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'

P8ge D8 • jhnllap ll:i 1110: -fHntintl .

Sunday, July 9, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiiiDOIIs. Ohio • Point Pleasant, WY

Bailey ·a youth tour winner, As ·
Tribe beats Reds; Stewart wins, 11

Tuesday

High: 80s: Low:-&amp;os

Money

creations, but today's connections

are diffe~nt.

"The Internet is connecting us
like a forest ecOS}"'em is connected - where all the pieces are all
"But today," says the 56-year- aware of one another. And the ·
old Loest, who's been in the whole sy.tem tends to react as an
money- management , business individual organism. Because of,
since 1987, "with the connectivity the r:apidity of feedback, it (the
being created by the Internet, we feedback) is virtually instantaare far more like an ecosystem than neous." says Loest, who received
we are like a Newtonian machine:· his Fi~ncial Analyst Charter desHuh?
ignation in 1992.
What all this means is, when this
Here~ how he explains It: "Take
a company like Yahoo. It's just guy is out looking for companies
barely making money and there to invest in for either the [pe
are no assea. So, ifyou use conven- New Frontier Fund - which is
tion.\ thinking and are used to non-diversified and suited for
looking at the value (of a compa- wild-cowboy-risk-Iller types or the !PO Millerini11111 Fund - a
ny) in terms of its physical assets growth-and-income-type
fund
like earnings, etc.- you might not
see much value. But, if you looked that ~ in Internet securities
at a biological ecosystem for some- and dividend-paying utility stocks
thing similar to Yahoo!, your assess- to soften vobtile blows - he's not
just looking at company fundament might be different.
"Let's say you go into an oak mentals. He's looking at a bigger
forest and rae a spider, put it in a picture.
At the fund family's Web site,
specimen vile, take it back to your
bb, dump it out on a lab bench and www.ipsfunds.com, you can get
then ask yourself this question: more of a sense of how management thinks, some of what it's buyWhat is that spider worth? "
ing and selling and why, and the
I'm thinking, " Not much."
Then Loest says, "It's a meaning- risks involved in investing. Regardless question because it's outside of ing the risks for wan~be shareits ecosy.tem. The spider may have holders in the IPS New Frontier
enormous value. It might be in Fund, you 'II read: "We buy scary
control of critical insect popula- stuff. You know, Internet stocks,
tions and the system may not be small companies. These things
able to survive in i" present state up and down like pogo sticks on
without it. But you don't value it steroids."
The IPS Millennium Fund, on
by weighing it." ·
the
other hand, currently has 100
From his perspective, a better
way to look at thing; for New Er:a stocks in iu portfolio, with utilities
companies; such as Yahoo! , would making up over 31 percent of if.
be to analyze their value as a func- That growth-and-income combo
·tion of their connectivity within could make the fund less vobtile.
the ecosystem. Of course, this new Neither funds are for j·,omJPV I
kind ofconnectiveness hasn't exist- investors . .Understand that bel'on:
ed before in human history. Sure investing.
Dum Viifovich ~ most rrant book
the printing press, r:adio and telephones all connected us in ways "101 M11tua/ F11ncl FAQs" (Channever experienced before their clkr Hom~).

flwn,..Dl .

Kneen

from PageD1

leaves underneath the locust
trees. There are several predatory
insects that feed on the locust
leafmincrr suclt as Tticl\ognmme
odonatotae wasp parasite and
Arilus cristata - wheel bug.
These parasythoids can quickly
clean up a large population ofleaf
lnining beetles and larvae. If you
haw- only- one or -two trees, you
may consider spraying Lindane or
Dursban in mid-April and again
in late May or early June. Most
trees will releaf out again and survive without spraying.

•••

Want a better vegetable garden

Bynaes
from PageD1

this year and in the future? Hoe
or pull the weeds out of your garden.
Weeds compete with your garden plants for moisture, light and
nutrients. Weeds which are
allowed to go to seed produce
thousands of future problems. At
least cut oflthe weeds' flower tops
.before seeds are formed .. Watch
for nearby' weeds in Land adjoining your garden. These plants can
provide weed seed which blow
into your garden.
All -the weed killers and
inhibitors won 't be of much help
· if you don't limit the creation of
new seed.

fnwn PapD1
The store also carry gates, feed
bunks and cli1ferent types of feeds.
" We carry Show Rite show
quality feed for steers, sheep, rabbits and hogs, traditional every day
feed for horses, cats, r:abbits and
dogs, as well as an excellent supplement called Crystalyx for animals with a four compartment
stomach; ' he said.
Crystalyx is Rio Hardware's top
seller.
.Neal isn't just a store owner, he's
an experienced and knowledgeable farmer and active community
member.
He is a director on the Gallia
County Canlemen's Association
and in the Ohio Angus Association.
"When I was in 4-H they didn't
have show feed and no one helped
me, so I decided then that when I
w.is older, I'd" do anything to help
those kids;' said Neal.
And speaking of 4-H , fair time is
approaching and Rio Hardware is
ready.
"We are starting to get our show
supplies in like wood sbavings,

show sticks, halters, feed pans, fans,
hog nipples... pretty much anything you would need;' he said.
They also carry "Hog Heaven,"
which ' is a non-oil based cleaner/conditioner that gives the pig's
skin a shine.
"I've shown steers from ages io
to 18 and would invest the money
I won in breeding stock," said
Neal.
If a Gallia County Junior Fair
participant wins using feed from
any particular store, the feed com-

2000 Buick Regal LS
CD Player Plus Cassette, 3.8
V6 Engine, Power Seat, Leather
Interior, Power Everything,
Low Miles

was 124.757

Now s17 900

l996 Chevy Express Van

\~e office, sealed m a plastic

Livestock
sales report

pany gives the participant a savings
bond and the store recognition
and a token gift.
Last year Rio Hardware had five
of the top 10 steers, reserve champion' hog, three of the top ten pigs,
all the breeding hogs, reserve market hog at Mason County Fair, and
reserve champion heifer at Gallia
County Junior Fair.
"It's interesting;' Neal said.
"I was in Wichita, Kan., and they
knew when the Gallia County
Fair was and the name of the steer
that won," added Neal.
Neal said that he's most proud of
the fact Rio Hardware is a family
owned business and
feels the
" personal touch" they give their
customers is important to their
repeat business.
·"we ship food~m Lucasville
to Milton, WVa., and can custom
design and deliver particular
o~ers," he said.
Customer Josh Bodimer has
shown pigs using Rio Hardware
feed and says, "I've had a lot of
success with it and so have my sib.,
li ngs.
Rio Haidware and Supply customers can stop in and find quality products at reasonable prices
.with a caring educated family
staff.

GALLIPOLIS - Produ cers
Livestoc k Market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted
on Wednesday, July 5.
Feeder Cattle-Higher
200-300# St. $105-SI\9 Hf.
$94-$109. 325-450# St. $97$117. Hf. $93-$101 475-625 #
St. $92-S 104 Hf. $82-$97 650800# St. $77-$93 Hf. $68-$87 .
Cows-Steady
.
Well Muscled/ Fleshed $45$52; Medium/ Lean $40-$45;
Thin / Light $35-$37; Bulls
$53-$62.
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pai rs
$525$1,150; Bred Cows $475-$635
Baby Calves $45-$190; Goats
$2-$70
Upcoming specials:
Herd bull leasing program
available. High quality Angus
bulls.
Ca ll the office at 446-9696.

Miles, JSD V8, Towing Pkg., Reat Hitch, This
Could Be What You've Been Looking For.

1997 GMC Jimmy 4Dr.
4 Wheel Drive, CD Player, Tilt,
'
Cruise, Air Condidoning,
Aluminum Wheels

Now$15.900

Was 117.900

l999 Grand AM 4Dr. SE
CD Player, Tilt, Cruise, Rear
Spoiler, Power WindOws
8c Door
,.
Locks, Bumper to Bumper Warranty

to

Meigs County's

19?.~ L~~~~E~~~~~J~ GS
Everything, Local One Owner,
54,000 Low Miles,
Rear Wheel Drive!

$

90_0

Volume 51, Number

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
•
(304) 675-1333

(740) 446·2342

(740) 992·2156

..

Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

lu

so

Cenh

ODOT garage right on track

D.i\YTON (AI') Ohio's
schoo l funding systt·m does httle
to close the ~ap betwee n poor
and Wl"althy di stri cts, an an:1lysis
by th e Dayton Daily News
showo;.
f)i ~ rrin s w ith low propcrty
\V~alth tkp(,.·nd m ore h cavi ly on
. . rare funding and te nd to perform wo rse in 27 "dist rict
I"L'P()rt lard " Clt !.::gorit:~ th at
-nh.'~l ~ un·

performJilCE

on """25

acad em ic starldards a~ well as
.lttl'll d ,llKt" and grad uation rates ,
thl· ncwspapL" r r~poneJ Su nday.

Th e aJI .1lysis of profi c1 mc y
. t c~ t rt'o;;ulrs, fin:-tnn·~ and dcmo--11- -- 1 --·-~"cmh ir~from - thr -;1''J'J'l--mt&lt;
rL" port ca rLts show•.::d:
• Districts that got the· least
fro111 loc1 l propt·rty taxes are
almost fi ve t llllt'S more likely to
bl' cL.Jss lfi t·d 111 the lowe•a repon
l99~ Ch~vy
r.1rd category, ··academic emngcncy,'' rhan schoo l districts who
Tilt, Cruise, Cassette, Power
~or most o f th eir mouey loc:lil y.
Windows 8c Door Locks, Bumper
• I )i srric.:ts th at get th e mosl
inl'O
lll l" fi-o m local taxt·~ art• 15
to Bumper Warranty
titlll.. ~ m o rt" likc:l y to be classified
.1
... "~o:flt-c..:ti vc.' ' the h1 ght"\t rt'port
1
ct rd l·a tcgo ry.

Lumina

Now s12.880

• Nea rl y

The call of the week was

·'mim9"' $tnthttl
·
.

Hom~town

--

o ut

n i nL'

of I 0

..;cJwOJ,. rhar receive an aboveavc r.Jgc share" of th t· ir in (O !lk'
fro m loc:1l t i X L'" wnc rat n l 111
tl1 c top two l·,ttcgnril'S of"dfl'cti Vl' " o r .. co n tinu o us Jlllprovem cn t ."
Th.H 's

l999 Montana 4 Dr.

l998 Achieva 4 Dr.

Power Seat, Power Windows,

Ext. Chassis, Front 8c Rear AC,

Tilt, Cruise, Cassette,.Power

Cassette, Aluminum Wheels,

Power Windows, 8 Passenger

Windows 8c Door Locks , Bumper

Tilt, Cruise

Seating

to Bumper Warranty

~l'i

good

v~r irh

Today's

Sentinel
:z
n
Sections -

1998 Chevy l500 Ext.

Only 23,000 Low Miles, Silverado

Pkg., Cassette, Tilt, Crui•e, Power
Windows~ Aluminum Wheels,~

5. 7 V8 Vonec· Engine

$21,900

1. _

l998 Chevy S-W
4 Cyl., 5 Speed,
Factory Air, Cassette, Tilt
Wheel; Cruise .Control

l998 Sunfire 2 Dr.
Local Senior Citizens Car, Sharp,

BY BRI4N J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

install ing the plumbin g; Soc·hnlen Ptpm g Cn .

POM EROY - Worker&lt; Jlld trucks shoul d
be settled into the Ohio Departme' lll ofTramportation's new M eigs County garage lo ng
bc:fon: the ~ n ow tlics thi s coming wintl' r.
Construc tion on the new facility, located on
Stare Route 7 j ust beyond Five Po i11ts, is
expected to be completed on schedule - by
Aug. 23. accordin g to Na11cy Pedif!:n, 01 lOT

tiomtlg sy~tcms; and Wdsh Electric Co. of

District II) spokeswoman .

T he $3.2 million E~e il ity, is bein g co nstructed by Bi-Co n Servi ces. In c. of Derwen t. with
Statdinc Pip e· Co r poration o f ll elpre

Dov~ r insta lling the: heati n g and air condi-

Gallipolis instal li ng th e el ectri ca l equipment.
.. Th e new garage wilJ b(' a v a~t improvem e nt over the existing facility." Pedigo said .
"Up-w-datc m ec har ti cal rt· p~lir l'q uipmcrtt
;md p rocesses wi ll be installed to comp ly with
state and ft:dcrJ! E PA gtnde hn eli , increasi ng
etll ciL'IK)' as \vell as :-. afery flu employees."

The office areas of the new bui ldin g will
include bmlr- in fe:H"u res and all new furniture.
Although not a part of th e building contract. rh l' new co mpl ex also will incl ude a new

salt dom e. which will b e built under a separate
contract.
The 21 1-plus acres uf pruperry were purchased from Donald M ora at $7 ,500 per acre .
The rxi'ltin g garage on Stare Roure 7 was
Jc·di cated in I YSJ .
Its f.lt e lias not yet been determined,
alt hough a numbe r of individuals have
expressed an interest in purchas ing 11, ODOT
De·pucy Directo r George r.ollim satd .
·
Th e last new garag;e to be built by District
I II was in Galli a Coun ty, and was completed
in 199H. Morgan County will get the next
one, Colli ns said .

Now ss. 995

Pages

Quoted
T~E

BY

ASSOCIATED PRE.SS

Some rcacti"on to the continumg debatl' over ()hio 's sdwol
funding syste m and eflOrts tu
clungc it :

''I imtlll' sill' S mi:.;siug tlt/1 . 11w
ci ur )itmily ts liar aud rhis is t/JIIl'rl'
w_t _fi,,t:, '' - Lee. Raines ,. whose.!
daughter M q~han is a .,tudenr at

Alexander M iddl e School in
rural ArllL'Il S Cou nty. Her
hom t' room is in a trailer &lt;~. n d ht·r
g ifted class nh:ct' 111 .1 J.ll llfor's
closc.t.
"It:~

prrrry !unci

It'

dc l'dop

CcJIII -

skills l!'itlwut" t'tliii)J IHL'f. It ~~
prt.'ll)' liard ft) dr1'c!•)J' t•Hnprurr
ski/Is 0;1 tl/d, 1/JrHII tll/{ ,-OI,JWfcrS
tl1ar _.;omtbtld)' /w.i dtm.u.·d ro tfrc
sch&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;l. " William Phillis .
p14fer

Calendar
Classifieds

Tilt, Automatic, AC , CD Player,

Cmnics
Editorials

23,801 Miles

Obituaries

Weather

AS
B2-4
BS
A4
A3
Bl, 6
A3

Lotteries
Super Lotto;: iK -::'!l-'o-Q-th-47
Kicker: S-:1-.=}-t f .11- .2

W.VA.

Cruisin' at

l.'Xl'Cttt i v~;.·

dircl"tof o f t h l' Ohto
Coalitio n f{1r thl· Et.luity and
Ad equacy of Schoo l Fundtng.

summer camp

.. nwy 'w /IIli th · t! lt ll (:r mor'('11/mr
il1 tilt n:i!_llt ' dirc(fitlll ." - John
Augenblick, 1 Co loro do- based
scho ol fin ance ex pert, talking
abou t th t d}()rt of legi slato rs to

ti x Ohi o's sc hool- fu nding sys-

ore than 80 g irl s from M eigs Co unty attended
the 2000 13ig Hcnd Girl Scout Summer Camp
ht'ld at Royal Oak R esort in Pomeroy. A number
of activities in cluded knot tymg, taught by M ark
Smith, knife safe ty, taught by Don Vaughan, Program Wild by Jenny Smallwood; hiking by Jo hn Cooke; swi m ming water games, dan cmg, outdoor coo kin g and crafts and other
summ ertime activiti es. J errt• na Eb ersbach se rved as the directo r for
the cu np. and Tami Putman and Jodi U1ssell served as c- directors .
13rowni es, juniors and cadettes were joined by a number of adult
leaders and vl!lunteers. At left,.Junior G irl Scout Stacy M aL·omber
is assisted by Bethany Cooke of Pomeroy as she learns to sharpen
hel' knife, while Mark Smith of Reedsville is pictured lending a
hand to Cad ette f'drean Reese. (Contributed photos)

tem .

"II(· lll 'l'd fL I_IItlt' d l'i.lblt .\dltltll
)imdiu,~ s~ J III rio r/ _1(1r ,,}/ kid.l'. " -

State Rep. Robert Co rbin .
R - ll aytoll.

and Adequac y of Sc hool Fundin g tlkd .1 laws uit 111 Pnr y
County Cnmmun l'i l' a ~ ( :oun.
The ~~o up argued Ohio \ ..;ystem dtd not p rov id e t'qu ,d
opp nrruniry for all ~ tud c nts ro
rt:•ceivt• an :1dcq uarc cdtJc atioll ·

Please see Funding. Page A:S

Ohio has distinguished history of poor disaster planning
!lAYTON (AI') - Hi,tory lu&lt; .1 bsnll
fot tho-&gt;t' who dismi s" thc risk of' t·;nth qtuk l'~

Sport~

Was 19.900

.Is

a lo\\' lo..-al sh arl',
wh LTL' j ust tO ur out of L'Vl~ ry I (J
rankL· d in t hc t\\'o hi ghe-st &lt;.:.It!..' ~o ri t''&gt;, th l· 11L'wsp .tp&lt;..'r ,,t id .
• l'm·t· rty c~nd tl1 c . ; harl' of d
di st rt ct\ ill l"OI II L' thdt U.ll \11..''\
tl·o tn loc.l l taxt:o.., aJT rl'brcd. ;111d
po VLTty .ilo n t&gt; \Vo tlid' acco unt
for Jnuc h c1f rh n'\t' trl'nds .
In Ohin. -.c hool fundin g Clll1 l'
tn the f(_lrdi·ont in IY':&gt; I, wlll·n
the Ohio Co.J iitlOll for Equity
'idwol'l

l999 Bdnneville SE

r wlet'

OHIO
Pick 3: 2 K-·1; Pick 4: 1-11-11-7

· · junbarg

July 1 0, 2000

•

ON SCHEDULE -The new ODOT Meigs County garage should be finished on schedule, Dis trict 10 reported Friday. The building, under
construction on the former Donald Mora property on State Route 7
near F1ve Po1nts. will be completed by Aug. 23. Bi-Con Services , Inc.
of Derwent is the general contractor on the project. (Tony M. Leach
photo)

was 14.900

ba~.

reaJly the comment of the week:
"I got that tobacco check after
all!" After several years of declining quota and tough production,
this . week, many producers
received a small award for all
they've put up with recently. If
you did not receive your Tobacco
Loss Assistance Program check
last week in the mail, give it
another week and then call ODA
at 1-800-282-1955 and ask to
speak with the office of Ohio
Tobacco Programs.
Pepper
producers/ corn
borer trap counts: Gallia
County has four European Corn
Borer traps around the .county
and thus far the moth counts have
been very low and no sprayjng is
warranted. We expect a surge in
moth coun~ at the end of the
month, which would indicate egg •
laying and the need to begin the
.spray program.
Please loQk for a detailed spray
schedule in the mail next week,
and continue to consult the Ag
News section of this article as
well as the bulletin boards at any
of the four cooperating businesses, including Altizer's Farm Supply, Pope and Pope, The Trading
Post and Owsley's.

Details, A3

Report: Funding
system not li·fting
.up poorer districts

(Hal Knnn is Meigs county~
Extension agent for agrnulture
Versatile Vehicle! 8.tlassenger Plus Rear
nawral r~sourus, Ohio Stale Uni=ve~~r-&gt;ltollm! Front &amp; Rear AC, Cassette, Plus CD Pla1vetr.l
siry.)
Power Seat, Power Windows, Only 30,000 Low

and web site at: &lt; www.ag.ohiostate.edu / --fair/ ag/ beefl&gt; .
Ag news
Blue mold was confirmed m
Gallia Cou nty o n July 6. As of
Fr.iday afternoon, areas of confirmed infection included Crown
City, Mercerville, Patriot, Cadmus, Waterloo and Vinton.
· Although not listed, producers
should assume that all areas of the
county are infected, just not confirmed . Thus far, the confirmed
cases are presenting very localized
situations with extremely low
sporulation. This
a. rather odd
characteristic, given that the
weather in recent1 weeks has been
ideal for blue. mold development
and spread .
Early detection may explain
this, so do not count on low disease pressure. Producers who
intend to · 1pray Acrobat MZ
shou ld do so as soon as possible,
using drop n'ozzles aod and at
least 80 psi . Remember that
Acrobat is a preventive fungicide,
not a resc ue, and that it must be
on the toba cco prior to field
infec tion in order for it to work
properlY,.
.
If you suspect blue mold on
your farm and would like confirljennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
mation from the Extension County~ Extension agent fo r agricillOffice, please call 446-7007 and ture and Hatl4ral resources, Ohio State
request a visit, or bnng a sample Uni vers i ry)

is

Store

LAst year Rio Hardware had five of the
top 10 steers, reserve
champion lwg, three
of tire top ten pigs,
all the breeding
hogs, reserve market
hog at Mason
Courrty Fair, and
reserve cltampion
heifer at Gallia
County ]rmio~ Fair.

