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•
\

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

_rh_eo_an_ys_en_tin_ei----==-f

Monday. July :so. 2001

DEAR ABBY: Please urge
" Wants Freedom From th e Apron
St rings," the 34-year-old woman
who lives with her controlling p arents, to run - not walk - to get
her own apartment lr is the only
way she will ever have ·a life of her
own .
Forty years ago, I, too, wanted my
ADVICE
freedom from my mother's apron
strings. I was 18 and . had dated
"Tom" for three years. After our made it to Tennessee.
high school graduation, Tom invited
Abby, Tom treated me with
me to visit him in Tennessee where .respect and was· always good to m e.
he was working. I had always been I knew he lov.ed me. I loved him,
intimidated by my mother. She told and I felt we could have a bright
me I couldn't go unless I took future together.
someone with me. I told Tom what
Every day of my life I regret I did
she had said, and he replied, " lf I not stand up to my mother. I have
wanted to date the baby .sitter, I loved Tom for 40 years and will
would invite the baby sitter." i never never get over him. He is long mar-

Abigail

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Van
Buren

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

IA'tttrs to the editor ore wtlcomt. They should be ltu thafl 300 wordt. Alll~tttn ·
art subjtct to editi11g "'ld must bt sig11td 011 d inclu.dt adt!nu lllrtd ttUpltollt 11um1Mr.

No unsigned letters

t~•ill

bt published, L#flm· should bt in good lastt, ruklrusing

issut s not ptrstmalitii'S.

r/u vpinhms expressed i ll the colum11 betu ..· are drr conSIIUUs uftlc t Ohio VuJJ,.y
Pu b/i!Jhi11g Co.'s editorial board, llrtltm oth uwist nottd.

NATIONAL VIEW

ried, but in my heart he w ill always
be mine. I have seen him fiom time
to time over the years, and I still feel
the same way.
. Twenty years ago, I was diagnosed
with depression. The doctor advised
me that if I did not leave my mother's house I would have a nervous
breakdown . I finally got an apartment of my own. I still live in the
same town. My relationship with
my mother is full of resentment,
even after all these years. I'm afraid I
will always be ... CONTRO~D
AND TRAPPED
DEAR CONTROLLED AND
TRAPPED: I'm sorry you didn't
write to me decades ago, because
my advice would have been the
'
same. You have many
good years
ahead of you. Counseling may help

LOCAL EVENTS

Cell phones' impact on national .
crash rate can't be ignored

"

• Seattl e Postointelligenc er, 011 re f/ plume.! am/ driviHg: Listcniq~; to cell phone lobby ists, yo u'd think the· push to regulate ,
thc· ir iP lu &gt;try is positively un-Amer icatl. The Personal Com- ...
lllUilll'.ltlUIII lndmtry of An 1er ic:l ' takes an exceedingly dim ,
,·ic·w ot.lcgisl.rrio n t ha t would "dictate how and '~h e n Am eric
, I . • . I dt'V \.CeS.,.
\.",\11 '\ \.",111 ll'\1..' t Jc;; l r \V I fl' t'SS
·

·-

HENTOFF'S VIEW

.Me Veigh case b~gs qu·es'tion: does .killing help heal?
'

•

•

f ,_,

•

/

•

..;, •;

-,-'
.:•

· The more than 1,400 repo rters have
Says Tina C hery:" [ know this is my ·
We\ \ buv that if cell phones were bein g used in vehicles as
long since left Terre Haute, Ind. T im
bes t f0 rm of revenge- taking my son's
oril(inallv intended -to call a row truck when the car breaks
McVeigh's ashes have been scattered, as
message and sharin g it with others. I do
d m~·n 01; the highway or to let the fa mily know you'll be late
he wanted. To the · end, he wo uld not
tl1irst fOr revenge, and thi s is it."
.,"
f{&gt;r di 1imT.
admit th e eno rmity of his crim e's impact
With all th e survivors of murd ered • ~
Americans can't get enough o f a good . thing, so they've
on th e survivors, and on the famili es of
family members, or any love d one, th ere· ~~
rurn ed cell phones into a hnard that's wo rthy of regulation by
tho se murdered in the O klahom a
is never any final clos ure. But the reac- · .
the t~·d cra l Co nsum er Prod uct Safe ty Commission ....
bombing. Even some oppon ents of th e
a~
tio ns of T ina C hc·ry and llud Welch - ·~
The verdic t is unanimous that h olding a phone to th e ear in
death penalty have made an exception in
cl early part .of a decided mi nor ity- g9
traffic si,;ni ficmtl y in creases the risk of cra shin g. ' Most of th e
his case.
beyo nd and beneath the c ustom ary
"'"SlHJS arc mtmrive- slower reacti o n ti mc'(ty,pically by'half a
Th·e president is right. T im M cY~igh ·
arg11 ments about th e dea th penalty.
, ,
·second), poore r hazard pe rceptio n, \vcavin g Withjt.J an~ o ut of
, COLUMNIST
So does the man ifes tly unde rstandabl e , .
received due process of law. T his point is
bn L'Ii, m on.: e rrJ tk speeds and p() Ofl' f visua l trackin g. '
not tru e, as Supreme Court Justice San···~· , .
reaction of Nancy Rllhe-Mun ch of th e: ,~
Thar \ wh y the New York A'1e1 nbly's passage of a ban ' on
dra Day O 'Connor points out, of some _ as he told reporter Tov ia Smith on Na tio nal Organization of Parents of
hand-held pho nes throughout the state o ught to be emul ated
ohhose who have been e-xecuted. And Natio nal Public ltadi o _ " \ fin ally Murdered C hildren. When she heard
by Washi ngto n k gisbtors. who have toyed with the idea for
some of those inmates now on death came to realize that the reason Juli e ~ml tha t Bud Welc h and orher'fim1ily memsevl' ral sessions. ...
row aco:Und the country.
167 othe'rs were d ~ad is beca use of hers ~ f those killed in the O kla h?m~
O pponents of pro posed bans are correct that other driver
As the late Supreme Court Justi ce vengea nce and"rage. Wh en we take him .bombm g were publrcly opposmg Vergh s
distractions shoul d co ncern us just as mu ch. They do.
Harry Blackmun said when he decided out of his cage to kill him, we will keep executiOn - . bur not opposu;,g final
T h is particular danger has mo rph ed way out of proportion
he would "no longer tinker with th H· th e"circle of'~rfce ' gt5ing.'' '·-....""·· ~ •. p~sh~l'I:\H for htm - she sa.td , I thmk
in a very short ti111 c. It deserves to be singled o ut.
111achinery of death ," there is too often
On the same National Public R adi o It s an msult to the other fa nnly mem only th e appearance of due process. This program, anothe r' parent wh ose son was bers." '
. . .
fact is increasmgly ,:vid:_n.: by th_t'_l~m-_ murdered _told_'_o:Lher_war _oL dealing
Bud Welch 1nsrsts, ~~o.w ever, as he_told ""_____
1
ber of diose proved mnocent ana with her ragel·and her need for revenge. reporterTovla Stmth : lm not defcndmg ..
released from death row, sometimes only
Tina Chery!S lS-year-old son, Louis him for one mom ent. Believe m e, I'm ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
shortly before they were to. be lethally D. Brown, was in Boston 011 his way to a not."
Today is Monday, July 30, the 2 11 th day of2001. There are 154
lllJCCted.
.
meeting ofTeens Against Viol ence :when
The late Suprem e Cour t Justi ce ··,
days left in th e year.
What would have been fatal nustakes he was killed in th e crossfire of a gang William Brennan was a devout C atholi c. · ·
Today's H ighlight in History:
by prosecutors and juries are discovered shootout. · '''
· ..
He attended Mass every week. H e also ..
O n July 30, 1945, during World War II, the USS Indianapolis
by new investigators ~nd new appellate
Brown, r~ported Tovii Smith, "used 10 opposed capital punishment all the years -"
wa.' torpedoed by a Japanese subm arin e; only 316 of 1,196 men
lawyers because the trrallawyers m those say he was going to be the first black he was on the bench. "Capital punishsurvived the sinking and shark-infested waters. (The Navy
cases were mcompetent. By the end of president of-the United States." A year mo.nt,'~ • he told me, "treats m embers of'
rece ntIy exonerate d t1e
I Ind.1anapo1·JS • captam,
hts case, Ttm McVergh did have first- berore
he was ·killed, hl·s· ntother _ ac.ter
the human race as nonhum ans. It is thus"
· · C har1es Bu t1 er
11
11
McVay Ill , who was courr- marrialed and convicted for failing to
class lawyers, And whether or not he another teen-ager was murdered by a , inconsistent with the . fundamental ,.
evade the submarin e that sank his ship.)
·,
acted alone he was - as ·he satd be
fu . I
. h d I d l'rem1se of the Consututton that even
O n this date:
responsible for those deaths.
g~ng :;;e~ r·nous: WIS he ~0 ~ ' the most base criminal remains a human
Ht' s executr'on • however, has .by no tl akt d . t e ganlg me~herhs
e being possessed of some potential, at
· of Ualtimore
·
[n 1729, the city
was founded.
t t ~ ou
In 1792, th e French national anthem "La Marseillaise,'' by
means brought a resolution of the debate ohc e '" dofineyhace,hwt h etffr guns, so least, for human dignity.''
1
0
· If· E ven a t ey
He was convinced that more and·
Claude Joseph R ouget de Lisle, was first sung in Paris.
on t h e d eath pen al ty ttse
H cou mrs h eac
k dot" I er , ·b 1.
"
1
ml'norr'ty of the f:atru'ly members of those h er.dso.", hwas s oc e :· h canall eh.teve,If more Americans would c.ome to believe·
In 1R44, th e New York Yacht Club was founded.
. execu t'ton -e sat ' ht e woman
that · But he also kn ew lt would take a
h e murd ere d oppose d h IS
In 1864, during the C ivil War, Union forces tried to !J,ke
. talk' w o b c s k erse
'l]'
1
Petersburg, Va., by explodin g a mine under C onfederate defense''v' by disagreeing that killing is a way of my mot er Is
mg a out
mg lorig time. The remorseless Tim'
lines. The attack failed.
•·
healing.
·
som~body."
.
McVeigh did not hasten that process.
In 1932, the Summer Olympic Games opened in Los Angeles.
·· Bud Welch's 23-year-old daughter,
Hts mother •?d his father are now
In 1942, President Franklin R oosevelt signed a bill creating a
Julie, was one of McVeigh's victims. He heads of the Louts D. Brown Peace ln~tl(N at Hentoff is a rratioflally r~nowned
aid
that
at
first
he
wanted
to
kill
tute,
tea~hing
.a
.curnculum
of
nonvros
aurllority on rhe First A mendmm t and tire·
women's auxiliary agency in the Navy known as "Women '
•
•
1
h B
bl'
h 1
Bill q( R ights.)
~ ~r~pted fo r Volunteer En'!ergency Service" - '!jAY£-5 f';? -" :.i ~~X~g\:ll(;!'Y himse~..Du~ over ,time en,ce ~: e Q'ston pu tc sc oo s.

N
Hentoff

TOD-AY IN HISTORY

1

In 1905, Prt'sident LyndO~, Johnson sign~dJ."'jA:i_~ J~'w t~: ~ "~ ~/,
.,~·~· N.
Medicare bill, which went into effe ct the following year.·
:.~ '-~. :: ·...·•· ,.
"
In 1975, for mer Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa disappea red in suburb:m Detroit. Altho ugh he is presumed dead, his
"
T
remains have never been found.
·
- · ,
~·_~OOY
In 1975, representatives of3 5 countries convened in Finland f~r
a confere nce on security and human rights that resulted in the
'· · ~
'•
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· "
·
·
·Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
·. it used to lead has just about evaporated?
Helsinki accords.
In 1980, the Israeli Knesset passed a law reaffirming all of
NEW YORK- Six months ago, the
As-a result, a good earnings report these
Jerusalem as the capital of the Jewish state.
sages of Wall Street were advising that dayl may be one that beats the consensus
~~ years agn: JJreside nt Bush ami Soviet President Mikhail S.
thirtgS couldn't get much worse, and , forei;Jist by a cent or two - even if it loses
Go rb\.:bev began the1r face-to-face mccnngs 111 Moscow.
investors listened.
money, and loses it big, like C orning, the
Fiw .years ago: A lederallaw enfo rcement source said security
Things got worse. And"nOw the advia: big:fiber optics producer.
.
.
b'llard Richard Jewell had become a focus of th e in vestigat.ion into
itselfis as deflated as stock prices.
Corning's snares rose last week inunedi. ' ,' After viewing the earnings reports of ately after it reported a ·second-quarter
the bombing et Centennial O lympi c Park. Oewell was )atef.
cleared as a suspect by the Justice Department.) The US Olympic- . major' corpor.Hions last week, nobody is lo nof$4.7 b!Jiion, equal to $5.13 a share.
sofiball team defeated C hina, 3-1, to w in the gold medal. Actress
•sur6 where the bqttom of the current R qse, but on what guidance? There was.
Claudette Colbert died in Barbados at age 92.
business slump lies. Even company of!i~ no worn path of experience to follow as a
One year ago: President Hugo Chavez oNenezuela tvon a fresli ,.:: ceis, who should know their own mar- guid e.
six-year term in a landslide re-election .
. . .,.:.. kets, concede their puzzleme nt.
. Significantly, the company declined to
Today's Birthdays: Actor Dick W ilson (" Mr. W hipple")' is 85~
Those certifi ed accounting ~taternents of!er excuses that executives once rouActor Richard Johnsqn is 74. Actor Edd "Kookie" Byrne1 is 68;
don'r always help, either. Often they leave tfnely offered about the past, an d equally
Blues mu sician lluddy Guy is 65. Movie director · Petef Bog.,",. . you searching through a maze of excep- tputine prom ises they once mad e about
danovich is n2. Feminist activist Eleanqr Sll1e~\ is 62. F,ohuet '
'tions to find mean ingful fi gures. It is hard- the future being brighter, etc. After all the
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D- Colo., is 61. Singer Paul Anka i ~ 60.
ly praise to say that accounting today is .failed forecasts , few investors are now
Jazz mu1i.:ian \)avid Sanborn is So. Actor Arnold Schwarzen egcreative.
. inclined to listen to such promises.
~er is 54. Actor Wi llia1 n Atherton is 54. Actor Jean R enQ is 53. '
the sitmltion leaves investors fishing, · Instead, many
them are falling back
Actor Frank Stall o ne is 51 . Actor Ken O lin is 47. Actress D elt;t
. hoping. tor 'indica tions that there is a on the same alibi they co nn ed themselves
13 urk~ is 45. Singer-songwriter Kate Dush is 43. Actor Ri~hard _ .future, but they're getting little guidance. with six months ago - that share prices
Bur~i i&lt;43.Actor Laurence Fishburn e is 40. Country singer Neal
Aficr many misses, corporate chiefS arc of maj or companies .are now so low that
McCoy i' 40. Actress Lisa Ku drow is 38. Country musician
demurring abo ut makin g sal es and earn- th ey can't dig th emselves lower witl1put
in ~ forecast&lt;.
. an excava tor.
\)wayne O"llricn is 37. Actress Vivic.1 A. Fox is 37. Actor Tom ,
(;rcen i1 ~I I. Actre&gt;&lt; Christin e Taylor i' Jfl. Actre" Hilary Swank
· Some of th e other reliable old sib'11S ' Th an extent that may be true. Corning
i1 27. Artrcll Jaime Pre;slv i' 2~.
an't be depended on either, or are Iiiean~ ' fe ll to un der $ 15 from more than S \13 in
Thought fur T~day: ··Caw is purel y a creation of th e human
ingless under the circumstances. How do the past 52 weeks, but it has had plenty of
imagination .. . the most im portant exa mple of how the imag in ayou calculate the price-earn ings ratio of:i company. Price collapses haw been so
tion COII til!ually Ol!trunl the creatu re it inhabit&lt;."- Katheri ~e
stock without earnings? H ow do you commo n th ey've lost tht'ir shock effect.
Anne Porter, Ameri can author (IHY4- 19HO).
assess a company's value whell the market
While sbares o f sm.n c of the companies

·:· .

..

B u s:I N E s s M I R R .O R

Xl[[

·v va

street has. lifte

.f'

,tnvestors

of

..

Page AS
Monday. July :so. 1001

14iJman who couldn't cut apron strings lost love if her life

'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
71!,0-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

the Bend

to

.'
p

h.
,
d
,
t ClY own .eVlCCS

with the worst declines are now above .'
their 52-week lows, the dimensions of · ·
their dizzying fall are still similar to those ·
you read about in a history of th e Great ,
Depressi9 n. .
··' '
To illustrate, in the sam e one-year ped - ·. ,.
od as Corning's, No rtel collapsed to just '
over $7 from nearly S84, JDS Uniphase ''
fell to a low of $8.50 fTom more than· ' ·
$136, Lucent sank to $5.04 from a 52-·
week high of nearly ,$49, and Pricelin e'
shriveled. to $1.06 !Tom ne;rrl y S30.
But unlike fTag ile, poorly co nceived· ·'
dot-coms that sank !Tom sight altogether, ·
these are substantial companies of a sort
that few investors - and chief ex&gt;cutiws
and option holders - could eve r have
imagined suffering such a fine.
.' Wary of advisers, havin g liste11ed to
guidance of corpomte offi cials absurdly off ·
the mark , having seen entire markets
shrink to half their size or less, and having· •
little direction from history, investors are ·
fishin g.
• '
And, like most fish ing people you •·'
know; they are on the alert for any little ''
ripple that indicates life. As th ey say, w he re
there's life there's hope.
-,

.,

Oolm C111miff is a busi11e.&lt;s a11alysr for Tire ··
Asso(iared H·ess.)
"

'!ON DAY
POMEROY - Meigs Counly
WEDNESDAY
..
Fair Board, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT . - Abundant
the Coonhunters Building.
grace, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Beny Johnson speaking.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
school, Racine Un:ted Methodist
PAGEVILLE - Scipio town·
.,CI1urch, Monday through Friday, ship Trustee meeting, 6:30 p.m.
6 to 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Pagevllle town hall.

