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                  <text>PAGE SIX

....

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,.

.

Fenwick
PLAN 41 017
Living Area 1016 sq.h,

Bedroom
9'4· x ws·

36' x44'
1000 SERIES
www.odihomeplom.com
Miller Suite
11'8" X 12'6"

Shape makes Fenwick a treat
An iomil!uing variety of ex-·
tcrior shapes and textures
makes the Craftsman-style
Fenwick a visual treat. This
plan was created by guest de-.
signer Steve Duarte.
Tape red wooden columns
rest on square fieldstone bases
that support the wraparound
porch, and fieldstone shows
up again in the wide rectanb'lllar chimney. Gently curved
arches link the porch supports,
while higher up a half-round
window sparkles beneath the
side gable.
Closer to ground level, the
venlcal and horizontal lines of
the multiplaned windows and
porch railinb'! run .harmonious
counterpoint to the diagonals
of the lattice below.
Inside, the ho1ne seetns
much larger than its 1,000plus square feet. Vaulted ceilings in the living room and

Vaulted
Living
15' X 11'6"

Covered Porch

0 2001 Associated Oes!gnt. tnc.

Tips on staying cool and calm
DEAR READERS: Many
of you have written to me
asking for ideas on conserving
energy and saving money on
electric bills. Here are some
lips.
• Why cool an empty
house? When your family is
out during the day, raise the
thermostat to 80 degrees or
so, and lower the air conditioner during the evening to
cool the house more.
• Moist air retains heat, so
r·-durin-g-'th~

wann months.
• If you have an air-conditioning system . that w·orks
through your furnace, be sure
to have the furnace cleaned
and serviced at least once
every year.
• Keep your furnace filter
clean, and change it at regular
intervals -- even if it means
cleani,ng it .once a month.
Many of the newer filters can
be vacuumed or even washed.
·• Try cooking meals .on the
stovetop or barbecue rather
thah in the oven, which
makes the room hotter. If you
are · cooking in the oven, use
the hood fan to disperse the
heat.
• If you are using central air

conditioning, don't block
ductworkwith furniture drapcries or other obstructions.
• If you are using a window-type air co ndition e r,
keep it dean , and clean the
filter frequently. Mold and
mildew can grow in air-conditioners if they are allowed to
get dirty.
• Run the clothes dryer ·in
the evening, when the temperature is cooler. If your
washer and dryer are in a uti!ity room rather than the basement, keep the i:loofClosetl
when operating the appliances. It will reduce heat
transfer to other rooms of the
house.
• Wash whatever clotlies
you can in cold water or
warm water; using hot water
heats the house up, too .
Warning: Never run the
washing machine if you are
out of the house . or sleeping.
It can malfunction and flood
the house. It's amazing how
much water can run out of
the little hose attached to your
washing machine.
• If you keep the lint filter
clean on the clothes dryer,
you wiU have less humidity in '
the room.
• If you have ceiling fans,

keep them clean for optimum
performance.'
• Be sure that your ceiling
fan is turning in a clockwise
rotation to pull up warm air
and replace it with a cool
flow.
• If you are using portable
fans, keep obstruction!, such
as furniture and draperies,
away from the back of the fan,
which is the area that draws
the air in to cool the room.
• Keep the tim clean and
free of debris.
·
• If you put a fan ·in the
window to draw in air, put a
single layer of cheesecloth
over the screen to filter out
dirt . Change or wash as
needed.
• For those hot nights when
you toss and turn and can't
sleep, sprinkle a little baby
powder on the sheets to absorb moisture.
• Your little black dress may
be a hot number, but there's
no need to cool it. Keep
closet doors closed.
• Are you off to a baseball
game or outdoor activity?
Keep a wet bandanna in a resealable bag in the refrigerator.
Tie it around your neck, and
you will be cool in more ways
than one.

Details count when making
your house your home. They
could be bibelots to excite the
eye and imagination, or they
could be the pretty things you
use every day:
• An important, big bowl is
often the centeopiece for a table or mantel. To celebrate
the 50th anniversary of Lismore, its most popular stemware pattern on both sides ol·
the Atlantic, Waterford has
introduced a series of Lismore
centerpiece bowls of Irish cut
crystal. The stemmed 13-inch
Scalloped Doat Bowl ($1,500)
is an light-catching gem; a
slightly simpler design is the
· 13-inch Statement Center-

BY BARBA~A MAYER

The basic designs for all furuiture already exist - pieces
enabling you to sit, sleep, cat,
write, and store things. Yet
new versions continually arrive, from designcr.s intent on
finding new ways to look af
old functions..
.
Design~rs of fUrniture from the worlds of art furniture, interior design and furniture manufactf~ring - reflect
on why they design something new and .w here their
ideas come from :
• Johnny Swing creates "art
furniture" from familiar materials at hanil . What's novel
about his penny chair is not
the form, which is based on a
modern Italian model, but
that except for its legs the
chair is upholstered with a
"fabric" made entirely of pennics, Swing also designed and
made a chaise covered with
1&gt;,400 nickels welded tqgcther.
formerly a sculptor in New
York, Swing nDw crafts unusual, sculpturol items of furniture in Brookline, Vt. He
exhibited the two pieces at
the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New
York in May.
"Lines formed by those who
1

ACROSS

1 Orang cousin
6 Spread out
11 Bedouins
16 Comes down
21 Tragic lover
22 City In Maine
23 Cockpit VIP
24 To no- (fruitless)
25 Sidestep
26 Pulled oara
27 -bear
28 lillillnt8!)!
29 Thole
30 Field cover. lor short
32 Healthy
34 Wounds with a knife
36 -whlzl
37 Word with shoe or
family
39 Timid
41 Dishonest one
43 Knlghl's Iitie
44 Emcee
45 Subdued
48 Composition for two
50 Memo
52 Ringed pla~et
55 Wanton look
57 Speaker's raised
platlorm
59 Nursery llem
'83 Of birds
84 Sports lnslant 86 Safeguard
88 Blue color
89 War god
70 Pepplness
72 Get away from
73 Disencumber
74 Go wrong
75 Boone and
Robertson
76 Revere
78 Billy - Williams
79 Monster
80 Law
wanted to sit ·d own sur- company. Furniture in the 82 Beery place
rounded by money," he says.
display includes a table on 83 Gourds
Why use what most people wheels, built of working tele- 85 Engender
86 Frozen dessen
would call spare change?
vision monitors with a glass 87 Seaman

"I usually work with found
objects, which are limited in
quantity. It occurred to me
that coins are easier to get. I
just gC) to the bank, give them
$20 or $50 and they hand me
rolls, and the price never
changeo," Swing said. "Whe11
I switched from pennies to
nickels, I wondered if I could
afford it. But the cost of the
nickels was the least expensive
part. Tlte chaise's · stainless
s.teel legs, the cost of making
the molds and the 200 hours
of welding that it took each
cost a lot more than the nickels."
Swing has created many
other unique designs, including a chair. out of a steel (beam that weighs 200 pounds.
For his next piece, he is
working with 1,000 baby
food jars. ''I'm thinking of
having each one lit by a one
watt light bulb · so the piece
will have l ,000 points of
light," he says.
Recently s·wing and a collaborator, John Carter, redid a ·
New York subway car as a
display booth for a soft drink

piece ($595), which is footed
but without the stem.
• Another spectacular centerpiece bowl, called Amazonia ($3 ,400) , comes from
Scottish glassmaker Caithness.
This limited edition is handmade, standing 12 1/4 inches
high on a graduated stem with
a multicolor tropical orchid
design within; the bowl is
fluted with · cut facets and a
subtle cobalt blue edging. .
• The London Desk Clock
($750), designed by Pam Waters for Staffcdshire Enamels,
is both decorative and functional. London landmark
scenes are enameled on each
panel of this hexagonal piece,
with a round clockface on

top. There's also a GolfinJ~;
Desk Clock (S750) version,
showing scenes from famous
golf courses around the worla.
• At the table, the choice of
fine china can be a treat for
visitors or an everyday pleasure for yourself. Pagoda, a
new pattern from Tiffany &amp;
Co. (September introduction),
is hand-painted blue ·on
creamy. white French faiencf,
reminiscent of a classic chinoiserie willow design. The
line is variable, with simple
blue rims or decorated styles,
ranging in price from SIS for
a bread and butter plate to
$175 for a set of four decorated dinner plates.

WEEKLY
PUZZLER
L..--------------------.;_-'-...:..------------l

Designers ponder new_ideas
FOR AP SPECIAL EDITION

you can gaze at the landscape
outside.
Laundry appliances are conveniently close, in a passthrough 'Utility room that
doubles 21 a mud room.
The FelfWil:k's master suite.
has a surprisingly large walk-in
closet, plus direct access tQ the
bathroom, and double doors
that open onto the wraparound porch.
For a review plan, including
scaled floor plans, elevations,
section and artist's conception,
send S25 to Associated Designs, 1100 Jacobs Drive,
Eugene, Ore. 97402. Please
specify the Fenwick 41-012
and include a ·return address
. when ordering. A catalogue
featuring more than 350
home plans is available (?r
$15. For more information,
call 1-800-634-0123.

Details count with the hom.e

Vaulled
Dining
15' X 9'8"

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY LINDA COBB

dinil]g room expand the feeling of spaciousness in these
linked rooms, and the dining
room is open to the kitchen.
A fieldstone (or brick) fireplace separates the dining and
living rooms, as does a level
change. The living room is
one step down, and naturally
illuminated by porch-softened
light washing in through wi(!e
windows on three sides.
Double doors on the wall
opposite the fireplace swing
wide open to provide porch
access and capture welcome
breezes when the temperature
risl!s.
In _the kitchen, counter and
cupboard spaces are in good
supply. A small pantry adds
more storage space for canned
goods and staple foods, while
lazy Susan shelving offers ·easy
under-the-counter access.
Standing at the kitchen sink,

tqp. The screens are active,
thanks to three built-in video
cameras and two VCRs. The
images range from the people
looking at the display to films.
Where do his ideas come ·
from? "It's about keeping an
open mind and mai!llaining a
childlike mentality," Swing
says. "One of the hardest
things is letting an idea grow
and develop instead of censoring it because it sounds
dumb."
Still, he says that designing
and making furniture imposes
some limits. "It has to be
comfortable and if it's seating
it has to· support the back."
• Clodagh, a New Yorkbased interior designer, is inspired by antiques ·and' other
objects she discoveres during
her travels. The immediate
impetus is usually that she
needs something for a ·particular job that she can't find . · 6,...1.-.J--._
Currently, Clodagh is mulling
over a new bookcase design.
She wants it to have thick
wooden shelves and thin uprights of brushed steel.

88 -drop
89 Regret
90 Metallic sound ·
93 Lawn cover
95 · Skillet
96 Infer
100 Sword handle
101 Big snake
102·1nn
104 Offbeat religion
105 "- Mlserables"
106 Emmet
107 Build
109...0cea .
110 Beln a rage
1 11 AI the lrumpet
player
112 Highly principled
1 15 Sleeper's visions
117 Use a loom
118 Mosl uncommon
119Dross
121 Genlle one
122· Stairway cousin
123 Feed for horses
125 'The - King"
127 Spinning 'round
129 Sept
132 Fleur·de· 134 Christmas song
138 Plummet
137 English school
141 Curved bone
142 Office notes
144 Type style: abbr.
146 Middling ,
148 Sheep
149 Texas lanc:tmark
151 Carpentry tool
153 Automaton
155 Rings out
157 Shiny Iabrie
158 Country ways
159 Weather, poetically
160 Leggy bird
161 Smell
t 62 Rye lungus
163 Detested
164 Expenses

DOWN

1 Went stealthily
2 Hang In midair
3 Picture
· 4.Giova size: abbr.
5 Bard
6 Horse's color
7 Small·plane pans
· 8 Moo
9 Again
10 Sing a cenaln way
11 Clap
12- de.Janelro
13 "-Wall That.Ends
Wall"
14 Kayaka
15 Put through a IIIIer
16 Devotees
17- Maria
18 Slow, In music
19 Dwells
20 Icy rain
31 "So be Ill"
33 Cover
35 Patterned fabric
38 Peer
40 Relalns
42 Do a farm lob
44 Warmth
46 Samovar
47 Punta - Este
49 Grow weary
. 51 Genuine
52 Gluta
53 Turn aside
54 Glittering headband
56 Barbershop Item
58 lnfrequenlly
60 Mournful song
61 River In France
6.2 Concluded
64 Appraise
65 -and yang
67. Hints
69 Husband or wife
n aural
75 Hockey Item
76 Severe
77 Fit lor a king
79 City In Ulah
81 Color
82 Ovine cry

84 Play on words
85 Reynolds or
~ancaaler

87 Religious
pamphlets
89 Law
90 Saat
91 Blair or Hamilton
92 Change
93 Proceeds
94 Distress call
95 Mothtr·of· 96 OuanHtles
97 ·EPioby
98 , Put tho ball play
99 Organic compound
101 Fragile
103 Spread to dry
104 Unwieldy
107 'Bom Free• lloneas
108 Money drawer
110 Nolorlous
111 Be evaelve
113 Long lime
11• Gene111 name
116 Com aplke
117 Pale
120 Moal sott and etlcky
122 Face feature
124 Uncomplicated
128 Seine
128 Plundered .
129 Stupid
130 Purple flower
131. Die down
133 Kind of eclipse
135 ConHeroua tree
138 Alps
139 Young h001er
140 Aeries
142 Neighbor ol Wyo.
143 Vocalized
145 Montez or Albright
147 Energy acronym
150 Hr. part
152 Recant: prefix
154 Piece
158 The "I"

•.

.•
'•

SPORIS: Berne Union shocks Southern,

Melp County's
50 cents • August 27, 2001 • Vol. 52. No.

a

As

Mon

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

wwlll&lt;.myrlaily§entinel .mm
•

Ky. man wins share of Powerball.jackpot
LOUISVILLE, Ky.' (AP) A
divorced father whose unemployment benefits were about to run out
decided to gamble on the $294.8
million Powerball jackpot. He says
his wager paid off.
David Edwards, 46, said one of the
eight tickets he bought about an
hour and a half before Saturday
nighes drawing was one of four that
matched the Powerball drawing.
"I figured I had nothing to lose

and everything to ··gain;' Edwards
told The Daily Independent of Ashland, Ky., on Sunday.
Kentucky Lottery officials would
not confirm the name of their state's
winner but said it was a man who
talked to the lottery president by
phone on Sunday.
Winning tickets also were sold in
New Hampshire, Delaware and Min· nesota but winners had not come
forward in those states by Sunday.

The winning numbers drawn Saturday night in Des Moines, Iowa, were
8, 17, 22,42 and 47, plus the Powerball number of 21.
Edwards said until Saturday l:ie
hadn 't played the lottery in months
because he couldn't afford the tickets. But with the jackpot approach ing
$300 million, he said he decided to
take a shot.
He said he bought the winning
ticket Saturday night at Clark's Pump

N Shop, about I 00 yards from his
home in Ashland, in northeast Kentucky. Lottery · officials confirmed
that Clark's had sold and validated a
winning ticket.
Ellwards, a regular at Clark's,
returned Sunday morning and spent
the day at the store talking to news
reporters, store manager Melanie
Wells said Sunday.
Edwards said he had recently been
laid off from his fiber optics job and

was in need of back surgery. He said
he had had no idea what he was
going to do once hi s unemploymenJ
benefits ran out.
Edwards s~ id he purchased S8
worth of chances ...- seven for himself and one for his fiancee. For his
first four plays, he used birthdays and
other significant numbers.
·
On his fifth one, he decided to try
P~•se

see PoweriNIII, AS

Athens

POWER OUTAGE

man

438 customers·

shot after
chase

left in the
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -About 438 Americm Electric Power
customers - including The Daily Sentinel's Court
Street office - were without electricity this morning.
AEP spokesman Terry Flora said power service was
interrupted at I 0 p.m. Sunday when an unqergrounli
cable malfunctioned. All affected customers were in the
viUage of Pomeroy.
AEP expe,ts the power to be restored by noon toda)i,
Flora said.
'
Any items missing from today's Daily Sentinel as
result of the power outage will be published in the Tues~
day edition.
·
·

ATHENS- An Athens
County man was shot and
wounded by a sheriff's
deputy Sunday night after a
high-speed pursuit,
Sgt.
Bryan
Cooper
observed James M. Creamer, 31, of 11547 Rainbow
Lake Road speeding on
Connett Road around
7:38 p.m. After Creamer
ran a stop sign, Cooper
began the pursuit, the
report said.
The chase continued to
LeMaster Road and onto
Poston
Road,
where
Deputy
Brice
Fick
approa~hed the suspect's.
vehicle from .the: "OP'PO!Site
direcHi:in. Creamer aUelit,a
causing the deputy· to. go
onto the berm.
The pursuit continued
down Poston Road onto
Ohio 691 South. Cooper
got in front of Creamer's
vehicle and tried to slow
Creamer with his cruiser.
Creamer turned onto
Hamley Run Road, where ·
Cooper forced him off the
road into a yard.
Creamer then rammed
the cruiser, the report said.
Cooper came out of the
car and ordered Creamer
·co stop. Instead, Creamer
came at Cooper with his
vehicle.
To avoid being struck,
Cooper fired his weapon,
striking Creamer in the
hand and lower chest.
Cooper Oed down Ham. ley Run to Hamley Short
Cut Road tow~rd Dowler
Ridge Road. Fick was able
to force Creamer off the
road, and the suspect was
apprehended.

Today'a

Sentinel
2 hclioll1 - ID Pllpl

a

"

Rural Women's
Recovery .Program
.

'

'

POMEROY- Rural Women's Recovery Program
(RWRP), which provides residential. treatment for alcohol and other drug abuse for women and female youth
in ·six Appalachian counties, including Meigs and Gallia,
is the recipient of an Ohio Department of Alcohol and
Drug Addiction Services (ODADAS) grant.
Other counties which will.benefit from the new grant
money, totaling $571,603 for all of Ohio, are Athens,
Hocking, Vinton and Jackson.
RWRP submitted a, proposal outlining a program that
will impact about 125 women a year in this community.
Commenting on the award, Dr. Joe Gay executive
director of Health Recovery Services, said "We are
extremely pleased once again to offer services to pregnant, substance abusing women in Athens, Hocking,
Vinton, Gallia,Jackson and Meigs counties:
"This funding will .provide us with the alcohol and
other drug treatment resources necessary to reach out to
this special population and help them to reshape their
lives and rebuild their families;' he added.
ODADAS plans, initiates and coordinates an extensive ·
system of alcohol, tobacco and other drug addiction ser"
vices d~igned to prevent abuse.
With support from the Taft administration, 92
women-specific programs have been funded this year,

MIDDLEPORT- Talented Bend-area singers.
and actors will take the stage of the Meigs Middle
School auditorium next week for two performances of "Ok:Jahoma!", Rogers and Hammerstein's timeless operetta.
Riverbend Community Theater's premier presentation, under the direction of Amy Perrin, has
been in rehearsals for several weeks, and last week,
performers donned their western costumes for a
dress rehearsal.
Mindy O'Dell and Anna Sayre, as "Laurey" and
"Ado Annie;' respectively, and Brian Howard and
Kathy Johnson, as "Ali Hakim" and "Aunt Eller,"
all pictured here, were hard at work during Thursday's rehearsal, putting the finishing touches on
two of the show's scenes.
· The musical will be performed on Saturday at 7
p.m., and Sunday at 3 p.m. General admission tickets are available for $6 at Peoples Bank N.A. offices
.in Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland; farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co. and Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy; Office Service and Supply and
. Riverbend Crafts ami' Antiques Mall in Middleport; Home National Bank in Racine and Baum
Lumber in Chester. (Brian J. Reed pho~os)

Hlp: lOs
L-:IOs
Details, A2

Lotteries

!I.Co!.lm·wwic~s_______,A""S

5up1r LoiiD: 3-&amp; 14-33-37-49
~Edlllill!tollrllljallilst..__ _ _....!A:n4 ICidlr. 2-7 56 9 8

loiO~buitu!diaiUrJSie5~---...I.A:loL3 W.VA.
&gt;lSPil!O.urts~---.cA"'5-;;J7~-1~Q PaMIRII: 8-17-22-42-47 (21)
:r:WI!le;.sant!lhseLr_____£!Abi.3 c 2001 O!llo Valley Publishins eo.

·.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

OKLAHOMA!

!loca
21!iSilenwdoll aiLr---~Alo!3 OHIO
!.C.u;lal2ssiZiifuie!ild,. sl,____. c.A!lo6!:.!.-7 . Pick :s: 6-3-8; Pick 4: 042-6

.P lene see Fundln., AS

)obless rate inches upward in Meigs, Gallia:
FROM AP, STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY Unemployment in
Gallia and Meigs counties was up in July,
state officials revealed in the latest check
of jobless figures from arountl the state.
The Department of Jobs and Family
Services reported thatJuly's unemploy-·
. ment rate in Gallia was 6 percent, up
two-tenths of a percent over June's post·ing of 5.8 percent.
In Meigs, joblessness was up 1 percent

in July, from 8.3 percent in June to 9.3.
The rate also crept upward in one area
county, with Athens going to 3.5 percent
in June to 3.6 during July. Declines were
noted In Lawrence County, down 1 percent from Jun e's 6 percent, and Vinton
County, w.here joblessness dropped from
I 0.5 percent in June to 9.9 percent in
July.
Jackson County's rate was unchanged
at 7.2 percent.

Ohio's jobless rate dropped slightly to
4.2 percent in July due.mainly to seasonal employment, the state said Friday.
The rate was 4.3 perc,e nt in June.
·Employment grew slightly in the services industry, which includes amusement
park and fair workers, the bJFS said.
Employment in most major industry
divisions held steady.

Ple•se see Jobless. AS

Hospitalist
Holzer Medical Center now has four highly trained hospitalists
who are board certified or board eligible internists. They cover
the hospital's inpatient services 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
365 days per year.
For more information, call

(740) 446·5568

Pu:izle answer on Page 4
• f

.T _,- -.

'•

Discover the Holzer Difference .

.www.holzer.org

· ~·

•

�..

•••

Monday, Aug. 27, 2001

PageAl

· The Daily Sentinel

f

Grandma fears losing touch· with·boy lift alone too often
there any

Abigail
Van .
Buren
ADVICE

. downstairs playroom ~ into :t mJstt·r
bedroom and ~:ntertainment center.

the living room .