Monday

in (_)h 1o.
Th ere wa~ no pLumin g t(lr !ll.h'i i\'l'
tlood ing in th t· statc mHil ;Itin 11) I ,1, w lwn
Dayton .111d oth l'r Wt'"tt'l'll Ohi o comrn um tin were t.k vastart• d hy ti ll' regio n \ wo r-.r

·n·arur:JI di -.a'\ tl'l"
Th e floo din g. w hich ki lled 4117 peopk
st.ltl'wi d l·. led ro rlll: M1.11 111 ( 'o no..,crva n cy
D i~ r ri n , ,J $JO millt on ti r'it-o f- ih-kind n ct\vork o fi L·v i'-·~ and d.uns that !unit th l· tlnw
o f rivn w.ll l'l".
"Tiw I &lt;J 13 llood wou ld h.11·c probabl y
1\'Vl\i tl·d thi s ;I rca nl ~lll }' tim e" .; in cl' I &lt;J 1.1 it'
\\'t' di d1 J.t h .IVt' th .H \t'ri t'\ o f d.11 m to 'itl' lll
th,,·t flo w.~· .,,]Jd Ed Kov.1r, L'XL'rtHi \'c dirl' cfor
o f tlw M Ll llll Val ley Em crgt·nty J\ll ,m .tgl'lii L' !It Agl' n cy.
An l'a rl y 'ipring th.1 w 111 I{JIJ .,,lt (ll·.tt l·d
th e b~1~ in 'i nf thc Crcat Mi :uni. M .td .l!ld
Stll l\\': tter rin·r..; . \\' h ich CUll l l' tO).!l't!ll·r 111

'

Facts about Ohio
earthquakes
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRE SS

Oh10 canhquakL''&gt; .appl' ar tn h,L' .l "l,.Ol'L1tnl wi th a n ri~nt znJH''l nf wc.JkllL'"" 111 ri ll'
Eanh \c ru st that fiH·mcd dunng co n tlllt'I Jul l"ol l\stcHl and ll llHl!lt.lin - bUl ldin l!; L'\'t'llt"
.1bout .1 billion year~ ,tgo .
.
Th L"'-l' zo nl'" .Hc c h.ILKtni zL·d by d n:ply
bun n i fwlts, SO lll L' of wlu r h o.; nvl' d!&gt; tht'
'&gt;itt'' t~ &gt; r t h ~,;.· J"l'lc.·,p;e of -. rr.1i n due ro rhl'
mm·cmcnr of tcrtmnr 'p l.itL':-o ri Ltr 111.1h· up
till' EJrth \ lTU SL
A lll.l g mtl!d L' 4.11 qu ,Jkl· l'·W t". Ul ~t' ~lif.": IH

I ),Jvtnn . T hen
~ top

It

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( :o un ry.

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• ,1.1 I on Jan . J I , 19X6 . iu Pain csvd le. L1k ~
Cou nty.
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( ~ numy.
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b rl'.tr hl'd the l',Irthen l~·vt·cs .md pnurt• d
into I lay to n . A hro\\" n \\';tvt' of \\",ltl'r - up
td

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tl rt''&gt; brokt· m tr ;Jrotllld tht' t·iry.
•
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Fr.111k lin . M1ddkrown .111d H ;unilton wt'rt'

.tf..,o ~W:llllp l' d .
" Aftn the· I') 1.1 fl ood, people became
11\0JT rogtn za m o f tlnorli ng," Kova r said .
.. And \Ve \\'t' f t.' m a phasl' of o ur history
\-V ht.' l"L' tt'l." hno logJc.Jll y we co uld do somt'thin g about it ."
Th c Engk wuod. Cl:'rlliJIHown, HufFm an . Locknlgton and Taylo r.svdJ. .~ dam s
\\'LTl' compl eted in JlJ22 ,l\ld havl· ~im.T
prcvl'ntl' d ;In t'qimatt'd 1.300 flo ods in
com nnmiti e;; ,Jiong- th l' r i\'~r.
K( ) \ ·Jr s&lt;
tid Ll1at :,when hL' atten ds nati on.d convennom o n tl ooLi l"l)tltro l, \""·cstnn
(. )h JO."i 'iL' ri c"i nt" dam s an d k vec..:s is pointed
ro .1-. a model.
"T h ~.:· Mi.1111i Consnvancy is n~tionall y

Please see Quakes, Page A:S

�•

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BUCKEY~ E

TOLEDO (AP) Libbey
Inc. plans to invest S25 million
to $41 million in the next three
years at its glass,varc factory

here, the company said.
The tableware company
expects to add two production
lines at the 1,200-employee factory and have them operating in
the first half of next year, said
plant manager Bill Herb.
'
"These machincs .will basically be added machinery to make
out existing products," Herb
' aid.
Besides installing equipment
and upgrading existing machinery, the country's largest food&lt;ervice glassware supplier plans
to open a 6,000-square-foot
~ howroom near its headquarters
in Toledo by year's end, said
Scott Sellick, Libbey's tax director:

Between 25 and 50 jobs are
expected to be added. Most of
the jobs will be produ ction' and
skilled-trades workers at the factory, although some will be at
corporate headquarters, Herb
said.
Added · production jobs will
pay $15 an hour, plus benefits.
The extra capacity partially
was needed because Libbey last
year closed a Canadian bottlemaking factory in Wallaceburg,
Ontario&gt; that also made some
glassware, Herb said.
Libbey also is increasing glassware production at a joint venture in Mexico.

Interracial
wedding stir

WTI a crucial operating permit
until Congress' investigative
division reviewed the plant's
safety and the permitting
process.
But the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency granted the
permit in the final days of President Bush's administration .
Activists accuse Gore of breaking a promise. while the vice
president says his hands were
legally tied.
"We just aren't going to let
him off the hook. We must hb ld
him accountable," said Terri
Swearingen of nearby C hester,
WVa., a leading opponent of the
plant since it was proposed in
1981.

Deputy released
from hospital
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Lorain County sheriff's deputy
shot in the chest two weeks ago
has been released from the hospitaL
Sgt. Shawn Hadaway, 41, was
shot Jun e 28 while he and two
other deputies responded to
calls about gunfire during a
neighborhood
dispute
m
Sheffield Township, about 30
miles west of Cleveland:
The man suspected of firing
the shot was shot and killed by
o ther officers.
·

Offidals find '
girl's arm in lake
ST. MARYS (AP) - Authorities have found a 10-year-old
girl's arm that was ripped off at
the shoulder in a boating accident, but doctors say it's too late
to reattach the arm.
Holly Marie Maxwell's arm
was found Sunday, four days
after the accident.
Maxwell was trying to keep a
rubber tube from falling out of a
boat Wednesday night on Grand
Lake St. Marys. He~ arm became
entwined in a rope connected to
the tube.
When the boat, which was
idlling offshore, started to move,
the force pulled the rope and

COL UMBUS (AP) A
southern Ohio pastor's refusal to
allow his church to be used for
• n interracial couple's wedding
·has fo rced the ceremony to b~
moved elsewhere. But the marriage of Chastity Bumgardner
and Henry Lawrence is to take
place Saturday as scheduled.
The wedding was to have
been performed at the l'le:isafit
Valley Community Church in
the Pike County community of
Jasper, about 60 miles south of
c0 1 b b B
rd
,
s~vered her arm, according to
.uhm us , Y ~mgad ner s the Auglaize County Sheriff's
b rot er, a newy
1 Otuame ~ -De . . - t~
-·.1s·ter.
~
partmen .
Bumgardner's brother, who
asked th:.t his name not be used,
said in a recent story published
in The Columbus Dispatch that
a church member told him
AKRON (AP) Parke
about three weeks ago that
Thompson, who was described
Pleasant VaUey's pastor, the Rev.
in The Guinness Book of
Donald Ellis, had rescinded his
Records as being one of the
appruval for use of the church.
When asked why he had . world's most-traveled people,
changed his mind, Ellis told him died Sunday from a , heart
the B1ble preaches against inter- aneurysm at age 81.
Thompson once said that
racial marriages, Bumgardner's
receiving
the 1989 Guinness
brother said.
"Did it shock me that 11 hap- edi tion, which included a photo
pened' No," he said. "Did ,it of nim at the South Pole as the
shock me that it happened in most-traveled man, was the realthe church? I was irate. I can't ization of a .dream. He got the
believe in the year 2000 we have honor by visiting 309 cou ntries,
Bible-believmg C hm tia ns that territories and island groups in
still think that God makes a dif- the world, as defined by Guinferen ce in th e races. It actually ness. He was listed in the book
sou nds like we're back 111 the from 1984 to 1994.
1840s."
Ellis confirmed to the newspaper that he prohd&gt;ited usc of
the church aft&lt;r learning that
Bumgardner's fi ance, Henry
Lawrence. is black. The pastor
refu sed to say why.
"This is my church," Ellis said.

Parke Thompson
dies at 81

CINCINNATI (AP) -The world's oldest
black Christian church is trying to com~at the
AIDS epidemic that is imposing a death sentence on hundreds of thousands of Africans.
The African Methoclist Episcopal Church
is offering life-skills counseling to women in
southern Africa and preaching sexual absti nence ' or at least the use of condoms, to
young people.
The AME Church's Botswana programs
include a center in the Lobatse community
which offers counseling to African women
who otherwise might res&lt;&gt;rt to prostitution
for a living, said BJ Primus-Catton, a C hicago-based nursi ng educator who recently
returned from a mission in Botswana.
"There is a. problem, and the most j:lirect
route to solving this is through the black
church ," she· said during an interview at the
AME Chu rch's general conference in Cincin-

nati. "The main thing. is understanding what
causes the disease and what it takes to stop it."
AIDS has kiUed 19 million people worldwide, but is hitting hardest in Africa, the United Nations reported in June. The disease is
expected to wipe out half the teen-agers in
son1e African nations, devastating economies
and societies.
"We're going to have to start with the very
young and teach them not to use their bodies
for payoffs or recreation," Primus-Catton said.
UN officials also said the AIDS virus has
infected 34 million more people globally,
i'ncluding 5.4 million last year alone. More
than 13 million children have been orphaned
by AIDS.
In 16 sub-Saharan African countries, more
than one-tenth of the population ages 15-49
car ries the human immunodeficiency virus,
or HIV. In seven of those countries, at least

Cincinna_ti Zoo opens
new exhibit of polar bears
C INCINNATI (A P) - The director of the Humane SodCincinnati Zoo's public open- ety's captive wildlife protection
ing of a new exhibit for polar program . "Satisfying
their
bears marked, the third debut of behavioral and physical n eeds is
a new animal habitat at the zoo pretty much impossible. No
since May 1999.
matter how big an exhibit you
The $2.7 5 million Lords of create, it's not going to have the
the Arctic exhibit that opened options for the aquatic life the
Saturday features four polar animal leads or for the temperabears: Its debut follows the $6 tures the animal exists m." ·
million Vanishing Giants elePolar bears have been known
· phant habitat, which opened to demonstrate ritualistic, pa cing
two months ago, and Manatee behavior in captivity,. possibly
Springs, which opened in May be cause of stress or lack of
of last year.
enrichment. A dozen zoos
The zoo's four polar bears are around the country are studying
a 3-year-old resident couple, polar bea rs to determine
named D anny and Rizzo, and whether a rise in stress hotnew arrivals Ulaq and Berit, 1 manes is linked to repetitive
1/2-year-old twin cubs from behavior.
the Denver Zoo. The cubs are
The Toledo Zoo sought to
the brother and sister of provide alternatives for its polar
Klondike and Snow, the twin bears in its $11.5 million Arctic
cubs raised from birth by Den- Encounters exhibit, opened in
ver zookeepers and made January. The new enclosure
famous by a 1996 PBS speciaL
includes a sand pit, where the
Klondike and Snow, who bears can dig at will; a waterfall
were abandoned at birth by and stream with live fish; and a
their mother, Ulu, were sent to chance to watch seals through
Sea World in Orlando, Fla., in windows.
1995.
Maruska favors having severCincinnati's 11 @W 2 1;000- al animals in .,.n enclosure; to
square-foot exhibit more than encourage activiry.
doubles the size of the bears'
"We've provided our animals
current grottoes. It includes two with a salt bath and other things .
glass-front viewing areas, one of We'll have four bears, maybe
them looking into a 12-foot- __r,aring it_,down _kter;' _he_ ~ajg,
deep, 70;000-gallon pooL
'R1ght now four IS a good
"BelieVe me, a polar bear on. number for quite a while, and
land is one thing," said Cincin- they'D be young, so there should
nati Zoo director Edward be a great deal of interaction
Maruska. "But under water it's and activity."
like an underwater ballet."
Polar bears are powerful
swimmers and can remain on
pack ice hunting for months at a
time away from land. They can
travel or swim 50 miles a day in
the wild and survive in minus50-degree cold.
Despite the public appeal of
polar bears, the Humane Society
of the United States contends
that they should not be confined
for public display because of
their intelligence and physical
needs.
"Polar bears are one of those
animals that are next to irnpossible to take care of well in captivity," sa id Richard Farinato,

EAST LIVERPOOL (AI') A hazardous wastt in cinerator
that 'i o mc ·activists porrr;~ y :l S a
b lot on AI Gore 's environmcnt.1l
reputati o n doesn "t stir th e p;l"-

way

or, ion it used to in rhi &lt;&gt; Oh io
River ciry. .
" It's rea ll y a no n-:iss ue to mo~a
peo pl e. Th e t1me has changed
and the whole overa ll _att itude
has changed." sa1d Larry Wal to n,
a local busin ess man who has
witn esse d two decades of
p rot~· s ts and lawsuits over the
planr.
G nrt' ~p o k ~ out .tgain sl thl'

Vo n R oll W.!&gt;tL' lechnolol(ics
I n dm rr icli
1nc inc.:n tor
111
l kL cmbt-r 1992 hecJu se It -;ir..,
QJ J the r1 ve rhank :md n e:~ r an
cl c llll' nlury ~t: h ool .
On a po st- e ll'ct1on

o;,w in g

thro ugh rh c O hio Vall ey, Gore
to ld residents that th e C linton
adn111mtra ti o n would not 1s.suc

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CHARLESTON, WVa.- Peter Ritz Eggleston , 90, of Charleston,
W.Va ., died Thursday, July 6, 2000, at Marmet Health Care Center following an extended illness.
He was a retired chemical operator for E. I. DuPont Chemical Co.,
Belle, W.Va.
He is survived by two daughters, Shirley L. Boggess, South
C harleston , W.Va ., and Thelma E. Clark, St. Albans, WVa.; six grand. children, 12 great grandchildren; and two great-great grandchildren.
H e was preceded in death by his wife, Bernice.
Funeral services were at 11 a:m. today at Fidler &amp; Frame Funeral
Home in Belle, with Rev. Fairley R . M cCormick officiating. Graveside funeral services were at Wells Cemetery with the Rev. Arthur
Crabtree officiating.

Charlotte Virginia Bateman
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Charlotte Virginia Bateman, 86, of GaUipolis Ferry died Friday, July 7, 2000, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis , Ohio.
Born November 24, 1913 in Mason County, she was the daughter
of Richard and Nora (Coleman) Putney. She was a homemaker.
In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by her husband, W.T. Bateman; three brothers, Russell, C lyde and Dale; four sisters, Roxie Hammond , Eulah Putney, Beulah Putney and Gladys
Honaker.
Survivors include two sons and daugNers- in-law, Richard and Violet Bateman and Bill Wand Janie Bat;-rnah, all of Gallipolis Ferry; four
daughters and sons-in-law, Anna B. and Charles Stephens of Cottageville, Nancy L. and Ike Wickline ofJackson, Ohio,Virginia D . Bateman and Mrs. Odie Hilda Henry, both o( Gallipolis Ferry; a sister and
brother-in-law, Juanita and Eddie Knapp of Mansfield, Ohio; brother
and sister-in-law, Lester "Bud" and Edna Putney of Gallipolis Ferry;
nine grandchildren; three step-grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren;
and six step-great- grandchildren.
Service will be 11 a.m. Tuesday, July 11, at the Deal Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, with R ev. Ron Swiney officiating. Burial will follow in
Beale Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Friends may call at the funeral home Monday from 6 to 9 p.m.

Derek didn't inhale water
because he .continued to receive
oxygen through the umbilical cord
until his face was lifted out of the
water, she said.
Underwater births have gained
attention as expectant mothers and .
nurses have realized that the warm
water helps women relax and
reduces pain, said Norma Ziegler,
nun;e manager in the labor and
delivery area at Grant Medical Center.
She said the hospital would add
at least four birthing tubs when it
remodels at the end of the year.
"If it's right here, we think more
women will use it," she said.
Mount Carmel St. Ann's Hospital in .suburban Westerville has
added a permanent birthing tub
that will open in a few weeks, said
spo ke,woman Krista Kruse. She said
one woman delivered her child
underwater in a rented pool a year

Darrell Layton Sayre
LEHIGH ACRES, Fla.- Darrell Layton Sayre, 82, of Alva, Fla. died
Friday, July 7, 2000, at the Anderson Hospital, Lehigh Acres, Fla.
Born December 22, 1918 in Cottageville, he was a son of the late
Raleigh B. 'a nd Cynthia May Sayre. In addition to his parents, he was
also preceded in death by two brothers, Blaine and Dwight Sayre.
He is survived by sisters, Leone Jaques of New Haven and Beryl
Lawton of White Pine, Tenn.; brother, Ralph Sayre of New Haven;
half-sister, Dora M . Bailey of Portland, Mich.; two daughters, Ava Kyle
and Autumn Roy, both of Florida; two step-children, Sharon Koerper
of Texas and Mike Harless of Lehigh Acres, Fla.; one granddaughter;
and several nieces and nephews.
Memorial services were held Monday, July 10, 200'0, at Anderson
Funeral Home, Lehigh Acres, Fla. Information provided by New
Haven Funeral Home.

ago at St. Ann's.
At Ohio State Univet5ity Medical Center, pregnant women can sit
in large tubs that were added
recently durjng .remodeling, said
Stephanie Vick, director of women
and infants nun;ing at the center.
The two tubs also could be _used
for an underwater bmh, she wd.
Not every woman can deliver
--.underwater. Dodge said·those wlio
develop complicatioru or who have•
high-risk prcgnancies arcn't candidates because they must be kept on
moniton, such as those to check the ·
baby's heart rate.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Pauline E. Hornsby, 71 • of GaUipolis, Ohio,
died Sunday, July 9, 2000, at her residence. .
Born January 28, 1929 in Mason County, she was a daughter of the
late Delmar and Stella (Saunden) Stewart. She was a homemaker and
attended the Church of Christ in Christian Union.
In 1dliitlon to- her parents, she was ~lso preceded in death ~y a son, Danny HaUey- Stewart; and brothers, Hershel, Frank, Eugene, 'IWin
Paul and Kenneth Stewart.
Survivors include her husband, John Harvey Hornsby of Gallipolis,
Ohio; sons and daughter-in-law, Gary Allen Stewart and Steven Scott
and Jackie Hornsby, all of Gallipolis; brother, Harold Stewart of
Cincinnati, Ohio; sister, Hazel Bush of Gallipolis; and two grandchildren.
·
Service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, July 12, 2000, at the Willis Funeral Home, Gallipolis, with Pastor Dan Bennett officiating. Bunal will be
in Old Mercerville Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, July It, at the Willis
Funeral Horne.

Zip

llJ!lu;. One Gift Cerrtfic,te per f:amily Per Montb. Must be. 18 Years
or Older to enter. No purchase neces511ry. Three (3) $50 Gift Cenilicates
to he given away monthly. Gift Cert ili~ale s to be appllrd to new purchase
only. Cannot be used as a payment on a Mason Furniture char!e Of
layaway accouot. Maillo P.O. 8ol&lt; 408, Mason, WV 25260 or brm~ In

Mason Furniture 2nd Street, Musoh, WV. All entries must be received
by July 31,2000. OrawlngAugusll, 2000. Winners will be noli Red
and names posted at the store. Mason 1-~urniture employees ahd
family members ore ineligible.

