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                  <text>Sunda~Auguat18, 2002

, OH • Pt. Plee nt, WV

&amp;.J. "'

R ins d mpen Herd scrimmage, B 1

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l'loJt.. lO'NIOifjJ..........-r....... ,.., ,. ·r u~~
11M ,,..,.
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II ~ Colo ..... """" "'"" $&lt;'0 ,~0\)IC&lt;Wt

~rgu~

,~Cil·l~&lt;-0011~«&gt;

S3 '

00

Melp County's

~ ~~~~

Whether you a
a lllng or buying,
t:irowstng or creaHng,
looking or booking...
classified has It alii II

Whafs Inside

Area jobless rates post decline·in July
AP, STAI'I' REPORT

POMEROY -

For most

aren counties_, July held good
news on the unemployment

front: Jobless rutes were
down.
The Ohio ' Depurtment of
Jobs und Fnmily Services
releused unemployment infor·
mutton for lust month Friday,
Nhowing the number of people
without work hud decreased
from June. Joblessness in the
nreu hud posted un i ncrense
over Mny.
Gullilt Coumy. listed with
7. 1 percent joblessness in

--

l'llhl11 Not~t l''&gt; • Pub lit Nulllt''&gt; • 1'uhl1c Nulil l''&gt;
e:
SS1 ,SSI.OO;
$44.881.00
1:
135,542.00:
S50,S?V.OO
8;
131.541,00;
$58,271.00
For Hch eddtllonlt
family membef, add:
•1 &lt;1 , 004 . 00 ;
+S5,8V8.00
Children
from
hDUIIhDfdl
With
lncDmo at or below
tho Ievett ohown may
be ollglblo for frtl
and
roductdprlct
niHil or 1m milk.
Application forma
are llelng dlatribuhld
to all homoo In 1 totter
tD
paronto
Dl
J':.li'rdlene. TD apply

.-.ometown News,.per

June, snw the rute full .03 per·
cent to 6.!1 in June, DJFS
reported.
Meigs County, one of I 0
counties with unemployment
above 8.5 percent for July,
wus I0.7 percent for the
month - 11 decrease of I. I
perce nt from June.
. Also posting declines were
Juckson, down .03 percent to
8.4 percent in Jul y~ Lawrence
with 11 .05 percent loss to 6.8;
nnd Vinton, another of the
counties with the suue's high·
est unemployment. down I
percent to 12.4.

Athens County saw jobless·
ness increase in July by .06
percent to 4.9, DJFS reponed.
Ohio's unemployment rate
remnined ut 5.7 percent tor
July, the su me us the re.vised
rate for June.
The nmio,utl rutc ·al so
retnnlned unchunged, at 5.9
percent in July.
.
"Ohio's lubor mnrket held
steady over the month, with
little chunge in the work
force," suid Tom Huycs, state
DJ FS director. "Although
there were slight gains in the
retuil trude und services sec-

2002 MEIGS COU
FAIR
PRE II Y BABY CONTESTS
·Awards
abound at

Eva M. Ruble, 65
Det.lla. A:S ,....

I

High: so~. Low: 60s

CU itO~li

ww \\', •"\' '"""'"'m tun••'. ,, nnt

COUI*~

2 1/2 BA, Smith
I

garage,

t.m Antloraon
h~·fti -3U6

Conert~IUtotlonal

'lou he"'
WOti 2 free ~'!Ovle \l~te to
l h~
7 !JOIII~o·
I
lot dO·

f.1t~Httf't'ly

I'Ml c~ • a"llched
x AO detechEid lt~ete l

Joe A r Moore- Broker 441 · 1818
Sarah L. Evana- Moore, Broke r 441 - 1616
Patricia Haye- 446· 3Bb4 Care Ca aey-24&amp;· 9430
l!llolllano· 368· 1841
. . . . . . . ..-.-~
ndace
446·74~1~2~----------~

bu11dll1g, hoi tub Atld ebove gn:nmd
Pool tl U ,\100

c''"''"''•

I

Cld!!!"'Dblle Cu\lnss. M. e~

f ~;s
c hnn1p1tm
ta!ll~t\t l tir\t'lhlll mJndl\lo11,. hm l11B ~
M.M O

'"ntm
miles,

olio owl\01, 8?.000 S! 1gM, ~a ·. ooll colllolnod,
mile,. eul&gt;lm•l&lt;c Ac. ~ow- coli (140198!·4433 ot 140cleo~.

'ftt 8\8-H\\~ , pOWf!t bMJoil!l!,
A"s. ~oMi t .wll&lt;dnwo, pow-

992-0249 .

-,--,,.----lS I locke. ron\Oie access. 1994 Molo~ kott~ l!l , t u n ~
now \lioo Askliig sa.ooo
oqlllilflod, 2a toot oloopo e
co! 11401448-1069
o•llo good condl\lon
(1401361-70?0

R/rwU11 rtt Nt'ttlty ",' ifiMiH' .\'m1rltvf'tl t )hitl 1:n;. Ow!r A Qt1nrtttr C·,,, ry"

~AleE REd~iCE'ot
lhlt now eoVi ~d bock porch
o~d o• t opaclocnrlo• rivll vlawot
o oeciUdid wDDdod lot oi1d
notul't With thlo tttu d hlnoh ~h
~ All m~ . Willi liol&lt;lwood lioott,
I'Cimodellid oak kitchen and oinplli

ttte l ow mol~ttna~ce
wllh low ulttlly cooto on • lovol
lot tn 1 c~nv ilnlant locollo)1? 3 '"'"'"' 'lioltlly
13~. 2 13A,• 2 car gBtAg~ . newer ~·

root. heWer \llnyl siding, newer lA 3 BA
tenc h on 3
h~at pump, lenced backyatd ~t~nd pttvete ec.tes mil just rntnutee
IIVI\ig sp ~ce en!1Rt1ced by e H! 11: 14 !!ltorl'lge bulldh1g. !rom lawn . l='otmal l!\llng room.
tlnt!!hed lower IB\IAI, lt\1!1 gem
1
rttmodeled
kllche11,
l ar~ e

s

oW.IIo you l 11UOO

dlMing!!amny roott1 r~ddltlon with
working llroplace n11d eoreonod·
In porc h, two car attached

'

g~t~mg~

"'EAL E$tAtE

tmd rt 2e

~

32 two tau

'delached garage. PLUS • nice
32 • 4B molal polo building w\1 11

AI:AL 1:8TATI!

w~t l et

Rm1 elootr!c. All lnr only

1181.100.

PAOFE8$10NAL. 81:1MCI:
OII=I"SRI:NCI:

MAKE~ THE

Vl~lltMt ~ 8Mttll, ~lltlk E~ ............... 448·8608
ll~ll~l:lVtllE .... .. ....................... ..... 448·9108

l

Convonltnt In·
Ntcely remodeled
turn ol the t
home, Welk lo
ptHk , SCI1MI .
l hoprltlg. 3·4

t:tll! 9MVb. it .................................. 441 -94Bi
oliN I'IIJ881!ll. .......................... Be1·0B2o
b~V I U 8NVUI!R................................. , 44 1 ·~488

14~'t oWM~II AN. IoUI! ttl
~loLL- llot'li tllkl ll~ !Ute lo •~•

\II~ ~"llie 111 \h\"8 IIIII}' UHck 11oll1'e 3
1111~11111 u~ . I IIi ll~ll 11 . ~4llll~l~tl
kll . LH , bt1. Wlliln~lnml l'nll
li~ !~lll~/11 111111 l ~nllly 1111 ~ 1\&lt;Jod
t~lrJVM · "ltcl
tl l!\11 ~ rt111tt\~ l(lt

recto811Uii All8clil!tl ynlnye IOYolv
lil!lltl lol ~IIY8 cy loi&lt;ce A liol lub.
1\&lt;illd deck, fiUiil boidl8 oltln 00ith
tli" 11~ 11~1illul cl"olliM~ ,~;; u• 18!11
by Ali ntibul l!\til~nl Vl,S&lt;illlh &lt;48
eMe .
tB~e~A~=~tliJ IIU N
• t }tl ~~~~~ ~~~
Nl
c
• u"
tl
~ LE. New olotnl ayete111 lluildlllg
buill lu ohlle c'lldo Cui\IIIIUdu•
Uflollllidlt " ""' I~Se ~llcft llldlld es
lil""ilf""' tJ•II J•tiHtll• "ol o••• ,.1
'" u·r • u
" "
"'" u

1•

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4 8

"'

.,~tJitlt' O~f!JIII

uu•• u

HU1111MU u; U!!l

et•Wtl~

Ull

ij""

~I!:H4tf!IHI Vttllr:;~ nu

!1 17.000

. comrttflrdll'll an s l=t 1

Stocks hllher
In earfy

. tradln1

NEW YORK CAP) - A
smuller thun el!.pected decline
In ukey economic tbrecustln~
guuge renewed Investors
confidence Monduy und guve
the
stock
1nurkel 11
respectuble udvunce. '
In the t11'!!t hour of truding.
the Dow Jones indusUiul uveruge rose 72.34, or 0.82 .percent, to 8,8S0.40 uner udvuncing 0.4 pel\.'ent last week.
The brouder murket wus
ulso higher. The Nusduq
composlte Index wus up
8.32, or 0.61 percent, ul
I ,369.3 3 huving surged 4.2
percent lust weeli . The
Stnndurd &amp; Poor 's SOO
Index rose 5.12, or 0.5S
percent, to 933.89; followIng u weekly guln of 2.2percent.

PRmtUT GIRLS- Netirly 100 Infants and toddlers competed In the annual pretty baby contest-staged Saturday at the Meigs Cour)ty Fair. Selected as the prettiest girls, left to right, were
birth to 3 months, Krlstl McKnight, daughter of Amanda Miller and Carlos McKnight of Rutland:
3 to 6 months, Savannah Stol'\a, daughter of Maggie Roseberry and Justin Stone, Pomeroy: 6
to 12 months, Brittany Gilmore, daughter of ~rook and Jerod Gilmore, Pomeroy: 12 to 18
months, Alyssa Smith, daughter of Paul Smith of Racine, and Grace Kitchen; 18 month s to 2
years, Hayley Lathey, daughter of Greg and EUzabeth 'Lathey of VInton; 2 years. Alyssa Shaffer,
daughter of Tiffany and Donald Shaffer of Recine; 3 years old, Miranda Combs, daughter of
Matt and Mandy Combs of Racine: (Charlene Hoeflich)

•

toko1ldo proportyl Ju81 mlln utei

from
towt1,
this
tra t1qUII
netghbothood Ia t11!!1 1Jed oM tl\tt
b!lnks of Charotals Litke. Along
wtu1 tJr:UI oWMrshtp of 1Ul 8 acre
tAkA this 3 BR 2 112 BA hot11e hlil
a IBrge great room w!lh A cozy
llteptace and !ow exlatlor
malllleneHc.e t he duck• . dtete

I

I

W.VA.
Dilly 3: 5-8·2
Dilly 4: 0·0· 1·3

with tho maml"ll
•te a bonus\

3·4 BR , laltllly
I oloroga opMo,
uoaumu 2·acte lui. Only 8
Goil&lt;polto "" SR 7

Index
2 SIICIIon• - 12 hilt

• IBI PRICE REDUCED\ NlcoiV jj~:::;,~~d
romDdolid lhrH bodt~~m lwu o·
b•th tltlch WIIH • lol!lelllo
oor.1100
floo r pion loaotod In d rooH
tuwnohlp, Bo• •''"~ ot • Smtih
Oustotn kllchen ~llh new lila

lltJo tlng,
Bruce
F!ootlt1g ltl tho

meln hail,

He~tdWood

toDm and

wllh
ohd

I

~

l!iilry open tOOttll , Hew CF!rpet, 1111· "'&lt; · "
In ref;l!scentent wlndowa, cenha!
hesl nnd air and a omnpldtety
lltnodelect kllchari 11021100

•

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Q

POMERO Y - Numerous sd wlur&gt;hips. suving&gt; bo nds,
trophies uml plii((UCS were awarded u&gt; m:hicvcmcnt' of
Meigs Co unt ~ hoys and $i rb were rccog ni tcd al Youth
Night uctiviues on ihc 1mul ni gh! of the !39th Meigs
County Fuir.
. Hundreds of fumily members tmd friends p11~ kc&lt;l the
show urenu Suturduy night to npr.tuud the boys und girls
unc;l their udult leaders who contnbute so much to making
Melg~ County 11 better place to Jive.
The event climuxed u week of fulr ucti vities where youth
exhibiteu pn&gt;je cl work. uei1wn struted their sk'i lls, und
showed the unimul s they had nurtured over the pusl yeur. It
was o night of rewards for outstundi ng performunce .
The Ohio Valley Bunk's $2.000 scholurshir thi s year
went to Ben Holter of Pomeroy who will be attending Ohio
Northern University where he will mujor in pharm acy. The
scholarships are awarded $500 u year for four years. Holter
joins Meigs college student s Chud Hubbard, Julie Spuun
tmd Tricia Davis all of whomure currently receiving scholarship money from Ohio Vulley Bunk.
··
For the fi~"Nttime this yeur, the Uni versity of Rio Grunde
and R&amp;G Feed of Pomeroy offered scholurship money. Joe
Evans of R&amp;G presented a $3!.&gt;0 scholursh1p to Ashley
Hager. Rusty Carnahan wus the rec ipient of the Uni versity
llf Rio Grande $200 schoh1rship. · ·
.
4-H scholarships were 11wurded to Ben Holter. B. J.
·
.
Welsh, and Ashley Hager.
Fifty-eight 4-H club members were uwurded $50 su v in&amp;~
bonds contributed by local businesses for e ~tce lin g in vunous aspects of their 2002 prolecl work.
·
Receiving one or more
the scholarships were Kura
Osborne, Andren Buckley, Sarah Houser, Andrew Bissell,
Taylor Lentcs, Saruh Hubbard. Tyler Lee, Dnniel Buckley,
Brtttany Hauber, Adam Phillips. Derek Roush.
Carita Garde11er. Ross Holter. Robbie Weddle. Becky
Taylor, Zach Newell, Arnundu Roush, Alyssa Holter, Brook
Bolin, Janet Culuwuy, Roger Chadwell, Tricia Congo,
Brlmdon Fitch, Jennifer Grady, Jennifer Goeglein, Ashley
Huger, Tiffany Hensley, Adam Johnson, Tyler Johnson.
Aubrie Kopec, Chrtstina Miller, Joey Rlftle, Matthew
Smith, Stephanie Story, Billie Jo Welsh, Becky Taylor,
Jennifer Grady, Whitney Thoene, Ben Holter, Billie Jo
Wel sh, Ashley Hager, Whitney Karr, Aly ssa Holter, Tricia
Con ~o . Deni se Hannum, Meghan Haynes, Hailey
Williams, Taylor Russell, Brad Parker. Kayla Gibbs. and
Bren Parker.
.
1\vo speciul/lnquc uwurds were presented, the Rachnel
Downie Awur for dedicution of youth to horses, and the
Lindsay Bolin Memorial Leadership Award . First recipients were Miranda McKelvey for the Downie Award, and
Brittany Hauber' for the Leadership Award. Both are 4-H
members.
·
The most outstanding member or members of a youth
group in Meigs County recognized and presented trophies
or plaques were as follows: FCCLA (formerly ·FHA);
Tiffany Kidder of Eastern High School ; FFA, Adrian
Hubbard of Me i g~ High School ; Teen Institute, Amanda
Jeffers of Meigs.
Reco~nized in girl ·scouts, Carty Taylor, outstanding
dai sy. Brittany Cogar. outstanding brownie, Ericka Cogar,

or

OHIO
Plck3:4· 12
Pick 4: 4·2·5-5
Supulolto19·21·2N8·29·32
l!onu• l1lh 19
Kicker: 2·7·4·9·4·2
Pick 3 nlthl: g; 7-4
Pick 4 nlthl: 1·5·3·8

e

tORI !howe"'" lncnlotl oul ~lo
GIOIId ~
WOy
SliUWillg8 by
e~polllhllelll Coli Vlrglllla 44B
saos
t 4041
SPECIAL . NOTiel
I'I EbUOlU PAl~! Ub,OOO EACH
lOt lookln~ Fot 'Tile O'"oleol
Loco/lot! Fot li New Homo. 3 lolo I
nc
'""h mn ~oody lor
dd
s
,, •
cOIIII\Uclloll Ulvavau • gia a ,
Heellh bepl ap~oo vod Lor.alod In
me•o lVIp Appto• B 1111 hom lowtl
t.Hi 9R eee n~ ehl cllve CUY~Iio nl s
apply Vls.
t 400! PLAT Lilt Lucoli d on ot"'k
oh•~•' ~d ~ turo- 1 Acr• mn.
St9,euo
ti03d· IT'S PEA8bNALITV PLU.I
~llHEi· HoMb· ~UILl:IINo• Old
IOiil011 cllotm Willi nlodelh
cullveiiiMc!l ltl IIIIo 4 SA. 2 lidty
liohlo. ~ bollio, rwliltllmol tub).
Lovoly 04UifJfJ9U kiVIotHIIy \ill
ootHbo W/1\otdWoocl lloote , chony
b 1 •
1 t 1"
Ci 1111 1 &lt;HioYv IWhg n~ OUUIIIIY
ltotil "e1y wll&lt;doW Forme\ dining
tm ~ LM Wl~!llhli!cl colllligo ~otch
&amp; polio 12 AC~EB ol beoulllul
teiiiH~ laHd POIIU!o, woodo 8 OUHIO
limbeI, ppnd A mineral tlghll Latg!
boll\ A b.lllldlnge Coil VLS &lt;49·
Mus
1-io! t, !2 ~_ ea 1 84 R! NTAL
INYI!ItMI! Ntl l'ludhy of eotlouo
lhoughl ' propot/188 wllo UI11/0 lo
&gt;~HI. You ' "" add value ! mo1o
lncultla by ll•lng each will Suy ono
bl all ol lho bullditlgo ullottu Ptloo
ilutl• 199.000 to SBb.ddO. ~ull
IHiot"'""" ovollolllo Loool!!d IH
~ometoy VLB 4&lt;9 9!00
lid~U ~AMtl~IN - ~lick 8 vinyl s
BR. 2 BA Homo btl utl¥111 1 ecro
lot · ~emily room, living 1oom
w~llopl~~eo, tJf1, eHo lo1 0o u11111r
t\J0\\1/H 111/o uti; Willi lull booemon .
Allocl!od ~ ' "' Uitou• Ohd
dolicHtti hit glrlgo al Wi ll oould
be Ulod lot llorll~o ~tlcod !01 o
~ulok 1011 SM,bOil
litlttij oHI!IHI~I Ai:ti!A old lit/~
tHine land SI!OIJ pot . . .. 1e~
ocroo llroot lor huHI!Hg "'
IOCIIOII&lt;JH Aleo " acteo m/1

BY CHARLENE HOEF~ICH

HOEFLICHIII'MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

Lotteries

l' l~ t1ll"d !lhme Al\d ltAtt1F! tM dl 1\ll!llltid tn a Utt of woodland
iollll! olleiS 3 b!!dl~uili o , w;1~ - ln Beoulllul de~m. oqu l~pod kltci~Hn
cloool. lull llAIII!i chnrtilllly IIVIny IYito!tAilllc tllll IIUUt 3 coulllel l
i)Jun; W• llt o~lftco. Nt!w o o ~ coblllet ~ Calllodr!l collillgb In II•• apeoloua
lil m \11~ klldlntl HA11Q'e , t ~ ltltJt!~nto t, llviMY. m1 . ~l oMil rllet:IIBol!l. 3
dl!liwaohl!l . • lid ctlnl~llcld• ell atoy. badtooino, i .baths· e ' "" ' 1illl A