. She watches TV down there with
my former son-in-bw (Gra nt's
. fa ther) .
Grant is not allowed to go down
, there unless he receives special permission. He spends most of hi s time
1 alone in his upstairs bedroom pby'ing his boom box or watching TV in

R ece ntly, teleph one privileges
were.cut off between Gram and me.
Grant's father candidly told me that
my not calling makes his home hap.pier for his "recluse." I am sure he
will cut off my visits if 1 try to help
Gran t.
Abby, I don 't know what to do. Is

'

'

w~y

I can help him' HUR~1NG INSIDE
DEAR HURTING: Don't do
anything to threaten your visits with
your grandson. He needs you. You
niust become his loving, safe harbor.
See him as often as you ca n. Help
him to express his feelings. Lei·him
know he can tell you anything, and
you will not be judgmental or get
angry.
Do tlnnb" a 9-year-old boy will
CllJOY so he can bond closely and
experience so me happiness wi th
you. Let him know he can count on
you when things see m the darkest.
If his father and stepmother do cut
off your visits, then call C hildHelp ·
USA ( 1-800-422-4453) for expert
ad vtce on this sad case of emotional

child abuse.
DEAR ABBY: I hope you can
stand one more lette r about funerals.
I read your "eulogy" articles on July
31. It was the day after my husband
was buried.
My darling wore a red Hawaiian
shirt and sunglasses. I included photographs, a back-scratcher, money
clip, blue rose and a l-inch-tall bear,
a white rosary and a toy skunk that
sang, "How Sweet It Is to Be Loved
by You." I wrote the eulogy and took
lots of pictures. I had an open casket
at the graveside service. An American fla g draped the silver metal casket.
His family was horrified that I
buried their fari1ily member in this
manner. I had only known him 8

Dear Abby is wri1tc11 by Pm;/;,,.
P!rillips a11d da1•glrter jca1111C Plrillips.

Fund.ing
from Page AI

•.

•Class holds reunion
[

RAC IN E - Sonsh ine C~rcle of
Dorcas United Methodist Chu rch
held its seco nd annual family picnic
, at the campsite of Eleanor and Mar1 vin M cKe lvey in Portla nd on Aug.
,

. 8.
President Lois Sterrett· had prayer
before th e meaL Eleanor and Mar' vin were th e hosts for the even ing.
1 with Donna Byer and Mary Byer
HilLin charge of games. Boat ri des
1
were also enjoyed by members of
the group.
It was note d that circle is selling
shirts an d mu gs. Anyone wanting

one may contact Kathryn Hart at
949-2656.
Attending were Edie Hubbard,
Blondena Rainer, Martha Lou Beegle, Mabel Brace, Joe and Evelyn
Foreman, Mi ldred Hart, Dale and
Kathryn Hart, Donna Byer, Mary
Byer Hill , Tom and Shei la ThetSS,
Gladys Sterrett, Edna Knopp, Matti e Beegle, Leanna 13eegle, Je rry and
Marilyn and Mark Bogard, Dick
and Lois Sterrett, Deway ne Stutler,
Lillian Hayman, Julie Campbell ,
Hazel McKelvey, Ruth Si mpso n
and Linda Russell.
Next meeting will be held at the
church on Sept. 13 at 7p1H .

All area wom en are invited to D ave Hawkins, Pau l and June
attend.
Eichinger; Polly Eichinger; Nancy
and Roger Hubbard ; Maxine .
Seyfried; Bob, Becky and Allen
Frank; Tracie and Butch Stein;
Suzanne and Fritz Sayre; Taylor
SYRACUSE The annua l M cN ickle; R andy Gibbs; Faith
Eichinger reunio n was held Aug. 5 Hall; Martha and Virgil Collins, Traat th e Carl eton SchooL There were
cie Sayre; Azzalia Sayre; Jenn ifer
51 present. .
Massie, Kalista Massie; Darla Staats.
Polly Eichinger gave th e blessing
Richard and De nise Mora; Mary
prior to the covered dish luncheon. and Jack Gibbs; William Charles
. Door prizes were drawn followCook; Joe and Mary Bowers; Steve
ing the announ cement of special
and Tammy Marcinko; · J os h
events.
Marcinko; Rodney Leifheit; Ruth
Those present
we re Jud y Leifheit; Larry Leitheit; Brian BowEichinger, Jan Seyfried Hawkins,
ers, Gerald and Bonnie Kelly; J ean

.Eichinger
reunion held

Seyfried and Mary Lou; Klare and
Tammi Kimes; Paula Eichinger,
Charles and C lara Sayre; Lind a
Collins, Marie Houda shelt and
Amanda 13oyd.
The next reunion will be the first
Sunday in August 2002.

said Gay. The program of
ODADAS will share more
than $16.5 million in federal
block grant and stare funds
allotted specifi cally for services.
ODADAS Director Lucille
Fleming commended RWRP,
describing it as· an "outstanding representative of Ohio's
alcohol and other drug treatment programs that target
women of all ages, women
with children and pregnant
women.
"Exemplary programs such
as this provide quality, respon: sive treatment to women with

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of staying
~ntelligence. panel ·

(

&gt;•shone on him in the · case of
·
: · missing interri Chandra Levy
: : actually could be a plus in that
: : assignment, his lawyer says. .
•• • "Everything about h.im is
: out there. He's probably the
:· person on the Intelligence
-: Committee who can't be
· bl k il d
" tt
· ac rna e anymore, a or; : ney Abbe Lowell said Sunday
: on NBC's" Meet the Press."
• "!fit's not punitive for soqte
:.· reason, there's no gnod reason"

"disrurb mg an wrong, an
said he wauld talk to House •
Democrats about possible
action against Condit, including his removal from the intelligerice panel.
Rep. Scott Mcinnis, RColo., said Sunday that
Gephardt "has an obligation

: · for the California Democrat to
: leave the committee, Lowell
: said. " He's served very well. His
:~·colleagues will tell you."

"requires very high integrity,"
Mcinnis said on CNN's "Late
Edition." "Certainly, any kind
of indication that someone has

: • Condit's fate on rhe panel
: was questioned after House
: . Minority
Leader
Dick
: : Gephardt, D- Mo., criticized

not been forthcoming or
truthful when put under pressure should not be in charge or
sitting on the committee that
·
oversees central intelligence
and .our spy networks throughout the world,"
On .'; Fox News Sunday;•
R
Ch 1 n _ 1 D N y
ep.
ares ""'nge • - · ·•
called
Condit's
behavior
''embarrassing" but said "therJ's
nothing that we can do in the

•: him for failing to be "candid
: and forward" in imABC inter· : view Thursday about his rela; : tionship with Levy, a Bureau of
·
h d'
· P risons mtern w o !Sap: . peared four months ago.
:: Asked repeatedly if he had a
1
.: sexual atfatr wtth Levv, 24, the
·"
: 53-year-old married congress': man said only they'd had a
: "very close" relationship. He
: offered no apologies for his
•

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Congress. Unless th ere is
something to take before the
ethics committee. I don't see
how we can do anything."

.The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

:

that's inherent to his responsibilities
to
immediately
remove"Condit
1
Service on the committee

'

Co"actlon Polley

Catsu

'

Jobless .

M~~~~ to~h~~~~o:.~~~e ~: d~j~~~~e.

Downie, Rachael
Harmon, deed, Syracuse VIllage. · Downie to TP·CWD, right of way,
Margaret Burris to Oscar May· Sutton.
nard, Lillian· L Maynard. deed,
Steven Brickles, Carolyn Brick·
Letart.
les, to TP·CWD, right of way, Bed·
Anthony Land Co. to John ford .
WASHINGTON (AP) involvement with Levy or for Robert Fisk, deed, Salem.
Jason Ca rieton to TP·CWD, ·
C eli 1... rved his I I (
·
·,~,
Kptie E.' Miller · to James A. right of way, 0 range.
,
•
&lt; Rep. Gary · on t r- se · ·
~e.~q ~Qqperat;toQ WJ-e: Miller, affidavk. · ......
•.• :.-~· ,.-Allberc
T,ru-11,
Manlyn·
: : honorably on the
police.
'
· · Leona J. Cline to·TTS Rentals, Trussell, to TP-CWD, right of way,
1

11 Pepsi
I

:•

deed.

Wednesday.
Sunset today will be at 8:1 1
p.m. and sunrise on Wednesday at 6:55 ·a.m.
Forecast
Today: Partly. cloudy. High
83,low 63.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
83,low 60.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy.
High 82,low 63.
Thursday : Partly cloudy.
High 82,low 60.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High
81,low 58.
Saturday: Partly cloudy.
High 76,low 58 .

winners in Delaware, and also
multiple winners in our local
' lottery, and we've never been
able to· release someone's
·name," lottery director Wayne
Lemons said Sunday.
Minnesota Lottery 'officials
won't say where their winner
was sold until the owner is
verified. But that shouldn't
take long, Minnesota Lottery.,
res~arch director Don Feeney
said Sunday.
"People can't wait to get
that ticket out of their hands,"
h
'd
e sat .
A spokeswoman for the
New Hampshire lottery said a
winning ticket was sold in
Rollinsford, N.H., at a Cum-

•

berland Farms convenience
store.
Lottery officials said the
store sold 530 ,000 in Power- .
•'.
ball tickets since Thursday, : ,
1

~~~~~~ i!ro~ti~ ,;~to~ ~~:U!~r:~ti:it~e:~~~ea~~~~
S 2~~: r~~!~tnl~~~rye inpr~;:~~

U.S. history was $363 million
in the Big Gam~ jackpot, won
last year by two players in lllinois and Michigan.
·In Delaware, state lottery
officials have said they would

.$1,500. The store is near the
border with Maine ·- a nonPowerball state - and many
people crossed the state line
to buy tickets.
·
b
.
'll
Each Power . a11 Wtnner WI
receive S73.7 million, or S2. 9

--~:~C~o~m~nu~·~tt~ee;,~a~n~d~t~h~e~s~po~tli~gh;~t-t~e;~~z~ed~C~~o~n:d~it~~r~an~~~!e~rs~a~s--llncD~~~~~A'I·
a ~~~~~~~~~·
A~.--Cb~l~~~cC:Uu;s~w;~;P~hhJy~II~~C~Sau~sf1Ee;,is·I ~--s~t~at=e~sn-:w~i:n~n~in~g~'~P~o~w~e=rb~a~l~l-.~th~e~y~~c~ho~o~s~e~.·~T~h~ey~~als~e~~~~-: -·~
, Deb· to TP·CWD, right Of way,
f k
I
.
d
..
d Crosby, to Walter A.

299 Limit 4 Please, 5 Qt.

,
II
. I

Joe Parsons, Usa Parsons, alii·
davit
Virgil Cross, Ruth Cross, Mer·
dayne Patterson, Corbell Patter·
son, Artetta Vanover, David Par·
sons, linda Parsons, Joe Par·
sons, Sandra Parsons, Billy Joe
Parsons, Teresa Parsons, Lisa
Parsons, to Ralph D. Spencer,.

Stormy weather on Tuesday

~~lient worthy

United Valley Bell

Chicken

ment to State ol Ohio, deed, Bed·
ford.
Harold H. Blackston to Carl
Wolfe, Della L. Wolfe, deed,
Chester.
· Paul L Smith Jr., Lisa Smith, to
Ha~ey E. McDonald, deed, Rut·
land.
Velma Parsons, deceased, to
David Parsons, Joe Parsons, Billy

~:Condit's lawyer says
~:on

lce "Cream Palls

The Daily Sentinel• Page A3

Iraq has been stepping up its efforts to
Agency quoted an U!Hdentified military shoot down the U.S. and Drttish aircraft
spokesman as saying.
that patrol "no-fly" zones over so uthern
The plane, according to the news and northern Iraq. It has come closer in
agency, contained " high-tech equipment" recent weeks, prompting occasional retaland was shot down near Basra, 340 miles iatory U.S. and British attacks on air
defense radars and communications sites.
south of Baghdad.
B)" THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Iraqi news agency did not further
In July, Iraq fired a missile at a U.S. Air
More rain is in the region's
specifY the type of plane or say anything Force U-Z surveillance plane flying at forecast for Tuesday.
about any pilots aboard. There were no high altitudes ove·r Iraq.The spy plane was
The scattered showers arid.
pictures immediately on Iraqi television . not hit but the missile exploded close thunderstorms will begin in
Also on Monday, U.S. planes attacked a enough to be felt by the crew.
the north late tonight and
SA-3 surface- to- air missile site in nor·th- · Several days earlier the crew of a Navy spread across the regio n Tuesern Iraq, a U.S. official said.The attack was E2-C radar plane flying over Kuwait day.
in response to an Iraqi provocation; which reported seeing the plume of an Iraqi surLows tonight will be in the
60s. Highs on Tuesday will be
the official did not describe.
face-to-air missile fired in its direction.
The United States has lost Predator · Over the last three years, Iraq has occa- 75-85.
reconnaissance planes to hostile fire sionally claimed it· had hit a U.S. or British · The National Weather Serbefore, mainly in the Balkans, but rarely if plane, bur Monday 's is the first downing vice said high pressure will
build into the region followever over Iraq.
that has been confirmed.
ing passage of a c:;old front,
providing dry weather ~nd
seasonal
temperatures
special needs, potentially
rate held steady at 4 .5 percent
impacting two or more lives
in July.
at one time and saving taxThe unemployment rate is
payers millions of dollars."
from Page AI
· largely, based on a survey of
Studies have shoWn that the
just under 2,000 Ohio houseT he number of workers
birth of just one drug free
holds conducted monthly by
baby saves taxpayers an aver- unemployed in July was
Page At
age of between $46,000 and 249,000, down from 253,000 the U.S. Census Bureau for
Ohio'i Bureau of Labor Mar- something different.
$200,000 in the first year in June.
ket Information.
~h e U.S. unemployment
"I said to myself, I'm going
medical expenses alone.
to
look N the numbers and
Since 1993, 4,969 drug free
the firs't ones that come to
babies have been born includmind, those are the ones I'm
ing more than 1,400 in the
gonna pick," he said.
last year-resulting in a conserHe and his fiancee wete
vative estimated financial savmaking
the rounds on Sunday
ings to Ohio taxpayers of
POMEROY
Meigs
Kurt S. Huizing to TIS Rentals, in 1 a silver Mercedes-Ben.z.
nearly $230 million,
County Recorder Judy King Inc., deed, Pomeroy Vil lage.
which he said a friend had
To learn more about
.ng
real
DavidA.
Davis,ShelbyJ.Davis,
loaned
him to drive "until I
Processed the fcollowl
to Robert P. Luke, Louise A. Luke,
RWRP, residents may contact
estate transfers in ·her office:
deed, Rutland.
can get one of my own."
Heather Thorp, program
Lawrence Cecil Harper to K.
Judy C. Musser to Michael
The Associated Press disdirector at 740-593-6152, or Wayne Haml~on, deed, Orange.
Musser, deed, Rutland.
covered Sunday that the
. toll free 1-866-594-6510.
Clara B. Aucke, Paul J, Flucke,
Ronald E. Snyder Jr., Deborah phone in Edwards' hom e had
Paul John Aucke, Paul Flucke, to J. Snyder, to Mel issa M. Thrasher, been disconnected.
·
Clara B. Flucke Trust Agreement, deed, Chester.
memorial trust, Sali.sbury, Bedford,
Paul Black to Tuppers Plains·
The jackpot for the game,
Salem Townships.
. Chester Water District, deed , Sui· played in 21 states and the
Patricia A. Henderson to limo· ton.
District of Columbia, was the
thy . D. Lawrence, Kanda A.
Jeraldine N. Hawk to Richard second- largest in Powerball
Lawrence, deed, Lebanon.
Ray Ross , La'ura Lynn Ross, h' 1
A
f f: t

Force unmanned reconnaissance aircraft
failed to return from a mission over
southern Iraq and apparently wa~ $hOt
down by Iraqi air defense forces, a U.S.
official said Monday.
"All of our manned aircraft are
accounted for," said Army Maj. Timothy
·Blair, a Pentagon spokesman. He would
I
not confirm the loss, but two defense offi.cials. said a Predator unmanned aircraft
was missing and believed lost on a mission
near the heavily defended city of Basra.
One U.S. official said operators of the
. Predator lost the communications signal
from the aircraft and were not immediately sure why.
The first word came from Baghdad.
"Iraqi air defenses have shot an American reconnaissance plane coming from

SOCIETY N'EWS AND NOTES
(

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'•

W~HINGTON (AP)- A U.S. Air Kuwaiti territory;• the official Iraqi News

1/2 years and they knew him a lifetime.
I kissed him "bye" and let th e
skunk do its thing while I left. I had
the funeral dire'c'!or give the flag to
my husband's sister instead of to me.
Everyone should do what they
feel is right in their heart, not wllJt
people tell them is right.
I sleep peacefully eve ry night
because I buried my friend, my husband, my lover in a manner he
would have been proud of. - SAD
IN LAKE CITY, FLA .
DEAR SAD: A-A-A -men! (I'll
bet he's glad you packed only the
essen rials.)

•

.

U.S. unmanned
ce aircraft lost
over southern Iraq, apparently shot down

Monday, August 27, 2001

DEAR ABBY: My 9-y~ar-old
grandson, "Grant," is in de~p trouble.
I must find a way to hdp him. Two
years ago he had to take on a
\ menopausal. reclusive stepmom. Of
course, these poor children frolll
1 broken hotnes don't get to vote their
. fa te; they must accept whatever is
thrust upon them.
Stepmom has turned Grant's

'

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Ohio Voltoy Publlolllng Co.
Publlllhed every afternoon, Monday
through Fnday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Seoond-class
postage paid al Pomeroy.
Mlmber: The Aasoclated Preso and
the Ohio Newspaper Asaoclation.

Patmatter: Send addresa oorrec·
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.

bury.
ora h A. Cros by, deed,
.
Snowville United Methodist
Gary Reed to TP·CWD, right of
Church to Charles S. Robinette, way, Olive.
deed, Scipio.
Perry Knepper to TP·CWD,
' David A. Smart, Penny M. right of way, Bedford.
Smart, Penny M. Clark, to Federal
Joy Morarity, Ernest E. Imboden
National Mortgage eo., sheriffUs 11 to TP·CWD, agreement, Sutton.
deed, Chester.
·
Gary R. Lemley, Gary Richard
Doris 0. Eastman, Ronald East· Lemley, Serena Lemley, to Colum·
man, Damtll F. Chevalier, Nola bus Southern Power, easement,
Chevalier, Helen M. Roberts, Adri· Orange.'
an Roberts, Ralph H. Chevalier, · David A. Burt, Lila L. Burt, to
Betty Chevalier, Betty Lou Cheva· Columbus Southern Power, ease·
ller, Kirk D. Chevalier, Debra L. ment, Chester.
Chevalier, to Anthony S. Kennedy,
Patrick B. Morrissey, Nancy L.
DebJ'Il L. Kennedy, deed, Orange. Morrisey, to Patrick B. Morrisey,
Ronald RHe , Ma~orie A. Rife, to Nancy L. Morrisey, Patrick B. and .
· Jason P. Rankin, Kelly E. Gruber, Nancy L. Morrisey, deed,
deed, Salme.
Orange/Chester.
Cheri L. Campbell, Dquglas
John A. Blaettnar, Elenaor S.
· Campbell, to Steven A. Belyus, Blaettnar, to Jack R. Satterfield,
Sandra R. Belyus, deed, Colum- d~;Village of Middleport.
bia. ·
David Eugene Lute, Jacqueline
Diana S. Phillips, Paul Phillips, Lute, to David Eugene Lute,
to Brian K. Phillips, deed, Scipio. Jacqueline Lute, deed , Orange.
Diana Sue Phillips, Paul
Virginia Mcintosh to Secretary
Phillips, 10 Thomas M. Stover, of Housing and Urban Developdeed, Columbia.
rnent, deed, Bedford.
Charles Francis, Christ Francis,
Lowell W. Bing, deceased, to
to Clarence Easter, Barbara East· Avis Bing, affidavit, Chester.
er, deed, Olive.
Avis Bing to James M. Bing,
Christopher E. Tenaglia to ·Michael L. Bing, Joyce M. Medley,
McGraw Griffith, Marie McGraw Mary J. Dodrill, deed, Chester.
GriffHh, affidavit of facts.
Ross 0. King, Joan L. King, to
Forest Summers, deceased, to Leslie Hayman, Patricia Hayman,.
Adeline Price Summers, affidavit, deed, Middleport Village.
Lebanon.
John McKinney, Sheila McKin·
Ada line Price Summers, to ney, to AHred Lewis Roush, Cyn·
Clarence M. Lawrence, Patricia A. thia An6 Roush. deed, Rutland.
Gluesencamp, deed, Lebanon.
Julia Katherine Mitchell, Julia K.
Dan Romuno, Sue Romuno, to Mitchell, to Julia K. Mitchell RaveDan Romuno, Sue Romuno. Fran· cable Trust, ·affidavit, Rutland.
co Romuno, deed, Scipio'.
Julia Katherine Mitchell to Paul .
William Charles King Jr. to San· David Mitchell, deed, Rutland .
dra Lynn Syrus, easement, Bed·
Julia Katherine ·Mitchell to Tere·
·
·sa Louise Chandler, deed, Rut·
f0 rd . .
Sandra Syrus, Sandra King , land.
Donald Syrus. to Patrick E.
Julia Katherine Mitchell to
Williams, Berlha J. Williams, deed, Edward Lawrence MHchell, deed,
Bedford.
Rutland.
Paul E. Hollman, Maxine Hoff·
Andrew N. Kiser, Delpha Kiser,
man, to Paul E. Hoffman, Maxine to Ohio Power Co., right of way,
Hoffman, deed, Chester.
Rutland.
Kendall M. Lemley, Amanda D.
Steven Huffine, Sherrie Huffine,
Lemley,' to Darren K. Chandler, Roger Hawkins, Terry Hawkins,
deed, Pomeroy Village.
Linda Putman, Denver L. Hender·
Bettie J. Whitlatch to Harvey G. son Jr., to State of Ohio, ease·
WhHiatch, deed, Pomeroy Village. ment, Bedford.
Fred H. George, Avanell
Steven Huffine. Sherrie Huffine,
George, to Ohio Power Co., ease· Roger Hawkins, Terry Hawki~s.
ment, Rutland.
linda Putman, to State of Ohro,
Ryim Adams to Columbus . deed, Bedford.
.
·
Southern Power, easement, Sut·
Vernal H. Wells, Louise Wells,
ton
to State of Ohio, deed. Bedford.
Larry E. Vance, Sharon L.
Vernal H. Well, Louise Well, to
Vance to Columbus Southern State of Ohio, deed, Bedford.
Power: easement, Scipio.
Vernal H. Wells, Louisa Wells.
Dorothy M. Frum to Columbus to State of Ohio, d!led. Bedford.
Steven Huffine, Shame Huffine,
Southern Power easement, Sci·
pio.
.
'
Roger Hawkins, Terry Hawkins,
Larry 0. Clark, Joy E. Clark, to Linda Putman, deed, Bedford.
Columbus Southern Power. ease·
Nancy S. Grueser Trust Agreement, Scipio. ,
ment to State of Ohio. deed, Bed. Mark Markham to Broward ford.
County Property, deed, Bedford.
Nancy S. Grueser Trust Agree·

ticket was sold, They added
that state law allows lottery
winners to remain anonymous.
"Quite frankly, we have had
four other Powerball jackpot

the option o ta ing a umpsum cash payment of S4 1.4
million, before taxes.
The odds of winning the
Powerball are one in 80 mil-

lion.

School district want to
.include band. in drug testing
SUGAR GROVE (AP) ~ A'
school board in rural Fairfield
County is considering. whether
io require drug testin g for
members of the high school
and middle school bands, as well
as athletes and cheerleaders.
The school board in the
1,030-student Berne Union
district will vote on the proposal Tuesday.
"The pressure for ~he P.olicy
came from parents:' said Robert
Starr, principal at Berne Union
High School, about 35 miles
southeast of Columbus.
" If the majority of the parents
had their way, we would test
everyone," he sa1'd.
· John Brandt, executive director of the Ohio School Boards
Association, said he is unaware
of other school districts testing
band members.

"People rend to focus on athletes," Brandt said. "But logically over the years you might
expect it to be extended. It's
permissible."
Marching · band members
usually aren't tested for drugs
because at many schools, band is
a graded class.
The U.S. Supreme Court has
ruled that srudenrs in graded
activities cannot be screened for
drugs.
At Berne Union, band is an
extracurricular activity for
which no grade is given.
During the past three school
years, the district has suspended
13 high school students.,and six
middle school students for possession of drugs or drug paraphernalia on schoQI grounds.
Roger Hardin said.

FRIIW4101 • THUIIII/3CI01

TUES:,;::~~:l:~/fHT"
(CERTAIN FUTUIIES MAY . . DCI.UDID)

-

-~

JAUI !1111101
Stllll JAa
BUIBLUOY

7'

T

Ill PIINCilS DIAlS 'i"
AMERICAN PIE 2 7'
RUSH HOURI ";;"'
RATRACE
THE OTHERS
...~
AMEIICAII WWS ·

---

. 7:30, 10;00
7;5019:45
6:40,9:30
6;50, 9;15
7:00, 9;15
7;10, 9:25
7:251 9:5\1
7;35, 9;55
7;45, 9:55

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4 .00

�..

•••

Monday, Aug. 27, 2001

PageAl

· The Daily Sentinel

f

Grandma fears losing touch· with·boy lift alone too often
there any

Abigail
Van .
Buren
ADVICE

. downstairs playroom ~ into :t mJstt·r
bedroom and ~:ntertainment center.

the living room .

. She watches TV down there with
my former son-in-bw (Gra nt's
. fa ther) .
Grant is not allowed to go down
, there unless he receives special permission. He spends most of hi s time
1 alone in his upstairs bedroom pby'ing his boom box or watching TV in

R ece ntly, teleph one privileges
were.cut off between Gram and me.
Grant's father candidly told me that
my not calling makes his home hap.pier for his "recluse." I am sure he
will cut off my visits if 1 try to help
Gran t.
Abby, I don 't know what to do. Is

'

'

w~y

I can help him' HUR~1NG INSIDE
DEAR HURTING: Don't do
anything to threaten your visits with
your grandson. He needs you. You
niust become his loving, safe harbor.
See him as often as you ca n. Help
him to express his feelings. Lei·him
know he can tell you anything, and
you will not be judgmental or get
angry.
Do tlnnb" a 9-year-old boy will
CllJOY so he can bond closely and
experience so me happiness wi th
you. Let him know he can count on
you when things see m the darkest.
If his father and stepmother do cut
off your visits, then call C hildHelp ·
USA ( 1-800-422-4453) for expert
ad vtce on this sad case of emotional

child abuse.
DEAR ABBY: I hope you can
stand one more lette r about funerals.
I read your "eulogy" articles on July
31. It was the day after my husband
was buried.
My darling wore a red Hawaiian
shirt and sunglasses. I included photographs, a back-scratcher, money
clip, blue rose and a l-inch-tall bear,
a white rosary and a toy skunk that
sang, "How Sweet It Is to Be Loved
by You." I wrote the eulogy and took
lots of pictures. I had an open casket
at the graveside service. An American fla g draped the silver metal casket.
His family was horrified that I
buried their fari1ily member in this
manner. I had only known him 8

Dear Abby is wri1tc11 by Pm;/;,,.
P!rillips a11d da1•glrter jca1111C Plrillips.

Fund.ing
from Page AI

•.

•Class holds reunion
[

RAC IN E - Sonsh ine C~rcle of
Dorcas United Methodist Chu rch
held its seco nd annual family picnic
, at the campsite of Eleanor and Mar1 vin M cKe lvey in Portla nd on Aug.
,

. 8.
President Lois Sterrett· had prayer
before th e meaL Eleanor and Mar' vin were th e hosts for the even ing.
1 with Donna Byer and Mary Byer
HilLin charge of games. Boat ri des
1
were also enjoyed by members of
the group.
It was note d that circle is selling
shirts an d mu gs. Anyone wanting

one may contact Kathryn Hart at
949-2656.
Attending were Edie Hubbard,
Blondena Rainer, Martha Lou Beegle, Mabel Brace, Joe and Evelyn
Foreman, Mi ldred Hart, Dale and
Kathryn Hart, Donna Byer, Mary
Byer Hill , Tom and Shei la ThetSS,
Gladys Sterrett, Edna Knopp, Matti e Beegle, Leanna 13eegle, Je rry and
Marilyn and Mark Bogard, Dick
and Lois Sterrett, Deway ne Stutler,
Lillian Hayman, Julie Campbell ,
Hazel McKelvey, Ruth Si mpso n
and Linda Russell.
Next meeting will be held at the
church on Sept. 13 at 7p1H .

All area wom en are invited to D ave Hawkins, Pau l and June
attend.
Eichinger; Polly Eichinger; Nancy
and Roger Hubbard ; Maxine .
Seyfried; Bob, Becky and Allen
Frank; Tracie and Butch Stein;
Suzanne and Fritz Sayre; Taylor
SYRACUSE The annua l M cN ickle; R andy Gibbs; Faith
Eichinger reunio n was held Aug. 5 Hall; Martha and Virgil Collins, Traat th e Carl eton SchooL There were
cie Sayre; Azzalia Sayre; Jenn ifer
51 present. .
Massie, Kalista Massie; Darla Staats.
Polly Eichinger gave th e blessing
Richard and De nise Mora; Mary
prior to the covered dish luncheon. and Jack Gibbs; William Charles
. Door prizes were drawn followCook; Joe and Mary Bowers; Steve
ing the announ cement of special
and Tammy Marcinko; · J os h
events.
Marcinko; Rodney Leifheit; Ruth
Those present
we re Jud y Leifheit; Larry Leitheit; Brian BowEichinger, Jan Seyfried Hawkins,
ers, Gerald and Bonnie Kelly; J ean

.Eichinger
reunion held

Seyfried and Mary Lou; Klare and
Tammi Kimes; Paula Eichinger,
Charles and C lara Sayre; Lind a
Collins, Marie Houda shelt and
Amanda 13oyd.
The next reunion will be the first
Sunday in August 2002.

said Gay. The program of
ODADAS will share more
than $16.5 million in federal
block grant and stare funds
allotted specifi cally for services.
ODADAS Director Lucille
Fleming commended RWRP,
describing it as· an "outstanding representative of Ohio's
alcohol and other drug treatment programs that target
women of all ages, women
with children and pregnant
women.
"Exemplary programs such
as this provide quality, respon: sive treatment to women with

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Land transfers posted

of staying
~ntelligence. panel ·

(

&gt;•shone on him in the · case of
·
: · missing interri Chandra Levy
: : actually could be a plus in that
: : assignment, his lawyer says. .
•• • "Everything about h.im is
: out there. He's probably the
:· person on the Intelligence
-: Committee who can't be
· bl k il d
" tt
· ac rna e anymore, a or; : ney Abbe Lowell said Sunday
: on NBC's" Meet the Press."
• "!fit's not punitive for soqte
:.· reason, there's no gnod reason"

"disrurb mg an wrong, an
said he wauld talk to House •
Democrats about possible
action against Condit, including his removal from the intelligerice panel.
Rep. Scott Mcinnis, RColo., said Sunday that
Gephardt "has an obligation

: · for the California Democrat to
: leave the committee, Lowell
: said. " He's served very well. His
:~·colleagues will tell you."

"requires very high integrity,"
Mcinnis said on CNN's "Late
Edition." "Certainly, any kind
of indication that someone has

: • Condit's fate on rhe panel
: was questioned after House
: . Minority
Leader
Dick
: : Gephardt, D- Mo., criticized

not been forthcoming or
truthful when put under pressure should not be in charge or
sitting on the committee that
·
oversees central intelligence
and .our spy networks throughout the world,"
On .'; Fox News Sunday;•
R
Ch 1 n _ 1 D N y
ep.
ares ""'nge • - · ·•
called
Condit's
behavior
''embarrassing" but said "therJ's
nothing that we can do in the

•: him for failing to be "candid
: and forward" in imABC inter· : view Thursday about his rela; : tionship with Levy, a Bureau of
·
h d'
· P risons mtern w o !Sap: . peared four months ago.
:: Asked repeatedly if he had a
1
.: sexual atfatr wtth Levv, 24, the
·"
: 53-year-old married congress': man said only they'd had a
: "very close" relationship. He
: offered no apologies for his
•

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.

Congress. Unless th ere is
something to take before the
ethics committee. I don't see
how we can do anything."

.The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

:

that's inherent to his responsibilities
to
immediately
remove"Condit
1
Service on the committee

'

Co"actlon Polley

Catsu

'

Jobless .

M~~~~ to~h~~~~o:.~~~e ~: d~j~~~~e.

Downie, Rachael
Harmon, deed, Syracuse VIllage. · Downie to TP·CWD, right of way,
Margaret Burris to Oscar May· Sutton.
nard, Lillian· L Maynard. deed,
Steven Brickles, Carolyn Brick·
Letart.
les, to TP·CWD, right of way, Bed·
Anthony Land Co. to John ford .
WASHINGTON (AP) involvement with Levy or for Robert Fisk, deed, Salem.
Jason Ca rieton to TP·CWD, ·
C eli 1... rved his I I (
·
·,~,
Kptie E.' Miller · to James A. right of way, 0 range.
,
•
&lt; Rep. Gary · on t r- se · ·
~e.~q ~Qqperat;toQ WJ-e: Miller, affidavk. · ......
•.• :.-~· ,.-Allberc
T,ru-11,
Manlyn·
: : honorably on the
police.
'
· · Leona J. Cline to·TTS Rentals, Trussell, to TP-CWD, right of way,
1

11 Pepsi
I

:•

deed.

Wednesday.
Sunset today will be at 8:1 1
p.m. and sunrise on Wednesday at 6:55 ·a.m.
Forecast
Today: Partly. cloudy. High
83,low 63.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
83,low 60.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy.
High 82,low 63.
Thursday : Partly cloudy.
High 82,low 60.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High
81,low 58.
Saturday: Partly cloudy.
High 76,low 58 .

winners in Delaware, and also
multiple winners in our local
' lottery, and we've never been
able to· release someone's
·name," lottery director Wayne
Lemons said Sunday.
Minnesota Lottery 'officials
won't say where their winner
was sold until the owner is
verified. But that shouldn't
take long, Minnesota Lottery.,
res~arch director Don Feeney
said Sunday.
"People can't wait to get
that ticket out of their hands,"
h
'd
e sat .
A spokeswoman for the
New Hampshire lottery said a
winning ticket was sold in
Rollinsford, N.H., at a Cum-

•

berland Farms convenience
store.
Lottery officials said the
store sold 530 ,000 in Power- .
•'.
ball tickets since Thursday, : ,
1

