber nf the pan sh . "Tiu~ 1'i n :ry :-..td .''

;Jrt.'

t!

,

tl

~

Saturday, August 26th ... 9am - 1pm

•i.,

Location · Parking Lot at rear of
MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING &amp; UTTEI?
PREVENTION OFFICE (Courlly Annex building) ,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

~

~
.,-.
,

,

Funded By:

Phone 992-6360
Meigs County Recycling
and Litter Prevention
_...l.·m-a~!.T'Tn."'.TJ!I.U"'o"'oTJ.TJ."'.TI.:r;.-rrnT,-r,-rrJ.-,~rrr

Judge remains
firm on decision
COLUMBUS (AI' ) A
judg~ who has bL'L'Il c nticJz~.· J
for thL' early rt:kJsc ti·o m pri so n
of .1 111.1n who kiikd h1 s 3 - \'~:H ­
old son satd sht' 's COil\' incc d she
d1d the right thing
"Somebody has to makl' the
decision in the- se cases. J nd that's
what I'm elected to do."
Franklin Co r111ty Common
Pleas Ju dge Nodine Miller sai d
Tuesday.
" I' m n ot gomg to test dH_·
political winds beforl' I nuke a
j udi cia] deci siOn. Thne Isn't a
J Udge tn here who nukes decisions about c hildren lightly"
Miller, 6 1, also ~a1d she had
dec1dcd some time ago not to
run for re - d cc tion wlll'll her
term exp ires in j.1nuar y 2005.
Miller this month g ranted a
defense motion requestmg th e
early release of Pat n ck Bourgcms after thre e years Ill pri so n .
He had been sen te nced to seven
to 25 years for t he 1996 kill ing
of Patn ck BourgeoiS Jr.
In De ce mb e r, Miller al so
granted an e.uly release for Tr.Ky
Lynn Branon . l3ourgems' girl fn cnd llLltton had been giVL'Il
the s:t mt• Sl'l1tt..'n c e JS Bourgco ts.
The two pleaded guilty 111
(Jc robn ! f)t)(J to involuntar y
nlJn sbu g h tc r for beaung .1nd
bltln~ th e boy on FL'b. 2H, 19%.
The C.lS t..' led to lcgir.;LHivc
adoption of a bi ll t. .' lllnin.ltln g
lhc ll t't.'J for pru scru to r~ to
prove Jnt L'nt Ill rhe " l.1ytn g of .1
c hild .
Attnttl l.'\ ~ ftlr li tHI rgl·tn~ .111d
1\r ,l![Oil .l g i'L'L' d [0 lflL' p fL',I Ill
11 ) 1)(, .1!i:c r pm'-L'i.' tttnr ' \,li d th t'Y

\\ tndd
111

ll tll op pP \l' t'. 1rl~

rlw fu ture
Miller \.lid \ilL·

n.li

l'L'I.Jllt.''t' t~H u l

nwn: t h. tn thl l ' L'
C UllJ &lt;;;t.l ll t'l'\

l1~.· r

~. k tHc d

r~.·l~.-.1~ 1..·

\l' .H \

k•d hn

~·
•I

~~

III

~
~

~

L

afl~rnnon , M o nd~y

Blood

Se conU

Member: Th~ Assoc iated Press. and the Oh1n
News pJpcr A SSO&lt;..' LMII0/1

POSTMASTER: Smd uddress conec uons to
l'hc Dat ly Scn imcl, Ill Coull St , Po meroy,

Ohio 45769
SUDSCRIPTION RATES
Hy Csrrlt&gt;r or J\lolnr Houle
On~

..... ... ~2 . 00

Week

One Month..... ..
On c Yc~r ....

. ............ $8.70
.. ....... $10400

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Da1 ly. . .

50 Ct:nls
nol d es mng lo pay the cu m er may
mnit 111 ndYancc ducc t to Th~ D~ily Semlne l
on a th11:c. S l~ o r 12 mo mh b;1~1s . Cre dit w1ll be
Sub s~11hct~

~pvc n

Ntl

camcr each w~ek
hy mail pcr mill cd rn arc n

s uh ~c r~pti u n

w he re h u m ~ C31 T I ~r~ rV Kl' 1~ ava ilable .
Pul'lli s hc r r~l' erv c~ th e nghl hl ad jus t rate5
durrng the su/lsL·npt ro n pcnod S u t.s~.: rlpll o n
, ;Ill' c hatt~W ~ lll•' ) he implcmcmcd by changtng
!nc dur .~t lllll of the ~ uhso.r rp!lon

MAILSUJISCRIPTION S .

Inside MclfZS Courlly
..... S 17.~0
I' Wee k\
.. S 5~ 82
21l Weeks .....
~2 Wt•ch

S I O.'i 56
Ratrs Outside Ml'igs Cmml)

1.' We e k ~
26 Wee k'
51 \Vl'Cb

o

unlimited 5oK dial-up access 24 hours a da~. Just c~ll
si~n up. But don't wait. An offer this ~ood won't last ion~.

..

2~

.. S56 .6K
..... $1 ()9, 72

'

main con cHn In aU

~turles

b to ht

IH'Cunlc. If you know ur an error In 11

~tor) ,

ull tbt rrew~ruum al (7 40 ) 9\12 ·2155 . We
will l' hCl' k your lnfnrntatlnn and nlllkt o
wr~ctlnn if wa r rantcd.

News DcpartmeJJb
The m ain JJum~r Is 992 · 215~ . Drpar1 mtnt
tXIenslons 11n:
Get1en1l t-bnll~er ........................... F..- 1. 1101
N"w~ ................................... ....... ·~ ~t . 1101
................ ...... , .. ..... ... ................. (lr

I

. S2 1)

f: ~t .

1106

:

Olhrr Ser'lj ·t~

'OII•r ••lid for n... t ~nomtrt o~lw. A.tq ulr-. t Mutt ' ontr• c t . Offer tncll 9130/00,

Ad,·ertblnw ................ ......... ......... ...

www.zoomnet.net

1·800-900 - 0400

ilee Bryant; RUTLAND
Marta
Blac kwood , Gabrielle
Blackwood, Ralph Bales, and Jenmfer Lambert; REEDSVILLE Hilary Peal and John Rice;
TUPPERS PLAINS - Joan
Smith; CHESTER - Josep h Bailey; CHES HIRE - Selby Manley; GALLIPOLIS - Mary
Bailes; GUYSVILLE - John Taylor; WEST VIRGINIA - Lms
Johnson, Ranc:jy Johnson and Amy
Ha ckney.
AsSISilng the Bloodmobile were
Retired and Volunteer Program
workers H elen Bodimer.June Ashley, Jim Gmeser. Peggy Harris, Ken
Harris, Betty Spen c-e r, Gerry
Pullen, Rita Buckley, Jan e Brown,
Carolyn Grueser, and Gerald
~ rawford .

Th e next sc heduled viSit for the
Red C ross Bloodmobile at the
Senior Cltlze ns Center will be
O ct. 18.

Reader Services
OUI·

Talk about hometown values. Si~n up now ~nd ~et months Internet ser;ice absolute!~
free .· Surf the Web and email as much as ~au like, with

Girl Scout camp
planned
MIDDLEPORT A Girl
Scout ca rnival will be held from
noon until 5 p.m. Saturday at
General Hartinger Park in Middleport. Crafts, demonstrations,
tie-dying, games and prizes are
planned, and the new dance team
will perform.
Girls attending must be registered Girl Scours. Those who are
not members can join by paying
the $7 membership fee for the
year and have a parent or
guardian sign the registration
form. Girl Opportunity Funds are
available to those w.ho need
financial assistance.
Those attending should bring a

Homecoming
event set
REEDSVILLE - Eden United
Brethren
Church
In
Reedsville will hold its annual
homecoming services Sunday,
with morning service at I 0 a.m.,
carry in dinner at 12:30 p.m .. and
afternoon service at 1:30. Peter
Martindale and family will be
guest speakers. Spenal singing by
singers from local churches. Baptism following. An evening gathering will follow at the home of
Gary Reed.

Committee
to meet
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Village Finance Committee will meet at 5:30p.m. today in
council chambers.

Auxiliary to meet
RACINE The Racine
Americ·an Legion Auxiliary 602,
potluck p1cmc, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. at the legion Hall. Spouses
and friends invited.

year period.
Bush spokeswoman Karen
Hughes denied that Bush's vow
to do more to promote the plan
was a reaction to the post-convention surge in the polls
enjoyed by Gore.
"He's going to continue to

talk about this for the rest of the
catnpaign," she said. 11 He wanr's
ro make sure people don't succumb to the misrepresentations
and distortions that Vice President Gore is malting."
Gore "is trying to muddy the
waters," Hughes said.

Board

Action was taken by the board
to correct amounts paid fo'r summer proficiency intervention at'
Meigs High School. The correct
figures are $500 to Judy Crooks
and $'375 to Jim Oliphant.
In other business, a professional
development grant for the current fiscal year in the amount of
$12,639 was approved .
Attending were Superintendent
Bill Buckley, C lerk, Mark E.
Rhonemus, and board members,
Scott Walton, Wayne Davis, Norman Humphreys, Roger Abbott,
and John Hood.

from Page AI
Maria Hampton, to provide
transportation as well as serve as
an aide.
Others hired were Jennifer
Jones as high school cheerleading
advisor; John Davidson as custodian at Pomeroy Elementary and
Meigs H1gh School, and Mike
KaufT as Meigs Middle School;
Debbie M. C undiff as a substitute
aide; and Kristin Brown as a substitute employee in the treasurer 1s
office.

from Page AI

Fnday. I l l CmHt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, hy the

At that price, you could even hook up your treehouse.

EMS units
log &amp; calls

RACINE - School will start
for Southern local School district students Monday with the
same take- up times as last year.
Students will be bringing .home
various papers about school policies and programs. Parents are
urged to Sign and return any necessary forms as quickly as possible.
Breakfast and lunch prices will
be the same as last year. Students
on free and reduced- pnce lunches last year will remain on the list
for a limited time to allow for the
processing of new applications.
All bus routes and dnvers are
the .ame as Jagt year.
Questions about school bus
pick-ups should be addressed to
Daniel Riffie at 949-2150.

through

Ohio Val ley Publi~hing Co mp&lt;~n y
class rostag~ paid a1 Po m crny, Oh1o

t~)J'

mllld .
" I rd i. t\l' d to L'\'L' Il l'IHt'rLun
th e mottnn ... M1iln ~ .11d . " [ tol d
lh cm I ,,.ot ddn'l kr thl' lll our.

~~

tl

Publi shed e ve ry

lllfor-

be fore n r to ch .1n gL'

~~

~

Foreclosures filed

Opening for
Southem Local

$3 event fee, a white T-shirt for
tie dying and a hanger, a water
bottle a nd a backpack . Girls
should mark their names on all
belongings.
Hot dogs will be served, but
those who do not like hot dogs
should bnng a sack lun ch . Drinks
will be provided.
Information is available from
Glena Smith at (800) 484-0265,
extension 0265, or Jerrena Ebersbach at 992-7747
Rain date is Sept. 9.

Bush tends to business off.campaign.trail

~·
~~·

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio \'ulley Publishing Co.

1·800·900-0400 or an authorized dealer in ~our area to

:y rdt'Ht'

~~

t

POMEROY - The Eastern,
Southern and Meigs Local school
districts have announced their
poli cy for free and reduced
lunches for the 2000-2001 sc hool
year.
POMEROY - A civil action
For children unable to pay the for judgment has been filed in
full price of meals served under Meigs County Common Pleas
the National School lunch and Court by MHFC, Inc., Loveland,
School Breakfast program, the against Keith Myers, long Botdistncts have addopted the fol- tom, seeking judgment in the
lowing income eligibility scale for amount of$26,3 16.18.
free or reduced-price lunches:
An action for foreclosure filed
For a household with one by. Broadview Mortgage Co.,
member, the income limit for free against John W. LeMaster, and
lunches is $10,855, and for others, has been gnnted.
reduced-price lunches, $1 5,448;
for two, $14,625 and 20,813; for
three, 18 ,395 and 26,178; for
four, 22.165 and 31,543; for five,
25,935 and 36,908; for six, 29,705
POMEROY - Units of the
and 42,273; for seven, 33,475 and
Emergency
Services
47,638; and for eight, 37,245 and Meigs
LEON, WVa. - Aaron Matthew Devault, 22, Leon, W.Va., died 53,003. For each additional faini- answered six calls for assistance on
Monday, Aug. 21, 2000, in Middleport.
ly members, add $3,770 for free Tuesday. Units responded as folH e was the son of the late Blaine and Phyllis Devault and was a lunch eligibility and 5,365 for lows:
m ember of Pleasant Valley Community Church in Flatrock.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
reduced- lunch eligibility.
H e was preceded in death by both parents.
3:49
a.m., Lmcoln Street, J.D.
Application . fqrms will be disHe is survived by three sisters and two brothers-in-law, Bonie tributed in letters to parents by Cross, Holzer Medical Center;
M cCa rty of Mason, Dorthy and Harold Taylor, Karen and Bill Rollins, the school districts, and addition12:36 p.m., Holzer Medical
all of leon; two brothers, Henry Devault and Eric Devault, both of
Center
Clinic, Carolyn Walker,
al copies are available from the
Leon; and several nieces and nephews.
HMC;
principal's office in each school.
Funeral services wiU be Thursday at 11 a.m. at Deal Funeral Home
9:03 p.m., Memorial Drive,
in Pomt Pleasant. Officiating will be Rev. Verlm "Sampy" Hart.
Paul Steimete, HMC;
Burial will follow at Baden Cemetery in Leon.
11:40 p.m., Laurel ClifT, Rich
Friends may visit on Wednesday from &amp;-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Jones, HMC.
RUTLAND
POMEROY Actions for
9:26 p.m., Zuspan Hollow,
dissolution of marriage have been Bobbie Searles, HMC.
flied in Meigs County Common
TUPPERS PLAINS
Pleas Court by Harlen Ray
7:17 p.m., State Route 186,
Brown, Portland, and Donna Jane assisted by Reedsville, Abigail
Brown, Pomeroy; Gwenna Grady. Cawthurn, St. Joseph's Memorial
and Paul J. Grady, both of Hospital.
AKRON (AP) -Thomas Lav- be applied to her body to ward off
'
cry's five children had a knack for any bruises from a beating. Anothwinmng spelling bees and other er time, when a daughter failed to
competitions. llut prose c uLor~ say meet Lavery's expectations, a soda
those successes ca1ne at a price can was smashed against her head.
lavery is accused of abusing his prosecutors said.
children when they failed.
"I don't want to tell people how
D et.1ils of the allegations were to mse their kids. There's aU kinds
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)
Hurricane Debby permitreleased '1\icsday when a Sununit of philosophies and I don't want to
Republican
presidential
canditing.
County grand jury mdicted lavery interfere, but there comes a time
Democratic presidential rival
on one misdemeanor and eight when a parent crosses the line and date George W Bush wants to
better
defend
his
proposed
S1.3
AI
Gore and running mare Joe
felony counts of endangering chi!- Mr. Lavery crossed that line;' ProsLieberman
have attacked Bush's
trillion tax cut from Democratic
dren. Lavery, So, is free on $2,500 ecutor Michael Call.ahan said.
bond pending his arraignment FriLavery's attorney, Peter Cahoon, attacks . But even some Republi- plan almost daily since the end
day.
declined comment, .aying he cans remain lukewarm to the of the Democratic convention
Prosecutors allege lavery threat- wanted to meet with Lavery and prospect of emphasizing such a last week. For instance, Gore
huge break.
told a veterans' convention in
ened in 1995 to kill one of his review the allegations.
"I
think
there's
some
appetite
Milwaukee on Tuesday that
The Lavery children began gardaughters, now age 18, when she
for
it,"
Rep.
Ray
LaHood,
RBush's plan "would wreck our
finished second- in the national- nering local attention· in the early
Ill.,
told
reporters
Tuesday
after
good
economy."
spelling bee.
1990s with their successes at
introducing Bush at a campaign
Some recent national polls
His 14-year-old daughter is spelling bees.
event
in
Peoria,
Ill.
"But
I
think
have
suggested that a growing
receiving post-traumatic stress
A son advanced to the 1993
counseling and has been placed in National Spelling Bee in Washing- he should also be talking about number of ,O.mericans think
a foster home. Lavery allegedly ton, D.C. His now 21-year-old sis- (being) able to pay down the Gore could better deal with the
U .S. economy than Bush.
refused to let her eat, sleep or use ter also d1d well m a local bee that debt."
Bush's plan would cut taxes for
Bush
said
he
is
trying
to
"do
a
the bathroom when she finished year bur not well enough to
better
job"
of
explaining
the
everyone
by $1.3 trillion over 10
second in a local spelling bee earli- advance to regional competition.
er tlli s year, accordmg to court
Another son finished fifth in a plan, the ce nterpiece of which is years.
Gore has proposed a $500 bildocuments.
1997 regional spelling bee compe- a tax cut for everyone, even the
ln another incident, Lavery is titian and will compete next wealthiest individuals. Then, lion reduction over the same
accused of forcing one of his month in a world lego building "people will "buy into the tax period, targeted mostly at the
relief plan even more," the Texas middle class.
daughters to disrobe so ice could contest.
governor said.
Bush aides spent much of
Tuesday
defending his plan, sayBut first, Bush was spending
Wednesday in Austin before mg the cut was only a small part
leaving for a two-day trip of the estimated total $4.6 trilThe Daily Sentinel
through louisiana and Florida lion surplus over the same 10-

Grand jury indicts father accused
of pressuring children for success

~.

Old discarded appliances ... Water Tonks... ~~
Any metal materlai...Bicycles... Furnaces ... Etc. ~~

Langsville; Mary Kathryn Werry
Williamson, Pomeroy, and Robert
Lee,Williamson, Pomeroy.
A divorce case filed by Robin
A. Rodehaver against Douglas W
Rodehaver has been diSmissed.

Dissolutions
processed

...T..T...T.T-T.T.T..T..T..U.T.T.l'..T.T..T..T..T...t t..T..T..T..T.l'...T..T..T..T...n . T
. ..T..T..T...T..T..T'..T'.';'.T'.';'•.';".f.";'...';"...l!J

~~ SPECIAL APPLIANCE RECYCLE DAY

Lunch polides
announced

Aaron Matthew Devault

md ~.·) ~nu th\\'L'\(

t)pJlt)[ll'llT'.