Ulllily·wulll l• ;,lio i"'U" 2 \lei dock
Ill IIi~ tMI Willi 36' 11\gi'C/Ui\d \lOOI
Mo11y frUit Ire eo, lloweto. ami
8MIUU8 B~flllklo1 syelenl IHlh~ ree1
~col ollnclied wotego olid 11 carum l
~ oloty b""' burldlliU . ~1111:-lrl~ lllld
celtlel\1 dt1YeW8y8. ~ itdltlo YoU'll b!
tJtoud lo """ VI. Blilllli ~•8-BBIJB
,~ 48 ~PfiNI!U li WH! A!
u
• U FIN I . 1lilA chotmlllg old•l
lltJIIIO hAS UeeH le lilod~lod , nice
kllchBii. ~ 112 bellio. il uedm10.
A.te sboe ,. '
lnr:nhlil 111 lh!!: t:dUH!ty Ntctt ldl ld
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iltlilll ~11/1 ~u1mol L~ml ool-&lt;n ~Il l · LH liMI' pull!~ !!oW cltpet . tdHUo
••I IIUI» Ill uvliH&amp; , 2 lui IJoliie, lui 1~1 8 di0111¥A•l•OI Deck oh tool, oul
tllr. hooollioltf lovely cdlf
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~;~~~~t ~~,~~~ .~~ :~:~~: ~~.f~ 018 1~ 1 ~oss . s to N 1 '" •M Locotlull
,11,1, '"""" ~ hotll till ~Ji tl f" tl u 11 95U 91 t11 7 Boulll tnko Burvlce
' Md loll nl1 tJioy acHoul ·
rlulltlllli Oil ~ IU~do 0 UOIB B
oclmul Addi¥1118 ~ldw811 . ~!Vet ~~044 fl Move IIIII U88ii11Uie 1999
VIlli!• Yull oi HtJ"I• i~Wtcltll o IIIIo Mubilo iluHIO lu you! lui 14' 1 eo·
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Bkylllle wl llr e bi!cltmo I bolh,
;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r. :~~~~ 1~ ~~~r oon11o1 "" ••nu• A '"' look! llki
·• /tl•'" t \l·ill I" I" IIH" !H • HUit• M8W loi u/IIYSf ! 000
~La ~11u~t:Eb si 1~. 1!\JU • ' ~UY ~OtH iltlME!l
!4tl!U UI!NtLI!MAN tll'l l~IJIE~ 34b!B lbi!Al OP~t:l ~tUNITY til
~A~M t"itl\1 It eMu d I e i b Hill
U¥ A HOME tHAt " Nt:!t
nllirf!ltl! 1'1 1111 tobecco uaeo ;Hd oil
Yl! "~"ltil!tl . 169.900 uo Luce lod
&lt;111110101 llylill 111 lt nctU!hd t esy e4g Lilt ro1~ Rd I yeo1 ulcl , 1/2 oc
!ceo.. :f BR ~ bolll tllllcll !ljll Mill 3 bodlll10 2 bolho. n\111/y '"' '
tmt\10 w1111 kllct&lt;oH, bt!akliol ""' Niue Lf1 &amp; din 1111 "' ""· b" ulllul
olld diiiiM\I Ioult1 L lltg~ IYIHU lbdlii, oobltiol~ ttl equlo~ed kit All olooil lc
Ulllllr ollu ~ cot oltoohlld ~lito~l hb\He So IUtO lu 810 Ifi ll A bUI
Hoe 1Jllll1\l will&lt; 1""/'""" rutllotl you 0111 llol a/turd lu rhllo VLe
!lid colll&lt;ol ;II New oii HUI~d tool ill 448 Mtte
1 99~ olollg Willi polio ond tJoteh tAdll~ du11nt Lllll1 tdwh ol
~lllt¥1 gtountl pool oil~ \lloilt t hUttHiH· ~ b1Uouot11, L ~ OR , kll&amp;
lvcolloil oil SuloYIIIe ~''' t Eosl ullllly 1111 13ood mull lllco wlntlowo,
~lll&lt;ol Rood '-"'U" ""'" r•~r,t u•
• 1111811 lui Jull 1111 tl lut o couple
lUll • 801 tr;t 11¥1~/ock 111d e; d. 1noyba Il lite h;,e County wolei,
wllo oottl
ctlb
wo1koliou clhltll oow!IUe OIJtldllunlty lu tlWH
oulbUIIUIIIV. IHd 8UIIIhllt " '"''"" 1.QUI 9.Pill li&lt;!liJo ~I IIJ!o _!qw IJtlce
Alao del!t Hid glltlgi!lohed Oluoo IMM~ DIAlll Pllllllllt!NI
lij fijWn WI1H bwouty ul 1111 oij&lt;Jhlty· Utilf • A~ ' dill dWIIItH • . t hlo
LU&lt;J; 11\llil! t!ltl tiHil till Johnnie lot olr, bl 1 1111111 IIUtlll ut Aurtlillo
oil ' [Jikllhllt1t1HI aef-tl9~a
00 ~H Neodo Wotk uul wurlH A
Utl lt bUVAN tW~. eo Actto IIIII 140,000
luulll d Ul! tw~ ~d I bott!O Ill ''"""
, , M "II H
L 11,
'·~·It ~ hlolotno, ••PI~ ""I loUol Uo •
d " ' IIVI

Det.lla, A:a

Bl'l 2 112 BA Call tDdoy 196,1100

Utli~ ti'IU l~ bELillHtl'lll HelME ·140&amp;1 ltk ~ 9EClU910 N1 You II
~1 1!1\y oe ; tlil'lui~ Veiy Well lind ''"' e•llootdlnrtry new homo

AS

B4·5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3

81·3
A2

2002 Ohio Volll)' Publlthl"l Co.

PllmtUT IOYI ~ Selected as the prettiest boys ·In the pretty baby contest Saturday were
birth of 3 months. Chase Burton, son of Scott and Michele Burton of Pomeroy; 3 to 6 months,
Benjamin Kuhn, son of Denny Kuhn,and Usa Smith, Middleport: 6 to 12 months. Trey McNickle,
son of Terry and Triola McNickle of Racine; 12 to 18 months, Cody Randolph, son of Brian and
Tammy RandOIJ)h of Racine: 18 months to 2 years, Bradley Smith, son of Penny Smith,
Syracuse; 2 years. Chayce Pearson, son of Wesley and Chloeanna Pearson of Pomeroy; and
3 yeara, Keaton Huffman, son of Jason and Sheri Huffman of Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoeflich)

FREE in-home program For those with early to mid-stage
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Pulmonary Fibrosis, or
Emphysema. Learn proper breathing techniques, nutrition, and ·
modified exercises to increase lung capacity. .
Physician's Order Required to Participate
. Vllft uunllnut

i&gt;"M' www.IVIII•MIIri.Cim
.

UMITED TO 50 PARJICIPANJS. Call. Todayl

PINM ... Youtii,A3

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org

(740) 446·9160

'

..
•

&lt;

youth night

Weather

t9

'lute\ highest L'uunty unemployment rule til 13.3 percent.
Thl' lowes! wu' in Holmes
County. where unemployment
wus .
3. 1
percent.
Unemployment dccrcu.ed in
uboutthree-tifl hs of Ohio's HK
counties.
Besides Mnq;un. Mei gs 1tnd
Vin ton. ·countie s wi th the
highe" jobless ntlcs lust
month inc_ludcd Perry. 11.5;
Atlu1m . I 0.6 ; Scncc·u. ~ . X ;
Huron und Trumbull, H.6; und
Lucus und Wyundot . !!.5.

Reds win, II

18118, aooz

Il l ,,, Ri'&lt;'HIItl Avt•.. c;nlllt•uiiM, l lhln .f./)(l:ll -C1994·
H 0--14&lt;•-HOOR 7•10-·H 1- 1111
lwuk •••·®••\'1111•-m.,.,.., •, &lt;'um
"' ,..

Murgun County hud t h~

tors, overull hiring remuin'
cuutious."
The number of unemployed
workers in Ohio increu,cd
slightly, from 334,(l(l(l in June
to 336.000 in July. .
In Jul y 200 I. 254 .000
workers were unemployed,
representing 4.3 perce111 ·of
the state's populntion.
Employment wus up in the
service sector. which guineu
8.400 jobs hetwee1l June uml
Jul y
of
thi s
yeur.
Nonagriculturul wuge und
sttluried employment rose hy
5.500 jobs.
·

�.1r

The Daily Sentinel

'

•

.

PapAl

Monday, Auauat 1I, 2002

www.mydallyaentlnel.oorn

2001

s

Ohio weather
TuMday, Aug. ao
•
•

Eva M. Ruble

•
•

COOLVILLE - Eva M. Ruble. 6S, Coolville. died
Saturday. Aug. 17, 2002. at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
after an extended illness.
·
Bom Oct. 12. 1936. she was a daughter of Genevieve Taylor
Moddesitt of Pomeroy and the late Woodford Hefner.
.In addition to her mother. she is survived by her husband,
Calvin Ruble; a daughter, Rowha (David) Reed of Reedsville;
l4 grandchildren: several great-grandchildren; two brothers,
James Moddesitt of Parkersburg, W.Va. and Lewis Moddesitt
of Marietta: and a sister, Brenda Taylor of Portland,
Services will be II a.m.. Tuesday. Aug. 20, 20Q2, at White
Funeral Home, Coolville. with Rev. Phil Ridenour officiating.
Burial will follow in Stewart Cemetery, Hockingport.
Visitation will be Monday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. at the
funera I home.

••

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I -ftlli

I~Mr

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HIAYYWIIGHT WINNIRI - Winnera oi the heavyweight
• \.IGHTWIIGHT WINNIRI - Wlnnera or tho ll&amp;htwel&amp;ht kiddie
chtmptonahlp tl'llctor pull line up In the ahow srena with apon.
aort 'Wayne Rouah, who provtdl!d tho dollnr billa 11 week anet
• Ed Hupp of Hupp'a Landaeaptng. The wlnnert re: Dewn
Duaan, fourth plaoa; Shawnelle Pntterton, third pllllle; Trenton
'Otlom, aecont:l piaee; Jtnna Burdotta, first plnca. Th11111 chll·
$11'1ln pull d 12!1 pounda, ptus their own welihta ~~nd the
feiPMtlvo welahta of the tractor and alad. (Aanaa Hapka)

Cooler temps to continue

MEIGS COUNTY COURT NOTEBOOK

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
1-lighs on Tuosduy will be in the upper .70s to low 80s.
Overnight lows will be mostly In the SOs.
•
While no ruin in In the forecast for the remainder of tho
wt~rk week. temperatures will stun rising uguin. By Thursduy.
highs will· be near 90 in many areas.
The record high temJ1Cruture for Aug. 19 wus 101 in 1936
und the record low was 48in 1943. Sunset Monday night will
be ut R:23 p.m. und sunrise on 1\tesduy ut6:48 u.m. ·
Weather Forecast
FCCLA AWARD- Tiffany Klddor of Eeatern High School Wlll tha winner of the top IIWird In tho Fnmlly Cnroora ond Community
Toduy... Hnzy und humid with scattered showers und thun· leaders of Amorlc• proaram In Meta• County. Sho wail presented the trophy by Jftnlct Wobar, t !IChor. (Ch6rl no HO(!flleh)
derstorms. Some thunderstorms muy contain heuvy ruinfnll.
Hit:hs in the upper 80s. South wind,s S to 10 mph becomin11
west curly in tile uftemoon. Chance of min 50 percent.
Tonlght ... Scuttored showers. and thunderstorms through
about midnlght ... Then purtial cleurin11. Still mullt:Y· l..ows
near 70. West winds S to 10 mph becoming north. Chance of
ruin SO percent.
·
1\tesduy... Mostly sunny. Highs In the mid 80s. North winds
around 10 mph.
.
Tuesdny nlght. .. Mostly clear und not us sticky. Lows in tho
lower 60s. ·
·
Wcdnesduy... Mostly sunny. Highs In tho upper, 80s.
Wednesday night ...Mostly clear. Low~ in the mid 60s.
·
.
Extended Forecast
Thursduy ... Mostly clear und hot. Highs neur 90.
Frldu~ ... Hot and humid. A chU!lCC of showers and thunder·
st?rms 111 the uftemoon und ut night. Lows in the upper 60s.
Htghs ncar 90.
·
Suturduy... A chunce of showers und thunderstorms Into the
cvonlng. Lows 6S to 70. High~ in the mid 80s.
Suuduy... Mostly clear una less humid. Lows in the lower
60s. Highs in tho lower 80s.
·

FFA TOP AWAAO - Reoosnlzod oa tho 1nos1 outstanding FFA mombor In Mol&amp;i County wo1 Adrian Hubbard of Molga High
School. She was preaonted tho award by Maxine Aoao of Home National Benk 1ponaor, left, and Tim Slmpaon, FFA odvlaor,
Molga High School. (Charlene Hoeflich)
·
T!EN INSTITUT!- Amend a Jeffers was named arand ohem·
pion of Teen Institute activities In Mel&amp;&amp; County by Julie
WandllnQ, prevention specialist for Health Recovery. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

,.

.Prep sports special

·. sedloli coming ·
.'fhursdtlf In flje
.

The · Gallipolis Dally
Tribune Is seeking a
clerk for lte editorial
department to aselet with
community news lteme
and other clerical tasko.
GIRL SCOUT AWARDS -The best scouts on their respective . Muet be computer liter·
levels were honored and the beat troops In the county were ate, have excellent typ·
recognized at Youth NIQht. From the left front, they are Cerly
Taylor, outatandln&amp; daisy; Erlcka Cogar, outstanding junior, and lng, grammar, spelling
Jennifer Smith, outatandlng cadette. Troop winners, left to and organizational ekllla.
right, back, were Junior Troop 1276, Middleport, accepted by Will be required to han·
Cayla Taylor; Meigs Palsy Troop 1292 accepted by Terrie die multiple tasks In a
Houser; Southern Brownie Troop 1120, accepted by Shirley fast·pacE!d environment.
Cogar; Junior Troop 1276 of Middleport, acceptea by Jemma Mall reeunie to;
Ebersbach . (Charlene Hoeflich)
Bette Pearce
Menaglng editor

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2156

The Qalflpollt Dally

Tribune
825 Third Ave.,
Galllpollt, OH, 4H31.
No phone calla, please.

Nicole dt Boer ("The Dead
ZUno") Wllllh~ ehlld whom·
prl1cd her family when 1he
come horne with the lead In
'1'ho WIZArd of Oz."

Don1ld .\dtoMun li'MINon
("Serub1") MOO! by tho nick·
name Shun And uppom In
Drondy'l video "Sittln' Up In
My Room.''

I'OMGJIOV - A 11\lmlllf at 111m Wlll9 -n"y
oi)IOOMil@III)V MtiQI Cllut~y Cllutl J\JIIgt &amp;li'ltl\ L Sltlly.

