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The Daily Sentinel

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mark McGwire doesn't ca re where he bats, asJong as he hits.
Batthng a season- long slu mp, M eG wire was dropped to sixth
in the order Sunday for the first time since 1994 . He went 3for-3 with four RJ3ls as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 9-0 for their 11th straight victory.
h doesn't matte r where you hit ," said M eG wire, in a 3 -for32 slide coming in . "They're going to pitch you the same way
and I got some balls to. hit. and put tht•m in play."
Matt Morris .(16-7) allowed fiw hits in seve n innings for the
Cardinals, who closed within a half-game of seco nd- place
Chicago and ~emained 2 1/ 2 games bac k of NL Central-leading Houston.
"We're not there yet; we're still in third place," McGwire said.
·"There's no celebrating." .
In other games it was San Francisco 4,Atlanta I; Houston 12,
Pittsburgh,2; Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 4; Arizona. 13, Chicago
6; New York 6. Los Angeles 5: Montreal 2, San Diego 1: and
Colorado 6, Montreal 5. ·
At St. Louis, David Coggin (4-2) allowed three runs and nine
hits in six innings.
10

NatiOnal League
East

w

l

Alfanta

68

55

Philadelphia

67
59

56

Florida
New York
Montreal

Houston
Chicago

St. Louis
Mitwaukee
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

Pet.
.553
545
.480

64

GB

Colorado 6, Florida 5
N.Y. Mets 6. los Angeles 5
Montreal 2, San Diego 1
Arizona 13, ChiCago Cubs 6
~ San Francisco 4, Atlanta 1

1

9

Monday's Games
Milwaukee (Wright .8·8) at Chicago Cubs
(Ueber 1&amp;5), 5:05pm., 1st game
St. L.oula (W.WIIII1m1 to-1) at Cincinnati (Reitsma 5-13), 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (levrault 5-8) at Chicago
Cubs (Zambrano 0-0), DH . 2nd game

56
53

68

.452 12 112

71
Central

.427 15 t/2

w

l

Pet

71

53

.573

68
68
53
48

54
55
68

.557

2

.553

2 112

.438 16 1/2

TUesday'S Games

75
78

.390 22 t/2
.3Q6 25 1/2

Milwaukee (Quevedo 2·1) at Chicago'
Cubs (TBA), 2:20p.m .
San Francisco (Ortiz 13-6) al Montreal
{Pavano 0-1), 7:05p.m.
.
Los Angeles (Carrara 3-1 ). at Florida
(Penny 7-6), 7:05 p.m.
·
· Arizona {Schilling 18·5) at PiMburgh
{D.WUiiams t-5), 7:05p.m.
Houston {Astacio 7-14) at Philadelphia
(Figueroa 4-3), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Hermanson 11-9) at Cincinnati (Acevedo 3-4), 7:05p.m.
Colorado (Hampton 12-9) at N.Y. Mets
{Leiter 7·10). 7:10p.m.
San Diego (Jarvis tQ-9) al Atlanta (Bur·
'
kett to-8), 7:35p.m.

45

Wtest

w

n

l

Pet

51

70

54
57

.585
.564

Arizona
San Francisco
Los Angeles .

67

San Diego

61 . 62

Colorado

53

.540
.496
.431

70

GB

GB
2 112
5 1/2

11
19

S..turday's Games

HouSton 3, Pittsburgh 0
Atlanta 3. San Francisco 1
Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 5

Colorado 8, Florida 3
St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 3

Astros 11, Pirates l
Jeff Bagwell hit a three-run homer in a six-run second and
Richard Hidalgo had four Rl3ls as Houston finished a fourgame home sweep.
.
Bagwell's 32nd homer gave him 100 RB!s, making him the
eigh th player in major league history with six stra ight 30. homer, 100-RBI seasons.
Rookie Roy Oswalt (1 0-2) allowed two runs - one earned
- and five hits in eight innings, and struck out a seaso n-high
10.
Todd Ritchie (9- 11). gave up seven runs and six hits in 1 23 innings. ·

Diamondbacks 13, Cubs 6
Sammy Sosa was 4-for-5 with hi s 14th homer in 27 games
and 44th overall, but Arizona rallied from a 5-1 deftcit to complete a three-game sweep and extend its win ning streak to
nine, matching its longest this year.
Arizona set a major league record with 13 pinch-homers this
season when Greg Colbrunn con nected in the seventh.
Bobby Witt (1-1) pitched one innin g, dropping visitin g
C hicago tq 6-1 1 in August. Will Ohman- (0, I) was the loser. :-

e.at
w ·· l

rr

New York
Boston ·

67
58

TOfOfl!O

Baltimore
Tampa Bay

53
44

San Diego 4, Montreal 3
Arizona 5, Chicago Cubs 3
N.Y. Mets 5, los Angeles 4

51
55

.589'
.549

66

.468
.427

71
81

Central

w

Pet
.561

89

54

Minnesota

65
60
51

59
62
71
74

Oerroh
Kan,.as City

50
West

GB
5
15

20
.352 29 t/2

L

Cleveland

.524

.492

GB
4 t/2
t/2

8

.418 17112
.403 19 t/2

l

Pet

GB

SeaHie
Oakland
Anaheim

89
72

54

.718
.581
.532
.435

17
23

Texas

35
52
58
70

35

Meigs County's

Ctevet1nd 4, Anaheim 2
Oakland 5, Chicago Whl1e Sox 4
Texas 12, Toronto 5

Seanle 7, N.Y. Yankees 6
Boston 5, Baltimore 1
Kansas City 8. Detroit 4
Minnesota 6, Tampa Bay 4

so cents· August 21,

Boston (F.Castillo 7·7) at Anaheim
(Valdes 8·6), t 0:05 p.m.
Detn&gt;t (Sparks 8-7) at Seattle (Garcia 14·
4), 10:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Finley 5--5) at O.kllnd (Zito
8-1), t 0:05 p.m.

,

Baltimore (Mercedes 7-13) at Tampa Bay
(P.WI1son 5·8), 7:1 5p.m.
Toronto (Lyon 1-2) ar Minnesota (John·
son 1·2 or Radke 10·8), 8:05p.m.

N.Y. Yankees (O.Hemandez 0-5) at

Cltoveltond (Woodard 2·2)

ot

Oaldond

(lldlo 8-5~ 10:05 p.m.

·

Sunday'• Gemea

Texas 8, Toronto 4
Be.!tlmore13, Boston 7
Anaheim 4, Cle¥811nd 1
Seattle 10, N.Y. Yankees 2
Detroit 4, Kansas Clly 3
Tampa Bay 5, Minnesota 1

Sunday's Games
Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati •

. St. Louis 9. Philadelphia 0
Hous1on 12, Pittsburgh 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE

·Seattle keeps on winning; O's outgun Red Sox
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Don't look at Seattle's series win over
the three-time World Series champion
New York Yankees as a measure of its
success rhis season.
. The Mariners aren't.
Seattle beat New York 10- 2 Sunday to
re main undefeated in 21 road series (170-4) bebind Mike Cameron, who hit a
grand slam and a three-run homer and
tied a Seattle record by driving in eight
runs.
Seattle has not ·lost three straight all
year and is on pace to tie the Cubs'
record of 116 w ins in a season set in
1906. With the win Sunday, th~
Mariners (89-35) matched a franchise
.
best at 54 games over .500.
Cameron went 4- for- 4 - he also had
an RBI single in the fifth - and tied the
club record for RBis set by Alvin Davis
in 1986 and matched by Mike Blowers
in 1995.
·
Jamie Moyer (14-5), who missed the
AL C hampionsh ip Series last season won by the Yankees in six games because of an injury, gave up five hits
and one run in seven inn ings.
Boone hit an RBI single and
Cameron hit his three-run hom er off
Andy Pettitte (14-7) in the first to give

/fs 8, White Sox 7

Seattle its second good start in a row. On
Saturday, the Mariners opened with
three runs before holding on for a 7-6

Jermaine Dye drove in four runs and
pincb-hitter Jeremy Giambi had a go-ahead,
w1n.
two-ron
homer otf Rocky Biddle (4-8) in
Seattle went 6-3 against New York to
the slxth and Oakland beat host Chicago.
win the season series for the second
Dye also homered and had a three-run
straight year.
double for the A\ who opened a four-game
lead over Boston in the AL wild card race.

Orioles 13, Reel Sox 7

In Boston, Baltimore overcame a 6-1
deficit, amassing a se'ason-high 19 hits.
Jeff Conine had a career-high five hits
and drove in three runs, and David Segui
had a homer and three RBis.
C hris Richard drove in three runs, and
Cal Rip ken Jr. and Tony Batista each had
two RB!s as the Orioles scored three
runs m the fifth and fo urmore in the
sixth.