~~~~~~ i!ro~ti~ ,;~to~ ~~:U!~r:~ti:it~e:~~~ea~~~~
S 2~~: r~~!~tnl~~~rye inpr~;:~~

U.S. history was $363 million
in the Big Gam~ jackpot, won
last year by two players in lllinois and Michigan.
·In Delaware, state lottery
officials have said they would

.$1,500. The store is near the
border with Maine ·- a nonPowerball state - and many
people crossed the state line
to buy tickets.
·
b
.
'll
Each Power . a11 Wtnner WI
receive S73.7 million, or S2. 9

--~:~C~o~m~nu~·~tt~ee;,~a~n~d~t~h~e~s~po~tli~gh;~t-t~e;~~z~ed~C~~o~n:d~it~~r~an~~~!e~rs~a~s--llncD~~~~~A'I·
a ~~~~~~~~~·
A~.--Cb~l~~~cC:Uu;s~w;~;P~hhJy~II~~C~Sau~sf1Ee;,is·I ~--s~t~at=e~sn-:w~i:n~n~in~g~'~P~o~w~e=rb~a~l~l-.~th~e~y~~c~ho~o~s~e~.·~T~h~ey~~als~e~~~~-: -·~
, Deb· to TP·CWD, right Of way,
f k
I
.
d
..
d Crosby, to Walter A.

299 Limit 4 Please, 5 Qt.

,
II
. I

Joe Parsons, Usa Parsons, alii·
davit
Virgil Cross, Ruth Cross, Mer·
dayne Patterson, Corbell Patter·
son, Artetta Vanover, David Par·
sons, linda Parsons, Joe Par·
sons, Sandra Parsons, Billy Joe
Parsons, Teresa Parsons, Lisa
Parsons, to Ralph D. Spencer,.

Stormy weather on Tuesday

~~lient worthy

United Valley Bell

Chicken

ment to State ol Ohio, deed, Bed·
ford.
Harold H. Blackston to Carl
Wolfe, Della L. Wolfe, deed,
Chester.
· Paul L Smith Jr., Lisa Smith, to
Ha~ey E. McDonald, deed, Rut·
land.
Velma Parsons, deceased, to
David Parsons, Joe Parsons, Billy

~:Condit's lawyer says
~:on

lce "Cream Palls

The Daily Sentinel• Page A3

Iraq has been stepping up its efforts to
Agency quoted an U!Hdentified military shoot down the U.S. and Drttish aircraft
spokesman as saying.
that patrol "no-fly" zones over so uthern
The plane, according to the news and northern Iraq. It has come closer in
agency, contained " high-tech equipment" recent weeks, prompting occasional retaland was shot down near Basra, 340 miles iatory U.S. and British attacks on air
defense radars and communications sites.
south of Baghdad.
B)" THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Iraqi news agency did not further
In July, Iraq fired a missile at a U.S. Air
More rain is in the region's
specifY the type of plane or say anything Force U-Z surveillance plane flying at forecast for Tuesday.
about any pilots aboard. There were no high altitudes ove·r Iraq.The spy plane was
The scattered showers arid.
pictures immediately on Iraqi television . not hit but the missile exploded close thunderstorms will begin in
Also on Monday, U.S. planes attacked a enough to be felt by the crew.
the north late tonight and
SA-3 surface- to- air missile site in nor·th- · Several days earlier the crew of a Navy spread across the regio n Tuesern Iraq, a U.S. official said.The attack was E2-C radar plane flying over Kuwait day.
in response to an Iraqi provocation; which reported seeing the plume of an Iraqi surLows tonight will be in the
60s. Highs on Tuesday will be
the official did not describe.
face-to-air missile fired in its direction.
The United States has lost Predator · Over the last three years, Iraq has occa- 75-85.
reconnaissance planes to hostile fire sionally claimed it· had hit a U.S. or British · The National Weather Serbefore, mainly in the Balkans, but rarely if plane, bur Monday 's is the first downing vice said high pressure will
build into the region followever over Iraq.
that has been confirmed.
ing passage of a c:;old front,
providing dry weather ~nd
seasonal
temperatures
special needs, potentially
rate held steady at 4 .5 percent
impacting two or more lives
in July.
at one time and saving taxThe unemployment rate is
payers millions of dollars."
from Page AI
· largely, based on a survey of
Studies have shoWn that the
just under 2,000 Ohio houseT he number of workers
birth of just one drug free
holds conducted monthly by
baby saves taxpayers an aver- unemployed in July was
Page At
age of between $46,000 and 249,000, down from 253,000 the U.S. Census Bureau for
Ohio'i Bureau of Labor Mar- something different.
$200,000 in the first year in June.
ket Information.
~h e U.S. unemployment
"I said to myself, I'm going
medical expenses alone.
to
look N the numbers and
Since 1993, 4,969 drug free
the firs't ones that come to
babies have been born includmind, those are the ones I'm
ing more than 1,400 in the
gonna pick," he said.
last year-resulting in a conserHe and his fiancee wete
vative estimated financial savmaking
the rounds on Sunday
ings to Ohio taxpayers of
POMEROY
Meigs
Kurt S. Huizing to TIS Rentals, in 1 a silver Mercedes-Ben.z.
nearly $230 million,
County Recorder Judy King Inc., deed, Pomeroy Vil lage.
which he said a friend had
To learn more about
.ng
real
DavidA.
Davis,ShelbyJ.Davis,
loaned
him to drive "until I
Processed the fcollowl
to Robert P. Luke, Louise A. Luke,
RWRP, residents may contact
estate transfers in ·her office:
deed, Rutland.
can get one of my own."
Heather Thorp, program
Lawrence Cecil Harper to K.
Judy C. Musser to Michael
The Associated Press disdirector at 740-593-6152, or Wayne Haml~on, deed, Orange.
Musser, deed, Rutland.
covered Sunday that the
. toll free 1-866-594-6510.
Clara B. Aucke, Paul J, Flucke,
Ronald E. Snyder Jr., Deborah phone in Edwards' hom e had
Paul John Aucke, Paul Flucke, to J. Snyder, to Mel issa M. Thrasher, been disconnected.
·
Clara B. Flucke Trust Agreement, deed, Chester.
memorial trust, Sali.sbury, Bedford,
Paul Black to Tuppers Plains·
The jackpot for the game,
Salem Townships.
. Chester Water District, deed , Sui· played in 21 states and the
Patricia A. Henderson to limo· ton.
District of Columbia, was the
thy . D. Lawrence, Kanda A.
Jeraldine N. Hawk to Richard second- largest in Powerball
Lawrence, deed, Lebanon.
Ray Ross , La'ura Lynn Ross, h' 1
A
f f: t

Force unmanned reconnaissance aircraft
failed to return from a mission over
southern Iraq and apparently wa~ $hOt
down by Iraqi air defense forces, a U.S.
official said Monday.
"All of our manned aircraft are
accounted for," said Army Maj. Timothy
·Blair, a Pentagon spokesman. He would
I
not confirm the loss, but two defense offi.cials. said a Predator unmanned aircraft
was missing and believed lost on a mission
near the heavily defended city of Basra.
One U.S. official said operators of the
. Predator lost the communications signal
from the aircraft and were not immediately sure why.
The first word came from Baghdad.
"Iraqi air defenses have shot an American reconnaissance plane coming from

SOCIETY N'EWS AND NOTES
(

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'•

W~HINGTON (AP)- A U.S. Air Kuwaiti territory;• the official Iraqi News

1/2 years and they knew him a lifetime.
I kissed him "bye" and let th e
skunk do its thing while I left. I had
the funeral dire'c'!or give the flag to
my husband's sister instead of to me.
Everyone should do what they
feel is right in their heart, not wllJt
people tell them is right.
I sleep peacefully eve ry night
because I buried my friend, my husband, my lover in a manner he
would have been proud of. - SAD
IN LAKE CITY, FLA .
DEAR SAD: A-A-A -men! (I'll
bet he's glad you packed only the
essen rials.)

•

.

U.S. unmanned
ce aircraft lost
over southern Iraq, apparently shot down

Monday, August 27, 2001

DEAR ABBY: My 9-y~ar-old
grandson, "Grant," is in de~p trouble.
I must find a way to hdp him. Two
years ago he had to take on a
\ menopausal. reclusive stepmom. Of
course, these poor children frolll
1 broken hotnes don't get to vote their
. fa te; they must accept whatever is
thrust upon them.
Stepmom has turned Grant's

'

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through Fnday, 111 Court St.,
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Ohio.
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Mlmber: The Aasoclated Preso and
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bury.
ora h A. Cros by, deed,
.
Snowville United Methodist
Gary Reed to TP·CWD, right of
Church to Charles S. Robinette, way, Olive.
deed, Scipio.
Perry Knepper to TP·CWD,
' David A. Smart, Penny M. right of way, Bedford.
Smart, Penny M. Clark, to Federal
Joy Morarity, Ernest E. Imboden
National Mortgage eo., sheriffUs 11 to TP·CWD, agreement, Sutton.
deed, Chester.
·
Gary R. Lemley, Gary Richard
Doris 0. Eastman, Ronald East· Lemley, Serena Lemley, to Colum·
man, Damtll F. Chevalier, Nola bus Southern Power, easement,
Chevalier, Helen M. Roberts, Adri· Orange.'
an Roberts, Ralph H. Chevalier, · David A. Burt, Lila L. Burt, to
Betty Chevalier, Betty Lou Cheva· Columbus Southern Power, ease·
ller, Kirk D. Chevalier, Debra L. ment, Chester.
Chevalier, to Anthony S. Kennedy,
Patrick B. Morrissey, Nancy L.
DebJ'Il L. Kennedy, deed, Orange. Morrisey, to Patrick B. Morrisey,
Ronald RHe , Ma~orie A. Rife, to Nancy L. Morrisey, Patrick B. and .
· Jason P. Rankin, Kelly E. Gruber, Nancy L. Morrisey, deed,
deed, Salme.
Orange/Chester.
Cheri L. Campbell, Dquglas
John A. Blaettnar, Elenaor S.
· Campbell, to Steven A. Belyus, Blaettnar, to Jack R. Satterfield,
Sandra R. Belyus, deed, Colum- d~;Village of Middleport.
bia. ·
David Eugene Lute, Jacqueline
Diana S. Phillips, Paul Phillips, Lute, to David Eugene Lute,
to Brian K. Phillips, deed, Scipio. Jacqueline Lute, deed , Orange.
Diana Sue Phillips, Paul
Virginia Mcintosh to Secretary
Phillips, 10 Thomas M. Stover, of Housing and Urban Developdeed, Columbia.
rnent, deed, Bedford.
Charles Francis, Christ Francis,
Lowell W. Bing, deceased, to
to Clarence Easter, Barbara East· Avis Bing, affidavit, Chester.
er, deed, Olive.
Avis Bing to James M. Bing,
Christopher E. Tenaglia to ·Michael L. Bing, Joyce M. Medley,
McGraw Griffith, Marie McGraw Mary J. Dodrill, deed, Chester.
GriffHh, affidavit of facts.
Ross 0. King, Joan L. King, to
Forest Summers, deceased, to Leslie Hayman, Patricia Hayman,.
Adeline Price Summers, affidavit, deed, Middleport Village.
Lebanon.
John McKinney, Sheila McKin·
Ada line Price Summers, to ney, to AHred Lewis Roush, Cyn·
Clarence M. Lawrence, Patricia A. thia An6 Roush. deed, Rutland.
Gluesencamp, deed, Lebanon.
Julia Katherine Mitchell, Julia K.
Dan Romuno, Sue Romuno, to Mitchell, to Julia K. Mitchell RaveDan Romuno, Sue Romuno. Fran· cable Trust, ·affidavit, Rutland.
co Romuno, deed, Scipio'.
Julia Katherine Mitchell to Paul .
William Charles King Jr. to San· David Mitchell, deed, Rutland .
dra Lynn Syrus, easement, Bed·
Julia Katherine ·Mitchell to Tere·
·
·sa Louise Chandler, deed, Rut·
f0 rd . .
Sandra Syrus, Sandra King , land.
Donald Syrus. to Patrick E.
Julia Katherine Mitchell to
Williams, Berlha J. Williams, deed, Edward Lawrence MHchell, deed,
Bedford.
Rutland.
Paul E. Hollman, Maxine Hoff·
Andrew N. Kiser, Delpha Kiser,
man, to Paul E. Hoffman, Maxine to Ohio Power Co., right of way,
Hoffman, deed, Chester.
Rutland.
Kendall M. Lemley, Amanda D.
Steven Huffine, Sherrie Huffine,
Lemley,' to Darren K. Chandler, Roger Hawkins, Terry Hawkins,
deed, Pomeroy Village.
Linda Putman, Denver L. Hender·
Bettie J. Whitlatch to Harvey G. son Jr., to State of Ohio, ease·
WhHiatch, deed, Pomeroy Village. ment, Bedford.
Fred H. George, Avanell
Steven Huffine. Sherrie Huffine,
George, to Ohio Power Co., ease· Roger Hawkins, Terry Hawki~s.
ment, Rutland.
linda Putman, to State of Ohro,
Ryim Adams to Columbus . deed, Bedford.
.
·
Southern Power, easement, Sut·
Vernal H. Wells, Louise Wells,
ton
to State of Ohio, deed. Bedford.
Larry E. Vance, Sharon L.
Vernal H. Well, Louise Well, to
Vance to Columbus Southern State of Ohio, deed, Bedford.
Power: easement, Scipio.
Vernal H. Wells, Louisa Wells.
Dorothy M. Frum to Columbus to State of Ohio, d!led. Bedford.
Steven Huffine, Shame Huffine,
Southern Power easement, Sci·
pio.
.
'
Roger Hawkins, Terry Hawkins,
Larry 0. Clark, Joy E. Clark, to Linda Putman, deed, Bedford.
Columbus Southern Power. ease·
Nancy S. Grueser Trust Agreement, Scipio. ,
ment to State of Ohio. deed, Bed. Mark Markham to Broward ford.
County Property, deed, Bedford.
Nancy S. Grueser Trust Agree·

ticket was sold, They added
that state law allows lottery
winners to remain anonymous.
"Quite frankly, we have had
four other Powerball jackpot

the option o ta ing a umpsum cash payment of S4 1.4
million, before taxes.
The odds of winning the
Powerball are one in 80 mil-

lion.