Helen Berkley · New Haven, WV
Sarah Shields · Mason, WV
J ttara Krider, Racine, OH

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS l!J.960)
Ohio \'1lley Publishing Co.
P~blishcd

Fr1Lioy, I l l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, hy 1t1e

~rty years ago, I wmmanded

Member: The A~!IIOCiatcd Press, and the Ohio
New sp aper A~)(ll:iH ti o n .

what was 10 have b een man's
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We didn't get to complete that
mission ~ but the story of what
happened on Apollo 13 cap tured ·
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over the world.

POSTMASTER: Send address comctions. to
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'

one-fifth of the population is infected.
The AME Church is trying any and all
means to tight the spread of AIDS, said Bish- ·
op William DeVeaux, who serves the church
in Swaziland, Mozambique, lesotho and
Botswana.
"We begin with a commitment to abstinence but strongly support other means to
control the spread of the disease, including
safe sex - the use of condoms," DeVeaux
said. "If we don't do something, most of the
other issues facing th e church will be oflittle
consequence."
' DeVeaux is urging international health
organizations to step up AIDS treatment programs in Afr ica. He said the AIDS treatment
drug AZT shouftl be given to pregnant mothers to prevent transfer of the disease to newborns.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The list
of essential items for expectant
mothers .headed for the hospital
may someday include an inflatable
swimming pooL
Some central Ohio hospitals are
making plans for underwater births,
which have been popular in areas of
Europe for years but have been slow
to catch on in the United States.
Grant Meclical Center had its
til't on July 3, when Derek Ryan
Killen was born into the warm
water of an inflatable pool she and
her husband had brought with
them.
"I wanted the birth to be as natural as possible;' said Heather Killen
of Newark. "The water was greatit helped with the pain in my legs
and back.
"A lot of people said I was insane
to do this, but I go my own way.
And this way, we also have a swimming pool for later on in the summer; 1 Killen said.
Underwater deliveries are sirnpie, said Pat Dodge, the nurse midwife who delivered Derek.
During the later stages of her
labor, Killen ~t in the pool, whi•h
was filled with nearly 2 feet of water
at about 100 degrees. Her h!&gt;"J:l~nd ,
Max, sat behind her, supporting her
back and holcling her hands.
Once she pushed the baby out,
. Bodgt'-lilled-Derek out of the water
and · placed' him on his mother's
chest.
"lt's a very gentle
for a baby
to be born because they come into
warm water;• Dodge said.

. 1.800.949.4444

www.rrjgolf/;om
.Jim' Lovell, Commander, Apollo 13

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LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

Birthing pools may become
~andard hospital equipment

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Incinerator
waning hubub

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AME Church trying to combat African AIDS epidemic

BRIEFS

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Flqmeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport; Ohio

Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

Libbey Inc.
plans expansion

Monday, July 10, 2000

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~ocal property taxes.
\ The Ohio Supreme Court
agreed in 1997 and in May reaffirmed that decision, ordering
lawmakers to create a new fundmg system by Jun e 2001 that
reduces Ohio's reliance on local
property taxes.
The richest school district . in
Ohio for property wealth, Cuyahoga Heights, collec ts about $637
per pupil for every mill of property taxes. Meanwhile, the Trimble Local Schools in Athens
County, the state 's poore~t distric t
for property wealth , collectsjust
$23 for eac h mill.
Each mill reptesent&gt; $1 collected for every $1,000 of assessed
property value.
And each year, the state sets a
mi nimun1 arilouin school districts
must spend for each child. This
fall, districts will receive $4,269
per student. Schools that want to
spend more mu st collect additional money throush local tax
levies.
Leaders in the poor sc hool districts believe the state 's minimum
amonnt per student is too low
and doesn't grow fast enough .
''I'd like to see the school basic
aid formula based o n what education actually costs," said Dennis
Morrison, superintendent of Mad
River sc liool s 111 west- central
Ohio:
''I'd just li ke to have a level
playing field."

Plan ice cream
sodaI

from the Medicare offi ce in
Columbus will present a program
to older adults and anyone interested.
The program is sponsored by
the Meigs County Cancer Initiative.
Early detection of cancer is
important ro older individuals
since their mortality rate from
cancer is high. Can cer rates for aU
age groups are much higher in
the.Appalachian region dian that
found in the rest of the United
States, but early detection with
today's ca ncer treatments extends
peoples' lives, according to Lenora Leifheit of the Meigs Cou nty
Council on Aging.

SALEM CENTER - The
Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its annual
ice cream social on Saturday, with
serving from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at
the fire department, located on
State Route 124 in Salem Center.
The menu will consist of 10 flavors of homemade ice cream,
roast beef sandwiches, pies, potato
salad, macaroni salad, baked beans,
hot dogs and other , items. The
Midnight Cloggers will entertain
at I p.m.

Fish fry planned

Reunion planned

WILKESVILLE
The
Wilkesville Volunteer Firemen's
Association will hold its annual
fish fry on July 29 from ll a.m. to
I 0 p.m . on the square in
Wilkesville.

RACINE - The Charles A.
and Alma Hinzman Snyder family reunion will be held on Sunday
at Star Mill Park m Racine. Dinner will be served at 12:30 p.m.

Church plans
revival

Fellowship to
meet

POMEROY Faith Valley
Tabernacle Church on Bailey
Run Road in Pomeroy will hold
a weekend revival July 13-16 at 7
p.m. each evening, with Elder
Robert Hall of Point · Pleasa nt ,
W.Va . as speaker. Pastor Emmett
Rawson invites the publi c.

MIDDLEPORT - Widows'
Fellowship will hold a potluck
lunch on Friday at noon at the
Middleport Church of Christ.

.

cancer program
set

To holdVBS

POMEROY- A program discussing cancer screenings and
what Medicare coven; will be
RUTLAND
Rutland
held at the Meigs County Multi- · Freewill Baptist Church, Salem
purpose Senior Center on Thurs- Street, will hold Vacation Bible
day at 10:30 a.m. Julie Leonard, School July 17-21 from 6 to 9
beneficiary education t:mnag~r p.m . Signup wiU be held on July

'

15 at 10 a.m .

Special meeting
set
POMEROY - Meigs Counry Soil and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervisors will
hold a special meeting .on Thursday at noon at the S&amp;WCD
office, to consider log jam
removal applications and perso[lnel matters.

Trustees to meet
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, 7
p.m. at Syracuse Village Hall.

POMEROY
Saturday, 7 :17 p.m .. St•te
Route 33, motor vehicle accident, Carrie Morris, Steve Morris , treated; '
10:46 p.m., River Heights Apt. , ,
Nonpus Hendry, HMC;
Sunday, 10:40 p.m., Maples
Avenue ,Jane Teaford, HMC.
SYRACUSE
Saturday, 12:57 p.m., Apple
Street , Don Roush, Pleasant Valley Hospital:
.
3:07 p.m., Elige Road, assisted
by Racine, Clara Marie Young,
HMC.

Arrests reported

POMEROY A Pomeroy
couple was arrested Saturday on
domestic violence and drug- .
related charges.
,.
According to Meigs Counry
POMEROY - Units of the Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Jimmy
Meigs Emergency Services Snider, 37, and Alberta Snider, 24,
answered 12 calls for assistance were arrested at their Union
over the weekend. Units respo nd-· Avenue home following a complaint of an alleged altercation
ed as follows:
there .
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Jimmy Snider was also arrested
Saturday, 7:10 a.m., Richard
Vitokoviti s, Holzer Medical Cen- for cultivation of marijuana and •
possession of drug paraphernalia
ter:
9:50 a.m.,James Adam, treated; after deputies allegedly found a
11 :47 a.m., Justin Dewitt, marijuana plant and other drug- '
related items at the couple's'
Pleasant Valley Hospital ;
home.
7:17 p.m., State Route 33,
· motor vehicle accident, Dorothy
Stone, Don Eakins, treated;
10:16 p.m., State Route 338,
assisted by Central Dispatch,
MIDDLEPORT - TheTNT
Sandy Adkins, Jackson General Pitstop, State Route 7, reported
Hospital;
to the Meigs County Sheriff's ,
Sunday, 9:38 p.m., South Department that an outside surFourth Street, Edclie Fite, PVH;
v.eillance camera was removed
11:25 p.m. , Lincoln Heights, from the property over the weekSam Williams, treated.
end.

EMS units log 12
calls

Theft reported

'

Viagra seller brings big dollars, scrutiny to Ala. town
CLANTON, Ala. (AP) Rural Chilton County is an
unlikely home for a businets that
bills itself as one of the world's
biggest Web-based sellen ofViagra.
The quiet farming community
is decidedly unsexy: Ill bestknown product is peaches, grown
in dozens of groves and sold at
stands along Interstate 65.
But the county is also headquarters for al) ~r-bu!lnesnhar-­
through a network reaching from
Australia to Eastern Europe claims to sell millions of doUars
worth of the little pills that can
help impo~nt men have sex
agam.
Known locally as NMC Marketing, Norfolk Men's Clinic is
housed in a small office in a strip
mall. Owner Anita Yates said the
company has quickly become
one of the top Web-based sellers
ofViagra since opening in October 1998.
"We're involved in the
absolute c·utting edge of health
care," said Yates. While acknowledging the problem of rogue
medi cal Web sites, she said her

business is completely legal.
But th~ U.S. Food and Drug
Administration and local authorities are investigating. The state
already has suspended and fined a
local doctor accused of illegally
fillln11 pmcriptions for Yates'
company.
"It's a long way from being
over," said Sheriff Billy Fulmer. ·
Federal agent• raided NMC's
office last year, seizing computer
luro arives, . ming ca6iiiets and
pill-cutting devj,ces that are sold
to customers. No charges have
been filed.
FDA
spokeswoman Susan
Cruzan said Friday the agency
would not comment on a pending investigation. However, Norfolk Men's Clinic is not among
the 140 Web sellers listed on the
FDA's Internet site as being in
possible violation of prescription
medication laws.
The scrutiny is directed at a
business with cramped headquarters that resembles a telemarketing offiFe more than a medical
supplier.
Five women ·sit at . computer
terminals. Melodic chimes signal-

look for more heat Tuesday
&lt;

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Forecasters say a cold front will
move south of the Ohio River on
Tuesday, bringing the threat of
showers and thunderstorms across
the tri-county ~egio n through
midweek.
But the front is not expected to
provide mu ch relief from the
Wcdne sday.. .Partly clou dy with
hea t, the National Weather Ser- a chance of showers and thundervice predi cts, as high tempe ratures storms. Highs in the upper 80s .
are slated near the 90- degree
Thursday... Partly cloudy. A
mark for much of th e week.
c han ce of slwwers ·and thunderForecast ·
. storms. Lows in the 60s. Hi ghs
Flas".flood warch roday
near 90.
Today.. . Scattered showers and
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows m
thunderstorms. High near 90.
the 60s. Highs in rhe 80s.

LOCAL STOCKS

AEP - 31),
Akzo - 42l.
AmTech/SBC - 441,
Ashland Inc. - 35),
AT&amp;T - 33
Bank One - 30~.
Bob Evans- 15 1~

BorgWarner- 35'•
Champion - 4
Charming Shops- 5lo
City Hold ing Fede'ral Mogul - 911i,.
Firstar - 22 ~.

7,.

L-~~--------------~

Gannon -

sa~.

'

·General Electric - 51 ' ·
Harley Davidson - 40

Kmart- 7'!.

. Lid . .,., 23~
Oak Hilt Financial OVB-26'1•
One Valley - 32),
Peoples - 14

Rocky Boots - 5\.
AD Shell - 62

Sears - 357...
Shoney's - 14
Wai-Mart - 61 ~..
Wendy's - 19l.
Worthington - 11 ~..

Kroger- 22'~•
Lands End- 35~
t4

.

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions,
provided
by ·
Adves1 of Gallipolis.

Premier- 6'·

Rockwell - 33~

•
•

Quakes
from Page A1

recognized as one of the greatest
stories in fl ood prevention," he
said.
And the memory of the 1913
flood co ntinues to drive efforts to
ke ep it from ever happening
again.
In Jun e 1998 , funding was
Tonight...Showers and thunapproved for the first phase of a
derstorms likely. Low in the 60s.
$24
million proj ect to repa ir ·the
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. C han ce
deteriorating dams.
of showers and thunderstorms.
In contrast . Kovar said, most
Highs ;tear 85 . ·
·
Ohioans
·are not prepared or con Extended forecast
Tuesday night.. .Partl y cloudy. cerned abo ui earthquakes.
"A lot of peopl e eve n laugh
Lows around 70.

VALLEY WEATHER

..

ing new e-mail ring out across htstory and a third with payment
the office, indicating a new order information. The typical order it
or a question.
between $250 and $300, she said.
Yates doesn't have a medical
Billing information comes
background: she used to train electronically to the Clanton
horses and clean aquarium• fo~ a offi~e,. whi eh haa totolannuol sales
living. She got into the Viagra of at leaat S13 million, according
business through her fiance, to figures from Yates. The medical
whom she met in an Internet information is reviewed by seven
chat room .
aoctors in Romania, where the
"I think the reason Viagra has government has licen&gt;ed the busidone so weU in this forum is ness . ·-·
because men -aon' t want to ad-mit
The foreign doctors then send
they may have a problem," she
approved prescriptions electronisaid . Drugs are shipped via Federcally to Weirton, W.Va., where
al Express without any indication
. Norfolk Pharmacy ships the pills
of their contents.
An order R&gt;r 100 mg Viagra from a converted convenience
pills- which sell for $10 each- store selected because West Virgoes around the world before . ginia honors foreign prescriptiqns.
reaching the buyer.
According to Yates' figures, the
To purchase Viagra or other
medicines for baldness, allergies West Virginia office handles
or assorted problems, customers orders worth as much as $54.6
link to a computer in Australia . million annually for Norfolk
They fill out one consent form, Men's Clinic and several other
another detailing their medical Web-based drug sellers.
about it," he said.
Kovar said that if a major earthquake struck th e state, Ohioans
would probably react the way
they did after the 1913 flood .
"New building codes would
be established." he said. "There
are tried and test ed types of construction that can be built that
can help buildings withstand large
earthquakes .
"And there would be renewed
interest in mass-casualty plans."
Kovar also said there would
likely be a run on ea rthquake
insurance.

SPRifiG VA llEY CINEMA
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' •

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7

• ' '' • ,. 1

FRI7f7/00· THURS 7/13/00

lOX OFFICI Will OPiN AI
6:30 PM FOR MNING SHOWS
17:30 PM FOR MAnNIIS

�•
()~~~~~iC)fl

_Th_;_D_al~·ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________
The Daily,Sentinel
'Esta6f~lietf in

1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

•

PageA4

•

Monday, July 10,2000.

·~·~ R

Monday, .July 10, lOOO

Tfbman S niece used her business computer to access pornography
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 21&gt;-yearold professional woman, arid I work at
home. My computer was bo ught and is
maintain ed by my company.
I recently hosted a family gettogeth er. Several of my nieces and
nephews attended, including my 12year-old niece. ~ha ron ." When the
younger kids became bored with the
adu lt party, Sharon asked if· she cou ld
ADVICE
use my computer to play so me gam~s.
I agreed. figuring she was old enough
I have no idea how to handle this.
to handle it herself.
.;
Sharon's mother is in her 50s and
The nex t day, I logged on to my whi!e I would not say she is squ,are, I
co mputer and notice d that there were don t thmk she realizes h ow mucli kids
severa l web sit es that h ad been know these days . Also, I'm sure it
accessed, ap parently by Sharon . I did would des troy my relationship with
some inves tigatin g, and . discove red she Sharon 1f I betray her by telling h er
had accessed a site with g raphic porno- parents th at she is looking at pornogragra phi c pictures and stories of an phy on the computer. An additional
ex plicit sex ual nature . Normall y, problem is that my comp uter is sup Sharo n would be unable to visit these posed to be for business use only. Our
sites. but my co mputer does not have co mpany polr cy expressly prohibits use
blocking software. and she had no trou - .of the Internet for anything personal,
ble at all.
and I fear a reprisal from my emp loyer.

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

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer

Landers

Controller

Uuers fo dlt tditor ~ •~lcome. TMy shaf4ld N ltn tJuur JOO words. AJlltll.,t llrT !fNb}td
w wdiri•IIUIJ ••st IN sir11td aNd include tJJldnu and tl!ltphattt " .....~,.. No 11ruig11td ftntrs wilt
H pMbiUhul. UlltN -"w•ld be in good hult, addnuing iuues, not penuruditirs.
Tltr upiNitJII.i txpnsstd ill tilt colNiftn bdow an tht rmtf.riUU $ of tht Ohio ~'allq Publishins
Co.) rdisorl4/ boord. Ulfltu olltt,...,ist noted.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Justice
Tribunal should have
no say over US.forces
• The Indianapolis Star,"" l!.Njustice:The United States has the
largest number of military serving overseas. It also ha.&lt; irs own military
justice system for punishing American troops suspected of war c rimes.
So why should it give an international tribunal superseding JUrisdiction to prosecute U.S. troops charg~d with war crimes or cr imes
against humanity?
It shouldn't. And rf it fail s to get blanket inunumty for American
personnel based abroad, the Senate should refuse to ratify a treaty
establishing the United Nanons-sponso red court. More, it should
make it clear there will be no financial support forthcoming for the
court.
Whatever ·the White House's inclinations, the Clinton administration isn't likely to call attention to th e matter of the global co urt. With
good reason. Tliis is an election year. Most Americans would and
should be furious at the nonon of U.S. troops being subject to a U.N.
version of justice.
• Albuquerque (N.M.) Journal, '"' knowledge of l1istory as key to
.freedom: "' ... We hold these truths to be self-evi dem, that allme1i are created equal. that they art· endowed by their Crt•ator with catam
unalienable R.ights, that among these are Life. liberty and the pu"mt
of Happiness .. .''
These soul-stirri ng \Vords are amo ng rhe mosr f:unilt ar m Amt'rica \
history and are fo und in th e Declaration of Independence- .r seminal document with whic h a band of 13 colonies dissolved its allegiances to En~and on this day 224 years a~,;o.
What the 56 signers did not do, however. was dcclan: a ''govt·rnnlCt lt
ofthe people, by the people, for the· people."" Tiw phrase· is pm c&gt;t" dre
Gettysburg Addrc~;; . Yl·t ~ 43 p~rce nt of t·oUt•gt.• seniors )&lt;t1 rn•yeJ tlmt1ght
it was part of the Declaration; .1 1 percent thou!;ht it part of the U.S.
Constitution. Only 22 percent eurrcctly answered this 4uestion li fted
from typical high school U.S. history tests.
While some confusion ove r so urce docmn ents (and lqss of high
sGh ool history class metnory) might not seem criti cal to rhe state of
t!Ie nation, it_is dis t!'~~sing_ that RO perc~ nt qf seqjo rs tt•sted ~ ;dl_studento; at 55 top colleges and u nivasnie.., - received a D or F on the
34-qu~stion high school-level exo m. More than a thrr·d didn't know
the Constitution esta blished the div1sion o f power in American government. ...
A knowledge oflmro ry - and especially of the ideal istic words on
which den1ocracy is based - is eo;se ntial for Amt·rica ns to contin ue
ti.mctionin g as " .. One nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and
justice for all," as stated rn the Pledge of All egiam e. In th eir zeal to eel- .
ebrate diversity and ethnic origin s. or to \-VJVt: rebd battlt: ·flJt-,rs and
hold Co nfederate memorial day;;, Am eri c m s rend ro fo rger thctr commonality as Ameri ca ns

