<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7142" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7142?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T09:17:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17549">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/3d24ca1858d97e723c2e533a173ea30d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f7208f272744d9760352337a91a28349</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23368">
                  <text>#

'A 10 • The Deily Sentinel

PI~

TUeada~Augutt13,

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

ALLEY OOP

11\IDOI

NJ:A Cro11word Punle

PHILLIP

ACIIOIS

ALDER
1

N11C10M

S TQUIM
I Oolllt
12 111''1 PNY

n ..,_

14 Tulll'1ll.
1S Flc:tioMl
lllutll -

6 A 1,1 1

w..

If K f I

• • t '

• A. f '

...

Wul
•

"""

• KQJ .illl
• 1.1 to 1 a

.. J.,

Suulll

.t.'If All~'
"n

• "'
...
K 'l 1

23 LtMoll
21 "-1~

llulf'r Smith
\'Lihlo:l •ble Buth
~ulll..

" 'nt

t·..~-

••

I

~ 'I'

l'&lt;~• -

lh'l!lll.)

43 Giib II
4&amp; Ay!o'1.,.
- Jun47 Smog man~
tor
4&amp; Plall
50 Fottd\11 ol

~-~~

•¥

All P..'

OJit'llllllllll'lid t K

Mltlna 011155 Midi'hut.
DOWN

lklnunlto

33 Baalnger or
~k

Keep counting

.I'M FILt.ING IN fOil ~tJMPTY·
/
DlJMPTY... .I'M
AN ~6G
SlJr IT IitJTE.

IIAUNEY

.--

t&gt;AbBURN IT!! eoH !!
WI-IAi'S BLOCI&lt;IN'
'CHIM'BL'("?!!

TilE
BOnN UISEU
I'"

'"'I

I'"

.

..,

YOUR. ~\lJ~f\J'.\0 1'&gt; '1'1-\t. Ll\lli:.5T , ffi M\0'1' D"-Y, 1-\( WON\~\
·MM \ E.V(~ ME.\
i Ttl( EHORT TO ~'*I f-I.I~U.f...
1

•
~

...1·\( 1-\0LO:':&gt; Tf-1.( Fi'N UP N-IC&gt; ..,
TUI:N5 HI~ f.l£.1\0 F(:l()r.\ :;,1t:;t

1/

-~-· I

TO ~10(!

•

IIH; NA'l'E
!M BLOCI&lt;.E D.
\/HAT

SHOULD
MY CH/I..R·
1\CTEF&lt;.
BE' DOING
NE XT '

M'&lt; 6RAMPA HAD ANOTHER
BIRTHDA'I' 'I'ESTERDA'I' ..

34 lleduct
Clloritl
35 Trunk oil

,_

1-\E SAID,'' I !.lAVE TO
ADMIT T~AT T~E YEARS
f.IAVE BEEN GOOD TO ME''

'' BUT TI-lE MOP./T~S AND
WEEKS f.IAVE BEEN
A LITTLE RUDE! ''

t.nt.

IIOUnd

20 Townehend 37 Let llmmtl'

or Sllglr 55 Coech 22 WriterHoltz
•
Vonnegut 40 Andu
23 Stlrtled CfY
ruminant
24 Colofllclo 4t W'-ICk
. ltd _ , 42 Monollllf'l
25 Humorlot Pill
llombeck 43 PC "blllno"
21 l'lrlormo 44 ""I ot
27 C.bell Of
thundl&lt;
SIIU9httr 45 Cod kin
21 Rl-..r. 4&amp; Allb GW-

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Reds' streak broken, Bl

Deaths
Nina Gibson
Det1lls, AJ

AUGUST 131

•

Details, A::t

Investors sell
NEW YORK (AP) Investors sold off stocks for
a third duy Wednesduy,
uninspired by a slightly bet. ter-thun-cxpcctcd cconomk
· report und anxious us ihe
nution's biggest ~ompanies
fnced un end-of-business•
day dendlinc to certify their
fiqanciul result.s. ·
l11e lackluster tone came
amid Wall Street's dlSilppQintment with the Fedeml
Re.;ervc's decision Tuesday 1101
to lower interest mtel. crushing
hopes of anotl1er stimulus for
the slumping t)Conomy.
In morning trading, the
Dow Jones industrial average declined I I9.56, or 1.4
percent, to 8,362.83, after
falling 207 points Tuesday.
The Nusduq co mposite
index fell 2.82 or 0.22 percent, to I,266.46. following
Tuesday's loss of 37.52.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500
index dropped 7J I, or 0.83
percent, to. 876.90, after
falling 19.58 points the day
before.

.

Lotteries

prot'itublc en ·
clC~uvnt' !ll in the year uh~ud art.!
upt w he th1t~c 111 whil!h you

SCORPIO !Oct. 24·Nov.
22) -- Tho people whose •••l•tunce you muy •••k toduy
won't nee~ your to munipulu-

crublc tlmi uncl effort. Stay

•upp•lrl. II'• how yuu ••k that

Wc~nc &lt; ~uy . Au~ .
mn~t

t4. 2002

BY BRIAN J. REED
ROCK SPRINGS - The number of murkel steernhown ut
the Meigs Countr Fair each yeur muy be declining, but the
quality is on the nse, according to Jeff Fisher of Jltckson. who
judged Tuesduy's Junior Fuir Beef Show.
·
· Brent Buckley's I,300-pound steer curncd grand chmnpion
honors, und Auron Yost's 1.309-pound 'Steer Wty&gt; numed .
reserve chnmpion. They will lcud the murk,et .steer flortion of
the Junior Fmr Livestock Snle on Friduy.
Janet Caluwuy was named grand chnmpion steer showman
und Alan Wntson reserve champion showmnn.
•
~Judging results, in order and by cluss. were: Sleers~ I.G31 to
I,266 po~nds: Miranda Buckley, Janet C~,tlwlly, ,t;Jizuboth
King, Alan Watson; Steer$, l ,280 to I,309 pounds: Brent
Buckley. g.c., Aaron Yost, · r.c ., Ben Buckley, Kucy Ervin ;
Steers, I,410 to I,425 pounds: Josh Collins, Ashley Huger.
Showmanship was judged as lollows: Senior, 17 and over: Janet
Calaway, g.c., Kacy Ervin, Ashley Huger; Junior. 15 und 16:
Aaron Yost, Miranda Buckley; Intermediate, 12-14: Alun Watson,
r.c .. Elizubelh King; Beginner, 9-11: Ben Buckley, Josh Collins.
Wade Collin.s showed the grand cham~ion commercial feeder
steer and Jessica Carr the reserve champton market feeder steer,
and Brett Parker and Ashley Life were named grund and reserve
champion commercial feeder steer showman, respectively. ·
Commercial feeder steer results were, by class: 408 to 425
pounds: Jessica Carr,. r.c., Morgan Windon, Ashley Life,
Jordun Wood; 490 to 528 pounds: Brett Parker, Abbie
Chevalier, J.R. Greene, James Will; 545 to 581 pounds: Wade
Collins, g.c., Justin Cotterill, Brud Parker. Macyn Ervin.
Amanda Windon. Nathan Cook.
In showmanship, results were as foll6ws: Senior 17 and
over: Brett Parker, g.c., Macyn Ervinj Junior, . 15 and 16:
Abbie Chevalier; lntermediaae, 12-14: Amanda Windon, CHAMPION STEER - Brent Buckley shows the grand champion market steer, weighing 1,300
James Will, J.R . Greene; Beginner, Ashley Life, r.c., Justin pounds, at Tuesday evening 's Junior Fair Beef Show. He Is pictured with Beef Flrlnc_ess Ashley
Cotterill, Wade Collins, Nathan Cook, Jordan Wood .
Life and Fair Quean Meghan Haynes . (Brian J. Reed)

OHIO

Rabbit show winners

Pick 3: 9-B-2
Pick 4: 9·5·2·1
M•l• Millions: 3·1Q-15-1B-25

breed, Vktoriu Luwson.
POMEROY - There were
Min i top : best of breed.
49 contestants in the junior fair Kaitlin Dewhurst.
rubbil show Tuesdny morning .
Mini Rex : best of breed,
The results are as follows.
Ruche! Argobright, be st
In showmanship: grand . opposite. Deudm 1-htrncu .
champion showman, Taylor
Ncthcrlm1d Dwurf. best of
Russell; · reserve · champion breed.- Dendra Barneu; best
showman. John Swanson.
oppo.l itc, Auwmn Hauber.
American Fuzzy Lop: best · New Zculund : hest of breed.
of breed, Cassie Hauber..
Taylor Russell: best opposite,
RABBIT
Californian:
best
of
breed.
·
Andrew Bi "cll . Rex : best of
SHOWJulie
Lantz:
best
opposite.
breed,
AIJlorctlc Sulser.
Grand
Kelby Brown . ·
Silver
Martin : best of
Champion
Dutch : besa of breed, breed, Tltbithu .Iones; best
In the market Rachel Argabright; best opposite, Raymond H.css.
pen class at opposite, Brudy Bissell.
.Crossbred : best of. breed,
the rabbit
English Lop: best of breed, Deadra Burnett: best opposhow, Taylor Samantha Cummins.
site, Amorette Sulser.
Russell, with
Florida White: best of
Best of Show : Taylor
reserve
breed, Jared Russell ; best Ru ssell : best
opposi ae,
champion,
opposite, Kayla Russell.
Deadru Barnett .
Samantha
Holland Lop: best of breed,
Murkel Pen : grund champiCummins.
Deadra Barnett; best oppo- on, Ta7lor Ru ssell: reserve
(Sentinel
site, Taylor Russell . ·
champ1on.
Samantha
staff)
Jersey Wooly: best of Cummins.
STAFF REPORT

Me1a Ball: 52
.
Bucklye 5: 1Q-22-23·28·36
Pick 3 nl1ht: 7-9-4
Pick 4 nl1ht: 9· 7-8-6
W.VA.

Dally 3: 3-4-9
Dally 4: 6-0-8-6
C11h 15:2-3-6-10-18-19

huve ulrcudv dcvuted ~On!\id·

.

tJu: CIJUf!IC, bCf.:UU~e )'UU ure .
hcudlnw fur the home ~tretch.

LEO Cluly 23-Aug. 22) ..

You've gut what it tukc!ll to·
duy to be more cntcrpri!4ing in
gcncruting uddltionul inL·ome.
If yuu usc your rnlnd ltnd en~
cr~il!ll proUu(.:t iv~ly, yt)u ' Jl he
!4U~ccss ful . Leo. treut ynur!\clf
tu u bir t h~ur gift. Sen~ fur
your A,rrn-Oruph prediction:.
ror the year uhcnd by mui ling
$2 ami nn SASIO to Amo-

Gruph. elu ohi' ncw•p•l·lcr.
P.O. llo~ 167, Wlcklitk OH
4.11~)2 . De ~urc to !lute your
zodiuc •lsn.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22)

•• Put your pre:.cnt plun!4 und

!dens fntn uctlon today und
your 'pcr!lnnullnterc!ltll cun be
udvun~cu . Don't wuit on nlh ..
en tu do so f'or you ; make

thing&lt; ~cvelop yuunclf.
LlllRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 23).
· De ••n;lblc ubuu! protecting
~our

uwn pmhiom~ toduy , but
don'l tukc unfuir Utl\IUMta~C or
an!'thcr in order to du !lo,
There ure many other m.:th oJ..; uf 11ccompli ~ hing lhe
11umc thing.
·

ARIES (Murch 21·Aprill9)
·· Align yourself tnduy with
eomplloncm your own. Teaming up with •ucr types hold•

i11 ir'lportant, not w~ut you

f!\UCh promis~ ror )'011 Ul this

pmmasc .

lime.

(Nov. 23Dcc. 21) -· When yuu !pot a
SAG!'r~MIUS

TAURUS (April ~IJ-May
20) ·· Don't be up!cl today
should the onl! you h&gt;vc re-

window ut' uppurtun!l)' lt)duy.

mukc . Y~)u.r move i~1ml.!dlut~ly

ceive un

and g1vc u \J~crythan~ you ~e
gm, Proper timing w11l be es~.cntiul tu ynur success nt thi~

·· In !lituutinns where bnld
menrture!l ure cull(d fur today, •
don ' l b.: ufraid 111 ll'iC them.
Succe1U1 muy be dcpendem
upon

cuurugcou.~ an~ ~tlulwurt

u~.:timl~ on your part.
, PISCES (feb. 20-March

20) ·· After ynu hUYe lhur-

oughly reu ~o ncd things ou[
and have made your decision
on how to act, huvc the ~:our·
u~e of your conviction11 .
Don'.l ullow others to ~way

of com·

B3-5
· B6

AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl-3
'

A2

c lOOl Ohio Valley Publlshlns Co.

by him/her.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jun.
l'l) .. Yuur ldeu• und thinking

AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Fcb.

ubundun~e

pliments and uucmtion from
the oppo•itc gender. lle fluttered, lhu attention indirectly
prailltrt you for bt~ing cho~cn

• lime .

1'))

Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
. Weather

pc«lplc whu urc ambitious, ob·
und hu~e abilities thai

tlon or bribes to offer their

are likely tn huvc a grcutcr in11ucn~:i.! over ynur pcc:rs todu).'
tt~an yuu might rculitc . Dun t
dJ!Icnunt what you huw to (lf·
fer bcfme you get a chance to
cx.pres" thing~.
.

1 Sections - 11 Pllft

Jecuv~:

• •

BAEEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Index
Your

•

Buckley shows wtnn1ng steer

High: 80s, Low: 60s

II

POMEROY - You cun
huve un Ohio State University
footbull uutogruphed by
Athie! ic Director Andy
Geiger. Hcnd Football Couch
Jim Tressel!, nnd twa-time
Heismnn Trophy Winner
Archie Griffin - for u price.
Friduy night l1t the junior
liveslock sule just before the
hogs ure brought into the ring.
the football will be uuctioned
nlf.
The money will go toward
building 11 4-H Center on the
Ohio Slnte University cnm pus, the first of its kind in the
sUite.
As 4-H begins t1 new century of hu1iding its future, the
youth orgunizntitln has kicked
11ff a cumpuign to ruise money
·· l'or the ·construction of the
$12 million4-H Center.

Julie Spuun hns been numed severu/ ~:orp1'rute pledg~s .
chninnun for Meigs County The rest 11f the money must
und Friduy night will present wmc fmm the gms,ronts
the football to Dun Smith. sUpjlort of individmtb, ulum&lt;iuctioncer. to sell to the high- ni. uml -1-H members.
est bidder.
The gmundbreaking cereIt wu~ at the re~o·enl 4: H mony will tttl.c pluce on
Voilintccr Conference in Suturduy. Sept. 7. und Ihe guu l
Columbus that the presidena is 10 have the building com- ·
of Ohio State University plctcd in ~O&lt;i4 .
unwrapped u gin of 88 auto- ·
graphed footbulls 10 be used
PIGSKIN AUCTION - Friday
by .:ountics to kick ofT fund
night at the Meigs County
rnising efforts. ,
Junior
Fair livestock auction.
The Center will he built
an Ohio State autographed
ucross the street fwm the
rootba\1 will be sold to the
.Jemme Schottensteiil Center
ttl the corner of Lune Avenue highest bidder just berore the
und Fred Tuylor Drive neur
sale or ~ogs. The proceeds
Ohio 315 . nt whut hus been ·· will go Into funding construedeemed the "new entnmce" to
tlon of a 4-H Center on the
the university.
Ohio State Un iversity campus.
Ohio Sttttc hus committed Here Julie Spaun, lert. county
'the lund und site. lntregal to 4-H chairman, snows the footmaking the mult,i-million dol- ball to.Den Smith. auctioneer.
lur dreum u reuhty huve been
(Charlene Hoeflich)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weather

I. I

!TUESDAY

Hometown News,.per

Football signed·by Archie Griffin, other
OSU luminaries hits the audion block
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

People occasionally
say really bizarre
poth
ment
55 llrlnd
Jhings . For examph!:
30 Grind dOwn 47 Quiche
namo1
32 Oull..tot need
31 Koep1on
"Success to me ts
Peut
49
Baatty or
having I0 honeydew
34 "Ed Wood"
Splrkl
3a
rn'~tc.
melons, und eating
. ltlr
-lcltlly
40 r.wc;~ Men"
35Jolcel
only the top hulf of
each one.'' Who suid
that'/
Success in four
hearts is havin.g lO
tricks . And even tl
you appear to have
four losers, victory is
sometimes possible.
Hide the East-West
hands in the diagram.
then plan the play in
four hearts . West
leads the diamond
king. You win with
the ace nnd ·cush the
A-K of hearts, but
West discards a diamond on the second
round. How would
you continue?
North's four-heart
rebid is debatable. He
decided logo with the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
known .eij!ht-card maby Lula Campo•
·
jor-suit ftt. However,
Celebnly Clphoo cryptogroml 111 crooto&lt;l from quo1111ono by lamouo ·
people, put end pruent. E1cn letter In lfte clph1r tlande lor another.
with such u nut hand,
Today's clue: I aqua/a L
perhaps he . should
"WEKKNEOL
NY
JIK II!YH,
have settled for three
no-trump (which can
OKJQ
HJ
ALYH POEZPL
be made, but might
fail).
8 A.
M J Y L A D. R E K H D
You seem destined
to lose two heart and
OEWL
"INFJKPL
NY
E
two diamond tricks .
But if you count winli!QCLKY."
AIECLI
ners, lhere might be
"c
10. Play a cfub to
PI! K C
OKEZH
your king, return a
club to dummy's ace ·PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'I never wear a watch. Ijuallook out
tht window and Itt If It's daytime or nighttime.'
and ruff a club in
-(Pirate outfielder) Crelg Wilson
•
hand. Then, collect
three spade tricks
WOlD
ending in the dummy.
'::~:t~~y sctr\\cillA-~t-trs· tAM I
· (If East ruffs, you had - - - - - - l~lto~ loy CLAY l, POLLAH - - - - - no chance.) You have
Rearrong1 letter• of t~e
nine tricks in the 0 lour ocrombltd word• bo·
bunk: three spades, lew ro fcrm fo~,~r llmple wcrdt.
two hearts, .one diaDILANI
mond, two clubs and
one club ruff. In
hand, you have left
two trumps and two
diamdnds. East has a
spade, two high
trunws and a diamond.
Now you lead dummy's lust club. What
can East do? If he
discards, you ruff for
your lOth trick. If he
ruffs, you discard a
diamond loser and
must collect another
trump Irick. Effectively, East has ruffed
~ PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
one of his !)artner's
diamond tricks. You
make ·a fourth trump
Irick by a coup en
passant.
Burbra Streisund
wastes honeydew
melons.

I

PEANUTS

Whafs inside

S4C~

50 Clohr'l yell
3t Nolllinl!ll
Ill

......

Melp County's

51 Bubble52 Gin.
53 ltnltmd

bliK'1111

N11tll1

~·

~

41 8WI!II brlnd

food

11 PFC baM
17 -yllgn
II Ellllnl
20 Fur!M
whltptr
2t Crum~tollt'
22 PlnOt

• J Ill l 6
• Q IU It

• f '

• J

More fair piduresr A3,5

2002

Together we cari change your.body.
And .your life.

GEMINI CMay 21-Junc 201

... You 11taru.l a very aonJ
r.:hunt.:e Loduy •if ~ull!tfuctvrily

wruppin11 up u mutter .that ha•
cuu11ed you Jmnu: contention

•

recently. II' nee~ be, pre" !he
•huatlon.
CANCER (June 21-iuly 221
·· Mukins tim&lt; hl&lt;lay In pur-

sue und purtok c 111 !lo me
pleaburabh: LU.:tivilics will nt.ll
be countcrpnllluctive. On Ihe ..

cnntrury. It'll ligh1cn your at-

\.

titude and mulil! your work

'

1ccm eusi~r .

.TOLL FREE (866) S:z.r-4541

www.cCWL.JNFO

you ~iffcrently .

'

.
•

••

•

•

�PageAl

Tlw D.1ilv St'nlint'l

VOI.l lt-.IIIIIS 1 1'1
A tkalh "'"
Ill Ill :til' "I""'' , ·"'" utithl ht- the lir't
"' 1 lhuo 1ku•il·tl '""'''I a 11tl111f! ""
,.,,.,·utili!! 11\&lt;'Hiall.\ tctantcd l'"""'cr'
'houhl l11.· 'llan·d :lilY '"' hn·:ou\l' h ·
" utn•M:cnt . lu, '"'"ily ':"'1 T11c\lla .
&lt;lrt'!tury l.ntt ·, mnlht·r. l.uuN'. and
hi\ h:tlf htntht'l'. ('hllord hhu1rd\.
U\~cd the Ohio l':ornle linunl tu l'cc·
ommcnd that llu . llnh Tall t!rant
~kitwnry.
•
I . ull. wh11w lawyc·r, daillll'tould he
r..:t:mlt-tl. '"" l'l&gt;lllll'lt.:d nf the I')Hf&gt;
'laylnt! nl Juhn Mc(irath. "Ill&gt; w:"
:lltadtd ami wt un lm: 111 hi' E:1't
l'kvdand home. The 41 -ycur-oltl h .
the nr,t Ohio inmutc fadng e~L'Uition
'in,·c llw U .S. Sullf&lt;'lllc l'vurt ruled fl.
J on June 20 ,thut cxcelttin)! mentally
r..:t:mbl inmate' i' Ulll'on,titutional
hccauw it i' rrucl anti unu,ual pun·

AccuWeather.com .. "''"' ··~ -. .. ,..,,1 1!-~•~~, '"'"'h''"'- ~-'"'Jh ~'4'•"~·•hu•· ...

·-

\

""too:ow•

•

....,..
.,

·-'

.-·. ,
•.
1Clnolnnon
. '10 1M

~.

'

•••

\

'

~~

\

.
.
. .,_.10- ,.. ,..

""'

,,

c.~-

•

.'

••

\

)

1\hmcnt.
l':trnlc ~I nard {'hairmun 'Ruym110d
l'apuh ,,ud the hll,ard wuuld muke it'
recnnllncntlatlun 't&lt;&gt; Tull by ·Friday.
'lalt c:llt then reduce Lntt\ wntence
or &lt;tllow the execution \0 proceed.
hour cxccutiom huve tukcn place
'incc Tull look oiTicc in 19'J9.
l .ntt \ lawyer\ urgued thut hi~ orig·
inul uttorncy' were nut ullow~d to see
"'ide nee that included a ~tutement
from M~Gruth. whu dieu eight duy\
aftcr the attud. dc\cribing his uttuck·
cr '" lighlcr-,kinned than Loti and
having Iunger huir.
Pro,ccuttm and lawyers from
Attorney
Gcn~rul
. Betty
Muntgomcry\ office re~ponded that
the difference\ ure not that pronounccd und the issue is not enough
tuuverturn Lott '' 'entence.

