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'

hge B8 • The Dally Sentinel

Mon~ay,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
the hrst two gan1es, and the difference came down to which team
could make the right decisions
and sink the key shots in the final
minute.
With the Knicks leading 80-78
with o ne . minute left, Charles
Oakley picked up his dribble 30
feet from the basket and threw the
ball out of bounds when none of
the other Raptors came to help
him.
Allan Houston, who led New
York with 23 points, made a 21foot jumper with 44 seconds left
for an 82~ 78 lead.
After two foul shots by Antoni o
Davis, Johnso n's three -pointer
slammed off the backboard and
went right th rough the net.
Upon making th e shot. Johnson

NBA
from

Page Bl

you're not going to come back
and play basketball. Now I've got
to go home and watch and deal
with nephews and cousins."
Philadelphia and Indiana will
attempt to wrap up their series
tonight. The 76ers face C harlotte
at home, and the Pacers are at
Milwaukee.
New York moves on to face t he
Heat in the playoffs for the fourt h
straight season. This time, both
teams are coming off firs t-round
sweeps. .
The Kmcks had to work hard
·for th is victory, just as th ey did in

Reds

Notes: Reds LF Dmitri Yo un g
was 2-for-3 with two walks and is
batting .500 (11 -for-22) in the last
from Page Bl
six games .... Th&lt;" Reds. 12- 12 in
R eyes got Kevi n Young to fly out. April. haven 't had a winn ing April
Boone had an . RBI groundout si nce \994 . They sta rt&lt;'J 9- 14 last
season b~:fore fimshm g H7 -S.1.
in the Reds' ninth .
T he l'aates o pened a 2-IJ lead in The R eds are 9-0 whc• n th ey lc•ad
the fourrh on a pair of walks and after eight inninb"· ... The Pir:ttcs
Pat Me ares' two-run double, their have a league-low tAree ~avt:s. ...
first hit in 19 at-bats wi th runners They went 9-15 in April and, like
in sco rin g position in tlw series. the Reds, haven't had a winning
They co uldn't get anothe r, strand- April since 199 4.... Mea res has
driven in fiw of the Pira tes' nine
ing l 0 runners .
Scott Williamso n pitched the runs in the four-game se rtes.
fina l two innings for Ius first save. which wraps up toqay.

pomted hiS bst at hiS nght elbow
- his "Big L" gesture that has
returned to fashio n after a oneyear hiatus.
O nly this time, the " L" might
j ust as well have stood for " Lucky"
than "Larry."

Carter had another below-par
game, scoring 15 points on 5-for17 shooting. The Knicks aggressively double-teamed rum in the
fina l minutes, even sending two

NAPA

from Page 81

men out to guard hun at hallcourt
when he brought the ball up.
Houston had his highest-scoring game of the series, while
Johnson added \4 points, Patrick
Ewing had 12 and Sprewell had
11.
Davis Jed the R aptors with I 8
points.
The biggest statistical difference
was in three-point shooting New York went 9-for-16 and
himself 37th o n the restart after
the first of six caution. flags in the
race.
I
He qmck:ly moved back into
co ntention, slicing through traffic
with what was obviously one of
the fa stest cars on the California
Speedway's two- mile oval.
Still, jt didn 't appear Mayfield
would be a factor up front until
Jimmy Spencer spun and hit the
wall o n bp 219 of the 250-lap

Toronto was 3-for-21.

Kings

,9, Lakers 91

Chris Webber scored 29 points
and reserve Tony Delk added 11 in
Sacramenio 's ho.me victory ove:
Los Angeles.
Shaquill e O'Neal had 21 points
and 17 rebounds, but went 8-for22 from the field and 5-for-14
from the line for the Lakers. Kobe
Bryant scored 16 of his 35 points
in the fourth quarter.
rest of the way, although he very
nearly lost it.
Labonte charged back to regain
second place on lap 234. but
trailed the leader by just over two
seconds. The series points leader
- replacing Mark Martin , who
finished 14th Sunday - steadily
cut into the lead and was trailing
by only 1.016 ~econds when DICk
Trickle hit the wall on lap 243.
On the e nsuing resta rt· on lap
247, Mayfield's ignition faile d and
Labonte's Pontiac pulled alonboside
on ihe inside of the Ford. But
Mayfield quickly switched to IllS
ba ckup ignition and set sai l,
pulling back into the lead.
"On that restart, (Mayfield) kit d
of scared me," Labonte said. " I w.s
going to try to get by him o n the
outside and he let off the gas and I
thought ~ might be trying to
block me and 1 hesitated a little. It

May 1, 2000

Game 4 is Tuesday night in
Sacramento .

late in the race, crew chief Peter
Sopenzo had a crewmen hand the
drtver two bags of ice during a pit
stop to slip behind hi s back.
" It was real hot and I'm probably all blistered up, but you've got
to suck it up sometimes," Mayfield l'V~Ilt.
sa td.
Kcn seth , who dominated th e
Following the celebratio n in ra ce, leading four times for I 29
vic tory circle, Moyfield was taken laps. was in front of.second-place
to the infield ll1t'dical cente r for Labonte by more than three secmi glu have . j[ won , [hat's whl'n in
examin .ltion and treatmetlt for onds when Spencer brought o llt
happened."
'
deh ydra tio11 . ·
Kenscth
wos
followed
by
Rick!y
the caution .
The wmnn. whose only pn..·vi_Rudd , Jeff Burton, Ward Burto'ti
All th e leaders pitted and seve rous vi ctory ca me in Pocono on al, incl uding Mayfi eld, changed
and pole-winner Mike Skinner~
June 12, I ')98, started 24th in the· only two tires while Kenseth and
Jeff Gordon, who won two of th.;'
43-car field and got off to a good Labonte both took the tim&lt;' to
first three Cali fornia races and finstart. But, with the oil tank prob- change all fo ur.
ish ed fourth in the other, wa•
lem, Mayfield was forced to make
Mayfield, w ho also took no gas, messed up my mon1entum and my never in contention and wouOd
two quick pit stops and found came out first and stayed there the plans."
up 11th Sunday,

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
0·0). 8 05 p.m.

Saturday's scores

Arizona (Stolllemyra 4·1} at Milwaukee
(Havnes 3-1 ), 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Schmidt 0·2) at St. Louis (Anklel

Chicago While So.: 2, Detroit 1

CLEVELAND 3, Boston 2

Eastern ........................... 202
AiverValley ............. ...... .ooo

5-8·1

01 =
00=

o-7-7

Seattle 11, Kansas City 3
Anaheim 7, Tampa Bay 6

Eastern: Lyons (W)
River Valley: Baker (L) and Rose

RiverValley .............. ,. .... 200 01
Batterln

N.Y. Yankees 7, Toronto

13·3·?

~

Detroit4 , Chicago White So)( 3 (12)
Oakland 8, Minnesota 2
Texas 8, Baltimore 4

3·3·?

=

3.0). 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta {Mulholland 3·2) at Los Angeles
(Park 3-2), 10:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Rusch 1-1) at San Francisco
(Hemandez Q.4). 10:15 p.m.

Sunday's scores
Boston 2, CLEVELAND 1

Eastern 13, River Valley 3
72 =

Montreal (Powell 0·1) at Colorado (Karl 0-2).
9:05 p.m.
Florida (Nunez 0-2) at San Diego (Clement

Oakland 6, Minnesota 2 (1 0)

BetteriH

Eastern .......................... 202

3·1), 8:10 p.m.

Battlmont 3, Texas 1
Toronto 6, N.Y. Yankees 2

Eastern 5, River Valley 0

~
anyl and money won:

Eastern: Smith
River Valley: Spaulding (L) and Rose

Kansas City 6, Seattle 3
Anaheim 5, Tampa Bay 2

NBA first-round
Tonight's games
N.Y.Yankees (Mendoza 2·2) at CLEVELAND playoff slate
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - How a stale (Wright 2'0. 7:05p.m.
panel of coaches rates Ohio high school baseDetroit (Nitkowski , --4) at Boston (Fassaro 2Saturday's scores
ball ' teams in the third regular-s eason paM for 1), 7:05p.m.
Mlamt 91, Detroit 72; Miami wins series 3·0
The Associated Press (by Ohio Hljjh Scnool Ath·
Oakland (Olivares 1-3) at Kansas City
Phoenix 101, San Antonio 94; Phoeni)( leads
letlc Association di11islons, with first-place votes (Durbin H). 8:05p.m.
·
In parentheses):
Tomn10 ( Carpen~er 2.;s) .at Chicago Whit e series 2·1
Seattle 89, Utah 78: Utah leads series 2- 1
Sox (K.Wells 2·2). 8.05 p.m.
Indiana 109, Milwaukee 96; Indiana leads
Division I
series 2·1
Tuesclly'l
games
Tum
W:L
1!11
1·Manstleld Madison (9) ........ 13·1
1&amp;4
N.Y. Yankees (Pel1itte 0·1) a1 CLEVELAND
Sunday's scores
2-Toledo Stan (4) ................... 10.0
104 (Witt 0.0). 7:05p.m.
New York 87, Toronto 80; New York wins
a-Defiance~,) .... ................. 13·,
102
Anaheim (Schoenewels 4-o) . at Baltimore
series 3·0
4·Cin. Moeller (1) ................... 12·1
101 (Ponson 2-1), 7:Q5 p.m.
Minnesota 94, Portland-87; Por11and leads
5-Cin.Eider(4)........................15-4
86
Detroit (MJohnson 0-0) at Boston (Rose 1·2) ,
series 2-~
B·Toledo Waite ....................... 12.0
85 7:0 5p.m.
Sacra mento 99, L.A.lakers 91; L.A. Lakers
7-Grove City ......................... 13-6
77
Texas (Helling 2·1) at Tampa Bay (Rupe 0·3),
lead series 2·1
B·Hamllton .............................. 15-4
53
7:15 p.m.
9-LakewoocL ......................... 13·1
44
Oakland (Mahay 0-1) at Kansas City (Batista
10-Brunswlck ... ........... ............ 12·1
33
1-0), 8:05p.m.
This week's games
Second 10: 11-LOGAN 31. 12·Maytleld VII·
Sea ttle (Halama 2-Q) at Minnesota (Mays 0·
Tonight
tage Mayfield (1) 29. 13-Falt11eld .24. 14-Canton 3), 8:05p.m.
Charlotte at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
GlenOak 21 . 15-Dubtln Cottman 20. 16-Unlon·
Toronio (Castillo 0-2) at Chicago White So)(
Indiana at Milwaukee. 9:30p.m.
town Laka ,g_17-N. Canton Hoover 18. 18· (Parque 3·1). 8:05p.m.
Tuesday
OHSAA poll

Solon 15. 19·Mass. Wa~hi ngton 13. 20·Wester-

~lle

Nonh 12.

Portland at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Phoenix. 9 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 10 ~30 p.m.

; NL standings

Division II
l·Hebron Lakewood (13) ....... 18.()

Eaatern Dlvlalon

227

2-Vandalia Butler (12) ............ t3 -o
3-Steubenville {2} ................... 18 ·1
4-Carrollton (1) ... ,.
... . .14-7
S-Tipp Citv Tippecanoe ..... 15·2
6·BfYan ................................... 11·1
7-Sprinofield Shawnee ........... 14·3
B·Orescfen Tri -Valley ............... 11 · 1

Tum

201

rt

Atlanta ........
.. ............. 18
New Vork ................... ..... 16
Montreal .............
....... 14
Florida ...
.. .............. 13
Pniladelphta
........ .7

~69

143
109
97
81

62
53

9·POATSMOUTH ........ ...... .11·2

Wednesday

L 1!&amp;1.
6

10
9
13
17

Central Division

10·SI . Ma~s Memorial ........... 13·4

46
Second 10: 11 -Cuya . Falls Walsh Jesuit 43.
12-Galion.39. 13-Parma His. Holy Nama 38. 14·

Men1or Lake Cath . 36. 1s-Ham. Badin {1) 31. 16
(tie)·BetiefOI'ltaJne, Alliance 28. 18·'f'ooster Tri·
way 23. 19-Tallmadge (1) 19. 20-Trenton Edge·

B
CINCINNATI ..
....... 12 12
Houston :........ .. ................9 14
Milwaukee .......
.. ...... 9 15
Pittsburgh.......... ..
.. ...... 9 15
Chicago ...............
.... 10 17
St. Louis....................... .... 17

wood 17.

.750
.615
.609
500
292

Division Ill
1·WHEELEASBURG (12) .... .15·0
2·Cokfwater (9) .................... 14.()
3·Ciovti.VASJ .......................... :9·1

229
175
128

4-Bioomdale Elmwood ........ ... 14 -2
5·Genoa .. .
.14-2
6·Bell. Benjamin Logan ....... ,.. 14·3
7-Piain City Jon. Alder. ........... 13·S
B·Ank:a Seneca E. (2) ........ :... 10·0
9·Gnad.lndian Valley .............. 11 ..£
10.Cin. Oak Hiii ........................B-2

114
106
105
100

3' ,
6
11

.680
500
391
.375
375
.370

sary

9 .640
10 .583
14 .440
14 .440
13 .435

Seattle at Utah, TBA. it necessary

•••7
7',
7'.
7'.

1'.
5
5
5

Saturday's scores
Houston 10, Milwaukee 3

Arlzona 7, Chicago Cubs 4 (10)

45
35

Friday

Sacramento at L.A. Lakers. TBA. it neces-

CINCINNATI 6, Pit1sburgh 5

58

Thursday ·
Milwaukee at Indiana, TBA, If necessary
Minnesota at Portland, TBA, if necessary
Philadelphia at Cha rlotte, TBA , if necessary
Phoenix at San Antonio; TBA, it necessary

3

Waatem Division

Arizona ............................. 16
LosAngeles ..................... 14
Colorado ........ ................. 11
San Oiego ........... .. .. ....... 11
San Francisco .................. 10

Utah at Seattle, 9 p.m.

WI

NHL conference
semifinals
Saturday'$ scores
Piltsburgh 4 , Philadelphia 1; Pittsburgh
leads series 2-0
Colorado 3, Detroil1 ; Colorado leads series

2·0

New Jersev 1, Toronto 0; series lied 1-1

N.Y. Mets U , Colorado 6

Second 10: 11-Campbetl Memorlal 32. 12·
Johnstown Northrldge 2t. 13 (tiei.Cin. Madeira
(1), Ash . Crestview 21. 15 {tle)-Mass. Tuslaw,
Satavla 20. 17 (tle)·W. Lafayette RidGewood.
MINFORD 13. 19-Columblana 10. to (tie)·
Lynchburg·Ciay, Granvill? 9.

San Francisco 2. Montreal !
St. Louts 7, Philadelphia 6'(10)
Los Angeles 13, Florida 12

Atlanta 7, San Diego 4 (12)

Sunday's scores
CINCINNATI 6. Pfttoburgh 2
Sl. Louis 4, Philadelphia 3

Dlvlalon IV
Milwaukee 4, HouSton 3
1-Toronto ('14) ........ :................ 21-2
227
Anzona 6 , Chicagd Cubs 0
2-l.lma Perry (4) :.................... 11.()
203
N.¥. Mats 14, COlorado H
3-FalrpattHarborHitrding (3) 15·1
183
Montrea14, San Francisco 3
4·NowRetgel(1) .................... 14-2
139
Los Angeles 7, Florida 1
5-Fort Recovery ..................... 10-4
n
Atlanta 7, San Diego 4
B·Falrtletd ................... ........... 12·2
76
?·'N. Unny HIUtop .....................8·2
70
Tonight's games
B·Fayenevllle-Perry ................ 11.0
67
CINCINNATI {Neagle 2·0) at Pittsburgh
9·51. Henry (21......................... 9·5
66
10·SYMMES VALLEY (1) ........ 10·2
56 (Anderson 1.0). 7:05 p.m.
Houston (001el 0·2) at Milwaukee (Woodard
Second 10: 11 ·0ttovttle 42. 12·Southfngton
cnatker41 . 13-0elphos Sl. John's26. t4-Crest- 0·3). 8:05 p.m.
Montreal (Hermanson 3-1 ) at Colorado
11ne 24. 15-Cin. Landman&lt; Christian 13. 16-You.
Strltch 8. 17 (tle).Cin. Country Day, Bellaire St. (Jarvis 1·1). 9:05p.m.
Florida (Dempster 1·2) at San Diego
John, Middletown Fenwick 7. 20·Mineral Ridge

Sunday's score

0

Dallas 1. San Jose, O: Dallas leads series f·
T~ls

Tonight
Toronto at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Detroit, 7 p·.m. ·

Tullldly

Philadelphia at Pinsburgh. 7 p.m
Dallas at San Jose, 10 p.m.

.

Wodntldlly

Toronto at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
ColoradO at Detroit, 7 p.m.

Thurtday

Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.

Frldoy

Detroit at Colorado , B p.m., tf necessary
Danas at pan Jose, 9:30 p.m.

Soluntoy

New Jersev at Toronto, '7:30 o.m.

(Williams 3-1), 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Millwood 2-Q) at Los Angeles

B.

(Gagne 0·1), 10:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mats (Pulsipher 0..0) at San Francisco NAPA
(Estes0.1J, 10:15p.m.
·

-

Meigs 5, Federal Hocking 0
federal Hooking ....... 000 000 0 • 0-4·2
Metgo ........................ 300 011 ' • 15-7·1
Meigs: Laudermm IWPl and Hams
· Federal Hocking: Calaway (LP) and MOO&lt;e

Eoo11fn Dl•lolon
W L

NtiwYork ......................... 15
• Bllttlmore .. ............. ........... 14
Boston.............................. 12
Toronto .. .. ......................... 12 ·

Tampa Bay....... ..................9

~

8
10 .583
9 .57 1
1• .462
15 .375

Live in one state,
work in another?

. t'.
2
-1 ',

e·•

Chk:ago............CM~~~~·~.
..... · ..~
. ~~·~!j~~~,~~
CLEVELAND ............:... ..
Kansas Citv .. ................_. ..
Minnesota .. ............ ... ,..... .

Detroit ................... ............. 6

Wettern DIV"IIion

Seat11e ................... ....... _.. 13 10 .565
An alleim ........................... 13 13 .500

Oakland .......................... 12 13

Te)(as ....................... .......... 9 15

460

.375

500 results

Tueaday's games
CINCINNATI (Parris 1·3) at Philadelphia
(As~by 1·2), 7:05p.m.
.
Houllon (lima H) at Chicago Cuos (Wood

AL standings
tllm

week's games

1' '

2

··~

618 East Main St.
1·740·992·6674

1. (24) Je remy Mayfield, Ford, 250.
$125,925.
2. (36) Bobby Labonte, Pontiac, 250.
$135,300.
.
3. 23) Man Kenseth. Font, 250, $114,325.
4. 3) Ricky Rudd, Ford, 250, $86,525.
5. 13) Jeff Burton. Ford, 250, $77,575.
6. 4) Want Burton, Pontiac, 250, $76,725.
7. (1) Mike Skinner. Chevrolet, 250,
$70,950.
8. (11 ) Rusty Wallace, Font. 250, $64.150.
9. (33) Dale Jarren, Ford, 250, $70,650.
10. (32 ) Tony Stewart. Pontiac, 250.
$75.950.
11 . . (26) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 250,
$64,475.
12. (20) Dale Earnhardt Jr.. Chevrolet, 250.
$52,375.
13. (25) Jeroy Nadeau. Chevrolet, 250,
$53.475.
14. (5) Mark Manln, Ford. 250, $58,175.
15. (38) Ched Little, Ford, 250. $59,275,
16. (9) Stove Park, Chevrolet, 250, $51,875.
17. (35) Dale Earnhardt. Chevrolet, 250,
$59.075.
.
18. (12) Bobby Haminon, Chevrolet, 250.
$53.975.
19. (27) Bill Elliott. FO«&lt;, 250, $50,875.
20. (28) Joe Nemechek, Chevrolet, 250,
$55.775.
21 . (16) Robert Pressley, Font, 249,
$42,875.
22. (40) Kevin Lepage, Ford. 249, $50,075.
23. (14) Johnnv Benson, Pontlac, 249,
$41 ,775.
24. (18)· Ken Schrader, Pontiac, 249,
$41 ,475.
25. (10) John AndreUI, Pontiac, 249,
$56,875.
26. (30) Kyle Petty, Pontiac, 249, $46,975.
27. (22) Wally Dallenbach Jr.. Foro, 249.
$40,625.
28. (8) Stacy Compton. Ford. 249. $41 ,225.
29. (7) Darrell Wanrlp, Foro, 246,$40,125.
30. (21 ) Michael Waltrip , Chevrolet, 248,
147.925.

39.115) Rick Mast, Pontla~. 220, $35,475.
40. 2) Jimmv Spencer, Ford, 219, accident,
$43.400.
l.
41. (31) Brett Bodine, Foro, 187,$35.350.
42. (39) KeMy ilwln, . Chevrolet, 99, acci·
dent, $43,300.
t
MLS standings
43. (19) EllioU Sadlel. •ont. 94. engine tail·
,ure, $43,25o.
Time or Race: 3 hr&amp; ., 20 min., 50
Margin ot Victory: .300 seconds.

Terry Labonte . Chevrolet. 247,

34. (6) Scott Pruett, Ford , 247,$36,750.

35. (4~) Mike Bliss, Pontiac, 247. $35,975.
36. (41) Kenny Wallace , Chevrolet, 246,

$43.900.

.

37. (42) Dick Trickle, Chevrolet, 239. accident, $43,700.
38. (17) Dave Blane'{, Pontiac, 236 .

$eC.

Average Speed: 149.378 mph
Lead Changes: 22' among 15 dnvors
Cau11ono: 5 for 22 laps,.
Lap Leaders: M.Siclnner (Pole), J.Spencer
(H), M.Martln (7·9), R.Rudd (10·19), MSkln·
ner (20.36), J.Andrettt (37·42), C.LitUe (43-43 ,
M.Sklnner (44·86). M.Kenseth (87·101 ,
S.Compton (102·102), S.Park (103·104 ,
R.Pressley (105·105), M.&amp;klnner (106·109 ,
M.Kenseth (110·150), B.EIIIott (151 ·151), J.Bur·
ton (152·153), K.Schrader (154·155), D.Waltrlp
(158·156), M.Kenseth (157-202). J.Burton (203·
203), M.Kenseth (204-220), M.Manin (221 ·224),
J.Maytleld (225·250).
Point Standings: Bobby- Labonte, 1,516:
Mark Manin 1,496; Ward Bunon 1,443; Jeff Burton ,,396; Dale Earn hardt 1,384, Dale Jarrett
1.305; Jeremy Mayfield 1 ,300; Jeff Gordon

1.279; Rusty WaKace 1,271; Ricky Rudd 1,251.

WLifiiGfliA ,

Miami ......................... 1
New England............... 1

2

4

7

5

6 ,

2

4

7

8

9

NY·NJ ......................... 2 5 0 6 8 13 :
D.C............................. ! 4 1 4 10 16
Central Dlvltlon

Dallas ......................... 4 3 0 12 10 12
Tampa Bay ..... ............. 4 4 0 12 15 11
Chicago ...................... 3 3 1 10 16 13
COLUMBUS ...............2 4 1 7 9 15
Wtatern Division

KansasCity .................6 o 1 19 17
Los Angeles ................5 0 2 17 15
Colorado .................... 3 4 o 9 8

4
6

1~

SanJosa .....................2 3 2 B 10 10
NOTE : Three points for a win and one point
~a~~
.

Saturday's scoras
Los Angeles 1, New York-New Jersey 0
Miami f , New England 1'-tle

Dallas 2, COLIJMBUS 1

Kansas City 5, Colorado ·o
DC United 2, San Jose 2·tie

&gt;
34099 St. At 7

r

Metcs CountY's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Numbe r ll2

50 Cents

Consbuction projects outlined to council
BY TDNY

M.

WCH

SENTINELNEWS STAFF
POMEROY - Village Council discussed the progression of variou s water
and sewer projects aro und the vil\age
during its regular meeting Monday.
Village Administrator John Anderson
said that th e M onkey Run sewer project
continues and will be finished in the fall.
"N in ety percent of the project is complete," said Anderson. "We still need to
do so me seeding and grading as well as
some manhole adjustm ent around the
bridge area."
"Other than that, th e project is continuing as expected," added Anderso n.

The S1 .3 million project will address
an EPA mandate to provide sewer service
to the Monkey Run area, and is funded
thro ugh the Community Development
Block Grant program and other grant
sources.
Anderson said test drilling for the new
water well has begun ai1d th at he should
be able to present th e resu lts at co un cil's
next meeting·.
He also said that the water line project
that runs along Main Street, from the
Dollar General Store on East Main Street
to Butternut Avenue, should be funded
soon and that the adverti sement for bids
could probably begin next'month.

"The funding is almost a sure thing," Street.
AnJerson said a sewer lea k was detec tsaid Anderson ." Once tills is done we can
ed
in an area where th ere shou ld not be
obtai n a good contracto r, which is very
a sewer. Anderson also said that the road
important."
Anderson reported that the Pleasant will probably have to be cut up anJ a
Ridge water project is currently under drainage pipe installed.
Fire C hief Ch ris Shank delivered his
design while the money from · Rural
Development and the Community monthly re port for cou ncil to review.
The report indi cated that in the month
Development Bloc k Grant is still being
of April , there was o ne auto tire, two auto
sought.
And.crson also said that the Minersville accidents, two structure fire s, one brush
reinforcement project is still in 'the plan- fi re, one mutual aid and one electrical
ning stage and that the project's funding fire th at Pomeroy VFD handled.
Council accepted Shank's report anJ
is still being sought.
Anderson also briefed council about an authorized purchase of a new hand- held
unexpected sewage problem on Laurel portable radio for Ass istant Fire Chief

Drive·

Thru
•

$35,525.

~&gt;..,

10.9

•

PUBLIC NOTICE

A six -week business planning class for individu.als
interested in starting a business in Meigs County is
scheduled to begin, Tuesday, May 9, 2000. Designed
especially for persons ~nterested in opening a busines~
in Meigs County, the classes will be. held Tuesday and
Thursday afternoons at the Meigs County Annex
Building, 117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio:
While the classes is open to any aspiring small business
owner, completion of the course is a prerequisite 1for
application to the Meigs County Revolving Loan Fund:
The fund is designed to enhance economic development
in Meigs County. Topics to be considered include_;,
'Planning and Research, Management and Legal
Structure, Marketing Research, Marketing
Imple~entation, Fin~ncfal Considerations a~d: .
Financmg, and · Managmg Growth. E.ach class ~Ill
feature regional "experts" and hands-on tmplementahon
of the concepts presented. The goal of the 12-session
program is completion of a business plan. An
introductory workshop is planned for 7 to 9 pm.
Thursday, April 20 at the County Annex Bui19ing, 117
E. Memorial Drive, .Lower Floor, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Jackie LeBerth, veteran small business counselor and ~
local small business ·owner, will instruct both the
·workshop· and the six-week class. Additional
information is available from Jean Trussell, Grants
Administrator, at 740-992-2733 or Jackie LeBerth at
740-989-0334. .

Please see Pomeroy, Pllp A:J

FROM STAFF REPORTS .
POMEROY - At 8 a.m.
sharp Monday, the so und of
scripture began to stream from
the Pomeroy parking lot as voluntee r Bible readers b egan a
week-long celebration fo r the
National Day of Prayer.
,
Tbe week's activiti es will culmin ate in a midday prayer ser- ·
vice on the steps of the M eigs
County Courthouse on Thursd~y.
.
The all-day Bible reading
rtiar:i'th'on ~. Y(ill . be held, along
with '"i( prayer vigil at Trinity
Ct\urch . Both events w ill continue through I 0 a.m. on Thursday, beginning at 8 a.m. , daily.
At 7 :30 a.m. on Thursday,
there wi ll be a prayer breakfast
for public offici als and members
of th e cle rgy at th e Trinity

Mon-Sun •

Taco &amp; Summer Salads
Available
Roast Beef Sub
U~oming New Meatball Sub

Kevin Van Matre, because th e radio he
currently uses belongs to the EMS and
they need it back.
Council and Shank also disc ussed th e
imte of the · demolition of a burneddown residen ce along Main Street .
Co un cilman George Wright asked
when th e site wi ll be cleaned up. Mayor
John Blaettn ar said that he has been in
contact with Jack Carsey, owner of the
stru cture, and has seen people worki ng at
the site.
''The village will get 10 percent of the
insurance· T)loney as a deposit. This

Meigs kicks off
Nationai .Day of
Prayer events

READINGS
BEGIN - Betty
Dean. stand·
ing, of the
Chester United
Methodist
Church, and
Betty Johnson
of the Ash
Street Church
in Middleport,
were among
the first volun·
teers to partici·
pate in the
week-long Bible
reading
marathon on
the Pomeroy
parking lot. The
marathon is a
part of Meigs
County's weeklong celebr&amp;
tion of National
Day of Prayer
events. (Brian
J: Reed photo)

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·5829
New Menu Items

May 2.1000

•

Arthur Treachers
..

31. {29} Robby GordOn, Forl1, 248 ,·$36,750.
32 . (37) Sterling Marlin, Chevrolet, 248,

$44,550.
33. {34)
$54.350.

Ea1tern Division

Tum

Details, A3

•

Timberwolves 94
Trail Blazers 87
Terrell Brandon scored 2&amp;
points
and
held
Damon
Stoudamire to two free throws as
Minnesota beat visiting Portland.
Minnesota's Kevin Garnett had
his second triple-double in a week
with 23 points, 12 rebounds and
10 assists.
Labonte, one of the 10 drivers
who have set a record for the most
different winners at 'the start of a,
season . added, " Man Kenseth
would have won and I might hav~
fini shed second if that yellow hadn 't come out. He had the best c~r
all day."
Kenseth, who fell all the way to
seventh after the final pit stops,
wound up third.
"I just planned on losing al\
day," said Kenseth, who drove in•
only his 16th Winston Cup race. •;f.
knew something wou ld happen;
Then, just when I thought wu

Meigs community happenings, A2
Eastern girls outlast Southern girls, Bl

w.dnesclllf
Hlp: 70s; Low: 40S

C hurch.
From I 1:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m ., the public prayer service
will be h eld at the co urthouse
steps in Pomeroy.
Public praye rs will be offered
on behalf of national, state and
local government leaders, and
for churches, families, sc hools
and communities.
At 7p.m. , a Concert of Prayer
will be held at the Asb Street
Church in Middlep ort.
Ka~hleen, .Fryar is the coordinator for t4e w~ek's ~ents, and
is available at'992-6756 for more
information , as is Steve Beha, at
698- 1815.
This year's event is the eighth
year for a Day of Prayer in Meigs
County, but involves community
o bservations thro ughout t he
coun try.

. t

Ch:er Stati&lt;n larrls 10 ·naticrel
'BY KRIS DoTSoN
OVP NEWS STAFF
ALLIPOLIS - Cheer Station's All Stars Unlimited
Cheerleaders and Dance Station Dancers brought home 10
national titles and four first
runn ers-up in team and individual competitions at the national cheer and dance championships.
T he 2000 USA Cheerleading Federation
. National C heerleading and Dance Championships at the Charlotte Hprnets Coliseum in
Charlotte, N.C., hosted a competition ~r
grades K- 12 from 12 states.
The event boasted 111 cheer, dan ce and
stunt teams totaling n.early I ,400 participants
and coaches, with more than 6,000 spectators.

'Ibday's

Sentinel
2

~

Ci!lendar
Clj!ssifi~!h

Comics
Editorial!
Ql!ilYilriil~
SRorl~

- 12 Pages
A2

BH
B~

M
AJ

IU, 6

:Wci!tlU[

AJ

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 8-7-8; Pick 4: 6-7~-0
Buckeye 5: 3-18-21-27-29

'W.YA,
Daily 3:7- 4-7 Daily 4: 0-8-8-9
&lt;0 20()0 Ohio Vo~ll ey Publishing Co.