Apostolic Worship Center, lor·
merfy known as lhe Middleport
United Pentecostal Church. Family members will enjoy a varlely of
activities including games, food
and a puppet show. The event
will be held at the church on Third
Avenue In Middleport.

ATHENS - OU Bleness
SUNDAY
Memorial Hospital, Athens, free
POMEROY - Taylor reunion.,
blood pressure checks In lobby of
Poolar
RldQe FellowshiP Hall .
the hospital's patient entrance
Dinner at noon.
Sunday.
Wednesday, 10 a.m. lo noon and
2 to 4 p.m. Also free colon·rectal
SYRACUSE _ ,Eichinger
Sunday,
cancer home screening kits and . reunion
Carleton
POMEROY - Meigs ·county information.
·
School,
1
p.m.
health Department childhood
immunization clinic Tuesday, 9 to
SATURDAY
.
The Community Cilendar Is
11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. at office
SALEM CENTER
Star
on Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Grange 778 and Star Junior publllhed as a free service to
Take childUs shot records. Chil· Grange 878, regular sassion, non-profit groups wishing to
dren to be accompanied by par- Saturday, potluck supper at 6:30 announce meetings and speanVguardlan.
p.m. followed by meeting at 8 cial events. The calendar Is not
p.m. CWA, photography and art dellgned to promota sales or
POMEROY American contest hems to be judged.
fund raisers ol any type. Items
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webster
are printed only as space perPost 39, 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
.MIDDLEPORT- Family car- mite and cannot be guaranteed
haiL Representative to Buckeye nival of Fun, Salurday lrom 10 to be printed a apeclflc number
l Girls State will give a report.
a. m. to 6 p.m. a1 the River Valley ol daya.

At-home tests 'can help reader
Question: After being out in
the sun, I developed a bumpy
itching rash only on the parts .o f

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Profeasor
of Family Medicine

(PABA) along with benzophonones are notorious
ofl"enders and are no longer used
in most sunscreen formulas.
Avobenzone, .
cinnamates,
homosalate
and
methyl
anthranilate are now more com}lealth risk produced by sun mon, but they still occasimially
exposure is an increase in the
f
kin
cause photosensitivity.
chance o developing s
canIt is also possible that your

vide the stated SPF of 15.
1his reapplication is still a
good idea, however, if you have
been swimming or perspiring
heavily. even if you have used a
"waterproof' product.

(Ohio University College of
OstEopathic MedicinL is running
''The Best of Family MedlcinL"
until a replllamenl for Dr. IM&gt;J[, who
has
retired, assumes authorship of the
ce~he risk increases as the rash is actually an allergic reaction to one or more of the column.)
amount of sun exposure increases, and this is particularly true for chemicals in your sunscreen
individuals with fair skin. Those product. The easiest ~ to
detennine if you are allergic to
with skin that burns easily

instead of tanning are at the
greatest risk.
The rash you described
sounds like what we doctors call
"photosensitivity dermatitis"
when we are using our professional vernacular.1his is a fancy

the sunscreen is to apply a small
amount of it to an area that will
not have sun -exposure, such as
the inside of the upper arm.
Leave it on fOr 24 to 36 hours.
A rash will appear in this time if
f
you are allergic 10 any 0 the
components of the product.
If that doesn't give you the
answer, try applying sunscreen to
a small :irea that will receive sun
exposure, such as the back of one
arm, before spending time in the
sun. If a rash develops only in this
area, your photosensitivity is
caused by one of the chemicals
in the sunscreen. .
I'd like to remind you ofa few

way of saying that a rash is the
direct consequence of sun exposure. Some medications, classified·
1as "psoralens," a: ac~ally
designed to cause p otosens1t1vity.This is useful in the treatment
of psoriasis and other skin conditions. More fiequendy, however,
photosensitivity is an lllldesirable
consequence of the use of a
medication. There are a number
misconceptions I fiequendy
of drugs that can produce this encounter about sun protection
kind ·of rash. Here are the most prodUc~.
_ p Its
· t, here's how to
common examples:
interpret those "SPF" numbers.
• tricyclic antidepressants;
If }'&gt;U normally burn afteJ: 20
minutes in the Sl\n, a SPF of 15
• spe~ific. antihistamines;
• some high blood pressure means you can stay out about 15
medications;
times longer, or about 5 houn,
• tetracycline, and certain before you start to bum. For
other antibiotics; and
most individuals in most situa• ibuprofen and some other tions,an SPF of15 is adequate.A
anti-infiarnrn;ltory medications. product with a higher number
Perhaps your rash occurred isn't necessarily any better.
because you have been using
Once }'&gt;U've been out in the
one of these products and then sun for a while, reapplying a sunscreen with an SPF of 15 will
went out in the sun.
The .chemicals in sunscreens not extend the amount of tjme
can also cause photosensitivity . }'&gt;U can stay in the sun without
reactions. Aminobenzoic acid burning. It only ensures that you
and the chemically similar com- have sufficient sunscreen to propound, para-aminobenzoic acid

my hands. "See," he said , "there are
10 fin gers. T hey are all different and
useful . But you don't remember the
nine good fing ers when you have a
sore thumb! "
. His "sore thumb" analogy helped
me to see past problems and focus
on th e nine "good fingers" in my
classroom. I've been teaching for
more than 20 years now, and I thank
heaven for my w ise grandfath er
who taught me to .focus on what's
really important. ISADORE
"IZZY" SORCE, GREEN-

FIELD, WIS.
P.S. Grandpa Herb is now 95 !
DEAR IZZY: Only 95? Thumbs
up for Grandfather Herb. H e's w ise
beyond his years.

Dear Abby is wrirten by Pauline
Phillips and daughterJeamre Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Community
vacation Bible · school, Grace
Episcopal Church, Tuesday
through ~aturday, 61o 8:30 p.m.
Classes for ages four to 12.

mother thinks it is a
reaction from the sunscreen )
used. ! don't think it is. How can
I tell if I'm sensitive to the sunscreen without getting a rash
again?
Answer: Your question is an
important and timely one since
the summer sunshine has once
again drawn those of us in
northern latitudes out into the
,un. Your use of sunscreen indicates that you are aware of the
risks or sun exposure. As }'&gt;U
probably know, the greatest

you to let go of the resentment you
feel for your mothe r, while helping
you to avoid feeling trapped. O nly
then will you really be free to be
your own person .
DEAR ABBY: I thought yo~
might enjoy a true story about
grandparents as role models. It honors the unsung" heroes in our lives:
As a boy, I grew up on Grandfather Herb's farm . He also worked as
a school bus driver. In my eyes, his
wisdom was boundless.
After years of listening to my
grandfather's stories, it seemed logical to ask his opinion about my
career choice. I had become a
teacher in an inner- city school and
was doubting my "calling" to teach
difficult •tudents.
Grandpa Herb told me to look at

Millets hold
reunion

Roach, Wes and Laura Fields.
Others at the reunion were
Willard and Judy Miller, Wooster; Dale Miller, Mexico and
Friendship, Tenn.; Carl and Marjorie Vanderhoof, Marion; Peg
Gruber, Marysville; Jason Davis
and Bobby Jarvis, Mansfield; Bill
and Loraine Moine Sterline·
Jolui. ward. Barbe~e Ill· Lor~
raine Neff, Rave~ WVa.
There fiom Middleport were
Aoradell Grueser Mike Debbie
and Alison Gerla~h Ha'zel Wilson, Marvin Frazie~, Dale Walburn Tom and Brandon Roach
and Dorothy Roach.
'
The 2002 reunion will be held
at the Miller homeplace on the
second Sunday ofJuly. .

MIDDLEPORT The
family of the late J Doyle and
Gertrude Russell Miller held its
21st reunior:t re~ently at the family homeplace m Middleport. .
Dale Miller was emcee for the
day lea~g the groull in prayer
preceding the carrym . dinner.
The day was spent re1111mscmg,
playing games, having a family
fun auction, and swimming.
Auctioneers were Dale and
Willard Miller.
.
New babtes welcomed mto
the · family circle were Lucy
Hurst and Joshua Cobb. Deaths
noted were Anna Mae Ward
Ebbinghaus and Mildred Lisle
Crooks.
Presented trophies were Floradell Grueser, the oldest; Joshua
Cobb, the youngest; Lorraine
POMEROY - The annual
Neff, the one with the most picnic of the Rock Springs Betgreat-grandchildren; Jan Roach, ter Health Club was held Thursthe sickest car; Christina Lacey, day at the church.
the least hair; Dale Miller of
Nancy Morris gave grace
Mexico who traveled the far- before 'the luncheon after which
thest; Trudy Browning and Jor- Barbara Fry conducted a busidan Williams, the egg toss win- ness meeting. It was decided not
ners; Raymond Roach and to have a meeting in August and
Kasey Williams, egg toss runnen- members were asked to have
- - · · - - - -schoolo-supplies for the Meigs
Attending were Jack and Cooperative Parish at the fry
Johnnie Miller, Jerry Proffitt, home by Aug. 22.
.
Tiffany Cox, Mike and Jackie
Officers for next year will
Lenox, Vickie, Annette Shawn, remain the same, fry, prestdent;
Christina and Brent Lacy. Lacy Nancy Morris, secretary and
Hurst,MaryPamandJIIllS1111th, reporter; Frances Goeglem, treaJohn and Wanda Abshire, John, surer; and Dorothy Jeffers, card
Mary, Joey. and Joshua Cobb, sender.. .
Ronda, N1cholas and Joshua
A bnefhistory of the dub was
AyresdM'Bob, ManAshldy.ArWalls1dria SmiLin.dath gwe
· n.It hashavin~nbin existtaebnliscehfodr
65
an
att,
ey
,
. years
g een es
e
Kl~in, all of Columbus.
in 1936, and the only living
Attending from · Pomeroy member from then is Lucille
were Raymond and Pam Leifheit Protraz.
The September meeting will
Roach, Trudy Browning, Kacy
andJordanWilliams,Mattlmbo- be at ·the church with Dorothy
den. Randy and Jan Roach, Jefl"ers as hostess. The program
Lynsey Roach, Charla and will be given by Morris, and the
Austin Little, Katelyn and Jaedin contest by Phyllis Skinner.
Hood. Darin, Angela and Jacob
Attending were George,

CJubbokls
picRic

Benny and Phyllis Skinner, Barbara and sue Fry, Frances
Goegelin, Dorothy Jeffers, Jo
Goodnite, Nancy, Angie, Jason,
Tyson and Danielle Morris.

arlisls

inviled to
exhibit
POMEROY - Local artists
are invited to participate in the
20th Annual Foothills An Festival to be held Oct 19-21 at the
lodge at Canter's Cave 4- H
Camp, five miles northwest of
Jackson and registration forms
are now availabl~.
The festival features a week- \,
end of visual arts, live music, and
hands-on art activities, all free.
Categories for exhibit are oil
or acrylic, pastel or drawing,
photography, prinis, three
dimensional work and waten:olor. A few juried booth spaces are
available to exhibiting artists.
While the show is professionally judged, it is not juried.
Artists of all ages and experience are encouraged to enter,
both professional and amateur.
-Entrants are - limited-· to- fo,-cu'"rworks per category. Entry fees
are $5 per piece or $16 for four
pieces until the Sept. 7 deadline.
After that the entry fee is slightly higher.
Cash prizes in the amount of
s1,21 o will be awarded. Dozens
of un:hase award donors will
p
kd .
.
1
:;e~ti=~ Oc~~~";, a preVIew
Fo thills An F .val .
0
.
estl Is a program of the Southern Hills Arts
Council. More mformanon or
entry forms can be obtamed by
calling the council at 740-2866355, emailing . shac@zoomnetnet, or wnnng Box 149,
Jackson, Ohio 45640. Registration deadline is Sept. 7.

ATTENTION .UerY Low
Income Home Owners!

Rural Development Home
Repair Program
Appli'cations for - the- Rural
Development Home Repair
Pro51ram will be available
begmning Wednesday, August
1, 2001, from 9:0~. a.m. to 5:00
~.m. in the Me1gs County .
Grants Office at 117 East
Memorial Drive.
This program will provide up
to $6,000 m home repair items
that are needed for llealth and
safety of very low income
households, such as: heating,
roofs, windows, weatherization,
plumbing, etc.

Very Low Income
Guidelines
(per year)
1 person - $9,750
2 persons -$11,150
3 persons - $12,550
4 persons - $13,950
5 persons - $15,050
6 persons - $16,200
7 persons- $17,300
8 persons - $18,40Q
If you have any
questions, please call
Jean Trussell at
(7 40) 992-~908
..

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�•1n1on
•
\

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

_rh_eo_an_ys_en_tin_ei----==-f

Monday. July :so. 2001

DEAR ABBY: Please urge
" Wants Freedom From th e Apron
St rings," the 34-year-old woman
who lives with her controlling p arents, to run - not walk - to get
her own apartment lr is the only
way she will ever have ·a life of her
own .
Forty years ago, I, too, wanted my
ADVICE
freedom from my mother's apron
strings. I was 18 and . had dated
"Tom" for three years. After our made it to Tennessee.
high school graduation, Tom invited
Abby, Tom treated me with
me to visit him in Tennessee where .respect and was· always good to m e.
he was working. I had always been I knew he lov.ed me. I loved him,
intimidated by my mother. She told and I felt we could have a bright
me I couldn't go unless I took future together.
someone with me. I told Tom what
Every day of my life I regret I did
she had said, and he replied, " lf I not stand up to my mother. I have
wanted to date the baby .sitter, I loved Tom for 40 years and will
would invite the baby sitter." i never never get over him. He is long mar-

Abigail

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Van
Buren

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

IA'tttrs to the editor ore wtlcomt. They should be ltu thafl 300 wordt. Alll~tttn ·
art subjtct to editi11g "'ld must bt sig11td 011 d inclu.dt adt!nu lllrtd ttUpltollt 11um1Mr.

No unsigned letters

t~•ill

bt published, L#flm· should bt in good lastt, ruklrusing

issut s not ptrstmalitii'S.

r/u vpinhms expressed i ll the colum11 betu ..· are drr conSIIUUs uftlc t Ohio VuJJ,.y
Pu b/i!Jhi11g Co.'s editorial board, llrtltm oth uwist nottd.

NATIONAL VIEW

ried, but in my heart he w ill always
be mine. I have seen him fiom time
to time over the years, and I still feel
the same way.
. Twenty years ago, I was diagnosed
with depression. The doctor advised
me that if I did not leave my mother's house I would have a nervous
breakdown . I finally got an apartment of my own. I still live in the
same town. My relationship with
my mother is full of resentment,
even after all these years. I'm afraid I
will always be ... CONTRO~D
AND TRAPPED
DEAR CONTROLLED AND
TRAPPED: I'm sorry you didn't
write to me decades ago, because
my advice would have been the
'
same. You have many
good years
ahead of you. Counseling may help

LOCAL EVENTS

Cell phones' impact on national .
crash rate can't be ignored

"

• Seattl e Postointelligenc er, 011 re f/ plume.! am/ driviHg: Listcniq~; to cell phone lobby ists, yo u'd think the· push to regulate ,
thc· ir iP lu &gt;try is positively un-Amer icatl. The Personal Com- ...
lllUilll'.ltlUIII lndmtry of An 1er ic:l ' takes an exceedingly dim ,
,·ic·w ot.lcgisl.rrio n t ha t would "dictate how and '~h e n Am eric
, I . • . I dt'V \.CeS.,.
\.",\11 '\ \.",111 ll'\1..' t Jc;; l r \V I fl' t'SS
·

·-

HENTOFF'S VIEW

.Me Veigh case b~gs qu·es'tion: does .killing help heal?
'

•

•

f ,_,

•

/

•

..;, •;