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday. July I0. rh ~ 192n d day ol 21 1110. There are 174
days lett in the year.
Today's Highli ght in History:
. O n July 10. 1850, Vice President M ill ard Fi llmore assumed the
presid ency, foll owin g the death of !'resi dent Taylor.
On thi s date:
·
In 1890, Wyom ing be ca me the H th state.
In 19 19, President Wilson pn"mally del ivered the Trearv oiVersailles to the Senate, and urged its ratificatio n.
,
In 1925,jury selecti on roo k place 111 Dayto n, Tenn ., in the trial of
schoolteac her John T. Scopes, cha rged with violati ng th e law by
teac hing Darwm's theory of evolu tion.
In 1925, the official news agency of th e Soviet Un ion, TASS, was
established.
In 1940, during World War II, the I 14-day Bartle o f l:lrira in began
as .N azr forces began attacking sou th er n England by air.
In 1943, during World War II. U.S. and Brrtish forces invaded Srcrly.
In 195 1, armistice talks aimed at ending tl 1e K ore;~n co ntli cr
began at Kaesonr;.
In 1962, the Tdstar com munrc ttiom ~atell lt e w:~s Lntnchtd tfom
Cape Ca nnwral. FloricLr. .
In 19~5 , bow1ng to preo.;-, urc from irate customers, rhe Coca-Co b
Co. said 1t would n:sun1e ~ell i n[;!; ol d-for mu la Coke, whilt' continuing to sell New Coke.
·
In 199 1. 1:lori s N.Yeltsin too k th,· oath ofo tlice a&gt; th e first elected presrdent of the Ru ssun rep ub lic.
Ten years ago: Mikhail S. Gorb t~c h e v h;mdily \VOn re-el ection ~"
leader of the Sov'iet CoiHmuni sr P:1rty. Th e Ameri ca n Lea gt1e shut
out the Nationa l Leagu e, 2-0. in th e 6 1stAll-Star ~;a m e.
Five years ago : Nohcl bun."dlt' Au11g San Suu Kyi was ffeed ftoi'il
ahnost six yt:an of hou\c arreo.;t in Yangon. Myanmar. The ddCmc.::
opened its C.tSl' ,tt thl' O.J. Simp.,on murdt:r tnal 111 Los Angele,_
Presidem C lmron embraced m;uKbro ry ra tings for TV progr'an1s
and legislation tu put p.m.' ntal-luntrol chip'~ in new~ ~cts.
One year ;tgo:Thl' U.S. wome n\ ~on:er tcan1 \von thl· World Cup,
beating C huu ~ - 4 on p(:nalty kicks .tlt. er~ l21J mmutt.''i of o;; curek -,~
play a( th e itn'&gt;l' Bowl111 !Ja,adL'Il.l , C~-111(
Today \ llirthdays:·'Mr. Wiz&lt;rd .. IJon I krbert r' H.\. hmm·r NBC
and ABC New;; corn:'lpondt'llt I hviJ Brinkley 1'&gt; XO. E11nicc
Kennedy Shnver rs 79. Former boxer Jake LrM r.m:. is 7'J Fnrmn
New York City Mayor D:.vid N. I l1nkim "7.1

Please tell me• the best way to handle
tricky situ ation 1 __:_ Aunt 1n
Omaha, Ncb.
. Dear Omaha Aunt : Keep your lip
zipped . Don't tell Sharon's mother
""how mu ch kids know these days."
Apparentl y, Sharon is knowledgeable
about ;~ccessing all sorts of n1 atenal
o nlin e, but thl' next tillll' o;h e asb ro
tl se your com puter, s:1y. "So rr y, but my
computl"r is for busint'S" ml' only." If
your cmployl·r a'k~ abour rhis incident,
explain I[ honl·stly. Jnd hopl· for the
best.
While there is a great deal of worthwhile informaci on available onlinL',
there is al so ;~ lor of garbJge. Parents
should establish strict rules regardurg
computer· u sc, and imp ose severe
penalties if those rules· arc not o bcyt"d .
Th ey ~ hould also install blockin~ softwa re, if lll' Cessa ry, to keep (heir kid s
from accessing inappropriate sitt:s.
Dea r Ann Landers : I re ad "Whv I
Fired My Secre tary.'' which appea;ecl

rr

SOCIETY NEWS

1

RadneUMW

discuss n~rallife

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Elian Gonzalez returns home to loving Jather'
. Initially, the Cuban government's intentions
fo r Ehan Gonzalez on hi s return was to place
him , as reported in the Apri l 18 New York
Times: in a state-owned house that would also
be a sc hool, with classmates and a psychologist
to aid in the b oy's readju stment.
That plan has apparently bee n changed, and
Elian will eventuall y go back to his former '
sc hool in Cord enas. As with aU C nbail chilclren. hi s education wiLl co nform with Article
:lY of the C:uha n Const itutr n n (adapted in '
I \176): "The ed ucatio n of ch ildren and youn~;
people 111 t h e spi rit of com muni sm 1~ t he dury
of "II soc iety." And Articl e 5 of C uba's la w No.
lh (th e (h i!Jrm ,u1d Yo uth Code) "reqmrcs
:Ill ;~dults \:vh_o co im: in l'O!ltact with the Chil d .~
to sci an CX&lt;Illl ple and help mol d the ·chil d's
'corm 1n1nist perso nality."'
T his co n c~: n1 is cJrried out in wry sper iti.c
ways. Tea che rs kcl·p a cumulative doss1a on
eve ry sc hoo lchild . As described in hi s book,
"Cuba, Mrro y R ealida" (Sacia Ediciones,
M i am i~C oracas). Jua n-Eia rk , professo r o~soci­
olof,'Y Clt Mramr- Dade Co m,rnunity College,
notes that cJr h stude nt's academi c devt..'lopmenr is r han ed along \V ith his political
grad es, including the exte nt to which he or
she pa rticipates in such orga ni za ti ons as ';the
Com muni st Pio nt"as Jnd th e Co mmittees for
th e IJ efcnse of thL· Revolurion,'' \:vhich co nsist
o fblock-watch co mmittees.
T hest' neighborhood mo nitors art' nor as
plentiful as they used to be because economic conditi ons req uire a lo r of sc urryin g to
make a li vin g, bm they do th e best ·rh ey ca n.
Ru~c r Hernandez, who left C uba with hi s
f.1 mily years ago. keeps in for med of co nditions
there, and notes in h1s syndicated Kmg Featu res column (Wash ington Post, April 29):
" Pa re n t~ who fa il to provide thei r Ehans with
a proper Marxist- Lenin formation can lose
custody and face charges nf ' hindering the

becomin g flawed .
Eli an co uld no longer have been given asylum here for fea r that he wo uld be subject to
political persec uti on.i n C uba. He has already
been programmed by those who took him
fro m Miami, and has signed a Father's Day
card to Fidel Castro. The card was also signed
by Elian 's father, stepmother and five school
friends of Elian w ho had been staying with
Eli an here. The ca rd sent . "an affenionate
~reetin g, and a wdl deserved kiss, to one
NEA COLUMNIST
t' rtlll"r who we love dearly for his unrivaled .
tt'Jc hmp and hrs infinite love for us, our
·
1
1
Con
rmandcr- i•r-C hi ef."
norma·I developmen t ol t 1L' chi ~.1."'
In ·'Tir ,· l31ack llo 4 k ofC:o mnnrni srn ," pub-_
It does rrot ;rppea r hkely th;g Elian will
l i~hcd by- H :nvttrd UlliVc i~i ty - Pn·~s b st )"L',\ 1'. ·· i'equiTl; much Of a period of readjustment in
Pascd Ftmtairn:· Jt·~nibc ~ lh c large r sol'll: ty 111 hi:-. homr land. He is indeed loved by his father
whtrh Eli a iJ wtl l gru\v up : "The I )1rec~.· inn - hy both of hi s Etthers.
Special J el Milrisrerie de l lut&lt;Tillr (DSMI )
When th e last appeal to an American court
recr uit~ chlvatos (i nf(nmc.:Ts) hy the thou san d. to preVt' llt Eli ar1 's retur n was denied , Gregory
"The DSMI works irr thr&lt;·c ·difl~·rc nt fields: C rarg, the lawyer fo r Elian 's father, said that
One section keeps a flk on ewry Cu ban cit- !he far_n,i}y "looks fo rward to resuming a nori zen ;-.rnmlw.-l&lt;eeP"tr:lt'k;:nf"pu!JiirojTifli~ mal. hte _- m Cuba.
.
. W rth lew exceptro ns, the Amerr can press :
th e third , in charge llf th e 'ideo logica l lin e,'
keeps an t.•ye 0 11 the cllllrch and it s var io u ~ ;~l';Ttt'~ With tht' C lmtnn - Rt'nO c he~r.mg ':f
congrega tio n s through infi lrr;~t ion.''
l:: han \ rl'turn . It has f~rgotren t~at m th•s
I t'xp~cr tlut \'is it ors to C uba from th is n)\]ntr y -. where Eban and Ius _ mot~~~
co untry'~ Natimu l Cou nnl of C hun:he;; _
\o u gh t re_tu ge- .:ustody cas.es are dect~ed .In
w hich has been persisrc· ntly hclp ti.rl to Elian 's th e best mterests of the chrld. But thrs chdd
f.1 ther,.Jnan Mi~uel Conzalez. in his dforts to w1l lnow be edll cated th ruu~h the lesson plans
.
_
get h1 ' )0 11 b;~ ck - ,lrl' nor umkr o.; u rv~.. II I.ml' e ol &lt;l d!n,no rship._
by the DSM 1. After aiL the chartered pl.m,· . As tor tlw Nati o nal Coun crl of C hurches, It
return ing Ehan rn C uba wa;; spon~nre d by th e 1s a str~m ge rehg1ous f.1Hh that has. p ersistently
National Council of C hurches. Did any of its worked to se nd th e boy to a country where
members o bjec t?
th e state ~e~ul ates w h ~ 1s free to excrctse h1s .
lmervicwing political prisoners who have or her relrgron - and 111 what way. Do aU the
been released and left C uba I have been told rank and fil e members of the Natrona! Coun- anJ this h;15 bee n
1tirmed hy Ton i cil of C hurches agree wrth its leaders' partnerFiedler of th e Miami Herald . who writes on ship with Fidel Castro in the fate of this child?
O rban li fe and politics - that students are
(Nat Hclllofl· is a natio11ally rctw wned a11tlrority
encouraged to rake nOt&lt;' of mdicati oirs that orr tire First A lllrrrdlll i'ld and tire rest of tire Bill of
the!r pa rents' "commun ist pe rso na ltt ie~·· ;ue ~~~'!Jifs.)

Nat
Hentoff

on Secretary's Day. lr was abo ut a guy but I don 't agree w1th any ofrhc above.
who thought his . family forgot his I believe when the secretary went to
birthday, and was feeling unappreciat- get the ca ke, the bos j impulsively
ed . H is wonderful secretary remem- decid ed to go for broke , an d took off
bered. however, and took him out for all his clothes. Little drd he know that
lunch . She then bro ught him to her his wife and kids would be part of the
apartmen t, turned down the lights, and birthday surprise. I have always said
wen t to "change into so mething more su rpri se parties can be di sastrous. and
co mfortable.'" When she ca me back thi s proves rt.
into the room with a surpri se birthday
Gem of the Day (Credit Napoleon
ca ke , along with his wife and kids. all Bonaparte): Religion is what keeps th e
he had on wen.· h1s soc ks.
poor from murd ering the rich.
This col umn stirred quite a debate
Do you have questru,(,l' about sex,
in our office. We: wanted to know what but no one to talk m? Ann Landers'
beca me of the man. Was he already booklet, "Sex and the Te enager," is
having an affair with the secreta ry~ or frank and to th e pornt . Send a selfwas this just his way of getting even addressed, long, business-size envelope
with his family for ignori 11g hi s birt h- and a c h eck or money ord er for $3 .7 5
day? The men in our departmem thmk (this includes postage and handling) to:
he was set up by hi s wife, and the Tee ns, c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box
women think the secretary was gettin g 11 5&amp;2, C hica go, IlL 60611"05&amp;2. (In
her revenge because he ended th eir C anada . se nd $4.55.) To t1nd out more
previous affair. What do you say, Ann ' about Ann La nders a nd read her past
- The Oftlce Staff in R.i chm ond, Va.
columns, visir rh e Creators Svndicate
Dear Staff: lnten:sring conclusions, web page at www.creJtor s.c.on;.

this

Ann

'

Diane Kay Hili

Advertising Director

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

'Just Maire Room:· and a prajl'r written by Webster.
Arr.rngement5 for the month was a beautifi ~ ruby n.'CI smgle stem fio.M,r VJSe with a single rose.
.An ammgement for th_e Extended C:rre Urut atVeterJIJS
Memorial Hospital w.r.s discus&lt;ed. Dorma and Sarah Dawn
Jenkins will prepare the proposed Jir.ll1gement.
The annual Garden Club picnic will be held Jlrly 24 at
6 p.m. at the home of Donna Jenkins. Garden Club members and a guest are '"'!come. A tour of Janet Bolin and
Jenkins's Bower garden will begin at 5 p.m betore the picnic.
A get-well card was ~gned and sent to Domthy Woodanl
by club membe" and the Traveling Prize w.r.s won by Sarah
Dawn Jenkins, which w.r.s furnished by Betty lowery
Sarah Dawn Jenkins presented a program entirled:'R.oo.·
Hint&gt; and How To:·
Peak rose buying season is here and every jl'ar mw v.rrieties of roses are judged for the ruses of the jl'ar.
1bis '!""'· the winner; were:
The Gemine- a cream and coral p~lk hybrid tea:
Knock out- a disease free dark pink to l1ght tt'&lt;l shnrb

RACINE - Rural life in the United States was discussed at the June meeting of the Racine United
Methodist Women.
R.uth Fr.~nk read an article about "Saving Sacred
Space: and Lee Lee presented liighlights fiom Response
rnag;mne concerning rural life in the United States.
. l t would appear that farmers are being told that they
are not needed because their land has higher market
value for recreational, commen:ial or other purpose.
Farnilies are losing their farms because a handful of corporations dominate much of the world's food system.
Genetic engineering, pesticide use and other corporate farming techniques are altering the food that we eat.
R acism and a desire to simplifY lifestyles are leading
urban residents to move to rural area.
In opening the business meeting, President Le~ Lee
welcomed everyone, and after . prayer, repeated the
UMW Purpose.
rose:
Due to the absence of Karen Walker, the secretary's
Crimson Bouquet - a bold and beautifi.~ n.&gt;d grandireport was read by Alice Wolfe. Several thank you notes
~~
.
.
.
were read and Chris Hill gave a detailed aooaunt of the
R.oses purchased through the marl usually come \\Othout ·
treasurer; report. Members also voted to send $100 to a
bare
roots a.nd must be put into watet immediately. Do not
family whose home burned.
Three short readings, "Healing Life," "Divine Gifis;' allow the root&gt; to dry out These flowe" shm~d be planretl
quickly
and "'Divine Order," were read by Opal Diddle, Martha
R.oses pun:hased in pot&gt; must be cut free and made sure
Dudding and Marilyn Bogard. Member; signed cauls to
that
the dirt or root&gt; do not get disturbed when planting.
be sent to two missionaries selected from the Prayer CalR.oses require a good bit ofwater and a proper drainage,
endar.
and should be fertilized one month after . planting. If the
_Alice Wolfe read .~!~Iter&lt; I:!:~eived fiom a missionary stationed in tanzia. A humorous reading, "Is it Just · weather is hot aiid dry. a sail polynter t1uy be used to help keep plants moiSt and h~thy
Me," was read fiom the new Clarity magazine.
Jay Combs presented a program entirled, "The Top 10
The recendy held Mother/Daughter Banquet called
Reblooming
Roses."
"A T Party" was well attended and chairpenon Martha
Landscape
or shrub roses need little care and I"" pnuring
Dudding was instrumental in organizing the affair. Hart's
a.nd are more resistant to bugs. They a~ also sun.·-fire
Country Kitchen cateted the dinner.
Cindy Winebrenner, Opal Diddle, Martha Dudding, bloomers.You can build a beautiful, well shaped garden \vith
and Lee Lee worked with the Bloodmobile at the Senior Landscape Roses.
The main likes of these roses are six hour; of sunliglrt per
Center in Pomeroy. Marilyn Bogard will be attending
the UMW School of Christian Mission, which will be day. pruning to shape, mulch to maint:lln m oc&lt;O.r~. and
spraying with a water hose to control aphid&lt;. Keep dead
held at Ohi? Northern in Ada , sometime in July
Cushions for porch furniture were bought and given blooms trimmed of!" because it will give your rose bush
to the Harkness family as a welcoming back gift. Alice more energy and will help it bloom better as
Some varieties of Landscape Roses are New Dawn,
Wolfe volunteered to be the chairperson of the annual
Comelia,
Iceberg, and Europeania.
Christmas Ba=r, which will be discussed at a later meetDonna Jenkins presented a program entirled, "1ll Helpmg.
ful
Herl:Js for Health."
Refreshments were served by Opal Diddle as memHealthful heri:&gt;s, many which arc used a&lt; phanHrcelmeals
bers signed get-well cards.
in
Germany,
are gaining popularity in the Umted States.You
The neXt meeting will be on July 24 with Chris Hill
having the program and Ena Ma e Hill serving refresh- . OU1 grow many herbs in )&lt;'Ur own gan.icn. It is ml&lt;' to first
leam all that }UU em about herbs b:fon: using rlw1 n .
rnents.
Some popular herbs are Aloe, Echmacea. l'eppemu1rt,
C:rj"rme, C hamomile, Garlic. Gingt:r, Cinko, Ginsmg.
Hops, Par&lt;ely Lemon Balm, Rrn.· H rp~ Gr,cn· ie:r, St. J&lt;,Jms
Wort, and V.1lcn.'an.
·
A helpful hint i~ to never give om on~ in ;u 1y tOnn to your
RUTLAND - The Rutland Garden Club recendy met dog. Onions can cause hemolytic anemia in dogs. Tlns 1s a
the home ofAlm Webster to hold their monthly meetc condition in which red blood cell&lt;:Il"C dt'Sl:!U)''d.
mg.
Sarah Dawn Jenkin.s pbyro se\"ral patnooc selectiom orr
Devooons by d1c hostess were a story fiom Gttideposi, the piano when re!R'Shment&gt; wen: scrwd by Wc·bstcr.
.

•••

MONDAY,July 10
POM EROY - Th e Mei gs
County Ohio Bi centen ni al
C:o.mm ittec, 1'vto11da)'. -\:30 p.m.
at the Mer gs County Mus&lt;•um.
Ni cole Moretti of the Ohio
Bicentennial Commission will
be a guest.
KAC I NE - R.acine Villa ge
Council wi ll meet at 7:30 p.m.
on Monday at the muni cipal
buildin g.
GALLIPOLIS Kids for
the Kin gdom. Bible scb ool.
C hurch of God of Prophe cy,
Whrte R.oad, Gal lipo lis.July I 014 6:30 to 8: 45 p.m. Classes for
nursery to ad ult.