False 9/11 claim filed
HAMil :rON (A I') - A man who duimed his futher was
in the Sept . II tcrruri't uttacks unci tried to collect
insunmce money knew his futlter wus alive in lndiu. prosecutors smd.
·
Assistant Butler County Pm.sccuwr Lee Oldcndick said the
futh&lt;•r of Ajuy Chuwlu. 37. w11s ulivc in his native li1lliu when
Chuwlu mudc the claim un 11 $100.(M)0 life insurance policy.
In Murch. 11 county grunt! jury ind,ietcd Clmwlu. of West
Chester, 1111 charges of itNII':Incc fruud, uttcmpted 11ggruvuted
thcli by deception, tclccummunicutions fruud und falsification .
· But the dcfcndunt 's luwycr suys Clmw la mudc un 'honest
mistukc und withdrew his cluim on the insumncc money after
he lc11rnct.l nf hi s futhcr's whereabouts.
·
~illcd

Brief cooling effect expected
cloudy with .u dwnce of
Shmwrs :md thundcrsturms shuwers nnd thunderstorms .
~ .~p&lt;'&lt;'t~d
tunight
nnd Lows in the upper 60s.
Tlwrs1lay will pmvidc urcu Chuncc of ruin 30 per&lt;·cnt .
1\'Si&lt;kills will snmc rdi~f
Extended run'CIISt
. lhHn th e h,•ut, the Nrttillllnl
Friduy... Purtly cloudy with
u chunce ot' shuwers und thun w.·atlll'r s,·rvkc suid.
Tcm1wraturcs will n:uch derstorms. Highs K4 to K9.
•'nlv llltti tlw mid-HOs on Chunw of ruin 30 percent.
Th,(n sday. ,·umpurcd with
Friduy night ... Purlly cloudy
hi)!hs in the ()()s curlier in the with 11 chunce
showers and
\l'l'l'~ . r.. r.·rustcrs suid.
thunderstorms. Lvws in the
11111 th~ rl'lid won't lust upper 60s. Chance of min ~0
llln)!. A rt• turn I•&gt; readings in pcrccnl.
t h&lt;· ·'lOs wus forccust for . Suturduy ... Purtly . cloudy
Friduy.
with u chunce of showers und
Su ns,·t t1&gt;ni~ht will he nt thunderstorms. Hij!hs in the
~:.Ill. und s1mnsc on Thursduy upper t!Os.
Sunduy... Purtly cloudy with
is at &lt;•:4.1u.m.
Wrnther rorrcast
a dumce of showers und thun Toni!!ht ... Purtly cloudy with derstorms. Lows. in the upper
a dHIIl&lt;'C of showers und thun- 60s und highs in th e upper
dcrstnrms. Lows ncur 70. I!Os.
Smith west winds 5 to ·10 mph.
Monduy... Mostly
cleur.
Clwncc of ruin 50 percent.
Lo.ws in the upper 60s und
, Thursday... Pnrtly cloudy highs in the upper 80s.
wi th u duu1ce or showers und
Tuesday.... Partly cloudy. A
thundct·stnrms. Highs in the slight chunce of showers nnd
mid HOs. Southwest winds S thunderstorms. Lows in the
tn 15 mph . Chunce of ruin 50 upper 60s nnd highs in thll
upper 80s.
percent.
T hu rsduy
night ... Purtly
RY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

or

Man dies in police custody
WEST CHESTER (AP) - West Chester police believe u
mun who died in their custody suffered u seizure. possibly
uf'tcr swu llowi ng i:mck cocui n~ .
Jtunes G. Buker Jr., 22, of Woodlawn, appeared to have the
seizure ull~r he wus hundcuffcd unci put i1l the buck of a police
eruiser.during un urrest for drug possession. Police Chief John
Bruce s11id,
Buker wus pronounced dcud ut Mercy Hosp itul Fairfi eld ut
4:45 u.m. Tucsduy.
•
Inn releuse. Butler County Coroner Ric hurd Burkhurdt suid
both his office und the West Ches ter police were investigating
Buker's deuth .

Extra clothes needed

·

LORAIN (AP) - In mud rucing. speed might get you a
prize but it won't keep you clean .
Two I 00-foot-long trenches. euch I 0 feet wide nnd about 4
feet deep, nwuited u half dozen revved-up uti-terrain vehicles
und !heir drivers at ti Mud Bas co nt est. ·
·
•
The contestant who drives 111 und out the fustest win s. It
usually takes between five nnd six seconds.
The drivers come prepared.
"You've got to leurn to tukc extnt clothes with you when
MASSILLON (AP)- Pollee an: tnklng precautions following you're doing this," Lee "Rick" Osborn, 39, of Greenwich,
the discovery of a threatening letter at a makeshift memoriaJ-for said on a recent Sunday at New London Recreational Park.
un oniccr killed in a shootout.
·
·
The letter defends patrolman Eric B. Taylor's killer and predicts
lndldq~ents
thut more police officers will die in traftic stops.
The one-page note begins: "Eric, Sorry you had to die for a TROY (AP) - A former elections official indicted on
charges related to alleged voting irregularities will have a sec·
speedi ng ticket. ... you now know it was NOT WORTH IT I"
Taylor. 31. wus shot and killed Friday night after he and other ond chance to tell a grand jury what happened during a chaot·
police joined t~e State Highway Patrol in a 12-mlle chase of ic November election.
At prosecutors ' request. u Shelby County judge assigned to
Donuld Matthews.
the
case in Miami County Common Pleas Court dismissed
Mutthews. 61, of Jackson Township, a Canton suburb, was shot
two
felony charges on Tuesday aguinst Sandra Wiley, former
to dcuth nfter fleeing a trooper who stopped him for speeding.
director of the county elections board. The dismissal came on .

Pollee take precautions

dismissed

Taft retums to sale, 4050 minutes...
:. 'but no champs repeat means good news for those
•

COL UM BU S (AP) Lust
ycur's
~u l c
of
Chmnpiotls lit .til e Ohio
Sta te l ·air ~uw five bid
record' hmkcn , h111 nunc of
the previous champions
wi ll he huck thi s yeu r.
(iov Uoh Tuft rnukes hi s
relt lrn
to
' th e
su le
Wcd11c"lay night ufter Ull
al"e nrc la'l year. wl&gt;cll a
tril1u 1c wu' puid to two of
ihL' f:tir'' biggest su pport ·

l',.'·

l'ollll&lt;'r
(iov.
James
Rho(k~ a11d Eu Johnson.
"1 Thc
Voice
of
Ohio
1\j!riculturc," were holl ·
I

tfl~( I'
R e~ord'

were 'e t hy th e
,lc&lt;·r.
gr:t nd · dtampinn
!(l':t nd champin11 market

lamh, rc,crvc !!rand

dli.IIH ·

who can't say goodbye.

Fuyettc
Co unty for
rn e u t
d1i cken .
Reserve
champions
arc Murk
Gruy
of

AT&amp;T WIRn rss DIGITI\L 1\0VJ\NTAGE

Up to

• JOOO ni1h1 ond weekond mlnuMI
• 350 Included onyllmo minutes

R o s s
County for
lumb: A.J.
Genter of
Talt
Fulton
County for harrow : auu Ben
Ricmun of Knox County for
dticken .
Kroger hought th e l!l':lnd
dwmpion steer forth&lt;' tltirtl
strui l) ht ycur. once a~:till
outhtddin g rival ML•t.icr.
Kroger :tl so hnu ght the
ch:trnpion m:trk ct lamh und
mea l chicken .
Th e sa le is a cltanc.· for

pion ln&lt;trkct lamh, graml
cha111p1o rr meal dtkkcn :md yo unl! s lcr .~r~ lo c~ ll'll mun cy
rc\L·rvc grand champion frnm livc,lock lh&lt;·y ha ve
rai ., cd. Th e fair ''"P' lht•
lllcal chicken .
:11\HHIIII
dti ldn·n
l':tll
Tall wa' on va~o:illit lll &lt;HHI
r&lt;·n·iv,·
.
1\IIIIHIIIIS
ove-r
tiH'
Li.
( iov .
Maureen
()'C'IIIIIIIIr filkd ill . ShL' limit ~" illtll the Yllnth
aunnlltH.T d · Krogl'l' ( 'o .·, R&lt;·scrv,· l'ro~ram. a fund
1n ·"rd P~, 000 hid f11r thL' tllilt provitks co llq~,· schol ·
arship.&lt; und !Hi~t•s fm ntht·r
~r:IIHI uhampiort _ "dl'CI' 111
L'Xhi)lllnrs . Sinn· tiH• fair
20111 .
implt'llll'llil·d lh&lt;' L':tp in
. l.h" yt':tr\ gra nd ch:11npi ·
1'1'1 ~. ahout !j;l•~ 7 .. 1~0 hu s
011 111;11 kt•l lwl'l wtll lw ,n/d
lo y ~lt•pl!i llll (' i(ti('y 1111111 !!"Ill' illl&lt;&gt; '"'' PI'O!!I':IIII .
M11,k111~11111
C '~&gt; unt y .
l~r ,r r Vt' dtilltljllllll Wllll h 'l'

''

"H'IIl

Kuhnert ul Ml'rn·r

C·,HI Ill Y ()!fll'r ~·t:uul rlla 111
I"'"' ..,,·lh' r.., wdl ht· J\ udn..·w·

Wn ynt• ( '11 11111Y
I ylt·t I '1ragt· 1 "I

l ol!lt \ lltl HI

1"1

!."""·

I tdlnn C'ourt l y l n r l!tat~l'l
hrtl, fllW ,

o1Ju f \lwo1

/l.t VI'II\

4050 minute for life
...NI/W!.u

PLUS

All for

POMEROY - Nina Mae Rupe Gibson of Indianapolis.
Ind .. fonner area resident. died Aug. 5, 2002.
·
.
She was born June 2. 1928. at Kyger. daughter of the late
Selby and Mabel Rife Rupe. Other preceding her in death
were an infant ~ister. Violet ; brothers. Stanley. Marion and
Lawrence Rupe; and granddaugher, Kimberly Haddox.
She is survived by two daughters, Sandy Johnson and Sherri
Gibson. both· of Indianapolis; andtwo grandchildren and two
. great-grandchildren.
...
Gibson was cremated .

LOCAL BRIEFS

$J9.99 n month!

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER- Aaron Yost is pictured with the reserve champion market steer. which he showed at Tuesday's
Junior Fair Beef Show. He Is pictured with Beef Princess Ashley Life and Fair Queen Meghan Haynes. (Brian J. Reed)

CLEVELAND (AP)- One Buckeye 5 game ticket hud the
right combination for the drawing Tue5day, and it's worth the
Ohio l,.ottery game's top prize of $ 100.000.
The winning ticket was sold ut Pearson Purty Store in
Oregon.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $223.404 und pluycrs shured
$164,913.
There were 68 Buckeye 5 tickets with four of the m11nbers.
und each is worth $250. The 2,328 ti ckets showing three of
the. numbers are each wonh $10, und th e 24.633 ti ckc•ts showing two of the numbers are each wonh $1.
The Ohio Lottery will puy out $231.536 to winners in
Tuesday night's Pick 3 Numbers duily gume. which had sules
of $729,522.50 . .

Subpoenas sought
WASHINGTON (AP.) - Attorneys for Wa shington Rep .
Jumes McDermott asked a federal judge Tuesday to he
allowed to subpoena five congressmen to testify in his case
over u 1996 recorded phone cull among Ohio Rep. John•
Boehner and House leaders thut was leuked to the media.
McDermott, a Democrat, acknowledged in Muy th at he \\ins
responsible for the leak . In court filings. he described how a
Florida couple, who had used uscunner to intercept th e call .
had traveled to Washington to give him th e tnpe. They were
Inter fined $500 euch.
The conversation between Boehner. then-House Speaker
Newt Gingrich and other Republican House leaders was
about strategy involving the announcement of an ethics committee finding against Gingrich.
Shoniy after the call was leaked, Boehner sued McDermott
for violating a federal wiretapping law that bars people from
disclosing information they know was obtained illegally.

STEER SHOWMAN- Janet Calaway was named grand champion beef showman during Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Show. She
Is pictured with Fair Queen Meghan Haynes and Be!!f Princess Ashley Life. (Brien J. Reed)

MEIGS COUNTY
HEALTH DEPARTMENT
PROPOSED FEES FOB NURSING SERVICES
Blood Pressure. ,....................................................... $3.00
Blood Sugar ........................................:............. ...... $15.00
Head Lice Screenlng ..............................................$1 5.00
Hemoglobin (finger stlck) ............ ............... ........ ..... $10.00
Hemoccult (three slldes) .......................... .... ........... $25.00
Hemoccult (two slides) ..................................... : ...... $20.00
Hemoccult (one slldes) ........ , ............ ,..................... $10.00
Flu Vaccine ........... .............. ....... ... .......................... $15.00
Hepalltls B Vaccine ................................................. $40.00
Prostate Screening .......... ....................................... $25.00
Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) ............................. $25 .00
Urinalysis:
2 test only (.sugar and acetona) .............................. $12.00
10 test slrlp .... ......... .. :............................................. $25.00

FUN ON THE MIDWAY- Whether It's an adventurous new ride
or a test of skill with a prize at the end, the midway at the
Meigs County Fair Is the place to be for those looking for something out of the ordinary. The Orbltron is a gravity-defying
human gyroscope, and Cody Hannum, pictured here, didn't
mind the dizzying effects at all, because, he said, he's an old
pro at trying out new amusement rides. Meanwhile, the usual
gallery games like this Old West shooting challenge allows falrgoers of all ages to try their tuck \)twinning a stuffed to'y, a mirror with a popular hero, or even a goldfish. Midway admission
is Included in the gate price at the fair, althOugh most amuse-~
ment rides requ ire a separate handstamp. (Brian J. Reed)

PROPOSED VITAL STATISTICS FEES
Cer11fltjd Blr1h Certlflcates, ................ ...................... $15 .00
Canlfled Death Cenlflcates ........... ..... ..................... $15.00
Non·cartlflad copies Birth/Death Certlflcates ............ $0.25

INCREASES:

SEWAGE PROGRAM: .
Site Evaluallon (Required) ........ ............ t 50.00
Permit to Install ...................................... $150.00
TOTAL : ... $200 .00
Penalty fee for Installation without permit .............. $1
Plus Perm II faa ............................. .. ....... $200..00
·
·
TOTAL '·'· $300 .00

oo.oo

•
ltESERVE SHOWMAN - Alan Watson was named reserve champion beef showman during Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Show.
He ts pictured with Fair Queen Meghan Haynes jlnd Beef Princess Ashley Life. (Brian J. Read)

