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Meigs society highlights, As
Meigs athletes qualify for regionals,

Sunday, May ~1, 2000;

Details, A3

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Monday
May 11,1000

B1

•

REAL ·ESTATE

Meigs County's

. Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume so. Number 246

so Cents

Jobless
rates fall
in April
FROM STAFF REPORTS

One or the Beet Vlewe of the Ohio
River Aroundll This Immaculate 2
story offers ~all- fanlastlc view
the cozy, glass-front living room or
the mairi bedroom, 2-3 more
bedrooms, 2 1/2 balhs, large dining
area open to knchen, 1 car garage
anached plus a 24 x 32 detached
garage and a "wonderful for
entertaining' 28 x 52 deck with bul~
in
All this situated on a 1~caUon,
PrMIIe SEming. $169,00011129

!-letlngt Old Time Ch1orm
with Modern Conveniences! 2
home has wonf;lerfully large rocms
and high ceilings giving It
spacious appeal. Features •nc••uae
foyer, living room, dining·room,
kl~chen ·with mud room,
bedrooms and 2 112 baths, wlrlno.
furnace (2), siding roof and
Very goocflocatton on Third A110M&gt;u,,._
kids can walk Ia school
~lnle·!iance.l actMties. Private back

from

street

Ukin10. :Jl i!4,,11UU

i' l l

57 graduate from SHS
BY TONY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

He also cited the words of Bel Kau6nan who
said, "Education is not a product mark, diploma,
ACINE - "Life is full of new chal- job or mqney in that order it is a process, a neverlenges. Trust in the L&lt;;&gt;rd and everything ending one."
will turn out all right:'
Co-valedictorian Christopher · Lee Randolph
That was the message given to the .57 members informed his classmates that "we all are on the
?f the Southern Hig_h School Class of 2000 dur- verge of undertaking an unforgettable experience
mg baccalaureate and commencement exermes · in our lives. W~ are &amp;ee to make our own deciSuriday evening in-RaGine.-' ~·\i .,..,.,.....,-~ :..;-, . "Jteni, fighb_...,~np-{tepefully we can l~rn
The Rev. Dewayne . c;. StutTer of Southern fiom our mistakes in order to continue on to a life
Charge of Unit~if'Methodist C hurch . recited to ' full of happiness and satisfaction."
students an t~plliltional story whose moral was
"In his tribute spee·ch, the late Jinuny Valvano
'· that in the face .of'adyersity, and when life's chal- said, 'Don't give up ... don't ever give up.' These
lenges co~nt1you, put yo·ur hand in God's hand words have an important meaning. Just because
and everything will turn out JUSt fine.
things aren't wbrking out in the beginning, does
· Salutatorian .Jamie Scott Bilir briefly reflected not mean they won't work out in the end. If one
qn the graduates' achievements and thanked the keeps on persevering, things just might fall into
and s~ of Southern High for their help, place;' said Randolph.
G"'IDU;IlTKliN EX:CrTDtENT'- Soutllern High School · teachers
"We now have reached the seventh inning
§!!Qlqrs walt with anticIpation as they prepare to fin a~ . wtsdom an!f kindness that was always shown to
his
time
at
the
school.
stretch.
What we do from here on out will deterhim
during
""1~ their high ~chool ~ays dl!ring Sunday night's graduBaker
also
thanked
God
bec~use "without him,
·
' . etlan which toQk place Inside the Ch~es. W. Haymah
we are nothing, and with him, We are everything."
PIHM ... Grads, Pap AJ
' Gymnasll!m. (Tony M. Leach photos)

.
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POMEROY - Reflecting' the national and state
trend in April, unemployment in Gallia and Meigs
counties continued to ' decrease, Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services reported.
Jobless rates fell in all but one of neighboring
counties, OBES' preliminary figures indicated.
For April, Gallia's unemployment was 6.8 percent,
down 2.3 percent from March's level of 8.9. Out of
a projected work force of 15,000, only 1,000 were
reported without jobs for the month.
Meigs' rate fell 1.5 percent, from 1 1.9 in March to
10.4 th e following month. The county's work force
level is estimated at 8,300,leaving,900 people unemployed during the month, according to OBES.
Joblessness fell by 1.1 percent to 4.4 in April in
Athens ~unty; 1 percent to 6.1 in Jackson County;
and 2.7 percent to 11.8 for Vinton County. Lawrence
County posted a three-tenths of a percent increase
with an April rate of 8.3 percent.
Unemployment in area counties for March
declined signi6candy in southeastern Ohio counties
after higher levels were reported for Fepruary.,
But Meigs, Vinton and Lawrence joined several
other counties- all in southern or eastern Ohiowith unemployment at or above ·8 percent for April.
Morgan County continued to lead the state with
12.1 percent, and others included Adams (9.5),
Noble (8.3) and Monroe (8.2).
Ohio's jobless rate was 3.8 percent, down threetenths of a percent from March. Statewide, 5.6 million are employed! The national. unemployment fig.ure for the month was 3.9.
.• • .
. • --" ''Finalr~v~fons to March's lal&gt;or f~rce data and
prelintinary data for April jndicate· Ohiols economy
remains strong, nearing .the March 1974 rate,o f 3.7
percent," said Interim OBES Adntinistrator Wayne
Shoales.
'
"Preliminary data for March indicated a 26-year
low in Ohio's seasonally adjusted unemployment
rate," Shoales. added. "UnfortUnately, not all unemployment compensation claim data was included in
the calculation due to a computer error."
The miscalculation also affected county U!)employment rates released in March, but Were corrected for April's figures, he said.

Service honors Civil ·war veterans
,. Still, Meigs County~
only b{ack·soldi~
'·
memorialized
•
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BY 8Rwt J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

·POMEROY -A tribute to David C.
Still, Meigs County's only black soldier to
die in the Civil War, v,;as irtcluded in Sat' urdaY's Memorial Day service for Civil
i War soldiers conducted by the Brooks1 Grant Camp ·7 1 Sons of Union Veteraqs of
' the Civil w:ir.
·
: The service included a message fiom
1Jamce Gor6nan, past national president of

'

die Ladies of the Grand Army of the · Still, who entered Union service at 18
Republic, as well as period music, and the in October 1861, served in Company C,
placement of decorative wreaths at the 63rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry, one of
foot of the Civil War monument at the Meigs County's major units.
That unit, with Still, saw "terrible
Meigs County Courthouse..
Memorial Day was originally ordered action" in both the western and southern
Gen. John' A. Logan, commander-in- campaigns, according to Ashley.
_chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, ·. "The regiment 'saw the elephant' at
the largest Uilion veterans organization New Madrid, Mo., followed by Island No.
after the Civil War.
·
· I 0, Corinth and Iuka, Miss., then Resaca,
Saturday's serVice also included the Kennesaw Mountain, Dalla;, Decatur,
re.ading of Logan's General Order No. 11 , Atlanta,Jonesboro, and Savarinah batdes of
Georgia saw these brave Buckeye boys;•
'which established ''Decoration Day" in
A'hl~y said.
,
1868.
StiU died of disease on May 4, 1862.
Keith Ashley of the Brooks-Grant
"Private Still's death may seem more
Camp shared 1 Still's story with those
Pluse su Vets, Pllp AJ
attending the service.

. bY

VETERANS
I'
past natlanal
of the
.of
Grand folmy of the Republic, spoke on P!Wiolism at Saturday's Civil W!lf Memorial Day cer-.
emony, held at the Civil war monument In Pomeroy. Members of the Brook&amp;Grmt Canp 7,
$Qns of Union Veterans, also pictured, conducted the ceremony. (Briao J. Reed photo.)

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Sentinel
1 Sadlot11- 11 Pllpi

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ROUSH LANE

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HILDA DRIVE

EVANS HEIGHTS
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LewlaRCIH
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If yoLi want your property SOLD call on• of our
profeulonala:
·

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[8
David \VI181118n ..........446-8555
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Son

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ny lmH ............ oMe-2707

Robert Bruce .............. 44&amp;-0G1 .
Rill Wlllmln ........ ~...~4 48 8!55

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Calendar
C:::tassifie4• .
Comics
Editoriab
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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A6
B2-4
BS
M
A3
BL 6
A3

Lotteries
Q}UQ
.· Pick 3: 9-1-9; Pid&lt; 4: 5-7-9-6
Super Lotto: 1..Jl.11-27-37-46
Klcbr: 7-7-1-&gt;-M

HAUot

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c-.
a•..,~.. Waach .....:.... 441·1007

l.;e(Tibers of Middleport.,!&gt;omeroy
Rotary Club donned aprons and
wielded spatulas, coffee pots
·~ plates of'steamln&amp; pancakes
~ ·, sausage ' Saturday morning,
dui'lnj! the club's annual pancake
l)r'eakfast. Here, Rotarians John
Anderson and Hal Kneen serves
t)reakfast to some of the many
focal residents who boUght tick•
,W to the event, which will benelit the club's servlee projects.
The event was held at the Meigs
County Senior Center. (Brian J.
aead photo) .

\'tVA,

a

Dally 3: 1-7-6 Daily 4: 8-3-6-9
C 2000 Ohio v~uey Publishing Co.

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Study: Legislators' assignments
may raise conflicts of intereSt
COLUMBUS (AP) - Many
Ohio legislators sit on committees that regulate their business
interests, raising potential conflicts of interest, a two-year investigation by a national government-watchdog group concludes .
The state ranked 1Oth nationally in the number .of state legislators with possible conflicts of
interest. The report by the Washington-based Center for Public
Il)tegrity found that 36 percent of
Ohio legislators sit on committees that regulate their business
interest. That exceeds the national average of 25 percent.
'"Ultimately, it is up to the taxpayer to decide whether a legislator is operating in good faith or
not," Charles Lewis, executive

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director ?f the cent_er, told .The
Columbus Dispatch for a Sunday
story.
The nonprofit, nonpartisan
group analyzed financial-disclo·sut:e forms filed last year for 1998
by 5,716 state legislaton in the·47
states that require the reporu,
Michigan, Vermont and· Idaho do
not require the disclosures .
The center cited 37 examples
of potential conflicts for Ohio
lawmakers' committee · assign- ·
ments and their pCl'SOnal b\Riness
or financial interests.
The study singled o~t Sen. Roy
L. R~y. R-Akron, who was paid
$161,000 as a lobbyist for Akron
electric company ' FirstEnetgy
·while working on electricity

PI•••

1ft Casslllct. .... AJ

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�-·Mo~y, MIV 22, 2000

Page A2 • 'The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BU C K E Y .E BR I EFS
Floater's Identity.still unknown
PUT-IN-BAY (AP) - Police have not released the identity of a
nun whose body was found near a dock on South Bass bland in
Lake Erie.
Police believe the man fell into the water while climbing into his
boat about 5 a.m. Sunday.
Residents reported hearing a large splash. About three hours later
police received a report about a missing man who was supposed t~
be in the same area.
T he man's body was recovered about two hours later by divers.

Fines proposed for arena owner
COLUMBUS (AP) - A roofing contractor working on the
Nationwide Arena project could be fined as much as $109 ()()() for
violations that the Occupational Saf~ry and Health Admirrlstration
·
said endangered workers' lives.
T he agency announced the proposed fines Friday against
Kalkreuth R oofing and Sheet M etal ofWheeling, W.Va.
Government inspectors fo und on Feb. 1I that the company's
workers were installing the hoc key arena's roof at heights of as much
as 110 feet without proper protection f19m falls and without proper
training to prevent falls.
·
A safety line was in place, but OSHA alleged it ~s improperly set
up. No InJun es because of falls have been reported at the arena site.
Kalkreuth has three weeks to either accept or contest the OSHA
fin dings.
"Most employers come in and request a conference;' said Debo~ah Zubaty, area director for OSHA in Columbus. "They can come
m and talk to us and make a good-faith effort to fix the problems."
. Zubary.sa1d the company fixed nuny problems im mediately after
tnspectors noted them. She said the training problems were considered more serious because the _company also was cited on July 9,
1997, at another JOb Site for failmg to train workers to preve nt falls.
Kalkreuth offic1als d1d no t return a telephone caU requesting
comment Friday.
The $1 50 million arena is scheduled to open Sept. 9.

Builder enten guilty plea
SPRINGBORO (AP) - A builder has pleaded guilty to two
counts of petry theft over problems at a $517,000 house that was featu red during the region's annual Homearama last year.
James Colston of Colston Building Corp. was accused of failing
to honor a warranty or make repairs to one of I 0 luxury homes featured during the Dayton-area event.
The couple who bought the home said they paid more than
$40,000 to other contractors to fill: problems with the house and
yard. Colston's company filed for bankruptcy last July.
.
. The couple filed a claim against Colston in bankruptcy court a!)d
the petty theft complaints in Warren County Court. Colston pleaded guilty to the charges on May 2, and Judge James Heath ordered
him to make restitution ~ H e also gave him a suspended 90~day jail
sentence.
Colston's lawyer, David Chicarelli, said the builder has paid debts
to a plumber and an electrician and WJ;Ote a $12,750 check to the
couple who bought the home. ·
I

Webtser's editor dies at 79
SHAKER HEIGHTS (AP) - David B. Guralnik, former editor''-' in-chief ofWebster's New World Dictionary and an inter~ationally
known le1Qcographer has died at the age of79.
Guralnik died Friday at his suburban Cleveland home.
Guralnik spoke six languages and served as Webster's editor- inchieffor more than 35 years, retiring in 1985, He was considered an
~xpert on liang and was the firs.t to include "ain't" in the dictionary
m 1951 - something that was unheard of at the time.
"Lan~age isn't crea.ted by votes or people coming together and
aaylnJ. Hey. I like this word:" Guralnik told The Atsociated Preu in
a 1995 interview. ''Lanauate ha1 a life of it1 own."
iuthou11h Guralnlk aaid all wordl were his fivodtes, he believod
"OK" best expre!!ed the ~:reativity of Enlllim· •peaking American•.
liS 8n.t known \lie wu l,n the 19tll cenl\lry, as an abbreviation for the
&lt;l•libetately ml11pell~d' oil korrect" or "all correct.'' Now the phrase
11 111ed worldwide.
Gu!Wlik Wat born in Pevcland and earned bachelors and masters
depes from Western Reserve Univenity. In 1948 he was na med
editor-in- chief ofWebster's New World Dictionaries.
·

Monday, MIV 22, 2000

•

•

James L Wimpy' Hendricks
~IRCLEV ILLE -James L. "Wimpy" Hendricks, 67; Ciideville, died
Fnday, May 19, 2000 at his residence.
Born on July 14,1932 in Middleport, he was the son of the late James
and Clara A. Newton Hendricks.
He was a U.S. Army Korean War veteran, and past master and com·
.mander for Masonic Lodge 23.
He is survived by his wife, Doris Ramsey Hendricks; two daughters
and s.ons-m-law, Peggy and Steven N orman, and Stacy ami Daniel Myers
of Cudeville; and a granddaughter and several cousins.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesdayin Wellman Funeral Home, Circleville.
, Burial will be in Jackson Township Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.
Memo rial contributions may be made to 1-lospice of Pickaway County or North Court Church of Christ, Circlelville.

Martin M. Major Sr.

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'Average Joe' runs for president in '74 van
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HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE SALE

CLOSEOUT· SALE.

21

natures by Aug.
to get on the ,
Ohio ballot, the Secretary of State's
office said - and similar numbers

=~~~a-mp~~~~ft~~n~~~;

FOR THE SEASON!

All FlatS &amp;
10" Hanging Baskets
4, p-a.. Cutti'""

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for signs, much less newspaper or
broadcast ads, Schriner is looking for
help.
Whnau.v
"We're going to have to tely on
1111
people making homemade signs,
1'!.--niums
'Vote for Joe:" he said.
'-'"'JU
Schriner gets a certain amount of
·
r __ ...1 •
50~
publicity becaus~ · of the folksy
..-.::~ Geraniums
~
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nature of his ~;impiign.
t
II
"In Columbus, we got about the
S • ru
uy 1\eg,
nee Get· .
nicest television piece that's been ......-o.:;P.;.•-.n.;D..;..a;;,;IIY:..;.M.. ..___9;;;.;92;;;;.,;·5;;;.;7..;..7.;8....;C.;Io;;;l;;;el;.;;d.-S-.u;.;;~;:;;.;;a.c;;·•;;....~
done on " Schriner said "I think
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As Sh bbe ry a 1

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75 (

1 FREE

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We remember thoae who

"'ce · · ·
·
He\ making a .wing tluou!Jh the ·
· Deep South thls week with hls wife,
~

as presidential candidates this ~;
said Kelly Huff, a spokeswoman for
the Federal Election Commission in
Washington. "Actually, you're not
even required to register · with us
unless you've t3ised more than "
$5,000.M
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,
.

Joseph, 2. He u,ually shows up in a
town, hangs a banner and starts
shaking hands.
"We're kind of the whole campaign staff.' Schriner said. "I make
advance calh to media . ... My wife
has been contacting secretaries of
state to find out how many signa-

we're going to get a lot of votes out
of Columbus.''
There aren't many requirements
to run forpresident.The race is open
to anyone 35 years old who was .
born in the United States.
"We've had 219 people register

'

Liz, and children, Smh 4, and

\,

pa••ed away
and are eapecially dear to ue.

·On Saturcjay. May 2T. we wtll publlah a apeclal page diYOIICI to thoaa who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be almllar to the aample below;

IUDGEWAY .- Martin M. Major Sr., B3, Ridgeway, formerly of
Me1gs County, died Saturday, May 20, 2000 at his residence.
Born in Hardin County on March 3, 1917, he was .the son of the late
Fr.1nk and Melissa Harsh Major. He was a construction worker for Local
U nion 329 in Lima.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Ruby Lee Major on June
24, 1988; a daughter, Linda Sue Major; a· brother; Charles; three sisters,
Mildred Walters, Geneve Mclaughlin and Lucille Yelton; and two grandsons.
·
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Martin and Alberta Major
Jr., and Robert and Diana Major, all of Huntsville; five daughters and
sons-in-law,Janet and Charles Bland of Huntsville, Sheila and Milton Little, Angie and Emerson Little, and Judy and R obin Horne, all of Russells
Point; and Sherry and Dewayne Prater of Ridgeway; and 19 g~a ndchil­
dren and 20 great-grandchildren.
Services will be held 11 a.m.Tuesday at the Eichholtz Funeral !-lome
in Bellefontaine. The Rev. Wilkie Shepherd will officiate, and burial will
be in Huntsville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home tonight
from 6-9. ..

Jean Marie Trussell
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. - Jean Marie Trussell, 76, died Friday, May
5, 2000 at Riverside Regional Convalescent Center at Newport News.
. A native of Mason, W.Va., she had been a resident of Newport News
for 39 years. She retired from Riverside Regional Medical Center after
2Q years of service.
~he was preceded in death by her husband, Harold Eugene Trussell.
Survivors include her daughter, NancyT. Seals and her husband Steve,
o!Yorktown; two sons, Michael H. Trussell and his wife Pam, and Harold
~'Rick" E. Trussell and his wife, Robin, all of Newport News; seven
grandchildren, a sister, Mamie Noble of Mason, W.Va., and a brother
William Nease ofBuchanan,W.Va.
Services were conducted May 11 , 2000 in Peninsula Funeral Home by
th~ Rev. Lawrence J. Biermann. Burial followed in the Peninsula Memorilll Park.

~atteras

lighthouse.. to reopen
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In blood banking to counbies worldwide

COLUMBUS (AP) - With over two- thirds of
the world's countries not ·supplying safe blood to
their people, the president of the An1erican Re\1
Cross says her organization plans to share technology · with other· countries in order to reduce th e
spread of AIDS and other diseases. "Our job is not done by simply achieving a safe
blood supply here, we must share our technology
w~th the resr,.of the world;' Dr. Bernadine Healy
wd Saturday. We made a pledge in Geneva and we
are doing this through many venues."
Healy, a former dean of the Ohio State University College of Medicine, was among 2,500 paid and
volunteer workers at the organization's three-day
75th national convention. Columbus also hosted the
finl American Red Cross conven1i on iii 1921.
According to the World Health . Organization,
more than 13 million pints of blood each year almost one- fifth of the world's annual consumption
- is not tested for all blood- borne infections.
·The WHO estimates that 5 to 10 percent of people with the AIDS were· infected via blood transfu sions and 80 percent of the world's population live
in countries with unsafe blood.
.
Besides AIDS, diseases such as hepatitis B and C,
malaria and syphilis can be transmitted through
blood transfusions.
.
·
·
'.' For the past 20 years, the R ed C ross and other
members of the world community have had the
world's greatest minds developing rigorous screening and sophisticated te.sting to achieve a level of
blood safety never before attained:' Healy said.
" We will teach other countries how· to make
their blood supply safe and how to screen donors."
The Red Cross has invested $300 million over
·the past five years ro establish eight state-of-the-art
testing laboratories. The organization performs eight
different tests to screen for: HI V I and II, hepatitis B
and C, syphilis, and hu.,an T-cell leukemia virus.

•

Led by more than 1.3 million volunteers, the $2.3
billion nonprofit organization currently aids more
than 50 nations, and has receptly- taken an increased
interest in international blood safety.
But transmissible· diseases are not the only issue,
in many countries which lack an organized transfu- ·
sion system, donated bltlod is just not available . .
Dr. Richard Davey, chief medical officer for the
American Red Cross, said the U.S. gets about 50
pints of blood donated per 1,000 people each year,
but in developing countries there are fewer than
two pints of blood donaied per 1,000 each year. Of
the 75 million pints of blood donated worldwide
each year, the poorest third of the world's ~ountries
ac count for just 1.3 million pints.
"It is a daunting challenge," Davey said Saturday.
"In Africa HIV is increasing and'that puts their fragile blood supply under even greater stress."
Even in the United States, finding enough blood ·
donors can be a problem.
"We need our blood here ," Davey said. "We
would be delightful if we had enough blood in the
U. S. to export it, but that is not the case.''
Blood donations in this country have dropped by
about l percent a year while the need for blood
increases by 1 percent a year.
. The National Blood Data R esource Center predicts that Amen cans will donate just under 11.7
million pints of blood next year - but hOspitals will
need 11.9 million pints.
·
~avey is also chairman of the Blood Program
Adv1sory Group for the International Federation of
Red Cross and Red Creseent Societies. T he soci·eties consist of 177 national humanitarian organizations and could potentially help more than 100 million people in need of blood transfusions or blood
products.
'
1 But most of the countries still need training,
technology and funding.

Andrews, David C
July ·10. 1961-M•y S, 191111

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
througho.Pt7me. ·
Alwayoln our hellrt.•,
John 1nd MonaAndnwt

and Family

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.. ...

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN TII~S SPEClAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $121F PICfURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop oft to
The Dally Slntlnal
With Fondalt Mamorlaa
111 Court St, Pomeroy, OH

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Please publish my tribute in the speical Memorial Day l'age on Friday, May 26. '·
Name of
· .
··
·1Relationship to inc
. Number of selected verse_,__ _
.Date of passing _ _ _._ __
1 Date of birth
'
I Veteran:..
· _____ Yes _ _ No•
1
l·Rank _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Branch of service: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....:,_ _~
\1Print your name here __________________..:,_·----~ : 1
1Address
Phone number _ _ _ _ __
l City
State: ____ ZiP•---1·
. Make Check Payfble to The Daily Sentinel

I

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The Daily Sentinel

ftllflflll-llllowtoiiiiiiiPenv
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,,

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Reunion set

Auxiliary to meet

Class sets meeting

Herbalife founder Hughes dies

Pimic scheduled

Alumni to meet

Conflld

~MORE LOCAL NEWS.

1. We hold. you In our thouahllond memorlee forever. .
2. May Ood aadle you in His ann1, now and forever.
3. Forever mlased, nev~r fofJOIItn. Mty Ood hold yo~ In the palm of Hl1
hond.
.
.
4. Thank you for the wonderful daya we shared toaelher. My prayen will be
with you until we meet aaain.
· .
.5. The doys we shared.were sweet. Ilona to see you oaaln In Ood'a
heavenly alory.
6. Your c:ouraae and bravery still Inspire ua all, ond the niemory of yotll'
smile fills US With joy 1nd JaUJitler.
'
7. TholiJh out of sip~ you 'II forever be in my heort and mind.
8. The days may come and ao. but the times we shored wlll1lways remain;
9. May tbe llaltt of peace shine on your face far eternity.
10. May Ood'a anala aulde you IIIII proiiCI yau throupout time.
11. You were allaln In our llfe.thll bums forever Ia 0111 hearts.
12. May Ood's Jracellhlne over you tor all lime.
13. You are In our thou&amp;btt and pnyen fnlm -Ina to nlaJtt ond from
. year to year.
14. W, send thiS'Inc~ae with olovlnJ klu for etemalreotontl'happlneu.
15. May the Lord blilil you with His JriCIII and worm,lovlna hean.

carey to meet

BUXTON, N.C. (AP) - 'len wipe it down and make it premi;mths after the Cape Hatte~;a~ · sentabl~'"before we let people in;'
L~thouse's majestic journey to a Ranger Rob Bolling of the
n~ home a half-mile from the National Park Service said.
c.ruhing Atlantic b'reaken, its keepSoon after the lighthouse was
ti( are spiffing it up for weD-wish- moved, Hurricane Dennis floocled
~
the lighthouse grounds and blew
llwnPapA1
• ::Floors and staircases are being sand into the structure.
~pt and WindCIWS reinstalled in
The fact that the 4,800-ton deregulation legialation.
~iicipation of its official public lighthouse now sits 2,900 feet from
"They ·ought to use it as an
reopening Friday. The 208-foot its former perch ISO feet from the example of someone who did the
IISbthouse, the nation's tallest and ocean is a minor miracle. ·
right thing and itill got nailed to
best-known, has been closed to
When' it went into service in the wall;' Ray said. "We asked for
~ton since Nov. 22, 1998. The 1870, the lighthouse stood 1,600 an ethics opinion (and) were
qiove, costing $10 million and feet from the ocean - the same · given the go-ahead; we did the
'anning several weeks, was com- distance from the beach as now, but work, and it .wasn't a problem." .
~leted in July.
.
over the :decades erosio~ brought
Some. Ohio legislators had
• "We're going to sweep it out and the ocean steadily closer. "
multiple listings.
•
Sen. Doug White, R-Manches•
ter, had three listings. White, vice
chairman of the Senate Finance
. and Financial Institutions Com-~

American·Red Cross to offer expertise

EMS logs 15 calls

fnMn

POMEROY -The following estate trans- and Chester Water District, right of w'lj. Smith, to Mildred Johnson, Carrell Johnson,
easement, Middleport;
fers were recently reported by Meigs County Chester;
Roger W. Hysell, Barbara F. Hysell, to TupLyvonnia E. Boggs, Lyvonnia E. Young,
Recorder Judith A. King: ·
Martha F. Hoffman, deceased, to George A. pers Plains and Chester Water District, right of R oy Boggs, to Roger L. Adkins, Sandy K.
Hoffman, Vicki L. Owens, certificate, Middle- way;
,
.
Atkins, deed; Salisbury;
port;
Troy D. Guthne, Laura M. Guthne, to TupH arold Lawson to Jeremy Alexander
D'eborah A. Williams, to David D.,Williarns, pers Plains and C hester Water District, right of • Th omas, dee d, Le·tart'.,
·
C
h
deed, Scipio;
way,
ester;
D b A Mi
J h M'
S
f
. e ra . rgon, o n ugron, to tate o
Jon T Mugrage, Samantha D. Mugrage, to
Dolphus Burke, Jr., Wanda Burke, to John
.
.
R. Adams, Marsha L. Adams, deed, Columbia; Tuppers Plains and Chester Water District, Ohio, ~asement, Lebanon;
of
way,
Chester;
Davtd
Gtate,
to
Tuppeq
Plams
and
Chestef
.
right
, R usty D. Bookman, Margaret L. Bookman,
Clarence 'Atherton, Lucille Atherton, to Water District, right of way, Chester;
to Rusty D. Bookman, Margaret L. Bookman,
Tuppers Plains and C hester Water District;
Delbert E. VanMeter, Opal VanMeter, to
deed, Sutton;
right
of
way,
Chester;
Tuppers
Plains and Chester Water District,
Jack W. Carsey, to George E. Oiler, ElizaWilliam D. Carey, Diana F. Carey, to Tup- right of way, Sutton;
beth Oiler, deed, Pomeroy;
Delbert E. VanMetet, Opal VanMeter, to
Violet Brown, to Kenneth S. Brown, deed, pers Plains and Chester Water District, right of
way, Bedford;
Pomeroy;
·
• Tuppers Plains and Chester Water District,
Kenneth R.Wilt,Jr.: Ken Wilt, Kimberly E.
Beneficial Mortgage Co., to Joann Hick- , right of way, Sutton;
Wilt, Kimberly Wilt, to Martin L. Searls,Tina man, deed, Bedford;
.
T homas W. Karr, Diana S. Karr, to Tuppen
F. Searls, deed , Scipio;
Martha Chapman._deceased, R onald Rife, Plains and Chester Water D istrict right of
Mark A. Veney, Melinda K. Veney, to to R onald Rife, Marjorie A. Rife, deed, way; Sutton·
'
"
Salem·
'
·
·
Rober.t A.Venoy,Jr.. Lisa A.Venoy, easement;
' b hM D ·
J
A D · d d
Paul L. Grady, Catherine L. Grady. to TupEliza
Esther L.Venoy, to E. LoraineVenoy, Esther
et
. av1s, to oyce . av1s, ee ,
PI .
d Ch
nt
D' ·
'gh f
Salisbu ry;
pers ams an
ester water 1stnct, n to .
L. Veney, affidavit;
..
Keith A. Cook, Cecelia Lynne C ook, to way, Sutton;
Paul Hawk, to Tupper Plains and Chester
Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Olive;
Robert G. Edwards, to Teresa A. Evans, ·
Wa ter District, right of way, Chester;
Shanno n Mille r, Lori · Ann Miller, to deed, Olive;
Paula J. Wood, to Tuppers Plains and
Glenn R. Lawson, Eleanor R. Lawson, to '
C hester Water District, r ig~t of way. Chester; Columbus Southern Power, easement, Olive;
Ivan
D.
Booth,
Bernice
A.
Booth,
to
Pamela
Ann Lawson, deed, Olive;
Dorothy Hawk, to Tuppers Plains and
Mildred Spencer, deceased, to Daren G. '
Chester Water District, right of way, Chester; Columbus Southern Power, easement, Letart;
Pomeroy Gun Club-Inc., to Tuppers Plains
Charles F. Sntith, Charles Smith, Betty Jackson, William
Lee Jackson, affidavit, Letart
.
. •.

(IJSPS 213·960)
Olilo V•llof ...lll-1 Co.
Pwbliahed every 1flemooa', Mondty th rouah
Friday, 1 II C01ut St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by lbe
Ohio Valley 1'\Jbllahina Comp•ny.• Pomeroy,
Ohio 43769, Po. 99l-lU6. S..:ond ""' pool•
•lp paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.

'

.Vets

fldmP8pA1 ··

than conunon until you know
something about him;' Ashley said.
"Private Still was a black soldier
serving an all-white unit long
before colored soldiers were sup•MtiiiM:r: Tbc Asloclated Pn11, and lhc Ohio
: Newtp~per Allocialioft.
pose'dly peiTI)itted to serve:•
••PO.n'MASTER: Send address comet ion• to
"He is most likely the first black
•ne Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
soldier who ,died in this war:' he
:ohio4S769.
added.
,,.
·
,
SUBSCRJmON RATES
Ashl,ey alsb addressed a contro_,
BJ C.rrltr ar MoMr RHte
'"One Weeli: .................... ......................., .••..•$2.00
versy from 1999, when Still's name
Ono Monoh ................................................$8.70
was not included iri a monument
10M Ye•r .... ........................................... $104.00
in Washington, D.C., to U.S. col•
SINGLE COPY PRICE
ored rroops.
.
-!lolly ' .....................,...................... , .....50 c. ...
" His family was forced to prove
Sublcribera not delbiaaiO P1J UM carrier may
his race and service when tol~ 'it
remil in 1dvance dtre:c:c lo The D1ily Sealinel
on 1 three, six or 12 month buiL Crodlt will be
could not be possible;" Ashley said.
aJven· carrier each week.
"Once it was proven, he was
.No ••bKriplion by m•il permUted In l(eU
denied a place among U.S. Colwhere hOme ca111er service ia available.
ored Troops on this monument,
1i1her reserves the riJ)\t 10 adjud tllel durusing thl' puny excuse that'he didIn&amp; llw: sublcription period. Subacrlpl:l0111 rate
ochups may be implemented by cbln&amp;fn&amp;thc
n't actually serve in the U.S. Collion of the •ubimpion.
ore d']roops.'"
MAILSUISCRimONS
"This monument bears his
~
lllide Melp C011•t1
name as the only black soldier of
·t ! Weeb.................................................Sl7.30
'l6 Weeb................................................ .$53.R2
this county who died from Meigs
) i\veeb............................................... $105.56
County, and we honor him today
..
· ltlitel O.tlkle Mtlp Co••lJ
·13 Wecu.:..............................................$19.25
as well as the 63rd Ohio Volunteers
'2tl w..to.................................................$56.611
who saw past his race and saw only
)2 Wecb ............................................... SI09.72
a loyal American;' Ashley said.
Reader Services
The Brook..:Grant Camp, the
• Oar •• ,. tHCt,. . . . . . . .l'ltl .. 10 be
Women's Relief Corps, Daughters
cct~ralt. If'" ...., rtl•• error It • ..,.,
of Union Veterans, and the auxil~· ... - - · - •• C7•) w.t-2111......... '
·-c.eck 1••r l•for•allo• .. d ••ke •
iary of the SUV placed wreaths in
#vnuttua ttwamldtid.
·
memory of Still and his Meigs
•
N... . . . , . _..
,
~ •I•
tt2·2UJ. . . ......_,
comrades, and other participants
~
:
read poems and performed patri"Cnrnl M....-_!.............-·-E•L 1111
~.... - · - -·- - · - -Eo&lt;II02
otic music on period instruments.
- · · -.........- ..-Dr Elt.llN
It is estimated that more than
•
OtMr Senket
.,.,dnrtiol"l ..- -..- ··-··-...- £1~ 1104
500 Meigs County men died dur'tirttllodloo- .................- .....- ...- EIL IIQJ
ing the C ivil War.
~Ca.H'Itd Adi............- ................ - Elt.llot

..

..-......•••btr.

L O C AL BRI E FS

"Faith of the Heart."
Following the addresses, students
on May 27 at the school in
were recognized by Principal GorCoolville.
don Fisher. Honorarians recogPapAl
Anyone who has attended,
POMEROY - Units of the
nized were Stacy Joann Ervin,
mine our outcome. As , we enter Kimberly Maurene Ilue, Amber · Meigs . Emergency Services worked, or taught at the school is
this new phase of our lives, every- Dawn Maynard, Kyle Paul Norris answered 15 call$ for assistance invited to attend. The classes of
over the weekend. Units respond- 1925, 1930, 1935, 1940, 1945,
one has the potential to fulfill their and Julie Frances Nakao.
1950,1955 and 1960 wiU be honwildes.t dreams," added Randolph.
The seniors were presented by ed as follows:'
ored.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
In his speech, co-valedictorian Superintendent James Lawrence to
Doors will open at 5 p.m., the
Saturday. 5:46 a.m., Union
Brandon Wolfe recalled watching Bob Collins, Southern Local
Pomeroy,
Louise meeting will ,be held at 6 p.m.,
past graduations and thinking that Board of Education president, who Avenue,
Gilmore,Veterans Memorial Hos- and dinner will be served at 7
he would never be up on the stage presentell' diplomas.
p.m. The price is $10 per person
R eceiving diplomas · were: pital;
obtaining his diploma.
in
advance, and SIS at the door.
10:41
a.m.,
West
Main
Street,
"Now that I am up here, I think Michael Henry Ables, Jessica Rae
that my time here has gone by way Alley, Tiffany Diane Barnes, Erin Pomeroy, Shirl Music, refused Reservations may be sent to the
CCTAA, Rt. 2-273 1 Lottridge
too fast. There's a famous quote N ichole Bolin, James Benton treatment;
Road,
Coolville, Ohio 45723.
12:08 p.m., West Main Street,
that says, 'Time flies when you're Boso, Sarah Ann Brauer, William
having fun.'Well, I think I speak for Perry Coe, Willie Mason Collins, Rudy Cassillas, VMH , EdY(ard Information is available from
Ledra Tanner at 667-3781.
a lot of people up here when I say Steven Cremeans, Carly Ann Slusher, refused treatment;
4:0B
p.m.,
Bailey
Run
Road,
C
row,
Adam
Victor
Cumings,
that the last 12 years have really
Heather Ervin Dailey, Joshua Tyler Michelle Roush, refused treatflown by."
Davis,
Joshua David D istelhorst, me nt;
Wolfe cong~atulated Randolph
POMEROY State Rep.
5: 11 p.m., assisted by Columbia
and Baker on their achievements Kim Marie Freeman, Donald Lee
and thanked family, friends and Greene, Courtney Jessanna Haines, Township as First Responder, John Carey, R -Wellston, will hold'
teachen for always being there for Ianzoe Bnwn Herman, Autumn Robert Bell, O'Bieness M emori- an open door session at the Meigs
Counry Courthouse on Friday
Brooke Hill, Ryan Morgan Hill, al Hospital;
him.
11 :59 p.m., Lincoln H eights, from 9-10 a.m.
"I, as I'm sure all of you are, am Anita Nicole Holter, Samantha
anxious to go into the world and Marie Hysell, Michael Jason Imbo- Pomeroy, Tristan Garnes;
Sunday, 1:39 p.m., sheriff's
become a successful person. Every- den.
office,
assisted by Pomeroy as First
D
enis
Michelle
Keyes,
Amanda
one has a plan for success, but
PO MEROY - Meigs High
R
esponder, Wayn e Milhoan,
everyone has a different definition Dawn Lang, Peggy Ann Lawrence,
School class of 1990 will have a
of success. Don't listen to anybody, Jeremiah Lee Lawson, Larai ne VMH;
5:41 p.m., Naylors Run R oad, reunion Saturday at Salisbury Eledo what you believe is best for Brook Lawson, Stacy Alane Lyons,
mentary School in Pomeroy. The
Raymond Jeffiey Michael, Jerome Annette Pierce, treated;
YQU," said Wolfe.
10:06 p.m., Wehe Terrace, assist- family picnic will be held at I
" Proverbs 16:3 says,'Commit to Scott Mihlbach, Ryan Patrick
the Lord · whatever you do, and Nease, Christopher Allen Proffi tt, ed by Pomeroy, Rick McClellan, p.m and an adult gathering at B
p.m . Questions may be directed
your plans will succeed.' With a Donald Allen Proffitt, Joshua James VMH;
B p.m., Pearl Street, Tamera to J ay Humphreys, 992-9101.
strong faith in God, any goal is Pullins, Russell Duane R eiber, Tara
Miller,
treated;
Beth Rose, Dena Michelle Sayre,
reachable," added Wolfe.
11 :59 p.m., Village Mano r,
Sarah Ann Brauer, class presi- Roberta Jeanette Scarberry, Misty
dent, gave the welcome, followed Dawn Sellers, Cassandra Dawn Homer Edward Gordon,VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
.
OLIVETWP.
by an invocation by Studer and the Smith.
Sunday, 4:23 p.m., Rye Road Auxiliary of Tuppers Plains VFW
Ed William Smith, Jarod Warner
Pledge ofAllegiance led by Laraine
Brook Lawson, student council Smith, Jonathan Clyde Smith, and State Route 6B 1, with will meet Tuesday at the hall. A
Amanda Renee Spaun, Autumn Reedsville squad, David Weber potluck supper will be held at
president
Choir members, directed by Deanne Thomas, Thomas M ason and Erin Weber, refused treat- 6:30 p.m. followed by the installation of new officers at 7:30 p.m .
Choir Director Greg Vance and Ware, Stacy Renee Wilson, Jarod ·ment; C onnie Abbott, OBMH .
POMEROY
accompanied by Jocelyn Bailey, Scott Wolfe, Jody Lynn Wolfe, and
Saturday,1 2:08 p.m.,West Main
sang "Time of Your Life" and Lena Ruth Yoacham.
Street, Mary Todd , refused treatLONG BOTTOM - Eastern
ment;
· Sunday, I :04 p.m., Leading High School class of 1960 will
Creek Road, assisted by Rutland, have a picnic at the Long Bottom
structure fire, Melanie Lee resi- Community building Saturday at
noon. For furthe£ information,
MALIBU, Calif. (AP) - Mark Reynolds Hughes, founder of the dence, no injuries reported.
call378-6149.
Herbalife empire of weight loss and nutritional products, has died at age
TUPPERS PLA1NS
44, authorities said Sunday.
Sunday, 9:33 p.m., Greenup
Hughes was found dead .in his Malibu mansion, said Los Angeles Lane, llene Bahr, Holzer Medical
County sheriff's Sgt. Norine Plett. He died of apparent natural causes but Center.
RACINE Rac.ine High
an autopsy will determine the cause of death, she said.
·
School
class
of
1960
will have a
Los Angeles-based Herbalife, which Hughes founded in 1980, sells
picnic at the residence of Bob
weight management, personal care and nutritional products.
Wingett,
Syracuse, Saturday at
According to the company's Web site, Hughes was inspired to found
COOLVILLE Coolville
noon.
For
more information, class
the company by the d~ath of his mother from an accidental overdose of Carthage-Troy Alumni Association will hold its annual dinner members may call 985-3581.
p~ription diet pills when he was 1,8 .