Cllnlty. Mlctdt.p611, UIIO IUI~Mtd, Ill Ml'&lt;iH WVi , $(!()I~ llOitl, UiltltH: BIVIIIIV R. Root,
miHIIhl jill 1\Jtl)tfldld to ont day, IWO V'!itl prub&lt;lllon, Mlctdlttpotl, 130 Inti C\:1111, ..111&gt;111,'ntrty 0. LIIWII, Letart
: Ttllltt ht\ICI we~e. ~•mv ~ ~oltlamb j, , ~IKll!oomnt, llOIII, Clootlill16 Vl6itlllll: l'ranklln ~tlltt, l'oolt!OY, 180 W.\li., 130 inti OOilt, INIIltlt: ~yth W.Dlmlilll, New
Uft 11\U OOMI, II!M(t, JUifllll ' · Q'"", 81\tdt, Uti 1M IU!ptttdld, 110111, 10 dil.yl jAil IUiponoltd Ill lhltl Millhlili&lt;l, 130 lntl IlOilO, ltlltltft: Jitl\81 R. TiV!Ot,
• 00111, lpttll, '1110 Inc! !111111, MIIIMII, Jlllltl OtllOtl'iett, ltNtd, llllt V'lf fll(lb!llon, rtllfllfllfiQ llldlt, domelllo llullanct, 130 Inti COlla, epotdiJohn M.Wlllleltr Jr , W
ClliUmllli W.VI., Sro 111d 110111, ltll Ol.utnllt: 'liliry L
: f'utl\llftl~ 00111, :Ia &lt;IIVIIIIIIU!IIII\CI!d, lwO Y!!lrl Pftl• llffiltno.
Oavld 0 . Gilkey, l'umtftl)l 1(10 ana t)()lla, llltt!d: Soyre, 'l'omaroy, 130 ond i!t!lll, IHtbi~; M111y 0
• biiiOO, rtltrllnlt1Q oljjl!, OOtliHikl 'lllllel\lli!, Olmtn
' ftf11i1!1Fkitl, f!olntftiV, ootll, I!() MY' jaliiUI!IIIRfltd, iWil ftran!IOO Sf!lhh, Mlctdltj)Otl, 1100 IHd 110111, one ytlr OiHIIeo, Mlddlej)Orl, SliO and oolla, aealbtll: Monna J
:Yflll pftlbalion, 19Mr&amp;h~I1Q 0!1ltr, dooitJII; vlolti1Cit, pi'Oilttlon, M optrtltlra llllt!nlli 8ooll w 'flooougn, Bul!lllll, Ootllvlllt, SilO 1110 00111, lfalbtll, t&lt;yta R.
'Jotvl ~ltlillnQtr, I'OmtfflY, 1100 11111 00111, ftO IIIIi 1111 Aliltlll, 130 and 011111, opte(j, Heinl~. Cllali, l'l:!mll!ly, Hudot&gt;n, f'u1111tray, llltl ltll! Mill, lfOIIIIQn, Chiflll A
1UijM!Ilt1ttl, IWD VIlli prtlbliltm, ftlilllning om11, 11141!1, 11100 lnd Cllllt, 80 diVIIIiiiU!IIII'!Cittl to tO, 011t )'Ill Klllllltn, Mlctdlej)Ori,I:IO and ootla, 'PIId.
1'111111. N ~lyt'!)idl, NIW H!it11, 1111111 cflly. ltlltltll, llotntt IUifllll!lon, lwO y@tlf prllt!allllll, DUI, 11100 Inc!
8hafllnt K. J~hnlon, OOIUtllllUI, I:ZO IM COlli,
"lbiOOi I W\lltt, "ICMit, til&amp; ll'tCI 00111, lllllft(itliHI 110111, 80 IIIIi 1111 IUiptl\dld, two )'1111 ~iiiOII, drl• ACOA, l:lil ind 00111, lellbtll: l'l)'lln H. Ooltt&gt;n, Poinl
djolai1Cit 11111111, Mlal\ul L 01111, LJngl'lllle, lliO and lling undtr IUIIItMIIOn, 00111, f&amp;IIUrt to 1101\lttll: Siinltv Plllllnl w.VII ., 130 ihd t)()lil, lllltllll, 130 and ..,,,,,
· 00111, teallltlt, Jealllll t.. Mlrwm, Lan;a'llllll, 131lancl McOillri, lllalnt, llli!O lnd COlli, 10 d.llit jilt IUiptnd• tptld; Cr)'lllll King, l'lltfti«Jy, 130 IM COlli, tlflted:
06111, Mllbill,DIMII. tlun, l'llftltft~V, 1880 ll'tCI COlli, ld kl mttt, Ilk IOO!tlh Mlltnll IUI!llnttOn, ant year pro· Wllliem J. Mthat.v, Albin• 130 and oo111. Hiltltl:
10 aiVIIIil IU!IIIill111l to lh!H, lik 11\tlnlh lletf\11 lUI• biiiOO, lliiiM 11100 IUIPI"dld upon C6rtll}lltilll\61 AT~ OrtgOry V. Mklnl, Hamlin W.V.., I flO lh(j cotlt, llllura
ptnlllllt, 1111, OUI, 1700 IUI!lfntlld II AT~ laltool OClftl• !llltOOI, DUI, tll8 and Galla, lllturt 10 llllltiiOii Kortn M. It! control, J1~rey D.Weill, Klllrldi, GO oncl 00111, un1111
llilltd, Ill);! 1tlr·pftlballon, 0011' ooly, lillure 10 yitl(t; CIIIIO, I'OO\tloy, tll8 lnd 00111 on lltlll, III!M dlit 1111 vt!tkllt: Pllfleilt ~ O'~tlltV, Qoltna, 130 tnd ootll, llllNd:
Mtn A Laudth, Olllltl\lre, $100 ancl 00111, tllllllell au~p~ncllct on mil, 19tlllullon, ~"' V@lr pi'Oiltlllltl, I'M! i!flan -M . JtnNngl, RII!QIItY W.'o/1., 130 ana OOIIi,
\liMiflllon, Jtmtl Q IQOnJr , l'omt!OY. 1100 ll'tCI OOIIt. oounlt Pitting bid ohtOita: ltndri Hoill&lt;lnbttly, opttd: J!ar~y D. Browtl, Cllrt1lll, t30 ana 00111, iii)Md:
11\l411111 Optrlllon: Jlllltlltln J, WIIIOO, l'tlmtray. 11100 l'off\110)1 US IMd 06111, ltltj)ltlfltr biOitlng: Jullln N. t&lt;llhiHn P. Hlftman, Alhtna, 130 and 00111, IPHd: 0111
and 00111, 1\Jfllhurl, (!() dayallll IU!ptttdtd 1ft 10, ona Wra~ Clalllpolll, 130 alld 00111, lllllltlt~, lliO tnd llillll, W. Holllaln Jr., !ltlnl Albina W
.\11., 130 ind ll(lllt. Hit·
•V'Ar llotnte IU!ptt111on. twO veara Pftlllillon, criminal ovtrtlllng lotd: Jtrtmv A. Wrav. Clallipllllt, IQO ana bitt: UO and 0011.. alCOhOl In motor whkllt: Jamte w.
, lltlptll, COlli, :10 dlyt iiiiiUiflti'!CIId IOIWil, IWil \'1111 00111. OYifllll"'l lflld:OhfiiiOflllllll'l. IIIII, l'ofl\lftly, I(!() Qnlndltl, Wtll Hamlin W.VI., 130 IMd 00111, tlf)Nd:
• pmballon, rtlltl~tlng ordlr: Klllh ~011~11, liulland, 111d 00111, llllbtll: Brnlll I , ~yona, l'lulltnd, ~DC lnd l'ltblflOI ~. Ctnl, lbung110wn, 130 and 00111, eptHtd:
: 11 oo and ooala, 0111 \'HI P«lllitiOO, rt!llralntno llfflll, Galli, INiblll, II&amp; lnd 001111, ll(lp ilgn: Wilbur~ Wiinl 11101 ~· lclor, Bll~rt. 1:10 IMd IIOIIt, !pttd; Mlllhtw 8.
• •tallfttarty oonaue1: Plobefl A. MoMIIII1n Jr , 11n Jr , Llrtgl\/1111, 180 IMMIII, p(liHIIIOii 01 Mlf~UIMI, HiYJ1111,· Pofl\lroy, 130 IM 011111, llllilt!; Yii'OII M.
' · I'IA1101aco, 01111., UO 111d 00111, IIIHd: Gary M, Wotlt, 180 altd 00111, poaitulon ot druo parapl\trntlll; JaHrey ~lnnty, Loaon, tOO ancl Mill, Htlbtlt: Aoyrmnd ~.
' MltleHI, 1:10 lnd 00111,. lptld, Tl111tli11Y IC, WIIIIHI, L. Ounntngltlm, ~lflltllliUIQ W.Va., 130 ancl 001t1, Tldtotd Jr., MoKetl Floekll'l., 130 tlld 00111, epotd;
: lyriOUH, UO Inti 00111, ljllld:Tilllmll 1\, Oomptllon, eptld: "'-rk W,8fl\lldll\', !'otlltnd, t30 lnd OGIII, Mil• Tl1110lft'l8. Dll~ OlffOI, .30 lnclllOIII, lptl(l: Sulln L.
bill:~ .. J. Malden, ~lhtnl, 131lll'tCI 00111, IPHG: Mar~ l'raMia, A.iid1vllle, &amp;GO end ooata, IPttd: 8emuol
Wtt1110n. 131llncl coati. lpild: O.vld w.Wlloo~~tn,
Moot~tn; , no 1110 00111, ua1t1111: Ollllatar "'· WlltaiOfl, I . 11\llflf, Mllle"l, 1:10 and 00111, IHitll!: t&lt;llfty I . McOtnclon, MlddlllllurQ Pil., U0 and 00111, ..lllltH:·
ltlpre, 131l anctaoall, aptld: "ofltl W. Alcllllll, l'lln Oollr, l.ln111111r, 110 tnd oaala, HltoeH: Alfllll I . B11n1 A. Dlnnl1, l'omi«Jy, 130 and .)XIIII, ..albeit;
, Cort ~T ON., 130 1110 00111, Hltotlt: llrllltO A. ~011: 0\bllt, ~lfktriCUrQ W,VI., 130 lnd 1111111, MIIINII: llloltll A, Otnnll, Pofl\lroy, lliO lrtd 00111, Hlltllil:
OIIOIIVIIII: 1:10 1nd 00111: lfiiHi Dtllld M, Konig, ~onald K. UH, Uf'OIIIIf, li!O 1110 00111 Hlltltll: ~lUll Aaron M.81lnd, I~IMIVilll ...., IGO IM 011111, Hlltllll;
!'omero~ no 1ncl aoall, ltlitllll,
1. 'r'Orvltr, lryon, 1:10 and oolta, lj)llll; JOIIPh W.011y April J. llltrna, '•lrllorn, lliO and oatil, ~~~ af otntat:
Jr.,
~l!MI, UO 1M 011111, INitllll: LOitn Q, IlliG, NIW IIIlO II IMP, 110 lncl 00111: lllltitU: JOhn ~. Mlrtln,
1111 A. Mtlktll, NIWIIk, 110 IM OGIII, lpiH~~~
1. Morrlltln, tnaltl\lpolll Ind., no and colla.
: Oonoofl!, 1110 and 00111, IPHCI. 110 atld •ta.IHIIIIII: Mon \11,, 1111 and 00111, tifllt J~~~t~~hlmlilll Inn
John ~ . CIOOII, Vltnlll W,\11,, 110 llld 00111 Ul!Niti JOdi II. llvln, 11111111, 1110 lncl 00111, INIDIH: MilliN 1), DlniiiOO, ltoeifiiOII, 110 and 00111, IPifCI IIHIIII fOld
Arthur G. Cllth, Alh1111, IIIQ Inc! tiOIII, lf)HCI: Oanltl 0. Mall, A11mon11 IP!Ing ''" 1110 aM oatil, IIPttd: William IIOIIdltlont: Douo 1. l'rttiNn,l'llcllll, 11000 and 011111,
lnvaer. Utllana, uo ana colla, Hlllltll: Tlrnotny L. J. Tipple, lllpre, 1110 ana OGIII, IPIIdi MIUIICII C. tiM monlhljiiiiUtptndld 10 10, IWil yttlt PIODIIIon, itll
Inc! 1000 IUtptrl&lt;ltd upcn ptOOI Ill I valle IIOIMH, no
~lftOII, OooMIIe, no and colla, 1111111: AMiaon 11. Madge, OtOIIUf Ind., 1:10 lnd 00111, tplld.
Ohtrlll C. MCOallatar, Mttalll \11,, 1~0 llld 00111, 0111111011 lloenn, 1110 lnd 00111, IUI!ltll: Mloholl J.
Molnto1h, Oolumbva. 130 ancl 00111, ~~~tart: ldWIIIII 1.
IIQIIt, 'IIIGIVIIII, 1110 IRO COlli, ltlllllll: Aullln II eptld: Donald ' · lpenotr, Vlnaent, 110 end oa111, Adktna, 11101111, 1110 ana 1111111, IPIId.
JtlfttY ~. 11111!1, AICIMI, 130 lnd 00111, II)Hdi
ftar;a, Olnolnn111, 130 and colla, tptlll: UO lttd 00111. ~Pftd: Alltn I . lOIII!, Cltllllpolll, 130 ln&lt;l 001" lf)HCI:
Hllbllt: OOnlld W,Dolton, OOIUII'IIIll, 110 lnd 00111, lrltn ~ ~OUdllhlll, 1'11011\1, 1:10 ll'tCI 00111, IPNd: Anii\Ony Wnlll, MICICIIII)OII, OGI" tO diVIIIIIIUiptMCIId
Mlllltlt: Tnomu o.1.1mb, N,01\trleaton 1.0, no 1nd Mloillai .W. MaoltWifl, Mllth," lacl Inc! OGIII, lf)HCI: 10 OHI day, IWO ytilfl prOCIIIOn, llllrlinlng ordtr,
co111, 1pttd: 11on11d a. ~•wv. l'omtrov. 140 and ooata. AntiiOny ~. Ml~ AHdill'lllt, lacl and 011111, Ullbtll; domtliiO viOIInct: MilO A McOIIIn, Pltlclllbu'O W.VI.,
ovtftold: OhiiiiCOIIIr T. LH, l'omtrov, U0 ln&lt;l 00111. Dlllld Iii ~nit, Amb!ICIQI Pt., 130 and OGIII, Ulllltll: 130 lnd 00111, 11116111; FIODIII 0. U!Dan, Otnll
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• ap11d, no 1nd 00111. llllbell: llrlllfl Arthur, Mlmblrly 0. O.tflh, Plllllklll, 130 IM 00111, lflltd: I'Onti!OV, U0 tnd OGIII, lllltltll, MIOitll D. Ollntr II.,
l'omeroy. IRS lncl 00111, lftrH UIV' 11111\llpin&lt;lld,IIIII• Wayne L. MUilt, Qrnnup Ky., llltl atld 00111, ltn 01 Oln• . l.lnclltllr, 130 tl'tCI 00111, IIPIH: l.lwrtncel. ~ON Jr.,
Mlon, 0111 vear problllon, p1ulng b1d al'llelka: Mloltlll ttr: MaHIItw A, Mdllton, AOQirtvNit Tlnn., 1:10 lnd Alolne, 130 Inc! 00111, HIIIIIH: John l'locoN, O~llpolll,
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, two VIlli prOClllon, flllrtlnlno older, orlmlnal damag• eplld, 1110 and 00111, HltlltK: Wtnda M11lnar, 11101n1, and coati, Hlllll~: Ohlllll IC, Tipton, Oolumbul, 131l
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1'1101111, Ut 0 lnd 00111, CYIIIOid: TlrH ~. lowllng, ntlla: Mlol\ttl J,Mkln1, flltcl111, 1100 and oaal~ 10 d1ya and 00111, tallblll; Blln A. Ctlrlla, 01~11, 120 ofld
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thrH, 111 month ll01n .. IUIPIH!Ion, 0111 VIII probatiOn, btllon, PQIHIII!Ifl, 1110 anti OGIII, PGIHII Plrapillrna• 1188 and OGIII, 1111 oYtftoldi Mlohlll I , Ot"ltl,
t.1111nd 11100 IU!Ptndld upon oomp1111on Olllf' 1011001, 111:Jlmtl M
.11111111, ~1011\t, 120 and 00111, lift 01 CIIMIII: OOIUII'IIIll, 1110 tncl 1111111, Hllbtll: Jlmmv 0. Cltrrtll,
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probation, raalllullon, rtllralnlng o1111r, orlmlnll dlmag• IIOinH IUipiMIIOn, twO )'1111 problllon, jill and 11100 ~11. , 130 and 00111, lflltdi~lUI I . ,orbl~ l'omtroy, 120
l!lg, Mlohatl J. AnlltriiOO, Middleport, IJO and 011111, IUI!Itndtd upon OO~Itllon ot AT~ IChOol, CUI:Tl~thy Iltd oottl, llotlllgn: Wivttl 0. !.Iii, I'Ofl\lroy, 130 tnd
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'
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The Daily Sentinel

m;fl..Valls~ Ch,hlian SchHt

Reader Sirvlces
Co"eollon Pelloy
Our main oono11n In allttorlllll
to bt IOCuratt. If ~u know of an
oml'l' In a ator~, oat tltt ntw~room
at (7 ~) ot2· 1ae. ·

OPII BOUIB
.

Tueaday, Auguet 20th • 8·8 PM .
Thl.~ Is a greattlmefor intere.s·ted parents to
visit the school and meet .~ttif]:

.

Wf'ft'I!WW'!IW!ft'WIIW!IWWMWI'"UIUIM'III!'Itiii!MIGIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIftillllltii-IIIIIIIIIIIIWIIilllllltll-~illllllllillllltl

It' g tJmg to ggnd' am back to gchoollU

Clttalllld Adl

Credit

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740-992-1771 . ,4
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Othlr llrYIOII
l!x1.3
.t.cN•tltlng
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Clroulttlon

for your back to school expensesll

credit@creditxpres$,com .
www .creditxpress.com

Ntw• D•crtm•n••
Tht 11111n num It ot2·2tee.
Dtpal'1nitnf erctentiOna are:.
lxt. 12
Otn••l.m1n1111
lxt. 13
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Of'

See the Credit Xpress Team

124 West Main Stre,et ·
Pomeroy, OH 45769

ftlt$!1111111

""II

Middleport, Ohio

.Sentinel .

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

kiddie ohamplonahlp tractor pull: Ryan Amos, flrat pt11c:e;
Colton Hall, aec:ond place; Oerek Powell, third; Amanda
Roush, fourth place. Pictured with the children are sponaora Wayne Roush and Ed Hupp. Other apon8or8 of this
event Include Olin Smith, who l)rovlded tne small tractor
and sled and Hart'a Tech Center, larae tractor. Each ohlld In
thlll cl~~aa pulled 150 pounde, plua tila or tier own weight
ana thoae of the tractor and sled. (A(Inea Hiitpka)

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ToHnd •m•ll
ntwtOmydallyltntlltll.com
On theW•b
www.mydtllyiOI!tlnll.oom .

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Ohio VIlli!' ~tAIIIIahl"l Co,
Publlilttd 11/tiY lntrnoon, MDndly
through ~rida~ I1 Oourt 81.,
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II,, Pomeroy, 01\1'1.,•&amp;780.
lub•orlpllon rail•
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.Youth
from PtpA1
oumandlna juillor, Jennifer
Smith, outatandlna cadette;
outat1111dlna troop• and lead·
er.a, Dally 1292 with Terrie
Hou•er 11 le11der. Southern
Brownie• ll20 with Shirley
Co~ar a1
leader, and
Ml dle~ort Junior Troot 127
with
errenu Eben ack,.
leuder. .
. Recoanlzed In boy t~eouu
were Troop 200 8pon10red by
Hemlock Orove Chrlltlan
Church, oul814ndlnf troop;
Chrla VanReeth o Troop
lOOk ouutandlng Acout; and
· Pac 249 IPQJIIOI'ed by the

PotnerodJ Methodllt Church,
outatan lnd pac:k.
Reco~ zed wu Alyua
· Holter,
Co'21Z:'• rep·
reaentAtlvo .to the
2 State
Pnshion Botll'd. Appointed to
the 2003 Meta• County
Pashion Board were Tina
Drak4J!, Aly11a Holter. Kelley
Holter, Audrlonna Pullins,
and Amanda Roush.
Alyua H91ter was one of
· four 4-H membera recoa·
nlzed. for achlevln~ ··out·
81andlna of the d~_f In /tro·
~ct work at the hlo tate
air. The othera were
Whitney Thoene with 11
projc~t,
woodworking
Dakota Anna wlth a ~roject
on the 1afe u1e of ~un1; and
Andrea Buckley wit a c:ook·
Ina project.

eta•

Reds gain ground in NL Central
S11 Blfor the scoop

LOCAL BRIEFS
Answer calls
POMEROY
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered the following calls
for assistance over the week·
end:
•
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:.50 a.m. Saturday, Beech
St., Middleport, Darlene
Johnson, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
3:17 p.m., Rutland Civic
Center, Travis ·Small, Holzer
Medlcal Center:
3:29 p.m., U.S. 33. motor
vehicle accident, Britni
Bevans, Holzer; John Boling,
Pleasant Valley;
l 0:41 p.m., Overbrook
Center, Allee Swiderski.
, Holzer:
11 :.5 l p.m., .Vine St., Jamie
Jones. Jackson General
• Hospit11l:
2:14 p.m., Rocksprings
kehabllltation
Center,
Dorothll Rtebel. O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital;
7:24 p.m., Overbrook
Center, Kelly
Romine,
Pleasnt Valley; ·
7:29 p.m .• Lincoln Heights,
Charles Harmon, refused
tre11tment.
POMEROY
ll:~l a.m. Sunday, Poplar
Chiii'Ch Rd., bruah fire;
2:56 p.m., Holzer Meiaa
Clinic, Paron Flangan,
Holzer.
REEDSVILLE
· 8:0.5 p.m., Ohio 124, Oary
Chevalier, St. Joseph's
Hospital.

OHer breakfast
RACINE - A free break·
fast will be served to parents
bringing children to school In
Southern Local
School
District Wed~esday, from ~ to
8:30 a.m., at the Umted
Methodist Church parking lot.

Eastem Local

board meets
TUPPERS PLAINS -·
Eastern Local Board of
Education
will
meet
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at
the Eastern Public Library
conference room.
·

School begins
.

TUPPERS PLAINS School in Eastern Local
School District will begin
Aug. 27. and a back-to·
school open house will 1 be
held Aug. 26 from S to 7 p.m.
Students and parents are
invited to attP-nd.
Those · with school-aged
children who are new to the
district should contact the
schools as soon as possible to
register children, from 8 a.m.
to .2:30 p.m. daily for both
elementury and high school.
For children five years old
by Sept. 30, not yet registered
for kindergarten, orientation
will be held tomorrow at 9
a.m. Parents are asked to
bring the. child's Social
Security card, birth certifi·
cate and Immunization

'

recorda.

Student lunc:he1 1n1 $1.30
for K·12. Children recelvlna.
free or reduced-priced lunch·
es will be permitted the aame
until new fonns are complet·
ed and returned for vallda·

lion.
Students will be aiven seV·
eral forms that will need to be
completed as soon as poui·
ble. Parente are asked to com·
plcte the forma at once.
Questions about the school
year should be directed to
High School Principal Rick
Edwards, 740·985·3329, or
Elementary Principal Jodi
Howard, 740·985·3304.

JCPtl\nty
C.h!IOI

MIICHAHT llft('IIMI·I
~,.

thd

Avet~n

I

Otllipoli• OH •!II I

(740) 441-1515
Mltt-JeiiO.I

Ol'l't'iJ:,OPINI
li:SO PM· N ·1"·11

lOX

I 12110 PM .AT • IUN
Tltl ADVIHTUIIU OP I'I.UTO

.NAIH (I'QII)
7:20 1 t:IIO

I.

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I

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

EiiitlrG:I100HOII-1~fi'M·,.,~ ......

~UI.MI;,

- - '

Dear
Abby

.

111 Court Strltt • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) ~92·2157

.

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

DEAR AU\'\ J am a ilrl
llvlna in hlhtwv, PU:istlll.
J am llll&amp;lpito a boy who
lo
mo ~ m\lth:, Tho
~em Is I wasln love with
lllother &amp;IIY who •mod to
love me. out we dktn., admit ·
it 10 each other. l have ~:tool~
wlitil'.ll rw him 10 uy tlovo

l.n rers w the etliwr cuP weiC'Omt. rhn should be lt&gt;'S tha11
300 1\'on/s. AI/ It/If/'!' 11/'P subject /0 editin,q mul IIIII.!/ f&gt;t ·
si,~nerl 1111el indrrrle clfid!'Pss mul te/epltone 11umber. No
rtll.l'iglled letr••rs will h•• published. l..mer.1· slumld be ill W)(H/
f(H'ff ,

tUJdrt sShiM

i .\'SIIl'."', tWifU:'TSOIUifilie.\',

71.- llflilliOIIS tXjlll!.ISet/ itl the C'0/1111111 be//111' /Ill! the 1'011·
se11srrs of the Ollio Vall•.v PublisllinR Co. s erli.torial/x)(m/,
unless o th~1wi:'e 1101erl.