(Time deepending' takes ·toll in no time at all
In fact, you can learn a lot about your&lt;elf and information make conununication fa ster and
BY JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK - A snapshot 0f Americans how to make constructive use of aU that tim e faster, although, say R obinson and Godbey,
"rarely more thoughtli.rl." How many times : .
on any given day wo uld show them at work, of yo\I never knew you had.
As an example, the professo rs co nclude that have you left the Intern et !Tustrated by all there :
c ours~. but also at 'ba1l 1 ga mt:~ , gulf co u rse~.
· ·
resorts, t he m ovies , th e beaCh, the mountains what makes you think you 're in a time fa mine is to know?
is so mething call ed "time-deepeni ng." As
.uxl slouched hdu re their TV sets.
It caUs tor personal decismns and discipline
Th ese are the same folks w ho claim they applied to leisure tim e, it mean s you're rrying because it isn't easy to fight the mom entum.
have no free rimt&gt; and whn, in an attempt to to get more · ·yield" ou t of every m.inute, wh ich Speed sells. and you can bet that competitive
compL·nsate, eat at fas t-fOod o utlets o r defrost mcJns you're speeding up your parti cipation by co mpanies will produce f.1Ster and more (time)
prep;tred nteals, bring the computer on vt~ca ­ co mbif1ing sev~: ral activities. Do it too Jlluch. dlicient products.
and it makes kisun.· ft:l'i li ke work.
But, say the prof,·ssors. "if we are flying blind
ti ons and claim they are sleep-d epn vt·d .
R
obinson
and
Godbey
explain
that
"titne· Tillle press ure, it see ms , 1~ more common
al lllach spt·eJ , we should kn ow where we are
th,m bt~c k lJalll ~llllong 111uJ c-rn American s. And ·deepcning ~SS llflll'·s· tl1 at, · ui1der pressure· uf going.'; Th e An Cient Creek khew: you have to
their 'lt: nse of h aving w o lirrl e rim e presents expanded in terest and compulsion. people ;~rc anti cip;lte and plan for leJsure, rhey said.
pmblellls for busi11ess becJ use it shmvs up as capa bk of hi gher ratl'S of 'doing,"' such 3~ visStill, the authors' purpose is less tu judge the
lo;;r work hours and imistcncc on benefi ts such iting a nr~tHm ,d p&lt;1rk without getti ng uut of th e wisdom of the fast Iitt_. than to view the orbit in
a_&lt;; pa id personal Jay-;, health maintt'IUIH.T proca r.
whi ch peopk spin their lives. To allow them to
()r peopll' m;1y ab.1111..lon a leisure ac tivity set:' self and socit·ry a~ a sc1entist sees life under
gra ms and child-can..· fa cilities.
. Bur in a mani4c comm enta ry 0 11 li fe mday, th at rak~s "mr.1 tntt d t" rit11e and lUbstitlltc un&lt;' J i1 Jlc ruscopc.
peopl,• who say they t(·l"i depriwd of leisure rhar rake~ less rim e. Or rhey may_L'ngage in
O hviom ly rhere 's a message in this for the
more than one activity at the \;tlllt' tilll ~. say hi gh- tec h people and th e compa ni es that cretim ~: Jctually h.tvt· J hour more pl' r day- than
readin g the newspaper and eating while watch - ate th e innovano ns thar spL·ed \1 5 on our way.
Jid pC'ople 35 years ago.
Who says so' Well, the people them selves, ing TV.
And tor th ose who say they're sleep-deprived .
" I r 111ay procJuce 1g rcar 'itrcs.,," s,1y rI·11..' two And t(,r all those- peopk in a rush.
through pl·rsotul "time di:1r ies" nJaintal ncd
.Juri1 1g rht.: p.1St l(1llr dccadl''- ~llld tk..,Vrlbl·d hy sc h nl.1r~. "~md it ,dso llll'.lm th .lt lll.lll"Y Amni Oh. by tlr,· way: Robin son and Godbey calprn iL·"~ilr\ jo hn I~ J.lobi1 f'l;o n and CL·offl·L'Y
&lt;.'.lll'- ncvLT L'XPL'I"lt'IKC ,111 )rlil ng tldl y, ll L'\'1.'1' li\\'
nd.ltl' that ·HI pcrn:m of tbt· free tiinl' of the
(;u~.l h..:y iu.· diL' It boo k ''Tirlll' ti1r Life." puh- ill rhc.: 1ll(11llt.· nt ." You 'n· ,dw,l\"'111
.tVL"r.-l gt: A111 nicn1 .Hiuh is. occu!)ied by televi. 1 ,l ru"~h. l ·.vnv-:...
.
.
.
one's In;~ 'rush .
h~hcd hy rhe Pen nsylvania Statl' Umvasity
SIOil VleWlllg.
Pn;'i&amp;-r
- lt may be the sanu: \vay at work .Tht' liD(., th ~
(Jolm CwmijJ' u a lm.m1e5s mwfy.1·r for .T ire Ass-odTh1o.; l' n't a du ll exposition for sc holar' on ly. computer, electron ic 111ail and &lt;1 dam - bur&lt;;t of dtcd Pre.(&gt;.)

&gt;

MI DDLE POR.T - Board o f
Publi c Affairs meetrng, ca nceled.

•••

TUESDAY, July ll

C HESH iR. E Disabled
Ame ri can Vetera ns, Cheshire,
will hold a dinner and meeting
o.n Monday. Dinner will be
serycd at-6:30 p.r-;," witl1 · the
meetir~g to follow at 7 p.m.

Ches ter
C H ESTER.
Township Trust ees will hoid
their regular meeting in the
C.h~;ter Town Ha ll on Tuesday
at 7 p.m. The budget for 2001
will be viewed dunng the
meeting.

MIDDLEPORT
Ash
Street C hurch in Middleport
will hold Vac ation Bible School
throu gh Friday from 6:30 to 9
p.m. each evening, for those age
three th rough grade six. "Jesus
- No Ordinary Man" is th e
chemc.

RACINE - Board of Public
Affair s, Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.,
municipal buildin g.
TUPPER.S PLAINS -Eastern Local Band Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., band room . All
parents of marching and con cert

;t

band are urged to attend .

•••

WEDNESDAY,July 12
RACIN E - The Ohio University Co llege of Osteopathr c
M edr cin e Childhood Immunization Program (C HIP ), a
mobile health program , will be
providmg free immunization for
all area child ren from birth
throu gh 18 yea rs of age on
Wedne sday. Ju ly 12 .2000, at the
Racine Pizza Express from 3
p.m. to 4 p.m. The Hcpamis B
vaccine is :1 three sho t series that
is administered over a minirnum
of four months and is now
requ ired upon a child entering
eith er preschool or kmder ga:r: [ eJl~

R.UTLAND
Leading
Cree k Co nservancy Di strict ,
special meeting to discuss hea lth
insura nce, Tuesday, 5 p.m.

A Vancella va cc ine is also
available. The child 's shot record
1s required for immuni zJtio ns.
POMEROY - Euchre-fest,
Trinity C hurch, beginnm g at 2
p.m ., $5 fee incl~des supper.
The Community Calendar
is publisf1ed as a free service to non-profit groups
wilhing to announ ce meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be .printed a specific number of days.

Big Buzz.. ~
.
.

It's The
Meigs - Gallia - Mason

Webster hosts
Rutland Garden aub

BUSINESS MIRROR

ROCKSPR.INGS Big
Bend Farm Antiqu e C lub,
Monday, 7:30 p.m., fairgrounds
oftlcc

ROCKSPR INGS - Meigs
County Republi can Execu tive
Co mmittee, 7:30 p.m., R.ocksprin.gs Fairgrounds.

.,..,n.

co;

POMEROY - Representatives of the Meigs County Histo rical Society will be at the
R.acme Public Library o n future
Monday evenings from b to 8
p.n1. to assiSt those needrng help
in writin g their stori es for the
new ,Volume lii of the Meigs
Courity History Book . Order
blanks will also be a~ailable .

]=il££ ••• 8££
Advertise In Classified -

7 Days
es. nc w·ec'k .'
4 Line Ad- 7 Times

\, o ,

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
FREE INTRODUCTORY WORKSHOP
QUICKBOOKS ACCOUNTING PROGRAM

I You musl be a pnvare 1nd1v1dual sellrng one or more items. 5. Please, no more than 3ads per personal a lime

. Each 11em musl be.p'lcej
6. No wailing al your hometown daily we slart your aa as
. The total pnce cnus1 nol exceed $300
soon as possible
send 1t to us. fax us or phone us.
No commetc1al ads. garage . yard sales. serv1ces. rentals.
wait? Cash In
I
. produce, an,mals. elc

TUESDAY· JULY 11,2000 • 6-9 p.m.
Lower Floor County Annex Building
117 East Memorial Drive, Por:neroy, Ohio
(formerly County Home)
.
The Meigs Grants Office Is offering a free introductory workshop
for business owners and future business owners who wish to
know the following:

art

s

7u~!' _:J!e_n:!~ !~ ~~

_ ~!I!~ Y~l!r_ ~o~p~l! _

One Letter Per Box. Allow Box lor Space Between Words.

'

Ho~

Quickbooks works, and how to decide whether or
. not it can serve your business needs effectively and
efficiently. Requirements: Ability to use wi11dows based
software, (Any software)
Registration is.required and interested participants may call Jean
Trussell, 992-7908 to. register. No fee will be charged for the
Introductory session. Registration will be accepted until July 10
at 5 &lt;00 .p .m.
'

.

There will be two workshops to follow for those who wish to
attend additional training on the Quickbpoks program . A fee of
$20.00 to cover the cost of both of these classes will be charged
to cover training costs.
I

:11
11111 111111 1 11111 1111
Name _________________________________________________
1

I

.

, Address ____~--------------------------------------City, State, Zip_______________________________________
1

I

1 Phone----------------------------~-------------------

1

-

Retum Coupon To: FREE· BEE

q

•

..

I

.r•

"I

. Ua1ly Sentinel
Cout·t S l. Pomeroy,. OH

Ill '•

•No Canccllalions
•N Abbrcvia1ion&gt; Please

•Customer Can Renew

Frc~

!'~ {7~9)_9_9~~~)~~
~~)~~-~~-~~- (J~(!) '~~-~ !~5In Mei!ls-Gallia-Mason"
··rhe Bill Buzz
~

�•

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Olilo

Inside:

Monday, .July 10,2000

POMEROY _ Becky Baer, Ohio State Unive"ity Extension
Agent, will present a workshop on food preservation on Friday from
I to 2:30 p.m . at the Meig; County Annex conference room . Food
prese rvation methods will be discussed and demonstrations given on
canning and freezing. Informational handouts will be available with
recotlUllended procedures, processing times and recipes for different
types of food.
Registration IS required by July 13 by calling 992-6696.
The extension office will win be c heck,ing pressure canner gauges
(gauged lid&gt; only). Lids can be dropped olffor testing.The day set aside
for testing is Monday from 9 to II a.m. Lids can be brought to the
food preservation workshop, but will need to be left over the weekend.

one of only three suc h battle fi e lds on ~orthern soil.
. The speaker for this year will be Mic hael Azinger, candidate for the
6th Ohio District fo r U.S . Cmigress. Participants placing wreaths will
be provided refreshments afte rwards.
Any organization wishing to parti cipate may contact Keith Ashley
at 992-7874.
Anyone see king members hip 111 ett lwr the S.U.V. or Ladies of the
G.A.R may stop by the membership table at the reenactment. BrooksGrant Camp will have the bunal records o n all 1400 Union soldiers
buried in M ei!l' Coun ty and th,· four volume index of all Ohio and
WestVtrginia Union soldters for anyone scekihg information on their
Union ancestors .

Recognized

POMEROY - Ruby Frick will observe her 89th birthday Tuesday
and relative ~ and friends are planning a card shower for her. She has
lived in Brown Town,just outside Pomeroy, almost all of her life and is
a member of the Enterprise United Methodist C hurch. Her address is
33330 State Route 33, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

. Wreath laying at Portland planned
PORTLAND -The third annual Battle of Buffington Island
wreath laying ceremony will be held in conjunction with the annual
Civil War reenactment at Portland hosted by the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society.
The ceremony is set for II am., Saturday, at the park in Portland. It
is sponsored by the Ohio Department Sons of Union Veterans -of the
Civil War and co-hosted by Brooks Grant Camp No.7 Sons of Union
Veterans of Middleport and the Maj . Daniel McCook Circle No. 104,
Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic.
The ceremony is to honor both Union and Confederate soldiers
who took part in the battle. All local patriotic, historical, and veterans'
groups are invited to participate ~~lhe wreath-laying ceremony. Buffington Island Battlefield is the o',l,lf- Civil War battlefield in Ohio and

Marcia Dennison, left, was given special recognition at the recent
observance of the 65th anniversary of the Rutland Garden Club held
at the Rutland United Methodist Church. She is the oldest active
member of the club which she joined over 55 years ago. Here Pauline
Atkins, president, presents her with a certificate.

Class of 1955 has reunion
MIDDLEPORT -

SOCIAL
SECURITY

The Middlep ort High School Class of 1955

RIO G RAND E - Bessie Bailey, dau ght er of Tracy and Tatruny
Rowsey of South Po int, was
amon g 37 high sc hool winners
from throu ghout Oh io who visited
Washin gton, D. C. recently as part '
o f the Ohio R urol Electri c Cooperatives, In c.'s Youth TOll[ to the
natio n 's ca pi£Jl.
The week - long t rip included a
visit to o ld Akxa nd ria and ot h ~ r
areas of hi storic signifi ca nce. Students were awa rded l'hc tour in a
scholastic co mpetition spon sored
by Buc keye Ru ral Electr ic Cooperative. Inc. of Ri o G rande. a
Touchstone Energy coopcr:n ivc.
Th e sop hom ores a nd juniors
Bailey
joined 1400 o th er ru ra l youths representing 30 states and several countries. In additi o n to tou ring the
Washington D. C. area, the students met with m embers of their Co ngressional delegation, visited the White H o use, ami atte nded a pertormance at Ford's T heatre.

Get Your Vacation P·a k while-,

Summertime
and the working
•
-ts easy
BY VALERA THOMPSON
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER

Most teenagers begin their
working careers during the
summer months, and with the
booming econoiny, employers
are now begging for new hires.
This is the time that many
young people are fim exposed
to Social Security and they
need to know certain facts
about th e program to under- sta nd the role it plays in their
. live&lt;; and even to , begin their
retire ment pl anning.
Young people need to know
how Soc ial Security benefits
are ea rn ed . For any job covered by Social Sec urity, wages
are posted to a worke r's Soc ial
Security record, and he/ she
receives credits based on these
wages. C redi ts are used to
determine eligibility for Sociaf
Security retirement, disability
or survivo rs benefits. In 2000, a
worker receives one Social
Security credit for each $780
of ear nings, up to a maximum
four c red its per year.
TwO important points are :
(1 ) credits earned remain on a
worker's Social Security record
even if he/s he changes jObs or
has a per iod of 110 earning;;
and (2) the number of credits
nee ded to be eligi ble for benefi ts depends on a worke r's age
and the type of Social Secunty
benefit .
Many
summ er j obs mvolve ti ps. Teens
need to kn ow that tips totaling
S20 or more a momh need to
be reportefl to the employer.
The employer the n is res ponsi1:5le for withholding Social
Security. Medicare and mcome
taxes du e o n the reported
Finally, as a teen, make sure
that your employers have your
correct name and Social Sec urity nu mber." The best way to
do th1 s is to show any new
e n-iployer you r . Soc ial $ecljrity
ca rd . Failme to do so could
cause proble ms b tcr. An incorrect Soc ial Sec unty number on
a W-2 could cause a de lay in
processing a tax . rcru rn and
sendi ng any refund due. Also.
ea rning; may not be credited
to yom Sonal Sec urity
records. ·w hich co uld affec t
-you r future be·nefi ts.
You may wanr ro chec k o ut
Social
Securi ty's
website ,
www.ssa gov. and subscribe to
3-Ncws, o ur monthly electronic newsletter full of the late~t info rm Jtio n on Soc ial
Sccurtty. Addtt10nal mformation is also available by ca lling
our to ll free number. l -800772- 1:2L\ .

Page 81

held its 45th class reunion at the home of Jim and Sheila Stowr Hubbard it:~ Middleport on May 27.
'
An afternoon cookout was enjoyed by alumn i Barbara Scott
Stonecypher and her husband, Bob of Col um bus; Patricia Baker Russell and her husband, Don, Hot Sprin!l' Village, Ark ; Phyllis Ebersbach,
Orchard Lake, Wise.; Fred Lewis of Cleves; Iris VanCooney Stanley of
Franklin; Ronald Fultz ofWesterville; Willard Miller ofWooster; Sheila
Stover Hubbard and her husband, Jim, Lancaster; R oger Long, Yvonne
Hackett Scally, Harold Thomas and his wile. C h arlene; Ruby Ycauger
Vaughan and Husband , Dick, Gary Wayla nd and Roger Willi ams, all of
Middleport. _
.
.
After an afternoon.of reminiscing about thei r high school days th e
class rnembe" attended the Middleport Alumni ba nqu e t.

Monday, July I o, 1000

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Southem H.S. holds
volleyball open gym

Bailey partidpates in Youth Tour

To observe birthday

The Daily Sentinel

W'NBA: Cleveland rocks Charlotte, Page 86
Daily ~coreboard, Page 86

SOCIETY NEWS
Food preservation workshop set

Otd(!t yout Vacation -Pak B~~OR~ you l(!avo!!
Call The Daily Sentinel at992-2156befora you go on Vacation
and ws will hold yout nswgpapstg whils you ats away.• Pick up yout
vacation-pak wh~n you gl!t home and tecaivaj' cou~pon -fot a ~ -- ~-- -·~R~~· Msdiurn Psppetoni Pizza and 2 Co~ ftarn Dornino'g
lJalli~olh: SJnd Potn(!toy !;!tot~ only. (Pick-u~ .only)

RAC IN E Southc·rn High
School wi ll hold open b'Ylll for
volleyba ll today from 5 p.m. to 7
p.m .. andThursday, July 13, from
h p.m . m H p.m .

Sampras wins 13th
Grand Slam crown
W IMBLEDON , England (A P)
To p-seeded Pe te Sampras
passed !loy Emerson for the most
Crancl Slam championships and
tied Wi ll ie Renshaw, a player in
the 18HIIs, for the most Wimbledon titles w ith a 6- 7 (10) , 7-6 (5),
6-4. 6-2 vi ctory ove r No. 12
Patn ck Rafter.
Sa mpfas has won seve11 Wim bledon titks, 13 Grand Slam
champi onships an d 28 straight
matches at Wimbkdon , extending
his mark there to 5.1- 1 ove r tht'
past ei ght years. Sampras is o nl y
the sixth men's player in history
to win Wimbledon four straight
years.
Th e bst to do it was Bjorn
Uorg, who won five straight fro m
1976-HO.
Ve.nus Williams beat Lindsay
Dawnport 6-3, 7-6 (3) Saturday
fo r ha first Grand Slam tttle,
, becoming the first black wome n's
ch amp ion at Wimbledon since
A lt!ll'a Gibson 111 1957-5H.
T he to p-seeded team of Au stralians Todd Woodbridge and
Ma rk Woodfordt· won tht· m en's
dnu hk'i championship wa·h a 6J. 6- 4. 6-1 victory over Paul
lla .~r h ui s and Sando n Stolle.
Do n Johnson and Kimberly Po
of th t• United States bt"at teenagers Llcvro n Hewi tt ;111d Kim
c: Iijsters i,-4. 7-6 (3) to win the
mix(.: d dot1bks title.

~AIIenby~wins ~ --­

Western Open
LEMONT. Ill . (AI') - R obert
Alk·nby wo n the W estt•r n t1pt'n
for his seco nd PG A To ur title.
la!Jpi ng in ;1 2- fimt par pmt to
bea r Nick Price on th e first playo~r h o l e.

Allen by ((•H) and l' m-e ((&gt;9 ) fi nr~o:~u lation at. I ~- under 274.
(;reg Krali (C.H), Shi~ck i M aru yalll.l (71 1) and Jim Ftrrvk (71) tie d
li1 r third ar 12- undcr '276.
'
T ig'-T Woods. playi ng his first
tcH I I'Il:llllt'llt !\I IH.':l' hi s amazing 15-.tru b..: victo ry in the U.\ Open ,
de ISCd Wlth ;\11 l'VC.'I)- p ;l r 72 ;tl1l!i

j..; hL·d

While you're on vacation don't miss the news or your Free* Pizza.

tlnishl·.d Sl'VL'II \ trokcs back at 7under 2H 1. It was his wont finish
. . intl' a ti t fo r .17th in thl' Sprim
lntl' l•n.Hion.ll .b st Au~mt.

.

This Summer's Special a
$10.00 value
Compliments of:

The
oa·ily Sentinel·

Sorenstam wins
Jamie Farr Classic
SY LVANIA , Ohio (AI')
An nik ;l Soremta m earned hn
fC.H1rth v1ctor y of tlu· year o n the
LP CA Tuur with an 11 - fnot
.
'
birdi e putt 011 th e o;;econd hok o f
,1 pb yutr with P... ;u.: hel Ht:th eringto n in rhc Jami t.:.· Farr Krogn
Cl.tv·.ir.
Su rL' Iht&lt;l!ll . who closed w1th an
cvcn-p.lr 7 1, h;1' ~2 c trct.•r vit.: tor rn. H c· lh e ringto n (67 ) haJ
h irdi~_·.., .H

17 and 1X to pull cvt.'n

\\' lth Sl)rrn~til ll l

.n Hl- undt:- r··274.