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

RACINE - Charles Clifford "Ooley" Beegle, 89, Racme, died
Tu esday, Aug. 22, 2000, at his residence.
He was the son of the late Charles and Mae Weaver Beegle and was
a retired stationary engineer from the Columbia Energy Group.
Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, C harles
Beegle; a grandson, Ryan Beegle; three brothers, Roy Beegle, Harry
Beegle, Edward Beegle; and four Sisters, Lucy Beegle, Pauline Beegle,
Frankie M cKelvey and Firn Gaul.
He is survived by his wife, Mattie Powell Beegle; a daughter, Judy
(Ernie) Bing of R acme; three sons, Robert E. Oane) Beegle, Ronald
(Lea nna) Beegle, Roger (Marv~ene) Beegle, all of Rac ine; a sister, Betty
Carpenter of Racine; a brother, Paul (Eileen) Beegle of Letart Falls; 10
grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Fnday at Cremeens Funeral Home in
Racine. Officiating will be the Rev. Dewayne Stutler.
Burial will follow in the letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call Thursday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Holzer Hospice of
Meigs County, 115 East Memorial Drive. Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9.

k.I St

R L'llO\'.l tl O il

5

Charles Clifford Beegle

Blood bank seeks to Church members ask
increase donations for priesfs resignation
from present d~nors

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•:!Itt. 1104

Clrculallon ...... u....... ,.... ,................. i:u . IIOJ
C lassified AdJ •. ,... ..... ...... ...... ... ... .... Ext , I 100 .

VALLEY WEATHER

c:

House
from PageA1
which was originJlly purt ha~ed
from a caLdogue , and brou ght to
the sitt: in st::veral piL'ccs near dw
turn of thL· b st Ct..'llt\lr y.
She sa1d she· pb1" to opt' n the·
bti s ines~ o ne d.1y a \"ll't·k. for
starters. on ce the n.-novation pro jed is co mpkted .

ing partly cloudy. Lows 111 the
60s.
Thursday.. . Partly to mostly
sunny. Highs in the lower 80s .
Extended forecast
Thursday night ... Mostly clear.
Lows from the mid 50s to lower
60s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs
from the nud 70s to lower 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
agam from the mid 50s to lower
60s. Highs from the upper 70s to
nlid 80s.
Sunday... Partly
cloud y.
A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows from the mid 50s to
lower 60s. Highs from th e upper
70s to nud 80s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP - 35 ~..

Gannett - 56'·

Akzo - 43 ),
AmTech/SBC - 40

General Electnc -

Ashland Inc . -

Kmart

35 ~

AT&amp;T - 31 ,,.
Bank One - 34 '1,.
Bob Evans - 1 71,,.
BorgWarner - 36),
Champion - 2',!,.
Charming Shops - 5~'11
City Holding - B'r,

HaMey Davidson - 7 ~.

Rocky Boots - 5~
AD Shell - 62

Sears- 31 ' ·

Shoney's -· ~..

Kroger- 23\
Lands End - 27l.

Wai-Mart - 491.
Wendy's - 1gl,

Ltd. - 20l.
Oak Hill Financ;w- 15''•

Worthington -

OVB - 26'1
BBT - 26 ~• .

Daily

Peoples -

141.

Federal Mogul - 11 ~· ..

Premier - S ~e

Firstar -

Rockwell - 39\

24' 011

56'/w
47\

10'·

stock reports

are the

4 p.m. clos1ng quotes of
the previous day's trans·
actions.
provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis.

1~'1'1'1 ~ I

7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15

Cold front moves southward
The National Weather Service
says a cold front Will reach the
Ohio River by tonight. Showers
and
thunderstorms
through
Thursday will concentrate along
the front . H1gh pressure will
move 111 behmd the front , bringmg less humid conditions and
near normal ten1peratures.
lows over'night will be in the
60s, with hi ghs Thursday from the
upper 70s to the low 80s.
Forecast
Today... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunde rstorms. Highs 111 the nlid 80s.
Tonight ... A chance
showers
and t hunderstorm~ then becom-

7

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
'1Lr J.lUtJH
446-4524 l~O~Jf,CK ~ ONPIKf
FRt 8/1B/00 • THURS 8124/00
BOX OFFICE WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM fOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM fOR MATINEES

SPACE COWBOYS

(PG13)

7.00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3 :30

THE CELL (A)

1·00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

•••••••••••••
-COUPON
REE HEARING TE
will be given in Me1gs/Gallia Count1es by

.~· HEAR.ING AID GENTER •

•
Friday, August 25, 2000
•
••
••
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
•
•
•
•
9:00 am • Noon
•
• Call Toll Free 1-800-634-5265 for an Immediate •
••
appointment.
••
The
tests
will
be
given
by
a
Licensed
Hearing
Aid
•
••
•
Specialist
• have a FREE hearing test to see if thcs problem can be helped. Bring th1s •
•

Anyone who has trouble heanng or understanding conversation IS Invited to •

• coupon w1th you tor your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value .

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

�•

r_h_e_n_ai..::..Iy_se_n_tin_e__
I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _0...;;;;;;.

P-Inion .

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesd•y.Aucustl3.lOOO

St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hqefllch
General Manager

J!Jore than (, years old. T hese boys had
b l'l' ll left co mpletely :!lone 111 the car, in
.1 busv parkin g lot of a large sh oppmg
Ll' lltt.·r. The windows of the C":t r wen.·
down, .1nd the doors \'I.'U re unlocked.
.Th,· boys kept getting in and out of
tla.· ca r, .m d ~.: oul d c.:.·a~i l y have bee n hit by
.JB~Hh L• r \'L' hi clc. Moreover, any predato r

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ult•rs ro ''" 1ditor tu'f weko'"*· Tirey Jlw• ld f)C. leu t lr.tm JOO wonb. AU leUen IllY sl4bj«l
10 e4ililtg a ltd M MSf bf lil'" d arul includ• IIIIJnn and u/,pJeun~ "'""Hr. No u11s;,ntd ktt•rs wili
IH publishtd. UntN sllowld bt in rood 14Srt, oddrwuinl issuu, not ~no~s.
, ,
Tilt .opinions upnsud in tilt C'olumn below an lht consensus of tllr Oh1o Valh J P11blu lun1
Co.'s tdilorl41/Hxud, IHtku QllltNilt rroltd.
r

~.lJ.tl t! have cuntL· bv and snatchl!d theln
\\" ithour .1n y diffi ~· ul rv wh :HSOl'\"l'r. I
lJLiJddy \\TlHL' .111 an o nYmnus note m c nllulllll~ the ..,i..· pn llHS. :1 11d :1 ~ kcd the bl))'S if

l

NATIONAL VIEWS

I c,n dd put It on tht.• front St'H.TilL'y s:1id.
' I ) .,d,h \\'ill be hack n ~,;l n .nny."
. Nnw. I .1111 ki ck111 g 111\')clr for nor

·Skillful

BY THE ASSOC IATED PR ESS

Today is Wed nesday, Aug. 23, the 236th day of 2000. There are 130
days left in the year.
Today's Highl ight in H isto ry:
On Aug. 23. 1927. Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzett1 were executed in Boston for t he m urders of two
men during a I '12fl robbery. Sacco and Vanzem were vindicated in
1977 by Massac husetts Gov. Michael S. Dukakis .
On this date
In 17'\4, France 's King Lo uis XV I was born at Versailles.
In I H~H. one of the fi rst colleges for wome n, M o u nt H o lyoke
Female Seminary in South Hadley, Mass. , g rad uated its first students.
In 19 14, Japan declared war on Germany in World War I.
In I 426. silent tllm star Rudolph Valentino died in New York at
age 31.
In I 'J.W. Nazi Germany and th e Soviet Unio n signed a nonaggrc-;~Ju n t reaty.
In 1944, R o man ian Pnme Minister ion Antonescu was di snnssed
by Kin g Mi cha el. paving the way for Romania to abandon the Axis
jl}J:wor of th e Alli es.
I ~ I'!!',(), Broadway librettist Oscar Hammerstein II di ed in
Doylt-stow n , Pa.
In IY72, the R epubli can Natio nal Convention. me eting in Miami
Beac h , Fla ., n o mi nated Vi ce President Spiro T. Agn ew for a second
term .
In 1979. So v iet dancer Ale xander c;odunov defected while the
Uo lsh01 l:l all et was on tour in New York.
In I YH2. Lebano n's parhamem el ected C hri&gt;t ian m ihua leader

Bash ir (;e nuyd p rt"~ident. H owt'vcr. Gc mayd was assass inat~ d some
three week s later.
Tl' n year~ ago: ln1 qi -;rate td cv i ~ion showed Presiden t Saddam
Hussein mcetlJlg Wit h a gro up of about 20 Western detamees, telling
the gro up whom he de&gt;cribed as "guests" - that th ey were
bein~ hr.: ld .. t o prevt:nt the: Kourge of war."
Frvl' years .1go: Du ri ng a mrm ori al service at Fort Mya.Va., PresId e nt C lin ton eu logized three U. S. diplomats kill ed in a road acci dent nl'ar Sarajevo, Bm nia - H t.•rzegovina , and vowed to ca rry on the
mugglt· for peace ' " th e llalkans . "Life " magazine photographer
Alfred E1wmt.1edt died on Marth a's Vineyard at age % .
One· ye·.1r r1go: Th e Dow Jones industrial average soar,d 199.15 to
a new rc·cord of I 1.2JJ~.H4. Fifty yea rs after th e German gove rnm ent
moved to the cap ital of Bonn , lkrlin recla11 ned irs rule a" &lt;1 cen ter of
power m Ccrmany with th e .m iva l of Chance llor Gerhard Sc hroed-

er.
Today\ UJTt hdaY" Movie ehrcctor R obert Mullib"'n i' 75. Artre\S
Vera Miles" 711. l'o liuul "'tiri't M .~rk Ru "ell i1 (,H .

remi nd JIJ of your rt.·adns thJt no mattt'r
how in convenic:nt or difficult it IS to
shop with you ng chi ldren , on(' shou ld
NEVER. leave thl.'lill'n :1 c u unattcndt.-Lt
It t.lk.L·s JUSt one mom e nt for a tra g t.•dy ro
occur, .md I'm surt." " D .1ddy" would
llt.'\'L'r forg1vc him sdf. -- Con ct: n l t.'d ParL'Il t in Yorb:1 Lllld.l , \.a li f.
D ea r Yorba Linda: Yo u h.wc written
.1 le tt er d u t ~ l undd !;l"[ t h L· aUL'Ilt ion of
n ·ny p .t ro..·nr \\"ho rL·.Jds thio; c ~)lu nu 1 . You r

Teeth is very nice to have.
They fills you with content.
And if you doesn't know it now,
You will when they have went .
Bryan in Warren , R .I.
Dear Bryan: Your English teac her
will not be pleased with you r "contribution," bu t yo ur denti st w ill love it.Thanks
a bu nch .
Forget ro save so me of yo ur f.1voritc..'
A nn Landers col umn s? "N ugge ts and
Doozi es" is the answer. Send J self-

addressed, long, bustn t.·., ~- s izL' envt· lupc
and a check or m o n~ v ord er fo r· S5 .25
(this incluJc1 postage .md l1.1ndiin g ) to :
Nu ggl'tS, c / o Ann L1 JH.IL· r..,, J'.(). B o:-i
I I i (&gt;2. C hi c.1go . Il l r,or, 11 - llii·~ - (In
Canada, St' IH.I $(J.2) .) Tl, tind ollt mnrL'
abom Ann Lmd cr~ .1mi rt.•ad hcr p .l ~ !
t.:o lum n..,, visir rh c ( : r c.J tor~ Syn dJ L. Hl'
\Vl"b

p:1gc

,It \V\\'\\". LTL'MUI'~ .l &lt;l111

PERKINS ' VIEW

s

TODAY IN HISTORY

t h~._, p~1 h et.·. P k . l ~l'

to

ADVICE

and It is also h urting her personally. M en
get the idea she is "easy," if you catch my
d rift.
Samantha has so much go ing for her, I
hate to see her coming off like th is . H er
self-esteem is extremely fragile, an d I
know she doesn't like her body. I don 't
understand w hy she can 't see her self the
way others do. Is there anything I can say
that will h elp without h u rting her? -Prudent in Pennsylvania
Dear Prudy: Probably not, so I suggest that you clip this colum n an d tell her
you wrote the letter. If you cannot bring
you rself to con front her d irectly, mail the
colum n to her anonymous]y. It is a long
shot , and may not work , but it's wor th
taki ng a chan Ce. She needs to see it.
Dea r Ann Landers: I fo un d tim " ' a
1056 edition of th e Fall River, Mass. ,
H era ld N ews I th o ught yo u mi gh t usc 1t
for )'OUT (; e m of the Day.

Reserve champion results for fair livestock sale

Clinton sfarewell reminds
us of his oratorical skills
• The New York Times, 011 Presidenr Climo11 valedictory: In an
emotional farewe ll to the party that he reshaped and led for eight
turbulent years and to th e political arena he will dea rly m iss, President C li nto n o tfered a passionate defense of h is record and a steadfast argume n t that VICe President AI Gore is ready to take over . ...
For fans of preside ntial oratory, the speech was a renunder of M r.
C linton's skills as an advocate w ho can borh speak fro m the h eart
and argue a case through a series of logical points. The Democrats'
enth usiastic reception was testimony to their mixed feeh ngs - an
eagern ess to move beyond Mr. Clinton and his o utsized perso nal
problems as well as genuine gratit ude for his success in moderniz-·
ing their pa rty.
·Mr. Cli nto n 's valedicto ry appearance , o n the fi rst day of the conv~nti on . was atmed at letting the p resi dent make a best-case an ;un;elll for his stewardship, before the party turns to the hard work of
pushing M r. Gore and his ru nn ing ma te, Senator Joseph Lieberman ;
ac ross th e fi nish line ....
T here w ill always be the sad ness th at the C linto n record wi ll foreye r be blotted because his leadersh ip g ifts were offset by a sdfd~str u c ti ve streak at the center of his personality. For all that, Mr.
C linton w ill go into party history as the o nly poli tician of his
decade with a personal m agnetiSm and commun icative skills to
m atch those of (forme r President R o nald) R eagan and M r. C lin to n's own boy hood idol. Jo h n F. Kennedy.
• Herald-Journal, Spartanburg, S .C., ot1 tl1e U.S. Postal Service
cl ~argin"~for e-mail: T he U nited States J ustice Department claims that
M icrosoft has used the power of its m o nopoly o n pers onal computer operating system s to crush its software competi to rs ....
Those J ustice Departm ent _lawyers sho uld now turn th eir atte ntio n to th e U.S. Postal Ser vice.T his entity, w hich is 'part business an d
p:m govern me nt agency, h as an offic ial governm ent-sa nction ed
mo no po ly o n firs t- class mail. No ot her com pan y is allowed by law
to co mpete with the Postal Service in deli ve ri ng first-class mail. ...
So they are getting into the e-mail and electron ic bill paying bu siness. T h ey wa nt to captu re this m arket and snuff o ut their comp etition .. ..
H ow will t he Postal Servi ce fund these new businesses' By m ilking m ail c u stomers - the same way that it su bsidizes jun k mail by
hiking first-class postal rates ....
T he Postal Servtce shou ld se rve private co mpanies, not put th elil
out of business.

till ~

rq ,1l ! !"! ll b

message is a vital one . f. ve ry parent w ho
sees this should ask him- or herself,
"Co uld the 'Yrit er~e talkmg to me'" If
th e answer is yes, fo r heaven's sake, vow
never aga m to le.1ve your chi ld ren unattended in a car. Rem ember, t hey are your
most prenous possessiO ns..
Dear Ann L a nders: I have a dear
fr iend w ho is h igh ly in tellige nt , warmhea rted and has :1 g reat ma ny fin e qualiucs. "Samantha " used to be a size 5, but is
now ,, size 14 . The problem is she still
squeL·zes her ample body into size 8
dresses and sbcks, and she looks li ke a
s:lll sigc pusblng· out of irs casing .
I have rrie•d to ta lk ro he r about th is in
.1 tactfu l \\";l y, bu t ~ h t: says in h er head she
. wdl llC\'l.' r bt.• largt.·r tlun J size 8. and that
it gJ \ 'o..'S he r pt.' ,lCt.' of m ind to think this
\\".1 )' H er :l.PPL',1 1".11l Ct.' IS hu rti ng her profi.·ss iona ll y (' he\ rhe ta lk of t he o ffi ce
h l'l.IW. l' t'\'l'l"yrlu ll g ~hl' WC.I I"S IS SO tig ht).