· • San Antonio Express-News. on fitmily planning deserved
U.S. supporT: Sudly. domestic politicul considerutions appeur
. to have taken precedence in the Bush udministration's deci: sion to withhold funding for the fumily planning program of
· the United Nmions.
Congress hud appropriuted $34 mi Ilion for the U.N.
Polulution Fund, wh1ch provides fumily plunning programs in
.14 poor notions. The money will go instead to a child sur:vival and health program of the U.S. Agency for International
. Development.
·
: This 1s a narrower progrum focused in fewer nations.
· Ostensibly, the reason wus thut the fund supports forced
.· abortion programs in China, but u U.S . ~overnment fact -find·ing team hud concluded that the fund nett her contributed to or
:supported such a program. In uddition, the fund, which spent
only $3.5 million of its $274 million budget in Chinn lust year,
. hud ugreed not to spend U.S . money there . ,
: Nonetheless, socml conservatives who oppose )lbortion hud
: pushed for the administration to withdraw funding. But those
who oppose abortion have, in fact. likely worked uguiilst their
own professed agenda.
The fund's executive director told the Associated Press $34
million would have been enough to prevent 2 milli9n unwant: ed pregnancies, nearly 800,000 induced abortions. 4, 700
maternal deuths, 60,000 cases of serious maternal illness and
over 77,000 infant and child deaths.
'
The Bush administration had included funding for the pro~ram in its budget for 2002, as well as in 200 I. This flip·flop
1s a sad signal to be sent during this election year.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Reformers overlook diversit)t of 'left behind' students

Bv NAT H!NTOI'F
A recent national poll by the Public
Education Network und the newspaJJ~:r
Education Week revealed that, next to jobs
and the economy, education is the most
pressing priority for Americans. And,
tndeed, there is a pl'tlfusion of books and
articles on the need for educational
reforms.
But how 1nuny Americans know - or
care - that, as Michael Rebell pointed out
in Education Week (April 24), "Over 70
percent of African-American and Latino
public school student~ in the United States
currently attend predominimUy minority
schools." So much for the glow in~
promise of the Supreme Court's unant·
mous 1954 decision, Brown v. Bourd of
Education, declaring segregated public
schools inherently unconstitutional.
Rebell focused on the cntclal reason so
many children are left behind: '.'The innercity schools attended by most of these
minority students receive substantially less
funding and have fewer qualified teachers,
larger classes, and vastly inferior facilities
than schools attended by more affluent
white students in the surrounding suburbs."
Often overlooked by .school"reformers"
aY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
is'
that fact that there are many poor white
Toduy is Monday, Aug. 19, the 231stduy of2002, There are 134
and
Americun Indian children in this
days left in the year. ·
nation
who are subject to the same bleak
Today's Highlight in History:
.
futures .as black and Hispanic youngsters
On Aug. 19, 1812, the U.S,S. Constitution defeated the British
.
in inferior schools.
· frigate Guerriere east of Nova Scotia during the War of 1812.
In the 19th century, Horace Mann was
On this date:
the
champion of the common school In 1848, the New York Herald reported the discovery of gold in ·
publicly
supportc:d, nonsectarian and com· California.
mitted to teachin~ youngsters how to
In 1929, the comedy program' "Amos and Andy," staJTing
become
active ciuzens in a democracy,
Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, made its network radio
debut on NBC.
In 1934, a plebiscite in Germany approved the vesting of sole
executive power in Adolf Hitler.
In 1942, about 6,000 Canadian and British soldiers launched a
disastrous raid against the Germans at Dieppe. France, suffering
about 3,000 casualties.
In 1955, severe flooding in the Northeast claimed 'some 200
lives.
In 1960, a tribunal in Moscow convicted American U-2 pilot
Francis Gary Powers of espionage,
Bv RAcHEL BECK
In 1974, U.S. Ambassador RodgerP. Davies was fatally woundNEW YORK -An investor just docsed by a bu !let that penetrated the American embassy in Nicosia,
n't know what to believe anymore.
Cyprus, during a protest by Greek Cypriots.
All the CEO scandals, controversy over
In 1976, President Ford won the Republican presidential nomistock options and financial restatements
nation at the party's convention in Kansas City.
made the accuracy of corporate earnings
In 1977, comedian Groucho Marx died in Los Angeles at age
suspect.
86.
.
And if you can't trust the earnings, you
In 1991, Soviet hurd-liners announced to a shocked world that
can·~ rely on the price-eamings ratio that
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev had been removed from power.
ha.~ Ion~ been a key formula for making
(The coup collapsed two days later.)
·
stock p1cks.
·
· Ten years ago: The third ni¥.ht of the Republican national con"Earnings are just too easy to manipuvention in Houston, billed a~ 'family values night," featured first
late," said Xen Stem, who runs a ~folio
lady Barbara Bush an~ Marilyn Quayle, wile of Vice President
management ftrm in San Diegp. 'No one
Quayle, as speakers.
is really sure what earnings mean anyFive years ago: Carl Drega, a 67 -year-old resident of
more, and that is causing some reliance on
Colebrook, N.H., shot and killed a part-time judge, two state
PIEs to fade."
troopers and a newspaper editor befott being killed in a gun bat.. Investors have long used 'PIE ratios to
tle with police.
help them assess a stock's value. The PIE
One year ago: An underground methane and coal dust explosion
shows the relationship between the price
in Ukraine killed 55 miners. Davis Toms won the PGA
of a company's shares and its earnings
. Champion!lhip with a 1-under-par 69. Donald Woods, a veteran . over the last 12 months. If a company
South African newspaper editor and apartheid opponent, died in
earns $1 a share and trades for $10, that
Sutton, England, at age 67. Soul singer Betty Everett died in
means the PIE ratio is I0.
Beloit, Wis., at age 61.
·
Historically, lower P!EII are generally
Today's Birthdays: Actor L.Q. Jones is 75. Former jockey
foundin value stocks, which are older and
Willie Shoemaker 1s 71 . Actress Debra Paget is 69. Tennis coach
,more stable companies. Higher .PIEs '!I'C
Renee Richards is 68. Actres• Diana Mulda4r is 64. Rock musiusually linked to growth stocks 111 nskier
cian Ginger Baker (Cream, Blind Faith) is 63, Singer Johnny Nash
industries. .
is 62. Actress Jill St. John is 62. Sen: Pred Thompson, a Tennessee
On il~ own, the .-aYo's value is virtually
Republican, is 60. Singer Billy J, Kramer is ~9. Country singerworthless, High and low is relative to other
songwriter Eddy Raven is 58. Rock singer Ian Gillan (Deep
companies in the same industry, and a
Purple) is 57. Fonner President Clinton is 56. Tipper Gore, wi(e
stock .can be. considered undervalued or
of former Vice President AI Gore, is 54. Actor Gerald M~Raney is
overvalued depending on its compari110n
54. Rock musician John Deacon (Queen) is S I. Actor Jonathan
with its peers and historical moves.
Fr.tKes is 50. Political consultant Mary Matalin is 49. Actor Peter
For instance, Wai-Mart Stores Inc.'s PIE
Gallagher is 47. Actor Adam Arkin is 46. Singer-songwriter Gary
trends arou~ 23, which is in line ~ith the
Chapman is 45. Actor Martin Donovan is 45. Actor Brie Lutes 1s
broader retail 1ndustry ·and the diSCOunt40. Actor John Stamos is 39. Actress Kyra Sedgwick is 37. Actor
stores sector, Intel Corp:s PIE, however, is
Kevin Dillon is 37. Country singer Lee Ann WolllliCk is 36, TV
about 32, less than ·half of others in the
reportc:r Tabitha Soren is 35. Country singer-songwriter Mark
technology industry and 6 points below
McGuinn is 34. Actor Matthew Perry Js'33. Country singer Clay
the average of chip manufacturers.
Walker is 33. Tennis player Mary Joe 'Fernandez is 31. Actor J:
A company's PIE is also often com)Ydl'ed
Evan Bonifant is 17. RapperLil' Romw is 13.
with the average PIE of the stocks 111 the

TODAY · IN HISTORY

""'w

Mll1tVI 1110 - Din Til also 1)1.1~'*1!11 t~ ·
cn.~p~oo aiM!' a\ FI\Gey'a t..1ttp Coul\~ J\11\101' Ftlt 1.1'0;!1\0ek
Sot.. ~\\1~ wl\l\ A~ 'I'Mt. t11t atttfa OWI\I!t, alii &lt;lMt
1'11owt1 of ~~~ 'Til~ ~If Kl!\1 lloilbit ~It, ~It QIMI\
~MI H~ 1M &amp;Mf PflfltUa ~tnt. l~, l!llia~ J, IMcll

. you fllf almost I~ ~­
However, durlna that time, he
had an affair wflh two at.rls I

NATIONAL VIEW

Change in US. supp~rt
sends sad election year signal

LNESIOCK

Girl longing for
what never was
must look ahead

Den Dickerson

Managing Editor

U11l NIGHT AT
THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

. I

ADVICE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BeHe Pearce

..

The Daily Sentinel

Elected to the Hull of Fame in 1900. he tain home slllnd cquruly high with tha.o;o
uchieved u great deul in M!l~snchusetts and from the mnnsions of the city. There IU'C no
in the rest of the country.
distinctions in the common schools, but rul
But thut dream hns foded. The poll by stand upon one level."
the Public , Education Network and · But in this century, thcystllldonotslllnd
Education Week ·shows thut many on one level - girls, as well as boys. And
Americans recognize that crucially thin's why, in Claremont School Dlsuict v,
unequul timUlcing of public education is nt State of New Hampshire, the New
the core of the need for refom1. A mJ\Iori- Hampshire Supreme Court declared:
ty of those surveyed - 53 percent - "Given the complexities of our society
want elected officials to protect sehools · today, the st11te 's constitutional duty
from budget cuts.
extends beyond mere I'Oildlng. writlna and
As Education Week notes. this strong arithmetic. It !liso Includes brood oduca·
con~-ern is manilested "nt a time when tiona! opportunities n*ed In today's
most states are reducin~ spending because society to prepare citizens for their roles as
of declining revenues. ' Nonetheless, the participanL~ and potential competitors in
majority of those polled wants "early- today's marketplace of ideas."
childhood education. class-size reduction
Nonetheless, on June 26 of this year. 11
progrums, teacher training and teuchcrs' panel of the Appellate Division of New
sulorles to be shielded from cuts."
York State's Supreme Court ntled - 1111
In my view, one way to persuade more The New York Times reported - that in
taxpayers to protect and increase school terms of spending on public schools, the
budgets is to mstitute a cloor, enforceable stalcl "is obliged to provide no more thiUlll
system of accountability for teachers and mJddlo-scltoOIIovel education, and to pre·
principals. And that means, despite teach- pare students for nothing more th1111 the
ers' union opposition, pay based on the lowest·level lobs."
·
·
actual achievement of students.
New York City Schools Chancellor
As Rebel! emphasized, a number of Howtll'd Levy sllld. ''The constitutional
state supreme courts are !liso recognizing standard cannot be that children are endthat equal-education opportunity requires tied to be menial laborers."
equitable financing of public schools,
Or as Oliver Twist said, "Ploa..'le sir, may .
"particularly in those cities and rural areas I have some more?"
where ¥enerutions of children are being
Jn every state, the coronion school canleft behtnd."
not otTer the opportunity for 11 meanlnaft.tl
Sounding like Mann, in Rose v. Council future if every child docs not have 11
for Better Education, the Kentuck,&gt;: chance to "stand equally high with thosc
Supreme Coun has reminded that states from the mansions of the city."
·
taKpayers that the delegation to the 1891
(Nat Hentoff Is a natlonaUy 11nown1d
state constitutional convention intended to authority on ihe First Amelldtnfnt and thl
ensure that "the boys of the humble moun- Bill o.f Rights.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Price-earnings ratio no longer.darling ofpicking
broud Standurd &amp; Poor's !!00 index, which Many companies are revising their flnannow stands at about 18,
ciHI statements to reconcile for past mis·
· "You can't look at the P/E in u vacuum," takes, which include overstatlna revenues
said Kevin Pianka, a partner at the New and hiding bad debts.
·
York accounting and advisory services
Then tliere is the issue of stock options,
firm Richard A. Eisner &amp; Associates. Since most companies don't expense these ·
"You must compare it to past trends, the volatile and poiCntially costly perks,
industry it operates and where it is in investors believe they aren't genlng the
regard to competitors,"
full picture of how the options cut Into
The reliance on PIEs initially began to profits.
· .
cntmble in the late 1990s, when the
"Earnings have become questionable,
Intemet boom thrust many stocks into the mostly because some companies aren't
market that weren't making any money. using reasonable ~unling standards,"
Without earnings, it's impossible to for- said Gary Gray, visiting tlnance profe1110r
· mulate PIEs, and as a result many at Penn State Unlver8ity and author of
investors used sales as the ba~is of thetr "Streeuman Guide to Valuing a Stock." .
analysis.
With eamlngs under attack. lnvestor5
Yet it wasn't long before P!EII clll)'le ljJ'C seeking out more accurate meuica for
back as the preferred valuation method. stock valuation,
The dot-com collapse drove investors to . There's already a push by some to
once again seek out companies with earn- develop new measures to calculate corpoings potential.
rate cumings,
But the use of PIE.~ is now in question
lnfluentiill ratings aFeney S&amp;P is now
again. Blame it this time on the fact that using "core earnings' In Its analysis, It
investors are nervous about corporate only focuses on a company's ongoing
earnings.
operations, adding in e"J?CIIIICII from stocli.;
Just look at Merril! Lynch's August sur- options und subtractlnfl 1term 11Qt directly
vey of 292 professional fund managers, related to the business, such 811 lltlption
worldwide, which sheWed 31 percent settlements and merger colits, S&amp;P plam
believed that U.S. stocks had the worst to UIJC "core earnings". when calculating
quality of earnings compared with stocb the PIE of the .500 stock inde" later thla
in other global IJUIIkets. That's up dratJialo. year, · .
·
ically frOm 7 percent a year ago,
Menill Lynch is alterins how it analyzet
Over the same time period, 19 percent cumlnp, too. Among the chan~s: It wlll
of fund managers said tJJey think Lr.S. cor- look at how cloie a company 1 carnlnp
porate earnings were of the highest quality are to belna realized in cUll and how
globally, down from 62 percent in August much a ~pany's mings arc dependent
200 I.
on reponmg low tales.
Fueling the sliding sentiment is the
And many investorll are makina a more
recent wave of corporate scandals, which diligent effort to compare PlEa with other
luui raised fean; about conupt CEOs who valuation 100
_ Is, incfuding pricc-to-caah
cook the books for personal $Sin. '
flow and prjce-to-saiell rat[Ofl,
'
Also spooking invest011i 1s the rash of (Rachel Beck l.r a .bwi~IN writer for
earnings restatements over the last year. The Associated P1111.)
·

knew.
Now l am enaqod to
someone wl\Q loves mo 1IOtll
much. 'but 1 ~annot f91'F.t thO
one I loved and feel thlt I still
love.
Please teU me bow to capo
because l am In bli troublo.
'
BROKEN DOLL.
IOV ICOUTI MOttOMO - ~~Mn&amp; !OtOiflltlol\ WOfO Tloo~ 299 lponaomd by M m loo~
P&amp;IHAWAR, PAKISTAN
Grove Cnnttlon Church M the Ol.ltatondlf11 troop In Molt• Collnly with R~n ~~~~. Billy
DEAR BROKEN DOU.:
Fink, ond No\hlll Cook octt~tlt1&amp; the owtud; Chrll 'hlnRooth, Molp Couoty'a outltilt1\'1111@
It is time to faco reality.
IMITibtr; 11\d PIGIIll•t 1!)01\IOI't&lt;l by the Pomeroy Mothodllt Churth, tho ma~t Olltl till\dlt11;1
lf the youni man who
~ ~Ceept.d by semuel Mc&lt;:ell, loft to fl&amp;ht, (Chorlone Hoofllcn)
.
"seemed" to lovo you dld1
Indeed. love tOll. no Wllllla
IWve told you. lnstolll. he had
an atralr with two alrls ~
l::now. That is haxdij what I
would call the behavior of a
man who is Interested In t1
lona·tmn relationship with
11nyono. .
We come from different
cultures. you tmd I. But lot
mo share somethlnll that tran·
seonds culture. Wo have to
build our live.s from tho 11\lliO•
rials that are given to us, or
tho ones we cam for oursolves. You havo · 11 nleo
.)'OUtli man who loves you.
'Oivc llirn a chance to prove
llimsolf. Dwolllna on some·
thlna that nevor liapponod and Mvor will - is a wutc
oftlmo.
DEAR ABDYt I have
novor written to an advice
colullUIIst before, but l want
to wam "Heartbroken In Now
Hampshire" that her huaband
is commitment-phobic. (He'a
the man who told hla wlfo or
one year that he'sstill in love ·
with his former girlfriend
who is scrvins time In
prison.)
·
"Heartbroken" must act out
now. while she still has her
sanity. There is no future with
thut man.
His aacnda Ia to prevent
BOTH of thoao women from
lovlna him. Pint, he m11rrled
LINDIAY MIMOIIIAL LIADIRIHIP AWARD- Brlttloy Haubor, oenttr, Wtl tl'ta winner of tha
"Hc"rtbroken" to &amp;et back at
Llndaty
Bolin Momorltl Laadorohlp Award. Prtaontln&amp; tho plaquo were Mr. and Mre. Brent
his ex-sirlfricnd. Second, h
· Bolin, ltft, pertnte of LlndiiY who wa1 klilod In an euto aocldont earlier thll ~lr. and rl&amp;ht,
distanced himself by telllna
herarendparenta, Mr. ond Mra. Joo Bolin. (CI't~rlano Hooflloh)
"Heartbroken" thAI he atlll
lovea hla ex.
He does not think like she
thinks .
What
makoa
"Heartbroken" feel aecurc
makes him feel suffocated.
What fecla like love to her,
CALENDAR
fcch like entrapment to him.
Her·auemptti to act along will
aommilnlty Oalandar 11 publlthlll II I 11'11 IIII'YIDIIO non•
appear lll&lt;e manipulation to
prom groupe wlehlna to
him.
.
announat
millln11 llllcf ·~
He will provoke with little
0111 tvtnll. Till Dtltndtr II nol
wan. ambuahca and land
dMIIntello PfOIIIOII 111M or
mines. and/or aradually with· . tuncf""tllllri ol any 'Yilt· lltme
draw until nothlna remains.
'"
onlY 1M
11 lllltrlniMII
'"" ""'
mll8prlnllll
ancl otnnol
She will tum to him expect·
lo Ill llflnllcl 1 lptOPio numlllt'
Ina a truce or rcaolutlon.
ol ciiYI·
He' II relict like 11 fire-breath·
Moncley, Aug, I I
Ina draaon. No f11lr play. No
~ITA!n' ,A~U - Letart '!Wp.
noaotlatlon. When it ends, It
Truallft,
a p.m., otftct building.
will end on hla terma.
The reaaon I aee thla 10
2 Col. X 5" .. $50.00
MIDCI~IIIOIIIT M1ige
Mlddll lohOol . open hOUH•Orl•
clearly ia that it happened 10
entation lrom 0to 7 p.m. lor Ill
Sunday 2 x 6''· $70.00
me. too, I am now dolna what
ai!Cih
grldar•
and
new
lnmlng
J shoUld have done aevon
atvtnth and elgltlh grade etu•
yean aao. I'm Involved In
denll.
counseling, atatc job-acarc:h
RACINI - Aeolnt village
workahopa, and worklna
oounoll,
rtoMIId lllt!On II the
toward eventual financial
2 Col. X 4" ... $40.00
munloipal building, 7 p.m.
independence, In other worda,
'
Sunday 2'X4 .. $158.80
I h11ve one foot out the door,
la;111
Learned helplenneu can
AIIMIIIary, 7:30 p.m. with the
be unlearned. Pleaao . take
group'l ennlvtrmy to bt
what! have 111id to heart. obHrvtd II 1:110 p.m.
HEALING IN OREGON
WlllniiCIIY, ~II
. DEAR HEALINGs I can
MIDCII.II'CJIIIT - llltta Perk
see your time In coun~ellna
o1
MeiGI 0oun1v Oommlttt•, e
has not been waated. From
p.m.. oDunoll oliambtrw.
the dlaaater of your marrlaao
rou have aained Important
snaiaht. One of the moat fre·
qucntly a1ked que1tlona I
2 Col. x 2" .. $20.00
receive b, "Whr, doea he treat
me thla way?' Your letter
Sunday 2x2 ... $28.00
e~trlains It very well.
wish you I~M:ceu In the
future when you finally get
both feet out the door, You
have earned it.
(Dear Abby 11 written by
Ablgall Van Buren. al1o
•
known tu Jeanne Phllllp1,
and wa1 founded by her
mcrhlr. Paulln1 Plillllp1.)

KID TRAOOR PULL

.