Grads

Meigs recorder posts recent land transfers

C INCINNATI (AP) - Ohio
has been home to eight United
States presidents - G~ant, Hayes,
Garfield, McKinley, Harding, Taft
and two Harrisons. Joe Schriner
wants to be No. 9.
The former writer and substance
abuse counselor is on the road with
his low-budget campaign, traveling
in a 197 4 Dodge Xplorer that has
seen 161,000 miles.
"We bought it for 15 hundred
bucks and I've been fixing it up as
we go - a little sanding, a little
Bondo work:' Schriner said by telephone last week during a ··stop in
South Carolina.
"We left Ripley with $1,000 and
that old motot home. We've never
run out of mon~ but .Ometimes
we've gotten to a town with
While Texas Gov. Geor:ge W.
Bush was setting fund-raising
records, collecting mOre than $80
million, Schriner has raised about
S13,000.That's about $1 a mile since
his cantpaign began in April 1999.
Schriner, 44, grew up in the
Cleveland area, g~aduated from
Bowling Gieen State University, and
worked for the Sandusky Register.
·He waa a subsrance abuse counselor
in Lorain, wrote a book about
Satanic rltuallun and ran aself-ttyled
Catholic mlnl•try In Ripl~ where
he allo wt«e weekly ~olunw for
the N-Democrat and Npley

The Dally Sentinel • Pag, A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

mittee, listed investment income
from 'Fifth Third Bank. He serves
as a member of the Energy Natural Resources and Environment
Coln!llittee a1,1d reported investment income from USXMarathon Oll. He also is chairman of the Senate Agriculture
and Natural Resources Committee, and reported income from a
farm.
Sen. White could not be
reached at his Manchester home
Sunday for comment.
The report also cited potential
conflicts for insurance agents
serving on the Insurance Committee, or lawyers who are members of the Judiciary Committee.

Rep. Dennis Stapleton, R Washington Court House, was
listed as a member of the House
Insurance Committee who
received both investment income
and employment income from
the Stapleton Pool. Insurance
Agency.
Rep. William Schuck, RColumbus, chairman of the Energy and Environment Committee,
made the list for a potential con~
tlict in the report because he listed investment income from Unocal Corp.
Messages left for Reps. Stapleton and Schuck were not
returned Sunday. Other examples of potential conflict include

memben of committees overseeing · financial institutions with
intemts in banks. The committee
listed Rep. Ronald V. Gerberry.
D.-Austintown, for having lnveltments in Sovereign Bank Corp.,
while Rep. Charles A. Wilson Jr.,
D-Bridgeport, reported income
from being a director or officer in
the Belmont National Bank.

VALLEY WEATHER

Storms possible for tonight
with a chance of showers and
The National Weather Service thunderstorms by midnight. Lows
says a weather disturbance passing in the upper 50s. South wind 5 to
through the tri-county area will to mph. Chance of rain 50 perbring scattered showers and thun- cent.
Thesday... Mostly cloudy with a
derstormS late tonight and early
Tuesday. Lows will be between 55 chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 70s.
and60.
Skies will be partly cloudy Tues- Chance of rain 50 percent.
Tuesday night ... Partly cloudy
day with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms statewide. Highs with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s.
wiltbe in the 70s.
Extended forecast:
A weak disturbance passing
Wednesday.
.. Mosdy cloudy with
·through the Ohio Valley brought
a
chance
of
showers
and thunder·partly to mostly cloudy skies
overnight. Temperatures as of 5 storms. Highs in the mid 80s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Lows
a.m. had fallen into the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:47 in the upper 50s and highs in the
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at upper 70s.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Lows in
6:10a.m.
·
the
upper 50s and highs in the
Weather foreca1t:
Tonight .. .lncreasing cloudiness upper 70s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOCAL STO&lt;CKS
~EP - 36Y.

Akzo-401.

AmTech/SBC - 42"1•
Ashland Inc. - 34 "1.
AT&amp;T - 35~
Bank One - 30\
Bob Evans - 131.

2'·

BorgWamer - 43
ChampiOn Charming Shops - 6~
City Holding - 10

Federal MOQ!ll - 111.
Flratar - 2~

Gannett - eolo
General Electric - st '4
Har1ty Davidson - 391.
Kmar1 - el•
Kroger - 20). '
Landa End - 33l.
Ltd. - 481.
Oak Hill Financial - 15),
OVB - 281.
One VBIIey - 33')•

Peoples - 17

Premier - 8
Rockwell - 39"•
~

Rocky Boots - 5
ROShell - 62\
SeOrs - 38
Shoney'a - '·

Wai·Mar1 - 57).
Wend 's - 21 ~

Worthfngton - 12
Daily stocl&lt; reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes of

the previous day's transactions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

The Office Of LarrY SPencer
Clerk of .Courts
fLesal DePartment OnlyJ
Will Be Closed On
TuesdaY. MaY 23rd
So EmPloYees Can
Attend Trainins

,. I

••

·~

•

•

�-·Mo~y, MIV 22, 2000

Page A2 • 'The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BU C K E Y .E BR I EFS
Floater's Identity.still unknown
PUT-IN-BAY (AP) - Police have not released the identity of a
nun whose body was found near a dock on South Bass bland in
Lake Erie.
Police believe the man fell into the water while climbing into his
boat about 5 a.m. Sunday.
Residents reported hearing a large splash. About three hours later
police received a report about a missing man who was supposed t~
be in the same area.
T he man's body was recovered about two hours later by divers.

Fines proposed for arena owner
COLUMBUS (AP) - A roofing contractor working on the
Nationwide Arena project could be fined as much as $109 ()()() for
violations that the Occupational Saf~ry and Health Admirrlstration
·
said endangered workers' lives.
T he agency announced the proposed fines Friday against
Kalkreuth R oofing and Sheet M etal ofWheeling, W.Va.
Government inspectors fo und on Feb. 1I that the company's
workers were installing the hoc key arena's roof at heights of as much
as 110 feet without proper protection f19m falls and without proper
training to prevent falls.
·
A safety line was in place, but OSHA alleged it ~s improperly set
up. No InJun es because of falls have been reported at the arena site.
Kalkreuth has three weeks to either accept or contest the OSHA
fin dings.
"Most employers come in and request a conference;' said Debo~ah Zubaty, area director for OSHA in Columbus. "They can come
m and talk to us and make a good-faith effort to fix the problems."
. Zubary.sa1d the company fixed nuny problems im mediately after
tnspectors noted them. She said the training problems were considered more serious because the _company also was cited on July 9,
1997, at another JOb Site for failmg to train workers to preve nt falls.
Kalkreuth offic1als d1d no t return a telephone caU requesting
comment Friday.
The $1 50 million arena is scheduled to open Sept. 9.

Builder enten guilty plea
SPRINGBORO (AP) - A builder has pleaded guilty to two
counts of petry theft over problems at a $517,000 house that was featu red during the region's annual Homearama last year.
James Colston of Colston Building Corp. was accused of failing
to honor a warranty or make repairs to one of I 0 luxury homes featured during the Dayton-area event.
The couple who bought the home said they paid more than
$40,000 to other contractors to fill: problems with the house and
yard. Colston's company filed for bankruptcy last July.
.
. The couple filed a claim against Colston in bankruptcy court a!)d
the petty theft complaints in Warren County Court. Colston pleaded guilty to the charges on May 2, and Judge James Heath ordered
him to make restitution ~ H e also gave him a suspended 90~day jail
sentence.
Colston's lawyer, David Chicarelli, said the builder has paid debts
to a plumber and an electrician and WJ;Ote a $12,750 check to the
couple who bought the home. ·
I

Webtser's editor dies at 79
SHAKER HEIGHTS (AP) - David B. Guralnik, former editor''-' in-chief ofWebster's New World Dictionary and an inter~ationally
known le1Qcographer has died at the age of79.
Guralnik died Friday at his suburban Cleveland home.
Guralnik spoke six languages and served as Webster's editor- inchieffor more than 35 years, retiring in 1985, He was considered an
~xpert on liang and was the firs.t to include "ain't" in the dictionary
m 1951 - something that was unheard of at the time.
"Lan~age isn't crea.ted by votes or people coming together and
aaylnJ. Hey. I like this word:" Guralnik told The Atsociated Preu in
a 1995 interview. ''Lanauate ha1 a life of it1 own."
iuthou11h Guralnlk aaid all wordl were his fivodtes, he believod
"OK" best expre!!ed the ~:reativity of Enlllim· •peaking American•.
liS 8n.t known \lie wu l,n the 19tll cenl\lry, as an abbreviation for the
&lt;l•libetately ml11pell~d' oil korrect" or "all correct.'' Now the phrase
11 111ed worldwide.
Gu!Wlik Wat born in Pevcland and earned bachelors and masters
depes from Western Reserve Univenity. In 1948 he was na med
editor-in- chief ofWebster's New World Dictionaries.
·

Monday, MIV 22, 2000

•

•

James L Wimpy' Hendricks
~IRCLEV ILLE -James L. "Wimpy" Hendricks, 67; Ciideville, died
Fnday, May 19, 2000 at his residence.
Born on July 14,1932 in Middleport, he was the son of the late James
and Clara A. Newton Hendricks.
He was a U.S. Army Korean War veteran, and past master and com·
.mander for Masonic Lodge 23.
He is survived by his wife, Doris Ramsey Hendricks; two daughters
and s.ons-m-law, Peggy and Steven N orman, and Stacy ami Daniel Myers
of Cudeville; and a granddaughter and several cousins.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesdayin Wellman Funeral Home, Circleville.
, Burial will be in Jackson Township Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.
Memo rial contributions may be made to 1-lospice of Pickaway County or North Court Church of Christ, Circlelville.

Martin M. Major Sr.

'

'Average Joe' runs for president in '74 van
.

.

r-------,;_.;.._.;;.._____________,

tu~~~~~~~f~~~~~~;-

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE SALE

CLOSEOUT· SALE.

21

natures by Aug.
to get on the ,
Ohio ballot, the Secretary of State's
office said - and similar numbers

=~~~a-mp~~~~ft~~n~~~;

FOR THE SEASON!

All FlatS &amp;
10" Hanging Baskets
4, p-a.. Cutti'""

•.

for signs, much less newspaper or
broadcast ads, Schriner is looking for
help.
Whnau.v
"We're going to have to tely on
1111
people making homemade signs,
1'!.--niums
'Vote for Joe:" he said.
'-'"'JU
Schriner gets a certain amount of
·
r __ ...1 •
50~
publicity becaus~ · of the folksy
..-.::~ Geraniums
~
' .
nature of his ~;impiign.
t
II
"In Columbus, we got about the
S • ru
uy 1\eg,
nee Get· .
nicest television piece that's been ......-o.:;P.;.•-.n.;D..;..a;;,;IIY:..;.M.. ..___9;;;.;92;;;;.,;·5;;;.;7..;..7.;8....;C.;Io;;;l;;;el;.;;d.-S-.u;.;;~;:;;.;;a.c;;·•;;....~
done on " Schriner said "I think
'·

v••

ss:·

•••

As Sh bbe ry a 1

p'

75 (

1 FREE

.

We remember thoae who

"'ce · · ·
·
He\ making a .wing tluou!Jh the ·
· Deep South thls week with hls wife,
~

as presidential candidates this ~;
said Kelly Huff, a spokeswoman for
the Federal Election Commission in
Washington. "Actually, you're not
even required to register · with us
unless you've t3ised more than "
$5,000.M
'
,
.

Joseph, 2. He u,ually shows up in a
town, hangs a banner and starts
shaking hands.
"We're kind of the whole campaign staff.' Schriner said. "I make
advance calh to media . ... My wife
has been contacting secretaries of
state to find out how many signa-

we're going to get a lot of votes out
of Columbus.''
There aren't many requirements
to run forpresident.The race is open
to anyone 35 years old who was .
born in the United States.
"We've had 219 people register

'

Liz, and children, Smh 4, and

\,

pa••ed away
and are eapecially dear to ue.

·On Saturcjay. May 2T. we wtll publlah a apeclal page diYOIICI to thoaa who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be almllar to the aample below;

IUDGEWAY .- Martin M. Major Sr., B3, Ridgeway, formerly of
Me1gs County, died Saturday, May 20, 2000 at his residence.
Born in Hardin County on March 3, 1917, he was .the son of the late
Fr.1nk and Melissa Harsh Major. He was a construction worker for Local
U nion 329 in Lima.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Ruby Lee Major on June
24, 1988; a daughter, Linda Sue Major; a· brother; Charles; three sisters,
Mildred Walters, Geneve Mclaughlin and Lucille Yelton; and two grandsons.
·
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Martin and Alberta Major
Jr., and Robert and Diana Major, all of Huntsville; five daughters and
sons-in-law,Janet and Charles Bland of Huntsville, Sheila and Milton Little, Angie and Emerson Little, and Judy and R obin Horne, all of Russells
Point; and Sherry and Dewayne Prater of Ridgeway; and 19 g~a ndchil­
dren and 20 great-grandchildren.
Services will be held 11 a.m.Tuesday at the Eichholtz Funeral !-lome
in Bellefontaine. The Rev. Wilkie Shepherd will officiate, and burial will
be in Huntsville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home tonight
from 6-9. ..

Jean Marie Trussell
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. - Jean Marie Trussell, 76, died Friday, May
5, 2000 at Riverside Regional Convalescent Center at Newport News.
. A native of Mason, W.Va., she had been a resident of Newport News
for 39 years. She retired from Riverside Regional Medical Center after
2Q years of service.
~he was preceded in death by her husband, Harold Eugene Trussell.
Survivors include her daughter, NancyT. Seals and her husband Steve,
o!Yorktown; two sons, Michael H. Trussell and his wife Pam, and Harold
~'Rick" E. Trussell and his wife, Robin, all of Newport News; seven
grandchildren, a sister, Mamie Noble of Mason, W.Va., and a brother
William Nease ofBuchanan,W.Va.
Services were conducted May 11 , 2000 in Peninsula Funeral Home by
th~ Rev. Lawrence J. Biermann. Burial followed in the Peninsula Memorilll Park.

~atteras

lighthouse.. to reopen
'

,_......

•,O.,w~~~~....... _

In blood banking to counbies worldwide

COLUMBUS (AP) - With over two- thirds of
the world's countries not ·supplying safe blood to
their people, the president of the An1erican Re\1
Cross says her organization plans to share technology · with other· countries in order to reduce th e
spread of AIDS and other diseases. "Our job is not done by simply achieving a safe
blood supply here, we must share our technology
w~th the resr,.of the world;' Dr. Bernadine Healy
wd Saturday. We made a pledge in Geneva and we
are doing this through many venues."
Healy, a former dean of the Ohio State University College of Medicine, was among 2,500 paid and
volunteer workers at the organization's three-day
75th national convention. Columbus also hosted the
finl American Red Cross conven1i on iii 1921.
According to the World Health . Organization,
more than 13 million pints of blood each year almost one- fifth of the world's annual consumption
- is not tested for all blood- borne infections.
·The WHO estimates that 5 to 10 percent of people with the AIDS were· infected via blood transfu sions and 80 percent of the world's population live
in countries with unsafe blood.
.
Besides AIDS, diseases such as hepatitis B and C,
malaria and syphilis can be transmitted through
blood transfusions.
.
·
·
'.' For the past 20 years, the R ed C ross and other
members of the world community have had the
world's greatest minds developing rigorous screening and sophisticated te.sting to achieve a level of
blood safety never before attained:' Healy said.
" We will teach other countries how· to make
their blood supply safe and how to screen donors."
The Red Cross has invested $300 million over
·the past five years ro establish eight state-of-the-art
testing laboratories. The organization performs eight
different tests to screen for: HI V I and II, hepatitis B
and C, syphilis, and hu.,an T-cell leukemia virus.

•

Led by more than 1.3 million volunteers, the $2.3
billion nonprofit organization currently aids more
than 50 nations, and has receptly- taken an increased
interest in international blood safety.
But transmissible· diseases are not the only issue,
in many countries which lack an organized transfu- ·
sion system, donated bltlod is just not available . .
Dr. Richard Davey, chief medical officer for the
American Red Cross, said the U.S. gets about 50
pints of blood donated per 1,000 people each year,
but in developing countries there are fewer than
two pints of blood donaied per 1,000 each year. Of
the 75 million pints of blood donated worldwide
each year, the poorest third of the world's ~ountries
ac count for just 1.3 million pints.
"It is a daunting challenge," Davey said Saturday.
"In Africa HIV is increasing and'that puts their fragile blood supply under even greater stress."
Even in the United States, finding enough blood ·
donors can be a problem.
"We need our blood here ," Davey said. "We
would be delightful if we had enough blood in the
U. S. to export it, but that is not the case.''
Blood donations in this country have dropped by
about l percent a year while the need for blood
increases by 1 percent a year.
. The National Blood Data R esource Center predicts that Amen cans will donate just under 11.7
million pints of blood next year - but hOspitals will
need 11.9 million pints.
·
~avey is also chairman of the Blood Program
Adv1sory Group for the International Federation of
Red Cross and Red Creseent Societies. T he soci·eties consist of 177 national humanitarian organizations and could potentially help more than 100 million people in need of blood transfusions or blood
products.
'
1 But most of the countries still need training,
technology and funding.

Andrews, David C
July ·10. 1961-M•y S, 191111

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
througho.Pt7me. ·
Alwayoln our hellrt.•,
John 1nd MonaAndnwt

and Family

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

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN TII~S SPEClAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $121F PICfURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop oft to
The Dally Slntlnal
With Fondalt Mamorlaa
111 Court St, Pomeroy, OH

•

r------~~~e~~!L~!P~§!~~~-!~~~~~~~~-·M_·--·--·--··~

.I

Please publish my tribute in the speical Memorial Day l'age on Friday, May 26. '·
Name of
· .
··
·1Relationship to inc
. Number of selected verse_,__ _
.Date of passing _ _ _._ __
1 Date of birth
'
I Veteran:..
· _____ Yes _ _ No•
1
l·Rank _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Branch of service: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....:,_ _~
\1Print your name here __________________..:,_·----~ : 1
1Address
Phone number _ _ _ _ __
l City
State: ____ ZiP•---1·
. Make Check Payfble to The Daily Sentinel

I

L------·--..:-'--------------

The Daily Sentinel

ftllflflll-llllowtoiiiiiiiPenv
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Reunion set

Auxiliary to meet

Class sets meeting

Herbalife founder Hughes dies

Pimic scheduled

Alumni to meet

Conflld

~MORE LOCAL NEWS.

1. We hold. you In our thouahllond memorlee forever. .
2. May Ood aadle you in His ann1, now and forever.
3. Forever mlased, nev~r fofJOIItn. Mty Ood hold yo~ In the palm of Hl1
hond.
.
.
4. Thank you for the wonderful daya we shared toaelher. My prayen will be
with you until we meet aaain.
· .
.5. The doys we shared.were sweet. Ilona to see you oaaln In Ood'a
heavenly alory.
6. Your c:ouraae and bravery still Inspire ua all, ond the niemory of yotll'
smile fills US With joy 1nd JaUJitler.
'
7. TholiJh out of sip~ you 'II forever be in my heort and mind.
8. The days may come and ao. but the times we shored wlll1lways remain;
9. May tbe llaltt of peace shine on your face far eternity.
10. May Ood'a anala aulde you IIIII proiiCI yau throupout time.
11. You were allaln In our llfe.thll bums forever Ia 0111 hearts.
12. May Ood's Jracellhlne over you tor all lime.
13. You are In our thou&amp;btt and pnyen fnlm -Ina to nlaJtt ond from
. year to year.
14. W, send thiS'Inc~ae with olovlnJ klu for etemalreotontl'happlneu.
15. May the Lord blilil you with His JriCIII and worm,lovlna hean.

carey to meet

BUXTON, N.C. (AP) - 'len wipe it down and make it premi;mths after the Cape Hatte~;a~ · sentabl~'"before we let people in;'
L~thouse's majestic journey to a Ranger Rob Bolling of the
n~ home a half-mile from the National Park Service said.
c.ruhing Atlantic b'reaken, its keepSoon after the lighthouse was
ti( are spiffing it up for weD-wish- moved, Hurricane Dennis floocled
~
the lighthouse grounds and blew
llwnPapA1
• ::Floors and staircases are being sand into the structure.
~pt and WindCIWS reinstalled in
The fact that the 4,800-ton deregulation legialation.
~iicipation of its official public lighthouse now sits 2,900 feet from
"They ·ought to use it as an
reopening Friday. The 208-foot its former perch ISO feet from the example of someone who did the
IISbthouse, the nation's tallest and ocean is a minor miracle. ·
right thing and itill got nailed to
best-known, has been closed to
When' it went into service in the wall;' Ray said. "We asked for
~ton since Nov. 22, 1998. The 1870, the lighthouse stood 1,600 an ethics opinion (and) were
qiove, costing $10 million and feet from the ocean - the same · given the go-ahead; we did the
'anning several weeks, was com- distance from the beach as now, but work, and it .wasn't a problem." .
~leted in July.
.
over the :decades erosio~ brought
Some. Ohio legislators had
• "We're going to sweep it out and the ocean steadily closer. "
multiple listings.
•
Sen. Doug White, R-Manches•
ter, had three listings. White, vice
chairman of the Senate Finance
. and Financial Institutions Com-~

American·Red Cross to offer expertise

EMS logs 15 calls

fnMn

POMEROY -The following estate trans- and Chester Water District, right of w'lj. Smith, to Mildred Johnson, Carrell Johnson,
easement, Middleport;
fers were recently reported by Meigs County Chester;
Roger W. Hysell, Barbara F. Hysell, to TupLyvonnia E. Boggs, Lyvonnia E. Young,
Recorder Judith A. King: ·
Martha F. Hoffman, deceased, to George A. pers Plains and Chester Water District, right of R oy Boggs, to Roger L. Adkins, Sandy K.
Hoffman, Vicki L. Owens, certificate, Middle- way;
,
.
Atkins, deed; Salisbury;
port;
Troy D. Guthne, Laura M. Guthne, to TupH arold Lawson to Jeremy Alexander
D'eborah A. Williams, to David D.,Williarns, pers Plains and C hester Water District, right of • Th omas, dee d, Le·tart'.,
·
C
h
deed, Scipio;
way,
ester;
D b A Mi
J h M'
S
f
. e ra . rgon, o n ugron, to tate o
Jon T Mugrage, Samantha D. Mugrage, to
Dolphus Burke, Jr., Wanda Burke, to John
.
.
R. Adams, Marsha L. Adams, deed, Columbia; Tuppers Plains and Chester Water District, Ohio, ~asement, Lebanon;
of
way,
Chester;
Davtd
Gtate,
to
Tuppeq
Plams
and
Chestef
.
right
, R usty D. Bookman, Margaret L. Bookman,
Clarence 'Atherton, Lucille Atherton, to Water District, right of way, Chester;
to Rusty D. Bookman, Margaret L. Bookman,
Tuppers Plains and C hester Water District;
Delbert E. VanMeter, Opal VanMeter, to
deed, Sutton;
right
of
way,
Chester;
Tuppers
Plains and Chester Water District,
Jack W. Carsey, to George E. Oiler, ElizaWilliam D. Carey, Diana F. Carey, to Tup- right of way, Sutton;
beth Oiler, deed, Pomeroy;
Delbert E. VanMetet, Opal VanMeter, to
Violet Brown, to Kenneth S. Brown, deed, pers Plains and Chester Water District, right of
way, Bedford;
Pomeroy;
·
• Tuppers Plains and Chester Water District,
Kenneth R.Wilt,Jr.: Ken Wilt, Kimberly E.
Beneficial Mortgage Co., to Joann Hick- , right of way, Sutton;
Wilt, Kimberly Wilt, to Martin L. Searls,Tina man, deed, Bedford;
.
T homas W. Karr, Diana S. Karr, to Tuppen
F. Searls, deed , Scipio;
Martha Chapman._deceased, R onald Rife, Plains and Chester Water D istrict right of
Mark A. Veney, Melinda K. Veney, to to R onald Rife, Marjorie A. Rife, deed, way; Sutton·
'
"
Salem·
'
·
·
Rober.t A.Venoy,Jr.. Lisa A.Venoy, easement;
' b hM D ·
J
A D · d d
Paul L. Grady, Catherine L. Grady. to TupEliza
Esther L.Venoy, to E. LoraineVenoy, Esther
et
. av1s, to oyce . av1s, ee ,
PI .
d Ch
nt
D' ·
'gh f
Salisbu ry;
pers ams an
ester water 1stnct, n to .
L. Veney, affidavit;
..
Keith A. Cook, Cecelia Lynne C ook, to way, Sutton;
Paul Hawk, to Tupper Plains and Chester
Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Olive;
Robert G. Edwards, to Teresa A. Evans, ·
Wa ter District, right of way, Chester;
Shanno n Mille r, Lori · Ann Miller, to deed, Olive;
Paula J. Wood, to Tuppers Plains and
Glenn R. Lawson, Eleanor R. Lawson, to '
C hester Water District, r ig~t of way. Chester; Columbus Southern Power, easement, Olive;
Ivan
D.
Booth,
Bernice
A.
Booth,
to
Pamela
Ann Lawson, deed, Olive;
Dorothy Hawk, to Tuppers Plains and
Mildred Spencer, deceased, to Daren G. '
Chester Water District, right of way, Chester; Columbus Southern Power, easement, Letart;
Pomeroy Gun Club-Inc., to Tuppers Plains
Charles F. Sntith, Charles Smith, Betty Jackson, William
Lee Jackson, affidavit, Letart
.
. •.

(IJSPS 213·960)
Olilo V•llof ...lll-1 Co.
Pwbliahed every 1flemooa', Mondty th rouah
Friday, 1 II C01ut St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by lbe
Ohio Valley 1'\Jbllahina Comp•ny.• Pomeroy,
Ohio 43769, Po. 99l-lU6. S..:ond ""' pool•
•lp paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.

'

.Vets

fldmP8pA1 ··

than conunon until you know
something about him;' Ashley said.
"Private Still was a black soldier
serving an all-white unit long
before colored soldiers were sup•MtiiiM:r: Tbc Asloclated Pn11, and lhc Ohio
: Newtp~per Allocialioft.
pose'dly peiTI)itted to serve:•
••PO.n'MASTER: Send address comet ion• to
"He is most likely the first black
•ne Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
soldier who ,died in this war:' he
:ohio4S769.
added.
,,.
·
,
SUBSCRJmON RATES
Ashl,ey alsb addressed a contro_,
BJ C.rrltr ar MoMr RHte
'"One Weeli: .................... ......................., .••..•$2.00
versy from 1999, when Still's name
Ono Monoh ................................................$8.70
was not included iri a monument
10M Ye•r .... ........................................... $104.00
in Washington, D.C., to U.S. col•
SINGLE COPY PRICE
ored rroops.
.
-!lolly ' .....................,...................... , .....50 c. ...
" His family was forced to prove
Sublcribera not delbiaaiO P1J UM carrier may
his race and service when tol~ 'it
remil in 1dvance dtre:c:c lo The D1ily Sealinel
on 1 three, six or 12 month buiL Crodlt will be
could not be possible;" Ashley said.
aJven· carrier each week.
"Once it was proven, he was
.No ••bKriplion by m•il permUted In l(eU
denied a place among U.S. Colwhere hOme ca111er service ia available.
ored Troops on this monument,
1i1her reserves the riJ)\t 10 adjud tllel durusing thl' puny excuse that'he didIn&amp; llw: sublcription period. Subacrlpl:l0111 rate
ochups may be implemented by cbln&amp;fn&amp;thc
n't actually serve in the U.S. Collion of the •ubimpion.
ore d']roops.'"
MAILSUISCRimONS
"This monument bears his
~
lllide Melp C011•t1
name as the only black soldier of
·t ! Weeb.................................................Sl7.30
'l6 Weeb................................................ .$53.R2
this county who died from Meigs
) i\veeb............................................... $105.56
County, and we honor him today
..
· ltlitel O.tlkle Mtlp Co••lJ
·13 Wecu.:..............................................$19.25
as well as the 63rd Ohio Volunteers
'2tl w..to.................................................$56.611
who saw past his race and saw only
)2 Wecb ............................................... SI09.72
a loyal American;' Ashley said.
Reader Services
The Brook..:Grant Camp, the
• Oar •• ,. tHCt,. . . . . . . .l'ltl .. 10 be
Women's Relief Corps, Daughters
cct~ralt. If'" ...., rtl•• error It • ..,.,
of Union Veterans, and the auxil~· ... - - · - •• C7•) w.t-2111......... '
·-c.eck 1••r l•for•allo• .. d ••ke •
iary of the SUV placed wreaths in
#vnuttua ttwamldtid.
·
memory of Still and his Meigs
•
N... . . . , . _..
,
~ •I•
tt2·2UJ. . . ......_,
comrades, and other participants
~
:
read poems and performed patri"Cnrnl M....-_!.............-·-E•L 1111
~.... - · - -·- - · - -Eo&lt;II02
otic music on period instruments.
- · · -.........- ..-Dr Elt.llN
It is estimated that more than
•
OtMr Senket
.,.,dnrtiol"l ..- -..- ··-··-...- £1~ 1104
500 Meigs County men died dur'tirttllodloo- .................- .....- ...- EIL IIQJ
ing the C ivil War.
~Ca.H'Itd Adi............- ................ - Elt.llot

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L O C AL BRI E FS

"Faith of the Heart."
Following the addresses, students
on May 27 at the school in
were recognized by Principal GorCoolville.
don Fisher. Honorarians recogPapAl
Anyone who has attended,
POMEROY - Units of the
nized were Stacy Joann Ervin,
mine our outcome. As , we enter Kimberly Maurene Ilue, Amber · Meigs . Emergency Services worked, or taught at the school is
this new phase of our lives, every- Dawn Maynard, Kyle Paul Norris answered 15 call$ for assistance invited to attend. The classes of
over the weekend. Units respond- 1925, 1930, 1935, 1940, 1945,
one has the potential to fulfill their and Julie Frances Nakao.
1950,1955 and 1960 wiU be honwildes.t dreams," added Randolph.
The seniors were presented by ed as follows:'
ored.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
In his speech, co-valedictorian Superintendent James Lawrence to
Doors will open at 5 p.m., the
Saturday. 5:46 a.m., Union
Brandon Wolfe recalled watching Bob Collins, Southern Local
Pomeroy,
Louise meeting will ,be held at 6 p.m.,
past graduations and thinking that Board of Education president, who Avenue,
Gilmore,Veterans Memorial Hos- and dinner will be served at 7
he would never be up on the stage presentell' diplomas.
p.m. The price is $10 per person
R eceiving diplomas · were: pital;
obtaining his diploma.
in
advance, and SIS at the door.
10:41
a.m.,
West
Main
Street,
"Now that I am up here, I think Michael Henry Ables, Jessica Rae
that my time here has gone by way Alley, Tiffany Diane Barnes, Erin Pomeroy, Shirl Music, refused Reservations may be sent to the
CCTAA, Rt. 2-273 1 Lottridge
too fast. There's a famous quote N ichole Bolin, James Benton treatment;
Road,
Coolville, Ohio 45723.
12:08 p.m., West Main Street,
that says, 'Time flies when you're Boso, Sarah Ann Brauer, William
having fun.'Well, I think I speak for Perry Coe, Willie Mason Collins, Rudy Cassillas, VMH , EdY(ard Information is available from
Ledra Tanner at 667-3781.
a lot of people up here when I say Steven Cremeans, Carly Ann Slusher, refused treatment;
4:0B
p.m.,
Bailey
Run
Road,
C
row,
Adam
Victor
Cumings,
that the last 12 years have really
Heather Ervin Dailey, Joshua Tyler Michelle Roush, refused treatflown by."
Davis,
Joshua David D istelhorst, me nt;
Wolfe cong~atulated Randolph
POMEROY State Rep.
5: 11 p.m., assisted by Columbia
and Baker on their achievements Kim Marie Freeman, Donald Lee
and thanked family, friends and Greene, Courtney Jessanna Haines, Township as First Responder, John Carey, R -Wellston, will hold'
teachen for always being there for Ianzoe Bnwn Herman, Autumn Robert Bell, O'Bieness M emori- an open door session at the Meigs
Counry Courthouse on Friday
Brooke Hill, Ryan Morgan Hill, al Hospital;
him.
11 :59 p.m., Lincoln H eights, from 9-10 a.m.
"I, as I'm sure all of you are, am Anita Nicole Holter, Samantha
anxious to go into the world and Marie Hysell, Michael Jason Imbo- Pomeroy, Tristan Garnes;
Sunday, 1:39 p.m., sheriff's
become a successful person. Every- den.
office,
assisted by Pomeroy as First
D
enis
Michelle
Keyes,
Amanda
one has a plan for success, but
PO MEROY - Meigs High
R
esponder, Wayn e Milhoan,
everyone has a different definition Dawn Lang, Peggy Ann Lawrence,
School class of 1990 will have a
of success. Don't listen to anybody, Jeremiah Lee Lawson, Larai ne VMH;
5:41 p.m., Naylors Run R oad, reunion Saturday at Salisbury Eledo what you believe is best for Brook Lawson, Stacy Alane Lyons,
mentary School in Pomeroy. The
Raymond Jeffiey Michael, Jerome Annette Pierce, treated;
YQU," said Wolfe.
10:06 p.m., Wehe Terrace, assist- family picnic will be held at I
" Proverbs 16:3 says,'Commit to Scott Mihlbach, Ryan Patrick
the Lord · whatever you do, and Nease, Christopher Allen Proffi tt, ed by Pomeroy, Rick McClellan, p.m and an adult gathering at B
p.m . Questions may be directed
your plans will succeed.' With a Donald Allen Proffitt, Joshua James VMH;
B p.m., Pearl Street, Tamera to J ay Humphreys, 992-9101.
strong faith in God, any goal is Pullins, Russell Duane R eiber, Tara
Miller,
treated;
Beth Rose, Dena Michelle Sayre,
reachable," added Wolfe.
11 :59 p.m., Village Mano r,
Sarah Ann Brauer, class presi- Roberta Jeanette Scarberry, Misty
dent, gave the welcome, followed Dawn Sellers, Cassandra Dawn Homer Edward Gordon,VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
.
OLIVETWP.
by an invocation by Studer and the Smith.
Sunday, 4:23 p.m., Rye Road Auxiliary of Tuppers Plains VFW
Ed William Smith, Jarod Warner
Pledge ofAllegiance led by Laraine
Brook Lawson, student council Smith, Jonathan Clyde Smith, and State Route 6B 1, with will meet Tuesday at the hall. A
Amanda Renee Spaun, Autumn Reedsville squad, David Weber potluck supper will be held at
president
Choir members, directed by Deanne Thomas, Thomas M ason and Erin Weber, refused treat- 6:30 p.m. followed by the installation of new officers at 7:30 p.m .
Choir Director Greg Vance and Ware, Stacy Renee Wilson, Jarod ·ment; C onnie Abbott, OBMH .
POMEROY
accompanied by Jocelyn Bailey, Scott Wolfe, Jody Lynn Wolfe, and
Saturday,1 2:08 p.m.,West Main
sang "Time of Your Life" and Lena Ruth Yoacham.
Street, Mary Todd , refused treatLONG BOTTOM - Eastern
ment;
· Sunday, I :04 p.m., Leading High School class of 1960 will
Creek Road, assisted by Rutland, have a picnic at the Long Bottom
structure fire, Melanie Lee resi- Community building Saturday at
noon. For furthe£ information,
MALIBU, Calif. (AP) - Mark Reynolds Hughes, founder of the dence, no injuries reported.
call378-6149.
Herbalife empire of weight loss and nutritional products, has died at age
TUPPERS PLA1NS
44, authorities said Sunday.
Sunday, 9:33 p.m., Greenup
Hughes was found dead .in his Malibu mansion, said Los Angeles Lane, llene Bahr, Holzer Medical
County sheriff's Sgt. Norine Plett. He died of apparent natural causes but Center.
RACINE Rac.ine High
an autopsy will determine the cause of death, she said.
·
School
class
of
1960
will have a
Los Angeles-based Herbalife, which Hughes founded in 1980, sells
picnic at the residence of Bob
weight management, personal care and nutritional products.
Wingett,
Syracuse, Saturday at
According to the company's Web site, Hughes was inspired to found
COOLVILLE Coolville
noon.
For
more information, class
the company by the d~ath of his mother from an accidental overdose of Carthage-Troy Alumni Association will hold its annual dinner members may call 985-3581.
p~ription diet pills when he was 1,8 .

Grads

Meigs recorder posts recent land transfers

C INCINNATI (AP) - Ohio
has been home to eight United
States presidents - G~ant, Hayes,
Garfield, McKinley, Harding, Taft
and two Harrisons. Joe Schriner
wants to be No. 9.
The former writer and substance
abuse counselor is on the road with
his low-budget campaign, traveling
in a 197 4 Dodge Xplorer that has
seen 161,000 miles.
"We bought it for 15 hundred
bucks and I've been fixing it up as
we go - a little sanding, a little
Bondo work:' Schriner said by telephone last week during a ··stop in
South Carolina.
"We left Ripley with $1,000 and
that old motot home. We've never
run out of mon~ but .Ometimes
we've gotten to a town with
While Texas Gov. Geor:ge W.
Bush was setting fund-raising
records, collecting mOre than $80
million, Schriner has raised about
S13,000.That's about $1 a mile since
his cantpaign began in April 1999.
Schriner, 44, grew up in the
Cleveland area, g~aduated from
Bowling Gieen State University, and
worked for the Sandusky Register.
·He waa a subsrance abuse counselor
in Lorain, wrote a book about
Satanic rltuallun and ran aself-ttyled
Catholic mlnl•try In Ripl~ where
he allo wt«e weekly ~olunw for
the N-Democrat and Npley

The Dally Sentinel • Pag, A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

mittee, listed investment income
from 'Fifth Third Bank. He serves
as a member of the Energy Natural Resources and Environment
Coln!llittee a1,1d reported investment income from USXMarathon Oll. He also is chairman of the Senate Agriculture
and Natural Resources Committee, and reported income from a
farm.
Sen. White could not be
reached at his Manchester home
Sunday for comment.
The report also cited potential
conflicts for insurance agents
serving on the Insurance Committee, or lawyers who are members of the Judiciary Committee.

Rep. Dennis Stapleton, R Washington Court House, was
listed as a member of the House
Insurance Committee who
received both investment income
and employment income from
the Stapleton Pool. Insurance
Agency.
Rep. William Schuck, RColumbus, chairman of the Energy and Environment Committee,
made the list for a potential con~
tlict in the report because he listed investment income from Unocal Corp.
Messages left for Reps. Stapleton and Schuck were not
returned Sunday. Other examples of potential conflict include

memben of committees overseeing · financial institutions with
intemts in banks. The committee
listed Rep. Ronald V. Gerberry.
D.-Austintown, for having lnveltments in Sovereign Bank Corp.,
while Rep. Charles A. Wilson Jr.,
D-Bridgeport, reported income
from being a director or officer in
the Belmont National Bank.