Devil Ravs 5, 'IWins 1
Rookie Joe J!ennedy (4-8) gave up
one run and three hits in six innings for
his first win si nce July 3, as 'visiting
Tampa Bay sent Minnesota to its ninth
loss in 10 games.
The Twins, 10-27 si nce the All- Star
break, got just four hits - three by
Doug Mientkiewicz - . and are 1-6
against the Devil Rays this season.

~~~!~~~:X ~~~r~~~~~!

37th homer and Raf.1el Palmeiro added
a two- run shot. Mike Lamb went 3-for5 with a homer and two doubles for
Texas, which has won two straight after
losing their previous five.
··

·

Tl~:ers

4, Royals 3

Nate ~rnejo (1 -0) ea.rnea his fi~t major
league win, allowing two runs and five hits
in 6 1-3 innings as Detroit defeated visiting
Kansas City.
C had Durbin (1-4) gave up four runs-·
o ne earned - and seven hits for the second
complete game of his career. Durbin was
hurt by shortstop Neifi Perez's error in the
fifth, which helped the Tiger.; break a 1-all
tie.

~o~~d&amp;~~~cF:!! ~

Mike Piazza
four runs at
Dodger Stadium to drop third-pla(:e Los Angeles 5 1/2 games
behind NL West-leading Arizona.
Steve Trachsel (7-11) won for the fifth time in six decisions,
sending the Dodgers to their 13th loss in 19 games. He allowed
four runs and eight hits in seven- plus innings. Armando Benitez pitched the ninth for his 29th save.
'
Chan Ho Park (11 -9) allowed fo ur runs - three earned and seven hits in five innings.

Expos 2, Padres 1 .
Tony Armas Jr. (9-11 ) took a. one-h it shutout into the ninth
and struck out a career-high I 0. H e allowed singles to Dave
Magadan in the sixth and Tony Gwynn in the ninth at San
Diego. Scott Strickland struck out Phil Nevin with rnnners at
the corners for his first save.
Peter Bergeron hit an RBI single in the sixth off Junior
Herndon (1-2), who forced in a run with a bases-loaded walk
to Jose Cabrera.

2001 • Vol. 52, No.4

www.mydailysentinei.com

Council OKs library variance
BY ToNY ·M. LEAcH

Mayor John Blaetmar said the proposed
construction ·si.te, adjacent to the library
POMEROY - A flood variance for on Main Street, falls within the village's
the construction of a new addition to the 100-year floodplain and that a variance
Meigs County District Public Library had to be .granted before construction
was granted during Pomeroy Village could begin.
Council's regular meeting Monday.
"We feel that there is good and sbfliCouncil voted to grant the flood vari- cient cause to grant this variance and the
ance after answering several questions new addition to the library will prove
used by the Federal Emergency Manage- beneficial to the entire community," said
. ment Agency (FEMA) in evaluating Blaettnar.
whether a community is following sound
"The information provided . to us by
floodplain management practices, arid · FEMA assisted us with reaching a solid
meeting the minimum requirement&lt; of decision on the matter and we are lookthe National Flood and Insurance Pro- ing forward to the development of this
gram (NFIP) .
new project," he added.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Byrd
·wants the ·
electric
chair

After deliberating on the matter, council determined that the project does meet
flood way requirements of the village's
Aood ordinance, and both FEMA and
state regulations.
In other matterS, council:
• approved a resolution to increase
appropriations for th e 200 I year;
• approved a resolution ·that wili allow ·
for the transfer of monies from the general fund to the street fund:
• agreed to purchase 10 new metal covers for village trash barrels at a cost of$60
apiece. Voting against the purchase was
Councilmen George Wright and Victor

,

Please see Llbr•ry. AJ

New arrival

Local blood drive
'

collects 74 units
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Rought, Bryan
Shan~,
POMEROY - A total of Harold Norton, David King.
74 units of blood was donat- Betty Coughenour, Sarah
ed at last week's visit of the Dailey, Jacky Coughenour,
Ameri can Ked 'Cross Blood- Robert Tobin, Tamela Jones, ·
mobile to the· Meigs County David Elliot, Paul Marr, Don
Senior Citizens Center in Vaughn, Jackie· Hildebrand;
Pomeroy.
Stephanie Pickens; Barabar
M ultiplc gallon donors Mathews Crow, John Musswere; Roger Man ley and er, ]van Powell, Terry C ulc
Arthur H..oush, one gallon; lums,John Redovian, ResetBetsy Nicodemus, two gal- ta Redovian, Geoffrey Willons; Kenneth Wiggens, four son, Sampson Hall, James
gallons; Bryan Shank, seven Witherall.
gallons;Thomas Hart, 12 galRACINE_ Hary Holter,
Ions; Paul Marr, 13 gallons.
Timothy Thoren, Arthur
Donors by commu nity
Roush , Kenneth Wiggens,
were:
POMEROY _
Debra Harry Brown, Janice Slaser,
Mora, Jenny Long, H..oger · R~nald Sals_er, Sharon Hall,
Manley Sr., Bethany Cre- Mtchael Sw1gger, Patsy ·Cormeans, Thomas Hart, Timo- nell,
Evelyn
Mugrage,.
thy Hall, Eunice Jones, Car- Charles Mugrage, Michael
olyn Charles, Mary Spencer, Ables, Dawna Arnold, Barnar
Billy
Spencer,
Gerald
Please IH Drive. Al .

Fair officers
find •good, not
greaf receipts

COLUMBUS (AP) John W. Byrd Jr. says he'd
rather go to the electric
chair than be executed by
injection for a fatal stabbing
that his attorneys maintain
· was committed by an
accomplice.
Byrd plms to choose the
chair to illustrate the -brutality of capital punishment,
but the decision to ca.rry out
an execution in this unusual
case rests in the hands of the
state Parole Board and Gov.
Bob Taft.
Byrd's lawyer.; have asked .
the board to reconunend
that Taft commute '"~~_!;!J=-,..-J-­
tence to life in prison,
board is expected to make
its reconunendation to Taft
on Friday.
.
"What his attitude has
been, if they're going to
ex.e cute him, he should
make it as difficult as he
possibly
can,"
public
defender David Bodiker
said Monday. "He's not
going to go quiedy into the
night."
Byrd, 37, is scheduled to
be executed on Sept. 12, in
what could be Ohio's first
electrocution and third execution since 1963. In Ohio,
where 202 men are on
death row, inmates may
choose between lethal
injection and the electric
Byrd's attorneys acknowledge their client took pa.rt
in · the 1983 robbery, but
they maintain an accomplice fatally stabbed convenience store clerk Monte
Tewksbury.

Jo hn Thomson (1-5), recovering from shoulder surgery, won
for the first time sin ce Aug. 15, 1999, allow in g two ru ns and six
hits in seven innings .
Larry Walker and Mark Little homered, sending visit in g
Florida to its seventh straight loss. Dan Miceli stru ck out Derrek Lee wi th runners on first and second for his first save.
Jesus Sanc hez (2-3) gave up four runs and 10 hits in four
mnmgs.

CHOOSE FROM OUR PACKAGES OR DESIGN YOUR OWN!

Summer Special ... 3 consecutive .
days unlimited greens rees ' •. $99
per person• Hotels not inCluded.
·Available May IS-September 15
Doe,r not in(·/tu)r Ct~pitof Hi//, 0,\'1110~11'
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Southern Swin.9 ... 3 days,
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Magnolia Grove ... starting
at $ 171 per person

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - " It was .a
good year, bat not a great
year."
That was how Meigs
Coun ty Fair Board President
described the
2001 ·fair which closed Sat_urday.
H e was referring to admissions paid and season ticke ts
sold ''··at th e gate which
totaled $100,372 this year,
more than $4,000 down
from last year's record figure

of$ 104,269.
While the receipts
down from last year, lh~
were higher than in four Of
the past six years when ttle
figures ranged from a low of
$81 ,588_in _!295, to "'"-'"!&gt;"-- , last year.
The figures on this year's
fair do not include about
2,500 season and membership tickets sold in businesses
prior to and during the fair,
Holter and other board

were

Pie•••- hlr,AJ

Sentinel
2Sedlons-12,.p.

Sports
Weather

The Tripp family of Tripp Dairy ·Farm In Pomeroy hopes that it's a good omen - this new calf
was born In the show ring at the Rocksprings Fairgrounds early Thursday. To make the day even
more special, ' mom ' was l.a ter named grand champion Brown Swiss in the open class dairy
show. Ryan Tripp Is pictured with the calf in his pen . (Brian J. Reed photo)

Hlp: lOs

l'oda(s

Calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials
Objtuarjes

.FAIR REVIEW- Gathering in the secretary's office on the

Low: 50s
Details, A2

Lotteries

AS

OHlO
82-4 Pick J: 34-7; Pick 4: 3-6-4-4
85 Bud·•~ 5: 1 -~17-26

A4
A3 W.VA.
81.3-4 o.Jiy 3: 4-3-1 Dally 4: 3-3-4-6

A2

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bay aniJ BeyonJ... 3 days, 2
nights, Stay at historic Grand
Hotel. play Magnolia Grove,
and Lakewood .... starting at
$213 per person

Price~ are per person, based'Orl doutJle occupancy
&lt;lnd pre-1elected hotel~ . Summer S~lat include5
unlimited replay &lt;1l same sib!. C11rt fe! d11rq!d for
all rounds. Subject to a...Jitabitity. Som! restrictions
may appty. Carts arnl tn arl! not included in pric!.
V~ lkl May 15-Septi!mber 15, ZOOl.

waQ~tlo n

Offi~ials upbeat about burley crop, sales season.
· LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - First came marveled at the resilience of the crop
bad weather, downpours th~t delayed· that farme rs are tiow hauling from fields
tobacco settin g and later swept away . to barns, a late-s ummer ritual across
some plants. T hen blue mold attacked, Kentu cky.
picking away at the pot.ential harvest.
"It's an excellent crop, considering
Even so, Kentucky's burley crop has how it started," Palmer said·. " I think
turned ou t be tter than ·expected and farmers are pretty happy with how the
co uld fetch a strong price th is fall, two crop turned out."
tobacco experts said.
. Excessive sp rin~ rain held up setting
Gary Palmer, extension tobacco spe- in part.s of Kentucky and kept some
cialist at the University of Kentucky, · plants from developing strong roots,

making them more susceptible to, dis.
ease and drought. G ulley-washers late in
the seaso n swept away som e plants
before they could be cut.
In between, blue mold took a tolt
reducing the crop by perhaps 4 million
pounds.
But the burley that survived shoui~
prove rewarding for its growers, u~
agricultu ral economist Will Snell said. :

&lt;

If you have health concerns or questions; call the
Holzer Health Hotiine.
FOR RfSfRVAnONS &amp; Tff riMES

A specially trained Holzer Medical Center RN is

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6:00 am - 2:00 am, seven days q week

E-mai l: reservations@rtjgolf.com
For a complete state

Rock Springs Fairgrounds Sunday afternoon to review the
money and attendance figures for the 2001 fair were fair
board officers, from left, Ed Holter, president, standing,
Debbie Watson , secretary, Bob Callaway, treasurer, and
Kenny BUCkley, vice president.

Summertime Woes?,

Summer Special does not incll.lde hotels .

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

chair.

Rockies 6, Marlins 5 .

TOP THIS- Mets' Mike Piazza follows through for his second
home run of the game Sunday. (AP)

Hometown Newspaper

Chicago White So~t: (Lowe 6-3) at Kansas

C'i'f (Steln 4·6), 8 :05p.m.

Texas (Davis 6-8), 8:05p.m.
Chk:ago White Sox (Garland 4-4) a1
Kansas City (Byrd 6-4), 8:05p.m .
Boston (Cone 7·2) at Anaheim (Schoenewels: 1o-8), 10:05 p.m.
Detrofi (Weaver to-t2) at Seattle (Sale
12·4) , 10:05 p :m.

S.turday's Gamel

,

Toronto (Escobar 4.-5) .al Minnesota
(Mil'S t2'ft), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 16-1) at Texas
(Helling 9·9), 8:05 p.m.

Tueaday'a Games

w

66

en 1ne

Moodily's Gamel

PeL

Tuesday.

•

Oakland 8, Chicago While Sox 1

Amerl.:.n League

Chk:ago'

Giants 4, Braves 1
Andres Galarraga broke a 1-1 tie with a two-run single off
Tom Glavine (11-6) in a three-run fifth as San Francisco
stopped visiting Atlanta's four-game winning streak. Glavine
lost for the first time since June 13 .
· John VanderWal added hi s 17th pinch homer, most among
active players. Barry Bonds, who hit his 54th homer Saturday,
was 0- for-2 with two. walks.
San Francisco remained 2 1/2 games behind Arizona, the NL
West leader. Atlanta stayed one game ahead of second-place
Philadelphia in the NL East.
Jason Schmidt (9- 7) improved to 3- 1.with the Giants, allowing one run and f.ve hits in seve n innings. Robb Nen pitched
the ninth for his NL-Ieading 36th save.

SPORIS: Griffey ends Cardinal winning streak, a1 ·

Monday, Aupst 10, 1001

AROUND THE DIAMOND -

NATIONAL LEAGUE

McGwire, dropped to sixth,
drives in four runners in win

Page 86

guld t caiiUOO.ALABAMA or vislt www.touralabamf:Org •

(800) 462·5255

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•

,
•

'

(

J

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Aug. 21
AccuWeathere forecast for
MICH.

.. ~r-(Toi~~&lt;J

ol
I Manalleld
I

...\)I

156'110'

I•

0

0

0
KY.

Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001

v-~~~ o

w,vA...

SANDUSKY (AP) - Sliding into the
front seat of the nation's tallest rvller
coaster, Dick Kinzel tucked his tie into
his shirt and left a little extra space
between his soiery bar and his lap.
"Nothing wrong with some air time,"
he said.
The president and chief executive officer of Cedar Fair LP. which owns 11
amusem ent and water parks, enjoys riding record-breaking roller coasters and
th e ups and dow·l)s of a business that
often depends on matters out of his con- ·
trol - the weath er and the economy.
" How can't ·you love this," he said after
rocketing more than 90 mph on the
Millennium Force at C edar Point, the
company's flagship park.
Cedar Fair's growth hasn 't been quite

that fast. But it has added eight parks
since 1995 to become the world's fifth
largest amusement park company in
terms of attendance.
About 14 million people passed
through the ·gates of Cedar Fair parks in
2000, putting it only behind Walt Disney
Attractions, Six Flags Inc., Universal Studios Recreation Group and AnheuserBu sch Theme Parks, according to
Amusement Business, a trade magazine.
C edar Fair has been conservative in
expanding its stable of parks and resisted
deals that would have forced it to go into
debt, Kinzel said.
Instead, it has focused on acquiring
family owne.d parks.
" Most of them were ma and pa
parks," he said. " Most sold out ·because

c 2001 Accuweather. lnc.
repair and personal property and automobile loss due to disasters. The program. can also pay /nedical and dental expenses.

·Buckeye Egg trial begins

Chance of rain set Wednesday

NEWARK (AP) - A lawsuit filed by about 20 neighbors
against the state's largest egg producer over odors and flies that
they say come from the company's operation&gt; in Licking County went to trial on Monday.
·
The neighbors of Buckeye Egg Farm's operations near Croton in northwest Licking County are seeking damages in the
trial that started in Licking County Common Pleas Court
before Judge Gregory Frost.
Neighbors of Buckeye Egg's operations near Croton and elsewhere have complained for years about infestations of flies,
odors and environmental problems caused by the company.
· Frost ordered the company to pay a $62,500 fine on Aug. 6
after finding that the company improperly disposed of wastewater and failing to stop a large outbreak of flies -this spring.

showers and thunderstorms
during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. High in the upper
80s .
Friday.. .Partly cloudy. Low
in the mid 60s and high in the
mid 80s.
Saturday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Low in the
mid 60s and high in the upper
80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thun. derstorms. Low in the upper
DAYTON (AP) - More than I 00 investors are facing losses
60s and high in the mid 80s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Low of up to S ISO million in what they say was a fraud scheme now
around 60 and high in the under investigation by a grand jury in New Jersey.
The investors say the losses resulted from short-term loans
lower 80s.
they made to Robert J. Ball, who conducted business as RJB
Sales Inc. in Hoboken, N.J., the Dayton Daily News reported
Sunda~
·
, Lawsuits have been filed in Dayton and Michigan on behalf
of the investors, who include Max Guttman, former chairman
CANTON (AP) -Are piles of scrap metal on a sculptor's
of Elder-Beerman Stores Corp.
property art materials or junk? A judge has come down on the
Mayer Morganroth, a Southfield. Mich., attorney, said he is
side of junk.
representing 14 Michigan investors who lost $3.7 million. But
The Stark County Common Pleas Court judge on Monday
he put total losses at $150 million.
ordered that the materials for an art project that GOJO Industries commissioned for its headquarters in Akron be removed
from the artist's property.
.
Judge Sara Lioi found artist P.R. Miller in contempt of court.
AKRON (AP) -The state is about to begin v.'ork to widen,
She authorized Lawrence Township to remove the scrap metal
dee]Jen
and straighten_ a 2,00Q,.foot...c.anallinking ·the-Portageexpens ,
But Miller's attorney says the issue is about art, not junk, and
promises to appeal.
·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast: .
Tonight ... Clear and calm .
. Low in the mid 50s.
Wednesday... Becoming ·
mostly cloudy followed by the
chance for showers and thun derstorms in the a!iernoon.
High in the lower 80s. Light
south wind increasing early in
the afternoon to I 0 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent .
Wednesday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low in
the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... A chance of

Report: investor loss heavy

Artist told to .dean up

State launches canal repair ... ,.

Contrad offers 4% .~aise
DAYTON (AP) - Dayton teachers would get a 4 percent
raise and a say in accountability standards and the school calendar if they ratifY a contract offered by the school board.
Teachers, who planned to vote on the contract Tuesday,
would also get extra pay based on years of servi~e. Dayton's base
pay is comparable to neighboring districts but teachers at the
top of its pay scale make thousands less than their counterparts
in suburban districts.
The amount of extra pay depends·on length of service. Some
steps in the contract add more than 2 percent on top of the
negotiated increase while others add none.
The deal may bring other changes in 2002-03. The contract
creates two committees. One would study whether to make the
school year and day longer: The other would recommend an
accountability plan to the board by June 30.

Recruits begin academy work
CI N CJN N ATI (AP) - Police Chief Torn Streicher told
Cincinnati Police Academy recruits on their fi~st day of class
that humility is the most important quality of a police officer.
" Yes, you may be special because of the power and authority
you have," he said. "But you better be damn humble with it.
You're not better than anybody else."
The message comes at a time when the city's police department is facing increased levels of violence following April's riots
and criticism and lawsuits alleging the police have a history of
racial profiling. .
·
The 27 recruits - 18 white, nihe black, six female - will
spend the next 23 weeks at the academy.

• rbOat
EScapee 10Und On nve
.1.

CANTON (AP) - Louis Allen White's riverboat cruise is
taking him back to jail in Ohio.
White escaped from the Stark County jail in July. He was
found by West Virginia authorities on a riverboat Friday.
ShcriffTimothy Swanson said· his department received a tip
that White was on a riverboat on the Ohio River · in the
. . Moundsville, W.Va .. area.
Swanson said his department is waiting to see if White will
fight extradition to Stark County. If the 28-year- old Canton
man does not, the Stark County prosecutor will be contacted
to work on a warrant for White's return.

Flood victims get money
C INC INNATI (AP) - Victims of last month's floods in
southwest Ohio will be the first to get state Individual Assistancc Grants, Gov. Bob Taft said J\:londay.
.
Fifteen chec ks averaging about $5,200 each were mailed Friday, Taft's offi ce said.
Flood victims in Butler, Hamilton, Clermqnt, Preble, Mont~
go mery and Warren counties are eligible for the program until
Sept. 27. They must first get a referral letter from the U.S. Small
Business Administration and be rejected for a loan from the
SllA .
·
The program began July 1 and p,ays for things such as home

•

Restaurant
owner drops
charge
.
against mayor

.

TOLEDO (AP) -A restaurant owner who accused the
city's mayor of threats and
intimidation dropped his criminal case as the trial was to
begin Monday.
John Skiadas, owner of
Pepe's Mexican Restaurant &amp;
Cantina, said he had no confidence in the special prosecutor
the city's law department
appointed to handle the case.
"We feel we 'vc been set up
to lose this case," said Skiadas'
wife, Georgette.
Carry Finkbeiner, a Democrat first elected as mayor 'in
1994, had been accused of
threatening to take official
action against Skiadas in July
2000 because of delays in
opening the restaurant in the
city-owned Erie Street Market, where vendors sell specialry foods and crafts. .
"From day one, he didn't
' have a case;' Finkbeiner said.
Fmkbemer was accuse? of
grabbmg and shaking Skiadas
while yelling obscemlle~ m his
face. Skiadas ~a.td at the time he
was traumatized by the_ confrontatton and ch.~cked IntO a
hospttal wllh cardiaC problems.
Charge~ of dtsorde~ly c~n~
duct and mte_rfermg wnh ctvil
nghts were disnussed earher m
the case.
Finkbeiner pleaded innocent
to a charge of coercion, which
carries a maximum sentence of
90 days in jail and a $750 fine.
The mayor said he used
strong words in his ITJCeting
with 55iadas bur didn't do anything wrong. Finkbeiner said
he went to ' the restaurant
because Skiadas was six weeks
behind on rent, had thrown
ciry inspectors out of the
building and was late in its
opening.
_.

,

they can 't put the capital in to keep up
with new rides. The rides keep getting
more expensive."
.
A year ago. Cedar Fair spent $11 0 mijlion on capital investments, including
$25 million on Millennium Force - th e
first coaster to top 300 feet. That compares with the $7.5 million it cost to
build the Magnum XL-200 roller coaster at Cedar Point. When it opened ·in
!989 the steel
coaster was th e fir st to
.
break 200 feet.
Despite th.e spiraling costs, Kinzel said
it makes sense to build giant coasters
because the rides bring in people who
spend money throughout the park.
"We're marketing an ,entire ente rtain ment complex," he said.

De8ths

Obituaries

William Cundiff Jr.

Jennings C. 'Jay' Gillenwater

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - WiUiam Carl Cundiff Jr., 53, of
BIDWELL - Jennings Chester "Jay" Gillenwater, 39, of
Colorado, formerly of Syracuse, died Thursday, Aug. 16,2001 at Bidwell, died Saturday evening, August 18, 2001 in Holzer
his residence.
Medical Center.
He was born on Nov. 5, 1947 in Syracuse, son ofWilliam
He was born September 18,1961 in Point Pleasant, West Vir·Carl Cundiff Sr. and Mary Elizabeth Diddle Cundiff. He was a ginia, the son of Robert Richard Gillenwater and Virgia
factory worker, and a veteran of the U.S. Air Fore~.
Mullins Gillenwater of Gallipolis.
Surviving in addition to his parents are his brothers and sisHe attended Gallia Academy High School and was part
~ers-in-law, Joe and Tammy Cundiff of Racine, and Jeff and owner of the Gillenwater family business, whi ch was started in
Sheri
Cundiff of Mouline; and a sister and brother-in-law. 1940. He attended White Oak Church.
'
Penny and Manue l Rodriguez ofToledo.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by his wife, Debbie
Internment was at Letart Falls Cemetery. There will be no Kay Mount Gillenwater, whom he married July 10, 1979 in
funeral service and no calling hours.
Giles,Virginia; three children who he loved very much, Jennifer
Arrangements are by Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood.
(Alfred) Howling of Oak Hill, Jennings Chester 'jC " Gillenwater of Bidwell, and Min dena Kay Gillenwater of Bidwell; a
brother, James Richard (Debbie Lynn) Gillenwater of Bidwell;
a sister, Debbie Ann Qohn) Grinder of Wooster; his paternal
POMEROY - Blanche Irene Stewart Wells, 83, Mulberry grandmother, Mamie Gillenwater olf Gallipolis; special fri ends,
Avenue, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Aug. 16, 2001 at her resi- Jessica Bickle ofJackson, Dennis Stanley ofRutland,JeffSimms
dence.
of Gallipolis, and David Gillenwater of Crown City; several
- She was born on July 28, 1918 in West Columbia, W.Va., aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins; and the many
daughter of the late Clyde W. and Nona Kerns Stewart. She was friends who have been there for us.
Lakes.
·
a homemaker.
The Iron Channel connects the east and west reservoirs and
He was preceded in death by a brother, Roger Lee GillenHer daughter, Clydia Ann Anthony of Charleston, W.Va., sur- water; his paternal grandfather, Ed Gillenwater; and his materwill be upgraded in a $1.3 million project that the Ohio
vives.
Department of Natu~al Resources will begin Sept. 4.
nal grandparents, Hark "Bud" and Pearl Mullins.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Thomas H.
The widening from 24 feet to 32 feet will require removal of
Services will be 1 p.m. on Thursday, August 23, 2001 in
Wells;
her
brothers,
Floyd,
Elmo,
Leo
and
Frank
Stewart;
and
metal piling installed about 1930.
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. Carl Ward
her
sister,
Mabel
Hutton.
The waterway, which sediment has reduced to a depth of 3
and the Rev. Dennis Weaver officiating. Burial will be in Prov. Graveside services were held at I 0 a.m. today, Tuesday, Aug. idence Cemetery. Frien·ds may call at the funeral home on
feet to 4 feet, will be deepened to 7 feet to 8 feet, and a dogleg
21 , 2001 at Wells Cemetery. There was no visitation.
Wednesday, August 22, 200i from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
turn will be straightened.
Pallbearers will be Chris Aker, Dennis Stanley, Joe GillenwaThe channel in nearby Coventry Township will be closed to
ter, Shannon Gillenwater, Alfred Howling, Kenny Gillenwater
boaters starting Sept. 10.
REEDSVILLE Betsy and Jeff Simms.
Nicodemus, Barbara Roush;
SYRACUSE
Darla
Thomas;
PageAl
LIMA (AP) - · Organizers of the Allen County Fair could be
MINERSVILLE - Mary
RACINE -John Malcolm Pape Sr., 60, of Racine, died on
out more than $110,000 after a storm forced the cancellation of
Voss;
Dugan;
Sunday,
August 19,2001 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg,
an Alabama concert.
'
RAVENSWOOD,WVa.Anita
PORTLAND
West Virginia.
Even though 'the band didn't take the stage Saturday night,
Sean Ray;
He was born on December 19,1940 in Marietta, son o!VirHolter;
they were prepared to play and will receive their guaranteed fee ,
NEW JERSEY Faith ginia Lou Barnhart .Pape Salser, and the late Everett Webster
LANGSVILLE .Eric
fair manager Jay Begg said.
Perrin.
Pape. ,
·
Montgomery and Gary Jack"They were here and set up their equipment," he said. "It
Retired and Senior VolunHe was a steelworker with Kaiser Aluminum, and retired as
son; .
wasn't their fault."
teer
Program
(RSVP)
workan inspector with Century Aluminum in Ravenswood. He was
SHADE - Greg McCall;
The Allen County Agricultural Society also has other expensers assisting the bloodmobile a member of the Local Steelworkers No. 5668, and was a vetMIDDLEPORT
es such as stage costs and labor, Begg said. All 7,000 ticket holdwere: Helen Bodimer, June eran of the U.S. Navy. He attended Racine United Methodist
William Cook, Ed Daniels,
ers will get a full refu~d.
Ashley, Jane Brown, Carolyn Church.
Donna Hawley, Robert BarGreuser, Rita Buckley, Mary
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Patry Roush
ton, Tim Smith, George HarLou Hawkins, Jerry Craw- Pape of Racine; two sons, John M. Pape Jr., and Allen L. Pape,
ris, Jr., Cind Eaton, Anna ford , Peggy Harris, Betty
both of Racine; a daughter, Lisa M. Pape of Westerville; four
Browning, Patricia Hayman, Coughenour,
CINCINNATI (AP) - A man who had been sought by
Jack grandchildren, Joshua A. Pape, Chelsea A. Pape, Adam .L. Pape
Donna Davidson, Jennifer Coughenour and
fraud squad detectives for five years has been named in a 51 Betty and Andrea R. Pape; a brother and sister-in-law, Jim and Judy
·Garey, Daniel Thomas, Elaine Spencer.
count indictment alleging forgery, theft and engaging in a patPape of Syracuse; his mother-in-law, Eileen Roush of Letart
Ralston, Erin Ralston;
tern of corrupt activity.
·
.The next scheduled Blood- Falls; two sisters-in-law and· brothers-in-law, Sally and Tommy
RUTLAND
Ralph mobile visit will be Oct. 17 at Hill and Tammy and Jeff Hill, all of Racine; and several nieces
Prosecutors said Monday that Charles Jackson, 25, of CincinBales, Paula Brown, ·Marta Meigs Senior Citizens Cen- and nephews.
nati, was behind a counterfeit check and bank fraud operation
ter.
that recruited people to cash fake checks.
Blackwood;
Services will be held on Wednesday, August 22, 2001 at 11
a.m.
at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, West Virginia,
"He was orie of the major providers of fake checks in our
area, victimizing many different local and out-of-state banks,''
with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating.
said Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen.
.
possibility .of ticketing indiBurial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery, and military rites
r-ant~-¥iduals for- v:iolating- the limit - will- be- eondueted -by- the Racine Post No. 602,- AmericanJackson..paid.people a small-fee-to-deposit or cash fake cn'"'J&lt;';----1~--·
was also addressed.
Legion.
.
.
and kept most of the money, Allen said.
Pep AI
In open discussion, council
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home on Tuesday,
assigned the safety committee August 21, 2001 from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
Young;
to examine traffic flow prob• discussed the problem of lems in the area of Butternut
; people repeatedly feeding Avenue and Main Street as
: parking meters in the down- well as the issue of people
: town business area so as to speeding
through
the
· park longer than the estab- Pomeroy parking lot so as to
lished two-hour limit. The bypass stop lights .

.

.

Blanche Wells

Drive

Concert will set back fait

John Malcolm Pape Sr.

from

51-count indidment issued

•b
-1
L.
from

·

• J

DHHR moves ahead with
plan to monitor TANF grants

.

LOCAL STOCKS

Put Your Special Greeting
In Our "Grandparents
Are Sp.e cial" Edition

. AEP-45),
Arch Coal- 19~
Akzo-43),
: AmTectlSBC - 43,,
· 'Ashland Inc. - 41
: AT&amp;T- 19~
• Bank One - 38
: BLI-11%
• Bob Evans - 20
BorgWarner- 48),
Champion - 3),
Charming Shops - S'lo
· City Holding - 11 '·
: Col-19~
• DuPonl - 4t»..

Sunday, September 9, 2001
.1x3 With Photo

1x2 With Photo

ssoo

•

.
•

Pap&amp;
Grandma
Judy
We ~You!

Tessa Paige Will
"All my pappaws
and mammaws

are the best!"

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CANAAN VALLEY, WVa.
(AP) - An advisory council
that will help the Department
of Health and Human
Resources try to avert a potential $90 million shortfall in
grants for welfare programs
will be named this week,
DHHR Secretary Paul Nusbaum said Monday.
The council ·will look at
West Virginia's entire social services program, Nusbaum said.
Nusbaum told · the Legislature's Oversight Commission

on Health and · Human
Resources Accountability that
the new council will include
six legislators - three senators
;md three delegates - and 13
or 14 citizen members.
Council members should be
familiar with how federal and
state grants for needy people
are delivered.
"This council needs to be
familiar with how the agencies
operate, because it's going to
look at everything," Nusbaum
said.

lected.
Overall money and attendance figures were affected by
PapAl
free admission to kids on
Wednesday and senior cttt· officers met Sunday to review zens on Thursday, it was
the figures, and discuss how pointed out.
they could have brought in
Looking ahead, rhe board is
more people and what they already . planning
some
can do to up the attendance changes in the scheduling of
next year.
events and the booking of
It was the general consensus entertainment, along with
that more "upbeat" entertain•
general improvements on the
ment will increase attendance,
fairgrounds.
Holter said.
Repairing several buildSaturday, which featured
the demo derby was the top ings, revamping the stage. and
day in gate receipts with more extending the new fencing
than $23,000 collected at the along the rocky path from the
gates. The second highest day lower fairgrounds to the midwas Friday, the day of the live- . way are already on the agenstock sale, with $21 ,858 col- da.

Fair

from

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

tuesday. August ll, 2001

Cedar Fair boss loves building, big coasters

Ohio weather

INO

PageA2

$56.89

St09.72

LOCAL BRIEFS
•
EMS logs calls

youngest, oldest, farthest traveled and the best Staneart stoPO MEROY - l Jn~ or ci.~. A_ visjt to the Chester_
th e Meigs Emerge ncy Service Co urthouse has been planned
answered six calls for assis- after the reu'nion .
tance on Mond ay. Units
responded as follow s:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
POMEROY - Marriage
1:04 a.m., Good Times Tavlicenses have been issued in
ern, Homer Mills, treated;
3:14 p.m., Holzer Medical Mei gs C ounty Probate Court
Ce nter C linic, Mari e Kni ght, to Scott Al an Bauerbach, 20,
Sal esvill e,
and
Amber
Holzer Medical C enter;
7:27 p.m ., Water and Apple Mi chell e Lawso n, 23, Tuppers
Streets, Alice Flanigan, treated. Plains; Ga ry David Thomas II,
POMEROY
21, and Shanno n Marie
11 :30 a.m ., College Road, Enright, 20, both of Rutland;
George Kaitta, HMC.
James Stewart Langu ell, 29,
and Shelly Diane Sinclair, 24,
RUTLAND
12:25 a. m., Main Stree t, both of Pomeroy; and Roger
David Staats, HM C.
Jaso n Preast, 20, and Erin
TUPPERS PLAINS
Marie Roush, 19, both of
4:32 p.m ., Ohio 124, Jack Albany.
Grose, St. Joseph 's Hospital.

Issued licenses

Woman found

POMEROY - A MulberPOMEROY- Actions for
ry Avenue woman was found
dissolution
of marriage have
dead inside her home by
been filed in Meigs County
Pomeroy police Thursday.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt Common Pleas Court by
said officers re sponded to a Connie Jo Garvin and Larry
call after being alerted by a R. Garvin, both of Albany,
Meigs County Council on and by Timmy Smith and
Aging employee who had Pauline Frances Smith, both
attempted to deliver a meal to of Reedsville.
Divorces have been granted
13lanche Wells, 83.
Upon arr iving, officers to Frances Lorene Burns from
made entry into the hom e Douglas Alan Burns, and to
through the front door and Carla J. Dill from : Bobby E.
discovered Mrs. Wells dead in Dill.
Dissolutions have been
her bedroom.
Meigs County Coroner granted to Duane Lee Jones
Douglas Hunter said the offi- and Bernice R. Jones, and to
cial cause of death was natur- Deborah Dailey an.d Laurel
al, and no evidence of foul Dailey.
play was discovered.
.

Arrest made

PE.lFE.C:T OAY...

Reunion
planned

POMEROY - The Stancart family reunion will be
held Saturday at the Route 33
Park. There wiU be genealogy
session with Lloyd Blackwood at 10 a:m. and a potluck
picnic at noon. Those attending are to take a covered dish,
beverage, dessert and lawn
chairs. Plates, cups and cutlery
wiU be furnished, and gifts
will be presented to the

\PRIIIG VAllEY CINEMA
446 • 4524

iLil!)l!l(
1 Oj

I•Nt~T

RUTLAND Sign-ups .
for the Meigs County Soccer
League have been extended
and a special meeting will be
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. inside
RJ.Itland Civic Center to kick
off the season.
Everyone is welcome to
attend this open meeting.

~c~c,,&gt;il••f

FRIB/17101 • THURS 8123/0t
rUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"

$3.75 ADMISSION

FEATURES MAV IE EXCLUfiED)

PWITOFIIW
II PIIIIISS DIAIIS
AMERICAII PIE 2
OSMOSIS JONES
JURASSIC PAll II

Downing Clllldalnour•noo Agency

6!~

Sign-ups
extended

7

YOU and our
LOCAL INDEPENDENT
INSURANCE AGENCY!
We serve YOU first!
111 Eos1 S.con&lt;l Stroot, Pomeroy
(740] 112-1374

Foreclosure
sought

POMEROY Several
POMEROY - A foreclopeople were arrested over the
sure action has been filed in
weekend by Pomeroy Police.
Chief Mark Proffitt said Meigs County Common
Kimberly Holliday of Lincoln Pleas Court by Home
Bank,
Racine,
Heights was arrested around National
8:52 p.m . Friday on domestic against Terry L. Barber,
Reedsville, and others, allegviolence charges.
Proffitt said Holliday had ing default on a mortgage
been consuming alcohol and agreement in the amount of
she allegedly made attempts $6,624.37.
to injure various members of
rhe-household7 -~--~-Man-sentenced
Holliday was arrested and is
POMEROY- A Cheshire
being held in Southeast
Regional Jail until her court man has been sentenced in
Meigs County Common
date.
In an unrelated -matter, Pleas Court on drug-related
Anthony W Will of Pomeroy charges.
Judge Warren Lotz ofVinwas arrested on Friday after
officers pulled him over for ton County sentenced Roger
speeding
along
Union Dale Shoemaker to a oneyear term i~ prison and two
Avenue.
After stopping Will's vehi - four-year prison terms on
cle, officers detected the smell charges of possession of mariof alcohol, and immediately .juana, a fifth-degree felony,
administered various sobriety and possession of oxycodone
and
possession
of
tests.
Will is being charg~d with hydrocodone, both thirddriving under the influence, degree felonies.
The two four-year terms
FRA suspension, expired tags,
were
issued consecutively, and
and speeding and is currently
.
awaiting his appearance in were suspended.
Shoemaker's
operator's
court.
license also was suspended for
six months, and he was placed
on community control.

,__ _ _ _ CLYllE. t S~illt - - - -......
Vl£N YOU TIIIHC YOIJ'If.
COMIHG w TilE tND OF
The PERFECT fit •..
TI£

Dissolutions.
divorces filed

7:00 &amp; V:30
MATINEES BAT· BUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30 ·

RUSI HOIJU
IIGAUJ ILOiiDE

...
...
~

111

~

........
~

6:45, .
6:50,9:15
7:00,9:15
7:10
7:35
7:40, 10:00
9:25
9;55

/&amp;A, l1lfJUS =
"="'

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Aug. 21
AccuWeathere forecast for
MICH.

.. ~r-(Toi~~&lt;J

ol
I Manalleld
I

...\)I

156'110'

I•

0

0

0
KY.

Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001

v-~~~ o

w,vA...

SANDUSKY (AP) - Sliding into the
front seat of the nation's tallest rvller
coaster, Dick Kinzel tucked his tie into
his shirt and left a little extra space
between his soiery bar and his lap.
"Nothing wrong with some air time,"
he said.
The president and chief executive officer of Cedar Fair LP. which owns 11
amusem ent and water parks, enjoys riding record-breaking roller coasters and
th e ups and dow·l)s of a business that
often depends on matters out of his con- ·
trol - the weath er and the economy.
" How can't ·you love this," he said after
rocketing more than 90 mph on the
Millennium Force at C edar Point, the
company's flagship park.
Cedar Fair's growth hasn 't been quite

that fast. But it has added eight parks
since 1995 to become the world's fifth
largest amusement park company in
terms of attendance.
About 14 million people passed
through the ·gates of Cedar Fair parks in
2000, putting it only behind Walt Disney
Attractions, Six Flags Inc., Universal Studios Recreation Group and AnheuserBu sch Theme Parks, according to
Amusement Business, a trade magazine.
C edar Fair has been conservative in
expanding its stable of parks and resisted
deals that would have forced it to go into
debt, Kinzel said.
Instead, it has focused on acquiring
family owne.d parks.
" Most of them were ma and pa
parks," he said. " Most sold out ·because

c 2001 Accuweather. lnc.
repair and personal property and automobile loss due to disasters. The program. can also pay /nedical and dental expenses.

·Buckeye Egg trial begins

Chance of rain set Wednesday

NEWARK (AP) - A lawsuit filed by about 20 neighbors
against the state's largest egg producer over odors and flies that
they say come from the company's operation&gt; in Licking County went to trial on Monday.
·
The neighbors of Buckeye Egg Farm's operations near Croton in northwest Licking County are seeking damages in the
trial that started in Licking County Common Pleas Court
before Judge Gregory Frost.
Neighbors of Buckeye Egg's operations near Croton and elsewhere have complained for years about infestations of flies,
odors and environmental problems caused by the company.
· Frost ordered the company to pay a $62,500 fine on Aug. 6
after finding that the company improperly disposed of wastewater and failing to stop a large outbreak of flies -this spring.

showers and thunderstorms
during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. High in the upper
80s .
Friday.. .Partly cloudy. Low
in the mid 60s and high in the
mid 80s.
Saturday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Low in the
mid 60s and high in the upper
80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thun. derstorms. Low in the upper
DAYTON (AP) - More than I 00 investors are facing losses
60s and high in the mid 80s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Low of up to S ISO million in what they say was a fraud scheme now
around 60 and high in the under investigation by a grand jury in New Jersey.
The investors say the losses resulted from short-term loans
lower 80s.
they made to Robert J. Ball, who conducted business as RJB
Sales Inc. in Hoboken, N.J., the Dayton Daily News reported
Sunda~
·
, Lawsuits have been filed in Dayton and Michigan on behalf
of the investors, who include Max Guttman, former chairman
CANTON (AP) -Are piles of scrap metal on a sculptor's
of Elder-Beerman Stores Corp.
property art materials or junk? A judge has come down on the
Mayer Morganroth, a Southfield. Mich., attorney, said he is
side of junk.
representing 14 Michigan investors who lost $3.7 million. But
The Stark County Common Pleas Court judge on Monday
he put total losses at $150 million.
ordered that the materials for an art project that GOJO Industries commissioned for its headquarters in Akron be removed
from the artist's property.
.
Judge Sara Lioi found artist P.R. Miller in contempt of court.
AKRON (AP) -The state is about to begin v.'ork to widen,
She authorized Lawrence Township to remove the scrap metal
dee]Jen
and straighten_ a 2,00Q,.foot...c.anallinking ·the-Portageexpens ,