Melp County Fllr
on Paps A2.S,I

~~~

MEIGS

.

NDAL, JIIIDALI- Janna Burdette puta her back Into the li&amp;h"
wtl&amp;ht kiddie tractor pull cl'tamplonahlp In .the ameli ahow-ifn1
at tha Malt• Counly Fair. At the tnd of tl't~ day, Burdette took
the trophy lor flrot pilot. (._nil Hi!Pkil)

""THANK YOU" ADS
Want to show your appreciation?

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
(Other sizes available) ·· ·
.· Please see Dave at the Dally Sentinel .
·
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, or call (740) 992·2155 for details.
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-------

�tt.oe AI • The Daily &amp;&gt;ntit\1.'1

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Monde~Augult19,2002

www.mydelly•entlnel.com

Steelers dominant in loss, Page 82
Jarrett takes the Pepsi, Page B3
MLB action, Page B3

I

Page 81
Monday,Aucustll,lOOl

Rains dampen ·first Herd scrimmage
MONDAY'S

HIGllllGHfS

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Mother
·Nature called an early end to the first
major scrimmage of fall prnctice for
the 19th ranked Marshall Thundering
Herd Saturday allernoon at Marshall
St11dium.
.
Mll!lihall managed to get in about45
plays before thundellltorms rumbled
through the area and put an abrupt end
to the practice.
Prior to !he rain. the Herd did some
extensive speci.al teams work including kickoffs coverage and
returns and punt and punt return. That
was followed by about 45 minutes of
scrimmage .work.
Senior punter Curtis .Head, a candi-

date for both the Lou Groza Award for ·
kickers and Ray Guy Award for punters, averaged just 'shy of 55 yards per
punt on eight attempts with a long
punt of 72 yards. He connected on his
only two point-aFter touchdown
attempts.
.
During the actual scrimmage most
of the work featured the tirst offense
against the first defense, with several
notable exceptions. No fewer than 14
players did not take pan in the scrimma$e. Included in that group was
semor Heisman Trophy candidate
Byron Leftwich, who spent much of
the aFternoon working with and talking to the team's two, freshmen quar-

terbacks.
The Herd offense - without
Leftwich, receivers Josh Davis and
Denero Marriott as well as running
bucks Butchie Wallace and Tank
1\Jnstalle - managed just one scoring
drive. Sophomore Stan Hill guided the
team down the field on its first possession. with a 41-yard pass completion
to Darius Watts setting up a three-yard
Brandon Carey touchdown run.
The only other score of the day
came on an interception return by
Moriah Anderson. ' His ·pick . of a
Jimmy Skinner pass. and Jimmy
Tyson . deflection, was returned 22yards for a score.

Sorenstam
takes Compaq

!001 MIHION IOARO - Nat\\!ld .til the :.1003 t='aehion l::loard on the basis ol project work,
!)lll~e

ai1d pe~oMIIty, were troni the left, Amanda
KeiMy Holter, and TIM t&gt;rakll. (Charlene HoiiOith)

~olush ,

AdurloaiJ.M Pullins, Alyssa Holter,

Beem
takes
the PGA

HELS~GBORG. Sweden
(AP) - Annika Sorenstam
won her eighth title of the
season, shooting a 2-under
70 for a four-stroke victory
in ihe Compaq Open.
Sorenstum, playing in
Sweden for the first time in
two years, had a 17 -under
2.71 to become the first threetime winner of the event.

Ben Holter and Billie Jo Welsh were named the 2002
outstanding 4-H members and ware presented clock plaques . . (Charlene
Hoeflich)

OUTSTANDING 4·Hera -

'

Matta races to
Motorola 200

victory

•

ELKHART LAKE. Wis.
(AP) - Cristiano du Matta
returned to form, ending u
three•race slump with a victory in the Motorola 220.
The CART series leader
won for the first time on the
scenic four-mile road course
at Road America, earning his
sixth win in 12 starts this season and the I Oth of . his
career.

SUII.1.1 -Force In ·
NHRA
ova

BRAINERD, Minn. (AP) _ ·
John Force raced to his I Oth
Funny Car victory in
Minnesota, beating team·
mate Gary Densham· in the
final . round of the Rugged
Liner NHRA Nationals.

ICHOLARIHIPI - aen Heller, right, wee tl1e recipient of the 200:1 Ohio Valley Bank RAG SCHOLARSHIP- Ashley Hager was the recipient of the first R&amp;G $300 scholar-

$:2 ,000

s~Miar~hlp prll ~iinted

Saturday night by OVI! offloer Hugh Graham, center. There to
l!~oept additiOMIItiij\alltnMt~ on their Mholatl!lhlpa were from the leit Jan and Greg Davie for
their thlught!!r, iflola, Chad Hubbard, and Julia Spaun. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Ship to be awarded during Youth Night activities at the Meigs County Fair. Joe Evans
of I=!&amp;G, holding his small daughter, Hannah , made the presentation. (ChE,Irlene
Hoeflich)

MLB talks
resume today

.

NEW YORK (AP) Negotiators for baseball's '
players and owners took .
Sunday off and will resume
hilks Monday in hopes or
avoiding the sport'.s ninth
work stoppage smce 1972.
Lawyers
met
twice
Saturday for about three
hOurs, but did not discuss the
key issues of a luxury tax and
revenue sharing. On Friday,
the union set a strike date for
Aug. 30.
• Owners want a luxury tax
ihat would restrain player
salaries, but they have proposed a far lower threshold
and higher tax rate than the
union will accept.
The proposal from the
C:,wners is a ta11 of 37 .5·50
percent oil the portions of
payrolls above $102 million.
Players want a 15-30 percent
ti\x on the portions above
$130 million next year..._with
t~e threshold increasing'$ 10
million annually. The union
aL~o doesn't want a tax in the
final year.
· The union fears that a luxury tax combined • with
increased revenue sharin~
w.ould 'llct as a cap because ll
· would drain large amounts of
money from high·revenue
teams.
Players don't want to fin~lhe season without a con·
·tratt because they believe
owners would lock them out
or change work rules. The
union prefers stop late in the
season, when more of the
owners' revenue is. at stake.
Baseball's last strike began
Aug. 12, 1994, dratlged on
for 232 days and wtped out
the World Series for the first
time in 90 years. Average
attendance dropped 20 percent the followinf season
and. still hasn 't ful y recovered.

'

•

The Dail Sentinel • i&gt;aturbap ~imes -~entinel • j)unbap m:tmes .j,enttnel

I

'

••

-

Offensively Hill wm. 8-14 for 64
yards with one interception. Both
Skinner and Adam Blad. attempted
one .pass. with Black's falling incomplete.
Carey led the ground game with
eight curries for 30 yards. Watts.
Demetrius Doss and BrJd Bates had
two receptions each while Jason Rader
and Cunis Jones had one catch each.
Defensively. Curios Morgan and
Toriano Brown had solo sacks while
J .T. Remben and Terence Tarpley
shared one. Robeno Terrell had an
interception and return for 22 yards
and Charles Tynes had a tackle for
loss.

Cincinnati's Sean Casey watches his game-winning home run In the 10th Inning off ·
Astros pitcher Ricky Stone In Cincinnati. (AP)

JUST WALK ON BY -

Casey walk-off homer tightens
down NL Central title chase
CINCINNATI (AP) - On the first two pitches,
Sean Casey squeezed the bat hard and swung for the
first game-ending homer of his career.
Two mighty swings, two futile strikes, no joyous
trot.
Once he relaxed, Casey got his long-awaited
walk-off celebration. He was mobbed by teammates
at the plate after his lOth-inning solo shot gave the
Cincinnati Reds a 2-1 victory Sunday over the
Houston Astros.
"You talk abOut all of the memories you make in
major league baseball and how you take them home
·and bottle them up," Casey said. "This is one I'm
definitely going to bottle up."
Both teams' offenses were bottled up during a
strange game. There was a total of seven hits. three
of them homers, and the 2-hour, 36·minute game
went much faster than a third-inning rain delay - 2
hours, 56 minutes.
Austin Kearns hit a solo homer in the Reds, second, and Jeff Bagwell matched it in the seventh.
Neither team managed a rally all game.

"This game is so screwy," Reds manager Bob
Boone said. "We were swinging like girls all day,
but we were pitching really well . When it got late, it
was tough 10 see."
. Most of the field was in shadows when Casey
came to bat with one out in the lOth against Ricky
Stone (3~3) ; who was selling a record in front of 16
relatives and friends.
Stone, who grew up in nearby Hamilton, Ohio, set
an Astros rookie record with his 62nd appearance.
He struck out Kearns, then threw .two 80 mph
changeups to Casey, who was swinging way too
hard and way too early.
"On the first pitch that I pulled foul, I think I was
tr,Ying to win the game," Casey said. "The second ·
pitch was a changeup. and I was trying to win it
there, too. I said to myself, 'You can 'I think that
way.' I calmed myself down."
The changeup was working so well that Stone
decided to throw another. This one was down, and
Ca~y hit it into the second deck in right field for his
Pl1111 -

CHASKA. Minn. (AP)- Playin~ as if he
had nothing to lose. Rich Beem buned Tiger
Woods and captured a PGA Championship
even he thought he had no business winning.
Beem hit a 5-wood to within 6 feet for an
eagle on the II th hole to seize control. then
put the finishing touches on
a fearless round by rolling
in a 35-foot birdie pull on
No: 16 to thwart a final
charge from Woods.
Seven years ago, Beem
was selling car stereos and
cell phones for $7 an hour.
Even after the third round,
he said guys like him
weren' t sypposll_d to win
a..m
majors. .
Surprise!
Beem stared down the
world's best player under
the stifling pressure of a
major championship at
Hazeltine on Sunday. closing with a 4-under 68 for a
one-stroke victory over
Woods .
'Tm still surprised at
myself," Beem said. "I'm
elated beyond belief. I was
Woods
a lot more in control of my
,
emotions than I ever have
been under that kind of pressure."
Woods did his part. Unwilling to give up
after back-to-back bogeys, Woods . birdied
the final four holes to keep alive fleeting
hopes of becoming the first player to win
the three U.S. majors in the same ·year.
Beem never flinched.
He finished off his incredible round with a
harmless three-putt bogey on the 18th, lifted
his arms and did a shimmy shake under the
bright skies of Minnesota before taking a
bow. .
Woods watched the final putt on a teleyision in the scoring trailer. He had told caddie Steve Williams that four birdies on the
final four holes would be enough to win the
tournt~ment .

"I went ahead and birdied out, and we .
didn't win,"' Woods said. "At least I gave it
my best effort. We just came out a little bit
short."
Woods closed with a 67, matching the
best score of the day.
Chris Riley shot a 70 and was another
stroke back, his best finish in a major and
good for a trip to the Masters next year.
The season's final major has seen this
before. Beem, who finished at 10-under
278, became the 12th player to make the
PGA Championship his first major victory.

Clny, 11

Pl..n

-

PGA, BJ

Davis to wear Broncos' jersey one last time
DENVER (AP) - Terrell Davis
wanted to keep playing. His knees
just wouldq't cooperate.
. After ,struggling with injuries for
nearly four years, Davis announced
that Monday night's preseason game
against the San Francisco 49ers will
, be his final appearance in a Denver
Broncos uniform.
''Unless some new technology
·comes along real soon," Davis said
Saturday, "there's a good chance I'll
never see the field again."
He considered . trying to work
through his latest ailment - a degenerative condition in his left knee but doctors could not guarantee further treatment would alleviate the

..

pain and swelling.
So instead of
enduring
another
round of rehabilitation and wondering
if he will play again,
the
29' year-old
Davis decided to end
his career after just
seven seasons. He
vii
will go on injured
08
reserve
Tuesday,
allowing him to walk
out in front of the fans one final time
Monday.
"He wanted to go out on his own
terms and he wanted some finality,"
Davis' agent Neil Schwanz said. "It

means a great deal for him to walk
out of the tunnel at Mile High one last
time. He would shake the hands of all
75,000 people there if he could."
Davis'longevity leaves his place in
history in doubt. ·
His 6,413 yards over his first four
years in the league are the secondmost iri histot;Y over that span.
He finished his career with 7,607
yards, puttin~ him ahead of five .modem-day runml)g backs already m the
Hall of Fame - Leroy Kelly, Hugh
McEihenny, Lenny Moore, Gale
Sayers and Doak Walker. ·
·
Davi·s also is one of four players to
rush for more than 2,000 yards in a
season. He won two Super Bowls and

was one of just eight players to be
MVP of'the league and Super Bowl
in a career.
Davis, drafted in the sixth round in
) 995, bec,ame one of the most popuJar and productive players in team
history.
His best seasons came in 1997 and
· 1998. _
In the 1997 season, Davis helped
John Elwa)' wjn 1U4. fU'Sf Super Bowl
and was chosen t'lie game's MVP us
the Broncos defeated Green Bay 3124. Davis set five franchise records
that season, including 1,750 yards
and 15 rushing touchdowns.
·
·
Plein - Dftll, 11

'

�.
Monday, Auguat 19, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 82 °The Dally Sentinel

Steeler starters dorilinate in exhibitio·n loss
LANDOVER. Md. (AP) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers first-string derense
shut out the Fun 'N Gun. That gave
safety Lee Flowers room to talk.
The Steelers eventually lost Sunday
night's game 35-34 to the Washington
Redskins. but Pittsburgh dominated
17-0 when the starters were playing in
the first hlllf.
"I don't think it's going to work in
this league," said Flowers, asked
about the Fun 'N Gun pffense that
inade coach Steve Sportier so successful ut the University of Florida.
"They would've never moved past the
SO unless we allowed them.! don't see
the big deal about it. I've seen better
offenses than that in my eight•year
career. This is not college."
The Redskins had six turnovers, and
the first-team offense had just 123
yards. Washington finlllly won with
second-stringers. third-stringers and
players who won't be in the league in
. a few weeks.
. "They could have booed our butts
right out of the tunnel in the first half."
Spurrier said. "You can find a lot of
things to criticize. but that's OK. We
weren't very good overall, but some·
how or another those guys made
enough plays to get one more point
tonight - for whatever it's worth."
. Sage Rosenfels threw three touch·
down passes to overcome a 20-point
deficit in the fourth quarter, with the
winning score coming on a · S-yurd
pass to Damerien McCants with 2: II
remaining. For players like McCants,
who is trying to move up on the depth
chart, the buckups-vs.-backups argu·
ment doesn't hold water.
"It's the NFL. I hope that they have
professionals on the field," McCants
said. •... I just think that's an excuse."
The Redskins are 3-0 and have
scored 110 points in exhibitions.
"I'm tryin~ to learn how to coach
exhibitions,' Spurrier said. "I haven't
learned yet. l don't know if you try to
win or not, but it seems like when we
g~t int~ battle, we try and win these
thmgs.
Kordell Stewart sustained a mild
concussion and Charlie Batch cut hi.s
chin. but it didn't matter who ·the
Pittsburgh quarterback was early op.
Batch capped an 83-yard drive with a
1-yard touchdown pass to Dan
Kreider, and rookie Antwalln Randle
El ran 32 yards on a reverse to finish
a 99-yard drive - both against the
Redskins' first-string defense. The
Steelers gained 221 yards in the first
half.
·The Steelers, in essence, had reason
to be happy .about most everything

PGA

from Pip 11
What set Beem apart from
a long list of surprising winners - John Daly, Wayne
Grudy, Mark Brooks - was
the guy chasing him.
All year long, past major
winners like Jack Nicklaus
and Arnold Palmer have
complained that too many
players wilt when they see
Woods' name on the leaderboard.
Woods showed up quickly
with three birdies and two
amuzi ng pars on the front
nine, putting him just one
stroke behind Beem with
nine holes to play.
·
Beem didn't buckle. He
simply continued to blast
. away.
Hilling driver on just about
every hole and attacking the
pins, Seem turned a onestroke advantage into a six·
stroke lead over Woods in a
matter of four holes.·

Casey

from Pap Bl
IOth homer and the Reds'
fourth game-ending homer
this season.
"1 .thought it was a pretty
good pitch," Stone said. "He
looked pretty bad on the first
couple of changeups. He didn't look bad on the third one.
He made an adjustment."
Gabe White (6·1) pitched a
perfect IOth and ended a
streak of meltdowns by the
Reds' bullpen, which leads
the NL in innings. Reds
relievers had given up 28 runs
in 31 2-3 innings over the last
nine games.
The Astros trailed St. Louis
by only one game in the NL
Central on Aug. 7, but have
gone 5-6 since. The loss
Sunday dropped them five
games out, their bigl'est
deficit since Aug. 2.
The third-place Reds
moved to a half-game behind
Houston after taking two of
the lirst three games in a
series that concludes Monday.

Steeters
quarterbeck Kordell
Stewart (10) gets teck·
ted as he goos out of
bounds by washington
Re&lt;lsklns' Lavar
Arrington during the first
quarter Sunday In
Landover, Md. Stewart
sustained a mild concussion on the play and
did not return. (AP)

Davis
from PageBl

OUCH -

except the final score.
"The group they had out there in the
founh quaner was better than the
group we ~ad out there,'' coach Bill
Cowher s111d.
But many of those players won't
make the final roster, and Cowher said
he was happy his starters' elay.
· "Yeah, but I don't ltke losing
though," Cowher said.
Rosenfels
strugl{led ' against
Pittsburgh's staners m the second
quarter - 6-for-10 for 54 yards with
an interception and a fumble - but
retumed in the .founh to throw TO
passes to Leonard .Stephens, Demus
Thompson and McCants. Rosenfels
finished 17.for-2S for 244 yards.
Starter Danny Wuerffel played the
first quarter and went 2-for-S for 24

· The biggest was his Swood second shot on.the 597•
yard II th hole.
"Come on! Come .on!"
Beem yelled as the ball
soared over a cluster of
bunkers, landed on the front
of the green and didn't stop
rolling until it was 6 feet
from the cup. He made that
for eagle to get to I0 under.
Woods played in the group
ahead of Beem, although he
knew who wus on top.
A scoreboard was directly
behind the cup on No. 13 as
Woods stood over a 12· foot
birdie putt that would have
pulled him within two strokes
of the lead. Instead, he three·
putted for bogey, then
dropped another shot on the
next hole.
·
The
key
putt
came on No.
·
16, the hole where Payne
Stewart won the 1991 U.S.
Open at Hazeltine. Beem
begged his 9-iron to clear a
marsh on the corner of Lake
Hazeltine, and it barely did.
His 35-foot birdi'e putt was
true.
Beem pumped his fist and

yards with two drops and an intercep·
tion. Shane Matthews, playing the
third quarter, was 14-for-21 for 137
yards wi~h two touchdowns and two
mtercepuons.
· .
Stewart was hurt in the first quarter
as he neared the sideline after scram·
bling to the right on 11 rollout. He was
grabbed from behind and slammed
lleudfirsl into the ground by linebucker LuVar Arrington.