VALLEY WEATHER

Storms possible for tonight
with a chance of showers and
The National Weather Service thunderstorms by midnight. Lows
says a weather disturbance passing in the upper 50s. South wind 5 to
through the tri-county area will to mph. Chance of rain 50 perbring scattered showers and thun- cent.
Thesday... Mostly cloudy with a
derstormS late tonight and early
Tuesday. Lows will be between 55 chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 70s.
and60.
Skies will be partly cloudy Tues- Chance of rain 50 percent.
Tuesday night ... Partly cloudy
day with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms statewide. Highs with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s.
wiltbe in the 70s.
Extended forecast:
A weak disturbance passing
Wednesday.
.. Mosdy cloudy with
·through the Ohio Valley brought
a
chance
of
showers
and thunder·partly to mostly cloudy skies
overnight. Temperatures as of 5 storms. Highs in the mid 80s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Lows
a.m. had fallen into the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:47 in the upper 50s and highs in the
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at upper 70s.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Lows in
6:10a.m.
·
the
upper 50s and highs in the
Weather foreca1t:
Tonight .. .lncreasing cloudiness upper 70s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOCAL STO&lt;CKS
~EP - 36Y.

Akzo-401.

AmTech/SBC - 42"1•
Ashland Inc. - 34 "1.
AT&amp;T - 35~
Bank One - 30\
Bob Evans - 131.

2'·

BorgWamer - 43
ChampiOn Charming Shops - 6~
City Holding - 10

Federal MOQ!ll - 111.
Flratar - 2~

Gannett - eolo
General Electric - st '4
Har1ty Davidson - 391.
Kmar1 - el•
Kroger - 20). '
Landa End - 33l.
Ltd. - 481.
Oak Hill Financial - 15),
OVB - 281.
One VBIIey - 33')•

Peoples - 17

Premier - 8
Rockwell - 39"•
~

Rocky Boots - 5
ROShell - 62\
SeOrs - 38
Shoney'a - '·

Wai·Mar1 - 57).
Wend 's - 21 ~

Worthfngton - 12
Daily stocl&lt; reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes of

the previous day's transactions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

The Office Of LarrY SPencer
Clerk of .Courts
fLesal DePartment OnlyJ
Will Be Closed On
TuesdaY. MaY 23rd
So EmPloYees Can
Attend Trainins

,. I

••

·~

•

•

�PageA4

_Th_e_D_ai~cy_.s_en_ti_ne_l________________C)~~~~~~C)fl

Moncl.y. May 12, 2000 ~
.
·'L

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

..'_.
,;

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

Advertlalng Director

Oener111 Manager

.,

..

R. Shawn Lewle

Larry Boyer

Charlene Hoeflich

etllhlerOfuae.net

' Managing Editor

Ull•n to til• tfliiOr lll'f wckoM•. nu, 1lw1dd H l•ss tluur 300 ...,rtls. AU leftm an 11lbjcc'
IG UliUrr and Mtnl bw sl&amp;rtfd ••4 ittcltuh tuldnu ••4t,lqlumw tu1mHr. No •Mipld ltfttn will
h pltblblle4. Lltkrl 11ttntl4 bf bt po.tt.,ll, UdrnJillf ""'"• 1tol lHNOrltllilin.
'lJI• uriJtiMu .x,-nhl U. tlct MIMMII 6tlo1!14rt 1111 COitstttiMI oftltl Oltio VDU•J PdiUIWr&amp;

Co.) 1diwMI boanl, 1111less otJ.erwl.r• 11oled.

..•

NATIONAL VIEWS

.

"
'

Air ball

".,
.,,

Indiana qfficials looked other
way on ~obby Knight

"

.,

Hoosier brass cho ked Monday. Indiana University President Myles
Brand shot an air ball. He announced basketball coach, Bob Knight
would be ' uspended for three games, fined $30,000 and forced to
follow a supervised code of conduct. Knight will be allowed to keep
his job despite his "pattern of inappropriate behavior,'' but one slipup and the coach is history.
The punishment is akin to expecting the
A look at
great white s)lark not to grab the chunk of
mea~ because it's meant for the blue marW at . .
lin.
Knight's crude and repulsive behavior
should have got him fired years ago ....
•
Brand in essense said Monday that what
Knight did is tolerable. To be sure, the university shares culpability through its silence all these years. The man
is a bully. His behavior has embarrassed the university and the state
of Indiana. His antics send the message to young people that abusive behavior by coaches is acceptable, even admired ....
. IU ,presidents looked the other way. Athletic directors looked the
other way. Alumni, fans, and even players and their parents looked
the other way. On Monday, Brand and the school's board of trustees
all looked the other way....
. • 11le Miami Herald, o" A IDS drugs for poor nations: Those
fighting AIDS got some powerful allies this week when five of the
world's largest drug companies agreed to slash the prices of HIV
drugs for people living in poor nations. That means millions ofpeo~
pie throughout.Africa anq the Caribbean Basin living with HIV, the
Virus that causes AIDS, will now get access to those lifesaving drugs.

h US
newspapers
are sayrng

Still, the biggest hurdle was the cost of the drugs. The lower
prices, though still too high for many, will go far in combating this
epidemic. The combination of three or four drugs needed to keep
the virus at bay will now cost between $150 and $200 a month tn
those countries, unlike the $10,000 and S15,000 a year it c_osts in
the United States and Europe.
.
President Clinton ... commendably issued an executive .onder
declaring that the United States will not interfere with countries
that viblate American patent laws to provide AIDS drugs at lower

.

That should be a warning to the drug companies. Profit margins
are ;,ever more imp?rtant than life itself.
• Noiill•li (Okla.) Trilntalpt,. on P~oplc for t,lre Ethical Treat-

ment ofAnimals:

.

.

We haven't seen one in our area yet, but we've been reading about
biUboai:ds in other places bearin~ the message, 'Jesus was a vegetarian.n
The latest coqtroversy stirred up by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals gets Christian carnivores riled in just about every
. city it hits ..·...
.
'
.
The Bible is mostly silent on what Jesus ate, preferrmg to focus
on what he taught, but it's not entirely silent. We refer the reader to
th~ 24th chapter of Luke, where the risen Je!US appears to the disciples.·In verses 41-43 we read, "And while they yet believed not for
joy, and wondered, he said unto them, Have ye here any meat? And
th!:y gave him a piece of broiled fish, and of an honeycomb. And he
took it, and did eat before them." Pareve but not vegetarian, unless
you consider fish a vegetable.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, May 22, the l43nd day of2000. there are 223 days
lett .in the. year. ;
'](xlay's Highlight in History:
·
·
M;~y 22, 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enacted as Congtl!SS
appropriated military and economic aid fo.r Greece and Turkey.
On this date:
In 1761, the first life insurance policy in the United States was
issued, in Philadelphia.
.
In 1813, composer Richard Wagner was born in Leipzig, Germany.
In 1819, the Savannah, the first steam-propelled vessel to ~mpt a
transatlantic crossing, departed tiom Savannah, Ga. (It reached Liverpool, England, after 29 days.)
·
In 1868, the seven-member Reno gang made off with $96,000 in
loot from "the Great Train Robbery" near Marshfield, Ind.
In 1900,Th~Associated Press (founded in 1848) was incorporated
in New York as a non-profit news cooperative.
In 1939,AdolfHitler and Benito Mussolini signed a "Pact of Steel"
commi¢ng Germany and 1;\y to a military alliance. . . .
.
In 1969 the lunar module of Apollo 10 Oew to Within rune nules
of the mo~n's surface in a dress rehearsal for the first lunailanding.
In 1972, the islartd of Ceylon .formerly ruled by Britain, became the
.
.
republic of Sri Lanka.
In 1979, Canadians voted in parlian1enury elecnons that put the
Progressive Conservati~ in power.
.
In 1992, after a reign lasting nearly 30 years, Johnny Carson hosted
NBC's "Tonight Show" for \he last time:
. _
.
Today's Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judit~
1&lt; 7R. Smger C harles
Aznavour is 76. Actor Michael Constanbne IS 73. Conductor Peter
Nero is 66.Actor-director Richard Benjamin is 62.Act&lt;ir Frank Converse is 62.Actor Michael Sarrazin is 60. Acror Paul Winfield is 59.

On

CJ:•st

Dear Ann Landers: It's time to break
out the wet noodle. You gave a terrible
response to the man on the plane who
was seated next to a passenger with a cat.
Th.e woman had smuggled her cat
abQard, and was holding it on her lap.
Uqfortunately, her seatmate was allergic
to cats. You were right when you said he
shJuld have asked the flight attendant to
move him to another seat. You were
wrong, however, when you said the
woman should have placed the cat in an
animal carrier and put it in cargo.
Airline cargo holds are absolutely NO
PLACE for an animal. These holds are
inrended for baggage and other freight ,
not for living creatures. Many airlines do
no,t regulille the air pressure or the oxygen in cargo, and an animal placed there
for an extended perio~ of time could
suffocate. The cargo hold is also not
sound-insulated, which means the animals would 1&gt;e subjected to the deafening

Ann
Landers
ADVICE

·

roar of the engines, and their hearing is
very sensitive. Furthermore, baggage
handlen have no more respect for animal
crates than they have for luggage. Any
animals in cargo could be injured or
killed through careless handling.
I wouldn't send a cockroach by air
cargo.•That woman who loved her cat
would have been horrified to find it dead
in its crate upon arrival. Please tell your
readers NEVER to .check their pets as
airline cargo. If you must bring your pet

on a plane, put it in a carrier, and stow it
under your seat. This type of"carry-on"
luggage is permitted by most airlines. If
the pet is too large for a carrier, drive to
your destination instead of' taking a
plane, or leave the animal at home. However much you might miss your pet,
coming home will be a lot happier when
" Fluffy" is alive to greet you. Pass the
word, Ann. - Animal Lover in Memphis, Tenn.
Dear Memphis: Thank you for a
sensible letter. The local humane society
ought to send you rwo dozen roses, Cat
lovers all over the world will appreciate
what you have written.
· Dear Aim Landers: You recendy
printed a letter from a reader who was
upset because her parents favored her
brother. "The Doctor," and always
bragged about him. I felt a bit uneasy
when I read that letter, because I saw
myself in it. Although I do not favor one

BY CONCEPCION DooLEN
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER

'

.
"

Washington press corps swoon~for a bunco artist

-.

1 •

On April29,1 attended- for the first time
- the allegedly prestigious White Hpuse
Correspondents' Association dinner. The stars
were two stand-up comics: Jay Leno and the
president of the United States.
The audience at the Washington Hilton
included about 2,000 renowned print and
television journalists, as well as celebrities
from Hollywood and network television. 1 am
grateful to The Washington Times for the
invitation, because the evening changed · my
view of many in ihe Washington press corps
NEA COLUMNIST
- ~nd not for the better.
In his May 3 Washington Times column,
Tony BlaQkley wrote that , "almost alone" The jokes that continually broke up the
among the guests, he was "appalled both by sophisticated diners were intended to cloak
President Clinton's performance and by the · the ways he has dishonored his office by
positive response of the audience."
enabling him to be seen as "the poor soul"
He was not alone. During' several standing who is, after all, only human.
ovations for the president, 1 remained seated.
Now that he has survived, partly by makAnd although many laughed at his jokes until ing people ·laugh 'at his bumbling misadventhere were tears in their eyes, I was disgusted, t1.1res (his routine that night has been widely
not amused. 1 have greatly enjoyed Richard televised), he shows what good sports we all
Pryor, Dick Gregory, Moms Mabley and are. And the president - · ·after all the mortifiLenny Bruce (who was a friend); but they did cation he has endured from Ken Starr and
not memorize someone else's script. They other prudish, malicious "right-wing zealots"
improvised and they boldly and hilariously - shows that he is the best sport of all.
skewered the hypocrisies of the powerful As Tony Blankley astutely put it, "By gainin and out of po~tics. They did not - as the ing the laughter of the political and media
president always does - focus on the way elite in tire room (and the American viewing
one's ability to rise from adversity increases audience), he implicates them as after-the-fact
one's own glory.
co-conspirators with him."
Clinton's performance was written by
During the evening, 'Clinton made a joke
Mark Katz of the Soundbite Institute. Katz about Travelgate. Amid the laughter, I wonalso ghosts for AI Gore and Hillary Rodham dered if Billy Dale, who ran the White House
Clinton, who is not notable for her wit. Video rravel office, was watching C-Span. Clinton
clips assembled by ·Phil Rosenthal, the creator ruined the man's life by falsely accusing him
and producer of "Everybody Loves Ray- of misuse of funds.
mond,'' were shown during the president's
I guess writer Mark Katz couldn't come up
,•monologue. For some reason the president with a joke about the president's tampering
neglected to acknowledge his helpers. I won- ·with witnesses involved in the impeachment
der if they did this pro bono, as a patriotic ser- proceedings. ~or could. he find any humor in
vice.
,
the way Clmton deliberately derued due
The president's st_amp was on every line. process - elemental fairness - . to another

N
at
Hentoff

tr

citizen, Paula Jones, by deliberately lying during a deposition in her case. White, House,,.
· Special Counsel Lanny Davis might have spun. ;
it if he had been asked to work on the script. ·1
Ilut the correspondents who orchestrate&lt;;!, ,,
the event much preferred Jay Leno, whg.;;
poked at some sore spots in what will be tl:le. ~
Clinton legacy, but never really darkened the ..~
overall tribute to The Comeback Kid. And•~
Leno practically genuflected in praise of the, !~
president's comic timing.
.. :~
That night, .] ran into a couple of journal-.;
ists who also declined to join the ovations fqr ,;
the president. Particularly outraged was Ma~t .,
Drudge, the "lonely pamphleteer" who is
looked down upon by his more establishnle0,t(1
colleagues.
Drudge railed at what has become of~~.
press, which used to , bask in its critical ind~
pendencc but now cheers a bunco arti~"
Drudge told me that Deputy Attorney ' Geti~
era! Eric Holder - fresh from his role ~1
OJ:!:hestrating the commando raid that extrac~~
ed Elian Gonzalez - chided such criticism 9J~
the merry correspondents' dinner. ''It's all i§:
good humor,'' Holder told Drudge.
· ,,.:
As the laughter of the audience rolled oni::£~
t~ought of my mentors in journalism: Geor~
Seldes, I. F. Stone and Murray Kempton.·~
don't think they would have joined the stan,cf&gt;'j
i~g ovations for this president. And. I remetJl::'l
· Hered my first editor, William H_arriso?~
whom I worked for when I was 19 years olil-.,.
He ran a weekly newspaper for black readers~
,:rhe Boston Chronicle.
.~·:
+ "There are three rules here," he told m(.~
"Accuracy, clarity, and don't let the peop~
you cover con you."
:~
Ai last I know who the inveterate WaslJ:-.7:
. !ngton insiders are. They're the press corps. :l
.
: ;:
, (Nat .Hentoff is a nationally renowned autl1~ri~

on tile Frrst Amendment and the rest
Riglrts.)

May is Older Americans Month and caregivers are recognized as essential to the quality of life many older people enjoy. An estimated seven million Americans are informal
caregivers providing unpaid help to older ·
persons living in the community. They
include spouses, aduli children and other relatives and friends.
If you are involved in the care of older
persons, you should be familiar with Social
Se!~urity and how it works to provide service
to older A~ericans , For example, if the person is unable to handle his or her funds ade.quately, you can become the "representative
payee" and receive the benefits on his or her
behalf. The representative .payee is responsible for assuring that the benefits are spent for
the person's basic needs and to account for
the funds periodically. While most representative payees are relatives, payees may also be
a friend, neighbor, church or other concerned organization.
"Another service that may be helpfUl to
tW.- i\Wti'Oh 'lfi )'Oil'f,care iJ direct deposit' d£
'

.

If you are involved in the care

b~nefits to the bank. Direct deposit saves

time and reduces the risk of check loss and
theft. The money is there whether at home
or vacationing away from home. More than
half of current beneficiaries already use
direct deposit. To start direct deposit, all you
have to do is call us.
Our toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213,
provides 24-hour-service, 7 days a week. To
talk to a representative, you need to call from
7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. The
telephone may be busy around the first of
the month and early during the week, so if
your business is not urgent, it's best to call at
other times.
If you are calling on behalf of someone
else, he or she must be at the phone with
you so that We can speak to him or her and

LTIS3 Lawn.Ductor
• ,JJ-hp engine • 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed .shift-on-the-go transmission

...

(AP) - With responses from
over 3,500 readers nationwide, the
results of Jane magazine's 2000
Entertainment Poll are reported in
the June/july issue. Among the
highlights:
• Actress voters want to be
(or be with): Angelina Jolie.
Runners-up: Julia Roberts and
Drew Barrymore.

Social Security facts
• Nine of out of 10 individuals age 65 and
older receive Social Security benefits.
• Social Security benefits represent an
average of 40 percent of an elderly individual's income.
• About rwo-thirds of aged Social Security beneficiaries receive 50 percent or more
of their income from Social Security.
• Social Security is the only source of
income for approximately 18% of the elderly.
• The poverty rate for elderly Americans
has dropped from 35 percent in 1959 to 11
percent in 1996.
· • Without Social Security, nearly SO percent ot the elderly would be living in poverty.

Live in one state,·
work in another?

$1 999•
I

:~

ONLY

• ;,i

·~

..:~.

\~

Economy, like people, needs to take .it easy

.
.
h I ,t·i~
enough evidence o f in fl ation to support its and manpower resources, .a sttuallon t at e
·~ untreated has always led to rising prices an&lt;S
NEW YORK - Even those specimens usual paranoia."
We're
running
out
of
skilled
workers.
sometimes then to recession.
.,~
that seem to be the healthiest may have to
The N ationa! Federation of Irtdependet1ti
change their lifestyles, lest sometime later Employment costs are rising. Businesses
eliminating those price cuts we've become Business, which claims ·its members refle~
. they face serious problems.
· While this sounds like a doctor warning a accustomed to for a de~ade . J;he sensiole· · Main Street business, reports that findinl'!\;
Type A person to take it easy, it applies just thing, you might conclude, is fot businesses qualified workers ~n Apri.I was its No. ~:
:"
as well to the economy, which the Federal to cut their costs, but they can't. Productiv1- problem, the most mtense m 25 years.
Based on survey reports, William Dunkel;:
Reserve has repeatedly indicated is showing ty gains that had kept costs low have be,en
utilized to the limit . Energy prices are high. berg, the federation's economist, (whos,ti
signs of hypertension.
findings are relayed to the Fed), finds th"t
The' Fed's prescription: Stop thinking. this Raw materials too.
Moreover, custbm ers are waiting in line at member responses to worker shortage is t~
economy is invincible. Take a dose of interthe
door.
· try even harder to hire.
·.
est-rate medicine now, move to a slower
pace and avoid the troublesome conseSlow down and, you hand your competi~or
The Fed's response is an oid one: If co~
your share of sales. Car sales at an unprece- sumers and business won't or can't slow o·
quences that otherwise are sure to follow.
Those potential consequences, lest any- dented annual r~te of 17 million-plus."Hous- their own, then for their own good we'
· make them slow.
~
one still hasn't heard, begin with prices ris- es ~re selling, and appliances too.
Where, in the world does all the money
And, as usual, higher interest rates are i~E
ing, which then could lead to runaway inflaanswer.
,.
tion, ruinously high interest rates and, hard , 'c dme fronl?
From the nearest thing to full employMeanwhile, the basic indicators
eco_::
to believe, economic collapse.
Most people still haven't felt the signs of ment the country has experienced in sever- nomic health remain strong, and ifseriou~
al decades, with the unemploym ent rate just inflation can be avoided, the consensus fore.:!
serious inflation.
And they may view the Fed as a crank at below 4 percent of the civilian labor force. · cast is for the economy to expand at leasi!
the party. But those who study· the econom- From strong profits. From 1999'! $350 bil- through the year 2000.
.
~
ic organism say it's there, subtly 1but observ- lion in· stock market capital gains. From easy
Dut, Dr. Greenspan would add, at a sh,&gt;w&lt;
credit.·
er pace. For its own good.
.~
ably.
All this, the Fed reasons, has fu eled a· level
Oolrn Cunn!ff is a business analyst forT1~e Assool
David Wyss of Standard &amp; Poor's states
the 'C ase succinctly: "The Fed now has of demand beyond the economy's physical dated Press.)
BY .JoHN CUNNIFF

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• 48-inch convertible mowing deck
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through July 5 we're offering dollars off some of our most coveted models. So head to
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CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp;LAWN, INC.

of

,..

618 East Main St.
1·740·992·6674

• 20-hp diesel engine
• 8-speed gear transmission
• Mid- and rear-PTO

.

BUSlNESS MIRROR

I

• Acton voters want to be
with: Jude Law. Runners-up: Brad
Pitt and Ben Affieck.
• Most overrated male actor:
Tom Cruise. Runners-up: Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt.
·
• Most overrated female '
actor: Gwyneth · Paltrow. Runners-up: Julia Roberts and Jennifer
Love Hewitt.

4100 Compact Utility lhlctor

JUST

of tire Brll r!a

.

Magazine polls readers on celebS

verify that you have permission to receive
tl0e information.
For more information on So.cial Security
rules you should know, call our ~oil-free
number and ask for the leaflet, Social Security: Understanding The Benefits, or visit
our website, www.ssa.gov.

of older persons, you should be
familiar with Social Security and
how it works to provide service to
older Americans.
.

Proud Mom in L.A,
Dear Mom: It appears as if you have
a right to brag about your d:iughter, too.
She sounds like a well-grounded, selfassured young woman who suffered .not
at all by being slighdy ouahined by her
star-quality brother. Congratulations on
a job well done, Mom.
Gem of the Day: Families are like
fudge - mosdy sweet, with a few nuts.
Have trouble sleeping at night and
don't want to get involved in a novel?" A
Collection of My Favorite Genu of the
Day" is the perfect bed-stand mate. Send
a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money order for
$5.25 (this includes postage a'!d handling) to: Collection, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 111.60611-0562
(in Canada, $6.25). To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creaton Syndicate
web page at www.creators.com.
-

'

VVhat caregivers should know about Soda[ Security
HENTOFF'S VIEW

Monay• .,_, 22. 2000

child over the other, I do brag about my
son a great deal.
Our oldest child, a daughter, tried college, and decided it wasn't for her. She is
now a receptionist in a large law firm, a
valuable and well-paid member of their
support staff. Our much younger son
decided to attend the Naval Academy in
Annapolis, Md. The competition to be
admitted was very stiff, but he scored
extremely well, and was accepted. One of
our proudest days was attending his graduation. He is now a full lieutenant, has
been to 14 countries, and is about to
receive his graduate degree in engineermg.
Are we proud ofhim?You bet. Do we
brag about him? Absolutely. After I saw
that letter in your column, I felt guilty,
and phoned my daughter and asked if it
bothered her that I did so much bragging
about her brother. She replied," Are you
kidding? I brag about him all t.he time!"

SOCIAL SECURITY
•

• 1be Des Moines (Iowa) Repster, on Bobby Kniglzi: The

cosa.

IJ the Beild

·.::__ _ _

Reader says airline cargo holds are no place for animals

PROTESTED THE WAR.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chartea W. Govey
Publleher

0fAHlfR.
........"" --

IT WAS 1liE SIXn&amp;s...
I DID MY PART &amp;

'£sta6Cishd in 1948

_Th_e_D~ai-=-ly_Se_n_tin_e_l_

Page AS

Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

$9,995·

�PageA4

_Th_e_D_ai~cy_.s_en_ti_ne_l________________C)~~~~~~C)fl

Moncl.y. May 12, 2000 ~
.
·'L

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

..'_.
,;

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

Advertlalng Director

Oener111 Manager

.,

..

R. Shawn Lewle

Larry Boyer

Charlene Hoeflich

etllhlerOfuae.net

' Managing Editor

Ull•n to til• tfliiOr lll'f wckoM•. nu, 1lw1dd H l•ss tluur 300 ...,rtls. AU leftm an 11lbjcc'
IG UliUrr and Mtnl bw sl&amp;rtfd ••4 ittcltuh tuldnu ••4t,lqlumw tu1mHr. No •Mipld ltfttn will
h pltblblle4. Lltkrl 11ttntl4 bf bt po.tt.,ll, UdrnJillf ""'"• 1tol lHNOrltllilin.
'lJI• uriJtiMu .x,-nhl U. tlct MIMMII 6tlo1!14rt 1111 COitstttiMI oftltl Oltio VDU•J PdiUIWr&amp;

Co.) 1diwMI boanl, 1111less otJ.erwl.r• 11oled.

..•

NATIONAL VIEWS

.

"
'

Air ball

".,
.,,

Indiana qfficials looked other
way on ~obby Knight

"

.,

Hoosier brass cho ked Monday. Indiana University President Myles
Brand shot an air ball. He announced basketball coach, Bob Knight
would be ' uspended for three games, fined $30,000 and forced to
follow a supervised code of conduct. Knight will be allowed to keep
his job despite his "pattern of inappropriate behavior,'' but one slipup and the coach is history.
The punishment is akin to expecting the
A look at
great white s)lark not to grab the chunk of
mea~ because it's meant for the blue marW at . .
lin.
Knight's crude and repulsive behavior
should have got him fired years ago ....
•
Brand in essense said Monday that what
Knight did is tolerable. To be sure, the university shares culpability through its silence all these years. The man
is a bully. His behavior has embarrassed the university and the state
of Indiana. His antics send the message to young people that abusive behavior by coaches is acceptable, even admired ....
. IU ,presidents looked the other way. Athletic directors looked the
other way. Alumni, fans, and even players and their parents looked
the other way. On Monday, Brand and the school's board of trustees
all looked the other way....
. • 11le Miami Herald, o" A IDS drugs for poor nations: Those
fighting AIDS got some powerful allies this week when five of the
world's largest drug companies agreed to slash the prices of HIV
drugs for people living in poor nations. That means millions ofpeo~
pie throughout.Africa anq the Caribbean Basin living with HIV, the
Virus that causes AIDS, will now get access to those lifesaving drugs.

h US
newspapers
are sayrng

Still, the biggest hurdle was the cost of the drugs. The lower
prices, though still too high for many, will go far in combating this
epidemic. The combination of three or four drugs needed to keep
the virus at bay will now cost between $150 and $200 a month tn
those countries, unlike the $10,000 and S15,000 a year it c_osts in
the United States and Europe.
.
President Clinton ... commendably issued an executive .onder
declaring that the United States will not interfere with countries
that viblate American patent laws to provide AIDS drugs at lower

.

That should be a warning to the drug companies. Profit margins
are ;,ever more imp?rtant than life itself.
• Noiill•li (Okla.) Trilntalpt,. on P~oplc for t,lre Ethical Treat-

ment ofAnimals:

.

.

We haven't seen one in our area yet, but we've been reading about
biUboai:ds in other places bearin~ the message, 'Jesus was a vegetarian.n
The latest coqtroversy stirred up by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals gets Christian carnivores riled in just about every
. city it hits ..·...
.
'
.
The Bible is mostly silent on what Jesus ate, preferrmg to focus
on what he taught, but it's not entirely silent. We refer the reader to
th~ 24th chapter of Luke, where the risen Je!US appears to the disciples.·In verses 41-43 we read, "And while they yet believed not for
joy, and wondered, he said unto them, Have ye here any meat? And
th!:y gave him a piece of broiled fish, and of an honeycomb. And he
took it, and did eat before them." Pareve but not vegetarian, unless
you consider fish a vegetable.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, May 22, the l43nd day of2000. there are 223 days
lett .in the. year. ;
'](xlay's Highlight in History:
·
·
M;~y 22, 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enacted as Congtl!SS
appropriated military and economic aid fo.r Greece and Turkey.
On this date:
In 1761, the first life insurance policy in the United States was
issued, in Philadelphia.
.
In 1813, composer Richard Wagner was born in Leipzig, Germany.
In 1819, the Savannah, the first steam-propelled vessel to ~mpt a
transatlantic crossing, departed tiom Savannah, Ga. (It reached Liverpool, England, after 29 days.)
·
In 1868, the seven-member Reno gang made off with $96,000 in
loot from "the Great Train Robbery" near Marshfield, Ind.
In 1900,Th~Associated Press (founded in 1848) was incorporated
in New York as a non-profit news cooperative.
In 1939,AdolfHitler and Benito Mussolini signed a "Pact of Steel"
commi¢ng Germany and 1;\y to a military alliance. . . .
.
In 1969 the lunar module of Apollo 10 Oew to Within rune nules
of the mo~n's surface in a dress rehearsal for the first lunailanding.
In 1972, the islartd of Ceylon .formerly ruled by Britain, became the
.
.
republic of Sri Lanka.
In 1979, Canadians voted in parlian1enury elecnons that put the
Progressive Conservati~ in power.
.
In 1992, after a reign lasting nearly 30 years, Johnny Carson hosted
NBC's "Tonight Show" for \he last time:
. _
.
Today's Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judit~
1&lt; 7R. Smger C harles
Aznavour is 76. Actor Michael Constanbne IS 73. Conductor Peter
Nero is 66.Actor-director Richard Benjamin is 62.Act&lt;ir Frank Converse is 62.Actor Michael Sarrazin is 60. Acror Paul Winfield is 59.

On

CJ:•st

Dear Ann Landers: It's time to break
out the wet noodle. You gave a terrible
response to the man on the plane who
was seated next to a passenger with a cat.
Th.e woman had smuggled her cat
abQard, and was holding it on her lap.
Uqfortunately, her seatmate was allergic
to cats. You were right when you said he
shJuld have asked the flight attendant to
move him to another seat. You were
wrong, however, when you said the
woman should have placed the cat in an
animal carrier and put it in cargo.
Airline cargo holds are absolutely NO
PLACE for an animal. These holds are
inrended for baggage and other freight ,
not for living creatures. Many airlines do
no,t regulille the air pressure or the oxygen in cargo, and an animal placed there
for an extended perio~ of time could
suffocate. The cargo hold is also not
sound-insulated, which means the animals would 1&gt;e subjected to the deafening

Ann
Landers
ADVICE

·

roar of the engines, and their hearing is
very sensitive. Furthermore, baggage
handlen have no more respect for animal
crates than they have for luggage. Any
animals in cargo could be injured or
killed through careless handling.
I wouldn't send a cockroach by air
cargo.•That woman who loved her cat
would have been horrified to find it dead
in its crate upon arrival. Please tell your
readers NEVER to .check their pets as
airline cargo. If you must bring your pet

on a plane, put it in a carrier, and stow it
under your seat. This type of"carry-on"
luggage is permitted by most airlines. If
the pet is too large for a carrier, drive to
your destination instead of' taking a
plane, or leave the animal at home. However much you might miss your pet,
coming home will be a lot happier when
" Fluffy" is alive to greet you. Pass the
word, Ann. - Animal Lover in Memphis, Tenn.
Dear Memphis: Thank you for a
sensible letter. The local humane society
ought to send you rwo dozen roses, Cat
lovers all over the world will appreciate
what you have written.
· Dear Aim Landers: You recendy
printed a letter from a reader who was
upset because her parents favored her
brother. "The Doctor," and always
bragged about him. I felt a bit uneasy
when I read that letter, because I saw
myself in it. Although I do not favor one

BY CONCEPCION DooLEN
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER

'

.
"

Washington press corps swoon~for a bunco artist

-.

1 •

On April29,1 attended- for the first time
- the allegedly prestigious White Hpuse
Correspondents' Association dinner. The stars
were two stand-up comics: Jay Leno and the
president of the United States.
The audience at the Washington Hilton
included about 2,000 renowned print and
television journalists, as well as celebrities
from Hollywood and network television. 1 am
grateful to The Washington Times for the
invitation, because the evening changed · my
view of many in ihe Washington press corps
NEA COLUMNIST
- ~nd not for the better.
In his May 3 Washington Times column,
Tony BlaQkley wrote that , "almost alone" The jokes that continually broke up the
among the guests, he was "appalled both by sophisticated diners were intended to cloak
President Clinton's performance and by the · the ways he has dishonored his office by
positive response of the audience."
enabling him to be seen as "the poor soul"
He was not alone. During' several standing who is, after all, only human.
ovations for the president, 1 remained seated.
Now that he has survived, partly by makAnd although many laughed at his jokes until ing people ·laugh 'at his bumbling misadventhere were tears in their eyes, I was disgusted, t1.1res (his routine that night has been widely
not amused. 1 have greatly enjoyed Richard televised), he shows what good sports we all
Pryor, Dick Gregory, Moms Mabley and are. And the president - · ·after all the mortifiLenny Bruce (who was a friend); but they did cation he has endured from Ken Starr and
not memorize someone else's script. They other prudish, malicious "right-wing zealots"
improvised and they boldly and hilariously - shows that he is the best sport of all.
skewered the hypocrisies of the powerful As Tony Blankley astutely put it, "By gainin and out of po~tics. They did not - as the ing the laughter of the political and media
president always does - focus on the way elite in tire room (and the American viewing
one's ability to rise from adversity increases audience), he implicates them as after-the-fact
one's own glory.
co-conspirators with him."
Clinton's performance was written by
During the evening, 'Clinton made a joke
Mark Katz of the Soundbite Institute. Katz about Travelgate. Amid the laughter, I wonalso ghosts for AI Gore and Hillary Rodham dered if Billy Dale, who ran the White House
Clinton, who is not notable for her wit. Video rravel office, was watching C-Span. Clinton
clips assembled by ·Phil Rosenthal, the creator ruined the man's life by falsely accusing him
and producer of "Everybody Loves Ray- of misuse of funds.
mond,'' were shown during the president's
I guess writer Mark Katz couldn't come up
,•monologue. For some reason the president with a joke about the president's tampering
neglected to acknowledge his helpers. I won- ·with witnesses involved in the impeachment
der if they did this pro bono, as a patriotic ser- proceedings. ~or could. he find any humor in
vice.
,
the way Clmton deliberately derued due
The president's st_amp was on every line. process - elemental fairness - . to another

N
at
Hentoff

tr

citizen, Paula Jones, by deliberately lying during a deposition in her case. White, House,,.
· Special Counsel Lanny Davis might have spun. ;
it if he had been asked to work on the script. ·1
Ilut the correspondents who orchestrate&lt;;!, ,,
the event much preferred Jay Leno, whg.;;
poked at some sore spots in what will be tl:le. ~
Clinton legacy, but never really darkened the ..~
overall tribute to The Comeback Kid. And•~
Leno practically genuflected in praise of the, !~
president's comic timing.
.. :~
That night, .] ran into a couple of journal-.;
ists who also declined to join the ovations fqr ,;
the president. Particularly outraged was Ma~t .,
Drudge, the "lonely pamphleteer" who is
looked down upon by his more establishnle0,t(1
colleagues.
Drudge railed at what has become of~~.
press, which used to , bask in its critical ind~
pendencc but now cheers a bunco arti~"
Drudge told me that Deputy Attorney ' Geti~
era! Eric Holder - fresh from his role ~1
OJ:!:hestrating the commando raid that extrac~~
ed Elian Gonzalez - chided such criticism 9J~
the merry correspondents' dinner. ''It's all i§:
good humor,'' Holder told Drudge.
· ,,.:
As the laughter of the audience rolled oni::£~
t~ought of my mentors in journalism: Geor~
Seldes, I. F. Stone and Murray Kempton.·~
don't think they would have joined the stan,cf&gt;'j
i~g ovations for this president. And. I remetJl::'l
· Hered my first editor, William H_arriso?~
whom I worked for when I was 19 years olil-.,.
He ran a weekly newspaper for black readers~
,:rhe Boston Chronicle.
.~·:
+ "There are three rules here," he told m(.~
"Accuracy, clarity, and don't let the peop~
you cover con you."
:~
Ai last I know who the inveterate WaslJ:-.7:
. !ngton insiders are. They're the press corps. :l
.
: ;:
, (Nat .Hentoff is a nationally renowned autl1~ri~

on tile Frrst Amendment and the rest
Riglrts.)

May is Older Americans Month and caregivers are recognized as essential to the quality of life many older people enjoy. An estimated seven million Americans are informal
caregivers providing unpaid help to older ·
persons living in the community. They
include spouses, aduli children and other relatives and friends.
If you are involved in the care of older
persons, you should be familiar with Social
Se!~urity and how it works to provide service
to older A~ericans , For example, if the person is unable to handle his or her funds ade.quately, you can become the "representative
payee" and receive the benefits on his or her
behalf. The representative .payee is responsible for assuring that the benefits are spent for
the person's basic needs and to account for
the funds periodically. While most representative payees are relatives, payees may also be
a friend, neighbor, church or other concerned organization.
"Another service that may be helpfUl to
tW.- i\Wti'Oh 'lfi )'Oil'f,care iJ direct deposit' d£
'

.

If you are involved in the care

b~nefits to the bank. Direct deposit saves

time and reduces the risk of check loss and
theft. The money is there whether at home
or vacationing away from home. More than
half of current beneficiaries already use
direct deposit. To start direct deposit, all you
have to do is call us.
Our toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213,
provides 24-hour-service, 7 days a week. To
talk to a representative, you need to call from
7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. The
telephone may be busy around the first of
the month and early during the week, so if
your business is not urgent, it's best to call at
other times.
If you are calling on behalf of someone
else, he or she must be at the phone with
you so that We can speak to him or her and

LTIS3 Lawn.Ductor
• ,JJ-hp engine • 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed .shift-on-the-go transmission

...

(AP) - With responses from
over 3,500 readers nationwide, the
results of Jane magazine's 2000
Entertainment Poll are reported in
the June/july issue. Among the
highlights:
• Actress voters want to be
(or be with): Angelina Jolie.
Runners-up: Julia Roberts and
Drew Barrymore.

Social Security facts
• Nine of out of 10 individuals age 65 and
older receive Social Security benefits.
• Social Security benefits represent an
average of 40 percent of an elderly individual's income.
• About rwo-thirds of aged Social Security beneficiaries receive 50 percent or more
of their income from Social Security.
• Social Security is the only source of
income for approximately 18% of the elderly.
• The poverty rate for elderly Americans
has dropped from 35 percent in 1959 to 11
percent in 1996.
· • Without Social Security, nearly SO percent ot the elderly would be living in poverty.

Live in one state,·
work in another?

$1 999•
I

:~

ONLY

• ;,i

·~

..:~.

\~

Economy, like people, needs to take .it easy

.
.
h I ,t·i~
enough evidence o f in fl ation to support its and manpower resources, .a sttuallon t at e
·~ untreated has always led to rising prices an&lt;S
NEW YORK - Even those specimens usual paranoia."
We're
running
out
of
skilled
workers.
sometimes then to recession.
.,~
that seem to be the healthiest may have to
The N ationa! Federation of Irtdependet1ti
change their lifestyles, lest sometime later Employment costs are rising. Businesses
eliminating those price cuts we've become Business, which claims ·its members refle~
. they face serious problems.
· While this sounds like a doctor warning a accustomed to for a de~ade . J;he sensiole· · Main Street business, reports that findinl'!\;
Type A person to take it easy, it applies just thing, you might conclude, is fot businesses qualified workers ~n Apri.I was its No. ~:
:"
as well to the economy, which the Federal to cut their costs, but they can't. Productiv1- problem, the most mtense m 25 years.
Based on survey reports, William Dunkel;:
Reserve has repeatedly indicated is showing ty gains that had kept costs low have be,en
utilized to the limit . Energy prices are high. berg, the federation's economist, (whos,ti
signs of hypertension.
findings are relayed to the Fed), finds th"t
The' Fed's prescription: Stop thinking. this Raw materials too.
Moreover, custbm ers are waiting in line at member responses to worker shortage is t~
economy is invincible. Take a dose of interthe
door.
· try even harder to hire.
·.
est-rate medicine now, move to a slower
pace and avoid the troublesome conseSlow down and, you hand your competi~or
The Fed's response is an oid one: If co~
your share of sales. Car sales at an unprece- sumers and business won't or can't slow o·
quences that otherwise are sure to follow.
Those potential consequences, lest any- dented annual r~te of 17 million-plus."Hous- their own, then for their own good we'
· make them slow.
~
one still hasn't heard, begin with prices ris- es ~re selling, and appliances too.
Where, in the world does all the money
And, as usual, higher interest rates are i~E
ing, which then could lead to runaway inflaanswer.
,.
tion, ruinously high interest rates and, hard , 'c dme fronl?
From the nearest thing to full employMeanwhile, the basic indicators
eco_::
to believe, economic collapse.
Most people still haven't felt the signs of ment the country has experienced in sever- nomic health remain strong, and ifseriou~
al decades, with the unemploym ent rate just inflation can be avoided, the consensus fore.:!
serious inflation.
And they may view the Fed as a crank at below 4 percent of the civilian labor force. · cast is for the economy to expand at leasi!
the party. But those who study· the econom- From strong profits. From 1999'! $350 bil- through the year 2000.
.
~
ic organism say it's there, subtly 1but observ- lion in· stock market capital gains. From easy
Dut, Dr. Greenspan would add, at a sh,&gt;w&lt;
credit.·
er pace. For its own good.
.~
ably.
All this, the Fed reasons, has fu eled a· level
Oolrn Cunn!ff is a business analyst forT1~e Assool
David Wyss of Standard &amp; Poor's states
the 'C ase succinctly: "The Fed now has of demand beyond the economy's physical dated Press.)
BY .JoHN CUNNIFF

are

325 Lawn and Garden 'lractor
• 18-hp engine
• 48-inch convertible mowing deck
· • Hydrostatic drive

NOW

$5799' SAVE $400

Save big money on a variety or John Deere equipment during Deere season 2000. NO'f
through July 5 we're offering dollars off some of our most coveted models. So head to
your participating John Deere dealer and see why green is the official color of money.