-,-'
.:•

· The more than 1,400 repo rters have
Says Tina C hery:" [ know this is my ·
We\ \ buv that if cell phones were bein g used in vehicles as
long since left Terre Haute, Ind. T im
bes t f0 rm of revenge- taking my son's
oril(inallv intended -to call a row truck when the car breaks
McVeigh's ashes have been scattered, as
message and sharin g it with others. I do
d m~·n 01; the highway or to let the fa mily know you'll be late
he wanted. To the · end, he wo uld not
tl1irst fOr revenge, and thi s is it."
.,"
f{&gt;r di 1imT.
admit th e eno rmity of his crim e's impact
With all th e survivors of murd ered • ~
Americans can't get enough o f a good . thing, so they've
on th e survivors, and on the famili es of
family members, or any love d one, th ere· ~~
rurn ed cell phones into a hnard that's wo rthy of regulation by
tho se murdered in the O klahom a
is never any final clos ure. But the reac- · .
the t~·d cra l Co nsum er Prod uct Safe ty Commission ....
bombing. Even some oppon ents of th e
a~
tio ns of T ina C hc·ry and llud Welch - ·~
The verdic t is unanimous that h olding a phone to th e ear in
death penalty have made an exception in
cl early part .of a decided mi nor ity- g9
traffic si,;ni ficmtl y in creases the risk of cra shin g. ' Most of th e
his case.
beyo nd and beneath the c ustom ary
"'"SlHJS arc mtmrive- slower reacti o n ti mc'(ty,pically by'half a
Th·e president is right. T im M cY~igh ·
arg11 ments about th e dea th penalty.
, ,
·second), poore r hazard pe rceptio n, \vcavin g Withjt.J an~ o ut of
, COLUMNIST
So does the man ifes tly unde rstandabl e , .
received due process of law. T his point is
bn L'Ii, m on.: e rrJ tk speeds and p() Ofl' f visua l trackin g. '
not tru e, as Supreme Court Justice San···~· , .
reaction of Nancy Rllhe-Mun ch of th e: ,~
Thar \ wh y the New York A'1e1 nbly's passage of a ban ' on
dra Day O 'Connor points out, of some _ as he told reporter Tov ia Smith on Na tio nal Organization of Parents of
hand-held pho nes throughout the state o ught to be emul ated
ohhose who have been e-xecuted. And Natio nal Public ltadi o _ " \ fin ally Murdered C hildren. When she heard
by Washi ngto n k gisbtors. who have toyed with the idea for
some of those inmates now on death came to realize that the reason Juli e ~ml tha t Bud Welc h and orher'fim1ily memsevl' ral sessions. ...
row aco:Und the country.
167 othe'rs were d ~ad is beca use of hers ~ f those killed in the O kla h?m~
O pponents of pro posed bans are correct that other driver
As the late Supreme Court Justi ce vengea nce and"rage. Wh en we take him .bombm g were publrcly opposmg Vergh s
distractions shoul d co ncern us just as mu ch. They do.
Harry Blackmun said when he decided out of his cage to kill him, we will keep executiOn - . bur not opposu;,g final
T h is particular danger has mo rph ed way out of proportion
he would "no longer tinker with th H· th e"circle of'~rfce ' gt5ing.'' '·-....""·· ~ •. p~sh~l'I:\H for htm - she sa.td , I thmk
in a very short ti111 c. It deserves to be singled o ut.
111achinery of death ," there is too often
On the same National Public R adi o It s an msult to the other fa nnly mem only th e appearance of due process. This program, anothe r' parent wh ose son was bers." '
. . .
fact is increasmgly ,:vid:_n.: by th_t'_l~m-_ murdered _told_'_o:Lher_war _oL dealing
Bud Welch 1nsrsts, ~~o.w ever, as he_told ""_____
1
ber of diose proved mnocent ana with her ragel·and her need for revenge. reporterTovla Stmth : lm not defcndmg ..
released from death row, sometimes only
Tina Chery!S lS-year-old son, Louis him for one mom ent. Believe m e, I'm ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
shortly before they were to. be lethally D. Brown, was in Boston 011 his way to a not."
Today is Monday, July 30, the 2 11 th day of2001. There are 154
lllJCCted.
.
meeting ofTeens Against Viol ence :when
The late Suprem e Cour t Justi ce ··,
days left in th e year.
What would have been fatal nustakes he was killed in th e crossfire of a gang William Brennan was a devout C atholi c. · ·
Today's H ighlight in History:
by prosecutors and juries are discovered shootout. · '''
· ..
He attended Mass every week. H e also ..
O n July 30, 1945, during World War II, the USS Indianapolis
by new investigators ~nd new appellate
Brown, r~ported Tovii Smith, "used 10 opposed capital punishment all the years -"
wa.' torpedoed by a Japanese subm arin e; only 316 of 1,196 men
lawyers because the trrallawyers m those say he was going to be the first black he was on the bench. "Capital punishsurvived the sinking and shark-infested waters. (The Navy
cases were mcompetent. By the end of president of-the United States." A year mo.nt,'~ • he told me, "treats m embers of'
rece ntIy exonerate d t1e
I Ind.1anapo1·JS • captam,
hts case, Ttm McVergh did have first- berore
he was ·killed, hl·s· ntother _ ac.ter
the human race as nonhum ans. It is thus"
· · C har1es Bu t1 er
11
11
McVay Ill , who was courr- marrialed and convicted for failing to
class lawyers, And whether or not he another teen-ager was murdered by a , inconsistent with the . fundamental ,.
evade the submarin e that sank his ship.)
·,
acted alone he was - as ·he satd be
fu . I
. h d I d l'rem1se of the Consututton that even
O n this date:
responsible for those deaths.
g~ng :;;e~ r·nous: WIS he ~0 ~ ' the most base criminal remains a human
Ht' s executr'on • however, has .by no tl akt d . t e ganlg me~herhs
e being possessed of some potential, at
· of Ualtimore
·
[n 1729, the city
was founded.
t t ~ ou
In 1792, th e French national anthem "La Marseillaise,'' by
means brought a resolution of the debate ohc e '" dofineyhace,hwt h etffr guns, so least, for human dignity.''
1
0
· If· E ven a t ey
He was convinced that more and·
Claude Joseph R ouget de Lisle, was first sung in Paris.
on t h e d eath pen al ty ttse
H cou mrs h eac
k dot" I er , ·b 1.
"
1
ml'norr'ty of the f:atru'ly members of those h er.dso.", hwas s oc e :· h canall eh.teve,If more Americans would c.ome to believe·
In 1R44, th e New York Yacht Club was founded.
. execu t'ton -e sat ' ht e woman
that · But he also kn ew lt would take a
h e murd ere d oppose d h IS
In 1864, during the C ivil War, Union forces tried to !J,ke
. talk' w o b c s k erse
'l]'
1
Petersburg, Va., by explodin g a mine under C onfederate defense''v' by disagreeing that killing is a way of my mot er Is
mg a out
mg lorig time. The remorseless Tim'
lines. The attack failed.
•·
healing.
·
som~body."
.
McVeigh did not hasten that process.
In 1932, the Summer Olympic Games opened in Los Angeles.
·· Bud Welch's 23-year-old daughter,
Hts mother •?d his father are now
In 1942, President Franklin R oosevelt signed a bill creating a
Julie, was one of McVeigh's victims. He heads of the Louts D. Brown Peace ln~tl(N at Hentoff is a rratioflally r~nowned
aid
that
at
first
he
wanted
to
kill
tute,
tea~hing
.a
.curnculum
of
nonvros
aurllority on rhe First A mendmm t and tire·
women's auxiliary agency in the Navy known as "Women '
•
•
1
h B
bl'
h 1
Bill q( R ights.)
~ ~r~pted fo r Volunteer En'!ergency Service" - '!jAY£-5 f';? -" :.i ~~X~g\:ll(;!'Y himse~..Du~ over ,time en,ce ~: e Q'ston pu tc sc oo s.

N
Hentoff

TOD-AY IN HISTORY

1

In 1905, Prt'sident LyndO~, Johnson sign~dJ."'jA:i_~ J~'w t~: ~ "~ ~/,
.,~·~· N.
Medicare bill, which went into effe ct the following year.·
:.~ '-~. :: ·...·•· ,.
"
In 1975, for mer Teamsters union president Jimmy Hoffa disappea red in suburb:m Detroit. Altho ugh he is presumed dead, his
"
T
remains have never been found.
·
- · ,
~·_~OOY
In 1975, representatives of3 5 countries convened in Finland f~r
a confere nce on security and human rights that resulted in the
'· · ~
'•
'
· "
·
·
·Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
·. it used to lead has just about evaporated?
Helsinki accords.
In 1980, the Israeli Knesset passed a law reaffirming all of
NEW YORK- Six months ago, the
As-a result, a good earnings report these
Jerusalem as the capital of the Jewish state.
sages of Wall Street were advising that dayl may be one that beats the consensus
~~ years agn: JJreside nt Bush ami Soviet President Mikhail S.
thirtgS couldn't get much worse, and , forei;Jist by a cent or two - even if it loses
Go rb\.:bev began the1r face-to-face mccnngs 111 Moscow.
investors listened.
money, and loses it big, like C orning, the
Fiw .years ago: A lederallaw enfo rcement source said security
Things got worse. And"nOw the advia: big:fiber optics producer.
.
.
b'llard Richard Jewell had become a focus of th e in vestigat.ion into
itselfis as deflated as stock prices.
Corning's snares rose last week inunedi. ' ,' After viewing the earnings reports of ately after it reported a ·second-quarter
the bombing et Centennial O lympi c Park. Oewell was )atef.
cleared as a suspect by the Justice Department.) The US Olympic- . major' corpor.Hions last week, nobody is lo nof$4.7 b!Jiion, equal to $5.13 a share.
sofiball team defeated C hina, 3-1, to w in the gold medal. Actress
•sur6 where the bqttom of the current R qse, but on what guidance? There was.
Claudette Colbert died in Barbados at age 92.
business slump lies. Even company of!i~ no worn path of experience to follow as a
One year ago: President Hugo Chavez oNenezuela tvon a fresli ,.:: ceis, who should know their own mar- guid e.
six-year term in a landslide re-election .
. . .,.:.. kets, concede their puzzleme nt.
. Significantly, the company declined to
Today's Birthdays: Actor Dick W ilson (" Mr. W hipple")' is 85~
Those certifi ed accounting ~taternents of!er excuses that executives once rouActor Richard Johnsqn is 74. Actor Edd "Kookie" Byrne1 is 68;
don'r always help, either. Often they leave tfnely offered about the past, an d equally
Blues mu sician lluddy Guy is 65. Movie director · Petef Bog.,",. . you searching through a maze of excep- tputine prom ises they once mad e about
danovich is n2. Feminist activist Eleanqr Sll1e~\ is 62. F,ohuet '
'tions to find mean ingful fi gures. It is hard- the future being brighter, etc. After all the
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D- Colo., is 61. Singer Paul Anka i ~ 60.
ly praise to say that accounting today is .failed forecasts , few investors are now
Jazz mu1i.:ian \)avid Sanborn is So. Actor Arnold Schwarzen egcreative.
. inclined to listen to such promises.
~er is 54. Actor Wi llia1 n Atherton is 54. Actor Jean R enQ is 53. '
the sitmltion leaves investors fishing, · Instead, many
them are falling back
Actor Frank Stall o ne is 51 . Actor Ken O lin is 47. Actress D elt;t
. hoping. tor 'indica tions that there is a on the same alibi they co nn ed themselves
13 urk~ is 45. Singer-songwriter Kate Dush is 43. Actor Ri~hard _ .future, but they're getting little guidance. with six months ago - that share prices
Bur~i i&lt;43.Actor Laurence Fishburn e is 40. Country singer Neal
Aficr many misses, corporate chiefS arc of maj or companies .are now so low that
McCoy i' 40. Actress Lisa Ku drow is 38. Country musician
demurring abo ut makin g sal es and earn- th ey can't dig th emselves lower witl1put
in ~ forecast&lt;.
. an excava tor.
\)wayne O"llricn is 37. Actress Vivic.1 A. Fox is 37. Actor Tom ,
(;rcen i1 ~I I. Actre&gt;&lt; Christin e Taylor i' Jfl. Actre" Hilary Swank
· Some of th e other reliable old sib'11S ' Th an extent that may be true. Corning
i1 27. Artrcll Jaime Pre;slv i' 2~.
an't be depended on either, or are Iiiean~ ' fe ll to un der $ 15 from more than S \13 in
Thought fur T~day: ··Caw is purel y a creation of th e human
ingless under the circumstances. How do the past 52 weeks, but it has had plenty of
imagination .. . the most im portant exa mple of how the imag in ayou calculate the price-earn ings ratio of:i company. Price collapses haw been so
tion COII til!ually Ol!trunl the creatu re it inhabit&lt;."- Katheri ~e
stock without earnings? H ow do you commo n th ey've lost tht'ir shock effect.
Anne Porter, Ameri can author (IHY4- 19HO).
assess a company's value whell the market
While sbares o f sm.n c of the companies

·:· .

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B u s:I N E s s M I R R .O R

Xl[[

·v va

street has. lifte

.f'

,tnvestors

of

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Page AS
Monday. July :so. 1001

14iJman who couldn't cut apron strings lost love if her life

'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
71!,0-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

the Bend

to

.'
p

h.
,
d
,
t ClY own .eVlCCS

with the worst declines are now above .'
their 52-week lows, the dimensions of · ·
their dizzying fall are still similar to those ·
you read about in a history of th e Great ,
Depressi9 n. .
··' '
To illustrate, in the sam e one-year ped - ·. ,.
od as Corning's, No rtel collapsed to just '
over $7 from nearly S84, JDS Uniphase ''
fell to a low of $8.50 fTom more than· ' ·
$136, Lucent sank to $5.04 from a 52-·
week high of nearly ,$49, and Pricelin e'
shriveled. to $1.06 !Tom ne;rrl y S30.
But unlike fTag ile, poorly co nceived· ·'
dot-coms that sank !Tom sight altogether, ·
these are substantial companies of a sort
that few investors - and chief ex&gt;cutiws
and option holders - could eve r have
imagined suffering such a fine.
.' Wary of advisers, havin g liste11ed to
guidance of corpomte offi cials absurdly off ·
the mark , having seen entire markets
shrink to half their size or less, and having· •
little direction from history, investors are ·
fishin g.
• '
And, like most fish ing people you •·'
know; they are on the alert for any little ''
ripple that indicates life. As th ey say, w he re
there's life there's hope.
-,

.,

Oolm C111miff is a busi11e.&lt;s a11alysr for Tire ··
Asso(iared H·ess.)
"

'!ON DAY
POMEROY - Meigs Counly
WEDNESDAY
..
Fair Board, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT . - Abundant
the Coonhunters Building.
grace, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Beny Johnson speaking.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
school, Racine Un:ted Methodist
PAGEVILLE - Scipio town·
.,CI1urch, Monday through Friday, ship Trustee meeting, 6:30 p.m.
6 to 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Pagevllle town hall.

Apostolic Worship Center, lor·
merfy known as lhe Middleport
United Pentecostal Church. Family members will enjoy a varlely of
activities including games, food
and a puppet show. The event
will be held at the church on Third
Avenue In Middleport.

ATHENS - OU Bleness
SUNDAY
Memorial Hospital, Athens, free
POMEROY - Taylor reunion.,
blood pressure checks In lobby of
Poolar
RldQe FellowshiP Hall .
the hospital's patient entrance
Dinner at noon.
Sunday.
Wednesday, 10 a.m. lo noon and
2 to 4 p.m. Also free colon·rectal
SYRACUSE _ ,Eichinger
Sunday,
cancer home screening kits and . reunion
Carleton
POMEROY - Meigs ·county information.
·
School,
1
p.m.
health Department childhood
immunization clinic Tuesday, 9 to
SATURDAY
.
The Community Cilendar Is
11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. at office
SALEM CENTER
Star
on Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Grange 778 and Star Junior publllhed as a free service to
Take childUs shot records. Chil· Grange 878, regular sassion, non-profit groups wishing to
dren to be accompanied by par- Saturday, potluck supper at 6:30 announce meetings and speanVguardlan.
p.m. followed by meeting at 8 cial events. The calendar Is not
p.m. CWA, photography and art dellgned to promota sales or
POMEROY American contest hems to be judged.
fund raisers ol any type. Items
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webster
are printed only as space perPost 39, 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
.MIDDLEPORT- Family car- mite and cannot be guaranteed
haiL Representative to Buckeye nival of Fun, Salurday lrom 10 to be printed a apeclflc number
l Girls State will give a report.
a. m. to 6 p.m. a1 the River Valley ol daya.

At-home tests 'can help reader
Question: After being out in
the sun, I developed a bumpy
itching rash only on the parts .o f

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Profeasor
of Family Medicine

(PABA) along with benzophonones are notorious
ofl"enders and are no longer used
in most sunscreen formulas.
Avobenzone, .
cinnamates,
homosalate
and
methyl
anthranilate are now more com}lealth risk produced by sun mon, but they still occasimially
exposure is an increase in the
f
kin
cause photosensitivity.
chance o developing s
canIt is also possible that your

vide the stated SPF of 15.
1his reapplication is still a
good idea, however, if you have
been swimming or perspiring
heavily. even if you have used a
"waterproof' product.

(Ohio University College of
OstEopathic MedicinL is running
''The Best of Family MedlcinL"
until a replllamenl for Dr. IM&gt;J[, who
has
retired, assumes authorship of the
ce~he risk increases as the rash is actually an allergic reaction to one or more of the column.)
amount of sun exposure increases, and this is particularly true for chemicals in your sunscreen
individuals with fair skin. Those product. The easiest ~ to
detennine if you are allergic to
with skin that burns easily

instead of tanning are at the
greatest risk.
The rash you described
sounds like what we doctors call
"photosensitivity dermatitis"
when we are using our professional vernacular.1his is a fancy

the sunscreen is to apply a small
amount of it to an area that will
not have sun -exposure, such as
the inside of the upper arm.
Leave it on fOr 24 to 36 hours.
A rash will appear in this time if
f
you are allergic 10 any 0 the
components of the product.
If that doesn't give you the
answer, try applying sunscreen to
a small :irea that will receive sun
exposure, such as the back of one
arm, before spending time in the
sun. If a rash develops only in this
area, your photosensitivity is
caused by one of the chemicals
in the sunscreen. .
I'd like to remind you ofa few

way of saying that a rash is the
direct consequence of sun exposure. Some medications, classified·
1as "psoralens," a: ac~ally
designed to cause p otosens1t1vity.This is useful in the treatment
of psoriasis and other skin conditions. More fiequendy, however,
photosensitivity is an lllldesirable
consequence of the use of a
medication. There are a number
misconceptions I fiequendy
of drugs that can produce this encounter about sun protection
kind ·of rash. Here are the most prodUc~.
_ p Its
· t, here's how to
common examples:
interpret those "SPF" numbers.
• tricyclic antidepressants;
If }'&gt;U normally burn afteJ: 20
minutes in the Sl\n, a SPF of 15
• spe~ific. antihistamines;
• some high blood pressure means you can stay out about 15
medications;
times longer, or about 5 houn,
• tetracycline, and certain before you start to bum. For
other antibiotics; and
most individuals in most situa• ibuprofen and some other tions,an SPF of15 is adequate.A
anti-infiarnrn;ltory medications. product with a higher number
Perhaps your rash occurred isn't necessarily any better.
because you have been using
Once }'&gt;U've been out in the
one of these products and then sun for a while, reapplying a sunscreen with an SPF of 15 will
went out in the sun.
The .chemicals in sunscreens not extend the amount of tjme
can also cause photosensitivity . }'&gt;U can stay in the sun without
reactions. Aminobenzoic acid burning. It only ensures that you
and the chemically similar com- have sufficient sunscreen to propound, para-aminobenzoic acid

my hands. "See," he said , "there are
10 fin gers. T hey are all different and
useful . But you don't remember the
nine good fing ers when you have a
sore thumb! "
. His "sore thumb" analogy helped
me to see past problems and focus
on th e nine "good fingers" in my
classroom. I've been teaching for
more than 20 years now, and I thank
heaven for my w ise grandfath er
who taught me to .focus on what's
really important. ISADORE
"IZZY" SORCE, GREEN-

FIELD, WIS.
P.S. Grandpa Herb is now 95 !
DEAR IZZY: Only 95? Thumbs
up for Grandfather Herb. H e's w ise
beyond his years.