But Miller's attorney says the issue is about art, not junk, and
promises to appeal.
·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast: .
Tonight ... Clear and calm .
. Low in the mid 50s.
Wednesday... Becoming ·
mostly cloudy followed by the
chance for showers and thun derstorms in the a!iernoon.
High in the lower 80s. Light
south wind increasing early in
the afternoon to I 0 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent .
Wednesday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low in
the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... A chance of

Report: investor loss heavy

Artist told to .dean up

State launches canal repair ... ,.

Contrad offers 4% .~aise
DAYTON (AP) - Dayton teachers would get a 4 percent
raise and a say in accountability standards and the school calendar if they ratifY a contract offered by the school board.
Teachers, who planned to vote on the contract Tuesday,
would also get extra pay based on years of servi~e. Dayton's base
pay is comparable to neighboring districts but teachers at the
top of its pay scale make thousands less than their counterparts
in suburban districts.
The amount of extra pay depends·on length of service. Some
steps in the contract add more than 2 percent on top of the
negotiated increase while others add none.
The deal may bring other changes in 2002-03. The contract
creates two committees. One would study whether to make the
school year and day longer: The other would recommend an
accountability plan to the board by June 30.

Recruits begin academy work
CI N CJN N ATI (AP) - Police Chief Torn Streicher told
Cincinnati Police Academy recruits on their fi~st day of class
that humility is the most important quality of a police officer.
" Yes, you may be special because of the power and authority
you have," he said. "But you better be damn humble with it.
You're not better than anybody else."
The message comes at a time when the city's police department is facing increased levels of violence following April's riots
and criticism and lawsuits alleging the police have a history of
racial profiling. .
·
The 27 recruits - 18 white, nihe black, six female - will
spend the next 23 weeks at the academy.

• rbOat
EScapee 10Und On nve
.1.

CANTON (AP) - Louis Allen White's riverboat cruise is
taking him back to jail in Ohio.
White escaped from the Stark County jail in July. He was
found by West Virginia authorities on a riverboat Friday.
ShcriffTimothy Swanson said· his department received a tip
that White was on a riverboat on the Ohio River · in the
. . Moundsville, W.Va .. area.
Swanson said his department is waiting to see if White will
fight extradition to Stark County. If the 28-year- old Canton
man does not, the Stark County prosecutor will be contacted
to work on a warrant for White's return.

Flood victims get money
C INC INNATI (AP) - Victims of last month's floods in
southwest Ohio will be the first to get state Individual Assistancc Grants, Gov. Bob Taft said J\:londay.
.
Fifteen chec ks averaging about $5,200 each were mailed Friday, Taft's offi ce said.
Flood victims in Butler, Hamilton, Clermqnt, Preble, Mont~
go mery and Warren counties are eligible for the program until
Sept. 27. They must first get a referral letter from the U.S. Small
Business Administration and be rejected for a loan from the
SllA .
·
The program began July 1 and p,ays for things such as home

•

Restaurant
owner drops
charge
.
against mayor

.

TOLEDO (AP) -A restaurant owner who accused the
city's mayor of threats and
intimidation dropped his criminal case as the trial was to
begin Monday.
John Skiadas, owner of
Pepe's Mexican Restaurant &amp;
Cantina, said he had no confidence in the special prosecutor
the city's law department
appointed to handle the case.
"We feel we 'vc been set up
to lose this case," said Skiadas'
wife, Georgette.
Carry Finkbeiner, a Democrat first elected as mayor 'in
1994, had been accused of
threatening to take official
action against Skiadas in July
2000 because of delays in
opening the restaurant in the
city-owned Erie Street Market, where vendors sell specialry foods and crafts. .
"From day one, he didn't
' have a case;' Finkbeiner said.
Fmkbemer was accuse? of
grabbmg and shaking Skiadas
while yelling obscemlle~ m his
face. Skiadas ~a.td at the time he
was traumatized by the_ confrontatton and ch.~cked IntO a
hospttal wllh cardiaC problems.
Charge~ of dtsorde~ly c~n~
duct and mte_rfermg wnh ctvil
nghts were disnussed earher m
the case.
Finkbeiner pleaded innocent
to a charge of coercion, which
carries a maximum sentence of
90 days in jail and a $750 fine.
The mayor said he used
strong words in his ITJCeting
with 55iadas bur didn't do anything wrong. Finkbeiner said
he went to ' the restaurant
because Skiadas was six weeks
behind on rent, had thrown
ciry inspectors out of the
building and was late in its
opening.
_.

,

they can 't put the capital in to keep up
with new rides. The rides keep getting
more expensive."
.
A year ago. Cedar Fair spent $11 0 mijlion on capital investments, including
$25 million on Millennium Force - th e
first coaster to top 300 feet. That compares with the $7.5 million it cost to
build the Magnum XL-200 roller coaster at Cedar Point. When it opened ·in
!989 the steel
coaster was th e fir st to
.
break 200 feet.
Despite th.e spiraling costs, Kinzel said
it makes sense to build giant coasters
because the rides bring in people who
spend money throughout the park.
"We're marketing an ,entire ente rtain ment complex," he said.

De8ths

Obituaries

William Cundiff Jr.

Jennings C. 'Jay' Gillenwater

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - WiUiam Carl Cundiff Jr., 53, of
BIDWELL - Jennings Chester "Jay" Gillenwater, 39, of
Colorado, formerly of Syracuse, died Thursday, Aug. 16,2001 at Bidwell, died Saturday evening, August 18, 2001 in Holzer
his residence.
Medical Center.
He was born on Nov. 5, 1947 in Syracuse, son ofWilliam
He was born September 18,1961 in Point Pleasant, West Vir·Carl Cundiff Sr. and Mary Elizabeth Diddle Cundiff. He was a ginia, the son of Robert Richard Gillenwater and Virgia
factory worker, and a veteran of the U.S. Air Fore~.
Mullins Gillenwater of Gallipolis.
Surviving in addition to his parents are his brothers and sisHe attended Gallia Academy High School and was part
~ers-in-law, Joe and Tammy Cundiff of Racine, and Jeff and owner of the Gillenwater family business, whi ch was started in
Sheri
Cundiff of Mouline; and a sister and brother-in-law. 1940. He attended White Oak Church.
'
Penny and Manue l Rodriguez ofToledo.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by his wife, Debbie
Internment was at Letart Falls Cemetery. There will be no Kay Mount Gillenwater, whom he married July 10, 1979 in
funeral service and no calling hours.
Giles,Virginia; three children who he loved very much, Jennifer
Arrangements are by Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood.
(Alfred) Howling of Oak Hill, Jennings Chester 'jC " Gillenwater of Bidwell, and Min dena Kay Gillenwater of Bidwell; a
brother, James Richard (Debbie Lynn) Gillenwater of Bidwell;
a sister, Debbie Ann Qohn) Grinder of Wooster; his paternal
POMEROY - Blanche Irene Stewart Wells, 83, Mulberry grandmother, Mamie Gillenwater olf Gallipolis; special fri ends,
Avenue, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Aug. 16, 2001 at her resi- Jessica Bickle ofJackson, Dennis Stanley ofRutland,JeffSimms
dence.
of Gallipolis, and David Gillenwater of Crown City; several
- She was born on July 28, 1918 in West Columbia, W.Va., aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins; and the many
daughter of the late Clyde W. and Nona Kerns Stewart. She was friends who have been there for us.
Lakes.
·
a homemaker.
The Iron Channel connects the east and west reservoirs and
He was preceded in death by a brother, Roger Lee GillenHer daughter, Clydia Ann Anthony of Charleston, W.Va., sur- water; his paternal grandfather, Ed Gillenwater; and his materwill be upgraded in a $1.3 million project that the Ohio
vives.
Department of Natu~al Resources will begin Sept. 4.
nal grandparents, Hark "Bud" and Pearl Mullins.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Thomas H.
The widening from 24 feet to 32 feet will require removal of
Services will be 1 p.m. on Thursday, August 23, 2001 in
Wells;
her
brothers,
Floyd,
Elmo,
Leo
and
Frank
Stewart;
and
metal piling installed about 1930.
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. Carl Ward
her
sister,
Mabel
Hutton.
The waterway, which sediment has reduced to a depth of 3
and the Rev. Dennis Weaver officiating. Burial will be in Prov. Graveside services were held at I 0 a.m. today, Tuesday, Aug. idence Cemetery. Frien·ds may call at the funeral home on
feet to 4 feet, will be deepened to 7 feet to 8 feet, and a dogleg
21 , 2001 at Wells Cemetery. There was no visitation.
Wednesday, August 22, 200i from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
turn will be straightened.
Pallbearers will be Chris Aker, Dennis Stanley, Joe GillenwaThe channel in nearby Coventry Township will be closed to
ter, Shannon Gillenwater, Alfred Howling, Kenny Gillenwater
boaters starting Sept. 10.
REEDSVILLE Betsy and Jeff Simms.
Nicodemus, Barbara Roush;
SYRACUSE
Darla
Thomas;
PageAl
LIMA (AP) - · Organizers of the Allen County Fair could be
MINERSVILLE - Mary
RACINE -John Malcolm Pape Sr., 60, of Racine, died on
out more than $110,000 after a storm forced the cancellation of
Voss;
Dugan;
Sunday,
August 19,2001 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg,
an Alabama concert.
'
RAVENSWOOD,WVa.Anita
PORTLAND
West Virginia.
Even though 'the band didn't take the stage Saturday night,
Sean Ray;
He was born on December 19,1940 in Marietta, son o!VirHolter;
they were prepared to play and will receive their guaranteed fee ,
NEW JERSEY Faith ginia Lou Barnhart .Pape Salser, and the late Everett Webster
LANGSVILLE .Eric
fair manager Jay Begg said.
Perrin.
Pape. ,
·
Montgomery and Gary Jack"They were here and set up their equipment," he said. "It
Retired and Senior VolunHe was a steelworker with Kaiser Aluminum, and retired as
son; .
wasn't their fault."
teer
Program
(RSVP)
workan inspector with Century Aluminum in Ravenswood. He was
SHADE - Greg McCall;
The Allen County Agricultural Society also has other expensers assisting the bloodmobile a member of the Local Steelworkers No. 5668, and was a vetMIDDLEPORT
es such as stage costs and labor, Begg said. All 7,000 ticket holdwere: Helen Bodimer, June eran of the U.S. Navy. He attended Racine United Methodist
William Cook, Ed Daniels,
ers will get a full refu~d.
Ashley, Jane Brown, Carolyn Church.
Donna Hawley, Robert BarGreuser, Rita Buckley, Mary
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Patry Roush
ton, Tim Smith, George HarLou Hawkins, Jerry Craw- Pape of Racine; two sons, John M. Pape Jr., and Allen L. Pape,
ris, Jr., Cind Eaton, Anna ford , Peggy Harris, Betty
both of Racine; a daughter, Lisa M. Pape of Westerville; four
Browning, Patricia Hayman, Coughenour,
CINCINNATI (AP) - A man who had been sought by
Jack grandchildren, Joshua A. Pape, Chelsea A. Pape, Adam .L. Pape
Donna Davidson, Jennifer Coughenour and
fraud squad detectives for five years has been named in a 51 Betty and Andrea R. Pape; a brother and sister-in-law, Jim and Judy
·Garey, Daniel Thomas, Elaine Spencer.
count indictment alleging forgery, theft and engaging in a patPape of Syracuse; his mother-in-law, Eileen Roush of Letart
Ralston, Erin Ralston;
tern of corrupt activity.
·
.The next scheduled Blood- Falls; two sisters-in-law and· brothers-in-law, Sally and Tommy
RUTLAND
Ralph mobile visit will be Oct. 17 at Hill and Tammy and Jeff Hill, all of Racine; and several nieces
Prosecutors said Monday that Charles Jackson, 25, of CincinBales, Paula Brown, ·Marta Meigs Senior Citizens Cen- and nephews.
nati, was behind a counterfeit check and bank fraud operation
ter.
that recruited people to cash fake checks.
Blackwood;
Services will be held on Wednesday, August 22, 2001 at 11
a.m.
at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, West Virginia,
"He was orie of the major providers of fake checks in our
area, victimizing many different local and out-of-state banks,''
with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating.
said Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen.
.
possibility .of ticketing indiBurial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery, and military rites
r-ant~-¥iduals for- v:iolating- the limit - will- be- eondueted -by- the Racine Post No. 602,- AmericanJackson..paid.people a small-fee-to-deposit or cash fake cn'"'J&lt;';----1~--·
was also addressed.
Legion.
.
.
and kept most of the money, Allen said.
Pep AI
In open discussion, council
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home on Tuesday,
assigned the safety committee August 21, 2001 from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
Young;
to examine traffic flow prob• discussed the problem of lems in the area of Butternut
; people repeatedly feeding Avenue and Main Street as
: parking meters in the down- well as the issue of people
: town business area so as to speeding
through
the
· park longer than the estab- Pomeroy parking lot so as to
lished two-hour limit. The bypass stop lights .

.

.

Blanche Wells

Drive

Concert will set back fait

John Malcolm Pape Sr.

from

51-count indidment issued

•b
-1
L.
from

·

• J

DHHR moves ahead with
plan to monitor TANF grants

.

LOCAL STOCKS

Put Your Special Greeting
In Our "Grandparents
Are Sp.e cial" Edition

. AEP-45),
Arch Coal- 19~
Akzo-43),
: AmTectlSBC - 43,,
· 'Ashland Inc. - 41
: AT&amp;T- 19~
• Bank One - 38
: BLI-11%
• Bob Evans - 20
BorgWarner- 48),
Champion - 3),
Charming Shops - S'lo
· City Holding - 11 '·
: Col-19~
• DuPonl - 4t»..

Sunday, September 9, 2001
.1x3 With Photo

1x2 With Photo

ssoo

•

.
•

Pap&amp;
Grandma
Judy
We ~You!

Tessa Paige Will
"All my pappaws
and mammaws

are the best!"

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CANAAN VALLEY, WVa.
(AP) - An advisory council
that will help the Department
of Health and Human
Resources try to avert a potential $90 million shortfall in
grants for welfare programs
will be named this week,
DHHR Secretary Paul Nusbaum said Monday.
The council ·will look at
West Virginia's entire social services program, Nusbaum said.
Nusbaum told · the Legislature's Oversight Commission

on Health and · Human
Resources Accountability that
the new council will include
six legislators - three senators
;md three delegates - and 13
or 14 citizen members.
Council members should be
familiar with how federal and
state grants for needy people
are delivered.
"This council needs to be
familiar with how the agencies
operate, because it's going to
look at everything," Nusbaum
said.

lected.
Overall money and attendance figures were affected by
PapAl
free admission to kids on
Wednesday and senior cttt· officers met Sunday to review zens on Thursday, it was
the figures, and discuss how pointed out.
they could have brought in
Looking ahead, rhe board is
more people and what they already . planning
some
can do to up the attendance changes in the scheduling of
next year.
events and the booking of
It was the general consensus entertainment, along with
that more "upbeat" entertain•
general improvements on the
ment will increase attendance,
fairgrounds.
Holter said.
Repairing several buildSaturday, which featured
the demo derby was the top ings, revamping the stage. and
day in gate receipts with more extending the new fencing
than $23,000 collected at the along the rocky path from the
gates. The second highest day lower fairgrounds to the midwas Friday, the day of the live- . way are already on the agenstock sale, with $21 ,858 col- da.

Fair

from

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1

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

tuesday. August ll, 2001

Cedar Fair boss loves building, big coasters

Ohio weather

INO

PageA2

$56.89

St09.72

LOCAL BRIEFS
•
EMS logs calls

youngest, oldest, farthest traveled and the best Staneart stoPO MEROY - l Jn~ or ci.~. A_ visjt to the Chester_
th e Meigs Emerge ncy Service Co urthouse has been planned
answered six calls for assis- after the reu'nion .
tance on Mond ay. Units
responded as follow s:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
POMEROY - Marriage
1:04 a.m., Good Times Tavlicenses have been issued in
ern, Homer Mills, treated;
3:14 p.m., Holzer Medical Mei gs C ounty Probate Court
Ce nter C linic, Mari e Kni ght, to Scott Al an Bauerbach, 20,
Sal esvill e,
and
Amber
Holzer Medical C enter;
7:27 p.m ., Water and Apple Mi chell e Lawso n, 23, Tuppers
Streets, Alice Flanigan, treated. Plains; Ga ry David Thomas II,
POMEROY
21, and Shanno n Marie
11 :30 a.m ., College Road, Enright, 20, both of Rutland;
George Kaitta, HMC.
James Stewart Langu ell, 29,
and Shelly Diane Sinclair, 24,
RUTLAND
12:25 a. m., Main Stree t, both of Pomeroy; and Roger
David Staats, HM C.
Jaso n Preast, 20, and Erin
TUPPERS PLAINS
Marie Roush, 19, both of
4:32 p.m ., Ohio 124, Jack Albany.
Grose, St. Joseph 's Hospital.

Issued licenses

Woman found

POMEROY - A MulberPOMEROY- Actions for
ry Avenue woman was found
dissolution
of marriage have
dead inside her home by
been filed in Meigs County
Pomeroy police Thursday.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt Common Pleas Court by
said officers re sponded to a Connie Jo Garvin and Larry
call after being alerted by a R. Garvin, both of Albany,
Meigs County Council on and by Timmy Smith and
Aging employee who had Pauline Frances Smith, both
attempted to deliver a meal to of Reedsville.
Divorces have been granted
13lanche Wells, 83.
Upon arr iving, officers to Frances Lorene Burns from
made entry into the hom e Douglas Alan Burns, and to
through the front door and Carla J. Dill from : Bobby E.
discovered Mrs. Wells dead in Dill.
Dissolutions have been
her bedroom.
Meigs County Coroner granted to Duane Lee Jones
Douglas Hunter said the offi- and Bernice R. Jones, and to
cial cause of death was natur- Deborah Dailey an.d Laurel
al, and no evidence of foul Dailey.
play was discovered.
.

Arrest made

PE.lFE.C:T OAY...

Reunion
planned

POMEROY - The Stancart family reunion will be
held Saturday at the Route 33
Park. There wiU be genealogy
session with Lloyd Blackwood at 10 a:m. and a potluck
picnic at noon. Those attending are to take a covered dish,
beverage, dessert and lawn
chairs. Plates, cups and cutlery
wiU be furnished, and gifts
will be presented to the

\PRIIIG VAllEY CINEMA
446 • 4524

iLil!)l!l(
1 Oj

I•Nt~T

RUTLAND Sign-ups .
for the Meigs County Soccer
League have been extended
and a special meeting will be
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. inside
RJ.Itland Civic Center to kick
off the season.
Everyone is welcome to
attend this open meeting.

~c~c,,&gt;il••f

FRIB/17101 • THURS 8123/0t
rUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"

$3.75 ADMISSION

FEATURES MAV IE EXCLUfiED)

PWITOFIIW
II PIIIIISS DIAIIS
AMERICAII PIE 2
OSMOSIS JONES
JURASSIC PAll II

Downing Clllldalnour•noo Agency

6!~

Sign-ups
extended

7

YOU and our
LOCAL INDEPENDENT
INSURANCE AGENCY!
We serve YOU first!
111 Eos1 S.con&lt;l Stroot, Pomeroy
(740] 112-1374

Foreclosure
sought

POMEROY Several
POMEROY - A foreclopeople were arrested over the
sure action has been filed in
weekend by Pomeroy Police.
Chief Mark Proffitt said Meigs County Common
Kimberly Holliday of Lincoln Pleas Court by Home
Bank,
Racine,
Heights was arrested around National
8:52 p.m . Friday on domestic against Terry L. Barber,
Reedsville, and others, allegviolence charges.
Proffitt said Holliday had ing default on a mortgage
been consuming alcohol and agreement in the amount of
she allegedly made attempts $6,624.37.
to injure various members of
rhe-household7 -~--~-Man-sentenced
Holliday was arrested and is
POMEROY- A Cheshire
being held in Southeast
Regional Jail until her court man has been sentenced in
Meigs County Common
date.
In an unrelated -matter, Pleas Court on drug-related
Anthony W Will of Pomeroy charges.
Judge Warren Lotz ofVinwas arrested on Friday after
officers pulled him over for ton County sentenced Roger
speeding
along
Union Dale Shoemaker to a oneyear term i~ prison and two
Avenue.
After stopping Will's vehi - four-year prison terms on
cle, officers detected the smell charges of possession of mariof alcohol, and immediately .juana, a fifth-degree felony,
administered various sobriety and possession of oxycodone
and
possession
of
tests.
Will is being charg~d with hydrocodone, both thirddriving under the influence, degree felonies.
The two four-year terms
FRA suspension, expired tags,
were
issued consecutively, and
and speeding and is currently
.
awaiting his appearance in were suspended.
Shoemaker's
operator's
court.
license also was suspended for
six months, and he was placed
on community control.

,__ _ _ _ CLYllE. t S~illt - - - -......
Vl£N YOU TIIIHC YOIJ'If.
COMIHG w TilE tND OF
The PERFECT fit •..
TI£

Dissolutions.
divorces filed

7:00 &amp; V:30
MATINEES BAT· BUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30 ·

RUSI HOIJU
IIGAUJ ILOiiDE

...
...
~

111

~

........
~

6:45, .
6:50,9:15
7:00,9:15
7:10
7:35
7:40, 10:00
9:25
9;55

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"="'

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

TUesday, Au1ust 21,1001

DEAR ABBY: 1 am a teen-age
girl, and I'd like to offer so me ad.vice
to other teens before they decide to
have sex. Besides the possibility of
getting pregnant or a sexually transmitted disease (STD), here are three
reasons to remain a virgin:
1. When you get married, you want
to be faithful to your spouse, right?
Well, if you have sex now, you are
already cheating on your future
spouse.
2. Even. though there are different
kinds of contracentives to choose
from, none of them can protect yot.ir
emotions. When you have sex, you
become emotionally entangled with
the other person. That's why it hurts
so much if you break up. Sex should
be part of a lifelong commitment.
3. Sex doesn't mean love. If your
date doesn 't respect your wishes not
to have sex, he or she doesn 't love
you.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R•.Shiwn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

CJ

Diana Kay Hill
· Controller

Ltnm to lht tdJlor au wekome. They should be ku tluut 300 wonts. tt.U fdttrs
ar~ Jllb}«t to ~diting and'"'"'~ signed and include iuldrns tu~d ltkplwne rtu111~r.
No 1msigntd lenerr will M pubiUhtd. Unm tllould be in rood tsJtt, 1Jddmlin1
iuuts, nfll JWnQIIalitits.

Tht oplnWnJ t:%prtsttd in tht column lttlow tue tht constntut of lht Ohio Vallty

Publislrirtg Co. '1 editorial bOdl'tl, uPlltu tHhtrwist noted.

NATIONAL VIEW

Flawed
Responsible media finishing
work stopped by high court
• Star Tribune of Minneapolis, on theNewYorkTimes'
voting str1dy: In an excellent journalisti c exe rcise that took
six months to complete, the N ew York Times has found
enormous inconsistencies in the way Florida election
officials handled overseas absentee ballots arriving after
the Nov. 7 election. In many instances, ballots that clearly
should have been discarded under state law were counted. Most favored George W. Bush, and that was no accident: The Times outlined in great detail how the Bush
campaign aggressively gamed the system to ensure the
overseas ballot count favored their candidate ....
The real problem was that the system was so flawed, so
lacking in consistent standards, so open to political manip- .
ulation that it could be successfully gamed by either side.
Many election officials flagrantly broke Florida state law;
others bent it badly.
As a consequence, even after six months of hard study
the Times could not and did not attempt to establish who
should or shouldn't have won. All it could do was show
how thoroughly the system was manipulated. ...
These efforts are essential to understanding what happened in Florida and learning how to prevent recurrences, whether in Florida or other states. Responsible
· media are now finishing the work that the Supreme
- c o urf unwisely stopped. rf tllat raises embarrassingquestions about the integrity of the court and the legitimacy
of the Bush administration, so be it . Something even more
iJ;nportant is at stake: the integrity of the vote, on which
stands the very integrity of this democracy.

'TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Aug. 21 , the 233rd day of 2001 . There are
132 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 21 , 1959, President Eisenhower signed an executive
order proclaiming Hawaii the 50th state of the union.
. On this date:
' In 1680, Pueblo Indians took possession of Santa Fe, N.M.,
after driving out the Spanish.
· In 1831, former slave Nat Turner led a violent insurrection
in Virginia. (He was later executed.)
In 1858, the fa mous debates between senatorial contenders
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas began.
In 1878, the American Bar Association was founded in ·
Saratoga, N.Y.
In 1940, .exiled Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky died
ip Mexico City from wounds inflicted by an assassin.
In 1944, the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union and
China opened talks at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington that
helped pave the way for establishment of th e United Nations.
In 1945, President Truman ended the Lend-Lease program
that had shipped some $50 billion in aid to America's allies during World War II.
In 1983, Philippine opposition leader Benigno S.J\quino Jr.,
ending a self-imposed exile in the United States, was shot dead
moments after stepping off a plane at Manila International Airport.
In 1983, the musical play "La Cage Aux Foiles" opened on
Broadway.
In 1986, more than 1,700 people died when toxic gas erupted from a volcanic lake in the West Africa n nation of
Cameroon.
Ten years ago: The hard-line coup against Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev collapsed in the face of a popular upris- .
ing led by Russian federation President Boris N . Yeltsin.
Five years ago: President c::linton signed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, aimed at making health insurance easier to obtain and keep.
One year ago: Rescue efforts to reach the sunken Russian
nuclear submarine Kursk ended with divers announcing none
of the 118 sailors had survived.
.
Today's Birthdays: Britain's Princess Margaret is 71 . Actordirector Melvin Van Peebles is 69. Singer Kenny Roge.rs is 63.
Actor C larence Williams III is 62. Rock-and-roll musician
James Burton is 62. Singer Harold Reid (The Statler Brothers)
is 62. Singer Jackie DeShannon is 57. Actress Patty M cCorma~
ck is 56. TV host Harry Smith is 50. Singer Glenn Hughes is
49. Rock musician Joe Strummer (The Clash) is 49. Country
musician Ni ck Kane is 47. Actress Kim Cattrall is 45. Actress
Carrie"Anne Moss is 31. Rock musician Liam Howlett (Predigy) is 30. Actress Alicia Witt is 26 . Sin ger Melissa Schuman
(Dream) is 17. Actress Hayden Panettiere is 12. ·
Thought for Today: " To know a little less and to understand
a little more: that, it seems to me, is our greatest need."-James ·
Ramsey Ullman, American author (1907- 1971).

_The_oa_ny_se_nHn_ei_ _

KONDRA CKE'S VIEW

Bush,will delay cures to avoid (brave new world'
GiVing the weakest possible go-a head
for federal embryonic stem-cell researc h
funding, President Bush avoided political
disaster, but he made it certain that
debate will continue in Congress and
elsewhere.
· In effect, B~sh labored his brain and
heart for months anp came up with a
mouse of a decision - to allow federally funded scientists (o work only with
existing cell lines, almost certainly slowing down development of potential disease cures.
Bush and administration officials
claimed that 60 such li nes exist around
the world, but scientists advising the
leading pro-stem-cell disease coalition
say that only 10 or so lines exist in the
United States, and not all of them may
be suitable for research.
The cells at issue are taken from the
inner core of days:oJd embryos, which
have to be destroyed in the process,
hence creating an ethical dil enima.
Stem cells have the potential to .develop into any kind of tissue in the body,
offering the promise of curing maladi es
ranging from diabetes and heart disease
to neurological diseases and severe
- --burns. ·
Although more than 150,000 embryos
are in cold storage at in vitro fertilization
clinics, and the vas t niaj ority are destined
for destruction, Bush decided to ban
federally backed research on any newly
derived cells, limiting it to cells from
already destroyed embryos.
(As readers of this column know, my
wife, Milly, suffers from adva nced
Paridnson's disease. Despite my full support for stem-cell research, I understand
the ethical diffi culties of the issue.)
Bush rejeqed a comprotnise proposed
by conservative Sen. Bill Frist, R -Tenn. ,
that would have allowed fed eral research
using newly derived cells - though not
on an unlimited basis.
Disease gro ups Were · prepared to

to expand research along the lines of tlw
Frist proposal or th e policy of the Clinton administration. which barred onl y
tedna l ft1nding or· actua l embr )"
destruction.
Just befo 1'e it ldt for th e Au gust brt'.l k,
'
the House· held the fi rst of what is likc· ly to be extensive debate on bioethics,
fmally voting 265-162 to ban all cl oni ng
of human embryos.
But bdt)rc• the tina! vote, nQ fewl' r
COLUMNIST
th.nl 178 House Members supported .111
amendment spo nsored by Reps. Jim
applaud Bush had he accep ted the Frist Greenwood, R -Pa., :m el l'eter Deutsch,
formu lation, thou gh the right-to- life D- Fla., to perm it crc,HiOil of hu man
movement an d .th e Roman C atholic embryos fi)r resea rch pur poses - an
C hu rch would ba ve .condem ned it.
asro undi ng and dist urb ing number conB ush's decision clearly was preferable, sidedng current ethic al lit m ilS.
both politically and from a research
The surprising exte nt o f support ti&gt;r
standpoint, to th e outright funding ban clo rring embryos sugg.·•" tl tat Bush ""'
he supported during tbe :WOO presiden- probably correc t iq bc'111g cautious .111d
ri ~1l campai gn.
in rd ying on such cthi c.d . co nse rvatives
B ut by hesitatin g to impose a ball ,ll '" Prof. Leon Ka&lt;&gt; of ti ll' Un iversity of
the outset of his admi nistration, Bush C hi cago for futu re gu idance.
allowed th e stem-cell issue to become a . Kass wrote in The N ew Republic in
national controversy .in whi cb a majori- May that "modern medicine . is daily
ty of Am ericans support timdmg ·the becoming ever more powerful in lts batresearch .
..
. .. . ,tie aga inst disease, decay and death ... for
In a Zn~by poll released ho urs b&lt;Ofi&gt;re which we must surel y be grateful." .
Bush\ Sl)cec h oilThllrs\by ni!lht'_-likel-y -.- Howcve( lle wrote.' prc·scnt and provo ters fi1vorcd the research by a margin J:·.cted adv:J ilt'l'S Ill genc'tlt .md rcprod11 cnf 52 perce nt to 30 perce nt. Even self- live t&lt;Oc hn ologles, rn neurosCie nce ami
described conservatiws favo red it nar- phar rnacolob')' and Ill the developm em
rawly, 42 percent to 37 JlL'rcent, and of artificial organs and co ~~1puter-r hip
Cath ol ics supported it by 49 percent to 1~11pl ants for human bra 1ns mean that
·
' human nature itself lies on the opera!'.31 percen t.
.
bl
d c
c
·
·
I'
bl.
mg ta c, rea y tor a1tcrat1on, tor euge mc
· b ·
So )llany ann-a
ornon ,epu rcans
.
•
fi
1
I
.
,1 1
, ·I
· l d.
am1 psyc nc en11ancement , or who eme u rng
l
d · ..
supporte c tl c resc .lTl l GOP Set,s. Frist, John McCain of Ari- sa~ reb eb.slrgn. d
.. tl
ro
a
Y
un
er
Kass
rn uence, Bus1,
1 () ,. H 1 f U h
1
zona, anc
rrm . ate 1 0
ta -. llat
looked down the road - and m aybe

.
Morton

Konchcke

· ----

a ban wo.uld have rsolatcd Bush wrth the
most ·conservative elc:rn&amp;nts of his party,
belying the notion th at he is a "diffc•rent
kind of R epubli can."
A ban also was likdy to b e rejected by
Congress, which now ce rtainly will
debate Bush 's decision and possibly vote

read ~ ~ldo us H uxley 's "Brave New
World" ~ and pu ll ed back . On stemcell research , however, he pu ll ed back
too far. ·

(Morton Kondracke is cxcwtiw edittJr vf
Roll Call, tire lleWspapa of Capitol Hill .}

WASHINGTON TODAY

VVhats the proper role for Democrats' superstar Bill?
BY WILL LESTER
WASHINGtON - If people had
forgotten, they were quickl y reminded
when Bill C linton opened his Harlem
office last month at a festive, campaignlike event.
At 54, the form er president is. the
" elder statesman" of the Democratic
Party, but as far as the faithfu l are concerned h e remains the party's rock star.
And from his Harlem headquarters,
C linton will offer mu ch-needed fundraising help, give valued political advice
and , top Democrats hope, avoid outshin,
ing their next wave of leaders. .
" More than anyone else, he wants to
make sure that Democrats win elections
up and dow n the ballot," said . th e
Democrats' national chairman, Terry
M cAuliffe. "He knows that he takes up a
lot of the oxygen in ,the room . We need
to highlight our new leaders and new
ideas."
C linton will have ~l e nty to divert him
from domestic politics - writing his .
$10 ll].illion memoir, working on his
presidential library, seeking international
solutions to th e AIDS crisb . and rac ial
relations.
But he has no plans to give up politics
altogether.
"The president has sa id if he can be
helpful to the party or to a ca ndidate, be
it raising resources or other mea11 s. he
will make himself ava ilable," said his
spokeswotjlan, Julia Payne.
Associates say he will try to be helpful
while remaining in the background, but

TUesday, August 21, 1001

Teen pleads with peers to sclve sex for marriage

·'·

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

--=.By the Bend

Page AS

th ey concede competitive politics is in
hi s blood.
Several Democrats eyeing a run for
president in 2004 have sot1ght his counsel. Even if he should remai11 neu tral,
Democrats and political analysts will
closely watch his every move in national politics.
" H e wo n't try to be th e guy out there
articulatin g Democrats' positions on the
issues," said Jo hn Podesta , C linton's
White House chief of staff. "The critical
voices in the future wi ll be those o ur
there runnin g for office - AI Gore, Tom
Daschle and· Dick Gep hardt."
Democratic in siders ta lk privatel y
about the challenge Gore wi ll tree if he
decides to run f&lt;)r president in 2004. If
he does, they say, the 20110 Democratic
nominee wi ll net d to give some ki11d of
public sign that he and C li_!1ton have
patched postelection diflerenccs.
Gore associates don't talk about the
relatiomhip between the two, and assnciates of Cl inton say the two havt' a
mu tual respect for each other even if
they're no t best fri ends.
But persistent sniping between aides
to th e two men has fueled a perception
of a lingering resentment over C li mon\
sc 0nd als and ·c ore's dc·cision to dist.t ncc
him self from the .11 1.111 he ~e·rvcd eigh t
years as vice presid,·nt.
· Leading Dcmoc:r.1ts s,1y rime ,ho uld
heal any difll:rcnces, md tlrey will look
for oppor tunities to put th ose ru mors to
rest.
"Clinton continues to be the big hur-

die fo r AI Gore in putting together his
rematch with Bush ," sa id Republi can
consultant Scott R eed. " Does he still
believe he's the best preSide nt ever, or is
he di sgusted with his la ck of perso nal
values?"
For his part, Clin ton will be back on
th e fund -raising circuit for Democ rats
throughout the fa ll.
" If I were involved ii1 a campaign in
2002," Ce rrell SJid, ''I'd have no hesitan-.
cy to tell so me promin ent Democrat, if
yo u get the opportuni ty, use th e prc·side nt."
That co uld cut two ways, however.
" He has incredible popularity am ong
Den1ocrats," sJid J)cnwcra ti( stratt.·gi ~t
Bi ll C arri ck. :'On the othe r hand , he
rema ins the Democrat Republicans love
to hate th e nlost"
Democrats and R.epublica ns agree 0 11
very littk these days , but there is agreement that Cl inton remains a domin ant
political presence among Democrats.,, After watch ing his performance in ·
Harlem, it was clear he continues to be
th e undisputed cha111pion o f the Democrati c !'arty," said the GOP's R eed, noting C lill to n's ill tensc ·appeal to bbcks
alld other key Democratic groups.
"The ti1ct is that in the pantheon of
p'o l i ti c~:t ll s. Bill Clill t&lt;&gt;ll " the ultimlle
rock StJr ln tcrll\'i o : nd- raising ;llld
r.dlyin f( the f.1irhful ,.. I J, lll ocratic' coll sul ta llt ll1 vid Axdrod ..• ,d. 'There's ""
one co mparable."

(Will Lester covm politics and polling J&gt;r
The Associated Prw.)

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
Abby, please print this. I'm so sick
of my friends and classmates getting
hurt by having sex. EAST
COAST TEE!'I-AGER
DEAR EAST . COAST TEENAGER: You have listed some convincing reasons for putting off having
sex until marriage. I have heard from
many teens over the years who said
they wished they had waited. My
reply to them is that just because a
per.&gt;on has had sex doesn't mean she
(or he) must continue to do so if it

fe els like it's doing something wrong.
This is a debate that has gone on
during the entire lifetime of this column. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I recently found a
clipping from oite of your old
columns. I think it is worth repeatmg:
"When I saw him, I liked him.
"When I liked him, I loved him.
"When I loved him. I let him.
"When I let him, I lost him."
Some may consider me old-fashioned, but I wish one of my granddaughters had followed this advice
before it was too late. - GRANDMAIN THE MIDWEST
DEAR GRANDMA: That little
jingle is. certainly worth reprinting.
Regardless of how old it is, it contains some hard truth. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I'm a guy, 18, and
I have something to say to girls who
sleep around. They may think they

are "hot stuff;' but they should hear
what is said about them in the locker room. Th.ese poor girls think it is
flattering to be sought out - that it
is a compliment to have sex. Not so!
It is cheap and degrading to be used.
I wouldn't want my two sisters talked
about like that.
Abby, I think there should be classes to teach girls not to throw themselves away li~e this.- A DECENT
GUY IN DETROIT
DEAR DECENT: If only solving
the problem were that simple! Judging from the mail I receive from
mothers of teen-age boys, the pressure to have sex isn't a one-way street
with. the girls being "victimized"
anymore. These days, girls pressure
guys to have sex, too. A step in the
right direction is for parents of teens
· of both sexes to let them know they
don 't have to perform in order to
conform.

DEAR ABBY: 1 have been ·married twice and have children from
both marriages. [ am now divo rced
again and have legally changed back
to my maiden name.
How should my teen-age children's friends address me? Since I am
not a "Mrs .," I would almost prefer to
have them call me by my first name
rather than pretending 1 am " Mrs.
Adams." SINGLE MbM IN
CINCIN NATI
DEAR SINGLE MOM: I see no
reason why you sho uldn't give your
children's friends permission to call
you by your first name since you're
comfortable with it. They will think
it is "cool," and probably tind communicating with you more comfortable because your first name is more
personal.
Dear Abby is tvrittm by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jeamre Phillips.

•

LOCAL EVENTS

Aspirin likely culprit in nosebleed

The Community Calendar Ia
published as a free aervlca to
non·proflt groups wlahlng to
announce meeting• and apeclal events. The calendar 11 net
deslgneil to promote ulaa or
fund raisers of any type. llama
are printed only 11 space permits and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a specific number of days.

THURSDAY
, Question: My husband has
POMEROY- United Fund lor had at least one nosebleed
Meigs County, board meeling, each month for nearly two
Thurs., 5 p.m.. Meigs County
years now. It is always the
Annex basement.
right side of his nose that
POMEROY - Meigs• County bleeds. His blood pressure is
Churches of Christ women's fel- good and he doesn't take any
lowship; Thursday, OVCA camp medication except aspirin or
6 p.m. Zion will furnish wieners.
buns and · beverage. Pomeroy Advil. What could be causing
his nosebleeds?
TUESDAY
will have devotions.
POMEROY - Immunization
Answ~r: Nosebleeds, or
clinic, Metgs County Health
POMEROY - Faith Valley epistaxis in doctor language,
Department. Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m. Tabernacle, 7 p.m. Thursday,
at the 112 E. Memorial Drive Evangelist J. A. Holsinger to are quite common, Most of
us have had one. The nose,
office. Take shot records. Chil· preach.
like any body part, will bleed
dren must be accompanied by
parent or legal guardian. The
TUPPERS PLAIN!! - VFW when · injured. Trauma is the
Meigs County Tuberctosis clinic 9053, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the most common cause for
will have same hours to accom· hall.
nosebleeds in children. Iri
· modale kinde'rgarten students
fact,
I can distinctly rememwho need skin tests to enter
SATURDAY
school.
POMEROY ..!. Slaneart family ber having one after accidenreunion, Saturday, Route 33 tally running into my sister's
CHESTER - Shade River roadside park. 10 a.m. genealo· fist but that is another
Lodge 453, special meeting, . gy session wilh Lloyd Black·
story.
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Work In the wood, noon potluck. Following
Nosebleeds are often the
fellowcraft degree. Refresh- reunion tour of Chester Courthouse.
·
result of nose picking. While
menls.
children don't think of this·as
WED.NESDAY
SUNDAY
· an injury, it's evidence that it
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
LETART - Annual Weaver doesn't take much force to
Abundant Grace Church, Rev. reunion, f , day, 1 p.m. at the
David Johnson, 10 a.m. service Marcus We •er home on Sas- scratch the sensitive nose tisWednesday; 7 p.m. service with sefras Road, Letart. Picnic lunch sues and cause bleeding.
- Rev. Betty Johnson preaching-. ~at-1-p . m. Take a !;;awn chair. ~- Nosebleeds afegenerally a
minor problem in the sense
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
CHESTER - Reunion of the