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp;LAWN, INC.

of

,..

618 East Main St.
1·740·992·6674

• 20-hp diesel engine
• 8-speed gear transmission
• Mid- and rear-PTO

.

BUSlNESS MIRROR

I

• Acton voters want to be
with: Jude Law. Runners-up: Brad
Pitt and Ben Affieck.
• Most overrated male actor:
Tom Cruise. Runners-up: Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt.
·
• Most overrated female '
actor: Gwyneth · Paltrow. Runners-up: Julia Roberts and Jennifer
Love Hewitt.

4100 Compact Utility lhlctor

JUST

of tire Brll r!a

.

Magazine polls readers on celebS

verify that you have permission to receive
tl0e information.
For more information on So.cial Security
rules you should know, call our ~oil-free
number and ask for the leaflet, Social Security: Understanding The Benefits, or visit
our website, www.ssa.gov.

of older persons, you should be
familiar with Social Security and
how it works to provide service to
older Americans.
.

Proud Mom in L.A,
Dear Mom: It appears as if you have
a right to brag about your d:iughter, too.
She sounds like a well-grounded, selfassured young woman who suffered .not
at all by being slighdy ouahined by her
star-quality brother. Congratulations on
a job well done, Mom.
Gem of the Day: Families are like
fudge - mosdy sweet, with a few nuts.
Have trouble sleeping at night and
don't want to get involved in a novel?" A
Collection of My Favorite Genu of the
Day" is the perfect bed-stand mate. Send
a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money order for
$5.25 (this includes postage a'!d handling) to: Collection, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 111.60611-0562
(in Canada, $6.25). To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creaton Syndicate
web page at www.creators.com.
-

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VVhat caregivers should know about Soda[ Security
HENTOFF'S VIEW

Monay• .,_, 22. 2000

child over the other, I do brag about my
son a great deal.
Our oldest child, a daughter, tried college, and decided it wasn't for her. She is
now a receptionist in a large law firm, a
valuable and well-paid member of their
support staff. Our much younger son
decided to attend the Naval Academy in
Annapolis, Md. The competition to be
admitted was very stiff, but he scored
extremely well, and was accepted. One of
our proudest days was attending his graduation. He is now a full lieutenant, has
been to 14 countries, and is about to
receive his graduate degree in engineermg.
Are we proud ofhim?You bet. Do we
brag about him? Absolutely. After I saw
that letter in your column, I felt guilty,
and phoned my daughter and asked if it
bothered her that I did so much bragging
about her brother. She replied," Are you
kidding? I brag about him all t.he time!"

SOCIAL SECURITY
•

• 1be Des Moines (Iowa) Repster, on Bobby Kniglzi: The

cosa.

IJ the Beild

·.::__ _ _

Reader says airline cargo holds are no place for animals

PROTESTED THE WAR.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chartea W. Govey
Publleher

0fAHlfR.
........"" --

IT WAS 1liE SIXn&amp;s...
I DID MY PART &amp;

'£sta6Cishd in 1948

_Th_e_D~ai-=-ly_Se_n_tin_e_l_

Page AS

Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

$9,995·

�,

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· Page M • The O.lly Sentinel

Inside:

Monday, May 22, ~

Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

Missionary society meets
;. RACINE - Quilt blocks to be sent to Thailand were cur dur~ng a recent work meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
:Society of Racine held at the home of Nondus Hendriclcs.
: Mary K. Yost had the program and used a reading, ''Blessings in
:Our Lives;• from "Small Miracles of Love and Friendship." She
"Tead I Corinthians 3 and 4 about love. and an article, "Mothers'
:Hands are too Rough."
.
: A history of The Lord's Prayer, in French, was given from the
:book, "Chicken Soup for the Woman 's Soul."
: Correspondence was read from Murron Indian Children's
:Home in Muskogee, Okla., with the name of a new girl that the
:group will support.
:· During the business meeting, Lillian Hayman gave the annual
-teport of the White Cross askings and Mary K. Yost reported on
Women's Conference to be held at Dennison University. Mary K.
:Yost will attend. A love gift was taken and sent to several missions
:Centers.
:· Cards were sent to the hospitalized and shut-ins from the com:munity. The next meeting will including a meal our and shopping.
: Those attending were Lillian Hayman, Mary K. Yost, Martha
:L~&gt;u Beegle, Mildr~d Hart, Marjorie Grimm, Linda Grimm, Naomi
.Stobart and Hendricks, the hostess.

Johnson birth announced
CHESTER Buck and
Krista Johnson of Chester '
announce the birth of their
second child, a son, Brent
Wilton Johnson .
·
He was born on April 19 and
weighed eight pounds, one
ounce, and was 20 inches long.
Paternal grandparents are
Buck and Sue Johnson ofWest
Columbia, W. Va. and the
maternal
grandparents •re
f.;'
Manning and Ramona Roush
;;.;....-.._......._....;.__, of Racine.
..
Brent Wilton John1011
The Johnsons have a daughter, Kelsey Brooke, two.

Hawks celebrate new arrival

POMEROY Jeff and c:::;~..,....~-......,:
Robyn Hawk of Pomeroy
announce the birth of a
daughter, Kaitlyn N icole
. OAK HILL -The Festival of Flags baby contest will be held on
Hawk , born on March 27, at
;Monday on the Central School stage at Oak Hill beginning at 10
the Holzer Medical Center ..
:a.m. All contestants are to report to the stage between 9 and 9:45
Kaitlyn
weighed
eight
;a.m. to prepared for the competition.
pounds , three ounces and was
; Registration before Friday at 4 p.m. is $5, while after that it will
21 inches long.
.be $10. No registrations will be accepted after 9:30a.m. on the day
Maternal grandparents are
:of the contest.
Clinton and Louise Pitzer of
: Entries are open to any children under the age of five. They do Long
Bottom.
Patern al
;not have to reside in the Oak Hill area. No child or grandchild of
grandparents are Rollin and
cluli member or a judge may enter. Out of county judges will be
Nina Hawk of Guysville.
Kaltlyn Nicole Hawk
·used for the contest.
: Trophies will be awarded in ten categories based on age and sex
:Of the child. The rules specify that contestants must not have
leached their fifth birthday by the day of the contest. The first
:place winner in each category will receive a trophy •nd a certifi;cate for an 8 x I 0 portrait from Shawn Richendollar Photography
(AP) A good primary-care physi- would be well-adVised to seek
:of Jackson. Second, third and fourth place ribbons will also be
;&amp;warded. Every contestant will receive a certificate of participa- cian should not only be able to someone else. Ask your local hospition.
make sick people well, but should tal or medical center for a refeml.
; Children are to wear casual clothes. Clothing may be red, white also be able to "coach" patients to Or talk to your friends or relatives.
-and blue. An adult must accompany each contestant on stage.
prevent illness in the first place, states Once you hove narrowed. your
; To preregister their children a three by five card with the child's a noted New York City internist in choices, set up some appointments.
:Uame, boy or girl category, date of birth, parent's name, address and the May issue of New Choices: liv- Even though you may hove to pay
:phone number along with a non-refundable S5 entry fee to: ing Even Better After 50.
the bill yourself, a half-hour discusFriends Club, c/o Nova Lovett, Treas., 41 Antioch Road, Oak Hill,
Dt. Steven Lamm writes in his sion will tell you more about
Dh. 45656.
column that after 50, perhaps even whether the two of you will get
: All money raised by the Friends Club is used for civic projects
more important than curing illness along than any number of recom)nd to help members in need in the surrounding communities. For
is "to become a 'coach' for healthy . mendations.
:further information on the contest or our club, the numbers to call
patients, helping them get stronger
"What matters is that you choose.
-are 740-682-7418 or 740-682-6416.
and better equipped to fend off ill- a primary-care physician who is
ness."
concerned about you as an individ"Idealb;"hesays;"you
will
be
able
uai
as well as a medical case~~Umm.·
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RACINE - Nita and Chuck Yc:ist of O:ak Grove Road, Racine, to wo~k with your current physi• . states in New Choices. ''this eireannounce the birtq of a daughter, May 13, 2,000 at O'Bieness , cian, someone ,who has treated you giver should listen to your questions
Memori•l Hospital in Athens. The infant has been named Olivia in the past and knows your medical and help you in your sean::h for
history. But if you think your .doctor answers with suggestions and proper
Barbara Esther Yost.
has little interest in prevention, you direction:'
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Baby contest announced

:a

NEW CHOICES

Yost birth announced

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COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS

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MONDAY, May 22
•

MIDDLEPO~T -Winding
Trail Garden C b, open meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, at the Garden R.oom, formerly Blue Tartan, of the MiBdteport United
Pentecostal Church, 873 South
Third Avenue, Middleport. Faye
Collins, past president of the
Ohio Association of Garden
¢lubs, will give a floral design
demonstration.

POMEROY
Meigs
County Right to Life, 7:30
p.m., Pomeroy Library. Public
invited.
ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs
High School band banquet, 7
p.m. in the cafeteria. Those
attending are to take a covered
· dish.
HARRISONv'ILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens,
Monday, 11:30 a.m. at the town
hall. Potluck dinner. All seniors
invited.
THE PLAINS - Revival,
Vore Ridge Church, The Plains
through May 27, Evangelist
John Elswick, evangelist; Danny
. Jeffries, pastor.
POMEROY -Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m .
Monday at the office, 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club 65th anniversary
celebrotion to be observed at an

l

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Lois Weber became the first
woman to direct a full-length
feature movie - "The Merchant ofVenice" in 1914.

.

···-.

Programs that have remained
on television for more..than 20
years include: "The Ed SulliVan
~how," "Meet· the P~ss;• "Gun. snioke;' "60 Minutes" and "The

''FREE''

Help With
Medicare Expenses
,

. i

MONDAY's

.HIGHLIGHTS

.,,••
•
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!lt'l .

TUESDAY, May 23

BY ANDREW CARTER

Melp band to host
coif toumey SltuJdly

RA&lt;:;INE - Racine Ar~a
Community
Organizatioil,
Thesday, Star Mill Park, 6:30
p.m. Potluck dinner.
•.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School band boosters
will host the 1Oth annual· .golf
scramble on May 27, at The Pine
Hills Golf Club. This year the
.event will host and honor Charles
Chancey, long time are educator
and football coach.
·· The four person scramble is
inviting teams with a handicap of
a total of 40, with one person
under 10. Interested players
~hould contact
tournament
Fhairman John Krawsczyn at
992-6394 or 992-2158 to enter
or for more information.

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POMEROY - Immunization clinic, Meigs Councy
Health Department 1 9 to tl
a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Take shc)t
record. Be accompanied by patent/ guardian.
~

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L·
THURSDAY, May 25 t.

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POMEROY
Ewi~
Chapter, Sons of the American
Revolution, Thursday, Mei~
County Museum, Pomeroy.
Dinner, 6:30 p.m., award cere•
mony to follow. .

•

Junior golf drcult
begl11&amp; June 16

The Community Calenda.r
is published as a free ser..:.
vice to non-profit group~
wishing to announce meetings and special evenu. The
calendat ,is not deaigned to
promote sales or fund raisen of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

•

Tonight Show."

•••

The Paricutin volcano is one
of the world's youngest. It _;,as
discovered in 1943 west 6J
Mexico City.
,

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' I•

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James .E. Wat~ (~736-1.8 ,1~);;·a
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Scottish tnechailical ·engineit
invented the modern stetfu
engine in 1765.
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than

PROCTORVILLE -T.heTriStateJunior Golf Circuit will kick
off June 16, at the Sugarwood
Golf Course in Lavalette, W.Va.
· The circuit is open to young
golfers in three age divisions: lOP, i3-15, 16-18. Competition
}viii run from June 16 through
July . 28 at various .courses
throughout the region. .
A point system will be used for
the seven event season. To be eligible for player of the year hon-·
on, an individual must participate
jn six of the events.
· The 13~15 and 16-18 divisions
~ play 18 holes per event. The
t.0-12 group will play nine holes
.per day.
Any player inierested in participating and obtaining an entry
forin should contact Ed Wilgus,
director of the Tri-State Junior
1]91f CirclJit. at. 7 tf0-886-8,91'Q.

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0~, $PORTS

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RIO CfRANDE - Three
and three relay
teams .,(rom Meigs High
School . are headed for the
Division II regional meet in
Zanesville this week.
The
Marauders
have
enjoyed, a breakout year in
· track and field, a fact that
pleases'~ head coach Mike
Kennedy.
"I'~ %ally proud of my kids
this ~~ar," said Kennedy.
"They ve worked hard all year.
People keep asking me, 'is this
the best team you've ever
had?'
"AIJ~ I can honestly say that
it's theJJ .best performance I've
gotten put of a team."
Senipr Zach Meadows qualified m both the II 0- and
300-meter hurdles. He posted
a time of 14.85 seconds in the
. 110 .h)!rdles to win the event
outnght.
Dc1j?ite falling at· the finish
line, Meadows placed third in
the 300 hurdles to earn a spot
in the regional meet. His time
was 4'i.98 seconds.
Seffior Justin Roush finished
secon'a in the discus and will
coni'pbte in the Zanesville
regional. He tied the Meigs
school record with a throw of
149''feet in Saturday's district
final~.
·Teammate Adam Grim
plac~d fifth with a throw of
139} feet, five inches. Grim
individq~ls

ON TO ZANESVILLE- Zach Meadows of Meigs (top, left) will compete in the 110- and 300-meter hur·
dies at the regional this week. Bea Morgan {left) will compete as part of the Marauders' 4x800-meter
relay team . Justin Roush {right) qualified for the regional as part 9f the 4x100 relay team and in the
discus. (Andrew Carter photos)
·

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PIUse He Melp, Pap Be
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.. r;laJe Jr. gra.bs $500,000 .Winston check
J l

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Mickelson wins .

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COlonial '

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FORT WORTH, Texas (AP).
!.... Phil · Mickelson, who begon
the final round six shors back,
closed with a 7-l,mder-par 63 to
win his third PGA Tour event of
the year in the Colonial.
Mickelson ended with · a 12under 268 total, two strokes ahead
of Stewart Cink (71) and Davis
Love Ill (68), for his .16th career
victory. Mickelson collected
$594,000, the largest check of his
nine-year career. He has won $2.3
milliqn this ~eason, surpassing the
$2 million mark for the first time.
Tiger Woods is the only other
three-time winner on Tour this
year.

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Knkks dump H~
MIAMI (AP) - Chris Childs
c:aught the inbounds pass with 2.1
s~conds left and hurled the ball
high into the air, finally putting
the seesaw series between the
New York Knicks and Miami
f.leat out of reach.
· For the second year in a. row,
the Knicks were a single point
better than their archrivals, beat}og Miami 83-82 Sunday in a
mrilling Game 7.
: The action didn't end when the
Sarn.e did. Miami's Jamal Mash. burn chased . after the referees
~houting insults, and the Heat said
bad calls tainted the Knicks' Victory.
: "They had three officials in
lheir pocket," Mashburn said.
t ~·You can print that. I don't care if
' I get fined or not."
·
: New York, jubilant after eliminating Miami in a Winner-take~
all gome for the third consecutive
year, began looking ahead to the
Eastern Conference finals. They
~tart Tuesday at Indiana.

.

•

NBA: Nets 1111b
top dnlft pick
: SECAUCUS~ N.J. (AP) -The
· New Jersey Ners won the NBA
draft lottery and have the No. 1
pick in next month's draft. The
Vancouver Grizzlies have the second pick, and the Los f.ngeles
(:tippers have selectio[l No.3 .

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CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - Sati~fied the ' Earnhardt said. "We sat ~ere and thought · even after· Lowe's Motor.. Speedway presiday before t!&gt; even be incluped in The Win- . about it and thought a~out . ir and finally dent H.A."Humpy"Wheeler picked i)im to
·
·
sto~ Dale Earnhardt Jr. became the first · .said, 'We didn't come here to run second or win it earlier in the week.
rookie to win NASCAR's all-star event Sat- ,third, let's take the tires.'"
"I dilln't plan on winning The WhiSton, to
u~y night when he .blew past Dale Jarrett
Jarrett finished second, followed by Dale be honest wit.h you,''llarnhardt Jr. said. ''We
witli,.on:e lap to go.·
Earnhardt Sr.,Jerry N adeau andJeffBurton. were just happy to be running it. It's a presEarnhordt was sixth when a q~ulti~cat.~ol- .
Earnhardt Jr. was met in Victory Lane by tigious race and I'd watched a lot of them
lision brought out a caution with eight laps his father - the only three-time winner in from up there in the second-floor condo
to go. He then told crew chiefTony .Eury he Winston history - where the two hugged and just knew it was something I someday
hoped to be a part of. I didn't care who won
couldn't win with the car he was driving in celebration.
and ,(;pnvinced him t~ give him four fresh
·"I thought .I could give Daie Jarrett some the thing."
Earnhardt Jr. overcame ·a series of early
tiresW
trouble and then I saw this kid running in
Thf result was a much ·quicker car then my rearview mirror.and couldn't believe it," problems to win.
the r~st ' of the field, allowing Earnhordt to Earnhardt said. "He is just something else."
He was halfway down pit road for a stop
rapidly move through the traffic and pass
·Earnhardt Jr., a rookie . this season, made during the first 30-lap segment when a cauJarre~n turn 'four.with one lap to go.
the field by winning two races this season. .t ion came out on the track. He quickly
Earnhardt then easily pulled away to pick . He's the only Winston Cup driver to win drQve off of pit lane. to avoid falling a lap
up ;r·!$,515,000 payout from tpe record $2 · more than once, something he seems over- down during the yellow flag.
[:ie later brushed against the wall in turn
·
million purse.
whelmed by..
"I ·~ running real good, but we were
The victories gor him into The Winston. four during the second 30~lap segment and
tight ~~d I told Tony I needed four tires;" which vyas more than enough for him Please ... Winston, Pap Be

In y 500
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Greg Ray is a marked man.
To his right is Jqan Montoya,
the defending CART champion.
Just behind him is Robby Gordon, his teammate, eager to atone
for last year's costly blunder. Farth er back is AI Unser Jr., who has
waited six years for a chance to
win his third Indianapolis 500.
At the rear is gutsy Billy Boat,
who qualified as the gun sounded
ending time trials Sunday night,
bumping his way into the lineup
in a car he had never driven.
Now all of them are taking aim
at Ray, the 1999 Indy Racing
League champion who will lead
the 33-car field from the pole
position next Sunday for the first
time.
He might as well paint a huge
bull's-eye on his No. I Dallara.
'Td be'lying to you if I said it
wasn't a big, big focus," Ray said
of winning the pole at Indianapolis. "It's something we wanted, but
the competition is so close.
"Really, there are two events
here. Now there's the race."
That's where the biggest challenges will come.
Montoya and Jimmy Vasser; his
teammate with Ganassi Racing
and another former CART
champion, are the first regufaf$
from the rival open-wheel series
to cross over to the IRI:s premier
event. Montoya, who qualified at
223.372 mph, was the early polesitter Saturday, but Ray1s four-lap
average of223.471 pushed Montoya to the middle of the front
row.
· Eliseo Salazar, who qualified at
223.231, will start on the outside.
Gordon, trying to find a way to
win the pole, called off his first
two attempts at speeds that would
have safely put him in the field
· and earned a spot on the inside of
the second row at 222.885, next
to Scott .Sharp and JeffWard, ,
Vasser is on· the next row, rig}jt
behind Gordon.
;
"I guess it's not that bad. We
gave it the best job we could;'
Gordon said. "We gave it all."
Gordon, then a CART regular
and now driving in NASCAR,
was leading the race last year, but
gambled he would have enough
fuel to make it to the checkered
flag. He came. up just over one lap
short.
"You can't dwell on it," Gordon
said. "You learn from your mis-

..._ see Indy, Pllp 11

}

Tribe
·~

·youngster
2-:.hits NY
CLEV'ELAND (AP) - Paul
Rigdon =shut ·out the World
Series champion Yankees on
two hirs. fqr .seven inning11 in
his major l eague ,debut Sunday,
leading the Cleveland Indians
to a 6-1 win over New York.
Rigdon , the first Indians
pit ~her .sihce Luis Toant in
1964 to make his first major
league start agoinst the Yankees, gave Cleveland just irs
second series win over New
York at Jacobs Field.
The
24-year-old
only
arrived Friday morning, called
up from Triple-A Buffalo one
day after the Indi ans had to
place starters Jaret Wright,
Charles Nagy and reliever
Ricardo Rincon on the disabled list.
Jim Thome and Manny
Ramirez hit two-run homers
off Orlando Hernandez (4-4)
and Enrique Wilson's insidethe-park shot helped the Indians take two of three from the
Yankees, who swept a threegame series . from Cleveland
here earlier fltis month.

Cubs double up Reds on get-away day
Neither Junior nor Slammin' Sammy.
homered in the 3-game series
CHICAGO (AP) - Kevin
With .a four-run cushion,
Tapani had a right to be tired Tapani surrendered a two-run
and disappointed. He'd thrown homer to Aaron Boone. After
135 pitches, only to lose both getting the second out of the
his shutoui and complete gome inning, he gave up a single 10
in the bottom of the ninth.
Pokey Reese, prompting a visit
What didn't get away from the . from manager Don Baylor as the
Chicago Cubs right-hander booing begon at Wrigley Field.
"I asked him if he could get
Sunday was a victory. And that's
what mattered the most:
Barry Larkin and he said he
"Some days you throw 85 could. He's one out away and he.
pitches and it feels like a couple wanted to finish it mqre than
of hundred. Today I threw 135 anybody," Baylor said after he
and it felt like 50 or 60,"Tapani · left Tapani in for one more hi~­
said after pitching the Cubs past ter.
the Cincinnati Reds 4- 2.
Baylor, whose bullpen lias
"Getting the shutout 'isn't as been in tatters all season, W\ls
big as finishing the game when cheered as he returned to tile
you have the lead," Tapani dugout.
.
added. "When the manager
But wh.en Larkin got :in
gives : you the opportunity ·to infield single, that was it. Baylor
finish, you want to be out there returned to the mound ai!cl
at the end. I just carne up one brought in Felix Heredia. The
out short."
reliever walked Ken Griffey Jr.
The Cubs were up 4-0 head- to load the bases but got Dmitri
ed into the ninth, building the Young on a fielder's cho~e
lead when Reds catcher Eddie grounder to third to end tile
1
Taubensee's throw on a sixth- game.
inning double steal ticked the
"We still had the lead and t o
bat of Cubs' hitter Ricky have Griffey face him after l!l5
•:
QOTCHA, JUNIOR! - Cubs second baseman Ricky Gutierrez (right) Gutierrez and sailed wildly past
third allowing twO runs to score.
PIHH ... aeclt, . . . . . ..
makes a play to force Ken Griffey Jr. Sunday. {AP)

•I.

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Ra wins

pole slot

EDITOR

•

Qualified
Medicare
'
.
::
· Beneficiaries Medicaid .
.
.
Health Insurance . (called QMB): ·
~Q~u~au.h.!L!!"fi.&amp;.lle!o:..!dL...Jiu.nll.lldu.iV.~.&lt;iu.duuuawls;r......;;-;:,.._,.!:!,2 A: ¥edicaid requires a
'
Medicaid (called QI-2):
disability determination
For
by the Social Security
This program covers the
or by the
Meigs County payment ,of your Medicare Thl. s program reimburses Administration
Ohio Department of Job~ . ,
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co- you for the part of the .Part &amp; Family Services through:
.
.
insurances(s) and deductibles
B premium that you, have \~ts County M-edical ·
:
you are required to make as
already paid , which we-nt · l ~ervices (CMS),
part of the Medicare
Call Today!
toward . home health care. · · _.n.. · •
Program.
.
Q: w uat IS the age when I
•
You
will
recetve . a . am conside!1'd "Aged"?
Spe·cified Low-Income reimbursement check once . a '
1-800-992-2608 Medicare Beneficiarh~s year. The income limits ,are A: Age 65
higher
QI-1 Medicaid.
.rl
•
Medicaid (called .S JMB):
Or
.
.
Q: What services are covered · ~·
.I by Medicaid? ·
992-2117
This type of Medicaid pays Qualified Workin1 . Disables ,
·
.
only for your Medicare Part Individual (ca11ed QWOI): · A: Any of ~ese services are
.'
covered if they are
B premium.
Meigs County·
medically necessary for
This ·program pays fQr your
Department of Qualified Individuals . - 1 Medicare ·Part A pr,mium you: DoctorVisits
Medicaid (called Q0-1);
only. QWDI can help you if '
Hospital Cate
Job &amp; Family
Immunizations
This ·program provides the · you have lost . eligibilicy .for ~',
'
.
Services
Substance Abuse
same benefits. as SLMB; Title II . disability benefits · ~ ·
Prescriptions
175 Race Street however, the income due to earnings.
Vision
standards are higher than
Middleport, OH those allowed for SLMB.
Dental .
Mental Health
45760
Other...
•

Nleigs athletes move on

•

·Commonly
asked
M
. ore...
.
. .... .
; Questions:
·'
Help With
.~.:
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•' · · E . ·
Q: Who determines whether : ·
M edtcare
xpense,s . ·~ am disabled? .
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Mond11J, MIIJ 11, 1000

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open meeting Monday, 7:3p
p.m. at the Rutl•nd Methodist
Church. Hal Kneen, Meigs
County Extension agent, will
spe•k. Members of all gordell
clubs and friends of the club
members are invited.
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NEWS SHORTS
BY THE AISOCIATED·PRESS

Page 81

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The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· Page M • The O.lly Sentinel

Inside:

Monday, May 22, ~

Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

Missionary society meets
;. RACINE - Quilt blocks to be sent to Thailand were cur dur~ng a recent work meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
:Society of Racine held at the home of Nondus Hendriclcs.
: Mary K. Yost had the program and used a reading, ''Blessings in
:Our Lives;• from "Small Miracles of Love and Friendship." She
"Tead I Corinthians 3 and 4 about love. and an article, "Mothers'
:Hands are too Rough."
.
: A history of The Lord's Prayer, in French, was given from the
:book, "Chicken Soup for the Woman 's Soul."
: Correspondence was read from Murron Indian Children's
:Home in Muskogee, Okla., with the name of a new girl that the
:group will support.
:· During the business meeting, Lillian Hayman gave the annual
-teport of the White Cross askings and Mary K. Yost reported on
Women's Conference to be held at Dennison University. Mary K.
:Yost will attend. A love gift was taken and sent to several missions
:Centers.
:· Cards were sent to the hospitalized and shut-ins from the com:munity. The next meeting will including a meal our and shopping.
: Those attending were Lillian Hayman, Mary K. Yost, Martha
:L~&gt;u Beegle, Mildr~d Hart, Marjorie Grimm, Linda Grimm, Naomi
.Stobart and Hendricks, the hostess.

Johnson birth announced
CHESTER Buck and
Krista Johnson of Chester '
announce the birth of their
second child, a son, Brent
Wilton Johnson .
·
He was born on April 19 and
weighed eight pounds, one
ounce, and was 20 inches long.
Paternal grandparents are
Buck and Sue Johnson ofWest
Columbia, W. Va. and the
maternal
grandparents •re
f.;'
Manning and Ramona Roush
;;.;....-.._......._....;.__, of Racine.
..
Brent Wilton John1011
The Johnsons have a daughter, Kelsey Brooke, two.

Hawks celebrate new arrival

POMEROY Jeff and c:::;~..,....~-......,:
Robyn Hawk of Pomeroy
announce the birth of a
daughter, Kaitlyn N icole
. OAK HILL -The Festival of Flags baby contest will be held on
Hawk , born on March 27, at
;Monday on the Central School stage at Oak Hill beginning at 10
the Holzer Medical Center ..
:a.m. All contestants are to report to the stage between 9 and 9:45
Kaitlyn
weighed
eight
;a.m. to prepared for the competition.
pounds , three ounces and was
; Registration before Friday at 4 p.m. is $5, while after that it will
21 inches long.
.be $10. No registrations will be accepted after 9:30a.m. on the day
Maternal grandparents are
:of the contest.
Clinton and Louise Pitzer of
: Entries are open to any children under the age of five. They do Long
Bottom.
Patern al
;not have to reside in the Oak Hill area. No child or grandchild of
grandparents are Rollin and
cluli member or a judge may enter. Out of county judges will be
Nina Hawk of Guysville.
Kaltlyn Nicole Hawk
·used for the contest.
: Trophies will be awarded in ten categories based on age and sex
:Of the child. The rules specify that contestants must not have
leached their fifth birthday by the day of the contest. The first
:place winner in each category will receive a trophy •nd a certifi;cate for an 8 x I 0 portrait from Shawn Richendollar Photography
(AP) A good primary-care physi- would be well-adVised to seek
:of Jackson. Second, third and fourth place ribbons will also be
;&amp;warded. Every contestant will receive a certificate of participa- cian should not only be able to someone else. Ask your local hospition.
make sick people well, but should tal or medical center for a refeml.
; Children are to wear casual clothes. Clothing may be red, white also be able to "coach" patients to Or talk to your friends or relatives.
-and blue. An adult must accompany each contestant on stage.
prevent illness in the first place, states Once you hove narrowed. your
; To preregister their children a three by five card with the child's a noted New York City internist in choices, set up some appointments.
:Uame, boy or girl category, date of birth, parent's name, address and the May issue of New Choices: liv- Even though you may hove to pay
:phone number along with a non-refundable S5 entry fee to: ing Even Better After 50.
the bill yourself, a half-hour discusFriends Club, c/o Nova Lovett, Treas., 41 Antioch Road, Oak Hill,
Dt. Steven Lamm writes in his sion will tell you more about
Dh. 45656.
column that after 50, perhaps even whether the two of you will get
: All money raised by the Friends Club is used for civic projects
more important than curing illness along than any number of recom)nd to help members in need in the surrounding communities. For
is "to become a 'coach' for healthy . mendations.
:further information on the contest or our club, the numbers to call
patients, helping them get stronger
"What matters is that you choose.
-are 740-682-7418 or 740-682-6416.
and better equipped to fend off ill- a primary-care physician who is
ness."
concerned about you as an individ"Idealb;"hesays;"you
will
be
able
uai
as well as a medical case~~Umm.·
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RACINE - Nita and Chuck Yc:ist of O:ak Grove Road, Racine, to wo~k with your current physi• . states in New Choices. ''this eireannounce the birtq of a daughter, May 13, 2,000 at O'Bieness , cian, someone ,who has treated you giver should listen to your questions
Memori•l Hospital in Athens. The infant has been named Olivia in the past and knows your medical and help you in your sean::h for
history. But if you think your .doctor answers with suggestions and proper
Barbara Esther Yost.
has little interest in prevention, you direction:'
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Baby contest announced

:a

NEW CHOICES

Yost birth announced

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COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS

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MONDAY, May 22
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MIDDLEPO~T -Winding
Trail Garden C b, open meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, at the Garden R.oom, formerly Blue Tartan, of the MiBdteport United
Pentecostal Church, 873 South
Third Avenue, Middleport. Faye
Collins, past president of the
Ohio Association of Garden
¢lubs, will give a floral design
demonstration.

POMEROY
Meigs
County Right to Life, 7:30
p.m., Pomeroy Library. Public
invited.
ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs
High School band banquet, 7
p.m. in the cafeteria. Those
attending are to take a covered
· dish.
HARRISONv'ILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens,
Monday, 11:30 a.m. at the town
hall. Potluck dinner. All seniors
invited.
THE PLAINS - Revival,
Vore Ridge Church, The Plains
through May 27, Evangelist
John Elswick, evangelist; Danny
. Jeffries, pastor.
POMEROY -Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m .
Monday at the office, 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club 65th anniversary
celebrotion to be observed at an

l

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Lois Weber became the first
woman to direct a full-length
feature movie - "The Merchant ofVenice" in 1914.

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···-.

Programs that have remained
on television for more..than 20
years include: "The Ed SulliVan
~how," "Meet· the P~ss;• "Gun. snioke;' "60 Minutes" and "The

''FREE''

Help With
Medicare Expenses
,

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MONDAY's

.HIGHLIGHTS

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TUESDAY, May 23

BY ANDREW CARTER

Melp band to host
coif toumey SltuJdly

RA&lt;:;INE - Racine Ar~a
Community
Organizatioil,
Thesday, Star Mill Park, 6:30
p.m. Potluck dinner.
•.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School band boosters
will host the 1Oth annual· .golf
scramble on May 27, at The Pine
Hills Golf Club. This year the
.event will host and honor Charles
Chancey, long time are educator
and football coach.
·· The four person scramble is
inviting teams with a handicap of
a total of 40, with one person
under 10. Interested players
~hould contact
tournament
Fhairman John Krawsczyn at
992-6394 or 992-2158 to enter
or for more information.

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POMEROY - Immunization clinic, Meigs Councy
Health Department 1 9 to tl
a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Take shc)t
record. Be accompanied by patent/ guardian.
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L·
THURSDAY, May 25 t.

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POMEROY
Ewi~
Chapter, Sons of the American
Revolution, Thursday, Mei~
County Museum, Pomeroy.
Dinner, 6:30 p.m., award cere•
mony to follow. .

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Junior golf drcult
begl11&amp; June 16

The Community Calenda.r
is published as a free ser..:.
vice to non-profit group~
wishing to announce meetings and special evenu. The
calendat ,is not deaigned to
promote sales or fund raisen of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

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Tonight Show."

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The Paricutin volcano is one
of the world's youngest. It _;,as
discovered in 1943 west 6J
Mexico City.
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James .E. Wat~ (~736-1.8 ,1~);;·a
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Scottish tnechailical ·engineit
invented the modern stetfu
engine in 1765.
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PROCTORVILLE -T.heTriStateJunior Golf Circuit will kick
off June 16, at the Sugarwood
Golf Course in Lavalette, W.Va.
· The circuit is open to young
golfers in three age divisions: lOP, i3-15, 16-18. Competition
}viii run from June 16 through
July . 28 at various .courses
throughout the region. .
A point system will be used for
the seven event season. To be eligible for player of the year hon-·
on, an individual must participate
jn six of the events.
· The 13~15 and 16-18 divisions
~ play 18 holes per event. The
t.0-12 group will play nine holes
.per day.
Any player inierested in participating and obtaining an entry
forin should contact Ed Wilgus,
director of the Tri-State Junior
1]91f CirclJit. at. 7 tf0-886-8,91'Q.

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0~, $PORTS

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RIO CfRANDE - Three
and three relay
teams .,(rom Meigs High
School . are headed for the
Division II regional meet in
Zanesville this week.
The
Marauders
have
enjoyed, a breakout year in
· track and field, a fact that
pleases'~ head coach Mike
Kennedy.
"I'~ %ally proud of my kids
this ~~ar," said Kennedy.
"They ve worked hard all year.
People keep asking me, 'is this
the best team you've ever
had?'
"AIJ~ I can honestly say that
it's theJJ .best performance I've
gotten put of a team."
Senipr Zach Meadows qualified m both the II 0- and
300-meter hurdles. He posted
a time of 14.85 seconds in the
. 110 .h)!rdles to win the event
outnght.
Dc1j?ite falling at· the finish
line, Meadows placed third in
the 300 hurdles to earn a spot
in the regional meet. His time
was 4'i.98 seconds.
Seffior Justin Roush finished
secon'a in the discus and will
coni'pbte in the Zanesville
regional. He tied the Meigs
school record with a throw of
149''feet in Saturday's district
final~.
·Teammate Adam Grim
plac~d fifth with a throw of
139} feet, five inches. Grim
individq~ls

ON TO ZANESVILLE- Zach Meadows of Meigs (top, left) will compete in the 110- and 300-meter hur·
dies at the regional this week. Bea Morgan {left) will compete as part of the Marauders' 4x800-meter
relay team . Justin Roush {right) qualified for the regional as part 9f the 4x100 relay team and in the
discus. (Andrew Carter photos)
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PIUse He Melp, Pap Be
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.. r;laJe Jr. gra.bs $500,000 .Winston check
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Mickelson wins .

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FORT WORTH, Texas (AP).
!.... Phil · Mickelson, who begon
the final round six shors back,
closed with a 7-l,mder-par 63 to
win his third PGA Tour event of
the year in the Colonial.
Mickelson ended with · a 12under 268 total, two strokes ahead
of Stewart Cink (71) and Davis
Love Ill (68), for his .16th career
victory. Mickelson collected
$594,000, the largest check of his
nine-year career. He has won $2.3
milliqn this ~eason, surpassing the
$2 million mark for the first time.
Tiger Woods is the only other
three-time winner on Tour this
year.

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Knkks dump H~
MIAMI (AP) - Chris Childs
c:aught the inbounds pass with 2.1
s~conds left and hurled the ball
high into the air, finally putting
the seesaw series between the
New York Knicks and Miami
f.leat out of reach.
· For the second year in a. row,
the Knicks were a single point
better than their archrivals, beat}og Miami 83-82 Sunday in a
mrilling Game 7.
: The action didn't end when the
Sarn.e did. Miami's Jamal Mash. burn chased . after the referees
~houting insults, and the Heat said
bad calls tainted the Knicks' Victory.
: "They had three officials in
lheir pocket," Mashburn said.
t ~·You can print that. I don't care if
' I get fined or not."
·
: New York, jubilant after eliminating Miami in a Winner-take~
all gome for the third consecutive
year, began looking ahead to the
Eastern Conference finals. They
~tart Tuesday at Indiana.

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NBA: Nets 1111b
top dnlft pick
: SECAUCUS~ N.J. (AP) -The
· New Jersey Ners won the NBA
draft lottery and have the No. 1
pick in next month's draft. The
Vancouver Grizzlies have the second pick, and the Los f.ngeles
(:tippers have selectio[l No.3 .