Dear Abby is wrirten by Pauline
Phillips and daughterJeamre Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Community
vacation Bible · school, Grace
Episcopal Church, Tuesday
through ~aturday, 61o 8:30 p.m.
Classes for ages four to 12.

mother thinks it is a
reaction from the sunscreen )
used. ! don't think it is. How can
I tell if I'm sensitive to the sunscreen without getting a rash
again?
Answer: Your question is an
important and timely one since
the summer sunshine has once
again drawn those of us in
northern latitudes out into the
,un. Your use of sunscreen indicates that you are aware of the
risks or sun exposure. As }'&gt;U
probably know, the greatest

you to let go of the resentment you
feel for your mothe r, while helping
you to avoid feeling trapped. O nly
then will you really be free to be
your own person .
DEAR ABBY: I thought yo~
might enjoy a true story about
grandparents as role models. It honors the unsung" heroes in our lives:
As a boy, I grew up on Grandfather Herb's farm . He also worked as
a school bus driver. In my eyes, his
wisdom was boundless.
After years of listening to my
grandfather's stories, it seemed logical to ask his opinion about my
career choice. I had become a
teacher in an inner- city school and
was doubting my "calling" to teach
difficult •tudents.
Grandpa Herb told me to look at

Millets hold
reunion

Roach, Wes and Laura Fields.
Others at the reunion were
Willard and Judy Miller, Wooster; Dale Miller, Mexico and
Friendship, Tenn.; Carl and Marjorie Vanderhoof, Marion; Peg
Gruber, Marysville; Jason Davis
and Bobby Jarvis, Mansfield; Bill
and Loraine Moine Sterline·
Jolui. ward. Barbe~e Ill· Lor~
raine Neff, Rave~ WVa.
There fiom Middleport were
Aoradell Grueser Mike Debbie
and Alison Gerla~h Ha'zel Wilson, Marvin Frazie~, Dale Walburn Tom and Brandon Roach
and Dorothy Roach.
'
The 2002 reunion will be held
at the Miller homeplace on the
second Sunday ofJuly. .

MIDDLEPORT The
family of the late J Doyle and
Gertrude Russell Miller held its
21st reunior:t re~ently at the family homeplace m Middleport. .
Dale Miller was emcee for the
day lea~g the groull in prayer
preceding the carrym . dinner.
The day was spent re1111mscmg,
playing games, having a family
fun auction, and swimming.
Auctioneers were Dale and
Willard Miller.
.
New babtes welcomed mto
the · family circle were Lucy
Hurst and Joshua Cobb. Deaths
noted were Anna Mae Ward
Ebbinghaus and Mildred Lisle
Crooks.
Presented trophies were Floradell Grueser, the oldest; Joshua
Cobb, the youngest; Lorraine
POMEROY - The annual
Neff, the one with the most picnic of the Rock Springs Betgreat-grandchildren; Jan Roach, ter Health Club was held Thursthe sickest car; Christina Lacey, day at the church.
the least hair; Dale Miller of
Nancy Morris gave grace
Mexico who traveled the far- before 'the luncheon after which
thest; Trudy Browning and Jor- Barbara Fry conducted a busidan Williams, the egg toss win- ness meeting. It was decided not
ners; Raymond Roach and to have a meeting in August and
Kasey Williams, egg toss runnen- members were asked to have
- - · · - - - -schoolo-supplies for the Meigs
Attending were Jack and Cooperative Parish at the fry
Johnnie Miller, Jerry Proffitt, home by Aug. 22.
.
Tiffany Cox, Mike and Jackie
Officers for next year will
Lenox, Vickie, Annette Shawn, remain the same, fry, prestdent;
Christina and Brent Lacy. Lacy Nancy Morris, secretary and
Hurst,MaryPamandJIIllS1111th, reporter; Frances Goeglem, treaJohn and Wanda Abshire, John, surer; and Dorothy Jeffers, card
Mary, Joey. and Joshua Cobb, sender.. .
Ronda, N1cholas and Joshua
A bnefhistory of the dub was
AyresdM'Bob, ManAshldy.ArWalls1dria SmiLin.dath gwe
· n.It hashavin~nbin existtaebnliscehfodr
65
an
att,
ey
,
. years
g een es
e
Kl~in, all of Columbus.
in 1936, and the only living
Attending from · Pomeroy member from then is Lucille
were Raymond and Pam Leifheit Protraz.
The September meeting will
Roach, Trudy Browning, Kacy
andJordanWilliams,Mattlmbo- be at ·the church with Dorothy
den. Randy and Jan Roach, Jefl"ers as hostess. The program
Lynsey Roach, Charla and will be given by Morris, and the
Austin Little, Katelyn and Jaedin contest by Phyllis Skinner.
Hood. Darin, Angela and Jacob
Attending were George,

CJubbokls
picRic

Benny and Phyllis Skinner, Barbara and sue Fry, Frances
Goegelin, Dorothy Jeffers, Jo
Goodnite, Nancy, Angie, Jason,
Tyson and Danielle Morris.

arlisls

inviled to
exhibit
POMEROY - Local artists
are invited to participate in the
20th Annual Foothills An Festival to be held Oct 19-21 at the
lodge at Canter's Cave 4- H
Camp, five miles northwest of
Jackson and registration forms
are now availabl~.
The festival features a week- \,
end of visual arts, live music, and
hands-on art activities, all free.
Categories for exhibit are oil
or acrylic, pastel or drawing,
photography, prinis, three
dimensional work and waten:olor. A few juried booth spaces are
available to exhibiting artists.
While the show is professionally judged, it is not juried.
Artists of all ages and experience are encouraged to enter,
both professional and amateur.
-Entrants are - limited-· to- fo,-cu'"rworks per category. Entry fees
are $5 per piece or $16 for four
pieces until the Sept. 7 deadline.
After that the entry fee is slightly higher.
Cash prizes in the amount of
s1,21 o will be awarded. Dozens
of un:hase award donors will
p
kd .
.
1
:;e~ti=~ Oc~~~";, a preVIew
Fo thills An F .val .
0
.
estl Is a program of the Southern Hills Arts
Council. More mformanon or
entry forms can be obtamed by
calling the council at 740-2866355, emailing . shac@zoomnetnet, or wnnng Box 149,
Jackson, Ohio 45640. Registration deadline is Sept. 7.

ATTENTION .UerY Low
Income Home Owners!

Rural Development Home
Repair Program
Appli'cations for - the- Rural
Development Home Repair
Pro51ram will be available
begmning Wednesday, August
1, 2001, from 9:0~. a.m. to 5:00
~.m. in the Me1gs County .
Grants Office at 117 East
Memorial Drive.
This program will provide up
to $6,000 m home repair items
that are needed for llealth and
safety of very low income
households, such as: heating,
roofs, windows, weatherization,
plumbing, etc.

Very Low Income
Guidelines
(per year)
1 person - $9,750
2 persons -$11,150
3 persons - $12,550
4 persons - $13,950
5 persons - $15,050
6 persons - $16,200
7 persons- $17,300
8 persons - $18,40Q
If you have any
questions, please call
Jean Trussell at
(7 40) 992-~908
..

'

.

�����Page

84 • The Daily Sentinel

. Monday, July

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

30, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Pag~

Pomer()y, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA
PHII.LIP
ALDER

.,.......;..;._ _ _

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addlllonl &amp;

Remodeling

• NtwO~ra;tl
• El~trlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting 1: Guttera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Otcka

· Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom&amp;foy, Onlo
il2 Years Local

BISSELL '

WOLFE HOME
'
MAINTENANCE

·New Homee
• Siding
·Roofing
• Remodeling

BUILDIRIINC.

• Home Repairs

Free Estimates
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs

Free Estimates

740·949·1521

740-992-1101
or992-2753

Owner:
Charlie Wolle

• Garages

• Additions
• Decks

New Hom.. • VInyl
Siding • New Gora~ts
• Rtplocement
Windows • Room
Additions • Roonng

COMMIICIAlond IBIDIIITIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public Notice5 In Newspitpers.
Vour Right to Know,
Delivered Right tO Your Door.
Ollir~ N•.,.IIJI(IfHr A~'-tlcm

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTV, OHIO
CASE NO. 01·CV.057
Beneficial Ohio, inc.
dba Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio
Plaintiff
vs.
Timothy T. Klein eliot
Defendants
Timothy T. Klein and

premises , lor the
amounl owing; that
the Defendants eqully
of redemption be
foreclosed; that ell the
parties be required to
answer as to their
Interest, In fBid
premises or be forever
barred from asserting
any Interest therein;
that all liens on said

Unknown Spouse of PremIses

Timothy T. Klein
whose last known
address Is unknown,
Is hereby notified thai

Wltll ADnlly Setttlnel

'BULLETIN BOARD
lncll WHkdiJf
10" colu11n Inell Sundny

''" CDIUMI
1

end

the

Racine
Mower
Clinic

Murray, MTO,
Echo, Oregon
Open
Mon-Fri 9-4:30
Sat. 9·1.2:00

. . . - - - - -· - -

WE
ll
\I

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 11!1.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

CAN l:fELP

.

·=

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

·•

·ouALITY

(740) 949·2804
·

~'R~
High&amp; Dry

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

740-992-5232

convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,

. Chester, Ohio ,
Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

dba
Beneficial proceeds olaald sale
Mortgage Co. of Ohio be applied according
flied a Complain! tor to law, and lor such
Money, Foreclosure other relief as Is just
and other Equitable equllloblt.
Relief on March 29,
Defendants first
Complete !'fome
2001, Case No. 01·CV· hereinabove
~E·rlc: Blackburn ·
Fully tneured
Repatr
057 , on the property mentioned are further
Remodeling
described as follows: . nolllled that they ar- - - - - - - - - .,._ _ _ _ _ __
New Additions
EXHIBIT A
required to answer
Public Notice
. Public Notice
Garages
Situated In the seld complaint on or
WV0282120
1
county of Meigs , In the before 9/24/01, which be torecloa'ed and " Colnplalnt demand a
FIIEE ESniATES
State of Ohio, and In lncludea twenty·elght thai the lleni and/or that the. title In and to
AG Service ·
the Township of (28) days from the last lnterellal~ or on said lh~ oil and gaa ba
In Service"
140-992.0021
Salisbury (Pomeroy date of publication, or property, I( any, be quieted
In th'e
Jlllfne
Village) and bounded ]udgmenl mey be marshalled ~nd the Plalnllll, Gayle H.
188-992-G021
and described ao rendered
aa real estate title PrlcaandEdnaPrlca,
loco ..,111 &amp; rofod
follows :
demanded therein.
quieted end aald and that the oil and
PARCEL 1 :
The
FRANK &amp; property sold In the gat 'lritareata ol the
following real estate
WOOLDRDGE CO., foreclosure acllon Delendanta
be
Losa Welghl Now
situated In the County
L.P.A. and all amounts due declar!ld abandoned,
by Gregory D. Plaintiff be paid from or In the alternative,
of Meigs, In the State
Ask Me How
of Ohio, and In the Wooldrldge(#0040964) the proceeds of the that
lhe Court
Whllhor you're !tying to
township of Salisbury,
by D. L. Mains, Jr sale. ,
. partition the oil and
loao wolgh~ oupptament
your diet for m~xlmum
and bounded and
'
(#0001391)
You a;e required to 981 lntereat end/or
.Utrnlon, or juotlook your
described as follows:
Allorneys lor Plalntlll anawer the COmplaint order the eame sold
lJI'Ullll with tht boll
The following real 600 South Pearl 111'11111 within twenty·elght with regard to the
parsan11 e~re products,
estate In Section No. Columbue, Ohio 43208 (28) daya altar the following described
Htrl&gt;lfllol~lfrnollonllhao
Eight in Township No. .
614·221-1882 1111 publication ot .realeallote:
something fOf everyone.
Two and Range No. (7) 23, 30, (8) 6, 13, 20, this Notice, which will
The
following
Coli your lndopondtnl
Thirteen near the 27,2001
be publlahed once deacrlbed real ealate
Herblllfe distributor,
South East corner of
each week lor six (8) altuail!
In
the
J&amp;L Enterprise
said Section on the
Public Notice
succe .. lve week a. Town a hIp
of
(740) 885-3921
North West aide ollhe
The laat publication Lebanon, In the
We cen personaiiZt 1
tlrst ravine West of the
will be made on the County of Meigs and
progrom lor youl
S.E. corner of said
JN THE COMMON
13th day of Aug, State of Ohio, viz:
Section and described
PLEAS COURT OF
2001; and lha twenty· Boundad northerly by
as follows:
MEIGS COUNTY,
eight (28) day a lor the Ohio River, eoat
Beginning at the
OHIO
an I we r . ,. wIll by the Iandt of
East corner of a Jot
common(!!~ em that Jam.. While and
sold and conveyed to
date. In )the caae ol aouth by the Ianda of
BARBARA PAYNE · .. your,failure to anawer Jamea Lerkent and
Ebanezar Watkins of
Exclusive ,
Mlnarsvllle; thence
EXECUTRIX '
or otheiwl•~ re,apond· Andrew Roaea end
Mohawk'Dealer
North 35' East 62 1/2 OF THE ESTATE OF
as requested by the we at by Ianda of
tiiet;thence North 55~-LlJCI(LE M. - -()hlo- Rules- ot- Civii- Spencer -Smith - anct•CarPet
Wasl 174 teet; thence KING AKA LUCILLE
Procedure, judgment ·olhers 51 acres 75
•
Hardwood
Floorlnl
KING, DECEASED
by default will 'J&gt;e one hundredth• of an
South 35' West 82 1/2
feet to tho · North
rendered against you acre, and live acres
• Contoleum
corner
of said
PLAINTIFF
and tor 'ilia relhtl part of 100 acre lot
FREE ESTIMATES
Ebenezer Walkins lot; CASE NO. 01·CV·1"02 .demanded In ·the No.140, Sec. 14 &amp; 15,
Phone
f304J 674-6100
·VI·
ComplalnL
and 8 110rea 50 one
thence Soulh 55' East
LOCUli
Straet,
Pl Pltooanl .
174 feet to the place of
Dated this 6th day itundred1ha acrea, 23Pool
K•K
Jull
beglnnlng.
, RANDY E. KING,
of June, 2001.
112 acrea and 14
Mobile
Home
Park
Excepllng the coal EXECUTOR OF THE
acres parte of 100
therein and the right ESTATE OF ROLAND Marlene Harrlaon, acre lot No.-141, Sec.
to mlnelha aame.
E. KING, DECEASED, Clerk of courte
14 &amp; 15 and 11-40/100
PARCEL 2:
!'TAL.
acrea, part of Sec. 21,
DEFENDANTS.
(71 9, 18, 23, 30, 2001
840 acre' lol No. 2 1.
The following real
allele situated In the
NOTICE BY
(8) 8, 13,2001
All olthe abovalande . .
East Stale S1reet Phone (740)593-6671
County of Malga, State
PUBLICATION
In Township No. 3,
Clhio
. .
•New Homes
To: Lisa D.
Public Notice
f'lange No. 11.
of Ohio, and In the
town of Pomeroy and Robinson ake Llta D.
II'· . being the
bounded
and
King, whoae laat
Intention to Include, • Garages
deacrlbed as follows, known addresaea are
IN THE COMMON
daacrlbe and convey
viz:
Elberton,
PLEAS COURT OF
herein all real ealate • Complete
Section No. 8 Jn
Georgia, and 1053
MEIGS COUNTY,
located In Melga
Remodeling
Rocky R Hupp . Agent
Township No. 2 and
SR 588, Gelllpolla,
·OHIO
, County, Ohio, owned
Stop &amp; Compare
' .•
OH 45831, present
GAYLE H. PRICE, ... by
Virginia B.
Range No. 13 near the
Box 189
Southeast corner of
address unknown,
ET AL.
· Wllllemton at the
FREE ESTIMATES
Micldleporl. Ohto 45760
said section on the
anil
tlma of her deceata
Northweat side of the
the unknown heirs,
PLAINTIFFS
and bequeathed by
·Local 843·5264
740.992·1671
first ravine West oflhe next of kin, devisees,
· her to Lillian W.
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
aald Southeast corner
legateea,
·v•·
Dennla and Paul
Burial and•Finll! Expenses;·Cancer &amp;
of said oectlon
administrators,
Wllllamaon.
executora, paraonal LILLIAN W. DENNIS,
Being the a a me
described as follows:
Denial, Retirement,
Beginning at the
represenlallvea,
ET AL.
real •••••• """v•ved
Pension
&amp; 401K Rollovers ;
East corner of hall apouoe, and aaalgna
lo Clinton R. Smith
CONTRACTORS,
INC.
acre lot sold and of Lisa D. Roblnaon
DEFENDANTS.
· by Lillian W. Dennla,
~ortgagii:'; Major fytedical
Racine, Ohio 48771
conveyed to Jonah
eke Lisa D. King,
NOTICE BY
el al., by dead
• Nursing Home
TMt! OUAUTV lll'l COIM'II,
Reese of Minersville;
whose
PUBLICATION
recorded In Deed
740·985-3948
addreases are
Book 144 Page 626 of
·.~
thence North 35' East
CONCRET£/BLOCIC/BRICK
unknown.
To: Lillian W. Dennie tha Melgl county
82 112 feet: thence
Pomeroy Eagles
North 55' Weal one
and
Samuel
S. Deed Recorda.
• Foolen, Walls, Stepi •
You are hereby Dennla, Ill whoaalaat
Excepting 1.238
hundred and seventy·
Flat Work,
Club Bingo
l9ur (174) teet; thence no.tilled that you have . known addraaa Ia . 52 aero conveyed to tha
Replacements, • Walkl
.On Thursdays
South 35 (ale) West been
named Eaaex Rd., Chealnut 8tateol0hloby.claad .
aod.Drlveo
•
Sleocll
·
At 6:30p.m. ·
All Mikes Tra~tor. &amp;
MA : 02-181, recorded In Volume
alxty·two and one·hall Defendant• In I he Hill,
Crete Free Eotlmateo
(62 112) to the North action
entllled preHnt
8ddretHI : 102, Page 275, Melga
Main Street
Equipment Parts
Strvhig Ohio and W.V.
corner of said Jonah Barbara
Payne, unknown;
Paul County
Olllclal
Pomeroy, Oloio
Factory Authorized
Reeae lot; tnance Executrix of the Wlllleniaon
and Recorda.
wv 1031712
South lllty, llve (55') .Eatale of Lucille M. Agnes B. Wllllamaon,
Reference Dead:
Paying $80.00 .
Case:IH Parts
degrees East one King, deceaaed, wholl Jut known Volume 185, Page 45
per game
hundred aeventy·lour Plalntlll, va. Randy E. address Is Texaa, 1, Melga County Deed
$300.00 Covemll
(174) to the place of King, Executor of the present
addreaaea Recorda.
beginning, excepting Estate of Roland E. unknown;
Bene
Audllor'a Parcel
Starburst
the coal therein and King, deceased, et Parts, whoaa last Noa.: 07·00103.000
Hauling &amp;
Progressive top line
the right to mine the al., Defendants. This known addrasa Ia and 07-110804.000.
Excavat;ng
same.
action has been 4022 Meadow View,
You are required lo
Lie . #00·50
PARCEL NUMBER : assigned case No. o · Suitland, MD 20748, anawar tha Complain!
'
.
.
1 -CV-102 and 11 present
addreaa within twenty·elght
18·00750,16·00749
PROPERTY
pending In 'the Court unknown; and upon (28) dayo efter the
ADDRESS : 32045 of Common Pleas ot the unknown helra, leal publlcallon of Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand • ,
Welshton
Road, Meigs County, Ohio. next of kin, devloeea, lhla Notice, which will
Mlneravllle, OH 45769 The oblact of the legateee,
apouHa, be publlohad once
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
~QH~BEIE'
Also known as Complaint demands successors
and each week tor alx (8)
• Mulch .
3 2045
Welshtown judgment against tho asslgno Of Lillian W. aucceaalve week a.
Bulldozer Servlres
Roofing • Home
!:£QHHE~IQH
Road, Mln,ersvllle, Defendants, In the Dennis, Samuel S. The lui publication
Ill,
Paul will be made on the
Ohio 45769, and that sum of $8,817.18, as Dennie,
Quality Driveways,
Maintenancethere remains due and of October 1 2000 Williamson, Agneo B. 27th day of August
owing $24,639.74 with wllh Interest ' al lh~ Williamson, and Bene 2001, and the twenty·
Patios, Sidewalks.
Gutters- Down
Jnte&lt;est at 15.492 : rate of 8.07% per Paris, whose names eight (28) daya for
25 years experience
Advertise
percent per annum annum, until tully and addresses are an' w er
wIll
Spout
from July 1, 2000, and p•ld ; In order to unknown ·
.
commence on that
·free
Estimates
Free
Estimates
coats;
that the torecloae upon a
You are hereby date. In the caae of In this space
defendants named In b rea chad
1and notified that you have your.failure to anawor
949·1405
Jr
.for $25 per
...
the Complaint may Jnslallment contract ' been
nama d or olherwlae reopond
I
.
up
I
t t
DetendaniS In the u raquealed by the
591·5011
h
month
avo an nterost In
on rea as a 8 action entllled Gayle Ohio Rulea of Civil
~·
said
property; localed at 927 S. H Price et al
Procadure, )ud~ment
therefore , Plaintiff Second
Ave., Pialnlllls 'vs Llllla~
demands thai It be Middleport ,
OH W Den~ls · 01 81 . by default wll be
Public Notice
found to have 0 good, 45760, which Is more D~lendant~ . Thl~ rendered against you
valid and subsisting fully described In action has been ~:~a':J.~hel;e:~~
lien on aeld premises deed recorded In assigned Case No
.
lor the amount owing; Volume 288 , Page 01 ·CV-114 and I~ Complaint.
Cterk of Courta
that the Delendinta 355, Meigs County pending ~~ the Court
Dated thla 9th day
ellully of redemption Deed Recorda, end 01 Common Pleas of of July, 2001.
By: Manica Freeman
be
valid
and costa olthla action ; Mel 8 Count Ohl
OeputyCJerk
subalallng lien on said and I hal the land Theg object y~f !hoe. Marlene Harrloon .
Installment conlract
Marlene Harrlaon, 7123,30, (8) 8, 13,27