Plains Regional Sewer District, John L. and Viola Riggs Jeffers that they stop quickly and
special meeting, 5:30 p.m. on family, Sunday, 1 p.m. at the usually don't involve a lifeWednesday, to discuss special Meigs County IKES Farm at threatening amount of blood
Chester.
assessments.
loss. The best way to treat a
.n osebleed is to sit up, bend
the head down, and to press
the sides of the nose firmly
together for five minutes.
Five minutes seems like an
eternity when you are doing
this, so don't use your judgment for determining the
elapsed time, use a watch. SitROCK SPRINGS -Jessi- two, Jim Kessinger, Charles ting up and holding the head
tilted downward helps the
ca Carr showed the grand Kessinger;
Belgian junior champion blood pool and clot in the
champion Belgian stallion,Jim
Kessinger the grand champion mare, Jim Kessinger; Belgian nose instead of running
down the back of the throat.
Belgian mare, .and Dave Coen senior champion mare, Jim
After the required five
the grand champion gelding Kessinger; . grand champion
minutes have passed, let go of
at Monday's draft horse show. Belgian mare, Jim Kessinger;
the nose and see if bleeding
Winners, by class and in gelding or grade mare under
resumes. It probably won't,
descending order where three years, Dave Co en, Dave
unless you blow your nose.
applicable, were: Belgian stal- Coen; junior chamP.ion geldBlowing the nose will ·clear
lion fo al, Jessica Carr; Belgian ing or grade m~re, Dave
the clotted blood and mu,us
senior champion stallion,Jessi- Coen; grand champion geldthat is making it hard · to
ca Carr; grand champion Bel- ing or grade mare, Dave
breath through the nose,
gian stallion, Jessica Carr; Bel- Coen; best matched pair, Dave along with the clot that is
gian mare, four years and over, Coen; mule, three years and
stopping the bleeding!
Jim Kessinger; Belgian mare, over, Rod Tuttle, Rod Tuttle;
Nos~bleeds aren't always a
three years and under four,Jim senior champion mule. Rod "minor" problem . Individuals
Kessinger; Belgian mare, two Tuttle; grand champion mule, who suffer from bleeding disyears and ·under three, Jim Rod Tuttle; cart class, Dave orders such as those with
Kessinger, Byron James; Bel- Coen, Dave Coen; farmer's hemophilia and elderly indigian mare one year and under hitch, Rod Tuttle.
viduals without hemophilia
can have potentially life
threatening amounts of blood
loss from the no se. This type
of nosebleed is quite frightening for the patient and for
Robil) A. Dugan of Roseville his or her . physician. Fortuand Randy Rif!le of Pomeroy, nately, they are uncommon.
Your husband has the most
POMEROY - Joseph L. will report to Fort Knox, Ky.,
for
basic
training.
conimon type of bleeding
Rife has joined the U.S. A-rmy
disorder. His platelets don't
under the Delayed Entry Prowork· very well because he
gram.
The program gives young
POMEROY ·- David M.
men and women the opportunity to delay entering active Fetty has joined the U.S. Army military trammg, soldiers
duty for up to one year. The under the Delayed Entry Pro- receive advanced individual
training in their career job
enlistment gives the new sol- gram.
dier the option to learn a new
The pro~m gives young specialty.
Fetty, who is the son of
skill, travel and become eligi- ~en and women the. opportuble to receive as much as mty to delay entermg active David M. and Janice L. Fetty
$50 000 toward a college edu- . duty for up to one year. The of Pomeroy, will report to
cati~n .
enlistment gives the new sol- Fort Benning, Columbus,
After completiqn of basic .dier the option to learn a new Ga., for basic training.
military training, soldiers skill, travel and become eligireceive advanced individual ble to receive as much as
training in theit career job $50,000 toward a college education.
. speer.al ty.
.
Rife, who is the son . of
After completion of basic

Fair draft horse
wi·nners announced

MILITARY NEWS

Joseph L Rife .

David M. Fetty

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
\

J.tfl11i/p
0tf'edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Famlly M~lcine
takes aspirin and other nonsteroidal, anti-inflammatory
medications (like Advil) .
Aspirin reduces the risk of
heart attack in those who
have had a previous one by
creating ·this type of minor
bleeding -disorder.
This helps prevent the formation of a blood clot that
would then block a ·c oronary
artery, which, in· turn, could
cause a heart attack. So, a
small amount of aspirin every
day is a good idea fonotneone who has had a previous
heart attack, but it isn't necessarily a good idea for those

make them more likely.
You mentioned that your
husband 's blood pressure was
normal. That's good. There is
a common myth that high
blood pressor&lt;" causes nose"
bleeds. This simply isn't true.
If it were, nosebleeds · would
be one of the most common
health complaints and they
aren't.
Anyone who ha1 a nose~
bleed that . doesn't stop after
five minutes of firm!~
squeezing the nose shut
should go to the emergenc¥
department of a local hospital. Most of th ese individuals
will turn out to have a n ose~
I
bleed that can be stopped by
relatively simple me asures .
Noneth eless, th e hospital !s
the correct place to be just in
case more complicated treatl
ment is called for.
.
Dr. Wolf has retired. RTI1e
Best of . . . Family MedicineS
will ·appear until Wolf~ ;eplacoment ass"mes his post . Pa¥
col"mns are available o"line 41

who haven't.
The mucosa, the skin-like
tissue that lines the nose, can
become thin and easily damaged as a consequence of
many problems. A common
cause . of this is excess drying
caused by breathing very dry
air. This is prevalent throughout the winter months when
central heating is on, and the
colder it is outside, the dryer
the inside air becomes.
Another common cause of
injury to the nasal mucosa is
frequeRt use . of decongestant
nose sprays. None of these
cause -nosebleeds;tfiey Just wwwjliraaio.org ifm. -

-

'

ol
• A Ball and B Ball
• Little League
• Pony League
• Softball

Name: Shelley Thomas
Birthday: 10"V94
~
Threw: Right
·
Bats: Right

\Cf

Deadline for the Baseball
Hall of Fame Is
FRIDAY, SEPT. 24
5:00p.m.
Cost $1 0.00 per picture

Fill out the form below and drop It off along with photo or mall
with paymentto the Dally Sentinel "Baseball"
P.O. Box 729., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r-------------------------------------,
I Child's Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
Birthday: _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
Throws: Right or Left
Bats: Right or Left
Team: _______________________________
Phone: __________________~__

L-------------------------------------~
Make checks payable to: The Daily Sentinel
,,

-"-+-·~

�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

TUesday, Au1ust 21,1001

DEAR ABBY: 1 am a teen-age
girl, and I'd like to offer so me ad.vice
to other teens before they decide to
have sex. Besides the possibility of
getting pregnant or a sexually transmitted disease (STD), here are three
reasons to remain a virgin:
1. When you get married, you want
to be faithful to your spouse, right?
Well, if you have sex now, you are
already cheating on your future
spouse.
2. Even. though there are different
kinds of contracentives to choose
from, none of them can protect yot.ir
emotions. When you have sex, you
become emotionally entangled with
the other person. That's why it hurts
so much if you break up. Sex should
be part of a lifelong commitment.
3. Sex doesn't mean love. If your
date doesn 't respect your wishes not
to have sex, he or she doesn 't love
you.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R•.Shiwn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

CJ

Diana Kay Hill
· Controller

Ltnm to lht tdJlor au wekome. They should be ku tluut 300 wonts. tt.U fdttrs
ar~ Jllb}«t to ~diting and'"'"'~ signed and include iuldrns tu~d ltkplwne rtu111~r.
No 1msigntd lenerr will M pubiUhtd. Unm tllould be in rood tsJtt, 1Jddmlin1
iuuts, nfll JWnQIIalitits.

Tht oplnWnJ t:%prtsttd in tht column lttlow tue tht constntut of lht Ohio Vallty

Publislrirtg Co. '1 editorial bOdl'tl, uPlltu tHhtrwist noted.

NATIONAL VIEW

Flawed
Responsible media finishing
work stopped by high court
• Star Tribune of Minneapolis, on theNewYorkTimes'
voting str1dy: In an excellent journalisti c exe rcise that took
six months to complete, the N ew York Times has found
enormous inconsistencies in the way Florida election
officials handled overseas absentee ballots arriving after
the Nov. 7 election. In many instances, ballots that clearly
should have been discarded under state law were counted. Most favored George W. Bush, and that was no accident: The Times outlined in great detail how the Bush
campaign aggressively gamed the system to ensure the
overseas ballot count favored their candidate ....
The real problem was that the system was so flawed, so
lacking in consistent standards, so open to political manip- .
ulation that it could be successfully gamed by either side.
Many election officials flagrantly broke Florida state law;
others bent it badly.
As a consequence, even after six months of hard study
the Times could not and did not attempt to establish who
should or shouldn't have won. All it could do was show
how thoroughly the system was manipulated. ...
These efforts are essential to understanding what happened in Florida and learning how to prevent recurrences, whether in Florida or other states. Responsible
· media are now finishing the work that the Supreme
- c o urf unwisely stopped. rf tllat raises embarrassingquestions about the integrity of the court and the legitimacy
of the Bush administration, so be it . Something even more
iJ;nportant is at stake: the integrity of the vote, on which
stands the very integrity of this democracy.

'TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Aug. 21 , the 233rd day of 2001 . There are
132 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 21 , 1959, President Eisenhower signed an executive
order proclaiming Hawaii the 50th state of the union.
. On this date:
' In 1680, Pueblo Indians took possession of Santa Fe, N.M.,
after driving out the Spanish.
· In 1831, former slave Nat Turner led a violent insurrection
in Virginia. (He was later executed.)
In 1858, the fa mous debates between senatorial contenders
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas began.
In 1878, the American Bar Association was founded in ·
Saratoga, N.Y.
In 1940, .exiled Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky died
ip Mexico City from wounds inflicted by an assassin.
In 1944, the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union and
China opened talks at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington that
helped pave the way for establishment of th e United Nations.
In 1945, President Truman ended the Lend-Lease program
that had shipped some $50 billion in aid to America's allies during World War II.
In 1983, Philippine opposition leader Benigno S.J\quino Jr.,
ending a self-imposed exile in the United States, was shot dead
moments after stepping off a plane at Manila International Airport.
In 1983, the musical play "La Cage Aux Foiles" opened on
Broadway.
In 1986, more than 1,700 people died when toxic gas erupted from a volcanic lake in the West Africa n nation of
Cameroon.
Ten years ago: The hard-line coup against Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev collapsed in the face of a popular upris- .
ing led by Russian federation President Boris N . Yeltsin.
Five years ago: President c::linton signed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, aimed at making health insurance easier to obtain and keep.
One year ago: Rescue efforts to reach the sunken Russian
nuclear submarine Kursk ended with divers announcing none
of the 118 sailors had survived.
.
Today's Birthdays: Britain's Princess Margaret is 71 . Actordirector Melvin Van Peebles is 69. Singer Kenny Roge.rs is 63.
Actor C larence Williams III is 62. Rock-and-roll musician
James Burton is 62. Singer Harold Reid (The Statler Brothers)
is 62. Singer Jackie DeShannon is 57. Actress Patty M cCorma~
ck is 56. TV host Harry Smith is 50. Singer Glenn Hughes is
49. Rock musician Joe Strummer (The Clash) is 49. Country
musician Ni ck Kane is 47. Actress Kim Cattrall is 45. Actress
Carrie"Anne Moss is 31. Rock musician Liam Howlett (Predigy) is 30. Actress Alicia Witt is 26 . Sin ger Melissa Schuman
(Dream) is 17. Actress Hayden Panettiere is 12. ·
Thought for Today: " To know a little less and to understand
a little more: that, it seems to me, is our greatest need."-James ·
Ramsey Ullman, American author (1907- 1971).

_The_oa_ny_se_nHn_ei_ _

KONDRA CKE'S VIEW

Bush,will delay cures to avoid (brave new world'
GiVing the weakest possible go-a head
for federal embryonic stem-cell researc h
funding, President Bush avoided political
disaster, but he made it certain that
debate will continue in Congress and
elsewhere.
· In effect, B~sh labored his brain and
heart for months anp came up with a
mouse of a decision - to allow federally funded scientists (o work only with
existing cell lines, almost certainly slowing down development of potential disease cures.
Bush and administration officials
claimed that 60 such li nes exist around
the world, but scientists advising the
leading pro-stem-cell disease coalition
say that only 10 or so lines exist in the
United States, and not all of them may
be suitable for research.
The cells at issue are taken from the
inner core of days:oJd embryos, which
have to be destroyed in the process,
hence creating an ethical dil enima.
Stem cells have the potential to .develop into any kind of tissue in the body,
offering the promise of curing maladi es
ranging from diabetes and heart disease
to neurological diseases and severe
- --burns. ·
Although more than 150,000 embryos
are in cold storage at in vitro fertilization
clinics, and the vas t niaj ority are destined
for destruction, Bush decided to ban
federally backed research on any newly
derived cells, limiting it to cells from
already destroyed embryos.
(As readers of this column know, my
wife, Milly, suffers from adva nced
Paridnson's disease. Despite my full support for stem-cell research, I understand
the ethical diffi culties of the issue.)
Bush rejeqed a comprotnise proposed
by conservative Sen. Bill Frist, R -Tenn. ,
that would have allowed fed eral research
using newly derived cells - though not
on an unlimited basis.
Disease gro ups Were · prepared to

to expand research along the lines of tlw
Frist proposal or th e policy of the Clinton administration. which barred onl y
tedna l ft1nding or· actua l embr )"
destruction.
Just befo 1'e it ldt for th e Au gust brt'.l k,
'
the House· held the fi rst of what is likc· ly to be extensive debate on bioethics,
fmally voting 265-162 to ban all cl oni ng
of human embryos.
But bdt)rc• the tina! vote, nQ fewl' r
COLUMNIST
th.nl 178 House Members supported .111
amendment spo nsored by Reps. Jim
applaud Bush had he accep ted the Frist Greenwood, R -Pa., :m el l'eter Deutsch,
formu lation, thou gh the right-to- life D- Fla., to perm it crc,HiOil of hu man
movement an d .th e Roman C atholic embryos fi)r resea rch pur poses - an
C hu rch would ba ve .condem ned it.
asro undi ng and dist urb ing number conB ush's decision clearly was preferable, sidedng current ethic al lit m ilS.
both politically and from a research
The surprising exte nt o f support ti&gt;r
standpoint, to th e outright funding ban clo rring embryos sugg.·•" tl tat Bush ""'
he supported during tbe :WOO presiden- probably correc t iq bc'111g cautious .111d
ri ~1l campai gn.
in rd ying on such cthi c.d . co nse rvatives
B ut by hesitatin g to impose a ball ,ll '" Prof. Leon Ka&lt;&gt; of ti ll' Un iversity of
the outset of his admi nistration, Bush C hi cago for futu re gu idance.
allowed th e stem-cell issue to become a . Kass wrote in The N ew Republic in
national controversy .in whi cb a majori- May that "modern medicine . is daily
ty of Am ericans support timdmg ·the becoming ever more powerful in lts batresearch .
..
. .. . ,tie aga inst disease, decay and death ... for
In a Zn~by poll released ho urs b&lt;Ofi&gt;re which we must surel y be grateful." .
Bush\ Sl)cec h oilThllrs\by ni!lht'_-likel-y -.- Howcve( lle wrote.' prc·scnt and provo ters fi1vorcd the research by a margin J:·.cted adv:J ilt'l'S Ill genc'tlt .md rcprod11 cnf 52 perce nt to 30 perce nt. Even self- live t&lt;Oc hn ologles, rn neurosCie nce ami
described conservatiws favo red it nar- phar rnacolob')' and Ill the developm em
rawly, 42 percent to 37 JlL'rcent, and of artificial organs and co ~~1puter-r hip
Cath ol ics supported it by 49 percent to 1~11pl ants for human bra 1ns mean that
·
' human nature itself lies on the opera!'.31 percen t.
.
bl
d c
c
·
·
I'
bl.
mg ta c, rea y tor a1tcrat1on, tor euge mc
· b ·
So )llany ann-a
ornon ,epu rcans
.
•
fi
1
I
.
,1 1
, ·I
· l d.
am1 psyc nc en11ancement , or who eme u rng
l
d · ..
supporte c tl c resc .lTl l GOP Set,s. Frist, John McCain of Ari- sa~ reb eb.slrgn. d
.. tl
ro
a
Y
un
er
Kass
rn uence, Bus1,
1 () ,. H 1 f U h
1
zona, anc
rrm . ate 1 0
ta -. llat
looked down the road - and m aybe

.
Morton

Konchcke

· ----

a ban wo.uld have rsolatcd Bush wrth the
most ·conservative elc:rn&amp;nts of his party,
belying the notion th at he is a "diffc•rent
kind of R epubli can."
A ban also was likdy to b e rejected by
Congress, which now ce rtainly will
debate Bush 's decision and possibly vote

read ~ ~ldo us H uxley 's "Brave New
World" ~ and pu ll ed back . On stemcell research , however, he pu ll ed back
too far. ·

(Morton Kondracke is cxcwtiw edittJr vf
Roll Call, tire lleWspapa of Capitol Hill .}

WASHINGTON TODAY

VVhats the proper role for Democrats' superstar Bill?
BY WILL LESTER
WASHINGtON - If people had
forgotten, they were quickl y reminded
when Bill C linton opened his Harlem
office last month at a festive, campaignlike event.
At 54, the form er president is. the
" elder statesman" of the Democratic
Party, but as far as the faithfu l are concerned h e remains the party's rock star.
And from his Harlem headquarters,
C linton will offer mu ch-needed fundraising help, give valued political advice
and , top Democrats hope, avoid outshin,
ing their next wave of leaders. .
" More than anyone else, he wants to
make sure that Democrats win elections
up and dow n the ballot," said . th e
Democrats' national chairman, Terry
M cAuliffe. "He knows that he takes up a
lot of the oxygen in ,the room . We need
to highlight our new leaders and new
ideas."
C linton will have ~l e nty to divert him
from domestic politics - writing his .
$10 ll].illion memoir, working on his
presidential library, seeking international
solutions to th e AIDS crisb . and rac ial
relations.
But he has no plans to give up politics
altogether.
"The president has sa id if he can be
helpful to the party or to a ca ndidate, be
it raising resources or other mea11 s. he
will make himself ava ilable," said his
spokeswotjlan, Julia Payne.
Associates say he will try to be helpful
while remaining in the background, but

TUesday, August 21, 1001

Teen pleads with peers to sclve sex for marriage

·'·

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

--=.By the Bend

Page AS

th ey concede competitive politics is in
hi s blood.
Several Democrats eyeing a run for
president in 2004 have sot1ght his counsel. Even if he should remai11 neu tral,
Democrats and political analysts will
closely watch his every move in national politics.
" H e wo n't try to be th e guy out there
articulatin g Democrats' positions on the
issues," said Jo hn Podesta , C linton's
White House chief of staff. "The critical
voices in the future wi ll be those o ur
there runnin g for office - AI Gore, Tom
Daschle and· Dick Gep hardt."
Democratic in siders ta lk privatel y
about the challenge Gore wi ll tree if he
decides to run f&lt;)r president in 2004. If
he does, they say, the 20110 Democratic
nominee wi ll net d to give some ki11d of
public sign that he and C li_!1ton have
patched postelection diflerenccs.
Gore associates don't talk about the
relatiomhip between the two, and assnciates of Cl inton say the two havt' a
mu tual respect for each other even if
they're no t best fri ends.
But persistent sniping between aides
to th e two men has fueled a perception
of a lingering resentment over C li mon\
sc 0nd als and ·c ore's dc·cision to dist.t ncc
him self from the .11 1.111 he ~e·rvcd eigh t
years as vice presid,·nt.
· Leading Dcmoc:r.1ts s,1y rime ,ho uld
heal any difll:rcnces, md tlrey will look
for oppor tunities to put th ose ru mors to
rest.
"Clinton continues to be the big hur-

die fo r AI Gore in putting together his
rematch with Bush ," sa id Republi can
consultant Scott R eed. " Does he still
believe he's the best preSide nt ever, or is
he di sgusted with his la ck of perso nal
values?"
For his part, Clin ton will be back on
th e fund -raising circuit for Democ rats
throughout the fa ll.
" If I were involved ii1 a campaign in
2002," Ce rrell SJid, ''I'd have no hesitan-.
cy to tell so me promin ent Democrat, if
yo u get the opportuni ty, use th e prc·side nt."
That co uld cut two ways, however.
" He has incredible popularity am ong
Den1ocrats," sJid J)cnwcra ti( stratt.·gi ~t
Bi ll C arri ck. :'On the othe r hand , he
rema ins the Democrat Republicans love
to hate th e nlost"
Democrats and R.epublica ns agree 0 11
very littk these days , but there is agreement that Cl inton remains a domin ant
political presence among Democrats.,, After watch ing his performance in ·
Harlem, it was clear he continues to be
th e undisputed cha111pion o f the Democrati c !'arty," said the GOP's R eed, noting C lill to n's ill tensc ·appeal to bbcks
alld other key Democratic groups.
"The ti1ct is that in the pantheon of
p'o l i ti c~:t ll s. Bill Clill t&lt;&gt;ll " the ultimlle
rock StJr ln tcrll\'i o : nd- raising ;llld
r.dlyin f( the f.1irhful ,.. I J, lll ocratic' coll sul ta llt ll1 vid Axdrod ..• ,d. 'There's ""
one co mparable."

(Will Lester covm politics and polling J&gt;r
The Associated Prw.)

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
Abby, please print this. I'm so sick
of my friends and classmates getting
hurt by having sex. EAST
COAST TEE!'I-AGER
DEAR EAST . COAST TEENAGER: You have listed some convincing reasons for putting off having
sex until marriage. I have heard from
many teens over the years who said
they wished they had waited. My
reply to them is that just because a
per.&gt;on has had sex doesn't mean she
(or he) must continue to do so if it

fe els like it's doing something wrong.
This is a debate that has gone on
during the entire lifetime of this column. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I recently found a
clipping from oite of your old
columns. I think it is worth repeatmg:
"When I saw him, I liked him.
"When I liked him, I loved him.
"When I loved him. I let him.
"When I let him, I lost him."
Some may consider me old-fashioned, but I wish one of my granddaughters had followed this advice
before it was too late. - GRANDMAIN THE MIDWEST
DEAR GRANDMA: That little
jingle is. certainly worth reprinting.
Regardless of how old it is, it contains some hard truth. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I'm a guy, 18, and
I have something to say to girls who
sleep around. They may think they

are "hot stuff;' but they should hear
what is said about them in the locker room. Th.ese poor girls think it is
flattering to be sought out - that it
is a compliment to have sex. Not so!
It is cheap and degrading to be used.
I wouldn't want my two sisters talked
about like that.
Abby, I think there should be classes to teach girls not to throw themselves away li~e this.- A DECENT
GUY IN DETROIT
DEAR DECENT: If only solving
the problem were that simple! Judging from the mail I receive from
mothers of teen-age boys, the pressure to have sex isn't a one-way street
with. the girls being "victimized"
anymore. These days, girls pressure
guys to have sex, too. A step in the
right direction is for parents of teens
· of both sexes to let them know they
don 't have to perform in order to
conform.

DEAR ABBY: 1 have been ·married twice and have children from
both marriages. [ am now divo rced
again and have legally changed back
to my maiden name.
How should my teen-age children's friends address me? Since I am
not a "Mrs .," I would almost prefer to
have them call me by my first name
rather than pretending 1 am " Mrs.
Adams." SINGLE MbM IN
CINCIN NATI
DEAR SINGLE MOM: I see no
reason why you sho uldn't give your
children's friends permission to call
you by your first name since you're
comfortable with it. They will think
it is "cool," and probably tind communicating with you more comfortable because your first name is more
personal.
Dear Abby is tvrittm by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jeamre Phillips.

•

LOCAL EVENTS

Aspirin likely culprit in nosebleed

The Community Calendar Ia
published as a free aervlca to
non·proflt groups wlahlng to
announce meeting• and apeclal events. The calendar 11 net
deslgneil to promote ulaa or
fund raisers of any type. llama
are printed only 11 space permits and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a specific number of days.

THURSDAY
, Question: My husband has
POMEROY- United Fund lor had at least one nosebleed
Meigs County, board meeling, each month for nearly two
Thurs., 5 p.m.. Meigs County
years now. It is always the
Annex basement.
right side of his nose that
POMEROY - Meigs• County bleeds. His blood pressure is
Churches of Christ women's fel- good and he doesn't take any
lowship; Thursday, OVCA camp medication except aspirin or
6 p.m. Zion will furnish wieners.
buns and · beverage. Pomeroy Advil. What could be causing
his nosebleeds?
TUESDAY
will have devotions.
POMEROY - Immunization
Answ~r: Nosebleeds, or
clinic, Metgs County Health
POMEROY - Faith Valley epistaxis in doctor language,
Department. Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m. Tabernacle, 7 p.m. Thursday,
at the 112 E. Memorial Drive Evangelist J. A. Holsinger to are quite common, Most of
us have had one. The nose,
office. Take shot records. Chil· preach.
like any body part, will bleed
dren must be accompanied by
parent or legal guardian. The
TUPPERS PLAIN!! - VFW when · injured. Trauma is the
Meigs County Tuberctosis clinic 9053, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the most common cause for
will have same hours to accom· hall.
nosebleeds in children. Iri
· modale kinde'rgarten students
fact,
I can distinctly rememwho need skin tests to enter
SATURDAY
school.
POMEROY ..!. Slaneart family ber having one after accidenreunion, Saturday, Route 33 tally running into my sister's
CHESTER - Shade River roadside park. 10 a.m. genealo· fist but that is another
Lodge 453, special meeting, . gy session wilh Lloyd Black·
story.
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Work In the wood, noon potluck. Following
Nosebleeds are often the
fellowcraft degree. Refresh- reunion tour of Chester Courthouse.
·
result of nose picking. While
menls.
children don't think of this·as
WED.NESDAY
SUNDAY
· an injury, it's evidence that it
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
LETART - Annual Weaver doesn't take much force to
Abundant Grace Church, Rev. reunion, f , day, 1 p.m. at the
David Johnson, 10 a.m. service Marcus We •er home on Sas- scratch the sensitive nose tisWednesday; 7 p.m. service with sefras Road, Letart. Picnic lunch sues and cause bleeding.
- Rev. Betty Johnson preaching-. ~at-1-p . m. Take a !;;awn chair. ~- Nosebleeds afegenerally a
minor problem in the sense
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
CHESTER - Reunion of the
Plains Regional Sewer District, John L. and Viola Riggs Jeffers that they stop quickly and
special meeting, 5:30 p.m. on family, Sunday, 1 p.m. at the usually don't involve a lifeWednesday, to discuss special Meigs County IKES Farm at threatening amount of blood
Chester.
assessments.
loss. The best way to treat a
.n osebleed is to sit up, bend
the head down, and to press
the sides of the nose firmly
together for five minutes.
Five minutes seems like an
eternity when you are doing
this, so don't use your judgment for determining the
elapsed time, use a watch. SitROCK SPRINGS -Jessi- two, Jim Kessinger, Charles ting up and holding the head
tilted downward helps the
ca Carr showed the grand Kessinger;
Belgian junior champion blood pool and clot in the
champion Belgian stallion,Jim
Kessinger the grand champion mare, Jim Kessinger; Belgian nose instead of running
down the back of the throat.
Belgian mare, .and Dave Coen senior champion mare, Jim
After the required five
the grand champion gelding Kessinger; . grand champion
minutes have passed, let go of
at Monday's draft horse show. Belgian mare, Jim Kessinger;
the nose and see if bleeding
Winners, by class and in gelding or grade mare under
resumes. It probably won't,
descending order where three years, Dave Co en, Dave
unless you blow your nose.
applicable, were: Belgian stal- Coen; junior chamP.ion geldBlowing the nose will ·clear
lion fo al, Jessica Carr; Belgian ing or grade m~re, Dave
the clotted blood and mu,us
senior champion stallion,Jessi- Coen; grand champion geldthat is making it hard · to
ca Carr; grand champion Bel- ing or grade mare, Dave
breath through the nose,
gian stallion, Jessica Carr; Bel- Coen; best matched pair, Dave along with the clot that is
gian mare, four years and over, Coen; mule, three years and
stopping the bleeding!
Jim Kessinger; Belgian mare, over, Rod Tuttle, Rod Tuttle;
Nos~bleeds aren't always a
three years and under four,Jim senior champion mule. Rod "minor" problem . Individuals
Kessinger; Belgian mare, two Tuttle; grand champion mule, who suffer from bleeding disyears and ·under three, Jim Rod Tuttle; cart class, Dave orders such as those with
Kessinger, Byron James; Bel- Coen, Dave Coen; farmer's hemophilia and elderly indigian mare one year and under hitch, Rod Tuttle.
viduals without hemophilia
can have potentially life
threatening amounts of blood
loss from the no se. This type
of nosebleed is quite frightening for the patient and for
Robil) A. Dugan of Roseville his or her . physician. Fortuand Randy Rif!le of Pomeroy, nately, they are uncommon.
Your husband has the most
POMEROY - Joseph L. will report to Fort Knox, Ky.,
for
basic
training.
conimon type of bleeding
Rife has joined the U.S. A-rmy
disorder. His platelets don't
under the Delayed Entry Prowork· very well because he
gram.
The program gives young
POMEROY ·- David M.
men and women the opportunity to delay entering active Fetty has joined the U.S. Army military trammg, soldiers
duty for up to one year. The under the Delayed Entry Pro- receive advanced individual
training in their career job
enlistment gives the new sol- gram.
dier the option to learn a new
The pro~m gives young specialty.
Fetty, who is the son of
skill, travel and become eligi- ~en and women the. opportuble to receive as much as mty to delay entermg active David M. and Janice L. Fetty
$50 000 toward a college edu- . duty for up to one year. The of Pomeroy, will report to
cati~n .
enlistment gives the new sol- Fort Benning, Columbus,
After completiqn of basic .dier the option to learn a new Ga., for basic training.
military training, soldiers skill, travel and become eligireceive advanced individual ble to receive as much as
training in theit career job $50,000 toward a college education.
. speer.al ty.
.
Rife, who is the son . of
After completion of basic

Fair draft horse
wi·nners announced

MILITARY NEWS

Joseph L Rife .

David M. Fetty

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
\

J.tfl11i/p
0tf'edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Famlly M~lcine
takes aspirin and other nonsteroidal, anti-inflammatory
medications (like Advil) .
Aspirin reduces the risk of
heart attack in those who
have had a previous one by
creating ·this type of minor
bleeding -disorder.
This helps prevent the formation of a blood clot that
would then block a ·c oronary
artery, which, in· turn, could
cause a heart attack. So, a
small amount of aspirin every
day is a good idea fonotneone who has had a previous
heart attack, but it isn't necessarily a good idea for those

make them more likely.
You mentioned that your
husband 's blood pressure was
normal. That's good. There is
a common myth that high
blood pressor&lt;" causes nose"
bleeds. This simply isn't true.
If it were, nosebleeds · would
be one of the most common
health complaints and they
aren't.
Anyone who ha1 a nose~
bleed that . doesn't stop after
five minutes of firm!~
squeezing the nose shut
should go to the emergenc¥
department of a local hospital. Most of th ese individuals
will turn out to have a n ose~
I
bleed that can be stopped by
relatively simple me asures .
Noneth eless, th e hospital !s
the correct place to be just in
case more complicated treatl
ment is called for.
.
Dr. Wolf has retired. RTI1e
Best of . . . Family MedicineS
will ·appear until Wolf~ ;eplacoment ass"mes his post . Pa¥
col"mns are available o"line 41

who haven't.
The mucosa, the skin-like
tissue that lines the nose, can
become thin and easily damaged as a consequence of
many problems. A common
cause . of this is excess drying
caused by breathing very dry
air. This is prevalent throughout the winter months when
central heating is on, and the
colder it is outside, the dryer
the inside air becomes.
Another common cause of
injury to the nasal mucosa is
frequeRt use . of decongestant
nose sprays. None of these
cause -nosebleeds;tfiey Just wwwjliraaio.org ifm. -

-

'

ol
• A Ball and B Ball
• Little League
• Pony League
• Softball

Name: Shelley Thomas
Birthday: 10"V94
~
Threw: Right
·
Bats: Right

\Cf

Deadline for the Baseball
Hall of Fame Is
FRIDAY, SEPT. 24
5:00p.m.
Cost $1 0.00 per picture

Fill out the form below and drop It off along with photo or mall
with paymentto the Dally Sentinel "Baseball"
P.O. Box 729., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r-------------------------------------,
I Child's Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
Birthday: _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
Throws: Right or Left
Bats: Right or Left
Team: _______________________________
Phone: __________________~__

L-------------------------------------~
Make checks payable to: The Daily Sentinel
,,

-"-+-·~

�•

I

Page A~

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

. Poll offers mixed news
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Rising high school senior Amanda Campbell says the Internet makes getting started on her
school assignments easier, but she still values the time she
spends with books in the library:
"The Internet makes it too easy sometimes," said Campbell,
a 17-year-old from New London, Pa. "I still think you should
go to the library.
She says her teachers require her to have three book sources
and one Internet source for school research projects, a mix of
research sources similar to those often required by teachers.
A majoriry of teens say they can find on the Internet very
nearly all of what they need for school projects. American
adults, however, have a mixed view of the importanceoflnternet skills for children to do schoolwork, an Associated Press
poll found.

Rape charges dismissed
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - Rape charges against a former Ku Klux Klansman accused in a deadly church bombing
have been dropped because the accuser, his former stepdaughter, has disappeared.
Shelby County ·circuit Judge AI Crowson dismissed the
charges Monday against Bobby Frank Cherry, 72, who has also
been indicted on murder charges in a 1963 bombing that
killed four black girls at Birmingham's Sixteenth Street Baptist
Church.
Cherry had been charged with rape, sodomy and sexual
abuse. His accuser, Gloria Dean LaDow, hasn't been seen since
last year.
LaDow's attorney, Larry Hardaway, said he saw her in October when she came by his office and said she was getting a job.

Inside:

Tuesday. Aucust 11~ 1001

SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP) - rlolice
launched a national manhunt for a
Ukrainian inunigrant who·allegedly went
on a family killing spree, stabbing his pregnant wife to death and slaying four more
relatives before fleeing with his toddler
son.
Nikolay Soltys, 27, was described by
friends and authorities as a quiet man who
grasped for a new life in America but
could not shake the demons that foUowed
him from overseas.
Authorities said he was seen leaving his
suburban Sacramento home Monday
morning after stabbing his 27-year-old
wife, who stumbled to a neighbor's doorway and collapsed. He then allegedly drove
to a duplex 20 miles away where he killed
an aunt, uncle and t\vo young cousins,

Harness racing, truck pulls, Page 83

Page 81
Tuesday, August :u.:zoo1

police said. They had no motive for the Ahee. "We don 't know."
killings.
• ~ _ _ ...___ ~
In Ukraine, Soltys was rejected by the
Officers were stationed at bus terminals national army and had a history of domes.&lt;
and airports ·in the Sacramento area on tic violence and mental instability, accordTuesday in hope of fincling Solrys and the ing to sheriff's department Chaplain Frank
3-year-old son. Detectives also were inves- Russell, whose office counseled relative$
tigating reportS that Solrys headed to Ore- after the killings.
Soltys came to the United States more
gon, where he .may have relatives, said
Sacramento County sheriff's ,Sgt. James than a year ago and has no known crimi~
Lewis.
nal record. His wife reluctantly joined hiJ1l
Late Monday. sheriff's deputies found about five months ago, Russell said.
After reuniting with his wife and son,
Soltys' 1995 Nissan Altima in a Sacramento parking lot behind a home improve- Soltys apparently began trying to refashion
;
ment store. The car was empty and a near- his life.
ly three-hour search of the area using heliUnemployed, he began taking Englisll
copters and dogs turned up nolhing, classes full time and was set to start attend; .
authorities said.
ing American River College on Monday,
"He could be in the area or he could be the same. day his wife was to start a neV(
in another vehicle," said sheriff's Lt. Steve job, said Sheriff Capt.John McGinness. :

· ·aabypanda

•

-

..

HIGHLIGHTS

far away in regional distances," Fischer said. "But this is a good
1'd ea...
It was not immediately clear how the Israelis felt about such
a meeting. Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres was en route
to Hungary, and his office had no immediate comment.
However, Peres said earlier this week that he would like to;)
meet with Arafat, and that such a meeting was "visible on the
horizon."'

NEW YORK (AP) - A Bronx minister who allegedly
claimed $250 million in income on his state tax return and
then tried to buy cars and real estate with his $5.4 million
refund has been arrested an.d faces multiple charges.
T!J.e former minister, Clayton Harris, was indicted Monday.
'c• .,..
He.faces 33 counts of grand larceny and 6Iing false income tax
.....
returns and other documents.
Harris had claimed the $250 million each year since 1993 A staff member holds one of the twin baby pandas born MonLEAVENWORTH, Wash. and firefighters were looking
from Clayton Harris Ministries, according to repom in sever- day !n Chengdu, the capital city of southwest China's Sichuan (AP)
Fire
engines
aJ N_ew.York Ci.t:y__ru:wsp_ap.e.rs. His_clairn_was rej.ec.tedJn_previ~-.-M.Ovmce. Thirteen other _g1ant Qandas . are _j¥egn.ant_ a_oa____;tre-.rnmt -outoftntsmoun- forward to rain forecast' a'S
early as Tuesday night. So (arl
ous years, but not for 2000, the reports said.
·
. expected to g1ve birth ':'lthm a few months as part of ~ camHarris, 43, reportedly filed a tax return claiming too much palgn to rescue China s nat1onal symbol from the brmk of tain resort town as cool the fire has cost $3.6 million
weather helped knock down to fight, officials said.
.:.
money had been withheld. He said the government owed him extmctlon. (AP Photo)
a wildfire, the latest example
Chelan County Sheri~
a refund of $5,476,398, to be wired to his account at Indeof
the
progress
being
made
pendence Community Bank.
Mike Brickert said evacu~
Arafat said Tuesday he would be willing to hold ceasecfire talks against blazes that have
with the Israeli foreign minister in B~rlin.
· charred nearly a half-million tion orders were lifted for 50
homes, although 18 famili~
After a two-hour meeting with Arafat, visiting German For- acres in the West.
The complex of fires that were not being allowed ba~k
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The driver in a fatal Greyhound eign Minister Joschka Fischer said he was willing to host such
a
meeting.
has threatened several homes . to houses in the road's upp~r
bus crash in Tennessee has been charged with driving on a
"If
this
should
happen
in
Berlin,
in
the
office,
rhe
door
will
license that was suspended in New York state in 1987, officials
in Leavenworth was 30 per-. reaches. No homes have beep
be always open, but I think there are some other places not so cent contained on Monday, damaged by the fire.
said.
~
The crash northwest of Nashville on Sunday morning killed
'·~ .
one passenger .and injured 44 passengers and the driver,
Nathaniel B. Waugh of St. Louis.
Waugh, who was charged Sunday night, had his license suspended for failing to pay child support, Tennessee Department
Sealed propo.sals for the Purchase and Pellvery of a Used Fire Truck to the •
of Safety spokeswoman Dana Keeton said Monday.
She said Waugh somehow obtained a license in Missouri
Orange Township Volunteer Fire Department , Meigs County, Ohio. will be ;
after his New York license was suspended, but she said the susreceived by the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at the :
pension "basically invalidates any license."
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 10:00 A.M~, Thursday. September -:

Sparks stymies
Seattle again
SEATTLE (AP) - The
Seattle Mariners should feel
fortunate that they won't
have . to face Steve Sparks in
the postseason.
Sparks beat the Mariners
for the third straight time,
pitching a five-hitter Monday
night to lead the Detroit
Tigers to a 4-l victory.
Sparks (9-7) walked none
and s,truck out seven. He beat
the Mariners 9-0 on a fivehitter at Safeco Field on Aug.
15,2000.
The Tigers, mired in fourth