School district want to
.include band. in drug testing
SUGAR GROVE (AP) ~ A'
school board in rural Fairfield
County is considering. whether
io require drug testin g for
members of the high school
and middle school bands, as well
as athletes and cheerleaders.
The school board in the
1,030-student Berne Union
district will vote on the proposal Tuesday.
"The pressure for ~he P.olicy
came from parents:' said Robert
Starr, principal at Berne Union
High School, about 35 miles
southeast of Columbus.
" If the majority of the parents
had their way, we would test
everyone," he sa1'd.
· John Brandt, executive director of the Ohio School Boards
Association, said he is unaware
of other school districts testing
band members.

"People rend to focus on athletes," Brandt said. "But logically over the years you might
expect it to be extended. It's
permissible."
Marching · band members
usually aren't tested for drugs
because at many schools, band is
a graded class.
The U.S. Supreme Court has
ruled that srudenrs in graded
activities cannot be screened for
drugs.
At Berne Union, band is an
extracurricular activity for
which no grade is given.
During the past three school
years, the district has suspended
13 high school students.,and six
middle school students for possession of drugs or drug paraphernalia on schoQI grounds.
Roger Hardin said.

FRIIW4101 • THUIIII/3CI01

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Monday. Aulust 27. 2001

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

paimond Roundup, Page A 10

Page AS .

The Daily Sentinel

Monday. August 27. 1001

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohl~
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

MONDAY'S

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

.iHIGHLIGHTS

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Bv Scorr WoLFE

Controller

NATIONAL VIEW

Welcome

EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ. (AP) - A run at the
national title is still a long way
off for No. I 0 Georgia Tech.
The Yellow Jackets' highpowered·offense sputtered to a
13-7 victory over Syracuse in
the Kickoff Classic on Sunday
liS George Godsey hooked up
with record-setting Kelly
Campbell 10 times for 193
and Joe Burns ran for
~ 13 yards and a touchdown.
/' Georgia Tech, with 18
~tarters returning from last
year's 9-3 team tha~ averaged
pearly 34 points per game, is
hoping to make a run at
dethroning Florida State as
Atlantic &lt;:;oast Conference
champions and then bidding
for a national championship.
But in a game that was anything but classic, Georgia Tech
discovered it needs a lot of
r-vark before challenging the
sixth- ranked Seminoles on
~ept. 15.
. Godsey, who completed 64
percent of his passes last seac
1on, was 15- of-26 for 224
yards.
1 Syracuse's Troy Nunes finished 19-of-32 for 183 yards
and an interception.

fards

Railroad donation good start
on W~. sflood recovery
HENTOFF'S VIEW

• The Herald-Dispatch of Huntington, W.Va.: Norfolk
Southern Corp. has donated 42 flat acres of M cDowell County land to the state agency charged with developing new housing for homeless flood victims.
Recent floodmg in southern West Virginia has left an estimated 1·500 families homeless.
Gov. Bob Wise has given the West Virginia Housing Development Fund the challenging assignment tlffinding new housing for those who lost their homes. The generous donation by
Norfolk Southern is a wekome start on that task.

Is reporting about Israel .becoming more biased?

The Fox News Channel's nightly
news hour, anchored by Brit Hume, is
often the most probing of the network
.
H
J' A gl
d
evemng newscasts. ume, tm n e an
Carl Cameron raise - and follow up on
Significancly, the 'homes built on the donated land will be
_ questions seldom asked elsewhere.
above the flood plain. Clearly the time has come to encourage
.On Aug. 13, for example, Brit Hume
not just i~dividuals but entire communities to leave the states
started an interview like this:
flood-prone areas. .
"One of the striking features of the
Speaking at groundbreaking ceremonies for a Pineville
reporting that comes from the Mideast' is
that Western journalists n,early always
mobile home park being built to house flood victims, Wise
made it clear he intends to do whatever he can to get families
d
.th
·
h C. h
to relocate.
en up WI growmg sympat y or t e
Palestinians. To find out why, we turn to
"We're going to encourage families to move out of the flood
Keith Graves, now the U.S. correspond
c
Plains and work with them to find suitable housing. We can
ent wr our sister network in Britain,
take what has been a very great tragedy and try and see some
..
d
Sky News, who ha1 spent many years
h
measure of opportunity from it, Wise sai
covering t e Mideast, not just for Sky,
"Nobody wants to leave their home place and I understand
but for much of his 25-year career with
that. But unfortunately, nature has driven a lot of people off
h
I
·
t e BBC (t 1e British Broad,asting Cortheir home place and has done that several times. The reality is..
. ) ..
poranon .
they are living in the flood plain. I think many people underSittin£;_ opposite Hume_ was tile vert_
.-c...c-stand-tha t,..-'J:hoy~are-leeking-fer~eptiens-and-that i s-our~jeb-t&lt;l•~C-----"::;::
~
;a-j
· 1
h
provide as many options as possible. "Some West Virginia commo e1 0 a seasone journa ist wit
munities have been all but leveled by the angry floodwaters.
impressive credentials. Keith Graves ·

~~~·~hb;ed~~;~~n:~i:~;~~~~e~ reb. uilt- but in places that .

Nat·
Hentoff
COLUMNIST
killed three Palestinians; including a 3month-old baby boy. And in 1982, when
Ariel Sharon invaded Lebanon, causing
great carnage, including among children,
he was also accused by .Israeli investigators of involvement, however inadverh
tent, in t e massacre of Palestinians in
Lebanese refugee camps by Lebanese
forces. Sharon was denounced by a great
many ordinary Israelis. And Abba Eban

~;~ng:~ds~~~~~~i~!~~~u~a:s";o;:~ ~;s~~~

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Aug. 27, the 239th day of 2001. There are ,
126 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 27, 1883, the island volcano ]\ra~atoa blew up; the
resulting· tidal waves in Indonesia's Sunda Strait claimed some
36,000 lives in Java and Sumatra.
On this date :
ln 1770, German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel was born in Stuttgart.
In 1892, fire seriously damaged New York's original Metropolitan Opera House.
In 1894, Congress passed the Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act,
which contained a provision for a graduated income tax that
was later struck down by the Supreme Court.
In 1908, Lyndon B. Johnson, the 36th president of the United· States, Was born near Stonewall, Texas.
· In 1928, the Kel)ogg-Briand Pact was signed in Paris, outlawing war and providing for the peaceful setclement of disputes.
In 1945, American troops began landing in Japan following
the surrender of the Japanese government in World War II.
In 1962, the United States launched the Mariner 2 space
probe, which flew past Venus the following December.
In 1967, Brian Epstein, manager of the Beatles, was found
dead in his London flat from an overdose of sleeping pills.
In 1975, Haile Selassie. the last emperor of Ethiopia's 3,000year-old monarchy, died in Addis Ababa at age 83 almost a year
after being overthrown.
.
In 1979, British war hero Lord Louis Mountbatten was killed
off the coast oflreland in a boat explosion. The Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility
Ten years ago: Warning of impending "catastrophe," Soviet
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev threatened to resign unless the
Soviet Union's splintering republics could at least . preserve a
military and economic alliance. In a split vote, the American
Bar Association gave Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas a "qualified" rating.
Five years ago: First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton addressed ·
the·Democratic co nventiott in Chicago, forcefully making her
husband's case for re-election while rebutting her Republican
critics . Actor Greg Morris ("Mission:. Impossible") was found
dead at his Las Vegas home : he was 61.
One year ago: Continuing a twocday visit to Nigeria, President Clinton said Africans had to "break the silence" about
AIDS or risk losing hard-fought . democratic and economic
gains. Fire broke out in Moscow's landmark O stankino television tower, killing three people. A botched Israeli military raid
on an IslamiC militant. hide-out in the West Hank ended with
three I,sraeli soldiers being. accidentally killed by their comrades.
Today's Birthdays: Cajun-country singer Jimmy C. Newman
Is 74. Actor Tommy Sands is 64. Bluegrass singer-musician J.D.
Crowe is 64. Musician Daryl Dragon is· 59. Actress Tuesday
Weld is 58. Rock singer-musician Tim Bogert is 57.

...

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Diane kay Hill

Lftten to the editor are wdcomr. T1t•J should b# kss lluJn·300 words. AU ldlen
an subjlct lu ediling und nuut be sfgntd and l•tlllde Gddre11t and tekphDM nurniHr.
No 11111iB11ed lnten will be publishul. lAUen Jlwuld In In good uute, ttddrtulltt
iw~u. noz ptnnrtaliliu
T11e opUtiotu ·txp~u#d in the column below an tht tttnlotntus oflhe Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.'s tditoriol boiud, unlm otlewwist IIOied.

''

Beme Union ends streak at Southem

1

Israelis themselves, "they are a very arrogant people, and (they are) to most journalists who go there."
Hume asked: "!s it the Israeli people,
or is it. the government officials that you·
deal with?"
"I've been accused of being a racist for
saying this," Graves answered, "but it is
the Israeli people."
What· immediately came to my mind
was the familiar statement made in this
country years ago by certain Americans,
who woukl ·generalize matter-of-factlyo
"Negroes are shiftless, and, well, intellectually not up to par. But don't get me
wrong. Some of my best friends are
Negroes."
And here is Keith Graves ·saying to
Brit Hume, "I've got a lot of Israeli
frie.nds."
Hume did not ask Graves why these
"arrogant" Israelis reacted recently
throughout Israel with public revl/lsion
and condemnation when Israeli settlers

d~ily

Graves did say, "No Western journalist;
no journalist in his right mind, would
condone what these. Palestinian suicide
bombers are doin, g." But he added,"You
might well want to ask what drives them
to that."
·
He can't condone those random
killings, but he can understand their
motivation. I would have asked him
what drove the suicide ·bomber irt
JeruS'alem on Aug. 9 who carefully
placed himself among children and
infants when he set off his explosive
k fball b ·
d ·1s h kill d
pac o
ear111gs an nat t at
e
16 1 ('
d
iJ d
h 100
srae ts an mut ate more t an
h
· h
·
·
ot ers 111 t at ptzzena.
Ah b G
· th " h
· b
, ut raves cttes e s ootmg . y
1 1·
1 ·
h
··
an srae 1 setter 111 t e mosque 111
H b
H kill d 28 · 1 " B
h '
e ron. e
e
peop e. ut t a&lt;
terrort'st, Baruch c;·olds.tet'n, was con'd
db h
·
f · 1emne y t e great m~onty o Israe is
in 1994. '
-,- ~
By contrast, after the suicide bombing

~al!~~~~:s~ino~h~~fr~:~ ~~0~:',~a~

Sharon almost
in the
If I had been interviewing Keith celebrated that glorious act of revenge;
Graves, .! would have agreed with him And after the June 1 suicide bombing ill
- as 1 have often written- that Israeli Tel Aviv, killing 20 Israelis, most of them
officials have indeed committed formi- teen-agers, there was dancing in the
dable abuses on Palestinians, including streets of Ramallah again. Moreover, 76
the torture of pr.isoners, destruction of percent of the Palestinians polled supc
homes and seizing ofland.
ported more suicide bombings.
But, as a longtime journalist in the
Mter the interview with Graves, Brit
Middle East, is Keith Graves not aware Hume told me he knows of other jourthat the most persistent, precise report- nalists who, after starting to cover Israel,
ing and condemnation . of these abuses find a·"moral· equivalency" in the viahave come from Israeli civil liberties lence between the two peoples, which
groups - whose reports I've received then becomes their increasing criticism
for years, and continue to- along with of the Israelis. And I see this often ira
statements from Israeli ·lawyers who have· purponedly dispassionate . dispatches
defended Palestinians in Israeli courts?
from the Middle East.
,
And what of the huge numbers of
Keith Graves is not alone among jour·
Israelis who generated ihe Peace Now nalists in his clear prejudices against the
move~1en1- initiated by colonels who Israelis. Brit Hume, as he told me, should
had fought in nearly all the Israeli wars? have been more challenging in that
Were they "arrogi111t" Israelis?
interview.
·
- When was there a comparable large- . (Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned
scale Palestinian peace movement?
authority on the First Amendment and the
In the Fox News interview, Keith Bill of Rights.)

BUSINESS MIR:ROR

Even the optimists are:throwing in towel .on a rally1
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK (AP) - The phrasing
varies but the message is the same: The
big dreams of a stock market comeback
as momentous .as its collapse are faded
and jaded now. Forget them. Get real.'
The message may be the recognition
of reality by that dwindling bunch of
financial analysts who had been holding
out hope. One by one they've conceded
defeat, reluctantly, because to do so

means "we were wrong."
The Federal Reserve began lowering
interest rates in January, and the dreame~ saw a recovery in the first quarter,
Th'e seco nd quarter brought more
reports of earnings. losses. And the third
quarter seems likely to as well.
You might for a while be able to deny
earnings as the basis for stock pr1ces why, prices of stocks soared on no earnings at all in 1999 - but you can't do so
forever. And with third- quarter earnings
. likely to be weak, forever is closing'in on
the dreamers.
In fa ct, one view developing now has
corporate chiefs be.c oming more interested this year in cleaning house than

..

showing big profits. More concerned
with lowering inventories, closing plants
and reducing work forc~s.
Ed,Yardeni , chief investment Sl:\'ategist
of Deutsche Bank, goes so far as to
express the belief some chiefS "are· also
cutting their operating earnings as much
as possible so their comparisons will
improve next year."
'
Gerald Perritt, a realist and editor of
The Mutual Fund Letter, says "one by
one the optimists are throwing in the
towel;' finally recognizing that the s)larp
rebound they forecast in January may
not come by December.
In fact, Perritt reminds investors,
"many of America's industrial giants are
telling· Wall Street that they don't see a
turnaround in the earnings skid anytime
thts. year."
Moreover, a smattering of technology
and telecommunications companies are
suggesting to analysts that they aren't
even sure their industries, still in retreat,
. are !$Ding to come roaring back next
year.
Perritt's advice is to bite the bullet, sell
stocks that are built on a dream and use

.

the proceeds to invest in funds tlut are
packed with so-called value stocks.
"Value is back in vogue."
Anthony Maramarco of"The Babson
Staff Letter," agrees. In fact, he observes,
the resurgence in the value sector began
more than a year ago, just as the tech~
wreck began; scattering investors like il
nest of ants.
· .
Value investing at the time didn't offer
the dreamy possibilities of technology
stocks. But it offered a haven in companies with slow Qut ·.real growth, low
volatility, positive cash flow and maybe
even dividends.
M~ramarco isn't against growth-style
investing, as opposed to value investing,
but he does observe that each waxes and
wanes, requiring diversification and regular rebalancing to best suit the times . .
·And these could be the times . agai1J,
when terms such as "~arnings" and u cas\t ''
flow" aren't viewed as old-fashioned,
"old economy" terms, but logical, realistic investment expectations. As opposed
to dreamy hopes.

aohn Cunniff is a business analyst jo~ The
Associated Press.)

liprbackon
Winning track
AKRON, Ohio (AP) ,Tiger Woods ended his winless summer with a birdie on
the seventh · playoff hole to
.defeat Jim Furyk for his third
· NEC Invlta:tionii.l title. ~ -:·' After they exchanged pars
for six holes, Woods, who
started the day two behind, hit
a wedge into 2 feet on No. 18
to finally end the longest play~
pff on the PGA Tour in 10
years.
: He and Furyk finished at
12-under 268.

· Tokyo wins LL
world Series
S. WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.
The Tokyo K'itasun~
(earn found something that
worked during and after
games, and stuck with it all the
way to the Little league
World Series championship.
• For the second time in as
many games, the team from
Japan rallied for two runs in its
~ast at-bat, this time beating
·1\popka, Fla.; 2-1 in the title
game.
Nobuhisa Baba hit a line
drive off the shortstop's glove
in the bottom of the sixth and
final inning, driving in two
runs.
~AP) -

Leslie wins
WNBAMVP

aown

LOS 'ANGELES (AP)
'Lisa Leslie of the Los Angeles
'Sparks was chosen as .the
WNBA's most valuable player,
"making her the 'first to capture
All-Star and regular-season
' MVP honors in the same sea.,
son.
- The 6-foot-5 center aver'aged 19.5 points - secondbest in the league - and led
the Sparks to a league-best
28-4 record during the regular
;season. ·
• She received 563 points and
51 first-place votes. from a
. national panel of 60 sports
'writers and broadcasters, easily
"outdistancing Houston's Tina
thompson, who had 355
-Points. .
' Sacramento's Yolanda Griffith was third with 190 points,
'Minnesota's Katie Smith bad
178 points .
f'

RACINE - ·Before a very large
crowd at Southern High School, the
Berne Union Rockets out-muscled
the Southern Tornadoes 44-14 . in the
2001 home foothill opener at Roger
Lee Adams M emorial Field.
In the process, the Rockets broke a
24-game losing streak that dated back
to October 10, 1999.
For the Rockets, Jason Palmer
scored three touchdowns and rushed
20 times for 147 yards, while John
England rushed 17 times 59 yards and
Terry Olive twice for 57 yards.

Matt
Ash
led
Southern with 10
carries for 77 yards.
Overall,
Berne
Union gained 31 I
yards to Southern's .
2 14.
Berne took th e
opening kickoff and
quickly moved into
Ash
Southern territory,
but a fumble re covery
by Southern senior Anthony C offman
thwarted the drive. On the very next
play, Southern aired it out, as quarter~
back Brandon Pierce rifled a 75-yard

touchdown pass to a wide-open Brice
Hill, who scrambled down the sidelines for the score, 6-0, after a failed
extra point kick at th e 9:4 7 mark.
Southern's celebration was shortlived, as on the very next action,Jason·
Palmer grabbed a Matt Thomas kickoff and rambled ri ght down the hea rt
of the Southern defe nse for a 60-yard
touchdown return . R yan Booth
added the extra point kick for a 7-6
lead at the 9:32 mark.
After Southern went three plays
before Nathan Speilman grabbed the
first of two interceptions, th e Rockets
again went to work. Seven plays later,

Berne Union c~mpleted th e 49-yard ·
drive when quarterback Nick Watson
squeaked in on a one-yard plunge, th e
sco re 14-6 at the 3:57 mark following
the Booth kick .
In l es~ than nine minutes , the
Southern turf was already abl aze, but
more action was to come. Matt Ash
rambled 59 yards from scrimmage to
paydirt on th e first play of the ensuing
series. Ash's rambl e was fo llowed by a
r:vo- point conversion, a Pierce to
Justin Allen pass that ti ed th e score a\
14- 14 with 3:35left in the first quar-

Ple•se see Southern, A7

'

Reds smoke Expos,
17-4 on Dog Day
MONTREAL (AP) - At nice for Junior," Reds managIeast the few fans who follow er Bob Boone said. "This is ·
the Montreal Expos are faith- the easiest way to rest him. It's
lUi.
hard to not start him." ,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 19th
Adam Dunn had three
homer and drove in four runs · RB!s and his first career fouras Cincinnati routed Montre- hit game, including his 11th
al 17-4 Sunday m the Reds' homer - his second in two
highest-scoring game in two games.
years.
Dunn. whose first three-hit
A crowd of II, 785 attend- . game was Saturday, walked in
ed "Dog Day," a promotion the first, hit an RBI double in
that drew more than 200 the second, singled in the
dogs to Olympic Stadium, as fourth, · homered in the fifth
the Expos finished a 2-4 and, with an opportunity to
homestand that saw them hit for the cycle, doubled in a
allow 10 or. more rims in run in the seventh.
"Triples are overrated three of the losses.
"It was nice to see people . too much running," Dunn
in the stands, and it was nice said. " I'm not a big triples
· to see them stick around," guy. The only way I'm going
Montreal third baseman to hit a triple . is if it ratcl es
Geoff Blum said. "It's unfor- around, the guy· kicks it, or if
tunate that we get in situa- a little bird comes down and
tions where the fans actually gets it, and moves it to left
do show up, and we don't field," ,
·
perform up to our best. But · juan Castro
_ there are days that they Cromer ~so hom en:c:l ~v_._, ....,__
haven't been showing up and Reds, who tied a season-high
we've played great baseball, so with 20 hits - 13 for extra
it's a give and take."
bases, including eight douGriffey hit a two-run single bles.
·
off Bopby Munoz (0-4) in
Jose Acevedo (4-S),who hit
OETTING THE HITS -Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. strokes a two-run single against the
the second as the Reds scored an RBI double in the seventh
Montreat Expos· on Sunday in Montreal as Expos catcher Randy Knorr looks on. (AP)
eight in the first two innings. · to drive in the Reds' 14th
He thought the promotion rim, allowed three runs and
was a great idea, though he five hits in seven innings.
Jennings also had his first
wouldn't have let his Rot"I had great command, career four-hit game.
tweiler, Akieba, take part.
great location with my fast "Yesterday, I spent a long
"That's nice, you could ball," Acevedo said. "When . day in the airport, but it was
bring your animal to the ball- you pitch like that, you know worth it today," Jennings said.
park:' Griffey said. "I just you'll get a win foJ sure."
Sean Casey hit a two-run
can 't bring mine because
After lasting just two-p1us double in the first and doushe's an attack dog, so she innings against St. Louis in his bled again in th e second to
doesn't' make it out of the previous start - his shortest chase Munoz.
•
house that much."
outing this season - AceveMunoz, 0-4 in seven starts,
He added a two- run shot do retired the first 10 batters allowed eight runs and seven .
- his 11th in August - in before Jose Vidro doubled hits in 1 1-3 innings. It was
the fourth inning for his with one out in· the fourth his first start since complain457th career homer. He came and Vladimir Guerrero fol- ing of soreness in his right
out of the game with Cincin- lowed with his 32nd homer. arin· Aug. II.
nati ahead lOcO.
Recalled from Triple-A
"I just got whipped,"
' "A day like this is really Louisville on Saturday, Robin Munoz said. , .

Up to 3400 minutes

. for $39.99.
Plus a free phone.
C.shback .

Stewart wins Sharpie 500
BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) The situation had the patenrial for disaster: Jeff Gordon
leading lap after lap around
the tight turns of Bristol w)th
hotheaded Tony Stewart right
on his bumper.'
The two clashed in this 'very
place just a few months
before, and the slightest tap
.from Stewart could have sent
his rival into the wall and
been the sweetest redemption.
Instead, Stewait slipped
right past Gordon and drove
off to victory in Saturday
night's Sharpie· 500 - proving he can forgive and forget.
Still, it's doubtful retaliation
was far from Stewart's mind
as he followed Gordon
around and around Bristol
Motor Speedway.
After all, it was initial contact from Gordon in the
spring race that started a
chain of events that have
marred Stewart's season.
He was running fourth in
the final .turn Of that race
when Gordon, charging hard
behind him as the two headed to the finish line, sent him
into a spin as he tried to pass
~

him . Stewart's.car went shooting up the high banking, missing the wall by mere inches.
By th e time Stewart refired·
his car and made it back to the
line, he had fallen 2 I spots
behind and finished 25th.
Incensed, he stalked Gordon
around the track, catching
him on pit road and bumping
him out of his way.
The action drew a $10,000
·fine and landed Stewart · on
probation . - ·which should

have ended this ·month had it
not been extended for the rest
of the :year after an outburst at
Dayto~a in July. .
Bec:tuse of how lightly
Stewart must tread these days,
Gordo11 never worried about
possible revenge.
For a long while, it didn't
look like Stewart would be
able to chase down Gordon or
continuously avoid th e racerecord 16 cautions.

' f'rl. 9:00 ·.r.;::JI)

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Monday. Aulust 27. 2001

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

paimond Roundup, Page A 10

Page AS .

The Daily Sentinel

Monday. August 27. 1001

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohl~
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

MONDAY'S

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

.iHIGHLIGHTS

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Bv Scorr WoLFE

Controller

NATIONAL VIEW

Welcome

EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ. (AP) - A run at the
national title is still a long way
off for No. I 0 Georgia Tech.
The Yellow Jackets' highpowered·offense sputtered to a
13-7 victory over Syracuse in
the Kickoff Classic on Sunday
liS George Godsey hooked up
with record-setting Kelly
Campbell 10 times for 193
and Joe Burns ran for
~ 13 yards and a touchdown.
/' Georgia Tech, with 18
~tarters returning from last
year's 9-3 team tha~ averaged
pearly 34 points per game, is
hoping to make a run at
dethroning Florida State as
Atlantic &lt;:;oast Conference
champions and then bidding
for a national championship.
But in a game that was anything but classic, Georgia Tech
discovered it needs a lot of
r-vark before challenging the
sixth- ranked Seminoles on
~ept. 15.
. Godsey, who completed 64
percent of his passes last seac
1on, was 15- of-26 for 224
yards.
1 Syracuse's Troy Nunes finished 19-of-32 for 183 yards
and an interception.

fards

Railroad donation good start
on W~. sflood recovery
HENTOFF'S VIEW

• The Herald-Dispatch of Huntington, W.Va.: Norfolk
Southern Corp. has donated 42 flat acres of M cDowell County land to the state agency charged with developing new housing for homeless flood victims.
Recent floodmg in southern West Virginia has left an estimated 1·500 families homeless.
Gov. Bob Wise has given the West Virginia Housing Development Fund the challenging assignment tlffinding new housing for those who lost their homes. The generous donation by
Norfolk Southern is a wekome start on that task.

Is reporting about Israel .becoming more biased?

The Fox News Channel's nightly
news hour, anchored by Brit Hume, is
often the most probing of the network
.
H
J' A gl
d
evemng newscasts. ume, tm n e an
Carl Cameron raise - and follow up on
Significancly, the 'homes built on the donated land will be
_ questions seldom asked elsewhere.
above the flood plain. Clearly the time has come to encourage
.On Aug. 13, for example, Brit Hume
not just i~dividuals but entire communities to leave the states
started an interview like this:
flood-prone areas. .
"One of the striking features of the
Speaking at groundbreaking ceremonies for a Pineville
reporting that comes from the Mideast' is
that Western journalists n,early always
mobile home park being built to house flood victims, Wise
made it clear he intends to do whatever he can to get families
d
.th
·
h C. h
to relocate.
en up WI growmg sympat y or t e
Palestinians. To find out why, we turn to
"We're going to encourage families to move out of the flood
Keith Graves, now the U.S. correspond
c
Plains and work with them to find suitable housing. We can
ent wr our sister network in Britain,
take what has been a very great tragedy and try and see some
..
d
Sky News, who ha1 spent many years
h
measure of opportunity from it, Wise sai
covering t e Mideast, not just for Sky,
"Nobody wants to leave their home place and I understand
but for much of his 25-year career with
that. But unfortunately, nature has driven a lot of people off
h
I
·
t e BBC (t 1e British Broad,asting Cortheir home place and has done that several times. The reality is..
. ) ..
poranon .
they are living in the flood plain. I think many people underSittin£;_ opposite Hume_ was tile vert_
.-c...c-stand-tha t,..-'J:hoy~are-leeking-fer~eptiens-and-that i s-our~jeb-t&lt;l•~C-----"::;::
~
;a-j
· 1
h
provide as many options as possible. "Some West Virginia commo e1 0 a seasone journa ist wit
munities have been all but leveled by the angry floodwaters.
impressive credentials. Keith Graves ·