Ann
Landers

Lo mine we rt.' two sweet littl e boys, no

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

VVednesday. Aug. 11. 1000-

Dear Ann Lande r s: I saw somethmg
\"t.'~tc rd .1y that disrurbcd me enough to
\\"rJtc to you and warn you r readers.
I \\':tli rl.' tu rni flg to my ca r afte r buying
g rnccr it.'S. In thL· ba r k seat of the ca r next

740.992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Pag.e AS ·

The Daily Sentinel

Reader warns patents to not leave children unattended in. the car

Passing the Baton :

'E..ItUOsnd bJ J.9.48
111 Court

PageA4

Why Bush is a djfferent kind of Republican
M arie Cocco has com e out of the closet . O n
national T V, no le". In a post- Philadelphia, preLos Angeles appearance on th e Cable N ews
Network gabfest, " R eli able Sources," the N ew
Yo rk Newsday colu mnist all but acknowle dged
that she hates Republicans.
And that she hates black Republicans even
mo re.
Cocco related that, " I d1dn't speak to a single
black j o urnalist who was there (in Philadelphia)
who really approved o r was persuaded by the
sort o f mi nstrel show, frankly, that they tho ught
was going o n at the convention."
Well, w hich black jo urnalists exactly did she
speak to? She sure d1d n 't exc hange words with
me.
And to who m exactly was Cocco referr in g as

''1runstrels"?
Colin PoweiP Condo leezza Rice?
Gen . Powell , former chair m an of the Joi nt
C hiefs of Staff, happens t.o be o ne of the m ost
revered fi gures in thi s coun try, black, w hite, yellow or brown. Rice is m erely on e of th e
natio n 's best and bnghtest fo reig n policy
exper ts - of any hue.
To suggest , as Cocco has, that Powell and
Rice and the other black speakers featured at
the GO P co nvention in Philadelphia are " minstrels" simply because they choose to associate
with Republicans is nothing short of racist.
For impli cit in Cocco's remark is th e bigoted
suggesti o n that all 3'\ mill ion o r so black folks
in this co ulllry o ught to think alike; ought to b e
members of the same political party.
But th e black pop ul atio n is not mo no lithic.
There are some black Amer icans - like Powell, like Rice - w ho appreciate their heritage,
w ho love their people, but w ho happen to
believe there is a place fo r blacks in the party of
George W Bush.
And while the vast maj or ity of black registt•red voters are almost certai n to cast their ballots for th e Dem ocratic ncket com e November,
Bush bas nonethdess made somt' inroads.
Indeed , in a post-Philadelphia C NN / USA

Joseph
Perkins
NEA COLUMNIST

they_ don't, parents sho uld get the money to
make a different cho ice."
On tax policy:"Those in g reatest need should
receive th e g reatest help," said Bush, "So we will
lower the bottom rate from 15 percent to 10
perce nt and double the child tax credit.
On health care: "We w ill give low-income
Ameri~ans tax credits to buy the private health
ins uran ce they ll t't'd :md deserve."
And o n ho usmt;: " We w ill transform today's
ho u,int( re ntal pmgram to help hundreds of
tho usands o f low-inco nte fa milies fi ne.! stability

and dignity in a homt' of their owtl."
Today/ Gallup PoU w hich C occo tou nd
quite disturbing. no do ubt - 52 percent of
blacks s:t.id B ush had leadershi p and personal
qualities to b e president; 54 percent sai d th ey
approve of Bush as a person; 37 percent said
Bush , if el ected , would work hard to rep resent
bl ack interest,.
C learly, Bush is perceived di ffere ntly :unong
the m ass of black America ns th an Repubhcm
presidential nominees past (includin g the Texas
giivernor's fathei}
' ·
'
T hat is attributabl e, in part, to Bush's etlt lft to
reach o ut to the blac k communiry. as evidenced
by his rece nt appearanct• at th e NAAC P\
national conventi on (at which he bec am e first
Republican presidential nominee to addre&lt;s the
nation 's leading civil rights organization in 16
years).
It is also attributable to the GO P st,mdardbearer's message of incl usion, as eloquently set
fo rth in his acceptance spe'L'ch in Philadclp hi.t.
"We will extend the promise of pr01perity to
every forgotten corn er of th is coumry." said
Bush . " To every man and woman. a chance to
succeed. To every child, a chance to learn. To
every family, a chance to live with dignity and
hope."
And w hat would a B ush presidency mean fo r
blacks, particularly the most needful?
O n education: "When a sclmo l distric t
receives federal fu nds· to teach poor childre n,"
he declared, " we expect them to learn . And if

C learly. Bush is, as he characterizes h imself, "a
ditfere m kind of R epublicm." And he JUSt m ay
be the man to bring blacks back in to tht· G rand
Old Party, after a half-ce ntury-long estra ngenlcnt.
T hat's not to s:ly th at the Texas hrtwernor has
blac k voters r ushing into the Repub li can fold.
llut :I t least he doesn 't haw a tearful black electorate m obilizing to prevent him fro m winning
th e White H o use.
~~ ---1\:nd "t hat is wltar Ius CmTu :md mher
Dem ocratic Party loya li sts so concerned. T hey
ti·et that black vo ters. the most reliably D em ocratic voting bloc, may start to defect to the party
of ll ush .
So they insin uate that any black who aban-

dons the Democratic plantation is a traitor to
his or her ran·: must bl' so m e..· sort of m mstrel.
·
!rankly.
W hat particularly r.mk le' is the hypocrisy of
Cocco and h er ilk . H ow swift th ey were, for
instance, to condemn the IHtcfu l remarks that
the ousted presid ent of the NAAC P's Dallas
chapter made about J os~ph Lieberman, m erely
because of his religious f.1 ith . Yet, these supposedly enli ghte ned fo lks think noth ing whatsoever about uttering no less hateful re marks about
blarks li ke Colin Powell and Condokczza
Rice, mere ly bccaust· th ey happen to be
R ep ublicans.
(/chl'flll Paki11s ;_., cJ (cllflnmi.~ r J1r '11Jc S1111 Dit;i!o
U llicl/1 - Ti-ilnme.)

RESERVE STEER - Home Natio nal Bank, represented by Tom Wo lfe
and Noah Hoback , p urc hased the reser ve cha mpio n marke t ste e r
from David Rankin . Also pictured are Fair ~ueen Tara Rose and Beef
Princess Amanda Windon . (Tony M. Le ac h photo )

•••

WED N ES DAY, August

23
C/\1 I I J'() I JS - Conllllu cl Jty l)l ,l h o..· tll" F .11r ~ pon \o rcd

\J,, ,j,

h •:

/\ ~ o..'lll \"

\X'L"dllL'~lLl\'. ,It dll'
~

'l

I see th ose young guys on TV, skateboardin g dow n free ways or jumping ofl· office
bui ld ings with not hing to saw them bu t speu al sports su nglasses and shoes th at cost m ore
tlu n my ca r. Watching these 1dmts risk their
lives can make us higher- mi leage guys fe el a
li ttle stodgy. especia ll y if you have to rest
twin• ju&lt;t wa lking up your driveway.
Wel l, don 't yo u beli eve it. T h ese you ngsters
Jon 't have lulf the gu t1 you and I do. So they
nsk th e ir live" tOr a few seconds o f cheap
thrill s. At o ur ::tge we're ronstantly risking o ur
lives every tune W&lt;' lift a shove l full of wet
snow ur c..·at a baron sandwi ch or go to bed
before we're tln·d . How can bungc:c:-jumping
ofl' a bridgl· ..: on 1pare to th e risk you run
every tim e yo u d oze otT on the couch with
teen - age r\ in the house unsupervised ?
Tl1111k abo ut how you deliberately put
yourself in har111 's way every tim e yo u truth fu lly answer o ne o f your w ife's "too'' questions ... " Am I too old'"" Am I too fat'" " Is
thi s dress too tl ght ?"
Now that ta kc:s guts ... not mu ch glory... b ut
at le ast yo u don 't need specia l sunglasses to do
it '
Shop of h orrors
Any g uy who'..; ever w;~. it c d in the car whik
hi1 wi fe runs into' the 1tore for ,som e small
ite111 k nows just ho\-v Jiffert'nt men and
wo m en are ;~t shopp ing. Mt· n are great plan-

ners . A guy k n ows, before he goes into a sto re,
exactly w hat h e wants and where he ca n fi nd
it. T he last th ing he wants is t o get bogged
down in son1e embarrassing corner of the
store wh ere they sell undeTwear or curtain s.
T he important thing for the sh op ping guy
is to look cool. like shoppin g cames hi m no
~ tress at all . Not necessa rily so with you r signifi cant other.
She may go to the sto re with ah&lt;o lutely no
idea w hat she wants. Sh e may he luppy to
read the en[lre lab,·l o n six dJflercnt brands of
tooth paste, listen to tht· gastrointestinal history of the sales pcr"on 's. do~. or try on cvL· ry
size-e ight sh m• o n th e ra ck.
Centur ies from now, archaco lngi"'t' will find
th e mummified rt·mains of o;o mc guy 111 hi s
car, sti ll waiting at the curb wink· h 1s wJfl· ran
into the &lt;;tore for "just .1 lllinutl·."
W hen you 're out of it

I know

\VC

do n't wa nt to be vict ims of

man ip ulatio n o r ;my o f rhar stutr. but it 's
always good to k now whl' ll we've.: 'i )n umt·d
fad and f.11 hion to th e point whe·rc· it's 1t1rting
to hurt ou r im age. Here arc a tCw Signs that
it 's time to ge t h:Kk on rra.c k: .

• You go to a ga rage .,all.' .1nd 'i t.'C .1 j,Jckct
that matches tht~ p:tnt'i yo u're wcari11g.
• You go to a ba,rbc.:·r instc..-ad of a hai r styil.\t,
• You go to a karaoke bar that has a 111,0011song selection hur nonl.' of the o n ~.c·o; you wa nt .

• When you tell a sln glt' wom ,1n thar you're

hL·duJc·d

\ ·, Jrl.llll~

llJJ

tnp t c~ .

iltL' I',ltlll"L'

l ~L'

Spo n ~orl.'d

b\" rh L'
r hur c h and the Powt·r 111 t h l·
B lood 11llll 1Stry. No r h.H gc
Col1Cl"~S I OI1 s ta n d Lll o pL' Lltiun . T ak e lawn chJII"S. Mo r L'
11lform.1t i nn c dl Dr . J.1mc~
111 .

A c r L' t', 9 )2-(17GH
1

,j\', ii\ -

• ••

Rlltl .ll id
4 0th
1' 111 1\ ·{ ·r,.tr\·
liPl'll
lliL' L'tJ il g.
\\ l·t ltll' "tl.l\'. 7: .) ~) p. m .. tt th L·

II

I I ANI)

JCI ILii\"

-

c;,ll"dl'llt'l"S.

\ '1 I!.1~L'

1.t!

hJThO LJ ~ ('.

[ ,rL'~L' Il t.llJn n ~.
.111d

I{ ~c'

ll l'\ ll!l)t.'lll'l

\,· 1

, - ~· , !

~c ln o r

l' .t~\

tllt " lllb o..' l ~
l'

Pom L· roy, C\'l' l'Y ni g ht H 7:J(I

hl L·

,llld

\\ til
.111d

ft

prn-

pn z o..·~ .

l) L'

pro. c11t

ll'l ld ...

11 )\'Jt-

'!
l'll ,\ 1l. I(&lt;JY

marr ied. she looks visibl y rdi,·vcd .
• When hitc hhikers sec vour ca r. they
declin e.
'
• You see your liigh sc hool yea rbook pi cture, a·nd you 're wea rin g: th e salllt' glasses and
hairstyle and tie and exprl.'ssion.
• Everyone fe&lt;."ls c;o r r y fo r your w1fC .
W ith fr ie nd s like these .. .
Every o nce in :1 w hile :1 triend will "'t up a
m eet ing bl.'t\Vl'l'll you and a str;mgl'"r where
neithe r of you knows what the other looks
like - mayhl' :1 blind date..· or .t bminess meetin g or a :-.ll npk transfCr o f propn ty.
Regardit'S'i
th e mmiv:ttio n, yo ur fri t· nd
lm de'"Tib cd yon tll tim third party. This is a

' P L',lk

t\)

d J.1 bc n c

l"l lllt . l!l~l\l,ll

\p~c ' t

BY RED GREEN

I) ,l . Ill .

p rn . H L·,dth c.n L' pr ofo..'~­

~IO II. tl"'

,1

N.l z.lrl' llL'

' !J ll I l h \) ( (; ,d h p u II~'

111 )

d r a m a , "Noah a n d th e A rk".
n ig h tly th roug h Sa t ur d ay at
th e H il lsi de Ba pt i's t C h urch
.tmp h itheatn lo c ated off
Ro u t~ 7 on R o u t~.· 1-1 3 ll L'J r

ll olllL'
1-lc .tltlt ,
p
l llc to be hl'ld

;':l .t l lh

At a certain age, every day becomes a risk

T H U RSDAY, Au g u s t 24
POMEROY
M e'~'
Count\' Churchc ~ nf Chrtq
\Vullll'!l's Fe ll owship.

Thur ..,-

d .ty. 7 p.lll . Z. iun Ch11r c h o l.
c :h ri \ 1. Rtttl .l nd to h.l\"L'
dc\·o rion s:
P rogr.1m
on
. 1 nr1quc~
bv S:lhr.t .1\..,h
M t.• mbcr s ttl rakL' .l n tiqut.'"
for
di sp lay.
MIS s io n.t ry
l"t.'plH C 011 the (;Irt&lt;HH .

•••

Outdo o r

arc untc l' nough tn be sucn.·ssful.
It m_igh r hun , hu t it 's i nt~ Jr l1l ,ltJon you need.
It will ch:mge ltnw yo u feel ;tbout yo urself.
Aud how you feel about yo ur tri cnd .
Quote of th e lh y: " If I had my Iif,· to live
over. I'd li ve it over :1 bait ' hop." R ed
Grt."L'Il

(Red Crcc11 i.1 r/U' ''"'

4 "'/)"· Red

Crn·11

S!101P," a rclt·Pisi&lt;'" ~cr it·s srr11 i11 rhc US. tl11 PHS
11nd iu Cmwdc~ u 11 the C 1-J( ; Nrrll'ork, ~tud tlu·
mllhor '!/' " 7 he Urd Grem Bo&lt;•k " &lt;1111/ "Rt•d C rec 11
'Jitlks l.ars: A L'"' sr..,y"l

SATURDAY, August 26

FRIDAY, August 25
P OME R OY

p.m . .H

-

Fr1day.

(;~.· n~:r.l l

r,

H art1ng~r

l'ark. MiJdlcport, the L;r die s
th L· Lord will ho~ t L'\'l' llt
t"or t hildrt.'ll. FrL't.' ~c hoo l
supplic·s will be given fo lf~H

io\\' in g
qn g tn g.

,1

Sl.'I'\.ICL'

P ,H c nt s

J ll d

m u st

( I () ()

n~on, Roll t t' JJ roJ d sidL·
p.1rk, north. T IHHl.' at t t·ndi n g
:tre to t.t ke .1 c o\·e rt' d dish
.1long with ptnures :1 n d hi s-

7

M ID D L E P O RT - O hK an
Coi n C l ub. Mond.ty, 7 p . m .
o t T ro ll ey H ouse in Midd le p ort, bd1in d D airy Que e n .
To fL'.l t tl rl.' dt5pl ay of papl.'r
money. Auct ion ,u td refrc'ihn1 L'Ilt~.

•••

SUNDAY, August 26

Th e Community ' Calen dar i s publi s hed as a f re e

LE T ART. W.VA . - A n nu.d Weaver r e un1on. S u nday, l
p.m . at r h c hnnH' of Mar cus
:lnd Oora \~lc a,·c r . Leta rt , W
Va . Tak e co ,·crcd d iS h a n d
cluir .

• ••

•••

You need cable to get
complete in-depth coverage
of the sports you love.

fridaY. Aueust 25 5:00 P.m. till ???
SaturdaY, Aullust 26 5:00 P.m. til ???

THE COMPLETE OLYMPICS
Ray&amp;. Ruby Cook
Heartfe lt SlnQers
Columbus, Ohio

[f(;l!!tit(•Vl~iilfill:tftR•lll~l•k1
DON'T MISS IT!!!

20 Gospel Groups
WEMM live Remote Friday 4!00 CamPinl!
Availab le

ADMISSION
FREE!!!

State Route 160

Galli olis Ohio

~'-

CNBC

HBCOLYMPICS.COM
13

Ocl I

se r v i c e to non - profit
g roup s wish i ng to

announ c e me e ting s a nd

MORE LOCAL NEWS.MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe 10dar.
992 -2 156

s p e ci a l ev ent s. Th e ca l e ndar is nol d esi gn e d to
'

UNWANTED HAIR

GALLIA COUNTY GOSPEL SING

Soloist
Chillicothe, Ohio

promote s a le s or fund
raisers of an y t y pe .
Items ar e print e d onl y
as spa c e p e rmits a nd
ca nn ot b e g u a r antee d to
be p r i nt e d a sp ec ifi c
numb e r of cla ys.

tory for Lilsp l.!l'.

t h o..· i r

chil d I" L' I1 .
H o t dn gs .1nd bL'\"t.' l" ,lg t.''i \\"il l
hL· "L' I"\"L' d . All .lC t l \' i tiL' ~ \\"il l
be cnt n p lct e ~ci bc .t'nrc the
schoo l . . u ppii L'S .1rc g i\·cn
tHit . For JlltHL' i n fiH ill .lt lOil
cnn t.ll t Hett y John..,oll -t..J.I 1-t I~ or l.t n Swi gge r. 9 1)20a Ll" nmp ,l n\'

PO M EROY R e u n i on
of J esc e nd ;rms of J oel a n d
Lv d LI St.lli e:n t . Sat llr d;ry,

MONDAY, August 27

IOth Annual

or

great nppt u·tunity for yo u to find o ut how
th at ti·iend tru ly o;ee" you. UetOn: ym1 gL~t into
the business of the mee ting, nuke a pmnt of
asking th e ' tr..mg;cr how your fr ieiHJ dl.'"it rib ed
you and w hat p.1 rt of tlw dL'"cnptinn was

RfSERVE HOG - Jaymar purchased the re serve cha mpion hog, ·
shown at Friday night's Junior Fair Livestock· S ale by Eugene Patte r- .
son . Pictured are Fair Queen Tara Rose, Bernard FuiU , representi!'1g
the buyer, Fair King David Rankin , Swine Princess Kayla Gibbs and
Patterson. (Brian J . Reed photo)

-----C-OM~ITY ~CALENDAR

\{ lt t l.tlll[

RED GRE E N 'S VI E W

RESERVE LAMB- Chelse a Yo ung' s reser ve c ham pion market lamb
wa s so ld to Vaughan 's Superm a rket at Friday night' s Junior Fair Live·
stoc k Sales at the Meigs Co u nty Fair. Yo ung is pictured far right with
Wool P rince ss Meghan Hayne s , Fair Queen Tara Rose , Fair King David
Rankin , Chelsea Young and Ruby Vaughan of Vaughan's Supermarket.
(Tony M. Leach photo )

Sydney. Ausl10l•o

COM9.bArstaa~~:
,~~· ,~,
A WIRED WORLD COMPANY

Ca ll I -800-800-CABLE

Unwa nted or abno rmal ha ir g rowth is a disorder many women
are expe riencing toda y. The re are 2 types of hair: Vellus (light),
and Te rm1nal (da rk). Most Vellu s hai rs are soft and downy,
sometimes they become accelerated mea'ning they grow longer.
Termina l hairs are dark, coarse and deep·seated in the follicles of
your skin .
If you have a hair problem be very carefu l what you do to the
hair. Li ght hai r can be s ti mulated into dark hair by tweezing ,
wax ing or us ing hair removal creams on your body. Waxing is just
a faster way of tweezing . Even if you have dark hair and you
tweeze, wax or use creams you are in for a nightmare of hair and
skin proble ms . Tweezing or hair removal creams will irntate the
skin. The only defense the skin has IS to grow more deeper hair,
and may be more than you had before.
Stop and th ink about the removal cream It they are strong
e nough to take the hair off your face , what is it do1ng to your s kin?
Creams and tweezing also can. lea d to 1ngrown hairs thai get
infected and can scar the face or body.
It most ot the pe o_ple had the money lhey spent on devices ,
creams and waxes , they co uld have invested 11 1nto Electrolysis
Treatments. the only permanent ha1r re mover method .
.The dev1ces you buy from magazines or department stores, do
they slate they are STERILIZED (meaning germ free )? As an
ElectrologJst, 1 hope this information helps you with your hair
problem . As a compass1onate person , who ha abnormal hair and
growth from an abnormal deficienc y at age 14 . that led to a beard ,
mustache and sideburns on the face, I know how you fee l.
If you have unwanted hair, Electrolysis can help rid yourself at
the problem . Our equipment is the best lhat is available . Our
treatments are alm ost pa inless. If your treatme nt at th is off1ce
hurts. th en you can leave withoul paying . THE OLD TALE OF
ELECTROLYSIS , NO PAIN . NO GAIN . IS N'T TRUE . Our
Electrolysis technique and eQU ipment using Sterilized Instruments.
offers you lhe best treatment in Electrolysis today.
The only people that come t~ our office have hair problems. The
Electrologists on staff at Candy's Electrolysis have all experiences
their own battle at unwanted hair.