-

Reader ·services

SEWAGE SYSTEM INSTALLER; $50.00
.. .................................. Plus $5,000.00 Performance bond
SEPTIC CLEANEBSIPUMPERS);
.
~~~glstratlon : ............................ ................. .............. $50.00
er Truck ................................................................ $25.00
Land Application Sites ............................... $50.00 per site
REFUSE HAULERS;
·
Reglstratlol'\ ................. .. .. ................. ., ..,. ................ $50.00
Per Truck .............................................................: .. $1 o.oo
WATER SAMPLES;
,
Bacteriological .................... ...... .............................. $30.00
Other ......................•...............
.. .... $15.00
Lab Fee

·Correction Polley
Our main concern In at! 1torlt1 II
10 be accurate. II you know ol an
error In a story, call lha newaroom

at (740) 992·2158.

New1 Department•
The main number 11 992·2156.
Department extendona are:

Gtotrll IIUin•a•r

Ext. t2

N-

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

On 1111' Nt•l :

Effective dale 9101102.

Ohio I h'part llll'll l of
1\).!l'll'llllnn· ·
1111 p:1/w w lf' . ' Iat,..••h .II ,;il).!lf
Cl111o .'\tall' 1':11r:
h1.1 p://w w w.••h i• ,.. ~ l'' ''·,·n
lt'l .t'tllllll'la\h/t " 1/t" I .hI 111

MEIGS COUNTY
HEALTH DEPARTMENT
992·8828

•

,•

•

·

paid 01 Pomeroy.

.

Poatmuter: Send addreaa correc·
tlono to The Dallr sentinel, t t 1 COUrt

Sl.. PorMroy, Ohio 46789.

·

Subacrlptlon ratea
Br carrltr 01 motor I'OIIle

Ono-k

$2

sa.70

Ono monlh
Ono yur

$1"'

'*"''

Dolly
Sublcrlblrt not clelirlng IO60pay lho

Ctrcul•tton

Ext. 4

MallsuMmallon

Ext. 5

To aend a-mall
newaOmydattysonttnet.com

On the Web
.mydattyaenllnet.oom

Subscribe today.
992·2156

Member. Tho Aoloclaled Prtll and
lilt Ohio NowiPIPf' AUoclallon.

Ext. 3

-

Norm• Torre•. AN, BSN, M8Ed, Htlllh Commllltoner

.

Advertt1tng

Clllllfted ·Ade

112 E. Memorial Drl.ve • Pomeroy

(USP82t 3-teo)

Ohio Voller Publlohlng Co.
PublllhO(I M'Y arternoon, Monday
lhrough Friday, 111 Court 51..
Pomeroy, Ohio. S.COnd-oiall poitoge

carrltr may remit In actvano1 direct to
The Dolly Sonllnol. Crodlt.OII bo given
carrlor eoch wool&lt;. No tubocripllon by
moll permlnod In .,... wttert homo
carrier Nl'lice ill'!olloble.

Other aervlcea

.. ....... "' ....... "' ......... ''" '" .............. $50.00

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

The Daily Sentinel

lnltlallnspecllon ... :...... ...... ...................................... $75.00
Relnspecllon If needed, per visll... ......... :................ $25 .00

•••

of

HARRISONVILLE
POMEROY
The
Kerbi J. Buzzard . 16. 312 . Pomeroy Police Depanment
Pearl St.. Middleport . reponed that a total of 336
wus cited for failure to tickets were issued in July. 18
c.ontrol . by the Galli a- of which were voided.
Meigs Post of the State
Money received from parkHighway Patrol following ing meters totaled Sl.l31 and
a
ono-cur
uccident from parking tickets $548.
Tuesday on Ohio Route
A total of $80 was taken in
684.
on parking permits . The total
Troopers said Buzzard of money received during the ·
was southbound at I :25 month was $1.759.
p.m . in Scipio Township
when the driver failed 10
navigate a rig.ht curve.
lost control and went off
RACINE A regular
the left side of the read .
of
the
The car struck. a mail· meeting
Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge
164.
box and embankment.
The ea'r had nonfunction- Free and Accepted M asons,
al damag e, the report will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday.
said.
·

Lodge meets

One wl._ner In Buckeye 5

HQME LQAN INSPE(jTIQNS SEWAGE

-mllfe

Police report

Driver dtecl

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALDI SANITATION FEE

chooto ony 1 of tho lotlowln1:
• 500 locot moblto· lo·mobtle mitlulot l
• 100 bonus onytlmo mlnulol
• Notlonwlde ton1 dlstonco

•

Nina Mae Rupe Gibson

Loui\e Lott und Edward\ each read
\hort \lutement\ to the bourd after the
inmate\ luwyer.' mude their pre~enta·
tion.
"I'm mn\t \Ure they hu\'C the wrong
man. I've known Greg his \\hOle life
u.nd he'~ never had light skin or long ·
huir," Louise Lon suid.
Edwu.rd~ \u.id his brother was not
cupuble of ~uch u crime.
"There's no way you cun uet me to
(I
. 1e
believe he'd pour ump) 01 on omcbody und 'set him on fire," Edward'
said.
Gregory Meyer , chief of the death·
penulty d,ivision of ~he o .h io Public
Defenders ofrlce. S~ld he I focu mg
on mi conduct dunng and ufter ht s
client's trial ruther thun dwell on the .
subject of mental retardation .

the day her trial was s&lt;:heduled to stan.
She had pleaded innocent to illegal voting of un ubsentce
ballot and misconduct by un employee of the board of elec- .
tions. She was accused 'of allowing someone to ca. 1 u ball ot
on Nov. 7. the day after the 200 1 general election. und fuiling
to order enough bullots for the election. Twenty-nine of the
county's 82 precincts run out of ballots.
Prosecutor James Stevenson. also assigned from Shelby
County. said he decided to ask the judge to dismiss the
churges urter Wiley 's lawyer, Dwight Brannon. requested thut
she huve the opponunity to expluin whut huppened on
~ l ection Day.

Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Deaths

Inmate's family, lawyer say Lott is wrong man

Thursday, Aug. 15

The

www.mydallyHntlnel.com

Wednesday, August 14, 2002

Wecln•sd•y, Auaust 14,2002

Ohio weather
'""'

•

lnaldo ~t8iC&lt;Iinly-

t 3 weeki
211 Weeki
62 Wookl

.

$27.30
Stl3.82
$106.1!6

AIIOO outoldo Molgo County
13 WOOkl

$29.25

26 Weeki
52-·

$1!6.68
$109.72

•

..

•

�'

r

·m·on
l
____...,_____
0 !,!!!.!!!!!!!.!

The Daily Sentinel

.

The Daily Sentinel

.

••

Page A4

_!W!!e~dnt~!!!!·~A~u

at 14. 2002

Abby
ADVICE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Old-fashioned
•
eptgrams
linger as fond
•
memones

'

·Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Editor

•

to tlw c•cliwr m't' welcomt. Tilt' \' xlumi«J l&gt;t' ft' , .~ 1Jum
.ifHJ 11'&lt;'111.1. All lt'ltt'l'.l' till' .l'llhjt•cr w t•ditill!l wul 'mu1't lw
.\'(~nnl ami iurlw/,. wMff' _
,..,. tmrl telt•JJIWJlt' "umln•r: No
ull.li}lllt'd lt·flr'l'.l ll'i/1/•r l'ub/i.1/rrtl. /,tl/rrs s/wultl bt• in gor•l
tm.;u•. mldrt'.\.'ting i ,\'.'ri/U'S. ftot /)t•r.,omdilir.,,
l .t'tlt'l',\

DEAR

'l11t' OJiilliOm t'.\fU't'-"·''c·d in tile' folumn ht /oll' W'(' tilt' COli·
1

·''''"·''" ' of tlrt• Olrifl l'tllit')'

Pu/r/i.,·/rin.~

Co. :, t•tliloriul lmtml,

unlt'S.\' olhrnl'iM' IWfc •tl.

NATIONAL VIEW
•

.-

Relief

Long-term care measure
deserves consideration
• El J&gt;uso Tilllcs, tm rl'iit:J' jr&gt;r mitldlt'· im ·omt• patierrts:
Heullh problems ~un h~ · of purli ~ ulur con~ern to middlcincome . Ameri~llns. those people who urcn' t poor enough to
qualify for government help und aren 't rich emHrgh to pay for
the ncr:cssury care or huvc inl'lusivc coverage from hculih·
cure plans.
Dw;tnrs." bills: hus/1i1ul hills, 1&gt;rcscriptiun-drug costs those arc JUSt a few o the worrrcs thul people sec gnuwrng 111
their retirement i.ncome. But the U.S. House of
Reprcsentu.tives !ook u mujor step in July towurd cusing the
fcurs nl nuddle-tncomc people when it comes to long-term
heulth cure.
By 36_2-6 1, the House OK 'u 11111~ dt,dur:tionlhut wuuld h~lp
mrddle-mcome people nu11gntc the expense ul rnsunrncc lor
l~ng- term health cure such as a nursing home . The tuxpayer,
hts or her spouse or 11 dependent would be eligible for the
brenk.
For this purpose. middle income is delined us $20,000$40,000 for individuuls und $40,000-$80,000 for murried couples filin_g jointl_y. Also, lhe tu~puyer would huvc to puy at
least hull of the msurancc prcnuums.
Although p_rer~tiurns for tnng-term health cnre cun currently
~e deducted lor mcome-tax purposes. the laxpuycr must ilemtze und the premiums mu.1 1 be purt of totul medical expenses
thutadd up tout leust 7.5 percent of income.
The new legislation woald ullow deductions without iiem izing.
·
.
How important is this mcusurc.'l Thut cun be seen in whut it
will cost the government in lost revenues over ' IO years $5.3 billion. That's money thut people needing expensive
long·term cure ~an hardly afford to lose.
The Senate, where the billlleucls next , shou ld give this measure favoruble considcrminn.
.
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

Spires birth

Dear

www.mydallyllnllnel.com

.
Charlene Hoeflich

'

PERK-INS' VIEW

·Forget delays

r---

now~

the time to deal with Saddam

BY JOIIPH PIRKINI

Wu¥ buck in 1994, terrorism expert
Murvm Cetron warned. in report. to the
Pentugon, of the possibility of an uirborne ultuck on U.S. turgets . "We saw
Osumu bin Luden," Cetron told ABC
News during a Februury 2002 ~egment
titled, "E11rly Warnings: . PreCautions Went
September II
Unheeded." "We spelled it out. und we
suid the United Stutes was very vulncrnble."
If only the Pentngon hud heeded
C~tron's report. If only the Clinton
ndminlstratlon had taken pre-emptive
military action against bin Laden and
AI Queda. The Sept. II terror attacks
- the worst In American history would have been avened.
Well. Suddam Hussein represents us
much u threat to the Untted Stutes
toduy us bin Luden did on Sept. 10.
Which is why it Is imperative that the
Iraqi despot be turned out of power
before he deploys weapons of mass
. destruction uguinst the American peopie.
Of course, there is some skittish ness
here in this country to take on
Saddum, mainly from anti-war lawmnkers on Capitol Hill and liberal
commentators in the media. They
wring their hands over the si:~:e (as
muny us 250,000 American troops)
and cost (as much us $50 billion) of
the operntion . They fret that our
European und Arab ·allies ure unsuppnrtive of military action uguinst
Suddum. The,Y caution that the continuing hostilities between the Israelis
und the . Palestinians need to be diffused before the United States pursues
a regime c)lunge in Baghdad.
Yet, would this nation's lenders have
let uny of those issues deter them from
u pre-emptive strike against bin Laden
if they knew such a strike would have
prevented the destruction, the carnage
at the World Trude Center and the
Pentagon?
And we know Saddam is capable of
inflicting far more damage on the

Joseph
Perkins
COLUMNIST

hus developed weapons of muss
destruction und thtll he intends to lrsu
them 11gninst his sworn enemy. Or we
cun disurm Suddum before he flilly
builds up his deu~ly ursenul of biolog.
icul, chemical und nuclcur weapons:
before he commits un unspeukublc
atrocity against the United Stotcs or its
allies.
.
·
No, the Bush admlnistrution should
not.rush to war with lruq. It shou ld vet
the issue before Congress. II shvu ld
consult with Artlerlcu's ullies in
Europe und . the Middle Eust. And it
should make its case to the Amerlcun
people.
.
.
And that Is precisely how the udminlstration Intends to proceed, President
Bush said during u speech this week in
Madison, Miss. "I promise you thlll I
will be potlent and dellberute," the
commander in chief said. "Thill we
will continue to consu lt with ·
Congress. And of course we'll consult
with our friends und ullies . We'll discuss these threats in renl terms."
The president ulso IJi cdgcd to
"explore all options and ul tools !II IllY.
disposul" including diplomucy uno
lnternationol pres.sure - und he suggested that military action would be tr
fast resort.
Well, maybe Snddnm will respond lo
gentle persuosion. Maybe he will vol ·
untarily dismantle his chemicul, biological and nuclear weupons pro•
grums. Muybe he will ullow U.N.
weapons inspectors to return w lruq to
confirm that he truly hus ubundoned
those programs. But it is flu likelier
that the lra9i despot will continue tt1
defy the Umted States und that he will
continue to develop weapons of muss
destruction with which he con threuten
this nation and others.
That is why the United States must
deal with Saddam here and now - for
tomorrow may be too lute.
·

United States than bin Laden ever
dreamed. For he has been busily
rebuilding his biologlcol. chemical
and nuclear weapons programs since
throwing U.N. arms Inspectors out of
Iraq in 1998. Indeed, a 1999 U.N.
repon concluded that Iraq had con·
cealed nearly 160 bio·worfurc bombs
and more thantwo dozen missile warheads filled with anthrax and other
biological agents. The United Nations
also suspects that Saddum has more
thun 4 tons of VX, u highly lethul
nerve agent. And it dismisses
Baghdad's claim that it has destroyed
its VX stockpile, as well as SSO musturd-gus shells and 107,000 special
artillery casings.
.
And while lraq' s nuclear program
. was set bock so many years by his
defeat at the hands of the United
Stutes 11nd its allies during the Gulf
Wur, Iraq retains enough scientific·
know-how, enough eq!Jipment to build
11 weapon.
All Saddam 'lacks Is a supply of plutonium or enriched uranium. which he
almost certainly will obtuin with the
billions of oil dollars that flow into
Baghdad's coffers. That's not to · sa.Y
that the American people are in immtnent danger of a biological or cheml·
cal or nuclear attack from Iraq. Only
that Saddam is as close today to waglng a dirty war against the United
(Jo.feph Perkins Is a co/umnl.vr for
States as btn Laden was in 1994.
The San Diego Union -Tribune and call
The United States can wait until it be
reached
·
ar
has primu facie evidence that Saddam Joseph.PerklnsUnlonTrlb.com.)

Today is Wcdncsuay. Aug . 14, the 226th duy of 2002. There
arc I~1.) duys left in the year.
Toduy's Highlight in llistory:
.
On Aug . 14, 1935. the Social Security Act bccarne luw.
On thi~ dmc :
,
In 1848, the Oregon Terri'tory wa.~ estublishcd.
In 1900. international forces. including U.S. Marines,
entered Beijing to put dow1! th ~ Bolter Rebellion, which was
armed HI purg1ng Chrnu ol lnrergn rntlucnce.
·
In 11.) 17, China dco.:larcd war on Germany uml Austria dur·
ing World Wur I.
·
In 1945. President Truman announced that Jupun had surrendered unconditionally. ending World War II.
In 11.)47, Paki&gt;tan bccume independent of British rule .
In llJ51, newspaper ·puhlishcr William Rundolph Hearst
died in Beverly Hill s, Cu iif:
.
ln 1962, robbc.~s held up u U.S. mail truck in Plymouth,
Mass. , makrn~ otl with more l~un $1.5 million. ·
'
In 1969, Bnti~h troops arrived in Northern Ireland to inter·
vene in sectarian violence hctwecn Prolc,tun\s and Roman
Cmholics.
In 1973. the U.S . bombing of Cambodia came to a halt.
In 1981_, Po~c John Paul H left a Rome hos~ital, three
Bv JIM MULLIN
rooms, twigs, worms and sluge. lt has again to see If it had that authentic
months alter bemg woun(jcd 111 an attempt on his life.
The coupon said, "Fresh New dust bunnies the size of - oh, never hint of death and decay, but it had
Ten years ago: Federal Jud1.1e John J. Siricu, who presided
Country Scentl" and there, floating mind, those are real bunnies. And been left out en,tirely.
over the Watergate trial,, died rn Wushington ·at 88. The White
over u back$round of tree-covered those are real bunny droppings.
Of course, the air-freshener industry
House announced that the Pentagon would begin emergency
hill s, was a g1ant can of room deodorSomeone
over
at
Air
Freshener
doesn't
really care whut the country·
airlifts of food to Somalia to alleviate mass deaths by starvaizer.
And
on
the
front
ofthe
can
was
a
Central
is
living
in
a
parallel
universe
All they know is that an '
smells
like.
tion .
picture of my house: A little farm- where the eountry is taken out and dry air freshener called "Fresh New City
Five years agl!: An unrcpentuin Timothy McVeigh wus for. house surrounded by rolling hills anc:t cleaned twice a week .
Scent!" would sit on the More shel(
mally sentenced to d~ath for the Oklahoma City ~ombin~ .
trees.
They
are
right
about
one
thing,
if
until
the end of time.
Cosmonauts Vasrly Tsrhllyev and Alexander Luzutkin rnude 11
you
want
a
lot
of
bana
for
your
fra·
had
a
white
picket
fence
and
Theirs
safely home . to Earth after ~ luckless silt-month mission
The mental whiff of garbage piled
mine has a stone fence, but other than grance buck, you can't beat the coun- up ,on street corners, bubble gum-covaboard the Mrr space station.
t.ry. It's wonderfully 1melly, An ever· ered sidewalks baking in the hot sun
that, they were almost identical.
On_e year ago :_ T:wenty people delained in riots at the Group
cl\angins
mixture of odors from septic rolling _clouds of bus exhaust, gutters
On the back of the coupon was a litof Erght summrl. rn Italy the previous month were ordered
tle scratch-and-sniff square. I system backups, frightened skunks, full of fast food containers and
released by a Genoa court . They included 15 Austrians, three
scratched, I sniffed. It smelled for all mown hay, .freshly spread manure, unscooped dog poop Is too much w
Americansra Slovak and a Swede.
th~ w?rld like laundry soap mixed fermenting silage, stagnant water, overcome.
· Todat s Binh~ay s: Pulitzer Pri ze-w i.nning author Russell
wrth prne needles. If they stan making damp leaves, compost heapa, and the
Baker rs 77. Srnger Buddy Greco rs 76. Actress Alice
The funny thinf is, they would
an underarm deodorant for trees, this' town landfill. It's really not some- make
Gbos tle~ i&gt; 76. Singer D~sh Crofts i ~ 62. Rock si nger David
it smell exact y like "Fresh New
thing you'd want.to spray around your
is what it will smell like.
Crosby rs 61. Country srn11c r Connre Smrlh is 61. Former
living room, even if it docs . remove Country Sce~t!" The only thing difjockey Robyn Smith Astarrc is 5H . .Comedian-actor Steve
But it's not what the country smeUs that heavy cigar-smoke smell from ferent ubout 11 would be that instead
J~.:tanin is 57. Actrc~s Susa~1 Saint Jan)C~ is 56. Singer·musilike.
.
your curtains.
of a P.icture of 11 farmhouse on the can .;
clan Lurry Graham rs 5o. Actor Antomo Fargas is 56. Author
When I ~ear people say they wish
There's a fresh new scent for each they d put a picture of giant, doorman
Danielle Steel is 55 . "Far Side" cartoonist Gary Larson is 52.
they lrved 111 the countr¥ because the day In the country. I found a deer car- apartment building.
.
Rock singcr-rnu&gt;ician Terry Adams (NRRQJ is 52. Film corncities have become so d1rty, I wonder cass by the side of the road recently.
Jim Mullen 1.1 I he aurhor of " /r
poser James Horner is 49. Actress Jackec Harry is 46. Actress
- do they !Jnderstand that the country The vultures had done a pretty 1100d Take.r A Village Idiot: A Me~t~olr of
Marcia Gay Hurdcn is 43. Former haskctb:rll player Earvin
~ob but it still had a good odor on to Life Afrer the C/ry" (Simon and
"Magic" Johnson is 43. Singer Suluh Brightman is 41 . Actress ' is where dirt comes from?
The
country
has
a
dirt
floor.
It
is
1t.My nose told me it had been there Schuster, 2001). You can fOnlaC/ him
Su,un Ol:.en i&gt; 41. Aclrc" Enumrnuelle Bean is 37. Actrc~~
filthy.
It
is
full
of
mud,
bugs,
rouing
three or four days.
Catherine Bell i' 34. A.:lrc,'J-Iallc Berry is )4. Rnd mu,ician
at
Jimpine
needles,
decompo
sing
mu
sh·
t sniffed the room deodorizer one~ Mullenemerralnmenrweekly.com
Kevi n Cadogan b 32. A&lt;:tor S.:oll Mi chael Campbell is 31.
Awe's Mila Kuni' i' 19.
Thought i()r Today : "l'rccuonr of ~peec h and freedom of
uction ure meaningless withmn freedom to lhink. And there is
12t.Tllllll Ave., OIIIIIIOIIt, Ollio
111 Courllt., Jtomeroy, 0111o
200 lloln a, Point ,..__,, w.Vo.
no freedom of thought without doubt." - Bergen Buldwin
1~2
..
To~Got~WIIIe
,
J04.t1f.1:UI
Evan,, American auth9r (I'104-1'17X ).

THE VILLAGE IDIOT

Remember, the odor in the country is the same as city$·

DROP US ALINE.
.. .

~

_,.

.......

I

Wllch•••d•y, Au1u1t 14, 2002

NOIEBOOK

. 111 Court S1reet • Pomeroy, Ohio

Publisher

Page AS

·~ •.'

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

Den' _
Dickerson

end

The Daily Sentinel

READERS: A

reader signed "Desperate In
Ohio" reponed that a verse
her aunt told her many years
ago w11s rattling around in hor
heud, · but she couldn't
remember the · lust line. It
went, "If 'ifs' and 'uns' were
pots and pans ... "
Yesterday, my column was
filled with .letters from rea~­
ers eager to provide the miss·
ing l.ine. " ... there'd be no
work for tinkers." Today
we'll see some fuscinuting
-variations on the theme. Rend
on for u sample:
•
J I&gt; EAR ABBY: Not only do·
I remember my mother quot·
lng the same phruse to me,
she hud another one: "If wfshes were horses, beggars
would ride." Both ure from a
bygone generation that hold
no truck with the "If only"
und "I wish" mentality. In
other words, if you want
something to huppen in your
life, work for it. If something
happens you don't like, deal
with it. grow from it and
move on. Don't just wish,
compluin und blume.
We could use u little more
of that suge wisdom in this
duy of frivolous lawsuits,
cheating in schools and business. etc. - LEE BAKER
lDEVORE, HAMILTON,
OHIO
DEAR LEE: You're right.
.And if everyone swept his
own doorstep, this world
would be o cleaner place.
Read on:
rJ~:A R
ABBY:
My
Pennsylvania -Dutcb grulld·
mother used to always say, "If
' ifs' and 'ands' were pots and
pans. you wouldn't have to
buy uny I" She had quite the
collectfon of little sayings,
including, "If you put your
shoes upon the table, you' II
be bad when you are able."
(My mother amended that
one to: "Tables are for glasses, not for a--seal")
There were many more for
all occasions, and my cousins
and I thou11ht she was the
smartest woman ·In the world.
I still miss her after 3S years.
-CHRIS GORNIK, LEV·
ELGREEN, I'A.
DEAR CHRIS: Amazing
how those curly lessons stay
..Miith us. Read on:
. DEAR ABBY: My sixth·
grude teacher, the late Leona
Hickey of Allegany, N.Y.,
used to recite the old '"lfs'
and 'Ana'" proverb to us in
class (circa 19SO).
Mrs. Hickey had man)llittle
cpigrums. Another of her
gems: "Whether it's cold or
whether it's hot, we're sure to
ha vc weather, whether or
notl"- JOYCE HILLER,
REDONDO
BEACH, ·

Mf[)DLEPORT - Stephen
. . - - - - - und April
Spire~
of
Mid·dlcporl
announce
the hirth of
· win~ l Ull&lt;:
rO ul the
H o l 1.cr
M e di cu l
Center.
T h c
Jecob Spirea infant&gt; ha ve
......- - - - - , been named
lacon Riley
Spires and
J e nnif er
RESERVE SHOWMAN - Rochac l El.llou was named Rosorve Champion Dairy Showman durR e n e I
Ing Monday's Junior Fair Dairy Show. Also pictured ero Dairy Prlnco Carson Yost, Dolry Princess
Spire s .
Kare Osborne, Fair King Robbie W ddlo al1d Fair Queen Meghan Hoynos. (Brion J. Reed) -·