~~~·~hb;ed~~;~~n:~i:~;~~~~e~ reb. uilt- but in places that .

Nat·
Hentoff
COLUMNIST
killed three Palestinians; including a 3month-old baby boy. And in 1982, when
Ariel Sharon invaded Lebanon, causing
great carnage, including among children,
he was also accused by .Israeli investigators of involvement, however inadverh
tent, in t e massacre of Palestinians in
Lebanese refugee camps by Lebanese
forces. Sharon was denounced by a great
many ordinary Israelis. And Abba Eban

~;~ng:~ds~~~~~~i~!~~~u~a:s";o;:~ ~;s~~~

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Aug. 27, the 239th day of 2001. There are ,
126 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 27, 1883, the island volcano ]\ra~atoa blew up; the
resulting· tidal waves in Indonesia's Sunda Strait claimed some
36,000 lives in Java and Sumatra.
On this date :
ln 1770, German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel was born in Stuttgart.
In 1892, fire seriously damaged New York's original Metropolitan Opera House.
In 1894, Congress passed the Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act,
which contained a provision for a graduated income tax that
was later struck down by the Supreme Court.
In 1908, Lyndon B. Johnson, the 36th president of the United· States, Was born near Stonewall, Texas.
· In 1928, the Kel)ogg-Briand Pact was signed in Paris, outlawing war and providing for the peaceful setclement of disputes.
In 1945, American troops began landing in Japan following
the surrender of the Japanese government in World War II.
In 1962, the United States launched the Mariner 2 space
probe, which flew past Venus the following December.
In 1967, Brian Epstein, manager of the Beatles, was found
dead in his London flat from an overdose of sleeping pills.
In 1975, Haile Selassie. the last emperor of Ethiopia's 3,000year-old monarchy, died in Addis Ababa at age 83 almost a year
after being overthrown.
.
In 1979, British war hero Lord Louis Mountbatten was killed
off the coast oflreland in a boat explosion. The Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility
Ten years ago: Warning of impending "catastrophe," Soviet
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev threatened to resign unless the
Soviet Union's splintering republics could at least . preserve a
military and economic alliance. In a split vote, the American
Bar Association gave Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas a "qualified" rating.
Five years ago: First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton addressed ·
the·Democratic co nventiott in Chicago, forcefully making her
husband's case for re-election while rebutting her Republican
critics . Actor Greg Morris ("Mission:. Impossible") was found
dead at his Las Vegas home : he was 61.
One year ago: Continuing a twocday visit to Nigeria, President Clinton said Africans had to "break the silence" about
AIDS or risk losing hard-fought . democratic and economic
gains. Fire broke out in Moscow's landmark O stankino television tower, killing three people. A botched Israeli military raid
on an IslamiC militant. hide-out in the West Hank ended with
three I,sraeli soldiers being. accidentally killed by their comrades.
Today's Birthdays: Cajun-country singer Jimmy C. Newman
Is 74. Actor Tommy Sands is 64. Bluegrass singer-musician J.D.
Crowe is 64. Musician Daryl Dragon is· 59. Actress Tuesday
Weld is 58. Rock singer-musician Tim Bogert is 57.

...

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Diane kay Hill

Lftten to the editor are wdcomr. T1t•J should b# kss lluJn·300 words. AU ldlen
an subjlct lu ediling und nuut be sfgntd and l•tlllde Gddre11t and tekphDM nurniHr.
No 11111iB11ed lnten will be publishul. lAUen Jlwuld In In good uute, ttddrtulltt
iw~u. noz ptnnrtaliliu
T11e opUtiotu ·txp~u#d in the column below an tht tttnlotntus oflhe Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.'s tditoriol boiud, unlm otlewwist IIOied.

''

Beme Union ends streak at Southem

1

Israelis themselves, "they are a very arrogant people, and (they are) to most journalists who go there."
Hume asked: "!s it the Israeli people,
or is it. the government officials that you·
deal with?"
"I've been accused of being a racist for
saying this," Graves answered, "but it is
the Israeli people."
What· immediately came to my mind
was the familiar statement made in this
country years ago by certain Americans,
who woukl ·generalize matter-of-factlyo
"Negroes are shiftless, and, well, intellectually not up to par. But don't get me
wrong. Some of my best friends are
Negroes."
And here is Keith Graves ·saying to
Brit Hume, "I've got a lot of Israeli
frie.nds."
Hume did not ask Graves why these
"arrogant" Israelis reacted recently
throughout Israel with public revl/lsion
and condemnation when Israeli settlers

d~ily

Graves did say, "No Western journalist;
no journalist in his right mind, would
condone what these. Palestinian suicide
bombers are doin, g." But he added,"You
might well want to ask what drives them
to that."
·
He can't condone those random
killings, but he can understand their
motivation. I would have asked him
what drove the suicide ·bomber irt
JeruS'alem on Aug. 9 who carefully
placed himself among children and
infants when he set off his explosive
k fball b ·
d ·1s h kill d
pac o
ear111gs an nat t at
e
16 1 ('
d
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h 100
srae ts an mut ate more t an
h
· h
·
·
ot ers 111 t at ptzzena.
Ah b G
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, ut raves cttes e s ootmg . y
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1 ·
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an srae 1 setter 111 t e mosque 111
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H kill d 28 · 1 " B
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e ron. e
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peop e. ut t a&lt;
terrort'st, Baruch c;·olds.tet'n, was con'd
db h
·
f · 1emne y t e great m~onty o Israe is
in 1994. '
-,- ~
By contrast, after the suicide bombing

~al!~~~~:s~ino~h~~fr~:~ ~~0~:',~a~

Sharon almost
in the
If I had been interviewing Keith celebrated that glorious act of revenge;
Graves, .! would have agreed with him And after the June 1 suicide bombing ill
- as 1 have often written- that Israeli Tel Aviv, killing 20 Israelis, most of them
officials have indeed committed formi- teen-agers, there was dancing in the
dable abuses on Palestinians, including streets of Ramallah again. Moreover, 76
the torture of pr.isoners, destruction of percent of the Palestinians polled supc
homes and seizing ofland.
ported more suicide bombings.
But, as a longtime journalist in the
Mter the interview with Graves, Brit
Middle East, is Keith Graves not aware Hume told me he knows of other jourthat the most persistent, precise report- nalists who, after starting to cover Israel,
ing and condemnation . of these abuses find a·"moral· equivalency" in the viahave come from Israeli civil liberties lence between the two peoples, which
groups - whose reports I've received then becomes their increasing criticism
for years, and continue to- along with of the Israelis. And I see this often ira
statements from Israeli ·lawyers who have· purponedly dispassionate . dispatches
defended Palestinians in Israeli courts?
from the Middle East.
,
And what of the huge numbers of
Keith Graves is not alone among jour·
Israelis who generated ihe Peace Now nalists in his clear prejudices against the
move~1en1- initiated by colonels who Israelis. Brit Hume, as he told me, should
had fought in nearly all the Israeli wars? have been more challenging in that
Were they "arrogi111t" Israelis?
interview.
·
- When was there a comparable large- . (Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned
scale Palestinian peace movement?
authority on the First Amendment and the
In the Fox News interview, Keith Bill of Rights.)

BUSINESS MIR:ROR

Even the optimists are:throwing in towel .on a rally1
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK (AP) - The phrasing
varies but the message is the same: The
big dreams of a stock market comeback
as momentous .as its collapse are faded
and jaded now. Forget them. Get real.'
The message may be the recognition
of reality by that dwindling bunch of
financial analysts who had been holding
out hope. One by one they've conceded
defeat, reluctantly, because to do so

means "we were wrong."
The Federal Reserve began lowering
interest rates in January, and the dreame~ saw a recovery in the first quarter,
Th'e seco nd quarter brought more
reports of earnings. losses. And the third
quarter seems likely to as well.
You might for a while be able to deny
earnings as the basis for stock pr1ces why, prices of stocks soared on no earnings at all in 1999 - but you can't do so
forever. And with third- quarter earnings
. likely to be weak, forever is closing'in on
the dreamers.
In fa ct, one view developing now has
corporate chiefs be.c oming more interested this year in cleaning house than

..

showing big profits. More concerned
with lowering inventories, closing plants
and reducing work forc~s.
Ed,Yardeni , chief investment Sl:\'ategist
of Deutsche Bank, goes so far as to
express the belief some chiefS "are· also
cutting their operating earnings as much
as possible so their comparisons will
improve next year."
'
Gerald Perritt, a realist and editor of
The Mutual Fund Letter, says "one by
one the optimists are throwing in the
towel;' finally recognizing that the s)larp
rebound they forecast in January may
not come by December.
In fact, Perritt reminds investors,
"many of America's industrial giants are
telling· Wall Street that they don't see a
turnaround in the earnings skid anytime
thts. year."
Moreover, a smattering of technology
and telecommunications companies are
suggesting to analysts that they aren't
even sure their industries, still in retreat,
. are !$Ding to come roaring back next
year.
Perritt's advice is to bite the bullet, sell
stocks that are built on a dream and use

.

the proceeds to invest in funds tlut are
packed with so-called value stocks.
"Value is back in vogue."
Anthony Maramarco of"The Babson
Staff Letter," agrees. In fact, he observes,
the resurgence in the value sector began
more than a year ago, just as the tech~
wreck began; scattering investors like il
nest of ants.
· .
Value investing at the time didn't offer
the dreamy possibilities of technology
stocks. But it offered a haven in companies with slow Qut ·.real growth, low
volatility, positive cash flow and maybe
even dividends.
M~ramarco isn't against growth-style
investing, as opposed to value investing,
but he does observe that each waxes and
wanes, requiring diversification and regular rebalancing to best suit the times . .
·And these could be the times . agai1J,
when terms such as "~arnings" and u cas\t ''
flow" aren't viewed as old-fashioned,
"old economy" terms, but logical, realistic investment expectations. As opposed
to dreamy hopes.

aohn Cunniff is a business analyst jo~ The
Associated Press.)

liprbackon
Winning track
AKRON, Ohio (AP) ,Tiger Woods ended his winless summer with a birdie on
the seventh · playoff hole to
.defeat Jim Furyk for his third
· NEC Invlta:tionii.l title. ~ -:·' After they exchanged pars
for six holes, Woods, who
started the day two behind, hit
a wedge into 2 feet on No. 18
to finally end the longest play~
pff on the PGA Tour in 10
years.
: He and Furyk finished at
12-under 268.

· Tokyo wins LL
world Series
S. WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.
The Tokyo K'itasun~
(earn found something that
worked during and after
games, and stuck with it all the
way to the Little league
World Series championship.
• For the second time in as
many games, the team from
Japan rallied for two runs in its
~ast at-bat, this time beating
·1\popka, Fla.; 2-1 in the title
game.
Nobuhisa Baba hit a line
drive off the shortstop's glove
in the bottom of the sixth and
final inning, driving in two
runs.
~AP) -

Leslie wins
WNBAMVP

aown

LOS 'ANGELES (AP)
'Lisa Leslie of the Los Angeles
'Sparks was chosen as .the
WNBA's most valuable player,
"making her the 'first to capture
All-Star and regular-season
' MVP honors in the same sea.,
son.
- The 6-foot-5 center aver'aged 19.5 points - secondbest in the league - and led
the Sparks to a league-best
28-4 record during the regular
;season. ·
• She received 563 points and
51 first-place votes. from a
. national panel of 60 sports
'writers and broadcasters, easily
"outdistancing Houston's Tina
thompson, who had 355
-Points. .
' Sacramento's Yolanda Griffith was third with 190 points,
'Minnesota's Katie Smith bad
178 points .
f'

RACINE - ·Before a very large
crowd at Southern High School, the
Berne Union Rockets out-muscled
the Southern Tornadoes 44-14 . in the
2001 home foothill opener at Roger
Lee Adams M emorial Field.
In the process, the Rockets broke a
24-game losing streak that dated back
to October 10, 1999.
For the Rockets, Jason Palmer
scored three touchdowns and rushed
20 times for 147 yards, while John
England rushed 17 times 59 yards and
Terry Olive twice for 57 yards.

Matt
Ash
led
Southern with 10
carries for 77 yards.
Overall,
Berne
Union gained 31 I
yards to Southern's .
2 14.
Berne took th e
opening kickoff and
quickly moved into
Ash
Southern territory,
but a fumble re covery
by Southern senior Anthony C offman
thwarted the drive. On the very next
play, Southern aired it out, as quarter~
back Brandon Pierce rifled a 75-yard

touchdown pass to a wide-open Brice
Hill, who scrambled down the sidelines for the score, 6-0, after a failed
extra point kick at th e 9:4 7 mark.
Southern's celebration was shortlived, as on the very next action,Jason·
Palmer grabbed a Matt Thomas kickoff and rambled ri ght down the hea rt
of the Southern defe nse for a 60-yard
touchdown return . R yan Booth
added the extra point kick for a 7-6
lead at the 9:32 mark.
After Southern went three plays
before Nathan Speilman grabbed the
first of two interceptions, th e Rockets
again went to work. Seven plays later,

Berne Union c~mpleted th e 49-yard ·
drive when quarterback Nick Watson
squeaked in on a one-yard plunge, th e
sco re 14-6 at the 3:57 mark following
the Booth kick .
In l es~ than nine minutes , the
Southern turf was already abl aze, but
more action was to come. Matt Ash
rambled 59 yards from scrimmage to
paydirt on th e first play of the ensuing
series. Ash's rambl e was fo llowed by a
r:vo- point conversion, a Pierce to
Justin Allen pass that ti ed th e score a\
14- 14 with 3:35left in the first quar-

Ple•se see Southern, A7

'

Reds smoke Expos,
17-4 on Dog Day
MONTREAL (AP) - At nice for Junior," Reds managIeast the few fans who follow er Bob Boone said. "This is ·
the Montreal Expos are faith- the easiest way to rest him. It's
lUi.
hard to not start him." ,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 19th
Adam Dunn had three
homer and drove in four runs · RB!s and his first career fouras Cincinnati routed Montre- hit game, including his 11th
al 17-4 Sunday m the Reds' homer - his second in two
highest-scoring game in two games.
years.
Dunn. whose first three-hit
A crowd of II, 785 attend- . game was Saturday, walked in
ed "Dog Day," a promotion the first, hit an RBI double in
that drew more than 200 the second, singled in the
dogs to Olympic Stadium, as fourth, · homered in the fifth
the Expos finished a 2-4 and, with an opportunity to
homestand that saw them hit for the cycle, doubled in a
allow 10 or. more rims in run in the seventh.
"Triples are overrated three of the losses.
"It was nice to see people . too much running," Dunn
in the stands, and it was nice said. " I'm not a big triples
· to see them stick around," guy. The only way I'm going
Montreal third baseman to hit a triple . is if it ratcl es
Geoff Blum said. "It's unfor- around, the guy· kicks it, or if
tunate that we get in situa- a little bird comes down and
tions where the fans actually gets it, and moves it to left
do show up, and we don't field," ,
·
perform up to our best. But · juan Castro
_ there are days that they Cromer ~so hom en:c:l ~v_._, ....,__
haven't been showing up and Reds, who tied a season-high
we've played great baseball, so with 20 hits - 13 for extra
it's a give and take."
bases, including eight douGriffey hit a two-run single bles.
·
off Bopby Munoz (0-4) in
Jose Acevedo (4-S),who hit
OETTING THE HITS -Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. strokes a two-run single against the
the second as the Reds scored an RBI double in the seventh
Montreat Expos· on Sunday in Montreal as Expos catcher Randy Knorr looks on. (AP)
eight in the first two innings. · to drive in the Reds' 14th
He thought the promotion rim, allowed three runs and
was a great idea, though he five hits in seven innings.
Jennings also had his first
wouldn't have let his Rot"I had great command, career four-hit game.
tweiler, Akieba, take part.
great location with my fast "Yesterday, I spent a long
"That's nice, you could ball," Acevedo said. "When . day in the airport, but it was
bring your animal to the ball- you pitch like that, you know worth it today," Jennings said.
park:' Griffey said. "I just you'll get a win foJ sure."
Sean Casey hit a two-run
can 't bring mine because
After lasting just two-p1us double in the first and doushe's an attack dog, so she innings against St. Louis in his bled again in th e second to
doesn't' make it out of the previous start - his shortest chase Munoz.
•
house that much."
outing this season - AceveMunoz, 0-4 in seven starts,
He added a two- run shot do retired the first 10 batters allowed eight runs and seven .
- his 11th in August - in before Jose Vidro doubled hits in 1 1-3 innings. It was
the fourth inning for his with one out in· the fourth his first start since complain457th career homer. He came and Vladimir Guerrero fol- ing of soreness in his right
out of the game with Cincin- lowed with his 32nd homer. arin· Aug. II.
nati ahead lOcO.
Recalled from Triple-A
"I just got whipped,"
' "A day like this is really Louisville on Saturday, Robin Munoz said. , .

Up to 3400 minutes

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Plus a free phone.
C.shback .

Stewart wins Sharpie 500
BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) The situation had the patenrial for disaster: Jeff Gordon
leading lap after lap around
the tight turns of Bristol w)th
hotheaded Tony Stewart right
on his bumper.'
The two clashed in this 'very
place just a few months
before, and the slightest tap
.from Stewart could have sent
his rival into the wall and
been the sweetest redemption.
Instead, Stewait slipped
right past Gordon and drove
off to victory in Saturday
night's Sharpie· 500 - proving he can forgive and forget.
Still, it's doubtful retaliation
was far from Stewart's mind
as he followed Gordon
around and around Bristol
Motor Speedway.
After all, it was initial contact from Gordon in the
spring race that started a
chain of events that have
marred Stewart's season.
He was running fourth in
the final .turn Of that race
when Gordon, charging hard
behind him as the two headed to the finish line, sent him
into a spin as he tried to pass
~

him . Stewart's.car went shooting up the high banking, missing the wall by mere inches.
By th e time Stewart refired·
his car and made it back to the
line, he had fallen 2 I spots
behind and finished 25th.
Incensed, he stalked Gordon
around the track, catching
him on pit road and bumping
him out of his way.
The action drew a $10,000
·fine and landed Stewart · on
probation . - ·which should

have ended this ·month had it
not been extended for the rest
of the :year after an outburst at
Dayto~a in July. .
Bec:tuse of how lightly
Stewart must tread these days,
Gordo11 never worried about
possible revenge.
For a long while, it didn't
look like Stewart would be
able to chase down Gordon or
continuously avoid th e racerecord 16 cautions.