Cycling: Armstrong
in 16th place
IJAX. Fran ce (A I') - IJ&amp;· nJtn g: dumpion Lan n• Arm ~ trong
111.1 11 .1gt:d to ~r;1y alH.: ad o f hi s c hief
c l 1.1l l cm;!;t' l'~ in th e over&lt;l ll standlll h'"" .di~t:r thl' n inth stage of the

•

10\lr de Fr:mrc.
Italy\ Pao lo Ue tnni won a

Hungry Now- Your L,ocal Domino's

•

Stewart wins wet and wild New England 300
LOUDO N. N .H . (AI') - Kenny lr.win looked directly at th e end of the skid
is gone, but not forgotten .
· marks m ore than o nce today," Martin said.
Two days afte r Irwin's fatal crash at New
l imy Stewart also had his lo ngtime rival
Hampshire international Speedway, M ark on h1s mind , and dedicated his victory ro
Martin kept seei ng the signs in deat!1 's Irwin.
corner.
"The first part of the race, it was hard to
" I looked at that spot more than once fo cus," Stewart said . "But the chapel sertoday," Martm sa id after finishing third vi ce this mo rning is pmba bly " lh en it
Sunday to Ton y Stewart in the New Eng- bothered me the most."
land 30U. "The spot was painted o n the
The 29-year Stewa rt, and Irwin , who
wall, but I know wherc'the cracks are."
was 30, had raced each o th er hard for
And that wasn 't ·all Marcin noticed in nearly a decade as they mowd from openth e third tum, whe re Adam Petty crashed wh eel ears 111 th e Midwest to NASCAR's
hi s Busch Series c ar eight weeks ea rlier. elite Winston· C up ci rcuit. ·
His death robbed N i\SC A ll of its first
"We weren't always on the best of
fourth -generation driver.
terms, but we always brough t out the best
''I'm not going to elaborate, but I in each other," Stcwarr sa id . "We always

~lzza

Number

992·2124
• To qualify for FREE pizza coupon , Vacation-Pak must be for 5 days or longer.
One Pizza coupon per family whil e promotion lasts. All pizza orders for pick up only.
Coupon will be given when picking up your Vac-Pac at your Tribune or Sentinel Office.

tin1r-~vily sPri nt to wi n the ninth
st ag&lt;.· in 4 h o ur~. 2 1) minm cs, 6
.. ccomk Armstrong was -+7th
across th e lin e, in th t· m ai n group.

was credited with the salllt'
rimt: .1 ~ lk ttini .
Arm~tron~ n•m ams 16th ovt•rall. Alberto Elli retained the yellow jl'rscy and was to wc..•ar it fo r
,, lintrth day.
.11H.l

~

respected each othc:l-.''
Fa cing a fuel problem that would have
fo rced him to give up the lead late in the
race Sunday, Stewart got lu cky wh e n the
last 27 laps were rained out.
H e dom inated, leading 156 of 273 laps.
A year ago, a fu el miscalculation by crew
chief Greg Zipadelli cost him the race.
This time, a decision to remain o n the
track once he got th e lead before the first
of two rain -c aused red fla gs, proved decisive. Stewart was happy for Zipadelli, but
m ost of all happy he was able to come
through for Irwin.
" I want to win this one fi) r Kenny,"
Stewart said Jur ing a rain delay halfway
through th e eve nt ... I'm sure he's riding

along with all o f us this weekend."
M eanwhile, Mike Helton, NASCAR 's
chi ef operating officer, said the cause of
Irwin 's crash remained undetermined.
Stewart's Pontiac, like the cars of the
other 42 drivers, had a decal that read: "In
Memory o f Kenny Irwin."
There were memorable moments
betwee n the two drivers from Indiana.
L&amp;st Octo be r, they banged into each
.ot her t\vicc in Martinsville, Va. The seco nd
collision sidelined Stewart, who threw
heat shi elds from his shoes at Irwin - an
ac t that resulted in a $5,000 fine from
NASCAR.

Please see NASCAR, h&amp;e 86

Viz uel HR
lea . s Tribe
'

C INCINNATI (AP) - No
braggi ng rights for either of
Ohio's teams. The C leveland
Indian s and the C inci nnati
R eds fini shed t hei r season series
· with an unsatisfYing :split.
, It's certainly appropriat e. The
season h as been nothing to brag
about for either team .
Omar Vizqud's thi rd hom er
in two days helped the Indians
beat th e R eds 5-3 o n Sunday,
leavi ng their 'seasun seri es ti ed ~t
three wins apiece. It was typi cal
of their seaso ns nor hing
came easy and much of it was
maddening.
How maddening? Ken Grifft.":y Jr. was ejected for ar'guin g a
called third strike in the eighth.
An inning later. the Indi ans
con gram lated eac h otlwr on a.
ragged win. th e n yelled at each
o th er in th e clubhouse.
'' ]think thi s team's ready fur a
· break-;'!-lnch ans-manager-e harlie Manuel sa id . " I think three days
off is go in g to help us. We really need time ofT."
lloth teams .rc·ally need to get
their acts together fast or rhel ll
find rhe msdvt·s out of conten tion before the Browns and
UC.· n ga ls report for traimng
cam p,
T he Indi ans ;m 44- 42 and
trail the C: hicago W hite Sox by
I 0 1/ 2' games. After winn int;
the AL C en tral five co nsecurive
year-s, the Indians an: c lose to
11dmitting that a nother ririe I S
alrc·ady out o f reach.
The In dians alrea dy have til'd
the fi-anch isc record by u ~ing 26
pitchers, a m aJor t:tetor in th ~ lt"
I II- ] X slunt p sin ce Juii&lt;' ll . Ja r~ t
GOOD JOB, OMAR - Cleveland third base coach Jim Riggleman (left) congratulates Omar V1zquel fo llow- Wri t;!t t and r:lurlt•s N a~y
re m ain on the dis.lbkd hst and
ing hi s home run Sunday at Cinergy F1eld. Vizque l hit thre e hOmers in two days against the Reds. (API

MLB ALL-STAR GAME

top run producer Manny
Ramirez is still on a rehab
assignment for a S[rained hamstring.
They couldn 't get much
wo rse. The Indians ended the
first half by getting six strong
inninb'S from Bartolo Colon (95) , pul ling away with the help of
C incinnati 's bumbling in the
ninth, th e n holding on through
another top~y - turvy performance by closer Steve Karsay.
Defore reporters were allOwed
in the clubhouse, they could
h ear screa ming inside:
R eds manager Jack McKeon
has h is own set of problems. The
Reds are 43-44, haven't been
above .500 since June 13 and
trail th e St. Louis Cardinals by 8
games in the NL Ce11tral.
They won the weekend series
w ith C leveland, but fel t they'd
bl own a chance to pull out a•
s\~ee p intlfe elid . . --- - Scott Willi amso n (2-6), the
NL's Roo kie of the Year as a
re li ever in 199&lt;), made his first
nl&lt;\ior leagu e start as part of a
.m tT shakeup. He gave up th ree
hits. including Vi zqueJ '., homer,
in 5 2-3 inninb"S .
Reds Notes: The Indian~
lead the four-yea r· intrasta te
series ] ll-8.
Vizquel has hit five homers
aga m st the Reds in the last two

years.
Afte r he was ejec ted by home
plate umpi re Justin Klemm for
arguing 3 called thi rd strike,
Gritlc·y screamed at Klemm and
thn:w his bat away b~fort! m;:m :l~Cr Jack Me Keon gor between
th '-' two of th e m . GritTey th rt•w
his helmet and hat back o nto
the fi eld befi&gt;re leavi ng .

Moss ives back
All-Star casualty .list grows longer to his ometown

ATL ANTA (AI') - Ju st calltt
the All- Scar ~"""' ·
T he am azing li st o f All-S ta r
' a ln e~ grev..' l'Vl'll longer Sun casu
day, with Ken Critley J•·.. Barry
Bonds. C tl R1pkc·n . Mrkc l'uzza
and G n.'g M,1ddux b~;.·co mm ~ the
Jate ~t to pul l OUt bL'C il l'.;i..'
Ill) u r h ..' o; .
Mark M LC. wi,t\1, Pl' tlm M.lr-

or

titwz,

and

•

•

Akx

l todrigu~o.'Z

,lu d

M a nn y R :unin·z prl'v iou "IY werL'
~ crat&lt;.:ht..·d

tfo m Tut·sday ni~ht 's
gam e ar Turn er r:ield .
" 'J./c:: Wt'T't' loo king .l t who \Vt'
could 'vt' had 1f t'VL'rybody was

hea lth y and it looke d like it
co uld \·l' bee.n one- of thl' b ~o;t
All -Star lin c· up' ol· all -t ime.' ' so id
Atlanta rhird b;\';e m ;in C hippl.'r
Jon ts. a 'ita rtl'r. " It's di sa pp oi nt ~
mg.
With C k·veh nd seco nd \meman R ob t•rto J\ lo mar also hu rting he was hit by a pitch
bc· low th e n gh 1 elbow Sunday
- th ere's_:'" in Jured A.ll-St.lf .It
t'VL'ry poo;;irio n.
"T hey've bt'l'll bugg in g lllt' ti.Jr

a linL' ll P th e List ft:w days," s,1id
NL ina n a~cr Bob hv Cox of lit e
Ur.lVl'"., "b ut I just don't knmv

•
who I ca n providl' right IIO\v."
(:ox o nce [bou ght hl' 'd h ave .
McGwirt', Bonds &lt;l nd G riiTey,
tht' top thrL'L' homL' run hitters in
t hl' IL~ ;lgUl', plu s Piazza · 1n ;1

pmn·r-p:lC kcd o rder.
No longn. Now. th e ll :lllll' "- nf
rhe no -s how'\ :lrl' s tartin~ to
m·t~r ..; h adnw th e actua l parti CI -

game: \V ~l s
Atlant.1 in

•

•

prcvinu~l y

hl'ld in
I')72. li w pLiyer,
ongma lly pi c ked \\'\'rl..' 3b,em:
lui s Ap;J nL·iu. Alllo~ Ot is. Frn idl L'. P.HL' k. ( :,1ry NDLll l ,md JoL'

Cu l rl l l.lll.

Critl~·v will be ,lh\L' llt beL.lll~L·
of a o;u.re nght kn t't'. Ejcltnl
Sunda\' tl)r ,ln.!; u in~ a L.J ikd thi rd
p. m r~.
strih· ' .lga i·n:t c:lcvebnd. th l'
T h e·
Nnv
York
M e ts Ci n nn11,~ti lH ittil'ldcr w 1l l ukL'
:lllllOlll ll'cd Sun d.1y ni Hht that
part in th l' hollll' ru n derby
Pi,1zz.1 wa~ out . Th e catc he r 'ill '&gt;- M omb y 111 Atla m.1 . .dl'ft'n(l!ng
r:nned ,1 co ncuss ion SatunLy thl' crown he \\'l)l l I.J'It 'lill llll r.:- r.
night w hen hi t 111 th l' heln ll'r by.
" I !--!:u c.:s~ t h~o.'y ti:L'l I do 11 't m·L'd
lto~cr Ckn rcns' f1stb all , .111cl did
to .1ggr.w.H L' it .1ny m o rl'." hl'
110{ p!.1y 111 th l' ~e n c;; tinal t•
o,;a td . 'Til do t hL' lhH lll' run co nl~,g,ti n o; t the Yank ce"i.
petit lllll ,md tht'll n·~t fi.1f two
''I' Ill ,1 litt k groggy:' "i:ud P l,lZ- cb ys."
za, \\'ho w ill &lt;;tay ho me and rc.-st
SJ ill ll l\' Sn,.l, Vl.1dimir Guerdu ri n~; the· bre,1k . " I h ow a
rero and Jo nt.'" \\'111 Join Junio r
he;Jd3L'h t', ObV!C1U'\ Jy .· '
on th e NL side ti) r th e derby,
C in cinn;lti pitc he r D anny ta k i n ~ un Carlos Delgado, Iva n
C rav'-·s. Arizona o uttiekk·r Stt'Vt' R. od ri gut'l, Carl Everett :1nd
FiniL·y. Baltim orL· short;; top Mih· L'ither Edgar Martinez o r Troy
llordi ck and Toronto third base- C lam
ma n Ton y Bari'lt:l ,Jre among the
R ipke n's record streak of 16
rcpLH'C JJH.: nts co ming to play.
stra ight AlJ -Swr ~t ar t~ w ill cm n t•
lnj un e"i ,mmnd All - ~t:lr.. time to an md . T he ll .tltimorc third
an· &lt;.:o mm o n. Tony G \vyn n .1nd b;J~Cill~lll j, on th e di , ab!t·~i hst
Jme . Ca no.;L'CO mi o.;&lt;;c. : d la o.;t year ar
Please see M LB. Page 86
Fc·mvay l'ark and. w h c· n the

CHAKLESTON . W.Va. (AI')
Minn esota Vikings wid e
rcc civt' r R andy Moss W:ln ted to
gi ,·e ".'O mdh in g ba l·k to !11 ~
ho mt'to\V Il, but it lu d to be
m o rL' tJl.lll than jll~t hamllll g
m m eon e a check.
M os~, .1 n.ttivl' ot' Rand Ill
Kana w ha Cou nty, learn t" d that
S.im Singk to n. his fo n11n yourh
lt· ~1 gu ~ coach. was working on ,\
pbygro und fo r the co mnn1tmy.
So he amographcd two o f hi:-.
Vtkings j erseys and dnn ~u cd
them ti.) r .l ratlle. The.:' lll O IK'\'
will be Ll~L'd ro buy playgrotln~l
eq u ipmen t .
" I didn 't just want ro come
o ut o f my poc ket and give
so mt:'body so m e mon ey. I wanrc·d people to work for 1t.
"There arc a lot o f peop le
w ho nag and pull and ask you
fi1r stutllike th at. I though I if I
co u ld give bac k. who wou ld I

ix ro?
"I'm tTo m R and, 'o I "ou\J

~IVC

o.;i:arr it otl-" from the rt•," !Vl o'\s s,ud
S.ltu rday during .HT appca ra1Ke
at Watt Powe ll l'ar k in .
Cha rl e&lt;ton, w h ere he signed

autog raph s fo r .1bo ut 7111J young
(;m ,.
M o~~. w ho also Gl.m e to Watt
Powt' ll la&lt;&gt;t Jul~, to s1g:n :lllro~ra p hs. s.tid h e probably will
111akt· 1r an annu al cvc·nr .
" I t'njoy it. b t·in ~ up earl y and
'it"e m ~ kid" smiling .md k n ow in ~
they're n1io;s in g their cartoons in
tht• 111 tlrlltn g." he ".,lid ;u a 111lllinute pn:~; l.l)lltl 'I'L' Il CL' prec cdi n ~ t he 't'~o;io n . " Anythin g fbr
rhl." kid-,. I enjoy Sl'L' in~ smile-s o n
{ht' kid-,' {;\LL'o; ."
"B,K k " hl'n I was growin g
up. I rt'.ll ly did n't have anyo ne
big in thi s area to com e b;tck
and do tlnn gs ltk e rim. M y profl·ss io n is l'ntcrtain ment. and I
e nte nam k 1d ~ rhe most. It's goo d
to h avt' the kids (0 111 C around
here and meet m t:."
M oss wou ld not co mnlt~ nt o n
a Jun e 12 lll t.:Jdenr at Yeager Airpor t w h en' ht• wa's removed
fro m a USAmvays fi tght after
being ,lcl"uscd of argLiin g \~.rit h a
tlight anendam .
An o tllL' r p.lSSt'nger o n th e

Please see Moss, Pa1e 86

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

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PUBUC NOTICE
Tho VII ago of Middleport
will hold a public hearing
yoar
2001
on July
l. j,lo;;or,11m,ltrhia•.&lt;Y budget
0 2000 at 730 pm n
counc
chamb•r• Tht
propoaod budget 11
currently evalleblt lor
public lnopocllon In tho
olllca
of
tho
Clerk/Traaauror
Bryan Swonn
Clark/Troaaurer
(7)6 1021c

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
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510

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F ench C y May ag 740 44 6

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llo unby430pm
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due otto d•y•

560

Pets for Sale

New 6 80 3BR 2BA $268 pe
mon h ow Dow Paymen F ee
F

ee De e y

888 928

3426

Help Wanted

New Do b ew de

BOTH POS T ONS
A eas 2 Year1 E pe e ce
Good MVR
Wee v Pay
Hea h nsu ance A a able
W

3 BR 2BA

$2 6 pe mon h ow Down Pay
men F ee A F ee De e y

Aeas 25Veas0d

REG STER OEAQLINE
2 days be ore the ad

800-292.01 1

928-6428

A

110

STEEL BU lDINQS
NEVER PUT UP
40x48 WAS $8080
NOW $5212 50X90 WAS

S 6170W lL SELL $91180

Pe Mon h Low down Paymen
888
F ee A F ee De e y

h4! day before ht ad
a o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed 1 on 2 00 p m Frldly
SENT NEL QEAQLINE
00 p m he dly be ofe he td
1 o run Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on
00 p m Friday

4 W de 3BR :i!BA $2 3

800 ~37 9528

888 928 3426

REAL ESTATE

WeWtnh&amp;Pbl

$505 WEEKLV GUARAN EED

WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE AE
QU REO BOO 5 .0753

440

40

Giveaway
A1J. G vuway Adt Mut

Be Pad n Advtnce
TR BUNE QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
he day be o e the ad
1 o un Sunday
&amp; Monday ed on
200pm F day
SENT NEL PEAPLINE
l:oo p m tt'le day be ore he ad
1 lo un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 1 OOpm F day
REG STER PEADUNE
2 days before he ad
1 o unby4 30pm
Sa urday I Monday ed on
4 30 p m Thursday
Det1d ne• aubfect to chllnge
..
due o ho dey•

RDGRANOE
Po d Mead ws
5 A e W
Bea
Budg Ses$3900

540

La d Con ac A a abe 0 SA
35 Cen e po n Road
800 2 3

8365

340

Business and
Buildings
SLANO V EW MOTEl
Rt7Ga polsOh o

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Allornoya for P olntlfl
PIIIUo75 Milford Drlvt
Hudoon OH 44231

AUGUSt: 2000
CanHCO Bank Inc
Dennie Rol.,., Co LP.A.
Dlnnlo Rei.,.,
Attorney at Law
Attorney for
Plalntlfl Petitioner
PO 8ox181
l\vlnaburg OH - 7
(330) 425-4201
(8) 5 12 111 26
(7) 3 10 BTC

NOTICE OF AVAIL.ABIUTY
FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION
Tho Carillon College
Board of TruiiHa h• flied
lUI annual return of a prlv...
foundation Form HO-PI':
with tho Internal Revenue
Service for calendar yaar
10811 In accordance wltfi
Internal Revenue Codo
Stell on 81 04Cb) Ihit fo m Ia
available lor public
nopectlon 1 the home of
Robert Wingett Praa dent
and Prine pol Manager 1317
Collage Flood Syracuoo
Ohio during the 180 day
po lad beginning July 11

(330) 342 8203
(8) f2 10 26

(7) 3 10 11

arc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Martha Boynton and John
Doe Unknown Spouae II
any of Martha Boynton
who11 loot placo of

PUBUC NOTICE
The Truatooo of Salam
Laoloy Streel Pomoroy
Townohlp will hod a public
45789 but wholt preooo•ntll hearing on tho 2001 Budget. 2000
ploco of realdanco Ia Tho public lo welcome TIM (7)10 1TC
ullknown will taka notice mHIIng will bt on July 12
that on March 18 2000 at 2000 II 6 00 p m II tho
10 15 am
Con11co Salam Fire HouH
You Hop Ovr Til&lt; 8u11 You I
Financial llltd Ito Complaint Bonn e Scott Cieri&lt;
In Call No OO.CV-028 In tha (7)10 lTC
Flltd h tltf Cklo I(ltd St&lt; •'
Court of Common Ploaa
Mtlgo County Oh o 1 oglng
that the Dolondant(a)
Martha Boynton and John
Doa Unknown Spou11 II
any of Martha Boynton
have or cia m to have an
lntereat In tho raa oatata
dooc~bad below
S tuotod In tho County of
Molgo n tho State ol Ohio
and In tho VI lago of
Pomeroy and bounded and
doocrlbad 11 fo owo
Bog nnlng at a otakt at tho
corner of Brock and Lawley
Strffla thence running
South 80 dog 47 m n W
112 IlOilo a atake thence
South 9 dog 13 min E 40
KIT N CARLYLE® by Larrv Wright
loot to a atoka thonco North
80 dog 47 m n E 112 foot
to a atoka thanca North 9
dog 13 min W 4D foot to
1-\ 1&gt;1:&gt; N Se~~ IN Dovllt..€
lha place of beginning Said
o ve 12.:1
lot Included tho houao and
barn and baing a lot 40 laet
wide by 112 loot deep Tho
above doocrtbad property a
part of Lot No 463 of tho
conoolldat on of Pomeroy
11 reported In Plat Book 2
Page 17 and 18 In the
recorda of Molgo County
Flocorder 1 Off co and
contonod0103acreo more
o lou
Tho Petitioner fu thor
allagoo that by roaoon of
dolaull of tho Defendant(a)
n tho payment of a
p omlooory nolo accord ng
to Ito tenor the condlt ono
of a concurrent mortgage
dead given to secure tha
payment of said nolo and
conveying the prom •••
described hava bean
1 •
broken and tho same haa
1&lt;!&lt;2 "1
bocomo abaoluto
(.4Al Cl\t't
Tho Pot t onar prayo that
www com cs com
C 2000 by NEA. ne
tho Defendant lo) named
above bo roqulrod to
anawer and aet up their
lntaraot In os d eal estate
or bs forever bar ed lrom
aaaortlng the oame for
Ioree oouro
of said
mortgage tho marshaling of
any llano and the oaloo of
sold eal eotate and tho
procotdo of oald ulo
appl td to tho payment of
Petit onor a Claim In tho
proper order of Ita prior ty
and for ouch other and
further rei el ao lo Jual and
eq~ltob o
reeldence Ia known 11 200