.
Stewan, who gained 6 yards on the
play, lay on the ground for a~ut a
minute. He then walked to the bench
and sat with a towel over his head as
Butch entered the game in his place.
Batch was hun when he was .hit
high by Del Cowsette after thl'llwing a
pass in the second quur.ter. Cowsette
was flagged for roughi.ng the passer,

heaved his ball in celebration.
The best part was still to
come. After holing out on the
18th, he jogged over and
kissed the Wanamaker
Trophy.
Beem keeps u bOttle of
antacid in his bug and takes a
swig before the round to calm
his nerves.
·
Give the man u bottle of
champagne. He's the toast of
golf.
Beem collected $990,000
and u live-year exemption on.
the PGA Tour and to the three
other majors. He can return to
the PGA Championship as
long us he likes.
.
,
Not bad for u ~uy who gave
up the gume ln 1995 and
decided he was better off in u
blue-collur job.
He wus culled a ·"one-hit
wonder" when he won the
.Kemper Open as a rookie in
1999, especially when he
didn't have any top lOs t.he
next year and only narrowly
kept his job for th1s season.
, He docs no,w.
.
Bcem took the lead for the

Neither starter returned fol- Pete Munro stan Wednesday
lowin$ the long rain delay in . in Chicago. The rain changed
the th1rd.
their plans - Munro took
Houston's
Carlos over and gave up one infield
Hemandez was activated and ~in~le and one walk in 4 2-3
made his first stai't since July mmngs.
I, when a sore ' shoulder sent
Ken Griffey Jr. was out of
him to the disabled list. The the Reds' lineup for the third
left-hander gave up one hit in straight game. Griffey aggratwo innings - Kearns' lOth vated a sore left thigh while
homer in the second.
chasing a tly ball on Thursday
· Keams also homered in the night and has been limited to
series opener Friday night, pinch-hitting.
'"
ending a two-month span
After going 5-for-5 iri
without one.
Houston's
6-1 win Saturday
Jimmy Haynes, who had
night,
Jose
Vizcaino was 0been hit hard in his last two for-4,
starts, pitched three innings
The
Astros
Nores:
without giving up a hit before
optioned
reliever
Jim
Mann
the storm arrived. He would·
n'I,have gone more than a few to Triple-A to open a spot for
more innings anyway - he Hernandez. ... Stone sur·
needed 50 pitches to get . passed Charley Kerfeld, who
through three
made 61 appearances as a
Left-hande~ Bruce Chen rookie in 1986.... Reds 2B
relieved for the Reds when · Juan Castro snapped an 0-forthe game resumed and gave '16 s~id and . had tw? ~f the
up Bagwell's leadoff homer Reds four htts . ... Cmcmnat1
in the seventh, his 23rd. C Jason LaRue had another
Bagwell has 38 career homers passed ball, his 17th of the
against Cincinnati, the most season - more than any
against any opponent.
·
other NL team. LaRue led the
The Astros had planned to NL with 15 last season. The
shift right•hander Dave Reds have 23 in all, most in
Mlicki into the bullpen and let the majors.
·

and Batch's return was listed as questionable.
Manin then entered the game as
Pittsburgh's third quarterback. On
. Martin's first play, Cowher called a
two~handoff reverse to Randle El,
who.scored to give the Steelers 1114-0
lead.
. In between the quarterback injuries,
Pittsburgh lost another starter when
linebacker Kendrell Bell severely
sprained his left ankle and will have to
wear a cast .for a week. Cowher said
he was "cautiously optimistic" Bell
will be readY for the season opener.
Pittsburgh running back Amos
Zereoue and Washington running
back Ludell Betts both sprained their
right ankles in the third quarter.

tirsttime with u bogey on No.
8 - Justin Leonnrd made
double bogey by hitting into
the water - and he never
gave It buck.
The '97 British Open
champion, and a runner-up at
Curnoustie three years ago,
Leonard struggled to hit fairways and greens. His threestroke lead was gone al'ter

four holes, and he wound up
with a 77, tied for founh with
Fred Funk (73) at 284.
Woo(is started the day five
shots off the lead but got into
contention with three birdies
and two big pars.
He. chipped in for par on
the first hole, and hud an even
better save on No. 8. From
thick rough between two

· The next season. he
had 2.008 yards und won
the MVP award. joining
OJ . Simpson, Eric
Dickerson und Bnrry
Sunders as the only players lo top 2.000.
One play changed
Davis' career.
.
In the founh game of
the 1999 season, Davis
tackled Jets safety Victor
Green after an interception. At the end of the
play, Davis' right knee
gave way ul'ter Broncos
tackle Matt Lepsis roll~
into it.
Davis tore his anterior
cruciate ligament and ·
was never the sumc.
He was limited to five
games in 2000 because
of 11 stress fracture in his
lower leg, und he played
only eight games because
of u knee inJury last season. ()ver h1s final three
seasons, he gained 1,194 ,
yards - 814 fewer than
he had in 1998.
He started ha v.ing knee
problems again just
before Denver's preseason opener against
Chicago on Aug. I 0.
Davis said he "felt like
someone .had u sta(&gt;le
gun and shot it into the
side of my knee." He
had an exam the next
day, which revealed a
degenerative condition
In the joint.
Davis had his knee
drained three limes in a
week and had two injec·
tions to reduce the
swelling and lubricale
the knee joint. He said
he was feeling better by
Tuesday but .dldn 't make
progress the rest of the
week.
Davis
met
with
Denver coach Mike
Shanahan on Saturday
befofe making the deci·
sion ·to end his career.
"It's the hardest deci·
sion I hud to muke, but
obviously the decision
was made for · me,"
Davis said.

bunkers to a downhill pin
with water behind the green,
Woods hit u tlop shot that
stopped within a foot of the
hole.
He was one stroke out of
the leud, with nine holes lO
play against a former stereo
salesman, and ull signs point·
ed to his ninth major championship.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Lead Clearance Technician
REQUEST FOR FEE PROPOSALS I REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
STATE &amp; OHIO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH CERTIFICATION REQUIRED
The Meigs County Commissioners are requesting fee proposals for the services of a
Lcud Clearance Technician in the Meigs County CHIP Rehabilitation Program funded
through the Office of Housing and Community Partnerships.
The CHIP program consists of the rehabilitation of owner occupied units. The rehabilitation program is required to comply with the Title X Residential Leud -Based Paint
Hazard Reduction Act of 1992 now effective.
The Meigs ·CHIP Program will require the professional services of State of Ohio qualified Lead Based Paint Clearance Technician to provide the following services:
Visual assessment and dust testing to identify lead-contaminated dust in areas of com'
pleted rehabilitation and renovation work as required.
Fee proposal for such services Will be accepted unti14:00 P.M .. August 23,2002.
Proposals may be mailed or delivered to the M~igs Grants Office, 117 East Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Fee proposal must provide fee cost per unit tested lnclu·
slve of all laboratory fees. Proposal must state timeline for response to request for
clearance testing and turn-around schedule for results repon. Fee proposal must state
qualifications, including all related completed lead-based painHraining approved by
the .Ohio Depanment of Health: provide State Cenification or be able to provide such ,
Cenificatiort prior to September I, 2002. Listing of all previous experience in Lead ·
Based Paint Clearance Testing: scope of services to be provided and amount of fixed
compensation required for ·the above services and pricing data to support the fixed •
price (e.g., per hour. diem, unit). All related qualificatjons and/or training cenifications ..
must be attached to the proposal.
Questions in regard to this request 'may be addressed to Jean Trussell, Grants
Administrator, at 740· 992-7908.
JeffThomton, President
Meigs County Commissioners
•

-~

I

•

Pomeroy/MiddlepOrt. OhiO ·

The Daily Sentinel •

Dale Jarrett charges Mets ·at a loss at Shea; ·Burnett blanks Giantsaoc
.back from spin to
win Pepsi 400
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The New York Mets have left their
fans so frustrated, they're beginning to
tum on thl" team.
.
.
Ma~be .the. Mets are gelling out of
town JUSt tn ume.
Marquis Gri som tripled. doubled
und scored twice us the Los Angeles
Dod~ers beat the Mets 2·1 Sunday _
sendmg them to their II th straight
home loss and eighth in a row overall.
The exasperated crt~wd at Shea·
Stndium grew increasingly impatient,
prodding New York starter Steve
Truchsel. u ·notoriously slow worker.
with chunts of "Throw the ball! Throw
the bull!" duri.ng his 39-pitch third
inning.
"Respectability is imponant," . Mets
first busemun Mo Vaughn said. "It's not
anyone, there's no finger-pointing. it's
all of us. It's everyone in this clubhouse."
Playing in the right place at the right
time. the Dodgers swept the three-gume
series to open n four-game lead over
San Francisco in the NL wild-curd race.
The Giants. on the other hand. ran
into the wrong pitcher Sunday.
A.J. Bumeu threw a three-hitter for
his major len~ue-Ieading firth shutout
us the Flonda Marlins beat Sun
Francisco 3-0 to hand the Giants 'their
founh consecutive loss.
"I said he's one step u~ay from the
guys with the greutnes.s, bu! he might be
closer than that. He mtght be half a step
awuy," Marlins manager Jeff Torborg
said. "This guy has been sensatiolllll."
Funs chanted "Go on Strike! Go .on
Strike!'' when the Mets fell behind 8-0
in the founh inilin~ Saturday a.nd
slipped into lust place m the NL Eust.

The Mcts start an eight-game ltlad
trip in Sun Francisco on Tue,duy. They
are not home again until the strike date
or Aug. 30.
New York's skid at Shea Stadium ·is
its worst since
. setting u franchise record
by lo ing the final 13 home games in
1979 under manager Joe Torre.
The Marlins and Tampa Bay Devil
Rays each lost II straight home games
in 1999. Detroit dropped its last 17 at
home in '96.
Burnett (12-9) struck out nine.
walked two and set a career high for
wins as Florida won its founh straight.
He also tied Montreal's Bartolo Colon
with seven complete games, most in the
majors.
"1 do take pride in being able to finish
what I start,' Bumett said.
CUBS 3, DIAMONDBACKS 2
Joe Girardi hit a' game-winning single
in the bottom of the ninth us Chicago.
despite to ing Summy Sosa in an outlield col)isi~n. snupped Arizona's eight·
game wmmng streak.
Sosu and second busemun Murk
Bellhorn collided while chasing
Damian Miller's short fly down the
right-field line in the siltth inning. Both
players stayed down for several minutes, and Miller circledAhe buses for an
inside-the-park homer.
Sosu and Bellhom remained in the
game for the rest of the inning before
being removed with headaches.
CARDINALS 5, PHILJ.IES 1
Edgar Renteria hit his first career
grand slam, leading Matt Morris ( 15-7)
over Philadelphia before u crowd of
58,493 - the lirst sellout this season at
Veterans Stadium.
The Phi llies honored Hall of Fame

broadcaster Harry Kalas. and fans
dual bobblehead dolls featuring the
popular announcer and Hall of Fa.mer
Richie Ashburn.
Former Phillies star Scoct Rolen did
not play because of a sore left shoulder.
Vicente Plldilla 02·8) took the lo s.
ROCKIES 6, 8ItAVES 3
Larry Walker homered twice und Jay
Payton had four hits at Turner Field as
Colorado handed Atlanta consecutive
losses for the first time in mcye than a
month.
Payton homered and tied his c~~teer
high with four pf 13 hits oil Greg
Maddux ( 11 -5), who came in leading
the NL with a 2.S I ERA.
Rockies "uner Jason Jennings ( 14-5)
wus hit in the head by a pitch in the second, but bounced buck to work si~ solid
innings.
EXPOS 9, PADRES 2
Jose Vidro homered twice and Jose
Macias hit a three-run shot to make a
winner of Torno Ohku ( 10-6).
A crowd ·of 24.872 on Vladimir
Guerrero bobbleheud duy raised
Montreal's uuendance through 63 home
games to 653.203. surpassing their total
of 642.748 for the enure 2001 season.
' Guerrero went 1-for-5, returning to
the lineup after missing Saturday's win
because of u strained left shoulder.
PIItATES 3, BREWERS 2
Adam Hyzau homered tmd dqJve in
two runs. und Mike Williams set a team
record with his 35th save for host
Pittsburgh.
Glendon Rusch (6-13) fell to 0-6 life·
time against the Pirates. He has lost
eight of his last nine decisions overall.
Richie Sexson hit his 26th home run
for the Brewers.

BROOKLYN. Mich. (APl • Dule Jarrett and crew chief
Todd Pnrrott didn't waver lromtheir decision to take four tires
on their tinul pit stop. Even nner JetT Bunon
dilln't stop 111 all. und the other fnmtrunners
took only two tires.
·
·:A lot of times we get criticized fur getting
lilur sometimes. hut I think that's probably
won us more mces thut it hns lost us.'' Jarrett
suid.
·
It worked ugoin.
Jnrrett rebounded from u spin on the 12th
lup und passed Jeff Burton with five laps to
go to win the Pepsi 400 ut Michigan
jltrrett
lntemationlll Speedway on Sunday.
"These victories ltre hurd to come by now,
so you have to work e~tremely hurd." Jarrett suid. "You utmost
. have to huve u perfect day.
·
,
"Fonumnely. our problems cnmc early in the day und. we
were able to ndjust on the cur und make 11 really flood Iuter."
Jarrett's 30th career victory _ und-founh lll Mich1g11n _ come
on the lith anniversary of hts tirst one, when he edged the lute
Davey Allison by inches on the 2-mile truck. Jurrett also won ·
this rue~: in 1996.' the lust time it was held Aug. 18.
· The Ford driver has two victories this year. also winning the '
. June race ut Pocono.
"I knew I hud plenty of time to get there if I wus just patient
und mud~: the right moves, und when you've got u car like this
that's e11sier to do," Jarrett said. "I'm very proud of these guys
for fighting and staying nfter !his."
.
Bunon stretched his fuel for the final 53 laps. but it was an
overhenting engine thut w11s a bigger concem. With two laps
to go in the 200-lup race, .Bunon's car spewed water and
truiled smoke, but he held on to finish founh.
"I don't kllow what it was. but I kept losing wuter," Bunon
suid. "We really did n ~ood job, uti the guys ori the crew. We
cume in und put wuter. m it. That's what kept us going as long
liS it did."
Tony Stewllft finished second in u Pontine, ubout 2 seconds
buck. und Kevin Harvick was third in u Chevrolet. Mark
Martin trailed Burton to the line, with point lender Sterling
· Murlin sixth.
"We could get ureal good run on Jeff Burton, especially the
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
solo shot in the seventh off Corey on four hits in S 2-3 innings.
first hulf of (Turn) 3. und just kept trying to dive under him up
All these home runs have brought out Thurman to give him u major league- ·
TIGERS 7, ORIOLES 4
lhere," Stewnrt suid. "Everybody just did their homework and
the philosopher in Alex Rodriguez.
high 110 RBls.
.
Roben Fick snapped out of a slump
we hud u renlly good duy.''
The Texas ,shonstop hit two more
Pulmeiro followed Rodriguez in the with three hits and two RBls. and visit·
Jurrctt's teum decided to tuke four tires during the sixth cauhomers Sunday night. ~iving him fiv!J in seventh with his 34th homer of the seu- ing Detroit shook oft' three homers by
tion on iup 164. The decision put him buck to 17th on the
two games to tie u·maJor league record, son und 481 st of his career .Ill e~tend Bultimore.
resturt, hut Jarrett steadily mude progress through the tield.
and the Rangers beat the Toronto Blue Texus' leud to I0-3.
Detroit hud 18 hits, including three
· He took ftllh from Bobby Lubonte with 20 .to go, then
J.uys I 0-7.
· Auron Myette (2·4) won his second upiece by Curios Pena und Matt
pussed Kevin Hurvick for ft~urth three lups Iuter.
Rodriguez homered three times straight start u.tier going winless in his Walbeck. The Tigers took two of three
A finul cuution for Derrike Cope's·crush on lnp 186 set up a
Smurduy and once Friday against first five this season. He allowed three from Baltimore to improve ·to 19-46 on
l'inul dush for the checkered flag. with Burton lending Stewurt,
Toronto to give him and AL record- runs on seven walks and .four hits over the road this year.
Dulc Eurnhurdt Jr. und Jarrett. Enrnhurdt got by Stewart with
tying six homers in three games. He has live innings.
·
DEVIL RAYS 8, ROYALS 6
10 laps left, but neither could hold otT Jurrett.
u major leugue-leuding 44 homers, one
MARINE~
5,
YI\NKilF.S
2
.
In
St.
Petersburg,
Fla., Tun yon Stunze
He moved past both to second on Iup 192, then closed in on
more than Summy Sosa.
.
AL
West-leadmg
Seattle.
acqutred
snapped
his
nine-game
winless streak,
Burton. With five to go, Jarrett drove to the inside in Tum 4
With six homers over three games, n~ht-hander lsmael Valdes 111 a trade and Aubrey Huff homered arid drove in
~nd pulled easily into the lead. leaving Burton to race with the
Rodriguez matched the AL record set by w1th the Texas. Rangers. The deu) wus ·three runs as Tampa Bay beat Kansas
others.
.
,
Tony Lazzeri of the New York Yankees announced durmg the seventh mnmg of City.
"I won't lie ltbout being disappointed. because if you're not
( 1936), Gus Zerniul of the Philadelphia the Mariners' win over Roger Clemens
TWINS 6, RED Sox 2
disuppointed about that, then you don't want to win very bud,"
Athletics ( 195 1) and Manny Ramirez of and New York at Safeco Field.
.
I
n
Minneapolis.
Rick Reed pitched
• Burton suid. "We slll~ed out, becuus,e you never know what
the Cleveland Indians (1998).
The Mariners gave up a pair of minor
seven
stro••g
innings,
and Doug
wus going to huppen.'
Two other players have hit five leaguers, infielder Jermalne Clark nnd
Rookie Jimmie Johnson finished seventh, followed by
homers over two games this ~euson. left-hander Derrick Van Dusen in the Mientkiewicz homered as Minnesota
beat Boston.
,
Johnny Benson. Jeff Green und Eurnhurdt. who fought un ill·
. Boston's Nomur Gurciupurru did it July deal.
ANGF.LS
4,
INDIANS 1
·hundling cur over tlu~.pnallups . .
22-23, und Dodgers slugger Shawn
Valdes, who tums 29 on Wednesday.
Kevin Appier and .three relievers com·
. Jurrctt's spin cume after he had just passed Steve Park for
Green did it May 23-24.
was 6-9 with a 3.93 ERA in 23 starts for
12th. Coming off Turn 4, Jarrett pulled in front of Park but
bined
on u two-hitter us host Anaheim
"He's in 11 zone, but he's been in a zone the Ran~ers.
in)mcdiutely got sideways: sliding down through the infield ·
defeated
Cleveland.
for seven years so. it's not a surprise,''
Joel Ptneiro ( 13-4) allowed two runs
grass but not dumaging the ·car.
Appier ( 11-9) threw 98 pitches over
Rangers munuger Jerry Narron suid. "! on five hits and a walk in 6 1·3 innings.
· He rumpled his fender u bit when he pulled awuy. but
six innings before leaving with a
don't think we appreciate what we're He struck out live.
Parrott und the team were able to tix the problem under the
strained hip flexor · and groin. He
seeing. There's no shonstop who comes