' f'rl. 9:00 ·.r.;::JI)

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Monday, Aug: 27, 2001

Monda~Aug.27,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·page AB • The Dally Sentinel

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NOTICES
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON "PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 01 ·CV~57
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.
dba Beneficial
Mortgage co. of Ohio
•
PlalntiH
va,
' Timothy T. Klein etal
1
Defendants
•Timothy T. Klein and
Unknown Sp.ouse of
Timothy T. Klein
whooe laot known
eddren 11 unknown.
lo hereby notified that
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.,
db a
Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio
flied a complaint lor
Money, Foreclosure
and other Equitable

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

premises , lor the
amount owing ; that
the Defendants equity
ol redemptto·n be
foreclosed; that all the
parties be required to
answer as to their
lntereat, In paid
premises or be forever
barred from asserting
any Interest therein;
that all liens on sold
PremIses
be
marshaled and their
priorities determined;
that oald premloes be
so I d
aa
uP on
execution and the
proceeds of eald sole
be applied according
to law, and lor such
other rallel as Ia just
equitable.
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Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.
O lt i&lt;&gt; ,,·~.,.\J&gt;f'~r'_. ,._~ut'Hil H/10

• Get Your Message lcnu
Willi A Dally S.atlaeJ

·'ltULL,TIN BOARD

:'l"icolu•• 'lacll ,.,..w.y,
1
1r.,celu••l•c- S1_., ,

.

CALL.ODitOFFICE
Af 992•2155
..

plumbing,

electrical, homr maintenan ct:, and repair
porches, &amp; decks.

Owner
Charles A. Dill
Phone 992-7445

740·992-7599

Cell hone 591 ·9254

Howardl.
Writesel
Roofing • Home
Maintenance·
Gutters· Down
Spout

Advertise your
message

Ail Makes 'frador &amp;

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$1 0.00 column inch Sundays

Case·IH Parts

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

•

Equ.ipment Parts

.. ,.
•••

.....

•

l:

IUI71U!

De ·~~

EufWest

Nortb

•

l'uo

• ••
"""

=

~-d

unlta 55

5&amp;
.

"'!:r'n"

South

Wt lt

out
54 Railroad
unlta

t8 "-, •
doer . . ••
17
19 ~oteble
axploH
20 Glut
23 Type of
trapahoollng
26 Glnatlc
obbr.
27 Youth org.
30 Folloge
32 Egg dish
34 F1111CIIul
35
36 Helghll

fl J I 7
• AQJI I
• K I
A AK J

Vu l ncu blt~ :

M.D."
51 Throwa

~-

.. K 10 I

l0 I

48~·~.

IO~I~n
12

E••t
·Pau
Pus

Dpenlnsl e•d: • A

In hand

BLACKBURN'S

YORE JUC,.HAID
DIN'T

THAT'S

ACT UP

··Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding ·
• Bucket Truck

ONCE TODAY!!

rttor

F13 Superlellve 33 Happilyending
ollor
18 Imogene's 36 Faotbell
co-oter
dlv.
20 Goitar
40 Sllrt
Bllleateroo 41 Melle angry
21 Army
42 Colli.
•
command
aummer

1 Snowtoy
2. Aalatlvo of
bingo
3 Ancient
IIIIIon
flmlly
4 Sundial

(2

numer~~l

wdo.)

22 Mexican

5 "Woyne'a

dllh
23 Urban
word
blight
(abbr.)
8 Middle Eaat 24 Mldweot'"'
37 Adrlotlc, for
college
. one
7~~1on 25 Organa of
38 Pretend
I Rolocato
hal!lng
(2 Wdl.)
8 Woraocl
27 Blurt out
40 llrawnler
11 Ruaalsn'a
28 Type ot lily
42 TV"o
"no"
29 Solar dlak
"'Gomer-, 12 Mra.
31 Shirt
U.S.M.C."
Rooaaven
lllrtl

JONES' .·

Tree Service

=~ng

57 Archlleclura style
DOWN

Dev••-

G-00!),

World"

time

43 Daya of(tho peat)

44 C..rgo

.

46 Amfno 47 --time
(never)
46 Hebrew lyra
50 ACINII
Clolre
52 Write
helllly
53 Fllghtlloa
bird

AIN'T IT'?!

TREE SERVICE
TOP • Trim • Removal
aucllat Se1rv1c::e

..ALLt&amp;L

Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 1 South

Eric Blackburn
0WRIIi

Fully lnourod
Right Away Cloorlng

WICK'S

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

dl

• Complete Line of Sullivan"s Grooming Supplies
Sui!Ut C0818d Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
•10% oil all P~efert Horoe end Llveotock Equip.
10.1 0.1 0 All Purpoae Fertilizer $4.501501
8,000 later Twine $19.50/Bale
•18,000 Baler lWina $21.50/Balo

(740) 992-3470

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

Shade River Ag Service, Inc·
35537 St. Rt7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

Cellular

OF
L-IFE ~ .

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

•.

NEED YDUR LIFE
, REMODELED OR RESTORED?

THE BORN LOSER

JESUS CAN DO .........
• Nearly 2000 years':~::
• Works on Sundays.

P"

24hn.

rttr

AN OP\1/o\lST...

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campoe
Ctlobrlty Cipher cryptograrna •ro ctaetad from quowoona by tamoua .
people, pall and p01oen1. EIC!IIenor In the cipher slonds lor another.

"·

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,

&amp;.uE.'JE:II'f. .
WORST l':) Y€.110
T~\ ~~I

·~

Today's clue: Z equals Y

'MLG

SOCII

00

VNH

A' W Q

Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

NV

VAPP

MAOQC
KNOG

HQJKLOX

~

UHNOACGX

A-

VNHPX

PJRX

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V LQR•

MLG
NV

MLG

0;

FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 125, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

~

CGHAGC.'

SJHHZ

SNRXC

':::-::-:~----=-----l~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A director makes only one film In hie
·Mit. T"'" he•brMkllt Into
and mokeo Hagain!·- ··.Jan

BIG NATE

ELIT!i: MECHANICAL CONTR.\CTORS

Reno~

pi-•

1

THAI DAM
PUULU

YEAH,

BUT

WOlD
GAMI

DETENTION

uOES

O Rearrange

letten of tl'le
four Krombltd words bt·
low to form four simple words.

TIL 'l :00.
Residential Commercial New Construction
Sales Senice Installation
Spocializilll! in Sheet Metal Ductwork
ttTrane" Sales &amp; Suvit:e For
Galliu, Ma.•on, a"nd Meigs Counties
Lkemed and ln.•ured
WV 005176

•lllu•ent IRd fliRt Elllllle..lr
•lube &amp; •1 $11.95 • biUIUit Worli
• Single Pl.. Reun111r to ••cl$88.95
Illite 842.95 • 111or •re•ss ~1411

PEANUTS
60 AWA'I! IF 'f'OU WANT
TO SWIM, 60 SWIM IN
YOUR. WATER DISrl!

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp,

Agent

.L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

740·992·5344

Box 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760

HOURS: Mon · Frl

Sal9-1

21271

no •• it threw two
clubs. My dub exit
r-""7"--------~-., was won with dummy's queen. Declarer
WELL, AT LEAST IT
played a heart to its
ISN'T CROWDED ..
queen. Now the machine only had to
cross to the diamond
ace, repeat the trump
finesse, draw the last
trump, and claim. Instead, it tried to cash
cCT•CTIJ&gt;
its two club tricks. I
L-----------..J.•~§::~:;________
ruffed the last with
my heart · seven for
one down after all.
The machine is
$133.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay
Bridge Supplies. Call
(800) 274-2221 to order.
·

....J

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
lifE OOO.LITY liF£ COMP!t.N\"'

Mac•••

POCKIT KIIIVB

&amp; COLUCTI.LII
217 Ent Second Street
Pomerov. Ohio

"992-5908
M..f 10•m_.pm

To get a current
weather report,
check the

I MONDAY

Sentinel

e
. I)
·

P~INT NUM&amp;E~ED
lETTE~S

IN SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBLE LElTERS
FOR ANSWER
.

AUGUST27I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Yankee - Booth - Midst - Itself - SF:ASON
Last winter I returned a new TV to the store. "There's
nothing but snow on the screen," I complained. "Don 't
worry," smiled the clerk, "it's the SEASON."

•

.•
Tlie~day. Au~. 2H. 21)(H
Many ~plendicl opportunities could be in the offing for

you in the ycar ahead. How-

!.!Vcr, they will be the rypc$ of
situatiom wh~re the rewards
will . be in proportion to the
etTort~ you cs:pcnd.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-.Sept 22)

-- Even thoug~ your companions may not share your

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

point-of-view concerning the
out come of .111 import;mt

FlEAMUKR
MAPlEWOODliiE
•

"Htlpl"f You ro Rttovtr Yourlnl'ftllltmt"

-31,SIIIl1&amp;3
Clt~easuaaait
IIICII 1111111111
1110 c1mlllltel

....,
.........
IEFIESIIIEIITS
.-.c...

11111111. ,.. Cll'l.
lnlll.
ltlllrllli&amp;CIIfll

Stll7

TllllriPIIIII

661-6329

6rT UP

CON\f:. I

.........
J

rut l't&lt;\ f&gt;.&lt;..!IJ

&amp;JIZ-1'1 ~R ...

. REFRESHMENTS

shillS.

.

I'l&gt;\ Tl1(

MJPliWOOiliiE

hlltullllml

/

~AMP.

REAURIO

CONNIE'S
CHilD CARE

~ (.Af'I'T \111'0~~ UP
rt"OUG~ S'P~~I&gt; TO

~~G~vJAY

For more information, come to our church site.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;
10:30. Preaching

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

P/B

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Always Available.

Hill' Self
Storage

4

8~~

01-Utl

Factory Authorized

on March
29, hereinabove
Delendnnta llrat
ReliefCeaa
2001,
No. 01·CV·
Coolvfll•, OH 45123
057, on the property mantloned are further
740887. . .3
described aa follows: notllled that they are
EXHIBIT A
required to answer
Public Notice
Pubflc Notice
'-----~-.1
Situated In the said complaint on or - - - - - - - oounty ol Meigs, In the before 8/24/01, which James White and and state regulations.
State of Ohio, and In Includes twenty-eight aouth by the Ianda ol In establishing youth
the Towne hlp ol (28) daya from the lui James Larkena and activities under WIA,
Hauling &amp;
Salisbury (Pomeroy date ol publication, or Andrew Roses and service provider• ore
Excavating
VIllage) and bounded judgment may be weal by Ianda ol expected to link
and described a a rend • r • d
• s Spencer Smith and programa with local
follows: ·
demanded therein.
others 51 acrea 7$ labor needa, provide
PARCEL 1:
The
FRANK &amp; one hundredths of an a strong connection
following real estate
WOOLDROGE CO., acre, and live acrea between academic Hauling • Limestone
altuated In the County
L.P.A. part ol 100 acre lot and occupational
• Gravel Sand •
ol Meigs, In the State
by Gregory D. No. 140, Sac. 14 &amp; 15, Ia a r n 1n g ,
and
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
ol Ohio, and In the Wooldridge (110040864) and 8 acres 50 one eatabllah programa
.
• Mulch
township ol Salisbury,
by D. L. Moina, Jr hundredths acraa, 23· which proper• youth
Bulldozer
Services
1nd bounded and
(110001381) 112 acres and 14 lor poll aecondary
deacrlbed as follows:
AHomeyslor Plaintiff acre a porta or 100 e d u c a tlo n
or
The lollowl ng real .&amp;DP South Peart StrHt acre lot No. 14 1, Sac. uniu"baldlzed
eotateln Section No. Columbus,Ohlo43208 14 &amp; 15 and 8·40/100 omployment
aa
Eight In Townohlp No.
814·221-1662 ·acrea, part of Sec. 21, approprlalo. Servlcea
Two and Range No. (7) 23, 30, (8) 6, 13, 20, 840 ac;e lot No. 2 1. should
Include; .• .
Thirteen near the 27,2001
·
All ollhe abclvelanda determining eligibility
I
South East corner of - - - - - - - In Township No. 3, lor WIA programs,
said Section on the
Public Notice
Range No.tt.
provIdIng
a
North Weotolde ollhe ,
II
being
the comprehensive array
flretrevlne West altho . IN THE COMMON
Intention to Include, ot oervlceo to eligible
29670 Baahan Road
S.E. corner of said
PLEAS COURT OF
deacrlbe and convey you I h
and
Raclna, Ohio
Section and deacrlbed
MEIG"S COUNTY. .,
heroin an. real eotate lncorpor~tlng tho ten
• • .. .45 n 1
•• followa:
OHIO
located In Meigs program elementa
• Beginning at the
GAYLE H. PRICE,
County, Ohio, ciwned under WIA. Program
74()..949·2217
1 ~-:---Easlt"c•omei'-·ol- a- lot
ET-At.:-. --b ·y----Y.Irglnla-B,-coat-muat-not-exceed~ ----sizes , X 10 •
5
aold and conveyed to
Williamson at the $100,000 lor the
.Ebenazar Watkins ol
PLAINTIFFS
time ol h~r deceaoe period ending June
to 10' X 30'
Minersville; thence
and bequeathed by_ 3 0,
2 0 0 2.
Hours
·North .35"Eaat 82 1/2
·VS·
her to Lillian W. Administrative coat
feet; thence North 55"
Dennis and Paul may not exceed 10%
7;00 AM· 8:00PM
Weal 174 feel; thence LILLIAN w. DENNIS, Williamson.
ol tho total contract
South 35" Wast 62 112
ET AL.
Being the same award. In addition,
feet to the North
real estate conveved 30% of the total
corner
of
said
DEFENDANTS.
to Clinton R. Smith contract award must
Ebenezer Watkins lot;
NOTICE BV
by Lillian w. Dennis, be uaed to serve outthenca South 55" East
et
1
b
d d
1
h 1
th
PUBLICATION
a .,
y
ee
o • sc oo you •
114 IHI to the place of
1o...
recorded In Deed Proposals · must · , New Homes
"""Inning.
To: Lillian w. Dennis Book 144 Page 628 of d,emonstrate
the .
Excepting the coat and
samuel
s. the Meigs County o!'apablllty to meet ·Garages
therein and the right Dennis, Ill whose last Deed Records.
performance
jtomlnethe same.
known address Is 52
Excepting 1.238 standards and to
• Complete
PARCEL 2:
Essex Rd., Chestnut acre conveyed to the quantify program
Remodeling
Tho following real Hill,
MA
02187, State of Ohio by dHd outcomes. For a copy
estate sltunted In the present
addresses recorded In Volume ol the Meigs County
Stop &amp; Compare
County ol Meigs, State unknown;
Paul 102, Page 275, Melga Workforce Plan, the
FREE ESTIMATES
ol Ohio, and In the Williamson
and County
Olllclal ten
program
town of Pomeroy and Agnes B. Williamson, Rec:ordo.
ole menta,
1he
740-992·1671
bound • d
and whose last known
Reference Deed: . performance
described as follows, address Is Texas, Volume 185, Page 45 atandarda, the criteria
vl~ectlon No. 8 In present
addresses 1, Malgs County Deed used In evaluating
unknowni
Bette Recorda.
the proposals, a .
Townahlp No. 2 and Paris, whose last
Auditor's Parcel inodel contract, and
Range No. 13 naar the known address Is Nos.: 07·00603.000 proposal format,
CONTRACTORS, INC.
··southeast corner of 4022 Meadow VIew, and 07·00604.000.
contact Jane Banks
: said section on the SuHiand MD 20748
You are required to at lhe Meigs County
,Racine, Ohio 45771
· Northwest side of the present '
address' answer the Complaint Department of Job
740·985-3948
first ravine West ol the unknown; and upon within twenty·olghl and Family Servlcea,
• said Southeast corner the unknown heirs, (28) days alter the (740) 982·2117.
CONCRETE/BLOCK/BRICK
ol sold
section next ol kin devlsHs last publication or
Proposals should
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
described as' follows: legaiHs, ' spouses: this Notice, which will be submllled to
Flat Work,
Beginning at the successors
and be published once There.sa Lavender,
Replacements,
• Walks
East corner ol half assigns of Lillian W. eachweeklorslx(8) Meigs
County
acre lot aold and Dennis, Samuel S. successive weeks. Department ol Job
and Drins • S~encll ·
conveyed to Jonah Dennis
p 1 The last publication and Family
111
Crete Free Estimate•
Reese ol Mlner~vllle; Wllllam'son, Agnes a~. will be made on the Services, 175 Race
Serving Ohio and W. V.
thence North 35 East Williamson and B u8 ~7th day .ol Auguat Street, Post Office
•
WV.MOJ1712
82 1/2 feet; thence Paris wh~se
e
2001, and the twenty· Box 191, Middleport,
North 55" West one
•
names
• hundred and seventy· and eddresses are eight (28) day a for Ohio 45780, no later
unknown
a n s we r
wIll
than Wednesday,
four (174) feet; thence
You are hereby commence on that August 31, 2001 at
South 35 (ole) West notllledthatyouhave date. In the caae of 4:00
p.m.
All
alxty·two and one·hall been
n a me d your failure to answer aubmlaslona must be
(82 112) to the North Defendants In the or otherwise respond received by mall or
bg. 31.1tlll1 &amp; I
corner 01 aald Jonah action entitled Ga 1 as requested by the hand delivery by the
, Clllllll SIIIIIJ
Reeae lot; thenc~ H. Price, et :1 .~ Ohio Rules ol Civil above date and lime.
South lllly·llve (55 ) Plalntllls va Llllla
Procedure, JudHment · No matarlalo received
·IPICIIIIIIII.II
degrees East one
•
·
n b
hundred seventy·lour W. Dennis, at al.,
Y default w II be after the date will be
IIU Clllllllll
(1 74 ) to the place of Defendants . Thla rendered against you Included In previous
IIHIJ
tllllllll.
beginning excepting action has been and for the relief submlulons nor be
the coal ihereln and ' assigned Case No. demanded In the considered.
The
1 01 cv 114
d 1 Complaint.
department reserves
~
the right to mine the pending
• • In' the
an Court
s
Datod thla 9th day the right to reject any
same
.....
Ct.
l
lll'llll.
PARCEL NUMBEP ol Common Plaaa of ol July, 2001.
or all proposals, In
11ft DriiU &amp;1:11111
.~
,
~~
Melga
County,
Ohio.
accordanca
with 28
1
750 18 749
8115 1 mo
PROPERTY ~
The obJect ot the Marlena Harrtobn
CFR part 31, 32,
ADDRESS · 32045 Complaint demands Marlene .H arrlaon, Meigs
County
Welshton · Road tho\lhetltlelnandto Clerko!Courta
Department ol Job
Minersville, OH 45768 • the oil and gas be
end Family Servlcea
Also known 88 quletad
In
tha By: Monica Freeman
Ia prohibited from
Welshtown Plaintiff, Gayle H. Oeputy Clerk
discrimination on the
32045
Road
Minersville Price and Edna Price,
basis of race, color,
Ohio 5769 and thai and that the oil and 7123, 30, (8) 6, 13, 27
natl.o nal origin, sex,
RIW
age, religion, political
there remal~s due and gas Interests of the
IDIDIQS. IU
owing $24,639.74 with Defendants
be
Public Notice
beliefs, or
lnteraat at 15 _492 declared abandoned,
disability. Evaluation
1 th
11
11
the proposals 1.5
dl!fiiWIIk
percant per annum or n e a erna va,
p
expected to be
1
1
from July 1, 2000, and I hot
the
Court Raquest or ropoaa
concluded no later
coats;
thet
tho partition the 011 and
than September 10,
defendants namod In gadeerlnttheeroesatmaenadlooldr D The IMelgls c,ouJntby 2001 . .
the Complaint may or
epar man o
o
,
with regard to the and Family Service• (8) 20, 27, 2001
have an lntareot In following deacrlbad Ia seeking propoaals
said
proparty; reateatate:
to
provide
a 3tc
therefora, Plaintiff
Tho
lollowlng comprahanalve year·
demandJI that It ba dascrlbed real aatate round youth program
found to have • good, situate
In
tha to eligible youth ageo
TRI-COUnTY
valid and subsisting Town 1 hI p
o I 14;21 consistent with
lien on said premises, Lebanon, In the Meigs County's Work·
way around it,
TRftUSPORT
lor tho amount owing; County of Malgo and iorce Developmant
Umestonel
Classified Ads
that the Delandants State ol Ohio, viz: Plan, provlalona of
Seniors Discounts
equity ot redemption Bounded northerly by the federal Workforce
multiple Lood
Work!
be
valid
and thit Ohio River, eaot Investment Art (WIA),
Discounts
aubalallng lien on aald by the IIMldl ol . and . related federal

!

•o

6 AKQ i tJ

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARlY ·
$321.00 PER JOINT

"'

PUrl

i

.,. ..
t Q

ACROSS 45 TV
1 Quantity of 48 ..
:,.::cceOIO~IJI~

'f !lo l 1
t A JS 4 S!

WoM

••••

949-1405
591·5011

· .EPOYIIG

•

ALDER

:~ .

hiUb

· Free Estimates

•

~J

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING
.

Free aetlmates,
Insured
Specializt in new
construction,
r!mod~ling,

~

KENSINGTON

30
CONSTRUC110N

NEA Crouword Puzzle

PHI T.!.iP

TO.' I COlJLO
lii'\' tl&gt; T.o.KEN
l"HAT GIJ'(!

YOUNG'S

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

814~·2202

Recine, Ohio

949-2134

B/151 mo

Advertise

event. be hopeful and expectant. Negative thinking gC"ner-

in this
space
for
$50 per
month

a broken romance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can

Afierti~ rour ~u~meu on t~i~ ,a~e or one
m.ont~ for a~ low a~~~~- · ~~one "~·~U~\

atc5 dde~t. Trying to patch up

help you undcmand what to
do to make the rellltiomhi'p

work. Ma1l $2.75 to Matchmaker. c/o thi!i ncw~p~per
1'.0. !lox 167. Wickliffe, OH

.

44092- 0167 .
LIDRA (Sept. 23-0 co. 23) •
- If you Uilln a ntmble today
don't expect family members
to strew .yo ur path with rmc
pet;~h trying . to make you

happy. Thcy "rc more likely to
toss stumbling stones in front
of yo u.
SC ORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov.
22) -- Do n' t take an :HTauge ntc nt that is bendlcial to all
;md tty to lltrn it :u ound to-

day to benefit only No. 1, nor
alJow anyone else to do so ei ther.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec: 21) -- Othen can not be
expected to bail you out of a
financi&lt;~~l situa~ion tmby you
got yourself into. It'~ ~o ing to
b'-· up to you to take care of
the matter yomself.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. t 9) · • Try lo gel thin!;'
started o n your own today
and invite in partnt'rs only aS
it become~ necess:u y: Partners
could hamper things instead

of help you.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.