SHOPATHOME

LEGAL NOTICE
Donna Fink whoa• loot
h
addraoa and w 010 prooon1
place ol roaldonco lo
unknown will taka notice
that on May 12 2000
Norweot Bonk Mlnnoaota
Nat onal Aoaocla11on 11
Truatao flied Ito Complaint
In c111 No oo-cv-os In tho
Court of Common Plait
Malga County Ohio alloglng
that tho Defendant Donna
Fink haa or clalma to have
an ntoraat In tho real oatate
doocrlbad below
Sltuatad n tha County ol
Molgo In tho State of Ohio
and In tho Townohlp ol
Rutland and bounded and
deocrlbad ao followa Being
In Fraction 4 Town 7 Flange
14
Ohio Company o
Purchooo Being Lot No 9
of CLAIR MAR ESTATES 11
daocrlbad In Plat recorded
In Volume 4 Page 61 Molgo
County Plot Recorda
Tho Potltlonar lurtho
al ogoa that by reason ol
default of tho Dofendanto(a)
In the p'aymont of a
pramlaaory nota accord ng
to Ito tonor tho conditions
of a concurrent mortgage
detd given to oecure tho
payment ol oald not co and
convoying tho promlaoa
doocrlbod have boon
broken and tho same hao
becomeabeolute
Tho Petit oner prays that
tho Dofandonta(a) named
above be oqulrod to
1 nawe1 and oat up thor
lntareat In oald real eotato
or tit 1oraver barred from
aaoartlng tha same lor
foroclooure
of
oald
mortgage tho marohallng of
any llano and tho aalo of
oo d roo I oatato and tho
procaodo of aald aa 0
applied to lha payment of
PotiUonaro c aim In tho
property orclorof Ito p~~,~~H·~~T~H::E~~~D~E,:FE!NDANT(S)
and lor ouch lith~.'
REQUIRED
further rolof •• loJuot and
7TH0 DH,.Y ~~
oqultablt
BY John D Clunk Eoq
10005378
Andrew A Pa aloy 110042515
Real Estate Ganeral

Brock Ranch Home
3 Bedrooms 1 1 2
Baths Kitchen
Dm ng Room Ut hty
Room L v ng Room
Utd ty Room Walk In
Pantry I 2 Acre M L
2 Car Attached
Garage Heat P mp
45262 Baum Add toon
Rd Pomero) Ohoo
I 740 985 3894

ALl. Los

&amp; Found Ads Mus
BePed nAd ance
BUNE PEAPLINE 2 00 p m
he daybeoe head
a o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 2 OOpm F day
SEN NEL QEAOUNE
p m he day be o e head
.s o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on
OOpm F day
REG STEA OEAQL!NE

lR

r:oo

Public Notice

M"'

'A

ALZHEIMER S FACT #9

The na onw de Safe Re u n p og am
s des gned to he p den fy oca e and

e u n o safety peop e wt h
A zhe me s They p ov de
den if ca on bracees egst at on n
a na ona database and a 24 hou
o fee numbe to con act wh en
someone s as o ound

Seen c H s Nu s ng Cen e can

p ov de you w h eg s a on fo ms a
he SaeRetu n pogam
Ca Ke y Bryant o Pam Jones a
(740 446 7 50 Me e ques ens?
Ca he Alzhe me s p o1ess ona s a

ScencH sNu sngCene o moe
nfo ma on

(740) 446 7150
Seen c H lis
The A zhe mer s Experts

Card of Thanks

110 Help Wanted

RN/LPN &amp; STNA
SERVICES

810

The Behavtoral Health Umt (Inner
Reflections) and Sktlled Nursmg Fac1hty
(SNF) at Veterans memor1al Hospttal
have 1mmedrate openmgs for part ltme
and full t1me or Per D1em Regtstered
Nurses Licensed Pract1cal Nurses State
Tested Nursmg Asststants Genatnc
and/or Psych Expenence preferred
Those mterested please contact Human
Resources at 740 992 2104 ext 201 to
arrange mterv1ews

Home

Improvements

--~In; Memory

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Tobacco P an s
Now ak ng o de s o h s Sp g
F s p de s w G a an ee Bes &amp;
ea es
Pan s
Dewh s
Fa ms 304 895 3740 89! 3 89

ed Ph o OQ a

TRANSPORTATION

480 Spece for Rani

Auction
and Flea Market

•••

•

DOWNTOWN lUI Nlll
SPACE OA 0~~ Cl
Fo Lta11 Th 11 Rooma C ean
&amp; N~o To Vow 740 441.--9!39

I

In Memory of
Monica and
Wolfe

WANTED Buckeye Commun ty Serv ces has
a part t1me post on ava Iable n Me gs County
33 hr wk 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon seep over
requ red Post on requ1res teach ng persona
and commun ty sk s to nd v dua s w th menta
retardation The work env onment s nfo mal
and reward ng The equ ements are h gh
schoo d ploma;GED va d dr ver s I cense
th ee years good d v ng exper ence and
adequate automob le
nsu ance coverage
B C S offers comprehens ve t a n ng n the
f eld of MR/DD Interested appl cants need to
spec fy pes t on of nterest and send esume to
P 0 Box 604 Jackson Oh 45640 0604 All
appl cat ons must be post marked by 7 11 /00
Equal Opportun ty Employe

�..

•

'
Pqe 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Pome~oy, Middleport, Ohio

.-...

Monday, July 10, 20110

' &lt;?~to
Pomeroy, Middle~ort,

The Dailv Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

DEPDYSIG
PIRft

Home Improvements done by

CHRISTYS FAMILY LIVING
204 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport. OH 45760

Rentals
Apts, Hom" Trailers,
Janiloriai-Maid Residential or Commen:ial
Maintenance
Residential or Commen:ial
Home Repairs
Interior &amp; Exterior

Call lor estimates 9·5 pm Mon-Frl
We work Mon-Sat 9 • 5 pm
and wa do accept emergency cells

Cal for Rates 1-740.992-4514 1-740·742-7403 hlllllgs

GUAUNTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

(304) 112·2079
NewHaven WV

Stop ·I n And See
Steve Riffle
··- Sales Representative
~
Larry Schey

........

f ·-·

750 East State Street
· Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

Phone (740) 593-6671

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per

month.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks'
• Roofing

Need It done, give u1 a cell
FREE ESTIMATES
Or11t Prloe1 on New Homes
992-2753
992-1101

'

&gt;

BANKRUPTCY
t:~n ~ltv· I debiOr Of flnlnCIII ObllgtUont lftd tmngt I ftlr Cilt'rlbUtlon Of
IIMft tmong crtdltort. A peraon going through blnkruptcy ma~ reUitn

218 E. lad
Pomeroy, Oblo

certain propt"Y, h;nown 11 " exempt ~ Property, for hit or htr pertontl ute.
TNt 11'11)' Include • e.r, 1 l'loute, clothes, tnd houuhald gaodt. Vou thould
direct tny qutttlont reg~rdlng bllnkruptcy to tn attornty belort procHdlng .

6115 I

- --For·inlormatlon-regardlng-Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592·5025 Athens

8 " in diameter to
27", 18' long,

WV Lie WV02B2120

f r~~ 6timat~~
7161mopd

6/10 ofmile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

740/985-4465
7161mopd

P/B CONTRACTORi,INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES

Insured

:J&gt;of# .

.FREE ESTIMATES

.

Fully Insured

l1l11 Morrlson/laclftt, Ohlt

(740) 985-3948

"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs
16·8·8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Call 740~ 985-3831

Alter 6 pm· 614-985-4180

Free Estimates

Man

Contrecton Welcome

__

E~p .

3 NT

..-.nuRE WISH MY YOUNG·UNS
HAD A TEEVEE
TO

WATCH II

Advertise
. in this
space for
$50 per
month.

...

Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
G~ rage

S•ptic SyoteltU &amp;

Utiliti.e•

17401 992·3131

Mllard

-.:a.o

Associates

Plumbing • Electrical·
Painting
Ray Mllard
42994 Rt. 2, C.S.y ld .

Alloaay, OH 45710

.

7-/0

Phone 740·698·9400

TliE BORN LOSER ..

Guaranteed Work
References Available

~ :

.

~. [ PUU.E.D OUT M.Y EIC?I-\1-

~

I~t--1 /&gt;J'IO PlJNC.Il-(0 It\( BN.L
Out Of me: w~
IPt\/1.,

J

~

.ti

'

( AAIE ''C~LL W~I\IN&amp;" t

~

~

(

P~Y TI-\E

Pl-'aiE COMP"NY
(~\~ fOI&lt;. TI-\E f'~ll/ 1 LEGE

~
8

~

Of ~1/I~G 11\Y CONI/ER.':&gt;I\\1(){)
\1'1\C.I!:.Wf'IEDI

!
~

f'1R .
R05A ... tT 'S

446·4995

'fOUl'.

F'.L~S.L

---

11EETING
1!5'0UI'.

"

Pomeroy
7/5 3 mo

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURiTY '

Protect your. guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
I
legal papers. inves tment records. photo
I ~:~~~~:r1!al cameras. household 1nventory and
I'
items will lle safe.
.for morll information call

BAUM LUMBER
ST. RT. 248 .
. c'HESTER

•
IS

or one mon

740-992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise in
this spaee for
$25 per
month.

•

er IR(
•

B&amp;T TRUCKING
Racine, Ohio
FLAT-DUMP-LOG
SERVICE
Great Rates· G real
Service
" You call we haul "

•

740-949-2610
740-591-63o4

•

East

Pass

t•
Pass

2.
Pass

19 "Classic "

11 Nor1h Carolina

college

12 Unit of force

1

1 YE BEEN

FEELING OLD

LATELY

:Tuesday. July II , 2000
:There could be so man y opportunilies about you in the year
alli:ad that it may cause you to
tr~ at them with indifference if
y ~ ' re not careful. -Don 't lake
y ~r luck for granted.
·CANCER (June 2 1-Jul y 22)
The re IS a sure fire fgrmula that
wRen put to the test always works
to: deprive you of success. And
thin is, don't do today what you
cah put off until tomorrow. Trying
to\_patch up a broken romance ?
Tl)e Astra-Graph Matchmaker can
h~p you understand what to do to
m~ke the relationship work . Mail
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
'
.
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ra~ Hill Station , New York, NY
10156.
;-LEO (Jul y 23-Au g. 22) A per·
son you know socially mig hi be u
better talker than u doer. Don 'I
take literall y any bi g things
promised you today by someone
wh o cluims 1\l have jmp.o (lan!
'cortacts , It may not be so.
;V IRGO (Aug . 2~ - S~pt. 22 ilf
y!J\l cou ld hear whut others wou ld
thi4.k about you if you use them
us stepping stones lo grutify a per· '
sonal ambilion, you woulpn"t dure

garment

I

41 "A Dotrs
House"
author
42 Applaud
43 River In
France
44 "HoW clumsy
of mel"
45 Make a

;1vo ldanL'I..' p i a~.··

After 11lav ing a rluh to du m·
Ill )"::-. kin g at tri c k thre-e. ckcl a,rc r
sho uld ha\'e return ed to ha nd
"·irlr:n-pmlc:Thc'Trl~d rrn m1\e r 1&lt;
1,-, - club. Wh c· n Wes t co ntribuoc s til e
cp.ke n. he.: i ~ all o\.vcd to wi n th e
t r i l:~: th us Ea... lll t:\;Cr gets on kad .
If East ha' bid one hc·a rt. not
two . ckrlarcr ha s to lear he ho lds
onl y" fi1e- ce~rd suit. Then he will
prohe~bl) Juck hi s h ce~rt e~ cc until
th e third round . At Jirst glance,
· this d o~ .s n "t matter. but 1f Wes t is
111 midse e~ so n form he will discard .
th e club qu een at tri ck three. Now
"declarer ca nnot eslabli sh dummy's suit wi th out lett1n g Ea sl in .
Bclloc was desc nhin g wine.

sweater
47 Manage
48 City In
Oklahoma
49 Se1ame

50 Actual being
52 Prior lo
(poet.)

54 Mao- -tung

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from Quolalions by lamous people, past and

present . Each letter in the cipher stands lor another.

Today's clus: D equals R
'X'L

VIE

0HVE

way. Don ' t

h~

a use r.

LIBR A (Sept. 23-0ct. 2.1)
There's a strong: chance yo u~..:ould

easil y confu'e w.s hful thinking
with optimism today. To be on the
safe side . it may he wi se to
reassess lhings t o mCHTO\V when
yo u'll be more reali stic .
SCORPIO (Oct 24 -Nov, 22)
Because some funds you were
ex pecting 1oday could get de layed
or possibly substantially redu ced,
don 't make any financial commitments until the money is
sec urely in your hands.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your mate could have a bet ·
ter handle on lhings today than
you do, so in important matters of
mutual concern, be sure to seek
out his or her thoughts and don 't
discount them.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Someone could pinpoint you
as an easy mark today and attempt
to take advantage of you . Be con·
side rate of others, but make sure·
it' s for the right peopl e and right
reasons.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
It's irksome that too much of u
good thing can be so bad "for. us,

AZBXVM

GZC ,

EILZEIHA

G' JE

LB
XU

EPHB'C

RHH

ARXYHC . '

MIRU
X

MZLH

MOHO

JN

YILH

EOHWXVI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "A silver lrumpot
Guinness describing.Sir John Gielgud's voice.

muffled in silk." -

Sir Aloe
WORD
GAM I

I

IJJ HERDS

-~t-~-.R~U:-N,...C_H.,......jl :

l I 1 I' I" .
3

c A rn

E

I"'

Country boy

ci ty fnend 'Til

1--.--,--,-,.,...--l~ never ge t us ed to b1g c1ty llvmg

.I

I I 1
5

:':

'--'-.....JL..-.l.-.l..___J~

People he re lock up to 1lel paper
and leave expensive ca rs ... 18

1
•=:,::=:0,==0=,~=
=E,:=s:,=-i·~-~ ·~ omplete
r
e
r

the chockle quote d
by fill ing in the mi S5ing words
'--'--'--'-....L-.l......J vov develop from step No . 3 be low
.

.

.

.

.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTER S
IN rHESE SQUARES

€)

UNS&lt;SIAMBL E LEITERS
FOR ANSWER

I

•

. l'

r

I II

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Arouse- Bushy - Decay- Onrush -SUCH a BORE

Gra nny says she V:asn 't warned about talk ing 'to herself but she dtd fmd ouL however, !hat she was SUC H

•

a BOR E

JULY 10 I

'Your
'Birthday
allow yourself to heha vc that

start
21 Looks llxedly
22 Irrational fear
23 Outer

37 Postatltem
38 Vacation spot

hut unfortu na tel y that\ the la w of
nature. F. n1oy yo ur'd f today. hul
gL1an.l agaiJl st ove r n tdulge .nc~ a nd
its consequenc~s .

f'I.);O iS ( F&lt;'h. 20 -rvlarch ] il l
From your pL·rs p ~c ti \L' tod ay. 11
may look lik e u tii L' f.'- .II"L' ~l'l t l ll t!
all til e hn.· a~ s. hut in rc; llit \ . that -.

onl ) an ill usio n fonn ul.tl n l h_:

neg ati ve th111 k1ng . Tum th at
around .

AR IES ii\ hu&gt;·h 2 1-..\pril I'l l
Braggart .. arc pc...·nph.: ~ ( Ill !"1nd
llthHil'ih.:ti\·l· . ...,u 11~ 1,:;1'refu l h 1da)
that y ou )P II rs~.: lf dnll·t fal l p re ~ t~ 1
this foibk anJ ~j,· ~..· L"&lt;11llp;11 11Pi l '
c au ~c: tn put you in that ~..· la s . . iflcat ion.
TA URUS lApril 20-Mct \ 201
Although you usuall) arl' quite
ad ept at handli ng other I'''"Pk·,
re~o u n.:cs. today yo u t.:o ultl hun gk
so met hing big that 111i ght CHIT\'
long term pena lties . Be c·arefu l
GE MI NI (May 2 1-.l une 2!11
There .isn't a chan ce you' II get
what you want today unless the re
is a quid
qu o: Make ce rtai n
you are-prepared to lrotws tly 111akc
the necessary co nn:s...,io n ~. hut h~
sure you get yours. tc&gt;o .

pro

B1ography [CC]
WntiO Today (CCI

•

'

9 Wild buHalo
10 Type of Ollde

24 Skeleton part
25 Musician•'
jobs
26 St. crossers
28 TV actor
Ken29 Thatch palm
30 Pizzeria need
31 Actor Foxx

IMONDAY

'

JJJl

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding· New Garag . ;
• Replacemenl Windows
• Room Additions
·Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

WI-IAT DO 't'OU MEAN '
YOU'RE YOUNGER
TI-IAN I AM ,.

6- •

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

North

Sentinel

Blown Insulation

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Buri al
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
,
MaJ&lt;?r Medical • Nursing Home
· .~.

West

To get a current weather
report, check the ·

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

.

IN ii4E FIRST 600K OF
T\MOTI4'1, IT SA'/5, ''DO NOT
REBUKE AN OLDER MAN"

~cks, Boat Docks,
Co ncrete &amp; Block Work,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

animal

About what was Hilaire Belloc
wriling in th ese lines?
To pra i s~. re ve re, establi sh,
and defe nd :
To welc ome ho me mankind's
mysterious friend .
A no-trump contract 1s normall y a race belween the declarer and th e defen,e. Each stde is
tryi ng to eslahli sh a long suit, get
in, and caslr suffi cient tricks fo r
success. Who wins in thi s deal'
Suppose East ove rcall s onl y one
he an : how mi ght that affect the
play?
East\ two hearts is a weak
jump overcall , showing a dece nt
six-card suit and some 6· I 0 highcard points .
Guided by the ove rcall. declar·
er duc.ked til e fi rs t hea rt and won
th e second. Then he crashed out
lhrcc round s of clubs. Yet East
produced the jac k and ran hi s
heart su it for Lw o dow n
.. 1 wa.s wry unlu cky... wailed
South. " Imagine t h ~ odd s aga in st
Eas t\ ha,·ing bot h 'ix hca rh and
th ree clubs ...
. . Unl ike ly. 11 -h true. " rcp.lied
North .·""hut it couldn 't hurt to try
:m

Doors &amp; Opener,

992·2772
For All Your Home
lmprovemenl Needs

35 Tw!&gt;-loe&gt;ted

1 Blister
2Gobycar .
3 Indigo dye
4 Court dlvl-o
5 Couple
6 Ms. Wtnlrey
7 Religion
8 Dakota Indian

BY 1'111)-I.IP AlDER

144 nlrd AYI. G•pols
----··

(weddlng
anendant)
32 Shellllsh genus
33 Martini garnish
34 Madden

The race is on

Grading

&amp;

8 7

Xavler-

Opening lead: " 5,

•

J&amp;L INSUlATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,

Matd--

South

BARNEY

{Factory Outlet)

___ _ -----

27

18

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

All vertical blinds are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Verticala • Wood
• Minis • Etc

6/15 1 mo pd.

,

23

16
I7

• K 6 4 3
.. 9 6 5

BLIND SPOT

Ker1 Yollng

Albany, Ohio

• 6 4
•KQJI 064
• J 9
.. J 10 8

"A 9 8

A CRAFTY,

992·1550
The Appliance

East

.87 532
• s3

• A K 10

Bulldo•er &amp; Backhoe
Senic8t
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sitea
Land Clearing &amp;

pd.

"Take the pain ont
of paintingLet me do' it for you" '
Interior
,
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. ·
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219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts· All Makes

1·800·311-3391

West ·

D7· IO-oo

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,,, rBt•eD•
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LINDA'S
PAINTING

"We're Back"

Residential, Commercial

"fth~!ad in .)l!rvi~l! "

SI:CUAITY

(140) 99:1·9083
(Mobile) 740·339·0163

20
21

.. Q 2

• S\ufl\~
Gflod\119
• Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

BOBCAT SERVICES

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

35537 St. At. 7 North

FREE ESTIMATES

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

(740) 367-0266
1·800-950·3359
20 Yrs.