Ju coh
weighed ~ix
pounds, silt
ounce~. und
w----..1 Jennifer. ~t ix
· Jennifer Spirea P 0 u n d s ·
I h r c t
ounces. Mr. und Mrs. Spires
huve
another
chilu ,
Cheyenne.
Maternal grandparents ure
Duvid and Mary Ross of
Middleport , and maternal
great-grandparents urc Duvid
und
Betty
Ross
of
Middlcpon. Paternal ~ nand 2Urents ure Dennis Sptre5 of
Cheshire and the lut e
Florence Marie Spires.

Shirley Mdk-r and l'urlo' and
Leta M~:Knr)!hl

Durst .tums 2
C'rM .
MIDDLEPORT
Dur•t cdc
tlrutcd hr~
~cC\lllU

birthday
with u Hoh
illl' Builder
p a r 1 y
Sunday.
Aug . 4 ul

th ~

Cole Dur•t

Allcnding 11.:r~ h~&gt; purcrit ~.
Jinr und Pumclu Dur~ l. grunt!
llu rents. lhllh lhrr.'l of
Mru~lcport. 1111d Mi~ c und ·
Joy 7.n·klc ol Nitrn , W, Vu .:
grcu t,- ~nllldpar,·nt&gt;. Jrrn und
Juck 1c Reed anu l.cm11 ~
lluptOihllrll nt Midd lcpor 1:
und Eddie. Midrdc (iuhncl.
und Jur:nh Sturd1cr of MuMIII ,
W.Vu .

OU graduate
IWTLANI&gt; Cheryl
Lynn Jewell . duughtcr of Hob
und Shu ro rr Jewe ll of
Hurrisonvil.lc. und grund lluug ht ~r of Puulin.: Atkir)s of
l~utluncl ,

gruduu tcd
from Ohio

McKnight birth

l!nivn~it y

vr1 June X

s

RUTLAND Amundu
. . - - - - - - . Miller U)Jd
CHAMPION AYRSHIRE - The Meigs County Junior Fair D lry Show's grand champion Ayrshire
was shown by Nathan Cook, pictured lloro with Dolry Princess Kara Osborne, Fair Quoen
. Meghen Hayl'les, Fair King Robbie Weddle and Dolry Prine Corson Yost. (Brian J. Road)

bu~hclor ·~

dcltrcc in
rccrcutionul·
~nunu g~.: ·

Cheryl Jewell

mcnt. ·She
ha~
h.:c n
munugcr nf
Bird Icc Arcnu ul Ohi o
Unlvc'rsity.
She will nc u gruduatc
ussistunt ut the i ~c urcnu wl\i lc
studying for her nru ~ t cr\
dearee. ·
Jewell is ul ~o u 1997 l!ruduute of Meigs 1-1 igh School.

Motoaoss l'esults
from the fair ••• 81
IUT IHORTHORNS- Raohael Elliott, pictured with her grand champion Shorthorn, also 1howed
the reserve champion Shorthorn. She Ia pictured with Dairy Princess Kera Osborne, Fair Queen
Meghen Haynes, Fair King Robbie Weddle and Delry Prince Carson Yost. (Brien J. Reed)
·

Alk for your

Free
ATM
Card
Stop Racine or Syracuu location.1·for dc•tai/s.
by

Racine, Ohio • (740) 949·2210
SyracuM, Ohio • (740) 992-6333
MlmbtrFDIC

CALIF.

DEAR JOYCE: She certainly had a way with words
(may she rest in peace).
DEAR ABBY: The phrue,
"If 'ifs' and 'ana' were poll and
pans, we'd have no need of tinleers," derives from Ocor~e
Bernard Shaw's play "Samt
JQQn," when Joan of An:, under
ecclesiastic interrogation for
heresy, responds in exasperation
tO questions and accusations
from her English pel'l«uton. .
I was in a Sydney scage production of"Samt Joon:• staning
Zoe Caldwell in 1962 (and later
played the Earl ofWaJWick in a
London BBC two-part television production of the 1101)'),
but Zoe's earnest fMtration 10
fervcnti,Y rendered 1till rcl·
onutea m m~ mind 40 . years
later. - ALLAN LANDER

(RETIRED . ACTOR

GRANO CHAMPION BROWN SWISS - Ryan Trtpp Is pjctLred w1th his grand ChM1plon Brown Swiss
show at Monday's Meigs County Junior Fair Dairy Show. Also pictured are Dairy PrtllCiess Kara osborne'
Fair Klng·Robble Weddle, Fair Queen Me~an Haynes and Dairy Prtnce Carsqn .'!bst. (Bt1an J. Reed) '
WEDNESDAy. AUGUST 14. 2002

4:00p.m.'
' :OOp.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
11:·00 p.m.

KIDDIE DAY
Kiddie TriiCtor Pull · Smull Show Arenu
Pie llalln1 Contetl· Hill Stoae
Open Clau HorN Show • tlllr&gt;e Arona
Mountain River Band· Show Arcllll
IWrH Pull • Pull Tr~~ek
Liquid Cl')'1lal· Spontored by Summerfrcld•·
Orandtllnd
ll«k 'N Counll')' Clouer~ · IIIII Stale
OaletCI~~~e

THI!B$DAY. AUGUfT 15; 2002
SENIOR CIJIZEN DA)'
llJIOIWr or the 0.,. "IUJJENOIJJl GAS"

IN

AJI8r CiliUM wtlh ('.olden Buckeye C1rd

SAVANNAH)
DEAR ALLAN: Retired or
n91. take a bow!
(Dear Abby 11 written by

blgall Van B11ren, a/10
_{Cn.own as Jeanne Phillips,
was louruled by her moth·
er, Pauline Phillips. Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, l..os Angele1, CA
90069.)

·11 ' c

rl!t:c i vccl u

Curio~

McKnight
unnouncc
the birth of
u daughter,
Kri s ti
N i co I c
McKnight ,
on
born
t....----J June 21 · ul
Krletl MoKnllht P I e u s " n t
Vull ey
Hospitul.
The infant weighed six
p_ouQds,
nine
ounces .
Grandparents arc Joe and

Mu ~o n

Purk
111
M 11 ~ o n ·
W. Vu .

lldmltlfd frnllllloOO pm
VariOIII nmel: The Mqle of "The Cllj!llnj«l"
7:00a.m. 01111 Open
II :00 1.m, · 1.111111 Dlptlhe Pair • Hill SIIJII

.

.

RDIJM IROMIIWISI- The Metes County Junior Fair Dairy Show'• reserve Champion Brown Sw111
wae lhown by Her1:lle Grate. pictured here wltt1 Dairy PrtllClesa Kara Osborne Fair Klf'C Robbie Weddle
Fair QIJeen Moj?Jlan H.,nes arrd Dairy PrlllCle Carson Yost (Bnan J. Reed) ' ·
'

ll:OOp.m.
ll:OO p.m."'
I:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
4:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
' '00 p.m.

Bieii*Pra,.i•• · HUJ Stqe

Opill
""'-Show JudJinf· Sr. Pair Bulldlnf
Hlmltt 1Ueln1 • Rlu friCk
Blf Bend ei"'Jm- Hilt Slip

Klddlt TriCior Pull • Small Show Arena
11ny TOI Show lnd Tell • Hill SIIJ'

AIIIIOI! JtoH. !fill Slap·

·

..

�Page A&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

14,2002

Tl,le Daily Sentinel

Inside:
PGA looks like 1999, Pc1ge 82
Diamond Roundup. Page 83
•

Ciovemment report says Federal Reserve keeps interest rates steady
Enron made millions .
by manipulating market
WASIIINOTON (AI')
Enmn Cuq1. in two year&gt;
canted ten&gt;of million' of dol
lar' from cner~y deals u; the
rewh of qucsuonublc truding
tuctks und hidden rclutitln·
ships. u govcrnnwnt l'l'pon
cnncludcs.
In vestigators fuunJ evidence
of price muttipulution and
dccdt hy Enrun us the ctfc'ISY
trudcr uggrcssivelr '"tight
wuys
to
prof1t
l'rnm
l'uliforniu's voluti le power
mnr~ets, which suw prices MJur
in 2tXXJ und early ~(X) I.
The rcpon issued Tuesday
hy the l'cdcrul Energy

un&lt;lcr Califomiu's lluwed clcctricity deregulation. "Enron's
coriJorute culluru ... foslert.'&lt;l a
ca l ous di•rcgurd for the
American \'11ergy customer,''
said tlw report.
The stuff urged the cornmis'inners to hcgi n additionul
inve;tigulinns into the uclivi tics of l'onland Clencral
Electric Co.. Enron Power
Murketing Inc. und Enron
C'upitu l and Trude Resomw
Cnrp .. nil Enron uftilintcs:
Avi,lu Corp.. u Spokane.
Wush .• de~lric utility: and El
l'uso Ekmk C'o .. based i11 El
l'usc&gt;. Texas.
Re~ulmory Commi ,~ ion ~tu ff
Avistu allegedly served us u
urged funhcr inve&gt;tigutiun into midJiemun for JlOWCr 111111SIIC·
"posbihlc tniscomhl(i" duu'gcs lions bel ween Enron's lruding
uguinst tltn:~ Enron ufliliulc compuny und Po11iand Gcnerul
companies und two ittw&gt;tor· Elcmic. Enrnn und El Puso
owned tnilitics thut did exten· Eic(tric ulso hud dose ties.
sive business with Ennm. · The sluff rcporl suid tltc
ind1u.ling one lhut ucted l" u :tllcged misconduct involving
middlemun to hide power these companies included hid·
lrunsuc tions between Enron ing tl1c ex lent of their mutuul
ufliliates. ,
husi ucss deuling .~ . usiug midAccmding In ruw datu from tllcmc n to disguise trunsAc·
Enron. the Western power linn.,, l'ui ling to comply with
p1urkets wcru highly prolitahlc federal rules on open trun srnis·
for I he llouston·buscd energy si01t ucccss un&lt;J litiling to huvc
lruding · cnmpuny tllll t &lt;.:nl- mlcqm1lc O(&gt;eruling reserves. ·
lupscd i11 scumlul und lilcd fur FEIH · ( o111missioncr Nom
hunkrup1cy last l)ccembcr. i11 Brnwtlcll suid the 'rcpon "cer·
2(KKJ und 2&lt;KJI the compuny t:Jinly idr:'milics compunies thut
hud ucc utllulatcd pmlits from we know today were engag ing
Weslcnl electricity trmles "in in hchu viur thai was munipuluthc neighborhood of $1.8 bil- live nr ina\Jprupriute."
lin11." said the FER(' report.
But C'u iforniu Oov. Oruy
I low much of that wus rclat· Duvi&gt; cu lled the preliminary
ed to price munipulation rcpo11 "u whitewuslt pure and
through vurious murkcting and simple" und com pl ained
truding schemes .....:. with FFRC still "hasn't sanctioned
numes like 11ut Boy. Ricochet u1iybody, il hasn't issued any
and Death Stur - and outright refu nds lo us. it's done nothing
deceit unci misinlimnation i.l 10 slop the 111unipulution which
u11cleur, the n.lpon suid.
cvt:ryonc u~rces occurred here
But tile· stuff suid Bnrun in C'u lil'orma."
eumcd ul lcust $120 million
The investigution wus
during the two )'curs from ordered in February by FERC'
power grid congestion charges. Cllllirman Pal Wood after
mcluding cuscs where Ennm repented charges by Califomia
deliberately creuted congestion ofliciuls Ihut ene':lly murketers
to incrcuse the value of trm1s·. were gou ~i n g C'a hforniu's utilmisb ion rights En ron had pur· ities und 1ts customers.
chased.
Two 111011ths later, FERC
One cuse, cited in the report, ol'&gt;tui ncd un intcrnul Enron
wus c.1pcciully lucrulivc. Enru11 memo lhut described many of
in the summer of 2CXJO paid the trlldill&amp; strategies, includ·
$3.6 milli on 10 reserve space lng sh11rn transactions and
on umujorCulilumia·trun.m1is- other schemes aimed at creal·
sion line. AI the ~ume lime, ing congestion on the Westcm
· Enron submitted fukc scl1ed · power grids und forcing up
ulcs for power tra nsmission, prices.
"addi ng unneeded confu ~ion ·~
Califomia officials claim its
to the overall system and utilities - and. in tum. cus·
adding to grid congestion. tamers - were overcharged us
When the lines beca me much as $1J billion by wholcclogl:led• Enron collected l.33 sule electricity and natural gus
milhon over two months in marketers. Enron's energy
"congestion fees" on itb 5&gt;3.6 marketing subsidiary was
milli" n investment.
among a hulf dozen major
The report dcscrihcd Enron pluycrs in the Califomia mar·
as eager to "game I he system" kct .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Stock mar·
ket turmoil and u wave of accounting
scunduls are · slowing the economy's
recovery, Federal Reserve policr·rnakers said us they held short-term mterest
rates steady. while ~ignaling rates could
go lower in the future.
At the same time, however, Fed
C'hainnun Alun Greenspan and his
Federal ,Open Market Committee col·
leugucs expressed some hope Tuesday
thut economic conditions . would
improve. helped out by interest rates
tlmt urc ulreudy at roughly four-decade
lows.
While the fed's decision puts into
play the possibility of funher rate
reduction s. some economists think the
odds arc low that Americans will see
one this year.
Some analysts believe the Fed will
cui rates on ly if it looks as though there
- might be u big shock to the economy,
such us u massive credit crunch that
thrcutcns to paralyze the nation's financial srstem. or clear signs that the economy 1s slipping back Into recession.
"Only if there is a clear evidence of a
double-dip recession,
Chuirmun
Oree nspun should pulllhe trigger," said
Sung Won Sohn , chief economist at

,

Executives face deadline
WA SHINGTON (AP) ~ Muny of the nation's biggest
compunles ure wuiting until the lust minute to comply with a
new government order requiring executives to sweur to the
uccurucy of their recent financial reports. .
Of the more )han 300 compames that had filed us of
Tuesday evening. from Ace Hurd ware to Yellow Corp., none
had reported a need to restate its finances. The chief execu·
t ivc officers und chief financial officers of nearly 700 corpo·
rut ions ure required to file sworn statements by Wednesday.
Amon~ the CEOs liling statements on Tuesday: multibil·
Iionuire mvestor Warren Buffett, who vouched for the veracity- of his Berkshire Hathaway Inc .'s 2001 annual repon, its
second -quurter report for this year and other financiul statements. The company's ch1ef financial officer, Marc
Hamburg. also submitted a statement.
· In response 'too wave of accounting scandals, the Securities
and Exchange Commission In lute ·June ordered 947 compani es~ ull with unnual revenues exceeding $1.2 billion - to
submit the sworn statements from their CEOs and chief
financial officers.
·

Police seek abcluded Infant

Amtrak trains sidelined

Protest surrounds execution

Bush crash Injures

.J

LOS ANGELES(/\/') - A 'rile clinic 's· receptionist whereabouts.
4-ycur·old girl who di.~ar· imrncuiatcly
recognized
Rafael Conez. the girl's
pc:urcd from a city purk had a Jessica.
. father, and Maria Hernandez,
JOyful rcuni()n with her family
When the woman went to her mother. sell wcos from a
after ~ he tumed up diny imd the buthroom, clinic staff ques- small stand across the street
barefoot but unharmed at a 1ioned the girl, who said her from the park.
medical clinic with her hair cut name was Jessica and that the
A statewide "Amber" Alen"
short .
w"man with her was not her was issued Sunday night for
The woman who accompa· mother. Mangia said.
the missing girl, then rescinded
nicd Jessica Cortez to the clin·
Jessica wa&amp; examined at a after Jessica's brother told
ic was lllkcn into custody after hospital , then sent home with
clinic Slllff recogni7.cd Jcs&amp;icu her parents. Police and a hospi- police he thought he saw
und called police.
ta l official said she was unhun. Jessica's dreu in the water.
"The mother, as you might
Pomeroy said ·Jessica also The alert was reissued,
e11pect, was weepin~ hysteri · appeared in · good spirits Monday, distributing informa·
cally and little Jess1ca threw although she expressed som~ tion to law enforcement agen-fer qrms around her m'~thcr eoncem that her pretty hair ~ad cies, news media and motorists
and began to laugh hystcr1cal· . been cut . He said detectives through traf(ic signs.
ly. And then aft.er a few m1n- assured her she .still looked
utes, she also begun to weep," fine.
Police Chief Manin Pomemy
Police divers had scoured
told reporters Tuesday night.
Echo Park lake since Sunday
"We think it wi ll· be a long night. while hundreds of detectime before they let go of one tivcs went door to door in
another," he said.
searc h of clues to Jessica's
Authorities were still looking for the man witoosses s~i d
ON YOUR SIDE
they· saw walkmg w1th JcsMca
'on Sunday night and trying to
determine his con nection to the
We Cover the Front Door, Back Door
woman who brought Jessica to
the clinic about five miles
and
in Between.
aw~y.
·.
Pomeroy 8pcculated that
whoever took Jcuica from
To find out more about our
Echo l'ark "gave up and said,
homeownera lnaurance • call
'I• know
the ,.,Oiice arc comott

Everything

Jim Mangia, executive director of the St. John'5 Well Child
('enter. said Je ~sicu was
brought in by a wc ll -drc~~d
woman in \ung la ~~c~ who
rcfuwd lo 8ign the clinic 's
form ~ and wrote that the
child \ name wa~ Maria On it.

Wednesday, authorities said. Six people were hospitalized. .
The bus O(lCrated by Trailways rolled over on its side off
the highway s shoulder in til is town 50 miles nonh of New
York City, according to the New York State Thruway
Authority.
Six people were taken to the emergency room at St. Luke's
Comwall Hospital, said Joan Cusack-McGuirk, vice presi dent of patient care.
The driver suffered serious injuries. said Thruway
spokesm~n Terr~ O' Brien. The conditions of the passengers
were not Immediately known.
·

ABILENE, Texas (AP) - Authorities continued to search
Wednesday for a month-old. infant who was snatched from a
minivan while her mother turned away to retum a shopping
cart in a parking lot.
· The mother screamed as she. desperaiely tried to stop the
getaway car. She held on and was dragged more than 30 feet.
Police Sgt. Kim Vickers said numerous leads have failed to
help police find the female kidnapper and the infant. Nancy
Crystal Chavez.
.
.
"The longer time goes, the harder it ~ets to solve any case,"
Vickers said in Wednesday 's editions of the Abilene
"We have really gone to the public to ask for
WASHINOTON (AP)- Amtrak 's high-speed Ace Ia trains Reponer-News.
information,
and
people are really trying to help."
will be out of service for d~ys, or even weoka, due to cracks
in equipment underneath its locomotives.
.
The truins, u key moneymaker for Amtrak in the BostonNew York·Woshlngron corridqr , 'Wen~ pillled from 1ervice
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - The death penalty is hardly
Tuesday after inspectorf' 14l~e8~~d "ttae~ In•mcketll' that
an
unusual punishment for the killing of a police officer in
attach shock absorbers to the IQComotlves. ,
Texas,
but the sentence given to a former fast-food worker for
Amtruk officials said they feared one of the assemblies such a crime has caused an international stir over diploknown us yaw dampers- could full off a movins train, dam· just
macy
and human rights.
.
aging its underside·or another train. The function of the yaw
Capital
punishment
opponents
and
.
government
officials
dampers is to prevent swaying, which cun increase wear and
from
Mextco,
where
there
is
no
death
penalty,
say
Javier ~
tear to rails and train wheels.
·
Suarez Medina, a 33-year-old Mexican citizen, should not be
The problem is the latest in a summer-long series of finan- executed
Wednesday evening and never should have received
cial and public-image blows to the struggling passenger rail- a death sentence.
·
road.
They say a mistake by officers when he was arrested after
the shooting robbed him of his rights as a Mexican national.
·Under the Vienna Convention of Consular Relations, which
6
the United States has signed, forei~n nationals who are
CORNWALL, N.Y. (AP) - A passenger bus carrying detained have a right to contact the1r consulates for help.
about 30 people crushed on a New York highway early Suarez wasn't informed apout this right.

Missing girl found unhanned at .
medical clinic; one suspect at large

me... atop by • It's your cholcel

tng.

Wells FJrgo. Otherwise, a rule reduction meetings this year including
could llash a panic signal to investors, 1\tesday's - policy-makers opted to
consumers and businesses. he added. leuve rates unchanged.
"The cure could be worse than the dis- As a result. the federal funds rate ease.,.
the interest that banks charge each other ·
Absent a crisis. some economists pre· on overnight loans - remained at 1.75
dicted the Fed probably would maintain percent. the lowest level since July ·
current interest rates for the rest of the 1961.
year. That's based on the belief that Commercial banks· prime lending
rates are already low enough to guaran- rate, which moves in lpckstep with the
tee an economic recovery and that fur· funds rate, stayed at 4.75 percent. the
ther cuts might not generate much more lowest level since November 1965. The
economic activity.
prime rate is a benchmark for many
"Let's get real. an itsy-bitsy cut in consumer and business loans.
shon-term rates from already decades- By keeping rates low - or, perhaps.
low levels is not the elixir that will heal
this economy," said economist Ken nudging them down later - the Fed
Mayland, president of . ClearView might motivate consumers to spend
more and businesses to step up investEconomics.
ment, aiding the recovery.
The Fed's next meeting is Sept. 24.
A softening in consumer and busi11ess
"A sufficiently weak string of data
demand
that emerged this sprin~; "has
could st.ill push the. Fed over the edge,"
been
prolonged
in large measure by
said Muury Harris, chief economist at
UBS Warburg. "However. we believe weakness in financial · markets and
that the economy retains consideruble heightened uncertainty related to probmomentum." Harris is in the camp thut lems in corporate reponing and goversars the Fed will stay on the sidelines nance," the Fed said.
thts year.
The central bank said 1\tesday that
The Fed slashed interest rates II the greatest risk ahead is further slowtimes in 2001 to rescue the economy ing of the economy. raising the odds of ·
from recession, but ut each of its five later rate cuts.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoeala for the paving of portion• of Scout Camp Road;
Allen Street; and Mill Streett In Cheater, Ohio, Cheeter Townehlp,
Melge County, Ohio; will be received by the Melga County
Comml11lonere at their office at the Courthou11, Pomeroy, Ohio
45789, until 1:00 p.m., Thuraday, September 5, 2002, and then at 1:30
p.m. at eald office opened and read aloud for the following:
Paving (14 ft. wide • 3 Inch thlckne11) of 2,000 linear feet of
Townehlp Road 112 (Scout Camp Road) In Cheater Townehlp·
Paving (12 ft. wide • 3 Inch thlckne11) of 1,200 linear' feet of ·
Townehlp Road 1037 (Allen Street) In Cheater Townahlp;
Paving (12 ft. wide • 3 Inch thlckneaa) of 1,000 linear feet of
Townahlp Road 1022 (Mill Street) In Cheater Townahlp
·
Speclflcatlona, and bid forma may be alcured at the office of Melga
County Commlaelonere, Courthouae, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 - Phone

(740) 992-2895.
A depoalt of 0 dollare will be required for each aet of plana and

epe~lflcatlona, check made payable to. The full amount will returned
within thirty (30) daya after receipt of blda.
Each bid muat be accompanied by either a bid bond In an amount
of 100% of the bid amount with a aurety eatlafactory to the aforeaald
Melga County Commleelonere or by certified check, caahlere check,
or letter of credit upon a aolvent bank In the amount of not 1e11 than ·
10% of the bid amount In favor of the aforeaald Melga County
Comml11lonera. Bid bonde ehall be accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the official or agent algnlng the bond.
Bide .• hall be 11aled and marked aa Bid for Cheeter Townahlp
CDBG Paving Project and mailed or delivered to:
Melga County Commllllonere, CourthouH, Pomeroy, OH 45789.
No bidder may withdraw hla bid within thirty (30) day• after the
actual 1date of the opening thereof. . The Melge County
Commlaalonere reaerve the right to reject any or all bide.

Jeff Thornton, Prealdent

.

Melge County Commleelonere

;,........

I M t -.. --llf'":::,~~· ,.,..
Ifill-~ ._Oib: CGUnl&gt;ui, CIH ~15422! ~ 11100

..

8-14,21, 28, 2002
-~·--

-------------------------·---

Page 81
w.ctM~My,

Aupst 14. 2002

Witmore runs away with motorcross titles
· 8v

OEREII TAYLOR

OTAYLORCI&gt;MYOAtLYSENTINE~.COM

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Eastea 11 youth
football
sign-ups
TUPPERS PLAINS
Sign-ups h&gt;r the Eu~tcrn Youth
Football Lcuguc will tuke
plu~c W a. m. Saturday at
Eastern High School for
gmdes 3-t'&gt;.
Thefll is u sign-up Icc of $40.

NFLPAdaims
coHusion
MANKATO. Minn. (APl Thc NFL Pluycrs Assnciution
duims the Mmnesota Vikings
und Kunsas City Chiefs muy
huve enguged i11 ~o llusin~
wh ilc ncgDIiut ing wnlracts