place In the AL Central, have
split four games with the
major
league-leading
Mariners (89-36) - the best
mark of any team that has
played Seattle .
In other AL games, it was
Oakland 9. Cleveland 0;
Boston 6, Anaheim 1; Toronr.o 3, Minnesota 2; New York
9, Thxas ·5; and Kansas City
'
'
) b, Chicago
1.

Weather helps ·in fight
against wildfires
'.~
~--

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A Kentucky man sent home to
clie after being denied a heart transplant is the secret patient
who made medical history by getting the world's first self-contained artificial heart, The Associated Press has learned.
A source who knows patient Robert Tools and who spoke
on conclition of anonymity confirmed that he had the experimental titanium-and-plastic pump implanted in his chest July'
2 at Jewish Hospital in Louisville.
Tools, 59, is a former telephone corppany employee and
teacher who moved from Colorado five years ago hoping to
receive a transplant, but he grew so weak he could barely cross
the street, neighbors said.
"I don't think dying has ever been an option with Bob," said
Melany Sco~t, 34, a friend and neighbor ofTools in the Kentucky town of Franklin, about 45 miles north of Nashville and
140 miles south of Louisville.

Near-hurricane hits Mexico
CHETUMAL, Mexico (AP) -Tropical Storm Chantal was
sweeping across Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on Tuesday after
frightening tourists, forcing evacuations and downing trees · but so far causing no known deaths.
The storm barely missed hurricane strength before touching
land near here Monday night, and narrowly missed the popular Caribbean tourist resorts ranging from Cancun to Tulum
along the coast to the north.
Chantal had been nearly stationary Tuesday morning near
the Belize-Mexico border, 15 miles south of Chetumal. Forecasters said it would likely have a second wind after weakening
on its passage across the Yucatan and emerging once again in
the warmer waters of the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday.
The Mexican navy reported the storm touched land on the
Xcalak peninsula .just east of here late Monday, churning up
13-foot waves.

Germany ready for talks
· RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) -

'

Palestinian leader Yasser

Bush to
outline
spending
pitfalls

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- On a campaign-style blitz
through the Midwest, President Bush is fighting back
against Democratic complaints that his massive tax
cut sucked away money better spent on social programs,
education and Medicare.
It is Congress that must
learn to rein in spending, .
Bush was to tell a gathering
Tuesday at Harry S. Truman .
High School in Independence, Mo.
Bush's staff said he also was
set to outline several mistakes Congress should avoid
making in setting spending
prio,rities.
"Virtually all economists
have predicted that the tax
cut will ignite economic
growth," said Claire Buchan,
a Bush spoke·swoman. "What
co.uld have a nega_tive effect
is if Congress doesn't restrain
spending. That is where the
threat to Social Security
lies."
The debate over how to
spend the budget surplus is
about to be taken up in
earnest between Congress
and the Bush administration.

.three Gaton
have operations

~

Authorities cite bus driver

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

13, 2001 and then at 11 :00 A.M at said office opened and read aloud for the ·
following:

'·

1970 model or newer, Used International or Equivalent Fire Truck· ..'··•

Specifications are provided In bid packet

'

Specifications, and bid forms may be secured at the office of Meigs County
Commissioners. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone II 740·992·2895. :
A .deposit of 0 dollars will be required for each set of plapa and .
specifications, check made payable to
• fhi full amount :
will returned within thirty (30) days after receipt of bids. Each bid must be :
accompanied by either a bid bond In an amount of 100% of the bid amount
with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners
or by certified check, cashiers check, or letter pf credit upon a solvent bank ~
In the amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount In favor of the ·
aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied .
by Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
Bids s.hall be sealed and marked as Bid for Orange Township Used Fire ::
Truck Bid and mailed or delivered to:
'
Meigs County Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Is called to all of the requlrem!tnts contained In this bid
packet, particularly to the Federal Labor Standards Provisions and Davis· ·:
Bacon Wages, various lnsur11nce requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and performance bond
for 100% of the contract price.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) .days after the actual date :
of the opening thereof. The Meigs County Commissioners resarve the right .
·
to reject any or all bids.
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

••

'I

St. Louis
win streak
ends at 11

TuEsDAY'S

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (AP) -An anti-government con.
voy has descended on the Klamath Basin to get federal irriga;
tion water to drought-stricken farmers, but at least one farmer
fears t,he protesters are"bringing their own agendas."
"When you get a bunch of peop,le together, anything could
happen," Steve Kandra, a leading farmer in the fight to get
water, said Monday. "We want to make sure people stay focuse~
on what the prize is."
;
A convoy vt- a dozen trucks from nearby states was bringing
supplies to Klamath Falls for a parade arid rally scheduled for
Tuesday. Along its route, the convoy has attracted protesters
who oppose the federal government's decision to reduce ths
flow of water to farmers in order to protect endangered fish. :
Organizers oiTuesday's events sought to restore -irrigation for
the farmers and to change the Endangered Species Act, undel' ·~
which the endangered fish were given priority for wat~
access.
•
•

Minister confronts charges

Zito, .
Athletics
.
.
blank
.
Indians

a

Protest clouds controversy

SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Despite daydreaming
about their welcome home meals, the former crew of the
international space station was sad to leave the orbiting outpost, its home for the last 5 1/2 months.
.
"I think I've been in denial about this whole departure thing
and I wasn't really quite ready to go, because I've enjoyed the
tour so much on the space station," former space station Alpha
crew member Susan Helms said in an interview Monday with
The Associated Press.
Helms, along with cosmonaut Yuri Usachev and U.S. astronaut Jim Voss, continued their trip to Earth on Tuesday aboard
space shuttle Discovery.
The shuttle is scheduled to touch down at Kennedy Space
Center in Florida on Wednesday afternoon, with early fore'&amp;sts
preclicting favorable weather. The shuttle has enough fuel and
supplies to stay in orbit until Friday if the landing is delayed. ·

.Kentuckian ·makes history

The Daily Sentinel

Ukrainian immigrant wanted in killing spree·

Crew sad over departure
•

•

-

c-ATNESVU:IE;-Flil.\AP)
Florida senior defensive
back Robert Cromartie and
two freshmen, tailback Willie
Green and defensive lineman
Sylvester McGrew, all underwent surgery Monday.
Cromartie tore his pe~toral
muscle last Wednesday in a
scrimmage. School officials
said he will likely miss the
entire season. Cromartie . had
· one interception and six passes defended last year.
Green had arthroscopic
surgery m1 his left knee and
will be out 6-to-8 weeks. He
had surgery on both knees last
·year and 'missed . the whole
season.
McGrew had surgery on his
left ankle to repair ligament
· damage. He hurt the ankle
during Saturday's scrimmage
and will be out four months.
Top-ranked · Florida will
open the season at home
against Marshall on Sept. 1.

Eastern s{"»rts

ticket pnces ·

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School has
announced ticket prices for the
upcoming school year. Ticket
, prices for the High School athletic events is $4 for adults and
$2 for students. For Junior High
the ticket prices will be $2 for
adults 'and $1 for students.
Senior citizens passes 'for the
2001-2002 school year may be
purchased for SW. You must
have a Golden Buckeye Card
to purchase a pass and be resident of the eastern Local
School District. The pass is
good for aU· athletic events.
Volleyball passes are available
for the 2001 season for $30.
The pass is good for all voUeybaU games, both junior high
and the high school level.
A football pass may be purchased fur $15.This pass is good
for all football games, both
junior high and high school
level.
All passes may be purchased
in the main office at the Eastern High 1 School from 8:00
a.m. until 3:20 p.m.

a

I
-~- --·····

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Barry Zito avoided any damage from the Cleveland Inclian s, then avoided a clirect hit
by his own team.
After Zito pitched a fourhitter, his second shutout in
three starts, to lead the Oakland Athletics to a 9-0 victory
over the Indians on Monday
night, teammate Tim Hudson
tried to sneak up on him with
a shaving cream pie during a
local television interview.
"I kind of knew it was coming:" said Zito, who struck out
a career-high II and walk~p
two. "I got (pitching coach)
Rick Peterson pretty good
yesterday, so I figured I might
get it today. I saw Huddy out
of the corner of my eye and
was able to dodge it."
The four hits Zito allowed
matched his career low ....,...
when he beat the Boston Red
Sox 6-0 on Aug. 9.
.
"That's as good as it gets;' A's
manager Art Howe said. "A
shutout against that kind of
lineup in a game. was exacdy
what we needed."
Zito left the Indians shaking
their heads.
.
"He really messed with us:·
Cleveland outfielder Ellis
Burks said. "He did a great job.
That's in the top five games
pitched against us this year." ·
Olmedo Saenz hit a basesloaded triple and Jermaine
Dye added a two-run homer
as Oakland won for the 16th

CINCINNATI (AP) The St. Louis Cardinals' IIgame winning streak finally
hit a wall.
The Cardinals blew leads in
the ninth and 1Oth innings
Monday night, then watched
in disbelief as Ken Griffey Jr.
circled the · bases with an
inside-the-park homer in the
II th, giving the Cincinnati
Reds a 5-4 victory.
All in all, it was a bizarre
ending to the Cardinals'
longest winning streak in 19
years.
"Well, let's see: Nobody got
ejected and there wasn't a
fight," Griffey said, summariz. ing the only missing elements. "We're just happy to
be on top. That's the first one
of those we've won at home."
At home or on the road, the
Cardinals have been winning,
period. Stranded eight games
out of first in the NL C.;ntral
on Aug'. 3, they've pulled
themselves back into contention- three games outby pulling off their longest
winning streak since 1982.
In the only other NL
games,
Milwaukee
and
Chicago split a doubleheader,
with the Cubs winning the
opener 7-4 and the Brewers
taking the nightcap 10-2.
It looked like St. Louis
would make \t an even do:tertwhen Mike Timlin took a 2-

1 lead into the ninth. Albert

-;;;~~~~~;;r-l-~~~in~1~:8~a~~~~~~~~~~--

Ken Griffey Jr. (3D1 1s mollbed tr
i
an Inside the park home run to. defeat St. Louis, 5-4, in the bottom of the 11th inning. (AP)

.~--cEtEBRATE=-crnc lnnatl's

Please- Griffey, B4

Marshall faulk back on practice field .for Rams
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Marshall Faulk was back on the
field for the St. Louis Rams, and
coach Mike Martz is optimistic again.
"He brings so much into the huddle," Martz said after Faulk practiced
for the first time in almost three
weeks after being sidelined with a
bruised knee. "Now we can start to
practice things that we've got prepared for Philadelphia and Atlanta,
the first few games of the season. And
it allows us to get into our gettin g
game-ready phase."
Faulk, the NFL MVP last season,
was given an extra week to rest the
knee. He hadn't practiced since Aug.
1 and sat out the Rams' 23-10 loss

Friday night to the Tennessee Titans.
Faulk's practices were supposed to
be limited, but the runnin~ back. said
he was working out and "on my own
I did everything. [ just need to get
back into playing shape."
Also, the Rams filled a hole at
defensive end, signing former Tampa
Bay starter Chidi Ahanotu to replace
Cedric Jones, lost for the season with ·
a hip injury.
The one-year con[ract is worth
$600,000, including a $ 100,000 signing bonus
The 6-foot- 2, 285-pound Ahanotu
started 104 of the 113 games in his
NFL career. Ahanotu was released by

Tampa Bay in a salary-cap move in
April.
jAGU&lt;\RS

Doctors and trainers found no furPANTHERS
ther damage to Tony Boselli's knee,
. Carolina.Panthers quarterbacks Jeff
and the Jacksonville Jaguars expect Lewis and Chris Weinke were so bad
their Pro Bowl left tackle to be ready in their last preseason game that they
for the season opener.
have earned more playing time in the
Boselli twisted his surgically next one.
repaired right knee in practice SunLewis and Weinke struggled in a
day, and he hld to be taken off the 23-8 loss to New England on Saturfield on a cart. But a thorough exam- . day, combining for three intercep.~
ination showed only a bone bruise.
tions and just 89 yards.
Coach Tom Coughlin said receiver
Both will see more action Thursday
Jimmy Smith will see his first action night against Baltimore as coach
of the preseason Thursday, when the George Seifert continues to evaluate
Jaguars play host to Kansas City. his. top two signal-callers.

Limping
Packers top
Broncos
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)The Green Bay Packefs were
counting on a healthier lineup after endurin~ their worst
injury epidemic in franchise
history last year.
But a dozen from-line players sat out Monday night, and
Antonio . Freeman joined
them on the sideline with a
concussion in the Packers' 227 preseason victory over Denver.
Just before halftime, Freeman was running full speed
over the middle and had just
caught a' Brett Favre pass
when
cornerback
Eric
Brown's helmet-to-jaw hit
sent Freeman plunging to the
grass head first.
"I was surprised because I
thought it was a good hit,"
said Brown, who was highliving Ian Gold as Freeman
was prone on the ground. The
crowd booed and the flag

Smith had two abdominal operations
in the offseason and has only
returned to full practice this week.

Two Nebraska
players arrested·

FUMBLE- Green Bay cornerback Mike McKenzie (34) knocks
ttie ball out of the hands of Denver Broncos' receiver Rod,
Smith after making a reception in the first quarter. (AP)

caine down.
1s 'not encouraged by the
Brown's
coach.
Mike . NFL ," Sherman said. "But
Shanahan, said he's have to see th ey happen and you move
the film. Don't bother, said 011. But hopefully, Freeman
Packers c0ach Mike Sher- will be OK ."
tnan.
Please see Broncos, B4
"It was a hit that obviously
\

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)The off-field troubles for
No.4 Nebraska are builcling
as two more players, includ. ing
1-back . Dahrran
Diedrick, face disciplinary
action after weekend arrests
for an argument at a bar.
Since June, four playershave been arrested and a
fifth, li nebacker Randy Stella, wa.&lt; kicked off the team
for violating tean1 rules.
Diedrick and backup
linebacker Tony Tara spent
· about an hour in jail Saturday night after being
charged with disturbing the
peace.
"You cannot be out at
midnight standing on the
street and generally have
something ~ood happen,'',
coach Frank Solich said
Monday.
Solich said that no decision had been made on the
players' status. He planned to
make a determination by
\

the end of the week.
''I'm just trying to get as
many facts on it as I can,''
Solich said. "In -a number of
cases we have waited until
things have played out in the
court system. I don't know if
that will be the case here." ·
Diedrick is scheduled to
appear in Lancaster County
Court Sept. 12. Tata is to
appear two days later.
Nebraska opens the season Saturday at home
against TCU.
·
The arrests add to a pre~
season that saw the Husken
lose SteUa, their top returning defender, and suspend
kicker Josh Brown for Saturday's game.
Stella, who had 58 tackles
last season, was booted o(l'
the team this month for
unclisclosed disciplinary rea~
sons. Brown was convicted
of assault for fighting with a
man on a date with his exgirlfriend.
-~-

·····- -

"...

~--~.

�•

I

Page A~

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

. Poll offers mixed news
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Rising high school senior Amanda Campbell says the Internet makes getting started on her
school assignments easier, but she still values the time she
spends with books in the library:
"The Internet makes it too easy sometimes," said Campbell,
a 17-year-old from New London, Pa. "I still think you should
go to the library.
She says her teachers require her to have three book sources
and one Internet source for school research projects, a mix of
research sources similar to those often required by teachers.
A majoriry of teens say they can find on the Internet very
nearly all of what they need for school projects. American
adults, however, have a mixed view of the importanceoflnternet skills for children to do schoolwork, an Associated Press
poll found.

Rape charges dismissed
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - Rape charges against a former Ku Klux Klansman accused in a deadly church bombing
have been dropped because the accuser, his former stepdaughter, has disappeared.
Shelby County ·circuit Judge AI Crowson dismissed the
charges Monday against Bobby Frank Cherry, 72, who has also
been indicted on murder charges in a 1963 bombing that
killed four black girls at Birmingham's Sixteenth Street Baptist
Church.
Cherry had been charged with rape, sodomy and sexual
abuse. His accuser, Gloria Dean LaDow, hasn't been seen since
last year.
LaDow's attorney, Larry Hardaway, said he saw her in October when she came by his office and said she was getting a job.

Inside:

Tuesday. Aucust 11~ 1001

SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP) - rlolice
launched a national manhunt for a
Ukrainian inunigrant who·allegedly went
on a family killing spree, stabbing his pregnant wife to death and slaying four more
relatives before fleeing with his toddler
son.
Nikolay Soltys, 27, was described by
friends and authorities as a quiet man who
grasped for a new life in America but
could not shake the demons that foUowed
him from overseas.
Authorities said he was seen leaving his
suburban Sacramento home Monday
morning after stabbing his 27-year-old
wife, who stumbled to a neighbor's doorway and collapsed. He then allegedly drove
to a duplex 20 miles away where he killed
an aunt, uncle and t\vo young cousins,

Harness racing, truck pulls, Page 83

Page 81
Tuesday, August :u.:zoo1

police said. They had no motive for the Ahee. "We don 't know."
killings.
• ~ _ _ ...___ ~
In Ukraine, Soltys was rejected by the
Officers were stationed at bus terminals national army and had a history of domes.&lt;
and airports ·in the Sacramento area on tic violence and mental instability, accordTuesday in hope of fincling Solrys and the ing to sheriff's department Chaplain Frank
3-year-old son. Detectives also were inves- Russell, whose office counseled relative$
tigating reportS that Solrys headed to Ore- after the killings.
Soltys came to the United States more
gon, where he .may have relatives, said
Sacramento County sheriff's ,Sgt. James than a year ago and has no known crimi~
Lewis.
nal record. His wife reluctantly joined hiJ1l
Late Monday. sheriff's deputies found about five months ago, Russell said.
After reuniting with his wife and son,
Soltys' 1995 Nissan Altima in a Sacramento parking lot behind a home improve- Soltys apparently began trying to refashion
;
ment store. The car was empty and a near- his life.
ly three-hour search of the area using heliUnemployed, he began taking Englisll
copters and dogs turned up nolhing, classes full time and was set to start attend; .
authorities said.
ing American River College on Monday,
"He could be in the area or he could be the same. day his wife was to start a neV(
in another vehicle," said sheriff's Lt. Steve job, said Sheriff Capt.John McGinness. :

· ·aabypanda

•

-

..

HIGHLIGHTS

far away in regional distances," Fischer said. "But this is a good
1'd ea...
It was not immediately clear how the Israelis felt about such
a meeting. Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres was en route
to Hungary, and his office had no immediate comment.
However, Peres said earlier this week that he would like to;)
meet with Arafat, and that such a meeting was "visible on the
horizon."'

NEW YORK (AP) - A Bronx minister who allegedly
claimed $250 million in income on his state tax return and
then tried to buy cars and real estate with his $5.4 million
refund has been arrested an.d faces multiple charges.
T!J.e former minister, Clayton Harris, was indicted Monday.
'c• .,..
He.faces 33 counts of grand larceny and 6Iing false income tax
.....
returns and other documents.
Harris had claimed the $250 million each year since 1993 A staff member holds one of the twin baby pandas born MonLEAVENWORTH, Wash. and firefighters were looking
from Clayton Harris Ministries, according to repom in sever- day !n Chengdu, the capital city of southwest China's Sichuan (AP)
Fire
engines
aJ N_ew.York Ci.t:y__ru:wsp_ap.e.rs. His_clairn_was rej.ec.tedJn_previ~-.-M.Ovmce. Thirteen other _g1ant Qandas . are _j¥egn.ant_ a_oa____;tre-.rnmt -outoftntsmoun- forward to rain forecast' a'S
early as Tuesday night. So (arl
ous years, but not for 2000, the reports said.
·
. expected to g1ve birth ':'lthm a few months as part of ~ camHarris, 43, reportedly filed a tax return claiming too much palgn to rescue China s nat1onal symbol from the brmk of tain resort town as cool the fire has cost $3.6 million
weather helped knock down to fight, officials said.
.:.
money had been withheld. He said the government owed him extmctlon. (AP Photo)
a wildfire, the latest example
Chelan County Sheri~
a refund of $5,476,398, to be wired to his account at Indeof
the
progress
being
made
pendence Community Bank.
Mike Brickert said evacu~
Arafat said Tuesday he would be willing to hold ceasecfire talks against blazes that have
with the Israeli foreign minister in B~rlin.
· charred nearly a half-million tion orders were lifted for 50
homes, although 18 famili~
After a two-hour meeting with Arafat, visiting German For- acres in the West.
The complex of fires that were not being allowed ba~k
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The driver in a fatal Greyhound eign Minister Joschka Fischer said he was willing to host such
a
meeting.
has threatened several homes . to houses in the road's upp~r
bus crash in Tennessee has been charged with driving on a
"If
this
should
happen
in
Berlin,
in
the
office,
rhe
door
will
license that was suspended in New York state in 1987, officials
in Leavenworth was 30 per-. reaches. No homes have beep
be always open, but I think there are some other places not so cent contained on Monday, damaged by the fire.
said.
~
The crash northwest of Nashville on Sunday morning killed
'·~ .
one passenger .and injured 44 passengers and the driver,
Nathaniel B. Waugh of St. Louis.
Waugh, who was charged Sunday night, had his license suspended for failing to pay child support, Tennessee Department
Sealed propo.sals for the Purchase and Pellvery of a Used Fire Truck to the •
of Safety spokeswoman Dana Keeton said Monday.
She said Waugh somehow obtained a license in Missouri
Orange Township Volunteer Fire Department , Meigs County, Ohio. will be ;
after his New York license was suspended, but she said the susreceived by the Meigs County Commissioners at their office at the :
pension "basically invalidates any license."
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 10:00 A.M~, Thursday. September -:

Sparks stymies
Seattle again
SEATTLE (AP) - The
Seattle Mariners should feel
fortunate that they won't
have . to face Steve Sparks in
the postseason.
Sparks beat the Mariners
for the third straight time,
pitching a five-hitter Monday
night to lead the Detroit
Tigers to a 4-l victory.
Sparks (9-7) walked none
and s,truck out seven. He beat
the Mariners 9-0 on a fivehitter at Safeco Field on Aug.
15,2000.
The Tigers, mired in fourth
place In the AL Central, have
split four games with the
major
league-leading
Mariners (89-36) - the best
mark of any team that has
played Seattle .
In other AL games, it was
Oakland 9. Cleveland 0;
Boston 6, Anaheim 1; Toronr.o 3, Minnesota 2; New York
9, Thxas ·5; and Kansas City
'
'
) b, Chicago
1.

Weather helps ·in fight
against wildfires
'.~
~--

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A Kentucky man sent home to
clie after being denied a heart transplant is the secret patient
who made medical history by getting the world's first self-contained artificial heart, The Associated Press has learned.
A source who knows patient Robert Tools and who spoke
on conclition of anonymity confirmed that he had the experimental titanium-and-plastic pump implanted in his chest July'
2 at Jewish Hospital in Louisville.
Tools, 59, is a former telephone corppany employee and
teacher who moved from Colorado five years ago hoping to
receive a transplant, but he grew so weak he could barely cross
the street, neighbors said.
"I don't think dying has ever been an option with Bob," said
Melany Sco~t, 34, a friend and neighbor ofTools in the Kentucky town of Franklin, about 45 miles north of Nashville and
140 miles south of Louisville.

Near-hurricane hits Mexico
CHETUMAL, Mexico (AP) -Tropical Storm Chantal was
sweeping across Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on Tuesday after
frightening tourists, forcing evacuations and downing trees · but so far causing no known deaths.
The storm barely missed hurricane strength before touching
land near here Monday night, and narrowly missed the popular Caribbean tourist resorts ranging from Cancun to Tulum
along the coast to the north.
Chantal had been nearly stationary Tuesday morning near
the Belize-Mexico border, 15 miles south of Chetumal. Forecasters said it would likely have a second wind after weakening
on its passage across the Yucatan and emerging once again in
the warmer waters of the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday.
The Mexican navy reported the storm touched land on the
Xcalak peninsula .just east of here late Monday, churning up
13-foot waves.

Germany ready for talks
· RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) -

'

Palestinian leader Yasser

Bush to
outline
spending
pitfalls

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- On a campaign-style blitz
through the Midwest, President Bush is fighting back
against Democratic complaints that his massive tax
cut sucked away money better spent on social programs,
education and Medicare.
It is Congress that must
learn to rein in spending, .
Bush was to tell a gathering
Tuesday at Harry S. Truman .
High School in Independence, Mo.
Bush's staff said he also was
set to outline several mistakes Congress should avoid
making in setting spending
prio,rities.
"Virtually all economists
have predicted that the tax
cut will ignite economic
growth," said Claire Buchan,
a Bush spoke·swoman. "What
co.uld have a nega_tive effect
is if Congress doesn't restrain
spending. That is where the
threat to Social Security
lies."
The debate over how to
spend the budget surplus is
about to be taken up in
earnest between Congress
and the Bush administration.

.three Gaton
have operations

~

Authorities cite bus driver

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

13, 2001 and then at 11 :00 A.M at said office opened and read aloud for the ·
following:

'·

1970 model or newer, Used International or Equivalent Fire Truck· ..'··•

Specifications are provided In bid packet

'

Specifications, and bid forms may be secured at the office of Meigs County
Commissioners. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769- Phone II 740·992·2895. :
A .deposit of 0 dollars will be required for each set of plapa and .
specifications, check made payable to
• fhi full amount :
will returned within thirty (30) days after receipt of bids. Each bid must be :
accompanied by either a bid bond In an amount of 100% of the bid amount
with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners
or by certified check, cashiers check, or letter pf credit upon a solvent bank ~
In the amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount In favor of the ·
aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied .
by Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
Bids s.hall be sealed and marked as Bid for Orange Township Used Fire ::
Truck Bid and mailed or delivered to:
'
Meigs County Commissioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Is called to all of the requlrem!tnts contained In this bid
packet, particularly to the Federal Labor Standards Provisions and Davis· ·:
Bacon Wages, various lnsur11nce requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and performance bond
for 100% of the contract price.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) .days after the actual date :
of the opening thereof. The Meigs County Commissioners resarve the right .
·
to reject any or all bids.
Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

••

'I

St. Louis
win streak
ends at 11

TuEsDAY'S

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (AP) -An anti-government con.
voy has descended on the Klamath Basin to get federal irriga;
tion water to drought-stricken farmers, but at least one farmer
fears t,he protesters are"bringing their own agendas."
"When you get a bunch of peop,le together, anything could
happen," Steve Kandra, a leading farmer in the fight to get
water, said Monday. "We want to make sure people stay focuse~
on what the prize is."
;
A convoy vt- a dozen trucks from nearby states was bringing
supplies to Klamath Falls for a parade arid rally scheduled for
Tuesday. Along its route, the convoy has attracted protesters
who oppose the federal government's decision to reduce ths
flow of water to farmers in order to protect endangered fish. :
Organizers oiTuesday's events sought to restore -irrigation for
the farmers and to change the Endangered Species Act, undel' ·~
which the endangered fish were given priority for wat~
access.
•
•

Minister confronts charges

Zito, .
Athletics
.
.
blank
.
Indians

a

Protest clouds controversy

SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Despite daydreaming
about their welcome home meals, the former crew of the
international space station was sad to leave the orbiting outpost, its home for the last 5 1/2 months.
.
"I think I've been in denial about this whole departure thing
and I wasn't really quite ready to go, because I've enjoyed the
tour so much on the space station," former space station Alpha
crew member Susan Helms said in an interview Monday with
The Associated Press.
Helms, along with cosmonaut Yuri Usachev and U.S. astronaut Jim Voss, continued their trip to Earth on Tuesday aboard
space shuttle Discovery.
The shuttle is scheduled to touch down at Kennedy Space
Center in Florida on Wednesday afternoon, with early fore'&amp;sts
preclicting favorable weather. The shuttle has enough fuel and
supplies to stay in orbit until Friday if the landing is delayed. ·

.Kentuckian ·makes history

The Daily Sentinel

Ukrainian immigrant wanted in killing spree·

Crew sad over departure
•

•

-

c-ATNESVU:IE;-Flil.\AP)
Florida senior defensive
back Robert Cromartie and
two freshmen, tailback Willie
Green and defensive lineman
Sylvester McGrew, all underwent surgery Monday.
Cromartie tore his pe~toral
muscle last Wednesday in a
scrimmage. School officials
said he will likely miss the
entire season. Cromartie . had
· one interception and six passes defended last year.
Green had arthroscopic
surgery m1 his left knee and
will be out 6-to-8 weeks. He
had surgery on both knees last
·year and 'missed . the whole
season.
McGrew had surgery on his
left ankle to repair ligament
· damage. He hurt the ankle
during Saturday's scrimmage
and will be out four months.
Top-ranked · Florida will
open the season at home
against Marshall on Sept. 1.

Eastern s{"»rts

ticket pnces ·

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern High School has
announced ticket prices for the
upcoming school year. Ticket
, prices for the High School athletic events is $4 for adults and
$2 for students. For Junior High
the ticket prices will be $2 for
adults 'and $1 for students.
Senior citizens passes 'for the
2001-2002 school year may be
purchased for SW. You must
have a Golden Buckeye Card
to purchase a pass and be resident of the eastern Local
School District. The pass is
good for aU· athletic events.
Volleyball passes are available
for the 2001 season for $30.
The pass is good for all voUeybaU games, both junior high
and the high school level.
A football pass may be purchased fur $15.This pass is good
for all football games, both
junior high and high school
level.
All passes may be purchased
in the main office at the Eastern High 1 School from 8:00
a.m. until 3:20 p.m.

a

I
-~- --·····

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Barry Zito avoided any damage from the Cleveland Inclian s, then avoided a clirect hit
by his own team.
After Zito pitched a fourhitter, his second shutout in
three starts, to lead the Oakland Athletics to a 9-0 victory
over the Indians on Monday
night, teammate Tim Hudson
tried to sneak up on him with
a shaving cream pie during a
local television interview.
"I kind of knew it was coming:" said Zito, who struck out
a career-high II and walk~p
two. "I got (pitching coach)
Rick Peterson pretty good
yesterday, so I figured I might
get it today. I saw Huddy out
of the corner of my eye and
was able to dodge it."
The four hits Zito allowed
matched his career low ....,...
when he beat the Boston Red
Sox 6-0 on Aug. 9.
.
"That's as good as it gets;' A's
manager Art Howe said. "A
shutout against that kind of
lineup in a game. was exacdy
what we needed."
Zito left the Indians shaking
their heads.
.
"He really messed with us:·
Cleveland outfielder Ellis
Burks said. "He did a great job.
That's in the top five games
pitched against us this year." ·
Olmedo Saenz hit a basesloaded triple and Jermaine
Dye added a two-run homer
as Oakland won for the 16th

CINCINNATI (AP) The St. Louis Cardinals' IIgame winning streak finally
hit a wall.
The Cardinals blew leads in
the ninth and 1Oth innings
Monday night, then watched
in disbelief as Ken Griffey Jr.
circled the · bases with an
inside-the-park homer in the
II th, giving the Cincinnati
Reds a 5-4 victory.
All in all, it was a bizarre
ending to the Cardinals'
longest winning streak in 19
years.
"Well, let's see: Nobody got
ejected and there wasn't a
fight," Griffey said, summariz. ing the only missing elements. "We're just happy to
be on top. That's the first one
of those we've won at home."
At home or on the road, the
Cardinals have been winning,
period. Stranded eight games
out of first in the NL C.;ntral
on Aug'. 3, they've pulled
themselves back into contention- three games outby pulling off their longest
winning streak since 1982.
In the only other NL
games,
Milwaukee
and
Chicago split a doubleheader,
with the Cubs winning the
opener 7-4 and the Brewers
taking the nightcap 10-2.
It looked like St. Louis
would make \t an even do:tertwhen Mike Timlin took a 2-

1 lead into the ninth. Albert

-;;;~~~~~;;r-l-~~~in~1~:8~a~~~~~~~~~~--

Ken Griffey Jr. (3D1 1s mollbed tr
i
an Inside the park home run to. defeat St. Louis, 5-4, in the bottom of the 11th inning. (AP)

.~--cEtEBRATE=-crnc lnnatl's

Please- Griffey, B4

Marshall faulk back on practice field .for Rams
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Marshall Faulk was back on the
field for the St. Louis Rams, and
coach Mike Martz is optimistic again.
"He brings so much into the huddle," Martz said after Faulk practiced
for the first time in almost three
weeks after being sidelined with a
bruised knee. "Now we can start to
practice things that we've got prepared for Philadelphia and Atlanta,
the first few games of the season. And
it allows us to get into our gettin g
game-ready phase."
Faulk, the NFL MVP last season,
was given an extra week to rest the
knee. He hadn't practiced since Aug.
1 and sat out the Rams' 23-10 loss

Friday night to the Tennessee Titans.
Faulk's practices were supposed to
be limited, but the runnin~ back. said
he was working out and "on my own
I did everything. [ just need to get
back into playing shape."
Also, the Rams filled a hole at
defensive end, signing former Tampa
Bay starter Chidi Ahanotu to replace
Cedric Jones, lost for the season with ·
a hip injury.
The one-year con[ract is worth
$600,000, including a $ 100,000 signing bonus
The 6-foot- 2, 285-pound Ahanotu
started 104 of the 113 games in his
NFL career. Ahanotu was released by

Tampa Bay in a salary-cap move in
April.
jAGU&lt;\RS

Doctors and trainers found no furPANTHERS
ther damage to Tony Boselli's knee,
. Carolina.Panthers quarterbacks Jeff
and the Jacksonville Jaguars expect Lewis and Chris Weinke were so bad
their Pro Bowl left tackle to be ready in their last preseason game that they
for the season opener.
have earned more playing time in the
Boselli twisted his surgically next one.
repaired right knee in practice SunLewis and Weinke struggled in a
day, and he hld to be taken off the 23-8 loss to New England on Saturfield on a cart. But a thorough exam- . day, combining for three intercep.~
ination showed only a bone bruise.
tions and just 89 yards.
Coach Tom Coughlin said receiver
Both will see more action Thursday
Jimmy Smith will see his first action night against Baltimore as coach
of the preseason Thursday, when the George Seifert continues to evaluate
Jaguars play host to Kansas City. his. top two signal-callers.

Limping
Packers top
Broncos
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)The Green Bay Packefs were
counting on a healthier lineup after endurin~ their worst
injury epidemic in franchise
history last year.
But a dozen from-line players sat out Monday night, and
Antonio . Freeman joined
them on the sideline with a
concussion in the Packers' 227 preseason victory over Denver.
Just before halftime, Freeman was running full speed
over the middle and had just
caught a' Brett Favre pass
when
cornerback
Eric
Brown's helmet-to-jaw hit
sent Freeman plunging to the
grass head first.
"I was surprised because I
thought it was a good hit,"
said Brown, who was highliving Ian Gold as Freeman
was prone on the ground. The
crowd booed and the flag

Smith had two abdominal operations
in the offseason and has only
returned to full practice this week.

Two Nebraska
players arrested·

FUMBLE- Green Bay cornerback Mike McKenzie (34) knocks
ttie ball out of the hands of Denver Broncos' receiver Rod,
Smith after making a reception in the first quarter. (AP)

caine down.
1s 'not encouraged by the
Brown's
coach.
Mike . NFL ," Sherman said. "But
Shanahan, said he's have to see th ey happen and you move
the film. Don't bother, said 011. But hopefully, Freeman
Packers c0ach Mike Sher- will be OK ."
tnan.
Please see Broncos, B4
"It was a hit that obviously
\

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)The off-field troubles for
No.4 Nebraska are builcling
as two more players, includ. ing
1-back . Dahrran
Diedrick, face disciplinary
action after weekend arrests
for an argument at a bar.
Since June, four playershave been arrested and a
fifth, li nebacker Randy Stella, wa.&lt; kicked off the team
for violating tean1 rules.
Diedrick and backup
linebacker Tony Tara spent
· about an hour in jail Saturday night after being
charged with disturbing the
peace.
"You cannot be out at
midnight standing on the
street and generally have
something ~ood happen,'',
coach Frank Solich said
Monday.
Solich said that no decision had been made on the
players' status. He planned to
make a determination by
\

the end of the week.
''I'm just trying to get as
many facts on it as I can,''
Solich said. "In -a number of
cases we have waited until
things have played out in the
court system. I don't know if
that will be the case here." ·
Diedrick is scheduled to
appear in Lancaster County
Court Sept. 12. Tata is to
appear two days later.
Nebraska opens the season Saturday at home
against TCU.
·
The arrests add to a pre~
season that saw the Husken
lose SteUa, their top returning defender, and suspend
kicker Josh Brown for Saturday's game.
Stella, who had 58 tackles
last season, was booted o(l'
the team this month for
unclisclosed disciplinary rea~
sons. Brown was convicted
of assault for fighting with a
man on a date with his exgirlfriend.
-~-

·····- -

"...

~--~.

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aug 21, 2001

~--------------~~~----------~~

'Qtrtbune - Sentinel - l\.egi5ter

CLASSIFIED

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r......~
...RENro...,~lr~IC,=: ~}Harness racing takes center stage at Fair
AERAT ON MOTORS
$2 95 1992 Corsu one
Repared Now &amp; Robull In owne 103K $2495 199

We Cover
Metgs, Gallla,

Bv ScoTT WO!.FE

Slock Cal Ron Evans 1 CaYaie 98K $2195 1990

cla1med the second heat wh1le Loaded
Cannon and Charhe Schoonover
cla1med the th rd quahfier and wmners
share of the purse The fourth heat went
to veteran lloyd Hawk aboard the
Joseph D Lanmng mount
Ralph Calvert Jr and Our Lady
Chabhs of Racme led most of the fifth
heat but had to settle for second behmd
ShelS Way Cool and Al Jones
C heerful L1z cla1med the SIXth go
round agam With Schoonover m the
sulkey Flashofcompetence cla1med the
seventh heat With B1ll Long J r at the
helm h1s second wm of the day
Racmg officials servmg for the day
were Russ Baldwm Judge R od
Newhart Clerk Chm Patterson
Announcer D1ck Roth Starter Roger
Spencer Speed Supermtendent Track
PhotoiS by Nester and Wmnem C~rcle
Phot01s by Lmscott Photo

800 537 9528

And MasM

1 Dedroom nea Holze AJC
iiCufJU

Counties Like
No One
Else Can'

K:&amp;l gas hea

que

local on $279 month ease
&amp; deposl
equ ad
(740)446-2957

Escort LX
77K
$950
COOK MOTORS (740)446
~~~---- _01_03____________
MOBILE liOME OWNERS