(304) 295-4533

Ucensod '" Marytoni
CANDY COX, ~. E ., C.P.E.
Comp lementary Confidential Consultation
Board Certified Professlo~el Elactrotoglst

CANDYS ELECT ROLYSIS

GEt THE COMPLETE OLYMPICS! GET

506 26th Street, VIenna, WV 26t05

CABLE!

f

-

-----

----'

�- ------

'

.,
J

; _P_a~g~e_A_s~·T~h~e~D~ai~ly~S~e~n~t-in~e_I______________________________________P~om~e~ro~y~·~M~id~d~le~p~o~rt~,~O~h~lo~--------------------------~W~e~d~n~e~sd~a~y~,_A_u~gu~s~t~2~3~,2~o~o~o

Inside:

'

Pete Rose reinstatement update, Page BJ
O rr the Fringe, Page B4
NFL Camp No tebook, Page B6

.''--.

..

ANNIVERSARY

SOCIETY NEWS
Sheila Thm and Su:rrett
Emeline
MORE LOCAL NEWS .
Park on '\ept. 7 .
OVAL to get
Sayre, Mattie Teafonl, Edith Hubbard,
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Rainer, Lillian Hayman,
new director
Sonshine Circle Blondena
Ruth Simpson, Edna Knopp, Gladys
Sub.1·a ibe todav.
W ELLSTON - T he p rocess
992-2156 ..
Mildred Hart, Mabel
elects officers Stem:tt,
of hiring a new directo r for th e
Ann Boso, E""Yn Foreman, Linda

The Daily Sentinel

Page 81

to

Wednesday, Aupst :Z3, :ZOOO

Br.~ce,

O hio Valley Area Libraries which
serves M eigs C ounty an d seven
o ther southeastern O h1o counues
was started when OVAL m et
recendy at the Wellston headquar-

RAC INE - Office,; for the p
" " "' nam ed w hen the Sonshine Grde met at the Dorcas C hurch recent-

ters.

a urem officers, lois Sterrett, president;

Stephen H edges, Nelsonvill e
Public Library and co-c ha1r of the
search contn tittee, reported to th e
Boa rd o n the progress m ade by
the search con; mi ttec m drafting
the director position ovt' rview
and adverrisen1cnt.
It was decided by the board to
proceed w tth advcrtismg the posi-

Mattie Teaford, vice pn'sulent; Kathryn
Hart, =t~ry; Melissa Smith, t=surer; Letha Proffitt, assistant treasurer;
Mary Cleek, corresponding sec=ry;
Edna Knopp and Mabel Brace, histo-

rio n. Ap p roval \Vas also g ive n to
affilia te n H.' mber co nrr.Kts fo r the
Sc1mo County Voc.ItH Jtl al Sc hoo l

Distnct. H ocking Coll ege .m d the
Hoc king Corn..'ttioual F.u..- dity.
Tht'TL' \V.IS J ll lli- Jq,th lh SU ISsio n of thl.'

L"UITL' Il[ by\.tWS

.llld the

OVAl: m fr.ts tructuw A bylaws
conumttet.· w,ts appo1 11tt: d and
willm n·t m:xt WL'L'k tu look ovl'r
Lawrence and Delores Wolfe

Wolfe 40th anniversary
RAC INE- Lawrence " L.my"
and Delores K raeuter Wolfe of
Racine w ill celebrate. their 40th
\Vedding annivers:1ry w ith an open
receptio n to be held on Su nday,
Aug. 27, at 4 p.m. at the R acine
United M ethodist C h urc h.
They were married o n Aug. 24,

1%0 at th,· Raci n e Ch urch .
Fr i~.:.· n ds :m d family are i n v i t~:d to

jom the co upk 's c hild ren and
gr.llldchildre n, Ke nt, Lesley, R yan,
and Kort Wolfe; and Laren , Wesley
and W hi tn ey R iffi e.
Th e couple req uests that gifts
be omitted .

Scouts recognized

proposed c hanges.

OVAL I S a cooper.ttivc re gional library system chartert·d by the
SL1te of O hio in 1973. Its mission
is to provide continuing educatio n, reso urce shanng and mnovative services to and fos ter cooperative effiJrts among librari es in the
so uthern O hi o coun ties of
Athens, Jackson , Lawrence, M e1gs,
Pike, R oss, Scio to and Vinto n .
Patricia H olter serves o n th e
OVAL Board and is a represen~l­
tive of M eigs Coumy District
Public Library.

Widows enjoy
breakfast
MIDDLEPORT - The Widow s Fellowship m et fo r a breakfast buffet at the G olden Coral in
Gallip olis recently. Nin eteen
members attended the breakfast
with Eileen Bowns w inmng the
door prize. N ext m eeting w 1ll be
a pi cnic po tluck at the C h eshire

ly.
Named for another )"'1!' ""'"' the

nans.
It

noted that the cookbooks
haw been R'Ceiwd and
for sale at
SIO each.They can be pun:ha.&lt;e tium
any member or by calling Ste""tt at
949-0032 or Hart at 949-1656.Secret
)lStt'P.i \~~ n.waled ;m d na.tnt-s \wrednwn for rllt' ne:x1: ~ar. The brroup
s\ltcd to h."IW a bake ~lie at the chun:h
llll S&lt;.·pt .30.
A thUlk ym 1 k'tter \\;ts read filllll
De W.')"'e Studer. pastor, t(&gt;r st:rvicL~
cltlt cl1e C ude has done fi&gt;r the chun:h
.md par&gt;&lt;mage. Otlicm reporo '"""'
giwn by Sterrett, Hart and l'mffitt. It
was nou:d that Ew lyn Fon:man \ v.I.S
at.., a hostl"SS at the picnic held at the
McKd""Y C unp in July
Hart read an article oded "lllinking ofYo u: 1&gt;'"-'11 to her by a friend,
Dorothy C hanc"y. The prog ram by
Sterrett opened with scriprure tium
Luke and articles "Between pampe"
\ v.IS

=

and
Depends"
" Fon:ver
Young." and Max Lucado\
Oeek reported that a sympathy
canl had been mailed to the David
Huddleston Famil)' Cards of encouragement ""resigned for Douglas Grcle,Wwna B:dlard, Mildred lhle, Gordon West, Daley Beegle, David
Grindstaff, Man:ha Swder, Ann Boso,
Vicki Boso, FJlen Arnott, Ethel Orr,
Anna Lee Tucker, Mildred Jla=ns,
Lizzie Woods, Libby WillfOrd, Pauline
W&gt;lfe, Magorie Salser, Don Hupp,
R &lt;&gt;g"r Manuel, Edison Brace, Betty
Jolmson, Donna Hill, Doris Wut, Mattie Teafurd, Blondena R.nner, Paul
Sayre, Mary Virginia Eastetday, and
R.1)'111ond Proffitt.
R efreshment&lt; were served by

Rt=D, Mary Cleek, Hazel McKeM.-y. Klthryn Hart, J,.etha Proffitt, and
Peggy Hill, Next meeting will be
Sept 14 at the church with all art'a
women invited

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

We Have
AU Your
Plumbing
Needs
• Pipe
• Fittings

DofA holds
memorial
C HESTER - The charter was
draped in me m o ry o f Zelda
Weber when C h ester Council
323 , Daughters of Ame rica, met
recendy at the hall .
Juhe C urtis presided at the
m eeung whiC h opened w ith the
pledge to th e C h m tia n ami

Ame;:-r ican · fla gs,

(h e

uati onal

anthe m, sc ripture from

Psalms
and gro up singing of th1.· n:1tion;1l
anthe m . O ffi cers' re po rts

Wt' n .·

b'IVCn .
R eported
ill
we re
Ella
O sbo rne, Hele n C lin e, Fai th
Davies, and M al] orie M orlock.
The death of Margaret Kissler \\'JS
no ted , along
with
J anice
Plumber's co nfin em ent ln a m1 n;ing ho m e, and M arge Levan·,
surgery. A repo rt was given o n
Helen C line and Eva R o bson.
Mary Barringer read " I Am So.
Blessed-"

PICKENS

Church of Christ hosts
volleyball league
M IDDLEPO RT - Th e M iddlep ort C hu rch of C h rist Will
host a vo ll eyball league for anyo n e 14 and o lder. The league wi ll
ru n from Septe mb er 7 t o
N ove mber IH.
All matches wi ll b e p layed
T hu rsday evem nb" from 7 p.m . to
I ii p.m.
Reg·ist ratio n fo rm s ca n be
obtained at th e churc h , lo cated at
43 7 M ain Street, o r by callin g
9'12-29 14.

r----------------------.,
Attention Rental Property
Owners:

The Section 8 Rental Assistance Program through
the Meigs Housing Authority has several families
looking for suitable housing in Meigs County. If
you have available rental units and would consider
accepting Section 8 participants, or if you should
have any questions concerning the Section 8 Rental
Assistance Program, please contact Jean Trussell at
992-2733 Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to
5:00p.m

SAN F ll.. ANC ISCO (A I&gt;) T ige r
Woods t'ndorst·s "Nike Tour Accuracy"
golf balls in TV and magaz 111e ads, but h e
reall y p!Jy&lt; With custom - m ade balls
un avaib bl e to eve ryday d uffer s, N ike
ac knowledged T uesday afte r bei ng sued in
fe deral court.
' said th e balls Woods uses fo r
N ikc Inc.
his mo nste r swings t hat produ ce 300-plusya rd d rives have a sli ghtl y harder in ner and
o uter core th an the ba lls sold to t he public.
"Those two el ements are sligh tl y fi r m er
than th e m arket ed ball," Mike Kelly, m arketin g directo r to r N ikc Go lf. to ld Th e
Assonat~d Press.
Kelly said it 's com m o n practice in rh e

golfing wo rld to sell the publi c difle rent
products t han what the pros really US&lt;' .
"' It's :tn in dustry practi ce to m ake nun or
specification changes to golf prod ucts:
irom, put ters an d golf balls for tour players," Kelly sai d. "Sligh t specificati o n and
modifications need to be· m ade to the ir
equipmen t for the ir g;tme."
Out o t her leadi ng n ames in golf say their
cu sto m ers .ge t exac tly w hat th eir pros
endo rse.
J oe Gomes. a spokesm an fur T itl eist, of
Fairh aven, Mass .. sai d its players use th e
san!l· prod ucts th ey ad vertise. And If a
pl aye r mcs a " tweaked " vers io n of a club,
h e said, a consum er co u ld spec ial order it .
"We are ver y particular about o ur

'

advertisemellts. We don't make an y claims res ult , for a very sho rt perio d of tim e,
that cann ot be substantiated in both golf th ere was a littl e bit of a lapse from w hat
was bein g marketed. We w ere very up
balls and clubs," Gom es said.
Callaway Golf of Carlsbad, Ca lif., said fro nt abou t it."
.
that if o ne of its go lf pros says h e uses a
Wood s' agent, M ark Stein be rg, did not
ce rtain club, that idemica l club is ava ilable im mediately return a call requesting comretail. Spokesm an La•ry Dorm an did say, · m enton t h e lawsu it.
however, that in Feb ruar y, o n e of its golf
In the suit filed Tuesday in U. S. D istrict
ba lls had a di ffere nt numb er o f di mpl es o n Co urt in San Fran cisco, a non profi t group
ca ll ed Public R em edies Inc. claimed Nike,
it than the o n es its pros u sed .
T hat occurred, he said , beca use C~ll- based in Beaverto n, O re., was engaging in
away was await ing app roval of the new un fa ir busi ness practices. It asks that Nikes
ba ll hy th e United St ates Golfi ng Associa- " ill -gotten gains" be restored t o the pubtio n, so the company's p ros were briefly lie.
fo rbid den fro m usin g it in to urnam ents.
" Tiger Woods docs not play th e N ike
" We used a pro torype wi th a different
number of dim ples," D o rman said. " As a
Please see
Pill• Bl

ncer.

•·

Phillies top
Redlegs, 5-4

Lane's wife
wanted for murder

HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

Watchdog group sues Nike over bogus balls

•

C HARLO TT E. N.C. (AP) A mu rder wa rrant was issu ed for
th e wife of Fred Lane in last
m o mh 'I shooting death of th e
N FL r unning ba ck, po lice said .
The murder wa rra nt was issued
late Tu esday for D eidra Lan e, said
a M ec kl enburg Cou nty sh eriff's
de pu ty w ho declin ed to give his
nann:.
C harl o tte- M ec kl enburg Poli ce
Capt . Kathy N ic ho ls confirmed
warrants had been issu ed but
wou ldn 't say w hat charges were
o n t h ~.:.· m .
Fred Lan e, the forme r C arolin a
Pant hers runn ing back w h o was
t rad ed to In dianapo li s du rin g th e
ofEcason, was shot to death in th e
co uple 's suburban
C harlo tt e
h o m e o n July 6.
Lane, 24, was shot in th e c hest
an d in the hea d ar close range
abo ut an ho ur after ar riving fro m
N ashviJle, Tenn . Po lice h ave said
D eidra La ne sho t him d ur ing a
di sput e.

Wilson wins
u.s. Amate'ur

Pres ented tro phies a t Yo uth Ni ght we re front Da rc i Bisse ll , outs tanding Brownie project; ieft to nght. Ha il ey Ebers b ach, o utstanding in
Brownies ; Lind sey House r, 111 juniors. and Al isha Cremean s in
cadette s; a nd bac k. outstanding t roop acce pted by leade rs. Je rre na
Ebersbach. Midd lepo rt Brownie Troop 1015; Terrie House r. Po m ero y
Junior Troop 1 309 ; Denise Ho lman. Meigs Cad e tte Troop 1261 ; Bre n- .
da Neutzling, Pom e roy Sen ior Troop 1180; and Ta mi Putman, best fa ir
booth, Ree ds ville troo p.
·

Sl'RI NGFI E LIJ, NJ (AI')
R t· m stat cd am ateur J eff W II&lt;o n,
th t· m~da h st at t he recent U.S.
O pt·n . and Jm! Sa lin etti of the
U ni Ve-rsit y of Rh ode Isl an d
to pp ed th e li t· ld of 3 12 pb ycrs by
p ost 1 n ~ 4- u ndcr- p ar IJ7 tota ls at
th e U.S. Amateur.
T h t• Lower and U ppt'r cou rse'S
at th t• fm!l·d Baltusrol Coif

Give Your Child
a Shot of PROTECTION

Cou r se yidded onl y seven sub-

Vaccinations have significantly reduced the cases of many childhood diseases, including a
number of major diseases-from polio to diphtheria. However, over the last ten years,
almost 25% ofall deaths of children under syears of age have been due to diseases w~dch
could have been prevented with proper vaccination, The reason is clear. Many children are
not getting their immunizations and booster shots on schedule.
To make sure your child is protected, below is the latest childhood immunizations recom mended by the U.S. Public Health Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, the
American Academy of Pediatrics and American Academy of Family Physicians. Make sure
you ask your doctor to e~cplain the dosing and schedules for your child.
Hepatitis B vaccine

Dose•
1 month after dose 1

Dose•
· Birth to 3 months

Dose 3
6 m onths afte r

p ar roumls ti" _v, h o les.
Exa ctly 1&gt;4 players ma de th e ctit
at S- n vl'r 14(), nurkin g th t' fi rst
rim e t hl' re hao;; nor bc.:•c n ;i playo tr

for ptlli iriom in march play ~in re
rhe c u rrc m fOrm:1.r was stan ed in
1'!7'1, 1hc US( ;A sa1d .
M:ott Ku char. th t· I '!lJ7 Ama teur
champion . tinishnl .lt 7- 0VlT 14K
iu l lll li~ lllg 111;1tr h pby f()r the.: St'L'on d st r;,tight yc.1r.

Wizards unload Austin

dose 2

Note : If hepatitis B vacdne has not betn given In early childhood, the
three dose series should be started and completed by ageu-12 years
Diphtheria and tetanus
toxoids and acellular pertussis
vaccine (DTaP) or diphtheria
and tetanus toxoids and
pertu ssis vaccine (DTP)

Taking the trophy for outstanding boy scout in Meigs County was Joe
Mc Call, who accepted the award from Craig Lightle, district chairman,
left. Outstanding troops recognized were Troop 299. with Joe Bus h
and Brandon Grover accepting the award, and outs tanding Pack 2 4 2,
with Sammy McCall accepting, left to right.
'

Hib: Haemophilus b conjugate
vaccine (influ~nza b meningitis)

We want your photos!

no larger than 8 x 10.
• Pol ariod-type photo s are discouraged s1nce

the~· do not reproduce

well on newsprint.
• When subm1t1ing d1g1tat photos. be sure the 1mages are saved as
high-resolution. high-quality JPEG foles .
• Advantix-type photographs are discouraged due to their unique s1zes.
which do not tran slate weH to newspaper co lumn s . Advantix-type negatives are not accepted _

Dose 2
4months

·Dose 3
6 months

Dose4
15·18 months

Dose 5
4-6 years

Note: Td (tetanus and diphtheria) booster recommended at age 11-12 years
if it has been at least s years since lost!&gt;~ t~en ~ery 1~ yeors os _an adult.