with their first -round drafl
picks.
The uninn claims the teams
may hu ~e had !lle~ul knowled~e ol the stgn mg bonus
nflered to u player ~ hoscn ufler
Kunsus City selected Ryan
Sims witt. 1he sixth pick• unu
Bryant McKinnie was picked
seventh by Minncsntu.
.
The players association suys
the teams suhscquently offered
the players a lower amount, so
the union lilcd a request for un
investigation with the NPL
Management .
Council.
ES PN .comlirst repo11cd . .

Judge leaning
toward skier
BOULDER. Colo. (AP) A judge said an Olympk 'kicr
who wunts. to play colleg.e.
l'oothull woulu be harmed 11
.the NCAA is ullowcd to sideline him over skiing entlorsemcnts.
Boulder County · District
Judge Daniel Hale didn't issue
il final decision. but made the
comment when he denied the
NCAA's rcquesttu remove the
University of Colorado a• a codefendant from a lawsuit liled
~y Jeremy Bloom.

Williams to Join
Team USA
NEW YORK (AI') - Jay
Williams of the Chicago Bulls.
an alternate on the U.S. national team, is· expected to be
added to the main roster as a
replacement for the injured
Ruy Allen.
Allen said Monday that a
sore knee would keep him
from playing in the World
Championships. which begin
later
this
month
in
Indianapolis. Truining camp
for th~ U.S. team opens Friday.

'Nasty Boy'
Myers may

retum
NEW YORK (AP)
Former relief ace Randy
My~rs could be eyeing a
comeback - with the New
York Yankees, of all teams.
Out · of the majors since
1998, Myers has been training
at the Yankees' complex in
Tampa, Fla., for more than a
week. He's thrown off the
mound at lea.~t three times.
Myers, who tums 40 next
month, wa~ a four-time .AilStar, and led the league in
saves three times, including a
then-NL record 53 for the
Ch ica~o Cubs in 1993. He had
347 hfetime saves when his
career was cut short by shoulder surgery in June i999.

ROCK SPRINGS
A11dy
Wit more of Lomklll urpeurs just ubout
reudy for professiona motorcn~~s .
Here 's to hoping professionul
motorcross is reudy for Andy
Wilmore.
The 19-year old rider from Lvndon
domintited his three events u1 the
Meigs County Fuirgrounds Tuesduy,
cluimiog wins in eac·h the Open Class.
the 16-24year old uge class und the
125 ''B" cluss.
All ure umuteur events whil'h do not
puy: but the Y"ungster is g~uring for
his dny soon.
.
looking to turn pm next yeur,"
Wit mure. who turns 20 Sept. 30. suid.

"''m

"Right now I'm just tryuig to mnke it gum sponsors throu!!h it ull I tht'
into und win us many mces as I cun." series). I meun I huve 'il&gt;me 'Jlon,nr. Witml&gt;re blew uwny the field on his like Moton:yde Plu1' unll St•r,·ke in
Hondu in tht: opening event of the Grovepon ·but whut we're lool&gt;ing II•
evening ut the Meigs County Fn~r. do is udd sponson:. who will help u&gt;
befon: returning to lhe course wn~ out nnd suppon u. ·
.
the hour to win twice n~ .
.
~ ~cer Dtckey . Hoy n1&gt;1~d
A chm~ee ut u professional cureer ts. Wttmore s talent. und smd .the pm m·
something thut htts been in the wortcnuit is wt~iling for the statewide pnxli·
for n long time for the suburbun gy.
Columbus rider.
"He's preuy good. He'sjust guing to
"I' ve been nu:ing as 11n nmateur lor go through whut everybody ebt' \\ent
II years.or so," Wit more suid. "It ~ets through turning pro." Hoy. u ~ven·
hurd sometimes tmvellingall the ume yenr pro \'etenm snid. "It'll he tou~h
uround the state nild stuff, but I'm on him like i1 wus oil everyhl&gt;dy."
going to huve to do a lot more of it in
AI leust Wilmore keeps goc.&gt;d cumthe future. so I'm not complaining.
puny. His travellin~ punner. Randy
"It's just reully imponunt to try to Wight. ulso of London. took top hon·

.or' i.n tht' I~~· "("' du" t&gt;n th~
evening.
. Lll&lt;:&lt;tl' winm.'l'\ indu.Ie\1 lkuu
Jividen of Gullitll.&gt;h,, "hu ton~ hunM:
tirsl pi!ll't' in 1he Qmld-4 Sll\&gt;~~ ·, tin.l
evem. und Nmhtm Ruhrn'lm. \\ho
won the ~50"("' Cia"'··

-In

1M lllgllfa _ _ _ 041: - t,lo&lt;fO 4-6 ,..., Oklt ()o!OOII Wloltll loom
Hwnlfton. )Q )IMr$ illnd ~ ~..th G•' ot Attwf\1. 7·

Qtllof

oklo Ntol!IO•Wil ~ 01 -~ ... jMI
o.lot- Muls&lt;tt(l Ql
~- Fo"Y ~50 a· r .. r ... 01 '"""'" ~!~co&lt;&gt; 1..
11 -

QliJs EtN\n ~~'0.0'''1' ~"

jOOI oOl$ Klo1M Cl\a.. Kllba!!IOf ot L - . l~ ~
1"- l ) llflin C..•io &gt;~ '1;"(R..,. &lt;I Randy W1\Jhl

ol l(!ndon

t.~u• Sr lira•"""' S..ll"" "' -

V"'' 1nd o.,..,

.0

Btll ANt Ql Ma'Y:t¥\li Qua~ Stn:'At

(AIM 2) 8'""" Molffli)Oh't ~- S•o~&lt;• ChfiS .Mto

olI/1!11Qft

·

Arizona puts brakes on Reels' streak
CINC INNATI (AI') Luis Gon~ulez husn't missed
11 gume ~ince Sept. 30. .1999.
when
the
Ariwnu
Dittmondhucks were savoring
their first NL West title.
An injured ribcage mi~ht
end the longest uctive pluymg
streak in the majors, just us
the Diumondhucks start
thinking about another run
through ihe postsenson.
Gonzalez . left the game
with 1111 nching side in the
third inning 1\tesduy ni_ght,
but Ariwnn pulled nway to n
6- 1 victory
over' the
Cin&lt;.:innati Reds without its
top hitter.
Erubiel Durazo hit u solo
homer und Steve Finley hnd a
two-run shut IJIT Jimmy
Huynes ( 12-8). helping Rick
Hell in ~ (H-8J get his first victory smce he· wus sidelined
by u severe ankle spruin.
G()m.alez got treutment for
hi s side, injured on a swing
Sunday. The strained ribcage
ti ~htened so much when he
tned to run out a second·
inning grounder that he hw;l
trouble breathing.
His 446·gnme pluying
streuk will likely end in
Cincinnuti .
"I've never babied my
body," suid Gonzalez, who
leads the Diamondbacks in
hits. homers and RBls .
"That's the first time I've hud
to suy I need to come out of u
gmne."
Manager Bob Brenly isn' t
about to risk u long-term
injury to Gonzalez by letting
him pluy with I he injury.
.
"We huvc tn he careful with
this thing," Brenly said.
"There's a lot of season left. I ·
don 't want· to rush him and
lose him for any amount of
time."
is · on
the
Time
Diamondbacks' side. The
defending World Series
chmnpions have won 17 of
their last 21, stretching their
lead from one game to a seasoil-high 7 · 112 after
Tuesduy's win.
They also got an encouraging performance by Hellin!J•
who severely sprained hfs AND HE AIN'T
OOOD.ONE - Arizona pitcher Rick Helling throws against Cincinnati
right ankle in a collision with In the second Inning,
Tuesday In Cincinnati. Helling pitched seven Innings, giving up one
PI•••• aH Braku, BJ
run on three hits. (AP)
·

Cleveland
beats the ·
Devil Rays
ST. PBTSRSBURO Fla.
(AP)- Tlu'ee phcho turned
a close game into a one·
sided affair. .
Xllrim Oarci hit his second .care6J' grond slam dur-

in&amp; a seven-run firth Inning

u tho Cleveland Indians

belt the Tllmpa Bay ~vU·
Rays 9e~day n t. .
Oarcla ma II ·2 hen
he hit the fir pitch oft
Tallyon Sturtze (l-13) In o
tho right-field seats.
Lee Stev D$ had walk
after taklna two close pitch·
ea with two outs ISefore
Oarcla connected f r hi first

alam alnec S pt. 23. 1998.
· I 6-for- 16 with

l!:1:

llt·blllt and one RBI

qalnat everyone else since

jOintna tho Indians on Aua.
6.
.
C.C. Sabathla (8·9) gave
up three runs and lx hils
over seven lnninas. He ha~
beaten Tamp11 B11y In con·
aecutive start~.
The lefl·hander was 0·3
with a 7.54 ERA In fl ve
atarh last month.
Sturtzc ullowed eiJht rona
•nd ~~even hit• in six lnninas.
The ri&amp;ht· hllrider hu ai ven.
up 200 hits and 74 walks
over t6S 2-J. lnnina tbla
lleiiOI\.

The Devil Ray

have

drwPed alx of eisht.
Mitt Lawton napped an

()..for-10 sllde with 11 two-run
li!llle In the fifth that put

Clevtlaad up H.

· lilll Tllome aot the Indians
Witllia 2-1 with a fo~trth•

I1111Aa IOlo homer, His 3Stlt
bomor went an estimated

436 feet 10 center.
TIUI\pa Ba)' took a 2-0 lead
In the IIICond.

Browns ban plastic beer boj:tles at stadium
BEREA (AP) - In stant replay hasn't been fixed, but the
Cleveland Browns are making sure that last year's ugly bot-.
tie-throwing incident is never rereated.
.
On Saturday, 'the Browns wil play their first h()me game
since Dec. 16. when an overturned call in the 11nal minutes
against Jacksdnville led to fan s pelting officials, police, play·
ers and coaches with thousands of plastic beer bottles.
This year, those 20-ounce bottles have been ~anned. The
club also is taking a zero-tolerance approach With fans who
throw objects.
.
''The only person throwing anythi~g a! the stadium wtll ~
the quarterback," said Browns secunty d~rector lAw Merletu,
a former director of the U.S. Secret Serv1ce.
In the aftermath of the near-riot at last season's home finale,
the Browns announced several polic&gt;: changes desianed to
prevent a similar situation at their.stadium.
.
Among them;
.
• No more plastic beer ~ttles. Beer will be poured in~ cur,s
by vendors and at concesston stands. However, fans wtll still
be able to purcha~~e bottled soft drinks and water.
• Beer sales will be cu't off following the third quarter at day
games, and stopped at the conclusion of halftime during night
game.~.
.
• Fans will be limited to two beers per transaction. In the
past, they could buy four at one time:
• A "Ready Room" next to the field has been set up where
Browns officials can more easily communicate with the

PleiH ... Brown~. 12

RAGIN' IDIOTS- Game of.flclels cover their heads and leave the field as debris thrown bY fans
rains down on them after the game between the Cleveland Browne and the Jacksonville Jaauara
was called by the officials with 48 seconds left on the clock last December In Cleveland. (AP)

•

•

�hge B a •The Dlllly SMtiMI

PGA has look of '99
Th~ ummrtJS
• ~'1.\ on&lt;" of golfs i~llt.-st \\'&lt;'t'kl'nds ~~~~­
: Cllly lll\'&lt;lu~~ ll rivlllry , ~ o.lkll'illl and full of
· ~\'llthl\11 ~'hurisn111 thut it Jnlllliscd tu Cln)l the

CH 'K , Minn. (AP}-

: po.&gt;rt Mil intn the new ~-..mury.
E\'en

ll(IW, 11 tk~n

mlljor d\ampionsllii_)S

Iuter. th~t history-~hllpil\1 showdown ts
. 1\'n~ml'tered ns the time whl!n @Olf's ~t
· ~tttr ~ume \&gt;f ~l' tlnd llllOther stllf - one not
: l'l'l'l\ nf ugt' - Wtl.'\ born.
· . S•'l'gio G~i11. un impetuous lel:nll&amp;tr of I'il,
· did e1~rything f".)..'l.~ible tu wmt the POA
Climnpinnshi!'l from Tiger Woods. the Musltr8
II int~f IW\1 )'&lt;lUI'S hcl\)re lit ll who had )'d 10
win another im\ior.
.
Gm-.:i:1 sprint•'&lt;! down Mtdinnh's C.irwa.ys 10
11:1t~h the flight of his shots, bou111.~ in the air
\IS if trilnljlOiiM-propl\lled, \WUII!d his hips
l'\llnllk$.'\ llnles und wlJBied his-1i~ roww
Tlgt'r us.if to Sll)'. "Hey,-brint! it on:
Bring it on. inttetd.
Visibly &lt;'nel'\lized by the cllullenae from
snme~.,ne S\1 tulented, so feurlcss and so much
)'l'llllt;l'r th:m himseu: Woods held off G:IKia
hy one stroke Ill win his stcond ml~Jor,mld he's
hl-.:n winning ever since. He's wun se~n of the
lust 12 mujors l!t.ling inro this Week's POA,
tk~pitc lo.~inll his cluUK'l' utthe Grund Slum by
lllltl·rinll in h1st month's British Open.
·
Now, with 11 settinl! much like Ihat of the '99
llGA. l'\luld this be the week when Woods, try·
ing to bel,"()me the first 10 sweep the AmeriCIJI
nu\)ors (Mnstcrs, U.S. O!len, PGA) in the wne WARM-UP - David Duval drives on the 18th
ycnr. nnd Gorda n:vivc the music of Medinah? hole at Hazeltine National Golf Club In Chaska
Mnybe it's the' return of aolf's 1nost compel· Minn. on TUesday as ha prepares for the PGA
iti ve toumnmi!nt "'- 99 of lhc wtirld's tup 100 Ch&amp;amplonshlp bqlnnlna on Thursday. (AP)
1n: entered - 10 the Midwest. Or the remark·
ublc resembluncc between Medinah and · At' the same lime, Woods was milking n disMinnesom 's Ht~~.cltine Nutionul Golf Club. Or covery of his own: o golf course dull very much
·nmybc it's th(ll Woods h11s won two of this resembles Medinnh, nnd th111 menns u course
yl.'ufs three mi\Jors, und Gun:lu has been ri&amp;ht that very muc:h fllvors him.
1hc~ with him, plnclnt! in the top 10 In all
"Some of the looks, some of the shnpes
lhn~.
some of the holes, it looks very simifur;1
"ll1en:'s no doubt he's a a~at player; if not Woods said. "HopefUlly 1 con use the snme
the besl there's ever been, he's glose 1o it,'' feeling 1 had then this week."
Gm\·iu suid Tucsduy. "But I know my chnnces
w·11h 1ts towenlljl
·
1
d
lM there. l know whut I cnn do. I know thai if
map e trees un vust
expanses of wntersai:lc real estl\te, Huzeltinc
I'm plnyin!J. w~!l und I'm doina whotl c1111 do, . keeps getting c:ompored to Medinnh, nnd not
ll'llll bcut hun.
. ·
just by Woods.
11
Thut husn't happened yet in mlijor. Gartla "II seems to huve 11 lot of the snme feel us
wus down only twu strokes to Wooi:ls curly in . ,.edl .. ~
.. Phil M' k 1
'd
the finul round of the U.S. Open at Bcthpaae '"' nw,, to me,
tc e son sua ·
Bh1ck. but fndcd to fourth. At t.he British Open,
David Duval hod a similur n:uction. snying,
Woods cnpsizcd in the wind, .min and cold of "All the holes now tugethcr well, with the
Muirficld with 11 pro cureer-worst 81 that left ·exception of No. 16 along the luke. Thut one
him out of contention us Ernie Els won his third stands out 11 llule bit, it .stunds 11lone."
nuuor in.u pluyofl' II duy later.
Huzeltine's signature hole - Woods refe~
1 Now. buck home on a long course seemingly 10 it as such the 402-yllrd, pur-4 16th
suit~xl to his gume. Woods looked very much at requires a tee shot across Ht~~.eltlne Luke to 11
eusc whi lc pluying his first prnctice round of fairway nanked by w11ter, followed by un
the week Tuesduy nt Huzeltine. It was almost as approach to 11 peninsula green.
if he ~'(mldn't wllit to get out there, slortlng so
It's almost as if, after P.lnying IS holes on u
curly - right ufter sunrise - thnt fnns couldn't course unmistnkobly bmlt for the Minnesota
join him on the course for nearly un hour.
prolrie, the entin: tleld takes n wrong tum nnd
Once 1he gntes opened, the curly arrlvllls winds up - surprise!- smuck dub in the mid·
meed fmmieully from hole to hole looklna for die of Floridu.
·.
him. After finding him. the gallery quickly "It's going to be the one thut everyone is
swelled from 500 to 5,000 to thousands more going to probubly remember," Woods suid.
sti II over the next hour.
second nnd one out, Burry
Larkin grounded buck to ·
n:liever Mike Koplove, who
threw to first for the out.
Kearns initlnlly broke for
home, then hended buck.
Cosey kept coming, ieuving
. two runners ut third.
Keums eventually took off
for home und wus cuught In u
rundown.
· "It wusn't pretty," Bob
Boone snid. "It sure topped
the night off."
The Reds (ell buck into
third pluce in the NL Centrul,
u hulf-gume behind Houston
und 3 l/2 behind' St. Louis.
They seem to play their worst
uguinst the best - Cincinnati
Is 44-23 uguinst tepms with
iosin11 records, only 17-33
uguinst the rest.
"We didn't pluy too well,"
Dunn suid. "Thnt wus one bf
those things where we cume
out nut."

hit hls fifth homer In four
games.
·
"Is it 100 percent?
Probubly not,'' Hellln11 suid
of the unkle. "But obvaously
it's good enough. These two
storts hove given me hope.
The aood thina Is I've picked
up wllerc I left off, und I'm
throwing good ugain."
The Reds couldn't tell
there wus anything wrong
with him.
"From the du4out. he
looked tremendous.' rnunug·
er Bob Boone suid. "We
couldn't squurc on the bull.
We didn't &amp;ive them much of
o gume, I know that."
The Reds ended the gnmc
with two huge bose running
blunders in the ninth. Adum
Dunn singled, then broke for
second too soon nnd was
cuught stealing. .
With rookie Austin Kenms
on third• und Seun Casey on.

Brakes
from Pap II
1hc Dudgcrs' Brinn Jqrdun
while covering home on July
2. ·lie mudc two more sturts
but furcd poorly, and the
Dlumnndbucks put him on
I he disuhlcd list. ·
"I just thought I could d~ol
with 1he puin," said Helling,
..Jwhn gnve up 1wo singles nnd
Anr"n Boone's 23rd homer in
seven innings. "I never rcqllzcd how much it affected my
rnc~hunics. It's like ni~ht and
duy from where I was. •
The rlght-hnndcr returned
lust Wcdn~sduy und ~~~v~ up
one run · 111 seven 1n111ngs
while getting no decision
ugninst Atinntu. On Tuesday,
he uliowcd only one runner 10
reucl1 second - Boone, who

Browns
fromPapB1
lcu .. uc office in New York us well as security
..
personnel in the stadium. ·
Mcrlctti said that was the biggest problem
cillht months ago.
r.c
· i
1 ki h d "h
' ommumcut on was ac na t 01 11Y• e
suid. "Severely." ·
The Browns feel the new policies were
essential to ensure there would never be
1 b 1 h · 1 'd
h' h 1
ano1 Jer ott e-t rowln~ ncJ en 1• w IC a ong
wilh the "Beer Night ' riot in 1974 at an
Indian~ game, ranks nmonJ the most embarrassin~ events in Clevelun spons history.
· "We redoing what we think is the wise, and
rutiohal and reasonable thi~g to d9," Browns
president Carmen Policy saJd Tuesday.
Followin~ lnst year's m.elee, the Brow~s
reviewed v1deotape and sull fhoto"raphs m
·
h
h
hopes of identifying some o I e ans w 0
threw bottles or other debris on the field.
Merletti said 17 arrests were made and that
the club has revoked five season-ticket
accounts. The Browns also have photo~rapha
. id 1 h
h
of 24 ot her indIV uaa t ey arc 0 P na to
lind.
"We have not been able to identifh those
people but we will be looldna for I em at
these games," Merletti said. ''The matter is
not closed yet.:•
.
.
Merletti said the Browns always womed .
about the large plastic bottles, which have

l

Wedneadtly, Auguat 14, 2002

www.mydallysentloel.com

become u stuplc ut spom arenus und stadiums
nationwide, bcin~ un "issue".
·
However, desp1te the bottle-throwing inci dent in Cleveland, and u simllur bu1 smallerscale one In New Orleans the next night,
muny teams are continuing beer sales in plustic bottles.
·
"I d •1 bel'
h h
on
•eve t ot t ere huve been muny
chanies In the leu11ue as a result of this inc1·
dent, Polley suid. "Most of the teams I have
talked to arc going to hold onto utilizing the
plastt'c bottles"
'
Polley added that there is even u possibility
the Browns would return to sellin_g beer in
plastic bottles - as long us funs ab1de by the
rules and behave.
"Once the situation has been tested for a
period of time and everybody understunds
that was un aberration ' that occurred lost
year," he said. "Thnt's not going to happen
again if people use their heads and understunq
t" t h h • d l 1
fl
f h'
ua w at t ey re o ng s o re ect1on o t as
community."
.
. During o visit to Browns Stadium last
week, NFL commissioner Paul Ta~Habue suid
miscommunication between re eree Terry
McAulay and stadium security played a
malor pan in the situation worsening.
As a safety concern, Polley was asked if
McAuIay suould
"
work upcoming Browns
ga,~~hlnk that's a.pecislon for the leaaue to
make," he said. "I think they will conSider a
· 1 "f th'
Wh
h
vane Y u
tngs.
ntever t e leugue
~t;;.~s to do, we're willing lu work with

to extension

Bengals' Simmons
CINCINNATI (AP)- The Cincinnati
Bengal! nnd linebacker Brian Simmon
re:1ched agreement on a six.-year contract
exten$ion on ~esda}'.
.
Th~ d~ul w11l take Stmmons, 27.
1hrough th 2008 sc:~son.
The Benguls und
Jerrold
Colton,
· Simmons' agent
declined to put
total figure on the
T~e
puckuge1
tcnm s .officu~l
Web stte esttmated
the

"We' re gratified thtit Briun wunted to
be here, und that we were able to con·
elude things befon: the regular. euson."
. Simmon had 1he mo t S3cks by un
inside linebacker in franchise hi. tory last
season with a career-high 6.5. He wns
· '.
· h 139
s~nd m tackles w1t ,
. ..
I m happy, but lets go buck now to .
playing football:· Simmons snid. "All
along, I've tried to keep my focus on the
field. I know the contmct is imponun!.
but if you don't concentrnte on the gmne,
you won '1 ~et n very good contrJct."
Takeo Sptkes, the Bengnls' other tirst!'Ound linebacker fro~ the. 1.998 drnft, is,
an the finul year of hts ongtnul contruct
und could become a free agent after this ·
·season.
·
Spikes had a career-best ·173 tackles
and she sacks lust season. He suffered u
partially tom muscle in his chest lu~t
week but could return for the seusO)l
opener.
The Ben~ols made two moves
Tuesday, watving wide receiver Chris
Archie of Eastern Michigun·nnd fullback
Joson Murray of Notre Dum~. both rook·
ie free agents.
·

million 10 $4 million u ycur, with neorly $6 million in the
firs1 yeur. · ·
Colton said Simmons would sign the
contract ul\er Tuesday's practice.
Simmons, u first-round drnft pick in
1998, wus in the ftnul year of his original
five-ycur contract.
"Brinn is one of the key players on our
team. and it's impc;,&gt;nnnt thut we've been
Rblc to secure his future with us through
whut should be some
his best years,"
. nid Ben1.1.nls executive vice-president
Katie BluCkbum.
. · '

or

Rolen decisively ends -slump, Cardinals follow his lead

AROUND

THE
DIAMOND
NIIIOnoiiMQut

a

~nlu: ~tusH

fMI
W

L

ltcl.

01
-

n ..1 .tSS$
n s :eoo
118 eo .4811
118

et .• 'IS

5I
83
Cenlrll
W

L

14

112

.,

118
..

ea

••1t
11
II~

··"

01

l'el

.w
.us

3
.n

.Ut

112 11 .U1
so t7 .417

13\
14\

.:sse

.q 'IS
n
WMI
WLI'eiGI
'14 .q .1511
-

'
~

1:.

s.n l'lftnclloo ee 112 .m
1M MgtiiM

Ill
ell
4t

.558

.•

83 .471
W .41$
, . _ ... CII!Me
HOullon s. CNotgo Cube •
Oololado s,, _ 4
Monii'MI., LOt MgtiiM 3
Sl. LM 0, Pl-fQII &amp;

. ..
M\

Oololado
Sin DltQO

83

~ 3, Milwllll&lt;M 1
Sin D1tQ0 7, N. a... a
, _ .. Clnoln111111

v.

With Gandy out, linemen getting work
LATROBE, Po. (AP) With left tackle Wuync
Onndy nursing an ankle
sproln, there's been J:llcnty of
movement this week along
the Steelers offensive line,
iving some of the younger
ft nemen a chance to prove
themselves with t11e starters.
First, Oliver Ross moved
to len tackle to take Gandy's
place. Thot allowed firstround draft pick Kendall
Simmons a chance to move
imo the starting lineup ut
right gunrd.
Then, Simmons injured his
hund on Mondly, sending
Ross buck to right guurd and
givlnjl second-rear player
Mathllls Nkwenua chnnce to
piny with the storters nt tack·
-!e.
·
Through it all, the conches
ure getting un opportunity to
see how the younger pluyers
perform next to more sea. soned linemen und ugoinst

lust . year's top-ronked to right guurd nnd Nkwenti
defense;.
came In as the stnning lej\
"I just look ot • it as a tackle.
chancl'l for me to get better.
A founh-round pick 11 yeur
Going against tlle ones ngo, Nkwenti. u niltive of
(starters) ·and stuff like that Cameroon, hus been consid· ~ives me o chance to ·ered u project for line couch
1mprove myself overall,'' Russ Grimm. Nkwenli
said Simmons, who sold he plnyed only one yeur on the
wasn't satisfied with his per- line at Temple und was inacformonce with the second tive last seuson.
.
teom offense in last week's
In the off-seuson, Nkwenti