The weekend's · festivities began with 89
members of the All Stars Unlimited teams
performing a 5 ), minute show including
stunts, pyramids, dance and tumbling during
the pregame activities for the NBA HornetsRaptors game.
"The kids really had a good time there, the
crowd cheered, and Hornet officials told us
that it. was the best entert.Unment they've had
in months .
"They said they were really impressed with
t4e girls: behavior and professionalism," said
Cheer Station owner and coach Becky
Rothgep.
The' •following groups were deemed
National C hampions this year:
Junior All Stars Unlimited won Large
Junior All Star N ational Champion.
''I'm really excited about the juniors win-

Patrol
BY

j~

MILLISSIA RUSSELL

i

OVP NEWS STAFF
GALLI POLIS - Within th e next five
years, an estimated one .out of every four
people will either be a v1cttm of an Identity
crime or be related to a victim .
Identity theft occurs when some~ne
obtains important perso nal mformat1on
from an individual, such as a Soctal Secunty
number or credi t card number, to commit
&amp;.md of theft.
For th e criminal, identity theft is a re(ac
tively low-risk, high reward endeavor, but for
the victim it can devastate credit and requJte
·enclless h~urs of telephone and written
conmmnication to resolve, if resolved at all.
In 1992, the U.S. financial con:munity
reported roughly 35,000 cases of 1dent1ty
fraud . By 1997, the number had nsen to
more than 500,000 and sttll cbmbs. The
average indjvidual fimn cial loss suffered by
an identity crime victim ts $20,000 . to

ning a national championship because for the
last two years they were first runners-up.
Those 30 kids worked so hard," said Rothgeb.
The other groups from C he er Station
included:
• All Stars Unlimited Twinkle Stars won
Large Pee Wee Ail Star National C hampion.
• Dance Station Twinkle Dance rs won Pee
Wee Dance National Champion.
• Dance Station Junior Dancers won Junior
.
Prom/D ance National Champion .
• Dance Station Seniors won Senior
Porn/Dance National C hampion .
• Aubrie's Twinkle ASU Stunt Team won
Pee Wee Stunt National Champion.
• .Ashley's Youth ASU Stunt Team won
Youth Stunt National C hampion .
.• Peggy Dutf won National Champi on
Junior Best Traditional Cheerleader.

munity reported roughly 35,000
cases of identity fraud. By ~ 997,
the nrunber had risen tp more
thatr 500,000 and still climbs.
$30,000.
About t:Wo- thirds of all identicy crimes areeither undetected or go unrep(/rted; and
credit card issuers often don't prosecute
thieves who are appre~ended because they
can affo rd to write off a certain amount of
fraud as a cost of doing business.
Th e Identity T heft and Assumpnon
Deterrence Act of 1998 makes identity theft
a fed eral crime witl1 penalties up to 15 years
imprisonment an d a maximwn fine of
$250,000.
It establishes that tile person whose identity was stolen is a true victim. Previously,

.•••

1

NATIONAL CHAMPION - Junior All-Stars Unlimited from Gallipolis-based
Cheer Station was named national champion in the Large Junior Ali'Star
competition at the 2000 USA Chee~eading Federation National Cheer·.
leading and Dance Championships at Cha~otte, N.C.-{Submitted photo)

l:at.t Je ·cg3iTEL in:Eamatia1 thiae3

In 1992, the US. financial com-

·'

.. '

only credit grantor; who suffered monetary
los5es were considered victtms.
This legislation enables th e Secret Service,
FBI and other law enforcement agencies
clout to combat this crime. It allows for the
identity theft victim to seek restitution if
there is a conviction. It also establishes the
Federal Trade Commission as a ce mra l
agency to act as a clearinghouse for complaints (agains! credit reporting age nqes and
credit grantors) referrals, and resources for
assistance for .victims of identity theft.
"In 1999, the O ruo State Highway Patrol
announced a partnership with a num ber of
banking, retail, credit card, and oth er com panies .Umed at.reducing the epidemic of ide ntity and financial fraud spreading across
Oruo and the rest of th e country," cxpL&gt;ittccl
Lt. Dick Grau of th e patrol's Gallia-M ett-&gt;&lt;
Post.
"Today's identity thieves ~re informattott
seekers who do not need to steal a wallet or

''

•

'

purse to do serious damage," Grau added.
" Identity tllleves obtain bits of information by sorting through trash for discarded
receipts and statements, scarcrung 'through
the Internet, spying for PIN numbers at
ATM machines or at telephone booths,
accessing public records, and even stealing
from mailboxes," he added.
Some simple ways to reduce the ris)&lt; of
becoming a victim include reducing the
number of credit cards yilu use, and never
giving out credit card number or other personal information over the telephone, unless
you have a trusted business relation.ship with
th e company and you initiated the phone
call.
.'\ dditionally, consumers are advised to
crc-.ltc· p.mwords and PINs that are not com11l&lt;ll t words or n~mbc:rs, store cancelled
clwcb in " safe place and carefully review-

Please see lde•lltf, ..... Al

•

.r

1

�Pete A. 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Man deareclln teen's death
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Columbus man charged with negligent
.homicide alter his ex-wife's teen- age son got ahold of his gun and
_accidentally killed a friend has been found innocent by a j udge.
Franklin Counry Municipal C o urt Judge James Fais ruled Monday that William Gannon, 36, had taken sufficient care to sec ure the
· weapon when he locked it in a tool chest.
Gannon's former stepson, Kyle Proffit, 14, .pried open the chest
· to get the .45-caliber pistol on Jan. 18 before he accidentally shot
and killed Matthew Osborne, 13.
The shooting took place at Gannon's home, where Profitt lived
.along with his mother, KeUey Gan~on. The Gannons are divorced
but continue to Jive together.
·
Gannon had dropped Proffit off at school that morning, but
Proffit and Osborne left before classes started and went to Proffit's
home.
Proffit pleaded guilty last month to a deliquency count of reckless homicide and was committed to the Ohio Department ofYoutb
Services for at least six months.

I

Tuelday, May 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Mldd.leport, Ohio..

Charter school faces eviction
CLEVELAND (AP) - A second taxpayer financed charter
school is f:icing eviction in Cleveland.
The Cleveland Catholic Diocese said Monday it plans to evict
the Horizon Science Academy from the former Saints Philip and
James School.
The diocese said Horizon had ripped out blackboards and lock.ers and had failed to repair and clean classrooms.
Taner Ertekin, director of the 190-student academy, denied damaging the school. Ertekin said the late eviction notice would make
it impossible to find an alternate site by the fall semester.
Next month, International Preparatory School will challenge its
eviction for withholding rent on a former office building. A June 29
·
trial is set in Cleveland Housing Court.
Charter schools receive more than $4,600 per student in state
. funds but are governed by parents, teachers or other nonreligious
·groups.

Mayor seeks review of arrests
CLEVELAND (AP) - One officer appeared to hit a robbery
·suspect who was arrested after a videotaped highway chase and a
· second patrolman apparently kicked the second suspect.
Mayor Michael R. White saw the WJW-TV videotape of Monday's chase and arrest and ordered Chief Martin L. Flask to investigate the matter.
"My response will be issued after Chief Flask issues his full and
complete report on the CPD investigation!' White said.
Patrick D'Angelo, lawyer for the Cleveland Police Patrolman's
· Association, said he did not believe officers used excessive force.
· "Over and above a long chase, let's not forget there was a very
· serious crime in progress," D'Angelo said. "Some force had to be
· used .to take the suspects down."
Police referred questions about the incident to the mayor's office.
White's press secretary, Brian Rothenberg, would not disclose the
names of the suspects or the officers. Charges· against the suspects
·were pending.
. The chase started after two men, one carrying a handgun, robbed
· a carryout and then crissCrossed ilie city, weaving through rush hour
traffic, before they were boxed in by police cars and arrested.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY
NEWS
School activities
promoting reading and ~ath

•••

POMEROY - Right to read and math week is being observed this
week in the Meigs Local School District.
A 112riety of activities are being carried out in the elementary schools.
At Bradbury the theme is "Exploring the Wonderful World of Chocolate through Reading and Math." Activities will include reading "Charlie
and The Chocolate Factory" sustained silent reading, making a chocolate
recipe, M&amp;M activity in math, estimation activity, a "name that candy
bar" contest, a chocolate taste test, and watching the movie, "Willie
Wonka and die Chocolate Factory."
"Score Big with Reading and Math" is the theme at the Harrisonville
school with activities .including daily sports math trivia, door prizes,
"Sports in the News" with a school-wide newspaper project; "World
Series Writing" contests, touchdown readers, a basketball shoot-athon,
and math basebaU.
Dwight Icenhower, Elvis impersonator, will be featured at an assembly at the Middleport ~ hool where "Rock and Read" is the theme. Daily
trivia, a scavenger hunt, book fair and daily games will be carried out.
Michael Kasony-O'MaUey, a professional storyteller will be at the
Pomeroy school for a program where the theme is "Got Cookie? Got
milk? Got books? Got it Made! "
"Enjoy the world of Fantasy and Adventure" is the Rutland school
theme where door decorating, creative writing and art projects are being
featured. There will also be dress-up day and collection of canned food
for the Meigs Cooperative Parish.
Salem Center's theme is "Monkeying Around with Reading and
Math." Reading stories ~bout wild zoo animals, making animals out of
baUoons, word and coloring contests, and a session with professional storyteller, Michael Kasony-O'MaUey will be featured.
"Books Get Our Vote" is the theme of the Salisbury program where
door decorating, silent reading, slogan contest, a book swap, a visit from
Ronald McDonald will be fea tured. The school's kickoff came last week
with a visit from Michael O'MaUey and Bob Beegle, storytellers, and
Rep. Ted Strickland who participated in an assembly.
Meigs Middle School will include a book fair, sustained silent reading,
and computer activities s.uch as award wining authors, developing a book
recorrunendation bulletin board, and Civil War research.
At Meigs High the activities center around use ofThe Daily Sentinel
for averages and statistics from sports page, stock market reports with pos- .
itive and negative numbers, fractions, money; and using the whole paper
for graphs, reading and interpreting.
A proclamation designating this as Right-to-Read and Math Week
was signed by administrative personnel, William L. Buckley, superintendent, and Wendy Halar, assistant superintendent, and program leaders,
Shannon Korn, Bradbury; Elizabeth Story, Middleport; Janet Hoffman,
Pomeroy; Bryan Zirkle, Pomeroy; Shirley VanMeter, Salem Center; Ron
Drexler, Meigs Middle; Kathy Sargent, Meigs High; Paub ]. Chancey,
H arrisonville; Teresa Carr, Middleport; Becky Triplett, Pomeroy; Linda
McManus, Rutland; Barb Matthews Crow, Salisbury; Pam V\)gt, Meigs
Middle; and Lester Manuel, Meigs High.

Necessary protection

POMEROY - A review of
:children's litetatUte was given by
: Phyllis Hacke~ at last week's
: meeting of the Middleport Liter: ary Club held at the home of
: MarW! Hoover.
·
: Hackett ·compared the Calde: cott · Award winners and the
··Newberry Award winnen from
: 1982 and 1999. The first aWard is
:for younger children's illustrared
:books and the Newberry Award
;is for excellence in older chil: dren's prose books. Hackett
:explained in her review the ways
• in which the winners from the
years were alike and how
: they were different.
: The 1982 Caldecott winners
"Jumanji", written and illus; trated by Chris Van AUsburg. a
:story of young children playing a
: wild fantasy game as they return
• home alone. The 1999 Caldecott
·: winner was "Snowflake Bentley",
: written by Jacqueline Martin and
: musrrated by Mary Azarian, a
:biographical story of a young
:man in the t860;'s who became

:two
:was

an expert in drawing and photographing the intricate designs
of snowflakes.
The Newberry .w inner for
1982 was "A Visit to William
Blake's Inn" written and illustrated by Alicl! and Martin Provensian, a book of poetry in the style
of B lake who wrote 200 years
ago, Hackett read several of the
poem from the book,
She said that the 1999 Newberry winner entitled "holes" was
different in that it had no illustrations and was a darkly humorous
story of young boys whp J181St
dig deep holes as puqishment in a
correctional =P· The reviewer
said that book perhaps was a l'nirror o f modern times with its difficult life for many children and a
more violent climare in general
society.
For roll call members recaUed
a favorite children's book or
author. Next meeting will be at
the Racine Ubrary. May 10 with
Jeanne Bowen as hostess and
Jeanette Thomas as the reviewer.

ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
hom.e of clerk, Osie Follrod.

•••
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department,
irrununizatiot\ clinic from 1-7
p.m. at 112 East M emorial
Drive. Take child's shot records.
Children must 'be accompanied
by a parent or legal guardian.

•••
WEDNESDAY, May 3

•••
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW 9053, ladies
Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.

•••
FRIDAY, May 5
POMEROY Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, Chillicothe, will provide health care
enrollment Friday, 10 am. to
noon and I to 2 p.m. at the Veterans Service , Office at 117
M emorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Proof of military service is
required.

•••
POMEROY - Zion Church
of C hrist, Harrisonville Road,
mother-daugher banquet Friday, 6:30 dinner, program to follow.

•••• •

•••

POMEROY- Poplar Ridge
Freec Will Baptist Church
revival, church located on State
Route 554, through Sunday,
Evangelist, Joe Gwinn, speci.J'
singing.

The Community
Calendar is published as a
free serVice to non-profit.
groups wishing to
aDDOunce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. lt.ms are printed only
u apece permits and .
caDDot be paranteed to
be printed • specUlc

number of daya.

HONOR A NURSE
DURING

'

t

Mary M. Burcham

Mary A. Webster

'·

b...

"\ \ o N

~p

.

,.,

&lt;

.'

Commissioners
OK transfers

. POMEROY -

the amount of $77,418.24.
Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard, Jeffrey Thornton
and Mick Davenport, and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Meigs County
Commission~ rs authorized a
number of transfers of funds and
other appropriations adjustments
'w hen theY"tn'et in regular session
on Monday.
RUTLAND - Sara M. Eades,
Commissioners approved . an
31,
34710 White's Hill Road,
.appropriation adjustment of
$4,135 for the Veterans Service Rutland, was cited for failure to
Office, to finajize the purchase of control by the 'Gallia-Meigs Post
a new transport van, and approved of the State Highway Patrol folan advance from the commission- lowing a one-car accident Mon·&lt;tn'"budget to the ctafters' ·grant day on Rutland Township Road
budget, to cover salaries pending · 38 (White's Hill).
Troopers said Eades was westreceipt of grant funds .
.. Tl\e board also approved a bound at 6 p.m. when she lost
request from Department of control of the car she drove on
Human
Services
Director gravel roadway, which caused the
Michael Swisher, allowing an car to rotate and strike an
amendment to the agency's con- · embankment.
The car continued on and
Ifact with 'ACCESS to Human
, Resource--I&gt;evelepment for the struck the embankment again,
·Early Start Ej!Jl"?\i_on program. · according to the report. The car
: The am~!ldment allows for was moderately damaged.
: 3,407 units of service at $50.25
: per unit. The expenditures are
;tstate-reimbursable, and represent
; an $80,000 increase from the
i original contract witlt ACCESS.
POMEROY - Units of 't he
The · commissioners
also
Meigs
Emergency
Services
' approved the payment of bills in
answered six calls for assistance on
.Monday. Units r~ponded as follows:
CENTRA.L DISPATCH .
I :58 a.m., Hampton Hollow,
Glen Mahorney, Vetera ns Memo••
(VSPS 213·HG)
rial Hospital;
r~
Oblo Volll7-lqCo.
'
Published every anemoon, Monday thtoup

Citation Issued
inacddent

•

, The Daily Sentinel

Racine student
wins IAAP scholarship
RACINE - Stacey Erwin of Racine was th~ winner of one of thi;'Ce ·
scholarships awarded by the Athens Chapter, International Association of
Administrative Professionals.
The chapter uses the scholanhips to encourage students who plan to
direct their education concentration in secretarial studies at either Hocking or Ohio University. Scholarships have been awarded by the Athens
Chapter for 16 years.
This year the Athens Chapter of IAAP presented the scholarships for
the 2000-2001 academic year at their annual Secretary's Day luncheon
last week.
Erwin, who will graduate from Southern High School later this
month, won the $300 Joyce D. Malone Memorial Scholarship. She will
be entering Hocking College in the .faU in the area of office administration.
IAAP scholarships of $500 each were awarded to Anita Corne and
Jestinah Wray. both ofLof"'n.They are currently students at Hocking college majoring in office adP unistration.

: ,friclly, 11l Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by ttw.
• Obio Valley Publllhina Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second cloos post·
ap paid II P()meroy, Ohio;
Me.ben The Auoclaled Prcu, 1nd the Ohio
Ne'!"'iplper.Auociation.

MAY 6-12; 2000

SVBSCRJmON RATES
11 Corrler or Molor -

Otto Weot... ... ............................................ $2.011
Ont Month ................................................ $M.70
• OncYcar ............................................... $104.00

.;

1x2Ad Runs

1

May 12th

ONLY $7.00
May 8th at 5:00 pm

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Oally ................................... ..................50Cenls
SubKrlben not detirinJ to pay Ute carrier may
remil in advance dlrcc~ 10.The Dally Senlinel
on a three, six or 12 monlh bula. Cu:dll will be
slvel'f carrier etCh weet.

Photo

No 1\lbKrlplktn by m•ll pennllled Ia
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Publllbor retcrveslhe riJhl to adju•l ratu dur" lnJIH 1\lblcript:k&gt;n period. Subscrlpllon rale
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At Ruthann•'• Market
St. Rt. 124 Reedsville, Ohio
May 6th, 2000 9 am • 5 pm

NameofNu~:~
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'Baskets, Couniry Thyme Herbs and Gifts, Loving ·
Stitches by Grandma's Touch , Fillmore Valley Crafts by
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Country Kitchen Ca ndles, and a .huge selec tion of
Rutba nne's Sprin g plants and Flowers .

For Info cal.l: 1·740·378·6344
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R&gt;tee Ooblde Mt... Cooot1

•'
•;

Reader Servtces

Ow ••• c.actn I• 111 storM• II to be
Karstt.Jf J" lulo" of a1 emW II a 1101')',
con ... .,.,_ 11 (140) ff2.2J55. We will
C.Kk JOir l1f0ria1tiDI. ..d •1ke I
com:'cdllli 1twam1W.
"
News ne,.rt•aatl
ne .... •••ber t1 m ..uss. Dtp~rt~ne•t
exteuiOu 1n;

Gelltl"'l Mllapr....- .................... EIL 1101
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,
•
•
:

•

from Page AI
money is refundable if the area is
cleaned up; ' added Blaettnar.
Co uncil heard from Sarah Fisher, who represents the Pomeroy
Merchants Associati on.
Fisher reported abou t blac kbirds
picking crash out of the trash cans
o n the Pomeroy parkin g lo t and
leaving it on the ground. Blaetmar
said that he would look into purchasing several barrel cove rs that
would hopefu lly solve the problem.
Blaettnar repo rted on the firs t
Market Day, held Saturday. These
events will continue every Saturday th roughout th e summer, and
will incl ude fl ower and produce
' ve ndors, quali ty crafters. Blaettnar
has said entertainment on the
amphith eater stage.
Council approved second reading of two ordinances, one creating the position of clerk of
mayo r;s court and establishing the
pay sc ale from 5 cents per hour to
50 cents, and another that would
set probationary pay rates for
. employees.
Council also approved a liquor
license transfer req uest for Little
John's, formerly Gas Plus, near the
Beacon. The license tra nsfer does

Newt .....- -..- ··--··"' ..........:.. ... Ell. 1102

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1106
Otlttr StrwkH
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Cllllllled Adi.................................. Ext. 1100

•

•

4:03 p.m ., South Second, Mid- ticipate in the mile-long yard sale,
dleport, Dave Spangler, VMH;
Friday and Saturday. Donations
6:20 p.m., Riverside Apart- may be ·left at the M asonic Temments, Middleport, assisted by p!e,-Wednesday, 10 a.m . to 2 p.m .
Middleport unit, Harley Barton, or call 742-2554 or 992-3530.
VMH;
9:17 p.m., State Route 124,
assisted by Reedsville unit as First
MIDDLEPORT Those
Responder, Don Buchanan,
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi- who wish to participate in the
Yellow Flag Yard Sale, to be held
tal.
this weekend in Pomeroy and
RACINE
9:19 p.m., Yellowbush, Lesa Middleport, must register no later
than the end of business on ThesCounts,VMH.
day.
SYRACUSE
A $5 fee includes a yellow flag
3:46 p.m ., East Main S~reet ,
PometbV; 11ssisted· · by 'Pbtfieroy, and listing on a nurlib~te'd lbcator
map to be printed in The Daily
lisa Eblin, Veterans Memorial.
Sentinel. Flags are available at the
Middleport Department Store
and Ohio River Bear Co., Middleport, and Chapman Shoes,
Pomeroy.
RACINE Kindergarten
The event is co-sponsored by
registration at Southern kinder- the Middleport Community
garten will be held during the Association and the Pomeroy
school day on Thursday and Fri- Merchants Association.
day.
. Parents and guardians should
bring the child's Social Security
card, birth certificate, shot records
POMEROY - A round and
and any custody papers necessary. square dance will be held Friday,.
Registration
appointments 8-11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
should be made by calling 949- Citizens Center. Music will be by
2663.
True Country and . Art Conant
will be the caller.

Yard sale deadline

Kindergarten
registration set

Donations
solicited

MIDDLEPORT Evan.geJine Chapter 172, OES, will par-

Warming trend commences
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Abundant
sunshine
on
Wednesday will push the Incounty area's temperatures into
the 70s, the National Weather
Service said.
The warming tcend will continue under fair skies into the
weekend, with the mercury
cracking the SO- degree mark iby
Friday.
Overnight lows will be mostly
in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:28
p.m. and sunrise on Wednesday at
6:29a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight .. . Clear through 3
a.m., then fog developing late.

Identity
from Page AI
ing credit card statements, phone
bills and cellular phone bills for
unauthorized charges.
"Once personal information is
obtained, impostors can open
fraudulent credit card accounts,
secure deposits on houses and cars,
create insurance benefits and drain
personal financial accounts, including retire ment benefits." Grau
added.
"Due to the wide range of ways
identity theft occurs, these partnerships are targeted toward getting
information to as many people as
possible on how to avoid the problem, or what to do if they become
a victim;' Grau added.
As part of the patrol's parll)ership
efforts, it has produced two
brochures; "A,void Ide9tity C~"
and "When Identity Crime Strikes
..
.
Yiou.
One brochure teaches the public

AEP - 38~

how to avoid being a victim of
identity theft, and the other outlines what steps to take for identity
theft victims.
"This partnership effort is pan of
the patrol's Parmers for Safety initiative that continues to successfully blend statewide corporate partnerships with innovative initiatives
at the local level," said Grau.
" In Ohio, the patrol and multiagency law enforcement task forces
have been working together to
detect and appreh end tho~e
involved in identity fraud through
the utilization of state driver licenses and ide ntification cards;' he
added.
"Education will be the key to
reducing this increasingly pefll3sive
crime." Grau said. "And these partnerships exemplify how successfully law enforcement and corporate
entities can be at working together
to get information to the general
public." •
r

.MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

lows in the upper 40s. Light and
variable wind.
Wednesday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper.70s.
Wednesday
night ... Mostly
cloudy With a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Cioudy with a
chance of showers and thunder··Storms. Highs in the upper 70s.
Friday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and ihunderstorms . Lows in th" upper 50s and
highs near 80.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows ncar 60 and highs in
the mid 80s.

Foreclosure
sought
POMEROY - An action for
foreclosure has bee n filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Broadview Mortgage
Co., Worthington, against John W.
LeMaster, Albany, alleging a
default balance in the amount of
$58,714.51.

GanneH - 63\
General Electric - 159\
Harley Davidson - 42

Rocky Boots - s"'.
RO Shell - 57\
Shoney's-\
Wai·Man - 57"1.
Wendy's - 22\
Wor1hlnglon - 12 ~

OVB- 29l.

Dally stock reports are 1he
4 p.m. closing quotes of

Kroger - 1e).
Lands End - 4 Ho
Ud. - 48\
Oak Hill Financial - 14
One Valley - 34).
Peoples - 17'1.
Premier - 7'1.

Rockwell - 38l.

the previous day's trana-

acllons, provided
Advest of Gallipolis.

by

A GES. ALL T IMES S·l

oo

7x9"
Victorian Tea
House Curved
Cedar Roof With
Double Glider

10xl4"

ty

sears - 38'·

Kman - sl.

GLADIATOR (R) &amp;
DREAMED OF AFRICIA (PG1
ALI

LOCAL STOCKS
Akzo - 41
AmTech/SBC - 44'•
Ashland Inc. - 341.
AT&amp;T - 48\
Bank One - 30~•
Bob Evans - 13'·
BorgWarner - 42\'o
Champion - 3
Channing Shops - 6j.
City Holding - 1 2~.
Federal Mogul .. 13l.
Firstar - 25~~

no t involve a change of locatio n,
only a change of name, Blaettnar
said.
Blaettnar th en informed coun cil
on several minor repairs to t he
Pomeroy Muni cipal Building that
need to be undertaken, including
loose bricks and rusty metal o n
the skylights.
Councilman Victor Yo ung 111, a
local contractor, said that he would
pe rform the work at no charge if
the village provides the ma terials.
Coun cil corrunended workers
fo r thei r part in C leanup Week and
C lerk Kathy Hysell said that the
cost of the cleanup effo rt is still
being calculated.
Wright asked council to consider sidewalk co nditions along
U nion Avenue and to contact the
owner, if necessary, abou t these
conditions.
Hysell reminded council that
anyone who owns a butial lot at
Beech Grove Cemete ry must pay
a $10 maintenan ce fee per grave
space. Those who own lots should
pay the fee in May, Hysell said.
Hysell also said that she wquld
be advertising for gasoline bids.
Council approved the mayor's
report of fines collected in April
which totaled $8,225 .00.
Present, in addition to Blaettnar,
Young, Wright and Hysell, were
Councilmen, Larry Wehrung and
Bryan Shank.

Dance to be held

VALLEY WEATHER

, 11 w.. u ........................., ....:...:..............s29.25
• 26 w.eu ................:................................$56.68
' 52 Wotlul ............................................... $109.72 '

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
All ads must be prepaid

Pomeroy

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

EMS units
answer 6 calls

•

•

Michael J. Trent

•••

MIDDLEPORT - E112ngeline Chapter 172, OES, Thursday, 7:30 . p.m. Middleport

lmmunlzetlona ere neCessary to protect children against major child·
hood diseases. To make It easy tor parents to gat "shots• fOr their
klda, the Meigs County Health Department has four free clinics every
month. Walk·ln clinics are held on the second and fourth.Tuesday of
each month, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. and the first and third Tuesday evenings 1 to 7 p.m. Here Sherry WllcoK, R. N. gives a shot to lit·
tie Rusty Fields held by his mother, Martina Fields of Rutland.

RACINE - Earl J. "Duck" Adams , 81, of Adams Road, R ac ine,
died on 'Friday, April 28, 2000 in Riverside Methodist H ospital in
Columbus.
He was born on January 23, 1919 in Antiquity, the son of the late
Earnest and Minnie Wolfe Adams .
· He was a retired Letart Township farmer and a member of the Meigs
•
County Farm Bureau .
He is survived by his wife, Doris J. Wagner Adams ; whom he married on April 25, 1939 in Gallipolis, a daughter and son-in-law, Jackie
and Wayne McLaughlin, Sunbury; four grandchildren amf four greatBIDWELL - Michael J. Trent, 47, 232 Roush Hollow Road, Bidgrandchildren; a sister, Clara PoweU of Racine; a daughter-in-law, well, died Saturday, April 29,2000 as a result of a motorcycle crash on
Carol Jean Adams of Syracuse; two sisters-in- law, Florence Adams of Bulaville Pike.
Racine, and Pearl Adams of Middleport; and several nieces and
Born June 11, 1952 in Dayton, son ofjoseph Taylor of Friendswood ,
nephews.
Texas, and Shirley Williams Trent Roark of Middletown, he. was a
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son , Jim senior control technician with the Regional Service Organization
Adams; four brothers, MarshaU " Bob" Adams, Clarence J. Adams, Reed (RSO) of American Electric Power.
Adams and Jack H. Adams; and by three sisters, Dewey McNickel, Ella
Surviving in addition to his parents are a daughter, Jennifer (Dan)
Quillen, and Edith Adams.
Moore of Kettering; two •sons, Jerimikea Trent of Reynoldsburg, and
Services will be held on Tuesday, May 2, 2000 at 11 a.m. at the Cre- Christopher Michael Trent of Moraine; three grandchildren; five sismeens Funeral Home in Racine , with the Rev. Brian Harkness offici- ters, Rebecca (Wendel) Morton of Morrow, Robin (Pete) Wenk of
ating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.Visitation
Centerville, Shirley (Michael) Meadors of Middletown, Tina (Chris)
: Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Asso- Elliott of Blanchester, and Melissa (Matthew) Coleman of Christians.ciation Ohio Valley Affiliate, P.O. Box 182039, Department 013, . burg, Va.; two brothers, Ronnie Trent of Dayton, and Jeffrey Trent of
Columbus, Ohio 43218.
. St. C harl es,Va.; and several nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles.
He was preceded in death by a half- brother in infancy.
Services will be 8 p.m . Tuesday, May 2, 2000 in C remeens Funeral
Chapel, Gallipolis. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.
· Additional services will be 8 p.m. Thursday, May 4, 2000 in Sanner
.·· ..POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Mary M . Burcham, 74, Point Pleas- Funeral Home, 8000 Alex Road, West Carrollton , Obio. Friends may
call at the funeral liome from 6-8 p.m. Thursday.
·ant, died Monday, May 1, 2000 at her residence .
Cremation will follow services.
: Born Sept. 22, 1925 in Lawrence County, daughter of the late Harlow and Elizabeth Bevin Fuller, she was a homemaker.
She was a member ofTrinity United M ethodis~ Church in Point
Pleasant, member and past Worthy Matron of Order of Eastern Star
POMEROY - Mary A. Webster, a former Pomeroy resident, died
Chapter 75 of Point Pleasant, and past Point Pleasant Mother Advisor
Frid;ty, April 28,2000 at the Meritcare Medical Cen\er in Fargo, N.D.
and District 2 Depury for International Order of Rainbow for Girls.
Services
·will be announced at the convenience of the fami ly.
· Surviving are her husband, Bernard E. Burcham; three daughters and
Arrangements are by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
·sons-in-law, Elizabeth Nibert of Point Pleasant, Linda and Greg Nel-

DEATH NOTICES

•••

•••

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

son of Scott Depot, W.Va., and Berna Jean and Jeff Hilbert of Point
Pleasant; and six gra.ndchildren and one great-grandson .
Services will be 11 a.m . Wednesday in D eal Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, with Dr. L. Frank Frye officiating. An Eastern Star service will
be conducted at 8 p.m. by OES Chapter 75. Burial will follow in
Rome C emetery, Proctorville. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9 tonight.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Trinity United
Methodist Church Building Fund , in ca re ofTrinity United Methodist
C hurch, PO. Box 22!1, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.

Earl J. 1)uck' Aclains

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Board of P!!blic Affairs,
closed May 3, for clerk to attend
POMEROY - Parent·Traintraining session. Payment can be
. ing Course, Friday; also May 11
made in drop box at office.
and 18·, Meigs County District
.' .
Library, Main Street, Pomeroy.
Sessions, children through 12
POMEROY Catholic from 1 to 4 p.m . ; teenagers, 6
Women's Club, mother/daugh- p.m. to 9 p.m. Topics to include
ter social, 7 p.m., church mass.
self-esteem, discipline, health
and nutrition, problem solving,
study skills, communication,
PAGEVILLE
Scipio decision making, understandi!lg
Township Trustees, Wednesday, child development.
Pageville town hall, 6:30 p.m.

THURSDA,Y, May 4

Delth row Inmate dill

Children's literature
.discussed at literary meeting

•••

•••

DUBLIN (AP) -A teenager was fatally shot during an argument
at a store in this Columbus suburb Monday aftc.r noon.
~ The owner ofThe Bait Store called 911 about 1 p.m. to report
;me shooting, city spokeswoman Colleen Moran said. The victim,
~identified by police as stote employee James Coyan Ill, 17, of
•Columbus, wu pronounced dead ahonly after arrival at Rivenide
:Meiliodilt Hospital. He waashot in the chest, police said.
Police said no one had been charged.
·

, COLUMBUS (AP) -Jerry Lee Allard,.on Ohio's death row for
·the liayings of his 2-yeat-old daughter and his ex-wife; has died of
'a stroke, authorities said.
.
Allard, 42, died Sunday at Ohio State Univeniry Medical Center
following a stroke, said Joe And:ews, spokesman · for the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
:Allard was sentenced to death in 19,93 for the stabbing deaths or
his ex-wife, Karen Marie Allard, 25, his daugh~er, Rachael Marie
Allard, and a knife a!fack on hia 5-year-old son, Aaron, in March
1992.
Knox Counry Prosecutor John Baker said Allard would have
k.illed the boy as well if the Mount Vernon police hadn't arrived at
Allard's apartment.

SILVER RIDGE South
Bethel New Testament Church,
Spiritual Renewal services,
through Saturday, 7 p.m. Pastor
Lonriie Coats of Restoration
Christian FeUowship as speaker,
and special music nightly.
Church is located on Silver
Ridge Road across from Eastern
High School.
·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OBITUARY

Masonic Temple .

TUESDAY, May 2

Youth killed following argument

..

1Ueada~May2,2000

Victorian.
Gazebo with
Chateau Shingle
Roof

urnitt~:re P[us

· :Furniture, Carpet, .52l.pp{rances

Financing Available 42123 State 'l?j. 7 • fJ"uppers Plains, 01i
90 Day Lay·Away
(740} 667-7388 • 1-800-200-4005

Mon.·Thurs. 9·5
Fri. 9·6 • Sat. 9·4

�Pete A. 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Man deareclln teen's death
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Columbus man charged with negligent
.homicide alter his ex-wife's teen- age son got ahold of his gun and
_accidentally killed a friend has been found innocent by a j udge.
Franklin Counry Municipal C o urt Judge James Fais ruled Monday that William Gannon, 36, had taken sufficient care to sec ure the
· weapon when he locked it in a tool chest.
Gannon's former stepson, Kyle Proffit, 14, .pried open the chest
· to get the .45-caliber pistol on Jan. 18 before he accidentally shot
and killed Matthew Osborne, 13.
The shooting took place at Gannon's home, where Profitt lived
.along with his mother, KeUey Gan~on. The Gannons are divorced
but continue to Jive together.
·
Gannon had dropped Proffit off at school that morning, but
Proffit and Osborne left before classes started and went to Proffit's
home.
Proffit pleaded guilty last month to a deliquency count of reckless homicide and was committed to the Ohio Department ofYoutb
Services for at least six months.

I

Tuelday, May 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Mldd.leport, Ohio..

Charter school faces eviction
CLEVELAND (AP) - A second taxpayer financed charter
school is f:icing eviction in Cleveland.
The Cleveland Catholic Diocese said Monday it plans to evict
the Horizon Science Academy from the former Saints Philip and
James School.
The diocese said Horizon had ripped out blackboards and lock.ers and had failed to repair and clean classrooms.
Taner Ertekin, director of the 190-student academy, denied damaging the school. Ertekin said the late eviction notice would make
it impossible to find an alternate site by the fall semester.
Next month, International Preparatory School will challenge its
eviction for withholding rent on a former office building. A June 29
·
trial is set in Cleveland Housing Court.
Charter schools receive more than $4,600 per student in state
. funds but are governed by parents, teachers or other nonreligious
·groups.