$J5/ton,

1 mo d.

Roofing, Siding,
Windows, Decks,
Porches, Room Add,
Garages, Pole
Building, Kitchens,
Baths

6/21/00 1 mo.

Flap on a llle

•AK 743

• Q 10

HOWARD
EICIYITING CO.

740-992-5232

46

.. 7 2
t A S 2

North
• QJ 9

JINES'

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

CONSTRUCTION

33795 Hiland Rtf.
Pomeroy, Ohio

pigment

42 Act like a C:hel

Iolder
47 Order o1
hotshot
whales
Beatie John- 51 Leo'1son
Unlls of sound 53 Pebbles
,
"Wheel of
55 Strive toward a
Fortune" 'buy
g011l
(2 wds.)
56 Glimpses
Skin ailment 57 Botner
Wool-bearing 58 Tailor·s tool
animal
'
Musician
DOWN

·'

iROOP

POPLAR LOGS WANTID

TIM DEEM

High &amp; Dry
$elf-Storage

"You w trltd tht rtsl ...
now II}' tht but"
Interior - Exterior
Residential - Commerical
Call for

• New Homes
• Garages
· • Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-g92-1671

.'Futu'? ~

Standing timber large
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pr·ices paid also.

Answer to Previous Puzzle

40 Cuttlefloh

Polio.,.

Creepily
15 Magazine
14

Stockln~ap

ornaments·

39 --out

1 Actor Marion
7 S&lt;&gt;ldared
Identification
method

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month.
Now Renting

36

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13

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after 8:00pm
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(Randy)

ALDER

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Painting •

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

mo pd.

45771

1·•1

Dozer work.
Free Estimates

PHILLIP

LEADER'

T&amp;D

19

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

(740) 949-2804

We Se..Vice All Makes
Washers· Dryers
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..

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Parts and Service
Most Makes and ·
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Pickup and
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lisa&amp;I

Racine, Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; Vinyl tops.
Four wheeler seats , motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc .
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00

Call or stop In and -._Mik&amp; 54irgall
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and !Mgln a
NWardlng aoNir as an
AutomotMI Sala Prof111slonal
TODAYI

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..

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Wli hiiV5 tiM But El&amp;n&amp;ftts. 8§1 Pay
and tM But family orlatal work
Envlronm&amp;rit In today's automotlvti
·
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Sunset Home
Construetfon

HILL'S
Jt:.WICK'S.
· · SELF STORAGE HfiQLI"CI anCI
29670 Bashan
Rood
EXCfiVfiTI"CI

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

1lHi Ohio Vallq's automotlv&amp; lud&amp;r Is
continually looking for iiiggr&amp;slv&amp; and
motlv.t.d .,.oplli to 'fill Sill&amp; pasltlons.

'l"ha AppUanca

.,

2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

740-lbt-o••

7/22/TFN

992-5479

Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales· 5 gal. buckets
to 55 g... drums

1000 Sr. Rl. 7 S&lt;&gt;ulh
Coo/11111•, OH 45723

SALES

Free Estimates

•

Dealers.

0111/00 tmo

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling · Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks - Garages

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

AB Mabs Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts.
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Pomeroy Eagles ·
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per g&amp;ITJII
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst ·
Progressive top line.
UC. I D0-50 11nt/l!n

'

•

�Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

-Cleveland rocks Charlotte, 80-59
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Rushia Brown scored 24 points
to lead the Cleveland Rockers to
an 80-59 victory over the Charlotte Sting.
.
The Sting (3-15), who lost nine
consecutive home games before
beating Miami 76-60 Wednesday,
led 15-10 with 11 :36 left in the
first half after a 12-foot jumper by

NASCAR '
fromPapBl
"We had our ups and downs,"
he said of Irwin. "But it was two
guys pushing each other hard."
Stewart said he was badly shaken by the death of Irwin.
" It was a wakeup call, a reality
check," he said. "I still think I'm
going to walk around the corner
and find him there."
Last July, Stewart dominated
late in the race but lost when he
ran out of fuel with less than
three laps remaining. His crew

Monday, July 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tiffany Travis.
But Cleveland responded with
a 7-0 run, featuring a three-point
play by Brown, and the Rockers
(9-8) never trailed again Saturday.
Mery Andrade added 17 points
on 8-for-10 shooting for Clevel:md, which stayed 2 112 games
behind _the first-place Orlando
Miracle in the WNBA 's Eastern
· inexplicably failed to bting him
in for a splash of gas even though
he was safely in the lead.
That blunder cost him what
would have been his first career
victory. Later, he won three times
on his way to a fourth-place fine
ish in the points race - .- capping
the best rookie season in history.
Stewart also won a rain-shortened event last month at Michigan Speedway. A week earlier, he
won in Dover, Del.
Joe 'Nemechek, who won here
last September, finished second
Sunday in a Chevrolet. After
. Martin's Ford came the Chevys of
Jerry Nadeau and his teammate,

MLB
fromPapB1
because of a back injury, but
baseball rules would have allowed
him to take part Tuesday night.
Bonds missed his eighth
straight start Sunday with a hairline fracture on the tip of his right
thumb. The San Franci~co outfielder will make the trip to Turner Field.
''I'm going to honor the fans
because they voted me in," Bonds
said. "After that, I'll wave goodbye. It's better than sitting at

Moss
from Page B1
flight, Patty Garcia of Tampa,
Fla., later said Moss did not provoke the confrontation.
"We're not here to talk about

Conference.
Chasity Melvin scored 16
points for the Rockers. Cleveland
shot 60 percent-for the game.
The Sting, who shot 34 percent
from the field, were led by Andrea
Stinson's 18 points. Rhonda
Mapp added
14.
)

TODAY'S SCOREBOA.RD
PRO.BASEii• I
Notlonaii.Mgue
E11t Dlvlolon

W

Toom

Atlanta ............................ 52
New York ..... ..... ............. 48

L Pet.
36
38

.591
.558

Floriela .. ...
. ......... 45 43
Montreal ........................ 42 42
Philadelphia ...... .............. 39 47
Control Dlvtolon
St. Louis............. ......... 51 36

.511

Cincinnati ...................... .43

.500
.453

home and doing nothing anyway."
Maddux, one of five Braves on
the NL roster, Wl\5 scratched from
his start Sunday at Boston
because of a sore right shoulder,
having been hit by a ball during
batting practice Samrday.
McGwire leads the majors with
30 home runs, but is out of the
St. Louis lineup because of knee
tendinitis.
Rodriguez was knocked out of
the game by a concussion. The
Seatde shortstop tried to break up
a double play Friday night and
took a knee to the head from Los
Angeles shortstop Alex Cora.

The concussion will keep
Rodriguez out for a week. He
also twisted his right knee in the
collision, and there was a chance
he has torn cartilage.
"It's a little more bit more
swollen today, but it feels a lot
better," he said Sunday.
Martinez, whose 1.44 ERA is
the best in the majors, is out of
the Boston rotation with an
injured muscle in his side. He is
expecte~ to be .in uniform in
Adanta', however.
Ramirez, elected to start in the
AL outfield, has been on the disabled list for Cleveland since May
30 with a hamstring injury.

the airplane. We 're here to talk
about kids and football," he said.
And football is Moss' domain,
at least for now.
A two-time All-Pro and former
All- American at Marshall University, he has caught 149 passes
for 2,726 yards and 28 touchdowns in two seasons with the

Vikings. ·
Moss, a former standout basketball player at DuPont High
School, hinted that he may try his
hand at professional basketball
someday.
"One of these days. Hold onto
your hat.You 'II find out."

GB
3

7
8
12

.588
. 4~

44

P~sourgh

three-time Loudon winn~r Jeff..
Gordon.
Bobby Labonte, Stewart's teammate, wound up ninth. He leads
the series standings by 45 points
over seven-time champion Dale
Earnhardt, who finished sixth.
Series champion Dale Jarrett,
who finished seventh, is 68 points
back.
Jeff Burton, the winner of th~
last three July races on the 1.058mile oval, wound up lith. Rusty
Wallace, who set a track qualifying record while claiming .his seventh pole of the season, was 15th.

TampoBay ................ t1
Chicago ............... .. ... 10

.... .. ...... ..... 38 48
Milwaukee .................... .. 37 51
Chicago ...... -.. ,, ............ 35 51
Houston .........................30 57
Woot Dlvlolon
Arizona
...... 51 37
San Francisco....
....... 46 39
Colorado ..................... .. ..45 40
Los Angelos ................... .. « 42
San Diego .. : ..................... 38 49

8

.442 12112
.420 14 112
.407 15112
.345
21
.580
.541 3 112
.529 4 112
.512
6
.43712112

Eat Dlvllllon
.
w L Pet.

GB

New York ......................... 45 38 .~2
Toronto .. ,......................... 48 41 .539
Boston .... ... ..................... 43 41 .512 2 1/2
Baltimore ........................ 38
.442 8112
12
TampaBay ....................... 34 5t .400
C•ntl'lll Dlvlaton
Chicago ... ...... ................. 55 32 .632
Cleveland ............. .......... 44 42 .512 tO 112
Kansas City ..................... 39 48 .459
15
Detroit ....... ......................38 48 .452 15 t/2
Minnesota ....................... 38 52 .422 t8 112
Woll Dlvlolon
Seattle ............................ 51 35 .593
Oakland .......................... 49 38 .559
3
Anaheim ..... .................. ,.47 41 .534
5
Texas ............................. 42 43 .494 8 1/2
Saturaay•a Qamea
Chicago Cubs 9. Chicago White Sox 2
Cincinnati 14, Cleveland 5
N.Y. Yankees 4, N.V. Mots 2, 1st game
Anaheim 6, Colorado2
Atlanta 5, Boston 1
San Francisco 7. St. Louis 6
Pittsburgh 4, Minnesota 1
Toronto 6, Montreal3
Philadelphia 13, Baltimore 4
Florida 6, Tampa Bay 5
N.Y. Yankees 4, N.Y. Mats 2, 2nd game
Kansas City 5, Houston 2
Texa s 8, San Diego 1
Seattle 11, Los Angeles 0

.a

00etakl~ndt48M,Aritwa
' zonak 7,21015i"!ni~s
ro1 , r u ee ,
mn1ngs
Sundoy'o Gomu

Boston 7. A11anta 2
Cleveland 5, Cincinnati 3
Baltimore 5, Philadelphia 4
Minnesota 3, Pittsburgh 2
Toronto 13, Montreal3
Milwaukee 10. Detrol12
St. Louis e. San Francisco i
Chicago Cubs 9, Chicago White Sox 5
Houston 9, Kansas City
Arizona 4, Oakland 2
Seattle 2, Los Angeles
Florida 10, Tampa Bay9
Anaheim tO, ~loracto4
N.Y. Mels 2, NY. Yankees D
San Diego 4 Texas 3
Tuoodoy'o Gome
All-Star Game at Allanta, 8:35p.m.
,
,
· ,.
.
.
;

a
o

·pao ~-[IJ·~-~
_&lt; .
.

~0

~IP,:

• '" -

"-"---'--·

Major l.Mgue Soccer
Eastern Dhri•lon
Team
W L T
NY-NJ..
.. 11 7 2
New England .: ...... ....... 7 7 5
Miami ......................... 7 9 4
D.C. .. .......... .... ....... ..4 13 5
Contral OMolon

pta

35
26
25
17

0 33 40

31

8

3 33 45

38

Dalas ......................... 8 11 3 27 36 39
CoUnbus ......... .......... 7 10 4 25 29 37 :
- . . , Dlvtolon
KansasCil'f ............... tt 3 5 38 30 1:!
LosAnQelos ........... ... IO 5 7 37 29 26
Colorado .................... 9 10 2 29 27 40
San Jose .....................s 8 8 23 25 30
NOTE: Three points for a win and ona point
for a tie.
s.turdoy'oGaiMo
Now Vofi&lt;·Now Jersey 1, Kan... CitY 0
Los Angeles 5, Miami 3
Dallas 3, DC United 0
Chicago 3, Cok.mous 1
San Jose 1, Colorado 0

Arno&lt;bn L.Ngue

Tum

9

GF GA
33 27
31 29
29 33
30 45

w~.Juty11

Tampa Bay at DC United, 7:30p.m.
New England at Columbus, 7:30p.m.

$39 ,475.
33 . (27) Darrell Waltr ip, Ford, 270,
$42,350.
34. (29) Dave Blaney. Pontiac, 270,
$39,225.
35. (39) Michael Waltr ip, Chevrolet,
270. $49 .600 .
36. (40) Steve Gr1ssom , Pontiac , 268,
$46 ,975.
37. (43) Ed Berrier, Ford , 267, $38 ,850.
38. (21) Robert Pressley, Ford, 162,
electrical, S3a,iso.
39 (31) Mike Skinner, Chevr;olet. 155,

$46 ,725.
40. (2) John And retti, Pontiac, 109.
engine failure , $59,175 .
41 {HU JJ.mmy Sppncer,.Ford, 98 , accident, $46 ,650 .
42 . (34) Chad Little , Ford , 5, accident,
$46,625.
43. (32) Terry Labonte. Chevrolet. 5,
accident. $56 .600.

Race Stltlatlca
NASCAR N- Englond 300 Rooulto
LOUDON, N.H. (AP)- Results Sunday
of the New England 300 NASCAR Winston
Cup Series race at New Hampshire Inter·
national Speedway with starting position
in parentheses, driver, type of car, laps
completed, reason out, lf any, and money
won:
1. (8) Tony Stewart , Pontiac. 273 ,
$164 ,600.
2. {301 Joe Nemechek , Che\lrolet, 273,
St 07,550.
3. (3) Mark Martin, Ford, 273, $81,200.
4 . (9) Jerry Nadeau, Chevrolet, 273,
$73 ,825 .
5. (8) Jeff Gordon , Chevrolet, 273 .
$74,375 .
6. (24) Dale Earnhardt, Chevrolet, 273,
$89,425 .
7. (tO) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 273,
$70,725.
8. (18) Jeremy Mayfield, Ford. 273.
$56,125 .
9. (20) Bobby Labonte, Ponlia c. 273.
$64,125 .
10. (14) Ricky Rudd , Ford , 273,

$88,925.

11. (4) JeH Burton, Ford, 273, $63 , t 25 .
12 . (11) Rick Mast, Pontiac, 273,
$45,025.
13. (17) Geoffrey Bodine. Chevrolet .
273, $55,325.
14. (38) Johnny Benson, Pontiac, 2:72,
$50,525.
t5 . (t) Rusty Wallace, Ford , 272,
$87,025.
16 . (33) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 272,
$57 325

·

·

17. (5) Aicky Craven, Chevrolet, 272,
S41·100 ·
18. (t 2) Ward Burton, Pontiac, 272,
$59,550 .
19. (22) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 272,
554,400.
20. (13) Brett Bodine, Ford, 272,
$4 5,650.
21 . (26) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
272, $51,075.
22. 136) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolet,
272, $52,725.
23 . (7) Ken Schrader, Pontiac, 272,"
$44,475 .
24. (15) Bill Elliott, Ford, 272, $52,225 .
25. (37) Sterling Marlin, Chevrolet, 272 .
$52,375.
26 . (19) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet ,
272,$51.725
.
27. (41) Wally
Dallenbach Jr.,
271, $43,450.
28. (23) Steve Park, Chevrolet,
$51,200.
29. (42) Slacy Compton , Ford ,
$42,950.
30. (35) Scott Pruett, Ford,
$40,225.
31 . (2B) Kevin Lepaga . Ford ,
$50,600.
32. (25) Mike Bliss , Pontiac,

Ford ..
.
271 ,
27 t ,
271,
271 ,

270,

Time of race : 2 hours, 49 minutes, 1
second.
Margin of vi ctory : Under caution .
Average speed : 103.145 mph .
Lead changes· 12 among 12 drivers.
Caution periods : 5 lor 38 laps .
Lap l.eaders : Rus ty Wallace 1,· John
Andretti 2. Ricky Cra ... en 3-65, Geoffrey
Bodine 66 -85, Tony Stewart 86 -186, Joe
Nemechek 187-189, Jerry Nad~:tau 190191 . Mark Martin 192-20 4, JON Burton
205, Jeremy Maylield 206·215. Dale Jarrell 216 . Bobby Labonte 217 ·218, Stewart
21 9·273 .
Series standings : Bobby Labo.n te
2,670 , Dale Earnhardt 2,625, Dale Jarrett
2,602, Ward Burton 2,456, Tony Stewart
2,455, Mark Martin 2,453, Jeff Burton
2,449, Ricky Rudel 2,4 19, Rusty Wallace
2.377. Jell Gordon 2,348 .

TRANSAaiONS
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON
REO SOX - Optioned
RHP Pa)(ton Crawford to Pawtucke t
of the International League
CLEVELAND IN DIAN $ - Activated
AHP Sean Depau la from !he 15-day
disabled l ist . 0ptioned AHP Kane
Da v i s t o euffalo of the Internationa l
Leagu e
NEW
YOR K
YANKEES - Pur chased th e co ntra cl ol AHP Dwight
Good an If om Tampa of the Florrda
State Le a gue Optloned RHP Ben
Ford t o C oiLrmn u s of the Interna tional Leag u e .
TAMPA
BA Y
D EVI L
RAYS Reca l led AH P Rya n Rupe frOm ·
Durham of the I nt e r na ti onal League .
Optioned
AHP
Co ry Lidle to
Durham .
TEXAS
RAN GERS- Ou trighted
RHP Sco t t Ra nda ll an d OF Scott
Podsednlk fr om the 40 - m an roster .
National Le ag lu
LOS
ANGELE S
D O DGERS Optioned INF -OF Mike M etcalfe and
RHP Jam ie Arno ld to A l buquerque of
the Pa cific Coast League .
SAN DIEGO PADRES - Recalled C
Ben Davis from Las Vegas ' of th e
Pacific Coast League .
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Asaoclatlon
ATL ANTA
HAWKS - Named
Garfield He ard as5istant coach .
Ml LWAUKEE BUCKS - S i gned C
Joel Przybilla to a three -year con·
tract and G Jason Hart to a two ·
year contract.
FOOtBALL
National Football League
NFL- Announ ce d the retirement
of Jerry Seeman. director of olfi·
c ials , effective alter the 2000 Stiti ·
son .

corra
Good To Believe:M

Almost Too

r---------------------r---------------------·
~~ :
Mondays &amp; Tuesd~ys Only
:

: Fridays...

1438GS Sabre' Lawn li'actor
• 14.5 hp

: Start Your Day

GT225 Law11 and Garrlen Tnll·tm·
• 15 hp • Auromatir tran..,l/li'o.~ion

• 3/1-inch mo\vPr deck
• 5 s{Jft'(i shifl·onthe-go transmission

c::orra

: Buy A Lunch Buffet And :

• .JZ-iru"/1 ( ·ur IVP!1iblt• n lfJ\ \ t~r rkv ·k

Breakfast Buffet

:

$.'

0
'lfllliil.."

1:I
II

:

9~n
.7

1
I

IJmit ,, Uine·in only. Not -..lid with AD]' other oll'.. r.
Expires 8131/oo

I1

Get One 112 Price

:

llmit '~ Uine·in only. Not &gt;-.lid with any other oll'er.
Expires 8/ 31/ 00

I

.

~denr

!I

II

c::orra
L--------------------~-------------~-------~
Mondays &amp; Tuesdays Only
Wednesdays &amp; Thursdays Only

325 Lawn and Garden li'actor
• 18 hp V-Twin mginc
• Aurrlf11(itir transini,'i.'iion

• ~R inrh Convrrtiblr mmvPr deck

LT133 Lawn Tractor

~~:::~-h

:
mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-011 the-go tt-anstni,sion

Qn~ $38per month*

LXZ55 LaWJJ Tractor
• 15 !Jp • Autom&lt;llir rrilfl'&gt; rlli.&lt;.~ioll
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Buy A Dinner Buffet And

Get One 112 Price

Get One 112 Price

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The lazy days of summer are here and John Deere has the perfect way to make

: Wednesdays &amp; Thursdays Only

your summer lawn care easy on you and on your wallet. Visit a' John Deere dealer
near you and learn how you can beat the heat this summer.

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Start Your Day ,
Breakfast Buffet

: Buy A Dinner Buffet And
www.deere .com

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To Locate A John Deere Dealer Near You, Call:

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888-MOW-PROS (Toll Free 888-669-7767)

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Buy A Lunch Buffet And

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Offer good only at: Golden Corral• 307 Upper River Rd. • Gallipolis, OH 45631• 740-446·9344
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