In one week With us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~rthune

To Place

Your Ad,

l\.egister

Sentinel

(740) 446·2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call Today•••

Rooms avai ab e at Darst
Adult Group Home lor Rea
dents pr vate and shared

..f'ooms

RACE SUMM'-RY

avalable (740}992

The summary s presented n the to ow1ng a ange
menl Horse Jockey Owner •nd hometown The winn fng
t me wll "be posted last
Heat One Forever Kwk:k B II Long J Rock N(

"5023
\ IIIU II 1\I&gt;ISI

Monday thru Fnday
8 00 a m to 5 00 p m

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

Oa ~ In Co umn 1 00 p m
Monday F day to Insert on
In Next Days Pape
Sunday In Co umn 1 00 p m
Fo sundays Paper

Free Yard Sale S1gn1
15 Words 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

$

6

Pr vate Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days • Each Item Pr ced
• No Commerc al Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Anima s
Or Garage/Yard Sa es • Lim t 3 Per Person

Horse Stabe Coumbus Oho Henry Etta S Charla
Schoonove W llam J Roush West Columba W Va
Pocketythemonaysam Tarry Thompson J
Gwen M
Thompson P keton Oh o Jazzfs Mag c AI Jones
Clarence E Haybron Un on Furnace Ohio Marthas
Col een John Plummer Jim Plumme Wellston Oh o
Crown Time Y Two K Earl OWings Esther M Crownover
McArthur Oh o Pretty VleuM Ty Van Rhoden Oav d P
Panter Johnstown Oh o Time- 2 07
Heat Two Eastern Star Two Duane Lowe Duane M
Lowe Ma a Ohio Striking MICk Ryan Householder
Robert Young and Je ry M te London Oh o Who(s the
Duck Charle Schoonove Joseph 0 Lann ng
Zanesville Oh o Ten Ten Two Twenty Robert Ogg J
Robert Ogg Jr and Sr and Tom Johnson Zanesv e
Ohio P sto pack nhoney A Jones WI am Lee Jago
Amesv lie Ohio Sch m tarra Action 8 I Long J Don