740-

0

2422

• u.

'

KIt

!'&gt;euler: North

I

V ulu~r•b lo!·

.'

tlualh

Wnt

I•

Pu1

(2 well.)

Roth

Nunh

~·
i'Mo

t:11s1
l'iOali

l'.itit

Opculnc lciKI: • 2

Pro - am competi"tions are well-known
in many fields: golf
and tennis immediately come to mind.
These events are usually organized to raise
money for charity. In
bridge,
however,
more often it is to
give the ams a chance
to partner a pro and
encourage them to
become more involved in the tournament world. (Some
are charity events,
though .) The attitude
of most pros is that
they get a lot of en joyment from bridge,
they remember when
they were beginners,
and they wish to put
something back into
the game, to inspire
others. Yet it is an
evening of unpredictability. This week,
let's look at six deals
from a tournament in
New York City in

'

OKAY!! YOU CAN
BE TI-l' UMP U

,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

· AL.I 8'A~
ANP ~fl.TY
THieVE$,
INC.

,'

0

•
•

'

.

THE BORN LOSER

'

this space for
s100 per
month

"Wf\1\T~ IT UK.E., CO.UNh Will-\ A.""'
00~

Ul'£ Vt:Ee&gt;lf.ft.':&gt;TEII:?'

!·o ":J~'f f.lE.'":J G:OUN..L.'f ~m""'

1!-.l~rour-w~T~TCfloJ~'(~

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

TIIAIIE'

'BIG NATE
T~DDY, TH~R~~

It&amp; Hord1h StupAThlrJt~

SOME·

O&gt;IE 1: WA&gt;IT YOU 11)

1·800..250..!1077
1-304-675·7824
Residential Commercial New Con&lt;lrudion
Sales Stnice Installation
Spe&lt;ializiRK In Sheol Mello!· Ductwork

MEET! THIS -~SO"- KELLY! KELLY, MEET

KELLY IS MY ... UH.. .

THAT IS, .SHE ANI&gt; r .. .
- we·Rg-:: UM ... WELL. .. .

-~~g~~--~J.ER.t&lt;:.-/--

]

....,.· xmffi

&gt;Howard L. ,
Wrltesel

(740) 992•3470

u 0.

p

TCPOEGM

E

YE T U R
S D •

N U K .K B D

MFBK

B K ·R A

vw

uo

VB ·.'

SMD

FYERB

RMVB

YULB

LCBDOBK,

MS

FEDUP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •... the language lhatls allowed lobe
uaad - llhlnk H'o degrading. II has taken television dOwn." Sid CaeHr

TREE SERVICE ·

I

I
I

PEANUTS
REMEMBER WHEN WE WERE
AT
. CJ.lARLIE eROWN,AND
' SNEAK AWA'i TO 6ET A
MARSMMALLOUl SUNDAE 7

11M NOT

CONFUSE!' TJ.lAN
YOU TJ.liNK.

JUSTA

G-..O_E..,...M_,A:..-l~'

1•;

f - . _ ,. . . .

SWEETIE ..

/

J

presumably after an
~
auction of 3 CLUBS"Who was to blame for the ac3 NT and a spade
15 1 1
cident?"thejudgeask·ed.Thewitlead! There ·were L-..J.L-..J.L-..J.l-.J.-~-ness replied, "Nobody's, from
three embarrassing re-,
what I could see, they hit each
suits. At two tables, · I-·_,,...s__,E.,....M,_u_s..-I.....,-llother at the·--- - ·- -."
the declarer -- the
B
Q Complete .the chuckle quoted
pro! -- went one ·L-.1.-.....1.-..L.-..L.-.I•......J.
by loll.ng on the missing words

'(OU1RE MORE

CMARLIE
I.!ROWN .. ttM

J/

I' I I I

••

you develop from step No. 3 b.~low.

Fully lneured

down in four spades.
An d one went two

.......

.......

down in · five spades.
How?
My · guess is that
West Jed the club jack
and declarer carelessly
cashed the spade ace
at trick two.

• Eldllat Willi
III'IIln
end

.n, PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTERS

2

3 . 4

5

IN SQUARES

"'i~~~~~fc5iir=T=T=j==:Jii1=T=~~~

i

SCRAM-LETS ANsWERS
Horror · Fudge · Gravy - Kettle • FOREVER

·

Overheard in local gym: 'I've always been called a
brain. But I k~.ow brain cells come and go but fat cells
are------·.

L&amp;t Tire Barn
441i87 WIJiple
Tuesday, July 31. 2001
In the year ahead, persons
wh~ like you will be more
likely to go om of their way
for you th.an usual, especially
when it involves undertakings
in your chosen field of endeavor. Be reciprocal.

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

LEO (luly 23-Aug. 22) -Somethmg that starts out sim-

~

Hill's.Self
Storage
remodeling ,
drywall , room
additions, and
plumbing.

cutting edge..•
Read the
Terry Lamm
Classified Ads
992-0739

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1

~~:~i~~~~~i~i~~~~~=~!~~~~~~~~~~
~=ti=;;-~;1

11

740-949·2217

ple couiJ tum into a big
headache for you today if you
do not manage your tasks
with attention to details .
Move slowly and deliberat&lt;ly
through onch step. Trying to
patch up a broken romil.nce?
Tho Astro-Graph Match~aker can help you undt&gt;ruand what to do to make the

to Matchmokor, clo thit
newtpaper, 1'.0. llox 17~8,
' relationship
Mall S2.75
Mumy Hillwork.
Stntion,
New
York, NY !OtSb.
!·
VIRGO (Au-. 23-Sept. 22)
You'll draw attention tu
ynur10lf •II rlJht by tryina to
up1111e your friends who ore
maklna pointt. but the 1ype of

··

rnpa111o you'll rttc:llive won't

Sizes 5' x 1o·
to tO' X 30'
Hours

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

•
I

•

E YV•

TUG B

and . three took 10. L.=~·;::~·=~·;::~·::;·~.J
The top North-South ,.
score was for three
AVL I T
no-trump by South 1--r~3;-r.l~:-.-,-1-,r
making all 13 tricks, .
.
.
.
.

740-742-8015
.1·877·353-7022

on

u

A B DB,

u

0 U VB

'BGBDW

O

A SMART
C..IRL'