pn:season loss to the Jets.
said he mude strides t:n
"I get down on myself improving his understunding
probubly harder than the of the gume.
couches will. I don~t like dis·
"He's come u long wny
appointing them, nor !~!)!Self.,. since lust yeui', but he still
so I'm trying to gct'better hus u ways to go," Grimm
each chance r get," Simmons said.
.
said.
"I'd like to see him pick jt
Simmons played well with up n little bit und huve a little
the first unit In practice · more sense of urgency in his
Monday before injuring his ploy," suid Couch Bill
left hand with a couple of Cowher following pruclice
plays n:moinlng in ' u scrim· Monday. "He's got n lot of
mnge. He returned to prnc· obility. He just needs to piny
tice Tuesduy - but not with more of u sense of
before Ross was moved back urgency.''

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel

San~7.AIIomat

Wldn•adlfl GIIMI
Houolal (Millor 11-3) 11 Clllcogo C\lba
(C.II-no W~ t::IO p.m.
• Oololado (NMglt ..7) 11 , _ ('-Y
a..!), 7:05 p.m.
Loa Angotea (1111M 11-7) 11 Monti'NI
(t:olon Sol). 7:05p.m.
Sl. Loula (1-1 1·3) II PlllltiUfllll
(K.Wtla11•8), 7:05p.m.
- Sin Franclaoo (L:H-ndtt Nl) 11
Atlanta (Giavlne I H), 1:05 p.m.
·
MllwN\tt (J.Wrtght 4-11) II f'Nllrlttphil
(ROI 0&lt;1 ), 7:05 P.")·
Sin DltQO ( L a - ID-e) at N.Y. Mell
(Laller1D-e), 7:10p.m.
AltloNt ( . . , . _ H)

at Clnolf111111

(!'em41ndtt1-l), r:1o p.m.
'11\-..y't CllrMe
· San DltQO {lbmko S-e) II N,Y, Mete
{ThomtOn 7-8), It: tO p.m.
Houi!On (Su.- W) II CNclj10 Cubl
(PilOt ~l. 1:10 p.m.
Loa llnQtlll (Dill t-1) 11 MonlrNI
(VUquN H), 7:05 p.m.
Sl, LOUII tHfOI&lt;man 13-3) II PltllbWOil
'{e.nton •-e), 7:05p.m.
MilwiUkH
(Qu8·10)
II

•

Plllla!ltlpl\11 tts.MVM l-21, 7:05 P.lll·
ArlmM (.11111111011 17-4) • Clnolnlllll
(Demplltl'1-11~ 7:10p.m.

Sin Franclaoo (Sclvnklt 7-1) at"lltlanl&amp;

(MOta 7o4),1:3S p.m.

I

--LMgue
fill
W L l'oL
73 &lt;14 .U4
118 G .Mt
118 eo .483

112 ..

•... ,

38

.331

78

Ql
-

I·

It\

an
M~

. . .....

Page 83

•
.
Wednesday, Aucust 14,2002

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
an RBI single.
Scott Rolen ended his
· GIANTS 7, BRAVES 2
slump so decisively that the
Jeff Kent homered twice.
St. Louis Cardinals couldn't doubled and drove . in four
help but feed off his exuber· runs, and Russ Ortiz pitched
ance .
seven innings of five-hit ball
Rolen had a triple and two as San Francisco won at
singles ond drove in three Turner Field.
runs for the third straight Ortiz (8-8) allowed a solo
game Tuesday night. and four homer to Julio Franco in the
other Cardinals hud.thn:e hits third and u run-scorihg single
in 11 9-5 win over the .by Keilh Lockhnn in the sev·
Pittsburgh Pirates.
enth. He struck out three and
"It's a lot of fun," said wollced two.
Mike Matheny, who hod n Kent hit a three-run homer
double nnd two singles. "We in the third, port of a four-run
just need to keep going wilh inning off Greg Moddux ( li n. Don't get complacen~. ju~t 4).
see how long. we can .nde II
ROCKIES S, MARLINS 4
out.''
In Miami. Larry Wolker
The Cardinals had a sea· and Todd Helton each drove
son-high 18 hits and nre but· in two runs and Colorado
ting .392 (47-for-120) over defeated FloridJI.
the last three games. •
Wulker's two-run triple off
Over that span, Rolen is 7- reliever Armando Almanza
for-10 with two homers, two highlighted a three-run sevtriples and six runs scored. enth as the Rockies rallied
He had just two hits in his from a 4-2 defici't. Earlier in
pn:vious 32 at-bats for St. the inning. Jay Payton's
Louis, nnd only two RBls in groundout scored Juan Uribe.
his first II games since being
Mike Hampton (7-13)
troded from ' Philadelphia to olio wed four runs in six
the Cardinals on July 29.
innings. He has won consec"The funny thing is I felt utive storts for the first time
better during my 0-for-20 this season.
streak," Rolen said. "That's
PADRES 7, METS 2
· what was so .frustrating about
Rookie Jake Peavy came
it. It was the best I' ve felt all within two outs of his first
Sellson. "
career cqmp Ietc game, an d
Matt Morris (14· 7) hus had three hits to lead San
won four of his lust live deci- Diego to the win at Shen
sions. He allowed one run Stadium.
· und six hits liS the Curdinuls
The Pudres ·won despite
won their founh struight.
umpires reversing a call and
"I thought tonight WO$ as tuktng a homer awuy from
good us I've seen him." Ryan Klesko after he had
Matheny said. "He has the already rounded the bases.
potentiul to do that every Replays confirmed it was a
night. It's fun to cutch a guy foul bull.
like that because he's pitchPeavy. (4-4), in his ninth
ing, notjust throwing."
stun, ollowe~ two runs and
· The Cardinals scored four. live hits in 8 1·3 innings. The
runs in the third off Jimmy right·hander struck out six,
Anderson
(8-13).
Jim wulked one und won for the
Edmonds, Albert Pujols and founh time in five decisions.
Rolen sturt.ed the inmng with
Trevor Hoffmun got the
smgles. Eh Marrero doubled last out with the buses loaded
in two runs and Matheny hod _for his 29th save.

SOLID OUTING - Padres starter Jake Peavy follows through on a pitch In the ninth Inning
against the Mets, Tuesday In New York. Peavy got the win, pitching eight and one-third Innings,
allowing two runs on five hits as the Padres beat the Mets , 7-2. (AP)
EXPOS 4, DODGERS 3
Troy O'leary hit a goahead, two-run homer off
Eric Gagne in the eighth
inning as host Montreul beat
Los Angeles.
O'Leary hit Gagne's (1-1)
first pitch over the wall in
right field to put the Expos
ahead 4-3. It wus the third
blown save in 42 chances
for Gagne.
PHILLIES 3, BREWERS 1
Vicente Padil'la scattered
four hits over seven shutout
and
Mike
innings,

I

'

•

and Jose Vizcaino each
drove in a run, and Pete
Munro won for the first time
since July 23 Houslon won· a
game interrupted twice by
rain .
Houston took a 5-0 lend in
lhe fourth. then hung on.
Summy So sa extended his
hitting sfreuk to eight
games, but the Astros man·
aged to halt his offensive
barrage. He had homered
five times in the previous
three games and driven in
AS'I'KOS. S, CUBS 4
In Chicago, Jeff Bugwell 16 runs.

,Ill Reed makes Orioles look sick·in shutout

Ctlllrll

w

THU DAY,AUG

11
12
....

22,2002

~ . ,. ~ ·

73
71
M

• .MEIGS • EASTERN • SOUTHERN

· so

17\

an
ae~

Ql
2

l'el

....813
... .501
51 .575 ,
118

P.ic~

"

"' ........
11 .c«~
74 .311

WMI
W L

,

Gl

4~

an

.424

111Hd1y't 9ImB

c - e. TM~pelhy •

_,..l'!'~···· Be Sure t Be
Partot o A
This Year's
~~Fan Sports
Wew Edition/

·s .

MlnMIOII 8,11alll1110111 0
N.Y.'lankMI tO,I&lt;MIII City &amp;
CIIIOIQO Whllo Sao 12, Taua 3
Sllhlo10, Booton 3
Anaheim 7, 0.1~1 e. tZtnnlngo
Ookland e, 'lbnlnJo 4

Wod-cfiJ'o Ga-

·

'lbnlniO (Walqr WI 11 Ollkllnd (11l·tl. 3:31 p.m.
Cllvetond (IHI •11 II Tampe lty
(P.wtloon H). 7:15p.m.
BaiUmore (D~aklll 8•51 at Mtnnaaota
(lladke 4·3), 8:05 p.m.
- N.V.I'Ini&lt;Ht tPtlllno 7-4) 11 Klnllll City
(aYra t4-e), I:OS p.m.
,
Chiao go WillIt So• (lutMt t H or
Porquo H) at r.... (Valdtl Sot), 1:01

p.m.

,

Booton (Lowe te•5) at Stlnlt (Movfr 12·

4), 10:08 p.m.

Dltftllt (Miroth 4-4)'11 Anllielm (OIIIJ It), 10:05 p.m.

ThulldiY't CllrMe
Cllvetand (Wtttbrootc 1•1) '111 TaniiNI
.lay (Kennedy 7-1), 7:11 p.m.

tlalllmore

(Johnaon 3·t) •• Mlnnuot~

(LahM 10oe1. e:os p.m.

•
N.V. 'lanl&lt;tH (O.Htrnan&lt;ltZ 8·3) at
KanHI Oily tAHncla 2_.), 1:05 p.m.
Bolton (Foilurn 2· t) 11 Stllllt (Gitota
12-1), 10:08 p.m.

, ,BV TH.E ASSOCIATED PRESS

ttded would ha\'e felt even wone if

he hadn't finished.
Despite con.stant coughing and flulike
symptoms, Reed pitched a five-hitter und the
Minnesota Twins beat the Baltimore Orioles
6-0 Tuesday night.
"It was tough," Reed said. "I couldn't stop
coughing. 1'111 just ·glad I wus ubie to give
our bullpen a rest.
·
"We're n couple of guys shon right now,"
he said. "The guys we huve running out
there have to go deep into games. We can't
worry about ERAs right now. We have to eut
innings.''
Reed struck out four and walked one in his
first shutout of the seuson and sixth of his
career.
"Rick Reed picked us up bi~ time," Twins
manager Ron Gardenhire saad. "We asked
him if he was OK severn! times during the
gume, he told me, 'Sit the bullpen down. I
. ~ti~
.
In other AL games. Seattle beat Boston
10-3, Anaheim defeated Detroit 7-6 in 12
innings, New York topped Kansas City 10-5,
Oakland downed Toronto 5·4, Chicago beat
Texas 12-3 and Cleveland defeated Tampa
Bay 9-5.
Doug Mientkiewicz made it a bit eusier for
Reed, homering twice off Sc.ott Erickson at
the Metrodome. David Ortiz also homered
and hit a two-run double.
"Doug and David finally got some pitches
they could drive," Gardenhire said. "We
went up against some good pitchers on the
road trip. Our guys just came through
tonight.'
MARINERS 10, RED Sox 3
Ichiro Suzuki drove in three runs and
Seattle beat Boston at Safeco Field.
Desi Relaford tripled, doubled and singled
for the AL West ·lenders. He filled in .for
shonstop Carlos Guillen, who sat out for the
third straight game with a strained left thigh
muscle.
'
Manny Ramirez homered for the Red Sox,
who fell five games behind New York in the
AL East.
·
ANGELS 7, TIGERS 6, 12 INNINGS
Troy Olausacored the tying run in the 11th
lnnlna and alnaled home the winning run in
the 12th at Aniheim.
·
The Anaels won their fourth In a row and

kept a two-game edge over Boston in the
wild c:ard nK:e.
Detroit took a &lt;i'5 lead in the II th on
Carlos Pena's RBI double. Shane Halter slid
past the plate on the play, but scrambled
back to beat catcher Jose Molina's tag.
Glaus doubled to stan the Angels lith and
scored on pinch-hitter Darin Erstad's single.
In the 12th, Shawn Wooten doubled with
one out and Glaus followed with his single.
YANKEES 10, RO'I'ALS S
Roger Clemens got his 290th career victory, backed by Bernie Williams and the
Yankees bats in Kansas City. ·
·
In his second stun since coming off the
disabled list, Clemens won despite giving up
five runs, 10 hits and four walks in live-plus
innings, He reached double figures in victo·
ries for the 16th time, most among active
pitchers.
Williams homered, doubled and drove in
four runs. His 223rd homer moved him past
Don Mattingly for seventh place ori New
York's career list.
Mike Sweeney returned to the Royals'.
lineup - and went 2-for-5. He missed 30
games bccouse of back and hiP. strains.
ATHI.ETICS S, ilJ.U£ JA'I'S 4
Barry Zito bounced back from his only
two-game losing streak of the season to cam
his 16th win us Oakland beat Toronto.
Zito matched Boston's Pedro Mortinez
and Derek Lowe for the AL victory leud.
The Athletics lefty has lost just once at the
Coliseum since June 200 I.
Jermaine Dye hit an early three-run homer
for the A's and Eric Chavez had a tiebreak·
ing, two-run single in the seventh inning.
WHITE Sox 12,
.
,
RANGERS 3
Switch-hitter Jose Valentin homered from
both sides ·of the plate, connecting for a
grand slam and driving in six runs as
Chicago won at Texas.
Valentin hit his sixth lifetime slam and tied
his career for RBis. He has homered left·
and rlaht~banded in the same gnme three
times.
Aaron Rowand went 4-for-4, drew a walk
and was hit by a pitch for the White SoK.
Rafael Palmeiro hit his 31st homer of the
season for the Rangers and 478th of his
career.

REDS NO'IEBOOK

Call Dave or Betay
~t992·2155
For More Information~ ·

NONCOMMITTAL
Pint baseman Sean Casey represented
the Reds at the playerr' union meetlna
on Monday, filling In for Boone. Casey
was encouraged that the players· decided
not to set a strike date.
"We're still looking to get a deal
done," Casey said. "There's no strike
date, but rhere's still no deaL The tone
right now Is good."
.
The union will holc;l a conference calls
with ~'Pilayer representatives on Friday

The Daily Sentinel !
•

."': _ _ _ _ ... ___ ,.

L

ROUTINE PLAY - Detroit's Hiram Bocachlca fields a 'ground
ball single hit by Anaheim's Benji Molina during tha ninth
Inning Tuesday In Anaheim. Calif. (AP)
-

NOTICE tO
CONTRACTORS
ltllld prop01111
lor the r•vtng of por·
tlont o loout Camp
llotdL Allen llreet;
1nd Mill IIrette In
Chiller,
Ohio,
Ch11ter 1'own1n1p,
Mllgt Counl)', Ohio,
witt Ill reoelvtd by
the Mtlgt County
Commllllon•re at
lhtlr OIIIOI It lhl
CourthOUH,
Pomeroy, Ohio 41711,
· untlt 1tOO p.m.,
"l'hul'lday, ltpttmlllr
8, 2002, lnd thin II
1:SO p.m. It llld
ofltoe opened end
for an update.
ELMER IMPROVING
~=~~:w~:,ud lor the
Right-hander Elmer Deuens is eligible 10 Plvlng (1411. wtcjlcome off the disabled list Aug. 17, but will 3 tnon lhlokntlll of
2,000 lln11r Ill( of
get a little more time to let his strained groin Townehtp llo•d 112
heal.
tloout C1mp l'totd)
"We're shooting for the 22nd," manager . fn ChHitr townahlp;
Bob Boone said. "We think he's close. Of 3 Plvtng
!1211. wldl·
Inch lhloknen)
of
course, close could be a million miles away 1,200 ttn••• •••• ol
with those leg things.''
.
Townthlp Ao1d 1017
(Allen ltreet! In
Dessens, the Reds' top staner, strained his en• .., townen p;
groin on Aug. 1.

'
.

Lieberthal hil a two-run
homer and doubled as host
Philadelphia
defeated
Milwaukee.
Lieberthal. who hit three
home run s Saturday. is 25for-5 8 (.431) in his lost 14
games with five doubles, six
homers und 10 RBi s.
Padilla ( 12-7) allowed
four singles 10 pick up just
his second win since June
29, eight starts. He walked
two and struck out five .

'1.1"'

~,.-..-

.. -

....

-

Pevtng (1211. wide·
3 Inch thlckntll) of
1,000 linter IHI of
Town1hlp Aold 1022

(Milt ltr .. t) In
Chiller Town1hlp
lpeallloatlonl, and
bid lormt mty bl
HGUrtd 11 1M oHioe
of Mtllll Couniy
Comm111tonn,
CourlhouH,
Pomeroy, Ohio 417..
• Phone (740) 112·
AdtPOIII of 0 dOl•
11r1 will Ill requtrtd
lor -n 111 of plant
lnd IPIOIIIOIIIOnl,
oheok m1dl PIY!Iblt
lo. Thl lull 1mounl
wttl retu'"td within
thirty (JO) dtyl Iller
I'IOIIpt ol bklt.
IIOh bid mutt Ill
1o.oomp1nted by
either 1 bid bond In
1n 1mount olt Oil% al
lht bid 1moun1 wllh 1
ourety 11ll118ctory to
lho alore11td Mlltll
County
CommiHionn or by
Olt1tlltd OhiOk, Ollh•
ltrli oheok, or tatter
of oredlt upon 1
tolvent btnk In the
omount of not 1111

•••

emount In favor ol
lht alorlllld Mlllll
County
Comm1111onere. ltd
bond• ohall be
noomr•nled ' by
Proof o Authority ol
the oHtolal or agent
elgnlnglhe bOnd.
lldt thai! be
-*lind mtrktd •
ltd lor Chitter
townthlp CDIG
Ptvlng l'roJeot and
mailed or Cltllvtrtd
to:
M.tllll County
eommr~ttotllnl,

CourthouH0

PollllrOY, OH 41711.

No tllddtr m1y
WllhdriW hll bid
w"nln lhlr1Y (10! lillY'
alllr thl aotua dill
of th• open1n1
thereof. The Mtlgt
County
Commt..lotllnl
ret~rvt lhe rtght to
rtJIOitnY or Ill btdl.
Jell thornton,
Prtlkllnt
Melge
County
Comml11~

lo14, 21, 21,1001

.

•

�P1ge B 4 • The Dilly Sentln~e;.l-------------www-•.m•y•d•a•IIYI.""-tl·ne~l.•
co.m~----e!!!'ll--~~

Wednesd1y, August 14, 2002

'at:ribune - Sentinel - lae

~ ''"""~~"'' ..l'l'i""
\I'MI M..I ......,. ... J•t&gt;•o t.,jlt~lio \,.. t ~• ·
Wltorllnt Spoclol, ~4 200 IQQ8 l'lytnouth N1on E•·
PSI $21 00 Po&lt; 100, I' :ZOO proa10 ptaU~, S II).,

C .L A S S..I F I E D

•
,

,
•

PSI S3S 00 Par 100: All
Brait COmprtooJon Fltllngo
In Stoci&lt;
liON !VANS !NT!IIPRIIII Jackoon , Ohio, 1-80fl.
s:l7·8528

llandlnl, pw, pl. pd,
pW/ounroot, c/ll playor,
iMI,OOO mllaa. 18,800,
l740)9ia•IIIS7V

tha Proboll Court of
Melgl County. OhiO,
reqUIIII ng
1hl
change ot nemt of
JOihUI Adam Hill
10 Joahuo Adom
Grube. Tho hearing
on the eppllctllon

PIIOIATI COURT
01' MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

t7 Cl'lllltr, aood condition, IN Ill!: CHANGE 01'
•
IHI biUI, 18,000 n'\llta, NAME OF JOSHUA
ADAM HI!SS TO
• Toahlbl S.ttlllll 11755 . $S800 oeo. ... l740!9N·
JOSHUA ADAM
LaptOt) CO"'I&gt;"tor. FUlly,
1181r"7--:i""'~~....,
GRUII!
loadtcl lnc:ludlng 0'10. •II&lt;•
'I'RI"'~
niW Par1ect lor cotlagt IIU·
~ ~'
doni or any uu. Beg. 11:. ..._llllilllil(lkiiiSAililii.Jo:._..
CAS! NO.
.• and car ldlpter~ Included,
31231
• $750. C.III740,.48·11SS or 1gg 5 ene.y cn.yonne t/2
: 1740)441· 5518
'nln, E&lt;ttndod Cab,' V8.
NOTICI! OF
• N!W AND USID IT!!L ATAC, nt CruiH, ca...ttt.
HEARING ON .
Hitch &amp; Cooler. SQ ,OOO
Stool U.Omo, Plpa Rtblr mllla. Gorlgt/Carport Klllt. CHANGE OF NAME
For C....,..tt, Anglo, Chon. All&lt;lnQ St0,100. (740)245·
no!. Flat Btr, Sltll Grotlng 0811
Appllnnl hereby.
, For Dralno. Drlvawll'l &amp;
•
QIVII nollct IO Ill
, WlllkWlVt. L&amp;L Scrap Mot· -1Q_Q_S_ Docl!l
-,,- R
- o_m_ t-500
:.,... 1nt1reated pereona
011
:
Optn -~· 111aaday, Ltramlo Sl.T. 311· AutO: 1nd to Ch11lly Hen
• Wodntadly &amp; Friday, 111m· 2W0. 811 Bod , Loaded, tl"t lht 1ppllc1nl hll
4.3Qpm, Cloood Thufldoy, 1oaK 111200: (700)441·
flied
for
en
Soturuay
a Sunaoy. 4328 ·
.
Appi!OitiOn
ol
1740,.48-7300
1gga Dodgt Dakota. OOyl, &amp; Chano• of Nama In
Now Molly Dak Covoralil, flllMd Now Tlru. Bedllntr.
: Llrgt. 130: A~ COI.J. mt- Q3,oo0 mlltl. _ $3,300.
• dlum lho&lt;l, $20, 174o,.48· (740)1$8·1424.

i9

""'""-·""

In One·Week With Us

OVER 285,000. PROSPECTS

REACH

==~O~N=L=IN=E~~~~--------~

PLUS

.. 2318
•

..

/}ulrltir~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m._, to 5:00 p.m.

Dl8pley Ade

D•lly 'ln-Columi'U I rOO p.m.
Mond•W·flrlday for lnoertlon
In NeMt D•v•a ~taper

Att Dlepleyt l2 Noon 2

Daya Prior To

8und•y ln•Colunu\1 1100 p.m.

• Start Your Ail With A Ktyword •

llor 8undaya "•per

lnct~o

for

rtldy V80 modtm
S700: Gtrmln GPS t 2,
$100 , now In bO&gt;&lt;: Sony
TVA58 ctmoro. hondy cam
with night •11101\, U Inch,
color LCD ocrttn: lrtpod,
ohltijlr matching loathor
Sony carrying 0110, all now
$2!0: 21' aluminum cabin

New · FIO•MIIIII t•hoult.
AlldnQ, $8,000 OBO Mora
Into. 01111(740)24&amp;•&amp;347 or
(740)3Si·3118a

• to, 13041773·81&amp;1
: Old Hand Forgt&lt;l Toolo,
• Sawo. Ptanaa 1880' Wood
• Sttdtr, 11' long, 1354180
aooh.
1740)H2-7888
1740)QQ2·8019

buUI FrQtll End. NMdl mo·
tor or rtbunt. 11 800.
(740)448·7928

rii

V

&amp;
4-WDs

compltttl

• Ada lhould Run 1. ~VI

--~-

\11 HI II \'\PI"I

P1111uro conn11.
1740)048·2318

i

Rlt Ttrrllr pupa llrOkl, • VIIP werrenty,

-2002 Honda 450S Foroman, new tlrtl, 4 year war·
ront't_ (740)4&lt;11-7311
,.....
"·
rw
'-""'l'llRS"'

MtYitlR lloM•:ll
AKC Bo•oro, 111 enoto, ...lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...
wormed. 1 Fawn. S brlndlo,

·9:::;8&amp;::&amp;~--: 1978 Chomplon motor
:S2::!0~·.ll7~4:=.!0)3:::68::.::;.:
homo,
&amp;4 ,8&amp;0
mlloo,

Molgo Counly. oond lotloro

or

lntera~t

to: The Dally

AKC Collin Sholtltl, &amp; $2,885. 28'. ooll oontolnod,
Pomo pupploo. vot ohool!od call 1740)88&amp;·4433 or 740·
near Shodt, 1740)811e·t065 Q82o0241
Bloodhound Pupo, 13&amp;0. _200_2_32_11-. -H-,-.,-R"'n-a-:O-ooo
-o
Mull S.tll 4 maloo a 4 Ft· ntok troller. :ZO,OOOibl. Nov· .
mtlt1. (740)24&amp;·0304.
or bton uood. $8,000.
!ib MUSICAL
11304)874·0100
L-•1Ns'iiii111illllliiiiiii.NI'Siiii._.· For S.la 24 11. 2000 Horntl
,
otmpor 1111· oontalnod,

r

11u

IIIIPI 8 1 llr, vttry nice,

lbl.l' W1WI1'Jl

seoo. 1nd

..,.. ..,.r PlY·
~r~~·.c•IT•~t. oon· mtnll 304·878·8381 otlor
••
200 . 8pm. wk dayo,
.
~;~~~;;,r...,TIIAVIL
Prowlar, 18TIIAILIII.
II, Slaapo' 82
8,
New Awning lnd ~roo . Su·
por nloo. 13800. 1740)448·
8!08.
"- Ill\ It, . . .
Bloakblrrlll U·Piol&lt;, 12.00
qt., on 124 E. Ol SytiOUH, iftj~;;;;~-...-..,
Ohio 892·7«9
HOME .
Conning tomatptl, ptoktd
IMPIIOvt:M•:.NI'S
SMO 1 buohol, u·plok $4.00 ,
a buotitl, bring oOI\talnert. All IVPM or m11onry brick,
1110 boll ptpport avallabla, blook &amp; otono 20 yro, oxpo·

Sonllnel, PO Bo• 729·20,
Pomoroy, Ohio &lt;5769.
Admlaeton• Repruentallva

Some College Neceaaluy,
Fo111r Ftarantl.
Salaa Ellperlenoe Helpful .
Local Agency tn Ohio •••~· Send Reaume to: FtO Box

lng quallllod couploa to bo· &amp;&lt;2, Kerr, OH

4~3.

come Foater parenta In - - - - - . - - - Lawrence. Gat11e, Jaokaon.

Anentlon :

Molga areao. Thora will be
S to I0 tamllltl ChoMn to

NATIONAL COMPANY
!KPANDINQ

project. Ouallllod apptloanll
may rocolvo uo to 1&lt;0.00
.per day relmburaemant In·

NOiN hiring In New

become pari ot the pilot

!trilled

pertlea

Call

1740)848·0673 aok lor·ROb·
art . If vou have prevtouttv

r

catted, pteaae call again.
GIVl'.AW~Y

YorKahlra lerrior, 1·1/2 year
old

male (hOUIItralned)

17&lt;0)388·8850

101 l!ut Drive.
QaiiiPGIII, OH 45831

(I) 14, aooa

i'o

Gallipolis Ottlco.

:21 Mtn and WOmen
nHded tmmedtatelv.
No &amp;llperlenoe nece11ary,
training will De provided.
Muet be t e or over and abto
to stan lmmodlately. ·
1400.00 per WHk to Stlrtl
(per agreemen!)
C&amp;ll tor lnlorvlew
Wednetdey lhd Thurtday

Raymond

IIEE ISTIMArES
SMAll 01 UIGI JOISIII

SINCE 196t

Mu~~s Tru~ttlr &amp;

E'lttipm~nl

DeanHW

l'urts

Fu•IOr)' Authori1ed

IACKHOE • DOZING • END LOADER •
TRUCKING • TRENCHING

New&amp; Uaed

Cuse-111 Purts
D.:ulcrs

IIPTIO 1UU.lUCIIIDI

475 South Church St .
Ripley, WV 25271

S""'"

WITII... IUCTIIID
MllllliOMI 111 .... 111111

011111... IOIUIIIAI.

1·800·822-0417
"W.V's HI Chevy. Pontine. Bulck. Olds
&amp; Custom

Connie's
Child CARE

7ue ft4're s,pec.t.'4t'UUi
ey s..tU., ~...

55

(iii;\

.

We Care For lv ur

Trees~

4-""-· A~~tAi441.

. .__, ~

'?nAt~

~

BOARD

P-...:M. 6.16·, I
Swill. Swai11

a'-,

has openings, 15 yr.
experience, Cerlllied
In Meigs, Athens and
Washington counties,
Open 24 hours.

7 Days per week.
St. At. 7 Tuppers
Plains, OH

Cltlllitwli.l\ Ollio• (740) 446-2015
ISA Cert((ied Mborisl

CALL 667 ·6329

·ODD JOBS

me.

Painting, Power
W11hlng, Mowing,
W"deetlng
You Need It
Done, We 'II Do It

(740) 949·402'6
or

(740) 591·9239

Rowe

I

Farm, rlenoe,

lrll

lltlmatt,

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING 8o HEATING

CONSTRUCTION

E

LIVlrsrocK

,,

For all Bingo Customers
on Aug. 22nd
Eagles 2111

Stop in and see the bargains
Monday thru Saturday
B amtll5 pm

(740) 992·07~9

• Service On All Brtncn

• Raaldenllll 6 Light Co~mereltl
• 10 yr. porta 6 Labor
• Hutlng &amp; Air Condlllonlng ,
· www.amerlcanatandlrdalr.com

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING
4 ·1 21

MANlEYS
SElf STORAGE

97 Beech St.
ffilddleport, OH
' (10'M10' 610'M20')

·

p...~~~~-:'- 1 (740) 992-3194
Aug. 17 Starting at 6:30pm
All Packs $5.00 each
Starbust 1,550.00
American Legion, Middleport

• Halting
• Air Condillon~r•

"S"LES AND SERVICE"

Terry Lamm

842 Second Ave.
446-1405
Annual Fair Week
SALE

992-6635 '

l..ocal 843·5264
Medicare Supplement: l..lfe Insurance;
llurlal and Flnul •:xpenses; Ctmcer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rolloven;

Mor1111111C; Mlljor Medical

• Nundng nome

Business Services