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CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - Sati~fied the ' Earnhardt said. "We sat ~ere and thought · even after· Lowe's Motor.. Speedway presiday before t!&gt; even be incluped in The Win- . about it and thought a~out . ir and finally dent H.A."Humpy"Wheeler picked i)im to
·
·
sto~ Dale Earnhardt Jr. became the first · .said, 'We didn't come here to run second or win it earlier in the week.
rookie to win NASCAR's all-star event Sat- ,third, let's take the tires.'"
"I dilln't plan on winning The WhiSton, to
u~y night when he .blew past Dale Jarrett
Jarrett finished second, followed by Dale be honest wit.h you,''llarnhardt Jr. said. ''We
witli,.on:e lap to go.·
Earnhardt Sr.,Jerry N adeau andJeffBurton. were just happy to be running it. It's a presEarnhordt was sixth when a q~ulti~cat.~ol- .
Earnhardt Jr. was met in Victory Lane by tigious race and I'd watched a lot of them
lision brought out a caution with eight laps his father - the only three-time winner in from up there in the second-floor condo
to go. He then told crew chiefTony .Eury he Winston history - where the two hugged and just knew it was something I someday
hoped to be a part of. I didn't care who won
couldn't win with the car he was driving in celebration.
and ,(;pnvinced him t~ give him four fresh
·"I thought .I could give Daie Jarrett some the thing."
Earnhardt Jr. overcame ·a series of early
tiresW
trouble and then I saw this kid running in
Thf result was a much ·quicker car then my rearview mirror.and couldn't believe it," problems to win.
the r~st ' of the field, allowing Earnhordt to Earnhardt said. "He is just something else."
He was halfway down pit road for a stop
rapidly move through the traffic and pass
·Earnhardt Jr., a rookie . this season, made during the first 30-lap segment when a cauJarre~n turn 'four.with one lap to go.
the field by winning two races this season. .t ion came out on the track. He quickly
Earnhardt then easily pulled away to pick . He's the only Winston Cup driver to win drQve off of pit lane. to avoid falling a lap
up ;r·!$,515,000 payout from tpe record $2 · more than once, something he seems over- down during the yellow flag.
[:ie later brushed against the wall in turn
·
million purse.
whelmed by..
"I ·~ running real good, but we were
The victories gor him into The Winston. four during the second 30~lap segment and
tight ~~d I told Tony I needed four tires;" which vyas more than enough for him Please ... Winston, Pap Be

In y 500
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Greg Ray is a marked man.
To his right is Jqan Montoya,
the defending CART champion.
Just behind him is Robby Gordon, his teammate, eager to atone
for last year's costly blunder. Farth er back is AI Unser Jr., who has
waited six years for a chance to
win his third Indianapolis 500.
At the rear is gutsy Billy Boat,
who qualified as the gun sounded
ending time trials Sunday night,
bumping his way into the lineup
in a car he had never driven.
Now all of them are taking aim
at Ray, the 1999 Indy Racing
League champion who will lead
the 33-car field from the pole
position next Sunday for the first
time.
He might as well paint a huge
bull's-eye on his No. I Dallara.
'Td be'lying to you if I said it
wasn't a big, big focus," Ray said
of winning the pole at Indianapolis. "It's something we wanted, but
the competition is so close.
"Really, there are two events
here. Now there's the race."
That's where the biggest challenges will come.
Montoya and Jimmy Vasser; his
teammate with Ganassi Racing
and another former CART
champion, are the first regufaf$
from the rival open-wheel series
to cross over to the IRI:s premier
event. Montoya, who qualified at
223.372 mph, was the early polesitter Saturday, but Ray1s four-lap
average of223.471 pushed Montoya to the middle of the front
row.
· Eliseo Salazar, who qualified at
223.231, will start on the outside.
Gordon, trying to find a way to
win the pole, called off his first
two attempts at speeds that would
have safely put him in the field
· and earned a spot on the inside of
the second row at 222.885, next
to Scott .Sharp and JeffWard, ,
Vasser is on· the next row, rig}jt
behind Gordon.
;
"I guess it's not that bad. We
gave it the best job we could;'
Gordon said. "We gave it all."
Gordon, then a CART regular
and now driving in NASCAR,
was leading the race last year, but
gambled he would have enough
fuel to make it to the checkered
flag. He came. up just over one lap
short.
"You can't dwell on it," Gordon
said. "You learn from your mis-

..._ see Indy, Pllp 11

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Tribe
·~

·youngster
2-:.hits NY
CLEV'ELAND (AP) - Paul
Rigdon =shut ·out the World
Series champion Yankees on
two hirs. fqr .seven inning11 in
his major l eague ,debut Sunday,
leading the Cleveland Indians
to a 6-1 win over New York.
Rigdon , the first Indians
pit ~her .sihce Luis Toant in
1964 to make his first major
league start agoinst the Yankees, gave Cleveland just irs
second series win over New
York at Jacobs Field.
The
24-year-old
only
arrived Friday morning, called
up from Triple-A Buffalo one
day after the Indi ans had to
place starters Jaret Wright,
Charles Nagy and reliever
Ricardo Rincon on the disabled list.
Jim Thome and Manny
Ramirez hit two-run homers
off Orlando Hernandez (4-4)
and Enrique Wilson's insidethe-park shot helped the Indians take two of three from the
Yankees, who swept a threegame series . from Cleveland
here earlier fltis month.

Cubs double up Reds on get-away day
Neither Junior nor Slammin' Sammy.
homered in the 3-game series
CHICAGO (AP) - Kevin
With .a four-run cushion,
Tapani had a right to be tired Tapani surrendered a two-run
and disappointed. He'd thrown homer to Aaron Boone. After
135 pitches, only to lose both getting the second out of the
his shutoui and complete gome inning, he gave up a single 10
in the bottom of the ninth.
Pokey Reese, prompting a visit
What didn't get away from the . from manager Don Baylor as the
Chicago Cubs right-hander booing begon at Wrigley Field.
"I asked him if he could get
Sunday was a victory. And that's
what mattered the most:
Barry Larkin and he said he
"Some days you throw 85 could. He's one out away and he.
pitches and it feels like a couple wanted to finish it mqre than
of hundred. Today I threw 135 anybody," Baylor said after he
and it felt like 50 or 60,"Tapani · left Tapani in for one more hi~­
said after pitching the Cubs past ter.
the Cincinnati Reds 4- 2.
Baylor, whose bullpen lias
"Getting the shutout 'isn't as been in tatters all season, W\ls
big as finishing the game when cheered as he returned to tile
you have the lead," Tapani dugout.
.
added. "When the manager
But wh.en Larkin got :in
gives : you the opportunity ·to infield single, that was it. Baylor
finish, you want to be out there returned to the mound ai!cl
at the end. I just carne up one brought in Felix Heredia. The
out short."
reliever walked Ken Griffey Jr.
The Cubs were up 4-0 head- to load the bases but got Dmitri
ed into the ninth, building the Young on a fielder's cho~e
lead when Reds catcher Eddie grounder to third to end tile
1
Taubensee's throw on a sixth- game.
inning double steal ticked the
"We still had the lead and t o
bat of Cubs' hitter Ricky have Griffey face him after l!l5
•:
QOTCHA, JUNIOR! - Cubs second baseman Ricky Gutierrez (right) Gutierrez and sailed wildly past
third allowing twO runs to score.
PIHH ... aeclt, . . . . . ..
makes a play to force Ken Griffey Jr. Sunday. {AP)

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Ra wins

pole slot

EDITOR

•

Qualified
Medicare
'
.
::
· Beneficiaries Medicaid .
.
.
Health Insurance . (called QMB): ·
~Q~u~au.h.!L!!"fi.&amp;.lle!o:..!dL...Jiu.nll.lldu.iV.~.&lt;iu.duuuawls;r......;;-;:,.._,.!:!,2 A: ¥edicaid requires a
'
Medicaid (called QI-2):
disability determination
For
by the Social Security
This program covers the
or by the
Meigs County payment ,of your Medicare Thl. s program reimburses Administration
Ohio Department of Job~ . ,
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co- you for the part of the .Part &amp; Family Services through:
.
.
insurances(s) and deductibles
B premium that you, have \~ts County M-edical ·
:
you are required to make as
already paid , which we-nt · l ~ervices (CMS),
part of the Medicare
Call Today!
toward . home health care. · · _.n.. · •
Program.
.
Q: w uat IS the age when I
•
You
will
recetve . a . am conside!1'd "Aged"?
Spe·cified Low-Income reimbursement check once . a '
1-800-992-2608 Medicare Beneficiarh~s year. The income limits ,are A: Age 65
higher
QI-1 Medicaid.
.rl
•
Medicaid (called .S JMB):
Or
.
.
Q: What services are covered · ~·
.I by Medicaid? ·
992-2117
This type of Medicaid pays Qualified Workin1 . Disables ,
·
.
only for your Medicare Part Individual (ca11ed QWOI): · A: Any of ~ese services are
.'
covered if they are
B premium.
Meigs County·
medically necessary for
This ·program pays fQr your
Department of Qualified Individuals . - 1 Medicare ·Part A pr,mium you: DoctorVisits
Medicaid (called Q0-1);
only. QWDI can help you if '
Hospital Cate
Job &amp; Family
Immunizations
This ·program provides the · you have lost . eligibilicy .for ~',
'
.
Services
Substance Abuse
same benefits. as SLMB; Title II . disability benefits · ~ ·
Prescriptions
175 Race Street however, the income due to earnings.
Vision
standards are higher than
Middleport, OH those allowed for SLMB.
Dental .
Mental Health
45760
Other...
•

Nleigs athletes move on

•

·Commonly
asked
M
. ore...
.
. .... .
; Questions:
·'
Help With
.~.:
.
•' · · E . ·
Q: Who determines whether : ·
M edtcare
xpense,s . ·~ am disabled? .
:

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Mond11J, MIIJ 11, 1000

•

open meeting Monday, 7:3p
p.m. at the Rutl•nd Methodist
Church. Hal Kneen, Meigs
County Extension agent, will
spe•k. Members of all gordell
clubs and friends of the club
members are invited.
,:

NEWS SHORTS
BY THE AISOCIATED·PRESS

Page 81

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The Daily Sentinel

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Mondly, IIIey 22, 2000

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Po11nera1'/,

~~~T~~Ap~~~~~~;~,-~=ji~~~~~;;~9r~a~~~
i
~~1.~~~U~I~~=r~~;:~~
fol' Rent
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NEW lfiAHO flAME OOIIIPUl

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MOIIthly Poymth~l I BOO 611

a oeloull!vlng

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EMPLOYMENT
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Mtd c• e o P vate nsu tnce
you may be M eo to ace ve
you d abettc supp es a no cos.
o you Fo mo e nto mat on 1
888 677 656

E•po IOnced Medico Offlco Bill ng
Pe son Posn on ltlc Udts Sbme
Adm nifitfa ve Oahu Send Re
sume A.nd Qua hca 10ns To Ct.A

Help Wanted

110

507 coGa PQ so~ yT bun'

82 5 T)l d Avenue Ga lpo s OH
4563

$2 OOa WEEKLY] Ma ~~ 400

8 ochu es Satlsl.ct on Gua
antetd Postage &amp; Supp 18&amp; P o

v ded

Rush

Se

$1835-Hour Fu Bl!lllal1s No Ex
pe ence RtQu e&lt;l Fiee App ca
on And n o ma on 888 726
9083 Ex enslon 19 (7 A 1.1 7

S amped Enve ope G CO DEPT

OAT N&lt;l

TONI GHT

TN

~M

UOI 'f/EEKLY GUARANTJED
WORK NG FOR THE GOV~RN
!lENT FROM ~OME PART
T ME NO EXPERIENCE AE
OU ~ED 1 BOO 757.0753

Have Fun Mte ng G, g b e S n
ges nVou Aea Ca Nl Moe
fnfo ma on
800 ROMAN CE

1100 WEEKLY

EJ\l 9735

men.l Ae und§ F ee

CST)

H BCO

Expe ence w {h MOS co mple
on

e mbu sem ent and c n ca

asou ce u I zar on ana/o case
App y Pont P ~asan l Cente
Genes s Eklt ya 8 Sial' Aou a
6.2N Route
Box 3.26 Po n

P easa~

WV

(304 675-QOOS

~55~ij,

STN.A

EOE

1

accep ng 1!)1p cat ons

740-446-¥37 0 74Qo«&amp;-84M
We Trlm.llted Ea NwJ Mow
We Supply Ou Own EQUtPft\tn
&amp; Fuel
You Lawn W Be _Mowed On
You Cho ce Of A Week y 0 B

WaeklyBa~s

1 80

Some Ext a T me And Elfo
\ot&gt;O Hancls This SumtntH(

6047

~eods

230

o Saa

ded Message

230-3390 E•l 5046

30

HYAC Serv ceTech
Mn mum 5 yea s eKPt lence

Mo ~a ed wl ~ g()Qlj job and peo
WIng o wort ovij tme

ProfessloRal
Servlc11

Aad1ord Rd Athans Oh o 4570
Jan!lprlo!

Supe v 10 W h Pklo ng E11p1 I
ence And 2 Gtnt a C eanera
Needed n Jackson A ea Fiu

T mt Poa on Wo k ng 5 00

~M

30 A M Monday ·FI dly Bene

It s Ava Ja'"" Al1ar SO tlays
~ anapo tat on Naeded Ca 740
245 7378

:0·

Fi'm 740 388 92 7

1988, 14 x70 Mobj e Homo &amp;.lot
3BR72BA
s ova et ge a o

Fenced In ya d and 10x14 bu d
ing Cen al
A
Ask ng
~ (304 673 0067

$21

f 99# 14K80 Flootwood 2 bod
2 ru baths w garden ub

I'Ooni'i

A t tctr c Arfp anee WID n
eluded New r ont po ch Sit up
on P vale Lot May move (7401
251 9311Z

S!OOEMS 0 str ct Hu Opon ngo

-

bo wa antv Bennetts Heat ng

Hufitlng Cay Twp Ma al!tll fld
11 Acroo $20 ooo 0 '31 Ac ' '
W th Barn $31 oaO f'r ~ndly
R dgo 15 Ac Ml10 000 eaah

rnoe

'

Molt• ~0. Aut and Whites Hill
Rd NICt 9 Acroo $12 000 0( a
Ac as l14 000 Wa t r Da1vll t
SA 325 Nlqt 5 Aorn $18 OOCI Qr
llfar A~ Ad 7 Acrts$11.000

•

Cull

VIllage
bOdr&lt;&gt;OI!llGre11n
total aApar
tctrlc.menta
oppllanc&gt;
., furnished aurw~N
room lac 11
.._'
tl and close to ~001 appllca
ont available al otnce 740..192
37t1 TOO 888 233-e894 Equal
Houllng owanunlty
4~ Space for Rent
MOllllt Homo Lo 1 W I Tako 12
, .. 18 Wldaa , 1 ~~ Mon h ttOQ
O.p oalt Rlteroncaa ~40 448
017&amp;

River ..,k Mob 1!1. Ho1110 Oom
mun tr l'omorov ~~~ a1 Stat:!
~r month Iff Cl fPACI fo rJn1.
1350 per~ nth 1350 diPOIIt
., 114 878191
740-,...
~,

Both Gal s + Molgo Coo CIQ
Now For Maps And Flnanolnt
Info I

~ppl(ancoo

w ence Count 11 Pa T me Btn
tf ts lncluda 8 ck Leave And
Oh c l?t 1 Qual red A.pp cants
Mu1 Be Cu rtn y Cert td In
A~d

SEOEMS. SIIA on 0 Cal
RISOU Cfl At 740 448 9840

More lntorma on

136-40S2

45,100 1-101).211 9594 x.aa

••e

80 Ooy Gu,rantoa
F onch Cl1y M1y1og 740
7185

Sate Kirby
Ra nbow ~ 1111 Sha ·p Low Aa
$250 0 hi 1 Low AI $30 Bags
Vacuum Cleant
1

For AI Modtll

O®D USED APPLIANCES
waaht a d ve 1 ret lge atora
anges SkaQda App anees 76

v no s 101 &lt;:"ol 740 448 7398
1-688-818-0 28

WI 1 ne Spoc ol 3 4 200 PSI
$2 t 9~ Po
00
200 PSI
137 oo Po r 100 All B a11 Com
p....lon F ttlngs n SIOck
ftO~ EVANI ENT~IIPRISEB
Jactoon Oh o 1 100-537 9~8

I'J,tw AnCI uaed FIJ n lure Sto e

Elill9w Hoi day Inn Kanauga B g
SavJngl On New Couches 1992
17 1 2ft Cob a Aunab out boat
A t you co nnected ? lhte ne

New To )'ou Th ft Shoppe
9 West St mson A hens

740-592 842
Qu a y c ottwng and 'tlousehold
tems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monddy thru Sa u day
900.5 30

40

5211

A$SIMBLY AT HOM Ell C a s
Toys Jewel

v. wood

Cheek ou

"'lb ~p WITH THE

Giveaway

licensed Salary and
benefits commensur~te
With qualiftcahons
Expenenced and

•

Loal Huge Malo Black Dog Rol
Lab Loat Betw .. n v nton And

Ew ngton 740 388 0 44

Me cl'land sa needed o South
Ohio Local on Pa 1 T me
Must r.tve Good Orlv ng record!
Pa s D ·vg Test antt Backg ound
Check Compel! vely pay Com
pany \lthlcle Fu esumt to
(814) 235 6000 o Cal (8001 550

8

45640

ALL Yard Soltt Must
tho cloY blforo tho 11&lt;1
Ia to run SundoY

odiUon 2 00 p m
Frfcloy Mondor edition
9 30 o m Sotunloy

Pltesed to IMOunot the

no

Insurance Agency
P.O Box 623

OEApUNE 2 00 p m.

Mana~t

ATTENT ON Wo k A Home
And love I $1 000 $5 000 PT
FT f ee Book el Ca Now 1 aoo.

4} Nutrt on Spec a a
H gh School 0 p oma And

Adv1nca Delldllne 1 OOpm the
day before the 1d 11 to run
Sundey I Monday edition
I OOpm Frfcloy

Every Sa 6 P. M

BOWENAUCOONSERY~E

GARY BOWEN AUCTIONEER
Proctorville Ohio
FIN Market

10

1 Piece Dozens &amp; Case Lots

11284428

~

1t82

Froe Dellvo r 1 898 928

New Doublewlda 3 BR 2BA
$276 l!ff mon1h Low Down Pay

mant Fre• A r Free Delivery ,

888-928 3426
32x80

Fa,etory, Aepo Naver
~d In $49 950 1 8~8 891

Moto Alot Now Pana Nf!W Til 01

400

~0

MEDICAL BilLER $1 ~ S&lt;IS IH
Mod ca B ng SOMwa e Company

Tnls -perwll not

Provided Mus Own Compuler 1
800-430 5518

advtrtl-- ror eolestalo
which II In violation ol1ha
laW o.. ... hereby
Informed lhat al dweUinge
advertlsod In llila """paper

knowjngly~

are avalable on an aqua

oppo&lt;t..,lly

Only 2

Th ee bedroom 1otot1y remo&lt;lolod

nllfde and out trane and lot new
fu r ace new appl ancas new ca
po $23,500 cal 740-992 4514

379-2589 Afto 5 00

440 1\Apal'tlilente

for Rent
1 and 2 btarooih aportmtntt Ill'
n &amp;hid and unfuri'IWttd security
dti!POI t required. fQ petl 740

992 Z!t8

like n•w o de home 81 Texas
Ad $4500 down owne w 11
r nance Month v paymen &amp;304 16
p us p ope ly a11es and n

140

POSTAL JOBS TO $ 8 2

H

Pus Senefils PT FT Va ous Po
1 1ons Fo ApQ 1 Exam 1 877

6657002EJt 7 8AM 5PM
MF
R.N oALPN I
A Cldla NU,.Ing Ctntt 1 now
aocap no app •• ono ro ~ No 1
LPN 1 ~ll"nll thould be tam

playtro WhO In oy WO king Wth

tne • det"ly A ctd • art.r• exceQ

t '''I bt'f1nl InclUding 1 com
p ahen1lva htt r, pfll1 an(1 an
aopo tu, ty fo ldvanc•m•"'
' '•••• 1pplr r~ Dtflon 11 A ea
d 1 Nurafn A Ceruar 5 Mt n

$1rto1 Ooov ~ Ohio M, ••
pm 101

enaeo""''"c•
• nom • •• n on
Income 1.5QO.a7!001 mo"tn

188 at8 331 wwwt &lt;Ommbl
no!

PO&amp;l,-L JOIJ f4J 3U 00 VA

Now H r ng No bpe tn.ee P'tld
T 1 n1ng Ortll ltnef Ia Ca 7
DoyoiOQ.&lt;m-3180 Ell J 1H

.

fARM O., UPPLI!:S

&amp;

LIVl~ ;TOC K

810 Farm Equipment

aurenca (740 44

GREAT NCOME PORTEN
TIAL MEDICAL B llERS Ea n
Up To 545K Yea I Fu ~a nlng
PC Atq d Ca T an Toll F oo
81111-880-6693 Ex 14401

Buelne"
Training

Gal lpollo co- Co!lego
(Co eo a Closo To Homo)
Ca Today 740 448 4367
1 600 214-0452
Reg lf90-05- 274B

150

Schoola
lnttructlon

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
O~EE QUICKLY Baoht o 1
Mltlt 1 Dcctora 1 ly Cor 1
apondonct ltttd UpOn P lo Ed
uoat on And lho I udy Cou 11
,or r~&amp;E l~lo ma1 on Boo~ tt
'hone CAMIRIDOI 8T~TI
UN VIAIITY 1_.._.13 I

108

INSTA~LED

If You Don r Cat Us We Bolli
Lo•• Frta Ea matai 740 441

e301, 1 eoo 291 008f

JET
AERATION MOTORS
R&amp;pllred Now &amp; Roi&gt;UKIIn Stock
Cad Ron Evono 1-800-1137 9828
Mtchtn Tab 1 wltn Chalrt Soli
praptlltd L1wn Bov Wheal Bar

CREDIT REPA R AS SEEN ON
TV E lit Bad Crod Logo &gt;j
F oolnlo t 800 7611-4008
FREE DE~T CONSOLIDATION
App

ca on

W St 't'loe Rtdute

Paymonlo To 85% IICASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERII Coli 800
328 8810 Ex l!8

'"II

'NUll MONEY PROI
UMS? NOW ACCE"INCl ~,
PLICATION$ 13 000 AND UPI
1110 AP,LICATION 'IE 117
114S.~7 IXl: 40i
Ill NIID OAIH?? Wli P~y
Coon for ~tmal~lng Poymonlt
On P op• IY lo dl Mo lgagoa
A""uUool hitltl"'ntt! lrnmt
~ '1 11 O~QIII I Nobody Bo~ 1
Ou Pr Qfl Ntll~n-' Coni ao
8uyt I 100 480 0731 EKI t OI
www "•' onllcontaclbLI)'I 1 com

WANT A COMPUTER? But No
Coah? No Crlld t OK Slow C odlt
OM In 0 Down Laplopl AVIIIab I
~oolttbl oh Your Crodltl Call
Now 1 100-247 3818

Nice Brick Home 3 Btd oomt 3

Balha

Sto y W h F nlohod
Butmen Ca port lnground
PoOl Ook Kltoht" Cob noll Con
vtn tnl Location Quia Neighbor
nood
o~ Ttodo 1 Avenue

Or a lltdroom lit&gt;anmonta Wa
tor &amp; Ttdh Paid No Pott 740
361-1100

Ask ng S1 9 000 140-446 818

IIIAUti~UL

Ga po 1 Owner Nttda To Se

APAATMINT8 AT
IUOOIT PRICII AT JACK
ION !8TATI8 52 Woslwood
Orkio I om $289 o 1370 Wa~ to
shop &amp; movlea Call 740 446
2!168 Ectull HOutlng Clpport\J~IIy

•
NO DOWN PIIYMENT I

No Oovwn Ptymtnt Requ red W rh
Governmtnt Sponao,.d Loan
Good Crtd t And S eady Income
Raqulrod Cll Todo~ For Mort
nformat on ndtptndtnce Mort
g1g1 Btrv CU 128t 1 Mad IOn
laliawcoel OH 44107 Ml1171 I
IOQ.I&lt;IS.OOII

110 WanlldTo Do
Dh 11 on Wom1n aou Houu
~nlng li!O&lt;II8781 08

1 Bedroom Near C nema A C
W D Hookup Qu 11 Location
1279/Mo + Ullltlll No Poll 7&lt;104411-2957 Or 7 -

JANITIIOL HEATIH&lt;l AND
COOLING EQUIPMINT

row (740) 4*2t18

CREO T PROBLEMS? CALL
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO T BANKA~PTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RAT NG 90 180 DAYS
800-4:12 598

t::;:~;:==:;::==:i
t999 Ha lor Dav dson W do
400 M es Laze Red

G l~e 1

$1 t 000 Like B and New 1994

WYDMINO LAND LIQ~ DA
TON nort&lt;lbli Oppo ~nlly 110
Aoru ~qr J YII I~U Dn /UU
Mo (fU Ill 8!1 111 Mot)
N••r
Ahtolope Hwra•
N11 by ~'~' No OrtCit onocko
Loa 100 47a 11 '14

oa,p•r

KAINER AlDOl
Tht P lea Hso INn Reductd On
Th 1 23 Aero '!tact Of Woodl
Anq H I Oil y 123 000 LOCOitd
On Kr no Aood Pff BR 7 l
Ntlgllllofllood
CINTIAPotNT RUN
IIIUI M ,ond On 8 t Aort Lot
Plus Pour Olht 1 I • Ao t Loll
Rlldy ~or Your Ntw Homo Lo
011111 ~ M II Ofl ·~ U Nttr Tht
Ja~n /0111 Oounl)' Llht
CON"!' Mill OUT ON T~l I~V.
INQI CALL TODAY '0~ ~~II
MAI!I
IIOH1 Sli!ll~
Mtl!imv Lai!Q Co Lid
WW!GOj !DJ~ 09m

Christy 1 Faml y

35 Fergu1on Blade Scoop P g
F-o e $4500 Elctra good condl
lon NIYI paint (304)e75-84a7

$450 00 010 (740) 44

Mob s Homo Supply, 740 448
94 8 www orvb """"""',."

7!io Boats &amp; Motors 1
for Sale
cuddy cab n 4 3 Liter V 8 dua
baner 11 Kepi under cove ed
dOCk in eummtt stored n garage
n w nter excellent cond lion
500 conlool Dan W•uo~ at
(74Q) 384 ~ 177 0 (740) 384
38110

n

Fo sa t or T aae 24 Pontoqn
Boo 70HP $1000 Look ng lo
Mqto eve 1 or aqua val
ue.(:J114)t76-8894

780

I

Transm oalona CVC Jo nls 740
245 56)7

Campera &amp;

790

Mqtor Home•
1977 21 t /2 Foo1 Coachman Ntw
F oo l Co poling Upholsle y
New Tfrn New ~lr Cond tlon ng
E~tcellent

Anora

Shapa 7•0 379 2927

~M

'

S H!VICES

810

Home
lmprov,ment•

IASIMENT
WATEAPIIOO"HG
Uncondlllono lttlmo guo tnltO
Loaal refarenc11 furnished Ea
llblllhod 1978 Ca 24 Hra (740)
448 0870 1 800 217 0578 Rog
... W.•rpraoflng

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUIUC NOTICI! OF SALE riiii'YIIIIIII right to occepl
Ll 1 ctl n g
c r • • k or re]tot tny or 111 bide
COnNMnoy Dlllrlct will 111 Term• of 1111 c11h or
fiOIIVIftil IIIIICI biCII until ~~=::'t.lldln=fMk
4
p.m on lilly 23 21100 It -•
34411 Corn Hollow Rd
ConHI'VInoy
ct
Rutlend, for a 1188 Ford
J FMJIOn Taylor. Proeldlnt
Alrolllr van
(5) I 15 22 3 to
Till Hint may 111 111n
lflt Dlllrtoll Dfllal, MondayPubliC Notice
::~Me: ~':JIIet= _O_n..:;latu=:::rtl::.l.:;y'=Miy:.:2=.7-21100-

ac

••1--------'.....;-

wo

~
11t5 Ford P.i80 4
Qab 'lllrbo Q(UI fotriOI!'Of C
Air ~~ PO AM/"'' CD 740
1118-1-

~~~~ :~J!:':n~ :X:~ ~~~~~~: a.~':: w~~·aJ:~To~
0

1

CIC Otntrtl Homo Mo n
tonenco Pa ntlng v nyl 1 d ng
carpentry doora w ndowo botho
moblla nome repair tnd mort For
lot ootlmlll call Chot 74Q.H:Io
8:123

or lmpllld warranty LCCD

nlell publlo auotlon an lhl

Public Notice

Public Notice

Bonk perking lot the
followlflll vohlolll
1818 Chovy Cav Vln
t01JC5248T71e3471
1183 Otd1mablle Cuttae1
Vln 103WH14T7PDMM47
1t81 Ford l!xp Vln
I fMDU:MZSMUA113120
The tarma of till 1111 are
Ollh
The Home Netlontt Blnk
IUirvH lfle right to rejaot
1ny or all btda or to ....,ova
tny unit from the 1111 11
lily tlmt

building
In Choetor
Townehlp Malg1 County
Ohio, In accortlenoe with
plana and IPIQIIICIIIana by
aontiii'Uotlftil 11111 Dome
"Till dati 111 for
oompl1tlon ol lhll work
11ttilt b1 11 111 forth ln lila
btctdlng propo11t " Plane
and lpeolfloattone ero on
lite In the Department ol

to
Jnapeot any may
of lltt
Arrangemantl
111above
made'
Vlhlolll p~or to lhl•l• by

01111111 740-Me-221 0

Motorcycln

(5) 11 11 22 "

ITATI OJI OHIO

clone fret eatlmatee 11r11 me

•
Aabbltl Pad1gr1td Naw Zealand
gf- lol of l!illk IX YHrl old call

I

Tranomloo ons All

Typea Accou Ttl Over 10 ooo

P ooflng all basemtnl epa r1

NO MONEY OOWNIII Compoq
HP IBM Oeoklopl Laptopo E

WWW I)Ufll&gt; I 8 I cam

Aut11J1arta &amp;
Accenort11

L vlng1ton 1 Bailment Water

DOWI\tOWn I ltdroom1 Upill rt,
Dopo1 1 Atltrtnou No Patl
740.....0111

Payments F •• Co o P ntt 1
888 479 2345
To Frtt)

on

Marine 3028 Bla

=---1

WhHaa And Mini Lops S12 Wllh
Pap oro Ho lnglon a 740 379
11213

Comt oe We bs •• $tart Your
HomeB vs n11s Today! A mos
Evt yone App oved Low Monthly

Q8il

-.-"":&gt;"
NOTICI TO IIDDIRI

B eye ~ New Hulf)' 8 Spotd Blul
Womona $90 00 (740) 446-11133

NOW Tlk ng ApjiiiOIIIOnl• II
WUI • lt~IOOIII TownM~It
Aplltmenlt Ina(~-·· WaJtr
!:.WW. Tru~ 1111/MO ?40

1895 Chtvy IMtondl&lt;l Cab Z 71
snvoroilo .. oollont Col)dhlon •
BuPtHII~ 33 ln,cW I F Good ch
Trft EV.ry 0p116n LMihtr Alk
1111 s1e eoo 740-441-8ta.

740

740 tea 4514 fPIIImont1 •••"
o01t tumloMd &amp;

unrum-.

-~·

Huge nventory Clacount Prieta
On V nyl &amp;k rt ng, Doo 1 Wind
owa Ancliora W111r Htattrt
P umb ng l lltctrlcal Perts P:u
nscso &amp; H1a1 Pumps Bonnatto

L!• nQ apart

mente home &amp; trailer rente 1

2000 Ford F 250 XLT 4x4 do
m101 bllicf&lt; with tan In
tt If amlfm CD a lower front
damage uklng It? 000 740
982 t 506 dayo 740 941 2844

88 Chow .., 305 41pd II
~&lt;•• a rlm1 M 1500 oo (7401 448
3387

MOIILI HOIII OWNIIII

entine

83 Honda Accord Runt Good
Looks fair Ve y Oependab 1

1t1 ~ 572

3t37

830 .. Llveetock

Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.

25 000 m los very sh1 p lui litr
lngs $11 1oo 740 U4t 2045 o
740-149 :1203

Father I Son LOOking For Pl~e
To Hunt Deer W 11 Pay Fo R"
IOnabll ACCIII Ftt 419 273

Fo d 2000 Tractor New Tlroo
Fondt 1 Pa n1 And Morel P S
Llvt Power 15 900 FFA Projact
SOuth Galla H8 740.21H37t

So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
'
today, and discover
true convenhmce at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!

Ha lay Dav dson 1200 Spo taler
8 400 M oo Aqua $8 500 Both
Blltes Exce len Condition Ga age
Kept Covers Included La s 01
Exlrao ~40 387-D555 0 Loeve
Meaaoge 740-31i7-o655

Bu~qot ~r1coq

t 994 Fo d Rang&amp;&gt; XLT 90 OOOK
New T es Laoka Runs Great!
$ S T m $4 300 OBO (740)

Two bedioom hause In M dd e
po I $300 pe month no pals
74&amp;992 5039

Opportunity Employe

8989

1989 IOUIU Pick up 4 Cy
Au o Tpppor $ 995 010 Pa
al trada consldertld or t ada for
R d ng Lawn Mowa (304)372
6853

1991 Toyota Tarool 2 Doors OX
F ont Whee 0.. ve Au omat c No
Ruat lie y c e~n lnle lor Runs
Wei $2 350 740 448 2196 740441.0t09

Bo• 420

Raymo nd Johnaon Auct one a
Fu Auction Se v ct Owner of
R verslde Aucl on Ba n Crown
City Cons gnmen Sale eve y

v.

A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
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den Ad Cro,.n C ty Oh (740)
211&amp;-6160

msslon $700 (304)875-580

Foe o\1§ Ronovalod 3 Bodrooma
$499 &amp; Anuma Hu ry
LeM 740-448-3384

B ada New , 2 TV Lawnmowe
Motort &amp;(304)875-!!94ll

OUtPIIlctOrltluts

PUSUC NOTICE
Till al'ltlull report Porm
110 PF for the Klbbl1
Foundation 8ornard V
Fultz Truam II IVIIIIbll
for public tnap1otlon 11
llarlt8t'd Fultz Law Ofllol
111 1/2 WMt 8ooonct Btrtll
Pomeroy OH 411781 during
'"utar buet1111n houri for
1 period ol tiD dey•
eub. . quent to publication
of thle nottce.
(6)11 11 21 22 23 24 25,
28. 28 30 31 1nd (I) 1 12tc

sale now

1990 Subaru 4WO SW Has 011

G avaly T aolor ~ ding Lawr&gt;
Mowe Weldtr Compr:easo
Gravely Mower &amp;ravely Guard

Barn 740 388 0823 740 245
8866 Fu Serv ce Aera encea
Ava abe L cenaed &amp; Bond ad

Public Notice

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.

Runs Clood 380 Eng no tlual
Wheols $1 500 Firm ?4o 258
t624

l~~:~~!~kcCa~"1 ~.~~ s~~!':t"

ltsl e Lemley Lem ey s Aucllon

how II!Uth you III
1mcm to 01 jult know
lvn•l'll alwa)'l be Ia our
1beaJIII. Ime you all
4
'I'blnka apln,
Nena I ChriiAtklnm

1976 Ton Ford Pick Up Rtbulll

Rabbits '3P""' (304 576-2699

Frulte &amp;
Vegetablef

Maps you
llowen rood, •
Clttl or pore a hn1 we
truly appreciate It
CIA I bepa to tell

of new pa ts but needa a trans

Aut and Oh o 45775 Alten on
Pe sonne tomm nee Off ce Manage No phone cal s please The
VI age or Rullantl s and Equal

wanted now or ol&lt;!or RCA o oct
TV qp u11d H!Jg~•• Qr lony 111
tilt t~lltm wllh •~cttl cords
~IY o11h ;• Vfo • r•o 949
113151tl&gt;'t meougo

Myst c Poms any breed dog
groom ng a~a able Also shOw
qualhy and pet Poma ava able to

580

·0·

e
Alddleport
Emergeacy Squad
Newmark aad stiff at
ror lrylall your
lwdut
1o the
Middleport TNT Pit
Shop Crew and

1988 Four W nna 205 Su(ldowne

720 Trucks fqr S.le

Ona bodrooln houio AC WID
hookup SR 7 noar Choih le"
S325 ca 740 912 5221 afto

s a r but w I nc ease as g an

V llgo ol Aul and

t 0

us:

solo 74~3418

WANT A COMPUTER ?? BUT
NO CA&amp;H?7 MMX technology
Will Flna~ct With 0 Down Pall
CredR Pr-ma No Problem Ca I
1M Froe 1 877 293-4082

v

304-453-2517

(740~258

T~

fund ng nc eases Th s pos on
a lows fo a grea deal of I BJC b I tv
and oppo tunlty o a good in
come Send eaume 3 et a s of
e e enca and ncome 1'1 s o b')l
T\JeSday May 23 2000 IO The

74~22tl

SetUrdoY a 7p m

Poop o Noaded' To Lose Up
30 Pounds In Tho No&lt;t 30
O~s F ea Samples 740 441
~7

Now 18x80 3BA 2BA $288 per
342tl

5 Spoed

Lab Mix Fema t 8 Weeks Old

B' "' 1 Yelow Fr endly ~upplts
740.245-5797

month loll!l' bown P8)1m&amp;nt Fret

A

Ch~vy Cava or

CARS FROM 121/~0.,.. lm
pounds Repoo li'H 10 """" /24
MOl 0)9 9% Fo UoUnga 18oo
319 9323 X215e

hou s pe week at SB 00 pe Mur

3sBklge

1998 Focd Mustang Conve tab e
Wh re w h Black Top G ey In
te or &amp;1 000 M ea V e Au
toroauc
Power Everylhlng

1~ota/ wO&lt;mlld 175 740 U48
2128 IM!n n;, i

&amp;Jipe ence a plus Pos tlon s 30

Just Ac ass
Hunt ~ton w.1

te~or
se.soo 740-448-4438
996 Chevy Camaro v 6

Aus a an shepherd pups 3 fe
males two blue rna le one b aclc

Per Month Low down 'Payment
Fru A Fth Do vo y 1 888

EARN $90 000 ~EARLY Rap a r
ng NOT Aeplac ng long Crocks
n W ndsb a ds F ee IJ'Ideo 1
800 826 8523 US Canada
www g aasmechanl.l com

99~ Chroyler Cirrus LS ABS
Bakd 8Cyndo 4Doos AC
Loa1~ S&amp;ala Powtr Locka PW
0 vera Seat Anti Thoft ~emote
Entry 49 OOOK Gr111n G ay In

1

NtwBankRapos
Only~Left NovorUved ln
CaH t-e00:'948 5678

AliT MCI
PAYPHONE ROUTEI
Ho LocatiOns Great Income
(Loca I Rle 800-800 3070

1994 RJ 8onnaYIIe SSEI Stipe•
Cha god Turbo Fuol Injected
75K Regularly Sorvlc,d Ao
duced Fo Ou ck Sa e $9 500
740-448-08!52 74Q.U8.Q957

A

'Let ua As•tst You In You New
Mfg HOme "Ca For Pre Approva
1 eae sao 9117
Save~$$$

ATIT 1t ~ON£CARD RO
UTEI Easy
SH CASH CASH
FREE In o I
7 9888 E•l
1155 (24 Hrs)

1993 Mt'"b oh 3000 GT 85 000
mlloo 5 opted 120 hp V 8
cr~1t a e d sc CO canatte
radio PW PL great condlt on
740-985 8929

$200

2 3 4 bld.Wm Homes
~ I 1 1100-948.5678

Needs Paop 8 To P acess Med
cal Cams F om Home Tr(lnng

Local &gt;J age has open ng o a
deta I o ~n ed nd v dua to man
age da y office fun cl ons Sue
cessfu cand da e w II pos.sess
bas c compu e and off ce sk lis
and have e~~:perlence as a supe
v so as weu. as be self mo iva ng
G ant w 1 ng and bookkeep ng

Pets lor Sale

•

thm to comfort

ooq

AM FM Casseue 2 Doors
Ask"g $7 500 740-256- 094

Now 14 Wldo .:IBR 2B~ 1213

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono s aa n $35 o $45 tor 2 O( 3
hou s week y Cal Se a Tee 740..
592 665

560

GO.OD CIIEDIT
eADCAEDIT
NOCREDITI

7 Chesh e OhiO 45820

OFFICE MANAGER

Every lues 6 P:M
Truck oads Of
New &amp; Used ems
F om Seve at States
Se ng To Tho P~lc &amp; Dealers

Price
..