Mall To Oh o Valley Publishing 825 Third
Avenue Galllpo Is OH 45631

POUCII!S Ohio Valley Jllub ..hint ,.MrWI the rfght to Milt, ~t, OJ c.~ 1ny lid .t any time Errore mutt be ,...,on.d on the flral day
Tf bune-Sentlnti-Rqlt1et w II bt reaponllble lor no mort thin tht colt ot tht apace ocoupJICI by the trr0r and only the I r.t nMr"tlon We
•ny lou or •XJMnM thl;t retulta from h publlcallon or oml11lon of an .ctvarliMmenl Correction wtn be matH In thl ftl'lt avalllbM .clition
,,. ttw.ys cant dlntlsl Current , .., Cllrd sppi!M AI rul nt.t. .ctv..U...,.nte: are •ubfect to tiM Feder• Ft r Holding Act of 1HI
HCePII only help w1ntld ldt mHIIng EQE tt.ndardL Wt wt 1no1 knowing y IOOipt eny ldYtrtlalng In violation or tht law

Start Yo u Ads w th A t&lt;eywo d Inc ude comp ete
Desc pt on
nc ude A. Pr ce Av o d A.bb ev at ons
Inc ude Pho e Numbe And Add ess When Needed
Ads Shau d ~un 7 Oays

Spencer afld Joyce and Mary LeWis Waterford Oh o
Vankeez Ca

Earl Ow ngs Kathryn L Ow ngs McAr1hu

Oh o Time- 2 4
Heat Th ee Loaded Cannon Charla Schoonov8f
WI am E Roush Hende son W v Falconfs Oes~gn
Te ry Thompson J Gwen M Thompson P ke on Oh o
Falcon s S ver Kev n Johnson V rg C Hal Jackson
Oho Time- 205
Heat Four Took The Ca I Lloyd Hawtc. Joseph D
Lann ng Zanesv le OhiO C own Time H llop Ty Van
Rhoden Es he M C ownover McArthur Qnkl F na
S orm 81 Long Jr sedona Spence Waterford Oh o
Up and Ove John G een Thomas M Oaumlt West
Newton Pa Fantasy Man Eart Ow ngs Es he M
C ownove
MeA hu Oh o Jay L Ross Charlie
Schoonove Ross L Bateman A hens Oh o Wesleys
Ch p Ty Van Rhoden Tomas C S ubbs Alledon a Ohio
Time 2 09 4
Heat F ve She s Way Coo A Jones Gary L Ble
derman Pa askala Oh o Ou Lady Chabl s Ralph
Ca vert J
Ralph Calver1 J
Rae ne Oh o Marys
Machine Chart e Schoonover Aoge L Sturg 1 Oak H 11
Oh o The lady Mach ne Rex Wa!son Marv n T Row
and McAnhu Oh o Easy Soul B Long J Robert L
G over Bait more Oh o Ta attack Ph p Swatzel Ph lip
Swatzel Pomeroy Oh o Time 2 10 2
Heat S x Cheerful L z Chari e Schoonove Ross L
Ba eman Athens Oh o Spec a Ca Robert Ogg Jr
Barba a A Cheney Sm thton Pa C own Time Sputn k
Earl Owings Esthe M Crownover McArthu Oh6o A ck
s Angel Kathy Ow ngs Kathryn L Ow ngs McArthur
Oh o M ss Goosoy Lucy B I Long J Aogo Spencer
Pomeroy Ohio Hummous Ryan Household&amp; Carl F
Vande see Ottawa Lake M ld e Ac es Susan Burke
Lyons Ca I Tho nlon Can a W ncheste Ohio Time
2 15 2
Heat Seven
F ashofcompetence B I Long Jr
Robert E Jo dan B ackl ck Oh o Ed Who AI Jones
Joyce A and A~e h a d McC el and Zanesv I e Oh o Big
Guy L Hie Guy Chari e Schoonover And ew G Malone
Wa erfo d Oh o C own Time Jack Earl Owings Esther
M C ownove McArthur Oh o Time- 2 05
Heat E ght Juel Spot Barney D lon Donald G Dll
lon Jerusa em Oh o Saulsbrook Ne I Burica Lyons Carl
0 Thornton Canal Wlncheste Ohio 5I ve Chip Rex
Wa son Rex 0 Wa son McArthu Oh o Time 2 15 4
Heat N ne Teekt que Earf OWings cons M Newhart
Manetta Oh o (lams Ca Motion Ryan Holton Wayne G
No man Palaska a Ohio The Real T uth Charlie
Schoonover Dana Lynn Malone Waterford Ohio Game
Venus Bur11:e lyons Oa e E Gardner Caldwe I Oh o
P ay A U Ty Van Rhoden Bernard Eckstein CO umbus
and John Br ghl Cen erbu g Oh o Town Imp Oav d
No an Florence M Startsman Fayettev lie Oh o Tlme2 084

Winners announced at Fair truck and semi pulls

V ck Jones ook ng Ia o d

f end Ca olyn M lie Leach
lo ve You S
399t

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

(863)773

Wanted Dead o al ve
House
Jacks
cemen
ough sh ng e remove
msc umbe and sding
cement blocks (7 40)441
0825

I \ 11'1 0\ \II '\ I

"'Hn

Advocate Fo Ch d en
Become a Fos e Paren
Cal WV Youth Advocate
Program
Phone t 800 575 6008
0 304 345-6897

HI

o..,

All MJI Htlle actvertlllng

In thla news.,.~, II'
oubltel to the ..-ra1
Felt Houllng Act or 1868
whleh makttlt Illegal to

tdvertiH "'any
preference llmltltlon 01
dlterlmlnat on baed on
race color rellg on ••

•nw-

d acrlmlnation

Arcad a Nu s ng Cente
East Ma n S eet
Coovle Oh
SS)
(740 667 3
EOE

-------==----AnENTION
WE NEED HELP!

$500 $1500 PT
$2 ooo $6 ooo FT
F ee Tan ng
866 807 R CH

r

For Sale 1978 Ford F 250
Used TI\Jmpol good lor be,
4x4Tuck
newmmor new----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - g nne $25 00 (304 )675
ransmiss on new paint
3652
good condlllon 1984 Ford llr.~-"'!'~~-..,
one ton 2 wheel d ve eng ·r · Bo
11'11~--:~~--,

preference llmlt.tlon or

GIVEAWAY

F ee two Span el m x pups
mala b acklwh e lema e
b ownlwh e 740-698 3004

992-2156

tlmllllletatut or nltlonal
origin or 1ny Intention to
IMikl
auch

New To You Th I Shoppe
9 Wes S mson Athens
740 592 842
Qua y c a h ng and house
hold ems $ 00 bag sa e
every Thu sday Monday
h u Sa u da~ 9 00-6 00

t

Subscnbe today

Lo!ITAND
FOUND

Gambro Healthcare
DRIVERS LOCAL Nal ona
ene gy compa ny has fu I Cu ent y has the lol ow ng
I me post ons ava labia lo ca ee oppor1un 1y n ou
employment n the Rae ne Pakesbug WVdayss
a ea
dea cand da 8 cl n c

shou d have a east year
s a ghl t uck driv ng expe

REGISTERED NURSE

ence and possess class A
o B COL w th an X en
do sement Lave offers a
fu I benef s package nclud
ng mad ca dental v s on
401 (k) malch ng vacat on
plus INCENTIVE BONUS
ES
nte ested cand dates
pease ca 1 800 583 9675
Fo a comple e st ng of JOb
open ngs please v s ou r
web s e at www levelp o
pane com

UAGENTlY

NEEDED

p asma dono s ea n $45 o
$60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly
Ca
Se a Tee 740 592
6651

&lt;\.'~S~~RS

Thll MWIPIII*' will nDt
knowingly occopt
adven:leementa tor real
11lete whk:h II In
vl~atlon of tM law Our
rwdefl .,. hereby
Informed that 111
.,_.lings ldvartiHd In
&amp;hie nn~.-r ,,.
available on en equal

2 bedroom apart
u n shed and unlur
secun y depos re
no pets 740 992

..

l--~=:~~b=·::·~J

Ch sty s Fam y L \1 ng
33140 New L ma Rd Au
land Oh o 740 742 740~
Apartmen home and a e
renta s Comme c a sto e
I onts ava lab e fo lease
Vacanc es now

' (1\IISI\11

lnd an C eek Es ales 3
acre to 6 acre estates also
27 50 acre or mo e Ia m or
ranch and (740)245 ~747

NOW H RING
RIVER BOAT PILOTS
Company has mmed a e
open ngs n the Charleston
area o expenenced r ver
boa potsw hopeatosl
cense fo un nspec ed ves
se s
FAX esume to
(304)345 6386
o
ca l
(304)345 6383

n

ms

Fo Lease One bed oom
unlu n shed second I oo
apartmen a come of SEK:
ond and Pine AJC S300
pe mon h wa e nc uded
Secu ly and key depos I
Rele ences equ ad No
pes (740)446 4425

Baby Bed Dross ng Table
f' ay Pon Car Seal Scrol

Apa tment .3
rooms and bath $285 00

month A Ut ties Pad 91'9
Second
Ave
phone
(740)446 3945
G ac ous I ving 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at V
lage Mano and Rivers de
Apanments n M ddlepor1
From $278 $348 Ca 740992 5064 Equal Hous ng

YAIIIl SALE
GALLIPOLIS

Opportun

es

Huge Ya d Sae 44 Bu e
nutD\Ie
2meout8ua

v e F day Sa u day 9 5

YARD SALE

Pr. I'LEASAI'IT

oa

Saw 2 Antique Lamps
(304)875 2801
B g Screen TV Take on
small monlnly poymonta
Good Credit Aoqul od
Phone 1 800 718 t 657
"Cobra 29LTO C ass c CB
;lad o $65 Wilson 1000
Magnetic Mount CB Anten
na $35 (304)875 8795
Craftsljlan 10 Tabo Saw
wllh 40 labo (740)256
8359

For Sa e Like New 24AS
Sunquest Tanning Bed
$2300 Cal (304)895 6705
Four grave cemetery ots at
Memory Gardens In e est
ed persons call (740)446138t

Something lor everyone

~76

QOib
P opane
Tanka
bought new never used
Overf II P otection Device
barbecue gr I size 1 Ful
$30 2 empty $20 each
(304)875 8795

C ean 2b ~artment Ref
e ences and depos t No
Pots (304)675 5t62

Fu n shed

YAR,ll SAlE

____.;__;____

New 14x70 3Brl2bth on y

ooo m•s

rlO

v

:....:::...:...=_;:.:.::==---

I

FARM

L.-.Oii li-li i--,J
EQlJlPMEllll'

Case 580 Super E Backhoe
Extendahoe 4x4 lu I cab
with hoat 3 000 hou s very
good condlllon (740)379
2855

Fe guoon 30 with exira mo
lo and 6 Ford buoh hog
new 5 scrapper blade
$2800 Call (740)448 4393

r
~

HAG.;~~
~·

I

79 Jeep CJ5
$2500
(304)675-ll540 Robart Neal
87 Chevy 4x4 plckup 2 Ill
kit Aluminum wheolo 305
automat c very nice $6500
~(7..:40:::;)~2::56:.-650:::::::8________
87 Ford Range 4x4 ox
ended
cab
$2700
(740)44t t 913
99
Chevy 4x4 air t 11.
cruise good work b'Uck.
Asking $4,000 (740)4ol6
0744

•

•x

Tara Townhouse Apart
menta Very Spac ous 2
Bedrooms 2 Floors CA
1 2 Bath Fu ly Carpoled
Adu~ Pocl &amp; Baby Pocl Pa
to Sttn S3651Mo No Pols
Leaoo Plua Security DoposJt
Required Oayo 740 446
348t Evonlngo 740 387
0502 740 448 Ot01
Tw n A vtrTowtrt now ao
oeptlng
oppllcal ono lo 1 SR
HUC aubl dlztd apt lor
t dtrly and d oabltd EOH
(304)878 8879

j

Gray aect ona w/e eeper
S350 488 COr!l&gt;ular wlprlnt
or $250 colfee &amp; end able
'ael $50 Welder weight t 990 Cougar LS al Power
banch &amp; we ghts $175 52 OOOm
good cond tlon
prnter
sand
$10 S4 000 (304)875-5019 after
(740)4ol6-4165
6pm or leave meaaage
Grubb I P ano Tun ng &amp;
Chevy
Cavalier
Repairs P oblems? Need 95
Tuned? Ca Tho Plano 0 wrecked $1200 080 79 4
wheel drive Bronco $1500
740-446-4525
OBO B8 Lincoln Town Ca
lndepon&lt;lanl Herballo 0 s $1000 OBO 92 Hyundla
trlbulor Co I For Producl Or $400 OBO (740)256-&amp;478
Opportunlly (740)441-t 962
Oldomobllt Cudofl
Cieri 83 000 mllto $5500
Call after Spm on week
days (304)676-8733

ee

2000 model Sporltllor 863
2000 mllto $7200 1985
Low rider eiCCit lent oondl
lion $8800 740 992.()280
2001
Harley Oovldson
Sportotor 883 Hugger lor
ward contra a 810 miles
asking $8000 (740)742

•soe

-iiiii.iiHIIiOMEiiiiiiiliiio,.l
IMPIIOYI!MEMS

C&amp;C Ganeral Home Mainonence- Paint ng vinyl s dlng carpentry doors w ndowo balhs moblo home

r

I
n less than 6 mos
Paid vactKlns (Hawa 200 )
Home w th ch d en
1 800-221 7740

:200=2:-::W-:-a_co__a:-lu-m:-ln-um~l:-oh~ Rea dent al o comma c al
lng boat w/centar conso 8 wiring new serviCe or re50 horse Mercury &amp; tra ,
palrt Ma1ter L~eensed etec
$9800 2002 Waco 11 alu triclan Ridenour E ec neal
mlnum baso boat w/60 WV000306 304-ll75-t786
horn Mercury &amp; lralla
$10 300 2001 Hyd a ban
llbarglau ban boal w/150
horse Mercury &amp; traile
SIS 600 other aoaortmont
of boats Ca I Tom at Marine
ServlcH 740-992.0280

s mp e ow monthly payment

II Elimi,nata

j

2

HF~twood

:':

HllpWanted

summER
Star Crah Soltsldt TI\Jck
Compo In Excollonl Condl
tlon 2yr1 old ulod 3 limos
(304)875 3Q86
-.. 1 U \ II I -.,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINQ
Unoond tlonal lllotimt guar
antee Loca aferencea fur
nlohod Eolab lohod 1976
24 Hrs (740) 448
Harley Davidson He mat Cal
Hall Shell Drag p P41a to f I 0870
1-800 287.0578
Sponllor $50 each Also Rogoro Wolorproollng
CSR Kawaoakl Motorcyc 1
can 773 5887
--------

Easy Indoor
work ftexlble

hours full/part
time hurry!
Positions fiRing
quickly!
1-888-974-JOBS
COG

lllaniQement LLC

Save

wh le beoom ng debt ee
lo en e s homeowne Band
peop e w th c edt d fflcull ea
Spec sl z ng n c edt ca ds collect on
accounts medica b Is and unsecured
loBns Ca
800 697 2200 Ed 340
A 50 (c 3)Nol Fo P or t 0 gan zat on

Ma ling Ou Sa es B ochu es
Free Supp es Postage
Start mmed ate y
Genu ne Opportun ty
Fo Fee nomaton
CaITo I Free
1 888 8 5 t835

JOBS

S6-S7/HR

In e est

1 ~~~,~~~

~

Prowler camper eMce aen
condlllon
fu
bedroom
atslnoss sleol stove &amp; ro
lrlgoralor
ale
$3 500
(740)992-4163

H gh

P

111111'--:r-~
......
_--_-::&amp;~..,

11{''\...,I 'IIH I \l ltJ "\

L...-------_.1

10

1711 w/120 Evnrude load eollmattcal Chet 740 992
od garago kept oxctlenl 6323
_ ________________
cond lion Call (30.)576 Lvlngsons Basemen! Wa
21 88
ter Proofing al ba&amp;ement
~~-:------------ repairs done free estl
1991 Lowe pontoon 24 malea llolmo gua antes
100 hp Johnson runs ex 14yrs on job experience
co enl hard top 26 gal (304)8953887
tank prlva1a po~a polll
large pontoon plywood
ELEcnuc.uJ
colonl
$5!100
llrm
REfluGERA'IlON
(740)985 3588
~
•

I:

Buck a bale oalo squa ellii) MOTORCYOJ!S
bales $1 00 othe hay up to
$2 00 round bales SIS 00 1988 Suzuk
GS450L
oach304-6754889
13727actualmln $1200
OBO (740)992'6255
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Straw Yeo Round Col very 18SS Yamaha Warr"r 350
&amp; Volume Oleoount Avails $2 000 OSO Loll ol ox1ra1
ba
He~lage
Fa m (740)ol48 2804
(304)676-5724

L.

go King Flnr Bau Soal repair and mora Fo free

HOUSES

2ba A I Appl anctts Free
Del very &amp; Setup On
S32 900 Only at Fleetwood t 3 Bod ocms Fo eclosed
Homes of Proctorvlle To 1 Homes From $199/Mo 4%
F 00 t-ll86 565.0t67
Down 30 Yea a at 8 5%
APR Fo Listings 800-319
New 2002 Fleetwood 1 ng o 3323 Exl 1709
WkJo Only St 49 month only - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 Fleetwood Homea ot 2 bedroom home 'btosa to
Proctorvl e Toll Free 1 town basement A ve view
886 585 Ot87
14261 month 3 badroom In
town 1 112 bathl Good loNow bank ropo. 1•&gt;t70 3 cal on $5001 monlh Role
badroom 2 bath Pty 14~ oncto tnd dtpoo t roqu rod
&amp; move In Otkwood Gall p- (740K48-3644
o lo (740)-44e-30Q3
;.;..;=:.:..;;;;.;;.;...._ __

rL.-------,JI

4-WDs

FOR RENr

Now 2002 Doub o Wide 3b

experienced Meta Me
chan c1
and
Insulate 1 neer:ted ro up
'i!~.;.;~~---., coming nuc ear outages
~
Other c alta roqu rod piP'J
WANm&gt;
p&lt;tp technic ano &amp; acaffo
TO BUY
• bu ldt o Backg ound chock
&amp; 01\Jg Screening oqulrtd
$ 5hr to Joumeymtn $50
Wan ed to buy ulld mob • 1 day lor de m To 1 ang1
homes ea (740)446 0175 an ntervew contact Beckie
o !304)875 5965
804 458 1855 EOE

r
L,--------"

Cann ng toma oes poppers
Contact McKeon Farm 556
Centenary Road (740)4469442
1984 Blue bird Bus Oslroll
eng ne very good condlt on
Canning tomatoes we plcfi: Ca anytime afle 6am
$5 bushel you pck S4 (740)245 5634
bushel cal (740)247 2113
Jm OB on Farms also 1999WndsUirSE V6 rear
~ave ho1 &amp; grwn PBPP'JIB
~eat a 8 r 4 doer loaded
40
excel ant con
I \H \1 "' ' 1'1'1 II -,
d tlon
$17 000
OBO
.\ 11\I ..., IIHh
(740)367-0632

$975 down and $189 76 : ; : : : ; ; : : : : : : : :
month y
.Ca
N kkl
(740)385 4367

riO

whee4 base
cyl mo
tor
speed300
2 6Ford
460 ~
''""' ~
•
moloro 1 Chevy 350 moto
1976 Fo d cab wl h new
llocr boa do (740)949-3232 ISS5 Prc-Crall t7112 loot
Bass boat with 1988 John
ean 150 HP englnt $3 000
•---V.""ANS-~&amp;--" (7&lt;40) 2561329

A 1Bus nesses

Aeta

Best Rates
Ze o Fee
Rap d Act vation
eCommerce Home based
1-800-395 5588

~~I

CASH LOANS I
Bad Cad OK
Most Qually
FeBt Service
Contiden 18

Easy Paymen 8
1-800-332 2411

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aug 21, 2001

~--------------~~~----------~~

'Qtrtbune - Sentinel - l\.egi5ter

CLASSIFIED

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r......~
...RENro...,~lr~IC,=: ~}Harness racing takes center stage at Fair
AERAT ON MOTORS
$2 95 1992 Corsu one
Repared Now &amp; Robull In owne 103K $2495 199

We Cover
Metgs, Gallla,

Bv ScoTT WO!.FE

Slock Cal Ron Evans 1 CaYaie 98K $2195 1990

cla1med the second heat wh1le Loaded
Cannon and Charhe Schoonover
cla1med the th rd quahfier and wmners
share of the purse The fourth heat went
to veteran lloyd Hawk aboard the
Joseph D Lanmng mount
Ralph Calvert Jr and Our Lady
Chabhs of Racme led most of the fifth
heat but had to settle for second behmd
ShelS Way Cool and Al Jones
C heerful L1z cla1med the SIXth go
round agam With Schoonover m the
sulkey Flashofcompetence cla1med the
seventh heat With B1ll Long J r at the
helm h1s second wm of the day
Racmg officials servmg for the day
were Russ Baldwm Judge R od
Newhart Clerk Chm Patterson
Announcer D1ck Roth Starter Roger
Spencer Speed Supermtendent Track
PhotoiS by Nester and Wmnem C~rcle
Phot01s by Lmscott Photo

800 537 9528

And MasM

1 Dedroom nea Holze AJC
iiCufJU

Counties Like
No One
Else Can'