~~~- Rootrn~4~)~~~:~~~:

Cellular

middleport, OH

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

m n. Second nue.
(740) 992-1705
Tonia Reiber

Licensed by the Ohio

TFN

State medical

The CRAFTY.

HOWARD L.
WRITESEL

Q,IJ CadeC &amp; Gravely

BLIND SPOT

Massey ·Ferguson

(Factory Outlet)
All •.,ucol bllmlo •••
m•cl" lo order al
our lor.atlon
• Vertlcalo • Woo•l
• ~llnlo • El&lt;

Roofing· Home
Malnlenance·
Gullers • Down
Spout
Free Esllmates

Parts &amp; Service

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359 St. At. 160
Galllpolte, OH 45631

144 I'Wrd AYI. Iialplll

446·4995

TI'N

(740) 446-1044
Monday·Frldey 8-SPM • Saturday 8·2pm
P/B

CONTRACTORS
, INC.

WEST SHADE
BARBERSHOP
New Manaaer·

you buy, Fr11 Etllmtlll
304·875-3733

Suptrlor Home ConllrUO·

,..,.,.-.,

'"'10, od, 1unroof, nttdl
oomt bOdyWOrk, rune good

Georae Korn
Nrovlbn

• 'J'onn~ue Cover
• VenlviNOr • llu1

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Beahan Road .

Racine, Ohio

45771
740·11411·2217

Slut 5'x1 0'
to 10'x3o'
HOUri·

IShh!ld &amp; Full Lint
Olher AeeeHHorles
I

I

'\ .1 I&lt;

\liddl·t'"ll

,

111 1111

I d

{J i ll

(740) 992· 5R22

'IIIH'It 8:3DIIII•&amp; pm

MOOOn!f. S(dhl&amp;.

P••ln1ln.11. Ouuon. l&gt;ecka

Free Eelimateal

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
1114/1 mo:

(740) 1112•11111
Affordable Prlcet ·

Pomeroy Eaalet

BISSELL

740.985-3948
CONCAETE/BLO
CK/BRICK
• Footen, Wulls, S1ep11 •
Flut Work.

Sit. 7n ·12 noon
a-!Mandlly
Appolnrmsnte lor
1hut-1n1 Available

SEIIL IT ·

CODSTRUCTIOn

Racine, Ohio 45771

RepiHcelnenu, • Wulkii

and Drlvca • Stencil
Creu.~

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION
• New Horne•
• Garage•
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·1671
7122/TFN

J6S ELECTRIC li

UmESTORE

PlUmBtnG

O.llverld l Spread

Jim Fllulrk

llevtriG. Plumbing,

Special 8 ton
$135.00

•nd email Home
Melntenanoe .JODI
(340 773•11412

740·742·7037

Find

Sunny

Savings
in the
Class
The

Foreman: Larry
Owner:
740·387·01111
Ronald "Mick" Haning
Chrlellna ·c~rls" Haning
740·992-0780
Cell f 740·59Hl919
Coli: 591·8393

Under Naw
Management

1QQ3 MIXdl MX8, amllm

2000 llrand Prl• GTP,
17 500
miiH, 111\'lr,
11a,ooo. !740)387·5421.
94 Corvtltl Coupt, whlta
wrth rt&lt;l ltalhtr, ~H. tap,
k&gt;ad«l. COl catltllt radio,
113,500 080. 17401582·
7512

Haning's Construction

mEIGS mHSSIIGf
THERIIPY

Chtok our prloe bttort

'Vrtf''"

Roofing, Siding, lldd-Ons, Electrical,
Plumbing; Decks, Remodeling,
Drywall, Painting_

lire you slressed?
Call now for your

949•1405

lion. Wt do all rop11ro on
homoo, rtmodtllng, plumblng, hot Wlllr lankt, Undtr ~-:==:-:
lklrlln , (740)441-()113
•
EurcnuCALI
llwHIGFJIA110N
'
Rtlldonllal or oommtrclal
Wiring,, now HNiao or ,.. • lloom Addlllono I
lltmOdtllng
polrt. Maollr Llotnltd tltO·
•
NtwGaroo••
lrlclon. Ridenour Eltctrloal,
1110111011 I Plumbing
WV000308, 304.e7&amp;·17e8.
lloollng I Qultfrt
1QQ3 Goo Storm aood oon·
I
dillon. Run and c!rlvot rHI
good 11200 (740)QQ2·113St

It ,280.tlrm.
304·773·541&amp;
19114 !!agio Vlolon. Cltln,
Extro Spocltl Condition,
Laodad. 1379&amp;. (740)440·
11111
t894 Plymoulh AOOiolm.
Runt ~ - Driven dlltv.
11200. 080. (1104)17 ..
433&amp; till epm. (304)4stte73 altlr 8pm.

l' hon&lt; (740)593 · 6671

Alhuns, Ohi o

l{ock\ R. llupp lu~.
anti
Financial Sl'n in·~

I

1&amp;84 Cadllloc, 82,000 mlloo,
power t'llrythlng, mint,
. mull HI, 13,000 080
·1740)441 ·087&amp;
1&amp;64 Chryoltr Llztr, lland·
•ord lranomllllan, dirk blua,
l800 080 !740)445·&amp;209
18e2 Moroury Sablt, All
Powtr, 1 ,Owner. 1740)448·
&amp;253.
tQQ2 Z·24 Co'lllltr aood
condlllon (740)387.038~

750 Enst Stnte Street

appl.

(740)379·
2 COWl (a.llod Galloway), 2 :.;;;..;;..,::--"":"-:--:::Holloro, t Bull, t Sloor.
Latl Chan at lprlng ltv•
1 Sounon Bill)' goot 1 112 lngo
· yro old .tom• bloutllut onl- Home romodollnQ ond ro·
molo.30H75·1828
palro , roollng, chain link
ltnOt,OUOIOm wood daokl 5
1 U \"-'·d'CIU I \ 1111 '
lonooo, lnouranot roptlrt.

AIJI'Ofi
.UN SAI,R

Siding. and
Additions
Owner:

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

1740)378·2131,
,L.~------"'·
.
2571
.

rlu

Specializing In:
Roofing , Decks,
Remodeling,

FREE FISH FRY

VIU llld onP

( &lt;t

All

740-667-0363

1740)247·4282
(304)773·9&amp;50
I"!"--~"!!"!~~
Homegrown Swaot Corn II
IAIIMINT
....
K·MOII Lot In Galllpollo Ro·
WATI~P~OOPINQ
J
111M 11 1tall. SUO dozen II Farm In unoondlllonol lllollmt guor·
Ill CH
I I
, LOll ol_&amp;0 Dozen or mort. antlt. LOoal rolortnotl rur·
llllllr DIU hll•
81.7&amp; doztn. Corn A•ollltjo nlohtd. Eotobllohod 197&amp;.
ltltl.lll"~ 11
ell Summor. Baughmon Coli :If Hro. 1740) 4~8·
•
Form. (740)2&amp;8·6836
0870, Rogort Btotment
Wlrk
Molano tor Solo 11 Ttoyofo Watorprootlng.
FDI MDII
Woodcrolt,
9
m1111
Woot
or
t•JOI"-o•
Gallipolis.
Black Top St~llng . Rtol·
_., CALL
denUal·
Comm~tcral . Fr11
111111111111
I 'H\1 \ l 1'1'1 II ...,
Eollmatto. (740)742'4529·
,\ I I\ I \ I I II h
740·&amp;81 ·lll43
Cl•llllllllYtCIJII
;;;=;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;~ C6C Gtntrll Home Molntfo
AIIIICI
nonao· Painting, vinyl old· 740.992·2222 or
.:;;;;,._.. lng, carpentry, doorl, win•
74,._44.,_1018
- · · bltho, mobllo homo 1 _.;.;,;;"",..;..;.,..;..;.;.,;.;..ool
: Gra•IIY riding mowor. 18 ropolr lnd mort. For lrtt •
• hp .. eo· out, oall alter 4:30 tollmata coM Chtt, 740·8D2·
' II:!DD2·3701
,
8323.

Only
I :OOim•I:OOpm
1740,.41-0352

740-742-3411

DEPDYSAG
PARts

filii'------.,
r

4yr. Old Lu11or Soller.
Ct!tltd Cookatoo. With
Cftgt. 2 mall Owner only.
Fornale Aggrtlll\'1, 11200.
1304)773·5789

tor aa!e, Cheater Townahlp,

FREE ESTIMATES!

~J•:S

$4&amp;.00 each 30H7&amp;-58&amp;0 14800 OBO. 1740)448-3348

;ft;r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks, Kllchens, Drywall
a More

• Bucket Truck

8UWliNG

ti ll

I \II'IIJ\\11 '\ I
'-II It\ It I ..,

Bryan Reeves

• Top • Rimovol • Trim
• Stump Grinding

C'o11MIIe. 01/4571.1

1888 FOil! A1nuar pull&gt; bul•
ton 4·whttl drt111. E•tondod
oab. now llrtl, new .paint.
130. Exoellont Condition. $2800.
(304)87&amp;•8121

11988 Fonl F280 XLT 72,000
mllaa utandtd cab, Bit .bod.
~
• &amp;.4
onglnt,
StQ.QOO
l740)8e9·2122
Block, brick, IIWII plpal,
windows, llnltll. tiC. Cloudl
M·-~··:vu ·~
Wlnllrt, Rio Orondo, OH
v•~~
11741).24&amp;·&amp;121 .
·-----·
1990 CR-128. Good Condl·
tlon. 1800 OBO. 1740)387·
0632
3· 3'mon. old t/2.Jaak Rue· 2002 400EX 4·WhMior, 4•

C·1 Bear Carry Out permit

Molthtw T. Gruba,

/IX~i S1. Rt. 7

I ;ee Jttp C - 4, 4
crulatr with traUtr $400. ea ~lbullt Ti'anamlulon~ Rl:

o ..crlptlon t Include A 'ric. t Avoid AbbreviMIOI\I
• Include 'hone Numbtir And Add,... When Ntedttl

Tree Service

740.992·5232

The Dally Sentinel
Classlfieds

oV'iS

Sunset Home
Construction

JONES'

Probtlt Court ol
JJ79S HiliiMtl Rtl.
Mtllll · County,
PrnHtroy. Obio
1oc1tlld 11 2nd Floor.
courthouae, Second
Street, Pomeroy,
OhiO.
..__ _ _ _ _...

ChlW)I, aood motor
• Ntw "-ntlum 4, · 1.3 8111 ltilln GMC. $SOl) oomtcomputer. 0'10 ptayor, CD bl..,._· taktn out, 1740)742·
writer dravta, Iuper l11t. 3805 evening~.
19• ooto~ mar\ltor, cemtra, · =:;;:.:~7.::-:::-::-:::::-::
oconntr. Mlof1)oolt worko 89 DorliM 314 tor\ 4·-1
• w/Wonl Pr&lt;l{jl'lm, USB portt. dt1.., 116(), 4•flll"d, 0' lilt.

'
:
•
·

'Jtoa. ~~
High&amp; Dry
Self"Storage

380

' tlhornot

·J:n•cludea Pree Yard Sale Slgnl
Up To :lifJ worda, 3 Day•
O\l•er 15 Worda 20¢ Per Word
Ada Mu•t Be Prepaid

will be held on lht
11th
diY
Ol

Septen\btf, II 1:30
· o'clock p.m. In the

=='·=:-:==-=-=

To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
l\egi!iter
Your Ad, (740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446·3008
or Fax To
H2-2157 ·
875-&amp;234 ....
Worcl Ad•

The Dally Sentl.nel • Page 8 5

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Wednesday, August 14, 2002

\'ot1r

OIICI'Ite Coaaectloa, LT

Qolilll
Ctlci'IIIII""II'H 110rtl

7.0.742-1015
(m..W.7tl2i

Coli"'"'"'""''"" .._
lMIIIII

BING02171

Every Tburtday
&amp; Sunday
Doon Open cl :30
Early blrda allrt

6:30
ht Thunday or
every month
All pack S5.00
Brln1 th" coupon
Buy SS.•OO
Bonanza Get

5FREE

BUilDfRS IDC.

New Home1 • VInyl
Sidlna • N~w Oaraaea

• Replacement
Windows • P.ootina
COMMERCIAL end

RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740.992·751111

IIMI'IIIEIII

Do you want 10

• Lou 10·20 lbl', ptr
monlh? (Jnd kNP ~
off)

• OtornN Appt~ll
• lncrNN Energy
• Lowtr your S1t111
• Look &amp; Fell IIIHtr

CALL:
J11nle Howell
7..0.882·7038
11ft Ill ll.lln•••

~QIJ/N~ 12
Lilli! Df!SIQN PRIMI! 12
. Lilli! Df!SIQN YOUTH
I
NATURI! Will! "" LAYI!R
I
:RIVI!R RIIN PROIII!BIIONAI. DOG I"'OD•

I
I

I

OI'I'IR CIOCO TH~U 11»01
LJMIT IIAOI Nil CUITOMI~ WITH Till~

OHI ~ 1'1~ HOtJHHOI.O

I

------------------~---·'

�Wedneaday, Auguat 14, 2002

www.mydally..ntlnel.com

Page 8 6 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEY OOP

NIA Cro11word Puule

IRIDOE

PIIILL!P

ACROSS

ALDER
1

flrat-clau

.
'WI

•

IS Shick

•
•

1a~J.~~

-

,. J.

~•!II

Wnl

.. J •
•

~-~

K1

t A.qJI~un

t l '4

.A.\,p t l P .. 1St
S!'UUI
A ,\KQI"J
., l,llott~

.

ro

~ ~llAT ~OJ 1'\\11-!K? 'IOJ
t.k.. 'ala ~t.LL'I 1\0N~~T..

.

t • I

'

I 'NII:'r' f-:11•t
Vulnf'rt~hle-.

1 ~INI&lt; 'tOJ N•IOt&gt;
10 SCI&gt;-\.E et\CI&lt;.
'10 fl!ti~PIJCCINCl .

\\"~\1

N•rt•

,.

~ ·

• •

I '•~•

..

NeHh.-r

5o1Ktl.·

l'ua

ttnor

OIIIOJ

• •n •
•A. Jt143

l'•u

t:l"l

llbl

Dramatic deals

=

44
41

ora

E'*"¥01'

In

a

==-4e Ateohlte
S1 Nal lot rMI

17 Tenet
S7 Hau
11 lnvnt
hunch
11 "Nova• ntt· Sl Unw111tod
21 wapnl
23 JOllie !rae-

21 TIIP

$0 Co!IH INk·

er
31 Inc. coualn
32 Broad

neclllle
33 OIUCIIO'I
rope
u DJ elbuiN
$7 Chlfllld

M•lp County'a

~ta

-k

tlon
a ·-- jiOOd
aPOI'tl'
27 N'urua org,

·

DOWN

20 CIIMI

topper

1 Chum
2 RoHmlp

12 Slrved
IOUP

abllf.

$ 401~k)
·coualn
4 ShOll eklrta
5 BIQ LNQUI

24 More

IUV91111'ft

as Super .
21 Outlying
+ dl1trlot

4$ Nlmt

Olmblln;
tllkt
47 W11ln on
4S

'·

Fire probed

41190

-pan.

POMEROY - The Ohio
Fire Marshal is investigaling a Wednesday nlghl
hou;e fire on Union
Avenue in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Pl,iice Chief
Murk Proft111 ~aid the
J\dkins residence, I09
Union Aw .. was burning in
two loclltions. but the fire
WltS quickly COt\ltlined . .
The Pomeroy t1re deptirl·
ment will nssisl in lhe
lnvestlgulion. There wore

Jon•
48 Wlddlftlt
column
21 AnaUII!IId
word
well
10 Ntlllfal
II Blc~ tllk
lllldl
at LonQ-IOtlve sa Fllh en•
volcAno 13 Gimlin
54 Modtfllll
~tor
H Play 54 Mounllln
(t.l;n
cum

........