993 Slacf&lt; Flrob ~ ts 395 1881
Lumlnl Eu o 2 Doo 1 13 485
1190 Cutltll Citra 4 Doon
$2 49~ t980 Curt111 Supromo I
D:r:.ti.115 COOK MOTOR I
7~03
j
t 993 D~ Daytona lroc 'Turbo
28
g •n wl h ~ray n
ter or m t daD'Iaa't fun• a
dr v,l $4 SOD 74h92 1508
diVI 740-llitll-2144 Mnlnga

1dis

Schoo At 8323 North Sill a Routo

Auction
and Flea Market
AUCTION
2 B g Sale Days

ant (304)675 2601
ductd

'

1991 Honda Accord LX Auto
Sl 000 010 1304,.75-58821874
447 A11115PM

A

Fo Sa e By Owner 3BR 2SA

r.OC)f gut e ng
car garage
2912 Ann 1 on D va PI Pleas

28!2

dr VIS $4 900 740 992 t 508
days 740.949 284&lt;11Y8nlngs

I

Mode Cloaeout SOlO

F ee Ca Fo App ca on E~~:am

All Yord Salol lluol 8e Paid In

Buelnees
Opportunhy
4

1891 Chov ott Caleb I)' Sttllon
Wagon PS PB &lt;lood CondiUon
G.ood T 11 Good Ttonoportatlon
Ca Nttdl To Solll 1•0 378

$10 000 OBO 740 448 3825

App cat one 'If Be Accepted
Thro11gh June 21h They May Be
Ob a ned A The Gu d ng ~and

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $i8 24 Hou H ng FD&lt; 2000

CST)

Mon F 9 30AM 8PM
Sat 9 30AM 3PM
l;:klso~ Sundaya
(304)175-2988

Rtgllttfod _srown Swlao cow
740 742-3408

11
•••

mtolnen

Leave Message

o vers License

We look forwa d to mea ng you

nal on Informal on Fede at H e
Full Benef ts 1 800 598 4504 Ex
onson 151t (BAM 6 PM

~

9 'oom t\Oust w/2. 112 ac ea sp t
driveway neede work SQid ai 11

Ia ye family oom &amp; o f ~· n•w

Ca 800-929-5753
lo an appq n ment

310 9509 www b gbucks om
hame com

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

lha s o a Tn County Spo

$57 500 740-IIIS'FINANCIAL

210

ll111nd opening of lis naw Wellston caj lng cente
We 4 • now"'"
up
interview appo ntments fo
outbound telesef'VIce posl ons
No e~eperlence neoet;sary
Earn up to S 5/hr
wl h quarte y sa ary eviews
Managemen o~ unit ee ava
able 401 KIMedlca1toentaVPa d
vaca kms ava able 3 shifts da y
F ex ble schedu log Sra you
new ca ae wthUs I

rcquuements to

Be Plld In Advance

Caao

or

Bache or Deg •• And
er's.License

MIUtnntum Ttltltrtlc:n

ns should
send resume w1th salary

Galllpolle
&amp; VIcinity

2)

3273

I qualifie(i pers

Yard 8ale

n

CARS fRC!)M t200 POLICE IM
POUND Honda o Toyoto 1 Cht
vya Jeeps And Spo U
11
Co Nowl BOO 772 7470 EXl
7832

black
w th g ay nterlo 59 000 m ••
m no f ont damage runa &amp;

our woekly U"'ldv&amp;

Shop, near Mason County Far
grounds Pt. Pleaaanl

FHA ~opoa &amp; Land Easy 'ltrmo
740-~ 31i7l!
+}

en

lporllmat)

Building
Suppllll

tlzed apecla 1!1 Pk:k up a ftye n

IIUNAROUND?
Wa A Now Homo With No Hafo
ala? C11ll F!or P a App ov•l
188 le5.0C117
&lt;

ts m need of a
Customer Service

Must be licensed or
Willing to become

550
•

Gooda

800

WANT A COMPUTER???,? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY Wa Finance 0 Down Past
Cr.dlt Problems 'OK Even If
Turned 0\)wn Bolorel AMs abl oh
'lou Cred 111 800 858-03SII

Sporting

Sew ng

1'/P ng G aa Pay CAll
795-0380 E• •20 (24 Hrs)

Expenonce preferred

80

740 448-47112

pac kage $39 888 365 9385
www makelh! bucks com

Repre~enlatlve

70

New oond lion t:heclt U1 Out

Or

uu wan ed $350 $800 a week
PT FT lu y e undab e dee s on

Don't 9et cau9ht in a Web
11

Da1lu Spedal thoak• to
710 Auto• fOr sale

RtoondiJionad

~ lllo 1

faDally ol Jame~
I"DIIIIu" Atklnoc\n would
!Ike 10 say thogb to-III
Ike DilDY &amp;lead~, family
aad neighbors whom

The Dally Sentinel • Pac•• 83

during dae lose

I

STEE~ BUti.DINGS Band Now
~ 11 1011 '" 1e R ..,. tiona On
"'
•.rr ' 25•30
tuuC 30x40
Kl1tlne
Inventory

ne

1 HANSPOHTAriON

CON6ULTAT ON Bona t Toam
St ~Cit Inc Totl FIt 1 888

Ropalt Serv co 740 448 4553 0
AM ~ PM Or Seo A 417 sec
ond Avonuo Ge po II

tub bey window n kitche n greal
cond ton new po ch mutt De
mov'd 114 000 call 740 742
1107 attor Spm:

Tobacco P an 1 For Sale Ca
7JIQ.44&amp;-78&lt;13 A/tor 7 PM

SOCIAL SECURITY 0 SABILITY

Be tt And Pe

1896 Atdman mob e home Ylo
badroom ont bath wllh garden

P~nrs For Sa t Rtldy
Now 740-25W20e

Cam Den ed? We Spec a ze n
Appea I And H.at nga FAEE

Wasl"lttt DI'Ytrt Rano•• Rtfrl

Carpal Cent i AI $11 000 No
LIM C,ontraotl P •••• ?40-448
78110

Val d OriVt I L CIRII
App eat on Package

Dtwtiurat

4225

Troybllt t or 1700 l,llboon
Wuhor /Oryor $525 ,.,..co g
• Shoulder Sl a~ Pura10 $1$2
740448-4428

Hou!~Wlold

OOOds

New Parct 1 Ava able Soon In

578 1363 NORWOOD SAW
MILLS 2~2 Sonw I D~ve Bulla o

Top Sol For Solo 746-.ut.cett

ME HCIIAI~IJI&lt;;E

510

P anka Beams Lerge
C
~ B181 SO
1 V I An
apac ''
wm 1 ue
ywhO • FREE ntorme lon 1 801).

N¥

Pl1nta

Flrmi(304)1195-37401895-37N

a

1 eoo 872 5987

Coo ng

Eatllest
Tobacco

- - a VUiago Manor and REIID£NTIAI. HOME OW~RS f
R veroldo ~mon1a In Ml&lt;tdlt
po t fr6m tz'S 5338 Cal 740 Tappan H Elllcloncy 90% Cld
9ll2.~ EIJUII Holj• ng Qppo
Fumac• 01 Fu nacet 12 seer
Heal PutTijl &amp; Air Cond Uonlng
6y1 am&amp; Frn 8 l'lor Partl &amp; l.a-

1995 t4•74 S ng t Wldt Mobllo
Horne very Nice Many Exlraal
0 shwHhtr F ant Deck New

P11 IT me Sh tis

Ava lablo In locillon And La

Tho Stal, 01 Ohio

Acroo $19 ooo
Grande Mo~tly Rd Bttt
Bu d ng Sftos in Tho Counly e
A&amp; oo 121 500 8 Acra'a W 1h
Pond $29 500
1 15 -'~111
S31 500 Oa1hl c.,... .. ~01111
C'"k Ad 20 Paroola BOQin~lng
A 8 ...cOS 112 000 To 37 ,_.rn

1984 Fa rrrtonl 1 Bath 14x70
S o'i age Ba n Oetachab i Deck
Washo 10 yo Inc udtd $8 7QO

Playe s w lh a pos ve anitude
who enjoy wO&lt;klng wilh lha eldarl)'
A ead a o e s a except onal ben
ef packag@ nc ud ng a, comp e
/lens ve. he a h pl ~n .and an op
po un :y o 11 ze our Ca ee
G ow1h P og ~m opoc f!ca y de
s gnod lor 6 T NA s P~aie app y
n person a A cad a Nu s ng
Can a 5 E Man Street Coo
veOhloMF84pm

For EMT 1

325,

Ac 11

t

$47 000 Great Haroea S tea And

peskll~

and able 10 cross over to nsta a
on &amp; electr ca work ExcfMient
pay and benet te Send esumes
o Dan nman Eectrle lne 6246

ooo Or l4

'us no,. 1 800 724

p can s shou d be ene ge leo team

1

tloWI Off SA

Crnlc Ad

FREE MONEY NOWI I s t r '

No Repayment Gua a!'l•ld Fo
Deb Con sol dat on Pe sonal

Off

eo AI

'

Pr ce Pe Lawn Is P opo 1on a
To Size Of Lawn!
We Wou d 81 Hapfjy To Tskt

3478Exlll30

2~~·~w::w~orvb.~oorn.llon~~
$3 795:rwtt:~~~~
s aw Logs 1n1o

ISBAD CREDit? &lt;lot Cash
l.oans To $5 000 Debt Conao
da jon To $200 000 C 01111 Cardo
Ma tgages Aaf narv:lng And
Auto loans Ava abe Mar dan
C ed Co p BOO 47\ 5119 Exl

Tested Nu sing Ass s an 1 Ap

He p ng Peop e Rece ve Gove n
H

Two yo~ ol klng 10 m ch c 1\1
ca nurs ng e•per enee equ ed

t; nney &amp; Payton Lawn Mo., ng
Sa v cas Of Ga IJa County Ca

A. cad a Nu &amp; ng Center n now

Make Money

9ata

Reg sterad Nu se Must possess
cu tnt West V gin a I cense

management s high.,- des abe

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Op To

Addfesse d

S Bo• 438 ANT OC H
3701
438 Start ftnmedia ely

SfART

180 WantedTQ Do

110

1 lnd ~ bodfoont

flOW 111(1110 ........ 10&lt; flit Spring
FlTst Ordtto w11 G~tnltt ~t&amp;

Middleport, Ohio

auaran ••

12yra on Job

lOCI (304)895-3887

••4

111118 ~onda Foreman 480 I&amp;
w ndlh o d Roar Storage 481
Milas L ko Now $4 500 OBO
740 388 9418

·~per

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

PUBLIC AUCTION
Tuesday May 23 6 30 pm
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN

8580 St Rt 588 (Old Rt 35)
Gallipolis Ohio

DIMIITMIN'T OF
TIIANIPOIITATION
CotumiiUI 011to
OfiiOI Of Conti aUIW
Lltlll CollY Numlllr: DDI007
IINrr PIIICI CONTRACT
Mlltlnt Dill DIIOI/IODO
letlocl proponle wilt bl
1ooeptod from all pre
quallflad blddere at the
Offloe of Contrtcll of till
Ohio D1p1rtm1nt of
Trlrllportallcn Cotumbue
Ohio until tO DD 1 m
WI!DNEBDA'tl: JUNI 7 21100
For Improving tho Mllga
County Salt Storage

1'r8naportatlon
Oortlon Proctor
DII'IDtor of Tnlnaportatlon
(5) 15 22 2 to

::Jii~~~!:=

PU8LIC NOTICI
Thl
Vlll111
of
Mldcl'-ftt
ann u11
llnanolal repon hat bien
oompiiiiCI and II IVIIilblt
tor pubiiO lna~on In 1111
oftloe
of
the
Cllrii/TI'Maurer

c.=

(5) 11 IIIIo

�•

•

•

Mondly, IIIey 22, 2000

'

Po11nera1'/,

~~~T~~Ap~~~~~~;~,-~=ji~~~~~;;~9r~a~~~
i
~~1.~~~U~I~~=r~~;:~~
fol' Rent
'ferdi,incflu
T-.:o P1onti

I

NEW lfiAHO flAME OOIIIPUl

ER8

:4.fmost Everyone Ap

P ovad W th tO Down! Low
MOIIthly Poymth~l I BOO 611

a oeloull!vlng

•
ANfWUNCEMENTS
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
DIABETIC PATIENTS
Mtd c• e o P vate nsu tnce
you may be M eo to ace ve
you d abettc supp es a no cos.
o you Fo mo e nto mat on 1
888 677 656

E•po IOnced Medico Offlco Bill ng
Pe son Posn on ltlc Udts Sbme
Adm nifitfa ve Oahu Send Re
sume A.nd Qua hca 10ns To Ct.A

Help Wanted

110

507 coGa PQ so~ yT bun'

82 5 T)l d Avenue Ga lpo s OH
4563

$2 OOa WEEKLY] Ma ~~ 400

8 ochu es Satlsl.ct on Gua
antetd Postage &amp; Supp 18&amp; P o

v ded

Rush

Se

$1835-Hour Fu Bl!lllal1s No Ex
pe ence RtQu e&lt;l Fiee App ca
on And n o ma on 888 726
9083 Ex enslon 19 (7 A 1.1 7

S amped Enve ope G CO DEPT

OAT N&lt;l

TONI GHT

TN

~M

UOI 'f/EEKLY GUARANTJED
WORK NG FOR THE GOV~RN
!lENT FROM ~OME PART
T ME NO EXPERIENCE AE
OU ~ED 1 BOO 757.0753

Have Fun Mte ng G, g b e S n
ges nVou Aea Ca Nl Moe
fnfo ma on
800 ROMAN CE

1100 WEEKLY

EJ\l 9735

men.l Ae und§ F ee

CST)

H BCO

Expe ence w {h MOS co mple
on

e mbu sem ent and c n ca

asou ce u I zar on ana/o case
App y Pont P ~asan l Cente
Genes s Eklt ya 8 Sial' Aou a
6.2N Route
Box 3.26 Po n

P easa~

WV

(304 675-QOOS

~55~ij,

STN.A

EOE

1

accep ng 1!)1p cat ons

740-446-¥37 0 74Qo«&amp;-84M
We Trlm.llted Ea NwJ Mow
We Supply Ou Own EQUtPft\tn
&amp; Fuel
You Lawn W Be _Mowed On
You Cho ce Of A Week y 0 B

WaeklyBa~s

1 80

Some Ext a T me And Elfo
\ot&gt;O Hancls This SumtntH(

6047

~eods

230

o Saa

ded Message

230-3390 E•l 5046

30

HYAC Serv ceTech
Mn mum 5 yea s eKPt lence

Mo ~a ed wl ~ g()Qlj job and peo
WIng o wort ovij tme

ProfessloRal
Servlc11

Aad1ord Rd Athans Oh o 4570
Jan!lprlo!

Supe v 10 W h Pklo ng E11p1 I
ence And 2 Gtnt a C eanera
Needed n Jackson A ea Fiu

T mt Poa on Wo k ng 5 00

~M

30 A M Monday ·FI dly Bene

It s Ava Ja'"" Al1ar SO tlays
~ anapo tat on Naeded Ca 740
245 7378

:0·

Fi'm 740 388 92 7

1988, 14 x70 Mobj e Homo &amp;.lot
3BR72BA
s ova et ge a o

Fenced In ya d and 10x14 bu d
ing Cen al
A
Ask ng
~ (304 673 0067

$21

f 99# 14K80 Flootwood 2 bod
2 ru baths w garden ub

I'Ooni'i

A t tctr c Arfp anee WID n
eluded New r ont po ch Sit up
on P vale Lot May move (7401
251 9311Z

S!OOEMS 0 str ct Hu Opon ngo

-

bo wa antv Bennetts Heat ng

Hufitlng Cay Twp Ma al!tll fld
11 Acroo $20 ooo 0 '31 Ac ' '
W th Barn $31 oaO f'r ~ndly
R dgo 15 Ac Ml10 000 eaah

rnoe

'

Molt• ~0. Aut and Whites Hill
Rd NICt 9 Acroo $12 000 0( a
Ac as l14 000 Wa t r Da1vll t
SA 325 Nlqt 5 Aorn $18 OOCI Qr
llfar A~ Ad 7 Acrts$11.000

•

Cull

VIllage
bOdr&lt;&gt;OI!llGre11n
total aApar
tctrlc.menta
oppllanc&gt;
., furnished aurw~N
room lac 11
.._'
tl and close to ~001 appllca
ont available al otnce 740..192
37t1 TOO 888 233-e894 Equal
Houllng owanunlty
4~ Space for Rent
MOllllt Homo Lo 1 W I Tako 12
, .. 18 Wldaa , 1 ~~ Mon h ttOQ
O.p oalt Rlteroncaa ~40 448
017&amp;

River ..,k Mob 1!1. Ho1110 Oom
mun tr l'omorov ~~~ a1 Stat:!
~r month Iff Cl fPACI fo rJn1.
1350 per~ nth 1350 diPOIIt
., 114 878191
740-,...
~,

Both Gal s + Molgo Coo CIQ
Now For Maps And Flnanolnt
Info I

~ppl(ancoo

w ence Count 11 Pa T me Btn
tf ts lncluda 8 ck Leave And
Oh c l?t 1 Qual red A.pp cants
Mu1 Be Cu rtn y Cert td In
A~d

SEOEMS. SIIA on 0 Cal
RISOU Cfl At 740 448 9840

More lntorma on

136-40S2

45,100 1-101).211 9594 x.aa

••e

80 Ooy Gu,rantoa
F onch Cl1y M1y1og 740
7185

Sate Kirby
Ra nbow ~ 1111 Sha ·p Low Aa
$250 0 hi 1 Low AI $30 Bags
Vacuum Cleant
1

For AI Modtll

O®D USED APPLIANCES
waaht a d ve 1 ret lge atora
anges SkaQda App anees 76

v no s 101 &lt;:"ol 740 448 7398
1-688-818-0 28

WI 1 ne Spoc ol 3 4 200 PSI
$2 t 9~ Po
00
200 PSI
137 oo Po r 100 All B a11 Com
p....lon F ttlngs n SIOck
ftO~ EVANI ENT~IIPRISEB
Jactoon Oh o 1 100-537 9~8

I'J,tw AnCI uaed FIJ n lure Sto e

Elill9w Hoi day Inn Kanauga B g
SavJngl On New Couches 1992
17 1 2ft Cob a Aunab out boat
A t you co nnected ? lhte ne

New To )'ou Th ft Shoppe
9 West St mson A hens

740-592 842
Qu a y c ottwng and 'tlousehold
tems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monddy thru Sa u day
900.5 30

40

5211

A$SIMBLY AT HOM Ell C a s
Toys Jewel

v. wood

Cheek ou

"'lb ~p WITH THE

Giveaway

licensed Salary and
benefits commensur~te
With qualiftcahons
Expenenced and

•

Loal Huge Malo Black Dog Rol
Lab Loat Betw .. n v nton And

Ew ngton 740 388 0 44

Me cl'land sa needed o South
Ohio Local on Pa 1 T me
Must r.tve Good Orlv ng record!
Pa s D ·vg Test antt Backg ound
Check Compel! vely pay Com
pany \lthlcle Fu esumt to
(814) 235 6000 o Cal (8001 550

8

45640

ALL Yard Soltt Must
tho cloY blforo tho 11&lt;1
Ia to run SundoY

odiUon 2 00 p m
Frfcloy Mondor edition
9 30 o m Sotunloy

Pltesed to IMOunot the

no

Insurance Agency
P.O Box 623

OEApUNE 2 00 p m.

Mana~t

ATTENT ON Wo k A Home
And love I $1 000 $5 000 PT
FT f ee Book el Ca Now 1 aoo.

4} Nutrt on Spec a a
H gh School 0 p oma And

Adv1nca Delldllne 1 OOpm the
day before the 1d 11 to run
Sundey I Monday edition
I OOpm Frfcloy

Every Sa 6 P. M

BOWENAUCOONSERY~E

GARY BOWEN AUCTIONEER
Proctorville Ohio
FIN Market

10

1 Piece Dozens &amp; Case Lots

11284428

~

1t82

Froe Dellvo r 1 898 928

New Doublewlda 3 BR 2BA
$276 l!ff mon1h Low Down Pay

mant Fre• A r Free Delivery ,

888-928 3426
32x80

Fa,etory, Aepo Naver
~d In $49 950 1 8~8 891

Moto Alot Now Pana Nf!W Til 01

400

~0

MEDICAL BilLER $1 ~ S&lt;IS IH
Mod ca B ng SOMwa e Company

Tnls -perwll not

Provided Mus Own Compuler 1
800-430 5518

advtrtl-- ror eolestalo
which II In violation ol1ha
laW o.. ... hereby
Informed lhat al dweUinge
advertlsod In llila """paper

knowjngly~

are avalable on an aqua

oppo&lt;t..,lly

Only 2

Th ee bedroom 1otot1y remo&lt;lolod

nllfde and out trane and lot new
fu r ace new appl ancas new ca
po $23,500 cal 740-992 4514

379-2589 Afto 5 00

440 1\Apal'tlilente

for Rent
1 and 2 btarooih aportmtntt Ill'
n &amp;hid and unfuri'IWttd security
dti!POI t required. fQ petl 740

992 Z!t8

like n•w o de home 81 Texas
Ad $4500 down owne w 11
r nance Month v paymen &amp;304 16
p us p ope ly a11es and n

140

POSTAL JOBS TO $ 8 2

H

Pus Senefils PT FT Va ous Po
1 1ons Fo ApQ 1 Exam 1 877

6657002EJt 7 8AM 5PM
MF
R.N oALPN I
A Cldla NU,.Ing Ctntt 1 now
aocap no app •• ono ro ~ No 1
LPN 1 ~ll"nll thould be tam

playtro WhO In oy WO king Wth

tne • det"ly A ctd • art.r• exceQ

t '''I bt'f1nl InclUding 1 com
p ahen1lva htt r, pfll1 an(1 an
aopo tu, ty fo ldvanc•m•"'
' '•••• 1pplr r~ Dtflon 11 A ea
d 1 Nurafn A Ceruar 5 Mt n

$1rto1 Ooov ~ Ohio M, ••
pm 101

enaeo""''"c•
• nom • •• n on
Income 1.5QO.a7!001 mo"tn

188 at8 331 wwwt &lt;Ommbl
no!

PO&amp;l,-L JOIJ f4J 3U 00 VA

Now H r ng No bpe tn.ee P'tld
T 1 n1ng Ortll ltnef Ia Ca 7
DoyoiOQ.&lt;m-3180 Ell J 1H

.

fARM O., UPPLI!:S

&amp;

LIVl~ ;TOC K

810 Farm Equipment

aurenca (740 44

GREAT NCOME PORTEN
TIAL MEDICAL B llERS Ea n
Up To 545K Yea I Fu ~a nlng
PC Atq d Ca T an Toll F oo
81111-880-6693 Ex 14401

Buelne"
Training

Gal lpollo co- Co!lego
(Co eo a Closo To Homo)
Ca Today 740 448 4367
1 600 214-0452
Reg lf90-05- 274B

150

Schoola
lnttructlon

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
O~EE QUICKLY Baoht o 1
Mltlt 1 Dcctora 1 ly Cor 1
apondonct ltttd UpOn P lo Ed
uoat on And lho I udy Cou 11
,or r~&amp;E l~lo ma1 on Boo~ tt
'hone CAMIRIDOI 8T~TI
UN VIAIITY 1_.._.13 I

108

INSTA~LED

If You Don r Cat Us We Bolli
Lo•• Frta Ea matai 740 441

e301, 1 eoo 291 008f

JET
AERATION MOTORS
R&amp;pllred Now &amp; Roi&gt;UKIIn Stock
Cad Ron Evono 1-800-1137 9828
Mtchtn Tab 1 wltn Chalrt Soli
praptlltd L1wn Bov Wheal Bar

CREDIT REPA R AS SEEN ON
TV E lit Bad Crod Logo &gt;j
F oolnlo t 800 7611-4008
FREE DE~T CONSOLIDATION
App

ca on

W St 't'loe Rtdute

Paymonlo To 85% IICASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERII Coli 800
328 8810 Ex l!8

'"II

'NUll MONEY PROI
UMS? NOW ACCE"INCl ~,
PLICATION$ 13 000 AND UPI
1110 AP,LICATION 'IE 117
114S.~7 IXl: 40i
Ill NIID OAIH?? Wli P~y
Coon for ~tmal~lng Poymonlt
On P op• IY lo dl Mo lgagoa
A""uUool hitltl"'ntt! lrnmt
~ '1 11 O~QIII I Nobody Bo~ 1
Ou Pr Qfl Ntll~n-' Coni ao
8uyt I 100 480 0731 EKI t OI
www "•' onllcontaclbLI)'I 1 com

WANT A COMPUTER? But No
Coah? No Crlld t OK Slow C odlt
OM In 0 Down Laplopl AVIIIab I
~oolttbl oh Your Crodltl Call
Now 1 100-247 3818

Nice Brick Home 3 Btd oomt 3

Balha

Sto y W h F nlohod
Butmen Ca port lnground
PoOl Ook Kltoht" Cob noll Con
vtn tnl Location Quia Neighbor
nood
o~ Ttodo 1 Avenue

Or a lltdroom lit&gt;anmonta Wa
tor &amp; Ttdh Paid No Pott 740
361-1100

Ask ng S1 9 000 140-446 818

IIIAUti~UL

Ga po 1 Owner Nttda To Se

APAATMINT8 AT
IUOOIT PRICII AT JACK
ION !8TATI8 52 Woslwood
Orkio I om $289 o 1370 Wa~ to
shop &amp; movlea Call 740 446
2!168 Ectull HOutlng Clpport\J~IIy

•
NO DOWN PIIYMENT I

No Oovwn Ptymtnt Requ red W rh
Governmtnt Sponao,.d Loan
Good Crtd t And S eady Income
Raqulrod Cll Todo~ For Mort
nformat on ndtptndtnce Mort
g1g1 Btrv CU 128t 1 Mad IOn
laliawcoel OH 44107 Ml1171 I
IOQ.I&lt;IS.OOII

110 WanlldTo Do
Dh 11 on Wom1n aou Houu
~nlng li!O&lt;II8781 08

1 Bedroom Near C nema A C
W D Hookup Qu 11 Location
1279/Mo + Ullltlll No Poll 7&lt;104411-2957 Or 7 -

JANITIIOL HEATIH&lt;l AND
COOLING EQUIPMINT

row (740) 4*2t18

CREO T PROBLEMS? CALL
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO T BANKA~PTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RAT NG 90 180 DAYS
800-4:12 598

t::;:~;:==:;::==:i
t999 Ha lor Dav dson W do
400 M es Laze Red

G l~e 1

$1 t 000 Like B and New 1994

WYDMINO LAND LIQ~ DA
TON nort&lt;lbli Oppo ~nlly 110
Aoru ~qr J YII I~U Dn /UU
Mo (fU Ill 8!1 111 Mot)
N••r
Ahtolope Hwra•
N11 by ~'~' No OrtCit onocko
Loa 100 47a 11 '14

oa,p•r

KAINER AlDOl
Tht P lea Hso INn Reductd On
Th 1 23 Aero '!tact Of Woodl
Anq H I Oil y 123 000 LOCOitd
On Kr no Aood Pff BR 7 l
Ntlgllllofllood
CINTIAPotNT RUN
IIIUI M ,ond On 8 t Aort Lot
Plus Pour Olht 1 I • Ao t Loll
Rlldy ~or Your Ntw Homo Lo
011111 ~ M II Ofl ·~ U Nttr Tht
Ja~n /0111 Oounl)' Llht
CON"!' Mill OUT ON T~l I~V.
INQI CALL TODAY '0~ ~~II
MAI!I
IIOH1 Sli!ll~
Mtl!imv Lai!Q Co Lid
WW!GOj !DJ~ 09m

Christy 1 Faml y

35 Fergu1on Blade Scoop P g
F-o e $4500 Elctra good condl
lon NIYI paint (304)e75-84a7

$450 00 010 (740) 44

Mob s Homo Supply, 740 448
94 8 www orvb """"""',."

7!io Boats &amp; Motors 1
for Sale
cuddy cab n 4 3 Liter V 8 dua
baner 11 Kepi under cove ed
dOCk in eummtt stored n garage
n w nter excellent cond lion
500 conlool Dan W•uo~ at
(74Q) 384 ~ 177 0 (740) 384
38110

n

Fo sa t or T aae 24 Pontoqn
Boo 70HP $1000 Look ng lo
Mqto eve 1 or aqua val
ue.(:J114)t76-8894

780

I

Transm oalona CVC Jo nls 740
245 56)7

Campera &amp;

790

Mqtor Home•
1977 21 t /2 Foo1 Coachman Ntw
F oo l Co poling Upholsle y
New Tfrn New ~lr Cond tlon ng
E~tcellent

Anora

Shapa 7•0 379 2927

~M

'

S H!VICES

810

Home
lmprov,ment•

IASIMENT
WATEAPIIOO"HG
Uncondlllono lttlmo guo tnltO
Loaal refarenc11 furnished Ea
llblllhod 1978 Ca 24 Hra (740)
448 0870 1 800 217 0578 Rog
... W.•rpraoflng

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUIUC NOTICI! OF SALE riiii'YIIIIIII right to occepl
Ll 1 ctl n g
c r • • k or re]tot tny or 111 bide
COnNMnoy Dlllrlct will 111 Term• of 1111 c11h or
fiOIIVIftil IIIIICI biCII until ~~=::'t.lldln=fMk
4
p.m on lilly 23 21100 It -•
34411 Corn Hollow Rd
ConHI'VInoy
ct
Rutlend, for a 1188 Ford
J FMJIOn Taylor. Proeldlnt
Alrolllr van
(5) I 15 22 3 to
Till Hint may 111 111n
lflt Dlllrtoll Dfllal, MondayPubliC Notice
::~Me: ~':JIIet= _O_n..:;latu=:::rtl::.l.:;y'=Miy:.:2=.7-21100-

ac

••1--------'.....;-

wo

~
11t5 Ford P.i80 4
Qab 'lllrbo Q(UI fotriOI!'Of C
Air ~~ PO AM/"'' CD 740
1118-1-

~~~~ :~J!:':n~ :X:~ ~~~~~~: a.~':: w~~·aJ:~To~
0

1

CIC Otntrtl Homo Mo n
tonenco Pa ntlng v nyl 1 d ng
carpentry doora w ndowo botho
moblla nome repair tnd mort For
lot ootlmlll call Chot 74Q.H:Io
8:123

or lmpllld warranty LCCD

nlell publlo auotlon an lhl

Public Notice

Public Notice

Bonk perking lot the
followlflll vohlolll
1818 Chovy Cav Vln
t01JC5248T71e3471
1183 Otd1mablle Cuttae1
Vln 103WH14T7PDMM47
1t81 Ford l!xp Vln
I fMDU:MZSMUA113120
The tarma of till 1111 are
Ollh
The Home Netlontt Blnk
IUirvH lfle right to rejaot
1ny or all btda or to ....,ova
tny unit from the 1111 11
lily tlmt

building
In Choetor
Townehlp Malg1 County
Ohio, In accortlenoe with
plana and IPIQIIICIIIana by
aontiii'Uotlftil 11111 Dome
"Till dati 111 for
oompl1tlon ol lhll work
11ttilt b1 11 111 forth ln lila
btctdlng propo11t " Plane
and lpeolfloattone ero on
lite In the Department ol

to
Jnapeot any may
of lltt
Arrangemantl
111above
made'
Vlhlolll p~or to lhl•l• by

01111111 740-Me-221 0

Motorcycln

(5) 11 11 22 "

ITATI OJI OHIO

clone fret eatlmatee 11r11 me

•
Aabbltl Pad1gr1td Naw Zealand
gf- lol of l!illk IX YHrl old call

I

Tranomloo ons All

Typea Accou Ttl Over 10 ooo

P ooflng all basemtnl epa r1

NO MONEY OOWNIII Compoq
HP IBM Oeoklopl Laptopo E

WWW I)Ufll&gt; I 8 I cam

Aut11J1arta &amp;
Accenort11

L vlng1ton 1 Bailment Water

DOWI\tOWn I ltdroom1 Upill rt,
Dopo1 1 Atltrtnou No Patl
740.....0111

Payments F •• Co o P ntt 1
888 479 2345
To Frtt)

on

Marine 3028 Bla

=---1

WhHaa And Mini Lops S12 Wllh
Pap oro Ho lnglon a 740 379
11213

Comt oe We bs •• $tart Your
HomeB vs n11s Today! A mos
Evt yone App oved Low Monthly

Q8il

-.-"":&gt;"
NOTICI TO IIDDIRI

B eye ~ New Hulf)' 8 Spotd Blul
Womona $90 00 (740) 446-11133

NOW Tlk ng ApjiiiOIIIOnl• II
WUI • lt~IOOIII TownM~It
Aplltmenlt Ina(~-·· WaJtr
!:.WW. Tru~ 1111/MO ?40

1895 Chtvy IMtondl&lt;l Cab Z 71
snvoroilo .. oollont Col)dhlon •
BuPtHII~ 33 ln,cW I F Good ch
Trft EV.ry 0p116n LMihtr Alk
1111 s1e eoo 740-441-8ta.

740

740 tea 4514 fPIIImont1 •••"
o01t tumloMd &amp;

unrum-.

-~·

Huge nventory Clacount Prieta
On V nyl &amp;k rt ng, Doo 1 Wind
owa Ancliora W111r Htattrt
P umb ng l lltctrlcal Perts P:u
nscso &amp; H1a1 Pumps Bonnatto

L!• nQ apart

mente home &amp; trailer rente 1

2000 Ford F 250 XLT 4x4 do
m101 bllicf&lt; with tan In
tt If amlfm CD a lower front
damage uklng It? 000 740
982 t 506 dayo 740 941 2844

88 Chow .., 305 41pd II
~&lt;•• a rlm1 M 1500 oo (7401 448
3387

MOIILI HOIII OWNIIII

entine

83 Honda Accord Runt Good
Looks fair Ve y Oependab 1

1t1 ~ 572

3t37

830 .. Llveetock

Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.

25 000 m los very sh1 p lui litr
lngs $11 1oo 740 U4t 2045 o
740-149 :1203

Father I Son LOOking For Pl~e
To Hunt Deer W 11 Pay Fo R"
IOnabll ACCIII Ftt 419 273

Fo d 2000 Tractor New Tlroo
Fondt 1 Pa n1 And Morel P S
Llvt Power 15 900 FFA Projact
SOuth Galla H8 740.21H37t

So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
'
today, and discover
true convenhmce at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!

Ha lay Dav dson 1200 Spo taler
8 400 M oo Aqua $8 500 Both
Blltes Exce len Condition Ga age
Kept Covers Included La s 01
Exlrao ~40 387-D555 0 Loeve
Meaaoge 740-31i7-o655

Bu~qot ~r1coq

t 994 Fo d Rang&amp;&gt; XLT 90 OOOK
New T es Laoka Runs Great!
$ S T m $4 300 OBO (740)

Two bedioom hause In M dd e
po I $300 pe month no pals
74&amp;992 5039

Opportunity Employe

8989

1989 IOUIU Pick up 4 Cy
Au o Tpppor $ 995 010 Pa
al trada consldertld or t ada for
R d ng Lawn Mowa (304)372
6853

1991 Toyota Tarool 2 Doors OX
F ont Whee 0.. ve Au omat c No
Ruat lie y c e~n lnle lor Runs
Wei $2 350 740 448 2196 740441.0t09

Bo• 420

Raymo nd Johnaon Auct one a
Fu Auction Se v ct Owner of
R verslde Aucl on Ba n Crown
City Cons gnmen Sale eve y

v.

A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!

den Ad Cro,.n C ty Oh (740)
211&amp;-6160

msslon $700 (304)875-580

Foe o\1§ Ronovalod 3 Bodrooma
$499 &amp; Anuma Hu ry
LeM 740-448-3384

B ada New , 2 TV Lawnmowe
Motort &amp;(304)875-!!94ll

OUtPIIlctOrltluts

PUSUC NOTICE
Till al'ltlull report Porm
110 PF for the Klbbl1
Foundation 8ornard V
Fultz Truam II IVIIIIbll
for public tnap1otlon 11
llarlt8t'd Fultz Law Ofllol
111 1/2 WMt 8ooonct Btrtll
Pomeroy OH 411781 during
'"utar buet1111n houri for
1 period ol tiD dey•
eub. . quent to publication
of thle nottce.
(6)11 11 21 22 23 24 25,
28. 28 30 31 1nd (I) 1 12tc

sale now

1990 Subaru 4WO SW Has 011

G avaly T aolor ~ ding Lawr&gt;
Mowe Weldtr Compr:easo
Gravely Mower &amp;ravely Guard

Barn 740 388 0823 740 245
8866 Fu Serv ce Aera encea
Ava abe L cenaed &amp; Bond ad

Public Notice

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.

Runs Clood 380 Eng no tlual
Wheols $1 500 Firm ?4o 258
t624

l~~:~~!~kcCa~"1 ~.~~ s~~!':t"

ltsl e Lemley Lem ey s Aucllon

how II!Uth you III
1mcm to 01 jult know
lvn•l'll alwa)'l be Ia our
1beaJIII. Ime you all
4
'I'blnka apln,
Nena I ChriiAtklnm

1976 Ton Ford Pick Up Rtbulll

Rabbits '3P""' (304 576-2699

Frulte &amp;
Vegetablef

Maps you
llowen rood, •
Clttl or pore a hn1 we
truly appreciate It
CIA I bepa to tell

of new pa ts but needa a trans

Aut and Oh o 45775 Alten on
Pe sonne tomm nee Off ce Manage No phone cal s please The
VI age or Rullantl s and Equal

wanted now or ol&lt;!or RCA o oct
TV qp u11d H!Jg~•• Qr lony 111
tilt t~lltm wllh •~cttl cords
~IY o11h ;• Vfo • r•o 949
113151tl&gt;'t meougo

Myst c Poms any breed dog
groom ng a~a able Also shOw
qualhy and pet Poma ava able to

580

·0·

e
Alddleport
Emergeacy Squad
Newmark aad stiff at
ror lrylall your
lwdut
1o the
Middleport TNT Pit
Shop Crew and

1988 Four W nna 205 Su(ldowne

720 Trucks fqr S.le

Ona bodrooln houio AC WID
hookup SR 7 noar Choih le"
S325 ca 740 912 5221 afto

s a r but w I nc ease as g an

V llgo ol Aul and

t 0

us:

solo 74~3418

WANT A COMPUTER ?? BUT
NO CA&amp;H?7 MMX technology
Will Flna~ct With 0 Down Pall
CredR Pr-ma No Problem Ca I
1M Froe 1 877 293-4082

v

304-453-2517

(740~258

T~

fund ng nc eases Th s pos on
a lows fo a grea deal of I BJC b I tv
and oppo tunlty o a good in
come Send eaume 3 et a s of
e e enca and ncome 1'1 s o b')l
T\JeSday May 23 2000 IO The

74~22tl

SetUrdoY a 7p m

Poop o Noaded' To Lose Up
30 Pounds In Tho No&lt;t 30
O~s F ea Samples 740 441
~7

Now 18x80 3BA 2BA $288 per
342tl

5 Spoed

Lab Mix Fema t 8 Weeks Old

B' "' 1 Yelow Fr endly ~upplts
740.245-5797

month loll!l' bown P8)1m&amp;nt Fret

A

Ch~vy Cava or

CARS FROM 121/~0.,.. lm
pounds Repoo li'H 10 """" /24
MOl 0)9 9% Fo UoUnga 18oo
319 9323 X215e

hou s pe week at SB 00 pe Mur

3sBklge

1998 Focd Mustang Conve tab e
Wh re w h Black Top G ey In
te or &amp;1 000 M ea V e Au
toroauc
Power Everylhlng

1~ota/ wO&lt;mlld 175 740 U48
2128 IM!n n;, i

&amp;Jipe ence a plus Pos tlon s 30

Just Ac ass
Hunt ~ton w.1

te~or
se.soo 740-448-4438
996 Chevy Camaro v 6

Aus a an shepherd pups 3 fe
males two blue rna le one b aclc

Per Month Low down 'Payment
Fru A Fth Do vo y 1 888

EARN $90 000 ~EARLY Rap a r
ng NOT Aeplac ng long Crocks
n W ndsb a ds F ee IJ'Ideo 1
800 826 8523 US Canada
www g aasmechanl.l com

99~ Chroyler Cirrus LS ABS
Bakd 8Cyndo 4Doos AC
Loa1~ S&amp;ala Powtr Locka PW
0 vera Seat Anti Thoft ~emote
Entry 49 OOOK Gr111n G ay In

1

NtwBankRapos
Only~Left NovorUved ln
CaH t-e00:'948 5678

AliT MCI
PAYPHONE ROUTEI
Ho LocatiOns Great Income
(Loca I Rle 800-800 3070

1994 RJ 8onnaYIIe SSEI Stipe•
Cha god Turbo Fuol Injected
75K Regularly Sorvlc,d Ao
duced Fo Ou ck Sa e $9 500
740-448-08!52 74Q.U8.Q957

A

'Let ua As•tst You In You New
Mfg HOme "Ca For Pre Approva
1 eae sao 9117
Save~$$$

ATIT 1t ~ON£CARD RO
UTEI Easy
SH CASH CASH
FREE In o I
7 9888 E•l
1155 (24 Hrs)

1993 Mt'"b oh 3000 GT 85 000
mlloo 5 opted 120 hp V 8
cr~1t a e d sc CO canatte
radio PW PL great condlt on
740-985 8929

$200

2 3 4 bld.Wm Homes
~ I 1 1100-948.5678

Needs Paop 8 To P acess Med
cal Cams F om Home Tr(lnng

Local &gt;J age has open ng o a
deta I o ~n ed nd v dua to man
age da y office fun cl ons Sue
cessfu cand da e w II pos.sess
bas c compu e and off ce sk lis
and have e~~:perlence as a supe
v so as weu. as be self mo iva ng
G ant w 1 ng and bookkeep ng

Pets lor Sale

•

thm to comfort

ooq

AM FM Casseue 2 Doors
Ask"g $7 500 740-256- 094

Now 14 Wldo .:IBR 2B~ 1213

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
dono s aa n $35 o $45 tor 2 O( 3
hou s week y Cal Se a Tee 740..
592 665

560

GO.OD CIIEDIT
eADCAEDIT
NOCREDITI

7 Chesh e OhiO 45820

OFFICE MANAGER

Every lues 6 P:M
Truck oads Of
New &amp; Used ems
F om Seve at States
Se ng To Tho P~lc &amp; Dealers

Price
..