Arm.ETICS 7, WHITF. Sox 4
t:uution. Jarrett fell buck to 43rd before making his run to the
close to what he's doing. He's the best
Terrence Long homered twice and mutched his victory total from last seafront.
player in the game today."
drove in four runs to break out of a son with the New York Mets.
. The rucc was the tirst ufter a rule change by NASCAR that
Brendan Donnelly and Ben Weber
Rodriguez put the Rangers up 6-3 lengthy slump us host Oakland complet·
ullnwed General Motors teams to bump their front air dams
each pitched a perfect inning, and
with a two-run homer off Esteban ed a three-game sweep over Chicago.
out slightly: Chevrolet was given an extra inch, and Pontiac u
Loaiza (5-7) in the second inning, his
Barry Zito ( 17-5) matched his career Percival finished for his 30th save in 33
half-inch. Although Ford and Dodge teams speculated the
fifth homer in seven at·bats. He added a high for victories. allowing three runs nttempts.
move woulcllcave their curs uncompetitive. all manufacturers
hud curs neur the toP. of the leuderboard.
"It definite!~ didn 1 hurt," said Bobby Labonte. who finished
13th. "In reultty, we changed u lot of other stuff, too."
Bill Elliott, looking for his third victory in four races, led
curly but fell buck when his Dodge begun jumping out of gear.
He drove most of the final 150 laps one-handed, keeping his
right hand on the gearshift. and finished on the lead lap in
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - · decision.
IN THE HUNT22nd.
·
Akili Smith thinks he still
The Bengals played with· Bengals quar.terback
can win Cincinnati's quarter- out two-time Pro Bowl runAklll Smith looks
back job.
ning back Corey Dillon or for an open receiver
His performance Saturday wide receivers Michael against the Colts In
night helped.
•
Westbrook,
T.J. the third quarter of
Smith led the Benj!uls on Houshmandzadeh
and an exhibition game
four
second-half
sconn~ dri- Danny Farmer.
.
In Indianapolis on
•
•
ves, rallying Cincinnati to a · In Dillon's ~lace, Rudi
Saturday. Tl:le
22·1 0 victory over the Johnson ran 22 limes for I03
Bengals defeated
Indianapolis Colts.
yards. and Cunis Keaton had
the Colts 22·10.
"I don't know what's going 16 carries for 89 yards. Each
BEREA (AP) After
However, in Saturday's win,
Smith was 9·16 for
on. I don't know what (coach player scored a touchdown.
· reviewing the lilm of Saturday some of the Browns' other
53 yards. (AP)
Dick) LeBeau and the rest of But it was a troubling
night's exhibition win over the wideouts showed signs that they
the staff is thinking," he said. night for the Colts, · who
Detroit Lions, Browns coach might be fur more productive
"The only thing r can do is made their home debut under
Butch Davis came away with this season than anyone expectjust
contmue to work hard ·coach Tony Dungy.
ed.
some very pointed opinions.
and continue to study each
Before
the
l!ame;
Dennis Northcutt und JaJuan
The defense? "I was a little bit
day and we'll see what hap- Indianapolis learned It lost
Dawson. who have both battled
disappointed," he said.
pens."
last year's leading rusher
injuries
during their pro careers,
The rookie linebackers?
Throughout the preseason, Dommie Rhodes, for the
each caught a touchdown pass
''They were OK."
it's been ex;P,ected LeBeau season with u torn anterior
Quwterback nm Couch? "He and Northcutt had a key IS-yard
will select e1ther last year's cruciate ligament in hi.s right ·
punt return.
played welL" ·
starter Jon Kilna or free- 'knee.
In addition, undrafted free
agent
acquisition
Gus
The problems worsened on
Rookie run~ back WilliB!Il agent
Frisman
Jackson
caught
Frerotte.
the
field.
Green'/ "He n s somebodfto four pUS!Ies for 53 yards. Quincy
But
Smith,
a
former
first·
Indianapolis'
offensive
blitz and hit him in the teeth."
Morgan, whose rookie season
round
pick,
might
be
buck
in
starters
failed
to
score
for the
Tough guy. Davis. His was highlighted by some key
the
running
for
the
starting
second
consecutive
week
reviews typically are candid. drops, l!ad two receptions second half, though, the
job.
and they managed only two was 8-of-13 for 69 yards.
One thing, though, pleased him. one on a ball he scooped oft' his
About-the only to go right· game turned.
.
.
He looked sharp in the sec· first downs in the second
''The thing I'm most happiest shoe tips - and rookie Andre
On his second drive, the
ond half against the Colts' half, both by penalty. ~as the ·play of Nick
about was the play of our wide Davis made one catch and
backups ano was more effl- Desmond KJtchings fumbled Harper, who intercepted Bcngals went ~6 yards and
receivers in every aspect of the opened things U(&gt; for others with
cient than either Kitna or on back·to·baclc kickoff Frerotte and raced 77 yards got a 42-yard field goal
~arne," Davis said Sunday. h1s blazing speed.
.
Frerotte.
·
returns and Hunter Smith for a touchdown - the from Neil Rackers.
'They caught the ball well. But
The Browns will likely k~
Colts' second on· an Inter·
Kitchings' first fumble aet
Smith completed 9 of 16 shanked a 10-yard punt.
the tliing r liked was that they at least tive receivers on therr
passes for 53 yards, and
Even when the Colts ceptlon in two weeks. up Cincinnati again: Four
played well without the balL"
53-man roster, and with just two
Kitna was 7-of-11 for 60 appeared to do something Harper also forc~d a fumble . plays later, Keaton powered
Cleveland's wide re91:ivers preseason games left und an
yards. Frerotte started and rfght, something else went that led to a 22-yard Mike in from 2 yards to give the
did have a blg night Saturdu~. Aug. 27 cutdown date looming,
was 6-of·l 0 for 56 yards with wrong. Punt r'etumer Drew Vanderjagt field goal and a Bengals a 1.3-10 lead.
and the fun sllirted when Kevm oompetition is heating up.
one interception. Smith led Haddad was even bowled 10·0 Colts lead midway · Smith's shanked punt led
Johnson agreed to a four-year,
Oavls has nine wideouts left
through the second. quaner. to a 33-yard Dorsch field
the Bengafs on their two over by his own blocker.
$13.35-mlnion oontract exten- on the roster after releasing
The Bengals got a 29-yard goal with I :48 left in the
touchdown ~rives and pro·
They only got Inside the
sion just before kickoff.
eight-year veteran Chris
duced 19 pomts.
·
Cincinnati 20 once, follow- field goal from Travis third quaner, and then
It was good enough that ing a fumble recovery, ·and Dorsch, a founh-round draft Smith guided Cincinnati on
"Everyone is happy," said Sunders on Sunday.
LeBeau said he would con- their longest drive of the choice who struggled last a 12-play, 92-yard drive that
Sunders was signed by the
Johnson. who caught a 7-yard
sider staning Smith in next night ended when Peyton week, to cut the lead to I 0-3 sealed the /arne on
pass from Couch on the game's club in March wheil the Browns
Johnson's l·yar TO run. A
week's. game against New Manning was intercepted .bY at halftime.
first play. "I'll go to bed at night were despero~te for un experi·
When
Smith
started
the
conversion
pan failed.
·
Orleans- before he makes a Lamont Thompson. Mannmg
knowing I'm in a great place." enCed speed receiver.

·Alex Rodriguez keeps hitting homers

Smith thinks he can win Cincy QB job.

Davis ·gives Browns
rece1vers rave rev1ew

'•

...

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Not Justa Job!
Trilling. Cell (Q37)31!4·:12~a Jim~ OooMr~OIIoo ond C••· ~~~. ~ 't"eon 'j,.'~"~o. madill on lbt w•v· Bul "1/oo-'11 no,. Pfol~jl.l',eff.ate? l&lt;tr\1110~ (~o'~J,.tJ.IYtl• wt~·,
bo
~
"n~~"'
orllx reeumo 10 (Q37)384· penlry. wo Do: PlOwer llol&lt;· (~)488·1810
llmt IO bUy II now. Many ,.,. , .ao. wr
.
..,, '",..,
"""' '""
-I
: Sl110n44 Saturday
?f.tnina•·
Wo will pay u
3332.
11, Mowing, P•lnilng. Call
homtt it\ 10 oh,OOII from, N\ol Tr•lltr a bedroom iu~ .
1·
I
•
01
40 5 4
: ~4~~ 8- 08 or ( l g .
IIUIIIMlcod sal illy
EXPERIENCED OAFIPEN· (740)440·al0e.
FOfltCIIOIYrtt 8 Btdroom, 4 uon'\ delay, we II moving nlahld for rtnl 011 Rodmond Olllld Ultd A!llllltnotl, II• Oraiii!Mn llldl\111 ~I,
unlit wo havo you
TEAS NEEDED- Mull have Will prtllull Wllh hOUMI, Bol~ Homo. • 10,800~or lhtm OUI.
AIQQI, 1310, Mo. + Ottmlt oondllloned tno Gu11•n• lltlrt ol\1, ILl f'ONif V
trllincd and roady 1o a drlveft l~tnM &amp; '""'' 11111111, and dtckl. C•ll Lilli~ oo\11-t00-718· I,
CoiN Mot&gt;llo HQrllll
(so.l)a78·.e83
.
lttd, Wal~fl, DtYtrt. ~ull l'rtHure MQIQI~ 41'
GtVKAWAY
aula\ consumora' In porllllon, 10011 &amp;knowlodgl 4~1-4238 otk for lion or 1111· 144·
IIIIGO
11~, lnd "'''iMIIIOrl. , Clut, Low Mollrt. \'trv 1111111
ol rotldtnllal romod11\ng, '""' -~·
HOUOII for 1111 with Rtnlll a U.&amp;. IO BtiiAihtrtl: Ohio
lomt 11111 11 Ia,, 11!10111 wllh 1'111110 llllfltll!llllm.
lholr •utomotlvo
•
Qualllitd opplloanlt o•n
roomt a \111\h illlaO Flink·
~!Jgne Z~O:!p8•1!7a
•
AlllliliMI, ?I vlnt II .. ,eo-1 Mr 11100 will IIIII
~:t,~.~~·:.:y. ~ ,:~:
purchases.
pick up .•n appl~allon 11
lin Aw. PI, Plto .. nl, wv wan\od• No Ortdll CutiQrll•
(7~0~0.7381
1100. (7&gt;40)t!l.otll .
Chrlltlan • Con•uuotlon,
S~rloul lnq~lrtl onl~. trt lo ,aurohaM New homt
t
mill, IPI~td.
Ill 11\tr II!•• Brian ROll
1403 E•llorn Ave., Galllpo.
BUSINillli
(:104)875·1027
under Go'ltrnm•nl ltntno•
Llvlnll. room .... ureon,
~t, lhlldtl •,~
7
uelnod. ( &lt;10)443-38!1?
~or Pat IIIII
111. Opon e-e M·F.
OPfoln\JNrrv
.
lng pmgrom, 11 aoo Jnoomo 1 end a btdtoom IPtrl· t400:oo. Ooffttl tfiQ Ill• ••a h pro._ omt row
8 ulod woo!ltn window• Monday Jhru
17401441·451 4
s Btdroom Hou11 a 111 ~ulrld 014i lo pre.qulllt;. mlnlt furnlthtHnd unlur• b\H, I?G.QO, Titbit l~mpt ; : ln:h =--~·
wilh lr1111111 tbaul 32M80.
10:00 a.m. to
E•Pirltnood Oon\al Allil·
INOTIOII
r:~~)~;om; CrM~ Rood. (7 0)4..0·3584.
nlth~, IIOU!It~ ~~: !~~·gg fll~~n~~~! II~~ : ~rtH~IO CJ~u11f itnd
84
(7&gt;40)&gt;140· 60
6:00p.m. To bealn the lanl Nt..d ~. Plmt Coli OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
'
'
Wan\lo: Lon! oomp•ny ~~{: ' no pu,
'
drtl"' IRO,QO, g!!1lH: 0011(? )!I!:!?U
Puppltt 10 Olvttwoy To
career you have
t740!44v• ....a.
lNG CQ. rooommtndl \hal B bedroom newly romod· w•nll lo puroh•ll I· 10
·
bOOkolll 110.00. 141• Onibb'l l'l•no- '1\lnl a
Good HoJI\I Onlyl Part Et•
d
ed 0t Help w~lod coring lor lho you do butlnttt wllh paoplt t\t&lt;J, In Mlddltpor\, o•ll Tom aero 11\H for new hemal, 1 Bedroom Aparlmtn\1 7~?1
. lltflllra, ~rollltml' Wtte~
1
klmo Spill &amp; Aut\. Shtp· a waya ream
Sllnlng •' Ulll/lilo, 'Nil~· Molloh
k '1\lritl:lt 0111 Tht ~llno Df,
• tldorly, Coral Group Home, you know, end NOT 10 lind Andertoo afler Spm, Coli (740~441·aGVs.
1 101 01
0
hltr&lt;l. Vtry cult &amp; odorablo.
now PlYing minimum wege, mooey lhrough lhl mel\ unl\1 (7&lt;10)Q82•:1348,
Wt ~lVI IPPIOIIImalllj 10 11/0rytr Hookup, 8\0YIIno Oltl r~.:~~f'O,IIf
~ , ?&lt;10·~-INI
.
con (304)878·1487 an1· .
new lhltlt: 7tm·Spm. 7om- you h•YO . InYOtll~ltd lht 3 Bodmcm wllh ~rtge on uttd homto for under Rtfrlgtlator.
(740)4~1 · l?~!f):.a. 7 ~~ 4 1,1?'r·IIO• lndllltndlnl l4lrllallfl Qll.
limo.
Mory. Mtry quill oonlflry &amp;pm, 3pm·llpm, 11 pm· ofltnng.
•pprox\mo\1\y I 1011 Cn aa,ooo, call H00·137·SIS8 1018,
8101. flltt ltMmatn. IHy · rlbullf, O.ll
I'
•
Lo/1' ANil
·I How doo• .Your monoy 7om, ooii74Q.8ga.aoa3. Slarl Your Bulln•to To· Roult 72, Gl\1\pollt ~erry. lOr Info.
I br, IPI for llnl 1100. HO. 1\rttnolna, 10 daya Amt II . ~u~' ~%~~~
FOUND .
• grow? Clll Homo ond Gor· Lou Speolmtn Colltclor dly Primo Shopp\n Con• (30&lt;1)1 H3:12
dep.&amp;UOO. 1 man, •11 u\1\, oeth. V11111 M11111 C•r•. ,f:!':'~~-~~~-=
on Por~:O~~~ ~0 mo~· rttliltd for on·tllo oolite· '" '&amp;Plot Avollolllt UAI AI· 3 Bedroom Wood Ploort,
lno1Ud4~ atl4.0?0.:100~
Drlvt· •· 1m1e "'"' 1\QI, ,lrttuillld Window. U'IH•
· '7 \low, ( ! .
tlont In Pemtroy trtl. Ex· rcrdlbll Rill. 2 Nlot EXIO• Gilt 1.0Q Firtp\101, I 112
a btd 1
Q\1
1 btd
ft
1/1', Ill, '"" 1111 Wd·
Poundr Ytilowlortn~~;1111dt· McCiurt'l Plttlauranl now !lllitnot wllh drug IOIHn uliVI Orflon Newly Rl· bllh, Good Looallon,
Qll~l room 1;"U'B' "11• w.Hn
II
~= 'Waad ltd, .... I?&lt;IO)IIIo
~:" ,:;8~~~~~4 ~ hlrlno 111 3 loolllont, full or oolloollont ~lpM Fox Ill· m - . &amp;pnng Ve\lty Pit• 108.000. (7&lt;10):108•81 81 . Lot for Slit· Approw. a 112 ~ovJdltp':~h 0011: 011 ':1~. uo &lt;~&lt;t':.OOH , 14&lt;1
;;.;.;.;;.
1 -~~--.
Pllrt·llmo, p~k up tppilol· ltr ol lnl•rtal lo 1014)047· " · C•ll (7&gt;40)&lt;14e-341f.
ecr11, c!Mitd 1 rttdy for (?&gt;40)WI·~I4I lfltr lpm '
~IT
~!WARD
lloo II looolton &amp; bring boo!&gt; 0874 or cell (014)847·0147
3br. aba. a Oltr
building, grovel driveway,
,
AIIIIATIQN MCrnll\1
Loll B\tclltullooN boo
bolwHn
8:30tm
I lor mort lnrormot\on. Ortll
PRomisloN.u. Brlok Alnoh. GrNI
I
Wlllr I 14tolrlo •vtlltblt. 88~ Apl In Cltnllnery Ill" .
ANnQIJlll
~lrtcl, New I ~~~~~~~" In
, _ Trlbbtt Rd &amp; Hurrl· 1o:ooam, MondltY lhru Btl· fllr1·llmo PlY I .
SIUMCRS '
:~7 ;~~;;'~1 on iiMtl lol. Parler trH. Atklng pMtnoll furnlthod, ~111111"
,lloalt, Qall ~CHI lwna, I•
Oint. 1104-307·8!\HI
urday.
Tht Athoni·Mtlgl EduOI·
.
"U88, Ot\1 (740)4~8· plld PotPI 4lt01rlo, OIHn• IU or Ill! ~l'ltrlnt Anti• IQO.U?•iUI,
MoDontlda In Rio Grandt. lion•\ Strvlct Ctnltr It
:lbr. Rtnoh, Ga\1\polll, Mill 4814 from 1·8 or (7&lt;10)&gt;140· rtltllnou a dlpollt ''" ul. 1II~ . 1111 Main on
YARD SALE .
Now Hlrl:':j Ooythlft lntur· Ntklng I Prttohool ~Ill
Ollok Road; lrlok ,ronl, Si48 olltr epm,
qulrtd. lUI/month, 0111 ill lt~ I I'Omt, ?&gt;IQ. ~NI=W
~A~N=D~.••
=
...=D~I:=TI=:I:::'~
• 1 bl1 H.0lid
Nttd1 c00 rdl 1111
Mil
now vinyl tiding, new root,
(?40)111•1111.
.. ·.
•
... •
,
l~~~~=:=; end
tnoo ~vo a •
aye
or. "' ·
1i:J04)8?a
PlYing 11m? Oon'l
.•
8111·11••· ~ull
oort, 'IIIII llamt, ~... niMr
78 ooo C•ll '"" 8pm ' lioo at one
I
Peld Vtclllon. Apply ctllont: Mllltr't Dtgrtt,
lllp
toy
I~MOO
IIAUTIPU~
AI'Ait11
owner.
~or
Qonoll\1
AIIQII,
Cill;
1
1038
YAIIIJ SAl.£.
Wllhln.
Suptrvltor Ctrtll~•llon, •nd
•
HQrlll new 'turrttot MINTI AT IUDOIT ~~~~
ntl, ~ill llr, ltttl Clrll
GAWPOUS
· Mtdl· Privott coro· now hlr· 11\hor Pro·K or S
4 bodroom, 3 btlht, Aonoh
, tlr~~t a 011 81: 011 AT .IACKION •• 1~1'1 111111\lbltl on lilt.,. ~or Oratne, Clri'IIW-• I
1peclel Edu•
~
· In PCA'I STNA'I end OOIIon Corl\1~1 on wllh hr·
1\y\1 noma wllh twlmmlno
lOll IIVIIIono TATII1.SI W11'-&lt;1 Drlvt In MlddltiiQr\, !loKI, ~1111• Wal~:·~~
c~l-iA'• 'ror 1 urowlng ly &amp;duooUon ollht Hondl;
pool. o1 11 (?40)441·0011
' (7401441 • from I1111J Ia 11113, Weill 10 wtlrt, Al•lldln m1n1111, ano ~~
.
Crown C\ly, OH, AucNII 20, ogenoy. 11 ln\orollld r&gt;\Hto aeppod Vtlldellon . .Salery.
.-ytlma,
thop &amp; movltl· Otll ?&gt;IQ. mO&lt;t, (1&lt;10~881.QIN
21. 22. 23. Left ol Cliovan\'1 . 0111 oti.no He~ ...: liN or BoNd on lroinlng end·~·
UO·IIOI. lquat Hauling
~il Pill· totld
,•
54 crown 1.41no.
Tme- Fllnklln "JBOO).et. rltnot. PlotN tubm\1 a II• 10.4 ~~~ Mlnl·~erm wllh uoull In Gtl\1~\t. 10 hi·
Opporfunll)l
hlu.r«~~•1 • . ~
'
,,,
lor of lnltrtll tnd r~tumt 1
~.0 II
"12" n
~ ·(7&gt;40)&lt;14t-?IOO
1
.
Llbbv Poltlok
8334 or j7&lt;10!440· 411.
10: John o. Cotllnzo, lu· v ew. '" ' ory ,• • monl QriYO, 7 oom•. 4IA
OoiiiUI ~rlmanl on Lin•
::0·. . . . .;.;.;;......,~,._'"'!'!':"
· Congralulellonli You have Nood 8\ldlttlo Mlllwon. porlnltndtnl, Alhtne·Molg~ ;~~=~·r~:'~ ~~!:m:.ul~ 2 LA,
~llht,
LPu tl
ootn Nit. eRIO. • month.
nnnll, 1$0,
: won 2 r,H rnovlt iloko\1 (7&lt;10)&lt;1&lt;18·33&amp;8
ESC, 807 Rlohllnd AYinut, lit b•lhl, otl•ln ki\O~tn, 1lllmt~1• ...,rgt
01• Rtlooallng, looking for aD HOmttiHd I'IMIII Ilk fOr
,......11
1o lht 8f)rlng Vtllll' 7 In ::-=:::..;;;;::.=;7~":7:':7':: Buill 1108, Alhtnt, Ohio dining room, living JOOIIJ, j?&lt;IO!&gt;I40 1380
10111, or mort ror tm•ll Nino~. (110~)171·11~0 or 1111 ford ~·110 . ~lokup
atlllpoilt. Clll till Trillune Nttd E•Ptr\tnood H.V.A.C 45701 . Aprllo«llon Dttd• lem\11 room. HardwoOd HouMin M\ddllflO~. oomar 111m1ng, •rll or ~rclanlng (104)1?1·~14
.
lr\1011 UQO, 1HI 1•10 Chfo
""dO\ll\1. (740)448·2342 lnllllllrt lnd Ho\Pfll. Clr· lint: Augul ae, aooa. Tilt 1\ooll, cullom \rim, oharry \0\, quit\ 111101, Ctnlral llr, W\lh tm-'1 1\rMm or flllnd,
V'f II ,000, Ortfttmln rldlnl
~ 111\ld ~rlftrrod. WMIM Trtln, AMESC It on lqutl Oppor· ooblnell. New Window IIUI· 2 ca~ra~, mull Ml lo (7.e)041•0871
OIIUJ\t . a lldroom Town. 11wnmow11, U' OU\, II, · - ·
,.t.J(.'JQII ANil
Cell and LoiYI tlttgo, lunlly Employtr/Provldtr.
mtnll 1 ~ Frll~ptlnl- IPP all 7'")""" "078
h
'
• Hf\1 llftfrlfirtiOr, II ~
FU:.\ MAIIKI!:T
(7&lt;10)441·1238 Alii ror Erin.
.
' ~ .....
UUII, Nllr Hr&gt;ill~ 01"' oav1111r 100 lnltrtatg•
111
..-aitiiiiiliiiiiii._t.J · Tho atl\lpollt Dolly Tribune lhiO!Jghou · Amltho
illlrn
e 31111 a 111h Til1
ED Hookup, Vtry ~~~~1 ' 1 • _._ "• 1 1"'- 1""')17 •
""'"'" ....
Now IOOtj)llng ratumtt lor 11 lOOking 1 oltrk for 111 odl• "''h lock room, lonood pad• Mutt " ·
'
'
I ptr month plu1 ullll\111 ., .., •1von II ... _,
.;;;;.~;;··;;;;;.:;
•Auclion Mry Fr\dlly e:IIO, oHiotl dania! o~,mtnl. larltl dlfll~mtnl 1a 1111111 ~L~.':; ~11\od ~· ~~;·M~t~':'o~nl~ "f·~·
tflqlll • IMH l'laqulrtef, 1111
; Angltt' Flt8emertcat, 333 BondPrelktumo0111o11: 11 J&lt;10
~ wllh communlly ntw~ltlmt
or Commtrol•t:
(7&lt;10)U... tl7,
·
~=~Y~n~=~~no~k-ottt~d
..,...,
1 mtit":'W:: I'IHidtnllol
. M&lt;oohonlc 1.. Pemoroy, ton
1, I 11101 • 0 lnd other olarlcll IUkl. opp
t1&gt;1tl1441.027Q
•
"''Ill •·t 11 1o
OhiO ror 1n1o oon (7&lt;10!&amp;112· 4\1831 j7A0!4'!·318f
Mull 111 oompultr llllr•te Galllpollt, lull orr 141. "''
··
rurnta~o 1 "OQrllt and Mlullf, ... ,.,, toll
m.l
••1 h •-- _,,111111 lypfng 0,.,· (7&gt;40)37e·e224.
. lith, Yptlllrt, O~ttn "It• llllkta, Ctlllnllt, Ughtt,
1
01110 Volley Pull\ M&gt; ng 11 ''""'•
'
trtnott and OtP!!Il Itt· Worfllltnoh, Wllk•on ~~~~~~. •
WM'I11Jl
l'n oponlno \cr' 1 nowt fll'~ mtr, IPflllno and orUifllll·
Prlotd for Qu\c\1 ltltl lr\c\1
qulrld No 1'111 17&gt;40)&lt;14t- a..ttltnt .Condlllarl 11000 lllllilblrrltt U·~lcrk, II 00
TO B• ~
dulgntrl !llglnoiOr on fit llonli lkl\lt. Wll bo required
Houat In Crown City. 3 1 •3 ll«&lt;roornt 'ortololld .1111 '
'
1!&lt;10!1\&lt;ft.IIH.
'
'1 q1., onHI•J&lt;I&lt;It
1U 1. o1
•~
v•
• Pllolnollon dttk. Mutl 111 10 hlndlo mullfp\o lllklln • Cabin W\ih I Loll of Btdroom, 2 hlh, ~Ofmll Homllt ''om lite/Mo. 4'!t&gt;
~;. •
01110
•
prollolonl In QueriiXprttt rotl·pt..d onvironmtnl. ~ 1.4111&lt;1, ldollll Trill Dining. 1 O.r Otirtlll 1no Down, :10 Yt111 11 il.l'!t&gt; G!lclout living, 1 end I 1000 Dt\1 OOmtlultr, 1r ' =-=~=~--~
Abto\ulo Top llollor: U.S. ond lblo 1o produoa erN· Mall ruumtt lo: loUt Rd. j7A0)440·1380
ltortge lulldlng. 113,100. APR. ~or Lltllnge, 1()0.311• bodroom lfllr\mlnllll VII• monllor, tower, lllybolrd. Q~nnl"t TOmtfOII, Jlrrl
tllivtr, (lQid Colnt, Proot· 1\vo. vlouotry oppoallng ~ret, monoglng tdllor, Ntwly Rtnov•lld 1eao Phono (7&lt;10)&gt;140·4043.
3323 IX\, 1708,
IIQI MthOI lnd "lvtllldt mo\IM, prlftltr, ltllt, 0011111, 1 D'llrltn ,11m! i.tt1r1 '""'
Mil. Diemondt, Gold nowt fll'~' In 1 rtM·ptCtd Till atlllpolt Dilly Trlbuno,· ,.,m~ouH 31 " 28A 2 P lotd 10 Sol Owntrt 810 ,1