Mayor seeks review of arrests
CLEVELAND (AP) - One officer appeared to hit a robbery
·suspect who was arrested after a videotaped highway chase and a
· second patrolman apparently kicked the second suspect.
Mayor Michael R. White saw the WJW-TV videotape of Monday's chase and arrest and ordered Chief Martin L. Flask to investigate the matter.
"My response will be issued after Chief Flask issues his full and
complete report on the CPD investigation!' White said.
Patrick D'Angelo, lawyer for the Cleveland Police Patrolman's
· Association, said he did not believe officers used excessive force.
· "Over and above a long chase, let's not forget there was a very
· serious crime in progress," D'Angelo said. "Some force had to be
· used .to take the suspects down."
Police referred questions about the incident to the mayor's office.
White's press secretary, Brian Rothenberg, would not disclose the
names of the suspects or the officers. Charges· against the suspects
·were pending.
. The chase started after two men, one carrying a handgun, robbed
· a carryout and then crissCrossed ilie city, weaving through rush hour
traffic, before they were boxed in by police cars and arrested.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY
NEWS
School activities
promoting reading and ~ath

•••

POMEROY - Right to read and math week is being observed this
week in the Meigs Local School District.
A 112riety of activities are being carried out in the elementary schools.
At Bradbury the theme is "Exploring the Wonderful World of Chocolate through Reading and Math." Activities will include reading "Charlie
and The Chocolate Factory" sustained silent reading, making a chocolate
recipe, M&amp;M activity in math, estimation activity, a "name that candy
bar" contest, a chocolate taste test, and watching the movie, "Willie
Wonka and die Chocolate Factory."
"Score Big with Reading and Math" is the theme at the Harrisonville
school with activities .including daily sports math trivia, door prizes,
"Sports in the News" with a school-wide newspaper project; "World
Series Writing" contests, touchdown readers, a basketball shoot-athon,
and math basebaU.
Dwight Icenhower, Elvis impersonator, will be featured at an assembly at the Middleport ~ hool where "Rock and Read" is the theme. Daily
trivia, a scavenger hunt, book fair and daily games will be carried out.
Michael Kasony-O'MaUey, a professional storyteller will be at the
Pomeroy school for a program where the theme is "Got Cookie? Got
milk? Got books? Got it Made! "
"Enjoy the world of Fantasy and Adventure" is the Rutland school
theme where door decorating, creative writing and art projects are being
featured. There will also be dress-up day and collection of canned food
for the Meigs Cooperative Parish.
Salem Center's theme is "Monkeying Around with Reading and
Math." Reading stories ~bout wild zoo animals, making animals out of
baUoons, word and coloring contests, and a session with professional storyteller, Michael Kasony-O'MaUey will be featured.
"Books Get Our Vote" is the theme of the Salisbury program where
door decorating, silent reading, slogan contest, a book swap, a visit from
Ronald McDonald will be fea tured. The school's kickoff came last week
with a visit from Michael O'MaUey and Bob Beegle, storytellers, and
Rep. Ted Strickland who participated in an assembly.
Meigs Middle School will include a book fair, sustained silent reading,
and computer activities s.uch as award wining authors, developing a book
recorrunendation bulletin board, and Civil War research.
At Meigs High the activities center around use ofThe Daily Sentinel
for averages and statistics from sports page, stock market reports with pos- .
itive and negative numbers, fractions, money; and using the whole paper
for graphs, reading and interpreting.
A proclamation designating this as Right-to-Read and Math Week
was signed by administrative personnel, William L. Buckley, superintendent, and Wendy Halar, assistant superintendent, and program leaders,
Shannon Korn, Bradbury; Elizabeth Story, Middleport; Janet Hoffman,
Pomeroy; Bryan Zirkle, Pomeroy; Shirley VanMeter, Salem Center; Ron
Drexler, Meigs Middle; Kathy Sargent, Meigs High; Paub ]. Chancey,
H arrisonville; Teresa Carr, Middleport; Becky Triplett, Pomeroy; Linda
McManus, Rutland; Barb Matthews Crow, Salisbury; Pam V\)gt, Meigs
Middle; and Lester Manuel, Meigs High.

Necessary protection

POMEROY - A review of
:children's litetatUte was given by
: Phyllis Hacke~ at last week's
: meeting of the Middleport Liter: ary Club held at the home of
: MarW! Hoover.
·
: Hackett ·compared the Calde: cott · Award winners and the
··Newberry Award winnen from
: 1982 and 1999. The first aWard is
:for younger children's illustrared
:books and the Newberry Award
;is for excellence in older chil: dren's prose books. Hackett
:explained in her review the ways
• in which the winners from the
years were alike and how
: they were different.
: The 1982 Caldecott winners
"Jumanji", written and illus; trated by Chris Van AUsburg. a
:story of young children playing a
: wild fantasy game as they return
• home alone. The 1999 Caldecott
·: winner was "Snowflake Bentley",
: written by Jacqueline Martin and
: musrrated by Mary Azarian, a
:biographical story of a young
:man in the t860;'s who became

:two
:was

an expert in drawing and photographing the intricate designs
of snowflakes.
The Newberry .w inner for
1982 was "A Visit to William
Blake's Inn" written and illustrated by Alicl! and Martin Provensian, a book of poetry in the style
of B lake who wrote 200 years
ago, Hackett read several of the
poem from the book,
She said that the 1999 Newberry winner entitled "holes" was
different in that it had no illustrations and was a darkly humorous
story of young boys whp J181St
dig deep holes as puqishment in a
correctional =P· The reviewer
said that book perhaps was a l'nirror o f modern times with its difficult life for many children and a
more violent climare in general
society.
For roll call members recaUed
a favorite children's book or
author. Next meeting will be at
the Racine Ubrary. May 10 with
Jeanne Bowen as hostess and
Jeanette Thomas as the reviewer.

ALFRED - Orange Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
hom.e of clerk, Osie Follrod.

•••
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department,
irrununizatiot\ clinic from 1-7
p.m. at 112 East M emorial
Drive. Take child's shot records.
Children must 'be accompanied
by a parent or legal guardian.

•••
WEDNESDAY, May 3

•••
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW 9053, ladies
Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.

•••
FRIDAY, May 5
POMEROY Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, Chillicothe, will provide health care
enrollment Friday, 10 am. to
noon and I to 2 p.m. at the Veterans Service , Office at 117
M emorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Proof of military service is
required.

•••
POMEROY - Zion Church
of C hrist, Harrisonville Road,
mother-daugher banquet Friday, 6:30 dinner, program to follow.

•••• •

•••

POMEROY- Poplar Ridge
Freec Will Baptist Church
revival, church located on State
Route 554, through Sunday,
Evangelist, Joe Gwinn, speci.J'
singing.

The Community
Calendar is published as a
free serVice to non-profit.
groups wishing to
aDDOunce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. lt.ms are printed only
u apece permits and .
caDDot be paranteed to
be printed • specUlc

number of daya.

HONOR A NURSE
DURING

'

t

Mary M. Burcham

Mary A. Webster

'·

b...

"\ \ o N

~p

.

,.,

&lt;

.'

Commissioners
OK transfers

. POMEROY -

the amount of $77,418.24.
Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard, Jeffrey Thornton
and Mick Davenport, and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Meigs County
Commission~ rs authorized a
number of transfers of funds and
other appropriations adjustments
'w hen theY"tn'et in regular session
on Monday.
RUTLAND - Sara M. Eades,
Commissioners approved . an
31,
34710 White's Hill Road,
.appropriation adjustment of
$4,135 for the Veterans Service Rutland, was cited for failure to
Office, to finajize the purchase of control by the 'Gallia-Meigs Post
a new transport van, and approved of the State Highway Patrol folan advance from the commission- lowing a one-car accident Mon·&lt;tn'"budget to the ctafters' ·grant day on Rutland Township Road
budget, to cover salaries pending · 38 (White's Hill).
Troopers said Eades was westreceipt of grant funds .
.. Tl\e board also approved a bound at 6 p.m. when she lost
request from Department of control of the car she drove on
Human
Services
Director gravel roadway, which caused the
Michael Swisher, allowing an car to rotate and strike an
amendment to the agency's con- · embankment.
The car continued on and
Ifact with 'ACCESS to Human
, Resource--I&gt;evelepment for the struck the embankment again,
·Early Start Ej!Jl"?\i_on program. · according to the report. The car
: The am~!ldment allows for was moderately damaged.
: 3,407 units of service at $50.25
: per unit. The expenditures are
;tstate-reimbursable, and represent
; an $80,000 increase from the
i original contract witlt ACCESS.
POMEROY - Units of 't he
The · commissioners
also
Meigs
Emergency
Services
' approved the payment of bills in
answered six calls for assistance on
.Monday. Units r~ponded as follows:
CENTRA.L DISPATCH .
I :58 a.m., Hampton Hollow,
Glen Mahorney, Vetera ns Memo••
(VSPS 213·HG)
rial Hospital;
r~
Oblo Volll7-lqCo.
'
Published every anemoon, Monday thtoup

Citation Issued
inacddent

•

, The Daily Sentinel

Racine student
wins IAAP scholarship
RACINE - Stacey Erwin of Racine was th~ winner of one of thi;'Ce ·
scholarships awarded by the Athens Chapter, International Association of
Administrative Professionals.
The chapter uses the scholanhips to encourage students who plan to
direct their education concentration in secretarial studies at either Hocking or Ohio University. Scholarships have been awarded by the Athens
Chapter for 16 years.
This year the Athens Chapter of IAAP presented the scholarships for
the 2000-2001 academic year at their annual Secretary's Day luncheon
last week.
Erwin, who will graduate from Southern High School later this
month, won the $300 Joyce D. Malone Memorial Scholarship. She will
be entering Hocking College in the .faU in the area of office administration.
IAAP scholarships of $500 each were awarded to Anita Corne and
Jestinah Wray. both ofLof"'n.They are currently students at Hocking college majoring in office adP unistration.

: ,friclly, 11l Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by ttw.
• Obio Valley Publllhina Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second cloos post·
ap paid II P()meroy, Ohio;
Me.ben The Auoclaled Prcu, 1nd the Ohio
Ne'!"'iplper.Auociation.

MAY 6-12; 2000

SVBSCRJmON RATES
11 Corrler or Molor -

Otto Weot... ... ............................................ $2.011
Ont Month ................................................ $M.70
• OncYcar ............................................... $104.00

.;

1x2Ad Runs

1

May 12th

ONLY $7.00
May 8th at 5:00 pm

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Oally ................................... ..................50Cenls
SubKrlben not detirinJ to pay Ute carrier may
remil in advance dlrcc~ 10.The Dally Senlinel
on a three, six or 12 monlh bula. Cu:dll will be
slvel'f carrier etCh weet.

Photo

No 1\lbKrlplktn by m•ll pennllled Ia
where home carrier Nrvlcc I• 1v1i11ble.

Includes Photo
Deadline:

A SPRING BAZA "R!

pOSTMAS'T'ER: Send addre11 ~ncctlona 10
The Daily Scnlinel, 111 Courl St., Pomeroy,
o•lo45769.

Nur5ing ... The Heart ofMe~icine

ltcll

Publllbor retcrveslhe riJhl to adju•l ratu dur" lnJIH 1\lblcript:k&gt;n period. Subscrlpllon rale
ehanp may be lmplemealed by tltltiJiiiJihe
duf'ltlon of tile subscription.

Jane Doe

•

City Hospital

MAIL SVBSCIUPTIONS
luldoMe!pCoool)'

l

• 11 w.eu .................................................S27.:!0

At Ruthann•'• Market
St. Rt. 124 Reedsville, Ohio
May 6th, 2000 9 am • 5 pm

NameofNu~:~
· -----------------------------

Plaee or Employment:-----------------------Your Name:-'---------------------------

Fascina.t ing booths .to browse, featuring Longaberg~r ·
'Baskets, Couniry Thyme Herbs and Gifts, Loving ·
Stitches by Grandma's Touch , Fillmore Valley Crafts by
-Janis Barnes, many c raft booths , Mary Kay Cosmetics,
Country Kitchen Ca ndles, and a .huge selec tion of
Rutba nne's Sprin g plants and Flowers .

For Info cal.l: 1·740·378·6344
Ralllel! • Free Sempln! • Door Prizes!

Address:------ ---_,.......,_ _.::;;....;...;........
'Jelepbone:--------------...:.._ _;;__;;..:.,_

Mail or Drop off at

The Daily Sentinel

I

'

• 26 Weeu ..........,..................................... .Sl3.R2
• 52 Weclul ..............:................................ $105 .~

:

R&gt;tee Ooblde Mt... Cooot1

•'
•;

Reader Servtces

Ow ••• c.actn I• 111 storM• II to be
Karstt.Jf J" lulo" of a1 emW II a 1101')',
con ... .,.,_ 11 (140) ff2.2J55. We will
C.Kk JOir l1f0ria1tiDI. ..d •1ke I
com:'cdllli 1twam1W.
"
News ne,.rt•aatl
ne .... •••ber t1 m ..uss. Dtp~rt~ne•t
exteuiOu 1n;

Gelltl"'l Mllapr....- .................... EIL 1101
~
,
•
•
:

•

from Page AI
money is refundable if the area is
cleaned up; ' added Blaettnar.
Co uncil heard from Sarah Fisher, who represents the Pomeroy
Merchants Associati on.
Fisher reported abou t blac kbirds
picking crash out of the trash cans
o n the Pomeroy parkin g lo t and
leaving it on the ground. Blaetmar
said that he would look into purchasing several barrel cove rs that
would hopefu lly solve the problem.
Blaettnar repo rted on the firs t
Market Day, held Saturday. These
events will continue every Saturday th roughout th e summer, and
will incl ude fl ower and produce
' ve ndors, quali ty crafters. Blaettnar
has said entertainment on the
amphith eater stage.
Council approved second reading of two ordinances, one creating the position of clerk of
mayo r;s court and establishing the
pay sc ale from 5 cents per hour to
50 cents, and another that would
set probationary pay rates for
. employees.
Council also approved a liquor
license transfer req uest for Little
John's, formerly Gas Plus, near the
Beacon. The license tra nsfer does

Newt .....- -..- ··--··"' ..........:.. ... Ell. 1102

E••·

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

..............._ ...... or
1106
Otlttr StrwkH
' Atlt't:J'tllletr...-··.......................:.... lt&amp;l. llo.l
Clrc•latiolt.......................................txt. 1103
Cllllllled Adi.................................. Ext. 1100

•

•

4:03 p.m ., South Second, Mid- ticipate in the mile-long yard sale,
dleport, Dave Spangler, VMH;
Friday and Saturday. Donations
6:20 p.m., Riverside Apart- may be ·left at the M asonic Temments, Middleport, assisted by p!e,-Wednesday, 10 a.m . to 2 p.m .
Middleport unit, Harley Barton, or call 742-2554 or 992-3530.
VMH;
9:17 p.m., State Route 124,
assisted by Reedsville unit as First
MIDDLEPORT Those
Responder, Don Buchanan,
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi- who wish to participate in the
Yellow Flag Yard Sale, to be held
tal.
this weekend in Pomeroy and
RACINE
9:19 p.m., Yellowbush, Lesa Middleport, must register no later
than the end of business on ThesCounts,VMH.
day.
SYRACUSE
A $5 fee includes a yellow flag
3:46 p.m ., East Main S~reet ,
PometbV; 11ssisted· · by 'Pbtfieroy, and listing on a nurlib~te'd lbcator
map to be printed in The Daily
lisa Eblin, Veterans Memorial.
Sentinel. Flags are available at the
Middleport Department Store
and Ohio River Bear Co., Middleport, and Chapman Shoes,
Pomeroy.
RACINE Kindergarten
The event is co-sponsored by
registration at Southern kinder- the Middleport Community
garten will be held during the Association and the Pomeroy
school day on Thursday and Fri- Merchants Association.
day.
. Parents and guardians should
bring the child's Social Security
card, birth certificate, shot records
POMEROY - A round and
and any custody papers necessary. square dance will be held Friday,.
Registration
appointments 8-11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
should be made by calling 949- Citizens Center. Music will be by
2663.
True Country and . Art Conant
will be the caller.

Yard sale deadline

Kindergarten
registration set

Donations
solicited

MIDDLEPORT Evan.geJine Chapter 172, OES, will par-

Warming trend commences
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Abundant
sunshine
on
Wednesday will push the Incounty area's temperatures into
the 70s, the National Weather
Service said.
The warming tcend will continue under fair skies into the
weekend, with the mercury
cracking the SO- degree mark iby
Friday.
Overnight lows will be mostly
in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:28
p.m. and sunrise on Wednesday at
6:29a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight .. . Clear through 3
a.m., then fog developing late.

Identity
from Page AI
ing credit card statements, phone
bills and cellular phone bills for
unauthorized charges.
"Once personal information is
obtained, impostors can open
fraudulent credit card accounts,
secure deposits on houses and cars,
create insurance benefits and drain
personal financial accounts, including retire ment benefits." Grau
added.
"Due to the wide range of ways
identity theft occurs, these partnerships are targeted toward getting
information to as many people as
possible on how to avoid the problem, or what to do if they become
a victim;' Grau added.
As part of the patrol's parll)ership
efforts, it has produced two
brochures; "A,void Ide9tity C~"
and "When Identity Crime Strikes
..
.
Yiou.
One brochure teaches the public

AEP - 38~

how to avoid being a victim of
identity theft, and the other outlines what steps to take for identity
theft victims.
"This partnership effort is pan of
the patrol's Parmers for Safety initiative that continues to successfully blend statewide corporate partnerships with innovative initiatives
at the local level," said Grau.
" In Ohio, the patrol and multiagency law enforcement task forces
have been working together to
detect and appreh end tho~e
involved in identity fraud through
the utilization of state driver licenses and ide ntification cards;' he
added.
"Education will be the key to
reducing this increasingly pefll3sive
crime." Grau said. "And these partnerships exemplify how successfully law enforcement and corporate
entities can be at working together
to get information to the general
public." •
r

.MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

lows in the upper 40s. Light and
variable wind.
Wednesday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper.70s.
Wednesday
night ... Mostly
cloudy With a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Cioudy with a
chance of showers and thunder··Storms. Highs in the upper 70s.
Friday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and ihunderstorms . Lows in th" upper 50s and
highs near 80.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows ncar 60 and highs in
the mid 80s.

Foreclosure
sought
POMEROY - An action for
foreclosure has bee n filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Broadview Mortgage
Co., Worthington, against John W.
LeMaster, Albany, alleging a
default balance in the amount of
$58,714.51.

GanneH - 63\
General Electric - 159\
Harley Davidson - 42

Rocky Boots - s"'.
RO Shell - 57\
Shoney's-\
Wai·Man - 57"1.
Wendy's - 22\
Wor1hlnglon - 12 ~

OVB- 29l.

Dally stock reports are 1he
4 p.m. closing quotes of

Kroger - 1e).
Lands End - 4 Ho
Ud. - 48\
Oak Hill Financial - 14
One Valley - 34).
Peoples - 17'1.
Premier - 7'1.

Rockwell - 38l.

the previous day's trana-

acllons, provided
Advest of Gallipolis.

by

A GES. ALL T IMES S·l

oo

7x9"
Victorian Tea
House Curved
Cedar Roof With
Double Glider

10xl4"

ty

sears - 38'·

Kman - sl.

GLADIATOR (R) &amp;
DREAMED OF AFRICIA (PG1
ALI

LOCAL STOCKS
Akzo - 41
AmTech/SBC - 44'•
Ashland Inc. - 341.
AT&amp;T - 48\
Bank One - 30~•
Bob Evans - 13'·
BorgWarner - 42\'o
Champion - 3
Channing Shops - 6j.
City Holding - 1 2~.
Federal Mogul .. 13l.
Firstar - 25~~

no t involve a change of locatio n,
only a change of name, Blaettnar
said.
Blaettnar th en informed coun cil
on several minor repairs to t he
Pomeroy Muni cipal Building that
need to be undertaken, including
loose bricks and rusty metal o n
the skylights.
Councilman Victor Yo ung 111, a
local contractor, said that he would
pe rform the work at no charge if
the village provides the ma terials.
Coun cil corrunended workers
fo r thei r part in C leanup Week and
C lerk Kathy Hysell said that the
cost of the cleanup effo rt is still
being calculated.
Wright asked council to consider sidewalk co nditions along
U nion Avenue and to contact the
owner, if necessary, abou t these
conditions.
Hysell reminded council that
anyone who owns a butial lot at
Beech Grove Cemete ry must pay
a $10 maintenan ce fee per grave
space. Those who own lots should
pay the fee in May, Hysell said.
Hysell also said that she wquld
be advertising for gasoline bids.
Council approved the mayor's
report of fines collected in April
which totaled $8,225 .00.
Present, in addition to Blaettnar,
Young, Wright and Hysell, were
Councilmen, Larry Wehrung and
Bryan Shank.

Dance to be held

VALLEY WEATHER

, 11 w.. u ........................., ....:...:..............s29.25
• 26 w.eu ................:................................$56.68
' 52 Wotlul ............................................... $109.72 '

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
All ads must be prepaid

Pomeroy

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

EMS units
answer 6 calls

•

•

Michael J. Trent

•••

MIDDLEPORT - E112ngeline Chapter 172, OES, Thursday, 7:30 . p.m. Middleport

lmmunlzetlona ere neCessary to protect children against major child·
hood diseases. To make It easy tor parents to gat "shots• fOr their
klda, the Meigs County Health Department has four free clinics every
month. Walk·ln clinics are held on the second and fourth.Tuesday of
each month, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. and the first and third Tuesday evenings 1 to 7 p.m. Here Sherry WllcoK, R. N. gives a shot to lit·
tie Rusty Fields held by his mother, Martina Fields of Rutland.

RACINE - Earl J. "Duck" Adams , 81, of Adams Road, R ac ine,
died on 'Friday, April 28, 2000 in Riverside Methodist H ospital in
Columbus.
He was born on January 23, 1919 in Antiquity, the son of the late
Earnest and Minnie Wolfe Adams .
· He was a retired Letart Township farmer and a member of the Meigs
•
County Farm Bureau .
He is survived by his wife, Doris J. Wagner Adams ; whom he married on April 25, 1939 in Gallipolis, a daughter and son-in-law, Jackie
and Wayne McLaughlin, Sunbury; four grandchildren amf four greatBIDWELL - Michael J. Trent, 47, 232 Roush Hollow Road, Bidgrandchildren; a sister, Clara PoweU of Racine; a daughter-in-law, well, died Saturday, April 29,2000 as a result of a motorcycle crash on
Carol Jean Adams of Syracuse; two sisters-in- law, Florence Adams of Bulaville Pike.
Racine, and Pearl Adams of Middleport; and several nieces and
Born June 11, 1952 in Dayton, son ofjoseph Taylor of Friendswood ,
nephews.
Texas, and Shirley Williams Trent Roark of Middletown, he. was a
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son , Jim senior control technician with the Regional Service Organization
Adams; four brothers, MarshaU " Bob" Adams, Clarence J. Adams, Reed (RSO) of American Electric Power.
Adams and Jack H. Adams; and by three sisters, Dewey McNickel, Ella
Surviving in addition to his parents are a daughter, Jennifer (Dan)
Quillen, and Edith Adams.
Moore of Kettering; two •sons, Jerimikea Trent of Reynoldsburg, and
Services will be held on Tuesday, May 2, 2000 at 11 a.m. at the Cre- Christopher Michael Trent of Moraine; three grandchildren; five sismeens Funeral Home in Racine , with the Rev. Brian Harkness offici- ters, Rebecca (Wendel) Morton of Morrow, Robin (Pete) Wenk of
ating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.Visitation
Centerville, Shirley (Michael) Meadors of Middletown, Tina (Chris)
: Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Asso- Elliott of Blanchester, and Melissa (Matthew) Coleman of Christians.ciation Ohio Valley Affiliate, P.O. Box 182039, Department 013, . burg, Va.; two brothers, Ronnie Trent of Dayton, and Jeffrey Trent of
Columbus, Ohio 43218.
. St. C harl es,Va.; and several nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles.
He was preceded in death by a half- brother in infancy.
Services will be 8 p.m . Tuesday, May 2, 2000 in C remeens Funeral
Chapel, Gallipolis. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.
· Additional services will be 8 p.m. Thursday, May 4, 2000 in Sanner
.·· ..POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Mary M . Burcham, 74, Point Pleas- Funeral Home, 8000 Alex Road, West Carrollton , Obio. Friends may
call at the funeral liome from 6-8 p.m. Thursday.
·ant, died Monday, May 1, 2000 at her residence .
Cremation will follow services.
: Born Sept. 22, 1925 in Lawrence County, daughter of the late Harlow and Elizabeth Bevin Fuller, she was a homemaker.
She was a member ofTrinity United M ethodis~ Church in Point
Pleasant, member and past Worthy Matron of Order of Eastern Star
POMEROY - Mary A. Webster, a former Pomeroy resident, died
Chapter 75 of Point Pleasant, and past Point Pleasant Mother Advisor
Frid;ty, April 28,2000 at the Meritcare Medical Cen\er in Fargo, N.D.
and District 2 Depury for International Order of Rainbow for Girls.
Services
·will be announced at the convenience of the fami ly.
· Surviving are her husband, Bernard E. Burcham; three daughters and
Arrangements are by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
·sons-in-law, Elizabeth Nibert of Point Pleasant, Linda and Greg Nel-

DEATH NOTICES

•••

•••

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

son of Scott Depot, W.Va., and Berna Jean and Jeff Hilbert of Point
Pleasant; and six gra.ndchildren and one great-grandson .
Services will be 11 a.m . Wednesday in D eal Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, with Dr. L. Frank Frye officiating. An Eastern Star service will
be conducted at 8 p.m. by OES Chapter 75. Burial will follow in
Rome C emetery, Proctorville. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9 tonight.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Trinity United
Methodist Church Building Fund , in ca re ofTrinity United Methodist
C hurch, PO. Box 22!1, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.

Earl J. 1)uck' Aclains

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Board of P!!blic Affairs,
closed May 3, for clerk to attend
POMEROY - Parent·Traintraining session. Payment can be
. ing Course, Friday; also May 11
made in drop box at office.
and 18·, Meigs County District
.' .
Library, Main Street, Pomeroy.
Sessions, children through 12
POMEROY Catholic from 1 to 4 p.m . ; teenagers, 6
Women's Club, mother/daugh- p.m. to 9 p.m. Topics to include
ter social, 7 p.m., church mass.
self-esteem, discipline, health
and nutrition, problem solving,
study skills, communication,
PAGEVILLE
Scipio decision making, understandi!lg
Township Trustees, Wednesday, child development.
Pageville town hall, 6:30 p.m.

THURSDA,Y, May 4

Delth row Inmate dill

Children's literature
.discussed at literary meeting

•••

•••

DUBLIN (AP) -A teenager was fatally shot during an argument
at a store in this Columbus suburb Monday aftc.r noon.
~ The owner ofThe Bait Store called 911 about 1 p.m. to report
;me shooting, city spokeswoman Colleen Moran said. The victim,
~identified by police as stote employee James Coyan Ill, 17, of
•Columbus, wu pronounced dead ahonly after arrival at Rivenide
:Meiliodilt Hospital. He waashot in the chest, police said.
Police said no one had been charged.
·

, COLUMBUS (AP) -Jerry Lee Allard,.on Ohio's death row for
·the liayings of his 2-yeat-old daughter and his ex-wife; has died of
'a stroke, authorities said.
.
Allard, 42, died Sunday at Ohio State Univeniry Medical Center
following a stroke, said Joe And:ews, spokesman · for the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
:Allard was sentenced to death in 19,93 for the stabbing deaths or
his ex-wife, Karen Marie Allard, 25, his daugh~er, Rachael Marie
Allard, and a knife a!fack on hia 5-year-old son, Aaron, in March
1992.
Knox Counry Prosecutor John Baker said Allard would have
k.illed the boy as well if the Mount Vernon police hadn't arrived at
Allard's apartment.

SILVER RIDGE South
Bethel New Testament Church,
Spiritual Renewal services,
through Saturday, 7 p.m. Pastor
Lonriie Coats of Restoration
Christian FeUowship as speaker,
and special music nightly.
Church is located on Silver
Ridge Road across from Eastern
High School.
·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OBITUARY

Masonic Temple .

TUESDAY, May 2

Youth killed following argument

..

1Ueada~May2,2000

Victorian.
Gazebo with
Chateau Shingle
Roof

urnitt~:re P[us

· :Furniture, Carpet, .52l.pp{rances

Financing Available 42123 State 'l?j. 7 • fJ"uppers Plains, 01i
90 Day Lay·Away
(740} 667-7388 • 1-800-200-4005

Mon.·Thurs. 9·5
Fri. 9·6 • Sat. 9·4

�PageA4
Tuesd.y, rur·:zr 2000

•

:.:the Daily Sentinel

--

--------~--------------~~----~Jr----------------------------------------~--~~~~·,.,~~2~,2-~~o

Ann says don't invite husband~ ex into home

The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6fi.sliea in 1948

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

...

.

.

, Dear ~ Landen: I . am having
.problems With my husband's ex-wife, .
:"Lola." She and my husband, ''Troy," are
:still good friends, even though they were
:only married for a year and had no chit.dren together. At first, Lola seemed sweet
:and easygoing, and I made an effort to
·like her. She has been married twice
:since the divorce from Troy, but still uses
his last name. She had a son with her
third husband, and the boy abo uses
Troy's last name, because she "wanted to
be consistent." The child calls my husband "Uncle Troy."
I've since discovered Lola can be emotionally abusive. I once saw her scream at
her last husband in our living room, in ·
:front of her son. After that, I told TJ;Oy I
·no longer wanted her in our house, but
:he ignored my wishes. The final . straw
: was when Lola bought a car and used
: Troy's name as a personal reference,
' without his permission. She defaulted on

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

.

.'

.

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

larry Boyer
Advertl1lng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

UU.-n to th1 .-dilor "'' wtlcmttf'. Thq dto11ld IH )•ss tltalf JIJIJ wonU. A.U ldtu:r Gn sMbjtct
10 tdi#ll6 IJ#fd lffllll b• l iglf/YI alUI intfudt llddrf*I IIHd 1fl1plfmt1 IUIIffbu. Nu IIIUig~ttd /tttm' wit/
IH p1111bli.JII~. UINn should be in food ttul•, 11dd~uing lf.s11u, 1101 p1nonalilin.

'l'lllr upj11imu rxprnsfil ;,. lhr cul11m11 bdo~t~ urrlh• con:m•su• u/ llrt Olriu ValkJ Publlrlu'nr
Clf, '" rdilurlallfoord, anlr.u ttlhrrw/.,, IJ,,IM.

OUR VIEW:

.

Hear us

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.The Daily Sentinel

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
the loan, and it took a long time before
we could convince the loan company
that Troy knew nothing about the transactiO!\.
Lola occasionally calls Troy collect,
and he always accepts the charges. He is
convinced that she's trying to change her
ways. Now, Lola tells me sl!e plans to
come for a visit, and would like to stay
with us. I don't think I can handle this,
Ann. I know Lola is hot a threat to our
marriage, but I don't want her under our

roof. Frankly, I think she is nothing but
trouble. Am I being rude? I need some
advice from an impartial observer. Nervous in San Jose, Calif.
Dear San Jose: If Lola wishes to
visit, you cannot stop her, but you need
not invite her to stay in your home.
When she does come to town, be gracious, but make sure Troy does not see
her unless you are present. The woman
does not come off as trustworthy, and
Troy sounds as if he could be easily
manipulated. Remember that old song
"Wh~tever_ Lola wants, Lola ge~"? I see
red flags flying all over the place.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently married UMartin," and
are now COinbining our households so . we can live
together in my home. I love my husband
very much, but there is one big problem,
and I need your advice. Together, we
have eight children - my three, and his
five. They are all grown and on their

we

.

own. Martin has enormous oil portraits
of each of his five children, done when
the kids were about 5 years old. He wants
to hang them in my home.
Ann , I have very litde wall space, and
the art that is already there is part of the
decor. I spent a lot of time and energy
getting the walls in my home to look.
elegant and balanced. Also, I do not
believe it would be fair to display such
large portraits of my hu sband's children
when I have nothin g of that size of my
own children or grandchildren .
I suggested that Martin give each
child his or her own portrait. I then purchased a lovely roon1 divider that also
holds several 8-by- 10 photographs, with
th ~ idea we co uld put pictures of all the
children and grandchildren in this
"photo gallery." Martin , however, refuses
to part with the portraits, and has spent
the last two days trying to find appropriate wall space for them. This is making

me crazy. Please tell me what to do. Not Picture-Perfect in Alta Lorna, Calif.
Dear Alta Loma: I assume you have
a decorator. If not, get one pronto. Let
the decorator make the decision about
the picture placement. I can assure you
that he or she will support your position.
Gem of the Day (Sent in by L.S.H. in
Washington, D.C.) : The best way to
remember your girlfriend's birthday is tu
forget it once.
When planning a wedding, who pays
for what? Who stands where&gt; "The Ann
Landers Guide for ·Brides" has all the
answers . Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money
order for $3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to : Brides, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11 5&amp;2, Chicago, Ill. 60611 05&amp;2 . (In Canada, se nd $4.55.) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns, visit the Crea tors Sy ndicate web page at www.creators.com.

f

J?._etraining funds welcome,
but project needs more

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hio Bureau ofEnployment Sc'fviccs' awarding of$168,000
to allow retraining of Sourlwrn O hio Coal Co. employees
·
facing loss of thc·ir jobs withi n two years was one of th e
bright spots in last week 's local news.
The tirndm g will allow classes to begin
in June for the 500 miners who have
expressed interest in training for · new
occupations. Com munity Action Agency
officials tell us t•no ugh money is in hand
for classes and other forms of assistance to
last through the summer.
Emphasis now f.11ls upon convincing the
U.S. Labor Department to release an additional $1.2 million to continue the program .
If that doesn 't happen, "we' ll take buses of min ers to Washington,"
Gallia-Meigs CAA Executive Director Trish M cC ~llough said last
week.
·
Knowing laughter that followed her remark recognized the efiec\iVeness of the outrage that can be lodged against the government
try those who are denied what they need .
. Faced with the loss of th eir livelihood and with few jobs for them
to fill, unemployed SOCCO· employecs are a force to be reckoned
with if the funding doesn't come through.
But we're getting ahead ourselves. There is no good reason for
those funds to be den.ied. It should be evident to Washington that
·; -the loss of nearly 1·,000 jobs·'and one of the biggt-st payrolls in th e
: region will cause untold di , ress in southern Ohio and West Vir-

There is no
·good reason
for those
funds to be
denied.