Poliovirus vaccine (Polio)

The Sentinel welcomes your photographs . Here are a few guidelines for
submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are in focus and have
good con trast. Negatives also are accepted; however. please 1nclude a
print along with the negat1ve
• Black-and-white photographs are ac cepted, prov1ded they are 1n focus
and have good contrast. Negatives also are acce pted. however, please
include a print along with the negative .
• Standard·s1ze slides are accepted. provided they are 1n focus and
have good contrast .
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallet s1ze and

Dose•
a months

MMR: Measles, mumps and rubella
v i rus vaccine

Dose•
a months

Dose•
4 months

Dose•
2 months

Dose 2
4months

Dose 3
6 m onths
Dose 3
6 -18 mns

Dose4
12·15 month s
Dose4
4-6 yea rs

Bucks &amp; Pistons
swap players

Doset
Dose 2
12 ·IS months 4-6 years

Note: One dose of hepatitis B, DTP, Hib, poliovirus and measles·
mumps-rubella vaccines may be given at the same time.

~

Varicella virus vaccine
(chickenpox)

tio1aer Clinic
ICUPIOIC: Ou• PIIOMI&gt;f

Other Immunizations
Influenza virus
Meningococcal meningitis
Pneumococcal Infections Vaccine
Hepatitis B VIrus Vaccine

WASH ING TON (AI') In
f\.1ic.:h :lt'l Jordan \ ri rq traJt• a'i a
ti-u nt nffiL·e t'Xecutive. the Washin gton Wizards -.enr d isgru nt le d
ct' nt er l kt· Austin to the VJn l·u uva Grizzlies for fo ur pl ayt:n:
Denn is Scott. C h ero kee Parks.
O bmna Ekt·z1e and Feli pe Lopez.
Tht· tka l give s th t' ~a br y (:lpst r~lpp ed \Vizards a net·th:d jolt of
llt'W b lood. wh il e it r i d~ th t·m of
a 't'V\.' 11 - y~:~r vt·tna·n who w:mted
o ut .tft~..-r losill!; hi' start i n~job to
jJhid1 White 1m .ll':I&lt;llll

1 Dolt
12 month s -12

OR

2

Doses

years
If not im munized,
13 years+, 4-8 weeks apart
Do..
Each year before flu season , 6 years -adult
For high risk cases of exposure to menin gitis. ages 2 - adult.
For teens+ each year, to protect against infection caused by up
to 23 types of Streptococcus pneumonia.
For all m iddle teen s and young adults

M i lWA U KEE (A I') The
Mil\\'aukl't' Buck-. obt~t in t'J guarl1
Lindo.;cy Hum cr from the I Je trott
[)istoll 'i fO r anor hcr N UA Vl'te ran.
tor\\'ord . llilly Owcm.
Hunrc..·r he!" bccn with th e Pl ~ ­
toll~ sin ct" bt·i ng sdc..·ctt:d .u. tht'
lllt h pick of the 19')3 NBA dr&gt;~l t.
He ovcraged 12.7 p o ints and 4.11
as-;i ~r~

Th ~

~ t'.l'iUt L

Uucks KquirL•d Owen -; ;\\
p;trt o f .'1 tb rL'L'- I l',lJ II rrad t' wit h
C lt-wland and Golden St,Ite 011
June 27.

,.

J

Ja, t

RECORD JOB- Ci ncy·s Al ex Oc hoa watches as his bases-loa ded s hot leaves the park in the first inning
of the Re d s' loss Tue sd ay. (AP)

Bengals try
to revamp
special teams

. '.-

13 ER EA, Ohio (A P) - T im
Co uch now has ;1 bruised rig h t
elb ow to go ;:d o ng w ith some
b ru isl·d fec l i n ~.

T he lkngaJ..: \\",ti\'cd pL!nttT
Urad Co-;tdln nn Tu c~ d .t v. chlll nvcrh :~ ul

o f th eir
kickin g- game . Th L' lllo\'l' c:t nlt'
o n e da y af!-cr th ey rt·kasc d I )n.ug

...·.·..

Pclti·cy. their pl.it"L'kickn t~ 1r the
l. tst '&gt;l'\'l' ll y~·a r~.
I),lllll'i Pope . ,I St•con d- yL'.I r
player who pum cd t(ll' f{. t m :~s
C ttv la.'&gt;t ~l' a~o n. won CmtL·IIn'o;
jOb With ;J CU il\lli(t' ll{ JWl'\l',\..;011.
!'o pe wi ll huld lor roo kie kit kn
N&lt;·il R .1 ckcr' '"' fidel gu.ds .Ii!d

cxtra

point~.

t,tking

sn . 1p~

,\ lll OVl' to tr y to ~_- orrcct thl'

problc n1' th.1t 'ty1ni..:d tht· kid,ing

g.\llll'

i.ht

"·'.hOJL

w h L'll

ini uri e' tl 1rc..:d the lkn c;.1h
"

I

•

.

. :·.,

.·.

ti-otll

rook it· Br.td St. loui ~.
''I t\ tktlnit1,:ly .1 yo uth mowll!cnt," quarterback Akih Sil!ith
s.Ii d.
I t'~

rl'pc.:~tcdly ~witt" h ~ n .t ppt· r~

Pluse see Reds, Page 86

with bum arm

IKW(O! l l\.'f..;.

,I ll

Stynes do ubl e-clutched b efore
throwi ng to forst .
After To m as Perez sac rificed,
Kevin Jordan hit a fl y to shall ow
right field . Bi chette c harged , got
his glove unde r it and then
d ropped it fo r a run -scoring
er ror.
Bi chette also let in th e goahead r un with an eighth inn ing erro r last Fnday in the
"Pi rates' 6-3 w in .
•
" I don 't think I ever h ad it in
my glove, and I j uggled It a little bit," Bich ette said. " I ran a&lt;
hard as I co uld after it , but I j ust
couldn't haul it in."
Vicente Padill a (3-3) pitch ed
two perfect innin gs a.nd Jeff
Brantley got three o u ts for his
19 th save in 23 chan ces- w ith
an assist fro m G riffey.
Griffey, who wasn't feeling
we ll , slept in th e train er's room
-dur ing 5attm g pracric&lt;':'5u t was
in th e lin eup and wertt 2-fo r- 4,
ext ending his hittin g streak to
eight gam es.
Th t: seco nd hit w as a o ne-o ut
sin gle in th e nint h thar brough t
up Oi ch ett e. G riffey was running on a full -count p itch th at
Bich ette popp ed softl y into fiJU I
territo ry near the R eds' du gout .
F irst b asem an T ravis Lee
CJ\.Jght it an d heard teammates
yell ing. H e looke d and saw
G riffey still far tro m tlrst, th e n
lobbed the ball over fo r a gameendi ng dou ble play th e
PhiUi es' se ason -h igh fo urth .
Wh y C ritl'ey took so lo ng to
get bac k to first was a mystery.
" H e did n't get a hu ge ju mp at
aiL" Lcl' sa id . " H e m u~t not have
looked in (t o see w hnc the ba ll

Couched sidelined

;

C I NCINNAT I (AI') A
rouk 1l· pbcl'k H: kl·r. a roo ki e
mappn. ,1 st·cnn d-ye ar puntn.
T he..· C in ri1t nat1 lkngal s h.tvl·
dt·c idt·d to put tht: ir spcn.d
tt'&lt;Hn s in th e lund s of a bunch of

plcting

C INC INNAT I (AP)
D ante Bi chette let in the goahead run w it h an error. Ken
G riffey Jr. got doubl ed up at
first b ase fo r th e fin al ou t.
Given a c h ance t o gain
g round in the NL Central, the
Ci ncin nati R eds let it slip away
o nce agatn.
Bichettc dro pped a soft fly in
rig ht field t o let in Philadelp hia's ti ebreak ing ru n in th e to p
of t he nin th and Griffey was
d o ubl ed up o n his foul po p in
th~ b o ttom half, en din g th e
Ph illies' 5-4 victory Tues day
ni gh t.
An e nco u ra~i ng start - Alex
Oc hoa hit a fi rst- inning g rand
slam , th e record 142nd in the
m aj o rs this season tur n ed
in to a bitter ending o nce agai n.
T he Reds remain ed 7 112
ga mes out in th e NL Ce ntral as
forst- place St. Louis lost ro Pittsburgh 6-2. Since making a surge
in late Jul y, th e R eds have lost
I 0 of 14 ho m e ga mes aga mst
H o usto n, Fl o rida, Atlanta, Pittsbu rgh and Philadelp hia.
"W hat's fnL~t r~uin g is we were
closL' a week ago and now we 'r..:
taki1) g- o u rse lves out o f it ," said
starter R o b Bell, w ho gave up
two- run ho m er&lt; by Bobby
Abreu an d Scott R olen. "We're
not bc..·ating thl" team s we sho uld
beat , \Vl''re geuing untimely
pitching o r unt1mely hittin g. It
s~:ems h ke wc 'rt' o ne mnmg
away from bein g good."
O n Tuesdoy. tim one mnmg
was the ninth .
With th e ga m e tied at 4. Larry
Lu cbb,·rs (ll-2) gave up a leadotr
sint(lc to Pat Burrell. Marlon
Anderso n b unte d and was satl:
w h e n t hird b ase m an C hns

tl)

.1nd

holden .

•

CASUALTY OF WAR - Kicker Doug Pelphrey was an early victim of
the Bengals' s pecial teams houseclean ing.(APJ
" We kno\\" wt· h:td

.1

problco1

l.t'it yc.1 r .md we ~ utTered through
it ,l!ll l nude lt ,t go.tl to not h.l\'t'
J-t h.1ppcn ,tg.llll ... (O.Kh BrU l't'

( ~ o~lct o.;aid.
Pope avc r.If!;l'll 4 I .H yard s per
punt tl1r th ~..· Chief\ last ~.:.-.t~on

a~1d was cb imed off waivt'r" jul\t

b efore: tram111g camp ~ta rt eti in
July. Even thou~h he d idn't kick
a... tJr .IS Cmtl'llu. Ill· wa~ Ili on·
depl'llllobk

Pluse see Bengals, Page 86

Couc h, ripped by critics for
his phy during the exhibition
Sl'ason, WrlS kepr from throwing
d urin!; practice on Tu e~d :ly after
his t• lbow got h it in Sarunby's
24 -0 loss ro thl· WashingJon
R edskms.
" It 's just a bruJ-;e." Co uch said .
''I'll b,· ready to go 111 a co uple
of days."
Urowns coac h C hns Palm n
\V.ISll 't C011C c.'J"J H:.' d
about th e
injury and t'xpcct~ Couch to b t•
able to play in this SatLml.!y's
prc.:season tina k· at Gn.·en Bay.
" If it were :. ~u n c toJay h e
would play." Palmer sa id beto rc
Tuesday's practice.
Palmer \V::tsn ' t sure exactly
w hen Couch got hurt but it 's
safl' rn assume ir happ ened in
rhe tl.nt quarter S,uurd&lt;1y when
he ~ot nailed b)' Wash in!(tOn
t.llk k Ken .Ird Lm g while drop ping bac k to pass.
M e,mwhik . the Brown &lt;'
Sl'drrh t( u· a h.H-kup t&lt;1r Couch

C0Jltl 11 Ut'S.

C levela nd bro ug ht in a Q B
tor ,1 workout on M onday. but
Palmer decli ned to reveal the
player's name. The tea m ha d
plann ed to look at Jdf Dro hm,
released last week by the San

Fran ci-;co -l-9crs.
Pal mer said it was a possible
rhe Urown' coul d h .we a Q B
and in camp by late Tuesday.
Rook ie Sp crgo n Wynn. tht·
currellt No .2 Q ll, is expected to
t:et th e majori ty of t he p laying
tllll L' agam st the P;~ c ker~. Pal m er
~i gn c d

Sill d.

"T hl· 111on: cxpen ence hl'
gets out th ere the b etter off he
will b,·," !'"I m er sml.
Th t• Urowns Jid get some
good lll'\\'1 Tuesday. Wide
n.· rcivn Knrin Johnson , w ho
caught 06 pa sses last ~eason,
!"&lt;'turn ed to pracii rt·. H e had
missed two \Vc ck s ;md two pre~e~son g.1mes with .1 ham -;t r i n~
ll!JllrY.
"He ran with us a little bit,"

Please see Couth, Pace B6

�Wednesday August 23 2000
Page B 2 • The Daaly Sentmel

All Pereonol
Announcement
Glvoawoy Loll &amp; Found
Yl!rd S11H 1nd Wonted
To OoAdo
MWI Bo P1 d n Advenct
TRIBUNE DEAQUNE,
2 00 p m tho day before
the ad Ia to run
Sund1y &amp; Monday edition
2 00 p m Frdly
r N E L DfAQUNE
1pm tho d1y before
tht ad 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Mondoy tdlllon
t OOpm F ldoy
REGISTER DEADLINE.
t d•r• belorolho od 11
torunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Mondoy
l'dltlon- 4 30 Thurodty
O..dlln•• aubJocl to
Chllnfl• flue to holldar-

110

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Help Wanted

J EASY SALES SJ 000
Eas y ea n $3 000 yo u
s
week Make $ K on e e y $99
sa e We Teach you ow Ca
BQO 294 9538

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Not co a hereby g van
that on Saturday August 26
at 10 00 a m a public sale
w
be held at 211 Wast
Second Street Pomeroy
Oh o The Farmer s Bank
and Sav ngs r ompany
extended par king lot
(bu de Powell s Supe
Valu) to sa lor caoh the
follow ng collatera
1995 FORD F ISO 4X4
TRUCK
1FTEF14Y6SLB58127
1996 YAHAMA BANSHEE
ATV JY43GGA03TA102762
The Farma a Bank and
Sav ng s
Company
Pomeroy Ohio reaerves the
right to bid at thla aale and
to withdraw the above

and aeHement
ESTATE NO 30596 First
and F nal Account ot
Michael Brothtrl and Ruth
Ann R ffe Guardtans of the
person and estate of
George W Brothora
Unleas exceptions oro
f led thereto aa d account
will be aet lor hoa l ng
before sold Cou t on the
25th day of Septembe
2000 at wh ch t me aa d
account w be considered
and contlnuod from day to
day unt I finally disposed of
Any person lntereated
may file wr lien ••capt on to
said account o to matte a
pertaining to the execut on
ol the t ust not loss than
I ve daye p lor to the date
sailor hear ng
Robert Buck
Judge
Common P eaa Court
P obalo Divis on
Molga eounty on 0
(8) 23

vacallng aa d al ey and that
tho vacating tho oame w I
not be del mental to tho
general Into ooto of tho
people of tho VIllage of
Pome oy Me go County
Ohio
NOW THEREFORE tho
Pomeroy VIllage Council ot
tha County ot Mt go State
ot Oh o does hereby redo
and resolve •• follows w th
regard to the vacat on and
abandonment of a certain
alley he etofo e known as
Anthony
Grimm
Subdlvla lon 401 on the
Pomeroy V I age P at Map t
a hereby o dalned that
certain descr bed
eel
estate parcels 1 2 3 4 and
6 7 8 9 ocated n Volume 2
Page 105 of tha pat books
be vacated and abandoned
to
the
adJoining
and~wnars The VIllage or
Pomeroy Malga Coun(Y
OH o ~olt a hereby toreve
release rem sa and vacate
any r ghts or nte eat In the
above described port on ot
the sa d alley along the said
pa ameters as therein
belora descr bed to thooe
land owners hav ng a tree
hold lntsrest In and to the
and surrounding tho oame
IT IS SO ORDAINED AND
RESOLVED TH S 7 DAY OF
AUGUST 2000
Kathy Hyael
C ark
T easu er
John B aettnar Mayor
John Mussar President ol
Counc
(8) 23 30 2TC

Pomeroy Molgo County 111
member•
thereto
concur lng
THAT tha Clorlc/Tronuror
ot the VI ago ot Pomeroy
t ran ale r
Twenty-one
thouund F vo hundred
(21 500 00) from tho
following account• In tho
genera lund
A17A2tt
1 o 000 to
A17A247 A17A212 2 000
to A17A240 A17D211 8 500
to A11A240 &amp; At7G234 ond
1 000 to A17A240
Deem thlo an emorgoncy
duo to ack of !undo In the
accounts
PASSED July 17 2000
Kathy Hyaol V I ago C ark
John Blaollnar Mayor
John Muaoo President ot
Counc
(8) 23 30 2TC

collate al pr or to aale
Further The Farmers Bank
and Sav nga Company
reaarveo the right to eJect
any and all bids subm ttad
Furtho
t he
above
co ate al w I be so d n the
condition t Is In w th no
exp ess
or
lmpl ad
wa ant es g ven
For furthe Information
contact Shei a Buchanan at
992 2 36
(B) 23 24 25 3TC

ACC ESS TO A COMPUTER
PU
0 WORK $350 $ 500
pe we e PT FT www
me ce om

ANN OUNCEMENTS

Public Notice
005

Personals

An hony land Comp1 y Ltd
-8()0.213 8365

www coun rytyme com
g

RENTALS

30 Announcements

LEGAL NOTCE
N THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT PROBATE D V SION
ME GS COUNTY OH 0
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers
of tho fo lowing named
I duclary has been filed In
the P obata Cou t Meigs
County Oh o lor app oval

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Public Notice
RECORD OF
RESOLUTIONS
RESOLUTION 7 00
WHEREAS the VII age of
Pomeroy Is a legally
ncorpo sled VIllage under
the Laws of the State of
Oh o and
WHEREAS W am T
Norton and Anne M Norton
husband and wlfa have
pel tlonad the Pome oy
VIllage Counc
for the
abandonment and vacation
or a carla n alloy ocated
with n the confines of the
V I age of Pomeroy and
WHEREAS pu suant to
Oh o Rev sod Code Section
723 05 t s the opinion of
the eg s alive autho ty that
there Is good cause fo

550

Building
Supplies

Public Notice
RECORD OF RESOLUTIONS
RESOLUTION NO 9
BE IT RESOLVED by
Counc of tho VII age or

Public Notice
RECORD OF ORDINANCES
Section 303 tO Pomeroy
TraHic Code Leaving Junk
Voh e ao on Pr vote Property
with Perm 11 on ot Owner
Is he oby amended u
fOI OWl

Parsons may atore or
keep by unreatr clod
method any collector •
vah c e as dol nod In Ohio
R C 4501 01 (F) on private
prope ty
w th
tho
permlulon of the peroon
having the r ght to tho
posaoaolon of tho property
except that such parson
having permission shall
concea auch vehicle n an
one oosd garage
Any other reference to
atorago or colloctora
veh cleo a hereby do etad
Th a amendment to
Section 303 10 Pomeroy
Troll c Coda ahal take

740

Motorcycles

MERCHANDISE

Pomeroy
Middleport

GOOD CREDIT
BADCREDT
NO CREOT
Le U s Ass s ou n Yo
N ew
M g H me Ca Fo P e App o a
688 36 3332