993 Slacf&lt; Flrob ~ ts 395 1881
Lumlnl Eu o 2 Doo 1 13 485
1190 Cutltll Citra 4 Doon
$2 49~ t980 Curt111 Supromo I
D:r:.ti.115 COOK MOTOR I
7~03
j
t 993 D~ Daytona lroc 'Turbo
28
g •n wl h ~ray n
ter or m t daD'Iaa't fun• a
dr v,l $4 SOD 74h92 1508
diVI 740-llitll-2144 Mnlnga

1dis

Schoo At 8323 North Sill a Routo

Auction
and Flea Market
AUCTION
2 B g Sale Days

ant (304)675 2601
ductd

'

1991 Honda Accord LX Auto
Sl 000 010 1304,.75-58821874
447 A11115PM

A

Fo Sa e By Owner 3BR 2SA

r.OC)f gut e ng
car garage
2912 Ann 1 on D va PI Pleas

28!2

dr VIS $4 900 740 992 t 508
days 740.949 284&lt;11Y8nlngs

I

Mode Cloaeout SOlO

F ee Ca Fo App ca on E~~:am

All Yord Salol lluol 8e Paid In

Buelnees
Opportunhy
4

1891 Chov ott Caleb I)' Sttllon
Wagon PS PB &lt;lood CondiUon
G.ood T 11 Good Ttonoportatlon
Ca Nttdl To Solll 1•0 378

$10 000 OBO 740 448 3825

App cat one 'If Be Accepted
Thro11gh June 21h They May Be
Ob a ned A The Gu d ng ~and

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $i8 24 Hou H ng FD&lt; 2000

CST)

Mon F 9 30AM 8PM
Sat 9 30AM 3PM
l;:klso~ Sundaya
(304)175-2988

Rtgllttfod _srown Swlao cow
740 742-3408

11
•••

mtolnen

Leave Message

o vers License

We look forwa d to mea ng you

nal on Informal on Fede at H e
Full Benef ts 1 800 598 4504 Ex
onson 151t (BAM 6 PM

~

9 'oom t\Oust w/2. 112 ac ea sp t
driveway neede work SQid ai 11

Ia ye family oom &amp; o f ~· n•w

Ca 800-929-5753
lo an appq n ment

310 9509 www b gbucks om
hame com

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

lha s o a Tn County Spo

$57 500 740-IIIS'FINANCIAL

210

ll111nd opening of lis naw Wellston caj lng cente
We 4 • now"'"
up
interview appo ntments fo
outbound telesef'VIce posl ons
No e~eperlence neoet;sary
Earn up to S 5/hr
wl h quarte y sa ary eviews
Managemen o~ unit ee ava
able 401 KIMedlca1toentaVPa d
vaca kms ava able 3 shifts da y
F ex ble schedu log Sra you
new ca ae wthUs I

rcquuements to

Be Plld In Advance

Caao

or

Bache or Deg •• And
er's.License

MIUtnntum Ttltltrtlc:n

ns should
send resume w1th salary

Galllpolle
&amp; VIcinity

2)

3273

I qualifie(i pers

Yard 8ale

n

CARS fRC!)M t200 POLICE IM
POUND Honda o Toyoto 1 Cht
vya Jeeps And Spo U
11
Co Nowl BOO 772 7470 EXl
7832

black
w th g ay nterlo 59 000 m ••
m no f ont damage runa &amp;

our woekly U"'ldv&amp;

Shop, near Mason County Far
grounds Pt. Pleaaanl

FHA ~opoa &amp; Land Easy 'ltrmo
740-~ 31i7l!
+}

en

lporllmat)

Building
Suppllll

tlzed apecla 1!1 Pk:k up a ftye n

IIUNAROUND?
Wa A Now Homo With No Hafo
ala? C11ll F!or P a App ov•l
188 le5.0C117
&lt;

ts m need of a
Customer Service

Must be licensed or
Willing to become

550
•

Gooda

800

WANT A COMPUTER???,? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY Wa Finance 0 Down Past
Cr.dlt Problems 'OK Even If
Turned 0\)wn Bolorel AMs abl oh
'lou Cred 111 800 858-03SII

Sporting

Sew ng

1'/P ng G aa Pay CAll
795-0380 E• •20 (24 Hrs)

Expenonce preferred

80

740 448-47112

pac kage $39 888 365 9385
www makelh! bucks com

Repre~enlatlve

70

New oond lion t:heclt U1 Out

Or

uu wan ed $350 $800 a week
PT FT lu y e undab e dee s on

Don't 9et cau9ht in a Web
11

Da1lu Spedal thoak• to
710 Auto• fOr sale

RtoondiJionad

~ lllo 1

faDally ol Jame~
I"DIIIIu" Atklnoc\n would
!Ike 10 say thogb to-III
Ike DilDY &amp;lead~, family
aad neighbors whom

The Dally Sentinel • Pac•• 83

during dae lose

I

STEE~ BUti.DINGS Band Now
~ 11 1011 '" 1e R ..,. tiona On
"'
•.rr ' 25•30
tuuC 30x40
Kl1tlne
Inventory

ne

1 HANSPOHTAriON

CON6ULTAT ON Bona t Toam
St ~Cit Inc Totl FIt 1 888

Ropalt Serv co 740 448 4553 0
AM ~ PM Or Seo A 417 sec
ond Avonuo Ge po II

tub bey window n kitche n greal
cond ton new po ch mutt De
mov'd 114 000 call 740 742
1107 attor Spm:

Tobacco P an 1 For Sale Ca
7JIQ.44&amp;-78&lt;13 A/tor 7 PM

SOCIAL SECURITY 0 SABILITY

Be tt And Pe

1896 Atdman mob e home Ylo
badroom ont bath wllh garden

P~nrs For Sa t Rtldy
Now 740-25W20e

Cam Den ed? We Spec a ze n
Appea I And H.at nga FAEE

Wasl"lttt DI'Ytrt Rano•• Rtfrl

Carpal Cent i AI $11 000 No
LIM C,ontraotl P •••• ?40-448
78110

Val d OriVt I L CIRII
App eat on Package

Dtwtiurat

4225

Troybllt t or 1700 l,llboon
Wuhor /Oryor $525 ,.,..co g
• Shoulder Sl a~ Pura10 $1$2
740448-4428

Hou!~Wlold

OOOds

New Parct 1 Ava able Soon In

578 1363 NORWOOD SAW
MILLS 2~2 Sonw I D~ve Bulla o

Top Sol For Solo 746-.ut.cett

ME HCIIAI~IJI&lt;;E

510

P anka Beams Lerge
C
~ B181 SO
1 V I An
apac ''
wm 1 ue
ywhO • FREE ntorme lon 1 801).

N¥

Pl1nta

Flrmi(304)1195-37401895-37N

a

1 eoo 872 5987

Coo ng

Eatllest
Tobacco

- - a VUiago Manor and REIID£NTIAI. HOME OW~RS f
R veroldo ~mon1a In Ml&lt;tdlt
po t fr6m tz'S 5338 Cal 740 Tappan H Elllcloncy 90% Cld
9ll2.~ EIJUII Holj• ng Qppo
Fumac• 01 Fu nacet 12 seer
Heal PutTijl &amp; Air Cond Uonlng
6y1 am&amp; Frn 8 l'lor Partl &amp; l.a-

1995 t4•74 S ng t Wldt Mobllo
Horne very Nice Many Exlraal
0 shwHhtr F ant Deck New

P11 IT me Sh tis

Ava lablo In locillon And La

Tho Stal, 01 Ohio

Acroo $19 ooo
Grande Mo~tly Rd Bttt
Bu d ng Sftos in Tho Counly e
A&amp; oo 121 500 8 Acra'a W 1h
Pond $29 500
1 15 -'~111
S31 500 Oa1hl c.,... .. ~01111
C'"k Ad 20 Paroola BOQin~lng
A 8 ...cOS 112 000 To 37 ,_.rn

1984 Fa rrrtonl 1 Bath 14x70
S o'i age Ba n Oetachab i Deck
Washo 10 yo Inc udtd $8 7QO

Playe s w lh a pos ve anitude
who enjoy wO&lt;klng wilh lha eldarl)'
A ead a o e s a except onal ben
ef packag@ nc ud ng a, comp e
/lens ve. he a h pl ~n .and an op
po un :y o 11 ze our Ca ee
G ow1h P og ~m opoc f!ca y de
s gnod lor 6 T NA s P~aie app y
n person a A cad a Nu s ng
Can a 5 E Man Street Coo
veOhloMF84pm

For EMT 1

325,

Ac 11

t

$47 000 Great Haroea S tea And

peskll~

and able 10 cross over to nsta a
on &amp; electr ca work ExcfMient
pay and benet te Send esumes
o Dan nman Eectrle lne 6246

ooo Or l4

'us no,. 1 800 724

p can s shou d be ene ge leo team

1

tloWI Off SA

Crnlc Ad

FREE MONEY NOWI I s t r '

No Repayment Gua a!'l•ld Fo
Deb Con sol dat on Pe sonal

Off

eo AI

'

Pr ce Pe Lawn Is P opo 1on a
To Size Of Lawn!
We Wou d 81 Hapfjy To Tskt

3478Exlll30

2~~·~w::w~orvb.~oorn.llon~~
$3 795:rwtt:~~~~
s aw Logs 1n1o

ISBAD CREDit? &lt;lot Cash
l.oans To $5 000 Debt Conao
da jon To $200 000 C 01111 Cardo
Ma tgages Aaf narv:lng And
Auto loans Ava abe Mar dan
C ed Co p BOO 47\ 5119 Exl

Tested Nu sing Ass s an 1 Ap

He p ng Peop e Rece ve Gove n
H

Two yo~ ol klng 10 m ch c 1\1
ca nurs ng e•per enee equ ed

t; nney &amp; Payton Lawn Mo., ng
Sa v cas Of Ga IJa County Ca

A. cad a Nu &amp; ng Center n now

Make Money

9ata

Reg sterad Nu se Must possess
cu tnt West V gin a I cense

management s high.,- des abe

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Op To

Addfesse d

S Bo• 438 ANT OC H
3701
438 Start ftnmedia ely

SfART

180 WantedTQ Do

110

1 lnd ~ bodfoont

flOW 111(1110 ........ 10&lt; flit Spring
FlTst Ordtto w11 G~tnltt ~t&amp;

Middleport, Ohio

auaran ••

12yra on Job

lOCI (304)895-3887

••4

111118 ~onda Foreman 480 I&amp;
w ndlh o d Roar Storage 481
Milas L ko Now $4 500 OBO
740 388 9418

·~per

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

PUBLIC AUCTION
Tuesday May 23 6 30 pm
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN

8580 St Rt 588 (Old Rt 35)
Gallipolis Ohio

DIMIITMIN'T OF
TIIANIPOIITATION
CotumiiUI 011to
OfiiOI Of Conti aUIW
Lltlll CollY Numlllr: DDI007
IINrr PIIICI CONTRACT
Mlltlnt Dill DIIOI/IODO
letlocl proponle wilt bl
1ooeptod from all pre
quallflad blddere at the
Offloe of Contrtcll of till
Ohio D1p1rtm1nt of
Trlrllportallcn Cotumbue
Ohio until tO DD 1 m
WI!DNEBDA'tl: JUNI 7 21100
For Improving tho Mllga
County Salt Storage

1'r8naportatlon
Oortlon Proctor
DII'IDtor of Tnlnaportatlon
(5) 15 22 2 to

::Jii~~~!:=

PU8LIC NOTICI
Thl
Vlll111
of
Mldcl'-ftt
ann u11
llnanolal repon hat bien
oompiiiiCI and II IVIIilblt
tor pubiiO lna~on In 1111
oftloe
of
the
Cllrii/TI'Maurer

c.=

(5) 11 IIIIo

�. r

I '

~· ...y 22, 200(1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AtLEYOOP

CIDrr PIOILIMI???
No Crwdlt • Slow Crwdlt • Bllnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvordecl

DIPOYIAI
Plllft.

SMITH'S COnSTRUCTIOn
• New Home•
• Garage•
• Siding

n

• Remodeling
• Dec:IUI
· • Roofing

All MU.. Tractor a:
Equip-111 Puts
Factory Authorized

Nte~ It ...... tiVI Ill •. ••"

No !'mllll'l'lnment...
You're Trnted with RnptiCtl

&lt;=-.IHPuts

FREE ESTIMATES

... ....
Dealen.

11100 ,_ Rr. 7 Souftl
CooMf/t, OH 41713

, ,

Oraat Prle11 on New Hom••
992•2753
992•11 01

&amp;/17.00 1..,

.T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; Oil

Sue'• Greenhouae
Qtallt)', VarletJ, Low Pl'lctl • Tbat'e Vel
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94e each

Stop In And See .
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Hyclrllllk Hese r1111811•1.l
cylinder repairs, al
Sales· 5 aiL IMkets
to 55 gal. drums
2 V. miles out of
Chester on SR 248

Mornlnl Star Rd. CR 30

Racine, Oblo
1-'740o94HIIS

rc...

2M'70Baahan
Road •
Recine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzea 6' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM· 8 PM

AT 11:30 P.M.
Mi.ln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Plying $811.00

perglnp
$300.00 Coverell
$500.00 StlrbUrtt

Progi'IIIIIIVe iop line.
Uc. II CI0-50 tt1ttMI '

·oLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGROOtiD

Phone (740) 593-6671

740-949·7039
"Get in whUe you can, space ill limited"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

.Sunset

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

Construetfoa
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs · Decks · Garages

~w:a

Free Estimates

:

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

"We're Back"

Ken Y'!"''B -

4/19/00 1 mo. pd.

WANftD
Standing timber large
or email tracks, Top
.prices paid also.

Dozer work.
free lltlmates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

od I mo. &lt;~HIMI

oK

BOSSIE II

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO. :

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat.Bam-1 pm
• . • Pltk up &amp; delivery Service
• LaWDmower &amp; weedealer repllr &amp; supplies
OWner· Jamu A. Picken•
Shop Foreman~ Shane Baker

WINDOWS

I,,,., wtre
"'v'"
Bulldo•er &amp; Backhoe

740-949-2804

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Sentice• '
,.
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sileo· •

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

·,,

740-742-9501

Septic Syate,.. &amp;
Utilitiea

·

,:
'
:

17401 992·3131 . ·;

__

........ 4oltt« .. -.... .......... - .................. ., ...... •.

For '"' Pet'slllllls.

~..,--...,...,

..... dotln.llllliltooHIMW ..... TM ......

l ,.,,,, ,, ........, ...,.. ,...... .
For Information regarding

Bankrupley eordact:
Now available

••
•

William Safranek, Attorney

Tan puppies

(740) 592·5025 Athena

A&amp;

Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

1Z1

~

QuaUty W'mdow
·Systems, Inc.

Sing-Dance-Party
with Miss Mamie In
Annie Oakley's

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800·291•5600

Karaoke
• Weddings•
Birthdays • Privati
Parties

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

J&amp;L IISULAnOII I

Karaoke I

~

·:

,•

C01111UCJIOI
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

....
.......

'l'ba·AppUanca

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

We Service All Makes
Washers· Dryers
Ranges· Refrigerators
Free2ers- Dish Washers

Before 6p.m.·
Leave Message
After 6pm· 614-985-4180

ltl·l·;,

llll.lnd

Poaa...,,I..D
4/11/0Q 1 mo pd .

.....
.....
Now Renting : .......,
...,'
~

High &amp; Drv : '
,-,,
Self-Storage .......,.
&lt;

I

~

"&lt;I

'

!

I

--\
.I

33795 Hiland Rd.
'
.-,'
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

~

~

-~~

Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, BoaI Docks, ,

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

992·2772
For All Your Home
lm overlllint Needl

Prof11liolial Stnke

.SHADE RIVER fl&lt;l SERVICE
"Ahead In Service"
lllllnna Wtslem Prida 12" Sweet Feed...................'S.2S/50 lb bag
...._16" Ralllllt Pelell....................................'6.95/50 lb. bag
lllllnna Huntm Pritla 21" llag Food .....................16.75/50 lb. hag
Cr001beis .................................'5.99/50 lb. bag
lllllnna S&lt;rvtdt Ftarl ............................................. '6.75/50 lb. hag
Shade hI~ Callie Ftari................................'6.1S/IOO lb. hag

..... ""layer

Cal.740·985·3831
PIIOIIOf, Olilo

BAUM
State Route
•Estes Rockets and Accessories
•Thains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Thack
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas'
•Lifelide

ONEMONTH'SRENTFREE

•
'

20Yn llf'll IN

MARCUM &amp; SoN
BUI.LDING

Phone (740) 992-6419
TDD 1 801H50-0750

.,- ''

·:

740·992·7945

•

'
:,
,

:•
•
::

·•
•

.

,
'

,,,'

I

••
•o(l

...

"'

,,,
'

' "·"'

P~unjng:Edglng

Planting and Retaining
Walls

'

Freel;stlmaies

..

Mike Sharp · ·

..

740Mt-3806

"'
~···

Shop., llotN.•.

•'

Bu ·from the Claasifleclsl.

~o..---~--------.....;...

I

"

______;__

..J. "
b

. ', .;
•

(

• Q g' . 5

6 A 7 5

•

• 7 6

• 19 9 8 7 4 3
6

Stravlnakv
3 Almoal lolling

brother'•
kllper?"
27 ''Aweaomet"

5 -dog-

30

4

,.._.lelng
eompeny

....

~r::.-:

lally

&amp; Everyone

7 O.tlroyl
8 -fixe

32 Hew alme

1-••lan)

34 Envoy

I Million (pre!.)
11 Subgroup

35 Of n l , . .
38WWiiarea

\.

•

West
Dbl.
Pass

North
46
Pass

12 Eelale worker . 21-0caM
22RIYoll
(2-.)

13Sun.epeech
18 "Eu,.ul"

20 Ac1....

Rowlonde

,,

•

23 CokNitll
..
24 "Bylhedmo

--to

Phoenix"
25 ·--My
Hllrt"
27Cabll
21 Algerian

East
Pass
Pass

Maurice Harrison-Gray was an
architect .ofthe Acol (pronounced
like atoll, not acorn) system. He
was one of England's top players,
and an excellent writer too. He
contributed for many years to
Country Life magazine, and the
best of those article~ were published in 1972, four years after his
death. Edited by Raymond Brock,
that book reappeared last year
under the title "The Best of
Gray" (Five Aces).
Although you have to accept
the Acol · auctioM (four-card
majors and weak, 12-14, notrumps), the vignettes contain lots
of sage advice, and there are many
photos from the early days of
English bridge. '
Gray was a believer in natural
is best. So, one of the 12 chapters
is devoted. to bidding misunderstandings. What's your best guess
for South's five-club rebid in this
deal?
.
I cannot tell you why. West
doubled; unless il was conven·
tiona I (Gray didn't say it was, but
he didn't say it wasn't either), it
was bizarre. If Wesl-had merely
passed, North's response of four
spades would have been a trai)S·
fer to clubs. (That's a new on~ on
me.) Sout~ assumed that the same
agreement applied over the double. And note how incredibly
lucky he was. First, fou r.spades by
North surely fails after a club to
the ace, a club ruff, a heart io the
ace, and a second club ruff. Yet
five clubs, which might have
been a worse fit, ·was untouchable.
In case you think these were
lucky beginners, the deal occurred
during the 1968 World Team
Olympiad in Deauville, France. ·
The book is $28.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274-2221 to
order.

Sentinel

·

.......

.___......:
. _ _ _....___....._..._
. .....;...;;;;.u

• 2
9 A J 10 7 2
• QJ 6 5

To get a current weather
r report, check the

;:

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
'

BOTTLE ..

:'

.

AprU Sltowero Brfnw
May FloOHroJI

T~E

,·,·

,,"

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

HE I-IA5t.J'r BEEN ABLE
6ET TJ.IE CAP

..

vin I sidln

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

1\

mo. pa: .

'

Residential· decks, kilchens, Commercial· metal studs,
bathrooms, custom
drywall, suspended c~ilings
remodeling, bartdicap access
1dtchens &amp; baths, wood &amp; '

K

~

. 41281

•
•
I

•

••••

740·985-4141

Dozer Fof .Hire

'

740-992-5212 •'•

~-~-~

Waters Edge of SyraeW!e

u

~

•

• • Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
:;
Apartment
•:
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
, Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On-Site Lauridry,
, Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
' '·
Provided
:
Call or Come By Our Ofltce Located at
•
2070 State Route 124 In Syra~use
•
. Office Hours
:
MondiyandThursday10am-3pm

Replacement Windows,
Seltllless Guue~ &amp;

Cal 740·367;!~!~

I

..

t! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

•

I

~~------~~--------~==~ ~

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.. .

(740) 742-8888
1 ~888-s21-o91s

a

. ---------------·. ·
Adv·ert•·se :
I n.t h I•s
f
spa, c
. e 0r
$
1so·per·
::&amp;.. ·~· .c~o~~~.~~o~~e:a~s
;~
month.
.....
·Advertise
-~ ~

l!/22 1 mo

26 ··-·- my

23 "The Plod - ·

M&amp;porl

28 Jain '

(IIINI)

31 Pined

33 Poodle

bablu

111m
40 AclriH
Bl'8gl

41 Long
oldrt

BY PHILLIP ALDER

.......... ...,...,,........
..
................
... ""'."" ............
""'
"
"
...........
.
_"T ......... .......

liraallllll

'

.

'

1 Wlllyonaa

2 CompoAr

Good old days

:

740·992·7599
'

DOWN

18Procluc:er

Opening lead: • Q

.J'

..

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room AddHions
• Roofing
COMMlROAL and RISIDENTIAI.
FREE ESTIMATES

57 Sneu

31 Calilgraphlr'a

•
:
;
-'1

IISSELL IIILD.EIS
INC.

•KJ942
East

Weat

58 C&lt;MIIy

11 AARP
memberl
17 Feline

Normen20AIMUit

• 2

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headliners.
Electrical Contractor W'r00:3U41
truck tarps, converUble' &amp; vinyl tops,
2425 Eighth Avenue
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle
seats,•
•
Huntington, WV 25703
boat covers, carpets, etc. ·
~hone : 304-529-2566 Fax: 304-529-2567
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Toll Free: 871·457-8904 Local 773-5011 .
Over 40 yrs experience
Emergency Beeper: 540·1141

,,•

. Long Bottom, Ohio

35SJ7 St.lt. 7llri

Mystic
Po....

Residential &amp;Commercial Service

Under Ng Owoerablp

REPLACEMENT

Service .
Limestone, GraVel
Agricultural Lime
Sand arid Dirt

949•2249
Raclnf, Ohio

Free Eatimatea
Cutractor1 Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Man

Fax 304-675-2457

9'oj'/it

1·800·311·3391 .

The Appliance

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

DumpTnick.

/J"u~Hty ~

992·1550 .

05-22.00

&amp;QJ1ogac

Free Delivery
'Toll Free

Pritchard Electric Company,

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUDERS

21!1 E. 2nd .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts· All Makes

•Drivewoys • Tennis Courts
•Pmking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

Dalley
Truck,lg ,

Nortll

7122fTFN

MYERS PAVIND
net1aerso1n, WV
1711-2417 or
· Cell Phone 674-3311

proof

South
I NT
5 "'

.RU01ellty
Rt;.eotmtftt

Black &amp;

51 WOOdy

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

HOUSE

CI.ASSUFIEDSI

45 Knlcu' ore.
48 CEO't dell.
48 Downw.nl ..... ~~~

• Q 10 8 3

All replacement
. parts

WITH THE

Grav.el• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740)

+AK

Syrecuu
NIJW Opetl For
Sprl11g Seasmt
Vegellble Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Pon:h Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums, .
Phlox, Amteas,
Rhododendrons, .

\OLI:AN

AMww to Ptc•1a • PUIIII

14 "F-· • - 54 O.pe- (on)
15 AIM!t without 55 ..... Mtrcoe

740-742-8015 or
1·877·353-'1022

o,.. ••

37 Writer Fleming
39 Ovwtum
1
40 Econom'.' e Actor Tomlroll 42 Bually helrdo

ond emoothly

Hauhng • Limestone •

• 8 4 3

••• lody ,.,.,

Shrubs
Open Dally 9-5
Sun U-S

EXCfiVfiTI"G

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

992-5776

Lilac 'Ih!es, Assorted

ACROSS
Make bf-

10 Movie ......
omplo'111
12 .._gently

Soutil
6 A K 53

GREENHOUSE

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seaaonal
Convenience Store/ B1H &amp; Tackle

ALDER

HAOUftQ

~=:::..:::=.==;;;:;!

Your
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

· NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

SELF STORAOE

"")"'

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45.701
"A Better

BRIDGJ:

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eeglea
Club Bingo On
Thuradeya

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

:TUESDAY, May 23, 2000
Sornett1ing very nice could
hap·pen for you relating to your .
calj~er ·,or occupation in the year
a~M:aid. It will come about through
•.. ~, eo.v·~ actions of another.
~EMil~! (May 21-June 20)
Shp,re what' you know with a
fri~nd who you know has great
need of some information or
knowledge you presently posse$!;. Don 'tlet him or her have to
bei you for it. Trying to patch up
a broken. romance? The Astro·
·Graph Matchmaker can help you
un~erstand what to do to make the
rel~tionship work. Mail $2.75 to
Mlltchmaker, clq this newspaper,
P.Q. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
tio~t. New York, NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21-JI,ily 22) In
order to attain a special objective
you have in mind, you mi1ht heve
to 'crap your ori1inal1ame plan
today . and so after It from an
entirely different 11nalc. Wllh
h,.alnatlon, it can work.
J..l~Q (July 23-Aua. 22) Be 11
toa,m plAyer because you could be
!I Vlllua\lle contributor · to&lt;luy,
Qijpablp of ln~plrlng others to

'Your

'Birthday

new menial heights in any col- your possibilities for fulfilling
lective endeavor you enter ·into. your ambitious aims are excellent
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) today. Give yourseif lhe stimulus
It's possible today that you cou ld needed to strive for financial suc·
make up for lost time where cess.
achievements are concerned·- if
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
you focus you( mental and phys· Members of both sexes are likely
ic11l efforts on !he goals that have to be seeking your companionship
eluded you thus far.
· today. Much attention will be
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct .' 23) focused on you ·wherever you go
When asked for your thoughts and today because your popularity is
suggestions by associates today, · presently at a high point.
take a serious interest. You have , PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
the ability to reshape their domestic matter can be resolved
unworkable ideas into something today, owing to developments
advantageous for immediate use. none of the players conceived of
SCORPIO (\)ct. 24-Nov. 22) or implemented. It'll put the issue
Faclors over which you have no to rest once and for all.
control' actually work for your
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
benefit today, so don't fight shift- There are two parties you know
ing conditions. March with the personally who each need what
flow of events, JIOt against them. the other has to offer, yet don't
SAOITTARit:JS (Nov. 23-Dec. know each other. You can do ·a
· 21) In orderto accommodate you good deed today by introduc.ing
1
them to one another.
today, ~:ompanlon• or a•soc ates
TAURUS (April 20-Muv 20 )
will berip1rod to readj111t their
,
plant.
to be ju~t 11 cooper&amp;· Your financial trends are runnin11
tJvo 111d o~lblo with them •• now In faVora!lle peaks and troughs
and In tho futuro.
through tomor.row, so conccn·
CAPRICORN (Dec. · 22-Jan. lr!IIO on ways to make or save
19) lf you aro pro)lCirly motivated. money, and think profil today.

I MONDAY

421RS mo.
43 Ran away
44 Act likll
king

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48 Hebrew

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10 Neighbor Of • :

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll Campot

Colobrity Clpl\lr CllCI)IPII*&gt;a&lt;OOIIIIamTIIII 1110 -loci from quolltiono by lamout poopll put llld
Eod11tttor In .... " " " " ' - fai ·
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I'm a aurvlvor. Thafa - · H Ia. That'a - t IIIey
gave Hto me tor.• - (OIIcar wlnnlr) Mlc:IIMI Celnl

•

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•

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SCitAM LITS ANSWIItS
'

Yankee - Index • Thick - Burner - CANDY

Overheard at the ·office water cooler: "Her fiance is
such a tightwad . I bet. she got her engagement ring out
of a CANnY box."

MAY 221

.'

.'

'

•

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I '

~· ...y 22, 200(1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AtLEYOOP

CIDrr PIOILIMI???
No Crwdlt • Slow Crwdlt • Bllnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvordecl

DIPOYIAI
Plllft.

SMITH'S COnSTRUCTIOn
• New Home•
• Garage•
• Siding

n

• Remodeling
• Dec:IUI
· • Roofing

All MU.. Tractor a:
Equip-111 Puts
Factory Authorized

Nte~ It ...... tiVI Ill •. ••"

No !'mllll'l'lnment...
You're Trnted with RnptiCtl

&lt;=-.IHPuts

FREE ESTIMATES

... ....
Dealen.

11100 ,_ Rr. 7 Souftl
CooMf/t, OH 41713

, ,

Oraat Prle11 on New Hom••
992•2753
992•11 01

&amp;/17.00 1..,

.T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; Oil

Sue'• Greenhouae
Qtallt)', VarletJ, Low Pl'lctl • Tbat'e Vel
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94e each

Stop In And See .
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Hyclrllllk Hese r1111811•1.l
cylinder repairs, al
Sales· 5 aiL IMkets
to 55 gal. drums
2 V. miles out of
Chester on SR 248

Mornlnl Star Rd. CR 30

Racine, Oblo
1-'740o94HIIS

rc...

2M'70Baahan
Road •
Recine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzea 6' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM· 8 PM

AT 11:30 P.M.
Mi.ln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Plying $811.00

perglnp
$300.00 Coverell
$500.00 StlrbUrtt

Progi'IIIIIIVe iop line.
Uc. II CI0-50 tt1ttMI '

·oLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGROOtiD

Phone (740) 593-6671

740-949·7039
"Get in whUe you can, space ill limited"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

.Sunset

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

Construetfoa
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs · Decks · Garages

~w:a

Free Estimates

:

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

"We're Back"

Ken Y'!"''B -

4/19/00 1 mo. pd.

WANftD
Standing timber large
or email tracks, Top
.prices paid also.

Dozer work.
free lltlmates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

od I mo. &lt;~HIMI

oK

BOSSIE II

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO. :

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat.Bam-1 pm
• . • Pltk up &amp; delivery Service
• LaWDmower &amp; weedealer repllr &amp; supplies
OWner· Jamu A. Picken•
Shop Foreman~ Shane Baker

WINDOWS

I,,,., wtre
"'v'"
Bulldo•er &amp; Backhoe

740-949-2804

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Sentice• '
,.
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sileo· •

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

·,,

740-742-9501

Septic Syate,.. &amp;
Utilitiea

·

,:
'
:

17401 992·3131 . ·;

__

........ 4oltt« .. -.... .......... - .................. ., ...... •.

For '"' Pet'slllllls.

~..,--...,...,

..... dotln.llllliltooHIMW ..... TM ......

l ,.,,,, ,, ........, ...,.. ,...... .
For Information regarding

Bankrupley eordact:
Now available

••
•

William Safranek, Attorney

Tan puppies

(740) 592·5025 Athena

A&amp;

Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

1Z1

~

QuaUty W'mdow
·Systems, Inc.

Sing-Dance-Party
with Miss Mamie In
Annie Oakley's

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800·291•5600

Karaoke
• Weddings•
Birthdays • Privati
Parties

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

J&amp;L IISULAnOII I

Karaoke I

~

·:

,•

C01111UCJIOI
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

....
.......

'l'ba·AppUanca

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

We Service All Makes
Washers· Dryers
Ranges· Refrigerators
Free2ers- Dish Washers

Before 6p.m.·
Leave Message
After 6pm· 614-985-4180

ltl·l·;,

llll.lnd

Poaa...,,I..D
4/11/0Q 1 mo pd .

.....
.....
Now Renting : .......,
...,'
~

High &amp; Drv : '
,-,,
Self-Storage .......,.
&lt;

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~

"&lt;I

'

!

I

--\
.I

33795 Hiland Rd.
'
.-,'
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

~

~

-~~

Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, BoaI Docks, ,

Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

992·2772
For All Your Home
lm overlllint Needl

Prof11liolial Stnke

.SHADE RIVER fl&lt;l SERVICE
"Ahead In Service"
lllllnna Wtslem Prida 12" Sweet Feed...................'S.2S/50 lb bag
...._16" Ralllllt Pelell....................................'6.95/50 lb. bag
lllllnna Huntm Pritla 21" llag Food .....................16.75/50 lb. hag
Cr001beis .................................'5.99/50 lb. bag
lllllnna S&lt;rvtdt Ftarl ............................................. '6.75/50 lb. hag
Shade hI~ Callie Ftari................................'6.1S/IOO lb. hag

..... ""layer

Cal.740·985·3831
PIIOIIOf, Olilo

BAUM
State Route
•Estes Rockets and Accessories
•Thains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Thack
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas'
•Lifelide

ONEMONTH'SRENTFREE

•
'

20Yn llf'll IN

MARCUM &amp; SoN
BUI.LDING

Phone (740) 992-6419
TDD 1 801H50-0750

.,- ''

·:

740·992·7945

•

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'

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P~unjng:Edglng

Planting and Retaining
Walls

'

Freel;stlmaies

..

Mike Sharp · ·

..

740Mt-3806

"'
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Shop., llotN.•.

•'

Bu ·from the Claasifleclsl.

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6 A 7 5

•

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• 19 9 8 7 4 3
6

Stravlnakv
3 Almoal lolling

brother'•
kllper?"
27 ''Aweaomet"

5 -dog-

30

4

,.._.lelng
eompeny

....

~r::.-:

lally

&amp; Everyone

7 O.tlroyl
8 -fixe

32 Hew alme

1-••lan)

34 Envoy

I Million (pre!.)
11 Subgroup

35 Of n l , . .
38WWiiarea

\.

•

West
Dbl.
Pass

North
46
Pass

12 Eelale worker . 21-0caM
22RIYoll
(2-.)

13Sun.epeech
18 "Eu,.ul"

20 Ac1....

Rowlonde

,,

•

23 CokNitll
..
24 "Bylhedmo

--to

Phoenix"
25 ·--My
Hllrt"
27Cabll
21 Algerian

East
Pass
Pass

Maurice Harrison-Gray was an
architect .ofthe Acol (pronounced
like atoll, not acorn) system. He
was one of England's top players,
and an excellent writer too. He
contributed for many years to
Country Life magazine, and the
best of those article~ were published in 1972, four years after his
death. Edited by Raymond Brock,
that book reappeared last year
under the title "The Best of
Gray" (Five Aces).
Although you have to accept
the Acol · auctioM (four-card
majors and weak, 12-14, notrumps), the vignettes contain lots
of sage advice, and there are many
photos from the early days of
English bridge. '
Gray was a believer in natural
is best. So, one of the 12 chapters
is devoted. to bidding misunderstandings. What's your best guess
for South's five-club rebid in this
deal?
.
I cannot tell you why. West
doubled; unless il was conven·
tiona I (Gray didn't say it was, but
he didn't say it wasn't either), it
was bizarre. If Wesl-had merely
passed, North's response of four
spades would have been a trai)S·
fer to clubs. (That's a new on~ on
me.) Sout~ assumed that the same
agreement applied over the double. And note how incredibly
lucky he was. First, fou r.spades by
North surely fails after a club to
the ace, a club ruff, a heart io the
ace, and a second club ruff. Yet
five clubs, which might have
been a worse fit, ·was untouchable.
In case you think these were
lucky beginners, the deal occurred
during the 1968 World Team
Olympiad in Deauville, France. ·
The book is $28.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274-2221 to
order.

Sentinel

·

.......

.___......:
. _ _ _....___....._..._
. .....;...;;;;.u

• 2
9 A J 10 7 2
• QJ 6 5

To get a current weather
r report, check the

;:

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
'

BOTTLE ..

:'

.

AprU Sltowero Brfnw
May FloOHroJI

T~E

,·,·

,,"

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

HE I-IA5t.J'r BEEN ABLE
6ET TJ.IE CAP

..

vin I sidln

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

1\

mo. pa: .

'

Residential· decks, kilchens, Commercial· metal studs,
bathrooms, custom
drywall, suspended c~ilings
remodeling, bartdicap access
1dtchens &amp; baths, wood &amp; '

K

~

. 41281

•
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I

•

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740·985-4141

Dozer Fof .Hire

'

740-992-5212 •'•

~-~-~

Waters Edge of SyraeW!e

u

~

•

• • Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
:;
Apartment
•:
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
, Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On-Site Lauridry,
, Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
' '·
Provided
:
Call or Come By Our Ofltce Located at
•
2070 State Route 124 In Syra~use
•
. Office Hours
:
MondiyandThursday10am-3pm

Replacement Windows,
Seltllless Guue~ &amp;

Cal 740·367;!~!~

I

..

t! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

•

I

~~------~~--------~==~ ~

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.. .

(740) 742-8888
1 ~888-s21-o91s

a

. ---------------·. ·
Adv·ert•·se :
I n.t h I•s
f
spa, c
. e 0r
$
1so·per·
::&amp;.. ·~· .c~o~~~.~~o~~e:a~s
;~
month.
.....
·Advertise
-~ ~

l!/22 1 mo

26 ··-·- my

23 "The Plod - ·

M&amp;porl

28 Jain '

(IIINI)

31 Pined

33 Poodle

bablu

111m
40 AclriH
Bl'8gl

41 Long
oldrt

BY PHILLIP ALDER

.......... ...,...,,........
..
................
... ""'."" ............
""'
"
"
...........
.
_"T ......... .......

liraallllll

'

.

'

1 Wlllyonaa

2 CompoAr

Good old days

:

740·992·7599
'

DOWN

18Procluc:er

Opening lead: • Q

.J'

..

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room AddHions
• Roofing
COMMlROAL and RISIDENTIAI.
FREE ESTIMATES

57 Sneu

31 Calilgraphlr'a

•
:
;
-'1

IISSELL IIILD.EIS
INC.

•KJ942
East

Weat

58 C&lt;MIIy

11 AARP
memberl
17 Feline

Normen20AIMUit

• 2

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headliners.
Electrical Contractor W'r00:3U41
truck tarps, converUble' &amp; vinyl tops,
2425 Eighth Avenue
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle
seats,•
•
Huntington, WV 25703
boat covers, carpets, etc. ·
~hone : 304-529-2566 Fax: 304-529-2567
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Toll Free: 871·457-8904 Local 773-5011 .
Over 40 yrs experience
Emergency Beeper: 540·1141

,,•

. Long Bottom, Ohio

35SJ7 St.lt. 7llri

Mystic
Po....

Residential &amp;Commercial Service

Under Ng Owoerablp

REPLACEMENT

Service .
Limestone, GraVel
Agricultural Lime
Sand arid Dirt

949•2249
Raclnf, Ohio

Free Eatimatea
Cutractor1 Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Man

Fax 304-675-2457

9'oj'/it

1·800·311·3391 .

The Appliance

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

DumpTnick.

/J"u~Hty ~

992·1550 .

05-22.00

&amp;QJ1ogac

Free Delivery
'Toll Free

Pritchard Electric Company,

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUDERS

21!1 E. 2nd .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts· All Makes

•Drivewoys • Tennis Courts
•Pmking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

Dalley
Truck,lg ,

Nortll

7122fTFN

MYERS PAVIND
net1aerso1n, WV
1711-2417 or
· Cell Phone 674-3311

proof

South
I NT
5 "'

.RU01ellty
Rt;.eotmtftt

Black &amp;

51 WOOdy

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

HOUSE

CI.ASSUFIEDSI

45 Knlcu' ore.
48 CEO't dell.
48 Downw.nl ..... ~~~

• Q 10 8 3

All replacement
. parts

WITH THE

Grav.el• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740)

+AK

Syrecuu
NIJW Opetl For
Sprl11g Seasmt
Vegellble Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Pon:h Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums, .
Phlox, Amteas,
Rhododendrons, .