APirlmtn\1 In Mkldlt~rl. 101nner &amp; dllk, 11100, · (7&lt;10 1~?·11 11, Uolllofl 14,
Rlno•.
u.s . Curronoy,· environment Send rotumt PO !loll 41111, Gtlllpollt, OH Fill ...,,.,; 1.41rut . ~ •• r~l muol Bttll Rt 1
a bedroom. 1 bolh. lull 'r~ ta?N~t. Dill o40- (7&lt;10)?42·?~34
wt
11 ll!ulhll,
M.f.'S. Coin Shot&gt;, 151 Sac· ond work 11mpr11 10: Botto 48831 . No Phone Colli Saoutllul F\oort. Tin Roo\, 760noSondy Ht\gh\1. 3 btd· battmtnl, 1350 plut dl• til 1014. l~ull Houtlnu HHO
llwrn!M. All Morntgro..n . _ Oatn
3
11
ond AYtnYO, Goilpollt, 7&gt;1(). Puree. ~roup mane~lng PloiH.
CIA, Big Kllllhtn, 3 O.r wl room llll\1 !lVII, 2belht, llrt· potil, !7&lt;10)A.Ieolll!
()pporluniiiH.
It"'•
No111011
Wood. I tlltltt, ' K·MirJ L.af In Gallitlolll ....
441-2842 .
tdKOl, Glllpoill De~ rib- Wor\C From Hamt. lvtlnttl Apl, A6ovl. Appio, Poer, p\101, il car P."oge, obovo ' 2br. gara~ ap\, Mtton North Thlfd, MlddltPort, I l'orltblt. I litdtt '!IIIII 1 1111, 1110 Goltf\111 ~Ifni ill
Buying Roott Gtnolng ~nebl:~ile~
&gt;IIIU, otrlpo. Opportunlly. Cltlll your Grlptt, LandiOIPITowno, ~· ground poo, dlld tnd UOO. I 000. DtQOtlt, lbr. llldroom furnllhld apart• ~71 Jimmy 011111 1'01'111 1.411 0/10 Dolin or mora.
1
Oo\dln-1 McHt·Stl 12-1' '
own 1\ourt. NNd htll) lm· bulldlnge, 0.n.,,\p, 11r101. Counlry 111\fng ml• HouM PI, Plllllnl 1271, monl, no filii, dlflQIIil &amp; ret• Unit, 171100. 01n .ltl J)u~ I I1.7140Un, Clom Aill!lbtt
cloMd s~ndltY Gtorgo Tr\1011 DriYOr nttdld. C\111 rytodlaftly, e65·'108-5201
~ millt 10 Hotplttl or Town. nu\11 from \own. Cell for mo.
1278.
Dipotl\ , trlrtO&lt;It raqulrlll, 17AO)vtl• Ina Operation. (7~0)011• 111 lummtr, leuglv!ttn
Buokloy, (7&lt;10)7117.UOI!4
ACOL. Coli t304l078-4005 www.l&gt;lrttrcla1t'lu.com
(7&lt;10).Wf·1118.
Appt(~)875· 1145
(:104)875·1UI1.•hor Opm
0100
1143.
·
, ,.,m, (7CQ~RIHIU
Alf'l ~"
ot E\'llltU
lnd
Mary (COfntlll
lllung;
PIHII coniiCI Erllll Efl.
Wllr&lt;ll II 11'1 Mt JookiCII
Ad .. Ntw Cltlll. Po 161Ga

..- - - - - - · ·
Admltll!&gt;nt R-lo\Ne.
Some Colloge..,..NOONury,
S.IH b\ltfltnOO Ht\ptul.
Send AHumt lo: PO llol&lt;
1142 Ktrr OH 45843

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MllNUYS
SElF STORAGE

Haning~s Construction

(11'11ri1M)

Cellular

mttNttptrt. 011

Jeff Warner Ins.
992·5479

(l40) 113•1l05
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HOWARDL,
WRITESEL

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148-1405

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www.mydallynntlnel.com

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27
Sl - Kippur S Sttcku111
Two weeks ago, I
21
54 C'-I UK part
featured Dave Hugalallr
so llelr, to
35 Trw growth 1 'alr-hlrtng
H GIIHc pap
llllwl
H CelllatPopeye
gett 's five-letter mneallr
I Pl1a Nndo
Ml
51 Dlnlll
monic device io help
n Llllon
wk:h
31 Porlor the
•-thetlc
declarer plan the play
(hyph.) I Chocolall
52 0111 Cllltr
38 Vlelnam
COOkie
22 -Ill (111111
uf trick one. Because
dr(nk) .
CapiUII
10
Llllri!Y
I have a razor-sharp
40 Cruh Into
aounci"
35 FlrfOWOI
mind, CVCIIl~tally It
occurred to me that
the defenders could
use the same routine.
This week, therefore ,
let's see how it
works.
First comes A is for
A11alyzc the Opening
Lead. Ynu are silting
E;tst. looking at your
hand und North's.
Against three notrump, your partner
lends the heart six,
How would yon plan
the defense'/ . '
After this auction,
West's card is surely
fourth-highest from
his longest and
strongest. So, apply
the Rule of Eleven:
CELEBRITY CIPHER
II minus 6 equals 5.
by Lull Clmpoa
This means lhat.thcre
C.-ty Clphtr cryplooromo ,,. croo'-&lt;1 from quolollono by Jomouo
pooplo, pool and pn~oent. Eacllltlttr In lho Clpll&amp;r otando 1o&lt; ono!Nr.
arc fi vc hearts above
Tod.oy's clue: K IIQ!l'llt P
the six in the North,
"PM
P
NPHLO
TZ~CXLE
East and South hands
.cqmbincd. Since you,
CLZ
NPMLCPRLO,
VL '
East, cun sec four of
them, you know
VJWNO
ZLHLE
OLL
South has only one
.
heart higher than the
TZJCXLI
JZL
NPDL
CLO
six , Which one is it?
If it is the seven,
VPNNPTRO."
West hus a suit
heuded by the A-10·
XTNN
JM
MTRL
RTZTYLI
9 -6 und probably
would have led the
I 0. And If South has
the ace, West holds
10-9·7·6·X(•X) and
certainly would have
led the I 0. ·So, South
should have the nine
O lour
Rtarrang• Jetten of
or 10.
ocramblod words b•
This means you lbw tQ rorm
Jour llmpll worda.
should play the queen
under dummy's king,
· c· A E I P E
which serves two· pur·
poses. First, it tells
partner about the
queen and juck. (You
SGARS
cnnnot have a single·
ton queen\ because s
1~
that wou d leave
South with six
"Just Imagine If we could take
heurts.) Second, playa
trip,'
the .wife sighed. The husing the queen unband
grumbled,
"Imagination Is
blocks the suit.
At trick two, de- . - - - - - - - - - . thinking you are having fun when
clarer wIll toke the
NE V RA T
you are only ' • • • - - - .- money." ·
losing diumond fi - 1-.,,r-.:;,....:.,,:,;.,. .:.;.,. .:. .,., B:-1 0 Comploto tho chuckle quoted .
nesse. After winning 1.......:.1...-.J.-.J.-.l..-.L. ....J.
bv filling In tho mining words
YOU dovolop lrom sttp No. 3 below.
with his king, West
should lead u low .,. PRINT NUMBERED
heart to your jack. "=' lETTERS IN SQUARES
Then, you return the
UNSCRAM.BLE LETTERS
heart eight, ~etmit­
'OR ANSWER
tlng West to wm three
SCAAM·LITS ANSWIRS
more tricks in the suit
to defeat the contract. .
Fabric- Pound· Holst· Pigeon- NEIGHBor/s ···-·'
"
.
After
working In the yard all weekend my friends husNEWSPAPERS
band
conclUded
that snow Is the only thing that will make
Cover All The
your
lawn
look
as
nice as your NEIGHBOR'S.
_, Majol SUbj80III

r JUST DON1T KNOW I-lOW

TO 1/JitiT&amp; A ~OIJE I.I!TTE!t

WI.IAT CAN '(OV SAV TO
A 61RL '1'1-lAT SI-!OWS VOU
REALLV I.IKE MER ?

MOW A60UT,''ENCL05EI'
PLEASE FIND A COOKIE "7

I

I

6

Krenzel's time to shine, Bl

High: 90s, Low: 60s

Detlllls, Al ,

Stocks surge
NEW YORK (AP) Investors held on to their
optimism Monday, sending
stocks sharply higher in
response to stronger retail
e~rnings und · u smallerthan-expected drop in a key
economic gauge: The Dow
Jones industrials surged
more than 2 I0 ,points lo
close just below 9,000.
Analysts said the absence
of any significant negative
news, such as accounting
restatements, added to the
good mood on Wall Street,
which has seen two straight
weeks of gains among the
three major indexes. Light
trading also gave prices u
boost.
The Dow closed up
212.73, or 2.4 percent, at
8,990.79, following a 0.4
percent advance last week.
The Dow has now recoven:d about I ,500 points
si~ce it hit an intraday low
of7 .489.53 on July 24.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 4~4· 2
Pick 4: 5-5·9·7
Buckeye 5: 12·21·23·34·36
Pick 3 night: 8·7-3
.
Pick 4 night: 6-4·1-2
W.VA.
Dally 3: 3·0·3
Dally 4: 4-3-4-4
Cash 25: 3-4-5-1 HB-23

·rue•duy, Aug. 20, 2002
In the yeur uheau you could

reuliz~

vu11 t

l~nprovemenu

where ynUI· l'im:inr life

\ ~ con­

ccrrycd, us well uo in your
w•Jrk-related uffulrs. Both will
mnk~ you a hupplel penon.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) ·- It
could 1cem to be one of lho•e
duy• when ihc harder you try
to

plcu ~e

others, the len you

urc upprcclulcd . To uvold gelling fru•lrutcd. •tccr clenr or
those who take you for
grunlcd. Trying ill puich up n
&amp;mkcn roonunce7 The A•lroOruph Mutchonukcr cun help
you undcr•lund whutto·do to
make 1he rclulion•hlr, work.
Mull S2.7$ to Mule 1mnker
c/o thl• ncw•pupcr, P.O. Bo~
167. Wickliffe, OH 44092.
VlltGO (Au1l . ~3 -Sept: 22) .
·· Mnkc ever~ effort to meas• ,
urc up to whut I• e•~cted ot
you loduy, ••peclnlly In •ltuil•
llon.1 where other. urc depending on you , If you lei
.them dnwn , you could be

lugged ndo-noihlng.
~IURA (Sept. 23·Qct. 23} •
· f-ur he il from you lo gland·
•luml. yc tloduy , your ln•ecurlty could have you lrylnglo
UJ" Insc yuur friends In older
In cnll nllcnllon to your•elf,
Unn'l ·· yuu won '! win hny
rave r~ vlcw!' .

s"coRPIO (Oct. 24-Nov
22) -- Opporhinhlcs !hat ur~
presemly uvuilublelo you will .
be whhdruwn If you fall to
uvull ~ou.,clf of ihem loduy.
II would be a blsger lo" thun
you may reull•e.
SAdiTTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 21) .. ln.tcud or ulleillpilng to make ••cuseo for whol
· you've failed to do or for lhe
mistakes you've mude· own
up to them immediately. By
not doing so, It will weaken
your Image In the eye• of others.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Non.
19) .. Keep u lock on your
wallet loduy und don' t go
shopplng,.lt's a day when you
muy not be 11 value con•cfous
aa you •hould and could
squander your funds on frivolous nOihlnf!.s,
AQUAIUUS (Jun. 20-Feb.
19) ·- U•uully you're a decisive penon who never vacillutu or wobblesl but today
you may ha~c a ot of prob- ·
lems making decisions or
calling rhe shot•, and you may
le1 It end up being a wasted
day.
PISCES (Feb. 20- Mor~h
20) ·· If you leave essentlul
ID8ks unil lihe la•l mlnule ond
ihen become desperole to get

'

them done, you can coun1 on
making a whole bunch of
mistakes and compound your
despa1r.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
· ·• Op1iml1m is an admirable
virtue, but don'tleave reall•m
ouJ of lhe equalion. If you do,
you could build your hope•
on unsound premise~ and end
up severely dl•appolnted.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Chance or luck cannot '
be depended on today, because lhese allies won't be
around 10 corry you over lhe
rough spot•. If you know you
oro stncily on your own,
you 'll hove a chunce to ocCompli"h your aims.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
-- Others may set away with
embellishing t~e facts today,
but you won'\, oo even If you
know someone is exaggerat•
Ins rhe truth. don'ttry 1o top
his/her lall lale wlih a whopper. .
. CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Overslghls will prove very
cosily tO&lt;fay if you allow your
mind 10 wonder off the details
in a financial lransacilon.
View ,things reali•tically and
count uti the loose change
you're ~Jvrn .

Index
2 S11Ctlon1 .: 12 Pllp•
CalendC~r ·
AS

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

84-S
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

c 200~ Ohio Volley Publiohl"' CO.

Members of the Farmers
Bank and Savings. Co. Board
of Directors broke ground for
a new branch office in
Mason, W.Va . · during a
Monday evening ceremony.
Pictured, below, from left, at
the ceremony ore bank
trustees Ben Ewing. John
Musser, Doug Little, Tom
Reed, President Paul Reed,
Tom Karr, CEO Paul Kloes, ·
·c arson Crow, Contractors
David Weber of D.V. Weber
Construction Co., Reedsville,
and Ed Converse of AB ·
Contracting of New Haven,
W.Va. , and Executive Vice
President Roger Hysell.
The new office will be
located near the Wal-Mart
Supercenter, at 424 Second
Street, just north of the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge, ·and
construction on the new
3,000 square-foot branch
office will begin later this
mon,th, according to Bank
President Paul M. Reed. It is
expected to be completed in
March. The new bank facility
will include a three- lane
drive-through facility and a
24-hour ATM .
Mike Licving, above, a
long-time community banker
from New Haven, W.Va. ; and
former regional president
with City National Bank, has
been nained president of
West
Farmers
Bank's
Virginiu Division. Farmers ·
Bank now n~rates offic.es in
Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains and
Gallipolis . Following the
groundbreaking ceremony,
the Meigs and Mason·County
Chambers of Commerce
hosted a combined business
after hours event.

.I

WEST NILE VIRUS

office·

41 Llll go
Novetlll- 42 1'001 Joe.
Llvln
l!llybe
Mlth proof 43 ColonCIO
lllbr.
akl apot
Army outfit 44
up
Portlclll 4e llulllllrl
Direction 47 Mo. ,......,
Vono111'1 4e Elllnal bird

I I I

PEANUTS

Hometown Newspaper

New branch

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•

MU's Leftwich on O'Brien Award list. 81

AC..ota . 41 1n 1MtM

ALDI!R

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NIA Cro ..word Punle

IIIIDOil

I

Lab results

on dead crows
ex
eel soon
Bv BRIAN J, REED
6REEOOMY041LYSENTINEL.COM

Sentinel photos by DDvld Hams

POMEROY - State health officials have confirmed two
likely human cases of the West Nile Virus in Ohio. and the
Meigs County Health Depilrtmenl continue' to wait for laboratory results from three·dead birds found in the county to
determine if they died from the virus.
·
According to the Ohio Department of Health, the two
"probable" human West Nile Virus cases involve a 26 year·
old man in Columbus. who has since been released from
the Ohio State University Hospital in llood condition. and a
76 year-old woman who was hospitalized in Cleveland.
Last year, nme people in the U.S. died from the disease,
which cau ses encephalitis. · or brain swelling, but last
week's Ohio cases are the state's first to be reported . They
are the first contirmed human cases of the virus in Ohio.
T~e virus is spread to humans by mosquitoes. crows and
blue Jays. and the local health depanment continues to wait
for test results to determine ifthe three dead crows found in
~eig s County during the past two weeks were carrying the
VIruS.
The first dead crow was found in the Racine area almost
three weeks ago, according to Health Commissioner
Norma Torres. and was immediately sent to the Ohio
Department of Health for testing.
Two other birds. both found in Middlepon, were also sent
off, but Torres said Monday no test results have beeq
received due to a high volume of such work being sent to
·the Columbus laboratory. ·
"We're expecting· to hear something at anytime," Torres
said yesterday.
·
Meanwhile, the health department has coordinated a tire
drop-off program to help eliminate mosquitoes, one of the
maJor contributing factors to the spread of the virus.

pro ram begins·

Ohio Valley Publishing . -W nesday
to eliminate
plans Saturday and ·' · ·TtestDesigned
Nile risk in Meigs
Sunday editions

•

o .

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDli'MYDA ILYSENTINEL .COM

STAFF REPORT

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
is beginning a new venture to
bette.r serve its readers in the
tri-county region.
The company - which
publishes the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, the Point Pleasant
Register and the Pomeroy
Sentinel -will be~in providing readers w1th both
Saturday and Sunday regional
morning editions.
The companY. currently
publishes The Tnbune and the
Sentinel Monday through
Friday, with a combined
Sunday · edition, The TimesSentinel. The Register cur·
rently publishes Monday
throu~h Saturday. The new
combtned Saturday product
.will a! so be called The TimesSentinel.
OVP will continue pu~lish­
ing the Daily Tribune,
Re!!ister and Sentinel as usual
durtng the week.
The decision to· create
regional Saturday and Sunday
publications for delivery in all
three markets - Galha and
Meigs counties in Ohio and
Mason County in West
Virginia - is based primarily ·
on readers' intense interest in
local sports, OVP Publisher
Den Dickerson said.
The neWSJ?apers' local
weekday edittons will be

•

the right thing to do long-term
for our customers," Dic"erson
said.
Bette Pearce, group managing editor, said the venture
is a challenge for a relatively
small staff.
"Only with the talented and
dedicated staffs that we have
at all three newspapers could
this venture even be considered," Pearce said.
Sports, however, is only
delivered by 5 p.m. as usual, one factor in the company's
but the regional weekend edi- decision, Pearce added.
"We also are developing
tions will go to press at midnight for delivery to sub· plans to provide readers with
scribers in ail three counties more local news, as well as
more .in-depth
. stories and
b)' 6 a.m.
.
"The new Saturday edition entertamtng features.
.
will enable us to provide our
"We also are inviting readreaders in all three counties ers to contact us with their
with next-day coverage of ideas, suggestions, story tips;
local high schools' football to let us know what they want
games, along with better cov- in their local newspapers."
erage of Ohio and West
Dickerson noted that pub·
Virginia college teams," lishing an a seven-day regionDickerson said.
at product is not simply an
"W!! will be the only news- editorial and press room task.
paper sold in this market to be
"It truly is a team effort,
able to deliver the scores, requiring the hard work of all
game. stories and photos by 6 departments - advertising,
a.m. Saturday," Dickerson circulation and the business
said.
offices at all three papers,"
·
"For any company, this Dickerson said.
"We are confident our readwould be a daring and bold
leap of faith, especially l!rs will be pleased with our
today's downtumed economy. · efforts, as we continue to
It is expensive to do, but it ts strive for excellence."
•

OVP's new

POMEROY - Beginning Wednesday, local residents
can help eliminate the risk of mosquitoes through a tire dis,
posai l'aciiit~ at the Meigs County Health Department.
·
Health olt1ciais blame mosquito bites as the primary
cause of the West Nile Virus in humaos. and old tires,
which fill up with stagnant water when stacked, are a pri·
mary harbor for the insects.
. According to Health Commissioner Norma Torres, the .
depanment has set up a tire trailer at the .health department.
located in the Meigs Multipurpose Center on Mulberry
Heights, adjacent to Veterans Memorial Hospital. The trailer will be available for two months.
Residenls may bring up to 25 tires, one time, during the
collection period. Torres said. They may bring tires oil
Wednesday and Friday. this week, from noon until 4 p.m: I
Tires may only be dropped off at the site when a staff member is present.
·
Tires must be 16 inches in diameter, or smaller, Torres
said .
In addition· to eliminating tires, the West Nile Virus
. Workgroup, made ur of the Ohio Departments of Heahh,
Agriculture, Natura . Resources and EPA, among othec
agencies, offers the following tips for reducing the risks of.
West Nile Virus infection:
'
• Eliminate all standing water, by clearing rain gutters, ·
and removing plastic containers, ceramic pots or other containers whlch might hold standing water.
• Clean and chlorinate home swimming pools, outdooi:
saunas and hot tubs, and keeping them empty when not
Ufoe.
:
• Drain pool covers regularly.
'
• Change bird bath water at least once a week.
• Tum over wadin~ pools, wheelbarrows and other water
collectors when not tn use. ·
• Keep windows and doors closed and make sure screens
are in good repair.
·
• Avoid mghttime outdoor activities when p()ssible,
because it is the time when mosquitoes are most likely tci
bite, and wear shoes, socks, long sleeves and long pants:
during those times, along with a DEET,continaing repel·.
lent
·

in

'

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high quality home health services, remember

It's Your Health. It's Your Home. It's Your Choice.
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I .

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