&amp; VIcinity

Ce

ed Pho

ga

Auction~- -+-:.~;;--=="'·

and Flea Market

=::___ __ __ _

AUCTION
2 B g Sale Days

420 Mobile Homes

E e Sa 6 P:M
E ery ues 6 PM

for Rent

uck oads 0
New &amp; Used ems

F mSevea Saes
Se ng The Pub 1C &amp; Deale s

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o

ON THE FRINGE

May looks back on missed opportunity
Bv DOUG FERGUSON
AP GOLF WR TER

The putt was only about 4 feet shppery downh1ll
w11h a sl ght break to the r ght Bob M ay knew
exac tly what was r d10g on 1t
Make the putt and he leads T1ge r Woods by two
strokes w th three holes to play 10 the PG A Cham
p10 nsh p He thou ght he put a perfect stroke on the
ball and was surpr sed when t staye d o ut to the left
It was cr t1cal he sa1d
May descr bed the nussed opportun ty not long
after he ra n out o f nuracles 10 hiS quest to take down
Woods 10 what would have ranked as among the
greatest upsets 10 golf
It wont be the last tlme he th nks about t
Chances are he nught remember that pu tt as one
that could have changed hiS life Wmn ng the PGA
Champ onship comes w11h a five year exempt on
on the PGA Tour mportant to a guy hke May who
had to endure qualify ng school on y 10 months

ago
He would have been exempt for the PGA C ham
p onsh1p the rest of his hfe and the other three
maJ ors for the next five years
Now May can only hope he doesn t d sappear hke
so many others who had ;t ma.Jor champ1o r sh p m
the r grasp and never got close aga10
Ten years ago at Med nah M ke Donald led Hal e
lrw n by one stroke gomg nto the 18th hole of a
playoff A par would have mad e the unheralded
Donald a US Open champ on but he pulled hiS
dnve nto the trees on the left punched mto a
greens de bunker and nussed a 10 footer lrw n beat
him on the next hole
Donald never won aga n
M1ke R e d had the PGA C hamp o nsh p see nun g
ly sewn up n 1989 until he made double bogey on
the 16th and a bogey on the 17th and lost by a
stroke to Payne Stewart Re d never won aga n
neve r contended m another maJOr and fell off th e
map when hiS 10 year exempt on fro m w nn ng the
World Senes of Golf exp red n 1998
Kenny Perry was hardly a hou sehold nan e
beyond hiS home m Ken tuck) w hen he could have
- should have - won the PGA at Valhall a n 1996
But he hooked his dr ve nto the bluegrass on the
par 5 18th and nussed an 8 foo t putt for pa Mark
Broo ks bud1ed the 18th to pull mto a t e a d beat
Perry n the sudden death playoff
Perry hasn t won aga n
And then there s Jean Van de Velde not even a star
n h s ow country The Frencl nan s foil es at
Carnoust e cost hi n the Bnt sh Open where he
squandered a three stroke lead on the 7? d hole
w th a sen es of bad shots and poor JUdgment

Public No tice

Public Notice

effect and be In force from
and after tho earlloat period
a owed bylaw
Kathy Hyooll
Clerk
T easu er
John Blaattnar Mayor
John Musser Pres dent ol
Council
(8) 23 30 2TC

rootr ct perking In certain
alaaa olthe V age and
WHEREAS the Council
be eves II to be In the beat
lnte est of 1ha c t zans and
government of the V llage ot
Pome oy to restrict aueh
park ng
NOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDAINED BY
THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY STATE OF
OHIO
Beginning w th Butternut
Avenue between Peacock
Ave and Br ck Stroot
Uneoln Heights from Point
Lane to the F aad Road a
of Condo St all of Lauro
Street and al ot Anna
Street parking w II be
lim ted to two pr vale
passenger
vehicles (prope ly I cenaed
and
n good runn ng
cond t on) per household
AI comma cal Inc udlng
but not limited to dump
trucks
wreckers
and
tra Iars
are
s r ct y
lo b dden to be pa ked
cu bslde or on p lvate

Public Notice

FINANCIAL
OR VEAS

I

PeceOo e s &amp; Case os

Bowen Auc:tlon Servk:e
tary Bowen Auc onee
Proc oN e Oho

In Memory

Fea Make
s Ac ass
H n ngon WV
3
B dge
740-886 2266
304-453 2587

In Mm~ory of
Mut]D11r1t

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
New
0

6 W de 3 o 4 Bed

$800 Dow
A &amp;S

1181982
8 231999

om

$245 pe Mo h
868 928 3426

ee

New 3 BR

$300 D w
FeeOe e

L ke the others he has yet to wm ano ther tou rna
ment
N o o ne knows 1f t w ll be a different story fo r
May H e howed he ha the ga me to go head to
head w h Woods w hose perfo rmance over the final
15 holes vas as good as any n his Grand Slam
caree
N ow n up to th e 3 1 year old to show he s more
than a o ne " ee k wonder
I think I proved t o a o t o f people th at I can play
under the heat M ay "' d I th nk th iS s fulfill ng
son e expec tat ons I ve had fo myself that ot her
/
people have I ad fo r me
T here s a reason expectations were so high May
was the man m So uthern Cal forn a as a teen age
a playe r whose JUntor records Woods asp~red to bea
He played for college powerho use O kl ahoma Sta
and bea t Dav d Duval n the Br t sh Amateur serm
fi nals
But the rea l measu re of a golfer s when he tu'!'s
pro and May hasn t exactly turned heads H s 011e
ye ar on the PGA To u 994 he fa led to keep h s
card It took h m 53 ourn aments over seven year;
befo e he recorded a to p 10
May d dn t come o ut of to tal obsc ur ty H e was a
runner up 22 t n es overseas befo e he finally wo n
the Master; - OK It was the Br t!Sh M aster; St ll
he held off Colm Montgomer e and Lee Westwood
the Eu ropean equ valent ofWoods and Phd M ckel
son
And he fin shed sec ond n Men phis th s yea o ne
shot behmd N otah B egay
May contends hiS play at Valhalla was no ace den t
He d dn t shoo t a stnng of 70s and throw down o ne
unconsc ous round of 62 to wmd up where he
never thought he w ould be H e had a 6 under 66 o n
each of the last three days o n a cou rse that s a bet
ter tes t of golf than m ost people real ze
I do n t th nk there s any fluke about that he
sa d
Then aga n Donald was go od fo a 'leek too So
was Van de Vel de
All May took away from the PGA C hamp onsh p
'las second place which gave h eno ugh none)' to
go over S1 mtllion fo r th e year sec ured h s card for
200 I a d go hi 1 to the re al Maste s ext Ap il
It al so gave h1m a goo d story to tell h s grandc h1l
dren someday about a stean y Su nday n Kentu cky
when he nearly beat the great T ger Woods
He may be when he s done the bes player
May sa d And I w ent head to 1 ead w th hi 1 and
lo t out n the playo ff
H e can on y hope the e s anotl r story o be to ld
w th a better end ng

property n these a eas
Vahle ea parked
n
v o at on of th 1 Ordinance
shall be towed at tho
owne s expense and fines
up to $100 00 par vehicle
pe nc dent ahal apply
This ord nance shall tako
effect and be n force from
and after the earliest period
a lowed by law
Kathy Hyas I VIllage C ark
John W Blaallnar Mayor
John Muaoe P es dent of
Council
Amendment to fourth
pa agraph to road
Beg nn ng w th Butternut
Avenue between Peacock
Avenue and Br ek Street
Unco n Heights I om Point
Lane to the F aod Road a
ol Condor Street al of
Laure Street and al of
Anno Stroot parking w II be
lmlte,d to throe pr vale
passenger
vel'llclea
(prope ly licensed and n
good running cond ton) per
househo d A commerc a
veh c ea nc ud ng but not
mlted to dump t uck o

110 Help Wanted
good

080

REAL ESTATE

SERVICES
810

Home
Improvements

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

God aw you Wtrt
gmmg t rtd A nd a
curl W4! nat to b~
So ht p ut h a m
around you and
ad
tJmt to
com~ v th m ~

W: th rye filltd w th
uar wt watchtd
you fodt away to a
I tit oom n
hravm wtth
w ndow all a ound
fo you my l ttlt
pr.c ou tr! look
down on thu
ground From your
littlt roo n m htavm
yo u rt not for at all
-{rom mt Fo my
!ittlt prtc ow you rt
n ou m~mory.

Help Wanted

$ EARN EXTRA NCOME $

BEAUT FUL APARTM ENTS AT

BUDGET PR CES AT

AC K

SON ESTATE S 52 We wood
0 e om $289 o 53 o wa
o
sn ap 1!. mo es Ca
40 446
2568 Eo a Ho
g Oppo

So unt I that howt
ltavtn ha an
txtra oom fo m~
W.11 kup you lo ktd
up n ou htart
and n our
mtm ory

W.Lovea dM

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the
An hony l and Co mpany l d
800 2 J 8365
www o n ry yme com

E
AEAA ON MOTORS
Re a ed New &amp; Reb
S

Ca R

'I'

Ea

800 53 9528

CLASSIFIEDSI

You M ·ry
Mom Dad Dav d
S t vtn A l a a d
Fam ly

wreckers and tral a a are
sir ctly forbidden to be
parked curbside or on
private property In thes_a

a eas
(8) 23 30 2TC

Public Notice
VACANCY
ANNOUNCEMENT
Rutland
Township
T ustees
are
tak ng
eppl cat ons
tor
an
equipment
ope ato
gene al
rna ntenance
parson
To ece ve a copy of the
Job doscrlpt on and official
appllcat on call 740 742
2805 attar 6 00 p m o w Ita
Rut and Township P 0 Box
326 Rut and Oh o 45775
Appl cat ons a e due by 5
p m on Septembe 5 They,
may be mal ad to P 0 Bo•
326 Rutland Ohio 45775 o
given to any of the
Townsh p Trustees
Rutland
Township
reserves the r ght to accept
or reJect any or all bids
(8) 23 30 2 TC

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDS!
110

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital

CRNA
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal currently has
opportumttes for C RNA applicants
Applicants must meet the followmg
quahficahons
M s f be eg s e ed nu sc tl e s le of WV
• G aduale of an Acc red ed schoo l of Ancs hes1a
Cert1f1ca1 on or ehg ble for cert f ca on by the
• A mer ca n Assoc1a1 on of Nurse An est he s ts

Com petit" E' "rt gt'~ amf Ex cellent
Benefits

Jom our fam 1ly of professmnals to the
best reso urce for commumty hea lth
servrce needs
Please Submit Resum e l o
PLEASA Nl VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PERSONNE L
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT I'LEASAN1 1W V 25550

OR FAX I 0 (J04) 675 6975

a wok a an au o
ma u actu ng p an
oca ed west or Co umb~s
Two 2) yea ass g men s
a sh fts ava abe
$950h on s Shit
$ 0/h on2nd&amp;3d
$ 00 men h y attendance
bo nus
CLASS A COL DR VERS
$ 1 00 $ 2 74 pe hou

We w be accep ng
app ca ens o hese
pes ens a he
ME GS CO UNTY
L ElAARY
216 West Main Street
Pomeroy Ohio
on
Thu sday Aug ust24
I O OOAM 330P M
p , ... B ng 2 Forms o 0

I

sphc..fl'on
wo,*fortl'an:" ed

M /EOE

(11&gt;&lt;-.ly -

"'

,__1

�• !

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday, August 23, 2000
Wednesday, August 23, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHU..LIP

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

ALDER
PRODUCTS

Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Advertise your
message
$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, fam.ily heirlooms, coin and card
collectiocs, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,tJj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~

BAUMLUMBER
ST.RT.248
CHES'I'ER

·Jqa
SSUd
SSUd

1883

J.N E

•z

.. J
q!.ION

SS8d
SSOd
SSOd

•••d

)SaM

q)ROS

J.N Z

•z

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
CHIFfnanclai, Inc. lka
City Loan Financial

Public Notice
_ li.tct lll'l!P•rty hap _b un
approload at $10,000.00 and
cannot soli for I too tho n
Services, Inc.
two-thlrdo or apralamem.
va.
Termo of Slit: An lnlllal
Roy Eugene Powoll, Heir,
depoolt of 10% of the
el. 11.
succooolul bid lo due at the
Melgo County Common Shorlfl'o Olflco, Civil
Plno Court,
Olvlolon, by 4:30 p.m. or tho
Clio No. 99-CV-130
day of tho ealo. Tho balanco
In pur~uance of en order ol the mount bid Is duo
fnuad from Common Pleas upon confirmation of sale
Court, within and for tho and delivery of deed. All
County of Melgo, Stole of payments ore payable In
Ohio, modo at the Moy term caoh, or by cortlllod chock.
thereof, 2000, ond to mo Tho only rosl oatoto taxoa,
dlrocted, I will oHor lor salo which aholl bs pold from tha ·
·ol Public Auction ot · tho procoodo of tho oalo of the
front otopo of tho eubjoct roal estote are those
Courthouoa, 100 E. Second which aro dua and payable
Stroot In tho City of ao of tho date of the oalo. All
Pomoroy, Ohio on
proporty told at Sheriff's
Thuroday,
ulo Is eold on an "AS Ia"
Soptembar 21, 2000
baste. There Ia no warren1y
at 10:30 o'clock A.M. of said nor guarantee. The
day, tho following Real successful bidder must
Eetato to-wit:
present
proper
Slluatod In Tho Vlllogo or ldontlllcatlon, at tha 'tlme of
Middleport, County of Melgo tholr bid lo accsptod, by lho
and Stall ol Ohio, to-wit:
officer In chargo of the oalo.
Being Lot No. 25 of Lower
Jameo M. Soluloby, ShoriH
Pomeroy, Now Incorporated
Molgo County, Ohio
1n1o and a part o1 tho Vlllago Mark A. Van Dyno
of Middleport, ao tile oamo 121 W. High Stroot, 9th
lo plotted and of record In Floor
Volumo 2 pageo 8 and 10 of P.O, Box568
lho Recorda of Plato In tho Uma, Ohio 45802-0568
Ofllco of tho Rocordor of (81 9, 16, 23, 30
Molgo County, Ohio, and (9) 5 STC
oltuoto on tho Eut oldo of
Botch Stroot botweort
Locuot and Aoh Street In
Public Notice
aold VIllage.
Rolaronca Is made to
Dood recordod In Volume
PUBUC NOTICE
192 Pago 553 Molgs County
In compliance with
Daod Records and Aflldavll &amp;action 5715.09 of the Ohio
tor transfer of Real Estate Rovlsod Code, the Molga
from Earl Powell, dated County Board of Revision
September 1987.
will moot on September 7,
Which has an addreaa of 2000. at 10:45 A.M. In the
424
Booch Street, Courtroom of Melga County
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Cour1, Third Floor, Meigs
Parco! No. 15-011011.000
County Courthouse..
Located at 424 Beech Nancy Parker Campbell
Stroot, Middleport, Ohio Board of Revision Secretary
45760.
(81 23 lie

MLBmumon
Rose reinstatement request
NEW YORK (AP) - Seven months after
his lawyer met with a top official of co mmissioner Bud Selig, Pete Rose said he still hasn't
been told the status of his application for reinstatement.
"They're not returning my lawyer's phone
calls," Rose said Tuesday afte r a charity softball game in Montclair, N.J. "Maybe I should
give Bud a call."
Rose , who agreed in 1989 to a lifetime ban
from baseball following a six-month investigation of his gamblin g, app li ed for reinstatement
in September 1997.
His appli cation languis hed witho ut action
until last fall, when he was given th e longest
and loudest ovation of any player at the intra. ductions of ba seball's All - Century team,
before Game 2 of the World Series at Atlanta's
Turner Field .
Baseball se nt Bob DuPuy, Selig's top lawyer,
to mee t with R ose's l.awyer, Roger Makley, on
Jan . 27 in Colt•mbus. Ohio. Makley prese nted
what Rose's side called evidence that showed
he didn't bet on baseba ll while managing the
Cinc inna ti Reds.
"Roger gave hint so me really good stuff,"
Rose said. " I fe lt afterward at lea st I'd have a
meeting with Bud Selig."
Baseball's career hits leader said that if he
doesn't hear ·back. even tllall y he'll go to co urt .
"(don't wa nt i fig ht ," he said. "M r. Maklcy
is eventually going to tell me were gm ng to
do w ha t we have to do. Th e re's going to co me
a tunc ."

Selig has repeatedly said that he hasn't seen
any evidence that would nuke him alt e r the
lifet ime ban .
R ose would like some n:sponse .
" I th1nk the American peo pl e demand that ,"
he said.
While he \ on the banned-for-life list, Rose
is 111cligible for conside ration for the Hall of
Fame . Because of his stat u's, h e wasn't all owed
to participate in ce remon ies e-arlier thi s yeJ.r

honor .ng two of the World Series cha mp iOns
he played for : the 1975 Cmci nna ti Red s and
the 1980 Philadelphia Philli es .
Selig has sa id allowi ng Rose to participate
in the All- C entury team introductiOn last
O ct. 24 was a on e-time exception to the life.timc ba n

" They say. ' No news is good news' ' Not for
me ," Rose said .
DuPu y chd not return a telephone message
seeking comment.

Al so participating in th e softball game,
spo111ored by C hip s Ahoy. were Hall of Famers
Nolan Ryan , Bob· Gibson and Joe Morgan,
and Yankees shortstop Derek Je ter.

State Route 7.
Tuppers Plains has
openings . all shifts.
Open 7 days. 24
hours. Certified in
Meigs /It Athens
Counties.

Plenty of TLC

40-667

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
74o-992-1671
7122/TFN

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

(arm~lita'~ (r~olion~

Ii

Compuierked Cusrom Emllloidery

ll!IIM!mactriQIPU
Hrdlps

Auto Upholstery
Company Logos
Hats

")

1

1

B~tlldooer

Hou"' &amp; Trailer Sites

Sc~~~cots

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System• &amp;
Utilities

Phone 740-742-1377
Fax 740-742·8103

1740) 992-3838

c

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

.:;,f, , iuuu~d

EXP02000

Meigs County Fairgrounds
September 16th &amp; 1 7th
Saturday 10-8 p.m. &amp; Sunday 1 0 ~ 5 p.m.

A CRARY.
BUND SPOT
. (Factory Outlet)
All vertleal bllndo ...,;
m..te to order al our
locallon
UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertlcalo • Wood
• Mlnlo • Etc

144 1'lllnl Aye. G I; til

446-4995

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GOnERS
/l"ul~ W'

/7offit

1·800·311·3391
Free Eatimatea
Conlrtelon Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

l

'

.