DIPOYIAG

-¥idl

Trxtay's clue: T eqiJIIIS G

. Galli•. ML'IOn, a'nd Meig.• Cauntl,..
Licensed and ln&lt;ured
WV ODS 116

P/B

A

people, past and pra1ent. Each lener in lha cipher stands tor another.

~~~~~~~;==~ suit.
11 tricks ;in either red
Yet this result

"Trane" Sales &amp; Sen ice For

Top • Trim • Removal
.Bucllet SerVIce

38 Indignation
40 Valid
reaoonlng
(2 wdt.)
41 "Let- -"
21 Like aome
(Bullet'
akl chelell
tong)
22 Type of
42 Tank
eaed
43 Work on
23· Apportion
"Time"
24 WOmln'a 44 Incarnation
of Vlahnu
garment
25 Wild bullalo 48 Sooner St.
27 "Etter"
47 VIIWI
Start
48 Art deCO
28 Opera tore
Illustrator
29 COmedltn 50 ProfH on
Laurel
blnk teet.
31 Chrltlmu 52 Reuben
Item
brud
(2 Wdl.)
53 AboVI
33 Scorch
(pOll.)

by Luis Campos
Celtb&lt;lty Cipher cryptogroma are createo from quotatlona by tomoua

third of the matchRearrange letters cf the
points. At most tables,
four scromblod words be·
South played in four low ta farm faur simple wards
spades .' One declarer
won all 13 tricks, two
DI M UT E
collected 12 tricks, t-~,n~-~,......,1,......,1.--"'l""z-l

I ... I"l1 HEJZ. ...

1"1Y Fto.IENl&gt; iEt&gt;I&gt;Y I

18 Female
oheep
20 TV horte

CELEBRITY CIPHER

mond;
and
East
·
· · switched correctly to
rT-,C~~;;---T---1 a heart. We were
therefore plus 620.
How do you think
we scored in matchpoints, when that result was compared
with the other North- ·
South paits?
Note that EastWest is laydown for

~TIZ.t&gt;.l GiJ.Tf~\11 Ni:.D.:

l

.........

At my table, against
four spades, the opening lead was a dia-

P"

..

WICK'S

23 Friend of
DOWN
Snow White
1 Alew
26 Lookot
27 Mu'guyo 2 -and
roen
30 Soltr·
3 Ingar
tyatem
Adlma
4 Atty.'a deg.
32 He'lllloke
5 Dlroc:lor
you out
Spike
34 Kind of
8 Aclor Hollin
corrlage
7 Conatruct
35 Plant with
8 "And-ohowy
bed"
flowora
38 Air-quality 9 Typaot
maetlng or
org.
hall
37 Roman
11 Large knife
1,051
39 Of Yucatan 12 Woallhy
13 Negatives
nail VII

1989.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

........

t AJ171l3

""'Q'''~
¥. K
M

LARRY SCHEY

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

\fQ !O~~!

J

S.llth

.a.....

;

1\ 10) l

J

•

Cellular
r.

•

••'

.-..u.t&amp;L
.

-

' 1

.. J 10

..

·Warner Ins.
. ,. '992-5479

t:a~t

r

•

• " J

Mon-Fri8:30 • 5:00
Over. 40 yrs experience
(740) 742·8888
1·888·521..0916

740·181·4282

.....

Wnl

· moiOrcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

WOODSHED

J 10
'# l Q

•• •Ar,p'' ' :!

t+bME ESTIMATES • •sEEJNQ IS 8EUEVJH0• •twV10234n

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck larps,

DIDEQ1
CONTRACTIIII

-

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

JIM'S

Vine Street
Full Servlce Dell• Rotisserie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk,
Eckridge Meats now available

•
•

1·800-291-5600 • Pomerov, OH
fREI! II

ft:W ~ l ,

• oort

SYSTEMS

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

33795 HiltznJ RJ.
Pomeruy, Ohio

.

•

W.INDOW

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

SeH·Storage

IU~~~~
42h,
FL
45 Ptnnlt to
48 "Verb" end
49 Slow
mualc.l
rnovemtnt
51 Rui-ftllolt
agent. e.g.
54 Ulllng a
111.
atopwatch
17 Poetic Umt 55 Smoll hole
19 Cell
58 Diplomacy
r111denllo 57 Cieor the
20 Llleltckll
olato

1 Odor
8 Suit pert
10 LOIIInd
Iota
12 Purpllth
Nd ·
14 Yaung l..ty
15 Boxing
alrllegy
18 Compaoo

•

CONSTRUCTION •
PROJECT?

Crossword Puzzle

40 More

ACROSS

~

-----..,

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155 ·

be

marshaled and their
priorities determined;
that said premises be
so Id
as
upon

Beneficial Ohio, Inc., execution

Get Yo1r Me•Ht• Acr111

r-=~---,--

BS

"

do • thing for your ropulority.
LlllRfl (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) • .
.. Condition&amp; in acncr~l could
make a owlft chanl(&lt; from yes•
tcrdJI)' an,t IL'aV4.' you ~c:ratc:h-

I.

ing your ht'aJ as io' j1ow you
went amiss. It'! not you; it's
just the way things arc.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- If you fail to so.: rc~n
source~

first , you may
find out after the fact today
that the persons from whom
you sought ditt'ction were the
lmt equipped to help you .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23D.c. 21) -- It's best you do
without rather than borrow
something today chat the
lender tn~:asures . There are indicariom that too many people are carch:u now, and [he
object could get damaged.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jon. 19) •• lleins uncertain or
indcr:ilivv with thole you
have dralinp today could, in
turn, a!Tect othe" by moking
theon think thoy have •II tho
onowen. If ihor, don't, you'll ·
I" down '\'lth I 10111.
AQUAI,IUS (ion . 20-Fob.
19) •• Tukt you nnd dlttlltCful could tuiTer from a poor
performance on your part and
end up havlnK to bo done
over apin. It miMht be wber
your

to po1tpono wh~t yon c: an to

•nothor day.
I'ISCES (feb. 20-Mmh 20)
.. _ Optiminn tempered with

realism creates successes.
However, rrying to build expectations today upon false
premises will guarantee f.1il ure. Face the facts first , then
the game plan.

ARIES (March 2t-April19)
-- Luck and chance arc not
your allies roday. If you rely a
bit too heavily on them to get
you over the rough spots,
you're going to be faced with
· -failure. Make things happen
yourself.

TAURUS (April 20-May
2tl) -- Sometimes we can
fudge our way through situations :~.bout which we don't

fully"undcntond . Today, how.
. ever, you'd better have the
knowlcdse to back you up on
what you do or say.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-· Koop a tharp oye toJ•y on

any in"101vcnncnt that tmuil•
finlri1:&lt;11 dealinso. If you 8"
carelcu or inditTcrent, you
could onako A mlocolculotion
that will prove to 'be cootly.
CANCER Oun~ 21-jttly
22) •• lt tnl~ht be ono of
thooe Joyt for you where the
harder you try to pluto oth·
on, the lo11 you aro opproclated. To spare younolf fruotration&amp;, ltay away fro1n penon&amp;
who take you for granted .

.

\

�Page

84 • The Daily Sentinel

. Monday, July

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

30, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Pag~

Pomer()y, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA
PHII.LIP
ALDER

.,.......;..;._ _ _

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addlllonl &amp;

Remodeling

• NtwO~ra;tl
• El~trlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting 1: Guttera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Otcka

· Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pom&amp;foy, Onlo
il2 Years Local

BISSELL '

WOLFE HOME
'
MAINTENANCE

·New Homee
• Siding
·Roofing
• Remodeling

BUILDIRIINC.

• Home Repairs

Free Estimates
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs

Free Estimates

740·949·1521

740-992-1101
or992-2753

Owner:
Charlie Wolle

• Garages

• Additions
• Decks

New Hom.. • VInyl
Siding • New Gora~ts
• Rtplocement
Windows • Room
Additions • Roonng

COMMIICIAlond IBIDIIITIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public Notice5 In Newspitpers.
Vour Right to Know,
Delivered Right tO Your Door.
Ollir~ N•.,.IIJI(IfHr A~'-tlcm

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTV, OHIO
CASE NO. 01·CV.057
Beneficial Ohio, inc.
dba Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio
Plaintiff
vs.
Timothy T. Klein eliot
Defendants
Timothy T. Klein and

premises , lor the
amounl owing; that
the Defendants eqully
of redemption be
foreclosed; that ell the
parties be required to
answer as to their
Interest, In fBid
premises or be forever
barred from asserting
any Interest therein;
that all liens on said

Unknown Spouse of PremIses

Timothy T. Klein
whose last known
address Is unknown,
Is hereby notified thai

Wltll ADnlly Setttlnel

'BULLETIN BOARD
lncll WHkdiJf
10" colu11n Inell Sundny

''" CDIUMI
1

end

the

Racine
Mower
Clinic

Murray, MTO,
Echo, Oregon
Open
Mon-Fri 9-4:30
Sat. 9·1.2:00

. . . - - - - -· - -

WE
ll
\I

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 11!1.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

CAN l:fELP

.

·=

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

·•

·ouALITY

(740) 949·2804
·

~'R~
High&amp; Dry

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

740-992-5232

convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,

. Chester, Ohio ,
Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

dba
Beneficial proceeds olaald sale
Mortgage Co. of Ohio be applied according
flied a Complain! tor to law, and lor such
Money, Foreclosure other relief as Is just
and other Equitable equllloblt.
Relief on March 29,
Defendants first
Complete !'fome
2001, Case No. 01·CV· hereinabove
~E·rlc: Blackburn ·
Fully tneured
Repatr
057 , on the property mentioned are further
Remodeling
described as follows: . nolllled that they ar- - - - - - - - - .,._ _ _ _ _ __
New Additions
EXHIBIT A
required to answer
Public Notice
. Public Notice
Garages
Situated In the seld complaint on or
WV0282120
1
county of Meigs , In the before 9/24/01, which be torecloa'ed and " Colnplalnt demand a
FIIEE ESniATES
State of Ohio, and In lncludea twenty·elght thai the lleni and/or that the. title In and to
AG Service ·
the Township of (28) days from the last lnterellal~ or on said lh~ oil and gaa ba
In Service"
140-992.0021
Salisbury (Pomeroy date of publication, or property, I( any, be quieted
In th'e
Jlllfne
Village) and bounded ]udgmenl mey be marshalled ~nd the Plalnllll, Gayle H.
188-992-G021
and described ao rendered
aa real estate title PrlcaandEdnaPrlca,
loco ..,111 &amp; rofod
follows :
demanded therein.
quieted end aald and that the oil and
PARCEL 1 :
The
FRANK &amp; property sold In the gat 'lritareata ol the
following real estate
WOOLDRDGE CO., foreclosure acllon Delendanta
be
Losa Welghl Now
situated In the County
L.P.A. and all amounts due declar!ld abandoned,
by Gregory D. Plaintiff be paid from or In the alternative,
of Meigs, In the State
Ask Me How
of Ohio, and In the Wooldrldge(#0040964) the proceeds of the that
lhe Court
Whllhor you're !tying to
township of Salisbury,
by D. L. Mains, Jr sale. ,
. partition the oil and
loao wolgh~ oupptament
your diet for m~xlmum
and bounded and
'
(#0001391)
You a;e required to 981 lntereat end/or
.Utrnlon, or juotlook your
described as follows:
Allorneys lor Plalntlll anawer the COmplaint order the eame sold
lJI'Ullll with tht boll
The following real 600 South Pearl 111'11111 within twenty·elght with regard to the
parsan11 e~re products,
estate In Section No. Columbue, Ohio 43208 (28) daya altar the following described
Htrl&gt;lfllol~lfrnollonllhao
Eight in Township No. .
614·221-1882 1111 publication ot .realeallote:
something fOf everyone.
Two and Range No. (7) 23, 30, (8) 6, 13, 20, this Notice, which will
The
following
Coli your lndopondtnl
Thirteen near the 27,2001
be publlahed once deacrlbed real ealate
Herblllfe distributor,
South East corner of
each week lor six (8) altuail!
In
the
J&amp;L Enterprise
said Section on the
Public Notice
succe .. lve week a. Town a hIp
of
(740) 885-3921
North West aide ollhe
The laat publication Lebanon, In the
We cen personaiiZt 1
tlrst ravine West of the
will be made on the County of Meigs and
progrom lor youl
S.E. corner of said
JN THE COMMON
13th day of Aug, State of Ohio, viz:
Section and described
PLEAS COURT OF
2001; and lha twenty· Boundad northerly by
as follows:
MEIGS COUNTY,
eight (28) day a lor the Ohio River, eoat
Beginning at the
OHIO
an I we r . ,. wIll by the Iandt of
East corner of a Jot
common(!!~ em that Jam.. While and
sold and conveyed to
date. In )the caae ol aouth by the Ianda of
BARBARA PAYNE · .. your,failure to anawer Jamea Lerkent and
Ebanezar Watkins of
Exclusive ,
Mlnarsvllle; thence
EXECUTRIX '
or otheiwl•~ re,apond· Andrew Roaea end
Mohawk'Dealer
North 35' East 62 1/2 OF THE ESTATE OF
as requested by the we at by Ianda of
tiiet;thence North 55~-LlJCI(LE M. - -()hlo- Rules- ot- Civii- Spencer -Smith - anct•CarPet
Wasl 174 teet; thence KING AKA LUCILLE
Procedure, judgment ·olhers 51 acres 75
•
Hardwood
Floorlnl
KING, DECEASED
by default will 'J&gt;e one hundredth• of an
South 35' West 82 1/2
feet to tho · North
rendered against you acre, and live acres
• Contoleum
corner
of said
PLAINTIFF
and tor 'ilia relhtl part of 100 acre lot
FREE ESTIMATES
Ebenezer Walkins lot; CASE NO. 01·CV·1"02 .demanded In ·the No.140, Sec. 14 &amp; 15,
Phone
f304J 674-6100
·VI·
ComplalnL
and 8 110rea 50 one
thence Soulh 55' East
LOCUli
Straet,
Pl Pltooanl .
174 feet to the place of
Dated this 6th day itundred1ha acrea, 23Pool
K•K
Jull
beglnnlng.
, RANDY E. KING,
of June, 2001.
112 acrea and 14
Mobile
Home
Park
Excepllng the coal EXECUTOR OF THE
acres parte of 100
therein and the right ESTATE OF ROLAND Marlene Harrlaon, acre lot No.-141, Sec.
to mlnelha aame.
E. KING, DECEASED, Clerk of courte
14 &amp; 15 and 11-40/100
PARCEL 2:
!'TAL.
acrea, part of Sec. 21,
DEFENDANTS.
(71 9, 18, 23, 30, 2001
840 acre' lol No. 2 1.
The following real
allele situated In the
NOTICE BY
(8) 8, 13,2001
All olthe abovalande . .
East Stale S1reet Phone (740)593-6671
County of Malga, State
PUBLICATION
In Township No. 3,
Clhio
. .
•New Homes
To: Lisa D.
Public Notice
f'lange No. 11.
of Ohio, and In the
town of Pomeroy and Robinson ake Llta D.
II'· . being the
bounded
and
King, whoae laat
Intention to Include, • Garages
deacrlbed as follows, known addresaea are
IN THE COMMON
daacrlbe and convey
viz:
Elberton,
PLEAS COURT OF
herein all real ealate • Complete
Section No. 8 Jn
Georgia, and 1053
MEIGS COUNTY,
located In Melga
Remodeling
Rocky R Hupp . Agent
Township No. 2 and
SR 588, Gelllpolla,
·OHIO
, County, Ohio, owned
Stop &amp; Compare
' .•
OH 45831, present
GAYLE H. PRICE, ... by
Virginia B.
Range No. 13 near the
Box 189
Southeast corner of
address unknown,
ET AL.
· Wllllemton at the
FREE ESTIMATES
Micldleporl. Ohto 45760
said section on the
anil
tlma of her deceata
Northweat side of the
the unknown heirs,
PLAINTIFFS
and bequeathed by
·Local 843·5264
740.992·1671
first ravine West oflhe next of kin, devisees,
· her to Lillian W.
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
aald Southeast corner
legateea,
·v•·
Dennla and Paul
Burial and•Finll! Expenses;·Cancer &amp;
of said oectlon
administrators,
Wllllamaon.
executora, paraonal LILLIAN W. DENNIS,
Being the a a me
described as follows:
Denial, Retirement,
Beginning at the
represenlallvea,
ET AL.
real •••••• """v•ved
Pension
&amp; 401K Rollovers ;
East corner of hall apouoe, and aaalgna
lo Clinton R. Smith
CONTRACTORS,
INC.
acre lot sold and of Lisa D. Roblnaon
DEFENDANTS.
· by Lillian W. Dennla,
~ortgagii:'; Major fytedical
Racine, Ohio 48771
conveyed to Jonah
eke Lisa D. King,
NOTICE BY
el al., by dead
• Nursing Home
TMt! OUAUTV lll'l COIM'II,
Reese of Minersville;
whose
PUBLICATION
recorded In Deed
740·985-3948
addreases are
Book 144 Page 626 of
·.~
thence North 35' East
CONCRET£/BLOCIC/BRICK
unknown.
To: Lillian W. Dennie tha Melgl county
82 112 feet: thence
Pomeroy Eagles
North 55' Weal one
and
Samuel
S. Deed Recorda.
• Foolen, Walls, Stepi •
You are hereby Dennla, Ill whoaalaat
Excepting 1.238
hundred and seventy·
Flat Work,
Club Bingo
l9ur (174) teet; thence no.tilled that you have . known addraaa Ia . 52 aero conveyed to tha
Replacements, • Walkl
.On Thursdays
South 35 (ale) West been
named Eaaex Rd., Chealnut 8tateol0hloby.claad .
aod.Drlveo
•
Sleocll
·
At 6:30p.m. ·
All Mikes Tra~tor. &amp;
MA : 02-181, recorded In Volume
alxty·two and one·hall Defendant• In I he Hill,
Crete Free Eotlmateo
(62 112) to the North action
entllled preHnt
8ddretHI : 102, Page 275, Melga
Main Street
Equipment Parts
Strvhig Ohio and W.V.
corner of said Jonah Barbara
Payne, unknown;
Paul County
Olllclal
Pomeroy, Oloio
Factory Authorized
Reeae lot; tnance Executrix of the Wlllleniaon
and Recorda.
wv 1031712
South lllty, llve (55') .Eatale of Lucille M. Agnes B. Wllllamaon,
Reference Dead:
Paying $80.00 .
Case:IH Parts
degrees East one King, deceaaed, wholl Jut known Volume 185, Page 45
per game
hundred aeventy·lour Plalntlll, va. Randy E. address Is Texaa, 1, Melga County Deed
$300.00 Covemll
(174) to the place of King, Executor of the present
addreaaea Recorda.
beginning, excepting Estate of Roland E. unknown;
Bene
Audllor'a Parcel
Starburst
the coal therein and King, deceased, et Parts, whoaa last Noa.: 07·00103.000
Hauling &amp;
Progressive top line
the right to mine the al., Defendants. This known addrasa Ia and 07-110804.000.
Excavat;ng
same.
action has been 4022 Meadow View,
You are required lo
Lie . #00·50
PARCEL NUMBER : assigned case No. o · Suitland, MD 20748, anawar tha Complain!
'
.
.
1 -CV-102 and 11 present
addreaa within twenty·elght
18·00750,16·00749
PROPERTY
pending In 'the Court unknown; and upon (28) dayo efter the
ADDRESS : 32045 of Common Pleas ot the unknown helra, leal publlcallon of Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand • ,
Welshton
Road, Meigs County, Ohio. next of kin, devloeea, lhla Notice, which will
Mlneravllle, OH 45769 The oblact of the legateee,
apouHa, be publlohad once
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
~QH~BEIE'
Also known as Complaint demands successors
and each week tor alx (8)
• Mulch .
3 2045
Welshtown judgment against tho asslgno Of Lillian W. aucceaalve week a.
Bulldozer Servlres
Roofing • Home
!:£QHHE~IQH
Road, Mln,ersvllle, Defendants, In the Dennis, Samuel S. The lui publication
Ill,
Paul will be made on the
Ohio 45769, and that sum of $8,817.18, as Dennie,
Quality Driveways,
Maintenancethere remains due and of October 1 2000 Williamson, Agneo B. 27th day of August
owing $24,639.74 with wllh Interest ' al lh~ Williamson, and Bene 2001, and the twenty·
Patios, Sidewalks.
Gutters- Down
Jnte&lt;est at 15.492 : rate of 8.07% per Paris, whose names eight (28) daya for
25 years experience
Advertise
percent per annum annum, until tully and addresses are an' w er
wIll
Spout
from July 1, 2000, and p•ld ; In order to unknown ·
.
commence on that
·free
Estimates
Free
Estimates
coats;
that the torecloae upon a
You are hereby date. In the caae of In this space
defendants named In b rea chad
1and notified that you have your.failure to anawor
949·1405
Jr
.for $25 per
...
the Complaint may Jnslallment contract ' been
nama d or olherwlae reopond
I
.
up
I
t t
DetendaniS In the u raquealed by the
591·5011
h
month
avo an nterost In
on rea as a 8 action entllled Gayle Ohio Rulea of Civil
~·
said
property; localed at 927 S. H Price et al
Procadure, )ud~ment
therefore , Plaintiff Second
Ave., Pialnlllls 'vs Llllla~
demands thai It be Middleport ,
OH W Den~ls · 01 81 . by default wll be
Public Notice
found to have 0 good, 45760, which Is more D~lendant~ . Thl~ rendered against you
valid and subsisting fully described In action has been ~:~a':J.~hel;e:~~
lien on aeld premises deed recorded In assigned Case No
.
lor the amount owing; Volume 288 , Page 01 ·CV-114 and I~ Complaint.
Cterk of Courta
that the Delendinta 355, Meigs County pending ~~ the Court
Dated thla 9th day
ellully of redemption Deed Recorda, end 01 Common Pleas of of July, 2001.
By: Manica Freeman
be
valid
and costa olthla action ; Mel 8 Count Ohl
OeputyCJerk
subalallng lien on said and I hal the land Theg object y~f !hoe. Marlene Harrloon .
Installment conlract
Marlene Harrlaon, 7123,30, (8) 8, 13,27

740-

0

2422

• u.

'

KIt

!'&gt;euler: North

I

V ulu~r•b lo!·

.'

tlualh

Wnt

I•

Pu1

(2 well.)

Roth

Nunh

~·
i'Mo

t:11s1
l'iOali

l'.itit

Opculnc lciKI: • 2

Pro - am competi"tions are well-known
in many fields: golf
and tennis immediately come to mind.
These events are usually organized to raise
money for charity. In
bridge,
however,
more often it is to
give the ams a chance
to partner a pro and
encourage them to
become more involved in the tournament world. (Some
are charity events,
though .) The attitude
of most pros is that
they get a lot of en joyment from bridge,
they remember when
they were beginners,
and they wish to put
something back into
the game, to inspire
others. Yet it is an
evening of unpredictability. This week,
let's look at six deals
from a tournament in
New York City in

'

OKAY!! YOU CAN
BE TI-l' UMP U

,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

· AL.I 8'A~
ANP ~fl.TY
THieVE$,
INC.

,'

0

•
•

'

.

THE BORN LOSER

'

this space for
s100 per
month

"Wf\1\T~ IT UK.E., CO.UNh Will-\ A.""'
00~

Ul'£ Vt:Ee&gt;lf.ft.':&gt;TEII:?'

!·o ":J~'f f.lE.'":J G:OUN..L.'f ~m""'

1!-.l~rour-w~T~TCfloJ~'(~

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

TIIAIIE'

'BIG NATE
T~DDY, TH~R~~

It&amp; Hord1h StupAThlrJt~

SOME·

O&gt;IE 1: WA&gt;IT YOU 11)

1·800..250..!1077
1-304-675·7824
Residential Commercial New Con&lt;lrudion
Sales Stnice Installation
Spe&lt;ializiRK In Sheol Mello!· Ductwork

MEET! THIS -~SO"- KELLY! KELLY, MEET

KELLY IS MY ... UH.. .

THAT IS, .SHE ANI&gt; r .. .
- we·Rg-:: UM ... WELL. .. .

-~~g~~--~J.ER.t&lt;:.-/--

]

....,.· xmffi

&gt;Howard L. ,
Wrltesel

(740) 992•3470

u 0.

p

TCPOEGM

E

YE T U R
S D •

N U K .K B D

MFBK

B K ·R A

vw

uo

VB ·.'

SMD

FYERB

RMVB

YULB

LCBDOBK,

MS

FEDUP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •... the language lhatls allowed lobe
uaad - llhlnk H'o degrading. II has taken television dOwn." Sid CaeHr

TREE SERVICE ·

I

I
I

PEANUTS
REMEMBER WHEN WE WERE
AT
. CJ.lARLIE eROWN,AND
' SNEAK AWA'i TO 6ET A
MARSMMALLOUl SUNDAE 7

11M NOT

CONFUSE!' TJ.lAN
YOU TJ.liNK.

JUSTA

G-..O_E..,...M_,A:..-l~'

1•;

f - . _ ,. . . .

SWEETIE ..

/

J

presumably after an
~
auction of 3 CLUBS"Who was to blame for the ac3 NT and a spade
15 1 1
cident?"thejudgeask·ed.Thewitlead! There ·were L-..J.L-..J.L-..J.l-.J.-~-ness replied, "Nobody's, from
three embarrassing re-,
what I could see, they hit each
suits. At two tables, · I-·_,,...s__,E.,....M,_u_s..-I.....,-llother at the·--- - ·- -."
the declarer -- the
B
Q Complete .the chuckle quoted
pro! -- went one ·L-.1.-.....1.-..L.-..L.-.I•......J.
by loll.ng on the missing words

'(OU1RE MORE

CMARLIE
I.!ROWN .. ttM

J/

I' I I I

••

you develop from step No. 3 b.~low.

Fully lneured

down in four spades.
An d one went two

.......

.......

down in · five spades.
How?
My · guess is that
West Jed the club jack
and declarer carelessly
cashed the spade ace
at trick two.

• Eldllat Willi
III'IIln
end

.n, PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTERS

2

3 . 4

5

IN SQUARES

"'i~~~~~fc5iir=T=T=j==:Jii1=T=~~~

i

SCRAM-LETS ANsWERS
Horror · Fudge · Gravy - Kettle • FOREVER

·

Overheard in local gym: 'I've always been called a
brain. But I k~.ow brain cells come and go but fat cells
are------·.

L&amp;t Tire Barn
441i87 WIJiple
Tuesday, July 31. 2001
In the year ahead, persons
wh~ like you will be more
likely to go om of their way
for you th.an usual, especially
when it involves undertakings
in your chosen field of endeavor. Be reciprocal.

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

LEO (luly 23-Aug. 22) -Somethmg that starts out sim-

~

Hill's.Self
Storage
remodeling ,
drywall , room
additions, and
plumbing.

cutting edge..•
Read the
Terry Lamm
Classified Ads
992-0739

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1

~~:~i~~~~~i~i~~~~~=~!~~~~~~~~~~
~=ti=;;-~;1

11

740-949·2217

ple couiJ tum into a big
headache for you today if you
do not manage your tasks
with attention to details .
Move slowly and deliberat&lt;ly
through onch step. Trying to
patch up a broken romil.nce?
Tho Astro-Graph Match~aker can help you undt&gt;ruand what to do to make the

to Matchmokor, clo thit
newtpaper, 1'.0. llox 17~8,
' relationship
Mall S2.75
Mumy Hillwork.
Stntion,
New
York, NY !OtSb.
!·
VIRGO (Au-. 23-Sept. 22)
You'll draw attention tu
ynur10lf •II rlJht by tryina to
up1111e your friends who ore
maklna pointt. but the 1ype of

··

rnpa111o you'll rttc:llive won't

Sizes 5' x 1o·
to tO' X 30'
Hours

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

•
I

•

E YV•

TUG B

and . three took 10. L.=~·;::~·=~·;::~·::;·~.J
The top North-South ,.
score was for three
AVL I T
no-trump by South 1--r~3;-r.l~:-.-,-1-,r
making all 13 tricks, .
.
.
.
.

740-742-8015
.1·877·353-7022

on

u

A B DB,

u

0 U VB

'BGBDW

O

A SMART
C..IRL'

DIPOYIAG

-¥idl

Trxtay's clue: T eqiJIIIS G

. Galli•. ML'IOn, a'nd Meig.• Cauntl,..
Licensed and ln&lt;ured
WV ODS 116

P/B

A

people, past and pra1ent. Each lener in lha cipher stands tor another.