19) •• This i• not • day to lay
;I.Sidc your tools ami make it a
time elf rest. Even if your
he a rt isn't in ymu work proje&lt;;ts, keep going until you
finish your tasks or you'll pay
the piper.
· PISCES (Feh. 20-Mmh 20)

-- DcalinK5 with friends need
to be handled with kid gloves
today . Peopl e arc •morr
tou c hy than usu al and could
easily bcc01he unit\u cd over'
the simplest of slights.
ARIES (M&gt;rch 21 - Apnl 19)
· - If things don 't go as you'd
hoped toda~· . be caref~1l not to

take your disappointment out
on innocent bystanders, such
a~ co - worken or family members.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) -- De more guarded than
usual about what yo u say or
sign today . Chance~ arc you
could hlurt out something
you don 't mean or put your
signature to pape r without
reading it fine
GEMINI (M•y 21-June 20 )
- - Unless yoLI have your dcsiFes for imtant gratification
under 'total control today, this
is not a good day for you to
go shopp 1ng . Em o ti o,n5
mustn' t be alloWed to ru le
your purse.
C AN CE R Uuno 21 -ju ly
22) -- Permns with whom.
you ch oo~e to a ssoci~ te tOday
co uld have a big intlucuc e
over your mood. N~gative
rypes would rapidly smother
your enth usit~sm and zest, and
put you in ~ funk.
LEO Quly 23-flug. 22) ••
Normally you fa ce m:~.tten
squarely and realistically, bu[
today you're apt to believe
. certain duties or responsibilities ,will somehow take care of
, them~elvcs_.
'

"

�.

Monday, Aug: 27, 2001

Monda~Aug.27,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·page AB • The Dally Sentinel

-

~LLEY

Pomeroy, Middlepqrt, Ohio

OOP

BIIIDOR

-

YOU R£"'-LY

OI ON'T

HA.V ~

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
·New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Jtlo and Porch DeckS

.

• New Homes
·Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garages
• Additions
• Decks
•Home

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
99.2-6215

Free Est i m ates

&amp; I nsur ed
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing

All

Home Needs

740·949·1521
Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

Pom8rcy. Ohio
2 YliMirS LOC8l

NOTICES
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON "PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 01 ·CV~57
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.
dba Beneficial
Mortgage co. of Ohio
•
PlalntiH
va,
' Timothy T. Klein etal
1
Defendants
•Timothy T. Klein and
Unknown Sp.ouse of
Timothy T. Klein
whooe laot known
eddren 11 unknown.
lo hereby notified that
Beneficial Ohio, Inc.,
db a
Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio
flied a complaint lor
Money, Foreclosure
and other Equitable

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

premises , lor the
amount owing ; that
the Defendants equity
ol redemptto·n be
foreclosed; that all the
parties be required to
answer as to their
lntereat, In paid
premises or be forever
barred from asserting
any Interest therein;
that all liens on sold
PremIses
be
marshaled and their
priorities determined;
that oald premloes be
so I d
aa
uP on
execution and the
proceeds of eald sole
be applied according
to law, and lor such
other rallel as Ia just
equitable.
.

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
Now Homes • VInyl
Siding • N&lt;w Garages
• RtpiO«mont
• Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and RBIDINIIAl
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public N otices in News pupcrs .
Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.
O lt i&lt;&gt; ,,·~.,.\J&gt;f'~r'_. ,._~ut'Hil H/10

• Get Your Message lcnu
Willi A Dally S.atlaeJ

·'ltULL,TIN BOARD

:'l"icolu•• 'lacll ,.,..w.y,
1
1r.,celu••l•c- S1_., ,

.

CALL.ODitOFFICE
Af 992•2155
..

plumbing,

electrical, homr maintenan ct:, and repair
porches, &amp; decks.

Owner
Charles A. Dill
Phone 992-7445

740·992-7599

Cell hone 591 ·9254

Howardl.
Writesel
Roofing • Home
Maintenance·
Gutters· Down
Spout

Advertise your
message

Ail Makes 'frador &amp;

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$1 0.00 column inch Sundays

Case·IH Parts

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

•

Equ.ipment Parts

.. ,.
•••

.....

•

l:

IUI71U!

De ·~~

EufWest

Nortb

•

l'uo

• ••
"""

=

~-d

unlta 55

5&amp;
.

"'!:r'n"

South

Wt lt

out
54 Railroad
unlta

t8 "-, •
doer . . ••
17
19 ~oteble
axploH
20 Glut
23 Type of
trapahoollng
26 Glnatlc
obbr.
27 Youth org.
30 Folloge
32 Egg dish
34 F1111CIIul
35
36 Helghll

fl J I 7
• AQJI I
• K I
A AK J

Vu l ncu blt~ :

M.D."
51 Throwa

~-

.. K 10 I

l0 I

48~·~.

IO~I~n
12

E••t
·Pau
Pus

Dpenlnsl e•d: • A

In hand

BLACKBURN'S

YORE JUC,.HAID
DIN'T

THAT'S

ACT UP

··Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding ·
• Bucket Truck

ONCE TODAY!!

rttor

F13 Superlellve 33 Happilyending
ollor
18 Imogene's 36 Faotbell
co-oter
dlv.
20 Goitar
40 Sllrt
Bllleateroo 41 Melle angry
21 Army
42 Colli.
•
command
aummer

1 Snowtoy
2. Aalatlvo of
bingo
3 Ancient
IIIIIon
flmlly
4 Sundial

(2

numer~~l

wdo.)

22 Mexican

5 "Woyne'a

dllh
23 Urban
word
blight
(abbr.)
8 Middle Eaat 24 Mldweot'"'
37 Adrlotlc, for
college
. one
7~~1on 25 Organa of
38 Pretend
I Rolocato
hal!lng
(2 Wdl.)
8 Woraocl
27 Blurt out
40 llrawnler
11 Ruaalsn'a
28 Type ot lily
42 TV"o
"no"
29 Solar dlak
"'Gomer-, 12 Mra.
31 Shirt
U.S.M.C."
Rooaaven
lllrtl

JONES' .·

Tree Service

=~ng

57 Archlleclura style
DOWN

Dev••-

G-00!),

World"

time

43 Daya of(tho peat)

44 C..rgo

.

46 Amfno 47 --time
(never)
46 Hebrew lyra
50 ACINII
Clolre
52 Write
helllly
53 Fllghtlloa
bird

AIN'T IT'?!

TREE SERVICE
TOP • Trim • Removal
aucllat Se1rv1c::e

..ALLt&amp;L

Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 1 South

Eric Blackburn
0WRIIi

Fully lnourod
Right Away Cloorlng

WICK'S

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

dl

• Complete Line of Sullivan"s Grooming Supplies
Sui!Ut C0818d Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
•10% oil all P~efert Horoe end Llveotock Equip.
10.1 0.1 0 All Purpoae Fertilizer $4.501501
8,000 later Twine $19.50/Bale
•18,000 Baler lWina $21.50/Balo

(740) 992-3470

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

Shade River Ag Service, Inc·
35537 St. Rt7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

Cellular

OF
L-IFE ~ .

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

•.

NEED YDUR LIFE
, REMODELED OR RESTORED?

THE BORN LOSER

JESUS CAN DO .........
• Nearly 2000 years':~::
• Works on Sundays.

P"

24hn.

rttr

AN OP\1/o\lST...

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campoe
Ctlobrlty Cipher cryptograrna •ro ctaetad from quowoona by tamoua .
people, pall and p01oen1. EIC!IIenor In the cipher slonds lor another.

"·

,..

,

&amp;.uE.'JE:II'f. .
WORST l':) Y€.110
T~\ ~~I

·~

Today's clue: Z equals Y

'MLG

SOCII

00

VNH

A' W Q

Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

NV

VAPP

MAOQC
KNOG

HQJKLOX

~

UHNOACGX

A-

VNHPX

PJRX

.

V LQR•

MLG
NV

MLG

0;

FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 125, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

~

CGHAGC.'

SJHHZ

SNRXC

':::-::-:~----=-----l~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A director makes only one film In hie
·Mit. T"'" he•brMkllt Into
and mokeo Hagain!·- ··.Jan

BIG NATE

ELIT!i: MECHANICAL CONTR.\CTORS

Reno~

pi-•

1

THAI DAM
PUULU

YEAH,

BUT

WOlD
GAMI

DETENTION

uOES

O Rearrange

letten of tl'le
four Krombltd words bt·
low to form four simple words.

TIL 'l :00.
Residential Commercial New Construction
Sales Senice Installation
Spocializilll! in Sheet Metal Ductwork
ttTrane" Sales &amp; Suvit:e For
Galliu, Ma.•on, a"nd Meigs Counties
Lkemed and ln.•ured
WV 005176

•lllu•ent IRd fliRt Elllllle..lr
•lube &amp; •1 $11.95 • biUIUit Worli
• Single Pl.. Reun111r to ••cl$88.95
Illite 842.95 • 111or •re•ss ~1411

PEANUTS
60 AWA'I! IF 'f'OU WANT
TO SWIM, 60 SWIM IN
YOUR. WATER DISrl!

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp,

Agent

.L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

740·992·5344

Box 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760

HOURS: Mon · Frl

Sal9-1

21271

no •• it threw two
clubs. My dub exit
r-""7"--------~-., was won with dummy's queen. Declarer
WELL, AT LEAST IT
played a heart to its
ISN'T CROWDED ..
queen. Now the machine only had to
cross to the diamond
ace, repeat the trump
finesse, draw the last
trump, and claim. Instead, it tried to cash
cCT•CTIJ&gt;
its two club tricks. I
L-----------..J.•~§::~:;________
ruffed the last with
my heart · seven for
one down after all.
The machine is
$133.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay
Bridge Supplies. Call
(800) 274-2221 to order.
·

....J

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
lifE OOO.LITY liF£ COMP!t.N\"'

Mac•••

POCKIT KIIIVB

&amp; COLUCTI.LII
217 Ent Second Street
Pomerov. Ohio

"992-5908
M..f 10•m_.pm

To get a current
weather report,
check the

I MONDAY

Sentinel

e
. I)
·

P~INT NUM&amp;E~ED
lETTE~S

IN SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBLE LElTERS
FOR ANSWER
.

AUGUST27I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Yankee - Booth - Midst - Itself - SF:ASON
Last winter I returned a new TV to the store. "There's
nothing but snow on the screen," I complained. "Don 't
worry," smiled the clerk, "it's the SEASON."

•

.•
Tlie~day. Au~. 2H. 21)(H
Many ~plendicl opportunities could be in the offing for

you in the ycar ahead. How-

!.!Vcr, they will be the rypc$ of
situatiom wh~re the rewards
will . be in proportion to the
etTort~ you cs:pcnd.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-.Sept 22)

-- Even thoug~ your companions may not share your

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

point-of-view concerning the
out come of .111 import;mt

FlEAMUKR
MAPlEWOODliiE
•

"Htlpl"f You ro Rttovtr Yourlnl'ftllltmt"

-31,SIIIl1&amp;3
Clt~easuaaait
IIICII 1111111111
1110 c1mlllltel

....,
.........
IEFIESIIIEIITS
.-.c...

11111111. ,.. Cll'l.
lnlll.
ltlllrllli&amp;CIIfll

Stll7

TllllriPIIIII

661-6329

6rT UP

CON\f:. I

.........
J

rut l't&lt;\ f&gt;.&lt;..!IJ

&amp;JIZ-1'1 ~R ...

. REFRESHMENTS

shillS.

.

I'l&gt;\ Tl1(

MJPliWOOiliiE

hlltullllml

/

~AMP.

REAURIO

CONNIE'S
CHilD CARE

~ (.Af'I'T \111'0~~ UP
rt"OUG~ S'P~~I&gt; TO

~~G~vJAY

For more information, come to our church site.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;
10:30. Preaching

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

P/B

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Always Available.

Hill' Self
Storage

4

8~~

01-Utl

Factory Authorized

on March
29, hereinabove
Delendnnta llrat
ReliefCeaa
2001,
No. 01·CV·
Coolvfll•, OH 45123
057, on the property mantloned are further
740887. . .3
described aa follows: notllled that they are
EXHIBIT A
required to answer
Public Notice
Pubflc Notice
'-----~-.1
Situated In the said complaint on or - - - - - - - oounty ol Meigs, In the before 8/24/01, which James White and and state regulations.
State of Ohio, and In Includes twenty-eight aouth by the Ianda ol In establishing youth
the Towne hlp ol (28) daya from the lui James Larkena and activities under WIA,
Hauling &amp;
Salisbury (Pomeroy date ol publication, or Andrew Roses and service provider• ore
Excavating
VIllage) and bounded judgment may be weal by Ianda ol expected to link
and described a a rend • r • d
• s Spencer Smith and programa with local
follows: ·
demanded therein.
others 51 acrea 7$ labor needa, provide
PARCEL 1:
The
FRANK &amp; one hundredths of an a strong connection
following real estate
WOOLDROGE CO., acre, and live acrea between academic Hauling • Limestone
altuated In the County
L.P.A. part ol 100 acre lot and occupational
• Gravel Sand •
ol Meigs, In the State
by Gregory D. No. 140, Sac. 14 &amp; 15, Ia a r n 1n g ,
and
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
ol Ohio, and In the Wooldridge (110040864) and 8 acres 50 one eatabllah programa
.
• Mulch
township ol Salisbury,
by D. L. Moina, Jr hundredths acraa, 23· which proper• youth
Bulldozer
Services
1nd bounded and
(110001381) 112 acres and 14 lor poll aecondary
deacrlbed as follows:
AHomeyslor Plaintiff acre a porta or 100 e d u c a tlo n
or
The lollowl ng real .&amp;DP South Peart StrHt acre lot No. 14 1, Sac. uniu"baldlzed
eotateln Section No. Columbus,Ohlo43208 14 &amp; 15 and 8·40/100 omployment
aa
Eight In Townohlp No.
814·221-1662 ·acrea, part of Sec. 21, approprlalo. Servlcea
Two and Range No. (7) 23, 30, (8) 6, 13, 20, 840 ac;e lot No. 2 1. should
Include; .• .
Thirteen near the 27,2001
·
All ollhe abclvelanda determining eligibility
I
South East corner of - - - - - - - In Township No. 3, lor WIA programs,
said Section on the
Public Notice
Range No.tt.
provIdIng
a
North Weotolde ollhe ,
II
being
the comprehensive array
flretrevlne West altho . IN THE COMMON
Intention to Include, ot oervlceo to eligible
29670 Baahan Road
S.E. corner of said
PLEAS COURT OF
deacrlbe and convey you I h
and
Raclna, Ohio
Section and deacrlbed
MEIG"S COUNTY. .,
heroin an. real eotate lncorpor~tlng tho ten
• • .. .45 n 1
•• followa:
OHIO
located In Meigs program elementa
• Beginning at the
GAYLE H. PRICE,
County, Ohio, ciwned under WIA. Program
74()..949·2217
1 ~-:---Easlt"c•omei'-·ol- a- lot
ET-At.:-. --b ·y----Y.Irglnla-B,-coat-muat-not-exceed~ ----sizes , X 10 •
5
aold and conveyed to
Williamson at the $100,000 lor the
.Ebenazar Watkins ol
PLAINTIFFS
time ol h~r deceaoe period ending June
to 10' X 30'
Minersville; thence
and bequeathed by_ 3 0,
2 0 0 2.
Hours
·North .35"Eaat 82 1/2
·VS·
her to Lillian W. Administrative coat
feet; thence North 55"
Dennis and Paul may not exceed 10%
7;00 AM· 8:00PM
Weal 174 feel; thence LILLIAN w. DENNIS, Williamson.
ol tho total contract
South 35" Wast 62 112
ET AL.
Being the same award. In addition,
feet to the North
real estate conveved 30% of the total
corner
of
said
DEFENDANTS.
to Clinton R. Smith contract award must
Ebenezer Watkins lot;
NOTICE BV
by Lillian w. Dennis, be uaed to serve outthenca South 55" East
et
1
b
d d
1
h 1
th
PUBLICATION
a .,
y
ee
o • sc oo you •
114 IHI to the place of
1o...
recorded In Deed Proposals · must · , New Homes
"""Inning.
To: Lillian w. Dennis Book 144 Page 628 of d,emonstrate
the .
Excepting the coat and
samuel
s. the Meigs County o!'apablllty to meet ·Garages
therein and the right Dennis, Ill whose last Deed Records.
performance
jtomlnethe same.
known address Is 52
Excepting 1.238 standards and to
• Complete
PARCEL 2:
Essex Rd., Chestnut acre conveyed to the quantify program
Remodeling
Tho following real Hill,
MA
02187, State of Ohio by dHd outcomes. For a copy
estate sltunted In the present
addresses recorded In Volume ol the Meigs County
Stop &amp; Compare
County ol Meigs, State unknown;
Paul 102, Page 275, Melga Workforce Plan, the
FREE ESTIMATES
ol Ohio, and In the Williamson
and County
Olllclal ten
program
town of Pomeroy and Agnes B. Williamson, Rec:ordo.
ole menta,
1he
740-992·1671
bound • d
and whose last known
Reference Deed: . performance
described as follows, address Is Texas, Volume 185, Page 45 atandarda, the criteria
vl~ectlon No. 8 In present
addresses 1, Malgs County Deed used In evaluating
unknowni
Bette Recorda.
the proposals, a .
Townahlp No. 2 and Paris, whose last
Auditor's Parcel inodel contract, and
Range No. 13 naar the known address Is Nos.: 07·00603.000 proposal format,
CONTRACTORS, INC.
··southeast corner of 4022 Meadow VIew, and 07·00604.000.
contact Jane Banks
: said section on the SuHiand MD 20748
You are required to at lhe Meigs County
,Racine, Ohio 45771
· Northwest side of the present '
address' answer the Complaint Department of Job
740·985-3948
first ravine West ol the unknown; and upon within twenty·olghl and Family Servlcea,
• said Southeast corner the unknown heirs, (28) days alter the (740) 982·2117.
CONCRETE/BLOCK/BRICK
ol sold
section next ol kin devlsHs last publication or
Proposals should
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
described as' follows: legaiHs, ' spouses: this Notice, which will be submllled to
Flat Work,
Beginning at the successors
and be published once There.sa Lavender,
Replacements,
• Walks
East corner ol half assigns of Lillian W. eachweeklorslx(8) Meigs
County
acre lot aold and Dennis, Samuel S. successive weeks. Department ol Job
and Drins • S~encll ·
conveyed to Jonah Dennis
p 1 The last publication and Family
111
Crete Free Estimate•
Reese ol Mlner~vllle; Wllllam'son, Agnes a~. will be made on the Services, 175 Race
Serving Ohio and W. V.
thence North 35 East Williamson and B u8 ~7th day .ol Auguat Street, Post Office
•
WV.MOJ1712
82 1/2 feet; thence Paris wh~se
e
2001, and the twenty· Box 191, Middleport,
North 55" West one
•
names
• hundred and seventy· and eddresses are eight (28) day a for Ohio 45780, no later
unknown
a n s we r
wIll
than Wednesday,
four (174) feet; thence
You are hereby commence on that August 31, 2001 at
South 35 (ole) West notllledthatyouhave date. In the caae of 4:00
p.m.
All
alxty·two and one·hall been
n a me d your failure to answer aubmlaslona must be
(82 112) to the North Defendants In the or otherwise respond received by mall or
bg. 31.1tlll1 &amp; I
corner 01 aald Jonah action entitled Ga 1 as requested by the hand delivery by the
, Clllllll SIIIIIJ
Reeae lot; thenc~ H. Price, et :1 .~ Ohio Rules ol Civil above date and lime.
South lllly·llve (55 ) Plalntllls va Llllla
Procedure, JudHment · No matarlalo received
·IPICIIIIIIII.II
degrees East one
•
·
n b
hundred seventy·lour W. Dennis, at al.,
Y default w II be after the date will be
IIU Clllllllll
(1 74 ) to the place of Defendants . Thla rendered against you Included In previous
IIHIJ
tllllllll.
beginning excepting action has been and for the relief submlulons nor be
the coal ihereln and ' assigned Case No. demanded In the considered.
The
1 01 cv 114
d 1 Complaint.
department reserves
~
the right to mine the pending
• • In' the
an Court
s
Datod thla 9th day the right to reject any
same
.....
Ct.
l
lll'llll.
PARCEL NUMBEP ol Common Plaaa of ol July, 2001.
or all proposals, In
11ft DriiU &amp;1:11111
.~
,
~~
Melga
County,
Ohio.
accordanca
with 28
1
750 18 749
8115 1 mo
PROPERTY ~
The obJect ot the Marlena Harrtobn
CFR part 31, 32,
ADDRESS · 32045 Complaint demands Marlene .H arrlaon, Meigs
County
Welshton · Road tho\lhetltlelnandto Clerko!Courta
Department ol Job
Minersville, OH 45768 • the oil and gas be
end Family Servlcea
Also known 88 quletad
In
tha By: Monica Freeman
Ia prohibited from
Welshtown Plaintiff, Gayle H. Oeputy Clerk
discrimination on the
32045
Road
Minersville Price and Edna Price,
basis of race, color,
Ohio 5769 and thai and that the oil and 7123, 30, (8) 6, 13, 27
natl.o nal origin, sex,
RIW
age, religion, political
there remal~s due and gas Interests of the
IDIDIQS. IU
owing $24,639.74 with Defendants
be
Public Notice
beliefs, or
lnteraat at 15 _492 declared abandoned,
disability. Evaluation
1 th
11
11
the proposals 1.5
dl!fiiWIIk
percant per annum or n e a erna va,
p
expected to be
1
1
from July 1, 2000, and I hot
the
Court Raquest or ropoaa
concluded no later
coats;
thet
tho partition the 011 and
than September 10,
defendants namod In gadeerlnttheeroesatmaenadlooldr D The IMelgls c,ouJntby 2001 . .
the Complaint may or
epar man o
o
,
with regard to the and Family Service• (8) 20, 27, 2001
have an lntareot In following deacrlbad Ia seeking propoaals
said
proparty; reateatate:
to
provide
a 3tc
therefora, Plaintiff
Tho
lollowlng comprahanalve year·
demandJI that It ba dascrlbed real aatate round youth program
found to have • good, situate
In
tha to eligible youth ageo
TRI-COUnTY
valid and subsisting Town 1 hI p
o I 14;21 consistent with
lien on said premises, Lebanon, In the Meigs County's Work·
way around it,
TRftUSPORT
lor tho amount owing; County of Malgo and iorce Developmant
Umestonel
Classified Ads
that the Delandants State ol Ohio, viz: Plan, provlalona of
Seniors Discounts
equity ot redemption Bounded northerly by the federal Workforce
multiple Lood
Work!
be
valid
and thit Ohio River, eaot Investment Art (WIA),
Discounts
aubalallng lien on aald by the IIMldl ol . and . related federal

!

•o

6 AKQ i tJ

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARlY ·
$321.00 PER JOINT

"'

PUrl

i

.,. ..
t Q

ACROSS 45 TV
1 Quantity of 48 ..
:,.::cceOIO~IJI~

'f !lo l 1
t A JS 4 S!