\

••

..... ...... &amp; ........

•U.IIIIirl*............
..,.......

"Take the pain out
oj'pair1ti~-

Let me do it }'or you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6 p.m..

Larry Schey

Leave Message

.

6/29/mo.

'

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages ,
' • Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
'I
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
•
Call T &amp; R Loggi ng

'

Aher 6pm- 740-985·4180

740 -1}92-5050

740·992·7599

(Randy)

· An Mabs Tractor &amp;
Equipment Puts
Factory Autlwrized

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

Advertise in
this space for

per

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"l"
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # oo-50 ""'"'"

•
;

"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs

2 Handyman crew will do
painting Inside and out,
carpenter worlr:, roofing,
siding. Have own tools.
Free Estimates
740-742-3225

J@::sWICK•s •
HROLI"CJ and
EXtfiVfiTIHCJ

~·

16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Call 740-985-383i
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Pomeroy
7/S 3

mo

00·£~·80

.

mont

or one
or as ow as

J&amp;l INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding. Roofing,
Replacement Windows,

•

Seamless Guuers &amp;
Downspout, Garage room

ANY

'MA,Al-T~~ lltFE~~NG~.f
OT~~, TMAN

M,. SOGJI:1.

BORN LOSER

"",'fo..N.D JU:J\ f\OW l.AKGE. /&gt;.. PI&gt;..Y

...
I)

""

1&gt;-.LL l 1'-~K
\0 &amp;: P/-..IC&gt;
Wl-\1\:\ L (\t&lt;\
WOR-T\-\ 1

FOR 7

~

·~

TflfN LET ME. IT PI-\~ Tfi(\TJU:&gt;\ fl-OW LN&lt;GE. f'..
Pf'..'{ CUT C"-M
f\1-N DLE. ?

THESE

ARE
WHITE!

!

j,

l

HOW Al1 J: SUPPOSED
A NEW PAll'.
OF LUCKY 50CI&lt;.S
WHEN I't'\ SURIIJ:)UNDED
eY SUC.H INCOMPETENCE 7

W FINP

.
''

! ~~~~~
PEANL:TS
Tf\15 15 CRAZY. SIR .. J.WW
AN ATTORNE'1' LEAD
OUT OF TI-lE. WOOD5'

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, Boat Docks,

one

24 Westem
defense org.
25 "No man-

-Island"
26 Swamps
28 Jail

t S 6 Ol A

OJ e
)SaM
~

L ..

6

b •

occupants

29 Landed
30 Drink liquor
exc_
eatlvely

31 Existence

37 Dodges
adroitly
3811 may bs

lJON

QUIET, MAWE .. NEVeR
DI5TURI3 AN ATTORNEY
WI&lt; EN J.lE'S THINKING

RI611T ABOUT NOW 15 W~EN A
PIZZA WOULD TASTE GOOD ..

Jonathan Swift, who is bestknown for "Gulliver's Travels,"
stated, "The best doclors in the
world are Doctor Diet, Doctor
Quiet and Doctor Merryman." At
the bridge table , though , sometimes Doctor Double prescribes
the perfect potion.
Yeslerday, we looked at a deal
in which a defender who had bid
a suit' subsequently doubled three
no-trump. As mentioned, I think
that the double should ask for the
lead of another suit, not the one he
bid. The doubler has a lower-ranking solid suit, which he is hopin g
partner will hit with hi s opening
lead .
Yet what does it mean if a playe r doubles three no-trump when
hi s side hasn ' t bid' If the opponents start the auction with I NTJNT, the doubler has a sol id suit.
(lf the doubler 's partner is un cerlain as 'to which suit this is. he
selects hi s shorter maj&lt;ir.) But
what if the opponents have been
bidding su iiS before seltling in
three no-trump'' Then Ihe doubler
i.. ; annou ncing thai he is strong in
the dummy's first-bid &gt;u it and is
&lt;~&gt;king his jlarl ner to ;lll &lt;tck thet:e
--as in this deal.
Without the lead-direct ing double. West would selec t ihe diamond five. giving declarer an easy
10 lri cks: four heart&gt;. two dmmonds and four clubs .
After lhe double. 1h oug l1 . West
opens with th e spade I 0 . Having
got the rig ht lead, East still ha s to
be carefuL He mu st overtake with
hi s jack and continue th e suit to
drive out dummy's king. Then,
when he gets in wilh lhe club ace,
he can take enoug h spade tricks to
defeal the contract.

To get a current weather
report, check th'e

Sentinel

IWEDNESDAY

TIIL IRSDAY . .'\u ~ 24. 2000
~ ·""are capa ble' of becoming a
mucc Jlllt linant intluctll'C in your
tH. ~Hill/.a tl o n cll ac1i v1ti es in the
'c: ll. ahc;rJ. he they soc ial or busi"" " rel"tcd . Many peripheral
hL' tlt..' t'i l . ., wd l co me of it.
VIRGO !Aug. D -Sepl 22)
Wl1:11 tr'""l'ires inda y could be
sor hclhing e .xciting thai will ele' ;1t t yo ur hnpcs Jnd cxpeL'tations
r,,r the f111 urc . It'll Fi you lhinklll g positi\'cly aga in. Know where
to loo' lor romance and you'll
fmJ 11 The Astro-Graph Malchm;r~ e r rn slantly reveals which
. ., i g n ~ ;tre nlltHU it ica ll y perfect for
' '" ' Mail S2 .7'i 10 Matchmaker.
~'/o this news paper. PO. Box
17 'iH_ Mmra y Hill Stati on, New
Yor ~ . 1\Y llll'i6
LIBRA (Scpl 2.l -Oc i 23)
h en Ihough you 111 ight not he
,m ·al'L' uf II. )'OU ' \J have I,.'Q !l Sider-

additions, Pole Building,

brown

23 Appear

ahJc 1111'1ucncL' m·cr your p!.!r;:rs
tod "'· It ' ll he the leadership you
di '-~p i.1 ~ tltat g: i,·cs them sw.: h co nfitk nu · 111 \ ou .
SCORI&gt;iO (Oct. 2-l -Nov. 22)
Tr v ll' th.' ' otc . . nme timL' today to
t~J~lin l.! to your warchmrse of
~ 1111\\ !cdgL'. - It', an l'\l.'cpti onal

Jay for rc:-;L' an.:hi•~g. ex plorin g

what you do today b.ccausc what
1111d ex panding yo tn hnritons .
you' ll he doin g. w ill he for those
SAGITTARIUS 1Nm . 2_\ . (Jcc·. close to your heart. No thing is too
21 ) Because· yo u'll I"'""'' a11 much for those you love .
insli11ctual ;rhility to pc·ln'i\e wh;rl
TAUR US (April 20-May 20)
resourLL'~ are tnai labk to you
The SlJCia hl e attuwk you disp lay
l otlay. y o ~u·

chano: . ; for
U. . e w hal \

;m~ \~ llh l llll..' ~d .

"' ll l'L't'S~

at VOli J'

Ji\posa l.
CAPR ICO RN (Dec . 21 -J;rn .
19) In order lo be able to draw
w nslrtiCIIVe co11clusinns today. il
wou ld be hel pful I n L'Xl: haJJ gc
your ideas with a couple of fastthinking fr,end s. usi ng them as a
soundin g board for testing your
ideas .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19 )
You'llaidyourownscarchtofit
into the scheme of things by
being as helpful to yoU&gt;· fri ends as
you can 1oday. By provi ng your
worth , you'll find your way.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Trealing people 111 suc h a conge nial way today makes you a popular person 1o be around . Thai
smile on your face "a medicine
that can be prescribed for ju&gt;~
about anybody . _
.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
You put a little extra effort into

today with all those you encounter
in ~tan t] y• )')LJ(S o tll crs i.tl C;l~t: and

'",. k:h

th e hc...;t l)f th em co me out.
Where,er vou go. fu11 is sure to
fo llo w.
GEM IN I I 11.-Iay 21 -.lun e 201
Take the lll'CL""'- ~11') lll l'i.L"Ll ll':-. to
so lidi fy ) our f111a nc·ial allairs
today. because the aspec ts are
nnw fa\·oring. &gt;nu. h1~.:11 'k P )OU
ta~ c L·utdd llL·Ip pn1' itk a p;~tlm;t)
t&lt;' prul&gt;t
CANCER i.illllc' 2 1-.luh 221
Ynur grcat c't &lt;1" ....' ' h 1 Lb~ j, ~ t'llr
"brill) tu pruj ed c\lllstrueti\ c
tlwu ght sun 1lwse 11 1m need Ihem
Sharin g )'ourself 11 ith li t hers
co uld also turn &lt;l UI t&lt;~ he educ·ali"n"l for )nLI.
LEO i .llrl' 2.1-,\u g. 22 i Tlwre's
a lot mo re· to ) " " than mce ls Ihe
eye toda y. and yo u' ll furnis h the
proof of this by showing ot her&gt;
1he res ource ful way yo u hand le
subj ecfiw i" ucs.

....

"

aparal

"'

constellation

·

42 Golden
43 Small ox
44 Thrash

B \' PHILLIP ALDER

-----------~~~hd~

CARP

12 Highlander

Just a double

DESSART

~'Your

CarPet, Uln~l COiierlnQ
Floor Tile Mill Dlrec1

monkey

(2 wds.j

41 Equatorial

vert1se

FACTORYDI
PRICES

19 Fib
21 Not long ago
(2 wds.)
22 Reddish

FER

•

·(740) 742-8888 ,••• ,
1-888-521-0916

40 Get rid of a
tonant

10 Wild buffalo
11 smtu

8 " Norma-"
9 And others

LOWEEZ.Y'S .

·• PARSON--

~7 40) 992-3470

(740) 985-3948

Warnw

fb}IV4
Et9L:M•

AN'

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

CONCRITE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Monlsonll•dne, Ohio

Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

992-2772

GO?

R/'..1:£ DO YOJ Ft.EL
j()::,nfiE:.D I t-1 /&gt;.,')K.I t-IG

HILl'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM - s -PM
1/21/00 1 mo. Dd.

Reasonable Prices
FRI;E Estimates

"Jth~ad in .$~rvic~"

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

For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

we

ELVINEY'S
FER SUPPER

Certainteed,
Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor

P/B (0NTRAUOR~ 1 1Nt

Rutland, Ohio

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown l nsulation

SUPPER,

WHAR SHALL

Replacement
Windows

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery ·Pus, Inc

Phone (304) 674-6t 00
4078 61h Street
Poin1 Pleasant, WV
Owner Mile Balch
Pager (304) 540-4443

WE GOT TWO

I

D. R.
30Vrs

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

DO 1 nlO. 4 11/00

month.

Phone (740) 593-6671

Standing timber large
or small trac ks . Top
prices paid also.

after 8:00 prn

NOTICE

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

!

1 conotructlon
beam
2 Naveda city
3 Mild tKpletlve
4 Reoldent of

ZSLB}I+

•••3

Puzz~

DOWN

£ 9 8 ..

sarbv•

Ask for Jim

n..........

~
-·
•• .
. .-.·TI'II:tlr
...

WANTED

UNDA'S
PAINTING

$25

t 6 v ..
Et 9 t
; L 4

/

740117-oa83

Stop In And See
Sieve Riffle
·-";' Sales Representative
?~2i

.. .

•Cblllnlnl-..

Anawer to Prevtou1

q1nos

740-992-9636

Youth ond Kids Activities Planned

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Caa/V/1~. OH 45723

992-5479

.~

Rose &amp; Friends

woman Llluder

z s ..

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

FeaturlnQ a 6:00 p.m. performance by Morvin

DIPOYSAG
PARft

.ALLLB
•i

Bluegrass Saturday
" 11311 cllllldlllllae,.,....

.

21 Water willow
23 Act like a
bloodhound
27 lnotruct
32 Atelier Item
33 Songs lor one
34 Bebylonlan

35 Cull
5 Year (Sp.l
36 Scl·ll creature 6 Hot wine drink
39 Bualnesa· 7 Slanted

:a(ql!J3UJRA

SOJfb:M•
OJ r v •
E9 8 4

INVITES FER

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

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

&amp; Back/we

Senice•

Ca1melita &amp; Kenny OsOOme
33869 Blackwood Road · Off St Rl 143

Mason,
304·
773-5300 or 740-99
Reserve a spot lor you; your team, or your leagu,a.

ise
io this
space for
$50 per
month.

42 Roamo Idly
46 While Houoe
nlcknome
47 Donated
51 lncurolon
53 Briefer
55 Actrell Lasoer
56 Joined
57 Rootsurant
Items
56 Spanish
woman

hero

lflJON :Ja1eaa
lS3,Y.-)SB:!f:

ACROSS
- , Heavy boring
tool
7 Boneo lor Fldo,
e.g.
13 "Scraml"
14 01 medicine
15 Not dlgllel
16 Small ohecl
17 Went by cor
18 Last mo. ~
20 Coleau-

6i. :pea( lluruado
SSed

s

.

~oundly

45 Earth
47 Smile
_
48 About (2 wds.) ,
49 Swerve
50 Opera role
52 Enzyme
ending
54 Compass pt.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: J equals B

'IANAEGFPV

CUECYU

IANAEGFPV
HZ U

IUPV

HZUV

CFPHYV
TPUFH

MEG'H

FPU
JUBFXNU

LFGV

NUU .'

E K

HZAGTN
JUPWUYUV

P ABU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'For a politician to complain about the press is like a ··

ship's captain complaining about 1he sea."- Enoch Powell

T~~~:t:~y

S©\\.&lt;iUlA- ~ t.tf~~
ld~o4 ~y

O four
Rearrange lttttrl of
scrambled words

WORD

GAMI

CLAY I, POlLAN _,;__ _ __

the

be·
low to ferm four simple words.

I rllll

I

GUDTUO

2

..