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: If the fcds don 't realize this, then it is up to everyon e - min ers,
• their families, people who 1(Icpend on their business and local offi~ cials - to make them aware of th e impact.
·
~ This grant is not a handout. It is a symbol of hope for hundreds
: of workers in several Ohio counties and in the Mountain State.
: As pointed out at last week's announcement of the initial grant,
: SOCCO employees are willing workers. They want to provide for
their families and be useful members of the community.
; , They pay taxes and have suffered the brunt of federal regulations
l that have dethroned King Coal. The least our government can do is
; direct funding to a necessary program that will keep our jobless
; rates from skyrocketing.
: The proactive approach taken by Gallia-Meigs CAA and its couni tcrpart for Athens, Hocking and Perry counties should be recog; nized.Its r.eward should be· sending those lacing an uncertain future ·
~ back into the work force with the skills - and. confidence - to
: find new jobs.
·
: The funding is not in any way another waste of government
~ money. Rather, it would be one of the wiser investments of public .
1 funding we've seen in the area for some time.
i Contact our congtessm&lt;&gt;n and senators and let them know how
: vital the retraining is to die region. It's too important to our future
r
,
.
'' to be put o ff, or worse, 1orgotten.
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· TODAY IN. HISTORY
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1

; Today is Tuesday, May 2, the 123rd day of 2000. There are 243
; days left in the year.
·
·· Today's Highlight in History:
• On May 2, Hl63 , Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson
: was accidentally wounded by his own men at Chancellorsville, Va.;
a he died eight days later.
' .
i On thi s date:
·
In 1519, Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, Fmnce.
; In 1670, the Hudson Bay Company was chartered by England's
: King C harles II.
: In 1890. th e Oklahoma Territory was organized.
: In 1936, "Peter and the Wolf," a symphonic tale for children by
; Sergei Prokofiev, had its world premiere in Moscow.
. In 1945 the Soviet Union announced the fall of Berlin, and the
•
•
: Allies announced the surrender of Nazi troops in Italy and parts of
· Austria.
· In 1957, Sen. Joseph R . McCarthy, the communist-hunting
: Republican senator fro m Wisconsin, died at Bethesda Naval Hospi't tal in .Maryland.
'
•
'
• In 1960, convicted sex offender and bcst-sellmg author Caryl
l Chessman was executed at San Quentin Prison in Californi a.
' In 1965,the "Early Bird" satellite was used to trans~litTV pictures
:. across the Atlantic.
: In 1972, after 48 years as head o( the FBI, J Edgar Hoover died
; in Washington at age 77.
: In 1994, Nelso n Mandela claimed victory in th e wake of So uth
: Africa's first democratic elec ti ons; President F.W. de Klerk acknowl; edged defeat.
; Today 's Birthdays: Actor Theodore Bike! is 76. Actor Roscoe Lee
; Brown e is 75. R ock musician Link Wray is 65. Comedy wmer: voice actor Lorenzo Music is 63. Bian ca Jagger is 55. Country singer
; R.C. Dannon is 55. Singer · Lesley Gore is 54. Singer-songwriter
• Larry Gatlin is 52. R oc k singer Lou Gramm (Foreigner) is SO.
: Actress Christine Baranski is 48. Actress Elizabe.th Berridge is 38.
~ Country singer Ty Hern don is 38. Actress Jenna Von Oy is 23.

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PERKINS' VIEW :

Administration ignores constitutional rights
Let us stipulate from the get-go: Elian Gonzalez ought to be with his dad.
And if his dad chooses to return to Cuba
with his boy, that ought to be his prerogative
(no matter that both father and son almost certainly would be better off here in the United
States).
But it is dte way 6-year-old Elian was
restored to his father Easter weekend that is
troubling.
For if Bill Clinton and Janet Reno can get
away with abrogating Lazaro Gonzalez's Fourth
and 14th Amendment rights - which supposedly protected Elian's g~at-uncle against
"unreasonable search and seizure" and guaranteed him "due process of the law" - then
Americans can no longer take these rights for
granted.
Which is why the White House and Justice
Department have had criticism heaped upon
them not only by the usual 'Suspects - congressional Republicans and conServative commentators, whose protests might be easily disrrii~•ed · as politically rnotivJted - but abo by at
least one Democratic -senator, two legal scholars
and one newspaper editorial page, all of which
are usually supportive of the Clinton administration.
Indeed, Florida Sen. Bob Graham,, whom AI
Gnre is considering as a running mate in
November, agrees with Republicans that Congress ought to hold hearing:~ on the pre-dawn
removal of young Elian from the home of his
Miami relatives.
Graham is understandably distJJrbed, because
he had assurances from Clinton .that, when and
if the administration decided to take the child,
it would do so in broad daylight. Instead, the
government's heavily armed storm troopers
came tn snatch the child like thieves in the
night, leaving terror in their wake.
So why did the president renege on his commitment 10 Graham? Because raking the child
during the day would have required that he
allow the legal process to run its course.
· Indeed, the administration looked warily
toward a May 11 federal court hearing, during
which Elian was 'to mak~ his formal request for
· asylum (a legal proceeding to which he is entitled, no matter how tender his age).
By snatching the litde Cuban boy, the admin-

Joseph
PerKins
NEA COLUMNIST
istr:)tion hoped to render that court proceeding
moot. And indeed, now that the boy is no
longer in the care of his Miami relatives, now
that the government is barring both the Miami
family and its legal representatives from contact
with the boy, Eli an's dad can effectively veto an
asylum hearing.
But, ag.lin, even those who believe that the
boy belongs with his dad .and that the dad has
the right, ultimately, to decide where he wants
to raise his boy can hardly justify the way the
White House and Justice Department brought
about this reunion.
It was "a dangerous day for all Americans"
when Elian was forcibly removed from Little
Havana, said Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, who happened to be one of Clinton's
most vocal defenders during the White House
sex scandal.
The administration acted "lawlessly," said
Dershowitz, in an interview with Fox News.
"They should have gotten a court order. They
should have sought to hold the family in contempt. And if the family refused to comply with
the court order, then they could have issued
court citations and arrested the f.1mily." ·
They could have marched up to the front
dol)r of Lazaro Gonzalez's Miami home during
daylight, with full confidence that they had the
law behind them.
But because they knew they didn 't have the
law behind them - Dershowitz noted that the
11 tb U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals actually
refused the administration's request for an order
that Elian's Miami relatives hand him over to
the government - they came with b'llllS. under
cover of darkness.

TIM·E bUT FOR TIPS

.,'
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What is truly frightening is that the White
House and Justice Deparpnent claim that they
acted under " the rule oflaw."
"A court order was not necessary in this
case," said White House spokesman Joe Lockhart. "It was a judgment we made. We got the
search., warrant. That wa.~ enough to .go forward .
But constitutional scholar; L,a!-!'i\'.".&lt;e• Tribe,. a
Harvard Law colleague of Dershowitz, passionatelydisagreed in a New York'T:ine5' commentary. "It was not a warrant to seize th'e 'child;' he
wrote. "Elian was not lost, and it ~s a semantic
sleight of hand to compare his forcible removal
to the seizure of evidence, which is what a
search warrant is for."
The White House and the Justice Department want everyone to just forget about what
happened in Little Havana on the day befo~e ·
Easter. The president urged that everyone concerned, including members of the media, give
Elian's family "th e ' space it needs to heal its
wounds."
.
But the wounds the Clinton administratiop
inflicted upon the Constitution cannot b~
ignored.
Indeed, as The New York Tiines editoriat
page opined, in the wake the administratim~s
commando raid on th e home of Elian 's great&gt;.
uncle:"The manner in which th e law is uphelil
in a free society can be as important as the law
itself. In this case, the methods used by the go¥r
ernment are likely to overshadow and diminish
the principle that Ms. Reno and President
Clinton set out to defend:'
The American public is willing, all too ofte11,
to excuse the government when it vi6lates the
constitutional rights of an individual it does not
particularly care for - like the mullh vilified
Lazaro Gonzalez.
But any of us could, at some point or anoth~
er, find ourselv.es in a dispute with the governr
ment, for some reason or another.
And if heavily armed federal officers coulp
break down Lazaro Gonzalez's door and snatclt
"litde Elian, flouting both the Fourth and 14th
Amendments, they can potentially do the sam~
to any one of us, even those of us who consiJ.
er ourselves scrupulously law abiding:
·
aoseph Perki"s is a columnist for 111£ San

.

; Ni'nety percent, of cigare.tte.
•
smokers began smoking by
the age of 19. Teens
addicted to tobacco have several
things in common, according •to
Lisa Gorman, Miami County
Extension Agent.
A number of them tried their
first cigarette in the sixth or seventh grade. Many smoking teens
do not perform well at school.
They enjoy trying to hide their
smoking and outwitting school .
administration. This has made
school more fun for some tobacco
· users. Many times they do not feel
they are a' part of school and are
isolated from students active · in
sports. Most feel they have little
hope of going to college or getting
a good job after high school.

'

Becky
Baer
EXTENSION
Quite a few smoking teenagers report adciictions ·to other substances, such as alcohol.
They experience pressure f'roni home 'and
school, and use tobacco as a form of relief.
Some teens say they began smoking to be
accepted by peers, cope with stress and
appear more mature. If these are important
goals for teens, how can we help them find
alternatives to reach these goals?We can help
teens develop ski.lls that recognize and refute
pro-tobacco use messages from the media,
adults and peers.
Personal and social skills such as assertive-

ness, communication, goal setting and problem-solving can enable teens to avoid tobacco use and other risky behaviors.
The initiation 9f smoking is influenced
by having friends, particularly a best friend,
who smokes. Risk factors indicate that teens
who have cloSe association with peers who
use or have favorable attitudes toward tobacco use are more apt to use it themselve~.
especially if they are vulnerable to peer pressure. o further compound the problem,
irregular teen smokers who ' develop a nicotine addiction have easy a
What can he dcine to ·decrease tobacco
use among teens? Parents .and family l!lem•
bers can promote a tobacco-free norm by
establishing a hard-line disapproval of tobacco use. Peers can' promote a tobacco-free
environment by modeling refusal skills.
Schools can teach the consequences of
tobacco use as a part of health education.
Communities can establish norms by limiting tobacco use in public places and by
restricting access to tobacco for children and
youth.

•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS..

.

•

roads on the
to the

L

lead

'.

•r

"{X ]hether you're driving down 1-65 from the Ohio

V V Valley, down 1-85 from the Carolinas, or along the
gulf coast on I-10 there is incredible golf along the way ...

•'

and something Grand at the end of the Trail.

..

The ROBERT Tl\ENT ]ONES GOLF TRAIL is 378 holes of
championship golf on a series of eight spectacular sites
spanning the length of Alabama's natural beauty. Designed
by the master himself, the Trail is what The New York

Timer called "some of the best public golf on Earth."
Aild now the famous GRAND HOTEL RESORT

:

AND

GOLF CLUB, recently

·.

'HARDBALL':

Raid brings legitimate authority into question
·BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
newswires of happy soit and father reunited.
WASHINGTON Newspaper people
But while that second ph.o to made a good
know the power of pictures. Forced to choose case for the enduring paternal bond between
two weekends ago between one of a federal the two Cubans, the first cast a grave light on
agent pointing in the general direction of a that between th e government of the United
scared-to•death 6-ycar-old and a snapshot of States and the Am"rican people it was created
th'e same kid with his .father, they knew which to serve ..]t snowed a well- armed Big Brother
had the firepower.
- Big Sister in Janet R eno's case - using his
They went with the newsmaker,. the AP vasdy greater firepower to show the little folk
photo guaranteed to win the Pulitzer, the pic- who the Boss is.
ture that screams "Show afForce!"
That's not a good picture. It says that the
This is the message delivered by that fellow way to measure and display legitimate authortoting the automatic weapon. He was a police ity is by having the bigge~t gun capable of
detective presenting his badge to a potential shooting the most bullets the fastest.
suspect. He was not a deputy U.S. attorney
Charlton Heston must love it. He comes
general standing at the door of a Southern in'to 'our living rooms like a 21st century Paul
university saying it was his duty 10 ensure its · Revere 't o tell us' that federal agents are already
peaceful integration. H e was a "fed" showing in their cars, dead set on disarmi ~g us.
he had more firepower than anyone else in
Comrades to his right speak in even darker
that little Mian1i household and, for that rea- tones of choppers heading in our direction to
son , they damned well better mrn over the dictate the arrival of a new world order, in
which gtlys like us take orders from Washingkid. .
The American lawyer' for Juan Gonzalez ton and guys like Clinton take them from
spotted the specter itntnediately. By afier- some foreign bureaucrat in th e United
noon, he had a picture running on the Nations.

..

named one of the best places in the world to stay

•

Alabama coast. Enjoy yourselflounging by tl1e

.

pool, sailing in the bay or expl&lt;;&gt;ring scenic trails

by Conde Nast magazine, is waiting tor you on the

••

Before last Saturday such folk had "Ruby
Ridge!" and "Waco!" in their vocabulary of
rage. Now they've got a handy picture to nail
on the clubhouse wall.
•
A government that knew its people bette&lt;
might have avoided giving its critics such ~
weapon . Even the most loyal, most law-abiding of us resent -the arrogance of governmen.~
. tal power._
'\
:
After all, we Americans are different. Whe~
the Canadian govenunent told its people t~
begin using th e .metric system, they did t1
without thinking. When our government did
the same thing, we stuck to our p's and q';,
kept buying milk in 'pints and quarts. We kePt
checking how fast our kids were growing in
inches and feet.
·
·:
And why do you think both Al Gore and
George Bush are both basing their campaigns ·
in Austin and Nashville?
,
We were not put here for Washington, you
see. W~shington was put' here for us.

on horseback. It's wonderful dining. It's impeccable service. It's all here at the Grand Hotel, a
•

grand resort on rpe Trail.

•·
ALABAMA'S
-MARRIOTI'S--::::----

C{JJw;m/ CJk1el
RESORT AND GOLF CLUB

1.800.544 . 9933

The Grand Hotel
Point Clear ·

1.800. 949.4444

(Cl~ris

MattlreuJS1 clrief of tlte San Francisco
Examiner's Washington Bnrea11, is host of "Hardball" 0 11 CNBC allll MSNBC cable channels.) .

\
•

•

ADAMSVILLE - Bob Evans'
One of the most exdtiftg
Farm announces its 2000 su·m- weekends at Adamsville -is
mer program at the village of
the "Old 'Jjlme Kids'
Adamsville. Classes and demonJ*elcend", held the
strations in th e !9th Century
way of life will be offered . Spinsecong weekend ofJune.
ning, weaving, knitting, quilting
and dulcimer playing are among ins and a reconstructed log
the traditional crafts presented.
schoolhouse. the village keeps
One of the most exciting the traditions of an earlier, genweekends at Adamsville is ' the tler life alive.
"Old 1'yme Kids' Weekend." It is
For further information, please
held the second weekend in co ntact Karen Dempsey or qale
June. This event includes an Leslie at (800) 994- FARM.
overnight stay in the village, and
teaches children about various
activities, such as tending animals, gardening, spinning and
weaving, connected with daily
life in the 19th Century.
The village of Adamsville was .
settled in the early 1800's. Today
Subscribe today.
it consists of four authentic cab992-2156

,

Diego

Union· Tribune.)

'

Bob Ev•ns' Farm announces
1000 summer program

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�PageA4
Tuesd.y, rur·:zr 2000

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:.:the Daily Sentinel

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--------~--------------~~----~Jr----------------------------------------~--~~~~·,.,~~2~,2-~~o

Ann says don't invite husband~ ex into home

The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6fi.sliea in 1948

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

...

.

.

, Dear ~ Landen: I . am having
.problems With my husband's ex-wife, .
:"Lola." She and my husband, ''Troy," are
:still good friends, even though they were
:only married for a year and had no chit.dren together. At first, Lola seemed sweet
:and easygoing, and I made an effort to
·like her. She has been married twice
:since the divorce from Troy, but still uses
his last name. She had a son with her
third husband, and the boy abo uses
Troy's last name, because she "wanted to
be consistent." The child calls my husband "Uncle Troy."
I've since discovered Lola can be emotionally abusive. I once saw her scream at
her last husband in our living room, in ·
:front of her son. After that, I told TJ;Oy I
·no longer wanted her in our house, but
:he ignored my wishes. The final . straw
: was when Lola bought a car and used
: Troy's name as a personal reference,
' without his permission. She defaulted on

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

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Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

larry Boyer
Advertl1lng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

UU.-n to th1 .-dilor "'' wtlcmttf'. Thq dto11ld IH )•ss tltalf JIJIJ wonU. A.U ldtu:r Gn sMbjtct
10 tdi#ll6 IJ#fd lffllll b• l iglf/YI alUI intfudt llddrf*I IIHd 1fl1plfmt1 IUIIffbu. Nu IIIUig~ttd /tttm' wit/
IH p1111bli.JII~. UINn should be in food ttul•, 11dd~uing lf.s11u, 1101 p1nonalilin.

'l'lllr upj11imu rxprnsfil ;,. lhr cul11m11 bdo~t~ urrlh• con:m•su• u/ llrt Olriu ValkJ Publlrlu'nr
Clf, '" rdilurlallfoord, anlr.u ttlhrrw/.,, IJ,,IM.

OUR VIEW:

.

Hear us

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Page ~5

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.The Daily Sentinel

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
the loan, and it took a long time before
we could convince the loan company
that Troy knew nothing about the transactiO!\.
Lola occasionally calls Troy collect,
and he always accepts the charges. He is
convinced that she's trying to change her
ways. Now, Lola tells me sl!e plans to
come for a visit, and would like to stay
with us. I don't think I can handle this,
Ann. I know Lola is hot a threat to our
marriage, but I don't want her under our

roof. Frankly, I think she is nothing but
trouble. Am I being rude? I need some
advice from an impartial observer. Nervous in San Jose, Calif.
Dear San Jose: If Lola wishes to
visit, you cannot stop her, but you need
not invite her to stay in your home.
When she does come to town, be gracious, but make sure Troy does not see
her unless you are present. The woman
does not come off as trustworthy, and
Troy sounds as if he could be easily
manipulated. Remember that old song
"Wh~tever_ Lola wants, Lola ge~"? I see
red flags flying all over the place.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently married UMartin," and
are now COinbining our households so . we can live
together in my home. I love my husband
very much, but there is one big problem,
and I need your advice. Together, we
have eight children - my three, and his
five. They are all grown and on their

we

.

own. Martin has enormous oil portraits
of each of his five children, done when
the kids were about 5 years old. He wants
to hang them in my home.
Ann , I have very litde wall space, and
the art that is already there is part of the
decor. I spent a lot of time and energy
getting the walls in my home to look.
elegant and balanced. Also, I do not
believe it would be fair to display such
large portraits of my hu sband's children
when I have nothin g of that size of my
own children or grandchildren .
I suggested that Martin give each
child his or her own portrait. I then purchased a lovely roon1 divider that also
holds several 8-by- 10 photographs, with
th ~ idea we co uld put pictures of all the
children and grandchildren in this
"photo gallery." Martin , however, refuses
to part with the portraits, and has spent
the last two days trying to find appropriate wall space for them. This is making

me crazy. Please tell me what to do. Not Picture-Perfect in Alta Lorna, Calif.
Dear Alta Loma: I assume you have
a decorator. If not, get one pronto. Let
the decorator make the decision about
the picture placement. I can assure you
that he or she will support your position.
Gem of the Day (Sent in by L.S.H. in
Washington, D.C.) : The best way to
remember your girlfriend's birthday is tu
forget it once.
When planning a wedding, who pays
for what? Who stands where&gt; "The Ann
Landers Guide for ·Brides" has all the
answers . Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money
order for $3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to : Brides, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11 5&amp;2, Chicago, Ill. 60611 05&amp;2 . (In Canada, se nd $4.55.) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns, visit the Crea tors Sy ndicate web page at www.creators.com.

f

J?._etraining funds welcome,
but project needs more

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hio Bureau ofEnployment Sc'fviccs' awarding of$168,000
to allow retraining of Sourlwrn O hio Coal Co. employees
·
facing loss of thc·ir jobs withi n two years was one of th e
bright spots in last week 's local news.
The tirndm g will allow classes to begin
in June for the 500 miners who have
expressed interest in training for · new
occupations. Com munity Action Agency
officials tell us t•no ugh money is in hand
for classes and other forms of assistance to
last through the summer.
Emphasis now f.11ls upon convincing the
U.S. Labor Department to release an additional $1.2 million to continue the program .
If that doesn 't happen, "we' ll take buses of min ers to Washington,"
Gallia-Meigs CAA Executive Director Trish M cC ~llough said last
week.
·
Knowing laughter that followed her remark recognized the efiec\iVeness of the outrage that can be lodged against the government
try those who are denied what they need .
. Faced with the loss of th eir livelihood and with few jobs for them
to fill, unemployed SOCCO· employecs are a force to be reckoned
with if the funding doesn't come through.
But we're getting ahead ourselves. There is no good reason for
those funds to be den.ied. It should be evident to Washington that
·; -the loss of nearly 1·,000 jobs·'and one of the biggt-st payrolls in th e
: region will cause untold di , ress in southern Ohio and West Vir-

There is no
·good reason
for those
funds to be
denied.

; ~•

'·

.

: If the fcds don 't realize this, then it is up to everyon e - min ers,
• their families, people who 1(Icpend on their business and local offi~ cials - to make them aware of th e impact.
·
~ This grant is not a handout. It is a symbol of hope for hundreds
: of workers in several Ohio counties and in the Mountain State.
: As pointed out at last week's announcement of the initial grant,
: SOCCO employees are willing workers. They want to provide for
their families and be useful members of the community.
; , They pay taxes and have suffered the brunt of federal regulations
l that have dethroned King Coal. The least our government can do is
; direct funding to a necessary program that will keep our jobless
; rates from skyrocketing.
: The proactive approach taken by Gallia-Meigs CAA and its couni tcrpart for Athens, Hocking and Perry counties should be recog; nized.Its r.eward should be· sending those lacing an uncertain future ·
~ back into the work force with the skills - and. confidence - to
: find new jobs.
·
: The funding is not in any way another waste of government
~ money. Rather, it would be one of the wiser investments of public .
1 funding we've seen in the area for some time.
i Contact our congtessm&lt;&gt;n and senators and let them know how
: vital the retraining is to die region. It's too important to our future
r
,
.
'' to be put o ff, or worse, 1orgotten.
~

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:' -----------------------------------------------

· TODAY IN. HISTORY
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1

; Today is Tuesday, May 2, the 123rd day of 2000. There are 243
; days left in the year.
·
·· Today's Highlight in History:
• On May 2, Hl63 , Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson
: was accidentally wounded by his own men at Chancellorsville, Va.;
a he died eight days later.
' .
i On thi s date:
·
In 1519, Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, Fmnce.
; In 1670, the Hudson Bay Company was chartered by England's
: King C harles II.
: In 1890. th e Oklahoma Territory was organized.
: In 1936, "Peter and the Wolf," a symphonic tale for children by
; Sergei Prokofiev, had its world premiere in Moscow.
. In 1945 the Soviet Union announced the fall of Berlin, and the
•
•
: Allies announced the surrender of Nazi troops in Italy and parts of
· Austria.
· In 1957, Sen. Joseph R . McCarthy, the communist-hunting
: Republican senator fro m Wisconsin, died at Bethesda Naval Hospi't tal in .Maryland.
'
•
'
• In 1960, convicted sex offender and bcst-sellmg author Caryl
l Chessman was executed at San Quentin Prison in Californi a.
' In 1965,the "Early Bird" satellite was used to trans~litTV pictures
:. across the Atlantic.
: In 1972, after 48 years as head o( the FBI, J Edgar Hoover died
; in Washington at age 77.
: In 1994, Nelso n Mandela claimed victory in th e wake of So uth
: Africa's first democratic elec ti ons; President F.W. de Klerk acknowl; edged defeat.
; Today 's Birthdays: Actor Theodore Bike! is 76. Actor Roscoe Lee
; Brown e is 75. R ock musician Link Wray is 65. Comedy wmer: voice actor Lorenzo Music is 63. Bian ca Jagger is 55. Country singer
; R.C. Dannon is 55. Singer · Lesley Gore is 54. Singer-songwriter
• Larry Gatlin is 52. R oc k singer Lou Gramm (Foreigner) is SO.
: Actress Christine Baranski is 48. Actress Elizabe.th Berridge is 38.
~ Country singer Ty Hern don is 38. Actress Jenna Von Oy is 23.

i

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'

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1

PERKINS' VIEW :

Administration ignores constitutional rights
Let us stipulate from the get-go: Elian Gonzalez ought to be with his dad.
And if his dad chooses to return to Cuba
with his boy, that ought to be his prerogative
(no matter that both father and son almost certainly would be better off here in the United
States).
But it is dte way 6-year-old Elian was
restored to his father Easter weekend that is
troubling.
For if Bill Clinton and Janet Reno can get
away with abrogating Lazaro Gonzalez's Fourth
and 14th Amendment rights - which supposedly protected Elian's g~at-uncle against
"unreasonable search and seizure" and guaranteed him "due process of the law" - then
Americans can no longer take these rights for
granted.
Which is why the White House and Justice
Department have had criticism heaped upon
them not only by the usual 'Suspects - congressional Republicans and conServative commentators, whose protests might be easily disrrii~•ed · as politically rnotivJted - but abo by at
least one Democratic -senator, two legal scholars
and one newspaper editorial page, all of which
are usually supportive of the Clinton administration.
Indeed, Florida Sen. Bob Graham,, whom AI
Gnre is considering as a running mate in
November, agrees with Republicans that Congress ought to hold hearing:~ on the pre-dawn
removal of young Elian from the home of his
Miami relatives.
Graham is understandably distJJrbed, because
he had assurances from Clinton .that, when and
if the administration decided to take the child,
it would do so in broad daylight. Instead, the
government's heavily armed storm troopers
came tn snatch the child like thieves in the
night, leaving terror in their wake.
So why did the president renege on his commitment 10 Graham? Because raking the child
during the day would have required that he
allow the legal process to run its course.
· Indeed, the administration looked warily
toward a May 11 federal court hearing, during
which Elian was 'to mak~ his formal request for
· asylum (a legal proceeding to which he is entitled, no matter how tender his age).
By snatching the litde Cuban boy, the admin-

Joseph
PerKins
NEA COLUMNIST
istr:)tion hoped to render that court proceeding
moot. And indeed, now that the boy is no
longer in the care of his Miami relatives, now
that the government is barring both the Miami
family and its legal representatives from contact
with the boy, Eli an's dad can effectively veto an
asylum hearing.
But, ag.lin, even those who believe that the
boy belongs with his dad .and that the dad has
the right, ultimately, to decide where he wants
to raise his boy can hardly justify the way the
White House and Justice Department brought
about this reunion.
It was "a dangerous day for all Americans"
when Elian was forcibly removed from Little
Havana, said Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, who happened to be one of Clinton's
most vocal defenders during the White House
sex scandal.
The administration acted "lawlessly," said
Dershowitz, in an interview with Fox News.
"They should have gotten a court order. They
should have sought to hold the family in contempt. And if the family refused to comply with
the court order, then they could have issued
court citations and arrested the f.1mily." ·
They could have marched up to the front
dol)r of Lazaro Gonzalez's Miami home during
daylight, with full confidence that they had the
law behind them.
But because they knew they didn 't have the
law behind them - Dershowitz noted that the
11 tb U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals actually
refused the administration's request for an order
that Elian's Miami relatives hand him over to
the government - they came with b'llllS. under
cover of darkness.

TIM·E bUT FOR TIPS

.,'
••

What is truly frightening is that the White
House and Justice Deparpnent claim that they
acted under " the rule oflaw."
"A court order was not necessary in this
case," said White House spokesman Joe Lockhart. "It was a judgment we made. We got the
search., warrant. That wa.~ enough to .go forward .
But constitutional scholar; L,a!-!'i\'.".&lt;e• Tribe,. a
Harvard Law colleague of Dershowitz, passionatelydisagreed in a New York'T:ine5' commentary. "It was not a warrant to seize th'e 'child;' he
wrote. "Elian was not lost, and it ~s a semantic
sleight of hand to compare his forcible removal
to the seizure of evidence, which is what a
search warrant is for."
The White House and the Justice Department want everyone to just forget about what
happened in Little Havana on the day befo~e ·
Easter. The president urged that everyone concerned, including members of the media, give
Elian's family "th e ' space it needs to heal its
wounds."
.
But the wounds the Clinton administratiop
inflicted upon the Constitution cannot b~
ignored.
Indeed, as The New York Tiines editoriat
page opined, in the wake the administratim~s
commando raid on th e home of Elian 's great&gt;.
uncle:"The manner in which th e law is uphelil
in a free society can be as important as the law
itself. In this case, the methods used by the go¥r
ernment are likely to overshadow and diminish
the principle that Ms. Reno and President
Clinton set out to defend:'
The American public is willing, all too ofte11,
to excuse the government when it vi6lates the
constitutional rights of an individual it does not
particularly care for - like the mullh vilified
Lazaro Gonzalez.
But any of us could, at some point or anoth~
er, find ourselv.es in a dispute with the governr
ment, for some reason or another.
And if heavily armed federal officers coulp
break down Lazaro Gonzalez's door and snatclt
"litde Elian, flouting both the Fourth and 14th
Amendments, they can potentially do the sam~
to any one of us, even those of us who consiJ.
er ourselves scrupulously law abiding:
·
aoseph Perki"s is a columnist for 111£ San

.

; Ni'nety percent, of cigare.tte.
•
smokers began smoking by
the age of 19. Teens
addicted to tobacco have several
things in common, according •to
Lisa Gorman, Miami County
Extension Agent.
A number of them tried their
first cigarette in the sixth or seventh grade. Many smoking teens
do not perform well at school.
They enjoy trying to hide their
smoking and outwitting school .
administration. This has made
school more fun for some tobacco
· users. Many times they do not feel
they are a' part of school and are
isolated from students active · in
sports. Most feel they have little
hope of going to college or getting
a good job after high school.

'

Becky
Baer
EXTENSION
Quite a few smoking teenagers report adciictions ·to other substances, such as alcohol.
They experience pressure f'roni home 'and
school, and use tobacco as a form of relief.
Some teens say they began smoking to be
accepted by peers, cope with stress and
appear more mature. If these are important
goals for teens, how can we help them find
alternatives to reach these goals?We can help
teens develop ski.lls that recognize and refute
pro-tobacco use messages from the media,
adults and peers.
Personal and social skills such as assertive-

ness, communication, goal setting and problem-solving can enable teens to avoid tobacco use and other risky behaviors.
The initiation 9f smoking is influenced
by having friends, particularly a best friend,
who smokes. Risk factors indicate that teens
who have cloSe association with peers who
use or have favorable attitudes toward tobacco use are more apt to use it themselve~.
especially if they are vulnerable to peer pressure. o further compound the problem,
irregular teen smokers who ' develop a nicotine addiction have easy a
What can he dcine to ·decrease tobacco
use among teens? Parents .and family l!lem•
bers can promote a tobacco-free norm by
establishing a hard-line disapproval of tobacco use. Peers can' promote a tobacco-free
environment by modeling refusal skills.
Schools can teach the consequences of
tobacco use as a part of health education.
Communities can establish norms by limiting tobacco use in public places and by
restricting access to tobacco for children and
youth.

•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS..

.

•

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'HARDBALL':

Raid brings legitimate authority into question
·BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
newswires of happy soit and father reunited.
WASHINGTON Newspaper people
But while that second ph.o to made a good
know the power of pictures. Forced to choose case for the enduring paternal bond between
two weekends ago between one of a federal the two Cubans, the first cast a grave light on
agent pointing in the general direction of a that between th e government of the United
scared-to•death 6-ycar-old and a snapshot of States and the Am"rican people it was created
th'e same kid with his .father, they knew which to serve ..]t snowed a well- armed Big Brother
had the firepower.
- Big Sister in Janet R eno's case - using his
They went with the newsmaker,. the AP vasdy greater firepower to show the little folk
photo guaranteed to win the Pulitzer, the pic- who the Boss is.
ture that screams "Show afForce!"
That's not a good picture. It says that the
This is the message delivered by that fellow way to measure and display legitimate authortoting the automatic weapon. He was a police ity is by having the bigge~t gun capable of
detective presenting his badge to a potential shooting the most bullets the fastest.
suspect. He was not a deputy U.S. attorney
Charlton Heston must love it. He comes
general standing at the door of a Southern in'to 'our living rooms like a 21st century Paul
university saying it was his duty 10 ensure its · Revere 't o tell us' that federal agents are already
peaceful integration. H e was a "fed" showing in their cars, dead set on disarmi ~g us.
he had more firepower than anyone else in
Comrades to his right speak in even darker
that little Mian1i household and, for that rea- tones of choppers heading in our direction to
son , they damned well better mrn over the dictate the arrival of a new world order, in
which gtlys like us take orders from Washingkid. .
The American lawyer' for Juan Gonzalez ton and guys like Clinton take them from
spotted the specter itntnediately. By afier- some foreign bureaucrat in th e United
noon, he had a picture running on the Nations.