WoM

••••

949-1405
591·5011

· .EPOYIIG

•

ALDER

:~ .

hiUb

· Free Estimates

•

~J

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
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lii'\' tl&gt; T.o.KEN
l"HAT GIJ'(!

YOUNG'S

The Daily Sentinel • Page A9

814~·2202

Recine, Ohio

949-2134

B/151 mo

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event. be hopeful and expectant. Negative thinking gC"ner-

in this
space
for
$50 per
month

a broken romance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can

Afierti~ rour ~u~meu on t~i~ ,a~e or one
m.ont~ for a~ low a~~~~- · ~~one "~·~U~\

atc5 dde~t. Trying to patch up

help you undcmand what to
do to make the rellltiomhi'p

work. Ma1l $2.75 to Matchmaker. c/o thi!i ncw~p~per
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44092- 0167 .
LIDRA (Sept. 23-0 co. 23) •
- If you Uilln a ntmble today
don't expect family members
to strew .yo ur path with rmc
pet;~h trying . to make you

happy. Thcy "rc more likely to
toss stumbling stones in front
of yo u.
SC ORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov.
22) -- Do n' t take an :HTauge ntc nt that is bendlcial to all
;md tty to lltrn it :u ound to-

day to benefit only No. 1, nor
alJow anyone else to do so ei ther.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec: 21) -- Othen can not be
expected to bail you out of a
financi&lt;~~l situa~ion tmby you
got yourself into. It'~ ~o ing to
b'-· up to you to take care of
the matter yomself.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. t 9) · • Try lo gel thin!;'
started o n your own today
and invite in partnt'rs only aS
it become~ necess:u y: Partners
could hamper things instead

of help you.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.

19) •• This i• not • day to lay
;I.Sidc your tools ami make it a
time elf rest. Even if your
he a rt isn't in ymu work proje&lt;;ts, keep going until you
finish your tasks or you'll pay
the piper.
· PISCES (Feh. 20-Mmh 20)

-- DcalinK5 with friends need
to be handled with kid gloves
today . Peopl e arc •morr
tou c hy than usu al and could
easily bcc01he unit\u cd over'
the simplest of slights.
ARIES (M&gt;rch 21 - Apnl 19)
· - If things don 't go as you'd
hoped toda~· . be caref~1l not to

take your disappointment out
on innocent bystanders, such
a~ co - worken or family members.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) -- De more guarded than
usual about what yo u say or
sign today . Chance~ arc you
could hlurt out something
you don 't mean or put your
signature to pape r without
reading it fine
GEMINI (M•y 21-June 20 )
- - Unless yoLI have your dcsiFes for imtant gratification
under 'total control today, this
is not a good day for you to
go shopp 1ng . Em o ti o,n5
mustn' t be alloWed to ru le
your purse.
C AN CE R Uuno 21 -ju ly
22) -- Permns with whom.
you ch oo~e to a ssoci~ te tOday
co uld have a big intlucuc e
over your mood. N~gative
rypes would rapidly smother
your enth usit~sm and zest, and
put you in ~ funk.
LEO Quly 23-flug. 22) ••
Normally you fa ce m:~.tten
squarely and realistically, bu[
today you're apt to believe
. certain duties or responsibilities ,will somehow take care of
, them~elvcs_.
'

"

�••
•

•

.'

The Daily Sentinel

.

Base

.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Sosa hits homers No. 50, 51

Mond•y, Aupst 27. lOOJ
•••
•

AROUND THE DIAMOND
'

NI110NIIletgue

Arizona 4, Philadelphi a 3, 10 innings
Colorado 3, Milwaukee 2
Chicago Cubs 6. St. l ouis 1
San Diego 10, Florida. O
N.Y. Mets 6, San Francisco 5

Eosl

BY THE ASSOCIATEDPRESS

Amerte~~n

•

•

•

•

Te1141 5, l!oolon 4

League

No games scheduled

• .I

•

Hometown Newspaper

Melp County's

•

•
~o cE&gt;nts ·August 18, 1001 • Vol. 51, No.9

....

Martinez return a success even though Boston loses

urn.

DEERE FOR Ai.L SEASONS

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

SEWER PROJECT

Winners

claim

Council hears\
residents'
complaints

Powerball

•••

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.A

•
\

-y'oQomeo

EaM

•

••

sis Russ Ortiz (I 4-6), Lei ter
w L PeL GB
'lllndoy's Gomeo
•
w L PeL Gl
Atlanta
71 58 .550
New Vorl&lt;
16 55 .580
Ano ther day, another two squared around to bunt ~efore
-lon
(Cone •z)ot C-nd (lurfjo
Philadelphia 69 60 .535
71 56 .550
2
Boston
H), 7:05 p.m.
,..
home ru ns for Sammy Sosa.
pulling his hands back and
Florida
61 68 .473
Monday's Games
10
Toronto
64 67 .488
12
Ookllnd (Muldaf15-7) a! Bellimore (POft.
New YorK
61
69 .469
10'17
Los Angeles (Adams 9-6) at Atlanta Baltimore
54 78 .415
21 '&amp;
son 5-9). 7:05p.m.
Sosa hit his 50th and 5 I st slashing a si ngle to center field.
Montreal
55
75 .423
1 6~
(Made!ux 17-7), 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay
47
64 .359
Toronto (Loaiza 11-101 at N.Y. van•
29
ho me runs Sunday, j oining
Braves 9, Dodgers 2
Cenlnol
San Francisco {Jensen 1-2) at N.Y. Mets
Central
(Muaslna 12· 11), 7:05p.m.
w L Pet GB (Appier 7-10), 1:10 p.m.
w L Pet Gl Chicago White Sox (Biddie 5-8) at Detroit
Babe Ruth and Mark MeGSlumpin g Andruw J o nes
Houston
75
55 _577
San Diego (Tollberg 6·4) at Florida (Bur- Cleveland
13 57 .582
(Lima 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
wire as the only players with hi t a pair of two- run ho mers
Chicago
72 58 .554
nett 9·9). 7:05p.m.
Minnesota
3
69
62 .527
Saame (Pineiro~~ at Tampa Bey (P.Wii·
St. Louis
10
]';
Arizona (Lopez 3-3) at Philadelphia (Per- Chicago
60 .539
5
68 64 .504
son 5-8), 7:15p.m.
;
fo ur 50-hom er seasons.
and Atlanta won for o nly th e
Milwaukee
57
12 .442
1 7 '~
son 11-6), 7:05 p.m.
Detroit
19'1.
53 75 .411
Texas (Oliver 10-6) at Minnesota (Reed
" I'm no t going to lie to you. third tim e in II gam es at
Clnc:lnm~tl
53 n
.408
Pittsburg. (Seimel 5- tO) at M ilwau~ee Kansas City
22
51 80 .389 . 22';
3·3). 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh
48 81
.372
26 ~
(Coppinger 0·0), 8:05 p.m.
We1t
Anaheim (OO!z 11-7) a! Kansas CI!Y
I am very happy to be in that Turner Field.
West
w L Pet QB (George 1-4), 8:05p.m.
,
category w ith Mr. Mark
w L PC1 GB
Tuesday'a Games
Seatlle
Jones had batte d j ust .194
94 37 .718
· Arizona
75
Philadelphia (Duckworth 2-0) at N.Y. Oakland
54 .581
19
56 .572
75
McGwire and Babe," Sosa satd. in the las t eight weeks before
San Francisco ' 72 56 . ~
Anaheim
3~
Mat s (Rusch 6-9), 7:10 p. m .
25
59 52 .527
LosAngefes
While closing in on Darry going 3-fo r-5.
71
59 .546
Montreal (Vazquez 13-11 ) at Atlanta (Mill- Texas
36
58 73 .443
San Diego
64
65 .496
11
wood
4-5). 7:35p.m.
Bonds for the maj or leagu e
Mark D eR osa and M arcus
Colorado
56 73 .434
19
Cincinnati (Dovls 6-2) at Houston
Saturday's a.mes
ho mer title, Sosa is keeping the G il es also ho mered as the
(Miller 13--7), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 7, AMheim 5
Saturday's Games
Florida (Dempster 14-11 ) at Chicago Seattle 3. Cleveland 2, 11 Innings
Cubs close in the Nl Central Braves o pened a two-game
Chicago Cubs 6. St. Louis 4
Cubs (Tapani 9-10), 8:05p.m .
Qakland 6, Detroit 1
Arizona 4, Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh (Beimel 5- 1O) at Milwaukee Tampa Bay 8, Chicago White Sox 4
race.
lead over Philadelphia in the
Los Angeles 8, Atlanta 7
(C oppinge ~ 0·0), 8:05 p.m.
Toronto~ . Baltimore o
Sosa's latest homers led N L Eas t. J o hn Burkett won
Pittsburgh ·&amp;. Houston 2
San Diego (Lawrenc e 3-3) at Sr. louis Texas 8, Boston 7, 18 innings
Milwaukee 5, Colorado 4
(Kilo 13·8), 8:10 p.m.
Minnesota 7. Kansas City 1
C hicago over the St. Louis · his 'fourth straight decision.
Cincinnati 4, Montreal 2
San Francisco (LHemandez 11-12) at
Cardinals 6- 1 at Wrigley Field.
Shawn Green hit his 42nd
San Diego 7, Florida 1
Arizona (Johnson 17-6), 10:05 p.m.
Sunday'• Games
N.Y. Mets 3, San Francisco 2. 11 innings
Colorado (Chacon 6-8) at los Angeles Chicago While Sox 3, Tampa Bay 2
The Cubs· trail Houston by home run , inCluding 22 sin ce
(Brown 8·4), 10:10 p.m.
Toronto 5, Baltimore t
the All-Star break, for Los
three games.
Sunday's Games
Oakland 7, Detroit 6
Atlanta 9, Los Angeles 2
Minnesota 7, Kansas City 2
Sosa ·has 16 ho me runs m Angeles.
Houston 3, Pittsburgh 1
Cla...,lond 4, Suttle 3
August, including a pa1r of
Braves
third · baseman
Clnclnnau 17, Montreat 4
Anaheim 7, N.Y. Yankees 6, 10 innings
three-homer games.
C hipp er Jones and manager
"Sammy's having a phe- Bobby C ox were ejected for
n~ menal year," McGwire said. arguing in th e sixth.
" He's doing everything and
. D-backs 4, Phillies 3,
more.'.'
10 innings
Sosa hit No. 50 in the first
R eggie Sanders homered
and added N o. 51 in the fifih. in. the lOth inning and Luis
Both · shots came against Gonzalez hit his 48th home
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Young; the No. 9 hitter, hit a solo homer, The Twins, who had lost 10 of 14 geing
Dustin Hermanson and result- run as Arizona beat PhiladelThe Boston Red Sox couldn't have had his eighth, in the fourth.
into the series, completed a three-game
ed in curtain calls.
phia.
a more encouraging loss.
Angels 7, Yankees 6, 10 innings
sweep and sent Kansas City to itli sixth
Backed by Sosa's four RB!s,
Sanders hit his career highPedro Martinez returned to the mound
Garret Anderson hit a nm-scoring dou- straight loss - all at home.
rookie Juan Cruz earned, his tying 28th homer, and third
for the first time in two months Sunday hie in the 1Oth inning to give Anaheim a
Brad Radke (1 1-8), who had lost his four
first major league victory.
of the s.eries for the NL West
night, but Boston lost S-4 to the Texas come-from-behind victory over visiting previous decisions, pitched three-hit ball
Sosa has reached at least 50 leaders.
Rangers.
·
New York.
for seven innings to beat Blake Stein (5-7),
homers in four straight years.
Astro.s 3, Pirates 1
Martinez, on a 60-75 pitch count as·he
Anderson's game-winning drive do~n who gave up five runs on six hits and four
McGwire did it from 1996-99
Ron Villone, starting . 111
recovers from a sore right shoulder, left the right-field line off Mike Stanton· (8-4) walks in 4 2-3 innings. The Twins remained
and Ruth did it in 1920-21 place of Pedro Astacio, struck
after four innings with the score tied at 3. came atier Stanton hit Darin Erstad with a 4 I 12 games back in the AL Central.
and 1927-28.
out eight in 5 1-3 innings as
"I feel good. My arm reacted good," pitch to start the inning. ·
White Sox 3, Devil Rays 2
Mets 6, Giants 5
the NL Central leaders won
Martinez said after throwing 71 pitches in
Anderson went 3-for- 5, with two douJose Canseco and Magglio Ordonez hit
Al Leiter kept Barry Bonds at Pittsburgh.
four innings."[ got my work done and I bles and two RB!s.
solo homers for visiting Chicago.
With Astacio out because
was back on the mound. The rest is overDavid Eckstein's two-out, run-scoring
in the park and keyed New
Canseco, who had three RB!s in Chicarated."
single off Mariano Rivera in the ninth tied go's 8-4 loss Saturday, broke a 2-all tie in
York's go-ahead rally in the of shoulder stiffness, Villone
~venth ·with a rare hit of his won in his first start since
In his first start since June 26, the three- it at 6 and denied Orlando Hernandez his the siXth against Bobby Seay (0-1) with his
own to lead the Mets over San June 20 with Colorado.
time Cy Young Award winner allowed first win of2001.
12th homer this season, the 458th of his
Francisco.'
Padres 10, Marlins 0
three runs - two earned - and siX hits.
Athletics 7, Tigers 6
career.
, Bonds came within about
Kevin Jarvis pitched seven
He threw mostly fastballs and changeups
Miguel Tejada drove i!'kthree runs, and
Jon Garland (6-4) allowed two runs and
·o ne foot of his major league- strong innings and San Diego
for 5 I strikes.
Terrence Long hit a tiebreaking single in six hits in 6 1-3 il'inings, and Keith Foulke
)eading 56th homer but had to won at florida .
Tim Wakefield (8-10) relieved Martinez the seventh as Oakland overcame a S-0 got three outs for his 35th save.
,settle for a triple and another . ·Rickey Henderson scored
to start the fifth. Mike Lamb hit-a tiebreak- deficit against visiting Detroit.
·
Blue Jays 5, Orioles 1
homerless day at Shea Stadi- his 2,229th run in the Padres'
ing two-run single for the Rangers in the
Matt Perisho (2-3) walked Olmedo
Rookie Brandon Lyon (3-2) pitched six
He hasn't gone deep in his eighth, leaving him 16 shy of
sixth.
Saenz and hit Jason Giambi with a piich in innings of three-hit ball as visiting Toronto
. iast 30 games at the Mets' 1Y Cobb's career record.
· Bill Haselman singled, Michael Young the seventh and Jermaine Dye singled completed a three-game sweep, outscoring .
Rockies 3, Brewers 2
was hit by a pitch and Boston catcher home the tying run.
' home stadium.
·
the Orioles I 9-1.
.Larry Walker hit a threeDoug Mirabelli was charged with a passed
Jeff Tam (2-3) pitched one scoreless
Leiter (9-10) allowed three
Melvin Mora's sixth-inning homer,
runs and five hits in eight run homer that Jed Colorado
ball before Lamb singled to left.
inning for his first victory since July 2, and ended Toronto's. 26~inning scoreless streak;
The Rangers built a 3-0 lead against Jason lsringhausen pitched the ninth for his one short of the team recottl.
innings as the Mets won their over Milwaukee at Miller
third strai~ game in this J&gt;a~k~~ _Maninez~wllo struck-out..fuur-and-walked-j!6tils;~ve.-:
en1on Wells,=
re~call
'+."e"id~fro'-m
-;;
11;-:
ri-,
pl;-e-A~four- game series.
Walker's 33rd home run
one.
Thins 7, Royals 2
Syracuse earlier in the day, had three .hitli.
After Rey Ordonez singled helped
Mike
Hampton
Ricky Ledee had an RBI single in the
Visiting Minnesota parlayed four walks Jose Mercedes (7-15) allowed five runs and
and went to second on a improve to 13-10.
second. The Rangers got an unearned run and five stolen bases into a five-run fifth. six hitli in six innings.
throwing error by Mets neme~
after two Boston errors in the third and

...

Tuesday

.SPOilS: Lady Eagles soar again, Bl

'-1e A10

jackpot
8y DYLAN

T.

LoVAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Three of the four winners of the $294.8 million
PowerbaU jackpot claimed
their
shares Monday,
including an elderly Maine
couple who hid their winning ticket in . a box of
cereal, a married mother of
three from Mini:u!sota and
a 46-year- old ex-convict ·
from Kentucky.
" It's a poor man's
dream," David Edwards
said at the Louisville Slugger Museum in Louisville,
Ky.
The. jackpot is the thirdbiggest lottery prize in
U.S. history. The four winning tickers in Saturday
night's drawing of the
multi state lottery·were sold
in Kentucky, Minnesota,
New Hampshire and
Delaware.
Except for the holder of
the Delaware ticket, all the
winners were identified
Monday and all chose the
lump-sum payment of
$41.4 million, before taxes.
With each winning ticket
worth $73.7 miUion, winners also have th~ option
of taking $2.9 million per
year for 25 years .
Up first in the parade of
. jacKpot
wimiers
was
EdwardS, who ·said he was
recent! laid off from his
fiber optics job, needs back
surgery and had no idea
what he was going to do
once his unemployment
benefits ran out.
"A lot of people work
hard and a lot of people are
out of work. And you
dream you want a better
life, and playing this lottery
has done that for me," said
Edwards, · whose fiancee,

PIHH seel•ckpot. AJ

. said last night.
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Lift station improvements
MIDDLEPORT - With and installations have been·
progress comes problems.
completed
on
General
Progress on Middleport's Hartinger Park way, Mill
major sewer improvement Street, and Laurel Street, and
project, and problems expe- excavation work on the lift
rienced lly residents as the 'station installation · at Ash
resuit of street repairs were Street has been completed in
cliscussed by Middleport Vil- anticipation of installation·.
lage Council during Mon- Paving at the site of the
day evening's regular meet- Rutland Street work should
be cQmpleted soon.
mg.
Two · contracting firms are . Hayes also · discussed the
working on separate public results of a recent inspection
works projects in Middlec of the 125,000-gallon water
port: B&amp;L Construction of tank on Middleport Hill.
Ashland, Ky., on the village's The Ohio Environmental
million- dollar
sewer Protection Agency suggested
improvement project, and the inspection after an EPA
Black Top Contracting of worker noticed a bulge in
Nelsonville on a street the side of the tank.
According to Hayes. the
paving project.
inspection
revealed that,
The sewer project, funded
through local revenue, pub- aside from few needed
including
seal
lic grants and loans , is mov- repairs,
replacement,
painting
and
ing along swiftly, according
to Becky Hayes of the ,vil- roof repairs, th e tank is in
lage's engineering firm , good condition. Suggested
repairs would cost approxiFloyd Browne Associates.
mately
$20,000, while the
"The project is right on
schedule ... maybe a little replacem ent of the tank
ahead of schedule," Hayes
Plene see ProJect. A:S
~

.
M

,.. ·-· ·"··---J--·---~-

IDDLEPORT - "Sharpen your
pencils, get your books out, and
"
.let's get started!"
Students and teachers at Mid- Valley
Christian School in Middleport were a step
ahead of their publiG school COUnlerparts,
starting classes on Monday.
Patty Asbeck, pictured here with firs~­
grader Morgan Hurlow, was busy giving
her students first-day instructions yesterday
morning, but it was clear that the first dive
into schoolwork was not far away. (Brian J.
Reed photos)

•
LTI33 lawn Jrador
• 13-hp engine
•
• 38-inch mowing deck
• S·speed shift·on·lhe-go transmission

W55 lawn Tractor
•15-hp engine
• 42·inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission
BY TONY

M.

WCH

. , TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Sheriff's Department has received fo11r
used personal comp11ters and two lap-top
computers through American Electric
Power's Charitable Donation Program.
Accorcling to Tom Graham, regional
security manager for AEP, the computer
donation program is an extension of the
company's corporate goal to support and

play an active, positive role in communities where AEP employees live and work.
"These donations are particularly
designed to help both qualifYing ;schools
and non-profit community orgaruzations
expand .their use of computer technology," said Graham . .
"Educators and students may use the
donated PC's in making technology an
int~gral part of the educational learning
process while non-profit organizations

may use the computers to update or
expand their computing capabilities so as
to better serve their communities," he
added.
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph E ,Trussell
said the donation wiU be used to update
the department's computer system,
specifically with record keeping and vehicle maintenance files, and that the equip-

. Pluse see cOmputerS, AJ

JS60 Walk-Behind Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum deck
• Seven cutting heights

Sentinel

J1 05C Line Jrlmmer/Brushcutter
•1.05-hp 119.8 eel M·Series engine
•15-inch·cutting-swath
• Only 8.5 Ibs
• 2·year consumer warranty

www.JohnDeere.com

~
'

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1 S1dlan - 10 Pllpl

SST! I lawn Jratllir

ealeDdar
Classifieds
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Editorials
Obituaries

• IB·hp, V·Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
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NOTHING

RUNS

LIKE

A

Weather
·'

A6·8
A9
A4
A3
ASJ-8,10
A3

L-:101
Details; A2

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 8-5--5; Pick 4: 1-4-H
...... . ,. 5: 4-~ 11-23-28

W.VA.
Deily 3: ().3.-8 Deily 4: 7-4-9-7
C 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

.

State argues that execution should proceed
COLUMBUS (AP) -Convicted killer
John W. Byrd Jr. should be e:Kecuted Sept.
12 because he hasn't raised credible evidence of his innocence, the state has told
the Ohio Supreme Court. .
The state filed court documents opposing Byrd's request for a hearing on the
evidence of his claim before ·the high
court.
Meanwhile, a mental coi)lpetency hearing was held in federal court on Monday

for a death row inmate who once said he
wanted to waive his appeals and be executed but later reversed himself.
The hearing will establish a permanent
record of whether Kevin Scudder is competent to waive appeals in his case.
Byrd claims an accomplice was responsible for the I 983 stabbing death of a
Cincinnati man during a convenience
story robbery. In January, Byrd's attorneys
produced two documents in which that

accomplice. John l3rewer. takes credit for
the slaying.
The state said Byrd has yet to show thai
a trial court made a mistake in convicting
him and sentenci.;g him to death.
"No one would ever want to see a truly
innocent man face the death penalty, but
Byrd has no~ offered any credible evidence supporting his claim on that issue,"
Hamil~on County Prosecutor . Michael
Allen said.

Summertime Woes?

JoHN DEERE

DEERE

Hlp: lOs

'fod.y's

Electricity service was out for more than 400 residents and
businesses in the Village .of Pomeroy. American Electric Power
blamed a faulty underground cable for the 12-hour outage,
which began at 10 p.m. on Sunday evening. Service was
restored just after 10 a.m. yesterday, but some stores and
offices - most notably offices In the County Courthouse declared a holiday &lt;Jnd remained closed for the day, although ..
it was business as usual in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, where hearings continued as scheduled. Here, Peo- ·
pies Bank's Pomeroy office says it all. (Tony M. Leach photo)
.

If you have health concerns or questions, call the

CARMICHAEL'S FARM. &amp; LAWN, INC.

WAKEFIELD GARAGE

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Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

US #50 West, P.O~ Box #639
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        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24478">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24477">
              <text>August 27, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