~~~~~~~;==~ suit.
11 tricks ;in either red
Yet this result

"Trane" Sales &amp; Sen ice For

Top • Trim • Removal
.Bucllet SerVIce

38 Indignation
40 Valid
reaoonlng
(2 wdt.)
41 "Let- -"
21 Like aome
(Bullet'
akl chelell
tong)
22 Type of
42 Tank
eaed
43 Work on
23· Apportion
"Time"
24 WOmln'a 44 Incarnation
of Vlahnu
garment
25 Wild bullalo 48 Sooner St.
27 "Etter"
47 VIIWI
Start
48 Art deCO
28 Opera tore
Illustrator
29 COmedltn 50 ProfH on
Laurel
blnk teet.
31 Chrltlmu 52 Reuben
Item
brud
(2 Wdl.)
53 AboVI
33 Scorch
(pOll.)

by Luis Campos
Celtb&lt;lty Cipher cryptogroma are createo from quotatlona by tomoua

third of the matchRearrange letters cf the
points. At most tables,
four scromblod words be·
South played in four low ta farm faur simple wards
spades .' One declarer
won all 13 tricks, two
DI M UT E
collected 12 tricks, t-~,n~-~,......,1,......,1.--"'l""z-l

I ... I"l1 HEJZ. ...

1"1Y Fto.IENl&gt; iEt&gt;I&gt;Y I

18 Female
oheep
20 TV horte

CELEBRITY CIPHER

mond;
and
East
·
· · switched correctly to
rT-,C~~;;---T---1 a heart. We were
therefore plus 620.
How do you think
we scored in matchpoints, when that result was compared
with the other North- ·
South paits?
Note that EastWest is laydown for

~TIZ.t&gt;.l GiJ.Tf~\11 Ni:.D.:

l

.........

At my table, against
four spades, the opening lead was a dia-

P"

..

WICK'S

23 Friend of
DOWN
Snow White
1 Alew
26 Lookot
27 Mu'guyo 2 -and
roen
30 Soltr·
3 Ingar
tyatem
Adlma
4 Atty.'a deg.
32 He'lllloke
5 Dlroc:lor
you out
Spike
34 Kind of
8 Aclor Hollin
corrlage
7 Conatruct
35 Plant with
8 "And-ohowy
bed"
flowora
38 Air-quality 9 Typaot
maetlng or
org.
hall
37 Roman
11 Large knife
1,051
39 Of Yucatan 12 Woallhy
13 Negatives
nail VII

1989.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

........

t AJ171l3

""'Q'''~
¥. K
M

LARRY SCHEY

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

\fQ !O~~!

J

S.llth

.a.....

;

1\ 10) l

J

•

Cellular
r.

•

••'

.-..u.t&amp;L
.

-

' 1

.. J 10

..

·Warner Ins.
. ,. '992-5479

t:a~t

r

•

• " J

Mon-Fri8:30 • 5:00
Over. 40 yrs experience
(740) 742·8888
1·888·521..0916

740·181·4282

.....

Wnl

· moiOrcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

WOODSHED

J 10
'# l Q

•• •Ar,p'' ' :!

t+bME ESTIMATES • •sEEJNQ IS 8EUEVJH0• •twV10234n

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck larps,

DIDEQ1
CONTRACTIIII

-

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

JIM'S

Vine Street
Full Servlce Dell• Rotisserie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk,
Eckridge Meats now available

•
•

1·800-291-5600 • Pomerov, OH
fREI! II

ft:W ~ l ,

• oort

SYSTEMS

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

33795 HiltznJ RJ.
Pomeruy, Ohio

.

•

W.INDOW

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

SeH·Storage

IU~~~~
42h,
FL
45 Ptnnlt to
48 "Verb" end
49 Slow
mualc.l
rnovemtnt
51 Rui-ftllolt
agent. e.g.
54 Ulllng a
111.
atopwatch
17 Poetic Umt 55 Smoll hole
19 Cell
58 Diplomacy
r111denllo 57 Cieor the
20 Llleltckll
olato

1 Odor
8 Suit pert
10 LOIIInd
Iota
12 Purpllth
Nd ·
14 Yaung l..ty
15 Boxing
alrllegy
18 Compaoo

•

CONSTRUCTION •
PROJECT?

Crossword Puzzle

40 More

ACROSS

~

-----..,

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155 ·

be

marshaled and their
priorities determined;
that said premises be
so Id
as
upon

Beneficial Ohio, Inc., execution

Get Yo1r Me•Ht• Acr111

r-=~---,--

BS

"

do • thing for your ropulority.
LlllRfl (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) • .
.. Condition&amp; in acncr~l could
make a owlft chanl(&lt; from yes•
tcrdJI)' an,t IL'aV4.' you ~c:ratc:h-

I.

ing your ht'aJ as io' j1ow you
went amiss. It'! not you; it's
just the way things arc.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- If you fail to so.: rc~n
source~

first , you may
find out after the fact today
that the persons from whom
you sought ditt'ction were the
lmt equipped to help you .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23D.c. 21) -- It's best you do
without rather than borrow
something today chat the
lender tn~:asures . There are indicariom that too many people are carch:u now, and [he
object could get damaged.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jon. 19) •• lleins uncertain or
indcr:ilivv with thole you
have dralinp today could, in
turn, a!Tect othe" by moking
theon think thoy have •II tho
onowen. If ihor, don't, you'll ·
I" down '\'lth I 10111.
AQUAI,IUS (ion . 20-Fob.
19) •• Tukt you nnd dlttlltCful could tuiTer from a poor
performance on your part and
end up havlnK to bo done
over apin. It miMht be wber
your

to po1tpono wh~t yon c: an to

•nothor day.
I'ISCES (feb. 20-Mmh 20)
.. _ Optiminn tempered with

realism creates successes.
However, rrying to build expectations today upon false
premises will guarantee f.1il ure. Face the facts first , then
the game plan.

ARIES (March 2t-April19)
-- Luck and chance arc not
your allies roday. If you rely a
bit too heavily on them to get
you over the rough spots,
you're going to be faced with
· -failure. Make things happen
yourself.

TAURUS (April 20-May
2tl) -- Sometimes we can
fudge our way through situations :~.bout which we don't

fully"undcntond . Today, how.
. ever, you'd better have the
knowlcdse to back you up on
what you do or say.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-· Koop a tharp oye toJ•y on

any in"101vcnncnt that tmuil•
finlri1:&lt;11 dealinso. If you 8"
carelcu or inditTcrent, you
could onako A mlocolculotion
that will prove to 'be cootly.
CANCER Oun~ 21-jttly
22) •• lt tnl~ht be ono of
thooe Joyt for you where the
harder you try to pluto oth·
on, the lo11 you aro opproclated. To spare younolf fruotration&amp;, ltay away fro1n penon&amp;
who take you for granted .

.

\

�Page 86

The Daily. Sentinel

AROUND THE DIAMOND

over the weekend
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The New York Mets started th e weekend by strengthening
Philadelphia's bullpen. T hey ended it by beating the Phillies'
relievers and helping the Atlanta Braves widen thei r lead in the
NL East.
Mike Piazza gave the Mets their
second straight game-winn ing
homer in the ninth inning Sun day as
New York defeated Philadelphia 65. T he Mets won th e fin al three
games of th e fo ur-game series.
The visiting Phillies, wh o acquired
relievers Turk Wende ll and Dennis
C ook from the Mets after Fr iday
c __ _ _ _ _ _ ____. night's
gam e, lost wh en Rhea!
Cormier came out of the bullpen to serve up Piazza's blast with
one out in th e ninth.
" I haven't pitched in nine days and I wasn't real sharp, especially to face a g~y like Piazza," said Cormie r (5- 4) .
Philadelphia , in second place, fell a season- high three games
behind the Braves, who bear Montreal 8-1. T he Mets, the
defendin g NL champions, are still in fourth place, 11 1/2
games out .
"There comes a point in time (when) you can't worry about
the negative things that happen and just go out and enjoy playing the game of baseball," Piazza said . "We're just having fun
playing the games. We're not complicating things."
Wendell was victimized Saturday when former teammate
Robin Ventura hit a walk-offhoiner to spoil his Phillies debut.
"The Mets played us tough this weekend, these were not easy
1games. It seemed like the last couple of days, the last at bat was
it," said reliever Ricky Bottalico, who allowed a run in the seventh that put the Mets in front 3-2.
Piazza's 26th homer made a winner of Armando Benitez, the
Mets closer who blew his first save of the season in 25 chances
in the top of the ninth.
Going back to September, Benitez (5-3) had recorded 28
straight save opportunities.

Roundup

Burkett~!~~~~ c~:ee~r!~h ~I

• John
strikeouts and
added an RBI single to lead visiting Atlanta past Montreal.
Burkett (8-8), who retired the first 13 batters, allowed one
run and four hits in 7 1-3 innings.
The BrJves' win was tempered by the loss of right fielder
Brian Jordan, who injured his left knee and ankle while trying
to beat out an infield hit in the fir;t.
·

Pirates 4, Astros l
Todd Ritchie (7-10) allowed one unearned run in eight-plus
innings to lead Pittsburgh over visiting Houston.
Kevin Young drove in three runs for Pittsburgh, hitting an
RBI double offWade Miller (12-6) and a two-run homer off
Ron Villone.

Padres 12, Brewers 5

NatJOMI League

Pittsburgh 4, Houston 1
San Di9QO 12, Milwaukee 5

East

San Francisco 4, Arizona 3

w

Pet.

60
57

.571

L
45
48
52 52
49 57
45 61
Central
w L
Chicago
61
43
Houston
57 48
St. Louis
52 51
Milwaukee
45 58
Cincinnati
.1 63
41
Pitt sburgh
63
Wel t
w L
LOS Ang~les
61 45
Arizona
59 46
San Francisco 57 49
51 . 54
San Diego
44 61
Colorado

AllanIa
Philadelphla
Fk&gt;rida
New York
Monlreal

GB
3

.543

500. 7 1/2

.462 11 1/2
.424 15 112

Pet
GB
,586
.543 4 112
.505 8 112
.437 15 1/2
20
.394
2f)
.394
GB

Pet
.576

.562 1 112
4
.538
.486 9 112
.419 16 112

Chicago Cubs 7, St. Louis 5
Colorado 3, LO$ Angeles 2
Monday's' GamH
No games scheduled
Tuetday't G1ma
N.Y. Mets (Rusch 6·6) at Houston (Miic+d
6·8). 8 05 p.m.
FIQrida (Dempster 11 -9) at Milwaukee
(Sheets 10·7). 8:05p.m .
·
Atlanta (Millwood 2-4) at St. Louis {Hermanson b-3), 8;10 p .m.
Philadelphia (Person 9-5) at COlorado
(Bohanon 5.-6), 9:05p.m.
Monlreal (Munoz 0-0) at Arizona
(Schilli"'! 14·5), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Lieber 13·5) at San Diego
(Hitchcock 2·1), 10:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Acevedo 2·3) 1t Lot Ange..
les (Gagne 4-4~ 10:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (D.Williams 1-3) at San Francisco {Hernandez 9· 11), 10:15 p.m.

Boston·
Tor'bnfo
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

Alex Ochoa singled in 'Che go-ahead run in the ninth inning
as Colorado snapped a four-game losing streak.
The loss Was just the third in 16 games for the NL West-leaping Dodgers, who remained 1 112 games ahead of Arizona.
Colorado's Jay Powell (3-2) pitched 1 1-3 scoreless. innings.
Jose Jimenez earned his 14th save by striking out Marquis Grissom and Adrian Beltre to end the game. Matt Herges (8-8)
took the loss.
James Baldwin made his Los Angeles debut, pitching shutout
ball until Todd Helton's two-run homer in the sixth.

Cubs 7, cardinals 5
Fred McGriff went 1-for-3 in his Cubs debut and Roberto
Machado hit a two-run homer for Chicago.
McGriff, who finally agreed to join the Cubs on Friday after
waiving his no-trade clause with Tampa Bay, had a walk, RBI
single, strikeout and liner to center.
Julian Tavarez (8-6) pitched six innings. and Tom Gordon
worked the ninth for his 21st save. Matt Morris (12-7) lasted
just four innings.
.

MLB L.eading· Hitters
Seallle, .328; JaG-.mlJI, Oakland,
BATTING -Alou, Houston, .357; Be!lcman, 324; Mien-. MMeso!a, .323; ARoHouston, .351; LGonzalez, Arizona, .350; driguez, Te&gt;&lt;as, .322. .
Floyd, Flol'da. .348; Aurilia, San Frardsoo, RUNS -&amp;JzuiO, Seanle, 88; ARodriguez,
.341; v.Jro, Mon1real • .340; Pioml. Colorado, Texas. 65; MJS"'""""Y. Kansas City, n:
.'SJ7.
RAiomar, Cleveland, n; BBoooe, Seattle, 76;
RUNS -floyd, Florida, 89; LGQnzalez, M · Je1er, New Vorl&lt;. 73; MRamrm, Bos1on, 73;
zona, 89; Helton, Colorado, 88; Bert&lt;man, JGonzalez, Clewland, 73.
- . 83; Bagwell, · 82; SSosa. RBI -8Boone, 5ea.ttle, 99; MAamirez,
Bos1on. 96; JGoozalez, Clewland. 95; Thome.
Clicago. 82;
81.
RBI -l.Gonzalez, Arizona, 102: SSosa, Cleveland, 87; ARodrlguez. Texas, 85;
Cl*:ogc. 119; He11on, Colorado, 96; Be!lvnan. TMattinez, New Vorl&lt;, 81 ; GAndoraon, Ara·
-.~,~~ helm, 75; RPeJmelro, To- 75.
San Diego,~88;~.
Floyd, Floflda, 87; LWBI&lt;e&lt;, HITS -suzu~ . Seattle, 152; B8oone,·Saat11e.
138; Rl\lomar, CI&lt;MIIand, 138; 51owart. ToronColorado. 87.
tmi-Aurlla, San Franciaoo, 141; LGorwo· 10, 1'SJ; ARodriguez, Te&lt;80, 129; . -. New
loz, Arizona, 140; Berkman, · 138; Yorl&lt;. 128; ~-Kansas City, 128.
Pioml, Colorado, 129; VGuen'an&gt;, Mon1reol, DOUBlES -MJs--.&amp;y, Kanoao City, 37;
129; Floyd, Florida. 128; BGHes. -rgll. S1swart. Toron1o, 31 ; ECII!voz, Ool&lt;land, 29;
JaG-. Oak!Md, 29; O'Neill, Now Vorl&lt;. 28;
128.
DOUBLES -Be&lt;1cman, - · 34; Heftoo, ~. Oakland, 27; Mlenlkiel'.icz, MI...........
Colorado, 34; VGuenaro, Mon1real, 31 ; Abreu. 27; Kookle. Minnooota, 27; lluham. Clicago.
. Pliladolplla, 31; BGIIaa, Pl1lsllurgll, 30; Floyd, 27; EMMinez, Seanle, 27.
T111PLES -cGuzman. Mlllll&lt;IOCI1a. 13; C«»Florida. 29; Ken1, San Frard900, 29.
1AIPLES --flollins, ~. 9; NP...,, "'· 001roit, 9; Suzt.ld. Seattle, 8; AAJomar.
Colorado, 8; Vlna, St Louis, 8; Pien'e, COI- C-..J, 8; JErumaclon, Dotroil, 7; Easley,
OtadO, 6; LCaSillk&gt;, Flol'da. 6; LGoozalez, All- Dotroi1, 7; Stewal1, Toronto, 6.
zona. 6; OCabro&lt;a. Montreal, 5; Ocl'&lt;lo. COI- HOME RUNS - Thome. Cleyeland, 33;
OtadO, 5; Ken1. San Franci900, 5; GooctMn. MAami'oz. Bos1on, 32; ARodriguez, Texas.
28; CDelgado, T010010. 28; JGoozalez. Cleve• Los Angolos. 5.
HOME RUNS -ilonds, San Franciaoo, 45; lard. 21; APalrneiro, Texas, 27; Glaus, Ana·
LGonzalez, Arizona, 41 ; SSooa, Clicago, 35; helm; 26.
Hel1on, Colorado. 31; SGreen, Los Angolos. STOLEN BASES --Cedef)o, Oetroil, 38;
Suzuki, Seattle, 35; Knotllauch, New Vorl&lt;. 31 ;
3:J; CJones. - · 30; NolAn, San Diego. 29. Sorlaro. New York. 28; Mct.amora. Seanle.
AMEIIIC&gt;\N LEAGUE
BATTING -AAiomar. ~rd. .356; JGon. 27&lt;.JoCruz. Toron10. 22: ca""""". Seattle. 22:
lBieZ, ~nd.. 344; BSoone. Seallle.. 330; Je1er, New Vorl&lt;. 22.
NATIONAL LEAGUE

-·

Suzu~ .