..

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••

Before last Saturday such folk had "Ruby
Ridge!" and "Waco!" in their vocabulary of
rage. Now they've got a handy picture to nail
on the clubhouse wall.
•
A government that knew its people bette&lt;
might have avoided giving its critics such ~
weapon . Even the most loyal, most law-abiding of us resent -the arrogance of governmen.~
. tal power._
'\
:
After all, we Americans are different. Whe~
the Canadian govenunent told its people t~
begin using th e .metric system, they did t1
without thinking. When our government did
the same thing, we stuck to our p's and q';,
kept buying milk in 'pints and quarts. We kePt
checking how fast our kids were growing in
inches and feet.
·
·:
And why do you think both Al Gore and
George Bush are both basing their campaigns ·
in Austin and Nashville?
,
We were not put here for Washington, you
see. W~shington was put' here for us.

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\
•

•

ADAMSVILLE - Bob Evans'
One of the most exdtiftg
Farm announces its 2000 su·m- weekends at Adamsville -is
mer program at the village of
the "Old 'Jjlme Kids'
Adamsville. Classes and demonJ*elcend", held the
strations in th e !9th Century
way of life will be offered . Spinsecong weekend ofJune.
ning, weaving, knitting, quilting
and dulcimer playing are among ins and a reconstructed log
the traditional crafts presented.
schoolhouse. the village keeps
One of the most exciting the traditions of an earlier, genweekends at Adamsville is ' the tler life alive.
"Old 1'yme Kids' Weekend." It is
For further information, please
held the second weekend in co ntact Karen Dempsey or qale
June. This event includes an Leslie at (800) 994- FARM.
overnight stay in the village, and
teaches children about various
activities, such as tending animals, gardening, spinning and
weaving, connected with daily
life in the 19th Century.
The village of Adamsville was .
settled in the early 1800's. Today
Subscribe today.
it consists of four authentic cab992-2156

,

Diego

Union· Tribune.)

'

Bob Ev•ns' Farm announces
1000 summer program

,,

'

•

•

�•

'•

he.. A 8 • The Dlilly Sentinel

Tuesday, May 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

I·

The Daily Sentinel

NBA playoff roundup, Page B6
Today~ scoreboard, Page B6

®

Page 81
1Uuay, Mly 2, 2001

SMOKER
FRIENDLY

TuEsDAY's

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HIGHLIGHTS

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Eagles top Southem in s
BY ScoTT WOLfE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

and Win

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Prep SportS

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BaHball
Monday'a games
Gallia Academy 13, Point Pleasant

8

In Merchandise
evejly month

Month!

Warren 10, River Valley 1
. Waterford at Eastern, .5:00
Southern 15, Trimble 8
Wahama at Valley-Fayette, 5:00
Nelsonville-York 10, Meigs 2
Today'• games
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5:00
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 5:00
Meigs at Southern, 5:00

'· Out Sells Marlboro 10-1

Wednesday's gam•
L09an at Gallia Academy, 5:00
Po1nt Pleasanl at River Valley,
5:00
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 5:00
Trimble at Eastern, 5:00
Meigs at Ravenswood, 5:00

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Point Pleasant 7, Gallia Academy

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South Gallla at Ironton, 4:30
River Valley at Warren, 5:00

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Eastem 12, Southern 8
Today'a games
Galli a Academy at Fairland, 5:00
South Galli a at New Boston , 5:00
River Valley at EaSiern, 5:00
Elk Valley at Wahama, 5.:00

.

.

Wednaeday'a gamea
Trimble at Eastern, 5:00
Southern at Ravenswood, 5:00
Sectional Tournament&amp;
River Valley at Federal Hocking,
5:00
Gallia Academy fit Wellston, 5:00
Jackson/Nelsonville· York winner
at Meigs, 5:00
•
Vinton County al Alexander, 5:00
Tennla
Today'e matchea
Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 4:30
Wahama at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Wedneaday'a matches
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Wahama at Ravenswood. 4:30
Track A 'Field
· Today'• meet ·
South Gallia at Portsmouth lnv.,
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Meigs at Rio lnv.. 5:00
River Valley at 'URG meet, 5:00
Gallia Acad ~my at Gazette
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Point Pleasant at Gazette Relays,
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Hannan at Gazette Relays, 5:00

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Meigs softball
game reslated

•I

ROCK ·SPRINGS The
TVC softball game scheduled for
Monday afternoon betw~en
Meigs and Nelsonville-York was
postponed due to the fact that .
Nelsonville-York was play sectional tournaments at Jackson.
The game was rescheduled as part
of a double header Friday at Nelsonville.
.The top seeded Marauders will
host the winner of the Jackson/Nelsonville-York
game
Wednesday at Meigs High
SchooL Game time is 5 p.m., and
lik e all tournament games their
will be a $3 admission charge.

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Mon-Fri
----'-- --·--4..-,_,_·_

tame .
Trimble

BY ScoTT WOLfE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

EAST MEIGS - T he
.
'
. Eastern Eagles scored early
and often in posting a
league win over the Waterford Wildcats Monday night
during varsity baseball
action at E~stern High
School.
Eastern is now 9-6 on
the season and Waterford is
1-15.
With a great pitching
effort, Eric Smith picked up
the win with B strikeouts
and 2 walks, while allowing
just four hits. Waterford
pitching fanned three and
walked two walks.
Eastern hitters were
Cacy Faulk two singles,Josh
Will a double, Chris Lyons
a triple and single, Jimmie
Putman a single and triple,..
Eric Smith a triple, Josh ·
Broderick ·a single, Brad
Brannon a siogle. ,
Doelerivi.lr had a doubl e
and si ngle, Heiner haq a ·
single, and Wagner had a
single.
Eastern scored three in
the first whei1 Cacy Faulk
was hit by a pitch. Lyons
walked before a double steal
made it runners at second
· and third. Putman hit a
two-run single and stole
second. Brent Buckley then
had an RBI single.
Waterford scored one in
the second when Doelerivier doubled, followed by a
balk, and Wagner had an
RBI single.
.
Eastern scored seven
when Jimmie Putman "'
tripled and scored on a
passed haiL Eric Smith
tripled and scored on a
Broderick si ngle. Then
Brannon singled to put
runners on the corners.
Brannon stole second
and Holter was hit by a
pitch to load th e bases.
Then Faulk hit a Itwo-run
•
si ngle. Josh WiU· 'doubled

Please H8 EHS, Pap Btl

· BY ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

GLOUSTER Scoring a
dramatic come-from-behind triumph, the Southern Tornadoes
got back in the win colunm with
a 15-8 romp ofTrimble Monday
night in Tri-Valley Conference
baseball action at Glouster
Municipal Park.
Sourhern is now 6-12 overall
and 6-8 in the league. Trimble is
10-8 overall.
The two teams meet again
T hursday in Racine, then Southern goes to Glouster for a
rematch in the first round of the
Division IV sectional o n Monday,
May 8. Trimble was first seed in
the tourney.
Down 4-0 after three, Southem started its comeback with
Adam Cumings' seventh home
run of the year. Trimble got.the
run back in the bottom of the
inning on two walks and a
ground out to make the score 5-

1.

TAKES CUT- Meigs' Jacob Smith takes his cut during Monday's Ohio Division baseball game with Nelsonville-York, which won 10-2. (Dave Harris photo)

Nelsonville-York·knocks
off Marauders, 10-2
. BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS - Nelsonville-York broke open a close
game with a six-run fifth inning
en route to a I 0-2 win over
Meigs in TVC baseball action
Monday.
The Buckeyes jumped out to a
2-0 lead in the top of the second
inning. Watkins doubled with
one out in the inning, and
Arnold followed with a two run
home run.
Meigs came back in the bottom of the inning to tie the

FOXBORO; Mass. (AP)
New England Patriots vice president of player personnel Bobby
Grier was fired by head coach Bill
Belichick.

/

Sat 10-8 ·Sun 12·5

game at 2-all. Jeff Brown and
Matt Stewart followed with a
two run home run .
The Buckeyes took a 4-2 lead
in the third inning, Bateman
reached on a Marauder error and
Fox walked, Smathers followed
with a single and back-to-back
walks plated the run.
The Buckeyes blew the game
open in the fifth hming with six
runs. The Buckeyes took advantage of three walks, two singles
and four Meigs errors to plate
the runs, and give the Buckeyes
the 10-2 win .

.

Please see Mel1s. Pal• Btl

GOTCHAI- New York Yankees
Derek Jeter (left) tags out
the Cleveland Indians' Jalbert Cabrera on a steal attempt at second base during Monday night's game . (AP)
·

.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Joe ninth by doubling pinch-runner
Torre was actually serious w hen Alex !(arnirez off seco nd base
he summed up the New York for the final out as New York
Yankees' victory over Cleveland held on to beat the Indians 2-1.
by saying: "That's pretty much a
The Yankees, 22-9 at Jacobs
signature win for ·us."
Field since it opened in 1994,
As if grounders bouncing off added another to th eir list of
bases for two-run doubles, dramati c victories and found
games ending with freak double
another way to frustrate the
plays and Mariano Rivera doing
Indians by surviving a wild
anything but making hitters
ninth inning.
look silly is routine.
Rivera, who barely escaped
But the Yankees, who have
.
the
eighth, gave up a leadoff sinyet to play like World Series
champions despite a 16-8 gle to David Justi ce. who moved
record, found another way to to third when Jim Thome douwin Monday night at Jacobs bled into th e right-field corner.
Ramirez, a part-time outField.
Shane Spencer bounced a fielder appearing in just his sb&lt;th
two-run double off third base, game this season . pinch-ran for
then bailed out Rivera in the Thome.

..

"\

.,

Stalder was the winning pitcher for the Buckeyes with help
from Oliver. The two combined
to scattt&gt;r four hits, strike out 10
and walk three.
Bateman had three singles to
lead the wi nn ers, Watkins added
a double and Arnold a home
run.
Lynch was the starter and loser
for Meigs. Stanley ca me on in
the third inning and fi nished the
game. The two combined to
strike out five and walk nine.

Yankees outlast Cleveland Indians 2~ 1

Plblots fire·Grier

'

;.J. ...

Cigarette
Rolling Tobacco
8 oz.
Can

.~·-

I

PltaH H8 Eegles, Pale 86

Tornadoes

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Linebacker Seth Joyner and running back Keith Byars both
retired after re-signing with the
Philadelphia Eagles.

WAI:MART PLAZA.

Fallon Roush si ngled and Stacy Lyons drove her home
with a double. Kati C ummins walked, but
Southern left two on when Bailey struck out the last
batter of the inning.
The first thre e Eastem batters walked-Kristen Chevalier, Carrie Wiggins and Tammy Bissell-then Janet Calaway si ngled home a run, Bailey singled home two,
Chasatie Hollon walked and Elaine Putman reached on a
fielder's choice.
Jan , t Riden our walked home a run and Tiffany
Spencer walked home a run .An error came on Lyons first
batter face d allowing two runs to cross then Wiggins
walked to again load the bases.
Lyons struck out the next batter and got a pop up to
end the inning to make the score 7-1. Southern went

Eastern
flogs
Waterford

Joyner, Byan retire
·after re-siping
with Eagles

.BUY.-J OET 1 FREE!

change
No edmltlance under
11 wllhout an aclull

EAST MEIGS -Behind a seven-run first innjng the
Eastern Eagles spread their wings and began soaring
towards a 12-B Division III sectional tournament
softball victory over the Southern Tornadoes Monday
night at Eastern High School.
Eastern is now 9-5 overall and Southern falls to 5-11.
The win advances Eastern to the sectional finals either
at Waterford or Oak·Hill to face the winner of that semifinal game. Eastern will be the ·
visiting .team next Monday at one of those sites and is
guaranteed of at least a runner-up slot.
Juli Bailey pitched a great game for the victor.; in picking up the win. Bailey fanned four and walked eight,
while Eastern made only one error behind her.
Sarah Brauer S\lfferec! 'the loss, giving up seven runs

without getting out of the first inning. Stacy Lyons came
on in relief and pitched a great rest of the game, giving
up only two earned runs the rest of the way. Brauer
walked six, gave up two hits and a fielder's choice. Lyons
fanned three and walked four in five and two-thirds
innings.
Southern actually ouihit Eastern 10-6, but seven
Southern errors again paved the way to Eastern prosperity.
Eastern hitters were Kristen Chevalier,Juli Bailey, Janet
Calaway a triple and single, Janet Ridenour and Tiffany
,Spencer.
Southern hitters were Kim lhle 3-4 , Fallon Roush 23 and a sacrifice, Stacy Lyons 3-4 with a double and triple
and singles by Heather Dailey and Tammy Fryar. Kati
Cummins walked four times without making an out.
Southern scored first in the first when with two out

ional

Southern got to starter Phil
Faires, Jr. in the fifth inning when
Chris Rartdolph and J.P. Harmon
walked to start the inning.
Four consec utive RBI singles
foUowed -Brice Hill, Josh Davis,
Cu rnings, and Jamie Baker-before
Matt Ash reached on an error,
Kyle Norris walked in a run and·
J.P. Harmdn had a two-run double as Southern ·took a 9-5 lead.
Trimble came back with one
in the bottom of the fifth, but
Southern erupted for six more in
the sixth to break the game wide
open'. Th e final ended at 15-8 .
Davis was the benc!ici~ry ol
the SHS offense in relief of Asn
and Matt Warner who sustained
the first couple rounds. The trio
fanned four and walked 11, while
hitting two. They gave up seven
hits.
Faires suffered the loss. H e
fanned two and walked nine,
while giving up 16 hits.
So uthern hitters were led by
J.P. Harmon who went 3-3 witli
two doubles, while J.B. Boso and
Adam Cumings each ·collected
three hits apiece, C umings had a
home run and Boso a double.
Other hitters were Brice HiD a
single and double, Josh Davis two
singles, Jamie Baker a single, Kyle
Norris a single, and Chris Randolph a single.
Trimble hitters were Bobby
Trace and Barney Malnar with
two hits each, a double by Adam
Jago, and singles by Tre11t Patton
and Ju stin Guinther.
Southern hosts Meigs Wednesday and Trimble Thursday.

!'t:
Siena
toml1101 1pe

Rangers

contnK.t
ARUNGTON, Texas (AP) The Texas Rangers signed outfielder Ruben Sierra to a minor
league contract. Sierra, 34, a fourtime All-Star who played for the
Rangers from 1986-92, was playing for Cancun in the Mexican
League.
,•

�•

'•

he.. A 8 • The Dlilly Sentinel

Tuesday, May 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

I·

The Daily Sentinel

NBA playoff roundup, Page B6
Today~ scoreboard, Page B6

®

Page 81
1Uuay, Mly 2, 2001

SMOKER
FRIENDLY

TuEsDAY's

'

HIGHLIGHTS

.

Eagles top Southem in s
BY ScoTT WOLfE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

and Win

Sign Up lor the

Custo~ner

Prep SportS

·o f the

BaHball
Monday'a games
Gallia Academy 13, Point Pleasant

8

In Merchandise
evejly month

Month!

Warren 10, River Valley 1
. Waterford at Eastern, .5:00
Southern 15, Trimble 8
Wahama at Valley-Fayette, 5:00
Nelsonville-York 10, Meigs 2
Today'• games
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5:00
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 5:00
Meigs at Southern, 5:00

'· Out Sells Marlboro 10-1

Wednesday's gam•
L09an at Gallia Academy, 5:00
Po1nt Pleasanl at River Valley,
5:00
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 5:00
Trimble at Eastern, 5:00
Meigs at Ravenswood, 5:00

SMOKER FRIENDLY
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Softball
Monday'a games
Point Pleasant 7, Gallia Academy

8 . 49

0
South Gallla at Ironton, 4:30
River Valley at Warren, 5:00

• FREE Lighter with every carton
• FREE Magnets

·Sectional Tournament
Eastem 12, Southern 8
Today'a games
Galli a Academy at Fairland, 5:00
South Galli a at New Boston , 5:00
River Valley at EaSiern, 5:00
Elk Valley at Wahama, 5.:00

.

.

Wednaeday'a gamea
Trimble at Eastern, 5:00
Southern at Ravenswood, 5:00
Sectional Tournament&amp;
River Valley at Federal Hocking,
5:00
Gallia Academy fit Wellston, 5:00
Jackson/Nelsonville· York winner
at Meigs, 5:00
•
Vinton County al Alexander, 5:00
Tennla
Today'e matchea
Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 4:30
Wahama at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Wedneaday'a matches
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Wahama at Ravenswood. 4:30
Track A 'Field
· Today'• meet ·
South Gallia at Portsmouth lnv.,
TBA

CAMEL
$22.43

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WINSTON
$22.43 6:~on
save $4.50

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Friday's IM8I
Meigs at Rio lnv.. 5:00
River Valley at 'URG meet, 5:00
Gallia Acad ~my at Gazette
Relays, 5:00
Point Pleasant at Gazette Relays,
5:00
Hannan at Gazette Relays, 5:00

17.76 Per doz.

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Per doz.

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$22.93 6:~on
Save$4.00

save$4.50

Blossom

S9.99

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Trophy

•1 0.9.5 Per doz.

Meigs softball
game reslated

•I

ROCK ·SPRINGS The
TVC softball game scheduled for
Monday afternoon betw~en
Meigs and Nelsonville-York was
postponed due to the fact that .
Nelsonville-York was play sectional tournaments at Jackson.
The game was rescheduled as part
of a double header Friday at Nelsonville.
.The top seeded Marauders will
host the winner of the Jackson/Nelsonville-York
game
Wednesday at Meigs High
SchooL Game time is 5 p.m., and
lik e all tournament games their
will be a $3 admission charge.

Skoal $23.50 ~~r

Red

Renegades

Seal

Per

$2.30

can

6:~on

Jets sip Coles

Save$5.00

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) The New York Jets signed third. round draft choice Laveranues
Coles, a speedy wide receiver and
kick returner who played sparingly for Florida State last season.

Finest selection of cigars in
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• La Gloria • Mac!Jnudo • Partagas •
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•

Mon-Fri
----'-- --·--4..-,_,_·_

tame .
Trimble

BY ScoTT WOLfE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

EAST MEIGS - T he
.
'
. Eastern Eagles scored early
and often in posting a
league win over the Waterford Wildcats Monday night
during varsity baseball
action at E~stern High
School.
Eastern is now 9-6 on
the season and Waterford is
1-15.
With a great pitching
effort, Eric Smith picked up
the win with B strikeouts
and 2 walks, while allowing
just four hits. Waterford
pitching fanned three and
walked two walks.
Eastern hitters were
Cacy Faulk two singles,Josh
Will a double, Chris Lyons
a triple and single, Jimmie
Putman a single and triple,..
Eric Smith a triple, Josh ·
Broderick ·a single, Brad
Brannon a siogle. ,
Doelerivi.lr had a doubl e
and si ngle, Heiner haq a ·
single, and Wagner had a
single.
Eastern scored three in
the first whei1 Cacy Faulk
was hit by a pitch. Lyons
walked before a double steal
made it runners at second
· and third. Putman hit a
two-run single and stole
second. Brent Buckley then
had an RBI single.
Waterford scored one in
the second when Doelerivier doubled, followed by a
balk, and Wagner had an
RBI single.
.
Eastern scored seven
when Jimmie Putman "'
tripled and scored on a
passed haiL Eric Smith
tripled and scored on a
Broderick si ngle. Then
Brannon singled to put
runners on the corners.
Brannon stole second
and Holter was hit by a
pitch to load th e bases.
Then Faulk hit a Itwo-run
•
si ngle. Josh WiU· 'doubled

Please H8 EHS, Pap Btl

· BY ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

GLOUSTER Scoring a
dramatic come-from-behind triumph, the Southern Tornadoes
got back in the win colunm with
a 15-8 romp ofTrimble Monday
night in Tri-Valley Conference
baseball action at Glouster
Municipal Park.
Sourhern is now 6-12 overall
and 6-8 in the league. Trimble is
10-8 overall.
The two teams meet again
T hursday in Racine, then Southern goes to Glouster for a
rematch in the first round of the
Division IV sectional o n Monday,
May 8. Trimble was first seed in
the tourney.
Down 4-0 after three, Southem started its comeback with
Adam Cumings' seventh home
run of the year. Trimble got.the
run back in the bottom of the
inning on two walks and a
ground out to make the score 5-

1.

TAKES CUT- Meigs' Jacob Smith takes his cut during Monday's Ohio Division baseball game with Nelsonville-York, which won 10-2. (Dave Harris photo)

Nelsonville-York·knocks
off Marauders, 10-2
. BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS - Nelsonville-York broke open a close
game with a six-run fifth inning
en route to a I 0-2 win over
Meigs in TVC baseball action
Monday.
The Buckeyes jumped out to a
2-0 lead in the top of the second
inning. Watkins doubled with
one out in the inning, and
Arnold followed with a two run
home run.
Meigs came back in the bottom of the inning to tie the

FOXBORO; Mass. (AP)
New England Patriots vice president of player personnel Bobby
Grier was fired by head coach Bill
Belichick.

/

Sat 10-8 ·Sun 12·5

game at 2-all. Jeff Brown and
Matt Stewart followed with a
two run home run .
The Buckeyes took a 4-2 lead
in the third inning, Bateman
reached on a Marauder error and
Fox walked, Smathers followed
with a single and back-to-back
walks plated the run.
The Buckeyes blew the game
open in the fifth hming with six
runs. The Buckeyes took advantage of three walks, two singles
and four Meigs errors to plate
the runs, and give the Buckeyes
the 10-2 win .

.

Please see Mel1s. Pal• Btl

GOTCHAI- New York Yankees
Derek Jeter (left) tags out
the Cleveland Indians' Jalbert Cabrera on a steal attempt at second base during Monday night's game . (AP)
·

.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Joe ninth by doubling pinch-runner
Torre was actually serious w hen Alex !(arnirez off seco nd base
he summed up the New York for the final out as New York
Yankees' victory over Cleveland held on to beat the Indians 2-1.
by saying: "That's pretty much a
The Yankees, 22-9 at Jacobs
signature win for ·us."
Field since it opened in 1994,
As if grounders bouncing off added another to th eir list of
bases for two-run doubles, dramati c victories and found
games ending with freak double
another way to frustrate the
plays and Mariano Rivera doing
Indians by surviving a wild
anything but making hitters
ninth inning.
look silly is routine.
Rivera, who barely escaped
But the Yankees, who have
.
the
eighth, gave up a leadoff sinyet to play like World Series
champions despite a 16-8 gle to David Justi ce. who moved
record, found another way to to third when Jim Thome douwin Monday night at Jacobs bled into th e right-field corner.
Ramirez, a part-time outField.
Shane Spencer bounced a fielder appearing in just his sb&lt;th
two-run double off third base, game this season . pinch-ran for
then bailed out Rivera in the Thome.

..

"\

.,

Stalder was the winning pitcher for the Buckeyes with help
from Oliver. The two combined
to scattt&gt;r four hits, strike out 10
and walk three.
Bateman had three singles to
lead the wi nn ers, Watkins added
a double and Arnold a home
run.
Lynch was the starter and loser
for Meigs. Stanley ca me on in
the third inning and fi nished the
game. The two combined to
strike out five and walk nine.

Yankees outlast Cleveland Indians 2~ 1

Plblots fire·Grier

'

;.J. ...

Cigarette
Rolling Tobacco
8 oz.
Can

.~·-

I

PltaH H8 Eegles, Pale 86

Tornadoes

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Linebacker Seth Joyner and running back Keith Byars both
retired after re-signing with the
Philadelphia Eagles.

WAI:MART PLAZA.

Fallon Roush si ngled and Stacy Lyons drove her home
with a double. Kati C ummins walked, but
Southern left two on when Bailey struck out the last
batter of the inning.
The first thre e Eastem batters walked-Kristen Chevalier, Carrie Wiggins and Tammy Bissell-then Janet Calaway si ngled home a run, Bailey singled home two,
Chasatie Hollon walked and Elaine Putman reached on a
fielder's choice.
Jan , t Riden our walked home a run and Tiffany
Spencer walked home a run .An error came on Lyons first
batter face d allowing two runs to cross then Wiggins
walked to again load the bases.
Lyons struck out the next batter and got a pop up to
end the inning to make the score 7-1. Southern went

Eastern
flogs
Waterford

Joyner, Byan retire
·after re-siping
with Eagles

.BUY.-J OET 1 FREE!

change
No edmltlance under
11 wllhout an aclull

EAST MEIGS -Behind a seven-run first innjng the
Eastern Eagles spread their wings and began soaring
towards a 12-B Division III sectional tournament
softball victory over the Southern Tornadoes Monday
night at Eastern High School.
Eastern is now 9-5 overall and Southern falls to 5-11.
The win advances Eastern to the sectional finals either
at Waterford or Oak·Hill to face the winner of that semifinal game. Eastern will be the ·
visiting .team next Monday at one of those sites and is
guaranteed of at least a runner-up slot.
Juli Bailey pitched a great game for the victor.; in picking up the win. Bailey fanned four and walked eight,
while Eastern made only one error behind her.
Sarah Brauer S\lfferec! 'the loss, giving up seven runs

without getting out of the first inning. Stacy Lyons came
on in relief and pitched a great rest of the game, giving
up only two earned runs the rest of the way. Brauer
walked six, gave up two hits and a fielder's choice. Lyons
fanned three and walked four in five and two-thirds
innings.
Southern actually ouihit Eastern 10-6, but seven
Southern errors again paved the way to Eastern prosperity.
Eastern hitters were Kristen Chevalier,Juli Bailey, Janet
Calaway a triple and single, Janet Ridenour and Tiffany
,Spencer.
Southern hitters were Kim lhle 3-4 , Fallon Roush 23 and a sacrifice, Stacy Lyons 3-4 with a double and triple
and singles by Heather Dailey and Tammy Fryar. Kati
Cummins walked four times without making an out.
Southern scored first in the first when with two out

ional

Southern got to starter Phil
Faires, Jr. in the fifth inning when
Chris Rartdolph and J.P. Harmon
walked to start the inning.
Four consec utive RBI singles
foUowed -Brice Hill, Josh Davis,
Cu rnings, and Jamie Baker-before
Matt Ash reached on an error,
Kyle Norris walked in a run and·
J.P. Harmdn had a two-run double as Southern ·took a 9-5 lead.
Trimble came back with one
in the bottom of the fifth, but
Southern erupted for six more in
the sixth to break the game wide
open'. Th e final ended at 15-8 .
Davis was the benc!ici~ry ol
the SHS offense in relief of Asn
and Matt Warner who sustained
the first couple rounds. The trio
fanned four and walked 11, while
hitting two. They gave up seven
hits.
Faires suffered the loss. H e
fanned two and walked nine,
while giving up 16 hits.
So uthern hitters were led by
J.P. Harmon who went 3-3 witli
two doubles, while J.B. Boso and
Adam Cumings each ·collected
three hits apiece, C umings had a
home run and Boso a double.
Other hitters were Brice HiD a
single and double, Josh Davis two
singles, Jamie Baker a single, Kyle
Norris a single, and Chris Randolph a single.
Trimble hitters were Bobby
Trace and Barney Malnar with
two hits each, a double by Adam
Jago, and singles by Tre11t Patton
and Ju stin Guinther.
Southern hosts Meigs Wednesday and Trimble Thursday.

!'t:
Siena
toml1101 1pe

Rangers

contnK.t
ARUNGTON, Texas (AP) The Texas Rangers signed outfielder Ruben Sierra to a minor
league contract. Sierra, 34, a fourtime All-Star who played for the
Rangers from 1986-92, was playing for Cancun in the Mexican
League.
,•

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

May2,2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
540 Mlecellaneoue
Merchandlae

620 Wanted to Buy

Public Notice

Want to '-••• Tobie co Quo a

ORDINANCE ee8
WHEREAS tho Vllagl
Council h11 ldontlllod the
nted lor a Parking
Vlolotlont Board In order to
comply with Section
~521 04 oltha Ohio Rav lid
Coda
NOW THEREFORE Bt It
ordained by tho Council or
tho VIllage or Pomeroy
That tald VIllage does
hereby dlrtct that a thrts
member
board
11
ollobllahad to comply with
taction 4521 04 ollhe OhiO
RovloodCodo
Thot tald VIllage doll
hortby 1dopt tho provlo one
or oactlon 4521 02 4521 03
4521 04 4521 05 4521 06
4521 07 4521 08 4521 09
ond 4521 10
Th 1 Ordinance, prov dtd
I rtCIIVII tho lfflrmtt VI
vote ol two thlrdo ol tho
mambara tloctod to
Council ahal tako oHoct
ond ba In Ioree !rom and
oltor the aarllaot period
ollowod by low
PASSED 4 17/00
John W Blaottnar Mayor
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hll newop- llubjeol 0
hi Fodt a Fa Housing Acl
of 981 whlcll malcaa ~ 1 ega1
o lldVtnllo etrt pteference
1rnna11on "'dlocnmlnatiOn

knowi~accellt

acNett aements for real esta a
whloh o n vklla ~n of the
lew Our eadell are hereby
nformod the a dwe ngo
aMrt led n lh 1!1 newspaper
are ava able on an equa
opportunl1y boo a

REAL ESTATE

BANK REP OS ONLY $488 00
OOWN I
ASSUME LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS WILL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOME
EASY FINANC NQ AVA LABLE
(304)755 568&amp;

37 Peop

me during lfi!J recent
11/na• Cflta11ks (or all
tlte prA!JC"' cards

'"""II
gifts and
v'-lts durl11g '"II

WE LOST 50 LBS n 8 Weeks
P og ams G a an eed Sp ng
n o Summe
800 820 7546
www dietez com

length!/ conflllement
Special tltanb to all
"'II Doctors aryl'
JQurse•wlto..
dedicated cCII'e made
lli!J I'CCOVCf'!l po••l&amp;le
flowr tltowglttfwlness
will never be
(orgottell
E'lma 9 .COwks

baNdon ace co~ re g~n
teK am Ia IUltut or national
Oflgln o •nv 1n1an11on 10
make any ouch pteflrence
mna 10n "'diiCI1mlnat~
Thle nawspaper&gt;Mn not

ORDINANCE SSS
WHEREAS tho Vllago
Council hao ldentll od tho
notd lor 1 datolled llno
schedule to be app lad to all
vlo atlona In tha V llaga ol
Pomeroy
NOW THEREFORE Ba t
ordained by tho Counc I ol
the VI ogo ol Pomaroy
Thot aald VII ago doaa
heroby adopt tho attached
llno schedule ao pub shad
That aald VIllage does
he oby lit court coat at
$40 00 parcaae
This ord nance provided
II rocelveo tho eHirmallva
vote ol two thlrda or the
mombaro a ectad to
Counc I ohlll t1ke ellect
and bo In !orca !rom and
altar tho earlleat par od
IIIOWtd by IW
PASSED 417 00
John W Blaottnar Mayor
Ka1hy Hyael
Cia k
T eaaurer
John F Muller Prealdent
(5)1 9 2TC

sHOP AT HOME

Card of Thanks

Dale Rtffle
for bemg a true
fnend You and
Pam are always
there when I
need you
Carol Manuel

Ka

0

save Bog sss

2 3,4 bed oom Homes

8()().948 5678

Help Wanted

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono&amp; aan$35 o$45 o 2o 3
ho s weeky Ca Sea Tee 40
592 665

n

Now 4 W do 3BR 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low down Paymen
F ee A F ae De a y 1 888
928 3426

New Doub ew de 3 SA 2BA
$276 pe mon 11 Low Down Pay

HEARTLAND EXPRESS 0 o ng

You G ea Oppo un es L ne
Hau Aeg ona Ded ca ad And
Team Runs CaH Now To See
Wha s A a abe n You A ea
c ass A COL Aequ ed
763-7483

$800 WEEKLY Make Money
Help ng Peop e Race ve Gove n
men Ae unds Fee De a s 24

H Reco dad Message)

man FeeA

FeeDe ey

888 928 3426

'oft

877

Mkld eport Oh 45760
740 992 45 4 0 740 742 7403

SERVICES

3Bedoom
bah ae nPo
meroy
2 Bedroom 1 ba h apart~n n
Bed oom 1 ba h apa men

810

n

Home
Improvements

Pomeroy
Large house to sa e n Pomeroy
Tr:a e fo sa e on land con rae
Pomeroy
Office Houro 2-4 M F

$ NO DOWN HOMES NO CRED
IT NEEDED GOV T FORE
CLOSURES GUARANTEED AP
PROVAL
600 360 4620 EXT
8509

REPORTER

100'1o GUARANTEED APPROVAL

INSTANT $5 000 00
CREDIT LIMIT!
NO CREDIT CHECKS I
NO SECURITY
DEPOSITS!
NO JOB OR INCO!IIE
VERIFICATION

2

M es Ou Rou e 2 a Mowe s
Books Coolers Kitchen Th nga

and Photo Shop
e.perience
like to 1alk with

Be ore C own C ty Friday Sa u

day May 5th 6th

have

Business
Training

SAVE THOUSANDS $ $ $ No
Phony Bus ness Opp P om ses
Buy VEND NG Equ pmen 0
RECT F om MEG Compa e OU
P ces BeoaYo By 00% F
na ng WAC 800 965-9025
24H

s

BRUNER LAND
74G-441 1492

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down Go n And Bank ~epo a
Be ng So d Now Finane ng A a
able Ca Now
BOO 355-0024
Ex1 8040

Che&amp;h e Jeu e C eek Ad

OhiO Valley
PubhshmgCo

Monon Roeef Ho se On H

hind Food~nd

St

Own
eoo-223-1 .. Eld -

Comt&gt;u1"'

Call1

8

lnlo

Attention Publisher

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

RENTALS

82S Thitd Avt
GallipoliS Ohio 45631

Huge nven o y 0 1coun P cas
On v ny Sk ng Ooo a W nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Hea e 1
"P umb ng &amp; E ee ca Pa a F
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb conwbennett

Adult c - Toys Mise

p- -

All Absolutely FREE!

s

0% Down
And A Ove SE Oh o Ca Now
Fo FREE Maps And F nanc ng

May 5 h elh 9 3 59 Redwood
c 1vt Goo g11 c ook Road 2
M o0ftRou1e7 G oCohoo

ca C ~ mt 'rom Home Tit n ng

JET

AERAT ON MOTOAS
Aopa od New &amp; Robu n S ock
Ca Ron evans 80().531 9528

We F nanca W h

NHd 7 Lad II To Se Avon 7..0
4441-33M

1utldl)' May 2nd 6 h P • LO
.. lod In Sp ng Va oy 0 Buh

(¥. limited tim« whtn yo!/ btoome.
card fTJtff'I1Deo you will ~v..