I SIYIItl

role

Raw mtllll
Dime
t Election
wlnMra
10 Birthday
number
11 Typewriter
42 JQ;;pll
pert
Campbell
1$ Jllty
forte
tt l!ra
7
I

Charity bridge
pertlcile
events are played
n
DooVY
around the world.
111111
One of the oldest is
St Orlon'a
love
lhe Charity Chal·
40
MI. Paron
lenge, held annually
41 au-·a
in England. Afterward, the entrants receive a booklel·wilh a
commentary about
the denls. which al·
wuys adds flavor 10
an event. For one
lhing. you are almost
certain 10 disagree
with something the
unulyst wrote.
Today's deal occurred in this year's
event. which raised
BAilNEY
almost $1S.OOO for
the National Society
I SHOULD WAKE
for the Prevention of
PAW FER
Cruelty to Children.
Look onl)' at the
SUPPE.R !!
West hand. If the bid·
ding goes us given.
whul would you lead?
Now study lhe whole
CELEBRITY CIPHER
den!. How do you
by Lula Campol
think the bidding and
Ctltbrity
Clphtr
oryptogroml
oro oroalod from quolotlono by loll10UI
play should proceed'/
-lo, pool and prootnl. Eaoh ltnar In lhl clpnar otindo lor onothor.
To&lt;MyJ ctu.: {' I!IUIIII U
The booklet sug. gcsls that afler Easl
"HIROOYHX
DIIIIJOX'R
MITDO
opens four diamonds,
should overcall .
ZVR
Y o·0 J
I J 0
I W
FZ 0
"'' South
8 ())\Of 10 Pe".Of'lE:.
~(,!-\\·
four spades. If he
JYFI'HYI
AIJNOHR
'II
r\N--~OCt&gt;. M'&lt; f-\~C&gt;,~. docs. the given uuc·
~ \0 &amp;. Wi!Ot-IC:&gt;· f!AAOCDI lion rs possible. with
IW,OJ
I'JNOHVS8HODTVFON."
East's double being
Lighlncr, showing a
DHT,TD
NIJ
ZODUOVJ
vo1d somewhere,
which he hopes part·
I
.PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Mtrrlagela our lilt, bill ohanoelo
grow up." - Joaepll Barth
ner cun lind on open"Divorot I• • game pltrtd by law-,tra.• -Cary Grant
·ing lead.
I
Wesl, who expecls
his partner's void to
be in clubs, should
HIG NATE
leud lhar ace. Then,
once West sees the
I
WHAT'S THE
RIGHT SOU ND
dummy, it shouldn't
EFFECT R:ll'.
be impossible for him
SOMEONE
to
find the heart-two
GETTIN!; HIT
IN THE HE.AD
shift to defeat the
WIT11 P.. WET
.
contracl.
wASHClOTH?
However, surely
ULGEI
South should double
f6ur diamonds. True,
I
this risks partner's
...
running to five clubs,
but il not only keeps
...,.:C;...;,.I,.;C;..,;;.B5...:U~I-r, Diplomacy can be spotted at
both majors in the
.
every youngster's birthday party.
picture, but also
It Is the art ol dividing tha cake so
.
.
.
.
leaves four diamonds
. . . . . - - - - - - - - . everyone thinks he has the· ---doubled as u possibil· . D E G T U B
WI&lt;AT MAKES 'fOU TI&lt;INK
, •• slice.
ity. West would raise ~....., ;;.....;;;...'.;;. ..,.,;..6_;,.I;;...,,...
HEV,
, -l 0 Como loll lht chuckle quoted
IT'S AN'( HOTTER NOW
to live diamonds, giv- 1 ....l..-~---1.-~.- l. .....J
MAIIIA6ER,
by filling In tho mlulnll word•
TI&lt;AN IT ALWAYS IS 7
L.
ing
North
a
problem.
you
dovolop
from llop No, J bolow,
IT'S iOO
t ~7r------------~
Maybe he should sel·
PRINT NUMBERED LETTE RS
I&lt;OT TO
tie for live heuns, but
IN THESE SQUARES
PLA'(
jumping to six is con" TODAY!
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
ceivable.
GET ANSWER
Si~t hearts requires
guessing the trull)p
SCIIAM-I.ITI ANSWIItS
suil correctly, which
Inlaid· Ankla ·Halve· Cosmos · St:NSE stALL
is a good be.t when
Nortli knows thai
01-1r new neighbor always seemed to be grumpy. My
husband says that II you don't have a sense of humor
Bust started with
AUGUST
you probably don't have any SENSE at ALL
'
eight diamonds.

,,_,,

...

'

n\) h~urles .

Hay Show

winners

ROCK SPRINGS . Winners in the · Meigs
Counly Fuir huy shuw,
sponsored hy Ihe Meigs SoU
und Wuler Conservuti&lt;lll
Dislrkl. w11ro unnounced
1odny us follow~:
Ciuss I, 75 percenl uf
more legumes: Duvid King,
VIrgil
King,
Cindy
Koblentz.
Cluss II, ull grnsses: Alun
Holter. Roy Holter. Patricia
Holter.
Class Ill. 49 percent or
less legumes: Palrlcia
Holter, Roy Holler, Virgil
King.
·
Winning entries are on
dlsplny ut lhe Meigs
. SWCD boolh · locuted
belween lhe 4-H and commerclnl buildings for lhe
remulnder ol' fair week.

Junior·Fair
Goat Show
ROCK SPRINGS
Denise Hunnum und Cusex
Hunm11n were numed grnnd,
and roserve chmnplon
showmen., reKpe~tlvely, nt
the Melli&amp; County Junior
flair Oont · Show hotel
Monday nflernoon In the
show ring ut the Rock
Springs Fnlrgrounds:
·
Both com poled · In lhe
beginner division.
Winners In the vurlous
breed
closses
were:
Lnmunchu.
Mellssu
Snowden. grund chumplon: ·
Cuscy Hunnum. reserve
chumplon: Nuhlun, Mellssu
S1iowJen, llfttnd chnmplon:
Suunen, Denise Hunn~m.
grund chum pion; Crossbred.
John Swnnson. grund chumpion: Cody Hunnum,
reserve dmmplon.
Juson
Bihl,
. BloomlngbLirg, judged Ihe
event.

I

·SwucKr- I
-

IIIII
.
I
I'
1
I
~
6

I

14l

_________·,~~--------new

cir~lc

of uio!quuintunct!!L

betng opum,.uc, you creute
your own luck with huppy re·
suit!',
·
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov.
22) •· MatterN thai pertain 10
your cureer und finunceH

Some quality friendship &lt; should be given prlorily over
could come uut of lhis bevy.
ony of your other interc•IH toLEO (July 23-Aug. ,22) ••
dny. You cun be quite lucky
Because you'll be popular
in this urea und score hig. ·
ll'ithitt y&lt;&gt;ur soda I circle tuSAG ITT AR!US (Nov, 2J·
day, &gt;Ou will ltavc u strong
Dec. 21) .. A1:~buu1 mid11ay.
influence over ycmr peer..
condilitHIS that coulcl have un
Yuur pkusunt and upbeat ucticl'i'ocr upon your fulllrt plun&lt;
ll&lt;~c will be contagious und
will start trcndins in your fuudnptc~ by all.
vor. You'll know when tu
VIRGO (Aus.'23-Sept. ZZl
hitch your hope&lt; to lhat red
•· Things can be juggled
wagon.
"'!"~hd today lo offset what
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun
m1~ . I 01an out"' a no-go and
19) ·· Your greateot luck to:
t~.~I.V&lt;.~ ~ou the c~unce to purday will come about through
!'"'P·''~ ma proftHtble, on·g?· . un """Cillle with whnm you
, mg un_angemcnt. You II fit 1n ·• shore a common interest. ltup
tl\c. ptcture nicely. Know
a ride with lhat person 1., get
where l~ lc;&gt;uk .for romance
where vnu want In gn.
and Y&lt;&gt;U II hnd 11. T~e AstroAQi.JARI US (Jun. 20-Feb.
Graph Matchmaker tnslantly
1\1) .. Don't let •eff-doubt
rcvc~ls whtch !1gns are roslop you from making the
ma~uc. u)ly perfect for you.
.fir!l move nn someone you
Ma1l .St.75 IO Matchmak,r,
would like to know better.
c/o thiS, ne~spaper, P.O. Box
The feeling is mutuul and In·
167. Wtcklltfc, OH 44092.
terc!ttng results arc indlcut~d.
L,IBRA (SepL 23-0ct. 23) ·
PISCES (Feb. 21!·March
· It you remam hopelul ~nd
20) •. Just ~cause or first
~•p~clunl tnday. n01h1~g
glance •nmething uppeurs tu
n~ga11vc lh~.t happens wtll
. be 1ed1ou• or tou~h doe•n't
have any effect on you . Oy
ncces.•uri ly mean t1 will turn

uul to bu m. In fuct, you'll
opem1e ru your best today
when faced with a challenge.
ARIES(March11 ·Aprll19)
There' s a good ~ han c~
Y.Ou'll gel the opportunlly IO•
il11y tn temporarily !helve
things thai have tied you
down und 10 be uble lo speml
the reNI of Ihe duy wi rh some
fun und lnlereNtin~ fr~endN .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. Thunk goOdness you've
!jOt your heud screwed on
llghl, bccau•e curly diHruptlono could pul you ma dilhur
today . You, however, will
tame the lion and hnng ubuu1
the reAnlt• you duire. ·
.GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
... Anyrhln¥ lmpnnanr lhnl
needs w bo cllscu.,ud ll!duv
s ~uuld b.&gt;·d&lt;&gt;ne. in private :.
W)Lhour uny klbu ~un lurkin g
ubnut 10 luke you off !ubje".
Agreements cun be made on a

in sheep·
show
~~NTIN~~ C~RR~SPQNPeNT

ROCK SPRINOS
Meghan Huynes. 2002 Mel~s
C'mml)' Fulr Queen. mudi.l u
dcfm sweep ol' the Melyl\
Coun1y Junior Fulr Sheep
Show Mondu)' night. ch1lm·
lnil bolh Gruml Clu1mph'n
Mnrket Showmun und Pnmd
Champion Murket Lmnb,
Chelseu Young wns Reserv.e
Chmnplon Mnrket Showmun
while Kuylee Milum huct the
Reserve fhumplon Murket
Lumb.
In
the
Murkot
Showmanship conlost, win·
nors were (In order by class):
Sonlor. Mc1Jhan HuyneN und
Theresu Bnkor:
Junior, Brook Bolin, Holloy
Wllllnm~ and Shuwna Duvls;
lntermodiule, ·
Chet~ea
YouniJ, Alyssa Buker and
Allshu Comp~on: Boglnner.
Acllon Pi1~omyt.'r. Mlchuol
Wrlfjhl und Dnwn Ill sse II :
Beginner, Kuylee Milam.
Ashlo)' Ray nnd Tlnu Druke.
Peewee
, Winning 1he
Showmunshlp compotlllon
was 4-yeur-old Austin Llt'e.
In tl\o Mnrket Lumb con·

TOP LAMI SHOWMIPe - MeQhlln Ha~no• and ChelitHI YQyf1i
wore namea l!rllna ana ·roeer~H~ champion •how~m~n, roapo\l'
ti~lv. al Mondi\Y nl&amp;ht' a Molaa County ~unlor fair Sl1tlt.lP Sh\lw.
From loft aro WOQt Prlnetl$!1 Tina Drake, Hewnea, f&lt;~lr Kin&amp;
Robblil Wt1ctctlo llntl YQuna. {Sentlnill ~t&lt;~ffl

lest, showing lhe tnp lumbs'in Alyssu . llukl)l' mHI ,"wtinn
euch dlvlsl(lll were:
Fn~om)'tll':
Ch1ss I (\lU. \ll pllllnds).
Cl11~~
Ytll
(L\!1· 1-I(l
Ollvln l)uvl~ nml Hully ('l'Uilllsl. Mli:htl~l Wrljjhl.
Duvls:
.
Ther~su llu~t:r Hllll R)'Hil
Cl11ss II (\l\l.to' pllundsl.
mos,
Holley Wlllinms, Kahlln
There wore
lnmhs
Dewhurst und Suzanne omered lntn lho Mur~llt l.umh
Oruesllr:
compethhm.
Chi~~ Ill (109· 112 p&lt;mndsl.
In 8ree\lhtt~ C\l1111JC!IItl\1n,
Z11ck Jeffers. Alyssa 8u~t.w H~lley Wlllhtms nnd Hummh
nnd RyPn Amo~;
Wllliums were nomad ~rnml
Ch1ss IV ( 114· 118 pounds). unct ros(rvo ohnmplun tireod·
Theresn Bnker, Mh.1 hnol lng shuwmen. 1'\lspecllvoly,
Wrlaht nml Htmnnh Wlllinms: · Holley Wllllmm hnd the
Clttss V ( llll· lll poumts). l!rumt ~hmnplun Sul1\1i~ !lwe
Jounnn Enst1111111. ' Mt.~ph"n while Onwn lllssell hull the
Hnynes nnd Kuvlee Milum:
re~en• e chmnpl\111 Sut1'n1k
Ch1ss VI (I~~· 1 2~ pounds), ewe. lhmnuh Wllllnms dis·
Kuylee
Milum,
Ao1lnn phlye(i the llrttnd chnmplnn
Fnoemyer n11d llrnok Bolin:
Sut111lk l'nm.
·
Clnss
VII
(12a- D2
Juct»inll the event wus
pmm.dsl, Mol)hun Hu~nes. Jusrmlllhlul' 81111111\hlllhlll)l.

NASOAR COMING - A taell ~~~~ Mlflil llllilfl to 1"\imtllil the
" Ht!fOtl,. &amp;tamp Will Qll p{lrkt~U Jtt th¢ llli!lt'lll flilrK 11i&gt;•t 1\i
tttll Mldetl~port f!(l!ll 0111\lll , Hl ,; 111 to il p.m. 1\lttay, f\if
flll1to to villw. Pt'l~lnll oe~iete th.ll ~,; r hllr" llfll Mlt!t'llt~oort
Po~\mtl@tllr Jim Stmetqlll•Hinet hli f\lt?Ut&gt; , !lllll\Jr&lt;~ ' \ltWIQYI%1.
Thll Plttllrtl WM \11111111 111 01\Yt\1111'1 Ht~rl~h . flo .. Y~ltlflll II
rt~et&gt;nt ~llowlnQ .

'*

Postal Service show
car .to be displayed
In Middleport ·
IV Jov J, IITTI.U

NfWa~MYCl~lbV ~(NfiNtl QOM

MIDI.}I,IWORT
lwul NASt'r\R filii' IIIII hti uhl~ to
Wtl th~ l'lll'r l'tll' IIWll\il \Wtnlll~ tli~ "l irl'll'l" IIUIIIp lllth~
t i,S, ~~~~~1 11 1 St'l'll~~ . 1~1'1111~ 111 I hi' l.l'jllltll l'mk 11~\l 111 thg
Mllldl~\1lll'\ Pltst Oni1't'·
It wll h tlwN t'l\llll ltl 11111 hi-IJl.lll, hll j11thlil: \ ltiWIIII!•
The "ht~me1\' ~HIIl1J1 I~ 11 ~~1ni - pm1ul I~&gt;Utl whkh mi~~M
l\1ml~ Ill \11'\l\'111~ ll~'i'tlill\'1' lllllltnlil~• ilt' I.IIIWI'j!till~} f'llli~r
iWI'SI111111.1 ~1111!11 m 11\ll'tiiiiiWittlr 1111uhlr111n tht~ lillt~ llllluty
ntill 3' ~ n", with th romulnhlll munl!)' 11 lilt
ottblt 00111111on to bcllllllrlbut ato Uti YMima.
·
The ~tnmp wn~ pl'l.lmlmmtl)' al~pi!IY1Xl on tho No. 27
Pnntlttc of Juml~ MeMurruy lnth NASCAR 8U81lh SNits
Ru ·e In llnylonu .wh~l'tl Jim Sumlltlli~l. Mlddll.lfl011 poMI•
mu,,ltir, Wit' prlvlillll~li tn h~l11 Jll\1111\llQ tl)l;l now 1to1~1ilM
~11111111 for Ihe II .S. l~1s1nl Stii'Yk~ In Flnrillu.
'fhilldennlld ~oml wlillll'l'lll~tillltint wilh Wlllinm'f'rul'l!l
Cl.lntt~rs WIIS l'lr~t lnhhtllld 11&gt;• 1\omlru Sun\ltjul ~t . nn ~\~Ctl·
tlve. She cmHu~to•llwr pu~tiiHINI\11' 1111\'ie. who h~lpt!ll hl'ttln·
,~ tonn nn\1 potlwr In contnct whh tho l'i~ ht liSI'S honllqlmr·
1

ter~ ~uniiiQt.~ .

'fh~

Truvul C'l.!ntilr~ sp1mMH'tiu thll •·n~t•. lhe ~nr tuit.l the
herueM smmpthnt wns l'ennH'tl&gt;l on ltll!li'IMiun hy I"X l'Klt'm·e
the rnce. Driver McM urrny &lt;itlnlll'let.l l ~ th t'nr !he l'll~l.! und
111\lllllht tho hl.ll\lllMcur Mnl'o ly to 1'11\11 11iuc~ .
· ·
Tho ~Ill' ten iiii'O~ 11 vlctl.!n .slmtlluttll' thnl pul~ tho \!river
t'll)ht imto 11 NASC'AR.II'tWk. fllll' 11 ~ 1111111 &lt;lllnntlun, lllll'licl·
jlllnt~ cnn1es1 thoh· rn~lnp .~~I ll s .
In cm\lllnctinn, 11 ~n lul e 111 hlll~lll• 1~ phlllned the Mttmo
dny. Willi Cl.lt'e lllilllll.llllil COIIIIIIillll'~ ill II 11 ,11\,
ANn repre~onttnlve~ for flillke. 1'11-e. Nhllrl l1'. · hillhWIIY
flllll~ll, EMS.• VflW, Amlll'kun 1,111!11111, 111111 1&gt;1\V will bO
pl'llMilntod with phl\lllil~ l'onturlnl!lhll htll'll\'111 ~111111 1,,
A MllCCiul plctnrlnl Qltncelllltlun will h11 nvnlluhle lh11t \lu~.
S/1011k rs wlllln~lu&gt;led lhil pn~tlllnsttil' of Mldllllljllll'l, USPS
dM
lrlcl relll'ilMonunlvl.lM nnd ti .S, Rep. Th\1 Strld:lun\l.

''· ~~ ., t f

Rotellr Ellllllll Hollon
1• 1' ~~~~-ll't. I'~ S•

ht~lll "' ' '

ftt 111h ''' lh11k l l!t4 !I~ M I 1 I

"~ ' ' "' '" " ' ''11\.jlll~~··tl ~l

'

Lotteries
Pick S: 9·11·4
!'lck 4: 2·4-5-5
sup1rLotto: 2·5-17·24·32·35
lonu• Bill: t 4
Klck1r: 7-8-7·6·8·8
lucktyl 5: H-27·32-34
Pick s nl&amp;ht: 8·5-9

Pick 4 nl1ht:

.

'fh11 4~·com stump I• v'ullu I'm l)llMIIIi!C ·"' flr~t e lM~ rtllo,

·,

OHIO

IC!.)f\\rltlutfllll

on Sopt. II .

MIMOftiAL DIIPLAY - Bill Bono Form Antique Club mombtlrl htMl c.lOdlootoo tholr CliiPIHY

at the Malsa county Fair thlw yoar to l!d.laon Hollon. a eh!'lrtor member Md lonstlrne loll

!!Xhlbltor. Hollon dlod July 17. Onu of hll fovorlto trtJotorl, o :11l64 Formoll Sup r H. whloh hll
refurbished and hal dlspl!lylld Ill th fair mnny tlmo1, 11 on ~txhlbllllSttln thll yeor. It 11 plo!Yrtld
here at the memorlol dlspluy with Hollon'• 10n, Lltrry, .iloth oru chart r membor1 of tho olub.
which annually brlnQI In 215 or SO antiquo traotort and oth r form oqulpm!lnt for thllllnjoymont
of lalraoera. (Chorlono Hooflloh)
·
•

5·7· H

W.VA.
Dilly 3: 5·1·4
D1lly 4: 1·2·8·3
Powerlllll: 4·16-19-33-41 (29)

At.lnLI

IITOP
MAGIO -

Kiltlo ·
ShnrtiSilr
ono ZaQhflry
Corp ntor
Join In with
tho 1111l!IIO
I how on
Wudnoedny
HI tho
Mol&amp;•
County. F11lr.
(AIIMIII
Hnpkn)

Index
:a IICtlon• - 12 ,....
Classifieds
· 83·5
Comics
86
Editorials
A4
Fair
A2,3rS
Movies
A3
Obltua ries
A3
Sports
81 ·3
Weather
A2
c 2002 Ohio Volloy Publ~hln• Co.

Ames to close all .stores
AP,

6TAf~ ~ gP(JRT

(IAI.I.If'OI-.I!l - A )1~111' nllor ~c~klnll hnnkl'lljltC)' IWiliOi.!•
linn. Allie~ DINCilulll S in N~ ttlllll1t11W~d Wcdn~Nl ny It would
sh111 dnwn all ~27 Nltll MIn tlw ~h1lin uml wln&gt;l down huMin MM,
Anw~ NUll' Mm·e locme\1 mn~tly In NMtil~uMt, Ml~dlc
Atlunll~ uml Ml(lwcMI NtuleN, hwlmllllll II In Ohio. 11M
NtoreN lllllllloy nhnul 22.CllKl IWilllle
The Ohio M
IUI'CM Mol lor clu~ln~ lllCIU&lt;IIl Alit IU,
CmTnillnn, llnNt Liverpool, Hlyrln. Mttl'lnn, Mldtllcll ld.
Ohe1·iln. llnm111, Sulcm. Wm·r~n und YnuniJ~Inwn . ,
AmeN ll[llll'lll~~ II NIOI'Ilill lhl) fornllll' Cl.r . Mllf(lh)' Mite Ill
(lnlllpoiiM Silver Orit111e Pln~.u until tlw ~urly IINON, II
tl!Jened n new M
tnre In !he Ohio Rlve1· Pln111 In S~!ll lllhor
I ~~N. hul c luM~d ~ur ly In 20{11 ,
.
In liM nnnmmcem m. A111~N Mlll1l Ihut Mulllect Ill ·the
nrprnvnl nl' the Otmkrupwy C'ourl, illlKilllCied In Jll'01111lllr,
iiiiMillnnte 11 ii11Uidutor to c•mducl ''&lt;loin !I Out ol' IJuMinoNM'
MllillM nt nil AmeN ~Inn: lo~tlllon~ .
Th~ ~Oilljltlll)' ~uld Nllll'~• 111'~ O~l'~~lr&lt;llttl~llllllll open fnr
nhnul Ul week" durin~ lhl~ llfl~·~·~ ·
.
AnwH lll~d fur j,nnkruptcy l u~t A11~11~1 . II hull hnpcd tn
~mer11e f'mm hnnkrur1cy ~t·otecllon hy lhil t!IUinl' llill ~ ~·
ond t]IIUt'l r. 1'he IIINcnultl chuln huil jiiiiiO tht'llllllh four
roun\l'~ ql' ~ tnre clnMIIlJIM In lho htMI ~evt~rulmnnt hM ,

Relay
Holzer Medical Center is a proud supporter of this year's
American Canc:er Soc:itly Relay for Lifo, ~

CANCF!R &lt;June 21-July 22&gt;
•• More Ihun one m_uterlul op.
portunl!y may be flouting
uhoJul IUtlay which, when

AUIUII I. • 17 at the Gollipoli• City Park.
· 6:00 pm · Qpenjng Coremqnj11 ·
6:30 pm • S!Jrviyqc qnd Cqrogjy•c Lqp
9:00 pm • Lumlnqcy Cqmqnv. : To purchaJt
a luminary,
pleaJt call Joan Schmlclt at 446•4728.

•

lUken udvunlu"e ul', cun wrn

uut ,qu1rc udvantakO&lt;&gt;u•ly . .
Don t let the doubters Ill•·
suade
you.
.,

I

.

top spo.ts

Olll!•On·onc buKil'i.

'

NASCAR-

Haynes
sweeps

BY JIM F'IIIPN.N

m.

Thur&lt;day. AuiJ. 15. 2002 ·
Chanocs arc. you will nc·
4u ire u numbl.!r of intcr~:~us in
lhc year ahead lhutwill brin~
yuu inw direct cuntacl with u

ely

nd

41JAMA ......

a 1n1wn bw q
12HMit
clllmber
14 l'opolcle

South m

_.

.'

\

'

.,

f)fsrout'l' Ow llp/z(ll' Piffcrrn

www.holz r.ora

•

.I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="468">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9916">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23370">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23369">
              <text>August 14, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="411">
      <name>gibson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="851">
      <name>rupe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