41

60
48

58

Detroit

Kar\sas City

Pet
.609

60
60
51
45
41

Pc1

L

.571
1/2
.495 8 112
.437 14 112
.391 19 112

58
64

West

Seattle
Oakland
Anaheim
Telilas

L

76

29
49
52

58
53
46

GB

.sn

45
52

w

GB

.577 3 112
.453 16 112
2f)
.419
.324
30

61
34 71
(;en1flt

w

Cleveland
Minneso1a
Chicago

Pe1
GB
.724
.533
20
.505
23
.442 29112

58

Texa s (Da•ls 5-7) ot Baltimore (Ponson 5·
6) , 8:05p.m.
Tueod.ly'oGomH
.. Anahe im (Washburn 9...,.) at Boston (Arrojo 2·3), 7:05p.m.
Seatt1e CSele 12·2) a1 0.1ro&lt;t (Uma 2·2) ,
7:05p.m.
Minnesota (Mays 12-7) at Toronto
(Loaiza 6·9), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Oliver 8·6) at N.Y. Yankees (LittY
3-3) , 7:05p.m.
•
Ooklond (Lidlo 4-5) 111 Clevelond (Woolbrool&lt; 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
•
Tafl'4)a Bay (Wilson 3-7) at Baltimore
(Towers 6-5), 7:05 p.m.
~
Kansas City (Byrd 2-4) at Chicago Wh ile
Sox (Biddle 2·7), 8:05 p.m.

••
'

Saturday's Games
Cleveland 6. Detroit 4, 1st gameDetroit 4, Cleveland 2, 2nd game
N.Y. Yankees 12, Toronto 1
Seattle 5 , Minnesota 1
Kansas City 9, Oakland 3
Chicago White Sox 3, Boston 1
Tampa Bay 7, Texas 3, 10 innings
Anaheim 6. Baltimore 4
Sunday'• Gamel
N.Y. Yankees 9, TOfonto 3
Detroit a, Cleveland 3\
Boston 4, Chicago White Sox 3 ·
Oakland ~. Kansas City 4
Seattle 1O, MiiYlesota 2
Baltimore 1, Anaheim 0

Saturday's G1me•
Pillsburgh 9, Houston B. t st game
Houston 12, Pittsburgh 3, 2nd game
N.Y. Mets 4, Philadelphia 3
St. louis 7, Chicago Cubs 4
Los Ang eles 1O, Colorado 6
- Atlanta 10, Montreat 5
Cincinnati 5, Florida 0
San Diego 6, Milwaukee 2
San Francisco 11, Arizona 4
Sunday's Games
N.Y. Mels 6, Phifadelphia 5
Cincinnati 8, Florida 4
Atlanta 8, Montreal 1

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nomar Garciaparra quickly put to rest any questions about
whether his right wrist had healed.
Garciaparra made a triumphant return to the Red Sox, hitting a homer and a go-ahead two- run single to lead the
Boston Red Sox to a 4-3 win over the Chicago Whire Sox on
Sunday.
"The wrist feels good," Garciaparra said. "J don't think I'm
, - - - - - - - - - , going to feel any pain right now,
that's for sure."
The two- time defending AL batting champion showed no ill effects
from the operation he underwent
on opening day and provided yet
another boost to Boston's playoff
·
hopes.
The shortstop was the third key
Boston player to return in three
days. Bret Saberhagen was outstanding in his first game in nearly 22 months Friday, and center fielder Carl Everett missed 32 games with a knee injury'
before starting Saturday.
But Garciaparra may be the most important as the Red Sox
try to climb back from a season-high 3 1/2-game deficit in the
AL East behind the Yankees.
"! had goosebumps," Garciaparra said. "Hopefully, the team
gets a boost, but we know we need everybody and today it

'

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

so cenb • July ll. 2001 • Vol. 51. No. H9

Blood
drive
slated

1~~;~~,~~s::::::::~~~~~~~ji~~~

L
EXPERT TIMING- Seattle's lcliiro Suzuki attempts a bunt
the sixth inning Sunday, as the Mariners beat the Twins 10.2.
(AP)

shutout since Aaron Sele did it Aug. 22, 1999, at Boston.
Devil Rays starter Joe Kennedy (3-6) lost his fifth straight
start.

-· -· -Orioles·l., Angels 0- ·

_,__·-

Jose Mercedes pitched 6 2-.3 scoreless innings and Jeff Conine
hit an RBI double offlsmaeiValdes IJ-6) at Anaheim.
Mercedes (5-12) won for the first time in five starts, scattering six hits. Buddy Groom, the fourth Baltimore pitcher, got
four outs for his 1Oth save.

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Mariners 10, Twins 2

13ret Boone went 4-for-5 with three RB!s, giving him an ·
AL-leading 99 on the season, as host Seattle beat Minnesota for
the eighth straight time.
Ed Sprague added four RB!s - matching his season total in
one game - to help the Mariners sweep the three-game series.
Freddy Garcia (12-3) outpitched Eric Milton (9-4) in a
matchup of All-Star pitchers as Minnesota remained a halfgame behind Cleveland in the AL Central.
·

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~n up with anATJ.f Digiti! ~f'lln.tllrt!AQ 11: 139.19•..-.dpl v-t
4{(1 1)1111 minUMII!Id lOOOMflltlghf ltldwtKfnd miMHnchi!IOMhfor
orot , _, Vou11Jbo'J"liC) dlooM IOOOt'dfJ 411C.... IQ oabl.. ~ fot
c.tlll to 011'111' ATIT W~~~ 'llbKrlblrslll yovrlaQI ~Mf OI'NUonwidt

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s~plt.•rnb•·•

15 200

lr......-

1n

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY Sixty
units of blood is the Arner- .
ican Red Cross' collection
goal during a special summer blood drive scheduled
Aug. . 15 at Meigs Senior
Center.
The blood drive, whiclt
takes place from 1-6 p.m. at
the center located on
Mulberry Heights, is being
held to help replenish low
summertime blood supplies.
·
"Summer is always a
critical collection period
for the Red Cross," said
Cheryl Gergely, spokesperson for the Red Cross.
GRAND CHAMPIONS- Selected as grand champions in their clothing projects were from the left, l&lt;aitlyn DeWhurst,
"Blood collections this
Ashley Ray, Alyssa Baker, who sewed for her sister, Shae Combs and Morgan Werry. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)
summer have been below
the required 240 donors
needed each day for several weeks," she added.
Gergely said that 240
blood donors are needed in
the Tri-State area every day
to supply patients in nearly
30 local hospitals.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
"The Red Cross distribSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
utes thousands of units of
OMEROY Grand and
blood and blood compoh
nents each month to 30
reserve c ampions in several
hospitals in the area. There
clothing categories judged
is only ' one source for
Friday
afternoon
were
blood, and that is volunteer
announced
during
the
dortors:' she said.
annual 4-H style revue held in the
Gergely stressed that
Meigs County Extension Office cc;&gt;nmodern medicine is heavifi
I , de endent on blood
erence room.
__}'__ )l
---- - - - - · - r -----transfusionS and that only a
"Unlocking the Treasures ofTomorrow" was
small percentage of people
the theme of the show, which featured chests
actually donate, "probably
overflowing with jewelry and garments. Becky RESERVE CHAMPIONS - Reserve champion awards .for
less than 5 percent," she
Baer, Extension agent, assisted by several 4- H their sewing projects went to Lindsey Roach, Kristin Trad·
er, Heather Brooks, Amanda Roush and Laura Bailey, pic·
said.
members, narrated the review.
tured left to right.
All blood types are needWinners in the various categories were:
C lothes for Middle School: Lindsey Houser,
ed, however, types 0 positive, 0 negative, A negative
grand champion;
.
and B negative are the:
Clothes for High School and College: Alyssa
most in demand.
Holter, grand champion;
To be a blood donor,
Tops forTweens:Alyssa Baker, grand champion, and Laura Bailey, reserve champion;
·individuals must be ~t least
17 years old, weigh 1OS
Joyful Jumper: Morgan Werry grand champion, &amp;nd Kristin Trader, reserve champion;
pounds or more, be in
good general health; and
Ready Let's Sew: Lindsey Roach, reserve
not have donated blood
champion;
w:ithln the past 56 d;lys.
. Fun with Clothes: Ashley Ray, grand chamDonors can give blood
. pton, and Amanda Roush, reserve;
when taking most medicaLounging clothes and undergarment: Jessica
tions, including insulin and
Arnott, grand champion; Rachael Morris,
high blood pressure medreserve champion, and Christina Miller, honorabJe mentton;
ications, if their medical
condition is stable.
Sew for Others:Ashley Baker, grand champiFor further donation
on, Tiffany Hensley, reserve champion, and
information, or to check
Becky Taylor, honorable mention;
on other bloodmobile
Dress-up Out6ts:JessicaArnott, grand.cham- MORE TOP WINNERS - These teenagers took top
awards and received grand champions in their respective
locations, interested indi- . . pion, and Erin Gerard, reserve c~ampion;
categories. Shown in the garments they created are Lind·
viduals may call toll free 1sey Houser, Elaine Putman. Theresa Baker, Jessica
800-GIVE-L!FE.
Arnott, Amanda Yeager and Alyssa Holter.
Plein SH Ch•mplons, A:J

Hlp: lOs
Low: lOs

Today'I

Sentinel

Ramon .Hernandez's two-run single capped host Oakland's
four-run eighth inning againstJasim Grimsley (0-5) .
Kansas City had rallied for four runs in the top of the eighth
against A's closer Jason lsringhausen (4- 2). ·

2 Sections - 12 Paps

.Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Rangers 2, Devil.Rays 0

Rick Helling p1tched a four-hitter for liis. fourth career
shutout, and Craig Monroe hit his first major league homer for
host Texas.
.
Hellinp: (8-8) became the first Rangers pitcher to throw a

Biggio.-·

SALE PRICED

SALE.
EXTENDED!

lOWEll C.
4359 51118 RIUI8180 •

S3,500

•

Powell's
•
-1n

BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Six juveniles and three adults
are being questioned in two breaking and
entering incidents at Powell's Super Valu.
Pomeroy Police · Chief Mark Proffitt said
. today that the police department is close to filing charges against the individuals responsible
for breaking into the local grocery on Second
Street.
According to reports, Patrolman Ronnie
Spaun was tra~eling down Second Street
around 3:43 a.m. Saturday when he noticed
that the back door of the supermarket. was partially open and damaged.
Jean Powell, co-owner of the store, and members of both the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department and Middleport Police Department arrived on the scene to discover the inside
of the grocery had been vandalized and that an
undetermined amount ·of money had been
No suspects were found
stolen.
.
. inside the buildmg.
No charges were filed at that time and the
inCident was still under investigation, said Proffitt.
.
Around 12:33 a.m. Monday, Proffitt said that
the department received a call about several susPlease IH Bre•k-ln.. Al

Sta~e to form .
,_____________
n

g

COLUMBUS (AI') - Terry Conant has
seen the day-after devas.tation of staged dog
fights - animals with broken legs, gaping
wounds, their ears cut off and cauterized' to
avoid messy blood loss.
"Professionals do it for profit and to have the
meanest dogs in the state," said Conant, the
Delaware County dog warden and president of
· the Ohio County Dog Wardens' Association.
"They fight these dogs literally to the death or
to the point where they cannot be rehabilitate d."
Veterinarians, prosecutors and dog wardens
plan to meet Wednesday as the state's first dog
fighti ng task force debates ways to curb the illegal practice.
.
The Ohio Dog Fighting Task Force will
research the problem of dog fighting in Ohio
and review the resources that police have to
combat it, said Lt. Gov. Maureen O 'Connor,
who formed the task force with Ohio Agriculture Director Fred Dailey.
"In many people's mentality it's a 'sporting
event: and we have to dispel that," said O'Con-

PI•••• see Tlsk. A:J .

le~ders oppose Social Security benefit cuts

Details, A2

•

Lotteries

WASHINGTON (AP) - New Social
Security legislation that wo uld create
personal investment accounts that President Bush favors won't get White House
support because it also cuts benefits and
taxes more income.
"A tax hike is a tax hike is a tax hike,
and the president opposes tax hikes,"
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer
said Monday. "The president does not
think that's an effective way to save Social

AS
OHIO
. 82-4 Pick]: 5-1-7; Pick 4: 1-5-3-5

85 Budle11 5: 4+1~:15-34

A4

A3 W.VA.

81.3-4.6 Deily 5: 0-2-2 Deily 4:6-746
A2 C 2001 Ohio VaUey Publishing Co.

Secunty."
. House leaders in both parties also say
they oppose the proposal by Reps. Jim
Koll:ie, R.- Ariz., and Charles Stenholm,
D-Texas, that would create investment
accounts for all workers.
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., .
said he could not support the proposed
legislation.
"No, not the way it is, and we've said
before we're not going to raise taxes for

Social Security and we're not going to
cut benefits," Hastert said Sunday on
NBC's "Meet 1he Press."
To pay for the private accounts, benefits would be cut, especially for middleand upper-income workers. The bill also
would raise the level of earnings that
could be taxed, reduce cost-of-living
adjustments and speed up the current
schedule raising the retirement age from
65 to 67 .

Gallia County Fair li111e!

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Regular.Price $5,465

www.mydaily~entinel.com

,

Cha •es
pen 1ng

'

CHAMPIONS

Tino
homers
and Alfonso Soriano drove in three nnis as New Y&lt;&gt;rk won its
eighth straight.
The Yankees swept the three-game series at SkyDome,
outscoring Toronto 30-5. Andy Pettitte (11 -6) allowed three
runs on seven hits. in six-plus innings.
Joey Hamilton (5-8) gave up a season-high eight runs and 10
· hits in five innings.

HUGE SAVINGS

Hometown Newspaper

FAIR CLOTHING

save.

Athletics 6, Royals 4

Melp County's

Aug. 15

~'"

Ciarciaparra strong
in 2001 debut ·

Giants 4, Diamondbacks 3

·

.
.
.
64

••

Moncl8y't G•me

wE••• L

New York

•

Texa s 2, Tampa Bay 0

Amerlcll'l League

Ryan Klesko and Bubba Trammell homered, and Alex Arias
hit a bases-loaded double as San Diego won another series
wasn't just me."
from Milwaukee.
Garciaparra made an error and went 0-for-2' in the first three
The Padres, who took two of three this weekend, have never .
innings.Then, with Chicago leading 2-1 on Jose Valentin's 16th
lost a series to the Brewers. San Diego is 9-0-1 in series since
--homer, Garciaparrni-emh·e ga rrre-with a 405-=foot solo homer
. ~--~.r.~·ibNai.iKe;e_] mneatlieNational League in 1998, going 23-9
off Sean Lowe in the sixth.
overall.
"He got himself prepared," designated hitter Dante Bichette
Kevin Jarvis (8-8) won despite allowing 10 hits in five-plus
said.
"He wasn't going to step on the field unless he was ready
innings. He added a sacrifice fly for his I Oth RBI this season.
to help us win and that's exactly what he did."
Boston loaded the bases in the seventh against Alan Embree
Marvin Benard hit a two-run pinch homer in the ninth
(0-1) and Garciaparra lined a single to center to make it 4-3.
inning off Byung-Hyun Kim (3-3) as San Francisco rallied to
"Every ~ime he comes ~o the plate, everybody expect' good
sweep Arizona in a four-game series.
things to happen and he usually doesn't disappoint;' Boston
Shawn Estes (8-5) scattered four hits over eight innings.
catcher Scott Hatteberg said.
Randy Johnson scattered seven hits and struck out 12 over
David Cone allowed two runs in six inningS as Boston won
eight innings. He struck out every Giants starter except Shafor his 11th straight start. Rod Beck got the win and Derek
wori Dunston.
·
Lowe struck out three of the four batters he faced for his 21st

.

Tuesday

81

Monday, July lO, 2001

Mets ·help Braves

Rockies 3, Dodgers 2

SPORIS: Tiger, Annika survive Monday mixer,

Customer

Look for the Holzer Medical Center Mobile Unit
during the Fair, July 30 ·_August 4. Free screenings
~
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