*A FREE DIRECT/TV
SATELLITE SYSTEM!
• Free Vacation for 21
• Free Motorola Pag•l
• $600 00 In free m•chandleal

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOC K

e

Aces $2000
a Aces
$200000 24AcesW hN ee
Ba ns $30 000 Cash C ay Twp
Ma abe Ad
Ac ea $20 ooo
0 3 AcosW hBan$37000
Fnendy Rdge 5 Aces oooo

us.

Me 81 Co Au and Wh es H
Rd Nlca 9 Ac ea S 20000
Aces $t4 000 Wa a Danv e
SA 325 N~e 5 Acres S 8 000 0.
Bna Ridge Rd
7 Acies S 000
c..hl

us

DENTAL BILLEA tU t45 H
OonUI
ng · COmtll"''
Noodl IPooe&gt;lo
To ,,.,...,
Moo

P,

G1llll Co R o G ande 4 M es
S 0 Unlve Sly Jus OH SR 325
Truly G and Home S es 6 Ac es
$2 500 8 Ao .. $23 500 0 10
Ac es W h Pond $28 500

Cash P ce

ATTENT ON WQRK AT HOME
n Bus ness Needs He p MME
D ATE Y $420 00 Wk PT
$1000 $ 500/Wk FT none
Ma Ol'dl Fu Ti an ng 800
900-9308 24 HRS

Requ rement fo on s te tech serv ce/support
when needed 24 x 7

Chnsly's Fam o/ 1v ng

Pomeroy

e~pCrience

Experience n admm ster ng network hubs
routers and modems plus Ethernet
technology
He p Des)&lt; support on computer hardware &amp;
software when a erted by remote s1tes dur ng
bus1ness hours on call w th pag ng serv ce

204 North Sacond Avo

cuse

HVAC ns a a a Needed Send
Reaume To P 0 Box 36 Thu
man 0H45685

computer

Exper ence n software app Icat on &amp;
operat ng systems as follows M crosoft
Office 2000 Windows 95/96/NT Server
Outlook Internet Exp orer and SCO/AIX
Umx expenence a plus

Good commun cat10n and personal sk lis w th
fellow team members and telephone end
users ......
This Is a ealarled position In a corporate
office environment with competitive beneflte
Send resume to
Rt 1 Box 332 Point Pleaaant WV 25550

$8 00 column lncll Weekdays
$1 o 00 column Inch Sundays

For Rent Apa men s a e a
&amp; e lga a o
ncudod
4 Bedroom 2 bath home n 5yn1

aoo

OIQANTIC YARD SALE Ho~ae
ho d I'K chan ems L nans Cu
a na Baby Clo hea Toys Ca
Seats A L ke New Much Mueh
Moo SaeRoue7SouhRghl

Exper ence n netwo k ng 1nstalhng and
adm n ster ng LAN &amp; WAN

0

Advertise your
message

WANT A COMPUTER?? 6UT
NO CASH?? MM~ Techno ogy
;)'IK F nance IY lh o Down Pas
(;(~!(! probi&lt;omo No PJOI)Iem ca
Free 817 293-40112

Exper ence n computer hardware &amp;
penphe al repa r and d1agnost1cs

home enta s s ove

230-3390 E&gt;C1 5046

Garage Sa e 5I s Th u 5th

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Woalwood
0 lve f om $289 o S370 Wa k o
&amp;hop &amp; mov o&amp; Ca 740 446
2568 Equal Hous ng Oppor1un 1y

Now 6x80 3BR 2BA $288 pe
man h low Down Paymen F ae
A F ea Oe o y 1 888 928
3426

B g Ga age Sao • h &amp; 5 h 0
Moy Back 01 Skaggs App ances
78 V nest 51 ee Ga po s 2
Sman Cha n Saws OM Uke Now
Weedea e Gas Wa e Pump
La ge &amp; Sma T uck Tappe 1
li uck Too Box Bee Keep ng
Equ pman Un fo me By The Box
And Much Much Muoh Moll

0

0

Mod&amp; Closeout Sale

New Bank Repos

0

0

760

Land Home Package A A. eas
A C ad R sks Oakwood Ga
pol s 740-446 3093

Onytwo eft Neve lJ\Ied
Ca BOQ-948 5678

0

See us off SA 24

Sv ac 5e OH 740 992 6520

Help Wanted

L.OCAL FIRM SEEKING COMPUTER
TECHNICIAN WITH THE FOLLOWING
EXPERIENCE AND SKILL REQUIRED

Ma ne Services

e Needed To Lose Up

'to 30 Pounds In The Nex 30
tiSys F ee Samp es 740 44
982

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Thank You

Daub ew de I Bough Won
My Lo 304 736 7295

110

The judge gave my lawyar five yaare
be1ore he even got around to mel

/YI!J •lncere thAnb to
CVCI'lfOnC (or All tlfe
encowrageme11t and
klnd11e•• •1tow11 to

NoFMUnllaWtWn
www

HERMAN&lt;!&gt; by Jim Unger

Card of Thank•

520

TUIINED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUAITY 1881?

Va d sa e Tuesday &amp; Wadnea

day Beech G o a Ru and h d
hOuse campe po ce a n &amp; mo e

Giveaway

R&amp;C 1 Uatd Fu n u o &amp; Ap
p ances G ea Sa ec on P ced

15&lt;13-8357 Ext 402

8 West Stirn~on Athlna
740-592 1842
Qua Y co n ng and houaeho d
ema It 00 bag 11 e eva y

c encv eo% Gaa

Fu nacat 0 Fu nac11

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs n 0
Boa ds P anka Beam 1 La ge
Capac y Bea Sawm Va ue An
ywlle &amp; FREE o melon BOO
578 383 NORWOOD SAW
MILLS 2!52 Son N Drive Bu a 0
NY 4225

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

N4w To 'lbu Tilt nShol)pe

Tappan H E

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

CAED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
C~ED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDGEM~NT$
AAA RAT NG 90 80 DAYS
BOO 422 598

NO DOWN PAVMENT I
No Oown Paymon Roqu od W h
Gave nmtnt Sponto ed Lo1n
Good C od 1 And Sltody noomo
Aoqu od Ca Today Fo Mo o
n(o m1 on ndepenct.nct Mo 1
gago So v cto 2811 Mod oon
Lakawood OH 44 07 MS1679 1
800 845.00311
Threo bodroom ono 1nd 314 ba h
u buemen sox 50 co ne o
ng oom din ng room end am
y oom lwo ea ga 1gt ask ng
$37 000 make an o e 740 992
2932

WITH THE

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
A most E a yone Ap
p 0 ed W h SO Down
ow
Mon h y Paymen s 800 s 7

CLASSIFUEDSI

3'475E&gt;C1 330

SAVE

2 Btd coma L.og House w n
A 1350 Mo Rt I IRCII Dt
poa Aoqu1rod 740-448 n32
$,0CIAL SECUR TV D SAB LTV
Cam Oened? We Spec a zen
Appea s And Hea ngs FREE
CONSULTAT ON Benel loam
v cas nc To F 11 888
831-4052

ae

620 Wanted to Buy
TOBACCO QUOTA Wan To
Lease n Good P ce Pad Up
F on Ca Jod ey J Fa m 937
373 4644 Ca Ca Co ec A e
900PM

AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

CASH LOANSI
• Bad Cred I OK
• Easy Qual fy ng
• Faat Service

• Low Paymenla ~
• Conf dent al
1-8D0-332 2o411

number lttld beJow wtth

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

May2,2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
540 Mlecellaneoue
Merchandlae

620 Wanted to Buy

Public Notice

Want to '-••• Tobie co Quo a

ORDINANCE ee8
WHEREAS tho Vllagl
Council h11 ldontlllod the
nted lor a Parking
Vlolotlont Board In order to
comply with Section
~521 04 oltha Ohio Rav lid
Coda
NOW THEREFORE Bt It
ordained by tho Council or
tho VIllage or Pomeroy
That tald VIllage does
hereby dlrtct that a thrts
member
board
11
ollobllahad to comply with
taction 4521 04 ollhe OhiO
RovloodCodo
Thot tald VIllage doll
hortby 1dopt tho provlo one
or oactlon 4521 02 4521 03
4521 04 4521 05 4521 06
4521 07 4521 08 4521 09
ond 4521 10
Th 1 Ordinance, prov dtd
I rtCIIVII tho lfflrmtt VI
vote ol two thlrdo ol tho
mambara tloctod to
Council ahal tako oHoct
ond ba In Ioree !rom and
oltor the aarllaot period
ollowod by low
PASSED 4 17/00
John W Blaottnar Mayor
Kathy Hyltl
Cltrk
Trtaourtr
John F Muller Praaldtnl
(5) 2 9 2TC

Maoon Cpun1y $ 25 b Ca
An&lt;1y Sigllt ~304)1137 20 8

630

Livestock

MERCHANDISE

70

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Y1rd Sale
510

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Household
Goods

Thu aday Monday h u Sa u day
9 OQ-5 30

40

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent

FAEE FREEl! MONEV PROS
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CAT ON FEE
877

230

2 see

Hu. Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sya ems F ee 6 Yea Pa 1 &amp; La
bo Wa anty Btnne 1 Hea ng &amp;
Coo ng
800 872 5957
www orvt convbennett

to 81

Com• And 8 OWII

STEEL SU LO NGS Now Mus
Se 30x40 x 2 Was $10.200 Now
$8 990 40x!Ox 4 Was S 6 400
Now $ 0 97 50x OOx 5 Was
$27 590 Now $ 9 990 60X200x 6
Waa $58 780 Now $39 990
SQ0.406-5 28

Co ne 0 Aou • 7 &amp; Add son
P kt We Buy Fu n u • 740
367-o280

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacoa Pants
Now akngodts o haSp g
F a Ofde a wl G a antee Bes &amp;
Ea ea
P an 1
Oewhu s
Fa ma 304 895-37.aol895 3789

TRAN SPORTATION

Prof1111ona1

Service a

74G-742 3082

-888 B82 33-&lt;5

PJ Pleaeant
&amp;VIcinity

80
on

CLASSAOTA
S nglo C lve Lale Modo Kenworths With Reele11 Wes Coaa
Carrer

FINANCIAL

MUST BE
A Laao 25Voa • 0~
A Laaa 2 Voaro Expt !once
Good MVR
Wookly Pay
Hea th naurance Ava !able
Work Wo W th The Pul&gt;llc

Allreaestale~n

Buelneas
Opportunity

210

NOTCEI
OH 0 VALLEY PU6L SH NG CO

ecommends ha you do bus
ness w th paop e you know and
NOT o aend money h ough he
ma un you hi e n u ga ed

For More nfO ma11on Ca 100
4378764Hro 830AM 5PM

he oflenng

70

OWN A COMPUTER? Pu
To
Wo k $500 S 500 Wask Pa
Tme Fu Tme To Fee 88,
3 6 206 0 www e bus nasa
sue e~s com

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

hll newop- llubjeol 0
hi Fodt a Fa Housing Acl
of 981 whlcll malcaa ~ 1 ega1
o lldVtnllo etrt pteference
1rnna11on "'dlocnmlnatiOn

knowi~accellt

acNett aements for real esta a
whloh o n vklla ~n of the
lew Our eadell are hereby
nformod the a dwe ngo
aMrt led n lh 1!1 newspaper
are ava able on an equa
opportunl1y boo a

REAL ESTATE

BANK REP OS ONLY $488 00
OOWN I
ASSUME LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS WILL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOME
EASY FINANC NQ AVA LABLE
(304)755 568&amp;

37 Peop

me during lfi!J recent
11/na• Cflta11ks (or all
tlte prA!JC"' cards

'"""II
gifts and
v'-lts durl11g '"II

WE LOST 50 LBS n 8 Weeks
P og ams G a an eed Sp ng
n o Summe
800 820 7546
www dietez com

length!/ conflllement
Special tltanb to all
"'II Doctors aryl'
JQurse•wlto..
dedicated cCII'e made
lli!J I'CCOVCf'!l po••l&amp;le
flowr tltowglttfwlness
will never be
(orgottell
E'lma 9 .COwks

baNdon ace co~ re g~n
teK am Ia IUltut or national
Oflgln o •nv 1n1an11on 10
make any ouch pteflrence
mna 10n "'diiCI1mlnat~
Thle nawspaper&gt;Mn not

ORDINANCE SSS
WHEREAS tho Vllago
Council hao ldentll od tho
notd lor 1 datolled llno
schedule to be app lad to all
vlo atlona In tha V llaga ol
Pomeroy
NOW THEREFORE Ba t
ordained by tho Counc I ol
the VI ogo ol Pomaroy
Thot aald VII ago doaa
heroby adopt tho attached
llno schedule ao pub shad
That aald VIllage does
he oby lit court coat at
$40 00 parcaae
This ord nance provided
II rocelveo tho eHirmallva
vote ol two thlrda or the
mombaro a ectad to
Counc I ohlll t1ke ellect
and bo In !orca !rom and
altar tho earlleat par od
IIIOWtd by IW
PASSED 417 00
John W Blaottnar Mayor
Ka1hy Hyael
Cia k
T eaaurer
John F Muller Prealdent
(5)1 9 2TC

sHOP AT HOME

Card of Thanks

Dale Rtffle
for bemg a true
fnend You and
Pam are always
there when I
need you
Carol Manuel

Ka

0

save Bog sss

2 3,4 bed oom Homes

8()().948 5678

Help Wanted

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono&amp; aan$35 o$45 o 2o 3
ho s weeky Ca Sea Tee 40
592 665

n

Now 4 W do 3BR 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low down Paymen
F ee A F ae De a y 1 888
928 3426

New Doub ew de 3 SA 2BA
$276 pe mon 11 Low Down Pay

HEARTLAND EXPRESS 0 o ng

You G ea Oppo un es L ne
Hau Aeg ona Ded ca ad And
Team Runs CaH Now To See
Wha s A a abe n You A ea
c ass A COL Aequ ed
763-7483

$800 WEEKLY Make Money
Help ng Peop e Race ve Gove n
men Ae unds Fee De a s 24

H Reco dad Message)

man FeeA

FeeDe ey

888 928 3426

'oft

877

Mkld eport Oh 45760
740 992 45 4 0 740 742 7403

SERVICES

3Bedoom
bah ae nPo
meroy
2 Bedroom 1 ba h apart~n n
Bed oom 1 ba h apa men

810

n

Home
Improvements

Pomeroy
Large house to sa e n Pomeroy
Tr:a e fo sa e on land con rae
Pomeroy
Office Houro 2-4 M F

$ NO DOWN HOMES NO CRED
IT NEEDED GOV T FORE
CLOSURES GUARANTEED AP
PROVAL
600 360 4620 EXT
8509

REPORTER

100'1o GUARANTEED APPROVAL

INSTANT $5 000 00
CREDIT LIMIT!
NO CREDIT CHECKS I
NO SECURITY
DEPOSITS!
NO JOB OR INCO!IIE
VERIFICATION

2

M es Ou Rou e 2 a Mowe s
Books Coolers Kitchen Th nga

and Photo Shop
e.perience
like to 1alk with

Be ore C own C ty Friday Sa u

day May 5th 6th

have

Business
Training

SAVE THOUSANDS $ $ $ No
Phony Bus ness Opp P om ses
Buy VEND NG Equ pmen 0
RECT F om MEG Compa e OU
P ces BeoaYo By 00% F
na ng WAC 800 965-9025
24H

s

BRUNER LAND
74G-441 1492

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down Go n And Bank ~epo a
Be ng So d Now Finane ng A a
able Ca Now
BOO 355-0024
Ex1 8040

Che&amp;h e Jeu e C eek Ad

OhiO Valley
PubhshmgCo

Monon Roeef Ho se On H

hind Food~nd

St

Own
eoo-223-1 .. Eld -

Comt&gt;u1"'

Call1

8

lnlo

Attention Publisher

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

RENTALS

82S Thitd Avt
GallipoliS Ohio 45631

Huge nven o y 0 1coun P cas
On v ny Sk ng Ooo a W nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Hea e 1
"P umb ng &amp; E ee ca Pa a F
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb conwbennett

Adult c - Toys Mise

p- -

All Absolutely FREE!

s

0% Down
And A Ove SE Oh o Ca Now
Fo FREE Maps And F nanc ng

May 5 h elh 9 3 59 Redwood
c 1vt Goo g11 c ook Road 2
M o0ftRou1e7 G oCohoo

ca C ~ mt 'rom Home Tit n ng

JET

AERAT ON MOTOAS
Aopa od New &amp; Robu n S ock
Ca Ron evans 80().531 9528

We F nanca W h

NHd 7 Lad II To Se Avon 7..0
4441-33M

1utldl)' May 2nd 6 h P • LO
.. lod In Sp ng Va oy 0 Buh

(¥. limited tim« whtn yo!/ btoome.
card fTJtff'I1Deo you will ~v..

*A FREE DIRECT/TV
SATELLITE SYSTEM!
• Free Vacation for 21
• Free Motorola Pag•l
• $600 00 In free m•chandleal

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOC K

e

Aces $2000
a Aces
$200000 24AcesW hN ee
Ba ns $30 000 Cash C ay Twp
Ma abe Ad
Ac ea $20 ooo
0 3 AcosW hBan$37000
Fnendy Rdge 5 Aces oooo

us.

Me 81 Co Au and Wh es H
Rd Nlca 9 Ac ea S 20000
Aces $t4 000 Wa a Danv e
SA 325 N~e 5 Acres S 8 000 0.
Bna Ridge Rd
7 Acies S 000
c..hl

us

DENTAL BILLEA tU t45 H
OonUI
ng · COmtll"''
Noodl IPooe&gt;lo
To ,,.,...,
Moo

P,

G1llll Co R o G ande 4 M es
S 0 Unlve Sly Jus OH SR 325
Truly G and Home S es 6 Ac es
$2 500 8 Ao .. $23 500 0 10
Ac es W h Pond $28 500

Cash P ce

ATTENT ON WQRK AT HOME
n Bus ness Needs He p MME
D ATE Y $420 00 Wk PT
$1000 $ 500/Wk FT none
Ma Ol'dl Fu Ti an ng 800
900-9308 24 HRS

Requ rement fo on s te tech serv ce/support
when needed 24 x 7

Chnsly's Fam o/ 1v ng

Pomeroy

e~pCrience

Experience n admm ster ng network hubs
routers and modems plus Ethernet
technology
He p Des)&lt; support on computer hardware &amp;
software when a erted by remote s1tes dur ng
bus1ness hours on call w th pag ng serv ce

204 North Sacond Avo

cuse

HVAC ns a a a Needed Send
Reaume To P 0 Box 36 Thu
man 0H45685

computer

Exper ence n software app Icat on &amp;
operat ng systems as follows M crosoft
Office 2000 Windows 95/96/NT Server
Outlook Internet Exp orer and SCO/AIX
Umx expenence a plus

Good commun cat10n and personal sk lis w th
fellow team members and telephone end
users ......
This Is a ealarled position In a corporate
office environment with competitive beneflte
Send resume to
Rt 1 Box 332 Point Pleaaant WV 25550

$8 00 column lncll Weekdays
$1 o 00 column Inch Sundays

For Rent Apa men s a e a
&amp; e lga a o
ncudod
4 Bedroom 2 bath home n 5yn1

aoo

OIQANTIC YARD SALE Ho~ae
ho d I'K chan ems L nans Cu
a na Baby Clo hea Toys Ca
Seats A L ke New Much Mueh
Moo SaeRoue7SouhRghl

Exper ence n netwo k ng 1nstalhng and
adm n ster ng LAN &amp; WAN

0

Advertise your
message

WANT A COMPUTER?? 6UT
NO CASH?? MM~ Techno ogy
;)'IK F nance IY lh o Down Pas
(;(~!(! probi&lt;omo No PJOI)Iem ca
Free 817 293-40112

Exper ence n computer hardware &amp;
penphe al repa r and d1agnost1cs

home enta s s ove

230-3390 E&gt;C1 5046

Garage Sa e 5I s Th u 5th

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Woalwood
0 lve f om $289 o S370 Wa k o
&amp;hop &amp; mov o&amp; Ca 740 446
2568 Equal Hous ng Oppor1un 1y

Now 6x80 3BR 2BA $288 pe
man h low Down Paymen F ae
A F ea Oe o y 1 888 928
3426

B g Ga age Sao • h &amp; 5 h 0
Moy Back 01 Skaggs App ances
78 V nest 51 ee Ga po s 2
Sman Cha n Saws OM Uke Now
Weedea e Gas Wa e Pump
La ge &amp; Sma T uck Tappe 1
li uck Too Box Bee Keep ng
Equ pman Un fo me By The Box
And Much Much Muoh Moll

0

0

Mod&amp; Closeout Sale

New Bank Repos

0

0

760

Land Home Package A A. eas
A C ad R sks Oakwood Ga
pol s 740-446 3093

Onytwo eft Neve lJ\Ied
Ca BOQ-948 5678

0

See us off SA 24

Sv ac 5e OH 740 992 6520

Help Wanted

L.OCAL FIRM SEEKING COMPUTER
TECHNICIAN WITH THE FOLLOWING
EXPERIENCE AND SKILL REQUIRED

Ma ne Services

e Needed To Lose Up

'to 30 Pounds In The Nex 30
tiSys F ee Samp es 740 44
982

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Thank You

Daub ew de I Bough Won
My Lo 304 736 7295

110

The judge gave my lawyar five yaare
be1ore he even got around to mel

/YI!J •lncere thAnb to
CVCI'lfOnC (or All tlfe
encowrageme11t and
klnd11e•• •1tow11 to

NoFMUnllaWtWn
www

HERMAN&lt;!&gt; by Jim Unger

Card of Thank•

520

TUIINED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUAITY 1881?

Va d sa e Tuesday &amp; Wadnea

day Beech G o a Ru and h d
hOuse campe po ce a n &amp; mo e

Giveaway

R&amp;C 1 Uatd Fu n u o &amp; Ap
p ances G ea Sa ec on P ced

15&lt;13-8357 Ext 402

8 West Stirn~on Athlna
740-592 1842
Qua Y co n ng and houaeho d
ema It 00 bag 11 e eva y

c encv eo% Gaa

Fu nacat 0 Fu nac11

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs n 0
Boa ds P anka Beam 1 La ge
Capac y Bea Sawm Va ue An
ywlle &amp; FREE o melon BOO
578 383 NORWOOD SAW
MILLS 2!52 Son N Drive Bu a 0
NY 4225

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

N4w To 'lbu Tilt nShol)pe

Tappan H E

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

CAED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
C~ED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDGEM~NT$
AAA RAT NG 90 80 DAYS
BOO 422 598

NO DOWN PAVMENT I
No Oown Paymon Roqu od W h
Gave nmtnt Sponto ed Lo1n
Good C od 1 And Sltody noomo
Aoqu od Ca Today Fo Mo o
n(o m1 on ndepenct.nct Mo 1
gago So v cto 2811 Mod oon
Lakawood OH 44 07 MS1679 1
800 845.00311
Threo bodroom ono 1nd 314 ba h
u buemen sox 50 co ne o
ng oom din ng room end am
y oom lwo ea ga 1gt ask ng
$37 000 make an o e 740 992
2932

WITH THE

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
A most E a yone Ap
p 0 ed W h SO Down
ow
Mon h y Paymen s 800 s 7

CLASSIFUEDSI

3'475E&gt;C1 330

SAVE

2 Btd coma L.og House w n
A 1350 Mo Rt I IRCII Dt
poa Aoqu1rod 740-448 n32
$,0CIAL SECUR TV D SAB LTV
Cam Oened? We Spec a zen
Appea s And Hea ngs FREE
CONSULTAT ON Benel loam
v cas nc To F 11 888
831-4052

ae

620 Wanted to Buy
TOBACCO QUOTA Wan To
Lease n Good P ce Pad Up
F on Ca Jod ey J Fa m 937
373 4644 Ca Ca Co ec A e
900PM

AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

CASH LOANSI
• Bad Cred I OK
• Easy Qual fy ng
• Faat Service

• Low Paymenla ~
• Conf dent al
1-8D0-332 2o411

number lttld beJow wtth

�\

•
Tueeday, M.y 2, 2000

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

TUeef!!ay, May 2, 2000

I

'

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page S 5

BRIDGE

' '
PHILLIP
ALDER
'

No CrNit • Slow Credit • Blnkruptcy

JOlES'

Repo • Dlvo~d4KI

WORRYIID!!!
No
Embarruam~L ..

• swrnP

• 'ToP

• Gt\t\4\1'~

• p.el'l\o"''
20 Yrs.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
·•q Sales Representative
... ~
""';~

AD Mahes Tractor &amp;
Equipmenl P&amp;l18
.Factory Authorized
Cue-IU P&amp;l18
Oealen.

WIIWF'OUIS, OHIO 45831 • CHESHIRE , OHIO 4158

You're Treated with Respect!

100051. Rl. 7 South
Coo/v/11., OH 46723

Exp. •Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

740117-a••

QuaUQ, Varietr1 Low Price• • That'l U1!

CONSTRUcriON

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perenni'als in 4" Pots for .94¢ each
Mol'ftlng Star Rd. CR 30

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

Racine, Ohio

740·992·1709

750 East State ·Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

.

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

740·949·7039
"Get in while you can, space
~••-'t..

te ,.,_ "

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

992-5479
.

Henderson, WV

8711-2457 or 448-1428
Cell Phone 674-3311

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

740-992-1671

Now Renting

High &amp;Drv
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-S2J2

7/221TFN

4/281

mo. pd.

*****************
* ."8"
*

:*
*
**
:

4/19t00 1 mo. pd.

WAN,.ID

Lie. #003506

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISIRUCTION

Ken Yoww

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets
WV C

992·1550
The Appliance
Man

u limited"

1t•t•' ~·

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

Dailey
Trucking
Service .
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

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

llll.lad

.

......,,Oido

l .
;

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUUION

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

New RoOfs • Repairs
• Coating • Guttera
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Eatlmat11

For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

740·992·2068
10,.00 1 mo

992-2772

Ag. Service

N

c

MASONRY

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lb. bag

Spring Seeds 8 Fertilizer

BAUM
LUMBER
State Route 248 Cheater, OH

Viall our 111howroorn S. R . 3,9 6

•Estes Rockets and Accessoties
•Thains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas
•Lifeline

Mil ~•

Potnnroy

40-992-4119
VIS/\

• Q
tf.Q96

eQJ983

•

Syracuae

All replacement
parts

Fret Dtllvtry
740-742-9501
'Toll Free

South

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs
- D~:s~~~~~;:~;
Free

(NO SUNDAY CAU.,S)

ShlnbOi..

~fng

23

21
27

$

DOWN

l'luoolen ........
• . ·'

•(-.) ,

I Reo1MJront
~· - Notional

Pi11111n Ulllh

3o .... - .
32 01 moclki"'-

3 ~.~h-Geellc
• Don Ro-'a

""'"•*lglon -·'
311 Ninny

network
5 "Boll-·
a Color of

at Flnlahod
40 Cover with o

7 Ptont

3A Sed'led

35

hard ~lng

atrewt&gt;errlet

· dl-•

8 Hertz rival

tSplkooncl
11

r:r.Yronto

12~~ruln

13 Mro. In Meclrlcl .

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

UtililiA!•

(7401 992·3131
.

Limbo
28 Rl-ln
25

27AScolt

Pass

29=::.,

Africa

Pass

All pass

31 Act Uko a
1Heher
33 Camp home
38 Singing
•vtlllble

For the best deals Iii th~ area
for Pre~owned cars &amp; trucks

~

•

•

'•

Across from Super-America in lower Pomeroy ·

Trade-ln 1s Welcome

Your last stop car shop

992·3490

I

•••
••
•

.

'

•

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~-·

•'

p
141ttO
O

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel'

t

'•: ~~

stt

I

'

·

MOTORS··~

· ME

COm£!MIUOn .

i ~~~~~~~~~~~~
,' THE
,.. BORN LOSER
.
...
! YOU t\J&gt;..I/E ,lo..~05LEM, SIR.?
••....
•
ero..mt:
••
•

l&amp;J ·

"Take the pain out
ofpaintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Mes10ge
Aher 6 pm· 614·985·4180

.,

40M.,.Icai

-

Local-843-5264
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; .Burial
.\
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement, .
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
·
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~. :

RIVERVIEW·

mlrac'-

2. G.-lcdetty•

.-1.

'•
•••
; r.-~~E

t

LINDA'S
PAINTING

21 Aft
!
22 IItteN
•
23 Scone of a •

BY PHILLIP ALDER
41 "Nol
.
Last year, "Bennuda Bowl -42 Uoelhe
microwave ·
The All Time Best Deals" (Five
42DoredeVII
Aces) was COiflpiled by Henry
Knlevol
44 Indian
Francis and Brian Senior.· In 250
Jlllrmenl
pages, you get interesting back'
... Dull
..7 Sandwich :
ground information about the
ohop
.;
players, the results, the two
... Ot*'1l rota •
110 llfllg(IIUI :
famous cheatin~ scandals, and the
dluuW • •
best or most important deals from
52 Col~or'( :,.
the first 33 incarnations of this
uc=on~~enciJ;
premier world championship.
Geller
•
••
Here is a deal from the controCELEBRITY CIPHER
versial. 1965 event ,,in Buenos
~:
by Lull Campos
Aires. As the final e,ntered its last
Colotlrtty Clphtr ~ 110 . . . - 11011'1 quotoljpno by 1omout pooplo. palllllld •
da~. the United Stf!tes enjoyed a
Eoch-lnlloclptlll' ...ndolaionother.
-:
Today• clue: s equal$ P
:five-point lead over- the Italian
Blue ·Team. Yet tllat didn't last · 'TFZQ
y ' TSN · $
UKD
Y
TIN
•"·
long,
aided
by
some
excellent
'
XKPJY
8GDUKYD
AKJY
AFIA
declarer-play from Benito Garozzo.
y' w
BEZNYYZGA.
UZXKWZ
At the other table, B.J. Becker
r ••
.... (North) and Dorothy Hayden UZIYGQ"(Ot AK UZJYZHZ 'f A • ' _ I
(now Truscou) stopped in three
PE~~ YeO DID ~T N.LO\o.l
1\ ~P\~IOC C.COLCJ!o.\1 st\1/(
spades (two hearts-two spadesXJSEZGXZ YSEEKT '
,
WINE.. SUffiC.\El{t' TltJ.f. TO
ffi\ ':&gt; ~WILL I
three
hearts-three
spades-Pass)
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Boxing Is a greate~etcise - •lono as you c:an ye~:
~-- !~0\\~-.... fl!oiE Wlt\E
'cut' whenever vou want to.• - Sylvester Slellone
,
,•
After
a
diamond
to
the
ace
and
a
'
~'\
TO
: I
diamond bac~ . declarer succeeds
wo ..
l ~:u'iG our rr;,
by fine ssing, but Ms. Hayden
tAMI
~~ OON..\TIE~!
went up with her king and down
•
one in her contract, losing two
•
/
O·four
Roarrango lottera. of the
scramblod wards bo.
spadeS. two diamonds and a dialaw
Ia
farm
faur'llmplo wards. i
mond ruff.
In live diamonds. Garozzo won
t the 9i~~,'ie~i:l ~ith diJ"/my. 's .QF~; ·., .~
·~§§§~~:=:,;,r.~ fmessed hts spade queen succes,s-. · · .
E
HE~e·s .. fully, f!lff~d a:~ sp~d~ in dilfpi"Y;
SLM1i'IED.
A!'l(llliEfl.
pjayed a trulnp to .h•S· IO, ruff~ :'' · • • 'M E T· T p
..- ~.A iii':"')"!
_PL"""""''~I1
.}·!1£!!-1&gt;' • ' another
· spade', ' and 'C alled 'for
..,...:.·....-.:;·......,.......,.'-"{
'
. I.
'
k:Y.._..:,__ _..·
· dumm~
's i,ast. lrump..- ~ast ·won
with his •ace and exited 'with a
club, but'Oarozzo won with his
king., cashe'd the .~)amond ki!Jg,
and playe~ ~p~des .fr~.m. th~ ,top,
h61ding E~st til ~ patr' of tru~p , .
tricks . :Plus. 400 gave· Italy; ·IP
international match ppints en
"
route to victory by 74. ; , ' ·'
', .
If you like to read about top'•
level bridge, you w,ilt, ~njoy •this.
JE 'Rf6RETTE' .6EAOCOOP.. .' TOOT VA
, $(&gt;ME&amp;AV'
DOltl f.BE SAD, f:l,VIN6 ACE ...
THE'!' WILL LAUGH ANI' SA'I'. · . book: It is $35..95 ·po~tpp.id ' frotrt'~
Barot\ Barclay ' Bridg~ S!!pplies.
1'ME ~T DOWN E16111V PLAt&gt;IES
'(00 WERE IJE«'( e«AVE; AND I
(800) 274-2221 to order.
Call
'{01) MADE ~1M
FOOLISH ..
AND ONE BIRTHDAY CAKE ! "

,

BuUIIooer &amp; Backhoe , .
Se,.,ice•
'
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sileo :• ,
Land Clearing &amp; ,.,
Grading
•·
Septic Syolenu &amp;

•

11 Concnlld ~ ,
20 Snotcll
:.

East
Dbl.