K:&amp;l gas hea

que

local on $279 month ease
&amp; deposl
equ ad
(740)446-2957

Escort LX
77K
$950
COOK MOTORS (740)446
~~~---- _01_03____________
MOBILE liOME OWNERS

In one week With us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~rthune

To Place

Your Ad,

l\.egister

Sentinel

(740) 446·2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call Today•••

Rooms avai ab e at Darst
Adult Group Home lor Rea
dents pr vate and shared

..f'ooms

RACE SUMM'-RY

avalable (740}992

The summary s presented n the to ow1ng a ange
menl Horse Jockey Owner •nd hometown The winn fng
t me wll "be posted last
Heat One Forever Kwk:k B II Long J Rock N(

"5023
\ IIIU II 1\I&gt;ISI

Monday thru Fnday
8 00 a m to 5 00 p m

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

Oa ~ In Co umn 1 00 p m
Monday F day to Insert on
In Next Days Pape
Sunday In Co umn 1 00 p m
Fo sundays Paper

Free Yard Sale S1gn1
15 Words 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

$

6

Pr vate Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days • Each Item Pr ced
• No Commerc al Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Anima s
Or Garage/Yard Sa es • Lim t 3 Per Person

Horse Stabe Coumbus Oho Henry Etta S Charla
Schoonove W llam J Roush West Columba W Va
Pocketythemonaysam Tarry Thompson J
Gwen M
Thompson P keton Oh o Jazzfs Mag c AI Jones
Clarence E Haybron Un on Furnace Ohio Marthas
Col een John Plummer Jim Plumme Wellston Oh o
Crown Time Y Two K Earl OWings Esther M Crownover
McArthur Oh o Pretty VleuM Ty Van Rhoden Oav d P
Panter Johnstown Oh o Time- 2 07
Heat Two Eastern Star Two Duane Lowe Duane M
Lowe Ma a Ohio Striking MICk Ryan Householder
Robert Young and Je ry M te London Oh o Who(s the
Duck Charle Schoonove Joseph 0 Lann ng
Zanesville Oh o Ten Ten Two Twenty Robert Ogg J
Robert Ogg Jr and Sr and Tom Johnson Zanesv e
Ohio P sto pack nhoney A Jones WI am Lee Jago
Amesv lie Ohio Sch m tarra Action 8 I Long J Don

Mall To Oh o Valley Publishing 825 Third
Avenue Galllpo Is OH 45631

POUCII!S Ohio Valley Jllub ..hint ,.MrWI the rfght to Milt, ~t, OJ c.~ 1ny lid .t any time Errore mutt be ,...,on.d on the flral day
Tf bune-Sentlnti-Rqlt1et w II bt reaponllble lor no mort thin tht colt ot tht apace ocoupJICI by the trr0r and only the I r.t nMr"tlon We
•ny lou or •XJMnM thl;t retulta from h publlcallon or oml11lon of an .ctvarliMmenl Correction wtn be matH In thl ftl'lt avalllbM .clition
,,. ttw.ys cant dlntlsl Current , .., Cllrd sppi!M AI rul nt.t. .ctv..U...,.nte: are •ubfect to tiM Feder• Ft r Holding Act of 1HI
HCePII only help w1ntld ldt mHIIng EQE tt.ndardL Wt wt 1no1 knowing y IOOipt eny ldYtrtlalng In violation or tht law

Start Yo u Ads w th A t&lt;eywo d Inc ude comp ete
Desc pt on
nc ude A. Pr ce Av o d A.bb ev at ons
Inc ude Pho e Numbe And Add ess When Needed
Ads Shau d ~un 7 Oays

Spencer afld Joyce and Mary LeWis Waterford Oh o
Vankeez Ca

Earl Ow ngs Kathryn L Ow ngs McAr1hu

Oh o Time- 2 4
Heat Th ee Loaded Cannon Charla Schoonov8f
WI am E Roush Hende son W v Falconfs Oes~gn
Te ry Thompson J Gwen M Thompson P ke on Oh o
Falcon s S ver Kev n Johnson V rg C Hal Jackson
Oho Time- 205
Heat Four Took The Ca I Lloyd Hawtc. Joseph D
Lann ng Zanesv le OhiO C own Time H llop Ty Van
Rhoden Es he M C ownover McArthur Qnkl F na
S orm 81 Long Jr sedona Spence Waterford Oh o
Up and Ove John G een Thomas M Oaumlt West
Newton Pa Fantasy Man Eart Ow ngs Es he M
C ownove
MeA hu Oh o Jay L Ross Charlie
Schoonove Ross L Bateman A hens Oh o Wesleys
Ch p Ty Van Rhoden Tomas C S ubbs Alledon a Ohio
Time 2 09 4
Heat F ve She s Way Coo A Jones Gary L Ble
derman Pa askala Oh o Ou Lady Chabl s Ralph
Ca vert J
Ralph Calver1 J
Rae ne Oh o Marys
Machine Chart e Schoonover Aoge L Sturg 1 Oak H 11
Oh o The lady Mach ne Rex Wa!son Marv n T Row
and McAnhu Oh o Easy Soul B Long J Robert L
G over Bait more Oh o Ta attack Ph p Swatzel Ph lip
Swatzel Pomeroy Oh o Time 2 10 2
Heat S x Cheerful L z Chari e Schoonove Ross L
Ba eman Athens Oh o Spec a Ca Robert Ogg Jr
Barba a A Cheney Sm thton Pa C own Time Sputn k
Earl Owings Esthe M Crownover McArthu Oh6o A ck
s Angel Kathy Ow ngs Kathryn L Ow ngs McArthur
Oh o M ss Goosoy Lucy B I Long J Aogo Spencer
Pomeroy Ohio Hummous Ryan Household&amp; Carl F
Vande see Ottawa Lake M ld e Ac es Susan Burke
Lyons Ca I Tho nlon Can a W ncheste Ohio Time
2 15 2
Heat Seven
F ashofcompetence B I Long Jr
Robert E Jo dan B ackl ck Oh o Ed Who AI Jones
Joyce A and A~e h a d McC el and Zanesv I e Oh o Big
Guy L Hie Guy Chari e Schoonover And ew G Malone
Wa erfo d Oh o C own Time Jack Earl Owings Esther
M C ownove McArthur Oh o Time- 2 05
Heat E ght Juel Spot Barney D lon Donald G Dll
lon Jerusa em Oh o Saulsbrook Ne I Burica Lyons Carl
0 Thornton Canal Wlncheste Ohio 5I ve Chip Rex
Wa son Rex 0 Wa son McArthu Oh o Time 2 15 4
Heat N ne Teekt que Earf OWings cons M Newhart
Manetta Oh o (lams Ca Motion Ryan Holton Wayne G
No man Palaska a Ohio The Real T uth Charlie
Schoonover Dana Lynn Malone Waterford Ohio Game
Venus Bur11:e lyons Oa e E Gardner Caldwe I Oh o
P ay A U Ty Van Rhoden Bernard Eckstein CO umbus
and John Br ghl Cen erbu g Oh o Town Imp Oav d
No an Florence M Startsman Fayettev lie Oh o Tlme2 084

Winners announced at Fair truck and semi pulls

V ck Jones ook ng Ia o d

f end Ca olyn M lie Leach
lo ve You S
399t

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

(863)773

Wanted Dead o al ve
House
Jacks
cemen
ough sh ng e remove
msc umbe and sding
cement blocks (7 40)441
0825

I \ 11'1 0\ \II '\ I

"'Hn

Advocate Fo Ch d en
Become a Fos e Paren
Cal WV Youth Advocate
Program
Phone t 800 575 6008
0 304 345-6897

HI

o..,

All MJI Htlle actvertlllng

In thla news.,.~, II'
oubltel to the ..-ra1
Felt Houllng Act or 1868
whleh makttlt Illegal to

tdvertiH "'any
preference llmltltlon 01
dlterlmlnat on baed on
race color rellg on ••

•nw-

d acrlmlnation

Arcad a Nu s ng Cente
East Ma n S eet
Coovle Oh
SS)
(740 667 3
EOE

-------==----AnENTION
WE NEED HELP!

$500 $1500 PT
$2 ooo $6 ooo FT
F ee Tan ng
866 807 R CH

r

For Sale 1978 Ford F 250
Used TI\Jmpol good lor be,
4x4Tuck
newmmor new----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - g nne $25 00 (304 )675
ransmiss on new paint
3652
good condlllon 1984 Ford llr.~-"'!'~~-..,
one ton 2 wheel d ve eng ·r · Bo
11'11~--:~~--,

preference llmlt.tlon or

GIVEAWAY

F ee two Span el m x pups
mala b acklwh e lema e
b ownlwh e 740-698 3004

992-2156

tlmllllletatut or nltlonal
origin or 1ny Intention to
IMikl
auch

New To You Th I Shoppe
9 Wes S mson Athens
740 592 842
Qua y c a h ng and house
hold ems $ 00 bag sa e
every Thu sday Monday
h u Sa u da~ 9 00-6 00

t

Subscnbe today

Lo!ITAND
FOUND

Gambro Healthcare
DRIVERS LOCAL Nal ona
ene gy compa ny has fu I Cu ent y has the lol ow ng
I me post ons ava labia lo ca ee oppor1un 1y n ou
employment n the Rae ne Pakesbug WVdayss
a ea
dea cand da 8 cl n c

shou d have a east year
s a ghl t uck driv ng expe

REGISTERED NURSE

ence and possess class A
o B COL w th an X en
do sement Lave offers a
fu I benef s package nclud
ng mad ca dental v s on
401 (k) malch ng vacat on
plus INCENTIVE BONUS
ES
nte ested cand dates
pease ca 1 800 583 9675
Fo a comple e st ng of JOb
open ngs please v s ou r
web s e at www levelp o
pane com

UAGENTlY

NEEDED

p asma dono s ea n $45 o
$60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly
Ca
Se a Tee 740 592
6651

&lt;\.'~S~~RS

Thll MWIPIII*' will nDt
knowingly occopt
adven:leementa tor real
11lete whk:h II In
vl~atlon of tM law Our
rwdefl .,. hereby
Informed that 111
.,_.lings ldvartiHd In
&amp;hie nn~.-r ,,.
available on en equal

2 bedroom apart
u n shed and unlur
secun y depos re
no pets 740 992

..

l--~=:~~b=·::·~J

Ch sty s Fam y L \1 ng
33140 New L ma Rd Au
land Oh o 740 742 740~
Apartmen home and a e
renta s Comme c a sto e
I onts ava lab e fo lease
Vacanc es now

' (1\IISI\11

lnd an C eek Es ales 3
acre to 6 acre estates also
27 50 acre or mo e Ia m or
ranch and (740)245 ~747

NOW H RING
RIVER BOAT PILOTS
Company has mmed a e
open ngs n the Charleston
area o expenenced r ver
boa potsw hopeatosl
cense fo un nspec ed ves
se s
FAX esume to
(304)345 6386
o
ca l
(304)345 6383

n

ms

Fo Lease One bed oom
unlu n shed second I oo
apartmen a come of SEK:
ond and Pine AJC S300
pe mon h wa e nc uded
Secu ly and key depos I
Rele ences equ ad No
pes (740)446 4425

Baby Bed Dross ng Table
f' ay Pon Car Seal Scrol

Apa tment .3
rooms and bath $285 00

month A Ut ties Pad 91'9
Second
Ave
phone
(740)446 3945
G ac ous I ving 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at V
lage Mano and Rivers de
Apanments n M ddlepor1
From $278 $348 Ca 740992 5064 Equal Hous ng

YAIIIl SALE
GALLIPOLIS

Opportun

es

Huge Ya d Sae 44 Bu e
nutD\Ie
2meout8ua

v e F day Sa u day 9 5

YARD SALE

Pr. I'LEASAI'IT

oa

Saw 2 Antique Lamps
(304)875 2801
B g Screen TV Take on
small monlnly poymonta
Good Credit Aoqul od
Phone 1 800 718 t 657
"Cobra 29LTO C ass c CB
;lad o $65 Wilson 1000
Magnetic Mount CB Anten
na $35 (304)875 8795
Craftsljlan 10 Tabo Saw
wllh 40 labo (740)256
8359

For Sa e Like New 24AS
Sunquest Tanning Bed
$2300 Cal (304)895 6705
Four grave cemetery ots at
Memory Gardens In e est
ed persons call (740)446138t

Something lor everyone

~76

QOib
P opane
Tanka
bought new never used
Overf II P otection Device
barbecue gr I size 1 Ful
$30 2 empty $20 each
(304)875 8795

C ean 2b ~artment Ref
e ences and depos t No
Pots (304)675 5t62

Fu n shed

YAR,ll SAlE

____.;__;____

New 14x70 3Brl2bth on y

ooo m•s

rlO

v

:....:::...:...=_;:.:.::==---

I

FARM

L.-.Oii li-li i--,J
EQlJlPMEllll'

Case 580 Super E Backhoe
Extendahoe 4x4 lu I cab
with hoat 3 000 hou s very
good condlllon (740)379
2855

Fe guoon 30 with exira mo
lo and 6 Ford buoh hog
new 5 scrapper blade
$2800 Call (740)448 4393

r
~

HAG.;~~
~·

I

79 Jeep CJ5
$2500
(304)675-ll540 Robart Neal
87 Chevy 4x4 plckup 2 Ill
kit Aluminum wheolo 305
automat c very nice $6500
~(7..:40:::;)~2::56:.-650:::::::8________
87 Ford Range 4x4 ox
ended
cab
$2700
(740)44t t 913
99
Chevy 4x4 air t 11.
cruise good work b'Uck.
Asking $4,000 (740)4ol6
0744

•

•x

Tara Townhouse Apart
menta Very Spac ous 2
Bedrooms 2 Floors CA
1 2 Bath Fu ly Carpoled
Adu~ Pocl &amp; Baby Pocl Pa
to Sttn S3651Mo No Pols
Leaoo Plua Security DoposJt
Required Oayo 740 446
348t Evonlngo 740 387
0502 740 448 Ot01
Tw n A vtrTowtrt now ao
oeptlng
oppllcal ono lo 1 SR
HUC aubl dlztd apt lor
t dtrly and d oabltd EOH
(304)878 8879

j

Gray aect ona w/e eeper
S350 488 COr!l&gt;ular wlprlnt
or $250 colfee &amp; end able
'ael $50 Welder weight t 990 Cougar LS al Power
banch &amp; we ghts $175 52 OOOm
good cond tlon
prnter
sand
$10 S4 000 (304)875-5019 after
(740)4ol6-4165
6pm or leave meaaage
Grubb I P ano Tun ng &amp;
Chevy
Cavalier
Repairs P oblems? Need 95
Tuned? Ca Tho Plano 0 wrecked $1200 080 79 4
wheel drive Bronco $1500
740-446-4525
OBO B8 Lincoln Town Ca
lndepon&lt;lanl Herballo 0 s $1000 OBO 92 Hyundla
trlbulor Co I For Producl Or $400 OBO (740)256-&amp;478
Opportunlly (740)441-t 962
Oldomobllt Cudofl
Cieri 83 000 mllto $5500
Call after Spm on week
days (304)676-8733

ee

2000 model Sporltllor 863
2000 mllto $7200 1985
Low rider eiCCit lent oondl
lion $8800 740 992.()280
2001
Harley Oovldson
Sportotor 883 Hugger lor
ward contra a 810 miles
asking $8000 (740)742

•soe

-iiiii.iiHIIiOMEiiiiiiiliiio,.l
IMPIIOYI!MEMS

C&amp;C Ganeral Home Mainonence- Paint ng vinyl s dlng carpentry doors w ndowo balhs moblo home

r

I
n less than 6 mos
Paid vactKlns (Hawa 200 )
Home w th ch d en
1 800-221 7740

:200=2:-::W-:-a_co__a:-lu-m:-ln-um~l:-oh~ Rea dent al o comma c al
lng boat w/centar conso 8 wiring new serviCe or re50 horse Mercury &amp; tra ,
palrt Ma1ter L~eensed etec
$9800 2002 Waco 11 alu triclan Ridenour E ec neal
mlnum baso boat w/60 WV000306 304-ll75-t786
horn Mercury &amp; lralla
$10 300 2001 Hyd a ban
llbarglau ban boal w/150
horse Mercury &amp; traile
SIS 600 other aoaortmont
of boats Ca I Tom at Marine
ServlcH 740-992.0280

s mp e ow monthly payment

II Elimi,nata

j

2

HF~twood

:':

HllpWanted

summER
Star Crah Soltsldt TI\Jck
Compo In Excollonl Condl
tlon 2yr1 old ulod 3 limos
(304)875 3Q86
-.. 1 U \ II I -.,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINQ
Unoond tlonal lllotimt guar
antee Loca aferencea fur
nlohod Eolab lohod 1976
24 Hrs (740) 448
Harley Davidson He mat Cal
Hall Shell Drag p P41a to f I 0870
1-800 287.0578
Sponllor $50 each Also Rogoro Wolorproollng
CSR Kawaoakl Motorcyc 1
can 773 5887
--------

Easy Indoor
work ftexlble

hours full/part
time hurry!
Positions fiRing
quickly!
1-888-974-JOBS
COG

lllaniQement LLC

Save

wh le beoom ng debt ee
lo en e s homeowne Band
peop e w th c edt d fflcull ea
Spec sl z ng n c edt ca ds collect on
accounts medica b Is and unsecured
loBns Ca
800 697 2200 Ed 340
A 50 (c 3)Nol Fo P or t 0 gan zat on

Ma ling Ou Sa es B ochu es
Free Supp es Postage
Start mmed ate y
Genu ne Opportun ty
Fo Fee nomaton
CaITo I Free
1 888 8 5 t835

JOBS

S6-S7/HR

In e est

1 ~~~,~~~

~

Prowler camper eMce aen
condlllon
fu
bedroom
atslnoss sleol stove &amp; ro
lrlgoralor
ale
$3 500
(740)992-4163

H gh

P

111111'--:r-~
......
_--_-::&amp;~..,

11{''\...,I 'IIH I \l ltJ "\

L...-------_.1

10

1711 w/120 Evnrude load eollmattcal Chet 740 992
od garago kept oxctlenl 6323
_ ________________
cond lion Call (30.)576 Lvlngsons Basemen! Wa
21 88
ter Proofing al ba&amp;ement
~~-:------------ repairs done free estl
1991 Lowe pontoon 24 malea llolmo gua antes
100 hp Johnson runs ex 14yrs on job experience
co enl hard top 26 gal (304)8953887
tank prlva1a po~a polll
large pontoon plywood
ELEcnuc.uJ
colonl
$5!100
llrm
REfluGERA'IlON
(740)985 3588
~
•

I:

Buck a bale oalo squa ellii) MOTORCYOJ!S
bales $1 00 othe hay up to
$2 00 round bales SIS 00 1988 Suzuk
GS450L
oach304-6754889
13727actualmln $1200
OBO (740)992'6255
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Straw Yeo Round Col very 18SS Yamaha Warr"r 350
&amp; Volume Oleoount Avails $2 000 OSO Loll ol ox1ra1
ba
He~lage
Fa m (740)ol48 2804
(304)676-5724

L.

go King Flnr Bau Soal repair and mora Fo free

HOUSES

2ba A I Appl anctts Free
Del very &amp; Setup On
S32 900 Only at Fleetwood t 3 Bod ocms Fo eclosed
Homes of Proctorvlle To 1 Homes From $199/Mo 4%
F 00 t-ll86 565.0t67
Down 30 Yea a at 8 5%
APR Fo Listings 800-319
New 2002 Fleetwood 1 ng o 3323 Exl 1709
WkJo Only St 49 month only - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 Fleetwood Homea ot 2 bedroom home 'btosa to
Proctorvl e Toll Free 1 town basement A ve view
886 585 Ot87
14261 month 3 badroom In
town 1 112 bathl Good loNow bank ropo. 1•&gt;t70 3 cal on $5001 monlh Role
badroom 2 bath Pty 14~ oncto tnd dtpoo t roqu rod
&amp; move In Otkwood Gall p- (740K48-3644
o lo (740)-44e-30Q3
;.;..;=:.:..;;;;.;;.;...._ __

rL.-------,JI

4-WDs

FOR RENr

Now 2002 Doub o Wide 3b

experienced Meta Me
chan c1
and
Insulate 1 neer:ted ro up
'i!~.;.;~~---., coming nuc ear outages
~
Other c alta roqu rod piP'J
WANm&gt;
p&lt;tp technic ano &amp; acaffo
TO BUY
• bu ldt o Backg ound chock
&amp; 01\Jg Screening oqulrtd
$ 5hr to Joumeymtn $50
Wan ed to buy ulld mob • 1 day lor de m To 1 ang1
homes ea (740)446 0175 an ntervew contact Beckie
o !304)875 5965
804 458 1855 EOE

r
L,--------"

Cann ng toma oes poppers
Contact McKeon Farm 556
Centenary Road (740)4469442
1984 Blue bird Bus Oslroll
eng ne very good condlt on
Canning tomatoes we plcfi: Ca anytime afle 6am
$5 bushel you pck S4 (740)245 5634
bushel cal (740)247 2113
Jm OB on Farms also 1999WndsUirSE V6 rear
~ave ho1 &amp; grwn PBPP'JIB
~eat a 8 r 4 doer loaded
40
excel ant con
I \H \1 "' ' 1'1'1 II -,
d tlon
$17 000
OBO
.\ 11\I ..., IIHh
(740)367-0632

$975 down and $189 76 : ; : : : ; ; : : : : : : : :
month y
.Ca
N kkl
(740)385 4367

riO

whee4 base
cyl mo
tor
speed300
2 6Ford
460 ~
''""' ~
•
moloro 1 Chevy 350 moto
1976 Fo d cab wl h new
llocr boa do (740)949-3232 ISS5 Prc-Crall t7112 loot
Bass boat with 1988 John
ean 150 HP englnt $3 000
•---V.""ANS-~&amp;--" (7&lt;40) 2561329

A 1Bus nesses

Aeta

Best Rates
Ze o Fee
Rap d Act vation
eCommerce Home based
1-800-395 5588

~~I

CASH LOANS I
Bad Cad OK
Most Qually
FeBt Service
Contiden 18

Easy Paymen 8
1-800-332 2411

�Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

, Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP
NEA Cronword Puzzle

....
....

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN

•
•

10 8 '
10

z

BLOCKS OUT 99.5%

740-992-1101
or992-2753

NOTICES

Public Notices In Newspapers.
Your Right to Know,

Delivered Right to Your Door.
OftluNI"'Jil'lf#H"A..wtHrlkM

Rick Stromoskl

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout

A JOb well done need
not be done aGain .

So•th

tW

I NT

JONES'

Tree Servi.c e
• Top • Removol • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

(740) 992 3470
Ht'll's Self
Storage

•

~

~

aatata altuated In the
The following real
~-~ colontyoiMelga,lnthe
alate or Ohio and In
the
VIllage of
1 nd
Pbomaroyd•
oun ed
and
deacrlbed •• lollowa:
A place of ground fifty
IHt wide out of the
aouthwell corner of
Lot No. 12 In tile Plat
of Dlllaburg, now Lot

10
of Plenent Valley
accredllallon
aurvay
Nuralng&amp;·~ at
Rehabilitation Canter carefully evaluated lor
;~~plember 25 &amp;28, relevance to the
Th.
th accreditation proceu.
1 purpoae 0 1 e Raqueatalor a Public
aurvey will be to Information Interview
1h e muat be made In
• vel u ate
organlutlon•a
writing and should be
compliance with unt to the Joint
nationally ..tabllahad Commlaalon no later
Joint Commlulon

Commlaalon'a
: AM • S:OO PM
requirement• and may 7 00
not be removed before .__ _ _ _ _~
the
aurvey
Ia
completed
ROBERT BISSELL
(8) 14 21 ·
'

•

Cubs 7·2, Brewen 4-10
Jamey Wright (9-8) won for the first
time in six weeb, and Kevin Brown hit
a three-run homer as Milwaukee earned
a doubleheader split at Wrigley Field.
In the opener, Sammy Sosa hit his
45th homer and Delino DeShields hit a
bases-loaded triple with ·two outs in the
eighth as the Cubs rallied from a 4.1
deficit. Sosa hit his 46th homer in the
nightcap, his 11th homer in 16 games,
but it wasn't nearly enough as the second-place Cubs stayed two games
behind Houston in the NL Central.

•

601 MY

TAX

~~BATt1!

NEED YOUR LIFE
REMODELED OR RESTORED?
1

• Nearly ·
years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.

'

t.

~

•'

For more information, come to our church site.
Sunday 9:30· Sunday School;
10:30 ·Preaching ·
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 125, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

:

s:=3

'

•

)

'' I-

..

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS
(- .

c=:::.

..,.J::i

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Ahman .Grt;en (groin)
and Dorsey Levens (hand), which played
a role in a sputtering offensive attack,
although Sherman said he wouldn.'t use
from Page B1
that as an excuse.
It's unlikely Freeman will play SaturFavre and the Packers were held out
day against Miami.
of the end zone in the first half thanks to
"His head was still pounding him in a heavy blitz package by Broncos defenthe locker room a few minutes ago;' sive coordinator Ray Rhodes, who
Sherman said.
made his first trip to Lambeau Field
The NFL is cracking down on such · since his firing 20 months ago afi:er just
hits this season and is threatening players one season as head coach of the Packers.
with a one-game suspension.
"They played the coverages we were
"You h2ve to go out and hie and deal expecting but not the fronts," receiver
with the consequences, at least that's Billy Schroeder said. "That kind of
what the league reUs you," Brown said. threw us for a loop a litde bit, but I think '
"But on the screen, it looked like I got our line did a real good job of picking it
him more on the shoulder. I didn't real- u.
P"
ly see helmet to helmet."
Favre, however, was struck in the faceThe Packers played without their top mask by a linebacker once.

Broncos

ilm:rr-6{

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..

1·800-250-9077

Roc ky R. Hupp, Ag ent
Bo x 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses ; Cancer &amp;
Denial, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 4.01K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical.
• Nursing Home ·
THE
COIM'II.NY"

HES S.ltAoKIN·r.)
HIS FIST
0
AT YOU! / -""'···

740-985·3948
CONCRETF/BLOCIVBRICK
• Footen, Walls, Stept •

Flal Work,
Replacements, • Walks

• Stencil ·
Crele Free Esllmates
Set'111ng Ohio aad W.V.
WV.OJ1712
a~d. Drlves

ou~ L l~l

Pau

f'au

Pu1

(As
1
been progr:immed by
the same team as

WHAT A

number

1HIIId

31 "Vtlvtt"

5 C11ual
ohlrt
6 Boredom
7 w••
plenllful
8 Tank
9 Superlative
oulflx

flnloh
32 Exlot
33 Gonetlc
abbr.
34 Relegate
37 Stumble
40 Smell
alrongly

36 Bill-, tho
Science
Guy
38 Nonmotolllc
element
39 Adluoted
beforehand
40 Summarize
42 City In
Germany
44 - H1wk,

ayotem
N.C.
26 Coomonaut 49 NoteboOk
Gagarln
50 Longuage
28 Outlet
aulflx
30 Abaoocl
52 "Thl .
34 Make
Greotoat"
lluy
53 Newaman
35 Sallora
Rother

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
.
Caltbnty Cipher cryptograms ore creeted Irom quoittiona.by famous

people, past and present. Each lettlf In the cipher stands for another.

Today's c/ua: N aqusls K

'F D

PCR

oc

OWT

XWCRHA

KCD

XTYMTOX

c II

P

PCRM

MTBTGH

OWT

DCM

J F K A

DWTL

oc

OWT

JFKA
I. HGLT

M T B T. G H F K V

OMTTX.'

VFIMGK
NGWHFH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Home runs come on mislakes and
I've hit thirty-lour mistakes this year." - (Arizona
Diamondback)
Luis Gonzalez
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4

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low · t~ form four simple words.

ANK PUC

BESIDES. I PUT ALL THE

'
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MARSJ.tMALLOWS AWA'(..

Pomeroy
Sat9·t

~ r~i1~~~~7=:!::::~::::::~==~~~~::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

;·

culling edge.••
tbe

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Classified ,Ads

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the contract would
have succeeded. But
no, S'o uth took the , . L I E D Y ~;:~,
three club tricks
s
6
Our cat is called 'Here Kitty'
(West discarded the '-·_..__..,..J.-..1..-.L.....J~ because I told my kids not to name
!wart 10) , before exit- r'-"""'"'-,.,...,.,.~-=--=---.,her or get attached to her. We've
K·W H A R E
had her - - - - - - - ing with t h e h eart ·
three from hand.
O Complete the chuckle quoted
Would West play . '--'-·-.&amp;..-.&amp;..-.&amp;..-..1..---l
by HI ling in the mi5Sing ward•
·you develop from step No. J below.
the two to allow partPRINT NUMBERED
ner to win with the
LETTERS IN SQUARES
six ancl claim the rest

I I I I' Ia

I

•

on

my's two top di.amonds -- ~ood move.
A third dtamond and

•

•"'

of
the tncb
for three
down?
No ·way,
Jose
·. Processor. Seeing the
setting tricks, West
went in with the nine
to cash the diamond
10 and heart ace for
one down.,

IIPlEWBDilUE

Snooze- Pinup - Mixer- Trivet- EXPENSIVE
When a friend complained that it had cost more to ·
mail a package than it did to purchase it. I told her to
buy more EXPENSIVE Qifts.

'Your
'Birthday·

I

IUU.31, 1111.1&amp;3
CIIIIIIIIHIY
IIICHIVIIIMII

.,

Wednesd11y, Aug. 22, 2otJI
In the y~:ar ahead yoLl could
be drawn into a new, excitm g
and stimu lati ng group wh o
will turn out to be both bmiru:ss . as5 o ciates and good
.friends . Much can be ~ccom­
plishcd together.

..
'

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.. c•n.
IUIS.CIIIInlll.
llltDrl..ll C.....

LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -- If
you .arc involved in .a ve nture
today that yo u believe yo u
understand better than your
pc.ers, don't let the control of
the situation slip fro m your
hands. Leo, treat yo urself to a
birthday gift . Send fo r your ..
Astra-Graph predictions for
the .year ahead by mailing S2
;m d SASE to .Astro-Graph ,
c/o this ncw~papcr, P.O . n~x

CONNIE'S
CIILDCARE
• hll fill lillie

IDIIInallllhiiiJ.
ldiiiiiWH~

1~7.

Min.
a Rtl
TUIIIrsPIIIDS

Wickliffe, OH 44092-

01 U7. lle sure to state your
Zodiac sign.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Family n12ttcr5 you've been
unable to rciolv~ can be
wor~ed out amicably today if
you U5e more logic than emotion. Put your desires aside for
the monu:nt and deal only

661·1329
TRI-COURTY
·JRHRSPORT

with the facts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)-

Umestonel
Seniors DIICIIIInts
multiple LOAd
Discounts

• lt du~sn't matter that you

might not bo too fond of •n
· individual who now deserves
a pat on the back, do ~o any-

•,

.' .

I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

•I
'
;.'

FlEA MARKET

1

I . I ·I

NO! 60TO SLEEP!

'

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Edltod by CLAY R.
Rearrange letters of tho
four scrambled words be·

2
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740-992·5344

HOURS:

P.11.~1

West, perhaps it
t'--.,,~./ '-----,r-1 shou ld have known

Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

zt

KIDDER!

81151mo

two tailbacb -

0_)),
. .

I

YUP' THAT'$
HIM ~IC.IiT
OVI§:R THERE .

Tires

COHTRAOORS, INC.
,Racine, Ohio 45771

P111

Eliil

10 Type of
I'IOnkey
11 Calm
12 Ancient
chariot
19 Mauna 22 Rich
pollomod ·
Iabrie
24 Type of

11
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hag
POLLAN::::!:,_,::::_:~:::--:-;-

TIU.NE'

lll'lu $42.95 • lear Bnles
•

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

Pn•

Nurtb

1•

When Lech W alcsa
made his first trip outside the Soviet bloc ,
to Paris in December
1988, he said, " You
have riches and freedom []ere bttt I feel
no sense of faith or
direction . You have
so many compu_ters,
why don't you use ·
them in the' search for
love?" Weren't there
Web sites for personal
ads in those days?
Computers help
some to find love -but they cannot play a
good game of bridge. ·
Here is a1iother deal
in which four computers were competing. I am confident it
would take you quite
some time to guess
West's lead and
South's line of play. .
Given South's initial response, West
decided not to lead a
heart. However, selecting the spade six
was particula,rly bizarre. (You may substitute · your own
word!)
Declarer's best approach isn't clear, but
the computer ducked
East's spade nine. East
· returned the spade
four, West winning
with the queen and
con~i~,uing wi},h the.~ r.-:_;
king.

•a,•a

P/B

REFRESHMENTS

I

I

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p~

• llltiRm8nl
Elllllllllr
•lube&amp; OH$17.95 •lliiiiUII ....
• Slllll Pill IIHRilll' II biCl $19.95

7"0·992-1671

IIIIQ lllhllll,

-

Cl&gt;l TI&lt;E RONl

Gal;!~·~~::::~n! ~:~:·~=:~lies
Liunsed and lrl&lt;ured
WV 005176

· •New Homes

IIID CIIIIIIIIS

~

KW' '1'0J1.E1e)
I II

-

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S•les S..-.ice lnslallalion
Specialiring in Shecl Melal Duclwork

CONSTRUOION

ttow

l&gt;IP YOU
ICNOw ~JUST

Rtsidential Commercial New CcmstrucCiun

Criffey

couldn't hold the lead, giving up consecutive homers to Todd Walker and- KeUy
Stinnett in the bottom of the inning.
AfterJohn Riedling (1-1) pitched the
11th, Griffey ended it with his first
inside-the-park homer in 1 t. years.
His drive caromed off the wall in center, hit Jim Edmonds' foot and bounced
past left fielder Kerry Robinson as Griffey pushed his bothersome left hamstring to the limit.
By the time Robinson got to the baU,
h~ had no chance to get Griffey, who slid
into home with a flourish.

•

•'

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

l·304-4i75-7824

r-=====

'

Cellular

1
to 10' X 30'
~h~e~t~lm~j~~-~-~he~~~!-~:~~:·s~~::
with the ;~j~!~,~:·~~~-:~~~~~~=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~
Joint .

- - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •Garages
It seemed a moot protest when the
• Complete
Cardinals scored twice in the 1Oth off
Remodeling
Danny Grav~. a rally set up by first baseStop &amp; Compare
man Sean Casey's error. Benes (7 -7)
flom PageB1
FREE ESTIMATES
Pujols homered over the 40-foot wall
in center, becoming the first to clear the
majors: taUest wall, and J.D. Drew hit a
solo shot in the eighth for the one-run
lead.
Over? It was just getting interesting.
Timlin gave up a single to Pokey
Reese with one out in the ttinth; then
threw off-target to first on Wilton Guerrero's comebacker, moving the tying run
to third.
Griffey hit a high-hop grounder to
second baseman Fernando Vina - the
guy that Albert BeUe ran over in a
famous 1994 encounter in the baseline.
This time, he got bowled over by Guerrero.
The Cardinals insisted it was interference on the runner. The umpires ruled
that the ball was past Vina when he was
run over, making it obsrrucrion on the
second baseman and leaving everyone
safe and the game tied.
"How is that possible?" said manager
. Tony La Russa, who played the game
'
under protest.
Vina didn't know exactly what happened.

.ALLtEL

JESUS CAN DO THAT .

Wto ~l

Chip off

Advertise your
message

~

...

• Q J
... JtiTH

Openi111 lead: ??

TREE SERVICE

WICK'S

....,.

...

£ .. ~
• J 10' ..

Vulnerable: North·South

FREE IN HOME ESTIMATES • •sEE.lNG IS BE.UEVJtm• · 'ttYI023417

· DEPOYSAG
PAR,.S

AKi f l l

Dealer: North

ReMember, RoYbo"(..

-800-291·5600 • Pomerov, OH

FEDERAL NATIONAL No. 290 In Pomeroy,
MORTGAGE
Ohla, which Ia
ASSOCIATION
bounded
and
va
described aa followa:
Fm Estimates
ANGELA L.
beginning on the weal .
CAPEHART
aide of aald Lot No.
949·1405
aka ANGELIA L.
(290) two hundred and
CAPEHART alai.
nlnoty at ooulh aide of·
591-5011
LEGAL NOTICE
the atone sidewalk on·
Angela L. Capehart the north aida of Front
aka
Angelle L. Street; thence north
Capehart, whoae 1111 with the weot side or
place ol residence Is said Lol No. 2110 to the
known aa 846 East face of the rocks or
Main Streel, Pomeroy, bluff; thence east (50)
Top • n1m • Removal
OH 45769, but whose fifty feat with the
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Bucket Service
preaant place of rocka and parallel with
Equipment Parts
realclenca Is unknown Front Street; thence
Factory Authorized
and John Doe, aoulh to the aoulh
Unknown Spouse, If aida of the atone
Case-IH Parts
$8.00 column inch weekdays
any, of Angela L. sidewalk fifty feet eaal
Capehart ake Angello of the place of
Dealers
$10.00 column inch Sundays
L. Capehart, whaae beginning; fhence
1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulll
laat place of residence west with said
Cootvlfle,
OH 45723
Ia known aa 846 East sidewalk to the placa
Fully Insu red
; Mlln StreOII, Pomeroy, of beginning.
74N87-GIII
· OH 45769, but whose The Delendanla
· preaant · place of named above are
Public Notice
Public Notice
: reald8nce Ia unknown, required to answer on
WHY DRIVE ANYWIIEHE ELSE?
. will take notice that on or before the 28 day or Standards. The survey than live working days
June 14, 2001, Oct. 2,2001 .
reaulta will be used to before the aurvay
Shade River AG Scrvi cr
FEDERAL NATIONAL
FEDERAL determine whether, beglna . The raqueat Hauling &amp;
" Ahead In Service"
MORTGAGE
NATIONA~ and lhe condition• muat aloo Indicate lhe
•
Camplele
Line
of Sullivan's Grooming Supplies
._,Excavating
ASSOCIATION flied Ito
MORTGAGE u n d er
whIch n ol u re
t h8
0f
•
Sulfur
Caoted
Urea,
bulk only, $128.00 per lon
Com!llolnt In CaN No.
ASSOCIATION accreditation would be Information to be
•10%
oil
all
Prlelert
Horae
and Livestock Equip.
01CV1061n the Court
By: Shapiro&amp; Felty, awarded
the provided 11 the
10.10.10
All
Purpooe
fertiiiJ.
er $4.501501
of Common Ple11 of
L.L.P. organization.
lntervl-.
such
9.000
Biller
Twine
$19.50/Bale
Malga County, Larry E.
Ll81 M. Michaela,
Joint Commlaalon raquaata ahould be Hauling ' Limestone
16,11110 Baler Twine $21 .50/Bale
Spencer,
Mel g •
Attorney at Law atandarda deal with edclreiiHd to:
• Gravel Sand •
County Clerk of AUomay lor PlalniHI· organizational quality Office of Quality Topsoil * Fill Dirt
Shade River Ag Service, Inc
Courta, P.O. Box 151,
Petitioner of .. ,. laauea and the Monitoring
• Mulch
100 Second Street,
800 Weal St. Clair aalety
of
the Joint Corrimlaalon on Bulldozer Servl&lt;es
35537 Si. Rl 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Pomeroy, OH 45768,
Ave., environment In •hloh Accreditation of
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-385 1
. aaeklng lorecloaure
2nd Floor care Ia provided. Haalth..re
and alleging that tile Cleveland, OH 44113 Anyone believing lllat Organlutlona
•
O.fandanta Angela L.
(218) 821·1530 he or aha haa one Ranalaunce
Capehart aka Angelle .(7) 31, (8) 7, 14, 21, 28, pertinent and valid aouleverd
, , ....-----...,
L. Capehart and John (II) 4
Information about Oakbrook Terrace, IL ·, ·
Doe,
Unknown - - - - - - - such mattera may 80181
Spou11, II any, of · Public Notlca
requeat a Public T h a
J o 1n t
Angela L. Capehart
Information Interview Commlulon will
aka
""galla L.
with the Joint· acknowledge auch
.
a~
Capehart have or The
JoInt Comml11lon'a field' requeata In writing or 29870 Bashan Road
•.
'"~'
claim to have an Commlaalon
on
tall
t
th
Racine, Ohio
repreaan vea • • by telephone and will
lnl.r •• t In th. r.al .Accreditation of lima
al the survey. 1n 1 o r m
t he
4$771
eatlle d.. crlbed Haallh..re
Information prennted orgaillzoitlon of the
740.949·2217
below;
Orgenlutlona will at tha Interview will be requaat lor any
EXHIBIT"A"
conduct
an carefully evaluated at Interview.
Sizes 5' x t 0'

t

... K Q l

~----=:-----­

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMs·

Howardl.
Writesel

$J

• ". 7
YKJ I1!

OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Free Estimates

z

•

WHO
• K QI
¥ A Q II I t

KEEPS THE

ACROSS 41 Dell breod
43 New-City
1 Work lor
45 lmportlnt
Amerleln,
time period
46 RIVII ol
7=nt
DOE
13 Mile pllotl 47 "Agnuo-"
14 Big parlin 46 Voeallone&lt;!
15 Unlaek
In • tent
again
51 CrU41
16 Aquatic
peraon .
mammelo 54 Army order
17Po._.
(2 wdo.)
11 Eoldmo
55 Howk
knlle
56 Awalled
20 Notice
aettlement
21 Require
57 Four acore
23Chlrged
and ten
portlcle
24 Ending l9r
DOWN
··cummer"
1 Producer
25 ·1944
Spelling
lnvaalon
2 lnapected
dote
3 Do-ereued
xr Counael
4 Raek· '
29 Kld'a pie
eancert
Ingredient

I,

~.

.

way. De courteous and gra- .
ciom about it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- You co uld do everything right in handling your
resource~ all day lon g, but as
the day wears on. your pru dence may weaken . Don't
ruin that which you too k such
paim to protect.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,
Dec. 21) --G et 011n e;arly start
today on working o n your
immediate concern~. You 'll
be mo re upbeat and positive
early in the day, which will

.

·· help you past the rough spots .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

Jln. 19) --Yo u ca n actually

be luckier tod •y through
other people's accomplish ments th2n you might from
your own, Enjoy the free ride
while you can.

bly good today, so long as you
h cp emotions ou t of your
dcc i~ion- m;~king . Introducing
fcchngs or passio n into t hings

will lead you astray.

ARIES (Mmh 21-April I'J)
·- C arcrully check all th e details wh en forming a p:trtm.·rship arrangemen t today , because althou gh initi11lly it may
;:appcu to be favorable to you,
thi ngs might turn out quite
differently.

TAUR US (April 20-Ma y
20) -- If you feel your work
trul y warrants a raise and
you're thinking of talkin g to
the boss about it, do so early
in the day. Do nut wai t until
latc.r when s/hc mi ght be tired
or discouraged.

; GEM INI (May 21-Jcone 20)
-- So long as it fits in wit h
your pl.:im, you'll honor Your
cOmmitments today. However, the minute your commitments inte rfere with what

AQUARIUS Q•n . 20-Fcb.
19) •• Although you may feel

you would prefer to do, it'll

flattered wheil someone who
usually doesn't seek advice
come&amp; to you today for guid·
anee, you may luer learn this
person w;u merely trying to
put you on the spot.

CANCER Uune 21-July
22) -- You may stnrt the day

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 211)
--Your j~,tdgment

i~

reuono.-

be another story . Keep your
pronuses.

off in a whirlwind of :u.:tivlty,
but it won't take long before
you burn yourself out. Set a
pa~:e that you can sustain

throughout your wo rk .

�Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

, Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP
NEA Cronword Puzzle

....
....

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN

•
•

10 8 '
10

z

BLOCKS OUT 99.5%

740-992-1101
or992-2753

NOTICES

Public Notices In Newspapers.
Your Right to Know,

Delivered Right to Your Door.
OftluNI"'Jil'lf#H"A..wtHrlkM

Rick Stromoskl

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout

A JOb well done need
not be done aGain .

So•th

tW

I NT

JONES'

Tree Servi.c e
• Top • Removol • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

(740) 992 3470
Ht'll's Self
Storage

•

~

~

aatata altuated In the
The following real
~-~ colontyoiMelga,lnthe
alate or Ohio and In
the
VIllage of
1 nd
Pbomaroyd•
oun ed
and
deacrlbed •• lollowa:
A place of ground fifty
IHt wide out of the
aouthwell corner of
Lot No. 12 In tile Plat
of Dlllaburg, now Lot

10
of Plenent Valley
accredllallon
aurvay
Nuralng&amp;·~ at
Rehabilitation Canter carefully evaluated lor
;~~plember 25 &amp;28, relevance to the
Th.
th accreditation proceu.
1 purpoae 0 1 e Raqueatalor a Public
aurvey will be to Information Interview
1h e muat be made In
• vel u ate
organlutlon•a
writing and should be
compliance with unt to the Joint
nationally ..tabllahad Commlaalon no later
Joint Commlulon

Commlaalon'a
: AM • S:OO PM
requirement• and may 7 00
not be removed before .__ _ _ _ _~
the
aurvey
Ia
completed
ROBERT BISSELL
(8) 14 21 ·
'

•

Cubs 7·2, Brewen 4-10
Jamey Wright (9-8) won for the first
time in six weeb, and Kevin Brown hit
a three-run homer as Milwaukee earned
a doubleheader split at Wrigley Field.
In the opener, Sammy Sosa hit his
45th homer and Delino DeShields hit a
bases-loaded triple with ·two outs in the
eighth as the Cubs rallied from a 4.1
deficit. Sosa hit his 46th homer in the
nightcap, his 11th homer in 16 games,
but it wasn't nearly enough as the second-place Cubs stayed two games
behind Houston in the NL Central.

•

601 MY

TAX

~~BATt1!

NEED YOUR LIFE
REMODELED OR RESTORED?
1

• Nearly ·
years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.

'

t.

~

•'

For more information, come to our church site.
Sunday 9:30· Sunday School;
10:30 ·Preaching ·
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 125, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

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Ahman .Grt;en (groin)
and Dorsey Levens (hand), which played
a role in a sputtering offensive attack,
although Sherman said he wouldn.'t use
from Page B1
that as an excuse.
It's unlikely Freeman will play SaturFavre and the Packers were held out
day against Miami.
of the end zone in the first half thanks to
"His head was still pounding him in a heavy blitz package by Broncos defenthe locker room a few minutes ago;' sive coordinator Ray Rhodes, who
Sherman said.
made his first trip to Lambeau Field
The NFL is cracking down on such · since his firing 20 months ago afi:er just
hits this season and is threatening players one season as head coach of the Packers.
with a one-game suspension.
"They played the coverages we were
"You h2ve to go out and hie and deal expecting but not the fronts," receiver
with the consequences, at least that's Billy Schroeder said. "That kind of
what the league reUs you," Brown said. threw us for a loop a litde bit, but I think '
"But on the screen, it looked like I got our line did a real good job of picking it
him more on the shoulder. I didn't real- u.
P"
ly see helmet to helmet."
Favre, however, was struck in the faceThe Packers played without their top mask by a linebacker once.

Broncos

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1·800-250-9077

Roc ky R. Hupp, Ag ent
Bo x 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses ; Cancer &amp;
Denial, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 4.01K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical.
• Nursing Home ·
THE
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HES S.ltAoKIN·r.)
HIS FIST
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AT YOU! / -""'···

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• Footen, Walls, Stept •

Flal Work,
Replacements, • Walks

• Stencil ·
Crele Free Esllmates
Set'111ng Ohio aad W.V.
WV.OJ1712
a~d. Drlves

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Pau

f'au

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the same team as

WHAT A

number

1HIIId

31 "Vtlvtt"

5 C11ual
ohlrt
6 Boredom
7 w••
plenllful
8 Tank
9 Superlative
oulflx

flnloh
32 Exlot
33 Gonetlc
abbr.
34 Relegate
37 Stumble
40 Smell
alrongly

36 Bill-, tho
Science
Guy
38 Nonmotolllc
element
39 Adluoted
beforehand
40 Summarize
42 City In
Germany
44 - H1wk,

ayotem
N.C.
26 Coomonaut 49 NoteboOk
Gagarln
50 Longuage
28 Outlet
aulflx
30 Abaoocl
52 "Thl .
34 Make
Greotoat"
lluy
53 Newaman
35 Sallora
Rother

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
.
Caltbnty Cipher cryptograms ore creeted Irom quoittiona.by famous

people, past and present. Each lettlf In the cipher stands for another.

Today's c/ua: N aqusls K

'F D

PCR

oc

OWT

XWCRHA

KCD

XTYMTOX

c II

P

PCRM

MTBTGH

OWT

DCM

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I. HGLT

M T B T. G H F K V

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Home runs come on mislakes and
I've hit thirty-lour mistakes this year." - (Arizona
Diamondback)
Luis Gonzalez
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low · t~ form four simple words.

ANK PUC

BESIDES. I PUT ALL THE

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MARSJ.tMALLOWS AWA'(..

Pomeroy
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culling edge.••
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the contract would
have succeeded. But
no, S'o uth took the , . L I E D Y ~;:~,
three club tricks
s
6
Our cat is called 'Here Kitty'
(West discarded the '-·_..__..,..J.-..1..-.L.....J~ because I told my kids not to name
!wart 10) , before exit- r'-"""'"'-,.,...,.,.~-=--=---.,her or get attached to her. We've
K·W H A R E
had her - - - - - - - ing with t h e h eart ·
three from hand.
O Complete the chuckle quoted
Would West play . '--'-·-.&amp;..-.&amp;..-.&amp;..-..1..---l
by HI ling in the mi5Sing ward•
·you develop from step No. J below.
the two to allow partPRINT NUMBERED
ner to win with the
LETTERS IN SQUARES
six ancl claim the rest

I I I I' Ia

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on

my's two top di.amonds -- ~ood move.
A third dtamond and

•

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of
the tncb
for three
down?
No ·way,
Jose
·. Processor. Seeing the
setting tricks, West
went in with the nine
to cash the diamond
10 and heart ace for
one down.,

IIPlEWBDilUE

Snooze- Pinup - Mixer- Trivet- EXPENSIVE
When a friend complained that it had cost more to ·
mail a package than it did to purchase it. I told her to
buy more EXPENSIVE Qifts.

'Your
'Birthday·

I

IUU.31, 1111.1&amp;3
CIIIIIIIIHIY
IIICHIVIIIMII

.,

Wednesd11y, Aug. 22, 2otJI
In the y~:ar ahead yoLl could
be drawn into a new, excitm g
and stimu lati ng group wh o
will turn out to be both bmiru:ss . as5 o ciates and good
.friends . Much can be ~ccom­
plishcd together.

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'

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IUIS.CIIIInlll.
llltDrl..ll C.....

LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -- If
you .arc involved in .a ve nture
today that yo u believe yo u
understand better than your
pc.ers, don't let the control of
the situation slip fro m your
hands. Leo, treat yo urself to a
birthday gift . Send fo r your ..
Astra-Graph predictions for
the .year ahead by mailing S2
;m d SASE to .Astro-Graph ,
c/o this ncw~papcr, P.O . n~x

CONNIE'S
CIILDCARE
• hll fill lillie

IDIIInallllhiiiJ.
ldiiiiiWH~

1~7.

Min.
a Rtl
TUIIIrsPIIIDS

Wickliffe, OH 44092-

01 U7. lle sure to state your
Zodiac sign.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Family n12ttcr5 you've been
unable to rciolv~ can be
wor~ed out amicably today if
you U5e more logic than emotion. Put your desires aside for
the monu:nt and deal only

661·1329
TRI-COURTY
·JRHRSPORT

with the facts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)-

Umestonel
Seniors DIICIIIInts
multiple LOAd
Discounts

• lt du~sn't matter that you

might not bo too fond of •n
· individual who now deserves
a pat on the back, do ~o any-

•,

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SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

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FlEA MARKET

1

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NO! 60TO SLEEP!

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Edltod by CLAY R.
Rearrange letters of tho
four scrambled words be·

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HOURS:

P.11.~1

West, perhaps it
t'--.,,~./ '-----,r-1 shou ld have known

Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

zt

KIDDER!

81151mo

two tailbacb -

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YUP' THAT'$
HIM ~IC.IiT
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Tires

COHTRAOORS, INC.
,Racine, Ohio 45771

P111

Eliil

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TIU.NE'

lll'lu $42.95 • lear Bnles
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MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

Pn•

Nurtb

1•

When Lech W alcsa
made his first trip outside the Soviet bloc ,
to Paris in December
1988, he said, " You
have riches and freedom []ere bttt I feel
no sense of faith or
direction . You have
so many compu_ters,
why don't you use ·
them in the' search for
love?" Weren't there
Web sites for personal
ads in those days?
Computers help
some to find love -but they cannot play a
good game of bridge. ·
Here is a1iother deal
in which four computers were competing. I am confident it
would take you quite
some time to guess
West's lead and
South's line of play. .
Given South's initial response, West
decided not to lead a
heart. However, selecting the spade six
was particula,rly bizarre. (You may substitute · your own
word!)
Declarer's best approach isn't clear, but
the computer ducked
East's spade nine. East
· returned the spade
four, West winning
with the queen and
con~i~,uing wi},h the.~ r.-:_;
king.

•a,•a

P/B

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Criffey

couldn't hold the lead, giving up consecutive homers to Todd Walker and- KeUy
Stinnett in the bottom of the inning.
AfterJohn Riedling (1-1) pitched the
11th, Griffey ended it with his first
inside-the-park homer in 1 t. years.
His drive caromed off the wall in center, hit Jim Edmonds' foot and bounced
past left fielder Kerry Robinson as Griffey pushed his bothersome left hamstring to the limit.
By the time Robinson got to the baU,
h~ had no chance to get Griffey, who slid
into home with a flourish.

•

•'

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

l·304-4i75-7824

r-=====

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Cellular

1
to 10' X 30'
~h~e~t~lm~j~~-~-~he~~~!-~:~~:·s~~::
with the ;~j~!~,~:·~~~-:~~~~~~=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~
Joint .

- - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •Garages
It seemed a moot protest when the
• Complete
Cardinals scored twice in the 1Oth off
Remodeling
Danny Grav~. a rally set up by first baseStop &amp; Compare
man Sean Casey's error. Benes (7 -7)
flom PageB1
FREE ESTIMATES
Pujols homered over the 40-foot wall
in center, becoming the first to clear the
majors: taUest wall, and J.D. Drew hit a
solo shot in the eighth for the one-run
lead.
Over? It was just getting interesting.
Timlin gave up a single to Pokey
Reese with one out in the ttinth; then
threw off-target to first on Wilton Guerrero's comebacker, moving the tying run
to third.
Griffey hit a high-hop grounder to
second baseman Fernando Vina - the
guy that Albert BeUe ran over in a
famous 1994 encounter in the baseline.
This time, he got bowled over by Guerrero.
The Cardinals insisted it was interference on the runner. The umpires ruled
that the ball was past Vina when he was
run over, making it obsrrucrion on the
second baseman and leaving everyone
safe and the game tied.
"How is that possible?" said manager
. Tony La Russa, who played the game
'
under protest.
Vina didn't know exactly what happened.

.ALLtEL

JESUS CAN DO THAT .

Wto ~l

Chip off

Advertise your
message

~

...

• Q J
... JtiTH

Openi111 lead: ??

TREE SERVICE

WICK'S

....,.

...

£ .. ~
• J 10' ..

Vulnerable: North·South

FREE IN HOME ESTIMATES • •sEE.lNG IS BE.UEVJtm• · 'ttYI023417

· DEPOYSAG
PAR,.S

AKi f l l

Dealer: North

ReMember, RoYbo"(..

-800-291·5600 • Pomerov, OH

FEDERAL NATIONAL No. 290 In Pomeroy,
MORTGAGE
Ohla, which Ia
ASSOCIATION
bounded
and
va
described aa followa:
Fm Estimates
ANGELA L.
beginning on the weal .
CAPEHART
aide of aald Lot No.
949·1405
aka ANGELIA L.
(290) two hundred and
CAPEHART alai.
nlnoty at ooulh aide of·
591-5011
LEGAL NOTICE
the atone sidewalk on·
Angela L. Capehart the north aida of Front
aka
Angelle L. Street; thence north
Capehart, whoae 1111 with the weot side or
place ol residence Is said Lol No. 2110 to the
known aa 846 East face of the rocks or
Main Streel, Pomeroy, bluff; thence east (50)
Top • n1m • Removal
OH 45769, but whose fifty feat with the
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Bucket Service
preaant place of rocka and parallel with
Equipment Parts
realclenca Is unknown Front Street; thence
Factory Authorized
and John Doe, aoulh to the aoulh
Unknown Spouse, If aida of the atone
Case-IH Parts
$8.00 column inch weekdays
any, of Angela L. sidewalk fifty feet eaal
Capehart ake Angello of the place of
Dealers
$10.00 column inch Sundays
L. Capehart, whaae beginning; fhence
1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulll
laat place of residence west with said
Cootvlfle,
OH 45723
Ia known aa 846 East sidewalk to the placa
Fully Insu red
; Mlln StreOII, Pomeroy, of beginning.
74N87-GIII
· OH 45769, but whose The Delendanla
· preaant · place of named above are
Public Notice
Public Notice
: reald8nce Ia unknown, required to answer on
WHY DRIVE ANYWIIEHE ELSE?
. will take notice that on or before the 28 day or Standards. The survey than live working days
June 14, 2001, Oct. 2,2001 .
reaulta will be used to before the aurvay
Shade River AG Scrvi cr
FEDERAL NATIONAL
FEDERAL determine whether, beglna . The raqueat Hauling &amp;
" Ahead In Service"
MORTGAGE
NATIONA~ and lhe condition• muat aloo Indicate lhe
•
Camplele
Line
of Sullivan's Grooming Supplies
._,Excavating
ASSOCIATION flied Ito
MORTGAGE u n d er
whIch n ol u re
t h8
0f
•
Sulfur
Caoted
Urea,
bulk only, $128.00 per lon
Com!llolnt In CaN No.
ASSOCIATION accreditation would be Information to be
•10%
oil
all
Prlelert
Horae
and Livestock Equip.
01CV1061n the Court
By: Shapiro&amp; Felty, awarded
the provided 11 the
10.10.10
All
Purpooe
fertiiiJ.
er $4.501501
of Common Ple11 of
L.L.P. organization.
lntervl-.
such
9.000
Biller
Twine
$19.50/Bale
Malga County, Larry E.
Ll81 M. Michaela,
Joint Commlaalon raquaata ahould be Hauling ' Limestone
16,11110 Baler Twine $21 .50/Bale
Spencer,
Mel g •
Attorney at Law atandarda deal with edclreiiHd to:
• Gravel Sand •
County Clerk of AUomay lor PlalniHI· organizational quality Office of Quality Topsoil * Fill Dirt
Shade River Ag Service, Inc
Courta, P.O. Box 151,
Petitioner of .. ,. laauea and the Monitoring
• Mulch
100 Second Street,
800 Weal St. Clair aalety
of
the Joint Corrimlaalon on Bulldozer Servl&lt;es
35537 Si. Rl 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Pomeroy, OH 45768,
Ave., environment In •hloh Accreditation of
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-385 1
. aaeklng lorecloaure
2nd Floor care Ia provided. Haalth..re
and alleging that tile Cleveland, OH 44113 Anyone believing lllat Organlutlona
•
O.fandanta Angela L.
(218) 821·1530 he or aha haa one Ranalaunce
Capehart aka Angelle .(7) 31, (8) 7, 14, 21, 28, pertinent and valid aouleverd
, , ....-----...,
L. Capehart and John (II) 4
Information about Oakbrook Terrace, IL ·, ·
Doe,
Unknown - - - - - - - such mattera may 80181
Spou11, II any, of · Public Notlca
requeat a Public T h a
J o 1n t
Angela L. Capehart
Information Interview Commlulon will
aka
""galla L.
with the Joint· acknowledge auch
.
a~
Capehart have or The
JoInt Comml11lon'a field' requeata In writing or 29870 Bashan Road
•.
'"~'
claim to have an Commlaalon
on
tall
t
th
Racine, Ohio
repreaan vea • • by telephone and will
lnl.r •• t In th. r.al .Accreditation of lima
al the survey. 1n 1 o r m
t he
4$771
eatlle d.. crlbed Haallh..re
Information prennted orgaillzoitlon of the
740.949·2217
below;
Orgenlutlona will at tha Interview will be requaat lor any
EXHIBIT"A"
conduct
an carefully evaluated at Interview.
Sizes 5' x t 0'

t

... K Q l

~----=:-----­

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMs·

Howardl.
Writesel

$J

• ". 7
YKJ I1!

OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Free Estimates

z

•

WHO
• K QI
¥ A Q II I t

KEEPS THE

ACROSS 41 Dell breod
43 New-City
1 Work lor
45 lmportlnt
Amerleln,
time period
46 RIVII ol
7=nt
DOE
13 Mile pllotl 47 "Agnuo-"
14 Big parlin 46 Voeallone&lt;!
15 Unlaek
In • tent
again
51 CrU41
16 Aquatic
peraon .
mammelo 54 Army order
17Po._.
(2 wdo.)
11 Eoldmo
55 Howk
knlle
56 Awalled
20 Notice
aettlement
21 Require
57 Four acore
23Chlrged
and ten
portlcle
24 Ending l9r
DOWN
··cummer"
1 Producer
25 ·1944
Spelling
lnvaalon
2 lnapected
dote
3 Do-ereued
xr Counael
4 Raek· '
29 Kld'a pie
eancert
Ingredient

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.

way. De courteous and gra- .
ciom about it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- You co uld do everything right in handling your
resource~ all day lon g, but as
the day wears on. your pru dence may weaken . Don't
ruin that which you too k such
paim to protect.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,
Dec. 21) --G et 011n e;arly start
today on working o n your
immediate concern~. You 'll
be mo re upbeat and positive
early in the day, which will

.

·· help you past the rough spots .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

Jln. 19) --Yo u ca n actually

be luckier tod •y through
other people's accomplish ments th2n you might from
your own, Enjoy the free ride
while you can.

bly good today, so long as you
h cp emotions ou t of your
dcc i~ion- m;~king . Introducing
fcchngs or passio n into t hings

will lead you astray.

ARIES (Mmh 21-April I'J)
·- C arcrully check all th e details wh en forming a p:trtm.·rship arrangemen t today , because althou gh initi11lly it may
;:appcu to be favorable to you,
thi ngs might turn out quite
differently.

TAUR US (April 20-Ma y
20) -- If you feel your work
trul y warrants a raise and
you're thinking of talkin g to
the boss about it, do so early
in the day. Do nut wai t until
latc.r when s/hc mi ght be tired
or discouraged.

; GEM INI (May 21-Jcone 20)
-- So long as it fits in wit h
your pl.:im, you'll honor Your
cOmmitments today. However, the minute your commitments inte rfere with what

AQUARIUS Q•n . 20-Fcb.
19) •• Although you may feel

you would prefer to do, it'll

flattered wheil someone who
usually doesn't seek advice
come&amp; to you today for guid·
anee, you may luer learn this
person w;u merely trying to
put you on the spot.

CANCER Uune 21-July
22) -- You may stnrt the day

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 211)
--Your j~,tdgment

i~

reuono.-

be another story . Keep your
pronuses.

off in a whirlwind of :u.:tivlty,
but it won't take long before
you burn yourself out. Set a
pa~:e that you can sustain

throughout your wo rk .

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Slumping Woods leads to slumping TV ratings at majors.
NEW YORK (AP) Tiger dropped II perce nt. He won both
Woods is in a bit of a slump, and so tournaments last year.
are the TV ratin~ for golfs major
"You can probably draw a connectourna.nents. lt's no c.oinc.idenc.e_
tion," CBS Sports president Sean
Just as Woods' unprecedented suc- McManus said Monday. "It's frustratcess drew new fans, sponsors and TV ing to keep comparing this year's
money to the sport, his recent numbers to the last two years
drought in Grand Slam events has because those numbers were inflatbeen accompanied by smaller audi- ed. We may never see those numbers
ences.
agam."
The latest example: After Woods
PGA Tour events in which Woods
scrambled to make the cut and tied played last year produced ratin~ 65
for 29th in the PGA Championship, percent higher than when he didn't
the overnight TV ratin~ for Sun- play. He increased interest in the
day 's final round on CBS slumped 36 sport while becoming the youngest
percent from last year, when he won. player to win a career Grand Slam
and the first to win four straight pro
the tournament.
At the British Open on ABC last majors.
month, Woods tied for 25th, and the
In deals driven by Woods' popularratin~ were the lowest in five years, ity, the PGA Tour agreed last month
· off 39 percent from 2000. At the to rights contracts with six networks
U.S. Open on NBC, where Woods that run from 2003-06 and are
was 12th, final - round ratin~ worth about $850 million - rough-

ly a 50 percent hike from the old
packages. (The deals don't include
th e majors.)
Woods never co ntended this
weekend, fit1ishing 14 strokes back .
He was done with his fourth round
about 3 1/2 hours before CBS went
off the air from Atlanta Athletic Club
after David Toms completed his oneshot win over Phil Mickelson.
Still, other than ·1999, Sunday's 6.4
overnight rating was the highest
since 1986 for a PGA Championship
without a playoff. (Each overnight
ratin~ point represents 1 percent of
TV homes in the country's 51 l~rgest
markets; full national ratings are
'e xpected Tu.esday).
And the PGA broadcasts Saturday
and Sunday were the two highestrated sports programs of the weekend, beating an NFL preseason game
on CBS and a major league baseball

nament since 1981. His eight-stroke
game on Fox.
" If there was ever proof o.fthe fact victory at the British 0pen - tO
that there- was a residual benefit of complete his career Grand Slam at
Tigers ~ presence on the tour, that age 24 generated that tourn:(would be it," McManus said. "If it ment's biggest Sunday ratin~. Ani!
weren't for a lot of the attention Woods' 2000 PGA Championship
brought by Tiger to the tour, I don't victory, in a playoff against Bob May,
think as many people would be as drew the event's highest preliminacy
familiar with the Phil Mickelson TV ratin~.
·
story, for example."
"You're seeing the same syndronte
When Woods won the Masters in that affected the NBA. We all felt
April, CBS drew an estimated 40.1 rhat Michael Jordan brought peopie
million viewers and ratin~ 33 per- to NBA telecasts that did not ordi~
cent high er than last year, when Vijay
Singh won. In the 46 years CBS has narily watch, · and Tiger Woods
aired the Masters, the only time brought viewers to golf tournament.
more people and TV households that did not ordinarily watch," said
tuned in was in 1997, when Woods TV consultant Neal Pilson, form "r
won his first green jacket.
. CBS Sports president.
:·
When he won last year's U.S.
"When that athlete retires or doe~Open by a record 15 strokes to start · n 't play on a given day or is. not Q1t
his streak in the majors, it drew rhe the leaderboard, a certain percentage
highest Sunday rating for the tour- of viewers finds other TV choices.",:
•••

REDS NOTEBO,OK

Stringers widow
searching for answers Slump brings lineup shakeup for Reds
in ·lineman's death
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. do want to know why," she
(AP)- Kelci Stringer doesn't said. "It's not his job to superspeak as if she's recently been vise . himself medically. What
was going on? What did they
widowed.
Her husband, Minnesota see? Why didn't anybody do
Vikin~ offensive tackle Korey anything' Couldn't they see
Stringer, died from heatstroke the ":'an was dying?"
following an intense practice
Korey · Stringer's autopsy
in stifling heat and humidity report was officially released
less than t)lree weeks ago. Yet Monday by the Blue 'Earth
Kelci Stringer is full of energy County coroner's office. It
and filled with peace despite confirmed his death was "nather loss - and still searching . ural,'' caused by heatstroke and.
for answers.
hyperthermia,
and
that
"Nothing in my, life has run Stringer had a body temperasmoother than they have the ture of 108 degrees.
last few weeks,'' Kelci Stringer
The Occupational Safety
said Monday, relaxed on a and Health Division of the
couch in her home in subur- Minnesota Department of
ban . ~inneapolis and talking Labor and Industry is investiabout her husband as if he gating Stringer's death. The
were still living.
investigation is likely .to be
"Maybe until you lose a completed in the next few
person can you only feel their week~.
spirit," she said. "Korey's
James Gould; Stringer's
working. A lot of thin~ are Cincinnati-based agent, has
just coming to me."
hired two Minm:apc)lis attarwith
Stringer said she has not neys to assist the
ruled out
the ·
or
the investigation into her and navigate Minnesota law.
husband's Aug. 1 death reveals The Vikin~ have hired an
something could have been attorney to represent the club
done about it. But she stresses in the investigation.
she's not out to get anyone.
But Kelci Stringer's main
'Tm not looking for a motive is to make sure all
fight," she said. "I'm not the football players are 'properly
big, bad widow trying to cared for when the temperabring down the NFL because ture rises.
her husband died." .
"I want these guys to know
Stringer doesn't fault the this could be you,'' she said.
Vikin~ coaching staff, but she "Yes, he was 335 pounds. But
wondered if more could have heat affects everybody. You're
been done. She saw a video- not going to be any less of a
tape of the practice and said man if you sit out of a hot
~he could tell her husband was practice. You're a smart man.
in bad shape.
And smart people win games,
"I don't blame anyone, but I not tough guys."

CINCINNATI (AP) -Todd Walker glanced at the lineup board, saw
that he was batting seventh and asked
reporters who was starting for the St.
Louis Cardinals.
"They must be throwing a lefty,"
Walker surmised.
Nope. Woody Williams is a righthander. The jumbled Cincinnati Reds
lineup on Monday night had nothing
to do with the opposing pitcher.
Manager Bob Boone just got tired of
watching his lineup flame out.
"0 h-and-8 kind of screams for
doing something different," Boone
said.
Heading into Monday's game, the
Reds had lost eight in a row, matching their longest slump of the season.
They've struggled to score runs lately,
batting only .192 with runners in
scoring position in the last nine
games.
The lineup finally got rolling when

Walker and rookie Adam Dunn
joined the club July 20. Dunn has
tailed off- he was in a 1-for-12
slump - and the offense hasn't done
much during the losing streak.
Walker, who has batted leadoff since
coming over in a trade with Colorado, was only 4-for-25 career off
Williams. Pqkey Reese was 5-for-11,
so Boone· decided to let him bat first.
That wasn't the only change. Dunn
got the day off, and Sean Casey was
dropped. to fifth.

REYES STILL IN ROTATION:
A day after Boone suggested he might
drop . Dennys Reyes /rom the rotation, he decided to keep him there for
a while longer. '
Reyes, who has spent most of his
career wirh the Reds as a reliever,
struggled in his two starts since
returning from Triple-A Louisville.
He failed to make it past the fourth

inning Sunday in a 6-4 loss to Milwaukee.
Boone said Monday he'll give
Reyes a chance to stay in the rotation.
He noted that Reyes looked' good in
the first three innin~ of his· initial
start.
"That warrants me being a little
more patient with him, and ·I don't
like the alternatives real well," he said.
The alternatives involve moving a
reliever into the rotation.

ELMER IS BIG MAC'S TOP
NEMESIS: Mark McGwire has
never done well at Cinergy Field he's a . 182 career hitter with four
homers and only five RBis.
His toughest pitcher to face on· the
Reds' staff? Elmer Dessens. McGwire
is 0-for-1 0 career against the righthander with five strikeouts. Dessens is
scheduled to face the Cardinals on
Thursday.

Melp County's
so

cents • August 22. 2001 ·Vol. 52, No.

Wednesday

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

s

www.mydailysentinel.com

Athletic·facil. on ballot u.s. 33 project
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - When voters of the
j\1ei~ Local Srhool District go to the
poDs on Nov. 6, they will decide a 20year; 2.67-mill bond issue .for construction of athletic facilities at Mei~ High
School and a bus garage ~t the new elementary school site .
· Meeting Tuesday night
regular session, members of tbe Mej~ Local Board
of Education vote.d unanimously to put
'the issue on the ballot, and Treasurer
Mark E. Rhonemus indicated' he. would
be filing the necessary paperwork with

in

'•

.•
r

'•

'

•

•

the Mei~ County Board of Elections
today.
The bond issu~, if passed, will be levied
as a direct tax on all taxable property in
th'e district. and will generate about
$4,250,000, the estimated cost of constructing the athletic facilities and the
garage.
It will be in addition to the 23-year
3.95-mill bond/levy issue already in place
for funding the $33 million dollar building project.
During the meeting, several personnel
matters in preparation for the oJ)ening of

school Tuesday were handled.
Hired on purchased services contracts
to assist handicapped students at the rate
of $9.19 an hour were Debbie Jacks,
Donna Jacks, Candy Ohlinger and Sher- .
ry Eagle. Maria Hampton was hired to
provide transportatior:J and serve as a
·
reader guide.
Jim Fink was hired as a substittJte custodian, and Bill Soulsby as a summer cus- ·
todial assistant. Rusty Bookman, who
submitted the school's safety ·policy and
handbooks accepted by the board, was
Please see Ballot. Al

'•

'
,
:
' ,.
·;

MEIGS
LOCAL

School·.
ear
aunches
Tuesday

•'
,

BY C!wu..ENE

to begin in
September
BY BRIAN

.'

J..REED

be bid in September.
The future of the controversial project was sealed earlier this summer when a federal lawsuit, filed by project
opponents, was decided by
Judge Edmund Sargus.
. Nancy Pedigo of Ohio
Department of Transportation 's District 10 office in .
Marietta said a "partnering
meeting" between ODOT
engineers, contractor representatives and project subcontractors is Friday, when
logistical details on the project will be discussed.
Construction is expected
to begin sometime in September, Pedigo said, and
ODOT hopes that Gov. Bob
Taft and other high-ranking
state officials can attend a
groundbreaking ceremony
sometime next morith.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

DARWIN - Construction on the new U.S. 33
between Darwin and Athens
is expected to begin next
month.
Meanwhile, a meeting
between state highway officials and project coiuractors
working on the project is set
for Friday, and a groundbreaking ceremony is sc hed~
uled for September.
The S33.3 million first
phase of the two-phase project involves construction of
six miles of new super-two
highway between Darwin
and the Athens County line
near Shade.
The project is expected to
be completed in September
2003 by the Columbus firrrl
of Smith &amp; Johnson. The
second phase, to Athens, will

HOEFUCH

Under construction

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Students
in the Meig; Local School
District return to . school
Thesday, while the new year
bj,gins for teachers and nonterrified employees Monday.
: Superintendent William
l3uckley said all employees
to report to-Meig!!'High· ·
School by 8:30 a.m. Mon-

.,.

are

_ ___!Anor-studeJ1fSwlioare-lhNinaiNAUFI'iiNii.A~UUsSTT- Jeremy Hill, son of Dale and Karen Hill of Karen's Greenhouse. Racine,
Is one of four finalists who will compete at the National FFA Convention in louisville, Ky. for the
new to the district :ind have
not registered for classes,
National Diversified Hortlcuture-Entrepreneurship Awar&lt;l. (Submitted photo)
they should report to the
building in their attendance
area as soon as possible to
p{eregister.
· Buckley said students will
be bringing .information
home during the first week
of school. Emergency medical forms, student accident
BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
FFA is a national
expen ence.
insurance forms, student
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
The Diversified Horticulhandbooks and free lunch
oraanization
oif
RACINE -Jeremy Hill of
~
ture-Entrepren,urship Award
applications are some of the
·
Racine
has
been
selected
as
a
455,306
members
is
one of 46 proficiency proforms to be sent out, he said.
national finalist for the preparing for leadership gram areas FFA members can
He encouraged parents to
and careers in the
participate in to develop valuNational FFA Proficiency
n;ad the information, fill out
science; business
able experience and leadership
Award in Diversified Horti- ·
i:he forms and get them back
skills
at the local , state and
culture-Entrepreneurship.
to the school right away.
Announcement of his selecand technology of
national levels.
For specific questions
tion
came
from
the
National
agriculture.
Hill, a member of Racine
about school, parents are to
Southern
FFA
Chapter,
FFA Organization (FFA)
~all the office of the princieligible for the
Convention in Louisville, Ky. became
pal at the school where their
today.
·
Proficiency awards recog-· national award after winning
child or children will attend.
Hill, son of Karen and Dale
Hill, and a member of the nize Ol!tstanding student the Ohio State FFA competi: ; Buckley said that students
Southern FFA, is one of only achievement in agribusiness tion earlier this year. who . were on . free or
·
1· h
The award ts sponsored by
~duced-price lunches last
four people chosen to com- · gamed through
estab
1s
ment
.
·
F
.
.
armIan d M utua1 · 1nsurance
¥ear .will remain on the list ' Pete · for the award at the of a new busmess,
working for C o. IN at1onw1
·
·de Agn'b usmess
·
until a date is set for new
national finals in October dur- an existing company or .o ther·
ing the · 74th National FFA wise gaining handscon career
Please !lee FFA, Al
: ,..... School, A3

'

Racine student named
.national finalist for FFA award.

. •·

NBA player creates summer
program in hometown · ·
BRANTLEY, Ala . (AP)Person started the proGrowing up, Wesley Person gram with $250,000 and
didn't have a wholesome help from his brother, forplace to play games on sum- mer NBA player Chuck
mer afternoons.
Person. Wesley Person's
Now the Cleveland Cava- wife, Lillian, and other famliers guard and former ily members also are
Auburn star is making sure involved.
Free to children ages 5
children in his rural south
Alabama hometown don't through 17, the program
have the same problem.
recently finished its first
The
Wesley
Person year. Person runs it from the
Opportunity Program pro- end of the NBA season in
vides sports and outdoor May until the second week
activities·, video games, pool of AugusC
tables and computers for
"It's been going like I
disadvantaged children try- · planned so far," he said. "I
ing to stay out of trouble.
can see a change in the kids
"It's kind of like I'm liv- already. The kids have more
ing a dream through this confidence in themselves,
because I didn't have this the kids are . speaking out
when I was coming up,'' now. Those are the things I
Person told the Mont- . like to see. I like to see the
gomery Advertiser for a kids grow and be there for
story Monday. "But it's not them."
about me, it's about giving
Brantley High School
th'ese kids an opportunity to assistant principal Tony
have a place to play basket- Stallworth praised the proball, have swings, have a gram.
place to enjoy themselves
A year ago, "I could have
and meet their friends.
taken you to the corner and
"The rewards will come shown you kids · ... lighting
to me later when these kids up cigarettes, kids doing
go off and come back as drugs . Now ies gone," he
good citizens, good people." said.

~PORTS: Cardinals take down Reds 11-6, Bl

"-.....

r

.

At that price, how can you

called the Trail one of its top

resist? Throw those clubs in

10 trips in the world and why

the car and head for Alabama's

Alabama was named among

2 Sections - 12 Pllps

calendar
C!assjfieds
Comics
Editorials
Objtuarjes

the top 1o·destinations in the
world for gol£1 ·

Indulge yourself withal! the

Low: lOS
Details, A2

·: sentinel

'

Robert Trent Jones GolfTrail.

Hlp: 80s

l'odlly's

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golf you can handle. See why

Sports
·Weather

Frequent Flyer magazine

AS

New bridge supports are being built and pieces of the old
bridge removed as workers for DMG Construction continue
efforts on replacing the Rutland Bridge on Main Street. The
project, which costs $546,250, began In March and Is
scheduled to be completed sometime around Nov. ·15. (Tony
M. Leach photo)

Gavin-· plant manager wins promotion
•

Lotteries
OHIO

82-4 Pick 3: 4-8-1; Pick 4: &amp;9+9
85 8ud!eye 5: 3-6-1&amp;2&amp;29
A4
A3 W.VA.
81.3,6 Daily 3: 7-4-B Daily 4: 9-6-6-5
A2 C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

headquarters, effective Friday.
In this new position, Phlegar will be
involved in strategic planning ·activities
ranging from benchmarking and comFROM STAFF REPORTS
. pariso ns of AEP power plant practices to
· CHESHIRE _ Duane Phleger, gen- · budget coordina tion and support for
era! mana ger of American Electri c asset management activities.
Power's James M. Gavin Plant, has been
He will report to Bill Sigmon, AEP
named manager of fossil and hydro vice president. of fossil and hydro operastrategic planning at AEP's Columbus tions-east, who oversees AEP's coal-fired

Massey will replace
Phlegar fjfective Friday

and hydroele ctric power plants in eastern states.
Greg Massey, general manager of
AEP's Kamnier-Mitchell Plant at
Moundsville, W.Va., has been named to
succeed Phlegar as general manager at
Gavin, while Wayne Irons, general manager at AEP's Picway Plant at Lockbourne, has been named general managPiease see Gavin, A3
\..

lnf~tion at your fingertips ...

•Dou not include huttb, caru or tax.
Price is per perso" . Carr fees charged for
eruh round. Valid tlmmglr September 14,
2001. 3 cousecutivt dayS required. Nol
applicable at Ox~oor Valier, Capitol Hill,
LAknwod Qt Tire Gflmd Hvtel. Not avail-'

•'

For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs and services.
Holzer Medical Center provides, .
log onto our website:

FOR RESERVAnONS &amp; TEE nilES

able at Grnnd Natiorra/ after Augtm 31 ,

1-800-257-3465

Some res,iclitms may apply.

· www. rtjgo.lfcom

www.holzer.org

..

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. Discover the Holzer Difference
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"

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