-·,_,......,r.........
r _T..,.E__,o...-l/
1

_r

I

r

~~~L~U~B~Y~R~~~

"I need thiS loan, sir," the man
acknow
ledged to the bank officer
5
_ _ _ _
~ Sm11tng he added , "And I will ai'---L-'---'--J.......Jm ways be in - - - . . - - - "

I Is I

I

;,

EN0 L y L

I0

(-.....,.,,,-r,-r~-T~-,,sr-i

Complete the chvckle q voted

L._L..-L.-1..-.L.-1.
. ...J.
bv filling in the missing words
Y?U develop from step No. 3 below.

$

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS

IN

SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Jumper- Quash- Ensue- H ack 1e - SCARES ME
Overheard in scie· .t.: b. ''I'm not afraid of what we
don 't know . What we already know is what really
SCARES ME "

AUGUST 231

�r

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 23, 2000

-•

FrldiiJ
Hlp: lOs; Low: lOs

Details, A3

NFL CAMP NOTEBOOK

·-•

01

Meigs County fall sports preview inside
Marauders, Devils renew rivalry, Bl

Bears waive former first rounders;
Chiefs also unload dead weight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRE SS

Veterans Chris Mims and
John Avery, both first-round
draft picks , were waived Tuesday as teams moved to so lidify opening-day rosters .
Mims, a C hi cago Bears
defensive lineman who was a
first-round pi c k · of the San
Diego Chargers in 1992 , was
injured most of camp and
missed an 11 :30 a.m. practice
Monday, reportedly because
he overslept.
Mims, who also played for
Washington,
re corded
10
sacks as a rooki e and 4 2 in his

career.
·Avery, a first -ro und pi ck by
Miami in 1998, appears to
have been a victim of a num bers game in Denver 's deep
backfield .
Avery rushed for 61 yards
on 12 preseason carries. He
rushed for 503 yards on 143
carries as a rookie for the
Dolphins in 1998, but had
only 21 yards on five carries
for the Broncos last season.
He caught four passes for 24
yards and returned seve n
kickoffs for 13 7 yards.
Chiefs
Center Aaron Graham, tight
end Kirk McMullen, a Fookie
from Pittsburgh, and wide
receiver Wasswa Serwanga
were among 12 plavers cut.
Wide receiver
Perez was
placed on injured res erve aftqr
injuring his knee .
The
Chiefs
also
cut
receivers Scott Cloman. Brock
McGrew
a nd
Germ aine
Stringer; lin ebacker Jonath a n
Jackson; guard Eric Kin g;
safety Percy King; fullba c k
Charles Kirby ; offensive ta c kle Josh Rawlings, and defensive tackle Kevin Sluder.
Giants
. Sean Benn'ett , the seco ndyear halfback who the Giants

Joe

Reds

r

from Page Bl
was hit) .We got a break and we
came out with a victory."
Maybe Griffey was taken in by
Perez, the shortstop who acted
like it was a hit to confuse him
and keep him from reversing
course in time.
"[ tried to fake somet lun g, like
it was a base Qit," Perez said. "I
don 't know if he saw me."
Griffey left the clubhou se as

Tager
from Page Bl
Tour Acc uracy golf ball, but
instead plays o ne with a different
composition and performance
characteristics specially made for
.him
an d not available to the

Bengals
from Page Bl
"I think it was my consistency,"
said Pope, who averaged 41.0
yards on seven pun ts in prcseJson.
"Plus the fa ct that I ca n hold (on
field goal attempts) help ed"
The Ben gals were ready to stan
over after botched k1 cks m ntributcd to anotl1er 4- 12 sea son .
Snapper G re g Truitt hurt hi s knee
dunng training camp b st year and
Costello tore a leg mu scle. lc·avmg
him out for the first 11 games.
The Bengals showed their
determination to fix things by
drafting a kicker and a snapper in

hGJpcd wou ld be a ke y part of
th eir o ffense. will have season-ending sur gery on hi s
ri g ht kne e wi th i n a wee k to
10 days.
Bennett , who injured the·
sa m e kn ee last year, was hurt
ea rly in the exhib ition opener
against C hi cago.

Bills
Starting nght guard Joe
Panos will miss at lea st the
season-opener agamst Tennessee after inJuring th e arc h
of his foot i n Buffalo's 31-27
win a t St. Loui s on Saturday
night.
Panos, who missed the
entire 1999 seaso n with a
neck injury, worked himself
ba c k into the starting lineup
until the mo st recent setback.
Also. running ba c k Jonathan
Linton sustained a rib injury
against the Rams and won't
play · in Thursday's pres~ason
finale against Philadelphia.

Eagles
Defensive end Greg Jefferso n underwent surgery to
repair th e anterior cruciate
ligament in hi s right knee.
.Jefferson , who hurt his knee
during practice Monday, started 41 games the past three
years. A third - round draft pick
in 1995, he has 1 &lt;i2 tackles,
including 13 112 sacks, in 57
career ga1nes.
Dolphins
Wide
rec e ive r
Lan1ar
Thomas, scheduled to start
the opener in place of O.J.
McDuffie. will miss his second st raight seaso n With an
IllJury.
Miami pla ce d Thomas on
injured res e rve Tuesday, one
day after h e fractured and dislocated his -right hip against
Green Bay.
The Dolphins also made
two trade s. se nding wide
receiver N a te Ja cquet to San

Die go for an undi sclosed
2001 draft pi c k , and acquiring
wide rece iver Jeff Ogden from
Dallas for an undisclosed 2002
pi c k .
Miam i also placed McDuffie
on the physi cally- un able-toperform list with a toe injury
and waived e ight others.
M c Duffie will miss at least six
weeks .
Additionally, defe nsive end
Adewale Ogunleye was plac e d
on reserve w ith a non-football injury.
Colts
Indianapolis got down to
the NFL roster limit by trading punter . John Baker to
Super Bowl champion St.
Louis for an undisclosed draft
pick.
Baker, an undrafred rookie
from North Texas, had seven
punts in four exhibition
games for a 43. 6-yard average.
His longest was a 56-yarder
and his net punting average
was 34.,1.
The Rams released punter
Rick Tuten and lineb ac ker
Troy Pelshak to get below the
NFL roster limit and be able
to acquire Baker.
Cowboys
Cornerback Kevin Smit h
was placed on the reservedretired list and could become
an ass istant coach this season.
Smith left training camp a ·
few weeks ago to decide
whether to call it a career
after nine seasons. Being
placed on this list doesn't n ecessarily end his playing days,
but becoming a coach would .
Also Tuesday, Dallas released
running back Michael Blac k .
Lions
Detroit claimed running
back Ken Oxendine
off
waiver. from Atlanta on Tues day and released 13 players to
rea c h the 65-man roste r limit.

The Lions also placed rookIe runnmg back Rueben
Dtoughns and .cornerback
Kevin Abrams on injured
reserve.
Oxendine, a 230-pounder
from Virginia Tech, is a thirdyear pro who spent two seasons wi-th the Falcons. He was
a seventh-round draft pick in
1998. In 21 NFL 'games, he
rushed for 502 yards with a
touchdown .
The players released were:
tight end Steve Brominski;
cornerback Andre Dixon;
wide receivers Dam1en Dodson and Henry Douglas; lineba c kers Scott Fields and Joe
O'Nei ll ; guards Paul Janus and
Je,remy Mankins; detensive
tackle Sean Powell; defensive
ends Quinton Reese and Paul ·
Spicer; running back Charlie
Sanders, and safety Ryan
Stewart .

Bengals

. ] l . . . ,'
,•I
'
'
l
.
.
.' :· l · ,~ 11! ~ j, I"!~ .' '
. I'
1

1 "''\

'

t-,,r

.

ij
'

I

'

'

,,~,y ~-·..
'

\

\

' ·~

' \

\.

.

'

. . r,•,"

•

'

'I 1 I

'l
'

1

'

\

,

I '
,I

.

''
...

:
I

1' (

•\

''

' ~t., ..'
. -~.
tI .J_,
'•

Couch

from Page Bl

•
Palm e r said . " li e prJLt ll ed .1nd
went through -..OJI IL' of lilL' pL1y-... I
don 't anticipatt· any probll'm s.
We'll mcrease the number of reps
the ne~t day If Ihere are no problems."

~

:

::

'

1
1

I..........
I ' .....
-' ..I

\'i )

I

..

'• '' •
I

~!

ODOT holds
final public
meeting on proJect

$275 Per Month
\

o

'

o

I

,

I

I

&lt;

'

JIJ•

~'

..

. '

.w:c·
•
:• .

5Speed, AC, AM/FM Cassette,
Aluminum Wheels, 23,000 Miles

$220 ·Per Month

first six weeks of the regular season.
Palmer also said Tu esday that
cornerback Daylon McCutcheon
(chest bruise) would not play ,
a~ ins t the Packer and that tight ,
end Mark Campbell injured his
'.
left foot against the Redsk.ins.

two students are part of the JTPA Community Action Summer Youth
Program, which hires area youth for summer employment. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

Renovated::S~ready -far .students
. .,,.

"

$600, 000 project
upgrades
39-year-old fadlty
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

5 Speed, VS, AC, Power Equipment,
Cruise, Tilt, 20,200 Miles

$320 Per Month

The Bengals also waived line backer Ben Peterson and three
coll ege free agents: fullback
Ri cky Brown, linebacker Alan
Buckwalter and defensive tackle
Mike Willetts.
Co rn e rback Charles Fisher,
recovering from reconstructive
knee surgery, was placed on the
physically unable to perform list.
He 's eligible to return after the
sixth week of the season.
Later Tuesday, the Bengals
clauu ed offensive ta c-kle Kris Far"' off wa ivers from the Pittsburgh
Steelcrs. Farris. a third -ro und
draft pick in 1999, missed last season with a broken foot.

GETTING READY- Southern Local High School students, Amy Wilson
and Candise Barber, help complete various painting tasks Wednesday
morning in preparation for the beginning of classes on Monday. The

BY TONY M. l&amp;ACH

AC, 5 Speed, Cruise, Am/FM Stereo,
Only 26,000 Miles

$210 Per Month

ACINE The
halls of Southern
High Sc hoo l in
R ac ine are a flurry of activity this
week as construction workers
hustle to . complete work on the
building before class es start Monday.
Th e renovations to the high
. sc hool , opened in 1961 . will
upgrade existing classrooms and
create several new ones.
Th e cost of the renovations is
in the $500,000 to $600,000
range and the improvetnents
should be completed when students return to th e classroom.
"All new renovations on preexisting rooms will be completed
for the first day of classes," said
Southern Local Superintendent
James Lawren ce . .,,H owever, one
biology classroom will not be
ready for students because its new

WELDING PIPE - Mike Walte rs, a pipe fitter for Geiger Bros. of
Logan, continues his welding duties in the renovated special education room located inside Southern High School in Racine. The new renovations are scheduled to be completed before the first clay of class·
es are set to begin on Monday. (Tony M. Leach photo)
windows have not been deli ve red
yet.
"Th e bio logy class will meet on
the stage inside the gymnasium
for about the first two weeks of

school. Th is should not pose a
problem for students because they
have taken classes on the stage in
the past."
The new additions to the

school w'ill house business office
education class es, soph()more and
senior English classes , biology
classes, and special educat'ion
classes.
However, pa'ce of constru ction
on several additions to the sc hool ,
which include a new media ce nter, computer labora tory and snence cho;srooms, wen:: temporarily slowed last month because of a
delay in the shipment of steel to
the constru ction site.
Lawrence said these new additimo s should be finisbed by midOctober.
Both high school sta ff members
and students were busy Wedn esday morning sorting out various
item s .md moving equipment .
"We have school personnel and
students working very hard trying
to get everything ready for next
w ee k," Lawre nce sa id. "Th e
anticipation level around h ere is
very high right now."
Progress is a1so co ntinuing on
the new Southern Local Elementary School project next to th e
high school.
"Th e decking for the new elememary sc hool is being laid
down as we speak," Lawren ce

Please see SHS. Pace A3

Rich is the sole ·survivor'
Toclay's
and he's really rich now Sentinel

1 Sec:tlons - 11 Paps

Auto, AC, AM/FM Cassette, Cruise, Tilt,
Power Equipment
2 In Sto~k at this payment
Both have Low Miles

$285 Per Month
• •11 APR for 10 Monthl WAC TIIC &amp; T"lt F"l Extr1

penalty flag thrown by referee Jeff
Triplettc.
Brown has not been able t,a
pra ctice all summe r and is cu rrently on the physically- unable w - perfonn li st.
Cleveland can either activate
Brown, release him or place the
6 - foot -7. 35U- pounde r on an
inactive injured list, wh1e h \~ould
mean Brown co uldn't play for the

.

:

Auto, V6, AC, AM/FM Cassette,
4 In Stock At This Payment

:i-

...

Woods showed up.
Titl eist contemp lated a lawsuit,
but instead reworked Woods' deal
so that he was paid only when he
used Tirle ist equipment in tournaments. Titleist also gave up its
right to have its logo on his bag
and to use Woods in advertisements.

C kwland tnmmcd irs roster by
fo ur players on Monday, but still
has 20 players to cut to get down
to the rcq01red 53 by Sunday.
flv Ih at time , the Browns will
,J[...o h:t vc ro 111 :1 k·· ;~. de ci~ ion on
l)lh•m J\'l' tJL kk O rlando Brown .
Brown sutlered a c;evere injury
to hi s . 1ght eye 111 a Dec. 1~ game
aga111 st Jacbonviile whe11 he wa&gt;
acu dentall y ha With a weighted'

I

$235 Per Month

sponsors - Nike and Titleist that began last year when Nike
entered the ball market.
Titleist argued that Nike was
usmg Woods to promote golf balls
beca use of two commercials one that showed Woods bounci ng
a ball off his wedge, and another
that showed hackers on the range
belti ng 300-yard dnves as soon as

so Cents

Connector
concems
addressed

See Us Today For A
"Quality" Pre Owned Vehicle!!!

.

ge neral public," the suit said.
The gro up did not return
repeated ca lls for comm e nt .
Woods officially switched to
the Nike Tou r Acc ura cy ball
before the U.S. Ope n , the fi rst of
his th ree major champ10nships
thts year. The move o ffi cially
e nded a marketing conflict
betwee n Woods' top two golf

son , after Johnson suggested the
front office had to change its
ways.
Costello kicked a team-record
73-yard punt in his first game on
Dec. 13, 1998 at Indi anapolis and
averaged 51.5 yards on fou r punts
in that game.
His leg injury last season left
Will Brice to handle the punts
until he returned . Costello averaged o nl y 3~ . R -ya rds o n 22 punts
in the last five games, a sign he
hadn't fully recovered.
He was inconsistent this preseason and sealed his fate with a
poor showin g last Satv rday in a
24-20 wm over Chicago. Costello was booed after punts of 36,
34, 23 and 22 yards.

Hometown Newspaper

Driving Araund In That 01' Clunker...
Always Breaking Dawn?

•

scouting.... The Reds have five
grand slams this season - two by
Griffey, one each by Bichette,
Young and Ochoa . ... Reliever
Mark WoWers; bothered by a sore
stomach, had tests at a hospital
Tuesday that came back normal.
... RHP Osvaldo Fernandez will
have an MRI on his sore right
shoulder Wednesday. The initial
diagnosis is tendinitis .... C Eddie
Taubensee, disabled by a bulging
disc in his back, will have another
injection Wednesday.

August 24. 2000

•

······1: ' .,

so that'• special, and that makes it
even more ~pe c ial ," Ochoa said.
"But losing takes the fun out of
it."
Reds Notes: The Phillies' four
double plays gave them seven in
two games. As a result of the dou ble plays. the R eds got six hits but
didn't leave a runner on base.
Phillies pitchers fa ced the minimum 24 batters over the final
eight innings .... Bichette hit into
three of the double plays .... Kasey
McKeon, son of the R eds manager,
was
promoted
from
scour/ cross checker to directo r of

Thursday

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 64

One day .after releasing
longtime kicker Doug Pelfrey,
Cincinnati cut punter Brad
"H'
"I ,]1!
'1,
Coste llo on Tuesday.
r1 " .)~ I 1"I ' l I
.1"
,
,
Costello's release leaves the
,.' I"L'"1J1
' om,
'I' I"\'\ ·~L 1"1·;1:
I
'
~ ' -' o..-l•~"l'
' f \ '-, L~i 1' '
'
'
job to Daniel Pope, who
"
"
punted for Kansas City last
year and was claimed off
waivers in July: He averaged
41.8 yards fo r the Chiefs.
Auto, 4 Cyl., AC, AM/FM Casette,
The Bengals also waived
Power Windows &amp; Locks
linebacker Ben Peterson and
2 In Stock
three co lle ge free agents: fullback Ricky Brown, lin ebacker
Alan Buckwalter and defensive tackle Mike Will e tts.
Cornerback Charles Fisher,
re cove ring from reconstructive knee surgery, was placed
on th e physically-unable-toperform list .
The Bengals claimed offensive tackle Kris Farris off
waivers from the Pittsburgh
'/~:n:. .
Steelen . Farris missed last sea- l·i~tr,::,.,.;;;; :,;:;~ ~.,'lfllt1t1!/!.iff-iftJ'I!N·"J~Jflj/jf~~'¥'iklco/&lt;'"~·w··ii1f~w·,1WM¥!·'&lt;'''!
so n with a broken foot.
.,

soon ·as it opened to reporters,
providing no explanation.
The Reds lost for the sixth
time in eight games even though
they got their second grand slam
in two nights.
Dmitn Yo un g hit the second
upper-deck grand slam in stadium history during the Reds' 7-4
victory Monday ni ght . He was on
base In the first inning when
Ochoa hit his first ca reer slam off
Bruce Chen.
Ochoa d1dn 't realize his slam
set a record.
"That was my first grand slam

April and b ring ing in competition for th e punting job.
No body's job was safe.
"They made that clear to us
right off th e bat, even when
Doug was here ," Pope said.
Pdfrey left himself v ulnera ble
' 27 field
by making only 18 of
goal :1ttcmpts last season, when
the timing of kick&lt; was thrown
off by constant changes in t he
holder and smppcr. Rackers has a
stronger leg, g•vin g him th e edge.
The
Bengak
cnvisiUnc:tl
Costello as a long- term pu nte r
when they signed hun as a rookie free Jgent in 1 ~\18 a nd put him
on the practice squad . He was so
unpressive that they .released
punter Lee Johnson late that sea-

Meigs County's

I

· MIDDLETOWN , R .I. (AP) - H e
was taunted for his penchant for nudity,
condemned as manipulative and even
call ed a snake by a fc llow t:astaway.
On Wednesday, Richard H atch
earned another label : millio naire.
The 39- year-old corporat e trainer
took home th e cash pri ze and a new car
on th e final episode of Cl:lS"'Survivor,"
confounding those ce rtain his schemin g
would cos t him in the end .
" 1 didn 't think he'd win it ," .aid
Andrew Gold. co-owner of Golds
Wood Fired Grill &amp; Cafe. where 1--btch
ate almost daily while he tramcd for th e
show. "He wasn't worried if people
liked him or did n't like hun . You c;111
hate him for that or call him arrogant .
Obviously, it worked ."

Outlasting Susan Hawk, R11dy
lloesch and Kelly Wl[;l~~worth, Hatch
bt·came the sole survivor:from the original 16 who maroorted-~hl'lnsclves on
the remote trop1 cal island Pulau Tiga at
the series' launch in May.
Tht· final choice - between Hatch
and Wiglesworth - was handed down
by a jury of &lt;even former tnbe-mates.
Tlwir vo te - some complete with personal vitr.iol - was a squeaker: 4 to 3.
" I wou ldn't changt· anything that I
did," Rich told the JUry in a final statement.
Then , waiting for the· hallots to be tallied , he admitted, " I can't breathe."
When " Survivor" host Jefl' Probst

being built.
In answer to a question about
who will fix the roads used for
detours once the highway is ,
completed, Collins said ODOT
has a policy of taking care of apy
problems
caused
by
the
increased
volume
of
traffic
.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Another
asked·
about
th
e
plan
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY With the for notifying reside nts when
Ravenswood Connector project sections of roads are being
now ,in its final phase of design, closed, with on e of the officials
the Ohio Department ofTrans- responding that a couple of
portation , Distri ct 10, held its we eks before changes are made
last public meeting on that pro- signs go up and residents are
ject Wednesday night at Royal notified.
Collins gave a timeline for the
Oak Resort.
Th e purpose of the meeting construction of the three-segwas to get input from residents ment highway proJ eCt which
about th eir concerns so they will connect existing SR 7 with
could be "addressed upfront, the Ritchie bridge over the
thereby keeping probl ems to a Ohio River at Great Bend and
minintum ," said District 10 with 1-77 at R avenswood, W.Va.
D escribed as a Super ll-lane
Deputy
Director
George
with controlled access, turn
Collins.
lan
es, and wide shoulders, the
The nearly 40 people attending had few qu estions, most of highway will be built in three
which centered on how traffic segments, each taking two years
will bt:: maintain ed and the to complete. It w11l be a width
ave.n\leS of detour to be used of 44 feet of pavement wit.~ ; ~1\. ,
dU:rittg the construction proces.• . · feet · of ttaveli"g l ane; otB~"
Using a screen for th eir pre- report~d.
The first segment, as described
sentation, ODOT officials took
the r esidents on a "waJk by Collins, wi ll be about seven
through" of the entire project, miles beginning at the Ritchie
~ from t-he Rav.,nswood Sridge to - -bric)ge and ending u ear~SR 124
Rome 7 at Five Points, showing and County Road 35 (Portland
how co unty and township roads Road) and Sutton Township
will be used to maintain traffic
as each section of the highway is
Please see ODOT. Pllce A3

CONCERNS EXPRESSED - Residents were given an opportunity
to express their concerns Wednesday aoout highway construction
oetween Route 7 at Five Points and the Ravenswood oridge at a
meeting at Royal Oak Park. George Collins, District 10 deputy
director, answered questions and then gave a time\ine of highway
prOJects for Meigs County. (C harlene Hoefli ch ph oto)

All
spruced

up

A~

Calendar
Clilnifi~!ls

BZ-~

Comi!,;s
Editorials
OlzitHilti!:~
S12orts
Wei! the[

BS
M
AJ

Bl,!!
AJ

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3: 8-9-0; Pick 4: 4-4-4- 2
Super Lotto: 2-7-10-11- 18-24

Kicker: 5--3-3-2-4-0

"'VA.
Daily 3: 7- R- 1 Daily 4: R-h-f&gt;-4

When visiting Pomeroy, one
cannot help but not ice the overall c leanliness and orderliness
of the downtown ousiness area.
Much of the credit for that goes
to Dale Riffte of Minersville,
who was hired oy the village a
few months ago to work in the
historic downtown. He's serious
about keeping the streets clean
of debris, painting whatever
needs painting, and watering
the flowers along Main Street
when they need it. This week
he began painting space divider
lines on the lower parking Jot.
"He's doing a great job." said
one councilman. (Tony M.
Leach nhoto)

&lt;

,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="442">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9881">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25399">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25398">
              <text>August 23, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1530">
      <name>beegle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1382">
      <name>devault</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