\OLI:AN

AMww to Ptc•1a • PUIIII

14 "F-· • - 54 O.pe- (on)
15 AIM!t without 55 ..... Mtrcoe

740-742-8015 or
1·877·353-'1022

o,.. ••

37 Writer Fleming
39 Ovwtum
1
40 Econom'.' e Actor Tomlroll 42 Bually helrdo

ond emoothly

Hauhng • Limestone •

• 8 4 3

••• lody ,.,.,

Shrubs
Open Dally 9-5
Sun U-S

EXCfiVfiTI"G

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

992-5776

Lilac 'Ih!es, Assorted

ACROSS
Make bf-

10 Movie ......
omplo'111
12 .._gently

Soutil
6 A K 53

GREENHOUSE

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seaaonal
Convenience Store/ B1H &amp; Tackle

ALDER

HAOUftQ

~=:::..:::=.==;;;:;!

Your
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

· NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

SELF STORAOE

"")"'

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45.701
"A Better

BRIDGJ:

HILL'S

Pomeroy Eeglea
Club Bingo On
Thuradeya

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

:TUESDAY, May 23, 2000
Sornett1ing very nice could
hap·pen for you relating to your .
calj~er ·,or occupation in the year
a~M:aid. It will come about through
•.. ~, eo.v·~ actions of another.
~EMil~! (May 21-June 20)
Shp,re what' you know with a
fri~nd who you know has great
need of some information or
knowledge you presently posse$!;. Don 'tlet him or her have to
bei you for it. Trying to patch up
a broken. romance? The Astro·
·Graph Matchmaker can help you
un~erstand what to do to make the
rel~tionship work. Mail $2.75 to
Mlltchmaker, clq this newspaper,
P.Q. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
tio~t. New York, NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21-JI,ily 22) In
order to attain a special objective
you have in mind, you mi1ht heve
to 'crap your ori1inal1ame plan
today . and so after It from an
entirely different 11nalc. Wllh
h,.alnatlon, it can work.
J..l~Q (July 23-Aua. 22) Be 11
toa,m plAyer because you could be
!I Vlllua\lle contributor · to&lt;luy,
Qijpablp of ln~plrlng others to

'Your

'Birthday

new menial heights in any col- your possibilities for fulfilling
lective endeavor you enter ·into. your ambitious aims are excellent
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) today. Give yourseif lhe stimulus
It's possible today that you cou ld needed to strive for financial suc·
make up for lost time where cess.
achievements are concerned·- if
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
you focus you( mental and phys· Members of both sexes are likely
ic11l efforts on !he goals that have to be seeking your companionship
eluded you thus far.
· today. Much attention will be
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct .' 23) focused on you ·wherever you go
When asked for your thoughts and today because your popularity is
suggestions by associates today, · presently at a high point.
take a serious interest. You have , PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
the ability to reshape their domestic matter can be resolved
unworkable ideas into something today, owing to developments
advantageous for immediate use. none of the players conceived of
SCORPIO (\)ct. 24-Nov. 22) or implemented. It'll put the issue
Faclors over which you have no to rest once and for all.
control' actually work for your
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
benefit today, so don't fight shift- There are two parties you know
ing conditions. March with the personally who each need what
flow of events, JIOt against them. the other has to offer, yet don't
SAOITTARit:JS (Nov. 23-Dec. know each other. You can do ·a
· 21) In orderto accommodate you good deed today by introduc.ing
1
them to one another.
today, ~:ompanlon• or a•soc ates
TAURUS (April 20-Muv 20 )
will berip1rod to readj111t their
,
plant.
to be ju~t 11 cooper&amp;· Your financial trends are runnin11
tJvo 111d o~lblo with them •• now In faVora!lle peaks and troughs
and In tho futuro.
through tomor.row, so conccn·
CAPRICORN (Dec. · 22-Jan. lr!IIO on ways to make or save
19) lf you aro pro)lCirly motivated. money, and think profil today.

I MONDAY

421RS mo.
43 Ran away
44 Act likll
king

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48 Hebrew

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month
· ... ~
10 Neighbor Of • :

Fr.
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll Campot

Colobrity Clpl\lr CllCI)IPII*&gt;a&lt;OOIIIIamTIIII 1110 -loci from quolltiono by lamout poopll put llld
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I'm a aurvlvor. Thafa - · H Ia. That'a - t IIIey
gave Hto me tor.• - (OIIcar wlnnlr) Mlc:IIMI Celnl

•

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•

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SCitAM LITS ANSWIItS
'

Yankee - Index • Thick - Burner - CANDY

Overheard at the ·office water cooler: "Her fiance is
such a tightwad . I bet. she got her engagement ring out
of a CANnY box."

MAY 221

.'

.'

'

•

�I

....... The Dlllly Sentinel

N.Y. Yankees (Ciemeno 4·3) at Chicago

Whlto Sox (WeHs 2·3), 8:05 p.m.
NL otlndlnto

AlotMdlntl
IMm

EMtom Dl.talon

. ................. . ..... .... ~ 1k
· ·'10&gt;·~ ......................... 24 16

I!.GI.

Ill

.800
23 .489
25 .405
~lley ....................... 14 28 .333

11
5 &gt;2

.825

""""*' ............................. 22
•.......,............................17

c.ntral Dlvlalon
ChlcoQo............................ 25 17 .595
CI.EVELAND ...................23 11 .575

-aCily ...... ............... 22 21 .512
•Winnetola ........................ 20 25 .444
Dttrolt ..............................14 28 .360
Wett.,n Dlvltlon
8uttie........... :..................23 18 .561

To- ...............................23

20 .535
Anahelm ............. ... ..... .. .... 22 22 .600

: Oakland ........................... 22 23 .489

9

l!l L 1!1:1.
13
17
20
23
27

.698

Ill

.585

15
.545 6 f.!
.489
19
.357 14 f.!

1,
2 .2
3

Sun•v'• acor••

CLEVELAND 8, N.Y. Yankees 1
Chlcago While Sow 2. Toron1o 1
Detroit 7, Boston 5
Oakland 13, Minnesota 4
Kansas City 10, Anaheim 6
Seante 8, fampa Bay 4
Tuas 6, Baltimore 5
TOday'• game
Chicago White Sox (Parque 3·2) at Toronto
(Munro 1-0), 1:05 p.m.
Tueactay·s g1me1
CLEVELAND (Colon 4- t ) at Detroit (Nitkowskl 2-7), 7:05p.m.
Seante (Meche 1·4) at Baltimore (Aapp 3-2),
7:05p.m.
Toronto (Carpenter 3·5) at Boston (P.Mar·
tlnez 7-1), 7:05p.m.
Oakland (OtNares 3-4) at Tampa Bay (Eiland
1-1}, 7:15p.m.
Texas (Helling 6·1) at Kansas City (Batista 2·
1), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Schoenewels 4·2) at Minnesota
(Mays 1·5), 8:05p.m.

Meigs
from Page 81
held the school record alone
before Roush's throw on Saturday.
"Everybody had thought that
Justin Roush was going to break it
(the
school
record) ," said
Kennedy. "So we go to·
~ortsmouth (earlier this year), and
Justin breaks the . record. He
, throws 144 feet or something like
that. Two throws later, Adam Grim
steps up and throws 149, so Justin
had the shortest celebration party
·ever, two throws.
. "Then, ofall thin~, Justin goes
.over there (Rio Grande) Saturday
and ties it. These two kids have
.been together all this time, and
•they're best of friends.
· " Adam felt bad that he had broken the record, and Justin was
probably thinking, 'that's it, I
threw my 149, I'm not going to
beat that throw.' He didn't want to
'~nock Adam out of there, I'm
Jure."

Junior Derrick Johnson quali. tied for the regional meet in tbc
lung jump. He took fourth place
with a leap of 20 feet, 2', inches.
Senior Josh Hootet:~ fmished
~ixth in the long jump. His top
dfort tncasured 18 feet 1 4 1.:! inches.
The Marauders 4x1 00-meter

'Reels
fromPap81

St. Louts ...........................25
CINCINNATI .. .................. 24
Plnoburgh......................... 19
Mllwaukeo ................ ........ 17
Chlcago .................... ........ 17
Houston ........................... 15

18
19
23
25
28
26

.561
.556
.452
.405
.377
.366

Al1zona .............................27 16 .628
Los Arnleles .....................24 17 .565
Cdorado .......................... 21 20 .512

5

5an Franc:Jsco .•............... 19 22 .483
San Diego ........................ 17 26 .395

7
10

2

Stturdo'l ICOrel
CINCINNATI !5, Ctl[car CuDs 3
N.Y. Mets 8, Artzona
Colorado 4, Philadelphia 3
Atlanta 10, San Diego 6
St.louis 19, Plrtsburgh 4
Montreal 8, Houston 7
Milwaukee 7 , San Francisco 0
Los Angeles 12. Florida 6

Sunday'• acorea
Los Angeles 12, Florida 3
N.Y. Mats 7. Arizona 6
Atlanta 12, San Diego 6
Chicago Cubs 4, CINCINNATI 2
Montreal 8, Houston 3

F~dly
I
New Jersey at Phladelphla, 7 p.m., H nac·

....ry

from Pap 81

; thought his night was over.
~ "J don't know why I hit the
• wall, it was my fault," he said.
•'"Then it got real tight and I
· thought to myself, 'We had a race
• winning car and now we don 't."'
; It looked gloomy for him when
the final segment - a 10-lap
shootout - began and Jarrett
took the lead away from Bill
Ellion on the first lap and was
: pulling away from the field .
13ut Stew Park and Jo.:

'•

lltUfdoy

Colorado al Dallal, TBA, It neces~~ary

Canferenca ••mflnala
Sundlr'• finale .
New Vortt 83, ~lam! 82; New Yortt wins
5uries 4·3

Thll WHk'l IIIII
Tonight
Porliand at L.A. Laker&amp;, 9:30p.m.

Tuud8y

New Vent at Indiana , 8:30p.m.
ThurMay
New Vom at Indiana. 8:30p.m.
F~day

LA . Lakers at Portland, 9 p.m.

·
Saturday
Indiana at New York, 3:30p.m.

;..:;:

San Francisco 16, Milwaukee 10
Today'l gamu
DH: Houston (Reynolds 5..() and Gross 0·0)
at Milwaukee {Woodard 1~ and Bare 2·3), 1:05
p.m.
,
N.Y. Mets (Rusch 1·4) at San Diego
(Clement 4·3), 10:05 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Noogie 4-0) at Los Angeles
(Oration 2.0), 10:10 p.m.

1\IHday'e gam11
N.Y. Mj!ts (Leiter 5-0) at San Diego
(Spencer 1-1), 5:05p.m.
Atlanta (MNiwood 4-21 at Milwaukee (Wright
O·O), 8:05p.m.

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - Reauhs Satu(day
ol tho NASCAR Winston Cup Sones The Win·
ston at Lowe'a Motor Sp~av with finishing
position, starting position In parentheHs, drtver,
type of car, lapt completed. reason ou1 (If any)
and money won:
1. (5) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Cnevrol&amp;t, 70,
$516,410.
'
2, (7) Date Jaffoll, Ford, 70, $141.410.
3. {12) Date Eamhardt, Chevrolel. 70,
$61,410.
.. 4. (20) Jerry Nadeau , Chevrolet, 70 ,
$75,282.
5. (8) Jeff Burton·, Ford, 70, $41 ,410.
6. (10) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 70,
$36,410.
.
7. !4~ Rusty Wallace. Ford, 70, $34,4,0.
8 (I Bill Elliott, Ford, 70, $182,910.
·
9. (3 Bobby LabOnte, Pontiac, 70, S$,4,0.
10. (13) Ward Bunon, Pontiac, 70. S31, 110.
11 . (17) Darrell Wattnp, Ford. 70, $30.910.
12. (16) Kenny Irwin, Chevrolet, 69.
$30,710.
·
13. (19) Steve Part~, Chevrolet, 62. accident.

Confennco llnolo
Saturday'• ICON
LA. Lakera 109, Portland !M: LA . Lakers
leads series 1·0

~~~i£:J

·

NHL canftrtnct finale
Saturday'l ICON
Philadelphia 3, New Jersey 1: Philadelphia
leads series 3·1
Sunday'• acare
Dallas 4. Colorado 1: sertes tied 2·2
Thla week'a 1l1tt
Tonight
New Jersey at PhHadelphla, 7 p.m.
TUtaday
Colorado at Dallas, 7 p.m.
Wedne1d1y

relay earned its ticket o the
freshman Brook Bolin finished
region;~! by placing fourth at Rio fifth against a veteran field in the
Grande, The teant, which featured I 00-meter intermediate hurdles.
Roush, Johnson, Tyson Lee and Bolin posted a time of 17.68 secJohn Haggerty, posted a time of onds in a race that saw three
seniors and a sophomqre advance
44.9 seconds.
The foursome set a new Mei~ to the regionaL
Bolin's performance tied the
record in the semifinals of the
4xl00 last Wednesday, posting a Mei~ school record for the event.
"She consistently ran. I 7 sectime of 44.34 seconds to break the
schoOl record.
onds (this season), and that's what
Adam Thomas, Josh Hooten, she ran Saturday;' said Kennedy.
James Stanley and John Witherell "We're pretty impressed with her."
will make the trip to Zanesville
Bolin missed tying the Meigs
Wednesday after qualifying for the record in the 300-meter hurdles.
regional in the 4x800-meter relay. Her time of 51.46 seconds was
Their combined time was 8:34.4, good for fifth place at Rio
good for fourth place.
~
The girls' 4x800-meter relay
Bolin joined Shannon Soulsby,
team placed fourth at Rio Grande
Morgan and Thomas in the
Saturday to earn its spot in the 4x400-meter relay. Their time w~s
od r
· h ]
regional meet. The team; which '4 35 22
: · • go wr· Stxt
th
·nPace.
the 800
consisted of junior Ashley
I d
S
1
tory P ace SIX
.t d Th fi h
Thomas, junior Sea Morgan .
meters.
e res man pos e a
Maite Buckingham and freshman time of 2:36.9, missing qualifica•
Emily Story, turned in a time of tion for the regional by about four
seconds.
10:46.8.
The Meigs boys scored 61 \
M
fi · h d · h h ·
organ tms e elg t 10 a
points to earn fifth place at the
strong I ,600-meter field, posting a
.
district meet. The girls tallied 25 tune
o f 6:_?O.·7 . ·
u' 11
L10
· d
W: 1
points and placed lith.
we ston JUmor
say
aMeigs had several other- athletes burn was one offour runners who
who just missed qualifying for the broke six.minutes in the I ,600 an d
h
· 1 W1
·
regional meet. ·
l1.fi d r
qua Ie •or t e regiOn a · a On the girls' side, Thomas burn's time of 5:38.5 won the
placed fifth in the 200-meters
·
And r.:a 13 urwith a time of 27.6 seconds, j'ust ev&lt;M'nt.
e1g; r,·res h man
one-tenth
a second ' behind . dette took ·eighth place in the
Sh
d
·
Gallia Academy's Jessica Bodimer. 3 ?0(1
·- -meters.
e paste a tune

or

eon said.
Tapani also got the Cubs' only
hit through the first five innings
with a two-out single to center i.n
the third. Bell (3-3) retired 15 of
the first I 6 batters he faced.
But Damon Buford doubled to
start the sixth and Eric Young
walked one oui later. When they
to·0 1{ off on a double steal,
Taubensee's throw nicked Gutierrez's bat and went sailing past third
as both runners scored.
"It was · 3 breaking pitch, so I
went down to try and get it,"
Tiubensee explained, "I threw the
ball and heard it hit the bat and it
just went off."
Gutierrez then followed with a
solo homer, hfs seventh, and the
Cubs had a 3-0 lead.
Buford hit a solo homer to lead
off the eighth inning off Dennys
Reyes.
Bell gave up just three hits in six

htp, bringing out another yellow
flag. That's when Earnhardt J r, ph~
suaded his crew to give him four
tires when much of the field wasn't even bothering to pit.
'
"I was a litile nervous after we
did it because if I didn 't win Tony
would have ·been mad," he said.
"But they listened and that's why
I like Tony and them guys because
they are gutsy."
Terry Labonte finished sixth and
Rusty Wallace was seventh. Elliott,
the pole-sitter, fmished dghth, but
won both 30-lap segments to earn
$100,000 in bonuses.
Bobby bbonte and W.1rd lhtrton rounded out the top Ill.

lndyiOO -

INDIANAPOUS (AP)
Tho llnoup tor 1l1e
Moy 28 lndlenopolto isOO, wllll driver, cor nurnb!tr, cl1uoll·onuln• and ,Jour-lop qualiflc:allon
average lpNCf rn milll - r hour s.turday and
Sunday on 1t1o 2 112.mliio· lndilnapotts Motor
Speedway trock (r·"""""l:

llow1

Reds Notes: Griffey leads the
with 41 walks. He bea t out
an infield single in the fifth, finishing 1-for-3. Sosa was 0-for-4 ....
The announced crowd of 39, 148
was the Cubs largest of the season
at Wrigley Field and 47 more than
Saturday. The three-game series
drew 115,448 .... Reds 1B Sean
Casey, who has a I 0-game hitting
streak, was scratched from the
lineup .with flu -like symptoms. He
was replaced by Hal Morris, who
made his third start of the season.
... Bell limited the Cubs to three
hits and three runs over seven
ihnin~ in his major league debut
on April 8 but did not get a decision .... Chicago Bears WR Mar-.
cus Robinson threw out the first
pitch .... After the game, the Ctibs
placed 3B Shane Andrews on the
disabled list with a bad back
retroactive to May 15. They called
up outfielder Raul Gonzalez from
Triple-A Iowa.
major~

~
.
•.:·~~----------------------------------~------------~----~--~--~~--~-----~·
Nemechek collided on the second
Crashes knocked some cars out

'

111~-oy

Ma~·38,

31 ·33 Joremy
Nomechok 3e.
54, entott 55-«l, Date Jarrett 81-68, Dale Earnhordt Jr. 89-70.

Dallas at COlOradO, 8 p.m.

NBA ptoyoft olato

St. Louis 7, Pillsburgh 5
Philadelphia 4, Colorado 3

...

Winston

__...

1111 Wlnaton rHuha

11
512
7 2
9
9

.:pitches would not have been fair
:co Tapani.· He pitched too well to
~ose," Baylor said.
; · "If I had had a pitch to hit it
:out, I would have hit it out," Grif.:fey said of his final at-bat against
·;Heredia. "With two guys on, I had
•;i chance to put us ahead."
:: Neither Griffey nor Sammy
::;osa homered in the three-game
'series, their first-ever meeting at
:tong ba)l-frietidly Wrigley field.
: tapani (2-5). who'd lost 14 of
:bis P.revious last I 5 decisions, gave
.: up 10 hits. He pitched out of a
; bases-loaded jam in the second by
; striking out rookie pitcher Rob
: B~~·
,
.
,
Tapam looked hmable but we
: ·h:id a number of ground ball innin~.
• outs," Reds manager Jack McK-

••

e&amp;HJY
'

Conlrol Dl¥iolon

W•tern Ohtllktn

•
SM.urday'a ecore1
Dotmtt2, Booton 1
CLEVELAND 3, N.Y. Yankees 2
Minnesota 3, Oakland o
CtlicaOO: While SOli: 6. Toronto 2
Tampa Bay"· Seattle 3
Texas 2. Baltimore 1
Anaheim 9. Kansas Clry 8

..

.

Atillnta .............................. 30
Monl:rNL ................ ........ 2.
Now YO!II ......................... 24
Flcrida ..............................22
Philadelphia ..................... 15

12

11
312
6 ,2
10

Eaotom Dlvlaioll

Ptlltadelphla ot Now Je111y, 7 p.m.• H nec-

Phllldetp111o (Woll 3-2) at Hous10n (Holt 1·
6), 8:05 p.m.
Florida (00I!l&gt;S1or 5·2) 01 St. Louts (Kite S.
2), 8:10p.m.
Chicago Cuba (Wood H) at Colorado
jArroJo 1·4). 9.05 p.m.
Ptnobu~ (J.Ando110n 1·1) at Arizona (B .
Andoroo 3-0). 10:05 p.m.
· CINCINNATI (Fomandez 0.0) at Loa Ange.
leoiGagna 0.2), 10:10 p.m.
MontTNI (Pavano 4·1) at San Francisco
!Rueter 2·2), 10:15 p.m.

of the race early:
Kel)ny Irwin and John Andretti
bumped in turn four of the first
lap. Because caution laps don't
count and the wreck happened
before the first lap was complete,
the race started over again after
Andretti's car was towed off· the
track.
Eight of the 20 cars didn't finish
the race, including Mark Martin,
Jeff Gordon and Jeremy Mayfield.
Darrell Waltrip, retiring at the
~nd of the season, got to say the
customary "Gentleman, start your
engines," before the race. He fin ished lith. Helm raced in all 16
running; ofThe Winston .

1. Grog Ray, No. 1, Dllllra·Auronr; 223.471
2. r.Juan Monloyo, No. 9T, G Force-Auronr,
2:13.372
.
3. Ell sao Salazar, No. , 1, G Force-Aurora,
223.231
~
Row 2
4. Robby Gordon, Nq. )12, Dallara-Aumra,
~

222.885

l

5. Scott Sharp, No. 8T, Oallara·Aurora ,
222.810
6. Jeff Ward, No. (.(~ G Force-Aurora ,
222.639
'Row 3
7. Jimmy vassar, No. · 8T, G Force-Aurora,
221 .976 '
~
8. Stan Wattles, No. 92. Dattara-Aurora,
221.608
9. RObbie Buhl, No. 24, G Force-Aurora,
221 .357
,.
•
llow 41 ,o
10. Eddie Cheever, No. ':~1 T. Dallara·lnflniti.
221.270
H . Mark Dismore, No . ~T, Dallara·Aurora,
220.970
12. Rot&gt;by McGehee, No. 5, G Forc .. Auro·
ra, 220.661
Row 5
13. Scott Goodyear, No ,. Oallara-Aurora.
$65,510.
220.629
'J~
14. (14} Joe Ner'Jlechek, Chevrolet, 62. ace!·
14. r·Sam Homlsh Jr., N~8. Dellara-Auro·
dent. $30,310.
ra, 220.498
15. (6) Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 82, accident,
15. Donnie Beechklr, No. 98T, Dallara-Auro$30.210
ra, 220.482
16. {11) Jeff Goi'don, Chevrolet, 62, SICC!·
Row
dent, $30,110.
16. Buddy Lazier, No.
Oallara·Aurora,
11 (21 Ma,. Mantn, Ford, 54, occident, 220482
1
$55,010
.•
17 r·Jason Leffler, No
Force-Aurora ,
18. (9) Jeremy Moyllold, Ford, 40, transmts· · 220.417
slon, $29,910.
18. AI Unser Jr., No . .3T, G Force-Aurora,
19. {15) Michael Waltrip, Chevrolet, 24, acci· 220.293
dent, $29,810.
Row7
20. (.18) John Andrenl, Pontiac, 0, accident,
19. r-Sarah Fisher, No. 1S...Dallara·Aurora.
$29.710.
220.237
20. r-Atrton Dare, No. SST, G Force·Aurora,
219.970
.
Tlme of Aace: 37 minutes. 43 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 1.295 seconds.
21 . Stephan Gregotrtj No. 'i, G Force-AuroAverage Speed: 187.035 mph.
ra, 219.970
'
Lead Changes: 6 among 5 driver~ .
Rowe .
Lap Leaders: Bill Efllon 1-30, Joe Nemechek
22. Buzz Calktna, No. 12 , 1 baHar~-Aurora,

Details, A3

....

~ ~

25. Jimmy K~a. No. 27, G FOICO·Au ,
220.718
&amp;t;.(.
26. •.Jaquoo Laziet, No. 33 , G FCJtOt·......,.,
... 220.875 ,...,
27 Steve Knapp, No. 24T, G Fon:e-lnf",t ..
220.290
.- 1 0
:.-,
28. Davey Hamtilofl, No. 16, G
21 78
'ro, 29,9.8Jerel Schroeder, No. 8, O&amp;liii'II"'U"!!~·
219.322
30, Jomny Unaer, No. 22. G FOIOO-I'"Rg,
219.066
Row 11
31 . Billy Boll, No. 11T, G Fon:e·AurQI,,
218.872
32. Lyn St. James, No. 7T, G Fo,ce·lwr&lt;&gt;fl.
218.828
33. r:Andy Hlllerburg, No. 48, Oalltaro·AOI.
ra, 218.285

Melp County's
Vulunw ~ 0 hlumbt·r 247

J. REED

tive employees could carry over and
receive as cash payment upon their
POMEROY - The issue of payment departure,
,,
for unclaimed compensated leave time
Shortly after the policy was adopted,
for management employees at the Meigs and Eason was defeated in the March
County Highway Department has been Republican primary election, Highway
resolved, following 'a meeting between Superintendent Manning Roush and
the county engineer and ihe county Administrative Assistant David Spencer
commissioners Monday.'
announced their plans to retire.
Engineer Robert Eason 'met with. the
Eason submitted a request for a
board in executive session to discuss a $95,000 transfer in funds to pay salaries,
written change in policy submitted two and unclaimed vacation and sick leave at
weeks ago, which will rescind a change the end of the year, Commissioners actud;~ted Jan. 1.
ally estimated the true cost for paying
· That change increased the amount of salaries and unclaimed compensated'
vacation and sick leave that administra- · leave for the remainder of 2000 to
BY BRIAN

Johnson arid Wood were distri:l:
finalists in the high jump. Johnso'Z. .,
took fifth place with a jump of s:X :
feet, one inch. Wood tied f~ '
eighth with a top effort of fi'i :
feet, eight inches.
.t ,
According to Kennedy, Meig! :
track and field athletes have tie'd '
or broken seven school recorib :
this season.
"'
The Division II regional meet
will be held at Zanesville · Hi~
School Wednesday and friday. '-

I

..

~.

Indy

the last row, assuring the first Indy foyt backup.
. ~·
500 with two women in 'the lineBoat's· first lap was at 219.94!.
h) b he
up.
He got slower on eac ap, un • ·
m PI- 81
Boat, who started from the pole average of 218.872 was · go ad·
•in 1998. and finished third last year enough to bump Miller.
·~
when he drove for A.:J. Foyt, . "They put me in a race car I ht.·
moved to Team Pelfrey.tHls, season. never turned a wh.eel in;• he sai ,
mistakes. We worked on our race
setup last week. Maybe that's why He wrecked his car Saturday. foyt, "I had been with this team befo•
I"'
his
former
boss
who
already
put
and
know
how
they
prepare
a
ra..,.
we have a better race setup in the
,.
Salazar and Ward in the 'liheup, let cat, and I was able just to 'put ttlY
bag than a qualifying one."
Boat have a backup, which he foot .down and go, which · act~ .
Unser, who left CART for the
, I k
d
bbl D
IRL's Galles Racing this season, qualified at 192.1 OS mph' after his o c oc in In y on Bu . e fi
hasn't driven in the race since engine momentarily diel:l on the 1 you've just ·got to do.
, ;:
.
third
lap.
·
·
.
·
-''You
don't
have
any
choict:
1994
Boat finished the run- the car This . is the 'Only shot you've gdt·,
"We defmitely had butterflies
1
d hd
·
d
•
fi ·t"
•
we haven't had for five years," said a rea y a two prev19,US unsuc- an you ve got to go or 1 .
,·
cessful attelnpts with ·! Roberto
Raul Boesel was the qu(ckeli
Unser, who faikd to qualify in
r
,
t
on
the
Sunday
at
222.
I 13, but he'll ha~~
1995 alld lll1.ssed th•• ne·xt "r 0 ur Guerrero - bm .was ~r&lt;.
rr
years as part of the CART boycott bubble after the field' ~ .filled.
to start on the eighth row as a setSt.James, the I 992 rookie of the ond-day qualifier. Jimmy Kit ;
oflndy "I can safely say we're back
'
h
k d
,
now."
year, bumped Boat; Davey Jones w o wrec e one rar on ,a
Fortll"r
,v1·1111 '•• rs Edd1·..' . cheever then bumped Robby Upser,
Scott warmup lap aturday, qualified ~t
'
11
•
and Buddy Lazier, and Sarah fish- Harrington bu.niped r'at!on,:s .and 220.718:
·
· .
. :.
er, a 19-year-old rookie and the Jeret Schroeder bumpe HarrmgRookte Jaques Laz1er, younge'r
ton
,
leaving
Jack
Millh
on
ohe
brother
of the 1996 winne•:
third woman to qualifY at lndi...
anapolis, also were .among the 23 bubble,
Davey Hamilton; Johnny Unsei:,
who earned spots in the lineup
As the 6 p.n1.' . deadline AI Jr.'s cousin; and Steve Kna!W
Saturday. Lyn St. James, who approaohed, rookie Ibn Drinan also qualified Sunday:
~
crashed during a warmup lap Sat- took one lap at just over 213 mph,
The IRL slashed 50 horsepowh
urday, took a team backup car and sa\~ that he \vouldn 't · be fast from the engines this year and tll.l
qualified Sunday between Boat enough and got off the track with 33-car field averaged 220.8d~
and rookie Andy Hillenburg on less than a minute to go, giving mph, down from last yeat's
Boat his last chance in another 221.558 average.
·

fro

s.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Cafe Cente
Urgent Care is now avoilable for those tNXpeeted
ailmints that ocar after hours.

,,, 'c"\'

Roush and Spencer at $65,000 and
$95 ,000, respectively.
Commissioners refused to act on
Eason's request, and were advised three
weeks ago by Prosecuting Attorney John
Lentes to seek a declaratory judginent
from common pleas court, which the
conunissioners had pledged to do if the
matter was not resolved.
That judgement would have sought a
d(cision as to· how much autonomy
officeholders have in setting such policies.
Eason ~cinded the sick leave policy
for administrative employees, arid reverted to a prior policy allowing employees

PH

992~0060
t

Holzer Clinic •• ~.-~eeping the Promise!

-.

the co mmissioners' position and act

accordingly," she added.
Eason made no stateme ntMonday. He
left the meeting immedia.tely following
the executive sessio n and prior to
Howard's statement.
Ple1se

'

'

census
BY BRIAN

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education members got
a first look Monday at the architects' schematic drawings for two
new schools in the district.
·Meeting at Meigs High School,
the architects, Joseph M . Kunkle ·
and Kirk A. Keaffaber of SSOE
Studios Toledo, and J.P. Rapp Jr. of
SEM P~rtners Inc., Westerville,
p~esenied the desi~~·
:£
' "l''i'rr!e.Jgns are 't'Wo sch~oiS, in ·
&gt;' one" with a shared .c.e nter for the.
cafeteria,' 'kitchen; gymnasiu~s
and entryway for the more than
900 elementary students in the
district, and a two-sto.ry winged
building for the 475 middle
school students.
::Proposed. plans for the elementa,ry school to he construct~d on
100- acre tract of land located
along Ohio 124 just east of Rutland Village has an attractive
curved design, which enhances
the 900-foot length of the building.
While it is pne building, it h!l'
two distinct wings - one for
kindergarten through second
grade, and the other for third.
through fifth grades.
:According to the schematic
dpwing presented, there are .19
·classrooms in each wing, along
with rooms for aFt and music, a
library, and administrative offices.
Every classroom has windows.
The design provides .for each
wing at the elementary school to
havso approXimately 100 parking
places at the front of the building
for staff and visitors.
Parents transporting their children to and from the school will
use the front eiltrances when they
bring or pick up their children,

a

see Commission, Pllge Al

M'port
may have
its own
J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.'
.
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL .;_ Showing design plans for the
!!Iemen.
tary school tb be constructed near Rutland are, fron\ left, architects,
J.P. Rapp Jr. of SEM, and Joj~eph M. ~unkle end Kirk A. Keaffaber,
with John HQOd, Meigs Local Board of Education presltlent.
'

' '1 •

'l. &lt; &lt;

•

II

'

·,

while buses will unload at th.e. rear
The~ . js also .a. poss~~illty of
'
entrance.
inStalling sorne fencing ·at the
A large parking area for buses rear.
Plans for the middle school for
along with a turn-around will be
1
at the rear of the -building; sixth, seventh and eighth' graders
according tO. the presented , to be constructed on the old ball
design.
,
field near the high school also has
Children ardving by bus will a winged configuration on two
be get off a,t • the rear cente,r · ·stories.
It will have an elevator. In the
entrance and prqceed ·through the
caf~teria or gytftnas!um ·ro their ' center core the cafeteria, kitchen,
~es~ei:tive win~ 'f.hey ·Will -leave gym, library, and a media center
the same way :~ the end of the with a computer lab.
day. .
'b
Both · buildings are designed,
The board
ssed safety and the architects said, with wirigs
with several which ·provide quiet zones, away
security featu
questionsasked. , was noted that from the noisy zones of cafeteria
a fully automat ' sprinkling sys- and gym. The middle school
tem and a sec ·ty system are
planne ~•i.t~riC'¥, building.
PIMH- Schools, hp AJ
'' ..

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme
Court agreed Monday to decide whether the
government went too far in adopting tougher
nationwide clean-air standards, setting the stage
fo~ a ~or environmental ruling,
. '
The justices said they will review a federal
appeals court ruling won by Ohio and neighboring states. That ruling bi?Cked the Envimnmental Protection Agency from enforcing rules
it adopted in I 997 to reduce smog and soot.
A high court ruling is expected sometime in
2001. .
"We feel the Court of Appeals got it right,"
said Heidi Grismer, spokeswoman for ·the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency: "We think
it's important that the Supreme Court issue a
decision on this. It is a controVenial issue and it
lleeds a resolution."
· Ohio has spent years fighting the clean-air
standards, which were imposed in 1997 to help
asthmatics breathe easier by taking more microscopic soot out of the air.

~~

highway department budget, and potentially to the counry general fund," Commissioner Jan et Howard said in a prepared statemen t.
"With this return to the 'status quo,' it
is no longer necessary to seek legal action
to resolve this issue.We are very glad that
Mr. Eason was willing to see the se nse of

Meigs .Local
gets look at
new school
drawings

.

'

'

Urgent Care ·~enter
88 East Memcirial Dr.

leave issue

cash payment for up t~ 60 days of sick
leave, (The Jan, I policy allowed payment
for an unlimited amount of sick leave
upon resignation.)
The vacation policy, which allowed
administrative employees to carry over
the total' number of vacation days
accrued in a six-year period, was also
rescinded. Those employees are now
allowed to carry over total vacation
accrued in ·a five-year period.
Commissioners noted that neither
Roush nor Spencer have tendered written resignations.
· "The rescinding of these policies will
result in a considerable savin~ to the

MIDDLE SCHOOL DESIGN - Joseph M. Kunkle of SSOE Architects,
Toledo, and John Hood, president of the Meigs Local Board of Edu·
cation, left, display the proposed design plans for the new two-story
Meigs Middle School to be constructed on land near Meigs High
School.

Justices to·decide if EPA went too·far

Holzer "'fgs Clinic
Urgent Care Haws
Monday Friday 1:00 pen to 9:00 · PI"
Weekends a Holiday$ 1:00 pen to 9:00 Plft

Pom~roy,

Middleport. Pomeroy. Ohio

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'

Hometown Newspaper

Commi~sion, engineer resolve

Field average: 220.794 mph
227.807, ·1996)

-------------------~--:-:7~:-'-::-'7-'--:--:---------,i:o­

, I,

May 23,2000

.
218:862
'
;
. 23. Riehle -ITI; No. 75, Oalan~·AurQit.
218.816
•·,
24. Rout Boesel, No. 55, G Folt:e·AU!Oft,
222.113
,.

·ii

of14:47.4.
Burdette was one of only two
freshmen to qualify for the finals,
fellow TVC distance runner Ashley Meadows ofAlexa rider was the
other freshman in the field. She
finished sixth with a time of
13':49.
In other boys' action for Mei~,
senior John Haggerty barely
missed qualifYing for the regional
in the 200-meters. Haggerty's
time of 23.36 seconds left him in

Tuesday

...•'"

'i

'"
fifth place behind Chris Hutchinson of Wellst~Jn , who posted a
time of 22.99 secondS.
Senior Nick Wood ll turned in
time of 55 .37 seconds iH the 400meters. Wood placed si!cth in the
'
.
event.
,
Wood, Hooten, St~nley and
Witherell came within ·~even seconds of qualifYing for the regional in the 4x400-meter relay. Their
time of 3:43.13 was gO?~ for sixth
pla'ce in the finals. . ,

DAR honors former residents, As
Meigs, Eastern begin regional quests, B·l

·HIP: 101; Low: 501

J..

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

•

Weclnescl.y

ak.nct.y, May 22, 2CIOi

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I Our View, lfllle
M
•
Then-Gov. Geo~ Voinovich and the Ohio
congressional delegation lobbied the federal
goverrfaent to · delay the regulation, then
looked
a way to get it blocked by law before
winnirig jn court.
They iiar11ed that imposing a requirement to
remove~on; fineyarticles fiom the air ~uld
cost the.~tes utilit;les more than $700 million,
make the cost of OhiO-generated electricity too
high and
Ohio less attractive to the auto
industry,
Goverilltent htwyers · told the court the
clean-air dispute carries "profoUild implications
for the health of the American public."
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, among
others, had challenged the regulations it said
were "pulled out of nowhere.''
·
"Once and for all, the Supreme Court can
put ;m end to EPA's unconstitutional attempt to

If

Today's

Sentinel

extend their regulatory power and ignore tlie
2 51~- 12 .....
will of Congress," Chamber · of Commerce
President Thomas Donohue said. "If EPA isn't
AS
stopped, the proposed standards will be a crush- ' Cilendar
Clasaifieds
B2-4
ing federal mandate on U.S, businesses, with no
Comic•
BS
scientifically ·proven benefit to human health."
The American Lung Association. defended
Editorials
A4
the rules. "These standards are essential to proObituaries
A3
tecting the health of millions of Am.ericans,
Bl. 6
Sports
especially children, ·the elderly and those with
Weather
A3
lung and heart disease, from exposure to
unhealthy air ppllution levels:' said John M.
Corutliers Jr., the association's president.
The standards were successfully challenged in
OIUQ
the appeals court .by a coalition of industry
Pidt
3: 0-7-5; Pick 4: 9-0-9-6
groups and three states - Michigan, Ohio and 'Jluclreye 5: 7-2l.Jt-32-37
West Virginia,
A panel of the U.S, Circuit Court of Appeals
"WVA.
for the District of Columbia ruled 2- I last year
Daily 3: 1-9-9 Doily 4: 9-0-0-9
that the EPA 9Yerstepped its authotity by interpreting the 1990 Clean Air Act "so loosely" that
Q 2000 Ohio V..lley Publi~hing Co.
it unlawful)y usurped congressional power.

lotteries

MIDDLEPORT - .The village will likely follow Pomeroy's
lead in conducting a village
census, in an attempt to ensure
that an accurate count is available in the event of a census
challenge.
Meeting in .regular session,
council members concurred
with Mayor Sandy lannarelli on
the issue, noting that Gallipolis,
· in 1990, came very close to losing its ''city" status. Gallipolis
challenged results of the U.S.
Census.
·
I~nnarelli said she had ~poken
with John Musser, president of
Pomeroy Village Council,
whkh discussed a similar village
census at its council meeting last
week.
lannarelli said Middleport
could conduct its census
through the village water
department, as Pomeroy has
Sll;ggested, using water meters,
meter deposit information,,and
information that could be collected ·by meter readers ~nd
other. village workers in their
routine work.
No action was taken to initiate the census last night, but
council agreed that discussions
with Pomeroy officials and
other planning steps should be
taken.
Local residents are urged to
return U.S. Census forms or
respond to enumeratots · who
visit · the home. Census results
are considered important tor the
purpos..- of applying for grant
funds and participating in other
federal programs .which rely on
population and income figures. ·
In other business, council
hired eight lifeguards and an
alternate lifeguard in prep~ra­
tion for Memorial Day's opening of the Middleport PooL
C:ouncilman Bob Pooler,
who has overseen and assisted
with repair work at the pool,
located in General Hartinger
Park, said the bottom of the
pool was painted and sealed, and
that plumbing repairs have also
been made;
The pool. will probably be
611ed Wednesday or Thursday,
Pooler said, and is set· to open
on Memorial Day, as scheduled.
Po.oler also said that the
ground floor of tl1e pool structure has received a thorough
cleaning, and that the concession stand area is being stocked
and readled for the first day of
business,
Councilman Bob Robinson
noted that many residents are
creating a potential .drainage .
problem by throwing their cut ·
grass into the street while mowPIIIM-

Census, ,... AJ.

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&gt;

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- - - - - - : - - - - ' ---...;:....;_,

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