From 1950 to 1997

•{ .

iji,"M

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent:
Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

740·992·7599

Wool Nortb
Pass 2¥
Pass
31
Pass 3 NT
Pass 5+

prop8lty

57

Opening lead: • Q

,,,.......tK.- -

2425 Eighth Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703

INC.

3•
4+

HOWARD •
EXCAVATING CO.:

Electrical Contractor WV003114

l

Redbl

-·

North

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNrTED ~~~IAL
SERVICES
~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
, • Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
i'
!
· ·Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RBIDENTI~L
' FREE ESTIMATES

••

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURjf4CE co.

I

South

17 Electtlcal unit

19 G.-lcpeak
20Sinln!ieot

37 In o - ~ltanlcl)

K 2

Dealer: Wes~

Advertise in · ·
this space for :
$100 per
month ..

Sunset
Construction

,•

eAQ8543

800-291-56.[)01

.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
.

10 7 6 4

caotlng}

15 More .-voua 55 Me1nniar
18 Com[ I pt. • 5I Ctolm on

MA ~l ' tW CI\Hil

SC:RAM-LETS ANSWE!lS
Purely- Exact- Crest- Mainly- TAXPA Y'ER
1overheard one fellow complain that our government
is based on the separation of money :and the TAXPAYER '

J•

: ROBOTMAN
•

o4

BOBCAT SERVIaS

,

.

•
'•'

M
A

••

s

'
••
'•

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
R
E FREE ESTIMATES ...FULLY INSURED N
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R
T
·(740) 985-3948
y
E
41"· IJOO I mo pd.

Doztr For Hire

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

Size • JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum
rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates
welcome

April Sliowero Bring

740·992·7945

• 4

¥K8653

Vulnerable: Neither

QUALITY WINDOWS()r

,
'·,'

Free Estimates
Mike Sharp
740-949-3806

992-2156
'6 75-1333
.
446-2.3·4 2.
.

Shop at homt•..

Buy from the Classlfledsl

'
t • .';

;

May FloweNI!

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding : Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls

CANCER ' tlune 2l·July 121

.

•·•

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

$6.75/50 lb. bat .

cant

:Joke. ••

I

JIL IIISULAnON I
COIISTIUCTION

East
• · K J to 9

• 6 2

T-ake "a

4/19100 1 rno pd.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT :
ENDTOEND
.MAY 5 &amp; 6- ALL DAY

Shade River

Sotvte feop Le.

Entry Doors
Patio Doors

Joseph Jacks
*:
*
P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.
** g CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES

*****************

West

e

luto Body Partl

Qualit Residential &amp;Commercial Service

Racine, Ohio

e&gt;A5

"t 4K J 10 3

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
.Free Estimates
740.742·8015 or
1·877·353-7022

Phone: 304-529·2566 Fax: 304·529·2567
Toll Free: 877-457·8904 Local 773-5011
Emergency Beeper: 540-1!41

949·2249

·8PM

992·5776

Dump Truck

or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer W!lrk.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm

1m . 4 1

tM"""

Pritchard Electric Company, Inc.

Standing timber large

(Randy)

7:00~

R.,IQOtMtftt ·

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
CU.SSQFUEIDSI

Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
· 740-992-1135

theApplluce
Man,

740-992-5050

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

R&amp;IOucallty

Vegellble Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combinalion Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Ulac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Dally 9-5
Sun 12-5

Located beside The Grill

"We're Back"

per 9•"11'

$300.00 Coverell
$500.00 Starbural
Progreaalve top llna.

,.,._ me141

oglot'o lind

1P A J 10 9 7 2
• 8 7 5 2

ct.. ~

(S:ocs I of

t4 An:'-1-

• 7

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sond • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt •'Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992••3411

45771
740-949-2217

Spring Season

s--· s.,ee

11 o Court Street

Pomeroy, Otl
Paying $80.00

Now Open For

AMD K6-2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6.4 Gig hard Drive, 17'' Monitor .26
DPL, CD· Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Network
Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color Printer Windows 98 Second Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month FREE Frognet Internet
Access! $899.00
Computer Perfo,.~trce Upgrades

~LLta

Racine, Ohio

51~

54

12 iJ1t1ers

North

-to~-

.....
•• ··a~ego~--no•l"

-.c. (2 wcla.)

QCfiVfl'll"C,

Road

1

1~:~

"fiOUitG -ancl

29870 Baahlln

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

OLD LOCKZ4
CAf1PGROUrtD

Phone (740) 593-6671

;

Your
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

•121100 1 mo pd

...

~ --

I

ILL'S
SELF STORAGE

OW';!

Sue's Greenhouse

l-740o949411S

Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,

Uc. II D0-50

PSI

Larry Schey

Pomeroy Eaglee
Club Bingo On

DIPOYIAI
PIRft

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

NEA Crossword Puzzle
.'
.'' ~$
· uol5 'oJorlul
~...cry
r' .

·~.; tht!re'~ jl ~rot~ t'hunct.' you·could
1 ~come in\•~1h· cd· in an arrangei
me~f today with smr~one who

has nullual inh.-rcsls. This relationship coultt lakt.' on a new sig-

Wcdnesduy. Muy 3, 21KIO
A more independent and
adventurou~ you may emerge in
the year ahead .du~ to.o ~ew di~­
tion you tdke m your lire. It w111
be more per.«&gt;nnlly fulfilling .
TAURUS (April 20-Mny 201
In order to ildv~nce u !'elf-interest,
you may decide upon a fresh
course of action to toke today.
Your projections are excellent
and look quite cm;ournging. Make
that move. Tuutus, treot your~lf
to a birthduy aift . Scud for your
Astro-Graph predict ion11 for the
year ahelld by mulling $2 •nd
SASE co Astro.Oraph. clo thi•
newsrnper. P.O. Box 1 7~8. Mur·
roy Hill Station, New York , NY
I0156. Be sure to slate your
Zodiac ~ign.

OEMINt &lt;Muy 21·June 201

Pay particular he~::d to your
hunches nnd intuitiv~ p:rception~
today. The)' coUld provide you
with some e~cdlcnt insighu ·for
fulfilling un mnt'lltio u~ ttim.

nificam:c for yuu .

LEO (July

2 .l· Au~.

221 Sil

down hxlay unll ~o·~tahli sh !'umc
new .goals ;un.l tlhjcr.:tivcs lhill
, ~;ould take you in u fn:-sh din:.ction.' Succe s~ i$"uite lik~ly when
i you,start .OVCrJtiits ~nnn an alten.-d

perspecuye.
VIRGO tAu~ . 2.1-Scpt. 221
Some inl'ornmtiun that

l.:omc .~ 10

yuu toduy throu~h an,ussociatl! or
friend could prO,•c to M '.quite
n:vculing . Arnwd wilh llli~ new
knuwlodae. yuu should be able to
U!\C iiiiU!Xetr~SfUIIy. .

,

LIBRA (Sept. 2~-0ci. 2~1
Theno pre • nu1nber of po&lt;.,lbili·
tie' hovering about yoo today 1hac ·
could ,cn:rrute addiliomal income
from unusuul 'ourte:.. Be watchful forthom .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Beginnin' today. the nost of the
week &lt;oold be vel')l jratifyi"ll for
you if team up with MJnltone wilh
whom you mil) never had berore.
The union will be 11 very enjoyable one .

SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 2Hlcc.
211 A new idea you get today
Could be .rc~ponsible for sraning
you ofT On a whole new way of
doing something at wnr!.. thai
wilt prove to~ very ~ucccssful.
CAPRICO~N tllcc. 22-Jan.
19) As of today, things could bttrendi{lg quite fuvoro~bly for Y')U
' either romuntict~lly . or socially if
you're open and friendly· to all
yoU cnc:ountcr. Good fe llow~ hip
yi~ld .. rorularily.
AQlJARI US (Jun. 211·Feb. 191
A whole new ~11111 could be in the
~mn, for you today rcJttrdtf!g:
~4ln'iCI~ing pmhlenlutictll lhut 's
been h~JprtninJ i11tht: holtll'. It 'II
!"rodU~~

u convivhtl UIIUU."pht!n:.

- PISCES lfeh . 211·Mur&lt;h lo1·11'
circumstiU'M.:cs ill tile pust rcw
hii\'C l 'UU!'ied )'tlU tn ·rc\'i)OC
w\l{ 'hc dk! !IIUJ1
or senin1 e\'C!I')'thina on !hut ntw
duys

•

)'OUr rlan .~ . tut.hly

lru&lt;k. II' II hnvo happy !\!SUI!~ .
ARI,HS 1Mun!h 21·Aj&gt;ril IQJ
Chun~es un: nnw wking plucc 1'~1r
yvu m•cr the neu couple of 1b&gt;·s
thm could gi\•c ynu so mcthin~ Ill
smile about where your m:1t~rial
im~rcsts nrc concerned . Get w
work nnd he fruitful.

.

'•

Baskelbafl Plal'()ffl.

�\

•
Tueeday, M.y 2, 2000

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

TUeef!!ay, May 2, 2000

I

'

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page S 5

BRIDGE

' '
PHILLIP
ALDER
'

No CrNit • Slow Credit • Blnkruptcy

JOlES'

Repo • Dlvo~d4KI

WORRYIID!!!
No
Embarruam~L ..

• swrnP

• 'ToP

• Gt\t\4\1'~

• p.el'l\o"''
20 Yrs.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
·•q Sales Representative
... ~
""';~

AD Mahes Tractor &amp;
Equipmenl P&amp;l18
.Factory Authorized
Cue-IU P&amp;l18
Oealen.

WIIWF'OUIS, OHIO 45831 • CHESHIRE , OHIO 4158

You're Treated with Respect!

100051. Rl. 7 South
Coo/v/11., OH 46723

Exp. •Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

740117-a••

QuaUQ, Varietr1 Low Price• • That'l U1!

CONSTRUcriON

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perenni'als in 4" Pots for .94¢ each
Mol'ftlng Star Rd. CR 30

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

Racine, Ohio

740·992·1709

750 East State ·Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

.

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

740·949·7039
"Get in while you can, space
~••-'t..

te ,.,_ "

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

992-5479
.

Henderson, WV

8711-2457 or 448-1428
Cell Phone 674-3311

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

740-992-1671

Now Renting

High &amp;Drv
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-S2J2

7/221TFN

4/281

mo. pd.

*****************
* ."8"
*

:*
*
**
:

4/19t00 1 mo. pd.

WAN,.ID

Lie. #003506

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISIRUCTION

Ken Yoww

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets
WV C

992·1550
The Appliance
Man

u limited"

1t•t•' ~·

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

Dailey
Trucking
Service .
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

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

llll.lad

.

......,,Oido

l .
;

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUUION

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

New RoOfs • Repairs
• Coating • Guttera
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Eatlmat11

For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

740·992·2068
10,.00 1 mo

992-2772

Ag. Service

N

c

MASONRY

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lb. bag

Spring Seeds 8 Fertilizer

BAUM
LUMBER
State Route 248 Cheater, OH

Viall our 111howroorn S. R . 3,9 6

•Estes Rockets and Accessoties
•Thains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas
•Lifeline

Mil ~•

Potnnroy

40-992-4119
VIS/\

• Q
tf.Q96

eQJ983

•

Syracuae

All replacement
parts

Fret Dtllvtry
740-742-9501
'Toll Free

South

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs
- D~:s~~~~~;:~;
Free

(NO SUNDAY CAU.,S)

ShlnbOi..

~fng

23

21
27

$

DOWN

l'luoolen ........
• . ·'

•(-.) ,

I Reo1MJront
~· - Notional

Pi11111n Ulllh

3o .... - .
32 01 moclki"'-

3 ~.~h-Geellc
• Don Ro-'a

""'"•*lglon -·'
311 Ninny

network
5 "Boll-·
a Color of

at Flnlahod
40 Cover with o

7 Ptont

3A Sed'led

35

hard ~lng

atrewt&gt;errlet

· dl-•

8 Hertz rival

tSplkooncl
11

r:r.Yronto

12~~ruln

13 Mro. In Meclrlcl .

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

UtililiA!•

(7401 992·3131
.

Limbo
28 Rl-ln
25

27AScolt

Pass

29=::.,

Africa

Pass

All pass

31 Act Uko a
1Heher
33 Camp home
38 Singing
•vtlllble

For the best deals Iii th~ area
for Pre~owned cars &amp; trucks

~

•

•

'•

Across from Super-America in lower Pomeroy ·

Trade-ln 1s Welcome

Your last stop car shop

992·3490

I

•••
••
•

.

'

•

~

~-·

•'

p
141ttO
O

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel'

t

'•: ~~

stt

I

'

·

MOTORS··~

· ME

COm£!MIUOn .

i ~~~~~~~~~~~~
,' THE
,.. BORN LOSER
.
...
! YOU t\J&gt;..I/E ,lo..~05LEM, SIR.?
••....
•
ero..mt:
••
•

l&amp;J ·

"Take the pain out
ofpaintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Mes10ge
Aher 6 pm· 614·985·4180

.,

40M.,.Icai

-

Local-843-5264
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; .Burial
.\
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement, .
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
·
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~. :

RIVERVIEW·

mlrac'-

2. G.-lcdetty•

.-1.

'•
•••
; r.-~~E

t

LINDA'S
PAINTING

21 Aft
!
22 IItteN
•
23 Scone of a •

BY PHILLIP ALDER
41 "Nol
.
Last year, "Bennuda Bowl -42 Uoelhe
microwave ·
The All Time Best Deals" (Five
42DoredeVII
Aces) was COiflpiled by Henry
Knlevol
44 Indian
Francis and Brian Senior.· In 250
Jlllrmenl
pages, you get interesting back'
... Dull
..7 Sandwich :
ground information about the
ohop
.;
players, the results, the two
... Ot*'1l rota •
110 llfllg(IIUI :
famous cheatin~ scandals, and the
dluuW • •
best or most important deals from
52 Col~or'( :,.
the first 33 incarnations of this
uc=on~~enciJ;
premier world championship.
Geller
•
••
Here is a deal from the controCELEBRITY CIPHER
versial. 1965 event ,,in Buenos
~:
by Lull Campos
Aires. As the final e,ntered its last
Colotlrtty Clphtr ~ 110 . . . - 11011'1 quotoljpno by 1omout pooplo. palllllld •
da~. the United Stf!tes enjoyed a
Eoch-lnlloclptlll' ...ndolaionother.
-:
Today• clue: s equal$ P
:five-point lead over- the Italian
Blue ·Team. Yet tllat didn't last · 'TFZQ
y ' TSN · $
UKD
Y
TIN
•"·
long,
aided
by
some
excellent
'
XKPJY
8GDUKYD
AKJY
AFIA
declarer-play from Benito Garozzo.
y' w
BEZNYYZGA.
UZXKWZ
At the other table, B.J. Becker
r ••
.... (North) and Dorothy Hayden UZIYGQ"(Ot AK UZJYZHZ 'f A • ' _ I
(now Truscou) stopped in three
PE~~ YeO DID ~T N.LO\o.l
1\ ~P\~IOC C.COLCJ!o.\1 st\1/(
spades (two hearts-two spadesXJSEZGXZ YSEEKT '
,
WINE.. SUffiC.\El{t' TltJ.f. TO
ffi\ ':&gt; ~WILL I
three
hearts-three
spades-Pass)
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Boxing Is a greate~etcise - •lono as you c:an ye~:
~-- !~0\\~-.... fl!oiE Wlt\E
'cut' whenever vou want to.• - Sylvester Slellone
,
,•
After
a
diamond
to
the
ace
and
a
'
~'\
TO
: I
diamond bac~ . declarer succeeds
wo ..
l ~:u'iG our rr;,
by fine ssing, but Ms. Hayden
tAMI
~~ OON..\TIE~!
went up with her king and down
•
one in her contract, losing two
•
/
O·four
Roarrango lottera. of the
scramblod wards bo.
spadeS. two diamonds and a dialaw
Ia
farm
faur'llmplo wards. i
mond ruff.
In live diamonds. Garozzo won
t the 9i~~,'ie~i:l ~ith diJ"/my. 's .QF~; ·., .~
·~§§§~~:=:,;,r.~ fmessed hts spade queen succes,s-. · · .
E
HE~e·s .. fully, f!lff~d a:~ sp~d~ in dilfpi"Y;
SLM1i'IED.
A!'l(llliEfl.
pjayed a trulnp to .h•S· IO, ruff~ :'' · • • 'M E T· T p
..- ~.A iii':"')"!
_PL"""""''~I1
.}·!1£!!-1&gt;' • ' another
· spade', ' and 'C alled 'for
..,...:.·....-.:;·......,.......,.'-"{
'
. I.
'
k:Y.._..:,__ _..·
· dumm~
's i,ast. lrump..- ~ast ·won
with his •ace and exited 'with a
club, but'Oarozzo won with his
king., cashe'd the .~)amond ki!Jg,
and playe~ ~p~des .fr~.m. th~ ,top,
h61ding E~st til ~ patr' of tru~p , .
tricks . :Plus. 400 gave· Italy; ·IP
international match ppints en
"
route to victory by 74. ; , ' ·'
', .
If you like to read about top'•
level bridge, you w,ilt, ~njoy •this.
JE 'Rf6RETTE' .6EAOCOOP.. .' TOOT VA
, $(&gt;ME&amp;AV'
DOltl f.BE SAD, f:l,VIN6 ACE ...
THE'!' WILL LAUGH ANI' SA'I'. · . book: It is $35..95 ·po~tpp.id ' frotrt'~
Barot\ Barclay ' Bridg~ S!!pplies.
1'ME ~T DOWN E16111V PLAt&gt;IES
'(00 WERE IJE«'( e«AVE; AND I
(800) 274-2221 to order.
Call
'{01) MADE ~1M
FOOLISH ..
AND ONE BIRTHDAY CAKE ! "

,

BuUIIooer &amp; Backhoe , .
Se,.,ice•
'
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sileo :• ,
Land Clearing &amp; ,.,
Grading
•·
Septic Syolenu &amp;

•

11 Concnlld ~ ,
20 Snotcll
:.

East
Dbl.

From 1950 to 1997

•{ .

iji,"M

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent:
Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

740·992·7599

Wool Nortb
Pass 2¥
Pass
31
Pass 3 NT
Pass 5+

prop8lty

57

Opening lead: • Q

,,,.......tK.- -

2425 Eighth Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703

INC.

3•
4+

HOWARD •
EXCAVATING CO.:

Electrical Contractor WV003114

l

Redbl

-·

North

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNrTED ~~~IAL
SERVICES
~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
, • Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
i'
!
· ·Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RBIDENTI~L
' FREE ESTIMATES

••

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURjf4CE co.

I

South

17 Electtlcal unit

19 G.-lcpeak
20Sinln!ieot

37 In o - ~ltanlcl)

K 2

Dealer: Wes~

Advertise in · ·
this space for :
$100 per
month ..

Sunset
Construction

,•

eAQ8543

800-291-56.[)01

.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
.

10 7 6 4

caotlng}

15 More .-voua 55 Me1nniar
18 Com[ I pt. • 5I Ctolm on

MA ~l ' tW CI\Hil

SC:RAM-LETS ANSWE!lS
Purely- Exact- Crest- Mainly- TAXPA Y'ER
1overheard one fellow complain that our government
is based on the separation of money :and the TAXPAYER '

J•

: ROBOTMAN
•

o4

BOBCAT SERVIaS

,

.

•
'•'

M
A

••

s

'
••
'•

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
R
E FREE ESTIMATES ...FULLY INSURED N
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R
T
·(740) 985-3948
y
E
41"· IJOO I mo pd.

Doztr For Hire

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

Size • JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum
rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates
welcome

April Sliowero Bring

740·992·7945

• 4

¥K8653

Vulnerable: Neither

QUALITY WINDOWS()r

,
'·,'

Free Estimates
Mike Sharp
740-949-3806

992-2156
'6 75-1333
.
446-2.3·4 2.
.

Shop at homt•..

Buy from the Classlfledsl

'
t • .';

;

May FloweNI!

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding : Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls

CANCER ' tlune 2l·July 121

.

•·•

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

$6.75/50 lb. bat .

cant

:Joke. ••

I

JIL IIISULAnON I
COIISTIUCTION

East
• · K J to 9

• 6 2

T-ake "a

4/19100 1 rno pd.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT :
ENDTOEND
.MAY 5 &amp; 6- ALL DAY

Shade River

Sotvte feop Le.

Entry Doors
Patio Doors

Joseph Jacks
*:
*
P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.
** g CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES

*****************

West

e

luto Body Partl

Qualit Residential &amp;Commercial Service

Racine, Ohio

e&gt;A5

"t 4K J 10 3

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
.Free Estimates
740.742·8015 or
1·877·353-7022

Phone: 304-529·2566 Fax: 304·529·2567
Toll Free: 877-457·8904 Local 773-5011
Emergency Beeper: 540-1!41

949·2249

·8PM

992·5776

Dump Truck

or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer W!lrk.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm

1m . 4 1

tM"""

Pritchard Electric Company, Inc.

Standing timber large

(Randy)

7:00~

R.,IQOtMtftt ·

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
CU.SSQFUEIDSI

Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
· 740-992-1135

theApplluce
Man,

740-992-5050

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

R&amp;IOucallty

Vegellble Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combinalion Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Ulac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Dally 9-5
Sun 12-5

Located beside The Grill

"We're Back"

per 9•"11'

$300.00 Coverell
$500.00 Starbural
Progreaalve top llna.

,.,._ me141

oglot'o lind

1P A J 10 9 7 2
• 8 7 5 2

ct.. ~

(S:ocs I of

t4 An:'-1-

• 7

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sond • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt •'Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992••3411

45771
740-949-2217

Spring Season

s--· s.,ee

11 o Court Street

Pomeroy, Otl
Paying $80.00

Now Open For

AMD K6-2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6.4 Gig hard Drive, 17'' Monitor .26
DPL, CD· Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Network
Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color Printer Windows 98 Second Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month FREE Frognet Internet
Access! $899.00
Computer Perfo,.~trce Upgrades

~LLta

Racine, Ohio

51~

54

12 iJ1t1ers

North

-to~-

.....
•• ··a~ego~--no•l"

-.c. (2 wcla.)

QCfiVfl'll"C,

Road

1

1~:~

"fiOUitG -ancl

29870 Baahlln

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

OLD LOCKZ4
CAf1PGROUrtD

Phone (740) 593-6671

;

Your
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

•121100 1 mo pd

...

~ --

I

ILL'S
SELF STORAGE

OW';!

Sue's Greenhouse

l-740o949411S

Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,

Uc. II D0-50

PSI

Larry Schey

Pomeroy Eaglee
Club Bingo On

DIPOYIAI
PIRft

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

NEA Crossword Puzzle
.'
.'' ~$
· uol5 'oJorlul
~...cry
r' .

·~.; tht!re'~ jl ~rot~ t'hunct.' you·could
1 ~come in\•~1h· cd· in an arrangei
me~f today with smr~one who

has nullual inh.-rcsls. This relationship coultt lakt.' on a new sig-

Wcdnesduy. Muy 3, 21KIO
A more independent and
adventurou~ you may emerge in
the year ahead .du~ to.o ~ew di~­
tion you tdke m your lire. It w111
be more per.«&gt;nnlly fulfilling .
TAURUS (April 20-Mny 201
In order to ildv~nce u !'elf-interest,
you may decide upon a fresh
course of action to toke today.
Your projections are excellent
and look quite cm;ournging. Make
that move. Tuutus, treot your~lf
to a birthduy aift . Scud for your
Astro-Graph predict ion11 for the
year ahelld by mulling $2 •nd
SASE co Astro.Oraph. clo thi•
newsrnper. P.O. Box 1 7~8. Mur·
roy Hill Station, New York , NY
I0156. Be sure to slate your
Zodiac ~ign.

OEMINt &lt;Muy 21·June 201

Pay particular he~::d to your
hunches nnd intuitiv~ p:rception~
today. The)' coUld provide you
with some e~cdlcnt insighu ·for
fulfilling un mnt'lltio u~ ttim.

nificam:c for yuu .

LEO (July

2 .l· Au~.

221 Sil

down hxlay unll ~o·~tahli sh !'umc
new .goals ;un.l tlhjcr.:tivcs lhill
, ~;ould take you in u fn:-sh din:.ction.' Succe s~ i$"uite lik~ly when
i you,start .OVCrJtiits ~nnn an alten.-d

perspecuye.
VIRGO tAu~ . 2.1-Scpt. 221
Some inl'ornmtiun that

l.:omc .~ 10

yuu toduy throu~h an,ussociatl! or
friend could prO,•c to M '.quite
n:vculing . Arnwd wilh llli~ new
knuwlodae. yuu should be able to
U!\C iiiiU!Xetr~SfUIIy. .

,

LIBRA (Sept. 2~-0ci. 2~1
Theno pre • nu1nber of po&lt;.,lbili·
tie' hovering about yoo today 1hac ·
could ,cn:rrute addiliomal income
from unusuul 'ourte:.. Be watchful forthom .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Beginnin' today. the nost of the
week &lt;oold be vel')l jratifyi"ll for
you if team up with MJnltone wilh
whom you mil) never had berore.
The union will be 11 very enjoyable one .

SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 2Hlcc.
211 A new idea you get today
Could be .rc~ponsible for sraning
you ofT On a whole new way of
doing something at wnr!.. thai
wilt prove to~ very ~ucccssful.
CAPRICO~N tllcc. 22-Jan.
19) As of today, things could bttrendi{lg quite fuvoro~bly for Y')U
' either romuntict~lly . or socially if
you're open and friendly· to all
yoU cnc:ountcr. Good fe llow~ hip
yi~ld .. rorularily.
AQlJARI US (Jun. 211·Feb. 191
A whole new ~11111 could be in the
~mn, for you today rcJttrdtf!g:
~4ln'iCI~ing pmhlenlutictll lhut 's
been h~JprtninJ i11tht: holtll'. It 'II
!"rodU~~

u convivhtl UIIUU."pht!n:.

- PISCES lfeh . 211·Mur&lt;h lo1·11'
circumstiU'M.:cs ill tile pust rcw
hii\'C l 'UU!'ied )'tlU tn ·rc\'i)OC
w\l{ 'hc dk! !IIUJ1
or senin1 e\'C!I')'thina on !hut ntw
duys

•

)'OUr rlan .~ . tut.hly

lru&lt;k. II' II hnvo happy !\!SUI!~ .
ARI,HS 1Mun!h 21·Aj&gt;ril IQJ
Chun~es un: nnw wking plucc 1'~1r
yvu m•cr the neu couple of 1b&gt;·s
thm could gi\•c ynu so mcthin~ Ill
smile about where your m:1t~rial
im~rcsts nrc concerned . Get w
work nnd he fruitful.

.

'•

Baskelbafl Plal'()ffl.

�•

•

P. Be •Tl1e Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, .._Y 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

••

NBA PLAYOFFS

Jverson, McKie leads Sixers to series-closing win over Homets
• PHILADELPHIA (AP) lllen lverson.didn't want to play
~e Charlotte Hornets in the playfffs . Neither did Philadelphia
~6ers coach Larry Brown.
Now, they're both glad they
' d.
;. The Sixers, led by Iverson's 26
lfoints and clutch shooting from
laron McKie, beat Charlotte 105i9 Monday night to win their
Qrst-round series 3-1.
:; Philadelphia plays the winner
the Milwaukee-Indiana series
the Eastern Conference semifi• 1s. G arne I is sche duled for Satila
~ da
lit Y.

"'t

"Aaron told me he wa~ted to
play these guys." Iverson said. " ]
kept telling him to root for somebody else . I never wanted to play
this team from Day 1. They're a
great team, a big team. They
played us h ard , even in our
house."

EagIes

from

¥

m

..."'..
.
;.
,.
•
•
:

Meip

ge Bl

down in order in the second and
Lyons put Eastern down in o rder.
In the third inning, .Southern
Plated a run when Laraine Lawson

walked, Kim lhk singled and Fa!Ion Roush sacrificed them to second and third.

from PapBI

Brow11 had a pair of singles for
Meigs, Stewart added his home
f.111 and Roush added a single.
: Meigs (6-11 , TVC 6-7) will play
Somh~n1 in a make-up game at
~a c ine today. ·

"'.,

Stacy Lyons ground out
brought ho me l awso n and
advanced lhle, the Cun.un im
walked and stole &lt;econd . A tly out
left two SHS runners stranded to
make the sco r.· 7-2.
A

Eastern got thl' run b ac k nn an

M cKie had career playoff highs
with 25 points and I I assists. The
four three-pointers tied McKie's
career high in any game. Iverson
scored 26 despite playing with a
chip fracture in his right ankle and
an inflamed right elbow. Substitute Matt Geiger scored 17 points

and grabbed 10 rebounds.
Anthony Mason and Derrick
Coleman each scored 21 points to
lead Charlotte.
Milwaukee routed Indiana
100-87 Monday night to force a
fifth game of that series on Thursday night.'

error and a double error on
Chevalier's ball that rolled to the
fence with Janet Ridenour scormg.
Southern again got back one
run m the fo urth when Tanuny
Fryar doubl ed, Macy n Ervin
walked, th en with two om, Kim
Ihi e singled home a run . Fallon
Roush was credited with a hit , but
the play e nded the mnin".' when a
~
Southern runner ran into the path
of the ball ami was called out.

fielder and rolled to the fence
allowing a second run to score to
make the score 10-3.
SHS scored three in the fifth
when Lyons led off with a single.
Cummins walked, and Heather
Dailey doubled home two runs.
With two out, Ervin walked for
the second time.
Dailey tried for third on a
passed ball and ca me home on an
owrthrow. A 1-3 g round ou t
ended the inn ing to make the

Eastern got tow run s 11,1 the
fourth \Vh(,·n thL' first two b:~ttt:rs
wa lked with one otJt. Lyon s
reco rdl'd a srrikl'om f()f rilL' seco nd otJt, then Ridenour &lt;i ngled .to
right. The ball ~ot by the righ t

sco r~ 10-6.

If sec: med cverytinte Southern
made a dent in the Eastern lead,

Tonight, Portl•nd is at Minnesota , with the Trail Blazers
ahead two games to one; San
Antonio visits Phoenix with the
Suns on top 2-1, and the Los
Angeles Laken are at Sacramento,
with the visitors leading 2-1 .
·
' Bu-=ks 100, Pacers 87
·'
away doubled and an outfield
allowed a11 extra base as Calaway
collected tHe RBI. Bailey walked,
and Calaway scored on a passed
ball to make the score 12-6.
Southern a=in didn't die. but
came back witho-two runs. lhle singled and sci&gt;red on a Lyons triple,
Cummins walked and stole seco nd, and Dailey hit a sacrifice fly.
A 5-3 ground out ended the
inning.
'
Lyons sat Eastern down in the

Milwaukee won a _playoff game
at home for the. first ttme m exact~
ly 10 years. The Bucks also haven t.
won a playoff series in a decade:
They still have the opportumty
because they,got off to a btg lead
and never faltered. Ray Allen
scored 20 points before taking a
blow to rhe head, and reserve
Scott Williams added a seasonhigh 20.
Milwaukee could become the
third No. 8 seed to upset a topseeded team, followmg Denver
over Seattle m !994 and the
Kme
· ks agatnst
·
th e H eat 1ast year.
"'" • · th · hea~- belt.eve
were In
Cit
""·
" M 1·t
•- ' D v,·,, Hanl
me ,
wau~&lt;.ee s
ar
'd "Th
h
·
saJ ·
ey can ear us commg.
Th 'd b t
t
d"
ey
e ter urn aroun ·

six'th , but Bai_lt!y came back to do
the same to Southern in the sev-

from Page Bl

EHS

cnth to make the final 12-8 East- hom e two runs. lyons. tripl ed
tht! Eagles were able to rall'y.
ern.
home Will to make the score 10-1 .
With the first two batters our,
Eastern is idle today, but hosts
Eastern plays Belpre at Eastern
Bissell reached on an error, Cal- Trimble Wednesday.
Tuesday.

~

•

TODAY'S SCOREBOl\.RD

~

&lt;

}

..

,•

..

:cr.

•

.(

.

:

Eastern 10, Waterford 1

liale~old ..................010 000
lestern ..... ....... ..... .. 307 000

""

o•
0

=

1-4·1
10· 11-1

B•tterlta

/• Eastern: Eric Smith {WP) and Faulk
fvaterford: Baker (LP), Camie 3rd, and Jones

AL standings
:rum

Eastern Dlvl•lon
w~~WI

New York ..... ............... .... 16 8 ,667
Boston ..... .................... 13 9 591
. Baltlmore .......... ................ 14 10 .583
·'
Southern 15, Trimble 8
. Toronto ........................... ..13 14 481
~hom ...................ooo 126 60. 15·16·3
Tampa Bay ......................... 9 15 .375
~mble ...................... 211 011 20 =
8·7· 1
·•
B1tterles
·
Centr1l Division
Southern: Ash, Wamer, Davis (W) and Cum· Chlcago ............................ 17 9 854
CLEVELAND ................... 13 9 591
ll!ll•
:~ Trimble: Faires (L) and Malnar
Kansas City ..................... 12 14 .462
Minnesota ................. . .. 11 15 .423
Detroit .......................... ...... 6 18 .250
Nelsonville-York
Meigs 2
lfoloonvllle-Yoli&lt; ........ 022 060 0 = 10.7-2
Westtrn Division
~olgs ....... ............... ..020 000 o.
2·5·7
Seanle ........................... 13 10 565
·..,
81tttrln
Anaheim .......................... 13 13 .500
·~ N·Y: SJalder(WP), Oliver (7) and Elliott
........ .... 13 13 500
: Meigs: Lynch (LP), Stanley (3) and Stewar1 Oakland
Texas.
.. ....................9 15 .375

••

2
2
4 ',
7

J

J

10,

Monday's scores
•
•

Boston 10, Detro~ 6
Oakland 7. Kansas City 5
Toronto 5, Chicago White Sox 3
N.Y. Yankees 2, CLEVELAND 1

Eastern 12, Southern 8

lbuthern ................... 101 132 0•

8· 10·7

1!18stem ..................... 701

12-6-1

220

x=

B•tt•rles
Eastom: Jull Bailey (WP) and Calaway
Southern: Brauer (LP), lyons and Dailey

.Tonight's games

2

5
6
10

Detroit (M. Johnson 0·0) at Boston (Rose 1·
2) , 7:05p.m.
Te~~:as (Hemng 2· 1) at Tampa Bay (A upe 0·3) ,
7:15p.m.
Oakland (Mahay 0·1} at Kansas City (Batista
1·0) , 8:05p.m.
Seattle (Halama 2-D) at Minnesota (Mays o3), 8:05p.m.
Toronto (Castillo 0·2) at Chicago White So~~:
(Parque 3·1}, 8:05p.m,

Wednesday's games
N.Y. Yankees (Cone 1-2) at CLEVELAND
(Burt&gt;a 3·1), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Ort~ 1·2) at Beltlmore (Johnson O·
0), 7:05p.m.
Detroit {Weaver 0-3) at Boston (Schourek 1·
2), 7:05p.m.
To•as (Ciall&lt; 2·2) at Tampa Bay (Gooden 2·
0), 7:15p.m.
Oakland (Heredia 2·2) at Kansas City (Sup·
pan 1·2), 8:05p.m.
Seattle (Tomko 1·1) at Minnesola (Radke 2·
3). 8:05p.m.
Toronto {Escobar 2·3) at Chicago White Sox
(Baldwin 4·0). 8:05p.m.

NL standings
Eastern DIVIIIon

Ium

WL~WI

Atlanta ...
. ... 19
NowYo11&lt; ........................ . 1~
Montrea1 ........................... 14
Flo~da .............................. 14
Philadelphia ...... ,.. :.............7

.6
1t
10
13
17

.760
.593
.583
.519
.292

N.V. Yankees (Pettitta 0-1) at ClEVELAND
(Witt 0.0), 7:05p.m.
·
Anshelm (Schoenewels 4·0) at Baltimore
Centr1l Dlvlllon
(Ponson 2·1). 7:05 p:m.
Sl. Louls........................... 17 8 .580

~

4 ,,
6

11 ~',

CINCINNAT I .. .... .......... 12
Houston ........
.. ....... 10
Pittsburgh ..... ..
.. ... 9
Chlcago .................. ....... ... 10
Milwaukee .~ ...................... 9

.4 17

4 ~t
6 ~.

15 .375
17 .370

7\,
8

16 .360

8

12 .500
14

Waatern Dlvlsfon
Anzona............................. 16
LosAngeles ..................... 14
Colorado ........................ 12
San Franclsco .................. 11
San Diego .. ................ ,..... 11

9 .640
.560

11

14 .462
13 .458
15 .423

2

4~
4~

5'4

Monday'a ~eorea
CINCINNATI at PlttiOufllh. ppd., roln
Houston 5, Milwaukee 0
Colorado 15, Montreal 8
Florida 5. San DIIIQO2
Atianta 2, Los Angelea 1
San Francisco 10, N.Y. Mats 3

Wedneadey's games
Houston (Holt 1·3) at Chicago Cubs (Lieber
2·2), 2:2() p.m.
Montreal (lrabu 1·2) at Colorado (Astaclo 2·
2), 3:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Parris 1·3) at Pl&gt;ladelphia
(Byld 0·2). 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Hampto n 2-4) at San Francisco
(Ortiz 2·3), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona {Daat 0-2) at Milwaukee (Estrada 0·
0), 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Benson 1·3) at St. Louis (Heot·
gen 3-2), 8:10p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 4.0)·at los Angeles (Perez
2·1). 10:Q5 p.m.
Florida (Penny 3·2) .~t San Diego (MeadOws
2·2). 10:05 p.m.

Thurad•~

Milwaukee at Indiana, lBA
Minnesota at Ftortland, TBA, il necessary
Phoenix at San Antonio, TBA. If necessaJY
F~doy

Sacramerito at L.A. lakers, 10 or 10:30
p.m., It necessary
.
Seattle at Utah, 8 or 9 p.m., jf necessary

NHL conference
semifinal slate
Mond1y's scares
New ·Jersey 5, Toronto 1; New Jersey leads
series

Tonight'• games
CINCINNATI (Neagle 2:01 at Philadelphia
(Ashby 1·2), 7:05 p.m.
Houslon (Lima1-4) at Chicago Cubs (Wood
0·0). 8:05p.m.
Arizona (Stottlemyre 4-1) at Milwaukee
(Haynes 3·1), 8:05p.m.
PINsbu1gh (Schmidt 0·2) a1 St. Louis (Anldel
3·1). 8:10p.m.
Montreal (Powell 0·1) at Colorado (Ka~ ().2).
9:05 p.m.
Florida (Nunez 0·2) et ·San Diego (Clement
3·0). 10;05 p.m.
AtlaniB (MulhoHancl 3·2) 81 Los Angelos
(Pall&lt; 3:21. 10:10 p.m.
.N.Y. MeiS (Rusch 1' 11 01 San Francisco
(Hemandez 0-4), 10:t5 p.m .

Utah at Seanle, 9 p.m.

2-1

Detroit 3, Cobrado 1; Colorado leads series
2·1

NBA first-rou!:)d
playoff slate

Future games

,~.~,

Tonight or-r
Philadelphia at P~,-.7 p.m.
Dallas at san Jose.

Monday'•::.coraa
Ptiladelphla 105, Chadotte 99: Philadelphia
1
wins series 3·1
•
Milwaukee 100. lndlafll 87; series tied 2·2

· · Future ~%mea

Tanli/ii

..~.,

Toronto at New Jersev, 7 p:rn.
Colorado at Detroit. 7 Ji.[ll. '

·

Thursdlf!

~

Philadelphia at PlttsbUfllll, 7:30p.m.
F~doy

Portlan&lt;lal Mlnnll$018, ·8 p.m.
San Antonio at Phoanl~ . 9 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Sacramtnto, 10:30 p.m.
w.c~

:W:;'.Aor.

Wednu

Detroit at ColollldO, 8 p.m.
Dallas at San Jose. 9:30 p.m.

,hturdoy

New Jerjey at .Toronto, 7:30 p.m.

'

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.

~

.

~

'"·o•-..

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•

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I

.
&lt;

Alkali.ne
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Lotion

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�•

•

P. Be •Tl1e Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, .._Y 2, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

••

NBA PLAYOFFS

Jverson, McKie leads Sixers to series-closing win over Homets
• PHILADELPHIA (AP) lllen lverson.didn't want to play
~e Charlotte Hornets in the playfffs . Neither did Philadelphia
~6ers coach Larry Brown.
Now, they're both glad they
' d.
;. The Sixers, led by Iverson's 26
lfoints and clutch shooting from
laron McKie, beat Charlotte 105i9 Monday night to win their
Qrst-round series 3-1.
:; Philadelphia plays the winner
the Milwaukee-Indiana series
the Eastern Conference semifi• 1s. G arne I is sche duled for Satila
~ da
lit Y.

"'t

"Aaron told me he wa~ted to
play these guys." Iverson said. " ]
kept telling him to root for somebody else . I never wanted to play
this team from Day 1. They're a
great team, a big team. They
played us h ard , even in our
house."

EagIes

from

¥

m

..."'..
.
;.
,.
•
•
:

Meip

ge Bl

down in order in the second and
Lyons put Eastern down in o rder.
In the third inning, .Southern
Plated a run when Laraine Lawson

walked, Kim lhk singled and Fa!Ion Roush sacrificed them to second and third.

from PapBI

Brow11 had a pair of singles for
Meigs, Stewart added his home
f.111 and Roush added a single.
: Meigs (6-11 , TVC 6-7) will play
Somh~n1 in a make-up game at
~a c ine today. ·

"'.,

Stacy Lyons ground out
brought ho me l awso n and
advanced lhle, the Cun.un im
walked and stole &lt;econd . A tly out
left two SHS runners stranded to
make the sco r.· 7-2.
A

Eastern got thl' run b ac k nn an

M cKie had career playoff highs
with 25 points and I I assists. The
four three-pointers tied McKie's
career high in any game. Iverson
scored 26 despite playing with a
chip fracture in his right ankle and
an inflamed right elbow. Substitute Matt Geiger scored 17 points

and grabbed 10 rebounds.
Anthony Mason and Derrick
Coleman each scored 21 points to
lead Charlotte.
Milwaukee routed Indiana
100-87 Monday night to force a
fifth game of that series on Thursday night.'

error and a double error on
Chevalier's ball that rolled to the
fence with Janet Ridenour scormg.
Southern again got back one
run m the fo urth when Tanuny
Fryar doubl ed, Macy n Ervin
walked, th en with two om, Kim
Ihi e singled home a run . Fallon
Roush was credited with a hit , but
the play e nded the mnin".' when a
~
Southern runner ran into the path
of the ball ami was called out.

fielder and rolled to the fence
allowing a second run to score to
make the score 10-3.
SHS scored three in the fifth
when Lyons led off with a single.
Cummins walked, and Heather
Dailey doubled home two runs.
With two out, Ervin walked for
the second time.
Dailey tried for third on a
passed ball and ca me home on an
owrthrow. A 1-3 g round ou t
ended the inn ing to make the

Eastern got tow run s 11,1 the
fourth \Vh(,·n thL' first two b:~ttt:rs
wa lked with one otJt. Lyon s
reco rdl'd a srrikl'om f()f rilL' seco nd otJt, then Ridenour &lt;i ngled .to
right. The ball ~ot by the righ t

sco r~ 10-6.

If sec: med cverytinte Southern
made a dent in the Eastern lead,

Tonight, Portl•nd is at Minnesota , with the Trail Blazers
ahead two games to one; San
Antonio visits Phoenix with the
Suns on top 2-1, and the Los
Angeles Laken are at Sacramento,
with the visitors leading 2-1 .
·
' Bu-=ks 100, Pacers 87
·'
away doubled and an outfield
allowed a11 extra base as Calaway
collected tHe RBI. Bailey walked,
and Calaway scored on a passed
ball to make the score 12-6.
Southern a=in didn't die. but
came back witho-two runs. lhle singled and sci&gt;red on a Lyons triple,
Cummins walked and stole seco nd, and Dailey hit a sacrifice fly.
A 5-3 ground out ended the
inning.
'
Lyons sat Eastern down in the

Milwaukee won a _playoff game
at home for the. first ttme m exact~
ly 10 years. The Bucks also haven t.
won a playoff series in a decade:
They still have the opportumty
because they,got off to a btg lead
and never faltered. Ray Allen
scored 20 points before taking a
blow to rhe head, and reserve
Scott Williams added a seasonhigh 20.
Milwaukee could become the
third No. 8 seed to upset a topseeded team, followmg Denver
over Seattle m !994 and the
Kme
· ks agatnst
·
th e H eat 1ast year.
"'" • · th · hea~- belt.eve
were In
Cit
""·
" M 1·t
•- ' D v,·,, Hanl
me ,
wau~&lt;.ee s
ar
'd "Th
h
·
saJ ·
ey can ear us commg.
Th 'd b t
t
d"
ey
e ter urn aroun ·

six'th , but Bai_lt!y came back to do
the same to Southern in the sev-

from Page Bl

EHS

cnth to make the final 12-8 East- hom e two runs. lyons. tripl ed
tht! Eagles were able to rall'y.
ern.
home Will to make the score 10-1 .
With the first two batters our,
Eastern is idle today, but hosts
Eastern plays Belpre at Eastern
Bissell reached on an error, Cal- Trimble Wednesday.
Tuesday.

~

•

TODAY'S SCOREBOl\.RD

~

&lt;

}

..

,•

..

:cr.

•

.(

.

:

Eastern 10, Waterford 1

liale~old ..................010 000
lestern ..... ....... ..... .. 307 000

""

o•
0

=

1-4·1
10· 11-1

B•tterlta

/• Eastern: Eric Smith {WP) and Faulk
fvaterford: Baker (LP), Camie 3rd, and Jones

AL standings
:rum

Eastern Dlvl•lon
w~~WI

New York ..... ............... .... 16 8 ,667
Boston ..... .................... 13 9 591
. Baltlmore .......... ................ 14 10 .583
·'
Southern 15, Trimble 8
. Toronto ........................... ..13 14 481
~hom ...................ooo 126 60. 15·16·3
Tampa Bay ......................... 9 15 .375
~mble ...................... 211 011 20 =
8·7· 1
·•
B1tterles
·
Centr1l Division
Southern: Ash, Wamer, Davis (W) and Cum· Chlcago ............................ 17 9 854
CLEVELAND ................... 13 9 591
ll!ll•
:~ Trimble: Faires (L) and Malnar
Kansas City ..................... 12 14 .462
Minnesota ................. . .. 11 15 .423
Detroit .......................... ...... 6 18 .250
Nelsonville-York
Meigs 2
lfoloonvllle-Yoli&lt; ........ 022 060 0 = 10.7-2
Westtrn Division
~olgs ....... ............... ..020 000 o.
2·5·7
Seanle ........................... 13 10 565
·..,
81tttrln
Anaheim .......................... 13 13 .500
·~ N·Y: SJalder(WP), Oliver (7) and Elliott
........ .... 13 13 500
: Meigs: Lynch (LP), Stanley (3) and Stewar1 Oakland
Texas.
.. ....................9 15 .375

••

2
2
4 ',
7

J

J

10,

Monday's scores
•
•

Boston 10, Detro~ 6
Oakland 7. Kansas City 5
Toronto 5, Chicago White Sox 3
N.Y. Yankees 2, CLEVELAND 1

Eastern 12, Southern 8

lbuthern ................... 101 132 0•

8· 10·7

1!18stem ..................... 701

12-6-1

220

x=

B•tt•rles
Eastom: Jull Bailey (WP) and Calaway
Southern: Brauer (LP), lyons and Dailey

.Tonight's games

2

5
6
10

Detroit (M. Johnson 0·0) at Boston (Rose 1·
2) , 7:05p.m.
Te~~:as (Hemng 2· 1) at Tampa Bay (A upe 0·3) ,
7:15p.m.
Oakland (Mahay 0·1} at Kansas City (Batista
1·0) , 8:05p.m.
Seattle (Halama 2-D) at Minnesota (Mays o3), 8:05p.m.
Toronto (Castillo 0·2) at Chicago White So~~:
(Parque 3·1}, 8:05p.m,

Wednesday's games
N.Y. Yankees (Cone 1-2) at CLEVELAND
(Burt&gt;a 3·1), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Ort~ 1·2) at Beltlmore (Johnson O·
0), 7:05p.m.
Detroit {Weaver 0-3) at Boston (Schourek 1·
2), 7:05p.m.
To•as (Ciall&lt; 2·2) at Tampa Bay (Gooden 2·
0), 7:15p.m.
Oakland (Heredia 2·2) at Kansas City (Sup·
pan 1·2), 8:05p.m.
Seattle (Tomko 1·1) at Minnesola (Radke 2·
3). 8:05p.m.
Toronto {Escobar 2·3) at Chicago White Sox
(Baldwin 4·0). 8:05p.m.

NL standings
Eastern DIVIIIon

Ium

WL~WI

Atlanta ...
. ... 19
NowYo11&lt; ........................ . 1~
Montrea1 ........................... 14
Flo~da .............................. 14
Philadelphia ...... ,.. :.............7

.6
1t
10
13
17

.760
.593
.583
.519
.292

N.V. Yankees (Pettitta 0-1) at ClEVELAND
(Witt 0.0), 7:05p.m.
·
Anshelm (Schoenewels 4·0) at Baltimore
Centr1l Dlvlllon
(Ponson 2·1). 7:05 p:m.
Sl. Louls........................... 17 8 .580

~

4 ,,
6

11 ~',

CINCINNAT I .. .... .......... 12
Houston ........
.. ....... 10
Pittsburgh ..... ..
.. ... 9
Chlcago .................. ....... ... 10
Milwaukee .~ ...................... 9

.4 17

4 ~t
6 ~.

15 .375
17 .370

7\,
8

16 .360

8

12 .500
14

Waatern Dlvlsfon
Anzona............................. 16
LosAngeles ..................... 14
Colorado ........................ 12
San Franclsco .................. 11
San Diego .. ................ ,..... 11

9 .640
.560

11

14 .462
13 .458
15 .423

2

4~
4~

5'4

Monday'a ~eorea
CINCINNATI at PlttiOufllh. ppd., roln
Houston 5, Milwaukee 0
Colorado 15, Montreal 8
Florida 5. San DIIIQO2
Atianta 2, Los Angelea 1
San Francisco 10, N.Y. Mats 3

Wedneadey's games
Houston (Holt 1·3) at Chicago Cubs (Lieber
2·2), 2:2() p.m.
Montreal (lrabu 1·2) at Colorado (Astaclo 2·
2), 3:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Parris 1·3) at Pl&gt;ladelphia
(Byld 0·2). 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Hampto n 2-4) at San Francisco
(Ortiz 2·3), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona {Daat 0-2) at Milwaukee (Estrada 0·
0), 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Benson 1·3) at St. Louis (Heot·
gen 3-2), 8:10p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 4.0)·at los Angeles (Perez
2·1). 10:Q5 p.m.
Florida (Penny 3·2) .~t San Diego (MeadOws
2·2). 10:05 p.m.

Thurad•~

Milwaukee at Indiana, lBA
Minnesota at Ftortland, TBA, il necessary
Phoenix at San Antonio, TBA. If necessaJY
F~doy

Sacramerito at L.A. lakers, 10 or 10:30
p.m., It necessary
.
Seattle at Utah, 8 or 9 p.m., jf necessary

NHL conference
semifinal slate
Mond1y's scares
New ·Jersey 5, Toronto 1; New Jersey leads
series

Tonight'• games
CINCINNATI (Neagle 2:01 at Philadelphia
(Ashby 1·2), 7:05 p.m.
Houslon (Lima1-4) at Chicago Cubs (Wood
0·0). 8:05p.m.
Arizona (Stottlemyre 4-1) at Milwaukee
(Haynes 3·1), 8:05p.m.
PINsbu1gh (Schmidt 0·2) a1 St. Louis (Anldel
3·1). 8:10p.m.
Montreal (Powell 0·1) at Colorado (Ka~ ().2).
9:05 p.m.
Florida (Nunez 0·2) et ·San Diego (Clement
3·0). 10;05 p.m.
AtlaniB (MulhoHancl 3·2) 81 Los Angelos
(Pall&lt; 3:21. 10:10 p.m.
.N.Y. MeiS (Rusch 1' 11 01 San Francisco
(Hemandez 0-4), 10:t5 p.m .

Utah at Seanle, 9 p.m.

2-1

Detroit 3, Cobrado 1; Colorado leads series
2·1

NBA first-rou!:)d
playoff slate

Future games

,~.~,

Tonight or-r
Philadelphia at P~,-.7 p.m.
Dallas at san Jose.

Monday'•::.coraa
Ptiladelphla 105, Chadotte 99: Philadelphia
1
wins series 3·1
•
Milwaukee 100. lndlafll 87; series tied 2·2

· · Future ~%mea

Tanli/ii

..~.,

Toronto at New Jersev, 7 p:rn.
Colorado at Detroit. 7 Ji.[ll. '

·

Thursdlf!

~

Philadelphia at PlttsbUfllll, 7:30p.m.
F~doy

Portlan&lt;lal Mlnnll$018, ·8 p.m.
San Antonio at Phoanl~ . 9 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Sacramtnto, 10:30 p.m.
w.c~

:W:;'.Aor.

Wednu

Detroit at ColollldO, 8 p.m.
Dallas at San Jose. 9:30 p.m.

,hturdoy

New Jerjey at .Toronto, 7:30 p.m.

'

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.

~

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~

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Clocks, Charml e 14~
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10KT. Gold
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•

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Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Ho.lzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

I

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Alkali.ne
Batteries
12PackAA

Ladies
Slippers
'Assorted
Sizes, Colors •
&amp; Styles!

Merchandise Avallabl.. Wednesday May 3rd, 2000

4 Pc. S~a
Therap1es
Gift Sets
. lntludos:
• !0 Oz. S.IIIA
ShOIWr r;.l
• !OOz. Body
Lotion

• Gol Condie
• Nylon Spong•

�Deluxe
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•10 Speed
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x 12·w.

X 24•H.

With Ice
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Boys Fashion
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ToU.99

Sizes: 4-7
• Henley
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Girls 2 Pc.
Scooter
Sets

•Mini Food
Processor•••

30"

Flamin~o

Fountain
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Garden Hose

20 Ft. Water Slide

11'' Foam
Kickboard

• Simple Sprinkler Connection
• Easy Fill In Pool
• Repair Kit Included

Sizes: 4-16-

Kids
Athletic
Shoes .

18-1/2''
Kettle
Grill

Sizes: 9-1

• Removable
Tinder
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• Adjustable
Height
Cooking
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Assorted Designs

199

5 Ft.
Bamboo Torch
or 32 Oz.

Lafnp Oil

· 10 Ct. Patio bights
• Assorted Styles lfi.\L
• 9-1/2 • L.

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Party Basket
J6•L. X 11-3/4 W.
X 10-1/4•0.
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3 PC.
Infant
Boys &amp; Girls
Gift Sets

Includes
3 Qt., 2 Qt.
&amp; s· x s·
Baking
Dishes with
Lids

Assorted Styles

••

Girls

Slip~rs
Assorted
Sizes &amp;

12• Glass
Candle Holder
with Metal
Pedestal
&amp; candle

Interior
Flat Wall
Paint
Gallon

· ~olors

Infant a Toddler
Sandals

Assorted Sizes &amp; Colors

Organizers ·
• 12• Bin

• 20 • Toolbox
with Top Storage

• Ratchet 1• x 15'
• Anchor

ltiGlt'Cltlf(l
Rod &amp; Reel
Spinning
Combo
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• Long Cast Spbol
• Gear Ratio 4.3:1
• Assorted Colors

�Deluxe
Family Pool
12o·L.

•10 Speed
Blender•••

x 12·w.

X 24•H.

With Ice
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Skirt &amp;Shorts
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Boys Fashion
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ToU.99

Sizes: 4-7
• Henley
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Girls 2 Pc.
Scooter
Sets

•Mini Food
Processor•••

30"

Flamin~o

Fountain
.Attaches To
Garden Hose

20 Ft. Water Slide

11'' Foam
Kickboard

• Simple Sprinkler Connection
• Easy Fill In Pool
• Repair Kit Included

Sizes: 4-16-

Kids
Athletic
Shoes .

18-1/2''
Kettle
Grill

Sizes: 9-1

• Removable
Tinder
·Chamber
• Adjustable
Height
Cooking
Surface

Assorted Designs

199

5 Ft.
Bamboo Torch
or 32 Oz.

Lafnp Oil

· 10 Ct. Patio bights
• Assorted Styles lfi.\L
• 9-1/2 • L.

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\!!:1

• 6 Pc.
Ovenware
Set

Party Basket
J6•L. X 11-3/4 W.
X 10-1/4•0.
14

3 PC.
Infant
Boys &amp; Girls
Gift Sets

Includes
3 Qt., 2 Qt.
&amp; s· x s·
Baking
Dishes with
Lids

Assorted Styles

••

Girls

Slip~rs
Assorted
Sizes &amp;

12• Glass
Candle Holder
with Metal
Pedestal
&amp; candle

Interior
Flat Wall
Paint
Gallon

· ~olors

Infant a Toddler
Sandals

Assorted Sizes &amp; Colors

Organizers ·
• 12• Bin

• 20 • Toolbox
with Top Storage

• Ratchet 1• x 15'
• Anchor

ltiGlt'Cltlf(l
Rod &amp; Reel
Spinning
Combo
- ,
• Long Cast Spbol
• Gear Ratio 4.3:1
• Assorted Colors

�· lhund~

Details, A3

May 3,1000

•

..

Mel1s County's
Volume

esday

Meigs' top scholars, Al
Eastern, Southern score victories, B 1

Hllh:70s;~:IOS

.Hometown Newspaper

•

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

so. Number 2n

so

cents

Steelworkers
post pickets
Contract with
Midwest Steel
expired Tuesday
FROM STAFF·REPORTS

POMEROY - Pickets began
forming o utside of Midwest
Steel's Pom eroy op~ration Tuesday morning aft er a contract
expired and uni on workers
rej ec ted proposed terms.
M~mbers of the United Steel
Workers· of America Local
02324 voted overwhelmingly to
rej ect terms .of a new contract
during a meeting yesterday
mormng.

Workers' old contract expired
at midnight Tuesday.
Wages and pension are at the

DIS&lt;; GOLF - Marc Queen, founder of the Meigs County Disc Golf
·Association and an avid disc golfer, tries his hand at one of the

heart of the labor dispute,
according to Uasham, staff representative for the USWA's office
in Chesapeake, w ho was at the
Pomeroy facility to assist union
members in negotiations.
Basham said no new talks are
scheduled at this rime, although
union members are ready ro go
back to th e bargaining table at
anytime.
Basham said that L.B. Foster,
· the Pittsburgh corporation
which operates Midwest Steel,
offered employees a "minimal"
wage increase, which the work ers rejected by a 95 percent
margin .
The local plant employs 18
union members. The company
manufactures steel tracking and
other products used in mining
and industry.

baskets at the new disc golf course at Forked Run State Park.
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Disc Golf craze hits Forked Run Park
BY BRIAN

J•. RIED

Instead ·of using a ball, players toss a fris- lion created to care for the course and to
bee-type disc, made especially for the game. promote the sport in the ·area.
.
Golf discs are designed to fly further and
Pharmacist 'Marc Queen of Gallipolis
with greater accuracy. Some discs are used as designed tqe course, and :begin 'developing it
drivers, and some as ·putters.
last summer.
. '· '
· .
·The·~~t is a "pole· hole," also ·referred to . ~""11Qu~en has been- hat'~! at -,vor)i: in ...Wilt!
as a "basli:et:•· Once ' the1 platFr hll~ 'ina~e the , money to complete !he ~oune, \Vhic;h Will
put!, he rrid\TeS ori rq&lt;the next'.hole: "
.r cost lu\, estimate~ $10,000.
•' . .
~
U,nllke the 'traditional golf cburse, disc golf
A .mlmbe~ .of Ievds of sponsorship · have
courses are a little more wild in nature: been established in an effort to r:iise the
there's no need fo.r manicured fairways, and funds needed to finance and maintain the
no. greens fees . It's more like a walk in the course.
park'.
, Rental discs and other equipment needed
The new course at Forked Run is a public to' play the game will be avai lable through
facility, maintained by the Ohio Department rental at the office at Forked Run.
of Natural Resources and Meigs · County
The course is designed to accommodate
Disc Golf Association, a non-profit organiza- amateur and pro p)ayers.

SENTINEL NEWS· STAFF

... ...

I ,

• J

EEDSVILLE- Forked Run .
State Park near Reedsville is
the only state park in' Ohio
- · 9 have a.disc.go),(.course, and . . .
. · this spring is 'l;lje first oppor' runity·that novjces and pros will have at playing.the .game on a local course. .
· The free sports facility .will be open at no
cost to people Qf all ages interested in learn- ·
ing a new sport.
Disc golf, also known as frisbee golf, is one
of the fastest growing sports in the world. Just
like regnlar .golf; players traverse a course
· from tees to targets in .the fewest number of
strokes possible.

4,

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18 Oz. Aerosol

1~

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Antihistamine
• 6 Ct. Nasal
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249

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Built-In .
Thermometer
Read Food Temp.
Instantly From Rare
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5.:=

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Directors.• Chairs
Wood Frame Construction With
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Angle Broom &amp;
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n•n appointees ~nder scrutiny:

Judge who sent Cases to

.

·

249
299
399

••
••
••
••
•

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - A former
U.S. attorney will conduct an inquiry of
the chief federal judge in the District of
,...~ Columbia,
who
assigned the prosecutions of alleged campaign
fund- raising
impropriepes and the
Whitewater ·cas.e to be
heard
by Clinton
appointees, legal sources
, The inquiry has
already caused repercussions, with a defense
attorney in one of the camp;rign fund-raiSing prosecutions seeking a delay until the
i~quiry is completed.
• The appointment of Joe D&gt;Whitley,

WORKERS PICKET - Members of the United
at Micf..
west Steel took to the picket line Tuesday aftemoon. Wages and pension oenefits are at the heart of the strike. (Brian J. Reed photo)

who served as a U.S. attorney in the Rea- has asked Johnson to testify about her
gan and Bush ac;lministrations, is a rare step actions.
for judicial disciplinary proceedings.
"The allegations. of wrongdoing by
Whirley will work for a five-judge panel Chief Judge Johnson carry with ·them
that is overseeing a misconduct complaint implications of favoritism and partiality by
against Chief U.S. District Judge Norma this court;' Hsia lawyer Nancy Luque said
Holloway Johnson to determine why she in court papers.
bypassed the · normal random case assignProceeding in ,the midst of the judicial
ment system, legal sources at the court- inquiry and a congressional investigation
•
would "~ the public belief in the
house said Tuesaay. ·
In one of the cases,. the pJ"O!leCution
impartiality of the judicial system and risk
199,6 Clinton-Gore .fund-raise.r Maria, · Ms. Hsia's right to unquestionably unbiHsia, the ~hj&lt;;.f Judge 'asked the. Justice . ased' s~rutiny of her prosecution," Luque
.
Department tq ·request . that the case be added.
sent to U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman, , Luque said !hat "it might be appropria Clinton appointe~. Hsia was convicted of are': for Friedman to disqualify himself
five felonies last summ~r and in post-trial from considering post-trial motions if he
motions is asking Fr~edman to throw out does not grant a. delay in the case.
· the .convictions. Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind.,
The,cas!=S that Johnson assigned to Clin- ·

of

ton judges included those of presidential
friends Webster Hubbell, a Whitewater figure, and Charlie Trie, a Clinton fund-raiser.
After The Aswciated Press first disclosed
special assigmnents in · the Trie and
Hubbell cases last year, Johnson wmte·11
letter saying her decision was not politically motivated and simply was designed to
shin complex cases to judges with open
schedules. She has never addressed her
actions in the other cases.
Based on the findings ofWhitley and the
five judgt:s, the panel will make a recommendation to the Judicial Council of federal appeals and district judges, who must
decide whether to discipline Johnson.
The council's decision could be
appealed to the Judicial Conference, the

policy-making body for the U.S. court system.
The hiring of Whitley is an unusual
n1ove.

"I can't think of any parallel situation in
which it became known that aq outside
investigator has been hired," said New York
University law professor Stephen Gillers.
"Usually it's all done internally."
Whitley declined co&gt;nment through a '
secretary at the Atlanta law firn1where he ,

works.

He served as U.S. attorney i~ Macon,
Ga., from 1981-87, then moved to the Justice Department in Washington, where in
1989, he became acting associate attorney
general, t)te department's No. 3 post. FrortL
1990-93, Whirley served a second sri!lt as
U.S. attorney in Atlanta.

Meigs schelarS' accompliStillinents hailed at banquet
'

.

'

'

'

'

'

.,,4. .,

.

'

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -. The accomplishments 'of Meigs County's ~9
fop ;diolars were · cc;lebrated at ..
the 16th annual Meigs County,
Academic Excellence Banquet
Tuesday night i.n the Mei~ High
School cafeteria. '
Each of the students, representinJ! top achievers in their
respective school~. was presented
a trophy by Jeanette Thomas, vice
president of the Athens~Mei~
Education:l! Seririce Center. . ·
Also. honored were the top
three seniors, one from each
sch~ol district, selected on the
basis of academic achievement
SCHOLAR-' Wesley Thoene, a ·senior at Meigs High School, waS" .PRESENTED TROPHY- Kelsey Holter. a fourth-grader at Eastern Eleand leadership .skills.
the recipient of the Franklin B. Walter AU-Scholastic A'fla~d. The son of mentary, was the first of 49 students to rece Lve trophie&amp; at the Meigs
They were Brandon Wolfe Mr. and Mrs, Dale Thoene, Pomeroy, Thoene will join the .state's top County Academic Excellimce Banquet Tuesday. Jeanette Thomas, vice
students ffol a recognition panquet' In Columbus todQy. ·He was pre- president of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center Governing
PleiH H4i Scho'-n, Pap AJ sented the plaq.ue by Jody Howard, talented 8nd gifted coordinator.
Board, presented-the trophies.

,I

Toclay's

Sentinel
Paps

2 Se:lloi11 ... 11
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituvies
Sports
Weather

AS
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omo
Pick 3: 3-9-8 Pick •: 2-1-6-2
~

5: .&gt;-8-28-30-35

WYA.
Daily 3: 7+5 Daily 4: 9-0-8-9
C 2000 Ohio Valle:)' Publi~hing Co.

' '

"

'•

'

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A~

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